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              <text>Lindsay in Kenosha</text>
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              <text>VOTER REGISTRATION DEADLINE FEB. 2 3&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parks ide&#13;
Volume 6 Number 7 February 21,1972&#13;
Lindsay in Kenosha&#13;
by Paul Lomartireand Marc&#13;
Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
For Jerry Bruno it was&#13;
another successful performance.&#13;
The legendary advance&#13;
man brought his '72&#13;
candidate home to Kenosha,&#13;
giving the locals a chance to&#13;
see, hear, and touch the heir&#13;
apparent to charismatic&#13;
politics, John Lindsay.&#13;
Bruno, long associated with&#13;
the Kennedys, orchestrated a&#13;
highly polished campaign stop&#13;
for the presidential hopeful,&#13;
before a packed crowd of 500 in&#13;
the Saint Joseph High School&#13;
cafeteria.&#13;
The public was invited to the&#13;
Sunday afternoon reception by&#13;
mailed invitation. The Kenosha&#13;
native was producing excitement&#13;
reminiscent of his&#13;
work during the Kennedy era.&#13;
"They're your guests," he&#13;
told a roomful of giddy junior&#13;
hostesses, referring to the&#13;
growing crowd, "you must be&#13;
courteous." The volunteers,&#13;
wearing smiles and "Lindsay"&#13;
sashes, were to form a human&#13;
corridor for their candidate&#13;
from the entrance of the&#13;
cafeteria to the podium.&#13;
Standing in the school's office,&#13;
temporarily labelled&#13;
"Press", were plain clothes&#13;
detectives quietly talking, as&#13;
reporters waited for their copy.&#13;
In the cafeteria, hostesses&#13;
served coffee and cookies to a&#13;
crowd of local politicos, hard&#13;
core Democrats, establishment&#13;
typ e s , on-t he-m ove&#13;
professionals, and the curious&#13;
citizenry in search of a handshake&#13;
and autograph.&#13;
Jerry Bruno had prepared&#13;
Kenosha" for the Mayor of New&#13;
York City.&#13;
He moved quickly, flashing a&#13;
movie star smile. His face was&#13;
tan, angular in shape, his hair a&#13;
sandy-gray hue. He -Wore a&#13;
(Continued on Page 4)&#13;
BOARD OF&#13;
DIRECTORS&#13;
MEETING&#13;
at the office&#13;
Tues. 7 pm&#13;
charcoal colored suit and vest, a&#13;
tie, unshined black shoes, and a&#13;
slightly wrinkled blue pinstripped&#13;
shirt. There was an&#13;
easiness to him, an outward&#13;
unconcern for the details of his&#13;
appearance.&#13;
He mounted the cramped&#13;
speaker's platform, shook the&#13;
hands of a few local dignitaries&#13;
and smiled through a short&#13;
introduction by Kenosha Attorney&#13;
David Phillips. He began&#13;
his verbal campaign.&#13;
The tax load in the country&#13;
must be restructured, he&#13;
asserted. "If elected President,&#13;
I intend to shift the burden of&#13;
taxation away from the&#13;
property tax to the federal&#13;
government."&#13;
It was a mistake, furthermore,&#13;
to use property taxes&#13;
to finance welfare programs.&#13;
Noting the number of&#13;
millionaires that pay no income&#13;
taxes, he said, "Every nickel&#13;
earned by working men and&#13;
women in this country is fully&#13;
taxable. This is not true of a&#13;
great many other Americans. I&#13;
intend to change a system in&#13;
which hundreds of Americans&#13;
go without paying taxes. I intend&#13;
to change a system in&#13;
Gay Lib organizing&#13;
at UWP&#13;
by Jim Koloenofthe Newscope staff&#13;
Political organizations with minority views are nothing new to&#13;
Parkside; the Young Socialist Alliance is a defunct example, the&#13;
YAF is another . A new minority group is presently in the process of&#13;
gaining recognition as a campus organization, that group is Gay&#13;
Liberation. Gay Lib is perhaps the only political organization (with&#13;
the exception of Women's Lib) which can find detractors on each&#13;
side of the political spectrum, an organization whose very name&#13;
elicits gut reactions of repugnance from some, and an uncertain&#13;
bemusement from others. It, like Women's Lib, represents a&#13;
sexopolitical movement, still an enigma in conventional political&#13;
thought.&#13;
Gay Lib may soon be a reality at P-side, and the two students&#13;
Newscope recently interviewed, Junior Dan Robeski and Fresh&#13;
man Nat Evanoff, are its guiding force. The two articulate&#13;
longhairs told Newscope they began the effort to gain recognition&#13;
two weeks ago, and were initially greeted with an "is it even&#13;
legal?" reply, followed by a suggestion that they "change the name&#13;
to something more obscure." Even so, they explained that so far&#13;
things have been going smoothly, and that they don't foresee any&#13;
major setbacks in their quest for recognition.&#13;
Evanoff explained the organization would be open to everyone,&#13;
gay and straight, and that its purpose for the present is both&#13;
educational and "necessarily political because we constitute a&#13;
minority." Evanoff further explained that "we want to help the gay&#13;
members of the university to establish a sense of identity and group&#13;
pride." "What we want to do," added Robeski, "is form some sort&#13;
of group cohesion, as well as educating the community and&#13;
possibly, in the future, allying ourselves with other Gay&#13;
organizations in the state."&#13;
They told Newscope that rather than go out and recruit&#13;
members, "we'll let them come around to us." The two Gay Lib&#13;
bers also expressed the hope that by organizing at Parkside, "we&#13;
can set an example to gay members of the smaller, private, more&#13;
restrictive schools in the area such as Carthage and Dominican."&#13;
Newscope asked how their idea had been received by fellow&#13;
students. They said the reaction was generally favorable. Evanoff&#13;
expressed the hope that a violent opposition wouldn't emerge such&#13;
as he'd experienced at Rice University while organizing a Gay Lib&#13;
there; "people weje getting beat up in dorms!"&#13;
Their advisor is Hal Stern, and though their membership is&#13;
presently composed of only themselves, they expressed the belief&#13;
that, in the near future their ranks will swell considerably. Once&#13;
recognized they hope to present speakers, and that other plans&#13;
depend upon what opportunities they will gain from being&#13;
recognized. Asked if their efforts were being aided from outside the&#13;
campus, they told Newscope that suggestions and encouragement&#13;
were coming from the Madison, Chicago and Milwaukee Gay&#13;
communities. They said one of the biggest stumbling blocks, as&#13;
well as a major reason for organizing a Gay Lib, is to combat the&#13;
"old queer syndrome". Evanoff said, "we'd like to see it die."&#13;
A new move&#13;
PARKSIDE ANNEXATION&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
ofthe Newscope staff&#13;
A new move is presently&#13;
underway to annex Parkside,&#13;
and some of the land that lies&#13;
between the campus and the&#13;
city of Kenosha to Kenosha.&#13;
This latest move is being instituted&#13;
by United States&#13;
General Inc., a Brookfield,&#13;
Wis., based land development&#13;
firm, in the form of a petition&#13;
requesting a referendum on the&#13;
issue. Unlike the last&#13;
referendum, which failed, Psi8e&#13;
students who reside in&#13;
Parkside Village are being&#13;
asked to sign the petition.&#13;
The first annexation move&#13;
(the referendum took place&#13;
October 12,1971) failed by a 11-4&#13;
vote. At that time only 17&#13;
electors of Somers were eligible&#13;
to vote; of this number ten&#13;
signed the petition requesting&#13;
the annexation be put on a&#13;
referendum. Heated debates&#13;
ensued between the City of&#13;
Kenosha (whose city council&#13;
approved of the annexation)&#13;
and the Town of Somers. A&#13;
threat was reported against the&#13;
well-being of one of the electors.&#13;
The 11-4 vote demonstrated a&#13;
dramatic turn of events, as&#13;
many of those who signed the&#13;
petition requested that an&#13;
nexation be put on a referendum,&#13;
voted against it. This turn&#13;
of events can be attributed to&#13;
either the more full airing of the&#13;
facts that occurred between the&#13;
time the petition was filed and&#13;
the final vote took place, or to&#13;
the reaction the voters felt at&#13;
the threat upon one of their&#13;
numbers. Mayor Burkee of&#13;
Kenosha, who vigorously&#13;
backed the annexation move,&#13;
was quoted in the Kenosha&#13;
News immediately after the&#13;
referendum results were known&#13;
as saying, "It is unfortunate&#13;
that a handful of farmers is able&#13;
to stifle the growth of a great&#13;
university."&#13;
Now a new petition is being&#13;
circulated with a few significant&#13;
changes; the acreage concerned&#13;
is up from 1,340 to 1,417,&#13;
and there are more than 350&#13;
eligible electors in compariosn&#13;
to the 17 eligible during the first&#13;
referendum. A substantial&#13;
number of these new electors&#13;
live at Parkside Village.&#13;
Why annex? The basic issues&#13;
argued by the city include the&#13;
realization of the city's land&#13;
investment at P-side, concern&#13;
over fire and police protection,&#13;
and an uncertainty as to&#13;
Somers' ability to provide&#13;
adequate water and sewer&#13;
services. Perhaps an equally&#13;
substantial though less laudable&#13;
item, is future land development.&#13;
&#13;
Mayor Burkee has argued&#13;
about Kenosha's investment in&#13;
the land that the University now&#13;
stands on, the 748 acres it&#13;
purchased from the Somers&#13;
land owners, many of whom&#13;
were reluctant to give it up at&#13;
any price. He has spoken about&#13;
the uncertainty of Somers'&#13;
ability to provide adequate&#13;
sewer and water facilities.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie has gone on&#13;
record stating that Parkside&#13;
has adequate facilities for the&#13;
next few years, while Somers&#13;
and Mt. Pleasant have undertaken&#13;
feasibility studies in&#13;
connection with a proposed&#13;
treatment plant to be located&#13;
near the Parkside campus; a&#13;
plant (^signed to fulfill the&#13;
expected needs of the university&#13;
in the years ahead.&#13;
The Mayor and others have&#13;
pointed out the need for police&#13;
and fire protection. Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie has stated that Parkside&#13;
has its own security force, while&#13;
Somers has pointed out that it&#13;
has a firm agreement from Mt.&#13;
Pleasant to combine their fire&#13;
fighting forces in the event of a&#13;
(Continued on Page 5)&#13;
P R O P O S ED A N N E X AT I 0N -&#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
Come visit our pizza&#13;
kitchens or have&#13;
some delivered'&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5—12&#13;
except Sunday&#13;
4615—7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
3a»*&#13;
i&#13;
tfzzA&#13;
jmuimuii' i ,• ii.i.i.'.i.'.i.'.i m u' i,u.M.i.i.'.cg:&#13;
RUBYS&#13;
A j Jjmaj&#13;
t&gt; tyty OJ^AKJ tie- U/uV (hyMj&#13;
5535-6 A ve. Kenosha&#13;
J O O O O O O O O O O O O O Q O O O O O O O O O O Q l f li&#13;
JOM sm&#13;
WINDJAMMER&#13;
TENDERLOIN S TEAK&#13;
*ND T UMBLED O NIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Sefwing Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DININC&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN R OOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WIND&#13;
JAMMER DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
- HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
SENATOR PRQXMIRE&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
( T H E F OL L O W I N G L E T T E R&#13;
IS A R EP L Y T O AN A R T I C LE&#13;
W H ICH A P P E A R E D IN L AS T&#13;
W E E K 'S N E W S C OP E. T H E&#13;
A R T I C L E E N T I T L E D&#13;
G O ES O N ' .&#13;
T H E CU R R E N T&#13;
B O Y C O TT O P&#13;
G R A P ES A N D&#13;
L A H UE L G A&#13;
C O N C E R N ED&#13;
N A T I O N W I DE&#13;
C A L I F O R N IA&#13;
R E L A T E D F A R M P RO D U C TS&#13;
Nine wineries in Northern&#13;
California are being subjected&#13;
to illegal secondary boycotts of&#13;
their products at certain retail&#13;
outlets. As part of the U.F.-&#13;
W.O.C. (United Farm Workers&#13;
Organizing Committee) effort&#13;
to force itself on our employees,&#13;
that Union has resorted to a&#13;
series of falsehoods and&#13;
distortions, and has completely&#13;
ignored one basic fact. The&#13;
U.F.W.O.C. has NEVER&#13;
presented convincing evidence&#13;
of employee support at any of&#13;
the firms involved and is not&#13;
even remotely interested in the&#13;
employee's preference in the&#13;
matter. Their propaganda&#13;
constantly overlooks the&#13;
following basic issues:&#13;
1. Employee wages, fringe&#13;
benefits, hospitalization and&#13;
housing at the wineries being&#13;
boycotted are among the best in&#13;
the agricultural industry and&#13;
considerably above those called&#13;
for in existing U.F.W.O.C.&#13;
contracts.&#13;
2. The wineries concerned&#13;
have consistently supported the&#13;
concept of a free secret ballot&#13;
election under Government&#13;
supervision to determine the&#13;
wishes of the employees in an&#13;
atmosphere free of coercion,&#13;
restraint or intimidation.&#13;
3. U.F.W.O.C. has refused to&#13;
allow employees to participate&#13;
in the secret ballot election&#13;
process and has refused even to&#13;
discuss a secret ballot election&#13;
in order to determine employee&#13;
desires. The Union wants the&#13;
wineries to sign a contract&#13;
which requires employees to&#13;
pay dues and fees to the Union&#13;
after seven days of employment&#13;
as a precondition to the employees'&#13;
ability to work. The&#13;
wineries feel that to force such a&#13;
contract upon their employees&#13;
without the employees' consent&#13;
violates a basic American&#13;
freedom, the worker's right to a&#13;
free choice under the secret&#13;
ballot. The wineries will continue&#13;
to extend this offer of&#13;
secret ballot elections to&#13;
U.F.W.O.C. in the belief that&#13;
such an election protects the&#13;
rights of the U.F.W.O.C., the&#13;
wineries, and most importantly,&#13;
wawa&lt;a&lt;as&gt;B&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Robin David, Pat McDermid,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Jean Frahm, Larry&#13;
Jones, Jim Koloen, John Koloen,&#13;
Rich Lipke, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Kevin McKay, Fred&#13;
Noer, Jr., Brian Ross, Wolfgang&#13;
Salewski, Andy Schmelling, Barb&#13;
Scott, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, Bill Sorensen, Mike&#13;
Stevesand, Debbie Venskus&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
THE EMPLOYEES. We do not&#13;
intend to succumb to illegal&#13;
boycott pressure nor do we&#13;
intend to sacrifice the rights of&#13;
our employees to improper and&#13;
immoral union demands.&#13;
We ask for your understanding,&#13;
your patience, and&#13;
your support to protect the&#13;
rights and privileges of our&#13;
employees, customers and the&#13;
public at large.&#13;
Beringer Brothers&#13;
Kornell Champagne Cellars&#13;
Louis Martini Winery&#13;
Sebastiani Vineyards&#13;
F. Korbel and Bros.&#13;
Charles Krug Winery&#13;
Robert Mondavi Winery&#13;
Weibel, Inc.&#13;
Wente Brothers&#13;
Dear John Koloen,&#13;
Editor of Newscope&#13;
In your February 7th T972&#13;
issue there was an article&#13;
written about the North Ranch&#13;
Restaurant. I am the proprietor&#13;
of the Ranch and very proud to&#13;
be so. I have been in the&#13;
Restaurant business in Kenosha&#13;
for 22 years, and have been very&#13;
successful at it.&#13;
A good part of my business&#13;
patrons come from Parkside&#13;
and Carthage. I enjoy their&#13;
patronage and I am sure they&#13;
must enjoy the North and South&#13;
Ranch or they wouldh't keep&#13;
coming back.&#13;
I employ nine students from&#13;
Parkside as waitresses and&#13;
cooks, and I must say they are&#13;
all good employees. Through&#13;
the years I have helped over a&#13;
100 students earn their way&#13;
through college and other&#13;
schools, and I intend to continue&#13;
to do so. There are five families&#13;
that derive their sole support&#13;
from the Ranch Restaurants&#13;
and I am sure that they want to&#13;
keep our reputation at a high&#13;
level.&#13;
Paul Lomartire wrote a very&#13;
prejudice article on the Ranch&#13;
Restaurant. I was working the&#13;
night that he was there at the&#13;
Ranch. The waitresses that&#13;
were on duty at the time are all&#13;
good waitresses. It is possible&#13;
that some of his complaints&#13;
were true, but if I did&#13;
everything wrong that he accused&#13;
us of, how could I possibly&#13;
be one of the most successful&#13;
Restaurants in town.&#13;
We serve over 500,000 people a&#13;
year at the Ranch Restaurants,&#13;
and we get very few complaints,&#13;
and a lot of compliments.&#13;
It is a sorry thing when&#13;
unqualified people can do&#13;
damage to a reputable business&#13;
and its many good employees.&#13;
Let's hope that the press in the&#13;
future is used for honest endeavor.&#13;
&#13;
I hold no anger towards&#13;
Parkside student or any of the&#13;
faculty,'but I think you as editor&#13;
should screen your material&#13;
before printing, so as tc&#13;
properly represent the people&#13;
that are responsible for&#13;
Newscope, and not represent&#13;
two irresponsible people.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Richard St. Germain&#13;
News Briefs&#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 ad&#13;
vertising funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
Photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
w.thm 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road.&#13;
local...&#13;
SGA ELECTIONS&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association will hold an&#13;
election on March 7 and 8 to fill vacancies in the senate. Interested&#13;
candidates should obtain nominating petitions at the SGA office&#13;
(Hwy. Aand Wood Road, 553-2493or 553-2244) or at the Tallent Hall&#13;
Student Activities Office. Deadline for filing is February 25,1972 - 4&#13;
p.m. Additional information and instruction may be obtained at the&#13;
SGA office.&#13;
The following offices are vacant: Senator, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary and Recording Secretary.&#13;
Volunteers also are needed to work at the polls. If you are interested&#13;
please contact Jim Twist, Chairman of Elections, or sign&#13;
up at the SGA office.&#13;
Pre-Law Club to Write Election Laws&#13;
Last Wednesday, February 9, at a regular meeting of the PreLaw&#13;
Club, a special committee was formed to write the election&#13;
laws for the upcoming and future student government elections at&#13;
the request of the PSGA.&#13;
Members of the committee are Timothy W. Prostko, chairman,&#13;
Peter Gallo, co-chairman, Rebecca Ecklund, Mark Harris, John&#13;
Regnery, and Michael Baxter. The committee would welcome any&#13;
suggestions made by students or faculty members. Suggestions&#13;
may be made in a letter or in person to any committee member, or&#13;
to Professors Richard Rosenberg (ext. 51K) and Oliver Hayward&#13;
(ext. 35R).&#13;
$1/000 Grant for Parkside&#13;
MADISON — A $1,000 grant from the Standard Oil (Indiana)&#13;
Foundation to be awarded in recognition of outstanding teaching at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside was accepted Friday by the&#13;
UW System Board of Regents.&#13;
Mr* re9eu&#13;
TSrf&#13;
IS° aPProved an unrestricted grant of $100 from&#13;
Library °&#13;
n&#13;
°' Laguna HMIs&#13;
' CaMf&#13;
" f&#13;
°&#13;
r Parkside&#13;
nationalFormer&#13;
Narc Calls For&#13;
Decriminalization of Marijuana&#13;
John Finlator, recently retired Deputy Director of the Federal&#13;
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, today said he strongly&#13;
avors the immediate decriminalization of marijuana, and predicts&#13;
legalization&#13;
- And until this is done, Finlator said, he&#13;
aoubts that any of our efforts to combat the heroin problem in this&#13;
oun ry, or any other serious drug abuse problems can be effective.&#13;
Resolution to Impeach Rockefeller lnroduced&#13;
&#13;
A th&#13;
BU&#13;
^&#13;
F&#13;
t&#13;
LY' N Y* (CPS) ~~ New York state Assemblyman&#13;
rln « h8S introduced a resolution in the state Assembly&#13;
*f. '!n9 the irnPeachment of Governor Nelson Rockefeller for his&#13;
is an ing of the Attica prison riot last September which cost the&#13;
lives of 43 people.&#13;
Fe?r&#13;
Sp^&#13;
ky&#13;
.&#13;
Spy t0 SPot Fields&#13;
defprtoH k Marijuana and opium poppy fields are soon to be&#13;
launrh^H ?kV an earth resource&#13;
s satellite that is scheduled to be&#13;
Tho .&#13;
I&#13;
.xSpring&#13;
' accord&#13;
ing to a recent Associated Press story,&#13;
will ho I',"&#13;
9 *&#13;
atel,ite&lt; scheduled for launching in May or June,&#13;
says AP P3 6 detec&#13;
*'&#13;
n9 Pot or poppy fields from 100 miles up, &#13;
Educator Speaks in C oncourse&#13;
February 21,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
by Jim Koloenofthe Newscope staff&#13;
The big, wavy haired man dressed in a gray&#13;
striped suit, paisley shirt and yellow tie, told the&#13;
over 400 listeners in the Greenquist concourse that&#13;
Parkside's catalogue "has the word innovation in&#13;
every other line." He continued, "I just hope nobody&#13;
tor real is running around the campus thinking&#13;
Parkside is innovative." He explained to the by now&#13;
applauding crowd that the word is obviously "just&#13;
for the catalogue writer."&#13;
Dwight Allen, Dean of the University of&#13;
Massachusetts School of Education, spoke Wednesday&#13;
night at 8 p.m. on the topic of "Making the&#13;
Future of Education Less Certain." He was brought&#13;
to Parkside under the auspices of the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee, and the free lecture was very&#13;
well attended.&#13;
Allen spoke for an hour and twenty minutes,&#13;
pacing back and forth on the podium while explaining&#13;
that the more certain the future of&#13;
education is, the worse off it will be. The educator&#13;
who bore a slight resemblance to Billy Graham,&#13;
presented a lecture to the sweltering audience that&#13;
was both humorous and serious, informative and&#13;
interesting. He spoke on the "freedom to fail",&#13;
"institutional racism", student participation in the&#13;
administration of the educational system, and the&#13;
need for teachers who are "biased, dedicated and&#13;
committed".&#13;
During the course of the lecture, Prof. Allen&#13;
explained that at his school, next year all grades&#13;
will be abolished; a person will receive a pass or a&#13;
no record grade, "we'll put on a student's record&#13;
what he can do rather than write down what he can't&#13;
do."&#13;
Another step he plans to take will be the&#13;
elimination of the semester system. He told the&#13;
audience that there is absolutely no reason a&#13;
specific class should require a standard number of&#13;
weeks to teach, that each instructor should set his&#13;
own time limits based on his own experiences. In a&#13;
direct reference to Parkside, Allen said there was&#13;
no conceivable reason for having required courses.&#13;
He explained further that if a student passes a&#13;
course which exacts required courses he hasn't&#13;
taken, that student should receive pass grades for&#13;
those courses as well.&#13;
After asking the audience for answers to some&#13;
of the questions he threw at them", and receiving few&#13;
replies, he spoke of the need for integrating as many&#13;
alternatives and choices as possible in education.&#13;
He said, "a school is where the most risks should be&#13;
taken", to be innovative requires experimentation,&#13;
and though this approach assumes the possibility of&#13;
error, it is also the only way one can discover the&#13;
best educational methods.&#13;
Varying the tone of his voice from a whisper to a&#13;
^hnut. the Massachusetts educator attacked the&#13;
"objectivity lie" that runs rampant in elementary&#13;
and secondary schools. He said a "teacher cannot&#13;
live and be neutral," that ideally a teacher should&#13;
be "biased, dedicated and committed, in&#13;
recognition of the pluralistic society America is".&#13;
He explained that a teacher can no longer teach&#13;
values because he is expected to be either "neuter&#13;
or neutral". "Even citizenship is too controversial&#13;
to teach." As far as subject matter is concerned,&#13;
Allen told the audience that "the school should&#13;
teach everything which is legal, in so doing you will&#13;
be assured of alternatives; allow for a choice."&#13;
But the topic Allen stressed most vehemently&#13;
during his lecture concerned institutional racism,&#13;
the need to destroy it but the primary need of&#13;
recognizing it first. "Scholars can no longer hide&#13;
from these realities if society is to continue."&#13;
"Lower admission standards do not combat&#13;
racism", he continued, "they perpetuate it. "Before&#13;
there can be equality there must be equity.'" To&#13;
emphasize his point Allen used the example of&#13;
"Winning the American West" as a typical subject&#13;
for American History. The textbook version, he&#13;
said, "is the sanitized, American white majority&#13;
version. This is racist! What we need to do is incorporate&#13;
as many viewpoints as possible; the&#13;
French, the British, and Spanish." He continued the&#13;
list of viewpoints by adding the Indian, and the&#13;
"Coolie" viewpoint of the "Winning of the American&#13;
West". He told the audience that if the educational&#13;
system doesn't end its institutional racism, racism&#13;
will never end.&#13;
He spoke briefly of the objective of education.&#13;
"One is sheer, crass status." He pointed out the&#13;
recent merger of the UW system and said that the&#13;
status is gone from a UW degree "because there are&#13;
so many around." "Now we are trying to discover a&#13;
new status symbol to take the place of the degree."&#13;
Professor Allen ended the lecture with an explanation&#13;
of what he wanted to do during the&#13;
evening. "I want to make you feel uneasy about&#13;
education at all levels, and I w ant to help you feel&#13;
powerful, make you feel we can change things."&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Black Newsman to Visit Campus&#13;
The Black Student Union, in&#13;
cooperation with the Racine&#13;
Commission on Human&#13;
Relations, and UW-f^arkside&#13;
Student Services, is bringing&#13;
Mel Goode, nationally known&#13;
black news commentator and&#13;
analyst, to Parkside.&#13;
Goode joined ABC as one of&#13;
its UN correspondents in 1962,&#13;
after fourteen years with the&#13;
Pittsburgh Courier and many&#13;
years of broadcasting experience&#13;
in radio and television&#13;
with Pittsburgh area stations.&#13;
He was educated in the public&#13;
schools of Homestead, Pennsylvania,&#13;
and graduated from&#13;
the University of Pittsburgh.&#13;
He was employed for twelve&#13;
years as a laborer in the steel&#13;
mills while in high school and&#13;
college, and for five years after&#13;
graduation.&#13;
After working for many of the&#13;
local medias in Pittsburgh, his&#13;
big break finally came when he&#13;
was employed by ABC in 1962.&#13;
He was the first Black&#13;
newsman employed as a&#13;
regular network correspondent,&#13;
and the first Black to hold&#13;
membership in the National&#13;
Association of Radio and TV&#13;
News Directors, and the&#13;
Association of Radio and TV&#13;
News Analysts.&#13;
Goode covered both the&#13;
Democratic and Republican&#13;
conventions with the ABC news&#13;
team in 1964 and 1968.&#13;
During ABC's intensive&#13;
coverage of the aftermath of&#13;
Dr. -King's death, Goode&#13;
distinguished himself with&#13;
interviews of those who had&#13;
come to Atlanta to mourn the&#13;
death of the famed civil rights&#13;
leader.&#13;
Goode has interviewed many&#13;
of the world's top figures including&#13;
President Johnson,&#13;
President Nixon, Ambassadors&#13;
Zorin and Malik of the Soviet&#13;
Union; Sir Patrick Dean and&#13;
Lord Caradon of Great Britain;&#13;
the late Adlai Stevenson, former&#13;
UN Ambassador Arthur&#13;
Goldberg, Governors Scranton,&#13;
Rockefeller, Maddox and&#13;
Wallace; Senators Eastland,&#13;
Brooke, Javits, Fulbright,&#13;
Goodell and the late Robert&#13;
Kennedy.&#13;
Goode will speak in the&#13;
Badger Room of Racine&#13;
Campus Monday, February 28,&#13;
at 8:00 P.M. The public is invited&#13;
to attend.&#13;
CORRECTION&#13;
Mockus Tap is owned by June&#13;
Johnson and operated by Cliff&#13;
Meyer. Last issue's On the Nod&#13;
stated that Meyer was owner of&#13;
the Tap. We apologize for this&#13;
error.&#13;
U-W.&#13;
ELasfcr Break&#13;
Trips To:&#13;
ROME&#13;
(2nd plane)&#13;
ACAPULCO&#13;
Information Available at&#13;
Student Activities Office — Tallent Hall&#13;
m***********************************************************&#13;
—Honest George Sale — during February&#13;
smm a free cherry tree with purchase of any major ite i m&#13;
Freezers — start at $194&#13;
Admiral Color TV start at $199&#13;
18" Color start at $299&#13;
Heavy duty washers start at $169&#13;
Apartment size washers start at $109&#13;
Refrigerators start at $179&#13;
Warehouse Discount Prices&#13;
micro-ovens, air conditioners&#13;
R. C. Service&#13;
One Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
Ron Casperson - owner&#13;
VK W IAIIAI IAI IAI IAIIA4104IAIIAIIAIIAIIAIIAIIAIIAI IAI IAI IAI IAI IAI IAIIAI IAI ITU Vtf MM MM &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
Help Fight Heir Pollution&#13;
Zero Population Growth is a nationally known non-profit&#13;
organization founded by Paul Ehrlich for the purpose of stopping&#13;
the population explosion through education and political activity. A&#13;
Parkside chapter is being started and all interested people are&#13;
encouraged to see Bob Moore on the Kenosha Campus Room 116-B.&#13;
The telephone extension is 34K.&#13;
£*\porhrs of&#13;
/mers&#13;
7&#13;
/ H O I W ^ U o j + o n / U .&#13;
5 0&#13;
I r\ up+own Ro^ci ne&#13;
Tky I v\C£,&#13;
•—d*K)rvffor&#13;
ood-&#13;
£e/uu*Uf the fytitedt&#13;
Pvpy* £ 9taiUm Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LldUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
CALL FOR CANDIDATES&#13;
+ + +&#13;
SGA Spring Election&#13;
March 7 and 8&#13;
-f + +&#13;
The following positions are open:&#13;
Senator (1)&#13;
Recording Secretary (1)&#13;
Corresponding Secretary (1)&#13;
Nominating Petitions are available at SGA office&#13;
or Student Activities - Tallent Hall&#13;
(Filing Deadline February 25,1972)&#13;
Humphrey speaks in Milwaukee&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Speaking at a non-partisan&#13;
voter registration rally in&#13;
Milwaukee last Saturday&#13;
Presidential hopeful Hubert&#13;
Humphrey told several hundred&#13;
young people that "Nothing&#13;
comes easy. Nothing is instant.&#13;
People who have power do not&#13;
relinquish that power easily and&#13;
it will be the task of the new&#13;
voter to make the changes that&#13;
are required in this land."&#13;
The rally, sponsored by the&#13;
Boston Store, featured former&#13;
Senator and Governor of Alaska&#13;
Ernest Gruening who Humphrey&#13;
called "the Ben Franklin&#13;
of modern America", st&#13;
State Senators James Devitt&#13;
and Niles Soik, and other&#13;
representatives of the various&#13;
Presidential candidates.&#13;
In a short speech Gruening&#13;
warned the audience that&#13;
"we're in danger of becoming a&#13;
police state if we have four&#13;
more years of Richard Nixon."&#13;
Devitt, a Republican, spoke of&#13;
the power of the youth vote&#13;
stating that "young people will&#13;
be the salvation of o ur nation."&#13;
Supporters for most of the&#13;
candidates attended the rally&#13;
bearing placards and trumpeting&#13;
support for their candidate&#13;
during the speeches, but&#13;
until Humphrey arrived the&#13;
meeting was relatively quiet if&#13;
not attentive. Gruening's&#13;
speech was interrupted to allow&#13;
Mr. Humphrey to speak. The&#13;
extraneous noise dropped&#13;
dramatically as he took the&#13;
podium and for the first time&#13;
the television cameras turned to&#13;
the stage.&#13;
Referring to legislation that&#13;
would provide universal voter&#13;
registration Humphrey said,&#13;
"We intend to use the very same&#13;
services of government that&#13;
send a tax blank to the&#13;
American citizen — the Post&#13;
Office, Census Bureau and the&#13;
Revenue Service — to provide&#13;
registration for every citizen of&#13;
this country."&#13;
He encouraged young people&#13;
to become involved in the&#13;
political process, urging them&#13;
to participate in party&#13;
caucuses. "That's exactly what&#13;
is needed today. Young people&#13;
entering the political process&#13;
and having something to say&#13;
about platforms, programs and&#13;
candidates."&#13;
He warned them not to expect&#13;
immediate results pointing out&#13;
that Gruening had worked for 25&#13;
years to get Alaska its&#13;
statehood. "I ask you to be the&#13;
distance runner, I ask you to&#13;
stay with what you believe and&#13;
not give up, but more importantly&#13;
I ask you to go to&#13;
(Continued from pac&#13;
which oil companies an&lt;&#13;
giants come forward eac&#13;
without paying their fail&#13;
of taxes."&#13;
Moving to the war, he f&#13;
to end it immediately u&#13;
election.&#13;
As for a national he;&#13;
surance program, he s&#13;
strongly favored one.&#13;
Confronting the ques&#13;
whether a Mayor is qua|&#13;
be President, he declai&#13;
was in the federal gove&#13;
for upwards of ten years&#13;
can tell you that any&#13;
week as Mayor of Nev&#13;
City teaches one more&#13;
HUMPHREY B ACKER ENJ OYING HERSELF AT RALLY&#13;
work."&#13;
After his speech Humphrey&#13;
indicated that present&#13;
legislation affecting welfare&#13;
reform was not adequate adding&#13;
that he opposed compulsory&#13;
work provisions for&#13;
women with families. He voiced&#13;
a need for "child development&#13;
centers" and denounced&#13;
President Nixon's veto of the&#13;
Child Care and Development&#13;
Center Program as "cruel and&#13;
outlandish."&#13;
Following his speech Humphrey&#13;
left the rally to meet with&#13;
his supporters at his campaign&#13;
headquarters on Wisconsin&#13;
Avenue. While there Newscope&#13;
asked his opinion of legalizing&#13;
marijuana. Humphrey said, "I&#13;
would and do recommend a&#13;
very sharp reduction in&#13;
penalties. I think the idea of&#13;
making the user a felon is&#13;
ridiculous and that at the most&#13;
it should be down as a&#13;
misdemeanor and really with&#13;
no court orders or sentences on&#13;
the first offense."&#13;
Reacting to the controversial&#13;
Drug Commission report he&#13;
said, "I think that when we get&#13;
our full reports then we have to&#13;
act accordingly, I mean from&#13;
the scientific and medical&#13;
community, that's when we&#13;
act."&#13;
Responding to President&#13;
Nixon's much publicized opposition&#13;
to the Drug Commission's&#13;
suggestions he said,&#13;
"The President said that he&#13;
doesn't care what the evidence&#13;
shows, what kind of President is&#13;
that? That's like saying you&#13;
don't care what the court&#13;
rules."&#13;
Lor/p&#13;
ON THE NOD SPEAKS OUT&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the IN&#13;
(The following speech was presented at the qu&#13;
My fellow Americans, you are all painfully i&#13;
spirocy" presently being foisted upon us, we the A&#13;
price public. First we gave "the kids" (howdec&lt;&#13;
the privilege of wearing the proud uniform of th&#13;
provided them with a war so they could distingi&#13;
combat. But were they satisfied? You bet your s&#13;
offspring demanded, yes friends, demandedthey&#13;
our wishy-washy, kneejerk, liberals in the Nation&#13;
called "kids". What these hippy, jobless wonderhi&#13;
prospect for the hard-working, right-thinkinjfAme&#13;
Were they satisfied then? No! Yes, my fri&#13;
barricades, it's time to show these kids where we&#13;
our state house, this pernicious progeny, the bet&#13;
our democratically elected legislators into passlnj&#13;
be lowered to 18. I ask you, is this not thestra&#13;
ultimate corkscrew?&#13;
Marihuana wasn't good enough for them, no, i&#13;
and guts, the very elbows of the meat and potatoe&#13;
them their pot and give us the glass. In the imm&#13;
unsung heroes, "Millions for lids but not an ou i&#13;
remain nameless as he fears the almost certain&#13;
kids".&#13;
To the mothers of America, I ask you do you&#13;
company is seldom the exception rather than the&#13;
the evil brew, taught how to use profane language&#13;
out, NO! It is a proven fact that beer leads to here&#13;
dupes of the "youth conspirocy" smoke thegenth&#13;
addict.&#13;
You fathers, do you want your daughter deba&#13;
little girl from the ruffians who occasionally (an&#13;
What about your son? Do you want him to lose his&#13;
inspired such statues as David; the strength that&#13;
to those locked behind the iron curtain? Then si&#13;
belly, whose affects are only now being discoverei&#13;
And to you, my hearty comrades, to you the ;&#13;
your carefully cultivated haunts invaded by a g-c&#13;
students and giggling girls? Yes, you too are the&#13;
youth are let loose to drink wherever they pleas'&#13;
devasting. I foresee in the days ahead a serioi&#13;
perienced during the dark days of the prohibition&#13;
I therefore beseech you, the more rational y&#13;
leave your leaders, renounce them, stamp their v&#13;
flagon, be a true rebel, and stay in school kids. t&#13;
waiting for. I rest my case.&#13;
ecm of &#13;
DSAY&#13;
Page ^&#13;
; and other&#13;
I each year&#13;
fair share&#13;
he pledged&#13;
ly upon his&#13;
health lnhe&#13;
said he&#13;
s.&#13;
question of&#13;
qualified fo&#13;
eclared, "I&#13;
jovernmenf&#13;
ears, and I&#13;
any single&#13;
New York&#13;
nore abouf&#13;
communities and people than do&#13;
all those years put together.&#13;
"I'm running for President&#13;
because change must come,"&#13;
Lidsay said. "This great&#13;
country of ours must stand for&#13;
justice. It must be a country&#13;
that properly rewards a man for&#13;
the sweat of his brow, and give&#13;
the next man in line a chance to&#13;
be rewarded equally."&#13;
Lindsay smiled as the&#13;
audience cheered his last&#13;
campaign promise. Standing&#13;
about twenty feet behind the&#13;
podium to the right, in a crowd&#13;
was Jerry Bruno.&#13;
The advance man had&#13;
presented his candidate to&#13;
Kenosha. He could do no more.&#13;
F the Newscope staff&#13;
the quarterly meeting of UFO post 5.)&#13;
Fully aware by now, of the vicious "youth conthe&#13;
American tax paying, peace but-not-at-anyv&#13;
de ceiving, that seemingly innocuous phrase)&#13;
i of the American military man, why we even&#13;
stinguish themselves on t he honorable field of&#13;
your swe et biped they weren't. The avaricious&#13;
1 they be given the right to vote! And what did&#13;
lation's Capital do? Why they coddled these soiderhogs&#13;
will do with the vote is too terrifying a&#13;
g American breadwinner to even consider,&#13;
ay friends, it's time to once again man the&#13;
re we, the American drinking class, sits. Up in&#13;
le betrayers of their fathers, have hoodwinked&#13;
assing a bill calling for the legal drinking age to&#13;
- straw that broke the winemaker's cask, the&#13;
i, no, now they want to sit next to the very, heart&#13;
otatoes of the American dinner table. I say give&#13;
immortal words of one of America's foremost&#13;
in ounce for drink." This unsung hero asks to&#13;
^rtain reprisals which will emanate from "the&#13;
o you want your daughte r in a bar where polite&#13;
in the rule? Do you want your son corrupted by&#13;
guage and to play pool? American mothers sing&#13;
0 heroin addiction. Let the innocent victims and&#13;
gentle weed, without fear of becoming a crazed&#13;
• debauched? Then protect her, protect daddy's&#13;
v (and once is enough) fre quent drinking halls,&#13;
ise his supple, trim, athletic build, the build that&#13;
1 that brought peace to the world and gives hope&#13;
hen shield him from the dreaded disease beerovered,&#13;
affects akin to the dreaded beri beri.&#13;
J the seasoned veterans of the vat, do you want&#13;
^ ^ gangling horde of longhair hippietypes, shy&#13;
e he victims. Rememb er this, if the millions of&#13;
p ease, the resulting shortage of spirits will be&#13;
serious shortage of spirits not unlike that exjition&#13;
holocaust.&#13;
jnal youth caught in the "youth conspirocy" to&#13;
tieir vile ideas into the ground. Do not pick up the&#13;
ii s. After all, anything worth wanting is worth&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
w&#13;
SL VJlif Supper CfuL&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
551-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan td.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Annexation&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
major fire at Parkside. This&#13;
force includes a hundred foot&#13;
laddeK Those people who&#13;
support the annexation move&#13;
have pointed out that in the&#13;
event of a disaster, Somers and&#13;
Mt. Pleasant could not even&#13;
together combat it. Jerome&#13;
Gumbinger, the recently retired&#13;
Fire Chief of Kenosha, had&#13;
stated earlier that in the event&#13;
of a catastrophe at Parkside,&#13;
his department would help out&#13;
anyway. It is believed by some&#13;
citizens that if Kenosha is to&#13;
afford fire protection to the Pside&#13;
area it would have to invest&#13;
in a new fire station.&#13;
The Somers residents&#13;
themselves fear that if annexation&#13;
were to come about, a&#13;
prohibitive rise in their taxes&#13;
would drive many from their&#13;
land, much of which they htfve&#13;
worked for generations. They&#13;
also fear the imminent&#13;
possibility of rezoning ordinances&#13;
being passed, which&#13;
would open the way for commercial&#13;
exploitation of the land.&#13;
Money-making is a central&#13;
item in the issue, the mayor has&#13;
stated that the city wants to&#13;
cash in on the anticipated $100&#13;
million investment that&#13;
Parkside will represent in a&#13;
decade, land developers such as&#13;
USGI want to build apartment&#13;
houses, shopping centers, etc.&#13;
Newscope spoke with some&#13;
area residents who voted&#13;
against the annexation&#13;
referendum last year. They said&#13;
that beside fears of prohibitive&#13;
taxes, rezoning, and the belief&#13;
that Somers is capable of&#13;
handling the needs of P-side at&#13;
this time, they also expressed a&#13;
firm disagreement with the way&#13;
in which the annexation is&#13;
presently drawn up. They told&#13;
Newscope that it was too&#13;
irregular, that it was a bits and&#13;
pieces affair. If presented with,&#13;
an uniform annexation of the&#13;
area, instead of the irregular&#13;
form, they would be more&#13;
amenable to it. The way it is&#13;
drawn up now is unacceptable,&#13;
they said.&#13;
This time 350 electors will be&#13;
in on a vote, many of them&#13;
students, some of whom may&#13;
continue to live near Parkside,&#13;
many of whom won't, many of&#13;
whom won't fear being driven&#13;
from their land.&#13;
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10% Dis count to students and Fa culty with | . q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Wellact • Lunt&#13;
Reed A 6»rton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefors&#13;
Seneca • Ialique&#13;
Royal Worce*ter &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
^ pL Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
O N S O U TH S H E R I D A N RO A D I N K E N O S H A 6 5 4 - 04 11&#13;
MISSED THAI FIRST ONE!&#13;
U.W.P. Ragtime Rangers&#13;
announces -&#13;
A Second Trip To&#13;
Whitecap Mt.&#13;
March 17-19&#13;
$32.50 for ski club members&#13;
$37.50 for students and faculty&#13;
$42.50 for registered guests&#13;
Sign up at room 217 Tallent Hall&#13;
$ 1 0 00 NO N - R E F U N D A B L E D E P O S I T R E O U I R E D&#13;
includes:&#13;
Transportation, lodging, lift tickets, meals,&#13;
beer party, beginning ski lessons and A GOOD TIME&#13;
. — — - - — &lt;-a~iri 111 I_ii w •&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
1&#13;
, Ih V,HOUND BF.KF&#13;
ON FRENCH CRUST&#13;
BREAD DRESSED&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
I.ETTUCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
DRILLED COUNTRY&#13;
MAM A CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLE WIJEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE.&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
-80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE. DECKER OE BURGER. CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISE ON TOAST 9QC&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
N ORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROA D SOUT H 7500 SHERIDAN RO A D&#13;
, , , i 11 -,, „ , n , - I , , , ,, n&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Vi Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
Pump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
forum&#13;
Newscope Today&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
We missed two stories this week. We missed&#13;
them because we didn't have the people to cover&#13;
them, and that's why you won't read about the&#13;
Women's Caucus and the Faculty Senate meeting,&#13;
and that's why there may not be a Newscope in a&#13;
few weeks. We don't have the personnel.&#13;
It's ironic really when you consider that we feel&#13;
the paper has finally jelled. Contentwise, we're the&#13;
best we've ever been. Financially, we're in a&#13;
relatively stable situation. But it's for nothing&#13;
because we're going to die - possibly this semester,&#13;
almost assuredly by next fall — unless new people&#13;
join the staff.&#13;
Our present Editor and Managing Editor will&#13;
probably leave their positions during the first week&#13;
of March. They were elected last December to serve&#13;
on an interim basis then — at which time we&#13;
had hopes of electing new editors who would serve&#13;
for the remainder of the spring semester and for&#13;
part of the fall semester.&#13;
It's not going to be like that. Right now, there is&#13;
no one to whom to hand the paper over. Hopefully,&#13;
we'll try to patch things together with existing&#13;
personnel, and hold another interim election to&#13;
finish off the semester — an obvious result of which&#13;
would be a decline in the quality of the paper.&#13;
Writing personnel will be forced to do management&#13;
and production work.&#13;
But even if things are patched together, or even&#13;
if the current editors do stay, it will mean nothing&#13;
for the continuation of the paper in the fall. The bulk&#13;
of the current staff will have gone either to live on&#13;
the sides of mountains, transferred to other schools,&#13;
ventured (however timidly) out into the REAL&#13;
WORLD, or, perchance, even have graduated.&#13;
The future of Newscope then depends upon new&#13;
staff members — and there are none.&#13;
We've tried to recruit over the past three&#13;
semester, and have failed almost totally in our&#13;
efforts. We've called meetings, explained that we'ie&#13;
jerks in handling people, told you to ignore our&#13;
bumbling efforts, pointed out that if you want to&#13;
write and have a modicum of talent to go ahead, you&#13;
have carte blanche to do what you want.&#13;
Nothing. Almost no results ... Do you realize&#13;
the posibilities, the potential of this paper? They're&#13;
going to be blown, the opportunities will disappear&#13;
unless they are utilized. It's all very easy to see. The&#13;
paper is going to die because the student body&#13;
doesn't give a fuck, or else it's too stupid to supply&#13;
the personnel requirements of a paper.&#13;
I say that seriously. SEVEN current Newscope&#13;
staff members worked three years ago on a campus&#13;
underground paper called the Committee. The&#13;
same people handle the writing, production, and&#13;
management responsibilities of Newscope. They&#13;
are, in effect, Newscope.&#13;
Seven people who worked three years ago on the&#13;
Committee. Seven peddle who work today on&#13;
Newscope. There has not been, aside from Warren&#13;
Nedry, anyone else who has approached Newscope&#13;
and has had similar newspaper talent, initiative,&#13;
leadership.&#13;
It would seem reasonable to expect at least one&#13;
or two people with a similar interest in journalism&#13;
to join the paper each semester. Even the law of&#13;
probability would indicate this.&#13;
That's all it would take and Newscope would&#13;
have a chance in the fall. But, having been around&#13;
here for a while, you learn not to expect too much.&#13;
Wisconsin Ballet in Kenosha&#13;
The Wisconsin Ballet Company will present a program of&#13;
classical and contemporary dance under sponsorship of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 26,fn Kenosha's Bradford High&#13;
School Auditorium. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
The Madison-based company of 25 dancers is directed by Tibor&#13;
Zana and currently is on a ten-city state tour.&#13;
The Kenosha program will include "Hungarian Rhapsody"&#13;
choreographed by Zana to msuic by Liszt; "Huapango"&#13;
choreographed by Enrique Martinez to music by Moncayo;&#13;
"Concert Champetre" choreographed by Zana to music by Lecocq;&#13;
and "Dello Joio", a modern dance choreographed by Anna Nassiff&#13;
to music by Dello Joio.&#13;
Fellini Film to be Shown&#13;
Nights of Cabiria, a film&#13;
directed by Federico Fellini,&#13;
will be presented Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 23, at 8 p.m. in room 103 of&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
Wood Road campus.&#13;
The showing is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Film Society.&#13;
Winner of an Academy Award&#13;
for Best Foreign Language&#13;
Film in 1957, Nights of Cabiria&#13;
stars Fellini's wife, Giulietta&#13;
Masina,as Cabiria, a prostitute&#13;
living on the outskirts of Rome.&#13;
Fellini's film is the third part of&#13;
his unofficial "trilogy of&#13;
solitude". The first two were La&#13;
Strada and II Bidone.&#13;
Neighbors will be the short&#13;
film following the feature. It&#13;
depicts a conflict over a flower&#13;
growing between the properties&#13;
of two neighbors.&#13;
Sen. Gravel&#13;
to Speak&#13;
The Parkside Coalition for&#13;
Muskie and the Parkside Young&#13;
Democrats are co-sponsoring&#13;
the appearance of Senator Mike&#13;
Gravel (D-Alaska) as a&#13;
representative and supporter of&#13;
Senator Muskie — the&#13;
Democratic presidential frontrunner.&#13;
&#13;
Gravel is the out-spoken&#13;
junior senator from Alaska who&#13;
officially entered the Pentagon&#13;
Papers into the Congressional&#13;
Record. Gravel is especially&#13;
concerned with problems of the&#13;
environment and is a&#13;
congressional leader in the area&#13;
of environmental reform.&#13;
Gravel will speak in this area&#13;
because of the out-standing&#13;
response to Parkside students&#13;
to a petition, circulated by the&#13;
Parkside Coalition for Muskie,&#13;
which requested "Senator&#13;
Muksie or his representative"&#13;
to speak in this area.&#13;
The talk will be held Saturday,&#13;
February 26, at 2:30 in&#13;
Local 72 Union Hall, across&#13;
from Kenosha Campus on&#13;
Washington Road.&#13;
I/ALEO'S&#13;
(jPIZZAt.&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 -r 30th Avenue Kenosha 657—5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE &#13;
Shussing at Playboy&#13;
bv John Koloen of tho M0...0 . .. &amp;&#13;
February 21,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
by John Koloen of the Newscope staff&#13;
A haven for big spenders, friends of big spenders and thoi&#13;
families, lies nestled in the hilly outskirts of Lake Gen^l&#13;
Protected by fences and accessible by a guarded blactop road th*&#13;
Playboy Club attracts thousands of guests weekly, some black&#13;
some white, but all with a purpose. For as many reasons as there&#13;
are people the club mv.tes its guests to relax, entertain and be&#13;
entertained to their pocketbooks' content.&#13;
Newscope visited the club last Sunday to review one of its&#13;
malor winter attractions - its ski facilities - and came away&#13;
unimpressed and puzzled by its popularity. y&#13;
A Playboy brochure advertises six ski runs serviced by two&#13;
chairlifts capable of lifting 1,900 skiers per hour. The six runs in&#13;
elude one for beginners aptly dubbed Bunny Run, one for the novice&#13;
called Little Annie Fanny and four runs for the intermediate skier&#13;
Together with a long wood trough used for tobogganing and areas&#13;
set as ide for snowmobiling, the facilities appeal to a spectrum of&#13;
cold weather sportsmen.&#13;
Newscope tested the intermediate runs and found them at&#13;
best, unchallenging. This writer had not strapped on skis in years&#13;
so I depended on the opinion of my companion who has been attached&#13;
to hers for sixteen. Her comment was, "the Playboy Club is&#13;
no Iron Mountain."&#13;
It is easy to see once one overcomes the illusory hype of the&#13;
typical Playboy experience. There are superlatives and there are&#13;
superlatives, and then there is Playboy. One does not simply go&#13;
skiing at the club because one must first be a card carrying&#13;
member, or at least go with someone who is, and then only if you&#13;
are willing to tolerate some of the extravagant prices. At 75 cents&#13;
for a hog dog one must think twice before satiating his appetite&#13;
following an afternoon of skiing. It is enough to make Oscar Mayer&#13;
enter the retail market.&#13;
Back at the slopes, and after a half-dozen runs, we realized that&#13;
the runs were pretty much straight and down hill, ending conveniently&#13;
near the lifts. The average skier might find the hills&#13;
worthwhile for the $7 weekend charge, but for any accomplished&#13;
Slow Week l or&#13;
Parkside Sports&#13;
schusser worth his wedeln the big advantage of the Playboy Club&#13;
lies in what stands at the bottom of the hill, the chalet.&#13;
On the day we were there a guitarist, accompanied by an accordion,&#13;
played smoothed over jazz in the Jug of Wine bar while&#13;
others swarmed to the Loaf of Bread cafeteria warming their toe;&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
the ultimate trip!&#13;
at the fireplace or simply loaving. I have heard a great deal about&#13;
the social life one finds at exclusive clubs, particularly the Playboy&#13;
Club, and the activity in the bar seemed to support this, but my&#13;
meagre expense account would not allow me to prove it.&#13;
I suppose if you're interested in more than skiing and have the&#13;
money to do it, the Playboy Club could turn into a bargain, but as&#13;
for myself the kind of money it would take to have a good time could&#13;
better be spent in Aspen, or on the rent. However, in all fairness, if&#13;
you want to try the club go there on a weekday after seven, the cost&#13;
for a ticket is a reasonable $3 and who knows, the social life may be&#13;
more accessible.&#13;
\ SPACE ODYSSEY&#13;
Friday, Feb. 25, 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission 75c 160 min.&#13;
Student Act. Bldg.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. ID'S required&#13;
It'lll be a "slow" week for&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
winter sports teams&#13;
as the basketball squad completes&#13;
its season Monday night&#13;
at Dominican and the gymnasts&#13;
are idle, while the three others,&#13;
wrestling, fencing and track, all&#13;
will compete on the road.&#13;
The Parkside wrestlers, still&#13;
battling sickness and injury,&#13;
will travel to Allendale, Mich.,&#13;
to take on Grand Valley State&#13;
and Hillsdale in a double dual&#13;
meet Friday night.&#13;
Coach Jim 'Koch has five&#13;
wrestlers who have managed to&#13;
stay uninjured and sicknessfree&#13;
throughout the season and&#13;
it's from them that he needs&#13;
wins Friday if the Rangers are&#13;
to close out their dual meet&#13;
season on a winning note. The&#13;
only competition remaining for&#13;
Parkside after the duals is the&#13;
NAIA Tournament March 9-11&#13;
at Klamath Falls, Ore.&#13;
The Parkside fencers also are&#13;
winding down their season and&#13;
will battle three tough foes this&#13;
weekend on a swing through&#13;
Ohio. The Rangers will face&#13;
Bowling Green State Friday&#13;
afternoon and then take on Big&#13;
Ten power Ohio State and the&#13;
University of Chicago some 24&#13;
hours later in Columbus.&#13;
John Tank, a sophomore&#13;
foilist from Kenosha, has been&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Coach Loran Hein's big gun&#13;
lately, taking five of six matches&#13;
against tough Michigan&#13;
State and Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
opponents in the Rangers'&#13;
recent narrow 15-12 losses to the&#13;
Big Ten strongmen. Parkside&#13;
will return home next week for&#13;
its last home meet of the year, a&#13;
10 a.m. Saturday encounter&#13;
with Illinois-Circle, Tri-State&#13;
and Milwaukee Tech at Bullen&#13;
Jr. High in Kenosha.&#13;
The UW-Parkside track team,&#13;
with its first taste of Invitational&#13;
competition last week&#13;
at Oshkosh, will jump into it&#13;
again Saturday as the Rangers&#13;
face UW-LaCrosse, UWPlatteville,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh and&#13;
Loras at LaCrosse.&#13;
Three-event school recordholder&#13;
Lucian Rosa will again&#13;
anchor the Parkside attack,&#13;
with the barefoot freshman&#13;
likely to be entered in the mile&#13;
and two mile runs.&#13;
The Rangers will stay on the&#13;
road the following weekend and&#13;
compete on Illinois' 260-yard&#13;
track in an open meet at&#13;
Champaign.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
BLVHTISER&#13;
J A •* % \&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
"lone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
Hours - Effective Feb. 28, 1972&#13;
Mon. thru Fri. 8 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha &amp; Racine Campus&#13;
Mon. &amp;Thurs. only&#13;
10 A.M. to 1 P.M. &#13;
B KOFFEE&#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
Sb*5r P®T&#13;
Dennis W eaver in Ke nosha&#13;
by Michael Kite&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
When asked to represent the&#13;
Newscope at the Senator&#13;
McGovern fund raising rally&#13;
featuring Dennis Weaver I&#13;
immediately accepted. After all&#13;
it isn't everyday that someone,&#13;
such as myself, has the opportunity&#13;
to meet a well-known&#13;
Movie and Television personality.&#13;
Anyway there would&#13;
be free refreshments,&#13;
something I rarely pass up.&#13;
Last Thursday evening I&#13;
found myself and some friends&#13;
standing before the offices of&#13;
the Construction Laborers&#13;
Local 237. As we neared the&#13;
entrance we saw five black&#13;
youths peering in the windows&#13;
but unable to pay the $1.50&#13;
admission.&#13;
Upon entering, we were&#13;
greeted by the well-known&#13;
smiling face of Shirley Schmerling,&#13;
who was responsible&#13;
for the rally. The smile quickly&#13;
faded into "Tickets please."&#13;
Surrendering my ticket, I&#13;
proceeded past a police officer,&#13;
sporting a well-waxed handlebar&#13;
moustache, standing&#13;
ready to thwart any evil doers.&#13;
Glancing around at the crows,&#13;
consisting mostly of older&#13;
couples and families, I was&#13;
surprised at how few young&#13;
people of the 18-21 category&#13;
there were.&#13;
The meeting hall itself was&#13;
rather small, as a crowd of&#13;
close to 200 pa cked it. It was&#13;
adorned with the usual political&#13;
paraphernalia, the walls held&#13;
those posters of a smiling face&#13;
that have infiltrated into every&#13;
phase of American life, now&#13;
smiling for McGovern.&#13;
While waiting for the rally to&#13;
begin I decided to sample the&#13;
refreshments, which consisted&#13;
of soda, coffee and popcorn.&#13;
Finding it difficult to eat popcorn&#13;
out of a shoebox, I stuck to&#13;
the liquids.&#13;
Preceding Weaver was&#13;
Reggie McLeon, a folk singer&#13;
from Detroit, who did fair&#13;
renditions of songs by Bob&#13;
Dylan, Neil Young and others.&#13;
Due to the obvious rudeness of&#13;
the audience, busy talking&#13;
amongst themselves, he was&#13;
very difficult to hear.&#13;
When the singer finished, I&#13;
attempted to ask him a few&#13;
questions, which I found very&#13;
difficult as Mr. McLeon would&#13;
not take his eyes off a young&#13;
lady in the audience. After&#13;
finally gaining his attention&#13;
long enough to ask why he&#13;
supported McGovern, he&#13;
replied, "I got tired of walking&#13;
to work; they pay my transportation.&#13;
He (McGovern) says&#13;
it straight, with no shit. And I&#13;
get good vibes when I hear him&#13;
speak." As the last word was&#13;
uttered, he turned back to the&#13;
girl. Knowing when to give up, I&#13;
headed back to a chair to await&#13;
Weavers' arrival. A few&#13;
moments later the back door&#13;
opened and in he strode, without&#13;
his stetson, but his fans were not&#13;
disappointed.&#13;
On his way to the meeting&#13;
room where his admirers were&#13;
awaiting him, he was asked why&#13;
he supported McGovern, to&#13;
which he replied, "Why&#13;
shouldn't I support him, his&#13;
beliefs are the same as mine.&#13;
Even Mr. Weaver, a star of&#13;
rrfovies and television, did not at&#13;
first command the full attention&#13;
of the audience. But it was not&#13;
long until he not only had their&#13;
attention but their loudly&#13;
cheering support.&#13;
In the course of his speech&#13;
Mr. Weaver related Senator&#13;
McGovern's beliefs, future&#13;
plans and policies that he would&#13;
enact if given the chance.&#13;
Speaking most forcefully on&#13;
McGovern's promise of a shift&#13;
in national priorities, by placing&#13;
our economy in the top spot, to&#13;
be done by bringing an end to&#13;
the conflict in East Asia, he&#13;
pointed out that McGovern was&#13;
the first Senator to take an&#13;
active stand against the conflict&#13;
in Vietnam.&#13;
After touching lightly on some&#13;
of the other issues such as&#13;
pollution and inequality, he&#13;
forcefully stated, "We need a&#13;
man like McGovern to solve&#13;
these problems. And to achieve&#13;
this he needs our support. We&#13;
can change things if we will just&#13;
get up off our apathy and do&#13;
something about it!"&#13;
He then left the cheering&#13;
crowd for a small room where&#13;
he would be photographed with&#13;
about 150 of the 200 people&#13;
present. Pictures were sold for&#13;
$1.00 fo r black and wljite and&#13;
$1.50 for color. Also during this&#13;
period some young ladies were&#13;
"giving away" McGovern&#13;
teeshirts for a minimal donation&#13;
of $2.00.&#13;
McLeon returned once again&#13;
to a much more receptive&#13;
audience, as most of the elders&#13;
were in line for their pictures.&#13;
Across the room I saw the five&#13;
young blacks who were once on&#13;
the outside, they must have&#13;
finally found an open door.&#13;
After about an hour of constantly&#13;
flashing camera bulbs,&#13;
the bleary eyed Weaver entered&#13;
the room where the&#13;
representatives of the press had&#13;
been patiently waiting.&#13;
He discussed McGovern's&#13;
fight for the support of&#13;
minoirites. Weaver said that&#13;
they were doing better than&#13;
expected. At this time a&#13;
colleague, digesting this last&#13;
piece of information pointed out&#13;
to Mr. Weaver that even though&#13;
this rally was held in a&#13;
predominatly black neighborhood,&#13;
there was not one&#13;
adult black at the rally. Mr.&#13;
Weaver contributed this to&#13;
apathy and ignorance on the&#13;
part of the black community.&#13;
Shortly after this, he bade&#13;
farewell and was gone. On my&#13;
way back to the meeting hall, to&#13;
'ind out if my friends were still&#13;
there, I ran into Shirley Schmerling&#13;
once again, smiling&#13;
even bigger this time. She w as&#13;
very pleased with the turn out&#13;
for the evening.&#13;
I finally got back to the&#13;
meeting room to find that&#13;
almost everyone was gone, gone&#13;
home with their autographed&#13;
pictures and their tales of when&#13;
they met Mr. Dennis Weaver.&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE C LASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS1960&#13;
GTO. New tires, mags, 4 speed,&#13;
excellent condition. Must sell. $1,200,&#13;
willing to talk. 633-1069 any time&#13;
after 5:00.&#13;
1967 Opel Rally 4 speed, 40,000 miles,&#13;
$850. Call 654-5032 ask for Barb or&#13;
Doug.&#13;
DRUMS FOR SALE — Ludwick&#13;
complete set, excellent condition.&#13;
Best offer over $125. Ph 633-5666&#13;
after 4:00. Jerry or Bob.&#13;
FOR SALE — 69 Plymouth Wagon -&#13;
Custom Suburban. 1 owner. V-8, 318&#13;
engine, air, power brakes and&#13;
steering, 57,000 miles. Excellent&#13;
condition. Call 658-1285.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE — Marimba, 2Vi oct.&#13;
$100; Schwinn bicycle. 1 speed,&#13;
coaster brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N . Oakland, Milwaukee,&#13;
Wis. "&#13;
Garrard SLX-2 "Module" series&#13;
turntalbe; console stereo. Call Ray&#13;
654-8878.&#13;
STEREO TAPE RECORDER —&#13;
Sony 252 D One year old. List $135.00,&#13;
sell for $70.00. Ph. Jerry 652-2538 or&#13;
553-2496.&#13;
MODEL NEEDED for life drawing&#13;
class. Contact David Zaig, Room&#13;
217, Gre enquist Hall - A rt Dept.&#13;
BABY-SITTER NEEDED 4 2 boys,&#13;
ages 20 months and 10 months.&#13;
About 6 hours a day, 2 weekdays.&#13;
Days and time flexible. My home -&#13;
North side of Kenosha. Call 654-4593&#13;
afternoons or evenings.&#13;
Will the lady that phoned in the&#13;
classified ad for typing last Wed.&#13;
please call us again ... we lost your&#13;
phone number.&#13;
3 Room Apt. North side Keno.&#13;
Privacy assured. Situated well for&#13;
all campuses. Call 552-8970.&#13;
To whom it may concern — We want&#13;
our 3 dish pans back now.&#13;
SKIS — Hart Camaro with^Cubcle&#13;
bindings. $200 new, sell for $75. Also&#13;
Gerard turntable, sell at cost. Ph.&#13;
652-8796.&#13;
WANTED — '63, 64 or 65&#13;
Volkswagen. Good running condition&#13;
- reasonable. Call 654-1684 or 658-&#13;
3998.&#13;
PERSONAL — BILL THATCHROOF&#13;
— Come home or call&#13;
callect - all is forgiven - we love you -&#13;
you don't have to get a haircut. Mom&#13;
and Dad.&#13;
FOR RENT — 1 furnished bedroom&#13;
with kitchen - off street parking.&#13;
$50.00 per month including utilities.&#13;
552-8172. 5306 South Lake Shore Rd.&#13;
(just off Sheridan Road), Racine.&#13;
FOR SALE — Roth violin with case.&#13;
Very good condition. $260.00 new,&#13;
$125.00 or best offer. Electronic&#13;
adaptor also available. Phone 654-&#13;
1731.&#13;
Snowbires for VW, size 5.60x15, used&#13;
700 mi. cost $55 new, make an offer,&#13;
call 632-8929. </text>
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              <text>Student Charged by Activities Board</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
no one is inn ocent in Babylon&#13;
Student Charged by Activities Board&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
On Friday afternoon the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board held&#13;
a meeting which Newscope&#13;
wished to, in part, cover. Paul&#13;
Lomartire, a Newscope staffer,&#13;
was scheduled to undergo a&#13;
hearing concerning an alleged&#13;
irregularity which occurred&#13;
during the recent Sha Na Na&#13;
concert. Paul is a probationary&#13;
member of the Board and&#13;
served as an usher during the&#13;
concert.&#13;
The alleged irregularity involves&#13;
the accused allowing a&#13;
guest to attend the concert free.&#13;
The Board had originally accused&#13;
Paul of letting a friend&#13;
attend Sha Na Na without&#13;
paying for a ticket. Unable to&#13;
attend the meeting in person,&#13;
Newscope has been forced to&#13;
rely on the accused's testimony.&#13;
Paul informed Newscope that&#13;
even assuming he did let a guest&#13;
in free, "there is no way they&#13;
can prove it". The convicted&#13;
felon explained that the&#13;
auditorium "was too dark, and&#13;
two crowded". Further, he&#13;
accused other members of the&#13;
Activities Board of bringing in&#13;
dates free, he said it was&#13;
"common practice for members&#13;
to bring in free dates by&#13;
appointing them ushers".&#13;
Apparently no one is innocent in&#13;
Babylon.&#13;
Lomartire explained that he&#13;
was approached by one of the&#13;
Superstar L eft P arkside&#13;
Holding the B ag&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the Newscope staff&#13;
Last year the Student Activities Board brought "Jesus Christ&#13;
Superstar" to Case High School's auditorium. One reason for&#13;
choosing Superstar over another group was the fact that it was a&#13;
Broadway show, an informed administration source told&#13;
Newscope that Bauer Productions "gave us a good deal, with no&#13;
risk involved".&#13;
This week Newscope has learned that Bauer Productions has&#13;
yet to pay for the rental of chairs, a piano, and police protection;&#13;
the sundry expenses which a company incurs in producing a show.&#13;
The estimated debt is $600, and though Newscope was told that&#13;
Parkside was in no way libel for the debt, the Activities Board is&#13;
presently considering the options before it makes a final decision&#13;
on the matter.&#13;
When asked if Bauer Productions has ever produced shows&#13;
without paying their debts, the informed source explained that&#13;
"They've tried it in Milwaukee". "They'd produced the Summerfest&#13;
Shows so we figured they knew what they were doing.&#13;
Either they're trying to pull one off on us, or they're just bad&#13;
businessmen."&#13;
When asked what Parkside might do in this hassle, Newscope&#13;
was told that the situation is presently being studied; "by Monday&#13;
the situation should be much clearer." One possibility is to file suit&#13;
against Bauer Productions, but this is an extreme move, one which&#13;
at the moment Parkside is reluctant to make.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
BERRIGANS NOMINATED FOR PEACE PRIZE&#13;
(CPS) — The Reverends Daniel and Philip Berrigan have been&#13;
nominated by the Swedish parliament for the 1972 Nobel Peace&#13;
Prize.&#13;
The Reverend Daniel Berrigan was granted parole last week&#13;
from his three-year sentence on a conviction of destroying draft&#13;
records in Catonsville, Md. He will be released on Feb. 24.&#13;
Philip Berrigan is on trial in Harrisburg, Pa., for allegedly&#13;
plotting to kidnap White House foreign affairs adviser Henry&#13;
Kissinger.&#13;
SCHOOLS DISCOURAGE STUDENTS TO TEACH&#13;
(CPS) — Colleges and universities across the nation are&#13;
"turning off the faucets" and discouraging many of their students&#13;
from entering education fields.&#13;
Thirty-seven per cent of all college graduates are certified to&#13;
teach, and some 234,100 new graduates will be competing for&#13;
115t900 jobs in U.S. public schools this year, according to figures&#13;
released by the National Education Association (NEA).&#13;
AWAITING THE PIPELINE STATEMENT&#13;
Conservationists are anxiously awaiting the release of the&#13;
Department of Interior's final impact statement on the Alaskan&#13;
pipeline which Secretary Morton said would be released about&#13;
January 15th, but has now been postponed until about March 15th.&#13;
Morton has indicated that he does not expect to hold public&#13;
hearings on the final impact statement and that the project will be&#13;
approved shortly after the statement's release. Judge George Hart&#13;
of the U.S. District Court recently rejected a move to require Interior&#13;
to hold hearings.&#13;
The Alaska Coalition of environment groups in Washington,&#13;
D.C., is urging all interested citizens to write President Nixon to&#13;
demand that public hearings be held.&#13;
UW Failures Blamed on Lack of Respect&#13;
Board members and asked to&#13;
publicly apologize at the&#13;
hearing, "I was told to be&#13;
apologetic and things would&#13;
work out". Lomartire informed&#13;
Newscope that during the&#13;
hearing itself, he was told that&#13;
"it's the first case like this&#13;
we've ever had". "They told me&#13;
that it is 'a serious charge and&#13;
vou don't seem to be taking it&#13;
very seriously'. I retorted by&#13;
pointing out the fact that the&#13;
burden of proof is on them."&#13;
During the closed hearing, Paul&#13;
said, "The charge was changed&#13;
from letting A person in to&#13;
Some."&#13;
Just before they told Paul to&#13;
leave the meeting room while&#13;
the Board members decided on&#13;
the disposition of the case, the&#13;
accused was informed that they&#13;
"weren't trying to railroad&#13;
me". The penalty which the&#13;
accused faces is expulsion from&#13;
the Board. Lomartire explained&#13;
that there would have to be at&#13;
least one more meeting before&#13;
the hearing is concluded.&#13;
Why was Newscope locked&#13;
out of the Board meeting, a&#13;
campus organization whose&#13;
finances are publicly funded,&#13;
and which supposedly operates&#13;
in the students' interest? This&#13;
reporter was told that the press&#13;
is sometimes "a hindrance" by&#13;
a Board member. But a&#13;
misinformed as well as an&#13;
uninformed press, is much&#13;
more of a hindrance than an&#13;
informed one.&#13;
Our apologiesTgoocl friends&#13;
for the fr acture of good order&#13;
the burning of paper&#13;
instead of chhuillddrc en — DANIEL BERRIGAN&#13;
Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
Meets March 6th&#13;
The Parkside's Women's&#13;
Caucus is now forming and will&#13;
hold its first program on&#13;
Monday, March 6, from 7:30 to&#13;
9:30 p.m. in the Whiteskellar in&#13;
Greenquist. (The lounge immediately&#13;
to the right and&#13;
downstairs after entering&#13;
Greenquist northernmost.)&#13;
PWC is open to any woman&#13;
student, staff or faculty&#13;
member and is aiming to enable&#13;
women at Parkside to gain a&#13;
more positive view of themselves&#13;
as women and to&#13;
examine issues related to&#13;
women in today's society.&#13;
The program on March 6th&#13;
will consist of listening to parts&#13;
of tapes of recent lectures by&#13;
Gloria Steinem and Betty&#13;
Friedan followed by group&#13;
discussion on the pros and cons&#13;
of the women's movement.&#13;
The Parkside Women's&#13;
Caucus will be presenting a&#13;
number of lectures and panels&#13;
on campus and in addition,&#13;
plans to form small study&#13;
groups on women's issues.&#13;
Projects can also be undertaken,&#13;
as the membership&#13;
desires. All women are encouraged&#13;
to attend the March&#13;
6th meeting as planning for&#13;
future meetings will be open for&#13;
discussion.&#13;
Representing UW-Parkside in the Association of College Unions-International Region 8 student&#13;
playoffs in union sports at UW-Oshkosh were (front row, from left) Ted Jensen, Kenosha; Robert&#13;
Hinderholtz, Racine? Edward Lobacz, Kenosha; Ed Arndt, Kenosha; and Tim Duesing, Kenosha;&#13;
(back row, from left) Tim Alfredson, Kenosha; Gregg Hansen, Kenosha; Mike Jenrette, Racine;&#13;
Reid Knitter, Kenosha; and Haig Derderian, Racine. UW-P competed in. bowling, chess and&#13;
pocket billiards.&#13;
By Mark P. McElreath&#13;
MADISON — The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Madison failed to&#13;
meet the challenges of the late&#13;
1960s because certain administrators&#13;
lacked respect for&#13;
the Wisconsin legislature.&#13;
That is one of several&#13;
provocative conclusions drawn&#13;
from a collection of articles&#13;
analyzing the University during&#13;
the late 1960s and published in a&#13;
new book, "Academic Supermarkets",&#13;
by Jossey-Bass Inc.,&#13;
San Francisco.&#13;
Other reasons for the UW's&#13;
ineffective response to the&#13;
crises of those times, cited by&#13;
some of the 18 contributors to&#13;
the new book, are a confused&#13;
faculty unwilling to wield effective&#13;
power, and militant&#13;
students viewing themselves as&#13;
apart from the rest of Madison&#13;
and severely questioning&#13;
traditional authority.&#13;
The editors of the book —&#13;
Prof. Philip G. Altbach and&#13;
graduate student Sheila McVey&#13;
of the UW-Madison School of&#13;
Education, and Robert S.&#13;
Laufer, sociology professor at&#13;
State University oMMew York at&#13;
Albany — describe the UW as&#13;
"A multiversity in crisis." &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE February 28,1972&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
S&amp;uhmg. the. Qinedt&#13;
'' ^Median fyoodi.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
RUBYS&#13;
"Ruby's has&#13;
the best corned&#13;
beel sandwich&#13;
in town"&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
A tyhoMj to- &lt;yy&#13;
oJ^AAj tfb&amp; (yOj\A&gt; (JUmj&#13;
5535-6 Ave. Kenosha&#13;
'I'l'lllil'llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll]&#13;
child rare center&#13;
needs help&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
The Co-op Lunch at the&#13;
Student Activities Building has&#13;
come and gone, but the funds&#13;
donated to the Parkside Child&#13;
Care Center are slated for investment&#13;
in large equipment&#13;
and new material for the&#13;
children. Special thanks go to&#13;
the students and the staff of&#13;
Student Services for their&#13;
participation in the Co-op Lunch&#13;
and their interest in the continuation&#13;
and improvement of&#13;
the Center. It is the concern of&#13;
all those on campus which will&#13;
ultimately determine the&#13;
quality of services the Center&#13;
can provide.&#13;
At present the Center is selfsupporting&#13;
financially, but the&#13;
budget can handle only small&#13;
purchases to create a more&#13;
enriching environment for the&#13;
fifty children enrolled. There is&#13;
a great need for volunteer help&#13;
to assist the staff and make it&#13;
possible to give each child individual&#13;
attention.&#13;
Interested parties are&#13;
welcome to visit the Center at&#13;
2620 - 14th Place (Hwy E) to&#13;
observe its function or call for&#13;
information at 552-8322 f rom 8&#13;
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday&#13;
through Friday.&#13;
Eileen Hanson, Director&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center&#13;
health planning&#13;
meeting soon&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Racine County Planning&#13;
Council in cooperation with the&#13;
Comprehensive Health Planning&#13;
Agency of Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, Inc. is planning an&#13;
informational meeting on&#13;
health planning on Wednesday,&#13;
March 1, 1972, 7:30 P.M. at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theatre, 14th&#13;
and Howe Streets, Racine.&#13;
Health planning is being&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
| WATCHES PERFUMES&#13;
Bolcx - Accutron&#13;
Ultrnchron • Longin.&#13;
• ulov. - Mov.do&#13;
C.r.v.ll. - TTmex&#13;
LeCoultr.&#13;
France'*&#13;
FSne.t -&#13;
P.rfume. and&#13;
Cologne*&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
S6J7 8th Ave.&#13;
VwuuMo &amp; Son*&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
0% Disc ount to students and Faculty with |.d&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
W.llac* • Lunt&#13;
Reed * Barton&#13;
Sheffiald • etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrtfori&#13;
Seneca • Lalique&#13;
Hoy a I Worcester&#13;
undertaken as the result of&#13;
Public Law 89-749. In response&#13;
to this law, Wisconsin has been&#13;
divided into districts. Racind&#13;
County and the six neighboring&#13;
counties of Kenosha,&#13;
M i l w a u k e e, Ozau kee,&#13;
Walworth, Washington and&#13;
Waukesha form the southeastern&#13;
region.&#13;
We are anxious that our&#13;
community learns about health&#13;
planning — what it means and&#13;
how it can affect the delivery&#13;
and cost of health services and&#13;
most important what is&#13;
presently being done in Racine&#13;
County in health planning.&#13;
There will be a film and a&#13;
pannel presentation on Comprehensive&#13;
Health Planning.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
G. P. Ferrazzano, M.D.&#13;
Chairman&#13;
Racine County Health&#13;
Planning Corporate&#13;
Committee&#13;
dirt is filthy&#13;
Newscope:&#13;
If I had to print any filth, I&#13;
would not print anything! You&#13;
must have a lot of pride to put it&#13;
out where anyone can see it!!!&#13;
No wonder the world is so&#13;
wicked!!&#13;
Disgusted&#13;
Benefit and Memorial&#13;
Dances Planned&#13;
This weekend Parkside&#13;
Students will have an opportunity&#13;
to support two very&#13;
fine causes and enjoy themselves&#13;
besides.&#13;
The Gene Fox Memorial&#13;
Association will be sponsoring a&#13;
dance Friday, March 3rd, from&#13;
9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. at the&#13;
student activities bldg. All&#13;
proceeds are going to the&#13;
K.Y.F. for wrestling equipment&#13;
for young boys. The Starboys&#13;
are donating their services and&#13;
providing the entertainment.&#13;
You will be asked to donate&#13;
$1.00 at the door.&#13;
A benefit dance will also be&#13;
held this Saturday, March 4, in&#13;
the Student Activities Building&#13;
with proceeds going to support&#13;
the Parkside Day Care Center.&#13;
The Day Care Center, a&#13;
Student Government project, is&#13;
in need of specific educational&#13;
toys for children and other&#13;
equipment. Volunteer help is&#13;
also needed. Anyone interested&#13;
in giving their services, contact&#13;
Elaine Birch at the Student&#13;
Government Office.&#13;
The Dance featuring "Union"&#13;
is sponsored by the Day Care&#13;
Center Association and&#13;
everyone is urged to attend.&#13;
Your attendance will help to&#13;
support a a good cause. The&#13;
dance begins at 9:00 P.M. and&#13;
there is a $1.50 admission at the&#13;
door.&#13;
SECURITY&#13;
OFFICER&#13;
PROMOTED&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, director&#13;
of safety and security at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
today announced the&#13;
promotion of security officer&#13;
Laurence S. Augustine to police&#13;
officer 1. Augustine joined the&#13;
15-member safety and security&#13;
staff last April and is presently&#13;
attending a 240-hour recruit&#13;
training school at the Racine&#13;
Police Academy. He lives at&#13;
7857 23rd Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, FEB. 29&#13;
Meeting. Student Government&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103. 7-30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAR. 2&#13;
Student Films. Sponsored by PAB&#13;
Coffee House Committee.&#13;
Whiteskellar, Greenquist Hall. 2:30&#13;
p.m. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, MAR.3&#13;
Dance. "Starboys" sponsored by the&#13;
Gene Fox Memorial Association.&#13;
Student Activities Building. Adm.&#13;
Chrg. 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. UW-P&#13;
and Wisconsin I.D. required.&#13;
SATURDAY, MAR. 4&#13;
Track. UW-P at Illinois Track Club,&#13;
Champaign.&#13;
Fencing. Ul-Chicago Circle Campus,&#13;
M.A.T.C., Tri-State.&#13;
Dance. "Union" sponsored by the&#13;
Day Care Center Association.&#13;
Student Activities Building. 9:00&#13;
p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D. required. Adm. $1.50.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Films&#13;
THURSDAY MARCH 2&#13;
2:30 P.M.&#13;
North Lounge Greenquist Hall&#13;
Robin David, Pat McDermid,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Jean Frahm, Larry&#13;
Jones, Jim Koloen, John Koloen,&#13;
Rich Lipke, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Kevin McKay, Fred&#13;
Noer, Jr., Brian Ross, Wolfgang&#13;
Salewski, Andy Schmelling, Barb&#13;
Scott, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, Bill Sorensen,. Mike&#13;
Stevesand, Debbie Venskus&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Par ks(de published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road. &#13;
February 28,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
PREP program in action finds Surinder Datta, associate&#13;
professor of life science at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
talking on biological discoveries and their social implications with&#13;
students at Racine's William Horlick High School. Above, left to&#13;
right, are Horlick social science instructor Ruth Bonady; Alan&#13;
Rench, 6703 Novak Road, Racine; Prof. Datta; Sheila White, 1104&#13;
Isabelle Ave., Racine; and Jim Small, 1406 Jefferson St., Racine.&#13;
Rench, Small and Miss White are seniors at Horlick. PREP, which&#13;
stands for Parkside Resource Enrichment Professors, this&#13;
semester will bring UW-P faculty members into high school&#13;
classrooms in Kenosha, Racine and Walworth counties.&#13;
Toys for Child&#13;
Center Sought&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center is&#13;
in need of your active support&#13;
and four centers will be set up&#13;
from Wednesday morning&#13;
March 1 until Friday noon,&#13;
March 3, in an effort to'reach all&#13;
the interested people on campus.&#13;
&#13;
There will be boxes for the&#13;
donation of toys or cans of juice&#13;
at the Greenquist Concousre,&#13;
the Student Activities Building,&#13;
the Racine Center Lounge, and&#13;
the Kenosha Center Lounge.&#13;
Each box will be posted with&#13;
information regarding the need&#13;
of the Center for volunteer help&#13;
and procedures for arranging&#13;
credit for working at the Center.&#13;
There will be someone at each&#13;
station to answer questions and&#13;
explain the function of the&#13;
Center.&#13;
Women's Caucus to Meet&#13;
A strategy session on&#13;
selection of delegates to the&#13;
national Democratic and&#13;
Republican conventions will be&#13;
held at 8 p.m. Wednesday,&#13;
March 1, at 4916 B yrd Avenue,&#13;
Racine. Wisconsin Women's&#13;
Political Caucus (WWPC)&#13;
representatives will explain&#13;
party procedures of choosing&#13;
delegates, how to become a&#13;
candidate for delegate, and how&#13;
much it will cost to attend the&#13;
conventions.&#13;
Lynn Hoff, a WWPC spokeswoman,&#13;
stated that the session&#13;
is intended primarily for&#13;
members or potential members&#13;
of the two political parties, and&#13;
for workers in current&#13;
presidential primary campaigns,&#13;
although anyone interested&#13;
may attend.&#13;
The meeting's purpose is to&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
assure equal representation of&#13;
women on all party delegate&#13;
slates, consistent with recent&#13;
party reforms, and to promote,&#13;
on the local party level, serious&#13;
discussion of issues concerning&#13;
women.&#13;
For further information,&#13;
those interested may contact&#13;
Ms. Hoff at 634-1237.&#13;
Driving Course Offered&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will again be offering&#13;
the National Safety Council's&#13;
Defensive Driving Course for&#13;
those employees who have not&#13;
as of yet taken the course.&#13;
The National Defensive&#13;
Driving Course has. been a&#13;
prerequisite for the operation of&#13;
all state owned vehicles since&#13;
December 31, 1970. University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside employees&#13;
(employees are considered&#13;
to be faculty, staff, or a&#13;
volunteer driver) who intend to&#13;
use state owned vehicles are&#13;
required to complete this course&#13;
before permission can be&#13;
granted to drive state owned&#13;
vehicles.&#13;
The course will be held on&#13;
Saturday, March 25, 1972, from&#13;
8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Please&#13;
submit to this office by March&#13;
17, 1972, the names of those&#13;
individuals that will be attending&#13;
the course. Attendees&#13;
will be receiving by mail a&#13;
letter giving the location of the&#13;
class and materials that they&#13;
should read.&#13;
VOLUNTEERS&#13;
WE NEED T HEM FOR POLL DUTY&#13;
SPRING ELECTION&#13;
MARCH 7 and 8&#13;
Sign up or call:&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Hwy. A and Wood Road&#13;
(553-2244 or 553-2493)&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
—Honest George Sale — during February&#13;
a free cherry tree with purchase of any major item&#13;
Freezers — start at $194&#13;
Admiral Color TV start at $199&#13;
18" Color start at $299&#13;
Heavy duty washers start at $169&#13;
Apartment size washers start at $109&#13;
Refrigerators start at $179&#13;
Warehouse Discount Prices&#13;
micro-ovens, air conditioners&#13;
R. C. Service&#13;
One Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
Ron Casperson - owner&#13;
MifmAitnimononrfinononoAnrvuniinonorvvwvvywwvy w w w v* vv vv vwm km ww i!r&#13;
Rise t o face UN other day&#13;
(mVJlrJbv&#13;
QoAJuitv&#13;
.&#13;
T0M^rn jammer&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
TENDERLOIN STEAK&#13;
TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
"Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S CABIN ROOM&#13;
FOR PRIVATE PARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENO:MA&#13;
" O F F E R I N G H I GH Q U A L I T Y AT&#13;
R E A S O N A B LE P R I C E S , T H E W I N D&#13;
J A M M ER D E SER V E S ITS P O P U L A RIT Y"&#13;
— H E R B E RT KUBL Y&#13;
" W O N D E R F UL FOO D'&#13;
SENA TOR PRQ X M IRE &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE February 28,1972&#13;
Itfethe&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Ctlleqelnri&#13;
HWY. 32 BETWEEN RACINE AND KENOSHA&#13;
SANDWICHES — PIZZA — PACKAGE GOODS&#13;
Tkis AD \S GOOD FOR A FREE DRANK*!&#13;
She VJLj Supper CU&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan Id.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
.V°V'&#13;
&lt; *&#13;
\\ ' v\e^ ^&#13;
\v&#13;
e \JP&#13;
\^&#13;
e&#13;
MISSED THAT FIRST ONE!&#13;
U.W.P. Ragtime Rangers&#13;
announces -&#13;
A Second Trip To&#13;
Whitecap Mt.&#13;
March 17-19&#13;
Sign up at room 217 Tallent Hall&#13;
OBIE'S&#13;
Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
No one could remember who started the&#13;
disagreement, but by the time I got there, it&#13;
was going full-tilt. Sitting in the Racine&#13;
lounge was a fat kid telling his opponent that&#13;
food prices are so high he could eat at a&#13;
restaurant cheaper than shopping in&#13;
grocery stores.&#13;
A skinny kid with long hair was shaking&#13;
his head, telling the fat kid that he was&#13;
crazy. "You can't eat anywhere and feel&#13;
full," the thin male contended, "you can't&#13;
eat cheaper in a restaurant."&#13;
The fat kid's eyes lit up, "Ya ever eat at&#13;
Obie's?" It all seemed like a television ad.&#13;
"After you eat there, then you can argue&#13;
with me," the big guy said. His opponent&#13;
walked away shaking his head.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
"Geez," Maggie said after I told her the&#13;
story, "I know what the fat kid meant." We&#13;
were sitting in Obie's eating dinner. "You&#13;
want to finish this," she said, pushing a&#13;
plate toward me with a slice of roast beef on&#13;
it. Are you kidding I said, I think I'm gonna&#13;
pass out.&#13;
Obie's in Racine on Lathrop Avenue is an&#13;
"all you can eat" smorgasbord-restaurant.&#13;
In what looks to be a converted bolwing&#13;
alley, they offer the customer any amount of&#13;
a wide choice of food, dessert and beverage&#13;
for one fixed price (a dollar sixty-nine for&#13;
dinner or a dollar thirty-nine for lunch -&#13;
adults). Children can eat for about seventynine&#13;
cents. Once in awhile if there is an&#13;
Obie's coupon in the newspaper they can eat&#13;
for free. The place is open seven days a&#13;
week from eleven a.m. until eight p.m.&#13;
Hog heaven, a glutton's paradise.&#13;
Spaghetti, roast beef au jus, tenderloin tips&#13;
over rice, fried chicken, turkey and&#13;
dressing, mashed or boiled potatoes, salads&#13;
of several types, cottage cheese, jello, hot&#13;
cinnamon rolls with icing, warm bisquits,&#13;
Coca-Cola, coffee, corn, breen beans, on and&#13;
on and on. There is an opportunity to contrive&#13;
quite a beggar's banquet for that flat&#13;
price.&#13;
In the "all you can eat" wonderland, there&#13;
are waitresses to clear tables, serve&#13;
beverages and in general keep the&#13;
customers satisfied. Slicing the roast beef,&#13;
and serving other main elements of the&#13;
adds an aire of "e*ri&#13;
9 9&#13;
I felt very comf* • Veness&#13;
''&#13;
tC&#13;
Peted. paneled d^ing'® ea&#13;
"&#13;
n9 '&#13;
Everything | atG J,&#13;
that comes in rolls of white rrv&#13;
enioyed it. Maggie saw ll rh&#13;
tenderloin tips also ,&#13;
l nntir^ ,&#13;
Were recom I noticed also that other t&#13;
mashed potatoes, d,dn,h°aVe ab&#13;
Some all you can eat" places&#13;
Thaw Hon'/J""&#13;
119 but somewha&#13;
p„&#13;
y&#13;
,?&#13;
0n&#13;
,&#13;
,h?&#13;
vethi&#13;
'Problem at&#13;
Featuring free beverages is a&#13;
One can wash down every b ite o&#13;
without having to f|sh fnto a&#13;
^ my secmd sPr»&#13;
!&#13;
back in the booth. I said the sami&#13;
sure everyone who overeats sa yi&#13;
eat that much, it's )u5t that&#13;
fHhng. In any case, I was g rea&#13;
this time I thought of the fa1&#13;
awarded him a unanimous deck&#13;
question of groceries over restai&#13;
at least in this case.&#13;
I saw the fat kid a few days I&#13;
Racine lounge. He was wiped&#13;
puffed, pale, stomach swollen. Hi&#13;
same table he had argued at d&lt;&#13;
The skinny kid bounced up to&#13;
"Hey, late at Obie's," he said,&#13;
picked his head up off the table&#13;
eyes, and simply groaned.&#13;
$10.00 N ON - R E F U N D A B LE DEP OSI T R E Q UIR ED&#13;
A CLOCKWORK ORANGE&#13;
Alex — Mai com McDowell&#13;
Alex's Gang — Warren Clarke, Jim Marcus, MJichael Tarn&#13;
Directed by Stanley Kubrick&#13;
A Warner Brothers film&#13;
The Micheal Todd Theatre, two doorways in the great wall on&#13;
neon north Dearborn, just south of Randolph Street's El-sheltered&#13;
hall. After six it seems the only cars you can find are the big&#13;
luxurious barges. Electric plush-seated monsters that force rather&#13;
