yaf head claims class cancelled

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THE UWM POST Vol. XIV No. 11 University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Tuesday, October 2] 1969 YAF head claims class cancelled Young Americans for Free- dom (YAF) chairman Tom Hig- deon falsely accused a teacher of failure to hold a class dur- ing last Wednesday's morator- ium on Vietnam, it was re- ported. Gerhard Rauscher, chairman of the German department, said Higdon made the accusation in an appearance on WITI-TV Wednesday night. According to Rauscher, Higdon said during the TV interview that his Ger- man class had been cancelled. "The class was held as sched- uled," Rauscher added, "but Mr. Higdon was not in class." Higdon told a Post reporter Monday that he had apparen- tly misinterpreted some state- ments made by his instructor. "To the best of my knowle- dge," he said, "she said the class would be cancelled." Mrs. Desa Sunarich, the Ger- man teaching assistant accused by Higdon, denied making such a statement. "I never said that the class would be cancelled," she said. "I told Mr. Higdon that if I wanted to cancel the class, it was within my power to do so. The statement was a purely hypothetical remark. Mr. Higdon made a false st- atement." Rauscher said the German department demanded a letter of "retraction and apology" from Higdon. Higdon complied, and Rauscher said he received the letter Monday and will forward it, along with a cover letter of explanation, to the deans of student affairs and the college PSE introduces organization bill Pi Sigma Epsilon fraternity has suggested a second bill to the University Student Senate to make groups responsible for the actions of their members during organization sponsored events, PSE president John Hanser said this week. Hanser said the first USS bill was illegal and so was re- jected by USS. He said that the group ' 'made sure the new bill was legal and did not deny the constitutional rights of any gr- oup." The original bill in USS would have allowed revocation of the charter of student organization if two or more of its mem- bers are convicted of class- room disruptions. Hanser said he considered actions which "break regents" rules or city or state laws suf- ficient reason for the repeal of an organizations' charter and rights to use University facilities. Hanser and another PSE member, Chris Potter, defen- ded the group's recent petition to expell SDS from campus Minister denied drivers license Rev. Hudson B. Phillips, a campus minister here, has been denied a Wisconsin driver's license because he refused to indicate his race on the license application form. Phillips, who recently came from Nebraska, said that, al- though he has an anglo-saxon ancestry, he could only assume what his race was and would not "furnish that assumption to the state as fact." Phillips turned in his Neb- raska driver's license when he took and passed the Wiscon- sin driver's license test and is now left without any. However,, he said his wife still retains her Nebraska dri- vers' license. A spokesman for the state bureau of driver control said that the applicant's race is re- quested for identification pur- poses and that refusing to gr- ant a license to Phillips for his failure to indicate his race is proper procedure under st- ate law. Monday night on WOKY radio station's "Wokey Talky." Hanser said that the peti- tion was prompted by a fee- ling of a "need for action." He chargedthat the administra- tion, "is somewhat powerless and a little unwilling" to han- dle the problem of disruptions. Hanser claimed that some 1200 signatures on the petition were gathered in "about ei- ght hours." He said this re- sponse convinced the fraternity that there was "definite stu- dent support" for their stand. Committee will review student case Don Nelson and Thomas Sch- mitt, accused of disrupting a class here on Sept. 25, must reply to the charges of the student conduct hearing com- mittee by Oct. 25, according to Ruth Milofsky, chairman of the committee and assistant pro- fessor of art here. The committee held a closed meeting Monday to discuss pro- ceedural matters. She said that the committee will act as an impartial jury in the hearing, with representatives of the ad- ministration and deans acting as the prosecutors and the two men the defendants. The hear- ing will be open. The only charge before the committee at this time is the disruption of the class, she said. The committee has received a letter from David Robinson, dean of student affairs, char- ging that the students have vio- lated at least one statute of the University, chapter 5, sec- tion 4C, which defines disrup- tions. They have also received a formal complaint from Wil- liam McHugh, the anthropology professor whose class was en- tered. Robinson said that Schmitt will be appearing in county court before Judge Seraphim on Tuesday in connection with an alleged bullhorn violation in the union on the same day. John Fuerst also charged with a bull- horn violation will appear be- fore Judge Duffy on Nov. 21. of letters and science. "As far as I'm concerned," Rauscher said, "this letter and my cover letter will close the matter." YAF had previously sent a letter to Chancellor J. Martin Klotsche threatening "legalac- tion" if classes Were not held as scheduled on Wednesday. In the letter, Richard Wri- ght, chairman of YAF for Wis- consin, sa i(j : "We have in- formation that several teachers are intending to interrupt their classroom schedules on Wed- nesday, October '15...Such ac- tions clearly violate the rights of the majority of students and we will take the matter to the courts unless we are satisfied that the school is performing its responsibilities to the maj- ority of students." The letter went on to list six faculty members whom YAF suspected of planning to can- cel classes. Greenfield called Higdon a "malicious, petty young man who's just trying to make tr- ouble." He suggested that Hig- don return to the television station and publicly retract his remark. Latinos Unidos, an organization of Latin American students he- re held a rally and march to support the grape boycott. The boycott is being held to impr- ove wages and working conditi- ons of migrant workers. The group started out at the Un- ion and marched to the Kohl's store on Oakland Avenue, two block past Capitol Drive, where they picketed. The group of 40 marchers included members of Latinos Unidos, United Farm Workers and Students for a Democratic Society. Latin American students here participate in boycott of grapes by Kathe Magayne of the Post staff Chanting "don't buy grapes" and "end the war on the poor; start the war on the rich," a group of about 40 march- ers picketed the Kohl's food store in Shorewood Friday ni- ght. The erouD leavine from UWM included members of Latinos Unidos, United Farm Workers and the Students for a Demo- cratic Society. Kohl's stores at Point Loo- mis and Capitol Court were al- so picketed by other groups supporting the grape boycott. wnen me marcners reached Kohl's they handed out leaf- lets explaining the boycott and told patrons of the store that "Kohl's doesn't care about st- arving children; they only want money." Patrons were encour- aged to do their shopping at A & P which supports the boycott. Bill Smith, assistant co-or- dinator of the Wisconsin Grape Boycott committee, said that this was the fourth year of the boycott and that he is opti- mistic. "Wisconsin residents bought 41% less grapes than thev did last year," Smith said. Smith also said that grapes had been purchased and were being tested for pesticides. He said the results may be of val- ue in discouraging grape buy- ers. Index Muelver's Mullings P. 2 Building approved P. 3 Panthers win? P. 4 Homecoming cometh P. 8

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THE UWM POST Vol. XIV No. 11 University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Tuesday, October 2] 1969

YAF head claims class cancelled Young Americans for Free­

dom (YAF) chairman Tom Hig-deon falsely accused a teacher of failure to hold a class dur­ing last Wednesday's morator­ium on Vietnam, it was re­ported.

Gerhard Rauscher, chairman of the German department, said Higdon made the accusation in an appearance on WITI-TV Wednesday night. According to Rauscher, Higdon said during the TV interview that his Ger­man class had been cancelled. "The class was held as sched­uled," Rauscher added, "but Mr. Higdon was not in class."

Higdon told a Post reporter Monday that he had apparen­tly misinterpreted some state­ments made by his instructor. "To the best of my knowle­

dge," he said, "she said the class would be cancelled."

