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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, Issue 1</text>
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            <text>First Nightclub Next Weekend</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Parkside's&#13;
NE SCOPE&#13;
first Nightclub Next Weekind&#13;
This coming Friday and Saturday&#13;
nights, Oct. 2 and 3, will mark the first in a&#13;
series of weekend nightclubs and coffee&#13;
houses to be presented in the new student&#13;
activities building during the coming year.&#13;
Live entertainment will be featured from 9&#13;
p.m. to 1 a.m. and refreshments will be&#13;
served.&#13;
The featured act for this opening&#13;
weekend will be one of Wisconsin's top&#13;
nightclub attractions, "The Gregory&#13;
James Group". This seven-member group&#13;
of two girls and five men, aims its performance&#13;
at college aged and young adult&#13;
audiences, appearing in both clubs and on&#13;
college campuses throughout the state.&#13;
Recent engagements include new student&#13;
week programs at UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Marquette universities, along with per.&#13;
Iorrnances at Summerfest and an ex.&#13;
tended engagement at Milwaukee's&#13;
"Someplace Else". Their program includes&#13;
hit numbers from many top&#13;
recording groups including The Fifth&#13;
Dimension, Blood, Sweat and Tears,&#13;
Brazil 66, The Beattles, The Letterman,&#13;
Chicago, and many others.&#13;
AdJTlission on both evenings will be $1.50&#13;
with Parkside and Wisconsin State LD.&#13;
Lecture Series&#13;
Opens Oct. 16&#13;
A Pulitzer Prize-winning ecologist, two&#13;
outspoken advocates of Women's&#13;
Liberation and an Australian actor&#13;
comprise the first three programs&#13;
scheduled for the fall Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts series atThe University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
The series will open on Oct. 16 with a.&#13;
one-man performance of Chaucer's&#13;
Canterbury Tales by Robert Inglis, an&#13;
Australian actor who is presently on a U.S.&#13;
TOUR. Site for the 8 p.m. performance is&#13;
to be announced.&#13;
On Oct. 20, "new journalist" Gloria&#13;
Steinem and Dorothy Pitman, who has&#13;
been reCerred to by the press as "the&#13;
black, beautiful Saul Alinsky," wiil join in&#13;
a discussion of "Women's Liberation."&#13;
Both are leading advocates of the women's&#13;
lib movement. Their discussion, which will&#13;
include a question and answer period, will&#13;
beat8 p.m. in Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
On Nov. 17 Pulitzer Prize-winning&#13;
ecologist Rene Dubos will lecture on&#13;
campus. A mOVing force behind last year's&#13;
EnVironmental Teach-Ins, Dr. Dubos won&#13;
the 1969 Pulitzer for his book on man. and&#13;
the environment, "So Human an AnimaL"&#13;
A proCessor of environmental biomedicine&#13;
at The Rockefeller University in New&#13;
York, Dr. Dubos will speak at 8 p.m, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Additional programs in the 1970-71&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Series are to be&#13;
announced.&#13;
Prof. Reeves&#13;
Edits New Book&#13;
A selection Crom writings of major&#13;
critics and supporters of billion-dollar laxexempt&#13;
founda tions is offered in a new&#13;
book, "Foundations Under Fire", edited&#13;
by Dr. Thomas C. Reeves, new University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside associate professor&#13;
of history.&#13;