than pick their way to the numerous cocktail lounges that iay just&#13;
as luxurious and just as electric plush up and down, left and right&#13;
on the Loop grid. The effect of all this on a sodbuster like me is&#13;
more than overwhelming. Add to this the burned out feeling that&#13;
one feels when he sees a brilliant Kubrick quasifantasy, and you&#13;
have an exhausted movie reviewer, who, while inspired to write&#13;
great things about a great film, drives bleary-eyed, jabbering his&#13;
way home.&#13;
Alex would have driven fast, on the wrong side of the road&#13;
running oncoming cars off, snarling his way home on synthemesc.&#13;
Alex, a savage beast, is soothed by Beethoven, moved by murder&#13;
and in love with all the immediate brutality of ultraviolence. He&#13;
controls himself gladiator style, lust and desire as motivation&#13;
portrayed equally in book and film as predator and victim.&#13;
In 1962, Anthony Burgess abstracted the character from the&#13;
Mod-Rocker clashes, near contemporaries of Hell's Angel&#13;
escapades. A story with deep idealogical roots that never quite&#13;
resolves its theme of Pavlovian conditioning versus criminal&#13;
nature. The book, a presupposition, is timed like clockwork orange&#13;
or otherwise with environmental controls being suggested by&#13;
Skinner and others. A schism on the verge, an answer in film&#13;
Oily Kubrick would latch on to this kintl of stuff, a perfect story&#13;
media for him to work his magic lense tricks,&#13;
techniques for 2001 Space Odyssey showing thro&#13;
posures, slow motion and of course classical stra&#13;
Beethoven, Rossini, Purcell, Elgar and Rimsky Kors&#13;
favorite being Ludwig's 9th symphony (which I love&#13;
way) all being played by one of those synthes&#13;
causticizing that feel of speed, and chromium grindin&#13;
Gene Kelley's "Singing' in the Rain" shows up as then&#13;
His ninth film in 19 years, Kubrick has mad&#13;
narrative nature of the book to relate the nature of&#13;
wasting the Russo-pubo slang Burgess meticulou&#13;
("Apypoly nogies" — apologies and the old " in-out&#13;
Beethoven is the crux, Alex accidently conditio™&#13;
favorite theme along with ultraviolence. We are led ti&#13;
this eventually restores Alex's love of brutality w&#13;
ditioning goes de-conditioning, his love of the9th reapt&#13;
The change takes place over our brutophiliac&#13;
English-Conditioning-Advocate looking on. As a ntag&#13;
pulled Alex from a prison to condition him. After hi;&#13;
publicized release, a fascist writer, bearing a&#13;
resemblence to Peter Seller's Dr. Strangelove (ano&#13;
film), bombards him with the "9th" until he trie&#13;
suicide, it doesn't quite work .... fade in — Alex&#13;
comical scene follows baby bird Alex mimicking, spc&#13;
mother robin Liberal.&#13;
The film is superbly photographed and g ives&#13;
comfortable position in which he can decide for I&#13;
whether or not he^loves his frontal lobes. It has wo&#13;
Prize for best direction, which I thought was sell deser&#13;
is a genius who says that he gained his virtuosity thro&#13;
lots of silms as a kid. &#13;
lung gentleman who&#13;
&gt;iveness"to the place,&#13;
le eating in the cararea.&#13;
&#13;
ted fine, as I t ried to&#13;
ssible. The roast beef&#13;
ies (I'm not sure if it&#13;
d time) but was very&#13;
) in a tasty natural&#13;
turkey was the kind&#13;
t white meat, I still&#13;
aid the chicken and&#13;
ere recommendable.&#13;
t other items, like&#13;
't have a bland taste,&#13;
t" places serve food&#13;
somewhat tasteless.&#13;
Jroblem at Obie's.&#13;
rages is a fine idea.&#13;
&lt;ery bite or mouthful&#13;
h Into a pocket for&#13;
ond Sprite, I leaned&#13;
d the same thing I'm&#13;
ireats says, "I didn't&#13;
ust that it's all so&#13;
was greased out. At&#13;
of the fat kid, and&#13;
nous decision on the&#13;
&gt;ver re staurant food;&#13;
ew days later at the&#13;
as wiped out, eyes&#13;
wollen. He sat at the&#13;
jued at days before,&#13;
ced up to the table,&#13;
he said. The fat kid&#13;
the table, rolled his&#13;
ned.&#13;
February 28,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
tricks, some of the&#13;
ing through, overexcal&#13;
strains including&#13;
sky Korsakoff; Alex's&#13;
:h I lo ve in a different&#13;
synthesizers synthoi&#13;
grinding teeth. Even&#13;
pas theme song,&#13;
ias made use of the&#13;
ature of the film, not&#13;
leticulously designed&#13;
I "in -out").&#13;
onditioned against his&#13;
are led to believe that&#13;
tality when the con-&#13;
?th reappearing,&#13;
iphiliac with Liberal­&#13;
's antagonist, he had&#13;
After his successfully&#13;
iring a remarkable&#13;
ive (another Kubrick&#13;
he tries to commit&#13;
— Al ex in traction. A&#13;
(ing, spoon fed by the&#13;
I g ives the viewer a&#13;
de for himself as to&#13;
has won the Critics'&#13;
ell deserved. Kubrick&#13;
;ity through watching&#13;
from the Music Desk&#13;
In our never-ending search to turn the&#13;
sophisticated but destitute music lover on to&#13;
just a little more of the mind destroying rock&#13;
&amp; r oll he craves, we of the Music Desk, who&#13;
understand his plight well, being in the same&#13;
boat ourselves, find few experiences more&#13;
satisfying than stumbling across an obscure&#13;
radiant and powerful album in the back bin of&#13;
the shop and being rewarded for impulse by&#13;
music which worms its way into the subconscious,&#13;
wreaks its havoc in the gray room,&#13;
and moves the feet in weird directions.&#13;
BAD MANORS is such an album.&#13;
In a plain gold sleeve with a crowbar on it,&#13;
this little gem could easily be missed. Upon&#13;
finding it, a perusal of the back cover would&#13;
reveal only a long list of credits and the&#13;
names don't give a clue that these boys used&#13;
to back up the legendary Ronnie Hawkins, the&#13;
evil Canadian genius who graduated the Band&#13;
after teaching them all they know. Doing time&#13;
with Hawkins is said to be a terrifying experience&#13;
but those who survive, the legend&#13;
goes, cannot miss a beat or play a wrong note.&#13;
Unless they want to.&#13;
But y'see, Crowbar sometimes wants to. If&#13;
there's one thing besides superhuman&#13;
musicianship that Ronnie Hawkins teaches&#13;
his bands, it's not to take themselves&#13;
seriously. Crowbar never lets convention&#13;
stand in the way of a good time. They cut up&#13;
and mess around, inject odd ball bits and&#13;
pieces in between songs, change tempoes at&#13;
the drop of a finger pick, belch, pant, yodel&#13;
and otherwise carry on like cheerfully spaced&#13;
maniacs. But thmve . trii iciwk i\ w of i th11 iw e trii aduue c • is o th11 ic e wway ay&#13;
!•!• /ilrof C« CAM V ® •' ' ;• ' ' '•'&#13;
its p l a y e d . E v e ry b i t of f o o l i s h n e s s is&#13;
casually calculated and not only strictly in the&#13;
context of the song but in fact to the enhancement&#13;
of the song in every case. Which is to&#13;
say that any band that loose has to be tight&#13;
and Crowbar are tight to just this side of&#13;
telekineticism. They've been in the biz a long&#13;
time and know each other's minds,&#13;
imaginations, needs and fetishes.&#13;
And the music they come up with. Defies&#13;
description. With six members, all possessed&#13;
of fine voices, the American vocal music&#13;
tradition is probably close. Pulling the songs&#13;
from the soil and the ghosts thereon in places&#13;
like Gettysburg and the dust bowl in the&#13;
manner of their spiritual kin, the Band, is an&#13;
approximation also. It e xists in the air in the&#13;
history books, and for Crowbar, in the dime&#13;
novels and kinky sideshows. Hillbilly and&#13;
halleujah, bluegrass and grease. They don't&#13;
know how to boogie woogie but they can reel&#13;
like no one since Jed Clampett. And they can&#13;
rock &amp; r oll.&#13;
"House of Blue Lights" will spin you. A&#13;
supercharged ricke-tick with woodblock&#13;
ticktock, jive piano and idiot scat singing. The&#13;
train song is an institution and also a good&#13;
standard of clack time-motion and "Train&#13;
Keep Roll in'" burns the thin steel rail with&#13;
great whistle guitar and chug. "Let's Play&#13;
House" cuts and runs in triple time yodel&#13;
from King Bisquit Boy and breaks for a neat&#13;
two bars of demented panting. "What a&#13;
Feeling" What a russsshhhh floating up to a&#13;
spoken bridge punched by horns in the perfect&#13;
redneck drug song.&#13;
We come upon Snuffy Smif's still in the&#13;
clearing bubbling merrily away and&#13;
"Mountain Fire" testifyin to those corn&#13;
squeezin's and downhome crazy. "In the&#13;
Dancing Hold" rocks on mercilessly while&#13;
this dupe denies being able to do any dance&#13;
ever invented and then pleads with his grease&#13;
baby to come back and dance with me. All&#13;
leading inexhorably to "Prince of Peace"&#13;
with weird doom parade of religious kooks&#13;
down main street dissolving to honky tonk sax&#13;
and Salvation Army bass drum and sure&#13;
enough, the Day of Judgement complete with&#13;
angelic chorus. This is scary.&#13;
Crowbar makes you laugh and shake at the&#13;
some time and music that can do that is&#13;
alright with me.&#13;
Mike Stevesand&#13;
.... Tickets for the National&#13;
•x Shakespeare Company's&#13;
production of "Twelfth Night''&#13;
&amp; are now on sale at the Student&#13;
g Activities Office, Room 217&#13;
S-Tallent Hall. The performance&#13;
|will he held on Tuesday, March&#13;
£28, at 8 p.m. in Bradford High&#13;
School Auditorium, Kenosha;&#13;
S Ticket sales are limited to the&#13;
£ Parkside &lt;j»mpus through&#13;
g Friday, March 3, affording&#13;
£ students and staff an op^&#13;
importunity for the best seats,&#13;
g After that date, general admission&#13;
tickets will be sold&#13;
! :•: thr o u gh the K e n o sha and&#13;
$ Racine outlets, Bidinger's&#13;
$ Music House and Cook-Gere&#13;
x Records, as well as at Parkside.&#13;
;XJ ^ "&#13;
Reserved seat prices are$1.50&#13;
and $1.00 for Parkside students&#13;
and staff, and $3.00 and $2.00 for&#13;
general admission.&#13;
The event is being sponsored&#13;
by the UW-Parkside LectureFine&#13;
Arts Committee.&#13;
Boss'KorrcE&#13;
Eggs...&#13;
Mon. thru Thurs.:&#13;
5 - 7 p.m. — All the beer&#13;
you can drink $1.00&#13;
7 - closing — Pitchers $1.00 \\&#13;
Sunday: 1-5 p.m. — All the beer you can drink $2;00&#13;
|Mon.: 8 - closing — "College Night" Food&#13;
Wed.: Beer and pretzel night&#13;
Thurs.: "Ladies' Night"&#13;
Vi price for women&#13;
Fri.: 4 - 7 p.m. —&#13;
["Double Bubble" Double mixed drink for the price of one&#13;
Sat.: 2 - 6 p.m. —All the beer you can drink $2.00&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
Mon. - Fri. — 4 - closing&#13;
Sat. and Sun. — Noon - closing&#13;
8231 SWidan Road&#13;
Kenosha, W/sconsm&#13;
Teleph one: 457-3311&#13;
RICHARD G. CAPELLX, prop. &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE February 28,1972&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
Election Laws Drafted&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA* SPLIT&#13;
IT' S S C R U M P T I O U S&#13;
80c&#13;
BIG TOP&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry -jf\&#13;
75c&#13;
N O R T H 3 3 11 SH E R I D A N RO A D S O U T H 75 0 0 SH E R I D A N R O A D&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
r l/ALEO'S&#13;
PIZZAII&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
I KM Dl I.IVI KV TO I'AKKSIDI VILI.AC.i-:&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30th Avenue Kenosha 657—5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
mi&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Easter Break&#13;
Trips To:&#13;
ROME Api&#13;
(2nd plane)-&#13;
ACAPULC0&#13;
Information Available at&#13;
Student Activities Office — Tallent Hall&#13;
In response to the very unprofessional&#13;
manner In which&#13;
elections have been done in the past,&#13;
Student Government has adopted an&#13;
entirely new set of procedures. The&#13;
senate had previously authorized the&#13;
Pre-Law Club to write up&#13;
procedures. The senate has also&#13;
authorized Tim Brotsko, President&#13;
of the Pre-Law Club, and other PreLaw&#13;
members to serve on the&#13;
Election Committee, Chairman&#13;
James Twist.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWSR SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racine&#13;
3309 Washington Ave&#13;
633-3595&#13;
Western&#13;
BULLS&#13;
VERY DEFINITELY&#13;
GEAR BOX®&#13;
Classic Western blue&#13;
jeans — rough 'n ready&#13;
for anything because&#13;
they're hefty bull weight&#13;
(13y2 oz.) cotton denim.&#13;
Flare bottoms, belt-loop&#13;
waist, scoop pockets in&#13;
front, patch pockets in&#13;
back. Si?es 28-38, S-M-L&#13;
lengths.&#13;
Richman&#13;
B R O T H E R S&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
BY LAWS&#13;
to&#13;
ARTICLE I, SECTION D, No. 3&#13;
ELECTION COMMITTEE&#13;
1. By a majority vote of its&#13;
members the Election Committee&#13;
will be empowered to enforce the&#13;
election laws.&#13;
2. It is unlawful for any candidate&#13;
to:&#13;
2.1 not have his name appear on&#13;
all campaign literature sponsoring&#13;
his candidacy.&#13;
2.2 willfully destroy, deface,&#13;
move, or remove from its place any&#13;
poster, sign, banner, or piece of&#13;
campaign literature of any other&#13;
candidate.&#13;
2.3 deceive or attempt to deceive&#13;
through verbal or written communication&#13;
any potential voter.&#13;
3. The Election Committee will&#13;
investigate and judge the merits of&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" '- 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI . RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING . . . W E BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
written complaints by candidates of&#13;
alleged campaign misconduct including,&#13;
but not restricting itself to&#13;
those mentioned in Regulation 2 (By&#13;
Law of Article I, Section D, 3). The&#13;
Election Committee may apply such&#13;
sanction in cases of demonstrated&#13;
misconduct as it sees fit, including&#13;
public censure, disqualification of&#13;
an offending candidate, or requiring&#13;
a new election.&#13;
BY LAWS&#13;
GENERAL&#13;
ELECTION PROCEDURES&#13;
1. The locations of the polls shall&#13;
be well-publicized and shall be&#13;
located to avoid congestion and&#13;
provide easy access to the voter.&#13;
2. A sample ballot shall be made&#13;
available for the voter to study at the&#13;
polling place.&#13;
3. Polls shall open no later than&#13;
8:30 A.M. on election days and shall&#13;
close not before 8:00 P.M.&#13;
4. Ballot boxes shall be sealed on&#13;
the day of the election and shall not&#13;
be opened until the ballots are&#13;
counted.&#13;
5. There shall be no campaigning&#13;
of any kind within 10 yards of the&#13;
polls, nor shall there be campaign&#13;
signs, posters, or other campaign&#13;
literature In evidence within 10&#13;
yards of the polling places on&#13;
election day.&#13;
6. Poll workers shall not make any&#13;
attempt to influence voters.&#13;
7. The ballot counting shall be&#13;
supervised by the Election Committee.&#13;
&#13;
8. Only those certified by the&#13;
Election Committee will be allowed&#13;
to enter the ballot counting room.&#13;
9. No partial results shall be&#13;
released by any person who has&#13;
access TO th e counting room while&#13;
the ballots are being counted.&#13;
10. All ballots must be counted&#13;
within 24 hours of the closing of the&#13;
polls on the last day of the election.&#13;
11. After the vote has been officially&#13;
tabulated and certified, the&#13;
Election Committee will publicly&#13;
release the results.&#13;
12. All ballots will be held at a&#13;
place specified by "the Election&#13;
Committee for 10 class days&#13;
following the election at which time&#13;
they will be destroyed unless an&#13;
appeal, recount, or re-election is&#13;
pending in which case they will be&#13;
held until the dispute is resolved.&#13;
13. A recount:&#13;
13.1 may be made upon a written&#13;
request by a candidate up to 3 class&#13;
days after the election with such a&#13;
recount to be authorized by the&#13;
Election Committee.&#13;
13.2 may be made by the&#13;
Election Committee up to one day&#13;
before the ballots are destroyed.&#13;
HAWAIIAN HOLIDAY&#13;
$28250&#13;
March 25 - April 1st&#13;
April 1st - April 8th&#13;
Braniff Airlines&#13;
Kuhio Hotel&#13;
All Taxes &amp; Tips&#13;
Transfers&#13;
Contact:&#13;
WSA&#13;
WSSC Store&#13;
720 State&#13;
Madison, Wis.&#13;
608-263-2444 &#13;
Sports Teams Prepare for NAIA&#13;
February 28,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
With the 1971-72 basketball&#13;
season safely tucked in the&#13;
record books, UW-Parkside's&#13;
other winter sports teams wind&#13;
up their dual meet seasons and&#13;
prepare for the NAIA national&#13;
championships.&#13;
Coach Loran Hein's fencers&#13;
will host Illinois-Chicago Circle,&#13;
Tri-State and Milwaukee Tech&#13;
at 10 a.m. Saturday at Bullen&#13;
Jr. High School in Kenosha in&#13;
their last home event of the year&#13;
while Dave Donaldson's&#13;
gymnasts take on the&#13;
University of Chicago Friday&#13;
night in the Windy City.&#13;
Steve Stephens' basketballers&#13;
finished the year last week by&#13;
upsetting Dominican at the&#13;
Chambliss&#13;
Tops Statistic s&#13;
Freshman Chuck Chambliss&#13;
topped the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside final&#13;
basketball statistics released&#13;
today.&#13;
The forward from Racine&#13;
Park high school led the&#13;
Rangers in total points, with&#13;
365; in scoring with a 17.4&#13;
average; in rebounding with a&#13;
7.6 average; in free throw&#13;
percentage with a 73.3 per cent&#13;
mark; and in the season's high&#13;
game, with a 30 point performance&#13;
against, Dominican&#13;
Monday.&#13;
It was in that game, the last in&#13;
a 4-18 s eason for the Rangers,&#13;
that Chambliss excelled and led&#13;
Parkside to an upset win over&#13;
the highly-regarded Lakers on&#13;
the Dominican court.&#13;
He hit on 10 shots from the&#13;
floor and 10 of 13 from the foul&#13;
stripe for his 30 big ones and&#13;
added 17 rebounds for the best&#13;
night this year by a Ranger in&#13;
that department.&#13;
Tom Heller, Kenosha freshman&#13;
who prepped at St. Joseph&#13;
high, had the Rangers' highest&#13;
percentage from the floor at&#13;
52.4 per cent.&#13;
Other Rangers who finished&#13;
in double scoring figures for the&#13;
year included Greendal freshman&#13;
Tom Joyce with a 14.1&#13;
average for 22 games;&#13;
Burlington sophomore Bob&#13;
Popp, with a 12.2 average for 11&#13;
games; and Heller, with a 11.5&#13;
ppg mark.&#13;
Lakers' court by an 81-71 score&#13;
as Chuck Chambliss pumped in&#13;
30 points for the season's high&#13;
game by a Ranger. The&#13;
Rangers ended with a 4-18 mark&#13;
hut improvement was&#13;
noticeable throughout the&#13;
second half of the season and&#13;
there were no seniors on the&#13;
squad.&#13;
The wrestling team, coached&#13;
hy Jim Koch, closed out its dual&#13;
season Friday night against&#13;
Grand Valley State and Hillsdale&#13;
(Mich.) College and will&#13;
now prime for the NAIA&#13;
national meet at Klamath Falls&#13;
Ore., March 9-11. The track&#13;
squad, headed by Bob Lawson,&#13;
will compete in the Illinois Open&#13;
at Champaign Saturday alter&#13;
vying at the LaCrosse Invitational.&#13;
John Tank has been&#13;
Parkside's top fencer this year&#13;
and just recently won the&#13;
Wisconsin Closed Foil Tournament&#13;
in Milwaukee,&#13;
defeating 25 other fencers from&#13;
throughout the state.&#13;
Three Parkside gymnasts&#13;
have qualified for the lateMarch&#13;
NAIA nationals at&#13;
Eastern Illinois University.&#13;
Warren McGillivray, a senior&#13;
from Burbank, Cal., and&#13;
Kenosha freshman Kevin&#13;
O'Neil and Kerry Pfeifer have&#13;
all qualified for the national&#13;
meet.&#13;
rugby&#13;
WANT TO PLAY ?&#13;
UW-Parkside needs rugby players!&#13;
A schedule has been set up and all who are interested are&#13;
welcome to join.&#13;
The schedule:&#13;
April 15 — St. Ambrose at Davenport, Iowa&#13;
April 22 - AMOCO at Parkside&#13;
April 28 — Lincoln Park at Chicago&#13;
April 29 — Marquette at Parkside&#13;
May 6 — Minnesota at Parkside&#13;
May 7 — Northern Illinois at DeKalb.&#13;
Each team is represented by 15 men with one additional&#13;
man (reserve) to act as line judge. Rules specify that there&#13;
are no substitutions during the game except because of injury&#13;
during the first five minutes of play. The time for each&#13;
match varies but is usually 30-40 minutes for each half of the&#13;
game (there is a five minute breathing space for half-time&#13;
entertainment).&#13;
There are only two set plays in rugby: a line-out occurs&#13;
when the ball is kicked, carried or thrown out of bounds. At&#13;
this time the opposing team throws the ball over the middle&#13;
of a one-yard alley formed by opposing forwards standing&#13;
five yards from the sideline. The forwards jump for&#13;
possession of the ball and play progresses from there.&#13;
A set scrum is awarded to one team for a minor infraction&#13;
of the rules by the other. To form the scrum the first&#13;
three men of the scrum lock arms and meet the opposing&#13;
team with their shoulders. The remaining five forwards bind&#13;
on them, giving support and helping push. Hands may not&#13;
touch the ball until it leaves the scrum.&#13;
Thtre points — a try — are awarded for placing the ball&#13;
on the ground over the opponent's goal. Two points — a&#13;
conversion — are extra points added after a try. A drop kick&#13;
from anywhere on the field that splits the uprights is worth&#13;
three points. And three points again are awarded for a drop&#13;
kick or place kick taken from the point of a n infraction; this&#13;
is a penalty kick.&#13;
And that, in short, is rugby. It's rough, but it's also fun.&#13;
An ambitious schedule awaits all who might want to play.&#13;
Contact Coach Vic Godfrey at Athletics (553-2310) for more&#13;
information and to sign up for the squad.&#13;
Legal ABORTION&#13;
in Midwest&#13;
you. hay t d&#13;
Choice&#13;
fopl2-775-268S&#13;
(f 312-774-^?!)&#13;
y a norv-profft service&#13;
J&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Va Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
10W - 20 W - 30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oif Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All It ems Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
196/ Opel Rally 4 speed, 40,000 miles,&#13;
$850. Call 654-5032 ask for Barb or&#13;
Doug.&#13;
FOR SALE — 69 Plymouth Wagon&#13;
Custom Suburban. 1 owner. V-8, 318&#13;
engine, air, power brakes and&#13;
steering, 57,000 miles. Excellent&#13;
condition. Call 658-1285.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE — Marimba, 2Vi oct.&#13;
$100; Schwinn bicycle. 1 speed,&#13;
coaster brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N. Oakland, Milwaukee,,&#13;
Wis.&#13;
Garrard SLX-2 "Module" series&#13;
turntalbe; console stereo. Call Ray&#13;
654-8878.&#13;
FOR SALE — Refrigerator. Works&#13;
like a refrigerator should. $20. Ph.&#13;
Doug, 654-0697.&#13;
FOR SALE — Mosrite Bass Guitar.&#13;
Double pickup. Double cutaway,&#13;
hollow body. With plush-lined&#13;
hardshell case. Was $450 new. Excellent&#13;
condition. $100. Call Larry,&#13;
552-8347 or come to P-Village, apt 109&#13;
(The Swamp).&#13;
County Lot — 1.9 acres, 41 Ave. 8. 14&#13;
St. (approx.) Call 654-6317 after 5:00.&#13;
FOR SALE — Roth violin with case.&#13;
Very good condition. $260.00 new,&#13;
$125.00 or best offer. Electronic&#13;
adaptor also available. Phone 654-&#13;
1731.&#13;
DRUMS FOR SALE — Ludwick&#13;
complete set, excellent condition.&#13;
Best offer over $125. Ph 633-5666&#13;
after 4:00. Jerry or Bob.&#13;
STEREO TAPE RECORDER —&#13;
Sony 252 D One year old. List $135.00,&#13;
sell for $70.00. Ph. Jerry 652-2538 or&#13;
553 2496.&#13;
FOR RENT— 1 furnished bedroom&#13;
with kitchen - off street parking.&#13;
$50.00 per month including utilities.&#13;
552-8172. 5306 South Lake Shore Rd.&#13;
(just off Sheridan Road), Racine.&#13;
3 Room Apt. North side Keno.&#13;
Privacy assured. Situated well for&#13;
all campuses. Call 552-8970.&#13;
MODEL NEEDED for life drawing&#13;
class. Contact David Zaig, Room&#13;
217, Greenquist Hall - Art Dept.&#13;
BABY-SITTER NEEDED 4 2 boys,&#13;
ages 20 months and 10 months.&#13;
About 6 hours a day, 2 weekdays.&#13;
Days and time flexible. My home -&#13;
North side of Kenosha. Call 654-4593&#13;
afternoons or evenings.&#13;
WANTED — '63, 64 or 65&#13;
Volkswagen. Good running condition&#13;
• reasonable. Call 654-1684 or 658-&#13;
3998.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED — People who would like&#13;
to help other people. Free training.&#13;
Contact Joe Baker, director Racine&#13;
Hotline, 637-1112. Mon.-Wed.-Fri.&#13;
1:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.&#13;
Photographer wanted — Should be&#13;
available for June 10th wedding,&#13;
reasonable rates. Call 639-8863,&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Female Bartender Wanted — one&#13;
night a week. The College Inn. Ph.&#13;
552-8465.&#13;
Thank you, everybody, for coming&#13;
Feb. 19 to hear us play for you. We&#13;
enjoy sincerely those all that came.&#13;
God's Starboys from Hell&#13;
MOM — come home now! Daddy,&#13;
Jimmy, Johnny, Ethyl, Deloris,&#13;
Petie, Alice, Sammy, Tommy, the&#13;
three dogs and four cats miss you.&#13;
Why did you leave? Come home soon&#13;
we need you. Teddy.&#13;
Would the person who stole the&#13;
radiator out of my brand new&#13;
Volkswagen please return it? No&#13;
questions asked! Contact Chalres&#13;
Leftturn.&#13;
To whom it may concern — We want&#13;
our 3 dish pans back now. &#13;
</text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 8, February 28, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1972-02-28</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63677">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63678">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63679">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63680">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63681">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63682">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="239">
        <name>gloria steinem</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="235">
        <name>jesus christ superstar</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="234">
        <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="238">
        <name>parkside women's caucus</name>
      </tag>
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      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63687">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 9</text>
            </elementText>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Public Hearing: Opposition to Annexation</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside ilr&#13;
Number 9 March 6,1972&#13;
Mayor Burkee explained proposed annexation at publie meeting held in Greenquist.&#13;
public hearing&#13;
Opposition to A nnexation&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Room 103 Greenquist Hall&#13;
was the scene last Tuesday&#13;
night of a public meeting&#13;
concerning the latest move to&#13;
annex the Parkside campus and&#13;
a strip of land connecting the&#13;
campus, with the city of&#13;
Kenosha. An hour and a half of&#13;
speeches preceded an almost&#13;
equally long question and answer&#13;
period. Mayor Wallace&#13;
Burkee, City Planner John&#13;
Kolstad and Assistant City&#13;
Planner Tom Pitts presented&#13;
the city's argument for annexation,&#13;
while eight speakers&#13;
including County Supervisors&#13;
Charles Huck and Gilbert&#13;
Ebner, area property owners, a&#13;
Parkside Village resident and&#13;
Dean Loumos, President of&#13;
SGA, spoke against it.&#13;
The hearing which began at&#13;
7:30, was sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association and was moderated&#13;
by Jim Twist, a student senator.&#13;
The three city officials&#13;
presented their arguments first,&#13;
all of which ran over the seven&#13;
minute time limit allotted to&#13;
speeches; later they would be&#13;
asked many pointed questions.&#13;
The three city officials referred&#13;
often to a'series of charts and&#13;
maps they had taped to a blackboard&#13;
earlier in the evening,&#13;
liberally injecting statistics into&#13;
their presentations. The city&#13;
men had obviously been&#13;
through this kind of thing&#13;
before; they spoke in even&#13;
tones, in marked contrast to the&#13;
speakers who would follow&#13;
them, explaining their case&#13;
point by point. Unlike the&#13;
speakers who followed them&#13;
with arguments against the&#13;
proposed annexation, the city&#13;
officials received no reaction&#13;
from the strongly partisan&#13;
audience, except for an occasional&#13;
muffled groan, while&#13;
the other speakers were greeted&#13;
and interrupted by enthusiastic&#13;
applause.&#13;
Mayor Burkee, who spoke&#13;
first, explained that the city&#13;
paid for the 15 inch sewer which&#13;
presently serves Parkside, as&#13;
well as water service. He indicated&#13;
that the existing sewer&#13;
line would be "adequate until&#13;
1973 with no new building, no&#13;
new additions." He explained to&#13;
the audience that after 1973 "the&#13;
present sewer would overflow:&#13;
You just can't put five pounds in&#13;
a three pound bag". He informed&#13;
the 50 to 60 people in the&#13;
audience that three developers&#13;
already have plans for building&#13;
1,000 new apartments in the&#13;
area. "I didn't ask for annexation,&#13;
developers like USGI&#13;
did."&#13;
The modishly dressed Pitts&#13;
followed the mayor's speech&#13;
with an explanation of the&#13;
procedure required of a direct&#13;
annexation, which is the type&#13;
now proposed. Direct annexation,&#13;
he explained, does not&#13;
require a referendum, it needs&#13;
the signatures of 50 p er cent of&#13;
the residents who live in the&#13;
area, and the signatures of 50&#13;
per cent of the property owners&#13;
or the signatures of owners&#13;
whose land is valued at 50 per&#13;
cent of t he assessed value of the&#13;
total area. He told the audience&#13;
that in order to annex Parkside,&#13;
"a corridor of land is necessary&#13;
in order to make the campus&#13;
contiguous to the city." Later&#13;
the opposition would contest his&#13;
statement, they would ask why&#13;
just a corrodor, why not an&#13;
orderly annexation of the entire&#13;
area between Parkside and the&#13;
city.&#13;
Kolstad ended the city's&#13;
presentation stating that the&#13;
"city is more developed and is&#13;
better able to provide all types&#13;
of municipal services to the&#13;
area . . . available upon annexation."&#13;
The City Planner&#13;
pointed out to the audience,&#13;
much of which was composed of&#13;
area farmers, that "farmed&#13;
agricultural land does not pay&#13;
nearly as much as apartments&#13;
would on the same property."&#13;
He expressed the belief that&#13;
annexation is necessary for the&#13;
further growth of the University.&#13;
&#13;
County Supervisor Charles&#13;
Huck spoke next, and said the&#13;
proposed "annexation would&#13;
cut Somers almost in two". He&#13;
echoed the sentiments of many&#13;
in the audience, concerning the&#13;
way in which the annexation is&#13;
drawn up; "It's not orderly."&#13;
He stated that if the "taxes go&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
UWP in U.N. Summer Seminar&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will participate in the&#13;
seventh annual Wisconsin&#13;
Universities United Nations&#13;
Summer Seminar June 19 - Aug.&#13;
12 in New York City.&#13;
The Summer Seminar is an&#13;
eight-week program of intensive&#13;
study of the U.N. at its&#13;
headquarters administered by&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and additionally&#13;
sponsored by ten&#13;
other UW campuses including&#13;
Parkside, the Johnson Foundation&#13;
of Racine, the Institute&#13;
for International Order in New&#13;
York City and the Cudahy Fund&#13;
of Milwaukee.&#13;
The participating universities&#13;
will send a total of 20 juniors&#13;
and seniors to the seminar,&#13;
including one or two from&#13;
Parkside. The representatives&#13;
will be selected from applicants&#13;
later this Spring by the political&#13;
science faculty.&#13;
Students will take six credits&#13;
of political science courses in&#13;
New York taught by UW system&#13;
faculty, supplemented by&#13;
lectures from members of the&#13;
U.N. Secretariat and national&#13;
delegations. Students also will&#13;
attend meetings of the U.N. and&#13;
related agencies.&#13;
Sponsors say they have&#13;
designed the program so that&#13;
the cost to participating&#13;
students is no more than six&#13;
credits and room and board&#13;
would be during the summer at&#13;
UWM, an estimated $520. To&#13;
make this possible, the Seminar&#13;
covers the round-trip air fare&#13;
between Milwaukee and New&#13;
York.&#13;
UW-P students interested in&#13;
applying for the program&#13;
should contact John Harbeson&#13;
of the political science faculty&#13;
or Dean Eugene Norwood by&#13;
Mar. 27. Applicants must be&#13;
Wisconsin residents, be juniors&#13;
or seniors by this summer, have&#13;
had a "substantial" number of&#13;
social science courses, including&#13;
a basic course in&#13;
political science, and have a&#13;
grade point average of at least&#13;
2.50.&#13;
SGA to Co-Sponsor&#13;
Charity Dance&#13;
by Larry Jones of the Newscope staff&#13;
Parkside's Student Government Association (PSGA) has&#13;
agreed to co-sponsor a charity dance with the other four schools in&#13;
the area. Larry Beck, of t he Kenosha Technical Institute, made the&#13;
request for participation at the March 2 meeting of PSGA.&#13;
Beck stated that the basic purpose of the event is to make a&#13;
start at bringing the five schools together — in this case socially,&#13;
and hopefully many other ways in the future. The dance will also&#13;
raise money for a local charity, still to be decided upon.&#13;
According to Beck, the event was held last year with only&#13;
Parkside not participating. The request was turned down by the&#13;
Board of Regents because of technicalities in financing. He said&#13;
they hoped to avoid the problem this year by going directly to the&#13;
student government.&#13;
Last year, the other four schools, KTI, RTI, Dominican and&#13;
Carthage, sponsored the event at Bristol Oaks and drew a crowd of&#13;
some 300 people on a night which included a bad sleet storm. At&#13;
that, they were able to give $250 to Southern Colony.&#13;
The event this year is again planned for Bristol Oaks, with the&#13;
rental cost down from $500 to $200. The hope is that three bands will&#13;
donate their services, which would only leave the rental and police&#13;
protection to be paid for. Should any loss occur, one fifth of it would&#13;
be underwritten by PSGA, according to Beck. No date has yet been&#13;
set for the event.&#13;
In other business at Thursday's meetipg, PSGA:&#13;
— accepted the resignation of Dave Kerner because a full time&#13;
job kept him from devoting enough time to government;&#13;
— tabled a request for funds by the Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
until a complete report on finances is made and other student&#13;
groups submit budgets;&#13;
— ag reed to send a representative to the governor's Student&#13;
Advisory Committee on financial aids, which meets monthly in&#13;
Madison; and&#13;
— established a committee to study the feasibility of a symposium&#13;
which would "offer students educational opportunities&#13;
other than traditional classroom chores."&#13;
Elections will be held Tuesday, March 7, and Wednesday,&#13;
March 8. According to Elections Committee Chairman Jim Twist,&#13;
only two nominating petitions have been filed for four vacant&#13;
positions. Both are for the position of senator, thus leaving the&#13;
positions of recording and corresponding secretaries vacant.&#13;
SGA ELECTIONS&#13;
Two students nave inea&#13;
nomination petitions for four&#13;
vacant positions in the.SGA's&#13;
spring election Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 7 and 9.&#13;
Mark Harris and Tom Haack&#13;
will be running for two senate&#13;
positions vacated by Dave&#13;
Kerner and Jim DeBerge.&#13;
No nominating petitions were&#13;
filed for the offices of recording&#13;
secretary and corresponding&#13;
secretary. Both of these&#13;
positions are vacant due to the&#13;
resignations of Jeanette Dremel&#13;
and Don Koser.&#13;
Write-in candidates will be&#13;
accepted though prospective&#13;
write-ins must abide by the&#13;
elections rules passed by the&#13;
Senate on February 21 and&#13;
published in NEWSCOPE on&#13;
February 28. Copies of the laws&#13;
governing elections are&#13;
available on request from the&#13;
SGA ovvice, Hwy. A and Wood&#13;
Road (553-2493 o r 553-2244).&#13;
Polling places will be located&#13;
in the main lobby of the Racine&#13;
campus, the main entrance to&#13;
the Kenosha campus, and in the&#13;
Greenquist concourse. Polls&#13;
will be open from 8:30 a.m. to&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Violations of the election laws&#13;
or other irregularities should be&#13;
reported to James Twist,&#13;
Chairman of the Election&#13;
Committee, or to committee&#13;
members John Regnery, Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Peter Gallo, Timothy&#13;
Prostko or Mike Baxter.&#13;
STAFF&#13;
ELECTIONS&#13;
Thur. Noon&#13;
at the office&#13;
Thomas E. Haack&#13;
Prospective Senator&#13;
The auspices that I run under&#13;
are that I will not let Parkside&#13;
become another Chicago with a&#13;
"machine" that runs it. I&#13;
believe strongly in student&#13;
involvement in all policies that&#13;
will affect the students, and also&#13;
believe in what the present&#13;
PSGA President and VicePresident&#13;
are trying to do for&#13;
our school.&#13;
CANDIDATE: Mark R.&#13;
Harris&#13;
OFFICE: Student Senator&#13;
The primary purpose of&#13;
Student Government, as I see it,&#13;
is to provide responsible and&#13;
effective representation and&#13;
leadership for the Parkside&#13;
student body. As a voter, you&#13;
should realize that Student&#13;
Government is currently very&#13;
limited in what it can do in&#13;
many areas; thus, in order to be&#13;
effective, I believe that the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association must develop a&#13;
close working relationship with&#13;
both faculty and administration.&#13;
This does not&#13;
imply student acquiescence in&#13;
all the wishes of the administration&#13;
or faculty, but&#13;
rather, it implies responsible&#13;
and constructive criticism,&#13;
which should win the respect of&#13;
faculty members and ad-&#13;
(Continued on Page 6) &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE March G, 1972&#13;
PU* ** fm Art Kfl Wlim KA AM Wl AA KN KN ** Krt IUI K*A* ** Wl I&#13;
RUBYS&#13;
"Ruby's has&#13;
the best corned&#13;
beef sandwich&#13;
in town"&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
A jAucA/, t&gt; (yy&#13;
(X^UJXJ thb lyOjVv (JjyMb&#13;
5535-6 Ave. Kenosha&#13;
'I'I'I'I'I'IIIIIIIIIII'T'Til 1T1T1T1T1T1TIT 1T1T1T»TiTiTil&#13;
^OUU/&#13;
waaXJI, tyutAjXi,&#13;
&lt;£r*Q(JjUA+tJi&#13;
Qit+taljUUJ&#13;
LETTERS TO&#13;
THE EDITOR&#13;
skiers have gas&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
The third annual ski trek' to&#13;
Whitecap Mountain proved to&#13;
be a gas. Six inches of new snow&#13;
on Friday night led to Saturday&#13;
morning's rape of the virgin&#13;
powder by P-Side skiers.&#13;
Having been high on top of&#13;
Whitecap Mountain, The&#13;
Ragtime Rangers et. al. took it&#13;
upon themselves to show the&#13;
northern locals they had no&#13;
claim to supremacy over the&#13;
area. The sparkling white lady&#13;
succumbed graciously to the&#13;
thirty eight P-Side skiers who&#13;
carressed her every flake.&#13;
Saturday night's party&#13;
contributed to Sunday morn's&#13;
overdose of coffee and sun&#13;
glasses, yet the mysterious&#13;
mistress of the mountain&#13;
beckoned to the P-Side skiers&#13;
who went back for seconds.&#13;
As the shadows lengthened,&#13;
weary skiers boarded their bus&#13;
for K-Town with smiles on their&#13;
faces, and sank softly into their&#13;
seats to await the next Whitecap&#13;
trip on March 17, 18 and 19.&#13;
Ragtime Rangers&#13;
tegim*&#13;
Mel Goode, nationally known news commentator for the&#13;
American Broadcasting Company, spoke to a group of 50&#13;
people Februarjy28 in the Badger room of the Racine campus.&#13;
Emphasizing the need for understanding among all&#13;
people Goode said, "In five years with the right kind of&#13;
leadership Racine could be the Ail-American city but this&#13;
couldn't happen if there is no equality." He went on to say&#13;
that inter-communication is the only way to solve the&#13;
problems of the cities.&#13;
"Materially we are the greatest country in the world. . .&#13;
but we haven't been able to get along with each other,"&#13;
Goode said.&#13;
Goode was brought to Parkside through the co-operation&#13;
of the Black Student Union and the Racine Commission on&#13;
Human Relations.&#13;
rings for the blind Shucord to Read Poems&#13;
To the Editor,.&#13;
We are a small group of&#13;
students with a big concern&#13;
about handicapped, underprivileged&#13;
and mentally&#13;
retarded people. We are looking&#13;
for ways to show our care,&#13;
understanding and love. We&#13;
have taken one small step.&#13;
Through St. Mary's on the Hill&#13;
Convent, it is possible to obtain&#13;
a seeing eye dog for the blind in&#13;
exchange for twelve pounds of&#13;
rings from pot-top cans.&#13;
Starting Monday there will be&#13;
.containers in the lounge areas&#13;
on campus. Concerned Students&#13;
Organization is asking you to&#13;
show your concern by&#13;
depositing the rings from your&#13;
pot-top cans in these containers.&#13;
Your cooperation is greatly&#13;
appreciated. If you would like to&#13;
become more involved, or find&#13;
out more about us, contact Dave&#13;
Bahr, 551-7653, or Carol&#13;
Willetts, 633-2698.&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
PARKSIDE ZPG MEETING&#13;
Parkside ZOG will hold a meeting on&#13;
Thursday, March 9, at 3:00 in Room&#13;
116-B on the Kenosha Campus. All&#13;
interested individuals are invited to&#13;
attend. For more information, call&#13;
Bob Lien (President) at 554-9159&#13;
(after 5:00) or Bob Moore (Advisor)&#13;
at Ext. 34-K (before 5:00).&#13;
THURSDAY -STAURDAY&#13;
NAIA Wrestling Championships at&#13;
Klamath Falls, Ore.&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
Track: North Central Relays at&#13;
Naperville, III.&#13;
Fencing: Great Lakes Meet at&#13;
Cleveland, Ohio&#13;
Alan Shucard, an assistant&#13;
professor of English at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
and author of a book of&#13;
poems titled "The Gorgon&#13;
Bag", will present a poetry&#13;
reading at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
March 12, at Wustum Museum,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Shucard, who "started&#13;
writing poetry when I was old&#13;
enough to wonder who I was and&#13;
what all those people were&#13;
doing around me," also has&#13;
published poems and short&#13;
stories in a number of literary&#13;
magazines in the U.S. and&#13;
Canada. He has given previous&#13;
readings in this area at the&#13;
Johnson Foundation's International&#13;
Writers Conference&#13;
at Wingspread, the Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum and the Kenosha&#13;
Public Museum.&#13;
Brooklyn-born, Shucard did&#13;
graduate work at the University&#13;
of St. Andrew, Scotland, and the&#13;
University of Connecticut and&#13;
received his Ph. D. degree from&#13;
the University of Arizona. He&#13;
taught at the University of&#13;
British Columbia before joining&#13;
the Parkside faculty in 1970.&#13;
Legion Blood D rive&#13;
The American Legion&#13;
Somer's post has notified UWParkside&#13;
that it will sponsor a&#13;
blood drive on Friday, April 7,&#13;
from noon until eight at night.&#13;
Blood donations will be used for&#13;
veterans at Woods Veteran's&#13;
Hospital. They are going to be&#13;
collected at the Somer's Post.&#13;
A Milwaukee County blood&#13;
mobile is going to collect the&#13;
blood for Woods Hospital. To be&#13;
eligible to give blood the donors&#13;
are asmed to be between the&#13;
ages of 16 and 65. They must fill&#13;
out a form and these are&#13;
available at the Student Activities&#13;
Office or at the A. L.&#13;
Post on Friday, April 7.&#13;
Every time a veteran at the&#13;
hospital receives blood, the&#13;
county he is from gets the bill.&#13;
Kenosha County currently owes&#13;
for 160 p ints of blood. Though&#13;
the Somer's Post is organizing&#13;
the drive, the entire county of&#13;
Kenosha is affected. They have&#13;
notified the other A. L. Posts,&#13;
the Reserves, and Carthage,&#13;
besides UW-P.&#13;
Donors should follow Kenosha&#13;
County Hwy. E west, traveling&#13;
one-half mile beyond the train&#13;
tracks, until they come to an old&#13;
fire house. There will be signs at&#13;
the front of the building.&#13;
PIZZAi&#13;
Custom made for&#13;
"i" DKLIVI RY TO PARKSim v'h.i AGK&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE DCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue Kenosha 651-5191&#13;
Open 6 days o week from 4 p.m., c/osed Mondays&#13;
Robin David, Kathy Rasch, Pat&#13;
McDermid, Marc Eisen, Jean Frahm,&#13;
Larry Jones, Jim Koloen, Helmut&#13;
Ferber, John Koloen, Rich Lipke,&#13;
Paul Lomartire, Bob Mainland,&#13;
Kevin McKay, Fred Noer, Jr., Brian&#13;
Ross, Wolfgang Salewski, Andy Schmelling,&#13;
Barb Scott, Cleta&#13;
Skovronski, Jerry Socha, Bill&#13;
Sorensen, Mike Stevesand, Debbie&#13;
Venskus, Mike Kite, Sifton Winnow.&#13;
PHONES:,&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#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 source of&#13;
revenue for the operation Of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout Ihe&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road. &#13;
March 6, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
Eric J. Olson, U.W.P. student running for Kenosha School Board.&#13;
UWP Student Candidate for School Board&#13;
hv by JJim k'aIaoh 1 im Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
On April 4th, a Parkside&#13;
student will spend a restless day&#13;
wondering if he has won himself&#13;
a new job. Junior English major&#13;
Eric J. Olson announced his&#13;
candidacy for one of two vacant&#13;
seats on the Kenosha school&#13;
board, one week before the&#13;
filing deadline.&#13;
Olson took wome time out of&#13;
his low-keyed campaign to&#13;
discuss his candidacy with&#13;
Newscope. The tall, dark haired&#13;
marine veteran explained why&#13;
he decided to run for public&#13;
office: "The school board needs&#13;
an alternative voice, a different&#13;
viewpoint, one which isn't&#13;
spoken from the position of a&#13;
middleaged, upper middle&#13;
income professional." The&#13;
amiable P-sider told Newscope&#13;
that if elected he would be "the&#13;
youngest member ever to sit on&#13;
the school board. Right now,"&#13;
he continued, "the average age&#13;
of the present board members is&#13;
between 40 and 50, it needs&#13;
younger members."&#13;
The Kenosha native, who is&#13;
making his first bid at elected&#13;
office, explained that the board&#13;
can no longer continue&#13;
"tackling new problems with&#13;
the same old methods. I've&#13;
spoken to a great many people&#13;
since announcing my candidacy,&#13;
and I've received many&#13;
favorable comments from older&#13;
as well as younger voters as to&#13;
the need for a young board&#13;
member. This is all new to me,&#13;
but what really surprised me&#13;
was the amount of interest, you&#13;
could say fervent interest&#13;
people, particularly older&#13;
people have in the school board.&#13;
I think one of the reasons for&#13;
this interest lies in the fact that&#13;
the board has the biggest&#13;
budget in the city government.&#13;
Another reason, of course, is the&#13;
fact that many of these citizens&#13;
have children attending schoool&#13;
in the Kenosha Unified school&#13;
district."&#13;
Olson explained some of the&#13;
goals he wants to meet if he is&#13;
elected: "I'd like to transfer the&#13;
cost of education from local&#13;
property taxes to federal and&#13;
state aids. The elderly particularly&#13;
can no longer afford&#13;
the high property taxes which&#13;
are caused by the rising cost of&#13;
education. I agree with Lindsay&#13;
when he says that education&#13;
must be funded with federal&#13;
monies. We must take the&#13;
burden off the property owners'&#13;
backs, it's gotten so many&#13;
people can no longer afford to&#13;
live."&#13;
When asked about any&#13;
specific proposals he has in&#13;
mind in structuring local&#13;
education he responded that "at&#13;
least 20 per cent of the high&#13;
school student body in this city&#13;
isn't interested in what they're&#13;
learning." Olson explained that&#13;
"these students don't care&#13;
about college prep courses, and&#13;
they find the traditional high&#13;
school curriculum boring.&#13;
These students are interested in&#13;
technical skills, things like&#13;
automotive mechanics." Olson&#13;
said he would like to institute a&#13;
liaison between local industry&#13;
and business with the schools, in&#13;
order to broaden the op&#13;
portunities for students to learn&#13;
technical skills. "For instance I&#13;
can't see why AMC can't help&#13;
organize a course at their plant,&#13;
and take in students who are&#13;
interested in automotive&#13;
mechanics. What it comes down&#13;
to is simply changing your&#13;
approach to education; why&#13;
centralize it all in one&#13;
building?"&#13;
Olson explained that he'd&#13;
been following a recent innovation&#13;
in the Cleveland area&#13;
"which has a school of perhaps&#13;
300 'difficult' students spread&#13;
out over an area of six city&#13;
blocks. These students learn not&#13;
in the traditional classroom&#13;
setting, but in places like the&#13;
backs of stores and neighborhood&#13;
shops. The results of&#13;
this experiment lyive been&#13;
favorable, the students seem to&#13;
be learning."&#13;
The 23 years old candidate&#13;
explained that it was obviously&#13;
correct to emphasize the basic&#13;
courses, such as math and&#13;
English, but* not to the&#13;
detriment of the individual;&#13;
schools should tailor classes to&#13;
the student rather than the&#13;
student to the classes.&#13;
The seat Eric Olson is running&#13;
for has a tenure of three years,&#13;
one incumbent and ten other&#13;
candidates are competing with&#13;
him for the two vacant&#13;
positions. Olson said he would&#13;
like to see UW-P students and&#13;
other new voters come to the&#13;
polls "not only to vote for&#13;
President, but also vote for the&#13;
local offices. People have to get&#13;
involved on the grassroots level&#13;
before they can really tackle the&#13;
Live Music at Whiteskellar&#13;
On Thursday, March y,&#13;
Whiteskellar — Parkside's&#13;
coffeehouse — will again be&#13;
open for business. Starting at&#13;
noon, the small white cavern in&#13;
the north basement of&#13;
Greenquist Hall will be hosting&#13;
the sounds of Tonny Bressette&#13;
and Chris (Jumbo( Inloes.&#13;
Admission is free and open to all&#13;
students.&#13;
It is unique in that Chris is a&#13;
Parkside student, being the first&#13;
to ever be featured at the&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
Whiteskellar. The duo describes&#13;
themselves as doing a sort of&#13;
country-folk-soft rock type.&#13;
Both Tony and Jumbo had been&#13;
playing in "hard rock" bands&#13;
but have grown tired of that&#13;
type of music. They've not only&#13;
developed a change in the type&#13;
of music that they play, but feel&#13;
their present style is much&#13;
better.&#13;
Asked about their performance&#13;
at the Whiteskellar,&#13;
Jumbo said, "We perform in a&#13;
tight vocal mannter, both&#13;
playing acoustical guitars.&#13;
During the performance, one of&#13;
us will occasionally switch to&#13;
bass."&#13;
The two have played in many&#13;
parts of the country and backed&#13;
up such groups as: Byrds,&#13;
Siegall-Schwall, New Colony Six&#13;
and Crow.&#13;
They will be playing at the&#13;
Whiteskeller on Thursday,&#13;
March 9, beginning at noon.&#13;
Admission is free.&#13;
FLO'S&#13;
Home Cooking&#13;
HWY 31&amp;County Trunk E&#13;
6AM-6PM Specials Daily&#13;
national offices."&#13;
The candidate explained that&#13;
his campaign will be low-keyed&#13;
and underfinanced: "I want to&#13;
meet people individually, I want&#13;
to go to PTA meetings,&#13;
smokers, whatever, and explain&#13;
who I am and what I'd like to&#13;
do."&#13;
When asked of his&#13;
qualifications for the office, the&#13;
candidate responded that few&#13;
people, if any, are truly&#13;
qualified to serve on the board&#13;
of education. "I have some&#13;
definite ideas, though," he&#13;
continued, "one includes instituting&#13;
a rule whereby every&#13;
member of the board would be&#13;
required to spend a certain&#13;
amount of time in the schools&#13;
themselves, in order to talk and&#13;
listen to students, as well as&#13;
faculty and administrators."&#13;
He indicated that the board&#13;
must be receptive to everyone,&#13;
including students.&#13;
Asked if he had any plans for&#13;
a rally, Olson said that tentatively&#13;
a beer and brat fest at&#13;
Capies was scheduled for&#13;
Sunday afternoon, March 19. He&#13;
explained that the purpose of&#13;
such a get-together would be to&#13;
discuss the upcoming election,&#13;
where he could discuss his&#13;
candidacy in an informal setting.&#13;
&#13;
Newscope asked Olson one&#13;
final question: What are your&#13;
chances at being elected?&#13;
"Right now I think they're very&#13;
good. I've spoken to a lot of&#13;
people, young and old, and their&#13;
reaction has been very positive&#13;
and encouraging."&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at numerous locations&#13;
throughout the nation including&#13;
National Parks, Resort&#13;
Areas, and Private Camps. For&#13;
free information send self-addressed,&#13;
STAMPED envelope to&#13;
Opportunity Research, Dept.&#13;
SJ0, Century Bldg., Poison, MT&#13;
59860. APPLICANTS MUST&#13;
APP LY EARLY . . .&#13;
GO&#13;
KNIT!&#13;
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GEAR BOX"&#13;
What a way to go! Knit&#13;
sport coats score high on&#13;
the campus scene! Gear&#13;
Box" model, priced right,&#13;
has fancy flaps and belted&#13;
back. 100% acrylic&#13;
bonded to nylon in denim&#13;
blue, tan, navy and red&#13;
plus blue and red geometric&#13;
pattern. Sizes 35-&#13;
44R, 36-44L. 39^75&#13;
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B R O T H E R S&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
©BS'KOFTEE&#13;
so* g- P©7" &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE Harch 6,1972&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
oa&amp;e&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
"Message from the Country"&#13;
the Move&#13;
^ _ ColLZGB XUN&#13;
"7/^ Char Irs 3n&lt;T Ajjrgic Huck Ou/nsrs&#13;
V HWY. 32 BETWEEN RACINE AND KENOSHA .*&#13;
SANDWICHES — PIZZA — PACKAGE GOODS -&#13;
tV£Rt WEb. lADlES[pniNKS '/*• ?A/C£&#13;
from the Music Dosk&#13;
This dialogue Is a literal translation&#13;
of the minutes of the meeting of the&#13;
Analytic Dualty Squad In the Gray&#13;
Room.&#13;
Sophisticated but Destitute Music&#13;
Lover: There is suspicion in some&#13;
circles that you are . . . how can I&#13;
compress this? ... a reactionary&#13;
nationalistic purist of the prole with&#13;
sensibilities deadened to the point&#13;
where only American made three&#13;
chord car music gets you off.&#13;
Music Desk: Horseshit. British three&#13;
chord car music gets me off too.&#13;
SDML: It amounts to the same thing as&#13;
three chord car music is American in&#13;
origin. Is it true that you have said&#13;
'The English can pronounce the word&#13;
'elegant' beautifully but they have&#13;
always had trouble with 'raunchy'?&#13;
MD: No, as a matter of fact it is not.&#13;
Bob Dylan said that and if I have&#13;
paraphrased him it is only because he&#13;
has summed it up once again.&#13;
SDML: The infallibility of Bob Dylan is&#13;
not the issue. Assuming this to be true&#13;
however, haven't you turned a&#13;
modest generality into dogma with&#13;
your disdain of superb English bands&#13;
like Yes, the Faces, Emerson, Lake&#13;
and Palmer, and King Crimson?&#13;
MD: Elegance is great. I'm as&#13;
susceptable as anyone to a nice turn&#13;
of phrase, an intelligent guitar line, a&#13;
thumbbusting bass run, or inventive&#13;
drums. English drummers especially&#13;
are technically miles ahead of us&#13;
Yanks. But how much better if these&#13;
elegant parts are unified by some&#13;
themeglue, a visceral vision if you&#13;
will, and you cnn dance to them while&#13;
you admire them.&#13;
SDML: English bands have direction.&#13;
MD: Some do and most don't. I will&#13;
venture to say that not one has as&#13;
much rock &amp; roll relevance as&#13;
"Louie, Lotfie". For noncerebral&#13;
excitement and sore palms you need&#13;
that raunch.&#13;
SDML: Where does that leave the&#13;
Beatles?&#13;
the Double White Album. The difference&#13;
between the Beatles and most&#13;
of the other self-absorbed Cockneys is&#13;
the humor and resolute lack of&#13;
pretension with which they carried it&#13;
off. Next to American raunch, this&#13;
kind of English cleverness is best.&#13;
And now listen to this.&#13;
MD slips the new Move on the turntable.&#13;
&#13;
SDML: "It Wasn't My Idea ? That&#13;
oboe reminds me of the quasiOriental&#13;
music in "Help!". These&#13;
guys are dense. But funny. Or I think&#13;
they are.&#13;
MD: "The Minister" makes me think of&#13;
"Paperback Writer". And this first&#13;
side is the thickest textural approach&#13;
to fantasy music since "Satanic&#13;
Majesties". Until this song.&#13;
SDML: What's Johnny Cash doing on a&#13;
British LP?&#13;
The Record (in manly throat itch):&#13;
I tried my hand at farmin but this dint&#13;
come off&#13;
Seems like there's nothing there for&#13;
me&#13;
It tried my patience which I haven't&#13;
enough&#13;
So I'm destined to work for the steel&#13;
company&#13;
MD: That's not Johnny Cash except in a&#13;
wierd way, but it is the slickets cut at&#13;
truckin music ever done.&#13;
The Record:&#13;
Can't find a job cause I just blew up&#13;
the Ben Crawley Steel Company.&#13;
Heh.&#13;
MD turns the record over, and an&#13;
acoustic guitar shuffles into 'Waitin&#13;
for the Robt. E. Lee.'&#13;
SDML: This band's got no ba&#13;
SDML's anatomical comment is cut&#13;
short by brontosaur bass as the&#13;
harmless music comes down hard&#13;
and turns into "Until Your Mama's&#13;
Gone" one of the two stone rockers on&#13;
the LP. The drums assault this rib&#13;
cage.&#13;
MD: I'm glad you asked. They had only&#13;
one co&gt;ifti iftext; they were themsleves&#13;
and true only to their self conception.&#13;
Lack of direction as direction: look at&#13;
SDML (impressed): Good cut. Who&#13;
produced this frustrating gem? Who&#13;
records drums like that?&#13;
MD: Glad you asked. Cat by the name&#13;
of Roy Wood who also does most of&#13;
the singing, guitar playing, and is&#13;
responsible for that oboe.&#13;
SDML: What's Elvis doing on an&#13;
English LP?&#13;
The Record (in surly grease growl):&#13;
We'll rock on to the feature film and&#13;
tear the seats apart&#13;
But if you gotta treat me rough don&#13;
mess me up.&#13;
MD: That's not Elvis. As in your other&#13;
stupid blunder, that's drummer Bev&#13;
Bevan. Odd voice wot?&#13;
SDML: And this cute English musichall&#13;
number. Didn't you have enough&#13;
when the Beatles did so many of&#13;
them?&#13;
MD: I can say nothing ....&#13;
SDML: You really shouldn't like this&#13;
album. It's diametrically opposed to&#13;
what you think is important in music.&#13;
MD: These boys are so strange and so&#13;
upfront that I can't help it. Things are&#13;
not always what they seem.&#13;
SOsS7&#13;
nt&#13;
«»ba«&#13;
For^week's&#13;
01 D^an th® ne^cope staff&#13;
cronies had been entreat!?^&#13;
Racine bar. Yeah, yeah J\&#13;
me&#13;
their plea, yeah, you gu' ^ 1 reSP°&#13;
r&#13;
and a way back and hi £&#13;
for the politicos to command*?* v^hk&#13;
alas, to no avail. Finally CY, tu ^ *1&#13;
himself to seek out V m2?'^&#13;
suitable to his station high .&#13;
C°T&#13;
Kenosha city; once sc&#13;
fortuity. It was fein, N£ "l*&#13;
™u&#13;
h&#13;
„;:°wa&#13;
b&#13;
y&#13;
anni9hti,,e&#13;
^st&#13;
ha.&#13;
educa.iZi&#13;
ldeve&#13;
en,na&#13;
;a!",&#13;
r&#13;
eS,ln9 £ J&#13;
wou&#13;
|dhegi ^&#13;
still shrieking over Ruby,s d0,&#13;
Kenosha, and end up at Rnrtdone's in Racii&#13;
as wenT "K °&#13;
Verhead in&#13;
S, the Nn'a M?" behMe&#13;
" ,he ,w&#13;
On the Nod would tag along with Sorer&#13;
™'&#13;
e&#13;
l&#13;
a c&#13;
u&#13;
hu&#13;
r&#13;
ch&#13;
- which I, another&#13;
altogether. History would be ma de alo&#13;
way; Nod would begin his evening of reve&#13;
fellowship with a motley crew made up ,&#13;
Grabowski, Ryan Higglnsand Bill Sorens.&#13;
complete the foray with an entirely dil&#13;
and I might add more respectable, grc&#13;
eluding Bob "Neptune" Herrmann, Mary&#13;
and Mike Stevesand. It would be the first t&#13;
the Nod had to change crews in midstre&#13;
Ruby's. Ruby's Restaurant and Bar i&#13;
between a drug store and a dance studio s&#13;
6th Avenue in downtown Kenosha, acre&#13;
street from the First National Bank, ugh,&#13;
On the Nod owes a pile of coconuts. It's c&#13;
Restaurant AND Bar I think because they&#13;
save the best for last.&#13;
Ruby's offers the patron a long padd&lt;&#13;
tables, panelled walls, good lighting (brigl&#13;
bar) and pictures on the wall. Perhaps wt&#13;
Ruby's apart from your run of the ginmill&#13;
are the floor to ceiling windows shich cor&#13;
the bar's front wall; this allows a patror&#13;
what's happening on the outside, while w.&#13;
up on the inside. It's nice to while away th&lt;&#13;
as a sort of candied camera, wtaching the&#13;
Moose Club. Vivian watched the balding man&#13;
work. When he gave the signal, the legalized&#13;
Thursday night Bingo games would begin in Zion.&#13;
Vivian was sittincJ in tho "Iritnhon" r\f the&#13;
On&#13;
a&#13;
Last Chance of the Season!&#13;
U.W.P. Ragtime Rangers&#13;
announces&#13;
A Second Trip To&#13;
Whitecap Mt.&#13;
March 17-19&#13;
Sign Up Deadline - Friday, March 10&#13;
Sign up at room 217 Tallent Hall&#13;
$ 1 0 . 00 N O N - R E F U N D A B L E DE P O S IT R E Q U I R E D&#13;
by Paul Lomartire of the Newscope staff&#13;
It was the first time for Vivian, a middle aged&#13;
woman dressed in black stretch pants and a knit&#13;
print top. Sitting next to her, explaining the rule?,&#13;
regulations and ethics of Bingo, was her cousNin,&#13;
another lady in the middle of life.&#13;
Both women were seated at a pool table&#13;
covered with .two large pieces of heavy green&#13;
cardboard. The room was jammed with people&#13;
prepared for a full night of Bingo. Cigarette smoke&#13;
clouded the air, making one's eyes water.&#13;
A member of the Zion-Benton Moose Club was&#13;
standing in the doorway making final adjustments&#13;
on the microphone he would be using throughout&#13;
the evening. His job would be to keep in touch with&#13;
the other two rooms full of Bingo players in the&#13;
Vivian was sitting in the "kitchen" of&#13;
building, although it was really a dining area,&#13;
the floor above her was another dining area, -&#13;
small gymnasium-type room filled with players,&#13;
and the person calling the letter-numbers for the&#13;
games. Below Vivian, in the basement, was&#13;
another small dining room accommodating a few&#13;
hundred more people.&#13;
At a quarter after seven, fifteen minutes late,&#13;
the balding man in the entrance to the "kitchen"&#13;
announced on the microphone that he was ready.&#13;
Vivian's cousin could be heard by most of those at&#13;
the converted pool table blitzing with a final recap&#13;
of details.&#13;
There would be twenty-five games of regular&#13;
Bingo, each worth thirty dollars to the winner (to&#13;
be split in case of a tei). Special games sprinkled&#13;
throughout the evening were worth from fifty to a&#13;
hundred dollars. There would be a "Jackpot&#13;
Game" worth five hundred dollars (a "Fill Game"&#13;
midway through the twenty-five games consisting&#13;
of only fifty-five calls).&#13;
The special games included the Frame Game,&#13;
Crisscross, the T-Game and the Fill Game. Played&#13;
in succession, the special games and a regular one&#13;
were called New York Bingo.&#13;
The first five games were uneventful as far as&#13;
Vivian and the others in the "kitchen" were&#13;
concerned. All the winners were either in the&#13;
basement or the large dining room. Before the&#13;
sixth game, the caller announced there would be a&#13;
short delay.&#13;
Vivian's cousin left the table to get a couple&#13;
beers from an ad;&#13;
to take;in h er su&#13;
Bingo veten&#13;
They used tape ti&#13;
while novices ha&#13;
upsetting their g&#13;
Moose Club therr&#13;
peanuts, candy, I&#13;
breaks, plastic t&#13;
corn kernels to&#13;
dividuals had go*&#13;
space on the B&#13;
pennies, an earri&#13;
lured fictory. A&#13;
ashtrays and a hi&#13;
eveningVivian&#13;
lister&#13;
dressed in cover&#13;
table. "I've beer&#13;
three states; Kai&#13;
"and I ahven't'&#13;
"There was&#13;
saS)" he c ontim&#13;
daughter throuj&#13;
nights a week."&#13;
disbelief around&#13;
"There were&#13;
honest," he told&#13;
His tale was&#13;
0ff the f irst lei&#13;
Vivian's c ousin&#13;
several times w&#13;
The sixth {&#13;
winners' in the "&#13;
"Crisscross" ga&#13;
Bingo veteran si &#13;
&lt;R&#13;
pe staff&#13;
and his SGA&#13;
, t0 review a&#13;
responded to&#13;
e a way there&#13;
jited patiently&#13;
a vehicle, but&#13;
,d took it upon&#13;
f conveyance&#13;
e lead ether of&#13;
lod resorted to&#13;
barsploratory&#13;
es that On the&#13;
I as well as&#13;
On the Nod&#13;
Gogh sun was&#13;
in downtown&#13;
in Racine with&#13;
mic inkblotter&#13;
the two bars,&#13;
h Sorensen to&#13;
inother story&#13;
ade a long the&#13;
of revelry and&#13;
ade up of Tom&#13;
Sorensen, and&#13;
rely different,&#13;
ble, group ini,&#13;
Mary Smith&#13;
efirsttime On&#13;
midstream,&#13;
id Bar is stuck&#13;
studio at 5535 -&#13;
1a, a cross the&#13;
lk, ugh, where&#13;
s. It's called a&#13;
jse they like to&#13;
g padded bar,&#13;
g (bright for a&#13;
haps what sets&#13;
ginmill tavern&#13;
-lich constitute&#13;
i patron to see&#13;
while warming&#13;
iway the hours&#13;
ling the people&#13;
slip on the ice, observing with bemusement the&#13;
queue of people waiting for buses that never&#13;
come, catching bankers offguard as they react&#13;
obscenely to the mystery roadsters that splash&#13;
their spats with icy slush, or simply staring in&#13;
befuddlement at the Bank's combination clock&#13;
and thermometer across the street, predicting&#13;
seconds before the act the change in time.&#13;
Aside from being confronted with such&#13;
poisonous concoctions as a "Bayou Bomb" or&#13;
"Woody's Suicide Slurp", the patron may also&#13;
choose culinary goodies from a full menu at the&#13;
bar, which of course is not in my area of competence.&#13;
Drinks on the lower forty go for 55 - 60&#13;
cents, whild your top rack spirits hit 65 and&#13;
better down the bar's formica-topped&#13;
straightway. The visible selection of labels&#13;
seemed redundant, though there are undoubtedly&#13;
other spirited names hidden away&#13;
from view; On the Nod's view was less than&#13;
binocular at the time. Unfortunately, Ruby's&#13;
like Rondone's, doesn't offer tap beer; cans go&#13;
for half a rock. The juke, if I remember&#13;
correctly, wasn't of superior quality, though it&#13;
did offer a couple of Bobby D's old love ballads;&#13;
"Just Like a Woman" and "I Want You", which,&#13;
if you're a Dylan freak is enough to make any&#13;
juke look good. As I surveyed the entire width&#13;
and breadth of the bar I discovered that the&#13;
clientele was composed of two jiggers&#13;
businesstypes, a jigger of hippe, and a pinch of&#13;
old salts; an interesting mix.&#13;
Since I can't remember too much more&#13;
about the bar, I must conclude it was good. I&#13;
made the unpardonable mistake of checking out&#13;
the newly tapped kegs in the union a few hours&#13;
earlier, judging them for purity; you'd be surprised&#13;
at the number of kegs they can tap in a&#13;
few hours.&#13;
But no time to dwadle, I ordered the&#13;
drummer boy to muster out the troops, only to&#13;
realize that Obediance U. really hadn't impressed&#13;
this crew of cutthroat braggards and no&#13;
good scum; no one wanted to go to Racine; it was&#13;
mutiny. Thinking quickly I summoned my trusty&#13;
laiison, Woozy Willie, and directed him to drive&#13;
me to AAockus' Tap and proving grounds where I&#13;
shanghaied a new crew.&#13;
Onward to Fondone's. Rondone's Bar is&#13;
located next to an alley at 1330 Albert Street in&#13;
Racine, and offers in its compact confines&#13;
wooden booths as well as a small bar. Behind the&#13;
bar on review night was none other than Tony&#13;
Rondone himself, whacking away with sppc^is at&#13;
some liquor bottles as he played rhythm to the&#13;
songs on the juke. It's not every day you see a&#13;
bartender with a musical bent, especially at this&#13;
9 of specialization. Unfortunagely, about this&#13;
time, | too was a little bent, but like any good cub&#13;
anHwTi,T&#13;
rth hiS huSh PuPPies&#13;
' 1 Persevered&#13;
and walked up to the crowded bar, nudging a few&#13;
customers; outta my way, I'm a reporter, I gotta&#13;
get the facts, quick, before it's too late.&#13;
Rondone's offers Bud and Pabst shorties for&#13;
0 cents and 12 ounce bottles for 45 cents for the&#13;
big guys, as well as a stock of some fine red wine&#13;
25 cents a glass. The lower echelons of liuqors&#13;
demand a toll of 45 cents, while the aristocrats of&#13;
the shelf go for 60 cents.&#13;
n I wobbled up to the juke in the compact bar&#13;
and found .t to be good, though not impressive.&#13;
^&#13;
h&#13;
'&#13;
l&#13;
.&#13;
e ?'&#13;
u™ing t0&#13;
°&#13;
Ur b00th&#13;
' 1 thoroughly investigated&#13;
the walls (feeling my way along them&#13;
tor secret passages) which, to my astonishment&#13;
were made of plaster, a rare phenomenon in&#13;
today s panelled world; one day even mountains&#13;
will be made of formica. Another oddity I&#13;
discovered at Rondone's were the original&#13;
paintings by his son which adorn the wall.&#13;
In addition to an adequate stock, the worldly&#13;
Italian offers a bowling machine as well as a&#13;
P all demon for the diversion of the clientele&#13;
composed of both hips and working class&#13;
straights; on review night two boys in blue sat at&#13;
the bar for a short while. An official of SGA tole&#13;
me, quite cryptically, that a motto for the place&#13;
could be 'humble people always take the back&#13;
door'; he said you can just about tell what kind of&#13;
people come in the bar by which door they use,&#13;
front or the back. On the Nod has nothing to hide&#13;
so he used the front door. In addition to&#13;
everything lese, On the Nod was mesmerized by&#13;
the grating hum of a bass compressor as it&#13;
scrunched and squealed its way into his pure&#13;
brewed heart and respiratory system.&#13;
Rondone's and Ruby's are quite different&#13;
bars; two different atmospheres, two different&#13;
clientele, perhaps even two different schools of&#13;
Barlosophy, yet On the Nod found fault with&#13;
neither. From this moment forward, On the Nod&#13;
pledges on a case of Lafite-Rothsdhild to seek out&#13;
with diligence and foresight, as many Racine&#13;
bars as he possibly can.&#13;
March ft. 197? NEWSCOPFl Page 5&#13;
Robert Bly, recipient of the&#13;
1968 National Bood Award for&#13;
poetry will soon visit the&#13;
Parkside Campus. The Minnesota&#13;
born poet, author of&#13;
"The Light Around My Body",&#13;
will appear Wednesday, March&#13;
15, from 9:30to 11:30 A.M. in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall Whiteskellar.&#13;
On Tuesday evening, March 14,&#13;
Bly will also appear at&#13;
Dominican for a reading that is.&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
In addition to his poetry, Bly&#13;
has published a magazine&#13;
called The Fifties, then The&#13;
Sxities, now The Seventies,&#13;
which has published for the first&#13;
time many European and South&#13;
American poets. In addition to&#13;
writing his own poetry, Bly al£o&#13;
has translated works by the&#13;
Chilean Pablo Neruda, the&#13;
German Georg Trakl and the&#13;
Swede Gunnar Ekelof among&#13;
others.&#13;
Bly is a deeply committed&#13;
writer and has done much to&#13;
make politics a field of poetry.&#13;
He is a founding member of&#13;
American Poets Against the&#13;
Vietnam War, and helped&#13;
organize the first Poetry&#13;
Readings Against the War; in&#13;
addition Bly has refused a $5,000&#13;
government grant on the&#13;
ground that it emanated from a&#13;
government engaged in&#13;
genocide, and has donated his&#13;
Book Award check to the&#13;
Resistance. Today Bly is&#13;
recognized as one of the leaders&#13;
of a poetic revival which has&#13;
returned American literature to&#13;
the world community.&#13;
WW-kUT KR.e»r»lc&#13;
C.OUN6ER WAKT S KWEe&#13;
o E N c *&#13;
w i e t o f " B L U D G E "&#13;
B E £ B © O T T L e&#13;
H A N D .&#13;
O U R C R C AT O I&#13;
M E E T J H I S ' .&#13;
n an adjoining bar. Vivian used the time&#13;
' her surroundings.&#13;
1 veterans could easily be identified.&#13;
1 tape to secure the paper Bingo sheets,&#13;
ices had to worry about wind currents&#13;
their games. They also brought to the&#13;
ib thermoses full of coffee, milk and tea,&#13;
f&#13;
ndy, baked goods to eat or sell during&#13;
lastic boxes for their colored chips, or&#13;
iels to fill the Bingo spaces. Many inhad&#13;
good luck charms filling the "free"&#13;
the Bingo sheet, wedding rings, old&#13;
in earring, silver dollar, or whatever else&#13;
tory. A few "vets" brought their own&#13;
and a healthy supply of cigarettes for the&#13;
n listened to a young longhaired male&#13;
n coveralls sitting at the converted pool&#13;
v een P^yin' Bingo for six months, in&#13;
es&#13;
' Kansas, Missouri and here," he said,&#13;
aven t won a cent "&#13;
won. The winning lady had her winning criss cross&#13;
verified by the balding man at the microphone.&#13;
She did not smile when two twenties and a ten&#13;
were handed her, envy oozing all around her. She&#13;
casually slid the money beneath her plastic box of&#13;
chips. A big grin cracked her face only after the&#13;
next game had begun and almost all of the eyes in&#13;
the room were directed away from her.&#13;
The evening wore on for those at the converted&#13;
pool table as none of them had won. It was the&#13;
halfway point, time for the "big one". The game&#13;
everyone who had purchased a dollar Bingo sheet&#13;
was sure they would win. Even some of the novices&#13;
playing with the minimum allowed, three sheets,&#13;
smiled with anticipation.&#13;
The first letter-numbers were called, and on&#13;
and on. It seemed like the "Jackpot Game" was&#13;
Xk&#13;
aven't won a cent."&#13;
re was dris fat lady in Lawrence Kancontinued,&#13;
"who was puttin' her third&#13;
college playin' Bingo seven&#13;
eek.' There were smiles of pleasant&#13;
p The young man sensed&#13;
f&#13;
r&#13;
,&#13;
e&#13;
,&#13;
ar^&#13;
c&#13;
!es in the papers about her,&#13;
ae told his friend.&#13;
!*w®s8&#13;
ree&#13;
tedby the announcer calling&#13;
con • er&#13;
"&#13;
number of the sixth game.&#13;
•im«!ln&#13;
,&#13;
returned with the beers, asking&#13;
S at had ^ eallea&lt;&#13;
n the "t&#13;
nd sevendl games" yielded no&#13;
)ss" a chen". Tbe eighth game was a&#13;
teran -f16 Worth fift&#13;
y dollars. A grizzled&#13;
sitting within twenty feet of Vivian&#13;
going on for hours when the announcer began to&#13;
approach the fifty-fifth call. Everyone dreaded the&#13;
bloodcurdling scream of BINGO. After each call&#13;
following fifty-one, Vivian winced.&#13;
On the fifty-fourth call, Vivian realized she&#13;
was onlv one letter-number away from the winning&#13;
jackpot. Her cousin needed three.Vivian was&#13;
the only player at the converted pool table who had&#13;
a chance of winning. Everyone at the table stared&#13;
at her sheet with only one open space. Vivian s&#13;
cousin pulled nervously at a mole on her cheek&#13;
The thought of someone else winning five&#13;
hundred dollars so easily produced smug looks on&#13;
many faces, and the hope Vivian would lose. A&#13;
man who had just begun calling the letternumbers&#13;
in the dining room milked the tension for&#13;
all_ it was worth. Skeeter told a Joke, no one&#13;
laughed. Vivian clenched her fists, knuckles&#13;
white, breath held. Five hundred bucks. That last&#13;
call. "You all know that if there isn't a winner&#13;
after the last call," Skeeter said, "there's a&#13;
consolation prize." Finally that last call.&#13;
0-72. Vivian was a loser. A smile came over&#13;
her cousin's face. A silence fell over the room as&#13;
no one in any of the three rooms had called Bingo.&#13;
After a long ten seconds, an old woman in the&#13;
dining room regained her voice long enough to let&#13;
everyone in Northern Illinois know she had won it&#13;
all, five hundred bucks.&#13;
"Aw shit," Vivian cursed. She flipped the&#13;
almost full Bingo sheet.into the air. Her cousin,&#13;
content that Vivian was now a confirmed loser,&#13;
offered to buy her a beer.&#13;
There was a fifteen minute break after the&#13;
"Jackpot Game". Vivian appeared to have lost&#13;
interest in Bingo. She turned her attention to the&#13;
balding Moose standing in the entrance. Her&#13;
cousin had been periodically watching the Moose's&#13;
friend. It was now time for the Bingo players to&#13;
loosen stiff muscles and take a breather from the&#13;
thought of winning money.&#13;
Vivian's cousin offered one bit of advice as she&#13;
noticed Vivian watching the Moose, "Don't tell&#13;
them we're cousins," she said. "Tell 'em we're&#13;
just girl friends."&#13;
Both middle aged women smiled, lliey left the&#13;
converted pool table, heading in the general&#13;
direction of the bar, the balding Moose and his&#13;
friend; forgetting momentarily that they were&#13;
losers at the halfway point.&#13;
CvGh ndfolded&#13;
Jc/ l\tx\r£&#13;
3&#13;
01 '&#13;
4 UTS* Ave&#13;
Keh&amp;sLo,&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
Itfe kind of a western.&#13;
He's sort of a cowboy.&#13;
METRO GOLDWYN MAYER Presents&#13;
A BURT KENNEDY PRODUCTION&#13;
sum s i&#13;
DIRTY DIMS&#13;
Mmi Starring&#13;
FRANK SINATRA&#13;
GEORGE KENNEDY&#13;
PANAVISION" , _ A&#13;
METROCOLOR IGP]^ MGM ^&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 10&#13;
STUDENT. ACT. B1_DG.&#13;
8PM ADM. 75&lt;£&#13;
Tim e-1 h r sim in&#13;
P A R K S I D E&#13;
f c W IS I.D. REQ UIR ED &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE March 6,1972&#13;
She VJLj Supper CLl&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan Id.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
SetoAuta the tf-inedt&#13;
Ptyy* &amp; Oialicut fyoodi.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 656-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
9(amm&amp;&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
HAWAIIAN H OLIDAY&#13;
$28250&#13;
March 25 - April 1st&#13;
April 1st - April 8th&#13;
Braniff Airlines&#13;
Kuhio Hotel&#13;
All Taxes &amp; Tips&#13;
Transfers&#13;
Contact:&#13;
WSA&#13;
WSSC Store&#13;
720 State&#13;
Madison, Wis.&#13;
608-263-2444&#13;
S6A Candidate&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
ministrators. Of course, PSGA&#13;
must always stand firm on&#13;
those matters which are of vital&#13;
interest to the student body.&#13;
It is to these purposes that I&#13;
direct my candidacy for the&#13;
office of student senator.&#13;
Regarding specific issues,&#13;
such as control of the student&#13;
activities building or the&#13;
proposed legal action against&#13;
the book store, I can only say at&#13;
this time that I favor investigation&#13;
of such matters&#13;
thoroughly before taking final&#13;
action. I think that the duty of a&#13;
senator is to carefully investigate&#13;
and consider issues&#13;
before coming to a decision, in&#13;
that a senator represents not&#13;
only himself or herself, but also&#13;
the Parkside student body.&#13;
Now a bit about myself and&#13;
my qualifications for office. I&#13;
am currently a junior majoring&#13;
in political science, history and&#13;
modern American society, and&#13;
active in the Pre-Law Club and&#13;
the Honors Program. I have&#13;
been a full-time student at&#13;
Parkside for nearly three years&#13;
now, and I think I have a feeling&#13;
for the needs of UWP and its&#13;
students. I sincerely believe&#13;
that I will be an able and&#13;
thoughtful student senator,&#13;
representing you. I ask for your&#13;
support in the March 7 and 8&#13;
election.&#13;
Finally, why should you be&#13;
interested in Student Government?&#13;
At present, it is the only&#13;
forum for a unified student&#13;
voice on campus. Furthermore,&#13;
Student Government has some&#13;
measure of control over a&#13;
considerable amount of money&#13;
(a portion of which you have&#13;
paid in your tuition fees each&#13;
semester), which may be septn&#13;
to benefit you. PSGA needs your&#13;
interest, support and participation.&#13;
Please take the-time&#13;
to become informed about&#13;
Student Government and&#13;
candidates for office, and then,&#13;
vote.&#13;
Jules and Jim Coming&#13;
The Parkside Film Society&#13;
will sponsor a public showing of&#13;
Francois Truffaut's "Jules and&#13;
Jim" on Tuesday, March 7, at 8&#13;
p.m. in Room 103 Greenquist&#13;
Hall on the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside's Wood&#13;
Road campus.&#13;
Although set in a pre-World&#13;
War I period, the film paints a&#13;
vivid picture of a thoroughly&#13;
modern woman, Kathe, played&#13;
by French acress Jeanne&#13;
Moreau. She loves two fraternal&#13;
friends, Oskar Werner and&#13;
Jacques Serre, and must have&#13;
them both — even if this means&#13;
death. A joyous film, "Jules and&#13;
Jim" established Truffaut as&#13;
the leader of French New Wave&#13;
directors.&#13;
"The Critic", a short directed&#13;
by Mel Brooks, is a spoof of&#13;
experimental, abstract films.&#13;
Winner of an Academy Award&#13;
for Best Short Subject, it will be&#13;
shown before the feature.&#13;
There will be a small admission&#13;
charge (50 cents).&#13;
Marine Corps to Visit Campus&#13;
Milwaukee, Feb. 24 — The&#13;
Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Team will visit the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Kenosha&#13;
campus on March 7 and 8 to&#13;
interview students interested in&#13;
becoming commissioned officers.&#13;
.&#13;
The Officer Selection Team&#13;
will be located in Room 249&#13;
Tallent Hall to peovide information&#13;
pertaining to Marine&#13;
Officer Programs, according to&#13;
Lieutenant J. P. English, the&#13;
Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Officer.&#13;
The Marine Corps offers&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
programs leading to a commission&#13;
as a 2nd Lieutenant.&#13;
These programs are open to&#13;
undergraduates as well as&#13;
graduating seniors. To be&#13;
eligible, students must have a&#13;
"C" or better average, pass a&#13;
written examination, be&#13;
physically qualified and have&#13;
the leadership potential&#13;
required of a Marine Officer.&#13;
Aviation Officer Programs&#13;
are open to highly qualified&#13;
students.&#13;
Women Officer Programs are&#13;
available to junior and senior&#13;
women.&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
•&#13;
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WHEELS&#13;
1968 Plymouth Valiant top-of-theline&#13;
model "Signet" - 2 dr. Club&#13;
Coupe, 1 owner, auto, trans., pwr.&#13;
steering, radio, air cond. $875 - Call&#13;
654-4982.&#13;
Polaroid Camera - Used 4 times.&#13;
Case, timer, dependable. Truely a&#13;
fine instrument. $25. Ph. Kevin 658-&#13;
4746.&#13;
TAPE RECORDER - Ree| to reel.&#13;
Like new. Orig. $100 sell for $50 Ph&#13;
657-5992 after 4.&#13;
1970 Triumph G.T.-6 + . British&#13;
racing green. 19,000 mi. Inquire Apt&#13;
210- Parkside Village, Building one."&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE — Refrigerator. Works&#13;
like a refrigerator should. $20. Ph.&#13;
Doug, 654-0697.&#13;
FOR SALE — Mosrite Bass Guitar.&#13;
Double pickup. Double cutaway,&#13;
hollow body. With plush-lined&#13;
hardshell case. Was $450 new. Excellent&#13;
condition. $100. Call Larry,&#13;
552-8347 or come to P-Village, apt 109&#13;
(The Swamp).&#13;
STEREO TAPE RECORDER —&#13;
Sony 252 D One year old. List $135.00,&#13;
sell for $70.00. Ph. Jerry 652-2538 or&#13;
553-2496.&#13;
STEREO TAPE DECK — Sony&#13;
252D. List $135. It's yours for $70. A&#13;
tape deck if ever I saw one. Ph. 652-&#13;
2538 - 553-2496 ask for Jerry.&#13;
1955-1963 Chevy trans., 4 speed and&#13;
positraction for 11 rear end. Pin-ball&#13;
machine best offer, or trade for ten&#13;
speed bike. Call 552-8987.&#13;
MODEL NEEDED for life drawing&#13;
class. Contact David Zaig, Room&#13;
217, Greenquist Hall - Art Dept.&#13;
BABY-SITTER NEEDED 4 2 boys,&#13;
ages 20 months and 10 months.&#13;
About 6 hours a day, 2 weekdays.&#13;
Days and time flexible. My home -&#13;
North side of Kenosha. Call 654-4593&#13;
afternoons or evenings.&#13;
3 Room Apt. North side Keno.&#13;
Privacy assured. Situated well for*&#13;
all campuses. Call 552-8970.&#13;
County Lot — 1.9 acres, 41 Ave. &amp; 14&#13;
St. (approx.) Call 654-6317 after 5:00.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Two guys need ride to Florida&#13;
Leave March 30-31. Pay V3 of travel&#13;
expenses. Inquire Apt 120&#13;
Parkside Village, Building one.&#13;
XfJ™"&#13;
5 WANTED - The Loom,&#13;
634 967? " AVe&#13;
" Radne&#13;
" Ph&#13;
"&#13;
WANTED — People who would like&#13;
to help other people. Free training.&#13;
Contact Joe Baker, director Racine&#13;
Hotline, 637-1112. Mon.-Wed.-Fri.&#13;
1:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.&#13;
Photographer wanted — Should be&#13;
available for June 10th wedding,&#13;
reasonable rates. Call 639-8863,&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Female Bartender Wanted — one&#13;
night a week. The College Inn. Ph.&#13;
552-8465. &#13;
Grapplers i n NAIA Nationals&#13;
March 6.1972 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Four UW-Parkside wrestlers&#13;
will compete Thursday through&#13;
Saturday in the NAIA national&#13;
wrestling championships at&#13;
Klamath Falls, Ore.&#13;
Heading the Ranger contingent&#13;
for Coach Jim Koch is&#13;
sophomore Ken Martin, who&#13;
placed second in the meet last&#13;
year as a freshman at 134&#13;
pounds. He's been grapplint at&#13;
142 this year and has an 18-2&#13;
record, but he'll drop down to&#13;
134 for the nationals and should&#13;
be seeded second in that weight&#13;
class.&#13;
"We think Ken has a good&#13;
chance for the championship,"&#13;
Koch said. "He was injured as a&#13;
freshman and still placed&#13;
second.&#13;
"He's had tougher competition&#13;
this year and really has&#13;
everything going for him. Now&#13;
Ken just has to take advantage&#13;
of the breaks."&#13;
Others likely to join Martin in&#13;
the big meet — which the&#13;
Rangers finished 21st in last&#13;
time around — are junior cocaptain&#13;
(with Martin) Jeff&#13;
Jenkins and freshmen Steve&#13;
Sulk and Bill West.&#13;
Jenkins was injured during&#13;
the middle of t his campaign but&#13;
has come on strong in recent&#13;
weeks and Koch rates his&#13;
chances at earning a place, or&#13;
even a berth in the finals, as&#13;
Page 7&#13;
For The Record&#13;
idi&#13;
MUSIC H OUSE /)&#13;
1 1 1 I I N I I ' I II I \ v .; •; |\ M8 I S I i'&#13;
•• Downtown Kenosha •&#13;
Ken Martir\ co-captain has an&#13;
18-2 record at 142 lbs.; he'I&#13;
drop down to 134.&#13;
good at his 150 pound class.&#13;
Koch labels Sulk, a 230 p ound&#13;
freshman from Peshtigo, as&#13;
"big and strong" and primed&#13;
for a wide-open weight class.&#13;
He's posted a 9-2 mark at&#13;
heavyweight since joining the&#13;
squad at the semester.&#13;
West, a Kenosha native,&#13;
compiled a 9-3 mark in the&#13;
second half of the year after&#13;
sitting out the first semester&#13;
matches as a transfer. He's&#13;
battled illness in recent weeks&#13;
Jeff Jenkins, 150 lb.&#13;
co—captain has good chance&#13;
at reaching finals.&#13;
but Koch things he could be&#13;
ready for a good effort.&#13;
The Rangers placed 21st last&#13;
year and obviously Koch would&#13;
like a higher finish this time&#13;
around.&#13;
"It would be nice to get in the&#13;
top ten," he admits, and says&#13;
that "if we can get one man in&#13;
the finals and the others all&#13;
scoring points, we could make&#13;
it.&#13;
"We've just got to be ready at&#13;
the right time."&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Teleph one: 4)57-3311&#13;
RICHARD G. CAPELLI, prop. STAFF ELECTIONS THURSDAY &#13;
Pages NEWSCOPE March 6,1972&#13;
City meets county&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
up, the rent goes up", and like&#13;
other speakers who were to&#13;
follow him, he contested the&#13;
city's claim that it had paid&#13;
millions for sewer and water&#13;
service to the area by insisting&#13;
that "big federal grants were&#13;
included in the city's investment."&#13;
Answering&#13;
Burkee's earlier statement&#13;
concerning the small amount&#13;
Somers had invested in the&#13;
campus area, Huck told the&#13;
audience that "Somers has paid&#13;
its share"; many residents&#13;
were forced to give up their land&#13;
to the campus.&#13;
Supervisor Ebner explained&#13;
in his speech that because the&#13;
cost of building a treatment&#13;
plant would be shared with Mt.&#13;
Pleasant, Somers wouldn't have&#13;
to pay the estimated $19,500,000&#13;
needed to build it. He told the&#13;
audience that with "expected&#13;
state and federal aids it&#13;
shouldn't cost Somers more&#13;
than $400,000." This&#13;
represented a replv to the city's&#13;
Henry Krause, area property&#13;
owner opposed to annexation&#13;
efforts.&#13;
earlier argument that Somers&#13;
only had bonding power for&#13;
$2,000,000 and therefore couldn't&#13;
possibly afford the projected&#13;
cost of a treatment plant.&#13;
Henry Krause, an area farmer&#13;
who originally brought the&#13;
annexation issue to the attention&#13;
of SGA and Newscope,&#13;
told the audience «that "an&#13;
annexation this large (over&#13;
1,400 acres) is the concern of a ll&#13;
people of Somers and the city of&#13;
Kenosha, as all taxes and rent&#13;
would go up. Mayor Burkee" he&#13;
continued, "has his hands full in&#13;
trying to take care of Kenosha,&#13;
let along a big area of Somers.&#13;
You have noticed many stores&#13;
boarded up and businesses&#13;
leaving town; the bigger the&#13;
city the bigger the trouble."&#13;
Krause charged that the&#13;
unorderly boundaries of the last&#13;
annexation were "deliberately&#13;
planned that way so that not&#13;
many property owners would&#13;
have a chance to vote."&#13;
A student at UWP who also&#13;
resides in the annexable area&#13;
backed up Krause's charge.&#13;
Jack Swartz said that when the&#13;
first annexation was drawn up,&#13;
his family's land was included&#13;
"all the way to our backyard."&#13;
He explained that the city didn't&#13;
include their house in the annexation,&#13;
thus making them&#13;
ineligible to vote.&#13;
Bob Lee, another area&#13;
resident, told the group, "We&#13;
don't want a concrete city from&#13;
Chicago to Milwaukee." He&#13;
indicated that the cost of&#13;
building sewage treatment&#13;
plants should not be the burden&#13;
of th e local residents, but rather&#13;
the responsibility of the federal&#13;
government.&#13;
Mrs. Henry Krause spoke&#13;
after her husband, and in one&#13;
instance personally addressed&#13;
the Mayor. She told the&#13;
audience that "Mayor Burkee&#13;
has his hands full with shooting&#13;
and purse snatching and what&#13;
have you ..." and facing the&#13;
mayor, she admonished him,&#13;
"You really do!"&#13;
Cliff Dodd, a Parkside Village&#13;
resident, compared the city of&#13;
Kenosha to a cancer. He said it&#13;
was "dying on the inside." It&#13;
was his belief that the urban&#13;
problems must be solved before&#13;
an annexation of more land&#13;
would make sense.&#13;
Dean Loumos, SGA&#13;
President, was the final speaker&#13;
of the evening. He told the&#13;
audience, "We should be concerned&#13;
about who suffers most,&#13;
not who benefits most. When the&#13;
state wants land, they get it one&#13;
way or another. Farmers need&#13;
the assurance that they'll be&#13;
able to live out their normal&#13;
lives, and conduct their normal&#13;
business without the threat of&#13;
higher taxes and loss of their&#13;
land." He proposed that "some&#13;
sort of contract be drawn up,"&#13;
which would ensure people the&#13;
right to live as they want.&#13;
He then explained the&#13;
students' plight: "Student&#13;
Activities is not a union, it's a&#13;
hustle, Parkside Village is a&#13;
hustle, the Bookstore is a hustle.&#13;
We pay and pay and now the&#13;
same people who brought us&#13;
Parkside Village and the&#13;
Bookstore, bring you the annexation."&#13;
&#13;
During the ensuing question&#13;
and answer period, members of&#13;
the audience asked the mayor&#13;
about any federal and state aids&#13;
the city had received for the&#13;
sewer line to UWP. He explained&#13;
he wasn't quite sure&#13;
what the percentage of the total&#13;
cost the aid covered was, but&#13;
that he knew it wasn't the 80 per&#13;
cent that some members of the&#13;
audience claimed it was.&#13;
