1
10
23
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https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/017fe46c54c5a1bb5c048303bfd25c3e.pdf
20dd07df76df1f862508759ffe5187a7
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 37, issue 23
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Breaking New Ground
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
Long-Iife
page
3
UW-Parkside
held the groundbreaking
ceremony
[or its Union
expansion
project
on Thursday,
March
,8.
Pictured
from left to right'
are David
Walsh,
Regent
Presiden~;
Tyson
Fettes,
UW-Parkside
Student
Government
Association
President;
Kevin Reilly,
UW
System
President;
Jim Kreuser,
Wisconsin
State Representative;
Jack Keating,
UW-Parkside
Chancellor;
Chris Semenas,
Student
Regent;
B~rbar~
Lawt?",
Wisconsin
Lt. Governor;
Ken Schuh,
UW-Parkside
Alumni
Association
President;
and Steve McLaughlin,
Uw-Parkside
Vice Chancellor
of Student
Affairs
and Dean of Student
Regents
visit UW-Parkside
PATTI
JENSEN
jenseOSS@uwp.edu
The Regents
visit
each
campus
every
eight years.
This
year, it was UW-Parkside's
tum.
Chancellor
John Keating
tried
to be very casual
about the visit,
even going so far as to say at the
Union
groundbreaking
ceremony,
"We don't care
if
the Regents
are
here yet!" The Regents'
meetings
also call for a contingem
of
chancellors
from other-campuses
whose
business
is discussed
at
their monthly
meetings.
The Center
for Community
Partnerships
presented
its two
projects
located
in both Racine
and Kenosha
and funded
by
Wisconsin
Coastal
Management.
The projects
(Kenosha's
Center
for Environme~tal
Education,
Demonstration
and
Applied
Research
and
Racine's
Root
River
Environmental
Education
Community
Center)
will
renovate
a
building
in each
e o.m m u n
i
t
y
and use it to
educate
each
community
about
vital
environmental
concerns.
Keating
headed
a
presentation
for the regents
about
the
campus'
Master
Plan, which
includes
the
much-discussed
Union
expansion.
Oyer the course
of the next five years,
the
campus
will
undergo
. major
structural
changes
and improvements
meant
to improve
its face and
function.
The Regents
later approved
its shared
expense
of UW-Parkside's
Union
expansion.
Regent
Salas
commented,
"This
campus
has many
times
the acreage
per student
than UW-Milwaukee!"
Regents
also heard
from
UW-Parkside's
business
students
Thad
Hosting
the Board ofRegents
on March
8 and 9, UW-Parkside
administration
and
students
presented
university.
issues
for
their consideration.
The Board
of
Regents
is
a group of people
who ~
make the operating
decisions
of
all the University
of Wisconsin
campuses,
4-year,
2-year,
and
online
colleges
as well as the
extensions.
They
decide
both
fund' allocations
and operating
app~ications.
Iii.other words,
they
decide
how much
money
each
campus
will receive
for what ..
purposes
and approve
operations
for each campus.
Gabron
and Sabba
Museteif.
The
students
presented
a Power
Point
presentation
concerning
their
marketing
project
for Modine
Manufacturing.
Modine
gave UW-
Parkside
students
the puzzling
question
of how to better compete
for business
in the "military
vehicle
market.
.Answering
this que-stion
entailed
a semester's
worth
of
intense
research
and
analy.sis.
The other .student
presenter
was Patrick
Liesch.
'His Power
Point
had interesting
pictures
of
meteor
samples
from Mars.
He had funding
from NASA
to
do research
on those rocks.
The
Regents
asked
bim if he would
be doing this kind of research
as
his career
choice.
Liesch
replied,
"No,
I
want to go in the field of
entomology.
I would
eventually
like to study insects."
This an.swer
surprised
them.
One
Regent
replied-
that he was sure Liesch
would
be successful
given
the
research
he presented
that day.
UW-Parkside
was not by
any means
the only business
the
Regents
heard
and approved.
Other schools
in
the UW-System
were
given
attention
as well.
Because
the.Education
Committee
did not have enough
time to cover
aIJ
of its business,
UW-Parkside's
presentation
on the Diversity
Scorecard
was tabled
until its next
meeting.
Much
controversy
surrounded
the concerns
of
Chippewa
Valley
educational
roads
to the baccalaureate
CONTINUE
TO
PAGE
7
."Come
get
that
good
copy!"
March
20, 2007
Justin Roth
page
5
Inclusiveness
Postponed
ANDREW
C.
WESTBROOK
westbOO2@uwp.edu
Parkside
Student
Government
Association
had its first regular
meeting
in two weeks
on March
9, after several
members
returned
from a conference
in
Washington,
D.C. At the operring
of the meeting,
several
members
of PSG
A, including
president
Tyson
Fettes
and Vice-
president
'Anthony
Dubose,
talked
about what they brought
back from
the trip.
Dubose
said that one of the
things
he saw at the conference
was
that many
other
schools'
student
governments
do more things
outside
of the school,
not just voting
on the'
budget.
Dubose'
suggestion
that
PSGA
should
start doing more such
things
'and not spending
so mucb
time dealing.
with issues
Irke
the
budget
received
applause
from many
of those in attendance.
Senator
early-Anne
Surber
questioned
how those
who went
would be spreading
what they learned
to the rest of the student
body. Fettes
said that he and PSGA
President
Pro-
Tempore
Brian Graziano
had already
been talking
about
programs
that
they could put on and said that they
may be doing one in the near future
aimed
at teaching
students
how to
lobby.
The
majority
of the meeting
focused
on
a.
new
resolution,
sponsored
by Carly-Anne
Surber,
entitled
"Resolution
in Support
of Creating
an Inclusive
Student
Government."
The pieceoflegislation
stated,
"BE IT RESOLVED
that this
student
government
will take the first
step by renaming
Women's,
Issues
Director
to the Director
of Gender
and Sexuality."
The resolution
was created
in
regard
"to the recent
presidential
vetoes
against
the addition
of LGBT
Issues
Director,
due to opposition
of an expanded
executive
board,"
as
stated
in
the document.
Part
of
the argument
is that "the
Diversity
Director
should
not be
over-extended
to cover all issues .of
race, ethnicity,
culture,
and religion
along
with issues
of sexual/gender
orientation/identity,
but
should
instead
be able to work on promoting
people
of color,"
as stated
in the
resolution.
Surber
said that it would
be easiest
to expand
the Women's
Issues
director
position
to include
these
issues,
as opposed
to other
current
director
positions.
Senator
Dayvin
Halmon'
asked
whether
this renamed
director
would
also deal with men's
issues.
Surber
said that he or she would.
Emily
Juniou,
PSGA's
current
Women's
Issues
director,
said that
she could see a problem
with losing
the separation
that Women's
Issues
currently
has.
Questions
were
also raised
about whether
the name is too broad,
as was argued
to be the case with the
title of Diversity
Director
in previous
meetings.
Surber
said that the change
would
make
issues
of gender.
and
sexuality
more visibly
inclusive.
"If
it's a need,
let's make it a visible
need,"
she said.
Graziano,
asked
whether
CONTINUE
TO PAGE
3
2
March
20, 2007
900 Wood
Rood
Kenosha.
WI 53141
Phone:(262)595.2287
Fox: (262) 595-2295
Ads: uwp_ods@yahoo.com
Website:
rangernews@Uwp.edu
ditor·in-Chief
AndrlW
C.
Westbrook
Weslb002@uwp.,du
xecutive
Editor
Kairi~n
Ulmer
eapaa666@yahaa.cam
.
esign
Monager
Saahyun
Killl
Kim00009@uwp.,du
dvertising
Manager
TIna Strauss
,lrau012@uwp.,du
rts and Culture
Page
Editor
D.
Whil'
Whn,041@uwp.,du
pinion
Page
Editor
Ramon
Jaimez
iaimeQOl@uwp.edu
hoto
Manager
Dan Tarkiben
dlork02@Yahaa.cam
tall
Reporters
PHaro
BY SOOHYUN
KIM
The Ranger
News
Andrew
C. Westbrook
Editor-in-Chief
---,T~H~IN-=-",GS~T-=-fM-u
Tuesday,
March
20, 2007
11:00
AM-8:00
PM
Racine
Kenosha
Art
Teachers
Invitational
Exhibition
Com.
Arts
Gallery
7:00
PM-8:45
I'M
Film:'
"Transamenca"
Union
Cinema
Wedne5day,
March
21, 2007
II :00 AM-8:00
PM
Racine
Kenosha
Art Teachers
Invitational
Exhibition
'Corn.
Arts
Gallery
12:00
PM-I:OO
PM
Noon
Concert:
UW-Parkside
Brass
&
Flute
Ensembles
Union
Cinema
Theater
12:00
PM-!:OO
PM
International
Friendship
Hour
Molinaro
109
12:00
PM-I:OO
PM
Community-based
learning
recognition
program
Union
l04-l06
The
university
pauses
to recognize
the value
of fall semester
community-based
learning
projects
carried
out by students
and faculty.
Presenters
include
Cathy
Folker,
Katherine
Gregory,
Debra
Karp,
Wendy
Leeds-Hurwitz,
Mary
Waid,
and Will
Zheng,
and-
students
Meg
Del Frate
and Paul
Glysz.
12:00
PM-3:00
PM
UW-Parkside
Baseball
Oberbruner
Field
free
The
UW-Parkside
basebali
learn
celebrates
the first day of spring
with
their
borne
opener
against
the
Flyers
from
Lewis
University.
Dress
warmly.
12:00
PM-1:l5
PM
"Girls
will be Boys"
Main
Place
7:00
PM-8:
15 PM
lJ'0'-Parkside
Spring
Preview
Parkside
Union
104-106
UW-Parkside
opens
its doors
to
prospective
students
and their
parents
for a Spring
Preview.
9:00
PM-IO:57
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Cache"
Union
Cinema
Thursday,
March
22, 2007
11:00
AM-5:00
PM
Racine
Kenosha
Art
Teachers
So, spring
break
is over,
and
we're
all back
in school.
It's the time.
of the year
when
I
realize
that
the
semester
is halfway
over
and
I
haven't
finished
anywhere
near
half
of my academic
work.
And,
because
of the break.
some
of our
stories
are a bit dated;
however,
there
were
some
things
that
I
saw
in our paper
when
I
got back
that
were
welcome
surprises.
We had
100
Words
(MORE
OR
LESS)
submissions
and
multiple
editorials
about
things
that
had
happened
in
OUI
previous
issues
and
current
happenings
on
campus.
l've
talked
about
this
before,
but
I
don't
remember
exactly
what
I
said.
so
to me
it
still
seems
topical.
One
of the functions
of our
newspaper
is to serve
as a public
forum,
a place
to debate
issues
and
for people-to
react
to
what
they
read
and
observe.
I
don't
mean
to say
that
a
paper's
editorial
section
is just
a deposit
box
for
rants:
rather,
it
provides
a medium
for intelligent
discourse
between
people.
I
have
been
aware
for a while
that
our
paper
had
been
lacking
in editorials,
but
I
really
began
to appreciate
our
need
for them
on my way
back
from
Florida
last Thursday.
I
picked
up a copy
of The
Atlanta
Journal
Constitution
on my way
through
Georgia.
I
was
reading
the opinion
section
of said
paper
and
the editorials
therein.
What
I read
were
editorials
based
on facts
and
structured
in the form
of solid
arguments.
Over
time,
I've'
learned
to have
greater
appreciation
for editorials,
not for the aspects
of
outlandish
claims
and
sensationalized
quotes,
but
for the expression
of ideas.
the debate
between
people,
and
solutions
proposed
for the problems
the news
section
brings
to light.
I
don't
consider
any
part
of a newspaper
to
be more
important
than
the actual,
hard
news,
but
strong
editorials
can give
a newspaper
a personal
quality
and
make
it more
interactive
and
lively.
Any
newspaper
is made
up of multiple
facets,
and
the whole
requires
a balance
in order
to be successful.
Editorials
can
add
another
dimension
to this
whole,
and
create
an exchange
of ideas
and
feedback.
It's a two-way
street;
just
watch
out for the orange
cones
around
my Letter;
it's in
need
of repairs.
opy Editors
Coslondra
Wheel~r
whee 019@uwp.edu
esigft
Assistant
Timothy
K,ith Griffin
Jr.
Darian_Magic@Yahoo.com
Erico Knutsen
knuts008@uwp.edu
artoonists
Tony Kinnard
durkstor
13_2001@yahoo.com
lacharY
Keehqn
Keeha003@uwp.edu
.
Kali. limp.1
rimpe001@uwp.edu
dvisor
Judnh
Logsdan
Lagsdan@uwp.edu
Ma"h.w
Matamblr
matom002@uwp.,du
Rabert
Rosali
robertrosati@holmoil.com
AJ. Morgan
marga017@uwp.edu
Ramon
Jaimez
iaim,OOl@uwp.,du
Mark Snodgrass
m,rkntan3S@h,'maif.com
Mission
Statement
The
Ranger
News
strives
to
inform,
educate,
and
engage
the UW-Porkside
community
by publishing
well-written,
accurate
student
iournalism
on
a weekly
basis.
The
Ranger
News
has meetirigs
every
Monday
at noon.
All
students
and faculty
of UW-Parkside
are welcome.
Please
feel free to attend.
Have
any
comments.
concerns.
questions,
or story
ideas?
Please
e.-mail
us at rangemews@uwp.edu
.
We are located
at Wyllie
D139C
Each
person
may
take
one
newspaper
per issue
date.
EXlTll
newspapers
can
be
purchas~
for $1
apiece.
Newspapers
can
be
taken
on a first come,
lint
serve
basis.
meaning
thai once
they
are gone,
they
are gone.
We
work
on
the
honor
system.
but
violators
will
be
prosecuted
(E
for
theft.
Faculty
memben;
and
swdents
organizations
who
wish
10 use
The
Ranger
News
in
•
clllSSrooms
should
consult
the
A.SSOOA'rtf)
editor.in,-chief
to
reserve
however
aJU,(GloO'E
many
free copies
they wish
10lISC.
III!U
Invitational
Exhibition
Cam.
Arts
Gallery
7:30
PM-9:27
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Cache"
Union
Cinema
7:30
PM-9:00
PM
Arts
Alive
presents
the John
Jorgenson
Quintet
Com.
Arts
Theatre
$19 Tickets
can be reserved
online
at www.uwp.edu
keyword
tickets
or
by calling
(262)
595-2345.
Union
Cinema
Monday,
March
26, 2007
8:00
AM-IO:OO
PM
Focus
on Living:
Portraits
of
Americans
with
HIV
and AIDS
Greenquist
Hall.
Main
Concourse
10:30
AM-I
:30 PM
Worldfest
Greek
Lunch
Parkside
Cafe
Spinach
and feta cheese
pie,
pasritsio,
cabbage
rice,
roasted
vegetables,
leek
soup,
and,
of
course,
baklava
for dessert!
I
J:45
AM-12:45
PM
Worldfest:
Opening
Flag
Ceremony
Main
Place
Join
more
than
35 international
students
and faculty
ta kick-off
Wortdfest
Week.
Free
food
is
provided.
12:00
PM-12:45
PM
Women
in Power
Week:
"Know
Your
Body"
Union20?
Uw-Parkside's
Michaelina
Young
will
sbow
you how
you can protect
yourself
from
breast
cancer.
Free
food
is served.
12:00
PM-I:OO
PM
Lecture:
'Women
in Revolutionary
Cuba."
Wyllie
247
(UW-Parkside
Library)
UW-Parkside
English
Professor
Maria
Martinez
offers
a glimpse
of
the women
who
were
instrumental
in the Cuban
revolutionary
struggle.