Recently published by the Cornell&#13;
University Press, "Foundations Under&#13;
Fire" has. a 37-page int:--oduction ~y Dr&#13;
Reeves, who joins the Parks ide faculty&#13;
this month after four years at the&#13;
University of Colorado. Reeves selected 24&#13;
writings representing a wide variety of&#13;
views.&#13;
In his introduction, Reeves examines the&#13;
role of foundations in society, discussing&#13;
their strengths and weaknesses and&#13;
pointing out the major issues surrounding&#13;
them. The 235-page book includes an extensive&#13;
bibliography.&#13;
The readings are grouped according to&#13;
four central themes: public responsibility,&#13;
venture capital, propaganda and politics,&#13;
and business and taxes. They include Ute&#13;
views of founda tion officials, civil rights&#13;
leaders, labor leaders, educators, jour·&#13;
nalisls, and members of Congress. The&#13;
selections treat such questions as why&#13;
multibillion-dollar institutions exist,&#13;
whether they are primarily a means oC&#13;
evading taxes, whether they are bearers of&#13;
anti-American ideology, their ties with the&#13;
CIA, and how they affect small business.&#13;
UW-Parkside Enrollment Now 4,030&#13;
Dr. Williams to serve&#13;
on UW CommiHee&#13;
A member of (he Divrsron of .cience&#13;
faculty at the University oC \\'iSCO~IO'&#13;
Parkside has been named to an an-tw&#13;
committee to study the slate's needs (or&#13;
alJied health professionals and ho\\ the&#13;
university can help meet the needs.&#13;
Anna Marie Williams, L'WP associate&#13;
professor of life sciences, will sene on thecommittee&#13;
with eight representatives&#13;
from other UW campuses. The comrmttee&#13;
is headed by wtnram L. Blcckstem,&#13;
professor of pharmacy at the . ladlson&#13;
campus.&#13;
INTAKE To Be&#13;
At Performing&#13;
Arts Center&#13;
A multi-media concert. fealuring a :'\t.'\\&#13;
York rock group, the .\lilwaukt"t' ~01-&#13;
phony Orchestra and a local poet \\ ill be&#13;
staged in ,Iilwaukee at the Performmg&#13;
Arts Center Friday, October 23, 1970. Thl.·&#13;
will be a special one-night event oJX'n onl~&#13;
10 area colJege sluden~.&#13;
This exciting explosion of sounds. hghl'i&#13;
and smells with commcnts on war&#13;
martydom and environment \I, ill be a&#13;
brand new departure for the :\Iih\3ukN'&#13;
Symphony Orchestra. under the dir(&gt;('hon&#13;
of Kenneth Shermerhorn. Accompanying&#13;
the orchestra will be poet Bruce Gordon.&#13;
Assistant Director of the Center for AfroAmerican&#13;
Culture. and the eastern basoo&#13;
rock group "The :o.:ewYork Electric String&#13;
Ensemble". The latter will ap~ar in&#13;
concert with the Milwaukee Symphony for&#13;
fh'" ~vep'in:;'s fin~l~ S~'3] mu&lt;,;'c~l&#13;
composition written for the occasion.&#13;
The program, entilled I:\TAKE lh&lt;&#13;
first of its kind in this area - is being&#13;
sponsored by local college and Vni\ersily&#13;
Student Activities representatives from&#13;
AJverno College, Cardinal SLritch College,&#13;
Concordia College. Carroll College.&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical College,&#13;
Marquette University, Mount ~lary&#13;
College, The Uni\'ersity o( Wisconsin.&#13;
Milwaukee, The University of Wiscol'bin.&#13;
Parkside and The Uni\,ersity oC WiSCOruioJnWaukesha&#13;
County Campus.&#13;
Tickets are available now to college&#13;
students with current J.D. cards for $200&#13;
at the UW-Parkside Studenl AffaIrs Office.&#13;
Tallent Hall, Main Campus. Sales are&#13;
limited to four tickets per student due to&#13;