Mrs. Desa Sunarich, the Ger­man teaching assistant accused by Higdon, denied making such a statement. "I never said that the class would be cancelled," she said. "I told Mr. Higdon that if I wanted to cancel the class, it was within my power to do so. The statement was a purely hypothetical remark. Mr. Higdon made a false st­atement."

Rauscher said the German department demanded a letter of "retraction and apology" from Higdon. Higdon complied, and Rauscher said he received the letter Monday and will forward it, along with a cover letter of explanation, to the deans of student affairs and the college

PSE introduces organization bill

Pi Sigma Epsilon fraternity has suggested a second bill to the University Student Senate to make groups responsible for the actions of their members during organization sponsored events, PSE president John Hanser said this week.

Hanser said the first USS bill was illegal and so was re­jected by USS. He said that the group ' 'made sure the new bill was legal and did not deny the constitutional rights of any gr­oup."

The original bill in USS would have allowed revocation of the charter of student organization if two or more of its mem­bers are convicted of class­room disruptions.

Hanser said he considered actions which "break regents" rules or city or state laws suf­ficient reason for the repeal of an organizations' charter and rights to use University facilities.

Hanser and another PSE member, Chris Potter, defen­ded the group's recent petition to expell SDS from campus

Minister denied drivers license

Rev. Hudson B. Phillips, a campus minister here, has been denied a Wisconsin driver's license because he refused to indicate his race on the license application form.

Phillips, who recently came from Nebraska, said that, al­though he has an anglo-saxon ancestry, he could only assume what his race was and would not "furnish that assumption to the state as fact."

Phillips turned in his Neb­raska driver's license when he took and passed the Wiscon­sin driver's license test and is now left without any.

However,, he said his wife still retains her Nebraska dri­vers' license.

A spokesman for the state bureau of driver control said that the applicant's race is re­quested for identification pur­poses and that refusing to gr­ant a license to Phillips for his failure to indicate his race is proper procedure under st­ate law.

Monday night on WOKY radio station's "Wokey Talky."

Hanser said that the peti­tion was prompted by a fee­ling of a "need for action." He chargedthat the administra­tion, "is somewhat powerless and a little unwilling" to han­dle the problem of disruptions.

Hanser claimed that some • 1200 signatures on the petition were gathered in "about ei­ght hours." He said this re­sponse convinced the fraternity that there was "definite stu­dent support" for their stand.

Committee will review student case

Don Nelson and Thomas Sch­mitt, accused of disrupting a class here on Sept. 25, must reply to the charges of the student conduct hearing com­mittee by Oct. 25, according to Ruth Milofsky, chairman of the committee and assistant pro­fessor of art here.

The committee held a closed meeting Monday to discuss pro-ceedural matters. She said that the committee will act as an impartial jury in the hearing, with representatives of the ad­ministration and deans acting as the prosecutors and the two men the defendants. The hear­ing will be open.

The only charge before the committee at this time is the disruption of the class, she said. The committee has received a letter from David Robinson, dean of student affairs, char­ging that the students have vio­lated at least one statute of the University, chapter 5, sec­tion 4C, which defines disrup­tions. They have also received a formal complaint from Wil­liam McHugh, the anthropology professor whose class was en­tered.

Robinson said that Schmitt will be appearing in county court before Judge Seraphim on Tuesday in connection with an alleged bullhorn violation in the union on the same day. John Fuerst also charged with a bull­horn violation will appear be­fore Judge Duffy on Nov. 21.

of letters and science. "As far as I'm concerned,"

Rauscher said, "this letter and my cover letter will close the matter."

YAF had previously sent a letter to Chancellor J. Martin Klotsche threatening "legalac­tion" if classes Were not held as scheduled on Wednesday.

In the letter, Richard Wri­ght, chairman of YAF for Wis­

consin, s ai(j : "We have in­formation that several teachers are intending to interrupt their classroom schedules on Wed­nesday, October '15...Such ac­tions clearly violate the rights of the majority of students and we will take the matter to the courts unless we are satisfied that the school is performing its responsibilities to the maj­ority of students."

The letter went on to list six faculty members whom YAF suspected of planning to can­cel classes.

Greenfield called Higdon a "malicious, petty young man who's just trying to make tr­ouble." He suggested that Hig­don return to the television station and publicly retract his remark.

Latinos Unidos, an organization of Latin American students he­re held a rally and march to support the grape boycott. The boycott is being held to impr­ove wages and working conditi­

ons of migrant workers. The group started out at the Un­ion and marched to the Kohl's store on Oakland Avenue, two block past Capitol Drive, where

they picketed. The group of 40 marchers included members of Latinos Unidos, United Farm Workers and Students for a Democratic Society.

Latin American students here participate in boycott of grapes

by Kathe Magayne of the Post staff

Chanting "don't buy grapes" and "end the war on the poor; start the war on the rich," a group of about 40 march­ers picketed the Kohl's food store in Shorewood Friday ni­ght.

The erouD leavine from UWM included members of Latinos

Unidos, United Farm Workers and the Students for a Demo­cratic Society.

Kohl's stores at Point Loo-mis and Capitol Court were al­so picketed by other groups supporting the grape boycott.

wnen me marcners reached Kohl's they handed out leaf­lets explaining the boycott and told patrons of the store that "Kohl's doesn't care about st­arving children; they only want money." Patrons were encour­aged to do their shopping at A & P which supports the boycott.

Bill Smith, assistant co-or-dinator of the Wisconsin Grape Boycott committee, said that this was the fourth year of the boycott and that he is opti­mistic. "Wisconsin residents bought 41% less grapes than thev did last year," Smith said.

Smith also said that grapes had been purchased and were being tested for pesticides. He said the results may be of val­ue in discouraging grape buy­ers.

Index Muelver's Mullings P. 2

Building approved P. 3

Panthers win? P. 4

Homecoming cometh P. 8

Page 2 THE UWM POST Tuesday, October 21,1969

Letters to the editor An Anarchist violence

To the editor: The Anarchists did not hurl the bomb at the

Chicago Haymarket demonstration of 1887 to inaugurate the labor action for a still elusive 8 hour day. And this contention of the parti­sans earned eloquent affirmation from Illi­nois Governor John Peter Altgeld, celebrated by Vachel Lindsay in a splendid elegy "The Eagle Forgotten" for his courage in granting pardon to the anarchist survivors of a mon­strous frame-up and public hangings.

But the anarchists did "loose wild words that have not Thee in awe," laying themselves wide open for agents provocateurs to do their thing as men committed solely to the sweet price of hire. For flagrant language Johahn Most, a Chicago-Milwaukee based anarchist, spoke most colorfully about the prospects for capitalists: "Extirpate the miserable bro­od!"

Random acts of violence and destruction, al­ong with the "beat em up" philosophy extol­led by Mark Rudd, have never been, in the Marxist (and Maoist) view, a substitute for serious educational and prganidational (sic) study-labor designed to win a profound majority of the working-class under the umbrella of socialism and Party leadership. Random acts andterror, like judicial frame-ups, only invite revulsion, anger, fear, and repression, a big boost for the police, and above all, isolate the individualist "propagandists of the deed" from the mass of family-bearing workers.