J2:45
PM-1
:45 PM
Galatea-Middle
Eastern
Dance
Main
Place
World
fest
gives
you the cbance
to
watch
and participate
in Middle
Eastern
dancing.
Milwaukee's
Galatea
demonstrates
a dynamic
set
of dance
movements
including
the
veil dance
and sword
balancing.
4:30
PM-7:30
PM
Worldfest
German
Dinner
Parkside
Gafe
Complete
mit sauerpraten
und
Bav~an
pork
roast,
herbed
spaelZle,
green
beans
mit vinegar
und sugar,
lentil
soup,
and,
black
forest
cake.
Greenquist
Hall,
Main
Concourse
10:00
AM-II
:30 AM
Music
for Kids
Com.
Arts
Theatre
10:30
AM-I
:30 PM
Worldfest
Russian
Lunch
Parkside
Cafe
Cabbage
rolls
with
mushroom
gravy,
chicken
Anastasia,
mashed
potatoes,
baked
cauliflower,
potato
and green
bean
soup,
and Russian
tea cakes.
12:00
PM-I:OO
PM
Women
in Power
Week:
"Eat
Healthy
and
Stay
Fit"
Molinaro
165
Former
U.S.
Olympian
Debbi
Lawrence
speaks
about
women
and
nutrition.
12:00
PM-1:00PM
Worldfest:
Capoeira:
Afro-Brazilian
Martial
ArtS
Main
Place
1:00
PM-2:00
PM
Worldfest:
"Diseases
Around
the
World."
Union
104/106
More
information
is availab},s
by
contacting
Dr. Ruffolo
at Carmel.-
Ruffolo@uwp.edu
via the Internet.
2:00
PM-3:00
PM
worfdfest:
Citizen
Diplomacy
for
Business
Leaders
Molinaro
D261
4:30
PM-7:30
PM
Worldfest
Chinese
Dinner
Parkside
Cafe
Mongolian
beef,
chicken
10
mein,
sticky
rice,
steamed
green
beans,
eg~ rolls,
hot sour
soup,
and banana
pastries.
5:00
PM-6:00
PM
Worldfest:
World
Religious
Views
Union
Cinema
Subject
to
change
or cancellation.
6:00
PM-7:00
PM
Women
in Power
Week:
"Get
Fit
Workout
Night."
SAC
Meet
by the SAC
weight
room
and
be ready
to workout.
During
this
session
you'll
learn
what's
available
I
and how
to use it.
Friday,
March
23, 2007
6:00
PM-II
:59 PM
WTPZ-FM
presents:
"Locals
Only"
concert
Parkside
Cafe,
Union
Dining.
Room
Are you ready
to ROCK!?
WlPZ
splashes
your
brain
pan with
eight
local
bands-Hangman's
Tree,
Mojo
Thrasher,
Ornerta
STF,
Plow,
Subrosa,
Vixx,
Vulture,
and Wolfpack--and,
a special
performance
by Lazarus.
7:30
PM-9:27
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Cache"
Union
Cinema
Saturday,
March
24,
2007
5:00
PM-6:57
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Cache"
Union
Cinema
Sunday,
March
25, 2007
2:00
PM-5:00
PM
UW-Parkside
Benefit
Concert
Communication
Arts
Building
The
UW-Parkside
Music
Dept.
presents
"A Tribute
to Music
Excellence."
The
festivities
start
at
2 p.m.
with
a Gennan
buffet
and
wine
tastings
with
Sommelier
Wine
Shop
of Kenosha.
The
university
then
honors
its 2007
Outstanding
Alumnus,
Marjorie
Roth
and
~ommunity
patron
Emil
Pacetti.
That
takes
place
on Level
One
of
the Communication
Arts
Building.
At 3:30.
UW-Parkside
studenls
and faculty
offer
a kaleidoscope
of
musical
perfonnances
in the Com.
Arts
Theatre.
To reserve
tickets,
call
Karen
Reiher
at (262)
595-2443.
2:00
PM-3:57
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Cache"
Union
Cinema
5:00
PM-6:57
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Cache"
.
-
Tue5day,
March
27, 2007
8:00
AM-!
0:00
PM
Focus
on Living:
Portraits
of
Americans
with
HN
and AIDS
•
Dublin Core
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Title
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The Ranger News, Volume 37, issue 23, March 20, 2007
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2007-03-20
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
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Newspaper
Language
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English
Coverage
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Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
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University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
black student union
board of regents
groundbreaking
lectures
parkside student government association (PSGA)
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/5079ea8d8547d28a41d1118613221484.pdf
fbc1c2a66376dcf9ed0d15a8a9df158a
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 6, issue 15
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Symposium 1972
Series Number
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UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
CSC calls for a
STRIKE The Concerned Students
Coalition, a loosely knit student
organization, has called for a
strike to end the war. As
NEWSCOPE goes to press plans
call for a strike to begin at the
Student Activities Building on
Monday, April 24, at 10:00 A.M.
A representative of CSC
informed NEWSCOPE that
students are asked to boycott
classes beyond Monday, in
order to participate in the strike
activities.
No concrete plans had yet
been laid for actions beyond the
Monday strike, however
NEWSCOPE was informed by
CSC members that "students
should stay away from classes
for the week." The CSC has
expressed the hope that
members from other area
colleges and technical schools
will also participate in
Monday's strike. The call for a
strike at UWP is seen as a sign
of support for other campuses
around the country who have
initiated student strikes and
demonstrations prior to the
National Peace Action
Coalition's mass marches in
New York City and Los Angeles
held on April 22.
Activities on other campuses
thus far have resulted in several
clashes with police, though the
extent of the campus unrest is
unlikely to reach the mammoth
proportions which followed the
1970 incursion into Cambodia.
That strike resulted in the
closing or major disruption of
normal activities on over 500
campuses throughout the U.S.
Concrete plans for more
c a m p u s a n t i - w a r
demonstrations were expected
to be made on Monday.
Mr* 1.1.1.1.1.
NOTE
The Electric Last Minute is a new feature. Any Parkside club,
organization, or group wishing to place a new item in this column is
asked to present the typed copy to Paul Lomartire in care of the
Newscope Offices before 4 p.m. on each Thursday for the following
Tuesday edition.
WOMEN TO DISCUSS DAY CARE
Parkside's Woman's Caucus is sponsoring a question-answer
session about the Day Care Center on Wednesday, April 26th, at
4:30 p.m. at the Parkside Baptist Church.
Eileen Hansen will be the guest speaker. The church is located
on Highway E just east of Wood Road.
ZERO POPULATION TO DISCUSS EARTH WEEK
Parkside's Zero Population Growth will hold a meeting on
Thursday, April 27th, at 3:00 p.m. in Room 141 at the Kenosha
Campus. The discussion will encompass ZPG Earth Week activities
and the planning of projects for the rest of the semester. All
interested individuals are invited to attend.
AUDITIONS
Parkside's Activities Board will be holding auditions for the
Whiteskellar. Parkside students wishing to audition for the coffeehouse
should contact Kim Rudat in Room 217 in Tallent Hall.
POT PEOPLE TO PLAN OFFENSIVE
As part of the grassroots movement to leaglize pot, the
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML),
is holding a heady conference in the countryside, a stone's
throw from Washington, D.C., to plan strategy for the 1972-73
campus pot offensive. The week-end conference, planned for early
August, is free to all interested persons, with food and music
provided.
(Note: Paul Lomartire had nothing to do with those "pot
puns", that's the way they sent it. P.L.)
On Thursday, April 27th at 7:00 p.m., and on Tuesday, May 2nd
at 7:00 p.m. at Parkside Village, Building 2, apartment 202, you will
have the chance to experience, in possibly a new way, what interpersonal
communication can be about.
The group will be intentionally limited in size for the sake of
cohesiveness; therefore, if you are interested, make early contact
with Steve Bangert or Wendy Musich, Room 135, extension K42.
University of Wisconsin - Parkside free
Volume 6 Number 15 April 24, 1972
SYMPOSIUM 1972
"Symposium 1972," a 10-day
series of programs on
contemporary issues sponsored
by the University of Wisconsin-
Parkside Student Government
Association (SGA), will begin
Monday evening, April 24, at the
UW-P campus.
The symposium will open
Monday night with a program
on penal institutions and
conclude Monday, May 8, with
programs geared around Black
Culture Day including a talk by
Julian Bond.
In between, programs will
consider urban concerns,
w o m e n ' s l i b e r a t i o n ,
contemporary theater, political
organizing, and a 24-hour film
festival. Featured attractions
will include Theatre X and
Racine's Cell Block Circus
Players.
All programs except the film
festival are free to the public
according to SGA president
Dean Loumos.
The opening program on
penal reform will feature the
Cell Block Circus Players, who
have toured Wisconsin
correctional institutions and
some in New York presenting
satirical reviews whose penal
reform message is delivered
through laughter. The Players
will then join John Jude of
Racine's Project Acceptance, a
program of ex-convict
rehabilitation, in a panel
discussion. The evening
program will begin at 7:30 in
the Greenquist Hall
Whiteskellar.
On Tuesday, April 25, at the
same time and place, a panel
discussion on "Model
Structures for Community
Organizing" will feature the
Rev. John Murtaugh, head of
Racine's Office of Urban
Concerns, and representatives
of Racine's Urban League and
Southside Revitalization Corp.
Women's programs will
occupy the Greenquist Hall
during the day and evening of
Wednesday, April 26, beginning
at 10:30 a.m. with panel
discussions on women's health
by members of the Women's
Health Collective in Madison in
room 111 and women and the
church by UW-P faculty
member Carole Vopat, Sister
Cathy Gibbon of the UW-P
Campus Ministry and others in
room D-123. Alternative Life
Styles will be discussed by the
Madison Women's Collective at
11:30 in room 108, and tapes of
speeches by Gloria Steinem,
Susan Davis and Arvonne
Eraser will be heard and
discussed at noon in room 108.
In the afternoon, Racine
attorney Elisheva Schwartz will
discuss Women and Legal
Issues at 1:30 in D-103; UW-P
students will present play
readings of Claire Booth Luce's
"Doll's House 1970" and Sylvia
Plath's "Three Women" at 3:30
in the Whiteskellar; UW-P
students and staff, a Racine
nurse, and a member of the
Madison Abortion Committee
will discuss Abortion — Pro and
Con at 3:30 in D-123; and a tour
and description of the privatelyoperated
Parkside Day Care
Center will be given at 4:30 at
the center on Hy. E.
Poems "by, for and about
women" read by Parkside
students and staff will conclude
Wednesday's programs at 7:30
in the Whiteskellar.
The first week's activities will
(Continued on Page 4)
Senator Nelson addresses 400
The Issue is Ecology
by Mike Kite
of the Newscope staff
"So in my judgement the
most important thing that has
happened in the history of the
environment is that the issue
has become, in the past three
years, part of the political
dialogue in the country."
The above spoken by one of
the men who were responsible
for making ecology an isrsue,
Senator Gaylord Nelson (D.
Wis.). The senator, who
originated Earth Day in 1970,
spoke to nearly 400 people
Wednesday evening at
Parkside.
Senator Nelson expressed
satisfaction at the growing
concern for our environment.
"It is interesting to note that in
1968 while campaigning for the
Presidency none of the
candidates gave a single speech
on the environment. How did it
get to be an issue in lVz years?
Because President Nixon had
heard and felt the rumblings of
his constituents. Legislatively,
things are moving faster than
ever before."
"The object of Earth Day was
not to educate the public
because I felt they were already
concerned. My real concern
was to inform the public
officials that this is an issue of
political importance."
After complementing the
independent ecology groups,
Sen. Nelson stressed the need
for coordinating the individual
efforts by national and
international organization. He
went on to say that the first
international ecological
conference to be held in
Stockholm, Sweden, was
scheduled for June. Sen.
Nelson, an alternate delegate to
the convention, said, "what will
come of the conference nobody
can predict, but it is good that
we are finally getting together
to discuss the problem."
One of the most successful
ecological organizations in the
U.S., The Environmental
Defense Fund (EDF), received
the senator's praise. Two of
their greatest victories were
stopping construction of the
Florida Barge Canal, and the
banning of DT in Wisconsin.
A subject of which few people
are aware, the ecological
destruction of South Vietnam,
was then approached by the
Senator. He explained that 10
per cent of South Vietnam's
agricultural land had been
destroyed, and that 25 per cent
of the population had been left
homeless, thanks to the
advanced methods of warfare
used by the U.S. Army. "South
Vietnam would be better off
losing to North Vietnam, than
winning with us." Sen. Nelson
recently introduced a bill in
Congress which calls for a full
scale study of the
environmental damage to
Vietnam.
(Continued on Page 4)
Senator Nelson speaking at Parkside
Page 2 NEWSCOPE April 24,1972 LETTERS
Some notes on a new feature; some clarifications on old rumors.
Recently NEWSCOPE initiated a new feature, the Electric
Last Minute. It's a column devoted strictly to campus events; the
information contained in it is forwarded to us by the people who
desire publicity for their organization. We don't go out and get the
information ourselves because we don't have the personnel.
Two reasons for the Electric Minute: l) because NEWSCOPE
is a STUDENT newspaper, and therefore has the obligation to print
campus events and highlights. 2) because we must prove to the
University that NEWSCOPE is capable of printing all their press
releases.
Presently, Student Activities is subsidizing a pamphlet called
Parkside Today. It is composed of two paid staff members; printing
costs are paid by the University. We feel that the funds funneled
into Parkside Today could be put to better use in
NEWSCOPE. We don't like the idea of being recognizee University
newspaper only to discover the University is publishing its own
official newsletter.
Such a condition leads to redundancy. Both papers print the
same news releases, at least now we are, so what's the sense of
continuing Today? NEWSCOPE desperately needs staff writers
and reporters, it also desperately needs money. Now that it is our
policy to print all campus events, etc., we ask Student Activities to
please re-evaluate the status of Parkside Today. We could use the
new staffers, and we could use whatever money goes into printing
Today. We're answering our critics, now it's time they answered
us.
Old rumors: 1) No one on NEWSCOPE is paid, absolutely no
one and absolutely nothing. 2) We are not subsidized by tax dollars
in any way; we received $2,000 through SGA from fund 128 (composed
of student fees) to write off some bad debts, but that is all.
• * •
This week NEWSCOPE is featuring an interview with Kim
Rudat, President of the Activities Board. It's an engaging interview
in which the reporter brings out many significant points
concerning PAB.
The interview points out the successful activities the PAB has
produced in the past year: the concerts, the Whiteskellar, the
Nickelodeon. But it also surfaces a few glaring faults inherent to
the structure of the PAB.
Perhaps, the biggest structural deficiency concerns student
input. No polls are taken to discover student preferences in entertainment.
This, as was explained, is partly due to student
apathy, a disease with which every organization on campus is
painfully familiar.
Since PAB's funds are allocated from fund 128 (student fees) it
would seem that a more concerted effort could be made to discover
how the student would like to see his money used.
This also raises an interesting question: Why must a student
pay twice to attend an event. NEWSCOPE was told that the PAB
uses student fees to finance its ventures. This seems to be at least a
little incongruous, though there can be good, financial reasons for
it. Perhaps ticket prices are lowered for this reason. And if PAB is
financed through student fees alone, their unequivocable purpose
should therefore be to provide entertainment for the students who
are paying for it.
Apathy at Parkside is growing faster than the campus iteslf,
everyone knows this, so it is only reasonable that alternative
methods be utilized in conducting polls, perhaps elections also. One
possibility could be the implementation of a poll at registration
time. Perhaps the PAB could draw up a list of groups which in their
collective opinion, would represent student preferences: Put any
group or troupe of performers on the list which in their opinion
would interest studegts enough to attend the performance; allow a
student to write in his own preferences if not included on the list.