limited sealing.&#13;
Carthage and Dominican students arl?'&#13;
eligible to purchase tickets from ParkSlde&#13;
for this event.&#13;
Teaches New Course&#13;
Parkside has a new listing for its mu ·IC&#13;
department. Music 499, applied music for&#13;
the non-major, will now be offered every&#13;
Wednesday from 3:30 to 430 p.m The&#13;
course is available for one credit and will&#13;
be held in GR 0131&#13;
Carmen Vila, Parkside's artist-Inresidence,&#13;
will teach the course She will&#13;
show mO\'ies, pia) records and gl\'e her&#13;
own interpretations of great composers.&#13;
Registralion for the course will continue&#13;
Sc per cop,&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSI'o&#13;
Parkside Campus&#13;
Kenosha. WiKoniln&#13;
Sopl.m~r 29,"'0&#13;
CONSTITUTION&#13;
SEEKS MORE&#13;
STUDENT VOICE&#13;
The con~llIu1101J.a1 COI1lIlI1IIl...• c.It't It'd&#13;
last. pnng. met 1hrolJ.t;!llUut Ila' Uml1WI&#13;
draw 109 up a consutunon for Ih{" Park Id,'&#13;
Iudent gO\ ernmem Thc.' document Yo a&#13;
esr enually completed om- \\l'('k h,,'furt.'&#13;
regtstratron&#13;
The consllluhon prO\ Idt lor a Sl"l,.1 '&#13;
compos ed 01 t.'\ enn-cn 111 vmber&#13;
Provisions ror t'1Jr!hf landmJ{ t.·onHllIllu&#13;
also were made ont.' nl whrch I ll.·ludl·n'&#13;
t.mon Commute 10 ()t, mad« up 01 1"o&#13;
senators and SI~ elected rudcnn 'I'lu dUI\&#13;
of the ~'tud('nl l mon Comllllth."l' would 1.('&#13;
10 S('( POhCR~ for Iht· USt' and Opt'l.llulfl of&#13;
the student UOloU Tlk' ccuon ("O\('nn,.:&#13;
student nghls prcvtd, for lUd"1I1c:ooltol&#13;
or the '·00(:, .101 wluch arc IJo:llroolllod&#13;
pl'lmarll~ b) .Iuck-Ilt 1 ilL'" Jlu.:h.ld(&#13;
\('ndlO~ madunc. h,otr ~It· l'I ·ltn&#13;
prO\ ISIO" IS d,rt.'(·I('d ul bnnglO~ '''-1''&#13;
und('r conlrol and .11c:nlilrollll~ lilt" Ust' 01&#13;
lhe r('H'nut.' gt'IM:ruh'd 1)\ th&lt;.' l (Ull&#13;
("{&gt;$SIQllS&#13;
111t.,Park Idt'.uimlOi Ir tlon. \\lll('h nCt,",&#13;
ha. a mOltClpul~ un Jlrodue.·1 ilnd ..no l:l&#13;
prO\ IJt"CI h~ the \('IKhn~ madufK's hOI&#13;
obJl·c.:ltodto ludc:ll( ,'onlm! (I\,'r Ihl' UlUun&#13;
and the: \('ndulg: m.u'hlt S ,lOt'c' hUKt&#13;
\\ hleh an..' ~("nt'rlll('(t b\ 11 f' '0111&#13;
dln'c.·ll:- from thc ludtllt I' CillS&#13;
reasonable. lhal ludc'lll hould nol tll~&#13;
Ix n(,rlt rrom lh("St, fund: hUI d("1 rmlllt'&#13;
hc.J\\ IIK'\ art&gt; u c'd&#13;
Thl&gt;C.·~l.llIUhon" lillie.' ul~nlth'Cf to lilt'&#13;
studt'ot bod~ fur r.lllflt.alloli&#13;
Symphony&#13;
Organizing&#13;
All rw p .tudl'nl ~ hu pl.n un III&#13;
. trumt&gt;nl art· ('IIKlhll- and 1m ih'd 10&#13;
!x&gt;comf' m('mlx'rs of tlic.· P ..rk Idc' S~ m&#13;
phon, (Jrch _Ira 11t'1"',rsal "'III boo ti,.ld&#13;
Wcd.k,~}!\ (rom 700 to 900 f) m In lh,&#13;
Kt'nosha fo'me ,\rlS Hool1l T t.' \101hill'&#13;
to partlClpat(' Ilf:t'd not be.' mu It maJo&#13;
ThrouKh IOdt·pt"tdUll IUd~ lud(,111 Inay&#13;
earn on cr&lt;'dJl (or pIa) IOJl In 1Il4-' } nI&#13;
phony&#13;
Get Your Fifth&#13;
Dimension Tickets&#13;
TI ket. no\\, an&gt; a\'allithll' 10 tht· public&#13;
for a concert by pol)u!al rc'cilrdml( group,&#13;
The fo'lflh DlITlNlSlon. al K pm da).&#13;
O&lt;t 26. al Hacm,'. J I ( ". r...ld 11011'&lt;'&#13;
on hl~h"'ay 20&#13;
Ticket. at I, 5and$4, mOl) Ix' uhlalncod&#13;
by mall or 10 p('rsof'I at the !'itUdt'lit .\&#13;
liVltl Offlct, on lht, LWP WOOff Hoad&#13;
Campus Bt'RlOnlllg ..·aturda~ II "Wi al 0&#13;
\\ III Ix&gt; 3vallabh: 8t Cook Gt.'r • COI1lI~n) In&#13;
RaC':lOe and BldlO,H'r lu 1(' 1100 C' III&#13;
Kenosha \0 I1ckt, y.11I bt: sold al&#13;
Park Ide'· Rat Int' and }\t'nosha Cam&#13;