Militant civil rights, welfare, and antiwar-demonstrations prepared to offer disciplined re­sistance to police and klan attacks are a horse

of a different color. Yet it is precisely the mischief of capitalist Democrats in harnessing these movements, by piecing-off their primi­tive leaders, that severely obstructs marshal­ling these forces under the leadership of a revolutionary socialist political party of the working-class.

Now there emerges, in this impasse, the despair of uneducated upper-class youth, de­eply disappointed with the political passivity of the working-classes trapped in the narrow "bread and butter" solutions of rank oppor­tunists. Hence the emotional, sometimes bril­liant but often theatrical, resort of passionate young men andwomen to violent personal acts and noble "testaments." Anarchism then, of the exploited, or underprivileged, classes.

The nation is paying a price, and will con­tinue to pay, for the severe and universal repressions visited upon the "old" political 'left, for imposing virtual illegality upon mem­bership in the Communist and Marxist socialist parties, for literally organizing a corrupt and venal bureaucracy of parasitical, shallow, and affluent "labor statesmen" to act as political policemen in the unions, for brutally freezing-out all opposition independent parties from the parliamentary contests to guarantee the sop-dealing Democrat -Republican coalition for a century of wars. New forces are groping for some road to political change in a bought-and-paid for closed society. Anarchism and random violence are manifestations.

James E. Boulton, Progressive Workers Committee

(Maoist)

Indignation aroused

AN OPEN LETTER TO 'A CITIZEN, A PARENT, A TAX PAYER.'

It is hard for me to express clearly what I think about your remarks. But, if an article "regarding faculty members discussing the moratorium arouses (your) indignation," then your letter arouses mine.

I can only assume that your ire was aroused, not by the article itself, but by its contents. That is, you were angered by faculty members discussing the moratorium. Note that the faculty members merely discussed the moratorium; they did not approve, condone or sanction it. Neither did they condemn it; they merely discussed the possibility of certain members being sympathetic and what those individuals might do to avoid outright cancellations of clas­ses. May I be so bold as to inquire what is so wrong with talking about the moratorium? Are our faculty members human beings first or teachers first? Or are professors not al­lowed to have consciences. Are professors not allowed to disagree with the pedantic drop­pings of some of their student's parent?' Be clear on this, being a teacher is not mut­ually exclusive with having a conscience and if anyone whatsoever may express an opinion (as you did in your letter), so can a teacher. The day when any person can tell a college professor what to say and when and where to say it will witness the final triumph of low grade morons in our government. What is more, these opinions, whichsurely you cannot forbid teachers to have, were expressed, not to students, but to other faculty, regarding the moratorium.* Can you seriously desire to have teachers express only your own opinions and, simultaneously, accept the consequence mat whatever of the student's intellectual capacity managed to survive high school will atrophy from lack of challenge? You can't have your cake and eat it too, the expression goes.

Secondly, you attack the goal of the mora­torium as pointless because everyone, inclu­ding Nixon, is, in fact, aware of the resis­tance. The blundering irrationality of that state­ment is (contemptible. If he was so aware as you believe,is he not some kind of tyrant for going against the will of so many? If he is no tyrant, then he surely is not aware of the extent of disapproval. Moreover, it is

not resistance, per se, which is at issue, but the right of people to speak without penalty on issues which are contemporary. Do you wish to deny this right? (There is one place where this right is believed to be denied and that place is communist Russia.)

Which brings up your third point: that the Vietnam issue is "hackneyed." Your monstrous lack of sensitivity and social perspective on this point is horrifying. Are the lives of some 40 thousand dead sons, husbands, brothers and friends trite? And the 200,000 maimed and injured - are they to be passed over as hack­neyed issues? I feventlv hope you can't mean this. (Don't forget that Hitler thought the "Jew­ish Problem" was a hackneyed issue also).

Fourthly, you feel this action was a justi­fication for a group's existence. But, the group you startedto talk about.the organizers of the moratorium program, are faculty members. Do professors have to justify their presence on campus? Do you really mean what you say?

Fifthly, you feel the moratorium program wo­uld deprive students of their right to learn. Since they have the choice to attend or not, your statement is sheer nonsense. However, what could be more instructive than discussion regarding vital issues of the day, issues in which your own child, like it or not, is inti­mately involved. Or would you wish students to be socially unaware, and, thus, unableto cope with social problems.

Let's face it, no one, not even you, can peti­tion to have the right of expression denied to anyone. Whether that person be faculty, student, laborer, or even parent. But, beyond that, your awarenessof what the moratorium is in terms of its organization, its goals, its meaningfulness, you were sadly misinformed assuming you were informed at all. In addi­tion, your blundering irrationality and unreason­ableness regarding what you will allow others to do, say and think border very near the obscene. If you can seriously maintain the lack of intellectual flexibility on the basis of your lack of information on the moratorium, Vietnam and the purpose of a university, • if you really feel that students ought not be all­owed (or even forced) to think for themselves, then I hope you believe in god because your immortal soul is in danger of petrification.

Steven H. Parker

Muelver's Mullings

Rat ratiocination reveals rat banes

"oy J. L. Muelver of the Post staff

The long arm of the government has reached into the nation's supermarkets to sweep the shelves clean of products contain­ing the artificial sweetner, cyclamate. This drastic step was taken after recent laboratory tests revealed that cyclamates cause cancer in rats.

Setting aside for the moment the compelling question of how many rats, nationwide, buy artificially sweetened softdrinks at their local supermarket, let us ponder the implications of this new government action. I suspect that a powerful new tool has been placed in the hands of anyone with a lab full of rats, an axe to grind, and a little ingenuity. . . .

(The Milwaukee Journal) "The justice department today issued a mandatory recall of all billyclubs and riot sticks. Official sources say that the nation's police departments are to destroy all such weapons currently in their possession before Jan., 1970. The order was based on laboratory experiments which revealed that rats, when clubbed on the head, suffered irreparable damage ranging from loss of hearing to death or permanent disability. . . . "

(Radio announcer, slightly hysterical) "Did you hear. . . DID YOU HEAR . . . that the government, YOUR GOVERNMENT, has banned all — yes, I said ALL -- TV commercials?! It seems the chrome-domes in white smo;ks, the test-tube boys, have found that prolonged exposure to TV commercials gives. . . RATS. . . the crawling heebie-jeebies. Ulcers, convulsions, DEATH. . . can result if the wee beasties get too much of the tube. WELL! What will be the NEXT to go.. . radio newscasts?! HA. . . HA.. . HA. . ."

(TIME magazine article) "Stunned reporters listened in shocked silence last week as President Agnew (AG-noo) made the el­ectrifying announcement that the nation's utilities would close down within the month. "The unprosaic proclamation came close on the heels of a high voltage report by University of Qalflaq . Scientist Baltus Arfunger. Arfunger put a rat in the hot seat and jolted the rotund rodent with common household 110 volt alternating current. The Qalfalqian study revealed that electri­city has a deleterious effect on the nerovous system of the Am­erican Rat . . . "

(WUWM) "Chemical, bio. . . bio. . . bio. . . lodge.. . ickle and knuckler welfare was banned in a summit agreement at jen. . . um. . . Geneva today. "Laboratory experiments showed that three percent of the rats who survived a 100 megaton.. . mejatone?. . . knuckler blast (whew) developed skin cancer from exposure to radio. Active fallout measuring over 380 row.TT what's this?. . . (20-second slience). . . row-ent-guns?. . . (silence, 10 seconds). . . The Panthers lost another game Sat­urday. . . . "

(PLAYBOY Party Joke) "There was a young lady perplexed/ Who swore that her lover was hexed/ "But dear,'he'd expound/ "The scientists found/ That rats lose their tails when sexed!"