But do this at registration time, include an initial list of performers,
leave space for write-ins, and place it in the registration
packet. Perhaps many people will not bother to fill in the form, but
it seems reasonable that a large number will. Certainly, PAB is
interested in student input, indeed they must be since they use
student fees taken from student tuition. Certainly, this fact will
have an affect on student input.
B E E R
Join
The Brotherhood
of Hamm's
critical of
godfather'
Dear Sirs,
I had always figured in all my
prudity that sexual intercourse
between two human beings was
a very beautiful, rather sacred
act and that it had the respect of
the majority of persons . . .
enough so that its privacy would
be kept somewhat intact. But I
am behind times it seems. I so
concluded after watching "The
Godfather" the other night.
As one of the ladies in "The
Godfather" was being bred by
one of the bad guys, the thought
crossed my mind that the
producer of the film was
something of a parallel to a
farmer breeding his stock. The
end result, of c ourse, was not a
batch of piglets, just
entertainment. So there we sat,
me and the fans, and we
watched the lady being bred
with even less than the
detachment of a crowd
watching a baseball game. At
least the. baseball fans care
enough to cheer.
My problem must be that I
don't take the time to see
enough movies and am
therefore unjustifiably shocked
at actions and filthy language
that are evidently now a days
socially acceptable. I am told
that sex is in all flicks now but to
a lesser degree in the "G"
pictures. Perhaps I ought to
work up to those films rated
"R" by starting with one a little
less racy, nice "G" rated stuff
like "Love Story". There, I am
told, in the primary love scene
the guy who we observe rolling
in the hay is a nice boy, his
partner being a nice girl. And
since they are both nice kids,'
watching them do their thing is
infinitely more tasteful. Yes,
that must be the way to work
up.
But darn it, as much as I
would like to be associated with
the socially enlightened folks by
learning to dig that stuff, I just
don't think I can. I am past the
point of no return. To me sex is
more than a mere biological
function and my mind is
absolutely set in the belief that
the sex act is beautiful and
sacred. Its casual public display
in such movies as "The
Godfather" (and movies like
"Love Story" for that matter
which was apparently an
otherwise very beautiful movie)
might be socially acceptable
but stripping the sex act of its
privacy and diminishing it by
doing so is both pitiable and
distressing. Why people wish to
propagate the distruction of six
by the eradication of its privacy
is a concept most difficult to
grasp.
But "The Godfather" was
objectionable on more than just
the bastardization of sex.
Equally objectionable was the
violence which constituted
another of the primary focal
points of the movie. What is
extremely difficult to
understand is the fact that the
American public can be so
vehemently opposed to the war
iin Viet Nam on the grounds of
its inhumanity only to turn
around and pack the theaters to
enjoy a display of unparagoned
sadistic cruelty.
The public cries for peace but
action does indeed speak louder
than mere words. The swelling
box office sales of "The
Godfather" points to the
unparalleled hypocracy of the
members of our society, both
young and old alike. Peace be
with you, one and all.
Sincerely,
Robert Flood
P.S. This letter was written in
crude style so as not to wander
too dreadfully far from the
spirit of Newscope, but thanks
for the opportunity for a low cut.
My bluntness makes me wonder
if yo u'll publish this thing, but I
suppose you will if y ou are at all
fair.
dean shows no
respect
To the Editor:
Undoubtedly some of you
have had enough antiadministration
— pro-student
literature to last a lifetime.
Others may agree that there
hasn't been really enough.
My name is Tom Ford and I
consider myself somewhere in
the middle. I am in no way part
of Dick Nixon's silent majority
and on the other hand I have no
desire to be a Parkside student
leader. While not leading in the
Parkside struggle for student
rights I have decided to support
the battle. I have made up my
mind to participate physically
instead of just vocally over a
CAMPUS EVENTS
WEDNESDAY, APR. 26
Recital: Student joint recital
featuring Fred Hermes, bassoon,
and Joyce Richards, piano, will be
presented at 8 p.m. in Room 103
Greenquist.Hall. Free.
THURSDAY, APR. 27
Films: Nickelodeon program
featuring Laurel and Hardy films
will be held at noon in the Greenquist
Whiteskellar sponsored by the
Student Activities Office. Adm. 5
cents.
Concert: The UW-P Chamber
Singers will present a free public
concert at 8 p.m. in Room 103
Greenquist Hall.
SGA Meeting: SGA panel
discussion, Greenquist 101, 7:00 - 10
p.m.
FRIDAY, APR. 28
Archeology Lecture: Northwestern
University Archeologist Stuart
Struever will lecture at 8 p.m. in
Room 101 Greenquist Hall on his
excavations at the southern Illinois
Koster Indian site. Free. Sponsored
by the Social Science Division.
Poetry Reading: Parkside Poetry
Forum will sponsor a reading by
Allen Cave of Racine at 7:30 p.m. in
the Greenquist Whiteskellar. Free.
Film: Feature film "Charley" will
be seen under sponsorship of the
Student Activities Office at 8 p.m. in
the Activities Building. Adm. 75
cents. UW-P and Wis. ID required.
Coloquium: Colloquium for
students-faculty. Greenquist 101,
2:30-4:00 p.m.
SATURDAY, APR. 29
Casino Party: Philanthropists Club
will sponsor a Casino Party with live
entertainment from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
in the Student Activities Building
Adm. chg. UW-P and Wis. ID
required.
Kenosha Alumni Founders Day: UW
Alumni Club of Kenosha will hold its
annual Founders Day dinner
beginning at 6 p .m. at the Kenosha
Union Club. Speaker will be Sen.
William Proxmire. Tickets are $6 50
per person and are available on
campus from Steve Stephens, Rita
Tallent and Charles Kugel.
SUNDAY, APR. 30
Artists Series Concert: Pianist
Carmen Vila, UW-P artist-inresidence,
will present the season's
final University Artists Series
Concert at 4 p.m. in Greenquist Hall.
Gen. adm. $1, students 50 cents!
children 12 and under free.
Poetry Reading: UW-P student
poets will present a reading at 2 p m
at the Kenosha Public Museum
THE END
MAY 20,21
tenth glass of beer.
About a month and a half ago
I was part of a group of
concerned students attempting
to persuade Asst. Chancellor
Dearborn (student services) to
set up a group which would
make suggestions to him before
he made decisions affecting the
student body. After a few
rounds of discussion Mr.
Dearborn presented the
following plan:
A board (name to be decided
upon) was to be set up
consisting of a pproximately ten
people. Seven were to be
students representing as wide a
variety of the Parkside
population as possible. The
others were to be chosen from
the faculty and university
workers. I was tb be one of the
students. The first meeting was
to take place before Easter
vacation. I was not contacted
before Easter vacation or as of
now, the Newscope deadline,
two weeks after the break. I
take this as both a personal
offense and a "Social" offense.
Personally because it shows a
lack of respect for me and
socially because it shows a lack
of respect for the student body
of which I am a part.
For those of you who agree, I
urge you to make an
appointment with Mr. Dearborn
to ask him for an explanation.
For those who disagree or
distrust me, I urge you to also
make an appointment with Mr.
Dearborn and ask for a reply to
what I have said.
Thanks,
Tom Ford
gruhl puts down
sga pres.
,n-scope
To the Editor:
In the April 10th issue of your
paper you printed an interview
with the President of Parkside's
S t u d e n t G o v e r n m e n t
Association and one of his
Senators — 94 column inches.
Wow! . . . That's more space
than you give to the entire
Faculty in a semester of
NEWSCOPE.
There are several things in
that lengthy interview which
call for some candid comment,
to wit:
1. The President of SGA let us
UWIOOfl
"Don't believe everything you read."
Jim Koloen, Paul Lomartire, Brian
Ross, Mike Kite, Mike Stevesand,
Tom Paradise, Cleta Skovronski,
Wolfgang Salewski, Kathy Rasch,
"Red" Widely, Roscoe Humus,
Sifton Winnow, /&.> X. Sasion,
Rombert Freebag, Bruce Badley.
PHONES:
Editorial
Business
553-2496
553-2498
Newscope is an independent
student newspaper composed by
students of the University of
Wisconsin-Parkside puolished
weekly except during vacation
periods. Student obtained advertising
funds are the sole Source of
revenue for the operation of
Newscope. 5,000 c opies are printed'
and distributed throughout Ihe
Kenosha and Racine communities
as well as the University. Free
copies are available upon request.
Deadline for all manuscripts and
photographs submitted to Newscope
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to
publication. Manuscripts must be
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited
manuscripts and
photographs may be reclaimed
within 30 days after the date of
submissio, after which they become
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The
Newscope office is located in the
Student Organizations building,
intersection of Highway A and Wood
Road.
TO THE EDITOR April 24/ 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3
know that he is carrying "only
one credit".
Well ... I think it's fair to
ask . . . What is that young
man's "mission" at Parkside?
• To get an education? By
taking one credit a semester?
Nuts! With such zeal and glacial
speed he will be older on his
graduation day than I will be on
mine . . . and I'm already over
thirty. Now I know that there is
more to becoming educated
than just the academics but if
the major extra-curricular
activity of a one-credit student
is to see how much discontent he
can generate around the
campus, then he is just
dissipating his own energy and
wasting the time of a lot of
people. The last thing any
student body needs is that kind
of distractive "help".
A one-credit guy with a lot to
say reminds me of a fellow with
one share of stock trying to tell
American Motors how to build
cars. He also reminds me of the
fellow who went to Mayo Clinic
with a sprained ankle and
proceeded to tell them how to
run the institution. (They gave
him castor oil.)
2. The Senator in the
interview is quoted as saying,
"The Administration told us to
shut up or they'd use things
from the files that they have on
us . . . At that point we cut off
communications with them."
So, I think it's reasonable to
ask . . . Now what on earth
would they possibly have in the
files that would cause outspoken
fellows like you to pull in
your horns? . . . especially
when the President of SGA says
in the interview, "We do
everything in the open,
everything is above board."
3. Another quote from the
President's remarks. . ."They
got a guy over there who's a
booking agent . . . Now what
the hell. . . They won't even let
us pick out our own bands."
Speaking as a long-time taxpayer
and as a student who
earns and pays for his own
tuition for ten credits . . . Hear
this! ... As a dues-paying
member of the good old
Establishment I accept the
responsibility of helping to pay
two-thirds of the cost to help you
get a college education and even
contribute to a subsidy for
NEWSCOPE but your
precocious assumption that we
also owe you your
entertainment while you are at
school makes my buttocks
tired.
I can understand the need of
providing entertainment for
children ... or for the poor kids
like those out at Southern
Colony . . . But you're adults
who can go anyplace and do as
you please and it's tirpe for you
to accept the responsibilities of
adulthood . . . such as picking
up the check for your own
entertainment. If you can buy
the beer you can pay the piper.
Parenthetically, last Spring I
saw a Parkside activity that
really teed me off. The Student
Pampering Department put on
a party on the Tallent Hall
parking lot which was to be the
Grand Finale for the school
year. Big circus tent . . out-oftown
band . . . snow fences up
... It must have cost the
people of Wisconsin a few
thousand dollars to put on that
"entertainment" for you. About
250 to 300 showed up. If the
school has that kind of money to
wallow in they should spend it
on scholarships or salaries. It's
no wonder that the University
System had budget troubles. If
the Pampering Department
puts on another fiasco like that
this Spring I'm going to invite a
couple of Regents here to watch
the money go down the drain.
(End of parenthetical
statement. . . Now back to the
interview.)
4. One more thing (I should be
typing a term paper instead of
this!) The Pres of SGA called
attention to the fact that "We
were only elected by 17 per cent
of the student body." . . . and
then inferred that the other 83
per cent are, as he put it,
"Anyone who doesn't have an
opinion is worthless."
Listen! . . . Has it ever
occurred to you that many of
the 83 per cent who, by their
abstinence elected not to vote,
might have been "Voting NO!"
to what you have to offer? If you
really think that the majority of
Parkside students consider
themselves as being depressed,
pushed-around and disgruntled
. . . then you've probably been
reading too much NEWSCOPE.
Very likely you supplied some
of the copy.
As for myself . . . When 50
per cent or more of the full-time
students . . . even 40 per cent,
maybe . . . find enough things
to become concerned about
(other than their studies) and
get out and vote, then I will
promptly and gladly recognize
those elected as truly
representing the student body.
But this time-consuming
business of having what I
consider as almost being "nonstudents"
running around,
sounding-off and butting in
where their "help" is not
needed and trying to advise in
areas in which they have no
qualifications . . . all under the
guise of representing the
student, is simply ridiculous.
One final quote from the Pres
of SGA. . . "They'll listen to us
but if they don't agree they
won't do what we say."
Now isn't that too bad! But
that's life, fellows . . . and the
quicker you learn that you must
know more than the dog does if
you're going to teach the dog
tricks, the better off you will be.
Anyhow, Mr. Pres, good luck
with that one credit . . . don't
let the burden of it get you
down. Stay with it!
Arthur M. Gruhl
P.S. The foregoing remarks
do not pertain to those Senators
and others who were elected
and who are trying to do
something constructive around
here.
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"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT
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— HERBERT KUBLY
"WONDERFUL FOOD"
— SENATOR PROXM|RE
WATCHES'
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Ultrachron • Longine
Bui ova - Movado
Caravel le - Timex
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PERFUMES
France's
FSne.t -
Perfumes and
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REPAIR DEPT.
Watches - Jewelry
Diamond Setting
Complete Repair
Dept.
Ring Designing
Craduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist,
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It does make a difference where you shop!
% Discount to students and Faculty with \.Q
SILVERWARE
Diana Intermezzo
Wallace • Lunt
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Sheffield - etc.
BRIDAL
REGISTRY
CRYSTAL
Tiffon - Orrefora
Seneca - Lalique
Royal Worcester
ed note: A few clarifications concerning
Mr. Gruhl's letter: We gave
94 col inches to the Dean Loumos
interview because this is a
.STUDENT newspaper, not a faculty
newsletter. 2) NEWSCOPE is in no
way subsidized by the University,
we received a $2,000 subscription
'through SGA (to pay off debts) from
fund 128 which is composed of
student fees, not Mr. Gruhl's hard
earned tax dollar. 3) Dean did in no
way imply that we (students) were
"owed" entertainment while at
school; he merely voiced the wish
for Student Activities Board
programs and concerts to bemore in
line with what students were interested
in. (instead of bringing a
flamenco dancer to UWP, why not
do as the Carthage Activities Board
did, bring in the Byrds, bring more
representatives of the youth culture.
4) I have no idea what Mr. Gruhl
means by "Student Pampering
Dept." putting on a "grand finale"
party. If he means the END i take
exception to his statement. The END
does not represent "pampering", its
purpose is to bring students together
for one last time, to possibly have a
good time after sweating through
finals. If Mr. Gruhl, as he implies, is
against having fun occasionally, I
suggest he submit his resignation to
'the human race. 5) At the last CCC
meeting, the requirement for
election to SGA office was
stipulated as "student". It does not,
at least as yet, stipulate any
minimum credit loads. Perhaps Mr.
Gruhl should run for office.
women s caucus
for day care
To the Editor:
At their meeting on March 20,
Parkside's Women's Caucus
passed a resolution to officially
support the Day Care Center. It
is our contention that a woman
with pre-school children need
not stagnate her talents and
ambitions while she and her
husband are raising a family.
Parents who enroll their
children do not want, however,
to sacrifice the care of their
children to achieve their own
personal wants.
After discussing the Center
with its Director and parents of
enrolled children the Caucus
believes that the Day Care
Center is more than adequately
capable to house these children
for a few hours during the day.
The staff is composed of two
certified teachers and three
men among its volunteers.
