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              <text>World's Craziest Sport</text>
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              <text>World's&#13;
Craziest&#13;
Sport&#13;
Billed as the world's "craziest" sport,&#13;
wilder than a rodeo, and funnier than a&#13;
circus, Bob Crosby's donkey basketball&#13;
show comes to Kenosha on Friday I Nov.&#13;
20, at 8 p.m. in the Carthage College&#13;
physical education center. The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside cheerleaders will&#13;
(ace the Carthage College cheerleaders in&#13;
the feature game. The other game will&#13;
feature a match-up between a team&#13;
comprised of faculty and administration of&#13;
Carthage versus a team comprised of&#13;
Carthage's sorority all-stars. The winner&#13;
of the first game will play the winner of the&#13;
second game for a short championship&#13;
game.&#13;
This event is being sponsored by the&#13;
Delta Omega Nu fraternity at Carthage.&#13;
The idea of donkey basketball is to attempt&#13;
to play basketball while riding on a&#13;
donkey. Sounds simple! However, the&#13;
donkeys don't always go in the direction&#13;
they are supposed to go. This results m&#13;
SOme very funny situation. .&#13;
The game will consist of two eight&#13;
minute halves, with four players from&#13;
....eachteam on the court atone time. Some&#13;
of the rules are that the players must take&#13;
their donkeys with them wherever they&#13;
go; all players must be mounted to score;&#13;
players may ride or lead donkeys to the&#13;
ball and all players must be mounted to&#13;
play defense.&#13;
Advance sale tickets are $1.00 for adults&#13;
and 75 cents for students, and may be&#13;
purchased at the Parkside Student Activities&#13;
Office or from the Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders. Tickets may also be purChased&#13;
at the door the night of the game at&#13;
the price of $1.25 for adults and $1.00 for&#13;
students.&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING&#13;
The Student Affairs Office is prepared to&#13;
help students explore their questions&#13;
concerning the draft and proVlde the&#13;
needed information in considering tneir&#13;
service choice. .&#13;
If you are interested in such counsehng&#13;
services contact Steve Bangert at Student&#13;
Affairs in Kenosha, Room 135.&#13;
SPONSOReD BY: vAasny CUJe&#13;
SIGMADELTAPHt&#13;
P£P~~CUJ&amp;&#13;
CAPTAIN's COUNCIl.&#13;
Rene Dubos to&#13;
Present Lecture&#13;
Pulitzer prize-winning ecologist Rene&#13;
Dubos will present a free public lecture,&#13;
HSo Human an Animal: The Development&#13;
of Man's Potential" , at 8 p.m. on Tuesday J&#13;
Nov. 17, at Parkside.&#13;
The lecture, in Room 103, Greenquist&#13;
Hall, is sponsored by the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee.&#13;
Professor of environmental biomedicine&#13;
at Rockefeller University, a graduate&#13;
institution and scientific research center,&#13;
Dubos received the 1969 Pulitzer prize for&#13;
the book which shares its title with his&#13;
lecture topic. Prof. Dubos' other books&#13;
include "Man Adapting" and "The Unseen&#13;
World", both winners of Phi Beta Kappa&#13;
awards. His most recent book is "Reason&#13;
Awake".&#13;
A member of the Citizens' Advisory&#13;
Committee on Environmental Quality to&#13;
President Nixon, Prof. Dubos was, until&#13;
last year, president of the Scientists' Institute&#13;
for Public Information and continues&#13;
to serve on Its board of directors. He&#13;
was among the prime organizers of the&#13;
Environmental Teach-Ins last spring on&#13;
the nation's college campuses.&#13;
Throughout his professional life, Dr.&#13;
Dubos has been intensely concerned with&#13;
the effects that environmental forces&#13;
physiochemical, biological and social -&#13;
exert on human life.&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
Alan Shucard, assistant professor of&#13;
English at Parkside, will read from his&#13;
recently published book of poetry, "The&#13;
Gorgon Bag", when the Poetry Forum&#13;
meets at 7 p.m. Nov. 17 in room 121,&#13;
Greenquist. He'll also read a number of&#13;
poems written since coming to Parkside.&#13;
Shucard, who "started writing poetry&#13;
when I was old enough to wonder who 1&#13;
was and what aU those people were doing&#13;
around me," recently read from "The&#13;
Gorgon Bag" and other poems at the&#13;
Johnson Foundation's International&#13;
Writers' Conference at Wingspread.&#13;
Brooklyn born, Shucard did graduate&#13;
work at the University of St. Andrew,&#13;
Scotland, and the University of Connecticut&#13;
and received his Ph.D. from the&#13;
University of Arizona. His work has been&#13;
published in a number of poetry journals in&#13;
the United States and canada.&#13;
"The Gorgon Bag" is available at all&#13;
UWP bookstores.&#13;
The Dec. 15 poetry forum will feature&#13;
Bruce Stiehm of the Spanish discipline&#13;
reading his English and Spanish poetry&#13;
Anyone interested in reading his poems&#13;
at the forum should contact Andy McLean&#13;
in Kenosha or AI Wallace in Racine.&#13;
Future programs are already in the&#13;
making - but there's still lots of room for&#13;
anyone who might want to read.&#13;
Not Responsible&#13;
For Thefts&#13;
Severa) inquiries about insurance&#13;
coverage for theft, loss, or damage to&#13;
personal property have been received as a&#13;
result of recent incidents on campus&#13;
Therefore, Central Risk Management felt&#13;
it advisable to again review the University&#13;
policy on this subject.&#13;
The University is NOT responsible&#13;
for personal property. Normally&#13;
anyone having personal&#13;
property on campus or using&#13;
personal property in projects off&#13;
campus is expected to provide his&#13;
or her own insurance coverage on&#13;
such property lwhether it is books,&#13;
an automobile. or cmet'ung else)&#13;
At one lime such property was easily&#13;
covered by personal insurance policies&#13;
However, today there is considerable&#13;
diversity among companies on coverage.&#13;
Therefore, we strongly suggest each&#13;
person check with his or her own company&#13;
on how coverage may be provided&#13;
If you have any questions, contact Mr- J&#13;
Ross, UWP Business office, extension 2M&#13;
Booster Club&#13;
Plans Events&#13;
A bus trip to Parkside's opener for the&#13;
1970-71 basketball season is being planned&#13;
by the Booster Club. Parkside cagers will&#13;
face Chicago Xavier on Tuesday, Dec. 1.&#13;
Game time is 8:00 p.m, Tickets are&#13;
scheduled to go on sale Nov, 23.&#13;
Also in the planning stage is a pep rally&#13;
and a victory bonfire to be held the night of&#13;
Dec. 3 as a kick-off for SPORTSFEST's&#13;
weekend of activities.&#13;
Other events Include trips to see some of&#13;
the Milwaukee Bucks or the Chicago Bulls&#13;
basketball games as well as Chicago&#13;
Blackhawk games. A winter carnival has&#13;
also been suggested as a possible activity&#13;
to be held second semester .&#13;
Only a handful of people showed up fbr&#13;
last Wednesday's meeting. They are now&#13;
working on up-coming events. But many&#13;
more students are needed to make future&#13;
events successful. Chairmen are still&#13;
needed for these committees: publicity,&#13;
special activities, trips, programs and a&#13;
bleacher bum section.&#13;
The next meeting is slated for Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 18. It will be held in Room&#13;
Ull.Greenquist at 4:00. If students are&#13;
interested but are unable to attend, contact&#13;
Kathy Mauer.&#13;
Upcoming Events&#13;
Donkey BaskethaU Game - Carthage&#13;
cheerleaders have challenged&#13;
Parkside cheerleaders in a game of&#13;
Donkey Basketball. The game will take&#13;
place Friday, Nov. 20, at 8:00 p.m. at&#13;
the Carthage Fieldhouse. Tickets may&#13;
be purchased from the cheerleaders,&#13;
the Rangerettes, and the Student&#13;
Activities Office, or they can be bought&#13;
at the door.&#13;
Bus trip to the first basketball gameNeighborhood&#13;
to Perform Here&#13;
Popular and successful recording group,&#13;
'The Neighborhood", will be performing&#13;
at Parkside this Saturday, Nov. 21, for a&#13;
dance-nightclub at the student activities&#13;
building. The event, sponsored through the&#13;
Student Activities Office, will run from&#13;
9:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. with the group&#13;
performing three sets.&#13;
Relatively new to the contemporary&#13;
music scene, The Neighborhood has&#13;
recently received much attention through&#13;
their hit recording of "Big Yellow Taxi"&#13;
and their latest release "Laugh". Both&#13;
may be found in the group's first album:&#13;
The Neighborhood - Debut.&#13;
Nine me!J1bers strong, the group is rich&#13;
Parkside vs. Chicago Xavier. Game&#13;
time is 8:00 p.m. on Dec. 1. Tickets go&#13;
on sale Nov. 23.&#13;
Pep Rally and Victory Bonfire - Kickoff&#13;
for Sportsfest weekend to beheld on the&#13;
night of Dec. 3.&#13;
First Home Basketball Games - Dec. 4,&#13;
8:00 p.m. St. Joe's High school,&#13;
Kenosha, UWP vs. U. of Pwdue, North&#13;
Central.&#13;
December 5, 8:00 p.m. Case high&#13;
school, Racine, UWP vs. Swedish&#13;
National team.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Austin, Tex. - (J.P.) - The first class of&#13;
the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public&#13;
Affairs at the University of Texas is a&#13;
cross-section of the United States in&#13;
geographic, cultural and academic&#13;
backgrounds, according to Dean John A.&#13;
Gronouski.&#13;
in its composite of musicians and singers.&#13;
Its makeup is piano, lead and bass guitar,&#13;
drums, five male vocalists, plus Elaine&#13;
and Ellen, two of the smallest bundles of&#13;
talent around todav. Thev stand only 4'9"&#13;
but can belt out songs like six footers.&#13;
The sound and style of The Neighborhood&#13;
is uniquely their own, yet they&#13;
move with ease from such things as the&#13;
somewhat wild score of "Hair" to the&#13;
more calming sounds of the Fifth&#13;
Dimension. Much of their material is&#13;
written and arranged by the group itself,&#13;
and each member is choreographed to&#13;
make their show exciting visually as well&#13;
as musically.&#13;
The group has been kept busy with&#13;
numerous club bookings ("Someplace&#13;
Else" in Milwaukee, "Mister Kelly'S" in&#13;
Chicago, etc.) as well as appearing in&#13;
concert on many college campuses {including&#13;
a date at the Carthage College&#13;
fieldhouse two Saturdays ago with Mason&#13;
Profit&gt;. This makes their appearance in&#13;
the limited capacity Parkside Activities&#13;
Building an extremely unusual opportunity&#13;
to see a top entertainment attraction&#13;
in a very intimate setting.&#13;
Because admissions will be limited in&#13;
number, tickets are now being sold in&#13;
advance at the regular price of $1.50 per&#13;
person. These advance sale tickets are on&#13;
sale now at the Student Activities Building&#13;
service counter, the Office of Student&#13;
Affairs (Racine and Kenosha campuses) I&#13;
and the Student Activities Office in Tallent&#13;
Hall. Remaining tickets, if any, will he&#13;
sold at the door at $2.00 per person.&#13;
World's&#13;
Crazies&#13;
Sport&#13;
Billed as the world's "craziest" sport,&#13;
wilder than a rodeo, and funnier than a&#13;
circus, Bob Crosby's donkey basketball&#13;
show comes to Kenosha on Friday, Nov.&#13;
20, at 8 p.m. in the Carthage College&#13;
physical education center. The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside cheerleaders will&#13;
face the Carthage College cheerleaders in&#13;
the feature game. The other game will&#13;
feature a match-up between a team&#13;
comprised of faculty and administration of&#13;
Carthage versus a team comprised of&#13;
Carthage's sorority all-stars. The winner&#13;
of the first game will play the winner of the&#13;
second game for a short championship&#13;
game.&#13;
This event is being sponsored by the&#13;
Delta Omega Nu fraternity at Carthage.&#13;
The idea of donkey basketball is to attempt&#13;
to play basketball while riding on a&#13;
donkey. Sounds simple! However, the&#13;
donkeys don't always go in the directi~n&#13;
they are supposed to go. This results m&#13;
some very funny situation. . The game will consist of two eight&#13;
minute halves, with four players from&#13;
1!.lch team on the court at·one time. Some&#13;
of the rules are that the players must take&#13;
their donkeys with them wherever they&#13;
go; all players must be mounted to score;&#13;
players may ride or lead donkeys to the&#13;
ball and all players must be mounted to&#13;
play defense.&#13;
Advance sale tickets are $1.00 for adults&#13;
and 75 cents for students, and may be&#13;
purchased at the Parkside Student ':-,ctivities&#13;
Office or from the Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders. Tickets may also be purchased&#13;
at the door the night of the game at&#13;
the price of $1.25 for adults and $1.00 for&#13;
students.&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING&#13;
The Student Affairs Office is prepared to&#13;
help students explore their q~stions&#13;
concerning the draft and . pro~de ~e&#13;
needed information in cons1denng their&#13;
service choice. . H you are interested in such counseling&#13;
services, contact Steve Bangert at Student&#13;
Affairs in Kenosha, Room 135.&#13;
Rene Dubos to&#13;
Present Lecture&#13;
Pulitzer prize-winning ecologist Rene&#13;
Dubos will present a free public lecture,&#13;
"So Human an Animal: The Development&#13;
of Man's Potential", at 8 p.m. on Tuesday,&#13;
ov. 7, Pa . .~· ,-.-·--·~&#13;
The lecture, in Room 103, Greenquist&#13;
Hall, is sponsored by the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee.&#13;
Professor of environmental biomedicine&#13;
at Rockefeller University, a graduate&#13;
institution and scientific research center,&#13;
Dubos received the 1969 Pulitzer prize for&#13;
the book which shares its title with his&#13;
lecture topic. Prof. Dubos' other books&#13;
Booster Club&#13;
Plans Events&#13;
A bus trip to Parkside's opener for the&#13;
1970-71 basketball season is being planned&#13;
by the Booster Club. Parkside cagers will&#13;
face Chicago Xavier on Tuesday. Dec. 1.&#13;
Game time is 8:00 p.m. Tickets are&#13;
scheduled to go on sale Nov. 23.&#13;
Also in the planning stage is a pep rally&#13;
and a victory bonfire to be held the night of&#13;
Dec. 3 as a kick-off for SPORTSFEST's&#13;
weekend of activities.&#13;
Other events include trips to see some of&#13;
the Milwaukee Bucks or the Chicago Bulls&#13;
basketball games as well as Chicago&#13;
Blackhawk games. A winter carnival has&#13;
also been suggested as a possible activity&#13;
to be held second semester.&#13;
Only a handful of people showed up for&#13;
last Wednesday's meeting. They are now&#13;
working on up-coming events. But many&#13;
more students are needed to make future&#13;
events successful. Chairmen are still&#13;
needed for these committees: publicity,&#13;
special activities, trips, programs and a&#13;
bleacher bum section.&#13;
The next meeting is slated for Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 18. It will be held in Room&#13;
101-Greenquist at 4:00. If students are&#13;
interested but are unable to attend, contact&#13;
Kathy Mauer.&#13;
Upcoming Events&#13;
Donkey Basketball Game - Carthage&#13;
cheerleaders have challenged&#13;
Parkside cheerleaders in a game of&#13;
Donkey Basketball. The game will take&#13;
place Friday, Nov. 20, at 8:00 p.m. at&#13;
the Carthage Fieldhouse. Tickets may&#13;
be purchased from the cheerleaders,&#13;
the Rangerettes, and the Student&#13;
Activities Office, or they can be bought&#13;
at the door.&#13;
Bus trip to the first basketball gameinclude&#13;
"Man Adapting" and "The Unseen&#13;
World", both winners of Phi Beta Kappa&#13;
awards. His most recent book is "Reason&#13;
Awake".&#13;
A member of the Citizens' Advisory&#13;
Committee on Environmental Quality to&#13;
President Nixon. Prof. Dubos was, until&#13;
last year, pre ident of the Scientists' InPoetry&#13;
Forum&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
Alan hucard, assi tant pror r or&#13;
English at Parkside, will read from hi&#13;
recently publi hed book of poetr , "Th&#13;
Gorgon Bag·•, when the Poetry Forum&#13;
meets at 7 p.m. , ·ov. 17 m room 127,&#13;
Greenqui t. He'll al o read a number of&#13;
poems written since coming to P rksid&#13;
hucard, who "started writing poetry&#13;
wh n I was old enough to wond r who I&#13;
wa and what all those people wer doing&#13;
around me," recently read from ''Th&#13;
Gorgon Ba " and other poem at the&#13;
Johnson Foundation' Int rnational&#13;
Writers' Conference at Wing pread.&#13;
Brooklyn born, hucard did graduate&#13;
work at the Univer ity of t Andrew,&#13;
ScoUand, and the ni\.'er ity or onnecticut&#13;
and received h1 Ph.D. from the&#13;
niver ity of Arizona. Hi work ha been&#13;
publi h din a number of poelr. journal in&#13;
the nited State and Canada.&#13;
"The Gorgon Bag" i available at all&#13;
UWP book tores.&#13;
The Dec. 15 poetr forum will feature&#13;
Bruce tiehm of the pani h di cipline&#13;
reading his Engli h and Spani. h poetr .&#13;
Anvone intere ted in reading h1 poem&#13;
at the forum should contact Andy • 1cLean&#13;
in Kenosha or Al Wallace in Racine.&#13;
Future programs are already m th&#13;
making - but there' still lots of room for&#13;
anyone who might want to read.&#13;
Not Responsible&#13;
For Thefts&#13;
Several inquirie about&#13;
stitute for Publi Information an:.:-,d=-=c:.::o-,en_------aci-,nlLui&#13;
tinues to serve on its board of director . He&#13;
was among the prime organizers of the&#13;
Environmental Teach-Ins last spring on&#13;
the nation's college campuses.&#13;
Throughout his prof es ·ional life, Dr.&#13;
Dubos has been intensely concern d with&#13;
the effects that environmental forces -&#13;
physiochemical, biological and ocial -&#13;
exert on human life.&#13;
Neighborhood&#13;
to Perform Here&#13;
Popular and succes ful recording group,&#13;
'The Neighborhood", will be performing&#13;
at Parkside this Saturday, , 'ov. 21, for a&#13;
dance-nightclub at the student acti\ities&#13;
building. The event, ponsored through the&#13;
Student Activities Office, will run from&#13;
9:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. with the group&#13;
performing three sets.&#13;
Relatively new to the contemporary&#13;
music scene, The Neighborhood ha&#13;
recently received much attention through&#13;
their hit recording of "Big Yellow Taxi"&#13;
and their latest release "Laugh". Both&#13;
may be found in the group's first album:&#13;
The Neighborhood - Debut.&#13;
Nine me!flbers strong, the group is rich&#13;
Parkside vs. Chicago Xavier. Game&#13;
time is 8:00 p.m. on Dec. 1. Tickets go&#13;
on sale Nov. 23.&#13;
Pep Rally and Victory Bonfire - Kickoff&#13;
for Sportsfest weekend to be held on the&#13;
night of Dec. 3.&#13;
First Home Basketball Games - Dec. 4,&#13;
8:00 p.m. St. Joe's High school,&#13;
Kenosha, UWP vs. U. of P1.11due, North&#13;
Central.&#13;
December 5, 8:00 p.m. Case high&#13;
school, Racine, UWP vs. Swedish&#13;
National team.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Austin, Tex. - (I.P.)-The first class of&#13;
the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public&#13;
Affairs at the University of Texas is a cross-section of the Untted States in&#13;
geographic, cultural and academi-c&#13;
backgrounds, according to Dean John A.&#13;
Gronouski.&#13;
in it composit of m ic,an a, d . mger . It makeup i piano, I ad and b guit r,&#13;
drums, five male vocali ·t , plu. Elam&#13;
and Ellen, two of th mall bundl of&#13;
tal nl around todav. Thev t nd only 4' "&#13;
but can belt out ong lik . ix foot r . The sound and tyl of Th , 1ghborhood&#13;
i uniqu ly th ir own, •e th • mo\.'e with ea from u h thm th&#13;
omewhat wild . core or "Hair" to th&#13;
mor calming ound of th Fifth&#13;
Dimen ion. Much or their mat rial I&#13;
wTitten and arranged by th group 11.5 If,&#13;
and each memb r i choreographed to&#13;
make their how exciting vi ually a· well&#13;
as musically.&#13;
The group has been kept bu y with&#13;
numerous club booking (''Someplace&#13;
Else" in Milwaukee, " 1ister Kelly's" in&#13;
Chicago, etc.&gt; a well as appearing in&#13;
concert on many college campuses &lt;including&#13;
a date at the Carthage College&#13;
fieldhouse two Saturdays ago with , lason&#13;
Profit&gt;. This makes their appearance in&#13;
the limited capacity Parkside Activities&#13;
Building an extremely unusual opportunity&#13;
to see a top entertainment attraction&#13;
in a very intimate setting.&#13;
Because admissions will be limited in&#13;
number, tickets are now being sold in&#13;
advance at the regular price of $1.50 per&#13;
person. These advance sale tickets are on&#13;
sale now at the Student Activities Building&#13;
service counter, the Office of Student&#13;
Affairs (Racine and Kenosha campuses),&#13;
and the Student Activities Office in Tallent&#13;
Hall. Remaining tickets, if any, will be&#13;
sold at the door at $2.00 per person. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
A Guided Free Will&#13;
Itseems that if the Parkside student were to reflect as to why he&#13;
is attending this University he just may seek out the honest reason .. u&#13;
The Government pressures him, the draft, Vie~am, and ';Ollege ar: a&#13;
heavy burdens, like an iron anvil tied to his feet, cnppling. e ery&#13;
young man into and sometimes through college. He's faced Wl~ ?ne&#13;
alternative in which they tell him "You must learn". There isn t. a&#13;
democratic decision involved. In forcing a student to college, while&#13;
trying to keep a taggering amount of Gover.nment, six wee~, twel::&#13;
weeks and final pressure, you are turmng out neurotic fore&#13;
education rather than free-flowing creative knowledge. hil&#13;
Wouldn't it be better to lessen the number of students w . e&#13;
rai ing the quality of each student ... Army, Jail, or College - whIch&#13;
do you choose?&#13;
Small Student Voice&#13;
tudents who would like to have a student-size v~ice ~ ~e hiring&#13;
and firing of their professors can do so by voicing their opmion to ~e&#13;
divi ion chairman, the dean, chancellor, or any of the higher authority.&#13;
You could build up a favorable opinion of your professors, therefore&#13;
making it difficult for the "lynch committee" to el~ate on~ of yo~&#13;
prof . or . The time to take this action IS now! ~ y.ear 5 axe IS&#13;
cutting out the non-Ph.D., unpublished cancer of this Uruverslty. Get&#13;
moving and you might save a life!&#13;
Bookstore a Closed Case&#13;
The University bookstores on our campuses are based in Appi&#13;
ton, Wi onsin. The stores are owned by Clarence Broc~an (UWP&#13;
i tant Chancellor) and Howard Thielen. Both are natives of Appleton.&#13;
Univer ity bookstores are operating on all campuses of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
P()!'CRIPTTO" TOn:M POLE&#13;
TIn 1 50rt of a pestscnpt to the article I&#13;
wrore hUed "Th. Acad rmc Totem Pol."&#13;
It "'. print in the '0\1 mber 2nd lS5ue&#13;
01 '~W' PE Som. 01 the things I said&#13;
In that arhcle came up for discussion&#13;
around the table In the lounge in Lake Hall&#13;
an Racme between morning classes.&#13;
"You sur' descrtbed a dog .at dog&#13;
I 1)',to commented one or the fellows.&#13;
"LIke a materiali be ral race." he added&#13;
lito name was "Greg" I didn't g.t the&#13;
la 1 name.)&#13;
"When and wher.· .. I asked&#13;
"In the 'Kong 01 the HIli' rout one you&#13;
lalked about where everyone is&#13;
scrambhng and tryong to g.1 ahead 01&#13;
someone .Ise . colleg. peopl., business&#13;
pi e ....erybody. h's a way of life&#13;
that doesn't appeal to me:'&#13;
"Il' not qUlle as grim a game as you&#13;
thmk." I told him, "And it can be an exe'ling.&#13;
challengmg and re~ ..arding way of&#13;
Itf. Your belllg her. right now indicates&#13;
that )'ou are tnterested in getting ahead&#13;
preparing for a race of some kind.&#13;
II"" do )·ou expeel to be earning a hving&#13;
rl.... e leaf'S from no,.,'!'"&#13;
". w8ntlo teach hi tory or social studies&#13;
on a hIgh hool _ mayhe on a coUeg.&#13;
~etlme." replied Greg&#13;
"Look round this room." I said. tH.&#13;
did I , "You·r. probably lookong al ten&#13;
people who will he applyong for the same&#13;
job you'll he alt.r when you graduat •. Lik.&#13;
11or not, the)' are yOW' competilors ...&#13;
e\tn n ..&#13;
'\I'hat I ...·a. trymg to say," I continued,&#13;
og noone had cut In."Is that the beUer&#13;
person is .ducated, the bett.r will be the&#13;
\'1 h can render . Ole finer&#13;
p&lt;oduCI ...111 he he abl to make and&#13;
the hIgh r '" III be that person's eventual&#13;
Ilion on the tottrn pole of success And&#13;
my de-fiOlhonof Utt is in bemg a useful&#13;
human being ..&#13;
ThOK around the table were listening so&#13;
I r n ....Ith the ball ...h,l. I still had il "You&#13;
don't have to Itterally give lOmebody a&#13;
blood)' """" 10 order to gel ah.ad in IiI •.&#13;
Only n arrogant person would try that&#13;
t hmque and ....ould probably com. out&#13;
nd best Arrogance IS no asset 10&#13;
anyone It's filty per cenl blull and certaInly&#13;
no 1001 to use when you are trying to&#13;
make people see things your way_ I can't&#13;
thlOk 01 a songl. arrogant person who ever&#13;
won h, last balll ....&#13;
.. , Just want to Iiv. and I.t Iiv.," said&#13;
Greg. "W. ought to dev.lop a soci.ty in&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
which you can find your place without&#13;
every move being a competitive effort&#13;
where you have to darn near knock&#13;
somebody down in order to gel ahead. It&#13;
J.an . . . beautiful, bright-eyed and&#13;
serious. . . was listening to this exchange.&#13;
"You've got to break it up, fellows, she&#13;
said. "The bell will ring in a minute." We&#13;
quickly picked up our books and went to&#13;
five diHerent classrooms.&#13;
Herwalching the clock was lucky lor me&#13;
because I needed time to think over what&#13;
else I wanted to say to Greg. Very late that&#13;
evening my thoughts came into locus&#13;
along these lines ....&#13;
I know where a person could go to get&#13;
a....ay lrom this rough-house king 01 the hill&#13;
business. There are countries where you&#13;
go to school and learn what the govern·&#13;
ment wants you to learn. "University" is&#13;
the fancy name for a propaganda center&#13;
and you won't even know the names of the&#13;
administrators. Your job will be assigned,&#13;
your wages fIXed, your dwelling place&#13;
state-owned. Your health will he car.d lor&#13;
(rom the cradle to the grave. You will be&#13;
told when, where and lor whom to vote.&#13;
You will have security ... and you will be&#13;
a slave.&#13;
I prefer to lake my chances playing&#13;
"King 01 the Hill". And I think that many&#13;
of you reading this will choose the Ire.&#13;
enterprise game because you are already&#13;
showing a strong tendency of wanting t(lrun&#13;
things. That, I think, is good.&#13;
However, you will eventually learn that&#13;
in our society there is a lot more to&#13;
adulthood than having the ability to heget&#13;
a child or rire a gun. Nor is becoming an&#13;
adult an automatic happening based on&#13;
chronological age. Economic self.&#13;
sufficiency is also a measure of maturity.&#13;
Expect this in our society ... It will only&#13;
be when you are entirely on your own that&#13;
you will he numhered among the lullfledged,&#13;
dues-paying adult memhers 01 the&#13;
trihe.&#13;
List.n, Greg ... Your time to lake over&#13;
will be here sooner than you think. And in&#13;
many cases, befor. you are lully pr.pared&#13;
... If there ever is such a time. The quirks&#13;
of timing will be one of your many&#13;
p-oblems. It's strange ... when you are&#13;
yOWlg and impatient, time seems to go so&#13;
slowly. You wish that you could speed il&#13;
up. And when you ar. older, time goes&#13;
much too last.&#13;
And actually, you don't have to worry&#13;
much about finding your station in lile&#13;
your place on the totem pole. Yo~'~~&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 8&#13;
November 16. 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven TaIls&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Marggie TaIls&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John potenle&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Advert~sing Manager&#13;
Busmess Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
r&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Ma,;,c Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the students 01 the University o( Wisconsin.&#13;
P k&#13;
'de Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Mailing address IS Parkside s Newscope&#13;
ar sr " .. d edito . It I h '&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Busmess an 1 rta e ep one number is 658-&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
picking it out right now. You are already at&#13;
one of the lower levels riding the escalator&#13;
to success. (Pardon the mixed metaphor&#13;
... totem pole and escalato.r.) Thousands&#13;
are riding right along With you. And&#13;
sometime, somewhere along the way,&#13;
somebody will tell you where to get oIl.&#13;
And don't be surprised if that person IS a&#13;
Ph.D.&#13;
In totidem verbis, id est vita.&#13;
&lt;Latin: in total words, that is life, or&#13;
that's Ihe way life is.)&#13;
Madison, Wis. - (I.P.l - An at!emptlo&#13;
steer away Irom the tradilional Iccno-,.&#13;
quiz course toward a multidisciplinary&#13;
approach has resulted in a new course fll'&#13;
Ihe Integrated Liberal Studies program at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin, according to&#13;
Prolessor Robert A. Kimbrough, cbair.&#13;
man 01 the department.&#13;
Tilied "Approaches to Knowl.dge", tlle&#13;
year-long four-credit course is designedto&#13;
provide a means of drawing logether IIId&#13;
integrating the facts, ideas and points al&#13;
view developed within each 01 three baoic&#13;
courses which ILS freshmen take d~&#13;
their first semester. These cOW"SeSceQ&#13;
around the three disciplines - nabal&#13;
science, social science and the humanitia.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4,00 P.M: TO IHO P.M.&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave. KENOSHA - 657·5191&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a day/7 doys a week&#13;
Organ Music Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2.a.m.-&#13;
Coming Saturday, November 21st&#13;
popular recording artists&#13;
DANCE/NIGHTCLUB&#13;
9:30-12:30 _ Three Shows _ Activities Bldg.&#13;
ADMISSION: $1.50 IN ADVANCE _ $2.00 AT THE DOOR&#13;
TIC PARKSIDE &amp; WISCONSIN 10. REQUIRED T AFFAItIl&#13;
KETS AVAILABLE: ACTIVITIES BLDG., KENOSHA.&amp; RACINE STUDEN&#13;
, COMMENTS on the news&#13;
A Guided Free Wilt&#13;
SmaU Student&#13;
Bookstore a Closed Case&#13;
tor on r camp es are based in Aptor&#13;
are owned by Clarence Brockman (UWP&#13;
nd Ho ·ard Thielen. Both are natives of Apoperating&#13;
on all campuses of the&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An A ware Square&#13;
which you can find your place without&#13;
every move being a competitive effort&#13;
here you have to darn near knock&#13;
m bod} do 11 m order to get ahead. "&#13;
Jean . . . beautiful, bright-eyed and&#13;
serious ... was listening to this exchange.&#13;
"You've got to break it up, fellows, she&#13;
said. " The bell v.i ll ring in a minute." We&#13;
quickly picked up our books and went to&#13;
five different classrooms.&#13;
Her v.atching the clock was lucky for me&#13;
because I needed time to think over what&#13;
el e Iv. anted to say to Greg. ery late that&#13;
e•,ehing my thoughts came into focus&#13;
aJong these lines . . . .&#13;
I know where a person could go to get&#13;
away from thi rough-house king of the hill&#13;
busin . There are countries where you&#13;
go to chool and learn what the government&#13;
·ants you to learn. "University" is&#13;
the fancy name for a propaganda center&#13;
and you v.on't even know the names of the&#13;
admini trators. Your job will be assigned,&#13;
)Our wages fixed , your dwelling place&#13;
tate--0wned. Your health will be cared for&#13;
from the cradle to the grave. You will be&#13;
told when, where and for whom to vote. You will have security ... and you will be&#13;
a slave.&#13;
I prefer to lake my chances playing&#13;
" King or the HiJI". And I think that many&#13;
of you reading this will choose the free&#13;
enterprise game because you are already&#13;
howing a trong tendency of wanting tt'&#13;
run thing . That. I think, is good.&#13;
However, you will eventually learn that&#13;
in our society there is a lot more to&#13;
adulthood than ha\ing the ability to beget a child or fire a gun. Nor is becoming an&#13;
adult an automatic happening based on&#13;
chronolog1cal age. Economic selffic1ency&#13;
i al o a measure of maturity.&#13;
E peel lhi in our society . .. It will only&#13;
be when you are entirely on your own that&#13;
you will be nwnbered among the fullfledged,&#13;
dues-paying adult members of the&#13;
tribe.&#13;
Listen, Greg ... Your time to take over&#13;
will be here sooner than you think. And in&#13;
many cases, befo_re you are fully prepared&#13;
•.• 1f there ever 1s such a time. The quirks&#13;
of timing will be one of your many&#13;
problems. It's strange . . . when you are&#13;
young and impatient, time seems to go so slowly. You wish that you could speed it&#13;
up. And when you are older, time goes&#13;
much too fast.&#13;
And actually, you don't have to worry&#13;
much about finding your station in life . . .&#13;
your place on the totem pole. You're&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 8&#13;
November 16, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Marggie Taffs&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Advert~sing Manager&#13;
Busmess Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D.JI. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity_ o! Wisconsinp&#13;
k 'd Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Ma1lmg address 1s Parkside s Newscope ar si e, ' · · d ed't · 1 t I h · 3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Busmess an 1 ona e ep one number is 658-&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
picking it out right now. You are already at&#13;
one of the lower levels riding the escalator&#13;
to success. (Pardon the mixed metaphor&#13;
... totem pole and escalato_r.) Thousands&#13;
are riding right along with you. And&#13;
sometime, somewhere along the way,&#13;
somebody will tell you where to get _off.&#13;
And don't be surprised if that person 1s a&#13;
Ph.D.&#13;
In totidem verbis, id est vita.&#13;
(Latin : in total words, that is life, or&#13;
that's the way life is.)&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
Madison, Wis. - (I.P.) -An attempt to&#13;
steer away from the traditional lcctur&#13;
quiz course toward a multidisciplin~&#13;
approach has resulted in a new course for&#13;
the Integrated Liberal Studies Program at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin, according to&#13;
Professor Robert A. Kimbrough, chair.&#13;
man of the department.&#13;
Titled "Approaches to Knowledge". the&#13;
year-long four-credit course is designed 10&#13;
provide a means of drawing together aid&#13;
integrating the facts, ideas and points of&#13;
view devel9ped within each of three ba IC&#13;
courses which IL.5 freshmen take durq&#13;
their first semester. These courses center&#13;
around the three disciplines - natural&#13;
science, social science and the humanities.&#13;
{ I ,r&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4:00 P.M: TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657-5191&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a day/7 days a week&#13;
Organ Music Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2 .a.m.&#13;
Coming Saturday, N·ovember 21st&#13;
popular recording artists&#13;
DANCE/NIGHTCLUB&#13;
~:30-12:30 - Three Shows - Activities Bldg.&#13;
ADMISSION: $1.50 IN ADVANCE - $2.00 AT THE DOOR&#13;
TICKET PARKSIDE &amp; WISCONSIN ID. REQUIRED T AffAli!S&#13;
s AVAILABLE: ACTIVITIES BLDG., KENOSHA_&amp; RACINE sruoEN &#13;
LETTERS to the Editor&#13;
To the Editors: •&#13;
Even the most clouded water clears with&#13;
time. Dean MacKinney's speech to the&#13;
laculty clarilied m.any of the problems and&#13;
seemed to explain some new polictes,&#13;
inCludingthe parking situation.&#13;
If you haven't noticed recently, the&#13;
parking lot at Tallent Hall is patrolled&#13;
during the day by two me~ in a bl~,e station&#13;
wagon with the polite title of security&#13;
trol" stenciled on the side. If you&#13;
~ondered at lirst what they were doing (as&#13;
I did) I'll tell you; they are checking lor&#13;
parki~ permits on cars and giving&#13;
various sorts of fines to those who fail to&#13;
obserVethe "rules and regulations of the'&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside". It&#13;
seems strange that a school finds it&#13;
necessary to bring security to the parking&#13;
lot via numbered yellow stickers when&#13;
very few problems have ever been experienced&#13;
at any of the campuses in the&#13;
last lew years. (When asked about the&#13;
need for parking permits, those responsible&#13;
simply reply "You will receive a&#13;
ticket if yoy don't have one.") Possibly the&#13;
Wliversilyis anticipating increasing theft&#13;
as their university grows, the average&#13;
class size increases, the professors begin&#13;
to stress research and publishing over&#13;
teacbing and the university begins to&#13;
assume the impersonal air of so many of&#13;
wr "great universities".&#13;
I have yet to see the "security patrol"&#13;
looking for anything but who is in the&#13;
administration parking positions or the&#13;
existence of the yellow tags on the cars in&#13;
thelot. I rarely have seen their car or their.&#13;
people patrolling the grounds at night&#13;
when attack to persons or damage to&#13;
property is most likely to occur. Maybe&#13;
they have difficulty seeing the yellow&#13;
stickers at night or perhaps the administration&#13;
no longer needs their&#13;
preferred parking position since they have&#13;
not lound it practical to open their offices&#13;
at night.&#13;
It seems strange that-an administration&#13;
that has already approved plans for the&#13;
despoilment of massive land areas for&#13;
automobile parking feels compelled to&#13;
regulate parking at all. Parking permits&#13;
are given to any and all students upon&#13;
request but with or without a permit a&#13;
student still must park in the general&#13;
vicinity 01 the buildings. If a student&#13;
arrives at the parking lot and linds it filled,&#13;
he has no recourse but to park illegally&#13;
(i.e. in the apple orchards or in the corn&#13;
field, on top of or across yellow lines)&#13;
making that person subject to a ticket.&#13;
Someone at the lop, true to their new&#13;
style, that, of course, being efficiency, has&#13;
chosento stress the privately owned car as&#13;
the major mode of transportation to and&#13;
Irom the school, largely through the&#13;
neglect of a more convenient and reliable&#13;
bus system. The unwillingness of the&#13;
administration to allow yellow school&#13;
buses (dependable transportation) to&#13;
tarnish their image as an "Instant great&#13;
university" has contributed to this costly&#13;
and dangerous situation. Such is their&#13;
solution to an economic and ecological&#13;
problem.&#13;
il Parkside is to have its great rolling&#13;
sprawl 01 asphalt and concrete for the&#13;
deposition of the hundreds 01 metal boxes,&#13;
Why consider any type of planning? A&#13;
school built in the inner city would have&#13;
ample justification for strong regulation of&#13;
a minimum number of parking positions.&#13;
As it stands the only ones who are hurt&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
OISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPaR rs CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62NO ST.&#13;
Aid try one ouf! (or bothl&#13;
Cheerleadlng" Rangerettes&#13;
(fined) are the occasional visitor the&#13;
student who brought the "wrong" ~ar to&#13;
school, or the person who made the&#13;
mistake ?f believing that Dean MacKinney&#13;
w3;s se.rlOus about cooperation at the&#13;
~l\:erslty ~d swung his car into an adrmrustrator&#13;
s parking position.&#13;
.If we can be told that we must earn the&#13;
nght t? participate in governing the&#13;
umversity, I wonder when and where the&#13;
administration "earned" the right to&#13;
administer. Or does the administration&#13;
lik~ the parking permits, exist because it&#13;
exists?&#13;
I for one, would like to think that the&#13;
"security patrol" exists for more broadly&#13;
based aims than to keep students out of&#13;
administrators' privileged parking&#13;
positions and cut a few Score well needed&#13;
steps .off their walk to their second story&#13;
sanctlonary at Tallent Hall. I also wish to&#13;
believe that the administration exists for a&#13;
purpose greater than that of creating an&#13;
"instant great university' whether the&#13;
students want it that way or not. IT not,&#13;
what do those shortened steps cost and&#13;
what is to become 01 a school that has&#13;
made an admirable start in teaching?&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In response to the article by Ken Konkol&#13;
in the Oct. 26issue of the Newscope, part of&#13;
the "silent majority" is now ready to&#13;
speak.&#13;
Ken asked the question, "Do we have a&#13;
competent Psych teacher at this school?"&#13;
I believe that we have two, although they&#13;
are not full-time staff. Dr. McDonald, a&#13;
practicing clinical psychologist, is pretty&#13;
competent, if one can pass judgement&#13;
after a half semester in his class. Dr.&#13;
Ciotola, also a clinical psychologist and ad&#13;
hoc to the staff, is an excellent psych&#13;
teacher who doesn't just "teach froin the&#13;
book", but gives his classes in-depth insights&#13;
into current research, opportunity&#13;
for student research and the benefit of his&#13;
clinical experience - plus - he doesn't&#13;
put you to sleep! However, he is presently&#13;
teaching in the Education Department,&#13;
which seems a waste of this man's talents.&#13;
I believe from discussing this with other&#13;
students, that the majority of psych&#13;
students concur in my observations. Both&#13;
students and University should be grateful&#13;
that these competent psychologists make&#13;
themselves available for teaching, and the&#13;
Psych Department could at least give&#13;
them their choice of Psych courses (esp,&#13;
2nd and 3rd leveD and hours that are&#13;
compatible with their schedules.&#13;
Ken why don't you interview the "silent&#13;
majority" 01 students currently taking&#13;
experimental, intra and other psych&#13;
courses, and let the University know just&#13;
how bad or how good it really is? Perhaps&#13;
we could then petition the Psych Departoosr~&#13;
~ WED. ~&#13;
NDY. 18&#13;
MEETING&#13;
HM. 101-OR&#13;
4:00&#13;
CLUB&#13;
me~t for some positive changes in policy,&#13;
~IDg both those psychologists who are&#13;
experienced in research and those who are&#13;
competent to teach.&#13;
Name withheld by requesL&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Upon my discovery that your newspaper&#13;
was being used as a crying towel Cor some&#13;
of the vets, I thought that you might appredate&#13;
a friend that has a dryer. After&#13;
wringing my copy of the NEWSCOPE out I&#13;
went up to the Student Records Ollice and&#13;
acquainted myself with a lew of the lacts&#13;
that are available to the public (obviously&#13;
some people don't do this). First, there are&#13;
approximately 250 continuing veterans&#13;
here and 401 of us altogether (not 252).&#13;
Second, I found out that the secretary went&#13;
through the veterans' papers alphabetically&#13;
starting with A and thai my&#13;
papers were sent on the 19th of October.&#13;
This means that the secretary started to&#13;
HAND process these papers (time consuming,&#13;
to say the least). including adds&#13;
and drops, on approximately the ninth of&#13;
October. That means that they waited only&#13;
IS working days for the finicky and fickle&#13;
vets (of which I am one) to make up their&#13;
minds as to which COUI'SeS they really&#13;
wanted.&#13;
Getting back to a few timely facts, I&#13;
found that it took the V.A. only 15working&#13;
days to receive, process, send, and get&#13;
cashed their monetary rewards tor services&#13;
rendered (for the less concerned,&#13;
that means I got my check on the 6th of&#13;
November). That still puts Decemher a&#13;
long way orr.&#13;
I have also discovered, in my short lime&#13;
II year) here, that it is the Students&#13;
Records Office, not Student Affairs, that is&#13;
concerned about our money, and that it is&#13;
Student Records. again, who is responsible&#13;
for sending out our certificates.&#13;
Hank and Ted are correct ID sayIng thai&#13;
it is too late Cor any corrections to take&#13;
place; however, if they can convince their&#13;
fellow vets to make no mistakes, such as&#13;
filling out their own fonns and not makmg&#13;
any program changes, I am sure the&#13;
Records office would be more than happy&#13;
to send out your papers as soon as the&#13;
registration period is completed So use&#13;
your Johnson's Baby Shampoo and cry-nomore.&#13;
Louie Petts 6755808U.S. RR&#13;
Pcrk s ide Feature Film Series&#13;
Presents:&#13;
ALAN ARKIN&#13;
IN&#13;
THE HEART&#13;
IS A&#13;
LONELY&#13;
HUNTER&#13;
FRI. NOV. 20, 8:00 P,M,&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
AOMISSION: 7S W'Trl&#13;
PARK510E &amp; WISCONSIN 10.&#13;
FOR MEN ONLY&#13;
Join the Bleacher Bums&#13;
meeting - Wed., Nov. 18&#13;
4:00 - rm. 101 - gr.&#13;
... )&#13;
Good old·time flavor!&#13;
LETTERS to the Editor ment for some po iti ·e change in policy,&#13;
ing both those psycholog1 t ho are To the Editors:&#13;
Even the most clouded ~ater clears with . e Dean MacKinney's speech to the&#13;
f&#13;
tiJllul.ty clarified many of the problems and ac . 1· · med to explam some new po icies,&#13;
~Iuding the parking situation.&#13;
UlCif ou haven't noticed recently, the&#13;
ki~ lot at Tallent Hall is patrolled&#13;
:~g the day by two men in a blue station&#13;
gon with the polite title of "security wa trol" stenciled on the side. If you&#13;
pa ondered at first what they were doing (as r did), I'll tell you; they are checkin~ ~or rking permits on cars and givmg&#13;
~rious sorts of fines to those who fail to&#13;
~bserve the "rules_ and r_egulatioi:is ?,f the · University of Wisconsm-Parkside . It&#13;
seems strange that a . school finds. it&#13;
necessary to bring security to the parkmg&#13;
Jot via numbered yellow stickers when&#13;
very few problems have ever b~n experienced&#13;
at any of the campuses m the&#13;
last few years. (When. asked about the&#13;
need for parking permits, those responsible&#13;
simply reply "You will receive a ticket if yoy don't have one.") Pos_sibly the&#13;
university is anticipating increasmg theft&#13;
as their university grows, the avera~e&#13;
class size increases, the professors begm&#13;
to stress research and publishing over&#13;
teaching and the university begins to&#13;
assume the impersonal air of so many of our "great universities".&#13;
I have yet to see the "security patrol"&#13;
looking for anything but who is in the&#13;
administration parking positions or ~e&#13;
existence of the yellow tags on the cars m&#13;
the Jot. I rarely have seen theiF car or their.&#13;
people patrolling the grounds at night&#13;
when attack to persons or da~age to&#13;
property is most likely to occur. Maybe&#13;
they have difficulty seeing the yellow&#13;
stickers at night or perhaps the administration&#13;
no longer needs their&#13;
preferred parking position since they have&#13;
not found it practical to open their offices&#13;
at night. _ . It seems strange that an administration&#13;
that has already approved plans for the&#13;
despoilment of massive land areas for&#13;
automobile parking feels compelled to&#13;
regulate parking at all. Parking permits&#13;
are given to any and all students upon&#13;
request but with or without a permit a student still must park in the general&#13;
vicinity of the buildings. If a student&#13;
arrives at the parking lot and finds it filled,&#13;
he has no recourse but to park illegally&#13;
(i.e. in the apple orchards or in the corn&#13;
field, on top of or across yellow lines)&#13;
making that person subject to a ticket.&#13;
Someone at the top, true to their new style, that, of course, being efficiency, has&#13;
chosen to stress the privately owned car as&#13;
the major mode of transportation to and&#13;
from the school, largely through the&#13;
neglect of a more convenient and reliable&#13;
bus system. The unwillingness of the&#13;
administration to allow yellow school&#13;
buses (dependable transportation) to&#13;
tarnish their image as an "Instant great&#13;
university" has contributed to this costly&#13;
and dangerous situation. Such is their&#13;
solution to an economic and ecological&#13;
problem.&#13;
If Parkside is to have its great rolling&#13;
sprawl of asphalt and concrete for the&#13;
deposition of the hundreds of metal boxes,&#13;
why consider any type of planning? A&#13;
school built in the inner city would have&#13;
ample justification for strong regulation of&#13;
a minimum number of parking positions.&#13;
As it stands the only ones who are hurt&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPOR rs CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST.&#13;
CIIT IT OUT!&#13;
And try one out! (or both)&#13;
Cheerleadlng &amp; Rangerettes&#13;
(fined) are the occasional visitor the&#13;
.itudent who brought the "wrong" dar to&#13;
~ool, or the person who made the&#13;
mistake ?f believing that Dean MacKinney&#13;
w~s se_rious about cooperation at the&#13;
umversity and swung his car into an administrator's&#13;
parking position.&#13;
If we can be told that we must earn the&#13;
right to participate in governing the&#13;
university, I wonder when and where the&#13;
administration "earned" the right to&#13;
administer. Or does the administration&#13;
like the parking permits, exist because it&#13;
exists?&#13;
I for one, would like to think that the&#13;
"security patrol" exists for more broadly&#13;
based aims than to keep students out of&#13;
administrators' privileged parking&#13;
positions and cut a few score well needed&#13;
steps off their walk to their second story&#13;
sanctionary at Tallent Hall. I also wish to&#13;
believe that the administration exists for a purpose greater than that of creating an&#13;
"instant great university' whether the&#13;
students want it that way or not. If not,&#13;
what do those shortened steps cost and&#13;
what is to become of a school that has&#13;
made an admirable start in teaching?&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In response to the article by Ken Konkol&#13;
in the Oct. 26 issue of the Newscope, part of&#13;
the "silent majority" is now ready to&#13;
speak.&#13;
Ken asked the question, "Do we have a :ompetent Psych teacher at this school?"&#13;
I believe that we have two, although they&#13;
are not full-time staff. Dr. McDonald, a practicing clinical psychologist, is pretty&#13;
competent, if one can pass judgement&#13;
after a half semester in his class. Dr.&#13;
Ciotola, also a clinical psychologist and ad&#13;
hoc to the staff, is an excellent psych&#13;
teacher who doesn't just "teach from the&#13;
book", but gives his classes in-depth ~- sights into current research, opporturuty&#13;
for student research and the benefit of his&#13;
clinical experience - plus - he doesn't&#13;
put you to sleep! However, he is presently&#13;
teaching in the Education Department,&#13;
which seems a waste of this man's talents.&#13;
I believe from discussing this with other&#13;
students that the majority of psych&#13;
students' concur in my observations. Both&#13;
students and Univer i y shoul be grateful&#13;
that these competent psychologists make&#13;
themselves available for teaching, and ~e&#13;
Psych Department could at least give&#13;
them their choice of Psych courses (esp.&#13;
2nd and 3rd level) and hours that are&#13;
compatible with their schedules. . Ken, why don't you interview the "sil~nt&#13;
majority" of students currently taking&#13;
experimental, intro and other ps?'ch&#13;
courses and let the University know Just&#13;
how batl or how good it really is? Perhaps we could then petition the Psych Departo0S1~&#13;
&#13;
~ WED. ~ NOV. 18&#13;
MEETING&#13;
RM. IOI-GR&#13;
4:00&#13;
CLUB&#13;
experienced in research and those who are competent to teach.&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
, 'ame withheld by reque t.&#13;
Upon my discovery that your new paper was being used as a crying towel for some&#13;
of the Ve~. I thought that you might appreciate&#13;
a friend that ha a dryer. After&#13;
wringing my copy of the 'EW COPE out I&#13;
went up to the Student Records Office and&#13;
3cquainted myself with a fe of the facts&#13;
that are available to the public (obviously some people don't do this). First, there are approximately 250 continuing veteran&#13;
here and 401 of us altogether (not 2521.&#13;
Second, I found out that the secretary went&#13;
through the veterans' papers alphabetically&#13;
starting with A and that my&#13;
papers were sent on the 19th of October.&#13;
This means that the secretary tarted to&#13;
HAND process these papers (time consuming,&#13;
to say the least&gt;. including add&#13;
and drops, on approximately the ninth of&#13;
October. That means that they Y.aited only&#13;
15 working days for the fimcky and fickle&#13;
vets (of which I am one) to make up their&#13;
minds as to which course the · really&#13;
wanted.&#13;
Getting back to a few timely fact , I&#13;
found that it took the V.A. only 15 working&#13;
days to receive, process, send, and get&#13;
cashed their monetary rewards for services&#13;
rendered (for the less concerned, that means I got rny check on the 6th of&#13;
November). That still puts December a long way off. I have also discovered, in my short time&#13;
(1 year) here, that it is the Students&#13;
Records Office, not Student Affairs, that is&#13;
concerned about our money, and that it is&#13;
Parkside Feature Film Series&#13;
Presents:&#13;
ALAN ARKIN&#13;
IN&#13;
THE HEART&#13;
IS A&#13;
LONELY&#13;
HUNTER&#13;
FRI, NOV. 201 8:00 P.M.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDI G&#13;
ADMISSION: 75 1Tri&#13;
PARKSIDE &amp; ISCO SIN ID.&#13;
FOR MEN ONLY&#13;
Join the Bleacher Bums&#13;
meeting - Wed., Nov. 18&#13;
4:00 - rm. 101 - gr.&#13;
Good old-time flavor! &#13;
THORN&#13;
B} KE' KO'IKOL&#13;
One of the most interesting parts of this&#13;
paper are the teuers to the editor 111e}&#13;
how that not all our readers are as&#13;
epa theuc as most. There w a a vel"} ruce&#13;
one 10 the last I ue from Henr) Kozicki of&#13;
Humamu Mr KOZiCki outlined how&#13;
tea hong excellence hould be oblaoned&#13;
rm _orry, IT KOZiCki, it ain't always so&#13;
\ teacher 15 a person who imparts&#13;
knov.ledge to hI. tudents. a man from&#13;
hom hi ludenlS learn If students&#13;
c Moll am from therr Instructor then he&#13;
e mnot be con Ide red a teacher On the&#13;
averag man might be a better teacher&#13;
it Ph 0 than that _ me man wa as an&#13;
\.. bul II 01", 10110,",.that a lou ey MA&#13;
rm ht be an t:\ en lou ICT Ph D • witnessed&#13;
b) Q Iew Ph n.' on C'amptb who have&#13;
t,k"gl'lYraIM n&lt;' gethnK their Dector.'h'&#13;
\LL u mu t be h ndled on an&#13;
I. lJl\'lUt: \L ba' once 'I' so ouen the&#13;
c t thut the m~trudor the department&#13;
he d d' Ilk"" penon"II) I olten a better&#13;
I 3,,:h r than the on who kl.· a&#13;
I ',r H U tum ~UI "hOI. t able 10&#13;
Jut! 't' rom~tt'nce'll the d partm nt&#13;
ht' d '" ho h In!'Jotructors at coffee&#13;
hour" ,0 F('lIo\o\ faculty members&#13;
ho t ~him holy oul Id' of c1 't '0_&#13;
ludln 'Aho re\\llhhlm e\er)' da)' and&#13;
m"flt Il ht· I compt·tt·nl and uHer If he i&#13;
r.lt" mil 'rt JUndmg Y I&#13;
111l'T ....t·re n grt'ut many complalnlS&#13;
r -~'I\l'(tfrom tudt'nl~ about a rtaln&#13;
IMtructor I. 1 ) 'ar Th r ull ....as that&#13;
thl m,," 'Ail h Id to 10.....r le\'('1 daes&#13;
thlS )t·,r \\ho' bnt(ht Id a 'A0lSlhat't The&#13;
rc utll ,hat mort.".luch·nL .. are expo eel to&#13;
h 10 IlllprH'nc' at the 10.... r le,,'el than&#13;
....~t before Lt'l cOlnl"t~'1thiS man's class&#13;
Il tI El\TIHi';I.Y ~ hl' can concenlrate hi&#13;
I·(forl. s,oul}on rc 'ar h. since he I qwte&#13;
)(noo a th.;.ll In tb.' pr . nl Situation both&#13;
SUlUupiJe fllorUls&#13;
&amp; (jrunJwwes&#13;
,_ WUll10&#13;
VII .. f K WlIIISTIXK&#13;
3021-15T" ST&#13;
KeNoSHA WISCONSIN 531"0&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your Back...&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet!&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOIII1HOWN KENOSHA&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY . PIPES'&#13;
·PAPERS&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
DlU'OND COH1Ul.TAHn excepted&#13;
be and his students suffer: the other way&#13;
around. aU would benefit.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
There are .basically lour groups of&#13;
people at this school. In order of their&#13;
importance they are: Students, teachers,&#13;
researchers, and administrators. Just as&#13;
no one can write (or a paper and be a&#13;
student and do both jobs well, no man can&#13;
both teach and do research and admirustrate.&#13;
A man should be hired either to leach.&#13;
research, or administrate, one of the&#13;
three. You cannot hold the same slandards&#13;
here as in Madison, the situation is entirely&#13;
dillerent. In ladison graduate students&#13;
aid In the research and teaching assistants&#13;
do the classwork. We are thankful that this&#13;
situation does not exist here. But still Dean&#13;
MacKmney preaches Publish or Perish&#13;
ana "lnsLanl Greatness". I hope he soon&#13;
opens his eyes and notices that. he can&#13;
expect competence in only one of tilt three.&#13;
He prefers research. but the students. lor&#13;
whom this school exists, vote 100 per cent&#13;
to 0 lor COMPETENT TEACHING. If a&#13;
man cannot serve the people for whom an&#13;
l~lItulion exists, he should tender his&#13;
resignation,&#13;
+ + +&#13;
111,s is a student paper and should be&#13;
upported by the students. But we need&#13;
mote than the donations we receive (or&#13;
sale to survive. Why not add $1 to the&#13;
segregated fund from everyone's tuition to&#13;
use in our support? I conducted a semiindependent&#13;
poll this past week and lound&#13;
the majority of students in favor of such a&#13;
plan. $1 Irom each 01 4.000 studenls per&#13;
semester would enable us to bring you a&#13;
much ,mproved product. What do you&#13;
think" Write our editors and let us know&#13;
your reactions to the paper as a whole and&#13;
THORN Don't leave it to the guy next to&#13;
you - he's as apaUletic as you are. You&#13;
WRITE'&#13;
+ + +&#13;
In the race lor competent Psych&#13;
teachers, Parsons is in the lead with three&#13;
votes. McDonald IS close behind with three&#13;
and Morrow trails the two with one, but he&#13;
is far ahead of the tvlO who have now&#13;
received a total of T1 votes in the incompetent&#13;
class. Cast your votes with&#13;
THOR care of this paper. You have two&#13;
weeks lell.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 17: Lecture - Pulitzer prizewinning&#13;
ecologist Rene Dubos,&#13;
professor of environmental&#13;
bi.omedicine at Rockefeller University,&#13;
Will present a free public lecture&#13;
sponsored by the UWP Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Commitlee at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Wednesday. Nov. 18:Film· Parkside Film&#13;
Society will sponsor showing of "Duck&#13;
Soup" at 8 p.m. in Greenquisl HaU.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Friday, ov.20: Film· Feature film, "The&#13;
Heart Is a Lonely Hunter'" will be&#13;
shown at 8 p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Building, sponsored by the Student&#13;
Activities Ollice and SA Board. Admission&#13;
75 cents.&#13;
Sunda~, TOV.~: Concert - University&#13;
Artists Sertes concert will feature&#13;
UWP Affiliate Artists Keiko Furiyoshi&#13;
and: Annie Petit in a violin and piano&#13;
reclt.al at 4 p.m. in the Greenquist&#13;
Concourse. General admission $1&#13;
students SO cents (children 12 and&#13;
under free).&#13;
~ilm . Intercollegiate Film Council&#13;
Will sponsor showing of "War of the&#13;
Buttons" at 7 p.m. in the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater, Racine. Free tickets&#13;
available in the Greenquist Concourse&#13;
111ursday and Friday preceding the&#13;
film. .&#13;
WATCHlS II&#13;
._·AU.......&#13;
UIIrMfo.... L_l ..&#13;
...-.-..,.&#13;
c.._tM. T''''&#13;
CAC_I_&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
W~tCh6 _ Je_lry&#13;
DloIIalond Setting&#13;
COlllplete Rtp.ir&#13;
. Dept.&#13;
I.., De~gfting&#13;
CHIHA. I&#13;
IRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
LETTERS to&#13;
the editors&#13;
To the Editors: k id congratulations to the staff of Par SI e&#13;
Newscope on the success of our up-and·&#13;
eomin campus pubHcation!. rhe free&#13;
interJange of discussion, g?od cov~rage ,&#13;
and editorial comment are Impres,slve.&#13;
One "too-bad" note, howev.er, .IS .Ken&#13;
Konkol's resort to yellow·dog JournalIsm.&#13;
If he keeps it up his articles will turn out to&#13;
be a crown of thorns that will prove more&#13;
painful than impressive.&#13;
erude, blatant insult. and ','expos':1re of&#13;
people" type journalism IS ObVlOUS!Y&#13;
meant to attract attentIOn. But this IS embarrassingly&#13;
immature and Konkol s~ould&#13;
realize that a University' audIence&#13;
deserves better than that. . .&#13;
What is even more appallmg IS that&#13;
Konkol threatens to fertilize all of our local&#13;
newspapers with his opinion. Fortunately,&#13;
they know consid~rably mor,e about&#13;
responsibility of the press and lIbel laws&#13;
than he does.&#13;
Someone should tell Konkol thitt all he&#13;
will accomplish is reinforcement' of the&#13;
idea commonly held by the tax-I'!'ying&#13;
publiC: that there are too many sludents&#13;
enrolled at universities who are m-'&#13;
tellectually, academically and&#13;
emotionally unfit to meet its challenges.&#13;
Fran Jaeschke&#13;
CLASS I FI ED&#13;
ADVERTI SEMENT&#13;
Classified advertisements are 50 cents&#13;
per line (or anyone interested. All&#13;
c1assifieds must be submitted to the&#13;
Newscope offices at Kenosha campus by&#13;
noon the Thursday before Monday.&#13;
publication.&#13;
Interested In Law?&#13;
Interested in law? There .&#13;
organizational meeting of thewu:,be III&#13;
Pre·law Club at7:30 p.m. this Wedn8rbicIe&#13;
Nov. 18. in room Dill of Gree . eada"&#13;
U you can't attend and would~t au:&#13;
member of the club, call 652-4142. to be,&#13;
-~-------&#13;
Xn,~&#13;
f!))en&#13;
BARBERSTUDIO&#13;
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with AlmondJne Sou.ce'&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME FI.B&#13;
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Ph. 654-1375&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
Brat or Steak Or Beefburger&#13;
ond&#13;
.French Fries or Onion Rings.&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
ond&#13;
Schooner or Bottle or Glass of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday th F 'd ru n ay 7p.m, to 8&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
I I . Avoiloble For Porties&#13;
nc udlng Frat . ernlty and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
"~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest C I 9 orner _ 4 ond Highwoy 50&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fr'I.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Faculty .&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.) Cr,du.te &lt;Amotocist-Certified Di,montololist&#13;
Y~g8tm4&#13;
It dMJ nwb • d;U~te'f1ce wlter~ you shop!&#13;
p."',&#13;
THORN&#13;
Wtnlj iJ~ gf ori b&#13;
&amp; (jrunh.ouu.s&#13;
- fta&#13;
0 21 • 75TH T&#13;
NO HA W15CO IN 53140&#13;
Thrift Threads&#13;
For Your Back. ..&#13;
1-ar Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet.'&#13;
MULLE 'S&#13;
0&#13;
T1HE&#13;
DAISY&#13;
OLES&#13;
1&#13;
he nd his tuden suffer: the other way&#13;
around, all \\OU)d benefit. T + -+&#13;
There are basically four groups ~f&#13;
people at this school. In order of their&#13;
importance they are: Students, teachers,&#13;
r rch rs, and administrators. Just as&#13;
no one can ·rite for a paper and be a&#13;
_tudent and do both jobs well, no man can&#13;
th te ch and do research and ad·&#13;
minLtrate. man should be hired either to teach,&#13;
r rch, or administrate. one of the&#13;
three. You cannot hold the same standards&#13;
her a · in adi on, the situation is entirely&#13;
different. In . tadi on graduate students&#13;
id in the re arch and teaching assistants&#13;
do th cl . work. We are thankful that this&#13;
itu t ion d not exist here. But still Dean&#13;
ta Kinney preaches Publish or Perish&#13;
nd " ln,tant Greatne " . I hope he soon&#13;
hi y _ and notices that ,he can&#13;
ct competence in only one of the three.&#13;
H pr r earch, but the students, for&#13;
horn thi _chool exi ts, \ote 100 per cent&#13;
to O for CO. 1PETE. "T TEACHING. If a&#13;
rve the people for whom an , he hould tender his&#13;
+&#13;
In the race for competent Psych&#13;
t ach r , P · i in the lead with three&#13;
vot . lcDonald i close behind with three&#13;
and torrow trail the two with one, but he&#13;
· far ahead of the two who have now&#13;
receh d a total of Tl \'Otes in the in·&#13;
competent class. Cast your votes with&#13;
THOR. · care of this paper. You have two&#13;
w left.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
Tuesday, ·ov. 17: Lecture - Pulitzer prizewinning&#13;
ecologist Rene Dubos,&#13;
profes or of environmental&#13;
biomedicine at Rockefeller University,&#13;
will present a free public lecture&#13;
ponsored by the UWP Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Greenqui t HaJI.&#13;
\\.edne day, 'ov. 18: Film - Parkside Film&#13;
Society will ponsor showing of "Duck&#13;
Soup" at 8 p.m. in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Friday, ·ov. 20: Film - Feature film, "The&#13;
Heart Is a Lonely Hunter", will be&#13;
hown at 8 p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Building, pon ored by the Student&#13;
Activitie Office and SA Board. Ad·&#13;
mt ion 75 cents.&#13;
, nda&gt;:, . ·o\'. ~ : Concert - University&#13;
rti ts nes concert will feature&#13;
WP Af~liate ~ -lists Keiko Furiyoshi&#13;
an&lt;1: Annie Pettt m a violin and piano&#13;
recital at 4 p.m. in the Greenquist&#13;
Concourse. General admission $1&#13;
tudents SO cents (children 12 and&#13;
under free ).&#13;
Film · Intercollegiate Film Council&#13;
will ponsor showing of "War of the&#13;
Button ·· at 7 p.m. in the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater, Racine. Free tickets&#13;
available in the Greenquist Concourse&#13;
Thursday and Friday preceding the&#13;
film. ·&#13;
WATCHES 7~1 _ R-'-EP..;.. A:.;.: IR:..D::.:E:.:.. PT:.:.·--l&#13;
u,~.:,.; "~t!:..,. W~t&lt;hts - Jewelry • .,.. . -- Dia•olld Setting c-... • . Ti-.• Cofflplete Re~1r s..c-.11n Dept.&#13;
CHINA I&#13;
liat Du,gning&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
DOWNTOWN_ KENOSHA&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty&#13;
( ust Sho l.O.) Gud111te G«moloc1st-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
~C.Ctm-1,&#13;
It d~s m11h II difference where you shop!&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted&#13;
LETTERS to&#13;
the editors&#13;
To the Editors: k ·d&#13;
Congratulations to the staff of Par s1 de&#13;
Newsco on the success of our up-an -&#13;
comin ~ampus publ~cation!. The free&#13;
interc;ange of discussion, g?O&lt;i cov~rage '&#13;
and editorial comment are impres~1ve.&#13;
One " too-bad" note, howev_er, is _Ken&#13;
Konkol's resort to yell?w-do~ Journalism.&#13;
rr he keeps it up his articles will turn out to&#13;
be a crown of thorns that will prove more&#13;
painful than impressive. Crude blatant insult and "expos1:1re of&#13;
people"' type journal_ism is ~b~ously&#13;
meant to attract attent10n. But this is em- barrassingly immature and Konkol s~ould&#13;
realize that a University audience&#13;
deserves better than that.&#13;
What is even more appalling is that&#13;
Konkol threatens to fertilize all of our local&#13;
newspapers with his opinion. Fortunately,&#13;
they know consid~rably mor_e about&#13;
responsibility of the press and hbel laws&#13;
than he does. . Someone should tell Konkol that all he&#13;
will accomplish is reinforcement ·of_ !he&#13;
idea commonly held by the tax-~ymg&#13;
public: that there are too many stud~ts&#13;
enrolled at universities who are mtellectually,&#13;
academically and&#13;
emotionally unfit to meet its challenges.&#13;
Fran Jaeschke&#13;
CLASS I Fl ED&#13;
ADVERTISEMENT&#13;
Classified advertisements are 50 cents&#13;
per line for anyone interested. All&#13;
classifieds must be submitted to the&#13;
Newscope offices at Kenosha campus by&#13;
noon the Thursday before Monday&#13;
publication.&#13;
Interested In Law?&#13;
Interested in law? There Will&#13;
organizational meeting of the p be .an&#13;
Pre-law ~ub at 7:30 p.m. this We&lt;1.:ks1c1e&#13;
Nov. 18, m room D111 of Green . esday,&#13;
H you can't attend and would 11~'% flan.&#13;
member of the club, call 652-4142_ be a&#13;
~~&#13;
• (jj)en&#13;
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4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
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Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
3sters&#13;
.Supper Club&#13;
8040&#13;
Sheridan Rd,&#13;
Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIOARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almond.ine Sau.ce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRI.ME RIB&#13;
The\\ BRAT 1115&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
,French Fries or On,·on Rings. .&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or Bottle or Glass of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 ·p.m. to 8 P·111•&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20¢&#13;
1 I . Available For Parties nc uding Fr t . a ern,ty and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
·,~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
NorthweS t Corner 1-94 and Highway 50 &#13;
Vo&#13;
F· G&#13;
An U&#13;
PRE&#13;
Ie&#13;
FABRICS FOR S&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-8612 -&#13;
[)OWNTOW~ K~NOSHA&#13;
MARGURITTE'S&#13;
ROBES-Regular $15.00,&#13;
Special, $10.00.&#13;
Enjoy these cool&#13;
evenings in coz.y&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short qui lted: velvet&#13;
toned ribbon down&#13;
the Irant, Iined with&#13;
softest nylon&#13;
peach or&#13;
lavendor.&#13;
. Small,&#13;
Margueritte '·5 is open&#13;
9 until 9 Mondays and&#13;
Fridays, other weekdays&#13;
Sundays&#13;
Iram 10 c.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone, 652,2681&#13;
Donkey basketball&#13;
Friday night.&#13;
From Other&#13;
Campuses&#13;
Washington, D.C. - (I.P.J - In one of&#13;
the first court cases to deal with the&#13;
procedural rights of political student&#13;
organizations attempting to gain official&#13;
recognition, a U.S. District Court judge in&#13;
Connecticut has ordered Central Connecticut&#13;
State College to hold a hearing on&#13;
whether to recognize a local chapter of the&#13;
Students for a Democratic Society.&#13;
The chapter compiled with college&#13;
procedures in applying for recognition,&#13;
and stated that the local group did not&#13;
follow dictates from any national&#13;
organization.&#13;
CI'hedean of students, three faculty and&#13;
four students voted to recommend that the&#13;
administration grant recognition.&#13;
Nevertheless, President Don James&#13;
denied recognition on the grounds that in&#13;
his view the aims of the national SDS, and&#13;
the charter of the College were incompatible.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Pittsburgh, Pa. - (I.P.l - Chatham&#13;
College has adopted a new academic&#13;
program which frees the sl~dent from&#13;
traditional requirements and gives her an&#13;
opportunity to design the course of study&#13;
which hest fulfills her personal&#13;
educational interests and abilities.&#13;
Under the new program, the student&#13;
may complete the 34 courses required ~or&#13;
graduation by choosing freely from a .w,de&#13;
selection of courses in the humanities,&#13;
social and natural sciences.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
New London, Conn. - (I.P.l - For the&#13;
first time beginning this fall, 45 undergraduates&#13;
at Connecticut College will&#13;
serve as voting members on rune standing&#13;
committees and one special committee of&#13;
the faculty body.&#13;
Moreover, with one exception, the&#13;
number of student representatives elected&#13;
to each committee will equal the number&#13;
of those elected by the faculty. The single&#13;
departure from the principle. of parity is.on&#13;
the academic policy committee to which&#13;
students will elect three representatives as&#13;
opposed to nine from the faculty.&#13;
This innuential group receives and&#13;
considers all proposals relating to the&#13;
educational program of the college, and&#13;
out of it come recommendations for CuU&#13;
faculty action in such vital areas as&#13;
curriculum innovation or alteration,&#13;
requirements Cor the bachelor of arts&#13;
degree and the honors program.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Hamilton, N.Y. - (I.P.) - The students&#13;
and faculty of Colgate University have&#13;
combined to produce a system of oncampus&#13;
governance which they feel will&#13;
also be of value to sister institutions.&#13;
The governance machinery is designed&#13;
J) cope with the day-to-day administration&#13;
of the University. In effect, it is a coalition&#13;
of ejected representatives of the students&#13;
and faculty and designated administrators.&#13;
Through the council, the chief oncampus&#13;
governing body. and its subsidiary&#13;
commissions, communications have been&#13;
opened to all members of the college&#13;
community residing here.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Spartanburg, S.C. - (LP.) - In a move&#13;
designed to emphasize the positive aspects&#13;
of learning, Wofford College has altered its&#13;
grading system by dropping the grades of&#13;
D and F beginning this fall.&#13;
In the place of these marks, grades of&#13;
"Placement Credit only" (PL) and" 0&#13;
Credit" (NC) will be given. The grades, A,&#13;
Band C will be maintained.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Cincinnati, O. - (LP.l - Current&#13;
problems being experienced on campuses&#13;
are only one manifestation of a much&#13;
broader problem a national&#13;
revolutionary movement - according to&#13;
Dr. Walter C. Langsam, president of the&#13;
University of Cincinnati.&#13;
He has told a meeting of his top administrative&#13;
advisors that "the real&#13;
danger facing our nation is not turmoil on&#13;
campuses but a national revolution". And&#13;
this, he added, the public and the national&#13;
government apparently have been unable&#13;
or unwilling to recognize.&#13;
Because of the revolutionary movement,&#13;
Dr. Langsam said, "any invective or&#13;
sarcasm aimed at a few hundred&#13;
university administrators is a diversion of&#13;
energy and a waste of time.&#13;
PHON E 658-3551&#13;
AIELLO&#13;
lA-lid· T CYlJdn&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
A Complete' flol'Ol ~e""ice&#13;
'''(lith MoJel'n Desiqn&#13;
2108 P'IFTY SECOND sTAEIIT&#13;
K!:N05HA.. WltlCOH8lN&#13;
.. All the university presidents In&#13;
America cannot stop a revelution; this is&#13;
the job of the American people and their&#13;
government Preserving America is ooe&#13;
buck that cannot be passed."&#13;
+ +&#13;
DeKalb, Ill. - (1 P) - The pass-fall&#13;
option has resulted In a substantial increase&#13;
in number of 'orthem llltnois&#13;
University undergraduates makmg the&#13;
academic honor roll.&#13;
F.-.l&#13;
/.1"*4-&#13;
n&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NDRTll CITY LIMITS&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
S2nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. ,. SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
SS(&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS • TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF •&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican food is fun food ••.&#13;
so Taco Kings are fun places"&#13;
• •&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11 a.m.&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
-AT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUSPhone&#13;
6$4·5117&#13;
VO&#13;
F - G&#13;
An U&#13;
u R E&#13;
'.c&#13;
FABRICS FOR 5&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-8612 -&#13;
l;)OWNTOWN K~NOSHA&#13;
MARGURITIE'S&#13;
ROBE~-Regular $15.q0,&#13;
Special, $10.00.&#13;
Enjoy these cool&#13;
evenings in CO'LY&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short quilted; velvet&#13;
toned ribbon down&#13;
the front, lined with&#13;
softest nylon&#13;
Marguer itte' s is open&#13;
9 until 9 Mondays and&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652~2681&#13;
Donkey basketball&#13;
Friday night.&#13;
From Other&#13;
Campuses&#13;
Washington, D.C. - (I.P.) - In one of&#13;
the first court cases to deal with the&#13;
procedural rights of political student&#13;
organizations attempting to gain official&#13;
recognition, a U.S. District Court judge in&#13;
Connecticut has ordered Central Connecticut&#13;
State College to hold a hearing on&#13;
whether to recognize a local chapter of the&#13;
Students for a Democratic Society.&#13;
The chapter complied with college&#13;
procedures in applying for recognition,&#13;
and stated that the local group did not&#13;
follow dictates from any national&#13;
organization. .'.fhe dean of students, three faculty and&#13;
four students voted to recommend that the&#13;
administration grant recognition.&#13;
Nevertheless, President Don James&#13;
denied recognition on the grounds that in&#13;
his view the aims of the national SDS, and&#13;
the charter of the College were incompatible.&#13;
&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Pittsburgh, Pa. - (LP.) - Chatham&#13;
College has adopted a new academic&#13;
program which frees the student from&#13;
traditional requirements and gives her an&#13;
opportunity to design the course of study&#13;
which best fulfills her personal&#13;
educational interests and abilities.&#13;
Under the new program, the student&#13;
may complete the 34 courses required ~or&#13;
graduation by choosing freely from a -~1de&#13;
selection of courses in the humaruhes,&#13;
social and natural sciences.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
New London, Conn. - (LP.) - For the&#13;
first time, beginning this fall, 45 undergraduates&#13;
at Connecticut _College ~ill&#13;
serve as voting members on rune standmg&#13;
committees and one special committee of&#13;
the faculty body.&#13;
Moreover, with one exception, the&#13;
number of student representatives elected&#13;
to each committee will equal the number&#13;
of those elected by the faculty. The single&#13;
departure from the principlt: of parity is_ on&#13;
the academic policy committee to which&#13;
students will elect three representative a&#13;
opposed to nine from the faculty.&#13;
"All th&#13;
This influential group receives and&#13;
considers all proposal relaung to the&#13;
educational program of the college, and&#13;
out of it come recommendations for full&#13;
faculty action in such vital area a&#13;
curriculum innovation or alteration.&#13;
requirements for the bachelor of arts&#13;
degree and the honors program.&#13;
+&#13;
Hamilton, .Y. - Cl.P.&gt; - The tudents&#13;
and faculty of Colgate University have&#13;
combined to produce a sy tern of oncampus&#13;
governance which they feel will&#13;
also be of value to si ter institutions.&#13;
The governance machinery is designed&#13;
o cope with the day-to-day administration&#13;
of the University. In effec it i a coalition&#13;
of elected representatives of the students&#13;
and faculty and designated administrators.&#13;
&#13;
Through the council, the chief oncampus&#13;
governing body, and its ub idiary&#13;
commissions, communications have been&#13;
opened to all members of the college&#13;
community residing here.&#13;
+ +&#13;
Spartanburg. S.C. - (l,P.) - In a move&#13;
designed to emphasize the positive a pee ts&#13;
of learning, Wofford College has altered its&#13;
grading system by dropping the grades of&#13;
D and F beginning this fall.&#13;
In the place of these marks. grades of&#13;
" Placement Credit only" (PLl and ··, 'o&#13;
Credit" (NC) will be given. The grades, A,&#13;
B and C will be maintained.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Cincinnati, 0 . - (I.P.&gt; - Current&#13;
problems being experienced on campuses&#13;
are only one manifestation of a much&#13;
broader problem a national&#13;
revolutionary movement - accordmg to&#13;
Dr. Walter C. Langsam, president of the&#13;
University of Cincinnati.&#13;
He has told a meeting or his top administrative&#13;
advisors that " the real&#13;
danger facing our nation is not turmoil on&#13;
campuses but a national revolution". And&#13;
this, he added, the public and the national&#13;
government apparently have been unable&#13;
or unwilling to recognize.&#13;
Because of the revolutionary movement,&#13;
Dr. Langsam said, " any invective or&#13;
sarcasm aimed at a few hundred&#13;
university administrators is a diversion of&#13;
energy and a waste of time.&#13;
PHONE 658-3551&#13;
AIELLO&#13;
fMi'd-TOrzxJn&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
2108 P'IF!Y SECOND STREIT&#13;
KENOSHA, W ISCONSIN&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTli CITY LIMITS&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A,M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A ••&#13;
HAMBUR ERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS • TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF.&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican food is fun lood •&#13;
so Taco Kings are fun places"&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
"AT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS''&#13;
Phone 6&amp;4-5717&#13;
• • &#13;
Joint Communique Of The Chernier,&#13;
Dieppe And Liberation Cells . t&#13;
. . ments in office, since they seem to he pas&#13;
OTTAWA (cps·cup) (October zr 1970) to the ideas and intentions ~ch the masters in that field. Our a-"cestors were&#13;
- The Front de Liberation du Quebec authorities. in power attribute to tt. . nollhe fathers of confederation: they wer~&#13;
would like to point out a lew things relating As we said in the Manifesto, the Froot is the patriots 01 1837·38. Our fathers, c:;:&#13;
not after political power. The FLQ IS made older brothers, our uncles were not e&#13;
up of groups of workers who have decided Bordens, the Saint·Laurenls, the&#13;
to lake steps toward the revolutioo -. the Duplessis: They were the men who had&#13;
only real way for the workers to ~chle~e no choice but to be massacred at&#13;
and exercise power. This revoluhoo will Dieppe having been forced to serve as the&#13;
nol be made hy a hundred people, as the ~inea:PigSofcheap labour: they ,:"ere the&#13;
authorities want" everyone to believe, but men nightsticked at Murdochvllle a~d&#13;
by the whole popul~tion. The only true elsewhere for wanting to defend their&#13;
power 01the people IS power exercised by simple right to exist Our brothers today&#13;
the people and lor the people. The FLQ are not the Trudeaus, the Bourassa, the&#13;
leaves coup d'etat to the three govern- Drapeaus, they are the ".gars ~e&#13;
LaPalme" - the people that BIll 38 :-vill&#13;
assassinate tomorrow: all the exploited&#13;
people of Quehec.&#13;
The FLQ is made up of groups of&#13;
workers who have given themselves the&#13;
objectives of fighting against the daily acts&#13;
of terrorism perpetrated by the state. The&#13;
crime of the FLQ in the eyes of the&#13;
authorities in power is not so much ~at we&#13;
used violence but that we use violence&#13;
against the establishment This ahove all&#13;
is unpardonable. This above all fnghtens&#13;
them.&#13;
It is in the interests of the establishment&#13;
to transmit this fear to the population.&#13;
Primarily to justify an armed intervention&#13;
into Quebec, which, they think, will give&#13;
them a certain degree of protection. But&#13;
also, to make it clear to the people of&#13;
Quebec that the:.:.had better forget about&#13;
any ideas about liberation.&#13;
But the Front de Liberation du Quehec&#13;
knows the population is not duped by such&#13;
games (tricks), even if. the different&#13;
governments are doing their best to make&#13;
itiook otherwise. This is what they tried in&#13;
the case of the same results in the&#13;
municipal election in Montreal.&#13;
We want to briefly point out some conclusive&#13;
facts concerning that: the high&#13;
anglophone turnout, the great percentage&#13;
of abstentions in the "quartiers&#13;
populaires" and the percentage of votes&#13;
accorded to workers' candidates in those&#13;
same areas. After making those observations&#13;
it's easy to see that the Civic&#13;
Party (sic) was elected with the concurrence&#13;
of scarcely ten per cent of the&#13;
population. And this they dare call&#13;
democracy.&#13;
Quebecois, the time for dupery is&#13;
finished.&#13;
Quebeeois, the hautes bourgeoisies,&#13;
English and French, has spoken: Now is&#13;
the time to act.&#13;
T1MIPl., TI •• ,&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
LIrIII' 1I',ett..&#13;
:jj;~~&#13;
626 ~6th 51. K.nosh'J&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
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A HEAVY OUNU&#13;
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AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Here is a good way to discover&#13;
what 'Fisher sound'&#13;
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Fisher 125. Play Ihe saine&#13;
record on ;,lnother make.&#13;
Lislen for the difference,&#13;
\.~peC'ially 10 Ihe very low&#13;
and ver) high frequencies.&#13;
A Fish~, .limply .Iotmd.l&#13;
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1010011.;ugrcat as it sounds.&#13;
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SPECIAL IIlCLUDES&#13;
SlOI FREE RECORDS&#13;
Equestrian's Club&#13;
Being Formed&#13;
A new club is being formed on campus&#13;
lor aU students interested in horses. The&#13;
organization is the Parkside Equestrians'&#13;
Club, aod its purpose will be to provide an&#13;
opportunity to learn, enjoy, and compete&#13;
in all fields connected with the horse.&#13;
These areas include showing, care, riding,&#13;
training, and management.&#13;
The club plans to hold clinics in order to&#13;
acquaint the non-owner with the horse. For&#13;
the more accomplished horsemen and&#13;
women, the organization plans to have&#13;
competition with other colleges in events&#13;
from barrel racing to saddle seat equition.&#13;
Already the club has drawn some top&#13;
riders. For instance cathy Moper, who has&#13;
placed consistantly in class A shows, an&#13;
and bas been champion or reserve in state&#13;
competition lor the last three years.&#13;
Amy Fulmer is another equestrian who&#13;
has shown since she's been eight, does all&#13;
ber own training and has won several High&#13;
Point trophies. Amy is at Parkside for preveterinary&#13;
study. Both cathy and Amy&#13;
perform difficult self-taught dressage&#13;
routines.&#13;
Mauine Stauder is another member with&#13;
an admirable record. She was instrumental&#13;
in starting the 4-H Horse&#13;
Science Project in Kenosha County, and&#13;
she also places consistantly in class A&#13;
shows. There are others, some with the&#13;
same great abilities, some just beginning&#13;
to show their talents, We need everyone, so&#13;
please join. Watch for the date and attend&#13;
the club's first meeting.&#13;
Six Named to&#13;
All-Star Team&#13;
Six members of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin·Parkside soccer team have&#13;
been named to the NAIA District 14&#13;
(Wisconsin) All-Star team.&#13;
Fullback Joe Orr 01 Milwaukee and&#13;
forwards Dale Nickel, Waukesha, and Stan&#13;
Markovic, Racine, were named to the first&#13;
team, while defensivemen Kari Liekowski,&#13;
Kingston, N.Y., Doug Beveridge,&#13;
Milwaukee, and goalie Charlie Lees,&#13;
Kearny, N.J., were picked on the five-man&#13;
reserve squad.&#13;
Nine UW-Green Bay players and one&#13;
from Platteville Stale University com·&#13;
pleted. the two teams. They are Torleiv&#13;
Bilstad 01 Platteville and Chris&#13;
Arrowsmith, Horst Slemke, Bill Scheller,&#13;
Ken Hess, Peter Stratton, Zach&#13;
Papanikolaou and Fred Justin of Green&#13;
Bay on the lirst leam, and Erich Dietrich&#13;
and Ray Gumpert of Green Bay on the&#13;
reserve team.&#13;
A senior from Plymouth, Dennis M,&#13;
Chaplin, was the 19'70 winner of the Minneapolis.Honeyweli&#13;
Co. award of $200and&#13;
a silver tray presented to the outstanding&#13;
University of Wisconsin engineering&#13;
student.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Ellllwood&#13;
2704 l.,lttop ,be., Ift;lIe, WiuoII,i"&#13;
Students get fed carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else!)&#13;
Liberation, Chenier, and&#13;
Dieppe Cells&#13;
Nous Vaincrons&#13;
Front de Liberation du Quebec&#13;
Tapes of the lecture on W&#13;
Liberation given at the Univer:rnen'.&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside recently by ~ly?!&#13;
Steinem are available free to lOlia&#13;
organizations or schools by conlacli C Ubo,&#13;
Public Information Office at Park "Lib.&#13;
The talk by Miss Steinem, wide!'1 .&#13;
journalist and Women's Lib spoi knOWn&#13;
rlUIS about 45 minutes. e.1llan,&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Anchorln&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
AD U L TS S2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 SLII&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 6 FRlI&#13;
Prices Include first&#13;
dinner beveragl.&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chleken with&#13;
BIs.a1ts andgFavy&#13;
r ~ .Ancl.or~&#13;
INN'.&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m, - 11 p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m,&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd. • • Phone 694-1733&#13;
eMpplt SM1ee eftl.fA(JlliM4&#13;
proudly announces the long awaited&#13;
revival of ...&#13;
HARDMAN'S&#13;
Hard Rock Cafe&#13;
2519-60th 51&#13;
Sin City&#13;
{{Ji ~~rAHMn-"&#13;
PEACE • • •&#13;
Joint Communique Of The Chernier,&#13;
Tapes of the lecture on w&#13;
Liberation given at the Univer ~lllen•a&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside recently by s~y ~f&#13;
Steinem are available free to 10na&#13;
organizations or schools by contacu clubs,&#13;
Public Information Office at Park 7e the Dieppe And Liberation Cells . . ments in office, since they seem to be past&#13;
The talk by Miss Steinem wide! 81 ·&#13;
journalist and Women's Lib spoi knoWn runs a!&gt;&lt;&gt;ut 45 minutes. . esrnan,&#13;
OTTAWA (CP -ClJP) (October z; l970) to the ideas and intentions w~1ch the masters in that field. Our a_ncestors were&#13;
- The Front de Liberation du Quebec authorities in power attribute to it. . not the fathers of confederation: they were it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
\\ould like to point out a re .... thing relating As we said in the fanifesto, the ~ront is the patriots of 1837-38. Our fathers, our not after political power. The FLQ 1s n:ade older brothers, our uncles were not the&#13;
T t Place Tt IMJ&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
626 !6th St. Keno sh-a&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
UIT 8A A CAKDY&#13;
l r Aer- Tvwn o, Ao.- 1M Worill&#13;
Hf. \'Y&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
·u&#13;
Herc i a good way to dis·&#13;
cover what 'Fisher sound'&#13;
1 m.c, Play .i record on the&#13;
Fi her 125. Play the sarne&#13;
re ord on :mother make.&#13;
l.1 ten tor 1he difference,&#13;
c pec1 lly in the very low&#13;
and vcr) high trequenciC\.&#13;
A Fishu .simply sounds&#13;
hmu. And the Fisher 125&#13;
I\ the fir t complete AMf&#13;
I tereo 1 usic enter&#13;
to lcxik a gre.11 a it ounds.&#13;
See and Hear&#13;
Fisher Stereo!&#13;
40 Wans or Mu ,.: P.:,wc,&#13;
t IHt' l • Wnk-R,tlll:C A 1 •&#13;
'iUJICr "- lc,1h~ I· I and FM-&#13;
~ltrtu w11h F ET ;ind !Cs 1n&#13;
frl'nl ·cnd :iid IF staccs • •·&#13;
')peed Au1om11k Turntable&#13;
wi1h Cuc Conirol. An1i- L:it ,&#13;
,n ,\11111m.Uh.' ,hu1 ,ofT • Tw(I&#13;
Aco~ llClllY· h1chcd Two- Way pc L.cr Sy,1cm • Full&#13;
,\udtu Con1roh W11h T,.JIC and&#13;
Phono F11cil,1in&#13;
Hammond Organ&#13;
Studios of Kenosha&#13;
3215 60th t. 658-1801&#13;
SPECIAL INCLUDES&#13;
100 FREE RECORDS&#13;
up of groups of workers who have decided Bordens the Saint-Laurents, the&#13;
to take steps toward the revolution-. the Dupless~: They were the men who had&#13;
only real way for the workers to ~chie~e no choice but to be massacred at&#13;
and exercise power. This revolution will Dieppe having been forced to serve as the&#13;
not be made by a hundred peopl~, as the inea-'pigs of cheap labour: thf:!Y ~ere the&#13;
authorities want" evei,:one to believe, but ~en nightsticked at Murdochv1lle a~d&#13;
by the whole popul_ation. The o~y true elsewhere for wanting to defend their&#13;
power of the people 1s power exercised by simple right to exist. Our brothers today&#13;
the people and for the people. The FLQ are not the Trudeaus, the Bourassa, the&#13;
leave coup d'etat to the three govern- Drapeaus they are the "gars de&#13;
LaPalme': _ the people that Bill 38 :,vm&#13;
assassinate tomorrow: all the exploited Equestrian 's Club people of Quebec.&#13;
Being Formed&#13;
A new club is being formed on campus&#13;
for all tudents interested in horses. The&#13;
organization is the Parkside Equestrians'&#13;
Club, and its purpose will be to provide an&#13;
opportunity to learn, enjoy, and compete&#13;
in all fields connected with the horse.&#13;
Th e are.as include showing, care, riding,&#13;
training, and management.&#13;
The club plans to hold clinics in order to&#13;
acquaint the non-owner with the horse. For&#13;
the more accompli hed horsemen and&#13;
women, the organization plans to have&#13;
competition with other colleges in events&#13;
from barrel racing to saddle seat equition.&#13;
Already the club has drawn some top&#13;
rid rs. For instance Cathy Moper, who has&#13;
placed con istanUy in class A shows, an&#13;
and has been champion or reserve in state&#13;
competition for the last three years.&#13;
Amy Fulmer is another equestrian who&#13;
has hown since she's been eight, does all&#13;
her own training and has won several High&#13;
Point trophies. Amy is at Parkside for pr~&#13;
veterinary study. Both Cathy and Amy&#13;
perform difficult self-taught dressage&#13;
routines.&#13;
1auine Stauder is another member with an admirable record. She was instrumental&#13;
in starting the 4-H Horse&#13;
Science Project in Kenosha County, and&#13;
she also places consistantly in class A&#13;
shows. There are others, some wilh the&#13;
same great abilities, some just beginning&#13;
to show their talents. We need everyone, so please join. Watch for the date and attend&#13;
the club's first meeting.&#13;
Six Named to&#13;
All-Star Team&#13;
The FLQ is made up of groups of&#13;
workers who have given themselves the&#13;
objectives of fighting against the daily acts&#13;
of terrorism perpetrated by the state. The&#13;
crime of the FLQ in the eyes of the&#13;
authorities in power is not so much ~at we used violence but that we use violence&#13;
against the establishment. This a~ve all&#13;
is unpardonable. This above all fnghtens&#13;
them.&#13;
It is in the interests of the establishment&#13;
to transmit this fear to the population.&#13;
Primarily to justify an armed intervention&#13;
into Quebec, which, they think, will give&#13;
them a certain degree of protection. But&#13;
also, to make it clear to the people of&#13;
Quebec that thex_ had better forget about&#13;
any ideas aboutliberation.&#13;
But the Front de Liberation du Quebec&#13;
knows the population is not duped by such&#13;
games (tricks), even if the different&#13;
governments are doing their best to make&#13;
it look otherwise. This is what they tried in&#13;
the case of the same results in the&#13;
municipal election in Montreal.&#13;
We want to briefly point out some conclusive&#13;
facts concerning that: the high&#13;
anglophone turnout, the great percentage&#13;
of abstentions in the "quartiers&#13;
populaires" and the percentage of votes&#13;
accorded to workers' candidates in those&#13;
same areas. After making those observations&#13;
it's easy to see that the Civic&#13;
Party (sic) was elected with the concurrence&#13;
of scarcely ten per cent of the&#13;
population. And this they dare call&#13;
democracy.&#13;
Quebecois, the time for dupery is&#13;
finished.&#13;
Quebecois, the hautes bourgeoisies,&#13;
English and French, has spoken: Now is&#13;
the time to act.&#13;
Liberation, Chenier, and&#13;
Dieppe Cells&#13;
Nous Vaincrons&#13;
Front de Liberation du Quebec&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADULTS $2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 $1.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 5 FREE&#13;
Prices include first&#13;
dinner beverage.&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken wl&amp;b&#13;
Biscuits and _.:avy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. - 11 p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
9006 Sherjdan Rd- · • Phone 694-1733 Six members of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside soccer team have&#13;
been named to the NAIA District 14&#13;
(Wisconsin) All-Star team.&#13;
Fullback Joe Orr of Milwaukee and&#13;
forwards Dale Nickel, Waukesha, and Stan&#13;
Markovic, Racine, were named to the first&#13;
team, while defensivemen Kari Liekowski,&#13;
Kingston, N.Y., Doug Beveridge,&#13;
Milwaukee, and goalie Charlie Lees, Kearny, N.J., were picked on the five-man&#13;
reserve squad.&#13;
&amp;i.ppl.t Sn.o.lr.t Otl.flr/J~&#13;
Nine UW-Green Bay players and one&#13;
from Platteville State University completed&#13;
the two teams. They are Torleiv&#13;
Bilstad of Platteville and Chris&#13;
Arrowsmith, Horst Stemke, Bill Scheller,&#13;
Ken Hess, Peter Stratton, Zach&#13;
Papanikolaou and Fred Justin of Green&#13;
Bay on the first team, and Erich Dietrich&#13;
and Ray Gumpert of Green Bay on the&#13;
reserve team.&#13;
A senior from Plymouth, Dennis M.&#13;
Chaplin, was the 1970 winner of the Minneapolis-Honeywell&#13;
Co. award of $200 and&#13;
a silver tray presented to the outstanding&#13;
University of Wisconsin engineering&#13;
student.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 lalltrop ,he., Aocine, Wi1con1in&#13;
Students eet red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else!)&#13;
proudly announces the long awaited&#13;
revival of ...&#13;
HARDMAN'S&#13;
Hard Rock Cafe&#13;
2519-60th ST&#13;
Sin City&#13;
(I t.Y1, ~ ,. (fa~ JJ&#13;
PEACE • • • &#13;
Audience Grooved To Gregor J&#13;
An evenIng . f 0&#13;
S·uperror entertainment . Y aIlles&#13;
as enjoyed by Bill and Jody Parkside at&#13;
;eir first expo~ure to.3 ~ightclUb - at the&#13;
Student Activities BUIlding last Nov. 7.&#13;
After being assaulted at lbe door for&#13;
their money and I.D.s, they sat down at a&#13;
front table-for-four .. . and somehow&#13;
expected to be waited upon. But, as it was&#13;
at the dances, he had to purchase beer&#13;
tickets at one end and lben walk lbe total&#13;
diagonal to the olber end to get what he&#13;
wanted, only to walk the distance again to&#13;
return to their table.&#13;
candlelight and beer were on the menu&#13;
for Bill and Jody until lbe monlb-Iate&#13;
Gregory James group started their performance&#13;
(9:20), just as lbe popcorn was&#13;
being served and the singles gave up their&#13;
search for singles.&#13;
"A Little Help From My Friends",&#13;
"Working On A Groovy Thing", a little&#13;
"grass, booze, and sex ... " and feedback&#13;
caught the audience with their mouths&#13;
open. Jody didn't puff or pick up her beer&#13;
until the lbird number. Then lbe group&#13;
apologized for destroying Bill and Jody's&#13;
big date Oct. 3 when they cancelled.&#13;
The whole audience grooved to the&#13;
fantastically arranged versions of&#13;
"everybody's favorites" - with a sound&#13;
like Sergio and Brazil '66. The music&#13;
wasn't cerebral. And after the second act&#13;
everyone relaxed and grooved even more&#13;
to the music. DeBerges Raiders were&#13;
I'Iblically recognized as Parkside's official&#13;
fedoyan, and lbe band played on.&#13;
People danced, sang, clapped, and got&#13;
involved with olber people wilb a little&#13;
from the entourage of Gregory James.&#13;
After it was all over, and the lights went&#13;
on, Bill was heard still trying to convince&#13;
Jody that lbe female was NOT staring at&#13;
him. They drove home with clear heads,&#13;
open minds, and looking forward to THE&#13;
NEIGHBORHOOD.&#13;
AAU two-mile Women's Open. Parkside's&#13;
Judy Zimmerman was ninth in 12:53in the&#13;
event won by Pat Bagian in 11:55.5.Teams&#13;
from lbe Wolverine Ciub took the top three&#13;
places in the team event, followed by&#13;
Parkstde and the Terre Haute Track Club&#13;
of Indiana. Running with Miss Zimmerman&#13;
for UWP was Sandy Houston&#13;
usn», Mary Libal (27th), Michelle&#13;
Rosandich (28th) and Bev Crawford&#13;
(34lb) .&#13;
Hoffman's Chicago Track Club won lbe&#13;
other team event in the Midwest Open with&#13;
32 points. Parkside was second with 48, as&#13;
Lund was joined by Tim McGilsky (7th),&#13;
Jim McFadden (Bth), Gary Lance (trth)&#13;
and John Wagner (29lb). Track clubs from&#13;
Marquette (72), Loyola (80) and&#13;
University of Chicago (128) followed.&#13;
The USTFF Junior Open for ninlb grade&#13;
and under boys was won by Gary Harben,&#13;
also of the Wolverine Club, in 8:23.1 over&#13;
one and a half miles.&#13;
For All the&#13;
Latest Fashions,&#13;
By Leading Names&#13;
At - Realistic Prices&#13;
BLAZE A&#13;
TRAIL TO&#13;
ISERMANN'S&#13;
USTFF Championships&#13;
Tom Hoffman and Dick Seibold paced a&#13;
field of 400 runners who competed&#13;
saturday in United States Track and Field&#13;
Federation (USTFF) championships held&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Hoffman, current national AAU six-mile&#13;
chamipon and former Whitewater star,&#13;
wonthe USTFF six mile championship in&#13;
31:13, 42 seconds better than two of his&#13;
Chicago Track Club teammates, John&#13;
Lesch and Kevin Keogh. Parkside's Rick&#13;
Lund was fiflb in 32:29, and Tremper&#13;
Coach Chuck Bradley was 25lb in 34:53.&#13;
Seibold, who was third in last week's&#13;
state class A public school cross country&#13;
run, won Saturday over three miles&#13;
against a classy field of prep runners in the&#13;
USTFF t8 and Under Open.&#13;
The Madison Memorial runner beat&#13;
Racine St. Catherine's Chuck LeRose by&#13;
fiveseconds in 15:14.8.Rudy Alverez, state&#13;
I'Iblic school champion, was fifth, 42&#13;
seconds back, while Tremper's Dave&#13;
Merritt, fifth in the state meet, was eighth&#13;
saturday, 53 seconds back at 16:35.&#13;
The man who beat LeRose for the&#13;
private school championship last week,&#13;
John Beaumier of SI. Joseph, chose not to&#13;
compete but watched as a spectator. A&#13;
Detroit runner, Bob Hughes, and an Iowa&#13;
star from Des Moines Dick Conway. were&#13;
third and fourlb. '&#13;
The USTFF National Masters championship&#13;
for men over 40 was won by Ben&#13;
Almaguer of Evanston, Dl. Bob Kueny of&#13;
Kenosha was ninth in the three mile race&#13;
in 21:18compared to the winning time of&#13;
17:24.8for the best finish among Wisconsin&#13;
entrants.&#13;
Women from the Wolverine Track Club&#13;
ofDetroit took 14of lbe top 15 places in lbe&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
~ORTH &amp;-SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
fOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
RANCH&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
i202 . 56th Stroot&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Rog. 54S.00&#13;
Now $27.50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
3M&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATIONRL. BANK&#13;
.,.......&#13;
614 56th ST.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Audience Grooved To Gre J . . gory ames&#13;
An evening of superior entertainment Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear was enjoyed by Bill and Jody Parkside at&#13;
their first exposure to a nightclub - at the&#13;
Student Activities Building last Nov. 7.&#13;
After being assaulted at the door for&#13;
their money and I.D.s, they sat down at a&#13;
front table-for-four . . . and somehow&#13;
expected to be waited upon. But, as it was&#13;
at the dances, he had to purchase beer&#13;
tickets at one end and then walk the total&#13;
diagonal to the other end to get what he&#13;
wanted, only to walk the distance again tO'&#13;
return to their table.&#13;
Candlelight and beer were on the menu&#13;
for Bill and Jody until the month-late&#13;
Gregory James group started their performance&#13;
(9:20), just as the popcorn was&#13;
being served and the singles gave up their&#13;
search for singles.&#13;
"A Little Help From My Friends",&#13;
"Working On A Groovy Thing", a little&#13;
"grass, booze, and sex . . . " and feedback&#13;
caught the audience with their mouths&#13;
open. Jody didn't puff or pick up her beer&#13;
until the third number. Then the group&#13;
apologized for destroying Bill and Jody's&#13;
big date Oct. 3 when they cancelled&#13;
The whole audience grooved to the&#13;
fantastically arranged versions of&#13;
"everybody's favorites" - with a sound&#13;
like Sergio and Brazil '66. The music&#13;
wasn't cerebral. And after the second act&#13;
everyone relaxed and grooved even more&#13;
to the music. DeBerges Raiders were&#13;
publically recognized as Parkside's official&#13;
fedoyan, and the band played on.&#13;
People danced, sang, clapped, and got&#13;
involved with other people with a little&#13;
from the entourage of Gregory James.&#13;
After it was all over, and the lights went&#13;
on, Bill was heard still trying to convince&#13;
Jody that the female was NOT staring at&#13;
him. They drove home with clear heads,&#13;
open minds, and looking forward to THE&#13;
NEIGHBORHOOD.&#13;
USTFF Championships&#13;
Tom Hoffman and Dick Seibold paced a&#13;
field of 400 runners who competed&#13;
Saturday in United States Track and Field&#13;
Federation (USTFF) championships held&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Hoffman, current national AAU six-mile&#13;
chamipon and former Whitewater star,&#13;
won the USTFF six mile championship in&#13;
31: 13, 42 seconds better than two of his&#13;
Chicago Track Club teammates, John&#13;
Lesch and Kevin Keogh. Parkside's Rick&#13;
Lund was fifth in 32:29, and Tremper&#13;
Coach Chuck Bradley was 25th in 34: 53.&#13;
Seibold, who was third in last week's&#13;
state class A public school cross country&#13;
run, won Saturday over three miles&#13;
against a classy field of prep runners in the&#13;
USTFF 18 and Under Open.&#13;
The Madison Memorial runner beat&#13;
Racine St. Catherine's Chuck LeRose by&#13;
fivesecondsinlS:14.8. Rudy Alverez, state&#13;
public school champion, was fifth, 42&#13;
seconds back, while Tremper's Dave&#13;
Merritt, fifth in the state meet, was eighth&#13;
Saturday, 53 seconds back at 16:35.&#13;
The man who beat LeRose for the&#13;
private school championship last week,&#13;
John Beaumier of St. Joseph, chose not to&#13;
compete but watched as a spectator. A&#13;
Detroit runner, Bob Hughes, and an Iowa&#13;
s~r from Des Moines, Dick Conway, were third and fourth.&#13;
The USTFF National Masters championship&#13;
for men over 40 was won by Ben&#13;
Almaguer of Evanston, Ill. Bob Kueny of&#13;
Kenosha was ninth in the three mile race&#13;
in 21: 18 compared to the winning time of&#13;
17:24.8 for the best finish among Wisconsin&#13;
entrants.&#13;
Women from the Wolverine Track Club&#13;
ofDetroit took 14 of the top 15 places in the&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
RANCH&#13;
NORTH &amp;.SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
AAU two-mile Women's Open. Parkside's&#13;
Judy Zimmerman was ninth in 12:53 in the&#13;
event won by Pat Bagian in 11 :55.5. Teams&#13;
from the Wolverine Club took the top three&#13;
places in the team event, followed by&#13;
Parkside and the Terre Haute Track Club&#13;
of Indiana. Running with Miss Zimmerman&#13;
for UWP was Sandy Houston&#13;
(19th), Mary Libal (27th) , Michelle&#13;
Rosandich (28th) and Bev Crawford&#13;
(34th).&#13;
Hoffman's Chicago Track Club won the&#13;
other team event in the Midwest Open with&#13;
32 points. Parkside was second with 48, as&#13;
Lund was joined by Tim McGilsky (7th),&#13;
Jim McFadden (8th), Gary Lance (11th)&#13;
and John Wagner (29th). Track clubs from&#13;
Marquette (72), Loyola (80) and&#13;
University of Chicago (128) followed.&#13;
The USTFF Junior Open for ninth grade&#13;
and under boys was won by Gary Harben,&#13;
also of the Wolverine Club, in 8:23.1 over&#13;
one and a half miles.&#13;
1202 - 56th Str .. t&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Reg. $45.00&#13;
Now $27 .50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
3M&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
WIHOIN&#13;
BLAZE A&#13;
TRAIL TO&#13;
ISERMANN'S&#13;
For All the&#13;
Latest Fashions,&#13;
By Leading Names&#13;
At - Realistic Prices&#13;
614 56th ST.&#13;
KENOSHA &#13;
Top row. Coach Chuck Dettman, Mike Dewitt, John Wagner, Tim McGilsky, Rick Lund. Front&#13;
row Keith Merrilt, Marc Conrad, Gary Lance, Jim Bark, Jim McFadden.&#13;
Kathy Doherty I Miss Wrestling at Parkside, is all smiles as she is flanked by two of&#13;
Parkslde's finest wrestlers, lelt, Paul Paricha and, right, Jeff Jenkins. Kathy was&#13;
chosen to represent the wrestling team in the SportsCest Queen Contest. She is also a _Ii"" Mal aid.&#13;
Bill Benkstein, Parkside Caplain, seems to be enjoying himself as he is backed by&#13;
three lovely Parkside Co-eds. The three, left lo righl, are Sally Hewitt, Nancy Michaels&#13;
and Cns Vlahakis, all members of the elite group of girls called Mat Maids.&#13;
·Prof. Valencia N.. Prock wh&#13;
professional career began as' hOi ?Be&#13;
nurse, is the new dean of the Universf'lal&#13;
Wisconsin School of Nursing in Ma~&#13;
3200 60th ~t,&#13;
6 u.m. till 11 p.m. 7 doy,&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657 -97 47&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~w&#13;
glalian~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small.&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
Sludies conducted by University of&#13;
Wisconsin geographer G. H. Dury indicate&#13;
that Wisconsin was in a tropical chmate&#13;
thousands of years ago.&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
MON. and Fri. - 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.1IIo&#13;
TUES. thru THURS. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.&#13;
SAT. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
fREE DELIVERY&#13;
ALCOA subsidiary has immediate openings for&#13;
parttime employment&#13;
3 evenings plus Saturdays $57.50&#13;
Scholarships available&#13;
Young Democrats&#13;
Elect Officers&#13;
Rm. 110&#13;
AMBITIOUS?&#13;
The newly formed University of&#13;
Wisconsln·ParKside Young Democrats&#13;
held an election meeting Sunday&#13;
November 8, 1970. The newly elected of~&#13;
fleers include Gregory Barrette, chairman.&#13;
Michael Beam, vice chairman;&#13;
Doris Dubenewicz, secretary; and Frank&#13;
lurrey, treasurer The three members at&#13;
large elected to the executive board inelude;&#13;
James Chesick, Donald MarjaJa&#13;
and Henry Heinisch.&#13;
It was decided that the next meeting&#13;
would be held on Tuesday, November 17,&#13;
1970,In Greenquist HaJJ, at 11;45 a.m. The&#13;
room il yet to be decided.&#13;
D£UCATESSEN-lEVERAGES&#13;
3203 PlfTY-SKOHO STlfn&#13;
UHOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
(The Newscope printed the following od incorrectly lost week. We are sotJ'f&#13;
jf any students we're inconvenienced by our mistake. (ed.))&#13;
see Mr. Otteson for an interview on Tuesday, NoV. 11&#13;
at Greenquist Hall&#13;
at 3 p.mYoung&#13;
Democrats&#13;
Elect Officers&#13;
DEUCA TESSEN -BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 flnY.SfCOND STHfT&#13;
UNOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
AMBITIOUS?&#13;
Studies conducted by University of&#13;
Wisconsin geographer G. H. D~y in~cate&#13;
that Wisconsin was in a tropical climate&#13;
thousands of years ago.&#13;
Prof. Valencia N. Prock wh&#13;
professional career began as ' hos ?Se&#13;
nurse, is the new dean of the Univers·f&#13;
1&#13;
lal&#13;
Wisconsin School of Nursing in MaJi~~&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phon, .657-97 47&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~wglafimn~&#13;
&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
MON. and Fri. - 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
TUES. thru THU RS. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.&#13;
SAT. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
LA TEST FASH IONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
(The Newscope printed the following ad incorrectly last week. We are sorrt&#13;
if any students w~re inconvenienced by our mistake. (ed.))&#13;
ALCOA subsidiary has immediate openings for&#13;
parttime employment&#13;
3 evenings plus Saturdays $5 7 .50&#13;
Scholarships available&#13;
see Mr. Otteson for an interview on Tuesday, Nov. 17&#13;
at Greenquist Hall&#13;
Rm. 110 at 3 p.m. </text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>George W. Beadle to Present Lecture Here</text>
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              <text>George W. Beadle To Presenl Lecture Here&#13;
Nobel laureate George Wells&#13;
emeritus president of . Beadle, Beadle received the Nobel prize. the&#13;
Chicago will the Umven!ty of highest scientific bonor society bestows, in&#13;
at the Univ~~ ~::'::'~~~'1.~':958 ror his research on the relation of&#13;
Wood Road Campus at8 p.m. on Tuesda genes to specific biochemical reactions.&#13;
Nov..24, IDGreenquist HaD, Room 101 n;'~ The prize, which he sbared with Edward L.&#13;
talk ISSponsored by the Parkside Lecture Tatum and Joshua Lederber'g, was in&#13;
and FIDe Arts Committee psysiology and medicine.&#13;
His ~pic will he "Myst~ry and Myth of In addition to the Nohel Prize, he has&#13;
MaIze. The talk, which wiU be iUustrated received the Priestley Memorial Award or&#13;
~Y c~lo~ transparencies, will cover the Dickinson CoUege in 1967; the Kimber&#13;
hngUlStIc,. historical, archeologl'cal, Genetics Award of the National Academy&#13;
m hoI 1 of Sciences in 1960; the national award of&#13;
orp ogicat, cytological and genetic the American Cancer Society in 1959; the&#13;
eVldenc~ o.f.evolution of maize, or corn, E from ti mil Christian Hansen Prize of the Royal&#13;
varietf~~l ve species to modern hybrid Danish Academy of Sciences in 1953; the&#13;
During the day. he also will meet with Dyer Award 01 the ational Institutes of&#13;
Parkside science students. Health in 1951; and the Lasker Award of&#13;
.~is will be the Nobel laureate's second the American Public Health Association10&#13;
VISIt t.o.Parkside in less than a year. He 1950Be'adle 'd 1 f he . . al ted th was presi en 0 t mversrty&#13;
so VISI e campus last May when he of Chicago from 1961until his retirement in&#13;
presented a major public address at the&#13;
Symposium on Biochemistry of Brain and 1968. Prior to that he was professor and&#13;
M chairman of the Division of Biology at the&#13;
themory which brought scientists from Califorma Institute of Technology from&#13;
roughout the world to Parkside. 1946 to 1961. He also has been a member of&#13;
Murphy Represented In Craft Shows&#13;
.. Ceramisl John Satre Murphy of the&#13;
Universtty of Wisconsin-Parkside art&#13;
faculty is represented in two current invita~ional&#13;
.shows and has been granted a&#13;
merit achievement award for works be is&#13;
exhibiting in a third show.&#13;
Murphy received the award for two&#13;
stoneware bowls with platinum and gold&#13;
lusters which are included in the invitational&#13;
Craft Committment Show which&#13;
will open Dec. 7 al the Rochester (Minn.)&#13;
Art Center and will then tour for two years.&#13;
Murphy also is represented in the&#13;
Wisconsin Craft Invitational No. 3&#13;
traveling exhibit opening Friday and&#13;
continuiog through Dec. 20 at L'Atelier&#13;
Gallery in Milwaukee and in the December&#13;
invitational craft show of the Contemporary&#13;
Crafts Association in PorUand,&#13;
The role of the urban university intrigues me.'&#13;
Ore.&#13;
In the Milwaukee show, Murphy has two&#13;
larger luster bowls - one a head bowl&#13;
adorned with faces with copper, gold,&#13;
orange and red lusters and one an abstract&#13;
stoneware bowl with cobalt blue stain and&#13;
platinum luster - and a small porcelain&#13;
wall relief with gold luster mounted in&#13;
ilIexiglass.&#13;
Murphy also has a porcelain wall relief&#13;
in plexiglass in the Portland exhibit. His&#13;
ceramics have been widely exhibited&#13;
throughout the United Slates and were&#13;
included in last winter's Montana Craftsmen&#13;
Exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution.&#13;
Murphy, who received his&#13;
graduate degree from the University of&#13;
Montana, joined the Parkside faculty last&#13;
year.&#13;
Weaver Will Work To Better&#13;
UW Public Relations&#13;
Reprint from Milwaukee Journal&#13;
Madison, Wls; - Improving relations&#13;
between the University of Wisconsin and&#13;
the people of the state will be a high&#13;
priority objective during the administration&#13;
of John C. Weaver, the new&#13;
.preaiden!of IJW._ . .&#13;
In a conservation wilb Edwin Young,&#13;
chancellor of the Madison campus; seen on&#13;
WHA-TV Tuesday night, Weaver siad:&#13;
"We have no greater objective than to&#13;
regain the faith of the people who support&#13;
the university. We have to transmit to&#13;
them that the essence or what lbey have&#13;
always had faith in-is still there, H&#13;
Weaver described university admil)istrators&#13;
as canght between students&#13;
who are demanding a greater role in lbe&#13;
governing of their schools and lbe public&#13;
which is demanding greater accountabiliiy&#13;
from the administrators.&#13;
"People Will Be Heard"&#13;
Referring to the people of lbe slate,&#13;
Weaver said, "They have listened to a&#13;
tremendous amount of noise from the&#13;
campus, even bombs. The people are going&#13;
to be heard.&#13;
"Just as students have interest because&#13;
their educations are at stake, the people&#13;
have an interest because it is their money&#13;
that is bemg spent. I feel the public has a&#13;
right to be heard just as the students have&#13;
a right to be heard."&#13;
Weaver indicated he believed that lbe&#13;
I'IIIe of students was limited to making&#13;
recommendations.&#13;
"I don't lblnk you can turn lbe&#13;
deelslOnmaking process over to the&#13;
ltuden1a. The students should be heard,&#13;
but it may be that the university can't bUy&#13;
an of their recommendations."&#13;
Weaver said the role of the faculty of a&#13;
uniVersity should be broad and deep. He&#13;
IIIlidthe faculi}' should be responsible for&#13;
determining general academic programs&#13;
Ind requirements.&#13;
As for the role of the president of lbe&#13;
IIlivenity, Weaver said, "The day to day&#13;
ClperatiOll8of a campus fall to the ~&#13;
ceDor.The president has faDen back IDtoa&#13;
"without involving ourselves in the civic&#13;
decisionmaking. "&#13;
Weaver said development of urban&#13;
studies at these campuses would provide&#13;
them a growth area without duplicating&#13;
many of the programs or the Madison&#13;
campus.&#13;
"These campuses would have an area of&#13;
development that is untouched. There are&#13;
some things that all campuses must do,&#13;
but when it comes to the more specialized&#13;
programs there must be some rationing. t&#13;
am sure that you don't have to duplicate&#13;
Ph.D. programs in every department on&#13;
four campuses in Wisconsin.&#13;
Weaver said he also opposed "raising&#13;
tuition for in-stale students to anything.&#13;
like rull per student cost."&#13;
"Inevitably students are going to pay a&#13;
greater part of the cost or their education ,I&#13;
they can afford to, but tuition should not&#13;
prevent any qualified student from attending&#13;
the university," he added.&#13;
The conversation between Young and&#13;
Weaver was recorded earlier Tuesday at&#13;
the University of Missouri television&#13;
station at Columbia. Weaver is president&#13;
of the University of Missouri. He is expecled&#13;
to assume his duties in Madison&#13;
sbortly after Christmas.&#13;
somewhat more detached position. The&#13;
president's job is to see that the chancellor&#13;
of a campus has the resources to maintain&#13;
the greatness of his campus."&#13;
Weaver also mentioned maintaining the&#13;
universities relations with the alumni, the&#13;
State Legislature and the governor as&#13;
among the president's responsibilities.&#13;
Urban Campus Role&#13;
Weaver sees increased roles for the&#13;
UW's Milwaukee and Racine campuses as&#13;
urban campuses. "The role of the urban&#13;
university intrigues me," Weaver said. He&#13;
pointed out that the University of Miss"'!ri&#13;
had campuses in Sl Louis and Kansas CIty&#13;
which specialize in problems of the cities.&#13;
•'There must be a tremendous OIr&#13;
portunity to do this in Milwaukee and&#13;
Racine," Weaver said&#13;
"The question is, can we bring the land&#13;
grant idea of service into the urban scene?&#13;
Can we bring to the urban areas the&#13;
knowledge that we have that can work to&#13;
the betterment of urban life. H&#13;
weiver cautioned that this must be done&#13;
Violinist To Perform In UWP Concert Series&#13;
Japanese-born violinist Keiko Furiyoshi,&#13;
affiliate artist in music at the Uruverslty of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, will present the next&#13;
program in the University Artists Concert&#13;
Series at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 22, m&#13;
Greenquist HaD at the UWP Wood Road&#13;
Campus. .&#13;
Single admission tickets will be&#13;
available at the door. (Adults $1, students&#13;
50 cents, cbiIdren 12 and under free.)&#13;
Miss Furiyoshi's program wiU Include&#13;
Vitali's Chaconne, Tcbaikowsky's Concerto&#13;
in D. Major, Op. 35, Mozart's Ada.glO&#13;
in E Major K261. Bloch's Nigu., (lIDprovisationl&#13;
and Sarasate's Gypsy AU'S&#13;
Op. 20. She wiD be accompamed at the&#13;
piano by Genevieve Prevot, a studenl or&#13;
Carmen Vila, Parkside artiSt-m-resldence.&#13;
Miss Furiyoshi, who joined the Parl&lt;Slde&#13;
music staff this faU, comes to UWP from.&#13;
the University of Indiana where she was Ii&#13;
student of Josef Gingold. former concertmaster&#13;
of the Cleveland Symphony&#13;
and nOWhead of ~e violin department at&#13;
the Indiana institution.&#13;
Born in Yokohama, Miss Furiyoshi&#13;
began her study of the violin at the age of&#13;
three at the world-renowned Suzuki School&#13;
- the "little children's music school" of&#13;
Japan.&#13;
She has made concert appearances in&#13;
New York and in the Midwest and returned&#13;
to Japan earlier this year to present a&#13;
recital at Toshi Center Hall in Tokyo. She&#13;
also has made several recordings in&#13;
Japan.&#13;
In January, she wiU present a concert in&#13;
carnegie Hall in the JeWlesse5 Musicales&#13;
International Artists Series.&#13;
MEMO&#13;
In a memodaled Nov. 12Anthony Totero&#13;
warns there will be suspension of&#13;
privileges to recognized student&#13;
organizations unless they dissolve all&#13;
oul8ide bank accounts and deposit their&#13;
funds with the bursar.&#13;
the faculty of Stanford University, Cornell&#13;
Unlvenity, the Califorma Institute or&#13;
Tec/wdocy, the Institut de Biolog,e 01&#13;
Paris and Harvard Umvenity.&#13;
He cu.......,t1yII presldenl of the ChIcago&#13;
Horticultural Society where he rs con-&#13;
&lt;kK:tingmuch of his current research&#13;
Film Series&#13;
At Rondelle&#13;
The Intercollegiate Film Councrl,&#13;
comprised of Parkside, Carthage and&#13;
Dominican students and Iaculty presents a&#13;
film series which is sponsered b) John·&#13;
son's Wax Inc. at (he Golden Roodelle&#13;
All films w ill be shown at the GoIdf'n&#13;
RonMUr Theater at 7:00 p.m. on Sunda~&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Some of the films to be shown arc'&#13;
"War of the Buttons" 7\'0\ 22, 1970&#13;
"The Red Desert" Dec. 6.1970&#13;
"Weekend" Feb. H, 19711&#13;
"Persona" ~lan::h7,I97u&#13;
"L,Avventura" ~1arch21.197U&#13;
The-Janus-New Cinema AprI14.19i0&#13;
(To be announced) Aprl12S. I~U&#13;
The tickets are free. but only a \l'r)&#13;
limited amount of tickets are available&#13;
and these will be given out on "f'dnt'Sda)s&#13;
and Thursday s 10 the GrN"nquisl concoarse&#13;
from 12 nooo lill I p.m. and abo on&#13;
Wednesdays and Thur-sdays at the en&#13;
trance to the lounge at the Itactne campo ...&#13;
from II a.m. Uti It noon. It was Iirst stated&#13;
that tickets would be given oul on Thur-s&#13;
days and Fridays. but do to the mixup of&#13;
trying to get tickets from other school . It&#13;
has been changed to leave Fridays to&#13;
straighten things out.&#13;
The tickets will be given out on the&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday preeeedmg the&#13;
Sunday 01 the film.&#13;
For further mformahon contact either&#13;
Mary Geraets (632·20541 or Jerry Horton&#13;
1633-47691.&#13;
Grant Accepted&#13;
A grant from the Amencan Chemical&#13;
Society Petroleum Research Fund 10&#13;
support of research by Virgmla Scherr. an&#13;
assistant professor of chemistry at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside. \lo as&#13;
accepted al Wausau Fnda)' by lilt'&#13;
University Board of Regents.&#13;
The $7,500 grant will supporl a Ihreeyear&#13;
research proposal by Miss Scherr for&#13;
molecular orbatal studies as a basis for&#13;
understanding conformation, ele&lt;:trofllc&#13;
structure and electroDlc energy of&#13;
molecules&#13;
Besides the correlation between ex&#13;
perimental data and calculation. the study&#13;
seeks to generate mformation which will&#13;
facilitate development of undergraduate&#13;
research ~ograms&#13;
The American Chemical oClely&#13;
program under which lhe grant wa:;&#13;
awarded is designed for r latively new&#13;
holders of the Ph D degree and is&#13;
designed to allow them to conltnue 10·&#13;
wvidual fundamental research In the&#13;
petroleum field&#13;
MISS Scherr received hrr o('l('toral&#13;
degree at Fordham Univen,11\ ,Ind ,.IlAghl&#13;
at Louisiana State Univel"oll"and ( ~lrdU\31&#13;
Stritch College Imm',·d;.tll·l,) bC'fort'&#13;
joining the Parkslde fat:ulh la~l f .111 ...h(·&#13;
was a faculty research ptt~Ill·II ..I·11 al&#13;
Argonne &lt;111.) ational Laboratory&#13;
Recruitm t6 be herr&#13;
The Manne Corps Oll,cer e1ect,on&#13;
Team will VISit the University or&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsm campus on November 25th&#13;
to interview student interested In&#13;
becoming commissioned officers.&#13;
The Omcer Selection Team wtll be&#13;
located in Room 117to provide Information&#13;
pertaining to Manne Officer Programs,&#13;
accordmg to 1st Lieutenant R. W&#13;
DU LAP, the Marme Corps Oflicer&#13;
Selection Oflicer.&#13;
MI ORITY GROUPS&#13;
1 UWPROGRAM&#13;
Indian Americans and Spanishsw-named&#13;
Americans, as well as blacks,&#13;
are eligible for college aid through the&#13;
Consortium for Graduate Study in&#13;
Business ror Disadvantaged Students.&#13;
The enlarged scope or the program, tied&#13;
in with The University of Wiscomin&#13;
Graduate School of Business, includes&#13;
students from such ethnic grou~ as&#13;
Puerto Ricans, Indians, MexicanAmericans,&#13;
and Cubans who are American&#13;
citizens. Its purpose is to hasten the entry&#13;
0( minority persons inlo management&#13;
p&gt;sitions in business.&#13;
George W. Beadle To Present Lecture Here&#13;
No~ laureate George Wells B&#13;
emeritus president of the U . ~die, . Beadle received the obel prize, the&#13;
Chat itcheagou, nW11·v.llerspriesent a fr_ ee pum_b~:7ec1tytureof highest scientific honor society bestows, m ty of 1958 for his research on the relation of&#13;
Wood Road Ca WtSConsm-Parkside genes to pecific biochemical reactions.&#13;
N . mpus at 8 p.m. on Tuesda Th . ov. 24, m Greenquist Hall R Y, epr1ze, which he shared with Edv.ard L.&#13;
talk is_ sponsored by the P~r~i ~~ree Tatum and Joshua Lederberg, was in&#13;
and_ Fme_ Arts Committee. psysiology and medicine.&#13;
~is t~ptc will be "Mystery and Myth of In addition to the Nobel Prize. he ha&#13;
Maize. The talk, which will be illustrated received the Priestley. temorial Award of&#13;
~y c~lo~ transparencies, will cover the Dickinson College in 1967; the Kimber&#13;
hnguistic,_ historical, archeological Genetics Award of the, ational Acad m,·&#13;
m~rphological, cytological and geneti~ of Sciences in 1960, the national award of&#13;
evidence_ o_f _evolution of maize, or corn, the American Cancer ociety in 1959; he&#13;
fro Emil Christian Hansen Prize of the Ro al&#13;
var%tf~~itive species to modern hybrid Danish Academy of Sciences in 1953: the&#13;
Dur!ng t~ day, he also will meet with Dyer Award of the , 'ational Institut of&#13;
Par~side science students. Health in 1951 ; and the La ker A ard of&#13;
. ~1s will be the Nobel Jaureate's second the American Public Health A iation m&#13;
visit t~ _Parkside in less than a year. He&#13;
1&#13;
~~adle was president of the nive 1t,&#13;
also visited the campus last May when he of Chicago from 1961 until h1 retirement in&#13;
presen~ a major public address at the&#13;
Symposmm on Biochemistry of Brain and 1968. Prior to that he wa prof - or a nd&#13;
Memory which brought scient1·sts from chairman of the Div· ion of Biol . at th&#13;
th gh California Institute Technolo · fr m rou out the world to Parkside. 1946 to 1961. He also h been a member of&#13;
Murphy Represented In Craft Shows . . C_eram!st John Satre Murphy of the&#13;
Umvers1ty of Wisconsin-Parkside art&#13;
faculty is represented in two current invitational&#13;
shows and has been granted a&#13;
merit achievement award for works he is&#13;
exhibiting in a third show.&#13;
Murphy received the award for two&#13;
stoneware bowls with platinum and gold&#13;
lusters which are included in the invitational&#13;
Craft Comrnittment Show which&#13;
will open Dec. 7 at the Rochester (Minn.)&#13;
Art Center and will then tour for two years.&#13;
Murphy also is represented in the&#13;
Wisconsin Craft Invitational o. 3&#13;
traveling exhibit opening Friday and&#13;
continuing through Dec. 20 at L'Atelier&#13;
Gallery in Milwaukee and in the December&#13;
invitational craft show of the Contemporary&#13;
Crafts Association in Portland,&#13;
Ore.&#13;
In the 1ilwaukee ho~ .. lurph) h · tv. o&#13;
larger luster bowl - one a h ad bo\, I&#13;
adorned with faces with copper. gold,&#13;
orange and red Ju ters and one an a ·tract&#13;
stoneware bowl with cobalt blue tain and&#13;
platinum lu ter - and a mall porcelain&#13;
wall relief with gold lust r mount d in&#13;
J3)exiglass.&#13;
Murphy also has a porcela in wall r Ii r&#13;
in plexiglass in the Portland exhibit. Hi&#13;
ceramics have been widely exhibited&#13;
throughout the United tates a nd were&#13;
included in last winter' - . 1ontana Craftsmen&#13;
Exhibit at the milhsonian In·&#13;
stitulion. 1urph~ , who received h1&#13;
graduate degree from the niversity of&#13;
Montana, joined the Par ide faculty la t&#13;
year.&#13;
The role of the urban university intrigues me.'&#13;
Weaver Will Work To Better&#13;
UW Public Relations&#13;
Reprint from Milwaukee J oumal&#13;
Madison, Wis: - Improving relations&#13;
between the University of Wisconsin and&#13;
the people of the state will be a high&#13;
priority objective during the administration&#13;
of John C. Weaver, the new&#13;
president of UW.&#13;
In a conservation with Edwin Young,&#13;
chancellor of the Madison campus; seen on&#13;
WHA-TV Tuesday night, Weaver siad:&#13;
"We have no greater objective than to&#13;
regain the faith of the people who support&#13;
the university. We have to transmit to&#13;
them that the essence of what they have&#13;
always had faith in·is still there."&#13;
Weaver described university admirµstrators&#13;
as caught between studen~&#13;
who are demanding a greater role in the&#13;
governing of their schools and the public&#13;
which is demanding greater aceountability&#13;
from the administrators.&#13;
"People Will Be Heard"&#13;
somewhat more detached position. The&#13;
president's job is to see that the chancellor&#13;
of a campus has the resources to maintain&#13;
the greatness of his campus."&#13;
Weaver also mentioned maintaining the&#13;
universities relations with the alumni, the&#13;
State Legislature and the governor as&#13;
among the president's responsibilities.&#13;
Urban Campus Role&#13;
Weaver sees increased roles for the&#13;
UW's Milwaukee and Racine campuses as&#13;
urban campuses. "The role of the urban&#13;
university intrigues me," Weaver said. He&#13;
pointed out that the University of Missouri&#13;
had campuses in SL Louis and Kansas City&#13;
which specialize in problems of the cities.&#13;
"There must be a tremendous o~&#13;
portunity to do this in Milwaukee and&#13;
Racine," Weaver said.&#13;
"The question is, can we bring the land&#13;
grant idea of service into the urban scene?&#13;
Can we bring to the urban areas the&#13;
knowledge that we have that can work to&#13;
the betterment of urban life."&#13;
wea·ver cautioned that this must be done&#13;
·'without involving oursel e in the civic&#13;
decisionmaking. ·· Weaver said development of urban&#13;
studies at these campuses would pro, id&#13;
them a growth area v.,ithout duplicating&#13;
many of the program of the tadison&#13;
campus.&#13;
" These campuses would have an area of&#13;
development that is untouched . Th re are&#13;
some things that all campu es m t do,&#13;
but when it comes to the more pec1alized&#13;
programs there mu t be some rationing. I&#13;
am sure that you don't have to duplicate&#13;
Ph.D. programs in every department on&#13;
four campuses in Wi. con in.&#13;
Weaver said he al o opposed "'rai 1ng&#13;
tuition for in-state tudents to anythm .&#13;
like full per stud nl cosl"&#13;
"Inevitably students are going to pa) a&#13;
greater part of the co l of their education 1f&#13;
they can afford to, but tuition hould not&#13;
prevent any qualified tudent from al·&#13;
tending the university," he ad d&#13;
The conversation between Young and&#13;
Weaver was recorded earlier Tu day at&#13;
the niversity of 1issouri tel v1 ioo&#13;
station at Columbia. Weaver i pr ident&#13;
of the University of 1i ouri. He i expected&#13;
to assume hi duties in 1ad1_on&#13;
shortly after Chri tma . Referring to the people of the state,&#13;
Weaver said, "They have listened to a&#13;
tremendous amount of noise from the&#13;
campus, even bombs. The people are going&#13;
to be heard.&#13;
Violinist To Perform In UWP Concert Series&#13;
"Just as students have interest because&#13;