(The (National Enquirer) " LIZ AND RICHARD ARE KILLING YOUR CHILDREN! Yes, it's true! Every time Richard jumps in the car and hurries off to a romantic tryst with the voluptuous Liz, his car is spewing poisons into the air your children br­eathe! "Lab experiments have shown that rats DIE when they are placed in the muffler of a car with the engine running! Richard's hectic sexuality is killing us all!"

(SDS leaflet) "The asinine idiocies of the Young Americans for Freedom have backfired on the pig, warmongering, baby-napalming sick capitalist power structure! Dedicated liberation scientists, led by the revolutionary high school sophomoreHarvey Glutz, have discovered that rats on a restricted diet of toilet paper and YAF leaflets develop middleclass racist attitudes and reactionary Bircher police brutality tendencies. . . . "

(YAF leaflet) "Vote with your ass! The only good commie is a dead commie! Better dead than red! SDS is vulgar! Pinko leftist comsymp rats are more prone to syphilis than red-white-and-blue star-spangled patriotic rats who live on a diet of Cali­fornia grapes and get only American, (un) social (ist) diseases!"

(The UWM Post) "Bulletin! The English department was dis­banded yesterday by the board of regents. Laboratory experi­ments proved that - atory experiments proved that courses in sophomore literature produced etaoin shrdlu etaoin shrdlu soft­ening of the brain when taught to rats. "Chancellor Klotsche immediately ordered the to as soon as. Possible, mad dash to the goal line brought the spectators, all three of them to their feet, yelling to panthers go blxrm cadrp mrgunwl erg. . ."

THE UWM POST The official student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee,

North Stowell House , Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201 . Editorial and Business phone 2 2 8 - 4 5 7 8 . Published twice weekly Tuesday and Friday morning during the school year except holiday and exam periods.

Second class postage paid at Milwaukee, Wis. Subscriptions $ 5 . 0 0 per year. This newspaper as a member of America's traditional free press, has no

censor on campus. The opinions herein contained are those of the editors and writers and are not to be interpreted »s those of the University.

Editorial Staff Richard Mial News Editor Mary Zahn Assistant News Editor J.L Muelver Contributing Editor John Severson

Patricia Bevic Copy Editors

Paula Orth Arts Editor

Alan Roshak Photo Editor

George Houde :.. Sports Editor

Tuesday, October 21,1969 THE UWM POST Page 3

UWM gets first Vilas professor; will teach, research English lit. Prof. Ihab Hassan, a nation­

ally known scholar in 20th cen­tury literature, was appointed Friday to the first Vilas pro­fessorship here.

The Universityof Wisconsin board of regents approved his appointment as Vilas research professor of English and com­parative literature in the col­lege of letters and science, effective next September.

Hassan now is director of the center of the humanities at Wesleyan university, Middle-town, Conn. He has taught th­ere 15 years since 1964 as Ben­jamin L. Waite professor of English. He was chairman of

Nurse9s will names UWM

The University of Wisconsin board of regents Friday accep­ted booKs and scholarship funds for the University from the es­tate of the late Edna Louise Mason, who was college nurse at UWM's predecessor schools, Milwaukee Normal school, Mil­waukee State Teachers college and the WisconsinState college. The regents met at Green Bay.

The bequest from Miss Ma­son's estate provides that her books be divided among UWM dormitories and $299 be used to establish the Edna Louise Mason Scholarship Fund. Ap­proximately $300, depending on interest rates, will be added annually to the scholarship fund from the estate.

Miss Mason, who was 85 at the time of her death Mar.28, 1966, began her nursing career at the University of Chicago in 1910. She came to the Mil-* waukee Normal School in 1920 and was college nurse and taught several courses in hy­giene until her retirement with emeritus status in 1954.

the English department from 1963-64 and from 1968-69, and director of the college of let-

Born Oct. 17,1925, inCamC Egypt, Hassan has been anAm-erican citizen since 1956. He was graduated, with highest ho­nors, from the University of Cairo in 1946. He received ma­ster's of art, master's of sci­ence and Ph. D. degrees from the Univerity of Pennsylvania. Before joining the Wesleyan faculty he taught for two years at Renesselaer Polytechnic in-situte, Troy, N. Y.

The Vilas professorship is

Regents ed.

The University of Wisconsin board of regents Friday ap­proved preliminary plans for an 11-story building to house the school of education and school of social welfare here. Including and $850,000 parking structure, the project will cost $6,191,200.

The education-social welfare building, labeled general buil­ding no. 2, is to be comple­ted in August, 1972, after two years of construction. The site is on the north side of E. Hartford Ave., in the area now occupied by Albert hall and McLaren hall.

Albert hall, which now hou­ses part of the Social Wel­

fare school, was built in 1907. McLaren, a residence hall with 70 beds, was built in 1903. Both were Milwaukee-Downer college buildings which the U-niversity acquired when it purchased the Downer campus in 1964.

The new general building will include offices, meeting rooms, some classrooms and

named for Col. William Fre­eman Vilas, a University of Wisconsin alumnus and early regent whose will provided for funds for the "enrichment" of education which eventually will total 30 million dollars.

Hassan was a Fulbright le­cturer in France 1966-67; a Guggenheim fellow 1958-59 and 1962-63 and a fellow at Indi­ana university inl964.*

Hassan will have a role in the development of the Ph.D. program in English here and teach both undergraduate and graduate courses, as well as.

continue his research in con­temporary literature.

Chancellor J. Martin Klo­tsche called the naming of a Vilas professor "an important first" and "a significant step in the development of UWM."

In another personnel action, the board of regents accepted the resignation of Dean Philip Rosental as dean of the col­lege of applied science and en­gineering. He asked to be re­lieved of the dean's respon­sibilities to devote more time to teaching and research.

OK 11 story , welfare building

Riegelman's DOWNER PHARMACY

"Everything for the Student"

3116 N. DOWNER AVE. 964-O60O

Thinking About a Personnel Career?

PART-TIME JOBS PERSONNEL AIDES

$2.60 per hour

The Milwaukee City Service Commission is looking for student aides who are considering a career in personnel work to help set up, administer, score and statistically analyze personnel tests and to do related personnel work.

Work around class schedules, mainly between 8 a.m. and 4:45 p.m., m onday through Friday.

The Requirements 1. At least junior status. 2.Coursework emphasis in psychology, political

science or personnel management is desirable. 3. City of Milwaukee residence. 4. United States citizenship.

Short • written tests and interviews will be held Thursday, October 23, at 2 p.m. and Friday, October 24, at 9 a.m. and at 2 p.m. in Room 706 of the City Hall, 200 East Wells Street.

laboratories. Special learning equipment, such as closed cir­cuit TV, will be included, as well as special facilities for public service functions, such as reading clinics and aids for the handicapped.

The school of education will have the second through sev­enth floors, and the School of Social Welfare ninth through eleventh. The eighth floor will be shared. The first floor will contain classrooms.

The architects are Plunkett-Keymar-Reginato & Associ­ates, 6830 W. Villard av.