The Women's Caucus also
feels that the Day Care Center
offers a more beneficial
atmosphere for a child than that
child would receive at home
Iwith a baby-sitter. The sensory,
audio, visual and social
(experiences a child encounters
at the Center can only enhance
their life when they enter
school.
The faculty, staff and
students who utilize the Center
are also enriched. For students
it enables them to take upper
division courses normally not
offered at night. Faculty and
staff, throug h the help of the
Center, are able to share their
talents with others in the
working and academic
community.
It is for these reasons that
Parkside's Women's Caucus
supports the Day Care Center in
its help with our effort to put
talented, ambitious women
back in our society while raising
families.
Sincerely,
Parkside's Women's Caucus
yarc needs
volunteers
To the Editor:
At the present time, the Youth
Association for Retarded
Children is badly in need of new
members. We are asking a
favor of all the editors of school
newspapers in the area. It
would be greatly appreciated if
you would print the following
article in the next issue of your
newspaper:
Students:
If you , are interested in
working with the mentally
retarded and would like to try,
consider joining the Youth
Association for Retarded
Children (YARC). In our
activities, we try to reach as
many of the mentally retarded
as possible. However, we are
short of members. We need new
ideas and new enthusiasm. Our
activities include volunteer
work at Southern Colony and
various other planned
programs. Our meetings are
held on the first and third
Thursdays of every month
(although this is soon going to
be changed) from 7:30 - 9:3 0 in
Racine. For more information
about this organization, please
call:
Julie Kozenski, 639-6814
or
Theresa Swenson, 637-5417
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin
Vi Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line ump
Save
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE
AND SAVEI
DISCOUNT SPECIALS
Cash & Carry
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10W-20W-30W
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID
50c per quart
34c per quart
$1.39 per gallon
47c per can
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE
Page 4 NEWSCOPE April 24, 1972
(Continued
from Page 1)
conclude Thursday, April 27,
with presentations by Madison
city councilman Paul Soglin and
representatives of the
Wisconsin Alliance and
R e v o l u t i o n a r y Y o u t h
Movement on the subject
"Radical Political Organizing."
Theatre X, the critically
acclaimed Milwaukee-based
ensemble which has been
receiving national attention,
will open the second week with a
productionof'X
Communication" in the UW-P
Acrivities Building Tuesday,
May 2, at 8 p.m. The production
is a collage of satire,
improvisation, mime and
music.
On Wednesday, May 3, the
UW-P Pre-Law Club will
present a panel discussion on
"Should Private Sex Between
Consenting Adults Be
Legalized?" in Greenquist 103
at 7:30 p.m. Participants will
include Waukesha County
District Attorney Richard
McConnell, who received
considerable publicity in the
recent Unitarian Church sexeducation
film controversy in
Waukesha County; Racine
attorney Jay Schwartz;
Kenosha state Assemblyman
Eugene Dorff; and Kenosha St.
Joseph high school teacher Rev.
Gregory Spitz.
A "Going Away" party,
featuring two bands, will be
held at the Racine Campus of
UW-P on Friday, May 5,
beginning about 5 p.m., with a
24-hour film festival slated for
the New Vogue Theatre in
Kenosha beginning at 6 p.m.
Films will range from shorts to
full-length, and refreshments
will be sold.
Symposium 1972 will conclude
with Black Culture Day,
Symposium Activities Upcoming 3 V Anril 97 n < • * L . . TT l i r n > _ T - \ i . i . . .
Parkside Activities Board
Presents
A love story
that begins with
an incredible
experiment!
SEIMUR PICTURES in collaboration with
ROBERTSON ASSOCIATES peasants
CLIFF ROBERTSON Xjf/^Ly
ME BLOOM
TtCHNICOtOR TECHHISCOPE"
"O" ^ONIIAMA KIUAIWC CORPORATION
Fri., April 28, 8 PM
Amd. 75c Time: 106 min.
Student Activities Building
Parkside 6. Wisconsin I.D.'s req
Special Addition to
PAB's Film Schedule
coordinated by UW-P's Black
Student Union. Highlight will be
an 8 p.m. lecture in Greenquist
Hall by Julian Bond under the
auspices of the UW-P Lecture-
Fine Arts Committee.
Organizers also plan to have
appearances and programs by
UW Regent Ed Hales of Racine,
Racine NAACP head Julian
Thomas, Racine Star editor
Tony Courtney, and Black poet
Rocky Taylor at times and
locations to be announced.
According to the SGA
president, "The purpose of
Symposium 1972 is to provide
Parkside students and the
surrounding communities with
a l t e r n a t i v e e d u c a t i o n a l
opportunities not available in
most existing institutions.
"The symposium will try to
deal with the term 'educational
relevance' through a number of
n o n - c o n v e n t i o n a l a n d
provocative programs,"
Loumos said.
Activities B id.: A New Bar
By Tom Paradise
of t he Newscope staff
The New Student Activities
Building has been changed a lot
recently. The bar area has been
brought out to include a new 16
ft. formica topped bar, more
storage space, two new pizza
ovens, a new tap and two brand
new Perlick coolers from
Milwaukee purchased at 2,900
dollars apiece, according to
David Bishop, administrator of
the SAB. Mr. Bishop told
NEWSCOPE that the reason the
bar had been changed was
because of the congestion on
Friday nights "when there are
dances some of the people who
wanted to approach the bar
couldn't. Those who want
peanuts and popcorn had to
wade through the crowd or turn
away empty handed." He added
that the limited space of the old
bar was hard on the bartenders
who had no room to work in.
The new bar offers Pabst,
Malt, Bud and Lite. The new
comer is Pabst. The coolers are
the type that can be moved into
the Student Union when it is
built in two years. They are a
portable type Mr. Bishop added,
"They are the type that can be
moved on to wheels and put in
the elevator and taken up to any
room for a party." The new bar
will have a micro-wave oven,
too. The bar will sell pizza soon
and I hope because frozen Pizza
is good. The finish on the new
bar is walnut, and topped by
formica.
The number of bartenders
will remain the same. Most of
them have jobs through the
work study program here at
Parkside. On the service that
the bar performs, there is no
question that the people will get
faster and more helpful
attention. On either end of the
bar are flat surfaces that pizza
or some other food could be
dispensed from with great ease.
The storage area allows the
empty beer barrels to be put in
the back out of the way of the
doors, where they present a fire
hazard.
NOTICE NOTICE
BREAKFAST 6=A.M. T O l h A.M.
Visit' Our Neu, TnstJe Carpeted
ibxbbjlnc Keen
A&W RESTAURANT
30th ave. and Roosevelt Road
1 n K«,h.Osl\.A.
Open:
Mon. thru Thurs. — 6 A.M. -11 P.M.
Friday — 6 A.M. to Midnight
Saturday — 9 A.M. to Midnight
Sunday — 9 A.M. to 11 P.M.
Parkside Activities Board Presents 1
[ ) J LEE
1 Table Tennis Ex hibition
5 - Time U.S. Open Champion
Direct From Tour with Chinese
Nationalist Team & ABC "Wide World of Sports"
(In addition to demonstration, he will be playing
Parkside students and Faculty)
Friday, April 28 Free
Student Activities Building
Faculty News
VAN WILLIGEN ELECTED
John G. Van Willigen, as assistant professor of anthropology at
Parkside, has been elected a fellow of the American Anthropological
Association.
Prior to joining the Parkside faculty in September, 1970, Van
Willigen taught at the University of Arizona where he also completed
work for his Ph.D. degree.
PARKSIDE PROMOTION
Peter M. Ellis, 28, has been named an assistant professor of
management science in the School of Modern Industry at Parkside
effective next September. He will teach operations research and
statistics.
Ellis previously has taught at the University of Alberta,
Canada, and at UW-Madison. His research fields are operations
research emphasizing linear and nonlinear programming and risk
and insurance.
TO WORK ON PROPERTY TAX
Dr. Mary Carrington, lecturer in communications at Parkside,
has been named to a 12-member state committee to study and
possibly revamp the State Department of Revenue's system of
equalizing taxable property values. The appointment was made by
Secretary of Revenue Edward A. Wiegner.
Wiegner said the state-determined equalized values have more
than 100 uses, but principally they figure in determining how much
state aid school districts receive.
TWENTY-EIGHT YEAR OLD TO JOIN STAFF
A geologist whose academic interests include planetary as well
as terrestrial terrains, Eugene I. Smith, 28, will join the faculty at
Parkside as an assistant professor of earth science, effective next
September.
Smith presently is a post-doctoral research associate at the
University of New Mexico and also is associated with the U.S.
Geological Survey Center of Astrogeology at Flagstaff, Arizona.
A specialist in petrology, volcanology and astrogeology, Smith
received his undergraduate degree from Wayne State University
and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of New Mexico.
His teaching areas include historical geology, lunar and
planetary geology, petrology, and physical geology.
His widely published research includes comparative studies of
volcanic cones on earth and on the moon and studies of Martian
terrain as a basis for the geological mapping of the planet.
He is a member of Sigma XI, the Geological Society of
America, American Geophysical Union and American Association
for the Advancement of Science.
Nelson and Ecology
(Continued from Page 1)
but the question is how. He
stressed that adequate
safeguards against oil leakage
and other hazards must first be
perfected. He expressed his
hopes for further public
hearings on the matter before
any final decision is made.
Concerning Project Sanguine,
the fifty million dollar bomb
proof communications system,
Sen. Nelson said, "After
everything had been presented
it still had not been proven
worthwhile to me."
As to the Thermal pollution of
Lake Michigan, Sen. Nelson
admitted he knew little about
the situation though he did
realize the seriousness of the
problem.
Having finished his prepared
material, the Senator began
fielding questions from the
audience. The first pertaining to
the possibility of
legislation such as the
Packwood Proposal, in which
tax deductions can be taken for
only up to two children) to
control the population. "Any
compulsory legislation that
would bring the birth rate down
at this time would also bring the
government down." According
to the Senator we need more
understanding and a better
education of the situation.
On the Alaska Pipeline the
Senator agreed that one day the
oil would have to be extracted,
Arthur C. Clarke April 24, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5
By Jim Koloen, Editor
Noted author and inventor,
Aithur C. Clarke, spoke before
an overflow audience in the
Greenquist concourse on
Thursday evening, April 20. The
conservatively attired author of
both the book and screen play
2001: A Space Odyssey, and
Childhood's Paid among 40 other
titles, structured the evening's
lecture thematically to "Life in
2001".
To the appreciative though
subdued audience, .many of
whom arrived an hour before
Clarke was to speak, the
scientist-author asked for their
patience if he seemed
distracted during the opening
minutes of the lecture; "the
Apollo is going to land in 19
minutes."
The balding, professorial
science fiction writer, spoke
with a slight English jaccent as
he explained that we "do not
have to predict any future." He
explained that it is most
important to "anticipate what
technology is going to do with
society." He related two
anecdotes concerning the early
attitudes toward two
technological innovations which
occurred near the turn of the
century. The possibilities of the
telephone, he explained, were
vastly underrated, and "the
motor car, the horseless
carriage, it was felt, would
serve only a limited function.
Many people at the time," he
continued, "thought the motor
car was limited to the city and
always would be, simply
because at the turn of the
century the United States only
had a hundred miles of road."
Touching on the subject of
man and the machine, Clarke
said when the rise of the
intelligent machine occurs,
"when that happens, all bets
are off. The first intelligent
machine will be the last
invention man may ever
make," he ominously amended
his statement, "may ever be
permitted to make." Later, he
fm
Life in 2001
said he had met only two
intelligent men in his life,
genticist, philosopher J. B. S.
Haldang and a science-fiction
writer, Olaf Stapleton.
Changing the topic to the
avocation of speculating on the
future, Clarke explained it is
"good fun, and that is the only
excuse you need for doing
anything." He added that
speculating on the future also
Bradbury, Clarke quoted him
concerning the object of writing
science-fiction: "We do not try!
to describe the future, we try to
prevent it." He added that
science-fiction is a "valuable
medium for inventing the
future." Touching upon the
topic of 2001, Clarke speculated
that "the psychological effect of
those added zeros will be too
much for many people."
Writer and inventor, Arthur C. Clarke answers questions
after his lecture in Greenquist to an overflow audience.
represented a "good exercise
for the mind," and "can serve
as a warning." Utilizing the
first of a number of references
to fellow sci-fi writer Ray
Smiling he only half-facetiously
commented that "we should
declare the whole year of 2000 a
holiday." Smiling he footnoted
his statement: "If we make it,
The UWP Philanthropist Club Presents
CASINO NIGHT
1
Drinking
Black Jack
Crap Tables
Chuck-A-Lug
Roulette
Surprises
Prizes
— Enjoy a Night of Chance —
Saturday, April 29 9PM-1AM
$n/ek/ammenf Cyrus Whitfield
Adm. $1.25 (Includes $200.00 gambling money)
Student Activities Building Parkside & Wisconsin ID required
we'll be fully justified."
Life in 2001, Clarke continued
speculating, "will see an end to
the 'self-contained household'.
This will occur," he explained,
"when the last preparation
process left to the home become
antiquated. People will be able
to 'dial' what they want to be
reconstituted at their home, or
they'll receive monthly 100
pound bags of dehydrated
food."
"Natural reproduction is so
inefficient that in the future . . .
it may be prohibited by law."
Clarke explained that it "takes
ten pounds of vegetables to
make one pound of meat." He
pointed out that the percent
efficiency involved in this
process is unacceptable. "I
happen to be a carnivore who
hates rabbit food." He noted
that "we are to the sea now
what we were to the land 5,000
years ago, what we were 500
years ago on this continent."
He questioned the possibility
of whale ranching as a source of
food: "Are we justified in
slaughtering animals whose
brains are twice as large as
ours?" Concerning another
undersea species, the dolphin,
Clarke wryly remarked that he
was skeptical of their
intelligence "because they
seem too friendly toward man."
The only satisfactory answer
to the food shortage
experienced in the world todaywill
come through
microbiological engineering,
Clarke believed. "We make
cheeses, wines, spirits this
way." Clarke humorously
pointed out that "an awful lot of
microbiological engineering
has been going on in Milwaukee
for the last hundred years."
Still considering the topic of
food supplies in the future,
Clarke spoke to the overflow
audience, many of whom were
forced to listen to and watch the
lecture over closed circuit
television in one of the lecture
halls, of oil as a source of
protein. "Three per cent of the
world's oil production could
feed the entire human race! I
think it's time we stopped
burning oil and started eating
it."
He said that in the future
"farming as we know it will be
phased out. One of the byproducts
of space research,"
Clarke explained, "is closed
cycle ecologies, where we have
to reprocess all wastes and turn
them back to food."
Later he admitted he "gets
annoyed by peoplewhosay 'why
spend money on space with all
the problems here on earth'.
Many of thoes problems can
only be solved through space
technology."
He explained the
communications satellites will
be the key to the future,
advancing education, but more
importantly, in the next two
years a communications
satellite will be launched into
orbit by India, for the purpose of
family planning."
New housing techniques and
materials will provide the
future generations with homes
"made of materials as strong as
steel and as light as paper.
Bucky Fuller," he said, "sees
an autonomous house with no
outside connections such as
plumbing, and electricity
needed to make it functional."
He explained that the
combination of light weight
building materials and the
possibility of the autonomous
house will bring more mobility
to the future. Instead of moving
in a car, he commented, "You'll
be able to move your entire
house with a helicopter."
He indicated that the
technological and educational
breakthroughs of the future will
be caused by "the transistor
and solid state electronics, and
the communications satellite."
He forcast a time when he won't
have to "walk back to my hotel
with five pounds of wood pulp
under my arms." He said that
instead of gaining access to the
events of the world through
newsprint, future men will be
able to have "every newspaper
on earth at h is fingertips; every
newspaper that has cvern been,
will be at our fingertips; in fact
every book ever published,
everything recorded by the
human race will ultimately be
available to me. when 1 dial the
correct thirty digit number."