their educations are at stake, the people&#13;
have an interest because it is their money&#13;
~t is being spent. I feel the public has a&#13;
right to be heard just as the students have&#13;
a right to be heard."&#13;
Weaver indicated he believed that the&#13;
role of students was limited to making&#13;
recornmenda lions.&#13;
"I don't think you can turn the&#13;
decisionmaking process over to the&#13;
student.;. The students should be heard,&#13;
but it may be that the university can't buy&#13;
all of their recommendations."&#13;
Weaver said the role of the faculty of a&#13;
university should be broad and deep. He&#13;
said the· faculty should be responsible for&#13;
determining general academic programs&#13;
and requirements.&#13;
~ for the role of the president of the&#13;
university, Weaver said, "The day to day&#13;
Ol)erations of a campus fall to the chancellor.&#13;
The president has fallen back into a&#13;
Japanese-born violinist Keiko Furiyoshi,&#13;
affiliate artist in music at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, will present the next&#13;
program in the University Artists Conce:t&#13;
Series at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 22, tn&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the UWP Wood Road&#13;
Campus. . . Single admission tickets will be&#13;
available at the door. (Adults $1, students&#13;
50 cents, children 12 and under_ fr~.)&#13;
Miss Furiyosbi's program will mclude&#13;
Vitali's Chaconne, Tchaikowskts Co~-&#13;
certo in D. Major, Op. 35, Mozart s Ada_g10&#13;
in E Major K261, Bloch's Nigu"'l &lt;~-&#13;
provisation) and Sarasate's Gypsy AU"S&#13;
Op. 20. She will be accompanied at the&#13;
piano by Geneviev~ Prev?1, _a st~ent of&#13;
Carmen Vila, Parkside artist-1D-res1de~e.&#13;
Miss Furiyoshi, who joined the Parkside&#13;
music staff this fall, comes to UWP from.&#13;
the University of Indiana where she was .i&#13;
student of Josef Gingold, former concertmaster&#13;
of the Cleveland Symphony&#13;
and now head of the violin department at&#13;
the Indiana institution&#13;
Born in Yokohama, 1i Furi)· hi&#13;
began her study of the violin at the age of&#13;
three at the world-renowned Suzuki School&#13;
- the "little children's music school " of&#13;
Japan. She has made concert appearances m&#13;
ew York and in the Iidwest and returned&#13;
to Japan earlier this year to present a&#13;
recital at Toshi Center Hall in Tokyo She&#13;
also has made several recording in&#13;
Japan. In January, she will present a concert in&#13;
Carnegie Hall in the JeW1esses tusicales&#13;
International Artists Series.&#13;
MEMO&#13;
In a memo dated 'ov. 12 Anthony Totero&#13;
warns there will be suspension of&#13;
privileges to recognized student&#13;
organizations unless they dissolve all&#13;
outside bank accounts and deposit their&#13;
funds with the bursar.&#13;
the faculty of tanford nlv&#13;
University, the California&#13;
Technology, the lnstitut d Bi l 1&#13;
Paris and Harvard ru\ ty.&#13;
He currently is president the Cha&#13;
Horticultural Societ h&#13;
Cklcting much cl his curr nt&#13;
Film Series&#13;
At Rondelle&#13;
Grant Accepted&#13;
i.·&#13;
Indian American and&#13;
surnamed Americans, a well a bl&#13;
are eli ible for college aid through th&#13;
Con ortium for Graduate tudy in&#13;
Bu iness for Disadvantaged tud n .&#13;
The enlarged scope of the program, tied&#13;
in with The niversll of Wi co in&#13;
Graduate School of Busin . includ&#13;
students from uch ethnic grou!)l&gt; a&#13;
Puerto Ricans, Indian . • 1exicanAmericans,&#13;
and Cuban who are American&#13;
citizens. Its purpose is to hasten the entry&#13;
of minority persons mto management&#13;
positions in business. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
The Tension Remains&#13;
We have been trying for weeks to make some assessment of&#13;
student feeling. Why? This fall, students seem to have something on&#13;
their minds - some sort of indescribable tension.&#13;
Last pring there were the Kent killings, the bombings, the&#13;
demonstrations. Last summer there was the bombing of Sterling Hall.&#13;
So far this fall nothing destructive has come of any of our various hangups.&#13;
But the tension is there.&#13;
That tension obviates itself in various ways. Students seem less&#13;
than willing to talk about strong issues - after all, where has ~lJting&#13;
led to in the past? And the bombing fad is wearing off - where did that&#13;
type of violence lead? Students appear to be guarding strongly and&#13;
ilently their personal convictions. What can one person do to end the&#13;
war, stop pollution, lower taxes, stop drug abuse - "what can one man&#13;
do, my friend, what can one man do?"&#13;
But the tension remains. Specifically for this campus, we have&#13;
come up with the idea that the underlying feeling is not one of apathy,&#13;
but rather one 01 hopelessness. Students have an interest in such things&#13;
the formation of a student government, or the idea that instructors&#13;
pay more attention to teaching than to research. You can talk until who&#13;
lin.... when and nothing will ever come of anything. It's less or an&#13;
pathetic, 'I don't care' attitude, than it is one or 'who would hear what&#13;
I said' And so there is that undeniable and undefinable tension. Even&#13;
th (acuity are experiencing the pangs or DO communication, as was&#13;
-n by the resolution passed by members of the Social Science&#13;
division.&#13;
Maybe the tension we feel isn't a tension at all. Maybe it's the&#13;
plateau of the so-called student revolution that is apparent in this&#13;
country. There's probably more to come.&#13;
Correction&#13;
The editors of the EWSCOPE received and printed some incorrect&#13;
information in last week's issue. Vice-Chancellor Brockman is&#13;
not co-owner 01 the University Bookstores. Howard Thielen is the&#13;
owner.&#13;
Oil 11(11"'011\\ Y&#13;
t lcve churches I really do. Not just&#13;
ror lh ph)"5lcal components and aesthetic&#13;
values but because or what happens to me&#13;
~ hen Iam Ill)lde of a church. For me, a&#13;
....ffk ...',thout a church service is like a&#13;
pumpl,," P'~WIthout whIpP"'! cream&#13;
3pplt pie ''''lthout cheese •• or a kiss&#13;
"lthout a squeeze. So It IS natural that&#13;
.......0 Mrs CruhJ and I are traveling that&#13;
... not onl) VISit the museums and fine&#13;
I"fStaurants In that area but houses of&#13;
.. on.tup a .. ell&#13;
I tt') to be- reverent at all limes ...&#13;
.. here\"er Irna)' be at any given moment&#13;
In a Quistian church, a Moslem&#13;
mosque. a Je'*1 h synagogue. a Buddhist&#13;
t mple. a Hindu of Shinto shnne or In&#13;
cl room. on the street or In my orrice.&#13;
I) thapel t.n ~. ,Iy be • room ttl my&#13;
home or a . at In an alrplame This aU&#13;
mok for a ,,"ery com"enient arrangement.&#13;
.".nd, mct there IS ooly one God and&#13;
God I t\"er')-v..here. • what difference&#13;
• hQuJd time place or deeore make~&#13;
I hnd m)'self onI,)" mildl,)" Interested in&#13;
t.' tartan procedures although I do&#13;
rt'CO~nlt.e the-Ir lmportance and 1rs"&#13;
Cruhl and I I') do do our share But I&#13;
gr. lh en)o) • me.runglul hturgy. a line&#13;
M'mlon nd beautiful mUSIc. It has been a&#13;
mal ler of opllonal chOice for over forty&#13;
)t·ar Lhat ""e ha,,'e attended the services&#13;
at The First United Methxh I church In&#13;
f me tach unda)' mormng" We recoup&#13;
our lreongth for IInog to the wonderful&#13;
feti~\\, hip ....e find there&#13;
II \\,a out good fortune 10 pend most of&#13;
: plember of 1968 In 'o",,"ay and It was&#13;
1f.....·"ltable that ....e . houJd ""' It se,,'eral of&#13;
II",,. •·..t.,. Churthes" So-c.lled, I&#13;
. uppose. btcause the roughly-he'o'n boards&#13;
whlth make up the Sides 01 the church&#13;
stand on end&#13;
\ l\ r""eglan slave church is made&#13;
('nllrel} of y.0Dd These churches are not&#13;
large You could put the ba e of one Inside&#13;
"Iarg. la room The rools ar~ hIgh and&#13;
It"ep u ually ....Ith t\lo 0 or three hers of&#13;
roofs rl or like. pagoda Th~ lew&#13;
pews In Ide .....ould seal from twent)' to&#13;
Ihlrty people In the 18th century. we wer~&#13;
told there were se\"eral hwtdreds of these&#13;
churches In Norway. Now onl)' twenty-&#13;
~ght remain Each is con Idered a&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
national treasure.&#13;
My "special wave-length" was&#13;
operating when we were in the Fantoft&#13;
Slave church about five miles south of&#13;
Bergen.. As we walked around inside I&#13;
gently touched the wood which had been&#13;
cut from the forest in the thirteenth century.&#13;
Ithought 01 Norway's thousand years&#13;
of Olristian history". . . of the many&#13;
gener.tions which had worshiP"'! in this&#13;
place· And I tho~ht 01 the manv other&#13;
churches Mrs. Gruhl and I had visited.&#13;
1said to Mrs. Gruhl, "Ruth, please leave&#13;
me alone for a few minutes ... Iwanllo&#13;
record my thoughts right now." She was&#13;
familiar with requests such as this, and&#13;
said, "Okay, dear ... see you later." Sh~&#13;
went outside and walked around the&#13;
grounds.&#13;
Now I had the church to myself .nd&#13;
talked to the tape recorder which I always&#13;
carry With me when 00 a trip. That little&#13;
Sony has a wonderful memory and a&#13;
month later, when we were back home I&#13;
played the t.pe ... and this is what Ih~d&#13;
recorded I will simply title it ...&#13;
THE STAVE CHURCH&#13;
These next thoughts are about&#13;
Churches ...&#13;
Ruth and I have been in many&#13;
In our travels 'round the world.&#13;
Here we've met up with another&#13;
Form of reverent architecture ...&#13;
We are told it's caUed a "Stave Church"&#13;
For its boards aU stand on end.&#13;
Cleverly they're fabricated&#13;
What ingenious construction' ..&#13;
Built to raise your eyes tow~rds' heaven&#13;
Built to shed the winter's snows. '&#13;
N~w this old ~orwegian Stave Church&#13;
Brmgs nostalgic recollections&#13;
Of the places where we've worshipped&#13;
Of the churches that we've seen. '&#13;
O1ristian churches without number&#13;
Notre Dame. Westminster Abbey •.&#13;
Washington's National Cathedral&#13;
Cbrist's birthplace in Bethlehem:&#13;
A long tabin in Alask.&#13;
Store!ronl Lutheran Ch~ in Hong K&#13;
Denver's Red Rock Amphitheater ong,&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 9&#13;
November 23, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOEll&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Sven Tarrs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby, JohnPotent~&#13;
N~ws Editor&#13;
. Sports Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ 01 the ti~iversity. "! W~&#13;
P&#13;
kside Kenosha Wisconsin, 5314(). MaIlIng address IS Parksida s N-· .... • r si " . d edito lal t I ho --~,.., 3700 Washingtoo Rd., Kenosha. BUSiness an I rr e ep ne number b ...&#13;
4861, ext. :16, and 652-4177.&#13;
LETTERS to the Editor&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Re: The letter of Louie Petts 6755808&#13;
USNRR, which appeared in Newscope,&#13;
Nov. 16. .&#13;
Congratulations on receiving your check&#13;
Nov. 6. Your success may be an exception&#13;
instead 01 the rule.&#13;
Personally I haven't been so lucky.&#13;
When I checked with Student Records to&#13;
find out about my VA check I was informed&#13;
that my records had been submitted&#13;
on Oct. 19. On Friday, Nov. 13, I&#13;
went to the local V.A. offi ce in th~ court&#13;
house. There Iwas informed that they had&#13;
called Milw.ukee six (6) limes that&#13;
morning (or six Parkside vets who had not&#13;
received their checks. Finally they quit&#13;
making individual phone calls and began&#13;
to list the complaints, they were going to&#13;
make one call late in the day.&#13;
December is no joke. Two years ago&#13;
some vets got their first check two days&#13;
before Christmas.&#13;
The woman at the VA said that she&#13;
could not pinpoint the fault, but she said&#13;
she was going to ask the Milwaukee office&#13;
to investigate the matter. She also said&#13;
that she had heard that the Student&#13;
Records office had delayed submitting the&#13;
necessary forms so as to save time&#13;
correcting drops and transfers, but they&#13;
were not supposed to do that.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
RA16720257&#13;
(Name withheld)&#13;
Where we went one Easter morn.&#13;
Christian Science Church in Boston,&#13;
Salt Lake City's Mormon Temple,&#13;
Mexlcana's Quaclalupe,&#13;
Riverside ChurCh in New York.&#13;
Mifiosionary Church on Mauii&#13;
Chapel at United Nations, '&#13;
Ciose to h,ome Chicago Temple,&#13;
Cluldhood s church on Christmas Eve.&#13;
The High Altar in St. Peter's&#13;
Made 01 gold and alabaster&#13;
Private chapels, tabernacl~&#13;
Prayer nooks in the c·acaco~bs.&#13;
And the church where Albert Schweitzer&#13;
Often went to play the organ ...&#13;
What a privilege it was lor&#13;
Me to play that organ, too!&#13;
~en trn:re .were non-Christian Temples&#13;
WIth. theIr d:llerent rules and cultures,&#13;
Urulled by One Creator&#13;
But with Prophets of th~ir own.&#13;
David's Tomb Room in Jerus'lem&#13;
The G~eat. ~lue Mosque in Istanb~l!&#13;
th~ Ba Hal World Faith in Haila .&#13;
Hmdu Shrines in Singapore. - ,&#13;
Temples shelt'ring jeweled Buddhas&#13;
Shmto ~hrines for contemplation, •&#13;
Many-tiered Chinese pagodas&#13;
W.t Arum in Bangkok Th '1' d M k'd ' alan, an m chooses - each his 0&#13;
. wo.&#13;
So we stand belore the altar&#13;
In thIS. old Norwegian Stave Ch h&#13;
And With loving hearts we thinkuro~ ,&#13;
Our own church and folks back home.&#13;
Dear Sir:&#13;
I agree completely With the IeUe&#13;
censored Ken Konkol lor his PUblic: ~&#13;
01 immaturity. Why Konkol'. ......&#13;
deficiencies must be foisted upon::::&#13;
sludents- at our expense_ is beY!IIII&#13;
His apparently unceasing e!fortl ~~&#13;
sludent and fa~ulty morals certaiaII.&#13;
this campus little good.&#13;
In a recent column Konkol ~ ..&#13;
he was arrogant because he bad !hilI&#13;
years. Gee, what impressive ~&#13;
Sincer.ly-.&#13;
E. B. Tey,JiIIa&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In response to Mr. Petts (wIKi ....&#13;
dubious pleasure 01 knowing his&#13;
number) whose letter appeared II•&#13;
column, I would like to get a rew..&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, I'm sorry il Imisplaced tII!'"&#13;
of holding up veteran's paperworlt II.&#13;
wrong office - Student Aflairs iDslsIU&#13;
Student Records - the lonner "".&#13;
office I was directed to ask&#13;
concerning VA. benefits.&#13;
Second, I thank him lor his ...&#13;
approach to the problem 01lindinll..&#13;
the paperwork is handled, both hereill.&#13;
the V.A.&#13;
Third, Iwant to point out that ~&#13;
he got his check on the 6th of N.....&#13;
mosf 01 the vets I've talked to got M&#13;
around the 13th, midway between(Jd*&#13;
and December. As Isaid belore til! IsII&#13;
VA Office told me it would lAkl! .-..&#13;
month .&#13;
Although I don't know the majariJ.&#13;
veteran's marital status, I do bloW l1li&#13;
there are some 01 us wbo are IIIIIlil&#13;
which means financi.1 hardship DIll.&#13;
for ourselves, but lor our lamiliel •&#13;
Another point is that the ooly time-:&#13;
swning part 01 the lorms to be -:.&#13;
looking up the number of eredib&#13;
taken and addressing the ......&#13;
Granted, for one person this migbt ..&#13;
quite a while. If so she should ba"&#13;
=&#13;
wh~n so many people depend ..&#13;
money. . •&#13;
And last 01 all, I'd like to clue~.&#13;
Louie, Ted and I aren't in the ..&#13;
crying, just airing a view that ,most II",&#13;
vets we know support. It's posstble!,,"...&#13;
sowell ofl finaancially th.tyuu~ t III&#13;
an unneccessary period of ~~ItiJC.&#13;
most 01 us aren't in that POSltl~ ...&#13;
Still~&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
The Tension Remains&#13;
feel isn't a tension at all. Maybe it's the&#13;
tud nt revolution that is apparent in this&#13;
bly more to come.&#13;
Correction&#13;
ito of th • PE received and printed some int&#13;
information in I ·t week' i ue. Vice-Chancellor Brockman is&#13;
wn r th University Boo tore . Howard Thielen is the&#13;
&lt; ll lH 111 IH\\ ,\ Y&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
national trea ure&#13;
ty " pecial wave-length" wa s&#13;
operating when we were in the Fant.oft&#13;
lave church about five miles south of&#13;
Bergen. As we walked around inside I&#13;
gently touched the wood which had been&#13;
cut from the for t in the thirteenth cen- tury. I thought of ·orway's thousand years&#13;
m Christian hi tory · . . . of the many&#13;
generations which had worshiped in this&#13;
pla~e. And I tho~ht of the many other churches , lrs. Gruhl and I had visited.&#13;
I said to lrs. Gruhl, "Ruth, please leave&#13;
me alone for a few minutes ... I want to&#13;
record my thoughts right now." She was&#13;
familiar with requests such as this and&#13;
said," ay, dear ... see you later.'" She&#13;
went outsid and walked around the&#13;
grounds.&#13;
, '°"' I had the church to myself and&#13;
ta ed to the tape recorder which I always&#13;
carry with me when on a trip. Tha t little&#13;
ny ha a wonderful memory and a month later, when we were back home I&#13;
played the tape ... and this is what I h~d&#13;
recorded. I will imply title it . _ .&#13;
TH E STA\'ECHURCH&#13;
Th ·e next thoughts are about&#13;
Churches . ..&#13;
Ruth and I have been in many&#13;
In our travels 'round the world.&#13;
Here we've met up with another&#13;
Form of reverent architecture&#13;
We ~re told it's called a "Slav~ Church"&#13;
For its boards all stand on end.&#13;
everly they're fabric ated ...&#13;
What ingeruous construction&#13;
Built to raise your eyes towa.rds. heaven,&#13;
Built to shed the winter's snows.&#13;
'ow thi old :orwegian lave Church&#13;
Brmgs nostalgic recollections&#13;
the places where we've worshipped,&#13;
the churches that we've seen.&#13;
Chri tian churches \\-ithout number&#13;
:01r1: Dam~, Westminster Abbey, '&#13;
\\ ashmgton s 'ational Cathedral&#13;
Chri t's birthplace in Bethlehem'.&#13;
A long cabin in Alaska&#13;
torefront Lutheran Ch~rch in Hong Ko&#13;
Denver's Red Rock Amphitheater ng,&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 9&#13;
November 23, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOEil&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby, JohnPotente&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
_ Photographers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity_ of Wisco~inParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin, 531~- Ma1hng a~dr~s is Parks1de's Newscope&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 6Si&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
LETTERS to the Editor&#13;
To the Editors: Re: The letter of Louie Petts 6755808&#13;
USNRR, which appeared in Newscope,&#13;
Nov. 16. Congratulations on receiving your check&#13;
Nov. 6. Your success may be an exception&#13;
instead of the rule. Personally I haven't been so lucky.&#13;
When I checked with Student Records to&#13;
find out about my V.A. check I was informed&#13;
that my records had been submitted&#13;
on Oct. 19. On Friday, Nov. 13, I&#13;
went to the local V.A. office in the court&#13;
house. There I was informed that they had&#13;
called Milwaukee six (6) times that&#13;
morning for six Parkside vets who had not&#13;
received their checks. Finally they quit&#13;
making individual phone calls and began&#13;
to list the complaints, they were going to&#13;
make one call late in the day.&#13;
December is no joke. Two years ago&#13;
some vets got their first check two days&#13;
before Christmas.&#13;
The woman at the V.A. said that she&#13;
could not pinpoint the fault, but she said&#13;
she was going to ask the Milwaukee office&#13;
to investigate the matter. She also said&#13;
that she had heard that the Student&#13;
Records office had delayed submitting the&#13;
necessary forms so as to save time&#13;
correcting drops and transfers, but they were not supposed to do that.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
RA16720257&#13;
(Name withheld)&#13;
Where we went one Easter morn.&#13;
Christian Science Church in Boston&#13;
Salt Lake City's Mormon Temple '&#13;
Mexicana's Quadalupe, '&#13;
Riverside Church in New York.&#13;
Mi~sionary Church on Mauii&#13;
Chapel at United Nations '&#13;
CJ~e to ~ome Chicago T~mple,&#13;
Cluldhood s church on Christmas Eve.&#13;
The High Altar in St. Peter's&#13;
Made of gold and alabaster&#13;
Private chapels, tabernacl~&#13;
Prayer nooks in the cacaco~bs.&#13;
And the church where Albert Schweitzer&#13;
Often went to play the organ . . . What a privilege it was for&#13;
Me to play that organ, too!&#13;
~en th~re _were non-Christian Temples&#13;
W1!11. their d:fferent rules and cultures&#13;
Unified by One Creator '&#13;
But with Prophets of their own.&#13;
David's Tomb Room in Jerus'lem&#13;
The G~eat_ ~Jue Mosque in Istanb~l.&#13;
~e Ba Ha~ Wo~ld Faith in Haifa, · Hindu Shrines in Singapore.&#13;
Te~ples shelt'ring jeweled . Buddhas&#13;
Shinto ~brines for contemplation, • Many-tiered Chinese pagodas&#13;
WMat k~rudm in Bangkok, Thail~nd an in chooses - each hi • . sown.&#13;
So w~ stand before the altar&#13;
In this_ old Norwegian Stave Church&#13;
And with loving hearts we think f ,&#13;
Our own church and folks back h:me.&#13;
Dear Sir:&#13;
I agree completely with the letter&#13;
cen~ored Ke~ Konkol for his public~&#13;
of immaturity. Why Konkol's ·&#13;
deficiencies must be foisted upon C:::&#13;
s~dents- at our expense- is beyotrJ mt&#13;
His apparently unceasing efforts lo lotir&#13;
student and fa~ulty morale Certainly de&#13;
this campus little good.&#13;
In a recent column Konkol asserted&#13;
he was arrogant because he had uveci 21&#13;
years. Gee, what impressive credenliali&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Sin&lt;:erely YGIII.&#13;
E.B. Tey,&#13;
In response to Mr. Petts (who &amp;aYellli&#13;
dubious pleasure of knowing his&#13;
number) whose letter appeared in llil&#13;
column, I would like to get a few fn&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, I'm sorry if I misplaced the blami&#13;
of holding up veteran's paperwork to&#13;
wrong office - Student Affairs instead fl&#13;
Student Records - the former ns&#13;
office I was directed to ask quelia&#13;
concerning V.A. benefits.&#13;
Second1 I thank him for his sd&#13;
approach to the problem of finding out lloJ&#13;
the paperwork is handled, both here ind&#13;
the V.A.&#13;
Third, I want to point out that al~&#13;
he got his check on the 6th of Novemhlr&#13;
most of the vets I've talked to got&#13;
around the 13th, midway between Octtk&#13;
and December. As I said before the&#13;
V.A. Office told me it would take atxMi a&#13;
month.&#13;
Although I don't know the majonty fl&#13;
veteran's marital status, I do kno&#13;
there are some of us who are mamit.&#13;
which means financial hardship not&#13;
for ourselves, but for our families&#13;
Another point is that the only time OIi"&#13;
swning part of the forms to be sm! 1&#13;
looking up the number of credits&#13;
taken and addressing the eD\'tkf5&#13;
Granted, for one person this mighl&#13;
quite a while. If so she should ha1e&#13;
when so many people depend Oil&#13;
money.&#13;
And last of all I'd like to clue l&#13;
Louie, Ted and i aren't in the halit&#13;
crying, just airing a view that mii;t rl&#13;
vets we know support. It's possible~&#13;
so well off finaancially that yuu ~oo 1&#13;
an unneccessary period of ~~itin&amp;-&#13;
most of us aren't in that pos1llon Hank&#13;
Sti!ID&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing &#13;
THORN&#13;
International Dictionary - Unabridged&#13;
de~mes It a~: "a statement or represen.&#13;
tation r,ubhshed withoot just cause or&#13;
excuse. This representation should also&#13;
have an element of falsehood. O.K.. Fran.&#13;
~ho have I told unwarranted lieS about?&#13;
Speak. me no generalities. speak me&#13;
specifics. I and most people at this&#13;
umvers.'ty are intellectually,&#13;
academically, and emotionally fit to&#13;
~ecogruze something wrong when they see&#13;
It. Also, believe it or not, most of tlie&#13;
student~ and all of the faculty at this&#13;
Univer-sity do pay taxes. Next time yoo&#13;
decide to cut somebody down get yoor&#13;
facts straight before you start. However,&#13;
once again, I compliment you on baying&#13;
the courage to sign your name to your&#13;
convictions· Well done.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
An independent poll was conducted last&#13;
week concerning reader reaction to Thorn.&#13;
It was independent since it was conducted&#13;
by a person not on the staff and personally&#13;
antagonistic to my own column. Twentyfive&#13;
students and 7 faculty were in favor of&#13;
Thorn. 22.students and 5 faculty thought it&#13;
could be improved (usually these&#13;
suggestions cancelled each other out.),&#13;
and 61 students had no opinion!&#13;
+ +.+&#13;
Keep those cards and letters coming in.&#13;
How are we going to know what you want&#13;
to see unless you write and let us know.&#13;
Don't leave it to the other guy, he's as&#13;
apathetic as you used to be. Any comments&#13;
concerning Thorn should be addressed to&#13;
me so that they might be handled more&#13;
efficiently and answered in the same issue&#13;
ra~her than subsequent ones.&#13;
"&#13;
o&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
..&#13;
'C&#13;
J.T.&#13;
I smiled at you&#13;
and discovered life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated,&#13;
bringing hack the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
And although I found the universe&#13;
a vise upon the marrow of my soul,&#13;
I followed you,&#13;
seeking life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
. and the times repea ted,&#13;
bringing hacl\ the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
My touch reached. implored.&#13;
could you understand the universe&#13;
of me&#13;
the sea of darkness and bright suns&#13;
raging all around you&#13;
grasping at life anew.&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the limes repeated&#13;
bringing back the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world? .&#13;
Somehow, though I clung (crying, "I want you! "seeking a hfeanew)&#13;
your person stung the force&#13;
of my life • I&#13;
you didn't know (you can't! you couldn t.)&#13;
Do you even want to know&#13;
the Wliverse of me,&#13;
this sea of darkness&#13;
and bright suns&#13;
raging all around you&#13;
grasping life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the limes repeated&#13;
bringing hack the era&#13;
when the Sun ruled the&#13;
world?&#13;
But you took my gold and made it tinselsaw&#13;
the beautiful ocean I offered and&#13;
made it a mud puddle ...&#13;
nes For Recognition&#13;
W•• hlngt .... D.C. - (I.P) - In one of the&#13;
first court cases to deal with the&#13;
procedural rights of political .tudent&#13;
organizations attempting to gain official&#13;
recognition. a U.S. District Court judge in&#13;
Connecticut has ordered Central Cooneclicut&#13;
State College to hold a hearing on&#13;
whether to recognize a local chapter of the&#13;
Students for a Democratic Society.&#13;
The chapter complied with college&#13;
procedures in applying for recognition.&#13;
and stated that the local group did not&#13;
follow dictates from any national&#13;
organization.&#13;
The dean of students. three faculty and&#13;
four students voted to recommend that the&#13;
administration grant recognition.&#13;
Nevertheless. President Don James&#13;
denied recognition on the grounds that in&#13;
his view the aims of the national SDS. and&#13;
the charter of the CoUege were incompatible.&#13;
The court's decision concluded that no&#13;
group is enlilled per se to recognition. and&#13;
did not deny the president's authority to&#13;
refuse an application.&#13;
It ruled, however. that once a school&#13;
allows student groups to organize and&#13;
grants recognition to them, it must apply&#13;
constitutional safeguards to aUgroups that&#13;
seek recognition process and a fair application&#13;
of these standards to all groups.&#13;
Suits brought by students against public&#13;
coUege administrators. listed by the&#13;
American Association of State Colleges&#13;
and Universities, include those that claim&#13;
the administration was too lax with&#13;
dissenters as well as those that argue&#13;
unduly harsh measures were used against&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
£~&#13;
dissenters.&#13;
Students and parents 01 students .t OhIO&#13;
Slate University sought injunctions&#13;
agamst a p-ofessor. several teach1f~&#13;
assistants. and four students'&#13;
organizations whom they clerm led activities&#13;
which resulted m dasruption on&#13;
campus&#13;
The Franklin Counly court granled an&#13;
injunclion against specified distrupuve&#13;
action by most of 1he mdivlduals 1O\'oIved.&#13;
but did not enjoin three of Ihe student&#13;
organizations because of legal&#13;
techrucalihes involved&#13;
SwuupiJe gL,ri.Jb&#13;
&amp;' (jru.nlwweJ&#13;
PARTS&#13;
The letterS to' the editors were extionally&#13;
good last week as they usual1y&#13;
cep Iwas especially happy to see the one :;e'"Name withheld by request" who&#13;
tated some things that I have heen trying&#13;
s rd to do all the time. that we do have.&#13;
hary good Psyc. teachers at this school&#13;
~en though the whole department has&#13;
beengiven a bad name by a few students&#13;
whOrao into a great deal of difficulty with&#13;
certain mstructors. However, response&#13;
!rom individual students in naming our&#13;
competent instructors IS woefully slow.&#13;
'\bey seem more inclined to respond to&#13;
... tructors on the other side of the scale.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
There was another letter printed&#13;
alongside my last column that was also&#13;
very good from Fran Jaeschke. She must&#13;
be commended on her lack of apathy. I&#13;
found her metaphor "crown of thorns"&#13;
very appropriate if she meant that as&#13;
.symbolicof the sins of the administra tion&#13;
falling on the heads of faculty and&#13;
slllOOnts. If Mrs. -Jaeseke thinks the&#13;
University audience deserves 'better',&#13;
whydoesn't she write her own column. If&#13;
Mrs. Jaeschke was more than a casual&#13;
reader of this publication she would not&#13;
havewrilten her fourth paragraph. But for&#13;
the inattentive who missed the same article&#13;
that Fran did. I suggest you find a&#13;
copy of the October 26 issue which explained&#13;
exactly that I write only what&#13;
peopleImeet during the week would like&#13;
to see in the next issue, what they believe, I&#13;
would also suggest that Mrs. Jaeschke&#13;
look up the definition of 'Iibel' in the dietionarv&#13;
as I did. Webster's Third New&#13;
------&#13;
_,"-,lOll •&#13;
VI .1Id ftAU IlUlISlOCl&#13;
:SOZ1 ·15TH.T&#13;
FRUlT BASKETS ANn CANDY&#13;
Delivu ACTOlI$ Town or ~ lhe World&#13;
«37· :nnd Av.nu.&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140&#13;
FmV.k""J&#13;
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e&#13;
''''=&#13;
as1ers&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
wit+. Almondine Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIM.E RIB&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty&#13;
CrHllllt Gemololilt-Ce:rtlhed D" .. OII,olol"'&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.)&#13;
Fairtrade Y~gg(JnA,&#13;
excepted DIAMOND CONSULTANTS&#13;
1040&#13;
Sheridan Rd.&#13;
. -&#13;
Ph. 654·1375&#13;
WATCHU=,CU'AII DIrT. J&#13;
-- - _--.. w.tcllft - k_lry "J__ - ,,-... D~",", Sf" ....&#13;
."'_ . _ ymplc:tl' .lI:p."&#13;
C-w_I ... Tl_ Dept&#13;
wc-I_ ,_. Dt~f"""&#13;
---CHIN.-=---] __.- _...,...--... _.-...........&#13;
IIIDAl&#13;
lECISTU&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
HEAVIED-oUT&#13;
Playing games&#13;
with my mind&#13;
searching to find&#13;
the perfect response&#13;
to the groping life&#13;
in which I am myself.&#13;
I decide&#13;
and can go no longer&#13;
hide&#13;
the burning heart&#13;
on my face&#13;
and your strength gives it&#13;
warmth&#13;
and power to stand&#13;
amidst&#13;
the crumbling&#13;
walls.&#13;
Every road&#13;
upon which&#13;
I walk&#13;
Love finds me&#13;
and makes me&#13;
suffer!&#13;
To be friends with love&#13;
is a demanding life&#13;
full of suffering -&#13;
Although I undergo&#13;
this passion,&#13;
Somehow, someway&#13;
I found my peace.&#13;
_ and I'm free!&#13;
I'm Free!&#13;
I'm free at last!&#13;
o Freedom, let me be;&#13;
o Freedom, let me love!&#13;
Let me fr the world!&#13;
THORN&#13;
pART 8&#13;
The letters to the editors were extionallY&#13;
good last week as they usually&#13;
cep 1 was especially happy to see the one&#13;
are. "Name withheld by request" who&#13;
b~ted some things that I have been trying&#13;
~ d to do all the time, that we do have . ~ good Psyc. teachers at this school&#13;
~~en though the whole department has&#13;
been given a bad name by a few studei:its&#13;
who ran into a great deal of difficulty with&#13;
certain instructors. However, response&#13;
from individual students in naming our&#13;
mpetent instructors is woefully slow.&#13;
;ey seem more inclined to respond to&#13;
mstructors on the other side of the scale.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
There was another letter printed&#13;
alongside my last column that was also&#13;
very good from Fran Jaeschke. She must&#13;
be commended on her lack of apathy. I&#13;
found her metaphor "crown of thorns"&#13;
very appropriate if she meant that as&#13;
·symbolic of the sins of the administration&#13;
falling on the heads of faculty and&#13;
students. If Mrs. Jaescke thinks the&#13;
University audience deserves 'better',&#13;
why doesn't she write her own column. If&#13;
Mrs. Jaeschke was more than a casual&#13;
reader of this publication she would not&#13;
have written her fourth paragraph. But for&#13;
the inattentive who missed the same article&#13;
that Fran did, I suggest you find a&#13;
copy of the October 26 issue which explained&#13;
exactly that I write only what&#13;
people I meet d~ring the week wou~d like&#13;
to see in the next issue, what they believe. I&#13;
would also suggest that Mrs. Jaeschke&#13;
Jook up the definition of 'libel' in the dictionary&#13;
as I did. Webster's Third New&#13;
I smiled at you&#13;
Internat~onal Dictionary • Unabridged&#13;
de~nes it as: "a statement or representation&#13;
F,bli~hed without just cause or excuse. This representation should also&#13;
have an element of falsehood. O.K., Fran&#13;
~ho have I told unwarranted lies about?&#13;
Spea_k_ me ·no generalities, speak me&#13;
s~c1f1c~. I and most people at this&#13;
umvers_ity are intellectually,&#13;
acader~ucally, and emotionally fit to&#13;
~ecogruze something wrong when they see&#13;
it. Also, believe it or not, most of Uie&#13;
students and all of the faculty at this&#13;
University do pay taxes. Next time you&#13;
decide to cut somebody down get your&#13;
facts straight before you start. However, once again, I compliment you on having&#13;
the courage to sign your name to your convictions - Well done.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
An independent poll was conducted last&#13;
week concerning reader reaction to Thorn.&#13;
It was independent since it was conducted&#13;
by a person not on the staff and personally&#13;
antagonistic to my own column. Twentyfive&#13;
students and 7 faculty were in favor of&#13;
Thorn, 22 .students and 5 faculty thought it&#13;
could be improved ( usually these&#13;
suggestions cancelled each other out.),&#13;
and 61 students had no opinion!&#13;
+ +.+&#13;
Keep those cards and letters corning in. How are we going to know what you want&#13;
to see unless you write and let us know.&#13;
Don't leave it to the other guy, he's as&#13;
apathetic as you used to be. Any comments&#13;
concerning Thorn should be addressed to&#13;
me so that they might be handled more&#13;
efficiently and answered in the same issue&#13;
rather than subsequent ones.&#13;
,, J.T.&#13;
0&#13;
I&#13;
and discovered life anew,&#13;
.. -&#13;
~&#13;
IC&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated,&#13;
bringing back the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
And although I found the universe&#13;
a vise upon the marrow of my soul,&#13;
I followed you,&#13;
seeking life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated,&#13;
bringing ba~ the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
My touch reached, implored,&#13;
could you understand the universe&#13;
of me the sea of darkness and bright suns&#13;
raging all around you&#13;
grasping at life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated&#13;
bringing back the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world'? . . Somehow, though I clung (crying, "I want you!" seeking a hfe anew)&#13;
your person stung the force&#13;
of my life , 1&#13;
you didn't know (you can't! you couldn t.)&#13;
Do you even want to know&#13;
the universe of me,&#13;
this sea of darkness&#13;
and bright suns raging all around you&#13;
grasping life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated&#13;
bringing back the era when the Sun ruled the&#13;
world'?&#13;
But you took my gold and made it tinsel - saw the beautiful ocean I offered and&#13;
made it a mud puddle · · ·&#13;
HEAVIED-OUT&#13;
Playing games&#13;
Every road&#13;
upon which&#13;
I walk&#13;
Love finds me with my mind&#13;
searching to find&#13;
the perfect response&#13;
to the groping life&#13;
in which I am myself.&#13;
I decide&#13;
and can go no longer&#13;
hide&#13;
the burning heart&#13;
on my face&#13;
and your strength gives it&#13;
warmth&#13;
and power to stand&#13;
amidst&#13;
the crumbling&#13;
walls.&#13;
and makes me&#13;
suffer!&#13;
To be friends with Jove&#13;
is a demanding life&#13;
full of suffering -&#13;
Although I undergo&#13;
this passion,&#13;
Somehow, someway&#13;
I found my peace,&#13;
and I'm free!&#13;
I'm Free!&#13;
I'm free at last!&#13;
o Freedom, Jet me be;&#13;
o Freedom, let me love!&#13;
Let me fr the world!&#13;
Wa hington. D.C. - ( I.Pl - In one of the&#13;
first court ca e to deal with the&#13;
procedural rights or political tudent&#13;
organiz.ations attempting to gain official&#13;
recognition, a U S. District Court judge in&#13;
Connecticut has ordered Central Connecticut&#13;
State College to hold a hearing on whether to recognize a local chapter of the&#13;
Students for a Democratic Society. The chapter complied \\ith college&#13;
procedures in applying for recognition. and stated that the local group did not&#13;
follow dictates from any national&#13;
organiz.ation.&#13;
The dean of students, three faculty and&#13;
four students voted to recommend that the&#13;
administration grant recognition .&#13;
Nevertheless. President Don James&#13;
denied recognition on the grc.unds that m&#13;
his view the aims of the national D and&#13;
the charter of the College were incompatible.&#13;
&#13;
The court's decision concluded that no&#13;
group is entitled per se lo recognition, and&#13;
did not deny the presid nt's authority to&#13;
refuse an application. It ruled, however, that once a chool&#13;
allows student groups to organize and&#13;
grants recognition to them, it must apply&#13;
constitutional safeguards to all groups that&#13;
seek recognition process and a fair air&#13;
plication of these standards to all group .&#13;
Suits brought by students aga inst public&#13;
college administrators listed by the&#13;
American Association or tale Colleges&#13;
apd Universities, include those that claim&#13;
the administration was too Jax with&#13;
dissenters as well as tho e that argue&#13;
unduly harsh measures were u ed against&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
£~ FRUIT BASKETS ANil CANDY&#13;
Deliver A""* Town or ""-th« Worid&#13;
campu&#13;
Toe Franklin ount · court r ntcd n inJunction gains! ified d trupt1v&#13;
action by m _t of the individ im·ol\'cd,&#13;
but did not enjoin 1hr of th tu t&#13;
or anization. bl.'cau or le I&#13;
technfcalitie in\'Ol\'l'd&#13;
SumupiJe gforuts&#13;
&amp; (j,eoJz.owe.s&#13;
3021 • 7,TH ST&#13;
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4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
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654-0774&#13;
3s1ers 8040&#13;
Sheridon Rd. . -&#13;
DIA.MOHD CONSULTANTS&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDAREO SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Souce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIM.E RIB&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
WATCHlS=:J~llt Dll'T. j&#13;
..... . A ~ Wit, ti - '""''" 111--• ._,,.. D -4 Sett'°'t • .,... • .......,. C• pktr ~p,u car.-.. -. • • 'f't Orpt&#13;
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IIIOAL&#13;
UGISTU&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Facult Y Gndo,e Gemol cht,Cut1f1cd 0,1111on1olo ilt&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.)&#13;
Fairtrade y~llSo-ru excepted It does iNh a d,fferenc• whre rou sltopf &#13;
From Other Campuses&#13;
Grand Forks, N D - (I.P.) - Two&#13;
national magazines, Readers Digest and&#13;
The AUantic lonthly, bave published&#13;
artkles praising errorts or the University&#13;
of 'orth Dakota New School of Behavioral&#13;
tudles in Education to remodel&#13;
elern ntary school education in the state&#13;
along informal lin&#13;
Th megann Ieeture articles based&#13;
on a thrff-and·a-ball·year study of the&#13;
education of educators, commissioned by&#13;
the arnegie Corporahon Cbarles&#13;
,'berm n, • member of Fortune&#13;
m saIl . rei of editors, and hi wife,&#13;
Arl oe, conducted the tudy and each&#13;
uthoro&lt;! on or the erucl&#13;
+ + +&#13;
~th ny. W Va - II p) - tudent&#13;
tloard of cverne-s offiCIals l\OIIi bave&#13;
ofh pa a'·allabl. ,n the Bethany&#13;
OIl r mbl t Administration bu,ldlng&#13;
l'OUr lncrt"a ent 1 on shared&#13;
de lon·m k,n by tall and students."&#13;
Rubert nderoo. 'ii Pres'dent and&#13;
t n 01 • tud~ts. td In an lOt rvitlA' He&#13;
id .h, mo heralds the decade's&#13;
,wut hll lrmd m tudent abllll1es, in·&#13;
h-n" h nt·...I 4tnd con equ ot new&#13;
tllr linn u chool per onnet&#13;
"' It".J h&gt;R)!&#13;
lud,-" enter the decade of the&#13;
un . I 1 ot reaction is their response to&#13;
thl g or In tantaneou com·&#13;
munlcatlon ,'. 0 an andercox said&#13;
"R&lt;lp,d new repor\lng of developments IS&#13;
compaN~ b)' Immediate ac:tiOft from&#13;
yOung peopl&#13;
"Tr dil,QruIlly. the ''''ory tOllier had&#13;
bUilt 10 pr ur s for long·calrn&#13;
It r loon and pondering ol,mpltcations&#13;
01 , Tho&lt;Cht pr1!Ceded action '0\Ii&#13;
luden. wanl 10 rno\ quickly in a heated&#13;
Ilu lion on campu3 or elsewhere in the&#13;
nation or world. because they feel they are&#13;
a vital part of the solution. . . .&#13;
"When lhere is an explosive Situation,&#13;
educators need to have more speedy&#13;
dialogue with students 10 discuss problems&#13;
01 concern and ways to make their parueular&#13;
contrtbetlcn. The objective is not to&#13;
talk students out of doing something; but&#13;
the conversations do have the benefiCial&#13;
effecl many times of helping stuQents see&#13;
that precipitate decisions and actions are&#13;
not their most effective means of communicating&#13;
their interest and making ~eir&#13;
particular contributions to resolVIng&#13;
problems."&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Hayward, Calif. - (I.PJ - Initiation of&#13;
a new program at California Stale College.&#13;
Hayward, to aid young drug abusers was&#13;
announced recently by President Ellis E.&#13;
McCune.&#13;
He said a federal contract for $260.800&#13;
bas been awarded to the Center for Drug&#13;
Informaloon, Research and Education at&#13;
the college by the National Institute of&#13;
Mental Health. The contract provides&#13;
funds ror IS one- and two-week training&#13;
cycles planned for the year's dw-ation.&#13;
The training will vary in intensity, accordmg&#13;
to the category of the trainee: The&#13;
2~ professional and para-profess,onal&#13;
personnel to be trained will get a more&#13;
mtensi ..·e and in depth course, and wIll go&#13;
to angencies for their field experi~nce&#13;
which are in bospital or clinical settIngs.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
salt Lake City. Utah - (J.P.) -&#13;
Asserting that the University of Utah can,&#13;
in no way, impose censorship or prior&#13;
restraint upon speakers. Alfred C. Emery,&#13;
proressor of law and chairman of the&#13;
President's Commission on Speaker&#13;
Policy, recently released the comPseudo&#13;
Event Of The Week&#13;
WASHINGTON &lt;CPS) - The selective&#13;
Sl......'ce ystem has qUleUy dropped a pI",!&#13;
10 . t up "orientation camps" for men&#13;
grant('(l Consclenl1OUS obJe&lt;:tOl"status who&#13;
do not ht mto any of the standard alternatJve&#13;
""ark . "ignmenls&#13;
In a recent inlen-lew. National Director&#13;
CUrti W Tarr. the rormer president of&#13;
La'l,l,'rtnce ni"'erslty in Appleton,&#13;
Wlsconsin informally discussed his&#13;
(oehngs about the ConSCIentious Objector&#13;
Alternative Sen'ice s.ituation. currently&#13;
pending upreme Court decisions, and the&#13;
new image of the Selective Service&#13;
ytem&#13;
On lhe S&lt;H:alled "o.-ientation camps,"&#13;
Tarr explamed that a study group headed&#13;
by the Deputy Publtc Information Ollicer&#13;
ror the ) tern had corne up with the idea&#13;
01 brlngmg together men who would not&#13;
accepl the k'nd 01 alternative service job&#13;
wluch the .. local boards wanted to gi ...e&#13;
them&#13;
The purpose of these "orientation&#13;
camps" would be to help "adjust" the&#13;
rt"Calcltranls toexi Ung JOb openings, or to&#13;
pro ..·tde special work ror them.&#13;
The Idea never got too rar, though.&#13;
'a'ional Headquarters decided to hold a&#13;
conference and let some of the national&#13;
COI\SC1t'1!l1ouobjector oriented groups in&#13;
on the ,dea and see how they would nact.&#13;
Amo~ the organuations which partiCipated&#13;
10 the mid-October Washington&#13;
meet,ng were the National Interreligious&#13;
....'ce Board for Consc,entious ObJ"Ctors&#13;
the Central CommIttee for Contentious&#13;
Objectors, and the American&#13;
Froerods Ser""ce Committee. They reacted&#13;
ry badly&#13;
The Idea sounded 100 much like the old&#13;
"work camps" of World War n. men who&#13;
opposed fighting the war were auowed to&#13;
alay in what amounted to concentration&#13;
eamps. as long as they paid their ""'"&#13;
room and board&#13;
In the faclsof this unexpected opposition&#13;
from wbat offic:Jals lerm ··C. O.&#13;
agencies" Ihe planners at national&#13;
headquartera. II described by Tarr. "put&#13;
the Idea to bed and let it die in its sleep."&#13;
So the idea of bnrcinC everybody to a&#13;
camp to counsel them Is dead, though a&#13;
proposal to counsel men OIl an individual&#13;
"SOCial worker" basis ia aWl ali ...e.&#13;
(lsienaillly the plan WII flnt thought up&#13;
with the sole inlent of heIplng men who&#13;
could not flfid CO worll. Men who are&#13;
granted CO status can sometimes gain the&#13;
approval of their local board to perform&#13;
alternative service at an acency of their&#13;
own t'booIing. (n many cases however. the&#13;
local DOIrd tries _to be punitive by arbitrarily&#13;
assigning the men to some low&#13;
paying. disagreeable job. and the man&#13;
balks. If no compromise can be worked&#13;
out, the present practice is to call in an&#13;
arbitrator from State Selective Service&#13;
Headquarters. who of len winds up issuing&#13;
a final ultimatum. The proposed plan&#13;
wwld provide a tidy "out" in cases which&#13;
have reached an impasse, and yet avoid&#13;
the sticky appearance of coercion.&#13;
It was a nice idea while lliasted But it&#13;
ran up against an image problem - the&#13;
image of manipulative social engineering.&#13;
And if lbere is anything lbe present-day&#13;
managers of the draft system are conscious&#13;
of, its their image.&#13;
They very proudiy point to the lottery&#13;
selection system, the elimination of&#13;
blatant SOCial engineering in the form of&#13;
job deferments. and the request that&#13;
Congress give the President aulbority to&#13;
revoke undergradua le student&#13;
deferments as examples of the policy of&#13;
"channeling" which former Director Gen.&#13;
Lewis B. Hersey once caued, "One of lbe&#13;
major products of the selecti ...e Service&#13;
Classification process."&#13;
Indeed. very few of the blatantly&#13;
repressive polic:Jes wbich guided General&#13;
Hersey'S 3()-.year administration of the&#13;
draft find many supporters around&#13;
national headquarters bad less than 200&#13;
employees) the national director sets the&#13;
tone for the agency."&#13;
Tarr was asked about this shift if. the&#13;
agency's image and the analysis put&#13;
forward by some draft counseling&#13;
organizations tbat the increased effort at&#13;
image-building is mosUy designed to buy&#13;
the system some time by defusing public&#13;
indignalidh in lbe coming two or three&#13;
years while the Nixon administration&#13;
moves towards its goal 01 a "zero draft."&#13;
He said, "No, I believe it is very true&#13;
that the measures we ha ...e laken bave&#13;
10000eredour prome somewbat, but I would&#13;
ba ...e wanted to do the same things if I had&#13;
been director five years ago. II&#13;
Whatever the motivation, it's clear that&#13;
Tarr himself keeps a eloser ear to public&#13;
opinion than did his predecessor.&#13;
The CO "orientation camp" caper is an&#13;
example 01 that. It grew of a study of what&#13;
to do with the grOlliing number of COS - a&#13;
study headed by a fresh, new public&#13;
relations man who was recently a Marine&#13;
colonel. When itlool&lt;ed like the plan, which&#13;
system officials slill feel has validity.&#13;
woold run lOto some controversy, it was&#13;
dropped,&#13;
- ous report - a simple. 4-&#13;
misSion'S unamm ff 'ng the Conpage&#13;
statement. rea u;::uthe firSt and&#13;
stitutional gua:~~:ls and recognizing&#13;
fourteenth amel..... •&#13;
boundaries established by I~W. "&#13;
. the report the commISSIon&#13;
In Jfte'::'~g present sp;..ker policy and.&#13;
exerrnn d b law students on court&#13;
hada study n;.~g~r~ing Constitutional&#13;
decl~lOns th limit the power of a&#13;
prOVISIOns as ey&#13;
university to control speakers. ker&#13;
The commission also exammed. spe3U S&#13;
Iicies of a number of major .,&#13;
l::.iversilies. held ed0penr ~ea[':;,~s 1'::;;&#13;
mpus and review a IS 0 .&#13;
:Oakers who have appeared on campus m&#13;
the last five years, . .. M&#13;
"The present University policy, r.&#13;
id "has permitted some con- Emery sal • ed b&#13;
fusioo between speakers spoDSO! . Y&#13;
official University groups using Umve.rsltt&#13;
y&#13;
funds d those sponsored by pnva e&#13;
• an·th their own. funds who are&#13;
groups WI iliti permitted to use University fac I es.&#13;
"While both groups may invite speakers&#13;
the nature of the sponsorship should be&#13;
made clear," the report continues. .&#13;
"Only those commillees eslabltshed&#13;
IIDder University policies and procedu~es&#13;
to select any invile speakers and for which&#13;
University funds .,.. have been&#13;
budgeted may in.,.;te speakers to :,ppear at&#13;
the University under the aegIs of the&#13;
University and use the name of. !he&#13;
University in the invitations, advertlsmg&#13;
and program," the report continues.&#13;
• WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHo&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 ·a.m. till 11 p.m. ida"&#13;
,COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
~ORTH. &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
tnic.Q,~ &amp;1"1. Q,t i~&#13;
be~t .... Fri. "e¥. 0\1&#13;
M4~('td tic.ld~ .Mo&#13;
A~\"lIt cleo' ... ·• !.oo&#13;
at. S1cu'td,nQ Co.&#13;
107 £4'" 'b't. J&#13;
RClc.ine.&#13;
8k..tIt£"f:¥:mI£;iM;\l. rDj·. ,q)£_- '1j:~~-~--- fA '\.Ji'VLi' U\&amp;'JfHkJt ...l.JUIK'Jle!Y"" !J«'(.&#13;
NATURE'S CH01CES~ PAOOU~~S PROVIDE ITS PRIZED FL.......OR&#13;
ONLY THE FINEST OF HOPS AND GR"IN5 ....RE USED&#13;
cP/uIid ~:Jjf!IJt in 1893&#13;
From Oiher Campuses&#13;
nation or world. because they feel they are&#13;
a \'ital part of the solution. . . "When there is an explosive situation,&#13;
educators need to have more speedy ·a1ogue ilh tudent to discuss pr~blems&#13;
ol concern and ways to make their particular&#13;
contribution The objective is not to&#13;
t.al tudent out of doing omething, ~ut&#13;
th conversations do have the beneficial&#13;
effect many times of helping stw;lents see&#13;
that precipitate deci ions and actions are&#13;
not th ·r most effective means of communicating&#13;
their interest and making ~eir&#13;
particular contributions to resolving&#13;
probl m ,"&#13;
+ -t&#13;
H yw rd, Calif. - (1.P , - Initiation of&#13;
a new pr ram at California State College,&#13;
H .,.. rd to aid young drug abusers was&#13;
nnounced recent!) by Pre ident Ellis E.&#13;
tcQme&#13;
He id a federal contract for $260,800&#13;
n awarded to the Center for Drug&#13;
Information, Research and Educ~tion at&#13;
1hc colleg by the , ·ational Institute of&#13;
ental Health. The contract provides&#13;
fu for 15 one- and two-week training&#13;
cycl planned for the year·~ dur~tion. Th training ...... n vary in intensity. acrdin&#13;
to the category of the trainee. The&#13;
2 prof ional and para-professional&#13;
rsonncl to be trained will get a more&#13;
int i\'e and in depth course. and will go&#13;
to end for their field experience&#13;
hich are in ho pital or clinical settings.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
lt La e City, tah - &lt;I.P.) -&#13;
rtin that the University of Utah can,&#13;
in no ,1,ay, un censorship or prior&#13;
'traint upon peakers, Alfred C. Emery,&#13;
prof r of law and chairman of the&#13;
Pre 1dent' Commis ion on Speaker&#13;
Policy. recently released the comPseudo&#13;
Event Of The Week&#13;
local ooard trie; . to be punitive by arbitrarily&#13;
assigning the men to some low&#13;
paying, disagreeable job, and the man&#13;
balk . If no compromise can be worked&#13;
out, the present pr-actice is to call in an&#13;
arbitrator from State Selective Service&#13;
Headquarters, who often winds up issuing&#13;
a final ultimatum. The proposed plan&#13;
would provide a tidy "out" in cases which&#13;
have reached an impasse, and yet avoid&#13;
the sticky appearance of coercion.&#13;
It was a nice idea while it lasted. But it&#13;
ran up again.5t an image problem - the&#13;
image of manipulative social engineering.&#13;
And if there is anything the present-day&#13;
managers of the draft system are conscious&#13;
of. its their image.&#13;
They very proudly point to the lottery&#13;
election system, the elimina tion of&#13;
blatant SOCJal engineering in the form of&#13;
job deferments, and the request that&#13;
Congress give the President authority to&#13;
revoke undergraduate student&#13;
deferments as examples of the policy of&#13;
"channeling'' which former Director Gen.&#13;
1,ew· B. Hersey once called, "One of the&#13;
major products of the Selective Service&#13;
C1a ification process."&#13;
Indeed, very few of the blatantly&#13;
repressive policies which guided General&#13;
Hersey's 30-year administration of the&#13;
draft find many supporters around&#13;
national headquarters had less than 200&#13;
employees) the national director sets the&#13;
tone for the agency."&#13;
Tarr was a ked about this shift in the&#13;
agency's image and the analysis put&#13;
forward by some dra ft counseling&#13;
organizations that the increased effort a t&#13;
image-building is mostly designed to buy&#13;
the ystem ome time by defusing public&#13;
indignatid'n in the coming two or three&#13;
years while the , ixon administration&#13;
moves towards its goal of a " zero draft."&#13;
He said, " 'o, 1 believe it is very true&#13;
that the measures we have taken have&#13;
lowered our profile somewhat, but I would&#13;
have wanted lo do the same things if I had&#13;
been director five years ago."&#13;
Whatever the motivation, it's clear that&#13;
Tarr himself keeps a closer ear to public&#13;
opinion than did his predecessor.&#13;
The CO "orientation camp" caper is an&#13;
example of that. It grew of a study of what&#13;
lo do with the growing number of COs - a&#13;
b.Jdy headed by a fresh, new public&#13;
relations man who was recently a Marine&#13;
colonel. When it looked like the plan, which&#13;
system off!cials still feel has validity,&#13;
would run into some controversy, it was dropped.&#13;
. us report - a simple, 4-&#13;
mission's unanuno ffirming the Conpage&#13;
statement . rea f the first and&#13;
·tuti nal guarantees o . . sti o dments and recogmzing&#13;
f Urteenth amen , 0 · blished by law.&#13;
boundanes _estathe report the commission&#13;
In ~e~~g present s~ker policy and . examm d b law students on court&#13;
had_a ~tudy n;.:g:r~ing Constitutional&#13;
decisions li ·t the power of a provisions as they mi · ersi·ty to control speakers. univ · ed speaker The commission also examm . U S&#13;
licies of a number of maJ~r . .&#13;
~iversities, h~ldedopenli ~e:r~!s 1: campus and review a s . speakers who have appeared on campus m&#13;
the last five years. . . . " Mr "The present Umversity policy, · 'd " has permitted some con- Emery sai • ed b&#13;
fusion between speakers sponso_r . Y&#13;
official University groups using Umve_rsitty&#13;
funds, and those sponsored by pnva e 'th their own funds who are groups W1 il'ti ·tted lo use University fac i es. perm1 · ·te kers "While both groups may mvi spea&#13;
the nature of the sponsorship should be&#13;
made clear," the report continues ..&#13;
"Only those committees established&#13;
W1der University policies and procedu:es&#13;
to select any invite speakers and for which&#13;
University funds . · · · have been&#13;
budgeted may invite speakers lo ~ppear at&#13;
the University under the aegis of the&#13;
University and use the name of. ~e&#13;
University in the invitations, 9:dvertismg&#13;
and program," the report continues.&#13;
St. S1&lt;1 ndi nQ Co.&#13;
101 LI"' ~. J&#13;
Re1eine&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 day,&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
t\iitG.f &amp;\ue, °'t ,t~ be~t. . . . Fri. Mft, A.l&#13;
M-4o.1\(td titld~ ~-50&#13;
At ~t dooY . · · · • '5.00&#13;
~ tt«tfJI\~~i!NJ\L:f'a&amp;t:BGa.J&lt;i!fon 1tut, NATURE'S CHOICEST PRO'OUCTS PROVIDE ITS PRIZED FLAVOR&#13;
ONLY THE FINEST OF HOPS ANO GRAINS ARE USED&#13;
~ at//mouraf/Jmt m 189.3 &#13;
Koc~ Joins Parkside&#13;
Coach ing Staff&#13;
Jim Koch is the newest and the youngest Front Row left to right: Jan Hennes,&#13;
member of the Parkside coaching staff. He Cris V1akakis, Nancy Michals, Kathy&#13;
is the head wrestling coach, director of Doherty,NancyKonecny, Carla Ricciardi.&#13;
intramurals, and an instructor in physical Second row: Hugh Gately, Steve&#13;
education. Just a year ago the young Lamont, Ken Martins, Bob Clarke, Gary&#13;
bachelor completed work on his Master of Vincent, Jeff Jenkins, Gene Fox, Bill&#13;
Science degree at South Dakota State Berkstein, Tom Beyer, Paul Paricka.&#13;
University. While at SDSU Koch was the&#13;
assistant wrestling coach and assistant teresting season.&#13;
intramural director. He also did his uo- Coach Koch, what are the Mat Maids?&#13;
dergraduate work at South Dakota State That is a pretty easy question. The Mat&#13;
where he graduated with honors majoring Maids are a group of very attractive girls&#13;
in physical education and mathmatics. His who are interested in promoting the sport&#13;
senior year he captained the South Dakota of wrestling. Last year at South Dakota&#13;
wrestling team to a fourth place national. State Ihelped start a group of girls which&#13;
rating. Jim was a member of the South we called Mat Maids to promote our&#13;
Dakota Wrestling Federation Executive wrestling team. As a team we finished&#13;
Committee prior "to coming to Wisconsin. fourth in the national tournament and our&#13;
In an attempt to get an inside view of attendance was up about 500 per match. I&#13;
CoachKocbwe asked him a few questions: can't give the girls all the credit but Ifeel&#13;
eoach KocIi, no","that you have heen at they helped. At Parkside there are aboul&#13;
Parkside for a couple of months what do twelve girls who are interested in heing&#13;
you think of the school? Mat Maids or whatever they want to call&#13;
Myflrst impression was that! wished we themselves. They will help us with&#13;
bad a school that was established, all in publicity, promoting, cheering, and any&#13;
one spot and running smooth. I felt there other ways that they can. I hope that we&#13;
wouldbe alot of inconveniences involved can get them a distinctive and attractive&#13;
with a school in the formulative stage such uniform. I am sure that my wrestlers will&#13;
as Parkside. Now that I have developed feel the practicing is easier and more&#13;
some pride in Parkside Ithink my attitude worthwhile if they know there are people&#13;
bas changed. I can't help but wonder when who care buw they do in the meets. I enIdrive&#13;
thru the Parkside campus and see courage people to come to the first meet&#13;
some of the different departments and see our Mat Maids in action.&#13;
operating out of farmhouses how different&#13;
things will be in a few years. Then Irealize&#13;
that this difference will depend on myself&#13;
and others like me. This school isn't like&#13;
the University at Madison or other&#13;
established scbuols where when you leave&#13;
theschoolit is about the same as when you&#13;
came. Here each student and teacher is&#13;
lUying a founding role. Some day I suppose&#13;
I could he called the the Father of&#13;
Wreatling at Parkside, or any of my&#13;
wrestlers could become known as Mr.&#13;
Wrestling at Parkside. How often do you&#13;
bave an opportunity like that.&#13;
CoachKoch, what kind of a team are you&#13;
going to have this year?&#13;
A wreatling team. I think I know what&#13;
you mean, but this is a hard question to&#13;
answer. Our team is just about as new.as I&#13;
am. At the present we&gt;have three boys&#13;
working out who were on Iast years team.&#13;
They are Bill Benkstein, Paul Paricka and&#13;
Jeff Jenkins. These three were about the&#13;
best on last years team and should do a&#13;
good job for us this year. Bill was last&#13;
years captain, and most valuable wrestler,&#13;
and ia again this years captain. Among the&#13;
newcomers on the squad Ihave three boys&#13;
who I am looking for big things to come.&#13;
They are Steve Lamont a transfer from&#13;
Ricbland Center Junior College, and fresh-'&#13;
men Ken Martin from Coleman and Tom&#13;
Beyer from Clintonville. Rounding out our&#13;
team are HUgh Gately, Gene Fox, Bob&#13;
Clarke, Gary Vincent, Mark Barnhill,&#13;
George Sielski, Tony Kolriik, and Bob&#13;
Sanders.&#13;
Whether these men will be good enough&#13;
to win or not is a hard question. I don-,-t&#13;
~ how good our opposition will be or&#13;
how goodour men will look in c6mpetion. I&#13;
do knowthat my men work hard enough in&#13;
.... etice and have the character necessary&#13;
to be winners. I think it could !?" an inRepresentatives&#13;
of Reach-Out,&#13;
University of Wisconsin student&#13;
organization, work to clear up misunderstandings&#13;
tha t may exist hetween&#13;
students and citizens of the state&#13;
"classified advertisements are SO&#13;
ceots per Iioe for anyone interested.&#13;
All classifieds must be submitted to&#13;
the Newscope offices at Kenosha&#13;
campus by DOOO the Tbursday before&#13;
Monday publication.&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
The \\B RAT "IS&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-l:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French" Fries or Onion Rin9s&#13;
Or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or aottle or Glass of a.er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
7 p.rn. to 8&#13;
20(&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
KOCh Joins Parkside&#13;
Coaching Staff&#13;
•i&#13;
Jim Koch is the newest and the youngest&#13;
member of the Parkside coaching staff. He&#13;
is the head wrestling coach, director of&#13;
intramurals, and an instructor in physical&#13;
education. Just a year ago the young&#13;
bachelor completed work on his Master of&#13;
Science degree at South Dakota State&#13;
University. While at SDSU Koch was the&#13;
assistant wrestling coach and assistant&#13;
intramural director. He also did his undergraduate&#13;
work at South Dakota State&#13;
where he graduated with honors majoring&#13;
in physical education and mathmatics. His&#13;
senior year he captained the South Dakota&#13;
wrestling team to a fourth place national&#13;
rating. Jim was a member of the South&#13;
Dakota Wrestling Federation Executive&#13;
Committee prior "to coming to Wisconsin.&#13;
In an attempt to get an inside view of&#13;
Coach Koch we asked him a few questions:&#13;
Coach Koch, now that you have been at&#13;
Parkside for a couple of months what do&#13;
you think of the school?&#13;
My first impression was that I wished we&#13;
had a school that was established, all in&#13;
one spot and running smooth. I felt there&#13;
would be a lot of inconveniences involved&#13;
with a school in the formula live stage such&#13;
as Parkside. Now that I have developed&#13;
some pride in Parkside I think my attitude&#13;
has changed. I can't help but wonder when&#13;
I drive thru the Parkside campus and see&#13;
some of the different departments&#13;
operating out of farmhouses how different&#13;
things will be in a few years. Then I realize&#13;
that this difference will depen9 on myself&#13;
and others like me. This school isn't like&#13;
the University at Madison or other&#13;
established schools where when you leave&#13;
the school it is about the same as when you&#13;
came. Here each student and teacher is&#13;
playing a founding role. Some day I suppose&#13;
I could be called the the Father of&#13;
Wrestling at Parkside, or any of my&#13;
wrestlers could become known as Mr.&#13;
Wrestling at Parkside. How often do you&#13;
have an opportunity like that.&#13;
Coach Koch, what kind of a team are you&#13;
going to have this year?&#13;
A wrestling team. I think I know what&#13;
you mean, but this is a hard question to&#13;
answer. Our team is just about as new. as I&#13;
am. At the present we. have three boys&#13;
Working out who were on fast years team.&#13;
They are Bill Benkstein, Paul Paricka and&#13;
Jeff Jenkins. These three were about the&#13;
best on last years team and should do a&#13;
good job for us this year. Bill was last&#13;
Years captain, and most valuable wrestler,&#13;
and is again this years captain. Among the&#13;
newcomers on the squad I have three boys&#13;
who I am looking for big things to come.&#13;
They are Steve Lamont a transfer from&#13;
Richland Center Junior College, and fresh-· men Ken Martin from Coleman and Tom&#13;
Beyer from Clintonville. Rounding out our&#13;
team are Hugh Gately, Gene Fox, B_ob&#13;
Clarke, Gary Vincent, Mark Barnhill,&#13;
George Sielski, Tony Kolnik, and Bob&#13;
Sanders.&#13;
Whether these men will be good enough&#13;
to Win or not is a hard question. I don~t&#13;
know how good our opposition will be or&#13;
how good our men will look in competion. I&#13;
do know that my men work hard enough in&#13;
Jractice and have the character necessary&#13;
to be winners. I think it could ~ an inFront&#13;
Row left to right: Jan Hermes&#13;
Cris Vlakakis, Nancy Michals, Kathy&#13;
DQherty, Nancy Konecny, Carla Ricciardi.&#13;
Second row: Hugh Gately, Steve&#13;
Lamont, Ken Martins, Bob Clarke, Gary&#13;
Vincent, Jeff Jenkins, Gene Fox, Bill&#13;
Berkstein, Tom Beyer, Paul Paricka.&#13;
teresting season.&#13;
Coach Koch, what are the Mat Maids?&#13;
That is a pretty easy question. The Mat&#13;
Maids are a group of very attractive girls&#13;
who are interested in promoting the sport&#13;
of wrestling. Last year at South Dakota&#13;
State I helped start a group of girls which&#13;
we called Mat Maids to promote our&#13;
wrestling team. As a team we finished&#13;
fourth in the national tournament and our&#13;
attendance was up about 500 per match. I&#13;
can't give the girls all the credit but I feel&#13;
they helped. At Parkside there are about&#13;
twelve girls who are interested in being&#13;
Mat Maids or whatever they want to call&#13;
themselves. They will help us with&#13;
publicity, promoting, cheering, and any&#13;
other ways that they can. I hope that we&#13;
can get them a distinctive and attractive&#13;
uniform. I am sure that my wrestlers will&#13;
feel the practicing is easier and more&#13;
worthwhile if they know there are people&#13;
wr.c, care how they do in the meets. I encourage&#13;
people to come to the first meet&#13;
and see our Mat Maids in action.&#13;
Representatives of Reach-Out,&#13;
University of Wisconsin student&#13;
organization, work to clear up misunderstandings&#13;
that may exist between&#13;
students and citizens of the stat~&#13;
Classified advertisements are so&#13;
cents per line for anyone interested.&#13;
All classifieds must be submitted to&#13;
the Newscope offices at Kenosha&#13;
campus by noon the Thursday before&#13;
Monday publication.&#13;
..&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTIO&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62 D ST&#13;
The\\ BRAT 1115&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
::renck Fries or Onion Rin9s&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00&#13;
7 p.m. to&#13;
GLASS 20(&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity ond Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
"'~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
8 p.m. &#13;
Seattle Rhymes With Chicago&#13;
By JON HILLSON&#13;
CoU~lt Pres Servic:e&#13;
EATILE (CPS) - Perhaps you've&#13;
heard the n&lt;!W saying; "spread the word&#13;
about attle," and wondered exactly&#13;
what that word, Itrhymes with Chicaso.&#13;
The Seattle consp,racy trial begins on&#13;
evernber 16 In Tacoma&#13;
On April 15, 1970, w,ght people were&#13;
'nd'cted on a rederal llJ'and jury and&#13;
eharg d With con plring. combining,&#13;
conrederaling and agreeing together to&#13;
eomrm: errerses against the Uruted States&#13;
In Vlolalion 01 '8 U 371,2101. and 1361&#13;
(lIoo371 01 the Cnmmal Code imposes&#13;
a pt'nalty 01$10,000and five years in pnson&#13;
(or con ptring to Violate the laws of the&#13;
lion 2101, th Interstate RIot Act&#13;
U!&gt; d In the hlCagO onspiracy. Imposes a&#13;
. 1mliar penalty (or traveling 10, or using&#13;
the r Ihlles or. Interstate commerce with&#13;
lMo mt nt 01 in ihng. organiZing. enc(JUraglng.&#13;
Or participating in a riot. A riot&#13;
I!; any \'101("01 act by' anyone person when&#13;
thr or more persons are assembled&#13;
to\:I,tlwr&#13;
St'chon t. 1 Im~es a $10,000 Cine andor&#13;
a tco }'l'3r pri50n term for damaging&#13;
r('&lt;ltral pl'ropt'rty ,n excess of StOO.Each&#13;
d.,rl'ndant thu, r ces a potenlial $30,000&#13;
ho and '\10' nty ye:1rs in prison&#13;
Thccharg . stem from a demonstrationnot&#13;
""Id on Fcbruary t6 In protest or the&#13;
hlcago 7 cOn\'ictions, Federal in·&#13;
wctments - I'" ued at the behest 01 the&#13;
Ju, tI('~ Department came over the&#13;
prot _ts of Seattle's local prosecuting&#13;
apparatu'&#13;
lOce they were handed down. there has&#13;
tx-en a \·Irtual news black·out of in·&#13;
dlctments. the trial, pre--trial defense and&#13;
Ihe history of the local movement upon&#13;
"hlch such heavy represession has faUen,&#13;
To recapitulate, then. we go back to late&#13;
January. 1970. on the campus of the&#13;
Um\'~rslty oCWashington. in Seattle.&#13;
\\ll\TW,\ llIESE,\TILE&#13;
I.IRER,\ nON FRONT?&#13;
1\11 hael Lerner. at that time an&#13;
ass,stant prolessor or philosophy at uW,&#13;
soon to become oneof the seatUe8 - atTl,&#13;
a teacher and a vet~ran of the Bay Area&#13;
radtcal movement - began reformulating&#13;
.the "new form" of radical organization.&#13;
The autonomous collective, as it was&#13;
caned. was to serve as the arena for indJvidual&#13;
growth as well as the vehicle for&#13;
soclahst aclton. Lerner - since "not rehired"&#13;
by his departmental colleagues -&#13;
found early success in his classes.&#13;
ACtion centered around a tax·incenlive&#13;
program to the general SeatOe area, which&#13;
ha an unemployment that spans both blue&#13;
collar and ",h,te collar working class and&#13;
IS estimated to be about 15 per cent.&#13;
Crealer seattle, with a population of&#13;
about 800,000has an army 01 unemployed&#13;
'.-..orking people - industrial, with less&#13;
than a high school education and&#13;
proCes ional. with Ph Os in engineeringand&#13;
the tax lOcentwe program sought to&#13;
rai e transitional and revolutionary&#13;
demand at the same t~me.&#13;
Soon after its dissemination and coupled&#13;
....ith a public meeting, Seattle Liberation&#13;
Front ( LFl collectives were formed&#13;
round work on the incentive, as well as a&#13;
13 POint program that ranged from&#13;
m,lItanl support to black and brown selfdetermination.&#13;
and similar positions on&#13;
imperialism. to IX)lnts defending youth&#13;
culture. self·defense and an out·and·out&#13;
fight agamst male supremacy. This point&#13;
_ not lived up to by SLF leadership - was&#13;
to underpin the dissolution of the&#13;
orgaOlzahon&#13;
Work on the lax incentive program&#13;
centered on door· to-door campaigns.&#13;
leafletttng unemployment offices armed&#13;
With coffee and donuts and talking to&#13;
students, as well as pushing the program.&#13;
Leadership emerged in the Sundance&#13;
coUechvl,\- each collective took names -&#13;
a group composed of Lerner and a bulk of&#13;
the others indicted for conspiracy. Among&#13;
them - ChIp ~Iarshall, Joe Kelly, Jeff&#13;
Dowd and Mike Abels - were cited for&#13;
crossing state lines and using interstate&#13;
commerce for the inttnt of inciting riot.&#13;
The four - and several others - had·&#13;
migrated from Ithaca New York in&#13;
December of 1969 to live and do political&#13;
work 10 Seattle. Many of the "Ithaca&#13;
pt'ople" had backgrounds in SDS - some&#13;
In Weathermen - but lelt the group&#13;
because of.sharp political disagreements.&#13;
The fledgling organization called&#13;
demonstrations in protest of the conviction&#13;
01 the ChicaGO7 on February 16_&#13;
Reports on crowd size vary - the sea ttle&#13;
commercial papers, both archconservative,&#13;
guessed 2,000, others cite&#13;
3,000. The crowd erupted as it neared the&#13;
federal building as rocks broke government&#13;
windows. Police, appearing from a&#13;
""f'by building, put on, according to&#13;
many on the scene, an uncommonly brutal&#13;
show, beating non-violent demonstratrors&#13;
with vigor,&#13;
one 01 the eight conspiracy defendants&#13;
were arrested at the demonstration.&#13;
Eighty participants were, and the Seattle&#13;
investigating grand jury reported that "at&#13;
least hair' or about 1,000 in their estimate,&#13;
took an "active" part in the melee .&#13;
The massive demonstrations around the&#13;
country varied in the amount of property&#13;
damage exacted. While over 20,000&#13;
peaceful demonstrators marched in&#13;
Boston, the Associated Press chose only to&#13;
report the street-light eng.gemenl between&#13;
5,000 militants and Boston police. In&#13;
spite of the report, the Boston demonstration&#13;
gave Harvard Square its Baptism&#13;
of fire. Demonstrations in numerous cities&#13;
were larger than Seattle's, and in Berkeley&#13;
and Boston at least, the intensity of&#13;
combat and the amount of damage was&#13;
higher than seattle.&#13;
Frantic SLF activity - inwardly and&#13;
outwardly - followed. The Day Aller&#13;
(TDA) demonstration Collectives&#13;
developed rapidly, gusbing young people&#13;
_ numerous UW students - into radical&#13;
politics for the first time. Collectives&#13;
around dormitory organizing, high school&#13;
organizing, free food for street people, Ule&#13;
tax-incentive, campus work, youth culture&#13;
organizing, unemployment projects - and&#13;
the Boeing plant - gained motion in a&#13;
fever·piteh.&#13;
The freneticism of events, the rapidity&#13;
of action and growth manifest weaknesses&#13;
and faults in the SLF. The most cutting&#13;
aspect was male supremancy. Leadership&#13;
soon took the familiar male dominated&#13;
Oavor; the swaggering, hip lifestyle of the&#13;
Sundance collective veneered what many&#13;
women began to see as an oppressive,&#13;
machismo form.&#13;
This contradiction would fester internally&#13;
for months as women sought to&#13;
pt'rsonally confront and work out the&#13;
problem.&#13;
In early April, the Federal Bureau of&#13;
Investigation conducted a private press&#13;
conference with the seattle commercial&#13;
medi,a. More like a battle briefing, its&#13;
ramifications pt'rhaps will only be decided&#13;
by the Tacoma jury.&#13;
Replete with international-conspiracy&#13;
paranoia, the Seattle media began an&#13;
hysterical campaign against the SLF -&#13;
particularly through attacKs on "its selfproclaimed&#13;
leadership, Lerner, Marshall,&#13;
Dowd and Kelley.&#13;
A three part series in the Seattle Post&#13;
Intelligencer - a Hearst owned paper -&#13;
conducted a campaign, a common mixture&#13;
01 half-truth, editorial potiey and witchhunt&#13;
sensationalism - which read&#13;
something like a "conspitacy!" Factual&#13;
mistakes, misquotes, a refusal to&#13;
talk at length - in m-any cases at aII- to&#13;
SLF members, religious reliance on FBI&#13;
information and colorful layout set the&#13;
base for indictments that would come less&#13;
than a week before the invasion of Cambodia,&#13;
the killings at Jackson and Kent&#13;
States, and the Augusta uprising.&#13;
Battered on one hand by the media attack&#13;
- "outside agitator" and "hard-core&#13;
exponents of violence and chaos" cliches&#13;
- and suffering internally from too rapid&#13;
gro~!h, male supremancy, and whirlwind&#13;
activlly, the SLF was dealt a on.,.two&#13;
ptJn:h by the events surrounding Cam-&#13;
~a Week and the issuing of the conspIracy&#13;
indictments, '&#13;
It.led "r:tilitant" actions that week that&#13;
baSically mvolved the inhalation of tear&#13;
gas alter blocking tbe freeway near the&#13;
seattle campus, and began to isolate itself.&#13;
Into the summer its energy was&#13;
generally disapated. Around the country,&#13;
however, heresay and the wishful thinking&#13;
of some SLF leadership was building a&#13;
myth. Movement people began flocking to&#13;
sea~tle: Women in the SLF, however, were&#13;
beginning to pullout.&#13;
WHY A SEATILECONSPffiACY?&#13;
Knowing that seattle'S TDA was by no&#13;
means unique, why federal conspiracy&#13;
indictments, over the protests of local&#13;
prosecuting authorities? .&#13;
To begin with, seattle, an Isolated city,&#13;
has been a testing ground for repressIOn.&#13;
seattle's general strike dunng which&#13;
workers shut down the city precipitated&#13;
mass detention, deporation and busting .of&#13;
scores of militant socialist, commumst&#13;
and anarchist workers a t the end of postWorld&#13;
War I recessions.&#13;
Raids on trade unions, harassment and&#13;
repression - minimized by the media -&#13;
paved the way for then Attorney General&#13;
A. Mitchell Palmer to institute, shortly&#13;
thereafter, similar escapades on a&#13;
national level: the infamous Palmer&#13;
Raids. Thousands of militant workers&#13;
were departed and jailed - no knocks, of&#13;
course - In a 24-hour perlnd and broke the&#13;
back of the trade-union's revolutionary&#13;
wing.&#13;
seattle workers, expecting their general&#13;
strike to move na tionaUy, retreated in&#13;
militant action: their isolation set the pace&#13;
for a dryrun, and Palmer took the experiment's&#13;
results nationally.&#13;
Three decades later, hefore few people&#13;
outside of Wisconsin knew then-senator&#13;
Joseph McCarthy, local witch-hunt&#13;
bearings went on in Seattle, as the redscare&#13;
was tested in the isolated Northwest.&#13;
More than possibly, McCarthy had an eye&#13;
not only to the Pugel. Sounds, but to&#13;
reaction around the country. With "reds"&#13;
scared in seattle, a·nd with a nation&#13;
unawakened to the coming of its saddest&#13;
days, McCarthy mounted a pndium whose&#13;
base had the mark of Seattle lumber.&#13;
Thus, the Seattle Conspiracy trial not&#13;
only fits in~o a general strategy of&#13;
repression - from busting student body&#13;
president mnderates at Kent State to&#13;
Black Panthers in Detroit - but into an&#13;
historical pattern. The Nixon-AgnewMitchell&#13;
regime, its corporate, financial,&#13;
industrial and labor bureaucrat backers,&#13;
have a national strategy. .&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADULTS S2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 SI.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 5 FREE&#13;
Prices Include flnt&#13;
dinner beverag\,&#13;
SUNDAY SPEClAL&#13;
ft.... t Chicken with&#13;
Bloeult. and gravy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. - II p_m,&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
Like any good strategy, it is lime&#13;
And wh!l&lt;:Seattle's only two neWSpa~&#13;
are reactionary - the Hearst P&#13;
telligencer and Scripps HOINardSea04\ latheir&#13;
monopoly powers are still notlIIe_&#13;
secondly, the strategy does ha lotoJ.&#13;
seattle target for certain reasons ;:;,..'!'!&#13;
history and geography. In spite of .;~&#13;
failures and hassles, the SLF made ~'~&#13;
short run, what will some day be ,Ill ill&#13;
as key steps in a revolutionary ~&#13;
While the Justice Department is note1a~&#13;
about this, it has a fundamental POli~&#13;
understanding: and had that wben ~&#13;
was attacked at its peak. "'"&#13;
SLF was a city-wIde movement..&#13;
autonomous project and liVingeollecti'.&#13;
were in constant touch with each ...&#13;
through phone lines, relationshipsoIbIr&#13;
weekly coordinating committee m~&#13;
While maintaining a campus t&gt;be,-&#13;
members organized off ~mpus, Were•&#13;
of school, worked for a living ",ere':&#13;
time in the sense of the word t~t makeo&#13;
Edgar Hoover start to wonder. They ~&#13;
the ivory tower in a way that did&#13;
parallel the fanatacism of Weathet1llelt I1lIt&#13;
the guilt and self-denial of "into-U:&#13;
factory" brigades.&#13;
Even without the SLF apparatus, II1e&#13;
strongest .motton In seattle is ",ith YQ11ll&#13;
and working people, ill the UnionIiII1e&#13;
Unemployed which has staged marebos ..&#13;
Boeing, 10 free fond and clothing II'OJecta&#13;
in white working class neighborhoodo.&#13;
working with the unemployed. ~&#13;
with the realization that unempl"YJDlltl&#13;
continues to skyrocket with recession_&#13;
NBC recentl~ reported that Y.ulll&#13;
unemploymentls up 35 per cent - 8Ild II1e&#13;
growth of unionization among ae~&#13;
engineers, teachers, and other white.&#13;
occupations, SLF's projects - at ..&#13;
according to the Justice Departmentud&#13;
, the corporate power structure ofBoeiIthad&#13;
to he crushed.&#13;
Clearly, the question is not conspirsq&#13;
but politics. The federal indict_&#13;
handed down cities, in Count II, the 11&#13;
"overt acts" indicative of conspiraer&#13;
Only two - the last two - ..&#13;
specifically to violence, and to pbyIiII&#13;
acts of violence committed. No names ..&#13;
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Seattle Rhymes With Chicago&#13;
in Weathermen - but left the group&#13;
because of ,sharp political disagreements.&#13;
The fledgling organization called&#13;
demonstrations in protest of the conviction&#13;
ol the Chica&amp;o 7 on February 16.&#13;
Reports on crowd size vary- the Seattle&#13;
commercial papers, both archcon&#13;
ervative, guessed 2,000, others cite&#13;
3,000. The crowd erupted as it neared the&#13;
fed ral building as rocks broke government&#13;
wmdow . Police, appearing from a&#13;
,by building, put on, according to&#13;
many on the scene, an uncommonly brutal&#13;
how, beating non-violent demonstratrors&#13;
v. ith vigor. ·one of the eight conspiracy defendants&#13;
were arrested at the demonstration.&#13;
Eighty participants were, and the Seattle&#13;
inv ligating grand jury reported that "at&#13;
l a t half' or about 1,000 in their estimate,&#13;
took an "active" part in the melee. The massive demonstrations around the&#13;
country varied in the amount of property&#13;
damage exacted. While over 20,000&#13;
p aceful demonstrators marched in&#13;
Bo ·ton, the ociated Press chose only to r port the treet-fight engageme"nt be-&#13;
·een S 000 militants and Boston police. In&#13;
pile of the report, the Boston demontration&#13;
gave Harvard Square its Baptism&#13;
of fire. Demonstrations in numerous cities w re larger than Seattle's, and in Berkeley&#13;
and Bo ton at lea t, the intensity of&#13;
combat and the amount of damage was&#13;
high r than Seattle.&#13;
Frantic SLF activity - inwardly and&#13;
outwardly - followed. The Day After&#13;
&lt;TOA) demonstration Collectives&#13;
developed rapidly, gushing young people&#13;
- numerous U\V students - into radical&#13;
politics for the first time. Collectives&#13;
around dormitory organizing, high school&#13;
organizing, free food for street people, the&#13;
tax-incentive, campus work, youth culture&#13;
organizing, unemployment projects - and&#13;
the Boeing plant - gained motion in a&#13;
fever-pitch.&#13;
The freneticism of events, the rapidity&#13;
of action and growth manifest weaknesses&#13;
and faults in the SLF. The most cutting&#13;
aspect was male supremancy. Leadership&#13;
soon took the familiar male dominated&#13;
flavor: the swaggering, hip lifestyle of the&#13;
Sundance collective veneered what many&#13;
women began to see as an oppressive,&#13;
machismo form.&#13;
This contradiction would fester internally&#13;
for months as women sought to&#13;
personally confront and work out the&#13;
problem.&#13;
In early April, the Federal Bureau of&#13;
Investigation conducted a private press&#13;
conference v.-ith the Seattle commercial&#13;
medi;1. More like a battle briefing, its&#13;
ramifications perhaps will only be decided&#13;
by the Tacoma jury.&#13;
Replete with international-conspiracy&#13;
paranoia, the Seattle media began an&#13;
hysterical campaign against the SLF -&#13;
particularly through attacks on 'its selfproclaimed&#13;
leadership, Lerner, Marshall,&#13;
Dowd and Kelley.&#13;
A three part series in the Seattle Post&#13;
Intelligencer - a Hearst owned paper -&#13;
conducted a campaign, a common mixture&#13;
of half-truth, editorial policy and witch- hunt sensationalism - which read&#13;
something like a "conspiJ;:acy!" Factual&#13;
mistakes, misquotes, a refusal to&#13;
talk at length - in m·any cases at all - to&#13;
LF members, religious reliance on FBI&#13;
information and colorful layout set the&#13;
ba e for indictments that would come less&#13;
than a week before the invasion of Cambodia,&#13;
the killings at Jackson and Kent&#13;
States, and the Augusta uprising.&#13;
Battered on one hand by the media attack&#13;
- "outside agitator" and "hard-core&#13;
exponents of violence and chaos" cliches&#13;
- and suffering internally from too rapid&#13;
gro~~. male supremancy, and whirlwind&#13;
activity, the SLF was dealt a one-two&#13;
pun_ch by the events surrounding Cambodia&#13;
Week and the issuing of the conspiracy&#13;
indictments.&#13;
It led "militant" actions that week that&#13;
basically involved the inhalation of tear&#13;
gas after blocking the freeway near the&#13;
Seattle campus, and began to isolate itself.&#13;
Into the summer its energy was&#13;
ge~r~lly clisapated. Around the country,&#13;
however, heresay and the wishful thinking&#13;
of some SLF leadership was building a&#13;
myth. Movement people began flocking to&#13;
Sea~tle_. Women in the SLF, however, were&#13;
begmnmg to pull out.&#13;
WHY A SEATTLE CONSPIRACY?&#13;
Knowing that Seattle's TDA was ~y no&#13;
means unique, why federal conspiracy&#13;
indictments, over the protests of local&#13;
prosecuting authorities? . To begin with, Seattle, an isolated c_1ty,&#13;
has been a testing ground for repress1~n.&#13;
Seattle's general strike during which&#13;
workers shut down the city precipitated&#13;
mass detention, deporation and busting _of&#13;
scores of militant socialist, commurust&#13;
and anarchist workers at the end of postWorld&#13;
War I recessions.&#13;
Raids on trade unions, harassment and&#13;
repression - minimized by the media - paved the way for then Attorney General&#13;
A. Mitchell Palmer to institute, shortly&#13;
thereafter, similar escapades on a&#13;
national level: the infamous Palmer&#13;
Raids. Thousands of militant workers&#13;
were departed and jailed - no knocks, of&#13;
course - in a 24-hour period and broke the&#13;
back of the trade-union's revolutionary&#13;
wing.&#13;
Seattle workers, expecting their gener~l&#13;
strike to move nationally, retreated m&#13;
militant action: their isolation set the pace&#13;
for a dryrun, and Palmer took the experiment's&#13;
results nationally.&#13;
Three decades later, before few people&#13;
outside of Wisconsin knew then-Senator&#13;
Joseph McCarthy, local witch-hunt&#13;
hearings went on in Seattle, as the redscare&#13;
was tested in the isolated Northwest.&#13;
More than possibly, McCarthy had an eye&#13;
not only to the Puget Sounds, but to&#13;
reaction around the country. With "reds"&#13;
scared in Seattle, and with a nation&#13;
unawakened to the coming of its saddest&#13;
days, McCarthy mounted a podium whose&#13;
base had the mark of Seattle lumber.&#13;
Thus, the Seattle Conspiracy trial not&#13;
only fits in.o a general strategy of&#13;
repression - from busting student body&#13;
president moderates at Kent State to&#13;
Black Panthers in Detroit - but into an&#13;
historical pattern. The Nixon-AgnewMitchell&#13;
regime, its corporate, financial,&#13;
industrial and labor bureaucrat backers,&#13;
have a national strategy.&#13;
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SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. _ ll p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. s p.m. _ 10 p.m.&#13;
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Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
Like any good strategy, it is time Les&#13;
And while Seattle's only two new led.&#13;
are reactionary - the Hearst ;pallera&#13;
telligencer and Scripps Howard Sea~ In.&#13;
their monopoly powers are still not t e - Secondly, the strategy does ha otal.&#13;
Seattle target for certain reasons ~ the&#13;
history and geography. In spite of in;o~&#13;
failures and hassles, the SLF made . ~I&#13;
short run, what will some day be r ' Ill its&#13;
as key steps in a revolutionary di,~ While the Justice Department is not:on.&#13;
about this, it has a fundamental P0liti ~ understanding: and had that when S cal&#13;
was attacked at its peak. LF&#13;
SLF was a ~ity-wide movement· . autonomous proJect and living collecti 1ts&#13;
were in constant touch with each ves&#13;
through phone lines, relationshi 0thet&#13;
weekly coordinating committee m:r i'-1&#13;
While maintaining a campus base""-&#13;
members organized off campus wer ' 111&#13;
of sc~ool, worked for a living, 'were'ru~&#13;
time m the sense of the word that makes&#13;
Edgar Hoover start to wonder. They 1&#13;
~· the ivory tower in a way that did t&#13;
parallel the fanatacism of Weathermen not&#13;
the guilt and self-denial of "into-0:,&#13;
factory" brigades.&#13;
Even witho~t ~e SLF apparatus, the&#13;
strongest _motion m ~attle is with YOOtb&#13;
and workmg ~pie, m the Union or the&#13;
Une_mpl~yed w~ch has staged marches 011&#13;
Boemg, m free food and clothing projects&#13;
in white working class neighborh~ in&#13;
working with the unemployed. Coupled&#13;
with the realization that unemployment&#13;
continues to skyrocket with recession _&#13;
NBC recently reported that youth&#13;
unemployment is up 35 per cent - and the&#13;
growth of unionization among aerospace&#13;
engineers, teachers, and other white collar&#13;
occupations, SLF's projects - at least&#13;
according to the Justice Department and&#13;
- the corporate power structure of Boeinghad&#13;
to be crushed.&#13;
Clear I~,. the question is not ~onspiracy,&#13;
but politics. The federal indictment&#13;
handed down cities, in Count II, the 11&#13;
"overt acts" indicative of conspiracy&#13;
Only two - the last two - refer&#13;
specifically to violence, and to physical&#13;
acts of violence committed. No names m&#13;
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Fridays, other weekday&#13;
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KENOSHA &#13;
Seattt~con't.&#13;
defined police-state u Thi . ac Ion •s is tbe liti r:'. SLF tr· l: po itieal s.gnificance of th&#13;
13. the same e&#13;
governmental for C~rporate and&#13;
Franco's fascism a~es'l~lCh lubricate&#13;
a score of dicta torshi 01 e machinery of&#13;
coming down on itsPSS8roundthe world is&#13;
Th . eattle antagon' ts&#13;
ere IS no question abo t tha . IS.&#13;
the neeessit of u l Cliches for&#13;
imperialism y not only defending the&#13;
. ~ racism, male supr and repression will be - emancy&#13;
social system which . repeated until the&#13;
the profit mecbam rn egrates them into&#13;
Thi . msm IS abolished.&#13;
th IS IS not only the lesson of Seattle but&#13;
an~ "::'..~sde of Agnew, the advice of Nixon&#13;
wi om of the Bank fA'&#13;
The Sealtle 8 knows well th 0 di ~enca.&#13;
Malcolm X: "the chick e c m of&#13;
home to roost" ens have come&#13;
And they know the real trial is to build&#13;
futu,:" worth liVing for: and that the r ~&#13;
verdict can never be made in courtroo:&#13;
Wrestling Is&#13;
The Lead Off&#13;
The first action of the winter&#13;
sea~ at Parkside will he taken :POthrls&#13;
wrestling UWP W tl. Y e Fr' . res Ing Team On&#13;
Iday Dec. 4, at3 p.m. in the aftern';"n at&#13;
John .Bullen Junior high school the&#13;
.wrestlmg team encounters WSU ~ Point and Mi h' ~ tevens " . c 19an Tech. John Bullen&#13;
jUmor hIgh school is loca ted less than onehaU&#13;
mile south of the Kenosha Cam&#13;
39th flvenue. pus on&#13;
This will be the first action of the season&#13;
for the Rangers. Team memhers h&#13;
there will he a large turnout to cheer thope&#13;
on to a VICtory. em&#13;
The Mat Maids and Coach Koch will he&#13;
makmg theIr debuts at Parkside.&#13;
'Parksides First&#13;
Wrestling Clinic&#13;
By WALTER BREACH&#13;
Once upQIl a time, as all good stories&#13;
sbould begin, a friend 01mine had a kindly&#13;
aunl This kindly aunt had a ninety year&#13;
old uncle. And, as the story goes, one day&#13;
she found him high in an old tree, standing&#13;
one foot on the top rung of a rickety ladder&#13;
and the other on a rather unsure looking&#13;
branch. "Oh, come down, come down."&#13;
she cried when she saw him, "you surely&#13;
will strain yourself." But the old man only&#13;
looked down on her and calmly said, "my&#13;
younger brother is helping me, so don't&#13;
worry." His eighty-nine year-old brother&#13;
t1:len appeared, and was indeed helping&#13;
him.&#13;
What has this got to do with a Booster&#13;
Club you ask? Not much, but I like the&#13;
story. For those who insist on a meaning,&#13;
however, substitute Kathy Mauer for the&#13;
kindly old aunt, the Booster Club for the&#13;
old timer. Then take the student body as&#13;
the younger brother and the tree as the&#13;
effort to raise school spirit, and the story&#13;
makes less sense then hefore.&#13;
The events the Club has plaMed sound&#13;
alright, but after all, we're not just out of&#13;
highschool, at least most of us aren't, well&#13;
maybe some of us aten't Uten agam maybe&#13;
this is just Parkside high school. If so,&#13;
more power to you Booster club, and I sure&#13;
w!JUldlike to be able to smoke on the bus.&#13;
UW LAB FIRST TO AID&#13;
SUPERIOR STUDE '1'8&#13;
The University of Wisconsin ""as the&#13;
first uni . eulti ~verslty to devote its attention to&#13;
tivalmg the land's greatest natural&#13;
resource - the intellectually superior&#13;
student.&#13;
Via the Madison campus Research and&#13;
~uldance Laboratory Cor Superior&#13;
tudents, more than 3.000 students rrom&#13;
high schools all over Wisconsin have taken&#13;
partm the project.&#13;
~&#13;
DE1JCA TESSEN -lEVERAGES&#13;
3203 f1m.secOND STIHI&#13;
l&lt;IN&lt;»&gt;tA. WISCONSIN&#13;
t'l\' ADULT EDl:CATfON&#13;
POPl:LAR IN TATE&#13;
A University of Wisconsin urvej&#13;
Research Laborator) sludy sho"ed that 13&#13;
per cenl of all Wiscon.,n adult par .&#13;
ticipated 1_ In l:W education program In&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY • PIPEt&#13;
• PAPERS&#13;
• BELl.'&#13;
• INCENSE&#13;
• CANDLES&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Ellllwood&#13;
Students let red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone elSe!)&#13;
to be seen. In fact, the grand jury itseU&#13;
estimate. at least 1,000 people took "active"&#13;
part i~the disruptive portions of the&#13;
demonstration.&#13;
Still- the alleged criminals - the over&#13;
act continue, name da tes when the con-&#13;
,prators are alleged to "have met in&#13;
seattle" or "to have talked." Accusations&#13;
«:idle crime of "addressing an 'assembly"&#13;
te I "d ' "taking ~ra ~,ass an advocating&#13;
lIacts of VIOlence are enough to issue&#13;
cbarges whose penalties range to 20 years&#13;
inprison.Lerner is "alleged" to have used&#13;
telephones;Marshall "addressed a rally,"&#13;
OOWd, :'spok~ to a gathering." The "overt&#13;
acts" are, 10 one sense, simply the&#13;
chronicling of certain practices guaranteed&#13;
by the Constitution and the Bill of&#13;
Rights.&#13;
10 1970 America, they are cause for&#13;
arresL&#13;
To make the situation more insidious:&#13;
_ Weathermen (whom none of the&#13;
defendantsknow), accused of blowing up a&#13;
"""t-office, were tacked onto the indicbnent&#13;
as co-conspirators "not named&#13;
as defendants."&#13;
'!'benews blackout- save for one article&#13;
in tbeNation magazine and an appearance&#13;
III the Dick Cavett show by one SLF&#13;
lawyer- mesh with the moving of the trial&#13;
from Seattle to Tacoma;' some. 40 miles&#13;
sooth.Moved by a' federal judge over the&#13;
protest of SLF lawyers, Ta.coma has far&#13;
feweryoung people, no youth community&#13;
lI' newspapers, is still dominated by&#13;
seattle's arclH:onservative media, is an&#13;
inconvenience for the defendants and&#13;
makes trial by peer an impossibility.&#13;
And, of course, the Rap Brown statute&#13;
and conspiracy itseU are "thO\lgh-crime"&#13;
laws, needing no specific action by&#13;
defeodants, no crimes, bul intent: It is no&#13;
wCliderthat Chicago 7 lawyer William&#13;
KWlStlerstatedthe primary importance of&#13;
!be Seattle-Tacoma trial. .&#13;
U the federal government can win, if&#13;
there are no mass outcries and if there is&#13;
oot significant support outside the Northwest&#13;
for the seattle 8, the base in once&#13;
again laid for federally oriented decentralized&#13;
masS scale repression. This&#13;
,trategy is partically being employed -&#13;
001WIthoutfederal overtones - in Athens&#13;
Keo~ California and other places. Bui&#13;
federal application leitimizes constant&#13;
federal surveilllince, full utilization of&#13;
Dat~onal .repression apparatus, the&#13;
ven.table Importation of thought police&#13;
asa~t any movement for social change,&#13;
be.• t black and Third World, women's&#13;
oriented, revolutionary, moderate or&#13;
liberal, because everyday, anybody&#13;
comnllts the overt acts cited against the&#13;
Seattle 8 by the federal grand jury.&#13;
Perhaps those facts are what motivated&#13;
IIUl:hbroad-based support for the Seattle 8&#13;
DefenseCommittee: the clergy heads of&#13;
!be. N.ewman Center and the Campus&#13;
Ouiatian Ministry at the University of&#13;
Washington; Engineering and nursing&#13;
pro.fesaions;. lawyers, young people,&#13;
:~~itl~~:~::n,,:,~~andmemherSOf Parkside Booster Club&#13;
The Defense Committee states the law&#13;
ll'edicating the charges against the eight"&#13;
.... 01 dubious conStitutionality, is as&#13;
lr'oad .and.elastic as government wants to&#13;
make.t and threatens the civilliherties 01&#13;
all Americans."&#13;
deThe SLF itself is now gathered into a&#13;
lense collective, which is trying to&#13;
solidifythe large Seattle movement - as&#13;
Wboarell as liberals and moderates - behind a&#13;
d and massive defense.&#13;
.Rallies have been planned in at least 15&#13;
Cities.around the country to coincide with&#13;
!he onglnallrial da te of November 9 since&#13;
mOYedhack to the 23. The demonsU:ations&#13;
~e set (0 confr0!'1tarea media operations&#13;
loree them to cover the trial and to give&#13;
.... ponse to the protests. Coincidentally,&#13;
::: dem~trations can only corroherate&#13;
~OW1ngclaims of reporters in com-&#13;
;::re.al press of censorship, political&#13;
rassment and news 1nanagement.&#13;
~onsPirators Lerner, Dowd, Kelley,&#13;
S, Marshall, Stern, and Roger Lipp- =.expect the trial to go into 1971. The&#13;
. al government, meanwhile, pursues&#13;
~d el Justensen, the eighih conspirator&#13;
a fugitive.&#13;
~ttle situation is, on every level,&#13;
ill . t setting: the concept of the SLF,&#13;
to Ulroads to working people, i!S attempts&#13;
llli Understand the meaning of young&#13;
_~';"Iaas people in the context of social&#13;
~~; the women's action and its&#13;
---...uences; and the namre of federally&#13;
Lirpl. Sellett.&#13;
Parkside's first annual Wrestling Clinic Lt ••• t Pric ••&#13;
last Saturday could only be looked at one ~&#13;
way - successful and huge. Unofficially idinflP..JL&#13;
there were over 500. wrestlers and coaches ~-~7"JJ·&#13;
in attendence. This would make it possibly ~f.&#13;
the largest one-day participation clinic L_,;.6,;.~6:...:5:.6t::;h:...S::t::-. ~K~e~no~s~h~.'__J&#13;
ever ~eld in the sport of wrestling. Instruction&#13;
took place on six individual mats&#13;
by five differ.ent instructors.&#13;
The instructors had many national&#13;
championships between them, but even&#13;
more important then that was that they&#13;
were able to leach their techniques at a&#13;
level that nearly everyone was able to&#13;
understand.&#13;
Coach Koch, the clinic director, felt that&#13;
all the organization and work which he and&#13;
others put into the clinic was worth it. "I&#13;
think we opened a lot of eyes concerning&#13;
the quality of the type of program we are&#13;
trying to run at Parkside."&#13;
TlIt PI•• T. I.,&#13;
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•• '"'j: .... ; , , .&#13;
Seattle_ con't.&#13;
to be seen. In fact, the grand jury itself&#13;
estimates at leas~ 1,000 people took "active"&#13;
part in the disruptive portions of the&#13;
dernonstra tion. . . Still - the alleged crimmals - the over&#13;
act continue, name dates when the conspirators&#13;
are alleged to "have met in&#13;
Seattle" or "to have talked." Accusations&#13;
of the crime of "addressing an assembly , ,&#13;
"taking .k~rate ~!ass" and advocati~&#13;
"acts of violence are enough to issue&#13;
charges whose penalties range to 20 years&#13;
in prison. Lerner is "alleged" to have used&#13;
telephones; Marshall "add!'essed a rally,"&#13;
oawd,:'spok~ to a gathering." The "overt&#13;
acts" are, m one sense, simply the&#13;
chronicling of certain practices guaranteed&#13;
by the Constitution and the Bill of&#13;
Rights.&#13;
In 1970 America, they are cause for&#13;
arresL&#13;
To make the situation more insidious:&#13;
three Weathermen (whom none of the&#13;
defendants know), accused of blowing up a&#13;
post-office, were tacked onto the indictment&#13;
as co-conspirators "not named&#13;
as defendants."&#13;
The news blackout-save for one article&#13;
in the Nation magazine and an appearance&#13;
on the Dick Cavett show by one SLF&#13;
lawyer - mesh with the moving of the trial&#13;
from Seattle to Tacoma, · some 40 miles&#13;
sooth. Moved by a federal judge over the&#13;
protest of SLF lawyers, Ta~oma has far&#13;
fewer young people, no youth community&#13;
or newspapers, is still dominated by&#13;
Seattle's arch-conservative media, is an&#13;
inconvenience for the defendants and&#13;
makes trial by peer an impossibility.&#13;
And, of course, the Rap Brown statute&#13;
and conspiracy itself are "though-crime"&#13;
laws, needing no specific action by&#13;
defendants, no crimes, but intent: It is no&#13;
wonder that Chicago 7 lawyer William&#13;
Kunstler stated the primary importance of&#13;
the Seattle-Tacoma trial.&#13;
U the federal government can win, if&#13;
there are no mass outcries and if there is&#13;
not significant support outside the Northwest&#13;
for the Seattle 8, the base in once&#13;
again laid for federally oriented decentralized&#13;
mass scale repression. This&#13;
strategy is partically being employed -&#13;
not without federal overtones - in Athens&#13;
Kent, California and other places. But&#13;
federal application leitimizes constant&#13;
£ed~ral surveillance, full utilization of&#13;
nat_1onal _repression apparatus, the&#13;
ven_table importation of thought police&#13;
aga~t any movement for social change,&#13;
be_ 1t black and Third World, women's&#13;
oriented, revolutionary moderate or&#13;
libera_l, because every'day, anybody&#13;
commits the overt acts cited against the&#13;
Seattle 8 by the federal grand jury.&#13;
Perhaps those facts are what motivated&#13;
such broad-based support for the Seattle 8&#13;
Defense Committee: the clergy heads of&#13;
the . N_ewman Center and the Campus&#13;
Chr1s?an Ministry at the University of&#13;
Washmgton; Engineering and nursing&#13;
deThfin_ed_ police-state action&#13;
IS IS the liti . ·. SLF trial: l:e ~ Significance of the&#13;
governmental force e c~rporate and&#13;
Franco's fascism and !u v;:1ch lu~ricate&#13;
a score of dictatorshi e machinery of&#13;
coming down on itsp; around the world is&#13;
There is no question abo eattle antagonists.&#13;
~e necessity of not o::it that. Cli~hes for&#13;
imperialisqi, racism m~ defending the&#13;
and repression will be e supremancy&#13;
social system which . repeated until the&#13;
the profit mechan· 1D: egrat~ them into&#13;
Th. . 15m IS abohshed&#13;
1s 1s not only the lesson f ·&#13;
:~ mtheessa~edof Agnew, the a~vi~!?~~i!&#13;
wisomoftheBnk f . The Seattle 8 knows wJ o ~menca.&#13;
Malcolm X: "the cbicke the dictum of&#13;
home to roost,, ns have come&#13;
And they know the real trial is to build a&#13;
futu~e worth living for: and that the real&#13;
verdict can never be made in courtrooms.&#13;
Wrestling Is&#13;
The Lead Off&#13;
The first action of the . · season at Parkside will be ~ter bsports wrestling UWP . en Y the Fr' · Wrestling Team On&#13;
Jo::!ay ~~- 4, at 3 ~-m. ~ the aftern~n at . en Juruor high school the&#13;
.wr~tlmg team encounters WSU-Ste&#13;
~o~t ~d Michigan Tech. John B~*:&#13;
Juruor ~1gh school is located less than one- half mile south of the Kenosha Ca&#13;
39th avenue. mpus on&#13;
i This will be the first action of the season&#13;
or the_ Rangers. Team members ho&#13;
there will_ be a large turnout to cheer the: on to a victory.&#13;
'rh_e Mat ~aids and Coach Koch will be&#13;
makmg their debuts at Parkside. ,&#13;
Parksides First&#13;
Wrestling Clinic&#13;
Parkside's first annual Wrestling Clinic&#13;
last Saturday could only be looked at one&#13;
way - successful and huge. Unofficially&#13;
there were over 500 wrestlers and coaches&#13;
in attendence. This would make it possibly&#13;
the largest one-day participation clinic&#13;
ever held in the sport of wrestling. Instruction&#13;
took place on six individual mats&#13;
by five different instructors.&#13;
The instructors had many national&#13;
championships between them, but even&#13;
more important then that was that they&#13;
were able to teach their techniques at a&#13;
level that nearly everyone was able to&#13;
understand.&#13;
Coach Koch, the clinic director, felt that&#13;
all the organization and work which he and&#13;
others put into the clinic was worth it. "I&#13;
think we opened a lot of eyes concerning&#13;
the quality of the type of program we are&#13;
trying to run at Parkside."&#13;
pro_fessions; lawyers, young people,&#13;
~:1&#13;
~~stJ~~~~~!i~~-rsandmembersof Parkside Booster Club&#13;
The Defense Committee states the law&#13;
predicating the charges against the eight"&#13;
· · · . of dubious constitutionality, is as broad _and elastic as government wants to&#13;
make it and threatens the civil liberties of&#13;
all Americans."&#13;
The SLF itself is now gathered into a&#13;
defense collective which is trying to&#13;
solidify the large Seattle movement - as&#13;
well as liberals and moderates - behind a&#13;
board and massive defense.&#13;
. ~ies have been planned in at least 15&#13;
Cities .ai:ound the country to coincide with&#13;
the ongmal trial date of November 9 since&#13;
moved back to the 23. The demonstr'ations&#13;
~e set Co confro!lt area media operations&#13;
w force them to cover the trial and to give&#13;
~es~nse to the protests. Coincidentally,&#13;
the em~nstrations can only corroberate&#13;
e &amp;~owing claims of reporters in com-&#13;
~~rcial press of censorship, political&#13;
assment and news management.&#13;
A~onspirators Lerner, Dowd, Kelley,&#13;
s, Marshall, Stern, and Roger Lipp-&#13;
~an expect the trial to go into 1971. Tqe&#13;
M' eral government meanwhile pursues&#13;
anidchael Justensen, the eighth co~spirator&#13;
a fugitive.&#13;
The Seattle situation is on every level,&#13;
:e_cedent setting: the co~cept of the SLF,&#13;
to inroads to working people, i!S attempts&#13;
nu understand the meaning of young&#13;
8~ 1e-c1 lass people in the context of social&#13;
gg e; the women's action and its&#13;
consequences; and the nature of federally&#13;
By WALTER BREACH&#13;
Once upon a time, as all good stories&#13;
should begin, a friend of mine had a kindly&#13;
aunt. This kindly aunt had a ninety year&#13;
old uncle. And, as the story goes, one day&#13;
she found him high in an old tree, standing&#13;
one foot on the top rung of a rickety ladder&#13;
and the other on a rather unsure looking&#13;
branch. "Oh, come down, come down."&#13;
she cried when she saw him, "you surely&#13;
will strain yourself." But the old man only&#13;
looked down on her and calmly said, "my&#13;
younger brother is helping me, so don't&#13;
worry." His eighty-nine year-old brother&#13;
then appeared, and was indeed helping&#13;
him. What has this got to do with a Booster&#13;
Club you ask? Not much, but I like the&#13;
story. For those who insist on a meaning, however, substitute Kathy Mauer for the&#13;
kindly old aunt, the Booster Club for the&#13;
old timer. Then take the student body as&#13;
the younger brother an~ . the tree as the&#13;
effort to raise school spint, and the story&#13;
makes less sense then before. The events the Club has planned sound&#13;
alright, but after all, we're not just out of&#13;
high school, at least most of us ar~'t, well&#13;
maybe some of us aten't then agam maybe&#13;
this is just Parkside high school. If so,&#13;
more power to you Booster club, and I sure&#13;
w9Uld like to be able to smoke on the bus.&#13;
UW LAB FIRST TO ID&#13;
SUPERIOR TUDE. •&#13;
The ':Jniversity of Wisc in the&#13;
firs~ un!versity to d vote its attention to&#13;
cultivatmg the land's gr t t natur I&#13;
~::~~ - the intellectually .uperior&#13;
\l_ia the 1adison campus R arch and&#13;
~Uldance Laboratory for Superior&#13;
~udents, more than 3. . tudents from&#13;
high ~ools all over Wiscon in have taken&#13;
part m the project.&#13;
?et«tlcu&#13;
DELICATESSEN-BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 flm-SKOND STlfn&#13;
K!NOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 lotlirep ""·• aodlle, w;,...,,..;,.&#13;
Students get red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone e l se !)&#13;
T I PINI Tt l•J&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
Larc11t s.11ct1&#13;
6?6 56th St. Kenosha&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last''&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
65&amp;-2233&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTli CITY L ITS&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY&#13;
Thrifty Thrtads&#13;
CE.NSE&#13;
OLES&#13;
For Your &amp;u! ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Fut.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 - 56th Street&#13;
Kenuha, Wis.• 652-6904&#13;
LA TEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS _ Reg. $,5.00&#13;
How $27 .50&#13;
Pric · to&#13;
Fit Your Pock t&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A. , TILL IDNITE&#13;
FRI. I SAT. TILL 2 A. ,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a dayJ7 days a week&#13;
Organ Music Thurs., Fr· , Sot&#13;
F rom 9 p.m. t il 2 o.m. &#13;
SPoNSOReD BY:&#13;
VARSI"l'Yewe&#13;
SIGMA D£t..TA Pf.fl&#13;
PEP -' BOOSlCQ ewB&#13;
CAPTAI""S COUNCIL.&#13;
HOI»&#13;
t\eouT&#13;
-. (t1i.....L.&#13;
TOUGH&#13;
0\..1&gt;&#13;
MrJG.GRi'&#13;
SUBMIT&#13;
IDEAS TO&#13;
NEWSCope,&#13;
STUOeNT as&#13;
-!&lt;~~...&#13;
SPONSOR@ BY:&#13;
VARS•TYcws&#13;
SIGMA DELTA PMI&#13;
PEP.&amp; SOOs-TtR CLUB&#13;
CAPTAIN'S COUNCtL.&#13;
Vc~Ai1L.e&#13;
FE"C.t..A, ·nv,,-&#13;
s~~ Ge-AA.&#13;
Ho~&#13;
AeovT&#13;
'- AAAL.&#13;
Tb~&#13;
01..t)&#13;
~l"Jl"~~r&#13;
~TH~ 'tlA c.E&#13;
LS No.,..&#13;
/&gt;. l,.W A '/...S&#13;
Tb Tt-\€&#13;
ScµlFi- 11 </text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>Harris and McKinney Resign</text>
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              <text>Harris and McKinney Resigrr;:o'&#13;
Morrow .1.0. Replace Harris By MARC EISEN&#13;
ViCe-Chancellor for Academic A~fairs&#13;
John Harris and Dean Arthur MacKmney&#13;
of the College of Science and Society, the&#13;
two apparent instigators of December's&#13;
bortive faculty purge, have resigned&#13;
~eirpositions, the Board of Regents&#13;
announced last Friday. To replace them&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie told the Regents he has&#13;
appointed William Morrow, Prof. of&#13;
Psychology at Parkside, as the acting&#13;
Dean \0 replace MacKinney, and that the&#13;
Vice-Chancelorship will not be filled on an&#13;
acting basis, but that temporary staff&#13;
adjustments may be made to handle the&#13;
situation until a successor can be named.&#13;
The immediate resignations of the two&#13;
was one of a number of demands made of&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie hy both the&#13;
University Committee and the Parkside&#13;
Faculty Association. The C~ancellor has&#13;
indicated his willingness to follow the&#13;
faculty's wishes.&#13;
John Harbeson, a member of the&#13;
University Committee and one of the 'Xl on&#13;
the administration's ax list, said of the&#13;
Chancellor's reaction, "I would "describe&#13;
the Chancellor's attitude as being very&#13;
receptive to the recommendation that the&#13;
two resign."&#13;
Because Harris and MacK.ioney are&#13;
tenured members of the faculty they will&#13;
assume pew duties as Director of&#13;
Resource Development and Institutional&#13;
Reporting, and as Director of Institutional&#13;
Studies respectively. Both men were&#13;
unavailable for comment.&#13;
They began their duties as ViceChancellor&#13;
and Dean only this past fall,&#13;
but within a few months of this became the&#13;
centers of controversy. The Dean with the&#13;
giving of a speech that called for Parkside&#13;
attaining "instant greatness", and the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor with this issuing of&#13;
criteria for faculty evaluation.&#13;
In retrospect it is seen that the Dean's&#13;
speech was a portent of the coming purge,&#13;
and the Vice-Chancellor's criteria the&#13;
.basls on which it was attempted. What is&#13;
unclear is the role Chancellor Wyllie had in&#13;
the faculty review process.&#13;
Harbeson, who was as closely involved&#13;
in the crisis as any faculty member was,&#13;
said, "In all honesty I think the Chancellor&#13;
in this whole process was enigmatic at the&#13;
hest. And I'm not. to this day really sure&#13;
just what his role was in all this.&#13;
"t do know he approved some of the&#13;
criteria that were employed. I do know he&#13;
approved the Dean's review process. I&#13;
don't know if he approved in advance all&#13;
the terminations that were made. Really,&#13;
overall, 1just don't know if he really knew&#13;
what they were doing, and if their actions&#13;
were the result of his instructions," he&#13;
said.&#13;
The change in the status of the two is&#13;
seen as an indication of the Chancellor's&#13;
desire to follow the faculty's lead in rectifying&#13;
the controversy over faculty&#13;
personnel reviews, and as part of the&#13;
implementation of the Chancellor's ten&#13;
point policy statement.&#13;
Leon Applebaum, the Chairman of the&#13;
Social Science Division, revealed in an&#13;
impromptu speech at the school rally in&#13;
December, that the ten points themselves&#13;
originated from the University Committee,&#13;
and were accepted by the Chancellor.&#13;
Another indication of the Chancellor's&#13;
willingness to listen to the faculty comes&#13;
from the Parkside Faculty Association&#13;
which told the ewscope it made four&#13;
Volume 3 - Number 1&#13;
[anuary 12, 1971&#13;
Tallent to Replace Krivan&#13;
realized in the establishment of Parkside.&#13;
She received her bachelor's degree at&#13;
the Madison campus. where she was&#13;
elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and taught&#13;
English in the UW Center System both 10&#13;
Wausau and Kenosha.&#13;
After her husband's death, she continued&#13;
her studies, receiving a master's d~ree ~n&#13;
guidance and counseling from Cahforrua&#13;
State College of Los Angeles. prior to&#13;
assuming her initial post at Parkside ".&#13;
Active in a wide range of community&#13;
activities in southeastern Wisconsin, Mrs.&#13;
Tallent was named Kenosha's Woman of&#13;
the Year in 1969.&#13;
ceeded enrollment projections. .&#13;
Mrs. Tallent also has been in~olved. rn&#13;
other key campus activities, including&#13;
service as Parkside's repres~ntative on&#13;
the all·University human r-ights co~·&#13;
mittee and principal campus agent 10&#13;
reporting aspects of ~rogram~ relate~ to&#13;
that committee to vaTlOUSpublic agencies.&#13;
In her new post, Mrs. Tallent will sen:e&#13;
as a representative of the ~hancellor s&#13;
office in special commumty.rel3:ted&#13;
projects and activities and at vaTlOUS&#13;
meetings both on and off campus. She also&#13;
'11 handle a variety of IO-offlce adM&#13;
k'd' ministrative tasks and ac~ as Par S? e s&#13;
liaison with various public and private&#13;
groups. .&#13;
Mrs. Tallent has long-standmg personal&#13;
d professional ties to southeastern&#13;
~isconsin. She came to Kenosha with her&#13;
late husband, Bernard, when he became&#13;
Director of the University.'s ~(&gt;.year&#13;
program in 1948,and shared 10 hl~ efforts&#13;
to obtain the [our-year campus which were&#13;
The appointment of Rita Tallent as&#13;
special assistant to the chancellor and&#13;
coordinator of community services at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside was&#13;
approved Friday by the University Board&#13;
of Regents. The appointment is effectIVe&#13;
Feb. 1.&#13;
Mrs. Tallent replaces David C. Kr~van,&#13;
who had indicated to Chancellor Irvm G.&#13;
Wyllie several.months ago that he planned&#13;
to resign to enter private business .. The&#13;
Regents accepted his resignation Fnday.&#13;
Mrs. Tallent has been director of school&#13;
and campus relations at Parkside since&#13;
September, 1968, and wiu c~ntinue to&#13;
provide direction for that office 10 her new&#13;
post.&#13;
In proposing the appointment, Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie cited the energetic and effective&#13;
manner in which Mrs. Tallent has&#13;
rela ted the Parkside academic program to&#13;
high school and college coun~el?rs,&#13;
teachers and students. Since its begmmngs&#13;
in 1968, Parkside has consistently exNewscope&#13;
Wants Help&#13;
demands of the Chancellor, all of which&#13;
have apparently been mel.&#13;
The demands were'&#13;
1 Because confidence rn the administration&#13;
has eroded. the Dean and&#13;
Vice-Chancellor must immtdialel) resign&#13;
2, Because the University IS in a crucial&#13;
growth period, the Dean and ViceChanceUor&#13;
must be replaced 10 mterrm by&#13;
senior memhers of the faculty sugge ted&#13;
by the Uruversity Committee.&#13;
3. aecruument must be 10 the hancb or&#13;
the divisions with the adrmm trauon&#13;
having review power.&#13;
4. The Dean's Ad Hoc Advisory Com·&#13;
mittee must be abolished.&#13;
Reportedly the seven facully membe&#13;
recommended by the University Cornmittee&#13;
to replace Harris and 1acKIOn )' In&#13;
the interim were James bea, Leon A~&#13;
plebaum, Albert May, Wilham Morrow.&#13;
John Buenker, Herhert Kubly and Eugene&#13;
Gasciorkiewicz..&#13;
The Chancellor told the RegenlS too thaI&#13;
he would soon appoint a screening com.&#13;
mittee to seek a new Dean and ViceChancellor.&#13;
William Morrow&#13;
John S, Harris&#13;
INSIDE ...&#13;
Faculty Interviews&#13;
Book Reviews&#13;
Record Reviews&#13;
Movie Reviews&#13;
Harr:is. and McKinney Resign~/&#13;
Morrow to Replace Harris&#13;
By MARC EISEN&#13;
Vice-Chancellor for Academic A~fairs&#13;
John Harris and Dean Arthur MacKmney&#13;
f the College of Science and Society, the&#13;
~o apparent instigators of Decem_ber's&#13;
abortive faculty purge, have resigned&#13;
their positions, the Board of Regents&#13;
nnounced last Friday. To replace them&#13;
~hancellor Wyllie told the Reg~nts he has&#13;
appointed William Morrow. Prof. of&#13;
Psychology at Parkside, as the acting&#13;
oean to replace MacKinney, and that the&#13;
Vice-Chancelorship will not be filled on an&#13;
acting basis, but that temporary staff&#13;
adjustments may be made to handle the&#13;
situation until a successor can be named.&#13;
The immediate resignations of the two&#13;
was one of a number of demands made of&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie by both the&#13;
University Committee and the Parkside&#13;
Faculty Association. The Chancellor has&#13;
indicated his willingness to follow the&#13;
faculty's wishes. John Harbeson, a member of the&#13;
University Committee and one of the Zl on&#13;
the administration's ax list, said of the&#13;
Chancellor's reaction, "I would describe&#13;
the Chancellor's attitude as being very&#13;
receptive to the recommendation that the&#13;
two resign."&#13;
Because Harris and MacKinney are tenured members of the faculty they will&#13;
assume pew duties as Director of&#13;
Resource Development and Institutional&#13;
Reporting, and as Director of Institutional&#13;
Studies respectively. Both men were unavailable for comment.&#13;
They began their duties as Vice- ·&#13;
Chancellor and Dean only this past fall,&#13;
but within a few months of this became the&#13;
centers of controversy. The Dean with the&#13;
giving of a speech that called for Parkside&#13;
attaining "instant greatness", and the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor with this issuing of&#13;
criteria for faculty evaluation.&#13;
In retrospect it is seen that the Dean's&#13;
speech was a portent of the coming purge,&#13;
and the Vice-Chancellor's criteria the&#13;
basis on which it was attempted. What is&#13;
unclear is the role Chancellor Wyllie had in&#13;
the faculty review process.&#13;
Harbeson, who was as closely involved&#13;
in the crisis as any faculty member was,&#13;
said, "In all honesty I think the Chancellor&#13;
in this whole process was enigmatic at the&#13;
best. And I'm not to this day really sure&#13;
just what hi role wa in all thi . "I do know he approved ome of the&#13;
criteria that were employed. I do knov.· he&#13;
approved the Dean's revi~ proc ·. I&#13;
don't know if he approved in advance all&#13;
the termination that were made. Really,&#13;
overall, I just don't kn if he really knew&#13;
what they v.-ere doing, and if their actions&#13;
were the result o( his instructions " h&#13;
said. The change in the tat us of the l"- o i&#13;
seen as an indication of the Chane llor·_&#13;
desire to follow the facultv' lead in rec· tifying the controver ·y· O\'er faculty&#13;
personnel reviews. and a part of the&#13;
implementation of the Chancellor' ten&#13;
point policy statement.&#13;
Leon Applebaum, the Chairman of th&#13;
Social Science Divi ion, re\'ealed in an&#13;
impromptu speech at the school ran: in&#13;
December, that the ten points them eh· originated from the niversity Committee,&#13;
and were accepted by the Chan·&#13;
cellor.&#13;
Another indication of the Chancellor'&#13;
willingness to listen to the faculty comes&#13;
from the Parkside Faculty Association&#13;
which told the ·~·scope it made four&#13;
Tanuary 12, 1971&#13;
Tallent to · ·Replace Krivan&#13;
The appointment of Rita Tallent as special assistant to the chancellor and&#13;
coordinator of community services at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside was approved Friday by the University Bo~rd&#13;
of Regents. The appointment is effective&#13;
Feb. 1.&#13;
Mrs. Tallent replaces David C. Kr!van,&#13;
who had indicated to Chancellor Irvm G.&#13;
Wyllie several.months ago that he planned&#13;
to resign to enter private business .. The&#13;
Regents accepted his resignation Friday·&#13;
Mrs. Tallent has been director of school&#13;
and campus relations at Parkside since&#13;
September 1968 and will continue to&#13;
provide dir,ection1&#13;
for that office in her new&#13;
post.&#13;
In proposing the appointme:"t, Chan·&#13;
cellor .Wyllie cited the energetic and effective&#13;
manner in which Mrs. Tallent has&#13;
related the Parkside academic program to&#13;
high school and college coun~el?rs,&#13;
teachers and students. Since its begmmngs&#13;
in 1968, Parkside has consistently ex·&#13;
ceeded enrollment projections: . Mrs. Tallent also has been m~olved_ m other key campus activities, mc_ludmg&#13;
service as Parkside's repres~ntallve on the all-University human rights committee&#13;
and principal campus agent m&#13;
reporting aspects of program~ relate~ to&#13;
that committee to various public a~enc1es.&#13;
In her new post, Mrs. Tallent will ser~e as a representative of the ~hancellor s office in special commumty-related&#13;
projects and activities and at various&#13;
meetings both on and off cam~us ~he also&#13;
·11 handle a variety of m-ofhce ad- wi k .d. ministrative tasks and act as Par s1 e s liaison with various public and private&#13;
groups. . Mrs. Tallent has Jong-standmg personal&#13;
and professional ties to southt:3stern&#13;
Wisconsin. She came to Kenosha with her&#13;
late husbana, Bernard, when he became&#13;
Director of the University_'s ~o-year&#13;
program in 1948, and shared m h1~ efforts&#13;
to obtain the four-year campus which were&#13;
realized in the establLhment of Park id•&#13;
he recei\·ed her bachelor·. degree t&#13;
the • tadi on campu . wh re . h wa&#13;
elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and taug~t&#13;
English in the W Center y tein both m&#13;
Wau au and Kenosha. After her husband's death, he continuf:d&#13;
her studies, receiving a master· d~ree !n&#13;
guidance and coun.eling from Cah_forma&#13;
State College of Los Angeles p~1or to&#13;
assuming her irutial post at Park 1de . Acli'-,e in a wide range of community&#13;
activities in outhea tern Wi con in, . lr ·.&#13;
Tallent was named Kenosha' Woman of&#13;
the Year in 1969.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
W'ants Help&#13;
om·&#13;
INSIDE .&#13;
Faculty Interviews&#13;
Book Reviews&#13;
Record Reviews&#13;
Movie Reviews &#13;
RETROSPECT&#13;
F.DITOR· :\OTE John Harbeson rs an&#13;
\ssistant Prores- or in the polillcal science&#13;
department 10 his fourth year at Parkside.&#13;
He received his bachelor's degree from&#13;
Swarthmore College and his doctorate&#13;
from the Cnn ersuy of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
He 1!'la member of thr JUnior faculty and a&#13;
member of the Lruver-sity Committee. HIS&#13;
field I African pohll and at the present&#13;
time has a book In the mitral stages or&#13;
publication&#13;
... ... ...&#13;
\\hat (acton influ n tel your choice \0&#13;
ecme i Park iM"!&#13;
I" attracted to Park ide and came for&#13;
a number of very specific reasons. 1&#13;
naturally wanted to be an errech\'e teacher&#13;
nd to be a prcducuve scholar I think both&#13;
can done and be remforclng and must&#13;
tX" I"e'IOfr lOR I con ider Parkside to be a&#13;
pot 01lall) excillng environment In which&#13;
to ("~ag 10 all form of acuvuy. I&#13;
hI) In coming to parkstde. that I would&#13;
ha\:(' a rot to pia)' 10 the building of a new&#13;
In.,lItUI,nn (h,gh&lt;'r I armng I hoped thai&#13;
orne of the thing. that ate very hard to&#13;
(;h nR In 8 I rg 10 utuucn. where there&#13;
are ve t~d mrer ts and encrusted&#13;
tradition .• could be changed much more&#13;
(' slly on a n('\o\ocampus, Here there can be&#13;
upportumtl arrordcd for real Innovation,&#13;
(' IX"rlmt'ntahon. and de,,·clopment of&#13;
IX pI '. educational Idea 10 a relallvely&#13;
Ir and opt'" environment I also was&#13;
;:Iltract d to Parkslde because: it i part of&#13;
lhl' Un"..erslt)" of WlsconslO, which stands'&#13;
for thloR-S I believe In, hke academic&#13;
Ir dl:~m nd a strong role of facuJlies in&#13;
tht' K0\"ernlOg of the IOslltuhon. And&#13;
\\ IsconslO IS a great an ttlution&#13;
\\hal ""as )OUr reaction to l~ firings'!&#13;
I krK"'AthaI the Jltlngs were coming&#13;
The)' "Io(.'r('o'tany surprise to mc. I feel&#13;
'ory· ",rry for some people who. (thought,&#13;
\\:('r caught completely flatfooted by this&#13;
"hole thlOR The nivcrsll)" Committee&#13;
oil) led as slrongly as "e poss,bly could&#13;
and :aid that things were not right. We&#13;
3. kt"das forcefully as we could to have this&#13;
\\ holt- process reconsidered, begun again&#13;
from scratch, and done right. But we&#13;
\\:('ren't hstene&lt;!to. The only thing we were&#13;
abl to achlc,,·e 10 that prOlest was the&#13;
pre~.. release between the University&#13;
CommIttee and the Chancellor that apprared&#13;
earlier 10 New5Cope.So all we ever&#13;
a 'hle\"cd was simply that we expressed&#13;
our \'lCWPOlOt,which was very strongly&#13;
felt, and we turned out to be right. The&#13;
Chancellor responded with his reading of&#13;
the Situation, which differed from ours,&#13;
and thal's how mallers stood on the eve of&#13;
lhe rtrlngs&#13;
110\0,did the firings affect )'ou per-&#13;
...ooall) '!&#13;
I was dJsillusloned because this kind of&#13;
thm&amp; could happen 10 the University of&#13;
WI consin. but I must say that I was not&#13;
d,. enchanted personally. Th&lt;'y chose to&#13;
release me, not because of my teaching,&#13;
not because of my research. but because I&#13;
\\'l~ not rele"'ent to the miSSion,Frankly, I&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
was contemptous of the reasons that Dr.&#13;
Harris gave me for saying I was not&#13;
relevant to the mission. So personally I&#13;
wasn't touched bv it at all. I was bothered&#13;
in an institutional sense becatlSe I was&#13;
distressed, having given more time to ~e&#13;
institution than was really advisable an&#13;
terms of my professional advancement" to&#13;
see this kind of thing happen to the 10-&#13;
stitution with all its necessary bad effects,&#13;
The revi'ew process very badly weakened&#13;
Parkside and set back the progress that all&#13;
or us had been trying to achieve for the&#13;
past three years. So I was distressed in&#13;
that sense. I'm also concerned for the U of&#13;
W because ef the effect that our nounde'rlOg&#13;
last semester might have on the&#13;
well-being or the system as a whole. But&#13;
personally it didn't bother me at all,&#13;
because again, it apparenUy didn't reflect&#13;
on my ability or my achievements. Also, I&#13;
was in my fourth year and had an extra&#13;
year in addition to this year to look for a&#13;
job I was, to be frank, confident that I&#13;
could do a great deal of work in that period&#13;
of lime and lind a good job.&#13;
\\ hat about your future at Parkside in&#13;
light of the recent administrative&#13;
c:hanges!&#13;
That depends on two or three things. I&#13;
am not committed either to stay or to go, If&#13;
the mission continues to be defined in the&#13;
narrow, inappropriate sense as it was&#13;
defined to me when I was terminated, then&#13;
[ have no choice but to look elsewhere. But&#13;
the racuIty has taken the initiative in&#13;
appolOting a committee which will soon be&#13;
at work to review and discuss the application&#13;
of the mission and what it should&#13;
mean in terms or coW"Sesand personnel.&#13;
I'm confident that the committee will&#13;
come forth with an intelligent set of&#13;
recommendations which will enhance&#13;
rather than curtail our committment to&#13;
liberal arts education. Will these faculty&#13;
recommendations be considered? I have&#13;
no reason to believe that they won't be.&#13;
The appointing of this mission committee&#13;
and also the personnel criterion committee&#13;
might be received wen by the administration&#13;
and then again they mighl.not&#13;
be. I just don't know. I almost have to&#13;
hope, trust, work to ensure that they will&#13;
be recei\'ed and acted upon favorably.&#13;
University or Wisconsin-Madison law&#13;
students voted Prof. J. Willard Hurst 3'S&#13;
"Outstanding Professor of 1970,"&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Volume 3 - Number 1&#13;
January 12, 1971&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke&#13;
WarrenNectry&#13;
Jerry Owens&#13;
Marsha Owens&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
. Mark Barnhill&#13;
John }(oloen&#13;
Bill Sorenson&#13;
Bill Jacoby; John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Production Manager&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Artist, Movie Reviews&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, D~n ~?umps. D. H, Post, l?on Marjala,&#13;
Mike Kurth, Jim Smith, Bob Borchardt, Walt Breach,&#13;
Narees Socha, Jerry Socha, Ken Konkol, .&#13;
Sven Tarrs, Diane Haney&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University o! WiscollSioParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, wtsconsio, 5314~.Mailing a~dr~ss ISParkside s Newscope,&#13;
3700Washington Rd" Kenosha. Busmess and editcrial telephone number is_&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
Nuclear Technology Course&#13;
A new interdisciplinary course titled&#13;
"Social Problems in Nuclear Technology"&#13;
has been added to the timetable for second·&#13;
semester.&#13;
The course will be taught by Bernard I.&#13;
Spinrad, a distinguished scientist ~ho&#13;
presently is senior physicist in the ApplIed&#13;
Physics Division at Argonne Natio~al&#13;
Laboratory. fmmediately before takmg&#13;
the post last August, he was director of the&#13;
Division of Nuclear power and Reactors of&#13;
the International Atomic Energy Agency&#13;
in Vienna.&#13;
The course, which carries two cr~dits for&#13;
Applied Science and Technology, Physics&#13;
or Social Science, will deal with elementary&#13;
principles of nuclear reactors·, applications,&#13;
including power generation and&#13;
propulsion systems, environmental,&#13;
economic, political and ethical considerations.&#13;
Dr. Spinrad had major responsibility for&#13;
invention and design of the Savannah&#13;
River Production Reactors and of the&#13;
Argonaut Reactor, the first designed for&#13;
use as an educational system.&#13;
His professional interests are wideranging&#13;
and include fundamental&#13;
technology of urban planning, design of&#13;
space e?,plorati~n missions usingDlIdsr&#13;
propulsion, ethics of science and,&#13;
ticularly, engineering and fast ~&#13;
reactor concepts.&#13;
Dr. Spinrad received his B.S.,M S iii&#13;
Ph.D. degrees at Yale, where he a'~ old&#13;
post-doctoral research as a Sterlilc&#13;
Fellow in Chemistry,&#13;
New Traffic law&#13;
Two new traffic regulations for lilt&#13;
Umverslty of Wlsconsm-Parkside WOld&#13;
Road Campus were approved Friday iIJ&#13;
. the University Regents.&#13;
The regulations establish a ma,"-&#13;