Separate from the main build­ing, although related with it, will be a parking structure for

275 cars. Partly belowground, the structure will be north of the general building, with ac­cess off N. Downer av.

The cost of the parking struc­ture, $825,000, is included in the overall cost of the pro­ject ($6,191,200), but the park­ing structure will be paid for by parking fees.

The schedule for the project calls for bids to be advertised in May and construction to start in August.

Jttteter pattjo Sing-A-Long

618 North Broadway

Ragtime Music Six Nights a Week'

INFORMATION MEETING

Tuesday 6RM. Bolton 188

People interested in forming a chapter

Alpha Kappa Lambda

Humanities building site is approved

The site proposed for a new humanities building here was approved Friday by the Un­iversity of Wisconsin board of regents meeting in Green Bay.

The $4,690,000 building will ,be located in what is now an open area north of Mitchell hall, adjacent to the Garland-Pear se-Vogel halls complex.

The Humanities building, with 82,750 square feet of space, will include 29 classrooms and space for the foreign language departments, Language labor­atories and the English depart­ment.

The schedule calls for com­pletion after January, 1973.

Included as part of the hu­manities project will be the creation of another major east-west pedestrian walkway across the campus. It will run north of Mitchell hall next to the humanities building, north of the Fine Arts Center's Music building, between Bolton hall and the Library, and between Lapham and Engelmann halls.

Are you getting enough

out of life?

Come to this Christian Science Lecture SUNDAY OCT. 26, 3:00p.m.

Fourth Church of Christ, Scientist

Kenwood Boulevard and Downer Avenue

MARCAS REG. PRINTED IN USA.

That's all you can call it. Impossible to confine to any

musical or verbal bag, IT sounds a little like every other kind of music and a lot like nothing you've ever heard before. Call it a synthesis, unique in both conception and execution.

Most of all, call it music. Music emitted from a nucleus of guitar, bass and drums, surrounded by three horn players and a violinist who knows and plays his ax like the best lead guitarists in the business.

Producer John McClure, who moonlighted from his regular job of handling such heavies as Bernstein and Ormandy, was genuinely im­pressed with the professionalism and versatility of what he saw and heard. And John Mayall, who jammed with

them at the Kinetic Playground in Chicago, called them the best band he'd ever heard.

More than a new album. More than a new group. These seven young musicians have created a quantity that can only be called what they call it: Flock music.

THE FLOCK INCLUDING:

CLOWN/I AM THE TALL TREE/TIRED OF WAITING STORE BOUGHT-STORE THOUGHT/TRUTH

CS9911

Get Into Tfie Flock. On Columbia Records

Page 4 THE UWM POST Tuesday, October 21,1969

Panther's strike in second quarter; ruin UICC's homecoming 15-13

The Panthers clawed their way out of a 13 point deficit in the second quarter Saturday to ruin the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle's (UICC) ho­

mecoming 15-13. "The boys were really down

after UICC got that lead and it was just great the way they came; right back and put 15

points on the scoreboard,"sa-id coach Wally Dreyer.

Errol Barnett and Mike 0 ' Hagen , both former defensive starters, ignited the Panther

Touch football standings

Fraternity - black division Tau Kappa Epsilon Beta Chi Zeta Beta Tau Delta Sigma Kappa Delta Chi Phi Sigma Epsilon

Fraternity - gold division Alpha Phi Omega Delta Tau Delta Phi Sigma Kappa Sigma Pi Vlpha fcpsilon Pi Phi Kappa Tau

Independent division Packers Alpha Kappa Psi Tagers Vets club PRs McLaren haL J. Straps

Errol Barnett gets yardage against the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle while Mike O'Hagen (85) looks for some­one to block. Barnett gained 86 yards in 20 carries and sc­ored two touchdowns. The Panthers won the game, 15-13.

A pass from Phil Palacek to Mike O'Hagen fell incomplete when a Chicago defender handed

SPORTS by George Houde of the Post staff

I received an unsigned letter Saturday from someone, a student probably, who wonders why the athletic program here is so poor. Out of 18,000 students one letter, one person, who seems to care! Two counting myself. Unbelievable.

In the letter this person, friend rather, asks if the people in Madison are afraid of UWM. In a sense, afraid that UWM could concievably become a football power given the money and man­power. A football power that would rival Madison, possibly, by the end of the decade.

That is something to dream of, and no matter how remote, the possibility is there. But, as long as there is only one student in 18,000 who gives a damn that dream will stay as remote as the poeple in Madison want it to.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Credit must be given to Dreyer and company. After a dis­heartening loss to Ferris State the week before, the Panthers bounced back for the win against UICC Saturday. No doubt they received a lot of support from the twenty or so Panther backers (parents, relatives, girlfriends) who squeezed into mam­moth Soldiers field.

scoring drives. "Barnett really played a ter­

rific game for us," said Dre­yer "and the way O'Hagen tur­ned that broken play into two points was almost unbelieva­ble,"

Barnett gained 8 6 yards on the grounds as well as scor­ing both touchdowns for the Pan­thers.

O'Hagen was kept busy set­ting up those touchdowns- with five pass receptions for 86 yards. He added the winning two points when a bad snap on the second point after to­uchdown (PAT) hit the ground.

The ball rolled around for a few seconds with O'Hagen in hot pursuit. He managed to re­cover the ball just in time to see a flock of red jerseys also in hot pursuit.

Scrambling, trying to pick up blockers, O'Hagen saw Dave Simunczak standing all by him­self in the end zone. Very cooly, O'Hagen lofted a pass to Simunczak, giving the Panthers their two point margin.

UICC scored first on a 60 yard run by David Anderson late in the first quarter. An­derson took a pitch out from quarterback Bob Fisher, cut over center and sprinted to the end zone.-The extra point made it 7-0 with 1:58 left in the first period.

The Panthers received the next kickoff but had to punt after running four plays.

UICC took the ball on their own 49 and in ten plays mar­ched in for the touchdown. A 33 yard Fisher pass to Ander­son helped get those six points. The extra point attempt failed when the ball hit the uprights.

The Chikas held a solid 13 point lead early in the sec­ond quarter. Until Phil Pal­acek started connecting with O'

Hagen which was immediately after the UICC kickoff.

The first play in that series saw Palacek throw a 31 yard pass to O'Hagen which took the Panthers to the UICC 29. Bar­nett then steamed into action and on a 15 yard run around left end went in for the tou­chdown. O'Hagen kicked the ex­tra point and the Chika's lead was cut to six.

The Panthers were then on the UICC 20 and Palacek cli­cked again, this time to Dick Sasek for 11 yards.

Barnett rolled again and from four yards out bulled his way in for six more. O'Hagen add­ed two on the broken PAT play and the score with 4:33 left in the half was UWM 15-UICC 13.

The Panthers threatenediga-in after the Chikas punted deep from their own territory.

Passes to O'Hagen and Bar­nett took the Panthers to the UICC 19. On second and ten, time was running out and O' Hagen's field goal attempt fell short. The half ended.

The second half saw little offensive action.

The Chikas, in a last ditch effort to salvage their home­coming, attempted a 20 yard field goal with 14 seconds left in the game. It fell short and the final score was UWM 15-UICC 13.