He explained that "the
information starvation" which
leads many people to move
from rural areas to the
overcrowded cities will be
alleviated through the
d e v e I o p in e n t o f
communications. People will no
longer "be robbed of education
for reasons of geographic
deficiencies."
Clarke admitted "I'm an
optomist. 1 believe
communications satellites will
unite mankind." Later, during
the question and answer period,
Clarke expanded on this
statement. He explained that
global communications would
difuse national boundaries, that
eventually nations will become
so integrated and dependent
upon each other, that man will
have no choice but to unite.
Concluding his lecture with a
brief look into education, Clarke
said that "education and
entertainment should be
synonymous, and a continual
process in life." How can the
educational process end when
•half the things you learn at
twenty are false by the time
you're forty; and at forty, half
the things you know weren't
even found when you were
twenty?"
The minimum age for the end
of education, Clarke said,
should be "120 years old."
Later, during the question
period, Clarke amplified his
statement on education stating
men . should "have the
opportunity to develop to their
limit." Today's educational
standards will be adjudged
feeble in the future, yet even
today you don't come across the
depths of ignorance that you
once did."
Man, he reflected, represents
an "intermediate biological
stage. We are destined to create
our successors." Clarke
explained that "life on this
planet originated in an
atmosphere of methane and
ammonia." The atmosphere, he
explained, was polluted by a
"deadly gas, oxygen, and made
way for a second type of
evolution. We may be polluting
our environment to make the
world fit only for machines."
Concluding his thesis, Clarke
spoke half cynically, half
satirically, perhaps resignedly
that "Detroit may be fulfilling
God's destiny for man." A
similar idea is expressed in Childhood's
End.
"One last question," the man
on the podium said to the
audience. Someone asked if
we'll have Overlords like those
envisioned in Childhood's End.
Unhesitatingly Clarke replied,
"No, we have to solve our
problems here, we cannot hope
for salvation coming from the
stars."
Page 6 NEWSCOPE April 24, 1972 Hiirry Chopin in Brooklyn
BOOKS
by Jim Koloen
of the Newscope staff
Title: The Age of Paranoia
Author: by the editors of
Rolling Stone
Publisher: A Straight Arrow
Book published by Pocket
Books ($1.50 paperback)
The Age of Paranoia, "how
the '60's ended": Strange how
decades can 'assume psychological
qualities, can be stereotyped
like people, how the weird j
scenes beat '50's were also
the Eisenhower cherry blossom
stagnation; how the '20's were
flappers and a lost generation
and Herbert Hoover. Reading
this I find the title only partially
accurate. There was paranoia,
especially as expressed in the
underground papers, but there
were also harbingers of
sunrising hope and flying joy:
the Democratic Convention
(which occupies a good portion
of the subject matter) was a
bloody battle, and yet it was
also a real festival of joy, a real
consciousness expansion.
Rolling Stone, of course, is a
singular product of hip journalism,
offering often great
writing (Hunter Thompson's
"fear and loathing" for one)
and an unusually thorough
-investigative reportage.
The articles included in this
anthology of the last years of
the gone decade, cover the
stoned gamut of the youth
subculture; from its flexing of
stiff, yet resilient political
muscles to interviews with gun
toting editors of underground
newspapers; from ecological
skirmishes against land
developers and fat cat
Republicans to the poignantly
tragic battle over People's
Park. The Age of Paranoia
jostled my memory; deja vu of
years gone by, years of growing
awareness and a new consciousness
for an entirely
strange generation.
From The Age, one gets the
feeling that we got the last
laugh in the sixties. That no
matter how much shit has to be
waded through before this
generation gains control of the
power that is presently equated
with money and staid cigar
smoke politics; the powers that
be will die off, gradually but so
beautifully chronologically;
necessarily.
Senseless for me to pick out
an apotheosis from this book,
because all the stories are
apotheoses. Perhaps a partial
list of titles would be helpful:
"A Tough Month to Be a Head";
"Feds' Dope Circus: 'How
Much LSD Do You Take to Be
Addicted?' " "Grass Ballot
Chooses Dylan for Presdient",
"Two Moratorium Days: So
What?", "Freak Power in the
Rockies", "A Lot of People
Were Crying, and the Guard
Walked Away", "Keeping Up
With the Mansons", to name a
few.
What makes Rolling Stone,
and consequently this anthology,
the best paper of its
kind, lies embedded deep in the
attitude of its writers. Hunter
Thompson and his cronies don't
write news for news' sake; they
get the story because the story's
there, but in the process the
writers capture the moment,
the essence of the story. These
are news stories which are
always human interest stories;
there is the attitude that behind
every story there are people,
always. So, unlike straight
journalism, RS presents the
reader with organic news
stories which read like fiction,
that have protagonists and
antagonists, subplots and
ironies; that are humanized
beyond straight facts because a
human is beyond pure fact.
Journalism that tends to get
blurry because it's honest.
The stories are printed in the
form they appeared in RS, two
columns per page, with the
happy result that they reqd
quite quickly. The writing is
generally quite good; the
research involved is often
superhuman and the attitude is
hip. The 429 pages are not as
formidable as may first appear;
the book can easily be
read in two days, though I would
suggest you read it like you do
the Stone, sections of it at a
time. Afterall, there's no hurry,
and no continuity to worryabout
losing.
The Age of Paranoia will stir
up the past, it will make you
laugh with tears cleansing your
eyes, and sometimes you'll
clench your fist, but above all it
can reinstill a unique consciousness
that was built in the
sixties; the past here is part of
our future. For a buck fifty, you
really can't go wrong.
by Paul Lomartire
He sat silently tuning his
guitar between songs. An
audience of a couple hundred
were waiting, some standing
with armloads of packages,
others sitting resting their tired
feet.
Harry Chapin was three
quarters of the way through a
set. He was performing his
songs for the shoppers at
Abraham and Strauss, on the
eighth floor of the department
store on Fulton Street in
downtown Brooklyn. He and
three other musicians were
sharing a small stage in an area
sandwiched between the
sporting goods and toy
departments, an enclosure
called the "Special Events
Center."
Behind the state was a thin
partition decorated with pictures
of Harry Chapin from the
aPPlause.
'Finally, there's my friend
Ron Palmer playing electric
and acoustic guitar."
Introductions finished, Harry
^gan the opening of "Taxi",
cstalyst in the music in-
"strY- "Hie song has been
P ayed a lot on the East Coast,
slowly creeping West into, the
airwaves and onto the charts.
"They told me it'd be a hit
single and | ddin't believe them.
I guess they proved me wrong,"
he said with a laugh. He then
sang "Taxi" to the listeners at
A-S on a Saturday afternoon in
downtown Brooklyn.
The scene on the eighth floor
seemed almost maudlin. There
sat the struggling new talent,
personally selling his wares to
an audience comprised of tired
shoppers, curious onlookers,
young admirers, and people
who would go out-of-their-way
1Mj M d tw OJ lu£/ siMjqlb
ojJJ 9 (SJAmj fc Ww tJimy.'
lyric sheet contained in his first
album, "Heads and Tales" on
Electra. Also pinned on the wall
in several places was the album
cover and the waxing.
At the mouth of the area was
an A-S employee and a store
cop. They were guarding a
shopping cart overflowing with
Harry Chapin albums. The
employee was leaning on a
portable roll-away stand with a
cash register on it. The cop kept
looking at his watch as Harry
began introducing his group.
"On my left is Tim Scott,
probably the only cellist playin'
in a folk group." The audience
politely applauded. "And this
big guy, the one behind me, is
the bass player, John Wallace,
who also helps on vocals."
"John can sing the lyrics way
up there," he motioned with his
hand, "and the ones way down
here. Maybe that comes from
our days together in a high
school choir in Brooklyn." John
smiled to the smattering of
to see anything free.
There were people, though,
who had taken the eighth floor
express elevator specifically to
see and hear Harry Chapin.
Some of them were there
because they didn't have the
"four-at-the-door-cover" to see
him perform at the Bitter End
in the Village. It didn't really
matter that they couldn't afford
{Wt>
the Bitter End, Harry Chapin's
week-long engagement was sold
out.
When the free performance
was over, and only about a
dozen people bought albums it
was sad, b(rt it was even sadder
when the buyers stood in line for
autographs.
A man from Queens paraded
his nine year old daughter in
front of Harry, who was sitting
on the edge of the stage with a
flair pen in his hand.
THusic 3o S roiu IP la (its Uy
Leo Kottke — "Greenhouse"
by David Rogers
"As my guitars were once
plants, this record's a
greenhouse," says the acoustic
steel-string guitar king, Leo
Kottke. Though this is Kottke's
fifth release, it is his second
really major work, the other
leader being his allinstrumental
Takoma LP, "6 &
12 String Guitar", where we
were treated to some outstanding
guitar work without
being subject to Kottke's
singing, likened by the singer
himself to "geese farts on a
muggy day."
Kottke brings his geese in on a
mere four cuts out of eleven on
"Greenhouse", but you couldn't
say his singing is really bad. It's
just back seat to his guitar
work. Kottke reverses his
dominant folksinger mode of
guitar playing accompanying
singjng, making the singing
accompany the guitar.
Kottke is matched by very
few in the steel-string guitar
field — John Fahey (who Kottke
used to tour with), Robbie
Basho, and two members of
Pentangle, Bert Jansche and
John Renbourne, are the only
other musicians I would put in
his class.
"Bean Time" opens the
album, an instrumental with a
lot of loose melodic ideas
thrown together: a typical
Kottke piece. "Tiny Island" is a
catchy tune with gentle lyrics
by Al Faylor. On this, as well as
the other vocals on this album,
Kottke's singing is more careful
and resonant than most of it on
such past albums as "Circle
Round the Sun" and
"Mudlark". The other vocals
include Paul Siebel's "Louise",
"From the Cradle to the Grave"
and "You Don't Have to Need
Me."
Kottke's treatment of
"Louise" is only fair compared
to, say, Linda Ronstadt's,
though this is probably because
this song relies heavily on
singing, rather than accompaniment.
"From the
Cradle to the Grave" is an
excellently performed chronicle
of life-weariness, the "hands-
In
Or
tied" feeling that you can't
always get when you want.
"You Don't Have to Need Me"
follows up on much the same
idea but it applies to a personal
relationship.
Kottke's treatment of two
John Fahey instrumentals,
Christ There is No East
West" and "Last Steam Engine
Train" is superb. The latter
features a steam engine rhythm
on the base line that is very
difficult to finger-pick on the
guitar. "Spanish Entomologist"
is a blending of "Red Wing" and
"Tumbling Tumbleweeds",
"Owls" is vintage Leo Kottke
and "Lost John" is pure blue
grass. "The Song of
rv
Swamp" features
bottlenecking.
the
Kottke's
by Roscoe Humus of the Newscope staff
THE GODFATHER — Paramount Pictures
The Godfather is a movie of extravagance.
Extravagant dress with huge tribal weddings and
funeral processions, led by a half-dozen open
limousines heaped with flowers, married to a
seemingly endless procession of death dealing
gangsters playing a fatal game of one-upmanship
for control of a vague and illusive stable of interests,
ranging from a starring role in a movie for
a favorite son — after the producer wakes one fine
morning to find the head of his $600,000 prize horse
bloodying the sheets —to pushing narcotics to the
"niggers." One family head seems to speak for the
rest when he refers to the black man as something
less than human. And perhaps there is a lesson in
•this jigaboo wop slurdom. Yes, even the gangster
feels the bite of bigotry in this film, showing him
not wholly insensitive. It's not that he's insensitive
so much as his curious style of expression.
We see the godfather, Don Corleone (Marlon
Brando) at the end of his reign as kingpin of the
underworld. It is the mid 1940's and the Don i s
faced with the not unwelcome prospect of
retirement in the country. It is very touching to
see a man who spent his life fixing judges, running
the numbers racket and perforating an occasional
rival or crooked cop — you get yqur newspaper
people (everyone owns one) to dig up the dirt on
the crooked cops, makes it easier for an enraged
public to swallow, somewhat tarnishing that
sterling cinematic credo of never kill a cop —
chasing his laughing grandson around the toma o
plantes. The game used to be called organize
crime and it was played for keeps.
But not all is well for the Don. One afternoon
on his way home from the office, his bodyguard
sick, he is shot down by gunmen and rumored to be
dead. Rushed to a hospital he must be guarded
round the clock to insure his safety. Justice comes
when the courts — undoubtedly friendly to
Corleone — allow his men to cover the hospital
when the police led by Capt. McCurdy arrive to
throw them out. One of the Don's sons — a young
war hero who insisted to his red haired fiancee
that he was different from the rest of the family —
protects the old man while the consigtierge,
Corleone's tru
McCurdy slugi
he was on the
called him ev
mon, leaving
Irony, be
favored son (>
governor or a
he kills two m
his father. A
undoubtedly a<
the neophyte
crooked cop I,
'THE
blood splatt
where he sp
countryside
He also mai
surname, ai
significance
Meanwl
escalates, c
literally tur
on the New
son, the fie
forced abs
tnarried in
turned into
"This is my daughter. Jeez,
you're great Harry. My
daughter also has musical
talents, don't you Tina? She
dances, a born dancer in the
family . .
A black man approached the
minstrel with no album in his
hand. He asked the composer
how he wrote his songs, how he
constructed them, because he
too was into songwriting.
Harry smiled. He had no
twenty-five-words or less ready
to sum up his talents. He told
the man wearing an Army
fatigue coat to simply write
what he felt and hope it came
together musically. They shook
hands.
ufa/L/ M.
A father who looked like a
Manhattan hard hat was getting
an album autographed for his
daughter. He asked'Harry if the
lyrics to "Taxi" referred to
taking dope. ("You see . . . she
was gonna be an actress . . .
and I was gonna learn to fly. She
took off to find the footlights, I
took off to find the sky. And here
she's acting happy, inside her
handsome home . . . and me
I'm flying in my taxi, taking
tips and getting stoned. I go
flying so high when I'm
stoned."+)
A frail man with a raincoat
hung over his arm asked Harry
about the lyrics to his song
called "Sometime, Somewhere
Wife". The man did not look
happily married, he did not look
happily anything. He smiled
faintly when Harry answered.
A large woman with a
friendly face walked up to
Harry when her turn came in
the short line. She gazed into his
face smiling broadly, motherly.
Harry looked a bit bewildered
as he smiled back. She had no
album or picture to be signed.
"Don't you remember me,
Harry?"
He looked hard, biting his
lower lip.
"You remember the old
neighborhood. I'm your
mother's . . ."
Harry remembered and
kissed her, gave the woman
with the friendly face a hug.
"I'm so glad to see you've made
it, Harry. I knew you would."
They talked a bit, then she said
good-bye, beaming as she
walked through the cluster of
empty folding chairs.
There was no one left to talk
to or sign autographs for.
Guitarist Ron Palmer was
finishing a conversation with an
aspiring guitar player. Tim
Scott was putting his equipment
away, John Wallace was talking
to someone about the excellent
review the group had received
in the New York Times the day
before. Speaking of the review,
John remembered they had to
play in the Village in a matter of
hours.
Harry Chapin left the
"Special Events Center",
walking past the still overflowing
shopping cart of his
records. He was still smiling.
He took the escalator down to
the seventh floor, to the furniture
department. There he
stood for a second at the base of
the moving stairs, as if to get his
bearings. He then turned right
and walked on as A-S shoppers
turned left to the escalator
down.
+ Copyright 1972 by Story Songs
Ltd., ASCAP, All rights reserved.