An angry voice in the back of&#13;
the lecture hall spoke heatedly&#13;
with the mayor about tax&#13;
assessments. He explained that&#13;
he has land in the city as well as&#13;
in Somers, and that the tax on&#13;
the city land is more than six&#13;
times that of the land in Somers.&#13;
Eric Olson, a county supervisor,&#13;
rejected the assistant city&#13;
planner's hope that Bill 58&#13;
would ease tax assessment on&#13;
farm land; "Senate Bill 58 has&#13;
been defeated time and again,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
A spokeswoman for the&#13;
Wisconsin Alliance spoke&#13;
briefly to the audience explaining&#13;
that the annexation&#13;
problem is happening all over&#13;
the state. "Somers is not alone&#13;
in its fight against annexation,"&#13;
she said. She told the mayor&#13;
that Madison is no longer annexing&#13;
property because its city&#13;
council is beginning to&#13;
recognize the overwhelming&#13;
problems a city incurs when it&#13;
annexes land.&#13;
Other members of the&#13;
audience spoke out against the&#13;
city's contention that Kenosha&#13;
could adequately handle the&#13;
sewage and water needs of the&#13;
Parkside area. They pointed out&#13;
that residents of the city have&#13;
been complaining for months&#13;
about the inadequacies of the&#13;
treatment plant. The City&#13;
Planner responded that any&#13;
existing problems will soon be&#13;
rectified. Mario Capponi,&#13;
former mayoral candidate, said&#13;
he opposed the annexation&#13;
because it included too large a&#13;
parcel of land. He said annexing&#13;
more than 50 acres at a time is&#13;
too much for the city to&#13;
assimilate.&#13;
The meeting ended with an&#13;
appeal by Judge Carlsen of&#13;
Kenosha to stop any&#13;
divisiveness that may be caused&#13;
by the annexation controversy,&#13;
stating that it's everyone's&#13;
problem. He informed the&#13;
audience that the present&#13;
location of UWP was chosen on&#13;
the basis of its natural beauty, a&#13;
natural beauty which, he said,&#13;
must be preserved.&#13;
Pa rk si de A c tiv iti es Boar d a n d t h e Pa rk side Poe try Forum&#13;
presents&#13;
IFLobert 131 y&#13;
POETRY WORKSHOP&#13;
WEDNESDAY, 15 MARCH&#13;
9:30AM-11:30AM&#13;
MR B L Y WIL L R E A D T U E S NIG HT AT D O MINICA N)&#13;
TONY&#13;
and&#13;
JUMBO&#13;
Thurs. March 9&#13;
Noon - 2p.m.&#13;
Fr e e Liv e En te rta inme n t&#13;
forum&#13;
now the time has come&#13;
By Dan Robeshi&#13;
Now the time has come to fight,&#13;
Laws in the Book of Love burn bright.&#13;
The starting point for revolution is love and it's no different&#13;
for gay liberation. As a matter of fact love is perhaps&#13;
the paramount motivating factor for gays to become involved&#13;
in gay lib because the kind of love we desire has&#13;
always been subject to sexist laws and social restriction.&#13;
Gays share the same discrimination and narrowing down by&#13;
straight society of life's experiences to the most sordid as&#13;
other minority groups. In like fashion as other minorities&#13;
have started to raise their voices in shouts of protest against&#13;
pig attitudes and practices so have gays. As long as one&#13;
person is oppressed we are all oppressed. That is the reason&#13;
for the present forming of gay lib here. No gay can any longer&#13;
hide in a closet out of fear for social ostracism — we've done&#13;
that too long. Our rights as citizens and our dignity as men&#13;
and women have been denied too long. But the only way these&#13;
will be regained is if we demand them. We can best achieve&#13;
this through group effort, group power. There will be an&#13;
initial Gay Youth Coalition meeting this week. Whether or&#13;
not gay lib will make any advances on this camous will&#13;
largely be determined by the turn out of gays at these first&#13;
few meetings. Without numbers we have no power, and&#13;
without power we have no rights — even rights as simple as&#13;
gathering peaceably together in free expression of our life&#13;
style without fear of violence from the straight community.&#13;
The time is overripe that we need no longer fear and hide. We&#13;
can take our destinies out of the hands of straight parents,&#13;
teachers, police, courts, and prisons and make them what we&#13;
want them to be: beautiful, free, gay.&#13;
c&#13;
Q O&#13;
0&#13;
jp I HO I WASH IN6TON Av/E.&#13;
(p IN UPTOWN rp&#13;
(? HidU&#13;
importers G&lt;&#13;
of &amp;&#13;
FINE WINES %&#13;
AN b fe&#13;
spirits W)&#13;
for nearly&#13;
50 &gt;D&#13;
years &gt;d h&#13;
c&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
ON S O UTH S H E R I D AN R O AD IN KEN OSH A 6 5 4 - 0 . 4 1 1&#13;
m m ^ ** ** - ^i^~ii~ij~Li~ii"xrLr'ij~u-ij~j~u~_j~i-i-Lnij-i.r-ijnLr-i_)Tj~ij~L.~u-Ln.i-i.rijn.&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Va Blo ck South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
ump&#13;
$ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE </text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63694">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>sga elections results</text>
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              <text>sga election results&#13;
UW-Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Spring Election Results — March 7 and 8&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Becky Ecklund - w inner&#13;
Marry Peterson&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Steve Sulk&#13;
Senator&#13;
Greenquist Kenosha&#13;
20&#13;
Racine&#13;
n—&#13;
Greenquist Kenosha Racine&#13;
Tom Haack - winner&#13;
Mark Harris - winner&#13;
Mike Wickware&#13;
Harold Liss&#13;
Neil Lawton&#13;
Jan Michalski&#13;
Mike Mayeshiba&#13;
Mike Pecnic&#13;
Tom Garner&#13;
"55"&#13;
49&#13;
18&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
~53~&#13;
51&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
Total&#13;
'40&#13;
6&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
Total&#13;
54&#13;
55&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
163&#13;
155&#13;
19&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Becky Ecklund - winner (o)&#13;
Nancy Robinson&#13;
Rick Barnhart&#13;
Mike Deutsch&#13;
Lynda Barnes&#13;
Kyle Barnes&#13;
Dave Walden&#13;
Carl Vinson&#13;
Cheryl Troeger&#13;
Greenquist Kenosha&#13;
5&#13;
Racine&#13;
0"&#13;
5 0&#13;
4 0&#13;
0 4&#13;
2 0&#13;
0 3&#13;
0 3&#13;
1 1&#13;
0 0&#13;
Total&#13;
Campus Totals 86 74&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
3&#13;
75&#13;
6&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
235&#13;
(o) In the corresponding secretary race, Becky Ecklund declined,&#13;
and the second place winner, Nancy Robinson, was declared&#13;
winner.&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
'free&#13;
Volume 6 Number 10&#13;
industrial mission&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Crucial to the ultimate success&#13;
of Parkside is the&#13;
development of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry (SMI). By&#13;
state statute, Parkside was&#13;
given this special Industrial&#13;
Mission — and to the extent&#13;
which it fulfills it will be a&#13;
standard against which its&#13;
success will be measured.&#13;
The purpose of the school is&#13;
described as twofold: First to&#13;
educate men and women of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin for&#13;
professional work in&#13;
engineering and management,&#13;
and, secondly, to offer the&#13;
services of the school's industrially&#13;
experienced faculty&#13;
to the industrial and business&#13;
community.&#13;
But while the development of&#13;
Parkside's other academic unit,&#13;
the College of Science and&#13;
Society, has progressed, the&#13;
development of SMI till now has&#13;
been slight.&#13;
Despite this, and despite the&#13;
moratorium on new academic&#13;
programs imposed by the&#13;
recently merged Board of&#13;
Regents, both the acting Dean&#13;
of the School, William Moy, and&#13;
Vice Chancellor Otto Bauer are&#13;
highly optimistic about the&#13;
future of the school.&#13;
"We're going to get the job&#13;
done," Bauer told Newscope.&#13;
Acknowledging there has&#13;
been a lag in development —&#13;
only three of Parkside's 25&#13;
majors are in SMI, and there&#13;
are only nine regular faculty&#13;
members in the entire school —&#13;
Bauer asserted real progress is&#13;
being made this semester.&#13;
The school, as it exists now,&#13;
consists of three divisions,&#13;
Engineering Science, which&#13;
offers a major in Applied&#13;
Science and Technology,&#13;
Management Science, which&#13;
offers a major in Business&#13;
Management, and Labor&#13;
Economics, which offers a&#13;
major in Labor Economics.&#13;
Only Engineering Science is&#13;
relatively well-developed. It has&#13;
the nine full faculty members&#13;
and is headed by Divisional&#13;
Chairman Alan Grossberg.&#13;
Management Science, on the&#13;
other hand, has a staff of two&#13;
visiting professors and the rest&#13;
ad hoc instructors, while -Labor&#13;
Economics has only a visiting&#13;
professor.&#13;
Neither has a full divisional&#13;
chairman.&#13;
Faculty recruitment this year&#13;
is. being concentrated in&#13;
Management Science. Dean&#13;
Moy said four or five appointments&#13;
are being considered&#13;
here, possibly in accounting&#13;
and finance,&#13;
marketing, quantitative&#13;
methods, and personnel.&#13;
A Labor Economist may be&#13;
hired, too. There will be no&#13;
additions in Engineering&#13;
Science, he said.&#13;
"We're late in the recruiting&#13;
season now," Moy noted. He&#13;
said.&#13;
The candidates that have&#13;
visited the campus, he said,&#13;
have left impressed with&#13;
possibilities at Parkside.&#13;
"It's attractive for them to be&#13;
part of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin and its traditions,&#13;
and it's good to be in an environment&#13;
where you're not&#13;
hemmed in," he said. "To be&#13;
honest, that's what impresses&#13;
me about Parkside."&#13;
Moy will serve as acting Dean&#13;
only to the end of the semester.&#13;
assumed his position as acting&#13;
Dean at the start of the spring&#13;
semester, and has only since&#13;
then began work on recruiting.&#13;
"Management Science is one&#13;
of the more difficult areas to&#13;
recruit in," he added. "It's&#13;
difficult to find good people."&#13;
The emphasis is on&#13;
Management Science, he explained,&#13;
because of student&#13;
demand. Over 600 students have&#13;
indicated it as their major,&#13;
making it the biggest major on&#13;
campus (188 of these have offocially&#13;
declared it as their&#13;
major). "The students are&#13;
here," he emphasized. "They&#13;
have demonstrated their needs,&#13;
and they want help."&#13;
About 200 students have indicated&#13;
Engineering Science as&#13;
their major, while only 22 have&#13;
indicated Labor Economics as&#13;
their major.&#13;
At present, he is uncertain of&#13;
what the results will be in&#13;
recruitment — "I'll know more&#13;
at the end of the semester," he&#13;
W i llia m Moy , a c tin g dean of S M I.&#13;
He is a professor 6f Industrial&#13;
Engineering at Madison, and"&#13;
teaches two classes there. He is&#13;
at Parkside only Tuesday thru&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
His main priority is&#13;
recruiting. He adds though,&#13;
"I'm here to help them in any&#13;
way I can. When you have a&#13;
limited amount of time, you do&#13;
what is most feasible."&#13;
A reason often given why SMI&#13;
has not been developed was the&#13;
absence of a Dean and&#13;
Divisional Chairman; it was&#13;
thought unwise to recruit unless&#13;
the top men in the School could&#13;
have a say in it.&#13;
Reportedly, the position of&#13;
Dean was offered to two people&#13;
during the previous school year,&#13;
and in both cases it was refused.&#13;
Vice Chancellor Bauer says the&#13;
position is about to be offered&#13;
again — it's a matter of the&#13;
Regents deciding what role they&#13;
want to play in the selection.&#13;
Moy then is serving in the&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
Newscope Elections&#13;
In its second interim election of the semester, Newscope has&#13;
elected a new set of editors.&#13;
Jerry Socha was elected Editor; Jim Koloen Managing Editor;&#13;
and Paul Lomartire Associate Editor. All ran unopposed. They will&#13;
serve to the end of the semester.&#13;
An interim election was held because none of the candidates&#13;
were willing to serve a full term that would have ended in&#13;
November. Socha said of this: "I have no idea what will happen to&#13;
the paper in the fall. Most of the people working on it now will be&#13;
gone by then. There's a chance we might even collapse this&#13;
semester."&#13;
He said the only way to avoid this is if new people join the paper&#13;
immediately.&#13;
Socha worked previously on Newscope as Photo Editor and&#13;
Managing Editor.&#13;
The retiring editor, John Koloen, is journeying to Colorado to&#13;
begin working on a new paper. Other Newscope staffers are expected&#13;
to follow him during the next few months.&#13;
The new editors, besides constituting the Editorial Board, will&#13;
also function as the Board of Directors to handle the corporate&#13;
matters of the paper. Cleta Skovronski, who was elected by the&#13;
staff, also will serve on the Board of Directors.&#13;
Further editorial appointments will be made by the three&#13;
editors.&#13;
Womens Capsule College&#13;
KENOSHA — The second&#13;
annual Capsule College for&#13;
Women at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will be held&#13;
April 6 in Gr.eenquist Hall at the&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
Because of the popularity of&#13;
the initial Capsule College last&#13;
year — about 400 women attended&#13;
the all-day session — the&#13;
number of session topics has&#13;
been expanded from eight to 19&#13;
and an evening session has been&#13;
added for the convenience of&#13;
women who are employed or&#13;
have other obligations during&#13;
the day.&#13;
Capsule College is sponsored&#13;
by UW-Parkside, University&#13;
Extension and the Kenosha,&#13;
Racine and Walworth&#13;
University Extension Offices.&#13;
Complete information on the&#13;
program and registration&#13;
blanks are available from the&#13;
sponsoring institutions.&#13;
Deadline for registration for the&#13;
daytime sessions is March 23.&#13;
The $4 registration fee includes&#13;
a morning coffee break and&#13;
luncheon. No pre-registration is&#13;
required for the free evening&#13;
session.&#13;
Registrants may choose to&#13;
attend either one 2V2 hour&#13;
workshop and two 75-minute&#13;
seminars or four seminars.&#13;
Workshop topics and lecturers&#13;
are "The Dark Side of the&#13;
Marketplace: The Plight of the&#13;
Consumer" by Jerry Lamert,&#13;
associate regional director of&#13;
the Federal Trade Commission&#13;
and a Chicago Law School&#13;
professor, and "The Novel:&#13;
What Next?" by Robert Najem,&#13;
chairman of the liberal studies&#13;
functional unit of University&#13;
Extension.&#13;
Seminar topics and lecturers&#13;
are:&#13;
4- "Label Logic" by BlancheErkel,&#13;
consumer specialist of&#13;
the Federal Food and Drug&#13;
Administration, Minneapolis;&#13;
4- "Ecology, Morality and&#13;
Religious Traditions" by Wayne&#13;
Johnson, assistant professor of&#13;
philosophy at Parkside;&#13;
4- "Parent Roles: How to&#13;
Live With a Teenager" by Sam&#13;
Stellman, chairman of the&#13;
social work department of&#13;
University Extension;&#13;
+ "Reproduction&#13;
Engineering: Biological&#13;
Discoveries and Their Social&#13;
Implications" by Surinder&#13;
Datta, associate professor of&#13;
life science at Parkside;&#13;
4- "The Modern Hero: A&#13;
Good Man Is Hard to Find" by&#13;
Walter Graffin, assistant&#13;
professor of English at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
4- "How Do You Cope With&#13;
Catestrophic Illness?" by Ann&#13;
L. St. Louis, RN, director of&#13;
education at St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital, Kenosha;&#13;
4- "Movies: Now What" by&#13;
Robert Najem, University&#13;
Extension;&#13;
4- "Health for Women" by&#13;
Elizabeth Steffen, MD, Racine;&#13;
4- "Good Music Is Forever"&#13;
by Carmen Vila, pianist, artistin-residence&#13;
at Parkside;&#13;
4- "Investigation Into&#13;
Identity" by Agnes' Song,&#13;
clinical psychologist, Southern&#13;
Wisconsin Colony'&#13;
4- "The Black Woman in&#13;
Society: A Minority Within a&#13;
Minority" by Eunice Moss,&#13;
i n s t r u c t o r , soc iol o g y,&#13;
Dominican College;&#13;
4- "An English Couple Looks&#13;
at America — And Likes It" by&#13;
Martin Seymour-Smith, visiting&#13;
professor at Parkisde, and&#13;
Janet Seymour-Smith;&#13;
4- "Art Is All Around You"&#13;
by Stanley Walsh, assistant&#13;
professor of art at Parkside;&#13;
(Continued on Page 8) &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
For The Record&#13;
' ''I I I N I r l 1 1 I \ i £ | \ » |&#13;
1 c | ( •&#13;
mm* Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Sp*' .&lt;o^&#13;
&lt;5*&#13;
AC\cf &lt;-e&#13;
# &lt;&gt;&#13;
&amp;&lt;StP&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
^TENDERLOIN STEAK&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
Spmtlj&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
\ • SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN ROOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
— SENATOR PROXAAIRj=_&#13;
help for child&#13;
care center&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I would like to bring to the&#13;
notice of readers of Newscope&#13;
the work being done by a small&#13;
group of hard working and&#13;
committed people in operating&#13;
a Child Care Center for the&#13;
benefit of the students, staff and&#13;
faculty of UW. Parkside. In&#13;
spite of obstacles of varying&#13;
kinds, these dedicated people&#13;
are providing a much needed&#13;
service as evidenced by the 50&#13;
children now registered. The&#13;
use of rooms in the Parkside&#13;
Baptist Church has been kindly&#13;
donated by the congregation&#13;
and others have loaned or&#13;
donated playthings and&#13;
equipment. The center is at&#13;
present self-supporting by&#13;
reason of the small charge&#13;
made to parents using the&#13;
service, but funds are needed&#13;
for the purchase of larger,&#13;
permanent nursery equipment&#13;
and to hire additional staff.&#13;
Those involved in starting the&#13;
center have volunteered many&#13;
hours of their own time without&#13;
recompense and are concerned&#13;
only that the service provided&#13;
shall be of the highest quality.&#13;
In order to attain this goal we&#13;
need the support of ALL&#13;
Parkside people — those "not&#13;
interested" at the present time&#13;
may at some point in the future&#13;
be very glad such a service&#13;
exists. The SGA has helped in&#13;
many ways and this has been&#13;
much appreciated, also the&#13;
participation of the student&#13;
body at large in contributing to&#13;
fund raising. WE have many&#13;
plans for the future of the&#13;
Center and intent to continue&#13;
providing the very best service&#13;
we can but this will only be&#13;
possible with broad based&#13;
support from the Parkside&#13;
community both students and&#13;
faculty.&#13;
B. Lukas,&#13;
student and volunteer.&#13;
chisholm coming&#13;
to racine&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Congresswoman Chisholm is&#13;
one candidate that stands out as&#13;
being different. The real difference&#13;
that makes her stand&#13;
out is not that she is a woman,&#13;
and a black woman at that, but&#13;
that this dynamic woman is a&#13;
catalyst that can bring together&#13;
responsive women, struggling&#13;
minorities, the poor and the&#13;
young who see her as a new&#13;
hope for the system.&#13;
Shirley is fighting for:&#13;
Jobs for Veterans&#13;
A volunteer army&#13;
Consumer protection&#13;
Fighting hard drugs harder&#13;
An end to police control of&#13;
marijuana&#13;
Federal "Bill of Rights" for&#13;
workers&#13;
Free choice abortion&#13;
Amnesty for draft dodgers&#13;
Shirley will speak on these&#13;
topics and others March 17 at&#13;
10:00 a.m. in the Badger Room&#13;
at the Racine campus. If you&#13;
can't wait till Friday, Thursday&#13;
there will be a fund raising&#13;
Mexican dinner with music at&#13;
815 Silver St. (2 blocks east of&#13;
the Racine State St. Post Office)&#13;
from 5:45 to7:30 p.m. donations&#13;
$1.00, children $.50. Following&#13;
dinner a bus and car caravan&#13;
will leave for a rally at St.&#13;
Boniface Church, 11th and&#13;
Clark in Milwaukee.&#13;
There will be child care at the&#13;
Silver Street Day Care Center&#13;
until busses and cars come back&#13;
from Milwaukee.&#13;
Parkside Woman's Caucus&#13;
Shirley Chisholm for President&#13;
Committee&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
DAR SLAMS WOMEN'S LIBERATION&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) — The National Convention of the&#13;
Daughters of the American Revolution, in its meeting last month&#13;
issued an eight-page declaration that the women's liberation&#13;
movement will lead to sexual promiscuity and destroy the morals&#13;
of American society.&#13;
a "XV*™ 5660 liberated for a long time," said Mrs. Nettie&#13;
Arnold Hawkins. "You don't see us leaving our homes to demonstrate&#13;
for abstract movements."&#13;
The DAR paper hinted that the women's liberation movement&#13;
may be a direct link to a communist overthrow of the country.&#13;
STATUE REMOVED FROM HARM'S WAY&#13;
CHICAGO 111. (CPS) — The statue commemorating seven&#13;
policemen killed in the Haymarket Square riot in Chicago in 1886&#13;
has finally been moved to a place where it will be safe from attack&#13;
inside the Chicago police headquarters. The 9-foot-tall statue had&#13;
been blasted from its pedestal by bombs twice within the last three&#13;
ycsrs.&#13;
The first bombing, on Oct. 7, 1969, marked the beginning of the&#13;
Days of Rage' in which radicals lead by the Weather people batt ed&#13;
police '"the streets of Chicago. The statue was patched togeta&#13;
but was bombed from its perch again in 1970&#13;
proS,^,^-^ r&#13;
c&#13;
„f g&#13;
hu&#13;
aar^„eg&#13;
n t&#13;
maintained&#13;
COLURT&#13;
HANT WI™ WH1PLASH AWARDED 54,500 BY&#13;
LOS ANGELES (CPS) — Bimbo the Daneina FiarvK »&#13;
$4,500 in damages for whiplash injuries she recefv&lt;^n&#13;
accident in 1969. received m a traffic&#13;
Superior Court Judge Julius Title made the ruling •&#13;
owner Ted de Wayne claimed $10,000 for injuries received hvT&#13;
rained 16-year-old elephant Bimbo Jr. in a car-truck^accM^n^&#13;
Los Angeles on March 30, 1969. accident near&#13;
The circus owner said that heranco&#13;
lost interest in danc ing and also in a unique wateStg MI*" ^&#13;
DEDENVER?cPS,&#13;
WNn&#13;
ERS BEAT D°&#13;
G C«CHER&#13;
when the d| S ' ~ Tr^ ciZ^V^&#13;
angry crowd of park visitors.&#13;
an Park by an&#13;
The dog catchers have been causing Denver&#13;
grief in recent months by handing out tickets in the mTk!? 3 ?&#13;
f&#13;
who permit their dogs to run around withoul a leash PC°&#13;
P 6&#13;
talent in&#13;
milwaukee&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Because Parkside does not&#13;
yet have a Theatre major, most&#13;
of our actors and technical&#13;
theatre people transfer to&#13;
Milwaukee or Madison. It is&#13;
unfortunate that Parkside is not&#13;
benefiting from these talented&#13;
people. However, it is consoling&#13;
to know that our Communications&#13;
faculty has done&#13;
such a fine job of teaching.&#13;
Marilynn Baxter's acting&#13;
training has evidently payed&#13;
off, especially for the students&#13;
that have transferred to UWMilwaukee.&#13;
&#13;
UWM's recent production of&#13;
Marat Sade, which was given&#13;
excellent reviews by all who&#13;
saw it, had five ex-Parkside&#13;
actors in its cast. Three of the&#13;
main charactors were portrayed&#13;
by Nick Angotti ) Marat&#13;
Sade), Mitch Herbert&#13;
(Coulmier), and Jerry Mathews&#13;
(Dulac); Ricky Donnelly and&#13;
Donnalee Bain Desmond were&#13;
inmates of the asylum.&#13;
Needless to say, this speaks&#13;
well for Parkside's acting&#13;
training and the students who&#13;
chose to transfer in order to&#13;
continue it.&#13;
If you missed Marat Sade, by&#13;
all means catch Nick, Jerry and&#13;
Mitch at UWM's next play, Man&#13;
of La Mancha, which runs April&#13;
21-23 and 25-30. Curtain time is&#13;
8:30 except Sundays when it is&#13;
7:30. Tickets are available at&#13;
the box office.&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAR. 15&#13;
Poetry Workshop. Poet Robert Bly,&#13;
a National Book Award Winner, will&#13;
conduct an informal free public&#13;
poetry workshop from 9:30 to 11:30&#13;
a.m. in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Whiteskellar.&#13;
THURSDAY,MAR. 16&#13;
Concert. Student-faculty opera&#13;
program will present "La Serva&#13;
Padrona" (in English) and selected&#13;
arias at 8 p.m. in the Racine Campus&#13;
Badger Room. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY,MAR. 17&#13;
Dance. "Stars and Stripes".&#13;
Baseball Club. 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Adm.&#13;
$1.50. Wisconsin and Parkside I.D.'s&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY,MAR. 18&#13;
Track. UW-P at UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
SUNDAY,MAR. 19&#13;
Concert. UW Racine Alumni Club&#13;
will sponsor a program by the&#13;
University Singers of UW-Madison&#13;
at 2:30 p.m. in the Horlick Little&#13;
Theater, Racine. Adm. adults $2;&#13;
students $1. Tickets available at&#13;
Student Activities Office. Proceeds&#13;
to local UW Scholarship Fund which&#13;
includes UW-P.&#13;
"Don't beli eve everything you read.'&#13;
Robin David, Kathy Rasch, Pat&#13;
McDermid, Marc Eisen, Jean Frahm,&#13;
Larry Jones, Jim Koloen, Helmut&#13;
Ferber, John Koloen, Rich Lipke,&#13;
Paul Lomartire, Bob Mainland,&#13;
Kevin McKay, Fred Noer, Jr., Brian&#13;
Ross, Wolfgang Salewski, Andy Schmelling,&#13;
Barb Scott, Cleta&#13;
Skovronski, Jerry Socha, Bill&#13;
Sorensen, Mike Stevesand, Debbie&#13;
Venskus, Mike Kite, Sifton Winnow.&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#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 source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout Ihe&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
,s 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road. &#13;
first meeting March 13,1972 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Gay Lib Attracts Few&#13;
Pago 3&#13;
by Helmut Ferber of the Newscope staff&#13;
It isn t at all hard for me to imagine why&#13;
there were only three persons in the audience at&#13;
the Gay Youth Coalition last Thursday. It isn't&#13;
hard to see why there weren't any constituents of&#13;
a Gay Movement present at the meeting. It&#13;
wasn t at all hard to see why the whole audience&#13;
left after about ten minutes of discussion. What&#13;
is hard for me to see is the feeling that I came&#13;
away with after the meeting had ended. I was all&#13;
ready to put a little more bias and resentment&#13;
into Newscope as I was sitting down there in that&#13;
little white Ratskellar. I couldn't have imagined&#13;
that a person who was Gay should have the&#13;
rights I have and be allowed to express himself&#13;
in the manner he desired. Well, I left that&#13;
meeting after an hour and a half and I felt that I&#13;
came a little closer to seeing a state of being. I&#13;
feel a little more comfortable in getting one step&#13;
closer to seeing that all people are human. I feel&#13;
somewhat more objective in writing a subjective&#13;
article as this is, than to write an uninvolved,&#13;
unfeeling report of discussion that took place.&#13;
Unfeeling Report of&#13;
Discussion and Topics Covered&#13;
On Thursday, March 9, there was a meeting&#13;
sponsored by the Concerned Student Coalition to&#13;
provide speakers and discussion on the subject of&#13;
Gay Liberation. Present at the meeting were two&#13;
members of the Gay Peoples Union from&#13;
Milwaukee as speakers, one member of the Gay&#13;
Youth Coalition from Parkside, one priest, two&#13;
other gentlemen from the Gay community, one&#13;
Newscope reporter, one Newscope&#13;
photographer, a journalist for the Young&#13;
Democrats in Milwaukee, and an audience of&#13;
three. A large-scale turnout to say the least.&#13;
Human rights and the need for progressive&#13;
change in our outmoded sex laws were the main&#13;
topics of discussion. The need for more pressure&#13;
on government officials and candidates was&#13;
stressed as a sound step for more freedom for&#13;
Gay life. The main point was that being gay in no&#13;
way changes the status of a human being.&#13;
End of Unfeeling Report&#13;
People need awakening in order to help&#13;
change old values and attitudes. People need to&#13;
take a good look at themselves in relation to what&#13;
is right, if anything. I sincerely wish that some&#13;
more students would have taken the time and at&#13;
least came and talked to these people. I sincerely&#13;
hope at some time you can talk to a person&#13;
without looking at the sexual beliefs in determining&#13;
if they are a good person or not. I sincerely&#13;
hope . . .&#13;
If you would like information or help call 414-&#13;
342-1722 or write Gay Lib, P.O. Box 90530,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Kenosha Can-Do to Continue&#13;
On the night of - Tuesday,&#13;
February 22, the city of&#13;
Kenosha held a meeting with&#13;
some people of the Can-Do&#13;
organization. Can-Do is a nonprofit&#13;
organization whose&#13;
ultimate goal is the complete&#13;
recycling of waste in the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha area.&#13;
The purpose of this meeting&#13;
was to discuss the turning over&#13;
of the Can-Do facilities to the&#13;
city, who has appropriated&#13;
$10,000 f or the operation.&#13;
For a good part of the meeting&#13;
the subject of discussion was&#13;
the amount of money the city&#13;
could make from this program&#13;
rather than the benefit it would&#13;
give our environment. After&#13;
getting most of the minor points&#13;
straightened out, the city&#13;
decided it would be ready to&#13;
start operations on March 6.&#13;
At present about 2 per cent of&#13;
the city's population is participating&#13;
in the Can-Do&#13;
operation. The city would like to&#13;
up this total to 10 per cent by the&#13;
use of an extensive advertising&#13;
program. The present Can-Do&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
organization has offered its&#13;
existing funds toward publicity&#13;
for the endeavor. This help&#13;
along with the assistance offered&#13;
by the Jaycees and word&#13;
of mouth should give the city its&#13;
much needed publicity for the&#13;
project.&#13;
HOURS OPEN&#13;
Monday - Friday: 1 p.m. to 5&#13;
p.m. Except holidays.&#13;
Saturday: 8 a.m. to 5 p .m.&#13;
Material To Be Accepted&#13;
A. Tin cans cleaned and&#13;
flattened.&#13;
B. Glass&#13;
1. colored - all metal tags&#13;
removed.&#13;
2. clear - all metal tags&#13;
removed.&#13;
C. Paper - not to be accepted&#13;
until a semi trailer can be obtained&#13;
for storage and transport.&#13;
&#13;
ZJlie VJL eij S—&lt; &gt;upper ^&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan td.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
SetoHHf the, tyined&#13;
Ptyy* &amp; OicJicut Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 656-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
Itolex - Accutron&#13;
UltrachrOn - Longine&#13;
Bui ova • Movado&#13;
Caravelle - Time*&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
Uneat -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
s M/ sai7 au, Ave.&#13;
y&amp;fwuteu £ &amp;&amp;TIA&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
o% Dis count to s tudents and Faculty with \ .Q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace • Lunt&#13;
Heed A Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAt.&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefora&#13;
Seneca • Lalique&#13;
Royal Worcester &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972&#13;
McLuhan at USC&#13;
by Mark Timpany&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
In his first public lecture in&#13;
the United States since 1970,&#13;
Marshall McLuhan had little&#13;
new to tell his audience at the&#13;
University of Southern&#13;
California. That's reasonable,&#13;
since, McLuhan points out, we&#13;
live in an eternal present where&#13;
past, present and future are&#13;
simultaneous. It's like going to&#13;
an antique dealer and asking,&#13;
"What's new?"&#13;
McLuhan now has black (not&#13;
grey) hair and wears a&#13;
mustache. He accepts his role&#13;
as "McLuhan", as opposed to&#13;
Professor McLuhan, though he&#13;
still is identified with the&#13;
University of Toronto. He now&#13;
plays the role of prophet, and&#13;
his audience last week did not&#13;
expect a typical college lecture.&#13;
What they got was typical&#13;
McLuhan — ty pical of a person&#13;
who is paid thousands of dollars&#13;
by General Motors to tell them&#13;
that, "The automobile was a&#13;
thing of the past."&#13;
The audience also got a large&#13;
collection of jokes, mostly puns.&#13;
The address could have been&#13;
titled "The Standup Humor of&#13;
Marshall McLuhan". "What is&#13;
a sick joke about Marshall&#13;
McLuhan? .... Who was&#13;
Marshall McLuhan?" Jokes,&#13;
McLuhan tells us, are an expression&#13;
of anguish. A comdeian&#13;
is one who puts on his&#13;
audiences grievances.&#13;
McLuhan did have some&#13;
comments on two other authors&#13;
writing on the contemporary&#13;
scene. Toffler, he said, was not&#13;
aware of breakdown as&#13;
breakthrough. Future Shock is&#13;
thus a look at the future through&#13;
a rear view mirror. B. F.&#13;
Skinner was described by&#13;
McLuhan as "a great man of&#13;
the nineteenth century."&#13;
Xerox was another topic for&#13;
comment. "The Gutenburg&#13;
cycle is completed by Xerox."&#13;
While, under conditions of print,&#13;
everyone could become a&#13;
reader, Xerox allows everyone&#13;
to become a publisher. It means&#13;
makes easy security leaks —&#13;
"the enema of the people".&#13;
These security leaks are&#13;
"anticipatory of participatory&#13;
democracy". Xerox, bv making&#13;
everyone a publisher, turns the&#13;
underground press into an elite&#13;
press.&#13;
The problem with McLuhan,&#13;
it seems, is that once you have&#13;
struggled with what he has been&#13;
saying (the last twenty years)&#13;
enough to understand it,&#13;
everything he's saying becomes&#13;
so obvious that you wonder why&#13;
the great controversy over&#13;
making it explicit. ("We're not&#13;
sure who discovered water, but&#13;
we're quite sure it wasn't a&#13;
fish.") Generalists are always&#13;
hard to work with this way.&#13;
McLuhan did mention several&#13;
uses of the information gleaned&#13;
from his media studies. While&#13;
radio has little effect when&#13;
applied to a literate culture, its&#13;
effects are enormous when&#13;
introduced to an oral culture.&#13;
(The dichotomy is literatevisual-civilization&#13;
— oralculture).&#13;
UNESCO's policy of&#13;
indiscriminately distributing&#13;
radios to "backward" areas is&#13;
akin to "pouring gas on a fire".&#13;
Similarly, the problem in&#13;
Northern Ireland could be&#13;
solved in a week by shutting off&#13;
the radio. This has nothing to do&#13;
with the content of radio, the&#13;
primary effect of any medium&#13;
being its effect as a shaper of&#13;
human sensibility. The medium&#13;
is the message — mass-age —&#13;
massage — mess-age.&#13;
It's been eight years since&#13;
Understanding Media and&#13;
nothing has changed. The&#13;
satellite (as proscenium arch)&#13;
has transformed the globe into&#13;
an art form which we are free to&#13;
program at will. McLuhan is&#13;
fond of recalling the Balinese&#13;
saying, "We have no art, we do&#13;
everything as well as we can."&#13;
The electric information environment&#13;
has made jobs obsolete&#13;
("roles not goals") and&#13;
revived the occult (Norman&#13;
Slater). In a service environment,&#13;
it is unnecessary to&#13;
work to be a productive&#13;
member of society. ("My&#13;
consumers, are they not also&#13;
my producers?") Hardware&#13;
loses primacy to software. Data&#13;
classification yields to pattern&#13;
recognition. Alcohol yields to&#13;
psychedelics. (The inner rather&#13;
than the outer trip.) There are&#13;
no more goals. "You're already&#13;
there."&#13;
In the eight years since Understanding&#13;
Media, McLuhan is&#13;
still the only name associated&#13;
with media study. All that time&#13;
he has said that he would be&#13;
happy to return to being a&#13;
professor of English literature&#13;
(grading papers in Toronto) if&#13;
someone else would become&#13;
interested in researching the&#13;
effects of media (Tom Wolfe&#13;
described McLuhan's field of&#13;
study as cognitive psychology.)&#13;
The effects of media are still&#13;
there. No one has seen fit to&#13;
program them to some human&#13;
end.&#13;
The point is that the media&#13;
don't have to be the message,&#13;
i.e. "whirled without amied'V&#13;
Through a critical awareness of&#13;
the effect of medi&#13;
Possible t 0 program a&#13;
of mmededia ia tno crreate a &lt;&#13;
ratio 0f sensory ex&#13;
'sensibility). While yo&#13;
escaPe rriedia effects,&#13;
P|ck which on es are us&#13;
given time. T o achieve&#13;
awareness, howevei&#13;
necessary to discard&#13;
mense backlog of&#13;
cultural assumptions&#13;
from the pi&#13;
technology). For the A&#13;
they include the woi&#13;
racism, sexism&#13;
nationalism. In the&#13;
(present), it can be&#13;
that one's allegiance&#13;
divided between the ti&#13;
end of the nu clear fan&#13;
the globe (the&#13;
nationalism). In the&#13;
(past), we experience t&#13;
(present) with an a'&#13;
defined by cultural la&#13;
than immediate rea&#13;
live, therefore, in a j&#13;
Frank Zappa's "Rubei&#13;
Jets" album does not&#13;
the fifties.&#13;
McLuhan addressed&#13;
audience last week wil&#13;
°f an Altec mic:&#13;
McLuhan's record albi&#13;
better use of his haltir&#13;
patterns than did hi&#13;
dressing this group. Or&#13;
commented, "You c&#13;
him, you might as&#13;
listening to the radio.&#13;
CRUDSTOPPERS TEXTBOOK&#13;
LONG HAIR LEADS TO FILTH, DEGRADATION, INSANITY,&#13;
DEATH,AND SOCIALISM/ IF YOU SEE A CRUD,&#13;
NOTIFY POLICE. OR, DO THE NEXT BEST&#13;
THING-SHOOT IT/ r&#13;
KENOSHA - The National&#13;
Shakes peare Company&#13;
production of "Twelfth Night"&#13;
will be presented under sponsorship&#13;
of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee at 8&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday, March 28, in&#13;
Bradford High School&#13;
Auditorium, Kenosha.&#13;
Tickets now are on sale at the&#13;
Parkside Student Activities&#13;
Office on the Wood Road&#13;
Campus, at Cook-Gere Co. in&#13;
Racine and Bidinger's House of&#13;
Music in Kenosha. There is no&#13;
mail order. Tickets for the&#13;
general public are $3 and $2,&#13;
with all seats reserved.&#13;
GRAF'S CAFE&#13;
8009 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
by Paul Lomartireof the Newscope staff&#13;
I decided to set up a vigil before the place became&#13;
a tourist attraction. I wanted to see the men who were&#13;
causing such a local commotion with the use of their&#13;
morning coffee break.&#13;
I p arked my car directly across the street from&#13;
Graf's Sausage Kitchen and Cafe in an empty parking&#13;
lot owned by Piggly Wiggly. I slo uched in the front seat&#13;
noting the stillness, the early morning tranquility. It&#13;
was a cold, crisp Thursday.&#13;
I listened intently for the rumble of the big red and&#13;
green "Keep the City Clean" machines, i w as ready to&#13;
record the event for all of mankind and posterity in a&#13;
simple journal. Needless to say, I w as very nervous.&#13;
A little past eight thirty the first monster appeared&#13;
on Twenty-Second Avenue. Then a second, a third. In a&#13;
few minutes the street was partially lined on both sides&#13;
by the mechanical garbage eaters, with fruits of past&#13;
battles affixed to the fronts of the trucks; stuffed&#13;
animals, cardboard signs and pictures, strange tatoos&#13;
of the trade.&#13;
The men climbing out of the cabs of the vehicles&#13;
were burly, husky, steam mouthes in the cold air. They&#13;
tunneled into the small Cafe in search of d aily papers,&#13;
hot coffee, rolls, eggs and pancakes. The scene&#13;
reminded me of a Hell's AngelS - Labor Day - invasion&#13;
of a small, innocent, defenseless town. I di dn't leave&#13;
my car.&#13;
As I watched the events transpire, I thou ght of the&#13;
contributors to the Kenosha News "Voice of the&#13;
People" column, those who had complained about the&#13;
city workers converging on local restaurants during&#13;
their morning breaks. One citizen asked why the men&#13;
couldn't simply carry coffee in thermoses and drink&#13;
during break-time in the truck. Other Kenoshans offered&#13;
advice and opinions in print condemning or&#13;
defending the sanitation engineers and their "on duty"&#13;
habits.&#13;
If th e garbage men could only face their accusers&#13;
right in the middle of Twenty-Second Avenue this&#13;
bright crisp morning, my simple journal would instantly&#13;
blossom into a best-selling novel.&#13;
I w aited quietly, remaining unnoticed while the&#13;
men ate, then re-entered the cold and mounted their&#13;
trucks, twentieth century chariots of waste. The big,&#13;
awkward vehicles faded into the distance north and&#13;
south on the avenue, east and west, invading sleepy&#13;
side streets. I jotted down a few final notes and headed&#13;
into the Cafe.&#13;
Andy Warhol once said that a time would come&#13;
when everyone in America would be a Superstar for&#13;
ten minutes, before fading into oblivion. I think the&#13;
time has come, thanks in part to "Voice of the People"&#13;
type columns. I beli eve Bud Graf, the proprietor of the&#13;
Sausage Kitchen and Cafe, will be propelled into Super&#13;
Stardom if the "garbageman controversy" continues. I&#13;
even think he may be a Superstar for more than ten&#13;
minutes; at least a half hour.&#13;
He is the individual who prepares the food, cuts the&#13;
meat, and serves all the customers under the small&#13;
square roof in the Sausage Kitchen-Cafe. He is a large&#13;
man who looks like he could sling hash in the toughest&#13;
corner of Hells' Kitchen in New York.&#13;
There are only about four booths in his place, and&#13;
as many tables. Next to the dining area is the typical&#13;
neighborhood jammed-packed grocery store — which&#13;
offers everything from potato chips, penny candy and&#13;
goSds^ SaUSageS t0 0003 Co,a&#13;
' che&#13;
ese and bakery&#13;
Judy, the waitress serving the four booths and&#13;
tables, took my order of pancakes and coffee minutes&#13;
after I had selected a place to s it. There&#13;
students, a coffee salesman, two housewi&#13;
man eating alone in th e Cafe; making the&#13;
full.&#13;
For fifty-five cents I got th ree p ancakes,&#13;
of butter and all the coffee I desired. Bud&#13;
had a little of the pancake batter left from tl&#13;
of the he-men earlier in the mo rning, as hi&#13;
three big, fat pancakes, fit fo r th e hungrii&#13;
berjacks, garbagemen or whoever.&#13;
Judy left a bottle of Log Cabin sy rup o&#13;
instead of t hose nasty, sticky plastic contai&#13;
places use. I r ead the Sun-Times w hich \&#13;
table, also appreciating the Tribune and Sen&#13;
disposal.&#13;
Graf's though small, also serves chicker&#13;
a dollar forty-five), steak (one be ing a R&#13;
$2.55), veal parmisan (a buck and a quar&#13;
(.95), shrimp (1.95), and hamburgers, chei&#13;
pizzaburgers. Not to mention any com!&#13;
breakfasts utilizing eggs, bacon, ha m sau:&#13;
cereal, etc.&#13;
Also available to any f oBu d s customer&#13;
Bud Super Special", which c®f&#13;
s&#13;
asked Judy what it consisted o f. She the&#13;
minute and told me it had something to&#13;
cheeseburger and a pizzaburger.&#13;
I at e what I could of the three Pancakes&#13;
I left e nough to permit serious thoughts on&#13;
sending the remains to someone^starving .r&#13;
place. It was definitely worth fifty'-five a&#13;
Before I left Grafs, I wanted sot&#13;
testimony from Judy concerning e ga&#13;
breaktime-"Voice of the Peopte affair,&#13;
this was indeed the Cafe w J &lt;&#13;
hang-out." wanted.&#13;
3&#13;
As" He" I th ought about w riting a&#13;
KenMha News^ice of he t&#13;
suggest that the payers wn k&#13;
the sanitation engineers ^&#13;
situation; on garbagemen s&#13;
coffee during breaktime so &#13;
March 13,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
of media it is&#13;
rogram a balance&#13;
create a desirable&#13;
nsory experience&#13;
While you cannot&#13;
a effects, you can&#13;
nes are useful at a&#13;
ro achieve such an&#13;
however, it is&#13;
} discard an imklog&#13;
of obsolete&#13;
jmptions (derived&#13;
ie preceding&#13;
For the American,&#13;
i the work ethic,&#13;
sexism and&#13;
In the future&#13;
can be expected&#13;
allegiance will be&#13;
reen the tribe (the&#13;
uclear family) and&#13;
(the end of&#13;
In the present&#13;
iperience the future&#13;
ith an awareness&#13;
cultural lag rather&#13;
diate reality. We&#13;
re, in a junkyard,&#13;
j's "Ruben and the&#13;
i does not refer to&#13;
addressed the USC&#13;
t week with the aid&#13;
tec microphone,&#13;
-ecord album made&#13;
f his halting speech&#13;
an did he in adi&#13;
group. One woman&#13;
"You can't see&#13;
might as well be&#13;
the radio."&#13;
National&#13;
ompany&#13;
th Night"&#13;
ider spon-&#13;
,-ersity of&#13;
Lecture&#13;
littee at 8&#13;
irch 28, i n&#13;
School&#13;
sale at the&#13;
Activities&#13;
&gt;od Road&#13;
;re Co. in&#13;
s House of&#13;
here is no&#13;
s for the&#13;
S3 and $2,&#13;
ed.&#13;
i sit. There were two&#13;
wo housewives and a&#13;
making the place half&#13;
} pancakes,three pats&#13;
(Sired. Bud must have&#13;
• left from the invasion&#13;
irning, as he produced&#13;
the hungriest of lumiver.&#13;
&#13;
ibin syrup on the table&#13;
astic containers many&#13;
nes w hich was on the&#13;
•uneand Sentinel at my&#13;
rves chicken (a half for&#13;
5 being a Rib Eye for&#13;
and a quarter), perch&#13;
urgers, cheeseburgers,&#13;
i any combination of&#13;
n, ham sausage, toast,&#13;
I's customer is the "Big&#13;
&gt;ts seventy-five cents. I&#13;
of. She thought for a&#13;
Jmething to do with a&#13;
er.&#13;
ee pancakes served me.&#13;
thoughts on my part of&#13;
e starving in a far away&#13;
fifty-five cents,&#13;
wanted some sort of&#13;
ling the garbagemen -&#13;
ie" affair. I asked her if&#13;
ere all the garbagemen&#13;
nd said, "a few of them&#13;
I wanted.&#13;
writing a letter to the&#13;
^eople" column, I could&#13;
vere complaining, meet&#13;
falk over the whole&#13;
urf over hot cakes and&#13;
e morning.&#13;
paid for by Wisconsin Students For McGovern and Wisconsin McGovern for President Committee. 728 N. Jefferson. Milwaukee. Frank Nikolay, Ch.&#13;
AND WHAT&#13;
ARE YOU DOING&#13;
ABOUT IT?&#13;
FOR OVER A DECADE ONE MAN IN AMERICAN POLITICS HAS HAD THE COURAGE TO SPEAK OUT —&#13;
ALONE — ON THE MAJOR ISSUES FACING THE COUNTRY.&#13;
• in 1963 George McGovern was the first man to oppose the War in Indochina.&#13;
• McGovern has pledged to appoint a woman to the first Supreme Court opening, as well as other major judicial and executive posts.&#13;
He supports all legislation guaranteeing equal rights for women.&#13;
• in 1968 he led a "one-man" crusade which revealed the extent of hunger and malnutrition in America. Out of this effort came Food&#13;
Stamp and School Lunch legislation.&#13;
• only McGovern is committed to grant a general amnesty to all those forced to flee the country rather than fight in an unjust war.&#13;
• only McGovern has spelled out an alternative defense budget for America which would reduce Pentagon spending by $30 billion.&#13;
• McGovern is the only Senator to endorse the 60 points of the Congressional Black Caucus. He co-sponsored every major piece of&#13;
civil rights legislation since he entered the Senate.&#13;
• in 1969 McGovern submitted legislation calling for the termination of the draft.&#13;
• McGovern calls existing penalties for posession of marijuana inequitable and unrealistic.&#13;
• McGovern led in congressional support for Cesar Chavez' efforts to ensure a fair income for farm workers.&#13;
• since 1963 McGovern has been proposing national programs which would shift the economy from military to civilian production.&#13;
• in 1972 McGovern stated the heart of his plan for a better America when he called for a dramatic program of income redistribution and&#13;
tax reform. His plan would have the effect of shifting $29 billion from those at the highest income levels to the vast majority of Americans&#13;
at lower levels, those earning under $12,000. Now, that's radical change!&#13;
McGovern's record on the issues is testimony to what he's been doing about the problems facing our country.&#13;
NOW, IT'S YOUR TURN TO DO YOUR SHARE!&#13;
George McGovern needs your help in the Wisconsin Presidential Primary. He needs two things from you. Your Vote . . . and Your Spring Vacation.&#13;
YOUR VOTE —&#13;
If you have not registered to vote yet, do so before the deadline, March 22 (March 15 in Milwaukee). If you are registered in a city where you will&#13;
not be present on Election Day, April 4, then clip the coupon, which is an application for an absentee ballot. Send this form to the Clerk at the o'fice&#13;
where you register. You will get an absentee ballot in the return mail. Please vote this ballot and return it to the Clerk before April 3.&#13;
ABSENTEE VOTING — APPLICATION FOR BALLOT&#13;
Election Clerk, City Clerk's Offices, Wisconsin&#13;
I hereby certify that I am a citizen of the United States and have been a legal resident&#13;
of the state of Wisconsin for six months, and of the precinct of the ward&#13;
of the city of . ; (or of the Village or Town of );&#13;
County of for ten days next preceding; that I am a duly&#13;
qualified elector therein; that I expect to be temporarily absent from such legal residence&#13;
and cannot appear at the polling place on said date. I, therefore, hereby apply for official&#13;
ballots to be voted by me at such election.&#13;
Dated 1972. Signed&#13;
Residence City or P. O&#13;
(Street and number or rural route)&#13;
Zip&#13;
Mail ballot to No Street&#13;
City or P. O.&#13;
YOUR SPRING VACATION&#13;
For Georae McGovern to win the Wisconsin Primary he needs the volunteer help of many people to canvass the cities and towns and rural areas of the&#13;
state. There is nothing you can do over your Spring Vacation which is as important as electing the next President of the United States. Please help!&#13;
There '1®.?^?.^''®one"of&#13;
3&#13;
these McGovern offices and sign up for a week's work which can be crucial in turning the country around once and for all;&#13;
MadisonMcGwmoffice: 630 W. Washington 608-257-8896 Milwaukee McGovern office: 728 N. Jefferson 414-273-3263&#13;
McGOVERN FOR&#13;
PRESIDENT &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972&#13;
Madison Program on Jewish Experience&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
fSt u f-wk i&lt; j. z.oo ^-y&#13;
AA&#13;
re e&#13;
a.4&#13;
M«-VJ Voqi\« TUJ&#13;
ld2 0 - S 2St&#13;
&lt;t r&#13;
I I ~ ^ Co.^yon .&#13;
/^tJsC)Sr\o, / /-•/{, Corr-iggn \&#13;
Rise to face UN other day&#13;
U.W. Parkside&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
IN&#13;
EUROPE&#13;
Chicago To Amsterdam&#13;
Two Plights&#13;
OR&#13;
JUNE - JULY 3 3&#13;
JUNE 4 - AUGUST 10&#13;
Complete price $214.00 ( Transportation On ly)&#13;
MADISON - The Hillel&#13;
Foundation at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison is sponsoring&#13;
a series of programs&#13;
March 11-24 on the campus to&#13;
study the Holocaust, the extermination&#13;
of six million Jews&#13;
in Europe.&#13;
The schedule is as follows:&#13;
Saturday, March 11 — 8 p.m.,&#13;
"The Shop on Main Street," the&#13;
film on the elimination of Jews&#13;
from a small Czech town; to be&#13;
repeated Sunday, March 12, 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Monday, March 13 — 4 p.m.,&#13;
workshop on writings about the&#13;
Holocaust with David Roskies&#13;
of Brandeis University, noted&#13;
young Yiddish scholar; 8 p.m.,&#13;
multi-media show on "The Rise&#13;
and Fall of the East European&#13;
Jew," presented by Roskies.&#13;
Friday, March 17 — 9 p.m.,&#13;
Prof. Georges Haupt, visiting&#13;
lecturer in the UW-Madison&#13;
history department, discusses&#13;
the Jewish response to the Nazi&#13;
occupation with emphasis on his&#13;
own native village of Falicia.&#13;
Saturday, March 18 — 8 p.m.,&#13;
presentation of the films&#13;
"Border Street," "Sighet,&#13;
Sighet," and "Night and Fog";&#13;
to be repeated at 8 p.m. March&#13;
23.&#13;
Tuesday, March 21 — 8 p.m.,&#13;
Czech author and film producer&#13;
Arnost Lustig screens his film&#13;
"Diamonds in the Night," then&#13;
discusses film making.&#13;
Friday, March 24 — 9 p.m.,&#13;
Prof. Raul Hilberg, University&#13;
of Vermont, author of "The&#13;
Destruction of European&#13;
Jewry," will discuss "The&#13;
Uniqueness of the Holocaust."&#13;
During the two-week period&#13;
special seminars will be held,&#13;
mini-exhibits on the revolt of&#13;
the Warsaw ghetto will be on&#13;
view, and pertinent books will&#13;
be on display ai campus&#13;
bookstores and the Madison&#13;
Public Library.&#13;
All programs will be held at&#13;
the Hillel Foundation, 611&#13;
Langdon st., and are open to the&#13;
"public. A program booklet can&#13;
be obtained by calling 256-8361.&#13;
Teaching Awards&#13;
to be Presented&#13;
Two University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
faculty members will&#13;
be presented with $500&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Awards&#13;
to be made at Commencement&#13;
Exercises this spring. The&#13;
awards are made possible by a&#13;
bequest for that purpose from&#13;
Standard Oil Company. The&#13;
Awards Committee desires&#13;
student nominations with a&#13;
statement of supporting:&#13;
evidence for the nomination not&#13;
to exceed a page in length. The&#13;
letters of support should emphasize&#13;
teaching effectiveness&#13;
and success and how the&#13;
professor contributed to the&#13;
student's learning experience,.&#13;
The awards are not meant to be&#13;
a popularity contest based on&#13;
the charisma of the instructors.&#13;
Next week nomination forms&#13;
will be mailed to each student&#13;
and will also be available to&#13;
students in the three Student&#13;
Services Offices, in the Library&#13;
and in the Divisional Offices.&#13;
These nominations will provide&#13;
the basis of selection of the&#13;
recipient. The Awards selections&#13;
are made by a committee&#13;
of 15. Committee members are&#13;
Professors Herbert Kubly,&#13;
Chairman, and Professors&#13;
Stella Gray, Gene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, Leon Applebaum,&#13;
Alan Grossberg and&#13;
Martin. Professor Martin was a&#13;
1971 winner of the Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Award. Student&#13;
committee members are Jerry&#13;
Grimes, Wolfgang Salewski,&#13;
Robert Lindstroth, Lois Bauer,&#13;
Robert Fornal, Curtis&#13;
Sahakian, James Twist and&#13;
Michael Baxter. Mr. Twist and&#13;
Mr. Baxter are representatives&#13;
on the committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. The fifteenth&#13;
member of the committee is&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger of the&#13;
Student Services Office.&#13;
PAB Needs Members&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, responsible for advising&#13;
the Student Activities Office in&#13;
the area of programming on&#13;
campus, is inviting more&#13;
students to become members.&#13;
The Board helps to organize and&#13;
work on activities on campus.&#13;
Sue Nevin, Vice President of the&#13;
Board and in charge of applications,&#13;
has announced, "The&#13;
Parkside Activities Board has&#13;
been operating for slightly more&#13;
than a year. Now the possibility&#13;
arises for expanding our&#13;
programming, and subsequently,&#13;
our membership."&#13;
The PAB has a series of&#13;
committees that program for&#13;
specific areas. The particular&#13;
committees listed below still&#13;
have room for new members.&#13;
They are:&#13;
Special Events - It is&#13;
responsible for organizing such&#13;
events as "The End",&#13;
Parkside's end of the year&#13;
festival. They also are interested&#13;
in new ideas for activities&#13;
of this type next year.&#13;
Outing - It hopes to offer&#13;
students hiking, skiing (in&#13;
ESqbs'&#13;
cooperation with ski club),&#13;
trips, etc. The possibilities are&#13;
endless but the committee&#13;
needs students to work in these&#13;
areas.&#13;
Games - It recently ran&#13;
tournaments for billiards and&#13;
chess, plus it sent the winners to&#13;
regional tournaments. Plans&#13;
are now being made for foozeball&#13;
and ping pong tournaments&#13;
to be held in the Activities&#13;
Building.&#13;
Fine Arts - Lectures,&#13;
documentary films, and the&#13;
more cultural activities are&#13;
their responsibility. PAB would&#13;
definitely like to go deeper into&#13;
this area.&#13;
Coffee House - Whiteskellar in&#13;
the basement of Greenquist&#13;
Hall has become the base of&#13;
operations for their successful&#13;
activities and their new concept&#13;
of daytime programming.&#13;
However, more interested&#13;
people are needed.&#13;
House - anyone interested in&#13;
sound or lighting systems or in&#13;
spending many hours preparing&#13;
for concerts are needed. They&#13;
help in physical aspects of the&#13;
Board.&#13;
The PAB asks any student&#13;
interested in any or all of the&#13;
above mentioned committees to&#13;
stop in at the Student Activities&#13;
Office, rm. 217, Tallent Hall.&#13;
Students can ask questions and&#13;
hopefully pick up an application&#13;
form.&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE V ILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue Kenosha 657-5181&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE &#13;
KENOSHA — Five home&#13;
tennis meets, three home golf&#13;
meets and participation in the&#13;
Drake Relays and the NAIA&#13;
national championships by the&#13;
track squad highlight the 1972&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
spring sports&#13;
schedules announced today by&#13;
Tom Rosandich, director of&#13;
athletics.&#13;
Spring sports coaches are&#13;
Steve Stephens, golf; Dick&#13;
Frecka, tennis; and Bob&#13;
Lawson and Vic Godfrey, track.&#13;
Barbara Jo Morris will coordinate&#13;
the women's tennis and&#13;
track teams, with their&#13;
schedules to be announced at a&#13;
later date.&#13;
The schedules follow:&#13;
Golf: Mon., April 10: Lake&#13;
Forest and Rockford at Lake&#13;
Upcoming Sports Schedule March 13.1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Forest, 111.; Wed., April 19: UWWhitewater,&#13;
Dominican UWMilwaukee&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
(Petrifying Springs);. Fri&#13;
April 21: Milton and Ripon at&#13;
Janesville; Sat., April 22:&#13;
Northwestern and UW-Madison&#13;
at Wilmette, 111.; Wed., April&#13;
26: Loyola, Carthage, UWWhitewater&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
(Petrifying Springs); Fri.&#13;
April 28: Roosevelt Univ at&#13;
Chicago, 111.; Tues., May 2:&#13;
Lake Forest, Dominican, UWGreen&#13;
Bay at Parkside&#13;
(Petrifying Springs); Thurs. -&#13;
Sat., May 4-6: NAIA District 14&#13;
Tournament at Green Lake.&#13;
Tennis: Mon., April 10: UWMilwaukee&#13;
at Milwaukee;&#13;
Wed., April 12: Marquette at&#13;
Parkside (Pershing Courts,&#13;
Racine); Fri., April 14;'&#13;
Dominican at Parkside; Sat.,&#13;
April 15: UW-Green Bay at&#13;
Parkside; Wed., April 26:&#13;
Milton at Parkside; Fri., April&#13;
28: at Dominican, Racine; Sat.,&#13;
April 29: St. Norbert at DePere;&#13;
Fri., May 15: UW-Milwaukee at&#13;
Parkside; Sat., May 6: at UWGreen&#13;
Bay, Green Bay; Wed.,&#13;
May 10: at Milton.&#13;
Track: Sat., April 8: USTFF&#13;
(Indoor) at Madison; Sat., April&#13;
15: at Stevens Point Invitational;&#13;
Sat., April 22: at&#13;
LaCrosse Invitational; Fri.-&#13;
Sat., April 28-29: Drake Relays&#13;
at Des Moines, Iowa; Sat., May&#13;
6: Northern Illinois Relays at&#13;
DeKalb, 111.; Tues., May 9: UWWhitewater&#13;
at Whitewater;&#13;
Wed. - Fri., May 29 - June 2:&#13;
NAIA National Meet at Billings,&#13;
Mont.&#13;
UWP All-Stars vs. Packers&#13;
KENOSHA, Wis. — Six&#13;
faculty and staff members from&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will be on Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens' squad Sunday, March&#13;
19, wh en the Parkside All-Stars&#13;
take on the Green Bay Packers&#13;
in a 1:30 p.m. contest at&#13;
Tremper High School.&#13;
They'll have to be brave,&#13;
because the Packer five will&#13;
carry a huge weight advantage&#13;
in against the All-Star&#13;
squad,wchih will also include&#13;
alumni of recent Ranger squads&#13;
and some from the current&#13;
outfit. But they're out for fun,&#13;
just as are the Packers, and&#13;
UW-P Vice Chancellor Otto&#13;
Bauer is typical of the breed of&#13;
faculty player fans will see on&#13;
the hardcourt.&#13;
But Bauer, like the rest, is&#13;
ready to give it a good go. The&#13;
rest are all basketball buffs and&#13;
include faculty from the various&#13;
educational divisions, with Bob&#13;
Lawson representing education,&#13;
Gene Gasiorkiewicz from&#13;
science, John Buenker from&#13;
social studies, and Peter Martin&#13;
and Walt Graffin from English.&#13;
Tickets are priced at $2 for&#13;
adults, $1 for high school and&#13;
college students and 50 cents for&#13;
children under 12. Ticket outlets&#13;
include Tyson's, Chappie's&#13;
Sports Center, Chet's Sports&#13;
Bar and Nehlsen Sporting&#13;
Goods in Kenosha and&#13;
DeMark's Tavern, Cozy Lounge&#13;
and Mike's Sport Shop in&#13;
Racine. They are also on sale at&#13;
the Parkside Office of Athletics&#13;
on Wood Road.&#13;
Fast 2 Mile for Rosa&#13;
KENOSHA, Wis. — The two&#13;
mile run's "nine-minute"&#13;
barrier can be just as real as the&#13;
mile's more-famed four-minute&#13;
block.&#13;
Just ask University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside trackman&#13;
Lucian Rosa.&#13;
The barefoot phenom&#13;
traveled the route in 8:55.3 at&#13;
the Illinois Open in Champaign&#13;
recently and not only smashed&#13;
his own varsity record but built&#13;
up self-confidence.&#13;
And Coach Bob Lawson,&#13;
pleased with the time,&#13;
pronounced it Rosa's best race&#13;
since early in the cross country&#13;
season.&#13;
"It was the first relaxed race&#13;
he's had since he became sick&#13;
last fall and had to drop out of a&#13;
cross country race," Lawson&#13;
said. "It's the first time this&#13;
indoor season that he's really&#13;
looked like the runner he was&#13;
when he came here. That's a&#13;
good sign because it shows he's&#13;
regaining strength and is&#13;
coming along."&#13;
Rosa admitted that he lacked&#13;
self-confidence and had doubts&#13;
as to whether he would get&#13;
under nine.&#13;
"I didn't think I was running&#13;
that fast," Rosa said. But fast it&#13;
was and his time cracked his old&#13;
Parkside standard by better&#13;
than 10 seconds — and that with&#13;
a lapped runner blocking his&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
V2 Blo ck South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
(Pump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE — SAVE&#13;
way and causing him to lose&#13;
valuable time as he moved up.&#13;
Rosa has been learning to&#13;
pace himself easier these days&#13;
because the Rangers have been&#13;
working on the indoor track at&#13;
Park High School.&#13;
"With just long distance&#13;
running and road work I can't&#13;
do fast workouts," Rosa pointed&#13;
out, "but now I can do intervl&#13;
work twice a week."&#13;
Lawson said Rosa's endurance&#13;
is great and that he'll&#13;
be able to handle a faster race&#13;
pace once he is able to achieve a&#13;
sense of pace.&#13;
As for the barefoot running,&#13;
Rosa said he wouldn't have it&#13;
any other way, although&#13;
Lawson has tried to talk him&#13;
into wearing shoes.&#13;
"I used to run barefoot on the&#13;
roads in Ceylon," he relates.&#13;
"And If I wear shoes I can't run&#13;
as fast. Tracks don't bother me&#13;
even if they're cinders but the&#13;
board tracks do."&#13;
The slender (104 pounds on a&#13;
5'6V2" frame) Rosa will likely&#13;
head to Germany this summer&#13;
to prepare for his 10,000 m eter&#13;
and marathon runs in the&#13;
summer Olympic Games.&#13;
mi/,&#13;
Nearing completion is the University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
$2.1 million multi-use physical education&#13;
building, which will be in use for the first time during the upcoming&#13;
summer session June 19 through August 12. The&#13;
building is located at the southwest corner of the central&#13;
academic area of the 700-acre campus adjacent to the&#13;
athletic fields. The building contains a main gymnasium&#13;
housing three basketball courts, auxiliary gymnasium,&#13;
natatorium with eight-lane pool, handball courts, conditioning&#13;
facilities, locker rooms and faculty and administrative&#13;
offices. The building, with a seating capacity of&#13;
3,000, will be used for various all-school activities as well as&#13;
the physical education program, intercollegiate and intramural&#13;
athletics and recreation programs.&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
1&#13;
, lh C.ROUND BEEF"&#13;
ON FRF.NCH CRUST&#13;
BRF.AD D RFSSFD&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LF.TTUCF AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
DRILLED COUNTRY&#13;
MAM A C UFFSF ON&#13;
WHOLE WHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OF BURC.ER CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISK ON TOAST 9^&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORJH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
— — - -&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1968 Plymouth Valiant top-of-theline&#13;
model "Signet" - 2 dr. Club&#13;
Coupe, 1 owner, auto, trans., pwr.&#13;
steering, radio, air cond. $875 - Call&#13;
654-4982.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Polaroid Camera - Used 4 times.&#13;
Case, timer, dependable. Truely a&#13;
fine instrument. $25. Ph. Kevin 658-&#13;
4746.&#13;
STEREO TAPE DECK — Sony&#13;
252D. List $135. It's yours for $70. A&#13;
tape deck if ever I s aw one. Ph. 652-&#13;
2538 - 553-2496 ask for Jerry.&#13;
1955-1963 Chevy trans., 4 speed and&#13;
positraction for 11 rear end. Pin-ball&#13;
machine best offer, or trade for ten&#13;
speed bike. Call 552-8987.&#13;
i i f t v . ' i A - ' C : ; . . A . .&#13;
FOR SALE — Mosrite Bass Guitar.&#13;
Double pickup. Double cutaway,&#13;
hollow body. With plush-lined&#13;
hardshell case. Was S450 new. Excellent&#13;
condition. $100. Call Larry,&#13;
552-8347 or come to P-Village, apt 109&#13;
(The Swamp).&#13;
Matching Refrigerator (Admiral)&#13;
and Stove (Premier), $125 each,&#13;
olive green. Practically new, owners&#13;
moved out of town, must sell. Both in&#13;
excellent condition. Call 634-6215&#13;
after 5 p.m. or weekends.&#13;
TAPE RECORDER — Reel to reel.&#13;
Like new. Orig. $100 sell for $50. Ph.&#13;
657-5992 after 4.&#13;
FOR SALE — Marimba, 2Vi oct.&#13;
$100; Schwinn bicycle. 1 speed,&#13;
coaster brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N. Oakland, Milwaukee,&#13;
Wis.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED — People who would like&#13;
to help other people. Free training.&#13;
Contact Joe Baker, director Racine&#13;
Hotline, 637-1112. Mon.-Wed.-Fri.&#13;
1:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.&#13;
Photographer wanted — Should be&#13;
available for June 10th wedding,&#13;
reasonable rates. Call 639-8863,&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Female Bartender Wanted — one&#13;
night a week. The College Inn. Ph.&#13;
552 8465.&#13;
WANTED - STAMPS — Collections,&#13;
Accumulations, Mint or Used, On&#13;
Cover or off, First Day covers or&#13;
what ever! U.S. or Foreign. Phone&#13;
694-3398. Ask for Jim or leave&#13;
messate at Newscope office.&#13;
WAITRESS WANTED — The Loom,&#13;
3919 Washington Ave., Racine. Ph.&#13;
634-9676. &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
interim. He said, "Four or five&#13;
years ago it would have been&#13;
better to first bring in a Dean&#13;
and Divisional Chairman, and&#13;
then recruit faculty. But it's not&#13;
four or five years ago, and the&#13;
students are here now, and we&#13;
have to act now."&#13;
Bauer similarly described the&#13;
lack of program development in&#13;
the same context, "There is a&#13;
tendency to hold back on&#13;
program development till you&#13;
have the people who know what&#13;
they are doing."&#13;
Program development will&#13;
also be slowed down by the&#13;
Regent's moratorium on new&#13;
academic programs. A request&#13;
for a major in Computer&#13;
Science will have to be put off&#13;
because of this.&#13;
Vice Chancellor Bauer&#13;
dismisses the possible effect of&#13;
the moratorium. "Everybody&#13;
gives the moratorium too much&#13;
credit. It's too short lived to be&#13;
that important. It will end in&#13;
July of 1973. Even if we add&#13;
good personnel in the Fall, there&#13;
is no way they can offer new&#13;
programs by July. It takes time&#13;
to work on new programs. New&#13;
faculty members need time to&#13;
work with one another."&#13;
Both Bauer and Moy&#13;
acknowledged other UW schools&#13;
have been jealous of Parkside's&#13;
bo uer, moy anc/ smi&#13;
School of Modern Industry —&#13;
particularly of Engineering&#13;
Science.&#13;
Bauer said, "Everyone is&#13;
looking over their shoulders at&#13;
us. I know the other institutions&#13;
are looking at us to see where&#13;
we are going."&#13;
Moy pointed out a great deal&#13;
of jealousy exists among all&#13;
schools — especially where&#13;
student demand for a program&#13;
is limited.&#13;
If Parkside can demonstrate&#13;
a need, he feels, it should get the&#13;
program — except if a school&#13;
with an existing program can&#13;
absorb more students.&#13;
"It's impossible for me to&#13;
conceive of SMI not being&#13;
supported," he said.&#13;
Bauer echoed him: "Granted,&#13;
there was a flat spot in the&#13;
development of SMI, but I'm not&#13;
worried about the growth and&#13;
development of the school. The&#13;
prophets of doom are always&#13;
around the corner. This is a new&#13;
ins tit uti on deve lopin g&#13;
beautifully."&#13;
Dean Moy possibly summed&#13;
things up best: "Potentially, the&#13;
school is one of the most exciting&#13;
things around. It just&#13;
needs a little more time."&#13;
Whether the school gets the&#13;
time and the opportunity to&#13;
develop, and whether Parkside&#13;
is able to realize its ambitions of&#13;
serving the industrial southeast&#13;
of Wisconsin remains to be&#13;
seen.&#13;
Bearing in mind the&#13;
moratorium, the Governor's&#13;
austerity program, the&#13;
Regents' desire to avoid&#13;
duplicating programs, UW&#13;
politics and the present undeveloped&#13;
status of the school&#13;
( p a r t i c u l a r l y L a b o r&#13;
Economics), you realize the&#13;
future well-being of SMI is not&#13;
all that assured.&#13;
capsule college&#13;
i Continued from Page 1)&#13;
+ "The Middle East: Perspectives&#13;
on Crisis" by Robert&#13;
Schacht, director of intern&#13;
atio nal sem inar s,&#13;
University Extension; and&#13;
+ "Vacant Lot: Who Will Be&#13;
Your New Neighbors" by Sam&#13;
Clemens, director of housing&#13;
m a n a g e m e n t, H U D ,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The daytime sessions will be&#13;
conducted from 9:15 a.m.&#13;
(following a half-hour&#13;
registration) to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Two lectures will make up the&#13;
evening program, beginning at&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Su^an Davis of Chicago,&#13;
editor of "Spokeswoman," vice&#13;
president of Urban Research&#13;
Corp. and women's rights activist,'&#13;
will lecture on&#13;
"Discrimination Against&#13;
Women in Business and Industry"&#13;
and Arvonne Fraser,&#13;
vice president of the Women's&#13;
Equity Action League (WEAL)&#13;
and educational and political&#13;
leader, will lecture on&#13;
"Discrimination Against&#13;
Women in Education."&#13;
Members of the Kenosha,&#13;
Racine and Walworth Extension&#13;
Homemakers will serve&#13;
as registrars and hostesses for&#13;
the daytime sessions.&#13;
One of America's best-known&#13;
contemporary poets, National&#13;
Book Award Winner Robert&#13;
Bly, will conduct an informal&#13;
poetry workshop at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
on Wednesday, March&#13;
15.&#13;
The free workshop, open to&#13;
the public, is scheduled for 9:30&#13;
to 11:30 a.m. in the Whiteskellar&#13;
at the north end of D-l level in&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at numerous locations&#13;
throughout the nation including&#13;
National Parks, Resort&#13;
Areas, and Private Camps. For&#13;
free information send self-addressed,&#13;
STAMPED envelope to&#13;
Opportunity Research, Dept.&#13;
SJO, Century Bldg., Poison, MT&#13;
59860. APPLICANTS MUST&#13;
APPLY EARLY . . .&#13;
iM* MHHW*&#13;
on St. Patrick's Day&#13;
(at the Student Activities Building)&#13;
9&#13;
1 ii &amp; li&#13;
•&#13;
22&#13;
i M&#13;
free popcorn with&#13;
every purchase of&#13;
GREEN BEER&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S-" PIZZA&#13;
Jjfffl In Four Sixes 9 " - 12"&#13;
*«&amp;*** J ALS0&#13;
//»Pitf J" • RIBS * SPAGHETTI •&#13;
• v ^ GMOCCHI • RAVIOLI •&#13;
j/J ^ * SEA F00D * SAN0&#13;
In Four Sixes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
LA S AGNA&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"*nu RING ... WE BRINr"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922 </text>
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              <text>parkside village&#13;
by Jim Koloen,&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Approximately 30 Parkside&#13;
Village residents, city&#13;
representatives, Somers&#13;
residents and a member of the&#13;
Southheastern Wisconsin&#13;
Planning Commission attended&#13;
a meeting last Sunday in a&#13;
corner of the Activities Building&#13;
to discuss annexation. Howard&#13;
Blackman, Henry Krause, Tom&#13;
Pitts, John Kolstad and Bill&#13;
Evenson presented explanations&#13;
and arguments in&#13;
support of and in opposition to&#13;
the annexation proposal.&#13;
The meeting which was&#13;
sponsored by the Young&#13;
Democrats and moderated by&#13;
student senator Jim Twist saw&#13;
Tom Pitts, assistant city&#13;
planner, introduce the detached&#13;
annexation proposal. The&#13;
proposal, which would allow&#13;
residents to detach their&#13;
property from the annexed&#13;
area, was met with skepticism&#13;
from the area residents in attendance.&#13;
When asked what&#13;
guarantee for detachment the&#13;
area residents would be assured&#13;
of once the annexation is approved,&#13;
Pitts was unable to&#13;
present an unqualified&#13;
statement. He said, "You have&#13;
my word." Pitts explained to&#13;
the still skeptical Somers&#13;
residents in the audience that&#13;
"there is a series of checks and&#13;
balances in this." Pitts later&#13;
addressed the students in the&#13;
audience asking them to&#13;
"consider the long-range implications"&#13;
of the annexation.&#13;
He explained that if the area is&#13;
annexed it would allow for&#13;
better planning and preservation&#13;
of the environment.&#13;
Howard Blackman, who was&#13;
a Somers Town Board member&#13;
at the time the Site Selection&#13;
Committee was scouring the&#13;
area for a suitable location for&#13;
the UW-P campus, predicted&#13;
that if the land is annexed "the&#13;
Students Discuss Annexation&#13;
farmers will have three&#13;
choices: They can lower their&#13;
standard of living; they can sell&#13;
their land immediately; or they&#13;
can borrow money until they&#13;
must sell their land."&#13;
Blackman expressed concern&#13;
over the ability of the city to&#13;
assimilate an area as large as&#13;
that proposed for annexation;&#13;
"It takes a year to develop only&#13;
sixty acres." Blackman appealed&#13;
to the students in attendance,&#13;
asking them if they&#13;
would want their parents to sell&#13;
their "family's land when&#13;
they're sixty years old."&#13;
Henry Krause, an area farmer&#13;
who opposes the annexation,&#13;
appealed to the&#13;
students, asking them not to&#13;
make a decision until they've&#13;
heard all sides of the issue.&#13;
Bill Evanson, a representative&#13;
from the Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Planning&#13;
Commission, explained that no&#13;
plan, including any presented&#13;
by the city, had yet been approved&#13;
by the Commission. He&#13;
revealed to the audience that&#13;
there are "at least six alternative&#13;
plans for providing&#13;
sewer and water services to the&#13;
area." He explained further&#13;
that there are many factors&#13;
involved in determining the&#13;
suitability of the various plans.&#13;
He said there is a possibility&#13;
that Parkside may never reach&#13;
the projected peak enrollment&#13;
of 25,000 students because of the&#13;
"zero population growth" and&#13;
changing attitudes toward the&#13;
desirability of a college&#13;
education. He concluded that&#13;
the projected capacity of a&#13;
treatment plant depends on&#13;
such factors.&#13;
Evenson revealed that one&#13;
advantage of a treatment plant&#13;
located on the Pike River would&#13;
be a benefit to the flow of the&#13;
river. He explained that such a&#13;
plant would force millions of&#13;
gallons of treated water into the&#13;
TOM PITT S, A SST . CITY P L A N N E R S P E A K IN G : B I LL&#13;
E V E N S O N, ST A TE P L A N NIN G COMMISSION R E P&#13;
presently slow moving and thus&#13;
help clean it up. Presently,&#13;
Evenson said, the area around&#13;
Parkside cannot be commercially&#13;
developed because of&#13;
the lack of adequate treatment&#13;
facilities.&#13;
John Kolstad, city planner,&#13;
spoke to the audience about the&#13;
desirability of changes in the&#13;
tax laws. He explained that land&#13;
should be taxed "according to&#13;
use" rather than by the present&#13;
method of assessed value. He&#13;
stated that part of the problem&#13;
in the annexation issue is&#13;
'located in an "antiquated tax&#13;
structure" which places the&#13;
burden of financing local&#13;
projects and services on the&#13;
shoulders of the property&#13;
owner.&#13;
When asked if Kenosha offered&#13;
agricultural zoning Improperly&#13;
in the city, Kolstad&#13;
replied no. He explained that&#13;
land couldn't be zoned for&#13;
agricultural purposes.&#13;
During the meet ing only a few&#13;
Village residents asked&#13;
questions of the speakers,&#13;
though ten villagers did follow&#13;
Somers Clerk's suggestion that&#13;
they register with her before&#13;
leaving the building. After the&#13;
meeting ended, all participants&#13;
were invited to attend a gettogether&#13;
in a Parkside Village&#13;
partment at which beer was&#13;
served, to continue discussion&#13;
on the topic.&#13;
University of W isconsin - Parkside&#13;
5 f r&#13;
Volume 6 Number 11 March 20, 1072&#13;
charity dance&#13;
SGA Plans Ahead&#13;
Final details of the Five-School&#13;
Charity Dance to be held this&#13;
Friday at Bristol Oaks on Highway&#13;
50 were given in a regular&#13;
meeting of the PSGA Senate&#13;
last Thursday. According to&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta and Mark&#13;
Barnhill, members of the SGA&#13;
activities committee, the event&#13;
will be a 'private party' open to&#13;
students of Parkside, Carthage,&#13;
Dominican, RTI and KTI.&#13;
Liquor will be served to&#13;
students 18 and over with ID's&#13;
assuming the age of majority&#13;
PfeiSHE&#13;
-oft cHAKumt&#13;
THIEU&#13;
"DICK, YOU'RE PROBABLY WONDERING HOW WE EVER GOT&#13;
THIEU TO AGREE TO THE PART ABOUT RESIGNING OFFICE&#13;
AND HOLDING FREE ELECTIONS IN SOUTH VIETNAM...."&#13;
bill is signed this week.&#13;
A rock band, nightclub act,&#13;
and coffee-house group will be&#13;
featured in three separate&#13;
rooms at the club. Scheduled to&#13;
appear are Dry Ice and Tony&#13;
and Jumbo along with another&#13;
group yet to be hired. Advance&#13;
tickets are $1 ($1.50 at the door)&#13;
are available this week at the&#13;
SGA office and Student Activities&#13;
Building and in ticket&#13;
booths in the Greenquist Concourse&#13;
and the lobbies of the&#13;
Racine and Kenosha campuses.&#13;
The SGA activities committee&#13;
also reported that several midweek&#13;
activities are being&#13;
considered for the Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
The Senate also agreed to cosponsor&#13;
a symposium with the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
and the Black Student&#13;
Union. Georgia legislator and&#13;
black leader Julian Bond is&#13;
scheduled to speak on campus&#13;
May 8 and several other black&#13;
speakers are being invited to&#13;
speak and participate in&#13;
discussions throughout the day.&#13;
Other events also being looked&#13;
into include a program of other&#13;
American minority groups, a&#13;
two-day film festival and a&#13;
prison reform day:&#13;
In other action the SGA:&#13;
— voted to establish a&#13;
literature table in the Student&#13;
Activities Building to distribute&#13;
a variety of materials of interest&#13;
to students.&#13;
— formed a sub-committee of&#13;
the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
to investigate the&#13;
possibilities of a communityaction&#13;
program which would&#13;
give students credit for their&#13;
work, in cooperation with a UWGreen&#13;
Bay federally funded&#13;
program.&#13;
— appointed Johnny Grimes&#13;
as SGA's representative on the&#13;
Campus Union Building&#13;
Committee.&#13;
— approved a request by Jean&#13;
Koehler of the Women's Caucus&#13;
for $42.94 for printing and&#13;
mailing costs to be allocated&#13;
from Fund 128.&#13;
— instructed the Finance&#13;
Committee to establish additional&#13;
guidelines concerning&#13;
the dispersal of Fund 128 funds&#13;
to student organizations.&#13;
New Radio Drama&#13;
MADISON (CPS) - There is&#13;
a scheme afoot to pump new life&#13;
into radio drama. WHA Radio in&#13;
Madison, Wisconsin, has a fiveyear&#13;
plan to produce from 400 to&#13;
800 radio dramas for noncommercial&#13;
radio.&#13;
The Corporation for Public&#13;
Broadcasting has provided&#13;
$150,000 for the first year of the&#13;
project, known as "Earplay."&#13;
Karl Schmidt, who left his job&#13;
directing the University of&#13;
Wisconsin's extension radio&#13;
activities to head up "Earplay",&#13;
says most of the&#13;
productions will be shorter than&#13;
they were in the old days —&#13;
most productions will be shorter&#13;
than 15 minutes, and many will&#13;
run only 5 or 10 minutes.&#13;
"The days when a family&#13;
would gather in a room and&#13;
listen to an hour of radio drama&#13;
together are gone," said Schmidt.&#13;
&#13;
"We'll do some half-hour&#13;
pieces, but nothing longer, and&#13;
our emphasis will be on the&#13;
shorter ones."&#13;
Schmidt's first task is to find&#13;
scripts. He said he hopes to find&#13;
60 to 100 scripts in the first year.&#13;
He has written literary agents,&#13;
is running ads in literary&#13;
magazines and is staging a&#13;
writing competition.&#13;
"Our script budget runs from&#13;
$200 to $700 a script, and all we&#13;
buy are the non-commercial&#13;
radio rights and, in the case of&#13;
the competition scripts, the&#13;
right to publish them in an&#13;
anthology that we hope to issue&#13;
each year. The author retains&#13;
the copyright and all the&#13;
commercial radio, TV and&#13;
movie rights.&#13;
"In England, movie, stage,&#13;
and TV producers make a habit&#13;
of listening to radio to find new&#13;
talent and material, and we&#13;
hope that's what will happen&#13;
here."&#13;
Writers interested in submitting&#13;
scripts for competition&#13;
or for direct sale are asked to&#13;
send their inquiries to Schmidt&#13;
at "Earplay" WHA, Radio Hall,&#13;
Madison, Wisconsin 53706. &#13;
NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
beer and&#13;
fried brains&#13;
Dear Sirs:&#13;
Although I am by choice no&#13;
longer a student of this&#13;
university, I feel the views&#13;
stated in this letter should be&#13;
read and possibly responded to&#13;
by the students, and so your&#13;
newspaper seems to be the&#13;
logical forum for my opinions.&#13;
From the beginning of the&#13;
1960's we have seen this country&#13;
become youth-oriented to the&#13;
point of absurdity. This concept,&#13;
mainly conceived by the media,&#13;
has left the American parents&#13;
devoid of a ny feeling of o neness&#13;
with their children, has split the&#13;
generations beyond repair, and&#13;
has left the majority of those 14 -&#13;
21 immature, irresponsible, and&#13;
lacking that crucial self-respect&#13;
which is the basis of a complete&#13;
life.&#13;
As a result of this we have&#13;
seen a phenomenon of human&#13;
nature: Instead of the young&#13;
looking to the maturity and&#13;
experience of the old for&#13;
guidance, the over 30&#13;
generation has lapsed into a&#13;
mass second childhood, trying&#13;
in vain to be "hip", trying to&#13;
gain some kind of secure place&#13;
in their childrens' society.&#13;
The politicians, who tend to&#13;
have sharper eyes and keener&#13;
ears than most people, are&#13;
getting into the act for their own&#13;
gain. Look at old LaFollette&#13;
when he was here. Bell Bottoms.&#13;
"Right on." And you&#13;
drank his beer and listened to&#13;
his bullshit, just as your&#13;
parents, conditioned by you&gt;,&#13;
will take the bullshit of&#13;
McGovern, Lindsay, McCarthy.&#13;
And old Georgy will probably&#13;
get the office. But what the hell&#13;
will you get, compared to what&#13;
you have lost? Will amnesty for&#13;
draft dodgers make it easier for&#13;
you to sit in a room with your&#13;
parents without embarrassment?&#13;
Will more rights&#13;
for women stop most men from&#13;
thinking of girls as pieces of&#13;
meat? Will looser drug laws&#13;
stop people from frying their&#13;
brains and making asses out of&#13;
themselves?&#13;
What is really important,&#13;
anyway? Why don't you sit&#13;
down for about 10 minutes of&#13;
you can stand the stress, and&#13;
think. Think of where the&#13;
problems really stem from.&#13;
Could they be from your mouth,&#13;
from your actions? Think about&#13;
it. Please.&#13;
D. Vallone&#13;
need&#13;
volunteers&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Volunteers are still being&#13;
accepted for the Easter party&#13;
for retarded children. We expect&#13;
to have between 40 a nd 50&#13;
retarded ranging in age from 4&#13;
to 21. They are primarily&#13;
mentally handicapped and&#13;
mildly to moderately retarded.&#13;
Parents who wish to volunteer&#13;
may also bring their children up&#13;
to 8 year olds. The party is from&#13;
1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
March 25, in the activities&#13;
building. Contact Dave Bahr,&#13;
551-7653, if you would like to&#13;
volunteer your services.&#13;
Students United in Service&#13;
hasssle&#13;
with police&#13;
To the Editor;&#13;
One afternoon after class, I&#13;
was walking to my car, thinking&#13;
I would take a break from&#13;
school and drive up to Racine.&#13;
When I reached my car, I found&#13;
the car originally parked next to&#13;
me had left and another parked&#13;
within two inches of my left side&#13;
at such an angle as to prevent&#13;
me from backing out without&#13;
putting a big scratch in his paint&#13;
job. Not wanting to pay for a&#13;
new paint job on such a big car,&#13;
I immediately went to Tallent&#13;
Hall and put in a call to the&#13;
Security Police at Parkside.&#13;
The man on the hpone said he&#13;
would send someone out. I&#13;
rushed back to my car, afraid I&#13;
would miss the arrival of the&#13;
Security Police, only to find I&#13;
had to waint ten to fifteen&#13;
minutes for his appearance. I&#13;
was hoping he could in some&#13;
way direct me out of the&#13;
parking space or find the person&#13;
who owned the big, grey convertible.&#13;
&#13;
When the Security Police&#13;
arrived he immediately began&#13;
accusing me of throwing a&#13;
snowball at his car. At first I&#13;
thought he was teasing me but&#13;
then he asked me again why I&#13;
threw a snowball. He told me I&#13;
could get into a lot of t rouble for&#13;
throwing one. I informed him of&#13;
the fact that I never threw a&#13;
snowball and wondered why he&#13;
kept asking me that. But he&#13;
insisted that I threw one and I&#13;
was getting furious at the fact&#13;
that this man had the right to&#13;
hassle a person for something&#13;
they didn't do. I finally joked&#13;
with him and said, "You're just&#13;
WEb. L ADIES' OMNKS '/*.RAtCE&#13;
Se/uu+Uf tlte Qutedt&#13;
;mg, &amp;. 9icJUan fyoodi.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Once before I made a plea for&#13;
student input concerning the&#13;
Student Activities Building. I&#13;
received a few questions and&#13;
some suggestions. Some items&#13;
have been worked on and many&#13;
more are being looked into.&#13;
What I still need is more input.&#13;
For this purpose we have&#13;
resurrected the suggestion&#13;
boxes in the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha lounges and if we don't&#13;
get any hassle, there will soon&#13;
be one in the SAB. If students&#13;
fill them with suggestions and&#13;
complaints they will be emptied&#13;
regularly and nothing will be&#13;
ignored. Anyone interested in&#13;
working for the Student Union&#13;
Committee is invited to the&#13;
meeting this Thursday at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Student Government&#13;
Office.&#13;
Jerry Murphy, Chairman&#13;
Student Union Committee&#13;
"PSYCHOPATH" RELEASED IN MICHIGAN&#13;
HOWELL, MICHIGAN (CPS) - Bert Chapman, 68, has been&#13;
released from Pontiac State Hospital after spending the last 31&#13;
years in Michigan mental institutions for al alleged homosexual&#13;
offense. He was confined as a "criminal sexual psychopath" in&#13;
1940.&#13;
Chapman's case was twice appealed to the Michigan Supreme&#13;
Court, but he was twice deemed a "menace to society", and his&#13;
confinement upheld. The law under which he had been convicted&#13;
was repealed in 1967.&#13;
AjtQ&amp;JjUr S/Co^UL.&#13;
cm/&#13;
fj*rx&gt;&#13;
'Don't believe everylhin* you read.&#13;
Marc tisen, Helmut Ferber, Gary&#13;
Jensen, Larry Jones, Jim Koloen,&#13;
Rich Lipke, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Steve Mazzarell; Pat&#13;
McDermid, Kevin McKay, Kathy&#13;
Rasch, Brian Ross, Wolfgant&#13;
Salewski, Andy Schmelling, Barb&#13;
Scott, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, Bill Sorensen, Mike&#13;
Stevesand, James Twist, Debbie&#13;
Venskus, Mike Kite, "Red" Widely,&#13;
Sifton Winnow.&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#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 source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
phdtographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
„ / f ) i d i n a e r -&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
e wcilleij —&gt;upper ^&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
1700 Sheridan kd.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
iWr iiNtstj&#13;
* m 4 M * 4 ^ &#13;
city's view on annexation M a rch 20,1072 NKWSCOPK Page 3&#13;
by Jim Koloen,&#13;
Interview With Mayor Burkee&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
In past weeks, Newscope has&#13;
presented articles concerning&#13;
both the past annexation efforts&#13;
and the present attempt begun&#13;
by United States General, Inc.,&#13;
a Brookfield based development&#13;
firm. This coverage has included&#13;
meetings and&#13;
discussions between the parties&#13;
opposed to the annexation and&#13;
those who support it; roughly&#13;
the dichotomy is city meets&#13;
country.&#13;
Mayor Wallace Burkee of&#13;
Kenosha, who vigorously&#13;
supports the annexation of the&#13;
Parkside area, has often been&#13;
singled out by those area&#13;
residents who oppose . annexation&#13;
as their major foe.&#13;
Beginning this week, Newscope&#13;
will present interviews with the&#13;
major proponents of each side&#13;
of the issue; this week&#13;
NEWSCOPE interviewed&#13;
Mayor Burkee, next week&#13;
Newscope will present an interview&#13;
with representatives of&#13;
the opposing viewpoint.&#13;
Why do you wish to annex?&#13;
"The only reason is to service&#13;
Parkside. Parkside wants the&#13;
annexation because soon they'll&#13;
have a sewer problem, among&#13;
other things. Somers can't&#13;
service it, they don't even have&#13;
a sewage treatment plant. They&#13;
(Somers) have said they can&#13;
construct a $19.5 million&#13;
treatment plant for $400,000&#13;
because of federal grants and&#13;
sharing the cost with Mt.&#13;
Pleasant. Well, I don't see&#13;
where they got their information.&#13;
The federal money&#13;
just isn't there. Right now&#13;
Kenosha is only eligible to&#13;
receive something like 50 per&#13;
cent federal aids for a project. I&#13;
can't get a million and a half&#13;
dollars for a sewer project here&#13;
in Kenosha; and they're talking&#13;
about ten million? I just don't&#13;
see where they get their&#13;
figures."&#13;
If the area is annexed what&#13;
would be the projected cost to&#13;
the city? "The sewer would cost&#13;
about a million and a half."&#13;
Tom Pitts, assistant city&#13;
planner who sat in on the interview&#13;
in the mayor's downtown&#13;
office, added, "Fire&#13;
protection will cost $1,495,000&#13;
including a fire station to be&#13;
ZU&#13;
IF you WERE A&#13;
SPOTTED PA/R. OP PANTS&#13;
OA t&gt;mrv COLLAR, YOU'O&#13;
LOVE US TOOF&#13;
QUALITY CLEANERS&#13;
1313- 66th St&#13;