speed limit of 15miles per hour for.....&#13;
vehicles on all roadways oncampuseltllll&#13;
in areas otherwise posted by signHI&#13;
require all vehicle traffic to cometo I&#13;
complete stop at all marked intersectia&#13;
on campus and at all intersectimsII&#13;
campus roads with ~oun~yor town.&#13;
. ways.&#13;
NEWSCOPE-Page2&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,197i&#13;
3stees&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
1040&#13;
Sheridan It&#13;
Ph. 65401375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
-with Almond.ine Sau.c.&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME IlIB&#13;
RETROSPECT&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KE1&#13;
NOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker}&#13;
55(&#13;
" -. cont mptou of the reasons that Dr.&#13;
Harri gave me for sa)ing I was not&#13;
r levant to the mi ·,ion. o per onaJly I&#13;
" n't touched by it at all. I was bothered&#13;
in an in titutional sen ·e because I was&#13;
di tres ed, ha\•ing gi\'en more ti~e to ~e&#13;
institution than was really advisable m term of my prof es ·ional ad\•ancement,. to&#13;
thi · kind of thing happen to the m-&#13;
·utution, with all its necessary bad effects.&#13;
The r vie · proce \'ery badly weakened&#13;
P r · ide and set back the progress that all&#13;
of u had been trymg to achieve for ~e&#13;
pa t three years. So I was distressed m&#13;
that. nse. I'm al o concerned for the U of&#13;
W becau of the effect that our floun-&#13;
'ring la ·t em~ter might have on the&#13;
11-being of the y tern as a whole. But&#13;
per. Uy it didn't bother ~e. at all,&#13;
caus again, it apparently d1dn t reflect&#13;
on my abilit\" or my achievements. Also, I&#13;
· m mv fourth year and had an extra&#13;
, 0 ar in addition to this year to look for a&#13;
job. I w , to be frank. confident that I&#13;
could do a great deal of work in that period&#13;
of tim and find a good job. \\ h l a ut ) ur future al Parkside in&#13;
ti ht or th recent admini trative&#13;
han '!&#13;
That d pends on two or three things. I&#13;
m not committed ither to stay or to go. If&#13;
th mi· i n continue · to be defined in the&#13;
narrow, inappropriate ense as it was&#13;
defined to me wh n I wa terminated, then&#13;
l have no choic but to loo el ewhere. But&#13;
th f ultv ha taken the initiative in&#13;
ppointing· a committee which will oon be&#13;
at \\Or to review and discuss the application&#13;
of the mi ion and what it should&#13;
mean in term of coun;e - and personnel.&#13;
1 m confid nt that the committee will&#13;
come forth with an intelligent et of&#13;
r mm ndatioru which will enhance&#13;
rather than curtail our committment to&#13;
liberal ar education. Will these faculty&#13;
re(."Ommendations be con idered? I have&#13;
no rea on to believe that thev won't be.&#13;
The appointing of this missio; committee&#13;
and aL o the personnel criterion committee&#13;
might be recei\'ed well by the admini&#13;
tration and then again they might.not&#13;
be. I just don't know. I almost ha\'e to&#13;
ho , tru ·t. wor - to en ·ure that they will&#13;
be received and acted upon favorably.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
''Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
volume 3 - Number 1&#13;
January 12, 1971&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Production Manager&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Feature Editor_ . Artist, Movie Reviews&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke&#13;
Warren Nedry&#13;
Jerry Owens&#13;
Marsha Owens&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Bill Sorenson&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Dean L?umos, D. H. Post, Don Marj ala,&#13;
Mike Kurth, Jim Smith, Bob Borchardt, WaltBreach,&#13;
Narees Socha, Jerry ~cha, Ken Konkol, ·&#13;
Sven Taffs, Diane Haney&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity_ o! Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 5314?- Ma1hng a~dr:5s 1s Parkside s Newscope,&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 653-&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
Nuclear Technology Course&#13;
A new interdisciplinary course titled&#13;
"Social Problems in Nuclear Technology"&#13;
has been added to the timetable for second ·&#13;
semester.&#13;
The course will be taught by Bernard I.&#13;
Spinrad, a distinguished scientist ~ho&#13;
presently is senior physicist in the Applied&#13;
Physics Division at Argonne Nallo?al&#13;
Laboratory. Immediately before takmg&#13;
the post last August, he was director of the&#13;
Division of Nuclear Power and Reactors of&#13;
the International Atomic Energy Agency&#13;
in Vienna . The course, which carries two cre_dits for&#13;
Applied Science and Technology, Physics&#13;
or Social Science, will deal with elementary&#13;
principles of nuclear reactors, applications,&#13;
including power generation and&#13;
propulsion systems, environmental,&#13;
economic, political and ethical considerations.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Spinrad had major responsibility for&#13;
invention and design of the Savannah&#13;
River Production Reactors and of the&#13;
Argonaut Reactor, the first designed for&#13;
use as an educational system.&#13;
His professional interests are wideranging&#13;
and include fundamental&#13;
technology of urban planning, design of&#13;
space e_xplorati~n missions using nud&#13;
propulsion, ethics of science and&#13;
ticularly, engineering and fast tx'.e&#13;
reactor concepts.&#13;
Dr. Spinrad received his B.S., M.S 1&#13;
Ph.D. degrees at Yale, where he al 0&#13;
post-doctoral research as a Sterl&#13;
Fellow in Chemistry.&#13;
New Traffic Law&#13;
Two new traffic regulations for&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside w&#13;
Road Campus were approved Friday&#13;
the University Regents.&#13;
The regulations establish a ma&#13;
speed limit of 15 miles per hour for miter&#13;
vehicles on all roadways on campus exc&#13;
in areas otherwise posted by sign a&#13;
require all vehicle traffic to come to 1&#13;
complete stop at all marked intersecll&#13;
on campus and at all intersections ci&#13;
campus roads with county or town&#13;
ways.&#13;
NEWSCOPE- Page 2&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 197i&#13;
asters 1040&#13;
Sheridan ld.&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Sau_ce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME lllB &#13;
January Commencement Set&#13;
University President John C. Weaver. The&#13;
Rev. Roy D. Phillips 0/ the Unitarian&#13;
Universalist church will con&lt;kJct the invocation&#13;
and benediction lor the no cap&#13;
and gown informal ceremony.&#13;
Following the ceremony will he a&#13;
reception in the South concourse. 48&#13;
candidates are scheduled for graduation&#13;
Faculty and administrative staff ar~&#13;
cordially invited to attend.&#13;
Universityof Wisconsin President John&#13;
C.weaver will be the principal speaker at&#13;
mid-year commencement. exercises at&#13;
uw_parkside.&#13;
Fifty candidates lor graduation are to&#13;
receive degrees at the 8 p.m. ceremony&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 31, in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
~~~_eve~t will be Weaver's first visit to&#13;
the Parkaide Campus since assuming the&#13;
pres~dency of the University Jan. 1. As&#13;
presIdent-elect, he made a brief stop at&#13;
Parkslde as part of a two-day tour 01 the&#13;
lour degree-granting UW campuses plus&#13;
the two-year campus at West Bend.&#13;
The commencement will be the second&#13;
for the new UW campus. Parkside&#13;
graduated its first 35 students last June&#13;
Parkside's mid-year commencement&#13;
will be infor~~ - without caps and gowns&#13;
and the traditional academic procession.&#13;
The event will be open to the public.&#13;
Twenty-six of the candidates are from&#13;
Kenosha, ~ from Racine, and one each&#13;
from Burlington and Salem.&#13;
Candidates for the bachelor of arts&#13;
degree are:&#13;
Diane M. Balestrieri, 3334 Ruby Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Willie E. Box, 1033 Pearl Sl&#13;
Racine; Linda C. Campeau, 1501 Illinoi~&#13;
St.,.' Racine; Suzanne R. Chernik, 142'h&#13;
Grand Ave., Racine; Jonathan P.&#13;
Christiansen, 1437 Florence Ave., Racine;&#13;
Kathleen Cippola, 7011 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Jerome K, Dombrask 4711&#13;
Sheridan Road, Kenosha; Jeanne Driver,&#13;
1315 Wisconsin Ave., Racine; Ellen M.&#13;
Eklund, 6108Seventh Ave., Kenosha; Fern&#13;
D. Haley, 302 Wind Point School Road,&#13;
Racine; Lester J. Halkowitz, 440 Blue&#13;
River Ave., Raclne. Dcnald L. Harris, 4046&#13;
31st Ave., Kenosha; Beverly Coleman&#13;
Heys, 3535 N. Newman Road, Racine;&#13;
Lillie M. ~ackson, 1318 Grand Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Marjorie Ann Jorgensen, 3532&#13;
Republic Ave., Racine; Ralph N. Kassel,&#13;
7846 33rd Ave., Kenosha; Dolores Kovera,&#13;
3910 Fourt St., Kenosba; Kathleen R.&#13;
Ladousa, 4914 36th Ave., Kenosba; Terry&#13;
LaDousa, 5412 41st Ave., Kenosha; Mary&#13;
S. Langendorf, 5027 24th Ave., Kenosba;&#13;
John H.lPwman, 491121stAve., Kenosba;&#13;
Terry F. Ludeman, 2015 S. Green Bay&#13;
Road, Racine; Susan Might, 815 49th st.,&#13;
Kenosha; Julia Ann Olson, 347 56th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Alfred Preiss, 6535 Fifth Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; June Reilly, 7550 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Veronica Rose Roscioli, 5412&#13;
23rd Ave., Kenosha; Joseph Rudolph, 134&#13;
Sheffield Dr., Ra&lt;!ine; Patricia Salituro,&#13;
272225th Ave., Kenosha; Kathryn Skow, 39&#13;
S. Summerset Dr., Racine; Irene Smith,&#13;
7109 23rd Ave., Kenosha; Conrad&#13;
Targonski, St. Francis Friary, Burlington;&#13;
Rosemarie Thompson, 961 Green Bay&#13;
Road, Kenosba; Elizabeth N. Weber, 2307&#13;
Four Mile Road, Racine; and Betty J.&#13;
Yankee, Salem.&#13;
Candidates for the bachelor of science&#13;
degree are:&#13;
Frederick J. Bruch, 2022 57th st.,&#13;
Kenosha; Richard K. Bruno, 4026 60th&#13;
Place, Kenosha; Kenneth Cullen, .6411&#13;
Greenridge Drive, Racine; Keren Meister&#13;
Davis, 4045 18th St., Kenosha; Susan K.&#13;
Griffiths, 1602 43rd St., Kenosha; Brent&#13;
Harrison, 725 Perry Ave., RaclOej&#13;
Lawrence Hartman, 1719 Johnson Ave.,&#13;
Racinej Barbara Jean Kral, 21 S. Green&#13;
Bay Road, Racine; Robert Moebrke, 2004&#13;
45thSt., Kenosha; LouisC. Noto, 210753rd&#13;
St Kenosba' Donald G. Peterson, 41)14&#13;
560, St., Ke~osha; Susan C. Piehl, 7602&#13;
32nd Ave., Kenosha; Stephen W.&#13;
Schneider, 4207Olive St.;Raclne;Bruno A.&#13;
Schrader, 2515 Erie St., Racme; and&#13;
Donald P. Smith, 1916 Deane Blvd.,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Mid-year graduation will take place&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 31, 1971, at 8 p.m. m&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse. The mam&#13;
speaker for tbe graduation will be&#13;
NEWSCOPE-Page3&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
ByGEORGE METESKY&#13;
The question of Luddite's survival and&#13;
ultiJOateform is now. one of critical imparlance.A&#13;
Luddite victory, a victory of&#13;
pleasure over pain, of -truth over&#13;
falsehood, is now at hand, if we dare to&#13;
struggle,dare to win. Luddite is not an&#13;
enemyof the people.&#13;
'!'hI$! forces of counter-insurgency who&#13;
threaten, "It can't. happen here," are&#13;
simply mistaken. Since its inception,&#13;
.Luddite has been 'growing in size and&#13;
strength, and this is before we began&#13;
slwOtingektachrome.&#13;
In this first Luddite column (part seven&#13;
ri a series of (iveY.it is important to set&#13;
l&lt;Irthsome of the precepts tha t were apperentin&#13;
the Luddite confrontation of the&#13;
IiIteenth 01 December of last year.&#13;
Inasmuch as Luddite is primarily nonverbal,any&#13;
verbal description or analysis&#13;
riLuddite, i.e, the Luddite organization, or&#13;
any Luddite will seem at best crude and&#13;
jRlentiollS. It Is for this reason that&#13;
Luddite is only accessible to those who&#13;
havebeen Luddites for some time. Even&#13;
the conceptof being a member of Luddite&#13;
is misleading. Luddite does not exist in&#13;
limeand space. Thus, a Luddite "member"&#13;
has no private but rather only a tribal&#13;
MSentity. There are no solutions to be had&#13;
wilh larger swastikas.&#13;
This column is also an opportunity to&#13;
"""tion the ultimate utility of Luddite.&#13;
LuOIite is not in lavor of providing utility.&#13;
LuOIite will not usurp the power of those&#13;
who wish to engage in such monopolistic&#13;
ICtivities. Luddite is not a common&#13;
carrier.&#13;
When the metaphor of territoriality is in&#13;
vogue, we would be wise to ask for the&#13;
boundariesof Luddite. Like the universe,&#13;
Luddite, while finite, is not definable.&#13;
Some 01 the chief problems in transmitling&#13;
information about Luddite are&#13;
problems with the media themselves.&#13;
Communicationsmedia, assumed to be&#13;
passivepurveyors of information, when&#13;
their large scale effects are analyzed, are&#13;
Ioond to bave a greater effect than their&#13;
","tent. In presenting Luddite concepts,&#13;
the printed page is inadequate, hopelessly&#13;
weriorto the electronic media. It is hoped&#13;
lhat what can be accomplished by a .&#13;
columnof Luddites is equal to that ac-&#13;
_plished by a battalion of regular&#13;
soldiers.McLuhan notes that we seldom&#13;
communicate we often share en·&#13;
vironments. ' .&#13;
It is unfortunate that our educational&#13;
ioItitutions train us only in critical&#13;
evaluation of the obsolescent media. The&#13;
~nt media work us over without our =ous awareness. This works to make&#13;
.... te take on mythic as well as ob-&#13;
"",live Jl'oporlions.&#13;
You wonder how these things begin.&#13;
~ Which seemingly springs quickly&#13;
"WI the background noise often IS =:::in the subconscious yearnings and&#13;
of years past. We have begin to&#13;
l1IlnIeture the primordial feelings from&#13;
~ 2,000years of literacy divorced ua.&#13;
lime is a lime for crossing barriers, :...a~old categories, for probing&#13;
~ ~ be expected tbat any column of&#13;
Ie ISto be a probe as well as an ar- :=-~llInmentary. a mime of events in&#13;
N- k- , ,e,e s&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
ACROS5 FROM THE cAYTON HOTEL&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
$75 Sportcoats $45&#13;
$100 Fur Coats&#13;
(Men's) $57.50&#13;
$35 ladies Jump&#13;
Suits $14.95&#13;
Always Wholesale Prices at&#13;
•&#13;
MEN'S &amp; YOUNG&#13;
MEN'S SHOP&#13;
5720 6th Ave.&#13;
K-enosha&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH l SOUTH SHEI'IDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHA -&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
THE ROCKER!&#13;
- - -&#13;
....&#13;
100-FM!&#13;
Ratine Kenosha Radio!&#13;
- - -&#13;
24 HOURS!&#13;
RIGHT ON!&#13;
January Commencement set NORTIH&#13;
and&#13;
university of Wisconsin President John SOUTH&#13;
C weaver will be the principal s~ker at&#13;
·(I.year commencement exercises at&#13;
1?11 'de UW-Parkst . Fifty candidates for graduation are to&#13;
By GEORGE METESKY&#13;
The question of Luddite's survival and&#13;
ultimate form is now one of critical importance.&#13;
A Luddite victory, a victory of&#13;
pleasure over pain, of truth over&#13;
falsehood, is now at hand, if we dare to&#13;
struggle, dare to win. Luddite is not an&#13;
enemY of the people.&#13;
Th~e forces of counter-insurgency who&#13;
threaten, "It can't happen here," are&#13;
simply mistaken. Since its inception,&#13;
.LUddite has been growing in size and&#13;
strength, and this is before we began&#13;
shooting ektachrome.&#13;
In this first Luddite column (part seven&#13;
&lt;i a series of five) it is important to set&#13;
forth some of the precepts that were apparent&#13;
in the Luddite confrontation of the&#13;
fifteenth of December of last year.&#13;
Inasmuch as Luddite is primarily nonverbal,&#13;
any verbal description or analysis&#13;
of Luddite, i.e. the Luddite organization, or&#13;
any Luddite will seem at best crude and&#13;
iretentious. It js for this reason that&#13;
LUddite is only accessible to those who&#13;
have been Luddites for some time. Even&#13;
the concept of being a member of Luddite&#13;
is misleading. Luddite does not exist in&#13;
lime and space. Thus, a Luddite "member"&#13;
has no private but rather only a tribal&#13;
identity. There are no solutions to be had&#13;
with larger swastikas.&#13;
This column is also an opportunity to&#13;
question the ultimate utility of Luddite.&#13;
LUddite is not in favor of providing utility.&#13;
LUddite will not usurp the power of those&#13;
who wish to engage in such monopolistic&#13;
activities. Luddite is not a common&#13;
carrier.&#13;
When the metaphor of territoriality is in&#13;
vogue, we would be wise to ask for the&#13;
boundaries of Luddite. Like the universe,&#13;
Luddite, while finite, is not definable.&#13;
Some of the chief problems in tranmitting&#13;
information about Luddite are&#13;
JX'Oblems with the media themselves.&#13;
Communications media, assumed to be&#13;
passive purveyors of information, when&#13;
their large scale effects are analyzed, are&#13;
found to have a greater effect than their&#13;
content. In presenting Luddite concepts,&#13;
the printed page is inadequate, hopelessly&#13;
inferior to the electronic media. It is hoped&#13;
that what can be accomplished by a&#13;
column of Luddites is equal to that accomplished&#13;
by a battalion of regular&#13;
soldiers. McLuhan notes that we seldom&#13;
communicate we often share en- \irorunents. '&#13;
rt is unfortunate that our educational&#13;
Institutions train us only in critical&#13;
evaluation of the obsolescent media. The&#13;
&amp;scendent media work us over without our&#13;
COllscious awareness. This works to make&#13;
~~ite take on mythic as well as ob-&#13;
~tive proportions.&#13;
You wonder how these things begin.&#13;
r,at which seemingly springs quickly&#13;
,rorn ~e background noise often is&#13;
::ded m the subconscious yearnings a~d&#13;
ires of years past. .We have begin to&#13;
1tructure the primordial feelings from&#13;
" c~ 2,000 years of literacy divorced us.&#13;
~r lim~ is a time for crossing barrie_rs,&#13;
or erasmg old categories for probing lll'Ound. '&#13;
~~ t~ be expected that any column of&#13;
ti 1 le 15 to be a probe as well as an ar1~.&#13;
e of commentary a mime of events in&#13;
"~ mind. '&#13;
MEN'S &amp; YOUNG&#13;
MEN'S SHOP&#13;
5720 6th Ave.&#13;
K-enosha&#13;
receive degrees at the 8 p.m. ceremony&#13;
SundaY, Jan. 31, in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
1.:~e eve?t will be Weaver's first visit to&#13;
th~ ~arkside Campus since assuming the&#13;
pres~dency of the University Jan. 1. As&#13;
pres1d~nt-elect, he made a brief stop at&#13;
Parkside as part of a two-day tour of the&#13;
four degree-granting UW campuses plus&#13;
the two-year campus at West Bencl.&#13;
The commencement will be the second&#13;
for the new UW campus. Parkside&#13;
graduated its first 35 students last June&#13;
_Park~ide's mid-year commencement&#13;
will be mfor~~ - without caps and gowns&#13;
and the traditional academic procession.&#13;
The event ~ill be open to the public.&#13;
Twenty-six of the candidates are from&#13;
Kenosha, 22 from Racine and one each&#13;
from Burlington and Sale~.&#13;
Candidates for the bachelor of arts&#13;
degree are:&#13;
Diane M. Balestrieri, 3334 Ruby Ave.&#13;
Racine; Willie E . Box, 1033 Pearl Sl 1&#13;
Racine; Linda C. Campeau, 1501 Illino~&#13;
St., Racine; Suzanne R. Chernik, 1421,2&#13;
Grand Ave. , Racine; Jonathan P .&#13;
Christiansen, 1437 Florence Ave., Racine;&#13;
Kathleen Cippola, 7011 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kem~ha; Jerome K, Dombrask, 4711&#13;
Sheridan Road, Kenosha ; Jeanne Driver,&#13;
1315 Wisconsin Ave., Racine; Ellen M.&#13;
Eklund, 6108 Seventh Ave., Kenosha ; Fern&#13;
D. Haley, 302 Wind Point School Road,&#13;
Racine; Lester J. Halkowitz, 440 Blue&#13;
River Ave., Racine; DonaldL. Harris, 4046&#13;
31st Ave., Kenosha ; Beverly Coleman&#13;
Heys, 3535 N. Newman Road, Racine;&#13;
Lillie M. .:(ackson, 1318 Grand Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Marjorie Ann Jorgensen, 3532&#13;
Republic Ave. , Racine; Ralph N. Kassel,&#13;
7846 33rd Ave., Kenosha ; Dolores Kovera,&#13;
3910 Fourt St., Kenosha ; Kathleen R.&#13;
Ladousa, 4914 36th Ave. , Kenosha ; Terry&#13;
LaDousa, 5412 41st Ave., Kenosha ; Mary&#13;
S. Langendorf, 5027 24th Ave., Kenosha ;&#13;
John H. L&lt;&gt;wman, 49112lstAve., Kenosha ;&#13;
Terry F. Ludeman, 2015 S. Green Bay&#13;
Road, Racine; Susan Might, 815 49th Sl,&#13;
Kenosha ; Julia Ann Olson, 347 56th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha ; Alfred Preiss, 6535 Fifth Ave. ,&#13;
Kenosha ; June Reilly, 7550 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha ; Veronica Rose Roscioli, 5412&#13;
23rd Ave. , Kenosha ; Joseph Rudolph, 134&#13;
Sheffield Dr., Racine ; Patricia Salituro,&#13;
2722 25th Ave., Kenosha ; Kathryn Skow, 39&#13;
S. Summerset Dr., Racine; Irene Smith,&#13;
7109 23rd Ave., Kenosha ; Conrad&#13;
Targonski, St. Francis Friary, Burlington;&#13;
Rosemarie Thompson, 961 Green Bay&#13;
Road, Kenosha ; Elizabeth N. Weber, 2307&#13;
Four Mile Road, Racine; and Betty J.&#13;
Yankee, Salem. Candidates for the bachelor of science&#13;
degree are : Frederick J. Bruch, 2022 57th St.,&#13;
Kenosha ; Richard K. Bruno, 4026 60th&#13;
Place, Kenosha ; Kenneth Cullen, _6411&#13;
Greenridge Drive, Racine ; Keren Meister&#13;
Davis, 4045 18th St. , Kenosha ; Susan K.&#13;
Griffiths, 1602 43rd St., Kenosha ; B~ent&#13;
Harrison, 725 Perry Ave., Racme ;&#13;
Lawrence Hartman, 1719 Johnson Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Barbara Jean Kral, 21 S. Green&#13;
Bay Road, Racine; Robert Moehrke, 2004&#13;
45thSt. , Kenosha ; LouisC. Noto, 2107 53rd&#13;
St Kenosha · Donald G. Peterson, 4014&#13;
S6tb St. , Ke~osha ; Susan C. Piehl, 7602&#13;
32nd Ave., Kenosha ; ~tephen W.&#13;
Schneider, 4207 Olive St. , Racme ;_Bruno A.&#13;
Schrader, 2515 Erie St., Racme; and&#13;
Donald P. Smith, 1916 Deane Blvd. ,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Mid-year graduation will take pla~e&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 31, 1971, at 8 p.m. ~n&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concours~. The. mam&#13;
speaker for the graduation will be&#13;
$75 Sportcoats $45&#13;
$100 Fur Coats&#13;
(Men's) $57.50&#13;
$35 Ladies Jump&#13;
Suits $14. 95&#13;
Always Wholesale Prices at&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
ACROSS FROM THE DAYTON HOTEL&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
University President John C. Weav r. The&#13;
Rey. Roy_ D. Phillips of the nlt.arian&#13;
Uruversalist church "'ill conduct the invocation&#13;
and benediction for the no cap&#13;
and gown informal cerernonv&#13;
Following the ceremony° · will be a&#13;
reception in the South concOtll"Se.&#13;
candidates are scheduled for gradua tion.&#13;
Faculty and admini trative taff are&#13;
cordially invited to attend.&#13;
i'o'EWSCOPE - Page 3&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 1971&#13;
ORTH &amp; SOUTI1 SHE~ID ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHA&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED·&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
THE ROCKER!&#13;
- - -&#13;
100-FM!&#13;
Racine Kenosha Radio! - - -&#13;
24 HOURS!&#13;
RIGHT ON! &#13;
This university has, in its few years of existence, experienced more than&#13;
its share of difliculty. We've gone from Ockham's Razor to instant greatness to&#13;
the Parkside mission and have recently endured the Parkside shaft.&#13;
The shaft has been weilded by the administration directed at limes at the&#13;
faculty. at times at the studnets, and at times even at the administration itself.&#13;
The r ult of this has been a lack of communication between all factions of the&#13;
univer ity Arter two years there is no student government, no clearly defined&#13;
faculty review procedures, no organized faculty recruiting procedures, no&#13;
drmmstration-Iaculty exchange, no faculty-student exchange, and no studentdmmistrallon&#13;
exchange. In these areas there exist formal channels of&#13;
commumcation. but these have been effectively obscured, misinterpreted, or&#13;
mi used a to render them ineffective. Recently, steps have been taken to&#13;
remov some of th ob tacles and construct effective, efficient channels. It&#13;
rem 'n! to be n If this is a genuine attempt at reconstruction or another&#13;
v rsron of th Parkside haft.&#13;
It, a time for guarded opumism, but not inaction.&#13;
A uruv r ity 10 its youth has to be strengthened before its benefits can be&#13;
enjoyed It i. time for construction and establishment of this university&#13;
through co-operauon It WIll require administration involvement, faculty involv&#13;
m nt, nd tudent involvement An important initial step is a redefinition&#13;
of OCkham' . razor, instant greatness, the Parks ide mission, and the Parkside&#13;
haft Let'. co-operate and pull it all together.&#13;
The r rgnation of Vice Chancellor Harris and Dean Mac Kinney might&#13;
"ell be tak n a. a step toward academic manhood for Parkside.&#13;
What ha . been learned at Park ide by the 17 firings and the resignations&#13;
f Harri. ·MacK,nney is what can happen to any immature university torn by&#13;
mt rnal aeadermc chaos. Tlu . 'f unchecked, creates almost certain external&#13;
eestrucuo»&#13;
Why not demand the resignation of the Chief Administrator himself?&#13;
nlortunately to command such an act is to call for certain destruction of this&#13;
Univ r Ity&#13;
we have learned that the underlying faculty response, a feeling of downtrodden&#13;
mdlfference, aimed at saving their own necks, is an attitude somewhat&#13;
dI couraging further teaching and research, leaving a bitler taste and not so&#13;
fond memory. We have learned that the University can be the subject of&#13;
ndlcule and degradation locally and even nationally. We lbe students should&#13;
learn that further chaos certainly would crush the already wavering walls of&#13;
Park ide.&#13;
Super construction seems to be the word at Parkside, with its instant&#13;
greatness and Parks ide mission: reconstruction should be the word. Observing&#13;
our mistakes and conscientiously applying the result should build not only a&#13;
brick and mortar niversity but one in which the faculty and the students can&#13;
contmue to operate as efficient creative learners without fear of further unrest.&#13;
Umte students. UnIte faculty, unite administration and fuse together, in&#13;
channels of communication, to build a university which radlales respect and&#13;
Understanding. It can be done. It must be done.&#13;
UWP Receives Federal Grant&#13;
A rederal grant of $18.000 1n support of&#13;
thc College Work-Study Program at the&#13;
University of \\'isconsin·Parkside was&#13;
aCCl'pted frIday by the W Board of&#13;
Regenb&#13;
The grant is for the period Jan. 1, 1971,&#13;
lhrougl1 Dec. 31. 1971&#13;
Jan K. Ocker, UWP's Director of&#13;
Financial Aids and Placement, said the&#13;
grant brings to S40,OOOthe amount of&#13;
federal funds allocated for the work-study&#13;
program at Parkside during the current&#13;
academic year.&#13;
RIlS'OE&#13;
IHOUSTRln&#13;
significant change. I think man&#13;
do.n't realize how significant it is. i,~~}...&#13;
this stage we have to take the C~-l\&#13;
at his word. celb&#13;
There are some points or WyUi '&#13;
point statement that did not come f e. too&#13;
chancellor, but came from the r;-n the&#13;
which the chancellor has accepl&lt;d ~l)&#13;
was no consultation with the c~~&#13;
prior to this. The University Com .Dar&#13;
did not go to the chancellor and sa~~&#13;
want your approval for the raJ W.&#13;
points. We told HIM we were gOing.....&#13;
this." IS. ,an d h id "G e sal, 0 ahead and do' " 10010&#13;
I lbink if you continue to battle thi... ~&#13;
out now and try to tear this place -.&#13;
you're going to he successful. alllrt,&#13;
1think this is not the lime for this Tlia'&#13;
the lime to try to pull this .chool ,;",.~&#13;
and see if we can be successful. '&#13;
REMEMBE.R NOVEMBER&#13;
APPLEBAUM'S DECEMBER SPEACH&#13;
If the administration thinks thi.s ~ampus&#13;
is going to run business as usual It 1S sadly&#13;
mistaken. There has been a tre~endous&#13;
battle on this campus, and 1 think the&#13;
administration has come forth. with. at&#13;
least a first step, to make up for It. Ithink&#13;
it hehooves the faculty, the students, a~d&#13;
the administration to see if we can pull th~s&#13;
campus together again. Beeaus: th~s&#13;
campus cannot continue to ex~st. If this&#13;
ever happens again. Because if It ever&#13;
does this campus will collapse. .&#13;
What we should do nOWis try to bring the&#13;
campus together. I don't think we ~ve&#13;
heard the end of this anyway. But 1 think&#13;
we have to try to bring it together. Ithink It&#13;
is a job for the administration, the faculty,&#13;
and for the students.&#13;
Having been closely involved .with .wh~t&#13;
has been happening at this Urnverslty 10&#13;
the past three years, I think. this is a&#13;
December 9, 1970&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
This is in reference to an article in the&#13;
Dee. 3 1970 issue of NEWSCOPE titled.&#13;
, , II&#13;
"Consider the North-South Program .&#13;
Last year at this time, there was a&#13;
similar article in Parkside's newspaper to&#13;
which'l responded. 1 was 'subsequently&#13;
chosen as Parkside's only repres"entative&#13;
and spent second semester of the school&#13;
year 1969-1970 at North Carolina Central&#13;
University. Itis for this reason that Iwish&#13;
to let my comments be known to others&#13;
who may be interested.&#13;
My experiences at NCCU, for the most&#13;
part, were filled with abuse, name-calling&#13;
and a constant reminder that Iwa:::.a nonblack&#13;
outsider in a situation where I didn't&#13;
belong and was not wanted.&#13;
Friendships were few and meaningless&#13;
and I came away not knowing who my&#13;
friends really were and who I could or&#13;
could not trust. You see, my room was&#13;
broken into twice and Iwas ripped off both&#13;
limes. A third attempt was made on lbe&#13;
last day of the semester, but it was unsuccessful.&#13;
Only my closest associates&#13;
could have known on both occasions that 1&#13;
was exactly "ripe for the picking".&#13;
The few opportunities afforded me fDr&#13;
participating in student oriented functions&#13;
were all but choked off because Iwas nonblack.&#13;
People who may have wanted to be&#13;
friendly toward me avoided lbe issue&#13;
because of outside pressure from the&#13;
majority of other students.&#13;
My advice to anyone considerinj1 the&#13;
North-South program is to forget it!&#13;
Females, however, usually are n0t subjected&#13;
to a hard time and may find·it more&#13;
worthwhile than Idid. Also, studoots there&#13;
were more receptive to a black from&#13;
Parkside attending their institntion and I&#13;
promised that 1 would recbmmend it.&#13;
R. E. Williams&#13;
Do You need the&#13;
Newscope?&#13;
Of COURSE you&#13;
do, to find our what's&#13;
happening around&#13;
our Campus" Because&#13;
we "tell it as it is."&#13;
-&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside's Newscope&#13;
We strongly commend Ken K....... ~&#13;
ongoing investigation of the Psycbolao&#13;
Department, an interest we find the IDIlIt&#13;
interesting since he has reportedlyDMI'&#13;
taken a course in Psychology. l1li&#13;
methodologically impeccahle polltae&#13;
procedures have, to .date, borne IDlIIt&#13;
impressive fr\.lils. We !ljkethe almost'"&#13;
lack of response on the part or his ..&#13;
stituency as presumptive evidenceIIIIt&#13;
Psychology, in toto. has earned a WUII&#13;
spot in the hearts. of that great siIlII&#13;
majority of w/lich he is the moStvocdJ&#13;
inarticulate member.&#13;
- To settle any latently lingeringdoubtI.&#13;
we are calling for a peaceful raUyat&#13;
Greenquist Hall, 1 P.M., Tuesday&#13;
January 19, to protest (I) the ret",.&#13;
and probable promotion to tenure,(j die&#13;
Eichmann of Psych 203, and (21 IIle&#13;
department's, at present, overbalarlmd&#13;
research emphasis.&#13;
We will lake the absence of ""&#13;
resounding turnout as an overwheImiC&#13;
gesture of confidence in PsycholaCl"l&#13;
present personnel. In such an eventua!itJ,&#13;
we suggest you direct Thorn's admitted&#13;
ability - born of the "arrogance" ~&#13;
"nearly twenty-two years of expen-&#13;
- to the remediation of such prfSSIIC&#13;
problems as "What's wrong with tbt&#13;
weather?"&#13;
Yours inFreIfl.&#13;
MarkTimpaIIY&#13;
uddi~ Apostolic Prothonatary. theL&#13;
Fa.clion and poilus _.....w&#13;
GeorgeM...,..,&#13;
DavidWe!J«&#13;
La IT)' 1biel/ll&#13;
GerrieSo&lt;""""&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
-&#13;
\&#13;
,~,&#13;
underlying facuJt. r ·ponse, a feeling of down- , is an attitude somewhat&#13;
UWP Receives Federal Grant&#13;
Jan K. Ocker, 1' P's Director of&#13;
Financial Aids and Placement, said the&#13;
grant brings to $40,000 the amount of&#13;
federal funds allocated for the work-study&#13;
program a t Park ide during the current&#13;
academic year&#13;
REMEMBE.R NOVEMBER&#13;
APPLEBAUM'S DECEMBER SPEACH&#13;
If the administration thinks th~s ~ampus&#13;
is going to run business as usual it is sadly&#13;
mistaken. There has been a tre"'.endous&#13;
battle on this campus, and I thi~ the&#13;
administration has come forth_ with. at&#13;
least a first step, to make up for it. I thmk&#13;
it hehooves the faculty, !he students, a~d&#13;
the administration to see if we can pull th~s&#13;
campus together again. B~us~ th~s campus cannot continue to e~st. if this&#13;
ever happens again. Because if it ever&#13;
does this campus will collapse. . What we should do now is try to brmg the&#13;
campus together. I don't think we ~ve&#13;
beard the end of this anyway. But 1 ~ we have to try to bring it together. I think it&#13;
is a job for the administration, the faculty,&#13;
and for the students. Having been closely involved _with. wh~t&#13;
has been happening at this Uruvers1ty m&#13;
the past three years, I think this is a&#13;
December 9, 1970&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
This is in reference to an article in the&#13;
Dec. 3, 1970, issue of NEWSCOPE titled,&#13;
"Consider the North-South Program".&#13;
Last year at this time, there was a&#13;
similar article in Parkside's newspaper to&#13;
which I responded. I was ·subsequently&#13;
chosen as Parkside's only representative&#13;
and spent second semester of the school&#13;
year 1969-1970 at North Carolina Central&#13;
University. It is for this reason that I wish&#13;
to let my comments be known to others&#13;
who may be interested.&#13;
My experiences at NCCU, for the most&#13;
part, were filled with abuse, name-calling&#13;
and a constant reminder that I war. a nonblack&#13;
outsider in a situation where I didn't&#13;
belong and was not wanted.&#13;
Friendships were few and meaningless&#13;
and I came away not knowing who my&#13;
friends really were and who I could or&#13;
could not trust. You see, my room was&#13;
broken into twice and I was ripped off both&#13;
times. A third attempt was made on the&#13;
last day of the semester, but it was unsuccessful.&#13;
Only my closest associates&#13;
could have known on both occasions that I&#13;
was exactly "ripe for the picking".&#13;
The few opportunities afforded me- for&#13;
participating in student oriented functions&#13;
were all but choked off because I was nonblack.&#13;
People who may have wanted to be&#13;
friendly toward me avoided the issue&#13;
because of outside pressure from the&#13;
majority of other students.&#13;
My advice to anyone considerin~ the&#13;
North-South program is to forget it!&#13;
Females, however, usually are njt subjected&#13;
to a hard time and may find-it more&#13;
worthwhile than I did. Also, students there&#13;
were more receptive to a black from&#13;
Parkside attending their instibltion and I&#13;
promised that I would recommend it.&#13;
R. E. Williams&#13;
Do You need the&#13;
Newscope?&#13;
Of COURSE you&#13;
do, to find our what's&#13;
happening around&#13;
significant change. I think man&#13;
don't realize how significant it is i ~-r YoU&#13;
this stage we have to take the Ch 1&#13;
nk a1&#13;
at his word. anceu~&#13;
There are some points of Wyn· ,&#13;
point s_tatement that did not come f~~ ten&#13;
chancellor, but came from the f lnlhe&#13;
which the chancellor has accepted ;cu1~&#13;
was no consultation with the cha here&#13;
prior to this. The University Comnc~~&#13;
did not go to the chancellor and sa rn:ttee&#13;
want your approval for the foliow W&#13;
points. We told HIM we were going ,A&#13;
th. " d h 'd "G "' d 1s. , an e sa1 , o ahead and d .&#13;
I think if you continue to battle this ~"\:'.&#13;
out now and try to tear this place -""11&#13;
you're going to be successful. apart,&#13;
I ll?ink this is not the time for this. This&#13;
the time ~ try to pull this school together&#13;
and see if we can be successful. '&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside's Newscope&#13;
We strongly commend Ken Konkol·,&#13;
ongoing investigation of the Psychology&#13;
Department, an interest we find the men&#13;
interesting since he has reportedly never&#13;
taken a course in Psychology. His&#13;
methodologically impeccable polling&#13;
procedures have, to date, borne most&#13;
impressive fruits. We 1¥e the almost tdal&#13;
lack of response on the part of his Clllstituency&#13;
as presumptive evidence that&#13;
Psychology, in toto, has earned a wann&#13;
spot in the hearts_ of that great 1lent&#13;
majority of wpich he is the most vocal!}&#13;
inarticulate member.&#13;
· To settle any latently lingering doubts,&#13;
we are calling for a peaceful rally at&#13;
Greenquist Hall, 1 P.M., Tuesday&#13;
January 19, to protest (1) the retentioo.&#13;
and probable promotion to tenure, of lhe&#13;
Eichmann of Psych 203, and (2) lhe&#13;
department's, at present, overbalanced&#13;
research emphasis.&#13;
We will take the absence of 811)'&#13;
resounding turnout as an overwhelmq&#13;
gesture of confidence in Psychology s&#13;
present personnel. In such an eventualil.,&#13;
we suggest you direct Thorn's admitted&#13;
ability - born of the "arrogance·• 1 " nearly twenty-two years of exper1e~&#13;
- to the remediation of such pr&#13;
problems as "What's wrong with lhe&#13;
weather?'' Yours in Frein&#13;
Mark Timpalll&#13;
Apostolic Prothonatary, the Luddi:e&#13;
Faction and poilus · George Mete&#13;
David Weber&#13;
Larry Thielen&#13;
Gerrie Soren&#13;
our Campusll Because&#13;
we "tell it as it is." &#13;
FACULTY REACTION&#13;
The immediate faculty reaction to the&#13;
resignations. of Vice-Chancellor Harris and&#13;
Dean MacKmney seems to be that it is a&#13;
necessary first step in pulling the&#13;
University hack together, but by itself is&#13;
not seen as being sufficient to heal the&#13;
wounds.&#13;
A junior faculty member who was one of&#13;
the'll to have his contract terminated said,&#13;
Hit removes the most ObVIOUS obstacle&#13;
between the administration and the&#13;
faculty.Never!hele~s, t?cre is a pressing&#13;
question at this POint III regards to the&#13;
relationship between the Chancellor and&#13;
the faculty. There is a large question in the&#13;
area of trust and administrative&#13;
responsibility which has yet to be answered.&#13;
"There are still several Questions that&#13;
the administration has not answered, It&#13;
would be interesting to know what instructions&#13;
were given to Harris and&#13;
MacKinney upon their arrival at this&#13;
campus by Chancellor Wyllie." he said.&#13;
"It would also be interesting to know&#13;
who autonomously Harris and MacKinney&#13;
haveacted throughout the entire situation.&#13;
A nwnber of faculty suspect that what&#13;
Harrisand MacKinney did was in essence&#13;
directed by the Chancellor himself.&#13;
"But their bungling incompetence, '.' he&#13;
continued,"and extreme behavior in this&#13;
matter however does not smack of the&#13;
Chancellor's cleverness and adroitness in&#13;
the handling of delica te rna tters of this&#13;
nature."&#13;
JOMHarbeson of Political Science said,&#13;
"Things will not be undone immediately.&#13;
That the alienation, distrust, and the lack&#13;
c:i confidence in the competence of our&#13;
administralion will continue in a grea t&#13;
amount of faculty for a long while. I think&#13;
it can be repaired, but not overnight.&#13;
"[ think the faculty is simply exhausted&#13;
c:i the whole thing right now," he con~&#13;
linood, "but I think its morale will im- I&#13;
prove knowing the Vice-Chancellor and&#13;
Dean are resigning. But whether it continues&#13;
to improve will depend on whether&#13;
the new acting D~an, .and the new ad~&#13;
rninistrativ~ procedures and leadership&#13;
justifies that faith .."&#13;
Speaking of the faculty role in decision&#13;
making, Harbeson said, "I would say at&#13;
,the pr~sent time it appears that there is&#13;
much more responsiveness on the part of&#13;
the administration to the faculty.&#13;
"But it's too early to tell if it will be a&#13;
longterm phenomenon, and if it will result&#13;
in concrete changes," he said. "It's quite&#13;
possible right now the faculty is being&#13;
listened to because it has been proved&#13;
rightin the immediate circumstances, but&#13;
OIlcethey recede in the background, the&#13;
old relationship may re-emerge.&#13;
"There is no reason to believe the ad~&#13;
ministration trusts any more the junior&#13;
faculty than it did before" he continued.&#13;
"That has never been tak~n hack. By lack&#13;
of trust I mean the basic view the junior&#13;
Flying Club&#13;
Formed&#13;
, ParkSide Flying Club is to become activenext&#13;
term. This Flying Club is for both&#13;
~tudents and faculty. It can be contacted&#13;
thrOUghthe Athletic Office and would like&#13;
th e stude~ts, faculty, and staff to answer&#13;
e follOWingquestions.&#13;
Fl. Do ~ou have ~r are you working on a&#13;
.A.A, pilot or mechanic's license?'&#13;
Yes No&#13;
2. Wouldyou be interested in a Division&#13;
: Aeron.auticsat Parkside, offering a B.S.&#13;
gree In aeronautical management or&#13;
~~er phases of aeronautics? Yes&#13;
F13..Would you be interested in joining a&#13;
thYIngClub at Parkside, probably using&#13;
~ KenOSha Airport? Yes No&#13;
lease mail answers and give your&#13;
~rne, address, and phone number to&#13;
arkside Athletic Office.&#13;
Thanks.&#13;
Foster Hannaford, Jr.&#13;
President Pro tern.&#13;
-&#13;
~cuthltyis simply not qualified in the .&#13;
e admlrustration t View&#13;
role in policy makin ot take. a decisive&#13;
CUrs in Mad' g the k1lld that ocS&#13;
. rson and Milwaukee."&#13;
. peakmg of the senior faculty's roJe in&#13;
James Shea&#13;
the controversey, he said, "The senior&#13;
faculty with a few notable exceptions has&#13;
not stood up as well in this crisis as they&#13;
should have.&#13;
"I think tbey weakened the faith of some&#13;
junior faculty in the wisdom of tenure" he&#13;
said: "It seems tenure makes ~ople&#13;
afraid to speak out, when it should give the&#13;
security and courage to speak up."&#13;
Business&#13;
Contrary to popular belief, there is in~&#13;
deed a business major at Parkside, such as&#13;
it is. Although the discipline has no full&#13;
time staff and virtually no program, the&#13;
major is included in the catalog.&#13;
In an interview with Mr. Keehn,&#13;
Assistant Professor of Economics, it was&#13;
determined that the curriculum as it now&#13;
stands is inadequate to such an extreme&#13;
that a business degree (rom Parkside is&#13;
almost worthless. There is support, both&#13;
from students and staff, for revision of the&#13;
discipline.&#13;
The business program, as it stands, is&#13;
inadequate. Essential courses are Jeft out&#13;
and there is no advanced training&#13;
available. Furthermore, there is no full&#13;
time staff, and only one visiting professor.&#13;
The Parkside program is like that of no&#13;
other major university. Consequent.Jy,&#13;
graduates from other" universities are&#13;
preferred over Parkside graduates in&#13;
industry. Parkside's program must be&#13;
built and revised.&#13;
To build an effective business major at&#13;
Parkside, a full time staIf is needed. It was&#13;
admitted by Mr. Keehn that such a staff is&#13;
often hard to find since qualified in~&#13;
dividuals often prefer business to&#13;
teaching. However, the present staff have&#13;
most of the qualifications to teach some of&#13;
the core courses in the major.&#13;
The central problem however, remains&#13;
the question of revision of ~e major. H?w&#13;
can a more effective curflculum be m·&#13;
stituted, and what changes should be&#13;
made? By investigating what other&#13;
schools offer, this problem could be&#13;
overcome. Evidently, however, this is&#13;
V&#13;
F °G Ad U&#13;
p~ E&#13;
'e&#13;
FABRICS FOR S&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-861&gt; -&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
By MARC ElSE~&#13;
Jam~ Shea. a member of the Cniversity&#13;
Committee,. said, ." think it .....as the right&#13;
ste~. and WIth the appointment of the new&#13;
acting Dean. Parks ide nO\' has the opportunity&#13;
to do what it should have been&#13;
doing all along: building a lop qualil)&#13;
teaching and researching Iacultv ..&#13;
He went on to say, "The Crisis'may turn&#13;
OUllo be a good tlung In tbat tbe faCuII,.·s&#13;
role has now been recognized 10 \I, riting·b\&#13;
the admimstratloo. and the Iacultv noV.'&#13;
~s the opportunity to assess the type of&#13;
Influence it ought to have been asSerting&#13;
all along."&#13;
Asked 1/ there has been a change In the&#13;
P,hilosop!1yof the administration. he said.&#13;
The~e s been a recogrution or reality that&#13;
wasn t there before. but as the views or the&#13;
admjnistration changing, no. I don't think&#13;
so. I think it's up to faculty to protect irs&#13;
own role. If it doesn'l the administration&#13;
will probably take the initiative again"&#13;
Speaking of the University Committee's&#13;
meeting with the Chancellor Shea said&#13;
"The meetings were frank a'nd friendly:&#13;
The committee spoke forcefully about&#13;
what il thought had to be done. The&#13;
~ceUOl' seemed to receive tJus advice&#13;
m the spirit it was given. •&#13;
"The Chancellor did admit freely to us&#13;
that he did make some mislakes," Shea&#13;
said. "I think that's the hasis you can go&#13;
ahead to correct the mistakes. Before you&#13;
do anything about righting a wrong,&#13;
somebody has to acknowledge there has&#13;
been, indeed, mistakes.&#13;
"And the Chancellor," Shea said,&#13;
"acknowledged this, and has taken some&#13;
steps to rectify the sibJtation ..&#13;
aior Offered&#13;
contrary to the Parkside innovative elhic.&#13;
Perhaps a more preferable solution from&#13;
an administrative standpoint wouJd be (0&#13;
allow those professors qualified to teach&#13;
business a greater voice in designing&#13;
requirements for a degree.&#13;
It is ironic that the business diSCiplineis&#13;
so undernourished in this industrial&#13;
society, particularly in a universlly With&#13;
an industrial mission. It would seem that a&#13;
business program at such a university&#13;
would be emphasiz.ed rather than circumscribed.&#13;
Parkside, by improVing lts&#13;
school of business. would belter fulftll its&#13;
mission, could conceivably mcrease Hs&#13;
enrollment, and would be or greater&#13;
service to the student and the community&#13;
NEWSCOPE- PageS&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
Artist to&#13;
Exhibit Works&#13;
'Il:RPII\, TO OI~PL.\\' \RT&#13;
John Satre :\lurphy a member of Ih,' art&#13;
faculty al the tm\1"r"S11) of \\ isco In&#13;
Park. ide. IS parhclpatmg In OJ two-man&#13;
show 01 Ceramic. and Fiber which \'111&#13;
ccntmue thr~h February at : aul("&#13;
Pacinc College, eaute. II'" h&#13;
1\1urph)' ha '28 \\ork. m the tx)\o\ 10&#13;
eluding two large. tcneware lu Ired Ilocr&#13;
bowls. eight porcelain ....all rdlt ..r with&#13;
rutile stain and gold metalhc he-ire, ("IKht&#13;
metalhc Iu Ired wall relu:r \ulh&#13;
plexigla transitional area, rum 'Small&#13;
World" 00'" Is and one . Ilk recn bann -r&#13;
Allot the cerami uuhze ooth Ih prt:&#13;
moldIng of clay In molds 0( pia. ter and lh.&#13;
application, in many flrln~. of tran~11X'nl&#13;
lustre and metalliC lustre&#13;
The Parkside cerami I ha exhlblt&lt;'d&#13;
widely Ihr0U8houl the nHed tates and&#13;
during December recel\:e&lt;t a merll&#13;
achievement award 10 IhP inVitational&#13;
Craft Commllmenl how '" hlch began a&#13;
Nrc-year tour allhe Rochester (. Itnn.) Arl&#13;
&lt;;enter and an a.....ard In the WiSCO~lO&#13;
Craft Invitallonal NO.3 Travehng ExhIbIt&#13;
at L'Aleher Gallery In Milwaukee.&#13;
YOUNG MElt&#13;
BOYS&#13;
100's of BELLS&#13;
~::!~b207 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53'03&#13;
leu' ,(d/e'1 Olle&#13;
503 t\!(/ill ',.&#13;
R"cine&#13;
lO% SI:ldml DlSCounl&#13;
011 ,,/I Posll'l &amp; Fran/t·t&#13;
eu' Call1'll &gt;/ U'O&#13;
5036 i.\/h A/I',&#13;
Kmosh"&#13;
FACULTY REACTION s&#13;
.),J nu ry 1 , 1971&#13;
Artist to&#13;
Exhibit Works&#13;
The immediate faculty reaction to the&#13;
resignations of Vice-Chancellor Harris and&#13;
oean MacKinney seems to be that it is a&#13;
necessary first step in pulling the&#13;
university back together, but by itself is&#13;
not seen as being sufficient to heal the&#13;
wounds.&#13;
A junior faculty member who was one of&#13;
the27 to have his contract terminated said,&#13;
"It removes the most obvious obstacle&#13;
between the administration and the&#13;
faculty. Nevertheless, there is a pressing&#13;
question at this point in regards to the&#13;
relationship between the Chancellor and&#13;
the faculty. There is a large question in the&#13;
area of trust and administrative&#13;
responsibility which has yet to be answered.&#13;
&#13;
"There are still several auestions that&#13;
the administration has not auswered. It&#13;
would be interesting to know what instructioJl.S&#13;
were given to Harris and&#13;
MacKinney upon their arrival at this&#13;
campus by Chancellor Wyllie." he said.&#13;
"It would also be interesting to know&#13;
who autonomously Harris and MacKinney&#13;
have acted throughout the entire situation.&#13;
A nwnber of faculty suspect that what&#13;
Harris and MacKinney did was in essence&#13;
directed by the Chancellor himself.&#13;
"But their bungling incompetence," he&#13;
continued, "and extreme behavior in this&#13;
matter however does not smack of the&#13;
Chancellor's cleverness and adroitness in&#13;
the handling of delicate matters of this&#13;
nature.''&#13;
John Harbeson of Political Science said,&#13;
"Things will not be undone immediately.&#13;
That the alienation, distrust, and the lack&#13;
of confidence in the competence of our&#13;
administration will continue in a great&#13;
amount of faculty for a long while. I think&#13;
it can be repaired, but not overnight.&#13;
"I think the faculty is simply exhausted&#13;
of the whole thing right now," he continued,&#13;
"but I think its morale will im- 1&#13;
prove knowing the Vice-Chancellor and&#13;
Dean are resigning. But whether it continues&#13;
to improve will depend on whether&#13;
the new acting Dean, and the new administrative&#13;
procedures and leadership&#13;
justifies that faith .. "&#13;
Speaking of the faculty role in decision&#13;
making, Harbeson said, "I would say at&#13;
, the present time it appears that there is&#13;
much more responsiveness on the part of&#13;
the administration to the faculty.&#13;
"But it's too early to tell if it will be a&#13;
long term phenomenon, and if it will result&#13;
in concrete changes," he said. "It's quite&#13;
possible right now the faculty is being&#13;
listened to because it has been proved&#13;
right in the immediate circumstances, but&#13;
once they recede in the background, the&#13;
old relationship may re-emerge.&#13;
"There is no reason to believe the administration&#13;
trusts any more the junior&#13;
faculty than it did before " he continued.&#13;
"That has never been tak~n back. By lack&#13;
of trust I mean the basic view the junior&#13;
Flying Club&#13;
Formed . Parkside Flying Club is to become active&#13;
next term. This Flying Club is for both&#13;
students and faculty. It can be contacted&#13;
~rough the Athletic Office and would like&#13;
the stude~ts, faculty, and staff to answer e following questions.&#13;
F 1. Do ~ou have or are you working on a&#13;
.A.A. pilot or mechanic's license1&#13;
Yes No&#13;
2- Would you be interested in a Division ! Aeron_autics at Parkside, offering a B.S.&#13;
0fee m aeronautical manageme!}t or&#13;
No er Phases of aeronautics? Yes&#13;
3·. Would you be interested in joining a&#13;
~Ytng Club at Parkside, probably using&#13;
e Kenosha Airport? Yes No&#13;
Please mail answers and give your&#13;
;;irne,_ address, and phone number to&#13;
arkside Athletic Office.&#13;
Thanks.&#13;
Foster Hannaford, Jr.&#13;
President Pro tern.&#13;
faculty is simply not Ii . . of the ad · · . qua fied m the view m1rustration to tak .. role in policy makin f e_ a dec1s1ve&#13;
curs in Madison andgMo ·1the kmd that oc- S k" 1waukee." . pea mg of the senior faculty's role in&#13;
James Shea&#13;
the controversey, he said, "The senior&#13;
faculty with a few notable exceptions has&#13;
not stood up as well in this crisis as they should have.&#13;
"I think they weakened the faith of some&#13;
junior faculty in the wisdom of tenure " he&#13;
said: "It seems tenure makes ~ople&#13;
afraid to speak out, when it should give the&#13;
security and courage to speak up."&#13;
Busin M&#13;
Contrary to popular belief, there is indeed&#13;
a business major at Parkside, such as&#13;
it is. Although the discipline has no full&#13;
time staff and virtually no program, the&#13;
major is included in the catalog.&#13;
In an interview with Mr. Keehn,&#13;
Assistant Professor of Economics, it was&#13;
determined that the curriculum as it now&#13;
stands is inadequate to such an extreme&#13;
that a business degree from Parkside is&#13;
almost worthless. There is support, both&#13;
from students and staff, for revision or the&#13;
discipline. The business program, as it stands, is&#13;
inadequate. Essential courses are left out&#13;
and there is no advanced training&#13;
available. Furthermore, there is no full&#13;
time staff, and only one visiting professor.&#13;
The Parkside program is like that of no other major university. Consequently,&#13;
graduates from other- universities are&#13;
preferred over Parkside graduates in&#13;
industry. Parkside's program must be&#13;
built and revised.&#13;
To build an effective business major at&#13;
Parkside, a full time staff is needed. It w~s&#13;
admitted by Mr. Keehn that such a tarr 1s&#13;
often hard to find since qualified individuals&#13;
often prefer business to&#13;
teaching. However, the present staff have&#13;
most of !he qualifications to teach some of&#13;
the core courses in the major. The central problem however. remain&#13;
the question of revision of ~e major. H~w&#13;
can a more effective curriculum be instituted,&#13;
and what changes should be&#13;
made? By investigating what other&#13;
schools offer, this problem coul~ ~&#13;
overcome. Evidently, however. this 1s&#13;
VO&#13;
FA GU&#13;
&amp;R E&#13;
'c&#13;
FABRICS FOR S&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-861:.! -&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
B~ , J.\R El&#13;
,:'sked if there h~ be n a cha m th&#13;
philosophy or the administratio h id&#13;
"There's been a rec nition of ~hty that&#13;
wasn't there before. but a the \i e". of th&#13;
adm}ni tration changing. no, I don'l thi so. I think it' up to faculty to protect ii!&#13;
~n role. If it doesn't, the dmini. tration&#13;
will probably take the initJati,e ai?ain."&#13;
Speaking of the ni\'ersity Cr,mmittee·&#13;
meeting with the Chancellor Shea said&#13;
"The meetings were frank and Cri ndh :&#13;
The committee spoke forcefull aboot&#13;
what it thought had to be do'i-ie. The&#13;
~ncellor seemed to receive tlus advice m the spirit it was given. •&#13;
"The Chancellor did admit freely lo u&#13;
that he did make some mistakes," hea&#13;
said. "I think that's the basis you can go&#13;
ahead to correct the mistakes. Before ,·ou&#13;
do anything about righting a wrong,&#13;
somebody has to acknowledge there ha&#13;
been, indeed, mistakes.&#13;
"And the Chance11or." hea aid, "acknowledged this, and has taken ome&#13;
steps to rectify the situtati~ ..&#13;
• Offered&#13;
contrary to the Park id innovative ethic.&#13;
Perhaps a more preferable . olution from an administrative standpoint would be to&#13;
allow those professors qualified to t ac-h&#13;
business a greater \'Oice in d igni&#13;
requirements for a d ree.&#13;
It is ironic that the busin&#13;
so undernouri hed in thi indu trial&#13;
society, particularli, in a uni,er.;ily \\ilh&#13;
an industrial mi ion. It \\OUld · em that&#13;
busin program at uch a univ rsity&#13;
would be empha ized rather than circum&#13;
cribed. Parkside, by improvu~ ii!&#13;
school of bu in · , would belt r fulfill i&#13;
mission, could conceivabli, increa i&#13;
enrollment, and would be of RJ' tcr&#13;
service to the tud nt and th communit ·.&#13;
Exploring the&#13;
1 IU HY l I I. Pl.\ Y Jl'r&#13;
YOUNG MEN&#13;
BOYS&#13;
IOO's of BELLS&#13;
World of ESP&#13;
Clairvoyancy• T eletype•Power of prayer&#13;
Spiritual Reincarnation•Ghost Hunting&#13;
(NORMA HAS PREDICTED TE ORLD- l_DE PREOICTIO S FOR 1969)&#13;
"KNOCK ON THE DOOR, ANO THE I ER LIGHT iHICH IS GOD HAS THE A&#13;
N orm Slater 654-2375 &#13;
A look at Indications&#13;
\uthor· Chri l) Brow n&#13;
Publi\he'r·. tein and Oa~. '.Y.&#13;
Bl JI\I KOLOE'&#13;
Chr~t~ Brown ha. wruten a boo that is&#13;
lon~ enough 2h7 pa es to be a novel. and&#13;
It hu \"'0 hard covers and maybe&#13;
mll'da) It will have two soft covers \\'hen&#13;
I IIr. t heard aboul this erippled&#13;
bPt tyll"T, Ithought oh boy, I'd really&#13;
hke to re d a novel written from the point&#13;
01" w of a paraplegIc" ho can 'I talk and&#13;
ho t) pel ",th tu big toe, But alas,&#13;
t'hrl t) Bro1il.-nd not choose to v.rite&#13;
from the v.h ·Idtalr. no. he ....rite outside&#13;
urlt hke \erybnd) el and produces a&#13;
book lhal I, hke everybody el' HIS&#13;
narr tor I obJect".. though at time I got&#13;
tht~ Impr tOO th I th 'arratlon was a&#13;
v~rtl , Impres Ion of the cripple's&#13;
lho"gIll and perceplloo • ho,,~'er, be that&#13;
It rna). lhr n \ell not fir 1 person and&#13;
Viol' ~f.'l gllm of charae-lers that&#13;
Jo nd La"HC·nc."(' (parh utarl) DHL 10&#13;
IIh tid 1.0\ I I perf "ted 1010typE'S 1be&#13;
muthl"l' "nd fath('r ar the In'h count&#13;
I part or 1h., LaIAreo Ian mother and&#13;
futher In S I. It' almost a If the)' ,",cre&#13;
nUt." Irom the me Dutilnt'" The father&#13;
,rth). t~pi all) In. h drlOkinR classorkln~&#13;
m n·former vettran \\Ilh definite&#13;
I rtl line \l 00 hI the mother I the&#13;
.. arm co\\, protecting her herd from the&#13;
hngs and "rro~, or the bull by absorbing&#13;
them bt'1"M"IC \1.lth a 511 ot grimace, per·&#13;
Slitlu n~pn ..&gt;gnant. a "1 lim of the In to&#13;
prt' 'nanc~ ) ndrome, the father saYIr\{&#13;
,I' hI god gl\' n duly to makc Inds&#13;
TIwre are other characters an the book,&#13;
Ih old titer who runs awal to the&#13;
, r It \lohorchouse of Albion ( (nsh pomt of&#13;
'Ie~) to t(et herself Isurprlsel) a hubby&#13;
"hu . J&gt;'."a good English and converts to&#13;
In hi. m, gets baptised IOto' pub life and&#13;
Ullcmplolmcnl and loses a matching set of&#13;
t'410· 10 the lumshack and his wife call&#13;
home The characters outside the ramih&#13;
are IJS{"d as counterpoints to show other&#13;
thtud and degredations of the Irish&#13;
lal Cf'SSpooi An example is that of a&#13;
m,ddl .....dgod hom)' toad "ho lays a&#13;
S('nllmental whore dunng a wake, or&#13;
l'OUr~e the whore is from England and one&#13;
old wrinkle times the lay with his gold&#13;
'Aateh, do lour ovon thing.&#13;
The themes run the lrish gamut: the.&#13;
('nmlty bet".,.een the Catholics and&#13;
Prote tants, the hatred of England,&#13;
Parnell. local politics and interestingly the&#13;
ptlilosophical quesllon of Ireland's role in&#13;
the upcomlOg "A,ar of TY.'0: the men. the&#13;
r hred veterans, are still unsure as to&#13;
"hether they should lighl with England or&#13;
\loIth the Germans. the youth ha\'e decided&#13;
to,)01Oup with the Green and fight with the&#13;
allte.'s If necessar)', a lot of them desert.&#13;
The crappie is an enigma, his last name&#13;
I BrO\\n, he has wet dreams and like most&#13;
(If the olher kids occasionally pisses in his&#13;
pant. He I. entenng puberty and fails to&#13;
ff."{"1gUilt after confessing the great sin of&#13;
Ja klO~ off which is about the only moral&#13;
ISSue Ihl. novel unexamine::». He is subject&#13;
to th' IOdJgnlh~ and snide remarks of&#13;
r\ M' one and anyone lx-causc he is chained&#13;
dn\lon ·'b~ InVisible chams" He spends a&#13;
l'OUplt' of \H~k~ In a children's hospital&#13;
"hert&gt; t'40 nurs&lt;"~ gig~le when the)" see his&#13;
public bu. h and say to themselves he&#13;
u1dn'l In a children's hosp,lal. The&#13;
cnppl I. ObvlOUSl) seOSltiH' to such barbs&#13;
bulthere' nothlOg he can door say. he can&#13;
onl) grunl and so mdulges In mghts of&#13;
fanta~} \Io.lth sexual symbolism. The&#13;
narrator lends to become overpoetic -&#13;
place reg hng m euphony pro,;ng the&#13;
adage that too man)' prelty words in the&#13;
pol poils the page,&#13;
l( there IS a plot or slory In thlS book I&#13;
rnl cd It. the book is concerned with the&#13;
VAl.EO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN OINNERS ond&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p,m,&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave,&#13;
.' Here is your chance to read the literary&#13;
works 01 your lellow students; hot 011 the&#13;
comes Parkside's hterary&#13;
orrset, INDICATIONS, This winter&#13;
magazme, I' ti edition contains 48 pages of short IC on,&#13;
poetry, photographs and o~~~r~&#13;
illustrations. From an aesthetic P&#13;
view this issue is much improved over last&#13;
year's' for one thing it has a plethora.of&#13;
photog'raphic and illustrated ~rtralts&#13;
which serve to balance the magazme&#13;
an~&#13;
afford a visual respite from the sma I&#13;
rint. The photographs were tak~n b~ Art&#13;
bulan David Christensen, David Bmder&#13;
and J~ Rudolph. The story and co~er&#13;
illustrations were created by the 10-&#13;
terpretative freehand ~f Ji~ Madura. ,&#13;
The opening piece IS Diane Lawler s&#13;
poem, "Blues". Itis as fine a poe~ as you&#13;
are likely to find in poetry magazines and&#13;
anthologies anywhere in America. Dia,ne&#13;
has descriptive eyes and bombards us Wlth&#13;
images, piling them on top o~ each other&#13;
until we can feel an impresslOn that en·&#13;
compasses all the senses .. If you read&#13;
"Blues" sensitively you Will hear and&#13;
smell the Chicago adventure and will know&#13;
why when "i was young when i met you&#13;
Id II "BI es"&#13;
now Iam dying of your a age.. u&#13;
alone is worth the rather exorbitant admission&#13;
price ($1.00) to this coUeetion of&#13;
poems and stories.&#13;
Also included in INDICATIONS are&#13;
short poems by Bill Rolbiecki, PatNelson,&#13;
Jerry Socha Walt Breach and Jim&#13;
Hanlon; all deserve your consideration.&#13;
In the short fiction category INDICATIONS&#13;
oilers a generally well&#13;
written variety of stories. "ExPeriment"&#13;
by yours truly is an experiment in point of&#13;
view and characterization. The story&#13;
concerns a schizophrenic whose world you&#13;
see through his eyes, it is a complex story&#13;
which needs a close reading. '&#13;
lev. years preceding WWII and the author&#13;
paints portraits 01 the tatber, mother,&#13;
sister, crippled brother and the old&#13;
alcoholic widow next door. His portraits&#13;
have other faces in the background, cloudy&#13;
faces that become clear for a few&#13;
moments. a few pages, and then recede&#13;
back IOtOthe background, It is obviously a&#13;
book with maturation motif but it really&#13;
isn't utilized firmly because the author is&#13;
continually concerning himself with&#13;
peripheral characters thai the youth&#13;
doesn't even come into contact with.&#13;
Where does this all lead us, well, the last&#13;
hoe of the book says the cripple is meeting&#13;
a nsing sun; either he's found himself as&#13;
the sa)'lng goes or he's decidod to join the&#13;
Japanese. 1 don't know, the crippl.e is ~&#13;
enigma, laybe it is because the cnpple IS&#13;
only an observer, that he is a bwnpon a log&#13;
that no one notices til they sit on him and&#13;
say sorry pal didn'l see ya, chuckle,&#13;
chuckle, that he is an enigma. One&#13;
memorable scene occurs when a young&#13;
bwcom l~ sits doYt'11in the boxcar with&#13;
the cnpple and fondles his sexual parts, he&#13;
gelS horny and she tells him he's like aU&#13;
the rest, bit of irony, a whaL&#13;
More than anything else this is a book of&#13;
sex, earthy sex, £Wlctional dutiful sex. Sex&#13;
i seen through the eyes 01 adolescents,&#13;
through the eyes or lechers and whores and&#13;
Widows and husbands and mothers and&#13;
fathers. The sex theme, which forms a&#13;
core of the boom. along with Irish drinking&#13;
habits, and the Irish way 01 death, is well&#13;
done, but it's oot enougllto make this book&#13;
a novel&#13;
OK, what do it all lack, it lacks a plot, a&#13;
story, a real climax and resolution( instead&#13;
of jusl. snipping 011 olloose ends), it lacks&#13;
c1arily, though the diatogue is well down it&#13;
is sometimes difficult to find out who is&#13;
saying what and to whom. The book is a&#13;
jumble of impressions which reaBy don't&#13;
seem to lead to anyone point, everybody&#13;
goes their 0\\'11 way and cross paths and&#13;
say hello and tell dirty stories and continue&#13;
on lhelr way separately. And maybe that's&#13;
the author's point, that we are all going our&#13;
ovm way and never really get to know each&#13;
other, nor even ourselves, but the lack of a&#13;
clear purpose, 01 delinity and clarity hurts&#13;
more than it could help even this point.&#13;
But I am most disappointed by what&#13;
Brown didn't do lban by what he did do, his&#13;
point of view is everybody's point of viewj&#13;
the author has an unique view of the world&#13;
because he can't talk and walk in real life&#13;
and yet he fails to use it to its full extent,&#13;
the wheelchair view is only one of a&#13;
number of views and anotber novel about&#13;
Dubtin's social tile we don't need,&#13;
If you like enigmas you'll love this&#13;
novel, if you like to see the· drab side of&#13;
Irish life, then this book is £or- you, but if&#13;
)'ou've read Sons and Lovers and Ulysses&#13;
you really don't need this book in your&#13;
library.&#13;
IIThree Girls Within" by Jerry Socha is&#13;
actually a series of vignettes linked by the&#13;
young girl protagonists and by the lact&#13;
that they are not "normal". One girl isn't&#13;
aware of others, another girl knew she was&#13;
a bitch and the third vignette portrays the&#13;
beautilul haretippod Jane who askod lbe&#13;
question" Am I nor~al,?11&#13;
"Fleming for Congress" is Esther&#13;
Burnett's rather sledgehammered story&#13;
.bout a young long hair who attempts to&#13;
destroy the political campaign or&#13;
order Congressman. It relies a la" 'l1li&#13;
pearance-reality theme as a on ~ ....&#13;
carry the story, but illalters ~evl""&#13;
It's not badly written; it just a Uio 'lilt&#13;
it's not worth writing, 5eetns 1htt&#13;
"The Cycle" by David Binder ' .&#13;
-myth and contrasts civilization ~tililta&#13;
simple, mystical life 01 Abr With IIot&#13;
company. Abraxas "hast the axas &amp;ad&#13;
cohabit with the elements" and:" "&#13;
missionary of divine foods a dru orn.,&#13;
when ingested "opens 'u,. dg 'OIucI,&#13;
preception." The author gets ca 00rs ar&#13;
the beauty 01 words, in eUPhony'rtllh&#13;
very easy to do and typical of m~'&#13;
we get the idea, J; bat&#13;
"Willard" by Marc Eisen is the&#13;
a high s~hoo~. student Who, as skty If&#13;
says to hIm, could dis.ppear t~&#13;
and nobndy would notice," "Sorn-;'-;::'"&#13;
mSlde me dOl~~ thiS to' me, trying ~.&#13;
m~, I know It, expresses the invo1 bin&#13;
alienation he is the avatar of. A girl'"&#13;
up to him and tells him he's mys~&#13;
sort of dark figure, nobody knows~&#13;
about him. At the end he gels19....&#13;
leaves. lid&#13;
Undoubtedly, my briel look at&#13;
stones does not do them justice I~&#13;
over-simplified and I may e~ batt&#13;
missod the point. The only "'ay you'D&#13;
know ISto buy INDICATIONSandread':&#13;
stories yourself.&#13;
All in all, a fine production,&#13;
Sunnysial' 'Jlorisls&#13;
&amp;0 Srl'l'n~OUSI'S&#13;
R .. ,,- Fnai1 ....... - ..&#13;
Phone: "9-67l1li&#13;
VI and FRANK WDIIS1lIClt&#13;
3021· 75TH n.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONIIN iJl.a&#13;
/I&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
Brot or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French FrI •. s or Onion Rings&#13;
or Pototo Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or Bottl,e or Glo •• of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Avoilable For Partie.&#13;
Including Froternity and Sorority Partie.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
"~~BRAT-STOP&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-1:3.0&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Jim Holoen&#13;
..&#13;
·"0..... .. . . '.&#13;
- - ._..~ .&#13;
~ - . ,&#13;
. ,&#13;
, ' ,&#13;
- '&#13;
3M ,.&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATlONRLBRNK&#13;
.........&#13;
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. i~,,';.1&#13;
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FREE DELIVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Northwe.t Corner 1:"94 and Highway 50 ___&#13;
Is&#13;
7 t&#13;
8 p,"', p.m. 0&#13;
__ sd&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed ondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
f years prec ding ·wwn and the author&#13;
pnmti portrai of the father, mother,&#13;
i ter, crippled brother and the ~Id&#13;
alcoholic idow ne. t door. His portraits&#13;
ha,eother ac in the background, cloudy&#13;
f that become dear for a few&#13;
momen a fe pages and then recede&#13;
c into th bac ground. It i obviously a&#13;
· \\1th maturation motif but it really&#13;
n't utilized f1rmlv because the author is&#13;
continually concerning him elf with&#13;
r1pher I characters q,at the youth&#13;
n't even come into contact with.&#13;
Where thi all lead us, well, the last&#13;
tin or the say · the cripple is meeting&#13;
ns1 un ; either he' found himself as&#13;
th · )in or he' decid d to join the&#13;
J pan . 1 don't no\\ , the crippl_e is ~&#13;
emgm . t ybe it i. because the cripple 1s&#13;
onl o n r, that he is a bwnpon a log&#13;
that no ori notic til they it on him and&#13;
y rry pal didn't ·ee ya, chuckle.&#13;
chuc e, that he 1 an enigma . One&#13;
m morabl _ ne occur· when a young&#13;
bu m I ~ down in the boxcar with&#13;
th cripple nd fondle · hi exual parts. he&#13;
t horn\' nd h tell him he's like all&#13;
th r , bit of ir y, a what.&#13;
! r than anything el. e thi · i a book of&#13;
, arthy . , runcttonal dutiful sex. ex&#13;
i thro h the eyes or adolescents,&#13;
through the ey of lecher· and whores and&#13;
ido\\ nd h b nd and mothers and&#13;
f th r. . The . x theme, which forms a&#13;
cor of th boom. along "ith Irish drinking&#13;
bi , and the lri·h way of death, is well&#13;
done, but it' not enough to make this book&#13;
novel&#13;
K, hat do it all lack, it lacks a plot, a&#13;
tory, a real clima and resolution( instead&#13;
r ju ta nipping off of loose ends&gt;. it Jacks&#13;
clarity, tho h the dialogue is well down it&#13;
metim difficult to find out who is&#13;
saying what and to whom. The book is a&#13;
jumble of impre ions which really don't&#13;
eem to lead to any one point, everybody&#13;
go · their own way and cross paths and&#13;
say hello and tell dirty stories and continue&#13;
their w ; separat ly. And maybe that's&#13;
th author point, that we are all going our&#13;
own way and never really get to know each&#13;
other. nor even ourselves. but the lack of a&#13;
clear purpose, of definity and clarity hurts&#13;
more than it could help even this point.&#13;
But I am most disappointed by what&#13;
Brown didn't do than by what he did do, his&#13;
point of \iev. is everybody's point of view;&#13;
the author has an unique \iew of the world&#13;
because he can't talk and walk in real life&#13;
and yet he fails to use it to its full extent,&#13;
the wh elchair view is only one of a&#13;
number of views and another novel about&#13;
Dublin' social life we don't need.&#13;
If you like enigmas you'll love this&#13;
novel, if you like to see the· drab side of&#13;
Irish life, then this book is for you, but if&#13;
you've read ons and Lovers and Ulysses&#13;
you really don't need this book in your&#13;
library.&#13;
JimHoloen&#13;
3h&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NRTIONRLBANK&#13;
e, IIIOIU&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KI.TCHEN&#13;
FREE DalVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657-5191&#13;
A Look at Indications&#13;
Here is your chance to read the liter~:?&#13;
works of your fellow students; ho~ off e&#13;
offset comes Parkside's . hte~ary . INDICATIONS. This winter&#13;
magazine, t f' ti&#13;
edition contains 48 pages of shor ic on,&#13;
poetry, photographs an_d ~~~;r illustrations. From an aesthetic poi&#13;
view this issue is much improved over last&#13;
year's· for one thing it has a plethora _of&#13;
photog'raphic and illustrated ~rtra1ts&#13;
which serve to balance the magazine and&#13;
afford a visual respite from the small&#13;
print. The photographs were tak~n b~ Art&#13;
Dulan David Christensen, David Binder&#13;
and J~ Rudolph. The story and co~er&#13;
illustrations were created by the mterpretative&#13;
freehand ?f Ji'? Madura. , The opening piece is Diane Lawler s&#13;
poem, "Blues". It is as fine a poe~ as you&#13;
are likely to find in poetry magazmes and&#13;
anthologies anywhere in America. Dia_ne&#13;
has descriptive eyes and bombards us with&#13;
images, piling them on top o~ each other&#13;
until we can feel an impress10n that encompasses&#13;
all the senses. _!f you read&#13;
"Blues" sensitively you will hear and&#13;
smell the Chicago adventure and will know&#13;
why when "i was young when i met you&#13;
now i am dying of your old age." _"Blues"&#13;
alone is worth the rather exorbitant admission&#13;
price ($1.00) to this collection of&#13;
poems and stories.&#13;
Also included in INDICATIONS are&#13;
short poems by Bill Rolbiecki, Pat.Nelson,&#13;
Jerry Socha Walt Breach and Jim&#13;
Hanlon; all deserve your consideration.&#13;
In the short fiction category INDICATIONS&#13;
offers a generally well&#13;
written variety of stories. "Experiment"&#13;
by yours truly is an experiment in point of&#13;
view and characterization. The story&#13;
concerns a schizophrenic whose world you&#13;
see through his eyes, it is a complex story&#13;
which needs a close reading. ·&#13;
"Three Girls Within" by Jerry Socha is&#13;
actually a series of vignettes linked by the&#13;
young girl protagonists and by the fact&#13;
that they are not "normal". One girl isn't&#13;
aware of others, another girl knew she was .&#13;
a bitch and the third vignette portrays the&#13;
beautiful harelipped Jane who asked the&#13;
question "Am I normal?"&#13;
"Fleming for Congress" is Esther&#13;
Burnett's rather sledgehammered story&#13;
about a young long hair who attempts to&#13;
destroy the political campaign r&#13;
order Congressman. It relies O a law&#13;
pearance-reality theme as a on ~e&#13;
carry the story, but it falters ~e\·ice&#13;
It's not badly written; it just a {he&#13;
it's not wor:th writing. seetns Iha&#13;
"The Cycle" by David Bind&#13;
-myth and contrasts civilizatio er -~t&#13;
simple1 mystical life of Ab; "1th&#13;
company. Abraxas "hast the aicas&#13;
cohabit with the elements" and i:\\er&#13;
missionary of divine foods a dru Oln 1&#13;
when ingested "opens 'the d g \l"h&#13;
preccption." The author gets ca ~rs Of&#13;
the beauty of words, in euphony i~-up&#13;
very easy to do and typical of myths 1&#13;
we get the idea. :&#13;
"Willard" by Marc Eisen is the a high school student who as lory Gf&#13;
to h. " uld , som&#13;
says 1m, co disappear to&#13;
and nobody would notice." "Some:&#13;
inside me doing this to me trying t n I kn ·t" ' o&#13;
me, ow 1 , expresses the invol&#13;
alienation he is the avatar of. A gi I u~&#13;
up to him and tells him he's myst!r, co&#13;
sort of dark figure, nobody knows an Olis 1&#13;
about him. At the end he gets up&gt; a leaves.&#13;
U~doubte_dly, my brief look at&#13;
stone~ do~. not do them justice. 1 ha&#13;
over-s1mphf1ed and I may even ha&#13;
missed the point. The only way you'll&#13;
know is to buy INDICATIONS and read"'&#13;
stories yourself.&#13;
All in all, a fine production.&#13;
Sunnyside Jloris~&#13;
~ Sreenhot1ses&#13;
fl111N11 - Frait ... Ill - Citll&#13;
Phone: 649-6700&#13;
YI and FRANK WEINSTOC•&#13;
3021 • 7!1TH ST.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN til"O&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-l:3.0&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
Fr&amp;nch Fr1e.s or Onion Rin9s&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or 8ottl_e or Glass of B•er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.rn.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sor.ority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.-M.&#13;
,~i BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1:...94 and Highway 50 &#13;
Water Pollution Control&#13;
By JOHN KOLOEN out to sea at a depth 0130 feet, discha i&#13;
BILL ROLBJEUKI atrpproXImately 5,975,111,000 gaUo~ ';:;&#13;
ealed water (em n&#13;
I t 01 talk is heard about water Racine the' r uen each year. In&#13;
AUti°onand what we can do to stop it and to 20 leetpel res t&#13;
500 leet oIl shore in 10&#13;
po u h d d 11 th 0 wa er. discharging Iter all t e war 5 an a e proximately 24 "U' apye\~onies&#13;
the most the average citizen per day. Efnuen~l Ion gallons ~feffluent&#13;
1eS~ldOto stop pollution is ~ocarry his beer the lake after th~Str~:t~a~~ which enters&#13;
ca toa garbage can during the fourth of water as it enters th 1 ~rocess. T~e&#13;
~: picnic.Eve~ if every?ne treated ~he fluent. e p ant IS called mlake&#13;
as something ,special, something Several crtterra are considered in the&#13;
trreplaceable and priceless ther~ wouJ.,d treatment process by which the&#13;
suUbe polluting ~Olng on on a dally baSI.S measure their efficiency. One of th~~n~&#13;
eeular as a live dollar walch. And It the amount 01 suspe ded lid as r.. OHNSON . n so s removed 'lAmerican Motors or J Wax (rom thewaler TheR' I . j,sn . acme p ant IS able to&#13;
that paint the !ake brown, no~ any mor~. remove 57 per cent of the suspended solids&#13;
TtIOligh we don t mean to, .eacti 0l!e of us IS fr0t:ll the influent before piping it into the&#13;
ponsiblelor the pollutIOn which !loats lake In Kenosha the I' .&#13;
res . h B' Igure IS apasborecolormgthe&#13;
beac es grey. eca~se proximately the same, which means that&#13;
we have Sewa.geTreatn:ent Plants whl~h for every 13.8 tons of sludge (solid&#13;
disChargetheir water mt~ the lake via mat~rial) removed from the influent 5.8&#13;
'pe1ine we have a contmuous source tons IS still in the water whe't t th P ked ·th t' 't' n I en erg e whichcannot~e chec WI Oll my I l~g a lake.&#13;
mass epidemICof three day constipation. A second criteria, considered to be one of&#13;
The pipe in Kenosha stretches 1,200 feet the most important in terms of lake&#13;
TOBACCONIST grRC£ 19U&#13;
2,401- 60!!! ST K£N~SKA,WI Be. 53140&#13;
pollution. IS the BOD (Blochemical&#13;
Demand). BOD has to do "ith the amount&#13;
of org.ruc matter wtuch enters the lake.&#13;
Since organic material uses oxygen. the&#13;
amount of it pumped into the lake 15 important&#13;
because whatever orgamc mauer&#13;
is added to the lake .. ill use up ox&gt;gen&#13;
which the lake ilseU needs to maintain Its&#13;
ecological balance It I therefore&#13;
necessary to remove as much ci the&#13;
organic matter from the sewage a&#13;
possible in order to Insure a sufficient&#13;
oxygen supply for the lake to survive&#13;
In Kenosha and Racine the plants, "hen&#13;
operating at peak efficienc)", removed&#13;
enough sludge and orgamc matenal to&#13;
make the effluent as clean. If not cleaner.&#13;
than the lake Itself. A i.gnificant c0ntributing&#13;
factor for this lies in the fact that&#13;
neither plant is equipped to remO\:e&#13;
phosphates from the water&#13;
In Racine. for example., only lvlent)' per&#13;
cent of the phosphates are removed Th&#13;
is not due to laulty admInIStration or Incompetent&#13;
handling., but to insuffiCient&#13;
facilities. The staffs cj the two plants are&#13;
extremely conscientious about theIr "ork&#13;
They run their plants with mechanical&#13;
efficiency and try to keep prepared lor any&#13;
emergency. They even use by-produclS 01&#13;
the treatment process (.lethane gas) to&#13;
drive their machinery. But there's a limit&#13;
to how well a plant can operate if it doesn't&#13;
have the equipment to do a good job.&#13;
RecenUya new lederal order demanding&#13;
that phosphates be removed lrom the&#13;
inlluent belore entenng the lake has&#13;
helped to appropriate additional lacililles&#13;
The Kenosha plant is currently coostructing&#13;
$2,830,000 of new facilities that&#13;
are expected to be put into operation by&#13;
1972. These new lacilities will aU"" the&#13;
Kenosha plant to remove as per cent of the&#13;
phosphates nOWbeing pumped Into the&#13;
lake and to impro....e their capacity to&#13;
handle oil and grease. In Racine plans are&#13;
ready to begin construction of a plant&#13;
which is expected to be completed by 1974&#13;
with 80 per cent of the cost coming from&#13;
the federal govenunent.&#13;
Even though the plants in the area are&#13;
not models of effectiveness they are I&#13;
among the best on the lake short'- For&#13;
example, the treatment process In both&#13;
Kenosha and Racine include decontamination&#13;
by chlorine in order to kill all&#13;
disease causing bacteria before it enters&#13;
the lake. This process takes only fifteen&#13;
minutes longer and is done just before the&#13;
water is pumped out, but in IiIwaukee&#13;
there is no chlorination process, the lack of&#13;
which has been speculated to be the cause&#13;
of a recent outbreak 01 typhoid.&#13;
The staffs in Racine and Kenosha claim&#13;
that no industry in the area pollutes the&#13;
lake direcUy, thal, in shor~ they are the&#13;
only consistent polluters. But this need not&#13;
be so. There are plants i.n the country&#13;
which operate at as tugh as 95 per cent&#13;
efficiency. One of these is in Lake Tahoe&#13;
where, because 01 the high degree 01&#13;
community responsibility and a desire to&#13;
, EWSCOPE-P ... 7&#13;
Tuesday, J ...... ry 19, 1971&#13;
preserve their ".ter 5\lPply lor dronk'&#13;
and rOC..... uoe. the I .1go",,,,mtnt ha&#13;
seen to II that·DO! ven th • e p1anl&#13;
pellutes Of COU~ th not to . that&#13;
people at Lake Ta "or hardff .rt'&#13;
more C'OO5C1entlou~.pte The'&gt; are Ibi to&#13;
mamtam a high tandard lmpl~ a&#13;
tbe\ M\:e more furm a\lllabl to&#13;
lth. When Ra "'" ad I planned&#13;
Iaciltues It is e: peeled 10 boost thetr d&#13;
ficlency for remo\ Ing ...-uspendtod to&#13;
81 per cent as compared to the pr n 51&#13;
per cent AI • the) e peet to • bJe 10&#13;
treat torm .. att.1"",hl('hl 00'0' of&#13;
Inadequate lacilItI ,poured dlrecll&gt; Into&#13;
the lake ",thout treatment K ha&#13;
expects to maintain a per nt (Or&#13;
recU\~ In remm:,n pended I&#13;
85 per ~nt in remo\"lng pho6phat and&#13;
per cent err tJ\e 10 malntalnm thfo D&#13;
level&#13;
I hear tell that someone ha. "' erload&#13;
of stock and' selling S cent ba 'Dd lids&#13;
al rock-boHom pnce!' Conts Fun!&#13;
BurfaU&#13;
+ +&#13;
Dol' Jon report lor th "&#13;
" 10 per cent.. '1 down 2' i5&#13;
Merage "eed eamod 51 2S&#13;
Ud p&#13;
r Cl"!'ll&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I. F.... Saat 9'"..lr U· ..1''"&#13;
AlSO&#13;
.. RII1 .. S'ACttml .. '"ICUM&#13;
.. C"OCCHt .. U'VIOU .. l.A S.AcaHA&#13;
.. stA fOOD .. SANOWI'HU&#13;
CAUYOUTS • OElIVllY&#13;
-YOU aJHC wE "'He'&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
S1.tO "" AV( _&#13;
HAM to&#13;
'Tradition o[ E c:&#13;
Kl,'G of ORG "&#13;
~~~&#13;
'/&#13;
SH Jim Merrick "Mr, H...... nd" For Guar.nteed Service' n.dO-In V.I.o&#13;
OUI of To.lI-C.11 colltct&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
14~~~~n~~n II) ~~~613~~~3&#13;
"Jf B.rtu Organs are Buill, JIammond Kill Budd ThM'"&#13;
ORG&#13;
Water Pollution Control&#13;
By JOHN KOLOEN out to s~ at a depth of 30 feet., discharging&#13;
BILL ROLBIEUKI ~proximately 5,975,111,000 gallons of&#13;
1 t of talk is heard about water&#13;
A t? n and what we can do to stop it and&#13;
PollU tO d fter all the wor s and all the&#13;
ye_l. aonies the most the average citizen&#13;
iesllf to stop pollution is to carry his beer&#13;
can ~ a garbage can during the fourth of&#13;
ca~ icnic. Even if everyone treated the&#13;
Ju &gt; pas something special, something&#13;
lake laceable and priceless there would&#13;
1rrep · d ·1 ba · .&#13;
11 be polluting gomg on on a a1 y sis&#13;
Li regular as a five dollar watch. And it&#13;
·n't American Motors or JOHNSON Wax&#13;
th t paint the lake brown, not any more.&#13;
,; gh we don't mean to, each one of us is&#13;
res~nsible for the pollution which floats&#13;
ashOre coloring the beaches grey. Because . have Sewage Treatment Plants which&#13;
::charge their water int~ the lake via . line we have a continuous source&#13;
~fuch cannot be checked without in~iti~g a&#13;
mass epidemic of three day constipation.&#13;
The pipe in Kenosha stretches 1,200 feet&#13;
ea~d water (effluent) each year In&#13;
~cme the pipe lies 500 feet off shore in 10&#13;
2~ feet of water, discharging a&#13;
proximately 24 million gallons of efflue~&#13;
per day. Effluent is the water which enters&#13;
the lake after the treatment process Th&#13;
water as it enters the plant is calle·d . ~ fluent. m&#13;
Several criteria are considered in the&#13;
treatment process by which the plants&#13;
measure their efficiency. One of them is&#13;
the amount of suspended solids removed&#13;
from the water. The Racine plant is able to&#13;
remove 5~ per cent of the suspended olid ·&#13;
from the influent before piping it into the&#13;
lake._ In Kenosha the figure is approximately&#13;
the same, which means that&#13;
for e~ery 13.8 tons of sludge (solid&#13;
material) removed from the influent 5.8&#13;
tons is still in the water when it enters the&#13;
lake.&#13;
A second criteria, considered to be one of&#13;
the most important in terms of lake&#13;
zz&#13;
6S7-9843 or 6S8-4922 SI&#13;
Se Jim errick ,, r. Ha ond" For Guaranteed Senice I Trad1-1n Val&#13;
Out of To n-0111 Coll ct&#13;
HAMMOND ORGA&#13;
m~T-~~~~.-ml !~~~~~ 3&#13;
"If Bmer Orgam ar~ .Bui/J, llammond ill Build Thr " &#13;
~e,'l, \,,\&#13;
'\~~ ~~\,: 1001'&#13;
~'\\) /0&#13;
~ Courtesy Discount&#13;
to&#13;
Students &amp; Faculty&#13;
(MUST SHOWIDENTIFICATION)&#13;
.. \T II 22"&#13;
fa tottharaet.t'r5&#13;
AJanArkm&#13;
• tarun Balsam&#13;
Richard Benjamin&#13;
Arthur Garfunkel&#13;
Jack Gillord&#13;
Buck Henry&#13;
Bob •.....harl&#13;
Anthony Perlun&#13;
Paula Prenu&#13;
MarlIn been&#13;
John VOIght&#13;
OnonWelles&#13;
Bob Balaban&#13;
usanne Benton&#13;
GUll Revere&#13;
Marcel Daloo&#13;
\ n n&#13;
~olonel .theart&#13;
I lOr Danby&#13;
. h&#13;
lloo:'" , a&#13;
Culonel Korn&#13;
\.)Or tajor&#13;
hapl InTappm n&#13;
ur OU k II&#13;
!lob&#13;
III IIn~erblnder&#13;
eet,.r 10feedl&#13;
Orr&#13;
Dr I' W&#13;
at Iy' Whore&#13;
Old Man&#13;
+ + +&#13;
John Calley&#13;
Mark Ransonholl&#13;
Buck Henry&#13;
Mike Nichols&#13;
Andrew Martin&#13;
John Jordon&#13;
Alan McCabe&#13;
10 malOirapher David Watkm&#13;
am ra Operalor Alan McCabe&#13;
Filmed in Panavision&#13;
Color by Technicolor&#13;
Thai' some calch! (he had to whisUe&gt;.&#13;
~eedless to say, so was the movie.&#13;
Yossarian wa carzy. but not crazy&#13;
enough to want to die He was held by a&#13;
unIVersal Catch. one thaI Mike Nichols and&#13;
Bu k Henry saw go beyond the embatUed&#13;
kif of Y{W 11 and perhaps even into OUT&#13;
pre ot lime&#13;
• Poor Youanan. he was real. he was&#13;
afraid. he was crazy. but most of all he was&#13;
Inherently true to himself. The character&#13;
"as porlrayed to near perlection by Alan&#13;
Arkin. With a madness of a special kind.&#13;
Yossanan was surrounded'by a nearly&#13;
urreal envtronment created by the&#13;
grotesquely satl1'lstic Black Humor of&#13;
Henry and Nichols. Colonel Cathcart&#13;
tMartin Balsam&gt;. the rude flagrant&#13;
commander as true to himself as a used&#13;
car ~1 man selling a lemon. Milo Min·&#13;
derblnder (John Voight) an operator who&#13;
deSIgn a syndic ale as corrupt as the&#13;
enem)"s losclsm. His M&amp;1I1 engulfed&#13;
Yo sarisn in its human dealings;&#13;
de lroY'lng ately (Arthur Garfunkel) his&#13;
}oung friend who was too innocent to&#13;
. Uf\'lve.&#13;
General Dreedle. performed in token by&#13;
Orson Welles, looks at "crazy" Yossarian&#13;
....00 I tanding nude awaiting a contrived&#13;
medal, and says "You are a very weird&#13;
person Yossarian," ... and he was&#13;
Within the General's institution.&#13;
.~~amYossarian's cowardice slands as hIS&#13;
0\\ n herOt m.&#13;
Produced by&#13;
reenplay&#13;
DIrection by&#13;
2nd nil Direction&#13;
.DOWNTOWN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
N ed Students The new cbairman-ele t - e Univ~rsity 01 Wiscol\sin Facul~yC:f&#13;
,tb.&#13;
chemistry Prof. Margaret I LeonUnciI ~&#13;
to Help Les the Marshfield-Wood Co~nty C~~l:&#13;
The sex. the pain. the confusion, the&#13;
heartbreak were all inevitable ... "War&#13;
makes this so . . The film made it so,&#13;
too. 11115 is why I must give the film my&#13;
highest. recommendation. It was&#13;
technlcall)' superb with the talented and&#13;
lcilllul help 01 David Watlcin and Alan&#13;
McCabe. cinemalographers, It would be&#13;
advisable for those who have read the book&#13;
to be prepared lor somelhing slighUy&#13;
different. The film became an interesting&#13;
extension or the book, making the&#13;
pothellcaUy lunny the grotesquely lunny&#13;
. turning laughter into reflection.&#13;
Tames have changed since the&#13;
copyrighting or "Catch 22" and since the&#13;
well received film "MASH" appeared on&#13;
the screens a new mood bas arisen far&#13;
above the heads or the grey flannel experts&#13;
.... It is made of more human stuff ..&#13;
and ... I think this is good.&#13;
In the end Yossarian escapes through a&#13;
seeming insanity alter he linds that Orr&#13;
tRobert Balaban) has escaped,&#13;
AIter much practice at crash landing his&#13;
plane at sea he has floated to Sweden via&#13;
lileboal. Yossarian tries it too .. , ' the&#13;
final scene reveals Yossarian paddling&#13;
madly toward a momentary freedom. He&#13;
escapes lrom more !ban juslthe confusior&#13;
and lci\ling he also escapes lrom selling&#13;
himseU out. Or shall I say his SELF out.&#13;
One scene that has layed heavily on my&#13;
mind since 1 saw the film is the point&#13;
where ately is speaking to an old man&#13;
(Marcel Dalio) who haunts an Italian&#13;
whore house, In responding 10 the innocenl&#13;
ethnocentric comments that the boy puts&#13;
forth the old man says ... lilt is better to&#13;
live on your feet and die on your knees than&#13;
to live on your kees and die on your feet."&#13;
Amen.&#13;
M I lell the theater I heard comments&#13;
like "That's not entertainment" and "Hell,&#13;
it wasn't even funny." Perhaps those&#13;
viewers have missed the poinl Entertainment&#13;
has ceased to be the name of&#13;
the game, and a special a':Yareness .of&#13;
reality has replaced it. This kind 01 liIm&#13;
can only open eyes . not close them.&#13;
SEE IT,&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Any Newscope readers who might like to&#13;
recommend a film or make comment or&#13;
criticism concerning this or any other&#13;
article may drop their suggestions off at&#13;
the Newscopy ollice. Thank ydIJ.&#13;
WATCHES .fPAIR DtPT.=t&#13;
Wltellu - .te-lry&#13;
Dilmortd SeHi" ..&#13;
COrllpkh aep.ir&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Desioailt9&#13;
MahY students of Parkside are aware, 1&#13;
am sure tnat several of their fellow&#13;
students' carry out their daily class&#13;
schedules despite serious handica~s they&#13;
possess. One of these students IS L~S&#13;
Barden, who has lost a major part of hIS&#13;
vision.&#13;
This, of course, poses speci&amp;! proble~s&#13;
for Les in carrying out his reading .&#13;
assignments. In overcoming tllis. problem&#13;
Les, has his text books copied onto&#13;
magnetic tape recordings. While the Blind&#13;
Association helps Les WIth the text&#13;
materials they have in stock, many of the&#13;
newer or special texts "and articles ar~n?t&#13;
available to him. For this reason Les IS 10&#13;
need of help and is asking for volunteer&#13;
readers. Les is not too particular 01 the&#13;
reader's voice quality or expressive&#13;
reading ability.&#13;
This semester Les will be needing&#13;
volunteer readers for two. sociology&#13;
courses which he will be taking. Tbose&#13;
students wbo feel that they could belp -&#13;
even for a few hours - please contact Les&#13;
Barden or contact Steve Bangert in the,&#13;
Kenosha Student Allairs Ollice. Room 135,&#13;
telepllone 658-4861 - Extension 42.&#13;
Did You Know - a column of little&#13;
known, but not widely cared about, facts.&#13;
1. Vivian "Sailor Joe" Summons, a&#13;
canadian tattoo artist, had 4,831 tattoos on&#13;
his bOdy. He died in Toronto on D~c.2~,&#13;
1965. age 77. -&#13;
2, All You Flea Fans - The long jump&#13;
record is 13 inches by a Californian Rodent&#13;
Flea. The high jump record is 7 inches.&#13;
3. The greatest alimony ever paid was&#13;
11.550.000 dollars. paid by Reuben H. Heet •&#13;
the U.S. millionaire aircraft manufacturer,&#13;
to his second wafe.&#13;
IF YOU HAVE ANY LITTLE KNOWN&#13;
FACTS ABOUT SOMETHING WE&#13;
SHOULD ALL KNOW ABOUT. SEND&#13;
THEM TO THE NEWSCOPE.&#13;
Mich III &amp; Worlds Records.&#13;
MARGURIITE'S&#13;
ROBES-Regular $15.00,&#13;
Speciol, $10.00.&#13;
Enjoy these cool&#13;
eveni'!9s in cozy&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short qui Ited; velvet&#13;
toned ribbon d~w~ ~:&#13;
- - _.&#13;
the front, lined with&#13;
sottest nylon&#13;
peach or&#13;
lavender.&#13;
Smoll&#13;
Morgueritte'·s is open·&#13;
9 unti I 9 Mondays and&#13;
. ridays, other weekdays&#13;
, 9 'til 5:30, Sundays&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
Vl__ .... ·~'- .~.,,-- -_._- e:.-._II •. Ti .... "&#13;
L~...ltr.&#13;
CHINA I&#13;
«i!!'=..:::::.....ItlDAl ....=-*' lECISTlY&#13;
FA.lR TRADE ACCEPTEr.&#13;
CradlYte CemolOllst.tntified Diamollltoloaist&#13;
NEWSCOPE - PageS&#13;
Tuesday. January 19.11111&#13;
tIw&#13;
LEADER&#13;
Moie&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KEIIOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLUA/lACIIII&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~w&#13;
g/alian ~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too smalL&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53148&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774 e~&#13;
~. I&#13;
......... ~&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
AJryou Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Monday-thursday SUS&#13;
Friday.Sunday $2.25&#13;
Chlld ....n $1.10&#13;
PlUI TAll AND UWJAII&#13;
LADlESNlTE&#13;
. Mon. &amp; Tues - 8:30 lo 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, seconddrink for lie&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and J'travy&#13;
SERVING: J'r\. • sat. I ,..,U ...&#13;
, aoa;.ft1In. s p.•..I. p."&#13;
.... UN- ..... ;&#13;
9006 Shariden ad.&#13;
PhD'" .. 4-1733&#13;
....&#13;
, the pain, the confu ion, the&#13;
rtb r all m \ itable .. . . War&#13;
m thi • . . . . The film made it o,&#13;
t . Th i hy I mu t give the film my&#13;
h1 h t r ommendation. It wa&#13;
t hm lly _ perb with the talented and&#13;
illful h Ip or Da,·id Watkin and Alan&#13;
I , cinematographers. It would be&#13;
dvi bl for th who ha\'e r ad the book&#13;
to be pr red for omething lightly&#13;
diff nt. The film became an interesting&#13;
. i n the book, making the&#13;
th ticallv funny the grotesquely funny&#13;
.. . turnin·g laughter into reflection.&#13;
Time ha\'e changed since the&#13;
) righhn of "Catch 22" and ince the&#13;
w 11 r h·ed film " lASH" appeared on&#13;
th r a new mood ha arisen far&#13;
bove the heads of the grey flannel experts&#13;
. . • • It i mad of more human stuff . . .&#13;
and • .. I thin this i good.&#13;
In th end Yossarian escapes through a&#13;
ming 1nsanit · after he finds that Orr&#13;
&lt;Robert Bala ban) ha escaped.&#13;
Aft r much practice at crash landing his&#13;
plane at a he has floated to Sweden via&#13;
lifeboat. Yossarian tries it too .. . the&#13;
final ene reveals Yossarian paddling&#13;
madly toward a momentary freedom. He&#13;
escapes Crom more than just the confusior&#13;
and killing he also escapes from selling&#13;
him elf out. Or hall I say his SELF out.&#13;
One cene that has layed heavily on my&#13;
mind ince I saw the film is the point&#13;
h re ·ately is peaking to an old man&#13;
&lt;. tarcel Dalio) who haunts an Italian&#13;
whor hou e. In r ·ponding to the innocent&#13;
ethnocentric comments that the boy puts&#13;
forth the old man savs . .• " It is better to&#13;
live on your feet and die on your knees than&#13;
to live on your kees and die on your feel. "&#13;
Amen.&#13;
As I left the theater I heard comments&#13;
like "That's not entertainment" and " Hell,&#13;
it wasn't even funny." Perhaps those&#13;
viewers have missed the point. Entertainment&#13;
has ceased to be the name of&#13;
the game. and a special a~areness of&#13;
reality ha replaced it. This kind of film&#13;
can only open eyes . . . not close them.&#13;
SEE IT.&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Any 'ew cope readers who might like to&#13;
recommend a film or make comment or&#13;
critici m concerning this or any other&#13;
art icle may drop their suggestions off at&#13;
the ·ew copy office. Thank yd\J..&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
..... . . CC11ft ....&#13;
u,.....,~ - l..'9n1'•"• ....... . ..., ... cw ........ . 'Ti"'••&#13;
--CHl-'-'- HA-'----'I&#13;
REPAIR DEPT. 7&#13;
Watchs - Jewelry&#13;
Dumond S.ttiRg&#13;
Con,plete a.pair&#13;
Dept. RiRg Designi1111&#13;
C, ')_ ~ \ -£.:'J.:f_.=-- ll~~~~STllY&#13;
'\~'Q..~ ~\..\.. . l 0%&#13;
~~'Q.. 0&#13;
~~ Courtesy Discount&#13;
to&#13;
DW60MD COH5UlTANTS Students &amp; Faculty&#13;
.DOWNTOWN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
{MUST SHOW IDENTIFICATION)&#13;
FAIR TRAD E ACCEP TEI:&#13;
Cr,dune Gemologist-Certified Dr,montologist&#13;
~C.86-rU&#13;
It .. a,A:e , ,iffe,e1c:e where you sliop!&#13;
Need Students&#13;
to Help Les&#13;
Many students of Parkside a re aware, I&#13;
am sure that several of their fellow&#13;
students ' carry out their ~ily cla ss&#13;
schedules despite serious handica~s they&#13;
possess. One of these students 1s L~&#13;
Barden, who has lost a major part of his&#13;
vision .&#13;
This, of course, poses special proble?1s&#13;
for Les in carrying out his reading&#13;
assignments. In overcoming this_ problem&#13;
Les has his text books copied onto&#13;
magnetic tape recordings. Yt'.hile the Blind&#13;
As ociation helps Les with the text&#13;
materials they have in stock, many of the&#13;
newer or special texts ·and articles ar~ n?t&#13;
available to him. For this reason Les 1s m&#13;
need of help and is asking for volunteer&#13;
readers. Les is not too particular of the&#13;
reader's voice quality or expressive&#13;
reading a bility .&#13;
This semester Les will be needing&#13;
volunteer r eaders for two sociology&#13;
courses which he will be taking. Those&#13;
students who feel that they could help -&#13;
even for a few hours - please contact Les&#13;
Barden or contact Steve Bangert in the&#13;
Kenosha Student Affairs Office, Room 135,&#13;
telephone 658-4861 - Extension 42.&#13;
Did You Know - a column of little&#13;
known, but not widely cared about, facts.&#13;
1. Vivian "Sailor Joe" Summons, a&#13;
Canadian tattoo artist, had 4,831 tattoos on&#13;
his b&lt;&gt;dy. He died in Toronto on Dec. ~ .&#13;
1965, age 77. -&#13;
2. All You Flea Fans - The long jump&#13;
record is 13 inches by a Californian Rodent&#13;
Flea. The high jump record is 7 inches.&#13;
3. The greatest alimony ever paid was&#13;
11,550,000 dollars, paid by Reuben H. Heet,&#13;
the U.S. millionaire aircraft manufacturer,&#13;
to his second wife.&#13;
IF YOU HA VE ANY LITTLE KNOWN&#13;
FACTS ABOUT SOMETHING WE&#13;
SHOULD ALL KNOW ABOUT, SEND&#13;
THEM TO THE NEWSCOPE.&#13;
Mich Ill &amp; Worlds Records.&#13;
MARGURITIE'S&#13;
ROBc S-Regular $15.00,&#13;
Spec ia l, $10.00.&#13;
En joy these cool&#13;
eveni'!gs in cozy&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short qu ilted; velvet&#13;
toned ribbon d~w~ • - . . . the fr ont, lined with&#13;
sottest ny lon&#13;
pe ach or&#13;
Marguer itte'·s is open ·&#13;
9 until 9 Mondays and&#13;
ridays, other weekdays&#13;
: 9 'ti I 5:30, Sundays&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 • 22nd Avenue .&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
NEWSCOPE- Page 8&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 1971&#13;
1:he _new ~hairman-elec-;-:--&#13;
Uruvers1ty of Wisconsin Facuit Co f the&#13;
chemistry Prof. Margaret I i.eo llntiJ&#13;
the Marshfield-Wood Co~nt nard r&#13;
r----------Y_ Center&#13;
~&#13;
LEADER ~ DOWNTOWN/ KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PlAZA/ ltACINE&#13;
UPTOWN REST AU RANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~w&#13;
#laliam~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
4437 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 531 40&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
AlfYou Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Monday-Thursday $1,95&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2,25&#13;
ChlldNn $1.10&#13;
PlUI TU AND IIVIIAII&#13;
LADIESNITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues -8:30 to 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, second drink for lk&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and gravy&#13;
SEllVING: I'd. A Sat. I ,_.,.tt ,_ .. 8on;-flnln. 5 p.m.-ll •·•·&#13;
8aL 1% Nooa·t , .•. ;&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Phone 694-1733 &#13;
Placement Services Offered&#13;
actions" Th fr tit ese statements were taken&#13;
om. • e summary sheet at Chancellor&#13;
WY,lhe s. Press Conference, Dec. 7 19'70&#13;
which directly contradicts the statement&#13;
reported by the Associated Press dated&#13;
D~. 3 ,~hich quoted Chan. Wyllie as&#13;
saymg, The school will not be influenced&#13;
by students when it comes to dismissing&#13;
teachers:" when Student Government is&#13;
formed It should afford the present Adml!Ustration&#13;
all the credibility it deserves&#13;
This scbool has bee~ ruo under a policy oi lies. for 2 years ano there is no reason to&#13;
believe. l.he present administration will&#13;
ever willingly change its attitude&#13;
,1 rece,ived indication of the seriousness&#13;
"":lth WhICh the Administration purports to&#13;
VIew student commi~ent on Tuesday.&#13;
Dec. 8. We were getting the constitution&#13;
ready for mailing, when it occurred to us&#13;
th~t. we :,-,ere being used by the administration&#13;
to implement its own&#13;
propaganda. The job we faced would have&#13;
taken us at least an 8·hour day, and there&#13;
are payed workers available for these&#13;
duti~s .. Being late,. near 6:00, the only&#13;
adminIstrators left m the building were in&#13;
the Chancellor's office. We knocked on his&#13;
door and Assistant Chancellor Clarence&#13;
"Book Store" Brockman peeked out at us&#13;
through the slightly opened door. I asked&#13;
to see the Chancellor and explained to Mr_&#13;
Wyllie that we felt we should be paid for&#13;
our work. His reply was, "Hey, Brock,&#13;
come here, Ithink we've got a problem." I&#13;
explained the "problem" to Brockman and&#13;
also added that I had been forced to miss a&#13;
class that afternoon, in deference to this&#13;
work. Gathering all of his intellectual&#13;
prowess, Brockman sneered, "Aw, that's&#13;
too had!" and shook his head. At this, we&#13;
qUietly left them with a mountain of paper&#13;
to be mailed. In response to their plight, I&#13;
only shook my head and said, "Aw, that's&#13;
too bad!"&#13;
This little comedy is an .example of how&#13;
serious student efforts and contri6utions&#13;
are recognized by the administration.&#13;
What happened to the Constitution&#13;
Committee and previous student govern·&#13;
ment attempts are probable indications of&#13;
what our new student Government is in&#13;
for. I repeat my warning and urge the&#13;
cooperation of all students, for the only&#13;
way we can have any influence is if we all&#13;
remain active and keep the pressure on&#13;
them.&#13;
The lanagemenl Club in conjunction&#13;
with the Placement Office has ennoceced&#13;
it wi~lbegin. providmg a new service to job&#13;
seeking seniors Plans have been finalized&#13;
to assemble catalogues of one page data&#13;
sheets and distribute them to numerous&#13;
employment agencies throughout the&#13;
Chicago-Milwaukee area&#13;
Recognizing the difficulty oi obtaining&#13;
employment in today's job market, club&#13;
members feel it is wise for the job seeker&#13;
to present his qualifications to as man)'&#13;
employers as possible. This, In fact 15 the&#13;
purpose of the clubs catalogue. It IS fell&#13;
utilization oi the clubs catalogue will&#13;
expose the qualifica tions oi the job seeker&#13;
Whereby Dennis Cashion brought to the&#13;
Committee's attention that Mr. Krenn&#13;
was lea~g the University as of Jan, IS.&#13;
and that hISmotives were solely In lines of&#13;
establishing a good. workable student&#13;
government.&#13;
One of the questions raised was why 1r&#13;
Krevan approached Dennis and Tim in-&#13;
~teau of the Committee. His reply was that&#13;
In student meetings with the Chancellor&#13;
a~t the firings- of the professors, he&#13;
Singled out Dennis aod Tim as two&#13;
students who seemed interested.&#13;
Tom Kreul, a Con-eomm member&#13;
answered that "it is only logical that if&#13;
someone wanted somethi.ng changed in the&#13;
constitution he should talk to the committee&#13;
members. Since you (Mr. Krevan)&#13;
didn't, and you are no\\!presenting us with&#13;
a totally new constitution, we have to&#13;
regard this with suspicion."&#13;
Asked why the Committee hadn't sought&#13;
help from people in the University ex·&#13;
perienced in constitutional law, such as&#13;
PolioScL ProL John Harbeson, Bev Noble,&#13;
Comm. Cbairwoman, replied. "We ",ere&#13;
told that a faculty committee would be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor to review our&#13;
constitution and to advise us on&#13;
technicalities, but this Committee was&#13;
never appointed."&#13;
Jim Smith, a student present at the&#13;
meeting, seemed to best swn up the&#13;
situation by saying, Hthis is a good&#13;
example of how the administration's&#13;
policies have fostered mistrust among the&#13;
students towards the administration."&#13;
The proposed constitution wasn't even&#13;
voted on, but changes have been made in&#13;
the existing constitution. (The entire&#13;
constitution with the changes underlined is&#13;
printed in this issue, and copies are&#13;
available to read in the libraries, Student&#13;
Activities Building, and Racine and&#13;
Kenosha lounges.)&#13;
The ratification referendum will be held&#13;
during registration for the spring semester&#13;
in the Student Go,emment booth Only&#13;
students enrolled in the Fall semester 19i0&#13;
are eligible to vote.&#13;
Con-Com Report&#13;
ISERMANN&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
614-616 56th St.&#13;
&lt;Y'Innual $U/JUI;U/I/jf &lt;&amp;leuIUMUX3&#13;
·SALE&#13;
Continues _ SAVE 20 to 30% on&#13;
. h· f&#13;
Two floors of Fine Men '5 Fur",s mgs.&#13;
l_~ ----~&#13;
oecember 10, t9iO •&#13;
As a member of the Constitutional&#13;
C&lt;J!I1mitteeI would like to give my constituencyone&#13;
final report. Having completedthe&#13;
constitution by Sept. t4 we&#13;
p-esentl!d it to Dean Dearborn's office so&#13;
the necessary arrangements could be&#13;
madeto get it printed up and sent out to&#13;
studentsfor ratification.&#13;
Next came a series of rneeunas with&#13;
DeanDearborn, Bill Neihbur, and John&#13;
Hubor.It was during these meetings that&#13;
the administration'S plan of total&#13;
harassment and uncooperation with&#13;
sbldentsbecame evident t9 me. (I only&#13;
suspectedit was so bef'ore.) The constitution&#13;
was subjected to a very close&#13;
scrutinyand nit-picking, as were members&#13;
of the committee. You may also have&#13;
noticedin several areas of the Student's&#13;
Rights section the word "should" where&#13;
manystudents, including members of the&#13;
committee. preferred the word "shall".&#13;
Believingthe constitution to be only a&#13;
formality and placing more im}X&gt;rtance&#13;
upon getting a student government&#13;
ocganizedwe agreed with these word&#13;
changes.Since then the constitution has&#13;
beenchanged ba.ckagain, along with some&#13;
otherchanges.&#13;
Afterthe November 3rd elections, Dean&#13;
Dearborn's attitude changed to a more&#13;
cooperative stance. Politics, obviously,&#13;
plays a big part in the running of our&#13;
lIIiversity. Rumor also bad it that the&#13;
administration had received orders ~from&#13;
Madisontq establish a student Government&#13;
by December.&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee was&#13;
thenappointed by Chancellor Wyllie and&#13;
wernetwith them. At this meeting, 3 of the&#13;
7 committee members showed up, along&#13;
with Deao Dearborn. The faculty members&#13;
had little to say so we bartered with&#13;
tile Deao. We wen~ thl'ough the constitution&#13;
and very cooperatively made&#13;
slightwording changes, which could have&#13;
been donea month earlier. The "meeting"&#13;
adjournedand we were told that we could&#13;
get the constitution printed.&#13;
Following a predictable bureaucratic&#13;
delay tbe constitutions were printed up_&#13;
During this delay. however, the administration&#13;
made a big mistake - the&#13;
ParksidePurge. As a result the Chancellor&#13;
received favorable publicity by saying&#13;
thatStudent Government is being formed&#13;
and that "more formal channels of student&#13;
advisement would be instituted." This&#13;
should be taken as seriously as the&#13;
preceding statement that claimed,&#13;
"student opinion and concern for good&#13;
teaching was considered in the review&#13;
u,.M'-1IriII/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
~40thAVE&#13;
NOSH" WI$. OL7-11174&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Candy&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Adam and Eve Special&#13;
Boneless Top irloin for 2 S12 9S&#13;
Lobster Tail for 2 S18's&#13;
Included with the above-&#13;
· Bottle of Champagne&#13;
· Lazy Susan&#13;
·Brandy-Ice for Dessert&#13;
° Complete Dinner&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
Con-Camm Member&#13;
Final Con·Comm Meeting&#13;
On Tuesday, Dec. 22, the Constitutional&#13;
Committee met with interested students to&#13;
discuss the constitution, its weak points,&#13;
and to hear and make possible changes.&#13;
Also attending was Mr. David Krevan,&#13;
Special Assistant to the Chancellor.&#13;
Mr. Krevan had approached two&#13;
students, Dennis Cashion and Tim Ocker I&#13;
about the constitution and questioned its&#13;
workability. The three of them had drawn&#13;
up a whole new constitution and presented&#13;
it to the Committee as an alternative.&#13;
During the meeting questions were&#13;
raised about Mr. Krevan's motives. Some&#13;
of the members or the Constitutional&#13;
Committee were reluctant to cooperate.&#13;
Dean Loumos called Krevan's sudden&#13;
interest "another Administration trick".&#13;
to a much larger number of employ",&#13;
Lhan would be Ible 00 an mdi\ldUlil&#13;
baSIS InclUSion 10 thr carate&#13;
available to all January, June and A\Ill I&#13;
graduates oi Parksrde. The catalogue I' ,11&#13;
beor-garutedmto.tajorarea of tud, and&#13;
will be accomparued by a W i\. P&#13;
catatogue. Orgaruzed in thIS manner, club&#13;
members feel the catalogue will pr nt to&#13;
employers an attracuv e. easily utilized&#13;
reference oi available talent&#13;
To be Included ,n the catalogue, a _,or&#13;
needs only to p.clt up the nec ry forms&#13;
at the Placement Office on County Trunk&#13;
A. complete aod return them md.ca~ng he&#13;
or she would hke to be Included 10 the&#13;
catalogue Inqulfles from the "nOWl&#13;
firms will be directed to Ir Ocker. Ihe&#13;
Placement Dlreclor, who 1',11then no~f&#13;
the studenl In qu bon.&#13;
A mall fee ma~ be required to CQ'\:eJ"&#13;
binder, poslal and duphca~ng CO!i&#13;
Project committeemen. Jim . ·ol.n. SIU&#13;
luzenski and Tim Leberman polO' out&#13;
that the Uni\·erslt) 1$ m no ....ay COM led&#13;
w,th thIS fee. They also remtnd Sf'nlors&#13;
that registration at the Placement O£rlceIS&#13;
a prerequisite tc mtervie ·ulg.and that Ole&#13;
oomber of registrants bears hea\ II} on the&#13;
decision 01 many campus rec:::nut~ on&#13;
whether or not 10 come to a perUC'ular&#13;
campus The)' also Indicated lht",r&#13;
gratitude to. Ir. Ocker and hi tarc at the&#13;
Placement Office for the-IT a lane to&#13;
malung thl sernee possible.&#13;
The .Ianagemenl Club I a ~t1)&#13;
formed campus organllallon advISed by&#13;
Mr. Roy Cougle.. Iembersbip ISopen to all&#13;
students Interested In a more complet&#13;
understanding of the function and&#13;
responsibilities or management.&#13;
EWSCOPE-Page9&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
6d'o&#13;
u- C· . __V.onm&#13;
HipwlY 21 It 1-94&#13;
R1CIIlE&#13;
FII Ruernti' .. CIII&#13;
11&amp;-4411&#13;
Con-Com Report&#13;
oecember 10, 1970&#13;
As a member of the Constitutional&#13;
C mmittee I would like to give my consti~encY&#13;
one final report. Having completed&#13;
the constitution by Sept. 14 we&#13;
presented it to Dean Dearborn's office so&#13;
the necessary arrangements could t)e&#13;
made to get it printed up and sent out to&#13;
·tudents for ratification.&#13;
Next came a series of .meetings with&#13;
oean Dearborn, Bill Neihbur, and John&#13;
Hubor. It was during these meetings that&#13;
the administration's plan of total&#13;
harassment and uncooperation with&#13;
·tudents became evident t9 me. (I only&#13;
·ll'ipected it was _so before.) The contitution&#13;
was subJected to a very close&#13;
scrutiny and nit-picking, as were members&#13;
of the committee. You may also have&#13;
noticed in several areas of the Student's&#13;
Rights section the word "should" where&#13;
many students, including members of the&#13;
committee, preferred the word "shall".&#13;
Believing the constitution to be only a&#13;
formality and placing more importance&#13;
upon getting a student government&#13;
ocganized we agreed with these word&#13;
changes. Since then the constitution has&#13;
been changed back again, along with some&#13;
other changes.&#13;
After the November 3rd elections, Dean&#13;
Dearborn's attitude changed to a more&#13;
cooperative stance. Politics, obviously,&#13;
plays a big part in the running of our&#13;
university. Rumor also had it that the&#13;
administration had received orders from&#13;
fadison to establish a student Government&#13;
by December.&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee was&#13;
then appointed by Chancellor Wyllie and&#13;
we met with them. At this meeting, 3 of the&#13;
7 committee members showed up, along&#13;
with Dean Dearborn. The faculty members&#13;
had little to say so we bartered with&#13;
the Dean. We went through the contitution&#13;
and very cooperatively made&#13;
light wording changes, which could have&#13;
been done a month earlier. The "meeting"&#13;
adjourned and we were told that we could&#13;
get the constitution printed.&#13;
Following a predictable bureaucratic&#13;
delay the constitutions were printed up.&#13;
During this delay, however, the administration&#13;
made a big mistake - the&#13;
Parkside Purge. As a result the Chancellor&#13;
received favorable publicity by saying&#13;
that Student Government is being formed&#13;
and that "more formal channels of student&#13;
advisement would be instituted." This&#13;
hould be taken as seriously as the&#13;
preceding statement that claimed,&#13;
"stud~n~ opinion and concern for good&#13;
leaching was considered in the review&#13;
rtrr K lid/I/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
~-40thAVE&#13;
KENOSHA WIS. 0L7-'5t74&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Candy&#13;
Corsages&#13;
afctionsth." These statements were taken&#13;
rom e summar h t Wyll" , p Y s ee at Chancellor . ie s. ress Conference, Dec. 7, 1970&#13;
which directly contradicts the statement&#13;
~ported b)'. the Associated Press dated&#13;
~ - 3 ,:,Vhich quoted Chan. Wyllie as saymg, The school will not be influenced&#13;
by students when it comes to dis . . teach " Wh m1ssmg ers. en Student Governme t ·&#13;
fo:n:ied i~ should afford the present" A~~ m1!11strabon all the credibility it deserves&#13;
~1s school has been run under a policy of&#13;
lie~ for 2 years and there is no reason to&#13;
believe_ t_he present administration will&#13;
ever wd_hngly change its attitude.&#13;
_I rece_1ved indication of the seriousness&#13;
"":th which the Administration purports to&#13;
VIew student commit~ent on Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 8. We were getting the constitution&#13;
ready for mailing, when it occurred to us&#13;
th~t. we ~ere being used by the admm1&#13;
stra hon to implement its own&#13;
propaganda. The job we faced would have&#13;
taken us at least an 8-hour day, and there&#13;
are payed workers available for these&#13;
duti~s._ Being late, near 6:00, the only&#13;
admm1strators left in the building were in&#13;
the Chancellor's office. We knocked on his&#13;
door and Assistant Chancellor Clarence&#13;
"Book Store" Brockman peeked out at us&#13;
through the slightly opened door. I asked&#13;
to see the Chancellor and explained to Mr.&#13;
Wyllie that we felt we should be paid for&#13;
our work. His reply was, "Hey, Brock,&#13;
come here, l think we've got a problem.'' I&#13;
explained the " problem" to Brockman and&#13;
also added that I had been forced to miss a&#13;
class that afternoon, in deference to this&#13;
work. Gathering all of his intellectual&#13;
prowess, Brockman sneered, "Aw, that's&#13;
too bad!" and shook his head. At this, we&#13;
quietly left them with a mountain of paper&#13;
to be mailed. In response to their plight, I&#13;
only shook my head and said, "Aw, that's&#13;
too bad! "&#13;
This little comedy is an example of how&#13;
serious student efforts and contributions&#13;
are recognized by the administration.&#13;
What happened to the Constitution&#13;
Committee and previous student government&#13;
attempts are probable indications of&#13;
what our new student Government is in&#13;
for. I repeat my warning and urge the&#13;
cooperation of all students, for the only&#13;
way we can have any influence is if we all&#13;
remain active and keep the pressure on&#13;
them. DeanLoumos&#13;
Con-Comm Member&#13;
Final Con-Comm Meeting&#13;
On Tuesday, Dec. 22, the Constitutional&#13;
Committee met with interested students to&#13;
discuss the constitution, its weak points,&#13;
and to hear and make possible changes.&#13;
Also attending was Mr. David Krevan,&#13;
Special Assistant to the Chancellor. Mr. Krevan had approached two&#13;
students Dennis Cashion and Tim Ocker,&#13;
about th~ constitution and questioned its&#13;
workability. The three of them had drawn&#13;
up a whole new constitution and pre_sented&#13;
it to the Committee as an alternative.&#13;
During the meeting questions we ·e&#13;
raised about Mr. Krevan's motives. Some&#13;
of the members or the Constitutional&#13;
Committee were reluctant to cooperate.&#13;
Dean Loumos called Krevan's sudden&#13;
interest "another Administration trick' '.&#13;
ISERMANN&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
614-616 56th St.&#13;
Jinnua/ Janua/1//f ~/eaJtance&#13;
·sALE&#13;
Continues - SAVE 20 to 30% on&#13;
Two Floors of Fine Men's Furnishings!&#13;
~~·-------------&#13;
Placement Services Offered&#13;
·whereby Dennis Ca hion bro ht to th&#13;
Committee·- attention that lr. Kre\•&#13;
_was lea,ing the ni, ·ty as o Ja 15,&#13;
and that hi motiv · v. er !ely in lin of&#13;
establishing a good, :-ork ble . udent&#13;
government.&#13;
One of the questions ra i · hy 1r.&#13;
Krevan approached Denn.u; and T-1m in-&#13;
. leac. vf the Committ _ Ht reply that&#13;
Jn student meetings with the Olan II&#13;
about the firing of the prof&#13;
singled out Denni and Tim&#13;
students who seemed inter ted.&#13;
Tom Kreul, a Con-Comm member,&#13;
an wered that " it i onlv I ical that if&#13;
someone wanted something chan ed -nth&#13;
constitution he hould talk to the committee&#13;
members. Since you (. !r. Kr ·an)&#13;
didn't. and you are no"" prest&gt;nting · i th&#13;
a totally ne\\ con titution, we have to&#13;
regard thi with uspicion."&#13;
Asked why the Committee hadn't . ught&#13;
help from people in the niversitv --&#13;
perienced in con titutional law, uch a&#13;
Poli. Sci. Prof. John Harbeson, Bev • 'obi .&#13;
Comm. Chairwoman, replied. " 'i ·e \I.ere&#13;
told that a faculty committee would be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor to re\"leW our&#13;
constitution and to advi e u on&#13;
technicalities, but this Committee wa&#13;
never appointed."&#13;
Jim Smith, a student present at the&#13;
meeting, seemed to best um up the&#13;
situation by saying. "this i a good&#13;
example of how the admini tralion'&#13;
policies have fostered mistrust among the&#13;
students towards the administration."&#13;
The proposed constitution w~Ln't e,·en&#13;
voted on, but changes ha\'e been mad in&#13;
the existing con titution. (Th entire&#13;
constitution with the chan underlined i&#13;
printed in thi i ue, and copi re&#13;
available to read in the librari tudent&#13;
Activitie Building, and Racin and&#13;
Kenosha lounge·.)&#13;
The ratification referendum \I.i ll be h d&#13;
during regi tration for the p ·&#13;
in the tudent Go,ernment&#13;
students enrolled in the Fall&#13;
are eligible to \'Ole.&#13;
Adam&#13;
Bon le Top irloin for 2&#13;
Lob t r Tn1l for 2&#13;
H igflway 20 at 1-94&#13;
RACINE&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
S 12 9S&#13;
s1s s&#13;
F r Reserntio s Call&#13;
886-4418 &#13;
Gymnasts Open Season&#13;
Parltside's greatest asset will be its&#13;
dynamic young coach. Bill Ballester. 33.&#13;
who came to UWP Uus laU Irom&#13;
Waukegan. Ill., where hJS high school&#13;
teams were 63-13 over eight years and&#13;
10 re ranked tn the top 10 in UJinois each&#13;
year&#13;
Coaching In the Suburban conference.&#13;
t'Ol\S,d red by many to be the top prep&#13;
gymnastics league in the country,&#13;
Ball I r de, loped lour 8)mnasts who&#13;
WMt on to AII-Amencan honors, including&#13;
one OlympIan&#13;
H has Judged NCAA and AAU champlonshi&#13;
• coached the U team thIS&#13;
summ r in a meet agamsl Bulgana a well&#13;
rdJnating training 01 the US team&#13;
In preparation lor the World Games&#13;
champiOn hip jn Yugoslavia, B.nd&#13;
CUrrMtly Is president or the national high&#13;
hool g)mna ti alation.&#13;
Ball ler's Itrst cempeuuve team al&#13;
'P w,lI I atur lour I"'0mlslllg lreshmen&#13;
and a highl) regarded JUnior coUege&#13;
transler lrom Calilornia&#13;
Th We t C. t junior is Warren&#13;
McGillivray 01 Burbank. who was aUaround.&#13;
ring and long horse champion 01&#13;
the Los Angeles Invitational while a star at&#13;
Pterce Junior College In Los Angeles.&#13;
Others are; Warren Vogel, Wisconsin&#13;
high school ring champ'oo at Homestead&#13;
high In Mequon last year&#13;
Dan Boswem. state finalist in high bar&#13;
and tumbling at Mllwaukee Madison high&#13;
school&#13;
Doug Anderson. Jlltnois slate finalist in&#13;
aII.around at Thornr,dge high in Doltoo.&#13;
III&#13;
AI EM'S, state meet finalist in side horse&#13;
(rom Kenosha Tr-emper.&#13;
Vogel 10 still rings and EMis in side&#13;
horse wl1J be UWP's only specialists. The&#13;
olhers are aU-around men who can perform&#13;
in.n ix events - rings, side horse,&#13;
IuIh bar. peraUeI bars, lree exercise and&#13;
long horse&#13;
Doug Anderson&#13;
An active gymnastics club at UWP ~&#13;
expected to provide a leeder system lor&#13;
the varsity in the luture. .&#13;
Parkside will have no home meets this&#13;
season, but the schedule includes some 01&#13;
the country's lop learns: NCAA contender&#13;
Indiana State, Big Eighl I"'wer Kansas&#13;
State, NCAA small college title contender&#13;
Illinois-Circle Campus, and Eastern&#13;
Illinois&#13;
The schedule:&#13;
Jan. 2 - at Stevens Point, 3 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 30 - at U. 01Chicago, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 5 - Merquette, Chicago at Marquette,&#13;
7 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 _ Wisconsin Open, Milwaukee, 10&#13;
Fe:·~· - Illinois Circle Campus, George&#13;
Williams at George Williams, 2 p.rr:t.&#13;
Feb. 19 -Illinois State, SI. Cloud alllhnols&#13;
State, 7 p.m. '11' •&#13;
Feb. 20 - Eastern Illinois, George WI lams&#13;
at Eastern, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 26 - Indiana State, Kansas St.te at&#13;
Indiana State, 7 p.m.&#13;
F3b. 'Z7 - Triton Invitational, Northlake,&#13;
III., 1 p.m. .&#13;
Mar. 12-13 - NAIA District 14, SUJl"rIor.&#13;
. Mar. 19-20-NAIANalionals, NatchItoches,&#13;
La.&#13;
Dan Boswein&#13;
NEWSCOPE - Page 10&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
--.&#13;
Notes of Interest&#13;
The Racine Branch of the Am .&#13;
Association of University Wornen.......&#13;
announced that applications noware be~&#13;
accepted lor the $400 scholarship ~&#13;
AAUW awards annually to a Ra'&#13;
County girl."'"&#13;
The scholarship award, which is bo..,.&#13;
on academic achievement and flDlDciaI&#13;
need, is awarded each year to alia'&#13;
County girl beginning the first Or ...:::&#13;
semester of her junior year at any&#13;
credited, degree·granting CollegeItuniversity&#13;
the lall after the grant ~&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Deadline lor filing .pplications is Aprjj&#13;
1. The scholarship will be awarded&#13;
AAUW's annual banquet in May. It&#13;
Application blanks may be 0btainod&#13;
from Mrs. W. R. Dollase, 333S Ascot Sl&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53406, the scholantlP&#13;
committee chairman, or from deans or&#13;
student affairs directors at a s.... _.&#13;
"t '~I college or urnversi y.&#13;
Application blanks should berelunlodlo&#13;
Mrs. Dollase along with atranscriptolille&#13;
student's credits lor her college Work Ia&#13;
date.&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 19:&#13;
BASKETBALL - UWP at DoI1linltao&#13;
College.&#13;
Wednesday. Jan. 20:&#13;
STUDY PERIOD - Also Jan. 21.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 21:&#13;
FACULTY SENATE - UWP F•...,&#13;
Senate will meet at3:30 p.rn. inGreetquiI&#13;
Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 22:&#13;
FINAL EXAMS - Through Jan ~.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 30:&#13;
BASKETBALL - UWP v. Hope CoIJeeeIl&#13;
Holland, Mich. 8 p.m. at Salem Cealnl&#13;
High School.&#13;
FENCING - UWP v. Purdue, UnivtIIiIJ&#13;
01 Indiana and Bowling Green SIaIt&#13;
University al Lafayette, Incl.&#13;
GYMNASTICS - UWP at University II&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Coming SpecialEvent&#13;
Foreign Travel:&#13;
Holiday in Spain - Spring Break, Apd&#13;
lo-I8. Torremolinos (Spanish Rivlenl&#13;
Includes round trip jet Irom Milw••&#13;
lodging in modern new apartments a1aII&#13;
the Mediterranean and use of a rental.&#13;
(lor each group of four). Cost: $219.l1lip.&#13;
tax. Information and application blllD&#13;
available in the Student Affairs orr.... ·d&#13;
campuses, or contact Mr. WiUilm&#13;
Niebuhr, 658-4861, Ext. 225.&#13;
New Semester Brings Improved Tallent&#13;
Tu'" strengths. Weaknesses and Outlook&#13;
(Of" the Upcoming ea5on:&#13;
Steve Norman, 6'1". 175 pounds,&#13;
nlverslty 01 Maryland, on Maryland's&#13;
traveling squad last year as a sophomore,&#13;
should provide solid strength at guard&#13;
when he becomes eligible secane&#13;
semester. Norman and Rick Davis, 6'3",&#13;
170 pounds, University of West Virginia, a&#13;
guard who started for West Virginia's&#13;
freshman last season, and who also will be&#13;
eligible second semester, were teammates&#13;
ff BARDEN'S&#13;
~ DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
i[g' e:.Men's Famous Name&#13;
Shirts • Woman's&#13;
Sportswear, Lingerie,&#13;
Domestic&#13;
Items&#13;
#~ ," ~.&#13;
"O~ O\) ~,.C\\&#13;
at Parkersburg, West Virginia.. high&#13;
school, where Norman made all·state and&#13;
all American. Depth will be a problem&#13;
until second semester; rebounding, a&#13;
weakness !,ast 'year, sliould be improved.&#13;
Slaughter, Hogan, Findreng and Madsen&#13;
should provide gooo scoring punch, with&#13;
Norman helping out in that department&#13;
second semester.&#13;
Ri'ck Davis and Steve Norman will join&#13;
team lor game Feb. 9 againsl University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Green Bay - eligible second&#13;
semester.&#13;
q~~&#13;
5160 6th AVE.&#13;
Student Bowling&#13;
Headquarters&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
46 BrunswicklUll&#13;
STUDENT SUMMER ·EMPLOYMENT&#13;
For next summer's job, check now the SUMMER EMPLOYMENT&#13;
DIRECTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, The&#13;
latest edition is fresh off the press. It has just arrived in the&#13;
• - US516 Library, and we have it on the reference shelf (HF 5382.5&#13;
. Get the 1971). Ninety thousand summer jobs are listed for I97J.&#13;
jump on the competition!&#13;
NEWSCOPE- Page 10&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 1971&#13;
Gymnasts Open Season Notes of Interest&#13;
The Ra~e Branch of the Arnen&#13;
Association of U~versity Women c&#13;
announced that applications now are be has&#13;
accepted for the $400 scholarship Wh~&#13;
AAUW awards annually to a Ra . County girl. cine&#13;
The scholarship award, Which is ~&#13;
on academic achievement and fin3!1cia)&#13;
need, is awarded each year to a Ra . County girl beginning the first or seco~&#13;
semester of her junior year at apy&#13;
credited, degree-granting college a·&#13;
university the fall after the grant or&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Deadline for filing applications is Ap&#13;
1. The scholarship will be awarded ,&#13;
AAUW's annual banquet in May. at&#13;
Application blanks may be oblai~&#13;
from Mrs. W. R. Dollase, 3335 Ascot&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53406, the schola&#13;
committee chairman, or from deans&#13;
Doug Anderson student affairs directors at a stud .... ~ . ·t ..... , college or umvers1 y.&#13;
n ctive gymna tics club at UWP is&#13;
d to provide a feeder system for&#13;
th \ . ity in the future. . Par : de .... m have no home meets this&#13;
but the chedule includes some of&#13;
th ~tr;, top team : , 'CAA contender&#13;
Indiana tale Big Eight power Kansas&#13;
t , · A 'mall college title contender&#13;
Illinoi ·Circle Campu , and Eastern&#13;
Illin · .&#13;
Th hedule&#13;
Jan. 2 - at tevens Point, 3 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 30- at U of Chicago, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. s -. larquette, Chicago at 1arquette,&#13;
7 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 - Wisconsin Open, Milwaukee, 10&#13;
Feba.~. - Illinois Circle Campus, George&#13;
Williams at George Williams, 2 P·".1·&#13;
Feb. 19 - Illinois State, St. Cloud at Illinois&#13;
State, 7 p.m. w·ir ·ms Feb. 20 - Eastern Illinois, George i ia&#13;
at Eastern, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 26 - Indiana State, Kansas State at&#13;
Indiana State, 7 p.m. F3b. 27 - Triton Invitational, Northlake,&#13;
Ill., 1 p.m. . Mar. 12-13 - NAIA District 14, SuJ?E!nor.&#13;
Mar. 19-20- NAIA Nationals, Natchitoches,&#13;
La.&#13;
Application blanks should be returned to&#13;
Mrs. Dollase along with a transcript or the&#13;
student's credits for her college work to&#13;
date.&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 19:&#13;
BASKETBALL - UWP at Dominic&#13;
·college.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 20:&#13;
STUDY PERIOD - Also Jan. 21.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 21:&#13;
FACULTY SENATE - UWP Facu!&#13;
Senate will meet at 3:30 p.m. in GreelVjUISI&#13;
Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 22:&#13;
FINAL EXAMS - Through Jan. 30.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 30:&#13;
BASKETBALL- UWP v. Hope College of&#13;
Holland, Mich. 8 p.m. at Salem Central&#13;
High School.&#13;
FENCING - UWP v. Purdue, Univemty&#13;
of Indiana and Bowling Green State&#13;
University at Lafayette, Ind&#13;
GYMNASTICS - UWP at University of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Coming Special Event&#13;
Foreign Travel:&#13;
Dan Boswein&#13;
Holiday in Spain - Spring Break, April&#13;
10-18. Torremolinos (Spanish Riviera)&#13;
Includes round trip jet from Milwauket,&#13;
lodging in modern new apartments alQII&#13;
the Mediterranean and use of a rental car&#13;
(for each group of four). Cost: $219.00 plus&#13;
tax. Information and application _blaiis&#13;
available in the Student Affairs Office· all&#13;
campuses, or contact Mr. William&#13;
Niebuhr, 658-4861, Ext. 225.&#13;
New Semester Brings Improved Tallent&#13;
and Outlook when he becomes eligible secona&#13;
a .on: semester. Norman and Rick Davis, 6'3",&#13;
170 pounds, University of West Virginia, a&#13;
guard who started for West Virginia's&#13;
freshman last season, and who also will be&#13;
eligible second semester, were teammates&#13;
BARDEN'S ~ DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
i(g··· e,,. Men's Famous Name&#13;
TREMENDOUS&#13;
SAVINGS!&#13;
Shirts • Woman 1s&#13;
Sportswear, Lingerie,&#13;
Domestic&#13;
Items&#13;
~ ~"" '" ~- "yo~ 0 &lt;) ~~rJ;I&#13;
at Parkersburg, West Virginia, high&#13;
school, where Norman made all-state and&#13;
all American. Depth will be a problem&#13;
until second semester; rebounding, a&#13;
weakness last ·year, sliould be improved.&#13;
Slaughter, Hogan, Findreng and Madsen&#13;
should provide good scoring punch, with&#13;
Norman helping out in that department&#13;
second semester.&#13;
Rick Davis and Steve Norman will join&#13;
team for game Feb. 9 against University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Green Bay - eligible second&#13;
semester.&#13;
Q~~ 5160 6th AVE.&#13;
Student Bowling&#13;
Headquarters&#13;
BOWLING I&#13;
46 Brunswick lall8S&#13;
STUDENT ·suMMER -EMPLOYMENl&#13;
For next summer's job, check now the SUMMER EM·&#13;
PLOYMENT DIRECTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, The&#13;
latest edition Is fresh off the press. It has just arrived in the&#13;
Library, and we hav~ it on the reference shelf (HF 5382-5 u5576&#13;
1971). Ninety thousand summer jobs are listed for 197l. Get the&#13;
jump on the competition! &#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
T;pewri.ter - manual $55.00. 652-7482. 3&#13;
; Boots - Dunham. Size 10'h $15.00. 654-&#13;
6496. 3&#13;