pu.s~&#13;
The Studt"t /\f(atn. Offll:(.' :lId IlC,:kt:(s&#13;
remam 3\31Iabl' 10 all pnn ~nd Inall&#13;
orders recC'IH'd 10 dalt· tla\'e ht n&#13;
pr~sed&#13;
"f" f eshmen and transCer students&#13;
..... teDUring&#13;
one eight-hour period,. some 1~I~ew e~ the Tallent Hall parking lot to U~1S red for UW-P classes, and their cars Spl ov&#13;
Wood Road for half a mile.&#13;
First District Needs Representation&#13;
The Racine-Kenosha .\lovement for a&#13;
New Congress is holding a meeting for all&#13;
Parkside students and faculty interesled&#13;
in becoming invoh'ed in the upcoming&#13;
Congressional elections. The lime and&#13;
place of the meeting will be announced&#13;
The national :\lo\'ement for a :\'ew&#13;
Congress is a campus~based organization&#13;
operation within the American political&#13;
tradition to mobilize massive grass ..rools&#13;
volunteer efforts.&#13;
President Nixon's announcement of&#13;
American involvement in Cambodia&#13;
touched off spontaneous student demonstrations&#13;
around the country. The Racine.&#13;
Kenosha M.N.C., which organized in the&#13;
aftermath of last May's Parkside stUdent&#13;
strike, has been aClive all summer, encouraging&#13;
partlclpalloo In the- prill ,lr~&#13;
congressional elections Wt.&gt;ft."C1thai tht&gt;&#13;
differences b&lt;'lween thl' VI('\\ of lh • In.&#13;
cumbent and those of the challenger&#13;
provide the \'olers of thl' Flr!otl&#13;
Congressional Di~trici V,llh a ch:ar cho]{'l'&#13;
that of continuIng With an&#13;
unimaginative, well-programrnl"CI ··Yt.'.&#13;
:'\lan", or elecling a SeOSIU\'e, responSive,&#13;
new congressman,&#13;
What effect student \'olunteers ha\'e had&#13;
in election was proved by the Kenned~ and&#13;
:'\lcCarthy campaigns of 1968. and now,"&#13;
Congressional elections around the&#13;
country. Through hard work and our time.&#13;
we can give the First District the&#13;
representation we desperately need&#13;
Parkside's Sc r C J&#13;
NEWSCOPE UNIVERSITYOF ISCO SI&#13;
Id Campu&#13;
first Nightclub Next Weekend&#13;
This coming Friday and Saturday&#13;
nights, Oct. 2 and 3, will mark the first in a&#13;
series of weekend nightclubs and coffee houses to be presented in the new student&#13;
activities building during the coming year.&#13;
Live entertainment will be featured from 9&#13;
p.m. to 1 a.m. and refreshments will be&#13;
served. The featured act for this opening&#13;
weekend will be one of Wisconsin's top&#13;
nightclub attractions, "The Gregory&#13;
James Group". This seven-member group&#13;
of two girls and five men, aims its per- formance at college aged and young adult&#13;
audiences, appearing in both clubs and on&#13;
college campuses throughout the state. Recent engagements include new student&#13;
week programs at UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Marquette universities, along with performances&#13;
at Surnmerfest and an extended&#13;
engagement at Milwaukee's "Someplace Else". Their program includes&#13;
hit numbers from many top&#13;
recording groups including The Fifth&#13;
Dimension, Blood, Sweat and Tears,&#13;
Brazil 66, The Beattles, The Letterman, Chicago, and many others.&#13;
Admission on both evenings will be $1.50&#13;
with Parkside and Wisconsin Sta te I.D.&#13;
Lecture Series&#13;
Opens Oct. 16&#13;
A Pulitzer Prize-winning ecologist, two&#13;
outspoken advocates of Women's&#13;
Liberation and an Australia n a c tor&#13;
comprise the first three programs&#13;