J&gt;H. 65Y - 9355&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
Map of area proposed to be annexed picturing the area to be&#13;
detached after the annexation and the area to be retained.&#13;
located somewhere on the&#13;
corner of Wood Road in&#13;
Somers."&#13;
"We're not making a cent-on&#13;
this," the mayor continued.&#13;
"It'll be at least fifteen years&#13;
before we see a dime, and even&#13;
then I'll be surprised. The&#13;
problem is simple, Parkside is&#13;
in Somers and therefore they&#13;
should be providing sewer and&#13;
water, but they're not. They&#13;
can't, there's no way they can&#13;
do it. I even offered originally to&#13;
put in a sewer for them, and&#13;
they (Somers) could pay&#13;
Kenosha back over a period of&#13;
ten years. But they turned that&#13;
down, so now the problem is ir,&#13;
my lap. And if it isn't resolved&#13;
soon, well, by 1974 the sewers&#13;
will be overflowing and the&#13;
state will just walk in and order&#13;
us to annex the area."&#13;
Previously the area residents&#13;
had objected to the way in&#13;
which the various annexation&#13;
proposals were mapped out.&#13;
What was your reaction to this?&#13;
"Well, it's just a case of never&#13;
being allowed to be right.&#13;
Previously, when we excluded&#13;
homes, they screamed that they&#13;
weren't able to vote. Now when&#13;
we include their homes, they&#13;
scream just as much.&#13;
Why wasn't the area annexed&#13;
to the city when the Parkside&#13;
campus site was first chosen?&#13;
"I wasn't-mayor at the time, but&#13;
there is a state statute which&#13;
wouldn't allow it. We tried to get&#13;
the statute changed by instituting&#13;
a boundary review&#13;
board, but lost by one vote in the&#13;
Assembly. You see the big&#13;
problem here is the fact that&#13;
there are no laws which take&#13;
care of it, it's an unique thing.&#13;
We even. . . our latest plan, the&#13;
detached annexation is a&#13;
loophole we dug up."&#13;
Could you explain the&#13;
det ach ed ann exa tion ?&#13;
"Basically, the idea is to annex&#13;
the area as presently drawn up,&#13;
and then after annexing it, we&#13;
would detach the land of anyone&#13;
(Continue d on P a ge 7)&#13;
jAMM*&#13;
11&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
^TENDERLOIN S TEAK&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEA FOOD&#13;
COCKTAILS&#13;
'Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN R OOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
" OF FERI NG H I GH Q UA LI TY AT&#13;
R EA SO N A BLE P RI CE S, T HE W IN D ­&#13;
J AM MER D ES ER VES ITS P O P UL AR I T Y"&#13;
— H E RB ERT KUBLY&#13;
" WO ND ER F UL F O O D"&#13;
— S E NATOR P R O XM IRE&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Siies 9" - 12" - 14" - 16".&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
. SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RIN G . . . WE BING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Discussion of materials on student organization&#13;
procedures for handbook topics: Recognition,&#13;
•&#13;
Eligibility, Rules for Meetings and Events.&#13;
•&#13;
j March 24 &amp; March 27&#13;
: 12 Noon Whiteskellar &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
an&#13;
V foni&#13;
Coffee House 8. N ight Club&#13;
performers (from New York&#13;
March 21 1 - 3&#13;
March 22 1 - 3&#13;
free&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
For the First Time on our&#13;
Giant New 24 ft. Screen&#13;
42 MEMBER&#13;
COMMUNAL TOURING COMPANY&#13;
HAD DOCS &amp;&#13;
ENGLISHMEN&#13;
ICON BU5SCLL&#13;
(iTS A MOVING PtCTUBt))&#13;
I gp] 'MCW&#13;
March 24 8:00 PM&#13;
Adm. 75(&#13;
Time: 2hrs.&#13;
St. Act. Bldg.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. ID Required&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
* ¥&#13;
• • *&#13;
MAKING&#13;
OF THE&#13;
PRESIDENT&#13;
1968&#13;
An Historical Film of&#13;
Timely Importance in this&#13;
Year of Decision&#13;
Three Showings&#13;
Wed. March 22&#13;
11:45 A.M. Gr. 101&#13;
Thurs. March 23&#13;
1:00 P.M. Whiteskellar&#13;
Thurs. March 23&#13;
7:00 P.M. Gr. 101&#13;
FREE&#13;
by Steve Mazzarelli&#13;
Bree Daniels — Jane Fonda&#13;
John Klute — Donald Sutherland&#13;
Pete Cable — Charles Cioffi&#13;
Add "Klute" to recent films which scan New York City's&#13;
backside and inhabitants thereof. This low-keyed "who-dunit"&#13;
engages the viewer's cortex and gives the viscera a breather.&#13;
Bree is a high priced N.Y.C. call girl who is being shadowed by&#13;
a former client who years ago, in a sado-frenzy, almost killed her.&#13;
Klute is a colorless but competent small town private eye looking&#13;
for a missing friend who he suspects is the same person threatening&#13;
Bree. The "heavy", Mr. Cable, is the employer of Klute's missing&#13;
friend and finances the investigation. By mid-film we know the&#13;
exec is the real sadist and has murdered the missing person to&#13;
avoid future blackmail.&#13;
The real story, however, is Bree's transsformation into a more&#13;
human person. After a near-fatal encounter with the sadist she&#13;
visits an analyst regularly and in these scenes Fonda is superb,&#13;
giving a performance which got her the 1971 Oscar for best actress.&#13;
Tom complicate her identity crisis Klute, the near Christ&#13;
figure, drags Bree, his Mary Magdalene, into the search for the&#13;
sadis and along the way they seduce each other. Bree almost&#13;
throws away this chance to establish a lasting neural ling between&#13;
head and groin by trying to go back to her old junkie-pimp&#13;
boyfriend. Klute stops this from happening but she flees anyway&#13;
and is trapped by Cable.&#13;
Still a bit rational, he tells Bree that we all have "little dark&#13;
corners in our minds that should be left untouched." Bree realizes&#13;
that she was the vehicle and is now the victim of his ruthlessness.&#13;
It's an old lesson. The greatest Insanity is protecting and nurturing&#13;
the monster impulse once it is freed from Freud's super-ego.&#13;
Predictably Klute arrives in-the-nick-of and the trapped exec&#13;
self destructs in a slow motion fade-out. Klute and Bree are last&#13;
seen leaving New York and in a voice over sound Bree tells her&#13;
analyst that she is unsure of what will come next. Nice realistic&#13;
ambiguity.&#13;
As I left the theater I wondered about my own personal demon&#13;
sitting in the dark corner of my head. I look occasionally but don't&#13;
touch.&#13;
This tight psychological thriller will hold your interest all the&#13;
way and probably give you more bad vibes about "Fun City".&#13;
Next Week: Behind the scenes with the National Shakespeare&#13;
Company.&#13;
nuttin'!&#13;
by Jim Koloen, Managing Editor&#13;
Not many nationally known poets come to&#13;
Parkside, and when they do come not many&#13;
students go to see them. Such was the empty&#13;
case when Robert Bly held a workshop in the&#13;
Whiteskellar Wednesday morning to "jabber"&#13;
about poetry, poets, astrology, solitude,&#13;
the war and the inner and outer shells of the&#13;
mind.&#13;
Perhaps 50 in terested students and faculti&#13;
sat rapted around the quaint checkerclothed&#13;
tables in the Whiteskellar to listen, laugh and&#13;
reflect as Bly presented a theatrical, informative&#13;
and engrossing informal jabber&#13;
program. The poet kept his audience by&#13;
controlling the mood; he undulated between&#13;
humor and seriousness, presenting limericks&#13;
and anecdotes, sarcasm and satire, jumpint&#13;
from mood to mood like a magic frog jumping&#13;
from metaphor to lilypad in a poetry pond.&#13;
Bly, a non-teaching Minnesota poet,&#13;
brought to Parkside by the Poetry Forum,&#13;
massaged his facial muscles with fingers that&#13;
would later become seawaves, as he told the&#13;
audience that "we're the country with the&#13;
most brutality; no country can compare to&#13;
ours in brutality on television. A friend of&#13;
mine listened to television for children for two&#13;
weeks before Christmas and heard an advertisement&#13;
for a torture table for dolls. You&#13;
put your doll on and you turn this wheel and it&#13;
pulls off this one arm, and this wheel pulls off&#13;
a leg. How do you like that! How do you expect&#13;
to end the war." Bly further explained,&#13;
"think of the advertising people who put this&#13;
ad together, and the executives who have to&#13;
pass it through, and the other people who&#13;
work to put it out. Do you understand what we&#13;
mean by an insane country?"&#13;
"We're never going to end the war," Bly&#13;
said in a voice laced with resignation. "If you&#13;
really want violence, you practice it first in&#13;
fiction. You get a violent novelist like Mailer,&#13;
and Hemingway, and you fantasize it. But&#13;
then it's not enough, it doesn't satisfy that&#13;
longing for violence, so then you've got to do&#13;
it. So you kill people in Vietnam; but even&#13;
then it's not enough; it's too far away, it's just&#13;
on television, so hopefully one of your kids&#13;
comes home with his leg blown off." While&#13;
absentmindedly fingering a leather thong&#13;
suspended from the string of beads he wore,&#13;
Bly sarcastically predicted the next war "will&#13;
be in Brazil. It's only a thousand miles from&#13;
Miami. It's close enough so that American&#13;
citizens as well as journalists can come and&#13;
watch the helicopters drop napalm. That'd be&#13;
terrific."&#13;
Continuing on the subject of the American'&#13;
state of mind, Bly commented that "the level&#13;
of consciousness in this country is rather low.&#13;
An example is that you see no evil in yourself;&#13;
you project it on others. You know, we're not&#13;
the wicked ones, Russia is; we have a perfect&#13;
democracy, China's evil, it has communism."&#13;
Amplifying his statement, Bly observed that&#13;
"American men tend to die spiritually at the&#13;
age of 35 o r 40. Just look at the face of an&#13;
American man, you'll see that something's&#13;
gone." Bly then read his "Television Poem"&#13;
whose theme illustrated the connection&#13;
between the low level of consciousness in&#13;
America and the Tube. "Television does this&#13;
to a person because it doesn't require&#13;
anything of you, all you need is passivity. You&#13;
learn not to respond.&#13;
"Enough television kills your spirit. You&#13;
look at television and nothin', duhh; you don't&#13;
have to do anything. Gary Snyder who was&#13;
teaching at Humboldt State, told me two art&#13;
teachers resigned on the same day because&#13;
their new freshman students couldn't&#13;
respond. They'd show them a Van Gogh and&#13;
umm, nuthin'; Rembrandt nuttin'; what do&#13;
you think of this, nuttin'. So one day they just&#13;
said, 'this is it, I'm sick of teaching you&#13;
goddamn zombies, I'm going out and get a job&#13;
teaching ditches.' " Placing the story into the&#13;
perspective, Bly explained, "if you watch&#13;
enough television you'll think your teachers&#13;
are TV sets. But a teacher isn't a television&#13;
set," he said softly, "he's a human being."&#13;
"You can't have all this television and not&#13;
pay for it. There's this passive emotional&#13;
quality coming. When your parents read you&#13;
a story, you responded to it, you didn't just&#13;
stare. And that's what happened in the antiwar&#13;
movement. When it started in '67, it was&#13;
like someone telling horrible stories to&#13;
children; the children saying, oohh, that's&#13;
terrible, you gotta stop it, I'm gonna go to&#13;
Washington. They responded. But now it's&#13;
Nixon more like a television set, telling people&#13;
'you know we're killing people in Vietnam,'&#13;
duhh, 'we're dropping more bombs than we&#13;
did in WW II,' duhh. Nobody gives a damn,&#13;
that's what's happening how; it's insane."&#13;
Speaking on the poetic process, Bly explained&#13;
that it is a product of the "inner shell&#13;
of the mind." He said there are two shells; the&#13;
inner and the outer. "The outer is the&#13;
rational, the conscious, the inner is the unconscious,&#13;
where poems and dreams come&#13;
from." When someone in the audience pointed&#13;
out that the theory was very Freudian, Bly&#13;
replied that he'd been reading a great many&#13;
Freudian works: "Freud was the greatest&#13;
man produced in the past 500, 1,000 years."&#13;
"We should take dreams seriously," he&#13;
continued, "we should write them down;&#13;
dreams are poems that don't get into words."&#13;
Bly told the audience that a good poem is&#13;
one which "you've never heard before." He&#13;
explained that it is a true poem because it&#13;
"came from your inner shell," it effuses&#13;
spontaniety. The poet wearing a poncho and&#13;
picking up bits of sugar that had fallen on the&#13;
table from a donut he'd been eating, explained&#13;
that the outer shell, "the rational&#13;
shell is too overdeveloped in the Western&#13;
world." That's why it takes so long for poets&#13;
to develop in America, they have to break&#13;
through to the inner shell. Bly's first&#13;
published book was produced when he was 36.&#13;
Using a Haiku poem as an illustration, Bly&#13;
told the audience a poem should be just&#13;
"verbs and nouns". He explained to some of&#13;
the aspiring poets in the audience that "one&#13;
adjective every three lines is enough".&#13;
Broaching the subject of astrology, Bly told&#13;
the audience that in future editions of his&#13;
magazine (the "Seventies"), he would&#13;
criticize poetry from an astrological&#13;
viewpoint. He explained that the New&#13;
Criticism is overdone, and that he'd like to try&#13;
something new.&#13;
Speaking on the subject of women, Bly&#13;
pointed out there are "almost no women in&#13;
the American novel". He said that men have&#13;
a "fear of women"; "when we've raped&#13;
mother earth, what effect does this have on&#13;
men's relationship to women?" He said t a&#13;
the historical places of men and women have&#13;
been reversed: Man was the hunter an&#13;
always alone, now it's the woman w o s&#13;
alone, locked in a house in the suburbs w i e&#13;
the man goes out with the boys.&#13;
Again addressing the young poets in&#13;
audience, Bly recommended that they spe&#13;
at least six months in the woods alone. ^&#13;
illustrated the point by utilizing his Pers0&#13;
.&#13;
experience in which he had spent two y&#13;
ear&#13;
„&#13;
the woods alone, "two too few I think no •&#13;
He counseled male and female poets o&#13;
perience the solitude of months in thes w &gt;&#13;
and not to get married until they d 9&#13;
through this solitary experience. He&#13;
plained that many of his works now com&#13;
of long hours of solitude on his farm n&#13;
With a reading of "Counting SmallI Boned&#13;
Bodies" and the Russian poem &lt;*7 »&#13;
during which he stood up and read wi ^&#13;
intense, gruff foice, emulating a hQUr&#13;
peasant, Bly concluded a two and a a&#13;
workshop that weemed two hours s o » ^&#13;
seemed a shame because only 50 peop&#13;
to see him. &#13;
March 20.1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
THE WORLDS ,Nr&#13;
tV.&#13;
W*°r'*°&#13;
WT&#13;
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J&#13;
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CT vow I.T.TJ&#13;
JVQOgS&#13;
OU6C&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
Ml P PIE; EVEN THE PREZf&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Coke.&#13;
&gt; /v^u. \ L y©&#13;
Ay&amp;fcMtl R&#13;
-/sen L o ,&#13;
THW&#13;
btrFzmny&#13;
/also* \_ 3 v&gt;&#13;
PIZZA in&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PAKKSIDI! VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 — 30tti Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
by Jim Koioen&#13;
While memorizing the page numbers in one&#13;
of the Newscalps papers they got lying around&#13;
in the union, On the Nod noticed an ad for a&#13;
place called Capie's. He swelt for a while on&#13;
the part about one dollar pitchers of brew,&#13;
with slow visions of double dubbles rising in&#13;
his desert like brain. "Ah needz irrigation,"&#13;
he exclaimed. He spoke to two cohorts; hey&#13;
Hermann, Socha, youse guys wanna go to&#13;
Capie's? Thunderstruck, they fled; but to no&#13;
avail. Nod would track them down in the&#13;
winter's blizzardry and point the beer glass&#13;
the other way; hands up Neptune, he would&#13;
say, this ain't no beef glass in your back, this&#13;
here is a shot glass. Get moving, creep.&#13;
Capie's is located at 8237 Sheridan Road in&#13;
Kenosha, away from all the other bars and&#13;
offers the two best extremes in contemporary&#13;
drinking; a cheap drunk as well as a very&#13;
exotic regal drunk. Cappie's offers one dollar&#13;
pitchers after 7 while at the same time&#13;
presenting complex* mixed drinks in the two&#13;
dollar range. It's unusual when, a bar,&#13;
especially a small bar, proffers the least as&#13;
well as the most, which to say the least is a&#13;
lot.&#13;
Capie's is indeed a bar of contrasts; Capie&#13;
provides a three acre parking lot although the&#13;
tavern is farily compact. Replete with a&#13;
padded formica topped bar, plush carpet,&#13;
tables with wrought iron chairs, a gas&#13;
powered fire place, lanterns and candles&#13;
hanging from the ceiling, the general ambiance&#13;
is one of rusticity. During the course of&#13;
the evening, Nod would come to appropriate&#13;
the padding on the bar, mistaking it for a&#13;
glorified pillow.&#13;
Capie offers three taps, two of which are&#13;
Schlitz (14oz. glass for 30 cents) and the other&#13;
leading to the source of Chablis. Legend has it&#13;
that this tap was once connected to a sea of&#13;
cold duck. Nod had to admit he'd never seen a&#13;
wine tap before, even though he wasn't quite&#13;
sure he was seeing it then; Nod suggested the&#13;
tap be brought in a little closer for inspection.&#13;
Capie who cinfided in Nod that he was in&#13;
business to help people enjoy themselves, also&#13;
pointed out that a pitcher of Harvey&#13;
Wallbangers could be purchased for $5.00 on&#13;
special nights. Upon measuring the capacity&#13;
of the metalic vessel with that of the beer&#13;
, KOFFLL&#13;
G) ENTION ALL STUDENTS g&#13;
c? BREAKFAST INSIDE&#13;
&gt;3 From 6 A.M. to 11 A.M., Monday thru Friday r$&#13;
Visif Our Neu, FnsiJe C-drpetec)&#13;
DBJLMJC.MC KCCtl 3&#13;
30th aue. and Roosevelt Road %&#13;
&lt;0 Open: (5&#13;
rp Mon. thru Thurs. — 6 A.M. -11 P.M. (x&#13;
rD Friday — 6 A.M. to Midnight ^&#13;
(p Saturday — 9 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Sunday — 9 A.M. to 11 P.M. 0&#13;
TUESDAY, MAR. 21&#13;
Poetry Reading. Knute Skinner,&#13;
Irish poet-in-residence at Western&#13;
Washington State. Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum. Greenquist&#13;
Hall, Whiteskellar. 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Coffee House. Morgan and Jeni.&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Whiteskellar. 12:00 to 3:00 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAR. 22&#13;
Film. "Making of a President, 1968". &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
^ -&lt;P&#13;
» / /&#13;
A &gt; ^&#13;
°&gt;&#13;
# ^&#13;
&lt;/&#13;
&amp;&#13;
3$&gt; cV&#13;
••&amp;£• &amp;&#13;
v&#13;
V&#13;
Mon. thru Thurs.:&#13;
5 - 7 p.m. — All the beer&#13;
you can drink $1.00&#13;
7 - cl osing — Pitchers $1.00&#13;
&gt; Sunday: 1-5 p.m. — All the beer you can drink $2.00&#13;
|AAon.: 8 - c losing — "College Night" Food&#13;
Wed.: Beer and pretzel night&#13;
Thurs.: "Ladies' Night"&#13;
V2 pr ice for women&#13;
Fri.: 4 - 7 p.m. —&#13;
("Double Bubble" Double mixed drink for the price of one&#13;
Sat.: 2 - 6 p.m. —All the beer you can drink $2.00&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
Mon. - Fri. — 4 - closing&#13;
Sat. and Sun. — Noon - c losing&#13;
8237 SWictar* Road&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Telephone: 457-3311&#13;
RICHARD G . CAPELLI, prop.&#13;
uwp policy questioned&#13;
Book Mart Bankrupt&#13;
by Jim Koloen, Managing Editor&#13;
The Book Mar in Kenosha is closed, gone,&#13;
bankrupt, its shelves are, if not barren, decimated&#13;
of books, its atmosphere is a flourescent light left&#13;
on in the back of t he wtore to warn burglars away.&#13;
Kenosha no longer has a store where people can&#13;
buy bestsellers, new releases, or any book with a&#13;
hardcover. In short, Kenosha no longer has a real&#13;
bookstore.&#13;
Why? Newscope asked that question. Why?&#13;
Grace Anderson, former proprietor of the Book&#13;
Mart, told Newscope that one of the major factors&#13;
in the bankruptcy was the non-availability of a list&#13;
of required texts and suggested reading for&#13;
courses at UW-P. In a telephone conversation,&#13;
Mrs, Anderson told Newscope that since Parkside&#13;
moved to its present location in 1969, s he had not&#13;
been able to obtain a book list. Bookstores in&#13;
Racine afso told Newscope that they had not&#13;
received book lists.&#13;
When asked of the Parkside policy toward&#13;
releasing booklists, Erwin Zuehlke, director of t he&#13;
Business Office, told Newscope that as far as he&#13;
knew, no book list was compiled after 1969. He&#13;
explained that the campus bookstore, which will&#13;
eventually relocate in the Libarar-Learning&#13;
Center, does not receive a booklist. "They send out&#13;
forms to instructors based on the information they&#13;
' obta in through the timetables. It's all voluntary, if&#13;
the instructors wish to fill out the form they can."&#13;
I He emphasized that there was no official book list,&#13;
and that "the policy for the present" is not to&#13;
compile one.&#13;
In a fit of journalistic research, Newscope&#13;
talked to a few instructors. When asked how they&#13;
make the required texts available to the students,&#13;
they explained that the campus bookstore sends&#13;
them questionnaires well in advance of each&#13;
Contents of these Prohtees&#13;
In Custody of&#13;
United St ates District Court&#13;
FOR THE £ASl£KlLMSW&lt;Z^_t**&#13;
IN BANKRUPTCY&#13;
MIUIAH •'gf .. S^vQ'-Tcy'&#13;
ADDRESS loxoj[fel&#13;
&lt;V«/ojwrf w*c.«W.&#13;
-TJ.,L~ I# *'"•&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at numerous locations&#13;
throughout the nation including&#13;
National Parks, Resort&#13;
Areas, and Private Camps. For&#13;
free information send self-addressed,&#13;
STAMPED envelope to&#13;
Opportunity Research, Dept&#13;
SJO, Century Bldg., Poison, MT&#13;
59860. APPLICANTS MUST&#13;
A P P L Y E A R L Y . ..&#13;
Vila to perform&#13;
Carmen Vila, Spanish pianist&#13;
and artist-in-residence at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
who recently returned&#13;
from a highly-acclaimed&#13;
European concert series, will&#13;
present a free public lecturerecital&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
March 23, in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
The program will be built&#13;
around 25 Brahms variations&#13;
and fugue on a theme by&#13;
Handel.&#13;
Miss Vila's concert series&#13;
included an appearance with&#13;
the Barcelona Orchestra in a&#13;
Bartok Concerto which one&#13;
critic praised for her "fluid&#13;
technique, vehement approach&#13;
to rhythmic passages and&#13;
suave, poetic phrasing." Said&#13;
another critic: "She is a pianist&#13;
of great natural gifts and&#13;
wonderful technique . . . shows&#13;
fire and strong esthetic temperment&#13;
perfect for romantic&#13;
pieces."&#13;
Miss Vila also appeared with&#13;
the Valencia Orchestra and was&#13;
cited by critics for the "beauty&#13;
and illumination" of her&#13;
"seductive, dense and&#13;
passionate" Brahms.&#13;
Scholarship Offer&#13;
The Business and&#13;
Professional Women's Club of&#13;
Kenosha is offering a $200&#13;
scholarship to female residents&#13;
of Kenosha who will be&#13;
sophomores or juniors and who&#13;
indicate strong academic&#13;
potential and are in need of&#13;
some financial assistance.&#13;
For further information and&#13;
appropriate forms contact the&#13;
Financial Aids Office on&#13;
Country Trunk A (553-2291).&#13;
RFUUNM&amp;.&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Students who are descendents&#13;
of J. I Case Company employees&#13;
are eligible to receive a&#13;
scholarship. Grants are also&#13;
available from the Kenosha&#13;
Branch of American&#13;
Association of University&#13;
Women. Any adult women&#13;
residing in Kenosha County who&#13;
has completed at least one&#13;
semester and has the objective&#13;
of obtaining a bachelor's degree&#13;
is eligible to apply.&#13;
Gruening&#13;
to Speak&#13;
Former senator Ernest&#13;
Gruening of Alaska will appear&#13;
at the Whiteskellar Tuesday,&#13;
Mar. 21, from 10 to 11:30 a.m.&#13;
He will give a short talk&#13;
followed by a rap session.&#13;
Gruening has the distinction&#13;
of being the first governor of&#13;
Alaska and the first editor of&#13;
The Nation. He was also one of&#13;
the two senators who voted&#13;
against the Gulf of Tonkin&#13;
resolution in 1965.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Gruening also will hold an&#13;
informal coffee hour with the&#13;
faculty in the Social Science&#13;
conference room Tuesday from&#13;
9 to 10 a.m.&#13;
semester. When asked if they were in any way&#13;
coerced to rely on the campus bookstore as the&#13;
sole means for making the texts available to&#13;
students, they replied they were not. One instructor,&#13;
who had previously taught at three&#13;
different institutions, told Newscope "this was the&#13;
procedure used on the other campuses I've been&#13;
on."&#13;
The death of a bookstore is never a welcome&#13;
event, when it is a city's only bookstore it approaches&#13;
travesty. Mrs. Anderson had indicated&#13;
that the Book Mar may be re-opened under new&#13;
management in a short while. But there is a cloud&#13;
hanging low. The campus bookstore is a monopoly&#13;
on campus; This, of&#13;
course, makes it quite economically feasible to&#13;
compile an exclusive booklist, which, of course,&#13;
places area bookstores at a distinct disadvantage.&#13;
Exactly how much of an advantage (and why) the&#13;
campus bookstores holds over area competitors&#13;
remains to be seen. &#13;
28 Letters Awarded March 20,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Twenty-eight University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside athletes&#13;
have earned letters in four justcompleted&#13;
winter sports,&#13;
athletic director Tom Rosandich&#13;
has announced.&#13;
Those who earned varsity letters&#13;
in basketball include Racine (Park)&#13;
freshman Chuck Chambliss;&#13;
Kenosha (St. Joseph) freshman Tom&#13;
Heller; Greendale sophomore Mike&#13;
Joyce; Greendale freshman Tom&#13;
Joyce; Jefferson freshman Pete&#13;
Nevins; Cudahy sophomore Mark&#13;
peck; Burlington junior Bob Popp;&#13;
Ewen, Mich., junior Dennis&#13;
Routheaux; and Racine (Case)&#13;
freshman Phil Stewart.&#13;
In fencing, letterwinners include&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) freshman&#13;
Charles Christensen; Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) senior John Hanzalik;&#13;
Sturtevant (Kenosha Bradford)&#13;
lunior Don Koser; Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford) junior Peter Shemanske;&#13;
Wauwatosa (East) sophomore&#13;
John Tank; Racine (Horlick)&#13;
sophomore Bernie Vash; and&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) freshman Steve&#13;
Vepraskas.&#13;
Gymnastics letterwinners include&#13;
Burbank, Cal., senior Warren&#13;
McGillivray; Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
freshman Kevin O'Neil and Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) freshman Kerry Pfeifer.&#13;
For the women's squad, Racine&#13;
(Horlick) freshman Kathy Kramer&#13;
earned a letter.&#13;
Gymnasts Compete&#13;
Three UW-Parkside gymnasts will compete Friday and&#13;
Saturday in the NAIA national gymnastics championships at&#13;
Eastern Illinois University.&#13;
Senior Warren McGillivray and freshmen Kevin O'Neil and&#13;
Kerry Pfeifer have qualified from Coach Dave Donaldson's squad&#13;
McGillivray, a native of Burbank, Cal., whose best mark in allaround&#13;
this year is 45.10, will compete in the rigorous all-event&#13;
competition, while Kenoshans O'Neil and Pfeifer will stay with&#13;
their specialties. O'Neil, captain of the squad, will be going on the&#13;
rings and parallel bars and Pfeifer will be entered in the long horse&#13;
vault.&#13;
It's the final competition of the season for the Rangers.&#13;
Burkee says Annex&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
who doesn't want to be included&#13;
in the annexation. They'd be in&#13;
and out. All it would take would&#13;
be the approval of the city&#13;
council and the Somers town&#13;
board. The only land that&#13;
wouldn't be detached would&#13;
belong to the people who want to&#13;
be annexed, and a 200 foot wide&#13;
corridor which would connect&#13;
Parkside with Kenosha. We&#13;
have to keep the corridor to&#13;
make the area contiguous with&#13;
the city and to provide sewer&#13;
lines." Pitts added that the&#13;
precedent for the corridor&#13;
retention was established in a&#13;
case between Madison and a&#13;
suburb in which the state&#13;
required a minimum width for a&#13;
corridor to make the annexed&#13;
area contiguous with the city.&#13;
You've said that farmers who&#13;
don't want to be included in the&#13;
annexation can detach their&#13;
property from it after the annexation&#13;
has been passed. What&#13;
guarantee do they have that&#13;
they'll actually be able to do it?&#13;
"I would recommend to the city&#13;
council, as soon as the area is&#13;
annexed, to detach the&#13;
property. You see there are&#13;
checks and balances to this&#13;
thing. The voters have the final&#13;
say. They can petition for a&#13;
referendum if they don't like&#13;
something that is happening,&#13;
and pull out. When this&#13;
(detached annexation) goes&#13;
back to the state, they're going&#13;
to flip. They're going to say this&#13;
is a kind of connived deal.&#13;
Somebody could even go to&#13;
court on this."&#13;
Does the city have to annex in&#13;
order to service the campus?&#13;
"If I extend sewer and water&#13;
outside the city limits, I could&#13;
get a taxpayers lawsuit. I could&#13;
have gotten a taxpayers lawsuit&#13;
when I put the original sewer in.&#13;
But people were so anxious to&#13;
help Parkside that nobody was&#13;
going to sue for that. Now they&#13;
would. I'd get a suit because I'd&#13;
be spending the taxpayers&#13;
money of the city of Kenosha&#13;
out in Somers."&#13;
Why do you think the area&#13;
residents are so vehemently&#13;
opposed to the annexation? "It&#13;
all goes back to the fact that&#13;
they don't liknee Pparkside,&#13;
because they can't say they&#13;
don't like me; what have I got to&#13;
do with it? I don't have a sewer&#13;
problem, Somers doesn't have a&#13;
sewer problem. They simply&#13;
resented the fact that their land&#13;
was sold for the Parkside site.&#13;
That's what I think anyway.&#13;
You see the city is doing&#13;
everything it can to solve this&#13;
problem, and they're (Somers)&#13;
not cooperating. If this thing&#13;
falls through, I don't know&#13;
what's going to happen; we've&#13;
done everything we can.&#13;
Somers says they can build a&#13;
treatment plant in conjunction&#13;
with Mt. Pleasant, but I just&#13;
don't see how they'll pay for it.&#13;
And if they can come up with $10&#13;
million in federal aid along with&#13;
the other $10 million they'll&#13;
need, that other ten million will&#13;
have to come out of their taxpayers&#13;
pockets. I think these'&#13;
taxpayers should realize this."&#13;
What happens if annexation&#13;
fails? "I don't know what we'll&#13;
do, when the sewers are&#13;
overflowing in 1974 I might not&#13;
even be here. Then we'll have&#13;
an emergency and the state will&#13;
come in and under Bill 50 they'll&#13;
order an annexation because&#13;
we'll have a pollution problem.&#13;
But then it's too late."&#13;
irish poet here&#13;
Knute Skinner, Irish poet, will&#13;
appear Tuesday at 4 p.m. with&#13;
Poetry Forum. Mr. Skinner,&#13;
spending most of the year in&#13;
Ireland, is currently in the&#13;
Creative Writing program at&#13;
Western Washington State. In&#13;
1961 he won the HuntingtonH&#13;
a r t f o rd F o u n d a t i on&#13;
Fellowship in poetry. His latest&#13;
book will be released shortly&#13;
called "Hearing of the Hard&#13;
Times" Mr. Skinner will read&#13;
selections of his poStry. Admission&#13;
is free.&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
Eight Rangers won letters in&#13;
wrestling. They include Peshtigo&#13;
freshman Kyle Barnes; Kenosha&#13;
(St. Joseph) junior Mark Barnhill;&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) junior Jeff&#13;
Jenkins; Coleman sophomore Ken&#13;
Martin; Racine (Case) freshman&#13;
Rick Schoeffler; Peshtigo freshman&#13;
Steve Sulk; Racine (Parkp) freshman&#13;
Frank Velasquez; and Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) sophomore Bill West.&#13;
Elected captains for their&#13;
respective squads are Dennis&#13;
Routheaux, basketball; Peter&#13;
Shemanske, fencing; Kevin O'Neil,&#13;
men's gymnastics; Kathy Kramer&#13;
and Mary Jo Giannottl, women's&#13;
gymnastics; and Jeff Jenkins and&#13;
Ken Martin, wrestling.&#13;
MVPS&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, Peter&#13;
S h e m a n s k e , W a r r e n&#13;
McGillivray, Kathy Kramer&#13;
and Ken Martin have been&#13;
named most valuable for their&#13;
winter sports at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Chambliss, high-scoring&#13;
freshman from Racine, was&#13;
named the cagers' top player in&#13;
a vote of teammates as were&#13;
fencing captain Shemanske, a&#13;
Kenosha junior, and Burbank,&#13;
Cal., senior McGillivray, who&#13;
will compete in all-around in the&#13;
upcoming NAIA national&#13;
gymnastics championships.&#13;
Miss Kramer, who placed&#13;
fifth in the state in floor exercises&#13;
for Parkside's first&#13;
women's gym squad, was&#13;
picked as MVP in that sport&#13;
while Martin, who claimed ailAmerican&#13;
wrestling honors for&#13;
the second time last weekend,&#13;
was named the grapplers' top&#13;
man. Miss Kramer is a Racine&#13;
freshman while sophomore&#13;
Martin hails from Coleman.&#13;
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Roy.I Worcetter &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
The Great Salad Controversy&#13;
AT L E F T T H E SM A L L ER A C TIV ITI ES SALAD:. AT RIG HT T H E R A CIN E P O R T I ON I&#13;
A L I T T L E MO R E S AL A D WITH OUR BOW LS P L E A S E .&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Dave Bishop appeared to be&#13;
visably shaken. He stood in his&#13;
office staring at two salads on&#13;
his desk, his chin slowly&#13;
massaged by his left hand.&#13;
"Hmm," he said, "isn't that&#13;
something."&#13;
I stood next to him as he&#13;
thought over what I had named&#13;
"the great salad controversy"&#13;
On his desk were two lettuce&#13;
salads bought by myself at two&#13;
different eating facilities under&#13;
his temporary authority. One&#13;
salad, heaped in a blue glass&#13;
bowl, was comprised of four&#13;
healthy wedges of tomato, bits&#13;
of c elery, slices of radish, and&#13;
fresh, crisp lettuce. The other&#13;
salad, housed in a smaller white&#13;
styrofoam bowl, had no raddish&#13;
or celery, but a thin strip of&#13;
green pepper and the butt-end&#13;
of a tomato.&#13;
"You're sure they're the&#13;
same price," he asked me. "I'm&#13;
positive," I said, "Twenty-five&#13;
cents and a penny tax, the&#13;
healthy one from Racine, the&#13;
scrawny salad from the Student&#13;
Activities Building lunch&#13;
counter." He shook his head&#13;
slowly, seemingly amazed.&#13;
One of Mr. Bishop's duties as&#13;
a Parkside Administrator is to&#13;
keep a watchful eye on the food&#13;
services on the three campuses&#13;
he serves as an interim liaison&#13;
between the students' stomachs&#13;
and the Canteen Company.&#13;
The "great salad controversy"&#13;
was born in a casual&#13;
conversation I once had with&#13;
another Parkside employee,&#13;
Shirley Schmerling. She asked&#13;
me why I, as author of Eating&#13;
Out, didn't review the eating&#13;
facilities at Parkside. I admitted&#13;
at that time the idea had&#13;
been haunting me for quite&#13;
awhile.&#13;
I explained that I didn't want&#13;
to get involved with administrators,&#13;
although I had&#13;
once interviewed Vice Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn concerning the&#13;
food available to students. It&#13;
seems that when Parkside was&#13;
just a suckling, a contract was&#13;
made with the Canteen Company.&#13;
The contract stated&#13;
Parkside could not initiate any&#13;
new food program until it expired.&#13;
Because I could say little&#13;
or nothing good about the&#13;
present set-up, I told Shirley&#13;
Schmerling that I would review&#13;
eating facilities at Parkside&#13;
when the Administration got&#13;
serious about feeding the&#13;
students.&#13;
Injecting a bit of trivial&#13;
detective work on my part, I&#13;
asked her if she knew that the&#13;
salads in Racine were bigger&#13;
than the ones at the Kenosha&#13;
campus or the Activities&#13;
Building. She didn't accept my&#13;
testimony as fact; she wanted&#13;
me to bring her a Racine salad.&#13;
When I did a few weeks later,&#13;
she insisted Dave Bishop, her&#13;
boss, see them.&#13;
He stood over the salads,&#13;
somewhat amazed, I think, and&#13;
a bit bewildered.&#13;
I realized while standing next&#13;
to him, that although I brought&#13;
the salads to him just for the&#13;
sake of proving a point, I was&#13;
still a Newscope writer, and in&#13;
charge of "Eating Out". He&#13;
wasn't in the same league as the&#13;
secretaries and others who had&#13;
been amused by my demonstration.&#13;
He was an Administrator.&#13;
&#13;
Adm inis trat ors and&#13;
politicians have one common&#13;
fear, and that is "unrehearsed&#13;
dialogue", which crops up when&#13;
they are questioned by a hostile&#13;
constituent, student or reporter.&#13;
Nothing is as nightmarish as a&#13;
statement off the top of the&#13;
head, when the statement is&#13;
binding and recorded by a&#13;
machine or mind. That's how&#13;
images are shattered — ask&#13;
George Romney. In this&#13;
respect, the President of the&#13;
United States and the man who&#13;
is to watch over a college food&#13;
program have a common bond.&#13;
I couldn't decide, standing&#13;
next to Mr. Bishop, if he thought&#13;
I was there to reveal a flaw in&#13;
his operation, or if h e realized I&#13;
was only casually proving a&#13;
point, though it had gone beyond&#13;
Shirley Schmerling and a&#13;
casual conversation.&#13;
After staring at the salads for&#13;
a few minutes, burrowing&#13;
through a garden of thought,&#13;
Dave Bishop told me that he&#13;
would personally make a tour of&#13;
the three lunch counters in&#13;
order to straighten out "the&#13;
great salad controversy". He&#13;
told me to call him in a day or&#13;
two.&#13;
Two days later, Dave Bishop&#13;
explained over the phone that&#13;
he had indeed toured the&#13;
campuses and found the salads&#13;
to be different sizes. He had&#13;
called a representative from the&#13;
Canteen Company in&#13;
Milwaukee. The "great salad&#13;
controversy" had now spread to&#13;
three counties in the state I&#13;
realized.&#13;
The salads were in different&#13;
containers, he went on to explain&#13;
over the phone, because&#13;
they were bought at different&#13;
times. There is no dishwasher&#13;
at the Activities Building, so the&#13;
Canteen personnel use&#13;
styrofoam containers, while&#13;
Racine and Kenosha use plastic&#13;
and glass. (Somewhere in&#13;
Parksideland I thought, Doug&#13;
LaFollette, the ecological&#13;
knight, was cringing at the&#13;
mention of styrofoam. "If you&#13;
bury a dead cat, a nail and a&#13;
sytrofoam cup, he tells his&#13;
ecology classes, then dig them&#13;
up years later, which do you&#13;
think will prove to be non biodegradable?")&#13;
&#13;
Bishop went on to say that he&#13;
felt the Kenosha Campus had&#13;
reached a "happy medium" in&#13;
the salad question, a smaller&#13;
version of the Racine model, but&#13;
a bit bigger than the Activities&#13;
Building salad. He would bring&#13;
this all to the attention of the&#13;
Canteen person coming down&#13;
from Milwaukee.&#13;
I asked if he had found any&#13;
other discrepancies on his&#13;
jaunt. He said something about&#13;
hot dogs and beans, and the fact&#13;
that someone somewhere&#13;
wasn't serving bread with the&#13;
meal.&#13;
In perfect politicaladministrative&#13;
rhetoric, he said&#13;
he would "strive for consistency"&#13;
in the lunch program,&#13;
and see to it the students got&#13;
their money's worth.&#13;
There would always be&#13;
complaints, Mr- Bishop&#13;
rationalized, prices and the like,&#13;
but those are the "nature of t he&#13;
beast" gripes. Concluding the&#13;
phone explanation he said a&#13;
"happy medium" had been&#13;
found and the salad affair was&#13;
over. Ceasar Chavez would&#13;
have been proud, I thought, no&#13;
more sickly lettuce salads.&#13;
The "great salad controversy",&#13;
which had begun in a&#13;
casual conversation, spread&#13;
into three counties, and taken a&#13;
few hours of out a couple&#13;
people's lives, was over.&#13;
Although I hadn't reviewed&#13;
the lunch program, I had done&#13;
something, I concluded after&#13;
talking to Dave Bishop. In fact,&#13;
he thanked me for bringing the&#13;
matter to his attention. It appeared&#13;
to have worked out&#13;
alright, but there were losers,&#13;
as in all controversies.&#13;
The vegetarians in Racine&#13;
would now have to be content&#13;
eating "happy medium" salads&#13;
instead of bargain-basement,&#13;
heaping, healthy herbage.&#13;
They would complain, I&#13;
realized, but that would come&#13;
under the "nature of th e beast"&#13;
gripes.&#13;
m mm 'X-Xv.v.v. n&#13;
SH liiMi v.v.v.v&#13;
•X-M-X-:-&#13;
vX;X; jg&#13;
^ Student Activities Built inj (^j) 1 Z 5&#13;
PARKSIDE t ( JI SC. X.b.'S REQUIRED # </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 11, March 20, 1972</text>
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
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                <text>English</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="51">
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63718">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
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        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
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        <name>parkside village</name>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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        <element elementId="97">
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              <text>Volume 6, issue 12</text>
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              <text>Parkside Today: more prone towards the administration</text>
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              <text>by Michael Kite of the Newscope staff&#13;
ther? aPPeared on campus a new publication&#13;
Parkside Today, about which very little was known. All that was&#13;
known about the paper was included in a "letter of purpose"&#13;
contained in the first issue.&#13;
, ,&#13;
Th&#13;
(? le&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
T&#13;
ter sta&#13;
^&#13;
ed 11131 1116 publication was sponsored and paid&#13;
or by the University. "It is a non-competitive publication aimed at&#13;
informing the campus community and the surrounding area of&#13;
special events and activities, and student, academic, and administrative&#13;
affairs."&#13;
The exact source of their&#13;
funds, and a more specific&#13;
purpose was not clear.&#13;
An interview with Mr. Anthony&#13;
Totero, Director of&#13;
Student Organizations, was set&#13;
up to seek out some of these&#13;
answers. But opon questioning,&#13;
Mr. Totero explained, "Because&#13;
Parkside Today is not a student&#13;
organization, I know very little&#13;
about it." He then suggested&#13;
Newscope talk to the&#13;
publications' advisor, Mr.&#13;
Kopriva, as the best source of&#13;
information.&#13;
But Mr. Kopriva was also&#13;
unable to produce any substantial&#13;
answers, not knowing&#13;
who had originated the paper,&#13;
exactly where the funds came&#13;
from, or how the staff had been&#13;
chosen. "By the time things&#13;
such as this work their way&#13;
down through the proper&#13;
channels," he explained, "I&#13;
usually don't know where they&#13;
originated." Kopriva added,&#13;
"All I know is it has Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's full approval."&#13;
Concerning the staff, Kopriva&#13;
thought it consisted of only&#13;
Rudy Leinau and Sue Zietz (the&#13;
only two names prepresnted in&#13;
the publication to date), and he&#13;
said they worked for the&#13;
University under the work&#13;
study program.&#13;
About the possibility of a&#13;
conflict arising between&#13;
Parkside today and Newscope,&#13;
Kopriva had this to say, "I feel&#13;
that rather than conflict they&#13;
will compliment each other."&#13;
At this point it was brought to&#13;
Mr. Kopriva's attention that in&#13;
the last issue of Parkside&#13;
Today, there appeared a news&#13;
story concerning the land annexation,&#13;
which was fully&#13;
covered in Newscope. To this he&#13;
said, "Rudy has almost complete&#13;
control over what is run in&#13;
the paper and he must have had&#13;
good reason for running it."&#13;
As for the future plans of&#13;
Parkside Today, Kopriva&#13;
replied, "As far as I know, the&#13;
paper will remain as it is with&#13;
no major changes and will&#13;
continue to be a noncompetitive&#13;
publication."&#13;
Being able to supply only&#13;
these vauge answers, Mr.&#13;
Kopriva suggested presenting&#13;
the questions to Rudy Leinau or&#13;
Mr. Totero, who had initially&#13;
suggested Mr. Korpiva.&#13;
Rudy, a freshman, was more&#13;
responsive than either Mr.&#13;
Totero or Mr. Kopriva. He&#13;
began by explaining that the&#13;
staff of Parkside Today consisted&#13;
of Sue Zietz, who receives&#13;
a salary for her contributions,&#13;
and himself. He added that he&#13;
was paid through the workNewscope's&#13;
&#13;
next issue&#13;
out April 10&#13;
study program.&#13;
Mr. Lienau explained that he&#13;
had gained journalism experience&#13;
by working on his high&#13;
school newspaper, the Tremper&#13;
Tempest. Knowing this, Mr.&#13;
Totero (who originally said&#13;
"Because Parkside Today is not&#13;
a student organization, I know&#13;
very little about it.") approached&#13;
Rudy with the offer.&#13;
Rudy, who had been seeking a&#13;
way to use and increase his&#13;
journalistic knowledge, readily&#13;
accepted.&#13;
This raised the question as to&#13;
why the individuals involved&#13;
had not come to Newscope, to&#13;
possibly create a regular&#13;
column which would serve the&#13;
(Continued on Page 7)&#13;
'Scoop' Jackson&#13;
more photos on page 8.&#13;
Kenosha. Report and&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
CCC Hearings Raise Q uestions&#13;
by Jim Koloen,&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
In the first of two open&#13;
hearings sponsored by the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
concerning proposed rules for&#13;
Mochon, a number of questions&#13;
were raised concerning. the&#13;
regulations which were&#13;
presented in a rough draft&#13;
written on March 15.&#13;
The hearing, which lasted an&#13;
hit at credit load&#13;
CCC Chairwoman Marion Mochon at open hearing which few&#13;
students attended.&#13;
r e g i s t e r i n g stu d e nt&#13;
organizations, fifteen faculty&#13;
and students were present to air&#13;
their views. Most of the participants&#13;
in the Friday noon&#13;
meeting, held in the&#13;
Whiteskellar, were members of&#13;
the CCC. Chaired by Marion&#13;
hour, did not see the proposed&#13;
rules considered point by point,&#13;
rather rules considered during&#13;
the meeting were those on&#13;
which the individual participants&#13;
took exception. The&#13;
rules which drew the most&#13;
debate included the validity of a&#13;
minimum grade point average,&#13;
minimum credit load&#13;
requirements for SGA officers,&#13;
and the responsibilities of an&#13;
organization when it sponsors&#13;
various events.&#13;
Student Union Board&#13;
representative Jerry Murphy&#13;
opened the discussion by&#13;
questioning the desirability of a&#13;
2.0 gpa for the representatives&#13;
of an organization who file the&#13;
application for recognition as a&#13;
campus entity. Murphy also&#13;
questioned the practicality of&#13;
establishing a six credit&#13;
minimum course load for officers&#13;
of the Student Government.&#13;
Professor Larry Deutsch&#13;
replied that he thought a&#13;
student body could not be well&#13;
represented by a person with&#13;
only one credit. He added that&#13;
most campuses have such&#13;
minimum course load rules.&#13;
Student senator Elaine Birch&#13;
supported Murphy's contention&#13;
by explaining that she did not&#13;
believe in dictating to people&#13;
how they should vote. She said&#13;
she wanted nothing to do with&#13;
pre-choosing a candidate.&#13;
On the question of the grade&#13;
point requirement, Murphy&#13;
asked why it specified it be&#13;
attained during the previous&#13;
semester. He wondered why it&#13;
couldn't be cumulative rather&#13;
than based on one semester.&#13;
The question came up concerning&#13;
the possibility for a&#13;
person's cumulative gpa&#13;
making him ineligible, instead&#13;
of the previous semester's gpa.&#13;
When asked if any present&#13;
SGA officer was carrying less&#13;
than six credits, Murphy replied&#13;
that Dean Loumos, President of&#13;
SGA, was. He further stated&#13;
that the present SGA must&#13;
fulfill two years of work in one&#13;
semester because of the&#13;
previous SGA administration's&#13;
laxness.&#13;
Concerning the proposed rule&#13;
requiring a student to attend&#13;
UWP for a full semester prior to&#13;
becoming eligible for SGA&#13;
candidacy, faculty member&#13;
Tom Knight questioned its&#13;
constitutionality. He explained&#13;
that the Supreme Court had just&#13;
ruled that lengthy residency&#13;
requirements for voter&#13;
eligibility were unconstitutional.&#13;
Professor&#13;
Greenbaum indicated that the&#13;
Court ruling applied to voting&#13;
and not to the issue of candidacy.&#13;
Jerry Murphy pointed&#13;
out that first semester freshmen&#13;
would be ineligible to hold&#13;
an officership in SGA if such a&#13;
requirement is recommended.&#13;
Knight agreed that the rule&#13;
would be discriminatory,&#13;
stating that it would prevent&#13;
transfer students from running&#13;
for office.&#13;
It was generally agreed that a&#13;
semester is necessary for a&#13;
student to learn the idosyncracies&#13;
of the campus.&#13;
However, Knight expressed the&#13;
belief that many transfer&#13;
students could be capable of&#13;
comprehending the tasks of a&#13;
Parkside SGA officer in a few&#13;
days, after poring over campus&#13;
regulations and other pertinent&#13;
information.&#13;
When the issue of the guest&#13;
policy for the Activities&#13;
Building was questioned, Elaine&#13;
Birch replied that the rule&#13;
concerning the 18 year old&#13;
minimum age requirement was&#13;
required by stipulations set&#13;
forth when the present beer&#13;
license was granted. When&#13;
Knight asked why a Parkside&#13;
ID was required rather than&#13;
allowing for a more general&#13;
general policy requiring just a&#13;
(Continued on Page 7)&#13;
PARKSIDE TODAY&#13;
more prone toward&#13;
the administration" &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE March 27,1972&#13;
EpitoBJAL&#13;
The Presidency&#13;
— Don't look for a messiah at least for another&#13;
2,000 years, Gene McCarthy told his supporters in&#13;
1968. What he said holds true. Newscope views&#13;
with dis truct the coming presidential election. Call&#13;
it, perhaps, cynicism, but we see the leading&#13;
candidates as failing to comprehend the basic&#13;
problems of the United States. The election of any&#13;
one of them — from Nixon on the Right to Lindsay&#13;
on the Left — would be almost equally dangerous&#13;
in the long run.&#13;
The United States is in the midst of a transformation.&#13;
The old ideologies are crumbling, the&#13;
old political alliances are in disarray. There is a&#13;
fundamental restructuring of American beliefs&#13;
going on. Politically, it is manifested by the&#13;
growing dual realization that the liberalism&#13;
ushered in by Franklin Roosevelt is approaching&#13;
bankruptcy, while the traditional Republican&#13;
concept of laissez faire has gone the way of the&#13;
dinosaur.&#13;
We are then in a period of changing beliefs and&#13;
conditions. If we are to adapt successfully to them,&#13;
our political parties and their ideologies must&#13;
reflect these changes. A failure to do so now will&#13;
probably result in greater social violence in the&#13;
future.&#13;
One candidate, we feel, has an intimation of&#13;
the changes that are about. That man is Eugene&#13;
McCarthy. He has our endorsement in the&#13;
Wisconsin presidential primary.&#13;
In both his grasp of the situation and his style,&#13;
McCarthy is best suited for the presidency. He&#13;
holds a rightful suspicion of the office. For too long&#13;
we have voted for men who seem to be consumed&#13;
with meglomania, with a desire to remake the&#13;
country in their image. McCarthy, refreshingly,&#13;
does not seem to have the physical NEED to be&#13;
president the others have.&#13;
For example: after his defeat in 1968, the&#13;
University of Maryland offered him a teaching&#13;
position in Political Science. He refused it. They&#13;
offered him a teaching position in poetry, and he&#13;
accepted. A small thing maybe, but consider what&#13;
it means to have a serious presidential candidate&#13;
who has a love of poetry . . .&#13;
But there is more to his style than that. He&#13;
realizes the importance of policies. "The question&#13;
is not who will be elected," he has said, "but&#13;
rather the principles, the policies and the&#13;
programs to which the next president is committed."&#13;
&#13;
In rejecting the other Democratic candidates,&#13;
we feel that, with the exception of George&#13;
McGovern and Shirley Chisholm, their support of&#13;
the Democratic party as it is presently constituted&#13;
shows their lack of perception of needed changes.&#13;
In particular, we are unable to support either&#13;
Hubert Humphrey or Edmund Muskie becuase of&#13;
their conduct in 1968. Henry Jackson, we feel,&#13;
would have been a more creditable candidate in&#13;
1960. John Lindsay is unacceptable because the&#13;
selling point of his candidacy is his pretty face.&#13;
George McGovern, though responsible for&#13;
much of the reform in the Democratic party,&#13;
embodys too much of the beliefs of traditional&#13;
liberalism. Shirley Chisholm, we feel, lacks the&#13;
necessary background to be president.&#13;
President Nixon, though mellowing some with&#13;
the passage of time, still lacks a sufficiently&#13;
humanistic vision of the presidency.&#13;
The candidate we believe who is the best, the&#13;
one we trust, is Eugene McCarthy. "I announced&#13;
in Grant Park the night they nominated Humphrey,"&#13;
he said. "I told the people in the park I&#13;
would never allow them to be taken in again by the&#13;
politics of 1968. I said I would never lead a&#13;
movement under the current system where the&#13;
people were humiliated. I said then we have to&#13;
change the politics of 1972. And when I was in&#13;
Grant Park, Hubert Humphrey was at the convention&#13;
hall, standing on the stage with George&#13;
McGovern on his left and Edmund Muskie on his&#13;
right."&#13;
We have no great hopes for 1972, but we can&#13;
say in clear conscience if there is one hope, it is&#13;
Eugene McCarthy.&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
City &amp; County- just the facts&#13;
In recent weeks, Newscope&#13;
has presented a continuing&#13;
series of articles concerning the&#13;
proposed annexation of UWP&#13;
and its environs to the City of&#13;
Kenosha. Opposition to the&#13;
proposal has emanated from&#13;
area residents and a few&#13;
Parkside students, creating an&#13;
unlikely alliance. Though&#13;
Parkside Villagers are eligible&#13;
to vote on the matter, few of&#13;
them have vocalized their&#13;
concern, and perhaps there is&#13;
good reason for it.&#13;
The two opposing parties, city&#13;
vs. county, have both expressed&#13;
the belief that their plan will be&#13;
of most benefit to the University.&#13;
The city has stated that&#13;
Somers can't finance the&#13;
facilities and services which the&#13;
University must be provided&#13;
with. The Somers residents&#13;
have indicated that they can&#13;
finance the projects for which&#13;
they have undertaken a&#13;
feasibility study.&#13;
Area residents have expressed&#13;
the fear that their&#13;
property will be taxed at a&#13;
prohibitive rate, forcing them to&#13;
lose their land if the area is&#13;
annexed. The city has&#13;
responded with a detached&#13;
annexation proposal. However,&#13;
the guarantee that their&#13;
property can indeed be&#13;
detached from the annexation is&#13;
not legally binding, rather it is&#13;
based on the Mayor's word. The&#13;
Somers residents have expressed&#13;
skepticism toward this.&#13;
The county has charged the city&#13;
with profiteering as the motive&#13;
behind annexing the area; the&#13;
city has accused the property&#13;
owners of stifling the growth of&#13;
the University.&#13;
It is difficult for a student on&#13;
campus to decide on an issue&#13;
when neither side has yet&#13;
proven its contentions, in which&#13;
each side refuses to make&#13;
concessions, when each side&#13;
expresses the laudable wish to&#13;
help UWP, yet accuse the other&#13;
side of baser motives. Annexation&#13;
should not be a&#13;
political issue, it should simply&#13;
be a question of which plan will&#13;
be best for the area. Unfortunately,&#13;
this is not the case.&#13;
Both sides have agreed that&#13;
the fate of the annexation rests&#13;
in the hands of the students who&#13;
reside in Parkside Village. But&#13;
before they can decide the&#13;
issue, they must be presented&#13;
with less emotionalism, fewer&#13;
controversial statistics. The&#13;
issue must be separated from&#13;
politics and old grudges. The&#13;
ecological environment must be&#13;
considered, not the political&#13;
environment; the residents&#13;
must be guaranteed the right to&#13;
live their lives as they wish&#13;
before they can be expected to&#13;
agree to an annexation;&#13;
cooperation, not opposition,&#13;
must be fostered by both sides.&#13;
Until such time as each individual&#13;
elector in the Village&#13;
has been satisfied that all the&#13;
facts have been made available&#13;
to him; until the student has&#13;
been presented with the facts&#13;
rather than emotionalism,&#13;
politics and old grudges; until a&#13;
student can make his decision&#13;
from position of intelligence&#13;
rather than bewilderment and&#13;
ignorance as is the case now,&#13;
only then should they vote, after&#13;
the city and county have come&#13;
to meet rather than fight each&#13;
other. The facts, gentlemen,&#13;
just the facts.&#13;
WATCHES PERFUMES"&#13;
Rolen - Accutron&#13;
UltrachrOn - Longine&#13;
Bui ova - Movado&#13;
Caravclle - Time.&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
France'*&#13;
Flne.t -&#13;
Perfume, and&#13;
Cologne*&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontoiogist&#13;
W_ Stir (Mi Ave.&#13;
Vi/fuufia, £&#13;
It does rmke » difference where you shop!&#13;
10% Disco unt to students and Facul ty w ith | . D&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
SILVERWARE |&#13;
Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Reed &amp; Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefort&#13;
Seneca - Lalique&#13;
Royal Worcester&#13;
mcgoyern&#13;
needs volunteers&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Those of us who heard&#13;
Senator Gruening when he&#13;
spoke at Parkside on Tuesday&#13;
— and even those who didn't —&#13;
must realize by now the&#13;
pressing need for an American&#13;
President who will tell the truth,&#13;
and act on it.&#13;
George McGovern is the one&#13;
candidate whose whole life and&#13;
legislative record promise that&#13;
he would be such a President.&#13;
The success of McGovern's&#13;
campaign is crucial to getting&#13;
this country back on the track,&#13;
and the Wisconsin primary is&#13;
crucial to McGovern's campaign.&#13;
&#13;
McGovern volunteers intend&#13;
to canvass every home in&#13;
Kenosha and Racine, but we&#13;
urgently need more people.&#13;
McGovern will be President if&#13;
we care enough. To volunteer to&#13;
help, no matter how limited the&#13;
time you can offer, call 657-5713&#13;
(Kenosha) or 632-7313 (Racine).&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Pete Selander&#13;
Parkside Students for&#13;
McGovern&#13;
canvassing&#13;
for george&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Forty college and high school&#13;
students from Nebraska were in&#13;
Kenosha this week-end to&#13;
canvass on behalf of Senator&#13;
George McGovern. The young&#13;
people who made the 12 hour&#13;
bus trip from Omaha Friday&#13;
evening, spent their time when&#13;
they weren't working, at the&#13;
homes of local McGovern&#13;
supporters.&#13;
Marc tisen, Helmut Ferber, Gary&#13;
Jensen, Larry Jones, Jim Koloen,&#13;
Rich Lipke, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Steve Mazzarell; Pat&#13;
McDermid, Kevin McKay, Kathy&#13;
Rasch, Brian Ross, Wolfgant&#13;
Salewski, Andy Schmelling, Barb&#13;
Scott, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, Bill Sorensen, Mike'&#13;
Stevesand, James Twist, Debbie&#13;
Venskus, Mike Kite, "Red" Widely,&#13;
Sifton Winnow.&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
The local McGovern&#13;
headquarters stated that they&#13;
expected students from all over&#13;
the midwest to join local young&#13;
people in canvassing the next&#13;
two weekends before the April&#13;
4th Primary. If any Parkside&#13;
students would like to join in&#13;
this person-to-person contact&#13;
approach to politics, they can&#13;
volunteer by calling 657-5713.&#13;
Hope to see you there!&#13;
institute for&#13;
family planning&#13;
The Institute for Family&#13;
Service, a non-profit&#13;
organization, has been formed&#13;
by concerned citizens who feel&#13;
that individuals should be&#13;
allowed to deal with birth&#13;
control and problem&#13;
pregnancies in a way appropriate&#13;
to their individual&#13;
situations.&#13;
Medical science has provided&#13;
modern methods which are&#13;
physically safe and mentally&#13;
healthy, about which no one&#13;
need feel ashamed.&#13;
The services provided by the&#13;
Institute include: problem&#13;
pregnancy counseling, abortion&#13;
referral, and psychological&#13;
counseling and therapy, when&#13;
needed. It also offers alternatives&#13;
to abortion such as&#13;
referrals for adoption and&#13;
maternity homes, as well as&#13;
information on methods of birth&#13;
control.&#13;
The Institute assists, where&#13;
necessary, in obtaining&#13;
financial aid in relation to any&#13;
of the above situations.&#13;
Further information is&#13;
available by phone vya a 24-&#13;
hour a day Washington hot-line,&#13;
202-628-7656, or by mail. Institute&#13;
of Family Service,&#13;
Public National Bank Building,&#13;
1430 K Street, N.W., Suite 402,&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20005.&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 c opies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout Ihe&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
-manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road.&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke. &#13;
March 27,1972 NEWSCOPE&#13;
by Jim Koloen,&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
In last week's Newscope, the city's side&#13;
of the annexation controversy was&#13;
presented in an interview with Mayor&#13;
Wallace Burkee.&#13;
This week Newscope held an interview&#13;
tith Somers Town Board Chairman&#13;
Howard Blackmon. As we sat in his&#13;
trucking firm's office, Blackmon talked&#13;
about Somers' side of the story.&#13;
Why do you think the city wants to&#13;
annex the area?&#13;
"My personal opinion is there's a fast&#13;
dollar somewhere in this deal. That's&#13;
only my personal opinion. I would ask&#13;
one question: Why does the mayor want&#13;
to annex the campus? There's no tax&#13;
revenue there, so why does he want to&#13;
annex the campus bought by the county.&#13;
Why does he want to annex some 614&#13;
acres of non-campus land?" As Blackmon&#13;
sat behind his desk, he explained&#13;
that 614 acres "is enough land for the&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Howard Blackmon opposes annexation&#13;
if the annexation proposal fails?&#13;
"We're going to arrange to do&#13;
whatever we possibly can to service the&#13;
entire area and, as I say, under the&#13;
feasibility study the City of Kenosha is&#13;
going to be servicing that portion&#13;
anyway."&#13;
Then do you see the problem as being&#13;
basically Kenosha's?&#13;
"Well, there's no one on the Town&#13;
Board of Somers, or any party involved&#13;
in this situation that wants to run the City&#13;
of Kenosha's affairs. We're not attempting&#13;
to tell the City of Kenosha how&#13;
to run its affairs." Blackmon explained&#13;
that the majority of Somers residents&#13;
"do not want to submit to a gross annexation&#13;
of this type." He added that "I&#13;
have not had one Somers resident tell me&#13;
he wants to be in the City of Kenosha. The&#13;
Board can do nothing more than support&#13;
the people we represent."&#13;
Would the area residents accept any&#13;
form of annexation?&#13;
"No, I don't think it's true at all. 1 think&#13;
the objection is based on the fact that the&#13;
landowners are in a position where they&#13;
do not have control over the choice of&#13;
government on their property." Another&#13;
reason, Blackmon later added, is the fear&#13;
that prohibitive taxes will result from&#13;
annexation. "As I stated in an earlier&#13;
meeting on this, the higher taxes will&#13;
leave the farmers with three choices:&#13;
They can sell their land immediately;&#13;
they can lower their standard of living so&#13;
they can pay the taxes; or they can&#13;
borrow the money to pay taxes until such&#13;
time as they would want to sell it."&#13;
Will Somers provide sewer service to&#13;
the campus if the annexation proposal is&#13;
defeated?&#13;
From the feasibility recommendations&#13;
that we have, more than&#13;
likely we will not be serving more than&#13;
the west half of the University. We can't&#13;
change that. And in each of these cases,"&#13;
Blackmon added, "Kenosha was&#13;
Interview with Somers Town Chairman&#13;
projected development of the area for the&#13;
next ten years." "So," he concluded,&#13;
"there must be some motive in the&#13;
background; though this is only my&#13;
opinion."&#13;
The city has indicated that Somers will&#13;
not be able to obtain the federal and state&#13;
grants which are necessary for the sewer&#13;
project. Would you answer this?&#13;
"Well, it's my opinion that the mayor&#13;
needs federal funds just as badly as&#13;
Somers needs them for the sewer project.&#13;
It's a question of mathematics as to&#13;
who's got the money to do it." Blackmon&#13;
further explained that the mayor is&#13;
"talking about servicing merely the&#13;
Parkside and annexation area; we're in a&#13;
long-range projected service to all the&#13;
area, not just the immediate Parkside&#13;
area. I believe," he concluded, "that&#13;
under the study that exists now, the City&#13;
of Kenosha is going to service that annexed&#13;
area in the end anyway."&#13;
Will Somers to ahead and begin&#13;
planning for servicing the Parkside area&#13;
"I would say that anyone owning&#13;
property adjacent to the city, who&#13;
petitioned to have it annexed, would not&#13;
find any objection. However, this is a&#13;
different case," Blackmon stressed.&#13;
"The people whose land lies in the area of&#13;
the annexation do not with to be in the&#13;
city. Sot it's a case of someone putting&#13;
them in a position they don't want to be&#13;
in. The annexation was previously&#13;
defeated on that basis."&#13;
How do the area residents view Mayor&#13;
Burkee's latest proposal, the detached&#13;
annexation?&#13;
"Well, the detached annexation is a fox&#13;
and a rabbit game, where the fox says to&#13;
the rabbit, 'Why don't you come in my&#13;
trap; if you don't like it in here, I'll let&#13;
you go.' "&#13;
One of the theories that has been given&#13;
some credance, concerning the reason&#13;
for the Somers residents' opposition to&#13;
the annexation, is that many of them&#13;
bear a grudge against the University. Is&#13;
this true, do you think?&#13;
recommended to service their portion of&#13;
it."&#13;
During the interview, the affable&#13;
Blackmon told Newscope that of the 160&#13;
eligible voters who will decide the fate of&#13;
annexation, the bulk of them live at&#13;
Parkside Village. Between interruptions&#13;
by telephone calls, the Town Board&#13;
Chairman expressed the belief that the&#13;
earliest date sewer service could be&#13;
increased in the campus area is "late&#13;
1973 or early 1974."&#13;
Blackmon explained this was his&#13;
estimate because "We're working with&#13;
other municipalities on it, and on an&#13;
overall plan that has to be approved by&#13;
the Southeastern Wisconsin Planning&#13;
Commission, along with several other&#13;
government bodies before any of us&#13;
(Kenosha or Somers) could provide&#13;
services. Both of us," he continued,&#13;
"have to rely on federal and state grants&#13;
and approval, and so on."&#13;
In these grants, is Somers competing&#13;
with Kenosha for them?&#13;
No. Each one of them, if it were split&#13;
up between Kenosha, Racine and&#13;
Somers, would be responsible for a&#13;
certain acreage of the entire area and&#13;
would then file individual applications&#13;
for grants for their portion."&#13;
Did the first annexation move come as&#13;
a surprise?&#13;
"No, we heard talk of it before it was&#13;
proposed. In fact, we held several&#13;
meetings, arranged by newspapers, at&#13;
which we tried to see if there was a&#13;
reasonable way to handle this. But it&#13;
seemed there was no other way in the&#13;
city's mind, other than outright annexation.&#13;
So there was no means of&#13;
negotiation at all there."&#13;
Blackmon continued on the topic of&#13;
negotiating with the city, stating that the&#13;
land owners would have to be included in&#13;
any meetings "because the Town Board&#13;
as such cannot designate what a certain&#13;
farmer may desire for his land. I, in turn,&#13;
and my two supervisors, represent the&#13;
Town of Somers, and we can only take a&#13;
petition for annexation of the property to&#13;
a public Town meeting." He explained&#13;
that "We found no one agreeing that the&#13;
land should be annexed to the city."'&#13;
What do you feel of the present sewer&#13;
facilities serving Parkside?&#13;
"I feel certain they (Kenosha) didn't&#13;
put out a sewer to the campus that&#13;
wouldn't take care of the campus, at&#13;
least as proposed at the time. But if&#13;
you're talking about servicing all the&#13;
area around the campus, then I would&#13;
say that the city is correct when they&#13;
stated that it would soon be inadequate."&#13;
"You see," Blackmon continued, "we&#13;
want cooperation. I believe problems&#13;
should be mutually handled between the&#13;
two governments; we should avoid a&#13;
situation where one government is trying&#13;
to take over the other one. I think that, if&#13;
somewhere along the line, we agree to sit&#13;
down to work out the problem mutually,&#13;
it could all be worked out to everyone's&#13;
satisfaction. But so far it's been a&#13;
situation of we'll serve you, but we'll lake&#13;
you over, and of course, the residents are&#13;
not going to buy that."&#13;
Youngest Regent to Visit&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Regent John M. Lavine will&#13;
visit UW-Parkside Tuesday,&#13;
Mar. 28, to solicit "ideas,&#13;
concerns and solutions about&#13;
the problems of higher&#13;
education."&#13;
Lavine, who is the publisher&#13;
of daily newspapers in Baraboo,&#13;
Chippewa Falls and Portage,&#13;
will spend the day at Parkside&#13;
talking to students, faculty and&#13;
other staff. He has made&#13;
similar visits to other UW&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Lavine, who at 30 is the&#13;
youngest member of the UW&#13;
Board of Regents, will hold&#13;
what he calls "an informal news&#13;
conference in reverse" from 10&#13;
to noon in Parkside's&#13;
Whiteskellar in the lower level&#13;
of Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Rd. campus.&#13;
"By news conference in&#13;
reverse," Lavine said, "I mean&#13;
that instead of me as a&#13;
newsman asking the questions,&#13;
I would like members of the&#13;
Parkside community to ask me&#13;
questions, to tell me about their&#13;
concerns, or to offer their&#13;
solutions to the problems of&#13;
education that are facing all of&#13;
us."&#13;
"I hope that people who come&#13;
to this rap session will realize&#13;
that it will be entirely informal&#13;
and unofficial," he said. "I am&#13;
not coming to Parkside as a&#13;
representative of the Board of&#13;
Regents, nor will I say that I&#13;
will support or not support the&#13;
views that are put forth at these&#13;
session.&#13;
"What I am trying to accomplish&#13;
is to gain an understanding&#13;
of what the concerns&#13;
are in our universities,&#13;
and to learn of ideas for possible&#13;
change in the policy that the&#13;
Regents set. Students, faculty&#13;
and administrators should have&#13;
an opportunity to express their&#13;
views directly to their&#13;
Regents."&#13;
In addition to the "reverse&#13;
news conference," Lavine will&#13;
spend the day exploring the&#13;
campus on his own.&#13;
PIZZA I&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
F REE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE VIEEAUl&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE 0CMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue Ken osha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Rac ine&#13;
3309 Washington Ave&#13;
633-3595&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
• , lb C,ROUND BF.EE&#13;
ON FRF.NCH CRUST&#13;
BR FAD DRF.SSFD&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LETTUCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
C,RILLED COUNTRYHAM&#13;
A CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLE WHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OF BURC.ER CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISF. ON TOAST 9Qc&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
N O RTH 331 1 SHERID AN R O AD SOU TH 7 5 0 0 SHERIDA N R O AD&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sixes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16".&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING . . . Wf B H I N C -&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922 &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE March 27,1972&#13;
Parkside Acfivities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
OVER 100&#13;
Film T r a i l e rs&#13;
Film Previews from Major&#13;
Motion Pictures&#13;
HELP PAB&#13;
CHOOSE NEXT&#13;
YEAR'S FILMS!&#13;
View these and&#13;
Write your choices&#13;
on blanks that will&#13;
be provided by the PAB&#13;
Two Showings&#13;
Wed., Mar. 29 ^&#13;
Noon - 3 P.M. %&#13;
QOOOOQOOOOOOO&#13;
IMPORTANT NOTE&#13;
The PAB is able to Announce&#13;
that there will be a special&#13;
showing of LOVE STORY on&#13;
MAY 5. We will also be running&#13;
that movie twice, due to the&#13;
heavy demand.&#13;
ooooooooooooo&#13;
BUDDY&#13;
RICH&#13;
and his big band&#13;
Sat. April 22, 8 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Bradford Auditorium&#13;
Reserve Seat Tickets&#13;
General Admission&#13;
$2.50 8. $3.50&#13;
P arkside Students&#13;
$2.00 — $3.00&#13;
Available at:&#13;
Student Act. Office&#13;
One Student Ticket&#13;
Per Parkside I.D.&#13;
by Jim Koioen&#13;
Many gin and tonics ago, On the Nod&#13;
decided that hippies were just as good as&#13;
people: Sure they looked like girls with&#13;
mustaches; sure they smelled like one of his&#13;
old rubberized, heat-sealed-at-the-sole boots.&#13;
But Nod had to face up to reality, more and&#13;
more parents were for hippies. Why there&#13;
were so many of them that they were even&#13;
able to support and operate their own bars. It&#13;
got so that in almost any bar he stumbled into,&#13;
or onto, he'd bump into one of their numbers,&#13;
at first muttering a muffled excuse me&#13;
madam, and finally coming to mumble&#13;
goddamn drunk freak.&#13;
And so it came to pass that hip begat hip bar&#13;
and Racine's result of this incest is the spunky&#13;
year and a half old CCR. Located on the&#13;
northwest corner of Main and High Streets,&#13;
which right away tips you off, the first thing&#13;
that strikes you is that this bar is for hardcore;&#13;
second thing strikes you is there ain't no&#13;
strangers; third thing strikes you is illegal,&#13;
and the fourth thing that strikes you is the&#13;
wooden bar which On the Nod la unched an all&#13;
out offensive against, utilizing his most effective&#13;
weapon as a battering ram, his formica&#13;
topped skull.&#13;
From the beginning, Nod knew he ran the&#13;
rist of being corrupted by the hippies; indeed,&#13;
it took two of SGA's staunchest anarchist&#13;
magpies (who are an endangered species on&#13;
campus) to shanghai him and bring him to&#13;
CCR. The ex-highschool wrestler put up a&#13;
doozie of a fight, throwing the conspirators&#13;
against the walls of the Student Organization&#13;
Building, smashing their plaster heads with&#13;
plastic chairs, using everything in his arsenal&#13;
(from rubber bands to broken 45 records and&#13;
plowshares) to deck them flat on their arses,&#13;
dedicating each punch: This one's for&#13;
Okinawa, Pinko; This one's for Dean Dearborn,&#13;
Troublemakers. It wasn't until Nod&#13;
called for a cessation to the hostilities, when&#13;
he pointed out, hey wait a sec you guys, I'm&#13;
wearing glasses, that they subdued him. The&#13;
two co-conspirators used the lull to their&#13;
advantage as they punched Nod out, forcing&#13;
him to plea for a halt to the fracas. Besides,&#13;
he said, I'm thirsty now. The exertion of&#13;
fending off the evildoers had left a parched&#13;
impression on his tongue, Nod realized he&#13;
would have to lift a few in order to relubricate&#13;
the old sluice: duped into a thirst by a couple&#13;
of magpies.&#13;
So Nod ended up in Racine at the rowdy,&#13;
crowded, smoke-filled CCR, a bar that&#13;
features the thing that makes the freak life&#13;
what it is today: Poverty. Like Hardman's in&#13;
Kenosha, CCR don't offer up no frills. Chunks&#13;
of plaster from the dirty green walls have&#13;
either been kicked out or simply eroded, the&#13;
wooden bar is decorated with cigarette burns,&#13;
and though it's supposed to open at six in t he&#13;
evening, as the bartender tod Nod,&#13;
"sometimes we don't upen up on time." It's a&#13;
class bar.&#13;
The pool table was a hotly contested field of&#13;
competition, pinballs bounced their way into&#13;
bells that rang in Nod's head long after he&#13;
finished playing the game, in fact, rang in h is&#13;
tcnute (dcinne'i and eaAy fwemb&#13;
by Jim Koioen, Managing Editor&#13;
Knute Skinner, an American poet who has been&#13;
living in t he bogs of County Claire in Ireland for the&#13;
past nine years, held a poetry reading in the&#13;
Whiteskellar on Tuesday afternoon. The audience,&#13;
consisting of perhaps twenty students, listened&#13;
silently as Skinner read selections from three of his&#13;
published poetry collections including A Close Sky&#13;
Over Killaspuglonane, In Dinosaur Country and&#13;
Stranger with a Watch. The tone of the poems undulated&#13;
between hills of humor and ruts of sentimentalism,&#13;
obscenity and anecdote, and bore such&#13;
self-explanatory titles as "Blackheads," "In&#13;
Praise of Urine," "Phlegm," "October Morning,"&#13;
and "The Beautiful White Cow."&#13;
Brought to Parkside by the Poetry Forum,&#13;
Skinner read with little zeal, reflecting the dearth of&#13;
imagery and metaphor, as well as the often blatant&#13;
conversational tone of his poems. Relying on&#13;
heavyhanded irony as the anvil upon which to pound&#13;
into worthless shapes the baaing of his sheepish&#13;
sentimentalizing, the poet demonstrated a basic&#13;
inability to cope with more than the streetcorner&#13;
obvious as he pointed out, in one of his more striking&#13;
similes, the shared characteristics of piss and flat&#13;
gingerale.&#13;
Skinner, sporting a spiffy goatee flecked with&#13;
gray, who is presently teaching at Washington State&#13;
College, explained that he doesn't "believe in making&#13;
poetry too difficult". Aptly demonstrating his point,&#13;
he read poems whose subjects included his children,&#13;
Irish cows, the Irish landscape and nightshirts, thus&#13;
resurrecting the mud poetry of Rod "the fraud"&#13;
McKuen, laureate of warmed-over mediocrity and&#13;
big bucks, in his own compositions. Again relying on&#13;
irony in order to compensate for a dearth of almost&#13;
everything, Skinner informed the audience that two&#13;
new collections of his poems would soon be unleashed&#13;
for public indigestion. Ho-hum.&#13;
cT&#13;
V K&amp;&#13;
\° *&#13;
&lt;»v /y A°"&#13;
V&#13;
TWO "SOCIE&#13;
OVER SPR&#13;
Featuring Two Na ti&lt;&#13;
Thursday, March 31&#13;
Student Activities E&#13;
Parkside and Wiscc&#13;
and on the following Th&#13;
Milwaukees Own&#13;
Black&#13;
With Their Dynamic Sh&#13;
Thursday, April 6, 9 p .n&#13;
Student Activities Buildi&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin &#13;
March 27,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
%&#13;
I |0ng after the bar closed. At CCR, pits&#13;
of beer go for a reasonable $1.25, while&#13;
11aSses cost 20cents; shots go for 40cents&#13;
mixes 45 cents from an austere selection&#13;
irits. Wine costs 30 cents a glass; 50 cents&#13;
iuffino Chianti, which is a brand few bars&#13;
k. Shorties cost 30 cents while cans go for&#13;
)nts a welcome feature at CCR is the free&#13;
iuts; toward the end Nod cracked them&#13;
, jUS't to re ad his fortune.&#13;
&gt;r Nod , toward the end meant from 10 till&#13;
ng, as his pickled brain finally paid its&#13;
jover dues for an • earlier foray;&#13;
odically he would nod his head in&#13;
gnition of Volpentesta as he chewed his&#13;
off. It was one of them nights.&#13;
ie juke at CCR is, as in most hippy bars,&#13;
quality, flowertops for the most part. The&#13;
itele was composed of hardcore freaks&#13;
enjoy a good time when they drink&#13;
juse they can't afford to go o t a bar simply&#13;
are in the mirror. Free drinks pop up. Al&#13;
I, the bartender, explained to Nod as he&#13;
dy tilted off his axis that the whole reason&#13;
2CR is to get people drunk, and to see that&#13;
•yone has a memorable time.&#13;
; stated earlier, toward the end Nod was&#13;
ler blitzed, his last audible words were&#13;
ided to Loumos, I'm no longer ripped, he&#13;
, I'm ruined. After that, Nod recreated an&#13;
izingly believable portrayal of a zombie.&#13;
&gt;e quite honest, he would be ruined for the&#13;
&gt;wing two days, having run out of the little&#13;
id mind alterer, the asprin. CCR, on its&#13;
i nights, and I assume Nod hit it on a good&#13;
it, is a numbing experience.&#13;
HUGE &amp; WILD DISCOUNTS&#13;
STER EO R E C O R D S &amp; TAPE S&#13;
SPEEDY SERVICE - S END F O B YOUR FREE LI ST&#13;
THE STUD ENT STORE P . O . BOX 6 4&#13;
RED OND O BEACH, CAL IFO RNI A 9 0 2 7 7&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
ZIP&#13;
v Koffee, ,,&#13;
^&#13;
T0M mlS&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
"TENDERLOIN STEAK&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
JN other da y&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S CABIN ROOM&#13;
FOR PRIVATE PARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
— SENATOR PROXMIRJ=_&#13;
-jjooks J&#13;
University bookstore&#13;
de McUmtieA dtcmd&#13;
Presents&#13;
I&#13;
• IETY" DANCES&#13;
PRING BREAK&#13;
National Recording Artists&#13;
rch 30, 9 p.m. - l a.m.&#13;
ties Building Adm. $1.50&#13;
Wisconsin I.D.s Required&#13;
vg Thursday&#13;
tun&#13;
ck Society&#13;
ic State Show and Soul Sounds&#13;
Q&#13;
9 ?•*. - 1 a.m.&#13;
Budding Adm. $1.50&#13;
onsin I D. Required&#13;
The Spotlight Kid — Captain Beef heart&#13;
from the Music Desk&#13;
Captain Beefheart is either a transcendant&#13;
musical genius or a dilletante with dogged eccentricities&#13;
and a freak voice, depending on who you&#13;
argue with. His fans are mysterious because undefined&#13;
and probably undefinable but certainly a&#13;
small minority, and the popular reaction to mention&#13;
of the Captain's name is distaste.&#13;
Not without some reason. The Captain's earlier&#13;
albums were challenging in their originality to the&#13;
point of endurance and succeeded remarkably in&#13;
polarizing listeners by ambushing the errant ear with&#13;
harsh complexities and impressionist lyrics which&#13;
demanded more attention than the average fan&#13;
wanted to give it. The fact that a good part of the&#13;
audial weirdness was the Captain's unadorned voice&#13;
was interesting but not a selling point. So he didn't&#13;
sell.&#13;
Well, the Captain cooly observed all this and&#13;
retaliated with The Spotlight Kid, the most accessable&#13;
album he's done since 1967, and if ev en this&#13;
album seems hard to get into at first hearing, wait till&#13;
you hear him do his Howlin' Wolf voice on side two.&#13;
The tortured and broken rhythms of his earlier work&#13;
have resolved themselves into lopsided but oddly&#13;
appropriate sketches of the more traditional forms&#13;
he's using here, greasy boogie and free blues&#13;
structures. The Captain's lyrics are mellower, too,&#13;
and he even rhymes a couple words while not losing&#13;
the rush of associations like a movie at triple speed.&#13;
And the Cap's voice charges through its multi-octave&#13;
range which cuts the Doppler Effect to ribbons.&#13;
The first side contains some of the cleanest,&#13;
oddest guitar work this side of the AAothers, a comparison&#13;
strengthened by Ed Marimba's flying mallet&#13;
riffs tripping into many of the cuts reminescent of&#13;
Zappa's munchkin arias. The steel appendage guitar&#13;
is stroked by one Zoot Horn Rollo while Rockette&#13;
Morten wields the bass in the manner of a man&#13;
pouring cement. Over this the Captain lays his pipes&#13;
which must qualify as another instrument for the&#13;
amazing sounds he gets and his mutant Southside&#13;
harmonica. "Alice in Blunderland" finds the Winged&#13;
Eeel fingerling guesting on guitar and spinning such&#13;
hot fuzztone lines that it's really a shame we'll never&#13;
know who he is.&#13;
Side two finds the Captain prowling the edges of&#13;
Chicago blues as his grunts and growls slide up&#13;
through the ionosphere to meet dropping bomb pitch&#13;
throat falling back down. But form is not content. The&#13;
verbal pictures carry themselves out with perfect&#13;
logic in the salty "Grow Fins":&#13;
I'm gonna grow fins&#13;
Go back inna water again&#13;
If yo u don't leave me alone&#13;
I'm gonna take up with a mermaid&#13;
Leave you landlubbin women alone&#13;
Worthy of consideration are "Click Clack" in the&#13;
fine old train song tradition and "There Ain't No&#13;
Santa Clause on the Evening Stage" for its vocal&#13;
rifting around the venerable "ho ho ho".&#13;
If thi s commentary sounds hesitant, it's because&#13;
the Music Desk has only recently suspected that&#13;
Captain Beefheart's music improves with time and&#13;
the album has not been lying on the Desk for a sufficient&#13;
time to make worthy comment possible. Try to&#13;
listen to it and behold a man who knows what he&#13;
wants. &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE March 27,1972&#13;
MONDAY, MAR. 27&#13;
Meeting. Psychology Club. 6:30 to&#13;
9:30 p.m. Greenquist Hall, Room&#13;
106.&#13;
TUESDAY, MAR. 28&#13;
Rap With A Regent. John M. Levine,&#13;
UW Regent, will meet with interested&#13;
students and staff. 10:00 - 1 2&#13;
noon, Greenquist Hall, Whiteskellar.&#13;
Play. Shakespeare's "Twelfth&#13;
Night". Presented by the National&#13;
Shakespeare Company. Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee. Bradford H.S.&#13;
Auditorium, Kenosha. 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Gen. Adm. $3.00 &amp; $2.00 UW-P&#13;
students and staff $1.50 and $1.00&#13;
Women's Track. At Carthage&#13;
Fieldhouse 4:00 p.m.&#13;
WEDNESDAY,MAR. 29&#13;
Film. "Freaks" and "An Andalusian&#13;
Dog." Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Film Society. Greenquist&#13;
Hall, Room 103. 8:00 p.m. Adm. 50c.&#13;
Film Clips. Coming attractions of&#13;
recent films will be shown in order to&#13;
get student input into next year's&#13;
PAB Feature Film Series. Students&#13;
' /v&#13;
&amp; Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
o n S O U T H S H E R I D A N R OAD IN K E N O S HA 6 5 4 - 04 11&#13;
^ M m M&#13;
- - i"h—i—a—u ii—j- —j—j—j—li~_i~i_tij—Lr"i_n_r~Lf~Lj~&gt;_rxj—ltd—u~u&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
V2 Block " "South vw,,,of v. ixKeno ^iivasha iio -Ra rvCcinlonie c Co\ unty Line&#13;
Pump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
10W - 2 0 W - 30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
slimy creeps in pentagon&#13;
will be asked to indicate preferences.&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Whiteskellar. 1:00 to 3:00 p.m.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAR. 30&#13;
Films. Nickelodeon featuring W. C.&#13;
Fields films ("The Great Chase,"&#13;
"The Fatal Glass of Beer," and&#13;
"The Pharmacist.") Sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Whiteskellar. 12:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Dance. "Love Society." Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Student Activities Building. 9:00&#13;
p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D.'s required. Adm.&#13;
$1.50.&#13;
FRIDAY,MAR. 31&#13;
Vacation. Easter Vacation begins.&#13;
Classes resume Monday, April 10.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 6&#13;
Dance. "Black Society". Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Student Activities Building. 9:00&#13;
p.m. to 1:00 p.m. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D.'s required. Adm.&#13;
$1.50.&#13;
Dick Gregory Speaks at Carthage&#13;
His voice echoing among the&#13;
basketball hoops and the steel&#13;
girders of the Carthage College&#13;
Fieldhouse, Dick Gregory told&#13;
an audience of about 700 that the&#13;
destiny of America depends&#13;
upon its young people.&#13;
Calling this generation the&#13;
best America has seen, he&#13;
asserted, "Any problem we&#13;
have can be solved by the&#13;
young." He repeatedly contrasted&#13;
them to "the vicious,&#13;
degenerate, stinking, slimy&#13;
creeps in the Pentagon."&#13;
He said these people were old,&#13;
sick, diseased and sexless —'&#13;
"When they wake up in the&#13;
morning, they want to attack&#13;
somebody."&#13;
Gregory, who began in the&#13;
early sixties as a nightclub&#13;
comic, has evolved into one of&#13;
the Movement's leading&#13;
commentators. Regrettably,&#13;
much of his style and finely&#13;
honed delivery was lost in the&#13;
rumblings of the Carthage p.a.&#13;
system.&#13;
His weight down to a lean 99&#13;
pounds (from a high of 288&#13;
pounds) because of his fast&#13;
against the War, he warned&#13;
agoinst polluting the body with&#13;
processed food.&#13;
He stressed, too, dope&#13;
smoking wasn't the anti-social&#13;
act the young think it is — "If&#13;
being cool solved problems,&#13;
niggers would have solved&#13;
theirs 50 years ago."&#13;
He further advised,&#13;
"Everytimeyou got to cement a&#13;
love affair with a reefer, it ain't&#13;
gonna last."&#13;
About George Wallace, he&#13;
said, "If he's as serious about&#13;
bussing as he was about integration,&#13;
why doesn't he stand&#13;
in front of a bus?"&#13;
Lager, he added about busing&#13;
opponents, "Where was their&#13;
concern when they were busing&#13;
black children pass white&#13;
schools to keep them&#13;
segregated?"&#13;
Gregory warned violence was&#13;
not the answer to America's ills.&#13;
He called it a short term&#13;
solution to a long term problem.&#13;
"They want you to be violent,"&#13;
he said. "Then they can handle&#13;
you.&#13;
"Moral force is the one thing&#13;
that scares America, not guns,&#13;
not rifles," he continued.&#13;
Urging the audience to&#13;
research the rise of naziism in&#13;
Germany and its use of terror&#13;
tactics, he suggested, "Look&#13;
around today, and you might&#13;
see the same tactics being&#13;
used."&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
PEPSI-COLA i»tetelkr&#13;
JVicJcelodeon&#13;
NOTICE NOTICE&#13;
BREAKFAST 6=A.M. TO 11= A .M.&#13;
Viyf Our Neui, TnsiJe&#13;
C.MC RCCI1&#13;
A&amp;W RESTAURANT&#13;
30th ave. and Roosevelt Road&#13;
i ^ k«.Kosk.^&#13;
Open:&#13;
Mon.thru Thurs. — 6A.M.-11P.M.&#13;
Friday — 6 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Saturday — 9 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
********* Sunday — 9 A.M. to 11 P .M.&#13;
W.C. FIELDS&#13;
in&#13;
The Great Chase&#13;
The Pharmacist&#13;
The Fatal Glass of Beer&#13;
Thurs. Noon&#13;
Admission - One Nickel&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Polaroid Camera - Used 4 times.&#13;
Case, timer, dependable. Truely a&#13;
fine instrument. $25. Ph. Kevin 658-&#13;
4746.&#13;
STEREO TAPE DECK —~ Sony&#13;