Wig - Short, Brown. $12.00. 652-5977 after&#13;
3&#13;
7p.m,&#13;
;;ooe Coat size 42, light brown $30. 657-&#13;
5992, 3&#13;
SkUs. Hart Javelin 210 em $150. Kneisse&#13;
Ilfd Stars 205 em $140. Hart Camern Giant&#13;
Slalom 190 em $140. Reigble Boots Size 9&#13;
.\110,110. Call ext 395. 3&#13;
Slti Boots, size 8 $10.00; ski pants size 16&#13;
$ll.IIO,886-4008after4p.m. '3&#13;
Slide Rule$12.50. information center. 3&#13;
TyperwrilersandAdders, Gene639-8636./&#13;
Camera - Polaroid 180 $85.00. Information&#13;
center 3&#13;
Nobel 12 Guage Deer Slayer, shot gun&#13;
175,110 or trade for 20 Guage auto, 658-3491. 3&#13;
Book - Want to Buy. The Elizabethean&#13;
W...ld Piclure by Tillyard. 632-7945 after&#13;
5:30p.m. 3&#13;
SkiJacket- Medium $40. Mu((y 532-7700. 3&#13;
PoolQue 18 oz. 694-5823.&#13;
TheTomainePalace "Where Gormets Eat&#13;
For a Real Eal T-ieat". Try our Filet of&#13;
Murcury. Only75 cenls. 3&#13;
For Evenings of fun contact Bill 652-8230.&#13;
Be Descreet!. 3&#13;
GolfBalls - W (lOxlO) 3 for $1.00 or 20 for&#13;
16.110. Jerry 654-8716. from 5 p.m,-7 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday or Thursdays. 3&#13;
Ski Boots - Kollach size 8'h. $35,00. 657-&#13;
6316, 3&#13;
Aquarium 50 Gal. with stand. 657-6602. 3&#13;
Wanted -' Light weigbt bicycle frame.&#13;
Fork incl, 27" mus! have pin type&#13;
sprockel. 657·7683 Steve Monday and&#13;
Wednesday after 9 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday,&#13;
Friday, after 6 p.m. 3&#13;
Wanted- 35 rom. single lens reflex with&#13;
electric eye under $100. Bill 639-1485. 3&#13;
Honda Scrambler "69" 450 cc. 652-5977&#13;
aller 7 p. m. 3&#13;
MUSICAL&#13;
Bass Guitar - Gibson and Eko call Ed 633-&#13;
4648 3&#13;
Bass &amp; Guitar-Eko. Tom 633-7603. 3&#13;
Guitar &amp; Amp- Gibson $150.654-8030. 3&#13;
Violin &amp; two Bows $50.00 or best offer. Bob&#13;
Seitz. 639-5297. 3&#13;
Harmony Stella 12 String Guitar and Case.&#13;
150.00. 633-ClO42. 3&#13;
Knabe Piano. Parlor Grand 6'4".639-0464.&#13;
3&#13;
Guitar - Epithone, Classical. must sell.&#13;
$60.694-6168,. 3&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Male. Mon,-Fri, 11:30 a.m.'1:3O p.m. Spot&#13;
Dnve 10 Apply in Person. 2117-75th street,&#13;
KenOSha. 3&#13;
Peoplelowork on Ads for Newscope - and&#13;
anYlhing else. Will train. 3&#13;
-&#13;
SITUATIONS WANTED&#13;
Will tutor. French and German. Frank&#13;
KUitschen.63!Hl346. 3&#13;
Typing 50 cents per sheet. Paper supplied&#13;
658-2203.12-1,4:30-5:30. 3&#13;
Term papers typed - 40 cents per sheel.&#13;
654-&amp;191. 3&#13;
Typing - all kinds. 633-0304.&#13;
Typing. 652-0418.&#13;
Backbreaking work wanted - call Samson&#13;
652-8791. 3&#13;
WANTED TO BUY&#13;
Pidgeon Hole desk. 654-3447. 3&#13;
Used Viola Standard size. 639-6164. 3&#13;
Gas stove - cheap Rita's mother. 6M3170,&#13;
3&#13;
ANTIQUES - Depression Glass (BP&#13;
green or red) will pay reasonable prices&#13;
652-5133. 3&#13;
ROOMMATES WANTED&#13;
3&#13;
To share furnished house near downtown&#13;
Kenosha. $45 plus utilities. Immediate&#13;
occupancy, 694-0171. 3&#13;
To share 2 bedroom apt. $50.00 per month.&#13;
Heat and electricity and phone. 652-9720.&#13;
Before 10 a.m, or after 4 p.m. occupancy&#13;
Feb. 71.&#13;
Basement apt. 1232 Marquette St. $40 per&#13;
month. contact Ken Konkol at Newscope&#13;
o((ice. 3&#13;
20 Vol. Encyclopedia. Contact Ken Konkol&#13;
at Newscope office. 3&#13;
RIDES NEEDED&#13;
To Denver during semester break. Warren&#13;
652-4177. or 652-5200. 3&#13;
To Hanoi - after war .. Contact Dick Nixon&#13;
or Lyndon Johnson or hoth. 3&#13;
CARS&#13;
vw -68 Auto, Radio. 654-£536.&#13;
Chevelle - 64. $190. 654-2615.&#13;
Ford - 65 Van. Pat 632-1750. Mornings or&#13;
3&#13;
after 5.&#13;
Hornet-I970, $1975. 652-3732.&#13;
Chev.lmpala - "65". isJ, automatic. $6OOj&#13;
658-4861. Ext. 211.&#13;
V&#13;
"65" Tom Lafave 658·3491. Metro an - .&#13;
CamPer, Delivery, service. 3&#13;
b d r&#13;
"65" $325 Tom Leafave. 658- Am assa o· 3&#13;
3491.&#13;
. t "64" $300 G58--8043. 3 PontIac - Tempes .&#13;
I&#13;
"59" $7500 632-£490. Needs Chrys er - .' . 3&#13;
power Steering repaIr.&#13;
. "65" 4 sp. auto, $125 or best pontIac - . 3&#13;
0((er.694-1434.&#13;
T&#13;
"67" 343-4BBL. 4sp. Mags.&#13;
Rebel SS - 3&#13;
694-2407.&#13;
Bee "69" 363-4BBL. Auto Trans. :i,:. Inquire Super America. 370HO~&#13;
St.&#13;
bl "64" wagon, stick $200. 694·&#13;
Ramer- 3&#13;
0714.&#13;
World Affairs Course Offering Finalized&#13;
Plans are 00.... compleh for tI' I~:&#13;
program of the l'TER \TlO' \1.&#13;
COLLEGE " COPE, .. \GE' and Ibe&#13;
course offerings have been finalized The&#13;
program has been divided up mto three&#13;
separate entities, the prmg semester. the&#13;
Summer Sessions. and the Fall Semester&#13;
Full credit courses 10 World AHairs at&#13;
ICC in prihg 1971 include: Afncan&#13;
History. Modern Russian HI hX)' w'lh a&#13;
two week tour in Leningrad included. All&#13;
World Seminar, and Individual Tutona!.&#13;
Camaro - "69" 327 hp. Auto. Trans 6S4~&#13;
8411. afler4:3O. 3&#13;
Chev. - "60". SliD. 1m Shimkus 639-&#13;
6849. 3&#13;
3&#13;
Wanted - Fronl end for '61 Che''Y Call&#13;
634-7800 after 6 p.m, 3&#13;
8-Track car Stereo S45.oo. Buz639-1655. 3&#13;
3 Mags - MIC. 4-6"xI4". $75 or o((er 654-&#13;
8517. 3&#13;
-- Snow Tires - Used. 2 Firestone 6.95x14_&#13;
$15; 2 Firestooe6.95x14. $10. Call Ext. 395.3&#13;
Snow tires - Used. 6.50xt3. $:;. 632-£678&#13;
~~L 3&#13;
2 tires - 825-15. ew: Jerry Gnmes 654-&#13;
2309. 3&#13;
Tires for Ramb. or Ford. Rims Too. 'f!!W.&#13;
652-7553. 3&#13;
Tires: 2-8.25Xl4, SIS; 2-J-7D-14, $70. 694-0714&#13;
or 2516-82 SI. Kenos~a. 3&#13;
Snowtires - studded for Mustang $30. 657-&#13;
5660 after5. 3&#13;
Wanted - G(H;5 Falcon, 1 have engme Ed&#13;
Carey 877-3220. 3&#13;
APARTMENTS FOR RENT&#13;
OR HOUSES FOR SALE&#13;
Wanted i.n nice area for young married&#13;
couple. 1 Bed. furnished or 2 bed. un·&#13;
furnished. Bill 633-0724. 3&#13;
Mobile Home - 2 bedroom partially&#13;
furnished. 10'x55'. 652-0075. $2.500.00. 3&#13;
STEREO EQUIPMENT&#13;
. hjslor') pohli or e . i'&#13;
Danish SOCial or pohu at IIf&#13;
In Ihe summer of 197\ ICC 1'.11 aller&#13;
SUmmrr Tour of rth('rn and I:- a 'I'm&#13;
EurolM' a t....o month portunlt to&#13;
plore life In thE&gt; . an navsan weltar&#13;
states. the socialist countrt or F' n&#13;
Europe. the t: 'R Poland Itomam&#13;
HunRar~ Czecnoslo\'akl3 and tht'" dl' d&#13;
cnv of Berlin A . horter tour I a,alabh:&#13;
for Lhose ....ho " I.h (0 e the highli hf 01&#13;
, 'orthern Europe out .de Copen&#13;
And finally, for those inter 'l'd 10 1 r&#13;
rung about Darush 11ft' "I: offer Ih&#13;
Stamm""... ion i.n Ot-nmark.&#13;
The Fall Semester or .971 1',11 orrer \11&#13;
World minar. a course 10 ~orld&#13;
Re\.'oluuonary .Io,·emen . and thp tn.&#13;
dh idul Stminar. Dam. h tudtes ~dI81\&#13;
an mu-odecucn to Dam. h life and culture&#13;
Dtscessiees about lndJ8 1',11 arrartlled&#13;
m preparation (or an optional lud~ Tour&#13;
0/ India planned for the seven-w k penod&#13;
between Fall and pnng m 1,." The&#13;
Dani mi.nar meludes lOten \ 10&#13;
strUction In lhe Dam language nd I&#13;
talon a Dam h Folkschool I' rt' onll&#13;
Dani h 1S spoken Danl h lan((ual&#13;
courses are available In Lh lhe Fall and&#13;
Spring Semesters and dunng the ummft'&#13;
Session and art open lo all Int~ ted&#13;
students VanaliOIb on these progr.m~.&#13;
mcludmg a (arm sta)'. are descnbed m th&#13;
brochure.&#13;
ICC comblnes lectur . ('mmar and&#13;
d1scussions. field tnps and tXCW".IO \\ lth&#13;
lhe opporluruty or gath('nn~ 'lall~\\lib&#13;
students from Denmark and odwl' fOn"ltul&#13;
countnes. all In an e((orl to .."t"illllplt h Ihr&#13;
desired goals of ICC In"- rnallonal&#13;
knowledge, understandlng .• nd lnrod 'lip&#13;
ICC uses the Informal approa"'h In ord&lt;r 10&#13;
create a more t1mulal1n alm ptwrr&#13;
Interesled students are encouragt."C1 10&#13;
~Tile for further information 10 Ie.&#13;
Henntng enS Aile 68. 2900 H IIcrup,&#13;
Copenhagen, Denmark Or contacl lh&#13;
XEWSCOPE&#13;
and&#13;
tl'd&#13;
that 2.203 students (rom 103 nattar. aN"&#13;
currently enrolled on Ibe 'adiSOO campu&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
10&amp;&#13;
WXFM FM&#13;
8-12 P.M.&#13;
Weekdays&#13;
(IT'S GOOD)&#13;
3&#13;
Are Beillg&#13;
$Ell YOUR BOOK&#13;
The Week of JlIlI, 25-2&lt;)tb (rilllll,)&#13;
3&#13;
3 Jr!"e If'ill BII) Blick ThOle Book, W'bitb&#13;
sed \ ext emolt r.&#13;
Top Prices Paid - Cash&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
;;--wri.ter - manual $55.00. 652-7482. 3&#13;
Ski Boots_ Dunham. Size 101/2 $15.00, 654-&#13;
6495- 3&#13;
Wig- Short, Brown. $12.00. 652-5977 after&#13;
7p.m. 3&#13;
suede coat size 42, light brown $30. 657-&#13;
5992. 3&#13;
iis. Hart Javelin 210 cm $150. Kneisse&#13;
Red Stars 205 cm $140. Hart Camero Giant&#13;
Slalom 190 ·cm $140. Reighle Boots Size 9&#13;
.$90.00. Call ext 395. 3&#13;
Ski Boots, size 8 $10.00; ski pants size 16&#13;
$1! oo. 886-4008 after 4 p.m. 3&#13;
Slide Rule $12.50. information center. 3&#13;
ryperwriters and Adders. Gene 639-8636. /&#13;
' Camera - Polaroid 180 $85.00. Information&#13;
center 3&#13;
obel 12 Guage Deer Slayer, shot gun&#13;
$75.00 or trade for 20 Guage auto. 658-3491. 3&#13;
Book - Want to Buy. The Elizabethean&#13;
World Picture by Tillyard. 632-7945 after&#13;
5:30p.m. 3&#13;
Ski Jacket-Medium $40. Muffy 532-7700. 3&#13;
Pool Que 18 oz. 694-5823. 3&#13;
TheTomaine Palace "Where Gormets Eat&#13;
For a Real Eat Treat". Try our Filet of&#13;
Murcury. Only 75 cents. 3&#13;
For Evenings of fun contact Bill 652-8230.&#13;
Be Descreet ! . 3&#13;
Golf Balls - 20 (l0xlO) 3 for $1.00 or 20 for&#13;
$6.00. Jerry 654-8716. from 5 p.m.-7 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday or Thursdays. 3&#13;
ki Boots - Koflach size 8½. $35.00. 657-&#13;
6316. 3&#13;
Aquarium 50 Gal. with stand. 657-6602. 3&#13;
Wanted - Light weight bicycle frame.&#13;
Fork incl. 27" must have pin type&#13;
procket. 657-7683 Steve Monday and&#13;
Wednesday after 9 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday,&#13;
Friday, after6 p.m. 3&#13;
Wanted - 35 mm. single lens reflex with&#13;
electric eye under $100. Bill 639-1485. 3&#13;
Honda Scrambler "69" 450 cc. 652-5977&#13;
after 7 p.m. 3&#13;
MUSICAL&#13;
Bass Guitar - Gibson and Eko call Ed 633-&#13;
4648 3&#13;
Ba &amp; Guitar - Eko. Tom 633-7603. 3&#13;
Guitar &amp; Amp- Gibson $150. 654-8030. 3&#13;
Violin &amp; two Bows $50.00 or best offer. Bob&#13;
Seitz. 639-5297. 3&#13;
Harmony Stella 12 String Guitar and Case.&#13;
$50.oo. 633-0042. 3&#13;
Knabe Piano. Parlor Grand 6'4" . 639-0464.&#13;
3&#13;
Guitar - Epithone, Classical. must sell.&#13;
$60. 694-6168. 3&#13;
HELP WANTE-D&#13;
M3;Ie. '.'1on.-Fri, 11 :30 a .m.-1 :30 p.m. Spot&#13;
Drive in Apply in Person. 2117-75th street,&#13;
Kenosha. 3&#13;
People to work on Ads for Newscope - and&#13;
anything else. Will train. 3&#13;
SITUATIONS WANTED&#13;
Will tutor. French and German. Frank&#13;
Kuitschen. 639-0346. 3&#13;
Typing 50 cents per sheet. Paper ·supplied&#13;
658-2203.12-1,4:30-5:30. 3&#13;
Term papers· typed - 40 cents per sheet.&#13;
654-6491. 3&#13;
World Affairs Course Offering Finalized&#13;
Camaro - " " 327 hp. Auto. Tra&#13;
8411. after-t:30.&#13;
Chev. - "60". $110 . . tark&#13;
6849.&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
Wanted - Front end for '61 Che\'y. C 11&#13;
634-7860 after6 p.m. 3&#13;
Typing- all kinds. 633--0304. 3 8-Track carStereoS45 .. Buz63!H65S. 3&#13;
Typing. 652-0418. 3&#13;
Backbreaking work wanted- call Samson&#13;
652-8791. 3&#13;
WANTED TO BUY&#13;
fags - A! IC. 4-6' xH". S.5 or offer. •&#13;
85i7. 3&#13;
Snow tires - Used. 6.S(l."13. $5. 632~&#13;
Pidgeon Hole desk. 654-3447. 3 after 5. 3&#13;
Used Viola Standard size. 639-6164. 3&#13;
Gas stove - cheap Rita's mother. 654-&#13;
3170. 3&#13;
ANTIQUES - Depression Glass (BP&#13;
green or red) will pay reasonable prices&#13;
652-5133. 3&#13;
ROOMMATES WANTED&#13;
To share furnished house near downtown&#13;
Kenosha. $45 plus utilities. Immediate&#13;
occupancy. 694-0171. 3&#13;
To share 2 bedroom apt. $50.00 per month.&#13;
Heat and electricity and phone. 652-9720.&#13;
Before 10 a .m. or after 4 p.m. occupancy&#13;
Feb. 71.&#13;
Basement apt. 1232 Marquette St. $40 per&#13;
month. contact Ken Konkol at ewscope&#13;
office. 3&#13;
20 Vol. Encyclopedia. Contact Ken Konkol&#13;
at Newscope office. 3&#13;
RIDES NEEDED&#13;
2 tires - 825-15. , ·ew: Jerry Grim . 654-&#13;
2309. S&#13;
Tires for Ramb. or Ford. Rims Too . . '&#13;
652-7553. 3&#13;
Tires: 2-8.25X14. $15; 2-J-i0-14, $70. 694--0714&#13;
or 2516-82 St. Kenos~a . 3&#13;
Snowtires - studded for . 1ustang . 657-&#13;
5660 after 5. 3&#13;
Wanted - 60-65 Falcon. I have engin Ed&#13;
Carey 877-3220. 3&#13;
Wanted in nice area for young married&#13;
couple. 1 Bed. furni hed or 2 bed. unfurnished.&#13;
Bill633-0i2-t. 3&#13;
Mobile Home - 2 bedroom partially&#13;
furnished. 10'x55'. 652--0075. 2,500. 3&#13;
3&#13;
106&#13;
WXFMFM&#13;
B-12 P.M.&#13;
Every Thursday, 10:45 a .m. Kenosha to Wanted - Free Stereo mu l ha\'e G rrard&#13;
Sturtevant. Willing to share expenses. 886- turn-table, Fischer tun r-amp, El tro Weekdays&#13;
(IT'S GOOD 2523 after 5 p.m. Sue Kasparek. 3 voice peakers. Will no ccept u ed _______________ .. equipment. Contact Bill Cippola. 3&#13;
To Denver during semester break. Warren&#13;
652-4177. or 652-5200. 3&#13;
To Hanoi . after war .. Contact Dick Nixon&#13;
or Lyndon Johnson or hoth. 3&#13;
CARS&#13;
VW - 68Auto, Radio. 654-6536. 3&#13;
Chevelle - 64. $190. 654-2615. 3&#13;
Ford - 65 Van. Pat 632-1750. Mornings or&#13;
3 after 5.&#13;
Hornet - 1970. $1975. 652-3732. 3&#13;
Chev. Impala - "65" . 283, automatic. $6003&#13;
658-4861. Ext. 211.&#13;
tr V .. 65.. Tom Lafave 658-3491. Me o an - · Camper, Delivery, service. 3&#13;
b dor .. 65 .. $325 Tom Leafave. 658- Am assa · 3&#13;
3491.&#13;
Pontiac -Tempest "64" $300. 658-8043. 3&#13;
1 "59" $75 00 632-6490 .• 'eeds Chrys er - . · · 3&#13;
Power Steering repair.&#13;
. ..65.. 4 sp auto. $125 or be t Pontiac - · · 3&#13;
offer. 694-1434.&#13;
SST "67" 343-4BBL. 4sp. lags. Rebel - 3&#13;
694-2407.&#13;
B .. 69.. 3S3-4BBL. Auto Trans. Super ee A erlca 370HiOth $2·,100. Inquire Super m · .3&#13;
St.&#13;
.. 64 .. wagon stick $200. 694· Rambler - ' 3&#13;
0714.&#13;
$ELL YOUR BOOK&#13;
Th Jr e k oj.J 111 .... -... &lt;Jib (l·iu ,I)&#13;
Jt' lJ''i/1811 B1 Tho Boo II bi l&#13;
,. B ,,,,, . d xi m Jer.&#13;
Top Prices Paid - Cash&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE &#13;
Whose Southern Strategy?&#13;
Taken SImply. the apporntmenl 01 John&#13;
Connall~ Secrelary or the Treasury is&#13;
an mpl 01 the "Soulllem Strateg)'" as&#13;
... bod b~ Ke\ln PllIlllp" Conally is a&#13;
ron 1*\ all\ ~mocrat ..rho represents&#13;
th ue bl polillcal advantages ollered&#13;
b) III tat 01 Tex Moreover, he is&#13;
L~ndon Johnson' proteg and L)'lldon is&#13;
th r ,t ader of the conservati\'e faction&#13;
.,r OemocUtlC politi Ob\1ously a deal&#13;
Im,l r to III tram Thurmond courtship&#13;
lik I)' Is Conally a pos illle V'C.,.&#13;
Pr Id nllal eandidate lor the&#13;
R Ii n' The pro t I tntrtgumg&#13;
ould n out k n hlleral receIVe lIle '72&#13;
£'&gt;tom r lie nomlOahon lhere i a deftrutt&#13;
.btlil) III I L B J may bolt hi part)'&#13;
dId hI ror to Ntxon Thl, 01&#13;
COO ... oold gwe J hnson 8 direct hne to&#13;
III \\hlt H • nd Irom a much safer&#13;
'III '" Ol Il&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Ileft' 'v. Itl d"&#13;
1,;1 .. 1,1 I I hI; !lund'&#13;
ll"~1'1..1) Ih,'I..lnt ,'n the&#13;
he 1_ '"1.1) lh~ .J1lI\..'&#13;
t rtl un nul her nuke&#13;
*l I th lhtrcr~nl,;C'.&#13;
Ih l th-: \l:r\ 1010'&#13;
t\'nhh111lt:rKIC&#13;
A I ,,/1(", '1m I \tJlUuh&#13;
", 'no lhe- II her 125&#13;
Ill.: III I \:t1mpkh.' \ \1&#13;
l l:f ',l 1u I (coh,:,&#13;
It ,l. ., grl,.·,II.1 II tlnnd ...&#13;
See and Hear&#13;
Fisher Stereo'&#13;
M a:t' \,.&#13;
f I \1 n.1 I \1&#13;
.: 1111 II I ,n,1 Ie In&#13;
, nl-tnd .... II "'oJCC" • 4&#13;
hi \&gt;11 m2lh. T'HnlOlblc&#13;
w h l (nlful \nlt'Loll&#13;
\ I I 'lil ,II _ I"",&#13;
h ,11 111y\I,ul,;hrJ T....o&#13;
\\ 01) ... ;Il..('r .....'u·m .. _ Full&#13;
\ (olnr ""llh T.re' :In'"&#13;
P '11 I XI ""&#13;
Hammond Organ&#13;
StudIOS of Kenosha&#13;
Ill; 1&gt;1/,11\/&#13;
1&gt;511IiWI&#13;
position (health wrise} than that he would&#13;
have sbould he consider running himself&#13;
las hIS brolher Sam Houston Johnson has&#13;
s~ested).&#13;
There is also an aspect to Conally's&#13;
appointment which seems 01 Iittle, but at&#13;
least some significance, In light 01 Mr.&#13;
Nixon's admitted conversion to Keynesian&#13;
Economics. and the nature of government&#13;
spending during the Johnson Admmistration&#13;
(50 billion dollar deficit), the&#13;
move can be seen as ixon's act of&#13;
..tokenism" to Democratic criticism of his&#13;
economic policies. Alter all, Cortnally IS a&#13;
Democrat, albeit Southern and conservative.&#13;
but -more important&#13;
representative 01 lIle "good old days"&#13;
under I.BJ. Illlle economy does improve&#13;
Nixon can extole Conally's role to conservalive&#13;
Oemocrats. oller him the V,P.&#13;
job and lurther his standing in lIle con·&#13;
servative Democratic opinion. On the&#13;
olher hand, il the economy does not&#13;
rebound. he can diplomatically admit that&#13;
the problem was bigger than bolll parties&#13;
and lhereby attempl 10 quiet liberal&#13;
Democratic criticism.&#13;
There is, however, a fly that may loom in&#13;
lIle proverbial ~inlment. That fly is Ed·&#13;
mWld Muskie, At the moment Muskie&#13;
enjo)'s a pr-ecarious position in the&#13;
Democratic Party. He represents both a&#13;
part of Lheconservative Johnson faction of&#13;
the party, primarily because of his&#13;
position on the last ticket, and a part of the&#13;
liberal lachon associated with liberal New&#13;
England pohlics represenled best by Ted&#13;
Kennedy His ability 10 please both sides&#13;
rna)' pave lIle .. a) lor a presidential nod in&#13;
1972 Should HE choose John Connally lor&#13;
V.P. as Kennedy chose Johnsoo. in 1960,&#13;
thereby reconciling the factions of his&#13;
party. Richard 'lxon could be in big&#13;
trouble. The simplicity of the "Southern&#13;
Stralegy" may be severely disrupted by&#13;
northern Democratic utilization of the&#13;
same lheme.&#13;
FORUM&#13;
Let me make an initial assumption -&#13;
Parkside is a physical structure. It can be&#13;
visualized; the symbol for which it stands&#13;
can be felt. The attitudes it generates&#13;
verge on the provincial, the obscure, the&#13;
absurd&#13;
Isolated between lwo lunch·bucket&#13;
towns is an institution which creates instant&#13;
greatness to ensure its status' emphasizes&#13;
creativity and originality ~ith a&#13;
curriclJlum designed to mass produce&#13;
programmed machines; and which&#13;
stresses the values and standards that&#13;
exemplify its depravity.&#13;
Parkside, to be sure, was conceived in a&#13;
drunken nightmare by the greatest intellects&#13;
~vailable - in the 13th century.&#13;
These wily old men have assumed that&#13;
what w,\s good enough for lIlem is good&#13;
enough for all,&#13;
Dennis Cashion&#13;
Save a little bread each week and&#13;
your fortune will be fair.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOaATION&#13;
Oownjown Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN AVENUE&#13;
West Side Office&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
furlller ahead of most of hi&#13;
contemporary rock, Slylelisti~!leers ill&#13;
.potpourri of musical tastes ~, it iI.&#13;
purist jazz to Sha-Na.Na b~tr~tng IrOQ,&#13;
genius of Zappa, ' retain Iltt&#13;
A lew highlights, , ,&#13;
"Would you go all the w&#13;
U,S,A,)" - pure Reuhen and:;; ?or Iltt&#13;
predictable lyrics, e ets With&#13;
In "Rudy Wants' to Buy Ye&#13;
Zappa. b~tows a very large s~~ Drink"&#13;
musicians muon-very artist] t to the&#13;
produced, c and "oil&#13;
"Transylvania Boogie" is an&#13;
Zappa's distinctive style il itc"xamJlit"&#13;
that he has a distinctive ~tyle at".:hbe Slid&#13;
good song, but not great. ' It q.&#13;
II"Twenty SmaU Cigars" w , asthe ......&#13;
song on the album, It would still be -~,&#13;
the price. w&lt;Wth&#13;
The purpose of this article w&#13;
talk of a particular album but as notto&#13;
talk of a particular man It rath.,. 10&#13;
misWlderstood, misinterpr~ted e l8 vel}&#13;
derrated. Think about that whe~ and ....&#13;
to "Chunga's Revenge," YlMl -&#13;
BY Bob Borchardt&#13;
Chunga's Revenge- Frank Zappa&#13;
It's been said that Frank Zappa lulfills a&#13;
social purpose; a sort of musical Lenny&#13;
Bruce, Many people undoubtedly feel that&#13;
if they were to order a Zappa album from&#13;
the Record-oC.the-month club, it would&#13;
arrive in a plain brown wrapper along with&#13;
an order blank for PLAYBOY magazine, II&#13;
we are to be completely honest about it,&#13;
we'd have to admit that lor aU you poeple&#13;
who like to sit around and snicker at his&#13;
lyriCS, Zappa's latest album, "Chunla'S&#13;
Revenge" won't disappoint you.&#13;
But keeping with this same honest&#13;
policy, we would also have to point out a&#13;
few things that may surprise all you obsenily&#13;
fans, When lIle 1970 Down Beat&#13;
Readers Poll came. out last month, Frank&#13;
zappa;&#13;
1. Was named Pop musician of the year.&#13;
2, Ranked among the top five in both&#13;
arranging and composing.&#13;
3, Had 3 albums among the top ten.&#13;
4, Was well up in the guitar listings,&#13;
5. Led the Mothers of Invention to a&#13;
ranking in the top rock category.&#13;
Maybe they know something you don't.&#13;
Maybe lIley know what to listen to,&#13;
Believe it or not, some people actually&#13;
listen to Zappa's music. They take his&#13;
satire for what it is; a condemnation of&#13;
tasteless, mindless, musical trash and&#13;
then take his music for what it is: a successful&#13;
attempt at creating just plain&#13;
beautiful sounds,&#13;
Zappa, above all else, is a serious&#13;
musician. Anyone that can write an entire&#13;
movie score at age 18, doesn't spend all his&#13;
time sitting around thinking up ribald&#13;
limericks and it certainly wasn't limericks&#13;
lIlat Zubin Metha, conductor 01 the L, A.&#13;
Symphony orchestra, had in mind when he&#13;
praised him as "one of the greatest&#13;
musical geniuses of our time."&#13;
With this in mind, listen to "Chunga's&#13;
Revenge." Don't try to convince yourself&#13;
that it's just a comedy album. Zappa has&#13;
never been a comedian. For once listen to&#13;
him as he intended. Listen to his guitar&#13;
work on "Road Ladies". Surprise yourself&#13;
with the artistry on "20 Small Cigars."&#13;
You can't help but appreciate it. Although&#13;
as ~ ~hol~, "Revenge" isn't as great an&#13;
arhstic triumph as his first three albums&#13;
it still contains innovations which ar~ eBank&#13;
of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lathrop A¥ •. ; .'odne. Wi,e.nlt.&#13;
Students get red carpet servict&#13;
(SO does everyone else')&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHO&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 day.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
[Ray [Radigan ~&#13;
OJ)onk!J 900J&#13;
For&#13;
ReservatiollS&#13;
Phone&#13;
694-0455&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS·. TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU Of • • •&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican'fOOfl ;s fun food&#13;
so Ta~o Kings are fun p'ade~';&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
HAT 1ME SIGN OF 1ME CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 6SH7lT&#13;
Whose Southern Strategy?&#13;
111&#13;
A&#13;
25&#13;
-FM Stereo&#13;
usic Center&#13;
H mmond Organ&#13;
Studios of Kenosha&#13;
1 / 1 f&gt;(Jr/1 ·,.&#13;
b58 I OJ&#13;
FORUM&#13;
Let me make an initial assumption -&#13;
P_ar . ide is a phy ical tructure. It can be&#13;
v1. ualized; the ymbol for which it stands&#13;
can be felt. The attitude it generates&#13;
verge on the pro,·incial. the obscure, the&#13;
ab ·urd.&#13;
I olated between two lunch-bucket&#13;
town. i an in titut1on which creates intant&#13;
greatnes. to ensure its tatus· empha&#13;
izes creativity and originality ;ith a&#13;
curricylum designed to mass produce&#13;
programmed machines; and which&#13;
tr the values and standards that&#13;
e. emplify its depra\;tv.&#13;
Park ide, to be ure, ·was conceh·ed in a&#13;
drunken nightmare by the greatest intell&#13;
cts ~vailable - in the 13th century.&#13;
Th · \\1ly old men have as urned that&#13;
what • good enough for them is good&#13;
enough for all.&#13;
Dennis Cashion&#13;
Save a little bread each week and&#13;
your fortune will be fair.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
Downtown Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN AVENUE&#13;
West Side Office&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
1,c.&#13;
BY Bob Borchardt&#13;
Chunga's Rev~nge-Frank Zapp~&#13;
It's been said that Frank Zappa fulfills a&#13;
social purpose; a sort of musical Lenny&#13;
Bruce. Many people undoubtedly feel that&#13;
if they were to order a Zappa album from&#13;
the Record-of-th~month club, it would&#13;
arrive in a plain brown wrapper along with&#13;
an order blank for PLAYBOY magazine. If&#13;
we are to be completely honest about it,&#13;
we'd have to admit that for all you poeple&#13;
who like to sit around and snicker at his&#13;
lyrics, Zappa's latest album, "Chunta's&#13;
Revenge" won't disappoint you.&#13;
But keeping with this same honest&#13;
policy, we would also have to point out a&#13;
few things that may surprise all you obsenity&#13;
fans. When the 1970 Down Beat&#13;
Readers Poll came out last month, Frank&#13;
Zappa;&#13;
1. Was named Pop musician of the year.&#13;
2. Ranked among the top five in both&#13;
arranging and composing.&#13;
3. Had 3 albums among the top ten.&#13;
4. Was well up in the guitar listings.&#13;
5. Led the Mothers of Invention to a&#13;
ranking in the top rock category.&#13;
faybe they know something you don't.&#13;
Maybe they know what to listen to.&#13;
Believe it or not, some people actually&#13;
listen to Zappa's music. They take his&#13;
satire for what it is; a condemnation of&#13;
tasteless, mindless, musical trash and&#13;
then take his music for what it is: a successful&#13;
attempt at creating just plain&#13;
beautiful sounds.&#13;
Zappa, above all else, is a serious&#13;
musician. Anyone that can write an entire&#13;
movie score at age 18, doesn't spend all his&#13;
time sitting around thinking up ribald&#13;
limericks and it certainly wasn't limericks&#13;
that Zubin Metha, conductor of the L. A.&#13;
Symphony orchestra, had in mind when he&#13;
praised him as "one of the greatest&#13;
musical geniuses of our time."&#13;
further ahead of most of his&#13;
contemporary rock. Stylelisrcan!&gt;e~rs&#13;
potpourri of musical tastes I r, It is a&#13;
purist jazz to Sha-Na-Na b~t r~?ing frotn&#13;
genius of Zappa. ' a retain the&#13;
A few highlights ...&#13;
"Would you go all the w&#13;
U.S.A.)" - pure Reuben and~ &lt;for the&#13;
predictable lyrics. . e Jets v.i&#13;
In "Rudy Wants to Buy y&#13;
Zappa bestows a very largeezha DriJt,. . . ' . s aft lo&#13;
mus1c1ans uruon-very artist" the&#13;
produced. IC and v.&#13;
"Transylvania Boogie" is an Zappa's distinctive style if it cexarnp1e0f&#13;
that he has a distinctive ~tyle at~ be&#13;
good song, but not great. · It a&#13;
If "Twenty Small Cigars" wa t&#13;
song o~ the album, it would stills behe On!)&#13;
the price. v.&#13;
The purpose of this article w talk of a particular album but as not to&#13;
talk f . , rather&#13;
o a particular man H . to . d · elS\&#13;
m1sun erstood, misinterpreted ery&#13;
derrated. Think about that whe~ aoo_&#13;
to "Chunga's Revenge." YOU h&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
270-4 Lot/,rop AYe., lto&lt;ine, Wi,cont/n&#13;
Students get red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else'}&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHO&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
rR.ay rR.adt·gan ~&#13;
With this in mind, listen to "Chunga's @ onder/ul 9 ooJ&#13;
Revenge." Don't try to convince yourself&#13;
that it's just a comedy album. Zappa has&#13;
never been a comedian. For once listen to&#13;
him as he intended. Listen to his guitar&#13;
work on "Road Ladies". Surprise yourself&#13;
with the artistry on "20 Small Cigars."&#13;
You can't help but appreciate it. Although&#13;
as ~ "."hol~, "Revenge" isn't as great an artistic triumph as his first three albums&#13;
it still contains innovations which ar~ •&#13;
.,.._ ____________ ,,,&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS . • TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARR-Y OUT&#13;
,, Mexican food is fun food&#13;
so Taco Kings are fun pla;e;,;&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
•Ar THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 6S4-S'117&#13;
• • • </text>
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              <text>Slate of Candidates</text>
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              <text>EE T&#13;
EDIT&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PAAKSIDE APRIL I 1971 VOLUME 3 HutroteER 10&#13;
SLATE&#13;
OF&#13;
CANDIDATES&#13;
President Recording Gary Davis Della Simpson&#13;
Tim Eaker Secretary Jeanette Dremel Tom Taskonis&#13;
David M. Karls David Weber George Fletcher Mark Timpany&#13;
Don Koser Corresponding Tom Garner Ed Toth&#13;
Ian MacTaggart Secretary John Gottfredsen Jack Tucker&#13;
Madeleine Thielen Sutton Kinter III K.enneth R. Konkol Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Vice Jean Koehler Michael Lofton Student Union&#13;
President&#13;
lYn Van Eimeren Senators Dean Loumos Committee&#13;
Ronn Williams Gary Adelsen Dale Martin Greg Barrette&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Mike Mayeshiba Ken Antaramian Tim Daley&#13;
D-ebbie Kemper Walt Breach Tom Meier Jerome Horton&#13;
larry Thielen Christopher Crowe David Scharneck Tom Kreul&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE APRIL 1 1971&#13;
President&#13;
Tim Eaker&#13;
David M. Karls&#13;
Don Koser&#13;
Ian MacTaggart&#13;
Madeleine Thielen&#13;
Vice&#13;
President&#13;
Lyn Van Eimeren&#13;
Ronn Williams&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
l&gt;ebbie Kemper&#13;
Larry Thielen&#13;
SLATE&#13;
OF&#13;
CANDIDATES&#13;
Recording Gary Davis&#13;
Secretary Jeanette Oremel&#13;
David Weber George Fletcher&#13;
Corresponding Tom Garner&#13;
Secretary John Gottfredsen&#13;
Sutton Kinter Ill K.enneth R. Konkol&#13;
Jean Koehler Michael Lofton&#13;
Senators Dean Loumos&#13;
Gary Adelsen Dale Martin&#13;
Ken Antaramian Mike Mayeshiba&#13;
Walt Breach Tom Meier&#13;
Christopher Crowe David Scharneck&#13;
0&#13;
Della Simpson&#13;
Tom Taskonis&#13;
Mark Timpany&#13;
Ed Toth&#13;
Jack Tucker&#13;
Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Student Union&#13;
Committee&#13;
Greg Barrette&#13;
Tim Daley&#13;
Jerome Horton&#13;
Tom KreuJ &#13;
Roaald (.R.E.) Williams&#13;
I.tform consists of no gimmicks,&#13;
MYp or promises to shake-up this&#13;
~,.ty What we need at Parkside is&#13;
""' .....tani greatness, hut just a little in- IllI":" the student body. If elected Vice-&#13;
~;':t Ihope to initiate programs of&#13;
~ti~ and recreational value to the&#13;
:;ots with the hope that these will inIOI&lt;5tStudenls&#13;
and make them want to&#13;
_.tiClpale. . . ~.uVice-President, I WIU try to give the&#13;
,...teat government power to check the&#13;
adDlinistration in decisions concerning&#13;
one! affecting the student population. We&#13;
the university and without us there&#13;
~ be 00 reason for Parkside to exist.&#13;
l1&gt;e administration must be made to&#13;
resli%ethis and give us power in the&#13;
deciSions that relate to us.&#13;
1will strive diligently to see that campus&#13;
,.curity people are disarmed. These men&#13;
are not trained law enforcement officers&#13;
on&lt;! giving them guns is giving them a&#13;
licft1Se to use them against students.&#13;
Finally Ihope to he able to influence the&#13;
etlDmil~ on the Parkside ~ission to&#13;
dta08e&#13;
the mission from feeding college&#13;
p:adualeS to the industrial community of&#13;
""theastem Wisconsin to giving aU&#13;
_ols a well-rounded education of&#13;
benefitto all areas of endeavor.&#13;
r Jean Koehler&#13;
Door People: .&#13;
1lte lack of an outstanding popular issue&#13;
in this campaign requires that a candidate&#13;
Ile experienced in recogniziog and dealing&#13;
with the obscure problems like those&#13;
created by Parkside's Administrative&#13;
lkIreaucracy. Iam fortunate in having had&#13;
opportunities to participate in and learn&#13;
from a number of political actions&#13;
beginning with Student Government at&#13;
Cue high school. I was active in the&#13;
wrilingandarlfor the spring strike during&#13;
the Cambodia invasion and last fall's&#13;
action where I learned some of the&#13;
methods of the administration while&#13;
participating in the negotiations with the&#13;
Qancellor. ] also work with the Racine&#13;
SWitthboarqin providing free abortion and&#13;
problem pregnancy counseling and&#13;
referral lor the people of the community. I&#13;
lint encoWltered the harsh realities that a&#13;
_nt laces seeking her rights when we&#13;
tried to wear slacks and were threatened&#13;
with expulsion, AU we wanted to be was&#13;
comfortable. Samething happened when I&#13;
tried to enler Parkside before I offically&#13;
~dualed. Parkside said O.K.; Case said&#13;
tbat was a no-no, Even though these vickries&#13;
were small Ilearned a lot about how&#13;
10 deal with Administrative Red Tape.&#13;
These experiences have also helped me&#13;
10 learn to recognize that the needs of the&#13;
studentand the aims of a bureaucracy are&#13;
"'I always tbe same. The UWP student&#13;
body's needs and interests have been&#13;
Ier:Ondary to the administrative goals of&#13;
lC'ademic greatness and efficiency,&#13;
U elected, I hope to serve you with a&#13;
jrOgram of inquiries that will help us to&#13;
rtsoIve the needs of the students and the&#13;
IrObiems created by administrative enta~ents.&#13;
In addition to the duties of&#13;
Vice President L)... \' •• Elmert'8&#13;
An Ul$t1tulJon"Nch 1O""'''~''&#13;
academiC frtoedom in an) 'AI) m be&#13;
reconslructed and c100dy ... Id&gt;&lt;d 10&#13;
lDSUf'e I pI"'OIreSSI\ a'Aare of r&#13;
SOClety&#13;
I f I thaI 1M ludtnl SeNte mus'&#13;
function 0 guo.nhon oflhr otudonl&#13;
","hon the It of 1M ~I Pork do&#13;
odmtOl trollon threol~ 0 luclenl. nchl&#13;
to be tought by on 0"ere ond nl _&#13;
faculty The ne,.I)'·formlng tud nl&#13;
Go\"ernment at P Ide must eslIbi&#13;
some s)sttrn 01 0" r lhe ad&#13;
muustrahon so thai fut~ Inlnnlg&lt;:ments&#13;
agOlnsl tbe udon and loculI not&#13;
occur&#13;
Th~ &lt;h&#13;
lud~nt G&#13;
ibIe opposed au p&#13;
trong. central tudm.t Co\: t"f1t nd&#13;
an erreeuve htuuon for Park&#13;
now M\e a tenuall effectlv on&#13;
sutuuon and I hope 10 0 1lUl(l udmt&#13;
Senate ~m e, b8 ed by 0 COCK'Un&#13;
studonl bod&#13;
CorrespondingSecretarY------t&#13;
1M besl th for 1M poop! ··If. ou don'l&#13;
tnov. - ou can"t act •• Tlm 1 mportant&#13;
1 ,.-ill do my t to el t.h Inform'lton&#13;
th~ peopl~ OS n a I con. so thaI Ih&lt;')&#13;
",-m better sen·~th peopl~ -)ou All I&#13;
can do IS try.&#13;
Vote UTl'O.' L. KUTER 111 for. our&#13;
CORRESPO,:Dl.'G ECRETARYand I&#13;
"ill try.&#13;
"IF Y DO, --T K. '011 YO . 'T&#13;
ACT"&#13;
the office set down by the constitution, I&#13;
will use the facilities of the position to:&#13;
1) Maintain Hason with government and&#13;
student groups on other campuses in an&#13;
effort to keep Parkside informed and&#13;
active in events and actions relevant to the&#13;
students.&#13;
2) To form committees to;&#13;
a) research, report and act on the&#13;
operations and the methods of Student&#13;
Activities.&#13;
b) investigate the contracts and&#13;
operations of the Auxiliary Enterprises.&#13;
such as the bookstore, and the utilization of&#13;
the funds gained from the concessions&#13;
patronized by the students.&#13;
3) Poll the students on their views&#13;
iregarding the quality of education and&#13;
service provided by the school and the&#13;
need for new and improved programs and&#13;
facilities for the students.&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Larry Thielen&#13;
There is little need for eIa,borate&#13;
statements concerning my conceptIons of&#13;
how student government shoul~ be&#13;
. ed S,'nce Iam seeking the ofhce of organlz . . ed J&#13;
treasurer suffice it to say that, If elect t&#13;
will serve in that capacity to the best of ~&#13;
abilities. I think that my backgrou&#13;
suggests that I have the capabilIties to do&#13;
th~:::'3 member of the Halloween Party&#13;
and fully support its programs and the&#13;
rograms of its presidential, ?1ndid~te.&#13;
~adeleine Thielen. It is crItically l;nrtant&#13;
that, in voting for candid~tes or&#13;
~dent office, considerationhohe gI;~dt~&#13;
choosing those candIdates w ~an&#13;
student government that functions as an&#13;
efficient tool of the student body,&#13;
Debbie Kemper&#13;
when you read a platform you&#13;
I SUi~~ear a lot of specific promiSes&#13;
expec I propose to promote. But&#13;
and programs a student government that&#13;
somehow. 10 't seems to&#13;
sently exists only on paper, I&#13;
~: that this kind of promising can only he&#13;
Sullon L. Kinlu 111&#13;
Policy Statemenl&#13;
The Corresponding Secretary has on~&#13;
hasic requirement to his office - and that&#13;
is, providing 1M necessary lOformation 10&#13;
the people involved and to plenty 01 time&#13;
Cor their consideralion. The Corresponding&#13;
Secretary must get any doeumenl 1M&#13;
Senate needs prInled and dJstnbuted to&#13;
them so that they can hetter ser .... the&#13;
Sludent Body by knowing what's going on&#13;
An uninformed Student Go\'ernment is no&#13;
government at all The COrTeSpondlOg&#13;
Secretary guarantees thaI the tudenl&#13;
Government has the papers It needs and on&#13;
time.&#13;
An uninformed Student Body 1 no&#13;
student body. but lorner te 0&#13;
zombies The CorrespondlOg secretAI')&#13;
must provide any information the tudent&#13;
Government feel lhe Sludent Body should&#13;
know about. The Corresponchng Secreta&lt;)&#13;
provides lhis pnnted material to the&#13;
people so lhat the people can do somethIng&#13;
about it. U it's not on lime - It'S no good&#13;
The Corresponding ecrelar)' 81 0&#13;
provides publicity about upe:ormng t\'enb&#13;
the Studenl Government IS sponsonn If&#13;
this information is inaccurate or latt. it lS&#13;
no good. Il must be on time lor il to he 01&#13;
any use.&#13;
There are part of the responsibihlles of&#13;
the Corresponding Secretary. I)' poliO) ,&#13;
to get the informotion prlOted and&#13;
distributed to lhe concerned peopl~ SO thaI&#13;
they have plenty olllme to slud)' II ond do&#13;
•&#13;
lounded on wishful thinking of possesstOg a&#13;
power not yet material, zed On these&#13;
grounds, I feel J can only Illve you my&#13;
ideas of what Iwould like to see happen to&#13;
our inCant student government and make It&#13;
clear that I'll do all Ican to really make It&#13;
work.&#13;
It seems that at ParksJde the main&#13;
problems confronting the ~tudent bod)&#13;
come baek to apathy and coofusion 01&#13;
who's in power and ....nat JXlW'ers \\e. as&#13;
studenlS, possess_ Therefore, "orlong lor&#13;
the growth of a strong studenl gO\'ernmenl&#13;
should bring about a centralization 01&#13;
student forces that would aUe,'iote most of&#13;
ourdisorganization; and concret~ projeCts&#13;
representative of the shxtenl VOice I,liould&#13;
bring about the realization of IMexteot 01&#13;
student power and should be a big step ,n&#13;
redoclDil apathy.&#13;
This probably all sounds like rhetorical&#13;
bullshit bUI I'm not going to promise&#13;
anyth;ng based on pov.-er as.:)'el untried ..l&#13;
can only establish thaI I'll try 10 make thIS&#13;
power become a reality and bring to&#13;
Parkside students the vOIce they deserve.&#13;
IRecording I&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Oa\id"f'~r&#13;
It IS hard to r rmulate an hrm hllal&#13;
postures for an ofl,ce such os record,&#13;
se&lt;ntary. ",. to k I the mor dllhcull&#13;
v..nen ooe is n.D'lnu~ ~&#13;
I am rumung lor ofhce on the Hal10&#13;
Parly!JekeL Ilully accept the program of&#13;
our pre8ldenllaJ cand,dote, .ladel n&#13;
ThIelen, and the Party's lance 10' nag&#13;
1M People' Peace Treal) Tlus IS the llm~&#13;
for Parkslde to he changed from a place&#13;
where one merel) attends cI to 0&#13;
place where one can become In\'Ohed 1n&#13;
mearungful relationships and achons.&#13;
At i ue, in electing student represen'&#13;
latives, is the selection of candidate \\ ho&#13;
will make the student body 0 Viable part of&#13;
the operallOll of th,s Umvers,ty. I hope thaI&#13;
...-hen you go to tbe polls, you thmk of&#13;
Halloween.&#13;
Ronald ( .R.E.) Williams&#13;
1 platform consists of no gimmicks,&#13;
MyP ~ promises to shake-up this&#13;
tri(kS, . Whal we need at Parkside is&#13;
1111v~:i greatness, but just a little in111)1&#13;
~ the student body. If elected ViceiertS_~~t&#13;
I hope to initiate programs of&#13;
pres! tic' and recreational value to the&#13;
~~~ with the hope that these will in- :;1 students and make them want to&#13;
... rbcipate. . . r- Vice-President, I will try to give the&#13;
A5 nt government power to check the&#13;
sllJ(le jniStration in decisions concerning&#13;
~ affecting the student population. We&#13;
the university and without us there&#13;
~d be no reason for Parkside to exist.&#13;
'J1lt administration must be made to&#13;
real1Ze this and give us power in the&#13;
dedSions that relate to us.&#13;
I will strive diligently to see that campus&#13;
urity people are disarmed. These men&#13;
not trained law enforcement officers&#13;
d giving them guns is giving them a&#13;
license to use them against students.&#13;
Finally, I hope to be able to influence the&#13;
COlllmittee on the Parkside mission to&#13;
change the mission from feeding college&#13;
duates to the industrial community of&#13;
swtheastem Wisconsin to giving all&#13;
5111dents a well-rounded education of&#13;
nefil lo all areas of endeavor.&#13;
r Jean Koehler&#13;
Dear People: . The lack of an outstanding popular _issue&#13;
this campaign requires that a candidate&#13;
experienced in recognizing and dealing&#13;
'liith the obscure problems like those&#13;
created by Parkside's Administrative&#13;
Bureaucracy. I am fortunate in having had&#13;
opportunities to participate in and learn&#13;
from a number of political actions&#13;
· ning with Student Government at&#13;
Case high school. I was active in the&#13;
writing and art for the spring strike during&#13;
Cambodia invasion and last fall's&#13;
action where I learned some of the&#13;
mechods of the administration while&#13;
participating in the negotiations with the&#13;
Oiancellor. I also work with the Racine&#13;
tchboar~ in providing free abortion and&#13;
problem pregnancy counseling and&#13;
referral for the people of the community. I&#13;
6 t encountered the harsh realities thal a&#13;
dent faces seeking her rights when we&#13;
tried to wear slacks and were threatened&#13;
th expulsion. All we wanted to be was&#13;
comfortable. Samething happened when I&#13;
tried lo enter Parkside before I offically&#13;
~•duated. Parkside said O.K.; Case said&#13;
lltat was a no-no. Even though these viclGries&#13;
were small I learned a lot about how&#13;
lo deal with Administrative Red Tape.&#13;
These experiences have also helped me&#13;
lo learn lo recognize that the needs of the&#13;
student and the aims of a bureaucracy are&#13;
not always the same. The UWP student&#13;
's needs and interests have been&#13;
ndary to the administrative goals of&#13;
IIC&amp;demic greatness and efficiency.&#13;
If elected, I hope to serve you with a&#13;
P'Ogram or inquiries that will help us to&#13;
resotve the needs of the students and the&#13;
JrOblem created by administrative entanglements.&#13;
In addition to the duties of&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Corresponding Secretary--------,&#13;
the office set down by the con titution, I&#13;
will use the facilities of the position lo:&#13;
1) Maintain liason with government and&#13;
student groups on other campuses in an&#13;
effort to keep Parkside informed and&#13;
active in events and actions relevant lo the&#13;
students. 2 ) To form committees to;&#13;
a) research, report and act on the&#13;
operations and the methods of tudent&#13;
Activities.&#13;
b) investigate the contract and&#13;
operations of the uxiliary Enterpri ,&#13;
such as the bookstore, and the utilization or&#13;
the funds gained from the con&#13;
patronized by the tudents.&#13;
3) Poll the stud nts on their v1ev.&#13;
jregarding the quality of ed ation nd&#13;
service provid d by the chool and th&#13;
need for new and improved program and&#13;
facilities for the tud nts.&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Larr) Thi len&#13;
There is little need for ela,borate&#13;
statements concerning my conception of&#13;
how student government houl~ be . ed Since I am eeking the office of&#13;
orgamz • •r I led 1&#13;
treasurer suffice it to say that, , e ec . will serve in that capacity to the best o~&#13;
abilities. I think that my ~c_kgr&#13;
suggests that I have the capab1htie to do&#13;
th "b ~ cinl ·a member of the HalJoween Part)&#13;
and fully support its program a"? the&#13;
of its presidential candidate,&#13;
programs "ti ally im&#13;
Madeleine Thielen. It is en c f • rtant that, in voting for candida_tes or&#13;
:dent office, consideration be g1:~dt~&#13;
choosing those candidates who ~an ~s an student government that function&#13;
efficient tool of the student body.&#13;
Debbie Kemper e when you read a platform you&#13;
I suppos hear a lot of pecific prom, es expect to I propose to promote. But&#13;
:!~::a:;:sa student gove~m:tm th~!&#13;
resenUy exists only on paper, tl . be&#13;
~e that this kind of promising can onl&gt;&#13;
IRecordi g I&#13;
Secretary &#13;
Gary Davis&#13;
StudentGovernment elections will&#13;
",. nTuesday and Wednesday of next&#13;
liebe!d~incethe only popular issue is&#13;
.,.t. t Rights, and everyone's for that,&#13;
9ude" only hope that the Real Student&#13;
.. c~ candidate will. stand up. A good&#13;
Ri3h candidates running under the&#13;
"~t Rights Banner have pledged to&#13;
9 k closely with the uni~ersity adfOf,&#13;
tration in ~~king solub~ns t~ the&#13;
"'':iem' of "silting and wmnowmg."&#13;
~ logicappears to be a well motivated&#13;
deSiretopresent the students' problems in&#13;
frCl1tof those who possess the power to&#13;
c&lt;l" withthem.&#13;
t canunderstand their positi~n ..I kn,ow&#13;
frOIl1 experience that the administration&#13;
ill workon student problems with great&#13;
~m and effort. The only difficulty is&#13;
that the administration treats the students&#13;
" theproblem. .&#13;
AboUtthree weeks ago, a number of&#13;
Ie from various groups met with the&#13;
:. 'ofStudents and the Cbancellor. The&#13;
administrators gave their personal'&#13;
guaranteethat Luddite, a political student&#13;
group that includes the Halloween Party&#13;
candidates,would be able to use the&#13;
\lliversityfacilities for public showings of&#13;
polit~cally oriented multi-media&#13;
iJ08fams.&#13;
LastThursday night we tried to show a&#13;
W in Racine, "Inside North VietI)am".&#13;
Althoughwe had planned to show two&#13;
lifferent films, we scheduled "Inside&#13;
North Vietnam" on short notice because&#13;
this wouldbe our only chance t9 obtain the&#13;
film, and because the movie's reputation&#13;
'lor fairnessand objectivity made us feel&#13;
that its showing would be worthwhile for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sameline Thursday, Racine Unified se""" District called Parkside to object to&#13;
tbeshowing of this "subversive film". The&#13;
administrative wheels ground out an&#13;
acquiescentreply and the office of Student&#13;
Affairsin the form of Tony Totero called&#13;
lateThursdayafternoon to inform us that&#13;
.. couldn't show the fiick at Parkside&#13;
~lf;e our room application form had&#13;
listed the other two films.&#13;
Wecollected our heads to assess the&#13;
iluatilll and discovered that this was no&#13;
liilbt hassle: The administration was&#13;
tearing down our announcements and&#13;
posting cancellation notices. The room we&#13;
.... to use had been locked and the&#13;
Racine ptgs had ~ent in an undercover&#13;
.... d led by prominent oinker, Ron&#13;
Hansen. But more important, the film had&#13;
aTivedfrom Marquette University, and&#13;
OYer 200people had come to see it! We&#13;
dIeckedoot the campus, found the lecture&#13;
ball empty,moved in, and showed the film,&#13;
The ~gs were unable to cope with a crowd&#13;
thatslze,so they sulked around for awhile,&#13;
lhen left for their pen after arranging to&#13;
have the Marquette people stopped and&#13;
harrassed on their way back to&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Rememberthis episode when you hear&#13;
Ibooe whoseek office on the basis of their&#13;
abilityto work with the administration.&#13;
'Ibis is only one incident' others like it&#13;
bavebeengoingon since the place opened.&#13;
Thecandidates of llie Halloween Party&#13;
:ve been working on student problems&#13;
to abouttwoyears. They know better than&#13;
trust the bureaucrats. They know that&#13;
~ faculty has failed to lead itself, let&#13;
no stUdents, in the defense of their&#13;
~Is. They have a platform of action&#13;
f sed on their experience in the con·&#13;
:ence rOOmand on the picket lines. They&#13;
veshownby their actions that there can&#13;
be ·no compromise i th&#13;
Student Rights. The \ e struggle for&#13;
determination and loYal ave proven their&#13;
of continual harrass~ tr over two years&#13;
or will co-opt us. en s - nobody has&#13;
Regarding my own candid&#13;
been fortunate enough t be acy, I have&#13;
for the people since 0 able to work&#13;
Revoluti . 1965. I am a&#13;
~d ~~I~~~~rn~: ~~e::.,~e:;,~el~~~a~i::~~&#13;
Am 'K peop e held in bondage in&#13;
e~l Kan Babylon by whatever "'eans&#13;
required M' .&#13;
at Park~ideY Views rlelgardingthe situation&#13;
are we known b all&#13;
worked .on the Vietnam Moratg;.ium ~~&#13;
~arl Strike, and last fall's Faculty Cri~is I&#13;
~~ r::~~e.no apologies for my action·s&#13;
s stand on my record If mv&#13;
program and actions don't earn ~e som~&#13;
enemies. I will have failed.&#13;
George Fletcher&#13;
The platform which I stand on is not&#13;
supported by the planks of issues, but the&#13;
bodies of students themselves,&#13;
Parkside's student government, to be an&#13;
effective vehicle of the students, will have&#13;
to be aggressive. The elected body will&#13;
have to fight the administration for every&#13;
conceivable benefit for the student.&#13;
Student rights can no longer be a dream,&#13;
but must be converted into practicing fact.&#13;
The student activity building must become&#13;
just that, a building for students, The inflated&#13;
prices charged for food and&#13;
recreation must be brought down to the&#13;
financial level of the students. The idea of&#13;
a co-op book store run by the student body&#13;
should be explored, making possible to&#13;
students a lower cost for books and SUIr&#13;
plies. Responsible evaluation of faculty by&#13;
the combined efforts of students, faculty&#13;
and administrative groups must become a&#13;
part of tradition at Parkside.&#13;
The Parks ide student government&#13;
should always be reading the pulse of the&#13;
student bndy. Working and fighting for the&#13;
ideas of the students it represents.&#13;
In conclusion, I condense my platform in&#13;
two words - STUDENT POWER. These&#13;
two words I pledge to fight for if elected.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
ElIIlwood&#13;
2704 lcrfhrcrp J,.y•.• /focin., Wi,con,in&#13;
Students get red cafpet ser ....ice&#13;
(SO does everyone else!)&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
-&#13;
. ~tarlr. Timpan)&#13;
As candidate for senator. running on the&#13;
Halloween Party ticket, I recogruze that&#13;
Slg~l~C~t change in political and social&#13;
act ivities ultimately springs (rom&#13;
technological change. •&#13;
Th~ people who have the most&#13;
meamngful comment on rny campaign are&#13;
the new physicists, Erwin Schrodmger of&#13;
~e Schrodinger wave equation, stated that&#13;
consciousness i the singular or \lo hich the&#13;
plural is unknown". Here at Par ide. e&#13;
ar~ in a position where the only eonsciousness&#13;
is setr-consctousness The&#13;
Halloween Party bopes to change thai&#13;
~ard was once asked if. by his films.&#13;
he intended to effect a change In Iilrnmaking.&#13;
He replied that he was out to&#13;
change the world. I strongly agree with&#13;
Bertrand Russell that what is needed I a&#13;
change in our imaginative plcture of the&#13;
world, To phrase It McLuhanislically,&#13;
what is needed is a new balance o( the&#13;
senses.&#13;
As a member of the Halloween Part\' I&#13;
accept the need (or radical action_ Ii'IS&#13;
important to note, though, that goal&#13;
directed radical action is generall)'&#13;
meaningless and. unless you operate to&#13;
change total s)"Stems of IOteractloo. your&#13;
actions will easily be co-opted by the&#13;
system. Tloe highest purpose is to ha\'e no&#13;
purpose at all.&#13;
I fully accept and will support the&#13;
programs of Madeleine Thielen.&#13;
Halloween Party candidate (or pres.ldenL&#13;
The Halloween Party is OrgaOlZed around&#13;
the harmonic structures o( the mu ic of&#13;
John Cage. That form of organization I&#13;
our plan (or student government.&#13;
(Ray rRadilJan&#13;
o".1 er 1,,1 ood&#13;
For&#13;
Re en ation&#13;
Phone&#13;
69-i·O-+55&#13;
THOUSA os&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
207 SIXTH SIItEfT&#13;
lACI E, WISCONSIN SUO)&#13;
3200 60lh 51,&#13;
6 O,m, lill 11 p,m, 7 doyo&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
Phono 657 -9H7&#13;
«37 - .2nd Avonuo&#13;
Kono"'o, W"'COfW"l\ 53140&#13;
Frt,{' Ddin"1&#13;
05-+,(1 -'-+&#13;
~&#13;
'W&#13;
\\ 1/&#13;
The BRAT Is&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
DAilY SPECiAl&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Bo"Je of&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru friday 7 p.1I\. to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
A".II'" F. P...Ie.&#13;
,-1.4 ... F....... " .... s.-Itr P... Ie.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
1'" BRAT-STOP&#13;
Na...... e-1:..t4 ...............&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
Gary Davis&#13;
Student Government elections will&#13;
11i;d nTue day and Wednesday of next&#13;
b ;ince the only popular issue is&#13;
nt Rights, and everyone's for that,&#13;
~ only hope that the Real Student&#13;
r: candidate will stand up. A good&#13;
gigh. candidates running under the&#13;
~t Rights Banner have pledged to&#13;
k closelY with . the uni~ersity adtration&#13;
in seeking solutions to the&#13;
blems of "sifting and winno~ing."&#13;
I'° logic appears to be a well motivated&#13;
~e to present the students' problems in&#13;
frOlll of those who possess the power to&#13;
cope with them.&#13;
1 can understand their positi~n._ I kn_ow&#13;
(rOlll experience that the admm1stratton&#13;
ill work on student problems with great&#13;
coPcern and effort. The only difficulty is&#13;
1 the administration treats the students&#13;
the problem.&#13;
~bout three weeks ago, a nwnber of&#13;
· le from various groups met with the&#13;
Dean of Students and the Chancellor. The&#13;
dministrators gave their personal&#13;
arantee that Luddite, a political student&#13;
group that includes the Halloween Party&#13;
ndidates, would be able to use the&#13;
11111versity facilities for public showings of&#13;
polittcally oriented multi-media&#13;
irogram . La t Thursday night we tried to show a&#13;
in Racine, "Inside orth Vietnam".&#13;
though we had planned to show two&#13;
liJferenl film , we scheduled "Inside&#13;
orlh Vietnam" on short notice because&#13;
would be ow- only chance to obtain the&#13;
film, and because the movie's reputation&#13;
'for fairness and objectivity made us feel&#13;
t its showing would be worthwhile for&#13;
Par ide.&#13;
Someline Thw-sday, Racine Unified&#13;
boo! District called Parkside to object to&#13;
the showing of this "subversive film" . The&#13;
administrative wheels ground out an&#13;
acquiescent reply and the office of Student&#13;
Affairs in the form of Tony Totero called&#13;
late Thursday afternoon to inform us that&#13;
t couldn't show the flick at Parkside&#13;
bttau.se our room application form had&#13;
led the other two films.&#13;
We collected our heads to assess the&#13;
situation and discovered that this was no&#13;
slight hassle: The administration was&#13;
tearing down our announcements and&#13;
ting cancellation notices. The room we&#13;
to use had been locked and the&#13;
Racine pigs had sent in an undercover&#13;
Sflad led by prominent oinker, Ron&#13;
Hansen. But more important, the film had&#13;
lrTiVed from Marquette University, and&#13;
O'itt 200 people had come to see it! We&#13;
ed out the campus, found the lecture&#13;
hall empty, moved in, and showed the film.&#13;
The pigs were unable to cope with a crowd&#13;
that ize, so they sulked around for awhile,&#13;
then left £or their pen after arranging to&#13;
b ve lhe Marquette people stopped and&#13;
arra sed on their way back to&#13;
il ·aukee.&#13;
Remember this episode when you hear&#13;
these who seek office on the basis of their&#13;
ability lo work with the administration.&#13;
is only one incident; others like it&#13;
have been going on since the place opened.&#13;
The candidates of the Halloween Party&#13;
~ve been working on student problems&#13;
lo about two years. They know better than&#13;
rust the bureaucrats. They know that&#13;
faculty has failed to lead itself, let&#13;
alone students, in the defense of their&#13;
~- They have a platform of action&#13;
( on their experience in the conerence&#13;
room and on the picket Hnes. They&#13;
ve hown by their actions that there can&#13;
be no compromise in th&#13;
Student Rights. The e struggle for&#13;
determination and liy.:;:ve proven their&#13;
of continual ha Y over two years rrassments bod or will co-opt us. - no Y ha&#13;
Regarding my own ca did&#13;
been fortunate enough t nbe acy, I have&#13;
for the people s· 0 able to work&#13;
R . mce 1965 I a evolutionary in ev · m a&#13;
and will continue to C::e~~~e I~ the . word&#13;
all the people held . 1 ration of&#13;
ArneriKK 8 b m bondage in&#13;
required. :1 via ylon by ~hateve~ means&#13;
at Parksidi ar:w!;~~~!~ t; ~~ati~n&#13;
worked _on the Vietnam foratorium ~~&#13;
~all Strike, and last fall's Faculty Cri;i I&#13;
!n~ 1::~te no apologie for my action· , s stand on my record U m . progr~m and actions don't earn .:ne om~ enemies, I will have failed.&#13;
George Fletch r&#13;
The platform which I stand on i not&#13;
supported by the planks of i u , but the&#13;
bodies of students themselves.&#13;
Parkside's student government. to be an&#13;
effective vehicle of the student , "';u ha\'e&#13;
to be aggressive. The elected bod will&#13;
have to fight the administration for ·ev r ·&#13;
conceivable benefit for the student.&#13;
Student rights can no longer be a dream,&#13;
but must be converted into practicing fact.&#13;
The student activity building must become&#13;
just that, a building for tud nt . Th inflated&#13;
prices charged for food and&#13;
recreation must be brought down to the&#13;
financial level of the students. The idea of&#13;
a co-op book store run by the tudent y&#13;
should be explored, making pos ible to&#13;
students a lower cost for books and upplies.&#13;
Responsible evaluation of faculty by&#13;
the combined efforts of students, facult •&#13;
and administrative group mu t become a&#13;
part of tradition at Park id .&#13;
The Parkside tudent go\' rnment&#13;
should alway be reading the pul e of the&#13;
student body. Working and fi hting for th&#13;
ideas of the tudents it repr nts.&#13;
In conclusion, I cond n my platform m&#13;
two words - ST DE 'T OWER. Thee&#13;
two words I pledge to fight for if elected.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lalhrap AH,, •aclne, Wi,can,in&#13;
Students eet red carpet seivice&#13;
(So does everyone el e!)&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
00&#13;
WESTS DE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
6 o. • ill&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
P o e 657-97 7&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Bottle of&#13;
1nd I&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
Alcoholic&#13;
Beverage&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
JI&#13;
Is&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20C&#13;
AHII.We Fw Pert •&#13;
lac'-llat ,,...,_,., • S--lty Pertle•&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
'"' BRAT-STOP ........ , c.... ,:.,.. ••..tu .... ., • &#13;
NEWaCOPE 1lIw .,. AprIL I P_ 7&#13;
J.." TiIdl... I&#13;
'Evolulioo' - not revolution - IS what's&#13;
needed here at Parkstde A successful&#13;
revolution. whether for the best or not. 1$&#13;
an exception to the rule rather than l.h&#13;
common Parkside IS In need of something.&#13;
but 1 do not feel that it is a revolution Our&#13;
campus is "Parkside High SChool", not the&#13;
University of Parkside. 1 believe thai our&#13;
campus, to become a umversrty, should do&#13;
so through the fastest possible evoluucn&#13;
instead of a revoluuon which has too many&#13;
bad connotation connected with It Vnloke&#13;
most revolutions. where. if uccessrul.&#13;
opponents are eliminated and the winners&#13;
take over, the student government, If they&#13;
get the power and authonty that should be&#13;
there, must still deal with the eXlstmg&#13;
administration. so there is not any need to&#13;
alienate ourselves with them.&#13;
Another thing Ifeel strongly about IS the&#13;
Student Union. I think It IS a real shame&#13;
thai the Student Union Isn't really the&#13;
"Student's Union" Lavern Martinez runs&#13;
practically everything and. In my opinion.&#13;
quite orten not in the best interest of the&#13;
students. A student committee should run&#13;
il A cup of beer costs 2S cenls until a&#13;
weekend dance. when more people show&#13;
up, and it becomes 30 cents. Also it is only&#13;
open until ten p.m. on all days except for a&#13;
weekend dance. it would be 10 the better&#13;
interest of the students if it was open later,&#13;
especially on Saturdays. He pracuces. I&#13;
feel. unfair ly against tudent&#13;
organizations in cbtammg the umon for a&#13;
(unction of their own If an erganizauon&#13;
were to have a dance on a Saturday night. I&#13;
think it unfair to thN1Wa dance on the rught&#13;
before. making it hard and sometimes&#13;
impossible for organizations to make a&#13;
prom or ju t to break e\·en. and mo t&#13;
orgamzations are strugghng the wa)' It is.&#13;
These three issues. the evolution of&#13;
Parkside. Marlmez and lhe Union, and&#13;
organizationallroubles. among others. are&#13;
the ones that I would right 10 help; so on&#13;
election day, I hope that you give me the&#13;
chance to do so as senator&#13;
r;;:Kenneth R, Kookol&#13;
d on my past performance:&#13;
IS::~for student rights before it&#13;
I e popular to do so.&#13;
beC"rn te a weekly column called 'Thorn'&#13;
.I::ch I held strong opinions on all&#13;
JI\ rs affecting students.&#13;
matte first to oppose MacKinney's policy&#13;
Iwal~t Grealness and first to call for&#13;
c1.lns nd Harris' resignation in print.&#13;
thiS a .&#13;
, 'ther is with us n?w.. .'~ .,&#13;
N~ posed the indlscrlmmanl fir-ing of&#13;
OIl tant professors and just as firmly&#13;
:::'"~ the non-selective retention of the&#13;
inCornpetanl.&#13;
Iarranged the press (TV) coverage for&#13;
'dent Weaver's first visit here and&#13;
Pre5'theone student to confront him with&#13;
- same dismissals on his arrival.&#13;
U!fconfronted Regent Walker with the&#13;
ridi&lt;:~ousness of the Chanceloors' 'ten&#13;
pllJl\ts. d ti .•• I arranged the stu ent mee ng wnn&#13;
GovernorLucey on his arrival here to&#13;
cisCuss the budget proposal and its affect&#13;
CIl students,&#13;
Ihave interviewed ~ll.pers~ms of implrtance&#13;
in the administration and I&#13;
cootinueto do so.&#13;
U I could do all this by myself, imagine&#13;
what we could do together in a strong&#13;
student government. .&#13;
My Platform: . . .&#13;
Revisionof constltution to make offices&#13;
of Vice President, Treasurer, and&#13;
Secretarieschosen by election within the&#13;
studentsenate. On student evaluation of&#13;
teachers;if 51 per cent of an instructors'&#13;
atudentsjudge him to be incompetantthen&#13;
his contract shall be terminated at the end&#13;
m the present semester and he be allowed&#13;
to serve out his remaining time in another&#13;
rapacity.&#13;
Students and faculty shall each have 50&#13;
r cent of sayan hiring, firing, and&#13;
ntionof prospective faculty members.&#13;
inistration shall have no say.&#13;
Studentswill be voting members on all&#13;
'versity committees.&#13;
All money profits spent on student&#13;
ported activities shall be returned to&#13;
nts by some suitable method.&#13;
Allparking fines shall be enforced and 50&#13;
reent of revenue shall be returned to the&#13;
denls. The other 50 per· cent shall go&#13;
ards enforcement of said fines and&#13;
·ng of persons specifically to enforce&#13;
fines who shall be. independent of&#13;
mpus security and responsible to the&#13;
dent senate.&#13;
Any means to improve the competence&#13;
efficiency of this University shall be&#13;
ilized,&#13;
Thomas C. Garner&#13;
U elected to the senate I will try to&#13;
remove the communication gap between&#13;
the administration and students by&#13;
establIshing listening posts so that the&#13;
students will have someone' to listen and&#13;
act on their grievances.&#13;
2) I will make sure that the students will&#13;
know what is going on around school for&#13;
example how the positions are sel~ted&#13;
such as editors, senators, etc., by way of a&#13;
What's New. bulletin board whi!re&#13;
literature will be posted to inform the&#13;
students.&#13;
3) Strive to make the students'&#13;
evaluation of the instructors have as mush&#13;
importance as the faculty and ad.&#13;
ministration's evaluation.&#13;
4) Try to make the classrooms at&#13;
Greenquist more conducive to learning&#13;
instead of the sterile cubicles that they&#13;
are.&#13;
5) All my actions will be student&#13;
oriented.&#13;
Tom Task_is&#13;
Apathy? - it's a new, incomplete school.&#13;
It must be completed and established&#13;
before significant involvement begins&#13;
The school paper improves but I thmk&#13;
that if we don't have enough political or&#13;
any other type of news around this area.&#13;
we would like to hear "what's happerung"&#13;
at other schools. Now, the Luddite's&#13;
column is being thrown out - irresponsibility&#13;
will out. But at any rate, I believe&#13;
the paper should be subsidized and credits&#13;
MUST be given for working on it.&#13;
Our monies diminish; our patience is&#13;
taxed. Why? - MACHINES! I believe&#13;
lunch counters should beopen 'til buildings&#13;
close and music "piped-in" rather than&#13;
digging in pockets for juke box.&#13;
Our transportation system is gross.&#13;
Construction of a moving sidewalk has&#13;
been suggested.&#13;
The campus security torce must be&#13;
disarmed before we have another Kent&#13;
State type incident!&#13;
Space limits me, but 1 must mention one&#13;
more point. Those students in Madisoo.&#13;
who are there for purposes of negotiating&#13;
for funds for Parkside, are pulling one big&#13;
snow job on the students of Parkside.&#13;
Please ask me about this.&#13;
Remember, the Halloween Party does&#13;
not put its OWII irons in the fire, but those of&#13;
you students. If you want a party looking&#13;
out for YOUR interests and not THEIR'S,&#13;
you WANT the Halloween Party (yoo may&#13;
have seen our clever, satirical posters).&#13;
Tom Meier&#13;
I am running (or student senator&#13;
because Ifeel the need (or programs that&#13;
benefit the students and not drain their&#13;
pocketbooks. I would like to see a student&#13;
co-op bookstore set up to cut costs of books,&#13;
which seem to have skyrocketed.&#13;
Iam for a 'student court to handle cases&#13;
that occur in the university, and this court&#13;
would have power. I believe in complete&#13;
control of student activities, including that&#13;
of the building to be in the hands of a&#13;
student committee, as prescribed by the&#13;
constitution. All money made in the activities'&#13;
building should be put in finds for&#13;
the operation of student activities, so that&#13;
the money comes back to the student.&#13;
I believe there should be controls put on&#13;
the campus police.&#13;
I believe a clear list of functions and&#13;
duties by the police should be established.&#13;
I am for student power. I feel that we, as&#13;
students, should have more to say about&#13;
the way our university is being han?-!ed. I&#13;
feel the administration is slowly cutting off&#13;
channels open to the student and slowing&#13;
down the progress of this university's&#13;
development into becoming a much m?re&#13;
relevant part of the student's l~fe, ~hlC.h&#13;
must be curbed. I believe the umvers1ty IS&#13;
much more than just a place to attend&#13;
class.&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing •&#13;
Della Simpson&#13;
Students don't have much money and&#13;
need to get more in return for their books&#13;
at the end of a semester.&#13;
Cafeteria prices are a liUle higher, too.&#13;
We need better prices because students&#13;
don'l earn much salary. For example,&#13;
what's wrong with coffee for 10 cents or&#13;
sandwiches at 25 cents from a \'ending&#13;
machine.&#13;
Free activities for students as well.&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGA&#13;
'Tradition of Excellence.&#13;
./&#13;
/&#13;
r Kl G of ORGA&#13;
r&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
See Jim Merrick "Mr. Hammond" For Guaranteed SerVice &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
Out .f Town-Call Collect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
1.!~~111~C!!!~~&#13;
"If IJftkr Orrruu /&amp;n: Buill, H--.d tftII BuiW'IItJ-a..&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
011 my past performance:&#13;
5 for student rights before it&#13;
1 e p0pular to do so. i,eca~te a weekly column called 'Thorn'&#13;
1 11h ch 1 held strong opinions on all&#13;
jpWl • d ts tters affecting stu en . 1118 s first to oppose MacKinney's policy&#13;
\:tant Greatness a~d fi~st t~ call _for ol_ and Harris' resignation m prmt.&#13;
~ 1 ther is with us n~w.. . • . . • ~1 opp0sed the ind1scnmmant firmg of&#13;
petant professors and just as firmly&#13;
CofTl se the non-selective retention of the&#13;
~po&#13;
u,competant.&#13;
1 arranged the press (TV) coverage for&#13;
president Weaver's first visit here and&#13;
was the one stud~nt to conf~ont ~m with same dismissals on his arrival.&#13;
thfconrronted Regent Walker with the&#13;
ndiculousness of the Chanceloors' 'ten&#13;
. ts' pof a~anged the student meeting with&#13;
c;overnor Lucey on his arrival here to&#13;
discUSS the budget proposal and its affect&#13;
00 students. . . I have interviewed all persons of importance&#13;
in the administration and I&#13;
continue to do so. u I could do all this by myself, imagine&#13;
what we could do together in a strong&#13;
student government.&#13;
My Platrorm:&#13;
Revision of constitution to make offices&#13;
of Vice President, Treasurer, and&#13;
Secretaries chosen by election within the&#13;
tudenl senate. On student evaluation of&#13;
teachers; if 51 per cent of an instructors'&#13;
tudents judge him to be incompetant then&#13;
his contract shall be terminated at the end&#13;
m the present semester and he be allowed&#13;
to serve out his remaining time in another&#13;
capacity.&#13;
Students and faculty shall each have 50&#13;
per cent of say on hiring, firing, and&#13;
retention of prospective faculty members.&#13;
Administration shall have no say.&#13;
tudents will be voting members on all&#13;
umversity committees.&#13;
All money profits spent on student&#13;
ported activities shall be returned to&#13;
dents by some suitable method.&#13;
All parking fines shall be enforced and 50&#13;
r cent of revenue shall be returned to the&#13;
dents. The other 50 per -cent shall go&#13;
ards enforcement of said fines and&#13;
ing of persons specifically to enforce&#13;
fines who shall be independent of&#13;
mpus security and responsible to the&#13;
dent senate.&#13;
Any means to improve the competence&#13;
d efficiency of this University shall be&#13;
tilized.&#13;
Thomas C. Garner&#13;
U elected to the senate I will try to&#13;
remove t~. communication gap between&#13;
the a_d~m1s~ration and students by&#13;
establishing listening posts so that the&#13;
students will have someone' to listen and&#13;
act on their grievances.&#13;
2&gt; I will make sure that the students will&#13;
know what is going on around school, for&#13;
example how the positions are selected&#13;
such as editors, senators, etc ., by way of a&#13;
~hat's ew bulletin board where&#13;
literature will be posted to inform the&#13;
students.&#13;
3) Strive to make the students'&#13;
~valuation of the instructors have as mush&#13;
importance as the faculty and administration•~&#13;
evaluation.&#13;
4) Try to make the classrooms at&#13;
~reenquist more conducive to learning&#13;
mstead of the sterile cubicles that they&#13;
are.&#13;
5) All my actions will be student&#13;
oriented.&#13;
Tom tei r&#13;
I am running for stud nl senator&#13;
because I feel the need for programs that&#13;
benefit the students and not drain their&#13;
pocketbooks. I would like to see a student&#13;
co-op bookstore set up to cut costs of books,&#13;
which seem to have kyrocketed.&#13;
I am for a 'student court lo handle ca es&#13;
that occur in the university. and thi court&#13;
would have power. I believe in complete&#13;
control of student activities, includin that&#13;
of the building to be in the hands of a&#13;
student committee. as pr cribed by the&#13;
constitution. All money made in th activities'&#13;
building should be put in find for&#13;
the operation of student activities, so that&#13;
the money comes back to the tudent.&#13;
I believe there should be control put on&#13;
the campus police. I believe a clear list of functions and&#13;
duties by the police should be establi heel.&#13;
I am for student power. I feel that we , as&#13;
students, should have more to ay about&#13;
the way our university i being han~led. I&#13;
feel the administration is slowly cutting off&#13;
channels open to the student and lowing&#13;
down the progress of this university'&#13;
development into becoming a much more&#13;
relevant part of the student's l~fe, ~hi&lt;:h&#13;
must be curbed. I believe th w11vers1ty 1&#13;
much more than just a place to attend&#13;
class.&#13;
rq-.I,/ 1ldfl //tnw.,u&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
;z ADULT BOOK STORE&#13;
0&#13;
-.,_ ' u&#13;
UJ :z&#13;
-.I&#13;
UJ 3:&#13;
V') 0&#13;
.,_ tKENOSHA&#13;
&#13;
- BONDAGE DENMARK&#13;
MAGS BOOKS ~&#13;
Al l Parks ,de StuJcnt!.&#13;
Over 21 10"~ QI I&#13;
SEX EDUCATION&#13;
V,&#13;
-,:,&#13;
m&#13;
("'"'\&#13;
--4 -&#13;
&gt; &gt; r0:,&#13;
&#13;
r- 0:,&#13;
rn &gt;&#13;
V') z&#13;
UJ - BOOKS&#13;
GAY&#13;
:::0&#13;
G')&#13;
(.!)&#13;
(.!)&#13;
- 1202-56 ST 652-9051 SECTION ):&gt;&#13;
:z&#13;
c:a TALK OF THE TOWN&#13;
Tom Ta koni&#13;
Apathy? - it's an w, incomple e school.&#13;
It must be completed and e tabh hE'd&#13;
before ignificant involv m nt m&#13;
The chool paper 1mprov but l Uu&#13;
that if we don't have enough pohtical&#13;
any oth r type or nev. · around th" ar&#13;
we would like to hear" ·hat' happem&#13;
at other school . 'ov.:, the Luddite'&#13;
column is being throv.:n out - irr . po •&#13;
sibility will out. But at an) rat , I h&#13;
the paper should ub~1diz d and crE'd1&#13;
1 ST be given for wor ng on it.&#13;
Our monies dimmi ; our pal en&#13;
taxed. Why? - t CHI.· '. I lie,&#13;
lunch counters hould be o n 'til buildmg&#13;
close and music "piped-in" rather lhan&#13;
digging in pockets £or juke box.&#13;
Our transportation ) tern 1&#13;
Construction of a moving sidewal&#13;
been ugge led .&#13;
The campu security force must be&#13;
disarmed before we have another K nl&#13;
Stale type incident!&#13;
Space limits me, but I must men ion one&#13;
more point. Tho students in tad1son.&#13;
who are there for purpo es or n ohating&#13;
for funds for Parksid . are pullin one big&#13;
snow job on the tudents of Par id .&#13;
Please a k me about this.&#13;
Remember, the HaUoween Part: does&#13;
not put its ow• irons in the hre, but th of&#13;
you tud nts. U you v.ant a party I&#13;
out for YO R inter · and not THEIR&#13;
you V A IT the Hallow n Part: (you ma~&#13;
have seen our clever. satirical ~ters .&#13;
· uden a v.ell&#13;
10 ORG&#13;
Tradition of E&#13;
Kl ·G&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
see Jim Merrick "~r. Hammond" For Guaranteed Service &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
Out of Town-Call Collect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
STUDIO Ill RACINE .. 1429 Wael.llqtoa Ph-.e Q4.2S63&#13;
"IJ Bt!Uer Or,an., are Built, H"""'"""' will Bu.iW '/lt!M"&#13;
• &#13;
Presidential Candidates&#13;
11m F..kff&#13;
It, III duI) 01 lhe Pre ldenl 10 ellect •&#13;
I bl 10\ roment through sound&#13;
df'rshtp nd to be v r r pon sve to the&#13;
'dt"a and d .res of IhOloe' "hom he&#13;
repr n~ There eXI I! lhe need for&#13;
4"onslrucl!\ c-hange at ark Ide. no one&#13;
llt-nu.' lh • but tbe major I ue bolls down&#13;
10 how ""II It be Implemented 01 the tWO&#13;
lIo It' avenu 0 n work In ide or&#13;
nut ld lh exrstmg tructure - I am in&#13;
la\ or of ("xhsW)lInK the former before&#13;
r orllng to the tauer Further breaking&#13;
Ihat do", n 1 ee tht hntt Student Govern·&#13;
mcnt a umg the pohcies and precedents&#13;
roe tht.· year to come&#13;
E' 'r)one ha talked aboul student&#13;
lmpul on cemmiuees and estabhshmg&#13;
dduional ones, but no one has made a&#13;
rOO\C' to do The lime has come to&#13;
bohsh those ccrnrruttees that are useless&#13;
,lOd establish those thai are needed.&#13;
At thiS lime I would hke to officially&#13;
announce m) resignatton as Coordmallng&#13;
Olr 'tor of the Commillee for United&#13;
" tool'nl Action I ",ould like to see an)'&#13;
nthrr canthdates now 1","01\"00 In an&#13;
or~anllatlon that might prO\'C to create a&#13;
ronO,el or mte ts do the same. I'.'hlle&#13;
cuve In the CommIttee for Cnited Student&#13;
\tU n, I was Involved 10 the "Faculty&#13;
DiSmIssal" problem: the campaign for a&#13;
lronger student senate constitution -&#13;
~hlch proved successful. representing.&#13;
Parkslde in student IOsurance conferences&#13;
.....hlCh rna)' end up saving insured&#13;
tudent $30 each on their policies: and&#13;
InitlatlOg the fact finding mission to&#13;
"ad, on concerning the proposed !Judget&#13;
cuts for the UOlverslty of Wisconsin and&#13;
the proposed merger&#13;
ACTIO,' GETS RESULTS - I HAVE&#13;
BEEN ACTIVE AND I HAVE GOTTO&#13;
HE.. LTS'&#13;
Madeleine Thielen .&#13;
Being a Parkside student is largely an&#13;
experience of frustration. There a.re,many&#13;
factors that work against building a&#13;
unified student body. These same factors&#13;
work to limit the satisfaction that a student&#13;
receives by being a member of Parkside's&#13;
student body.&#13;
There are some obstacles that cannot be&#13;
easily overcome. 'We cannot quickly so~ve&#13;
problems like the fact that the Park~lde&#13;
campus is spread out over two counties.&#13;
The student government can, though, w~rk&#13;
to build student consciousness and bring&#13;
students into involvement with matters&#13;
that concern them as students.&#13;
It is imperative that students have&#13;
control over those elements of the&#13;
niversity that directly affect them.&#13;
Students must manage the use of the&#13;
Student Activities Building. Ilis absurd for&#13;
student groups to pay a fee for the use of&#13;
this facility. Similarly, funds generated by&#13;
students at events like dances and concerts&#13;
and Olrough Ole use of vending&#13;
machines and food services must be&#13;
controlled by students. Students are the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside as much&#13;
as the faculty or administration and should&#13;
assume a corresponding amount of control&#13;
over their lives at the University.&#13;
The student government must be a&#13;
government for the students. It should not&#13;
funclion as an extension of the administration.&#13;
Officers and senators in&#13;
student government must be representatives&#13;
of the students and willing to work&#13;
for the students in the operation of the&#13;
government.&#13;
Ilis possible for the student government&#13;
at Parkside to serve needs of the student&#13;
that are now not being considered. I~sk&#13;
for your support in my candidacy and the&#13;
candidacy of the other members of the&#13;
Halloween Party to that end.&#13;
Don Koser&#13;
To create a student government with tbt&#13;
power to initiate an effective studeut&#13;
voice, the majority and hopelully all of&#13;
Parkside's students must give up the smaD&#13;
amount of their time necessary to mab&#13;
the realization of this longsougbt alle:&#13;
goal possible. To unite the students bebiDd&#13;
the new constitution one main ideamuslbe&#13;
instilled. The student at this lDlivenily&#13;
must be made to realize the studeat&#13;
government is relevent. Before, without.&#13;
effective voice and central organizltioD.&#13;
any student action was without any real&#13;
collective authority. This could chaD&amp;t&#13;
with a majority student government.&#13;
One might ask, how can this be ""&#13;
complished? I propose, both More aad&#13;
after the election, to create one to CDt&#13;
communication between the student ant&#13;
his government. Above all the individualis&#13;
first at the university. His righllo the belli&#13;
education possible cannot be inf~ed&#13;
upon" This can be made possible by&#13;
creating a body lIlat is dedicated tD \be&#13;
individual at Parkside. This will inchxle.&#13;
drive to improve basic conditions.~&#13;
prices, inprovement of the parkilll&#13;
situation would be given priority. Buttbr&#13;
student government must also be an ...&#13;
forming device in which tht! a~erIIf&#13;
student wlll rely upon for informationon&#13;
all action concerning his academic alii&#13;
surrounding student life, whileat the same&#13;
time be an outlet in which to express tus&#13;
opinion .&#13;
Parkside's first Student Senal.&#13;
president must have the time in wh\dlto&#13;
keep on top of all actions concermng \be&#13;
university and be dedicated to that pur'&#13;
pose. '. . to&#13;
I do have the time and lIle del!icabdl&#13;
achieve this end.&#13;
Help push lor a united Parkside.&#13;
SmIth&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE:&#13;
was elected ,he&#13;
James&#13;
first A History Of ~,~.~.~ntGovernment----1&#13;
Student Government Pres-&#13;
,dent ,n January of 1969.&#13;
'ext 'A'eek Parkslde students will elect a&#13;
ne~ tud nl Go\'ernment to fill a VOidthat&#13;
ha foXl ted for almost two years. It was&#13;
ked to '" nle lIll hlslor)' 01 Student&#13;
Go\{'rnmenl for the benefit or those&#13;
tucknts '\Aha were not here when our last&#13;
go\ emment collapsed. and for those who&#13;
....ere here. but may ha"'e forgotten what&#13;
happened. so lIle)' will reahze lIle&#13;
IJ(nlflcance of the upcoming elections and&#13;
exerCI their nght to ,,'ole&#13;
The story really began when Racine and&#13;
Krnosha ""ere m the Center system. In&#13;
Kt"nosha there" ere numerous clubs and&#13;
actl\'ltles which comprised the hub of the&#13;
lal hfe on campus These clubs were&#13;
fin n d b)' membershIp dues and proHI!&#13;
from their acll\"llIeS, dances. carnivals.&#13;
etC' The role of ludent Government at this&#13;
hme was matn)y social In nature. Seventy-&#13;
(l\'e to 80 per cent of the student body were&#13;
rr hmen each )"ear. SG.A sold membe~hlp5&#13;
.....hlCh were used to finance&#13;
dan and also prOVided money to clubs&#13;
so lh y could develop programs 01 lIlelr&#13;
O\lo"n Due to the rapid turnover of students.&#13;
thl bod)' never really developed any&#13;
govermng ability or power The most&#13;
pre log problem that confronted all 01&#13;
Ih groups was finanCial By lIle time a&#13;
club rented a hall. paid for entertainment&#13;
and refreshments there was litUe or no&#13;
profit left&#13;
The Parkside became a reality. Land&#13;
was purchased and Irvin Wyllie was appointed&#13;
Chancellor. During one of his visits&#13;
to KenQ.'Sha,I approached him and explained&#13;
the problem to him. I asked if&#13;
there was a building on the site which&#13;
could be developed as a student union, so&#13;
that groups could eliminate the high rental&#13;
fees of campus hans, thereby increasing&#13;
lIleir prolil!. He said lIle Wood Road school&#13;
house was being set aside for that purpose.&#13;
The following fall, during freshman&#13;
orientation, Kathy Mauer addressed the&#13;
group and told them lIlal students would be&#13;
required to purchast" a Parkside Student&#13;
Activities pass to use the union. Iprotested&#13;
and a meeting was scheduled to air the&#13;
mailer. Iargued lIlat any student who had&#13;
paId his tuition was entitled to use the&#13;
union, that this was the policy in&#13;
Milwaukee and Madison, and furthermore,&#13;
the union was not for the exclusive&#13;
benefit of anyone particular&#13;
campus organization. This position was&#13;
tentatively accepted and the need for a&#13;
student government to deal with similar&#13;
problems in the future led to another&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The second meeting was held at a house&#13;
on the Parkside site which was to be used&#13;
as lIle Student Ar[airs olliee. Studenl! who&#13;
had been active in S.C.A. at Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, plus any other interested&#13;
students, were invited to the open meeting.&#13;
About 20 or 25 students attended and&#13;
formed the interim government which&#13;
planned to draw up a constitution and hold&#13;
elections by lIle end of the first month of&#13;
the second semester.&#13;
Things were moving along fine, Pat&#13;
Spring was the chairwoman of the Constitution&#13;
Committee and her group drew&#13;
up a constitution that the interim government&#13;
felt was suitable for ratification. The&#13;
Election Committee scheduled the elections&#13;
for February and the other committees&#13;
were progressing at a satisfactory&#13;
rate. .&#13;
The first hint of trouble occurred when&#13;
candidates began to fil&amp; no"mination&#13;
papers. Betty Peterson, who had been&#13;
acting as Recording Secretary for the&#13;
interim government, failed to file. When I&#13;
contacted Belly to find out why she hadn't&#13;
filed she said she was dissatisfied with the&#13;
way Jewel Echelbarger, S.G.A. advisor&#13;
from Student Affairs, censored the&#13;
minutes of the meetings before they were&#13;
published. Betty would not run but&#13;
elections were held as scheduled. In&#13;
re~ospect, the elections were the high&#13;
POint 01 S.G.A. because Irom lIle day it was&#13;
seated until its final collapse less than four&#13;
months later the road was straight down&#13;
hill.&#13;
S.G.A. intended to be lIle governing body&#13;
of the students; it intended to let oUter&#13;
groups deal with the social programs,&#13;
although a committee was .. tabU": ~&#13;
use S.G.A. funds for a limited n";"~GA&#13;
programs. One of the funct,lon~0 Am&#13;
was to ratify club apphcabOOS';'n';'&#13;
organization that wanted to f~~Cti&lt;I1 (0&#13;
campus had to submit its app lea "t.-aS&#13;
S.G.A. and if it was approved the~~1elt'i&#13;
sent to S.L.I.C. (Student Lile and camP"&#13;
Committee, now called cec, lfaeu1'l&#13;
Concerns Committee, composedlif'o._ b\ Ra . 1C8""'"' • members and students). cl b to UIf&#13;
bolll of these groups allowed a ':.. II&#13;
campus facilities to bold mOO "'" II&#13;
solicit members, to hold evt;nts,turf III&#13;
advertise, distribute or sell litera&#13;
campus. ~A b&lt;It&#13;
The first few meetings thatto rati/)'illl&#13;
devoted a great deal 01 tune ..... rdt&#13;
the man¥ applications that "fiCltJOll'&#13;
mitted. It was during these r~ttel""&#13;
that the administration set th~ns .tiC*&#13;
student-adrp.inistrati,ve re~:::'in ~&#13;
have continued to thiS day. eral, 1.,0&#13;
were singled out for harr3SS&#13;
m&#13;
§oCiJliP&#13;
especially - Y.S.A. (Youn~,or an epd'&#13;
Alliance) al\d The CommIttee iglil y A&#13;
Forum. For'-example, the n BIshOP eI&#13;
'1' t' n Daye :..l&lt; came up for rab lCa 10.' 'ved ~'I&#13;
.the Student Allairs ofh" amlQI'S ,,1IiJC&#13;
and cornered a number of sen~s .' \~&#13;
them privately lIlat Y.S.A. w "",tJel1 to&#13;
group (lIlere were only lW~ ~t d ..&#13;
the Kenosha chapter) an ,&#13;
Presidential Candidates&#13;
, 1ad leine Thi len&#13;
Bei a Park ide tudenl is largely an&#13;
e perience of frustration. There a_re_many&#13;
facto that work against bu1lding a&#13;
w,ifi d tudent body. Th e ame factors&#13;
rk to limit the ti faction that a stu_de~t&#13;
r iv by being a member of Parkside s&#13;
tu nt body.&#13;
There are ome ob tacle that cannot be&#13;
a ii o,· rcome. ·, e cannot quickly solve&#13;
probiem Ji e the fact that the Park~ide&#13;
campu i _pread out over two counties.&#13;
Th . tudent O\'ernment can, though, w~rk&#13;
o build tud nt con ciou n and brmg&#13;
tu nt into in\'olvement with matters&#13;
that oncem them as tud nts.&#13;
It L ,m rati\' that tudents have&#13;
control o,· r tho.e elemen of the&#13;
l m,· 1ty that directly affect them.&#13;
tud nts m ·t manage the use of the&#13;
. tudent ct1vilies Building. It i absurd for&#13;
tudent groups to pay a fee for the use of&#13;
thi · facility. imilarly, funds generated by&#13;
. tudent at e\' nts like danc and conr&#13;
and through the u · of vending&#13;
m chin · and food ervic s must be&#13;
trolled bv tud nt Students are the&#13;
niversil\ of Wiscon in-Parkside as much&#13;
a:,· the fa ulty or admini tralion and should&#13;
-·ume a corr ponding amount of control&#13;
o\'er th 1r hve at the niversity.&#13;
Th tud nt government must be a&#13;
~o,· rnment for the tuden . It hould not&#13;
run lion a an extension of the ad•&#13;
mini tration. Officers and senator in&#13;
tud nt go\'ernment mu l be representati,•&#13;
of the students and willing to work&#13;
for the tudents in the operation of the&#13;
overnmenl.&#13;
It i possible for the student government&#13;
at Park ide to serve needs of the ludent&#13;
that are now not being con idered. I .ask&#13;
for your upport in my candidacy and the&#13;
candidacy of the other members of the&#13;
Hallow n Party to that end.&#13;
nd meeting wa held at a hou e&#13;
on th Park ide 1te which wa to be u ed&#13;
. the Student Affairs ofric tudents who&#13;
had been active in .GA at Racine and&#13;
Keno ha, plu any other int ere ted&#13;
students, were invlled lo the open meeting.&#13;
About 20 or 25 students attended and&#13;
formed the interim government which&#13;
planned lo draw up a constitution and hold&#13;
elections by the end of the first month of&#13;
the econd emester.&#13;
Things were moving along fine. Pat&#13;
pring was the chairwoman of the Constitution&#13;
Committee and her group drew&#13;
up a constitution that the interim government&#13;
fell was suitable for ratification. The&#13;
Election Committee scheduled the elections&#13;
for February and the other committees&#13;
were progressing at a satisfactory&#13;
rate. ·&#13;
The first hint of trouble occurred when&#13;
candidates began to file- nomination&#13;
papers. Betty Peterson, who had been&#13;
acting as Recording Secretary for the&#13;
interim government, failed to file. When I&#13;
contacted Betty to find out why she hadn't&#13;
filed he said she was dissatisfied with the&#13;
way Jewel Echelbarger, S.G.A. advisor&#13;
from Student Affairs, censored the&#13;
minutes of the meetings before they were&#13;
published Betty would not run, but&#13;
elections were held as scheduled. In&#13;
re~ospect, the elections were the high&#13;
pomt of .G.A. because from the day it was&#13;
seated until its final collapse less than four&#13;
months later the road was straight down&#13;
hill.&#13;
S.G.A. intended to be the governing body&#13;
of the students; it intended to let other&#13;
groups deal with the social programs,&#13;
Don Koser&#13;
To create a student government with !ht&#13;
power to initiate an effective studen&#13;
voice, the majority and hopefully aU or&#13;
Parkside's students must give up the sm&#13;
amoWlt of their time necessary to make&#13;
the realization of this long sought after&#13;
goal possible. To unite the students behind&#13;
the new constitution one main idea must~&#13;
instilled. The student at this wiiv y&#13;
must be made to realize the studem&#13;
government is relevent. Before, without&#13;
effective voice and central organization&#13;
any student action was without any m&#13;
collective authority. This could change&#13;
with a majority student government&#13;
One might ask, how can this be accomplished?&#13;
I propose, both before and&#13;
after the election, to create one lo ooe&#13;
communication between the student and&#13;
his government. Above all the indi\idual&#13;
first at the university. His right to the&#13;
education possible cannot be infnngtd&#13;
upon. This can be made possible by&#13;
creating a body that is dedicated lo&#13;
individual at Parkside. This will includta&#13;
drive to improve basic conditions. IAw«&#13;
prices, inproveme_nt of . th_e park1&#13;
situation would be given pr1onty. But the&#13;
student government must also be an mforming&#13;
device in which_ tM a~erag&#13;
student will rely upon for mfonna~on&#13;
all action concerning his academic and&#13;
surrounding student life, while at the sam&#13;
time be an outlet in which to ex&#13;
opinion.&#13;
Parkside's first Student en•t'&#13;
president must have the time in &gt;A~lch t&#13;
keep on top of all actions concernmg the&#13;
W1iversity and be dedicated to that pur&#13;
pof~o have the time and the dedicatloo&#13;
achieve this end. . Help push for a united Parkside.&#13;
although a committee was eslabh bed&#13;
use S.G.A. funds for a limit_ed nu~ ~ programs. One of the funct_10n. 0 }.&#13;
was to ratify club apphcauon&#13;
organization that wanted to fu~cti;"&#13;
campus had to submit its apphca 1&#13;
S.G.A. and if it was appro~ed t~r101&#13;
sent to S.L.I.C. (Student Life a&#13;
Committee, now called CCC, of r&#13;
Concerns Committee, com~ catiOII&#13;
members and students). Rati \ b&#13;
both of these groups allowed 8 c,~&#13;
campus facilities to hold '.11ee and&#13;
solicit members, to hold e\efl 't&#13;
advertise, distribute or sell bter•&#13;
campus. . t sGA&#13;
The first few meetings Iha rat&#13;
devoted a great deal of time to&#13;
the many application that "'Jrica&#13;
mitted. It was duri~g these r~t&#13;
that the administration set lhe&#13;
student-administrative relatiota'lll · th' d y Cer have continued to 1 a · rnt.fll&#13;
were singled out for harra&#13;
. y s A cvounl! especially - · · · . for an Alliance) and The Committee ight \'&#13;
Forum. For exampl~, the 8~ B&#13;
came up for ratificatio~. D rri\ed&#13;
the Student Affairs office a ators,&#13;
and cornered a number of se:.a a&#13;
them privately that Y.S.A. _, nl two rn~ ... group (there were O Y d thll if • the Kenosha chapter&gt; an &#13;
Pal 4 ·El'SCOPE Thunda)" April I&#13;
Gan \df'1 ft'&#13;
tern r or Con n&#13;
.tud nt xperr need In the&#13;
'""Iralo tau b) the poor ad&#13;
ml Ifahon of Lhl L:nl\ . II)&#13;
II \ tIlOUgh urne to do ""meUling&#13;
t them&#13;
m mbe!' of '~senate. I WIU work&#13;
bfoltn c:ommunlcallon about .. hat IS&#13;
trig on In lh udmlnlsuauon, with lhe&#13;
r It). wub th ludent aell\ Ih&#13;
I bo 1O'"'lld 10 ""'rk 10&lt; th e ·labhsh·&#13;
mml of (tong tudent rl hts&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
PHONE .... 700&#13;
'1' 'lid f.A1f~ E1"SJOC&#13;
all 7~," 5T&#13;
NOIl'Tli &amp; SOUTtl Stlel'IDAH ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHA -&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
HARCOAl BROllE&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
FINEST QUALITY&#13;
EASTER&#13;
CANDIES&#13;
From ANDREA'S&#13;
• RUSSEL STOVER&#13;
• FANNIE MAY&#13;
• NESTLE'S SOLIO PURE&#13;
CHOCOLATE RABBITS&#13;
STUFFEO ANIMALS&#13;
GENUINE PECTIN-JELL&#13;
JELLY BEANS&#13;
• HALLMARK CARDS&#13;
• FOREIGN LANGUAGE CARD~&#13;
SELF-SERVICE&#13;
Fast Convenient&#13;
Open DallJ&#13;
! a.m. - 9 p.m.&#13;
Sot ftil 6 p.m&#13;
Sun 9 o.m -4 .m&#13;
In Kenosha Since 1911&#13;
finest&#13;
quality&#13;
candies&#13;
Ken AnLaramian&#13;
Park ide's growing pains are many. and&#13;
need plenty of attention. Being a senator of&#13;
'he tudent Govemrnent, problems 01&#13;
gray. iog can be made somewhat easier.&#13;
The ludents here at Parks ide. must unite&#13;
to maintain the high academic standards&#13;
or the Umversity of Wisconsin System.&#13;
I have been deeply involved in the&#13;
Iaculty d.I missa1. campaign for a better&#13;
udent Constitution, I'm presently a&#13;
renewal of Student Insurance and a&#13;
director of the Committee for United&#13;
udern Action which has previously met&#13;
with the Jomt Finance Committee on the&#13;
propo ed budget cuts and UW·WSU&#13;
ystem merger&#13;
lIeel that lhe students here at Parkside&#13;
need to have representation that will&#13;
continually trive for a better University.&#13;
A student government. approaching new&#13;
ideas 10 the right perspective, can benefit&#13;
our. school in the fields of education, and&#13;
SOCialaspects.&#13;
Through my \'aned activities thus far I&#13;
ha\'e shO\lonmy personal involvement in&#13;
Park ide and will continue to do so by your&#13;
support.&#13;
Support&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52no St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUII. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 loll. TILL MIDIlITE&#13;
FRI •• SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
Walt Breach&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
exists for the student. A Student Government&#13;
here must meet the challenge of&#13;
making the administration more conscious&#13;
of, and more responsive to the needs and&#13;
wants of the student body. Positive action&#13;
and cooperation, I believe, will enable a&#13;
determined Senate and a supporting&#13;
student body to accomplish nearly&#13;
anything in the way improvement and&#13;
betterment of every Parkside students'&#13;
situation.&#13;
Isee student control of a student union,&#13;
responsible teacher evaluation programs,&#13;
and the establishment and protection of&#13;
sludent rights as the major tasks which the&#13;
new government will have to tackle. These&#13;
are the goals I have set for S.G.'s first&#13;
year, and if elected, they are what I will&#13;
immediately start pushing for and keep on&#13;
pushing for until they are achieved.&#13;
Information on the Candidate: Junior, 3.&#13;
OGP, Communication Major, Elected to&#13;
and served on Can Com, Newscope Staff, 6&#13;
credits this semester, Endorses Don Koser&#13;
for President.&#13;
Your&#13;
BITCH&#13;
Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Parkside is in a sense an artifi&#13;
cr~ation: Lik~ laws or governments&#13;
1tial&#13;
university IS dynamic co ta tbt&#13;
changing -,b~fore responses.' It"C:~otntly&#13;
lord to slip its feet into concrete 0 . aI·&#13;
the wishes 01 the student. Not only~&#13;
student have the right but also tho&#13;
obligation to himself and his eduC8tioa III&#13;
bitch. Criticism then assumes 8 func~&#13;
role as does a periodic h'&#13;
. examination for the body. P yaltal&#13;
The university must never 8SSWDt&#13;
~piri~~al status ow:herecondemnatiOlW;&#13;
mqumes are considered sacriligious 1bI&#13;
position only losters palern~ ...:&#13;
?ppresslOn. It must constantly .....&#13;
[angling to keep the juices OOWin" ud&#13;
always in a forward direetl&#13;
Academically its hunger lor kn~&#13;
cannot he satiated, but not at the ""-&#13;
of valuable instruction. Educationally,die&#13;
classroom should he the uncensured,Iluid.&#13;
and tUlstructured medium for the a·&#13;
change of that knowledge. Politicallylilt&#13;
untVersIty should not play the unrealiIli&lt;.&#13;
anachronistic neutral for our lima.&#13;
nation, and education demand actionad&#13;
activism.&#13;
Parkside must become a laculty·sIudIol&#13;
forum not an administrative institutila&#13;
The pituitary glands 01 university ...&#13;
ministrations have contracted a sewrt&#13;
case 01 elephantiasis and caused ..&#13;
creation of monoliths comparableiD....&#13;
to industrial corporate boards. OIlstanding&#13;
instructors are exasperated ...&#13;
frustrated in their powerlessness. 'I'M&#13;
dissemination of their knowledge to die&#13;
students is.then consequently diluted wiIIl&#13;
one part nihilism to two parts disinterest.&#13;
Like a phone call during coitus, studlIIl&#13;
laculty contact is interruplA!dby ...&#13;
ministrative interference. Parkside'-&#13;
direct itsell via student·laculty iIliliati,'5&#13;
and demands.&#13;
Candidates&#13;
VAI.EO'$&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657·5191&#13;
W~'RE NOT 'LYI~' WHEN WE SAY&#13;
(0Qd b/{ie~&amp;~a/{e&#13;
the CGegt ~/{ie~dg&#13;
They know you· Ih appreciate you' _ =~du:'t,derstand you; they&#13;
you're not around ~y mISs you when&#13;
are _ and that's .u~h;t S how old friend~&#13;
valued J s ow we feel about a&#13;
really mi~sU:dtomerlike yourself! We've&#13;
. you and hope yo 'Il&#13;
In SOon to say "h II " u stop e 0 and browse.&#13;
uH~iHed&#13;
6207 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
Open 6 Days. a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
C:osed Mondays&#13;
Senatorial&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
0 &amp; SOUTff SHl!l'IDAN !WAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
HARCOAL BROILE&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
FINEST QUALITY&#13;
EASTER&#13;
CANDIES&#13;
to do.ob. your&#13;
Support&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN, THRU THURS.&#13;
l1 A,M, TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. I SAT, TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
sse&#13;
Candidates&#13;
V altBreach&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
exi ts for the student. A tudent Government&#13;
here must meet the challenge of&#13;
making the administration more conscious&#13;
of, and more responsive to the needs and&#13;
wants of the student body. Positive action&#13;
and coo ration, I believe, will enable a&#13;
d termined enale and a supporting&#13;
tudenl body to accomplish nearly&#13;
anything in the way improvement and&#13;
tterment of every Parkside students'&#13;
ituation. 1 se tud nl control of a student union,&#13;
respon ibl teacher evaluation programs,&#13;
and the establishment and protection of&#13;
tud nt rights as the major tasks which the&#13;
new government will have to tackle. These&#13;
are the goals I have set for S.G.'s first&#13;
year, and if elected, they are what I will&#13;
immediately tart pushing for and keep on&#13;
pushing for until they are achieved.&#13;
Information on the Candidate: Junior, 3.&#13;
OGP, Communication Major, Elected to&#13;
and erved on Con Com, ewscope Staff, 6&#13;
credits thi semester, Endorses Don Koser&#13;
for President.&#13;
BITCH&#13;
Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Parkside is in a sense an artlfi&#13;
creation. Like laws or governm 1&#13;
. . t . ents un1vers1 y 1s dynamic con changing before responses.' It ca Slant&#13;
ford to slip its feet into concrete O °"!' af&#13;
the wishes of the student. Nol only ~IQ"f&#13;
stu?en~ have the right, but al&#13;
ob?thghatc10~1&#13;
_t~ himthself and his educaUoo l&#13;
1 c . n 1c1sm en assumes a funcli&#13;
role as does a periodic h&#13;
examination for the body. P ) 1&#13;
c1&#13;
The university must never a u · ·t I t me ~pm_ ~a s atus "'.here condemnatiom er&#13;
mqumes are considered sacriligious Tha&#13;
position_ only fosters paternalis~&#13;
~~pres_s1on. It must constantly 11\0'i&#13;
Jangling ~o keep the juices flowm"&#13;
always m a forward direct"&#13;
Academically its hunger for know) 1&#13;
cannot be s~tiated, _but not at the ex)lffllt&#13;
of valuable instruction. Educationally tbt&#13;
classroom should be the uncensured, n&#13;
and unstructured medium for the&#13;
ch~nge _of that knowledge. Politically lht&#13;
un1vers1ty should not play the 11nn•11li11;.&#13;
anachronistic neutral for our timfl&#13;
nation, and education demand action 111d&#13;
activism.&#13;
Parkside must become a facultyforum&#13;
not an administrative imliwliall&#13;
The pituitary glands of university administrations&#13;
have contracted a se\'ffl&#13;
case of elephantiasis and caused lilt&#13;
creation of monoliths comparable in&#13;
to industrial corporate boards. Oul&#13;
standing instructors are exasperated ud&#13;
frustrated in their powerlessness. 11lf&#13;
dissemination of their knowledge to tbf&#13;
students is then consequently diluted&#13;
one part nihilism to two parts disin&#13;
Like a phone call during coitus, tudmt&#13;
faculty contact is interrupted ~ administrative&#13;
interference. Park.side m&#13;
direct itself via student-faculty initiati\&#13;
and demands.&#13;
Your Candidates&#13;
VAI..EO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave. FREE&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 Days.a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
WP::'RE NOT •L YIN• WHEN WE SA y&#13;
(0Qd bltte"dg atte&#13;
the CBegt bltte"dg&#13;
They know you. the appreciate you' - y underst~nd you; they&#13;
you're not aroun and th~y miss you when&#13;
are - and that's di·~ ~~t s how old friends&#13;
valued s ?W we feel about a&#13;
really mi;~;Jomer like yourself! We've . you and hope you'll t&#13;
in soon to say "hell " s op o and browse.&#13;
~~ule~&#13;
621.17 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
C :osed Mondays &#13;
..... , IIWIICOPE,....,.. AfrtIl IHistorY' (CaaliDued from Pace 2)&#13;
..iotence: occurred at Parkside. senators&#13;
who had voted In '.,,'or of rallfication&#13;
would be held responsible for any&#13;
damages. Fcr tunately these senators&#13;
reported "'hal BIshop had said and when&#13;
lhe dlSCUSSIOl1 session opened we clarified&#13;
\fohat ratiflcahon meant and what&#13;
responslbohtles S G.A had. We decided&#13;
thaI II wasn'l S G A's role 10 leg,slate&#13;
pctrueal OPInions and that we weuld be&#13;
henerrng • long standing unrver ily&#13;
ITachllOn10allow any group 10 present its&#13;
VI ",Ihoul restncuoe Both SGA. and&#13;
L I C ralllled Y A&#13;
Th Comenuee for an Open Forum and&#13;
Ihe underground no paper The Comeuuee&#13;
also w re raubed The)" were&#13;
harr 1 ter The Open Forum was&#13;
th raed wrth v iolahng regula lions&#13;
J oil. Gotllrodun&#13;
The lim ha come for Par Ide students&#13;
10mak lhelr \ OlC heard throughOulth,S&#13;
&lt; m The onl) "'a) thl goal can be&#13;
hie'ed I through a Irong, unlled errorl&#13;
Of Iled Ithln the Park Ide tudenl&#13;
0\ rom nt The inCidents of last&#13;
m I r' facully purge demon Irale the&#13;
ne&lt; ly of ham'll a well o.-ganlzed&#13;
ludenl fo locombalthe lopo,ded power&#13;
monopol) of lhe admlnl lratJon&#13;
The """ rl POOlhon of the 4.000&#13;
tudent enrolled here mUSIbe Co.-recled&#13;
II "I ted 10 the ludenl Sel\8le. I w·ould&#13;
conllnuolly p lor the students voice to&#13;
hard equally w·ith that of the facully&#13;
and admmJ .rallon Il is lJme for the deafmute&#13;
Image. that students at this&#13;
uttl\'f'I"Slt)' now ha\"e. to be transformed&#13;
Inl0 that or • responsible. energetic,&#13;
po",erful student body.&#13;
II elO&lt;:led. I would Implemenl sludenl&#13;
represenlallOn III facully dIsmIssal and&#13;
enluollon In adchhon. I would see that&#13;
tudent representatives would be placed&#13;
on 811unIVersIty commlllees A powerful&#13;
\'Olce concerning the activities of our&#13;
Sludent UNonwould also be hIgh on the list&#13;
of priori lies.&#13;
Another me ure to be undertaken&#13;
'" ould be an Jnve5hgal1on of present book&#13;
. lore policie· With recommendations for&#13;
sethnR up a student co-op for resale of&#13;
book&#13;
For thiS university to de\'elop into a&#13;
\ abl In lItutlon the measures mentioned&#13;
aboH" be&lt;'ome a necessity. My stand on&#13;
the-st'l. ue IS strong and reasonable. Iam&#13;
sklng for nothmg more than rights which&#13;
tut:k"nts at other uOIversities receive&#13;
'" Ithout question U elected, 1 will devote&#13;
my lime and energy to see that these&#13;
rlghts become a reality for our student&#13;
bod)&#13;
Please \·oteon April6 and 7 and consider&#13;
John GOlUredsen lor Student Senale.&#13;
regarding CUlducl of meetings. A three&#13;
part indi&lt;:lmenl was submitted to Dean&#13;
May in Racine by Dave Bishop. Dean May&#13;
called Bill Smith, President of the Open&#13;
Forwn, to answer the charges. After&#13;
hearing Smith's side of the story and doing&#13;
some mvestigation of his own the Dean&#13;
lIismissed lhe flrst two charges and made&#13;
the members of the Open Forum clean the&#13;
room they had used as a punishment for&#13;
the third charge. The case should have&#13;
been closed, bul Bishop wasn't satisfied.&#13;
He re-submitted the same charges to&#13;
S.GA Then, Dean Dearborn called me to&#13;
a private meeting in the Student Affairs&#13;
office. This meeting was attended by the&#13;
Dean. Jewel Echelbarger and myself. The&#13;
Dean slated Ilatly that if S.G.A. did not&#13;
prosecute the Open Forum, the charges&#13;
....-auld be submitted to the Chancellor&#13;
recommending revocation of ratification,&#13;
Dean LoumM&#13;
What I am most afraid of in student&#13;
go\'ernments, and all governments for that&#13;
matter, are elected officials who then&#13;
bee-orne elitistS. Parksides' previous&#13;
existence has been lolallydiclated bya rew&#13;
people in Tallenl Hall. During this lime of&#13;
reorganizing, faculty and students must&#13;
coeperate and produce a structure of&#13;
committees that have real power. For&#13;
students this means lhat Parkside should&#13;
strike out a totally new course of student&#13;
power. Ibelieve the administration should&#13;
administrate and leave policy slatements&#13;
to the co.-rect Facully-Studenl committee.&#13;
In order to implement and carry oul such a&#13;
program we must elect a student government&#13;
thaI will act in a truly democratic&#13;
way. This means that we cannot let the&#13;
executive ttranch assume a power that&#13;
enables them to set policy for student&#13;
government. UnfortWlate1y, [ see a danger&#13;
in some of the candidates for the executive&#13;
branch of wanting this type of power. For&#13;
this reason, I decided to run for the&#13;
senate and try to make il the source of&#13;
policies and the executive branch· the&#13;
administrators of these decisions.&#13;
Originally, !was not a member of any&#13;
party, I have since met and talked with&#13;
most of the candidates and come to a&#13;
decision that Imust support the Halloween&#13;
Party and its candidate for Pres"ident,&#13;
Madeliene Thielen.&#13;
II true democracy exists, Ibelieve one of&#13;
the first institutions which could conceivably&#13;
achieve it is our university. [&#13;
want to help make Parkside a truly&#13;
democratic institution.&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Good Books at a Good Price&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
BRANDT'S":RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
......... LI K E . .. the brands youklllllJ&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000A1bulll&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not ytI1&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark. ~&#13;
Department· Manager, who is a ParkJidl&#13;
,P-.J.e-..... ....-:::==::::,.student and will talk your language,bCJI/lI&#13;
equipment purchases, records andrrtIftI'/&#13;
which would ban the club from flBldioning&#13;
on campus- Icaned a private meeting WIth&#13;
Bill Smith and a few members of S.G:A.&#13;
and we decided that a 30 day suspensIon&#13;
might save the group. even though it was&#13;
double jeopardy. .&#13;
These are a few of the major events&#13;
which eroded student confidence in the&#13;
administration. From here things got&#13;
worse. S.G.A. had no funds, whenever we&#13;
needed money we had to submit a detailed&#13;
budget and then the Dean had 10 approve&#13;
it. If he liked the project we got the money,&#13;
if not he simply refused. He had all the&#13;
power in his fmancial vote. S.G.A. in fad&#13;
was nothing but a puppet for the Dean.&#13;
Two examples will illustrate this.&#13;
The first one occurred when SGA voted&#13;
unarumously to put on a program of three&#13;
movies dealing with. the war. The Dean&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
,&#13;
Dale Martin&#13;
I dig Parkside as il now slands. Parkside&#13;
is a college of promise. The future of&#13;
Parkside, howe,., as one of quality is in&#13;
doubl because of funding. Il would be a&#13;
shame if Parkside is ruined because of an&#13;
error in someones judgeme~t.&#13;
Many other issues should be dealt with&#13;
by the sludenls. Il is my hope that all&#13;
students will participate in this election&#13;
and everything lhat has lo do with&#13;
Parkside, Iwill always remain open to any&#13;
suggestions my fellow students have.&#13;
If elected, I will support those things that&#13;
will provide Parkside sludents with the&#13;
best possible education. I also am in favor&#13;
o( anything that will provide us. the&#13;
students, with more fun. Ifeel more free&#13;
dances would help.&#13;
Recently, the Parkside candy machine&#13;
in Kenosha set an outstanding example of&#13;
philosophy for us to Colow. The machine&#13;
wtexpected.ly gave out free candy and&#13;
money. Parkside should follow the candy&#13;
machine's example and make a larger&#13;
portion of Parkside's dances FREE.&#13;
Chrlltapbererow-e---&#13;
I suppose there are many ........&#13;
apathy. Probably the reason lor&#13;
malignancy at Parkside is u.efflt IlIia&#13;
cyndrome of a group's lack of ~&#13;
in its ability to improve its lot A~~~&#13;
futility. .' -_If&#13;
We've got this chance friends S&#13;
government - if approached . ~&#13;
can give us the confIdence 10 iii=,",·&#13;
feeling of helplessness. Yes Iadi&lt;o IlIia&#13;
gentlemen - our big ehanc~ 10 . lid&#13;
selv.es.of our collective fear of irnrid _.&#13;
Pitch: The approach to goverQ'&#13;
the important thing. •&#13;
If elected. I plan to ap_b&#13;
government with the idea SlladeI&#13;
complishments foremost in mind. of .1(.&#13;
of solution of student problems raU:-&#13;
the creation of an ineffectiv 1bII&#13;
idealistic governing body like ::. ....&#13;
student governments, on the na~&#13;
scale, have become. tioIII&#13;
I am interested in organi'&#13;
committees lo investigate The ~ ..&#13;
Bookslore. lhe Campus Police 0:::&#13;
menl, lhe "Auxiliary Enlerprises"&#13;
minislralors, and last but by no ~&#13;
leasl, the Sludent Activities braneb':"&#13;
Ad~it?istration. Problems in these lit&#13;
- If mdeed they exist, must be ....&#13;
opinion, defined and dealt with.• ID117&#13;
I am an eggman, we are the eumea.1&#13;
think this is a good thing.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED (I&#13;
"Check Our PricesLtnt"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
New Gat/ery One&#13;
503 Main St,&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% Student Discoulfl&#13;
on all Posters&amp; Frallts&#13;
SONY-Ta ; PANASO pe record~rs, RadiOS,TV &amp; Record players&#13;
KOSS NHIC- RadIO, TV, Recorders, Stereo record pla~&#13;
- eadsets&#13;
KENWOOD - R . MARANT eC~lvers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
AZTEC Zs- Receivers, Speakers, Record playerS&#13;
- peakers ,&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntables&#13;
G,E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
ar A~SO,Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories.~l&#13;
So~theeri sh~ for .Jewelry, Sporting goods and .'''~&#13;
as ern Wisconsin'S lowest prices,&#13;
and -:- and con id&#13;
I •nl t•na te.&#13;
AN UAL SP1RING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
G d Book at a Good Price&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
which would ban the club from fllll~tioni~&#13;
on campi.i,. I caJJed a private meeting with&#13;
Bill Smith and a few members of S.G:A·&#13;
and we decided that a 30 day suspension&#13;
might save the group, even though it was&#13;
double jeopardy. . These are a few of the maJor events&#13;
which eroded student confidence in the&#13;
administration. From here things got&#13;
worse. S.G.A. had no funds, whenever we&#13;
needed money we had to submit a detailed&#13;
budget and then the Dean had to approve&#13;
it. If he liked the project we got the money,&#13;
if not he simply refused. He had all the&#13;
power in his financial vote. S.G.A. in fact&#13;
was nothing but a puppet for the Dean.&#13;
Two examples will illustrate this.&#13;
The first one occurred when SGA voted&#13;
w,animously to put on a program of three&#13;
movies dealing with. the war. The Dean&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
Dale IJartin&#13;
I dig Parkside as it now stands. Parkside&#13;
is a college of promise. The future of&#13;
Parkside, howe,•, as one of quality is in&#13;
doubt because of funding. It would be a&#13;
hame if Parkside is ruined because of an&#13;
error in someones judgement.&#13;
Many other issues should be dealt with&#13;
by the students. It is my hope that all&#13;
students will participate in this election&#13;
and everything that has to do with&#13;
Parkside. I will always remain open to any&#13;
suggestions my fellow students have.&#13;
U elected, I will support those things that&#13;
will provide Parkside students with the&#13;
best possible education. I also am in favor&#13;
of anything that will provide us, the&#13;
students, with more fun. I feel more free&#13;
dances would help.&#13;
Recently, the Parkside candy machine&#13;
in Kenosha set an outstanding example of&#13;
philosophy for us to folow. The machine&#13;
Wlexpectedly gave out free candy and&#13;
money. Parkside should follow the candy&#13;
machine's example and make a larger&#13;
portion of Parkside's dances FREE.&#13;
Christopher Crowe&#13;
I suppose there are many&#13;
apathy. Probably the reaso~ fer&#13;
malignancy at Parkside is u./or&#13;
cyndrome of a group's lack or . in its ability to improve its Jot A~::~&#13;
futility. . lllg ct&#13;
We've got this chance frien~ S&#13;
government - if approached ·&#13;
can give us the confidence to ~~ feeling of helplessness. Yes ladi&#13;
gentlemen - our big chanc~ lo !S&#13;
selves of our collective fear of iin nd D11t&#13;
Pitch: The approach to goven!:~&#13;
the important thing.&#13;
U elected, I plan to approach&#13;
government with the idea 5,&#13;
complishments foremost in mind· ~ •&#13;
of solution _of student problems raUier&#13;
the creation of an ineffective&#13;
idealistic governing body like s:i&#13;
student governments, on Uie&#13;
scale, have become. na&#13;
I am interested in organizt&#13;
committees to investigate The Unh&#13;
Bookstore, the Campus Police&#13;
ment, the "Auxiliary Enterpr· ,&#13;
ministrators, and last but by no&#13;
least! ~e S~dent Activities branch':&#13;
A&amp;:n1i:11stration. Problems in these 1&#13;
- if mdeed they exist, must be&#13;
opinion, defined and dealt with. '&#13;
I am an eggman, we are the eggrn&#13;
think this is a good thing.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED Cl&#13;
"Check Our Pricts Las1"&#13;
4807 7th AYENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
New Gallery One&#13;
503 Main St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
LIKE ... the brands you 11011&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000AlblJ&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, .&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both&#13;
--~ equipment purchases, records and&#13;
~~:~S Tape r~corders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
KOSS ONHIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record playtfS - eadsets&#13;
~~::~o:: Rec~ivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
AZTEC ZS Receivers, Speakers, Record players - peakers&#13;
J.8.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntables&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
a 'i!so, Pateh cords, blank Tapes and accessories. Whilt&#13;
~~th er~, sho~ for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Glfll&#13;
eas ern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
51 2 MAIN STREET&#13;
on the west side of Monument Square &#13;
Pagp 8 ~E"SCOPE Thursday, April 1&#13;
I Tim Dalp)&#13;
The Uw-P Situation IS known. A Incampus&#13;
sy tem exists in ",hi~hlhere are&#13;
no dorms or student centers and no&#13;
athletrc Iaetlttes These ph) ICal factors&#13;
bave created a negative attitude toward&#13;
the entire school and toward the student&#13;
b\.:t1\"1hes In the future the physical&#13;
problem '" ill be overcome. But the&#13;
problem of cvercommg the atutudinal&#13;
factors can be dealt wrth no". The&#13;
. ludent Union committee is one step In Lhis&#13;
direeuon becau e the students \\ III no"&#13;
ha\ t an equal \ oiee In review mg polic.ies&#13;
of the tudent acuvmes and In revrewmg&#13;
g O&lt;'rally 1M broad area or student actl\.11l&#13;
poilci' on "'110 IS 10 have&#13;
prlOrlly In u Ing the buildIng ,,,II help&#13;
r I 1M I 'lor auuud 01 the tudents.&#13;
Thfr ha been a regauve attJlude&#13;
10'4 rd tM ludenl acuvtnes buildIng&#13;
aus It I not a true student umon and&#13;
the tudent have had no control Tbis&#13;
nrgah\' at htude also I taken toYo'8~ any&#13;
acllVlll connecled with the buIlding,&#13;
ThPl" ha' been complaInts about beer&#13;
prl . too The tudent umon committee&#13;
though '" 111be the (irst step In erasmg&#13;
th atlltudea&#13;
nee Sept m r 1 ha\'e been work.Jn~.as&#13;
• brilrlfnder at the student acllVitles&#13;
buIld"'. I bel.. ,p thIS g"es me a good&#13;
(,Iosfo·hand VI~Y; of the organization 1 am&#13;
thet't at most achvlhes and I can therefore&#13;
~I"\'e h.... the poliCIes pUI",to ellettare&#13;
.. orklOg&#13;
The students lhemsehres now have a&#13;
ch nceoto help build a part of their o.""n&#13;
campu. A successful student UOion&#13;
committ will help pave the way for the&#13;
da)' when 8 cam~ umon IS ready for the&#13;
students, to run&#13;
Jerome R. Hor.... l&#13;
I leel the Student Go,eroment is • _ I&#13;
and necessary function of OUrSclI~f/1i4&#13;
should have existed long belore now 'Ill&#13;
students spend a great deal of their~&#13;
within th~ walls 01 the school and ~&#13;
have a voice on how It functions,Iw -..&#13;
be a part of this voice. 1111"&#13;
By talking to students and w0rtina&#13;
lunctioning with students at P8Jtsidi, ':&#13;
almost two years, I hope teo and f&#13;
can, represent the student 'body till&#13;
committee member in the S(~&#13;
Government well.&#13;
From working in other organ;",&#13;
and clubs within the school and.., btIIa&#13;
through some 01 my own exper;.....&#13;
have found that students in many . I&#13;
are unknowingly not getting aUIboy:::&#13;
and should from the lunctions and """"&#13;
provided within the school. Iam ......&#13;
lor a co":,mittee knowing I willgain iliooi&#13;
satisfaction In doing all I can toltv, '"&#13;
students the sen Ices and lunclionaa..,&#13;
deserve.&#13;
"Keep on Truckin"&#13;
Greg BarreUe&#13;
In the past the StUdent A&lt;tivtllol&#13;
Building, operated by AWliliaryr.&#13;
terprises has been nm on a Profit~&#13;
basis, The students are being thouptal.&#13;
consumers, I think this is wrong, AuxiIIa,&#13;
Enterprises should operate the S1uIIti&#13;
Activities Building as a senile_&#13;
students,&#13;
The Student Activities BUildingm .&#13;
operated with the students' benelilill....&#13;
and not with the prolil margin aslbe...&#13;
concern.&#13;
U elected, I propose'" in'estigatt ..&#13;
01 the practices AUxiliaryE....,..&#13;
have been conducting in regardsto,*&#13;
services.&#13;
Student Union Committee&#13;
Be Sure To VOTE&#13;
On&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday&#13;
•&#13;
t A/Iatl' III formed me lbat Studen ..,.Id"&#13;
backed down and the Luddites I"&#13;
a table in the registration I~ ...&#13;
they had seen the Regents&#13;
said no, loI1oftIIllI'"&#13;
Among the students who ,~&#13;
to his office that day was DeJIIII(;IIMII tI&#13;
Despite his presence th"';"' __ ",-&#13;
played the administration~ •• ,&#13;
Eaker formed CUSP and ";&amp;iv.. " _&#13;
registration line With SbeI • .-&#13;
. stitution, They listed Drbim, lie ~~&#13;
advisor, so I went to see t :.&#13;
group was ad hoc and Jus 'd dIo1 ...&#13;
students a choice, He sa: aod ;;;&#13;
known source 01 oncom • ..l&#13;
, ti g office .... r:.JfI University prtn n 'r .,-.;,&#13;
their constitution, T: JliPII" '"&#13;
continued to eliminate coosti~ .•&#13;
committees, NeIther tI/# 4·&#13;
ratified as less th81120 ~&#13;
students who regIsterednoth" ~&#13;
Con-Con finally held: telld" ~&#13;
,ote a lew weeks ago, ':"t&gt;odY~..,&#13;
a majority 01the ~tudr. majoril1 ~&#13;
they decided a sun~d do, U~ ~&#13;
casting ballots wo !be _~&#13;
the vote- did not dra" it did ~ "-&#13;
students, but lorttma&#13;
::&#13;
y&#13;
get a ;,.s1!&#13;
Parkside wIll ~ ~Ihbe¢&#13;
government, hOpe! ~. in, ~ ~&#13;
This is where y";:.t the)'Staod&#13;
candidates and w r¢I'&#13;
VOTE! t gov,rtt A strong studen . __ and.....&#13;
th defiCl.... ~.- overcome ese ·tba strCIII·&#13;
the studentbo~ ~arI&lt;Jid"-&#13;
in the affaiI'S 0&#13;
students could be made aware of what was&#13;
happening and then Jewel Echelbarger&#13;
sent word that il the group dia anythIng&#13;
she didn't like, she would have it vetoed by&#13;
Dean Dearborn. The group became&#13;
disgusted with the situation and gave up.&#13;
Then CorrCon was proposed. Last spring&#13;
an election was held and students were&#13;
selected to draw up a new c&amp;1stitution.&#13;
Hopes were high that the constitution&#13;
would he ratified by Easter and a new&#13;
goverrnnent elected by May 1. By virtue of&#13;
receiving the most votes, Bev Noble, in·&#13;
volved in her first political activity on&#13;
campus, chaired the group. The semester&#13;
ended with no ratification vote. Summer&#13;
passed and the new fall semester was well&#13;
lDlder way with no constitution acceptable&#13;
10 both sides,&#13;
When I taiked to con-con members to&#13;
find out what was happening I was told&#13;
that Dearborn had hecome abusive "'ward&#13;
Bev Novle and accused her 01being a rebel&#13;
rouser and a trouble maker, I approached&#13;
Bev and asked her if this was true and she&#13;
confirmed it.&#13;
When the laculty lirings began the&#13;
situation became ripe lor Con-Con to push&#13;
through its constitution. Student interest&#13;
was at a peak, the need for a student voice&#13;
apparent, and the CorrCon document&#13;
seemed destined lor passage,&#13;
But the administration tried one last&#13;
ditch ellort to block the constitution. Dave&#13;
Krivan, the Chancellor's personal&#13;
assistant, came out of the woodwork to&#13;
alter the document. Working through&#13;
Dennis Cashion and Jim Eaker, under the&#13;
History&#13;
(Continued lrom Page 6)&#13;
"Ioed our budget. He claimed that the&#13;
Regents Rules required us to present both&#13;
Sides of the argument. This was a lie. As a&#13;
matter or lacl the school had just&#13;
presented a program on civil rights which&#13;
Included Father James Groppi, Alderman&#13;
Val Phtlltps and Jesse Jackson, who are&#13;
all Irong civil rights advocates. When we&#13;
confronled Lhe Student Affairs o£Ciceand&#13;
asked to see a copy 01the regents rules, we&#13;
"'ere told that there was no copy available.&#13;
The other incident OCC\DTed when SGA&#13;
planned a year end party at the new&#13;
Parkside site. Beer was to be served and&#13;
51. bands had been lined up '" provide&#13;
conllnuous musIC all day and night. When&#13;
It was learned lbat all the "bands had&#13;
agroed 10 donate their money to the un.&#13;
derground n....."paper. so it could get a&#13;
press. Student Allairs relused to accept&#13;
the contracts and lured two bands 01their&#13;
0'4."&#13;
By late APril Ihad had my fill. SGA was&#13;
a useless, powerless 1001 01 the student&#13;
affairs office. I resigned from the&#13;
presidency and went 10 work lor The&#13;
CommllleP SGA degeneraled to oothing&#13;
the semester limped to a close, When&#13;
the fan semester began in September 01'69&#13;
11 was clear to everyone that SGA was&#13;
dead Around Christmaslime a few&#13;
tUdents trIed 10write a Constitution and&#13;
get 1lratified so another government could&#13;
get started but Bill Niebuhr refused to give&#13;
them rooms to hold meetings so the&#13;
guise of smoothing out the language,&#13;
Krivan tried'" back out th",students Bill 01&#13;
Rights and the standing committee. On the&#13;
fIrst Tuesday of Christmas vacation ConCon&#13;
held a meeting to consider these&#13;
changes. Con-Con accepted some&#13;
recommendations dealing with word&#13;
changes, but maintained that past exP\'rience&#13;
established a definite need for the&#13;
rights and the standing committees.&#13;
Cashion and Eaker argued that we should&#13;
forgive and forget 'and show some trust in&#13;
the administration, Con-Con voted to&#13;
maintain the two key issues and the&#13;
constitution was ready for ratification.&#13;
The vote was scheduled to take place&#13;
during registration.&#13;
As far as showing trust is concerned., the&#13;
lolly of that notion became evident during&#13;
January's final exams. A number of&#13;
organizations had asked for permission to&#13;
set up tables in the registration line to&#13;
solicit membership and distribute&#13;
literature, I was sitting in the lounge at&#13;
Tallant Hall when Mr. Totero Irom Dean&#13;
Dearborn's ollice came down and told&#13;
some memhers of the Luddites that they&#13;
would not be allowed to have a table. When&#13;
they .. ked him why not he said that they&#13;
had been checking the Regents Rules the&#13;
previous day and found that it was not&#13;
permitted. This sounded lamiliar and I&#13;
told the Luddites to ask to see the rules.&#13;
Totero said they were in his office, so we&#13;
went back to his office with him. Somehow&#13;
the Regents Rules became irretrievably&#13;
lost in 24hours. I had to leave for an exam,&#13;
When I got out one of the Luddites inHistory&#13;
&#13;
prt 1&#13;
Student Union Committee&#13;
Jerome R. Horton&#13;
I feel the Student Government i&#13;
and necessary function of our sch~&#13;
should have existed long before now&#13;
students spend a great deal of thei&#13;
within the walls of the school anJ&#13;
have a voice on how it functions. 1&#13;
be a part of this voice.&#13;
By talking to students and workj&#13;
functioning with students at Par ng&#13;
almost two years, I hope too, and 1&#13;
can, represent the student body&#13;
committee member in the St&#13;
Government well.&#13;
From working in other organiu&#13;
and clubs within the school and also&#13;
through some of my own expen&#13;
have found that students in many are unlmowingly not getting all they&#13;
and should from the functions and&#13;
provided within the school. 1 arn&#13;
for a committee knowing I ...,;11 gain&#13;
satisfaction in doing all I can to gi&#13;
students the services and functions&#13;
deserve.&#13;
"Keep on Truckin"&#13;
Greg Barrette&#13;
In the past the Student Acti&#13;
Building, operated by Au.xiliar:,&#13;
terprises has been run on a profit&#13;
basis. The students are being lhougbtGI&#13;
consumers. I think this is wrof'I. Enterprises should operate th&#13;
Activities Building as a sen&#13;
students.&#13;
The Student Activities Building m&#13;
operated with the students' benefit&#13;
and not with the profit margm as the concern.&#13;
If elected, I propose to inv tigate&#13;
of the practices Auxiliary Ent&#13;
have been conducting in regards to&#13;
services.&#13;
Be Sure To VOTE&#13;
On&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday&#13;
(Cootinued from Page 6)&#13;
tudents could be made aware of what was&#13;
happening and then Jewel Ecbelbarger&#13;
sent word that if the group did" anything&#13;
she didn 't like, she would have it vetoed by&#13;
Dean Dearborn. The group became&#13;
disgusted with the situation and gave up.&#13;
Then Con-Con was proposed. Last spring&#13;
an election was held and students were&#13;
selected to draw up a new c&amp;stitution.&#13;
Hopes were high that the constitution&#13;
would be ratified by Easter and a new&#13;
government elected by May 1. By virtue of&#13;
receiving the most votes, Bev oble, involved&#13;
in her first political activity on&#13;
campus, chaired the group. The semester&#13;
ended with no ratification vote. Summer&#13;
passed and the new fall semester was well&#13;
under way with no constitution acceptable&#13;
to both sides.&#13;
When I talked to con~n members to&#13;
find out what was happening I was told&#13;
that Dearborn had become abusive toward&#13;
Bev ovle and accused her of being a rebel&#13;
rouseF and a trouble maker. I approached&#13;
Bev and asked her if this was true and she&#13;
confirmed it.&#13;
When the faculty firings began the&#13;
situatioo became ripe for Con-Con to push&#13;
through its constitution. Student interest&#13;
was at a peak, the need for a student voice&#13;
apparent, and the Con-Con document&#13;
seemed destined for passage.&#13;
But the administration tried one last&#13;
ditch effort to block the constitution. Dave&#13;
Krivan, the Chancellor's personal&#13;
assistant, came out of the woodwork to&#13;
alter the document. Working through&#13;
Dennis Cashion and Jim Eaker, under the&#13;
guise of smoothing out the language,&#13;
Krivan tried to hack out thEl,students Bill of&#13;
Rights and the standing committee. On the&#13;
first Tuesday of Christmas vacation ConCon&#13;
held a meeting to consider these&#13;
changes. Con-Con accepted some&#13;
recommendations dealing with word&#13;
changes, but maintained that past experience&#13;
established a definite need for the&#13;
rights and the standing committees.&#13;
Cashion and Eaker argued that we should&#13;
forgive and forget ·and show some trust in&#13;
the administration. Con-Con voted to&#13;
maintain the two key issues and the&#13;
constitution was ready for ratification.&#13;
The vote was scheduled to take place&#13;
during registration.&#13;
As far as showing trust is concerned, the&#13;
folly of that notion became evident during&#13;
January's final exams. A number of&#13;
organizations had asked for permission to&#13;
set up tables in the registration line to&#13;
solicit membership and distribu(e&#13;
literature. I was sitting in the lounge at&#13;
Tallant Hall when Mr. Totero from Dean&#13;
Dearborn's office came down and told&#13;
some members of the Luddites that they&#13;
would not be allowed to have a table. When&#13;
they lsked him why not he said that they&#13;
had been checking the Regents Rules the&#13;
previous day and found that it was not&#13;
permitted. This sounded familiar and I&#13;
told the Luddites to ask to see the rules.&#13;
Totero said they were in his office, so we&#13;
went back to his office with him. Somehow&#13;
the Regents Rules became irretrievably&#13;
lost in 24 hours. I had to leave for an exam.&#13;
When I got out one of the Luddites informed&#13;
me that Studen~ AffJll1&#13;
backed down and the Lt!ddites 1 a table in the registration lme. ,_ they had seen the Regents&#13;
said no. folJoWd&#13;
Among the students who&#13;
to his office that day was De~&#13;
Despite his presence '!'~ ...,e&#13;