scheduled for the fall Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts series at The University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
&#13;
The series will open on Oct. 16 with a&#13;
one-man performance of Chaucer's&#13;
Canterbury Tales by Robert Inglis, an&#13;
Australian actor who is presently on a U.S. TOUR. Site for the 8 p.m. performance is&#13;
to be announced.&#13;
On Oct. 20, "new journalist" Gloria&#13;
Steinem and Dorothy Pitman, who has&#13;
been referred to by the press as " the&#13;
black, beautiful Saul Alinsky," will join in&#13;
a discussion of "Women's Liberation."&#13;
Both are leading advocates of the women's&#13;
lib movement. Their discussion, which will&#13;
include a question and answer period, will&#13;
beats p.m. in Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus. On Nov. 17 Pulitzer Prize-winning&#13;
ecologist Rene Dubos will lecture on&#13;
campus. A moving force behind last year's&#13;
Environmental Teach-Ins, Dr. Dubos won&#13;
the 1969 Pulitzer for his book on man and&#13;
the environment "So Human an Animal."&#13;
A professor of e~vironmental biomedicine&#13;
at The Rockefeller University in New&#13;
York, Dr. Dubos will speak at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Additional programs in the 1970-71&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Series are to be announced.&#13;
Prof. Reeves&#13;
Edits New Book&#13;
A selection from writings of major&#13;
critics and supporters of billion-dollar taxexempt&#13;
foundations is offered in a new book, '·Foundations Under Fire", edited&#13;
by Dr. Thomas C. Reeves, new niYersity&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside associate profe sor&#13;
of history. Recently published by the Cornell&#13;
University Press, ·'Foundations Under Fire" •1as :i 37- age int-odt•ction •,_ Dr&#13;
Reeves, who joins the Parkside faculty&#13;
this month after four years at the University of Colorado. Reeves selected 24&#13;
writings representing a wide variety of&#13;
views. In his introduction, Reeves examines the role of foundations in society, discussing&#13;
their strengths a nd weaknesses a.nd&#13;
pointing out the major issues surrounding&#13;
them. The 235-page book includes an extensive&#13;
bibliography. .&#13;
The readings are grouped accor~~~ to four central themes: public respons1b1hty,&#13;
venture capital, propaganda a?d politic ,&#13;
and business and taxes. They include the views of foundation officials, civil rights&#13;
leaders, labor leaders, educators, journalists&#13;
and members of Congress. The&#13;
selecti~ns treat such questions as ~ hy multibillion-dollar institutions ex1 t,&#13;
whether they are primarily a means of&#13;
evading taxes, whether they.ar: bea~ers of anti-American ideology, their ties with the CIA, and how they affect small business.&#13;
UW-Parkside Enrollment N&lt;:&gt;w 4 ,o3o&#13;
Dr. Williams to serve&#13;
on UW Committee&#13;
INTAKE To Be&#13;
At Performing&#13;
Arts Center&#13;
CONSTITUTION&#13;
SEEKS MORE&#13;
STUDENT VOICE&#13;
Sym hony&#13;
Organizing&#13;
Get Your Fifth&#13;
Dimension Tickets&#13;
First District Needs Representation The Racine-Keno ha l\lo\'emen for a :-,;ew Congre i holding am ling for all&#13;
Park ide ;'tudenls and facul y inter led&#13;
in becoming im·olved m th upcomi&#13;
Congre: -ional election Th time and&#13;
place of the rneetin will be announced.&#13;
The nallonal :\Iovemenl for a 'cw&#13;
Congre s i a campu_-ba ·ed organization&#13;
operation \\ ithin the American political&#13;
tradition to mobilize ma ive ra &gt;roots&#13;
\·olunteer efforts&#13;