252D. List $135. It's yours for $70. A&#13;
tape deck if ever I saw one. Ph. 652-&#13;
2538 - 553-2496 ask for Jerry.&#13;
FOR SALE — Marimba, 2Vi oct.&#13;
$100; Schwinn bicycle. 1 speed,&#13;
coaster brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N. Oakland, Milwaukee,"&#13;
Wis.&#13;
Matching Refrigerator (Admiral)&#13;
and Stove (Premier), $125 each,&#13;
olivegreen. Practically new, owners&#13;
moved out of town, must sell. Both in&#13;
excellent condition. Call 634-6215&#13;
after 5 p.m. or weekends.&#13;
TAPE RECORDER — Reel to reel.&#13;
Like new. Orig. $100 sell for $50. Ph.&#13;
657-5992 after 4.&#13;
FOR SALE — Ski Boots. Ladies, size&#13;
7. Buckle boots made in Austria.&#13;
Worn twice - $20.00. Call 552-8469 -&#13;
ask for Linda.&#13;
SIX SIAMESE KITTENS — pure&#13;
bred - 7 weeks old - cute and&#13;
adorable - m ust have a good home -&#13;
$10.00 each. Call 552-8469 - ask for&#13;
Linda.&#13;
WOMAN'S FUR COAT — Lamb. Ph.&#13;
694-4720. Terry Fuller.&#13;
TYPEWRITER — Smith-Corona&#13;
"Classic 12". 12 inch carriage and&#13;
case. $30.00. Call 658-1249 evenings.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED - STAMPS - Collections,&#13;
Accumulations, Mint or Used, On&#13;
Cover or off, First Day covers or&#13;
what ever! U.S. or Foreign. Phone&#13;
694-3398. Ask for Jim or leave&#13;
messate at Newscope office.&#13;
BABYSITTING — mornings. 7:30 -&#13;
12:30. Jones school area - South&#13;
Racine. Ph. 554-7538 after 1 p.m.&#13;
WANTED — People who would like&#13;
to help other people. Free training.&#13;
Contact Joe Baker, director Racine&#13;
Hotline, 637-1112. Mon.-Wed.-Fri.&#13;
1:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.&#13;
RIDE NEEDED — to New York or&#13;
thereabouts on March 30th at noon.&#13;
Call 564-1684 after 9 p.m. if headed&#13;
that way.&#13;
LOST — Brown wallet in Student&#13;
Union last Friday. I need the papers,&#13;
you can keep the money. Please&#13;
return to the information center. No&#13;
questions asked.&#13;
FREE KITTENS — (Good Eastergift)&#13;
6 weeks old, litter-trained, used&#13;
to children. Black and white male,&#13;
black and gray "tiger-striped"&#13;
female, and a multi-color -"calico"&#13;
female. Call 634-6215 evenings, or&#13;
553-2121 ext. 20 days.&#13;
WANTED — Scrap lead pipe an&#13;
fittings. Congact George Meteskv &#13;
Trackmen to Compete&#13;
March 27,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Two UW-Parkside spring&#13;
sports teams will head south&#13;
this week to prepare for the&#13;
outdoor campaigns up north.&#13;
The Ranger track squad will&#13;
head for Arkansas and run in&#13;
the Arkansas Relays Saturday,&#13;
while the golf squad will travel&#13;
to Tampa, Fla., and practice&#13;
there for a week.&#13;
The Ranger trackmen also&#13;
will face Arkansas Tech and&#13;
Arkansas A.M.&amp;N. in a&#13;
triangular before returning&#13;
home April 7 for the USTFF&#13;
Indoor Meet April 8 in Madiosn.&#13;
The trackmen will be facing&#13;
some rugged competition down&#13;
souty. More teams are making&#13;
the southern treks regularly&#13;
each year and teams the likes of&#13;
Drake, Minnesota, Indiana,&#13;
Harvard and many others have&#13;
been competing the last two&#13;
weeks in Louisiana, Texas and&#13;
Arkansas.&#13;
Distances are expected to be&#13;
the Rangers' forte in the south,&#13;
with freshman Lucian Rosa due&#13;
to get some big tests against&#13;
major college competition.&#13;
Rosa will run the three mile, six&#13;
mile and marathon this outdoor&#13;
season.&#13;
Track coach Bob Lawson was&#13;
unsure as to who would make&#13;
the trip but among men expected&#13;
to travel and see plenty&#13;
of action were Jim McFadden,&#13;
Steve Erspamer, Dennis Biel&#13;
and Leonard Bullock. All have&#13;
been mainstays for the Rangers&#13;
during the indoor season and&#13;
PAID F O R BY ED W ARD R EMICK&#13;
8719 SHERIDA N RD. KENOSHA&#13;
if you are&#13;
18&#13;
or over&#13;
get out and&#13;
VOTE&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR&#13;
IT N OW U SE IT&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave. .&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Lawson wuj look to them for&#13;
relay help on the southern tour.&#13;
l he golfers, coached by Steve&#13;
Stephens, will attempt to get&#13;
their game sorted out and&#13;
ih!f&#13;
are !°L 3 rugged season&#13;
that includes such foes as&#13;
Northern Illinois. WisnnnC;„_&#13;
HEARING&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
University ID from any state&#13;
campus, Mochon replied that it&#13;
was partly a problem of limited&#13;
space in the existing facility.&#13;
She explained there simply isn't&#13;
en°&#13;
ugh space to accommodate&#13;
all college students with the&#13;
same privileges UWP students&#13;
possess.&#13;
When the question arose&#13;
concerning the extent of&#13;
responsibility an organization&#13;
incurs when conducting a&#13;
function on University&#13;
property, Mochon answered&#13;
after a brief debate, that it was&#13;
possible University insurance&#13;
would cover any damages&#13;
which may be incurred during&#13;
club functions; she commented&#13;
that the University "can't sue&#13;
the_French Club" for damages&#13;
it may incur during a dance.&#13;
Knight stated that the matter of&#13;
an organization's responsibility&#13;
for the safety of University&#13;
facilities must be clarified&#13;
further.&#13;
The hearing was concluded&#13;
rather haphazardly when the&#13;
participants trickled off, one by&#13;
one, soon after one o'clock, It&#13;
was generally agreed that&#13;
further recommendations and&#13;
Madison, Northwestern and&#13;
Bradley.&#13;
The tennis squad, coached by&#13;
Dick Frecka, will not head&#13;
south but has been practicing&#13;
indoors for much of the year&#13;
and should be in good shape for&#13;
a season with a loaded schednlP&#13;
are still clarifications&#13;
necessary.&#13;
TODAY&#13;
Continued from Page 1)&#13;
same purpose, as the editors&#13;
had repeatedly requested&#13;
student input. "I was told&#13;
Newscope was presented with&#13;
the idea," Mr. Lienau replied.&#13;
As to the source of their funds,&#13;
Mr. Lienau explained, "The&#13;
whole thing is paid for by the&#13;
state, not publicly funded."&#13;
Concerning the possibility of&#13;
conflict between Parkside&#13;
Today and Newscope Rudy&#13;
stated, "In so far as duplication&#13;
of stories is concerned I feel&#13;
they will conflict." He justified&#13;
his last statement by saying,&#13;
"In comparison with Newscope,&#13;
we present a different view in&#13;
the sense that we are less prone&#13;
to criticize Parkside, and more&#13;
prone towards the administration."&#13;
&#13;
Finally, when questioned as&#13;
to whether there were any&#13;
changes planned for his&#13;
publication, Mr. Lienau answered,&#13;
"Yes, I definitely plan&#13;
to broaden the publication by&#13;
including some feature articles&#13;
and hopefully student contributions&#13;
and also more news&#13;
stories."&#13;
Senouif the fyinedt&#13;
Piffl* &amp; 9ttilian fyoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
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in " ffie Midwest"&#13;
T/OU. HAYT, a.&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
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Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan Id.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE March 27,1972&#13;
SCOOPERBOWL&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of t he Newscope staff&#13;
The old man suddenly starts&#13;
banging on the piano and before&#13;
you know it everybody is&#13;
standing up and singing&#13;
There's a moment of co nfusion.&#13;
What's happening? You're&#13;
startled.&#13;
It's strange to be in the Elk's&#13;
club in the first place, and to be&#13;
sitting in the midst of a Kiwanis&#13;
luncheon makes it positively&#13;
weird. And the music — oh,&#13;
wow. It comes to you like a bolt.&#13;
America the Beautiful.&#13;
Henry "Scoop" Jackson, the&#13;
Senator from Washington, the&#13;
longshot entry in the&#13;
Democratic presidential derby.&#13;
He's about to make his initial&#13;
campaign speech in Kenosha.&#13;
But first there's the pledge of&#13;
allegiance, the benediction, a&#13;
few songs by an accordion&#13;
player, and an introduction by&#13;
the President of the Kiwanis&#13;
club.&#13;
Lying in your stomach,&#13;
uneasily at that, in the meantime,&#13;
is some meat loaf and its&#13;
accompanying sauce. The stuff&#13;
is wicked. It reminds you of&#13;
some cheap Salisbury steak you&#13;
had once that greased you out&#13;
for a day and a half.&#13;
Henry Jackson is busy&#13;
making small talk with the&#13;
people at the head table. He's a&#13;
friendly man, smiling comes&#13;
easy to him. He nods vigorously&#13;
as he converses. You take a&#13;
liking to him. He can be trusted,&#13;
you decide.&#13;
He's coming off a third place&#13;
finish in the surprising Florida&#13;
primary where he gathered 13&#13;
per cent of the vote to Wallace's&#13;
42 per cent and Humphrey's 18&#13;
per cent. But he beat Muskie,&#13;
and as the most moderate of the&#13;
Democratic liberals he has a&#13;
potential audience as large as&#13;
any of the front runners. It's&#13;
just a matter of becoming&#13;
known . . .&#13;
"Wisconsin voters are&#13;
stubborn, independent people,"'&#13;
he tells the businessmen. "Just&#13;
like the people in Washington."&#13;
His campaign literature&#13;
compares him to Harry&#13;
Truman, and he works hard to&#13;
cultivate the image.&#13;
The overiding issue of the&#13;
campaign, he says, is the&#13;
economy. It touches so many&#13;
aspects of daily life: inflation,&#13;
taxes, welfare. "We have the&#13;
greatest economic system in the&#13;
world, properly managed,&#13;
properly handled," he stresses.&#13;
He cuts hard into Nixon: "We&#13;
have had phony price controls.&#13;
Crime is a major issue, he&#13;
states. The other candidates&#13;
gloss over it. He ticks off a three&#13;
point program: speed up the&#13;
administration of justice; penal&#13;
reform — "We better be concerned&#13;
because we're turning&#13;
out hardened criminals right&#13;
now," and more&#13;
professionalism in police work.&#13;
He switches the focus of the&#13;
speech now. His delivery slows.&#13;
"I believe in a strong&#13;
presidency," he says. "I believe&#13;
it's important to look at the man&#13;
as well as the issues. You have&#13;
to find out if the candidates tell&#13;
it how it is. You'll know where&#13;
Scoop Jackson stands," he&#13;
concludes. It was an effective&#13;
members resigned, he says.&#13;
Nixon only wanted to give&#13;
appearance of wage-price&#13;
stabilization.&#13;
"I have here a waffle iron,"&#13;
he says, pointing to it. "It is&#13;
waffling on part of the president&#13;
that caused the resignations. It&#13;
was a failure to take a tough&#13;
position and to stay with it in&#13;
order to bring about wage and&#13;
price stabilization. This is an&#13;
example of weak leadership, of&#13;
what can happen when you&#13;
waffle."&#13;
(For what it's worth, a&#13;
definition of waffle is: a batter&#13;
cake with a grid of deep indentations&#13;
formed by baking it&#13;
in a metal appliance having two&#13;
We have had phony wage&#13;
guidelines. We need sound&#13;
economic direction in this&#13;
country." Looking across the&#13;
room, he checks for support.&#13;
He moves on to unemployment&#13;
— "we have never&#13;
before had such qualitative&#13;
unemployment. Ph.D.'s are&#13;
pumping gas." The federal&#13;
government should take over&#13;
the management of welfare, he&#13;
says. Training programs should&#13;
be established. Day care centers&#13;
should be set up.&#13;
He talks forcefully to the&#13;
audience as they listen, to him.&#13;
This will be his best campaigning&#13;
of the day. He calls for&#13;
larger federal assistance to&#13;
education. Education and&#13;
welfare hit local property taxes&#13;
the most, he points out. His&#13;
programs would reduce the&#13;
burden of property taxes.&#13;
speech and he's applauded&#13;
warmly.&#13;
Next, it's to the Holiday Inn&#13;
for a press conference. The&#13;
Secret Service Men are in&#13;
evidence here. They're unfriendly&#13;
fellows, grim and&#13;
taciturn — it's as though they're&#13;
all nursing stomach ulcers.&#13;
They all have tiny buttonlike&#13;
triangles on their lapels. Sort of&#13;
like the logo Citgo uses, except&#13;
they're black, white and blue.&#13;
The men eye everybody&#13;
suspiciously and some of them&#13;
have tubes running into their&#13;
ears — radios of some sort. One&#13;
of them sits in the limousine&#13;
reading the Valacchi Papers.&#13;
For some reason there is a&#13;
waffle iron by the podium.&#13;
Jackson begins by cutting into&#13;
Nixon again. He calls the wage&#13;
price freeze a tinkertoy&#13;
operation. That's why the labor&#13;
hinged parts . . . addenda: the&#13;
Time article on the Florida&#13;
primary described Hubert&#13;
Humphrey as having waffled on&#13;
the busing issue, so . . .)&#13;
— "Attention, bowlers,&#13;
Senator Jackson and Mrs. Mary&#13;
Lou Schneider are now bowling&#13;
on lane 38." The Senator had&#13;
walked across the street from&#13;
the Holiday Inn to Guttormsen's&#13;
to bowl a few frames before&#13;
leaving to go to American&#13;
Motors to meet the workers&#13;
when the shifts changed.&#13;
A woman's league is playing&#13;
and a gaggle of excited&#13;
housewives are busy fluttering&#13;
about. The television lights are&#13;
set up and the Senator takes off&#13;
his grey suit coat.&#13;
There is a slight paunch to&#13;
him, but yet he is handsome.&#13;
When he's not talking politics&#13;
there is a twinkle in his eyes and&#13;
W WW iyi RW ft* M M ft* RW M M W* ** W* Rrt RW P.* R* RW ft* RW RW Wrt ** RW WA pm HJH im mi HJI HJI M w w w,&#13;
"Your vacation party headquarters"&#13;
PABST r 12 pack $2.19&#13;
MICHELOB 6 pack $1.39&#13;
A —2qts. f or $ 9.35 ristocrat Brandy —&#13;
New Yorker&#13;
Champagne and Cold Duck —&#13;
Mateus Rose Wine —&#13;
^2-19&#13;
,/! M.98&#13;
Would your clufe or organization&#13;
like a&#13;
Wine Tasting&#13;
Contact Mr. Cook, 637-4101 „&#13;
'/&#13;
2gal&#13;
$1.77&#13;
Gallo wines&#13;
Rhinegarten&#13;
Vin Rose&#13;
Chianti&#13;
Spanada&#13;
PRICES GOOD THROUGH SAT.. APF^IL 1ST.&#13;
IN RACINE AT WESTGATE ON HIGHWAY 20, WASHINGTON AVENUE AND OHIO STREET"&#13;
DAILY 9 A.1VL TO 9:30 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY • SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M,&#13;
an easy smile. He circulates&#13;
among the sparse crowd&#13;
shaking hands, introducing&#13;
himself. He talks to the women&#13;
he is to bowl with, and then rolls&#13;
up his sleeves and selects a ball.&#13;
He sets himself, approaches&#13;
the line and lets go. Two&#13;
bounces arid the ball is slicing&#13;
off to the left. The Senator is&#13;
very definitely not a bowler. A&#13;
1-5 sleeper. His next ball is&#13;
gutter-bound to the right.&#13;
Marshall Simonsen, the&#13;
photographer for the Kenosha&#13;
News, sets himself midway&#13;
down the alley now. He's going&#13;
to get himself some alright&#13;
shots of the Senator. Jackson,&#13;
still smiling, lets go with&#13;
another hefty two bouncer, and&#13;
misses Marsh by about four&#13;
inches. Hotdamn, Marsh mush&#13;
have said to himself.&#13;
Jackson bowls a few more&#13;
frames and then quits to press&#13;
the flesh a little more. There's&#13;
not many people here and soon&#13;
he leaves to go shower.&#13;
What do you think of S enator&#13;
Jackson, Mrs. Schneider is&#13;
asked.&#13;
"He seems to be a very nice&#13;
person," she replys. "I enjoyed&#13;
talking to him."&#13;
Will you vote for him?&#13;
For a moment there is indecision.&#13;
"Probably," she&#13;
answers.&#13;
For Senator Jackson it turned&#13;
out to be a low key half day of&#13;
campaigning in Kenosha. The&#13;
subsequent coverage of the&#13;
Kenosha News, a picture with&#13;
no story buried in the inside&#13;
pages, magnified the lack of&#13;
exposure.&#13;
The fate of the presidential&#13;
aspirations of the man both&#13;
Lyndon Johnson and Richard&#13;
Nixon wanted in their cabinets&#13;
seems uncertain. Time will give&#13;
him his answer.&#13;
"K ' &lt; 1 ^ —;&#13;
v Hiqhest Bar in K^nos/ia&#13;
UPSTAIRS&#13;
Peopled Hours -&#13;
We d s. *7-/0 Sun. l~ 6&#13;
/2 02. B OTTLE B EER&#13;
* HIGHBALLS 35 t&#13;
live Mustc ~z ,&#13;
Fri. 5dt.&#13;
ACROSS FROM TttZ&#13;
lAfKB Ttt£Al£ R&#13;
•mAnnnnnnnnnniinimiiniiminiinnniiniiniiniiniiniinnnitftiinimiinnruumruwuiruuuuuwuuuiruuuum^yM^^^t^ysST^&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 12, March 27, 1972</text>
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              <text>Rock and Roll and Starboys&#13;
page four&#13;
Coalitions Form&#13;
for C onventions&#13;
(CPS) — Coalitions have been&#13;
formed recently in Tampa,&#13;
Fla., and San Diego, Calif., to&#13;
organize demonstrations for the&#13;
Democratic and Republican&#13;
national conventions to be held&#13;
in those states this summer.&#13;
The Florida People's&#13;
Coalition, held its founding&#13;
conference in February. The 35-&#13;
50 delegates, composed&#13;
primarily of young white&#13;
students and former students&#13;
were drawn from several of the&#13;
state's youth-oriented&#13;
newspapers, community&#13;
organizations, the Vietnam&#13;
Veterans Against the War&#13;
(VVAW) and the Shirley&#13;
Chisholm campaign committee,&#13;
which attended but did not&#13;
participate.&#13;
The San Diego group, called&#13;
the Convention Coalition, has&#13;
125 representatives, mostly&#13;
from local groups and includes&#13;
political views ranging from&#13;
Marxists to liberals and&#13;
anarchists.&#13;
Both coalitions seek to&#13;
coordinate activities with a&#13;
number of other organizations&#13;
to build a representative united&#13;
front which will focus on the&#13;
war, the economy, and civil&#13;
rights. Each also seeks support&#13;
from such national groups as&#13;
the National Peace Action&#13;
Coalition, the National.Welfare&#13;
Rights Organization, UAW,&#13;
and other anti-imperialist&#13;
groups.&#13;
The Florida group is drawing&#13;
up a "People's Platform" which&#13;
will be based on the Citizen's&#13;
Action Pledge, created by&#13;
members of the San Diego&#13;
coalition. The "pledge" stresses&#13;
specific actions that&#13;
presidential candidates would&#13;
promise to take to end the war&#13;
immediately after assuming&#13;
office, including the following:&#13;
halt within 24 hours all U.S.&#13;
military operations in Indochina,&#13;
a withdrawal of all&#13;
U.S. military forces from Indochina&#13;
by April 31,1973 and the&#13;
resignation of the Thieu regime&#13;
in Saigon. The San Diego group&#13;
is also demanding that the&#13;
President accept the PRG&#13;
seven-point peace plan.&#13;
Both coalitions plan to&#13;
organize medical care, legal aid&#13;
and information services for&#13;
large crowds of demonstrators&#13;
which may attend.&#13;
In San Diego, a Mayday-style&#13;
preventive detention policy is&#13;
anticipated by local attorneys,&#13;
even though emphasis has been&#13;
placed on non-violence by the&#13;
local organizers.&#13;
Environmental F ilm Festival&#13;
Earth Week Activities Outlined&#13;
In connection with Earth&#13;
Week 1972, Citizens for the&#13;
Environment is again offering&#13;
an Ecology Film Festival&#13;
designed to bring to interested&#13;
citizens an appreciation of our&#13;
Earth and its ecological&#13;
problems and what we can do&#13;
x about them.&#13;
w i The general themes for the&#13;
2 three evenings of the Festival&#13;
Z • ar e "Man vs. Nature," "The&#13;
HI Price of Affluence," and&#13;
* "Waters and Wildlife." The&#13;
films were carefully chosen for&#13;
impact, inspiration, variety and&#13;
balance.&#13;
Speakers who will give short&#13;
presentations are: Tuesday, Dr.&#13;
Ralph Tiefel, Professor of&#13;
Biology, Carthage College;&#13;
Wednesday, Dr. Douglas&#13;
LaFollette, Assistant Professor&#13;
of Chemistry, U.W-Parkside;&#13;
and Thursday, Dr. Eugene&#13;
Goodman, Assistant Professor&#13;
of Life Science, UW-Parkside.&#13;
Dr. Goodman will talk about the&#13;
local "Pike River Project."&#13;
The films will be shown on&#13;
April 11,12, and 13, 7:30 p.m., at&#13;
the Golden Rondelle Theatre,&#13;
Racine. Tickets may be obtained,&#13;
for one or more&#13;
eve ning s, in pers on or by&#13;
telephone reservation at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theatre, phone&#13;
632-1681. The committee&#13;
requests that tickets be used or&#13;
returned to the Rondelle so&#13;
there will be no empty seats.&#13;
(CPS) — Harry J. Anslinger,&#13;
U.S. Commissioner of Narcotics&#13;
from 1930 to 1962, has condemned&#13;
the recommendations&#13;
of a national commission to&#13;
abolish penalties for private use&#13;
of marijuana.&#13;
Anslinger said the commission's&#13;
recommendation&#13;
could have "very serious&#13;
national repercussions" and he&#13;
ocalled the findings&#13;
"terrifying."&#13;
Anslinger, who almost singlehandedly&#13;
accomplished&#13;
national prohibition of&#13;
marijuana in 1937, said any&#13;
liberalization of his law would&#13;
cause the number of heroin&#13;
users in this country to&#13;
"mushroom."&#13;
"If these recommendations&#13;
go through, allowing smoking in&#13;
secret without any penalty, then&#13;
I think in a couple of years we'll&#13;
have about a million lunatics&#13;
filling up the mental hospitals,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
A few old-timers remember&#13;
him saying very similar things&#13;
in 1929. About the proposed&#13;
legalization of another drug&#13;
which Anslinger was charged&#13;
with repressing — alcohol.&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Volume W Number 13 April 10,1972&#13;
Vogue Theater Closes&#13;
By ROSCOE HUMUS&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Last Sunday the New Vogue&#13;
Theatre fell victim to the forces&#13;
of disinterest culminating six&#13;
long months of o peration. Last&#13;
September, Jim Smith and Eric&#13;
Prentnicks, both Parkside&#13;
graduates, borrowed $1,000&#13;
each and opened the Vogue with&#13;
high hopes and success staked&#13;
on the blind faith Eric had for&#13;
the so-called counter culture.&#13;
He went so far as to say that Ktown&#13;
was in t he midst of a sort&#13;
of social-cultural rennaisance.&#13;
Now he doubts there is or vee r&#13;
was a counter culture other&#13;
than in dime stores and as for&#13;
the rennaisance he says "it ain't&#13;
happening here."&#13;
"I really thought Kenosha&#13;
could support a theatre like the&#13;
Vogue but after last Friday&#13;
when only 18 people showed up&#13;
for Theater X I sa id there was&#13;
no way that the Vogue could do&#13;
anything for Kenosha, Kenosha&#13;
doesn't deserve it, and it just&#13;
don't want it."&#13;
From the beginning the&#13;
Vogue appeared doomed.&#13;
Despite ambitious promotion&#13;
the first films failed to turn a&#13;
profit setting the pattern for&#13;
what finally taxed Prentnicks&#13;
resources and patience beyond&#13;
hope. He expresses a bitter&#13;
disillusionment with what he&#13;
termed the "drinks, drugs and&#13;
sex" preoccupation of many&#13;
young people. He estimated the&#13;
average size of a nightly&#13;
audience at "seven or eight.&#13;
Anyone else would have closed&#13;
down. I've heard of theaters&#13;
closing down because there&#13;
wasn't an audience big e nought&#13;
to profitably show a movie. I&#13;
stuck around to show a film for&#13;
two people, you know, for an&#13;
, hour and a half a nd turn on two&#13;
cats to a movie."&#13;
Despite the financial&#13;
problems plaguing the Vogue&#13;
Prentnicks insisted that it was&#13;
not the sole reason for closing&#13;
the theater. Referring to the&#13;
performance of Theater X he&#13;
said "people busted their ass to&#13;
put on a good show and no one&#13;
cared enough to come see them.&#13;
You know its one thing to work&#13;
hard to do something that&#13;
people respond to and its&#13;
another thing to do it and&#13;
nobody pays attention."&#13;
In operating the theater&#13;
Prentnicks and Smith tried to&#13;
provide exposure for local&#13;
talent through staging plays&#13;
and sponsoring concerts at the&#13;
theater in the dim hope that it&#13;
would somehow help establish&#13;
itself as a viable force in the&#13;
community. For his efforts he&#13;
said that local businessmen&#13;
didn't take him seriously "They&#13;
thought I was a hoppie who was&#13;
trying to do something weird,&#13;
they never saw us as serious&#13;
with the Vogue or even as&#13;
businessmen."&#13;
"Before the Vogue started&#13;
people would say to me hey&#13;
man, this is what's happening.&#13;
They'd go to Chicago or&#13;
Milwaukee or Madison and talk&#13;
about concerts, and un&#13;
derground theaters and things.&#13;
But when I tried to do what they&#13;
were talking about they just&#13;
ignored it like it wasn't there."&#13;
As Prentnicks sees it other&#13;
"rennaisance" projects such as&#13;
Harbor West face the same&#13;
dismal future that engulfed the&#13;
Vogue. As for the future of the&#13;
Shoreliners Hall which housed&#13;
the Vogue Prentnicks said, "As&#13;
far as I know as soon as Bingo&#13;
becomes legal in Wisconsin the&#13;
Vogue's going to be turned into&#13;
a Bingo parlor."&#13;
Dope F oe F ights on and on&#13;
Members of Alpha Kappa Lambda, social and service. fraternity at The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside, weren't wearing Santa Claus suits when they delivered a donation&#13;
of toys i and art supplies to the Day Care Center opened recently under sponsorship of Ihe&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association, but the kids didn't care. Above, Lisa Hanson, 3,&#13;
of 7124 27th Ave., Kenosha, shows off one of the giant checkers from the collection of toys&#13;
for three fraternity members and a day care center classmate: left to right, David&#13;
Otto, Racine, 'fraternity treasurer: Jim Mohrbacher, Racine, president; Jim Douglas, 5,&#13;
of 5207 86th St., Kenosha; and Dennis Donovan, Racine. The Day Care Center, located in the&#13;
Parkside Baptist Church on Kenosha Hy. E just south of the campus, has been operating&#13;
with borrowed toys while accumulating its own supply through donations such as that&#13;
from Alpha Kappa Lambda. &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE April 10,1972&#13;
This week NEWSCOPE is featuring an interview&#13;
with_Dean Loumos, President of Student&#13;
Government. The interview is important because&#13;
it elicits the opinions of an elected student officer,&#13;
and exposes behind the scene glimpses of campus&#13;
politics. It is also important because it is honest.&#13;
Undoubtedly, the phones will ring intensely at&#13;
the Student Organizations Building with calls from&#13;
people who will express their opinions to Dean or&#13;
NEWSCOPE concerning the interview. Some will&#13;
say that we are again 'tearing down the University',&#13;
others will call to tell us they learned things&#13;
from it, and will agree with us that no institution is&#13;
above criticism. Loumos pointed out that a strong&#13;
student government is the best means of&#13;
rcpresnlation a student can have on campus.&#13;
Newscope agrees and amends this to include a&#13;
strong, independent student newspaper.&#13;
Parkside has the beginnings of both:&#13;
NEWSCOPE has never ignored the discrepancies&#13;
and irregularities which surface in campus life,&#13;
from unwarranted faculty non-retentions to&#13;
discrepancies in the size of salads. Like Student&#13;
Government, we too have been interested in the&#13;
issues which affect the surrounding area of the&#13;
campus, issues such as annexation which are&#13;
pertinent to and directly affected by the&#13;
University.&#13;
In the interview Dean expressed the fear that&#13;
next fall, the efforts of the present SGA may be&#13;
tempered due to the lack of greater student involvement.&#13;
NEWSCOPE faces the same plight.&#13;
There are only six weeks re.aining in the&#13;
semester, six weeks in which to either solidify&#13;
SGA's and NEWSCOPE'S positions, or let them&#13;
erode from under us. If you, the students want&#13;
strong Student representation and an effective&#13;
press, you must involve yourself with them. You&#13;
must support them and volunteer your services in&#13;
the areas in which you feel qualified. Next fall&#13;
may be too late, the time for involvement is now,&#13;
as Dean says "what you do is what you are": It is&#13;
about time that students find out who they are,&#13;
discover their power as a unified body and use it&#13;
effectively to realize their goals.&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
kcarc thank you&#13;
to students&#13;
TO THE EDITOR:&#13;
On behalf of KCARC, I wish to&#13;
thank the students of U.W.-&#13;
Parkside, for the lovely Easter&#13;
Party, which was so very enjoyable&#13;
for the many mentally&#13;
handicapped children that were&#13;
invited.&#13;
The party revealed that much&#13;
time had been devoted to its&#13;
organization. The games,&#13;
music, dances, Easter baskets,&#13;
and refreshments, were all in&#13;
excellent taste — really, a big&#13;
job, beautifully executed.&#13;
Your interest and efforts to&#13;
promote the welfare of the&#13;
mentally handicapped citizens&#13;
is greatly appreciated.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Katherine T. Romaine (Mrs.&#13;
Thomas)&#13;
President, KCARC&#13;
critical of&#13;
newscope&#13;
TO THE EDITOR:&#13;
In your March 27th issue you&#13;
looked with jaundiced eyes. .&#13;
.and down your nose, too. . .at a&#13;
new campus publication called&#13;
PARKSIDE TODAY.&#13;
Speaking only for myself, I&#13;
say "Welcome" to the new&#13;
arrival. I learned more about&#13;
what was happening on&#13;
Parkside's three campuses in&#13;
that one issue of TODAY than I&#13;
would find out in a semester of&#13;
NEWSCOPES.&#13;
You ask for student "input".&#13;
Okay. . .I'll contribute some.&#13;
My subject: What's the matter&#13;
with NEWSCOPE?. . .Here&#13;
goes. . .&#13;
1. At least 50 per cent of your&#13;
copy has to do with sports. . .a&#13;
very disproportionate coverage&#13;
of campus affairs.&#13;
2. You're a bunch of petty&#13;
fault-finders. I can't recall a&#13;
single news item or editorial in&#13;
which NEWSCOPE had&#13;
anything good to say about&#13;
Parkside. . .Always out with a&#13;
axe to grind. I sometimes&#13;
wonder why some of you stick&#13;
around.&#13;
3. You waste space with book&#13;
reviews which, I am sure, are&#13;
very seldom read and with&#13;
drivel like that found in the "On&#13;
the Nod" column. What phony&#13;
sophistication! The March 27th&#13;
"Nod" column sounded like a&#13;
diary of a bar fly.&#13;
4. You're biased when it&#13;
comes to politics. . .and often&#13;
very naive.&#13;
5. You almost totally ignore&#13;
the interesting activities of&#13;
faculty members and of the&#13;
many clubs on the campus. If it&#13;
wasn't for the bulletin boards&#13;
we wouldn't even know that&#13;
these clubs were around.&#13;
6. You often fail to differentiate&#13;
between news and&#13;
editorial comment. Don't you&#13;
have an Advisor?&#13;
The other story on page one of&#13;
your March 27th issue (other&#13;
than the article about&#13;
PARKSIDE TODAY) was&#13;
headlined "CCC Hearings Raise&#13;
Questions". I know that&#13;
NEWSCOPE was just reporting&#13;
a meeting. I mention the story&#13;
only because it shows your&#13;
propensity to make a mountain&#13;
out of a mole hill. Plus your&#13;
usual inference that "Now&#13;
we've found something else that&#13;
that damned administration is&#13;
doing which needs investigating."&#13;
&#13;
The hearing?. . .Fifteen&#13;
present including several&#13;
faculty members. Some turnout!.&#13;
. .for an "open" meeting&#13;
to which the entire student body&#13;
had been invited. The story&#13;
seemed to indicate that there&#13;
was a lot of adolescent quibbling&#13;
about grade point&#13;
averages. (If each of us did our&#13;
homework w^jwouldn't have to&#13;
worry about point averages.)&#13;
averages.)&#13;
For me the most enlightening&#13;
bit of information that came out&#13;
of the story was that the&#13;
President of Parkside's Student&#13;
Government Association&#13;
(usually considered as being&#13;
The Big Man on the Campus)&#13;
was carrying less than six&#13;
credits. Well, I'll be darned! I&#13;
wonder. . .Just how many does&#13;
he carry?&#13;
And the other subjects on the&#13;
agenda, according to the&#13;
NEWSCOPE story, had to do&#13;
with who can be elected to what&#13;
and when and what the&#13;
requirements should be for a&#13;
group to become a recognized&#13;
campus organization. . .and&#13;
their subsequent responsibilities.&#13;
At this point the&#13;
faculty members and CCC reps&#13;
were trying to spell out some&#13;
ground rules. . .which is good.&#13;
The reporter sounded&#13;
somewhat dejected as he ended&#13;
his story. . ."The hearing&#13;
concluded rather haphazardly&#13;
when the participants trickled&#13;
off, one by one.. ." The figures.&#13;
Anyh ow, wel com e&#13;
PARKSIDE TODAY! Come out&#13;
often and let us know what's&#13;
going on around here. Certainly&#13;
there are more important&#13;
things to report than that "Dick&#13;
Gregory Speaks at Carthage."&#13;
Tell us about them!&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
P.S. Oh yes. . .One more&#13;
thing. It's not a question of&#13;
something being "right" or&#13;
"wrong" or "it depends on&#13;
circumstances". In my opinion,&#13;
those ads for abortion mills&#13;
which NEWSCOPE prints&#13;
cheapen the paper. — A.M.G.&#13;
'zpg' film&#13;
attacked&#13;
TO THE EDITOR:&#13;
I am writing to you about the&#13;
film "Z.P.G." that Paramount&#13;
Pictures plans to release in&#13;
early April. This film is set in a&#13;
period thirty years from now.&#13;
Overpopulation has become so&#13;
rampant that the (world)&#13;
government issues an edict on&#13;
January 1, 2002, prohibiting&#13;
childbirth for 30 years. The&#13;
story is about a couple who,&#13;
having delayed their first child,&#13;
who find it impossible to live&#13;
with this edict and steal off to&#13;
their bomb shelter basement to&#13;
have a child.&#13;
While the film gives a grim&#13;
picture of life as it may well be&#13;
if man fails to control&#13;
population by voluntary&#13;
rational means, it is a gross&#13;
misrepresention of what "zero&#13;
population growth" stand for.&#13;
ZPG does not mean no more&#13;
babies. It means no population&#13;
growth — that is, a birth rate&#13;
equal to the death rate. As a&#13;
result of Paramount's refusal to&#13;
change the name of the film or&#13;
to clearly indicate what&#13;
"Z.P.G." means, ZPG is suing&#13;
the company for&#13;
misrepresenatation to block use&#13;
of its name on the film.&#13;
I hope that all readers of this&#13;
column will boycott this movie.&#13;
If it is shown by any theaters in&#13;
the Kenosa-Racine area,&#13;
members of Parkside ZPG will&#13;
picket those theaters.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Dr. Robert J. Moore,&#13;
Advisor, Parkside ZPG&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
Marc tisen, Helmut Ferber, Gary&#13;
Jensen, Larry Jones, Jim Koloen,&#13;
Rich Lipke, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Steve Mazzarell; Pat&#13;
McDermid, Kevin McKay, Kathy&#13;
BI&#13;
ian Ross&#13;
' Wolfgant&#13;
Salewski, Andy Schmelling, barb&#13;
Scott, Cleta Skovronski,&#13;
Bi&#13;
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1&#13;
Stevesand, James Twist, Debbie&#13;
Venskus, AAike Kite , "Red" Widely,&#13;
pl&amp;nN^&#13;
n&#13;
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W-&#13;
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ditorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553 249fl&#13;
"&#13;
e&#13;
-&#13;
SC0Pe 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 source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building;&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road.&#13;
STAFF MEETING at the office&#13;
-high noon thur. BE THERE &#13;
April 10,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
Dean Loumos on the roles of students and administrators&#13;
Interview with th e President of Student Government&#13;
By Jim Koloen, Editor&#13;
"I believe in you are what you&#13;
do and answering the question&#13;
on how the present student&#13;
government compares to the&#13;
last, I'd say that we are the only&#13;
student government that&#13;
Parkside has ever had." That&#13;
statement was made by Dean&#13;
Loumos, President of the&#13;
Student Government at UWP&#13;
during an interview with&#13;
NEWSCOPE which took place&#13;
in the student government offices&#13;
located in the Student&#13;
Organization Building. Besides&#13;
the dark haired Loumos, Dan&#13;
Trotter, a senator, also sat in on&#13;
the interview to add to his&#13;
President's statements.&#13;
"Like we're the only ones who&#13;
have really been known by the&#13;
students," Trotter emphasized.&#13;
"Before, if you ask'ed&#13;
students what their student&#13;
government was doing, they'd&#13;
say: 'what student government'?"&#13;
Trotter continued,&#13;
"now they either say 'those&#13;
sons of bitches' or 'yeah, those&#13;
guys are doing some good&#13;
things'."&#13;
Loumos expanding on his&#13;
previous statement said, "we&#13;
haven't messed around.&#13;
Students either love us or hate&#13;
us. Anyone who doesn't have an&#13;
opinion is pretty much worthless&#13;
to any form of government.&#13;
If you have no opinion,&#13;
there's nothing we can do.&#13;
Perhaps, we can do something&#13;
to force you to make an opinion,&#13;
and I think we've done a lot of&#13;
that and that's basically good.&#13;
So you are what you do, and if&#13;
you look back at the past three&#13;
or four years, I think you can&#13;
safely say we're the only&#13;
student government that has&#13;
been at Parkside."&#13;
When asked about the&#13;
problems of the present student&#13;
government, Loumos replied&#13;
that "internally there's a lack of&#13;
experience among the people in&#13;
it as to what their functions are,&#13;
what they're supposed to do."&#13;
Trotter added 'that "externally,&#13;
our problem has been misinformation&#13;
from administrators."&#13;
Dean broke in,&#13;
"it's basically a problem of the&#13;
definition of our role. We consider&#13;
ourselves a vital part of&#13;
the University", he continued,&#13;
"and therefore we want the&#13;
official say, we want official&#13;
votes, we want to be included in&#13;
the whole decision making&#13;
process." Loumos explained&#13;
that "up until now, where we&#13;
are now, we have votes where&#13;
they (the administration) let us,&#13;
and that's only superficially. No&#13;
student anywhere can yet get in&#13;
on what's really going on in the&#13;
University."&#13;
Trotter explained that many&#13;
of the present student government&#13;
problems began "with a&#13;
little misinformation here and a&#13;
little there until it eventually&#13;
became a personal battle. It&#13;
came to the point where the&#13;
administration called us&#13;
militants and radicals and&#13;
began accusing us of being&#13;
subversives. At the height of&#13;
one conflict with the administration&#13;
we were told to&#13;
shut up or they'd use things&#13;
from the files they told us they'd&#13;
gathered on us. At that point we&#13;
cut off communication with&#13;
them, they'd threatened us to&#13;
either shut up or they'd use&#13;
their files against us, and then it&#13;
became a personal battle, at&#13;
least for me" Trotter explained.&#13;
Dean added that it didn't make&#13;
any difference to him because&#13;
don't really think they can do&#13;
anything to me. Throwing me&#13;
out of school isn't a punishment&#13;
as far as I'm concerned. I&#13;
mean, wow, it's totally absurd.&#13;
It comes down to mistrust built&#13;
on mistrust, and that mistrust is&#13;
founded on a complete paranoia&#13;
on the part of the people in&#13;
Tallent Hall." Loumos continued&#13;
that "we do everything in&#13;
the open, everything we do is&#13;
above board, we never tried to&#13;
hide anything, and we never&#13;
will."&#13;
Continuing on the subject of&#13;
the administration, Loumos&#13;
said "I've never seen so many&#13;
paranoid people as there are in&#13;
the administration at Parkside.&#13;
They don't have too much guts,&#13;
they're balless, they simply&#13;
follow orders real well. It's&#13;
especially difficult on our part&#13;
because they're the people who&#13;
have to help us, they have to ok&#13;
everything we do. Like when we&#13;
had the open meeting in the&#13;
union a -while ago, those people&#13;
thought it was one of the worst&#13;
things to happen on campus. I&#13;
think they're afraid of a really&#13;
strong student government, one&#13;
that won't always reflect their&#13;
attitudes. They want people who&#13;
look neat and don't worry about&#13;
controversial issues, they would&#13;
ideally like to see another&#13;
Student Activities Board out&#13;
here, something whose purpose&#13;
is to present entertainment or&#13;
some non-political things".&#13;
Loumos explained that he&#13;
thought the administration&#13;
"just doesn't like our attitude.&#13;
My attitude is that maybe half&#13;
of the people in Tallent Hall&#13;
could be done away with, and&#13;
their jobs could easily be taken&#13;
over by us, the students and&#13;
faculty." He explained that the&#13;
administration doesn't want to&#13;
allow students to work in&#13;
Tallent Hall "for purposes of&#13;
control. *1 m ean this isn't their&#13;
fault alone, it's the regents'&#13;
fault, it's the fault of universities&#13;
all over the country;&#13;
there's this attitude to keep&#13;
these damn students down, of&#13;
not allowing them to do things&#13;
for themselves."&#13;
Trotter added that "three&#13;
years ago they brought us all&#13;
kinds of folk singing groups and&#13;
they died miserably because&#13;
people just weren't into folk&#13;
singing. The whole thing, like&#13;
bringing the First Edition was&#13;
ridiculous, they're living in a&#13;
past culture, they think&#13;
everybody's like they were&#13;
when they went to school, and&#13;
they expect us to relate to it. But&#13;
everything's changed."&#13;
Dean said "that's typified by&#13;
Student Activities. They've got&#13;
a guy over there who's a&#13;
booking agent, and that's what&#13;
he does, he books entertainment&#13;
for us. He has almost no contact&#13;
with students at all, he sits in his&#13;
office in Tallent Hall and personally&#13;
handpicks the Activities&#13;
Board. At least until now,&#13;
presently the people already on&#13;
the board pick members. But he&#13;
originally picked all the people&#13;
on the Activities Board. Now&#13;
what the hell, they won't even&#13;
let us bring in our own bands,&#13;
bring in our own entertainment,&#13;
bring in our own movies."&#13;
Trotter added that "they tell us&#13;
to hold referendums, and then&#13;
they say referemdums are&#13;
meaningless."&#13;
Loumos explained that "they&#13;
claim that we're not&#13;
representative of the student&#13;
body because we were elected&#13;
by only 17 per cent of the&#13;
student body. That's really a&#13;
significant point, especially the&#13;
entertainment thing which the&#13;
Activities Board controls,&#13;
because if they do that in just&#13;
these little, insignificant areas&#13;
like entertainment, I mean if&#13;
they do that in everything else,&#13;
we should be concerned with&#13;
where we should have our say.&#13;
But they're not gonna let us do&#13;
it, they're gonna hire somebody&#13;
to do it for us." Dean noted that&#13;
"like all the policies of&#13;
academics, of w hy should there&#13;
be grading instead of pass-fail,&#13;
they say we can hand in&#13;
suggestions and be on committees,&#13;
but that's not any real&#13;
say. They'll listen to us but if&#13;
they don't agree, they won't do&#13;
what we say."&#13;
"I think their attitude to ward&#13;
students goes back to the whole&#13;
misconception that students are&#13;
in college to go to school and be&#13;
taught and that is all," Loumos&#13;
explained. He continued, "they&#13;
think that since faculty and&#13;
administrators were once&#13;
students, that they know all our&#13;
problems and can handle them.&#13;
Well, that's just not true. I for&#13;
one want my life in my own&#13;
hands, I don't want it dictated to&#13;
me, I want to make my own&#13;
decisions, and I t hink we can do&#13;
that. Student Government is&#13;
what it's supposed to do, that's&#13;
the body which is supposed to&#13;
decide student matters, and we&#13;
can, we can do those things, we&#13;
can find competent people to&#13;
stick into committees, put them&#13;
in the very real positions where&#13;
you can place your hand on it&#13;
and say 'we do this." Loumos&#13;
concluded that "now we can&#13;
only say we think we do this, we&#13;
can write suggestions and that's&#13;
really about all." Smiling&#13;
Trotter added, "if we try to pull&#13;
off too much, we get threatened&#13;
with files."&#13;
i Continued on Page 8)&#13;
tfuurmiik&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
BUDDY&#13;
RICH&#13;
and his big band&#13;
Sat. April 22, 8 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Bradford Auditorium&#13;
Reserve Seat Tickets&#13;
General Admission $2.50 8&lt; $3. 50&#13;
Parkside Students $2.00 — $3.00&#13;
Available at: Student Act. Office&#13;
One Student Ticket&#13;
Per Parkside I.D. &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE April 10,1972&#13;
For The Record&#13;
r i ii i i \ i i: thi n g 'S i \ M r f i f&#13;
Dou ntou n Kenosha •&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing,&#13;
Coke.&#13;
They 're Back For Two Shows&#13;
Parkiide Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
TONY&#13;
and&#13;
JUMBO&#13;
April 11-12, l-3p.m.&#13;
FREE - LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presents&#13;
•BREWSTER MCCLOUD" s«mng BUD CORT&#13;
SALLY KELLERMAN • MICHAEL MURPHY&#13;
Co-starring WILLIAM WINDOM am RENE&#13;
AUBERJONOS Wntisn tv DCWAN WILLIAM CANNON&#13;
Directed Cv ROBERT AL.TMAN Produced O, LOU AOLER&#13;
Rhythm and Blues&#13;
Saturday&#13;
April 15, 9 p.m.-l a.m.&#13;
Admission $1.50&#13;
Student Activities Bldi&#13;
gl f,impd in PANAVtSION'.ind METO0C0LOR ^&#13;
fParkside and Wisconsin&#13;
FRIDAY, APRI L 14, 8 p.m.&#13;
Adm. 75 c ents Time 2 hr.&#13;
Student Ac tivities Buildini&#13;
I.D. required&#13;
for Both events.&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
"So you want to be a rock n'roll star&#13;
listen now to what I say&#13;
just get an electric guitar&#13;
and take some time and learn how to play..."&#13;
—from a song by the Byrds&#13;
Cy answers slowly, intently, "It's like 'What do&#13;
you plan on doing?' Make a living, right? It's&#13;
something you want to do." He looks up now, his&#13;
eyes meeting your's, as if o t make sure the point is&#13;
made.&#13;
Cy is the drummer for the Starboys, a band of no&#13;
small legend in their hometown of Kenosha. Since&#13;
June they've lived in a house on North Oakland&#13;
Street in Milwaukee. They made the move to find&#13;
more gigs, to get more exposure. But ten months&#13;
later, they've made barely a dent into the&#13;
Milwaukee scene.&#13;
Gigs in the city, itself, are few and far between,&#13;
and the band is no closer than before in finding an&#13;
agent who is interested in them. The illusions are&#13;
gone for the most part. This is reality. For a band&#13;
that has been together for more than three year a,&#13;
existence is a survival trip.&#13;
"We're not at the point that if we don't get&#13;
famous in a week, we're going to kill ourselves,"&#13;
Frank says. "We just want to make a living&#13;
playing our music."&#13;
The band members are: John Sieger, guitar,&#13;
Frank Niccolai, electric piano and organ, Kenny&#13;
Vanderpoel, bass guitar, Cy Costabili, drums, and&#13;
Phil Clarke, saxophones, flute, harmonica and&#13;
percussion.&#13;
ROCK&#13;
They've been together for years now, but the&#13;
move to Milwaukee was the Big Decision. The&#13;
committment to their music. No more part time&#13;
jobs. No more separate apartments. They would&#13;
live together in a co-operative. They They would&#13;
live off their music. This would be it.&#13;
"We got fired from a job once in Racine," Kenny&#13;
says. "We played some Chuck Berry, and the&#13;
owner says, 'I don't want any of that hillbilly&#13;
music'."&#13;
Cy nods in sympathy. "It's really nice when you&#13;
play and you think you're doing well, and you see&#13;
you're not making it no matter what you do.&#13;
Because out in the audience the people are either&#13;
leaving, or the manager is walking back and forth&#13;
shaking his head, and looking at you every once in&#13;
a while and shaking his head some more."&#13;
"It's good for your ego," Frank adds.&#13;
"They either want Top 40, or heavy underground&#13;
music that's really shit," Cy says.&#13;
"We're trying to make a living playing music&#13;
that doesn't help you make a living — unless&#13;
you've already made it." Frank explains.&#13;
"Most of the young groups are emulating the&#13;
people they are closest to — the young white rock&#13;
groups," John says. He is the most analytical of&#13;
the five, the most articulate about their music.&#13;
"The second generation bands are copying things*&#13;
off of them, instead of listening to what they&#13;
listened to. They're missing something."&#13;
"We're doing the same material that the Stones,&#13;
the Beatles, the Kinks listened to at one time,&#13;
rather than doing their material," Cy offers. He&#13;
talks slowly, picking his words with care.&#13;
Frank adds, "It's like working from the same&#13;
base to different conclusions."&#13;
"We're trying to get back to 1965," John says&#13;
"1965 was when we had our minds blown by music&#13;
— the Beatles, the Who, the Kinks, Dylan. What&#13;
these people were selling was honesty."&#13;
The music of the Starboys is difficult to&#13;
categorize. Different strains run through it from&#13;
Dylan ("Corrina, Corrina," "Down Along the&#13;
Cove' , "All Along to the Watchtower") to Chuck&#13;
Berry ("Johnny B' Goode", "Sweet Little 16"&#13;
Living in the USA") to Zappa ("King Kong",'&#13;
teaches en Regalia") to Eddie Harris ("Listen&#13;
Here ) to Mississippi Fred MacDowell, to Otis&#13;
R,&#13;
ed?&#13;
n&#13;
^' t0 Alice Co&#13;
°Per, to Hank&#13;
WHIiams ( Honky Tonkin' ") to Jimmie Rodgers,&#13;
to the Carole King golden oldie, "Locomotion".&#13;
Then about 40 per cent of their material is&#13;
original. Their taste is eclectic, but unified in&#13;
conception.&#13;
The band has contempt for what they call "riffrock&#13;
, the mindless jamming that characterizes&#13;
many bands. They see it as the enemy. Once for&#13;
aH°flnrt+h&#13;
mon^&#13;
hs&#13;
' fh&#13;
*V didn't s„,0 extensively at&#13;
all. and through an evening's performance not one&#13;
song would be over three minutes long _ it's not&#13;
the type Of thing that most audiences apprec ate&#13;
Then there is disregard for most overt&#13;
showmanship on stage.&#13;
ita».&#13;
us&#13;
.&#13;
w»&#13;
nt t0 ctano (a/l_ , wam to gr 9rimimacace e on on&#13;
?? f&#13;
66 a hree piece heavV group that&#13;
looks like they re being crucified, I really want to&#13;
go up there and give them first aid," John savs&#13;
"It's synthetic," he asserts. "We don'^anUo&#13;
do anything synthetic. If we have achifW o&#13;
thing on stage, it's that I think when pe0D^ iea&#13;
they think we have done something real J we'&#13;
not feeling good, you're.going to see it n* I*'- + I .... " °n 5IOS It's not just a tape loop we run m °ur heads&#13;
where every performance is identical&#13;
"The authentic stage acts like the SWc t&#13;
Who, Alice Cooper, the Doors when thPv'h&#13;
Morrison, Hendrix, they were always doil&#13;
something that was really intelligent theatre&#13;
stage," he continues. "It just wasn't teena&#13;
pain."&#13;
"I guess we're not a saleable group" Frai&#13;
ventures. He's the maniac of the group. Perpetu&#13;
glee is in his eyes, and the cosmic gigqle k *iwa&#13;
about to erupt from him.&#13;
"A friend stopped over last night," he continue&#13;
"and gave me that old line again — what's wroi&#13;
with our band." His voice slips into vintaqe us&lt;&#13;
car salesman hardsell. "You gotta get up the&#13;
and play funky music. You gotta jump around ar&#13;
be insane — the chicks will like you, and i f tl&#13;
chicks like, everybody likes you, 'cause everyboc&#13;
likes the chicks." He tails off. "Look as freaky .&#13;
you can," he starts again. This time dragging tl&#13;
words out as if his throat was lined with grave&#13;
"Do Santana. Grand Funk. Get it on." Disgust, t&#13;
leers. He shakes his head.&#13;
"They want 'Heavy Music' — whatever the he&#13;
that is," Kenny says. "We never use the ter&#13;
when we discuss our music."&#13;
Starboy music is a mixed bag. The differe&#13;
strains converge, as their own sound is dvelopir&#13;
in the blend. The vocalists are examples of thi&#13;
Kenny is the adenoidal rocker, his roots in WAS&#13;
rock n' roll. John is the country fine singer — wi&#13;
echoes of country blues and the lonely plaint i&#13;
Hank Williams. There's a mournful quality to h&#13;
voice,a touch of innocence and sadness. Frank&#13;
the tenor, having, perhaps, the best voice of all, F&#13;
handles the blues numbers, and his voice has tt&#13;
right intensity for it.&#13;
Musically, they're well meshed. They're tigh&#13;
but not the tightness you associate with a go&#13;
studio rhythm section. Rather, they play inside&#13;
one another, and you hear not five separate&#13;
struments but an integrated sound.&#13;
There's no jerk-off riffs, but instead a c&lt;&#13;
centrated, coalesced music. John, on guitar,&#13;
economical and precise in his solos. Phil,&#13;
saxophone, at times is amazing. Disclaiming a&#13;
overt jazz influence on his style, he can, on a so&#13;
switch from the honking and squealing of Tex&#13;
rhythn and blues to the droning of a Coltrane-li&#13;
saxophone as he builds, bending notes as&#13;
progresses, exploring a riff to its end.&#13;
"We were going to hit Milwaukee by storm," '&#13;
says, remembering back to June.&#13;
"I remember the first job we had&#13;
Milwaukee," Frank nods. "It was at the Colle&#13;
Fieldhouse. The place had the accoustics of&#13;
manure pile."&#13;
"We really bombed in that place," Cy says&#13;
agreement. "The people really hated us."&#13;
"We didn't bomb. We didn't bomb that bad&#13;
Frank says defensively.&#13;
"Yeah, we did," the rest of the group replies.&#13;
Kenny adds suddenly, "When we played at t&#13;
Stone Toad, there was a . . ." he stops, at loss f&#13;
the proper word. "There was a school in the an&#13;
that brough these kids who were. .&#13;
".. . deaf homosexuals," John says. "Honest&#13;
God, there were 25 deaf homosexuals ther&#13;
They're coming up to us and making these le v&#13;
motions."&#13;
Cy says earnestly, "There was this one gi&#13;
there that kept coming up to Phil and he had th&#13;
Santa Claus that you pulled this thing out and&#13;
dick would pop out. . ."&#13;
"What?!" Kenny asks incredulously.&#13;
"Yeah," Cy claims. "Then he'd go.. •" Cy w;&#13;
smacking his lips together now and everybody&#13;
laughting." Humor is a strong point with tf&#13;
Starboys.&#13;
"I don't know if they were faking it or what&#13;
John says. "Why would anybody who's deaf wai&#13;
•to hear a band anyway?"&#13;
"Because," Cy answers seriously/ "there wet&#13;
people there who were explaining to these peop&#13;
with sign language. . ."&#13;
". . .describing the music for them/ Joh&#13;
finishes the thought.&#13;
"And they didn't like us!" Cy adds, his eye&#13;
glowing.&#13;
"They weren't just listening," J°hn sa&gt;&#13;
laconically. He shakes his head. After a while, h&#13;
becomes serious. "At the places we've played at i&#13;
the last few months the audiences have beeni in&#13;
their own things: sex, drugs, and booz* That&#13;
what they're there for. Music is just the. • •&#13;
. .the catalyst," Frank interjects.&#13;
"Like ice in a drink," Cy says.&#13;
"It's a pretense to be there," John con m ue; &#13;
John&#13;
"But no one wants to listen to the music and get&#13;
into it in an honest way. They'd rather sit there&#13;
and pinch each other's asses and drink beer."&#13;
Commercialism is a possible way out. A way to&#13;
make money to survive. To exist till the time when&#13;
it's economically feasible to play the music you&#13;
want. The Starboys have gone this route couple&#13;
of times. The last time it was with a manager, who&#13;
was the talent coordinator for a major Top 40&#13;
station in Chicago. The manager had a female&#13;
singer, and she wanted the Starboys to back the&#13;
singer. The Starboys agreed. The relationship&#13;
ended with the two sides at each other's throat —&#13;
"We.were mutually terrified by one another. We&#13;
simply got paranoid," Frank says in retrospect.&#13;
"We have been terrifically unlucky," Phil&#13;
declares. He is the hiost quiet of the Starboys. He&#13;
speaks in a tentative voice. "Most groups who&#13;
have been together as long as us have had some&#13;
sort of opportunity to make it."&#13;
"Maybe we don't compromise enought," Frank&#13;
offers. Beneath his maniacal exhuberance lies a&#13;
clear vision of things. "We try to compromise for a&#13;
while but it doesn't work. It becomes so unbearable&#13;
we have to stop.&#13;
"How can you play something you don't really&#13;
like?" Frank asks. "Can you convince yourself&#13;
you like it? — or do you think, 'I have to make&#13;
money and this is what I have to do!' You may be&#13;
happy you're making money, but you're going to&#13;
be very unhappy because you can't stand what&#13;
you're doing.&#13;
"I go see other bands," he continues, "and it&#13;
seems they have demeaned themselves. Like their&#13;
musicians, and it's about time they realize it. A&#13;
musician is an artist," he says emphatically.&#13;
"We did try to change," Kenny acknowledges.&#13;
"We had the opportunity to make some money. We&#13;
changed as much as we could. The people didn't&#13;
like us," his voice tails off, "and, uh, we didn't like&#13;
us!"&#13;
"It's one thing not to have anyone like you," Cy&#13;
joins in. "It's another thing not to like yourself."&#13;
He rolls his eyes. In appearance Cy looks like a 3A&#13;
size Cat Stevens.&#13;
"We can't get into any of these side trips like&#13;
ROLL&#13;
playing temporary commercial music so we can&#13;
be big in the future. That's what they tell you, but&#13;
it's a bunch of bullshit," John says definitely.&#13;
"We actually sold out," Cy admits.&#13;
"We tried it, you know, and it just didn't work&#13;
out," John says.&#13;
"When we play Well, I enjoy it," Cy affirms.&#13;
"When we play bad, I think I should be doing&#13;
something else.&#13;
"We're trying to bounce back," Kenny says.&#13;
".. fr. om a kick in the balls." Frank finishes the&#13;
tought.&#13;
What are you going to do in six months if you're&#13;
in the same stiuation — still struggling to subsist?&#13;
"I'm almost positive we will be in the same&#13;
situation," Kenny answers quickly. "I can't see. .&#13;
." He stops, and at that moment the band seems to&#13;
share an epiphany.&#13;
"My God," John says softly, to no one in particular,&#13;
and then suddenly they're laughing like&#13;
madmen at the realization.&#13;
What are you going to do?&#13;
"I don't know," Frank answers. "But I know the&#13;
band will be getting better."&#13;
"We'll mature. We'll be a better band. That's all&#13;
I'm thinking," Cy}adds positively.&#13;
"We're too good to be ignored," Kenny asserts.&#13;
"It's going to take three or four more years."&#13;
"Meantime, we'll enjoy playing," John says.&#13;
"We're not that optimistic, but we know we're&#13;
going to keep at it. It's mainly a survival trip.&#13;
We're not hardsell." He shrugs his shoulders. It s&#13;
a borderline existence, at best," he says simply.&#13;
"I mean if I quit I'll be buying Zest soap and&#13;
raising kids," Kenny exclaims. There is a look of&#13;
barely suppressed glee on his face. At times, he&#13;
looks like he might have been the type of teenager&#13;
who swiped hubcaps for the thrill of it.&#13;
"There's not too many people that enjoy what&#13;
they're doing like we do," Cy says. "I enjoy what&#13;
I'm doing. I get up around noon every day. If&#13;
there's food around, I eat, if not, I scrounge aroun&#13;
til I get fed. Then I'll practice, and then I'll do&#13;
something else. I'll practice some more, and then&#13;
I'll get drunk. It sounds ridiculous -&#13;
ridiculous, come to think of it!" Cy is in the mids&#13;
of another epiphany. "But I'm enjoying my li e or&#13;
the. . ." he stops to calculate, . -for the past&#13;
couple, for the past two months!" He nods his head&#13;
and they all begin laughing again.&#13;
"We're on the road to beautyville," John says&#13;
succinctly.&#13;
April 10,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
v&gt;&#13;
r&#13;
^'&#13;
CK&#13;
Vlcis.l-'&#13;
0 Sun. l-b&#13;
12 02. BOTTLE BEER&#13;
+ HIOH-BALLS 35 t&#13;
L i v e M u s i c ~&#13;
Fri. + 5dT. ^&#13;
ACROSS T#£&#13;
AAKE rHBATZU&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Polaroid Camera - Used 4 times.&#13;
Case, timer, dependable. Truely a&#13;
fine instrument. $25. Ph. Kevin 658-&#13;
4746.&#13;
STEREO TAPE DECK — Sony&#13;
252D. List $135. It's yours for $70. A&#13;
tape deck if ever I saw one. Ph. 652-&#13;
2538 - 553-2496 a sk for Jerry.&#13;
FOR SALE — Marimba, IV* oct.&#13;
$100; Schwinn bicycle. 1 speed,&#13;
coaster brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N . Oakland, Milwaukee,&#13;
Wis.&#13;
Matching Refrigerator (Admiral)&#13;
and Stove (Premier), $125 each,&#13;
olivegreen. Practically new, owners&#13;
moved out of town, must sell. Both in&#13;
excellent condition. Call 634-6215&#13;
after 5 p.m. or weekends.&#13;
TAPE RECORDER — Reel to reel.&#13;
Like new. Orig. $100 sell for $50. Ph.&#13;
657-5992 after 4.&#13;
FOR SALE - Reel to reel tape deck,&#13;
Allied TD-1095 with sound on sound&#13;
-t- sound with sound, price $90.00.&#13;
Phone 552-8733 a fter 6:30 p.m.&#13;
FOR SALE - Panasonic stereo&#13;
model 1519 A m-Fm, BSR turntable,&#13;
2 2-way speakers, best offer. Call Joe&#13;
after 6:00, 654-2945.&#13;
Pterodactyl ancient flying reptile,&#13;
full size replica Rhamphorhynchus&#13;
$150 - ph. 658-3833 i n the evening.&#13;
Daucshunds AKC registered, born&#13;
Feb. 6, lightweights, 2 females $65&#13;
each. ph. 652-4513 after 4:30.&#13;
FOR SALE — Ski Boots. Ladies, size&#13;
7. Buckle boots made in Austria.&#13;
Worn twice - $20.00. Call 552-8469&#13;
ask for Linda.&#13;
SIX SIAMESE KITTENS — pure&#13;
bred - 7 weeks old - cute and&#13;
adorable - m ust have a good home -&#13;
$10.00 each. Call 552-8469 - ask for&#13;
Linda.&#13;
WOMAN'S FUR COAT — Lamb. Ph.&#13;
694-4720. Terry Fuller.&#13;
TYPEWRITER — Smith-Corona&#13;
"Classic 12". 12 inch carriage and&#13;
case. $30.00. Call 658-1249 e venings.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED - STAMPS — Collections,&#13;
Accumulations, Mint or Used, On&#13;
Cover or off, First Day covers or&#13;
what ever! U.S. or Foreign. Phone&#13;
694-3398. Ask for Jim or leave&#13;
messate at Newscope office.&#13;
BABYSITTING — mornings. 7:30 -&#13;
12:30. Jones school area - South&#13;
Racine. Ph. 554 7538 a fter 1 p.m.&#13;
RIFLE - Winchester model 88 - .243&#13;
Win. with 4x Weaver Scope. Excellent&#13;
condition. $110 firm. ph. 654-&#13;
7964.&#13;
WANTED - Writers, journalists,&#13;
production staff and ad men to take&#13;
over a college newspaper. Must be&#13;
housebroken, learn while you earn&#13;
when you can. Ph. 553-2496 o r 553-&#13;
2498. Ask for anybody or come in&#13;
person to the Newscope office,&#13;
corner of Wood Rd. and Hwy. A.&#13;
WANTED — People who would like&#13;
to help other people. Free training.&#13;
Contact Joe Baker, director Racine&#13;
Hotline, 637-1112. Mon.-Wed.-Fri.&#13;
1:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.&#13;
Spiffy 1963 MG Midget SPORTSCAR,&#13;
needs body work, truly THE&#13;
car of the future and yours for the&#13;
ridiculously low price of $150 cash,&#13;
contact Jim at 553-2496 or at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
LOST — Brown wallet in Student&#13;
Union last Friday. I need the papers,&#13;
you can keeff the money. Please&#13;
return to the information center. No&#13;
questions asked.&#13;
FREE KITTENS — (Good Easter&#13;
gift) 6weeksold, litter-trained., used&#13;
to children. Black and white male,&#13;
black and gray "tiger-striped"&#13;
female, and a multi-color "calico"&#13;
female. Call 634 6215 evenings, or&#13;
553-2121 ext. 20 days.&#13;
WANTED — Scrap lead pipe and&#13;
fittings. Congact George Metesky.&#13;
Clean sleeping room for man, 6100&#13;
24th Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
Athletic Event Results - Call Information&#13;
Center, ext. 2345 the&#13;
morning after. We will have the&#13;
word.&#13;
MUSICIANS (bass, electric piano,&#13;
percussion) wanted to start from&#13;
scratch to create new soft rock&#13;
sound. Must be able to read and-or&#13;
inproviseon chords; must have own&#13;
equipment, contact Gary 633-0875 or&#13;
Fred at P-side Village apt. 111. &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE April 10,1972&#13;
£etou*uj, the, tf-inedt&#13;
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LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
CATCH A "?&#13;
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SALE&#13;
tECOflDS,&#13;
INKS&#13;
'JACKETS,&#13;
SWEATERS,&#13;
- Shirts h shII&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
'/a Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line (Pump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
FLO'S&#13;
Home Cooking&#13;
HWY Sl&amp;County Trunk E&#13;
6AM-6PM Specials Daily&#13;
NOTICE NOTICE&#13;
BREAKFAST 6=A.M. TO II: A.M.&#13;
l/iiif Oar Heu, Tns,Je C^rpehc)&#13;
C iC C tl&#13;
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30th aue. dnd Roosevelt Road&#13;
' ^ oska.&#13;
Open:&#13;
Mon.thruThurs. — 6 A.M. ,11 P.M.^&#13;
Friday — 6 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Saturday — 9 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Sunday — 9 A.M. to 11 P.M.&#13;
Visit t o&#13;
Morrisons Grave&#13;
By Sal Ferrera&#13;
PARIS (CPS) — The young&#13;
American student who walked&#13;
up as I was about to leave was&#13;
startled at his discovery. Like&#13;
most visitors to the historic&#13;
Pere-Lachaise cemetery, he&#13;
had come to see Oscar Wilde,&#13;
Honore do Balzac, or maybe&#13;
Frederic Chopin. All he could&#13;
say was, "I can't believe it!"&#13;
You see, we were both&#13;
standing in front of Jim&#13;
Morrison's grave.&#13;
We'll probably never know&#13;
why Jim Morrison of the Doors&#13;
was buried in an almost unmarked&#13;
grave in Paris, just like&#13;
we'll never know much about&#13;
the cause of his death on that&#13;
26th of June last year. As a&#13;
matter of fact, we weren't even&#13;
told about his death until a week&#13;
later, And then all the&#13;
newspapersaid was that he had&#13;
been buried "in private." But&#13;
that was all last year.&#13;
Almost one year later, my&#13;
visit to Jim Morrison's grave&#13;
revealed that people, and&#13;
especially young Europeans,&#13;
still visit the half-hidden site in&#13;
"Division 6" of this most&#13;
famous of cemeteries in Paris.&#13;
They've left a lot of reminders,&#13;
mostly scribbled notes under&#13;
the 20 or so seashells which lie&#13;
along the perimeter of the&#13;
grave.&#13;
For instance, there is the note&#13;
which says simply, "Good-bye&#13;
Jim," and is signed, "One&#13;
friend French." Under another&#13;
shell there's an unsigned note&#13;
rolled up with a ring around it,&#13;
and it says, "I don't know you&#13;
Jim, but I like your music and&#13;
want to be your friend." On&#13;
another one from "Patricia and&#13;
Nelly" which reads, "Now you&#13;
are in heaven, in a world of&#13;
peace like Brian, Jimmy and&#13;
other, but we'll go to join you&#13;
after."&#13;
Other visitors, in misplaced&#13;
zeal to express themselves,&#13;
have taken to scratching&#13;
messages on the backs of adjacent&#13;
headstones, like:&#13;
"Richard from Montreal, 17-11-&#13;
71" who said, "We think of you&#13;
Jim"; or the annonymously&#13;
etched words, "LA Women."&#13;
The Doors were a product of&#13;
Los Angeles, California. Forming&#13;
in 1965, they took their&#13;
name from a passage in a&#13;
William Blake poem concerning&#13;
doors. It wasn't long before the&#13;
group gained national&#13;
prominence, offering songs like&#13;
"Light My Fire" and live&#13;
performances which were to&#13;
say the least, "different."&#13;
Morrison's exposing himself to&#13;
a Florida audience became part&#13;
of what is probably the most&#13;
notorious of all Door performances,&#13;
at least the&#13;
arresting police thought so.&#13;
Jim Morrison doesn't have a&#13;
headstone, or even a stone&#13;
covering for that matter, It's a&#13;
plot of exposed ground with a&#13;
narrow frame of concrete. But&#13;
there's a hand-written message&#13;
on a kind of plaque poked in the&#13;
ground. In addition to his name&#13;
and dates 1943-1971, it tells us&#13;
that Jim Morrison was a "PoetCompositeur."&#13;
Below that it&#13;
reads:&#13;
"Yesterday a child died in&#13;
wonder; here he lives, head in&#13;
hand."&#13;
' A ' &#13;
April 10,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Netmen Prepare for Season&#13;
With the snows of recent&#13;
weeks barely melted off the&#13;
courts and the players still&#13;
accustomed to the warmth of&#13;
the indoor arena, the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside tennis&#13;
teapi is bracing for its first&#13;
week of play, which includes&#13;
contests against four tough foes&#13;
in a six-day period.&#13;
Coach Dick Frecka's&#13;
jacketmen will face UWMilwaukee&#13;
in their opener&#13;
Monday at Milwaukee and then&#13;
return to their home courts at&#13;
Racine's lakefront Pershing&#13;
Courts to face Marquette on&#13;
Wednesday, Dominican&#13;
Thursday and UW-Green Bay&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Frecka's squad finished last&#13;
season with a 3-7 mark but&#13;
Frecka has a young group and&#13;
is looking for improvement this&#13;
time around.&#13;
Mike Safago, Kenosha&#13;
sophomore, looks like the&#13;
number one man heading into&#13;
the first meet but Frecka&#13;
emphasized that the lineup is&#13;
likely to be shuffled frequently&#13;
through the season and that no&#13;
one can be sure of a spot.&#13;
Another Kenosha sophomore,&#13;
Dan Mieczkowski, should go at&#13;
No. 2 singles in the early meets&#13;
while Villa Park, 111., freshman&#13;
Skip Jones appears set at the&#13;
No. 3 spot. Kenosha junior&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
KENOSHA, Wis. — Dave&#13;
Donaldson, gymnastics coach&#13;
at the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
has been elected&#13;
secretary-treasurer of the&#13;
NAIA Gymnastics Coaches&#13;
Assn.&#13;
KENOSHA, Wis. - Officers&#13;
in the newly-formed National&#13;
Varsity Club at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside include&#13;
Dario Madrigrano, president;&#13;
Bob Hartman, vice president;&#13;
A1 Gelsone, secretary ; and Guy&#13;
Trecroci, treasurer.&#13;
KENOSHA, Wis. — Lucian&#13;
Rosa, freshman distance&#13;
runner at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, will&#13;
represent his native Ceylon in&#13;
the summer Olympic Games at&#13;
Munich. He'll run the 10,000&#13;
meters and the marathon.&#13;
KENOSHA, Wis. — Mike De&#13;
Witt, a senior trackman at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
recently won the mile&#13;
walk at the 29th Annual&#13;
Amateur Athletic Union&#13;
Championships in Milwaukee in&#13;
a record 7:07.&#13;
Dennis Halverson is likely to go&#13;
at No. 4 singles while Racine&#13;
junior David Herchen should be&#13;
at No. 5 and Todd Nelson,&#13;
Racine junior, at No. 6.&#13;
Top doubles team in the early&#13;
going should be Safago and&#13;
Jones with Mieczkowski and&#13;
Halverson paired at No. 2 and&#13;
Herchen likely as half the duo at&#13;
No. 3.&#13;
After this opening week, the&#13;
tennismen have a schedule&#13;
break until April 26, when they&#13;
resume action here against&#13;
Milton. They'll close out April&#13;
with matches April 28 and 29&#13;
against Dominican and St.&#13;
Norbert, respectively.&#13;
The remainder of the&#13;
schedule shows UW-Milwaukee&#13;
at Parkside on May 5, the&#13;
Rangers at UW-Green Bay on&#13;
May 6 and at Milton on May 10.&#13;
The NAIA playoffs are slated&#13;
for UW-Whitewater May 19-20.&#13;
Golfers t o Tee O ff&#13;
Weather and grounds permitting,&#13;
the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside golf squad&#13;
will open its 1972 season Monday&#13;
at Lake Forest in matches&#13;
against the Foresters and Rockford&#13;
College.&#13;
And the wet ground and cold&#13;
winds of the North will offer a&#13;
new challenge for Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens's squad after a week&#13;
of practice and intra-squad&#13;
tournament play on the links in&#13;
Tampa, Fla.&#13;
But Stephens is confident that&#13;
his Rangers, who tied the UWMadison&#13;
linksters in a fall&#13;
tournament, will be ready to&#13;
play well in the Rangers' short&#13;
four-week season.&#13;
From Florida, Stephens noted&#13;
that Racine sophomore Jim&#13;
Vakos was emerging as the&#13;
team's number one man for the&#13;
scheduled opener but that&#13;
Racine freshman Tom Feiner&#13;
and Kenosha soph Tom Bothe&#13;
were close behind and&#13;
challenging.&#13;
Other spots, Stephens said,&#13;
remain up for grabs heading&#13;
into the first match.&#13;
The schedule: April 19 - UWWhitewater,&#13;
Dominican and&#13;
UW-Milwaukee at Pets- April 21&#13;
- Milton, Ripon at Janesville;&#13;
April 22 - Northwestern, UWMadison&#13;
at Evanston; April 24 -&#13;
Northern Illinois, Bradley at&#13;
DeKalb; April 26 - Loyold,&#13;
Carthage, UW-Whitewater at&#13;
Pets; April 28 - Roosevelt at&#13;
Chicago; May 2 - Lake Forest,&#13;
Dominican, UW-Green Bay at&#13;
Pets; May 4-6 - NAIA District 14&#13;
Tournament at Green Lake.&#13;
WINDJAMMER&#13;
hEMDERLOIN STEAK&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
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Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
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FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH Q UA LITY AT&#13;
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JAMM ER DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— H ER BE RT K UBLY&#13;
" WO ND ERFUL FO OD"&#13;
— SENATOR PROXMIRjL&#13;
WATCHES PERFUMES&#13;
Role* - Accutron&#13;
UltrachrOn - Longint&#13;
Bui ova - Movado&#13;
Caravctle • Time*&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
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Perfumes an&#13;
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REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewe lry&#13;
Di amond Setting&#13;
Compl et e Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontolof.isF&#13;
5617 6«ii Ave.&#13;
Vwuubco &amp; £&amp;rvi&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
0% Disco unt to students and f a c ult y with | .q&#13;
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Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Reed fc Barton&#13;
Sheffield • etc.&#13;
BRIDA'.&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
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SANDWICHES —PIZZA — PAC K A GE GOODS&#13;
tvaw v/Eb. iADi£S^on/N/&lt;$&#13;
How can you bring out&#13;
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Come to this Christian Science Lecture&#13;
"The Po w e r Cr is is a n d t h e I n d i v i d u a l"&#13;
By Pa t ri c ia T u t tle A Ch ri st i a n Sc i e n c e p r a c t it i o n e r&#13;
3 P. M . Sa t u r d a y , A p ril 15&#13;
at t h e F ir st Ch u r c h o f Ch ri st, Sc i e n t ist 9 t h a n d Co l l e g e ,&#13;
Ra c i n e , Wis. Ch i l d c a re Fa c i li ti e s Pr o v i d e d&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
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A TRIIM.K DHCKF.R OF BURC.FR CHKFSF&#13;
BACON I.FTTUCF TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
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Custom made for you&#13;
fri i: n ri ivi RY to pakksidi: vill.ygi&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 — 30tH A venue K enosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
Diana Intermezzo &#13;
Pages NEWSCOPE April 10,1972&#13;
SGA's role on campus&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
Loumos later delineated the&#13;
goals of student government at&#13;
Parkside. "I see it as creating a&#13;
consciousness among the&#13;
students. I realized that in&#13;
almost no way could we put&#13;
student government in the&#13;
position we wanted it in school,&#13;
until students became aware of&#13;
the fact that student government&#13;
was for them. So we did&#13;
things for the students like the&#13;
book exchange, and helped on&#13;
the day care center, and held&#13;
open meetings. We had to get&#13;
students involved in the process&#13;
so they could see that it sucks,&#13;
and that it should be changed. A&#13;
lot of people think that now, but&#13;
they just don.t want anything to&#13;
do with it. So my thing was to&#13;
show them things we could do&#13;
together outside of school, by&#13;
ourselves and then- throw them&#13;
into the committees with the&#13;
attitude that we are mature&#13;
enough to handle our own lives.&#13;
I wanted to see people come upagainst&#13;
the bureaucracy and&#13;
the hassles and to take it as far&#13;
as they could go. The administration&#13;
would allow for&#13;
some change, but it only goes so&#13;
far; now the thing to do is get all&#13;
those changes within the&#13;
structure as far as we can,&#13;
because once we do that,&#13;
people, I think, will come to the&#13;
realization on their own that it&#13;
isn't enought, and that,they'll&#13;
have to take it one more step&#13;
further until the administration&#13;
says no. Then the committment&#13;
has to be made whether they&#13;
want to take it to the natural&#13;
extension of their actions, and I&#13;
think they will, because it'll be&#13;
too important to them not to;&#13;
then we can move."&#13;
Trotter interjected that&#13;
"we're trying to change fhe&#13;
administration's view of the&#13;
average student as being a&#13;
mouse in a maze, that he's just&#13;
there to get to the other end in&#13;
four years, and never says&#13;
anything, or thinks anything&#13;
about the walls." "Really,"&#13;
Lou.os added, "our main goal&#13;
has been to create a consciousness&#13;
among the students&#13;
that they are somebody, that&#13;
they can do things, that they can&#13;
control what happens to them&#13;
while at the University."&#13;
During a more pensive period&#13;
of the interview, Loumos told&#13;
Newscope that "I get the feeling&#13;
that some students are intimidated&#13;
by my office, that&#13;
they're afraid of c oming up and&#13;
talking to me, or to senators for&#13;
that matter. I think a student&#13;
should feel able to walk up to a&#13;
senator and grab his arm and&#13;
say, 'you asshole, what have&#13;
you been doing with my life' if&#13;
he doesn't agree with&#13;
something, or just come up and&#13;
tell me what he wants to see&#13;
done. That's one of the reasons&#13;
for our literature table, which&#13;
we're setting up in the Activities&#13;
Building. We'll have a phone&#13;
there, and we'll sell Panther&#13;
papers, the RYM's Midnite&#13;
Special and the Wisconsin&#13;
Alliance's paper. Ideally we&#13;
want people to come up and&#13;
debate things, argue&#13;
viewpoints. And if anyone wants&#13;
to pass out leaflets at the table,&#13;
they can. In fact I've been&#13;
thinking of moving my office&#13;
;nto the Activities Building so I&#13;
can have closer contact with the&#13;
students. Where I'm located&#13;
now, I'm pretty effectively cut&#13;
off from students."&#13;
When asked about the&#13;
proposed six credit requirement&#13;
presently being considered by&#13;
the CCC for student government&#13;
officers, Loumos replied that "I&#13;
guess everybody knows by now&#13;
that I have only one credit. I&#13;
came into this with the&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APR. 12&#13;
Men's Tennis. UW-P vs. Marquette,&#13;
Pershing Courts, Racine.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 13&#13;
Meeting. Parkside Zero Population&#13;
Growth. 3:00p.m. Kenosha Campus,&#13;
Room 141.&#13;
Nickelodeon. Featuring the W. C.&#13;
Fields films: The Pharmacist, The&#13;
Fatal Glass of Beer, and The Great&#13;
Chase. 12:00 p.m. Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board. Adm. 5&#13;
cents.&#13;
FRIDAY, APR. 14&#13;
Film. "Brewster McCloud."&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. Student Activities&#13;
Building. 8:00 p.m. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D. required. Adm. 75&#13;
cents.&#13;
SATURDAY, APR. 15&#13;
Dance. "Hotnoggin." Sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Activities Board. Student&#13;
Activities Building. 9:00 p.m. to 1:00&#13;
a.m. Parkside and Wisconsin I.D.&#13;
required. Adm. $1.50.&#13;
realization that our roles as&#13;
students on this campus had&#13;
been officially totally neglected&#13;
on our part, as far as student&#13;
government was concerned.&#13;
There was never an official&#13;
effort to get ourselves&#13;
established in the University&#13;
until recently, though even now&#13;
our view isn't accepted.&#13;
However, I do think that there&#13;
was a conscious effort to keep&#13;
student government out of the&#13;
process of the University.&#13;
Anyway," Loumos continued,&#13;
"I was talking with Ed Hales,&#13;
the new regent from Racine,&#13;
and he told me he was in student&#13;
government when he went to&#13;
school. He felt that it was&#13;
ridiculous to require a student&#13;
government president to take&#13;
any classes at all during the&#13;
year he served. I agreed&#13;
because, really, our role is very&#13;
important, there's a lot of work&#13;
to be done and there's no way I&#13;
could have done my work and&#13;
attended classes at the same&#13;
time. I'd have just wasted my&#13;
money and probably would&#13;
have flunked."&#13;
Concerning the proposed&#13;
rules and regulations for the&#13;
Student Handbook, Loumos said&#13;
"they're going to put in rules for&#13;
us' They're gonna place&#13;
regulations on us?! Will they let&#13;
us put rules and regulations on&#13;
them?"&#13;
When asked about the symposium&#13;
which student government&#13;
is planning for April 18&#13;
through May 20 Loumos explained&#13;
that idea of the&#13;
symposium is to "show the&#13;
students opportunities for&#13;
alternatives to the form of&#13;
education they receive at&#13;
Parkside. We're planning at&#13;
least eight events from a&#13;
seminar on Prison Reform to a&#13;
Woman's Day, to 18 straight&#13;
hours of non-Hollywood movies&#13;
at the Vogue Theatre to a bon&#13;
voyage party for the Racine&#13;
campus." During the symposium&#13;
Loumos explained "we&#13;
want to show students they can&#13;
do something with their&#13;
education besides working for&#13;
Johnson's Wax or American&#13;
Motors. We want to show them&#13;
how the educational process is&#13;
part of prison reform, and that&#13;
the University is not only here&#13;
to grant degrees, but to help the&#13;
people in the communities."&#13;
When asked of the present&#13;
state of the student government,&#13;
Loumos replied that "it's&#13;
probably the most representative&#13;
body on campus, the only&#13;
thing it lacks, perhaps, is&#13;
enough women senators, but&#13;
everything else, from political&#13;
views to race to age is&#13;
represented." He added that&#13;
there was little, if any factionalism;&#13;
"we all get along&#13;
with each other real well, and&#13;
unlike other SGA's we never&#13;
have trouble attaining a&#13;
quorum."&#13;
Touching upon the open&#13;
meeting that had been sponsored&#13;
by student government at&#13;
the Activities Building, Dan&#13;
Trotter said that "after the&#13;
meeting, the administration&#13;
called us militants." In a sarcastic&#13;
tone, Trotter stated that&#13;
"they don't even know what a&#13;
militant is." Loumos added that&#13;
"(Dean( Dearborn told us that&#13;
he's been through all this stuff&#13;
of people calling him a pig and&#13;
moving him out of his office&#13;
.he hasn't been through shit.&#13;
You know, he hasn't been&#13;
kicked out, I mean kicked out of&#13;
his office and thrown down the&#13;
stairs, no one around here has&#13;
had that happen to him."&#13;
Trotter further explained that&#13;
"it came close to that during the&#13;
teacher firings, they panicked&#13;
and locked up outside of the&#13;
halls and closed their doors."&#13;
Loumos added that "on other&#13;
campuses we would be considered&#13;
conservatives, but here&#13;
they call us revolutionaries and&#13;
subversives." He added, "that&#13;
shows you where Parkside's at,&#13;
it has an administration that is&#13;
so afraid of a good, strong&#13;
student government that they&#13;
call us revolutionaries and&#13;
subversives to justify themselves."&#13;
&#13;
When asked what student&#13;
government's most important&#13;
actions have been Dean said the&#13;
"book exchange, the day care&#13;
center, and our meetings have&#13;
been the most significant things&#13;
we've done. We've always got a&#13;
quorum so we always function,&#13;
the book exchange gave the&#13;
students an alternative to buy&#13;
books for less, from each other.&#13;
i AN fin RW w* FTI WAWW A* ****** ft* ************** a* ft*** put wrwf&#13;
SCHLITZ r *2" 12pack&#13;
Mission Club Brandy — $3&#13;
35 5th&#13;
Tuarsck Vodka—&#13;
$2&#13;
98 5t)l&#13;
Milshire Gin 52&#13;
98 5th&#13;
Galliano —&#13;
57&#13;
98 5th&#13;
Gallo Brandy $4&#13;
19 5th&#13;
Would your club or organization&#13;
like a •&#13;
Wine Tasting&#13;
Contact Fred Cook, 637-4101&#13;
Ask about assorted Case&#13;
prices for parties&#13;
Keg beer available&#13;
with a few days notice&#13;
F o l a n a r Italian Wi n es&#13;
Soave&#13;
Bardolino&#13;
Valpolicella&#13;
$*|98&#13;
5th&#13;
P R I C E S GO O D T H R O U G H SU N D A Y A P R I L 1 6 T H&#13;
IN RACINE AT WESTGATE ON HIGHWAY 20, WASHINGTON AVENUE AND OHIO STRE&amp;T&#13;
DAILY 9 A.NL TO 9*30 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY • SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6'P.IW,&#13;
V VV WU WW* VtfMVI i w w w w w w w w w w w w w w w yy'w J&#13;
We gave the impetus to the day&#13;
care center though now they&#13;
won't have anything to do with&#13;
us because, in order to become&#13;
a University activity, they were&#13;
told they couldn't have anything&#13;
to do with us. But that's all&#13;
right", Loumcs explained, "if&#13;
they can do it, good, that's what&#13;
we want because the University&#13;
should be doing it anyway."&#13;
"Another important result&#13;
we've attained over the&#13;
semester has been to force the&#13;
people in Tallent Hall to be less&#13;
sloppy. Now the same rules&#13;
have to apply every day in the&#13;
same way, they can no longer&#13;
be inconsistent."&#13;
What do you feel are the&#13;
problems which student&#13;
government will face in the&#13;
future? "Number one is the&#13;
sustainment of what we've done&#13;
so far. I don't know if our efforts&#13;
can be continued in the fall,&#13;
though I hope so." Loumos&#13;
continued "one of the reasons&#13;
for this is the fact that students&#13;
are not taught to apply what&#13;
they learn from textbooks.&#13;
Sociology students don't apply&#13;
what they learn in Sociology to&#13;
real life, and students don't&#13;
apply what they learn in&#13;
Sociology to real life, and&#13;
students in general don't&#13;
question the University processes&#13;
around them, because&#13;
they're orily taught to think in&#13;
class. Let's face it, with an&#13;
industrial mission, Parkside is&#13;
turning out nuts and bolts for&#13;
the corporate system, and the&#13;
corporations don't measure&#13;
things in human terms. The&#13;
University bows to this mission&#13;
every time they fire a professor&#13;
who has been teaching his&#13;
students to apply what he learns&#13;
in class to real life situations."&#13;
Trotter added that "no matter&#13;
what you tell me I'll always&#13;
believe they fired Art Williams&#13;
and Doug LaFollette because&#13;
they told their students to apply&#13;
what they learned; they've&#13;
always fired teachers like that&#13;
and probably will continue to."&#13;
Dean concluded the interview&#13;
with the hope that more&#13;
students will get involved&#13;
because "you are what you do,&#13;
and you do what you think. We&#13;
can do a lot," he said, "but&#13;
everyone has to realize it first."&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING . . . WE BRING"&#13;
• 657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922 </text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>The Electric Last Minute is a new feature. Any Parkside club,&#13;
organization, or group wishing to place a news item in this column is&#13;
asked to present the typed copy to Paul Lomartire in care of the&#13;
Newscope Offices before 4 p.m. on each Thursday for the following&#13;
Tuesday edition.&#13;
6&#13;
" 200 1: A Space Odyssey"&#13;
Space age travel authority, science fiction writer and inventor&#13;
Arthur C. Clarke will speak at Parkside on April 20th at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall. The topic of the free lecture will be "Life in the&#13;
Year 2000", sponsored by the UW-Parkside Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Author of "Reminiscences&#13;
of Norma" to Read&#13;
Martin Seymour-Smith, a London-born poet, teacher, lecturer and&#13;
free-lance writer who is a visiting professor of English this year at&#13;
Parkside, will read from his poems at a free public program sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Poetry Forum at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, April&#13;
19, in the Greenquist Hall Whiteskellar.&#13;
Professor Seymour-Smith is the author of four books of poems,&#13;
the most recent, "Reminiscences of Norma", published in 1971. He&#13;
also has written several books of literary criticism and the soon-tobe-published&#13;
"Guide to Modern World Literature."&#13;
Herbert Kubly to "Hodag" Country&#13;
Herbert Kubly, professor of English at Parkside, has been&#13;
named writer-in-residence at the ninth annual two-week summer&#13;
Rhinelander School of Arts July 17 through 28 sponsored by UWExtension&#13;
Arts.&#13;
Professor Kubly, an award-winning author and playwright, will&#13;
conduct a series of seminars at the school's Writer's Workshop,&#13;
which has become one of the nation's foremost gathering places for&#13;
authors.&#13;
Other workshop instructors will include Robert Gard, on&#13;
play writing; Hoke Norris, Fiction; Marion Fuller Archer, writing&#13;
for children; Edna Meudt, poetry; Jerry Apps. article writing; and&#13;
Dale O'Brien, photography for writers.&#13;
Registration information from the Writer's Workshop can be&#13;
obtained from UW-Extension Arts 610 Langdon Street, Madison, or&#13;
from Professor Kubly.&#13;
Earth Week Speaker&#13;
Senator Gaylord Nelson (DEM. Wis.) will present an Earth Week&#13;
lecture, An Inventory of Environmental Concerns," to be followed&#13;
by a question and answer session, at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April&#13;
19th, in Greenquist Hall. p&#13;
Senator Nelson was a founder of the original Earth Week two&#13;
years ago His campus visit is sponsored by the Parkside Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Buddy is Back&#13;
Parkside's Activities Board announced the ticket prices and date&#13;
for this year's Buddy Rich Concert. Reserved tickets (General admission&#13;
$2.50 and $3.50, Parkside students $2. and $3.) are available&#13;
at the Student Activities Office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
The concert will be April 22nd, at the Bradford High School&#13;
Auditorium in Kenosha at eight p.m. Each Parkside student will be&#13;
allowed to buy one student priced ticket per identification card&#13;
presented at the Activities Office.&#13;
Alternative Candidates find it&#13;
Difficult to get on Ballot&#13;
(CPS) — Socialist Workers&#13;
Party candidate for President,&#13;
Linda Jennes, has protested a&#13;
threat by Ohio Secretary of&#13;
State Ted W. Brown to rule her&#13;
off that state's November&#13;
presidential ballot.&#13;
Brown says that he "will not&#13;
be able" to put Jenness on the&#13;
ballot unless she states that she&#13;
is at least 35 years old. Ms.&#13;
Jenness is 31.&#13;
Jenness, in answering&#13;
Brown's notification of her&#13;
potential ineligibility, stated&#13;
that though the Constitution&#13;
states that the President must&#13;
be 35 years old, there is no age&#13;
requirement for running for&#13;
that office. She further stated&#13;
that the Constitutional age&#13;
requirement is "totally out of&#13;
line with today's political&#13;
reality" and that Brown's move&#13;
was "motivated by partisan&#13;
political interests."&#13;
9,767 signatures were filed on&#13;
behalf of Jenness in Columbus&#13;
before the February 2 filing&#13;
deadline. 5,000 signatures are&#13;
required by law.&#13;
M e a n w h i l e , U . S.&#13;
Representative John Ashbrook&#13;
may contest his elimination&#13;
from the Indiana primary slate.&#13;
Ashbrook has been ruled off&#13;
that state's ballot because he&#13;
had fallen short of the 500&#13;
required voters' signatures&#13;
from each district.&#13;
Ashbrook is the conservative&#13;
Republican challenging&#13;
President Nixon in the&#13;
Republican "race".&#13;
A spokesman for Ashbrook&#13;
said that enough signatures&#13;
were gathered in each district,&#13;
but that election officials had&#13;