played the administration~ If&#13;
Eaker for~ed 0,JSP a_nd KriYID&#13;
registration hne wilh Sid ,.&#13;
stitution. They listed DrbiJD. flt&#13;
advisor, so I went to~ t wanted&#13;
group was ad hoc and JUS "d !bf)'&#13;
students a choice. He 581 and&#13;
known source of income bid&#13;
University printing offic~r c . • · The• their conshtut1on. fligbll&#13;
continued to elim!nate ~- committees. Neither 20 per ~&#13;
ratified as Jess 1:1180 red voted.&#13;
students who regtSte notJier rt&#13;
Con-Con finally held; tead"&#13;
vote a few weeks ago. f~&#13;
a majority of the ~tud:' rna;ort. '-&#13;
they decided a sunp do&#13;
casting ballots would !ht&#13;
the vote did not draw ii did&#13;
students, but ~ortu;:1!fi: F' •&#13;
Parkside will !ill with tltl&#13;
government, hopef ~e in&#13;
This is where Y%t the)' staod flJ&#13;
candidates and w&#13;
VOTE! t goverlllll A strong studen . ...-jeS and defiCle, ... overcome these 'th a sironC·&#13;
the student.~';:~&#13;
in the affairs 0 </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 10, April 1, 1971</text>
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                <text>1971-04-01</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>By Bob Mainland&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Racine's New Gallery One&#13;
offers artist's originals at prices&#13;
ranging from .two dollars to&#13;
twelve thousand dollars. It.ahm&#13;
features Emile and Nancy,&#13;
madcap en trepreneurs, .&#13;
providmg the best floor Slio'w&#13;
this side of Benny's Club.&#13;
Nancy says, "Here we&#13;
are-where are your' Emile is&#13;
silent. So come on gang, truck&#13;
on down to New Gallery One&#13;
and rip off some culture!&#13;
New Gallery will feature an&#13;
exhibition by Parkside's Ian&#13;
Fraser, starting April 18.&#13;
--&#13;
By Bob Mainland&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Racine's New Gallery One&#13;
offers artist's originals at prices&#13;
ranging from . two dollars to&#13;
twelve thousand dollars. It al!in&#13;
features Emile and Nancy, madcap entrepreneurs, . providing the best floor slio'w&#13;
this side of Benny's Club.&#13;
Nancy says, "Here we&#13;
are-where are you?" Emile is&#13;
silent. So come on gang, truck&#13;
on down to New Gallery One&#13;
and rip off some culture!&#13;
New Gallery will feature an&#13;
exhibition by Parkside's Ian&#13;
Fraser, starting April 18. &#13;
i&#13;
~2 --:.:.;e~W'&gt;C;;;;lope~-L-=~~ri~~S' 1_97_IERS TO TH E EDITO R&#13;
tWO very close and precise scrutiny&#13;
Eduor&#13;
II&#13;
d! A d I that this happened over of each word .. An I"ntellectual actua ) passe. n not on Y ? And&#13;
I've got a hot lip for thaI )'00'11 never believe ihts weeks ago. do we. game, '0 to speak. If this is the&#13;
you methmg )"U JU I ,m~ht one but that some clever certainly,letting them know any- case, I submit that a dIffIcult&#13;
be rruere red 10 hou ne ver Park ide students have actually thing at all about the c~ndldates crossword puzzle, the answer to&#13;
kn,," wuh new paper eduors] stalled secret campaigns for or issues would be foohsh-theYI which could be published at a&#13;
.~ In nd of nnne who' rull) offices in the first student might just go out and vot~. later date, would better suit this&#13;
... n I' h II eovernment '0"', this IS just ~1aybe even care about what s&#13;
10 ..eep t 1\ quiet now, u ...v- purpose.&#13;
)UU can .onnrm tt I "hi pered bcl\\cen you and me -after all, happening. I I feel I must also comment on&#13;
to me ludol) tholt the student \\C wouldn"t want tu let the So don't spill the beans. the name (The Halloween Party)&#13;
,""trnmenl -onsmuuon (shh0l whole tudent bod) find ollt mean, if you did that-what selected for the Luddite slate of kind of campus newspaper candidates in the upcoming&#13;
editor would you be, anyway? student government election. It&#13;
Secretively yours, is indeed a good joke. As such, I&#13;
Lynn A, Hoff feel it exemplifies the kind of&#13;
government Parkside students&#13;
can expect if the Party is&#13;
elected.&#13;
I may appear to take issue&#13;
with everything the Luddites are&#13;
for, but this is not the case. I&#13;
feel the Luddite policy of&#13;
activism and participation is one&#13;
which all students should&#13;
seriously consider adopting. I&#13;
particularly concur with the&#13;
closing statement of the&#13;
aforementioned Luddite&#13;
column. It was, "It may weB be&#13;
that Luddite has nothing to&#13;
say." Perhaps I'm more ·of a&#13;
than I lhought. 1 e x p e ct&#13;
they'll let me know.&#13;
Jim Nolan&#13;
.;#7001 S...m 8. I&#13;
::H I) HI.109.f.&#13;
~s'H: '10.00 I'~Jl1)"IlIS&#13;
*&#13;
~&#13;
To the Editor.&#13;
The Luddite column in the&#13;
March ::!9 issue of ewscope&#13;
contains. in my opinion, an&#13;
c),.lrcmely novel definition. It&#13;
Slates, "A Luddite is onc who&#13;
feels compelled to act or react."&#13;
It is this definition which&#13;
caused me to write this letter.&#13;
and. I suppose therefore&#13;
qualifies me as a Lud~itc. This&#13;
comes as quite a surprise to me&#13;
as I'm sure it does to Mr.&#13;
\\'ebster. He also does&#13;
definitiuns:&#13;
Ifind it su surprising because&#13;
Idisagree with nearly everything&#13;
I can make sense of in the&#13;
Luddite columns. I recognize as&#13;
the cause for my difficulty in&#13;
underslanding the Luddites my&#13;
own ineptilllde, but then I'm&#13;
hung up on Webster's&#13;
definitions.&#13;
I understand the name&#13;
Luddite to be derivcd from a&#13;
group of English workmen who&#13;
destroyed labor-saving machines&#13;
as a form of protest. In Iiglll of&#13;
this, I find confusing the fact&#13;
that the Luddites publicized as&#13;
the highlIght of their election&#13;
rally a particular kind of&#13;
loudspeaker. Initially, I believed&#13;
thIS seemingly inconsistent&#13;
highlight to be another of the&#13;
LJIllOUS Luddite puns. 1&#13;
c'\pe..:ted :H some point in' the&#13;
rally the machine would be&#13;
smashed lO bits by club wielding&#13;
Luddites. However. this was not&#13;
lhe ~ase. They actually pUI to&#13;
good use a labor saving device.&#13;
I've considered the possibility&#13;
that the Luddite column does&#13;
have meaning. but is written so&#13;
as to reveal it only upon the&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
i~m:=::~~~::'&lt;-:::~:::::~~;:~'::;::;::&gt;;~:J~!~~~f:~:~!~~r~::&#13;
h&#13;
. . The SWIm Ball swim-bra top ::::&#13;
t IS IS~haslhelamou,sl,tolaBali,bra t&#13;
8&#13;
·&#13;
WI hOullooklng like one, ~::&#13;
Front tucklngs ::::&#13;
~&#13;
91 e a natural look ::::&#13;
to the seamless cup ::::&#13;
Hidden underwlring supports ~~;&#13;
and shapes beautifully. ::::&#13;
.' A...a la e in so. cup and push·up styles_ ~t:&#13;
AI er you've sized up your lop, :~~&#13;
choose ellher a hlp hugger, brief Or bikini. ::=:&#13;
Tops and bottoms ::~:&#13;
are sold separalely. ~:~&#13;
In prints for every swim taste. :;:;&#13;
All AnlTon- nylon with nylon tricot lining. :::;&#13;
~~~&#13;
::::&#13;
~~~&#13;
§j&#13;
1\1&#13;
::::&#13;
::::&#13;
(ci:&#13;
~:'&#13;
~~:&#13;
i~; I~&#13;
I&#13;
\\\&#13;
i&#13;
11,&#13;
. \~~&#13;
\ I J'h&#13;
1\ R-K NEWS AGENCY ..~ Free !~,:::=:~:"~,,-J..N_e_;_S:_:_~_:_';h_·_::_&lt;:_~_Z_~_~_~_~i_:_9a_~a_I;_:_e_s _*_~:::='::::::.....1 L~.;.:.~.i.7..4__ "",.....&#13;
$)7 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
There is a lot of bullshit&#13;
nying around these days, and if&#13;
you don't watch out it's liable&#13;
to hit you right between the&#13;
eyes. If you don't believe it ask&#13;
me. The date was April 1 and&#13;
the time was 7:25 p.m. I had&#13;
decided to go out to our&#13;
Student Activities building and&#13;
have a couple beers, play the&#13;
pins and kick out some jams on&#13;
the juke box. Well, I pulled into&#13;
the modulux parking area and&#13;
parked the car at the end of the&#13;
,row that was started in the&#13;
middle of the area.&#13;
I went in, met some friends&#13;
and started rapping with them.&#13;
We rapped for about ten&#13;
minutes and then went over to&#13;
the bar and had a beer.&#13;
Then we went over and&#13;
played the pins. While a friend&#13;
was getting his nips burnt off by&#13;
the machine, I went over and&#13;
flipped a· quarter in the box to&#13;
get things moving a bit.&#13;
All this time as I was blowing&#13;
my wad trying to enjoy myself,&#13;
The Man on the Parks ide patrol&#13;
smacks my windshield with a&#13;
ticket that costs me a fiver. As if&#13;
I don't pay enough to attend&#13;
lhis university. What a bummer.&#13;
All I could say was I-ee. Nothing&#13;
else but I·ee.&#13;
When [ went out to the car to&#13;
leave I saw the ticket wrapped·&#13;
around the wiper blade, As I&#13;
turned my head The Man was&#13;
back. The smirk on his face&#13;
seemed to say, "I got ya, ya&#13;
durn hlpPle."&#13;
I just don't understand how&#13;
he expects us "durn hippies" to&#13;
know where to park when we&#13;
don't see a no parking sign in&#13;
the middle of the ll10dulux&#13;
parking area, and&#13;
already a second row there I:l&#13;
As Idrove off and started.&#13;
to bad all I could tN~~ hOl1lt&#13;
night was I-ee, I've be ~f~&#13;
again, I-ee, '.ee, l.ee en rtpPtij&#13;
Al McGibany .&#13;
Dear Sirs:&#13;
In reply to John K&#13;
Newscope article of Ma~lJtn"&#13;
1971 on the Helpline we ~&#13;
like to clear up \liould&#13;
misunderstandings fOunda ftl,&#13;
the article. Wtt!un&#13;
First of all, the group b ~,_&#13;
the Helpline is not the K ac....,&#13;
Mental Health AssOeiati~n't&#13;
rathel IS Kenosha Drug Abon,&#13;
Incorporated, a group of d&#13;
interested in drug prohl a ul,&#13;
Kenosha. While KDAI'I be;"' •&#13;
conSists of financial suppo~&#13;
. t h nltl4&#13;
In ~rest, t e Helpline itself&#13;
entirely manned and run&#13;
younger volunteers boll&#13;
student and non·stude~t ,&#13;
volunteers do have acce~ t&#13;
some adult resource ad~&#13;
and 0 u tside communu&#13;
resourc~s, but are pnnuri)&#13;
r~spon~lble and use Our&#13;
discretion in talking with lbt&#13;
caller.&#13;
In regard to meeting withIhr&#13;
poltce, we volunteers want&#13;
make .it clear thai whije&#13;
talked with them, we are ID II&#13;
way working for the police bot&#13;
are only seemg them to i_&#13;
our being able to operate frlOly&#13;
Concerning the quole abolt&#13;
runaways, "The law say. m.,&#13;
(Helpline) must call the pi....&#13;
if their son or daughter fa&#13;
away from home." This 15&#13;
entirely true. We may nol&#13;
anything to affaet Ihe cu~o4)&#13;
of anyone under 18, however&#13;
someone does call and is unda&#13;
18 and has or wants to runmy&#13;
from home, we do ..&#13;
automatically call his parte&#13;
First of all, Helpline operates&#13;
a first name only basis,andFU&#13;
the caller's last name onlytflr&#13;
wants to give it. Secondl).&#13;
do not ask for add,...&#13;
telephone numbers and th&#13;
we are there to talk to (aBm,&#13;
not to crossexamine them&#13;
turn them in to their parents.&#13;
Lastly, we would lil.e&#13;
correct an impression tltalDIIJ&#13;
have been conveyed tlut If&#13;
handle only SUIcide ani&#13;
overdose problems. IklpiDr&#13;
exists for you to call and&#13;
about anything you ne&lt;d&#13;
wi th, such 3S relall&#13;
problems, information a&#13;
what's happening in the&#13;
draft questions, legal probiolL&#13;
pregnancy problems, or fl&#13;
talking if you need sam"'"&#13;
talk to. OUI number "'"&#13;
658-4357 or 658.HELP. If&#13;
is easier to remember.&#13;
We appreciate the&#13;
Newscope has sltownus.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Helpline Volunteers&#13;
~...".tCPq ...&#13;
( \ " BOOK,S - NOVELS&#13;
'".,.' 71) S \ ~.:' ensu.ous Woman by "J"&#13;
~,;.I t~ Everything You Always Wanted to&#13;
;,&lt;!!-- I ~~ K b .&#13;
, . ,.~. __~ now a out Se~ by Dr. Reuben r--&lt;2&gt;~ . " . Love Story by Erich Segal&#13;
~'II}:; ~~ lnhenlors by Harold Robins&#13;
_.. , ?"' I French Lieutenant' W • 5 oman&#13;
J .-&#13;
by John Fowles&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Ball Four by Bouton&#13;
Capsule Colleg&lt;&#13;
Women held at lbe COl&#13;
of Wisconsin.Parksldt&#13;
Thursday, April IS. front' I&#13;
to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
2 ope&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
pril 5. I 9 I&#13;
very close and precise scrutiny parking area, and&#13;
already a second row s there IS&#13;
C OOSC e1&#13;
1ii COil. W./&#13;
~::&#13;
~: ,,.. O.llvery&#13;
• • 'Ult AVB./DOWNTOWN&#13;
Phone 654-0744&#13;
that this happened over two&#13;
weeks ago. do we? And&#13;
ertaml) . letung them kn~W any·&#13;
thing at all about the cand~dt~:s or i ·ues would be foolish y&#13;
miclll JU t go out and vot~!&#13;
~1a-ybe even care about what s&#13;
f each word . . An intellectual&#13;
~ame, so to speak If this is_ the&#13;
case, I submit that a difficult&#13;
crossword puzzle, the answer to&#13;
which could be publishe~ at _a&#13;
later date, would better sutt this&#13;
As I drove off and tarted.&#13;
to bad all I could t~ent ho&#13;
night was 1-ee, I've beenk ?f&#13;
again, 1-ee, 1-ee, 1-ee n npPtd&#13;
Al McGibany ·&#13;
purpose. I feel I must also comment on happening. Dear Sirs: don ·1 spill the beans. I&#13;
mean. it you did that-what&#13;
md of campus newspaper&#13;
editor would you be, anyway?&#13;
e .. ·etively yours.&#13;
L) nn A. Hoff&#13;
To the ·ditor.&#13;
The Luddite column in the&#13;
. larch 29 issue of Newscope&#13;
contams. in my opinion. an c,trcmcly novel definition. It&#13;
tate~ .. A Luddite is one who&#13;
feel ~ompelled to act or react."&#13;
It ,~ this definition which&#13;
cau.,ed me to write tht letter.&#13;
and. I uppose therefore&#13;
qualifie me a a Luddite. Thi&#13;
,ome a quite a urpn e to me&#13;
a 1'111 ure it doe~ to 1r.&#13;
\\'cb tcr . lie al o doc&#13;
det111111on ."&#13;
I find it o ·urpr1sing becau e&#13;
I dbagrce w11h near!)- everyth111g&#13;
I can make ense of in the&#13;
tddite columns I recogni1e as&#13;
the au e for my difficulty in&#13;
under tanding the Luddites my&#13;
m,n ineptitude. but then I'm&#13;
hung up on Webster's&#13;
definition . I under tand the name&#13;
Luddite to be derived from a&#13;
group of Engli h workmen who&#13;
de tro)-ed labor-savmg machines&#13;
a a form of prote t. In ltght of&#13;
this. I find confu ing the fact&#13;
that the Luddite pubhdted as&#13;
the highlight of their election&#13;
rally a particular kind of&#13;
loud pcaker. Initially. I believed&#13;
th1 ~cemingly in-:onsi tent&#13;
highlight to be another of the&#13;
fam u u Luddite puns. I&#13;
pected at ome point in · the&#13;
the name (The Halloween Party)&#13;
selected for the Luddite slate of&#13;
candidates in the upcoming&#13;
student government election. It&#13;
is indeed a good joke. As such, I&#13;
feel it exemplifies the kind of&#13;
government Parkside students&#13;
can expect if the Party is&#13;
elected.&#13;
I may appear to take issue&#13;
with everything the Luddites are&#13;
for, but this is not the case. I&#13;
feel the Luddite policy of&#13;
activism and participation is one&#13;
which all students should&#13;
seriously consider adopting. I&#13;
particularly concur with the&#13;
closing statemeAt of the&#13;
aforementioned Luddite&#13;
column. It was. "It may well be&#13;
that Luddite has nothing to&#13;
say." Perhaps I'm more · of a&#13;
than I thought. I e x p e ct&#13;
they'll let me know. ·&#13;
Jim olan&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
There is a lot of bullshit&#13;
flying around these days, and if&#13;
you don't watch out it's liable&#13;
to hit you right between the&#13;
eyes. If you don't believe it ask&#13;
me. The date was April I and&#13;
the time was 7:25 p.m. I had&#13;
decided to go out to our&#13;
Student Activities building and&#13;
have a couple beers. play the&#13;
pins and kick out some jams on&#13;
the juke box. Well, I pulled into&#13;
the modulux parking area and&#13;
parked the car at the end of the&#13;
row that was started in the&#13;
middle of the area . I went in, me t some friends&#13;
and started rapping with them.&#13;
We rapped for about ten&#13;
minutes and then went over to&#13;
the bar and had a beer.&#13;
In reply to John K 1&#13;
ewscope article of Ma;:n·,&#13;
1_971 on the Helpline. we w • ltke to clear up&#13;
misunderstandings found 3 f&#13;
the article. v.,t&#13;
First of all, the group b&#13;
the H~lpline is not the K:n&#13;
Mental Health Associaho&#13;
rather is Kenosha Drug n,&#13;
Incorporated, a group uf d ,&#13;
interested in drug prob! a '&#13;
Kenosha. While KDAI' bms 11&#13;
consists of financial supp 3&#13;
. ·~t&#13;
mt~rest, the Helpline II If&#13;
entirely manned and run&#13;
younger volunteer~&#13;
student and non-stude~t&#13;
volunteers do have a~ ,·&#13;
some adult resource adi&#13;
and outside commun,i&#13;
resources, but are prmu&#13;
r~spon~ible and use our discretion rn talking 11;(h&#13;
caller.&#13;
I~ regard to meeting 11,th&#13;
police, we volunteers \\lnt&#13;
make it clear that while&#13;
talked with them, we are 1&#13;
way working for the poh c b are only seeing them to&#13;
our being able to operate fr&#13;
Concerning the quote 1&#13;
runaways, "The law ms&#13;
(Helpline) must call thc·p&#13;
if their son or daughter&#13;
away from home." Thi u&#13;
entirely true. We ma\ n t&#13;
anything to affact the t&#13;
of anyone under I , how someone does call and 1s&#13;
18 and has or wants to run&#13;
from home, we d&#13;
automatically call hi p 1&#13;
First of all, Helpline opcrat a first name only basi , and&#13;
the caller's last name on!&#13;
wants to give it. Second!)&#13;
ralh the ma-:hine would be&#13;
"m:i~ed to bit by dub wielding&#13;
Luddite However. this was not&#13;
the ca •. The, actually put to&#13;
good u e a labor saving device.&#13;
I've considered the possibility&#13;
that the Luddite column does&#13;
have meaning. but is written so a to reveal it only upon the&#13;
Then we went over and&#13;
played the pins. While a friend&#13;
was getting his nips burnt off by&#13;
the machine, I went over and&#13;
flipped a· quarter in the box to&#13;
get things moving a bit.&#13;
do not ask for addre&#13;
telephone number and tlur&#13;
we are there to talk to&#13;
not to crossexamine th&#13;
turn them in to their parents.&#13;
Lastly, we would l e&#13;
correct an impres ion th1t&#13;
have been conveyed th1t&#13;
han dle only u1cidt&#13;
overdose problems. II&#13;
exists for you to call an&#13;
about anything you need&#13;
with, such as relall&#13;
problems, information&#13;
what's happening in the&#13;
draft questions. legal pr&#13;
pregnancy problems. or ~&#13;
talking if you need om&#13;
talk to. Our numbe1&#13;
658-4357 or 658-HELP. if&#13;
is easier to remember.&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
All this time as I was blowing&#13;
my wad trying to enjoy myself,&#13;
The Ma11 on the Parkside patrol&#13;
smacks my windshield with a&#13;
ticket that costs me a fiver. As if&#13;
I don't pay enough to attend&#13;
this university. What a bummer.&#13;
All I could say was 1-ee. othing&#13;
else but 1-ee.&#13;
When I went out to the car to&#13;
leave I saw the ticket wrapped -&#13;
around the wiper blade. As I&#13;
turned my head The Man was back. The smirk on his face&#13;
seemed to say, " I got ya, ya&#13;
durn hippie ."&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
I just don't understand how&#13;
he expects us "durn hippies" to&#13;
kno-:v where to park when we&#13;
don t see a no parking sign in&#13;
the middle of the modulux&#13;
{&#13;
· . I&#13;
' BOO~S - NOVELS&#13;
·' YT). Se w / nsuous oman by "J" ~-iJ-__~~-Everything You Always Wanted to&#13;
~ Know about Sex by Dr. Reuben&#13;
_.,_ , Love Story by Erich Segal&#13;
~ Inheritors by Harold Robins&#13;
French _ Lieutenant's _ W oman&#13;
by John Fowles&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Ball Four by Bouton&#13;
R-K NEWS AGENCY&#13;
Newspape~s . P~perbacks . Magazines&#13;
5816 Sixth Ave. &amp; Pershing Plaza&#13;
We appreciate the 1&#13;
Newscope has shown u ·&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
~ Capsule Coll&#13;
Women held at The Un&#13;
of Wis consin-Park tdt&#13;
Thursday, April t 5. fiolll 1&#13;
to 3:30 p.m. &#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the NEWSCOPE Staff&#13;
hi d a storefront with boarded&#13;
Be n and a papered-up door is&#13;
·ndows .. d I WI Harry. DIS IS e pace.&#13;
DulldO\ out my taperecorder and&#13;
I Ir'back in an old chair near the&#13;
"ttle nd told the band this here's&#13;
door a be an interview, so say&#13;
gonn. . II· t&#13;
melhing mte Igen.. .&#13;
SO Bulldog Harry IS considered in more&#13;
mere four quarters to be the&#13;
than;amned' band in Sin City. John&#13;
besl usual spokesman for the group&#13;
s&lt;egl~~'t show up for 45 minutes, so I&#13;
.~~ d the three other Har1.s with the&#13;
pro : end of a microphone, feeling of&#13;
bun r in my hands, able to cut them&#13;
rrr;i1h the subtle, silent black switch&#13;
the mike off, on, smiling, asking&#13;
~ ' f . d Id questions 0 Wlzene rock&#13;
~usicians. that's the right work too,&#13;
musicians. .&#13;
A couple years ago It came to pass&#13;
that the Starboys appeared on the&#13;
no· John Seeger, Phil Clark, Ken&#13;
~d;rpool, Cy Costabile, and later&#13;
Father Meat's own, Frank NlCcolal (or&#13;
vice versa), oozed throught the meat&#13;
inder of losing one band and&#13;
~scending the starry.path. Starboys&#13;
were to begat Bulldog Harry, originally&#13;
composed of Danny Strange (formerly&#13;
of Homegrown Blues), Ken, Frank and&#13;
Cy. Danny split for California in&#13;
January, with John lithely filling the&#13;
void. f call them musicians bec~use,&#13;
for example, FranK has been addIcted&#13;
to keyboards of ·various lenghts and&#13;
lanes since he was seven, getting into&#13;
rock and blues when 14, Cy on drums&#13;
for seven years. The Jist is endless.&#13;
I asked how much of their music is&#13;
original.Ken said about 60%, "lately it&#13;
has been because we haven't been&#13;
playing any clubs, we've just been&#13;
playing, you know, to kids. We don't&#13;
play alot of the horseshit we had to&#13;
playin Chicago."&#13;
What kind of music do you guys&#13;
play? Ken lold· me, Rolling Stones,&#13;
rock and roll, Buddy Holly .. What is&#13;
the music like? "You have to listen to&#13;
it" was Ihe reply.&#13;
You been gettin gigs? Frank said&#13;
"we're playing mostly here. practici.ng.&#13;
Harry Music&#13;
AorU S, 1971&#13;
~en Vanderpool_ Bas~ gUitar, vocaJs Frank Niccolai- Keyboard. 'Vocals&#13;
oho. Seeger_ Lead guitar, rhythm gUitar, vocal. Cy Co.tabile- Drum.&#13;
The i~ea is to do as much original&#13;
matenal as we can."&#13;
What's this about an agent checking&#13;
you over? Frank: "Oh yeah, we might&#13;
get an agent. We've had different&#13;
agents. They're all crooks. But this one&#13;
seems a little more honest ... If he&#13;
takes us I'll like him, if he doem't I'll&#13;
hate him. He'. from Milwaukee anct&#13;
books groups like OX Segal Schwal " ,&#13;
Who writes most of the songs? Who&#13;
does the lyrics, who the music. or is it&#13;
a joint effort or what .. Ken: "It's&#13;
always one person:' Who's that?&#13;
"Either John or I. Actually, a per.on&#13;
writes a song at home and brings it in&#13;
here and we all put OUr own parts into it...&#13;
·What kind of reaction have you&#13;
been getting from audiences? Frank:&#13;
Lately good. It depends on the&#13;
audience." Ken: "In most of the bars&#13;
·we played in Chicago they didn't like&#13;
us. If they hadn't heard the .ong&#13;
before, they didn't like it."&#13;
How many hours a week do you&#13;
practice? Frank: HWe praclice- about&#13;
three hours a day. As much as we can&#13;
while leading nonnal lives." Ken&#13;
"We're trying to get mOre material&#13;
that we like, tcause we're throwmg a&#13;
lot of material out that we don't want&#13;
to do, sort of a changeover in&#13;
progress."&#13;
What about the future for BUlldog&#13;
Harry? Ken: "I'll probably be driVing a&#13;
cab. I can't ever see mx.se1f qUilting,&#13;
but I'm not very optimi ••tii:.about ever&#13;
making it."&#13;
How do you compare Bulldog Harry&#13;
with the Slarboy.? Ken; "Bulldog&#13;
Hany is better:" What do you think&#13;
the reaction is going to be at Parkside?&#13;
Frank: "If a lot of them come WIth&#13;
open minds, we're gonoa have a good&#13;
time." Cy: It depend. on u. too. I&#13;
think the group play. mOre for the&#13;
audience than Starboys, like we're able&#13;
to get it on. We don't dcr al! original&#13;
material. A lot of. people think If a&#13;
group does all DriginaJ mateoal lhat&#13;
the group i. good, but that'. no'&#13;
necessarily true. A group can do all&#13;
upgmal marerut iJnd 9()11 of II IS shu&#13;
The Ihlng th.11 wn rong IoIolthlhe&#13;
St.,""). " tlut we'd pl.y II u nat&#13;
malen.11 and n 1I all I II"~ llul&#13;
good" }tJU're more b.11 need no,,'"&#13;
•Yuh, the reall eood or naJ&#13;
malerl.11 I ept in .11001 "uh popul~r&#13;
songs&#13;
What are rbe wea' pumu uf the&#13;
b.1nd't Chorus Equipment" ran&#13;
"And the Iact Ih.3t e haven't been&#13;
able '0 ge' enough pp" C, ·\le&#13;
haven't learned 10 bullshu the pe pie&#13;
't\no come ro II len to u . '41' n pia&#13;
for the few people '" ho 'orne 10 lutm&#13;
IU u rather dun for those who are&#13;
II1ICr led m ;a 101 ()f things th,t go un&#13;
111 roc mu tc But I heard that 011 tbe&#13;
hJhn Hue Benefn c\tf)une S&#13;
dancmg and (rea me 001" FrJn&#13;
"With U II' aU spom.lneous "-e dun I&#13;
plan our 'Sta~ stilt before ~e pb ...&#13;
FrOin on Ihe 3 tnl "An agrnt&#13;
gtmna be :11 1he \-,:Uf'kcrl 'SO lell the&#13;
t.:ro"d 10 Jump around _henne'r&#13;
say Jump around Chee. durulG the&#13;
brea ., tomp their feel before wr ,&#13;
on:' Ken "Even-bod 'A'h doem'l&#13;
like us should corne there and h r ,&#13;
"e can get oot uf Kon a and 'hey&#13;
won't ha\o't' l~hear us ao)'morc ...&#13;
John Seeger h.d fin.lly rtl'ed .n~&#13;
the four HJrries 100 (hen plac;es ant.!&#13;
played Jelly Roll Gumdrop. by ,he&#13;
Mothers for Ihe (jrlt tunt'. The)&#13;
unpressed me. I hstened Iu lhe fl"lf&#13;
mounted on lhelr Instruments. fUf ..&#13;
two hour prac,,,:e IIde through Hm)&#13;
Jusie, and when I go off I could,,',&#13;
NlIIit to get back on the Hury hur&#13;
Apnl9th.&#13;
I h.ad asked (hem to tame me :I fC\llchar.lClenSCIc&#13;
titles&#13;
Cheryl the Barrel&#13;
~neral Store&#13;
Wilden's SUlle&#13;
Hurgrng Time&#13;
Trying '0 Kick the Do", Do.",&#13;
IUtlroad Song&#13;
Waltz uf the ChIC en.&#13;
She Came 'ow&#13;
Cy said Ihey do moslly humouJU&#13;
SlUff, but Ihe mUSIc IS SfClOUS, J sen&#13;
of humor but no fa '" Build H r&#13;
is for real&#13;
You probably know if you're busted for the first&#13;
time for possession of marihuana the offense is only a&#13;
misdemeanor, and what you'll get is not a judgment of&#13;
lUilty but almost assuredly one year's probation with&#13;
the knowlege .that if you star cleart during that time&#13;
the misdemeanor itself wit be erased from your&#13;
reeord.&#13;
But three things you probably don't know about&#13;
dope and the law. One, if you're convicted for&#13;
"""mon of a dangerous drug with the intent to sell,&#13;
furnish, or transport it you can_get up to five years in a&#13;
ltat. prison, or up to a $5,000 fine, or both.&#13;
You could get this sentence Kenosha's district&#13;
Ittomey, Burton Scott, pointed out, for "furnishing a&#13;
JIY with one marihuana cigarette or one hit of LSD."&#13;
Secondly, if you're convicted either of advising,&#13;
inducing Or encouraging someone to use a dangerous&#13;
drug you. can get up to five years imprisonment, .o~ a 12,500 fme, or both. You could be liable for advlsmg&#13;
101' domg as httle as saying "I know you can buy It&#13;
fromhim; he's got it right now and it's a dime bag; Go&#13;
"''', and .Bet it." If the person buys it, Scott thmks&#13;
YUIIre guIlty of adVising.&#13;
fulcouraging the use could be as little as bringing five&#13;
Of. I1XJOints to a party and passing them around Scott .. d.&#13;
T)tirdIy, what you probably don't know is that if&#13;
)'Ou re convicted of selling a dangerous drug to&#13;
.... one under the age of2f (even if you're under 2J)&#13;
YOU can be iJn{Jrisioned not more than 15 years. For a&#13;
letond conViction of this it's not less than 30 years and&#13;
~t mOre ~~n life·.with no chance of probation. For a&#13;
rd comuchon it's a mandatory life sentence.&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
lho..-&#13;
'(lip' -&#13;
....&#13;
.-&#13;
..-..... -..... -&#13;
h.&#13;
THURSDAY, APRIL 8th - 8:00 P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING - ADM. 15'&#13;
These are some of the penalties you confront when&#13;
you're into dope. Burton SCOII Kenosha's District&#13;
Attorney, told Newscope in an interview. "I want to&#13;
stress this, This is what you face. Ididn't write the laws,&#13;
but this is what you face. Iwant everyone to 6e aware&#13;
of Ihe penalties.'&#13;
Wisconsin statutes concerning dangerous drugs and&#13;
narcotics were revised near the eend of the Stale&#13;
Legislature's last session to reflect the nationwide trend&#13;
to separate marihuana use from the use of other&#13;
dangerous drugs and to provide lesser penalties for it,&#13;
while at the same lime to toughen the penal tie. for&#13;
r&#13;
pUtleDopeOn Dope&#13;
, byMucE~n&#13;
of the NEWSCOPE Staff .~::::::::::::::::;:;:::-::::::;:::::::=:::::::::::=:::::::t*::::::'~:;&lt;l. ~~~.i#i&#13;
But because the new laws ~ere passed when the&#13;
legislature was in a rush to adjourn .they are poorly&#13;
worded and the resulting confuSIon WIll be left to the&#13;
courts to untangle. .&#13;
In fact it was argued by some the legr.lature had&#13;
repealed all narcotic and dangerous drug •• tatutes m&#13;
attempting to renumber them. The Stale Supreme&#13;
Court fmally ruled it had not inlended to do so.&#13;
An example of the poor wordmg IS seen. in .the&#13;
transporting penalties, Scott said. If someone" guIlty&#13;
of transporting a dangerous drug he can be seOlenced&#13;
u to five years imprisonment, or a $5,000 fine, or&#13;
bJ'th. Thi. section is aimed al the pusher, bUI because&#13;
I&#13;
of the wordmg " .ffeClS 'hose who don't push&#13;
ScOIl explained, "We. uke the View an lh o(fl&#13;
that for us 10 Issue a W3rrant agJlOl Iran rial Ion the&#13;
have 10 h.a"·e such a quantity (hal u's n I f, r then 0\lo'T1&#13;
use.&#13;
"I'm nOI sure thai'S whal Slalue g . The SUlulc&#13;
.seems (0 say that if you're caught wuh ont. manhu ..n;l&#13;
cigarelte in your pockel you can be ch 'ltd wllh&#13;
transporlation:' he saJd. To me Iba. does vlolen~e to&#13;
the 'possession' section.&#13;
'" think they intended '0 .. y 'tran porta"on fur&#13;
.. Ie,' but they d,dn't. So I'm pIIt In • PO"" n where I&#13;
have to make the decision ..&#13;
He declared later in the interview. "I Will gIve the&#13;
benefit of the doubt in those ·Ind of HUIlinns I.-&#13;
possession rather than Iransporlalton "&#13;
While for the first orfense of po Mon I iI&#13;
misdemeanor the sentence Will usually be ~ ycar'&#13;
probation withoul court adJudlCall&lt;ln of gulli. Ihe&#13;
second offense IS a felon)' wnh Imprisonment of nul&#13;
more than two ye,us, Or a fine of nol more tn.m&#13;
$1,000.&#13;
But Scott poln,ed out on one hand ,ho t.le I&#13;
saYing there 1.$ no COnvu;:lIon of gudl for the fir t&#13;
offense and thai II dIsappears fr the re ord, hut If&#13;
there is a second offense II IS 4.:00 Ide red 1 gullh&#13;
verdier. He qu Itoned If lhe nrst offense ;,c;tuall~ t&#13;
erased from the record,&#13;
Concerning POSSt'1 Ion iurlf, he ~Id. "llu~ .,muunt&#13;
you hnt 10 posse ion IS hit-rally Jrrele"anl If'l,\t fmd&#13;
fl\'e seeds in a guy's pocket that I~po Ion. You&#13;
don't have 10 have a dime bj1&amp;. or a Wh(lle elgarellt \&#13;
roach is possession. The rhin in a pIpe 1$po to'&#13;
LIBRARY&#13;
MICROFORMS&#13;
W,lrd sell~. like a He .&#13;
It _Icr,m •• ~ ItIItr&#13;
typll ,f .1.1 ... r, ,llIletl"&#13;
typ,. It _t,latIn ,."IlIICtlH&#13;
,f "I'te~ _",,1.1.. It'.&#13;
CH.,.; It .IYII ."c,. D.. 't&#13;
,,,,riNk It, Mil' It •., ,.rlt-&#13;
~IClI. C_ 11I11W.,. AlII III,&#13;
... Yert TillES (.llc, 18511,&#13;
L..... TIMES (llIc, 11151, .~ ,,,, ..w.,.,... AI •• 11M&#13;
•• b, ,tc. T'II. It I. II.,.&#13;
AltIII' 1101•. nil!lin ,.III,"Ph.&#13;
...&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the NEWSCOPE Staff&#13;
. d a storefront with boarded . sehin and a papered-up door is 111ndowsHarry. Dis is de place.&#13;
Bulldog k out my taperecorder and&#13;
1 tdback in an old chair near the settle nd told the band this here's&#13;
door a be an interview, so say gonna 1· t ething in tel 1g~n . . . am ulldog Harry 1s considered m more&#13;
B mere four RUarters to be the&#13;
than lamned' band · in Sin City. John&#13;
best usual spokesman for the group 5tegfd~'t show up for 45 minutes, so I&#13;
wo~ d the three other Har~s with the&#13;
pro : end of a microphone, feeling of btun r in my hands, able to cut them&#13;
rrr;ith the subtle, silent ?l_ack swi~ch&#13;
on the mike, off, on, sr~ulmg, askmg Id questions of wizened rock 0 ci·ans ·That's the right work too, rnus1 · rnusicians. . A couple years ago 1t came to pass&#13;
•&#13;
oril S, 1971&#13;
Harry Music&#13;
h t the Starboys appeared on the&#13;
t 3 e· John Seeger, Phil Clark, Ken&#13;
f;d~rpool, Cy Costabile, _and l_ater F ther Meat's own, Frank N1ccola1 ( or \;~e versa), oozed throught the meat&#13;
Ken Vanderpool- Bass guitar, vocals frank Niccolai- Keybo rd, ocals&#13;
John_ Seeger- Lead guitar, rhythm guitar, vocals Cy Co tabile- Drum&#13;
inder of losing one band and&#13;
fscending the starry path. Starboys&#13;
were to begat Bulldog Harry, originally&#13;
~omposed of Danny Strange (formerly of Homegrown Blues), Ken, Frank and&#13;
Cy. Danny split fo_r Califo~nia in&#13;
January, with John htJ:ie.ly fillmg the&#13;
void. I call them mus1c1ans because,&#13;
for example, Fran.I&lt; has been addicted&#13;
to keyboards of various lenghts and&#13;
tones since he was seven, getting into&#13;
rock and blues when 14, Cy on drums&#13;
for seven years. The list is endless.&#13;
The idea is to do as much original material as we can." practice? Frank: "We pr ti e- 1t&#13;
What's th.ree hours a day. As mu h n this about an agent checking you over? Frank: "Oh yeah, we might get an agent. We've had diffe.rent&#13;
agents. They're all crooks. But this one&#13;
seems a little more honest ... If he takes us I'll like him, if he doesn't I'll&#13;
hate him. He's from Milwaukee ancl books groups like OX, Segal Schwa) "&#13;
while leading normal Jive :· en: "We're trying to get m re m3terial that we like, 'cause wr're thro ing a lot of material out that we don't ·ant&#13;
to do, sort of a change ,er in progress."&#13;
What about the future for Build&#13;
Harry? Ken: "I'll prob bly be drhing cab. I can't ever see mtself quillin , but I'm not very optimi .ti-.about e er&#13;
I asked how much of their music is making it."&#13;
original. Ken said about 60%, "lately it&#13;
has been because we haven't been&#13;
playing any clubs, we'~e just bee~&#13;
playing, you know, to kids. y,te don t play alot of the horseshit we had to&#13;
play in Chicago."&#13;
Who writes most of the songs? Who&#13;
does the lyrics, who the music, or is it&#13;
a joint effort or what .. Ken: "It's always one person." Who's that?&#13;
"Either John or I. Actually, a person writes a song at home and brings it in&#13;
here and we all put our own parts into it."&#13;
How do you compare Bulldog Harr) with the Starboys? Ken: "'Build&#13;
Harry is better." V.'hat do you thin&#13;
the reaction is going to be at Par ·s,de?&#13;
Frank: "If a lot of them come 1th&#13;
open minds. we 're gonna have a g&#13;
time." Cy: It depends on u too. I&#13;
think the group plays more for the&#13;
audience than Starb ys, r ·e e·re ble&#13;
to get it on. We don't do all ori ·na1&#13;
material. A lot of. pc p e thin if a group does I original material that&#13;
What kind of music do you guys&#13;
play? Ken told me, Rolling Stones,&#13;
rock and roll, Buddy Holly .. .What is&#13;
the music like? "You have to listen to it" was the reply.&#13;
-What kind of reaction have you&#13;
been getting from audiences? Frank:&#13;
You been gettin gigs? Frank said "we're playing mostly here, practici_ng.&#13;
Lately good. It depends on the audience." Ken: "In most of the bars ·we played in Chicago they didn't like&#13;
us. If they hadn't heard the song before, they didn't like it."&#13;
How the roup i g , ut that' many hours a week do you nece sarily true. A group n do&#13;
You probably know if you're busted for _the first lime for possession of marihuana the offense 1s only a misdemeanor, and what you '11 get is not a judgment of guilty but almost assuredly one year's pr_obation ~ith ihe knowlege Jhat if you stay clean dunng that time the misdemeanor itself will be erased from your record.&#13;
But three things you probably don't know about dope and the law. One, if you're convicted for possession of a dangerous drug with the intent to ~II, furnish, or transport it you can get up to five years m a late prison, or up to a $5,000 fine, or both. , . . You could get this sentenc~, Keno~~a s _d1~tnct Homey, Burton Scott pointed out, for furnishing a&#13;
guy With one marihuan'a cigarette or one hit of ~P-" . Secondly, if you're convicted either of adVIsmg, inducing or encouraging someone to use a dangerous drug you can get up to five years imprisonment, _o! a S2,500 fine , or both. You could be liable for adv1sm_g for doing as little as saying "I know you can buy 1t from him; he's got it right now and it's a dime bag._ Go&#13;
er, and. get it." If the person buys it, Scott thmks&#13;
you re gullty of advising. . . E~cou_raging the use could be as little as bnngmg five or.t Joints to a party and passing them around Scott&#13;
T!tirdly, what you probably don't know is that if You re convicted of selling a dangerous drug to laneone under the age of 21 ( even if you 're under 21) You can be im{'risioned not more than 15 xears. For a ond conviction of this it's not less than 30 years and : 1 more ~han life--with no chance of probation. For a rd con'(Jction it's a mandatory life sentence.&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
THURSDAY, APRIL 8th - 8:00 P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING - ADM. 15e&#13;
These are some of the penalt e you onfront hen&#13;
you 're into dope , Burton Sc tt Ke nosh • Distri t Attorney, told Newscope in an interview. "I ant to stress this. This is what you face. I didn ·1 v.Tite the lav. . but this is what you face. I want everyone to e aware of the penalties.' . Wisconsin statutes concerning dangerous drug and narcotics were revised near the eend of the State Legislature's last session to reflect the nationwide trend to sepa.rate marihuana use from the use .of oth~r dangerous drugs and to provide lesser penaltie . for 1t, while at the same time to toughen tJie pena tie for pushers.&#13;
I&#13;
::···:.:-:,:,,~'):-:-:::~'*'~~-·,; .&#13;
The Dope On Dope&#13;
L18:.w-~:::::::~f:::!:~:t}i[f::£:?rf1~ .... -z:=:::.-:i:·" •• &gt;.-u.·: ~ But because the new laws ~ere passe~ when the Je ·slature was in a rush to adJ~Urn _they are poor! w~rdecl and the resulting confusion will be left to the&#13;
courts to untangle. - L-d In fact it was argued by ome the legi lature '"! repealed all narcotic and dangerous drugs tatute m&#13;
attempting to renumber th~m. The State upreme Court finally ruled it had not intended to do o h An example of the poor ~ordtng I en_ m ! e transporting penalties. Scott said. If meone I gu11td of trans_porting a dangerous drug he can be sentence to five years imprisonment, or a S5.000 me, or bcith. This section is aimed at the pusher. but because&#13;
t LIBRARY&#13;
ICROFOR S&#13;
Weird na . Sounds like a uc.&#13;
It means lcrtf1l111 and o r&#13;
types of minla H re iroductio&#13;
types of mlnlahlre reproductio&#13;
of prlnfld attr als. It's&#13;
cheaper; It sans space. D 't&#13;
nerloek It. Ma y 1f our p rlodlcals&#13;
co e at "IJ· AIH e&#13;
"'" York TIMES (since 1851), London TIMES (Si Cl 1785), d&#13;
•• r IIWIPIPtrS. AIH $0&#13;
heks, etc. To use It Is ouy.&#13;
Ast • II rarian. Then m&#13;
tlttbt llpts. &#13;
April 5, 197'&#13;
How about a ride, Mister?&#13;
b) Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the 'EII'SCOPE Staff&#13;
Thl') i50 the ell)'. Kenosha. Wisconsin Crime is .no&#13;
\.hlf~tenl 10 lhl cit) than an&gt; other us size, but. some Crime&#13;
\.Jl\ be avoided If people know the laws. This IS news. and&#13;
th.n IS where I come rn. I carry a pen.&#13;
Three p.m .. I was working out of kitchen division with a&#13;
bologna sandwich when I gOI the call at my apartment from&#13;
the editor. There had been a story In the city paper that&#13;
'llnlted the Chief Inspector of the police depanrne ..."! about&#13;
hlt~hhlklng. The editor thought that the college community&#13;
llll&amp;hl be some....hat re~onsi6Ie. I got on the story. .&#13;
On the afternoon of the call, I headed down to the police&#13;
tJlIun to get the facrs. The officer at the main desk after&#13;
IIUlllng out ""hat I \Ioilnted. directed ·me "down t~e hall,&#13;
thl: la t door on ) our left:' and said that the c3ptam would&#13;
help me \\hcn I gUl to the offi~e. I found it '.aeanl. nother&#13;
pu!ll,.'e ofh~er ~lId that the captalO ,W3S nOl in. he was on&#13;
'JI,;.JlI m I \loeot ba..:k lO the maIO desk and told the&#13;
plJh 'emJn abuut the empty office "down the hall the last&#13;
iJtJlJf on my left" I II rep!). W3 "try profeSSional. "oh&#13;
... lIy·"&#13;
On m\ \\'a)' out of the poh~e sti.ltion. I ran inlO an old&#13;
Irlend \loh~) hJd been a pulice officer quite awhile. so I&#13;
I pped hI bank "f expcr)cn« and asked him what he&#13;
~ould do II he "'-tre me (rylng to dig up laws about&#13;
hll hh,kmg. lie IU , g3\e a Illtle laugh and told me not to&#13;
II~ ;around the poh..:e (i.lll~lO.but to head O"ier to the city&#13;
JII HUe)' otfi..:C'&#13;
1htc( thin) p.m. I entered (he l,;U) atlorney"s office,&#13;
..oJ luld them ",hy l had come ,I WJS shown Into ',he&#13;
a I (Jot CIl) aIHHnC\' offtl.:c 1 told him (hat I would like&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52no St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUM, THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M, TILL MIOMlTE&#13;
RI. a SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
HUXHOLD S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
So, Grt'eII Btl), Rd,&#13;
Kmosha&#13;
634-!J716&#13;
COLD BEE&#13;
. . e under a city ordinance or a&#13;
to know if hitchh'ktng d":Cross his desk and grabbed a&#13;
state statute. H~-eache&#13;
book of city ordmances.. the best ordinance he could&#13;
After about fifteen mmutlSted to hitchhiking, -vas a .law&#13;
come up with, that even ~ea n a public sidewalk. Since&#13;
against loitering or loungtng 0 a hitchhiker lying on the&#13;
neither of ,us had ever ~eein the air, we both concluded&#13;
sidewalk, With ~ISth~ll1b.~ was a state statute.&#13;
that the law ~gatnst hltC~d ~~en arrested, thinking maybe&#13;
He asked If 3.oyone a 'ndivid'ual. I said that to J!lY&#13;
my story pertamed to abn, ested yet bu t the police&#13;
knowledge no D,ne had een an ' .&#13;
were giving warmngs. to mind was the one issued&#13;
One such warning that came n Washington Road in&#13;
to Jerry Wielgat one afternoons 0Standing on the curb,&#13;
front of the K;e~osha 'dCa'J~~ry' stood long hair blowmg&#13;
seemingly to solicite a n e, '&#13;
in the wind. f a car finally did pull up, and he&#13;
Afler a hal hour or so, He thought maybe .the gal&gt;.&#13;
saw they were po~ce df~~li~~ was being gapped, ef,Pecially&#13;
between the yout" an u want a ride downtown? asked,&#13;
when they asked, he~ yo ?" No said Jerry, he wasn't&#13;
"hey you want a nde ownto\\tihe alice officer glared at&#13;
going that way hbut trh'k~a~nsome lind of wise/uy. Jerry&#13;
him and aske.d 1m I e an arrest an the gap&#13;
realized a fide downtown was Ie' 0 ened to its&#13;
between law enforcem~nt and the pe~g the ~urb and he&#13;
usual girth an.d Jerry said thathhe 7:eS&#13;
y saw him. All went&#13;
didn't have his thumb out w en&#13;
alright thObu~, he'hw,'SsWIarer~I~~~dhow unfortunate it will be&#13;
R:emem erang • . II . I a now&#13;
for the first arrested hitchhiker, especIaT&amp;' sl~~~ist~/ city&#13;
~~~~::in~Oldh~~ t~ech~~~la~~ mW:~~hoof library's stat~te&#13;
books ~nd' I would find the statute there. I thanked hIm&#13;
and ieft I was on my way back to the police, statIOn. . th&#13;
Whe~ I got there I remembered the on y name m . e&#13;
newspaper story 1 had refered to, so I ~skef~ to {'ice Ch1ei&#13;
Ins ector Trotta. I had not gone to him 1f~t \.e~ause&#13;
th~aht he would be toO busy to see r~e. On. thiS VISit Iwas&#13;
told fie was in a meeting, and why don t I waIted' p 6·) (Continu on ago.&#13;
Irish Author To Visit Parkside&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy,&#13;
currently a faculty member at&#13;
Denison University, will present&#13;
a poetry reading at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, April 6, in the&#13;
Activities Building at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
UPTOWN&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or ba"'luet,&#13;
"0party too sma//.&#13;
Cau 6'4-9123&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE • • •&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices,&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language. both in&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY- Tape recorders, Radios. TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS- Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J,V,C, - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntable~&#13;
G,E. - Raaios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
• •&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Liddy will be at Parkside&#13;
from Monday, April 5, through&#13;
Thursday. During the period, he&#13;
will be guest lecturer in several&#13;
classes and will meet informally&#13;
with groups of students&#13;
interested in poetry.&#13;
He a Iso will provide a&#13;
commentary following a&#13;
screening of the film&#13;
"Finnegan's Wake" at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, April ·7, in Room&#13;
103 Greenquist Hali at the&#13;
Wood Road Campus. There is a&#13;
nominal admission charge for&#13;
the film which is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Film Society, a&#13;
student organization.&#13;
Liddy is the author of five&#13;
books of poetry.&#13;
H is poems have been&#13;
reprinted in "The Penguin Book&#13;
of Irish Verse,", "New Poets of&#13;
Ireland" and "Drumbook" and&#13;
have appeared in "The Dolmen&#13;
Misceliany - of Irish Writing,"&#13;
Ca mpus Events&#13;
Tuesday, April 6&#13;
Harpsichord Recital F&#13;
Bedford. 8:00 p.m R· tane" .. OOm10 Greenquist HaiL 3.&#13;
Poetry Reading. James .&#13;
the internationaliy farn Lddy&#13;
ous I,;.&gt;.&#13;
poet 8 :00 prn S .~,&#13;
Activities Building. tUden,&#13;
Wednesday, April 7&#13;
Film. "Finnegan's Wok&#13;
8:00 p i m . Room e."&#13;
Greenquist Holi. Sponsore~03&#13;
the Parkside Film Society Afby&#13;
the film poet lames Ldd teo&#13;
comment. Admission· SO y '111 . cent&#13;
Track. UWP vs Ri '&#13;
Wheaton and Carthage: 11On.&#13;
Thursday, April 8&#13;
Meeting. Stud,&#13;
In ternational Medit /1&#13;
Society. 7:45 p.m. Roo~ 1'1°0&#13;
Racme Campus. 4,&#13;
Feature Fiim. "Bulli!." 8:00&#13;
P·~·. Student ActiViti&#13;
BUlldmg. Admission: 75 cen:,1&#13;
Basebali. UWP vs. White",.&#13;
at Whitewater. in&#13;
Friday, April 9&#13;
Dance. "BUlldog Harry"&#13;
Sponsored by NEWSCOPf&#13;
Student Activities Bid&#13;
Admission: $1.00. Parkside ~&#13;
Wisconsm J.D. required.&#13;
!he New York Times, ''TodIy.'&#13;
The Kilkenny Magazine" !be&#13;
I ri s.h . Press and 'otbtl&#13;
publtcatlOns.&#13;
He has presented readings..&#13;
The San Francisco Pot,,}&#13;
Corner, Lewis and CIaoI&#13;
College, Harpur Coliear&#13;
University Coliege G~...)&#13;
University Coliege Dublin, tbr&#13;
International Poetry Forum &lt;i&#13;
Pittsburgh and the Inm&#13;
Embassy in London.&#13;
Liddy has held faculty poIU&#13;
at San Francisco State Col~&#13;
State Univershy of New York.&#13;
Binghamton, University CoiItF&#13;
Dublin and Lewis and Clark •&#13;
addition to his present poll"&#13;
Denison.&#13;
He received his bachelorsond&#13;
masters degrees from Univerg,&#13;
Coil e g e Dub lin and&#13;
barrister-at-law at Kings Inltl&#13;
Dublin.&#13;
Liddy describes his h.b,u ..&#13;
"convivial, solitary and Ctlm.&#13;
his attitudes as "poll'e,&#13;
apolitical and Baudeiairian."&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
'Tradition of Excellence.&#13;
\~&#13;
For Guarante.ed Service i. Trade-In Villi&#13;
HAiWMOND HORGAN&#13;
•• 142~~~~~~n 1m~~~~~&#13;
I]Bttter OrcaIU Gte Buill, HtuIIlfIOIIIl"Jl&#13;
H H' about a ride, Mister?&#13;
Tiu no&#13;
. . e under a city ordinance or a to know if hitchhiking dam ross his desk and grabbed a tale tatute. H~ reache ac&#13;
book of city ordinances._ the best ordinance he could&#13;
After about fifteen mrnutjs{ d to hitchhiking, -·,as a _law come up with. that even ~ea ~n a public sidewalk. Smee&#13;
against loitering or lounging a hitchhiker lying on the&#13;
neither of us had eveb seen the air we both concluded&#13;
idewalk. with ~is thl_lm ~r in was a state statute.&#13;
that the law ~gainst httc~ftfen arrested, thinking maybe&#13;
He asked 1f anyone a . divid'ual I said that to my&#13;
my story pertained to abn in rrested· yet, but the police&#13;
knowledge no o_ne had een a .&#13;
were giving warn~gs.th e to mind, was the one issue~&#13;
One such warning at cam on Washington Road in&#13;
to Jerry Wielgat one afternoons Standing on the cu:b,&#13;
front of the i&lt;;e!1osha .dca"J~~ry· stood, long hair blowmg&#13;
seemingly to sohclle a n e,&#13;
in the wind. f h a car finally did pull up, and he&#13;
fter a ha! ou~ or so, H thought maybe -the gaP..&#13;
saw they were po~ce dfficji~s~ w!s being gapped, especially&#13;
between the yout .. an po want a ride downtown?' aske~,&#13;
when they asked, _he~you t n?" No said Jerry, he wasn t&#13;
"hey you want a nde own ow the olice officer glared at&#13;
going that way but ~rrks. ans~me Bnd of wise guy. Jerry&#13;
him and aske_d him l e was s an arrest and the gap&#13;
realized a nde downtown wa O le' opened to its&#13;
between law enforcem~nt and h the peog the curb, and he&#13;
u ual girth an~ Jerry said thath e fi:esy saw him. All went&#13;
didn't have his thumb out w en&#13;
alright thobu~ , heth"".ass f~;~1~f~d how unfortunate it will be&#13;
Remcm ermg 1 • · II · I was now f r the first arrested hitchhi~er' esp:ciaThe s1~~:istant city&#13;
~\~~~;;m~o,rh~~ t!echr;rao~ mW.,a s~hool library's stat~te&#13;
book ~nd I would find the statute the:e. I th_anked him&#13;
and left. I was on my way back to the pohce station. . th&#13;
When I got there I remembered the onklyd name uch·ef new a er stor I had refered to, so I ~s e . to 5ee 1&#13;
In ict~r Trotta. I had not gone to him ftr~t b_e~ause I&#13;
thciul!.ht he would be too busy to see i:1e. On_ this v1s1t I was&#13;
told fie was in a meeting, and why dof ~~~~~ on Page 6)&#13;
Campus Events&#13;
~uesday, April 6&#13;
Harpsichord Recital F&#13;
Bedford. 8:00 p.m. R~o ranees Greenquist Hall. rn 103.&#13;
Poetry Reading. James . the internationally fam Liddy&#13;
poet 8:00 m ous[r"&#13;
A t. . . B p. · Stu.1. c IVlhes uilding. uc:m&#13;
Wednesday, April 7&#13;
Film. "Finnegan's W&#13;
8 ·00 akc " · P · m · Room · Greenqui~t H~ll. Sponsore~Ol.&#13;
the Parkside Film Society Afby&#13;
the film poet James Lidd ltr&#13;
comment. Admission: 50 ~o&#13;
Track. DWP vs Ri&#13;
Wheaton and Carthage: n&#13;
Thursday, April 8&#13;
Meeting. Studc&#13;
International Medi[ t Ill&#13;
Soci_ety. 7 :45 p.m. Roo; 1&#13;
1J°&#13;
Racme Campus. · •&#13;
Feature Film. "Bullit."&#13;
p.m. Student Activit&#13;
Building. Admission: 75 ce~~1&#13;
Baseball. uwP vs. Whitev.att&#13;
at Whitewater.&#13;
Friday, April 9&#13;
Dance. "Bulldog Harry "&#13;
Sponsored by EWSCOP&#13;
Stu~e~t Activities Bid&#13;
A~m1ss1?n: $1.00. Park idc&#13;
W1sconsm I.D. required.&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
HUXHOLD S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE Irish Author To Visit Parkside&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL IONITE&#13;
RI. I SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24¢&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55¢&#13;
o. ree11 .Bt1) Rd.&#13;
Ke110 h"&#13;
6J-.+-9 16&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy ,&#13;
currently a faculty member at&#13;
Deni on Univer ity, will present&#13;
a poetry reading at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday. April 6 , in the&#13;
Activities Building at The&#13;
Univer ity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
UPTOWN&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~~&#13;
~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or ba"'luet,&#13;
no party too small.&#13;
&lt;:al/654-9123&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE • • •&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both in&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY- Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntable!&gt;&#13;
G.E. - Raalos &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Liddy will be at Parkside&#13;
from Monday, April S, through&#13;
Thursday. During the period, he&#13;
will be guest lecturer in several&#13;
classes and will meet informally&#13;
with groups of students&#13;
interested in poetry.&#13;
He also will provide a&#13;
commentary . following a&#13;
screening of the . film&#13;
"Finnegan's Wake" at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, April -7 , in Room&#13;
103 Greenquist Hall at the&#13;
Wood Road Campus. There i~ a&#13;
nominal admission charge for&#13;
the film which is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Film Society, a&#13;
student organization.&#13;
Liddy is the author of five&#13;
books of poetry.&#13;
His poems have been&#13;
reprinted in "The Penguin Book&#13;
of Irish Verse," "New Poets of&#13;
Ireland" and "Drumbook" and&#13;
have appeared in "The Dolmen&#13;
Miscellany - of Irish Writing,"&#13;
pie Ne"'.' York Times, "Toda&#13;
The Kilkenny Magazine ,,&#13;
Irish Press and 'otbt&#13;
publications.&#13;
He has presented readings&#13;
The San Franci co p 1&#13;
Corner, Lewis and&#13;
College, Harpur Collet&#13;
University College Gal&#13;
Universi~y College Dubli11, lht&#13;
Internat1onal Poetry Fon&#13;
Pittsburgh and the (im&#13;
Embassy in London.&#13;
Liddy has held faculty&#13;
at San Francisco State Col&#13;
State Universtiy of ew Yo&#13;
Binghamton, Universitv Co&#13;
Dublin and Lewis anl Chr&#13;
addition to his present po&#13;
Denison.&#13;
He received his bachelor&#13;
masters degrees from Univtr&#13;
College Dublin a&#13;
barrister-at-law at King&#13;
Dublin.&#13;
Liddy describes his h3b1u&#13;
"convivial, solitary and Celuc&#13;
his attitudes as "poo'&#13;
apolitical and Baudelairian."&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
iTradition of Excellence.&#13;
,J&#13;
For Guarante.ed Service &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
See Jim Merrick 11~,. Hammond"&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
u 142~~~!~ Ill!~'~~-&#13;
If Better Or,ans are Buil4 Hammond aoiJJ &#13;
b Paul Lomartlre&#13;
y Newscope Staff&#13;
of 1~:lk into the Bill, of Fare&#13;
....0 yoU 't miss the giant com ~ you can dh&#13;
,1/11, outh wall. The assorte c ange,&#13;
J.S (Inthe S ies are part of the early&#13;
'lifo and peo2\ ;ealized that the interior&#13;
·andecor, ahne had premonitions about must av&#13;
11l1f was going to be run.&#13;
tht reslaurant, 'ng to tell Ihe public that&#13;
was try Th" t th OIl' to eat here. IS 15 no e ,., b'g money b'&#13;
~ I t that one goes to for a lte to&#13;
irtstauranarters nickels, and pennies, mg qu ,&#13;
.lIT) lis of Ihem, , ,&#13;
h~has~o the menu, I noticed my ~holce&#13;
A:lerreadlO~'1l of Fare's interpretation of&#13;
kd Ih~ U:e week before at the Big Boy&#13;
I ha R 'ne' a hot turkey sandw.ich, I ._"nnt In acr, 'h'gh th&#13;
P&lt;"""'-~ 'de the prices bem,g 1 er on e&#13;
t/l.1t beSlth quantities are '-also different.&#13;
., Iltffif'F r: offers a Town Crier plate for.3&#13;
Bill 0 a fi The Big Boy has theIr I'wenty' we.&#13;
Josephand the Amazing Techni&#13;
color Dreamcoa t&#13;
Musicby Andrew lloyd Weber&#13;
Lyricsby Tim Rice&#13;
SeeptorRecords&#13;
After listening to this album,&#13;
I came to one simple, but&#13;
dermite conclusion. It stinks.&#13;
In fact that statement&#13;
doe.,'t eve; suffice. This trung&#13;
REAKS. Anyone playing thiS&#13;
mouldbe indicted for pollutIOn&#13;
of the airwaves. Furthermore,&#13;
III)'DDe playing this and actually&#13;
E JOYING it should be&#13;
OIIlIJIitted.&#13;
Upon looking over the liner&#13;
notesto determine who should&#13;
om the blame for this disaster I&#13;
fullyexpected it to be credited&#13;
10 the cdmbined efforts of&#13;
SptkeJones and Howdy Doody.&#13;
I was, therfore, quite surprised&#13;
10 fmd that the writers were&#13;
AndrewWeber and Tim Rice,&#13;
whoalso created a record that,&#13;
m my opinion, was one of the&#13;
UWPCoeds&#13;
In Finals&#13;
Three Parkside coeds, Linda&#13;
o..mbers, Jackie Matson, and&#13;
Jan ,Hermes, are among the&#13;
~~lS in the 12th Annual Miss&#13;
-lJIe Pageant sponsored by&#13;
tire RacineJaY-Cees.&#13;
In the final, which is April&#13;
16,Memorial, the girls will be&#13;
Jldifd in 3 categories: 1)&#13;
b'mng Gown; 2) Swim Suit; 3)&#13;
T,lent-which is the most&#13;
I1Iportant.&#13;
~e Winner will receive a&#13;
",_ scholarship, use of an&#13;
~obil for appearances, and&#13;
f ""'UV WOrth of merchandise&#13;
~~m. RaCine Merchan ts,&#13;
UdlOga mink stole.&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
ALSO&#13;
ICHICkEN DINNERS and&#13;
lAlIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Ill! DI!ltveRY 4'00 P.M. TO 12,OO.P.M.&#13;
ap... 8 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
ClOSed MOndays&#13;
combination plate for a dollar fen. Both consrsi&#13;
of a double decker hamburger. french fries. and&#13;
a salad with either a Big Boy salad, or a Bill of&#13;
Fare cup of cole slaw.&#13;
Chicken at Big Boy is a dollar sixly.five for a&#13;
regular (three pieces) dinner. The menu reads a&#13;
dollar ninty·five at the Bill of Fare (four&#13;
pieces). For the same dollar ninty-tive you&#13;
",:ould spend, at Bill of Fare. you could get five&#13;
pieces of chicken at Big Boy, The other odds&#13;
and ends with the meal balance out at both&#13;
restaurants.&#13;
I ordered a hot turkey sandwich for a dollar&#13;
fifty. Maggie ordered a Town Crier plate. and a&#13;
small Pepsi. At the Bill of Fare a large Pepsi and&#13;
a small one are the same volume, but at&#13;
different prices in different glasses. You can&#13;
confirm this for yourself by pouring a small&#13;
glass into the larger one. I did this in front of&#13;
the waitress once before, and she only smiled&#13;
sweetly and asked us not to make any trouble.&#13;
While we waited for Our meal. we noticed&#13;
that quite a few older people were beginning to&#13;
come in, at the start of the dinner hour. After&#13;
about a half hour of this influx, I checked 10&#13;
see if there was a bus in the parking 101. I&#13;
figured that maybe Shady Lawn East or West&#13;
had sponsored a field trip for their patrons, but&#13;
. saw no such vehicle.&#13;
As Maggie and I 'continued to wait for our&#13;
meal, we talked about the events of the day,&#13;
the day before, the future, and finally began&#13;
discussing the war in Viet Nam. while people&#13;
who bad come in after us, who had ordered&#13;
abou.t the same thing, were in the process of&#13;
eating. I watched my water glass sweat, and&#13;
for Student&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Apr!! .), 1'1 I&#13;
grew impatient&#13;
We got OUr meals and began 10 hi M .. e&#13;
french fries \Ioere cold and ~ 1\ turd The&#13;
cook must have been putttn an ~ t l (&#13;
overtime. because there \\In enough dr \111&#13;
the double decker hamburger '0 er a&#13;
moderate salad,&#13;
I got the most Umm3,1O:lIl\e h I IUr e&#13;
sandwich anyone could Ul1J~1Rr It 01111 It'd of&#13;
a piece of while bread. \Ioilh halve un each SIde&#13;
covered With sikes of ~ hut tur ('\ m.11 ~&#13;
scoop of mashed poraroe • and \.\I\·trt'd \lioub&#13;
gravy. On the Side was J. \tl) "tl.111 ..up of ~ ..,&#13;
cranberry sause, \Iohl\:h I ate qUI,," ~ be u&#13;
the juice was eaung thhlUgh the PJ~r cup I&#13;
didn't expect anYlhmg o\erl~ fan). bUI It&#13;
least a piece of p3rs1&lt;~ would have helped 10&#13;
make me think it 'IA."3:S worth a buc and J half&#13;
The food tasted alright , that's. ut 'all I&#13;
can't get evened about In}lhmg .II the 8dl ".&#13;
Fare. J ordered a hot fudge send ..e and sear bed&#13;
endlessly for the fudge. I ate 3 fe" rap I&#13;
warm fudge wile lookmg. and nnaU~ r allzed I&#13;
was left with 1\100 large Sl..'OOp~of ~t rC2m&#13;
That Was after I did 3 ....01\ wllh the mount;am uf&#13;
whipped cream. It started me" ndenng ••bldl&#13;
is cheaper to serve, \l,hlpped "rtam r hOi&#13;
fudge. It was ju t enough to end the \ I II to tlus&#13;
place.&#13;
When I was pal mg. I nOlh.:ed llul lhe after&#13;
dinner miniS whkh used 10 ~ .....0 I.:ent :t&#13;
piece, were now three cenls. ~f re I..:ould&#13;
a word, Maggie danfied. "the) ·re thr 'ent.111&#13;
over now." I shook m\ he3d and 100 ·td 31 tlu.&#13;
south wall. I'd sv..ear· the ra(;e n lhe qu.;;arter&#13;
snickered at me 3S I left.&#13;
£he artist.&#13;
'othing n~ds 'a be .d&#13;
aboul the album ilself thJOg&#13;
desene to be S3Jd about I( ..\11&#13;
I would like to ....~ '. fo&lt;&#13;
Godsake, don', bu~ It,&#13;
Peace&#13;
Corps&#13;
Here&#13;
Two represtntau\es (rom the&#13;
Peace Corps. Dick C'hn Ilan&#13;
and Paul Y, rill ""II be .t the&#13;
GreenquISI Hall c ""our'" \prll&#13;
7 and from 9 00 '0 4 00 P m&#13;
to ~peak to studenu !nttre led&#13;
In joining the Peac:e Corp&#13;
A film ""II be sho" n on b Ih&#13;
da~s at 1'00 p.m, In r milO&#13;
at Greenquist, The I~O .....11131&#13;
speak to St\eral 10150('&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 •. m. till 11 p .•.&#13;
o&#13;
125&#13;
AM·FM Slereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Hue lS .. ,ood "'~y 10 dl'&#13;
CO'ortt ...,tyt lWter lOUl\d&#13;
ti ole Pb)' ~ r('Cord Oft 1M&#13;
Fisher I ~~ Play cbe Un)(&#13;
record on ~nolhcr ma.k,r&#13;
I.utc.n for the dtJfe:rrnc~.&#13;
«pee ••lly In lhe ery law&#13;
.. net cf) h'th f~l,IC:nc~&#13;
A "uht, "m"l)' -..1tII,&#13;
I¥"u And ,he Filber 11$&#13;
IS the: lIu! compldc AMFM&#13;
Slt'reo Ml.Q.K("tnIC.&#13;
'0 ;I '(('oI'.:ito 'I 'net ..&#13;
.......,... a.....&#13;
........ 1(_&#13;
J1IS 6OtI. $I.&#13;
6&gt;1-1801&#13;
".OIAL .IOUO..&#13;
.... Fill 11I001101&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
b t efforts in the last 5 then mercifully forgoltne. But&#13;
:~rs-Jesus Christ Superstar. with the su~cess of Superstar&#13;
' y With those facts, you should Scepter obvlousl~ fefi" thar ~&#13;
. . If uestion. re-release of their lrst wor&#13;
be asking ytohurtse oaul&#13;
q&#13;
d make could sell on their names alone. Anyone a C b d R'&#13;
.superstar would ?bvio,usly have Even thr~~~1 Wew:~1 a~tisfjl:&#13;
enough musical mtell~gence. to W~t~ h;ving rLs early mistake&#13;
know that Dreamcoat IS ternble. ~ tt n there would be&#13;
The:efore? why did they ever n~~~i~g ~hey could do i!Scepter&#13;
put It out. f I can wanted to resurrect H. Once&#13;
The answer, as ar .as b' b . ss reigns over fi '1 t is this: Dreamcoaf again Ig usme .... ", , ,...: ...:0[.', Igure I au, ~ ,.,,' , ,., ':':. ;..-..:',.,:.;:::..', :-,..x't.;. was recorded before Superstar, :={ :o:••"' ,.... • ~~&#13;
and therefore, probably put ;:;; SunnysIde ~;&#13;
Weber and Rice under contract :~:~ ~:;&#13;
with Scepter records. (t was :::: Fl' t ~::&#13;
originally released about 2 years ~:: oris S ;t&#13;
ago torn apart by critics and . :::~ ~&#13;
~ate,.. i&amp; Greenhouses ~&#13;
O ::~:Ronrs - frllit Ballets - 'lib :i:&#13;
~ ~ f&#13;
i!J I ...!~.I&#13;
~~j l::;i~. C~.~~"B,~~R&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
b Paul Lomartire&#13;
Y Newscope Staff&#13;
of t!:1k into the Bill . of Fare&#13;
you 't miss the giant com&#13;
~t. you ~:an. The assorted change,&#13;
n the so~nnies, are part of t~e ea~ly&#13;
ter, arld P d r realized that the mtenor&#13;
:in de~~~- ~~ve had premonitions about&#13;
tor m was going to be run.&#13;
rite restauran: ·ng to tell the public that&#13;
oe was ryyito eat here. This is not the b·gmone b" 1 . t that one goes to for a 1te_ to&#13;
r~tauran ters nickels, and pennies, lfl)'IOe quar , Ill· rolls of them. . he . the menu, r noticed my ~ho1ce&#13;
a readtn\·u of Fare's interpretat10n of&#13;
d the thle week before at the Big Boy&#13;
I hadR cine· a hot turkey sandwich. I&#13;
rant in a ' · h"gh the side the prices bemg I e~ on&#13;
1 be the quantities are · also d1fferen t.&#13;
itemr'Fare offers a Town Crier plate for _a 0 enty-five 1 · The Big Boy has theu&#13;
Joseph and the Amazing Techni&#13;
color Dreamcoat&#13;
lusic by Andrew Lloyd Weber&#13;
Lrn,s by Tim Rice&#13;
Secptor Records&#13;
Mter listening to this album,&#13;
I ·came to one sim~le but&#13;
definite conclusion. It stznks.&#13;
combination plate for a dollar ten. Both con I t&#13;
of a doub!e decker hamburger. french frie . and&#13;
a salad with either a Big Boy salad, or a Bill of Fare cup of coleslaw.&#13;
Chicken at Big Boy is a dollar sLxty-five for 3 regular (three pieces) dinner. The menu read a&#13;
d?llar ninty-five at the Bill of Fare (four&#13;
pieces). For the same dollar ninty-tive y u&#13;
w:ould spend_ at Bill of Fare, you could get five&#13;
pieces of chicken at Big Boy. The other odd&#13;
and ends with the meal balance out at both restaurants.&#13;
r ordered a hot turkey sandwich for a dollar&#13;
fifty. Maggie ordered a Town Crier plate. and a&#13;
small Pepsi. At the Bill of Fare a large Pepsi and&#13;
a small one are the same volume. but at&#13;
different prices in different glasses. You can&#13;
confirm this for yourself by pouring a mall&#13;
glass into the larger one. I did thi in front of&#13;
the waitress once before, and she only miled&#13;
sweetly and asked us not to make any trouble.&#13;
While we waited for our meal, we noticed&#13;
that quite a few older people were beginning to&#13;
come in, at the start of the dinner hour. After&#13;
about a half hour of this influx, I checked to&#13;
see if there was a bus in the parking lot. I&#13;
figured that maybe Shady Lawn East or West&#13;
had sponsored a field trip for their patrons, but&#13;
saw no such vehicle.&#13;
As Maggie and I ·continued to wait for our&#13;
meal, we talked about the events of the day, the day before, the future, and finally began&#13;
discussing the war in Viet am. while people&#13;
who had come in after us, who had ordered&#13;
abou.t the same thing, were in the process of&#13;
eating. [ watched my water glass sweat. and&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
In fact that statement of the Newscope Staff&#13;
I( n't eve; suffice. This thing&#13;
RFAKS. Anyone playing t_his ,uld be indicted for pollutwn&#13;
of the airwaves. Furthermore,&#13;
vone playing this and actually&#13;
E ·.JOYING it should be&#13;
committed.&#13;
best efforts in the last 5&#13;
years-Jesus Christ Superstar.&#13;
With those facts, you should&#13;
be asking yourself a question.&#13;
Anyone that could make -Superstar would obviously have&#13;
enough musical intelligence to&#13;
know that Dreamcoat is terrible.&#13;
Therefore, why did they ever&#13;
put it out?&#13;
Upon looking over the liner&#13;
notes to determine who should&#13;
e the blame for this disaster I&#13;
folly expected it to be credited&#13;
t the combined efforts of&#13;
pn1 1 IY/1&#13;
Peace&#13;
Corps&#13;
Here&#13;
e Jones and Howdy Doody.&#13;
I v.as, therfore, quite surprised&#13;
t find that the writers were&#13;
Andrew Weber and Tim Rice,&#13;
h also created a record that,&#13;
my opinion, was one of the&#13;
The answer' as far as I can&#13;
figure it out, is this: Dreamcoat&#13;
was recorded before Superstar,&#13;
and therefore, probably put&#13;
Weber and Rice under contract&#13;
with Scepter records. It was&#13;
originally released abou_t _2 years&#13;
ago, torn apart by cnttcs and&#13;
then mercifully forgottne. But&#13;
with the success of Superstar&#13;
Scepter obvious!&gt;: felt that .~ re-relea e of their first wor&#13;
could sell on their name alone.&#13;
Even though Weber and Rice&#13;
were probably well sati ft d&#13;
with having thi early mi ta ·e&#13;
forgotten there v. uld be&#13;
nothing they could do if S.:ep1er&#13;
wanted to re urrect It 011ce&#13;
again big bu ine s reig~~. ?~-~r.&#13;
·=-~-::.... :. •. -........•• , .... ·:.::::·.·:. ··:::·-·-~ .. •.•:&gt;.·.•-:-~&#13;
t Sunnyside f WEST I Florists i SIDE WP Coeds Vole r0&#13;
In Finals&#13;
Three Parkside coeds, Linda&#13;
Chambers, Jackie Matson, and&#13;
hn Hermes, are among the&#13;
fi ists in the 12th Annual Miss&#13;
ne Pageant sponsored by Racine Jay-Cees.&#13;
In the final, which is April , , 1ernorial, the girls will be&#13;
d in 3 categories: 1) E emng Gown; 2) Swim Suit; 3)&#13;
Talent-which is the most&#13;
ortant.&#13;
~ ·&#13;
~&#13;
(b&#13;
f'-t -·&#13;
I&#13;
::l -·&#13;
(j&#13;
~&#13;
::l&#13;
ClCl-&#13;
-·&#13;
~&#13;
f'-t&#13;
(b&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~ ~&#13;
~&#13;
""'-c&#13;
~ ....&#13;
~&#13;
&lt;.-,&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~ -.&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
;!&#13;
....&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
""'-c&#13;
~ ....&#13;
--&#13;
~&#13;
-.&#13;
~ .&#13;
I&#13;
,.&#13;
:a&#13;
..&#13;
-&#13;
:a&#13;
1ft&#13;
8&#13;
8&#13;
0&#13;
u&#13;
C:&#13;
0 .....&#13;
C:&#13;
~&#13;
sJl;e winner will receive a&#13;
(¼ scholarship, use of an&#13;
S~Obil for appearances, and&#13;
r worth of merchandise 1&#13;
tm. Racine Merchants, ding a mink stole. for Student&#13;
VAtEO'S&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
Also&#13;
IClflCKEN DINNERS and&#13;
TALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
~ Del.iVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 - P.M.&#13;
Oi&gt;eo 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
li&amp;R-~~~.~~~~~~:s 1 SWEET ·-~ :::: I&#13;
- • SHOP I :;:; .. 3021 ~ ·~· • 7!1TH ""~ ST. I&#13;
~~ if KENOSHA WISCONSIN !13140 t :::: .... :[:; PHONE 694~-~--.-... ·,:.;.»~::: , ... ~::•:::: ....... -.,,.._ ..... -......... ::-·... . ..&#13;
3200 60 St.&#13;
6 a •• till 1l p.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97'7&#13;
" &#13;
CIRUNA Formed&#13;
A.".yo!,e interest&#13;
parnctpatmg in any of thed !n&#13;
and/or joining ClRUNAe&#13;
01&gt;0;"&#13;
contact Janet at 633 3 pit",&#13;
Mrs. Porzak at M'836 '"&#13;
ex tension 36R fa am Hau&#13;
. formati r fUr", in ormation. Transportar "rq&#13;
be provided. Ian "'In&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
A free public shoWin&#13;
classic German.langua g of the&#13;
"Kleider machen ge rrhn&#13;
(Clothes Make the Manlleute'&#13;
held at 4 p.m. in R Will be&#13;
Greenquist Hall. OOm IOJ&#13;
Apr~ 5,1971 Pye b&#13;
Thumbs Out&#13;
(C&lt;Jnlinued from Page 4)&#13;
Four tenJ'_m .. Chief lnspector Trona was done with his&#13;
meeung. an I walked Into his office. He was seated at his&#13;
de smox mg :I large cigar _ I felt like a mi.mor league&#13;
ba ball player lr) 109 (0 negonate a major league contract&#13;
with the owner of the baseball team.&#13;
I e plamed to him \\h) I had come. bUI before I had said&#13;
two health' paragraphs. hi fingers were glidmg through his&#13;
lay. book He fuund the statute he "anted pertaining to&#13;
huchhl mg. and a ked his. secretary to duplicate It for me.&#13;
H then a ,led me If I holdan) uther questions.&#13;
I a....ed him If there were, If 8n). certain times of the&#13;
)ur .. hen huchhi ers were most noucable. when the&#13;
problem peaked. He puffed his cigar for a few seconds&#13;
before an wermg, and IJ that hllchluklOg was usually a&#13;
pr blem bum spring, ummer, a fe\\ more puffs, fall and&#13;
wlm r BUI he U1dd\ added, dead wmrer didn't aurae'&#13;
100 roam huchfu er l-I e plained th3t one of the hazards&#13;
of st..n H1 long sld the road waumg for 3 ride, was In the&#13;
(;I 1 thai old people h 3rt conditlons might gel 1010 an&#13;
ld nt It a person w-;a In the road \\3\&#13;
t-: r nun" reasons Ihoped th3t the se...:re.t3rVwould hurry&#13;
up .IU the tUph. that I Iht)ud\t i,l, 3S such 3 good story&#13;
nted 10 dl ,pJtt hl..c the SIn i'le from his cigar. I also&#13;
n Idcd th31 Ihl I 'PI \Ioould not 13 t tOO long on "\1eet&#13;
Ih Pel ,hJO td him ""hen I got the cop)' of the 13WS&#13;
..nd I I&#13;
Ih 1at t: Hilt he p"( me read. "When standing or&#13;
It,u flng In ru~dwa) or high \\0'3) prohibited. (I) '0 person&#13;
all In road..-.)' for th purpo~ of witcHing a ride&#13;
frum the \)~rator of an) -.ehlde other than a public&#13;
pa nstr 'chId (Z) a person shall stand or loiter on any&#13;
r d..-. it) other th n In a fety zone If such act interferes&#13;
\\lIh the la\\ful movement or 1r3ffic:'&#13;
The penalt~ for IhlS offense may be "not less Ihan 52.00&#13;
n r more than 20.00 for Ihe first offense and nol less than&#13;
510.00 nor m re ltun 550.00 for the second or subsequent&#13;
convk:doo within I year."&#13;
ChIef 1lIIpeotor TrOlla had furnished me wilh the story I&#13;
c me for and I ",os sure the law would interest many&#13;
thairskJe "'wyers who would ask what constitutes a&#13;
'·roadway." Istili felt sorry for the first arrested hitchhiker&#13;
",ho ,abed any quest,ons 10 anyone other than Chief&#13;
Inspector Trotta while at the pohce station.&#13;
I caJJed borne. and asked my fnend to give me a ride. I&#13;
was It .... on the curb. waili~ when a police car pulled&#13;
up. Fortuately. they wete waiting for a SlOp light, but I&#13;
wondered II I was up on my Dragnet jargon to case I was&#13;
£I\'en the dnd of informal warning Jerry Wielgat received.&#13;
FOUl forty p.m .• Igot a ride home.&#13;
International Education at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin·&#13;
_Milwaukee on April 17, 1971.&#13;
Some will attend the hearings of&#13;
the Assembly Veteran Affairs&#13;
for S-1801A-314 on April 22,&#13;
1971. S-180/A-314 is the&#13;
Wisconsin bill to make it illegal&#13;
for Wisconsin Men to be drafted&#13;
for undeclared foreign wars.&#13;
Some will observe conferences&#13;
on world affairs at Wingspread&#13;
on May I, 1971.&#13;
-The Council on&#13;
International Relations. an?&#13;
United alions Affairs. IS&#13;
forming on the Parkside&#13;
campuS. The purpose of&#13;
CI R A is the study of&#13;
international affairs and&#13;
responsible participation in&#13;
international relations.&#13;
The following are some of the&#13;
planned activities for CIRUNA.&#13;
Some will altend The&#13;
Governor's Conference on&#13;
Summer Seminar In New York&#13;
have a substantial numb&#13;
college credits in histo er 0(&#13;
social studies, a basic cory and&#13;
pol itic~l science (prf~:rte III&#13;
lOternational relations) abId&#13;
Y&#13;
d&#13;
· , an I&#13;
gra e pomt average of 2 50&#13;
above (between Band C). or&#13;
Des c rip tive booklets&#13;
application blanks are avm:&#13;
from the SOCial Science Di""""&#13;
Office, Room 318, Greenquist&#13;
and must be ,eturned by A&#13;
9.1971. 1"ll&#13;
be transferable to UW-Parkside.&#13;
Participants will live in&#13;
dormi tories of the New York&#13;
University Medical Center,&#13;
within walking distance of the&#13;
U.N. Expenses are based ~~on&#13;
regular UWM summer t~lt~on&#13;
and dormitory costs. AdmiSSIOn&#13;
is open to legal residents of&#13;
Wisconsin who WIll be Jumors or&#13;
seniors by the summer of 1971&#13;
at one of the participating&#13;
institutions. Candidates should&#13;
A unique opportunity to&#13;
spend the summer in ew Xork&#13;
CilY studying Ihe Uruted&#13;
I a i tons through regula.r&#13;
University of Wisconsin·&#13;
Milwaukee "credit courses,&#13;
attendance at U.N. sessions and&#13;
meetings with delegation and&#13;
secretariat personnel is being&#13;
offered to a UW·Parkside&#13;
student under the 6th Wisconsin&#13;
Universities United Nations&#13;
Summer Seminar, June 21 .&#13;
August 14, 1971. The Seminar,&#13;
administered at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin·· Milwaukee, is&#13;
being sponsored for the 6th&#13;
consecutive year by UWM,&#13;
UW-Madison, UW-Green Bay,&#13;
UW-Parkside, and six Wisconsin&#13;
S tate Universities who will&#13;
select a combined total of&#13;
approziamtely twenty&#13;
participants.&#13;
Each student will emoll at&#13;
the UW-Milwaukee, in two&#13;
3-credit courses focusing upon&#13;
the U.N, and international&#13;
~:)fganization, These credits will&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
For Sale Lost &amp; Found&#13;
Blue ski jacket 859.2156&#13;
REWARD&#13;
Wanted&#13;
'69 Volkswagen 12,000 miles.&#13;
$\495 - Call AI, 654-2414&#13;
Stereo Cassette Player and&#13;
Recorder with changer Model 377&#13;
$200 Call 652-8870 MUST SELL.&#13;
'69 Kawasaki WI-5S 650 cc Ex&#13;
Cono. 652-6335 after 4&#13;
'57 Chev. Wagon $350 or besr&#13;
t)ffer 652-0109 after 6&#13;
'69 Ramb. American 5995&#13;
652-4215 before 7&#13;
'69 Mustang Sl,800 or best offer&#13;
694-4117&#13;
Fiat wagon $150 call Ron&#13;
632-8230&#13;
'70 AMX 52450 or best offer&#13;
658-4271 or 658-4117&#13;
'67 Triumph TR-4 IRS whole or&#13;
for parts 886-3618&#13;
2 Piece luggage set cheap call Tom&#13;
654-2074 after 4&#13;
Winter coat size 7 $10 633-7576&#13;
or 637-8120&#13;
'70 Ambassador call Dennis&#13;
652-5673&#13;
Honda 'ISO" cc $200 694-0325&#13;
RCA Signal Generator $20.00 also&#13;
RCA Vacuum Tube voltmeter&#13;
$20.00 639-8202&#13;
Fender Stradcaster $450 or best&#13;
offer 639-6360&#13;
'62 Rambler SlOO Call 652-9552&#13;
Fiberglass Repair work&#13;
654-8739&#13;
Any type or work 652-8734&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Office Space - Modern,Carpnal&#13;
Partitioned, Air Condo Ideal r.&#13;
Acctg., Insurance, or Saks. eoa.I&#13;
proximity to Parkside and Carm.,&#13;
4058 7th Ave. Call 652·394S.&#13;
654-7410.&#13;
Misc.&#13;
Minnie the Midnite Maid&#13;
Qualifications for calling'&#13;
Proffessors &amp; Bachelors Ovtr25&#13;
(1 'm not cute but I'm effiCient&#13;
C,1l657·5929&#13;
GOT THE DRAFT !unai'Iyour&#13;
head??? Do something",OUlI&#13;
ECUMENICAL CENTER FOP.&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING 22lt EAST&#13;
KENWOOD BLVD. MtLWAUW&#13;
For appointments phone: (414&#13;
962-5855 or conta,t: STEVE&#13;
BANGERT STUDENT AFFAlRSKENOSHA&#13;
gam0u6 In girted&#13;
g&gt;~ w gla/ian PJ'~&#13;
~\"&#13;
liquor Store&#13;
r-;::=='l-:::::=:::=&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
A NEW 2·RECORD&#13;
SET FROM&#13;
CHICAGO: BEER&#13;
$7.49&#13;
':1.:.:-- -......:-&#13;
...,,;..~ :~~&#13;
~-:~ ... I&#13;
I FRO~&#13;
MUSIC COMPANY&#13;
COLUMBIA AND EPIC&#13;
RECORDS AND TAPES&#13;
~CEP")&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
STOP &amp; WATER Your own&#13;
Portable&#13;
Pop Festival&#13;
by19&#13;
Contemporary&#13;
Artists!&#13;
SUPER VALUE$1. 24-7 oz. bot. 12-24 OZ. bot.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
2428 Washin ton Rd., Kenosha&#13;
pg b , "A ope pril 5. 19il&#13;
Thu,nb Out CIRUNA Formec.l A_n_y o _n e in tereste&#13;
part1c1patmg in any of th d 1&#13;
and/or joining CIRUNAe a contact Janet at 633 3 Pie&#13;
Mrs. Porzak at M .. 836 Or&#13;
extension 36R ,. ain -The Council on&#13;
International Relations and&#13;
United , ·ations Affairs is&#13;
forming on the Parkside&#13;
campus. The purpose of&#13;
CIRU, 'A is the study of&#13;
international affairs and&#13;
responsible participation in&#13;
international relations.&#13;
The following are some of the&#13;
planned activities for CIRUNA.&#13;
Some wi 11 attend The&#13;
Governor's Conference on&#13;
International Education at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
-Milwaukee on April 17, 1971.&#13;
Some will attend the hearings of&#13;
the Assembly Veteran Affairs&#13;
for S-180/A-314 on April 22,&#13;
1971. S-180/A-314 is the&#13;
Wisconsin bill to make it illegal&#13;
for Wisconsin Men to be drafted&#13;
for undeclared foreign wars.&#13;
Some will observe conferences&#13;
on world affairs at Wingspread&#13;
on May I , 1971.&#13;
· f · ,or fur,1.. m orma !Ion. Transport . "IQ&#13;
be provided. ation ill&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
A free public showi&#13;
classic German-langu ng of&#13;
"Kl ·d age e1 er machen&#13;
(Clothes Make the Man)Le_ute"&#13;
held at 4 p.m. in Ro w,n bt&#13;
Greenquist Hall. om 103&#13;
Summer Seminar In New York&#13;
F ur forty p.m .• I got a ride home.&#13;
!COF&#13;
fME&#13;
A unique opportunity to&#13;
pend the sum_mer in New Xork&#13;
Cit} tudymg the United&#13;
'a i tons through regular&#13;
ni,ersity of WisconsinMilwaukee&#13;
~credit courses,&#13;
attendance at .• '. sessions and&#13;
meetings with delegation and&#13;
ecretariat per!&gt;onnel is being&#13;
offered to a UW-Parkside&#13;
tudent under the 6th Wisconsin&#13;
L'niversities United Nations&#13;
Summer Seminar, June 21 ·&#13;
August 14, 1971. The Seminar.&#13;
administered at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-· Milwaukee, is&#13;
being sponsored for the 6th&#13;
consecutive year by UWM,&#13;
UW-Madison, UW-Green Bay,&#13;
UW-Parkside, and six Wisconsin&#13;
State Universities who will&#13;
select a combined total of&#13;
approziamtely twenty&#13;
participants.&#13;
Each student will enroll at&#13;
the UW-Milwaukee, in two&#13;
3-credit courses focusing upon&#13;
the U.N. and international&#13;
organization. These credits will&#13;
A NEW 2-RECORD&#13;
SET FROM&#13;
CHICAGO:&#13;
$7.49&#13;
Yourown&#13;
Portable&#13;
Pop Festival&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
be transferable to UW-Parkside.&#13;
Participants will live in&#13;
dormitories of the New York&#13;
University Medical Center,&#13;
within walking distance of the&#13;
U.N. Expenses are based ~~on&#13;
regular UWM summer t~1t~on&#13;
and dormitory costs. Adm1ss10n&#13;
is open to legal residents of&#13;
Wisconsin who will be juniors or&#13;
seniors by the summer of 1971&#13;
at one of the participating&#13;
institutions. Candidates should&#13;
have a substantial numb&#13;
college credits in histo er&#13;
social studies, a basic cory&#13;
I. t. al Ur po 1 1c . science (prefer&#13;
mternational relationsJ&#13;
d . , nd a&#13;
gra e pomt average of , 0&#13;
above (between B and q-· or&#13;
Descriptive book.leis&#13;
application b_lanks are 3Yaila&#13;
from tne Social Science D&#13;
Office, Room 318, Gree '&#13;
and must be returned b~&#13;
9, 1971.&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
For Sale&#13;
'69 Volkswagen 12,000 miles.&#13;
$1495 - Call Al, 654-2414&#13;
Stereo Cassette Player and&#13;
Recorder with changer Model 377&#13;
S200 Call 652-8870 MUST SELL.&#13;
'69 Kawasaki WI-SS 650 cc Ex&#13;
Cono. 652-6335 after 4&#13;
'57 Chev. Wagon S350 or best&#13;
&lt;Jffer 652-0109 after 6&#13;
'69 Ramb. American $995&#13;
652-4215 before 7&#13;
'69 Mustang Sl,800 or best offer&#13;
694-4117&#13;
Fiat wagon $150 call Ron&#13;
632-8230&#13;
'70 AMX $2450 or best offer&#13;
658-4271 or 658-4117&#13;
'67 Triumph TR-4 IRS whole or&#13;
for parts 886-3618&#13;
2 Piece luggage set cheap call Tom&#13;
654-207 4 after 4&#13;
Winter coat size 7 $10 633-7576&#13;
or 637-8120&#13;
'7 0 Ambassador call Dennis&#13;
652-5673&#13;
Honda '150" cc $200 694-0325&#13;
RCA Signal Generator S20.00 also&#13;
RCA Vacuum Tube voltmeter&#13;
S20.00 639-8202&#13;
Fender Stradcaster S450 or best&#13;
offer 639-6360&#13;
'62 Rambler SlOO Call 652-9552&#13;
Lost &amp; Found&#13;
Blue ski jacket 859_2356&#13;
REWARD&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Fiberglass Repair work&#13;
654-8739&#13;
Any type or work 652~7 J.4&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Office Space - Modern. Cuptted&#13;
Partitioned, Air Cond. Ideal £«&#13;
Acctg., Insurance, or SalCJ.&#13;
proximity to Parkside and Can&#13;
4058 7th Ave. Call 652-3945 or&#13;
654-7410.&#13;
Misc.&#13;
Minnie the Midnite Maid&#13;
Qualifications for calhng:&#13;
Proffessors &amp; Bachelors om 2S&#13;
(I'm not cute but I'm efficient&#13;
Call 657-5929&#13;
GOT THE DRAFT lungin&#13;
your head??? Do something abom ._&#13;
ECUMENICAL CENTER&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING 2211 EAST&#13;
KENWOOD BL VD. MILWAUKEE&#13;
For appointments phone: (414&#13;
962-5855 or contact: STEVE&#13;
BANGERT STUDENT AFFAIRS -&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
f7&lt;Mnout&gt; ~ PJ'ined&#13;
if'~ w- #lal«»i PJ'OO&lt;M&#13;
~·--&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA&#13;
21 FLAVORS&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
BEER - ''fh POP&#13;
~.&#13;
'&#13;
~2 ==.wit &amp; WATER ,,,;//4///I\\\\~,,--· STOP&#13;
24-7 oz. -bot. 12-24 oz. 1,oc.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
2428 W ashin ton Rd., Kenosha &#13;
Rangers Take Invitational pressure off. he umped&#13;
some'Nhal closer to the tar nd&#13;
cleared It 6"4" IS [ ~OC' 5 be 1&#13;
effort to date&#13;
lie "3n1S to pcorled hi ~ un&#13;
and guild up hI str&lt;ng,h II,&#13;
explamed , "\1) F I J or n, .. I&#13;
to dear CO Perhap ~ the&#13;
season progrt he... n In.: h&#13;
closer to and f n;,lI} .JIlL du.&#13;
height&#13;
par side dominat d 'he (,()&#13;
} ard htgh hurdk wtth I,&#13;
lug, .h, Denm F, 'helm '00&#13;
Dean IUJ 'hoff IJ 1Oi! Ihe .ir I&#13;
three place&#13;
In the J ,Tun I (;, )&#13;
and \Ierrul plJI."N d ~ d&#13;
third respe:l:t1\~h t..Gd \ '"&#13;
only 3 10 of.. coed botlil&#13;
Ihe \l,inlllllt! Un~ 01 5~.Qlurn d&#13;
in b) llllld) GJl uf 8&lt;1 •&#13;
Zugh.:h and De "Ill pb,:t'd~. ~&#13;
in the 600 ~Jrd run 't\ hi h "'OJ&#13;
won b~ Rllo."h U il.1rd.J ,I&#13;
\tarquellt&#13;
Leonard Buill' and I ifill&#13;
ga\'e P Hksh:le ~('ond OInd third&#13;
pla.:e 10 Ih tnple Illp. :and&#13;
they "Cfe J.....In Ih~ I n~Jump&#13;
II the "om,""o' m tl&#13;
Park Ide' J u,h ZlIlUnt&gt;fl n "oJ&#13;
a double 't\lIlner. J.p1Unn~ Ihe&#13;
mile and Ihe O. {.Iur&#13;
WeSlfh.:h gJ\t" P.n de 01 '" "d&#13;
In the half mtle 1.1 t:&#13;
The Ranger ".11 pJrlldp.lIe&#13;
In lhe \\ I n 10 fedtr:ltlon&#13;
Indoor meel al I.Jl.hson&#13;
April 10, Com~UIIOI1 ..,11 be&#13;
bOlh the mt:n''5 Jnd \Ii, lilt&#13;
di\ISlOn ,&#13;
fRay fRadtr;an&#13;
0' ,Ier!"I good&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
Newscope staff&#13;
.rthe with 97~ points,&#13;
rarkSld\ men's division of&#13;
.JPI"~e~ptekside [nvita tional&#13;
U"· ar H' I '... eel held at Case. Ig1.&#13;
[r~~ III finished a distant&#13;
\Wquet~e the six team meet&#13;
.""d In&#13;
~~ 3lh . \&#13;
.,th6 -' m scores were Beloit&#13;
omeN,leathwestern 21, si.&#13;
'9 or ,. 5&#13;
.' 7 and DOITIlmCan .&#13;
'lr~rtDo~inican's first year in&#13;
1M" .. k competitIOn.&#13;
""i"hl teams compeled in the&#13;
E~"s diVIsion with the&#13;
fOmen CI b . . '3ukee Track u cO~lIng&#13;
\b!W lOp with 43 pomls.&#13;
"" on f h 'th 17 • bide placed ourl WI . . "'-&#13;
hr""kside's success in the pole Bob Waters&#13;
It layed a role in'the men's&#13;
"" p The Rangers S&#13;
~~:red the event by taking ports Photos by Borger. JUdy Zimmerman&#13;
die first three places. John . showmg by wmnmg the 60 yard event wilh a jump of 6'3" M k&#13;
hlltO and Tun Martlllson went dash 111 6.5 sec. He has run it in Toepel f N h . ar&#13;
IJ'O",and Keith Merritt 12'0". 6.3 sec. thisyearalso. c1eJred 6~3" ~rt ~es~em also&#13;
Fourth and fifth place were Other i.ndicators tha~ the misses thal~ u~u :ne ad more&#13;
tJienby Marquette vaulters. Rangers will be strong 111 the Dronek a K . ~. '. Larf)&#13;
Jim McFadden turned in a running events were the who h' d ol11ln~~a~. Jumper&#13;
431 mile to win that event for victories by Judd Johnston in manaoe as.. ~n,~ 6,g,.· bn~Uld&#13;
t'Jrk'side.This is a good time for the 880, and Chuck Dettman in miss'.:o th on y . e~o~~&#13;
"&#13;
..door mile which is difficult the 2 mile. McFadden was fiflh Wheln"g ree IInh,es aI 6 I .&#13;
f h h . h 88 you mISs { ree times at to run because 0 t e s arp ,111 teO, and Gary Lance any gl'ven h 'ghl f&#13;
. I d fifth C th' h 2" el you are OUI 0 ,r ParkS/de pace , . ,our In t e. nule, reflectlllg the competi'ion.&#13;
\I;Fadden also captured the the depth of the team. I-on,'cally h' I f h&#13;
I h h'gh' ". s on y a 'er I e l.fXXl yard run. n tel Jump the Rangers event was over Prince decided to&#13;
Bob Waters, Ranger have a good young prospect in take a crack al 6'4" h 'ght&#13;
Freshman f~om Mil.wau~ee E~gene Prince,. freshman from which he failed to c1e;/in ~~ree&#13;
lincoln, contlllued his. fme Milwaukee. Pnnce won the earlier attempts. With lhe&#13;
1m&#13;
R t It II til;011&#13;
PhfJI/t&#13;
C&gt;t)-I ."-1 5 5&#13;
... "_C:".&#13;
...(0 t1A&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
g. Red Corpc-1 ft'.alm~nl&#13;
0&#13;
•&#13;
BA K Of&#13;
ELf 000&#13;
everyone e dOt I&#13;
270. Lo,h,op ,.,••&#13;
Roclne, II&#13;
Hockey Bea rs Tie Whitewater opened thIrd&#13;
period scoring to take a :!-O&#13;
leJd. With 9:37 lefllO pia} KJri&#13;
Liekoski scored on a powerplay.&#13;
Some two minutes later Rich&#13;
Rosko followed with a hard&#13;
shot to the right corner of lhe&#13;
net. Bill Westerlund capped lhe&#13;
Ranger comeback effort at 5:05&#13;
with a booming slapshot.&#13;
Whitewater. howe\·er. came&#13;
back to score the tying goal&#13;
wilh 45 seconds left 'u pia}.&#13;
The Rangers Ihus had to set tIe&#13;
for their second tie \I'llh&#13;
Whitewater. Earlier in the&#13;
season the teams deadlocked at&#13;
5-5.&#13;
r",,"" M4f/~&#13;
EMIL CERLACH&#13;
/t-r s.:e _&#13;
PaddleballChamps&#13;
left. Whitewaler took a 1-0 lead.&#13;
The second period was&#13;
scoreless with Whitewater&#13;
outshooting the Rangers 6-3.&#13;
Hard and close body checking in&#13;
the period resulted in six&#13;
penalty minutes for Parkside,&#13;
while Whitewater had four.&#13;
The third period found&#13;
Whitewater outshooting the&#13;
RJngers 11-5, but Parkside&#13;
capitalized more frequently on&#13;
the shots and outscored the&#13;
visitors 3-2.&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Ptrkside's hockey team tied&#13;
IbUtwater State 3·3 at Wilson&#13;
PMk in Milwaukee. The Rangers&#13;
Ipp&lt;ared 10 be headed for&#13;
n:IOry but Whitewa ter scored&#13;
tht lying gual with 45 seconds&#13;
llIIIainingin the game.&#13;
The first period was&#13;
dulJ&lt;terized by aggressive play&#13;
luh both teams exhibiting&#13;
Irong defense. The lone goal in&#13;
dle period was scored with 2:31&#13;
The Pa Idt Inu.lmur.d&#13;
paddleball 'h;lmplf..-'lllsfu \l re&#13;
captured b} Jeff. ~r and&#13;
Colleen Joho\on. Jeff ""un lh&#13;
men's, and Collcen Ih "omtningle&#13;
.&#13;
Todd d n 'WJ runnrrup 10&#13;
the men'~ \,.' till ~. 3&#13;
Susan Graf In lht" men"&#13;
The intr.:amural hand.;all&#13;
charnpu. nshlp "'3$ .11 1 d Idtd.&#13;
\\Ilh Tim bum tn nnt'rpng&#13;
\·lctorlOu. and \r~ till'"&#13;
placlOg~..: d&#13;
Or.hl It \&#13;
'l11d)&#13;
[',.,(// B'/I ell&#13;
e&#13;
eoee.o", AV&#13;
..&#13;
rU:~WrII .. ..&#13;
Ol.7·11174'· '.•... ' '&#13;
I S~ S/wwv I&#13;
"BRAT Lifters Place In State /I&#13;
Our three power lifters who&#13;
Iift1luredto the Wisconsin State&#13;
Powe, Ufting Meet this past&#13;
""'end dId well in the field of&#13;
Inenty·nve.&#13;
OuOald Ours, our lightesl&#13;
lfler competed as a&#13;
~therweight (up to 132\4 Ibs.).&#13;
~ad a good showing in&#13;
ry When he set four new&#13;
~I records with a total of&#13;
611' Saturday things were&#13;
trent and he was only&#13;
lucceSSful with his first&#13;
~".. This did plJce him&#13;
I th In a field of eleven. His&#13;
I IVere: bench press 165,&#13;
~t 1&#13;
r&#13;
1s, deadlift 315 for a&#13;
--'0 70S ' I . i: Hernandez lifted as a&#13;
; Th'Yweight (up to 18I&#13;
*&#13;
cant~Sl IS was only his third&#13;
loy Wi hut he had an excellent&#13;
I, 1t~ SIX successful lifts. His&#13;
re: bench press 260,&#13;
Mike Madsen, Ranger center.&#13;
was chosen (0 represent&#13;
Parkside on a basketball tour In&#13;
orthern Europe this summer&#13;
The team also includes players&#13;
from schools that played with&#13;
the Swedish lOuring team this&#13;
past season.&#13;
Gymnastic equipment.&#13;
--&#13;
IS&#13;
available to any Parks Ide&#13;
student on Tuesday evenings&#13;
from 7:30-9:30 al Park High. It&#13;
is an open exercise period and&#13;
instruction will be available If&#13;
desired. Anyone interested&#13;
should contact Warren&#13;
McGillivray at 637-5~60.&#13;
squat 315, deadlift 525, for a&#13;
total of 1100 pounds and a fifth&#13;
place finish. All his lifts were&#13;
new UW·Parkside records but&#13;
. they were quickly broken by&#13;
Joe Gemignani.&#13;
Joe Gemignani is having an&#13;
excellent year lifting. In a&#13;
January meet he tied for third&#13;
while setting four new UWP&#13;
records in the middleweight&#13;
class. Up one weight class now&#13;
he broke the records established&#13;
by Jesse and finished third in&#13;
the state. His lifts were; bench&#13;
press 355, squat 450, deadlift&#13;
525, for a total of 1330.&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
";til&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
.nd •&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
.....".&#13;
Neu, Gallery&#13;
One HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday .thru Friday&#13;
7 p.nt. to 8 p.m,&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
A".l1 F. Pert".&#13;
Iooc ....... , " .-4 s.-." Pert"•&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,,,, BRAT-STOP&#13;
10% StUdent ~&#13;
Discount&#13;
. "" all Posters&#13;
• &amp; Frames&#13;
.. S.&#13;
503 Main St,&#13;
Rllci'lt ........te-I-~ ....H •&#13;
Rangers T a~e Invitational&#13;
BY Jim Casper&#13;
Newscope staff&#13;
ofthe vith 97½ points.&#13;
fir id\ \ men's division of&#13;
ptured, ~ \side Invitational&#13;
LM· /held at Case High.&#13;
111 mee finished a distant&#13;
,11quette the six team meet d 1n&#13;
th 63½· 1 scores were Beloit&#13;
othe( teaith1 western 2 I' St. or . . 5 • . 7 and Domm1can . bt!l ' ' fj t . Thi j· Domi~i~an s irs year m&#13;
k Nmpetttton. . ght teams compete_d m the&#13;
Ei ·s division with the omen Cl b . ·aukee Track u co~mg&#13;
top with 43 pomts.&#13;
t ?;e placed fourth with 17.&#13;
i~ lk ide's success in the pole Bob Waters rar I . ·th , ult played a ro e m e men s&#13;
ry Th e Range r s Sh t Ph b 1 '&#13;
0ate.d the event by taking r 0 r S otos ry Borger&#13;
first three pla_ces. John · showi_ng by :,Vinning the 60 yard&#13;
P11ten and Tim Martinson went dash m 6.5 sec. He has run it in&#13;
r'O" and Keith Merritt I 2'0". 6.3 sec. this year also.&#13;
fllllrth and fifth place were Other i_ndicators that the&#13;
0 by farquette vaulters. Rangers will be strong in the&#13;
Jllll \1cFadden turned in a r~nni_ng events were the&#13;
4 1 mile to win that ev~nt for v1ctones by Judd Johnston in&#13;
1'-1! ,de. This is a ~oo_d t1_m~ for the 880,_ and Chuck Dettman in&#13;
indoor mile which 1s difficult the 2 mtle. McFadden was fifth&#13;
10 run because of the sharp in the . 880, and . Gary Lance&#13;
of Parkside placed fifth. fourth m the 2 mtle, reflecting&#13;
Fadden also captured the the depth of the team.&#13;
1.000 yard run. In the high jump the Rangers&#13;
Bob Waters, Ranger have a good young prospect in&#13;
fre hman from Milwaukee Eugene Prince , freshman from&#13;
oln. continued his fine Milwaukee . Prince won the&#13;
Hockey Bears Tie&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Park 1de's hockey team tied&#13;
1ewater State 3-3 at Wilson&#13;
Pu~ m \lilwaukee. The Range rs ared to be headed for&#13;
IOI'} but Whitewater scored&#13;
t}mg gual with 45 seconds&#13;
ming in the game.&#13;
The first period was&#13;
ra teri,ed by aggressive play&#13;
th both teams exhibiting&#13;
rong defen e. The lone goal in&#13;
period was scored with 2: 31&#13;
left. Whitewater took a 1-0 lead.&#13;
The second period was&#13;
scoreless with Whitewater&#13;
ou tshooting the Rangers 6-3.&#13;
Hard and close body checking in&#13;
the period resulted in six&#13;
penalty minutes for Parkside.&#13;
while Whitewater had four.&#13;
The third period found&#13;
Whitewater outshooting the&#13;
Rangers I 1-5, but Parkside&#13;
capitalized more frequently on&#13;
the shots and outscored the&#13;
visitors 3-2.&#13;
Lifters Place In State&#13;
scjuat 3 I 5, dead lift 525, for a&#13;
total of 1100 pounds and a fifth&#13;
place finish. All his lifts were&#13;
new UW-Parkside records but&#13;
they were quickly broken by&#13;
Joe Gemignani.&#13;
Joe Gemignani is having an&#13;
ex cell en t year Ii fting. In a&#13;
January meet he tied for third&#13;
while setting four new UWP&#13;
records in the middleweight&#13;
class. Up one weight class now&#13;
he broke the records established&#13;
by Jesse and finished third in&#13;
the state. His lifts were: bench&#13;
press 355, squat 450, deadlift&#13;
525 , for a total of 1330.&#13;
Judy Zimm~rman&#13;
event with a jump of 6T'. Luk&#13;
Toepel of . 'orthwe tern I&#13;
cleared 6'3". but he had m re&#13;
mi ses than Eugene. Larr}&#13;
Dronek. a Kominican jumper&#13;
who ha· done 6'6". could&#13;
manage "on!}.. b 'O" bef k&#13;
mis ing three time at b' I ".&#13;
When }OU mi three tam at&#13;
any given height ;-ou are out f&#13;
the competition . .&#13;
!ronically. hortly after the&#13;
event wa over Prince decided to&#13;
take a crack at 6'4". a height&#13;
which he failed to dear in three&#13;
earlier attempts. With the&#13;
Whitewater opened thtrd&#13;
period scoring to take a 2-0&#13;
lead. With 9 37 left to pla} K n&#13;
Lieko ki scored on a p werpla} . Some two minute later Rich&#13;
Rosko followed with a hard&#13;
shot to the right corner of the&#13;
net. Bill We terlund capp•d th&#13;
Ranger comeback effort t : o·&#13;
with a booming lap hot .&#13;
\Vhitewater. h we,er. • m&#13;
back to ·core the t} in.,, o&#13;
with 45 second left to pla~ . The Ranger thu had to ttl&#13;
for their second tie v.1th&#13;
Whitewater. Earlier in th&#13;
season the team dead! ~ ed at&#13;
5-5.&#13;
I s jwttJ,, s hW4, I&#13;
iike fad~n. Ranger enter, wa · cho en to repre nt&#13;
Parkside on a basketball t ur m orthern Europe th1 umm r.&#13;
The team al o in.Jude play r&#13;
from chool that played wJth&#13;
the wedi h tourmg te m th1&#13;
past sea&#13;
~&#13;
on&#13;
Gymna ti.. equipment 1&#13;
available to any Park 1de&#13;
student on Tue da&gt; e\em1 ~&#13;
from 7:30-9 :30 at Park lligh. It&#13;
i · an open e,ercise pen d 1d&#13;
instruction will be 3\31lablc 1f&#13;
desired. n}·one 111tere t d&#13;
should contact \\arren&#13;
McGillivray at 637-5~60.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, issue 11, April 5, 1971</text>
              </elementText>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61854">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61855">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61861">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Student Government Elections - Eaker Wins Presidency</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89862">
              <text>tree University oj Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
••••••••&#13;
Jazz Comes To UWP&#13;
s« page.5&#13;
NUMBER 12 APRIL 19, 1971&#13;
- Student Gov't Elections&#13;
". Eaker- Student Government President.&#13;
c&#13;
z&#13;
".J&#13;
Z&#13;
;(&#13;
WI.i.....aiIllo-_......~&#13;
o&#13;
Dou LoalOi - Top senatorial Vole-Getler. m&#13;
Eaker Wins Presidency&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
01 the New8cope Slall&#13;
After nearly two years without a student&#13;
government the Parkside student body now has&#13;
one.&#13;
In a general election that saw only 885students&#13;
vote out of a student body of 4,000, Tim Eaker&#13;
w.as elected President; R. E. (Ron) Williams,&#13;
VIce. president; Debbie Kemper, treasurer;&#13;
David Weber, recording secretary; and Jean&#13;
Koehler, corresponding secretary.&#13;
In the Senate 1601the 17positions were chosen.&#13;
For the 17th position there was a tie between&#13;
Tom Taskonis and Ed Toth. Taskonis has asked&#13;
for a recount, and if the 'tie remains the chairman&#13;
of the election committee will randomly&#13;
select the winner.&#13;
The 16 winners are: Dean Loumos, Tom&#13;
Garner, John Gottfredsen, Ken Antaramian,&#13;
Walter Breach, Jeanette Dremel, Walter&#13;
Ulbricht, Ken Konkol, Tom Fletcher, Chris&#13;
Crowe, Mark Timpany, Tom Meier, Mike&#13;
Mayeshiha, Gary Davis, Gary Adelson and Dale&#13;
Martin.&#13;
For the Student Union Committee, the four&#13;
students on the ballot, Tim Daley, Greg&#13;
Barrette, Tom Kreul and Jerry Horton, were all&#13;
elected. Sue Nevin won the fifth position on a&#13;
write-in campaign.&#13;
The race for the presidency saw Tim Eaker&#13;
defeat Madeleine Thielen of the Halloween party&#13;
by 87 votes. Eaker has been active in lobbying&#13;
for the restoration of cuts in the Parkside budget&#13;
in Madison. He was also a leader of the Commlttee&#13;
for United Student Action (CUSA), and&#13;
fought against the ratification of the Constitutional&#13;
Committee constitution.&#13;
.. Eaker had 38 per cent of the votes cast for&#13;
president and carried all three campuses. Don&#13;
Koser was second in votes cast at the Kenosha&#13;
campus.&#13;
The unofficial results are:&#13;
Rac. Ken. Gr. Tol&#13;
Tim Eaker 91 92 142 325&#13;
Madeleine Thielen 85 52 101 238&#13;
Don Kosher 54 68 57 179&#13;
David Karls 28 12 31 71&#13;
Ian MacTaggert 11 14 14 39&#13;
Per&#13;
Cl&#13;
38&#13;
28&#13;
21&#13;
8&#13;
5&#13;
Regents Meet At Parkside&#13;
WI Friday the University 01 Wisconsin Board of&#13;
....... met on the Parkside campus.&#13;
'I1&gt;emorningsessionbegan minus regents Walker and&#13;
... , duringwhich the grout&gt;approved an 18 credit&#13;
-c:bina certificate. The non-major, non-minor course ~s&#13;
dItIped for the full-time student, particularly .10&#13;
-lion, whomight be pressed into coaching dulles&#13;
tIiJe teaching.&#13;
.....~~ a break for lunch the group returned to the&#13;
~ti1 at full attendance and listened to Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie explainParkside. Wyllie stressed the land grant&#13;
lradilionasit relates toParkside's industrial mission. He&#13;
IIDted thatthearea is in tbe midst of changing from an&#13;
Ilri&lt;uJluralbackgroundto a solidly industrial base..He&#13;
Iloo mentionedParkside's nine interdisciplinary majors&#13;
• a part of its program. . .&#13;
During the course of Wyllie's address statisllea&#13;
;:emmg studentbodymake-up revealed 70 per cent of&#13;
studentbody work20hours per week, while takmg 12&#13;
::18 per semester and for this reason classes are held&#13;
B a.m. until 10 p.m, to provide as fleXible an&#13;
lC!dem!cprogramas Possibleto meet the demands of the&#13;
~ student.Itwas also mentioned that the average&#13;
of a Parkside student is 22.&#13;
~ Late:, Tom Rosandich Athletic Director, told the&#13;
~ts that Parkside "is in a situatiorl where the fan&#13;
lac:k't knowwhereteams are playing," referring to the&#13;
__ of, permanent athletic facilities on .campus. He&#13;
--a the unique nature of the club-Oriented sports&#13;
:tam directedat student participation in activities vs.&#13;
nt competitionon a varsity level. He S81d the ;::.m is "a model innovation" aud predicted other&#13;
Ilea: WOUlddevelop their programs along the same&#13;
'I1&gt;eIIleeliDg then turned to the committee Report on&#13;
the Budget which resulted in the group being informed&#13;
that the findings have nol yet been completed. Regent&#13;
Walker stressed that the public oughtto be kept aware of&#13;
whatever happensto the budget as it happens rather than&#13;
waiting until all the infonoation has been analyzed and&#13;
finalized. . bid TheRegents alsovoted downthe Madisoncampus&#13;
for COoedhousing; allocated $90,000 for th;, Library&#13;
Learning Center; and approved a measure allOWlng.the&#13;
developers of off-campus housing to coenect 1010&#13;
Parkside's sewer system.&#13;
For vice president Roo Williams soundly&#13;
trounced Lyn Van Eimeren, who did litUe&#13;
campaigning, 50&amp;-266 votes.&#13;
The unofficial results are: Per&#13;
Rae. Ken.. Gr. TaL Ct.&#13;
Ron Williams In 134 203 sal 6S&#13;
Lyn Van Eimeren 81 III lOS 2li6 35&#13;
For treasurer, Larry Thielen, long a campus&#13;
activist and the husband oC Madeleine Tlllelen,&#13;
was beaten convincingly by Debbie Kemper.&#13;
The unofficial results are: Per&#13;
Rae. ~en. Gr. Tol Ct&#13;
Debbie Kemper 151 t47 t91 4 62&#13;
Larry Thielen 104 83 119 306 38&#13;
Dave Weber, of the Hallov.een party, ran&#13;
unopposed for recording secretary and picked up&#13;
542votes. The [act that 885votes were cast would&#13;
seem to indicate there was a backlash against&#13;
the Halloween party candidates.&#13;
The contest for corresponding secretary was&#13;
the closest race among the Senate offices. Jean&#13;
Koehler emerged with a 33 vote edge over Sutton&#13;
Kinter. Kinter won the Kenosha campus b one&#13;
vote but lost heavily in Racine.&#13;
Miss Koehler was the only Halloween party&#13;
candidate to win an office in direct competition.&#13;
The unofficial results are:&#13;
Per&#13;
Rae. Ken.. Gr. To Cl&#13;
Jean Koehler 130 tOS 154 389 52&#13;
Sutton Kinter 104 106 t46 356 8&#13;
In the at-large election [or the Student Senate,&#13;
Dean Loumos paced all candidates in pulling In&#13;
340 votes, 45 votes more than runnerup, Tom&#13;
Garner.&#13;
In electing the Senate each voter cast six&#13;
votes.&#13;
Loumos ran on the Halloween party ticket and&#13;
opposed the candidacy of Tim Eaker [or&#13;
president. He WlIS a member of the Constitutional&#13;
Committee and was a leader of last&#13;
spring's campus strike.&#13;
Five of the six Halloween party senatorial&#13;
candidates, Loumos, Gary Davis, Mike&#13;
Mayeshiba Marl&lt; Timpany and John Gottfredsen&#13;
";011 senate seats. The sixth, Tom&#13;
Taskonls, is tied for the 17th positioo.&#13;
The unofficial results for the senate are: ( ote&#13;
discrepancies in totals.)&#13;
Rae. Ken. Gr.&#13;
141 01 132&#13;
117 62 116&#13;
89 75 126&#13;
74 85 118 277&#13;
44 110 lOS 259&#13;
82 55 110 247&#13;
49 lIS 89 231&#13;
60 75 89 224&#13;
43 92 84 219&#13;
rt 39 94 2tO&#13;
81 49 n 2111&#13;
(Continued 011 Pile I)&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
Tom Garner&#13;
John Gottfredsen&#13;
Ken Antararnian&#13;
Walter Breach&#13;
Jeanette Dremel&#13;
Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Ken Konkol&#13;
George Fletcher&#13;
01ris Crowe&#13;
Mark Timpany&#13;
Tot&#13;
340&#13;
29!;&#13;
0:&#13;
W&#13;
"&#13;
0:&#13;
o&#13;
m&#13;
.J&#13;
.J&#13;
W&#13;
0:&#13;
0:&#13;
"o&#13;
11IeBe...... lb._ ... -. Hall u.rary tu&amp; Frilia .&#13;
F ,ee University of Wis,onsin-Parkside&#13;
------"'-&#13;
NUMBER 12 APRIL 19, 1971&#13;
Jazz Comes To U&#13;
S pat 5&#13;
Student Gov't Elections&#13;
Eaker Wins Presidency&#13;
nm Eaker - Student Government President.&#13;
Dea.n Loamo11 - Top Senatorial Vote-Getter.&#13;
0&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
.J&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
::E&#13;
m&#13;
0&#13;
m&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
After nearly two years without a student&#13;
government the Parkside student body now ha&#13;
one.&#13;
In a general election that saw only 885 students&#13;
vote out of a student body of 4,000, Tim Eaker&#13;
was elected President; R. E. (Ron) Williams,&#13;
vice_ president; Debbie Kemper, treasurer;&#13;
David Weber, recording secretary; and Jean&#13;
Koehler, corresponding secretary.&#13;
In the Senate 16 of the 17 positions were chosen.&#13;
For the 17th position there was a tie between&#13;
Tom Taskonis and Ed Toth. Taskonis bas asked&#13;
for a recount, and if the ·ue remains the chairman&#13;
of the election committee will randomly&#13;
select the winner.&#13;
The 16 winners are: Dean Loumos, Tom&#13;
Garner, John Gottfredsen, Ken Antaramian,&#13;
Walter Breach, Jeanette Dremel, \ 'alter&#13;
Ulbricht, Ken Konkol, Tom Fletcher, Chris&#13;
Crowe, Mark Tilnpany, Tom eier, iike&#13;
Mayeshiba, Gary Davis, Gary Adelson and Dale&#13;
Martin.&#13;
For the Student Union Committee, the four&#13;
students on the ballot, Tim Daley, Greg&#13;
Barrette, Tom Kreul and Jerry Horton, were all&#13;
elected. Sue Nevin won the fifth position on a&#13;
write-in campaign.&#13;
The race for the presidency saw Tim Eaker&#13;
defeat Madeleine Thielen of the Halloween party&#13;
by 87 votes. Eaker has been active in lobbying&#13;
for the restoration of cuts in the Parkside budget&#13;
in Madison. He was also a lead of the Committee&#13;
for United Student Action ( SA) , and&#13;
fought against the ratification of the Con·&#13;
stitutional Committee constitution. Eaker had 38 per cent of the votes cast for&#13;
president and carried all three campuses. Don&#13;
Koser was second in votes cast at the Kenosha&#13;
campus.&#13;
The unofficial results are:&#13;
Rae. Ken.&#13;
Tim Eaker 91 92&#13;
Madeleine Thielen 85 52&#13;
Don Kosher 54 68&#13;
David Karls 28 12&#13;
Ian MacTaggert 11 14&#13;
Gr.&#13;
142&#13;
101&#13;
57&#13;
31&#13;
14&#13;
Tot.&#13;
325&#13;
238&#13;
179&#13;
71&#13;
39&#13;
Per&#13;
Ct.&#13;
38&#13;
28&#13;
21&#13;
8&#13;
5&#13;
Regents Meet At Parkside&#13;
Last Friday the University of Wisconsin Board of&#13;
Regents met on the Parkside campus.&#13;
The morning session began minus regents Walker an~&#13;
7.ieg}er, during which the group approved an 18 cred~t&#13;
CO&amp;~ing certificate. The non-major, non-minor course ~s&#13;
designed for the full-time student, particularly . m&#13;
education, who might be pressed into coaching duties&#13;
Ylhile teaching.&#13;
Aftei: a break for lunch the group returned to the&#13;
. ary at full attendance and listened to Chancellor&#13;
Ylli~ explain Parkside. Wyllie stressed the l~~ grant&#13;
tradition as it relates to Parkside's industrial mission. He&#13;
lrl~ that the area is in the midst of changing from an&#13;
&amp;gricu]tural background to a solidly industrial base .. He&#13;
mentioned Parkside's nine interdisciplinary maJors&#13;
a., a pa~t of its program. . .&#13;
During the course of Wyllie's address statistics&#13;
~ming student body make-up revealed 70 per cent of&#13;
Sbident body work 20 hours per week, while taking 12&#13;
~ts per semester and for this reason classes 8:re held&#13;
om 8 a.m. until 10 p.m. to provide as fleXIble an&#13;
~~ic program as possible to meet the dem~ds of the ~ student. It was also mentioned that the average&#13;
e of a Parkside student is 22.&#13;
11-Later, Tom Rosandich Athletic Director, told the&#13;
~ts that Parkside "is in a situation where the fan&#13;
lack 't know where teams are playing," referring to the&#13;
~ ti permanent athletic facilities on _campus. He&#13;
i'o ed ~e unique nature of the clut:H&gt;nen~. ~ports&#13;
~m directed at student participation in activi~es vs.&#13;
i-- nt competition on a varsity level. He srud the&#13;
C&gt;gram is "a model innovation" and predicted 0ther&#13;
~ Would develop their programs along the same&#13;
The meeting then turned to the Committee Report on&#13;
the Budget which resulted in the group being informed&#13;
th t the findings have not yet been completed. Regent&#13;
w:UCer stressed that the public ought to be kept aware of&#13;
whatever happens to the budget as it happens rather than&#13;
waiting until all the information has been analyzed and&#13;
finalized d' · bid&#13;
The Regents also voted down the ta ison cam~ .&#13;
for co-ed housing; allocated $90,000 for the ~brary&#13;
Leaming Center; and approved a mea ure allowuig . the&#13;
developers of off-campus housing to connect mto&#13;
Parkside's sewer system.&#13;
a:&#13;
Ill&#13;
C)&#13;
oc&#13;
0&#13;
m&#13;
.J&#13;
.J&#13;
Ill&#13;
oc&#13;
oc&#13;
&lt;&#13;
0&#13;
'lbe Rege ts meetm&#13;
Rae.&#13;
Ron 'illiams li2&#13;
Lyn \an Eimerens1&#13;
For treasurer, Larry T&#13;
activ " t and the husband&#13;
wa beaten com;nci 1 b&#13;
The unofficial resul&#13;
Jean Koehl r&#13;
Sutton Kinter&#13;
In th at-1&#13;
DeanLoum&#13;
340 VO&#13;
Gamer. In electi&#13;
Dean Loom&#13;
Tom Gar r&#13;
John GoWr n&#13;
Ken Antaramian&#13;
Walter Br ch&#13;
Jeanette Dremel&#13;
Walter lbricht&#13;
Ken Ko ol&#13;
~r e Fl tch r&#13;
01 . o&#13;
ark Timpany&#13;
Rae.&#13;
141&#13;
117&#13;
74&#13;
44&#13;
82&#13;
l&#13;
(Coo&#13;
e Ta ftll Hall f') la l Frid.a ••&#13;
p&#13;
m&#13;
4i&#13;
231&#13;
l&#13;
210&#13;
2(f/ &#13;
Pa.eZ i\Jll'lII'. l\lql&#13;
Volunteers Needed for Headstart&#13;
_Temple Baptist Church, 4715&#13;
5200 Avenue (2 classes)&#13;
Classes are from 9 a.m. until 1&#13;
pm., Monday through Friday.&#13;
There is a teacher and a&#13;
teacher-aide working with 20&#13;
four-year olds in each classroom.&#13;
Extra hands are needed to help at&#13;
most times. Those volunteering&#13;
should like cluldren and be able&#13;
to accept guidance from the&#13;
teacher.&#13;
Anyone interested in giving&#13;
some time and loving attention to&#13;
children please call 658-2371,&#13;
extension 77, and leave your&#13;
name and phone number.&#13;
Someone will contact you to give&#13;
you more information.&#13;
The Kenosha Head Start&#13;
Session&#13;
Offers&#13;
Summer&#13;
About 2,000 students are expe&#13;
ted to register for the 1971&#13;
summer session at the University&#13;
or Wisconsin·Parkside, according&#13;
to John Va laske. Director or&#13;
Summer Session and Extended&#13;
Day Programs. Enrollment last&#13;
. ummer was 1,789&#13;
Detailed umetables ror the&#13;
eight-week summer session&#13;
beginning June 28 now are&#13;
available from Valaske"s office&#13;
and at the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
campuses&#13;
The timetable lists 109 separate&#13;
courses In 'n different academic&#13;
and prctes ronal Cields including&#13;
18 courses which have not&#13;
previously been orrered during&#13;
ummer session.&#13;
The new summer courses are&#13;
Introduction to Accounting,&#13;
Personnel Management, Employe&#13;
Evaluation, Introduction to&#13;
Biochemistry, Mass Media in&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
New&#13;
American Society, Introduction&#13;
to Earth SCience, Government&#13;
and Business, Advanced&#13;
Calculus, Analytical Techniques&#13;
in Music, Contemporary Issues in&#13;
Public School Music Education,&#13;
Philosophy or Religion,&#13;
Psychology or Personality,&#13;
Seminar in Motivation, Introduction&#13;
to Social Theory,&#13;
Cervantes and Latin American&#13;
Perspectives.&#13;
Valaske pointed out that a&#13;
number of introductory courses&#13;
are being offered this summer to&#13;
accommodate students who have&#13;
just completed their high school&#13;
. work and wish to get a head start&#13;
on college.&#13;
A number of upper division&#13;
courses also will be offered to&#13;
meet the needs both of continuing&#13;
Parkside students and students&#13;
home for the summer from other&#13;
institutions, Valaske added.&#13;
"We will have a slightly different&#13;
mix of day and evening&#13;
courses this summer," Valaske&#13;
said, "to allow flexibility for&#13;
students combining employment&#13;
and study."&#13;
Valaske said the deferred&#13;
program is in need of volunteerS&#13;
to work with children 10 the&#13;
classrooms. Head Start is a&#13;
federally runded program Ior&#13;
children of families of low Income&#13;
(specificattons determined by&#13;
guidelines set up by the government).&#13;
We have centers at:&#13;
Beth Hillel Temple, 6050 8th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Immanuel Methodist Church,&#13;
5410 Sheridan Road&#13;
St. Mark School, .1J17 14th&#13;
Avenue (2 classes)&#13;
St. Matthew Guild Hall, 5900 7th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Courses&#13;
credit program for high school&#13;
juniors begun several years ago&#13;
also will be continued. Under the&#13;
plan, students completing their&#13;
junior year in high school In the&#13;
upper 50 per cent of their class&#13;
may enroll for summer work on&#13;
the recommendation or their high&#13;
school counselor with college&#13;
credits earned held in "escrow"&#13;
until completion of high school&#13;
work.&#13;
Courses will be offered on all&#13;
three Parkside campuses, with&#13;
registration June 22 through 25 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
Summer session fees are&#13;
scaled to the number or credits&#13;
taken and are uniform at all touryear&#13;
UW campuses. Fees for&#13;
state residents are $37.50 (or one&#13;
credit, $55.50 for two credits,&#13;
$73.50 for three credits, $91.50 for&#13;
four credits, $109.50 (or five&#13;
credits, $127.50 (or six to nine&#13;
credits and $181.50 (or len or&#13;
more credits.&#13;
For non residents,&#13;
corresponding fees are $91.50,&#13;
$163.50, $235.50, $307.50, $379.50,&#13;
$451.50 and $667.50.&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE, , ,&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
'student and will talk your language, both in&#13;
·equlpment purchases, records and money,&#13;
SONY- Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J,B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntables&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Soutneastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
WednesdaY, April 21&#13;
Ecology Lecture .&#13;
Michael Cafferty, acting&#13;
assistant secertary of the t,J.S.&#13;
Department of Transpo:tatlOll&#13;
,&#13;
will talk on ''TransportatlOn and&#13;
the Environment" at 7:~O p.m.&#13;
in Room 103, GreenqUlst Hall&#13;
under sponsorship of Umverslty&#13;
Extension. (free)&#13;
University League&#13;
University League will m~et&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in the Ra,lOe&#13;
Campus Badger Room where&#13;
Eugene GasiorkiewlcZ, assocIa~e&#13;
professor of life science, Will&#13;
speak on "A Fight for Space&#13;
-Daisies vs. Grasses at the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie."&#13;
Tbursday, Apnl'U&#13;
Lecture-Recital&#13;
Tenor Eugene Conley will&#13;
present a lecture-recital from&#13;
12:30 to 2 p.rn. in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall. (free)&#13;
Architecture-Art Lecture&#13;
The noted architect, Victor&#13;
Christ-Janer, holder of&#13;
numerous awards and prizes for&#13;
architecture, will lecture on&#13;
"Architecture as Art" at 8 p.m.&#13;
in Room 103 Greenquist Hall&#13;
under sponsorship of the&#13;
Le c t u re and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee. (free)&#13;
Friday, April 23&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Feature film "True Grit" will&#13;
be shown at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Activities Building. (adrn. 75&#13;
cents)&#13;
Saturday, April 24&#13;
Alumni Founder's Day&#13;
The UW Alumni Association&#13;
of Kenosha will hold a&#13;
Cheerleading&#13;
Tryouts&#13;
There will be cheerleading and&#13;
Rangerette tryouts coming up&#13;
this spring. All interested girls&#13;
are encouraged to come to the&#13;
practices or contact Mrs.&#13;
Patricia Mattek if interested and&#13;
can't come.&#13;
Practices will be held at&#13;
Kenosha and Racine, with the&#13;
final tryout to be held in the&#13;
Badger Room-Racine Campus .&#13;
Tuesday, May 18, from 3:30 to&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
In four Sizes 9" - ·12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RI8S • SPAGHnTI • CHiCKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI. LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD. SANDWICHES&#13;
CARlY -OUTS • DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU IUNC ... WE alUNC"&#13;
Founder's Day dinner dance at&#13;
6:30 p.m. at Bristol Oaks&#13;
Country -Club. Speaker will be&#13;
UW President John Weaver&#13;
Tickets at $6.50 per person ar~&#13;
available on campus frorn&#13;
Charles Kugel (Ext. 391) Or&#13;
Coach Stephens (Ext. 245).&#13;
Dance&#13;
T he Booster ClUb&#13;
(Cheerleaders and Rangerettes)&#13;
'will sponsor a dance at8 p.rn, in&#13;
the Activities Building. (adm&#13;
charge) .&#13;
Sunday, April 2S&#13;
University Artists Series Concert&#13;
The David Baker Jazz&#13;
Ensemble will present a&#13;
University A!ltsts Series concert&#13;
at 4 p.m. In Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse. (Gen. adm. $1&#13;
student adm. 50 cents, childre~&#13;
12 and under free)&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum will&#13;
feature Carl Lindner. assistant&#13;
professor of' English, speaking&#13;
on "concrete poetry" at 2 p.m,&#13;
at the Kenosha Public Museum&#13;
Rally Race .&#13;
Zeta Beta Tau will sponsor a&#13;
road rally wi th registration at&#13;
12:30 p.m. in the Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot and the first car&#13;
scheduled to leave at I p.m&#13;
Cost of $5 per car (two per';'';&#13;
per car) includes free beer, food&#13;
and a party at the end of the&#13;
race. A traveling team trophy&#13;
will be introduced for&#13;
organizations wishing to sponsor&#13;
two or more cars as a team.&#13;
Teams also are eligible for&#13;
regular place trophies (six&#13;
trophies for the first three&#13;
places).&#13;
PRACTICE SCHEDULE&#13;
Athletic Room-Kenosha&#13;
Tuesday, May 4,3:30-5:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Racine Campus&#13;
Tuesday, May 4, 3:30-5:3Op.m.,&#13;
Room 201&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.m., Badger Room&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.rn., ..Badger Room&#13;
_Final Tryouts&#13;
May 18, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Badger&#13;
Room- Racine.&#13;
For further information CODtact:&#13;
Mrs. Patricia Mattek, Advisor,&#13;
Extension 245.&#13;
Kathy Mauer, Captain of&#13;
Cheerleaders, Racine 633-1664,&#13;
Bev Noble, Captain or Pom·&#13;
Pom Girls, Kenosha 654-1OW. 'N"ij"wscope"&#13;
• Edit« Warren Nedry&#13;
Marc Eisen NewsEdit«&#13;
John Koloen Copy Eelt«&#13;
Jim Nolan Business Mallll'l&#13;
John Leighton Adv:':;:::&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF Bill&#13;
Jim KolDen, Bill Sorensen, BGb&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Mike&#13;
Mainland, Dean LoUIDOS,Keo&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchardt,&#13;
Konkol, Kevin McKay,J=&#13;
Casper, Paul LomartiJ'O,&#13;
Taffs.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF _&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjola,&#13;
Gray, Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES ESl--&#13;
658-1881&#13;
isw77&#13;
Newscope is an ~&#13;
sludent newspaper c~ .IY 01&#13;
students of The uruv .....bIiib"l&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks,de po ,,-&#13;
d&#13;
·ng va ....&#13;
weekly except un ined IOf&#13;
periods. Student oblJl lh&lt; .-&#13;
vertising runds are rOI tb'&#13;
source of revenue 6.&#13;
operation or NeWSCOPd·aod&#13;
copies are prln~~utl1I'&#13;
distributed throug. ..--&#13;
d Rac,ne&#13;
Kenosha an Unltll'&#13;
munities as well as lh&lt;av~&#13;
sity. Free COpies are&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Volunteers Needed for Headstart&#13;
program is in need of vol~teers&#13;
to work ..... ;th children m the&#13;
classrooms. Head Start is a&#13;
federally funded progr3:m for&#13;
children of families of low mcome&#13;
(specifications determined by&#13;
guidelines set up by the govern·&#13;
Temple Bapll ment). t Church, 4715&#13;
52nd Avenue (2 classe-)&#13;
Cla. · are from 9 a .m. until 1&#13;
p.m., 1onday throu h Frida} .&#13;
There i a teacher and a&#13;
t ch r-aide wor · ing with 20&#13;
four-year olds in each classroom.&#13;
E. tra hands are needed to help at&#13;
most tim . Th volunteermg&#13;
hould like childr n and be able&#13;
to accept guidance from the&#13;
teacher.&#13;
Anyone interested in gi\'ing&#13;
some time and lo\·ing attention to&#13;
children please call 658-2371 ,&#13;
extension n , and leave your&#13;
name and phone number.&#13;
Someone .,., ill contact you to give&#13;
you more information.&#13;
The Kenosha Head Start&#13;
We have centers at: Beth Hillel Temple, 6050 8th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Immanuel Methodist Church,&#13;
5410 Sheridan Road&#13;
St. lark School, 7117 14th&#13;
Avenue (2 classes)&#13;
St. Matthew Guild Hall, 5900 7th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Summer Session&#13;
Offers New Courses&#13;
for the&#13;
umrn r&#13;
American Society, Introduction&#13;
to Earth Science, Government&#13;
and Business, Advanced&#13;
Calculus, Analytical Techniques&#13;
in tusic, Contemporary Issues in&#13;
Public School tu ic Education,&#13;
Philosophy of Religion,&#13;
Psychology of Per onality,&#13;
eminar in totivation, In·&#13;
troduction to Social Theory,&#13;
Cervante; and Latin American&#13;
P r:;peclives.&#13;
Valaske pomted out that a&#13;
number of introductory courses&#13;
are being offered this summer to&#13;
accommodate students who have&#13;
ju t completed their high school&#13;
work and wish to get a head start&#13;
on college.&#13;
credit program for high school&#13;
juniors begun several years ago&#13;
also will be continued. Under the&#13;
plan, students completing their&#13;
junior year in high school in the&#13;
upper 50 per cent of their class&#13;
may enroll for summer work on&#13;
the recommendation of their high&#13;
school counselor with college&#13;
credits earned held in "escrow"&#13;
until completion of high school&#13;
work.&#13;
Courses will be offered on all&#13;
three Parkside campuses, with&#13;
registration June 22 through 25 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
Th n · ·ummer cour e are&#13;
Introduction to Accounting,&#13;
P r onn I 1anagement, Employ&#13;
Evaluation, Introduction to&#13;
B1och •mi try, la s Media in&#13;
A number of upper division&#13;
courses also will be offered to&#13;
meet the needs both of continuing&#13;
Parkside students and students&#13;
home for the summer from other&#13;
institutions, Valaske added.&#13;
Summer session fees are&#13;
scaled to the number of credits&#13;
taken and are uniform at all fouryear&#13;
UW campuses. Fees for&#13;
state residents are $37.50 for one&#13;
credit, $55.50 for two credits,&#13;
$73.50 for three credits, $91.50 for&#13;
four credits, $109.50 for five&#13;
credits, $127.50 for six to nine&#13;
credits and $181.50 for ten or&#13;
more credits. it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
"We will have a slightly different&#13;
mix of day and evening&#13;
courses this summer," Valaske&#13;
said, "to allow flexibility for&#13;
students combining employment&#13;
and study."&#13;
Valaske said the deferred&#13;
For non residents,&#13;
corresponding fees are $91.50,&#13;
$163.50, $235.50, $307.50, $379.50,&#13;
$451.50 and $667.50.&#13;
NATIONAL BANK or KENOSHA&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE ...&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both in&#13;
·equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY - Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntable!&gt;&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Sout,,eastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
Wednesday, April 21&#13;
Ecology Lecture .&#13;
Michael Cafferty, acting&#13;
assistant secertary of the ~.J.S.&#13;
Department of Transpo~tat10n ,&#13;
will talk on "Transportation and&#13;
the Environment" at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in Room 103, Greenqui_st H_all&#13;
under sponsorship of Umvers1ty&#13;
Extension. (free) University League&#13;
University League will m~et&#13;
at ? :30 p.m. in the Racine&#13;
Campus Badge~ R.oom w~ere&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiew1cz, assoc1a~e&#13;
professor of life science, will&#13;
speak on "A Fight for Space - Daisies vs. Grasses at the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie."&#13;
Thurs&lt;iay, Aprtl U&#13;
Lecture-Recital&#13;
Tenor Eugene Conley will&#13;
present a lecture-recital from&#13;
12 :30 to 2 p.m. in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall. (free)&#13;
Architecture-Art Lecture&#13;
The noted architect, Victor&#13;
Christ-Janer, holder of&#13;
numerous awards and prizes for&#13;
architecture, will lecture on&#13;
"Architecture as Art" at 8 p.m.&#13;
in Room 103 Greenquist Hall&#13;
under sponsorship of the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee. (free)&#13;
Friday, April 23&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Feature film "True Grit" will&#13;
be shown at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Activities Building. (adm. 75&#13;
cents)&#13;
Saturday, April 24&#13;
Alumni Founder's Day&#13;
The UW Alumni Association&#13;
of Kenosha will hold a&#13;
Cheer leading&#13;
Tryouts&#13;
There will be cheerleading and&#13;
Rangerette tryouts coming up&#13;
this spring. All interested girls&#13;
are encouraged to come to the&#13;
practices or contact Mrs.&#13;
Patricia Mattek if interested and&#13;
can't come.&#13;
Practices will be held at&#13;
Kenosha and Racine, with the&#13;
final tryout to be held in the&#13;
Badger Room-Racine Cam1;ms&#13;
Tuesday, May 18, from 3: 30 to&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" . 12" ~ 14" . 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHOTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • U SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARII.Y-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU II/HG •. . WE BIIIHG"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Founder's Day dinner dance at&#13;
6:30 p.m. at Bristol Oaks&#13;
Country Club. Speaker will be&#13;
UW President John Weaver&#13;
Tickets at $6.50 per person ar~&#13;
available on campus from&#13;
Charles Kugel (Ext. 391) or&#13;
Coach Stephens (Ext. 245).&#13;
Dance&#13;
The Booster Club&#13;
(Cheerleaders and Rangerettes)&#13;
·will sponsor a dance at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Activities Building. (adm&#13;
charge) ·&#13;
Sunday, April 25&#13;
University Artists Series Concert&#13;
The David Baker Jazz&#13;
En_sem?le ~ill present a&#13;
University A~l!sts Series concert&#13;
at 4 p.m. m Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse. (Gen. adm. $1&#13;
student adm. 50 cents, childre~&#13;
12 and under free)&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum will&#13;
feature Carl Lindner, assistant&#13;
professor of English, speaking&#13;
on "concrete poetry" at 2 p.m.&#13;
at the Kenosha Public Museum&#13;
Rally Race ·&#13;
Zeta Beta Tau will sponsor a&#13;
road rally with registration at&#13;
12:30 p.m. in the Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot and the first car&#13;
scheduled to leave at I pm&#13;
Cost of $5 per car (two personi&#13;
per car) includes free beer, food&#13;
and a party at the end of the&#13;
race. A traveling team trophy&#13;
will be introduced for&#13;
organizations wishing to sponsor&#13;
two or more cars as a team.&#13;
Teams also are eligible for&#13;
regular place trophies (six&#13;
trophies for the first three&#13;
places).&#13;
PRACTICE SCHEDULE&#13;
Athletic Room-Kenosha&#13;
Tuesday, May 4, 3:30-5:30 p.m&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Racine Campus&#13;
Tuesday, May 4, 3:30-5:30p.m.,&#13;
Room 201&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.m., Badger Room&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.m., .,Badger Room&#13;
. Final Tryouts&#13;
May 18, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Badger&#13;
Room-Racine.&#13;
For further information con·&#13;
tact:&#13;
Mrs. Patricia Mattek, Advisor,&#13;
Extension 245.&#13;
Kathy Mauer, Captain of&#13;
Cheerleaders, Racine 633-1664&#13;
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Porn Girls, Kenosha 654-1020 . .............................. ,&#13;
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John Leighton Ad~~ger&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF ill&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, ~ Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Mtkt&#13;
Mainland, Dean 1,ownos, ell&#13;
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BUSINESS STAFF . Jolil&#13;
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BUSINES.S PHONES Ext&#13;
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Newscope is an ind~&#13;
student newspaper co_m~: ·&#13;
students of Th~ uruversJ?&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside pu cab · g va weekly except durm . ed ,d-&#13;
'od Student obtain pen s. the&#13;
vertising funds are for&#13;
source of revenue&#13;
operation . of Newsco~- a&#13;
copies are pnn~e ut t&#13;
distributed throug O co d Racine Kenosha an the un1\1!&#13;
munities as well as availablt&#13;
sity. Free copies are&#13;
upon request. &#13;
James Liddy : Magician and Satanist&#13;
by JIm Koloen of the Newsc&#13;
' ope Staff&#13;
Liddy, Irish poet, red haired, portly,&#13;
~ DYlan Thomas, read poems, lectured and&#13;
...-!~~parkside students during the week&#13;
~ WJ Easter vacation. Instr:uctors, taking no&#13;
~ fat chance that their students would&#13;
~ OIlwn to hear Mr, Liddy voluntarily, invited&#13;
~~ and lecture in their classes. Few students,&#13;
""~- (asked, knew quite what to say about this&#13;
~,.raanY&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
ID&#13;
o&#13;
lJ&#13;
"~&#13;
-'&#13;
-'&#13;
ID&#13;
During tha t night th .&#13;
would be taking Herbert" poet ~nformed us that he&#13;
reSIdence next year H ~UblY s place as artist-infrom&#13;
Denison Unive~ite ~~ 0bf: coming to US directly&#13;
San Francisco State ~l hio andbefore that from&#13;
ther, Mr. Liddy said he wege&#13;
., When interrogated Iurof&#13;
course he would be t as~.t sure exactly what type&#13;
traduced Lidd eac 109, Mr. KUbly, who 10-&#13;
discussing poeJy&#13;
~~th ~:n aUdle~ce. told of Liddy&#13;
bis room till fou . th Francisco State students in&#13;
r In e mormng&#13;
The next day Wednesd .&#13;
terviewed Mr Lidd i ay . t? be exact, I inconvivial&#13;
tankards Y&#13;
OfnA&#13;
the Activities Building over&#13;
be . rnencan ale Whe di d&#13;
co~~~eto write ~lry.? "I started' in 1~9. II ~:&#13;
ke t ond myself scribbling quite unconsciously and I&#13;
p. It ... after aU the whole secret to writin is to&#13;
perSIst, not to give up, As Iget older [ feel Ih g&#13;
~ent. bU~I get lazier. As I get older I believ::o~:~~&#13;
mortality and another life so Idon't th'nk I' .&#13;
to do a~ything this time around. __ and las fa~ a~m~&#13;
po~trYI'S concerned, Istill think Isuffer from be~&#13;
so , a most sentimental, and try to consciously keep&#13;
awa&#13;
b&#13;
Y&#13;
I&#13;
from that, especially when approaching the&#13;
pro em of love."&#13;
I tbiLi~dYon poetry, "Poetry is a part of one's destiny&#13;
n a lord of creation or some great power .&#13;
wherever the power comes from or wherever' th~&#13;
• source of energy is, is the same place where poems&#13;
come from ... messages are brought to US from&#13;
''In America one becomes a non-human being.&#13;
it seem$ you've given up the ideo of Community. "&#13;
nb poet after hearing him speak in their classes.&#13;
Sort&lt; 01 judgementaluncertainty: Few students had&#13;
!"Ift'seen a poet close up before and, hence the first&#13;
Uddy contactwas in some ways equivalent to shaking&#13;
!Id with one's first martian; second reason conC8'D5&#13;
poet Liddy's Satanic obsession (Satanic in a&#13;
;odital sense) which obsession Ishall keep vague as&#13;
PDftI to remain poets must live behind a veil.&#13;
Mr. Liddyheld a reading in the Activities Building&#13;
11 Tuesday in which perhaps four score sat in at1IIIdance,&#13;
Helookedvery much like Dylan Thomas, his&#13;
_ the wavein his hair, the protruding stomach, and&#13;
Iipoeticreodering, interrupted by explanations and&#13;
-.Jtalk,provedthe night to be worthwbile. Except&#13;
louloudchOl1lS of beligerent drunks near the har, the&#13;
NICiDg was good, and though no one in the audience&#13;
." any questionsto ask the poet, he wasn't able to&#13;
lint the building for more than an hour after he&#13;
*liIIed down from the podium as be found bimself&#13;
.arded bystudents and curious onlookers. So this is&#13;
alrilb poet. Yup. •&#13;
faraway places, a spiritual world. The poems we \\-TIte&#13;
have, Ithink, little to do with ourselves except that we&#13;