President . ·ixon's announcement of&#13;
American invokement in Cambodia&#13;
touched off spontaneou student demonstrations&#13;
around the country. The RacineKenosha&#13;
. 1.. ·.c . which organized in the&#13;
aftermath of last . tay·s Parkside student&#13;
strike, has been active all ummer. en-&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Work for Cooperation&#13;
tudent editors are faced with this critical question - what&#13;
"news" is "fit" to print? Are we working to present a newssheet of the&#13;
adrnini tration or are we working to present students with what reallY,&#13;
interests them? It's a difficult question to answer when you reahz~ that&#13;
we editors are operating on university property· And we're trymg to&#13;
represent student interests. The Scope is going to work for cooperation between students,&#13;
pre , and administration. We hope to build channels of communication&#13;
for the exchange of information and ideas between&#13;
tudent .press, and administration. Who knows? Wemay promote and&#13;
ac mph h the impossible. .' The U. ' Student Press Association stated the whole SituatIOn&#13;
beautifully: "As the campuses have gotten more po~it.ical, and as&#13;
college papers have reflected that politicalization, admlm.strato~s and&#13;
trust have adopted the Agnew thesis: you can stop dissent If you&#13;
ilen the media of dissent. And whereas Agnew'S attacks stop at a&#13;
th atrical albeit dangerous level of intimidation, the actions now being&#13;
openIy used or discussed by nervous college administra.tors and&#13;
electioneering officials pick up where he leaves off: editors are&#13;
suspended, funds are cut off, offices are locked up. -,&#13;
. "We can say It Can't Happen Here and continue to publish on&#13;
blind faith in friendly liberal administrators or at the expense of our&#13;
new and editorial relevance, but whether we like it or not, co-called&#13;
freedom of the student press, which was always so openly advocated&#13;
even If privately disregarded, is now - thanks to the legitimacy of Mr.&#13;
Agnew's views, aired ironically enough by that same media he&#13;
criticizes _ publicly criticized as a luxury of the past, or at least only&#13;
r rved for the good niggers of the present.&#13;
"The college environment was traditionally seen as a protected&#13;
environment, but, as the notion of in loco parentis was shouted down in&#13;
the early '60's and shot down in the early '71'S, the protection was seen&#13;
for what it really is: control, protecting not students' interests, but&#13;
those Interests which exploit most people in this country and the rest of&#13;
the world. Thus, the protection of offices and printing presses and&#13;
flnancial support for college papers has also become seen for what it&#13;
really is: a mechanism of control just like those parietal hours. Student&#13;
joum~lists .are being bound and gagged clamoring for their constitutional&#13;
rights, not only at the college level but in the high schools as&#13;
well. And each voice silenced brings one step closer the demise of the&#13;
still-"protected" papers. This is the perspective from which we must&#13;
all operate.&#13;
, "It is also one which most student newspapers are woefully&#13;
Incapable of confronting, because of lack of technical ability lack of&#13;
funds',\ack of n.erve, lack of confidence, and lack of vision. '&#13;
There IS hope. The g~owth of underground and community&#13;
papers have shown us there IS a readership and financial base untaP~&#13;