April 24, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7
isted adviser, is hustling the judges,
ged him out of spite and the fact that
e payroll of an opposing gang and
'ery ethnic moniker he could sumthe
tender youth's psyche bruised,
ing what it is, turned the Don's
Al Pacino) — he wanted him to be a
senator — optimism into bullets as
en in revenge for what was done to
JI added measure of satisfaction
ccompanied his vengeance as one of
killer's victims was McCurdy, the
ater linked to narcotics. From the
FLICKS:
: GODFATHER'
;d restaurant he is whisked to Sicily
ds the next year or two roaming the
ith two shot gun armed bodyguards.
5S a young girl in a town bearing his
we can only speculate as to what the
f that is.
e, back in the states, the gang war
I his hot blooded brother Santino is
d into Swiss cheese at a toll station
ersey causeway. Like the prodigal
ling Killer returns hardened by his
:e and the death of the girl he
icily. He finds his father's house
armed camp and the Don in failing
health. From then on it is his show and it is clear
that he is destined to take the reigns from the old
man and restore the family name to its peak in the
mountainous range of gangsterdom. In a fatherson
type encounter we see th e old man's senility
surface in repetitious babbling speech. But we
hear a bit of worldly wisdom dribble from his lips
when he warns his son that the traitor in the family
will be the one who comes to him with an offer of
capitulation from the other side. It is good and
refreshing to see an absolute cross the screen once
in awhile, it sets your mind at east.
Of course, in a movie as compact as the
Godfather — over 15 murders occur in three hours
— even the babbling of an old man cannot be
forgotten, and this becomes evident with
terrifying ramifications.
The end finds the old man drop while chasing
his grandson in the tomato patch and his son r ise
to power as head of the family. His first move is to
get rid of dad's councilor because he's "not a
wartime consiglierge." And he shoots across the
screen like a star shattering anybody's expectations
of a top ganglord.
The movie is an interesting story of the socalled
Mafiosa and the acting is quite good for a
movie in which the plot depends on violence to
move it along. Most of my friends insist that the
syndicate is all but in control of Kenosha. Yessir,
right herein Anywhere USA, which raises another
point for speculation. (If any of you want to pursue
this leave your name and address at the Newscope
office and a couple of the boys will visit you.)
But leaving all open questions aside, and
reserving opinion on the elder Corleone's noble, if
pragmatic determination not to dip into the
lucrative and young narcotics market, we are left
with a film that tried to do in three hours what took
Marie Puzo 600 pages. We cannot possibly have an'
accurate picture of what the Godfather
represents, if anything. And if so, then the underworld
rivals the Vietnam War for brutality and
violence and this reviewer is not aware of such
another war. What we have despite its equivocal
factual context is a movie imminently suited to fit
those wonderful automated theatres on the west
side.
MARTIN SEYMOUR-SMITH
poetry and simultaneity
by Jim Koloen, Editor
Among the visiting faculty serving time at Parkside, Martin
Seymour-Smith stands out as being the one with an English accent,
ttje one with a full beard, and the one who publishes poetry. The
English professor, who, among other things, teaches a creative
poetry class, presented the latest in a series of Poetry Forums held
in the Whiteskellar on Wednesday afternoon.
At UWP, poets usually draw hummingbird audiences, people
come in, sit down, listen for a while and abruptly leave; others
loudly arrive in the middle of the reading; still others decide that,
at least during poetry readings, the Whiteskellar is not a good place
to play cards, so they shuffle out silently between introductions to
poems.
Seymour-Smith read from two of his published collections,
taking good advantage of his strongly accented and resonant voice.
Appearing quite relaxed and in his element, Seymour-Smith was
pleasant just to listen to, though it took awhile to accustom the
midwest American hot dog ear to the fish and chips British accent.
Ore of the hazards incurred while reading poems in the
Whiteskellar is the background accompaniment. Deaf hammers
flayed away at hollow metal behind twin steel doors, creating a
cacophony that clashed with the poems; the coke machine, not to
be outdone, wailed its own subtle cold wind death rattle. But poets,
being an adaptable breed, make the best of it. Smith quipped it off
saying, "I like that accompaniment, though it doesn't always go
with the rhythm of the poems."
The poet commenced the reading with a poem on westerns
entitled "Forth Coming Attractions". Its subject was "good bad
guys", and as was characteristic of the entire menu of poems read
that day, featured a witty irony-satiricism, and a reliance on incisive
observation rather than imagery. As he explained some
unfamiliar British terminology, the audience ats its lunch; much of
his later poetry contained reflective, metaphysical intonations; the
rather large, and closely quartered audience coped with less
metaphysical stomach grumblings.
The poet explained before reading "The Administrators" that,
When I read this in public in England, people come up and say
they don't like it because it's about the 'official poets', the right
writers." Poets, as his poem amplified, "with careers planned at
16." Later he smilingly explained, "I have a reputation for, ah, well
you can guess, misbehaving in public. People in England know my
name, but they don't speak it."
Next Smith read "Saxalby", "the kind of poem," he explained,
"you can't write unless it's absolutely true. I wrote it when I was
poor and would do anything for money." Grinning he added, "I
think I still will."
Smith's poems were genrally long, witty, occasionally satiric
and not so much laden with imagery as with concise, and ironic
statements.
The poet concluded the reading with a presentation of a
number of the thirteen sequences in "Reminiscences of Norma",
who is not a "particular person" Smith explained. Using cubism as
an example, Smith explained "In this poem I try to express a
number of different moods and different aspects simultaneously."
"Reminiscences" is interwoven with a bleak death-sex theme,
and perhaps, represented the most successful moments of the
reading. Even the hollow hammers and the coke machine became
silent, as the poet spoke of a "photoplay in which I don't, I hope, not
participate; when memory warms, but only real is cold; ending, I
had you once; to find in nothingness the love I can." Desperation.
After the reading, a brief question and answer period ensued
during which Smith was asked to compare universities in England
with those in America. Facetiously, he grinned that "Oxford is
possibly a bit higher (in excellence) than Parkside." He later took
exception to a question concerning the sexual fantasies he relates
in his poetry. He retorted, "I don't know that they are fantasies."
In the past month or so, the Poetry Forum has sponsored three
published poets at the Whiteskellar. Robert Bly presented UWP's
most impressive and memorable reading to date; Knute Skinner
fell flat on his arse, while Martin Seymour-Smith lifted the Forum
back to its feet. All in all, it's been a good, sometimes great, poetry
season.
B KOFFEE
'3@T
Page 8 NEWSCOPE April 24, 1972
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ALRIKAS Body and
Paint Shop
6310 - 20 th Ave.
Phone - 657-3911
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Sports Cars Specialists
Parkside Activities Board
Presents
at the
iWfelltf1
Live Entertainment
Two
Performers
For Two Shows
Lois Seiberlich
&
John Ziebell
April 26 1 - 3 PM
FREE
Parkside Activities Board
Presents
at the
jVicicelodeoM
The Classic Comedy of
Laurel &
Hardy
in Fixer Uppers
Laurel & Hardy
Murder Case
Live Ghost
April 25 Noon
FREE
Interview with PAB President
by Roscoe Humus of the Newscope staff
Kim Rudat, president of the Parkside Activities Board, was
interviewed by Newscope several weeks ago. The assignment
presumably follows the interview with the president of SGA sort of
as a gesture of goodwill. In the past Newscope had editorially
faulted much that the PAB has done, and only on one occasion did it
give the organization its unqualified praise. And that was in a
review.
But more than that, the interview may serve to introduce the
PAB, through its president, to the student body. It is, after all, one
of the largest student organizations on campus, and one of its advisors
says its budget is made up entirely of student segregated
fees. In a way this is a stockholders' report on the progress of an
organization that is truly supported by the students.
Knowing this and that it is responsible for such projects as
Whiteskellar, the Friday night movie in the activities building,
dances, concerts and numerous other undertakings the interview
begins in the middle of the tape.
NS: Is the PAB a student club?
Rudat: No.
NS: What is it?
Rudat: Well, to get as specific
as you can. it's an advisory role
of students in the Student
Activities Office. Students can't
handle state funds. We're using
state funds so the Board more
or less advises Bill Neibuhr and
Tony Totero (Coordinator of
Student Activities and Advisor
to Student Organizations,
respectively). However, I can't
name an instance when they
said no to unless it wasn't
practical.
NS: Where do you get the
money to put on a program?
Rudat: That's a budget that Bill
and Tony control.
NS: Do you know where from
the University budget the
money comes from, or is it just
from Student Activities?
Rudat: Yeah, I just know it
goes to Student Activities
Office. I imagine it's where all
great money comes from ... a
great big bank in the sky or
something.
NS: When you get a budget do
you get it in one lump, you
know; you get a figure of how
much you have to work with
during the year?
Rudat: Really I don't know.
You see this year we don't have
a budget as such because things
(with the university) are the
way they are. Next year they're
going to get a whole different
type of setup and I have no idea
what it's going to be like. I'm
sure it will be explained to the
board, I guess it's some kind of
expanded budget where we'll be
part of the Student Activities
Building. You know, it won't be
just Auxiliary Enterprises.
NS: Right now you just go up
and say, well, we want to do this
can we have the money? Is that
how you do it?
Rudat: That's generally the
way it is. We have to show
cause.
NS: Who do you have to show
cause to?
Rudat: I believe we have to go
through Assistant Chancellor
Dearborn's office, but I'm not
sure. You see we do the
programming you know, and
like we don't worry about the
money. Bill and Tony bend over
backwards when it comes to
getting some bread for
something.
NS: Do you make profits on
your program?
Rudat: It depends.
Occasionally we do, but we're
usually operating in the red. We
have the idea of exhausting our
budget by the end of the year.
Last year we turned our budget
over four times, but we finally
blow the whole thing by the time
the end of the year bash comes.
We're not in it to make money
but let's face it. you gotta make
some money. I mean like
ShaNaNa. we lost money. We
can't do too many ShaNaNa's.
NS: Was ShaNaNa a bust?
Rudat: It wasn't a bust but we
did lose money. It's one of the
few things we've lost that much
money on.
NS: Any reasons why?
Rudat: I think ShaNaNa was a
little advanced for this area.
There were a lot of students that
came and we did a lot of
Rudat: Bill Niebuhr.
NS: Are students involved in
any way?
Rudat: Right, right. We've
gone, myself or Buzz, have gone
to meetings with him with
agents. He's told us how much
they want and we'll tell them if
we don't want them, if they're,,
too much. If he says I got a
chance for this group do you
want them, yeah, then we set a
price limit on it. If we can't get
that forget it.
He and Tony had a chance to
get John Denver down here last
fall and he told the agent, "Well,
I have to go back and talk it
over with the board." The board
was contacted and talked it over
and they said 'okay, we'll take
him", you know. And since then
Denver had raised his price you
know, so we had to come back
Kim Rudat
advertising. What can you say?
I guess you liked them, I liked
them a lot.
NS: Did the ticket prices have
anything to do with it?
Rudat: The ticket prices we
figure, if we sell out the house,
we might go a hundred dollars
over or something. We sit down
and mathematically work it out,
we're not trying to rip anybody
off, it's just what we have to do.
NS: Do you think the ticket
prices for the larger concerts
are fair?
Rudat: Well I'll agree that
they're high, but if you try to go
to a concert in Milwaukee or
Chicago they're higher. Around
here we're limited to facilities
and when we have a concert we
sell the seats so we'll just break
even.
NS: Do you plan on sold out
houses?
Rudat: We have to. Just
recently we've convinced the
Student ActivitiesOffice to give
Parkside students a break on
(he tickets. It isn't much of a
break but we're still giving a
break with Buddy Rich now.
NS: What is the break?
Rudat: Well, 50 ce nts cheaper.
NS: Does the Activities Board
get any percentage from
concerts?
Rudat: On Superstar I know the
money that we got from that
went straight into our account.
But I don't think it's called the
Parkside Activities Board
account, it's called the Student
Activities Office account
because it's state funds.
NS: Who is your agent in
dealing with groups?
again and we said 'okay, we'll
take him for that price too."
NS: In your opinion what are
the major things the PAB has
done for Parkside since last
September?
Rudat: Well, personally, it's the
Whiteskellar. Next, we've
written a constitution which is a
good constitution. Those are the
two major things and then our
concerts. I think the big thing
has been the huge success of our
dances, they went over good.
Plus we did some innovative
programming such as, well, we
took your idea of a tape dance
and used that successfully.
We're not afraid to try things
now.
NS: What kind of success has
Whiteskellar had?
Rudat: Excellent success.
Poetry Forum is very . happy
being able to put their things on
there. Our Nickelodeon, the day
before vacation during that
blizzard we had over fifty
people in there.
NS: How would you define
yourself in terms of what you do
for the students?
Rudat: We stick to our job of
programming. Not just
entertainment, but interesting
things for students to do on
campus. Whiteskellar, I keep
going back to them because it's
probably the best example of
what we've don this year. We
went there with the idea that
there is a lot of students sitting
around on campus during the
day with nothing to do. Let's
program for them too. Se we put
Whiteskellar on during the day
and we kept it free or the
movies are a nickel
(Nickelodeon) and that's just a
gimmick, we don t make
anything on it.
NS: How are the films you show
at the Activities Building
chosen?
Rudat: The film committee
chairman, Mark Thome, and
his committee went through and
chose a number of films out of
the catalog. Somebody has to sit
down with the catalog, see what
we've had and what is now
available and choose maybe 200
films that we could choose
from. Out of that we choose 25
that the Executive Council
chooses and out of those 25 th e
ones with the top votes, if
they're available sometime
during the year we plug them in
and we go right down the line
until we have as many films as
we show during the year.
NS: Who makes the final
decision on what will be shown?
Rudat: The Executive Council
and physical limitations. It's
happened that we've
programmed Mash and Patton -
and they assured us that they
would be available in this area,
and they weren't, the reason
being that we have so many
theatres around here that
wanted to bring them back
again, whereas, a lot of colleges
up north have been able to get
that because there's no
theaters.
(The PAB constitution
requires prospective members
to serve a one year
probationary period before they
can become regular members.
The Executive Council is made
up of the various committee
chairmen of PAB which
currently numbers nine. Since
the constitution was only
adopted in January new
members, about 25, must wait
until 1973 before they earn a
vote.)
NS: Are you as president
elected?
Rudat: Oh yeah, by the board. I
like the setup. I did a lot of work
in high school on student
governments, student council,
that stuff; running for election
all the time. That's bullshit. You
can't get nothing done. The
people that elected me, that
elected the people onto the
positions of leadership on the
council, the committee
chairmen, they were elected
because of their interest and
their ability to do the work and
that was all they got elected on.
There was no popularity contest
because you can't bullshit. You
know if the guy's going to put
out or not and that's why I think
it'll be a good organization. It's
going to keep going because you
can't get anywhere unless you
do the work.
NS: Are most committees made
up of regular members or.
probationary members?
Rudat: Right now they're
probationary. After we got the
constitution last January
everyone from then on has been
probationary.
NS: How many members of
PAB are employed by the
Student Activities Office?
Rudat: I'd say five or six.
NS: Were most of them hired
before or they joined PAB?
Rudat: All before.
NS: Does your work for the
Activities Office go along with
your PAB activities?
Rudat: It helps yeah, because
I'm right in the office when -
something comes up. I can take
a call if they're calling for the
Activities Board president.
I can't say there are any
conflicts. I can't say it would be
any harder if I was just
(Continued on Page 12)
Archeologist to Speak
The 8,000 year record of early man in the Midwest unearthed at
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 -
free public lecture by Northwestern uZeJiS a cLloS rt
S ruever at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, April 28, in GranqubtHallaUhe rb r ™ *'»« DivUion and ^cture^and Fine^Arts
t 9StonUeVer' who directs the Koster excavations, also will lecture
at 2.30 p.m. in Greenquist Room 101 on "New Directions in
nTnf th f°l0gC USing the Koster di8 as ™ example.