mus~ receive them and acknowledge them and try to&#13;
public them out and cast them into the language we&#13;
have. The poet is the vehicle, the poem is the property&#13;
of the world."&#13;
During the reading yesterday, you spoke of evil&#13;
and Satanic qualities in Baudelaire and yourself Could&#13;
you expand on this: "I believe in evil as a sort of&#13;
necessary part of the world, evil as experienced in Its&#13;
duration. America has lost out because it never really&#13;
believed in evil, because it is facile and shallow in the&#13;
sense that it's an overoptimistic society_ I think it&#13;
needs a kind of a love of Baudelaire, of that coo) French&#13;
decadence. As for Satan, 1 think an ultimate reconciliation&#13;
between good and evil is theoreticall)&#13;
possible. You must realize that Satan is not totally evil.&#13;
he has sufficient evil in him to make him a wonderful&#13;
figure. "&#13;
How do you view the poet? "The poet is a magician&#13;
and a satanist. He can put a spell on us, and we can&#13;
either reject the spell or accept it. It should be&#13;
dangerous to meet poets, mothers should tell their kids&#13;
when young that one should read poets but not meet&#13;
them."&#13;
ApriI't.'tll PE&#13;
You were advertLsed as an 1nsh poe "'''hat 15 an&#13;
Irish poet' "An extIe E&gt;a.le has atways the g~'&#13;
lAlrment01tbe Imh 11'. our desuny to a"ay from&#13;
home, to be outsl&lt;le at"a) s: did you know there are&#13;
more IrtShmen In England than In Ireland' Another&#13;
thlllg is thai " .. underslal'd death. are b 1&#13;
11'. partly a cultural Ieelmg that th world not the&#13;
only ""orld That's wh e aren't too ve We&#13;
give death Its proper recogntuon In .. and In&#13;
funerals. in Ireland death IS an important al&#13;
event"&#13;
What are scrne 01 )"OUr obsen:allons on Amenca"&#13;
"In America one becomes a non-human bet OU'rf'&#13;
conUnually being Ioid to "ash a"a) our bod al'd&#13;
deodorize it. me loses ones pit) lcohl)' In Amenco&#13;
you all slay homeal 01 ht in froot 01the box, Illlrelal'd&#13;
~.eleavehome ""egolOlhepubs tt~l.hat)ou·&#13;
ll1"enup the Idea 01communI ' Hope for Amena I&#13;
10 tIus present generation. th IS tbe first Cl\lhud&#13;
generation that Amenca has t produced 1be au&#13;
are tT)i.ng to re..define It In human terms ..&#13;
On the poet and drugs "I I people" ho dn&#13;
.....Tite better than people vtho smoke ((lope. For .n·&#13;
stance. Colendge beeame addIcted 10 laudanum 'a&#13;
mixlure 0180 per cent ak&lt;Jboland 20 per cellt Opium&#13;
and wasn'l able to "nle an 'thlll&amp; for the \asl thlrt)&#13;
~eon oItus life Baudela1re expenmenled siroogl)&#13;
with opium and hashish, be " .. n "TOle a boolo. a , It&#13;
called the "Arbflcial Paradlse'·, and then me&#13;
slrUtgly anU~g Personall)', I don't like the ITIP&#13;
poem, At San FranCISCOI banned SO' ral ",-ords OM&#13;
was krishna, another ""as O. t 'T'be) came up lOG&#13;
(requently. I don'. mind so much If peopI &lt;:orne to&#13;
class sloned. there'. nothlll&amp;Ican do abou' tha bu'&#13;
Please doo't V.Tlle poems hen )o'OU're tcmtd.."&#13;
What ",auld ~ou .. ~ are major lbem n&#13;
poetry~ "Death al'd sex I ha,'e a profound de Ih&#13;
croosed '" Ith a burnl oullo,'e, burnt oul heart '&#13;
What do )' ou lhtnk of ,.,Ien h a Bob&#13;
D)"lan, Tim Buckley "It's al".} a question of&#13;
.....hether theyv.T1te poetry Of' nol I thl 0)Ian tumst'U&#13;
says someplace that }us 'IAOor&lt;bdon't tand alone.. HE."&#13;
an artist~ a complete arUSt. soph ucated. exc1 u·&#13;
roolless. be changes hi sl)'le. he dO\'eIops for the e&#13;
or his art extraonlmaril) ~erful, he tin back&#13;
belierinwords Iremember,lthmklt'lAOa earl,y D. Ian.&#13;
where he sur.g 01 the un IblIlt~ 01 Io-e beea&#13;
everythmg IS fadmg, nothmg g.. n to Iasl I It&#13;
James Taylor, 00'"&#13;
What poets Imp. ess you most and "hal quahll&#13;
make for a good poem' "Wben I gl'! a of&#13;
astonishment, .....hen I'm a tonlshed afttl" reach a&#13;
poem Poets hke Baudelaire and Pat" Ca\ ana&#13;
and lately Jack Spicer mix U1te1hg~ and ernot.iOn m&#13;
a way that forces the poem mlo my mind good&#13;
poems stay fore\'er m}our mind Hi II) the. tum&#13;
the reader 1010lbe poet •&#13;
For the students ",ho d,dn'l hO\ a chance to t I&#13;
with James Udd '. you'Uha\~)our cha~ nnt ar&#13;
He is quicl&lt; to laugh. kno led , al'd enJOY&#13;
tailing with .tudents In fac!. me or the problem I&#13;
encountered while mten'le"o'in him a • perpetual&#13;
circle of students cr"OVOdi~ me ou In hlm&#13;
quesllons like what makes a good poem&#13;
Senator Jeanl'! Dremel qu limed&#13;
"hat the encbn 01the lmJlO'llloo 01 the&#13;
llueu.Ky regIme ould mean&#13;
"'oodered 100If ,be Sena'e could act 00&#13;
on behalf of the studenl body. rallf)' lhe behalf 01the'luden' bod) In raur in lbe&#13;
Joint Trealy of Peace between tbe people treal)&#13;
of the United Stales, Soulh Vielnam and Pre, ,den TIm Eaker m ed to lab!&#13;
North Vietnam and urge other the mOlJon unlll the' nt t mnLJn 111&#13;
organizations and persons to supporl tbe ",as ,o,ed do....nU "'aller Breach, Cary&#13;
principles of the People's Peace Treaty" Adelson and Tom Carner' aled to la&#13;
The treaty says In part the U iL&#13;
agrees to immediate and total ¥lith· The \0 e on 1M rnouon i&#13;
drawal from Vielnam, al'd to end the £0&lt;..- jo'OIn~ the three ou no l\&#13;
imposition of the Tlueu-Ky regime in AnLaramian and Jeanette DrtmeJ abo&#13;
South Vietnam. The Vietnamese in tum sLained from \ 011 Tlmpan) Dtan&#13;
would enter into discussions concenung Loumos, Gary Da\ 1 ,Jean K r. John&#13;
the safety of withdrawing troops and CotLfredsen. 00\ Weber, Tom I r&#13;
release of military'r-!:pr;:l:so~ne;:;,:.rs::;,-:::: .. _~:,,:,_...;;Con=::u:n:,:u::;ed::..;:0::;n:.:p:.;:~e:,,:8,:,).....,&#13;
Student· Senate Ratifies Treafy by Marc Eisen&#13;
of lbe Newscope staff&#13;
1be Student Senate in its initial&#13;
~ tast Thursday ratilied "The&#13;
PtapIe's Peace Treaty", a joint peace&#13;
holy betweeolhe people of the United&#13;
.... , South Vietnam and North Viet-&#13;
.... by an 8-4 margin with two ab1IIIlboIl;,&#13;
Abo in the 3'h hour meeting the&#13;
Saat. appointed chairmen to the&#13;
~cornrnittees, passed a resolution&#13;
IIId Student Government does not&#13;
fltoBnize as legal any campus com- :llte that has heen functioning without&#13;
studentrepresentation intended for&#13;
taJnlDdpassed. a resolution concerning a&#13;
I'IS secw-Ity-studentmeeting set for&#13;
April 23,&#13;
Mark Tympany introduced the&#13;
resolution supporting the people'S Peace&#13;
Treaty, It read:&#13;
"Whereas we do not believe ourselves&#13;
10 be at war with the People of&#13;
Vietnam, and&#13;
"Whereas the lighting of an un·&#13;
declared war in Southeast Asia has inflicted&#13;
a great toll in human lives and has&#13;
been the cause of immeasurable suffering;&#13;
"We the elected student government&#13;
of the U~iversity of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
James Liddy : Magician and Satanist&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Liddy, Irish poet, red haired, portly,&#13;
es Dylan Thomas, read poems, lectured and&#13;
like~ Parkside students during the week&#13;
111 Easter vacation. Instructors, taking no&#13;
fat chance that their students would&#13;
:wn to hear Mr. Liddy voluntarily, invited&#13;
d and lecture in their classes. Few students&#13;
::,~y I asked, knew quite what to say about thi~&#13;
During that night th . would be taking Herbe te poet informed u that he&#13;
residence next year. H/ w~u~:ts P!ace as ar~ t-infrom&#13;
Denison University i Oh coming to us direcUy&#13;
San Francisco State Coll n io and _before that from&#13;
ther, Mr. Liddy said hew ege., When interrogated furof&#13;
course he would be t as~.t sure exactly what type&#13;
troduced Liddy t th eac t~g, Mr. Kubly, who indiscussin&#13;
~ e audience. told of Lidd,&#13;
hi g pootry with San Francisco State stud ts .- s room till four in the mornin n m&#13;
The next day Wednesda g.&#13;
terviewed Mr Lidd . Y . t?. be exact, I inconvivial&#13;
tankards ~ft~ the _Act1V1tie Building over&#13;
begin t ·t mencan ale. When did you&#13;
coveredo mwrt e ~try_? "I ~tar~ed in 1959. I d1 • ke t . yself scribbling qu1te unconsciously and 1&#13;
p _on it ... after all the whole secret to \\Titin i t&#13;
ki:~:\~~\ t;ef~e ~p. As I get older I feel I havegmor:&#13;
im ' . azier. As I get older I believe more in&#13;
mortaht~ and ~nother life so I don't think I'm oi&#13;
to do a~ything this time around . . . and as far ag ~ :~try1&#13;
is concer~ed, I still think I suffer from be~&#13;
' a most sentimental, and try to consciously keep&#13;
~;o~ezo~ lthat:, especially when approaching the&#13;
ove.&#13;
1 ~iddy on poetry. "Poetry is a part of one's destiny&#13;
think a lord of creation or some great power ·&#13;
wherever the power comes from or wherever · th; • source of energy is, is the same place where poems&#13;
come from . . . messages are brought to us from&#13;
"In America one becomes a non-human being .&#13;
poet after hearing him speak in their classes.&#13;
e o! judgemental uncertainty: Few students had&#13;
seen a poet close up before and, hence the first&#13;
Ld!)' contact was in some ways equivalent to shaking&#13;
with one's first martian; second reason conpoet&#13;
Llddy's Satanic obsession (Satanic in a&#13;
'cal sense) which obsession I shall keep vague as&#13;
to remain poets must live behind a veil.&#13;
Ir. Liddy held a reading in the Activities Building&#13;
Tuesday in which perhaps four score sat in atHe&#13;
looked very much like Dylan Thomas, his&#13;
the wave in his hair, the protruding stomach, and&#13;
poetic rendering, interrupted by explanations and&#13;
I talk, proved the night to be worthwhile. Except&#13;
aloud chorus of beligerent drunks near the bar, the&#13;
mng was good, and though no one in the audience&#13;
any questions to ask the poet, he wasn't able to&#13;
the building for more than an hour after he&#13;
down from the podium as he found himself&#13;
led by students and curious onlookers. So this is&#13;
Irish poet. Yup.&#13;
it seems you've given up the idea of Commun ity."&#13;
faraway places, a spiritual world. The poem we \\Tile&#13;
have, I think, little to do with ourselves except that e&#13;
mus~ receive them and acknowledge them and try to&#13;
pubhc them out and cast them into the language we&#13;
have. The poet is the vehicle, the poem is the property&#13;
of the world."&#13;
During the reading yesterday. you spoke of evil&#13;
and Satanic qualities in Baudelaire and yourseli. Could&#13;
you expand on this'? "I believe in evil a a ort or&#13;
necessary part or the world, evil as experienced m its&#13;
duration. America has lost out because it ne\'er really&#13;
believed in evil, because it i facile and hallo\\ an th&#13;
sense that it's an overoptimistic ociety. I think it&#13;
needs a kind of a love of Baudelaire. of that cool French&#13;
decadence. As for Satan, I think an ultimate reconciliation&#13;
between good and e ii is theoretically&#13;
possible. You must realize that Satan is not totally e\·il,&#13;
he has sufficient evil in him to make him a \\ onderful&#13;
figure.''&#13;
How do you \'iew the poet'? "The poet i a magician&#13;
and a satanist. He can put a spell on us, and we can&#13;
either reject the spell or accept it. It hould be&#13;
dangerous to meet poets, mothers should tell their kid&#13;
when young that one should read poets but not meet&#13;
them."&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
or the Newscope Staff&#13;
Tb Student Senate in its initial&#13;
~ last Thursday ratified "The&#13;
· ' Peace Treaty", a joint peace&#13;
ty b tween the people of the United&#13;
Student-Senate Ratifies Treaty&#13;
South Vietnam and North Vietby&#13;
an 8-4 margin with two ablio&#13;
.&#13;
Also in the 31&#13;
1:! hour meeting the&#13;
te appointed chairmen to the&#13;
lliing committees, passed a resolution&#13;
laid Student Government does not&#13;
·ze as legal any campus comthat&#13;
has been functioning without&#13;
dent representation intended for&#13;
d pa sed a resolution concerning a&#13;
P-IS security-student meeting set for&#13;
April 23.&#13;
Mark Tympany introduced the&#13;
resolution supporting the People's Peace&#13;
Treaty. It read:&#13;
"Whereas we do not believe ourselves&#13;
to be at war with the People or&#13;
Vietnam, and&#13;
"Whereas the fighting or an undeclared&#13;
war in Southeast Asia has inflicted&#13;
a great toll in human lives and has&#13;
been the cause of immeasurable suffering&#13;
;&#13;
"We the elected student government&#13;
of the U~iversity of Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
. April I'. 1'71&#13;
Anyone who has been exposed to the television&#13;
medium, knows that the Pondorosa is's giant&#13;
.pread in Nevada inhabited by the Cartwrights.&#13;
They work hard. play hard. and devour the lood&#13;
prepared by Hop Sing, their hired cook.&#13;
Well Pardner, Kenosha has a Ponderosa, but it&#13;
is a steak house and not a ranch. The only steer or&#13;
head of calUe you may run into is on a plate. The&#13;
hired help aren't quite as tan or strong as the ranch&#13;
hands on the television Pondorosa, but they are&#13;
more efficient.&#13;
Pondorosa Steak House enjoys a very good&#13;
business on Tuesday nights. people seem to come&#13;
out 01 the woodwork in Kenosha, just to eat a Ribeye&#13;
stead dinner for ninty-nine cents. Tuesday is the&#13;
only mght that is termed "Family Night", and this&#13;
is when 1 went to the steak house to eat.&#13;
I was very surprised to see all the cars in the&#13;
parking lot when I first arrived. Ithought maybe&#13;
one of the Carlwrights was making a personal&#13;
appearance or something. The first thing Idid see&#13;
when Iwalked in was 8 line. I'm not used to standing&#13;
in line at a restaurant.&#13;
The Pondorosa is a cafeteria type restaurant.&#13;
The building is one large room full of picnic tables.&#13;
There are pictures of cowboys and Indians around&#13;
on the walls. and holsters and guns. The people&#13;
working here all wear black cowboy hats, black&#13;
sklfts or pants and red checkered shirts. The atmo&gt;phere&#13;
is all here, and I noticed it delighted&#13;
children&#13;
Their menu consists of steaks and hamburgers .&#13;
by Paul Lomartire 01 the Newscope stal!&#13;
You can get any number 01 steaks. but on TueSday&#13;
night the Ribeye dinner is the mover. I went along&#13;
with the crowd and the weekly sale and ordered a&#13;
rare steak asked for blu cheese dressing on my&#13;
salad, baked potato and a roll and collee. Itall adds&#13;
up to a little over a dollar as the drink is not mcluded&#13;
in the ninty-nine cents. .&#13;
Noone was more surprised than Ito reahze that&#13;
my steak was indeed rare, and very good. I got&#13;
more blu cheese dressing than other places usually&#13;
eke out to you, and the coffee is very good. The&#13;
reason 1 would return to the Ponderosa is the fact&#13;
that there are coffee pots out (or the customers to&#13;
help themselves.&#13;
The meal I had was good enough to make me&#13;
return. So, Idid eat there again, but not on Tuesday&#13;
night. Maggie and Ireturned on a regular night and&#13;
paid the usual dollar seventy-nine (or the Ribeye&#13;
dinner. After eating here on a regular night, 1&#13;
realized that Tuesday evening is the best time to&#13;
frequent this place. The meal is well worth a little&#13;
..~~~~o&amp;=.:':-:'~~:::':*:::::::::::::::::::::$:::::==::~8~8;:§'~~:&gt;-::~X::::::&gt;~~"m:::;:.~:::::.,,:~::~-:::;::~;s.m?.~:~~&#13;
; ".: III Could Only Remember My !~::j1&#13;
Name - David Crosby - with&#13;
Grace Slick, Jane Mitchell. Jack&#13;
Casady, Jorma Kaukonen,&#13;
Graham Nash, Neil Young. Paul&#13;
Kantner, Jerry Garcia and&#13;
anybody else Atlantic could&#13;
round up. Atlantic Records&#13;
S07203.&#13;
I suppose that alter the solo&#13;
albums by McCartny. Harrison&#13;
and Lennon, Ibegan to expect too&#13;
much of recordings released&#13;
under one name. To me, the&#13;
purpose 01 doing a solo album is&#13;
lo reveal yourself as an individual&#13;
artist, away from the&#13;
influence of any group that you&#13;
had been with. Except for&#13;
Ringo's album that was precisely&#13;
what the Beatles had done. This&#13;
album as a definite contrast.&#13;
Dave Crosby was probably the&#13;
one most responsible for the&#13;
overall sound 01 Crosby Stills&#13;
Nash and YQUng; the close.&#13;
defined Inur-part harmony over&#13;
the subdued lolk guitar, much the&#13;
same as Lennon and McCartny,&#13;
were mostly responsible for the&#13;
particular style 01 the Beatles.&#13;
The difference is that when you&#13;
listen to Lennon's or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very definitely&#13;
listening to Lennon or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very&#13;
definitely listening to Lennon or&#13;
McCartny singularly, in-.&#13;
dependent 01 eaclr other. the&#13;
group, and anyone else they've&#13;
been connected with - at least as&#13;
much as that is humanly&#13;
possible. But Crosby. whether&#13;
intentionally or not, never left his&#13;
group sound. This album is obviously&#13;
one-hall CSN&amp;Y and onehall&#13;
Jeflerson Airplane, the latter&#13;
hall due to the fact that the whole&#13;
band is on the album.&#13;
So. taking the album lor what it&#13;
is, I'd rate it as slightly above&#13;
average, for the simple reason&#13;
that I enjoy the Airplane and&#13;
CSN&amp;Y. Unfortunately, with&#13;
Dave Crosby trying to come up&#13;
with a more or less original&#13;
sound, he succeeded in doing&#13;
nothing more than watering down&#13;
the style 01 the two groups.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
"III Could Only Remember My&#13;
Name" courtesy of Bidinger'S&#13;
Record Shop.&#13;
(Audio Realm would like to&#13;
review records that are of particular&#13;
interest to you, the&#13;
reader. If you have any&#13;
suggestions, drop us a line and&#13;
we'll see what we can do.)&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
meet the Parkside Fuzz at&#13;
fREE BEER PARTY&#13;
April 23 from 10 p,m.-12 p.m.&#13;
after the movie&#13;
FEATURE FILII SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
--- JOHN WAYNE&#13;
GlEN CAMPBELL&#13;
KIM DARBY&#13;
Th• .rran .... trio&#13;
.ver to trod ..a kill....&#13;
rtTf'dJ/e--&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
HAlWAWS'&#13;
--&#13;
over a dollar, but il two people eat here on a regular&#13;
night. the prices add up (drinks. deserts, ete.) I&#13;
figured tha t an average couple would work their&#13;
way up toward live dollars il they had a good meal&#13;
equipped with a lew extras, like pie, jello, and&#13;
maybe seconds on a baked potato or something.&#13;
If this were the case, I would assume that&#13;
someone spending five dollars would not appreciate&#13;
mess hall type atmosphere. The confines of&#13;
conventional restaurant would be more a;&#13;
preciated, at least by me. .&#13;
But on Tuesday night you can't beat it. Eating&#13;
at the Pondorosa on this night is a good chance to&#13;
catch up on all the old friends that you thought lell&#13;
town, got married and moved. away, died, Or&#13;
blended into the woodwork. I noticed a lew people&#13;
who tried to crawl into the wood work when Isaw&#13;
them, as they were a couple 01 old lriends who OWed&#13;
me money. But all in all I can't say Iwould eat at&#13;
the Pondorosa on any night but Tuesday, because it&#13;
is a good deal. 'if money was of no consequence for&#13;
someone else, they might eat. here every night&#13;
appreciating the fast, e(flcl~nt service, the&#13;
cleanliness 01 the place, the quality and quantity 01&#13;
the lood and the dillerent atmosphere.&#13;
So Pardner, mosey on over to the Pondorosa&#13;
but ya don't have to go armed, ya won't get robbed&#13;
here. To me it is a big chuck wagon that doesn't&#13;
move, and I expect to meet Roy Rogers, Dale&#13;
Evans. Gene Autry, Hopalong and the Long Ranger&#13;
lor a good deal on a Tuesday night.&#13;
LITTLE BIG MAN&#13;
Jack Crabb Dustin Hollman&#13;
Old Lodge Skins&#13;
Chiel Dan George&#13;
Gen. George A. Custer&#13;
Richard Milligan&#13;
Mrs. Pendrake Faye Dunaway&#13;
Wild Bill Hickock Jell Corey&#13;
A. T. Merriweather&#13;
Martin Balsam&#13;
as the theme he relates hiI&#13;
existence with the Indians,&#13;
showing their natural love 01&#13;
Terra and of each other as a part&#13;
01 that matrix. Calling themselves&#13;
"Human Beings" they see&#13;
themselves as extensions of&#13;
nature rather than as tbe&#13;
whiteman's stolid spiritoal&#13;
"Image of God". In one sequerw:t&#13;
Jack Crabb's adopted Grandlather&#13;
says to the youngwarri"',&#13;
"There is an endless suWly01&#13;
whitemen, but there is only •&#13;
limited supply 01 H._ Beings." a statement that ..&#13;
perhaps, even more true todaY·&#13;
The film did an exceDen! job 01&#13;
relating the cruelty dealt lD !be&#13;
indians by what we sometilllt'&#13;
haphazardly call "heroes" 01 !be&#13;
old west. Raids upon the JndiaD&#13;
villages are quite believableaJ&gt;!&#13;
remove many histOrical&#13;
distortions.&#13;
A desirable experience t...&#13;
those who like bumor 01 a dil·&#13;
lerent kind than Howdy[JoOdY.&#13;
The film is accurate in ...&#13;
complishing its aims. See It&#13;
-BilI~&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657':5191&#13;
DUSTIN HOFFMAN has&#13;
certainly done it again with a&#13;
superb performance as Little Big&#13;
Man - a role that demanded that&#13;
he play everything from a boy in&#13;
puberty to a 121 year old man.&#13;
As an ancient narrator he&#13;
conducts an imagery lilled&#13;
odyssey into the world 01 the&#13;
Cheyenne "Human Beings"&#13;
telling his experiences as a&#13;
satireal character moving from&#13;
one historical western figure to&#13;
the next, inviting many of the&#13;
same impressions common to&#13;
films of this genre.&#13;
The century which separates&#13;
tOe topics discussed in productions&#13;
like Catch 22 and this lilm&#13;
S d b P . make true social commentary&#13;
ponsore y rotecnon &amp; Security second run to aesthetic inquiries&#13;
D&#13;
and make comedy possible&#13;
epartmcnt OL7·t1174 without disdain. The Ancient&#13;
i&#13;
t=:::::=:::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::~ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * graphically General Custer and describes his recalls his disgust 01&#13;
- -&#13;
_ .c~ _ attempt to destroy him at The _ O"~ LitlIe Big Horn. His descriptions&#13;
i'\ .. are clouded into a sometimes&#13;
: ,.j\e.,v - . comical and sometimes painlul&#13;
_ s:' : . dream 01 times gone by. With this&#13;
: ~~ e-&lt;':&gt;-&#13;
'::...'b-~ -&#13;
- &lt;".V: -&#13;
- &lt;~ if {j)'" -•&#13;
- rO~"O -&#13;
- V -&#13;
.- -&#13;
- -&#13;
-- ~&#13;
'" --&#13;
• _ V&#13;
- 0&lt;':&gt; -&#13;
-&#13;
_ • b,'b-.... - .'" -&#13;
- ~ ..&#13;
. - 1:11 ".M. : CJ'b-~ :&#13;
AOTIYITI .. IUILDI •• - ADM. 11, - -&#13;
~...c----.... ""'~............ _~. * * * * * -:* * * * **.-&#13;
by Bob Borchardt 01 the Newscope Stall&#13;
~ ...__( I&#13;
':---.1 .&#13;
PIZZA 'h?t:.&#13;
KITCHEN ---.'.~~_&#13;
ALSO ",~g."'~~&#13;
CHICKEN D1NNj:RS and -t~~&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Doys a Week From 4 p.m., posed MondaY'&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
Page EWSCOPE pril 19. 1971&#13;
by Paul Lomartire of the Newscope Staff&#13;
You can get any number of steaks, but on Tuesday&#13;
rught the Ribeye dinner is the mover. I went along&#13;
with the crowd and the weekly sale and ordered a&#13;
rare steak, asked for blu cheese dressing on my&#13;
salad, baked potato and a roll and coffee. It_ all adds&#13;
up to a little over a dollar as the drink is not mcluded&#13;
in the ninty-nine cents. . No one was more surprised than I to realize that&#13;
my steak was indeed rare, and very good. I got&#13;
more blu cheese dressing than other places usually&#13;
eke out to you, and the coffee is very good The&#13;
reason I would return to the Pondorosa is the fact&#13;
that there are coffee pots out for the customers to&#13;
help themselves.&#13;
The meal I had was good enough to make me&#13;
return. So, I did eat there again, but not on Tuesday&#13;
night. Maggie and I returned on a regular night and&#13;
paid the usual dollar seventy-nine for the Ribeye&#13;
dinner. After eating here on a regular night, I&#13;
realized that Tuesday evening is the best time to&#13;
frequent this place. The meal is well worth a little&#13;
If I Could Only Remember My&#13;
Name - David Crosby - with&#13;
Grace Slick, Jane Mitchell, Jack&#13;
Casady , Jorma Kaukonen, Graham Nash, Neil Young, Paul&#13;
Kantner, Jerry Garcia and&#13;
anybody else Atlantic could&#13;
round up. Atlantic Records&#13;
SIY7203.&#13;
over a dollar, but if two peopl~ eat here on a regular&#13;
night, the prices add up (drmks, deserts, etc.). 1&#13;
figured that an average couple would work their&#13;
way up toward five dollars if they had a good meal&#13;
equipped with a few extras, like pie, jello, and&#13;
maybe seconds on a baked potato or something.&#13;
If this were the case, I would assume that&#13;
someone spending five dollars would not ~ppreciate&#13;
mess h~ll type atmosphere. The confmes of a&#13;
conventional restaurant would be more appreciated,&#13;
at least by me.&#13;
But on Tuesday night you can't beat it. Eating&#13;
at the Pondorosa on this night is a good chance to&#13;
catch up on all ~e old friends that you thought left&#13;
town, got married and moved_ away, died, or&#13;
blended into the w~work. I noticed a few people&#13;
who tried to crawl mto the wood work when I saw&#13;
them as they were a couple of old friends who owe(!&#13;
me ~oney. But all in all I can't say I would eat at&#13;
the Pondorosa on any night but Tuesday, because it&#13;
is a good deal. 'If money was of no consequence for&#13;
someone else, they might ~t. here every night&#13;
appreciating the fast, efflc1~nt service, the&#13;
cleanliness of the place, the quality and quantity of&#13;
the food and the different atmosphere.&#13;
So Pardner, mosey on over to the Pondorosa&#13;
but ya don't have to go armed, ya won't get robbed&#13;
here. To me it is a big chuck wagon that doesn't&#13;
move, and I expect to meet Roy Rogers, Dale&#13;
Evans, Gene Autry, Hopalong and the Long Ranger&#13;
for a good deal on a Tuesday night.&#13;
by Bob Borchardt of the Newscope Staff&#13;
1 uppos that after the solo&#13;
!bums by McCartny, Harrison&#13;
nd Lennon, I began to exl)l!ct too&#13;
mu h of recordings released&#13;
und r one name. To me, the&#13;
purpos of doing a solo album is&#13;
to r v al yourself as an individual&#13;
artist, away from the&#13;
influence of any group that you&#13;
h d b n with. Except for&#13;
Hingo' album that was precisely&#13;
what th Beatles had done. This&#13;
album is a definite contrast.&#13;
Dave Crosby was probably the&#13;
one mo t responsible for the&#13;
overall ound of Crosby Stills&#13;
a h and Young, the close,&#13;
defined four-part harmony over&#13;
the ubdued folk guitar, much the&#13;
same a Lennon and McCartny,&#13;
were mostly responsible for the&#13;
particular style of the Beatles. The difference is that when you&#13;
listen to Lennon's or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very definitely&#13;
listening to Lennon or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very&#13;
definitely listening to Lennon or&#13;
McCartny singularly, independent&#13;
of each other, the&#13;
group, and anyone else they've&#13;
been connected with - at least as&#13;
much as that is humanly&#13;
possible. But Crosby, whether&#13;
intentionally or not, never left his&#13;
group sound. This album is obviously&#13;
one-half CSN&amp; Y and onehalf&#13;
Jefferson Airplane, the latter&#13;
half due to the fact that the whole&#13;
band is on the album.&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
meet the Parkside Fuzz at&#13;
FREE BEER PARTY&#13;
April 23 from 10 p.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
after the movie&#13;
pon orcd by Protection &amp; Security&#13;
Department&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
- JOHN WAYNE&#13;
GLEN CAMPBELL&#13;
KIM DARBY&#13;
The strongffl trio&#13;
ever to trock o killer.&#13;
HALWAWS' """'&lt;&gt;UCTlON&#13;
So, taking the album for what it&#13;
is, I'd rate it as slightly above&#13;
average, for the simple reason&#13;
that I enjoy the Airplane and&#13;
CSN&amp;Y. Unfortunately, with&#13;
Dave Crosby trying to come up&#13;
with a more or less original&#13;
sound, he succeeded in doing&#13;
nothing more than watering down&#13;
the style of the two groups.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
"If I Could Only Remember My&#13;
Name" courtesy of Bidinger's&#13;
Record Shop.&#13;
(Audio Realm would like to&#13;
review records that are of particular&#13;
interest to you, the&#13;
reader. If you have any&#13;
suggestions, drop us a line and&#13;
we'll s~ what we can do.)&#13;
rtrr~wJt/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
OL7-5l74&#13;
LITTLE BIG MAN&#13;
Jack Crabb Dustin Hoffman&#13;
Old Lodge Skins&#13;
Chief Dan George&#13;
G.en. George A. Custer&#13;
Richard Milligan&#13;
Mrs. Pendrake Faye Dunaway&#13;
Wild Bill Hickock Jeff Corey&#13;
A. T. Merriweather&#13;
DUSTIN HOFFMAN has&#13;
certainly done it again with a&#13;
superb performance as Little Big&#13;
Man - a role that demanded that&#13;
he play everything from a boy in&#13;
puberty to a 121 year old man.&#13;
As an ancient narrator he&#13;
conducts an imagery filled&#13;
odyssey into the world of the&#13;
Cheyenne "Human Beings"&#13;
telling his experiences as a&#13;
satireal character moving from&#13;
one historical western figure to&#13;
the next, inviting many of the&#13;
same impressions common to&#13;
films of this genre.&#13;
Martin Balsam&#13;
as the theme he relates his&#13;
existence with the Indians,&#13;
showing their natural love of&#13;
Terra and of each other as a part&#13;
of that matrix. Calling themselves&#13;
"Human Beings" they see&#13;
themselves as extensions of&#13;
nature rather than as the&#13;
whiteman's stolid spiritual&#13;
"Image of God". In one sequerx:e&#13;
Jack Crabb's adopted Grand·&#13;
father says to the young warrior,&#13;
"There is an endless supply of&#13;
whitemen, but there is only a&#13;
limited supply of Human&#13;
Beings," a statement that Ii.&#13;
perhaps, even more true t~Y· The century which separates&#13;
the topics discussed in productions&#13;
like Catch 22 and this film&#13;
make true social commentary&#13;
second run to aesthetic inquiries&#13;
and make comedy possible&#13;
without disdain. The Ancient&#13;
graphically recalls his disgust of&#13;
: * * * * * * * * * * * * * General Custer and describes his&#13;
41 -0 ~ : attempt to destroy him at The&#13;
The film did an excellen~ JOb of&#13;
relating the cruelty dealt ~ tht&#13;
Indians by what we sometimes&#13;
haphazardly call "heroes" of tbe&#13;
old west. Raids upon the Indian&#13;
villages are quite believable .84&#13;
r.emove many his tori ca&#13;
distortions.&#13;
A desirable experience f~&#13;
those who like hwnor of a different&#13;
kind than Howdy I)oO(ly.&#13;
The film is accurate in al'-&#13;
complishing its aims. See it.&#13;
• O'li.'-' Little Big Horn. His descriptions&#13;
41 C tr are clouded into a sometimes&#13;
• ....1\ c; tr comical and sometimes painful&#13;
tr ~ : . dream of times gone by. With this&#13;
: ~~ •&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
- Bill SorefJSt!II&#13;
II if&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
CHICKEN DINN~RS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th AV9•&#13;
KENOSH;A&#13;
657..:.5191&#13;
· - l:H P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING - ADM. 11•&#13;
tr .&#13;
tr •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
~~~ ................ ~··············&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P .M. TO 12:00 P .M.&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m., Closed Mondoy• &#13;
April g, 11'11 ,'EWSCOPE Pages&#13;
.-- -----Jazz ComesToParkside------- ....&#13;
ftQm the Uchey Foot Mose,&#13;
. ore West, Fillmore East&#13;
ru:n LoS Angeles' Shrine,&#13;
•~.• go - the popular&#13;
C llcmbia recording group not&#13;
ClJU t R . , city - comes 0 acme S&#13;
~seHighSchoolField House on&#13;
/dondaY May 10, under sponsorship'of&#13;
the University of&#13;
lI'isconsin.parkslde Student&#13;
ActivitiesOffice.&#13;
Theltehey Foot is the college&#13;
beeJ' bar in Los Angeles where&#13;
(bicago got its start after&#13;
movingto California from its&#13;
oamesake city.&#13;
(bicago has had much more&#13;
illustrious bookings since, but its&#13;
populartty with college&#13;
.audiences remains. Last year&#13;
the seven-piece group was th~&#13;
top album seller in college&#13;
campus and community record&#13;
stores as well as in jukeboxes&#13;
according to Billboard&#13;
magazine.&#13;
Robert Gold of the Los&#13;
Angeles Free Press calls&#13;
Chicago "the most inventive&#13;
hardest. blowing jazz-rock -or:&#13;
chestra I ever heard ... They&#13;
are excellent musicians in every&#13;
way."&#13;
A limited number of $4.50&#13;
tickets for their Racine apThe&#13;
award winning David Baker Jazz&#13;
Ensemble will present a University Artists&#13;
Series Concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday, April 25,&#13;
in the Greenquist Hall Concourse at the&#13;
Universityof Wisconsin-Parkside Wood Road&#13;
campus.&#13;
Baker is a widely-known artist, composer&#13;
and performer. He has been chairman of jazz&#13;
studies at the Indiana University School of&#13;
Musicsince 1966 and is associate director of&#13;
the IU Black Music Center.&#13;
His ensemble has appeared in concerts&#13;
from Athens to Bombay and is a two-time&#13;
winner of the Big Band Award at the Notre&#13;
Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival.&#13;
Baker's own awards and citations include&#13;
the Indiana Philharmonic Gold Award, the&#13;
DownbeatHall of Fame Scholarship Award,&#13;
theDownbeat New Star Award for Trombone&#13;
and the Outstanding Music Award of the&#13;
National Association of Black Musicians ..&#13;
Baker has played with such jazz greats as&#13;
stan Kenton, Maynard Ferguson, Lionel&#13;
Hampton, Slide Hampton, Buddy Jones and&#13;
Quincey Jones. He also has appeared as&#13;
soloist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra&#13;
writers in the band, has been&#13;
playing eight years .&#13;
Terry Kath (guitar-vocals)&#13;
has also been playing eight&#13;
years, and, although has had no&#13;
formal training, is one of the&#13;
prolific writers in Chicago.&#13;
Walt Perry (woodwinds)&#13;
earned a degree from DePaul In&#13;
orchestral clarinet. studied WIth&#13;
woodwind players in the&#13;
Chicago Symphony, has been&#13;
.playing 14 years.&#13;
Lee Loughnane (trumpetflugel&#13;
horn) studied at DePaul&#13;
two years, then at the Chicago&#13;
Conservatory College for two&#13;
years, played in several local&#13;
Chicago rock groups and big&#13;
bands.&#13;
Pete Cetera (bass-vocal)&#13;
began playing accordian at 12.&#13;
worked with several local&#13;
groups, the last for six years&#13;
with his city's top rock group.&#13;
Jim Pankow (trcmbone)&#13;
studied at DePaul and Quincy&#13;
College, played with the Bobby&#13;
Christian and Ted Weems orchestras,&#13;
Bill Russo's Clucago&#13;
Jazz Ensemble and his own Jazz&#13;
quintet, does much of Chicago's&#13;
composition and brass&#13;
arrangements.&#13;
pearance still are available at&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine and&#13;
Bidinger's House of Music in&#13;
Kenosha. The $5.50 seats have&#13;
been sold out for several weeks.&#13;
The seven members or&#13;
Chicago call themselves "a&#13;
creative community" and bring&#13;
a variety of musical&#13;
backgrounds to their unique&#13;
sound wluch incorporates jazz,&#13;
blues, rock and symphonies.&#13;
The inhabitants of the&#13;
"creative community":&#13;
. Dan Seraphine (drums)&#13;
studied percussion at DePaul&#13;
University, then with Chuck&#13;
Flores, ex-member of Maynard&#13;
Ferguson and Woody Herman&#13;
bands. Has been playing for 11&#13;
years.&#13;
Robert Lamm (organ-electric&#13;
piano-vocals) studied piano and&#13;
composition at Roosevelt&#13;
University, is one of the prolific&#13;
and has been guest conductor of the Indianapolis&#13;
Symphony and the Indianapolis&#13;
Civic Orchestra.&#13;
His credits also include some 15 reeordings,&#13;
scores of jazz compositions and four&#13;
books on jazz techniques.&#13;
A proponent of the tlurd stream in Jazz,&#13;
Baker believes experimentation i of some&#13;
consequence to the progression of jan. "With&#13;
improvisation being the motivation, the new&#13;
third stream in jazz is a marriage between&#13;
classical form, composition and pure Jan,"&#13;
he asserts.&#13;
His Jazz Ensemble presents both the&#13;
music 01 the contemporary jazz composer and&#13;
classic big band numbers.&#13;
Members of the ensemble are Paul&#13;
Demarinis, alto sax, Larry Wiseman,&#13;
trumpet, Don Pickett, piano, Mark Dr er,&#13;
bass, Emory Whipple, drums, and Baker on&#13;
trombone.&#13;
Concert tickets wiU be available at the&#13;
door. General admission is $1 and studenl&#13;
admission is SO cents (children 12 and under&#13;
admitted freel.&#13;
FLARES. BELLS. BODY SHIRTS&#13;
george A lester's&#13;
10% Discount with Georgeand Lester'sStudent ID.&#13;
[lj'amou6fin [lj'~&#13;
g'J~ w: 91aiian [lj'~&#13;
liquor Store&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. K~NOSHA 658·1131&#13;
-------------Jazz Comes To Parkside--------.&#13;
the Itchey Foot Mose,&#13;
from west Fillmore East&#13;
f1llm0&#13;
:s A~geles' Shrine,&#13;
an? 0 _ the popular&#13;
Ch1cat·a recording group not&#13;
Colun:1 1&#13;
comes to Racine's&#13;
the_ c~rgh School Field House on&#13;
case May 10, under spon-&#13;
:,toniay, of the University of&#13;
so~s 0&#13;
1&#13;
pnsin-Parkside Student w,sc . ctivities Office.&#13;
A The Itchey Foot is the college&#13;
bar in Los Angeles where&#13;
be:r go got its start after&#13;
onca . f ·t . g to califorma rom i s movm&#13;
namesake city.&#13;
Chicago has had 1!1uch mo_re&#13;
illustrious bookings smce, but its&#13;
popularity with college&#13;
audiences remains. Last year,&#13;
the seven-piece group was the&#13;
top album seller in college&#13;
campus and community record&#13;
stores as well as in jukeboxes&#13;
aceording to Billboard&#13;
magazine.&#13;
Robert Gold of the Los&#13;
Angeles Free Press calls&#13;
Chicago "the most inventive,&#13;
hardest . blowing jazz-rock orchestra&#13;
I ever heard . . . They&#13;
are excellent musicians in every&#13;
way."&#13;
A limited number of $4.50&#13;
tickets for their Racine apThe&#13;
award winning David Baker Jazz&#13;
Ensemble will present a University AJ:tists&#13;
Series Concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday, April 25,&#13;
in the Greenquist Hall Concourse at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Wood Road&#13;
Campus.&#13;
Baker is a widely-known artist, composer&#13;
and performer. He has bee~ cha~rman of jazz&#13;
studies at the Indiana Umversity ~c~ool of&#13;
Music since 1966 and is associate director of&#13;
the IU Black Music Center.&#13;
His ensemble has appeared in concerts&#13;
from Athens to Bombay and is a two-time&#13;
\!,inner of the Big Band Award at the Notre&#13;
Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival.&#13;
Baker's own awards and citations include&#13;
the Indiana Philharmonic Gold Award, the&#13;
Downbeat Hall of Fame Scholarship Award,&#13;
the Downbeat New Star Award for Trombone&#13;
and the Outstanding Music Awa~d. of the&#13;
National Association of Black Musicians. '&#13;
Baker has played with such jazz grea~ as&#13;
Stan Kenton Maynard Ferguson, Lionel&#13;
Hampton Slide Hampton, Buddy Jones and&#13;
' ed as Quincey Jones. He also has appear&#13;
soloist with the Boston Symphony OrcheStra&#13;
FLARES, BELLS, BODY SHIRTS&#13;
pearance still are available at&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine and&#13;
Bidinger's House of 1usic in&#13;
Kenosha. The 5.50 seats have&#13;
been sold out for several weeks. The seven members of&#13;
Chicago call themselves " a&#13;
creative community" and bring&#13;
a variety of musical&#13;
backgrounds to their unique&#13;
sound which incorporates jazz,&#13;
blues, rock and symphonies.&#13;
The inhabitant of the&#13;
"creative community"·&#13;
· Dan Seraphine drums&#13;
studied percussion at DePaul&#13;
University, then v.ith Chuck&#13;
Flores, ex-member of 1aynard&#13;
Ferguson and Woody Herman&#13;
bands. Has been playing for 11&#13;
years.&#13;
Robert Lamm (organ-electric&#13;
piano-vocals) studied piano and&#13;
composition at Roo evelt&#13;
University, is one of the prolific&#13;
f/taniou o-i flt',&#13;
9'i~ !Jtalian ~ o&lt;./4&#13;
Liquor Store&#13;
d -,e &amp; Jester's&#13;
eeOre G and Lester's Student JD.&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
10% Discount with eorge&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KF.NOSHA 658-1131 &#13;
Election TENURE HEARING!&#13;
EWSCOPE AprU 19. 1971&#13;
Results&#13;
&lt;Continued from Page 1l&#13;
Tom Meier&#13;
Mike Mayeshiba&#13;
Gary Davis&#13;
Gary Adelson&#13;
Dale Marlin&#13;
Tom Taskonis&#13;
Ed Toth&#13;
Della Simpson&#13;
Jack Tucker&#13;
Mike Lofton&#13;
Da vid Scharneck&#13;
For the student Union Committee votes were&#13;
cast evenly for the lour people on the ballot. Sue&#13;
evin beat C. E. Sahakian and others in write-ins&#13;
lor the filth position.&#13;
Greg Barrette&#13;
Tim Daley&#13;
Jerry Horton&#13;
Tom Kreul&#13;
ue evan&#13;
E Sahakian&#13;
This Friday a special regents&#13;
committee will conduct an open&#13;
hearing on tenure criteria. The&#13;
Committee, composed of Frank&#13;
Pelisek, George Strother -&#13;
acting chancellor of extension,&#13;
and Eric SChenker - UWM, is&#13;
researching criteria for&#13;
evaluation used in determining&#13;
the granting of tenure. The&#13;
committee will hear anyone who&#13;
wishes to offer constructive&#13;
suggestions regarding the&#13;
granting of tenure and will answer&#13;
pertinent questions. As a&#13;
pre-condition of appearing before&#13;
the committee speakers must&#13;
submit a written summery of&#13;
what they intend to say. A study&#13;
committee list of questions is&#13;
available at the chancellor's&#13;
office. The hearing will be held at&#13;
1:30 in room 221 at Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
70&#13;
72&#13;
72&#13;
40&#13;
58&#13;
72&#13;
27&#13;
36&#13;
40&#13;
49&#13;
21&#13;
57&#13;
45&#13;
50&#13;
61&#13;
45&#13;
33&#13;
f;l&#13;
49&#13;
49&#13;
25&#13;
36&#13;
78&#13;
78&#13;
68&#13;
87&#13;
78&#13;
56&#13;
66&#13;
53&#13;
46&#13;
43&#13;
34&#13;
205&#13;
195&#13;
190&#13;
188&#13;
178&#13;
161&#13;
161&#13;
137&#13;
135&#13;
117&#13;
91&#13;
Rae.&#13;
81&#13;
17&#13;
58&#13;
78&#13;
22&#13;
9&#13;
Ken.&#13;
45&#13;
73&#13;
38&#13;
27&#13;
15&#13;
5&#13;
Gr.&#13;
64&#13;
62&#13;
53&#13;
65&#13;
37&#13;
12&#13;
Tot.&#13;
190&#13;
152&#13;
149&#13;
170&#13;
74&#13;
26&#13;
Management Science Club Formed&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
and Walter lJlbricht voted yes.&#13;
An additional resolution was passed&#13;
concerning the trea Iy in which SGA&#13;
"acknowledge and morally support, to&#13;
the fullest extent a delegation under the&#13;
chairmanship of Gary Davis to present&#13;
Ute ratified people's Peace Treaty to&#13;
congress," passer' unanimously.&#13;
Eaker introduced a resolution that&#13;
called for the non-recognit~on of a~y&#13;
campus committee that required but did&#13;
not have student representation. He&#13;
extended this to include Student&#13;
Government would not recognize any&#13;
past actions of a committee of this sort.&#13;
The resolution passed unanimously.&#13;
The Sena te passed another resolution&#13;
concerning a meeting between students&#13;
and campus security alter a film on April&#13;
Student Government Meets&#13;
0-101, Greenquisl Hall, at 2:30&#13;
p.m. All members are urged to&#13;
attend. There is still time to join&#13;
the club, it's open to all students&#13;
interested in business&#13;
management. Become a member&#13;
of Parkside's progressive new&#13;
club!&#13;
Dean Loumos questio&#13;
meeting was just a pub!' .lIed d&#13;
d&#13;
. . tr . lelk• ...~ a mIDIS ~t1onwould try to '1 ~y&#13;
Gary-Davis said there sbouId~&#13;
WIth the campus police be ..&#13;
disarmed. lIDtilIlloy&#13;
The Senate passed .&#13;
resolution that said "W~ I&#13;
d&#13;
. ,e acknn...:.·&#13;
an appreciate the party s _-="q&#13;
campus security as an t ~ It&#13;
prove relations with Slu~temptto&#13;
cann~t endorse as a SOI:~' but&#13;
security-student problems 10'1 to&#13;
dards are accepted Illat lIDbI"-&#13;
during negotiations." are Il'r'i"'d&#13;
In other business Eaker .&#13;
right to. name commitll!e1OIiYod-.&#13;
because he felt he didn'l&#13;
=-&#13;
Senators well enough and&#13;
for nominations from the ~ .....&#13;
Dean Loumos was el":'&#13;
01 Ihe Siudent Union Corn .thaonr"&#13;
Tom Meier was the other nullo&lt;&#13;
pomted. They will join the fi,:"b ..&#13;
elected, three faculty appointed:::-&#13;
faculty sena le, two alumna lite&#13;
of Auxiliary Enlerprises ~ -...&#13;
dinalor of Student Activities.. lite e.".&#13;
of the Studenl Union Comrnit:e--&#13;
Walt Breach was elected·1I&#13;
Finance Committee, andGary0...&#13;
elecled Chairman of the&#13;
Policies Committee. Four&#13;
appointments, Jeanette DrerneI.&#13;
Gottfredsen, Walter Ulbricht, lid&#13;
Konkol were made to the&#13;
Committee. Gottfredsen WII&#13;
temporary chairman.&#13;
23. Security plans to provide free beer at&#13;
the meeting.&#13;
At the last meetmg or the&#13;
Management Science Club of&#13;
Park Ide, an election of otficers&#13;
wa held The new club officers&#13;
are' President, John leighton;&#13;
Vlce.PreslC~ent, Art Oulan.&#13;
ecretary. Vincent Gigliotti,&#13;
Treasurer, Dan Modrijan.&#13;
Plans are no-.wbeizlg made to&#13;
have Mr Roy Coubte. Assistant&#13;
Professor In the Management&#13;
Science Division of parkside, to&#13;
speak to the club members and&#13;
anyone else interested in the&#13;
Business Management field.&#13;
Mr Coogle plans to discuss&#13;
with the students the role or the&#13;
Management Science Division&#13;
here at Parkside. He will also&#13;
explain its goals. curriculum and&#13;
what students can expect in the&#13;
future.&#13;
The date of this discussion will&#13;
be May 4, lime and place to be&#13;
announced. All interested&#13;
students are Invited and urged to&#13;
attend. This will be a great opportunity&#13;
to lind out all the facts&#13;
on what the Management Science&#13;
Division has to offer.&#13;
The next regular meeting of the&#13;
Management Science Club will be&#13;
on Wednesday, April 21, in Room&#13;
The first malt liquor&#13;
good enough to be&#13;
called BUDWEISER~&#13;
E. F. MADRICiRANO Inc&#13;
BUDWEISER • BUDWEISER MALT I •. • MICHELOB&#13;
Phone 658-3553&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
1831 55th Street&#13;
A"HEUSER·BUSCH, INC.• ST. lOUIS&#13;
Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Secretary, Mgl. Sci Club&#13;
WBITEWAW&#13;
6.50-13&#13;
(Blaekwolls 110.151&#13;
Itwn.u, ....... _ maa:r e-.tI, c..-&#13;
adV_&#13;
PlUI 'us Feel. Es. fIR&#13;
mdUzeoff,.-&#13;
Tt,e$ton,&#13;
ORAMPIONS&#13;
Fu1l4-1'J.y&#13;
Nylon Cord&#13;
A great tire. buy at these&#13;
low prices! Built to Firestone's&#13;
rigid quality standards to&#13;
deliver excellent mileage and&#13;
dependable performance,&#13;
Check our low&#13;
price on your size!&#13;
5.60-15or7.35-14 7.75-14u7.75-15 8,25-1401'8.10.15 8.~~&#13;
$iS10 $fij15 $2F5 $23~&#13;
B1aekwaJls$l5.70 BlackwaIlsS16.75 ~'18.85 ~ ......&#13;
1'100 .l.14 or IZ.01F'tod. E:L I'1WlIlL14 orI:L16 VecL E&amp;. I'!UltuSorfU'l Ft&lt;LEL "" ...... i!:::' kI:__ Dff,...,.ca:r. ta __ off,...,.__ __Il.-atl~"" fM';::::::;-&#13;
~~~~~;~~:irtir8~&#13;
3J.tILJ: III. kidSiP'"&#13;
1011 10111SI.&#13;
KENOSHA 154-1lII&#13;
9·(Jl ~&#13;
Open 8:00 a.m. - ~&#13;
Monday- pi&#13;
5 P'-'&#13;
Saturday to 5 p.m. saturday to •&#13;
. . ••1'" Brin_g this Ad and Receive 10% DisCI 1111&#13;
automotive services until June. It&#13;
109 -WISCONSIN AVE.&#13;
RACINE 631-9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
OPE&#13;
Election Results&#13;
&lt;Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Tom Meier 70 57&#13;
1ike 1ayeshiba 72 45&#13;
Gary Davis 72 so&#13;
Gary Ad Ison 40 61&#13;
Dale Martin 58 45&#13;
Tom Taskonis 72 33&#13;
Ed Toth 27 61&#13;
Della impson 36 9&#13;
Jack Tucker 40 9&#13;
1ike Lofton 49 25&#13;
D vid Scharneck 21 36&#13;
pril 19, 1971&#13;
78 205&#13;
78 195&#13;
68 190&#13;
87 188&#13;
78 178&#13;
56 161&#13;
66 161&#13;
53 137&#13;
46 135&#13;
413 117&#13;
34 91&#13;
TENURE HEARING&#13;
This Friday a special regents&#13;
committee will conduct an open&#13;
hearing on tenure criteria. The&#13;
committee, composed of Frank&#13;
Pelisek, George Strother -&#13;
acting chancellor of extension,&#13;
and Eric Schenker - UWM, is&#13;
researching criteria for&#13;
evaluation used in determining&#13;
the granting of tenure. The&#13;
committee will hear anyone who&#13;
wishes to offer constructive&#13;
uggestions regarding the&#13;
granting of tenure and will anwer&#13;
pertinent questions. As a&#13;
pre-condition of appearing before&#13;
the committee speakers must&#13;
Student Government Meets&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
and Walter Ulbricht voted yes.&#13;
An additional resolution was passed&#13;
concerning the treaty in which SGA&#13;
"acknowledge and morally support, to&#13;
the fullest extent a delegation under the&#13;
chairmanship of Gary Davis to present&#13;
the ratifiM People's Peac.- Treaty to&#13;
congress, 11 passetl unanimously.&#13;
Dean Loumos questi&#13;
meeting was just a pub!' 0.lled if&#13;
administration would try ~•ty ~&#13;
Gary Davis. said there shoUldrnaru&#13;
with the campus police _be llo&#13;
disarmed. llntil th&#13;
The Senate passed un . resolution that said "W anun&#13;
d , I e ar~~ an appreciate the party ""'IQV,&#13;
campus sec_urity as an atte~&#13;
prove relations with studen ~ to&#13;
cannot endorse as a sol ~.&#13;
security-student problems ution to&#13;
dards are accepted that llntil&#13;
d . ,1 • • are aurm6&#13;
negotiations." .. ,&#13;
Rae. Ken. Gr. Tot. ubmit a written swnmary of&#13;
what they intend to say. A study&#13;
committee list of questions is&#13;
available at the chancellor's&#13;
office. The bearing will be held al&#13;
1:30 in room 221 at Greenquist&#13;
Hall .&#13;
Eaker introduced a resolution that&#13;
called for the non-recognit!on of a~y&#13;
campus committee that reqmr~ but did&#13;
not have student representation. He&#13;
extended this to include ~tudent&#13;
Government would not recognize any&#13;
past actions of a committee of this sort. . In other business Eaker ,. . right to name committee 'ah&#13;
81 5 64 1&#13;
17 73 62 152&#13;
58 38 53 149&#13;
78 27 65 170&#13;
22 15 37 74&#13;
9 5 12 26&#13;
The resolution passed unanimously.&#13;
The Senate passed another resolution&#13;
concerning a meeting between students&#13;
and campus security after a film on April&#13;
because he felt he didn't cha&#13;
Senators well enough and kkno.,&#13;
f . t· as ed or nomma ions from the fl&#13;
Dean Loumos was elec~r.&#13;
of the Student Union Com . T M . m1 o~ e1er was the other&#13;
pomted. They will join the ns:na&#13;
elected, three faculty appointed&#13;
faculty_ s~nate, two alumnae, the Management Science Club Formed 23. Security plans to provide free beer at&#13;
the meeting.&#13;
1 nee Di\ i ion of Par ide, to&#13;
k to the club members and&#13;
anyone el e inter ted in the&#13;
Bu ·10 lanag ment field .&#13;
Ir. Cougle plans to di cu&#13;
with the tudents the role or the&#13;
t nagcment cience D1vi ion&#13;
her at Park ide. He will al o&#13;
xplain it goal , curriculum and&#13;
what . tud nts can expect in the&#13;
future.&#13;
The date of this discussion will&#13;
be • fay 4, time and place to be&#13;
announced. All interested&#13;
stud nts are invited and urged to&#13;
attend . This will be a great opportunity&#13;
to find out all the facts&#13;
on what the Management Science&#13;
Division has to offer.&#13;
The next regular meeting of the&#13;
lanagemenl Science Club will be&#13;
on Wednesday, April 21, in Room&#13;
The first malt liquor&#13;
good enough to be&#13;
called BUDWEISERe&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. , ST LOUIS&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRl&lt;iRANO Inc&#13;
BUDWEISER • BUDWEISER MALT I M • . • ICHELOB&#13;
1831 55th Street Phone 658-3553-&#13;
D-101, Greenquist Hall, at 2:30&#13;
p.m. All members are urged to&#13;
attend. There is still time to join&#13;
the club, it's open to all students&#13;
interested in business&#13;
management. Become a member&#13;
of Parkside's progressive new&#13;
club!&#13;
Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Secretary, Mgt. Sci Club&#13;
of Auxiliary Enterprises and&#13;
dinator of Student Activities as&#13;
of the Student Union Committee&#13;
Walt Breach was elected to&#13;
Finance Committee, and Gary 0&#13;
elected Chairman of the A&#13;
Policies Committee. Four&#13;
appointments, Jeanette Dr&#13;
Gottfredsen, Walter Ulbrich a&#13;
Konkol were made to the G&#13;
Committee. Gottfredsen wa&#13;
temporary chairman.&#13;
WHITEWALLS&#13;
OBAMPIONS:&#13;
FuH 4-Ply Ny.fonCJord&#13;
A great tire buy at these&#13;
low prices/ Built to Firestone's&#13;
rigid quality standards to&#13;
deliver excellent mileage and&#13;
dependable performance.&#13;
Check our low&#13;
price on your size!&#13;
109 WISCONSIN AVE.&#13;
FIia man;y Ccnnotl, c.m.,&#13;
Darts, .r.i.ou, Spocilll&#13;
andVllliladl&#13;
Plus '1.76 Fed. EL tu&#13;
and tll9off ,-cu.&#13;
RACINE 631-9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. _ a p.m.&#13;
1011 &amp;0th Sf,&#13;
KENOSHA &amp;54-21"&#13;
m _g:~&#13;
Open 8:00 a. · . frtdS&#13;
Monday - Friday Monday -&#13;
• day to 5 P· · Saturday to 5 p.m. ~atur 11&#13;
· · aunt•• 1&#13;
Srin_g this Ad and Receive 1~% oisc 1971&#13;
automotive services until June &amp;, &#13;
�ngerTrackmen Take Thirdby&#13;
Jim Casper&#13;
r&#13;
I F:&#13;
Eugene Prince setting school record.&#13;
,.uiderrestunan Bob Waters&#13;
4........ won- two events but&#13;
• _ took third in a&#13;
........ meet with Illinois and&#13;
..... tern.&#13;
, .... turned in a 9.9 100 yard&#13;
and ran the 220 in 21.9. He&#13;
.. ""anchoron Parkside's 440&#13;
relay team which placed second.&#13;
Eugene Prince set a new&#13;
personal record and also a school&#13;
record by leaping 6'6" in the high&#13;
jump. His jump was good for&#13;
third place.&#13;
Jim McFadden placed third in&#13;
the.mile with a time of 4:20.5 .&#13;
ermen _Drop Openner&#13;
Pubide opened its 1971 tennis&#13;
_on a losingnote, dropping&#13;
....... opener !HI to uw-&#13;
...... at Pershing Park.&#13;
Dt Salago, Dan Miec1IIftkj,&#13;
Mark Haase, Cal&#13;
=:DaveHercben and Todd&#13;
aullered losses lor&#13;
IlIIIide in singles competition.&#13;
l'-Rangers also lost the three&#13;
"'maldles.&#13;
Parkside gets another shot at&#13;
UWM on April 28. The schedule is&#13;
listed. All home meets are at&#13;
Pershing Park in Racine.&#13;
1971 Tennis Schedule&#13;
April 12 - UW-Milwaukee&#13;
home, 2 p.m. •&#13;
April 16 - Dominican College,&#13;
home, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
April 23 - Oshkosh Invitational&#13;
&lt;oshkosh, Milton, Stout,&#13;
Bowling Tournament Sunday&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
It, Red C arpet treatmen t&#13;
at the&#13;
BANK OF&#13;
ELMWOOD&#13;
IOVery 1 - one e se does!)&#13;
broad concepts of "The&#13;
American Training Pattern".&#13;
which is the title 01 a book put out&#13;
by Rosandich, Lawson and Paul&#13;
Ward. It deals with the&#13;
development 01 skill, speed,&#13;
stamina and strength - all 01&#13;
which are attributes that&#13;
characterize the successful&#13;
athlete&#13;
John Patten soa&#13;
pole vault taki:ed I? feet in the&#13;
ParkSid~ had g third.&#13;
- Tim MeG'} \pal~ of fourths&#13;
(1:21.1), and l\~i~: z~n the 660&#13;
440 intermediate hur~lch 10 the&#13;
Illinois won th es .(59.0)&#13;
points e meet WIth 103&#13;
second ~i~~thwestern placed&#13;
Parkside' 50, lollowed by&#13;
s 30.&#13;
InclUded is the bal&#13;
track schedule: ance of the&#13;
Remainder of Tr-ack Schedule&#13;
1\1 - men's&#13;
April 17 Loui W - women's&#13;
'. - ursrana Stat In Vltallonal (M) LSU H e - , • ouston,&#13;
Tulane, McNeese Balon Rouge&#13;
La. ' ,&#13;
April 23-24 - Drake Relays (MW),&#13;
Des Moines, Ia.&#13;
May 1 - Northern Il1inois invitational&#13;
(M), DeKalb, Ill.&#13;
M.ay 4 - Whitewater Invitational&#13;
(M), Whitewater.&#13;
May 8 - LaCrosse Invitational&#13;
(M-W), LaCrosse.&#13;
~ay 11 Whitewater&#13;
Triangular, Whitewater.&#13;
May 15 . Wisconsin Relays&#13;
Stevens Point. '&#13;
May 22 -&#13;
May 29 -&#13;
June 2-5 - N.A.I.A. ationals,&#13;
Billings, Mont.&#13;
June 15-19 - N.C.A.A., Seattle&#13;
Wash. '&#13;
Parkside) , away, 9 a.m.&#13;
April 24 - UW-Green Bay,&#13;
home, 9 a.m.&#13;
April ~ . Marquette niversity,&#13;
home, 2 p.m.&#13;
April 28 - VW-Milwaukee&#13;
awaY,2 p.m. '&#13;
April 30 " Dominican College,&#13;
away, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
May 8 - SI. Norbert College,&#13;
home, 1 p.m,&#13;
May 15-,UW-Green Bay, away,&#13;
12 noon.&#13;
May 21-22 - NAtA. Dislrict14&#13;
play-offs at Whitewater.&#13;
April I'. 1171&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
PE Page 7&#13;
Golfers Organize&#13;
Parksioe's gol£ team I' bus,&#13;
rounding mte shape for the ne";'&#13;
season&#13;
Leif Guttorsmen hea&lt;b til II t&#13;
or Ranger linksmen cornpetm,g&#13;
lor spots on the squad Coach&#13;
Steve Stevens says he win carT)&#13;
12 men this lear&#13;
Gultormsen was last )ear's&#13;
MVP, and is capable of shootull&#13;
Scores that could earn him&#13;
medaJist honors 10 rnanv meets&#13;
Other golfers Ste~ens IS&#13;
counting on include Tom Both~&#13;
Randy Dreilke, George Hon'at'&#13;
Bob Toeppe, Tom Krummel \&lt;..;&#13;
Rossi and Dan We)Tauch&#13;
Ji~ Vakos, a lop prospect from&#13;
Racine, has a broken finger 00&#13;
his left hand and will not be&#13;
available for a fe'4 weeks&#13;
Stevens says the toughest part&#13;
01 the schedule comes firsL "UW.&#13;
Madison, Platteville and Oshkosh&#13;
~e three of the strongest learns&#13;
on the state," said Stevens All&#13;
three will appear with Par SIde&#13;
on April 19.&#13;
'971 Goll&amp;hodute&#13;
(All home matches are at&#13;
Petrifying Spr-ings gol£ course I&#13;
April t6 - Lake Forest College.&#13;
Rocklord College. away&#13;
April 19 - '-Madison. Platteville,&#13;
Oshkosh. away.&#13;
Apnl 23 - Dominican College.&#13;
Racine.&#13;
April 77 • Loyola t.:niVer5lt)&#13;
home.&#13;
April 30 - Lake Forest College.&#13;
home.&#13;
May I - Lakeland Invitallonal,&#13;
away.&#13;
May 4 - VW.I, Carthage&#13;
College, hol1U!.&#13;
May 7 - Whitewater. home.&#13;
May 10 - Domllucan College,&#13;
home.&#13;
May 14 - 'M. away&#13;
May 26-22. NA LA Dl InCI ..&#13;
Tourney. La~"SOOia,Green Lake,&#13;
Wis.&#13;
Baseball Club Formed&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
This year Parkside has formed&#13;
a club baseball team. The&#13;
organization is different from a&#13;
varsity sport in that it is not part&#13;
of Parkside's formal athletlc&#13;
program.&#13;
The new team has secured a&#13;
schedule that includes such&#13;
schools as Dominican College. St&#13;
Norbert and UWM, among&#13;
others.&#13;
Some of the more promising&#13;
players according to Coach&#13;
"Red" Oberbruner include&#13;
pitchers Joe Johnson, Rick&#13;
Jackson, Carl Talsma, Tom&#13;
Jaehne, Tom Pinzger and Jim&#13;
Kobierski. Some of these men&#13;
will play at other positions when&#13;
not on the mound.&#13;
Other team members who will&#13;
figure in Oberbruner's plans ~re&#13;
infielders Tom Gedemer, Nick&#13;
Perrine, Dennis Serpe, Ron ~hmitz&#13;
John Pills and JIm&#13;
Moh;bacher. Dean Karis and&#13;
Tom Elsen are tbe catchers.&#13;
Scot Piemeisl, Chuck&#13;
Christiano, Jef£ Koleske and Scot&#13;
Nelson will handle outfield&#13;
hrkside's intramural division.&#13;
IIponmentis sponsoring the Sunday, April 25 is the date&#13;
It AIl.University bowling of the tournament to be held at&#13;
mament. The tournament Sheridan lanes in Kenosha.&#13;
consist of three divisions: Bowling will begin at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
.', handicap, women's Those interested should&#13;
1IMicap, and scratch. To be contact Jim Koch, Room 144&#13;
dIiHe to participate in either Kenosha; or Dick Frecka, Room&#13;
the handicap divisions a 302 Racine. Other registration&#13;
fImn must bowl in either the places are Sheridan Lanes and&#13;
Iacile or Kenosha intramural the Athletic Office.&#13;
~~~th,e physical education Registration fee is $1.25 to&#13;
-",woadeague. be paid at Ihe time of&#13;
Bowlers in any of these registration. This fee will&#13;
:' who average 170 or include the cost of trophies&#13;
... or anyone not In these which will be awarded In all&#13;
mUlt bowl In the scratch divisions.&#13;
~ ~onl&amp;M UJfit!t !7ainl6&#13;
~~~s athletic director&#13;
... -.,h spent last Friday&#13;
~rday In Louisiana&#13;
IIlI pia Withboth the coaches&#13;
~ ren 01 the NFL New&#13;
e..t Sllnla.&#13;
~ Bob Lawson, who was&#13;
~ In Louisiana with the&#13;
Rosie, tra.ck team, joined&#13;
.... lIdich In discussing the&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phane 657-9147 27 4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
04 Lothrop Ave.&#13;
... Racine, Wis. KENOSHA, WISCONSIN . .... ..~!::=:::=:::::---:----.-a&#13;
duties ~elson may see some&#13;
action in lhe infield also.&#13;
The schedule as It nO\\ stands lS&#13;
listed here:&#13;
April 15 - Domlrucan College&#13;
(2), home or away&#13;
April 2li - Domin n CoIldlle.&#13;
awaY&#13;
May 3·Dormnican CoIleRe12 ,&#13;
away.&#13;
May 8 - .01 III -Ch,ca 0 C...de&#13;
(2), home&#13;
May 11· dwaukee Tech 2.&#13;
away.&#13;
May 15- l. Norbert 121• home&#13;
!\lay 22 - VII'-, hluukee 2'.&#13;
away.&#13;
Carthage and Parks,de ""II&#13;
play a home and a home&#13;
scrimmage to be decIded upon at&#13;
a future date&#13;
!IIa!l dla&lt;k?a1l&#13;
()J~ J"cwJ&#13;
For&#13;
Resenations&#13;
PhOl1'&#13;
69-HJ-+55&#13;
1([ os"" ....&#13;
'rs;~Y;id;'&#13;
I&#13;
.Florists .&#13;
~&amp;Greenhouses :::&#13;
~~ ---&#13;
.:::&#13;
,~&#13;
x&#13;
,I:&#13;
:~ noe&#13;
:-": '021, 7ST.. Sf&#13;
51~ Kl.NOSHA WISCONSIN '1&lt;10&#13;
~:~ PHO E "'.uoo :::~~~:::::::::::":::~·:·:-""?-~~"}"'::·:«..~n~~&#13;
.:'.&#13;
ST_. RACI E&#13;
10%&#13;
tlldmt Diu-Olll1t&#13;
011 all&#13;
POsfl'rs &amp; Frames&#13;
503 Al&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
pregnancies ~ 12&#13;
vee.ks e in&amp;ted r&#13;
117iJ1O&#13;
Medication, Lab T~st&#13;
Doctors fees includ&#13;
Hospital &amp; Roepital&#13;
&amp;tfilia ed clinics.&#13;
(212) TR 1-8803&#13;
2 hours-1 cays&#13;
PIlYSlCIAllS REFERRAL&#13;
We u..w .. UifI, .,., .... If&#13;
.... ,.... ..~ ......&#13;
anger Trackmen Take Third&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
DARRELL BORGER&#13;
Eugene Prince setting school record.&#13;
ule freshman Bob Waters&#13;
aukee won two events but&#13;
ream took third in a&#13;
lar meet with Illinois and&#13;
tern&#13;
ers turned in a 9.9 100 yard&#13;
and ran the 220 in 21.9. He&#13;
ran anchor on Parkside's 440&#13;
relay team which placed second.&#13;
Eugene Prince set a new&#13;
personal record and also a school&#13;
record by leaping 6'6" in the high&#13;
jump. His jump was good for&#13;
third place.&#13;
Jim McFadden placed third in&#13;
the . mile with a time of 4: 20.5.&#13;
etmen _Drop Openner&#13;
Put.side opened its 1971 tennis&#13;
on a losing note, dropping&#13;
borne opener 9--0 to UWee&#13;
at Pershing Park.&#13;
e Sarago, Dan Mieci,&#13;
Mark Haase, Cal&#13;
Dave Herchen and Todd n suffered losses for&#13;
de in singles competition.&#13;
Rangers also lost the three&#13;
matches.&#13;
Parkside gets another shot at&#13;
UWM on April 28. The schedule is&#13;
listed. All home meets are at&#13;
Pershing Park in Racine.&#13;
1971 Tennis Schedule&#13;
April 12 - UW-Milwaukee&#13;
home, 2 p.m. '&#13;
April 16 - Dominican College, home, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
April 23 - Oshkosh Invitational&#13;
( Oshkosh, Milton, Stout,&#13;
Bowling Tournament Sunday&#13;
Parkside's intramural division.&#13;
rtment 1s sponsoring the Sunday, April 25 is the date&#13;
t \II-University bowling of the tournament to be held at&#13;
nt. The tournament Sheridan lanes in Kenosha .&#13;
, on 1st of three divisions: Bowling will begin at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
s handicap, women's Those interested should&#13;
P, and scratch. To be contact Jim Koch, Room 144&#13;
1 to participate in either Kenosha; or Dick Frecka, Room&#13;
handicap divisions a 302 Racine. Other registration&#13;
must bowl in either the places are Sheridan Lanes and&#13;
or Kenosha intramural the Athletic Office.&#13;
or the physical education Registration fee is $1 .25 to&#13;
t1onal league. be paid at the time of&#13;
Bov.ier in any of these registration. This fee will&#13;
s who average 170 or include the cost of trophies&#13;
e, or anyone not in these which will be awarded in all&#13;
s must bowl in the scratch divisions .&#13;
. 'fto~dic/t ~on/eM u)f itft :?ain/4&#13;
Parkside's athletic director&#13;
d Rosandich s~nt last Friday&#13;
~turday 1n Louisiana&#13;
rrtng with both the coaches&#13;
players or the NFL New&#13;
ans Saints&#13;
ch ~b Lawson, who was&#13;
Y 10 Louisiana with the t track team, joined&#13;
dich In discussing the&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
s,1 Red C orpet treatment&#13;
at the&#13;
,BANK OF&#13;
~LMWOOD&#13;
(e~ery l one e se does!)&#13;
broad concepts of ''The&#13;
American Training Pattern",&#13;
which is the title of a book put out&#13;
by Rosandich, Lawson and Paul&#13;
Ward. It deals with the&#13;
development of skill, speed,&#13;
stamina and strength - all of&#13;
which are attributes that&#13;
characterize the successful&#13;
athlete.&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
John Patten soared . pole vault taki 1_3 feet in the&#13;
P . • ng third arks1de had a . · - Tim 1 . pair of fourth&#13;
( cG1lsky in th&#13;
1:21.1&gt;, and Mike · ~ 660&#13;
440 intermediate h Zug1ch m the&#13;
Illinois won the l!fdJes _(59.0).&#13;
points N meet with 103 . orthweste I second with 50 rn P aced&#13;
Parkside's 30. . fol lowed by&#13;
Included is th ba&#13;
track schedule : e lance of the&#13;
Remainder of Track chedule&#13;
1\1 -men's&#13;
April 17 _ Lo . W · women· · . llls1ana tate I V1tat1onal CM&gt; n- , LSU, Houston,&#13;
~~ane, McNeese, Baton Rouge,&#13;
April 23-24 - Drake Relays ( tW),&#13;
Des Moines, Ia.&#13;
May 1 - Northern Illinois Invitational&#13;
(M), DeKalb, Ill.&#13;
M_ay 4 - Whitewater Invitational&#13;
(M), Whitewater.&#13;
May 8 - LaCrosse Invitational&#13;
(M-W), Lacrosse.&#13;
~fay 11 - Whitewater&#13;
Triangular, Whitewater.&#13;
May 15 - Wisconsin Relays&#13;
Stevens Point. '&#13;
May 22 -&#13;
May 29 -&#13;
June 2-5 - N.A.I.A. 'ationals, BilJings, Mont.&#13;
June 15-19 - N.C.A.A., Seattle&#13;
Wash. '&#13;
Parkside), away, 9 a.m.&#13;
April 24 - UW-Green Bay, home, 9 a .m.&#13;
April Z7 - larquette nh·er- sity, home, 2 p.m.&#13;
April 28 - UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
away, 2 p.m.&#13;
April 30 - Dominican College,&#13;
away, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
May 8 - St. Norbert College, home, 1 p.m.&#13;
May 15-,UW-Green Bay, away,&#13;
12 noon.&#13;
May 21-22 - N.A.I.A. Di trict H&#13;
play-offs at Whitewater.&#13;
'Golfers Organize&#13;
Baseball Club Formed&#13;
b Jim a per&#13;
This year Parkside has formed&#13;
a club baseball team The&#13;
organization is different from a&#13;
varsity sport in that it i not part&#13;
of Parkside's formal a hlet1c&#13;
program. The new team has ecured a&#13;
schedule that include uch&#13;
schools as Dominican College · Norbert and \\' I, among&#13;
others. Some or the more promi. in&#13;
players according to Coach&#13;
"Red" Oberbruner include&#13;
pitchers Joe John on , Rick&#13;
Jackson, Carl Tai ma. Tom&#13;
Jaehne, Tom Pmzger and Jim&#13;
Kobierski Some of these men will play at other po ition wh n&#13;
not on the mound. Other team members who will&#13;
figure in Oberbruner's plans are&#13;
infielders Tom Gedemer . 'ick&#13;
Perrine, Dennis Serpe, Ron Schmitz&#13;
John Pitts and Jim&#13;
Moh;bacher. Dean Karis and&#13;
Tom Elsen are the catchers. Scot Piemeisl, Chuck&#13;
Christiano, Jeff Koleske and Scot&#13;
Nelson will handle outfield&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
Sunnyside&#13;
Florists&#13;
· &amp; Greenhouses&#13;
10%&#13;
111d 111 Di 11111&#13;
-011 all&#13;
Po I &amp; I·,·.,&#13;
503 Al ST •• R Cl E&#13;
ABORTIO &#13;
PaleS AprU 11. 1111&#13;
lIy Jim Kojoen&#13;
of the ewscope Staff&#13;
Tille' Touching&#13;
Author' Gwen Davis&#13;
Publisher' Doubleday&#13;
Hell has found a true earthly paradise in&#13;
Southern California; God left for greener&#13;
pastures. and Satan's manifesto of&#13;
hopelessness and boredom fills the gap with&#13;
emptiness.&#13;
Gwen Davis treats us to yet another&#13;
novelistic probe into the desert aridity&#13;
behind the billboard of modern society.&#13;
telling us like it is just as everyone else has,&#13;
poinung out the sexual nexus of life; the&#13;
primal gift of God (if fulfilling) and ice-cold&#13;
prod of Satan (if unfulflllmg); the dialectic&#13;
For Hell's frame of reference Southern&#13;
California style, the author introduces&#13;
Soralee's husband Simon Herford potentate&#13;
of the encounte~ marathon, various and&#13;
sundry (stereotypical) social freaks,&#13;
"Kerouwackian" freaks standing vigil for&#13;
Caryl Chessman. and Lionel. Lionel is a&#13;
pivotal character, he is the ~mp~r~r of a&#13;
chain shoestore kingdom. his life s goal&#13;
merely to get through life, working ~ haT?&#13;
that he has no time for despair. His&#13;
"becoming a multi4mil/ionaire was one of&#13;
the grearjokes o[all rime."&#13;
Lionel was in his and everyone else's view&#13;
a "funny little man, middleaged and beaten,&#13;
stuffed into his skin like an overcooked&#13;
potato .." Saralee refuses to see his ugliness.&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
;.::&#13;
-&#13;
~&#13;
rnv I.. love nd canng (touchmg) m&#13;
oppo ilion to sex as a materialistic means.&#13;
It all depend on how you look at it For&#13;
In lance, tf you're middleaged and your&#13;
hu band takes Wednesday off for a round of&#13;
golf wuh the fellas, well then, you JUSlform&#13;
a hule club (acung as a sexual clearinghouse)&#13;
of discreet women whose rallying point is to&#13;
pick up namele studs m out of the way&#13;
restaurant and that sort of relieves the&#13;
b redorn. But" do also yolk you with guilt&#13;
~nd mote empuness. That Satan's real devil.&#13;
The novel IS wntten from an observer&#13;
narrau n pomt of view. Marion, the&#13;
narrOitor, is telling the story of Sorale, who&#13;
was for a time her best friend. Marion is a&#13;
Journalist, femiOlSl, 'yplcally (for a&#13;
journaliSl) '·cynical about nearly&#13;
tverylhillg". She is as igned the task of&#13;
writing an article about a nude encounter&#13;
marathon for which "there was no need for&#13;
me to get emotionally involved. ..Crux: She&#13;
does ge' emo'ionally involved. through' the&#13;
auspices of Saralee anti here own gutdeep&#13;
rage rising uncontrollably from a stomach&#13;
overrun with existential spasms, Exhausted,&#13;
Marion finds herself or at least the raod to&#13;
herself&#13;
she invests in him a beauty that isn't there.&#13;
She pities him and only because women can&#13;
give enought at open a man up, to touch&#13;
"the little boy in men" she sees herself as a&#13;
savior for Lionel. She convinces herself ilia t&#13;
she actually loves him and for a short time&#13;
succeeds.&#13;
Marion invites Saralee to the encounter&#13;
marathon where she discovers, through&#13;
self-analysis and Simon's (a possible&#13;
charlatan) direction. her exact Freudian&#13;
hang-ups, not quite accepting 'he final&#13;
judgement that lionel represents a father&#13;
figure; female oedipus. Soralee is finally&#13;
purged of her pity and flase love for Lion".&#13;
She leaves the marathon ready and willing to&#13;
extract that latent affection of her husband,&#13;
long neglected. who needs it as much as&#13;
Lionel and who is capable of giving if primed&#13;
long enough. Yes sir, everything gonna be&#13;
awright.&#13;
But strong·ann Chance jumps on thE&#13;
stage. As she is driving home to her hubby&#13;
Soralee wraps her car around a tree and&#13;
boom, no more Soralee in an orange ball of&#13;
flame. Marion, who is driving behind her,&#13;
can see the fireball of Soralee's eviction from&#13;
life and ends the novel in a revery about&#13;
~===CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
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Misc.&#13;
Chance. At the funeral home she wonders why .no&#13;
one is pounding their fists and gutscreammg&#13;
"fuck you fate." "Soralee was dead, and&#13;
dead she couldn't be Saralee. Because she&#13;
was alive, that's what she was about, wa,s&#13;
living so wharever was in that coffin wasn t&#13;
Soral~e." Age old consolation. .'&#13;
1 suppose you could call Soralee tragic, In&#13;
a modern sense. She was moti~ated. by her&#13;
emotions and a few psychological insights.&#13;
Trapped by pit~! she finally tr~!,scended,&#13;
herself, attained peak sensittvuv, ready to&#13;
give herself to her husband, ready to touch&#13;
the little boy, and is cut down before she has&#13;
the chance. Touching is not a particularly great novel;&#13;
it's decent and is well-written only in places.&#13;
The central theme, that of an empty society&#13;
and the hopelessness of its inhabitants, is the&#13;
central theme of too many modern novels&#13;
the story is interesting particularly when the&#13;
author concerns herself with a behind the&#13;
scenes look at the vigil held when Caryl&#13;
Chessman was executed, (and occasionally&#13;
when she describes the encounter&#13;
marathon). The newspapers purported the&#13;
'Chessman vigil to be a noble action on the&#13;
part of hundreds of ~elebrities, Gwen Davis&#13;
'reinterprets it as a circus. Her elUCidations&#13;
concerning sex, love, males and females, the&#13;
repressed rage of modern man and woman&#13;
are contemporary, but far from original. It&#13;
seems as if I've read this novel before, in bits&#13;
and pieces of other novels. Only the names&#13;
have been changed..&#13;
One big advantage of this book is its&#13;
length, a mere 212 pages, short enough to&#13;
read in a few hours. It's nice to read about&#13;
Southern California freaks but it ain't worth&#13;
too much effort. A consistently perceptive&#13;
writer, Gwen Davis isn't. Ultimately,&#13;
Touching leaves you untouched.&#13;
Touching, courtesy of the Book Mart&#13;
622-59th Street, Kenosha, can be purchased&#13;
for $5.95.&#13;
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excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
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A Bottle of _,DIE&#13;
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Northwest Corner 1-94 and HighwaY 50&#13;
Page WSCOPE pril 19, 1971&#13;
b) Jim Koloen&#13;
of th 'e cope Staff&#13;
Title: Tou hing&#13;
uthor· G ·en D vis&#13;
Publisher· D ubleday&#13;
H II h found a true earthly paradise m&#13;
uthern aliforni ; God left for greener&#13;
p stures, nd at n's m nifes10 of&#13;
hopele ness nd boredom fill the gap with&#13;
emptme .&#13;
Gwen D \i treats u to yet another&#13;
n veli ll probe into the desert aridity&#13;
behind the billbo rd of modern iety.&#13;
t llin u It ·e it I JU l a everyone el e ha ,&#13;
p inting ut the se ual ne us of life: the&#13;
primal ift of G {if ful illin nd kc-cold&#13;
pr d o t n If unful 11lin ); the di le ti1.&#13;
For Hell's frame of reference Southern&#13;
C.tlafomia stvle. the author introduces&#13;
Soralee·s husband, Simon Herford potentate&#13;
f the encounter marathon, various and&#13;
sundry (stereotypical) social freaks,&#13;
'·Kerouwac ·ian.. freaks standing vigil for&#13;
C ryl Chessman. and Lionel. Lionel is a&#13;
pivotal character. he is the emperor of a&#13;
chain hoe tore kingdom. his life's goal&#13;
merely to get through life, working ~ har~&#13;
that he ha np time for despair. His&#13;
"becoming a multi-millionaire was one of&#13;
the great jokes of all rime. ·: Lionel was in his a-nd everyone else's view&#13;
a "funny Lillie man, middleaged and beaten,&#13;
stuffed into his skin like an overcooked&#13;
potato. ' Soralee refuses to see his ugliness,&#13;
Vte anve ts in him a beauty that isn't there.&#13;
he pities him and only because women can&#13;
give enought ot open a man up, to · touch&#13;
"the Lillie boy in men" she sees herself as a&#13;
\'ior for Lionel he convinces herself that&#13;
she tu Jly loves rum and for a short time&#13;
ucceed .&#13;
farion invite Soralee to the encounter&#13;
marathon where she discovers, through&#13;
self-analy i and Simon's (a possible&#13;
charlatan) direction, her exact Freudian&#13;
hang-up , not quite ac epting the final&#13;
judgement that Lionel represents a father&#13;
figure : female oedipus. Soralee is finally&#13;
purged of her pity and flase love for Lio11~l.&#13;
he leaves the marathon ready and willing to&#13;
extr.ict that latent affection of her husband,&#13;
lon·g neglected, who needs it as much as&#13;
Lionel and who is capable of giving if primed&#13;
long enough. Yes sir, everything gonna be&#13;
awright.&#13;
But strong-arm Chance jumps on the&#13;
tage. As she is driving home to her hubby&#13;
Soralee wraps her car around a tree and&#13;
boom, no more Soralee in an orange ball of&#13;
flame . 1arion. who is driving behind her,&#13;
can see the fireball of Soralee's eviction from&#13;
life and ends the novel in a revery about&#13;
Chance.&#13;
At the funeral home she wonders why _no&#13;
one is pounding their fists and gutscreammg&#13;
"fuck you fate." "Soralee was dead, and&#13;
dead she couldn't be Sora lee. Because she&#13;
was alive, that's what she was about, wa;&#13;
living so whatever was in that coffin wasn t&#13;
Soral~e. "Age old consolation.&#13;
I suppose you could call Soralee tragic, in&#13;
a modern sense. She was motivated by her&#13;
emotions and' a few psychological insights.&#13;
Trapped by pit~: she fin~ll_y_ tr~scended&#13;
herself, attained peak sens1t1v1ty, ready to&#13;
give herself to her husband, ready to touch&#13;
the little boy, and is cut down before she has&#13;
the chance.&#13;
Touching is not a particularly great novel;&#13;
it's decent and is well-written only in places.&#13;
The central theme, that of an empty society&#13;
and the hopelessness of its inhabitants, is the&#13;
central theme of too many modern novels&#13;
the story is interesting particularly when the&#13;
author concerns herself with a behind the&#13;
scenes look at the vigil held when Caryl&#13;
Chessman was executed, (and occasionally&#13;
when she describes the encounter&#13;
marathon). The newspapers purported the&#13;
'Chessman vigil to be a noble action on the&#13;
part of hundreds of celebrities, Gwen Davis&#13;
'reinterprets it as a circus. Her elucidations&#13;
concerning sex, love, males and females, the&#13;
repressed rage of modern man and woman&#13;
are contemporary, but far from original. It&#13;
seems as if I've read th.is novel before, in bits&#13;
and pieces of other novels. Only the namei&#13;
have been changed.&#13;
One big advantage of th.is book is its&#13;
le·ngth, a mere 212 pages, short enough to&#13;
read in a few hours. It's nice to read about&#13;
Southern California freaks but it ain't worth&#13;
too much effort. A consistently perceptive&#13;
writer, Gwen Davis isn't. Ultimately,&#13;
Touching leaves you untouched.&#13;
Touching, courtesy of the Book Mart&#13;
622-59th Street, Kenosha, can be purchased&#13;
for $5.95.&#13;
A professional ABORTION&#13;
that is safe, legal &amp;&#13;
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Court~~Y Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty '&#13;
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• t:,:=,·it--&#13;
-· - ~ F ===CLASSIFIEDS====-1&#13;
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(Must Show 1.0.)&#13;
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excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
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Cono. 652 6. JS after 4&#13;
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off; r 652-0109 After 6&#13;
' 69 R~mb . Amcric~n $995&#13;
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Fiat wa on Sl50 call Ror&#13;
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65 271 or 65 -4117&#13;
'67 Triumph TR-4 IRS whole or&#13;
for p;,ru 6-3618&#13;
'.? Pu:c.· I J ( so:1 cltup cJII Tom&#13;
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WmtC'r COAi size 7 SI0 633 -7576 or 637 1'20&#13;
'70 Ambassador call Dennis&#13;
652-567&#13;
Fender tr d Jstcr S450 or best&#13;
offi r 639-6360&#13;
' 62 R mblcr SIOO CJII 652 -9552&#13;
Stereo Cassette Player and&#13;
Recorder w11h changer Model 377&#13;
S200 Call 652-8870 MUST SELL.&#13;
Honda • 150" cc S'200 694--0325&#13;
RCA Signal Generator S20.00 also&#13;
RC A Vacuum Tube voltmeter&#13;
S20.00 639 202&#13;
Misc.&#13;
GOT THE DRAFT hanging over&#13;
your head??? Do something about it.&#13;
ECUMENICAL CENTER FOR&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING 2211 EAST&#13;
KENWOOD BLVD. MILWAUKEE&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Fiberglass Repair work&#13;
654-8739&#13;
F.or appointments phone : ( 414)&#13;
962-5855 or contact: STEVE&#13;
BANGERT STUDENT AFFAIRS -&#13;
call KENOSHA&#13;
Any type or work 65'2-87 34&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Office Space - Modern. Carpeted,&#13;
Partiuoned, Air Cond. Ideal for&#13;
Acctg., Insurance, or Sales. Good&#13;
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Minnie the Midnite Maid&#13;
Qualifications for calling:&#13;
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&#13;
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
or The Newscope Staf!&#13;
"BiD 225virtually disenfranchises all of those,&#13;
comingto Wisconsin to study," -:sspeechby State Senator Dale McKenna (D-&#13;
....:.,) last Thursday sponsored by the Racine&#13;
--- of the ACLU, he warned the small :::e "They will not be qualified to register in&#13;
: t where they attend school and they&#13;
:.::: at all in the United States of America if&#13;
IIill passes in the Assembly,"&#13;
• AtClJIdiog to McKenna, "Th~ bill, in effect,&#13;
IIIIdset up stringent voting requirements that the&#13;
_city clerk could ask of a student or a person in&#13;
JlDSieDtvocationwhether he intended to remain&#13;
~.district heis living, whether he owns property&#13;
.1IIe district, whether he filed an inco~e tax&#13;
IIIII'D in the district, whether his driver's hcense&#13;
• Issued in the district, whether he has his&#13;
lIIDIJIObile registered in that district. All of these&#13;
.. are criteria the clerk can use to exclude you&#13;
hili voting inthat district if you answer no."&#13;
"It also disenfranchises all veterans returning&#13;
... VletDam going to school under the G.r. Bill&#13;
.. use unless they have established legal&#13;
IIIidmcY at home for voting purposes and because&#13;
11.18 year old vote change most of them will not&#13;
qaaUfied to register in the precinct in which they&#13;
II'lIIchool."&#13;
JlrKenM characterized the bill as an attempt&#13;
.~ the effect of the new 18 year old voting&#13;
IIlr JIaDy legislators expect the addition of 18 year&#13;
tIIII to lbe electorate to significantly affect the&#13;
IIRlIme of the local and state elections in college&#13;
-.tties.&#13;
MeKenM said the bill stood a good chance of&#13;
~ lbe Assembly but added on his own behalf,&#13;
ti this bill is a bad bill ... but it passed 25-4."&#13;
IIcKenna then spoke about Senate Bill 180, 314&#13;
illleAl8embly,that is designed to test the power&#13;
lillie President to commit U.S. troops in un-&#13;
__ red wars. Similar to a bill passed by the&#13;
by Dean Loumos&#13;
or The Newscope Start&#13;
Alan alt Faculty meetiug last Wednesday,&#13;
.\frIl 21, a resolution was presented fly Professor&#13;
Jell. Harbeson, representing the Social Science&#13;
DlYlsion. The resolution stated:&#13;
Tbal lbe Parkside Faculty opposes the&#13;
Prtsfnce on campus of armed security&#13;
personnel carrying sidearms and mace&#13;
dlring daylight hours,&#13;
"0 further explained that armed security were&#13;
: muchin evidence in Greenquist Hall and that&#13;
ItmOSpllereat Parkside did not warrant the :U.. of the security patrol. He added that "we&#13;
...d better resolve this now before somethmg .::::s." He ~lso said that there have been a few&#13;
.. Is where guns were not involved, but could&#13;
.. " been,&#13;
.. t\ancollor Irvin G, Wyllie then introduced&#13;
..:c:.nson, from Central Administration m&#13;
1IIeech" WhoISthe security head. He gave a short&#13;
llIu ' InWhichhe continually emphasized that "If&#13;
L.llve the security the authority to make arrests&#13;
~1 Shouldbe armed."&#13;
~e also revealed that some of our campuses,&#13;
1Ocu' Bay for example, do not have armed&#13;
~ty" a decision that was made in Madison.&#13;
~ Ylholookthe noor and explained that he was&#13;
1Ir~ by the Regents to "beef up security and&#13;
llibarhon On campuses, even if it meant 'canIlitQ~lDgFaculty&#13;
positions'." This order was later&#13;
IOcu '1ed because of outside pressure, but the&#13;
1llI~ Y patrol were armed and received the&#13;
lld~rn 20 hours training on the use of their&#13;
s. lbatrofessor Applebaum added he didn't believe&#13;
lld~en the .authority to arrest meant having a&#13;
M ,To him that reasoning didn't follow.&#13;
ba\'e r. Hanson answered, "admittedly arrests&#13;
.. ~n made Without sidearms," but then Cited&#13;
lilt' p,lewhere a gun was needed "to give out a&#13;
IIIg ticket."&#13;
Supports Anti-War Bill&#13;
SENATOR DALE McKENNA&#13;
Massachusetts legislature, it forbids state citizens&#13;
from serving in undeclared wars. The&#13;
Massachusetts bill was taken to the Supreme Court&#13;
to test its constitutionality. The court refused to&#13;
make a ruling on the grounds that the state had not&#13;
gone through the standard procedure of litigation in&#13;
the lower federal courts.&#13;
According to McKenna the Wisconsin bill,&#13;
introduced March 18, was immediately' mel b)&#13;
opposition senators who attempted to dilute its&#13;
effectiveness via amendment. He said, .. ection 1&#13;
mb states 'Any agrieved inhabitant of this stale on&#13;
his own behalf . . . may bring an appropriate action&#13;
in the United States Supreme Court ... 10&#13;
defend and enforce such rights of the indi\'idual&#13;
under section B . - .. "&#13;
Faculty Opposes&#13;
A rmed Security&#13;
On Campus&#13;
&gt;&#13;
•o&#13;
v&#13;
•~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
•&#13;
Describing secuon B and the I lent of I&#13;
documenl he said, "What thi bill means n elf t&#13;
that we would oot perrmt the )'lJW1 peopl of&#13;
Wisconsm to fight in undeclared" ar We re It'lhn&#13;
the President. 'really, we've had II nd II'&#13;
time 10 sa)' good-bye' ..&#13;
"When IIcame up on the nate ncor th first&#13;
amendmenl tha; "a gg ted "ould hav&#13;
destroyed It For exampl a am nded the bill&#13;
would not hold If th Unrted tat am Ill\ol\ ~&#13;
III an undeclared war In any counl!') thaI I'&#13;
.S aid, Also, thelf amended bill ould no lak&#13;
effect until the .Iassachu t la" "a declared&#13;
constilullonal I took stron e puon and con&#13;
sidered Wisconslll a sovereign tate."&#13;
Accorcing to tale la any bill pa ed b. the&#13;
two houses In, tadison. unl otherwt lpulated&#13;
lakes effect the day alter .1 pubh.hed in th&#13;
ficial stale publication he WI! co n. tal&#13;
Journal)&#13;
"We hould have th right on our 6"n to In&#13;
troduce Bill 180 and g I .1 th h th nat&#13;
without waiting for .Ia ch 10 reach t&#13;
Supreme Court"&#13;
Describing the dIfficulty III n th bill he&#13;
noted thai though there "as debate on the ncor&#13;
almost no one opposed the bill IIIthe pubhc he nn&#13;
attended by "aboul :;00" people&#13;
", 'ow even the forc Lhal had n III upport&#13;
of the war have come full err I nd re III opposition&#13;
to il If Un 0.01 c,idenc nough 10&#13;
con\'lnce thl! Prldenl Lhal th peopl I thl&#13;
countr)' don t anI their men d. I III&#13;
Vietnam then I don't kllO" "hat&#13;
A member 01 the audl nc SUJitRl'SlcdI&#13;
thoughl the I ue of th bill hould be pul fo&#13;
referendum to the peopl 01 the t, n a&#13;
thai thi was too Important a mal r for th r&#13;
elected rep"" ntall' to hand!&#13;
tConI1J1U on Pa 5&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
McKenna Fights Voting Bill&#13;
Supports Anti- by John Koloen&#13;
of The Newscope Staf!&#13;
"B'll 225 virtually disenfranchises all of those .&#13;
en~ coming to Wisconsin to study."&#13;
1 8 peech by State Senator Dale McKenna (D-&#13;
:SOn) last Thursday sponsored by the Racine&#13;
ter of the ACLU, he w~~ned the . sm~ll&#13;
~nee, "They will not be quahf1ed to register m&#13;
precinct where they attend school and they&#13;
vote at all in the United States of America if&#13;
bill passes in the Assem?}Y.' ' . . According to McKenna, The bill, m effect,&#13;
et up stringent voting requir~ments that the&#13;
city clerk could ask of a student or a person in&#13;
1 ansient vocation whether he intended to remain&#13;
district he is living, whether he owns property&#13;
Ille district, whether he filed an income tax&#13;
in the district, whether his driver's license&#13;
· ued in the district, whether he has his&#13;
, mobile registered in that district. All of these&#13;
are criteria the clerk can use to exclude you&#13;
voting in that district if you answer no."&#13;
•·u also disenfranchises all veterans returning&#13;
Vietnam going to school under the G .I. Bill&#13;
use unless they have established legal&#13;
idency at home for voting purposes and because&#13;
the 18 year old vote change most of them will not&#13;
qualified to register in the precinct in which they&#13;
to school."&#13;
cKenna characterized the bill as an attempt&#13;
minimize the effect of the new 18 year old voting&#13;
. lany legislators expect the addition of 18 year&#13;
to the electorate to significantly affect the&#13;
come of the local and state elections in college&#13;
unities.&#13;
lcKenna said the bill stood a good chance of&#13;
Ing the Assembly but added on his own behalf,&#13;
I think this bill is a bad bill . . . but it passed 25-4."&#13;
lcKenna then spoke about Senate Bill 180, 314&#13;
the Assembly, that is designed to test the power&#13;
the President to commit U.S. troops in unred&#13;
wars. Similar to a bill passed by the&#13;
by Dean Loumos&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
At an all Faculty meeting last Wednesday,&#13;
pril 21, a resolution was presented f&gt;y Professor t»/ _Harbeson, representing the Social Science&#13;
ion. The resolution stated:&#13;
That the Parkside Faculty opposes the&#13;
pre ence on campus of armed security&#13;
P r~onnel carrying sidearms and mace&#13;
during daylight hours.&#13;
Ile further explained that armed security were&#13;
f&gt;" much in evidence in Greenquist Hall and that&#13;
~tmosphere at Parkside did not warrant the&#13;
~ 1: of the security patrol. He added that "we&#13;
lter resolve this now before something Tns.'' He also said that there have been a few&#13;
1 ents where guns were not involved, but could&#13;
\ been.&#13;
Ral ~hancellor Irvin G. Wyllie then introduc~d&#13;
S· Hanso~, from Central Administration m&#13;
150~, Who 1s the security head. He gave a short&#13;
~ ~ in Which he continually emphasized that "If&#13;
give the security the authority to make arrests&#13;
Y should be armed "&#13;
He J · Gr a so revealed that some of our campuses,&#13;
~ Bay for example do not have armed&#13;
nty a d · · ' · M di \\. • ec1s1on that was made m a son. )Ir ered •e took the floor and explained that he was&#13;
Protecr by the Regents to " beef up security and&#13;
bar !0n on campuses even if it meant 'canUo~ing&#13;
Faculty positi~ns'." This order was later&#13;
rit ect because of outside pressure, but the&#13;
lllinint Y Patrol were armed and received the&#13;
idea urn 20 hours training on the use of their&#13;
rrns.&#13;
t:afessor Applebaum added he didn't believe&#13;
lldear1&#13;
ven the authority to arrest meant having a&#13;
1~ · To him that reasoning didn't follow. ve b · Hanson answered "admittedly arrests&#13;
~n ' · ed eJtarn made without sidearms," but then cit&#13;
rlti P_le Where a gun was needed " to give out a&#13;
ng ticket."&#13;
SENATOR DALE 1cKE. ·.'&#13;
&gt;&#13;
0&#13;
u&#13;
., •&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
•&#13;
Massachusetts legislature, it forbids state citizen&#13;
from serving in undeclared wars. The&#13;
Massachusetts bill was taken to the Supreme Court&#13;
to test its constitutionality. The court refused to&#13;
make a ruling on the grounds that the state had not&#13;
gone through the standard procedure of litigation in&#13;
the lower federal courts.&#13;
According to McKenna the ·Wi co in bill.&#13;
int oduced farch 18. w imm i te ~ ~&#13;
opposition senators who attempted to dilut i&#13;
effectiveness via amendment. He said " ' tion 1&#13;
rob states 'Any agrieved inhabitant of thi tat on&#13;
his own behalf . . . may bring an appropria c- tion in the United States upreme Court ... to&#13;
defend and enforce such rights of th individu I&#13;
under section B . . . . "&#13;
Faculty Oppose&#13;
Armed Security&#13;
On Campus&#13;
~ re&lt;-olut&#13;
ilh four Facull~&#13;
ar &#13;
April 2&amp;. I!HI..&#13;
Hearing Attracts Two&#13;
'lIKE t\l RTIt of The 'e~ ...cope taU&#13;
The Open Public Hr-artngs on&#13;
tenure crrteria held b} a special&#13;
rl'gt'nt eornrmttee last Frida&gt;&#13;
"as attended b~ ''''0 peopl~&#13;
("tIl( \\ a a "('Y.. cope reporter&#13;
th&lt;' other wu \ "" Prof of&#13;
l't \ rc Ben Grt"t"n('haum&#13;
(irecncllaum pre cered the onlv&#13;
I , lIollS on cnrcrta&#13;
(,r rt~um remark were&#13;
unun f) or n draft report of&#13;
ht . lentl 1&gt;1\ I IOn Sub&#13;
eornmrt tue un Pl'r onnel&#13;
Ih'\ It'\\ PU!ll'IC Ttw draft&#13;
n'port I':\elf tot,11s ~flmt' 1("0&#13;
pil~t&#13;
'Ill", ,'ntlal or hi remarks&#13;
In' a folll)\\&#13;
lh'luhH" \\"'I~hl~ or 50 pt'f&#13;
ll'nl, Jl} pl'f (:t'Ol Olndlil per c('nl&#13;
huuld t&gt;(o.1 l~nl"(l to the thrt '&#13;
tr.llhllOIMI ar'iI or actl\ It).&#13;
IC.ldlln~ fo('holart) ..u:lI\'11yand&#13;
~'nH"&#13;
"In n,O('",al promoll nand&#13;
,,'nun' 11ua"01\.... whl'n' the&#13;
t-: "t;ull"'" ('omnllltt"· ha!'t&#13;
(Irt..rlllmlUanll~ ad\('r.l' 10&#13;
lurtll"llUn l'lln(:l'rntn~ an 10&#13;
ill\ Idu.l) hi' h~lll bt.' notlflt.'d of&#13;
1111 I.,·, ,lIld hall bt' 10\ 1t&lt;'&lt;110&#13;
kelch I&#13;
3032 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
Phone 637-2533&#13;
Uhl_u ••• .tj. lMIarli .n" "lolli's)&#13;
speak to the committee on his&#13;
0\\0" behalf If he w ishes He may&#13;
brmg another member or the&#13;
Iacuhv as an advisor ..&#13;
Teacher:-. should be evaluated&#13;
pr irn arily b~ student&#13;
que:-.t1onnal re 'Ideally. the&#13;
(IUeStionnaire should be&#13;
developed administered and&#13;
tabula led b) students In&#13;
. peclat snuauore ....such as that&#13;
of an IOstructor trying real&#13;
1000\ auom the opmtnn of his&#13;
(..ollea~u~ "ill be invited"&#13;
"Some publishable scholarly&#13;
&lt;JClI\·ll} should be expected of&#13;
all faculty The amount expected&#13;
mUSl recognize the&#13;
hmltal10n duc to facilities and&#13;
other duties under which the&#13;
IOdlvldual faculty member may&#13;
hr working." Extraordinary&#13;
puhlic service could count as a&#13;
lempOrar) subsl1tute for&#13;
...cholarly activity&#13;
Finally. sen'ice ",ork should&#13;
melude both general public&#13;
st.'rVlce and Universit',- sen'ice.&#13;
.. An individual ought not to&#13;
rl.... &lt;..eiv(' an)· service credit for&#13;
ck)ing only public service arid&#13;
leaving his colleagues home to&#13;
do the dirty work."&#13;
The members of the regents&#13;
committee Suggested Prof.&#13;
Greenebaum check with UW!\1&#13;
and Green Bay re: student&#13;
evaluation. Evidently there&#13;
have been significant problems&#13;
with student evaluation at these&#13;
campuses&#13;
After the heanng Newscupe&#13;
spoke briefly with Asst. Prof.&#13;
Greenebaum. He explained that&#13;
his committee was composed&#13;
primarily of interested teachers&#13;
(five tenured and five nontenured&#13;
members of the Science&#13;
Division I. He also mentioned&#13;
that six students were consulted.&#13;
VISTA:&#13;
Advisor Hopes To Instill&#13;
by Mark Timpany&#13;
or The :\ewscope Starr&#13;
Joseph G. Baier is an advisor&#13;
to the Parkside faculty and&#13;
administration. He represents&#13;
the University Faculty Council,&#13;
the executive committee of the&#13;
University Faculty Assembly.&#13;
.:'\lr. Baier was sent here, with&#13;
the approval of the Parkside&#13;
administration and University&#13;
Committee, early in January of&#13;
this year. At that time. shortly&#13;
after the dismissal and reinstatement&#13;
of 27 Parkside&#13;
faculty, the Council felt the need&#13;
for someone" . . who had had&#13;
a broad ~ulty government and&#13;
They make things happen in the rural pove t h&#13;
the big city slum, the, Indian reservati~nY 0110"·.&#13;
attorneys make the law serve the . VISTA&#13;
business specialists help develop m\lOO,·r. VISTA . nonty enterprIses.&#13;
VISTAS teach, work with street&#13;
develop adult education programs and 0 g~.&#13;
cooperatives. They do all these things and I rga....&#13;
.. a ot m&lt;rt&#13;
. you ve got to hang tough to be a VISTA.The&#13;
IS tough and the road to accomplishment· JOb&#13;
one. You've got to be mature, dedicated an~ca7&#13;
You've got to want to donate a year of your"hr '&#13;
helpmg th,IS natI?n's poor quit being poor. e to&#13;
If you re sertOUS about changing the wa f&#13;
world, if Y&lt;lUhave the skills and the desire toy~&#13;
0&#13;
lbr&#13;
you think you can make things better check' rye,if&#13;
1&#13;
. ,tnWlth&#13;
the. Vo unteers In SerVIce To America re&#13;
tatIves on campus. VISTA films will be Shown~&#13;
today and tomorrow. .GO&#13;
Have a question on VISTA?? Call toll free-Ill&gt;&#13;
424-8589·&#13;
Interested in changing the way things are?? You&#13;
can explore various ways to make the scene better by&#13;
talking with former VISTA Volunteers on campuS&#13;
today and tomorrow. Ex-Volunteers In Service to&#13;
America have an information booth set up in&#13;
Greenquist Hall from 9:00 to 5:00 to discUSS the&#13;
program and recruit mature, skilled men and women&#13;
who want to help solve some of the problems this&#13;
country faces.&#13;
Within VISTA the emphasis has shifted to the&#13;
specialist volunteers who bring specific knowledge&#13;
and skill to the people they serve. Therefore. in addition&#13;
to men and women with natural ability and a&#13;
well-rounded education, VISTA representatives will&#13;
actively seek out specialiSts. They will look for those&#13;
with professional training and degrees in law,&#13;
business, education, health services, architecture,&#13;
city planning, the social sciences and other fields.&#13;
The specialist volunteer puts skills into action.&#13;
Tuesday, May 4&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
as taught by Maharishi Mahesh '!'ogi&#13;
Introductory meeting&#13;
MEDITATION&#13;
Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall&#13;
4 p:m. and 8 p.m.&#13;
SantaJta&#13;
Snag&#13;
Skelch II&#13;
2133 91st SI.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Phone 694·1727&#13;
(Anol&gt;S ffOnt. 51. Thc:rue's)&#13;
administrative exper"&#13;
able to assist the f lence to be&#13;
d&#13;
'" acuIty a ministration in and&#13;
th . . perform,&#13;
err respective roles " ng&#13;
Baier states that h· h&#13;
instill in the facult&#13;
e&#13;
oPes to&#13;
derstanding of the Y Ian Un·&#13;
regulations of the Un,:U es. and&#13;
W&#13;
·· versltv of isconsm and the "w· .&#13;
tradition" which . ISConsin lllvolves&#13;
great faculty role in OV ,a&#13;
the University. He no~ese~~ng&#13;
faculty is strongly d'. he 'hth aViSO WIt e administratio l)&#13;
decision makers and" the&#13;
Regents, the final d . Ihe&#13;
maker." eCISlon&#13;
Mr. Baier is largely unaware&#13;
A Chance For Change&#13;
LIDDY CORRECTION&#13;
It has come to our attention&#13;
that the recent article on&#13;
visiting poet James Lidd'&#13;
contained two errors c011-&#13;
cerning the poet's coming to&#13;
teach at Parkside. First. James&#13;
Liddy will be guest writer-inresidence&#13;
during the 1972-73&#13;
school year. Second, Herbert&#13;
Kubly.. present writer-inresidence,&#13;
will remain at&#13;
Parkside and will not be&#13;
replaced by Liddy as the article&#13;
indicated. Newscope regrets&#13;
these ambiguitIes.&#13;
NEWH&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweise&amp;&#13;
•.. but you&#13;
•&#13;
know that!!&#13;
being murdered, in defense ci&#13;
anticommunism, a slogan&#13;
which conceals a sinisler&#13;
combination of economic aad&#13;
political. justification by tbe&#13;
Wall Street-Pentagoo Eo·&#13;
terprise. Supporting dictators&#13;
who claim to be friendsin onler&#13;
to maintain profitable alliances&#13;
with capitalism is the game that&#13;
Washington has been plal111&amp;&#13;
for decades. Franco in SpaiD&#13;
Chiang . Kai-shek ID&#13;
"nationalist" China, Stroessnef&#13;
in Paraguay, la Junta in&#13;
Greece, and Ky io Sooth&#13;
Vietnam (who recently galt&#13;
concessions. to all Americanoil&#13;
companies) are a few of tlf&#13;
allies of American democrat1&#13;
The military organizatioll&#13;
that defends the interestso/tir&#13;
American government (noltit&#13;
people) has finally been ".&#13;
posed in the Calleyaffair.",.&#13;
lieutenant, as a hwnan l)eUIg.lS&#13;
guilty of the charges passed by&#13;
his comrades, but perhaPSI&#13;
professional military mill&#13;
should not be tried in ",on, "&#13;
even ~onsidered a hum~&#13;
species, since the d~ree&#13;
alienation in this caste IS sam;&#13;
that it has ceased to func~ II&#13;
a sensitive or moral edJIY&#13;
Duty, honor, palriotism,1W&#13;
free world, national "'::&#13;
have evidenllY subdued t!Jt&#13;
principles attached to ~&#13;
universal concept of lo\'t&#13;
the human condition. ed frOI'&#13;
A lession can be learn is III&#13;
defeat, and the first one&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
VISTA&#13;
(Volunteers In Service To America)&#13;
NEEDS: BUSINESS MAJORS HEALTH SPECIALISTS&#13;
LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS EDUCATION MAJORS&#13;
and THOUSANDS of others!&#13;
WE HAVE A LOT TO SHARE.&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES IN GREENQUIST HALL. TODAY AND TOMORROW. - 9- 5&#13;
VISTA FLICK' TO • DAy AND TOMORROW 4:00 P.M.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The war in Indochina is lost, it&#13;
has been sinc~ it started, and is&#13;
now a smelling cadaver that has&#13;
been exposed to the open for ten&#13;
years. The Vietnamese (these&#13;
are people too) and American&#13;
lives have been sacrificed in&#13;
vain, and the mental and&#13;
physical suffering that have&#13;
been paid by those directly or&#13;
indirectly involved in this&#13;
bloodbath is hard to be&#13;
evaluated. We are left with a&#13;
war-guilt complex that will be&#13;
in our conscience, if we have&#13;
any left, for the rest of our lives.&#13;
The military termination of&#13;
the war (the moral occurred a&#13;
long time ago) is far from sight&#13;
in spite of the time-table&#13;
produced by the president,&#13;
since it is quality, not quantity,&#13;
that in the last instance will&#13;
determine the final question of&#13;
hostilities. While personnel are&#13;
leaving Vietnam, new kinds of&#13;
bombs are tried in the most&#13;
sadomasoquistic experiments&#13;
that the world has known:&#13;
napalm, Riot Control Agent CS,&#13;
blockbusters, etc. It is indeed&#13;
symptomatic that in this&#13;
culture, one of our heroes has&#13;
been James Bond, the agent&#13;
With permission to kill.&#13;
The means of communication&#13;
~re used by the forces in power&#13;
to such a fashion that one&#13;
won~ers if they are maintaining&#13;
a dlalogue with a zombieculture.&#13;
"Our boys .... "our&#13;
brothers" keep murdering, and&#13;
Students' International&#13;
Meditation Society&#13;
iL°.., \e\\ - it"", Here -it":'; Feminine&#13;
ilos FOR FR.\I LES ONLY!&#13;
It's all in the Cut-It\ the "SEX LOOK"&#13;
~tS~;&#13;
iNI §:))0U9&#13;
LERMAN HAIRDRESSERS&#13;
THE FIRST WI1'l1 THE NEWEST&#13;
Stylists at your service Tues. 8:30 - 6;&#13;
Wod., Thurs., Fri. 8:30 - 8; Sal. 8 to 5&#13;
Member or Wise. lIair Fashion Committee&#13;
-:\::'\D ::'\OWFor.&#13;
the Budget-Minded, a Mini-Salon with TtIlNI·PRICESbehInd&#13;
Sketc:::hll-'"The Back Boo It CaJl CM-I121 ask lor "n. BI" .,. {or young and old.&#13;
, , . e au DOOI',"&#13;
p 2&#13;
aring Attract&#13;
:\JIKEKLH111 ofThe&#13;
\pdl-. I •l.&#13;
T\\'O&#13;
hould&#13;
public&#13;
rvice.&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION&#13;
as taught by Maharishi Mahesh yogi&#13;
Introductory meeting&#13;
Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall&#13;
4 p:m. and 8 p.m.&#13;
Students' International&#13;
Meditation Society&#13;
lhe&#13;
Sa11ta11a&#13;
Sltag&#13;
-iL·s Fe1ni11i11e&#13;
it·. L ~, -L&#13;
H's all i11 th ,ut- It'-. the · SEX LOOK"'&#13;
it\ ) O\IIS - at&#13;
LEHMAN -I IRDR&#13;
'l HE FIR T WI'l'II THE I'\EWEST&#13;
• lw li!ts at your service Tues. 8.30 - 6;&#13;
W'! ., Thur ., Fri. 8:30 - 8: Sat. 8 to 5&#13;
. kt l&lt;'h I&#13;
ERS&#13;
3032 Lathrop ve.&#13;
Raine&#13;
Phone G37-2533&#13;
2133 91st St.&#13;
Cl!ltt,.tta lla4 • at._ aDd h:ohl"•&gt;&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Phone 694-1727&#13;
(A&lt;"ro~ from St. Tht:rese'~)&#13;
emb r of Wi c. Hair Fa bion Committee&#13;
- .\ D _"O\V - or. the Budget-. tinded, a . tini-S 1 'th .. II",... PRICE&#13;
beh1ntl · etch 11-"The Back O ~.on " 1 " ,u · S-&#13;
'all ,112'7 1 k !or "Th oor .. . for young and old. · · · e Back Door."&#13;
lea\·ing his colleagues home lo&#13;
do the dirt~ work."&#13;
The members of the regents&#13;
committee suggested Prof.&#13;
Greenebaum check with CWM&#13;
and Green Bay re: student&#13;
e\'aluation Evidently there&#13;
h3ve been significant problems&#13;
"1th ·tudent e\'aluatJon at these&#13;
campu e:- After the hearing :\'ewscope&#13;
~poke briefly with Asst Prof&#13;
Greenebaum. He explained that&#13;
h1. committee was composed&#13;
primarily of intere ·ted teachers&#13;
tf1\'e tenured and five nontenured&#13;
member· of the c1ence&#13;
Di\'uon). He al o mentioned&#13;
that 1x student were conulled.&#13;
&#13;
Advisor Hopes To Instill&#13;
by :\lark Timpany&#13;
of The :\'ewscope Staff&#13;
Joseph G. Baier is an advisor&#13;
to the Parkside faculty and&#13;
administration. He represents&#13;
the University Faculty Council,&#13;
the executive committee of the&#13;
University Faculty Assembly.&#13;
:\Ir Baier was sent here, with&#13;
the approval of the Parkside&#13;
administration and University&#13;
Committee, early in January of&#13;
this year. At that time. shortly&#13;
after the dismissal and reinstatement&#13;
of 27 Parkside&#13;
faculty, the Council felt the need&#13;
for someone " ... who had had&#13;
a broad ~ulty government and&#13;
administrative exper·&#13;
able to assist the f ience to&#13;
administration in peacuflty and&#13;
th · r orrn&#13;
eir respective roles . in&#13;
Baier states that h · h&#13;
instill in the facult~- op to&#13;
derstanding of the · 1&#13;
an un.&#13;
regulations of the Cni'.~ e . and&#13;
W. · \Crs1t\' of&#13;
1sconsin and the "\\" . . tradition" which i·n . tlscon in&#13;
\O ve great faculty role in ov . a&#13;
the University. He no1e e:.;ng&#13;
faculty is strong!~· ct' . he . h , a \'ISO&#13;
wit the administrat· I)&#13;
d . . ion the&#13;
ec1s10n makers and&#13;
Regents, the final d . ~he&#13;
maker." ec1s1on&#13;
Mr. Baier is largely un&#13;
VISTA=&#13;
aware&#13;
A Chance For Change&#13;
Interested in changing the way things are?? You&#13;
can explore various ways lo make the scene better by&#13;
talking with former VISTA Volunteers on campus&#13;
todav and tomorrow. Ex-Volunteers In Service to&#13;
Ame.rica have an information booth set up in&#13;
Greenquisl Hall from 9:00 to 5:00 to discuss the&#13;
program and recruit mature, skilled men and women&#13;
who want lo help solve some of the problems this&#13;
country faces.&#13;
They make things happen in the rural pove t h&#13;
the big city slum, the. Indian reservatiiny ; 11011&#13;
attorneys make the law serve the poo · ,&#13;
1&#13;
STA&#13;
business specialists help develop mi· r .. \ISTA . nor,ty&#13;
terpnses. VISTAS teach, work with str l&#13;
develop _adult education programs andee O ga&#13;
cooperatives. They do all these things and I rgal!Ut , a ot more . You ve got to hang tough to be a VISTA. The&#13;
1s tough and the road to accomplishment ·s joh&#13;
Y , 1 a ro&#13;
one. ou ve got to be mature dedicated and&#13;
Within VISTA the emphasis has shifted to the&#13;
. pecialist volunteers who bring specific knowledge&#13;
and skill lo the people they serve. Therefore, in addition&#13;
to men and women with natural ability and a&#13;
well-rounded education, VISTA representatives will&#13;
actively seek out specialists. They will look for those&#13;
with professional training and degrees in law,&#13;
busines , education, health services, architecture,&#13;
city planning, the social sciences and other fields.&#13;
, ' capabl&#13;
You _ve go~ to w_ant to donate a year of your rr&#13;
helping th1&#13;
1s· nati_on's poor quit being poor. 1 e lo&#13;
If you re ser10us about changing the way r&#13;
world,_ if y-0u have the skills and the desire to s:~, the&#13;
you thmk you can make things better check · 'If&#13;
1 . ' In,,,,,&#13;
the Vo unteers In Service To America re tat. ~e&#13;
1ves on campus. VISTA films will be shown at 4&#13;
today and tomorrow.&#13;
llave a question on VISTA?? Call toll free_&#13;
424-8580.&#13;
The specialist volunteer puts skills into action.&#13;
LIDDY CORRECTION&#13;
Il has come to our attention&#13;
that the recent article on&#13;
visiting poet James Lidd·&#13;
contained two errors co~-&#13;
cerning the poet's coming lo&#13;
teach at Parkside. First. James&#13;
Liddy will be guest writer-inre&#13;
idence during the 1972-73&#13;
- chool year. Second, Herbert&#13;
Kubly, present writer-inresidence.&#13;
will remain at&#13;
Parkside and will not be&#13;
replaced by Liddy as the article&#13;
indicated. Newscope regrets&#13;
these ambiguil,P.s.&#13;
NEW!!&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweisec&#13;
... but you&#13;
-&#13;
know that!!&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The war in Indochina is lost, it&#13;
has been sine!'! it started, and is&#13;
now a smelling cadaver that has&#13;
been exposed to the open for ten&#13;
years. The Vietnamese (these&#13;
are people tool and American&#13;
lives have been sacrificed in&#13;
vain, and the mental and&#13;
physical suffering that have&#13;
been paid by those directly or&#13;
indirectly involved in this&#13;
bloodbath is hard to be&#13;
evaluated. We are left with a&#13;
war-guilt complex that will be&#13;
in our conscience, if' we have&#13;
any left, for the rest of our lives.&#13;
The military termination of&#13;
the war (the moral occurred a&#13;
long time ago) is far from sight&#13;
in spite of the time-table&#13;
produced by the president,&#13;
since it is quality, not quantity,&#13;
that in the last instance will&#13;
determine the final question of&#13;
hostilities. While personnel are&#13;
leaving Vietnam, new kinds of&#13;
bombs are tried in the most&#13;
sadomasoquistic experiments&#13;
that the world has known:&#13;
napalm, Riot Control Agent CS,&#13;
blockbusters, etc. It is indeed&#13;
symptomatic that in this&#13;
culture, one of our heroes has&#13;
~en James Bond, the agent&#13;
with permission to kill.&#13;
The means of communication&#13;
~re used by the forces in power&#13;
m such a fashion that one&#13;
won~ers if they are maintaining&#13;
a dialogue with a zombiecul&#13;
tur e. "Our boys", "our&#13;
brothers" keep murdering, and&#13;
VISTA&#13;
being murdered, in deferu e ct&#13;
anticommunism, a slogan&#13;
which conceals a sini ter&#13;
combination of economic and&#13;
political justification b\' the&#13;
Wall Street-Pentagon· Eoterprise.&#13;
Supporting diclalol'$&#13;
who claim to be friends in order&#13;
to maintain profitable allian&#13;
with capitalism is the game that&#13;
Washington has been playmg&#13;
for decades. Franco in pa&#13;
Chiang . Kai-shek 1n&#13;
"nationalist" China, Stroe&#13;
in Paraguay, la Junta •&#13;
Greece, and Ky m out•&#13;
Vietnam (who recently ga1&#13;
concessions to all American oiJ&#13;
companies) are a few of tll'&#13;
allies of American democracy&#13;
The military organizall&#13;
that defends the interest oltbe&#13;
American government nol tll'&#13;
people) has finally been&#13;
posed in the Calley affair 'l1uS&#13;
lieutenant as a human bem ,&#13;
guilty of the charges passl'd •&#13;
his comrades, but perhaps 1&#13;
professional military ma&#13;
should not be tried in court. or&#13;
even ~onsidered a hu!ll d&#13;
species, since the d~ree&#13;
alienation in this caste is so&#13;
that it has ceased to functiO!l 15&#13;
a sensitive or moral entI&#13;
Duty, honor, patriotism,. f]Jg&#13;
free world, national m&#13;
have evidently subdued&#13;
principles attached to&#13;
universal concept of love&#13;
the human condition. ,,&#13;
A lession can be learned ,&#13;
defeat, and the fir5t one&#13;
(Volunteers In Service To America)&#13;
NEEDS: BUSINESS MAJORS HEALTH SPECIALISTS&#13;
LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS EDUCATION MAJORS&#13;
and THOUSANDS of others!&#13;
WE HAVE_ A LOT TO SHARE.&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES N&#13;
5&#13;
I GREENQUIST HALL, TODAY AND TOMORROW , 9-&#13;
VISTA FLICK: TODAY ANO TOMORROW 4:00 P.M. &#13;
'Wisconsin Tradition'&#13;
jar concerns regard-&#13;
, l/Jt ilia nnel decisions&#13;
IC f'cul~~ at the time of&#13;
~ we: ;iring. He responded&#13;
Ibt: lfIauestion concerning ,the&#13;
III a ~ent of faculty review&#13;
fllabll&#13;
called for in the&#13;
;.odeh~~;,sDecember 10 [Klint&#13;
",..net 0"1 have no idea. I was&#13;
l"'I"~ved and will not be&#13;
~ ~ed" Baier was unaware&#13;
",01&gt; ";"ent Parkside Faculty&#13;
~ lbCi;uon statement calling&#13;
~e establishmento~ those&#13;
~h1iCguidelines.Mr. Baler ~as&#13;
..... officially met With llt,'er id&#13;
C&#13;
oncerning the Parksi e&#13;
JO'i(lle .'&#13;
r~euIlYAssOcIatIOn.&#13;
ReIlardingthe use of a. special&#13;
rt'iieW commi ttee, In the&#13;
~atter of the "super six" at th&#13;
time of the firing of 27 ParkSid:&#13;
faculty, Mr. Baier said, "This&#13;
has not b~n University custom&#13;
nor practice. I think it was&#13;
c~eat:d under very special&#13;
~lrcuI?stances. I have heard of&#13;
Its e~lstence. I have also heard&#13;
that It no longer does exist." He&#13;
stated that " ... there is no&#13;
!egal ~tatu~for that committee&#13;
In University structure."&#13;
In a speech before the faculty&#13;
last Wednesday, Joseph Baier&#13;
suggested that the admnustr-ator&#13;
is the only person&#13;
who can seen the whole picture&#13;
of the University. He did state&#13;
the " ... administrator doesn't&#13;
last long if he loses his&#13;
faculties. "&#13;
Recipients of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-P arkside Dis ti nguished&#13;
Teaching Awards for 1971 are Oliver&#13;
Hayward, Peter Martin, Robert Schrader&#13;
and James Ward. Each will receive an&#13;
award check for $500, which will be&#13;
presented to him at the Spring Honors&#13;
Convocation.&#13;
Recipients of Honorable Mention for&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Awards are Paul&#13;
Beyer, Walter Graffin, Henry Mann and&#13;
Roman Schauble .&#13;
Teachers Awards Committee Members:&#13;
Leon Applebaum, Stella Gray, Alan&#13;
Grossberg, Norbert Isenberg, Herbert&#13;
Kubly (chairman), Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
William Jeranek, William Loendorf,&#13;
Warren Nedry, Florence Onnhfk, Evelyn&#13;
sagat, Kathleen Turner. '&#13;
It&#13;
a&#13;
I:&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
..&#13;
APriI!!..ta. Vietor Christ Janner&#13;
Mythology and magic in architecture&#13;
P!f ..i&#13;
"I say that one stands before&#13;
the object condemned, helpless,&#13;
and fundamentally out of&#13;
control." "We think we can take&#13;
a simp.le idea like analysis,&#13;
synthesis and solution as a&#13;
mock-up model of life and learn&#13;
from iL"&#13;
It is Christ-Janner's belief&#13;
that man exists rationally in 8&#13;
profoundly irrational world, as&#13;
he said Thursday night in&#13;
Greenquist hall. It is this&#13;
TOTHE EDITOR&#13;
recognize that we are&#13;
nIpCIIlSibiefor having killed 1.5&#13;
milIiGIl Civilians,most of them&#13;
Americanand allied actions,&#13;
lid that we are not in any&#13;
p:ition to dictate moral conllJrt&#13;
10 anyone,and finally, too,&#13;
daIt the empire is collapsing in&#13;
lpiteor the injection to revive it&#13;
poriodicallythrough the circus&#13;
IIIoa 10 the moon.&#13;
Ilidtey Mouseshould retire to&#13;
Ibole and meditate about how&#13;
..... nUy,beastly and insane&#13;
- has been. After this&#13;
....ration he should self-&#13;
~ and perhaps from the&#13;
1Sb~ will emerge a New&#13;
.\alorO:an, a total human being&#13;
Who will see in himself a more&#13;
bumble, limited, and conIrIcktory&#13;
person and in his&#13;
10lio.. man another human&#13;
~ rather than a client to&#13;
I With in business or&#13;
IOm.thing that has to be&#13;
:::.OYedin order to get the job&#13;
Jose Ortega&#13;
Dear Editor' As' ,&#13;
Parkaia&#13;
concerned student at&#13;
~ . de Ueelthat it is my duty&#13;
....."':"~ oul a gross injustice&#13;
lbest~ been perpetrated on&#13;
I1IIde t bodtbody of UWP BY the&#13;
Then. y of UWP.&#13;
II theIn''·U JY.;&gt; ce to which I refer&#13;
IUd ~Iection of the New ~:~tGovernment&#13;
IlUdenlUon. The reason the&#13;
oJlI!ticebody perpetrated the&#13;
On Itself was not by&#13;
commission of an act, rather by&#13;
the omission of an act.&#13;
The act was voting in the&#13;
recent SGA elections.&#13;
FAILURE to vote by some 3,000&#13;
plus students was the reason for&#13;
the election of an SGA with&#13;
Luddites in control (Nice&#13;
campaigning Luddites!).&#13;
I, for one, have nothing&#13;
against any individual Luddite,&#13;
nor the group for that matter.&#13;
However, my' beliefs do not&#13;
happen to coincide with theirs.&#13;
To set matters straight, neither&#13;
am I an avid Tim Eaker fan. I&#13;
am, however, an advocate of a&#13;
strong stud~nt government&#13;
acting on those matters which&#13;
affect the relationship between&#13;
the student hody and the&#13;
university administration.&#13;
I cannot stand idly by while a&#13;
Luddite-sponsored, Ludditecarried&#13;
proposal to ratify the&#13;
"People's Peace Treaty" is&#13;
carried. Anyone who read the&#13;
last issue of Newscope could not&#13;
help but notice that those&#13;
members of SGA voting to&#13;
ratify are either declared&#13;
Luddites or were elected on the&#13;
Halloween Party ticket, itself&#13;
loaded with Luddites. No&#13;
matter who sponsored the&#13;
proposal, however, the SGA had&#13;
no business voting on it. According&#13;
to Article I, Section A.6.&#13;
under Student Government of&#13;
the Constitution: "The senate&#13;
shall investigate all policy&#13;
affecting student life and interests&#13;
they deem necessary."&#13;
If the SGA now seated deems it&#13;
necessary to ratify something&#13;
pertaining to anything so&#13;
personal as my beliefs concerning&#13;
the points covered in&#13;
the "People's Peace Treaty",&#13;
then it's already time for the&#13;
senate to investigate itself on&#13;
the matter of its collecth·e&#13;
swelled head. The senate can&#13;
"investigate" to its heart's&#13;
content, but it had better dray.&#13;
the line there Wltil the investigation&#13;
is complete. (I&#13;
believe "investigation" caJls for&#13;
a gathering of facts before&#13;
reaching some conclusion.)&#13;
My congratulations to&#13;
Senator Jeanette Dremel and&#13;
the other members or SGA who&#13;
had the forethought to consider&#13;
whether individual students&#13;
would desire to have someone&#13;
else voting for them on so&#13;
touchy a matter.&#13;
Meanwhile the SGA had&#13;
better clean its own constitutional&#13;
house before telling&#13;
me how to run mine. I'didn't&#13;
vote Halloween Party so 1 have&#13;
to thaok the pathetically&#13;
apathetic silent majority for my&#13;
plight.&#13;
John Leighton&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN THE NEWSCOPE STAFF&#13;
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED&#13;
STAFF MEMBERS NEEDED FOR NEXT YEAR&#13;
CREDITS AVAILABLE SALARIES&#13;
Get your name in the paper&#13;
DO SOMETHING FOR UWP -IT NEEDS IT AND NEll/SCOPE NEEDS YOU&#13;
COME TO THE STAFF MEETING THURSDAY, 1:30&#13;
KENOSHA CAMPUS, ME'SCOPE OFFICE&#13;
Tuesda)', Apnl 27 Red .. 1&#13;
Joanne Schlegel of l;WP musIc&#13;
facult)' will present a plano&#13;
recital 8:00 p.m Room 103,&#13;
Greenquist Hall T~nnl&#13;
Rangers vs ~Iarqu&lt;tte 2.&#13;
p.m. Pershing Courts. Racine&#13;
Golf. Rangers V5 Lo~ola&#13;
:. .... -$' «ll~~~~'8ll1~'I8IliIllll"lSlIllllll_•• __ ._"lIllllilll;l~illl;l~&#13;
Newscope&#13;
rationality which makes man&#13;
believe he can marupulate the&#13;
world with schemes of interaction.&#13;
This feeling is caughl m hi&#13;
creations 10 which he relies&#13;
beavily on myth and the natural&#13;
lay of the land He cnueued&#13;
technology for Its funcllOnal&#13;
aspect as lo the human 0,&#13;
perience. As be sa) _ "whoever&#13;
said thal functionalism ,. a&#13;
archilecll.o-e'! "ben we belle\e&#13;
that eVer)1hmg is packaged In a&#13;
place and everything in lIS&#13;
place, then "'e run mto thiS kmd&#13;
of reliance that totally depends&#13;
upon this perfect kInd of Idea&#13;
that I do architecture because II&#13;
CA p&#13;
He ho.. eel som&#13;
""urche .. hI"" are d&#13;
using hi archtol)pI(a) m&#13;
lo create an .lmaM m~ heal&#13;
appear.nC' of the nOt rlor&#13;
desIgn Som of the oho "ere&#13;
so spectacular that the aud.&#13;
.. round 100) r etten ap&#13;
proached that of a fIr "&#13;
dlsplay&#13;
. Ir Chn t ·Janner not onl)&#13;
poke but demon Ira. d&#13;
through hi 0,,""" cnoaho that&#13;
"archJtectw-- \erb. not a&#13;
noun, and UlIert'for It 10\"01\:&#13;
I A bean ~hlCh nolonl)&#13;
ph) !Calbut PJrI'Ua! a '" II&#13;
BE T&#13;
$amota In §,ined&#13;
,o/J~ w /J1aIian §'oorM&#13;
liquor Store&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
Monday. April 26, 0 lrlCI&#13;
Attorne) Talk. Burton SCOll ,.,11&#13;
speak on "Lawful Dissent'·&#13;
7:30 p.rn Room 0111&#13;
Greenqwsl Hall ponsored b)&#13;
the Pre-La .. Club&#13;
Warren 'edry Edllor&#13;
Marc Eisen :-.;-~ EdItor&#13;
John Koloen Copy EdI.or&#13;
Jim 'o)an BuslOe. tana er&#13;
John LeIghton Amerll IIlg&#13;
. lana ft'"&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, BoIl Soren~. BIll&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Dean Lowno , ,hke&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchard., Ken&#13;
Konkol, Ke\'In .leKay. James&#13;
Casper, Paul LornarUre, "en&#13;
Talis&#13;
PetTlf) In&#13;
Ba tball&#13;
Dominican&#13;
Domm n&#13;
prlr&#13;
Ran100&#13;
('our&#13;
r v&#13;
pm at&#13;
BUSI1''ESS STAFF'&#13;
areesSocha, Don .Iarjala, John&#13;
Gary, Barbara Scott&#13;
(loll&#13;
I t&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA- 658.3131&#13;
~wisconsin Tradition'&#13;
jor concerns regard- ,..., rna d .. ,J LU" It . personnel ec1s10ns&#13;
facu Yi·ssues at the time of were ded I ass firing. He re~pon&#13;
rn su·on concermng the&#13;
8 que . IO . tunent of faculty reV1ew&#13;
iablt es called for in the&#13;
d hn ' o · t 11 r's December 1 pom ce o "d I .,1 have no I ea. was&#13;
::ived and will not be&#13;
1.ed ,. Baier was unaware 011 -ec· ent Parkside Faculty lbt • a11· ation statement c mg&#13;
th establishment of those ~ e B. h _,11licguidelines. Mr. aier _as i-- officially met with&#13;
ere concerning the Parkside&#13;
lll,l'OO . t· raculty Assoc1a ion.&#13;
R arding the use of a. special&#13;
rt\iell committee, m the&#13;
~atter of the "super six" at the&#13;
time of the firing of 27 Parkside&#13;
faculty, Mr. Baier said, "This&#13;
has not been University custom&#13;
nor practice. I think it was&#13;
c~eat~d under very special&#13;
~1rcur_nstances. I have heard of&#13;
its e~1stence. I have also heard&#13;
that 1t no longer does exist.., H&#13;
stated that ". . . there is n~&#13;
!egal ~tatu:'"for that committee m University structure."&#13;
In a speech before the faculty&#13;
last Wednesday, Joseph Baier&#13;
su_g~ested that the administrator&#13;
is the only person&#13;
who can seen the whole picture&#13;
of the University. He did state&#13;
the " ... administrator doesn't&#13;
last long if he loses his&#13;
faculties."&#13;
Recipients of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Awards for 1971 are Oliver&#13;
Hayward, Peter Martin, Robert Schrader&#13;
and James Ward. Each will receive an&#13;
award check for $500, which will be&#13;
presented to him at the Spring Honors&#13;
Convocation.&#13;
Recipients of Honorable Mention for&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Awards are Paul&#13;
Beyer, Walter Graffin, Henry Mann and&#13;
Roman Schauble.&#13;
Teachers Awards Committee Members:&#13;
Leon Applebaum, Stella Gray, Alan&#13;
Grossberg, Norbert Isenberg, Herbert&#13;
Kubly (chairman), Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
William Jeranek, William Loendorf,&#13;
Warren Nedry, Florence Onninlc, Evelyn&#13;
Sagat, Kathleen Turner. '&#13;
Victor Christ Janner&#13;
Mythology and niagi in ar hi&#13;
.&#13;
' "I say that one stands before&#13;
the object condemned, helple ,&#13;
and fundamentally out of&#13;
control." "We think we can take a simple idea like analy i .&#13;
synthesis and solution as a&#13;
mock-up model of life and learn&#13;
from it."&#13;
It is Christ-Janner's belief&#13;
that man exists rationally in a&#13;
profoundly irrational world, a&#13;
he said Thursday night in&#13;
Greenquist hall. It is thi&#13;
tur,&#13;
TO THE EDITOR&#13;
recognize that we are&#13;
responsible for having killed 1.5&#13;
ion civilians, most of them&#13;
American and allied actions,&#13;
and that we are not in any&#13;
ition to dictate moral condiet&#13;
to anyone, and finally, too,&#13;
the empire is collapsing in&#13;
SJXle of the injection to revive it&#13;
nod1cally through the circus&#13;
to the moon.&#13;
1ckey Mouse should retire to&#13;
1 bile and meditate about how&#13;
arroganUy, beastly and insane&#13;
ha been. After this&#13;
ration he should selfct&#13;
and perhaps from the&#13;
e. will emerge a New&#13;
en~an, a total human being&#13;
will see in himself a more&#13;
mble, limited, and condictory&#13;
person and in his&#13;
ellow man another human&#13;
~ rather than a client to&#13;
1 with in business or mething that has to be&#13;
oyed in order to get the job&#13;
Jose Ortega&#13;
r Editor· As • I&#13;
Park ~ concerned student at&#13;
lo _ide 1 feel that it is my duty&#13;
~~ out a gross injustice as been perpetrated on&#13;
~Udent body of UWP BY the&#13;
Thent ~y of UWP.&#13;
thelnJUSlice to which I refer&#13;
hid ,election of the New -:t t Government&#13;
dent ion. The reason the&#13;
lice body_ perpetrated the on itself was not by&#13;
commission of an act, rather by&#13;
the omission of an act.&#13;
The act was voting in the&#13;
recent SGA elections.&#13;
FAILURE to vote by some 3,000&#13;
plus students was the reason for&#13;
the election of an SGA with&#13;
Luddites in control (Nice&#13;
campaigning Luddites! ).&#13;
I, for one, have nothing&#13;
against any individual Luddite,&#13;
nor the group for that matter.&#13;
However, my beliefs do not&#13;
happen to coincide with theirs.&#13;
To set matters straight, neither&#13;
am I an avid Tim Eaker fan. I&#13;
am, however, an advocate of a&#13;
strong student government&#13;
acting on those matters which&#13;
affect the relationship between&#13;
the student body and the&#13;
university administration.&#13;
I cannot stand idly by while a&#13;
Luddite-sponsored, Ludditecarried&#13;
proposal to ratify the&#13;
"People's Peace Treaty" is&#13;
carried. Anyone who read the&#13;
last issue of Newscope could not&#13;
help but notice that those&#13;
members of SGA voting to&#13;
ratify are either declared&#13;
Luddites or were elected on the&#13;
Halloween Party ticket, itself&#13;
loaded with Luddites. No&#13;
matter who sponsored the&#13;
proposal, however, the SGA had&#13;
no business voting on it. According&#13;
to Article I, Section A.6.&#13;
under Student Government of&#13;
the Constitution: "The senate&#13;
shall investigate all policy&#13;
affecting student life and interests&#13;
they deem necessary."&#13;
P7amout&gt; ~ f7med&#13;
@)~ w- #lalian P7oo&lt;/4&#13;
Liquor Store&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
KENOSHA- 658-313 1&#13;
If the SGA now seated deems it&#13;
necessary to ratify something&#13;
pertaining to anything . o&#13;
personal as my beliefs concerning&#13;
the points covered in&#13;
the "People's Peace Treaty•·,&#13;
then it's already time for the&#13;
senate to investigate itself on the matter of its collecth·e&#13;
swelled head. The enale can&#13;
"investigate" to its heart'.&#13;
content, but it had better dra\\&#13;
the line there until the inves&#13;
ti ga tion is complete. (I&#13;
believe "investigation" call for&#13;
a gathering of fact before&#13;
reaching some conclusion.)&#13;
My congratulation to&#13;
Senator Jeanette Dremel and&#13;
the other members of SGA who&#13;
had the forethought to con ider&#13;
whether individual student&#13;
would desire to have someone&#13;
else voting for them on so&#13;
touchy a matter.&#13;
Meanwhile the SGA had&#13;
better clean its own con·&#13;
stitutional house before telling me how to run mine. I · didn't&#13;
vote Halloween Party so I have&#13;
to thank the pathetically&#13;
apathetic silent majority for my&#13;
plight. John Leighton&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN THE NEWSCOPE STAFF&#13;
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED&#13;
STAFF MEMBERS NEEDED FOR NEXT YEAR&#13;
CREDITS AVAILABLE SALARIES&#13;
Get your name in the paper&#13;
DO SOMETHING FOR U P - IT NEEDS IT AND E SCOPE EEDS YOU&#13;
COME TO THE STAFF EETIHG THURSDAY, 1:30&#13;
KEHOSH A CAMPUS, NE SCOPE OFFICE&#13;
r &#13;
Pag~"&#13;
April 26, 1911&#13;
by Bob gorchardt&#13;
of the ewsrepe Staff&#13;
good the musicians are they've&#13;
got to have consistently good&#13;
charts to prate it.&#13;
A second flaw which is totally&#13;
inexcusable for an innovative&#13;
group is thrs- Chicago made It&#13;
by having an original sound and&#13;
10 a time when Imitation groups&#13;
arc dcminaung the market an&#13;
orjgmal sound should be held as&#13;
almost sacred With that in&#13;
rrund listen to "fUght 602&#13;
Bhnd". and tell me why they&#13;
gave it up for an exact copy of&#13;
Cr""by·. SlIUS. 'a h and Young.&#13;
ClI1Co\GO&#13;
Columbia Obi album)&#13;
110&#13;
1J in S('raphln('&#13;
ItntN.'rt l.dmm&#13;
"Ir rr&gt; Kuth guuar and vocats&#13;
\ It Pt.'rn Woochl.lnd.&#13;
I t ,nu~nan(' Trumpet&#13;
Pete C'l,t('ru Ra!'o~and vocals&#13;
JlIll P nku..... Trombone&#13;
I hrfl' can be no questioning&#13;
Ih(' (', Irbcr of the musrctans In&#13;
tfu groop If thl') had. lOPped&#13;
rl'( orthng .dttr tht'lr first&#13;
album thC'lr prohcl '1)(:) both as&#13;
\\,nlt'rs and In....trumentahsts&#13;
"HuhJ h.t\(' hi't'n proven There&#13;
(an ,lbu hi' no qU&lt;'slIonmg the&#13;
f,lC:I that If JJ1Z rOt:k I· 00\\&#13;
lUtl ,d('n'd a Il~~lllmat~ In·&#13;
.11\Idual form, 'hlca~o was the&#13;
~rnllpmO-'ot rlosponslble for Its&#13;
l'fMl(·l'ptlun and M:!) done the&#13;
I1lU' to propugalc It smce&#13;
Irr) BS&amp;T no apology IS&#13;
Ilt'n r))&#13;
T'u;,n- cun, ho\\('n~r. be some&#13;
I ~llI11l3Il' cfll1cal qU~liomng&#13;
,.tlnt:t'rntn~ thiS latest album&#13;
FIr I, and most ob\'lous or all,&#13;
I (IUt'~hon the It."gillmacy of Ihis&#13;
IS a daubl album Like too&#13;
lIlan) &lt;klubl~ diSCS commg out&#13;
luclay It could have made a hell&#13;
1t1.1sll\~l(' but suffers when only&#13;
Ih.lt mUl'h material IS stretched&#13;
tl,l,I(·(' as far No maller how&#13;
Drums&#13;
Key board and&#13;
Lastly. and very simply,&#13;
....ongs like "1 Don't Want Your&#13;
.\10ney··. "Travel Suite" and&#13;
..An Hour In the Shower"&#13;
cannot be tolerated from artists&#13;
with the formerly apparent&#13;
expertise of Chicago. These&#13;
songs are simply not worth&#13;
listening to.&#13;
Unlike their first album their&#13;
brilliance is seen only in&#13;
Oashcs, never sustained over&#13;
the length of an entire com+&#13;
position, Many people will&#13;
undoubtedly disagree, pointing&#13;
out songs like "Free" and&#13;
"Lowdown". But compared to&#13;
some of their earlier works&#13;
("Time", "Make Me Smile",&#13;
etc) they just don't measure up.&#13;
It SQunds corny, but they can&#13;
and should have done better.&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
presents&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of The NewscopeStaff&#13;
.&#13;
flapjacks were first created by Jack ~;~p ~~&#13;
de e Missouri on December 30, 1 . ~adl~~m~sin' aroWld in his kitchen wh~ fhe c::&#13;
up with a unique batter, that when heate h orm k a&#13;
very tasty and filling cake. people ealled t e ca f~ne&#13;
flapjack in honor of Jack. EverythlOg went 1&#13;
around Independence until a hot shot newspaperman&#13;
from New York got on to the idea.&#13;
The city slicker took the flapjack back to, New&#13;
York with him, and of course clayr;ted credIt. fO,r&#13;
discovering it. Jack Flap was an Indian and didn t&#13;
tr-avel much, so the reporter ~idn't have to worry&#13;
about the true inventor becomlOg we~l known, ,&#13;
Once the flapjack hit New York, It was r-evised,&#13;
refined and renamed the pancake, The newspaperman&#13;
tried to tag his name onto it, but no one could g~t&#13;
used to asking for a Harvey Flourcake first thing In&#13;
the morning. Ever since this beginning, the pancake has enjoyed&#13;
international acclaim. Jack Flap die~ a pauper&#13;
on a reservation, and Harvey Flourcak~ died ,a very&#13;
unhappy man. He went i,nto eaudeville with the&#13;
pancake, juggling and aaung them 10 ev.ery small&#13;
town between Arne, Iowa, and Wheeling, West&#13;
Virgina. "&#13;
Al this history came to mind while I was m the&#13;
Village Inn one morning. I assumed that they don't&#13;
know the true story behind the pancake, because I&#13;
didn't see one memorial picture of Jack Flap or even&#13;
Harvey Flourcake on any of. the walls .&#13;
Other than this obvious slight on a great man, I&#13;
like the atmosphere of the place. Restaurant~ are~'t&#13;
built helter skelter. The building and mteflor&#13;
decorating are very important in the sal&#13;
products. Colors like orange and red are su e of ~&#13;
induce one into becoming hungry. The ~Plloed~&#13;
important if the customer is to feel relaxed. AU&#13;
ung&#13;
put together quite nicely at the Village Inn a th"&#13;
chain. ' nalllllll&#13;
No matter how the place is built or f&#13;
colors, the food still remains the most'dete&#13;
0&#13;
~1al&#13;
factor in popularity. The Village Inn speci:11I1IIC&#13;
pancakes, an.d as expe~ted, they have it downaes 1lI&#13;
tried the baSIC buttermilk pancake, with an PI! 1&#13;
coffee. egg and&#13;
The pancakes were excellent. The comb,nati&#13;
the butter and hot syrup with the pancake ot~&#13;
satisfy anyone's breakfast tastes. The egg was&#13;
5&#13;
r&#13;
over easy, .and done v.ery well, Some restaurants:&#13;
to serve ffled eggs WIth a tough skin underneath&#13;
yolk, I a~swne so the egg doesn't break if it is:&#13;