Yards rushing

Return Yardage Passes Punts

Yards penalized UWM UIC

UWM 13

136 130 266 54

9—22—0 10—34

115 O 15

UIC—Anderson, 6", r u n kick).

UIC—McNeills, 1, run (kick 1 UWM — Barnett, 15, run

kick). UWM—Barnett, 4, run (Simi

from O'Hagan). A—3,500.

UIC 10

132 110 242 44

6—26—2 8—30

2 57

0 0—15 0 0—13

(Williams,

ailed). (O'Hagan,

ncak, pass

Four harriers place; win Chicago meet

O'Hagen some trouble. Despite UICC efforts O'Hagen caught five passes for 89 yards.

The cross country team pla­ced four men in the top five finishers to win its meet with the University of Chicago Sat­urday, 21-34.

Ron Winkler placed first for the Panther harriers and sec­ond overall with a time of 16:32 for 5,000 meter event.

John Snodgrass finished right behind Winkler with a time of 16:40 , followed by Dan Grimm

whose 16:58 earned him fourth place and Ron Kurtz, fifth with a 17 minute mark.

The Panthers had one more man in the top ten. That was seventh place John Milter who turned in a 17:12 performance.

The meet was held at Esta-brook park, where the Panth­ers will play host to the run­ners from Oshkosh State uni­versity Wednesday at 4:30 p.m.

Tuesday, October 21, 1969 THE UWM POST Page 5

Students photographed for ID's "Look at the orange dot....

click....move to station 3 pl­ease."

A police line-up? Prisonpro-cessing office Army induction center? No, these words will be repeated to over 18,000 stu­dents here this week in Mit­chell 217 as they are photo­graphed for the new student ID cards. The cards are being issued at the direction of the board of regents.

While a copy of the card is being given to the student for "identification purposes," another copy is being kept on permanent file by the Univer­sity.

This fact has stirred contro­versy among many student and faculty membersand has caused some uneasy speculation as to

the purpose of the University's photo file.

Some students interviewed while waiting to be photograph­ed expressed fears that the ph­otos may be turned over to state and federal law enforce­ment agencies for identification of student radicals and drug users.

Others said they felt the ph­otographing was an invasion of their privacy.

Professor David Luce of the philosophy department and me­mber of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said that he didn't believe the pho­tographing could be considered a direct violation of one's ri­ghts, but said that he thought that the implementation of the I.D. cards at this particular

time was a further "intimi­dating device" on the part of the University.

Luce said that one student, especially angered by the man­datory photographing, told him that he was considering refus­ing to have his picture taken.

Vincent Allison, University registrar, said this week that any student so refusing would "probably be allowed to finish this semester but would not be allowed to register for the next semester."

David W. Robinson, dean of student affairs, said he beli­eved that much of the appre­hension on the part of the stu­dents was unfounded.

"Unless I'm ordered differ­ently, the photographs will be kept in a locked file," Robin­son said.

Robinson said that he con­sidered the photographers part of the student's transcript, whi­ch was not public information and would not be turned over to the police or anyone else.

He admitted, however, that this policy could be changed by an order from Chancellor Klo­tsche.

Robinson said that unlike UW-Madison, administrators here had decided to purchase the equipment necessary for ma­king the cards,

This fact, in conjunction with the operating costs of the pro­cess and the salary of oper­ators, brought the total 1969-70 cost of the project to about $50,000.

Cadet gets scholarship Reserve Officer Training Co­

rps (ROTC) cadet Joseph P. Philipp will receive a certi­ficate for a two year ROTC scholarship here Tuesday. Phi­lipp is a junior.

Philipp was chosen on the basis of his academic record, "military interest" and ratings

by the cadre officers. He was interviewed by a board of of­ficers for the scholarship.

Philipp is the only cadet cho­sen here this year for the two year scholarship.

A scholarship winner must spend four years on active duty instead of the usual two.

Ecumenical Center for DRAFT COUNSELING

Information and counseling on all nights, procedures, and alternatives regarding

the selective service system.

2211 East Kenwood Boulevard (across from the Student Union) 962-5855

Monday - Friday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

UAB Forum Committee presents: 'Contact' -the 'Commuter-Teacher Dialogue9 (CTD)

Sunday, October 26, 1969 7:30-10:OOp.m. with

Dr. John H. Romani , Vice-chancel lor , U W M Sign-up at main desk, Union

UAB Film Committee presents:

'Studio 35: The Film Generation9

Sat. October 25, 5:00, 7:30, & 10:OOp.m. Fine Ar ts Lecture Hall 120

this week featuring:

CAT AND MOUSE Union Members (students) $ .80

General Admiss ion $1.15

His story was censored... But some got through. They'll tell you their stories — unabridged.

Unabridged —that's the kind of Europe we give you. Involvement with the total culture: talking, listening, meeting, sharing.

Sure, you'll get the sights, the beaches, and some swinging parties —and you'll enjoy them. But then, anybody can give you those. We give you the facts behind the sights, the reasons behind the events. And we do it through the people.

We dish up the real Europe —from the mod up-beat action of Carnaby Street to the philosophical intensity of the Left Bank.

You get the agony and the ecstasy; action and involvement. Because that's what Europe is all about.

Inst i tute of Cultural Education P.O. Box 2388. Cincinnati, Ohio

Clip and mail this coupon today.

INSTITUTE OF CULTURAL EDUCATION P.O. Box 2388. Gwynne Building. Cincinnati. Ohio 45201

Please send me the full color, illustrated booklet. "European Discovery — 1970 College Student Programs", available at no cost to University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Students

(PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY)

NAME

CURRENT ADDRESS

CITY ' STATE ZIP

TELEPHONE

HOME ADDRESS

CITY STATE ZIP

P.S. We advise those desiring a hold-my-hand-from-monu-ment-to-monument student tour, to look elsewhere.

Page 6 THE UWM POST Tuesday, October 21,1969

Arts & entertainment Chorale finely crafted, expert

A perfect blending of voices was the reward for those who

Semiquavers

attended the concert of the Ro­manian Madrigal chorale last

Friday night. (Post photo by Alan Roshak.)

Humous new book looks at music critics

by Stephen Colburn of the Post staff

An interesting new edition has come across my desk: "Lexicon of Musical Invec­tive," subtitled "Critical As­saults on Composers Since Beethoven's Time" by Nico­las Slonimsky. The book has been published in a new pa­perback edition by the Univer­sity of WashingtonPress, copy­right 1969 and selling for $2.95.

The author, in an elaborate Prelude to a Lexicon, tries to explain the forthcoming pages of invective by delving into the idea that people (and music critics) share a psychological inhibition called the "Pheno­menon of Non-Acceptance of the Unfamiliar." This idea merely days that when some­one is called upon to compre­hend that with which he has had no previous encounter, he will very likely, if he happens to be a newspaper writer, in­voke nothing less than the gods to vilify what he has heard and obviously not accepted.

Among those composers treated are Beethoven: "The second symphony is a crass monster, a hideously writhing wounded dragon, that refuses to expire, and though bleeding in the Finale, furiously beats about with its tail erect." (Zeitung fuer die Klegante Welt, Vienna, May 1804). Also Brahms: "The Brahms C minor Symphony sounds for the most part mor­bid, strained.and unnatural, much of it even ugly...Melody has become, by this time a pretty vague term...but when it comes to an oboe and a clarinet making absolute speeches at each other (in the Andante for instance), the listener's mind is at so great trouble to re­member what the firsthassaid, that it is impossible to ap­preciate whether the reply qf the second is pertinent or not." (W.F. Apthorp, BostonCourier, January 20,1878).