ruled many of them invalid. He&#13;
said that Ashbrook would&#13;
probably appeal to the state&#13;
elections board, but would&#13;
probably not carry the dispute&#13;
any further if that appeal fails.&#13;
SGA replies t o C CC&#13;
The latest Student Government&#13;
meeting held in room 103&#13;
at Greenquist on Monday, April&#13;
10, heard reports on teacher&#13;
evaluation, the literature table&#13;
and the grievance committee,&#13;
and also acted on the Symposium,&#13;
appointed a Committee&#13;
on Admission Policy, and issued&#13;
a statement to the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee.&#13;
SGA approved the following&#13;
statement to the CCC: "The&#13;
CCC should drop any mention of&#13;
qualifications for a candidate to&#13;
hold a student government&#13;
office other than is stated in the&#13;
SGA constitution." This&#13;
statement was issued in&#13;
response to the proposed rules&#13;
and regulations to be included&#13;
in the Student Handbook.&#13;
Elaine Birch moved and Tom&#13;
United Latinos&#13;
Organize&#13;
United Latinos Coalition of&#13;
Parkside, a newly formed&#13;
chapter of the United Latinos&#13;
students of the University&#13;
system of Wisconsin.&#13;
This organization is formed&#13;
for the purpose of creating selfawareness&#13;
among the Latino&#13;
students on the Parkside&#13;
campus, and is seeking to involve&#13;
all Latino students in an&#13;
effort to improve conditions on&#13;
the campus.&#13;
The first gathering of the&#13;
group will occur on Monday,&#13;
April 24, at 7 P.M. at the home&#13;
of Carmen Nute, 1629 South&#13;
Wisconsin St., Racine.&#13;
The faculty representative for&#13;
the organization is Dr. John Van&#13;
Willigin of the Anthropology&#13;
Department.&#13;
Haack seconded a motion to&#13;
grant the budget request for a&#13;
tentative amount of $1,200 to&#13;
come out of fund 128 to finance&#13;
various portions of SYMPOSIUM.&#13;
The motion was&#13;
passed with 14 votes for an 2&#13;
opposed. Tom Haack, Bruce&#13;
Volpintesta, and Jim Twist&#13;
were appointed to the SYMPOSIUM&#13;
committee.&#13;
Mike Lofton reported on the&#13;
progress of the teacher&#13;
evaluation project. A special&#13;
committee was formed to&#13;
decide on the effectiveness of&#13;
implementation of the teacher&#13;
evaluation if instituted before&#13;
the end of the semester. Mike&#13;
Lofton will chair the group&#13;
which includes Jim Bielfeldt,&#13;
Elaine Birch, Ken Konkol,&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta, and Jim&#13;
Symposium To&#13;
Begin Monday&#13;
The tentative schedule for the&#13;
upcoming Symposium sponsored&#13;
by Student Government&#13;
has been released. Dean&#13;
Loumos, President of SGA&#13;
emphasized that "some of the&#13;
speakers may be changed&#13;
because of other committments,"&#13;
but all activities&#13;
will run as scheduled.&#13;
The tentative schedule is as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Twist.&#13;
Concerning the literature&#13;
table in the Activities Building,&#13;
SGA President Dean Loumos&#13;
reported that a telephone will be&#13;
available for student use in&#13;
local calls. Newspapers which&#13;
will be available for sale at the&#13;
table include: The Racine Star,&#13;
The Wisconsin Patriot, The&#13;
Midnight Special and the Black&#13;
Panther paper.&#13;
Elaine Birch was given the&#13;
responsibility of setting up a&#13;
grievance committee with the&#13;
Parkside police. A motion was&#13;
passed to fund the purchase of&#13;
several pencil sharpeners for&#13;
the Greenquist Hall concourse.&#13;
The meeting was attended by&#13;
18 senators and officers, and&#13;
lasted over an hour.&#13;
TUESDAY, APR. 18&#13;
ZPG&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APR. 19&#13;
Penal Institutions 7:00 p.m.,&#13;
Cell Block Circus Players,&#13;
Project Acceptance - John&#13;
Jude Ex-Cons.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 20&#13;
Model Structures for Community&#13;
Organizing. Urgan&#13;
Concern - Fr. Murtaugh.&#13;
Urban League - Morris&#13;
J o h n s o n. S.- Sid e&#13;
Revitalization - Larry Hunt.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APR. 26&#13;
Women's Liberation.&#13;
Women's Caucus&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 27&#13;
Radical Political Organizing.&#13;
Wisconsin Alliance&#13;
Madison. R.Y.M. - People's&#13;
Bookstore. Paul Soglin&#13;
Madison Alderman. Film&#13;
'Community Control'&#13;
TUESDAY, MAY 2&#13;
Living Theatre. Theatre X.&#13;
FRIDAY,MAY5&#13;
'Going Away Party' for&#13;
Racine Campus. Chicago&#13;
Blues Band.&#13;
SATURDAY,MAY 6&#13;
SUNDAY, MAY 7&#13;
Film Festival. Vogue&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
MONDAY, MAY 8&#13;
Black Cultural Day. Julian&#13;
Bond. Tony Courtney, Racine&#13;
Star. Ed Hales, UW-Regent.&#13;
Julian Thomas, NAACP.&#13;
Rocky Taylor, Black&#13;
Revolutionary Poet. Black&#13;
Panther.&#13;
You Deserve A Break Today, In the Name of Alice&#13;
Right After We Clear&#13;
That Forest Away&#13;
(CPS) — A study by Housewives Involved in&#13;
Pollution Solutions (HIPS) disclosed that the&#13;
McDonald s hamburger people have used up three&#13;
billion kilowatt hours and 890 square miles of&#13;
forest just to make the paper cups, bags, wrappers&#13;
napkins, etc., necessary for eight billion&#13;
hamburgers.&#13;
(CPS) — Alice Cooper, rock singer extraordinary,&#13;
has performed a wedding ceremony&#13;
in Atlanta, Georgia, as a preacher.&#13;
He joined in holy and probably illegal&#13;
matrimony Smokey Frisch and Debbie Bost.&#13;
Alice made up the vows as he went along,&#13;
using r Mad magazine instead of a Bible and inS&#13;
f&#13;
oke&#13;
y ana "ebbie wear lampshades&#13;
on their heads.&#13;
The marriage certificate was written on a&#13;
sheet of Holiday Inn stationery. &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE April 17,1972&#13;
PAB Sponsors&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
at the&#13;
MARTIN&#13;
SEYMOURSMITH&#13;
&#13;
Visiting professor&#13;
noted Author &amp; Poet&#13;
1:00 PM April 19&#13;
H We can aid and assist •&#13;
a limited number of&#13;
qualified senior or&#13;
graduate students to&#13;
9ain&#13;
admission&#13;
for the session starting&#13;
fall 1 972 in recognized&#13;
medical&#13;
schools&#13;
overseas&#13;
We offer the following program:&#13;
an intensive 8 week&#13;
orientation and highly concentrated&#13;
technical language instruction.&#13;
(90% of the difficulty&#13;
in attending &amp; r emaining&#13;
in a foreign school is the language&#13;
barrier.) The intensive&#13;
programs are given in the&#13;
country where you will a ttend&#13;
medical school.&#13;
For the qualified students who&#13;
wish to partake of this program,&#13;
admission can be secured&#13;
to a recognized European&#13;
Medical School.&#13;
group&#13;
interviews&#13;
&amp; seminars&#13;
in the follow ing areas&#13;
Call toll tree&#13;
(800) 6,15-12.V,&#13;
lor further information&#13;
and to register&#13;
ATLANTA - Sat , Apr. 22&#13;
Hyatt H ouse, 10:00 a.m.&#13;
See Mr. Ellman&#13;
CHICAGO — Fri., Apr. 21&#13;
Playboy Towers, 10:00 a.m.&#13;
See Mr. Schrager&#13;
COLUMBUS - Thurs., Apr. 20&#13;
Holiday Inn D owntown, 12:00 noon&#13;
See Mr. Schrager&#13;
CORAL GABLES - Sun., Apr. 23&#13;
University Inn , 2:30 p.m .&#13;
See Mr. Ellman&#13;
DALLAS - Sat., Apr. 22&#13;
Hyatt Ho use, 9:00 a.m .&#13;
See Mr. Schrager&#13;
HOUSTON - Sun., Apr. 23&#13;
Sonesta Hous e, 11:00 a. m.&#13;
See Mr. Schrager&#13;
LAS VEGAS — Mon., Apr. 24&#13;
Stardust, 11 :00 a.m .&#13;
See Mr. Levine&#13;
L.A.—ANAHEIM - Sat., Apr. 22&#13;
Hyatt H ouse, Anaheim, 11: 00 a.m.&#13;
See Mr. Levine&#13;
SAN FRANCISCO-Fri., Apr. 21&#13;
Hilton Towers, 11:00 a.m.&#13;
See Mr, Levine&#13;
SAN JUAN, P .R. — Tues., Apr. 25&#13;
Caribe Hilton, 11:30 a.m.&#13;
See Mr. Ellman&#13;
Write for further in formation&#13;
EUROPEAN MEDICAL&#13;
students placement service, inc.&#13;
3 McKinley Avenue,&#13;
Albertson. N.Y. 11507&#13;
There is no charge for application&#13;
form and interview&#13;
bitoRIAL&#13;
Last week we ran a story concerning the death by strangulation&#13;
of the Vogue Theater. It was strangled by Kenosha's "hip" subculture.&#13;
In Kenosha the word "hip" is spelled "hype". Kenosha&#13;
culture obviously suffers from senility, the disease is especially&#13;
prevalent among the young. The city has become a trap for artists,&#13;
writers and musicians, and it's set by the very people who claim to&#13;
support them.&#13;
On the other hand, Parkside is suffering the pains of maturing,&#13;
though at times it seems retarded. UWP in plain fact is unable to&#13;
adequately support a student newspaper. It has aaMAjNicATiac&#13;
department that is unable to interest its students in (student)&#13;
journalism; it has creative writing classes that can't stimulate&#13;
people to write creatively, except perhaps for one of the first four&#13;
letters in the alphabet.&#13;
These faults are admittedly in part caused by Parkside's&#13;
growing pains. Yes, there are going to be errors made, and maybe&#13;
that's good if we learn from them and correct them. To this date&#13;
Parkside's biggest error is in student journalism; the paper is&#13;
floundering due to $3,000 of unpaid accounts receivable; it is running&#13;
aground because only five people work with any consistency to put&#13;
an issue out each week; it is slowly sinking because the campus&#13;
community refuses to realize that a student newspaper is in the interests&#13;
of all members of the University.&#13;
We II put NEWSCOPE out til the end of the semester because&#13;
we're all crazy. But after that, NEWSCOPE will not have a single&#13;
trained layout man, not one person with managerial experience,&#13;
possibly two writers with experience and maybe one photographer.&#13;
And these people, if they stay with NEWSCOPE if it remains in the&#13;
same incredibly frustrating position it is now, they're crazier than I&#13;
am.&#13;
NEWSCOPE needs immediately a meaningful and productive&#13;
liaison with the journalism classes; it needs more people willing to&#13;
work for the paper.&#13;
Parkside students will deserve whatever they get, and that will&#13;
probably be nothing for a long time.&#13;
Presently, Parkside is a baby dinosaur, lumbering for a few&#13;
steps in the right direction and then falling flat on its ass, wallowing&#13;
for a while as it thinks to itself that it is already a real University. But&#13;
Parkside is still a baby dinosaur with a hard skin and myopia, and&#13;
I'm just a crazy editor who knows a dinosaur when he sees one. It's&#13;
just that a real University, a real student body, would never let its&#13;
student newspaper wither without a fight.&#13;
* * * * *&#13;
This is an editorial concerning an editorial. For the opinions&#13;
expressed above, I could be again criticized for "tearing down the&#13;
University". How can you tear down something that hasn't been built&#13;
yet; how can I really put down students when students haven't found&#13;
out who or what they are; how can I tear down an administration&#13;
that, for all practical purposes, exists in another dimension concerning&#13;
the overwhelming problems now faced" by NEWSCOPE?&#13;
Criticism is easy and NEWSCOPE has admittedly taken the easy&#13;
way out, simply for that reason. But those are rare instances; the&#13;
editorial above is critical because them's da facks. We would sincerely&#13;
like to report the "good news" that emanates from the&#13;
campus community, but with a writing staff of three or four regular&#13;
reporters, who must double on features, layout, advertising and&#13;
management, we just can't possibly cover the many good things that&#13;
happen, for the simple reason we lack the personnel.&#13;
So, NEWSCOPE asks any club or organization which desires&#13;
publicity for its activities, to please send press releases directly to&#13;
us. We take this measure reluctantly because ideally, all events&#13;
should be covered by regular staff reporters. But we can't, it's as&#13;
simple as that. So no more complaints on that ground; we've given&#13;
you the facts as they stand, and the responsibility is yours to tell us&#13;
what's happening with your organization. It's a student newspaper&#13;
so use it.&#13;
Beginning this week organizations may submit press releases to&#13;
The Electric Last Minute, a new feature — public service presented&#13;
by NEWSCOPE for the benefit of the campus community.&#13;
Rise to face UN other day&#13;
OA/ tht LAK£&#13;
SPORTS QAR&#13;
: H W Y 3 Z&#13;
M L A Y P O O L - P O O S B A L L&#13;
B AR - S A A / O u / / C H £ S&#13;
' package c&gt;oot&gt;s . .&#13;
(we l come NEW AJOULTS'O '&#13;
. S A A / 6 S — S / ) A / £ ) S J P A / f i S ..&#13;
Y e s fri e n d s , NEWSCOPE is a g ain p u b l i s h i ng a&#13;
pho to e d iti o n a n d is a s k i ng a l l y o u ph o tob u g s o u t&#13;
ther e to s u b m it your h a n d i w o r k. P h oto gra p h s w h i c h&#13;
are a c c e pte d for p u b l ica tio n w i l l be jud g e d on com p&#13;
o s iti o n , a nd a p t n e s s of tho ugh t. D e a d l i n e is T h ur&#13;
s d a y , A p ril 2 7 . D o not m i s s i t ; y o u m a y win a v o m i t b a g .&#13;
America Moving&#13;
to Canada&#13;
OTTAWA (CPS) - The&#13;
United States was the largest&#13;
source of Canadian immigrants&#13;
last year, the Canadian Bureau&#13;
of Manpower and Immigration&#13;
reported March 30.&#13;
The agency said that for the&#13;
first time the United States was&#13;
the major source country in&#13;
1971, contributing 24,366 persons&#13;
or 20 per cent of the total immigration&#13;
movement.&#13;
While U.S. immigrants to&#13;
Canada remained the same in&#13;
1971 as in 1970, total Canadian&#13;
immigration declined 18 per&#13;
cent to 121,900 persons. "The&#13;
decline in immigration in 1971&#13;
"reflects reduced employment&#13;
opportunities in Canada&#13;
because of economic conditions,"&#13;
Manpower and Immigration&#13;
Minister Bryce&#13;
Mackasey said.&#13;
"strong economic conditions&#13;
in most of western Europe," he&#13;
continued, "were also a factor&#13;
in reducing emigration from&#13;
that area."&#13;
The flow of immigrants from&#13;
Britain decline 41 per cent from&#13;
1970 to 1971. By contrast, immigrants&#13;
from the U.S. totaled&#13;
24,424 in 1970, only 58 more than&#13;
the following year.&#13;
Lack of decline in the U.S.&#13;
figure is probably attributable&#13;
to draft evasion and the bleak&#13;
economic and employment&#13;
picture.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
Enand&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
MONDAY, APR. 17&#13;
Concert. UW-P music&#13;
students will present at&#13;
concert at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room. Free.&#13;
TUESDAY, APR. 18&#13;
Film. Feature film&#13;
"Metropolis" will be&#13;
presented by the Parkside&#13;
Film Society at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Room 103 Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Adm. 50c.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APR. 19&#13;
Earth Day Program. Sen.&#13;
Gaylord Nelson will report on&#13;
"An Inventory of&#13;
vironmental Concerns&#13;
conduct a question and an&#13;
swer session at 7:30 p.m&#13;
Greenquist Hall. Free.&#13;
Sponsored by Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Poetry Reading. Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum will sponsor a&#13;
poetry reading by Martin&#13;
Seymour-Smith, visiting&#13;
professor of English, at 1&#13;
p.m. in the Greenquist&#13;
Whiteskellar. Free.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 20&#13;
2001 Lec ture. Ar thur Clarke,&#13;
inventor of the communications&#13;
satellite and&#13;
author of "2001: A Space&#13;
Odyssey", will lecture on&#13;
"Life in t he Year 2001" at 8&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Free. Sponsored by the&#13;
Lecture and Fine&#13;
Committee.&#13;
SATURDAY, APR. 22&#13;
Concert. Drummer Buddy&#13;
Rich and his Big Band will&#13;
present a concert at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Bradford Auditorium,&#13;
Kenosha. Sponsored by the&#13;
Student Activities Office.&#13;
Reserved seats S3.50 and&#13;
$2.50; UW-P students $3 and&#13;
$2. Tickets available at the&#13;
SA Office, Bidinger's in&#13;
Kenosha and Cook-Gere and&#13;
J8.J Tape Center in Racine.&#13;
SUNDAY, APR. 23&#13;
Concert. UW-P Band and&#13;
Orchestra will p resent a free&#13;
public concert at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Greenquist Concourse.&#13;
Road Rally. Ragtime&#13;
Rangers Ski Club will&#13;
sponsor the second annual&#13;
Jimmy Clark Memorial Road&#13;
Rally with registration at&#13;
noon and the first car leaving&#13;
from the Tallent Hall lot at 1&#13;
p.m. Entrance fee of $5&#13;
covers driver and navigator.&#13;
Party follows the race.&#13;
Marc Eisen, Jim Koloen, John&#13;
Koloen, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Brian Ross, Steve&#13;
Mazzarelli, Kathy Rasch, Wolfgang&#13;
Salewski, Cleta Skovronski, Mike&#13;
Kite, Mike Stevesand, "Red"&#13;
Widely, Roscoe Humus, Sifton&#13;
Winnow, Andrew Schmelling.&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Arts&#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 source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout The&#13;
Kenosha .and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road. &#13;
Can t Blaspheme the Prexy&#13;
April 17,1972 NEIVSCOPE Page 3&#13;
(CPS) — The Fresno, California, city council&#13;
has voted to restore $200 to a high school paper&#13;
which printed an article so critical of President&#13;
Nixon that a local Republican leader referred to it&#13;
as blasphemous." But a local councilman who&#13;
defended the paper, looked up the word&#13;
"blasphemous" in the dictionary and discovered&#13;
the definition meant "indignities toward God or&#13;
King." The councilman said he wondered under&#13;
which classification the President fell.&#13;
Teacher Evaluation b y Students&#13;
From Princeton, New Jersey&#13;
— A new program that allows&#13;
students to evaluate the performance&#13;
of their teachers has&#13;
been developed by Educational&#13;
Testing Service (ETS).&#13;
Besides allowing students a&#13;
chance to express their views&#13;
anonymously about courses and&#13;
teachers, it also gives instructors&#13;
an objective way to&#13;
monitor their own performance&#13;
and progress.&#13;
Called the Student Instructional&#13;
Report (SIR), the&#13;
program is an effort to improve&#13;
instruction based on responses&#13;
to an ETS-designed questionnaire&#13;
supplied to students by the&#13;
colleges themselves.&#13;
The questionnaire was&#13;
developed by ETS researchers&#13;
with the aid of college faculty&#13;
members and students. It is&#13;
composed of questions about&#13;
specific teaching practices and&#13;
more general topics including&#13;
such queries as:&#13;
— Did the instructor encourage&#13;
students to think for&#13;
themselves?&#13;
— Were the course objectives&#13;
made clear?&#13;
— W ere students informed of&#13;
how they would be evaluated?&#13;
The ETS questionnaire also&#13;
includes questions about a&#13;
Talky to be Shown&#13;
"Metropolis," a 1927 fi lm by&#13;
the German director Fritz&#13;
Lang, will be presented by the&#13;
Parkside Film Society on&#13;
Tuesday, April 18, at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Room 103 Greenquist Hall at&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wood Road campus.&#13;
The showing is open to the&#13;
public. There is a small admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
One of the most famous expressionistic&#13;
films in the early&#13;
"talky" period, "Metropolis"&#13;
deals with the struggle between&#13;
management and labor in a city&#13;
of the future. The New York&#13;
Times said, "Nothing like&#13;
METROPOLIS .a.a. a film that&#13;
has created wide international&#13;
comment, has been seen on the&#13;
screen ... a remarkable&#13;
achievement. It is a technical&#13;
marvel . . ."&#13;
Free Public Concert&#13;
Music students of The&#13;
University of WisconsinPar&#13;
kside will present a free&#13;
public concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Monday, April 17, in the&#13;
Kenosha campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room.&#13;
Vocal soloists will be Judith&#13;
Bandor, soprano, Kenosha;&#13;
Beatrice Jacobson, Waterford,&#13;
soprano; and Joseph Gauchel,&#13;
tenor, Racine.&#13;
Instrumental soloists will be&#13;
Jill Reich, piano, Racine; Letha&#13;
Wood, piano, Marshfield;&#13;
Arline Dahlquist, violin,&#13;
Racine; Kathy Devine, piano,&#13;
Kenosha; Philip Ince, cello,&#13;
Racine; and Joyce Richards,&#13;
piano, Racine.&#13;
Accompanists will be pianists&#13;
Mary Gauchel, Racine; Rita&#13;
Melius, West Bend; Miss Wood;&#13;
and Frances Bedford and Frank&#13;
Mueller of the music faculty;&#13;
and guitarist Kurt Harff.&#13;
Academic Plan Session&#13;
During the week of April 24th&#13;
it would do you well to attend&#13;
one of the academic planning&#13;
sessions in your major or intended&#13;
major.&#13;
Each of the one-hour sessions&#13;
is designed to give you information&#13;
on University and&#13;
major requirements, to allow&#13;
you to meet informally with&#13;
major professors and the&#13;
counseling staff, and to help you&#13;
plan your academic schedule&#13;
for Summer and Fall.&#13;
All of the sessions will be held&#13;
in Greenquist Hall. A student&#13;
wide mailing listing the majors&#13;
by day-time-room will be&#13;
delivered the week of April 17.&#13;
If there are any problems or&#13;
questions concerning these&#13;
sessions, please feel free to&#13;
contact the Student Counseling&#13;
Office, 553-2121, extension K42,&#13;
room 135 Kenosha Campus, or&#13;
Information Center, 553-2345.&#13;
student's reasons for taking the&#13;
course and the grade he expects&#13;
to receive.&#13;
More information about SIR&#13;
may be obtained by contacting:&#13;
Institu tio nal R e s e a r ch&#13;
Program for Higher Education,&#13;
Educational Testing Service,&#13;
Princeton, New Jersey 08540.&#13;
THE&#13;
UPSTAIRS&#13;
"Highest bar „&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
• •• , ,&#13;
Weds. *7-/o Swn./-6&#13;
/2 02. BOTTLE R&#13;
+ HIGHBALLS&#13;
L / v e A l u s i c —&#13;
IT Fri. ± 5gt,&#13;
ACROSS FROM T#E&#13;
AWE THEATER&#13;
BUDDY&#13;
RICH&#13;
and his big band&#13;
Sat. April 22, 8 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Bradford Auditorium&#13;
Reserve Seat Tickets&#13;
General Admission $2.50 &amp; $3.50&#13;
Parkside Students $2.00 — $3.00&#13;
Available at: student Act. Office&#13;
One Student Ticket&#13;
Per Parkside I.D.&#13;
PIZZA II&#13;
ustom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 fo Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
jtom sttfrp&#13;
'JAMMER&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER S»cci«J&#13;
^TENDERLOIN STEM O&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Strving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S CABIN ROOM&#13;
FOR PRIVATE PARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH Q UA LITY AT&#13;
R EA SO NA BLE P RI CE S , T HE WIND ­&#13;
JAMMER DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— H E RB ERT KUBLY&#13;
"WON DERFUL FOOD'&#13;
SENATOR P RO XMIRF &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE April 17,1972&#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
THE UPSTAIRS&#13;
Recently, On the Nod has&#13;
been accused of presenting&#13;
"phony sophistication" to the&#13;
impressionable readers of&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Such false and&#13;
malicious accusation struck&#13;
Nod to the quick; hurry, tell me&#13;
where I went wrong, he pleaded&#13;
to his part-time shrink and&#13;
bartender. He cried in his beer&#13;
all that day, muttering I've&#13;
been struck to my quick; is&#13;
there a doctor in the house he&#13;
asked plaintively. He was&#13;
growing paranoid anxious when&#13;
the printout suddenly appeared&#13;
across his frontal lobes; if&#13;
music can soothe the savage&#13;
beast, music can soothe the&#13;
struck quick.&#13;
It was Upstairs at the Upstairs,&#13;
that Nod was to find the&#13;
audiobalm and wetsalve. The&#13;
"highest bar in Kenosha",&#13;
located above the Pussycat&#13;
Lounge across from the Lake&#13;
Theatre, afforded the tonedeaf&#13;
Nod with a rare, drunkard's&#13;
dream juke. The juke's juke,&#13;
located in a kind of alcove at one&#13;
end of the tavern featured the&#13;
classic works of the Doors, the&#13;
Dylans, the Stones and Beatles&#13;
to name a few. At present, it&#13;
may be Kenosha's finest juke.&#13;
The Upstairs is a compact,&#13;
dimly lit young peoples' bar&#13;
whose accoutrements include a&#13;
shocking thick carpeted floor, a&#13;
padded bench lining one wail,&#13;
tables and chairs, and a small&#13;
bar that seemed to roll every&#13;
time Nod put his elbow down.&#13;
Any time Nod believes that a&#13;
bar is rolling from under him,&#13;
he tends to get a bit flustered;&#13;
he thinks to himself that it must&#13;
be an earthquake, and being a&#13;
consume ever i» ,&#13;
quantities ot spirit&#13;
believes is true becaus t it&#13;
when Nod drops a n..f/&#13;
bar&#13;
f rest' ^ ^ discovers the* bar rests on wheels, then he&#13;
decides that drinking makes&#13;
one a good wheel.&#13;
hJJiir065 are un^&#13;
rm; I !n and miX(&#13;
* ^&#13;
inks&#13;
cost 50 cents, and on Wednesday&#13;
between 7:30 and 10:30 go for a&#13;
mere 35 cents. The uniformity&#13;
of prices takes much of the&#13;
complexity out of the already&#13;
ove r-c o m plic ate d c o n ­&#13;
temporary drunk.&#13;
J! th® tables which lined the&#13;
thJL Patr&#13;
°&#13;
ns 0ccupied&#13;
themselves with gin, both&#13;
FriH*&#13;
m9 h f? Playin9 if&#13;
-&#13;
0n&#13;
Friday and Saturday live music&#13;
s presented at which, at least&#13;
last weekend, a passel of anchor&#13;
clankers from Great Lakes and&#13;
the regular longhair customers&#13;
observed each other's behavior&#13;
from opposite sides of the bar.&#13;
Ray, the young bartender and&#13;
proprietor of the Upstairs,&#13;
supplied Nod with serviceable&#13;
gin and tonics, enough of which&#13;
were consumed by night's end&#13;
to purify Nod's hurt quick; the&#13;
next morning it would be&#13;
something else that would give&#13;
him pain. The clientele of the&#13;
Upstairs is composed of hippies&#13;
and others who equivocate the&#13;
word high, with an influx of&#13;
sailors on weekends. Weekdays&#13;
did not seem conducive to&#13;
crowds, though weekends do&#13;
present somewhat of a space&#13;
problem at the bar.&#13;
Nod, who had to query his&#13;
friends as to what kind of night&#13;
he had while reviewing the&#13;
Upstairs, floated out at closing&#13;
on a tide of gin, bellyup and&#13;
performing an inverted breast&#13;
stroke to the amazement of ail&#13;
his critics.&#13;
The Upstairs presents a&#13;
righteous deal for young&#13;
drinkers, especially on Wednesday&#13;
evenings, and the juke,&#13;
well, you can just sit and listen&#13;
to it for hours, walking hand in&#13;
glass down memory lane, and&#13;
still not hear enough.&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
TITLE: THE JOB&#13;
AUTHOR: William S. Burroughs and Daniel&#13;
Odier&#13;
PUBLISHER: Grove Press Inc. ($5.95 hardcover)&#13;
&#13;
Wild Bill Burroughs, author of Naked Lunch,&#13;
hipster pioneer of the fold-up cut-up technique of&#13;
writing, former fifteen year junkie, world&#13;
traveler, and intimate peregrine of the Beats, is&#13;
the subject of this 188 p age "inlerview". In The&#13;
Job, Dan Odier is listed as the in+erviewer, though&#13;
the author's foreword, and fh fact the entire&#13;
composition of the book is Burroughs', which&#13;
makes one wonder what Odier has to do with it.&#13;
Actually, it seems he has very little to do With it,&#13;
and the terse questions he asks for the most part&#13;
do not measure up to Burroughs' lengthy answers&#13;
and explanations.&#13;
Not just a leatherchair interviewee,&#13;
Burroughs has interjected selected passages from&#13;
his fiction and quotes from outside sources into the&#13;
text to aid in delineating his responses. Unfortunately,&#13;
Burroughs did not edit his interviews&#13;
very well, there is a marked tendency toward&#13;
sloppy redundancy throughout the text: identical&#13;
phrases continually pop up, and particular&#13;
passages from his fiction occur in more than one&#13;
place.&#13;
The main topics upon which Burroughs&#13;
speculates are education, drugs, Scientology and&#13;
concepts of nation and family. He explains quite&#13;
logically that the concepts of nation and family&#13;
should be abolished since they are most responsible&#13;
for war and the decadance of Western&#13;
society. He explains that the nation is an&#13;
outgrowth of the family, and that in today's world,&#13;
a child is forced to develop the same neuroses as&#13;
his parent, thus crippling him before he could even&#13;
walk. His suggested alternative to the vamily is&#13;
fog vague, relying on the institution of&#13;
"academies" for the education of children.&#13;
Burroughs explains the theory behind his cutup&#13;
and fold-up technique of writing and its application&#13;
with tape recorders to "break down the&#13;
barriers of consciousness and enlarge the field of&#13;
preception." He explains, somewhat less than&#13;
lucidly, that by taping sounds and words and then&#13;
cutting them up and splicing them together in&#13;
different orders, one can break the "old&#13;
associational blocks" which people develop&#13;
toward words. This, he says, expands ones consciousness,&#13;
it places words in new and different&#13;
contexts, it breaks down the emotional content of&#13;
various words. New words will appear from the&#13;
spliced sections of tape, words which weren't even&#13;
recorded; you can control the past, he states.&#13;
What he means by controlling the past is again too&#13;
vague; to control time by tape recorder is a bit&#13;
fatuous.&#13;
In other sections of the book, Burroughs&#13;
examines the relationship between language and&#13;
awareness. He explains that Western iang'uages&#13;
are responsible for many of the faults of Western&#13;
society. The aristotelian either-or statement is a&#13;
fundamental mistake; Burroughs points out that&#13;
this statement has lead the Western thinker into&#13;
viewing the world in a false light, it gave rise to&#13;
concepts of absolutes which have hindered more&#13;
than helped the advancement of Western man.&#13;
Ideally, he would construct a hieroglyphic&#13;
language which would give a more complete&#13;
control of oneself to oneself. He explains that a&#13;
given statement can be presented in a number of&#13;
ways in English, but would make sense in only one&#13;
way in glyph. This is so, he says, because the&#13;
statement in glyph is locked in time, it requires a&#13;
particular order of pictures to make sense,&#13;
whereas in English many juxtapositions of words&#13;
are possible to present the same statement. Increased&#13;
awareness would result through*&#13;
hieroglyphs because a definite order and time is&#13;
inherent in a nieroglyphic statement. He uses the&#13;
prosaic example of getting dressed. Normally&#13;
when you get dressed you simultaneously do other&#13;
things, you are preoccupied with future events&#13;
when you're dressing. This is exemplified in&#13;
language, which also expresses more than one&#13;
thought in a statement. If one learned to think in&#13;
glypf, one would concentrate his entire awareness&#13;
on the action at hand; you would get dressed and&#13;
nothing more until you're completely dressed. Not&#13;
bothered by thoughts directed toward the future, a&#13;
person can do things properly, could get dressed&#13;
properly for example, and thus enjoy whatever he&#13;
does because he is doing it properly.&#13;
At times I got the impression that Burroughs&#13;
was suffering from paranoia; he blamed the&#13;
media for creating bad situations by publicizing&#13;
them, his crusading attitude toward Scientology&#13;
and his reaction to its alleged official suppression&#13;
by the U.S. government did not seem quite&#13;
believable. Many of his explanations were far&#13;
from lucid, when he resorted to his cut-up, fold-up&#13;
technique to illustrate examples it became&#13;
mountain climbing difficult to follow him. But, I&#13;
don't think its is raving paranoia that characterizes&#13;
his ideas, it's more like a mad originality.&#13;
As confusing as some of his explanations are, one&#13;
can glean the gist of what he's saying, and much of&#13;
it makes sense, in fact there's a certain deja-vu&#13;
phenomenon involved insome of his concepts; the&#13;
tape recorder concept is one. The whole idea of&#13;
destroying associational blocks by not employing&#13;
conventional contexts is what happens when you&#13;
first get stoned and everybody laughes at&#13;
everything; Firesign Theatre also employs it, so&#13;
do the absurdists.&#13;
So there are far-fetched and paranoidal views&#13;
expressed in this book, and there are strikingly&#13;
reasonable ones also. The Job provokes thinkinq-f&#13;
on the reader's part and that's enough to justify&#13;
reading it; it is also a William Burroughs book and&#13;
that, too, justifies it.&#13;
b f&#13;
MICHAEL'S BAR&#13;
AND RESTAURANT&#13;
2500 - 52nd St&#13;
by Paul Lomartireof the Newscope staff&#13;
"Listen Mike," a man wearing a London Fog&#13;
raincoat was saying, "I called for a table over an&#13;
hour ago. My wife and I get here and there's&#13;
nothin'." He motioned toward a wall lined with a&#13;
half dozen or so tables.&#13;
Mike Witkauskis, the owner of the combination&#13;
bar and restaurant was wiping his hands&#13;
with the bottom of a white bartenders apron. He&#13;
really had not time to listen to the man's long&#13;
winded complaint. It was Friday night and his&#13;
place was jammed.&#13;
"Now Mike, you know we're regulars. Why&#13;
isn't there a table for us?" asked the man, not&#13;
bothering for an answer. "We'll be back about&#13;
eight, Mike, now make sure there's a table for us."&#13;
A waitress excused herself as she cut between&#13;
London Fog and the proprietor. Someone from&#13;
across the room was calling Mike. The waitress&#13;
placed two plates on a table. Mike nodded his head&#13;
at the man and his wife, then broke away toward&#13;
the voice calling him. The couple, forced to&#13;
postpone their dinner, were already out the back&#13;
door. It was a little after six p.m. at Michael's Bar&#13;
and Restaurant.&#13;
Two couples sitting in the bar were talking&#13;
loudly about the evening ahead of them. One, a&#13;
woman with cotton candy white hair, suggested&#13;
that the quartet go to the movies. A man sitting&#13;
opposite her shook his head. He wanted to go to a&#13;
local cabaret. The waitress interrupted them as&#13;
she began to clear the table. Before removing any&#13;
dirty dishes, she placed a small plastic "reserved"&#13;
sign on top of the napkin dispenser.&#13;
Sitting at a table under an oil painting of a&#13;
carnival scene, a long haired kid was struggling to&#13;
get a quarter out of his tight pants pocket. With the&#13;
coin pinched between his thumb and forefinger, he&#13;
wormed his way to the silent jukebox. He glanced&#13;
a few feet to the right and left of the machine and&#13;
saw the giant chrome speakers. With two hands&#13;
holding his weight on the music machine, he read&#13;
the type-written slips of paper naming the artists.&#13;
Jane Morgan, Artie Shaw, Neil Young, Eddy&#13;
Arnold, Count Basie, Pete Fountain, the Carpenters,&#13;
Perry Como, the Mills Brothers, Donny&#13;
Osmond, Bing Crosby, T-Rex, and so on. He&#13;
dropped the quarter into the device, beginning his&#13;
three selections with "I Wish I Were Single Aqain"&#13;
by L'l Wally.&#13;
Mike was now behind the bar taking reservations&#13;
over the phone, which he wrote on a piece&#13;
of paper pinched on a clipboard. He was struggling&#13;
to hear the correct spelling of a name. A big man&#13;
wearing a red, white and blue vinyl windbreaker&#13;
with "Javelin" spelled across his heart was&#13;
waiting for Mike to get off the phone. The man had&#13;
an American Motors paycheck in his hand, and a&#13;
family waiting to eat.&#13;
Like other small taverns that surround*&#13;
American Motors, Michael's goes beyond being a&#13;
place,where food and drink are served. Checks are&#13;
cashed for the regulars, baseball teams are&#13;
sponsored, bowling teams, maybe a party at one&#13;
time or another.&#13;
It is a neighborhood affair really. Mike&#13;
inherited the business from his father, whose&#13;
picture hangs in the dining room. There have been&#13;
more than a few generations of Kenosha families&#13;
who have had a beer and dinner on this corner&#13;
over the years The place is a tribute to the best&#13;
form of advertising known this side of Madison&#13;
Avenue; word of mouth.&#13;
The menu is different everyday. While Friday&#13;
is traditionally fish night, one can count on excellent&#13;
home made meals sprinkled throughout&#13;
the week.&#13;
Baked ham, pork hocks and sauerkraut, chop&#13;
suey, scalloped potatoes with ham bits, hot beef&#13;
sandwiches, hamburgers, pork chop sandwiches&#13;
on Italian bread, beef stew, etc. Besides these&#13;
featured items, there is home made soup daily,&#13;
thirty cents a bowl. Prices for the dinners rarely&#13;
go over a dollar seventy-five, for workingman's&#13;
proportions.&#13;
The atmosphere is comfortable, nothing&#13;
strained, especially in the bar area where there&#13;
are only about a half dozen tables. The dining&#13;
room is a bit crowded with tables, but it is&#13;
warranted because of Friday nights.&#13;
Throughout the establishment there are&#13;
several paintings done by Mike, very fine pain&#13;
tings that add a novel touch. There is one done in&#13;
pastels of Kennedy Drive, a picture of Pershing&#13;
Plaza which has the effect of seeing it through a&#13;
sheet of water, and others, a couple of men&#13;
standing in front of an old store, a building in&#13;
Florida. The stained knotty pine walls and the&#13;
paintings are friendly to the eyes.&#13;
I found the best time to appreciate the food&#13;
and atmosphere at Michael's is during the&#13;
weekend, on a Saturday night.&#13;
The color television is usually on, maybe just a&#13;
hockey game with no sound. There are only a&#13;
handful of people in the bar, sipping beers, talking&#13;
with the bartender.&#13;
This is the best time to drop a quarter into the&#13;
jukebox, find a favorite and sit down to enjoy a&#13;
home cooked meal with a beer, over in Mike's&#13;
neighborhood. &#13;
April 17,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
SYMPOSIUM 1972&#13;
m&#13;
presented by&#13;
U.W.P. Student Government Association&#13;
MONDAY, 24 APRIL — Penal Institutions&#13;
Cell Block Circus Players&#13;
Project Acceptance — John Jude, Supervisor&#13;
TUESDAY APRIL — Model Structures for Community , 25&#13;
Organizing&#13;
Urban Concern — Fr. J ohn Murtaugh&#13;
Urban League — Morris Johnson&#13;
S-Side Revitalization — Representative&#13;
WEDNESDAY, 26 APRIL&#13;
Women's Caucus&#13;
Women's Liberation&#13;
THURSDAY, 27 APRIL — Radical Political Organizing&#13;
Wisconsin Alliance — Political Party, Madison&#13;
R.Y.M. — People's Bookstore, Racine&#13;
Paul Soglin — Madison City Councilman&#13;
TUESDAY, 2 MAY — Living Theatre&#13;
THEATRE X — Milwaukee&#13;
WEDNESDAY, 3 MAY — Panel Discussion&#13;
Should Private Sex Between Consenting Adults be Legalized? —&#13;
Pre-Law Club&#13;
FRIDAY, 5 MAY — 'Going Away Party'&#13;
For Racine Campus — Blues Band&#13;
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY, 6 &amp; 7 MAY — Film Festival&#13;
At site of old Vogue Theatre&#13;
MONDAY, 8 MAY — Black Cultural Day&#13;
Black Student Union&#13;
Julian Bond — Lecture &amp; Fine Arts&#13;
Tony Courtney — Racine Star&#13;
Ed Hales — UW Regent&#13;
Julian Thomas — NAACP&#13;
Rocky Taylor — Black Revolutionary Poet&#13;
Little Greg and the Concepts&#13;
*&#13;
tentative&#13;
The purpose of Symposium '72 is to provide Parkside students and&#13;
the surrounding communities with alternative educational&#13;
opportunities not available in most existing institutions. The&#13;
Symposium will try to deal with the term 'educational&#13;
relevance' with a number of non-conventional and provacative&#13;
speakers and groups ranging from a Blues Band to a member of&#13;
the Revolutionary Youth Movement. We will be utilizing almost&#13;
all forms of media featuring THEATRE X, an innovative&#13;
theatre group from Milwaukee, and a 24-hour film festival. If&#13;
you would like any information please call our office — 553-2244.&#13;
jjv!&#13;
M&#13;
V.V.&#13;
**$:&#13;
M&#13;
i &#13;
Pagett NEWSCOPE April 17,1972&#13;
Ragtime "Rangers Ski Club&#13;
Presents&#13;
2nd Annual&#13;
Jimmy Clark Road Rally&#13;
Sun April 23&#13;
Entrance Fee $5.00&#13;
(covers driver &amp; navigator&#13;
Registration 12 noon&#13;
Back Lot - Tallent Hall&#13;
1st car out - 1 :00 PM&#13;
Trophies + Special Faculty Awards&#13;
Party After - Food and Beer&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
1&#13;
, lh f,ROUND BF.FF&#13;
ON FRF.NCH CRUST&#13;
BRFAD DRFSSFD&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
l.FTTUCF AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
('•RILLED COUNTRYHAM&#13;
A CHHFSF. ON&#13;
WHOLE WHF.AT BUN&#13;
WITH l.FTTUCF&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OF BURC.ER CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE: TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISE ON TOAST 9Qc&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
M ^ - ~i~n-irin 11 • »&#13;
0?'&#13;
^ A&#13;
A ?&gt;&#13;
*Vy&gt;&#13;
&amp; J?&#13;
A*&#13;
iROotos,&#13;
Boms,&#13;
„ JACKETS,&#13;
SWCATSRS, L&#13;
SHIRTS H SHJ&#13;
Sue f or Right t o H onor H itler&#13;
(CPS) — The Arlington, Virginia, school&#13;
board is being sued by the ACLU there on behalf of&#13;
the National Socialist White Peoples Party for&#13;
denying the Nazis use of a school auditorium to&#13;
celebrate Hitler's birthday. At a recent federal&#13;
court hearing, the lawyers of the NSWPP conceded&#13;
the school board has a duty to protect school&#13;
property but contended, "The NSWPP is not a&#13;
violent party and doesn't enage in violence." The&#13;
school board has customarily permitted private&#13;
organizations to use school facilities, and the&#13;
ACLU contends the refusal in this instance is a&#13;
discriminatory denial of First Amendment rights.&#13;
Consumer League to hold Assembly&#13;
The Wisconsin Consumers&#13;
League announced that Mr. Leo&#13;
Perlis, National Director of&#13;
AFL-CIO Community Service&#13;
Activities, will keynote the&#13;
Wisconsin Consumer Assembly&#13;
72 to be held Saturday, May 6,&#13;
on the University of WisconsinMilwaukee&#13;
campus. The public&#13;
is invited to attend.&#13;
The day-long meeting will be&#13;
held in the Fireside Lounge of&#13;
the Student Union on the&#13;
Milwaukee campus. Displays&#13;
and educational materials from&#13;
government agencies, business&#13;
organizations and consumer&#13;
interest groups will be situated&#13;
throughout the area for the&#13;
benefit of participants.&#13;
Registration is $5.00 which&#13;
includes the luncheon, and $1.00&#13;
for the program only. For&#13;
registration or additional information,&#13;
contact John Udick,&#13;
Program Chairman, Wisconsin&#13;
Consumer Assembly '71, at&#13;
10025 West Greenfield Avenue,&#13;
Milwaukee, 53214, or call 1-414-&#13;
778-2227.&#13;
WISPIRG Praised by State Rep.&#13;
state Representative Harout&#13;
O. Sanasarian (D-Milwaukee-4)&#13;
applauded the birth of the&#13;
Wisconsin Public Interest&#13;
Research Group (WISPIRG). A&#13;
student-run and student-funded&#13;
organization which would&#13;
provide needed research on&#13;
problems that are posed before&#13;
the general public in such areas&#13;
as the consumer prices, and&#13;
environment, or anything else&#13;
CORNBREAD&#13;
one-third cup shortening&#13;
three-fourths cup sugar&#13;
2 eggs&#13;
1 cup milk&#13;
2 cups flour&#13;
3 teaspoons baking powder&#13;
one-half teaspoon salt&#13;
three-fourths cup yellow cornmeal&#13;
1. Place shortening, sugar and eggs in a bowl and&#13;
beat thoroughly until smooth.&#13;
2. Add the milk, then the flour sifted with the&#13;
baking powder and salt.&#13;
3. Add the cornmeal and beat until smooth.&#13;
4. Place in a greased shallow pan and bake in a&#13;
moderately hot oven (400 to 425 degrees) for 25&#13;
minutes or until done.&#13;
5. Serve hot with butter.&#13;
Cleta Skovronski&#13;
that is deemed in need of&#13;
studying. The research would&#13;
be conducted in a scholarly&#13;
fashion, with policy being taken&#13;
by the WISPIRG board only&#13;
after all the data has been&#13;
subjected to careful scrutiny.&#13;
Sanasarian noted that in&#13;
addition to providing sorely&#13;
needed research for public&#13;
interest causes, the group&#13;
provides a very much needed&#13;
educational experience for&#13;
those involved, not only in&#13;
specific reserach projects, but&#13;
in administering and coordinating&#13;
the program, both on&#13;
the state and local levels.&#13;
The Milwaukee lawmaker&#13;
urged the Board of Regents to&#13;
give life to WISPIRG by approving&#13;
a funding mechanism&#13;
at its May 7 meeting, thus encouraging&#13;
students to get a real&#13;
education and also help the&#13;
state.&#13;
Marriage Preparation&#13;
Catholic Student Center&#13;
beginning Sunday,&#13;
April 23 at 7:30 PM&#13;
pre-registration phone 552-8626&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE —1946 Fo'rd,6cyl.-2door&#13;
in good cond. Call after 6 at 654-6485.&#13;
for this $450 value.&#13;
FOR SALE — '62 Comet, 6 cyl. $125.&#13;
Call 652-5904 or 654-3429.&#13;
RIFLE - Winchester model 88 - .243&#13;
Win. with 4x Weaver Scope. Excellent&#13;
condition. $110 firm. ph. 654-&#13;
7964.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 VW, sunroof, good&#13;
cond. $1,145. Call 632-9669 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Spiffy 1963 MG Midget SPORTSCAR,&#13;
needs body work, truly THE&#13;
car of the future and yours for the&#13;
ridiculously low price of $150 c ash,&#13;
contact Jim at 553-2496 or at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
SK11"!!&#13;
0 ' Writers&#13;
' journalists,&#13;
production staff and ad men to take&#13;
over a college newspaper. Must be&#13;
housebroken, learn while you earn&#13;
2T f&#13;
9"' Ph" 553 2496 or 553-&#13;
2498. Ask for anybody or come in&#13;
person to the Newscope office,&#13;
corner of Wood Rd. and Hwy. A.&#13;
HOUSEWORK HELPER - early&#13;
June for about a week, pay open. Ph.&#13;
034-8517.&#13;
FOR SALE - Reel to reel tape deck,&#13;
Allied TD-1095 with sound on sound&#13;
+ sound with sound, price $90.00.&#13;
Phone 552-8733 after 6:30 p.m.&#13;
fcOR SALE - Panasonic stereo&#13;
model 1519 Am-Fm, BSR turntable,&#13;
2 2-way speakers, best offer. Call Joe&#13;
after 6:00, 654-2945.&#13;
Athletic Event Results - Call Information&#13;
Center, ext. 2345 the&#13;
morning after. We will have the&#13;
word.&#13;
WANTED — a student volunteer to&#13;
be big brother to 11 year old cerebral&#13;
palsied boy. Call Wendy at 553-2121,&#13;
ext. 42.&#13;
Pterodactyl ancient flying reptile,&#13;
full size replica Rhamphorhynchus&#13;
$150 - ph. 658-3833 in the evening.&#13;
Daucshunds AKC registered, born&#13;
Feb. 6, lightweights, 2 females $65&#13;
each. ph. 652-4513 after 4:30.&#13;
MUSICIANS (bass, electric piano,&#13;
percussion) wanted to start from&#13;
scratch to create new soft rock&#13;
sound. Must be able to read and-or&#13;
inproviseon chords; must have own&#13;
equipment, contact Gary 633-0875 or&#13;
Fred at P-side Village apt.&#13;
Clean sleeping room for man, 6100 -&#13;
24th Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
WANTED - STAMPS — Collections,&#13;
Accumulations, Mint or Used, On&#13;
Cover or off, First Day covers or&#13;
what ever! U.S. or Foreign. Phone&#13;
694-3398. Ask for Jim or leave&#13;
messate at Newscope office.&#13;
WANTED — People who would like&#13;
to help other people. Free training.&#13;
Contact Joe Baker, director Racine&#13;
Hotline, 637-1112. Mon.-Wed.-Fri.&#13;
1:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.&#13;
WATCHES |&#13;
Rolex - Accutron&#13;
Ultrachron . Longine&#13;
Bulova - Movado&#13;
Caravel le - Time*&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
Finest -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT~"]&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
'-Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
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rimufooag&amp;ru&#13;
1*0/ rsi Ji ?oe*&#13;
make 3 difference where you shop!&#13;
Q/o Discount to (tudpntc an d smoents and Faculty wit h |. D&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Reed 6 Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefort&#13;
Seneca - Lalique&#13;
Boyal Worcester &#13;
Merritt works toward Decothalon&#13;
April 17, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Keith Merritt might be&#13;
something akin to those major&#13;
league baseball players who&#13;
have played all nine positions in&#13;
a single game.&#13;
But Merritt, a sophomore at&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
finds his action on'the&#13;
track — in at least three or four&#13;
events in each meet.&#13;
It's an iron man stunt which&#13;
few athletes can match in this&#13;
era of specialization, but more&#13;
than that, it shows Merritt's&#13;
tremendous versatility, a trait&#13;
that Coach Bob Lawson&#13;
welcomes on a squad that is&#13;
long on talent but short on&#13;
depth.&#13;
The Tremper grad may have&#13;
found his niche this outdoor&#13;
season, though that niche includes&#13;
just about every event on&#13;
the track slate.&#13;
"He competes in everything&#13;
from the marathon through&#13;
cross country and the hurdles to&#13;
the triple jump and the pole&#13;
vault," Lawson pointed out.&#13;
"He just amazes me."&#13;
For Merritt, it's all in the&#13;
course of a day's work at a&#13;
track meet. He showed the&#13;
crowd at the Arkansas Tech&#13;
Relays just what one man can&#13;
do when he scored 15 of UWParkside's&#13;
30 p oints.&#13;
On the track, he cracked the&#13;
UW-P record over the 440-yard&#13;
intermediate hurdle route,&#13;
clocking 56.2 for a big win over a&#13;
rugged field which had seen&#13;
much more outdoor action than&#13;
any of the Rangers, who were&#13;
getting their first taste of&#13;
outdoor competition on the trek&#13;
south.&#13;
Merritt also triple jumped 44-&#13;
5% to take top honors in that&#13;
event and then followed up with&#13;
a third in the pole vault.&#13;
More amazingly, all three&#13;
events were run at about the&#13;
same time and the lean&#13;
sophomore had to rush from one&#13;
to the other to compete.&#13;
"He's really an up and&#13;
coming athlete," Lawson said.&#13;
"I think he's one of the best allaround&#13;
men in the state. He's a&#13;
local athlete who's built his&#13;
reputation up throughout the&#13;
state by working hard and being&#13;
dedicated.&#13;
"Keith doesn't have the great&#13;
strength or speed but he has a&#13;
good attitude and he wants to&#13;
compete."&#13;
More correctly, however,&#13;
Merritt might be well suited for&#13;
a single event rather than the&#13;
many he competes in weekly.&#13;
It's the decathlon, which officially&#13;
is a single event, but in&#13;
reality is a two-day ten-event&#13;
grind that can wilt the best of&#13;
men.&#13;
=&#13;
£=y=t&#13;
,&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
But it's never wilted Merritt&#13;
f&#13;
S.&#13;
e&#13;
,&#13;
V e&#13;
"5&#13;
ed ^ his 5,658 point&#13;
total m the event, a Parkside&#13;
varsity record. He'll compete in&#13;
the decathlon at least twice this&#13;
season, with the April 22&#13;
ofu,uSf&#13;
e Invitati&#13;
°nal and May&#13;
20 Whitewater Open Meet offering&#13;
it.&#13;
And for that, he's got one of&#13;
the best teachers in the business&#13;
m Lawson, who rated fourth in&#13;
w&#13;
i&#13;
orld the late '50s and&#13;
may have found in Merritt, the&#13;
decathlete he's been looking for.&#13;
The events are geared for&#13;
Dewitt m akes&#13;
Merritt, with the first-day&#13;
decathlon slate including the 100&#13;
meters, long jump, shot put,&#13;
high jump and 400 meeters and&#13;
the second-day counting the 110&#13;
meter hurdles, the discus, pole&#13;
vault, javelin and 1500 meters.&#13;
For a cross country runner&#13;
who's run marathons and high&#13;
jumped and triple jumped and&#13;
vaulted and sprinted and run&#13;
400 meter hurdles, that combination&#13;
shouldn't be all that&#13;
bad.&#13;
As Lawson said, "What else&#13;
can a kid do?"&#13;
For The Record&#13;
1 11 I I I \ I K | || | \ v; £ | \ M i &lt; |&#13;
~• Dou ntou n Kenosha&#13;
Mike DeWitt, UW-Parkside&#13;
senior and long distance walker&#13;
who's rapidly becoming one of&#13;
the best around, has a trip to&#13;
Eugene, Ore., on his agenda for&#13;
mid-summer.&#13;
DeWitt clocked 1 hr., 39 min.,&#13;
for a 20 kilometer walk Sunday&#13;
at a Riis Park (Chicago) meet&#13;
and made the Olympic trial&#13;
standard of 1 hr., 45 m in.&#13;
DeWitt, who became&#13;
Parkside's first track allOlympic&#13;
T ria Is&#13;
American in January when he&#13;
placed third in the National&#13;
Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA) indoor&#13;
championships in the two mile&#13;
walk, has been walking steadily&#13;
both indoors and out in recent&#13;
weeks and has collected his&#13;
share of first place honors.&#13;
He recently won the 29th&#13;
annual AAU walk in Milwaukee&#13;
on a meet record 7:07 for the&#13;
one mile distance.&#13;
ZJhe VJlL eyS—uJu„pPpeer r CLl&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
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Sheridan Lanes&#13;
O N S O U TH S H E R I D A N RO A D I N K E N O S H A 6 5 4 - 0411&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Setuuuj. the, Qineit&#13;
Pify+ &amp; Otalian tyoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 654-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
BREAKFAST 6:A.M. TO II: A.M.&#13;
If.ijj- Our /]/eu, TnsiJe C arpeted&#13;
ICCtl&#13;
A&amp;W RESTAURANT&#13;
30th ave. and Roosevelt Road&#13;
i * KihosU&#13;
Open:&#13;
Mon. thru Thurs. — 6 A.M. -11 P.M.^&#13;
Friday — 6 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Saturday — 9 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
*^"^1 Sunday — 9 A.M. to 11 P .M.&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
V2 Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
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PENNZOIL&#13;
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AFSCON.O. 10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
SI .39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry FYlceson Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 F»er Cent Sale s Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE &#13;
page8 NEWSCOPE April 17, 1972&#13;
TVifi Ufcft o rf SomcHiin^ HEW -BU&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Guidance Association to meet at UWP&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
About 200 guidance counselors&#13;
and student personnel&#13;
staff members from&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin schools&#13;
are expected for a day-long&#13;
workshop on group counseling&#13;
on Thursday, April 20, at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
The workshop is&#13;
jointly sponsored by Parkside&#13;
and the Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
Personnel and Guidance&#13;
Association (SEWPGA).&#13;
Workshop sessions will be&#13;
conducted by Merle M. Ohlsen,&#13;
Holmstedt Distinguished&#13;
Professor of Guidance and&#13;
Psychological Services at Indiana&#13;
State University and&#13;
immediate past president of the&#13;
American Personnel and&#13;
9(amnfo.&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
In Concert&#13;
Carthage Field house&#13;
Friday April 21&#13;
8:00 PM&#13;
$2.00 at door&#13;
sponsored by&#13;
Carthage Freshman&#13;
Class&#13;
Guidance Association.&#13;
Dr. Ohlsen will conduct a&#13;
morning session for elementary&#13;
school counselors and educators&#13;
and an afternoon session for&#13;
counselors in junior and senior&#13;
high schools and in education.&#13;
The workshops will deal with&#13;
when to use group counseling,&#13;
differences between group&#13;
counseling and group guidance&#13;
and techniques of successful&#13;
group counseling.&#13;
Dr. Ohlsen is the author of&#13;
eight books on education including&#13;
a 1970 v olume, "Group&#13;
Counseling." Before beginning&#13;
his teaching career at the&#13;
university level, he taught in&#13;
elementary and high schools&#13;
and was a guidance chairman&#13;
and high school principal.&#13;
He received his B.E. degree&#13;
at Winona (Minn.) State&#13;
College, his A.M. from the&#13;
University of Illinois and his&#13;
Ph.D from the University of&#13;
Iowa. Before accepting his&#13;
present post, he taught at&#13;
Washington State University.&#13;
The afternoon workshop will&#13;
be followed by a business&#13;
meeting of the SEWPGA and a&#13;
dinner at Maplecrest Country&#13;
Club.&#13;
Prisoners and the&#13;
Press&#13;
(CPS) — A group of journalists&#13;
and a* group of federal&#13;
prison inmates, represented by&#13;
the ACLU Foundation, have&#13;
filed a federal lawsuit&#13;
challenging the U.S. Justice&#13;
D e p a rtm e n t's policy&#13;
prohibiting press interviews of&#13;
federal prison inmates.&#13;
The journalists cite the&#13;
freedom of p ress guarantee and&#13;
the public's right to know; the&#13;
prisoners cite their right of free&#13;
expression.&#13;
IN MEMORY OF&#13;
RICHARD P 5ART0&#13;
PASSIM6 HIS 35TH BIRTH PAY&#13;
The Business Office,&#13;
U-W Parkside&#13;
U . 'll he c l o s e d Fri d a y , A p ril «?Ls +&#13;
FROM to w.in dm&#13;
Hamm's 6 pack&#13;
Vodka full quart&#13;
Gin full quart&#13;
Aristocrat B randy full quart&#13;
Southern C omfort fifth&#13;
Would your club or organization&#13;
like a&#13;
Wine Tasting&#13;
Contact Fred Cook, 637-4101,&#13;
MWMMIMMWINMWyiWW'l&#13;
'Where the fun starts before the party begins."&#13;
P r i c e s g o od t h r o u g h S u n d a y , A p ril 2 3 rd&#13;
IN RACINE AT WESTGATE ON HIGHWAY 20, WASHINGTON AVENUE AND OHIO STREET&#13;
DAILY 9 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY • SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
</text>
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                <text>English</text>
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            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
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              <elementText elementTextId="63753">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63754">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>CSC calls for a&#13;
STRIKE The Concerned Students&#13;
Coalition, a loosely knit student&#13;
organization, has called for a&#13;
strike to end the war. As&#13;
NEWSCOPE goes to press plans&#13;
call for a strike to begin at the&#13;
Student Activities Building on&#13;
Monday, April 24, at 10:00 A.M.&#13;
A representative of CSC&#13;
informed NEWSCOPE that&#13;
students are asked to boycott&#13;
classes beyond Monday, in&#13;
order to participate in the strike&#13;
activities.&#13;
No concrete plans had yet&#13;
been laid for actions beyond the&#13;
Monday strike, however&#13;
NEWSCOPE was informed by&#13;
CSC members that "students&#13;
should stay away from classes&#13;
for the week." The CSC has&#13;
expressed the hope that&#13;
members from other area&#13;
colleges and technical schools&#13;
will also participate in&#13;
Monday's strike. The call for a&#13;
strike at UWP is seen as a sign&#13;
of support for other campuses&#13;
around the country who have&#13;
initiated student strikes and&#13;
demonstrations prior to the&#13;
National Peace Action&#13;
Coalition's mass marches in&#13;
New York City and Los Angeles&#13;
held on April 22.&#13;
Activities on other campuses&#13;
thus far have resulted in several&#13;
clashes with police, though the&#13;
extent of the campus unrest is&#13;
unlikely to reach the mammoth&#13;
proportions which followed the&#13;
1970 incursion into Cambodia.&#13;
That strike resulted in the&#13;
closing or major disruption of&#13;
normal activities on over 500&#13;
campuses throughout the U.S.&#13;
Concrete plans for more&#13;
c a m p u s a n t i - w a r&#13;
demonstrations were expected&#13;
to be made on Monday.&#13;
Mr* 1.1.1.1.1.&#13;
NOTE&#13;
The Electric Last Minute is a new feature. Any Parkside club,&#13;
organization, or group wishing to place a new item in this column is&#13;
asked to present the typed copy to Paul Lomartire in care of the&#13;
Newscope Offices before 4 p.m. on each Thursday for the following&#13;
Tuesday edition.&#13;
WOMEN TO DISCUSS DAY CARE&#13;
Parkside's Woman's Caucus is sponsoring a question-answer&#13;
session about the Day Care Center on Wednesday, April 26th, at&#13;
4:30 p.m. at the Parkside Baptist Church.&#13;
Eileen Hansen will be the guest speaker. The church is located&#13;
on Highway E just east of Wood Road.&#13;
ZERO POPULATION TO DISCUSS EARTH WEEK&#13;
Parkside's Zero Population Growth will hold a meeting on&#13;
Thursday, April 27th, at 3:00 p.m. in Room 141 at the Kenosha&#13;
Campus. The discussion will encompass ZPG Earth Week activities&#13;
and the planning of projects for the rest of the semester. All&#13;
interested individuals are invited to attend.&#13;
AUDITIONS&#13;
Parkside's Activities Board will be holding auditions for the&#13;
Whiteskellar. Parkside students wishing to audition for the coffeehouse&#13;
should contact Kim Rudat in Room 217 in Tallent Hall.&#13;
POT PEOPLE TO PLAN OFFENSIVE&#13;
As part of the grassroots movement to leaglize pot, the&#13;
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML),&#13;
is holding a heady conference in the countryside, a stone's&#13;
throw from Washington, D.C., to plan strategy for the 1972-73&#13;
campus pot offensive. The week-end conference, planned for early&#13;
August, is free to all interested persons, with food and music&#13;
provided.&#13;
(Note: Paul Lomartire had nothing to do with those "pot&#13;
puns", that's the way they sent it. P.L.)&#13;
On Thursday, April 27th at 7:00 p.m., and on Tuesday, May 2nd&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. at Parkside Village, Building 2, apartment 202, you will&#13;
have the chance to experience, in possibly a new way, what interpersonal&#13;
communication can be about.&#13;
The group will be intentionally limited in size for the sake of&#13;
cohesiveness; therefore, if you are interested, make early contact&#13;
with Steve Bangert or Wendy Musich, Room 135, extension K42.&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside free&#13;
Volume 6 Number 15 April 24, 1972&#13;
SYMPOSIUM 1972&#13;
"Symposium 1972," a 10-day&#13;
series of programs on&#13;
contemporary issues sponsored&#13;
by the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (SGA), will begin&#13;
Monday evening, April 24, at the&#13;
UW-P campus.&#13;
The symposium will open&#13;
Monday night with a program&#13;
on penal institutions and&#13;
conclude Monday, May 8, with&#13;
programs geared around Black&#13;
Culture Day including a talk by&#13;
Julian Bond.&#13;
In between, programs will&#13;
consider urban concerns,&#13;
w o m e n ' s l i b e r a t i o n ,&#13;
contemporary theater, political&#13;
organizing, and a 24-hour film&#13;
festival. Featured attractions&#13;
will include Theatre X and&#13;
Racine's Cell Block Circus&#13;
Players.&#13;
All programs except the film&#13;
festival are free to the public&#13;
according to SGA president&#13;
Dean Loumos.&#13;
The opening program on&#13;
penal reform will feature the&#13;
Cell Block Circus Players, who&#13;
have toured Wisconsin&#13;
correctional institutions and&#13;
some in New York presenting&#13;
satirical reviews whose penal&#13;
reform message is delivered&#13;
through laughter. The Players&#13;
will then join John Jude of&#13;
Racine's Project Acceptance, a&#13;
program of ex-convict&#13;
rehabilitation, in a panel&#13;
discussion. The evening&#13;
program will begin at 7:30 in&#13;
the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Whiteskellar.&#13;
On Tuesday, April 25, at the&#13;
same time and place, a panel&#13;
discussion on "Model&#13;
Structures for Community&#13;
Organizing" will feature the&#13;
Rev. John Murtaugh, head of&#13;
Racine's Office of Urban&#13;
Concerns, and representatives&#13;
of Racine's Urban League and&#13;
Southside Revitalization Corp.&#13;
Women's programs will&#13;
occupy the Greenquist Hall&#13;
during the day and evening of&#13;
Wednesday, April 26, beginning&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. with panel&#13;
discussions on women's health&#13;
by members of the Women's&#13;
Health Collective in Madison in&#13;
room 111 and women and the&#13;
church by UW-P faculty&#13;
member Carole Vopat, Sister&#13;
Cathy Gibbon of the UW-P&#13;
Campus Ministry and others in&#13;
room D-123. Alternative Life&#13;
Styles will be discussed by the&#13;
Madison Women's Collective at&#13;
11:30 in room 108, and tapes of&#13;
speeches by Gloria Steinem,&#13;
Susan Davis and Arvonne&#13;
Eraser will be heard and&#13;
discussed at noon in room 108.&#13;
In the afternoon, Racine&#13;
attorney Elisheva Schwartz will&#13;
discuss Women and Legal&#13;
Issues at 1:30 in D-103; UW-P&#13;
students will present play&#13;
readings of Claire Booth Luce's&#13;
"Doll's House 1970" and Sylvia&#13;
Plath's "Three Women" at 3:30&#13;
in the Whiteskellar; UW-P&#13;
students and staff, a Racine&#13;
nurse, and a member of the&#13;
Madison Abortion Committee&#13;
will discuss Abortion — Pro and&#13;
Con at 3:30 in D-123; and a tour&#13;
and description of the privatelyoperated&#13;
Parkside Day Care&#13;
Center will be given at 4:30 at&#13;
the center on Hy. E.&#13;
Poems "by, for and about&#13;
women" read by Parkside&#13;
students and staff will conclude&#13;
Wednesday's programs at 7:30&#13;
in the Whiteskellar.&#13;
The first week's activities will&#13;
(Continued on Page 4)&#13;
Senator Nelson addresses 400&#13;
The Issue is Ecology&#13;
by Mike Kite&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
"So in my judgement the&#13;
most important thing that has&#13;
happened in the history of the&#13;
environment is that the issue&#13;
has become, in the past three&#13;
years, part of the political&#13;
dialogue in the country."&#13;
The above spoken by one of&#13;
the men who were responsible&#13;
for making ecology an isrsue,&#13;
Senator Gaylord Nelson (D.&#13;
Wis.). The senator, who&#13;
originated Earth Day in 1970,&#13;
spoke to nearly 400 people&#13;
Wednesday evening at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Senator Nelson expressed&#13;
satisfaction at the growing&#13;
concern for our environment.&#13;
"It is interesting to note that in&#13;
1968 while campaigning for the&#13;
Presidency none of the&#13;
candidates gave a single speech&#13;
on the environment. How did it&#13;
get to be an issue in lVz years?&#13;
Because President Nixon had&#13;
heard and felt the rumblings of&#13;
his constituents. Legislatively,&#13;
things are moving faster than&#13;
ever before."&#13;
"The object of Earth Day was&#13;
not to educate the public&#13;
because I felt they were already&#13;
concerned. My real concern&#13;
was to inform the public&#13;
officials that this is an issue of&#13;
political importance."&#13;
After complementing the&#13;
independent ecology groups,&#13;
Sen. Nelson stressed the need&#13;
for coordinating the individual&#13;
efforts by national and&#13;
international organization. He&#13;
went on to say that the first&#13;
international ecological&#13;
conference to be held in&#13;
Stockholm, Sweden, was&#13;
scheduled for June. Sen.&#13;
Nelson, an alternate delegate to&#13;
the convention, said, "what will&#13;
come of the conference nobody&#13;
can predict, but it is good that&#13;
we are finally getting together&#13;
to discuss the problem."&#13;
One of the most successful&#13;
ecological organizations in the&#13;
U.S., The Environmental&#13;
Defense Fund (EDF), received&#13;
the senator's praise. Two of&#13;
their greatest victories were&#13;
stopping construction of the&#13;
Florida Barge Canal, and the&#13;
banning of DT in Wisconsin.&#13;
A subject of which few people&#13;
are aware, the ecological&#13;
destruction of South Vietnam,&#13;
was then approached by the&#13;
Senator. He explained that 10&#13;
per cent of South Vietnam's&#13;
agricultural land had been&#13;
destroyed, and that 25 per cent&#13;
of the population had been left&#13;
homeless, thanks to the&#13;
advanced methods of warfare&#13;
used by the U.S. Army. "South&#13;
Vietnam would be better off&#13;
losing to North Vietnam, than&#13;
winning with us." Sen. Nelson&#13;
recently introduced a bill in&#13;
Congress which calls for a full&#13;
scale study of the&#13;
environmental damage to&#13;
Vietnam.&#13;
(Continued on Page 4)&#13;
Senator Nelson speaking at Parkside&#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE April 24,1972 LETTERS&#13;
Some notes on a new feature; some clarifications on old rumors.&#13;
Recently NEWSCOPE initiated a new feature, the Electric&#13;
Last Minute. It's a column devoted strictly to campus events; the&#13;
information contained in it is forwarded to us by the people who&#13;
desire publicity for their organization. We don't go out and get the&#13;
information ourselves because we don't have the personnel.&#13;
Two reasons for the Electric Minute: l) because NEWSCOPE&#13;
is a STUDENT newspaper, and therefore has the obligation to print&#13;
campus events and highlights. 2) because we must prove to the&#13;
University that NEWSCOPE is capable of printing all their press&#13;
releases.&#13;
Presently, Student Activities is subsidizing a pamphlet called&#13;
Parkside Today. It is composed of two paid staff members; printing&#13;
costs are paid by the University. We feel that the funds funneled&#13;
into Parkside Today could be put to better use in&#13;
NEWSCOPE. We don't like the idea of being recognizee University&#13;
newspaper only to discover the University is publishing its own&#13;
official newsletter.&#13;
Such a condition leads to redundancy. Both papers print the&#13;
same news releases, at least now we are, so what's the sense of&#13;
continuing Today? NEWSCOPE desperately needs staff writers&#13;
and reporters, it also desperately needs money. Now that it is our&#13;
policy to print all campus events, etc., we ask Student Activities to&#13;
please re-evaluate the status of Parkside Today. We could use the&#13;
new staffers, and we could use whatever money goes into printing&#13;
Today. We're answering our critics, now it's time they answered&#13;
us.&#13;
Old rumors: 1) No one on NEWSCOPE is paid, absolutely no&#13;
one and absolutely nothing. 2) We are not subsidized by tax dollars&#13;
in any way; we received $2,000 through SGA from fund 128 (composed&#13;
of student fees) to write off some bad debts, but that is all.&#13;
• * •&#13;
This week NEWSCOPE is featuring an interview with Kim&#13;
Rudat, President of the Activities Board. It's an engaging interview&#13;
in which the reporter brings out many significant points&#13;
concerning PAB.&#13;
The interview points out the successful activities the PAB has&#13;
produced in the past year: the concerts, the Whiteskellar, the&#13;
Nickelodeon. But it also surfaces a few glaring faults inherent to&#13;
the structure of the PAB.&#13;
Perhaps, the biggest structural deficiency concerns student&#13;
input. No polls are taken to discover student preferences in entertainment.&#13;
This, as was explained, is partly due to student&#13;
apathy, a disease with which every organization on campus is&#13;
painfully familiar.&#13;
Since PAB's funds are allocated from fund 128 (student fees) it&#13;
would seem that a more concerted effort could be made to discover&#13;
how the student would like to see his money used.&#13;
This also raises an interesting question: Why must a student&#13;
pay twice to attend an event. NEWSCOPE was told that the PAB&#13;
uses student fees to finance its ventures. This seems to be at least a&#13;
little incongruous, though there can be good, financial reasons for&#13;
it. Perhaps ticket prices are lowered for this reason. And if PAB is&#13;
financed through student fees alone, their unequivocable purpose&#13;
should therefore be to provide entertainment for the students who&#13;
are paying for it.&#13;
Apathy at Parkside is growing faster than the campus iteslf,&#13;
everyone knows this, so it is only reasonable that alternative&#13;
methods be utilized in conducting polls, perhaps elections also. One&#13;
possibility could be the implementation of a poll at registration&#13;
time. Perhaps the PAB could draw up a list of groups which in their&#13;
collective opinion, would represent student preferences: Put any&#13;
group or troupe of performers on the list which in their opinion&#13;
would interest studegts enough to attend the performance; allow a&#13;
student to write in his own preferences if not included on the list.&#13;
But do this at registration time, include an initial list of performers,&#13;
leave space for write-ins, and place it in the registration&#13;
packet. Perhaps many people will not bother to fill in the form, but&#13;
it seems reasonable that a large number will. Certainly, PAB is&#13;
interested in student input, indeed they must be since they use&#13;
student fees taken from student tuition. Certainly, this fact will&#13;
have an affect on student input.&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
critical of&#13;
godfather'&#13;
Dear Sirs,&#13;
I had always figured in all my&#13;
prudity that sexual intercourse&#13;
between two human beings was&#13;
a very beautiful, rather sacred&#13;
act and that it had the respect of&#13;
the majority of persons . . .&#13;
enough so that its privacy would&#13;
be kept somewhat intact. But I&#13;
am behind times it seems. I so&#13;
concluded after watching "The&#13;
Godfather" the other night.&#13;
As one of the ladies in "The&#13;
Godfather" was being bred by&#13;
one of the bad guys, the thought&#13;
crossed my mind that the&#13;
producer of the film was&#13;
something of a parallel to a&#13;
farmer breeding his stock. The&#13;
end result, of c ourse, was not a&#13;
batch of piglets, just&#13;
entertainment. So there we sat,&#13;
me and the fans, and we&#13;
watched the lady being bred&#13;
with even less than the&#13;
detachment of a crowd&#13;
watching a baseball game. At&#13;
least the. baseball fans care&#13;
enough to cheer.&#13;
My problem must be that I&#13;
don't take the time to see&#13;
enough movies and am&#13;
therefore unjustifiably shocked&#13;
at actions and filthy language&#13;
that are evidently now a days&#13;
socially acceptable. I am told&#13;
that sex is in all flicks now but to&#13;
a lesser degree in the "G"&#13;
pictures. Perhaps I ought to&#13;
work up to those films rated&#13;
"R" by starting with one a little&#13;
less racy, nice "G" rated stuff&#13;
like "Love Story". There, I am&#13;
told, in the primary love scene&#13;
the guy who we observe rolling&#13;
in the hay is a nice boy, his&#13;
partner being a nice girl. And&#13;
since they are both nice kids,'&#13;
watching them do their thing is&#13;
infinitely more tasteful. Yes,&#13;
that must be the way to work&#13;
up.&#13;
But darn it, as much as I&#13;
would like to be associated with&#13;
the socially enlightened folks by&#13;
learning to dig that stuff, I just&#13;
don't think I can. I am past the&#13;
point of no return. To me sex is&#13;
more than a mere biological&#13;
function and my mind is&#13;
absolutely set in the belief that&#13;
the sex act is beautiful and&#13;
sacred. Its casual public display&#13;
in such movies as "The&#13;
Godfather" (and movies like&#13;
"Love Story" for that matter&#13;
which was apparently an&#13;
otherwise very beautiful movie)&#13;
might be socially acceptable&#13;
but stripping the sex act of its&#13;
privacy and diminishing it by&#13;
doing so is both pitiable and&#13;
distressing. Why people wish to&#13;
propagate the distruction of six&#13;
by the eradication of its privacy&#13;
is a concept most difficult to&#13;
grasp.&#13;
But "The Godfather" was&#13;
objectionable on more than just&#13;
the bastardization of sex.&#13;
Equally objectionable was the&#13;
violence which constituted&#13;
another of the primary focal&#13;
points of the movie. What is&#13;
extremely difficult to&#13;
understand is the fact that the&#13;
American public can be so&#13;
vehemently opposed to the war&#13;
iin Viet Nam on the grounds of&#13;
its inhumanity only to turn&#13;
around and pack the theaters to&#13;
enjoy a display of unparagoned&#13;
sadistic cruelty.&#13;
The public cries for peace but&#13;
action does indeed speak louder&#13;
than mere words. The swelling&#13;
box office sales of "The&#13;
Godfather" points to the&#13;
unparalleled hypocracy of the&#13;
members of our society, both&#13;
young and old alike. Peace be&#13;
with you, one and all.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Robert Flood&#13;
P.S. This letter was written in&#13;
crude style so as not to wander&#13;
too dreadfully far from the&#13;
spirit of Newscope, but thanks&#13;
for the opportunity for a low cut.&#13;
My bluntness makes me wonder&#13;
if yo u'll publish this thing, but I&#13;
suppose you will if y ou are at all&#13;
fair.&#13;
dean shows no&#13;
respect&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Undoubtedly some of you&#13;
have had enough antiadministration&#13;
— pro-student&#13;
literature to last a lifetime.&#13;
Others may agree that there&#13;
hasn't been really enough.&#13;
My name is Tom Ford and I&#13;
consider myself somewhere in&#13;
the middle. I am in no way part&#13;
of Dick Nixon's silent majority&#13;
and on the other hand I have no&#13;
desire to be a Parkside student&#13;
leader. While not leading in the&#13;
Parkside struggle for student&#13;
rights I have decided to support&#13;
the battle. I have made up my&#13;
mind to participate physically&#13;
instead of just vocally over a&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APR. 26&#13;
Recital: Student joint recital&#13;
featuring Fred Hermes, bassoon,&#13;
and Joyce Richards, piano, will be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist.Hall. Free.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 27&#13;
Films: Nickelodeon program&#13;
featuring Laurel and Hardy films&#13;
will be held at noon in the Greenquist&#13;
Whiteskellar sponsored by the&#13;
Student Activities Office. Adm. 5&#13;
cents.&#13;
Concert: The UW-P Chamber&#13;
Singers will present a free public&#13;
concert at 8 p.m. in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
SGA Meeting: SGA panel&#13;
discussion, Greenquist 101, 7:00 - 10&#13;
p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY, APR. 28&#13;
Archeology Lecture: Northwestern&#13;
University Archeologist Stuart&#13;
Struever will lecture at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Room 101 Greenquist Hall on his&#13;
excavations at the southern Illinois&#13;
Koster Indian site. Free. Sponsored&#13;
by the Social Science Division.&#13;
Poetry Reading: Parkside Poetry&#13;
Forum will sponsor a reading by&#13;
Allen Cave of Racine at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Greenquist Whiteskellar. Free.&#13;
Film: Feature film "Charley" will&#13;
be seen under sponsorship of the&#13;
Student Activities Office at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Activities Building. Adm. 75&#13;
cents. UW-P and Wis. ID required.&#13;
Coloquium: Colloquium for&#13;
students-faculty. Greenquist 101,&#13;
2:30-4:00 p.m.&#13;
SATURDAY, APR. 29&#13;
Casino Party: Philanthropists Club&#13;
will sponsor a Casino Party with live&#13;
entertainment from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.&#13;
in the Student Activities Building&#13;
Adm. chg. UW-P and Wis. ID&#13;
required.&#13;
Kenosha Alumni Founders Day: UW&#13;
Alumni Club of Kenosha will hold its&#13;
annual Founders Day dinner&#13;
beginning at 6 p .m. at the Kenosha&#13;
Union Club. Speaker will be Sen.&#13;
William Proxmire. Tickets are $6 50&#13;
per person and are available on&#13;
campus from Steve Stephens, Rita&#13;
Tallent and Charles Kugel.&#13;
SUNDAY, APR. 30&#13;
Artists Series Concert: Pianist&#13;
Carmen Vila, UW-P artist-inresidence,&#13;
will present the season's&#13;
final University Artists Series&#13;
Concert at 4 p.m. in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Gen. adm. $1, students 50 cents!&#13;
children 12 and under free.&#13;
Poetry Reading: UW-P student&#13;
poets will present a reading at 2 p m&#13;
at the Kenosha Public Museum&#13;
THE END&#13;
MAY 20,21&#13;
tenth glass of beer.&#13;
About a month and a half ago&#13;
I was part of a group of&#13;
concerned students attempting&#13;
to persuade Asst. Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn (student services) to&#13;
set up a group which would&#13;
make suggestions to him before&#13;
he made decisions affecting the&#13;
student body. After a few&#13;
rounds of discussion Mr.&#13;
Dearborn presented the&#13;
following plan:&#13;
A board (name to be decided&#13;
upon) was to be set up&#13;
consisting of a pproximately ten&#13;
people. Seven were to be&#13;
students representing as wide a&#13;
variety of the Parkside&#13;
population as possible. The&#13;
others were to be chosen from&#13;
the faculty and university&#13;
workers. I was tb be one of the&#13;
students. The first meeting was&#13;
to take place before Easter&#13;
vacation. I was not contacted&#13;
before Easter vacation or as of&#13;
now, the Newscope deadline,&#13;
two weeks after the break. I&#13;
take this as both a personal&#13;
offense and a "Social" offense.&#13;
Personally because it shows a&#13;
lack of respect for me and&#13;
socially because it shows a lack&#13;
of respect for the student body&#13;
of which I am a part.&#13;
For those of you who agree, I&#13;
urge you to make an&#13;
appointment with Mr. Dearborn&#13;
to ask him for an explanation.&#13;
For those who disagree or&#13;
distrust me, I urge you to also&#13;
make an appointment with Mr.&#13;
Dearborn and ask for a reply to&#13;
what I have said.&#13;
Thanks,&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
gruhl puts down&#13;
sga pres.&#13;
,n-scope&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In the April 10th issue of your&#13;
paper you printed an interview&#13;
with the President of Parkside's&#13;
S t u d e n t G o v e r n m e n t&#13;
Association and one of his&#13;
Senators — 94 column inches.&#13;
Wow! . . . That's more space&#13;
than you give to the entire&#13;
Faculty in a semester of&#13;
NEWSCOPE.&#13;
There are several things in&#13;
that lengthy interview which&#13;
call for some candid comment,&#13;
to wit:&#13;
1. The President of SGA let us&#13;
UWIOOfl&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Jim Koloen, Paul Lomartire, Brian&#13;
Ross, Mike Kite, Mike Stevesand,&#13;
Tom Paradise, Cleta Skovronski,&#13;
Wolfgang Salewski, Kathy Rasch,&#13;
"Red" Widely, Roscoe Humus,&#13;
Sifton Winnow, /&amp;.&gt; X. Sasion,&#13;
Rombert Freebag, Bruce Badley.&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside puolished&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole Source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 c opies are printed'&#13;
and distributed throughout Ihe&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road.&#13;
TO THE EDITOR April 24/ 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
know that he is carrying "only&#13;
one credit".&#13;
Well ... I think it's fair to&#13;
ask . . . What is that young&#13;
man's "mission" at Parkside?&#13;
• To get an education? By&#13;
taking one credit a semester?&#13;
Nuts! With such zeal and glacial&#13;
speed he will be older on his&#13;
graduation day than I will be on&#13;
mine . . . and I'm already over&#13;
thirty. Now I know that there is&#13;
more to becoming educated&#13;
than just the academics but if&#13;
the major extra-curricular&#13;
activity of a one-credit student&#13;
is to see how much discontent he&#13;
can generate around the&#13;
campus, then he is just&#13;
dissipating his own energy and&#13;
wasting the time of a lot of&#13;
people. The last thing any&#13;
student body needs is that kind&#13;
of distractive "help".&#13;
A one-credit guy with a lot to&#13;
say reminds me of a fellow with&#13;
one share of stock trying to tell&#13;
American Motors how to build&#13;
cars. He also reminds me of the&#13;
fellow who went to Mayo Clinic&#13;
with a sprained ankle and&#13;
proceeded to tell them how to&#13;
run the institution. (They gave&#13;
him castor oil.)&#13;
2. The Senator in the&#13;
interview is quoted as saying,&#13;
"The Administration told us to&#13;
shut up or they'd use things&#13;
from the files that they have on&#13;
us . . . At that point we cut off&#13;
communications with them."&#13;
So, I think it's reasonable to&#13;
ask . . . Now what on earth&#13;
would they possibly have in the&#13;
files that would cause outspoken&#13;
fellows like you to pull in&#13;
your horns? . . . especially&#13;
when the President of SGA says&#13;
in the interview, "We do&#13;
everything in the open,&#13;
everything is above board."&#13;
3. Another quote from the&#13;
President's remarks. . ."They&#13;
got a guy over there who's a&#13;
booking agent . . . Now what&#13;
the hell. . . They won't even let&#13;
us pick out our own bands."&#13;
Speaking as a long-time taxpayer&#13;
and as a student who&#13;
earns and pays for his own&#13;
tuition for ten credits . . . Hear&#13;
this! ... As a dues-paying&#13;
member of the good old&#13;
Establishment I accept the&#13;
responsibility of helping to pay&#13;
two-thirds of the cost to help you&#13;
get a college education and even&#13;
contribute to a subsidy for&#13;
NEWSCOPE but your&#13;
precocious assumption that we&#13;
also owe you your&#13;
entertainment while you are at&#13;
school makes my buttocks&#13;
tired.&#13;
I can understand the need of&#13;
providing entertainment for&#13;
children ... or for the poor kids&#13;
like those out at Southern&#13;
Colony . . . But you're adults&#13;
who can go anyplace and do as&#13;
you please and it's tirpe for you&#13;
to accept the responsibilities of&#13;
adulthood . . . such as picking&#13;
up the check for your own&#13;
entertainment. If you can buy&#13;
the beer you can pay the piper.&#13;
Parenthetically, last Spring I&#13;
saw a Parkside activity that&#13;
really teed me off. The Student&#13;
Pampering Department put on&#13;
a party on the Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot which was to be the&#13;
Grand Finale for the school&#13;
year. Big circus tent . . out-oftown&#13;
band . . . snow fences up&#13;
... It must have cost the&#13;
people of Wisconsin a few&#13;
thousand dollars to put on that&#13;
"entertainment" for you. About&#13;
250 to 300 showed up. If the&#13;
school has that kind of money to&#13;
wallow in they should spend it&#13;
on scholarships or salaries. It's&#13;
no wonder that the University&#13;
System had budget troubles. If&#13;
the Pampering Department&#13;
puts on another fiasco like that&#13;
this Spring I'm going to invite a&#13;
couple of Regents here to watch&#13;
the money go down the drain.&#13;
(End of parenthetical&#13;
statement. . . Now back to the&#13;
interview.)&#13;
4. One more thing (I should be&#13;
typing a term paper instead of&#13;
this!) The Pres of SGA called&#13;
attention to the fact that "We&#13;
were only elected by 17 per cent&#13;
of the student body." . . . and&#13;
then inferred that the other 83&#13;
per cent are, as he put it,&#13;
"Anyone who doesn't have an&#13;
opinion is worthless."&#13;
Listen! . . . Has it ever&#13;
occurred to you that many of&#13;
the 83 per cent who, by their&#13;
abstinence elected not to vote,&#13;
might have been "Voting NO!"&#13;
to what you have to offer? If you&#13;
really think that the majority of&#13;
Parkside students consider&#13;
themselves as being depressed,&#13;
pushed-around and disgruntled&#13;
. . . then you've probably been&#13;
reading too much NEWSCOPE.&#13;
Very likely you supplied some&#13;
of the copy.&#13;
As for myself . . . When 50&#13;
per cent or more of the full-time&#13;
students . . . even 40 per cent,&#13;
maybe . . . find enough things&#13;
to become concerned about&#13;
(other than their studies) and&#13;
get out and vote, then I will&#13;
promptly and gladly recognize&#13;
those elected as truly&#13;
representing the student body.&#13;
But this time-consuming&#13;
business of having what I&#13;
consider as almost being "nonstudents"&#13;
running around,&#13;
sounding-off and butting in&#13;
where their "help" is not&#13;
needed and trying to advise in&#13;
areas in which they have no&#13;
qualifications . . . all under the&#13;
guise of representing the&#13;
student, is simply ridiculous.&#13;
One final quote from the Pres&#13;
of SGA. . . "They'll listen to us&#13;
but if they don't agree they&#13;
won't do what we say."&#13;
Now isn't that too bad! But&#13;
that's life, fellows . . . and the&#13;
quicker you learn that you must&#13;
know more than the dog does if&#13;
you're going to teach the dog&#13;
tricks, the better off you will be.&#13;
Anyhow, Mr. Pres, good luck&#13;
with that one credit . . . don't&#13;
let the burden of it get you&#13;
down. Stay with it!&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
P.S. The foregoing remarks&#13;
do not pertain to those Senators&#13;
and others who were elected&#13;
and who are trying to do&#13;
something constructive around&#13;
here.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DIN ING&#13;
WINDJAMMER&#13;
^TENDERLOIN S TEAK f&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN R OOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FAC ILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
— SENATOR PROXM|RE&#13;
WATCHES'&#13;
Rolcx - Accutron&#13;
Ultrachron • Longine&#13;
Bui ova - Movado&#13;
Caravel le - Timex&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
FSne.t -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Craduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist,&#13;
Vl-X SBI7 St* Ava.&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
% Discount to students and Faculty with \.Q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace • Lunt&#13;
Iteed &lt;&gt; B arton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefora&#13;
Seneca - Lalique&#13;
Royal Worcester&#13;
ed note: A few clarifications concerning&#13;
Mr. Gruhl's letter: We gave&#13;
94 col inches to the Dean Loumos&#13;
interview because this is a&#13;
.STUDENT newspaper, not a faculty&#13;
newsletter. 2) NEWSCOPE is in no&#13;
way subsidized by the University,&#13;
we received a $2,000 subscription&#13;
'through SGA (to pay off debts) from&#13;
fund 128 which is composed of&#13;
student fees, not Mr. Gruhl's hard&#13;
earned tax dollar. 3) Dean did in no&#13;
way imply that we (students) were&#13;
"owed" entertainment while at&#13;
school; he merely voiced the wish&#13;
for Student Activities Board&#13;
programs and concerts to bemore in&#13;
line with what students were interested&#13;
in. (instead of bringing a&#13;
flamenco dancer to UWP, why not&#13;
do as the Carthage Activities Board&#13;
did, bring in the Byrds, bring more&#13;
representatives of the youth culture.&#13;
4) I have no idea what Mr. Gruhl&#13;
means by "Student Pampering&#13;
Dept." putting on a "grand finale"&#13;
party. If he means the END i take&#13;
exception to his statement. The END&#13;
does not represent "pampering", its&#13;
purpose is to bring students together&#13;
for one last time, to possibly have a&#13;
good time after sweating through&#13;
finals. If Mr. Gruhl, as he implies, is&#13;
against having fun occasionally, I&#13;
suggest he submit his resignation to&#13;
'the human race. 5) At the last CCC&#13;
meeting, the requirement for&#13;
election to SGA office was&#13;
stipulated as "student". It does not,&#13;
at least as yet, stipulate any&#13;
minimum credit loads. Perhaps Mr.&#13;
Gruhl should run for office.&#13;
women s caucus&#13;
for day care&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
At their meeting on March 20,&#13;
Parkside's Women's Caucus&#13;
passed a resolution to officially&#13;
support the Day Care Center. It&#13;
is our contention that a woman&#13;
with pre-school children need&#13;
not stagnate her talents and&#13;
ambitions while she and her&#13;
husband are raising a family.&#13;
Parents who enroll their&#13;
children do not want, however,&#13;
to sacrifice the care of their&#13;
children to achieve their own&#13;
personal wants.&#13;
After discussing the Center&#13;
with its Director and parents of&#13;
enrolled children the Caucus&#13;
believes that the Day Care&#13;
Center is more than adequately&#13;
capable to house these children&#13;
for a few hours during the day.&#13;
The staff is composed of two&#13;
certified teachers and three&#13;
men among its volunteers.&#13;
The Women's Caucus also&#13;
feels that the Day Care Center&#13;
offers a more beneficial&#13;
atmosphere for a child than that&#13;
child would receive at home&#13;
Iwith a baby-sitter. The sensory,&#13;
audio, visual and social&#13;
(experiences a child encounters&#13;
at the Center can only enhance&#13;
their life when they enter&#13;
school.&#13;
The faculty, staff and&#13;
students who utilize the Center&#13;
are also enriched. For students&#13;
it enables them to take upper&#13;
division courses normally not&#13;
offered at night. Faculty and&#13;
staff, throug h the help of the&#13;
Center, are able to share their&#13;
talents with others in the&#13;
working and academic&#13;
community.&#13;
It is for these reasons that&#13;