ped. Frymg eggs, I have concluded, is an art.&#13;
. Coffee is served i~ pitc~ers and left on the latit&#13;
WhIle the customer IS eatmg. There is no ...&#13;
'The London Merchant' Here This Week&#13;
Murder, Prostitution, and Women's Lib will&#13;
all be presented when the Parkside Players&#13;
group presents George Lillo's "The London&#13;
Merchant". The play opens Friday at 8:15&#13;
p.m. and will continue for Saturday at the&#13;
same time and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts Room.&#13;
"The London Merchant", or "The History&#13;
of George Barnwell", is an 18th century&#13;
British play by George Lillo. It teUs the story&#13;
of George Barnwell, a London apprentice,&#13;
who falls in love with a prostitute, Mistress&#13;
MillWood, and is influenced by her to cheat&#13;
his master and kill his uncle for money.&#13;
Lillo based the play on a 17th century ballad&#13;
which told the true story of just such a London&#13;
apprentice. The original ballad has been&#13;
arranged by Marvin Pollard, assistant&#13;
professor of music at Parkside. It will be&#13;
played on guitar and sung by Mike Ingram&#13;
between scenes of the production.&#13;
"The London Merchant" is considered by&#13;
theatrical historians as one of the significant&#13;
plays which moved the theater in England&#13;
and all of Europe towards realism.&#13;
Lillo's play was one of the first to present a&#13;
common man as the hero of a tragedy. Lillo&#13;
wrote the play in prose instead of blank verse&#13;
and started the trend toward prose as the&#13;
principal medium of expression in serious&#13;
drama. .&#13;
In this production, Don Rintz who is&#13;
directing the play for· the Parksid~ Players,&#13;
ho~s to achIeve some of the realistic impact&#13;
WhICh the play made upon London audiences&#13;
r;~rRo~'~;;"'~l&#13;
I OUR r&#13;
I ADVERr'ZERS i&#13;
1 I&#13;
WINNER OF&#13;
4 ACADEMY&#13;
AWARDS&#13;
FRIDAY, APRIL 30th 8:00 P.M.&#13;
ELOT&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
ADM. 15C&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
AND&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
Please order your Caps &amp;.&#13;
Gowns for Graduation now&#13;
all orders must be in by&#13;
April 30th.&#13;
NEW!!&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweiser.,&#13;
but you&#13;
•&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE know that!!&#13;
. . .&#13;
two hundred and forty years ago.&#13;
In 1731 audiences were stunned by the&#13;
"reality" of Lillo's dia19gue and were moved&#13;
to tears by the fate of George Barnwell.&#13;
"Realism in the theater has come a long way&#13;
since then," Rintz commented. "Today, 'The&#13;
London Merchant' reads more like soap opera&#13;
than serious drama, Some of the old·&#13;
fashioned conventions of the play, like&#13;
soliloquies and asides, often provoke laughter&#13;
from modern audiences. Yet in 'The London&#13;
Merchant', Lillo dealt with basic human&#13;
experience and emotions that are as strongly&#13;
felt today as they were two centuries ago.&#13;
These will be the focus of the productioo."&#13;
In this production Mitch Hebert (Kenosha)&#13;
will play George Barnwell and Annabene&#13;
Current Rintz (Racine) will play Mistress&#13;
Millwood. John S. Gray (Racine) has beeIl&#13;
cast as the merchant, Thorowgood; Karen&#13;
Glaeser (Kenosha) will play his daughter&#13;
Maria. Rick Donnely (Racine) has been cast&#13;
as Barnwell's friend and fellow apprentice,&#13;
Trueman, and Todd Rattle (Racine) will play&#13;
Barnwell's uncle. Millwood'S servants and c0-&#13;
conspirators, Lucy and Blunt, will be played&#13;
by Janet Gerler (Racine) and Rick PonziO&#13;
(Kenosha). Completing the cast are RaY&#13;
Waldie (Kenosha) and Art Dexter (Un""&#13;
Grove), who will play the policeman and the&#13;
hangman, Marc Colby (Kenosha) is the&#13;
assistant director and wilt be the stage&#13;
manager of the production. James C~xfocd&#13;
(Kenosha) is in charge of set construction and&#13;
lighting.&#13;
"Interested in starting r&#13;
your own business this a&#13;
nationally-known product?&#13;
summer with a new h&#13;
Write R.A.H. Distributing Company,&#13;
Suite 14. 4821 Sahler Street&#13;
Omaha, Nebraska 68104 • ,&#13;
or call 402-455-3995 (no collect callS) •&#13;
distributing company&#13;
:::?x::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::&#13;
i\\ Sunnyside :~j:&#13;
~\ Florists :~~\&#13;
~\&amp;Greenhouses j\\l&#13;
::::l KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140 l:&#13;
~:; '::: .:,' PHONE: 69"-6700 :-:-&#13;
::*:::;:;:::~:::;:::;:;:;:~:~:;:i:~=*~:~:~:~:;:i:;;=:::;:;:;:::::::::;:::;:;&#13;
it's t~e&#13;
real thing&#13;
Rowen - Fruit Bal,ts - Gifts&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
•&#13;
I' e \pril 26, I 971&#13;
La ti), and \ery imply .&#13;
h " I Don't \\'ant Your&#13;
ton)", ''Tra \' I uite" and&#13;
" \ n Hour ln the hower"&#13;
c nno b tolerated from arti t ·&#13;
\\1th U1 formerly apparent&#13;
•• - • bv Paul Lomartire&#13;
of The ;o.;ewscope Staff .&#13;
Flapjacks were first created by Jack F1apHm . · December 30 1851. e Independence, ~l1ssouri'. on. . h • he came&#13;
wasju t messin' around 1:1 his kitchen w en&#13;
up with a unique batter, that when heated formed a&#13;
\·erv tastv and filling cake. People called the cakf~ a · ·. k E th·ng went me&#13;
flapjack m honor or Jae . very 1&#13;
around Independence until a hot shot newspaperman&#13;
from , ·ew York got on to the 1de~.&#13;
The citv slicker took the flapJack back to_ New&#13;
York with ·him. and or course cl~imed credit_ f~r&#13;
di co\·ering it. Jack Flap was an Indian and d1dn t&#13;
travel much, o the reporter didn't have to worry&#13;
about the true inventor becoming we_ll known, . Once the flapjack hit New York, 1t was revised,&#13;
refined and renamed the pancake. The newspaperman&#13;
tried to tag his name onto it, but no o~e cou_ld g~t&#13;
used to asking for a Harvey Flourcake first thmg m&#13;
the morning. Ever ince this beginning, the pancake has enJOYed&#13;
international acclaim. Jack Flap die~ a pauper&#13;
on a re ·ervation , and Harvey Flourcake died a very&#13;
unhappy man . He went into vaud~ville with the&#13;
pancake. juggling and eating them m every small&#13;
town between Ame, Iowa, and Wheeling, West&#13;
Virgina. . . . Al this history came to mmd while I was m the&#13;
Village Inn one morning. I assumed that they don't&#13;
know the true story behind the pancake, because I&#13;
didn't ee one memorial picture of Jack Flap or even&#13;
Harvey Flourcake on any of the walls. Other than this obvious slight on a great man, I&#13;
like the atmosphere of the place. Restaurants aren't&#13;
built helter skelter. The building and interior&#13;
ft •&#13;
decorating are very important in the sa]&#13;
products. Colors like orange and red are sue or&#13;
induce one into becoming hungry. The ~l&gt;Osed&#13;
important if the customer is to feel relaxed· 4Jlli&#13;
put together quite nicely at the Village Inn· '&#13;
chain. • ana&#13;
No matter how the place is built O r&#13;
colors, the food still remains the most' de~ 0&#13;
factor in popularity. The Village Inn spec~~&#13;
pancakes, and as expected, they have it do&#13;
tried the basic buttermilk pancake, with anV.TI&#13;
coffee.&#13;
The pancakes were excellent. The combina&#13;
the butter and hot syrup with the pancak&#13;
satisfy anyone's breakfast lastes. The egg v.as r&#13;
over easy, _and done v_ery well. Some restaura&#13;
to serve fried eggs with a tough skin underneath&#13;
yolk, I assume so the egg doesn't break if it ·&#13;
ped. Frying eggs, I have concluded, is an art 15 dnt&#13;
Coffee is served in pitchers and left on ·th&#13;
while the customer is eating. There is no&#13;
• I rt1 . or h1cago. These n : are . imply not worth&#13;
hsl nmg to&#13;
'The London Merchant' Here This Week&#13;
nl1ke th ir first album th ir&#13;
brillian i een only in&#13;
na. h ·, never u ·tamed over&#13;
th length or an entire composit&#13;
ion . :\1any people will&#13;
undoubtedly disagree, pointing&#13;
out ng like " Free" and&#13;
" Lowdown" But compared to ,&#13;
ome or their earlier works&#13;
("Time' ', "Make l\le mile" ,&#13;
etc ) th y Just don 'l measure up.&#13;
It . ounds corny. but they can&#13;
and hould have done better.&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
presents&#13;
WINNER OF&#13;
4 ACADEMY&#13;
AWARDS&#13;
Cll.M:ELOT&#13;
FRIDAY, APRIL 30th 8:00 P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
ADM. 75C&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
AND&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
Please order your Caps &amp;.&#13;
Gowns for Graduation now&#13;
all orders must be in by&#13;
April 30th.&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
1urder, Prostitution, and Women's Lib will&#13;
all be presented when the Parkside Players&#13;
group presents George Lillo's "The London&#13;
1erchant". The play opens Friday at 8:15&#13;
p.m. and will continue for Saturday at the&#13;
same time and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts Room.&#13;
"The London Merchant", or "The History&#13;
of George Barnwell", is an 18th century&#13;
British play by George Lillo. It tells the story&#13;
or George Barnwell, a London apprentice,&#13;
who falls in love with a prostitute, Mistress&#13;
1illwood, and is influenced by her to cheat&#13;
his master and kill his uncle for money.&#13;
Lillo based the play on a 17th century ballad&#13;
which told the true story of just such a London&#13;
apprentice. The original ballad has been&#13;
arranged by Marvin Pollard, assistant&#13;
professor of music at Parkside. It will be&#13;
played on guitar and sung by Mike Ingram&#13;
between scenes of the production.&#13;
"The London Merchant" is considered by&#13;
theatrical historians as one of the significant&#13;
plays which moved the theater in England&#13;
and all of Europe towards realism.&#13;
Lillo's play was one of the first to present a&#13;
common man as the hero of a tragedy. Lillo&#13;
wrote the play in prose instead of blank verse&#13;
and started the trend toward prose as the&#13;
principal medium of expression in serious&#13;
drama. ·&#13;
In this production, Don Rintz who is&#13;
directing th~ play for the Parksid~ Players,&#13;
ho~s to achieve some of the realistic impact&#13;
which the play made upon London audiences&#13;
two hundred and forty years ago.&#13;
In 1731 audiences were stunned by the&#13;
"reality" of Lillo's dialogue and were moved&#13;
to tears by the fate of George Barnwell.&#13;
"Realism in the theater has come a long way&#13;
since then," Rintz commented. "Today, 'The&#13;
London Merchant' reads more like soap opera&#13;
than serious drama. Some of the old·&#13;
fashioned conventions of the play, like&#13;
soliloquies and asides, often provoke laughter&#13;
from modern audiences. Yet in 'The London&#13;
Merchant', Lillo dealt with basic human&#13;
experience and emotions that are as strongly&#13;
felt today as they were two centuries ago&#13;
These will be the focus of the production."&#13;
In this production Mitch Hebert (Kenosha)&#13;
will play George Barnwell and Annabelle&#13;
Current Rintz (Racine) will play Mistress&#13;
Millwood. John S. Gray (Racine) has been&#13;
cast as the merchant, Thorowgood; Karen&#13;
Glaeser (Kenosha) will play his daughter&#13;
Maria. Rick Donnely (Racine) has been ca&#13;
as Barnwell's friend and fellow apprentice&#13;
Trueman, and Todd Rattle (Racine) will play&#13;
Barnwell's uncle. Mill wood's servants and coconspirators,&#13;
Lucy and Blunt, will be played&#13;
by Janet Gerler (Racine) and Rick Ponzio&#13;
(Kenosha). Completing the cast are Ray&#13;
Waldie (Kenosha) and Art Dexter (Union&#13;
Grove), who will play the policeman and the&#13;
hangman, Marc Colby (Kenosha) is the&#13;
assistant director and will be the stage&#13;
manager of the production. James Croxford&#13;
(Kenosha) is in charge of set construction and&#13;
lighting.&#13;
"Interested in starting&#13;
your own business this&#13;
ADVERTIZERS !&#13;
•• •mJ&#13;
NEWll&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
nationally-known product?&#13;
Write R.A.H. Distributing Company,&#13;
Suite 14, 4821 Sahler Street&#13;
Omaha, Nebraska 68104 ' ,, or call 402-455-3995 (no collect calls} ·&#13;
distributing company&#13;
::if .. :..· ............ , ..... :, ............. ,' .. ';:;:&#13;
lj\l Sunnyside !Iii&#13;
Budweiser. iii Florists iiii&#13;
I&amp; Greenhouses I&#13;
. . . but you&#13;
-&#13;
know that!!&#13;
\{ Rowers - Fruit Baskets - Gifts [)l&#13;
VI and FRANK&#13;
-&#13;
WEINSTOCK&#13;
•:•:· I ·t= lf KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140 {&#13;
:)::._ ...•••• _F'HONE: 694-6700 :):)&#13;
.. ,. ·•·•·• ...... -...... --.- ~ ~ ~ :.~ :.:::· ...... • ..... :::. &#13;
waitress to fill your cup every so often, .&#13;
~ th;' only charged fifteen cents. This is the&#13;
;,.d'~ I have come across In a. restauram&#13;
,deasomeplace, is on the !&gt;all, thinking of the&#13;
~eone, f st at least in this respect.&#13;
cuswrnec I~~r anything other than the dozen or so&#13;
If)-oU°ou may be disappointed here and there.&#13;
;tU"skes,~ the chili was served 50 hot that it seems&#13;
'01' tnsta':opriatefor J~ar~~, Mexico: B~t.Chili is one "",pr differs from Individual to individual. I did&#13;
..,od tha ir chili, but the next person might.&#13;
.",rliie~~lther visit I had a chicken dinner which at&#13;
~Iars didn't seem all that good. There were four&#13;
... 00 r chicken that would seem to benefit from a&#13;
~ 00g in the breading. Included in the dinner&#13;
;tt5OI'I}renchfries, a sli~~ of candied apple, a&#13;
ttre e and a choice of JUice or salad.&#13;
t!t'~ are the only tw~ foods I ventu,red into&#13;
my visits to the Village Inn. Their menu&#13;
tiJrinB around pancakes, which start at seventy&#13;
ceo:7orbuttermilk pancakes, on up. There. are six or&#13;
"" different kinds of syrup that add variety to the&#13;
...."'1 that an individual could eat breakfast there&#13;
CIU" davsa weekand not run out of combinations of&#13;
....... k&#13;
;rup and panca es.&#13;
" '!be VillageInn chain seems to be a worthwhile&#13;
restaurant. Iwould look for one of these restaurants if&#13;
Iwere in a stran~e city,.ifthe Kenosha branch is any&#13;
odJ&lt;Ouon of their quality.&#13;
I realize the responsibility that Village Inns&#13;
"""America have shouldered in serving the public&#13;
• inStitution: the pancake. It seems only poetic&#13;
jIIi&lt;e that a descendant of Jack Flap be working&#13;
,....mere in the chain. If doing nithing, just&#13;
MSSiD' around in the kitchen.&#13;
McKenna on vote, war i:idinued from Page I) -&#13;
McKenna responded by wars the cost of litigation would&#13;
1I)'iDg, OlWesupport this piece rest entirely on his shoulders.&#13;
~ iogisIation because we feel He also noted that the ultimate&#13;
Ille peopleof Wisconsin are in purpose of the bill was not to&#13;
_olit ... if this is not true prevent Wisconsin men from&#13;
lIIeIl we'D hear about it in the serving in Vietnam but to test&#13;
n election." the constitutionality of the&#13;
President's .power to commit&#13;
the United States to an undeclared&#13;
war. "Referendum is not good&#13;
lO'm1ment. We are in a&#13;
"IIftIODtatiDnal form of&#13;
.....,..ent. What we're doing&#13;
laying that you have a right&#13;
10 10 10 the Supreme Court to&#13;
lIodout U the President has the&#13;
flD'I!I' to send young men to&#13;
lPt in an undeclared war ...&#13;
Ilis I based fundamentally on&#13;
" C4mstitutionof the United&#13;
.....:'&#13;
AlIted to characterize the&#13;
dill! IOUJ'ce of opposition he&#13;
IlIltd, liThe wording was&#13;
*ittly political maneuvering&#13;
was the strategy of the&#13;
_bOIl by delaying the ef-&#13;
~.' date of the bill thereby&#13;
-all it."&#13;
According to McKenna&#13;
~ the bill would give a~&#13;
lo'Crieved inhabitant" the right&#13;
refuseto serve in undeclared&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
t SUN. THRU THURS. ;~~ l11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE'{&#13;
~~FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.;:&#13;
« ~&#13;
~~f\HAMBURGERS~:~ 109 WISCONSIN AVE. 1011 60lb SI• II 40( &amp; 24( )!!: RACINE 631-9591 HNOSHA 654-2186&#13;
.. .. Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m. Open 8:00 a m. - 9.00 pm&#13;
m SUP ERC HEW 1 Monday - Friday .Ionday - Frld&#13;
iii. (triple decker) :::: s::~::a~;:::a:~ Receivel:~.tu~~::o~:::n:1I&#13;
!il[:::::::::::::::::::::;:~:~::::::~:~::;:;:::~:;:!t a~.'.~~~.'.i~.e..~~:~:~~.s..u.~:i.'.~.u.n.~.~:.~~~.1 '!&#13;
Suggesting that the Nixon&#13;
administration left much to be&#13;
desired, McKenna was&#13;
reminded of the two democratic&#13;
administrations by a member of&#13;
the audience. McKenna&#13;
responded by explaining&#13;
"Johnson sent twice as many&#13;
men as were needed to Vietnam&#13;
and now Nixon is taking advantage&#13;
of this mistake by withdrawing&#13;
this surplus of men."&#13;
Concerning the proposed&#13;
State University-UW merger,&#13;
he said, "I have indicated that if&#13;
the merger would respect the&#13;
various areas of expertise of the&#13;
various state schools and it&#13;
would not impair the education&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
. yes, I would support it."&#13;
VALED'S&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 0&#13;
ay, a Week From 4 p.m., Closed Mondays&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
21 FLAVORS&#13;
BEER 'Il' POP&#13;
WA';--$qjjjjV'==;,OP 4ItfJ&#13;
24-7 oz. bot. 12-24 oz. bot.&#13;
Stu $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
1428 Washin ton Rd., Kenosha&#13;
UW.PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES&#13;
SfJ.IIf,(MA&#13;
).w&#13;
o p&#13;
Spaid&#13;
THREE OPTIONS&#13;
CHICAGO to&#13;
LONDON&#13;
THREE DEPARTURES&#13;
June - Ju Iy - Augusl&#13;
$19710 $218 plus lax&#13;
For Information Contact:&#13;
Siudeni Aclivi Ii .. Olli'ce I&#13;
Talenl Hall&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
AprilZC.19il&#13;
rt ~--~--~--~~-~---r&#13;
1971Original Equipment&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
BELTED&#13;
LONG MILEAGE TIRES&#13;
AS LOW AS&#13;
25&#13;
jirt$.ont&#13;
DELUXE CHAJllPION&#13;
SUp·R-BELT&#13;
WHlTEWALLS ADD '5.00&#13;
3ways to charge&#13;
·tn__ DE -.&#13;
·L...C£.TU..OTOOn'.I'l'.- ...... --.....&#13;
.QOl&amp;1.Lll£Ln:D~''!!~:::''!~~'~&#13;
.......... --- ....&#13;
DRIVE IN TODAY FOR&#13;
FAST TIRE SERVlCEl&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
····· .&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
·· . · . : •.••.•.•...•.....•..••..•............................................... ~&#13;
:- .&#13;
:&#13;
vaitress to fill your cup every so often,&#13;
~ the 'only charged fifteen cents. This is the&#13;
OU are . &gt; 1 have come across m a restaurant.&#13;
idea meplace , is on the ball, thinking of the&#13;
-~e so . h' . t CV" ' frst at Jeast m t 1s respec .&#13;
torner 1&#13;
rd~r anything other than the dozen or so&#13;
If you 0,&#13;
0u may be disappointed here and there.&#13;
. e. · Je the chili was served so hot that it seems&#13;
ror ta~opriate for J~ar~~· Mexico.- B~t_Chili is one&#13;
app differs from mdiv1dual to md1v1dual. I did&#13;
1ha~ ir chili, but the next person might.&#13;
e ;!her visit I had a chicken dinner which at&#13;
Onll~ didn't seem all that good. There were four&#13;
ck&gt; f chicken that would seem to benefit from a 0 g in the breading. Included in the dinner&#13;
;rench fries, a slice of candied apple, a&#13;
l!ft'ra e and a choice of juice or salad. ni!e are the only tw~ foods I ventu_red into&#13;
my visits to the Village Inn. The1r menu&#13;
around pancakes, which start at seventy&#13;
te~or buttermilk pancakes, on up. There_ are six or&#13;
different kinds of syrup that add variety to the&#13;
"\ that an individual could eat breakfast there&#13;
ltll davs a week and not run out of combinations of&#13;
an·d pancakes.&#13;
• The Village Inn chain seems to be a worthwhile&#13;
urant. I would look for one of th~se restaurants if&#13;
1 ere in a strange city, if the Kenosha branch is any&#13;
cation of their quality.&#13;
I realize the responsibility that Village Inns&#13;
America have shouldered in serving the public&#13;
institution: the pancake. It seems only poetic&#13;
uce that a descendant of Jack Flap be working&#13;
ewhere in the chain. If doing nithing, just&#13;
· ' around in the kitchen.&#13;
McKenna on vote,war Continued from Page 1) ·&#13;
cKenna responded by wars the cost of litigation would&#13;
g, "We support this piece rest entirely on his shoulders.&#13;
ltgi Jation because we feel He also noted that the ultimate&#13;
people of Wisconsin are in purpose of the bill was not to&#13;
r of it ... if this is not true prevent Wisconsin men from&#13;
·e'll hear about it in the serving in Vietnam but to test&#13;
t election." the constitutionality of the&#13;
'·Referendum is not good&#13;
erament. We are in a&#13;
rtpre entational form of&#13;
mment. What we're doing&#13;
saying that you have a right&#13;
ID go to the Supreme Court to&#13;
out if the President has the&#13;
er to send young men to&#13;
in an undeclared war . . .&#13;
based fundamentally on&#13;
Constitution of the United&#13;
.,&#13;
ked to characterize the&#13;
source of opposition he&#13;
ated, ' 'The wording was&#13;
llrictly political maneuvering&#13;
~~s the strategy of the&#13;
ttion by delaying the efe&#13;
date of the bill thereby&#13;
tn It."&#13;
ccording to McKenna&#13;
gh the bill would give a~&#13;
lo eved inhabitant" the right&#13;
refuse to serve in undeclared&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
President's power to commit&#13;
the United States to an undeclared&#13;
war.&#13;
Suggesting that the Nixon&#13;
administration left much to be&#13;
desired, Mc Kenna was&#13;
reminded of the two democratic&#13;
administrations by a member of&#13;
the audience. Mc Kenna&#13;
responded by explaining&#13;
"Johnson sent twice as many&#13;
men as were needed to Vietnam&#13;
and now Nixon is taking advantage&#13;
of this mistake by withdrawing&#13;
this surplus of men."&#13;
Concerning the proposed&#13;
State University-UW merger,&#13;
he said, "I have indicated that if&#13;
the merger would respect the&#13;
various areas of expertise of the&#13;
various state schools and it&#13;
would not impair the education&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
. . yes, I would support it. "&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:oo P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 D '&#13;
ays a Week From 4 p.m., Closed Mondays&#13;
21 FLAVORS&#13;
BEER 'f' POP ~~'~---&#13;
&amp; WA u?·,//q --=: --==== 1//II\''~"' STOP&#13;
24- 7 oz. bot. 12-24 oz.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
2428 Washington Rd., Kenosha&#13;
bot.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES&#13;
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For Information Contact:&#13;
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CHEW&#13;
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&amp;&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
(j;j SUN. THAU THURS. \ii&#13;
t 11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE t&#13;
1f:FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.MJ&#13;
11llHAMBURGERsllli&#13;
III 40¢ &amp; 24¢ J&#13;
:!II SUPERCHEW i~i&#13;
i1t{triple decker) !\11&#13;
Ifi: s s ¢ Ill!&#13;
April_, I ;1&#13;
1971 Original Eq ·pmen&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
BELTE&#13;
ILEA&#13;
1&#13;
109 ISCO SI AVE.&#13;
RACINE 631-9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
• onday - Friday&#13;
Saturday to 5 p.m.&#13;
Bring this Ad and R&#13;
0&#13;
1011 01 s,. ~ OSH&#13;
tur&#13;
E&#13;
:.::.:•:•:•.•:•.•.•.• ... ; .. -:.:•:•:•.: ... :::.:;:.:;:::.:;:~:.:_:~_:.:.:::.:~~· ·-~~;:~: ................................................................ ..................... .. ! . . .&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
NOW&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
GIMME&#13;
SHELTER 1&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
: ............................................................................ ... =················· &#13;
Palel Speak""At PSGA 'Gathering'&#13;
Centel' complex has been dr?pped. The&#13;
reason for the change is ~at It generally&#13;
has been University practice to h.av.&#13;
e&#13;
state&#13;
architects design state funded bUIldings. A&#13;
general architectural plan has already&#13;
been laid out but is still open to&#13;
modifications. . .&#13;
SGA then passed a resolutIOn 10-&#13;
troduced by Walter Ulbrict to appoint Ian&#13;
MacTaggert chairman of an A.d .. ~oc&#13;
Committee to investigate the possibilities&#13;
of student imput and review of present and&#13;
future construction. MacTagge~t&#13;
suggested having paintings place? 10&#13;
classrooms and that rooms be pam ted&#13;
colors other than white as possibilities for&#13;
improving the present conditions.&#13;
With the unanimous approval of the&#13;
Senate Eaker appointed himself (a&#13;
mandatory appointment), Dennis Cashion,&#13;
Edmund Gilday, Ian MacTaggert and&#13;
Madeline Theilen to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee.&#13;
f&#13;
~'~::'::::'- ,S--h-p"'!"" P ,-,~"""".,&#13;
'r~ WW l&#13;
I rm~.J~·&#13;
I 7 :30-0~&#13;
6t_,..-..m"",",""",_''''''''''lII_."""m,''''"'''''II"",",ml'&#13;
Rubin To&#13;
b) \\ arren l"~dr)&#13;
or The 'e~scope- Starr&#13;
Arter a long and dehcate debate over&#13;
workmg , hnances and securuy, the&#13;
tudera senate passed a resolunon to&#13;
upport a gathering where people" III be&#13;
able to learn more about the Peoples&#13;
Peace Treaty The resoluuon was introduced&#13;
by Recording ecretary David&#13;
weber and reads&#13;
The tudent enate of the&#13;
UOlverslty of WI. on In-Park Ide&#13;
upport a gathering of people for&#13;
the purposes of tnW'·ldually endor&#13;
109 th Joint Treat) of Peace&#13;
-tween the peopl of Amertea and&#13;
orrh Va'lnam nd outh Vietnam.&#13;
and educating people about this&#13;
pnnK anti war movement and&#13;
related tOPiC .\ tentative list of&#13;
peaker mclud Jerr)' Rubin,&#13;
'lark Knopp,. eduor of MadISon&#13;
Kal.,do cope, Father Luke&#13;
\13 Arthur. 0 mtnlcan College.&#13;
Helen chiller, coordmator.&#13;
Ch,ldrt&gt;n': nre kIa I Program The&#13;
l'oordlnators 8rC Mark Tympany&#13;
and Dave W('ber PrOVisions will be&#13;
madt-. for lUdent marshalls and&#13;
stud nt government funds are not&#13;
appropn8tl'd m this mohon&#13;
The gathenng IS heduled to beg," at&#13;
10 a m Wednesday, Apnl 28, at the&#13;
Athie,," field on Wood Road Free food and&#13;
music "ill be provided. The county highway&#13;
department has warned that cars&#13;
parked on Wood Road will be ticketed.&#13;
The resolution met with a srngle opposing&#13;
vote, cast by Ken Ko~ol. ~fter ~&#13;
Involved discussion regarding (manclal&#13;
support of the event. Konkol inlrodu~e? a&#13;
motion to allot $25 for advance publicity.&#13;
The motion passed with only ~eane~te&#13;
Dremel in opposition. Further fmanclal&#13;
support will be taken up at this week's&#13;
meeting. .&#13;
In other business SGA passed a motion&#13;
to have Academic policies committee&#13;
investigate all the committees at Parkside&#13;
to which students are appointed and report&#13;
their findings to SGA. At an ear-lier&#13;
meeting SGA voted not to recognize&#13;
committees with student appointments&#13;
that have not been cleared with SGA. SGA&#13;
also passed a measure to send letters to all&#13;
student organizations requesting each one&#13;
to recommend one representative to serve&#13;
on the Ad Hoc Judiciary Committee.&#13;
Ian MacTaggert appeared before the&#13;
Senate and spoke concerning the architecture&#13;
of Parkside. "It's design is&#13;
rooted in decoration. It is designed from&#13;
the outside in, It is an expression of&#13;
technology." In his remarks he brought to&#13;
light the fact classrooms lack windows and&#13;
that most have no windows at all. He&#13;
reported that the firm from Sl. Louis thaI&#13;
designed. the Greenquist-Library Learning&#13;
?? PREGNANT ??&#13;
TEST YOURSELF IN YOUR HOME!&#13;
ACCURATE RESULTS IN TEN MINUTES'&#13;
TWO TESTS PER KIT&#13;
PROMPT DELIVERY&#13;
SEND: CASH, CHECK OR MONEY ORDER&#13;
PRICE: $6.95 PER KIT + 55~ HDLG. CHGS.&#13;
BE SURE PRODUCTS, INC.&#13;
375 Sylvan Avenue&#13;
Englewood Cliffs, N. J- 07632&#13;
NEWH&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
PSGA presents Budweise&amp;&#13;
PEOPLE'S PEACE TREATY&#13;
GATHERING&#13;
with Jerry RUbin - Mark Knopps - others&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28&#13;
MAIN UW-P CAMPUS&#13;
AC1ivilies start at 10 a,m,&#13;
Peace is coming because the people&#13;
are making Ihe peace.&#13;
• • •&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE ...&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both in&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY - Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receill'er" Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntable~&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
. In business conducted .&#13;
10 the meeting, two :arher&#13;
were heard from HarbesoCJ&gt;orts&#13;
introduced a resolution n ..He&#13;
the Parkside Faculty 0 puttiog&#13;
as being against tiln recOtd.&#13;
executive budget proPO~alSlate&#13;
recommended m sand&#13;
Professor John Buenke~rfer&#13;
Personnel Policies Com o. the&#13;
reported that they are ~lIttee&#13;
process of establishing te~~~he&#13;
evaluation criteria w·th iii&#13;
emphasis on student im' an&#13;
. hich put .. Issue w lC he said Will'&#13;
handled separately beca be&#13;
its Importance. use fA&#13;
Professor Norbert Is berg&#13;
read a tribute to then I&#13;
Professor Harlow Mil~ ale&#13;
announced the establish and&#13;
1&#13;
. menlo(&#13;
a Har ow Mills Mem .&#13;
Scholarship in Mills' fiel~l~&#13;
Anamology.&#13;
Wyllie reported that lh&#13;
building program was go' e 109 as&#13;
planned and wasn't expecti&#13;
any cut-backs. He also ad~&#13;
that bids for the PhYeal&#13;
Education BUilding Wil~l be&#13;
received this week and that thr&#13;
Communication Arts Buildmg&#13;
will be bid on soon.&#13;
Members and Friends of&#13;
"Another Mother For Peace"&#13;
will hold a Mother's Day Few&#13;
Peace on Sunday, May 2, 1m.&#13;
at 2:00 p.m. at United AIM&#13;
Workers Local 72, :IlIlS&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha&#13;
Les Aspin, Congressman IJIJI&#13;
member of tbe House ArmoI&#13;
Services Committee, will he lito&#13;
guest speaker in an informll&#13;
program which will include&#13;
open dialogue and Concl!l1lOd&#13;
Voices for Peace. There wi!&#13;
also be refreshments aDd&#13;
music. Open to all.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
At the Young Democratic&#13;
Clubs of Wisconsin's State&#13;
Convention, held April 16, 17&#13;
and 18 in Milwaukee, Gregory&#13;
Barrette, Chairman of the V.W.&#13;
Parkside delegation, addressed&#13;
a caucus of the South Lake&#13;
District, which is composed of&#13;
the Young Dem clubs from&#13;
Racine County, Kenosha&#13;
County, WSU-Whitewater and&#13;
the U.W. Parkside unit.&#13;
He urged all delegates to vote&#13;
in opposition to the platform&#13;
plant supporting the proposed&#13;
tUliversity merger and budget.&#13;
but you&#13;
•&#13;
know that!!&#13;
The grievance and clearing&#13;
house committee of the&#13;
Parkside student senate is&#13;
looking for ad hoc student&#13;
members to serve. Interested&#13;
3tudents must meet this Friday&#13;
in room Di03 Greenquist at&#13;
10:30 a.m., when three ad hoc&#13;
mem bers will be selected to be&#13;
on the committee. They will&#13;
have full voting powers.&#13;
Free&#13;
Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657 -97 47&#13;
The Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Orchestra, under the dir&lt;c\IJJJI&#13;
of Mr. Istvan Jaray, with the&#13;
Carthage College-Communil!&#13;
Chorus will present a emcertized&#13;
arrangement or "Dir&#13;
Fledermaus" by Joba"&#13;
Strauss at the Mary D. Bradford&#13;
High School AuditoriJll\.&#13;
8:15 P.M. Wednesday, AJIllI.&#13;
1971.&#13;
Soloists will be nona KOID'&#13;
brink, soprano. as orIofsky&#13;
Arcenia Moser, sopraoo, ..&#13;
Rosalinda; Jane Carm~&#13;
soprano as Adele; Ri&#13;
, EO'&#13;
Sjoerdsma, tenor, as&#13;
enstein; Davis Astor, teD'&#13;
as Alfred; Slephen M"""",&#13;
baritone, as Frank; and ~&#13;
Hottmann, baritone, as f&#13;
The performance will bt •&#13;
English.&#13;
The Cartbage Coll~&#13;
Community Chorus is com':-:&#13;
of more than 85 VOiCes WI'&#13;
directed and rebearsed bY&#13;
John Windb. . lie'&#13;
Tickets will be availa adttl&#13;
the box offi,e at $3.00 per&#13;
and $1.00 per student.&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORT~&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal St.&#13;
inexpensWt&#13;
be sel uP onfl .&#13;
can '111&#13;
outpatient baS.•1..5 ... ~I&#13;
The ,rOIJIenI ._-Jd Referral )P'-:-&#13;
215~722.536'&#13;
24 hOUrs-7 da~&#13;
for prOflSSiOJ\l1, :;.&#13;
and ,,",'OIl&#13;
Pa , ·e"' cop&#13;
Rubin To Sp~ai··'At PSGA 'Gathering'&#13;
Center complex has been dropped. The&#13;
reason for the change is ~at it generally&#13;
has been University pracbce to h_av_e state&#13;
architects design state funded buildings. A&#13;
general architectural plan has already&#13;
been laid out but is still open to&#13;
gin at&#13;
music ,,ill be provided. The county highway&#13;
department ha w~med _that cars&#13;
par eel on Wood Road w1I_I be t1~keted.&#13;
Th re. olution met with a smgle oppo&#13;
·mg vote, cast by Ken Konkol. ~Iler an&#13;
involved discussion regarding fmanc1al&#13;
upport of the event, Konkol introduced a motion to allot S25 for advance publicity.&#13;
The motion pas eel with only ~eane!te&#13;
Dremel in opposition. Further fmanc1al&#13;
upport will be taken up at this week's&#13;
meeting. . In other busines GA passed a motion&#13;
to have Academic Policies committee&#13;
m·e:-tigate all the committees at Parkside&#13;
to which tudents are appointed and report&#13;
their finding to GA At an earl!l!r&#13;
m tin GA vo•ed not to recognize&#13;
committee with student appointments&#13;
that have not been cleared with GA. SGA&#13;
al. o pa:. ed a measure to send letters to all&#13;
~tudent organizations requesting each one&#13;
to recommend one repre ·entative to serve&#13;
on the d Hoc Judiciary Committee.&#13;
Ian :'\lacTaggert appeared before the&#13;
modifications. . . SGA then passed a resolut10n introduced&#13;
by Walter Ulbrict to appoint Ian&#13;
MacTaggert chairman of an A_d. -~oc&#13;
Committee to investigate the poss1b1hbes&#13;
of student imput and review of present and&#13;
future construction. MacTagge~t&#13;
suggested having paintings placed m&#13;
classrooms and that rooms be painted&#13;
colors other than white as possibilities for&#13;
improving the present conditions.&#13;
With the unanimous approval of the&#13;
Senate Eaker appointed himself (a&#13;
mandatory appointment), Dennis C~shion,&#13;
Edmund Gilday, Ian MacTaggert and&#13;
Madeline Theilen to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee.&#13;
-&#13;
-~----UNUltlUHt .. ,,,,. .. _,,.,...,,_, __ .. ;&#13;
,~s~ i&#13;
! rm~ .T~-&#13;
1 7 :30-0~&#13;
tii••••v•r---HHftH"INIHIUIHIHUUIIIIIUUUIHHtt; un1muumt111tllUIIIMIIIIII&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(Continued from Page ll&#13;
In business conducted e . in the meeting, two r arher&#13;
were heard from Harb ep0r&#13;
introduced a resolutioneson. He&#13;
the Parkside Faculty O PUtling&#13;
as being against th n record&#13;
executive budget prop0:a1 Slate&#13;
recommended m sand&#13;
Professor John Buenke~rfer&#13;
Personnel Policies Com O. the&#13;
reported that they are ~ilt&#13;
process ?f esta~lishing tea~ ihe&#13;
evaluabon criteria w·thhing&#13;
emphasis on student im1 an . hi h put an lSSUe W C he said Will'&#13;
handled separately bee&#13;
its importance. aUSe of&#13;
Professor Norbert ls ....._&#13;
read a tribute to th en"i""&#13;
Professor Harlow l\1i1\: ate&#13;
announced the establishm and&#13;
a Harlow Mills Mement_of&#13;
Sch l h. . or1a1 o ars 1p m Mills' field _ Anamology.&#13;
~y_llie reported that the&#13;
bmldmg program was go 1 d mg as&#13;
P anne and wasn't expecti&#13;
any cut-backs. He also addl'd&#13;
E&#13;
thdat bti~s for the Phy. ica]&#13;
uca 10n Building will be&#13;
received this week and that the&#13;
Communication Arts Buildi&#13;
will be bid on soon.&#13;
nate and poke concerning the architecture&#13;
of Parkside. "It's design is&#13;
rooted in decoration. It is designed from&#13;
the outside in. It is an expression of&#13;
technology." In his remarks he brought to&#13;
light the fact classrooms lack windows and&#13;
that mo t have no windows at all. He&#13;
reported that the firm from St. Louis that&#13;
d signed the Greenquist-Library Learning NElNS BRIEFS&#13;
?? PREGNANT ??&#13;
T T YOURSELF lt,j YOUR HOME!&#13;
CCURATE RESULTS I TEN MINUTES!&#13;
TWO TESTS PER KIT&#13;
PROMPT DELIVERY&#13;
D: CASH, CHECK OR MONEY ORDER&#13;
NEW!!&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
PRICE: $6.95 PER KIT + .55¢ HDLG. CHGS.&#13;
BE SURE PRODUCTS, INC.&#13;
375 Sylvan Avenue&#13;
Englewood Cliffs, N. J. 07632 GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
PSGA presents Budweiser*&#13;
PEOPLE'S PEACE TREATY&#13;
GATHERING&#13;
with Jerry Rubin - Mark Knopps - others&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28&#13;
Activities&#13;
MAIN UW-P&#13;
start&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
at 10 a.m, • • • but you&#13;
-&#13;
Peace is coming because the people&#13;
are making the peace.&#13;
know that!!&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE • • •&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both in&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY- Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receiver,, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V .C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntable~&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop_ for _J~welry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin s lowest prices.&#13;
At the Young Democratic&#13;
Clubs of Wisconsin's State&#13;
Convention, held April 16, 17&#13;
and 18 in Milwaukee, Gregory&#13;
Barrette, Chairman of the U. W.&#13;
Parkside delegation, addressed&#13;
a caucus of the South Lake&#13;
District, which is composed of&#13;
the Young Dem clubs from&#13;
Racine County, Kenosha&#13;
County, WSU-Whitewater and&#13;
the U.W. Parkside unit.&#13;
He urged all delegates to vote&#13;
in opposition to the platform&#13;
plant supporting the proposed&#13;
university merger and budget.&#13;
The grievance and clearing&#13;
house committee of the&#13;
Parkside student senate is&#13;
looking for ad hoc student&#13;
members to serve. Interested&#13;
students must meet this Friday&#13;
in room D103 Greenquist at&#13;
10:30 a.m., when three ad hoc&#13;
members will be selected to be&#13;
on the committee. They will&#13;
have full voting powers.&#13;
Free&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
Members and Friends f&#13;
"Another Mother For Peace·&#13;
will hold a Mother's Day F&#13;
Peace on Sunday, May 2, 1971&#13;
at 2:00 p.m. ~t United Auto&#13;
Workers Local 72, !615&#13;
Washington Road, Keno ha&#13;
Les Aspin, Congressman&#13;
member of the House Arm&#13;
Services Committee, will be thr&#13;
guest speaker in an inform&#13;
program which will inclu&#13;
open dialogue and Concern&#13;
Voices for Peace. There v.&#13;
also be refreshments and&#13;
music. Open to all.&#13;
The Kenosha Symphon&#13;
Orchestra, under the directi&#13;
of Mr. Istvan Jaray, with thr&#13;
Carthage College-Commum.&#13;
Chorus will present a caicertized&#13;
arrangement of ''Die&#13;
Fledermaus" by Johs&#13;
Strauss at the Mary D Bra~&#13;
ford High School Auditorium&#13;
8:15 P.M. Wednesday, AJXi)&#13;
1971.&#13;
Soloists will be Ilona Ko&#13;
brink, soprano, as Orlof )&#13;
Arcenia Moser, soprano,&#13;
Rosalinda· Jane Carmich&#13;
soprano, 'as Adele; Richard&#13;
Sjoerdsma, tenor, as E •&#13;
enstein; Davis Astor, te!Of&#13;
as Alfred; Stephen Ma~&#13;
baritone, as Frank; and !)a;&#13;
Hottmann baritone, as F&#13;
The pe;formance wiU be&#13;
English. The Carthage Coll&#13;
Community Chorus i~ com and 11&#13;
of more than 85 vmces&#13;
directed and rehearsed by&#13;
John Windh. _ lie at&#13;
Tickets will be availa&#13;
the box office at $3.00 per a&#13;
and $1.00 per student&#13;
A professional ABORTION&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal&amp;.&#13;
inexpensa\'f&#13;
can be set u_P on:&#13;
outpatient ba915 bY&#13;
The pn,blelll Prtl.&#13;
Referral servi"&#13;
21s-122-s360&#13;
24 hours- 7 dafjdtf'lt · · nal o,n for profeSSIO . • t,tlP· and carin!I &#13;
GolfersWhip Lake Forest&#13;
uWP '9'&#13;
~JlmCasper&#13;
"'" Ne",cope Staff&#13;
(1IIl baseball, new at&#13;
!ItIdo Ibis year, got off to a&#13;
"" lIIrt as the Rangers won&#13;
... 01 a doubleheader&#13;
arcb-rival Dominican&#13;
The Rangers took the&#13;
..... 11-3, and won a 1-0&#13;
,..... duel in the second&#13;
....&#13;
played well for the first meet.&#13;
The course was in good shape&#13;
and the scores indicated it."&#13;
After their i~itial victory. the&#13;
Rangers ran Into two of the&#13;
state's best college golf teams&#13;
UW-Madison and Oshkosh, and&#13;
lost to both.&#13;
UW·Madison finished with 383&#13;
strokes, Oshkosh 391, and&#13;
Parkside 416, in a match held at&#13;
the tough Cherokee Course in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
~oach ?tevens was disappointed&#13;
with the Scores in the&#13;
Madison meet. Only one&#13;
Ranger, Leif GUHormsen&#13;
broke 80. He just barely did it'&#13;
shooting a 79. Tom Bothe shot&#13;
80, Bob Toeppe 84, Dan&#13;
Weyrauch 86. and Ken RossI Sf&#13;
Stevens attributed the&#13;
relahvel.y high Scores in part to&#13;
the rainy conditions that&#13;
plagued the meet. "The course&#13;
was w~t and it played long and&#13;
tough. said Stevens&#13;
Despite the poor weather&#13;
cond~tlons the Badger Golfers&#13;
had five men below SO. paced be&#13;
medalist Willy Tack's rj Tack&#13;
was not originally scheduled 10&#13;
play. but one of the starting&#13;
golfers had an exammatlon so&#13;
he was put in as a substitute&#13;
The Badgers were readv (0&#13;
play, having had considerable&#13;
pr.actice time dur-ing a spring&#13;
tr-ip down South. "Thev alreadv&#13;
had played three or iour matches."&#13;
said Stevens.&#13;
Oshkosh, finishing only eight&#13;
strokes behind the Badgers, had&#13;
balanced scoring with three&#13;
79's, an 80 and a 75.&#13;
Take Doubleheader&#13;
the first game, managed only&#13;
one ru~ in the second game. It&#13;
came In the sixth inning when&#13;
Jeff Koleske-s- walk was&#13;
followed by Ron Schmitz's&#13;
triple.&#13;
Coach Kenneth "Red"&#13;
Oberbruner was happy about&#13;
the double win. "The team&#13;
played well despite having no&#13;
place to practice. We hadn't&#13;
been able to get outside too&#13;
much before these games," he&#13;
said.&#13;
What pleased Oberbruner&#13;
most was the defense. "The&#13;
defense held up and didn't make&#13;
the number of errors that would&#13;
be normal for early games,"&#13;
said Oberbruner. He was happy&#13;
with the 13 hits lhe team&#13;
collected 'during the&#13;
doubleheader.&#13;
Although the squad has no&#13;
uniforms yet, it will Soon have a&#13;
home field if the weather&#13;
remains favorable. A new&#13;
diamond, with a freshly sodded&#13;
infield, should be readv shorth&#13;
It is located west of the soccer&#13;
field on the Wood Road campus.&#13;
According to Oberbruner. the&#13;
addition of a home playing field&#13;
located on the campus will be a&#13;
great asset to the team. The&#13;
field has been watered&#13;
frequently and looks quite green&#13;
now. Some miscellaneou&#13;
chores remain to be taken care&#13;
of, such as acquiring bases. but&#13;
nevertheless, the team should&#13;
be playing its remaining home&#13;
games on the new diamond.&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS-----&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
¥W (~.ooo ml) S6OO; '66&#13;
c:.r.net (12,000 mt.) $700,&#13;
.... Inoton Ave, Raei.&#13;
"'Osc, Auto, 6, $150, Also&#13;
lIIl-lSBFG tires, rims &amp; Bal.&#13;
ifill-IS OBFG Ilres (500&#13;
~ &amp; 801 560_ 859-2653&#13;
.,,-:"!!Idget COllY,New Ban,&#13;
'- lMto Keno, R, Smllh or&#13;
~ 'so! t&#13;
... aio .... p. 326, Sp, Coup, _ ' 6II-aocl,&#13;
....... 710&#13;
lD2Iit 2de HT, 287,51, Sh-&#13;
•Cllo.oi=-It---- -&#13;
Ao1ro' 301-350 hp, 4 sp, 4&#13;
.. ..... &amp; More_ 654-4440,&#13;
____ Ave, Keno,&#13;
~ twa. ltSobre $100, 1-634-&#13;
---------&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
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ANK OF&#13;
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'68 r-r. Spitfire Mk III, Conv..&#13;
Low miles. 637-7966 or 654-9471&#13;
(after 6 p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
'63 Ram. Amer. Wag., Stk. new&#13;
clutch, muff, trans. 694-6353.&#13;
'62 Pont. Conv. Auto $250. 652-&#13;
1443 after 5 p.m.&#13;
'69 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spcL 383-335&#13;
hp; rad, htr. 637-5520 after 5:00&#13;
'63 Olds 88 HoI., 4953 btt, high&#13;
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Mayor June. Will split&#13;
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FOR RENT&#13;
MAOI SON summer sublet 2&#13;
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MISC, FOR SALE&#13;
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•&#13;
"Prilai.• 1..&#13;
Netmen BIonic Dominican&#13;
In the double, , la&#13;
Herchen-. "elson d lea f'd&#13;
Tennis Tournament Set&#13;
A sprmg teem&#13;
for students and (a ult~&#13;
members at Par will&#13;
held at th(' R vx ("am&#13;
tennis court In P&lt;-Nh n Park&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
""&#13;
..., It CERLACH&#13;
~&#13;
s&#13;
117I1( Bill If&#13;
"Check OUI'&#13;
Price. 1.11_\("&#13;
4 07 ; lh \ \ I 'l I&#13;
'Tradition&#13;
.••• .•••&#13;
~::&#13;
~~;&#13;
~~&#13;
~~&#13;
=$&#13;
~&#13;
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~::&#13;
:~&#13;
~&#13;
f.&#13;
II&#13;
~~&#13;
.:-- For Cuafanh·ed Service &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
~~; See Jim Merrie ~ ·'1114, HOllunond"&#13;
IHAMMO&#13;
~; STUDIO&#13;
::~: I ~29 lIa bonClOn PbOM 6H-216 I 1&lt; i'If Better Organs ore BUilt, Hammond _til bu.ld them,: ~.&#13;
;:::. :"':::-.:«:::::::*,~~":~..-..::.:.::.-:;:::s.w;::~""" - ~.&#13;
olf ers Whip Lake· Forest Weyrauch 86, and Ken Ro 1 ;&#13;
Ste\·ens attributed h&#13;
relati\'ely high :core_ in part t~&#13;
the rainy cond111on that&#13;
plagued the meet '"The cour ,&#13;
\\as w~t and it played long and&#13;
tough. said 'te\en.&#13;
Jil11 Casper&#13;
b1 \e11scope Staff&#13;
1/'fhe • won their first&#13;
Ri,.nr~r the season,&#13;
tc1.,akc Forest ~Y 15&#13;
nd Rockford by ;il.&#13;
a rn was paced by junior&#13;
uch and freshman&#13;
t}Ta \\'e1Tauch fired a I e •&#13;
a i4 . th r Ranger scores_ m e&#13;
d at oeerpath ~n Lake&#13;
Ill., were Leif Gut78,&#13;
Bob Toeppe 78, and&#13;
ilJjams 83. fil'e of six men shoot&#13;
iO' In the first meet was&#13;
'usfying to Coach Steve&#13;
n said, • 'The team&#13;
UWP '9'&#13;
b1 Jim Casper&#13;
,~ Sewscope Staff&#13;
baseball, new at&#13;
this year, got off to a&#13;
art as the Rangers won&#13;
of a doubleheader&#13;
arch-rival Dominican&#13;
The Rangers took the&#13;
e S-3, and won a 1-0&#13;
's duel in the second&#13;
de came up with eight&#13;
the opening game, and&#13;
the second. Dominican,&#13;
ile, was held to five hits&#13;
fi game, and only three&#13;
leap. Parkside's Carl&#13;
threw a three hit&#13;
in that game.&#13;
Ra ers, who scored in&#13;
of e first six innings of&#13;
played well for the first meet.&#13;
The course was in good shape&#13;
and the scores indicated it."&#13;
After their initial victory. the&#13;
Rangers ran into two of the&#13;
state's best college golf teams&#13;
UW-Madison and Oshkosh, and&#13;
lost to both.&#13;
UW-Madison finished with 383&#13;
strokes, Oshkosh 391, and&#13;
Parkside 416, in a match held at&#13;
the tough Cherokee course in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Coach Stevens was disappointed&#13;
with the scores in the&#13;
Madison meet. Only one&#13;
Ranger, Leif GuHormsen&#13;
broke 80. He just barely did it:&#13;
shooting a 79. Tom Bothe shot&#13;
80, Bob Toeppe 84, Dan&#13;
Desp11e the poor wea her&#13;
cond1t1ons the Bad er Golfo&#13;
had fiw men below 80. paced b,&#13;
medalist \\"illy Tack' ii Ta ·.&#13;
was not originally .-cheduled 0&#13;
play· but one of the ·•artm&#13;
golfers had an examination&#13;
he was put in a. a ,ub tllut&#13;
The Badgers were r ad, to&#13;
play, ha\'ing had con~1d r"abl&#13;
practice time during a ,pri&#13;
trip down outh. ··Toe, alread,&#13;
had played three or r our mai.&#13;
ches," said Ste\'en .&#13;
Oshkosh, fini hmg only eight&#13;
strokes behind the Badgers. had&#13;
balanced scoring \\ith thr "&#13;
79's, an 80 and a 75.&#13;
Take Doubleheader&#13;
the first game, managed only&#13;
one run in the second game. It&#13;
came in the sixth inning when&#13;
Jeff Koleske 's · walk was&#13;
followed by Ron Schmitz's&#13;
triple.&#13;
Coach Kenneth " Red"&#13;
Oberbruner was happy about&#13;
the double win. " The team&#13;
played well despite having no&#13;
place to practice. We hadn't&#13;
been able to get outside too&#13;
much before these games," he&#13;
said.&#13;
What pleased Oberbruner&#13;
most was the defense. "The&#13;
defense held up and didn't make&#13;
the number of errors that would&#13;
be normal for early games,"&#13;
said Oberbruner. He was happy&#13;
with the 13 hits the team&#13;
collected during the&#13;
doubleheader.&#13;
Although the quad ha no&#13;
uniforms yet, it will oon ha,·c a&#13;
home field if the weather&#13;
remains favorable A ne,,&#13;
diamond, wilh a freshh· .odded&#13;
infield, should be read,: hortlv&#13;
It is located west of the occer&#13;
field on lhe Wood Road campu.&#13;
According to Oberbruner. the&#13;
addition of a home playing field&#13;
located on the campu will be a&#13;
great asset to the team The&#13;
field has been watered&#13;
frequently and look quite green&#13;
now. Some mi cellaneou.&#13;
chores remain to be taken care&#13;
of, such as acquiring ba.- .. bu&#13;
nevertheless. the team :hould&#13;
be playmg its remaining horn&#13;
games on the ne,, diamond.&#13;
----CLASSIFIEDS----&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
(~.000 mi) $600; '66&#13;
Qironet (12,000mi.) $700.&#13;
ash,ngton Ave. Raci.&#13;
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i 15 BFG tires, rims &amp; Bal.&#13;
l 9.'I0-15 OBFG tires (500&#13;
ms &amp; Bal $60. 859-2653&#13;
)&#13;
td Co&#13;
rpet treatment&#13;
ot the&#13;
8ANK OF&#13;
llMwooo&#13;
...&#13;
• tryone I&#13;
e se does!)&#13;
b 4 L · _othrop Ave .&#13;
0C111e W' • I S .&#13;
'68 Tri. Spitfire Mk 111, Conv .,&#13;
Low miles. 637-7966 or 654-9471&#13;
(after 6 p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
'63 Ram. Amer. Wag., Stk, new&#13;
clutch, muff, trans. 694-6353.&#13;
'62 Pont. Conv. Auto $250. 652-&#13;
1443 after 5 p.m.&#13;
'69 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spd, 383-335&#13;
hp', rad, htr. 637-5520 after 5: 00&#13;
'63 Olds 88 Hol., 495 3 btl, high&#13;
comp. Best Offer. 654-6746 after&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
WANTED TO BUY - 2 used 3&#13;
or 5 speed 26" bicycles. Call 633-&#13;
3131 after 5.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DRIVE a Pugeot to Minneapolis.&#13;
Must get there before&#13;
June. Call 843-2225 after 5 or 657-&#13;
5121 ext. 36.&#13;
NEED ride to Seattle or An&#13;
chorage, May or June. Will split&#13;
cost. Call Barb 654 9631.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
MADISON summer sublet 2&#13;
bed. near Vilas Park. Call 608-&#13;
251 -8632, $65 per person.&#13;
ROOM - Men only, S9.00 per&#13;
wk. 3 blocks from Racine&#13;
Campus. Inquire 832 S&#13;
Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
AMP _ Silvertone A cha ncl.&#13;
Also mike. Best offer. Call&#13;
Cathy, 694-2769. Must sell.&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE&#13;
Westinghouse 30", s75 :&#13;
REFRIGERATOR&#13;
Westinghouse S75. Box spC"ing&#13;
mattress for double bed, S75.&#13;
Call 633-0541 .&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Netmen Blan&#13;
Re&#13;
the Ran&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
PED&#13;
.. h&#13;
Cl y I&#13;
111"&#13;
p,-j . I... ,.. i&#13;
• ilh \ ,.&#13;
'1 r, die ion&#13;
For Guoro&#13;
Su Ji&#13;
Do • • ,n,can&#13;
• • &#13;
PaseS AprilZS.IS71&#13;
.....---Jethro TullBringsOutTherUnderground'-----&#13;
b) Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Se'Ascope Starr&#13;
America's cngtnal longhair. weaned on purple&#13;
hate acid and ''In·A-Gadda-Da-Vida''. by Iron&#13;
ButterOy. IS to. 109 hi imege 10 the underground he&#13;
created If the Jethro Tull concert in Milwaukee on&#13;
Apnl14 is any indicauon of the counter-culture of the&#13;
day&#13;
It seems to me that those ....ho Identify with the&#13;
I ft hav reached a new plateau of wealth The drab&#13;
clothing con. I ling of blue Jeans. fatigues. and other&#13;
urplu items. have en replaced by $8 T-shirts with&#13;
tars nd lIghtenmg bolt sewn on, fringe coats made&#13;
of leath rand uede, boots with an accessory atchm&#13;
nt. for spurs, and clever patches including&#13;
l\hckl''\o'Motbc and marijuana leafs. that cover the&#13;
, hoi an the old faded Jeans&#13;
But weather the COIlOOI .eurs of rock dress well&#13;
or not. It . e m. that a group like Jethro Tull brings&#13;
f\tqOO tDgNher. 81 least for one evening of music.&#13;
Bolh concerts \\ ere sold out in advance, With a few&#13;
hundred people "31lmK outSIde the Perform 109 Arls&#13;
Ct.'nt r for lick L~to fall out of the sky, or someone's&#13;
ket&#13;
Thf En~hsh musicians use the name of an 18th&#13;
c ntury 10\ enter. Jethro Tull. who among other&#13;
Ihl~ • founded fle\l, uses for manure in his native&#13;
England Th group consists of Jan Anderson. nute,&#13;
\'()('al and gUitar· ClI\'C BWlkcr. drums (the only two&#13;
orlKmal Tull member&gt; I.ft). Jelfrey HammondHammond&#13;
bass gUitar; John Evan. plano. organ,&#13;
nd !\larlln Barre, lead gUitar&#13;
Ian Ander~n is the founder and leader of the&#13;
group H appe red wearing knee high moccasins.&#13;
hghts, on e \\torn Inmerry old England, and a ripped,&#13;
pl ld, kn length robe. HIS dress and stage antics&#13;
prompted a ~1I1wukee Jow-nal writer to say that&#13;
Ander. n "100 as though he's stepped straight out&#13;
I an 18lh century· a ylurn."&#13;
Before an)"one could enjoy the music of Jethro&#13;
Tull. lhey were subjected to another English group&#13;
called Cun'ed Air. A female vocalist named Sonja&#13;
Krl ·tlona tried to get It on, as Tina l\Irner does and&#13;
Jopltn did. but came up short. Curved Air also has a&#13;
menacing V10hnist named Darryl Way. His function&#13;
was to abuse the viohn and capture the intensity of&#13;
Grand Funk&#13;
When thiS nonsense was over, and after a fifteen&#13;
minute Intermission, everyone seWed back to hear&#13;
Ian Anderson and company. The appearance of the&#13;
robe-clad nute player broughlthe entire second show&#13;
audience to its feet. To many. h~ has ~id ~s d~les ~&#13;
the underground with albwns Iike This Was, an&#13;
Cp, and Benefit, and cross-country tours the past&#13;
three years. . ed The new album Tull was to introduce IS nam&#13;
Aqualung. It is mainly the creation of Ian Anderson,&#13;
who calls the album ·'anti-religious". The album was&#13;
released in England awhile ago, but has not come out&#13;
in America yet.&#13;
Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull&#13;
After turnng-up and greeting the crowd, the group&#13;
began with "Nothing Is Easy" from the Stand-Up&#13;
album, The rest of the show followed the pattern of a&#13;
few old favorites and then two or three songs off the&#13;
new album. This mixture provided for a fine show.&#13;
The appearance of Jethro Tull at Uihlein Hall at&#13;
the Performing Arts Center was somewhat of a rarity&#13;
in rock. It isn't very often that anyone can enjoy the&#13;
plush surroundings of the Center and see a&#13;
rock group. IlOlIU1ar&#13;
Concerts are usually in huge arenas, or cav '&#13;
the Aragon and the Syndrome in Chicago. Th~like&#13;
peting, comfortable seats, elevator and car·&#13;
"luxuries" (not to mention the excellent accou~~her&#13;
proved to be welcome but confusing. Itwas too ~cS)&#13;
learn that crashers, who didn't get in, smash d to&#13;
glass door that caused some $400 damage. With ~ a&#13;
like this, Milwaukeens may have to get used t antics&#13;
accommodations like the Oriental "Theater w~ ~&#13;
costs $4 to sit on the floor. ' ere It&#13;
Individuals who have "followed this group 8i&#13;
1968 may argue that the group Anderson brou nee&#13;
MiNl""kee is not up to the standards set by thgh~&#13;
groups. on the first three albums, The first ~b&#13;
included Anderson, Bunker, Mick Abrahams IUIn&#13;
guitar, and Glenn Cornick, bass guitar. Abrciliead&#13;
started his own group after this album naams&#13;
Blodwyn Pig. Glenn Comic did two more albumsmed&#13;
then went on his way. For the current tour and alb and&#13;
the five member Jethro Tull is somewhat new urn,&#13;
Any skeptics as to the quality of the perform'&#13;
of the group were answered with Ian Ande:&#13;
Though solos on lead and bass guitars were&#13;
somewhat weak as compared to the original Tu1I&#13;
guitarists, the performance of Ian Anderson left&#13;
one questioning his talents, which I thought w no&#13;
worth the price of admission. eft&#13;
His lyrics in Aqualung concern a dirty old rnaa&#13;
who sit~ in the park "eyeing up little girls withbod&#13;
mtent.' SIde one IS devoted to the antics or the&#13;
'*&#13;
man Aqualung. Side two is called "My God" 8tId&#13;
her .. Ian Anderson displays his philosop,ies' .....&#13;
cernmg religIOn. The whole album which Jethro TuB&#13;
performed in full, seems to be an excellent wort&#13;
Many concert goers will either have to buy the&#13;
English copy, or anxiously await the release of the&#13;
album by Reprise.&#13;
o&#13;
..&#13;
o&#13;
..•&#13;
"•z&#13;
":&gt;&#13;
o&#13;
"w&#13;
w&#13;
•:&gt;&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
•&#13;
The lyrics of one song in particular will COII'1Oj&#13;
the tone of the "anti-religious" theme Anele....&#13;
spok,e of. The last song Jethro Tull performedia&#13;
Milwa.ukee, and the last song on side two ofthealbum&#13;
is called "Wind-Up". Standing alone on stage with biI&#13;
gUitar, Ian Anderson sang, "Well you caD a·&#13;
communicate me on my way to Sunday school,"udl&#13;
assume after hearing this album, someone,&#13;
somewhere will try to. But they weren't in tilt&#13;
audience the night Ian Anderson and Jethro M&#13;
captivated the Milwaukee counter-culture.&#13;
SUPPORT THOSE WHO SUPPORTU&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS&#13;
f,lol;' RRr~f\ooJ'o\-&#13;
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PHYSICIANS REFERRAL&#13;
w. know .. can help you, eveft H&#13;
It's juat to talk to ·aomKn •.&#13;
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~~BRAT'~&#13;
Where It's At!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
9 A.M. TO .4 P.M.&#13;
A Bottle' of&#13;
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PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Available Far Parties&#13;
, . PClrti,1&#13;
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0&#13;
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0&#13;
"l&#13;
Y&#13;
2 p.M.&#13;
d H· h"aY SO Narthwest Corner 1-94 an .g&#13;
pg Aprll ?6, 1971&#13;
.-----Jethro Tull Brings Out The 'Underground'-------&#13;
audience to its feet. To many, h: has ~id his dues~~&#13;
the undergrolllld with albwns like This Was, Stan&#13;
l'p, and Benefit. and cross-country tours the past&#13;
three vears. . ed&#13;
The new album Tull was to introduce 1s nam&#13;
Aqu lung. It is mainly the creation of Ian Anderson,&#13;
\·ho calls the album ··anti-religious" . The album was&#13;
released in England awhile ago, but has not come out&#13;
in America yet.&#13;
Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull&#13;
After turung-up and greeting the crowd, the group&#13;
began with " othing ls Easy" from the Stand-Up&#13;
album. The rest of the show followed the pattern of a&#13;
few old favorites and then two or three songs off the&#13;
new album. This mixture provided for a fine show.&#13;
The appearance of Jethro Tull at Uihlein Hall at&#13;
the Performing Arts Center was somewhat of a rarity&#13;
in rock. It isn't very often that anyone can enjoy the&#13;
0&#13;
....&#13;
0&#13;
X&#13;
6.&#13;
J&#13;
&lt;&#13;
z&#13;
a:&#13;
:,&#13;
0&#13;
.,&#13;
w&#13;
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~&#13;
:,&#13;
&lt;&#13;
3:&#13;
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i&#13;
plush surroundings of the Center and see a rock group. PClPlllar&#13;
Concerts are usually in huge arenas, or cav .&#13;
the Aragon and the Syndrome in Chicago. Th~ hke&#13;
peting, comfortable seats, elevator and car.&#13;
"luxuries" (not to mention the excellent acco other&#13;
proved to be welcome but confusing. It was too ~tic I&#13;
learn that crashers, who didn't get in, smash ad lo&#13;
glass door that caused some $400 damage. With ed a&#13;
like this, Milwaukeens may have to get used t anuc&#13;
accommodations like the Oriental "Theater, wi ro~ costs $4 to sit on the floor. ere U&#13;
Individuals who have followed this group si&#13;
1968 may argue that the group Anderson brou nee&#13;
MiN11111kee is not up to the standards set by th gh~o&#13;
groups. on the first three albums. The first ~b ll&#13;
in~luded Anderson, B~ker, Mick Abrahams, 1~rn&#13;
gmtar, and Glenn Cornick, bass guitar. Abrah d&#13;
started his own group after this album na allls&#13;
Blodwyn Pig. Glenn Comic did two more albums me(!&#13;
then went on his way. For the current tour and alb and&#13;
the five member Jethro Tull is somewhat new urn,&#13;
Any skeptics as to the quality of the perform'ance&#13;
of the group were answered with Ian Anderson&#13;
Though solos on lead and bass guitars wer ·&#13;
somewhat weak as compared to the original run&#13;
guitarists, the performance of Ian Anderson left&#13;
one questioning his talents, which I thought w no&#13;
worth the price of admission. re&#13;
H!s l~rics in Aqu~lun~ conce~n a dirty old man&#13;
~ho s1~ 1~ the pa~k eyemg up little girls with bad&#13;
mtent. Side one 1s devoted to the antics of the old&#13;
man Aqualung. Side t_wo is cal!ed "My God'', and&#13;
here_ Ian ~~derson displays his philosophi concernmg&#13;
religion. The whole album which Jethro Tull&#13;
performed in full, seems to be an excellent worl.:&#13;
Many concert goers will either have to buy u..;&#13;
English copy, or anxiously await the release of the&#13;
album by Reprise.&#13;
The lyrics- of one song in particular will COlll'ey&#13;
the tone of the "anti-religious" theme Andersai&#13;
spo~e of. The last song Jethro Tull performed ·&#13;
Milwaukee, and the last song on side two of the album&#13;
is called "Wind-Up". Standing alone on stage with hJs&#13;
guitar, Ian Anderson sang, "Well you can excommunicate&#13;
meon my way to Sunday school," and I&#13;
assume after hearing this album, someone,&#13;
somewhere will try to. But they weren't in the&#13;
audience the night Ian Anderson and Jethro Tull&#13;
captivated the Milwaukee counter-culture.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
VOLUME 3 NUMBER 14 MAY 3,1971&#13;
—FREEStalbaum&#13;
and Molinaro&#13;
Interviewed -page 3&#13;
Knopps &amp; Rubin&#13;
Address "a gathering of the people"&#13;
By Marc Eisen of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Parkside had its "gathering of people" to&#13;
support the People's Peace Treaty last Wednesday,&#13;
and an overflow crowd responded, filling&#13;
the Activities Building to hear.Jerry Rubin and&#13;
Mark Knopps of Kaliedescope speak.&#13;
The Gathering was sponsored and financed in&#13;
part by Student Government. Much of the crowd,&#13;
an estimated 700 strong, was composed of area&#13;
high school students.&#13;
Other speakers were Father Luke MacArthur&#13;
of Dominican College, Helen Schiller of the Racine&#13;
Children's Breakfast program, and an unidentified&#13;
youth who had just finished a two year&#13;
stretch at Green Bay for a dope conviction.&#13;
Rubin, noted yippie and a defendant in the&#13;
Chicago 8 conspiracy trial, gave an hour long freeform&#13;
speech that touched upon almost every&#13;
radical cause and interest around.&#13;
Among the topics he discussed were: women's&#13;
liberation, children's liberation, gay liberation,&#13;
male chauvinism, a Freudian analyses of&#13;
education, ecocide, genocide, American imperialism,&#13;
economic imperialism, Christianity,&#13;
water beds, organic food, Joe Cocker, Calley and&#13;
Manson, Cuba, dope (marijuana), drugs (heroin),&#13;
pacifism, March on Washington, Tim Leary, dope&#13;
smoking as a religious act, closet acid heads, the&#13;
army, J. Edgar Hoover, and the Revolution.&#13;
Rubin exhorted those present to go to&#13;
Washington. "If you're worried about violence,&#13;
Washington is going to be a non-violent action."&#13;
"They can't jail all of us. If we all stick&#13;
together, we can't lose. That's our power," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"What's going to happen in Washington is that&#13;
masses and masses of people are going to it to&#13;
raise the cost of war so high that it can't be carried&#13;
on anymore," he explained.&#13;
"It's going to spread," he told the audience.&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
by John Koloen and Mike Kurth&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
The Southeastern Wisconsin Committee&#13;
to Preserve Parkside met last Friday night in&#13;
Greenquist Hall. The meeting was primarily&#13;
devoted to intra-organizational problems but&#13;
included an address by Assemblyman George&#13;
Molinaro D-Ken.&#13;
Prior to Mr. Molinaro's address the&#13;
chairman of the meeting, Mrs. Ralph&#13;
Jaeschke, outlined the business to be&#13;
discussed which included the election of a&#13;
board of directors to prepare by-laws. Several&#13;
Parkside students were nominated including&#13;
Dennis Cashion, Tim Eaker and Ken Antaramian.&#13;
&#13;
Made up of local citizens and alumni of&#13;
the university the group is opposed to the&#13;
proposed UW-State university merger and&#13;
invited Mr. Molinaro to the meeting to discuss&#13;
the status of the merger bill in the state&#13;
legislature.&#13;
Molinaro began by explaining his strategy&#13;
in opposition to the merger noting that "The&#13;
University itself is a little naive or a little&#13;
stupid or whatever you want to call it. They're&#13;
playing a game that they know very little&#13;
about and they're on thin ice and they're about&#13;
to go under." He was referring to the apparent&#13;
lack of interest on the part of President&#13;
Weaver since Weaver had not approached&#13;
him personally concerning the budget cuts.&#13;
He added that the Green Bay campus and&#13;
community has shown almost ho initiative in&#13;
fighting the merger expressing the attitude&#13;
that if Green Bay doesn't show some enthusiasm&#13;
he is going to concentrate on aiding&#13;
the Parkside campus only.&#13;
"Parkside is the most important thing to&#13;
me. Any other field of education you've got in&#13;
this state, including Mr. "Buck" Weaver and&#13;
all his other aides that I'm about ready to let&#13;
Assemblyman Molinaro&#13;
them play their game of chance, let them wind&#13;
up with an open end book and let them&#13;
struggle for these two years and the following&#13;
two years and we'll see what kind of political&#13;
plum game we're going to end up with."&#13;
He re-emphasized his disappointment in&#13;
the University's "Ivory tower" attitude&#13;
toward the merger crisis. Turning to factors&#13;
causing the merger he stated, "We have to go&#13;
-C&#13;
a ID&#13;
? O&#13;
£&#13;
Molinaro Speaks to&#13;
S.W.C.P.P.&#13;
back to the Kellett reorganization of state&#13;
government. We had 83 departments before&#13;
the Kellett reorganization committee came&#13;
about, they sold us a package deal that we're&#13;
going to save $3Vfe m illion the first biennium&#13;
by reducing the 83 down to 29 departments, I&#13;
lost the fight by three votes. Today we have&#13;
153 divisions within the 29 departments, we&#13;
By Marc Eisen of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Beginning his speech as Jerry Rubin would&#13;
later begin his, Mark Knopps, the editor of&#13;
Kaleidescope, questioned the audience why they&#13;
weren't smoking dope, and when someone threw&#13;
him up a joint, he lit it, took a couple of tokes, and&#13;
then passed u He began speaking then on what&#13;
it is to be young m America and to be living in the&#13;
midst of a crumbling empire.&#13;
Knopps, who chose six months in jail rather&#13;
|than to testify before a grand jury on how he obtained&#13;
a letter from the bombers of the Army&#13;
Math Research Building in Madison, described&#13;
how in traveling across the state he has seen the&#13;
same thing —- kids not knowing what's happening&#13;
to them.&#13;
He spoke in a slow, deliberate manner that&#13;
contrasted to the frantic disjointedness of Rubin.&#13;
Aptly, in the background the easy sound of D avid&#13;
Crosby's album, If I Co uld Only Remember My&#13;
Name, played.&#13;
Selected extracts from Knopps' speech are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
"Most importantly, if we want to understand&#13;
ourselves as a group (and we are a group), we&#13;
have to see one key word — it may sound strange&#13;
at first, but everything fits together once you get it&#13;
in your head — that word is empire, because that&#13;
is what we are living in. We're right in the heart of&#13;
it.&#13;
"That's why we are what we are. That's why&#13;
we're here. Maybe we have never heard that word&#13;
before, empire. It's something you read about&#13;
when you study Rome. To me that is the word that&#13;
describes exactly what is happening to my life,&#13;
and the lives of the people around me."&#13;
He went on to describe the United States to the&#13;
Roman Empire in its last days.&#13;
"You go up to Madison and they're building&#13;
about five or six huge new buildings on the&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
even increased the payroll by almost 7,000&#13;
employees, and it is costing us $13 million&#13;
more each biennium, that's what they call&#13;
austerity, economy and efficiency in government."&#13;
&#13;
Molinaro»cautioned the audience of the&#13;
foreseeable effects of the merger (ie.&#13;
limitations on out of state enrollment, etc.)&#13;
adding that the ruling body over the merged&#13;
system would "evaluate the whole system&#13;
within the next two years ... and then&#13;
determine what's going to be on any campus,&#13;
which campus is going to be eliminated . . .&#13;
which campus is going to be allowed to grow&#13;
and which ones will freeze."&#13;
He warned that the president of this ruling&#13;
body would be a "dictator" over state&#13;
education as a result of the extensive power&#13;
his position will have.&#13;
Returning to an earlier point in the address&#13;
he notes that "All the businessmen and&#13;
professional people and the unions and the&#13;
PTA's sit on their hands . . . and they will&#13;
have what they have got today and a little&#13;
less."&#13;
Concluding with a plea for organized&#13;
efforts by the citizens, and students in opposition&#13;
to the merger he assured them that&#13;
"I'll do my best and I trust that you'll do&#13;
yours."&#13;
A question period followed and soon after&#13;
the meeting was turned to its regular&#13;
business. The regular business primarily&#13;
involved haggling over parlimentary&#13;
procedures while discussing a "position"&#13;
paper the steering committee had proposed. A&#13;
motion was finally made and carried to refer&#13;
the paper to the board of directors.&#13;
The turnout for the meeting was very&#13;
light, about forty people and only four&#13;
students attended, two were reporters. &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
May 3,1971&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
302 Green Bay Rci&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-1336&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
far 4* xt#/&amp;*ve/&#13;
EMIL G ERLACH&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
eooa 40th AVE&#13;
KENOSHA WIS&#13;
OL7-B174&#13;
Open Soturdays&#13;
9 A.M.- to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECKI NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENT&#13;
AND R ETIREES&#13;
3928 Sixtieth Street&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Symposium To be Held This Saturday&#13;
A one-day symposium titled&#13;
"Corrections and the Offender:&#13;
Treatment or Punishment" will&#13;
be held Saturday (May 8) at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
The symposium, which will&#13;
run from 9:30 a.m. to 3:15 p.m.,&#13;
is sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
&#13;
Keynote speaker will be&#13;
Sanger Powers, director of the&#13;
Wisconsin Division of&#13;
Corrections and chairman of&#13;
the Wisconsin Parole Board.&#13;
Prior to taking his current posts&#13;
Powers was superintendent of&#13;
the Wisconsin State Reformatory.&#13;
&#13;
He will talk on •Current&#13;
Problems in Corrections".&#13;
Discussants of the keynote&#13;
address will be Joseph Rowan,&#13;
director of the John Howard&#13;
Association, an agency&#13;
dedicated to the rehabilitation&#13;
of former prisoners, and Prof.&#13;
William H. Hewitt, coordinator&#13;
of the Criminal Justice&#13;
Program at UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Rowan is a former deputy&#13;
commissioner of corrections for&#13;
Minnesota and has done&#13;
probation and parole work in&#13;
California and Wisconsin. He&#13;
served for seven years as a^&#13;
member of the National Council&#13;
on Crime and Delinquency.&#13;
Hewitt previously taught in&#13;
the Center for Law Enforcement&#13;
and Corrections at&#13;
Pennsylvania State University&#13;
and the Police Administration&#13;
department at State University&#13;
of New York-Farmingdale. A&#13;
consultant to the President's&#13;
Crime Commission, he is the&#13;
author of two books on police&#13;
administration.&#13;
Their talks will precede&#13;
showing of three award-winning&#13;
films, "The Odds Against" ,&#13;
"The Price of a Life" and "The&#13;
Revolving Door", which deal&#13;
respectively with maximum&#13;
security prisons, probation and&#13;
jails. A panel discussion will be&#13;
held after each film.&#13;
Charles Gray, Kenosha&#13;
probation officer, will chair the&#13;
panel on probation which will&#13;
include Delmar Huebner,&#13;
director of the Wisconsin&#13;
bureau of probation and parole,&#13;
Rowan and Hewitt.&#13;
Andrew McLean of the&#13;
Parkside faculty will chair the&#13;
panel on jails including Vern&#13;
Verhulst, Wisconsin director of&#13;
detention; Robert Ellsworth,&#13;
associate warden for treatment&#13;
at the Wisconsin Correctional&#13;
Institution-Fox Lake; Huebner,&#13;
Rowan and Hewitt.&#13;
James McKeown of the&#13;
Parkside faculty will chair the&#13;
panel on prisons including&#13;
Ellsworth, Verhulst and Rowan.&#13;
Persons wishing to participate&#13;
in the symposium&#13;
should pre-register by May 6&#13;
with Prof. McLean at the UWP&#13;
Kenosha Campus.&#13;
LETTER TO THE EDITOR&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
It seems the Parkside Police&#13;
threw a party last weekend&#13;
entitled "Meet the Parkside&#13;
Police", and as an extra added&#13;
attraction there was plenty of&#13;
pre-advertised FREE BEER!&#13;
Naturally with the free beer the&#13;
party' was a ripped roaring&#13;
success, as far as attendance&#13;
goes anyway.&#13;
To put it differently, the same&#13;
men who feel a need to carry&#13;
mace and revolvers while&#13;
passing out their $5.00 parking&#13;
tickets threw a bash. Anyone&#13;
and everyone who wanted to&#13;
could get drunker than a&#13;
roaring skunk, free.&#13;
To 'get it on' or whatever, the&#13;
officers were playing 'top forty&#13;
music' over the intercom on a&#13;
squad car they had parked in&#13;
front. The music was well&#13;
complemented by the red&#13;
flashing lights and blaring&#13;
siren. But that's not the point.&#13;
The point is . . . while&#13;
'Security' was getting into it&#13;
with their gesture of good will,&#13;
others were getting into&#13;
something else. Lost of suds and&#13;
M^AMPUS EVENTS^&#13;
Monday, May 3: Meeting.&#13;
Equestrian Club. 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Room Dill. Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Baseball. Rangers vs. '&#13;
Dominican. 1:00 p.m. at&#13;
Dominican.&#13;
Tuesday, May 4: Golf. UW-P&#13;
vs. UW-M and Carthage at&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Music students at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will present a free&#13;
public Honors Concert at 8 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday. May 4, in the Badger&#13;
Room at the UWP Racine&#13;
Campus.&#13;
Wednesday, May 5: Film.&#13;
"Loved One". Presented by&#13;
Parkside Film Society. Room&#13;
103. Greenquist Hall. Admission:&#13;
$.50.&#13;
Friday. May 6: Golf. UW-P&#13;
vs. Whitewater. Petrifying&#13;
Springs. Feature Film. "Four&#13;
for Texas". Student Activities&#13;
Building. 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, May 8: Symposium.&#13;
"Corrections and the&#13;
Offender: Treatment or&#13;
Punishment". Sponsored by&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
9:30 a.m. - 3:15 p.m.&#13;
Greenquist Hall. Baseball.&#13;
Rangers vs. U of Illinois&#13;
Chicago. Parkside Athletic&#13;
Field. 12:00 noon. Tennis. UW-P&#13;
vs. St. Norbert. 1:00 p.m. at&#13;
home. Dance. 9:00 - 1:00 a.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin I.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
Special Events&#13;
Summer Travel: Three&#13;
European Flights this summer.&#13;
Flight C departs August 15 from&#13;
Chicago to London and returns&#13;
September 12 from London to&#13;
Chicago. The cost is $197.00.&#13;
Flight D departs July 15 for&#13;
London and returns August 11&#13;
from Amsterdam to Chicago.&#13;
The cost is $197.00. Flight I&#13;
departs June 15 from Chicago to&#13;
London and returns September&#13;
18 from London to Chicago. The&#13;
cost is $218.00. Information&#13;
available at the Student Activities&#13;
Office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
r~&#13;
JOB HUNTING&#13;
We're So Proud of Mony's&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Program For College Seniors that we&#13;
will give you a copy of The Complete Job&#13;
Hunting Guide for the opportunity to&#13;
show you what&#13;
The Life Insurance Program for College&#13;
Students can do for you&#13;
for information send:&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
,Ci ty&#13;
Phone.&#13;
To: John J. Schmitz&#13;
612 15 th Place&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
652 4020&#13;
roaring and flexing their&#13;
muscles.&#13;
To get away from abstract&#13;
thoughts and state it bluntly&#13;
man, some people really got the&#13;
shit kicked out of themselves&#13;
there. Maybe because others&#13;
can't keep their beer down&#13;
without getting rowdy.&#13;
It's not the first campus 'get&#13;
together' with some "really&#13;
good fights" nor the last. But&#13;
with the proper encouragement&#13;
the Angel types could have a&#13;
hand in making Parkside by&#13;
creating the annual&#13;
McGovern&#13;
Committee&#13;
Formed&#13;
A Kenosha County McGovern&#13;
for President Committee has&#13;
been formed to promote the&#13;
candidacy of the South Dakota&#13;
Senator.&#13;
Co-chairmen of the committee&#13;
are Mrs. Linda Legler&#13;
and James M. Hansen. Hansen&#13;
was 1st District McCarthy&#13;
delegate to the 1968&#13;
Democratic National convention.&#13;
Other officers are&#13;
Robert Ormeth, secretary, and&#13;
James Taube, treasurer.&#13;
Hansen said the group was&#13;
aiming for a McGovern win in&#13;
the Wisconsin presidential&#13;
primary next year. He invited&#13;
persons to join the campaign by&#13;
contacting officers.&#13;
"We believe," a spokesman&#13;
said, "that Sen. George&#13;
McGovern is an independent&#13;
voice speaking on behalf of&#13;
millions of Americans, young&#13;
and old, who are deeply&#13;
disturbed and dissatisfied with&#13;
the performance of our&#13;
government at home and&#13;
abroad.&#13;
"We believe Sen. McGovern&#13;
is speaking to, and on behalf of,&#13;
millions of Americans who feel&#13;
alienated from their government."&#13;
&#13;
All interested students,&#13;
faculty, administration, call&#13;
654-4982 o r 694-2809.&#13;
GOnSORT&#13;
Policeman's Brawl.&#13;
We're supposed to be&#13;
proponents in the new third&#13;
world, not opponents doing the&#13;
same old shit. The energies&#13;
expended in fighting amongst&#13;
ourselves are not only wasted&#13;
but are a setback. If you gotta&#13;
get pissed off at least be constructive&#13;
— scream dirty words&#13;
or something about really bad&#13;
things.&#13;
A certain dude named Sly was&#13;
quoted in Rolling Stone: "We&#13;
just aren't into street-fighting&#13;
here."&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Warren Nedry Editor&#13;
Marc Eisen News Editor&#13;
John Koloen Copy Editor&#13;
Jim Nolan Business Manager&#13;
John Leighton Advertising&#13;
Manager&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
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Kurth, Bob Borchardt, Ken&#13;
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Casper, Paul Lomartire, Sven&#13;
Taffs. Mark Timpany&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
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Gray, Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES&#13;
658-4861, Ext. 36&#13;
652-4177&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
operation of Newscope. 6,000&#13;
copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University.&#13;
Free copies are available&#13;
upon request.&#13;
2nd Class Postage paid at&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
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Mav 3.1971&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
of t he Newscope Staff&#13;
^ feature series&#13;
Finance Committee Member Stalbaum&#13;
NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
EDITORS NOTE: This is the first of a&#13;
four-part series on the merger vs.&#13;
UW-Parkside. The series will consist&#13;
of interviews with our state&#13;
legislators from Racine and Kenosha&#13;
counties.&#13;
Merrill Stalbaum is the assemblyman&#13;
from western Racine county.&#13;
Newscope asked Mr. Stalbaum if it was&#13;
true that Governor Lucey's merger would&#13;
save the state money.&#13;
"Governor Lucey has said we would&#13;
save the state $4 million by merging the&#13;
universities. I feel there are more funds&#13;
jeopardized than that because the amount&#13;
of federal funds for research purposes that&#13;
Wisconsin will receive during the next&#13;
bienpium amounts to $60 million a year,&#13;
which means a total of $120 million is&#13;
jeopardized."&#13;
Newscope then asked about the future of&#13;
the State universities.&#13;
Mr. Stalbaum answered: "It's impossible&#13;
for the state to afford to bring the&#13;
state university system up to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system."&#13;
Newscope then inquired about&#13;
Parkside's future.&#13;
"There will be no priorities," he said.&#13;
"I'm not worried about Parkside or Green&#13;
Bay because we do have points in our&#13;
favor. After reapportionment we'll have&#13;
five more new assemblymen in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin, the area sympathetic&#13;
to our cause."&#13;
Newscope questioned Stalbaum about&#13;
Parkside's ambitious building program.&#13;
"It will be costly," Mr. Stalbaum said.&#13;
"There should be quite a large amount of&#13;
funds for both Green Bay and Parkside in&#13;
the next two years. At Parkside the&#13;
potential for students is great. In order to&#13;
keep up with enrollment they've got to&#13;
build."&#13;
Will. Parkside funds be restored?&#13;
"I should think that Parkside would&#13;
have considerable of their funds restored&#13;
— so would Green Bay. The enrollment&#13;
determines the size of the faculty and the&#13;
amount of buildings you're going to need."&#13;
"Governor Lucey argues that the cost&#13;
per student going to Parkside is too high.&#13;
But you have the start-up costs and&#13;
potential for increased enrollment. I feel&#13;
when the dust is settled considerable of the&#13;
funds will be restored."&#13;
"I've been on Finance Committee for&#13;
four years and I've never really had to do&#13;
very much for Parkside. That is&#13;
changing."&#13;
Stalbaum said some state universities&#13;
may be in for a sad awakening. He considered&#13;
a partial merger of the two&#13;
systems, favoring bringing Stevens Point&#13;
and Platteville into the UW system.&#13;
He said: "There are three adjacent state&#13;
universities in three adjacent counties;&#13;
River Falls, Menominee and Eau Claire. It&#13;
is rather doubtful that all three of those&#13;
institutions will be kept in operation,&#13;
Menominee and Eau Claire might be&#13;
gone."&#13;
The topic then switched to taxes. Mr.&#13;
Stalbaum said there will be an increase in&#13;
both corporate and personal taxes as well&#13;
as property taxes. It may drive some of&#13;
our corporations out of the state by raising&#13;
the corporate tax from 7 to 8.4 per cent&#13;
"Taxes will go up to 14 per cent over the&#13;
present ten per cent on incomes over&#13;
$14,000. All the brackets will be increased&#13;
20 per cent, but the exemptions will only be&#13;
raised from $10 to $20." By this method&#13;
lower brackets will pay less and higher&#13;
brackets more.&#13;
Newscope then asked if Governor&#13;
Lucey's budget was going to make it&#13;
through the legislature or if there were&#13;
going to be any drastic changes.&#13;
Stalbaum answered that it probably&#13;
would be amended, spelling out every&#13;
phase of the UW system right in the&#13;
merger. The legislature could even&#13;
completely tie the hands of the Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Newscope concluded the interview by&#13;
asking if the merger would make it&#13;
through the assembly.&#13;
"In the Democratically controlled&#13;
house, Governor Lucey is assured of 45&#13;
votes of the 66 Democrats, and he'll also&#13;
pick up some Republican votes."&#13;
will have a two-week's debate&#13;
Finance Committee Chairman Molinaro h&#13;
.^£i&#13;
what they amend, so it will go to&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Do you think the&#13;
merger will help or hinder the&#13;
University?&#13;
"At the start of the merger it&#13;
was such a loose affair which left&#13;
complete control to just one&#13;
person, the president of all the&#13;
universities. That kind of a&#13;
merger is the worst type of&#13;
merger you can get with all the&#13;
open loose ends for someone else&#13;
to tie for political purposes."&#13;
"The merger can be good and it&#13;
can be bad. The savings we would&#13;
make on the proposed merger as&#13;
it now stands since they lowered&#13;
their aims of an absolute dictatorial&#13;
type of merger. They&#13;
can't save more than $3 million in&#13;
the biennium and could cost us&#13;
$10 to $15 million more in the next&#13;
ten years."&#13;
"As it now stands, the merger&#13;
provides where the degrees&#13;
would be set, what the academic&#13;
course would be, and other items.&#13;
Mr. Molinaro can't see anyone&#13;
handling this other than Madison&#13;
— to the detriment of the other&#13;
schools."&#13;
Regents Must Change&#13;
"Eventually it will have to&#13;
wind up with 16 paid regents. If&#13;
you have to have 16 people who&#13;
are paid a salary to serve on that&#13;
it's not only the amount of dollars&#13;
that goes into it but it will turn&#13;
over the field of higher education&#13;
to a group of professionals and&#13;
that is bad since no one else will&#13;
have anything to say except the&#13;
group of professionals and&#13;
professionals are just like anyone&#13;
else, once they get control no one&#13;
knows anything but the pros. And&#13;
that is highly detrimental to the&#13;
field of education."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Would the&#13;
merger affect Parkside in particular?&#13;
&#13;
"If the merger says that they&#13;
will not phase anyone out by&#13;
statutory provisions and if the&#13;
merger says that Parkside and&#13;
Green Bay will be permitted to&#13;
have Master's Degrees, then that&#13;
won't be so bad."&#13;
"If they don't give us enough&#13;
money to start up that will again&#13;
stymie the whole program in both&#13;
Green Bay and Parkside. A&#13;
merger that will be worth&#13;
anything is a merger that&#13;
guarantees with statutory&#13;
provisions that state legislators&#13;
will have full control of&#13;
designating what is going to be&#13;
taught in any of these institutions,&#13;
the amount of money&#13;
that's going to be released for all&#13;
those institutions, that under no&#13;
circumstances can anyone phase&#13;
one out because they feel that&#13;
they can merge with someone&#13;
else."&#13;
..NEWSCOPE: Is the budget&#13;
being amended?&#13;
"The building commission has&#13;
now given Parkside the Student's&#13;
Union, the buildings for the&#13;
classrooms and a few other&#13;
items."&#13;
"They have come out with a&#13;
position paper of a mission for&#13;
each one of the institutions."&#13;
"They've hurt Parkside and&#13;
Green Bay by cutting off a certain&#13;
amount for the start up&#13;
money. I think half of that ought&#13;
to be restored, then that would&#13;
put them back in the proper&#13;
place "&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Is the merger&#13;
going to save money?&#13;
"In four years it will quadruple&#13;
the amount of money (spent) you&#13;
have saved."&#13;
"Five years ago 83 departments&#13;
were merged into 29&#13;
departments. This was supposed&#13;
to save $3V2 million for the&#13;
biennium. Now that same&#13;
program is costing us $13 million&#13;
for the biennium. And we now&#13;
have 153 divisions in the 29&#13;
departments with executive&#13;
secretaries in charge with no one&#13;
in charge."&#13;
Mr. Kellett is now in charge of&#13;
the university merger proposal.&#13;
Even so, the governor is only&#13;
paying attention to half of his&#13;
program.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: What about the&#13;
building program?&#13;
"We are getting just about 100&#13;
per cent of what we orginially&#13;
asked for. We did scratch out&#13;
BEER&#13;
&amp; WATER&#13;
21 F LAVORS&#13;
POP&#13;
STOP&#13;
24—7 oz. bot. 12—24 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; d eposit&#13;
2428 Washington RdKenosha&#13;
housing for students because I&#13;
am not in favor of putting&#13;
student's housing on the campus.&#13;
I want private enterprise to&#13;
handle that at all times."&#13;
"County trunk E is going to be&#13;
four lane all the way to Sheridan&#13;
Road. We are planning a new four&#13;
lane freeway coming by. Somers&#13;
road, county trunk E, is going to&#13;
be four lanes going to the Isystem.&#13;
We're building a belt line&#13;
that is coming around it. It goes&#13;
in from Racine, takes into Highway&#13;
20, comes around just about&#13;
a mile west of the Green Bay&#13;
Road. By about 1980 we'll have it&#13;
all done."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will there be tax&#13;
increases?&#13;
"Corporations and industry&#13;
haven't had an income tax raise&#13;
in 20 years. So maybe it is time&#13;
that they adjust their brackets&#13;
slightly. I don't think they're&#13;
getting too big a hit. I think&#13;
between 5 and $12 thousand income&#13;
is where the real tax bite&#13;
is."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will merger&#13;
pass?&#13;
"That's anybody's guess.&#13;
Everyone has a pet. I imagine&#13;
you'll agree to my type of merger&#13;
provided your interest is well&#13;
protected by statutory law."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Has there been&#13;
any discussion on the floor:&#13;
"Nothing has been talked over&#13;
on any floor yet, either the&#13;
assembly or the senate, until that&#13;
budget bill gets out."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will there be a&#13;
great deal of argument once it&#13;
does come out?&#13;
"I'm hopeful we'll get it out of&#13;
there after we get it on the floor.&#13;
It's going to take three weeks to&#13;
get it out of finance if not more.&#13;
Once it gets on the floor it's going&#13;
to be a week's debate if n ot more.&#13;
When it gets over to the senate it&#13;
the committee on negotiations."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: When will the&#13;
budget come out?&#13;
"When we get through with it. I&#13;
don't know. If the budget isn't&#13;
adopted by July 1 we operate on&#13;
the last budget. It could get a&#13;
little tight."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will the merger&#13;
be in the final budget?&#13;
"Some say no, some say yes.&#13;
We don't even know how many&#13;
votes we've got in Finance&#13;
Committee. We could send the&#13;
budget up for indefinate postponement&#13;
with 11 votes of 14 now,&#13;
then send it to senate and kill it&#13;
there too."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Are other&#13;
campuses for the merger tie.&#13;
Steven's Point and Platteville?&#13;
"Not at Steven's Point. They're&#13;
going to get eliminated. They&#13;
have a lot more to worry about&#13;
than they think. Eventually a lot&#13;
of campuses will be phased out."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: If merger goes&#13;
through, will salaries of State&#13;
Universities be brought up to the&#13;
level of the UW system?&#13;
"No, because they can't teach&#13;
the same level of education. The&#13;
merger doesn't upgrade the&#13;
standards, it's not going to give&#13;
you the type of education any&#13;
different than what you have&#13;
now."&#13;
"It's just a fancy deal that you&#13;
think you've got to do something&#13;
because you got into the governor's&#13;
chair and because Kellett&#13;
was crazy enough to think he had&#13;
another second hand dream like&#13;
the first one which I lost with&#13;
three votes."&#13;
"You don't upgrade by consolidation&#13;
and merger, you&#13;
create bigger chaos, bigger&#13;
dynasties."&#13;
Next week: Senators Dorman&#13;
and Devitt.&#13;
Parkside's Fea ture F ilm Series&#13;
presents&#13;
HOW THE WEST WHS LOST.&#13;
FRANK • EAN&#13;
s IN n ma • Ma R tin&#13;
ANITA URSULA&#13;
E 11 IE RG AND Rl ESS&#13;
i&#13;
mm&#13;
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FOR TEXAS&#13;
mm&#13;
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Talent Hal! &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE May 3,1971&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
For the sake of all you people&#13;
who believe that the adage, "If&#13;
you ean't say something nice,&#13;
don't say anything at all",&#13;
applies to music critics, I ask&#13;
you to turn to the sports section.&#13;
The David Baker group simply&#13;
did not live up to its advance&#13;
publicity. But I'll do this much;&#13;
I'll begin with a few remarks in&#13;
their defense.&#13;
First of all, the Greenquist&#13;
Concourse is intended to be a&#13;
concert hall about as much as&#13;
La Scala is intended for Roller&#13;
Derby. That afternoon I often&#13;
felt as if I was listening to a&#13;
concert in a sewer tunnel with a&#13;
pail over my head. Secondly,&#13;
the group had been playing, I&#13;
was told, till 3 a.m. the day&#13;
before and therefore was not at&#13;
its peak of proficiency. But for&#13;
lack of further argumentative&#13;
material, the defense must now&#13;
rest, and give way to the&#13;
prosecution.&#13;
The music itself was little&#13;
more than pure West Coast&#13;
funk, ala Quincy Jones, and at&#13;
times Don Sebesky. It's very&#13;
suitable for background music;&#13;
you can hear it on the Bill Cosby&#13;
show, but when put out front in&#13;
the limelight, it just doesn't&#13;
seem to fit. Besides, I went to&#13;
hear something new, somethihg&#13;
a little innovative. I was&#13;
listening to this same stuff ten&#13;
years ago and it didn't thrill me&#13;
then.&#13;
As far as the individual&#13;
members go, I'd have to admit&#13;
that I liked what Baker was&#13;
doing on trombone. Unlike the&#13;
others, you could tell that on his&#13;
solos he had a command of both&#13;
style and the chord procession&#13;
behind him. If the tunes weren't&#13;
innovative, at least he was. But&#13;
other than Dave, I was hard&#13;
pressed to find anything impressive.&#13;
The drummer did&#13;
nothing but whack out a«&#13;
m o not o n ous C H U N K - A&#13;
CHUNK-A CHUNK-A Boogalooooff,&#13;
ad nauseum, until my&#13;
head throbbed. The alto man,&#13;
who could best be described as a&#13;
musical sisyphus, seemed to&#13;
pick up an idea, work on it, build&#13;
it up to a point where he was&#13;
just about to really do&#13;
something, and then drop it.&#13;
The trumpet player constantly&#13;
used every trick in the book to&#13;
make the audience think he was&#13;
playing jazzy.&#13;
To think that I thought I was&#13;
getting a bargain by only&#13;
paying 50 cen ts to get in!&#13;
•MaAat ^acle&#13;
By James Madura&#13;
Opposites are often the most&#13;
interesting and entertaining&#13;
aspects of life. Dominican&#13;
College's Lakefront Players with&#13;
their production of Marat-Sade&#13;
provided an evening of delightful&#13;
opposites.&#13;
The play itself is the greatest&#13;
opposite of all when compared to&#13;
the "terribly worthwhile" but&#13;
boring plays usually done by&#13;
college companies. Peter Weiss'&#13;
Marat-Sade is a modern play&#13;
filled with life, and manifesting&#13;
stimulating theatre as rarely&#13;
seen in this area.&#13;
Dominican's production has&#13;
strong and weak points. The&#13;
uneffective set, tired lighting,&#13;
and other minor defects are&#13;
overshadowed by the strikingly&#13;
strong points. Chief of these were&#13;
the inmates. Eight adept actors&#13;
playing hard roles that set both&#13;
mood and pace for the entire&#13;
production. Several of these&#13;
young actors developed and&#13;
maintained their insanity to near&#13;
perfection, without overshadowing&#13;
the main action of the&#13;
play.&#13;
Alex Korff as Marat had a&#13;
voice that was musical and&#13;
enhanced his speeches. Unfortunately,&#13;
he lacked, developed&#13;
or sustained characterization&#13;
which should have corresponded&#13;
with his vocal quality.&#13;
Dennis Lynch as De Sade and&#13;
Bruce Greening as the Herald&#13;
gave performances worthy of&#13;
seasoned actors. They were good&#13;
without being extraordinary and&#13;
complemented the rest of the&#13;
cast.&#13;
The acting highlight of the play&#13;
was given by three show-stealers,&#13;
the singers. Deb Clifton, as&#13;
Rossingol, Dan Pekarske as&#13;
Cucurucu, and Nick Bart portraying&#13;
Polpoch combined three&#13;
bodies and three voices to make&#13;
one or struck out seperately to&#13;
complement each other. These&#13;
people are ACTORS.&#13;
Unfortunately the director&#13;
chose to let his cast j)lay for the&#13;
audience and not to and with&#13;
them. This decision weakened the&#13;
emotional and dramatic effect of&#13;
the production upon the audience.&#13;
Rarely did the audience react&#13;
with the cast and then only out of&#13;
curiosity.&#13;
As a whole "The Persecution&#13;
and Assassination of Jean-Paul&#13;
Marat as performed by the inmates&#13;
of the Asylum of&#13;
Charenton under the direction of&#13;
the Marquis de Sade" is a play&#13;
well worth seeing. It can shock,&#13;
entertain and make you think.&#13;
Dominican should be complemented&#13;
for bringing this kind&#13;
of theatre to our local stage and&#13;
praised for its fine production.&#13;
While the cost of tickets $1.75&#13;
could be a little lower for&#13;
students, its worth the money to&#13;
see this play. Tickets are&#13;
available at the box office. The&#13;
curtain goes up at 8:00 p.m. on&#13;
May 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, and 9. Everyone&#13;
should see this production.&#13;
VISITING PROF. HOLDS EXHIBITION&#13;
. .Note: On April 181 attended&#13;
an exhibition held by Ian&#13;
Fraser at NEW GALLERY&#13;
ONE in Racine. I was very&#13;
much impressed with Mr.&#13;
Fraser's work, but I felt I was&#13;
in no position to make a&#13;
statement about it other than&#13;
to say it was most enjoyable&#13;
and easy to look at. I asked&#13;
Mr. Fraser to make a&#13;
statement about art for the&#13;
average person — Robert&#13;
Mainland, Staff Photographer.&#13;
&#13;
Ian Fraser&#13;
While I do not pretend to make&#13;
prints for philantropic reasons —&#13;
my primary reason being that I&#13;
enjoy the medium as a language&#13;
Ian Fraser&#13;
Verfuufov&amp;S&amp;m,&#13;
It dots make a dif fart net where you shop!&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(Must Show I.D.)&#13;
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that is safe,&#13;
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can be set up on an&#13;
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215-722-5360&#13;
24 hours-7 days&#13;
for professional, confidential&#13;
and carina help.&#13;
distinct from painting — I&#13;
nevertheless believe that prints&#13;
do afford an opportunity for a&#13;
greater number of people to own&#13;
and enjoy original works than the&#13;
average market price of paintings&#13;
allows. In this sense I&#13;
believe it fair to argue that the&#13;
various print media have done&#13;
much to increase public understanding&#13;
and appreciation of&#13;
contemporary art.&#13;
The variety of styles and&#13;
techniques is enormous, even&#13;
bewildering on the first few visits&#13;
to the average commercial&#13;
gallery. There are, of course,&#13;
many books on the subject,&#13;
written, I imagine with the avid&#13;
collector in mind. These books&#13;
quite often dwell on such matters&#13;
as authenticity, pedigree and&#13;
generally how not to buy a pig in&#13;
a poke. This certainly can be a&#13;
fascinating study, though beside&#13;
the point as far as I am concerned&#13;
as an artist. It can also be&#13;
daunting for someone wishing to&#13;
buy something simply because&#13;
they enjoy it. My advice on this&#13;
matter is that you cannot go&#13;
wrong is you choose what you&#13;
enjoy — it is only when a purchase&#13;
is made as a possible&#13;
financial investment that&#13;
disappointment results from&#13;
having backed the wrong horse —&#13;
and deservedly so!&#13;
There should be no difficulty in&#13;
discerning that which moved you,&#13;
whether violently or gently: the&#13;
sensation is unmistakable. The&#13;
only measure of true art is that&#13;
the sensation does not subsequently&#13;
diminish, but continues&#13;
to move the viewer or listener —&#13;
quite often with growing conviction.&#13;
&#13;
The faculty for such sensation&#13;
is within all of us and should be&#13;
nourished, for it is one of the&#13;
great redeeming features of a&#13;
beast that is still plenty savage.&#13;
excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
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o&#13;
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GO&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
DENMARK&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
All Parkside Students&#13;
Ove r 21 10% O ff&#13;
SEX EDUCATION&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
1202-56 ST 652-9051&#13;
TALK O F T HE TOWN&#13;
lS)&#13;
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CD&#13;
3&gt;&#13;
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May 3,1971 NEWSCOPE Pagea&#13;
By William Sorensen&#13;
FIVE EASY PIECES&#13;
Cast&#13;
Jack Nicholson Robert Dupea&#13;
Karen Black Rayette Dipesto&#13;
Bill "Green" Bush Elton&#13;
Lois Smith Partita Dupea&#13;
Helena Kallianiotes Apodace&#13;
Ralph Waite Karl Dupea&#13;
Susan Anspach&#13;
Katherine VanOst&#13;
William Challe Nicholous Dupea&#13;
Five Easy Pieces is a film that&#13;
concerns something that has&#13;
become a universal in our time&#13;
. . . alienation ... man encased&#13;
in himself, uttering words&#13;
that never quite mean the same&#13;
thing after they have left the&#13;
confines of one's mind. The&#13;
obstacles are so great and the&#13;
words are so small that the&#13;
battle of stimulus-response is&#13;
never won and communicating&#13;
finally seems futile.&#13;
Despite trying to understand&#13;
and to be understood is the&#13;
gifted hero, clad in a self that&#13;
has been stripped of all&#13;
tradition, of all things that&#13;
would hold him anywhere in this&#13;
society's time and space . . .&#13;
brought closer to pain, lust,&#13;
sorrow and anger. His voyage&#13;
brings him into a contact with&#13;
reality that shows him he can&#13;
never understand that contact.&#13;
This classic idea has imbellished&#13;
the writings of many a&#13;
philosopher... but here, on the&#13;
screen, the flesh is warm with&#13;
color and the words ring in the&#13;
ear and the sights soothe and&#13;
pain the eyes:&#13;
I couldn't help but look at the&#13;
man next to me in the theatre&#13;
and wonder what he was&#13;
thinking, but then I received the&#13;
message ... I knew it was all&#13;
in my head. All the impressions&#13;
were mine and it was only from&#13;
that frame of reference that I&#13;
could judge, however feebly,&#13;
what he really thought. A&#13;
special blindness is Man's, a&#13;
blindness that can destroy him&#13;
or leave him with a greater&#13;
creative vision.&#13;
Filming techniques varied&#13;
from the lashing of sunlight to&#13;
the cool blue twilight of a&#13;
dream, all accomplished&#13;
quietly and meaningfully.&#13;
Jack Nicholson is powerful, a&#13;
character lay angry beneath the&#13;
skin, like a tormented beast&#13;
being poked and stabbed by&#13;
truth and lie alike. The pain&#13;
resulted in confustion and&#13;
eventual frustration. He could&#13;
not say 'yes' to life because it&#13;
was not understandable and in&#13;
portraying this he was highly&#13;
successful in relating the theme&#13;
of t he film. It seems safe to say&#13;
that Mr. Nicholson carried the&#13;
entire film almost on his own&#13;
... so much of the dialogue&#13;
produced by Karen Black as&#13;
Rayette Dipesto, his almost&#13;
alive, almost thinking girl&#13;
friend, and that interaction with&#13;
his sister portrayed by Lois&#13;
Smith did reflect Robert's interior&#13;
monologue more than a&#13;
dialogue. The photography&#13;
seemed to imply a greater inner&#13;
search as well with close-ups of&#13;
Nicholson.&#13;
To generalize . . . further&#13;
. . . this film is what might be&#13;
called truly a product of the&#13;
United States. The difficulties&#13;
seem almost exclusive of the&#13;
rest of the world and the things&#13;
that surround this alienation&#13;
smell of Detroit, Pittsburgh,&#13;
New York and Chicago. As the&#13;
character moves from the oil&#13;
fields of Texas to the forests of&#13;
Washington State the dirt and&#13;
auto fumes that so deeply affect&#13;
us are made to live. In the end&#13;
he stands naked and unsure as&#13;
he was in the beginning . . .&#13;
alienated.&#13;
The film is a well integrated&#13;
piece of communication matter.&#13;
I think its effect has been understood&#13;
as I have put it down&#13;
here. In this way the film is selfdefeating&#13;
for in making such a&#13;
fine piece of work as this I can&#13;
see that it isn't all futile. See it.&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS&#13;
Management Club News&#13;
By Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Sec., Mgt. Club.&#13;
Mr. Roy Cougle, Assistant&#13;
Professor in the Management&#13;
Science Division of Parkside,&#13;
will speak to the Management&#13;
Science Club, and other interested&#13;
students, on the role of&#13;
the Management Science&#13;
Division here at Parkside.&#13;
The time for this discussion&#13;
will be on Tuesday, May 11, at&#13;
3:30 p.m., location to be announced.&#13;
All students interested&#13;
in the business management&#13;
field should attend and find out&#13;
just what the .Management&#13;
Science Division has to offer.&#13;
Mr. Cougle will also answer&#13;
any questions on the subject. Be&#13;
in the know! Plan now to attend&#13;
this session — it should prove to&#13;
be very interesting.&#13;
The Management Club is now&#13;
making plans to organize a&#13;
Summer Carnival to run in&#13;
'conjunction with the annual end&#13;
of the year Beer Blast sponsored&#13;
by Student Activities. The&#13;
Management Club is contacting&#13;
all the other school clubs with&#13;
the hopes of bringing about a&#13;
joint effort of the clubs to make&#13;
this the biggest event of the&#13;
year.&#13;
There are more than twenty&#13;
clubs here at Parkside. If we all&#13;
work together, this could be the&#13;
highlight of the year. So, clubs,&#13;
start brainstqrming for an idea&#13;
for a booth to represent your&#13;
club. Students, plan now to&#13;
attend the Summer Carnival&#13;
and end of the year Beer Blast.&#13;
The best way to relax and&#13;
release tensions after finals.&#13;
The next regular meeting of&#13;
the Management Club will be&#13;
Wednesday. May 5, at 2 30 p.m.&#13;
in room D101, Greenquist Hall.&#13;
All members are urged to attend,&#13;
and bring a friend.&#13;
For students interested in&#13;
Business Management, these&#13;
are the dates for you to&#13;
remember: Tuesday, May 11,&#13;
Mr. Cougle talks on the Role of&#13;
the Management Science&#13;
Division at Parkside and&#13;
Wednesday, May 5, the nefct&#13;
regular meeting of the Parkside&#13;
Management Science Club. All&#13;
students remember the Summer&#13;
Carnival June 12 and 13,&#13;
Plan to attend them all!!&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN THE NEWSCOPE STAFF&#13;
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED&#13;
S T A F F MEMBERS NEEDED FOR NEX T YE A R&#13;
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Open 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m&#13;
Monday — Frida y&#13;
Saturday to 5 p.m.&#13;
Bri n g m is Ad a n d Re c e i v e 1 0 ° / o D i s c o u n t o n a ll&#13;
automotive services until June 6, 1971 &#13;
Fagefi NEWSCOPE May 3,1971&#13;
Rllbin (Continued from Page 1)&#13;
"Because if Washington is&#13;
in uproar, the army is going&#13;
to revolt, Saigon is going to&#13;
burst out in revolution, and&#13;
demonstrations will occur&#13;
all over in Europe.&#13;
"If you're sitting back&#13;
listening to rock music&#13;
getting stoned, you're&#13;
missing out on the&#13;
Revolution!" he warned.&#13;
Speaking of the Calley&#13;
trial, he said, "I think Calley&#13;
should have been put on&#13;
trial. I think Medina and&#13;
Westmoreland and every&#13;
Pentagon general should be&#13;
put on trial.&#13;
"There's only one thing&#13;
— they should all be flown to&#13;
North Vietnam and put on&#13;
trial there! That's what war&#13;
crimes are all about. It&#13;
doesn't mean the naziis try&#13;
the naziis!" he said with&#13;
incredulity.&#13;
"What other agressive&#13;
power in the world has said,&#13;
'I won't end the war till you&#13;
release the prisoners?" he&#13;
elaborated.&#13;
"What an incredible&#13;
demand. A guy flys over&#13;
North Vietnam with the&#13;
intention of destroying&#13;
bridges, schools and&#13;
hospitals. He gets shot down&#13;
and they expect 'Oh. sorry&#13;
you're shot down. We'll send&#13;
you right back so you can hit&#13;
us again the next day.'&#13;
"That's what Richard&#13;
Nixon thinks. That's incredible!"&#13;
he emphasized.&#13;
Rubin told of his&#13;
meeting with Che Guevara&#13;
in 1964. "A group of us were&#13;
in Cuba for about two&#13;
months and we had a&#13;
meeting with Che. All of us&#13;
were sick of being&#13;
Americans and wished we&#13;
could be Cuban&#13;
revolutionaries.&#13;
"Che told us, 'You're&#13;
talking like you want to be a&#13;
Cuban or Venezuelan and&#13;
stay here. That's wrong. If I&#13;
had my wish I wish I could&#13;
be out in the audience with&#13;
you, and go back to America&#13;
and fight there. Because you&#13;
live in the middle of the&#13;
beast. Everything you do&#13;
back there is much more&#13;
important than what we do&#13;
here. Because we're only at&#13;
the fringe of imperialism. I&#13;
envy you!', Rubin related.&#13;
Rubin spoke, too, of&#13;
dope and heroin (which he&#13;
called poison) and of Tim&#13;
Leary. He said of Leary,&#13;
"Tim Leary was busted for&#13;
smoking dope and was given&#13;
30 years in the penitentiary.&#13;
He's put in jail for&#13;
something which everyone&#13;
here is probably going to do&#13;
in the next couple of hours..&#13;
"What happened?&#13;
Suddenly everyone forgot&#13;
about him. Tim Leary?&#13;
Who's that? All the acid&#13;
heads became closet acid&#13;
heads," Rubin contended.&#13;
"It broke the most&#13;
important thing about pot&#13;
smoking, which is the&#13;
community. I consider&#13;
smoking marijuana to be a&#13;
religious and sacred act&#13;
because of the way it is&#13;
done," he stated. "Take a&#13;
puff, pass it on. Take a puff,&#13;
pass it on."&#13;
He was interrupted by&#13;
long and sustained applause;&#13;
the loudest applause&#13;
of the afternoon.&#13;
"There's a solidarity to&#13;
it; a brotherhood, a&#13;
sisterhood," he explained.&#13;
"They arrested one of us&#13;
because we smoke dope. Not&#13;
because Tim Leary smokes&#13;
dope. They didn't care about&#13;
one person. But because&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
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BANK O F&#13;
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(e ve ryon e el se do es !)&#13;
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KnOppS (Continued&#13;
campus. There is only one&#13;
way to describe them. They&#13;
all look like fortresses. Like&#13;
huge brooding Teutonic war&#13;
helmets that you'd see in a&#13;
medieval wood cut. These&#13;
buildings don't represent&#13;
life or happiness. They're&#13;
brooding, and sad, and&#13;
grim.&#13;
"You walk around that&#13;
campus and look at those&#13;
buildings — especially if&#13;
you're stoned and it's late at&#13;
night. It's the scariest experience&#13;
you'll ever have.&#13;
It's like walking through the&#13;
gears of a giant machine.&#13;
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from Page 1)&#13;
You get the feeling those&#13;
buildings, those gears, are&#13;
going to engage and you're&#13;
going to get ground up like&#13;
an insect.&#13;
"You realize then that&#13;
type of architecture occurs&#13;
only in the last days of an&#13;
empire.&#13;
He went on to say that&#13;
type of architecture is&#13;
pervasive in America —&#13;
especially in Washington.&#13;
"The people there they&#13;
see themselves as the imperial&#13;
custodians — as the&#13;
men who have the mission of&#13;
determining the direction of&#13;
the planet in the next century.&#13;
&#13;
"Once you begin to&#13;
understand this thing about&#13;
the American empire, and&#13;
once you begin to see&#13;
yourself as a rebellious self&#13;
inside of this empire, I think&#13;
it helps you understand your&#13;
own head.&#13;
"Essentially, you have&#13;
two options. One is to go on&#13;
and get yourself a job and&#13;
help run the empire, in&#13;
effect.&#13;
"The other alternative&#13;
is to begin to build a totally&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE . . .&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both in&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY — Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC — Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS — Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD — Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ — Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC — Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. — Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. — Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD — Turntables&#13;
G.E. — Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
different culture — a culture&#13;
of resistance to that empire,&#13;
as an attempt to try to tear it&#13;
apart, and at some point to&#13;
kill it.&#13;
Knopps sees Vietnam in&#13;
this light. It's murder. You&#13;
can go through legal&#13;
channels to stop it, but the&#13;
victim will probably die in&#13;
the meantime, or, you can&#13;
step in and try to stop it&#13;
yourself.&#13;
"Vietnam is like that.&#13;
Hopefully, in 1976 or 1984&#13;
some president will end the&#13;
war, or else, you can step in&#13;
and try to stop the hand of&#13;
the murderer right now&#13;
yourself.&#13;
"A lot of us have made&#13;
our moral decision. We see&#13;
over one million human&#13;
beings murdered in Vietnam&#13;
over the last ten years.&#13;
One out of three babies born&#13;
in Vietnam is a monster.&#13;
The child is so deformed he&#13;
can't live more than a few&#13;
days or weeks. This is&#13;
because of the herbicides we&#13;
have dropped on the&#13;
countryside.&#13;
"Vietnam is a people's&#13;
war. The only way to break&#13;
the back of a people's war is&#13;
Tim Leary is a symbol they&#13;
arrested him, and we didn't&#13;
do anything about it. The&#13;
family has been broken."&#13;
"Tim Leary was taken&#13;
away and the hippies didn't&#13;
do anything about it," Rubin&#13;
said. He claimed Bernadine&#13;
Dohrn and Jeff Jones of the&#13;
Weatherman underground&#13;
engineered his escape.&#13;
Speaking of himself,&#13;
Rubin said, "In America&#13;
you work till you're 65, then&#13;
you retire. It's a trick.&#13;
Retire? I'm retired right&#13;
now! The technology is so&#13;
developed here that if we&#13;
just take it from the monsters&#13;
who have it now we&#13;
can turn this country into a&#13;
paradise in 24 hours.&#13;
"But you saw what&#13;
happened at Kent State.&#13;
This country will kill its own&#13;
children if it doen't like what&#13;
they're doing. It will wipe&#13;
them out."&#13;
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"That's what the United&#13;
States is doing. One million&#13;
of them murdered in the&#13;
past ten years by this&#13;
country.&#13;
"I see the only thing a&#13;
person who has any sense of&#13;
moral worth can do, is to&#13;
step in and try to stop the&#13;
hand of the murderer.&#13;
"To a lot of us that is&#13;
what sabotage is.&#13;
"Sabotage is our answer.&#13;
It's not embraced&#13;
lightly. It's not embraced&#13;
even joyously. It's seen as a&#13;
grim necessity, at this point,&#13;
to uphold the honor of our&#13;
generation.&#13;
"I'll say now what I said&#13;
once before, that if five&#13;
people were killed in the&#13;
bombing of the Army Math&#13;
Research Building, I would&#13;
still back it. Because that&#13;
building had to go. That&#13;
building was responsible for&#13;
the deaths of 100 times five&#13;
people, a 1,000 times five&#13;
people.&#13;
"That's my side of the&#13;
coin. The other side is that&#13;
we're trying to build a&#13;
culture. We may have to&#13;
fight and we may have to be&#13;
grim and we may have to&#13;
die.&#13;
"The major thing we're&#13;
trying to do s i build a culture&#13;
that hopefully will at some&#13;
point in time replace the&#13;
culture of the whole society.&#13;
"That can be a culture,&#13;
a way of life that will make&#13;
sure that never again will&#13;
another generation go&#13;
through what our generation&#13;
has gone through."&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS / RACINE'S ;&#13;
512 MAIN STREET / GREAT . 1 ^&#13;
&lt; • DOWNTOWN, .&#13;
on the west side of Monument Squire DISCOUNT HOUSE -&#13;
; • o &#13;
May 3,1971 NEWSCOPE Page?&#13;
Trackmen Second to Marquette&#13;
Courtesy Public Information.&#13;
1971 GOLF TEAM: Left to right: Leif Guttormsen, Bob Toeppe&#13;
Dan Weyrauch, Tom Bothe, Randy Dreifke, Rick Willems George&#13;
Horvat, Mark Hjortness, Mike Niles.&#13;
Golfers Post 2 Victories&#13;
With Leif Guttormsen capturing medalist honors twice, Parkside&#13;
scored dual meet victories over both Dominican College and Loyola&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
In the Dominican meet, the Rangers totaled 198 s trokes to the&#13;
losers' 222. Guttormsen led the way with a 37 in the 9-hole event at&#13;
Johnson's Park. Tom Bothe had 39 and Dan Weyrauch 40. Rich&#13;
Willems and Ken Rossi each turned in 41's.&#13;
Guttormsen's 73 paced the 464-496 victory over Loyola at the rainsoaked&#13;
Petrifying Springs course. Tom Bothe was next with a 74, while&#13;
Dan Weyrauch and George Horvat had 78's. Rich Willem's 79 and Bob&#13;
Toeppe's 82 rounded out the scoring.&#13;
Russ Coley, assistant athletic director, acted as a clinican at the&#13;
62nd annual Drake Relays. Coley, whose area was baton passing, was&#13;
the featured speaker at the Friday night clinic.&#13;
Mr. Suh, Parkside judo instructor, will demonstrate techniques at&#13;
the Junior National in Odessa, Texas, on July 9-10. His partner will be&#13;
Mr. Park of Eastern Montana.&#13;
Grant Anderson, Parkside fencer, participated in the Junior&#13;
World Fencing Championships which were held in the United States&#13;
for the first time. Seventeen countries competed in this event.&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier and John Hanzalik competed in the&#13;
Martini-Rossi International Fencing tournament held in New York.&#13;
This tournament had participants from 15 n ations.&#13;
Freshmen Top Track&#13;
Netmen Place 5th in&#13;
A pair of freshmen from&#13;
Milwaukee, Bob Waters and&#13;
Eugene Prince, have turned in&#13;
UW-Parkside's most impressive&#13;
track performances&#13;
this season.&#13;
Waters, a sprinter from&#13;
Milwaukee Lincoln, has times&#13;
of :09.7 and :21.9 in the 100 and&#13;
220, while Prince, a high jumper&#13;
from Milwaukee Lutheran, has&#13;
soared 6-6.&#13;
Mark Kohen, Mike Kmetz and&#13;
Pat Kekic won their respective&#13;
divisions in the Parkside intramural&#13;
bowling tournament&#13;
which had 70 participants. Some&#13;
of the top scores are listed:&#13;
Men's Scratch Division&#13;
Mark Koehn 592&#13;
Steve Stone 567&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
'66 Ram. Amer. Con. 7843 - 2 0th&#13;
Keno.&#13;
'63 VS (40,000 mi) $600; '66&#13;
Dodge Coronet (12,000 mi) $700.&#13;
12911 W ashington Ave. Raci.&#13;
'65 Chevy Bel. 4 dr. Auto, 6, PS,&#13;
Rad. Reas. 633-3963.&#13;
'60 Ram CIsc, Auto, 6, $150. Also&#13;
2,7075-15 BFG tires, rims &amp; Bal.&#13;
$40; 2, 9.90-15 OBFG tires (500&#13;
mi) Rims &amp; Bal $60. 859-2653&#13;
(toll free)&#13;
'64 Pont. Temp. 326, Sp. Coup,&#13;
Stick $300. 658-8043.&#13;
'64 Ram. 770 2 dr HT, 287, St.&#13;
Shf. 857-2016.&#13;
Freshmen, in fact, dominate&#13;
theUW-P best-times chart: Jim&#13;
McFadden of Waterford has a&#13;
4:21.5 mile and 15:17.9 threemile;&#13;
Tim McGilsky of Racine&#13;
is 1:58.7 and :52.7 in the 880 and&#13;
440; Mike Zugich of Racine is&#13;
:58.2 in he t 440 and intermediate&#13;
hurdles; and Dennis Fechhelm&#13;
of Mayville is :15.8 in the 120&#13;
high hurdles.&#13;
Junior Leonard Bullock, who&#13;
Mark Haabrauer 552&#13;
Men's Handicap&#13;
Mike Kmetz 643&#13;
Jerry Grezener 639&#13;
A1 Anderson 638&#13;
Women's Handicap&#13;
Pat Kekic 600&#13;
Linda Olsen 592&#13;
Judy Knutson 576&#13;
'66 Chevelle 301-350 hp, 4 sp. 4&#13;
Brl. Astro's 8&lt; More. 654-4440,&#13;
3559 - 10th Ave. Keno.&#13;
'62 Buick LeSabre $100. 1-634-&#13;
6127.&#13;
'68 Tri. Spitfire Mk III, Conv.,&#13;
Low miles. 637-7966 o r 654-9471&#13;
(after 6 p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
'63 Ram. Amer. Wag. Stk, new&#13;
clutch, muff, trans. 694-6353.&#13;
'63 Pont. Conv. Auto $250. 652-&#13;
1443 after 5 p.m.&#13;
'69 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spd, 383-335&#13;
hp, rad, htr. 637-5520 after 5:00.&#13;
'63 Olds 88 Hoi. 495 3 Brl, high&#13;
comp. Best offer. 654-6746 after&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Marquette, avenging earlier&#13;
loses to Parkside, defeated the&#13;
Rangers in a quadrangular&#13;
track meet held at Marquette&#13;
Stadium.&#13;
The Warriors totaled 90&#13;
points, with Parkside second&#13;
with 65. Northwestern College&#13;
had 23 and Dominican College&#13;
five.&#13;
Highlighting the meet for&#13;
Parkside were Jim McFadden&#13;
and Mike Zugich, who both&#13;
scored double victories while&#13;
setting school records.&#13;
McFadden won the mile and&#13;
the two mile with times of 4:27.4&#13;
and 9:48. His time in the two&#13;
mile set an outdoor school&#13;
record. Zugich set a school&#13;
record in the 440 in termediate&#13;
hurdles at :58.2, and also won&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Facing some tough competition,&#13;
the Ranger netmen&#13;
finished fifth in a six-team meet&#13;
in Oshkosh, and dropped an 8-1&#13;
decision to UW-Green Bay.&#13;
The Green Bay defeat left the&#13;
Rangers with a 1-2 record in&#13;
dual meets, the lone victory&#13;
coming over Dominican.&#13;
In finishing fifth in the Titan&#13;
Invitational at Oshkosh, the&#13;
Rangers picked up five points,&#13;
three of them coming on byes;&#13;
two in competition.&#13;
Todd Nelson defeated&#13;
Milton's Roy Gelin 10-2 in&#13;
singles. Nelson also teamed&#13;
with Dave Herchen to give&#13;
Parkside a 10-3 win over a Stout&#13;
doubles team.&#13;
In team totals, Oshkosh&#13;
dominated the meet with 54&#13;
Team&#13;
moved to Kenosha this summer&#13;
from El Paso, Tex., leads the&#13;
long jump, 21-1V2, and triple&#13;
jump, 40-5, while junior John&#13;
Patton of Santa Cruz, Calif., has&#13;
gone 13 feet outdoors in the pole&#13;
vault, a height that has been&#13;
matched indoors by freshman&#13;
Keith Merritt of Kenosha.&#13;
Because of injuries, the&#13;
Rangers have had no entries in&#13;
the shot put, discus or javelin.&#13;
Parkside plunges into the&#13;
heart of its outdoor season&#13;
beginning Saturday with the&#13;
Northern Illinois Invitational at&#13;
DeKalb. That will be followed&#13;
by the Whitewater Invitational&#13;
May 4, the LaCrosse State Invitational&#13;
May 8 and the&#13;
Stevens Point State Invitational&#13;
May 15.&#13;
'69 Opel GT Silver $2,400 or best&#13;
offer. 652-3312 after 4.&#13;
'63 MG Midget Conv. New Batt,&#13;
$275. 250854th Keno. R. Smith or&#13;
C. Lawler.&#13;
'64 Jeep 4-wheel drive Red conv.&#13;
Built up; like new. Racine 633-&#13;
3367.&#13;
WANTED TO BUY — 2 u sed 3&#13;
or 5 speed 26" bicycles. Call 633-&#13;
3131 after 5.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DRIVE a Pugeot to Minneapolis.&#13;
Must get there before&#13;
June. Call 843-2225 after 5 or 657-&#13;
5121 ext. 36.&#13;
NEED ride to Seattle or Anchorage,&#13;
May or June. Will split&#13;
cost. Call Barb 654-9631.&#13;
the high hurdles in 16.4.&#13;
Tim Martinson won the pole&#13;
vault for Parkside, and Tim&#13;
McGilsky triumphed in the 880&#13;
with a 1:59 clocking. McGilsky&#13;
placed second in the 440 also.&#13;
A number of other Rangers&#13;
placed second. They were Ken&#13;
Bullock in the triple jump, Keith&#13;
Merritt in the pole vault, and&#13;
DenniS Fechhelm in both the&#13;
high hurdles and two relay&#13;
teams. Chuck Dettman ran&#13;
second in the mile.&#13;
Gary Geoby, Len Bullock,&#13;
Fechhelm, and Dean Maschoff&#13;
comprise the 440 relayVteam.&#13;
Judd Johnston, Fechhelm,&#13;
Merritt and McGilsky ran&#13;
quarters in the mile relay.&#13;
While Parkside finished&#13;
second in the meet, 25 points&#13;
behind Marquette, the Rangers&#13;
might have won had Bob Waters&#13;
points. Lagging behind were St.&#13;
Norbert with 21, Stout 10,&#13;
Lakeland, six, Parkside five,&#13;
and Milton three.&#13;
Parkside coach Dick Frecka&#13;
said Oshkosh has one of the&#13;
strongest teams in the state.&#13;
They finsihed 9th nationally in&#13;
the NAIA last year.&#13;
The match with UW-Green&#13;
Bay was highlighted by&#13;
Parkside's Mike Safago's&#13;
victory over Larry Kropp in&#13;
three sets.&#13;
Coach Frecka was pleased&#13;
with Safago's effort. "Kropp is&#13;
a highly experience player who&#13;
only lost about two matches last&#13;
year," said Frecka.&#13;
Despite the modest record&#13;
compiled so far, Frecka feels&#13;
that the team has been getting&#13;
better.. "We're playing top&#13;
competition now so we can have&#13;
WANT ED TO BUY — Tickets to&#13;
Chicago Concert. Contact Dale&#13;
Martin 878-2992.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
MADISON summer suoiet 2&#13;
bed. near Vilas Park. Call 608-&#13;
251-8632, $65 p er person.&#13;
ROOM — Men only, $9.00 per&#13;
wk. 3 blocks from Racine&#13;
Campus. Inquire 832 S.&#13;
Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
FOR RENT — Office Space -&#13;
Modern, Carpeted, Partitioned,&#13;
Air Cond. Ideal for Acctg.,&#13;
Insurance or Sales. Good&#13;
proximity to Parkside and&#13;
Carthage. 4058 7th Ave. Call 652-&#13;
3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
and Eugene Prince been able to&#13;
participate.&#13;
Waters, the flashy Ranger&#13;
sprinter, would very likely have&#13;
scored victories in the 100 an d&#13;
the 220. Waters would also have&#13;
run on one or both of the relay&#13;
teams which could have given&#13;
Parkside more scoring in these&#13;
events. He missed the meet&#13;
because of a death in his family.&#13;
Eugene Prince, school record&#13;
holder in the high jump at 6'6",&#13;
was competing in the Drake&#13;
Relays and had to miss the&#13;
Marquette meet. Prince was&#13;
unable to place at the Drake&#13;
meet as four jumpers went over&#13;
seven feet.&#13;
Another Ranger, Mike&#13;
DeWitt, ran in the marathon at&#13;
Drake, but had to quit after 22'&#13;
miles when he suffered dizzy&#13;
spells.&#13;
Oshkosh&#13;
a good schedule for the future.&#13;
We could schedule lighter&#13;
competition now but it would be&#13;
more difficult to develop a&#13;
major schedule later," Frecka&#13;
said.&#13;
Frecka readily admits that&#13;
the team will have rough going&#13;
with this year's schedule. Some&#13;
improvement will have to be&#13;
measured in defeats.&#13;
Although soundly beaten by&#13;
the Bay team, Fredta saw&#13;
improvement over last year's&#13;
performance against Green&#13;
Bay: "Last year we dropped&#13;
two matches to them by 9-0&#13;
scores. Besides winning a&#13;
match this year, several other&#13;
matches went to three sets."&#13;
The meet against Marquette,&#13;
scheduled for April 27. was&#13;
postponed because of poor&#13;
weather.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
AMP — Silvertone 4 channel.&#13;
Also mike. Best offer. Call&#13;
Cathy, 694-2769. M ust sell.&#13;
•&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE — West&#13;
inghouse 30", $75; Refrigerator&#13;
Westinghouse, $75. Box&#13;
spring mattress for double bed,&#13;
$75. Call 633-0541.&#13;
TAPE DECK — Sony - T C 355.&#13;
List FYice $219. Sacrifice for&#13;
$100. Phone 654-1731 a fter 4 or&#13;
see Frank Chiapetta.&#13;
SPmile&#13;
Bowling Results &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE May 3,1971&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Title: Positively Main Street&#13;
Author: Toby Thompson&#13;
Publisher: Coward McCann &amp; Geoghegan&#13;
Inc. ($5.95)&#13;
This week's column is dedicated not to&#13;
literary hunchbacks but to Dylan Freaks. It&#13;
has been my good fortune to have fall in my&#13;
lap (with a crash) Bob Dylan's first&#13;
biography (Positively Main Street), and (end&#13;
of four year quest for blackprint grail)&#13;
Tarantula, his one and only prose work, the&#13;
one he refused to publish at the last minute.&#13;
Where do I start? The beginning. Toby&#13;
Thompson took a trip to Hibbing, Minnesota,&#13;
(Dylan's hometown) and looked up the&#13;
Zimmerman family, old friends, and high&#13;
school teachers of Robert Zimmerman (Bob&#13;
Dylan). In a style which Toby calls "New&#13;
Journalism" but which is really prolix "Bad&#13;
Writing", Bob Dylan's days as Bob Zimmerman&#13;
are relived (relive here has no&#13;
connection with life) through the words of his&#13;
brother David, Echo Helstrom (the "Girl&#13;
From the North Country"), his uncles who&#13;
"don't know that much about him", his&#13;
English teacher (his best subject), and his&#13;
mother. Much of what is reported is contradictory;&#13;
Toby would hear something about&#13;
Dylan from one person and later someone&#13;
else would say that it was a lie. However,&#13;
everyone does agree on one thing, they all&#13;
deny Dylan's self-confessed intimate&#13;
relationship with Crystal Methadrine, Mrs.&#13;
Zimmerman most emphatically. A lot of tall&#13;
tale telling here, tongues hanging out coated&#13;
with white lies. Everybody's got good intentions&#13;
(and they "don't want to make Bob&#13;
angry"), but good biographies are made of&#13;
much harder stuff than a syrupy varnish.&#13;
Actually we discover that Dylan was a fat&#13;
kid, eccentric (for Hibbing), a wild dresser,&#13;
played with an electric band at a high school&#13;
assembly at full decibels and blew die&#13;
principal's wig off, nobody liked his voice,&#13;
everyone laughed, he loved first love Echo,&#13;
lived in Dinky town for awhile (Dinkytown is&#13;
the student section of the U. of Minnesota),&#13;
listened at night to a southern radio station to&#13;
hear dem good ole blues, waylaid every Black&#13;
who sauntered through Hibbing to check him&#13;
and his experiences out, was self-conscious&#13;
about his Jewishness, and wanted to be a rock&#13;
and roll star, made it big and never forgot the&#13;
folks back home.&#13;
Hibbing itself is behind the times, high&#13;
school students laughed at Toby's long hair,&#13;
and no one listens to Dylan albums, in fact the&#13;
local record shop only had a couple copies of&#13;
"Greatest Hits". It becomes obvious that&#13;
Dylan had to escape Hibbing in order to make&#13;
it, it was oppressive to him, but the stories&#13;
about his running away from his family are&#13;
untrue, his father gave him money to go to&#13;
New York, and before his mecca to Fun City&#13;
at the age of 19, Bob had never been out of&#13;
Hibbing.&#13;
The trouble with this biography is that the&#13;
biographical information takes up about forty&#13;
pages, the rest is Toby on Toby. Toby in&#13;
Madison where a couple of Dylan Freaks say&#13;
to leave Dylan alone, his past is his own and&#13;
no one has any business fucking around with&#13;
Bobby D's past. Toby in Hibbing and getting&#13;
drunk and making a spectacle of himself in a&#13;
bar, singing "Girl From the North Country",&#13;
everybody applauding, waking up with a&#13;
hangover, and Echo later, telling him that he&#13;
sounds a lot like Bob did. Bullshit. 140 pages of&#13;
bullshit and 40 pages of interview which does&#13;
little to clarify the young Bob Zimmerman. I&#13;
expected more. Maybe Robert Shelton, who&#13;
has reportedly (Toby tells us) been working&#13;
for five years on a Dylan biography, will fill&#13;
the many gaps Toby only stumbles into. Oh&#13;
yah, good ol' Tobe has never met Dylan, but&#13;
you know Dylan Freaks, yeah I know a lot&#13;
about one anyway.&#13;
Title: Tarantula&#13;
Author: Bob Dylan&#13;
Publisher: none listed (bootlegged) ($1.75)&#13;
I approach this book like I. . . like I never&#13;
approached a book quite like this one before.&#13;
Let's get one thing straight, Dylan is&#13;
something of a god to me and well, like&#13;
Tarantula is a bible of sorts. In a literary&#13;
sense it isn't worth more than a few quill&#13;
pens, but then again, we don't always read the&#13;
Bible for its literary value. No, this is BOB&#13;
DYLAN'S first published (even if it's&#13;