Slonimsky covers about 43 composers in his Lexicon, and aside from such staples of the

literature as Schumann and Franck, we are able to survey the more recent past through critical reports on Debussy, Copland, Milhaud, Varese and others.

Everyone who attends con­certs should read this book because it is simply hilarious good fun. There is another reason for reading the book: it can be a very good lesson in helping one to keep one's mind always open to new mu­sic.

Unfortunately, serious lis-tening-to of new music is some­thing that musicians and music journalists do not always do very well. In my experience, it has always been a very small percentage of musicians who are willing to invest the time and effort to learn new works and offer performances to the public.

What Slonimsky has done for us is to take virtually any of our favorite composers and de­monstrate that the composer was labeled anything from "a-moebic weeping" (Webern) to "witless Teuton" (Strauss) by a music critic who was not able to find any merit in what he had heard. Presumably, no one would like to be remembered

Rock group plays here

A. B. Skhy is a progressive rock group with a success story. Originally from Wis­consin, the four member group became well known here as fine musicians, but somehow, their music was too far out to give them the success they sought.

A.B. Skhy features Howard Wales on the organ; Jim Mar-cotte on bass; Terry Anderson, drums and Dennis Guyer, gui­tar.

Back in Wisconsin for a li­mited engagement, they will perform here Monday, Oct. 27 at 8:15 p.m. in the Union ball­room. Tickets are on sale at the Union main desk;;

as "old tone deaf' who didn't like Brahms. On the other hand, there are still active con­troversies over the relative merits of such composers as and Varese. Depending on your own critical opinion, you may be horrified or delighted when you read some of the more recent musical invective.

One final feature of the book is an "Invecticon" which, we are told, is an "Index of Vi­tuperative, Pejorative and De­precatory Words and Phrases." For example, under "Absurd­ity" we find Copland, Debus­sy and Puccini; "Agony," Lis­zt, Scriabin, Strauss, Varese and Wagner; "Crime Against Music," Stravinsky, and so on.

Read the book. You won't be sorry.

by Charles Bramscher of the Post staff

The Renaissance and Ro­mania became real for Mil­waukee listeners last Friday night as the Romanian Madri­gal chorale performed in the Union ballroom. This was the first of the Music committee's five Great Artist concerts, and the overflow audience was treated to one of the best vo­cal ensembles ever to visit the city.

It is a finely crafted group, with expert control, delicate balance and superb expressive feeling. Marin Constantin has molded twenty some voices (each of which is a solo sound in itself) into nothing less than a perfect blend. Nothing is overlooked, be it phrasing, ar­ticulation, interpretation or en­semble.

The first third of the program was given to the music of the Renaissance. Costumed in magnificently embroidered dresses and doublets of six­teenth century Spain, the cho­rale invoked the spirit of a European court, whether at a church service in Vittoria's cathedralesque "Ave Maria" or at a banquet with Thomas Morley's "Fire, Fire." The gay fa-la-las and rollicking rhythms of "La, la, la, je ne l'ose dire" by Certon and "Wohlauf Gaste" by Erasmus Widmann were especially

'Summertree' Oct. 23-26

A small cast of six, all new to the stage here, is rehears­ing for "Summertree," a first play by Ron Cowen, young A-merican playwright. The Mil­waukee premier will open the theater season from October 23 through October 26.

The play will be performed at 8:30 p.m., Thrusday, Oct. 23, Friday, Oct. 24 and Satur­day, Oct. 25, and at 7:30 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 26. Single ad­mission tickets may be pur­chased at the Fine Arts Box office: adults, $2.75; students, $1.60.

charming in their bright clarity. Bennet's "Weep, O Mine Eyes" contained the finest example of miniature expression.

Part two of the program look­ed back even further in mu­sical history by presenting three ancient Byzantine songs. The first two of these were hymns sung in the services of the Eastern Orthodox church. These are monodic pieces, chanted with only one melodic line. The phrases have an or­iental flavor to our ears, which are only used to the Catholic Gregorian chant.

"Ancient Rain Ritual," by the contemporary Romanian Miri­am Marbe, is based on folk verses and melodies and was originally a traditional rite per­formed for rain, duringperiods of draught. It is completely modern in sound, however, with sharp dissonances, clusters of almost improvisational singing, chanting, speaking and every­thing between. To this was added percussion instruments, the total effect having a po­werfully primitive drive.

When the chorale returned for the final portion of the con­cert, the members had changed into their traditional national costumes, to the general ap­proval of the audience. They then presented, perhaps, their most enjoyable music: Roman­ian folk songs arranged by mo­dern Romanian composers. This was when the listeners could lean back and let the beautiful, compelling harmon- -ies and rhythms take hold of them. Occasioanlly, folk in­struments were used as in the "Tryptich" by Arvinte and the "Suite from Oas" by pop. The chorale seemed happiest here, too, as they added new vitality and excitement. Clos­ing the program was the Black spiritual, "Go Down, Moses."

As an encore, the Madrigal sang, "America, the Beautiful" and more than one appreciative peace symbol was seen among all the applause.

The were no political or i-deological boundaries at this concert. It was as it should have been: people together for the enjoyment of something ve­ry special.

A. B. Skhy, one of the na­tion's top three progressive

rock groups, will appear in the Union ballroom at 8:15 p.m.

Monday, Oct. 27.

Tuesday, October 21. 1969 THE UWM POST Page 7

POST CLASSIFIED 228-4578

50? per line, two line minimum. AH classified ads must be paid in advance unless client has an established account.

Help Wanted

Part-Time Campus Rep. Put.' up adv. posters, earn $5-10 per hour. No selling. Write Univ. Publications, Box 20133, Denver, Co 80220 for details.

Male or female, full or part time, car wash, 1.80/hr. 964-9670, 8-6.

Says Spanish here ignored

Ad salesmen, salary and com­mission, work own hours. Call 228-4578, UWM POST.

FOR SALE

Hot Pt. Elec. Stov, two ovens. Cheap - Call 332-2625.

For Rent

3921 N. Humboldt and Capitol. 1 bedroom carpeted, lovely view, parking, good transportation. Subletting one month's rent free. 964-4392.

Would you like a fresh start?

Come to this Christian Science Lecture SUNDAY, OCT.26, 3:00p.m.

Fourth Church of Christ, Scientist

Kenwood Boulevard and Downer Avenue

The University gives little , help to Spanish speaking stu­dents here, according to Prot Robert Holzhauer, of the sch­ool of social welfare.

Although graduate students are assigned to work with mi­grant workers through organi­zations such as the united mi­grant opportunity service and headstart, Holzhauer said, lit­tle attention is paid to Span­ish speaking students on cam­pus.

These students formed anor-ganization, "Latinos Unidos," last year, to give them a vo­ice on campus.

Vivian Valdez, a member, said that the group would like such things asbilingual classes for Spanish -speaking students.

English 101 cuts copying

Four experimental sections of freshman Ensligh have a new approach this year.

The new course has more "individual attention," than traditional English 101 courses, said Mrs. Elizabeth Babbitt, one of the teachers involved with the experiment.