Parkside's Women's Caucus&#13;
supports the Day Care Center in&#13;
its help with our effort to put&#13;
talented, ambitious women&#13;
back in our society while raising&#13;
families.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Parkside's Women's Caucus&#13;
yarc needs&#13;
volunteers&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
At the present time, the Youth&#13;
Association for Retarded&#13;
Children is badly in need of new&#13;
members. We are asking a&#13;
favor of all the editors of school&#13;
newspapers in the area. It&#13;
would be greatly appreciated if&#13;
you would print the following&#13;
article in the next issue of your&#13;
newspaper:&#13;
Students:&#13;
If you , are interested in&#13;
working with the mentally&#13;
retarded and would like to try,&#13;
consider joining the Youth&#13;
Association for Retarded&#13;
Children (YARC). In our&#13;
activities, we try to reach as&#13;
many of the mentally retarded&#13;
as possible. However, we are&#13;
short of members. We need new&#13;
ideas and new enthusiasm. Our&#13;
activities include volunteer&#13;
work at Southern Colony and&#13;
various other planned&#13;
programs. Our meetings are&#13;
held on the first and third&#13;
Thursdays of every month&#13;
(although this is soon going to&#13;
be changed) from 7:30 - 9:3 0 in&#13;
Racine. For more information&#13;
about this organization, please&#13;
call:&#13;
Julie Kozenski, 639-6814&#13;
or&#13;
Theresa Swenson, 637-5417&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Vi Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVEI&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE April 24, 1972&#13;
(Continued&#13;
from Page 1)&#13;
conclude Thursday, April 27,&#13;
with presentations by Madison&#13;
city councilman Paul Soglin and&#13;
representatives of the&#13;
Wisconsin Alliance and&#13;
R e v o l u t i o n a r y Y o u t h&#13;
Movement on the subject&#13;
"Radical Political Organizing."&#13;
Theatre X, the critically&#13;
acclaimed Milwaukee-based&#13;
ensemble which has been&#13;
receiving national attention,&#13;
will open the second week with a&#13;
productionof'X&#13;
Communication" in the UW-P&#13;
Acrivities Building Tuesday,&#13;
May 2, at 8 p.m. The production&#13;
is a collage of satire,&#13;
improvisation, mime and&#13;
music.&#13;
On Wednesday, May 3, the&#13;
UW-P Pre-Law Club will&#13;
present a panel discussion on&#13;
"Should Private Sex Between&#13;
Consenting Adults Be&#13;
Legalized?" in Greenquist 103&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Participants will&#13;
include Waukesha County&#13;
District Attorney Richard&#13;
McConnell, who received&#13;
considerable publicity in the&#13;
recent Unitarian Church sexeducation&#13;
film controversy in&#13;
Waukesha County; Racine&#13;
attorney Jay Schwartz;&#13;
Kenosha state Assemblyman&#13;
Eugene Dorff; and Kenosha St.&#13;
Joseph high school teacher Rev.&#13;
Gregory Spitz.&#13;
A "Going Away" party,&#13;
featuring two bands, will be&#13;
held at the Racine Campus of&#13;
UW-P on Friday, May 5,&#13;
beginning about 5 p.m., with a&#13;
24-hour film festival slated for&#13;
the New Vogue Theatre in&#13;
Kenosha beginning at 6 p.m.&#13;
Films will range from shorts to&#13;
full-length, and refreshments&#13;
will be sold.&#13;
Symposium 1972 will conclude&#13;
with Black Culture Day,&#13;
Symposium Activities Upcoming 3 V Anril 97 n &lt; • * L . . TT l i r n &gt; _ T - \ i . i . . .&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents&#13;
A love story&#13;
that begins with&#13;
an incredible&#13;
experiment!&#13;
SEIMUR PICTURES in collaboration with&#13;
ROBERTSON ASSOCIATES peasants&#13;
CLIFF ROBERTSON Xjf/^Ly&#13;
ME BLOOM&#13;
TtCHNICOtOR TECHHISCOPE"&#13;
"O" ^ONIIAMA KIUAIWC CORPORATION&#13;
Fri., April 28, 8 PM&#13;
Amd. 75c Time: 106 min.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Parkside 6. Wisconsin I.D.'s req&#13;
Special Addition to&#13;
PAB's Film Schedule&#13;
coordinated by UW-P's Black&#13;
Student Union. Highlight will be&#13;
an 8 p.m. lecture in Greenquist&#13;
Hall by Julian Bond under the&#13;
auspices of the UW-P Lecture-&#13;
Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Organizers also plan to have&#13;
appearances and programs by&#13;
UW Regent Ed Hales of Racine,&#13;
Racine NAACP head Julian&#13;
Thomas, Racine Star editor&#13;
Tony Courtney, and Black poet&#13;
Rocky Taylor at times and&#13;
locations to be announced.&#13;
According to the SGA&#13;
president, "The purpose of&#13;
Symposium 1972 is to provide&#13;
Parkside students and the&#13;
surrounding communities with&#13;
a l t e r n a t i v e e d u c a t i o n a l&#13;
opportunities not available in&#13;
most existing institutions.&#13;
"The symposium will try to&#13;
deal with the term 'educational&#13;
relevance' through a number of&#13;
n o n - c o n v e n t i o n a l a n d&#13;
provocative programs,"&#13;
Loumos said.&#13;
Activities B id.: A New Bar&#13;
By Tom Paradise&#13;
of t he Newscope staff&#13;
The New Student Activities&#13;
Building has been changed a lot&#13;
recently. The bar area has been&#13;
brought out to include a new 16&#13;
ft. formica topped bar, more&#13;
storage space, two new pizza&#13;
ovens, a new tap and two brand&#13;
new Perlick coolers from&#13;
Milwaukee purchased at 2,900&#13;
dollars apiece, according to&#13;
David Bishop, administrator of&#13;
the SAB. Mr. Bishop told&#13;
NEWSCOPE that the reason the&#13;
bar had been changed was&#13;
because of the congestion on&#13;
Friday nights "when there are&#13;
dances some of the people who&#13;
wanted to approach the bar&#13;
couldn't. Those who want&#13;
peanuts and popcorn had to&#13;
wade through the crowd or turn&#13;
away empty handed." He added&#13;
that the limited space of the old&#13;
bar was hard on the bartenders&#13;
who had no room to work in.&#13;
The new bar offers Pabst,&#13;
Malt, Bud and Lite. The new&#13;
comer is Pabst. The coolers are&#13;
the type that can be moved into&#13;
the Student Union when it is&#13;
built in two years. They are a&#13;
portable type Mr. Bishop added,&#13;
"They are the type that can be&#13;
moved on to wheels and put in&#13;
the elevator and taken up to any&#13;
room for a party." The new bar&#13;
will have a micro-wave oven,&#13;
too. The bar will sell pizza soon&#13;
and I hope because frozen Pizza&#13;
is good. The finish on the new&#13;
bar is walnut, and topped by&#13;
formica.&#13;
The number of bartenders&#13;
will remain the same. Most of&#13;
them have jobs through the&#13;
work study program here at&#13;
Parkside. On the service that&#13;
the bar performs, there is no&#13;
question that the people will get&#13;
faster and more helpful&#13;
attention. On either end of the&#13;
bar are flat surfaces that pizza&#13;
or some other food could be&#13;
dispensed from with great ease.&#13;
The storage area allows the&#13;
empty beer barrels to be put in&#13;
the back out of the way of the&#13;
doors, where they present a fire&#13;
hazard.&#13;
NOTICE NOTICE&#13;
BREAKFAST 6=A.M. T O l h A.M.&#13;
Visit' Our Neu, TnstJe Carpeted&#13;
ibxbbjlnc Keen&#13;
A&amp;W RESTAURANT&#13;
30th ave. and Roosevelt Road&#13;
1 n K«,h.Osl\.A.&#13;
Open:&#13;
Mon. thru Thurs. — 6 A.M. -11 P.M.&#13;
Friday — 6 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Saturday — 9 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Sunday — 9 A.M. to 11 P.M.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Presents 1&#13;
[ ) J LEE&#13;
1 Table Tennis Ex hibition&#13;
5 - Time U.S. Open Champion&#13;
Direct From Tour with Chinese&#13;
Nationalist Team &amp; ABC "Wide World of Sports"&#13;
(In addition to demonstration, he will be playing&#13;
Parkside students and Faculty)&#13;
Friday, April 28 Free&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Faculty News&#13;
VAN WILLIGEN ELECTED&#13;
John G. Van Willigen, as assistant professor of anthropology at&#13;
Parkside, has been elected a fellow of the American Anthropological&#13;
Association.&#13;
Prior to joining the Parkside faculty in September, 1970, Van&#13;
Willigen taught at the University of Arizona where he also completed&#13;
work for his Ph.D. degree.&#13;
PARKSIDE PROMOTION&#13;
Peter M. Ellis, 28, has been named an assistant professor of&#13;
management science in the School of Modern Industry at Parkside&#13;
effective next September. He will teach operations research and&#13;
statistics.&#13;
Ellis previously has taught at the University of Alberta,&#13;
Canada, and at UW-Madison. His research fields are operations&#13;
research emphasizing linear and nonlinear programming and risk&#13;
and insurance.&#13;
TO WORK ON PROPERTY TAX&#13;
Dr. Mary Carrington, lecturer in communications at Parkside,&#13;
has been named to a 12-member state committee to study and&#13;
possibly revamp the State Department of Revenue's system of&#13;
equalizing taxable property values. The appointment was made by&#13;
Secretary of Revenue Edward A. Wiegner.&#13;
Wiegner said the state-determined equalized values have more&#13;
than 100 uses, but principally they figure in determining how much&#13;
state aid school districts receive.&#13;
TWENTY-EIGHT YEAR OLD TO JOIN STAFF&#13;
A geologist whose academic interests include planetary as well&#13;
as terrestrial terrains, Eugene I. Smith, 28, will join the faculty at&#13;
Parkside as an assistant professor of earth science, effective next&#13;
September.&#13;
Smith presently is a post-doctoral research associate at the&#13;
University of New Mexico and also is associated with the U.S.&#13;
Geological Survey Center of Astrogeology at Flagstaff, Arizona.&#13;
A specialist in petrology, volcanology and astrogeology, Smith&#13;
received his undergraduate degree from Wayne State University&#13;
and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of New Mexico.&#13;
His teaching areas include historical geology, lunar and&#13;
planetary geology, petrology, and physical geology.&#13;
His widely published research includes comparative studies of&#13;
volcanic cones on earth and on the moon and studies of Martian&#13;
terrain as a basis for the geological mapping of the planet.&#13;
He is a member of Sigma XI, the Geological Society of&#13;
America, American Geophysical Union and American Association&#13;
for the Advancement of Science.&#13;
Nelson and Ecology&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
but the question is how. He&#13;
stressed that adequate&#13;
safeguards against oil leakage&#13;
and other hazards must first be&#13;
perfected. He expressed his&#13;
hopes for further public&#13;
hearings on the matter before&#13;
any final decision is made.&#13;
Concerning Project Sanguine,&#13;
the fifty million dollar bomb&#13;
proof communications system,&#13;
Sen. Nelson said, "After&#13;
everything had been presented&#13;
it still had not been proven&#13;
worthwhile to me."&#13;
As to the Thermal pollution of&#13;
Lake Michigan, Sen. Nelson&#13;
admitted he knew little about&#13;
the situation though he did&#13;
realize the seriousness of the&#13;
problem.&#13;
Having finished his prepared&#13;
material, the Senator began&#13;
fielding questions from the&#13;
audience. The first pertaining to&#13;
the possibility of&#13;
legislation such as the&#13;
Packwood Proposal, in which&#13;
tax deductions can be taken for&#13;
only up to two children) to&#13;
control the population. "Any&#13;
compulsory legislation that&#13;
would bring the birth rate down&#13;
at this time would also bring the&#13;
government down." According&#13;
to the Senator we need more&#13;
understanding and a better&#13;
education of the situation.&#13;
On the Alaska Pipeline the&#13;
Senator agreed that one day the&#13;
oil would have to be extracted,&#13;
Arthur C. Clarke April 24, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
By Jim Koloen, Editor&#13;
Noted author and inventor,&#13;
Aithur C. Clarke, spoke before&#13;
an overflow audience in the&#13;
Greenquist concourse on&#13;
Thursday evening, April 20. The&#13;
conservatively attired author of&#13;
both the book and screen play&#13;
2001: A Space Odyssey, and&#13;
Childhood's Paid among 40 other&#13;
titles, structured the evening's&#13;
lecture thematically to "Life in&#13;
2001".&#13;
To the appreciative though&#13;
subdued audience, .many of&#13;
whom arrived an hour before&#13;
Clarke was to speak, the&#13;
scientist-author asked for their&#13;
patience if he seemed&#13;
distracted during the opening&#13;
minutes of the lecture; "the&#13;
Apollo is going to land in 19&#13;
minutes."&#13;
The balding, professorial&#13;
science fiction writer, spoke&#13;
with a slight English jaccent as&#13;
he explained that we "do not&#13;
have to predict any future." He&#13;
explained that it is most&#13;
important to "anticipate what&#13;
technology is going to do with&#13;
society." He related two&#13;
anecdotes concerning the early&#13;
attitudes toward two&#13;
technological innovations which&#13;
occurred near the turn of the&#13;
century. The possibilities of the&#13;
telephone, he explained, were&#13;
vastly underrated, and "the&#13;
motor car, the horseless&#13;
carriage, it was felt, would&#13;
serve only a limited function.&#13;
Many people at the time," he&#13;
continued, "thought the motor&#13;
car was limited to the city and&#13;
always would be, simply&#13;
because at the turn of the&#13;
century the United States only&#13;
had a hundred miles of road."&#13;
Touching on the subject of&#13;
man and the machine, Clarke&#13;
said when the rise of the&#13;
intelligent machine occurs,&#13;
"when that happens, all bets&#13;
are off. The first intelligent&#13;
machine will be the last&#13;
invention man may ever&#13;
make," he ominously amended&#13;
his statement, "may ever be&#13;
permitted to make." Later, he&#13;
fm&#13;
Life in 2001&#13;
said he had met only two&#13;
intelligent men in his life,&#13;
genticist, philosopher J. B. S.&#13;
Haldang and a science-fiction&#13;
writer, Olaf Stapleton.&#13;
Changing the topic to the&#13;
avocation of speculating on the&#13;
future, Clarke explained it is&#13;
"good fun, and that is the only&#13;
excuse you need for doing&#13;
anything." He added that&#13;
speculating on the future also&#13;
Bradbury, Clarke quoted him&#13;
concerning the object of writing&#13;
science-fiction: "We do not try!&#13;
to describe the future, we try to&#13;
prevent it." He added that&#13;
science-fiction is a "valuable&#13;
medium for inventing the&#13;
future." Touching upon the&#13;
topic of 2001, Clarke speculated&#13;
that "the psychological effect of&#13;
those added zeros will be too&#13;
much for many people."&#13;
Writer and inventor, Arthur C. Clarke answers questions&#13;
after his lecture in Greenquist to an overflow audience.&#13;
represented a "good exercise&#13;
for the mind," and "can serve&#13;
as a warning." Utilizing the&#13;
first of a number of references&#13;
to fellow sci-fi writer Ray&#13;
Smiling he only half-facetiously&#13;
commented that "we should&#13;
declare the whole year of 2000 a&#13;
holiday." Smiling he footnoted&#13;
his statement: "If we make it,&#13;
The UWP Philanthropist Club Presents&#13;
CASINO NIGHT&#13;
1&#13;
Drinking&#13;
Black Jack&#13;
Crap Tables&#13;
Chuck-A-Lug&#13;
Roulette&#13;
Surprises&#13;
Prizes&#13;
— Enjoy a Night of Chance —&#13;
Saturday, April 29 9PM-1AM&#13;
$n/ek/ammenf Cyrus Whitfield&#13;
Adm. $1.25 (Includes $200.00 gambling money)&#13;
Student Activities Building Parkside &amp; Wisconsin ID required&#13;
we'll be fully justified."&#13;
Life in 2001, Clarke continued&#13;
speculating, "will see an end to&#13;
the 'self-contained household'.&#13;
This will occur," he explained,&#13;
"when the last preparation&#13;
process left to the home become&#13;
antiquated. People will be able&#13;
to 'dial' what they want to be&#13;
reconstituted at their home, or&#13;
they'll receive monthly 100&#13;
pound bags of dehydrated&#13;
food."&#13;
"Natural reproduction is so&#13;
inefficient that in the future . . .&#13;
it may be prohibited by law."&#13;
Clarke explained that it "takes&#13;
ten pounds of vegetables to&#13;
make one pound of meat." He&#13;
pointed out that the percent&#13;
efficiency involved in this&#13;
process is unacceptable. "I&#13;
happen to be a carnivore who&#13;
hates rabbit food." He noted&#13;
that "we are to the sea now&#13;
what we were to the land 5,000&#13;
years ago, what we were 500&#13;
years ago on this continent."&#13;
He questioned the possibility&#13;
of whale ranching as a source of&#13;
food: "Are we justified in&#13;
slaughtering animals whose&#13;
brains are twice as large as&#13;
ours?" Concerning another&#13;
undersea species, the dolphin,&#13;
Clarke wryly remarked that he&#13;
was skeptical of their&#13;
intelligence "because they&#13;
seem too friendly toward man."&#13;
The only satisfactory answer&#13;
to the food shortage&#13;
experienced in the world todaywill&#13;
come through&#13;
microbiological engineering,&#13;
Clarke believed. "We make&#13;
cheeses, wines, spirits this&#13;
way." Clarke humorously&#13;
pointed out that "an awful lot of&#13;
microbiological engineering&#13;
has been going on in Milwaukee&#13;
for the last hundred years."&#13;
Still considering the topic of&#13;
food supplies in the future,&#13;
Clarke spoke to the overflow&#13;
audience, many of whom were&#13;
forced to listen to and watch the&#13;
lecture over closed circuit&#13;
television in one of the lecture&#13;
halls, of oil as a source of&#13;
protein. "Three per cent of the&#13;
world's oil production could&#13;
feed the entire human race! I&#13;
think it's time we stopped&#13;
burning oil and started eating&#13;
it."&#13;
He said that in the future&#13;
"farming as we know it will be&#13;
phased out. One of the byproducts&#13;
of space research,"&#13;
Clarke explained, "is closed&#13;
cycle ecologies, where we have&#13;
to reprocess all wastes and turn&#13;
them back to food."&#13;
Later he admitted he "gets&#13;
annoyed by peoplewhosay 'why&#13;
spend money on space with all&#13;
the problems here on earth'.&#13;
Many of thoes problems can&#13;
only be solved through space&#13;
technology."&#13;
He explained the&#13;
communications satellites will&#13;
be the key to the future,&#13;
advancing education, but more&#13;
importantly, in the next two&#13;
years a communications&#13;
satellite will be launched into&#13;
orbit by India, for the purpose of&#13;
family planning."&#13;
New housing techniques and&#13;
materials will provide the&#13;
future generations with homes&#13;
"made of materials as strong as&#13;
steel and as light as paper.&#13;
Bucky Fuller," he said, "sees&#13;
an autonomous house with no&#13;
outside connections such as&#13;
plumbing, and electricity&#13;
needed to make it functional."&#13;
He explained that the&#13;
combination of light weight&#13;
building materials and the&#13;
possibility of the autonomous&#13;
house will bring more mobility&#13;
to the future. Instead of moving&#13;
in a car, he commented, "You'll&#13;
be able to move your entire&#13;
house with a helicopter."&#13;
He indicated that the&#13;
technological and educational&#13;
breakthroughs of the future will&#13;
be caused by "the transistor&#13;
and solid state electronics, and&#13;
the communications satellite."&#13;
He forcast a time when he won't&#13;
have to "walk back to my hotel&#13;
with five pounds of wood pulp&#13;
under my arms." He said that&#13;
instead of gaining access to the&#13;
events of the world through&#13;
newsprint, future men will be&#13;
able to have "every newspaper&#13;
on earth at h is fingertips; every&#13;
newspaper that has cvern been,&#13;
will be at our fingertips; in fact&#13;
every book ever published,&#13;
everything recorded by the&#13;
human race will ultimately be&#13;
available to me. when 1 dial the&#13;
correct thirty digit number."&#13;
He explained that "the&#13;
information starvation" which&#13;
leads many people to move&#13;
from rural areas to the&#13;
overcrowded cities will be&#13;
alleviated through the&#13;
d e v e I o p in e n t o f&#13;
communications. People will no&#13;
longer "be robbed of education&#13;
for reasons of geographic&#13;
deficiencies."&#13;
Clarke admitted "I'm an&#13;
optomist. 1 believe&#13;
communications satellites will&#13;
unite mankind." Later, during&#13;
the question and answer period,&#13;
Clarke expanded on this&#13;
statement. He explained that&#13;
global communications would&#13;
difuse national boundaries, that&#13;
eventually nations will become&#13;
so integrated and dependent&#13;
upon each other, that man will&#13;
have no choice but to unite.&#13;
Concluding his lecture with a&#13;
brief look into education, Clarke&#13;
said that "education and&#13;
entertainment should be&#13;
synonymous, and a continual&#13;
process in life." How can the&#13;
educational process end when&#13;
•half the things you learn at&#13;
twenty are false by the time&#13;
you're forty; and at forty, half&#13;
the things you know weren't&#13;
even found when you were&#13;
twenty?"&#13;
The minimum age for the end&#13;
of education, Clarke said,&#13;
should be "120 years old."&#13;
Later, during the question&#13;
period, Clarke amplified his&#13;
statement on education stating&#13;
men . should "have the&#13;
opportunity to develop to their&#13;
limit." Today's educational&#13;
standards will be adjudged&#13;
feeble in the future, yet even&#13;
today you don't come across the&#13;
depths of ignorance that you&#13;
once did."&#13;
Man, he reflected, represents&#13;
an "intermediate biological&#13;
stage. We are destined to create&#13;
our successors." Clarke&#13;
explained that "life on this&#13;
planet originated in an&#13;
atmosphere of methane and&#13;
ammonia." The atmosphere, he&#13;
explained, was polluted by a&#13;
"deadly gas, oxygen, and made&#13;
way for a second type of&#13;
evolution. We may be polluting&#13;
our environment to make the&#13;
world fit only for machines."&#13;
Concluding his thesis, Clarke&#13;
spoke half cynically, half&#13;
satirically, perhaps resignedly&#13;
that "Detroit may be fulfilling&#13;
God's destiny for man." A&#13;
similar idea is expressed in Childhood's&#13;
End.&#13;
"One last question," the man&#13;
on the podium said to the&#13;
audience. Someone asked if&#13;
we'll have Overlords like those&#13;
envisioned in Childhood's End.&#13;
Unhesitatingly Clarke replied,&#13;
"No, we have to solve our&#13;
problems here, we cannot hope&#13;
for salvation coming from the&#13;
stars."&#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE April 24, 1972 Hiirry Chopin in Brooklyn&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Title: The Age of Paranoia&#13;
Author: by the editors of&#13;
Rolling Stone&#13;
Publisher: A Straight Arrow&#13;
Book published by Pocket&#13;
Books ($1.50 paperback)&#13;
The Age of Paranoia, "how&#13;
the '60's ended": Strange how&#13;
decades can 'assume psychological&#13;
qualities, can be stereotyped&#13;
like people, how the weird j&#13;
scenes beat '50's were also&#13;
the Eisenhower cherry blossom&#13;
stagnation; how the '20's were&#13;
flappers and a lost generation&#13;
and Herbert Hoover. Reading&#13;
this I find the title only partially&#13;
accurate. There was paranoia,&#13;
especially as expressed in the&#13;
underground papers, but there&#13;
were also harbingers of&#13;
sunrising hope and flying joy:&#13;
the Democratic Convention&#13;
(which occupies a good portion&#13;
of the subject matter) was a&#13;
bloody battle, and yet it was&#13;
also a real festival of joy, a real&#13;
consciousness expansion.&#13;
Rolling Stone, of course, is a&#13;
singular product of hip journalism,&#13;
offering often great&#13;
writing (Hunter Thompson's&#13;
"fear and loathing" for one)&#13;
and an unusually thorough&#13;
-investigative reportage.&#13;
The articles included in this&#13;
anthology of the last years of&#13;
the gone decade, cover the&#13;
stoned gamut of the youth&#13;
subculture; from its flexing of&#13;
stiff, yet resilient political&#13;
muscles to interviews with gun&#13;
toting editors of underground&#13;
newspapers; from ecological&#13;
skirmishes against land&#13;
developers and fat cat&#13;
Republicans to the poignantly&#13;
tragic battle over People's&#13;
Park. The Age of Paranoia&#13;
jostled my memory; deja vu of&#13;
years gone by, years of growing&#13;
awareness and a new consciousness&#13;
for an entirely&#13;
strange generation.&#13;
From The Age, one gets the&#13;
feeling that we got the last&#13;
laugh in the sixties. That no&#13;
matter how much shit has to be&#13;
waded through before this&#13;
generation gains control of the&#13;
power that is presently equated&#13;
with money and staid cigar&#13;
smoke politics; the powers that&#13;
be will die off, gradually but so&#13;
beautifully chronologically;&#13;
necessarily.&#13;
Senseless for me to pick out&#13;
an apotheosis from this book,&#13;
because all the stories are&#13;
apotheoses. Perhaps a partial&#13;
list of titles would be helpful:&#13;
"A Tough Month to Be a Head";&#13;
"Feds' Dope Circus: 'How&#13;
Much LSD Do You Take to Be&#13;
Addicted?' " "Grass Ballot&#13;
Chooses Dylan for Presdient",&#13;
"Two Moratorium Days: So&#13;
What?", "Freak Power in the&#13;
Rockies", "A Lot of People&#13;
Were Crying, and the Guard&#13;
Walked Away", "Keeping Up&#13;
With the Mansons", to name a&#13;
few.&#13;
What makes Rolling Stone,&#13;
and consequently this anthology,&#13;
the best paper of its&#13;
kind, lies embedded deep in the&#13;
attitude of its writers. Hunter&#13;
Thompson and his cronies don't&#13;
write news for news' sake; they&#13;
get the story because the story's&#13;
there, but in the process the&#13;
writers capture the moment,&#13;
the essence of the story. These&#13;
are news stories which are&#13;
always human interest stories;&#13;
there is the attitude that behind&#13;
every story there are people,&#13;
always. So, unlike straight&#13;
journalism, RS presents the&#13;
reader with organic news&#13;
stories which read like fiction,&#13;
that have protagonists and&#13;
antagonists, subplots and&#13;
ironies; that are humanized&#13;
beyond straight facts because a&#13;
human is beyond pure fact.&#13;
Journalism that tends to get&#13;
blurry because it's honest.&#13;
The stories are printed in the&#13;
form they appeared in RS, two&#13;
columns per page, with the&#13;
happy result that they reqd&#13;
quite quickly. The writing is&#13;
generally quite good; the&#13;
research involved is often&#13;
superhuman and the attitude is&#13;
hip. The 429 pages are not as&#13;
formidable as may first appear;&#13;
the book can easily be&#13;
read in two days, though I would&#13;
suggest you read it like you do&#13;
the Stone, sections of it at a&#13;
time. Afterall, there's no hurry,&#13;
and no continuity to worryabout&#13;
losing.&#13;
The Age of Paranoia will stir&#13;
up the past, it will make you&#13;
laugh with tears cleansing your&#13;
eyes, and sometimes you'll&#13;
clench your fist, but above all it&#13;
can reinstill a unique consciousness&#13;
that was built in the&#13;
sixties; the past here is part of&#13;
our future. For a buck fifty, you&#13;
really can't go wrong.&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
He sat silently tuning his&#13;
guitar between songs. An&#13;
audience of a couple hundred&#13;
were waiting, some standing&#13;
with armloads of packages,&#13;
others sitting resting their tired&#13;
feet.&#13;
Harry Chapin was three&#13;
quarters of the way through a&#13;
set. He was performing his&#13;
songs for the shoppers at&#13;
Abraham and Strauss, on the&#13;
eighth floor of the department&#13;
store on Fulton Street in&#13;
downtown Brooklyn. He and&#13;
three other musicians were&#13;
sharing a small stage in an area&#13;
sandwiched between the&#13;
sporting goods and toy&#13;
departments, an enclosure&#13;
called the "Special Events&#13;
Center."&#13;
Behind the state was a thin&#13;
partition decorated with pictures&#13;
of Harry Chapin from the&#13;
aPPlause.&#13;
'Finally, there's my friend&#13;
Ron Palmer playing electric&#13;
and acoustic guitar."&#13;
Introductions finished, Harry&#13;
^gan the opening of "Taxi",&#13;
cstalyst in the music in-&#13;
"strY- "Hie song has been&#13;
P ayed a lot on the East Coast,&#13;
slowly creeping West into, the&#13;
airwaves and onto the charts.&#13;
"They told me it'd be a hit&#13;
single and | ddin't believe them.&#13;
I guess they proved me wrong,"&#13;
he said with a laugh. He then&#13;
sang "Taxi" to the listeners at&#13;
A-S on a Saturday afternoon in&#13;
downtown Brooklyn.&#13;
The scene on the eighth floor&#13;
seemed almost maudlin. There&#13;
sat the struggling new talent,&#13;
personally selling his wares to&#13;
an audience comprised of tired&#13;
shoppers, curious onlookers,&#13;
young admirers, and people&#13;
who would go out-of-their-way&#13;
1Mj M d tw OJ lu£/ siMjqlb&#13;
ojJJ 9 (SJAmj fc Ww tJimy.'&#13;
lyric sheet contained in his first&#13;
album, "Heads and Tales" on&#13;
Electra. Also pinned on the wall&#13;
in several places was the album&#13;
cover and the waxing.&#13;
At the mouth of the area was&#13;
an A-S employee and a store&#13;
cop. They were guarding a&#13;
shopping cart overflowing with&#13;
Harry Chapin albums. The&#13;
employee was leaning on a&#13;
portable roll-away stand with a&#13;
cash register on it. The cop kept&#13;
looking at his watch as Harry&#13;
began introducing his group.&#13;
"On my left is Tim Scott,&#13;
probably the only cellist playin'&#13;
in a folk group." The audience&#13;
politely applauded. "And this&#13;
big guy, the one behind me, is&#13;
the bass player, John Wallace,&#13;
who also helps on vocals."&#13;
"John can sing the lyrics way&#13;
up there," he motioned with his&#13;
hand, "and the ones way down&#13;
here. Maybe that comes from&#13;
our days together in a high&#13;
school choir in Brooklyn." John&#13;
smiled to the smattering of&#13;
to see anything free.&#13;
There were people, though,&#13;
who had taken the eighth floor&#13;
express elevator specifically to&#13;
see and hear Harry Chapin.&#13;
Some of them were there&#13;
because they didn't have the&#13;
"four-at-the-door-cover" to see&#13;
him perform at the Bitter End&#13;
in the Village. It didn't really&#13;
matter that they couldn't afford&#13;
{Wt&gt;&#13;
the Bitter End, Harry Chapin's&#13;
week-long engagement was sold&#13;
out.&#13;
When the free performance&#13;
was over, and only about a&#13;
dozen people bought albums it&#13;
was sad, b(rt it was even sadder&#13;
when the buyers stood in line for&#13;
autographs.&#13;
A man from Queens paraded&#13;
his nine year old daughter in&#13;
front of Harry, who was sitting&#13;
on the edge of the stage with a&#13;
flair pen in his hand.&#13;
THusic 3o S roiu IP la (its Uy&#13;
Leo Kottke — "Greenhouse"&#13;
by David Rogers&#13;
"As my guitars were once&#13;
plants, this record's a&#13;
greenhouse," says the acoustic&#13;
steel-string guitar king, Leo&#13;
Kottke. Though this is Kottke's&#13;
fifth release, it is his second&#13;
really major work, the other&#13;
leader being his allinstrumental&#13;
Takoma LP, "6 &amp;&#13;
12 String Guitar", where we&#13;
were treated to some outstanding&#13;
guitar work without&#13;
being subject to Kottke's&#13;
singing, likened by the singer&#13;
himself to "geese farts on a&#13;
muggy day."&#13;
Kottke brings his geese in on a&#13;
mere four cuts out of eleven on&#13;
"Greenhouse", but you couldn't&#13;
say his singing is really bad. It's&#13;
just back seat to his guitar&#13;
work. Kottke reverses his&#13;
dominant folksinger mode of&#13;
guitar playing accompanying&#13;
singjng, making the singing&#13;
accompany the guitar.&#13;
Kottke is matched by very&#13;
few in the steel-string guitar&#13;
field — John Fahey (who Kottke&#13;
used to tour with), Robbie&#13;
Basho, and two members of&#13;
Pentangle, Bert Jansche and&#13;
John Renbourne, are the only&#13;
other musicians I would put in&#13;
his class.&#13;
"Bean Time" opens the&#13;
album, an instrumental with a&#13;
lot of loose melodic ideas&#13;
thrown together: a typical&#13;
Kottke piece. "Tiny Island" is a&#13;
catchy tune with gentle lyrics&#13;
by Al Faylor. On this, as well as&#13;
the other vocals on this album,&#13;
Kottke's singing is more careful&#13;
and resonant than most of it on&#13;
such past albums as "Circle&#13;
Round the Sun" and&#13;
"Mudlark". The other vocals&#13;
include Paul Siebel's "Louise",&#13;
"From the Cradle to the Grave"&#13;
and "You Don't Have to Need&#13;
Me."&#13;
Kottke's treatment of&#13;
"Louise" is only fair compared&#13;
to, say, Linda Ronstadt's,&#13;
though this is probably because&#13;
this song relies heavily on&#13;
singing, rather than accompaniment.&#13;
"From the&#13;
Cradle to the Grave" is an&#13;
excellently performed chronicle&#13;
of life-weariness, the "hands-&#13;
In&#13;
Or&#13;
tied" feeling that you can't&#13;
always get when you want.&#13;
"You Don't Have to Need Me"&#13;
follows up on much the same&#13;
idea but it applies to a personal&#13;
relationship.&#13;
Kottke's treatment of two&#13;
John Fahey instrumentals,&#13;
Christ There is No East&#13;
West" and "Last Steam Engine&#13;
Train" is superb. The latter&#13;
features a steam engine rhythm&#13;
on the base line that is very&#13;
difficult to finger-pick on the&#13;
guitar. "Spanish Entomologist"&#13;
is a blending of "Red Wing" and&#13;
"Tumbling Tumbleweeds",&#13;
"Owls" is vintage Leo Kottke&#13;
and "Lost John" is pure blue&#13;
grass. "The Song of&#13;
rv&#13;
Swamp" features&#13;
bottlenecking.&#13;
the&#13;
Kottke's&#13;
by Roscoe Humus of the Newscope staff&#13;
THE GODFATHER — Paramount Pictures&#13;
The Godfather is a movie of extravagance.&#13;
Extravagant dress with huge tribal weddings and&#13;
funeral processions, led by a half-dozen open&#13;
limousines heaped with flowers, married to a&#13;
seemingly endless procession of death dealing&#13;
gangsters playing a fatal game of one-upmanship&#13;
for control of a vague and illusive stable of interests,&#13;
ranging from a starring role in a movie for&#13;
a favorite son — after the producer wakes one fine&#13;
morning to find the head of his $600,000 prize horse&#13;
bloodying the sheets —to pushing narcotics to the&#13;
"niggers." One family head seems to speak for the&#13;
rest when he refers to the black man as something&#13;
less than human. And perhaps there is a lesson in&#13;
•this jigaboo wop slurdom. Yes, even the gangster&#13;
feels the bite of bigotry in this film, showing him&#13;
not wholly insensitive. It's not that he's insensitive&#13;
so much as his curious style of expression.&#13;
We see the godfather, Don Corleone (Marlon&#13;
Brando) at the end of his reign as kingpin of the&#13;
underworld. It is the mid 1940's and the Don i s&#13;
faced with the not unwelcome prospect of&#13;
retirement in the country. It is very touching to&#13;
see a man who spent his life fixing judges, running&#13;
the numbers racket and perforating an occasional&#13;
rival or crooked cop — you get yqur newspaper&#13;
people (everyone owns one) to dig up the dirt on&#13;
the crooked cops, makes it easier for an enraged&#13;
public to swallow, somewhat tarnishing that&#13;
sterling cinematic credo of never kill a cop —&#13;
chasing his laughing grandson around the toma o&#13;
plantes. The game used to be called organize&#13;
crime and it was played for keeps.&#13;
But not all is well for the Don. One afternoon&#13;
on his way home from the office, his bodyguard&#13;
sick, he is shot down by gunmen and rumored to be&#13;
dead. Rushed to a hospital he must be guarded&#13;
round the clock to insure his safety. Justice comes&#13;
when the courts — undoubtedly friendly to&#13;
Corleone — allow his men to cover the hospital&#13;
when the police led by Capt. McCurdy arrive to&#13;
throw them out. One of the Don's sons — a young&#13;
war hero who insisted to his red haired fiancee&#13;
that he was different from the rest of the family —&#13;
protects the old man while the consigtierge,&#13;
Corleone's tru&#13;
McCurdy slugi&#13;
he was on the&#13;
called him ev&#13;
mon, leaving&#13;
Irony, be&#13;
favored son (&gt;&#13;
governor or a&#13;
he kills two m&#13;
his father. A&#13;
undoubtedly a&lt;&#13;
the neophyte&#13;
crooked cop I,&#13;
'THE&#13;
blood splatt&#13;
where he sp&#13;
countryside&#13;
He also mai&#13;
surname, ai&#13;
significance&#13;
Meanwl&#13;
escalates, c&#13;
literally tur&#13;
on the New&#13;
son, the fie&#13;
forced abs&#13;
tnarried in&#13;
turned into&#13;
"This is my daughter. Jeez,&#13;
you're great Harry. My&#13;
daughter also has musical&#13;
talents, don't you Tina? She&#13;
dances, a born dancer in the&#13;
family . .&#13;
A black man approached the&#13;
minstrel with no album in his&#13;
hand. He asked the composer&#13;
how he wrote his songs, how he&#13;
constructed them, because he&#13;
too was into songwriting.&#13;
Harry smiled. He had no&#13;
twenty-five-words or less ready&#13;
to sum up his talents. He told&#13;
the man wearing an Army&#13;
fatigue coat to simply write&#13;
what he felt and hope it came&#13;
together musically. They shook&#13;
hands.&#13;
ufa/L/ M.&#13;
A father who looked like a&#13;
Manhattan hard hat was getting&#13;
an album autographed for his&#13;
daughter. He asked'Harry if the&#13;
lyrics to "Taxi" referred to&#13;
taking dope. ("You see . . . she&#13;
was gonna be an actress . . .&#13;
and I was gonna learn to fly. She&#13;
took off to find the footlights, I&#13;
took off to find the sky. And here&#13;
she's acting happy, inside her&#13;
handsome home . . . and me&#13;
I'm flying in my taxi, taking&#13;
tips and getting stoned. I go&#13;
flying so high when I'm&#13;
stoned."+)&#13;
A frail man with a raincoat&#13;
hung over his arm asked Harry&#13;
about the lyrics to his song&#13;
called "Sometime, Somewhere&#13;
Wife". The man did not look&#13;
happily married, he did not look&#13;
happily anything. He smiled&#13;
faintly when Harry answered.&#13;
A large woman with a&#13;
friendly face walked up to&#13;
Harry when her turn came in&#13;
the short line. She gazed into his&#13;
face smiling broadly, motherly.&#13;
Harry looked a bit bewildered&#13;
as he smiled back. She had no&#13;
album or picture to be signed.&#13;
"Don't you remember me,&#13;
Harry?"&#13;
He looked hard, biting his&#13;
lower lip.&#13;
"You remember the old&#13;
neighborhood. I'm your&#13;
mother's . . ."&#13;
Harry remembered and&#13;
kissed her, gave the woman&#13;
with the friendly face a hug.&#13;
"I'm so glad to see you've made&#13;
it, Harry. I knew you would."&#13;
They talked a bit, then she said&#13;
good-bye, beaming as she&#13;
walked through the cluster of&#13;
empty folding chairs.&#13;
There was no one left to talk&#13;
to or sign autographs for.&#13;
Guitarist Ron Palmer was&#13;
finishing a conversation with an&#13;
aspiring guitar player. Tim&#13;
Scott was putting his equipment&#13;
away, John Wallace was talking&#13;
to someone about the excellent&#13;
review the group had received&#13;
in the New York Times the day&#13;
before. Speaking of the review,&#13;
John remembered they had to&#13;
play in the Village in a matter of&#13;
hours.&#13;
Harry Chapin left the&#13;
"Special Events Center",&#13;
walking past the still overflowing&#13;
shopping cart of his&#13;
records. He was still smiling.&#13;
He took the escalator down to&#13;
the seventh floor, to the furniture&#13;
department. There he&#13;
stood for a second at the base of&#13;
the moving stairs, as if to get his&#13;
bearings. He then turned right&#13;
and walked on as A-S shoppers&#13;
turned left to the escalator&#13;
down.&#13;
+ Copyright 1972 by Story Songs&#13;
Ltd., ASCAP, All rights reserved.&#13;
April 24, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
isted adviser, is hustling the judges,&#13;
ged him out of spite and the fact that&#13;
e payroll of an opposing gang and&#13;
'ery ethnic moniker he could sumthe&#13;
tender youth's psyche bruised,&#13;
ing what it is, turned the Don's&#13;
Al Pacino) — he wanted him to be a&#13;
senator — optimism into bullets as&#13;
en in revenge for what was done to&#13;
JI added measure of satisfaction&#13;
ccompanied his vengeance as one of&#13;
killer's victims was McCurdy, the&#13;
ater linked to narcotics. From the&#13;
FLICKS:&#13;
: GODFATHER'&#13;
;d restaurant he is whisked to Sicily&#13;
ds the next year or two roaming the&#13;
ith two shot gun armed bodyguards.&#13;
5S a young girl in a town bearing his&#13;
we can only speculate as to what the&#13;
f that is.&#13;
e, back in the states, the gang war&#13;
I his hot blooded brother Santino is&#13;
d into Swiss cheese at a toll station&#13;
ersey causeway. Like the prodigal&#13;
ling Killer returns hardened by his&#13;
:e and the death of the girl he&#13;
icily. He finds his father's house&#13;
armed camp and the Don in failing&#13;
health. From then on it is his show and it is clear&#13;
that he is destined to take the reigns from the old&#13;
man and restore the family name to its peak in the&#13;
mountainous range of gangsterdom. In a fatherson&#13;
type encounter we see th e old man's senility&#13;
surface in repetitious babbling speech. But we&#13;
hear a bit of worldly wisdom dribble from his lips&#13;
when he warns his son that the traitor in the family&#13;
will be the one who comes to him with an offer of&#13;
capitulation from the other side. It is good and&#13;
refreshing to see an absolute cross the screen once&#13;
in awhile, it sets your mind at east.&#13;
Of course, in a movie as compact as the&#13;
Godfather — over 15 murders occur in three hours&#13;
— even the babbling of an old man cannot be&#13;
forgotten, and this becomes evident with&#13;
terrifying ramifications.&#13;
The end finds the old man drop while chasing&#13;
his grandson in the tomato patch and his son r ise&#13;
to power as head of the family. His first move is to&#13;
get rid of dad's councilor because he's "not a&#13;
wartime consiglierge." And he shoots across the&#13;
screen like a star shattering anybody's expectations&#13;
of a top ganglord.&#13;
The movie is an interesting story of the socalled&#13;
Mafiosa and the acting is quite good for a&#13;
movie in which the plot depends on violence to&#13;
move it along. Most of my friends insist that the&#13;
syndicate is all but in control of Kenosha. Yessir,&#13;
right herein Anywhere USA, which raises another&#13;
point for speculation. (If any of you want to pursue&#13;
this leave your name and address at the Newscope&#13;
office and a couple of the boys will visit you.)&#13;
But leaving all open questions aside, and&#13;
reserving opinion on the elder Corleone's noble, if&#13;
pragmatic determination not to dip into the&#13;
lucrative and young narcotics market, we are left&#13;
with a film that tried to do in three hours what took&#13;
Marie Puzo 600 pages. We cannot possibly have an'&#13;
accurate picture of what the Godfather&#13;
represents, if anything. And if so, then the underworld&#13;
rivals the Vietnam War for brutality and&#13;
violence and this reviewer is not aware of such&#13;
another war. What we have despite its equivocal&#13;
factual context is a movie imminently suited to fit&#13;
those wonderful automated theatres on the west&#13;
side.&#13;
MARTIN SEYMOUR-SMITH&#13;
poetry and simultaneity&#13;
by Jim Koloen, Editor&#13;
Among the visiting faculty serving time at Parkside, Martin&#13;
Seymour-Smith stands out as being the one with an English accent,&#13;
ttje one with a full beard, and the one who publishes poetry. The&#13;
English professor, who, among other things, teaches a creative&#13;
poetry class, presented the latest in a series of Poetry Forums held&#13;
in the Whiteskellar on Wednesday afternoon.&#13;
At UWP, poets usually draw hummingbird audiences, people&#13;
come in, sit down, listen for a while and abruptly leave; others&#13;
loudly arrive in the middle of the reading; still others decide that,&#13;
at least during poetry readings, the Whiteskellar is not a good place&#13;
to play cards, so they shuffle out silently between introductions to&#13;
poems.&#13;
Seymour-Smith read from two of his published collections,&#13;
taking good advantage of his strongly accented and resonant voice.&#13;
Appearing quite relaxed and in his element, Seymour-Smith was&#13;
pleasant just to listen to, though it took awhile to accustom the&#13;
midwest American hot dog ear to the fish and chips British accent.&#13;
Ore of the hazards incurred while reading poems in the&#13;
Whiteskellar is the background accompaniment. Deaf hammers&#13;
flayed away at hollow metal behind twin steel doors, creating a&#13;
cacophony that clashed with the poems; the coke machine, not to&#13;
be outdone, wailed its own subtle cold wind death rattle. But poets,&#13;
being an adaptable breed, make the best of it. Smith quipped it off&#13;
saying, "I like that accompaniment, though it doesn't always go&#13;
with the rhythm of the poems."&#13;
The poet commenced the reading with a poem on westerns&#13;
entitled "Forth Coming Attractions". Its subject was "good bad&#13;
guys", and as was characteristic of the entire menu of poems read&#13;
that day, featured a witty irony-satiricism, and a reliance on incisive&#13;
observation rather than imagery. As he explained some&#13;
unfamiliar British terminology, the audience ats its lunch; much of&#13;
his later poetry contained reflective, metaphysical intonations; the&#13;
rather large, and closely quartered audience coped with less&#13;
metaphysical stomach grumblings.&#13;
The poet explained before reading "The Administrators" that,&#13;
When I read this in public in England, people come up and say&#13;
they don't like it because it's about the 'official poets', the right&#13;
writers." Poets, as his poem amplified, "with careers planned at&#13;
16." Later he smilingly explained, "I have a reputation for, ah, well&#13;
you can guess, misbehaving in public. People in England know my&#13;
name, but they don't speak it."&#13;
Next Smith read "Saxalby", "the kind of poem," he explained,&#13;
"you can't write unless it's absolutely true. I wrote it when I was&#13;
poor and would do anything for money." Grinning he added, "I&#13;
think I still will."&#13;
Smith's poems were genrally long, witty, occasionally satiric&#13;
and not so much laden with imagery as with concise, and ironic&#13;
statements.&#13;
The poet concluded the reading with a presentation of a&#13;
number of the thirteen sequences in "Reminiscences of Norma",&#13;
who is not a "particular person" Smith explained. Using cubism as&#13;
an example, Smith explained "In this poem I try to express a&#13;
number of different moods and different aspects simultaneously."&#13;
"Reminiscences" is interwoven with a bleak death-sex theme,&#13;
and perhaps, represented the most successful moments of the&#13;
reading. Even the hollow hammers and the coke machine became&#13;
silent, as the poet spoke of a "photoplay in which I don't, I hope, not&#13;
participate; when memory warms, but only real is cold; ending, I&#13;
had you once; to find in nothingness the love I can." Desperation.&#13;
After the reading, a brief question and answer period ensued&#13;
during which Smith was asked to compare universities in England&#13;
with those in America. Facetiously, he grinned that "Oxford is&#13;
possibly a bit higher (in excellence) than Parkside." He later took&#13;
exception to a question concerning the sexual fantasies he relates&#13;
in his poetry. He retorted, "I don't know that they are fantasies."&#13;
In the past month or so, the Poetry Forum has sponsored three&#13;
published poets at the Whiteskellar. Robert Bly presented UWP's&#13;
most impressive and memorable reading to date; Knute Skinner&#13;
fell flat on his arse, while Martin Seymour-Smith lifted the Forum&#13;
back to its feet. All in all, it's been a good, sometimes great, poetry&#13;
season.&#13;
B KOFFEE&#13;
'3@T&#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE April 24, 1972&#13;
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ALRIKAS Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents&#13;
at the&#13;
iWfelltf1&#13;
Live Entertainment&#13;
Two&#13;
Performers&#13;
For Two Shows&#13;
Lois Seiberlich&#13;
&amp;&#13;
John Ziebell&#13;
April 26 1 - 3 PM&#13;
FREE&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents&#13;
at the&#13;
jVicicelodeoM&#13;
The Classic Comedy of&#13;
Laurel &amp;&#13;
Hardy&#13;
in Fixer Uppers&#13;
Laurel &amp; Hardy&#13;
Murder Case&#13;
Live Ghost&#13;
April 25 Noon&#13;
FREE&#13;
Interview with PAB President&#13;
by Roscoe Humus of the Newscope staff&#13;
Kim Rudat, president of the Parkside Activities Board, was&#13;
interviewed by Newscope several weeks ago. The assignment&#13;
presumably follows the interview with the president of SGA sort of&#13;
as a gesture of goodwill. In the past Newscope had editorially&#13;
faulted much that the PAB has done, and only on one occasion did it&#13;
give the organization its unqualified praise. And that was in a&#13;
review.&#13;
But more than that, the interview may serve to introduce the&#13;
PAB, through its president, to the student body. It is, after all, one&#13;
of the largest student organizations on campus, and one of its advisors&#13;
says its budget is made up entirely of student segregated&#13;
fees. In a way this is a stockholders' report on the progress of an&#13;
organization that is truly supported by the students.&#13;
Knowing this and that it is responsible for such projects as&#13;
Whiteskellar, the Friday night movie in the activities building,&#13;
dances, concerts and numerous other undertakings the interview&#13;
begins in the middle of the tape.&#13;
NS: Is the PAB a student club?&#13;
Rudat: No.&#13;
NS: What is it?&#13;
Rudat: Well, to get as specific&#13;
as you can. it's an advisory role&#13;
of students in the Student&#13;
Activities Office. Students can't&#13;
handle state funds. We're using&#13;
state funds so the Board more&#13;
or less advises Bill Neibuhr and&#13;
Tony Totero (Coordinator of&#13;
Student Activities and Advisor&#13;
to Student Organizations,&#13;
respectively). However, I can't&#13;
name an instance when they&#13;
said no to unless it wasn't&#13;
practical.&#13;
NS: Where do you get the&#13;
money to put on a program?&#13;
Rudat: That's a budget that Bill&#13;
and Tony control.&#13;
NS: Do you know where from&#13;
the University budget the&#13;
money comes from, or is it just&#13;
from Student Activities?&#13;
Rudat: Yeah, I just know it&#13;
goes to Student Activities&#13;
Office. I imagine it's where all&#13;
great money comes from ... a&#13;
great big bank in the sky or&#13;
something.&#13;
NS: When you get a budget do&#13;
you get it in one lump, you&#13;
know; you get a figure of how&#13;
much you have to work with&#13;
during the year?&#13;
Rudat: Really I don't know.&#13;
You see this year we don't have&#13;
a budget as such because things&#13;
(with the university) are the&#13;
way they are. Next year they're&#13;
going to get a whole different&#13;
type of setup and I have no idea&#13;
what it's going to be like. I'm&#13;
sure it will be explained to the&#13;
board, I guess it's some kind of&#13;
expanded budget where we'll be&#13;
part of the Student Activities&#13;
Building. You know, it won't be&#13;
just Auxiliary Enterprises.&#13;
NS: Right now you just go up&#13;
and say, well, we want to do this&#13;
can we have the money? Is that&#13;
how you do it?&#13;
Rudat: That's generally the&#13;
way it is. We have to show&#13;
cause.&#13;
NS: Who do you have to show&#13;
cause to?&#13;
Rudat: I believe we have to go&#13;
through Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn's office, but I'm not&#13;
sure. You see we do the&#13;
programming you know, and&#13;
like we don't worry about the&#13;
money. Bill and Tony bend over&#13;
backwards when it comes to&#13;
getting some bread for&#13;
something.&#13;
NS: Do you make profits on&#13;
your program?&#13;
Rudat: It depends.&#13;
Occasionally we do, but we're&#13;
usually operating in the red. We&#13;
have the idea of exhausting our&#13;
budget by the end of the year.&#13;
Last year we turned our budget&#13;
over four times, but we finally&#13;
blow the whole thing by the time&#13;
the end of the year bash comes.&#13;
We're not in it to make money&#13;
but let's face it. you gotta make&#13;
some money. I mean like&#13;
ShaNaNa. we lost money. We&#13;
can't do too many ShaNaNa's.&#13;
NS: Was ShaNaNa a bust?&#13;
Rudat: It wasn't a bust but we&#13;
did lose money. It's one of the&#13;
few things we've lost that much&#13;
money on.&#13;
NS: Any reasons why?&#13;
Rudat: I think ShaNaNa was a&#13;
little advanced for this area.&#13;
There were a lot of students that&#13;
came and we did a lot of&#13;
Rudat: Bill Niebuhr.&#13;
NS: Are students involved in&#13;
any way?&#13;
Rudat: Right, right. We've&#13;
gone, myself or Buzz, have gone&#13;
to meetings with him with&#13;
agents. He's told us how much&#13;
they want and we'll tell them if&#13;
we don't want them, if they're,,&#13;
too much. If he says I got a&#13;
chance for this group do you&#13;
want them, yeah, then we set a&#13;
price limit on it. If we can't get&#13;
that forget it.&#13;
He and Tony had a chance to&#13;
get John Denver down here last&#13;
fall and he told the agent, "Well,&#13;
I have to go back and talk it&#13;
over with the board." The board&#13;
was contacted and talked it over&#13;
and they said 'okay, we'll take&#13;
him", you know. And since then&#13;
Denver had raised his price you&#13;
know, so we had to come back&#13;
Kim Rudat&#13;
advertising. What can you say?&#13;
I guess you liked them, I liked&#13;
them a lot.&#13;
NS: Did the ticket prices have&#13;
anything to do with it?&#13;
Rudat: The ticket prices we&#13;
figure, if we sell out the house,&#13;
we might go a hundred dollars&#13;
over or something. We sit down&#13;
and mathematically work it out,&#13;
we're not trying to rip anybody&#13;
off, it's just what we have to do.&#13;
NS: Do you think the ticket&#13;
prices for the larger concerts&#13;
are fair?&#13;
Rudat: Well I'll agree that&#13;
they're high, but if you try to go&#13;
to a concert in Milwaukee or&#13;
Chicago they're higher. Around&#13;
here we're limited to facilities&#13;
and when we have a concert we&#13;
sell the seats so we'll just break&#13;
even.&#13;
NS: Do you plan on sold out&#13;
houses?&#13;
Rudat: We have to. Just&#13;
recently we've convinced the&#13;
Student ActivitiesOffice to give&#13;
Parkside students a break on&#13;
(he tickets. It isn't much of a&#13;
break but we're still giving a&#13;
break with Buddy Rich now.&#13;
NS: What is the break?&#13;
Rudat: Well, 50 ce nts cheaper.&#13;
NS: Does the Activities Board&#13;
get any percentage from&#13;
concerts?&#13;
Rudat: On Superstar I know the&#13;
money that we got from that&#13;
went straight into our account.&#13;
But I don't think it's called the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
account, it's called the Student&#13;
Activities Office account&#13;
because it's state funds.&#13;
NS: Who is your agent in&#13;
dealing with groups?&#13;
again and we said 'okay, we'll&#13;
take him for that price too."&#13;
NS: In your opinion what are&#13;
the major things the PAB has&#13;
done for Parkside since last&#13;
September?&#13;
Rudat: Well, personally, it's the&#13;
Whiteskellar. Next, we've&#13;
written a constitution which is a&#13;
good constitution. Those are the&#13;
two major things and then our&#13;
concerts. I think the big thing&#13;
has been the huge success of our&#13;
dances, they went over good.&#13;
Plus we did some innovative&#13;
programming such as, well, we&#13;
took your idea of a tape dance&#13;
and used that successfully.&#13;
We're not afraid to try things&#13;
now.&#13;
NS: What kind of success has&#13;
Whiteskellar had?&#13;
Rudat: Excellent success.&#13;
Poetry Forum is very . happy&#13;
being able to put their things on&#13;
there. Our Nickelodeon, the day&#13;
before vacation during that&#13;
blizzard we had over fifty&#13;
people in there.&#13;
NS: How would you define&#13;
yourself in terms of what you do&#13;
for the students?&#13;
Rudat: We stick to our job of&#13;
programming. Not just&#13;
entertainment, but interesting&#13;
things for students to do on&#13;
campus. Whiteskellar, I keep&#13;
going back to them because it's&#13;
probably the best example of&#13;
what we've don this year. We&#13;
went there with the idea that&#13;
there is a lot of students sitting&#13;
around on campus during the&#13;
day with nothing to do. Let's&#13;
program for them too. Se we put&#13;
Whiteskellar on during the day&#13;
and we kept it free or the&#13;
movies are a nickel&#13;
(Nickelodeon) and that's just a&#13;
gimmick, we don t make&#13;
anything on it.&#13;
NS: How are the films you show&#13;
at the Activities Building&#13;
chosen?&#13;
Rudat: The film committee&#13;
chairman, Mark Thome, and&#13;
his committee went through and&#13;
chose a number of films out of&#13;
the catalog. Somebody has to sit&#13;
down with the catalog, see what&#13;
we've had and what is now&#13;
available and choose maybe 200&#13;
films that we could choose&#13;
from. Out of that we choose 25&#13;
that the Executive Council&#13;
chooses and out of those 25 th e&#13;
ones with the top votes, if&#13;
they're available sometime&#13;
during the year we plug them in&#13;
and we go right down the line&#13;
until we have as many films as&#13;
we show during the year.&#13;
NS: Who makes the final&#13;
decision on what will be shown?&#13;
Rudat: The Executive Council&#13;
and physical limitations. It's&#13;
happened that we've&#13;
programmed Mash and Patton -&#13;
and they assured us that they&#13;
would be available in this area,&#13;
and they weren't, the reason&#13;
being that we have so many&#13;
theatres around here that&#13;
wanted to bring them back&#13;
again, whereas, a lot of colleges&#13;
up north have been able to get&#13;
that because there's no&#13;
theaters.&#13;
(The PAB constitution&#13;
requires prospective members&#13;
to serve a one year&#13;
probationary period before they&#13;
can become regular members.&#13;
The Executive Council is made&#13;
up of the various committee&#13;
chairmen of PAB which&#13;
currently numbers nine. Since&#13;
the constitution was only&#13;
adopted in January new&#13;
members, about 25, must wait&#13;
until 1973 before they earn a&#13;
vote.)&#13;
NS: Are you as president&#13;
elected?&#13;
Rudat: Oh yeah, by the board. I&#13;
like the setup. I did a lot of work&#13;
in high school on student&#13;
governments, student council,&#13;
that stuff; running for election&#13;
all the time. That's bullshit. You&#13;
can't get nothing done. The&#13;
people that elected me, that&#13;
elected the people onto the&#13;
positions of leadership on the&#13;
council, the committee&#13;
chairmen, they were elected&#13;
because of their interest and&#13;
their ability to do the work and&#13;
that was all they got elected on.&#13;
There was no popularity contest&#13;
because you can't bullshit. You&#13;
know if the guy's going to put&#13;
out or not and that's why I think&#13;
it'll be a good organization. It's&#13;
going to keep going because you&#13;
can't get anywhere unless you&#13;
do the work.&#13;
NS: Are most committees made&#13;
up of regular members or.&#13;
probationary members?&#13;
Rudat: Right now they're&#13;
probationary. After we got the&#13;
constitution last January&#13;
everyone from then on has been&#13;
probationary.&#13;
NS: How many members of&#13;
PAB are employed by the&#13;
Student Activities Office?&#13;
Rudat: I'd say five or six.&#13;
NS: Were most of them hired&#13;
before or they joined PAB?&#13;
Rudat: All before.&#13;
NS: Does your work for the&#13;
Activities Office go along with&#13;
your PAB activities?&#13;
Rudat: It helps yeah, because&#13;
I'm right in the office when -&#13;
something comes up. I can take&#13;
a call if they're calling for the&#13;
Activities Board president.&#13;
I can't say there are any&#13;
conflicts. I can't say it would be&#13;
any harder if I was just&#13;
(Continued on Page 12)&#13;
Archeologist to Speak&#13;
The 8,000 year record of early man in the Midwest unearthed at&#13;
t h e K o s t e r I n d i a n s i t e i n s o u t h e r n I l l i n o i s w i l l h p t h o o k -&#13;
free public lecture by Northwestern uZeJiS a cLloS rt&#13;
S ruever at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, April 28, in GranqubtHallaUhe rb r ™ *'»« DivUion and ^cture^and Fine^Arts&#13;
t 9StonUeVer' who directs the Koster excavations, also will lecture&#13;
at 2.30 p.m. in Greenquist Room 101 on "New Directions in&#13;
nTnf th f°l0gC USing the Koster di8 as ™ example.&#13;
One of the largest on-going archeological undertakings in the&#13;
western hemisphere, the Koster site is located near the junction of&#13;
the Illinois and Mississippi Rivers and has been home to at least 12&#13;
successive groups of Indians who moved in, established villages&#13;
buried their dead and eventually moved on.&#13;
Major finds during last summer's excavations included the&#13;
well-preserved skeleton of an 18-month-old infant covered with red&#13;
paint and a dog burial, both dating from about 5100 B.C., as well as&#13;
a ceremonial cache of red pigment and cannel coal&#13;
The site and a nearby museum of artifacts from the dig are&#13;
open to the public during the summer months, a departure from&#13;
practice at most excavations where visitors are rigorously excluded.&#13;
Guided tours may be arranged by writing the Field&#13;
Director, Archeological Research, Kampsville, 111.&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
TWO KILLED IN MEXICAN STUDENT PROTESTS&#13;
CULIACAN, Mexico (CPS) — Two students died of bullet&#13;
wounds Friday, April 7, when police fired on students who had&#13;
thrown stones and molotov cocktails at the State Congress&#13;
Building.&#13;
The students demanded the resignation of Sinaloa State&#13;
University Rector, Gonzalo Armienta Calderon, the reform of&#13;
university law, and the release of students arrested during the Dast&#13;
six months. 6 H&#13;
An estimated 60 students are being held as a result of Friday'sdisturbances.&#13;
KLEINDIENST PR CAMPAIGN INTENSIFYING&#13;
(CPS) — Acting Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst,&#13;
facing stiff Senate opposition to his nomination to the Attorney&#13;
Generalship, is waging an intensive public relations campaign&#13;
designed to impress upon the public his qualification for the cabinet&#13;
post. Or so it seems.&#13;
In the past two weeks the national office of College Press&#13;
Service in Denver has received over 50 pages of press releases&#13;
documenting indictments ranging from price freeze violations to&#13;
anti-trust suits — all of which have second paragraphs beginning&#13;
with: "Acting Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst . .&#13;
NIXON PLANNED TO DISOBEY SUPREME COURT&#13;
ON AMCHITKA A BLAST SAYS REAGAN&#13;
SACRAMENTO (CPS) — California Governor Ronald Reagan,&#13;
speaking before the California Republican Assembly Saturday&#13;
night said President Richard Nixon was prepared to disobey the&#13;
U.S. Supreme Court if it ordered him to halt the Amchitka nuclear&#13;
test in Alaska last November.&#13;
"The President said to me, 'Even if the Supreme Court ruled&#13;
that I could not do it I have determined that as commander-in-chief&#13;
it is my responsibility and I am going to do it anyway,' " Reagan&#13;
recanted.&#13;
The court did not order a halt to the controversial underground&#13;
nuclear test despite objections from environmentalists who feared&#13;
an earthquake. None occurred.&#13;
STONED TEACHING OK IN CALIFORNIA&#13;
(CPS) — Ruling that possession of marijuana does not&#13;
demonstrate unfitness to teach, the California Court of Appeal has&#13;
decided that a Berkeley teacher was improperly stripped of his&#13;
teaching credentials. The State Board of Education had revoked&#13;
the teaching credentials in 1969, two years after the man was&#13;
convicted of marijuana possession. The teacher was represented in&#13;
the case by the ACLU of Northern California.&#13;
Carthage College Student Activities Board&#13;
PRESENTS IN CONCERT&#13;
THE BYRD5 Also appearing — MADURA&#13;
Sunday, April 30 8:00 PM&#13;
Carthage Fieldhouse&#13;
.00-General Admission&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE: Carthage College, Bidinger's Music House,&#13;
Cook-Gere Music (Racine), and Team Electronics (Racine)&#13;
THE&#13;
UPSTAIRS&#13;
"Highest bar „&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
Weds, ^-/o Sun./-6&#13;
H oz. BOTTLE BEER&#13;
* HIGH-BALLS 35 £&#13;
Live Musi c —&#13;
Fri. + 5at,&#13;
ACROSS FROM THE&#13;
IAKE THEATER,&#13;
April 24, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 9&#13;
For The Record&#13;
1 n i i i \ i i: i n i \ ii s i \ m i s i&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
S&amp;uueuj, Ute tf-Utedt&#13;
Pifga &amp; Otolian Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 653-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
When it comes to&#13;
engagements,&#13;
we wrote the book...&#13;
I t ' s 40 pages f i lled&#13;
with diamond engagement and&#13;
wedding rings. In beautiful full&#13;
color you can look at hundreds of&#13;
different s tyles . Everything from&#13;
ant i que to modern.&#13;
Vanity Fair has been in the diamond&#13;
business s ince 1921. We&#13;
impor t our own diamonds , design&#13;
and manufactu r e the set tings,&#13;
and mount the gems . And s ince&#13;
1921 we' v e sold direct l y to dea l ers&#13;
. Now in a new and unique&#13;
marketing policy, we're selling directly&#13;
t o co l lege students .&#13;
Wha t it all means is that we' v e&#13;
eliminated the middleman pr o f i t s&#13;
that can drive up the price of a&#13;
diamond r ing.&#13;
In fact we' v e done it so well, we&#13;
can probabl y sell you a diamond&#13;
ring for 50% less than anyone&#13;
else . If we don't we'll give you&#13;
your money back. We give you&#13;
that guarantee in writing.&#13;
You can read all about our&#13;
guarantee and a lot of oth e r interesting&#13;
fact s about diamonds in&#13;
our book. It's fre e . . .&#13;
send for it!&#13;
a Division of Jewelcor&#13;
\fantsphir])iiim&lt;m(ls&#13;
Jewelers and Distributors, 1234 Manor Shopping&#13;
Center, Millersville Pike, Lancaster, Pa. 17603&#13;
Name&#13;
Address.&#13;
City. .State. -Zip Code.&#13;
^ School&#13;
Page 10 NEWSCOPE April 24, 1972&#13;
— __ anti-war demonstrations&#13;
-l Students Strike Across the Country&#13;
IOL VatLj Supper CU&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan Id.&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
•y SPORTS BAR&#13;
OhJ ihZTAKE HWY 3Z&#13;
FLAY PO O L - POO S BA L U&#13;
B A R - E A A / O v j I C H E&#13;
• '• package ooobs -&#13;
(WELCOME NEW AbULTSO&#13;
S A V b S S/t v Z&gt; 5 3 A A/ t&gt; S&#13;
y zfSi&#13;
HURRY IM TO OUR&#13;
-SPRING S f\lE: BOOKS&#13;
RECORDS JA CKETS&#13;
SWEATERS&#13;
PIZZAS&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREF. DELIVERY TO PARKSIDF VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 «i Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE —1946 Ford, 6cyI. 2 door&#13;
in good cond. Call after 6 at 654-6485.&#13;
for this $450 value.&#13;
FOR SALE — '62 Comet, 6 cyl. $125.&#13;
Call 652-5904 or 654-3429.&#13;
FOR SALE —Guitar MARTIN D-18,&#13;
with deluxe hard shell case, $335&#13;
firm, ph. 652.0295.&#13;
"RIFLE - Winchester model 88 - .243&#13;
Win. with 4x Weaver Scope. Excellent&#13;
condition. $110 firm. ph. 654-&#13;
7964.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 VW, sunroof, good&#13;
cond. $1,145. Call 632-9669 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
P E Turntable. SHURE high track&#13;
cartridge. Call Ron. 657-6630.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 Triumph 500,&#13;
custom, best offer call 552-9068.&#13;
1970 Nova, 350 V-8, two barrel,&#13;
factory 3 speed on floor, power&#13;
steering and brakes, 32,000 miles,&#13;
new tires. Call 657-7105, 8 to 5:30 or&#13;
554-6470 after 6:30.&#13;
Spiff y 1963 MG Midget SPORTSCAR,&#13;
needs body work, truly THE&#13;
car of the future and yours for the&#13;
ridiculously low price of $150 ca sh,&#13;
contact Jim at 553-2496 o r at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED - Writers, journalists,&#13;
production staff and ad men to take&#13;
over a college newspaper. Must be&#13;
housebroken, learn while you earn&#13;
when you can. .Ph. 553-2496 or 553-&#13;
2498. Ask for anybody or come in&#13;
person to the Newscope office,&#13;
corner of Wood Rd. and Hwy. A.&#13;
Gay Youth Coalition: Anyone interested,&#13;
or having any questions or&#13;
problems they would like to discuss,&#13;
please call 634-4470.&#13;
HOUSEWORK HELPER — early&#13;
June for about a week, pay open. Ph.&#13;
554-8517.&#13;
WANTED — a student volunteer to&#13;
be big brother to 11 year old cerebral&#13;
palsied boy. Call Wendy at 553-2121,&#13;
ext. 42.&#13;
(CPS) — After a two-year lull&#13;
America's college campuses&#13;
became active with strikes,&#13;
demonstrations, and teach-ins&#13;
prompted by the escalation of&#13;
the U.S. role in the Indochina&#13;
war.&#13;
The strike, backed by the&#13;
National Student Association&#13;
(NSA), the National Student&#13;
Lobby (NSL), and the Student&#13;
Mobilization Committee (SMC),&#13;
grew out of an emergency NSANSL&#13;
conference. Forty student&#13;
leaders met in Washington to&#13;
discuss the air war and to lobby&#13;
for passage of the Mondale-&#13;
Gravel-Drynan bill to cut off&#13;
funds for the war. The eight Ivy&#13;
League student newspapers&#13;
agreed that same weekend to&#13;
print a joint editorial criticizing&#13;
the war's escalation and calling&#13;
for a student strike. The NSA&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION — is a unique and&#13;
effortless technique by which every&#13;
individual can expand his awareness&#13;
and develop his full mental potential.&#13;
Lectures: Mon. April 24 =&#13;
Kenosha campus rm. 103 3 P.M. and&#13;
8 P .M.; Tue. April 25 - Greenquist&#13;
Hall, rm. 108 8 P.M.; Thur. April 27 -&#13;
Greenquist 8 P.M.&#13;
JUST IN TIME FOR MOTHER'S&#13;
DAY — Ready for the Home,&#13;
weaned and litter trained, 8 weeks&#13;
old people orientated kittens. 1&#13;
Black &amp; White Female - looks like a&#13;
panda bear; 1 Black &amp; White male -&#13;
looks like Sylvester the Cat; 1 Gray&#13;
Tiger Stripe Male - big eyes and a&#13;
loud pur; 1 Brown Tiger Stripe Male&#13;
-the friendliest kitten. All come with&#13;
white boots, stomachs and faces.&#13;
Cost: only a l ittle love. Call 633-8162&#13;
any time, but hurry.&#13;
WANTED - STAMPS — Collections,&#13;
Accumulations, Mint or Used, On&#13;
Cover or off, First Day covers or&#13;
what ever! U.S. or Foreign. Phone&#13;
694-3398. Ask for Jim or leave&#13;
messate at Newscope office.&#13;
conference responded with a&#13;
call to all students to strike on&#13;
Friday, April 21.&#13;
Several demands were issued&#13;
late Monday, April 17,&#13;
including: an immediate halt to&#13;
the bombing of North and South&#13;
Vietnam; the withdrawal of all&#13;
American air, naval, and&#13;
ground forces from Vietnam;&#13;
the final renunciation of the&#13;
Thieu regime by the U.S.&#13;
government; and a return to the&#13;
peace talks by the U.S.&#13;
government. NSA also issued an&#13;
appeal to antiwar forces to&#13;
bring massive pressure to bear&#13;
on Congress in support of the&#13;
Mondale-Gravel-Drynan "cut&#13;
off the war funds" amendment.&#13;
Response to the call was&#13;
immediate. On Monday evening&#13;
several thousand Columbia&#13;
University students staged a&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
march down Broadway in New&#13;
York City, three hundred&#13;
students smashed windows at&#13;
Stanford University in&#13;
California, and Amherst&#13;
College in Amherst, Mass.,&#13;
went on strike immediately.&#13;
In San Francisco 2,000 people&#13;
stood in support of the take over&#13;
of an Air Force Recruitment&#13;
Station by members of the&#13;
Vietnam Veterans Against the&#13;
War. 70 persons were arrested&#13;
and a Naval Recruiting station&#13;
wagon was burned.&#13;
At Alameda Air Naval Station&#13;
4 persons were arrested after a&#13;
crowd of four hundred shut the&#13;
base down for three hours.&#13;
At Madison, Wisconsin, three&#13;
thousand students marched to&#13;
the ROTC building on the&#13;
University of Wisconsin campus&#13;
bearing red paint.&#13;
Demonstrators there seized and&#13;
held for ten minutes the State&#13;
Street mall, a main city street&#13;
leading from the campus to the&#13;
State Capitol building.&#13;
Colgate University and&#13;
Grinnell College in Iowa&#13;
declared immediate hunger&#13;
strikes on their campuses.&#13;
Boston University has been on&#13;
strike for the past two weeks on&#13;
account of an incident arising&#13;
from the presence of Marine&#13;
recruiters on that campus.&#13;
Students at the University of&#13;
Maryland College Park campus&#13;
staged protests at a table tennis&#13;
match between the visiting&#13;
Chinese and American teams —&#13;
a match attended by Tricia&#13;
Nixon Cox and Secretary of&#13;
State William Rogers. After the&#13;
match about 350 students&#13;
marched on the ROTC building,&#13;
breaking windows, and then&#13;
paraded to the University&#13;
President's home.&#13;
Activities on Tuesday, April&#13;
18, were heightened. Columbia&#13;
students again marched down&#13;
Broadway in New York, and the&#13;
Columbia administration&#13;
hurriedly removed the U.S. flag&#13;
from the flagpole in front of the&#13;
administration building-as&#13;
students stood demanding the&#13;
closing of that school.&#13;
University of Maryland-&#13;
College Park students again&#13;
attacked the ROTC building&#13;
and, 1,000 st rong, blocked U.S.&#13;
Highway 1 into Washington,&#13;
D.C. Police used tear gas to&#13;
clear the area, injuring one&#13;
student and arresting several&#13;
others.&#13;
A nationwide chain phone-call&#13;
campaign also was initiated,&#13;
with people calling the White&#13;
House to register their feelings&#13;
and then asking a friend to do&#13;
likewise (the White House&#13;
number is (202) 456-1414).&#13;
By Tuesday evening between&#13;
40 and 50 schools had informed&#13;
their intentions to strike, with&#13;
numerous others planning to&#13;
hold strike votes on Thursday,&#13;
April 20'&#13;
The ROTC building at the&#13;
College of the Holy Cross in&#13;
Worcester, Mass., was reported&#13;
to have been rocked by a bomb&#13;
blast Tuesday night while&#13;
students from the University of&#13;
the Americas rioted outside the&#13;
Naval Security Station in&#13;
Washington, D.C.&#13;
To coordinate information&#13;
flow, the NSA has set up a stirke&#13;
central in its offices in&#13;
Washington, D.C. Three&#13;
regional strike information&#13;
centers have also been&#13;
established: the Colorado Daily&#13;
at the University of Colorado in&#13;
Boulder, Rollins College in&#13;
Winter Park, Fla.; and the&#13;
University of Illinois at&#13;
Champaign. Additionally,&#13;
College Press Service in&#13;
Denver, Colorado, is working&#13;
with NSA to coordinate news for&#13;
the duration of the protests.&#13;
April 24, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 11&#13;
Golfers, Netmen Win&#13;
UW-Parkside varsity teams&#13;
continue to do well as the&#13;
golfers were 4-1 after two&#13;
outings in multi-team matches&#13;
and the tennis squad had&#13;
rebounded with a 13-1&#13;
humiliation of Dominican after&#13;
three losses.&#13;
And the trackmen continued&#13;
to be among the most successful&#13;
of Parkside teams, at least on&#13;
an individual basis, as the&#13;
Rangers cracked four school&#13;
records at the Stevens Point&#13;
Relays, where no team scores&#13;
were kept.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens' golf&#13;
six-man golf squad carded a&#13;
472, ten strokes back of a wellbalanced&#13;
UW-Whitewater team,&#13;
to take second in a&#13;
quadrangular at Pets&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, a surprise&#13;
winner over the Rangers'&#13;
Saturday opponent, Northwestern,&#13;
in an earlier meet, was&#13;
third with 481 while Dominican,&#13;
with only five men playing,&#13;
scored 475.&#13;
The Rangers were led by Tom&#13;
Feiner, with a two over par 73&#13;
while Tom Bothe had a 75 and&#13;
Jim Vakos a 76. They'll face&#13;
Northern Illinois and Bradley&#13;
today'at DeKalb, 111., and then&#13;
return home to Pets to meet&#13;
Carthage, Loyola and&#13;
Whitewater at 1 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday. Parkside will go on&#13;
the road again Friday and meet&#13;
Roosevelt University at&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
The Ranger tennis squad&#13;
Hurley freshman Steve Erspamer&#13;
has been a key man for&#13;
UW-Parkside this year in the&#13;
short relays and is beginning to&#13;
come into his own in the 100-&#13;
yard dash. The former State&#13;
Class B sprint king has stopped&#13;
the clocks at 9.7 in the century,&#13;
that effort coming as he took&#13;
second in the Arkansas Tech&#13;
Relays on the Rangers' spring&#13;
trip.&#13;
erupted after a 6-3 lo ss to UWGreen&#13;
Bay Saturday and&#13;
hammered Dominican 13-1&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Mike Safago has been playing&#13;
at No. l singles with Dan&#13;
Mieczkowski and Skip Jones at&#13;
No. 2 and No. 3. But everyone&#13;
got into action for Coach Dick&#13;
Frecka's squad against"&#13;
Dominican and the results were&#13;
pleasing as the Rangers showed&#13;
some spark for the first time.&#13;
The tennismen will host&#13;
Milton at 1 p.m. Wednesday at&#13;
the Pershing Courts in Racine&#13;
before going on the road Friday&#13;
and Saturday against&#13;
Dominican and St. Norbert.&#13;
The trackmen broke records&#13;
right and left at the Stevens&#13;
Point Relays as they won the&#13;
four mile relay in a school&#13;
record 17:48 with Lucian Rosa,&#13;
Jim McFadden, Dennis Biel and&#13;
Rudy Alvarez teaming up.&#13;
Rosa also set a school mark at&#13;
six miles as he won easily in&#13;
30:16.2. The Rangers placed in&#13;
every relay they entered, with&#13;
the 440, 880, mile, sprint and&#13;
distance medley and two mile&#13;
Varsity Club to hold&#13;
Smoker The newly-formed National&#13;
Varsity Club of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside will&#13;
sponsor a get-acquainted&#13;
smoker at 7:30 p.m. Monday at&#13;
the Kenosha Holiday Inn.&#13;
The smoker is open to the&#13;
public and is designed to offer&#13;
those people who want to&#13;
support intercollegiate athletics&#13;
at Parkside a chance to join the&#13;
club.&#13;
Coaches and staff members&#13;
from Parkside, as well as&#13;
members of the National&#13;
Varsity Club, will be on hand to&#13;
greet those interested in the&#13;
organization, club president&#13;
Dario Madrigrano said.&#13;
Members met two assistant&#13;
coaches from the Chicago&#13;
Bears, Zeke Bratkowski and&#13;
Bill George, this last week and&#13;
will meet more such&#13;
personalities, in both the&#13;
professional and collegiate&#13;
athletic worlds, at luncheons&#13;
and smokers in the coming&#13;
months.&#13;
Skip Jones, Villa Park, III.,&#13;
freshman, is a key man for&#13;
Coach Dick Frecka's tennis&#13;
squad as the Rangers resume&#13;
heavy action this week with&#13;
meets against Milton,&#13;
Dominican and St. Norbert.&#13;
relay squads all garnering&#13;
places in the non-scoring affair.&#13;
Parkside will go up against&#13;
some of the toughest&#13;
competition in the nation&#13;
Friday and Saturday when a&#13;
select group of Rangers travels&#13;
to the Drake Relays at Des&#13;
Moines, Iowa.&#13;
Rosa is almost sure to go and&#13;
will likely be entered in the&#13;
marathon, one of the two events&#13;
(the other is the 10,000 meters)&#13;
that he'll be running at Munich.&#13;
Puckster Named to Hockey Camp&#13;
Bill Westerlund, Twin Lakes&#13;
sophomore and founder of the&#13;
Univeristy of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside Hockey Club, has been&#13;
named assistant instructor and&#13;
senior counselor for the Cooper&#13;
of Canada Hockey Camp' in&#13;
Oakville, Ont.&#13;
Westerlund was a key figure&#13;
in the club sports program and&#13;
the hockey club at Parkside, not&#13;
only on the ice but off it as well&#13;
as he and club president Tim&#13;
Krimmel promoted and&#13;
organized every day and every&#13;
week of the season.&#13;
Certainly Westerlund was&#13;
picked for the instructor's&#13;
position at the prestigious&#13;
hockey camp for this reason.&#13;
People in the hockey world have&#13;
a way of finding out who the&#13;
bright young men of the sport&#13;
are, who can carry it on to&#13;
bigger and better things, and&#13;
perhaps, whose names will&#13;
become household words&#13;
because they are associated&#13;
with hockey.&#13;
Westerlund kind of l ooks at it&#13;
that way, and regards the&#13;
weeks (July 19 through August&#13;
26) to be spent at the camp as a&#13;
great challenge as well as a&#13;
great opportunity.&#13;
"I look on this position as a&#13;
way to get a foothold in&#13;
hockey," Westerlund says.&#13;
"This way I can try to share my&#13;
knowledge with kids and at the&#13;
same time work with other&#13;
young adults who share my&#13;
interest and background in&#13;
hockey.&#13;
"The exchange of knowledge&#13;
among us — there will be others&#13;
there from the Dakotas to&#13;
Boston — should benefit me&#13;
greatly."&#13;
But maybe Westerlund wasn't&#13;
picked for the job only because&#13;
of his organizational ability,&#13;
although he- nearly&#13;
singlehandedly held the club&#13;
together when a losing record in&#13;
1970-71 may have made it ripe&#13;
for extinction.&#13;
Westerlund is a winner. He&#13;
knows what it means to be a&#13;
winner hecause his team just&#13;
finished its season with an 18-2-&#13;
1. But he's more of a winner —&#13;
and this is most important in&#13;
hockey or in any sport as&#13;
Cooper Camp director Paul&#13;
Roach so well knows — be cause&#13;
he knows what it is to lose.&#13;
The mark of a champ, sure,&#13;
Bill Westerlund has it. The&#13;
philosophy of Cooper — to build&#13;
a camp around experienced&#13;
coaches and staff members who&#13;
just want to teach kids — should&#13;
be right up his alley.&#13;
Bill's one of six outstanding&#13;
collegians who will be serving in&#13;
the camp, learning as they&#13;
teach and maybe, just maybe,&#13;
taking that giant step which will&#13;
lead to a career of some kind in&#13;
the wonderful world of hockey.&#13;
Five-time U.S. table tennis champion, D. J.&#13;
Lee, will present a free demonstration at the UWP&#13;
Activities Building Friday (April 28) at 2 P.M.&#13;
Lee, a 31 year old Korean-born American&#13;
citizen, has won every major U.S. tournament&#13;
several times, and has never been beaten by an&#13;
American in match play in the seven years he has&#13;
been in this country. He was South Korean champ&#13;
five years.&#13;
Lee recently was featured on national&#13;
television while playing as No. 1 player for the&#13;
U.S. in its matches against the visiting Chinese&#13;
team.&#13;
His exhibition at UW-P will include serious&#13;
play against the Ohio champion, as well as a&#13;
demonstration of trick shots and exhibitions with&#13;
Parkside players during which he will use a scrub&#13;
brush as a paddle while sitting in a chair.&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
' , lh GROUND BEEF&#13;
ON FRF.NCM CRUST&#13;
BR FAD DRESSED&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LF.TTUCF AND OUR&#13;
SPF.CIAI. SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
GRILLED COUNTRYHAM&#13;
r. C HFFSF. ON&#13;
WHOLE WHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OF BURGER CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISK ON TOAST 90Q&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
• •——&#13;
Page 12 NEWSCOPE April 24,1972&#13;
more on PAB&#13;
president or just working for the&#13;
office. The Activities Board&#13;
Executive Council makes the&#13;
decision and then I go back to&#13;
my office and do publicity,&#13;
that's about all.&#13;
NS: Are all students&#13;
employed at the Activities&#13;
Office on PAB?&#13;
Rudat: I th ink now they are. Up&#13;
until a few months ago they&#13;
weren't.&#13;
NS: Is that sort of a&#13;
requirement that if y ou work in&#13;
the Student activities Office you&#13;
have to be a member of PAB?&#13;
Rudat: No. As a matter of fact&#13;
there's only four of us on the&#13;
Executive Council who are&#13;
employed by the Student&#13;
Activities Office and two of us&#13;
will be leaving at the end of this&#13;
year.&#13;
For example, Jim Croxford is&#13;
up there just doing books and&#13;
things. And in the constitution&#13;
instead of having our own&#13;
treasurer we figured the guy&#13;
that's hired by the office should&#13;
be the treasurer because he's&#13;
right there. He has all the books&#13;
so he sits on the Executive&#13;
Council, but as treasurer he&#13;
doesn't have a vote.&#13;
NS: Are you familiar with the&#13;
way Green Bay operates their&#13;
programs? Well, they operate&#13;
on the basis of trying to bring in&#13;
as many things as they can at&#13;
the lowest price, so they sort of&#13;
avoid big groups and bring in&#13;
small bands that are well known&#13;
that they can get at a cheaper&#13;
price.&#13;
Rudat: That's come out at the&#13;
Executive Council that we'd&#13;
like to see more mini-concerts.&#13;
That's going to happen next&#13;
year. The idea you're saying is&#13;
that if we forget the major&#13;
(Continued from Page 8)&#13;
things that people can see in&#13;
Chicago or Milwaukee and just&#13;
get a number of smaller, miniconcerts&#13;
here. Yeah, but we&#13;
have a problem too; where can&#13;
we put on the mini-concert?&#13;
When we get our fieldhouse&#13;
there's going to be a lot we can&#13;
do.&#13;
NS: I mean groups like Mason&#13;
Proffit you can get at a much&#13;
cheaper rate than Chicago.&#13;
Rudat: I don't think they'd go&#13;
that good around here.&#13;
Carthage just had them.&#13;
NS: Is there any poll taken to&#13;
decide who to bring in?&#13;
Rudat: Poll taken?&#13;
NS: Of any kind, I mean like I&#13;
don't understand; is it just that&#13;
you think that a group would go&#13;
over or what?&#13;
Rudat: Yeah. It's a very well&#13;
known act (Jose Greco the&#13;
flamenco dancer) and its different&#13;
and it's something that&#13;
we're doing just for the&#13;
Parkside community in general&#13;
including faculty and staff too.&#13;
You see we program for all of&#13;
Parkside, and students are&#13;
going to like this too. There are&#13;
dance classes here. I don't know&#13;
if there's any dance class as&#13;
such, but I imagine there's&#13;
some students interested,&#13;
theatre students, things like&#13;
that. And he puts on quite a&#13;
show. It's a good show, it's&#13;
going to be interesting.&#13;
I know you didn't like John&#13;
Denver, but the people there&#13;
liked him. I seriously question&#13;
your idea of just people out on a&#13;
Saturday night date idea of it.&#13;
You see, we really want to&#13;
program for everybody on the&#13;
campus. That means we'll&#13;
program things for you as well&#13;
as others, not just the majority&#13;
but the minority too. There are&#13;
an awful lot of older students on&#13;
this campus. As a matter of fact&#13;
we're gonna have Buddy Rich&#13;
again. I don't know what you&#13;
think of t hat but he has sold out.&#13;
We have had a lot of older&#13;
students who have come up to&#13;
our office right after ShaNaNa&#13;
asking for Buddy Rich tickets.&#13;
NS: Is Jose Greco going to&#13;
any other colleges?&#13;
Rudat: Yeah, he's going up to&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
NS: I don't understand who&#13;
that would appeal to.&#13;
Rudta: Right, we had members&#13;
on the board who . . .&#13;
NS: There's never any poll taken.&#13;
Three or four people get&#13;
together and say, 'I don't think&#13;
that'll go over?'&#13;
Rudat: You can't really go that&#13;
much by polls or canvasses.&#13;
First of all the students don't fill&#13;
them out and secondly just&#13;
because you see a list of things&#13;
. . you see, we have to get&#13;
what's available.&#13;
NS: I understand that. I&#13;
understand you can't just pick&#13;
your favorite group and we'll&#13;
see if we can get them, but. . .&#13;
Rudat: Usually by the time&#13;
when they finally become available&#13;
you know, it's pretty close&#13;
where you really don't have that&#13;
much time to do it.&#13;
NS: I mean, I don't see how you&#13;
can sit and say that you don't&#13;
think Mason Proffit would go&#13;
over but . . .&#13;
Rudat: I didn't say I didn't&#13;
think, I said the general&#13;
concensus.&#13;
NS: Alright, I don't see how the&#13;
general concensus is that&#13;
Mason Proffit probably&#13;
wouldn't go over but Jose Greco&#13;
will.&#13;
Rudat: It's two different things&#13;
by the way.&#13;
NS: It's attractions for&#13;
students.&#13;
Rudat: I think we reflect the&#13;
interests of the students. We&#13;
have all sorts of different&#13;
students on the board and we&#13;
have a lot more members&#13;
putting input into our&#13;
organization than say the&#13;
Student Government, I would&#13;
think. They have a set number&#13;
of senators.&#13;
NS: When you choose a group&#13;
then, do you base it on some&#13;
kind of musical standard or&#13;
popularity?&#13;
Rudat: Popularity, what&#13;
they ve done, what they might&#13;
do you know. We check a lot of&#13;
national sales, Billboard, stuff&#13;
like that. Where they'veplayed.&#13;
You know if a group has&#13;
bombed in the last three places&#13;
it isn't really a great idea to&#13;
bring them in here.&#13;
NS: In other words, Frank&#13;
Zappa would never come to&#13;
Parkside?&#13;
Rudat: I don't know, it's hard to&#13;
say. I don't think so. Okay, you&#13;
know we're talking about tastes&#13;
of music too.&#13;
NS: That's what I'm trying to&#13;
find out.&#13;
Rudat: When it comes to miniconcerts&#13;
as of next year I could&#13;
see more of that come in, but I&#13;
think for right now you have to&#13;
throw major concerts. Okay we&#13;
brought in ShaNaNa. And let's&#13;
face it, Newscope gave it a real&#13;
good review, one of the few&#13;
things we've don that's gotten a&#13;
good review and then it turns&#13;
out to be one of the things that&#13;
we've lost the most money on.&#13;
NS: Is Your Father's Mustache&#13;
going to be at the end of the year&#13;
thing?&#13;
Rudat: Yeah. They're going to&#13;
come back for part of the first&#13;
night and I think we're going to&#13;
try a free blues concert in the&#13;
afternoon, blues or really hard&#13;
rock. I wanted to get a hard&#13;
rock band that night, but it&#13;
seems some of the members&#13;
don't want it.&#13;
NS: I was just wondering why&#13;
things like at The End last year&#13;
there was Your Father's&#13;
Mustache and we're getting&#13;
them again this year, and&#13;
Buddy Rich is a repeat and&#13;
that's a major concert, isn't it?&#13;
Rudat: Well I wouldn't call&#13;
Your Father's Mustache a&#13;
major concert. It's one of the&#13;
bands that play. We might even&#13;
have a German band out there&#13;
this year. We're putting on&#13;
every kind we can get,&#13;
something for everybody. Most&#13;
of th e people just go there to get&#13;
drunk. I got drunk listening to&#13;
Your Father's Mustache. I&#13;
couldn't stand them sober, but&#13;
after I got drunk I didn't mind&#13;
them. What the hell.&#13;
NS: Is it going to be any&#13;
different from last year?&#13;
Rudat: It's hard to say, it's still&#13;
being planned and I haven't&#13;
been to many meetings of the&#13;
Special Events committee yet.&#13;
We'd like to get more student&#13;
VI gWlUCUUV/UlJ 111 ISU 11.&#13;
'AAftAiunwnwnaimMmifui»mfm»uiajnuiaAwji»Mwwm»wii&#13;
SCHLITZ m—&#13;
Vodka full quart.&#13;
Gin full quart&#13;
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Pott Rum—&#13;
full quart— - $449&#13;
-fifth $319&#13;
Would your club or organization&#13;
like a&#13;
Wine Tasting&#13;
Contact Fred Cook, 637-4101 1&#13;
Your complete home&#13;
wine making center.&#13;
Andre Cold Duck&#13;
fifth&#13;
Roma Cianti&#13;
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$J50&#13;
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fWhere the fun starts before the party begins."&#13;
Pfices good through Sundav Anrik*n»h&#13;
nantTf MTrSTGATE 0N H,GHWAY 20- WASH.MGTON AVENUE AND 0H.0 STREET&#13;
DAILY 9 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY • SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.&#13;
NS: Have you tried?&#13;
Rudat: Well, we're going to&#13;
have to send out letters or I'm&#13;
going to have to get on the&#13;
phone. Booths and things. What&#13;
I would like to get is one of those&#13;
deals with the tank; you know,&#13;
you throw a ball and a chick&#13;
falls in the water. Like if you&#13;
guys could dig up something&#13;
like that and wanted to bring it&#13;
in there I don't see any hassle.&#13;
NS: If a student organization&#13;
wanted to put something on&#13;
they'd first go to PAB? (&#13;
Rudat: Right.&#13;
NS: Do you think the students&#13;
accept PAB?&#13;
Rudat: Well the average of 600&#13;
students attending our dances&#13;
seem to accept it. And 50 o r so&#13;
people at the Whiteskellar seem&#13;
to accept it. So what can I say?&#13;
I guess the average student&#13;
calls for polls, well we had that.&#13;
We tried that with the films this&#13;
year. Okay, there was a lot of&#13;
students that showed up, but not&#13;
the vast majority. But then does&#13;
the vast majority go to the polls&#13;
to vote for Student&#13;
Government? I think that it's&#13;
fantastic that with the apathy&#13;
on this campus that we get that&#13;
many people into the&#13;
Whiteskellar, that's why I wish&#13;
Newscope would point that out&#13;
to the students. You know,&#13;
Student Government's trying to&#13;
bring this campus together, so&#13;
are we, socially.&#13;
Wolfe&#13;
to Lecture&#13;
on Diet&#13;
Dr. George Wolfe,&#13;
coordinator of physical&#13;
education at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, will&#13;