by existing media. The development of new technologies has&#13;
ma e printing cheaper and simpler each year. Experiments in staff&#13;
~lect~ves and cooperative publishing, advertising and newsgathering&#13;
a&#13;
vdes 0f~dthat new ways of working together provide the knowledge&#13;
n con I ence to face the future."&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors '&#13;
NewsEditor&#13;
Feature Edi&#13;
Business Mana tor&#13;
Advertising M ger&#13;
anager&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the Univ~rsit .&#13;
Parkslde, Kenosha, wisconsm 53140. Mailing address is P kYd&#13;
O&#13;
!WISCOnsin.&#13;
UW.Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53140. Business and a~d~~ e.s Newscope&#13;
number is 658-4861, Ext. 24. 1 rial telephon~&#13;
volime 2 - No. 1&#13;
Sept. 29, 1970&#13;
~~•.~&#13;
Pree CouRSf'Uing ser~ice on&#13;
II... ,. Goo/·OII&#13;
H an) of )0\1 h;;-ve registered here at&#13;
I'ark"de for the purpose 01 gcofing-otf&#13;
then you might as well get some advice&#13;
from an expert. Me.&#13;
1)' credentials Ito modestly name just a&#13;
r ~} arc that I am a drop-out from thre&#13;
~nl\ ersrues 'way back in 1921, '22 a~&#13;
~ , Lawrence at Appleton. Milwaukee&#13;
Stale Teachen' College (now UWMl and&#13;
Marquette Law School.&#13;
Well. anyway, last Spring. at the age of&#13;
loll, 1100« an ,nventory of my life and found&#13;
Ihal one dlhe few goals I haven't allained&#13;
\A a. a college degree.&#13;
So I did some leIter 'writing and even&#13;
tually got three transcripts back in th~&#13;
mall I showed lhem to Mr EI&#13;
O&#13;
AI· • more&#13;
lrector VI AdmiSSions "You ha lh' '&#13;
...&#13;
-hl ~ t" . ve Irty·&#13;
r- cr ..-ul s said he. That's a heck&#13;
lonlr:ways from 120. said I to myself uva&#13;
My daughlcr IMagna Cum '&#13;
Lawrence '531 said, ..It's never t La,Ude,&#13;
f) d'" 00 ale&#13;
a 0 now .. With that affectionat'&#13;
nudlr:e,and at a hme m hfe when I need :&#13;
degree probably 1&lt;'&gt;5 than any enroll&#13;
the rampu , I'm back an college Wi: s~~&#13;
ummcr school credits added t&#13;
ongu\31 thlTty.elght and' 0 my&#13;
hatchmg in this Fall term. mne more&#13;
So nOW',ha\"lng learned the ha d&#13;
Ihat I couldn't lick 'em {i.e the r lr&#13;
ay&#13;
graduatf establtshmenll I've de ,cdo_..Iege&#13;
l- t • CI C\.I to&#13;
./ 0 JOm E'm And at the rate I'm .&#13;
oujtht 10 qualify for a degree iustg~,:}&#13;
fIr,) yea ... afler g01l11( oulthe back d t&#13;
. 'arqueHe OOrof&#13;
My trouble back 111the early da&#13;
Ihat I had allowed myself to ~ was&#13;
df't'pl) eovol\"('d In certain °lme ex ra-&#13;
~urricular activities. To begin with Iwas&#13;
In. love and that alone is enough to comr~~:a~~:~y&#13;
a~ad~mic career. On top of my&#13;
Ford an~r~'ha~r~~h~dsj~or\~ model-T&#13;
time jobs to take care ofwr:: ree partexpenses&#13;
of $1375 y over-head&#13;
~ent okeh but my stu~ii~e~~. Eve,ryth~ng&#13;
It. My envolvements got the ~~dnf t swing&#13;
1 became a dro Some and&#13;
'elling lhat rut. Ireally goofed-off by&#13;
services wehav:iP:&#13;
n&#13;
.. The counselling&#13;
invented yet in thOay ~lmplYhadn't been&#13;
What followod de ear y twenties,&#13;
years is another sturmg the next forty-five&#13;
successful careersO? ....a~d I've got two&#13;
around to reportin~ p:ove It. I mighl get&#13;
chapters if this column ~ a few of those&#13;
Now I must get baCkastslong enough,&#13;
counselling services 0 to. my offer of&#13;
bave a hang-up on t~ goofIng·off. If you&#13;
college life and ups and downs of&#13;