bootlegged it's still published) prose work,&#13;
and its literary pretensions are attested to by&#13;
the fact that Dylan himself refused to publish&#13;
it.&#13;
Tarantula is a % page book composed of&#13;
short story sequences, a few long poems, and&#13;
short letters appearing at the end of each&#13;
story and signed by non-characters with&#13;
names like "louie louie", or "Shorty Cookie".&#13;
Dylan is "shadow boxing" the language, he is&#13;
using words in unusual contexts, he is being&#13;
complex and absurd, simple and poignant,&#13;
and he tells us not to be afraid of&#13;
meaninglessness.&#13;
It is a speedfreak-poet-folk legend's&#13;
collection of poem-prose sketches whose&#13;
metaphoric ambiguity and complexity&#13;
reminds me of some of Dylan Thomas' prose&#13;
pieces. With Dylan it is the words themselves&#13;
rather than what is behind words which is of&#13;
prime importance. Dylan has always been&#13;
eminently quotable and Tarantula is no exception.&#13;
Literally hundreds of Dylanisms are&#13;
contained here, phrases and sentences which&#13;
are as poetic as they are often overwhelming.&#13;
Within Tarantula there are references to&#13;
his songs, "somebody once said the sun ain't&#13;
yellow, it's chicken", also the "Memphis&#13;
Blues" paranoia caused by Dylan's discovery&#13;
of the absurdity and meaninglessness of life is&#13;
rampant. It is a speed trip, spread out, spaced&#13;
out and confusing. It begins with the&#13;
"Freewheelin' " Dylan and ends with the&#13;
"Blonde on Blonde" SuperDylan. There is a&#13;
great deal of self-mockery, for example&#13;
"sang at the vegetarian convention my new&#13;
song against meat, everybody dug it excpt&#13;
(sic) for the plumbers neath the stage."&#13;
As a whole I can't find any real structure in&#13;
Tarantula, it is a collection of weird incidents&#13;
and absurd stories, huncreds of noncharacters&#13;
come into view for a few lines and&#13;
then disappear. The only continuing&#13;
characters in the book are aretha and prince&#13;
hamlet, and even they are seen only in the&#13;
beginning and the end.&#13;
If you ever get the opportunity to read&#13;
Tarantula, approach it with an open mind,&#13;
don't expect anything because everything in&#13;
Tarantula is to be unexpected. It's a&#13;
bootlegged book (I bought it in Madison) and&#13;
maybe it's not right to buy from bootleggers,&#13;
but Dylan Freaks will understand. I tried to&#13;
pull Tarantula.s legs off but they only&#13;
disappear.&#13;
"here lies bob dylan&#13;
demolished by Vienna politeness —&#13;
which will now claim to have invented him&#13;
the cool people can&#13;
now write Fugues about him&#13;
&amp; Cupid can now kick over his kerosene&#13;
lampbob&#13;
dylan — killed by a discarded Oedipus&#13;
who turned around&#13;
around&#13;
to investigate a ghost&#13;
&amp; discovered that&#13;
the ghost too&#13;
was more than one person"&#13;
Positively Main Street may be&#13;
purchased at the Book Mart 622-&#13;
. 59th Street, Kenosha.&#13;
</text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 14, May 3, 1971</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89865">
              <text>F &#13;
. *-&#13;
'i - . • '&#13;
By Warren Nedry&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
It was a cool Thursday night&#13;
in Washington, D.C. After entering&#13;
the city on Wisconsin&#13;
Avenue we drove to the site of&#13;
"Peace City" in West Potomic&#13;
Park.&#13;
The site was ringed by a treelined&#13;
drive and bordered on&#13;
both sides by water — an ithmus&#13;
between the Jefferson and&#13;
Lincoln memorials, in the&#13;
shadow of the Washington&#13;
monument.&#13;
About 50 tents dotted the&#13;
park. Motorcycles, campers,&#13;
and campfires were scattered&#13;
throughout with the information&#13;
tent forming the hub. The half&#13;
mile oval generated an atmosphere&#13;
of calm anticipation.&#13;
Standing in the middle afforded&#13;
a complete view of its occupants.&#13;
&#13;
We went to the information&#13;
tent and were directed to the&#13;
Wisconsin section of the park.&#13;
When we arrived there was one&#13;
group from Milwaukee already&#13;
on the site. We set up our tent&#13;
and decided to make a fire.&#13;
Wood was scarce but with&#13;
donations of sticks, logs and&#13;
paper from the "community"&#13;
we easily managed a fire. The&#13;
warm fire was an oasis in the&#13;
cool night for those who had&#13;
recently arrived. People would&#13;
walk by and stop to warm up.&#13;
Every few minutes a new face&#13;
stopped in asking, "Is this Indiana?"&#13;
or a shout, "Where's&#13;
Iowa?" Fires were used to cook&#13;
everything from hot dogs to&#13;
exotic stews. Campfires&#13;
Irecame the focal point of the&#13;
evenings.&#13;
The morning brought&#13;
thousands more tents, including&#13;
occupants, cars, triple parked&#13;
around the oval, and about 150&#13;
more Wiseonsinites. The rest of&#13;
the day included tactical&#13;
meetings, a march to the&#13;
Justice Department, sightseeing,&#13;
more meetings, and the&#13;
campfire.&#13;
With Saturday came the sun.&#13;
About 10 a.m. the numbers&#13;
again began to swell.&#13;
Thousands had arrived during&#13;
the night and throughout the&#13;
morning groups of from five to&#13;
twenty arrived continually.&#13;
Areas previously thought to be&#13;
off limits to campers became&#13;
prime targets for the&#13;
homesteaders.&#13;
There is no accurate measure&#13;
to gauge crowd size, everyone&#13;
was mobile. At no time was&#13;
everyone in one place.&#13;
Throughout the concert, which&#13;
began at 11 a.m. and continued&#13;
to 4 a.m., there was a constant&#13;
flow of people. There was no&#13;
place within walking distance of&#13;
the park where there wasn't a&#13;
resident of Peace City. Bedtime&#13;
depended upon how much one&#13;
enjoyed music and-or campfires.&#13;
&#13;
Sunday morning was grey. At&#13;
7:00 a.m. the police informed us&#13;
our park permit had been&#13;
revoked. They granted Peace&#13;
City five hours to evacuate. In&#13;
the early morning confusion we&#13;
managed state-wide meetings&#13;
and planned to leave the park.&#13;
The end of the music initially&#13;
decimated our ranks and the&#13;
breaking of our camp further&#13;
reduced our numbers. Many&#13;
went to local universities, some&#13;
to nearby friends' homes and&#13;
others roamed the streets in&#13;
anticipation of Monday, while&#13;
the less hearty headed home.&#13;
We drove across the Potomic&#13;
to a friend's home. Eight of us&#13;
spent the night in the living&#13;
room of a slightly run down&#13;
suburban home. We rose at 3&#13;
a.m. and were to meet the&#13;
Wisconsin delegation at the&#13;
corners of Pennsylvania and&#13;
Constitution avenues at 5:45&#13;
a.m.&#13;
The sun was still down and the&#13;
air was cold as we crossed the&#13;
bridge into Washington. We&#13;
parked on the far side of the&#13;
capitol and waited until 5:15. At&#13;
that time we walked past the&#13;
capitol to our target site. The&#13;
capitol at 5:30 a.m. is quite a&#13;
sight. During the walk we encountered&#13;
groups of three and&#13;
four heading for their target&#13;
areas, greeted by shouts of "See&#13;
you in the streets."&#13;
When we arrived there were&#13;
about 50 people scattered about&#13;
the block. We headed for the&#13;
corners and began crossing&#13;
with the light. After about ten&#13;
minutes the crowd had swelled&#13;
to a few hundred. An announcement&#13;
that we were an&#13;
illegal assembly was followed&#13;
by a rush of police. The group&#13;
began quickly to disperse but&#13;
after a few minutes the ranks&#13;
had been reinforced and&#13;
regrouped on the corners. The&#13;
crossing continued for twenty&#13;
minutes, ever increasing in&#13;
size.&#13;
The streets one block away in&#13;
all directions were then filled&#13;
with police. They charged the&#13;
corner, closing most exits of&#13;
escape. They hearded the crowd&#13;
into two groups and waited for&#13;
vans to haul them off to jail.&#13;
Arrests were made on a&#13;
wholesale basis. Anyone not&#13;
wearing a tie or a skirt or not&#13;
looking like they worked for the&#13;
government was arrested.&#13;
Among those arrested were a&#13;
Boy Scout, a 12 year old on a&#13;
sightseeing tour with his&#13;
parents, lawyers, reporters,&#13;
photographers and various&#13;
passers by.&#13;
During the wait for the vans,&#13;
the constant sound of sirens,&#13;
hovering of helicopters and flow&#13;
of police throughout the city&#13;
was very much evident. After a&#13;
half hour the first bus loaded the&#13;
CContinued on Page 2)&#13;
Monday&#13;
By Dean Loumos&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
On Monday, May 3, at 6:14&#13;
a.m., I was among nearly 300&#13;
other anti-war demonstrators&#13;
who were "arrested" by nearly&#13;
150 police officers in&#13;
Washington, D.C.&#13;
For most of us the day started&#13;
early. We were evicted from&#13;
"Algonquin City" — Potomac&#13;
Park, named for the Algonquin&#13;
Indians who once lived there&#13;
and were driven out by the&#13;
colonialists, early Sunday&#13;
morning. None of us had slept&#13;
much the night before, instilled&#13;
with the idea of possibly&#13;
shutting down the U.S.&#13;
government. That excitement&#13;
quickly left us within a matter&#13;
of minutes after our street&#13;
tactics began, which proved to&#13;
be highly ineffective: We were&#13;
surrounded by the police and&#13;
herded into two circles. There&#13;
was no violence on the part of&#13;
the demonstrators, although the&#13;
failure to stop traffic may have&#13;
led to more violent tactics.&#13;
What the May-Day Tribe instructed&#13;
was not to resist arrest&#13;
but talk to the police and explain&#13;
to them why we were&#13;
there. Some people resisted&#13;
arrest and paid for it physically.&#13;
I saw the police club two&#13;
resisting protestors.&#13;
A noteworthy point about&#13;
Washington, D.C., is that 71 per&#13;
cent of the population is black&#13;
and not until recently, prompted&#13;
by the riot caused by the&#13;
assassination of Martin L. King,&#13;
have black policemen been&#13;
hired in large numbers;&#13;
although white policemen are&#13;
still very much in the majority.&#13;
The difference also was&#13;
reflected in the differing attitudes&#13;
of the black and white&#13;
cops. The Black cops, on the&#13;
whole were much more&#13;
rational, very cool, and many&#13;
sympathetic; while the white&#13;
cops were uptight, reactionary&#13;
and scared. While we were in&#13;
jail I noticed that this feeling&#13;
was evident with white cops&#13;
gloating over their victory and&#13;
Black cops less talkative and&#13;
subdued.&#13;
The first step in transporting&#13;
us to the jail was to load us on&#13;
buses. I was one of the first ten&#13;
loaded on the first bus. The first&#13;
thing I noticed were two&#13;
familiar faces from Parkside&#13;
and after I sat down five more&#13;
friends from Parkside came&#13;
sailing down the aisle. The bus&#13;
ride was noisy and short. Then&#13;
.came the first hint of my&#13;
relationship with my fellow&#13;
"inmates". The feeling on the&#13;
bus was joyous. There was a&#13;
togetherness which I have only&#13;
experienced a few times and&#13;
later in jail, a complete feeling&#13;
of total brotherhood overwhelmed&#13;
me. One bad thing&#13;
about the buses is that some&#13;
buses were gassed and when&#13;
unloaded the gas floated into the&#13;
cell area with nothing to protect&#13;
the already jailed prisoners.&#13;
Our bus was the first to&#13;
arrive, but we didn't have long&#13;
to wait for more. They put us in&#13;
large cells with a capacity of 75.&#13;
By 10:00 there were 150 people&#13;
in our cell which had one toilet&#13;
and one small sink. We were all&#13;
of one mind, one hope, and one&#13;
beautiful dream which comes&#13;
true everytime a group of us get&#13;
together. This probably explains&#13;
the party which the 980 of&#13;
us made out of this Washington,&#13;
D.C., jail. We chanted and sang,&#13;
loud enough so the whole&#13;
building heard us. We yelled at&#13;
the police and made fun of&#13;
(Continued on Page 3)&#13;
By Paul Lomartire of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Don't want to discuss it&#13;
I think it's time for a change&#13;
You may get disgusted&#13;
And think I'm strange&#13;
In that case I'll go underground&#13;
Get some heavy rest&#13;
Never have to worry&#13;
About what is worst and what is best&#13;
from the song Domino&#13;
by Van Morrison&#13;
These lyrics best capture the sentiment during&#13;
the days I spent in Washington, D.C., during "the&#13;
gathering of the tribes" on the banks of the&#13;
Potomic.&#13;
The tribes I speak of were comprised of middle&#13;
class kids from places like Houston, New York,&#13;
Cleveland, St. Louis and San Francisco, not to&#13;
mention the multitude of small towns between.&#13;
They came to hear music, dance in the streets, and&#13;
block the arteries of the capital, voicing their opposition&#13;
to the war in Indochina. The overall theme&#13;
that echoed throughout "Peace City" encampment&#13;
in West Potomic Park those first days in May was&#13;
non-violent civil disobedience.&#13;
These days were characterized by comedy,&#13;
tragedy, marshal law, and spirit. After observing&#13;
the actions of the youth. I thought the events were&#13;
best described as a collage of Woodstock, the&#13;
Chicago Democratic Ceonvention, Kent State, and&#13;
the smaller protest gatherings this country has seen&#13;
since the late '60's.&#13;
May Day was celebrated by about 50,000 people&#13;
in West Potomic park, where there was free food,&#13;
music, politics, wine, dope, sunshine, and a strong&#13;
sense of togetherness. One example of the&#13;
togetherness came on the afternoon of May Day&#13;
during the rock festival. Hot dog vendors from the&#13;
city came to the park to sell hot dogs for fifty cents,&#13;
which is even more expensive than major league&#13;
baseball parks. For twenty-five or thirty cents,.you&#13;
could buy a hot dog and help finance the people who&#13;
were providing free medical assistance to the park&#13;
inhabitants.&#13;
Word went around to the effect that it would be&#13;
much better to keep any profits within the festival, a&#13;
recycling of sorts. This announcement was made on&#13;
stage, between the Beach Boys and Mitch Ryder.&#13;
The fifty-cent vendors were boycotted. When I saw&#13;
this, I realized that this crowd had the potential of&#13;
accomplishing a purpose.&#13;
The park was divided into camping areas for&#13;
specific states and groups. Wisconsin, Indiana, Gay&#13;
Liberation, New York, all had areas to camp.&#13;
Literature was readily available stating the plans to&#13;
close down the city, the purposes, and the times.&#13;
(Continued on Page 4) &#13;
Page 2 NENVSCOPE May 10,1971&#13;
Black Poetess Here Sunday LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
Pulitzer prize-winning black poetess&#13;
Gwendolyn Brooks will present a free public&#13;
reading at 8 p.m. on Sunday, May 16, In&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The program is sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum.&#13;
Miss Brooks is the author of a number of&#13;
books of poetry including "A Street in Bronzeville",&#13;
"Annie Allen", "Maud Martha", "The&#13;
Bean Eaters", "Riot", and "Family Pictures".&#13;
Her book-length poem, "In the Mecca",&#13;
published in 1968, was highly acclaimed by&#13;
critics.&#13;
"Jump Bad: A New Chicago Anthology"&#13;
containing poems, short stories, essays and&#13;
criticism by writers in Miss Brooks' Chicago&#13;
Writers' Workshop, is to be published this month.&#13;
Miss Brooks has lectured and conducted&#13;
poetry seminars at colleges and universities&#13;
throughout the United States and has made a&#13;
number of guest appearances on major network&#13;
television shows.&#13;
Born in Topeka, Kans., Miss Brooks has&#13;
spent most of her life in Chicago and her poetry&#13;
deals principally with the city and its people—&#13;
particularly the people of its black ghettos. She&#13;
frequently tells audiences "I want to expand&#13;
your horizons, black-wise."&#13;
In 1968 she was named poet laureate ot&#13;
Illinois and in 1969 she was nominated for a&#13;
National Book Award. She currently is working&#13;
on her autobiography.&#13;
Miss Brooks has been awarded eight&#13;
honorary doctoral degrees as well as two&#13;
Guggenheim Fellowships and numerous prizes&#13;
for her poetry.&#13;
CAMPUS CALENADAR&#13;
Chicago Concert: The Student&#13;
Activities Office will sponsor&#13;
a concert by Chicago, the&#13;
popular recording group, at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Case High School&#13;
Fieldhouse, Racine. SOLD&#13;
OUT.&#13;
Meed the Legislators: 11:00&#13;
a.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Six Wisconsin&#13;
legislators will meet informally&#13;
with students to get&#13;
opinions on the proposed&#13;
UPTOWN&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
and L OUNGE&#13;
cid^ne/Ucan 9f&#13;
tftalian&#13;
Planning a party\&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small&#13;
Call 6544123&#13;
merger and budget cuts.&#13;
Golf: UW-P vs. Whitewater.&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12&#13;
Group Opera Deadline:&#13;
Registrations close for the&#13;
Fall, 1971, Group Opera going&#13;
to the Lyric Opera in Chicago&#13;
at 8 p.m. Saturday evenings&#13;
sponsored by University&#13;
Extension. Register with Mrs.&#13;
Lillian James at the Racine&#13;
Campus.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAY 13&#13;
Variety Show: MENC will&#13;
sponsor a student variety&#13;
show at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room. Also May 14. There is&#13;
an admission charge to be&#13;
announced.&#13;
FRIDAY, MAY 14&#13;
Golf: UW-P vs. UW-M. North&#13;
Shore Country Club,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
SATURDAY, MAY 15&#13;
Baseball: UW-P vs. St. Norbert.&#13;
Aprime&#13;
The way&#13;
to buy the&#13;
insurance&#13;
you need&#13;
but may&#13;
feel you&#13;
can't&#13;
afford.&#13;
For Fu rther&#13;
Information Cal l:&#13;
JOHN J. SCHMITZ&#13;
652-4020&#13;
or use coupon below&#13;
John J. Schmitz&#13;
612 15th Place&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
Yes, I am interesied in&#13;
getting further information&#13;
on "PRIME."&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
STATE&#13;
Doubleheader. 1:00 p.m.,&#13;
Parkside Athletic Field.&#13;
Tennis: UW-P vs. UW-Green&#13;
Bay at Green Bay.&#13;
Dance: "Neighborhood". 9:30 -&#13;
12:30 a.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D. required.&#13;
SUNDAY, MAY 16&#13;
Poetry Reading: Pulitzer prizewinning&#13;
poet Gwendolyn&#13;
Brooks will give a free public&#13;
poetry reading at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse&#13;
sponsored by the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Artists Series Concert: A trio of&#13;
UWP musicians —nAnnie&#13;
Petit, piano, Keiko Furiyoshi,&#13;
violin, and Harry Lantz, cello&#13;
— will present a University&#13;
Artists Series concert at 4&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
General admission $1,&#13;
students 50 cents (Children 12&#13;
and under free).&#13;
Dear Editor Nedry:&#13;
I should like to make a&#13;
response for clarification in&#13;
regard to my presentation&#13;
before the faculty as reported m&#13;
the Newscope April 26, lv/iIn&#13;
the first place, I did not say&#13;
that newly elected Stident&#13;
Government President Tim&#13;
Eaker was not concerned about&#13;
the arming of the canJP"^&#13;
security patrol, as your article&#13;
suggests. As I recall my words,&#13;
I indicated that I had spent a&#13;
"delightful hour" with three of&#13;
the newly elected student officials,&#13;
and we talked of studentpolice&#13;
relationships, the forthcoming&#13;
rap session, and the&#13;
police cruiser. I expressed&#13;
surprise that the sidearm issue&#13;
had not been brought up. One of&#13;
the officers — not President&#13;
Eaker — su ggested that it was&#13;
recognized that the police&#13;
needed their sidearms but he&#13;
and the other two student officers&#13;
wanted to know if the&#13;
display of the weapons, particularly&#13;
in daytime, could be&#13;
.minimized. I answered in the&#13;
affirmative, and there was&#13;
some discussion on the wearing&#13;
of an appropriate blazer by the&#13;
campus police officer in the&#13;
daytime.&#13;
The point I wish to make is&#13;
that the three students had not&#13;
seen the wearing of sidearms by&#13;
campus police personnel as an&#13;
"issue". On the other hand, they&#13;
were interested and concerned&#13;
about the display of sidearms&#13;
particularly during the daytime&#13;
and suggested the use of blazers&#13;
under some conditions. All&#13;
three students indicated that&#13;
this position was favored by&#13;
most of the student body, at&#13;
least in the perceptions.&#13;
I believe what I have just&#13;
stated represents a fair appraisal&#13;
of what transpired&#13;
between the three, students and&#13;
myself on April 15, 1971, in&#13;
Tallent Hall. This, of course, is&#13;
in stark contrast to your printed&#13;
statement that :&#13;
". . . . newly elected Student&#13;
Government President Tim&#13;
Eaker, who, according to&#13;
Hanson, assured him that&#13;
students were not upset that the&#13;
security patrol was armed, and,&#13;
that incidents in the Student&#13;
Activities Building and on&#13;
campus have not effected the&#13;
students . . . ."&#13;
On the contrary. I was very&#13;
much impressed with Mr.&#13;
Eaker and his two associates,&#13;
and I found them most interested&#13;
and concerned with&#13;
student-police relationships in&#13;
all aspects.&#13;
In closing it would be my hope&#13;
that you would print this in your&#13;
Newscope at an early date.&#13;
Thank you for your attention to&#13;
this matter.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Ralph E. Hanson, Director&#13;
The Weekend&#13;
Recycle This Paper&#13;
YOUR&#13;
S T O R E S&#13;
BOTH IN KENOSHA AND RACINE ARE GIVING YOU&#13;
on all automotive services.&#13;
m a That's besides their normal&#13;
| /Q OFF great tire buys. Just bring&#13;
in this ad.&#13;
•S&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
group on the opposite corner.&#13;
Another hour-long wait brought&#13;
the second bus that took a&#13;
smaller amount from the last&#13;
group. A third bus further&#13;
diminished the second group.&#13;
After another hour the police&#13;
were called to different&#13;
locations and freed the&#13;
remaining prisoners, among&#13;
them six smiling RacineKenosha&#13;
residents.&#13;
During the two hour wait for&#13;
the bus that never showed up,&#13;
we talked with policemen on an&#13;
individual basis. They asked&#13;
where we were from and if we&#13;
went to school. After the initial&#13;
confrontation shock wore off an&#13;
almost "party" atmosphere&#13;
overcame the entire group —&#13;
police included.&#13;
The cold windy morning&#13;
prompted a black cop to ask,&#13;
"Hey, Buddy, can I rent your&#13;
coat?" or "How about your&#13;
mittens, Miss?" We talked of&#13;
the war, police-demonstrator&#13;
relationship and of one another.&#13;
One black officer I talked to had&#13;
been raised in the ghetto, kicked&#13;
out of high school for racial&#13;
reasons and joined the army.&#13;
He had spent 1V2 years in&#13;
Vietnam before becoming a&#13;
police officer. He, too, was&#13;
against the war, but he had his&#13;
job to do.&#13;
A girl passed the crowd with a&#13;
box of doughnuts and began&#13;
tossing them into the circle.&#13;
Some fell short of their target&#13;
because if she came too close&#13;
she was likely to be arrested.&#13;
One of the dpughnuts landed&#13;
behind a black cop. He picked it&#13;
up, looked at it, smiled, and&#13;
nonchalantly hid it behind his&#13;
back, but laughter and shouts&#13;
from the crowd made him&#13;
reluctantly give up his prize and&#13;
he tossed it into the circle.&#13;
We all became so involved in&#13;
discussion that when one black&#13;
officer tried to interrupt a group&#13;
already talking to another officer,&#13;
the officer replied,&#13;
"You're talkin' to them. This is&#13;
my group and you leave 'em&#13;
alone. Besides they block the&#13;
wind and I'll get cold if they go&#13;
by you."&#13;
We talked and joked with the&#13;
officers for more than two hours&#13;
and when they had to leave and&#13;
let the remaining prisoners free&#13;
there were feelings of regret&#13;
that we had to break up. Warm&#13;
regards were exchanged when&#13;
we left.&#13;
May Day was a success.&#13;
Newscope Staffers Needed&#13;
Newscope&#13;
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EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
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Kurth Bob Borchardt, Ken&#13;
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BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
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Newscope is an independ^&#13;
student newspaper composed y&#13;
students of The Universityoi&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Pubhsb®°&#13;
weekly except during vaca i&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the&#13;
source of revenue for&#13;
operation of Newscope. -&#13;
copies are printed&#13;
distributed throughout "&#13;
Kenosha and Racine&#13;
munities as well as the Un&#13;
sity. Free copies are available&#13;
upon request. &#13;
May 10 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
Nusbaum Quizzed on Budget Cuts and Merger&#13;
by Mike Kurth&#13;
Ed's Note: Joe Nusbaum is&#13;
Gov. Lucy's chief administrative&#13;
assistant. Dr.&#13;
Harvey Brown is the head of the&#13;
CCHE (Coordinative Committee&#13;
of High Education) and&#13;
will be out of a job if the&#13;
Governor's merger is approved.&#13;
These men spoke to a public&#13;
meeting Friday, May 7, at&#13;
Greenquist, on the Governor's&#13;
merger and budget cuts.&#13;
What began as a casual&#13;
presentation of two viewpoints&#13;
on the proposed merger, ended&#13;
as a session of pointed&#13;
questions, with few answers on&#13;
the specifics of the Governor's&#13;
plan. The primary target of&#13;
these questions was Joe&#13;
Nusbaum the Governor's chief&#13;
administrative assistant.&#13;
Nusbaum maintained that the&#13;
two systems of higher education&#13;
are growing less distinguishable.&#13;
Evidently since Green&#13;
Bay and Parkside are&#13;
primarily undergraduate institutions.&#13;
He suggested that the&#13;
merger would save money since&#13;
the CCHE would be eliminated,&#13;
one board of regents would go&#13;
and costly competition between&#13;
the two systems would be&#13;
eliminated. He felt the prestige&#13;
of the UW system would continue&#13;
by assigning "peaks of&#13;
excellence" to various institutions.&#13;
He asked two things&#13;
of the faculty. First that they&#13;
consider the merger "not as a&#13;
move aimed at any campus in&#13;
particular,, but as in the contract&#13;
of students" and second,&#13;
as citizens of the state, the&#13;
faculty should view the move as&#13;
one "making effective use of&#13;
resources."&#13;
After Nusbaum spoke, Dr.&#13;
Harvey Brown presented the&#13;
pro's and con's of merger. He&#13;
said to merger could generate&#13;
more confidence in government,&#13;
offer more innovative&#13;
programs through the central&#13;
board, centralize admission,&#13;
control, and allow for the use of&#13;
network computers and intercampus&#13;
library service.&#13;
Brown then suggested the&#13;
hazards. A la ck of coordination&#13;
between the U's, Voc. Techs,&#13;
and 2 year campuses, and the&#13;
lack of a broad based group to&#13;
explore potential problems&#13;
(these problems would&#13;
primarily be administrative,&#13;
such as size, location etc. of the&#13;
various institutions, but also&#13;
would include the forseeable&#13;
faculty problems such an&#13;
tensure.) the merger would&#13;
encounter.&#13;
The audience then began their&#13;
questions. John Harbeson&#13;
wanted to know if t here was any&#13;
proof to support the Governor's&#13;
merger. Nusbaum "* ans wered&#13;
that "there is no proof ... the&#13;
merged system could be a&#13;
disaster ... but the problems&#13;
are mainly political." One&#13;
board'setting policy could&#13;
overcome the competition for&#13;
political favor by each system.&#13;
Brown then took the floor and&#13;
stated that of 100 programs&#13;
submitted by both systems only&#13;
15 were rejected. He suggested&#13;
that this was competition but&#13;
wondered if it was bad.&#13;
Fran Jaesche asked&#13;
Nusbaum how tuition would be&#13;
handled if Parkside is funded at&#13;
the USU level (two-thirds of&#13;
A Study in Parkside Politics&#13;
Prof. Resigns in Face of Non-Renewal&#13;
By John Koloen of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Because this has already happened and there is really nothing&#13;
that can be added to change it, I will not write this as a news story.&#13;
It is a closed case. Salimons Cacs, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Mathematics, has resigned.&#13;
What follows is intended to be as well a documented history as&#13;
possible of Professor Cacs resignation. It is a study in methodology&#13;
and should not be construed to represent the cause of his plight&#13;
since that lies much deeper. His example serves only as far as it&#13;
illustrates the effects on one man of the current approach to&#13;
teacher evaluation. _ _ _ , „ . f..&#13;
First of all, Salimons Cacs came to the Kenosha Center of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin in 1967 from the University of Khartoum,&#13;
where he taught for two years. Under an agreement between the&#13;
United States and the Sudanese government, he was sent from&#13;
Northwestern University to Sudan as an expert in his field to aid in&#13;
upgrading the University at Khartoum. He arrived in 1965 with the&#13;
official status of Visiting Associate Professor in Engineering and&#13;
Pure Mathematics and left as a full-professor.&#13;
Prior to 1965 he had taught elsewhere, including two years at&#13;
the Rose Polytechnic Institute of Terre Haute, Indiana, and at the&#13;
University of Indiana.&#13;
On March 11, 1970, Prof. Cacs received a letter from the&#13;
Executive Committee of the Division of Science to the Chancellor.&#13;
The letter served as a notice of dismissal. The paragraph referring&#13;
to the reasons for his dismissal read:&#13;
"The intent is for all staff&#13;
members to have the Ph.D. as&#13;
soon as possible where this is&#13;
the usual terminal degree.&#13;
Since you do not have the Ph.D.&#13;
and do not have a doctorate&#13;
program, and since this would&#13;
mean that you would not be&#13;
given tenure, it was the concensus&#13;
that it would be best not&#13;
to reappoint you to the faculty of&#13;
UW-Parkside after the&#13;
academic year 1970-1971. This&#13;
would give you all of next year&#13;
to seek a position elsewhere."&#13;
Upon receiving this letter&#13;
Prof. Cacs wrote for references&#13;
to offer as evidence after his&#13;
•status as a scholar.&#13;
Shortly after this recommendation&#13;
by the faculty body&#13;
the student body evaluated&#13;
Prof. Cacs by awarding him the&#13;
Standard Oil Outstanding&#13;
Teacher Award of 1970.&#13;
Whether they meant it or not a&#13;
letter sent from the Steering&#13;
Committee 1969-70 F aculty Awards said:&#13;
"This award, consisting of a $1,000 certificate, represents the&#13;
gratitude and esteem of the student body for your teaching excellence&#13;
and warm personal interest in student life."&#13;
When asked by Newscope to express his feelings concerning&#13;
the first notice of dismissal, he said: "In the beginning they thought&#13;
that a Ph.D. should actually be necessary, but when I was hired&#13;
they should have informed me that they don't recognize my&#13;
degree. . . that it would be just a temporary job. And then I would&#13;
understand, and at that time I actually had my choice between one&#13;
school and another school and at that time to find a job was very&#13;
easy. And so at that time they needed me and now that they have an&#13;
overflow of teachers they can just get rid of me."&#13;
In reply to Prof. Cacs request for references Dr. Irvin G.&#13;
Wyllie received a letter from Dr. Leonid Staucitjs dated August 5,&#13;
1970. Dr. Staucitajs' references include: Director of t he Institute of&#13;
Geophysics at Latvian University, Rige; Head of Department and&#13;
Professor, National University, La Pla, Argentina; and, Visiting&#13;
Professor of Geophysics, University of Hawaii, Honolulu. Addtionally,&#13;
he is listed on pate 2021 of the 1968 edition of Who is Who in&#13;
America. He holds three doctoral degrees, one each from Riga,&#13;
Stuttgart and the University of Sydney, Australia.&#13;
Staucitajs wrote: "Upon the request of Mr. S. Caca I certify&#13;
that: Mr. Salimons Cacs completed 209 semester credit hours of the&#13;
Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences at the University of&#13;
Latvia, with all its practical&#13;
works and examinations,&#13;
passed the final academical&#13;
state board examinations,&#13;
presented an excellent terminal&#13;
thesis on "Measurements,&#13;
evaluations and analysis of&#13;
Declination, Inclination and zcomponent&#13;
of magnetic field of&#13;
Latvian Territory" under my&#13;
guidance and supervision from&#13;
June 1940 through May 1941.&#13;
According to the decisions of the&#13;
Faculty Council at the conference&#13;
on Sept. 1941, Mr.&#13;
Salimons Cacs received the&#13;
Terminal Degree in&#13;
Mathematics.&#13;
"Furthermore, it is known to&#13;
me that Mr. Cacs received&#13;
additional 51 semester credit&#13;
hours from the Technical&#13;
University Karlsruhe and 48&#13;
credits from the Technical&#13;
University Dresden, GerProf&#13;
(Continued on Page 5) essor Salimons Cacs&#13;
Parkside's present level per&#13;
student) "If WSU tuition is not&#13;
raised would Parkside students&#13;
receive a refund?"&#13;
Nusbaum questioned the twothirds&#13;
figure. He maintened the&#13;
funding difference was only&#13;
eight per cent, but admitted&#13;
that Parkside seemed to be&#13;
"losing money somewhere".&#13;
Sid Walesh of Budget and&#13;
Planning questioned Nusbaum&#13;
about the drastic cuts on&#13;
decision items. He pointed to&#13;
specific cuts listed in the&#13;
University Budget printout&#13;
(Green book, etc.).&#13;
Nusbaum at first was not&#13;
convinced that these figures&#13;
were accurate. After a thorough&#13;
explanation of the importance&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
Mond ay&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
them. Brothers (everybody&#13;
called each other brother — and&#13;
meant it) talked to the police&#13;
and explained why we thought&#13;
we should be let go and why&#13;
they should join us in our fight&#13;
against the war.&#13;
After 13 hours of this they&#13;
finally fed us. We were given&#13;
two sandwiches each, but no one&#13;
would eat until everyone had a&#13;
sandwich in his hand. We were&#13;
not given anything to drink, but&#13;
we had one canteen and two&#13;
small plastic squeeze bottles&#13;
which we filled with wafter and&#13;
passed around.&#13;
They then told us that we&#13;
could pay a $10 bail and get out&#13;
that night, which prompted the&#13;
longest and most spirited&#13;
celebration. When things&#13;
calmed we laid plans for what&#13;
we would do to be more effective&#13;
the next day ; we saw our&#13;
arrests as a victory, not a&#13;
defeat.&#13;
The first person was&#13;
"liberated" around 11:30 after&#13;
spending a total of I8V2 ho urs in&#13;
cramped quarters and with&#13;
little food. I had the "honor" of&#13;
being the last person to be&#13;
released. This was around 1:30&#13;
Tuesday morning after I had&#13;
spent 19V2 hours in jail.&#13;
The May Day Tribe said our&#13;
action was a success. It didn't&#13;
shut down the government, but&#13;
just the fact that there were&#13;
enough people in open defiance&#13;
of their government and willing&#13;
to go to jail to stop this war is a&#13;
victory for human dignity. The&#13;
government was ready for us;&#13;
they had everything, troops,&#13;
clubs, mace, gas, helicopters, a&#13;
few tanks around town, spies,&#13;
jeeps, buses, motorcycles, the&#13;
whole military establishment.&#13;
All we had was our communication&#13;
and our love Rennie&#13;
Davis is saying we'll try it again&#13;
soon (July 4th has been mentioned.)&#13;
This time we'll be more&#13;
prepared, and most likely won't&#13;
be arrested as easily.&#13;
Old Edition textbooks&#13;
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Page 4 NEW SC OPE - May 10,1971&#13;
WOMEN IN LOVE&#13;
Amidst the tenuous embraces&#13;
of body and the tenuous embraces&#13;
of words stirs the film&#13;
Women In Love. The final word&#13;
of D. H. Lawrence's title is thei&#13;
topic dissected to the pitch and I moan of those in climax, those&#13;
who know a climax that is not&#13;
only in an earthly heaven but in&#13;
arr earthly hell as well. The&#13;
many dimensions of what love&#13;
is: or seems to be are explored&#13;
with thoughts of the present in&#13;
mind.&#13;
How appropriate that in a&#13;
time when love is carried by&#13;
standard bearers that the&#13;
concept should be so accurately&#13;
defined in such a way as to give&#13;
it substance, subtracting the&#13;
order and beauty that seem so&#13;
readily a part of its first impression.&#13;
&#13;
The games of love and hate&#13;
that are hardly inseparable are&#13;
played in an atmosphere of&#13;
soured wealth and an absurd&#13;
variance from British&#13;
Utilitarianism, surrounded by&#13;
pastoral settings of an English&#13;
country estate. The time is near&#13;
World War I and the estate&#13;
belongs to the Crich family,&#13;
owners of a coal mine run by the&#13;
only son Gerald. We also find&#13;
Rupert Birkin, a young&#13;
naturalist whose sensitivity is&#13;
too great for most to follow him.&#13;
The involvement begins&#13;
almost as simultaneously the&#13;
search for love begins with the&#13;
sisters, Brangwen, Gudrun and&#13;
Ursula, the first being sensual&#13;
and the second impressionable.&#13;
Gerald falls with Gudrun and&#13;
Rupert falls to Ursula. With the&#13;
blossoming of these anguished&#13;
romances another comes about&#13;
and the triangle establishes&#13;
itself. A stigmatic love develops&#13;
between Rupert and Gerald.&#13;
Surrounding the characters&#13;
Gudrun and Ursula, the story&#13;
saturates their desparate&#13;
definitions of love and the&#13;
almost bestial sensuality and&#13;
great sensitivity of the women&#13;
are contrasted to the power and&#13;
brutishness of the man leading&#13;
to a sado-masochismic clash.&#13;
Their portrayal of torturer and&#13;
tortured clouds again the idea of&#13;
love and the ritual turns into&#13;
hate. The woman is savagely&#13;
motivated toward an artist who&#13;
asks her to work with him in&#13;
Dresden. With impressions of&#13;
early Picasso spotted through&#13;
his bedroom at a Swiss Alps ski&#13;
resort, they invent an absurd&#13;
dialogue and act out a strange&#13;
play, symbolic of their desire.&#13;
Gerald destroys himself and the&#13;
film is ended with a glaring&#13;
survival of hate over love. In the&#13;
final moments Rupert is heard&#13;
saying that both loves are&#13;
possible between man and&#13;
woman, and it seems to me with&#13;
that the hate and love will carry&#13;
on too.&#13;
The photography was superb&#13;
with every shot containing&#13;
highly generating color accents&#13;
and the mood was projected into&#13;
a time and not just a space.&#13;
With Glenda Jackson's acting&#13;
the film became highly&#13;
equateable with our time . . .&#13;
again.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
BRAT \ \&#13;
Thei^r m • is&#13;
Where It's At!&#13;
1!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL I&#13;
9 A . M . T O 4 P.M .&#13;
A Bo t t le of&#13;
nifim nnE&#13;
A New Kind of&#13;
Alcoholic Beverage&#13;
and "BEEFBU RGER&#13;
STEAK&#13;
o r&#13;
BRAT&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
HOUR&#13;
M O N D A Y t h ru FRIDA Y&#13;
6 p .m. to 7 p . m.&#13;
PITCHERS $ 1 . 0 0 GL A SS 20&lt;&#13;
Ava ilab le For P art ies&#13;
Includ ing Fraternity a nd Sorority P a rti es&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M. • 12 P .M.&#13;
N o rthw e st Corne r 1-9 4 and H i g hw a y 50&#13;
parmg&#13;
mm&#13;
by Paul Lomartire of The Newscope Staff&#13;
If there are those who envision the good, old&#13;
small American restaurant, where individuality is&#13;
not traded for the buck, it is needless to say that these&#13;
people are constantly disappointed. National chains&#13;
of eating places have taken over in America.&#13;
Every city seems to look the same as you pass&#13;
McDonalds, Roy Rogers' Roast Beef Sandwiches,&#13;
Burger Chef, Colonel Sanders' Fried Chicken, Fish&#13;
and Chips, and scores of others that even share the&#13;
same architecture. If someone does find a small&#13;
restaurant, it is either an all night greasy spoon, or a&#13;
high priced novelty. It is safe to assume that the&#13;
Alice's Restaurant we all saw in the movie is one in a&#13;
thousand.&#13;
So, if Arlo Guthrie is looking for another place to&#13;
eat, Kenosha might just have one to his liking.&#13;
Frank's Diner attracts those who want a good meal&#13;
that isn't pre-packaged and ready before they come&#13;
in to eat it.&#13;
About eight or nine in the morning, Frank's is full&#13;
of longhairs about to descend upon Kenosha Billiards&#13;
(Popularly known as the Hole), store clerks readying&#13;
for a work day, and a half dozen or so high school kids&#13;
who have taken an unauthorized day off.&#13;
I was at first fooled into thinking that the&#13;
structure was once a car on the Chicago and Northwestern&#13;
Railroad that was derailed one fine spring&#13;
day. The building is built like a dining car on a train,&#13;
but in fact, it was intended this way and Frank has&#13;
been serving his customers for four and a half&#13;
decades here.&#13;
I had just returned fro.m the ordeal in Washington&#13;
and I felt comfortable eating with those my age.&#13;
There are times when a friendly atmosphere can&#13;
make food taste better, and to me this seemed like&#13;
one of those times.&#13;
Frank and-his waitresses use an honor system in&#13;
running their restaurant. The only place I know of&#13;
that still has faith in people. No checks are issued for&#13;
the food, as the individual is supposed to report to the&#13;
register and tell what he ate after his meal.&#13;
It would be a cardinal sin to rip-off Frank, according&#13;
to all of his regulars. Strangers eating there&#13;
only infrequently wouldn't even consider it because it&#13;
would reduce them to a level in society that would&#13;
align them with swindlers who steal from old ladies.&#13;
Frank's honor policy works.&#13;
The prices wouldn't motivate one to try to sneak&#13;
out without paying, or lieing. Hamburgers are forty&#13;
cents, roast beef sandwiches seventy, homemade&#13;
soup is thirty cents, and hamemade chili is forty&#13;
cents. The all time favorite at this restaurant is a hot&#13;
hamburger which includes gravy and mashed&#13;
potatoes for only sixty cents.&#13;
The food is good, nothing is overly greasy or&#13;
bland. The service is good, since anyone can go&#13;
• behind the counter to get their own choice of soft&#13;
drink or coffee. The whole set-up at Frank's has given&#13;
birth to a number of regular customers who successfully&#13;
support the business so there can be a note&#13;
of individuality here. Among the regulars are&#13;
businessmen, longhairs, detectives, shoppers and&#13;
retired gentlemen from the Hotel Dayton.&#13;
When days don't seem to be starting too well for&#13;
you, or you get sick of assembly line food, I suggest&#13;
you go to Frank's Diner humming an Arlo Guthrie&#13;
tune, and you're bound to meet some good people.&#13;
J-IU-J-.I - - - - - • • •••&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
I thought it was too&#13;
idealistic to think that those who&#13;
had come to protest would go as&#13;
far as participating in mass&#13;
arrest. I couldn't imagine&#13;
thousands of people going to jail&#13;
for a cause or even personal&#13;
principles. It was amazing to&#13;
see the arrested groups on&#13;
Monday, waiting for rides to the&#13;
camps and jails. They sang,&#13;
chanted, and rode the buses&#13;
with fists sticking out of every&#13;
available window, spirits didn't&#13;
even fail once everyone was&#13;
imprisoned.&#13;
After a few thousand were&#13;
taken to the Coliseum on May&#13;
3rd, it wasn't long before a Viet&#13;
Cong flag was hung, chants and&#13;
popular protest songs filled the&#13;
air. A couple was married&#13;
during their detention at the&#13;
Washington Redskins' practice&#13;
field, to make all aspects of the&#13;
protests very different.&#13;
The funnier things that&#13;
happened included the Gay&#13;
Liberation delegation in&#13;
Georgetown on May 3rd as they&#13;
carried small cars into the&#13;
streets and let the air out of the&#13;
Observations&#13;
tires. After a dozen or so&#13;
demonstrators successfully&#13;
lifted a car and carried it a few&#13;
feet, they would joyously jump&#13;
up and down, hug each other&#13;
and have a little celebration of&#13;
sorts with each vehicle they&#13;
used to clutter the street.&#13;
On the last day of demonstrations&#13;
there was the&#13;
beautiful 84 year old lady who&#13;
was led down the steps of the&#13;
Capitol, under arrest, hands on&#13;
her head P.O.W. style, with a&#13;
smiling D.C. police officer&#13;
leading the way.&#13;
The sadder moments included&#13;
a 23 year old man in&#13;
court explaining during his&#13;
arraignment that he had a wife&#13;
eight months pregnant who was&#13;
roaming around Washington&#13;
penniless searching for him.&#13;
The judge simply told him that&#13;
the District of Columbia had a&#13;
fine welfare system, and he&#13;
didn't think the man showed&#13;
any responsibility characteristic&#13;
of fathers and husbands.&#13;
A cash bond of $250.00 w as set.&#13;
The man was led away weekping.&#13;
&#13;
After the 7,000 arrests on&#13;
Monday., the courts turned into&#13;
misdemeanor factories, court&#13;
personnel working 12 hour shifts&#13;
in eight courtrooms. Judges&#13;
listened to many reasons why&#13;
individuals felt they should be&#13;
re leased on their own&#13;
recognizance, but only those&#13;
who lived in the District of&#13;
Columbia were released, on the&#13;
condition they were home every&#13;
night before ten p.m. until their&#13;
court date.&#13;
My function at the demonstrations&#13;
was strictly as a&#13;
reporter. I tried not to get involved&#13;
with any of the&#13;
demonstrations, but I can&#13;
remember running at least six&#13;
times from club wielding police&#13;
officers who worked like robots,&#13;
arresting anyone who looked&#13;
the part of a dissenter. Press&#13;
credential meant little or&#13;
nothing, considering even&#13;
medics were arrested. There&#13;
was an energy generated by the&#13;
people that fascinated me.&#13;
There seemed to be a blind faith&#13;
among everyone who sat or&#13;
marched in the streets. They&#13;
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(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
many."&#13;
An additional letter dated&#13;
June 27,1945, indicated that Dr.&#13;
Cacs had been working at the&#13;
Institute for Applied&#13;
Mathematics at the FriedrichSchiller&#13;
University. Prof. Cacs&#13;
was engaged as a scientific&#13;
assistant and studying on his&#13;
own but, "Due to the destruc-,&#13;
tion of the institute by an Allied&#13;
Forces air-attack it was not&#13;
possible to finish the doctor's&#13;
work of Mr. Tshatschs." (ed.&#13;
Prof. Cacs Americanized his&#13;
name.)&#13;
In view of Dr. Slaucitajs&#13;
references Prof. Cacs said:&#13;
"The reasons that they gave&#13;
were not valid. Other reasons I&#13;
wouldn't mind. I don't fit in this&#13;
university . . . sorry, I can&#13;
understand and then I know it,&#13;
but if my degree is somehow&#13;
inferior for these reasons, then I&#13;
know the reasons are not&#13;
because of my education."&#13;
A second letter dated January&#13;
29, 1971, was sent from Dr.&#13;
Isenberg, Chairman, Social&#13;
A Study in Parkside Politics&#13;
Sciences Division to Professor&#13;
Cacs the body of which read:&#13;
"After due consideration of&#13;
the credentials submitted,&#13;
several questions have been&#13;
raised* by the Executive&#13;
Committee that the burden of&#13;
proof is upon you to provide.&#13;
The following information is&#13;
requested:&#13;
1. What is the nature of the&#13;
terminal degree issued to you&#13;
* by the University of Latvia?&#13;
2. What is the nature of the&#13;
requirements for the terminal&#13;
degree that is referred to in the&#13;
documents?&#13;
3. What is the academic&#13;
equivalency of the University of&#13;
Latvia degree to American&#13;
academic degrees?&#13;
In the letter of February 26,&#13;
1970, the termination recommendations&#13;
raised two issues:&#13;
(1) the question of the Ph.D.&#13;
degree and (2) the lack of&#13;
research beyond a master's&#13;
level. It is recommended that&#13;
you provide supporting&#13;
evidence for research or&#13;
were sure that they wre doing&#13;
what had to be done for their&#13;
cause; ending the war. The&#13;
clown princes, Jerry Rubin and&#13;
Abbie Hoffman, preached nonviolence,&#13;
and did not go out on&#13;
their usual political limbs with&#13;
wild generalizations about the&#13;
government and leaders.&#13;
I don't see how anyone can&#13;
say this whole Festival of Life&#13;
failed. The only time the laws in&#13;
this country will ever be&#13;
changed through the system is&#13;
when those who physically&#13;
make and can change the laws&#13;
are directly affected. When&#13;
their kids are getting arrested&#13;
by the thousands through&#13;
planned civil disobedience in&#13;
the-nation's capital, put into a&#13;
detention camp, and they are&#13;
released vowing to do ir over&#13;
again; eyes should open and&#13;
closed minds had better open.&#13;
At least for now the youth&#13;
culture is not playing into the&#13;
hands of their enemies and&#13;
critics by irresponsible bombings&#13;
and destruction. They are&#13;
constructively working the best&#13;
they can within the system,&#13;
without the vote within the&#13;
system. .&#13;
When it was all over, the dirty&#13;
sleeping bags slung over&#13;
shoulders, the stink from imprisonment&#13;
still fresh, those&#13;
who came to Washington to&#13;
protest the war were still&#13;
smiling, with thumbs asking for&#13;
rides back home all over&#13;
America, applying the lyrics of&#13;
Van Morrison "Many think it's&#13;
time for a change," and they&#13;
are "heading underground for&#13;
some heavy rest," but they will&#13;
return again, somewhere else,&#13;
until the war they hate is over.&#13;
Meetings were held among the&#13;
groups to vote on plans of action.&#13;
It was truly a make-shift&#13;
but efficient army.&#13;
When the permit for the&#13;
park was revoked, and&#13;
everyone had only a few hours&#13;
to leave, it seemed to me the&#13;
protest would dissolve in the&#13;
rain that was beginning to fall.&#13;
Knapsacks, sleeping bags, and&#13;
tents were hastily packed by the&#13;
frustrated people of Peace City.&#13;
It was assumed before hand&#13;
that many of the 50,000 had&#13;
come just for the free rock&#13;
festival, but those who had&#13;
come to protest hoped they&#13;
would at least have a place to&#13;
meet and plan for the Monday&#13;
shutdown.&#13;
When darkness and cold set&#13;
in, fifteen or twenty thousand&#13;
people were faced with the&#13;
dilemma of nowhere to stay in a&#13;
city with a high crime rate. I&#13;
think the closing of the park did&#13;
more to bring about a sense of&#13;
unity than a mass meeting&#13;
could have done. Every time&#13;
groups or individual protests&#13;
passed on the Washington&#13;
streets a fist shot up, followed&#13;
by the greeting, "See you&#13;
Monday morning in the&#13;
streets."&#13;
scholarly activity since the date&#13;
of your terminal degree, and&#13;
also provide evidence of any&#13;
publications to support the&#13;
research activity."&#13;
Subsequently, in a letter&#13;
dated January 2?, 1971, and&#13;
addressed to Dr. Isenberg,&#13;
Professor Slacitajs reemphasized&#13;
the facts of his&#13;
previous, adding that "In my&#13;
opinion his terminal thesis is&#13;
equivalent to the Ph.D. thesis in&#13;
U.S.A."&#13;
In an additional letter from&#13;
Olgarts Balodis of the&#13;
Association of Latvian Catholic&#13;
Students explaining that at the&#13;
time Prof. Cacs had finished his&#13;
work at Latvian University&#13;
(1941) he had "ammassed a&#13;
total of 209 semester credit&#13;
hours at Latvian University,"&#13;
but that "Russia had invaded&#13;
Latvia and degrees were not&#13;
officially awarded." But the&#13;
letter added, "There is no&#13;
question but that the Terminal&#13;
Degree in Mathematics from&#13;
the University of Latvia is the&#13;
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equivalent, or even superior to,&#13;
the Ph.D. degree that is granted&#13;
by an American University."&#13;
Cacs said at this point that&#13;
"Since I proved it (held a terminal&#13;
degree), I proved that the&#13;
reasons they dismissed me&#13;
were wrong, they don't even&#13;
comment on it."&#13;
In a following letter dated&#13;
April 15, 1971, addressed tp&#13;
Prof. Cacs, Dean William&#13;
Morrow quoted Dr. Isenberg as&#13;
writing:&#13;
"In a meeting of the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
Division of Science on Wednesday,&#13;
March 24, 1971, all the&#13;
documents presented by Mr.&#13;
Salimons Cacs in support of his&#13;
appeal generated by his letter of&#13;
December 1, 1970, were considered.&#13;
The Executive Committee&#13;
re-affirmed its previous&#13;
recommendation of nonrenewal&#13;
dated February 26,&#13;
1970."&#13;
Cacs said of t his letter, "They&#13;
just avoided this question&#13;
completely. In personal interviews&#13;
by two Deans, Dean&#13;
Mills andDean MacKinney, the&#13;
reason is, first of all, I did not&#13;
contribute to the university&#13;
community. Teaching does not&#13;
count Dean MacKinney told&#13;
me; and, I did not publish."&#13;
"Actually I was told by Dean&#13;
MacKinney that I just don't fit,&#13;
but actually it's happened that&#13;
he is no more here." (ed. Dean&#13;
MacKinney was removed from&#13;
his post as Dean of the College&#13;
of Science and Society last&#13;
semester.)&#13;
"In a personal interview Dr.&#13;
Wyllie told me you cannot put&#13;
on the paper the real reasons.&#13;
They have the power to fire&#13;
anyone . . . it's one of those&#13;
things."&#13;
"I could win the argument in&#13;
an open hearing but still I would&#13;
lose the job. I could present a&#13;
court case with all the papers,&#13;
but if they really wanted to&#13;
learn the truth about my&#13;
degrees they could have called&#13;
me at least a year ago. They&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
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Page 6 NEWSCOPE May Iff. 1971&#13;
Smik&#13;
A Study in Park side Politics&#13;
(Continued from Page 5)&#13;
never called, they never asked&#13;
me questions directly."&#13;
According to Cacs his reason&#13;
for tendering his resignation&#13;
before the end of the semester&#13;
was due to a combination of&#13;
factors that so deteriorated his&#13;
teaching effectiveness that&#13;
teaching became a strain.&#13;
Newscope asked Prof. Cacs to&#13;
discuss his views of the faculty&#13;
review committee. The&#13;
following are his opinions&#13;
regarding the procedures involved&#13;
in faculty review.&#13;
"The university has to certify&#13;
that my degree is equivalent to&#13;
an American Ph.D. And I don't&#13;
believe any European&#13;
university will certify this&#13;
because, in their opinion, their&#13;
degrees are higher than&#13;
American degrees. Secondly,&#13;
even if the university would&#13;
certify this somebody asked,&#13;
'how can you prove that this&#13;
degree is equivalent or higher?'&#13;
Somebody from the University&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
s&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
of the decision items to a new&#13;
and developing University, and&#13;
their accuracy, Nusbaum&#13;
conceded the point and&#13;
remarked that he would convey&#13;
the groups concerns to the&#13;
governor. He also suggested&#13;
that many "one shot programs"&#13;
set up for Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee could have their&#13;
funds diverted to other campuses.&#13;
These funds however,&#13;
are not a part of the decision&#13;
items itenerary and are apof&#13;
Wisconsin would ask the&#13;
University of Illinois if their&#13;
degree is equivalent to U.W.&#13;
degree. Who would certify&#13;
this?"&#13;
Outlining the problems&#13;
revolving around certification&#13;
of international degrees, Cacs&#13;
stated that because the&#13;
University of Latvia is behind&#13;
the iron curtain he said, "They&#13;
are not allowed to write directly&#13;
to capitalist countries. The&#13;
documents might have been&#13;
destroyed but I think they just&#13;
would like to hurt as much as&#13;
possible because I do have the&#13;
originals of my papers and they&#13;
sent a letter that said they had&#13;
no records."&#13;
"They (USSR) also think&#13;
their degrees are higher than&#13;
American degrees, and I can&#13;
see their reasons. For instance,&#13;
I teach Math. 221-222, in the&#13;
Soviet Union they teach this in&#13;
high school. The German&#13;
university (too) does not&#13;
Nusbaum&#13;
plicable only to basic budget&#13;
considerations.&#13;
Mrs. Greenquist suggested&#13;
that a commission be set up,&#13;
similar to4 the Governor's&#13;
commission on crime, to study&#13;
the full implications of the&#13;
merger.&#13;
Tim Eaker asked if he could&#13;
expect the same education at&#13;
Whitewater he could at&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Harbeson wished Nusbaum to&#13;
convey his sentiments to the&#13;
&amp;&#13;
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recognize an American high&#13;
school diploma. An American&#13;
would have to take two years of&#13;
course work before he would&#13;
become a freshman in a German&#13;
university."&#13;
."But I don't think any German&#13;
university would ask,&#13;
'would you certify that your&#13;
degree is equivalent' they would&#13;
never do this. First of all it's&#13;
only jealousy and second, you&#13;
can't prove those things. It's a&#13;
matter of opinion. Try to&#13;
compare the University of&#13;
Illinois degree with Wisconsin.&#13;
Wisconsin for sure would say&#13;
their degree was much more&#13;
valuable, but try to convince&#13;
Illinois that Wisconsin was&#13;
higher."&#13;
Expressing his attitude&#13;
toward research work and work&#13;
directed mainly at publication,&#13;
he said: "When Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie drew up the ten points,"&#13;
for faculty evaluation, "it was&#13;
said of these ten points that&#13;
teaching would be the first&#13;
consideration of a faculty&#13;
member. The promises of&#13;
teaching are just on the paper,&#13;
but not in real life."&#13;
"I did a ol t of research for the&#13;
sake of my students. I&#13;
researched the best ways of how&#13;
to expalin, not what is in the&#13;
textbook, but how the student&#13;
can better understand the&#13;
material. I believe in this type&#13;
of research, I don't believe in&#13;
the research for publishing&#13;
purposes only. People who like&#13;
to publish should do this and be&#13;
rewarded, but still the prime&#13;
objective is that the student be&#13;
taught to the best of an instructor's&#13;
abilities."&#13;
(Newscope learned that the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
Science Division is unable to&#13;
discuss the specific reasons for&#13;
Prof. Cacs' non-renewal&#13;
because such information is&#13;
considered to be of a confidential&#13;
nature.)&#13;
Governor. He said '.'The basis of&#13;
tenure, the missions, and&#13;
faculty governance are the very&#13;
soul of this university and our&#13;
chances for quality depends on&#13;
those being preserved and what&#13;
we don't want to see is these&#13;
being put in the hands of new&#13;
regents of unknown quality —&#13;
your'e putting what we think is&#13;
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well, we'll see."&#13;
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May 10.J971 NEWSCOPE Page,7&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of The NeWscope Staff&#13;
Remaining undefeated in three games, the&#13;
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the first night game of the season. All three&#13;
Ranger victories have come at the expense of&#13;
Dominican.&#13;
Playing in bitter cold weather, the Rangers&#13;
broke the game open in the eighth inning with a&#13;
13-run outburst. Combining walks with some&#13;
timely hitting, which included a pair of bases&#13;
loaded doubles, the Rangers came up with their&#13;
biggest inning of the season.&#13;
• ,^ oac&#13;
^ Cberbruner was extermely pleased&#13;
with the display of fireworks from the Ranger&#13;
bats. Chuck Christiano went 4 for 5 and Nick&#13;
Perrine 3 for 5 to pace the Ranger offense.&#13;
Rick Jackson, one of the batting practice&#13;
pitchers for the Milwaukee Brewers, started for&#13;
Parkside. He was followed on the mound by Jim&#13;
Kobierski and Carl Talsma.&#13;
The team is now practicing on the new ball&#13;
diamond west of the Athletic Office on the Wood&#13;
Road campus. All remaining home games will be&#13;
played on that diamond. The infield is in excellent&#13;
shape, but the outfield is still quite&#13;
bumpy.&#13;
A bicycle race sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Cycling Club and&#13;
the Club Sports Council will be&#13;
held at the Washington Park&#13;
Bowl in Kenosha on May 23.&#13;
The 40 and one-fifth mile race&#13;
will be relay style, with a team&#13;
composed of four riders. All&#13;
four riders must ride in the&#13;
race, but there is no set limit as&#13;
to how much each member&#13;
must ride.&#13;
Any type of bike (except&#13;
motorized) may be used, but a&#13;
narrow bike tire is preferable.&#13;
Trackmen 10th at NIU&#13;
by Jim Casper of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Scoring 13% points, Parkside finished tenth in the Northern&#13;
Illinois Invitational track meet in DeKalb, Illinois. Bob Waters and&#13;
Eugene Prince, both freshmen from Milwaukee, accounted for all&#13;
the Ranger points.&#13;
Eastern Illinois topped the 14-team field with 106 points. Northwestern&#13;
was second with 95, followed by Northern Illinois, and&#13;
Lincoln University of Jefferson City, Missouri.&#13;
Waters finished third in both the 100 and the 220. His time in the&#13;
100 was 9.3 seconds — the same as the first and second place winners.&#13;
The other runners, as Waters put it, "beat him to the tape".&#13;
He ran in lane ten while the other two 9.3 runners were in lanes two&#13;
and three. This positioning may have kept him out of the judges&#13;
eye. Waters ran a 9.5 in the preliminary.&#13;
The time of 9.3, only two-tenths of a second off the world record,&#13;
was his best time of the season. When asked if he felt any different&#13;
during the race, Waters replied, "I felt the same as usual, and it&#13;
seemed like the race was kind of slow." In a short distance running&#13;
event you don't get much time to think about the race; you just&#13;
perform.&#13;
Bob's 100 yard dash was not eligible for a school record because&#13;
it was aided by a nine-mile-an-hour wind. Always seeing room for&#13;
improvement in his running, Waters termed his 21.7 timing in the&#13;
220 as "kind of slow".&#13;
Prince was the only other Ranger to score in the northern&#13;
Illinois meet, clearing 6'4" in the high jump. Although 6'4" is one of&#13;
Eugene's best jumps to date, he was not satisfied with it. "Just&#13;
before the jumps I felt good enough to clear 6'8"," he said. I really&#13;
felt like I could have made it."&#13;
Eugene just missed at 6'6", which is his best so far. His goal in&#13;
the immediate future is to clear the 6'8" mark. "A 6'8" jump would&#13;
make me eligible for the NAIA Championships in Billings, Montana,"&#13;
he added.&#13;
Prince works on jumping virtually every day, trying to build up&#13;
strength and perfect his form. He is not satisfied with his form yet,&#13;
and feels that improvement is necessary in order to add inches to&#13;
his jump.&#13;
An entry fee of $4 will be used&#13;
to purchase awards and help&#13;
defray expenses.&#13;
A two mile race for women&#13;
will also be held. There will be&#13;
two members to each women's&#13;
team.&#13;
Hans Nurenberg, president of&#13;
the cycling club, is the director&#13;
of the race. Completed entry&#13;
blanks should be returned to the&#13;
Office of Athletics.&#13;
Parkside will hold an 18 hol e&#13;
intramural golf tournament at&#13;
the Petrifying Springs course&#13;
from May 10-14.&#13;
Golfers can play any time&#13;
during that period, but they&#13;
must have their score attested&#13;
by a partner. The score sheet&#13;
blanks, which are now&#13;
available, must be turned in by&#13;
May 17.&#13;
Further details can be obtained&#13;
from Coach Vic Godfrey.&#13;
The Milwaukee School of&#13;
E n g i n e e r i n g def eat ed&#13;
Parkside's new Rugby team 9-5.&#13;
Tom Jaehne and Tom Thompson&#13;
scored all the Ranger&#13;
points.&#13;
The next game will be at&#13;
Milwaukee with Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering again&#13;
furnishing the opposition. Game&#13;
time is 2:30 p.m.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tires and Rims.&#13;
639-8863 after 4:30&#13;
1966 R am. Amer. Con. 7843 - 20th,&#13;
Keno.&#13;
1963 VW (40,000 mi.) $600; 1966&#13;
Dodge Coronet (12,000 mi.) $700.&#13;
12911 Washington Ave. Raci.&#13;
-1965 Chevy Bel. 4 dr. Auto, 6, PS,&#13;
Rad. Reas. 633-3963.&#13;
1960 Ram. CISC. Auto. 6, $150. Also 2,&#13;
7075-15 BFG tires, rims &amp; Bal. $40; 9,&#13;
9.90-15 OBFG tires (500 mi.) Rims &amp;&#13;
Bal. $60. 859-2653 (toll free)&#13;
1964 Pont. Temp. 326, Sp. Coup,&#13;
stick. $300. 658-8043.&#13;
1964 Ram. 770 2 dr HT. 287, St. Shf.&#13;
857-2916.&#13;
1966 Chevelle 301-350 hp, 4 sp. 4 brl.&#13;
Astro's 8c M ore. 654-4440, 3559 - 10th&#13;
Ave. Keno.&#13;
1962 Buick LeSabre. $100. 1-634-6127.&#13;
1968 Tri. Spitfire Mk III, Conv. Low&#13;
miles. 637-7966 or 654-9471 (after 6&#13;
p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
1963 Ram. Amer. Wag. Stk, new&#13;
clutch, muff., trans. 694-6353.&#13;
1963 Pont. Conv. Auto $25. 652-1443&#13;
after 5 p.m.&#13;
1969 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spd, 383-335 hp.&#13;
rad, htr. 637-5520 after 5:00.&#13;
1063 Olds 88 Hoi. 495 3 brl. high&#13;
comp. Best offer. 654-6746 after 5:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
1969 Opel GT Silver $2,400 or best&#13;
offer. 652-3312 a fter 4.&#13;
1963 MG Midget Conv. New Batt,&#13;
$275.2508 - 54th, Keno. R. Smith or C.&#13;
Lawler.&#13;
1964 Jeep 4-wheel drive Red conv.&#13;
Built up; like new. Racine 633-3367.&#13;
Track Records Set&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
WANTED TO BUY — 2 used 3 or 5&#13;
speed bicycles. Call 633-3131 after 5.&#13;
WANTED — Hot "26" bicycle. Call&#13;
632-7307 or leave info.&#13;
P.O.O.G.O.: Would be delighted to&#13;
permanently complete Id-control&#13;
therapy of 28 Apr. Herman in O.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DRIVE a Pugeot to Minneapolis.&#13;
Must get there before June. Call 843-&#13;
2225 a fter 5 or 657-5121 ext. 36.&#13;
NEED ride to Seattle or Anchorage.&#13;
May or June. Will split cost. Call&#13;
Barb 654-9631. '&#13;
WANTED TO BUY — Tickets to&#13;
Chicago Concert. Contact Dale&#13;
Martin 878-2992.&#13;
MADISON — Summer sublet, 2 bed.,&#13;
near Vilas Park. Call 608-2$!-8632,&#13;
$65 per person.&#13;
ROOM — Men only, $9.00 per wk. 3&#13;
blocks from Racine Campus.&#13;
Inquire 832 S . Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
FOR RENT — Office Space -&#13;
Modern, Carpeted, Partitioned, Air&#13;
Cond. Ideal for Acctg., Insurance or&#13;
Sales. Good proximity to Parkside&#13;
and Carthage. 4059 7th Ave. Call 652-&#13;
3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE — Poodle Puppies. 6 wks&#13;
old, AKC, 2 male, 1 female. Cream,&#13;
Toy. Excellent blood lines. $100 ea.&#13;
878-2992.&#13;
AMP — Silvertone 4 channel. Also&#13;
mike. Best offer. Call Cathy, 694-&#13;
2769. Must sell.&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE — Westinghouse&#13;
30", $75; Refrigerator —&#13;
Westinghouse, $75. Box spring&#13;
mattress f&lt;5r double bed, $75. Call&#13;
633-0541.&#13;
TAPE DECK — Sony - TC - 355. L ist&#13;
price $219. Sacrifice for $100. P hone&#13;
654-1731 after 4 or see Frank&#13;
Chiapetta.&#13;
Ranger trackmen set several&#13;
school records in an eight team&#13;
meet at Whitewater last&#13;
Tuesday. Parkside finished&#13;
with 24 points in the meet, which&#13;
was won by Stevens Point with&#13;
58 Va.&#13;
Tim McGilsky set two school&#13;
records; one of them coming in&#13;
the mile, the other in the 880.&#13;
Jim McFadden was a record&#13;
setter in the three mile, and&#13;
Gary Lance did likewise in the&#13;
six mile. Len Bullock accounted&#13;
for a school record in the long&#13;
jump.&#13;
Scoring first place finishes for&#13;
Parkside in the meet, which&#13;
was held in wet and windy&#13;
conditions, were Bob Waters in&#13;
the 220 and Eugene Prince in&#13;
the high jump.&#13;
Tennis Team Loses, Wins&#13;
After dropping a 7-2 decision&#13;
to Marquette University,&#13;
Parkside came back the next&#13;
day to defeat Dominican 8-1.&#13;
Against Dominican, the&#13;
Rangers swept all the doubles&#13;
matches in two sets. Parkside's&#13;
lone defeat came in singles&#13;
competition.&#13;
In the Marquette match, Mike&#13;
Safago and Dave Herchen were&#13;
the only Ranger winners.&#13;
Safago, turning in a good effort,&#13;
defeated Marquette's number&#13;
one singles player in three sets,&#13;
6-0, 6-8, 7-5. He rcheon won his&#13;
match in two sets.&#13;
Ranger Golfers Busy&#13;
After defeating Milton&#13;
College and Lake Forest in a&#13;
golf triangular at Petrifying&#13;
Springs, the Rangers finished&#13;
sixth in the 19-school Lakeland&#13;
College Invitational held at&#13;
Elkhart Lake. Following the&#13;
meet, the Rangers last Tuesday&#13;
defeated Carthage, but lost to&#13;
UWM in a triangular at&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
In the Milton and Lake Forest&#13;
triangular, Rick Willems&#13;
grabbed the medal for&#13;
Parkside, firing a 72.&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A LITTLE EXTRA , . .&#13;
TRY&#13;
Budweiseh&#13;
MALT L IQUOR&#13;
know that!!!&#13;
COMING SATURDAY, MAY 15th&#13;
DANCE - NIGHTCLUB&#13;
featuring&#13;
popular recording artis ts&#13;
THE NEIGHBORHOOD&#13;
9:30 — 12:30 — Three Shows&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
Admission: $1.50 in advance - $2.00 at the door&#13;
Available Rm. 206 T allent Hall 8. Activities Building&#13;
WITH PARKSIDE &amp; WISCONSIN I.D.'s &#13;
s .. J Sunnyside&#13;
Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
Flowers - Fruit Baskets - Gifts&#13;
:£ VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK g&#13;
3021 - 75TH ST. !v&#13;
;•£ ;•••&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140 ^&#13;
S PH0NE&#13;
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Swing into Summer&#13;
inches smaller at&#13;
eleanor stevens figure salon&#13;
If you're a&#13;
Size 14 you can be a size 10 in 30 to 45 days&#13;
Size 16 you can be a size 12 in 36 to 45 days&#13;
Size 18 you can be a size 14 in 36 to 45 days&#13;
Size 20 you can be a size 14 in 45 to 60 days&#13;
Size 22 you can be a size 16 in 45 to 60 days&#13;
There Is no finer, more Inexpensive method of figure toning&#13;
and weight reduction than Eleanor Stevens Figure Salon.&#13;
Our staff o' professional instructors will mold you into your&#13;
desired shape at less than Vi the price ot other salons.&#13;
complete&#13;
4 month&#13;
program&#13;
*42 Unlimited Visits&#13;
rnMi&lt;MntAAi If for any reason you fail to receive the results that are listed,&#13;
UUarunTee* Eleanor Stevens will give you 1 YEAR FREE.&#13;
call 654-3535&#13;
eleanor s tevens figure salon&#13;
6218 22nd Avenue&#13;
Open Men.-Fri.&#13;
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Sat., 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. </text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
•••••••• Volume 3-Number 16 :May 11, t&amp;n&#13;
F&#13;
r&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
Inside: Chancellor Com merits on Faculty&#13;
Review Process&#13;
· State Senators Interviewed on Merge,&#13;
.&#13;
Newscope Interview: &#13;
Edltoc·s Note: Last Monday recording&#13;
group "Chicago" played at the Case&#13;
Fieldhouse In Racine. Following the&#13;
concert two of the band members, Bob&#13;
Lamm. organ. and Terry Kath, guitar.&#13;
were lntel"vlewed by Bob Borchardt ol the&#13;
Newscope Staff.&#13;
Newscope: Are you, as you've been called&#13;
in recent articles, a political band?&#13;
Lamm: We're a musical band that does&#13;
some political lyrics.&#13;
N ewscope: Do you feel that that accom&#13;
plishes something politically'?&#13;
Lamm: Well, you see, the basis of art is&#13;
communication, and while we may be&#13;
thinking the same thing as people like you,&#13;
there are other people who don't have their&#13;
minds on those things al all. We're a&#13;
vehicle for those kinds of thoughts. We get&#13;
on stage and sing things or say things that&#13;
may change people's heads. Not offering&#13;
solutions, let's say, but acting as a catalyst&#13;
• ... Anyway, we're not a political band.&#13;
We're a musical band that sometimes&#13;
phrases political ideas. Music Is the most&#13;
important part of my life. If politics was,&#13;
I'd be running for president. I couldn't do&#13;
that. But I can play piano and write songs&#13;
about what I think is wrong.&#13;
NS: Do you do things outside of the band to&#13;
further . . . those ideas1 ·&#13;
Lamm: Yeah, only we don't publicize it&#13;
... We're not saying, "This ls what we do.&#13;
we help people. Student mobilization for&#13;
one. We just do what we think needs to be&#13;
done. NS: You slarted saying something about&#13;
music critics before, during the concert.&#13;
(Al one point In the concert, Lamm&#13;
remarked. "Rigl\t there to music critics,"&#13;
and was observed giving a gesture that.&#13;
was known among Marines in WW n as a&#13;
MUS6olini Salute.) When you were talking&#13;
about Leonard Feather ...&#13;
Lamm: I'm not talking about Leonard&#13;
Feather, ·because at least be has some&#13;
background In music . . . I'm talking&#13;
about people who write for Rolling Stone,&#13;
Rock Magazines and those things. I'm&#13;
talking about your typical rock critic who&#13;
can't do anything else and happens lo be a&#13;
Journalism major. so they send him out to&#13;
cover a concert. He doesn't get into the&#13;
music at all. He doesn't know anything&#13;
about music except that he's got a few&#13;
records at home. When he criticizes you,&#13;
he doesn' t criticize you ln terms of music,&#13;
he criticizes what he see!.&#13;
NS: About that free form thing you dld on&#13;
( Continued on Page 3) &#13;
Page2 SEWSCOPE May 17,Jt'll&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
"violation", I found that I was&#13;
just one of a small minority o{&#13;
350 who l:l!!ve protested throuah&#13;
written petition. ll's boos that&#13;
the only recourse a student has&#13;
for justice is filllng out a worthless&#13;
piece of paper which the&#13;
~rkside pigs donate to the&#13;
cj!'cular file. I inquired to the&#13;
pigs on who I could see personally&#13;
to appeal my ticket and&#13;
I was told "we don't know who&#13;
is in charge, we just collect tre&#13;
money". This leaves the student&#13;
two options, pay up or don't gel&#13;
your grades. Where the hell is&#13;
our student court? Democracy&#13;
at work - bullshit!&#13;
1'0 the Editor:&#13;
The City or Racine is ror•&#13;
lunate in having a weekly&#13;
newspaper called THE&#13;
SHORELINE LEADER. It's&#13;
editor is Jake Erdman who&#13;
writes a candid and thoughtful&#13;
weekly "Let's Talk" column.&#13;
I'd like all ol you to read a few of&#13;
bis paragraphs. Here they are:&#13;
Three clowns talk in a&#13;
publicly-owned building and&#13;
promote revolution and get&#13;
applause. cheers!&#13;
fyo of these lhree are, and In&#13;
roe way or another, responsible&#13;
£or the deaths, injury and&#13;
displacement of bard-working,&#13;
serious, students and taxpayers.&#13;
Yet, they were permitted&#13;
to use "our" tax-paid-for&#13;
buildings to promote their&#13;
revolution ... why?&#13;
Besides support from a couple&#13;
rundred "curious·• kids, these&#13;
kooks get headlines and front&#13;
page photos In some&#13;
newspapers . . . but not this&#13;
~&amp;St:nu&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
u .......&#13;
-·-. ~,_,. ... _ ........ c._,,._ ....... OU -" • Iii#,-_, • "'• JOU shop/&#13;
10% -·&#13;
Courtesy Discounl&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty itP,\IR l&gt;lPT.&#13;
(Must Show 1.D.J&#13;
F a irtrade&#13;
excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A LITTLE EXTRA •• •&#13;
TRY&#13;
Budweise:c&#13;
MALT LIQUOR ,. ;&#13;
• :,t ~ ~ .,.J/Ti&#13;
:v ~ :"t&lt; '.'&#13;
,, ,.,,,) i.· 't&#13;
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but may&#13;
feel you&#13;
can't&#13;
afford.&#13;
For Further&#13;
lnlormotion Call:&#13;
JOHN J. SCHMITZ&#13;
652-4020&#13;
or use coupon below&#13;
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612 15th Place I&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140 I&#13;
Yes. I am Interested In I&#13;
geUlng further lnlor• 1&#13;
ma 1 tion on "PRIME."&#13;
NAME&#13;
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6 o.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
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i_t_:~1 =·=.! KENO SH A j~~ SUN. THRU THURS. i&#13;
t 11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE l •• • :::t&#13;
f.FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.t&#13;
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1-ll::::.~-:-:..~..,;.~;.,:::«,~ ' ~&#13;
one.&#13;
Just how anyone can get so&#13;
excited, and give such a spread,&#13;
to these rotton, hate-filled goons&#13;
is beyond me. I'll bet they&#13;
laughed all the way to their&#13;
potted pads and banks.&#13;
Yes, the Commies were&#13;
happy last week . . . Racine&#13;
a.raced and promoted their&#13;
prime pushers.&#13;
A!&gt;d, if you want to live in&#13;
their so-called "new culture" of&#13;
dirt, pot, free sex, lazy-donothing&#13;
worlds, you should have&#13;
your head examined.&#13;
'I heartily agree with Mr.&#13;
Erdman.&#13;
The one good thing that came&#13;
out rL Rubin's appearance Js&#13;
that a couple of Parkside&#13;
wheels got stuck with the cost or&#13;
his plane ticket and fee. (Ac·&#13;
cording to a report in The&#13;
Racine Journal-Times.) That's&#13;
okay with me. Let the ludicrous&#13;
and verbose Luddites learn the&#13;
hard way, as long as they are&#13;
doing it with THEIR OWN&#13;
money. Now, let us hope that&#13;
the Rubin-fanciers got a good&#13;
lesson in economics .•. which&#13;
they will probably remember&#13;
for about a weelt.&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
ecycle this Paper&#13;
Newscope&#13;
• Warren Nedry Editor&#13;
Marc Eisen News Editor&#13;
John Koloen Copy Editor&#13;
Jim N&lt;l\an Business Manager&#13;
John Leighton Advertising Manager&#13;
EDITORlAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Dean Loumos, Mike&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchardt, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Kevin McKay. James&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire. Sven&#13;
Tatfs. Mark. Tlmpany&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, John&#13;
Cray, Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES&#13;
653.486t.Ext.38&#13;
652-4177&#13;
Ncwscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students or The University or&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student . obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
operation of NeW1&gt;C&lt;tpe. 6,000&#13;
copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine com•&#13;
munities as well as the University.&#13;
Free copies are available&#13;
upon req~t.&#13;
I&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Apathy at Parkside? You&#13;
bet.tel' believe there is and rtVf'r'J&#13;
bit or It is well rounded. This&#13;
place. which the big-shots up in&#13;
Tallent call a university, Is the&#13;
biggest rip-off I've ever seen.&#13;
The police state administration,&#13;
is out to skrew every student in&#13;
every imaginable way. First&#13;
they fuck the students over by&#13;
making us go to school second&#13;
shift so the Golden agers can&#13;
catch a few classes at night and&#13;
rap during the day at their card&#13;
parties on haw their college&#13;
"careers•· are going. One year&#13;
ago, Tom Weiss and I, along&#13;
with a petition signed by 400&#13;
students, contacted Dc1111&#13;
Mitchell to see if more classes&#13;
could be scheduled duri.ng the&#13;
day. lllitchell told us he could do&#13;
nolhiflg about It. Wyllle's yes.&#13;
man did it again, since Mlt•&#13;
chell's the one who makes the&#13;
class schedule himself!&#13;
Quoting our brother J en-y&#13;
Ruben, "that education is shit",&#13;
there is alot of shit flying&#13;
around under the disguise of the&#13;
university police. When&#13;
questioning the legality of a&#13;
ticket I received for a parkinu&#13;
Rip-off No. 3 is the library.&#13;
Cun you name a major&#13;
university in lbe U.S. whose&#13;
library isn't open on Saturday?&#13;
This only refers to the faithful&#13;
users at Racine and Ken06ba&#13;
who must then check 41l!t&#13;
materials for the weekend and&#13;
face up to a 50 cent an hour fine&#13;
If they aren·t returned by 9 a.m.&#13;
Monday. •&#13;
In closing, I hereby submit&#13;
that the name Parkside be&#13;
officially changed to University&#13;
ol Wisconsin-Backside Rip-off!&#13;
Peter J. Habeller Jr,&#13;
C AMPU S E V E NTS&#13;
TUESDAY. MAY 18&#13;
Band Concert: UW-P band and&#13;
orchestra will present a free&#13;
concert. 7:30 p.m. Bradford&#13;
High School, Kenosha.&#13;
TlllJRSDAY, lllAY 20&#13;
Golf: NAlA District 14 tourname11t&#13;
at Green Lake. Also&#13;
May 21 and 22.&#13;
F RIDAY, MAY2I&#13;
Tennis: NA IA District • 14&#13;
tournament at Whitewater.&#13;
Also May~ .&#13;
Open House: Student Government&#13;
will hold an open house&#13;
at their new facilities in the&#13;
old Physical Plant building. It&#13;
is located al the junctio11 ol.&#13;
Wood Road and Highway A.&#13;
Film: Feature film, "Goodbye&#13;
Columbus" wUl be shown at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Buildini;l. Admission 75 cents.&#13;
CCC TO MEET&#13;
There v.111 be an open meeting&#13;
of the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee Friday, May 23, at I&#13;
p.m., in room 221 of Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
SATURDAY, lllAY 22&#13;
Baseball: UW·P vs. UW-M at&#13;
Lincoln Park, Milwaukee. 12&#13;
noon (doubleheader).&#13;
Dance: "Touch McGraw". 9:00&#13;
p.m. • 1:00 a.m. Student&#13;
Activities Bldg. Sponsored by&#13;
Zeta Bela Tau fraternity.&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin I.D. required.&#13;
SUNDAY. MAY 23&#13;
Student Recital: Joe Gauche(,&#13;
tenor, and Sharron Johnson,&#13;
flute, will present a free&#13;
public recital at 4 p.m. In the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room.&#13;
University League: Parkside&#13;
University League will hold&#13;
its annual picmc from 2 to 7&#13;
p.m. at Johnson Park, Hy. 38,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
P~U"Y Forum: UWP !11.w:lents&#13;
will read at the Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum al 2 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Museum patio&#13;
garden.&#13;
Honors Convocation: Spring&#13;
Honors Convocation will be&#13;
held at 2 p.m. in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse.&#13;
SPECIAL EVE NTS&#13;
Summer Travel - Thr ee&#13;
European F lights this&#13;
summer. Flight C departs&#13;
August 15 from Chicago to&#13;
London and retllrns September&#13;
12 from London to&#13;
Chicago. The cost is $im .oo.&#13;
Flight D departs J uly 15 for&#13;
London and returns September&#13;
11 from Amsterdam&#13;
to Chicago. Tbecostis$197.00.&#13;
Flight I departs June 15 from&#13;
Chicago to London and&#13;
returns September 18 from&#13;
London to Chicago. The cost is&#13;
~18.00. Information available&#13;
at the tudenl Office in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
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- - CXl&#13;
. TALK OF THE TOWN&#13;
z&#13;
I &#13;
Editor's Note: The annual (acuity review process bas begun.&#13;
Among those noUfled lhat their contracts will noC be&#13;
renewed past lhe spring semester of 1912 ar e: Russell&#13;
Brokaw, Psychology; Salfinans Cacs, Math; Darrell&#13;
Douglas, mllillC; Charles Holibob. a rt; Marvin Pollard,&#13;
mu•lc; and Sidney Wal&amp;h, art.&#13;
By Warren Nedry&#13;
of The Newaeope Stan&#13;
Last Friday Newscope spoke with Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
concerning the procedures and evaluation criterion em•&#13;
ployed in the faculty review process.&#13;
The review process is initiated on the division level with&#13;
each divisional executive committee's review of all&#13;
probationary faculty up for review that year.&#13;
May 17. 1971 NEWSCOPE Page3&#13;
can cover a period of up lo 12 years, and that the six year&#13;
probationary period is designed 10 protect the man by •&#13;
assuring him the institution will make .a decision about him&#13;
within a reasonable time.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie Wyllie said that, "The normal practice of the University&#13;
is first to employ people who have the doctorate. Second is to&#13;
employ such persons as assistant professors for a three year&#13;
probationary term and, third, is to review, during that three&#13;
year term, whether they want to renew them for another&#13;
three year term.·•&#13;
Asked if newly-hired faculty are informed of the stan•&#13;
dards expected of them by the institution, Wyllie said, "The&#13;
extent to which an individual is told precisely by his&#13;
colleagues. who make the iniUal hiring recommendation, or&#13;
by his chairman that while you are here you should do&#13;
teaching, research, and institutional service, 1 don't really&#13;
know. My comment on this is that anybody who is bright&#13;
enough to gel a Ph.D. and to head into this profession and&#13;
has spent an extended period of time In graduate school,&#13;
can't be surprised by the expectation that these are the&#13;
standard functions and expectations of university&#13;
professors."&#13;
Wyllie mentioned that faculty members receive an&#13;
annual indication as to how well they are doing by way of the&#13;
annual review process. Each year a review is conducted l'o&#13;
determine If the faculty member receives a pay increase and&#13;
if so, what mangnitude. Wyllie commented that these&#13;
reviews are conducted in the same manner as rcnt&gt;wal&#13;
proceedings, "The initial review and recommendation on&#13;
salary merit increases come from the division and then on up&#13;
the line."&#13;
Comments on the " If they are renewed for the three year term, no later&#13;
than the sixth year. during which'l.ime he is still on probation,&#13;
the institution has to make a final determination whether to&#13;
promote him and grant him lifetime tenure or to send him&#13;
away. So, in effect, the ordinary circumstance is for a man to&#13;
be six years on probationary status, assuming he is renewed&#13;
for the second three years."&#13;
•&#13;
Faculty Review&#13;
In the case o£ non-renewal the employee is noti.fjed one&#13;
year in advance or the decision not to renew his contract.&#13;
Notification is by letter from either the dean or the chairman&#13;
or the division stating the reasons for non-renewal. U a&#13;
professor wishes to challenge the reasons given, he may&#13;
request a hearing, either open or closed. before the divisional&#13;
executive committee. However, al such a hearing only those&#13;
specific points as enumerated in the letter of non-renewal&#13;
may be taken up. Al.so in this hearing the bW'den of proof as&#13;
to the veracity or the reasons staled is upon the employee.&#13;
Asked whether there was any variance between divisions&#13;
on the emphasls given to evaluation criterion. Wyllie said.&#13;
"There shouldn't be, ordinarily, but I wooldn't guarantee&#13;
that there aren't."&#13;
Process&#13;
( Continued from Page 1)&#13;
piano. Do yoo think that's where music is&#13;
going; getting away from time and key&#13;
signatures?&#13;
Lamm: There's no reason lo do all music&#13;
like that. There's no reason that a simple&#13;
four chord thing can't be pleasing to listen&#13;
lo and pleasing to play. But on the other&#13;
hand I think that it's really good for people&#13;
lo hear new tthlngs. Maybe ''Lowdown"&#13;
isn't the most sophisticated thing in music,&#13;
bul if people come to hear "Lowdown" or&#13;
"25 or6 to4" and we lay some of this other&#13;
stuff on them, then I think we're influencing&#13;
the listening.&#13;
NS(Will you feel more of a success when&#13;
you're musically in front, having people&#13;
look to you for ideas, rather than you&#13;
looking lo someone else?&#13;
Lamm: You can measure success in a lot&#13;
or ways. Most groups measure it In terms&#13;
of money or in record sales. But I think the&#13;
success thal we feel is just U1e fact that a&#13;
lot of people come to see us play. Success&#13;
has to be judged in terms of how many&#13;
people like you.&#13;
''ln this whole area you're not in a mechanical process.&#13;
You're in the realm of human Judgement. But on balance I&#13;
think in our kind or institution the first thing that is looked at&#13;
is teaching effectiveness."&#13;
Asked to comment on the divisional executive committee's&#13;
dual role as judge and jury, Wyllie said, "When this&#13;
process was initiated some weeks ago, the dean contacted the&#13;
university attorney on this very point and it was his advice&#13;
lhal that is the proper hearing body on the appeal."&#13;
"This process is less rigid th.an you might imagine. That&#13;
is, we have people on the faculty who have tenure who&#13;
don't. have the Ph.D .. but they have something else that&#13;
identifies and marks their distinction. This is what you're&#13;
really always looking for. You're looking for nOI. just time in&#13;
service but distinction in service in teaching, research, andor&#13;
public service."&#13;
Asked to compare the percentage or faculty turnover at&#13;
Parkside with other similar institutions, Wyllie charac-&#13;
"I admil to some small surprise that the advise came terized it as "very light by comparison."&#13;
back that way, but the point yoo have to recognize is that in&#13;
the appeal as in the original judgement. presumably the&#13;
persons involved are not conducting a vendetta, but rather an&#13;
efforl to gel al tile basic facts or the case and come to a&#13;
professional judgement which will be fair lo the man and fair&#13;
to the institution."&#13;
Wyllie mentioned that al some institutions, particularly&#13;
the prestigious Ivy League institutions, probationary status&#13;
Wyllie said that within the review system as constituted&#13;
administrators make some personnel judgements. but only&#13;
after there has been a considerable amount or faculty in put.&#13;
"ln other word:s, the dean doesn't get in his judgements until&#13;
after these other steps have been taken. Then he ordinarily&#13;
would simply affirm the judgement made down the line. So&#13;
the idea that a dean sits up there and says, 'Nail this guy,' or&#13;
'Nail that one,' is untrue."&#13;
NS: Well, I think that could be argued.&#13;
Like the man· said, no one's ever lost&#13;
money undercstlmating the stupidity of&#13;
the American ?Jblic and I think that goos&#13;
for aesthetics, too.&#13;
Lamm: Yeah, but getting back to critics.&#13;
the ultimate crl tic is the pubUc. You know&#13;
as well as I do that when a band slops&#13;
being creative, yoo never hear of them&#13;
again, like Blood, Sweat and Tears . . .&#13;
their whole idea was lo structure a small&#13;
Count Basie. All America may love one&#13;
tune, but they might not like the next one&#13;
by that same group. Bui if all America&#13;
loves one group that continues lo grow&#13;
and, hopefully, makes the public grow in&#13;
terms ol what they appreciate musically,&#13;
then that's success.&#13;
SS: Could you compare the American&#13;
audience lo a European audience as far as&#13;
aesthetics?&#13;
Lamm: This (America ) is the center of&#13;
pop music. Like the Beatles aren' L even&#13;
that big in Europe. They're the Beatles.&#13;
But they never would have made it if they&#13;
had stayed in Europe, they had to come&#13;
here to make it.&#13;
NS: That's where the money was and is.&#13;
That's why they come Anyway, is it harder&#13;
for a band in Europe? 1 don't think they&#13;
pay to hel!r bad mlll!ic. .&#13;
Lamm: I'd say the European audience&#13;
understands whatever art pop music is.&#13;
They listen better. As a matter or fact,&#13;
we're heading for Europe the end o£ May&#13;
and then going around the world.&#13;
NS: What :t'a5 your reason for moving to&#13;
California?&#13;
Kath: Because there was then and still i:s,&#13;
no one in the Midwest that's into music as&#13;
far as ongineers, producers, manager:s,&#13;
companies, everything. 1'hey·rc just not&#13;
into music. They're inlo screwing the&#13;
group and making as much money as they&#13;
can. That's in lhe Midwest. 1n the Midwest&#13;
it's 100 per cent U:.at way. On the East&#13;
coast it's aboul99 per cent and on the West&#13;
about 98 per cent.&#13;
Lamm: Anything that's on the coast&#13;
doesn't get to the Midwest till a year later.&#13;
That goes for ev~ylhing from style of&#13;
_dress and musical taste to politica 1 idea.s.&#13;
:O.S: As far as yoor free form things, who&#13;
do you look to, someone like Miles&#13;
(Davis)?&#13;
Kath: l saw Miles about four months ago&#13;
and I can honesUy say that l didn't think&#13;
his group did shit. For me there are cer•&#13;
lain things that are just for the musician.&#13;
and are not really intended for a mass&#13;
audience.&#13;
NS: ls that wrong in itself or just wrong if&#13;
you try Lo play it for mass audiences?&#13;
Lamm: It's bcltc:r to bein a position where&#13;
can play a little of that and then a little of&#13;
whal people can understand.&#13;
NS: Woulctn·t that be compromising&#13;
yourself?&#13;
Lamm: Not really, because the choice is&#13;
doing that or not playing anything at all for&#13;
yourself. and that's compromising. If we&#13;
all dropped acid on stage and completely&#13;
freaked out, I'm sure that there would be&#13;
some people who could get behind it. but&#13;
I'm sure a lot of people would be disappointed.&#13;
I don·t think we have the right to&#13;
disappoint them.&#13;
Lamm on the r~ording power structure:&#13;
Unfortunat!!IY, arhsts don't have lhe kind&#13;
of people representing them that they can&#13;
trust. A lot of limes artists go to people&#13;
that can get their foot in the door. You&#13;
have lo be able to control your arl.&#13;
Columbia can never put oot anything that&#13;
we don't want them to.&#13;
NS: Are you in a better position to change&#13;
that by being on the inside even though&#13;
you're working for it?&#13;
Lamm: Just in terms or what we have&#13;
done, contracts, business decisions and&#13;
other things, we done it all different from&#13;
what was normally accepted. We want to&#13;
change the business. We play colleges for&#13;
relatively nothing just to play for colleges&#13;
Kath: we don·t like playing places where&#13;
you can gel more than 5 or 6 thousand&#13;
people in. It happens, but we know that&#13;
half the people aren't getting anything&#13;
near the experience they should be geumg&#13;
This Space For Sale&#13;
Call 652-4177&#13;
You Owe It&#13;
to&#13;
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Paget :-.EWSCOP E May 17, 1971&#13;
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DeRango's Restaurant is of course Italian.&#13;
They have a full menu of standard Italian dishes&#13;
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u s,, n u u u u n • n a a n n 4 •-&#13;
1 ordered ravioli filled with meat, and Maggie&#13;
my frsquent guest ordered a hamburgP.r. french&#13;
by Paul Lomartir e fries and cole slaw, which only cost seventy-five&#13;
of the ~ewscope Staff cents. The ravioli dinner came with Italian bread&#13;
People slop me now and then to offer me a_ll and a salad, and cost a dollar seventy-five. '&#13;
kinds of advice concerning the writing of tlus Wewerediningoutin themiddleoftheweek 80&#13;
column. Everything from suggestions that I drop the place was expectedly quiet, and the ser~lce&#13;
dead; to writing articles mor e pertinent than my prompt. I would imagine that a weekend would be&#13;
eating habits. busy here, since it is a family type restaurant. The&#13;
One fellow stopped me last week and suggested interior looks as though someone was into a&#13;
that I eat in Racine more often, os l have only remodeling job, but they got called away before&#13;
written about one eating establishment in that city. they could finish. The inside is pleasant though.&#13;
I thought over this· weeks' suggestions and by- The Rolling Stones, Elton J ohn and various&#13;
passed those which appeared cynical, or in general, artists from thettop forty survey make up the music&#13;
non-creative, and decided to take that friendly on the jukebox. While we were waiting for our food,&#13;
fellows' advice and eat at DeRango's in Racine. I four junior high school sluut:nl:s shufned in. 1 figured U1is would be some sorl or consolation for Protected from the rain by sunglasses, and&#13;
the individual who wanted me to drop dead for I cigarettes dangling from thel.r mouths, the four&#13;
would at least leave town noisily chose a booth, pooled their money, and orI'll&#13;
admit to anyone that I go out of my way to dered one small cheese pizza. stay oul of Racine, simply because I al'fays get lost. Once we began to eat, Maggie found that her&#13;
those streets with names and no numbers, create a hamburger was good. Judging from the quanlily or&#13;
maze for me, when I search for anything that isn' l trench fries, nnd the size of the hamburger, I&#13;
next to the lake, or directly downtown. thought that her meal was quite a bargain. The&#13;
Wlien I first hit the cit.y limits on this Journey, 1 ravioli was a bit more involved though.&#13;
stopped at a gas station to ask where DeRango's Ravioli didn't seem to be worth the dollar&#13;
was. The attendant asked me which one I was seventy-five, which is a complaint I always seem to&#13;
looking for, and it was at this time 1 found out that find as a consumer in the restaurant field. The&#13;
there are four DeRango Restaurants. I decided lo ravioli tasted fine, was drenched in a tasty Italian&#13;
try the one on Douglas Avenue because I had at sauce, andwascoveredwiththefamouscheesethal&#13;
leasl heard of the street before. nine out often Americans can't stand the smell of. If&#13;
The attendant's directions included a turn the ravioli is any indication of the quality of their&#13;
where "the old Standard Station used to be", Italian food, and the hamburger and french fries,&#13;
followed by nwnerous cul'Ves leading to dead ends the American side, I would say that these are&#13;
and turns ril(ht and left. enough to confuse a &amp;11bstantial reasons why !our DeRango Restaurants&#13;
navigation expert. I listened for the first concrete operate in Racine. or course, that is if the other&#13;
direction and sort of nodded my head throogh the three fall in line with the one on Douglas Avenue.&#13;
rest. I left repeating "turn right at the first stop I have to admit that my meal was a bit preocsign.'&#13;
' cupied with U1e fact that I was worried about finding&#13;
After turning right at the sign. I sought out the the way back to Kenosha. I watched the four Junior&#13;
next station in my seareh for Oolll(las Avenue. high students fight over the last piece of pizui, a nd&#13;
by listening to only the first direction I didn't have even considered making a deal with them. to worry about becoming confused. In this manner I I would have been willing to turn them on to a&#13;
gotlost in only hall the lime, ending up after an hour way they could get into tile Kenosha county beer&#13;
· of driving behind a super markel At this time I bars before they were eighteen, for a clear precise&#13;
decided that any restaurant whose name even route home. It looked to me that they would go for a&#13;
resembled OeRango would be more than sufficlenl deal like that, and I would get home before running&#13;
From nowhere came a Racine police officer, oul ofgas somewherelnthewildsofRacine.&#13;
Philosopher-Poet Here Wedn~sday&#13;
Philosopher-poet Keith associate for the Minnesota havebeenpuhlished this month. Gunderson will read from his Center of Philosophy of Science. His poems have been printed&#13;
new book of poems at 7 :30 p.m. In addition to his reading, in a variety of periodical&#13;
vn Wednesday, May 19, at the Gunderson will meet with journals and he has given a&#13;
University of Wisconsin- several Parkside English and number of poetry readings both&#13;
Parkside in Room 101 philosophy classes during the in the Midwest and on the West&#13;
Grcenquist Hall. The program day. coast.&#13;
Is free and open to lhe public. Both his new book of poems,&#13;
Gunderson is a professor or "A Continual Interest in lbe Sun&#13;
philosophy al the University of and Sea" , and a nother book on&#13;
Minnesota and research "Mentality and Machines"&#13;
His Parkside visit is being&#13;
sponsored by (he Dlvlsion or&#13;
Humanistic Studies.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE ...&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
In sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and .45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop In and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who ls a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your· language, both In&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY-Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers ·&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntabl~&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, sh~ for Jewelry, Sportu,g goods and ~lfts at&#13;
Southeastern W1sconslR's lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S . DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
512 MAIN STREET&#13;
on !hr- WP~t •;idp of Monurtwnt Squ~rp&#13;
RA&lt;_ INE "',&#13;
CRF-.'.1&#13;
.. ----' ..,. __ ,,--~· &#13;
State Legislators Dorman and Devitt sp';~flk OnM;;;';ger •·•·•&#13;
By Ken, Konkol urban un1vers1ty in !he twelfth "There will be language knowledge of the merger the previous b\enni~. which will&#13;
of The Ne .. uopeStalf la~ges~city m the Urutcd States. which will provide for the "The senate, before they vote hurt both uruvers1ty system~&#13;
Wilh 1l:&gt; urban goals and C continuation of the building on the merger, wants to know drastically." Henry Dorman is the Wisconsin&#13;
State Senator rrom Racine&#13;
county.&#13;
1 first asked Senator Dorman&#13;
hoW he personally fell about the&#13;
Governor's proP&lt;1Sed university&#13;
merger plan. "First of all there is oo&#13;
blueprint on the merger. What&#13;
we do know does not auger well&#13;
with the UW system.&#13;
"The govemor .has said we&#13;
should have one unified system.&#13;
Other than the central campus,&#13;
the other campuses should be on.&#13;
a more equal financial f~ting.&#13;
This would equate Parkside,&#13;
which is now supported on a&#13;
higher financial level, lo schools&#13;
like Oshkosh and Whitewater.&#13;
"If I were emotionally involved&#13;
with Oshkosh or&#13;
Whitewater, I might say this&#13;
was good. Bul since I am&#13;
associated with Parkside, I can&#13;
only deplore the downgrading of&#13;
the level of support with respect&#13;
to Oshkosh."&#13;
I asked if the merger would&#13;
hurt the University of Wisconsin&#13;
system in regard lo Madison&#13;
and Milwaukee.&#13;
schools it should_ be maintained program, and t am satisfied ii more on the details of the James C. Devill ,s the Senn tor&#13;
as ~ ~pec1al ur:iique inslllution willgoforwardunabated. There merger and the possible from a unique district that&#13;
meritin~. a higher level of will be statutory provisions to ramifications of the merger. spans three counties. He 1s on&#13;
sutpor[. . pro\;de that the quality of in- 'The merger has been modified the influential Educational&#13;
o_ncernmg the merger's struction shall remain on a high somewhat. Committee.&#13;
possible effects on Parkside and level. "I am satisfied that as the I asked Mr. Devill why the&#13;
~~een Bay_. _Dorman added. budget containing the merger proposed merger came about.&#13;
I m optimistic as lo the out- -...-------• wends its weary ,.ay cttrough "The merger proposal was&#13;
come of the merger because ·. the legislative processes, the brought out of the blue by lhe&#13;
there_ are too many people who merger that emerges will be Governor. ll is a non-problem.&#13;
f~I hke I feel. We don't mind much different than the merger There didn't appear to be anr&#13;
upgradmg an educational in• that entered." need to merge during the&#13;
stitution but we are fearful of 1 questioned Mr. Dorman on campaign - no citizens&#13;
dow~grading it. All of us aNund the conflict or sludies con- brought it up. This is a pressing&#13;
Rac~e, Kenosha and Rocle ,-erning whether lhe merger need not pressing to anyone but&#13;
counties are very much in- would save or cost money. the governor."&#13;
terested in Parkside. "It is pM-qible to look at ad- Concerning the Educational&#13;
" I entered the Leb'islature in ministrative savings and SN' a Committee's involvement he&#13;
1965. 1 was one of the authors or Sllvings of four million dollars commented, "The Educational&#13;
Senate Bill 48 that established but simultaneously anothcr committee sponsored the&#13;
Parkside University. I helped person can look at the ad- merger bill. not because the}&#13;
nurture Parkside University. I ditional cost due to an were ne&lt;'cssarily for the&#13;
was on joint finance for the past equalization of fatuity salaries merger, but because they th&lt;'fl&#13;
three sessions, and I did and see an increased ex- would be able 10 hold public&#13;
evel'ything I could to help penditure of thirty or forty meetings to find out how others&#13;
develop Parkside, lO get the Henry Dorman million dollars." felt. That is why Senators&#13;
additional rwids to build a fll'eat Questioned that if Governor Chiscn and Heinicn made ii a&#13;
Parkside University:• "The proposed merger plans Lucey did not like the final separate senate bill."&#13;
·•we have cause to be happy. are fearful. The Governor. in proposal for merger and vetoed Asked if the merger would&#13;
We did do a good job. We did his budgel proposals, says that it, would his veto have a chance h'.lrt the UW system. he replied,&#13;
build a good school. We do have the level of support to additional of being overturned, he replied: "The merger will dilute the&#13;
a good and growing student students at Parkside shall be on "You are asking me to quality of education and the&#13;
body. Wedohaveagoodfaculty the same le\'el as the Stale speculate and I will. The image of the l'nh•ersiLy ol&#13;
and we do have a good ad- University $)'$Lem." merger may or may not be Wisconsin which is now&#13;
ministration. I asked if Governor Lucey·s approved by both houses. The rocogni~ed us one of th&lt;&gt; top&#13;
•·1 will continue to do my best budget, as vague as il is, would assembly will go along with the five in the "?lion. After the&#13;
to see to it lbat Parkside is not make it through the legislature. governor but I am dubious if the merger education can be seen to&#13;
hurl, by merger. "Senate resolution 19 says in Senate will go along. I do not be going downhill." .&#13;
homogini.Ultion of campus-OS, or effect that the governor is in• know how this conflict will be When quest.1oned 1r the&#13;
by a lack of funds. There will be vited to appear before the resolved. merger was going to hurt the&#13;
provisions to provide in senate to explain the merger. A "lf wedo not have a budget by system. why then was&#13;
statutory language for the goodly number of senators have July first for the university Governor Lucey pushing it so&#13;
specific mjssion of Parkside taken the floor to decry U1e fact system, we will have a congreat&#13;
University. that they have such little tinuaUon on the same sy~tem as&#13;
"I am neither pleased nor&#13;
happy with the merger. We now&#13;
have one system, the IJW&#13;
system, that is recognized by&#13;
one and all. In ; UW-Madison we&#13;
have a unique university, a&#13;
special uni\-erslly and a na~I&#13;
university. It shall be mamtained&#13;
at a superior level and&#13;
with a higher quality or&#13;
education.&#13;
"Al UWM we have a&#13;
I ConlinuPd on Page 6 l&#13;
McGovern&#13;
Committee&#13;
Plans Drive&#13;
Students Death Prompts forum on Bus Safety&#13;
The Kenosha County&#13;
McGovern for President&#13;
Committee, al a meeting held&#13;
April 30, announced plans for a&#13;
membership drive lO be conducted&#13;
during the month of&#13;
May. Plans also were made t.o&#13;
attend the statewide McGovern&#13;
for President meetinl! May 8 at&#13;
Stevens Point, Wisconsin.&#13;
People interested in supporting&#13;
Sen. McGovern should&#13;
call Mrs. Linda Legler, 694-6612,&#13;
or James M. Hansen, 694-2809.&#13;
For further information&#13;
contact: James M. Hansen,&#13;
3401·104th St.. Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
53140. 394-2809.&#13;
'lbe recent accideol between a school bus and an armored&#13;
truck which resulted In the death of a student has generated a great&#13;
deal of concern within the southeastern corner of Wisconsin.&#13;
Kenosha's Berryville Elementery School P. T JJ·. is acting as&#13;
a spearhead In the community: researching the problem of school&#13;
bus safety, focusing on existing weaknesses, working to gel&#13;
corrective legislation passed at the state and federal level.&#13;
• Congressman Les Aspin has already stated his \Jllenl to introduce&#13;
a bill this session of congress which would have as its aim&#13;
the corr«tion of existing defects in the structural safety of school&#13;
buses. Two state assemblymen, Eugene Dorff or Kenosha and&#13;
Michael Ferrall of Racine, are interested in proposing legislation to&#13;
Improve the operational practices of school buses.&#13;
A public fact finding forum moderated by Les Aspin is&#13;
sdleduled to be held at Bullen Junior School0 on Friday, May the&#13;
21st at 7: 90 p.m. This forum Is being co-sponsored by the Berryville&#13;
P.T-0. and the administration of the Kenosha Unified School&#13;
District. The participants will be:&#13;
Mr. Robert Cromey, Administrative Assistant, Department&#13;
oC Transportation, Madison, Wisconsin.&#13;
Mr. Theodore Sorenson. Program Administrator. Pupil&#13;
Transportation Services, Madison, Wisconsin.&#13;
==== CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHIILS&#13;
1910 C.mro. snow Tires and Rims.&#13;
61943&amp;3 alter •:30&#13;
1H6 Ram. Amer. Con. 7M3 - 20111,&#13;
ICtno.&#13;
1963 VW (-40,000 ml.) $6001 1966&#13;
llodve Coronet c,2,000 mi. J S100.&#13;
12911 Washington Ave. Rael.&#13;
1965 Olevy Bel. • dr. Auto, 6, PS,&#13;
Rad. RMS .. QJ-3%3,&#13;
19&lt;,0 Ram. Clsc. Auto. 6, S150. Also 2,&#13;
1075,15 BFG tires, rims &amp; Bal. MO; 9,&#13;
t ,,0.15QBFG!ires (500 ml.) Rims &amp;&#13;
Bal. $60, 159-2653 (totl free)&#13;
196' Pont. Temp. 32', Sp. Coup.&#13;
sllck. $300. ~--&#13;
1t6,I Ram. 770 2 cir HT. 'Jin, st, Shi. 157-2916.&#13;
IM6 Clavelle 301-350 hp, 4 op. 4 bl'I.&#13;
Aatro•a &amp; Nor•. '54 4440, "5t - 10III ........ ~.&#13;
19t2 Buick lAISabre. S100, 1-434-6171.&#13;
IHI Tri. Spllffr• Mk 111, Conv, ~&#13;
mll•. '37-7966 ..- 654-9471 (after 6&#13;
p.m.) Rod Mresc:•lo.&#13;
1,0 Ram. Amw. Wag. Stk. new&#13;
dutct,, mutt., """•· .,4-635:l.&#13;
1'U Pont. canv. AAlto $25. 652-140&#13;
aftw Sp.m,&#13;
1965 Chevy Bel ~ r , dr. autQ., 6 cyl.&#13;
Pow. st .. , 1650. 633-3963&#13;
1969 Ply, RdTM'r, • 11)(1, 383-335 hp.&#13;
red, hll'. 637-5520 alter 5:00,&#13;
1043 Olds 88 Hot. ffl 3 brl, hi9h&#13;
comp. Bfft ott.r. 654-47'6 alter 5:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
1969 Opet GT SIIVlt' $2,400 O&lt;' -t&#13;
otter. 652-3312 after 4.&#13;
19'3 MG MlclQel Conv. New Ball,&#13;
$275. 2508 . 54th, Keno. R. Smllh or C.&#13;
Lawter.&#13;
196' JNP +whMI drive RICI conv,&#13;
Bulll up; like new. Racine 633-3367.&#13;
WANTt:D TO BUY - 2 used 3 or 5&#13;
,opced t&gt;l')'Cleo. C.11 633-3131 alte.- S.&#13;
WANTED - Hot "26" bicycle. can&#13;
632,7307 or l•ev• Info.&#13;
P.0,O,G,O.: WOUid be ct.ilgftted lo&#13;
perm.,entty complete ld-eontrot&#13;
lh••PY Cl{ 21 • H•m•n In 0.&#13;
l'otlRENT&#13;
. MAOISON-Summlt'SUblel, 2bed.,&#13;
near Vilas Park. Cell «Je-~1-1632,&#13;
S6S eer person.&#13;
ROOM _ 1Mfl ,only, $9.00 per wk, 3&#13;
blocks from Racine campus.&#13;
Inquire 832 s. Wisconsin AVfl.&#13;
FOR RENT - Office si,ace •&#13;
M)dem, c.rpcttcl, P•rtltlOtled, Air&#13;
Oind, ldHI fOr Acctv-, lnaur-,ce_"'&#13;
Sites. Good proximity to Prksule&#13;
_,d carth•ge. 40597th Ave. CaU ~-&#13;
3HS or 65'-7•10.&#13;
RtD9S Nt:1D9D - WANT&amp;O&#13;
OR IVI a Pu9eot lo MiMHl)Oils,&#13;
Must get thlt'ebefOre June. Cell IIG222S&#13;
alter 5 or 657-5121 ext. 36.&#13;
N91Drldeto Seattle or Andlorage,&#13;
May Of JI.Ole, WIii ll)llt cost. C.ll&#13;
Berb 6$4,9631.&#13;
WANTID TO auv - Tlclcets to&#13;
Chicago Conc•rt. Contact Dele&#13;
Martin 1711-2992.&#13;
MISC, FOR SALi&#13;
FOR SALE -Poodle Puppltt. 6 wkl&#13;
Old, AKC, 2 mele, l temal•. CNem,&#13;
Toy. Eltcaler1t blOOCI II-. Jl OO ff,&#13;
171-2992.&#13;
AMI' - Sllvartone • channtl. AtlO&#13;
mllw. - Offlt'. Cell Caln'(, ,,.,&#13;
'1169, Must Hit, '&#13;
ILIICTRIC RANG• - WeslinQ,&#13;
nouse 30", f15; Rllfrlgel'elor -&#13;
WHllnghOUst, S75. II.ox spring&#13;
maftrHS lclr -· bed, $75. Call&#13;
633-0541.&#13;
TAPtl DtECI&lt; - Sony · TC , 355. LIii&#13;
prlc• $219. S.Crlflce for SlOO. Pllone&#13;
654-1731 •II.,. • or - Fr.,k&#13;
O,lapette.&#13;
FOR SALE-SIii Boat, Snipe Closs.&#13;
Makemler. Call 657-6765 alter• p,m.&#13;
FOR SALa - El«trlc. Stove · ex&#13;
cellent condition - realty hOI stutf.&#13;
SUch a de.,I. $50, 0y Vet,. u2.-&#13;
aftlt' 4:00&#13;
A Safety Engineer, Wayne Bus Company, Richmond. lndana,&#13;
Manufactures both the light weight school buses and the&#13;
heavier trans-it buses.&#13;
Annemarie Shelness, South Salem, New York, Co-author of&#13;
"How Safe is Pupil Transportation?" January 1970 supplement to&#13;
Pediatrics: The Journal of the American Academy of Pediatric ts.&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
:::.. ;:,='::;,;~,;:.._;:&#13;
$~-~-&#13;
Al the present time we are also working to obtain the&#13;
cooperation of too chairman or lhe National Transportation Safety&#13;
Board In send.Ing Mr. Henry Wakeland to this meeting for the&#13;
purpose or explaining lhe special study "lrnidequate Structural&#13;
Assembly of Schoolbus Bodies" report number: NTSB-HSS·70&#13;
2. 5-13-71, Mr. Wakeland will attend meeting,&#13;
A portion of this program will be reserved to answer the&#13;
questions or the public. The Jelco Bus Company will have buses at&#13;
the school the night of the forum- open for inspection.&#13;
This forum should be of great interest to all people. The buses&#13;
in question not only provide daily transportation for thousands of&#13;
children, they also provide transportation for field trips and extra•&#13;
curricular activities.&#13;
Anyone desiring more information call raith Mudge at 637·&#13;
3013 (Racine) or 654-5028 &lt;Kenisha&gt;.&#13;
BEER&#13;
&amp; WATER&#13;
24-7 -Oz. bot.&#13;
$1.11&#13;
plus tax&#13;
STOP&#13;
12-24 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.39&#13;
&amp; deposit&#13;
2428 Washin ton Rd., Kenosha &#13;
,P;:a;!g!;;e~6;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;N; E: :::;SC:;;O;; W P;;E, --~)~l--: •y~t 7~, 111~71&#13;
f' By Jim Koloen pushes Kelno and any empathy we might&#13;
have for him under the judges gavel,&#13;
smashed. He hero-worships his dead aviator&#13;
older brother, is good at baseball, flying and&#13;
writing. In the war he crash lands his Spitfire,&#13;
sustaining severe burns and the IO!;S of one&#13;
eyeball. While recuperating he blindly meets&#13;
his future wife. Cat out baseball, cut out&#13;
fiying, the only thing Cady has left is his&#13;
writing and eventually he writes "The&#13;
Holocaust" and must stand beside his&#13;
publisher, the inimitable Cranshaw, in a court&#13;
of civil law. By the time he is sued for libel in&#13;
1965, he has been divorced by his wiCe and&#13;
finds himself greatly worried over the safety&#13;
off. Uris foreshadows everything but not&#13;
lHUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
302 Ct'een Bay Rd.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-1536&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
of Thr NewscopeStarr&#13;
Thle: QB VII&#13;
Author: Leon Uris&#13;
PubHsher: Double day 1$7.95)&#13;
QB VII is what we call a straight, saleable&#13;
novel. Small surprise then when we discover&#13;
that QB Vil is numero uno on the best seller&#13;
lisL Leon Uris is what we call a straight,&#13;
saleable novelist who weaves a sometimes&#13;
interesting, occasionally tedious story in a&#13;
sty le which makes it somewhat discomforting&#13;
when we realise he is writing in the same&#13;
language as Joyce, Mailer and Kerouac &lt; to&#13;
name a few). From an anonymous narrationalways&#13;
successfully. •&#13;
cady and Kelno are opposites. Kelno is a&#13;
writer and therefore a carouser. He is the&#13;
vicUm of many doubts but ha11 a suf!icienUy&#13;
§l-r9nB ego to enBaie in much boudoir&#13;
research. Kelno is a refugee, a doctor, a&#13;
driven man ( you could say paranoid), when&#13;
he r~t.ers the modern world after his 14&#13;
year exile' In Sarawak, he opines that youth&#13;
and the new world are immoral and&#13;
despicable (Cady has the opposite view).&#13;
multiple character point or view, Uris churns&#13;
out a 504 page novel in which the style is best&#13;
described by the word Oat. Uris uses words to&#13;
express a straightforward, single level story,&#13;
words are devoid of nuances, connotations&#13;
are non-existent, symbolism and metaphor&#13;
are ugly rumors.&#13;
of his engaged daugJ-,ler and aviator son who&#13;
have moved to an Israeli kibbutz to fight the&#13;
war of liberaliQO. After Uris has supplied us&#13;
with sufficient foreshadowing the son is killed&#13;
The story and plot is well weaved with&#13;
many strands of subplots and biographical&#13;
sketches of the various characters in the&#13;
novel. This is Uris' strong point, In short&#13;
chapters be presents the reader with a long&#13;
story leaving nothlng pertinent unexposed.&#13;
Everyone from the main characters lo the&#13;
lawyers and U,e witnesses is given a&#13;
biography, everything from Sarawak to&#13;
Jadwiga is given an appropriate history that&#13;
leads to the fateful trial in lll6~. J U$t wnen we&#13;
become bored by one strand of the story, he&#13;
jumps over lo a new strand and we regain&#13;
interest.&#13;
There are too many characters to name,&#13;
but most of them are flat, the dialogue and&#13;
characterizations are basically uniform; no&#13;
one speaks with an accent, no one p05Se5Ses a&#13;
characteristic idiosyncracy, no one gets in the&#13;
way of the story, everythi.ng fits in with a&#13;
minimum of friction. The biographies tell the&#13;
stories of the characters, their individuality is&#13;
localed in their parts, not in Uieil' present&#13;
selves.&#13;
SAFE. lEliAl&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
LET US HELP YOU&#13;
(iwdann for&#13;
• Ccr11ficoJ Gynecologisls&#13;
• ('hml'e ot Top Privak&#13;
('hn1cs •nd I lo,p1tals&#13;
• Ap('lotntm~nh AvJ1lahk&#13;
Wuhm ! 4 flours&#13;
There are two main characters in this&#13;
novel, Dr. Adam Kelno (the antagonist), and&#13;
Abraham Cady (the protagonistl. QB VII is&#13;
Queen's Bench Seven, a court of civil law in&#13;
merrye olcle London, and Or. !Kelno is suing&#13;
writer Cady for libeling him in his latest and&#13;
greatest novel. In the first 268 pages, Uris&#13;
dn1ws the Ure histories of the two main&#13;
characters. Kelno is a survivor &lt; prisonerdoclor)&#13;
of Jadwiga Concentration Camp, and&#13;
he !eels he is being hounded by the Jews and&#13;
Commies. He nees London for the crown&#13;
colony of Sarawak and remains as a&#13;
physician for 14 years, returning to London&#13;
after copping a knighthood for instructing the&#13;
natives in Uie fine art of nutrition. In Albion,&#13;
Sir Kelno opens a clinic in a poor section of&#13;
town (where he can be superior to everyone&#13;
he comes into contact with&gt; and decides to sue&#13;
the Jew who libeled him in a novel concerning&#13;
WW 11 concentration camps. The libel con•&#13;
cerns Kelno's medical treatment or a group of&#13;
castrated Jews who also survived Jadwiga.&#13;
Abe Cady is a Jewish writer (he says&#13;
everyone betrays Jews. while Kelno says&#13;
Jews belray everyone - ah, counterpoint&gt;&#13;
whose treatment in the novel gradually&#13;
I'&#13;
·:'\\'lo, ....&#13;
·-~'.~&#13;
~ ·-............. -•·· .. ·, . ~--i~· ;,.:.,/.I/.,~&#13;
It is very difficult, indeed facetious, for&#13;
me to call this novel a work or art.. so I won't.&#13;
QB VII is a straightforward account of "the&#13;
longest libel ll'ial in British history", it gives&#13;
us an historical development of the various&#13;
elements which come to the fore during the&#13;
trial, in the most economical presentation&#13;
possible. But lhere is a difference between&#13;
literature and good story telling. Literature&#13;
bas a great deal to do with the language, with&#13;
how words are used. Ideally words are&#13;
literary colors on the paper palette of the&#13;
artistic writer, he painu; as well as types a&#13;
story. Uris is not an artistic \\-Titer. It's a good&#13;
story (both in terms of reader interest and&#13;
struclureJ presented in a straightforward&#13;
fashion. It's a best seller because the reader&#13;
does not have to really learn how to read to&#13;
understand this novel, but it's not good&#13;
literature.&#13;
QB Vil may be purdinsL-d al The Bnok&#13;
~art, 1122 • 59Ui Street, Kenosha. (2121 TR 7-8562&#13;
MRS. SAUL&#13;
CERTIFIED ABORTION&#13;
REFERRAL&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Our&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
tContinued from Page S)&#13;
hard' he responsed:&#13;
Dorm fin, Devitt&#13;
.-1 JI lnqu,rre1 ('011fidt'l1l1dl&#13;
NEED A LOAN?&#13;
r, nrANNOUNCING&#13;
&#13;
THE OPENING&#13;
OF THE&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
SERVICE CENTER~.";°;&#13;
..&#13;
\&#13;
MEET DORIS LANTZ----&#13;
/&#13;
CREDIT UNI ON REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
PLACE: Are&lt;1 245 Bursflr's Off ice&#13;
/-!OURS:&#13;
Tule111 Hall&#13;
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 12:30 p.m.-4:00 p.m.&#13;
Wed. &amp; Fri. 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.&#13;
UNIVERSITY of WISCONSIN&#13;
CREDIT UNION .&#13;
25A A. W. Pt"h•r~on Blclg.&#13;
750 l 'n 1v(&gt;ri,. ity AvcnuC'&#13;
M11d1eon. WtH·onsin 53715&#13;
T&lt;'l&lt;'Phone Hi081 262-2228&#13;
"This whole thing is mostly&#13;
political. The governor is&#13;
adamant on particular items&#13;
and is using the merger as a&#13;
smokescreen to take the heat off&#13;
the rest of the budget - other&#13;
bad items rn the budget lhal he&#13;
rears wouldn't make it through&#13;
otherwise.·•&#13;
"Ther e is more politics involved.&#13;
Governor Lucey would&#13;
revamp the present Board of&#13;
Regents. He would then&#13;
establish campus councils to&#13;
make advisory recommendations.&#13;
On each of the&#13;
campuses would be a council ot&#13;
eleven members - two&#13;
students, two professors, the&#13;
campus chancellor and six&#13;
members appointed by the&#13;
governor.''&#13;
"These 78 appointments for&#13;
cronies of the governor,&#13;
political appointees, is a&#13;
blatant political move.''&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMnHING&#13;
A LITTLE EXTRA , , .&#13;
TRY&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
•&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
know that! ! !&#13;
He is uncertain whether the&#13;
merger will save money.&#13;
"There will be changes in&#13;
administration. We will save&#13;
money where we can. I'm not&#13;
oonvinced it will save anything.&#13;
In 1967, before we merged the&#13;
state agencies along the&#13;
guidelines or the Kellett report,&#13;
(It is Kellett who bas also&#13;
designed the UW merger.) our&#13;
budget bi11 totaled $1.1 billion.&#13;
Today under this economical&#13;
merger system. Governor&#13;
Lucey is aJlking for $2 billion."&#13;
Asked where the WSU system&#13;
fits in, he answered,&#13;
"The merger is a backlash&#13;
over the creation o( Park.side&#13;
and Green Bay as UW's. The&#13;
state people felt they should&#13;
have been state schools. They&#13;
feel that the merger will put&#13;
Parkside on the same level as&#13;
the st.ale universities."&#13;
''The options available would&#13;
lie taken aw11 . P11rk8ide would&#13;
be regulaled to second class&#13;
status. This would prevent&#13;
future growth."&#13;
Concerning the truth of the&#13;
rumor that Governor Lucey had&#13;
offered the presidency of the&#13;
university to President Drefus&#13;
or Stevens Point in return for his&#13;
support of the merger, he said,&#13;
"I have also heard Uiat&#13;
rumor. It is fairly widespread&#13;
and might have some foun•&#13;
dation in (act. President&#13;
Weaver may just be a short&#13;
term president and the&#13;
governor probably sees this as&#13;
an opprotunity."&#13;
"I bave offered to debate the&#13;
governor on statewide T.V. on&#13;
the merger. I have not yet&#13;
received bis answer."&#13;
I asked if the merger was&#13;
going through.&#13;
"I hope it doesn't go through&#13;
at all. But even if it does, it&#13;
won't have anywhere near the&#13;
form it does now."&#13;
Paiksitle's Feature FIim Series&#13;
presents&#13;
IT BECOMES AN OLD FRIEND" "REFRESHING TO SEE&#13;
AS IT IS RARE TO&#13;
FINDI CLEARLY THE&#13;
WORK OF TALENTED,&#13;
SENSITIVE, HUMOROUS&#13;
PEOPLE!'&#13;
' GOODBYE, COLUMBUS IS&#13;
BOUND TO BE A GREAT&#13;
SUCCESS!"&#13;
FRIDAY, MAY~ZI&#13;
1:11 P,M, ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
JOll, l&amp;O•ITH PARKSIDE ID &#13;
•&#13;
Uay ·11, 1111 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Ranger Golfers Set Record&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
ol the Newscope 81.atr&#13;
Leif Gu ttormseo set a new 18 hole school record&#13;
with a three under par 68, pacing the Rangers to a •&#13;
451-:482 victory over Whitewater at Petrifying&#13;
Sprmgs.&#13;
Trackmen fifth at Lacrosse,&#13;
Second at Whitewater&#13;
In winning the match, the Rangers set a six&#13;
man team record for low average with a 75.1 mark.&#13;
Helping set the record were Tom Bothe with 72&#13;
Dan Weyrauch 74, Bob Tooppe 78. Rich Willems 79'&#13;
and Randy Dreilke 80. '&#13;
Guttorrilsen, a junior, turned in five birdies on&#13;
the front nine and one on the back en route to his 68.&#13;
For the round he collected ten pars, six birdies, one&#13;
bogey, and a double bogey which came on the&#13;
seventh.&#13;
Leif just missed an eagle on the third hole when •"-._,&#13;
he nearly holed his second shot. He had 28 puts and&#13;
hit 14 greens in regulation. Hitting a green in&#13;
regulation revers to reaching the putting surface in&#13;
two strokes less than par.&#13;
•&#13;
"1 didn't miss a put under ten feet," he said. •&#13;
When asked about his play for the entire season&#13;
Leif replied, "ln the past few weeks I've been hit'.&#13;
ting the ball better. In the beginning of the season I&#13;
wasn't hitting well but my putting was good."&#13;
losses ag;iinst individual teams.&#13;
Leif has been satisfied with the season so far.&#13;
"In the big meets !more than four teams) you&#13;
record what place you finished in," Stevens said.&#13;
G.ullonnsen's Card The team has compiled a 9-3 record in head to head&#13;
competition and a sixth place finish in the 19 team&#13;
Lakeland Invitational.&#13;
Front Nine Par 44 344 455-37&#13;
Guttorsmen 433 333 645- 34&#13;
Coach !'teve Stevens explained that in matches&#13;
up to and ir 'in~ four teams you count wins and&#13;
BackNlne Par 443 444 344-34&#13;
Guttorsmen 443 444 245 - 34&#13;
Ranger '9·' lose, Win , Tie&#13;
A fielding and pitching breakdown&#13;
Jed to Parkside's first&#13;
defeat, as the University ol&#13;
IIUnois-Chicago routed the&#13;
Rangers 15-5.&#13;
Except for one inning, the&#13;
Rangers played good ball. J etc&#13;
Koleske led the oflense with two&#13;
hits.&#13;
I n a doubleheader with&#13;
.Milwauk-.&gt;e Tech last week,&#13;
Parkside won and Ued. CARL&#13;
Talsma threw a three-hit shutout&#13;
in the 2-0 first game win. lie&#13;
supported his pitching by&#13;
CC)llling up with two hits.&#13;
In the second g;imc which&#13;
ended 5-5, Parkside had a 3-2&#13;
lead before Milwaukee Teclt&#13;
tied it in the last inning. The&#13;
Rangers came from behind&#13;
twice in the extra innings but&#13;
couldn't forge into the lead.&#13;
Tom Jaehne pitched the entire&#13;
game, along with contributing a&#13;
triple to the offense.&#13;
Other hitting stars were&#13;
Koleske, Tom Gedemer and&#13;
Dean Karas. A triple by Koleske&#13;
and Jaehnc's triple both Jed to&#13;
scores which resulted from&#13;
squeeze bunts.&#13;
With the score at 5-5, rain&#13;
clouds~ darkened the sky to an&#13;
extent that the game had to be&#13;
caUed.&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of The NewscopeStaff&#13;
While placing firth in the&#13;
LaCrosse Invitational, the&#13;
Rangers came up with several&#13;
strong individual per•&#13;
formances.&#13;
Mike Zugich set school&#13;
records In the 120 high hurdles&#13;
and the 440 intermediates. He&#13;
placed fourth and fifth in the&#13;
two events. Tim Martinson went 13'5" for&#13;
a school record in the pole vault.&#13;
Gary Lance took a third in the&#13;
six mile race, while Jim McFadden&#13;
was fourth in the three&#13;
mile.&#13;
Tim McGilsky picked up a&#13;
fifth In the 880, the same&#13;
placement a.~ the 440 relay team&#13;
accomplished.&#13;
The Rangers were hampered&#13;
in the meet, which was won by&#13;
Mankato State, when ace&#13;
sprinter Bob Waters pulled up&#13;
lame in the preliminaries. It is&#13;
not yet known how serious his&#13;
injury is.&#13;
Scoring 44 points, Parkside&#13;
placed. second in a triangular&#13;
meet at Whitewater. The host&#13;
school won the meet with 106&#13;
points, whJle College of DuPage&#13;
had 41.&#13;
Jim mcFadden and Tim&#13;
McGilsky tied for first in the&#13;
mile with Umes of 4: 32.&#13;
Dennis Fechhelm "as first&#13;
with a 58.5 time in the 440 intermediate&#13;
hurdles, while a six&#13;
foot jump by Eugene Prince&#13;
was good for a victory in the&#13;
high jump.&#13;
Catholic Conference Star to Attend Parkside&#13;
Tom Heller, Catholic Conference star from Kenosha St. scoring with an 18 a game average.&#13;
Joseph, has announced his intention or attending the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, coach Steve Stephens announced today,&#13;
Heller, a 6-6 forward, was named to both the Milwaukee&#13;
Journal and Seatinel Catholic Conference second teams, was a first&#13;
team Catholic Conference All-Opponent selection, and made the&#13;
Kenosha News All-County first team. He was the top rebounder in&#13;
the conference Nort~lh All-Star game, and averaged 11&#13;
rebounds a game tor the season. He finished sixth in conference&#13;
A good shooter, Hellershot58 per cent from the field and72 per&#13;
cent from the free throw line for Dan Chubrilo's St. Joseph's team&#13;
which went Ul-4 for the season.&#13;
Parkside Coach Steve Stephens said he was extremely pleased&#13;
that a player of Heller's calibre had chosen UWP. Heller's other&#13;
offers had included Louisiana State University, Stephens said.&#13;
Heller also is an honor student at St. Joseph's and a member ol&#13;
the Student Council.&#13;
Sailing Team Opens Thursday&#13;
Competition for Parkslde's&#13;
sailing team will open at the&#13;
MilwaUkee Yacht Club Thursday,&#13;
May 20, at 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Members of the club who will be&#13;
samng include Mike Pobar,&#13;
Jerry Ruffalo, Karl Kishllne&#13;
~d James Dean.&#13;
Other teams sailing will be&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and Marquette.&#13;
Teams that have been Invited&#13;
irclude Whitewater, Oshkosh&#13;
and UW•Madison.&#13;
A summer league which will&#13;
compete on Tuesday evenings&#13;
will be set up after the initial&#13;
races.&#13;
Non Sequitors To Chase Insects 'up a wall'&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
An interesting post-season basketball contest&#13;
featuring the faculty "Non Sequitors" against a&#13;
student team called "Jnsects" has been scheduled.&#13;
The rivalry should be intense in tbls struggle&#13;
which is set for'7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 22 at Bullen&#13;
Junior High in Kenosha. The faculty's 23 man roster includes such&#13;
sharpshooters .as Michael "The Punkin" Holmes.&#13;
"Lawyer" John Harbeson, Carl "Cicil" Lindner,&#13;
Peter "the Purple" Martin, and "Hy-Gene"&#13;
Gasiorklewicz.&#13;
One student player will apparel\UY receive&#13;
special attention in the ·game. Faculty cager Walt&#13;
"R006ter'' Shirer issued fair warning to Bill Ivy.&#13;
Shirer says he will "drive Ivy up a wall."&#13;
For halftime entertainment the Parkside&#13;
gymnastic team v.ill perform. Also scheduled is a&#13;
game between the cheerleaders.&#13;
Proceeds for the game will go the the Harlow B&#13;
Mills Memorial scholarship fund. Ticket donation i!&#13;
$1.00. Tickets can be purchased from Student Affain&#13;
or any Lile Science major.&#13;
STUDENTS if 's the&#13;
S"lrf' ~ ~ truc real thing EMIL G RLACH get Red Carpet treatment&#13;
/~ ot the&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets BANK OF&#13;
Corsages ElMWOOD&#13;
Candy (everyone else does!)&#13;
110118 40,i, ,we.&#13;
KeNOeHAWIS&#13;
Ol.7-15174&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Roci1te, Wis.&#13;
Recycle&#13;
this Paper&#13;
PANCAl&lt;f. MOUSE&#13;
REUAURANT&#13;
SundaJ • Thursday&#13;
6 - Midnight&#13;
Friday • Saturday&#13;
6 · 3 A.M. - 3619 90 AVE.-&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
"Che,k Our&#13;
Pt·ices Last "&#13;
4807 7U1 AVE:\l' E&#13;
KENOSHA, I\ is&lt;·o:-.s1:-.&#13;
Leonard BuUoclc set a scnoo1&#13;
record in the triple jump with a&#13;
leap of 42 feet S inches, which&#13;
was good for second place. He&#13;
had a second in the long jump,&#13;
also.&#13;
McGilsky was second in the&#13;
880, as was McFadden in the&#13;
three miles. Keith Merrill ran&#13;
second in the 440, and Mike&#13;
DeWitt did likewise in the&#13;
steeplechase.&#13;
</text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 16, May 17, 1971</text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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