Another difference is that the content of the course is all composition, as compared with composition and reading essays in the regular courses. . There are not textbooks, and all writing is done is class.

Two immediate goals of the project are to "cut down on absenteeism, and eliminate pla­giarism in compositions," Mrs. Babbitt said. "Our emphasis is on learning to write, not on grades."

The results thus far have been good. She said that "ab­senteeism has cropped off, and since all writing is. done in class, there is no plagiarism."

When asked what the University had done to aid these studen­ts, Miss Valdez replied, "No­thing."

Miss Valdez has also enco­untered apathy among students. Attempting to rally support for a grape boycott march, she contacted several student or­ganizations. Only the Students for a Democratic Society re­sponded.

Relevancy of UN discussed

There will be a panel dis­cussion on the relevancy of the United Nations during its first 25 years of operation here Th­ursday.

The panel will feature Bruno Bitker, member of the gover­nor's commission on human ri­ghts as well as former mem­ber of the presidents commiss­ion on human rights.

It will be held on Thrusday, Oct. 23,from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in the Milwaukee room of the union.

Camera Center For all your camera needs

Oakland at Capital 332-1550

College of Letters and Science BULLETINS

Council on Academic Advising Advising Office for Freshmen and Sophomores

Mitchell 211

a.m. p.m.

TUESDAY 21 Oct. P.Ullman C. Knoche

WEDNESDAY 22 Oct. H. Kittsley

E. Lebano

THURSDAY

23 Oct. R. Durning

D. Nance

FRIDAY 24 Oct.

M. Burns D. Johnson

MONDAY 27 Oct

R. Stoveken R. Peske

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * TO: All Faculty Members, Departments of Botany, Zoology,

Psychology and Medical Technology

FROM: R. B. McQuistan, Associate Dean

RE: Seminaron Mechanics of Proposal Preparation

DATE: Thursday, 23 October 1969

TIME: 9:30 AM to 11:30 A.M.

ROOM: Union, Room 205

COLLOQUIUM DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY

SPEAKER: Dr. Dieter Seebach Institut fur Organische Chemie der Universitat Karlsruhe Germany

PLACE: Lapham Hall, Room 140

TIME: Monday, 27 October 1969, 4:00 PM

TOPIC: "The Chemistry of Metallated Ortho-Trichloro-Formates"

CROSSWORD PUZZLE, ACROSS

1-Likely 4-Conjunction 9-Greek letter

12-Meadow 13-Vegetable 14-Be ill 15-Sponsor 17-Encircled 19-Measure of

weight 20-Foot lever 21-Barracuda 23-Pronoun 24-Urn 27-Rocky hill 28-Strike 29-Sheets of glass 30-Bone 31-Headgear 32-Pigeon pea 33-Football position

(abbr.) 34-Man's name 36-Chicken 37-Time gone by 38-Pertaining to

an era 39-Church bench 40-Walk 41-Part of step 43-Small bird 44-Fruit 46-Menace 49-Anger 50-Macaw 52-Music:

as written 53-Satlor

(colloq.) 54-Unadorned

55-Number

DOWN

l H i g h

mountain 2-Edible seed 3-Shred 4-Anop

5- Hostelry 6-Symbol for

nickel 7-Centers 8-Wife of

Geraint 9-Style of coat

lOHasten 11-Ancient 16-Decay 18-Pertainingtothe

navy 20-Fruit seed 21-Retail

establishment 22-Puzzle 23-Part of body 25-Kind of fabric 26-Bar legally 28-Possesses 29-Shallow

vessel 31-Eyelashes 32-Condensed

moisture 35-Collect

HCSH SQ EEBSH

E H oaaa aans nanH D E B S rasa @raa@B H H B Q aa

arjBH anna EJQ anaa narans una HGHIT] r iaan DHGja nEHn rag irjH aaaaaaa ns 5 b N I L. E H t L t K i P Nl

aaaaa H B ticia 36-Pronoun 37-Bear

witness to 39-Gem 40-Title of

respect 42-Break

suddenly 43-Conjunction

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three 47-Devoured 48-Sunburn 51-Cooled

lava

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College Men Part-time work

Subsidiary of ALCOA car necessary

See Mr. Otteson Time: 3:30 pm sharp!

Place: Bolton Hall 273

Date: Tuesday, 10 /21 /69

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Page 8 THE UWM POSTT Tuesday, October 21,1969

Homecoming: Great Awakenings by Joanne Engelking

of the Post staff

Homecoming events this year will be extended to a three day weekend - November 6,7, and 8. This is an attempt to em­phasize homecoming and elicit more support from students, said Jan Matthews, coordinator of social affairs for USG.

The theme of the 1969 home­coming is "Tomorrow's Great

Awakenings." A raft race on the Milwau­

kee River at 3:30 p.m. Thur­sday, November 6will kick-off the activities. It will again be judged by members of the Mil­waukee police department, and coast guard. Any group may enter the race.

USG is currently petitioning city hall and the fire depart­ment for a bonfire on Thurs­day in the north parking lot

at 6 p.m. The "yell-like-hell' contest and announcement of the royalty and court will follow.

The homecoming parade will begin at 7 p.m. Friday and will proceed from Wisconsin ave. and No. 14th St. to the lake-front. Alumni fireworks will fol­low at 8:30 p.m. near the War Memorial center.

The Panthers meet Bradley University's Braves at County Stadium at 1:30 p.m. Saturday.

Nelson warns buyer to be more cautious

Halftime entertainment will feature the introduction of the royalty and court and perfor­mances by the University band and Alumni marching band.

Climaxing the weekend's ev­ents will be a dance in the Un­ion from 8 p.m. to midnight and the crowning: of the king and queen. Musical entertain­ment will be provided by five groups. The Rubber Band, the New Colony 6 and Freddy and the Freeloaders will play in the ballroom. The Fireside lo­unge will feature the Jimmy

Colvin Combo, a jazz group. Scott Walsh, folk singer and student here, will perform in the Snack bar.

Tickets for the dance are $5 per couple and will be on sale starting Oct. 27 in the Union lobby and the USG of­fice.

Alumni will hold their re­union dinner-dance at 6 p.m., Saturday at the Sheraton-Schr-oeder hotel. Jerry Blake's or­chestra and night club star Norm Crosby will provide the entertainment.

Senator Gaylord Nelson (D-Wis.) warned Milwaukee shopp­ers in a talk here Sunday that products may be harder to ch­oose between due to misleading containers that products come in.

One product may weigh more than three ounces less than an­other, in the same sized box, he said.

"Thirty to 40 years ago, the consumer could watch the gro­cer weigh and package the pro­duce in front of his eyes," Nelson said.

"Things weren't nearly as complicated as items on sale today," he said. The real pro­blem for the consumer, said Nelson, is to find the quality, as well as the quantity of the product.

Nelson also charged that au­tomobile manufacturers had be­en putting undersized tires on automobiles. This increased the danger of high speed blowouts, Nelson said.

Two tires can look exactly alike, he said, but the only

real way to tell the difference is a label telling the weight capacity.

Nelson stressed the need for more protection for the consu­mer by both private and fed­eral agencies.

"We will ultimately have a representative of the consumer at the federal level," Nelson said.

The talk was sponsored by the Greater Milwaukee Consu­mer league, and was attended by approximately 150 people.

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