One of the largest on-going archeological undertakings in the
western hemisphere, the Koster site is located near the junction of
the Illinois and Mississippi Rivers and has been home to at least 12
successive groups of Indians who moved in, established villages
buried their dead and eventually moved on.
Major finds during last summer's excavations included the
well-preserved skeleton of an 18-month-old infant covered with red
paint and a dog burial, both dating from about 5100 B.C., as well as
a ceremonial cache of red pigment and cannel coal
The site and a nearby museum of artifacts from the dig are
open to the public during the summer months, a departure from
practice at most excavations where visitors are rigorously excluded.
Guided tours may be arranged by writing the Field
Director, Archeological Research, Kampsville, 111.
News Briefs
TWO KILLED IN MEXICAN STUDENT PROTESTS
CULIACAN, Mexico (CPS) — Two students died of bullet
wounds Friday, April 7, when police fired on students who had
thrown stones and molotov cocktails at the State Congress
Building.
The students demanded the resignation of Sinaloa State
University Rector, Gonzalo Armienta Calderon, the reform of
university law, and the release of students arrested during the Dast
six months. 6 H
An estimated 60 students are being held as a result of Friday'sdisturbances.
KLEINDIENST PR CAMPAIGN INTENSIFYING
(CPS) — Acting Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst,
facing stiff Senate opposition to his nomination to the Attorney
Generalship, is waging an intensive public relations campaign
designed to impress upon the public his qualification for the cabinet
post. Or so it seems.
In the past two weeks the national office of College Press
Service in Denver has received over 50 pages of press releases
documenting indictments ranging from price freeze violations to
anti-trust suits — all of which have second paragraphs beginning
with: "Acting Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst . .
NIXON PLANNED TO DISOBEY SUPREME COURT
ON AMCHITKA A BLAST SAYS REAGAN
SACRAMENTO (CPS) — California Governor Ronald Reagan,
speaking before the California Republican Assembly Saturday
night said President Richard Nixon was prepared to disobey the
U.S. Supreme Court if it ordered him to halt the Amchitka nuclear
test in Alaska last November.
"The President said to me, 'Even if the Supreme Court ruled
that I could not do it I have determined that as commander-in-chief
it is my responsibility and I am going to do it anyway,' " Reagan
recanted.
The court did not order a halt to the controversial underground
nuclear test despite objections from environmentalists who feared
an earthquake. None occurred.
STONED TEACHING OK IN CALIFORNIA
(CPS) — Ruling that possession of marijuana does not
demonstrate unfitness to teach, the California Court of Appeal has
decided that a Berkeley teacher was improperly stripped of his
teaching credentials. The State Board of Education had revoked
the teaching credentials in 1969, two years after the man was
convicted of marijuana possession. The teacher was represented in
the case by the ACLU of Northern California.
Carthage College Student Activities Board
PRESENTS IN CONCERT
THE BYRD5 Also appearing — MADURA
Sunday, April 30 8:00 PM
Carthage Fieldhouse
.00-General Admission
TICKETS AVAILABLE: Carthage College, Bidinger's Music House,
Cook-Gere Music (Racine), and Team Electronics (Racine)
THE
UPSTAIRS
"Highest bar „
in Kenosha
Weds, ^-/o Sun./-6
H oz. BOTTLE BEER
* HIGH-BALLS 35 £
Live Musi c —
Fri. + 5at,
ACROSS FROM THE
IAKE THEATER,
April 24, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 9
For The Record
1 n i i i \ i i: i n i \ ii s i \ m i s i
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Vanity Fair has been in the diamond
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impor t our own diamonds , design
and manufactu r e the set tings,
and mount the gems . And s ince
1921 we' v e sold direct l y to dea l ers
. Now in a new and unique
marketing policy, we're selling directly
t o co l lege students .
Wha t it all means is that we' v e
eliminated the middleman pr o f i t s
that can drive up the price of a
diamond r ing.
In fact we' v e done it so well, we
can probabl y sell you a diamond
ring for 50% less than anyone
else . If we don't we'll give you
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You can read all about our
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Page 10 NEWSCOPE April 24, 1972
— __ anti-war demonstrations
-l Students Strike Across the Country
IOL VatLj Supper CU
Catering to all types and size groups
552-8481
1700 Sheridan Id.
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN
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Custom made for you
FREF. DELIVERY TO PARKSIDF VILLAGE
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS
5021 - 30 «i Avenue Kenosha 657-5191
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays
FOR SALE
FOR SALE —1946 Ford, 6cyI. 2 door
in good cond. Call after 6 at 654-6485.
for this $450 value.
FOR SALE — '62 Comet, 6 cyl. $125.
Call 652-5904 or 654-3429.
FOR SALE —Guitar MARTIN D-18,
with deluxe hard shell case, $335
firm, ph. 652.0295.
"RIFLE - Winchester model 88 - .243
Win. with 4x Weaver Scope. Excellent
condition. $110 firm. ph. 654-
7964.
FOR SALE — '68 VW, sunroof, good
cond. $1,145. Call 632-9669 after 5
p.m.
P E Turntable. SHURE high track
cartridge. Call Ron. 657-6630.
FOR SALE — '68 Triumph 500,
custom, best offer call 552-9068.
1970 Nova, 350 V-8, two barrel,
factory 3 speed on floor, power
steering and brakes, 32,000 miles,
new tires. Call 657-7105, 8 to 5:30 or
554-6470 after 6:30.
Spiff y 1963 MG Midget SPORTSCAR,
needs body work, truly THE
car of the future and yours for the
ridiculously low price of $150 ca sh,
contact Jim at 553-2496 o r at the
Newscope office.
PERSONALS
WANTED - Writers, journalists,
production staff and ad men to take
over a college newspaper. Must be
housebroken, learn while you earn
when you can. .Ph. 553-2496 or 553-
2498. Ask for anybody or come in
person to the Newscope office,
corner of Wood Rd. and Hwy. A.
Gay Youth Coalition: Anyone interested,
or having any questions or
problems they would like to discuss,
please call 634-4470.
HOUSEWORK HELPER — early
June for about a week, pay open. Ph.
554-8517.
WANTED — a student volunteer to
be big brother to 11 year old cerebral
palsied boy. Call Wendy at 553-2121,
ext. 42.
(CPS) — After a two-year lull
America's college campuses
became active with strikes,
demonstrations, and teach-ins
prompted by the escalation of
the U.S. role in the Indochina
war.
The strike, backed by the
National Student Association
(NSA), the National Student
Lobby (NSL), and the Student
Mobilization Committee (SMC),
grew out of an emergency NSANSL
conference. Forty student
leaders met in Washington to
discuss the air war and to lobby
for passage of the Mondale-
Gravel-Drynan bill to cut off
funds for the war. The eight Ivy
League student newspapers
agreed that same weekend to
print a joint editorial criticizing
the war's escalation and calling
for a student strike. The NSA
TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION — is a unique and
effortless technique by which every
individual can expand his awareness
and develop his full mental potential.
Lectures: Mon. April 24 =
Kenosha campus rm. 103 3 P.M. and
8 P .M.; Tue. April 25 - Greenquist
Hall, rm. 108 8 P.M.; Thur. April 27 -
Greenquist 8 P.M.
JUST IN TIME FOR MOTHER'S
DAY — Ready for the Home,
weaned and litter trained, 8 weeks
old people orientated kittens. 1
Black & White Female - looks like a
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looks like Sylvester the Cat; 1 Gray
Tiger Stripe Male - big eyes and a
loud pur; 1 Brown Tiger Stripe Male
-the friendliest kitten. All come with
white boots, stomachs and faces.
Cost: only a l ittle love. Call 633-8162
any time, but hurry.
WANTED - STAMPS — Collections,
Accumulations, Mint or Used, On
Cover or off, First Day covers or
what ever! U.S. or Foreign. Phone
694-3398. Ask for Jim or leave
messate at Newscope office.
conference responded with a
call to all students to strike on
Friday, April 21.
Several demands were issued
late Monday, April 17,
including: an immediate halt to
the bombing of North and South
Vietnam; the withdrawal of all
American air, naval, and
ground forces from Vietnam;
the final renunciation of the
Thieu regime by the U.S.
government; and a return to the
peace talks by the U.S.
government. NSA also issued an
appeal to antiwar forces to
bring massive pressure to bear
on Congress in support of the
Mondale-Gravel-Drynan "cut
off the war funds" amendment.
Response to the call was
immediate. On Monday evening
several thousand Columbia
University students staged a
Save
for
the
Future
WEST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
Phone 658-2573
58th St. at. 6th Ave.
MAIN OFFICE:
CAPITOL COURT,
MILWAUKEE
march down Broadway in New
York City, three hundred
students smashed windows at
Stanford University in
California, and Amherst
College in Amherst, Mass.,
went on strike immediately.
In San Francisco 2,000 people
stood in support of the take over
of an Air Force Recruitment
Station by members of the
Vietnam Veterans Against the
War. 70 persons were arrested
and a Naval Recruiting station
wagon was burned.
At Alameda Air Naval Station
4 persons were arrested after a
crowd of four hundred shut the
base down for three hours.
At Madison, Wisconsin, three
thousand students marched to
the ROTC building on the
University of Wisconsin campus
bearing red paint.
Demonstrators there seized and
held for ten minutes the State
Street mall, a main city street
leading from the campus to the
State Capitol building.
Colgate University and
Grinnell College in Iowa
declared immediate hunger
strikes on their campuses.
Boston University has been on
strike for the past two weeks on
account of an incident arising
from the presence of Marine
recruiters on that campus.
Students at the University of
Maryland College Park campus
staged protests at a table tennis
match between the visiting
Chinese and American teams —
a match attended by Tricia
Nixon Cox and Secretary of
State William Rogers. After the
match about 350 students
marched on the ROTC building,
breaking windows, and then
paraded to the University
President's home.
Activities on Tuesday, April
18, were heightened. Columbia
students again marched down
Broadway in New York, and the
Columbia administration
hurriedly removed the U.S. flag
from the flagpole in front of the
administration building-as
students stood demanding the
closing of that school.
University of Maryland-
College Park students again
attacked the ROTC building
and, 1,000 st rong, blocked U.S.
Highway 1 into Washington,
D.C. Police used tear gas to
clear the area, injuring one
student and arresting several
others.
A nationwide chain phone-call
campaign also was initiated,
with people calling the White
House to register their feelings
and then asking a friend to do
likewise (the White House
number is (202) 456-1414).
By Tuesday evening between
40 and 50 schools had informed
their intentions to strike, with
numerous others planning to
hold strike votes on Thursday,
April 20'
The ROTC building at the
College of the Holy Cross in
Worcester, Mass., was reported
to have been rocked by a bomb
blast Tuesday night while
students from the University of
the Americas rioted outside the
Naval Security Station in
Washington, D.C.
To coordinate information
flow, the NSA has set up a stirke
central in its offices in
Washington, D.C. Three
regional strike information
centers have also been
established: the Colorado Daily
at the University of Colorado in
Boulder, Rollins College in
Winter Park, Fla.; and the
University of Illinois at
Champaign. Additionally,
College Press Service in
Denver, Colorado, is working
with NSA to coordinate news for
the duration of the protests.
April 24, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 11
Golfers, Netmen Win
UW-Parkside varsity teams
continue to do well as the
golfers were 4-1 after two
outings in multi-team matches
and the tennis squad had
rebounded with a 13-1
humiliation of Dominican after
three losses.
And the trackmen continued
to be among the most successful
of Parkside teams, at least on
an individual basis, as the
Rangers cracked four school
records at the Stevens Point
Relays, where no team scores
were kept.
Coach Steve Stephens' golf
six-man golf squad carded a
472, ten strokes back of a wellbalanced
UW-Whitewater team,
to take second in a
quadrangular at Pets
Wednesday.
UW-Milwaukee, a surprise
winner over the Rangers'
Saturday opponent, Northwestern,
in an earlier meet, was
third with 481 while Dominican,
with only five men playing,
scored 475.
The Rangers were led by Tom
Feiner, with a two over par 73
while Tom Bothe had a 75 and
Jim Vakos a 76. They'll face
Northern Illinois and Bradley
today'at DeKalb, 111., and then
return home to Pets to meet
Carthage, Loyola and
Whitewater at 1 p.m.
Wednesday. Parkside will go on
the road again Friday and meet
Roosevelt University at
Chicago.
The Ranger tennis squad
Hurley freshman Steve Erspamer
has been a key man for
UW-Parkside this year in the
short relays and is beginning to
come into his own in the 100-
yard dash. The former State
Class B sprint king has stopped
the clocks at 9.7 in the century,
that effort coming as he took
second in the Arkansas Tech
Relays on the Rangers' spring
trip.
erupted after a 6-3 lo ss to UWGreen
Bay Saturday and
hammered Dominican 13-1
Monday.
Mike Safago has been playing
at No. l singles with Dan
Mieczkowski and Skip Jones at
No. 2 and No. 3. But everyone
got into action for Coach Dick
Frecka's squad against"
Dominican and the results were
pleasing as the Rangers showed
some spark for the first time.
The tennismen will host
Milton at 1 p.m. Wednesday at
the Pershing Courts in Racine
before going on the road Friday
and Saturday against
Dominican and St. Norbert.
The trackmen broke records
right and left at the Stevens
Point Relays as they won the
four mile relay in a school
record 17:48 with Lucian Rosa,
Jim McFadden, Dennis Biel and
Rudy Alvarez teaming up.
Rosa also set a school mark at
six miles as he won easily in
30:16.2. The Rangers placed in
every relay they entered, with
the 440, 880, mile, sprint and
distance medley and two mile
Varsity Club to hold
Smoker The newly-formed National
Varsity Club of the University
of Wisconsin-Parkside will
sponsor a get-acquainted
smoker at 7:30 p.m. Monday at
the Kenosha Holiday Inn.
The smoker is open to the
public and is designed to offer
those people who want to
support intercollegiate athletics
at Parkside a chance to join the
club.
Coaches and staff members
from Parkside, as well as
members of the National
Varsity Club, will be on hand to
greet those interested in the
organization, club president
Dario Madrigrano said.
Members met two assistant
coaches from the Chicago
Bears, Zeke Bratkowski and
Bill George, this last week and
will meet more such
personalities, in both the
professional and collegiate
athletic worlds, at luncheons
and smokers in the coming
months.
Skip Jones, Villa Park, III.,
freshman, is a key man for
Coach Dick Frecka's tennis
squad as the Rangers resume
heavy action this week with
meets against Milton,
Dominican and St. Norbert.
relay squads all garnering
places in the non-scoring affair.
Parkside will go up against
some of the toughest
competition in the nation
Friday and Saturday when a
select group of Rangers travels
to the Drake Relays at Des
Moines, Iowa.
Rosa is almost sure to go and
will likely be entered in the
marathon, one of the two events
(the other is the 10,000 meters)
that he'll be running at Munich.
Puckster Named to Hockey Camp
Bill Westerlund, Twin Lakes
sophomore and founder of the
Univeristy of Wisconsin-
Parkside Hockey Club, has been
named assistant instructor and
senior counselor for the Cooper
of Canada Hockey Camp' in
Oakville, Ont.
Westerlund was a key figure
in the club sports program and
the hockey club at Parkside, not
only on the ice but off it as well
as he and club president Tim
Krimmel promoted and
organized every day and every
week of the season.
Certainly Westerlund was
picked for the instructor's
position at the prestigious
hockey camp for this reason.
People in the hockey world have
a way of finding out who the
bright young men of the sport
are, who can carry it on to
bigger and better things, and
perhaps, whose names will
become household words
because they are associated
with hockey.