conduct a public lecture at 7:30&#13;
p.m. Wednesday at Room 104,&#13;
Kenosha campus, on diet and&#13;
weight control. The lecture is&#13;
open to the public at no charge.&#13;
jM* &lt;d'&#13;
famous for CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
9" - 12" - 14" - 16". 4&#13;
ALSO&#13;
In Four Sizes&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA EOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU KIHC, . . . W E B R I N G " L 657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922</text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 15, April 24, 1972</text>
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                <text>1972-04-24</text>
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                <text>English</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63766">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
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        <name>gaylord nelson</name>
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        <name>symposium</name>
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              <text>Graffin recieves Kiekhofer Award</text>
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              <text>Graff in receives&#13;
Kiekhofer award&#13;
Walter R. Graffin, 35, an&#13;
assistant professor of English at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside, is among young&#13;
faculty members chosen from&#13;
throughout the UW System to&#13;
receive the 1972 Kiekhofer&#13;
awards of $1,000 each for&#13;
superior classroom performance.&#13;
Graffin received the award&#13;
Friday evening at a dinner&#13;
attended by members of the&#13;
Parkside humanities division,&#13;
which recommended Graffin&#13;
for the honor, the campus&#13;
teaching award committee,&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie and&#13;
other colleagues. Final selection&#13;
of recipients is made by an&#13;
all-UW System committee.&#13;
Graffin is the second&#13;
Parkside faculty members to&#13;
receive one of the outstanding&#13;
young teacher awards since the&#13;
program, which began at the&#13;
Madison campus in 1953, was&#13;
extended in 1970 to all campuses&#13;
of the university. Morris W.&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside free&#13;
Volume 6 Number 16 May 1, 1972&#13;
last sga meeting of semester&#13;
Loumos steps down from Meeting&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The April 25th meeting of the&#13;
Parkside Student Senate saw a&#13;
diversity of items on the&#13;
agenda.&#13;
Motions made by Nancy&#13;
Robinson, corresponding&#13;
secretary, after a presentation&#13;
by Jim Twist on the WPS&#13;
Medical Insurance which would&#13;
be made available to students&#13;
during the next academic year.&#13;
Though this insurance, at a cost&#13;
of $87 per 12 month year, is&#13;
more than previously paid for&#13;
medical insurance, the increased&#13;
benefits far outweigh&#13;
the cost.&#13;
Included in the health&#13;
package are surgical,&#13;
diagnostic, and maternity&#13;
benefits. The policy is available&#13;
to students with carrying six&#13;
credits or more.&#13;
The motion: "That the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association participate in the&#13;
Wisconsin Physicians Service&#13;
student health insurance&#13;
program sponsored by the&#13;
United Council of University of&#13;
Wisconsin Student Governments."&#13;
passed unanimously&#13;
when quorum was established.&#13;
A second motion, "That a&#13;
coordinator be elected to&#13;
represent the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association in all&#13;
matters regarding the student&#13;
health insurance problem,",&#13;
also passed unanimously and&#13;
Jim Twist was elected to fill the&#13;
post.&#13;
A final motion: "That a&#13;
representative(s) be elected to&#13;
officially represent the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association at the United&#13;
Council Winter and Spring&#13;
General assemblies at Stout&#13;
State University in Menominee&#13;
on May 5, 6, and 7.&#13;
1). That these representatives&#13;
be given full authority in terms&#13;
of voting powers to represent&#13;
the Student Government&#13;
Association on any matters that&#13;
call for a decision at the general&#13;
assemblies.&#13;
2). That travel, lodging, and&#13;
meals be paid for by the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association by means that are&#13;
availablel"&#13;
The motion passed 13-0-1 and&#13;
Jim Twist and Elaine Birch&#13;
were voted to attend the conference.&#13;
In commenting on the PSGA&#13;
sponsored Symposium, Dean&#13;
Loumos expressed his disappointment&#13;
in the way the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
was handling approval of funds,&#13;
and objected to the president&#13;
referring the matter to committee.&#13;
President Loumos further&#13;
expressed his feeling on the&#13;
matter when he turned the&#13;
meeting over to Jim Twist&#13;
saying he had had it. He also&#13;
stated that Bruce Volpintesta,&#13;
who was not present, had also&#13;
"had it." Danny Trotter,&#13;
treasurer, who ran for office on&#13;
the same ticket as Loumos and&#13;
Volpintesta, must also have had&#13;
it since he also was not present.&#13;
Upon taking over the&#13;
meeting, Jim Twist, with&#13;
Elaine Birch, clarified the&#13;
symposium plans. It was&#13;
generally agreed that the&#13;
Symposium committee try to&#13;
save as much of the planned&#13;
program as pos sible instead of&#13;
forgetting the whole thing which&#13;
had been suggested by&#13;
President Loumos.&#13;
The preceeding action took&#13;
place without a quorum,&#13;
quorum being established at&#13;
5:15 with the arrival of Mike&#13;
Lofton who had not been informed&#13;
of the meeting until&#13;
called when it was evident a&#13;
quorum was not present.&#13;
Upon establishing a quorum,&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
•»..&#13;
PARKSIDE CHILD CARE CENTER&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center will offer a special summer&#13;
session to begin June 19th. Registration will be held at the center&#13;
ST n,a n?: T }.P\m each day the week of May 8th through the&#13;
12th and will be limited to children up to age 5. The Center will be&#13;
open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., during the summer&#13;
session. For further information you may call Kenosha 658-3888 or&#13;
Racine 633-2931.&#13;
CAMPUS UNION BUILDING&#13;
f Thf £fmpus Union Building Committee has recently been&#13;
formed. The following members of the faculty, staff, and student&#13;
body form the committee: Student representatives include James&#13;
Lroxtord, John J. Grimes, and Patrick Moran; Staff, William&#13;
, ?r'AEJWin ?UeWke' and Philip Burnett! Faculty members&#13;
include Andrew McLean, John Murphy, and Barbara Jo Morris.&#13;
}he Co"1"1I"ee members welcome all suggestions by students,&#13;
taculty, and staff members in the planning of this vital building on&#13;
campus. &amp;&#13;
THIRTEEN DOLLARS A COUPLE&#13;
The annual Varsity Club Awards Banquet and Dinner-Dance&#13;
will be held Saturday, May 6, at the Kenosha Holiday Inn. All&#13;
students, faculty and staff are invited.&#13;
Cost for the complete program, which includes a social hour,&#13;
dinner and dance, is six-fifty per person or thirteen dollars a&#13;
couple.&#13;
Tickets may be purchased at the athletics office on Wood Road.&#13;
Call 553-2246 for information.&#13;
CAREER INTEREST GROUPS&#13;
Beginning the week of May 1 a group will be started for&#13;
students who would like to learn more about their career related&#13;
interests. If you would like to join such a group, please call 553-2121,&#13;
extension K42, as soon as possible . Tell the secretary your name,&#13;
phone number and what hours would be most convenient for you to&#13;
meet. If you have any questions, please cal lus at the same number.&#13;
CHICAGO BORN ITALIAN RESIDENT TO TEACH&#13;
A painter and printmaker of international stature, Moishe&#13;
Smith, has been named a visiting associate professor of art- at&#13;
Parkside effective next September. Chicago-born Smith presently&#13;
lives in Rapallo, Italy.&#13;
He previously taught at Southern Illinois University and Stout&#13;
State University (presently UW-Stout) and has been a visiting&#13;
faculty member at UW-Madison, Ohio State University, Utah State&#13;
University and the University of Iowa.&#13;
A PLANNED WEEK&#13;
This week will be Academic Planning Week at Parkside.&#13;
The program, organized by the Parkside student counseling&#13;
staff and faculty, is designed to assist students in p lanning summer&#13;
and fall academic schedules, selecting majors and determining&#13;
career choices.&#13;
Group academic advising sessions a re scheduled in various&#13;
academic fields throughout the week for students who have not yet&#13;
selected a major. Students who already have selected a major are&#13;
being encouraged to confer with the academic adviser assigned to&#13;
them during the week.&#13;
LITERATURE AND FILM&#13;
Literature and Film: "Narration, Montage and You" is the&#13;
topic for the next Parkside Humanities Seminar. Dr. Robert Self of&#13;
Northern Illinois University will lecture and show several short&#13;
films in Greenquist room 101, Friday, May 5th, at two-thirty.&#13;
Mr. Self has been teaching film for years and has been&#13;
especially interested in the possibilities for teaching in a comparative&#13;
approach to literature and film.&#13;
His presentation will vocus on the narrative and verbal aspects&#13;
of literature, the visual demands and implications of&#13;
cinematography, and the socio-cultural significance of the two&#13;
media. There is no charge; all students are welcome.&#13;
itt subsidiary opposed Strike becomes a Boycott of Canteen&#13;
Discussion takes plac e at&#13;
Monday s t r i k e meeting .&#13;
by Jim Kq lo^n, editor&#13;
What began as an attempt to&#13;
initiate a student strike,&#13;
developed into a free lunch&#13;
program in the Activities&#13;
Building. Originally, the&#13;
Concerned Students Coalition&#13;
had planned to strike in protest&#13;
of the War. However, as it&#13;
turned out, their efforts were&#13;
channeled into a protest of the&#13;
Canteen Company which&#13;
provides food services to the&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
During a Monday morning&#13;
Strike meeting in the Activities&#13;
Building, the plan for a free&#13;
lunch table was crystallized. It&#13;
was pointed out that the Canteen&#13;
Co. is owned by ITT, and as&#13;
such is implicated in the war&#13;
effort. Dean Loumos, SGA&#13;
President, said, "It's not&#13;
whether you boycott the&#13;
machine, it's that you know&#13;
they are owned by ITT."&#13;
The Monday morning planning&#13;
session was attended by&#13;
twenty students who agreed&#13;
with Loumos that "a true act of&#13;
anti-war sentiment would be to&#13;
boycott Canteen." Loumos&#13;
explained the boycott of Canteen&#13;
would represent a "constructive&#13;
action" as opposed to&#13;
a more dramatic strike.&#13;
Donations were gathered from&#13;
those attending the planning&#13;
session and by 12:15 a table had&#13;
been set up offering assorted&#13;
sandwiches and fruit.&#13;
Continuing through Wednesday,&#13;
the lunch table attracted&#13;
few faculty or students,&#13;
and though a few boycott&#13;
supporters stood up on tables to&#13;
explain the purpose of the free,&#13;
alternative lunch, few people&#13;
looked up.&#13;
Danny Trotter, an SGA officer&#13;
participating in the&#13;
boycott, said "though the&#13;
boycott may seem futile, it's a&#13;
start. You have to take some&#13;
kind of action, you just can't sit&#13;
around doing nothing." Few&#13;
people heeded his plea.&#13;
The al t e r n a t i ve lunch prograi&#13;
protestin g Canteen a nd |TT&#13;
May l, 1972 NEWS COPE Pag* 2&#13;
EpjtoRIAL&#13;
ran 'L'V revaa,ln9' and monotonously predictable conclusions&#13;
can be drawn from the first full week of Symposium activities&#13;
&amp;J^aCt'^,eS r" t0 dr3W Very sP®c!alizeTaudiences;&#13;
the people interested in Wednesday's Women's Caucus programs&#13;
nterested in Thursday's VICC VCISD. Radical Politics Seminar, and&#13;
intpr^ln"mb€a^0: ^ pe0p,e (faculty' staff' students) are&#13;
interested in anything. The average attendance figure for each&#13;
event presented during the week approached ten. Though some&#13;
succassfu,,y Presented than others, quality had&#13;
materialize' quanitltV of attendance. The audience just didn't&#13;
notth^n^Tw"6.!1?01 ubiquitous 9ray daV apathy; maybe it's&#13;
thl h °nuf kn0W where they're at' more "ke it's simply&#13;
factor'" att«ndan^?ere *" 9°' ^ •&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee recently rejected SGA's&#13;
proposal that the Revolutionary Youth Movement, and the&#13;
Wisconsin Alliance people who participated in the Radical Politics&#13;
Seminar, be paid a small gratuity for their efforts&#13;
The reason given: RYM and the Alliance represent "political"&#13;
groups and therefore cannot be paid for speaking on campus.&#13;
wh« lm 1 nter*sf 1 n9» and not entirely irrelevant, that Julian Bond,&#13;
nn m Q^f a-ne Student Union's Symposium program&#13;
n 5uW eCelve$2'000forhiseffortsfrom Lecture and Fine&#13;
^,'i ®°ndh.f'°f cou"e' a 9reater nationwide fame based on his&#13;
sn!!thf&gt;rn i u3 e 68 D®mocratic Convention, and in&#13;
southern politics. He is a public political figure; possibly the fact&#13;
«iomathiaP^eaHanCf*!S funded throu9h Lecture and Fine Arts has&#13;
something to do with this seeming incongruity.&#13;
Perhaps the rub is not just the word "politics" or "political"&#13;
bu the word "radical". Perhaps the difference befween radical&#13;
asfrfh,3 ,C°nVen,l0nal P°",iCS is ,he ,ac,or dictating the&#13;
distribution of money. Of course, there's nothing new here.&#13;
frl£0'S&#13;
Letters to the Editor Jff&#13;
PIZZA £&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PA RKSIDE VI LLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 — 30th Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 day^a wee/c from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
-V/aa Bbiloucihk S&gt;oouutinh ooft KKeennoosshhaa--RRaacciinnee 'C ounty Line SPump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
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DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
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PENNZOIL&#13;
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PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gal Ion&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prlctson Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kite, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Par Ont Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
Turk stops flood&#13;
April 25,1972&#13;
To th e Editor:&#13;
When Robert Flood, in his&#13;
missive to the Voice, showed us&#13;
that he had missed the message&#13;
in the movie, "The Godfather,"&#13;
I was sorry. But when your&#13;
reviewer seemed to have&#13;
missed it also, I felt obligated to&#13;
clear it up.&#13;
If you are going to discuss a&#13;
movie with any degree of intelligence,&#13;
it is suggested that&#13;
you see all of it first. The&#13;
message was in the very&#13;
beginning, with the little old&#13;
man who had determined to live&#13;
by the rules, by law and order,&#13;
and to stay clear of the dirty&#13;
hands of the Mafia. But the poor&#13;
fellow learned that justice does&#13;
not always prevail, and to right&#13;
a grievous wrong had been&#13;
forced to get help from the&#13;
Godfather.&#13;
The message is just as&#13;
relevant today — i.e . McCarthy&#13;
who couldn't get a peace&#13;
platform in '68, or his followers&#13;
who could not even speak&#13;
because their microphones&#13;
were turned off. We have all&#13;
learned that, though violence&#13;
isn't much of an answer,&#13;
seeking justice through&#13;
peaceful means doesn't do&#13;
much either.&#13;
And so we have the usual&#13;
problems that stay usual every&#13;
year . , . an administration&#13;
overstocked with expensive&#13;
administrators who run the&#13;
university for themselves and&#13;
not the students or faculty... a&#13;
school that will not support a&#13;
newspaper unless it is a rubber&#13;
stamp for their propaganda,&#13;
and on and on.&#13;
Sex was such a minor part of&#13;
the movie that I am a bit&#13;
amazed at # Mr. Flood's&#13;
anguished cries ... I don't&#13;
think he's ready for anything as&#13;
dull as "Love Story" either.&#13;
He'd better just stay home and&#13;
lock the doors. But I'm indebted&#13;
to Mr. Flood. "Sex is a sacred&#13;
act," he said. Surely does&#13;
relieve my mind, so that's what&#13;
those bells are that I keep&#13;
hearing!&#13;
I would suggest that perhaps&#13;
the "Godfather" . is popular&#13;
because the distraught citizens&#13;
who attempted to gain peace&#13;
through the regular channels&#13;
are at the movie looking for&#13;
other answers. We've tried to&#13;
get out of Vietnam and dispose&#13;
of local dictators with every&#13;
method short of that.&#13;
I realize that you are short of&#13;
copy, but do we have to put up&#13;
with such long letters, such as&#13;
last week's offering from some&#13;
fellow who never has had&#13;
anything to say, but keeps on&#13;
saying it. We'd all be ahead if&#13;
you would just leave the space&#13;
blank.&#13;
Mrs. Genevieve Turk&#13;
senator&#13;
answers&#13;
gruhl&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Last week saw another of&#13;
those infrequent and unmissed&#13;
missives by Art Gruhl generally&#13;
condemning our hard working&#13;
student senate as a bunch of&#13;
bureaucratic misfits.&#13;
I have a few things to say to&#13;
Mr. Gruel regarding , his instance&#13;
that the student senate is&#13;
unrepresentative since it was&#13;
elected by only 17 per cent of the&#13;
student body.&#13;
I say this to Mr. Gruhl: Your&#13;
Student Senate is the duly&#13;
elected body of the students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside and the fact that only&#13;
17 per cent of those students&#13;
voted only means that 83 per&#13;
cent of the students aren't worth&#13;
shit when it comes to expressing&#13;
a political preference. Did YOU&#13;
vote, Mr. Gruhn?&#13;
As to his comments about&#13;
paying taxes, that can only be&#13;
taken as a bunch of crud since&#13;
just about everyone does the&#13;
same be they hard working&#13;
businessmen like Mr. Gruhl or&#13;
outspoken short-haired radicals&#13;
like myself who are trying their&#13;
best to get an education.&#13;
I, unlike Mr. Gruhl, do not pay&#13;
my 'own' tuition. For this I&#13;
depend strictly upon scholarships&#13;
and $175 a month from a&#13;
grateful government paid me&#13;
through the Veteran's Administration.&#13;
I did have a job&#13;
once, but it interfered with my&#13;
academic planning. My only&#13;
'job' now is with the Naval&#13;
Reserve.&#13;
As to the entertainment Mr.&#13;
Gruhl derides so nicely:&#13;
Someone should inform Mr.&#13;
Gruhl that the money for such&#13;
entertainment is budgeted&#13;
through the State of Wisconsin&#13;
and given to the Activities&#13;
Board which must use it all up&#13;
or give it back.&#13;
The Activities Board is&#13;
strictly controlled by the Administration&#13;
of this University&#13;
even to the extent of having its&#13;
members appointed and then&#13;
denied even a vote on the&#13;
committee.&#13;
It's too bad Mr. Gruhl that&#13;
you are denied the opportunity&#13;
to express yourself to the PAB,&#13;
which should have been&#13;
disbanded long ago in favor of&#13;
the more representative and&#13;
duly elected Student Union&#13;
Committee of the Parkside&#13;
Student Senate. Your Student&#13;
Senate, Mr. Gruhl. If you have&#13;
any complaints on the way the&#13;
show is run bring them yourself&#13;
to the off office of YOUR Senate&#13;
and we will try to help you with&#13;
them.&#13;
Instead of crying to his&#13;
friendly recognised student&#13;
newspaper which is subsidized&#13;
by his friendly Student&#13;
Government Association of&#13;
which he is a member, Mr.&#13;
Gruhl could be useful to us on&#13;
some Student Senate committee&#13;
or other, thus putting that&#13;
vehemence of his into a constructive&#13;
channel.&#13;
So, Mr. Gruhl, come on down&#13;
and have a tale with your&#13;
representatives. Instead of&#13;
rapping Dean and the rest of t he&#13;
Senate in the paper, rap with&#13;
them in person. Though if you&#13;
want to dh so with me you will&#13;
have to do so before I depart on&#13;
the little journey I have coming&#13;
up on the orders of the U.S.&#13;
Navy. (Even student radicals&#13;
can have that little regarded&#13;
emotion of patriotism.)&#13;
Yours,&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol, Senator&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association&#13;
senior reflects&#13;
on uwp&#13;
To the Students,&#13;
I have been a student at&#13;
Parkside for four years now and&#13;
graduate next month and I feel&#13;
at least a little qualified to state&#13;
some experiences during my&#13;
time here and some opinions on&#13;
them I have been fortunate, or&#13;
equally unfortunate, to watch&#13;
Parkside grow in some areas&#13;
and conversely die in others, as&#13;
u has gone from a University&#13;
Extension to a University of&#13;
Wisconsin. Aside from just&#13;
being "around here" for four&#13;
years 1 have been on a number&#13;
of student committees, a&#13;
member of the Athletic Board&#13;
oMwo P?SitW°years' President&#13;
of two clubs, and have worked&#13;
AAtthhlewti c ^Dlethp armtmemebnetr. s of the&#13;
I have: gotten chased by two&#13;
Parkside cops all the way to&#13;
Racine because a friend and I&#13;
took a wrong road on campus&#13;
during a blizzard (even though&#13;
they tried to run us off the road&#13;
they failed to get us) . . . sden&#13;
three different sets of roads on&#13;
this campus and their accompanying&#13;
sets of pot holes&#13;
. . . Been thrown out of a dance&#13;
by Tony T. for still unknown&#13;
reasons . . . easily come to the&#13;
conclusion that Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
is full of sh-t . . . seen Wyllie&#13;
spend $5,000 on sod around&#13;
Tallent and Greenquist Halls&#13;
only to have it torn up less than&#13;
a year later (he refused to have&#13;
it used for a soccer field which&#13;
was needed at the time) .&#13;
seen some blonde woman&#13;
walking around the Student&#13;
Union for 3 years and never do a&#13;
goddamn thing except make&#13;
money off the students ....&#13;
been with a friend as the&#13;
Parkside cops towed away his&#13;
car during class because it&#13;
stalled on the side of the "road"&#13;
and then wanted him to pay&#13;
$41.00 to get it back . . . never&#13;
found Donald Gunderson in his&#13;
office (try the Library&#13;
newsstand) . . . had the "files"&#13;
pulled out on me and consequently&#13;
2 days later had a&#13;
parking ticket appeal, which I&#13;
submitted over four months&#13;
earlier, denieii . . . and the&#13;
terrible misfortune of having to&#13;
take a class with Harry Copipock&#13;
. . . wondered why the building&#13;
where the administration has&#13;
its offices is called Tallent when&#13;
they show so much lack of it&#13;
. . . and finally, I have been&#13;
falsely accused of fighting and&#13;
brawling in the Student Union&#13;
by some of the Administration.&#13;
I could go on but I think you&#13;
get the point I am trying to&#13;
make. That is, as a student at&#13;
Parkside you are going to be&#13;
faced with all kinds of shit from&#13;
the administration, faculty, and&#13;
cops. Don't get me wrong, I'm&#13;
not tearing down the school.&#13;
Parkside has great potential&#13;
and I want to see it developed,&#13;
but it's the things and the people&#13;
I mentioned and experienced&#13;
that are choking Parkside to&#13;
death. I have had good times at&#13;
Parkside, too, especially with&#13;
the Athletic Department and&#13;
S.G.A. and it is through these&#13;
and similar organizations I&#13;
suggest you work in to better,&#13;
Parkside. It's your school, not&#13;
the faculty's or the, administration's,&#13;
so make it the&#13;
way you want it to be. And then&#13;
in the future it will be a school&#13;
where you, as well as myself,&#13;
will be more proud to have&#13;
graduated from.&#13;
Peter J. Habetler, Jr.&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Jim Koloen, "Red" Widely, Paul&#13;
Lomartire, Brian Ross, Cleta&#13;
Skovronski, Bob Mainland, Mike&#13;
Kite, Gary Jensen, Wolfgang&#13;
Salewski, Mike Stevesand, Andrew&#13;
Schmelling, Ken Konkol, Kathy&#13;
Rasch, Tom Paradise&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
student* of thte University of&#13;
Wisconsm-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout Ihe&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located In the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road.&#13;
I*-***4*.***MUttVlMPMW******** "*»«r**•««*•*' AT A .*&lt;.*•»-» * * *&#13;
OUTER LIMITS&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents a REAL Road Rallye&#13;
"Head Your Car to the "&#13;
May 7&#13;
Registration at Noon — 1st Car Out l :00 PM&#13;
$5.00 Registration Fee — includes Driver and Navigator&#13;
Tallent Hall Parking Lot&#13;
After the competition and Dust Subsides&#13;
Relax at our party — Beer &amp; Food&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID required&#13;
Page 3 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
Radical Political Organizing&#13;
SGA Meeting by Jim Koioen, Editor&#13;
Thursday night's segment of&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Symposium, "Radical&#13;
Political Organizing" began&#13;
late, and was attended by few.&#13;
Paul Soglin, the Madison City&#13;
Councilman, did not speak. His&#13;
absence was explained by&#13;
PSGA President Dean Loumos&#13;
as due to a searies of events in&#13;
Madison that demanded his&#13;
presence.&#13;
Members of the Wisconsin&#13;
Alliance, a political party from&#13;
Madison, and representatives of&#13;
the Revolutionary Youth&#13;
Movement from Racine&#13;
outlined their philosophies and&#13;
programs.&#13;
Spokesmen for Wisconsin&#13;
Alliance explained their activities&#13;
in organizing workers&#13;
and farmers in the Madison&#13;
area. Representing various&#13;
committees in the Alliance, the&#13;
four Madisonites explained the&#13;
goals of the Alliance as a&#13;
"working people's party" which&#13;
assists in organizing people&#13;
from the "bottom up". One&#13;
speaker pointed out that the&#13;
union leadership "can be as&#13;
bureaucratic as management",&#13;
and thus not represent the true&#13;
feelings of the rank and file.&#13;
After briefly outlining the&#13;
history of the Alliance, which&#13;
was formed in 1968, two spokesnen&#13;
from RYM presented an&#13;
PENAL&#13;
Kicking off Symposium 1972,&#13;
the Cellblock Circus Players&#13;
performed a series of short skits&#13;
which one of the players&#13;
characterized as "examples of&#13;
the kind of humor that goes&#13;
over really well in the institutions."&#13;
The troupe performed&#13;
before an audience&#13;
whose size was to be seen as&#13;
characteristic of the week-long&#13;
Symposium activities; small&#13;
and specialized.&#13;
The four women and one man&#13;
who make up the Cellblock&#13;
Players presented six skits,&#13;
including "Pedro", a "pet&#13;
rock," with which the player&#13;
quickly knocked herself out;&#13;
"Hopscotch", about a cop who&#13;
attempts to bust some kids for&#13;
holding an illegal assembly on&#13;
the sidewalk; "Hey, Bill,"&#13;
about a man who discovers his&#13;
girl isn't "safe"; and "Factory&#13;
Song" sung to the tune of "I've&#13;
Urban League and SSSSSSSS&#13;
Project Acceptance&#13;
Women's&#13;
Day of Symposium&#13;
poetry and play readings&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Three people dedicated to&#13;
helping the needy in Racine met&#13;
Tuesday, April 25, at the&#13;
Whiteskellar. They presented&#13;
the facts of their presently&#13;
existing programs to an&#13;
audience of six or seven.&#13;
Ray Matthews, Associate&#13;
Director of the Racine Urban&#13;
League, was the first to speak..&#13;
He informed the meager&#13;
audience that the Racine Urban&#13;
League was part of a national&#13;
urban league. There are 106&#13;
local affiliates of their league in&#13;
46 cities. It is presently funded&#13;
by private citizens and the&#13;
Department of Labor. One of his&#13;
hopes, he said, is to get minority&#13;
groups into jobs as skilled&#13;
apprentices.&#13;
The Southside Revitalization&#13;
Organization was represented&#13;
by Terry Ludimon. The S.R.O.&#13;
recently began being funded by&#13;
the federal government. They&#13;
are presently occupied with the&#13;
rebuilding of Racine's south&#13;
side. Ludiomon also said they&#13;
hope to buy small industries for&#13;
the south side community. This&#13;
would provide jobs for the&#13;
people.&#13;
Jean Manley from Urban&#13;
Concern told about her experiences&#13;
working with ACenter,&#13;
the detention home, and&#13;
the city jail. This is all part of&#13;
"Project Acceptance," which&#13;
was formed to help prisoners fit&#13;
back into society. Urban&#13;
Concern is funded solely by&#13;
private donations and churches.&#13;
During his presentation,&#13;
Ludimon suggested that&#13;
students become directly involved;&#13;
paint a poor person's&#13;
house; clean a blind person's&#13;
house, he suggested.&#13;
Matthews said the Racine&#13;
Urban League can always use&#13;
new people since it is a membership&#13;
organization, supported&#13;
only by volunteers. Jean&#13;
mentioned that Father Williams&#13;
needs students in the research&#13;
area.&#13;
At the end there was a&#13;
question-answer period in&#13;
which students asked the group&#13;
various questions about the&#13;
progress of the aforementioned&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The poetry reading, held in&#13;
the Whiteshellar at 7:30 was&#13;
presented by Carol Vopat, an&#13;
English instructor. Included in&#13;
her selections were poems from&#13;
Sandra Hoffman, Denise&#13;
Levertov, Nikki Johavic, Ann&#13;
Sexton and Sylvia Plath.&#13;
Ms. Vopat provided a good&#13;
interpretation of the "Women's&#13;
poems," whose themse included&#13;
abortion, seduction, menstruaticn,&#13;
childbirth. The&#13;
general ambiance of the poems&#13;
was either celebration or&#13;
poignant sadness, a dejection&#13;
culminating in Plath's poetry of&#13;
tragedy and venom.&#13;
The audience at the poetry&#13;
reading outnumbered the&#13;
participant ten to one,&#13;
representing a 66 per cent&#13;
upswing in attendance over the&#13;
play readings.&#13;
analysis of the "system" in&#13;
historical terms. The RYM&#13;
member posited as an apriori&#13;
premise the statement that.&#13;
"America is the most racist&#13;
country in the history of the&#13;
world." He concluded that the&#13;
failure tp deal with racism has&#13;
historically prevented&#13;
meaningful change in the U.S.&#13;
Speaking briefly on what&#13;
radical politics means, the&#13;
RYM representative equated it&#13;
with change. The RYM speaker&#13;
later outlined the various&#13;
programs his organization has&#13;
initiated in Racine. Concentrating&#13;
on the Near North&#13;
Side, he explained, "We have&#13;
put together survival programs&#13;
for the oppressed and poor&#13;
people living in this area."&#13;
"Only by getting the community&#13;
together," he continued,&#13;
"can we survive."&#13;
The meeting ended with a&#13;
question and answer period.&#13;
INSTITUTIONS&#13;
been working on the Railroad"&#13;
with lyrics like "some one in the&#13;
factory is dying, hoping a fresh&#13;
wind blows."&#13;
The Cellblock Circus Players&#13;
has performed at the&#13;
Manhattan House of Detention&#13;
for Men, disaffectionately&#13;
nicknamed the "Tombs" by its&#13;
inmates, and at many state&#13;
penal institutions including&#13;
Green Bay, Waupun and the&#13;
Milwaukee House of Correction.&#13;
Following the presentation of&#13;
the skits, a discussion ensued&#13;
which included short presentations&#13;
by Jack Jude, a&#13;
representative of Project Acceptance,&#13;
and Jerry Gonzales, a&#13;
former convict and addict.&#13;
Jude explained the function of&#13;
Project Acceptance, characterizing&#13;
it as a vehicle for&#13;
community involvement with a&#13;
philosophy similar to the Big&#13;
Brother and Sister&#13;
organizations. The attitude of&#13;
the group, Jude said, leads to&#13;
the belief that "jail as a form of&#13;
rehabilitation is defunct,"&#13;
adding that the "institution&#13;
squelches the individual."&#13;
Gonzales drew the analogy of&#13;
prison as "a bug which goes in&#13;
one ear and eats his way&#13;
through to the other ear. On the&#13;
way it lays millions of eggs all&#13;
over the brain."&#13;
He told the audience that&#13;
when a person is released from&#13;
prison, he needs "a place to stay&#13;
for at least two months, clothes&#13;
and a minimum of $30 a week"&#13;
in order to readjust himself to&#13;
the world and find employment.&#13;
Currently, he explained, a&#13;
released prisoner is left&#13;
basically to his own resources,&#13;
and without the necessities as&#13;
he outlined, he is easily forced&#13;
back into crime.&#13;
As part of the "Women's&#13;
Day" activities of the SYMPOSIUM,&#13;
the Parkside&#13;
Women's Caucus produced both&#13;
a play reading and a poetry&#13;
reading. The play readings,&#13;
held in the Whiteskellar at 3:30,&#13;
featured Claire Booth Luce's&#13;
"Doll's House 1970" and Sylvia&#13;
Plath's "Three Women".&#13;
Ms. Luce's play, which unfortunately&#13;
is yawningly&#13;
didactic and evidences little&#13;
dramatic merit, was capably&#13;
read by Pam Nekich and'Ted&#13;
Paone. The tract involves a&#13;
dialogue between a couple&#13;
married for ten years, and&#13;
analyzes the reason behind the&#13;
wife deserting her husband in&#13;
order to become a human being.&#13;
Tough both participants&#13;
presented a good reading, little&#13;
could be done to compensate for&#13;
the play's lack of merit; the&#13;
dialogue, as written, has little&#13;
relationship to the way people&#13;
really speak: Propagandizing is&#13;
not necessarily an art form.&#13;
The final reading was from&#13;
Sylvia Plath's "Three Women,"&#13;
a poem for three voices. The&#13;
three women were presented by&#13;
Debby Friedell, Becky Ecklund&#13;
and Rebecca Cook, One voice&#13;
represented a mother about to&#13;
give a natural childbirth;&#13;
another echoed a woman about&#13;
to have a miscarriage following&#13;
a series of miscarraiges; and&#13;
the third voice was that of a&#13;
college girl about to have a child&#13;
which she plans to put up for&#13;
adoption.&#13;
Sylvia Plath, a poet who&#13;
committed suicide at the age of&#13;
30, afforded the readers with&#13;
decidedly poetic material, as&#13;
opposed to the staid didacticism&#13;
of the tractition Luce. The three&#13;
readers presented a good interpretation&#13;
of the material;&#13;
Rebecca Cooks' rendering&#13;
especially good.&#13;
The audience tied the participants&#13;
with six members&#13;
each.&#13;
May l, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 4&#13;
SGA meeting&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Ken Konkol made a motion that&#13;
the roll be taken for the purpose&#13;
of having it as part of the&#13;
minutes, something which had&#13;
not been previously made. The&#13;
motion passed.&#13;
Members present: Dean&#13;
Loumos, President, Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Recording Secretary,&#13;
Nancy Robinson, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary, Senators&#13;
Michael Baxter, Jerry Murphy,&#13;
Mike R. Harris, Elaine M.&#13;
Birch, Kenneth R. Konkol, Mike&#13;
Lofton, Mark Barnhill, Ken&#13;
Martin, James Twist, Dale&#13;
Martin, Jim Bielefeldt, and&#13;
Tom Taskonis, another late&#13;
arrival.&#13;
A motion on a request by&#13;
Z.P.G. for $100 for establishing&#13;
an information center on birth&#13;
control methods and contraceptive&#13;
devices with a future&#13;
outlook toward a V.D. clinic&#13;
passed 12-2.&#13;
A motion to reimburse&#13;
Carmen Nute of the Latino&#13;
Student Coalition for expenses&#13;
of $36.20 incurred while attending&#13;
two Latino oriented&#13;
conferences passed 10-3.&#13;
A motion to provide $200 for&#13;
fencing for the Day Care Center&#13;
passed by 9-4-2.&#13;
At this time a question arose&#13;
as to whether the Student&#13;
Organizations Account, which&#13;
had had $1,700 in it before the&#13;
Symposium planning which&#13;
would cost an estimated $1,200,&#13;
and other disbursements had&#13;
been made, now had any money&#13;
left in it at all. Since the&#13;
treasurer was unavailable, the&#13;
question remained unresolved.&#13;
Mike Lofton, Chairman of the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee,&#13;
spoke on the standardized&#13;
TEACHER EVALUATION&#13;
FORM prepared by that&#13;
committee consinsting of Lofton&#13;
and Senators Birch, Bielefeldt&#13;
and Konkol.&#13;
Though the meeting started&#13;
breaking up for 6:00 classes, the&#13;
committee got the go ahead to&#13;
disburse the form to faculty&#13;
members for consideration at&#13;
the May 2 Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Graffin receives award&#13;
(Continued from Page 1&#13;
Firebaugh, an associate&#13;
professor of physics at UW-P,&#13;
received one of the first four allcampus&#13;
awards in 1970.&#13;
The awards are named for&#13;
William Kiekhofer, late UW&#13;
professor of economics, and are&#13;
funded from a grant established&#13;
to perpetuate his teaching&#13;
ideals, candidates must be&#13;
under 36.&#13;
Graffin was graduated from&#13;
Milwaukee North Division High&#13;
School, received his B.S. and&#13;
M.A. degrees at UW-Madison,&#13;
did additional graduate work at&#13;
Indiana University and was&#13;
awarded his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1968, he taught for&#13;
three years at Northwestern&#13;
University.&#13;
His current teaching includes&#13;
a section devoted to&#13;
contemporary problems in&#13;
P a r k s i d e ' s i n n o v a t i v e&#13;
American language program,&#13;
an English course in contemporary&#13;
literature and a&#13;
humanities course titled&#13;
"Background of the Arts: 20th&#13;
Century," which he developed&#13;
with Peter Martin of the&#13;
English faculty.&#13;
Graffin also is chairman of&#13;
the American language&#13;
program committee and is&#13;
active as a lecturer for PREP&#13;
(Parkside Resource Enrichment&#13;
Professors), a project in&#13;
which faculty members act as&#13;
visiting lecturers in area high&#13;
schools.&#13;
He was among lecturers for&#13;
the recent Capsule College for&#13;
Women at UW-P and has spoken&#13;
on a variety of literary topics&#13;
before community groups.&#13;
He is co-editor of a volume of&#13;
contemporary readings for&#13;
college level English classes,&#13;
"Perspectives for the 70's,"&#13;
publiched by Dodd, Mead in&#13;
1971.&#13;
He was elected to Phi Beta&#13;
Kappa as an undergraduate and&#13;
is a member of the Modern&#13;
Language Association.&#13;
Last spring he was among&#13;
four UW-P professors cited for&#13;
honorable mention as&#13;
distinguished teachers at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
*S«rving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY CO MFORTABLE DININ C&#13;
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• CAPTAIN'S'CABIN RO OM&#13;
FOR PRIVATE PA RTIES&#13;
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FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
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— HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
~ SENATOR PROXM|R£_&#13;
18 hour film&#13;
marathon at&#13;
vogue&#13;
On Saturday and Sunday,&#13;
May 6th and 7th, SGA will&#13;
present the penultimate activity&#13;
of Symposium 1972. An 18 hour&#13;
long film festival is planned to&#13;
begin at 6 PM Saturday at the&#13;
grave site of the Vogue Theater,&#13;
1820 - 52nd Street, Kenosha.&#13;
Admission is $1.00 and inexpensive&#13;
food and refreshments&#13;
will be served. Many surprises&#13;
are currently being planned to&#13;
keep people awake and alert as&#13;
the marathon film session runs&#13;
its 18 hour cinematic gamut of&#13;
underground, foreign, and old&#13;
classic flicks.&#13;
Included in the list of films to&#13;
be shown are such old standbys&#13;
as "Horse Feathers" starring&#13;
the inimitable Marx Brothers;&#13;
the Great Nose's "Hurry!&#13;
Hurry!" and "The Great&#13;
Chase"; Laurel and Hardy's&#13;
"Perfect Day", as well as&#13;
Chaplin's "Essanay" films. For&#13;
swashbuckling fans, Errol&#13;
Flynn's "Captain Blood" will be&#13;
shown.&#13;
Other, more contemporary&#13;
fare includes such peppery&#13;
classics as "Salt of the Earth";&#13;
the controversial "Pledge of&#13;
Allegiance"; "Brand X"&#13;
starring Taylor Mead, Ultra&#13;
Violet and Abbie Hoffman; and&#13;
"Right On".&#13;
Rounding out the list will be a&#13;
3-D flick entitled "Eyes of Hell'&#13;
the proletarian "Day of the&#13;
Painter", the revealing "Apple&#13;
Thieves", "Parque-Year of the&#13;
Tanks", the prosaic "La Vita -&#13;
Life in a Tin Can", "Spider&#13;
Elephant", "1001 Arabian&#13;
Nights" and "Dead of the&#13;
Night".&#13;
The film festival is open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
SYMPOSIUM 1972&#13;
A BON VOYAGE TO RACINE CAMPUS&#13;
On Friday, May 5, beginning about 5 PM, a "Going Away",&#13;
party will be held for and at the Racine campus. Featured at this&#13;
event will be three rock bands; "Canyon", "Speedy Cookin' " and&#13;
"Blood Money".&#13;
Weather permitting, the party planners hope to hold the party&#13;
outside, on the Racine Campus' patio, overlooking Lake Michigan.&#13;
Next year, the campus will become part of the Racine Technical&#13;
Institute.&#13;
THEATRE X&#13;
An • Exc iting theatrical revue of satire, improvisation and&#13;
experiment will be featured when UWP presents Milwaukee's&#13;
Theatre X. The ensemble company will present X Communication.&#13;
Curtain time is 8 PMat the Activities building on Tuesday, May 2.&#13;
Admission is free.&#13;
A collective touring ensemble, which has recently performed&#13;
before Kenosha audiences at Carthage College and the Vogue&#13;
Theater, Theatre X has won both popular and critical acclaim for&#13;
more than 175 performances in 60 locations since its founding two&#13;
years ago.&#13;
X COMMUNICATION is a collage of changing and growing,&#13;
short original pieces created by the Theatre X company members.&#13;
The program runs the theatrical gamut of co ntent and style, and&#13;
features spontaneous company improvisations utilizing situations&#13;
drawn from audience suggestions.&#13;
There will be only one performance.&#13;
Pre-Law Club: Sex Panel&#13;
As part of the Symposium&#13;
activities, the UWP Pre-Law&#13;
Club will sponsor a panel&#13;
discussion Wednesday, May 3,&#13;
at Greenquist 103. The topic will.&#13;
be "Should Private Sex Between&#13;
Concenting Adults be&#13;
Legalized?"&#13;
The discussion panel includes&#13;
Waukesha County District&#13;
Attorney Richard McConnell;&#13;
Racine Attorney Jay Schwartz;&#13;
Kenosha State&#13;
Assemblyman Eugene Dorff;&#13;
and the Rev. Gergory Spitz, a&#13;
Kenosha St. Joseph high school&#13;
teacher. Also sitting on the&#13;
panel will be a prostitute and a&#13;
homosexual.&#13;
District Attorney McConnell&#13;
recently gained notoriety for his&#13;
opposition to the controversial&#13;
sex education program sponsored&#13;
by the Unitarian Church.&#13;
Jay Schwartz is a well-known&#13;
Racine attorney who ran for&#13;
state attorney general a few&#13;
years ago.&#13;
The panel discussion in&#13;
Greenquist 103\vill begin at 7:30&#13;
PM. After the discussion an&#13;
informal social gathering&#13;
replete with refreshments will&#13;
be held in the Whiteskellar. All&#13;
UWP faculty, staff and students&#13;
are invited to attend and continue&#13;
discussion with panel&#13;
members on a one to one basis.&#13;
CLARIFICATION:&#13;
Last week's NEWSCOPE&#13;
included a story on the new bar&#13;
in the Activities Building. It was&#13;
mistakenly reported that two&#13;
upright coolers cost $2,900 each.&#13;
This should be amended to&#13;
approximately $2,200 for&#13;
everything, not as stated in&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Don't believe&#13;
everything you read.&#13;
. ^OMEGRAD SCHOOLS&#13;
ARE MORE CHALLENGING&#13;
THAN OTHERS. It's graduation day and&#13;
there you stand... diploma&#13;
in hand and future in doubt.&#13;
You could go on to graduate&#13;
school.Or you could look for&#13;
a job in today's ever-tightening&#13;
job market. Or,you could&#13;
put your education to work&#13;
immediately by applying for&#13;
the Air Force's OfficerTraining&#13;
School program.&#13;
Upon qualification,&#13;
you'll find yourself beginning&#13;
12 weeks of specialized&#13;
study designed to prepare&#13;
you for the challenge and&#13;
responsibilities of an officer's&#13;
commission. And, give you&#13;
the chance to go on to flight&#13;
school to earn those famous&#13;
silver wings as an Air Force&#13;
pilot or navigator.&#13;
OTS is your chance to&#13;
break away from the crowd&#13;
and be recognized. For all the&#13;
facts, mail in the coupon. Or,&#13;
call 800-631-1972 toll free:&#13;
Remember,with an Air&#13;
rorce future, the sky's no&#13;
imit. * In New Jersey call 800-962-2803.&#13;
TDfRHIAmRATEcR^?»U1TINGSERV1CE «•«!&#13;
Please send me more information on Air Force OTS. I&#13;
i Name.&#13;
. Address&#13;
j Date of Birth. I City&#13;
| State&#13;
-Sex.&#13;
-County.&#13;
| Date of Graduation —School.&#13;
j I understand there is no obligation. |&#13;
ij^dyo^jf in theAirFbrce.j&#13;
Awards To VanWilliganfO'Rourke Page 5 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
An anthropologist and an&#13;
engineer are the 1972 winners of&#13;
outstanding teaching awards of&#13;
$500 each at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. The&#13;
awards are'funded by a grant'&#13;
from the Standard Oil (Ind.)&#13;
Foundation and will be formally&#13;
presented at commencement&#13;
exercises on May 28.&#13;
The winners are John Van&#13;
Willigen, assistant professor of&#13;
anthropology, and Michael J.&#13;
O'Rourke, engineering science&#13;
instructor. Cited for honorable&#13;
mention as distinguished&#13;
teachers were LeRoy Cougle,&#13;
assistant professor of business&#13;
management, and Chong-maw&#13;
Chen, assistant professor of lif e&#13;
science.&#13;
They were selected by the&#13;
c ampu s f a c u l t y - s t u d e n t&#13;
teaching awards committee&#13;
chaired by Prof. Herbert Kubly&#13;
on the basis of nominations&#13;
submitted by students.&#13;
Van Willigen, 33, joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty in September,&#13;
1970, after teaching at the&#13;
University of Arizona, where he&#13;
also completed work for his&#13;
Ph.D.&#13;
John Van Willigen&#13;
As an anthropologist and as a&#13;
teacher, Van Willigen has interested&#13;
himself in the impact&#13;
of industrialization on the&#13;
problems of urban industrial&#13;
society, the area of stu dy which&#13;
constitutes Parkside's special&#13;
educational mission.&#13;
He presently is teaching two&#13;
courses in introductory anthropology&#13;
and a course in&#13;
culture and technological&#13;
change. He also was one of tw o&#13;
UW-P anthropologists who led a&#13;
study-field trip to Mexico&#13;
during the spring semester&#13;
break to study Mexican culture&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
DRUG TESTS AT CENTRAL STATE U.&#13;
(CPS) —Ohio's Central State University has begun mandatory&#13;
urinalysis with registration to weed out hard drug users, after two&#13;
drug-related shootings shook the campus several weeks ago.&#13;
Students at the predominantly black school requested the tests&#13;
and the regents approved, "to change CSU's reputation as a drug&#13;
haven in Ohio."&#13;
READER-OWNED PAPER IN IDAHO?&#13;
(CPS) — The Intermountain Observer in Boise, Idaho, is&#13;
selling shares to its readers in that state to raise $30,000 by th e end&#13;
of April.&#13;
The paper, written and printed on the University of Idaho&#13;
campus, hopes to buy its way out of a local broadcasting firm and&#13;
become a self-supporting journal of a dvocacy by 1973. It would be&#13;
the first totally reader-owned paper in the country.&#13;
MITCHELL SPEAKS OUT&#13;
(CPS) — "My dear, don't you realize that you can take a real&#13;
trip in marijuana. . . These stupid jerks who smoke the stuff don't&#13;
realize what they're getting themselves into. Now that we've&#13;
stopped the flow of the milder stuff in the United States, they're&#13;
going outside the country, and now the pushers are importing the&#13;
cannabis plant from other countries. The same kind of stuff the&#13;
opium smokers use. It's hashish, and you can really become addicted&#13;
to it." — for mer Attorney General John Mitchell to Kandy&#13;
Stroud, a reporter for Women's Wear Daily, at a cocktail party.&#13;
EAGLE FOUND SHOT&#13;
(CPS) — A mature golden eagle has been found shot to death in&#13;
Wyoming with a note tied to its legs with barbed wire. The note&#13;
read: "To the continued safety of the flocks of Wyoming, for he died&#13;
that the lambs may grow."&#13;
and history.&#13;
He has just been elected a&#13;
fellow of the American Anthropological&#13;
Association and is&#13;
also a member of Sigma Xi, the&#13;
Tibet Society and the&#13;
Association for Asian studies.&#13;
O'Rourke, 25, also came to&#13;
Parkside in fall, 1970, and&#13;
presently is teaching a course in&#13;
electromechanics, mechanical&#13;
vibrations and introducting to&#13;
computing mechanics in the&#13;
School of Modern Industry,&#13;
which implements Parkside's&#13;
industrial society mission.&#13;
O'Rourke also has been&#13;
selected as a participant in a&#13;
National Science Foundation&#13;
Summer Institute, on structural&#13;
design, an interaction program&#13;
between educators and practitioners,&#13;
to be held July 10&#13;
through August 4 at Illinois&#13;
Institute of Technology.&#13;
He received his M.S.C.E. and&#13;
Ph.D. degrees at Northwestern&#13;
University and brings to the&#13;
classroom experience from&#13;
both industrial and academic&#13;
posts.&#13;
He is a member of T au Beta&#13;
Phi, Chi Epsilon and the&#13;
Michael O'Rourke&#13;
American Society of Civil&#13;
Engineers.&#13;
Cougle teaches courses in&#13;
emp l o y e e e v a l u a t i o n ,&#13;
behavioral science and decision&#13;
making in the management&#13;
science division of th e School fo&#13;
Modern Industry, and is a&#13;
Loyola University Ph.D.&#13;
Chen, who is teaching&#13;
bioscience and plant&#13;
physiology, received his Ph.D.&#13;
at Kansas University and did&#13;
postdoctoral work at the&#13;
National Cancer Institute of&#13;
Canada and the Roche Institute&#13;
af M olecular Biology.&#13;
the tyinedt&#13;
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FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE —1948 Ford, 6cyl. 2 door&#13;
in good cond. Call after 6 at 654-6485.&#13;
for this S450 value.&#13;
FOR SALE — '62 Comet, 6 cyl. $125.&#13;
Call 652-5904 or 654-3429.&#13;
FOR SALE —Guitar MARTIN D-18,&#13;
with deluxe hard shell case, $335"&#13;
firm, ph. 652.0295.&#13;
FOR SALE: White panne velvet&#13;
shawl with long white fringe. Never&#13;
worn. Shimmers like White gold. $25&#13;
new, will sell for $10. Ph. Cleta 654-&#13;
1927 o r 553 2496.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 VW, sunroof, good&#13;
cond. $1,145. Call 632 9669 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
P E Turntable. SHURE high track&#13;
cartridge. Call Ron. 657-6630.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 Triumph 500,&#13;
custom, best offer call 552-9068.&#13;
1970 Nova, 350 V-8, two barrel,&#13;
factory 3 speed on floor, power&#13;
steering and brakes, 32,000 miles,&#13;
new tires. Call 657-7105, 8 to 5:30 or&#13;
554-6470 after 6:30.&#13;
Splffy 1963 M6 Midget SPORTSCAR,&#13;
needs body work, truly THE&#13;
car of the future and yours for the&#13;
ridiculously low price of $150 cash,&#13;
contact Jim at 553-2496 or at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED - Writers, iournalists,&#13;
production staff and ad men to take&#13;
over a college newspaper. Must be&#13;
housebroken, learn while you earn&#13;
when you can. Ph. 553-2496 or 553-&#13;
2498. Ask for anybody or come in&#13;
person to the Newscope office,&#13;
corner of Wood Rd. and Hwy. A.&#13;
Gay Youth Coalition: Anyone interested,&#13;
or having any questions or&#13;
problems they would like to discuss,&#13;
please call 634-4470.&#13;
HOUSEWORK HELPER — early&#13;
June for about a week, pay open. Ph.&#13;
554-8517.&#13;
WANTED — a student volunteer to&#13;
be big brother to 11 year old cerebral&#13;
palsied boy. Call Wendy at 553-2121,&#13;
ext. 42.&#13;
JUST IN TIME FOR MOTHER'S&#13;
DAY — Ready for the Home,&#13;
weaned and litter trained, 8 weeks&#13;
old people orientated kittens. 1&#13;
Black 8, White Female - loo ks like a&#13;
panda bear; 1 Black 8. White male -&#13;
looks like Sylvester the Cat; 1 Gray&#13;
Tiger Stripe Male - big eyes and a&#13;
loud pur; 1 Brown Tiger Stripe Male&#13;
• the friendliest kitten. All come with&#13;
white boots, stomachs and faces.&#13;
Cost: only a little love. Call 633-8162&#13;
any time, but hurry.&#13;
Go Go Girls wanted', top wages.&#13;
Pussy Cat Lounge, 633-3805, Racine.&#13;
Babysitter and light house work,&#13;
afternoons and evenings, full or part&#13;
time. Please call 632-3785.&#13;
WANT TO TRADE Men's 21"&#13;
bicycle frame - Reynolds 531. With to&#13;
trade for larger, comparable frame -&#13;
would consider selling. Ph. 657-3046.&#13;
TYPING done. Experienced. Ph.&#13;
552 877.&#13;
ROMEMATE WANTED — Girl to&#13;
share apt. in June, a mile from the&#13;
Kenosha campus. 3 rooms. Ph. 652-&#13;
1486, between 12 - 2, 652-5904.&#13;
May l, 1972 NEWSCOPE Paget&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
HOLIDAY IN N AND&#13;
RUBY II&#13;
It took me a day and a half to&#13;
find Eating Out, and when I did,&#13;
I found him on some kinda' trip.&#13;
It seems that the dentist he&#13;
hadn't seen in six months told&#13;
him his teeth were fine, but he&#13;
was too fat.&#13;
Eating Out was depreseed, it&#13;
took a real sales pitch to get him&#13;
out to review double the normal&#13;
amount of restaurants. "C'mon,&#13;
man, we've got three places to&#13;
do before NEWSCOPE is a&#13;
thing of the past." '&#13;
Maggie was gathered up, and&#13;
the three of us slid into&#13;
Kenosha's melting pot of&#13;
prepared food.&#13;
The first stop on a Thursday&#13;
night, a little after nine, was the&#13;
local Holiday Inn. I had to&#13;
convince Eating Out that this&#13;
coast to coast, global Chain&#13;
didn't contribute directly to&#13;
"the Big Viet Squirmish", the&#13;
"Commie Caper". I told him it&#13;
didn't to my limited knowledge,&#13;
just don't drink a Coke.&#13;
The only reason I took the&#13;
entourage there was because a&#13;
former Parkside student and&#13;
Kenosha track superstar, Tom&#13;
Young, worked there.&#13;
The ex-student mans the night&#13;
kitchens, preparing items like&#13;
hamburger delights, Reuben&#13;
sandwiches, Norsman halibut&#13;
steak, T-Bones, Kansas City&#13;
Sirloins, lobster, frog legs . . .&#13;
and so on.&#13;
Word had gotten to the food&#13;
desk to the effect that ole Tom&#13;
was whippin' up some fine food.&#13;
So, by a three to nothing vote, it&#13;
was off to the Southport Room.&#13;
Eating Out and I each had a&#13;
steak sandwich (2.65) while&#13;
Maggie was drawn to a Rueben&#13;
sandwich (1.95) by the well&#13;
worded menu. The real test was&#13;
on the shoulders of the former&#13;
fleetfoot. As Eating Out put it,&#13;
"Can one successfully make the&#13;
transition from cinder to tile?"&#13;
He did, at least last Thursday&#13;
night. The steak sandwich&#13;
wasn't the usual scrawny,&#13;
grizzly, stringy piece of poorly&#13;
cooked meat. We each ate big,&#13;
juicy, cooked to perfection&#13;
steaks, plump, placed atop a&#13;
throne of toast.&#13;
Maggie decided the Rueben&#13;
was good enough to serve Al&#13;
Kooper, Norman Mailer,&#13;
Barbara Striesand, el Rico&#13;
Dorfman, Sandy Koufax, Bob&#13;
Dylan, Sammy Davis, or even&#13;
good enough to bury with Lenny&#13;
Bruce. A Rueben can't be given&#13;
a higher recommendation to my&#13;
way of thinking-writing.&#13;
PAB Presents&#13;
PARAMOUNT P ICTURES PRESENTS&#13;
Ali MacGraw-Ryan O'Neal&#13;
A HOWARD G.MINSKY- ARTHUR HILLER Production&#13;
John Marley &amp; Ray Milland ERO SEGAL ARTHUR HILLER&#13;
fcoduefetd bby* {f iflecruultivn#t PPrrrovd4u,c.re«ri MUu.s.i.c. Scored bk.*&#13;
HOWARD G.MINSKY D AVID GOLDEN FRANCIS LAI A PARAMOUNT M&#13;
I SOUNO TRACK At BUM AVAILABLE ON PARAMOUNT RECOUPS I [PPl&#13;
May 5, 8 PM 100 min.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Parkside 8. Wisconsin ID required&#13;
While eating and talking to&#13;
Tom, I found out Josie worked&#13;
there, one of the waitresses on&#13;
the Eating Out All Star Team,&#13;
and in the Eating Out Hall of&#13;
Fame. Josie Speed Queen, one&#13;
of the friendliest workers in the&#13;
frenzied, freaked-out food&#13;
world.&#13;
Tom Young and the other&#13;
night shift workers had won our&#13;
stomachs at the Holiday Inn,&#13;
and the three of us recommend&#13;
the food prepared by Tom, and I&#13;
suggest stopping by in the&#13;
morning to see Josie.&#13;
That was' it, we couldn't&#13;
return for a second visit to&#13;
really give the Inn a twice-over,&#13;
no time. With a staff of two&#13;
writers covering all the beats,&#13;
regular columns, and all else, I&#13;
had to hustle my associates&#13;
home for rest so we could take&#13;
on another deserving eatery.&#13;
On to Ruby II, at the site of&#13;
the defunct George Webb&#13;
franchise. The Ruby Brothers&#13;
have expanded to the west, they&#13;
run the all-night restaurant&#13;
painted purple on Roosevelt&#13;
Road. Kenosha night life never&#13;
had it so interesting.&#13;
Along with a sharp waitress&#13;
named Marie, we enjoyed&#13;
cheeseburgers, Damon Runyon&#13;
characters, and the jukebox.&#13;
The Ruby Boys, along with&#13;
their army of workers-nonworkers,&#13;
are always ready to&#13;
listen to any ideas concerning&#13;
the betterment of their&#13;
restaurants. They are unique&#13;
this way. Besides talking about&#13;
food. Jack Ruby will offer his&#13;
basketball analysis to anyone,&#13;
and I have not found him to be&#13;
wrong recently. He'll tell you&#13;
how. the Knicks will upset the&#13;
Lakers, just ask him.&#13;
They could serve dog food at&#13;
Ruby 11 and still rake it in when&#13;
the bars close. Those individuals&#13;
dining-out after&#13;
drinking-out will consume&#13;
anything under the guise of&#13;
food, ask Jim Koloen.&#13;
Ruby II is better than that. It&#13;
is an interesting place,&#13;
frequented by everything from&#13;
intellectuals to nomads to&#13;
moms and dads to detectives&#13;
(and they wouldn't put just&#13;
anything in their stomachs).&#13;
There is one thing the&#13;
management at Ruby II did that&#13;
deserves mention. They&#13;
removed the sign above the&#13;
door that read "Minimum to&#13;
Minors", which spelled out a&#13;
minimum time the second class&#13;
citizens could sit. The sign is&#13;
gone and minors are more than&#13;
welcomed. That's progress in&#13;
the restaurant business.&#13;
There was a creamer soured&#13;
on our table, and there may be&#13;
other odds and ends one could&#13;
fault, but the place is new, and it&#13;
is like a factory, three shifts,&#13;
busy usually, and just getting&#13;
routines set.&#13;
As Ken Kesey and the Merry&#13;
Pranksters would say, "flow&#13;
with it, just flow with it" and I&#13;
agree.&#13;
Next Week: The Last Supper&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's Newest Rock Bar&#13;
now open&#13;
the Establish&#13;
424 Lake Avenue, Racine&#13;
(formerly Counselor's II)&#13;
Live Entertainment Five Nights a Week&#13;
now featuring&#13;
Second Coming&#13;
formerly&#13;
Buddy and the Citations&#13;
by Bob Sieger&#13;
ONE YEAR:&#13;
COLIN BLUNSTONE&#13;
During the middle 60's, The&#13;
Zombies was one of many&#13;
groups to share the crowded&#13;
spotlight of rock stardom. They&#13;
were good, putting out such&#13;
early hits as "She's Not There"&#13;
and "Tell Ner No." They were a&#13;
strong group, both musically&#13;
and vocally and they really&#13;
knew how to rock. Shortly after&#13;
their last hit, "Time Of The&#13;
Season," the Zombies broke up.&#13;
Out of this breakup came&#13;
ARGENT, a new group led by&#13;
Rod Argent, a former Zombie.&#13;
Now, Colin Blunstone, a singer&#13;
for the Zombies, has decided to&#13;
re-enter the music business.&#13;
With the musical backing of&#13;
ARGENT, Blunstone has just&#13;
released his first solo album.&#13;
But something is missing.&#13;
Although he has his roots in&#13;
rock, Blunstone does nothing on&#13;
this album that comes close.&#13;
There is none of the power, none&#13;
of the drive that was inherent in&#13;
the Zombies. Instead what&#13;
Blunstone offers is ten love&#13;
songs, four of which he wrote.&#13;
Songs of love lost, love gained,&#13;
love far away.&#13;
- -^nse o&gt;&#13;
a un,fy of ba&#13;
monotony, 7^ r&#13;
^ts. are also&#13;
chelated and&#13;
arranged.&#13;
B'unstone's Vo&#13;
rename&#13;
h abl sound!&#13;
t\eJchln .iqhuaeb,i t wa struci&#13;
&lt;*rtain song,&#13;
beneficial. Howe-&#13;
9asps way&#13;
s,*» of the albu&#13;
suffer from too&#13;
^king them dry&#13;
0,1 the first cut or&#13;
only cut pn the&#13;
l&#13;
from the music desk&#13;
Buddy Rich is the Grand&#13;
Canyon among the&#13;
topographical features of the&#13;
drumming fraternity. Or he&#13;
could be Steve Canyon; larger&#13;
than life in spite of .weighing in&#13;
at 115 on a heavy day. The plain&#13;
fact is that he was born with&#13;
wings while the rest of us need&#13;
sticks to walk with.&#13;
Buddy Rich doesn't need&#13;
sticks to drum with. He can play&#13;
cleaner licks with his fingers&#13;
than most drummers can&#13;
manage with any number of&#13;
sticks, as he demonstrated&#13;
Saturday, April 22, at Bradford&#13;
Auditorium. His return&#13;
engagement drew probably all&#13;
the local hardcore swing fans, a&#13;
number of masochist fellow&#13;
drummers come for the sheer&#13;
sweet frustration of it, and,&#13;
befitting the glittering UWPARKSIDE&#13;
floating above the&#13;
stage, even a few students who&#13;
didn't belong to either category.&#13;
Noticing the I.F.O., Buddy&#13;
quipped, "That's a funny way to&#13;
spell 'Rich'."&#13;
Several such remarks plus&#13;
bored-casual attitude toward&#13;
the funny Wisconsin towns he&#13;
and his band were hitting led to&#13;
the conclusion that Buddy Rich&#13;
thinks highly of himself. The&#13;
buzz from the business bears&#13;
WO$HA this out, as Buddy has collected&#13;
a reputation as one of the Bad&#13;
Boys, hell to work with, hell to&#13;
Interview. Rumor has Frank&#13;
Sinatra throwing a full pjtChe,&#13;
of water at him for disrupt^&#13;
love songs with rimshots durinq&#13;
their mutual stint with Tommy&#13;
Dorsey. But the stature of the&#13;
man and his prodigous musical&#13;
genius make all other considerations&#13;
irrelevant, at least&#13;
to the audience.&#13;
Buddy fronts a streamlined&#13;
band these days, himself and a&#13;
bassist the sum total of the&#13;
rhythm section, the sole support&#13;
for four trumpets, three&#13;
trombines and four saxes. It&#13;
could easily get top heavy but&#13;
Buddy Rich is Buddy Rich and&#13;
the bassist, who looks like a&#13;
lizard with a ponytale and plays&#13;
with spider fingers, is his&#13;
match, eyes glued to Buddy's&#13;
ride cymbal, staying neck and&#13;
neck. The rest of the side men&#13;
are all first rate, many doubled&#13;
on several instruments, and two&#13;
of the sax men are genuinely&#13;
exciting in solo spots.&#13;
This really isn't a big band,&#13;
though. The arrangements,&#13;
while workmanlike and spiffy,&#13;
are rather elementary in terms&#13;
of tone color and shading,&#13;
tending toward flashy accents&#13;
and lots of fills, playing off the&#13;
«* • .&#13;
•T&gt;* V.&#13;
-v*:&#13;
zr ...&#13;
kX&#13;
.4 i'v.&#13;
jC&#13;
-aby&#13;
"Red" Widely of the&#13;
Newscope Sports staff&#13;
Yes, sports fans, finally&#13;
NEWSCOPE's ace in the hole,&#13;
par free, bar none, sportswriter&#13;
gets a chance to pitch the ole&#13;
ball. Yessir, this On the Nod&#13;
fella's average has been falling&#13;
lately, vat-aging he can't go the&#13;
distance anymore. After each&#13;
contest he's had to wrap his&#13;
head in ice packs; he's even&#13;
been whirl-pooling his tongue.&#13;
But the quarts are inevitably&#13;
creeping up on him.&#13;
Nothin' worked, so coach&#13;
benched him and gave me,&#13;
NEWSCOPE's first round draft&#13;
choice, a chance to bat and&#13;
pitch the ole ball.&#13;
Yessiree, I'm pitchin' the old&#13;
ball npw, yesirqe.&#13;
Dick's Olympic Super Bar (on&#13;
the corner of 24th Ave. and 52nd&#13;
St.) was my first batter of this&#13;
early season and, well, looks&#13;
like I gotta do some more warm&#13;
ups. Got a tripple off me on the&#13;
first pitch. Yessiree, I peppered&#13;
it in there and zowie, I was&#13;
knocked off the mound. But&#13;
coach says I deserve another&#13;
chance, so I'll probably be&#13;
starting when we play the&#13;
Activities Building next week.&#13;
Dick Stankus presents an&#13;
ever-smiling, chunky figure,&#13;
and manages a fine team with&#13;
such All-star material as ten&#13;
ounce tap Bud, Pabst, Hamm's&#13;
and Old Style for 15c; basic&#13;
mixed drinks for 35c; schooners&#13;
for 30c and Harvey Wallbangers&#13;
for a shockingly low 75c. I didn't&#13;
stay in the game long enough to&#13;
face a Wall banger, but Jack&#13;
Daniels and Gin Tonic did&#13;
plenty of damage; I was beaned&#13;
twice in a row. A NEWSCOPE&#13;
record.&#13;
The tavern features a formica&#13;
topped bar which is at least 50&#13;
feet long (you can't hit one out&#13;
ef the bar), tables and padded&#13;
chairs, a piano, and a small pool&#13;
table. Bob Stankus, who will&#13;
become manager of the bar in&#13;
May, took over for his father at&#13;
9 PM, and with him, the older&#13;
fans in the stands started filing&#13;
out, figgering the game was&#13;
already decided.&#13;
With mostly longhair types&#13;
sparsely occupying the box&#13;
seats at the bar, Bob piped- in&#13;
music from a stereo, featuring&#13;
albums by the Doors, Dylan and&#13;
Eric Burdon to name a few.&#13;
Fumblefingers Socha was&#13;
catching, and trying to call the&#13;
pitchers. Unfortunately/ he&#13;
wasn't speaking loudly enough,&#13;
which left the ordering of drinks&#13;
on my shoulders.&#13;
The softly lit/ "ewly&#13;
remodelled bar featured a&#13;
Martini and Manhattan mixing&#13;
device which resempled a four&#13;
^ cuts he is ac- drums and bass) Blunstone&#13;
igjy by Violins and comes close to a rock style. Yet&#13;
arranging of the he catches himself before he&#13;
st identical on all has a chance to&#13;
0 gives the returns to his&#13;
Page 7&#13;
sing out and&#13;
This '"c reiurna 10 nis nnoorrmmaall,, ' ssaaffee&#13;
&gt; of unity' but it is style. His vocal ethic seems to 1&#13;
' bKa^ddiylv arrantg ed bt e: ,D on't take chances and try&#13;
„ remaining four to please everyone.&#13;
Ho heavily or- —&#13;
ld equally overvocals&#13;
ar e high,&#13;
mediocre. He has&#13;
inding br eathy. If&#13;
was a refined&#13;
-uctured to fit a&#13;
It would be&#13;
lWever, Blunstone&#13;
jy through both&#13;
jbum. His vocals&#13;
oo much control,&#13;
dry and ordinary&#13;
With&#13;
groups&#13;
worse yet, going crazy on the&#13;
bar circuit, why does Colin&#13;
so many deserving&#13;
going unheard of or.&#13;
Blunstone rate an album? But&#13;
I'm letting my ideals show. I'm&#13;
forgetting that the music industry,&#13;
with all its politics and&#13;
petty bureauracracy, is a&#13;
business first and an artistic&#13;
medium second.&#13;
ONE YEAR: COLIN&#13;
BLUNSTONE is just a lot of&#13;
wasted acetate. It has no beat,&#13;
,t on side two (the the lyrics are trite, and the&#13;
the album with vocals ordinary. I give it a 25.&#13;
NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
fA&#13;
big brass sound like a drum&#13;
corps scaled for the stage.&#13;
Which figures because it is&#13;
Buddy's show.&#13;
But in context it's a great&#13;
show. Buddy pulls sounds from&#13;
his drums that qualify them as a&#13;
melodic instrument, filling the&#13;
holes with the perfect riffs,&#13;
nudging the beat in all the right&#13;
places. Every now and then an&#13;
arm will shoot out of the tangle&#13;
to flick a cymbal, always catching&#13;
the accents, and all&#13;
without benefit of a score.&#13;
Buddy shouts the numbers of&#13;
the songs like some cocky&#13;
quarterback setting off a flurry&#13;
of pages, but he doesn't have a&#13;
music stand.&#13;
And, of course. There were&#13;
only two extended drum solos&#13;
but Buddy did them right, arms&#13;
crossing, sticks blurred to a&#13;
solid sheet, rattling off the most&#13;
amazingly complex combinations&#13;
of obscure rudiments.&#13;
The finale had him moving from&#13;
the fastest cleanest most&#13;
purring single stroke roll in the&#13;
world on the rim of his snare to&#13;
several arm, shoulder and head&#13;
riffs.&#13;
It may be grandstanding, but&#13;
the man is a natural wonder&#13;
and should be seen at least once&#13;
in a l ifetime. r&#13;
^% pronged candelabra: Lot of&#13;
drinking geniuses running&#13;
around inventing all kinds of&#13;
labor saving machines for the&#13;
contemporary bartender.&#13;
One especially impressive&#13;
aspect of the Super Bar is its&#13;
orderliness; nothing was out of&#13;
place; the good stock of hard&#13;
spirits was lined up in single&#13;
file, chest out and bottletop&#13;
fight. On review night, the bar&#13;
was quiet, restful, almost&#13;
tranquil, though the seasonal&#13;
attendance figures are probably&#13;
quite high since Dick's , is&#13;
located near AMC. It's a shot&#13;
and a beer bar during the afternoon&#13;
when some elderly&#13;
sportsmen sit around the tables&#13;
playing cards, or while the&#13;
American Motors workers lift a&#13;
few during recess, hoping to&#13;
Place the boredom of fhe&#13;
Assembly line in the proper&#13;
amber perspective.&#13;
Prices are very reasonable,&#13;
indeed I wonder how they got&#13;
Harvey Walbanger and Gin&#13;
Tonic to play for only 75c and&#13;
40c respectively: The strike had&#13;
no effect on them. On&#13;
weeknights, Dick's provides the&#13;
patron with a quiet atmosphere,&#13;
color TV and albums to listen to.&#13;
Even the umpires are nice guys,&#13;
which just goes to show why&#13;
drinking is America's number&#13;
one a ll-season indoor sport.&#13;
By Andy Schmelling&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
After making a few last&#13;
minute arrangements Friday&#13;
afternoon, like calling for&#13;
tickets, picking up my young&#13;
lady, replenishing my stash,&#13;
buying a bottle, grabbing a bite&#13;
and filling my beast with petrol,&#13;
it was off into the sunset, 1-94&#13;
non-stop to Madison.&#13;
We reached our destination,&#13;
the Madison field house, about 8&#13;
p.m. or one hour after the start&#13;
of the show. Inside there were&#13;
gathered a sizeable number of&#13;
people but not the crowd scene&#13;
one might have expected at the&#13;
first major festival of the year.&#13;
As i t was, it was ideal. Anyone&#13;
who wanted to could work&#13;
himself to the front of the stage&#13;
without much difficulty, or if he&#13;
preferred there was ample&#13;
room in the bleachers to stretch&#13;
out and take a nap or just observe&#13;
the show from a reclining&#13;
position, which many people did&#13;
as the clock moved on past two.&#13;
Looking to the stage we saw&#13;
what appeared to be about a 40&#13;
year old, long haired man in an&#13;
orange jumpsuit telling dirty&#13;
jokes. As it turned out, it was&#13;
just Uncle Dirty, the M.C.,&#13;
doing his thing. He wasn't&#13;
having much success in the&#13;
audience reaction department,&#13;
and it soon became apparent&#13;
that the crowd had come for&#13;
music and would settle for&#13;
nothing less.&#13;
Then the spotlight swung to a&#13;
large bearded man with a&#13;
guitar whom Uncle Dirty introduced&#13;
as Dave Von Ronk.&#13;
Dave has been around for quite&#13;
a while but his talents have for&#13;
the most part been overlooked&#13;
except for people who have been&#13;
into folk. After a rolicking&#13;
rendition of "Candy Man", the&#13;
frustrated dopers lament, he&#13;
broke into a laugh and exclaimed&#13;
"Kenosha Blues". He&#13;
moved through the slow rhythmic&#13;
"Who Do I Love" and&#13;
blasted out another called "If&#13;
You Want to be A Hero Follow&#13;
Me". I remembered what Dylan&#13;
once said of him. "I'd always&#13;
known Risin' Sun but never&#13;
really knew it until I heard&#13;
Dave sing it." Called back after&#13;
"One Meatball" he delighted&#13;
the crowd with "Would You&#13;
Like to Swing on A Star".&#13;
Next up was McKendree&#13;
Spring, a relatively new group&#13;
whom I'd never had the&#13;
pleasure of hearing before.&#13;
They began with Neil Young's&#13;
"Down By The River". Their&#13;
three guitars and violin&#13;
produced such a full sound that&#13;
it was hard to believe they&#13;
didn't have a drummer. They&#13;
had a real ear-pleasing sound. A&#13;
violin solo of "God Bless&#13;
America" reminded me of&#13;
THE END&#13;
MAY 20,21&#13;
Hendrix's "National Anthem"&#13;
with fantastic feedback work&#13;
producing everything from the&#13;
sounds of a string quartet to&#13;
that of a diving jet bomber full&#13;
with blazing machine gun. I&#13;
hope to hear some more good&#13;
things from this group.&#13;
McKendree was as-hard as the&#13;
rock got Friday night with the&#13;
appearance of Ramblin' Jack&#13;
Elliot the sounds returned to the&#13;
acoustic traditional vein which&#13;
dominated the weekend.&#13;
Opening with "San Francisco&#13;
Bay Blues" he quickly moved&#13;
into a string of fine Dylan tunes&#13;
including "I Threw It All&#13;
Away", "Lay Lady Lay", and&#13;
"God On Our Side". He looks&#13;
remarkably like Dylan and&#13;
hearing him sing his songs was&#13;
almost disconcerting. He more&#13;
lhan did them justice though.&#13;
After Jack was the world&#13;
famous Earl Scruggs Review&#13;
show, in the spirit of the thing,&#13;
opened up with Dylan's "You&#13;
Ain't Going No Where". Their&#13;
reception was fantastic,&#13;
especially when they started&#13;
getting it on with some down&#13;
home square dance, the whole&#13;
place was jumping. At one&#13;
o'clock in the morning they&#13;
were just What the crowd&#13;
needed for a second wind.&#13;
Hearing Earl play "Orange&#13;
Blossom Special" on the banjo&#13;
was a real treat.&#13;
The first night was climaxed&#13;
with the fabulous Richie&#13;
Havens. Watching his play&#13;
guitar just blows my mind. His&#13;
hand just moved in a blur&#13;
across the front of his box.&#13;
Every song he sang brought on&#13;
an ovation. "Handsome&#13;
Johnny", "Freedom", "Here&#13;
Comes the Sun", and a couple&#13;
new songs I'd never heard&#13;
before. It was a fine end to a&#13;
great night. When the lights&#13;
came on it was alter 2:30 a.m.&#13;
and looking at Diane I knew it&#13;
was time to head for home. It&#13;
seemed like we'd been there a&#13;
week.&#13;
We missed Sorry Mutha's and&#13;
just caught the last part of&#13;
David Mississippi Queen Rea's&#13;
act. I decided to move up to the&#13;
stage and try to get a couple of&#13;
shots. My luck was with me,&#13;
just as I reached the stage&#13;
Beautiful Day came on, just as&#13;
they came on I came on, and the&#13;
next hour was almost to much&#13;
for me to believe. Anyone who&#13;
has ever seen them could understand&#13;
why. They sang a&#13;
couple of cuts off their first&#13;
album like "Hot Summer Day",&#13;
and "White Bird". I could have&#13;
sat and listened to them until&#13;
the cows came home. As far as I&#13;
was concerned they were the&#13;
high point of the weekend.&#13;
Country Joe followed&#13;
Beautiful Day with a sing-aiong&#13;
version of "We'll All Be Free&#13;
Some Day". If you know&#13;
anything about Country Joe,&#13;
and you know anything about&#13;
Madison, you can imagine what&#13;
his performance was like. It&#13;
was something like a family&#13;
reunion, brothers and sisters&#13;
together again for a while. He&#13;
told a story about his being&#13;
harrassed in Boston over the&#13;
"Fish Cheer" and then led the&#13;
crowd in a chorus of it that&#13;
shook the walls. "Give me an f .&#13;
. . Give me a U ... He played&#13;
four or five songs and ended up&#13;
with the house singing "Fixin to&#13;
Die Rag". No one wanted to let&#13;
him leave the stage.&#13;
Linda Ronstadt was up next.&#13;
She's one of the best looking&#13;
female performers I've ever&#13;
seen (The lady in Beautiful Day&#13;
was right up there too!) besides&#13;
being a fine singer and violin&#13;
player. She started out with "A&#13;
Whole Lot More of Jesus and a&#13;
Whole Less Rock and Roll" then&#13;
(I think I'm Going to Love You&#13;
For) "A Long Long Time" I'd&#13;
say her group's music was&#13;
country based although it had a&#13;
wide variety. Her lead player&#13;
who said he was from "Suthurn&#13;
Texus" picked and his way&#13;
through "a littl' song ah rote"&#13;
called "Mail Order Dog", and&#13;
then they jammed on some&#13;
country for a while.&#13;
By the time Kris Kristofferson&#13;
got on the stage we were&#13;
having trouble seeing it. Just&#13;
the same our audios were in fine&#13;
shape. He sang his current&#13;
release "Josie" and then made&#13;
a big hit with "Okie from&#13;
Muskogee". Then he asked&#13;
Linda Ronstadt to come up and&#13;
sing "Help Me Make It Through&#13;
The Night" with him. They&#13;
really sounded good together.&#13;
Muffy, a friend of mine from&#13;
Racine, agreed when I said they&#13;
sounded good and added, "And I&#13;
don't even like that song." After&#13;
that they brought Ramblin Jack&#13;
Elliot up and they all sang a&#13;
song of Jack's called "The&#13;
Tramp on the Street". For the&#13;
final number of the weekend&#13;
they called Leslie on stage and&#13;
the whole group sang "Me and&#13;
Bobby McGee". Ramblin Jack&#13;
had a yodel that would put the&#13;
Swiss to shame. It was really a&#13;
happy scene, everyone was&#13;
singing and laughing and just&#13;
carrying on. When the lights&#13;
finally came on it was apparent&#13;
that our friend with the sports&#13;
coat had done a miserable job. I&#13;
saw him as we left, sitting on a&#13;
bleacher with his head in his&#13;
hand.&#13;
Walking out into the warm&#13;
night air I had the feeling of&#13;
having taken part in something&#13;
beautiful, something to&#13;
remember for a long time to&#13;
come.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
T II I: l: I N l: K T II I N v*. S IN Ml'f IC&#13;
Downtown Kenosha -&#13;
LIVE&#13;
ENTERTAIN&#13;
MENT&#13;
Two Shows&#13;
featuring&#13;
Tom Rosplack&#13;
and the duo of&#13;
Terry Elliot&#13;
Don Mohr&#13;
May 3 + 4&#13;
Noon to 3 PM&#13;
The news&#13;
is Stretch!&#13;
VERY DEFINITELY&#13;
GEAR BOX®&#13;
Newest fashion on the&#13;
scene — Stretch Woven&#13;
Slacks! Great new fabric&#13;
look with a great, built-in&#13;
comfort factor. Stay-neat,&#13;
Dura-Press® blend in&#13;
flannels, twills and neat&#13;
geometries. Pick your favorite&#13;
color: grey, green,&#13;
navy. It. blue, tan, black.&#13;
Sizes 28-38.&#13;
Richman BROTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
May 1, i?72 NEWSCOPE Page 8&#13;
Iil'lil'l'l'l'lil'l'lililililililililililililil.lililil.&#13;
Parkside Student Activities Board&#13;
Last Dance of the Year&#13;
(until the End)&#13;
9 PM — 1 AM&#13;
SURPRISE BAND!&#13;
$1.00 for students $1.25 for guests&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID required&#13;
I'I'I'I'IiI'IiIiIiIiIiTiT iTiTiTiTiTiTiTiT iTiTiT iTiTiTiTi&#13;
| Golfers vs. Roosevelt I&#13;
The UW-Parkside golf squad&#13;
went into action against&#13;
Roosevelt University Friday&#13;
with a 9-5 mark and Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens hopes that's a good&#13;
sign for the future.&#13;
And the future, in this case,&#13;
means Thursday through&#13;
Saturday because the Rangers&#13;
will be vying in the NAIA&#13;
District 14 tournament at Green&#13;
Lake, hoping to improve on&#13;
their ninth place finish of 1971.&#13;
Parkside dumped Carthage,&#13;
Loyola and Whitewater last&#13;
Tuesday to run their mark to 9-5&#13;
as freshmen Dave Fox and Pete&#13;
Nevins led the way over the par&#13;
Trackmen&#13;
E&gt;q&amp;s' Ko r r s e To Compete&#13;
^ 5r P®T"&#13;
The UW-Parkside trackmen&#13;
will compete Saturday at the&#13;
Northern Illinois Relays in&#13;
DeKalb.&#13;
The meet is becoming one of&#13;
the Midwest's toughest relay&#13;
battles as evidenced by the&#13;
entry of Drake University,&#13;
perennial Missouri Valley&#13;
Conference champion.&#13;
The Rangers will enter a full&#13;
squad in the meet and also in&#13;
next Tuesday's dual encounter&#13;
with UW-Whitewater on the&#13;
Warhawks' track.&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Gary Lance&#13;
competed in the marathon in&#13;
last weekend's Drake Relays at&#13;
Des Moines. For Rosa, the&#13;
Ceylonese Olympian, it was his&#13;
first big test over the 26 mile&#13;
route.&#13;
The Rangers also entered a&#13;
four mile relay team of Rosa,&#13;
sophomore Jim McFadden and&#13;
freshmen Dennis Biel and Rudy&#13;
Alvarez. That quartet, which&#13;
ran in the big race with all the&#13;
major colleges, schools, should&#13;
have ben pulled to a fast time,&#13;
hopefully under 17 minutes.&#13;
// yon arc unable to a/tend summer school, yon are invited to participate in . . .&#13;
A T E L E V I S E D C R E D I T S E M I N A R&#13;
The College ot Continuing Education, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
PSYCHOLOGY OF DRUG USE...AND ABUSE&#13;
a six week course - Summer, 1972&#13;
presented on the following stations:&#13;
WLUK-TV (ch 11) Green Bay, Wis. WREX-TV&#13;
WXOW-TV (ch 19) La Crosse, Wis. KDUB-TV&#13;
WKOW-TV (ch 27) Madison, Wis. WDSE-TV&#13;
WMVS-TV (ch 10) Milwaukee, Wis. KTCA-TV&#13;
WAOW-TV (ch 9) Wausau, Wis. WNMR-TV&#13;
(ch 13) Rockford, III.&#13;
(ch 40) Dubuque, Iowa&#13;
(ch 8) Duluth, Minn,&#13;
(ch 2) Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
Northern Michigan Univ.&#13;
TOPICS WILL INCLUDE: Is th e \1is( hiet in Drills or in People . . . Hist ory ol Drug Abuse . . . Drugs Commonly&#13;
Abused . Inerts ot Drug Abuse loneliness lose llum.in Development and Growth . . . Psycho-&#13;
Sor i.il ( onsider.itions . the Allein.itive So&lt; jety Drugs. Religion, and Mysticism . . . Crime Drugs.&#13;
\outh and law leathers, kids and Drugs ( ommunily Role in Drug Abuse . . . New Directions&#13;
YOU CAN ENROLL AS:&#13;
a "Special" undergraduate student&#13;
a "Special" graduate student&#13;
an undergraduate auditor&#13;
Earn i graduate or undergraduate credits&#13;
for a course outline, enrollment information, and viewing schedule, dip and mail&#13;
All c ourse&#13;
requirements&#13;
can be&#13;
completed&#13;
at home&#13;
without&#13;
campus&#13;
attendance&#13;
host professor&#13;
Robert lane, Ph.D.&#13;
N.ime- Te&#13;
Address.&#13;
City-&#13;
State. -Zip.&#13;
Televised Instruction&#13;
College of Continuing Education&#13;
Return to: University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
Oshkosh, Wisconsin 54901&#13;
71 course at Pets as with a 77&#13;
and 79 repsectively.&#13;
Mark Hjortness added a 79&#13;
and Tom Bothe an 80 while Jim&#13;
Vakos and Tom Feiner came up&#13;
with an 80 and 85 respectively to&#13;
round out the Parkside scoring.&#13;
The Rangers totaled 480 for&#13;
six men while Carthage had 487.&#13;
Whitewater 487 and Loyola of&#13;
Chicago 509. Medalist was Ed&#13;
Habacker of Loyola with a par&#13;
71.&#13;
Parkside will meet Lake&#13;
Forest and Dominican — teams&#13;
which it's already defeated —&#13;
and UW-Green Bay at 1 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday at Pets.&#13;
Road Rallye Results&#13;
On Sunday, April 23, Steve&#13;
Swan and his navigator Tom&#13;
Werbie won the second annual&#13;
Jimmy Clarke Road Railey.&#13;
Runner up trophy was given to&#13;
Kevin McKay and Jerry Socha.&#13;
John Zaring and Ron Gatterdam&#13;
received the Most&#13;
Distinguished Faculty Award.&#13;
Forty-six cars turned out for&#13;
thS event on a partly Sunny&#13;
afternoon, and it was a great&#13;
success for the Ragtime&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
The actual course, 67 miles&#13;
long, was created by Mary&#13;
Fettas and Chris Heckel, and&#13;
was basically designed for&#13;
Racine and Kenosha counties;&#13;
but a few people included side&#13;
tours to as far south as Antioch,&#13;
Illinois, as far west as&#13;
Burlington, and as far north as&#13;
the Seven Mile Fair. Many&#13;
people were thankful for Lake&#13;
Michigan's constant presence to&#13;
the east!&#13;
After the Rallye, a crowd of&#13;
more than ninety people enjoyed&#13;
food and beer at the&#13;
Brat's basement.&#13;
Netmen vie for volley&#13;
Interested in (check one) Graduate Credit- Undergraduate Credit- -. Undergraduate Audit-&#13;
The Ranger tennis squad will&#13;
face UW-Milwaukee Friday at&#13;
the Pershing Courts in Racine&#13;
in a rematch of one the&#13;
Parkside men dropped earlier&#13;
and Saturday the Rangers will&#13;
meet UW-Green Bay up north.&#13;
The Rangers, improving&#13;
weekly, notched their second&#13;
victory last week against an&#13;
experienced Milton unit in what&#13;
Parkside Coach Dick Frecka&#13;
called "our best meet of the&#13;
year."&#13;
Mike Safago, playing at No. 1&#13;
singles for the Rangers, beat&#13;
Brian Gibson of Milton 6-3, 6-2&#13;
while No. 2 man Dan Mieczkowski&#13;
won over Brad Barry 6-&#13;
3, 6-2.&#13;
Skip Jones, No. 3 man, won 6-&#13;
4, 4-6, 6-0 over Bruce Lindsley&#13;
while Dennis Halverson fought&#13;
an uphill battle at No. 4 against&#13;
Kurt Aufterhaar but won 1-6, 8-&#13;
6, 6-4.&#13;
Dave Herchen won over Sam&#13;
Skaggas at No. 5 by 6-1, 6-3&#13;
whild John Kangas topped&#13;
Corey Shea at No. 6 6-1, 6-3.&#13;
In doubles action, Safago and&#13;
Jones beat Gibson and Aufterhaar&#13;
6-2, 6-2 while Mieczkowski&#13;
and Halverson won 6-0,&#13;
6-0 over Barry and Lindsey.&#13;
Herchen teamed with Todd&#13;
Nelson at No. 3 doubles to win 6-&#13;
1, 6-2 over Skaggs and Shea.&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
KAMI&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
1 , lb G.ROUND BEEF&#13;
ON FRF.NCH CRUST&#13;
BR FAD DRF.SSFD&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LFTTHCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
GRILLED COUNTRY&#13;
HAM A CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLE WHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OF BURGER. CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISF. ON TOAST gfc&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
uvuT-n.nrLqft.-inf»i^i^^^^^, . . , nnritijuJ&#13;
ASNDH0UGH S0ME0NE FROM PARKSIDE WILL ATFrom&#13;
May 5th through June 11th, the Milwai.kpo R&#13;
Theater Company will present forty-four performanrP^T^P&#13;
Journey of the Fifth Horse", Ronald Ribman's thrfn !&#13;
compassionate portrait of human lonliness and unrrJ,?- "Ifi&#13;
The rhapsodical play MRT's final .ubscription^„72 oft'&#13;
season, will open Friday, May 5th, at eight p m in the T«HH ur u&#13;
Theater at the Performing Arts Center.&#13;
EROTIC FL ICS&#13;
The prize winning works of the recent New York Fvnt;,. R-.&#13;
Festival, an exhibition designed to encourage more creaUvP T&#13;
in sex cinema, will be presented at UWM's Bolton Hall l in&#13;
The films, part of a new UWM Union sponsored filmT •&#13;
be shown Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 4th 5th and 6th&#13;
Showtimes Thursday are at seven and nine-thirty p m and FHH*&#13;
and Saturday at seven, nine-thirty and eleven thirty o m&#13;
Admission for the public is two bucks, persons uder 18 can't get&#13;
in, and identification is required, so know who you are.&#13;
WHOSE GOVERNMENT IS THIS 9&#13;
Students on a number of US campuses have began a campaign&#13;
to turn the Nixon Administration around on its refusal to hold&#13;
public hearings on the issue of environmental impact of the&#13;
proposed trans-Alaska pipeline.&#13;
Working with the Alaska Action Committee, an organization of&#13;
econservatiomsts living in the vicinity of Washington D C these&#13;
students are distributing a pamphlet entitled "The Alaska PinelTne&#13;
Reading Lesson." The pamphlet deals with unanswereS quSns&#13;
and inconsistencies found in the government's pipeline imnacl&#13;
statements. r r&#13;
In spite of the imposing concern on the part of conservationists&#13;
ecologists, Congress members and students, the Nixon Ad'&#13;
ministration appears determined to bow to oil industry demands to&#13;
issue the pipeline permit (a permit for construction as early as Mav&#13;
4th for construction of the 789 mile, hot-oil pipeline)&#13;
Copies of "The Alaska Pipeline Reading Lesson" can be obtained&#13;
m quantity from the Alaska Action Committee 729 - lith&#13;
Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005. '&#13;
Page 9 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
OA/ +ht LAKE&#13;
•sPorts bar&#13;
: HWY 32.&#13;
/ &gt; / / \ Y pool ' FOO s BA L L.&#13;
^ BAR- SAA/D UL/CRBS .jP,&#13;
" package c,oot&gt;s .&#13;
(we l come A/ E w AbULTSJ)&#13;
\ . . s A / s t &gt; s 3 A A / t &gt; S — 3 * A / t &gt; S .&#13;
It's the&#13;
Creoakl eth. ing.&#13;
FLO'S&#13;
Home Cooking&#13;
HWY 31&amp;County Trunk E&#13;
L_&#13;
6AM-6PM Specials Daily&#13;
T h e SG A l i t e r a t u r e t a b l e w as r e ce n t l y s e t up i n&#13;
t h e A ct i v i t i e s B u i l d i n g . B e s i d e l i t e r a t ur e , i t&#13;
o f f e r s s t e l e p h o n e f o r s t u de n t us e .&#13;
Quiet City,&#13;
USA&#13;
(CPS) — If the city of Des&#13;
Plaines, Illinois, has its way,&#13;
that town will probably be the&#13;
quietest town in the country.&#13;
They've just passed an ordinance&#13;
that bans the following:&#13;
m "... crying, calling or&#13;
• o shouting, using a whistle, rattle,&#13;
* bell, gong, clapper, hammer,&#13;
ro drum, horn, hand organ,&#13;
jjj mechanically operated piano,&#13;
or other musical instrument,&#13;
wind instrument, mechanical&#13;
device, radio, phonograph,&#13;
sound amplifier or other similar&#13;
electronic devices so as to&#13;
destroy the peace of the neighborhood."&#13;
The nine page document,&#13;
passed unanimously by the&#13;
Council, also requires motors on&#13;
vehicles, except for buses, to be&#13;
shut off while idle.&#13;
The ordinance carries lines of&#13;
$15 - 300 for a first offense and a&#13;
jail term of up to six months for&#13;
additional offenses.&#13;
T h e n ew | £ f o o t l o n g ba r , r e c en t l y b u i l t i n&#13;
t h e Ac t i v i t i e s B u i l d i n g ; i t f e at u r e s a new&#13;
P a b s t t a p.&#13;
A t h i r d o f t h e au d i e n c e a t t he R ad i c a l&#13;
P o l i t i c a l O rg a n i z i n g s em i n a r l i s t e n s&#13;
i n t e n t l y t o t h e s e ve n s p e a k e r s .&#13;
ALRIKAS Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
3,L VJLluey SSu' p p e r CU&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan k«J.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
9Gunmb. B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
THE&#13;
UPSTAIRS&#13;
"Highest bar&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
| | |&#13;
WC&lt;4S. SUN./-6&#13;
12 O Z. &amp; QTTLE B EER&#13;
V- HIGH-BALLS 35 &lt;&#13;
L/ v e Bjusic —&#13;
Fri. +&#13;
ACROSS FROA T HE&#13;
LAKE THEATER&#13;
May 1,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 10&#13;
Page 11 NEWSCOPE May 1,1*72&#13;
*************rtWrt«)i»u&#13;
episuj sojoij j BJoy\ j&#13;
tqsueuaoqs (gjupfs (q otoqf&#13;
www;&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
oa&amp;e 3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
RHINELANDER&#13;
Pott R um — fifth S309&#13;
Dimitri Vodka—full quart $345&#13;
Five-Star Brandy f'M $335&#13;
Henri C Brandy—full quart—$3*'&#13;
Seagram's Gin Miwart — $439&#13;
Would your club or organization&#13;
like a&#13;
Wine Tasting&#13;
Contact Fred Cook, 637-4101 1&#13;
12PAK&#13;
CANS&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at Blueberry Cold Duck&#13;
Strawberry Cold Duck&#13;
Cold Turkey&#13;
Your complete home&#13;
wine making center.&#13;
Gold Seal Catawba&#13;
Wines&#13;
Phono 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
AAAIN OFF ICE:&#13;
•CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
QUARTS-&#13;
|</text>
            </elementText>
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        <name>Dublin Core</name>
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            <name>Title</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63768">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 16, May 1, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63769">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63770">
                <text>1972-05-01</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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            <name>Format</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63773">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63774">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63775">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63776">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63777">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63778">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
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        <name>ken konkol</name>
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        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="514">
        <name>women's day</name>
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