Westerlund kind of l ooks at it
that way, and regards the
weeks (July 19 through August
26) to be spent at the camp as a
great challenge as well as a
great opportunity.
"I look on this position as a
way to get a foothold in
hockey," Westerlund says.
"This way I can try to share my
knowledge with kids and at the
same time work with other
young adults who share my
interest and background in
hockey.
"The exchange of knowledge
among us — there will be others
there from the Dakotas to
Boston — should benefit me
greatly."
But maybe Westerlund wasn't
picked for the job only because
of his organizational ability,
although he- nearly
singlehandedly held the club
together when a losing record in
1970-71 may have made it ripe
for extinction.
Westerlund is a winner. He
knows what it means to be a
winner hecause his team just
finished its season with an 18-2-
1. But he's more of a winner —
and this is most important in
hockey or in any sport as
Cooper Camp director Paul
Roach so well knows — be cause
he knows what it is to lose.
The mark of a champ, sure,
Bill Westerlund has it. The
philosophy of Cooper — to build
a camp around experienced
coaches and staff members who
just want to teach kids — should
be right up his alley.
Bill's one of six outstanding
collegians who will be serving in
the camp, learning as they
teach and maybe, just maybe,
taking that giant step which will
lead to a career of some kind in
the wonderful world of hockey.
Five-time U.S. table tennis champion, D. J.
Lee, will present a free demonstration at the UWP
Activities Building Friday (April 28) at 2 P.M.
Lee, a 31 year old Korean-born American
citizen, has won every major U.S. tournament
several times, and has never been beaten by an
American in match play in the seven years he has
been in this country. He was South Korean champ
five years.
Lee recently was featured on national
television while playing as No. 1 player for the
U.S. in its matches against the visiting Chinese
team.
His exhibition at UW-P will include serious
play against the Ohio champion, as well as a
demonstration of trick shots and exhibitions with
Parkside players during which he will use a scrub
brush as a paddle while sitting in a chair.
THE RANCH CREATIONS
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• •——
Page 12 NEWSCOPE April 24,1972
more on PAB
president or just working for the
office. The Activities Board
Executive Council makes the
decision and then I go back to
my office and do publicity,
that's about all.
NS: Are all students
employed at the Activities
Office on PAB?
Rudat: I th ink now they are. Up
until a few months ago they
weren't.
NS: Is that sort of a
requirement that if y ou work in
the Student activities Office you
have to be a member of PAB?
Rudat: No. As a matter of fact
there's only four of us on the
Executive Council who are
employed by the Student
Activities Office and two of us
will be leaving at the end of this
year.
For example, Jim Croxford is
up there just doing books and
things. And in the constitution
instead of having our own
treasurer we figured the guy
that's hired by the office should
be the treasurer because he's
right there. He has all the books
so he sits on the Executive
Council, but as treasurer he
doesn't have a vote.
NS: Are you familiar with the
way Green Bay operates their
programs? Well, they operate
on the basis of trying to bring in
as many things as they can at
the lowest price, so they sort of
avoid big groups and bring in
small bands that are well known
that they can get at a cheaper
price.
Rudat: That's come out at the
Executive Council that we'd
like to see more mini-concerts.
That's going to happen next
year. The idea you're saying is
that if we forget the major
(Continued from Page 8)
things that people can see in
Chicago or Milwaukee and just
get a number of smaller, miniconcerts
here. Yeah, but we
have a problem too; where can
we put on the mini-concert?
When we get our fieldhouse
there's going to be a lot we can
do.
NS: I mean groups like Mason
Proffit you can get at a much
cheaper rate than Chicago.
Rudat: I don't think they'd go
that good around here.
Carthage just had them.
NS: Is there any poll taken to
decide who to bring in?
Rudat: Poll taken?
NS: Of any kind, I mean like I
don't understand; is it just that
you think that a group would go
over or what?
Rudat: Yeah. It's a very well
known act (Jose Greco the
flamenco dancer) and its different
and it's something that
we're doing just for the
Parkside community in general
including faculty and staff too.
You see we program for all of
Parkside, and students are
going to like this too. There are
dance classes here. I don't know
if there's any dance class as
such, but I imagine there's
some students interested,
theatre students, things like
that. And he puts on quite a
show. It's a good show, it's
going to be interesting.
I know you didn't like John
Denver, but the people there
liked him. I seriously question
your idea of just people out on a
Saturday night date idea of it.
You see, we really want to
program for everybody on the
campus. That means we'll
program things for you as well
as others, not just the majority
but the minority too. There are
an awful lot of older students on
this campus. As a matter of fact
we're gonna have Buddy Rich
again. I don't know what you
think of t hat but he has sold out.
We have had a lot of older
students who have come up to
our office right after ShaNaNa
asking for Buddy Rich tickets.
NS: Is Jose Greco going to
any other colleges?
Rudat: Yeah, he's going up to
Whitewater.
NS: I don't understand who
that would appeal to.
Rudta: Right, we had members
on the board who . . .
NS: There's never any poll taken.
Three or four people get
together and say, 'I don't think
that'll go over?'
Rudat: You can't really go that
much by polls or canvasses.
First of all the students don't fill
them out and secondly just
because you see a list of things
. . you see, we have to get
what's available.
NS: I understand that. I
understand you can't just pick
your favorite group and we'll
see if we can get them, but. . .
Rudat: Usually by the time
when they finally become available
you know, it's pretty close
where you really don't have that
much time to do it.
NS: I mean, I don't see how you
can sit and say that you don't
think Mason Proffit would go
over but . . .
Rudat: I didn't say I didn't
think, I said the general
concensus.
NS: Alright, I don't see how the
general concensus is that
Mason Proffit probably
wouldn't go over but Jose Greco
will.
Rudat: It's two different things
by the way.
NS: It's attractions for
students.
Rudat: I think we reflect the
interests of the students. We
have all sorts of different
students on the board and we
have a lot more members
putting input into our
organization than say the
Student Government, I would
think. They have a set number
of senators.
NS: When you choose a group
then, do you base it on some
kind of musical standard or
popularity?
Rudat: Popularity, what
they ve done, what they might
do you know. We check a lot of
national sales, Billboard, stuff
like that. Where they'veplayed.
You know if a group has
bombed in the last three places
it isn't really a great idea to
bring them in here.
NS: In other words, Frank
Zappa would never come to
Parkside?
Rudat: I don't know, it's hard to
say. I don't think so. Okay, you
know we're talking about tastes
of music too.
NS: That's what I'm trying to
find out.
Rudat: When it comes to miniconcerts
as of next year I could
see more of that come in, but I
think for right now you have to
throw major concerts. Okay we
brought in ShaNaNa. And let's
face it, Newscope gave it a real
good review, one of the few
things we've don that's gotten a
good review and then it turns
out to be one of the things that
we've lost the most money on.
NS: Is Your Father's Mustache
going to be at the end of the year
thing?
Rudat: Yeah. They're going to
come back for part of the first
night and I think we're going to
try a free blues concert in the
afternoon, blues or really hard
rock. I wanted to get a hard
rock band that night, but it
seems some of the members
don't want it.
NS: I was just wondering why
things like at The End last year
there was Your Father's
Mustache and we're getting
them again this year, and
Buddy Rich is a repeat and
that's a major concert, isn't it?
Rudat: Well I wouldn't call
Your Father's Mustache a
major concert. It's one of the
bands that play. We might even
have a German band out there
this year. We're putting on
every kind we can get,
something for everybody. Most
of th e people just go there to get
drunk. I got drunk listening to
Your Father's Mustache. I
couldn't stand them sober, but
after I got drunk I didn't mind
them. What the hell.
NS: Is it going to be any
different from last year?
Rudat: It's hard to say, it's still
being planned and I haven't
been to many meetings of the
Special Events committee yet.
We'd like to get more student
VI gWlUCUUV/UlJ 111 ISU 11.
'AAftAiunwnwnaimMmifui»mfm»uiajnuiaAwji»Mwwm»wii
SCHLITZ m—
Vodka full quart.
Gin full quart
Paul Masson
Pott Rum—
full quart— - $449
-fifth $319
Would your club or organization
like a
Wine Tasting
Contact Fred Cook, 637-4101 1
Your complete home
wine making center.
Andre Cold Duck
fifth
Roma Cianti
fifth
$J50
$*|05
fWhere the fun starts before the party begins."
Pfices good through Sundav Anrik*n»h
nantTf MTrSTGATE 0N H,GHWAY 20- WASH.MGTON AVENUE AND 0H.0 STREET
DAILY 9 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY • SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
NS: Have you tried?
Rudat: Well, we're going to
have to send out letters or I'm
going to have to get on the
phone. Booths and things. What
I would like to get is one of those
deals with the tank; you know,
you throw a ball and a chick
falls in the water. Like if you
guys could dig up something
like that and wanted to bring it
in there I don't see any hassle.
NS: If a student organization
wanted to put something on
they'd first go to PAB? (
Rudat: Right.
NS: Do you think the students
accept PAB?
Rudat: Well the average of 600
students attending our dances
seem to accept it. And 50 o r so
people at the Whiteskellar seem
to accept it. So what can I say?
I guess the average student
calls for polls, well we had that.
We tried that with the films this
year. Okay, there was a lot of
students that showed up, but not
the vast majority. But then does
the vast majority go to the polls
to vote for Student
Government? I think that it's
fantastic that with the apathy
on this campus that we get that
many people into the
Whiteskellar, that's why I wish
Newscope would point that out
to the students. You know,
Student Government's trying to
bring this campus together, so
are we, socially.
Wolfe
to Lecture
on Diet
Dr. George Wolfe,
coordinator of physical
education at the University of
Wisconsin-Parkside, will
conduct a public lecture at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at Room 104,
Kenosha campus, on diet and
weight control. The lecture is
open to the public at no charge.
jM* <d'
famous for CARL'S PIZZA
9" - 12" - 14" - 16". 4
ALSO
In Four Sizes
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA
• SEA EOOD • SANDWICHES
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY
"YOU KIHC, . . . W E B R I N G " L 657-9843 or
658-4922
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 15, April 24, 1972
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1972-04-24
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
concerned students coalition
earth day
gaylord nelson
lectures
symposium
-
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23052c6c36d044015c6c52677d568ef6
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Photo Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Photos documenting the history of UW-Parkside.
Subject
The topic of the resource
History of Parkside
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Collection
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC002
Original Location
Series, box, and folder number of original resource.
UWP Archival Collection 02. Box 22 Folder 20
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
UWPAC002_P_0989
Title
A name given to the resource
Dr. E. Reed Gilbert
Description
An account of the resource
Dr. Gilbert, Director of the Spring Green Wisconsin Mime Company, was a guest lecturer at UW-Parkside in the Humanistic Studies Division. Left to right: Dr. Gilbert, Jeff Koch, Robert Schrader and Jim Garramone.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1972-05-03
Subject
The topic of the resource
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Events
Lectures
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
UW-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
events
lectures
-
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dacee43aa0517d384f045a39668969f5
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Photo Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Photos documenting the history of UW-Parkside.
Subject
The topic of the resource
History of Parkside
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Collection
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC002
Original Location
Series, box, and folder number of original resource.
UWP Archival Collection 02. Box 22 Folder 16
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
UWPAC002_P_0988
Title
A name given to the resource
Harry Edwards
Description
An account of the resource
Sociologist and civil rights activist Harry Edwards spoke at UW-Parkside on January 13th, 1989. He was the keynote speaker at a symposium entitled "The Changing Character of Institutional Racism in Higher Education."
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1989-01-13
Subject
The topic of the resource
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Events
Lectures
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
UW-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
events
lectures
-
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4619cd6f96dbefeb373dedf0abbeec67
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Photo Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Photos documenting the history of UW-Parkside.
Subject
The topic of the resource
History of Parkside
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Collection
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC002
Original Location
Series, box, and folder number of original resource.
UWP Archival Collection 02. Box 22 Folder 7
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
UWPAC002_P_0987
Title
A name given to the resource
Ben Bradlee
Description
An account of the resource
Ben Bradlee, executive editor at the Washington Post, spoke at UW-Parkside on March 27th, 1977. Bradlee is pictured on the left, speaking to Chancellor Alan Guskin.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1977-03-27
Subject
The topic of the resource
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Events
Lectures
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
UW-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
events
lectures
-
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bde1572050a11e23c14f87633b3d1b29
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Photo Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Photos documenting the history of UW-Parkside.
Subject
The topic of the resource
History of Parkside
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Collection
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC002
Original Location
Series, box, and folder number of original resource.
UWP Archival Collection 02. Box 22 Folder 2
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
UWPAC002_P_0986
Title
A name given to the resource
Dwight Allen
Description
An account of the resource
Dean of the University of Massachusetts School of Education Dwight Allen spoke at UW-Parkside on February 16th, 1972. His lecture was entitled "Making the Future of Education Less Certain." Allen is pictured speaking to students while seated.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1972-02-16
Subject
The topic of the resource
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Events
Lectures
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
UW-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
events
lectures
-
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9f5dca94722947f3f0348ec845156b91
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Photo Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Photos documenting the history of UW-Parkside.
Subject
The topic of the resource
History of Parkside
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Collection
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC002
Original Location
Series, box, and folder number of original resource.
UWP Archival Collection 02. Box 22 Folder 6
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
UWPAC002_P_0985
Title
A name given to the resource
Julian Bond
Description
An account of the resource
Social activist and civil rights leader Julian Bond spoke at UW-Parkside on May 8th, 1972. An article about the event appeared in the Racine Journal Times on May 9th, 1972.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1972-05-08
Subject
The topic of the resource
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Events
Lectures
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
UW-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
events
lectures
-
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f09f0bc2eb2399d7b367b425ef8c2df9
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Photo Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Photos documenting the history of UW-Parkside.
Subject
The topic of the resource
History of Parkside
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Collection
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC002
Original Location
Series, box, and folder number of original resource.
UWP Archival Collection 02. Box 22 Folder 1
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
UWPAC002_P_0984
Title
A name given to the resource
Reverend Ralph Abernathy
Description
An account of the resource
Chancellor Alan Guskin meets with Reverend Abernathy and Abisola Gallagher. Reverend Abernathy appeared on campus to speak on February 4th, 1976. Left to right: Reverend Ralph Abernathy, Chancellor Alan Guskin and Abisola Gallagher.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1976-02-04
Subject
The topic of the resource
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Events
Lectures
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
UW-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
events
lectures
-
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6669d470453a5bfc3361014a1dcd97fb
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Photo Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Photos documenting the history of UW-Parkside.
Subject
The topic of the resource
History of Parkside
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Collection
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC002
Original Location
Series, box, and folder number of original resource.
UWP Archival Collection 02. Box 22 Folder 35
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
UWPAC002_P_0983
Title
A name given to the resource
Victor Reuther
Description
An account of the resource
Noted author and labor organizer, Victor G. Reuther, spoke at UW-Parkside as part of a public forum called "Unions and the Challenges of the '80s."
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1981-11-17
Subject
The topic of the resource
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Events
Lectures
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
UW-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
events
lectures
-
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1dd851aa85b105237836c4823f94d06e
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Photo Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Photos documenting the history of UW-Parkside.
Subject
The topic of the resource
History of Parkside
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Collection
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC002
Original Location
Series, box, and folder number of original resource.
UWP Archival Collection 02. Box 22 Folder 30
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
UWPAC002_P_0982
Title
A name given to the resource
James Liddy
Description
An account of the resource
Irish Poet James Liddy (left) presented a poetry reading at UW-Parkside on April 6th, 1971. Liddy also spent a year as a visiting professor at UW-Parkside.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1971-04-06
Subject
The topic of the resource
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Events
Lectures
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
UW-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
events
lectures