Iislener: nag me dow~eel~ a sympathetic&#13;
~d who knows'? . m a ~oodlistener.&#13;
listening to some of;; you might wind up&#13;
May~ we can swa y own problems ....&#13;
of thmgs bugging ~ , , , there are a couple&#13;
very well do Withou~ With w.hich I could&#13;
But let me - ' . warn you I'll&#13;
m odgewise. too, And ("Il d' get a few words&#13;
01 the "goof'" ISCUSSboth 'd '1 com. Havi' Sl es&#13;
WI I also point out th ng tned one side I&#13;
other. e pros and cons of the&#13;
!t seems that wh&#13;
to get into mUch e~ a ~ellowgets too 01&#13;
~:eri~ to give :::;~~c~e~hl~develops ~&#13;
A w 0 are willin 1 e .... only to&#13;
nd you don't h g 0 read and r&#13;
ave to fOllow't Isten, I,&#13;
tki...11f.~&#13;
NOW OPEN!!!&#13;
S MON.-THURS. - 8 a.m.-10 p."'.&#13;
T FRI. i 8 a.m.-l a.m.&#13;
U SAT. &amp; SUN. - '&#13;
, SPECIAL EVENTS ONLY&#13;
o STUDENT &amp; WIS. 10 REQUIRED E GAMES BANDS' POPCORN&#13;
MUSIC FOOD DRINKS N CURRENT MOVIES&#13;
T THIS WEEK GREGORY JAMES1 SHO~&#13;
L,FRi. &amp; Sat. j ACTIVITIES I 8:0&#13;
0&#13;
-&#13;
1&#13;
..:.:.-&#13;
svenTaffs&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
Mike Gogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Poetry Corner&#13;
Dawn sets forth from within,&#13;
instigated even by a loss;&#13;
Within me Isee a. burst of brightness,&#13;
for all the world to behold.&#13;
Not me, A beautiful force within&gt;&#13;
droplets of love giving birth&#13;
to smiles,&#13;
satisfaction&#13;
_ for all to seek,&#13;
to understand and become aware,&#13;
to eat and participate&#13;
to live' and stand out,&#13;
within me and without me.&#13;
Freedom, at last,&#13;
- for all to be,&#13;
Growing in a dynamic reality&#13;
setting forth on a journey toward&#13;
newness,&#13;
a sea of love, (ALL THOSE DROPLETS)&#13;
a crystallizing of a bond&#13;
that creates&#13;
this community,&#13;
growing, touching the sun,&#13;
widening our sight,&#13;
opening a soul,&#13;
. children· laughing, caring,&#13;
crying:&#13;
Let it all be together:&#13;
within&#13;
me,&#13;
Istepped on a dead robin today&#13;
as I watched a butterfly flutter away.&#13;
Bothsat In the same sunlight,&#13;
both were beheld in my sight&#13;
One the symbol of sorrow '&#13;
the 'other, the joys of tomorrow&#13;
Life slips away and then '&#13;
we ,:",atch it creep back again,&#13;
Teachmg us, keeping us aware&#13;
of its burden we shrink to bare&#13;
finding in the desolation of today&#13;
tomorrow's better way, ., '&#13;
Fabric Savings For&#13;
Back-to-School&#13;
Wardrobe&#13;
THE SINGER CO.&#13;
5716 6th Ave,&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
J'!.st South 01&#13;
Talent Hall,&#13;
-.&#13;
PHON E 658-3551&#13;
AIELLO •&#13;
8v1id- TO'lJd1t&#13;
FLORIST.&#13;
A Compl,t,'fl~,ol S, ' • PVlte&#13;
''\lith MoJep" Desiqn&#13;
2108 FIFTY SECON~~TREIT&#13;
KENOSHA, WIBCONIIN&#13;
Use Classifieds&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
Threads For&#13;
The Back&#13;
Fitti ngs For&#13;
The Feet&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Next door to the Wis. Qas &amp;.Electrlc&#13;
R-K NEWS&#13;
Kenosha's&#13;
Finest Entertainment&#13;
Live Bands&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri" Sat·&#13;
Open Seven Days a If3931&#13;
45 St" Ph. 6;~&#13;
8&#13;
U&#13;
I&#13;
L&#13;
D&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
G&#13;
I&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Work for ,Cooperation&#13;
ud nt itor are faced with this critical question - what&#13;
" n v. "i ' fit" to print? Are we working to present a newssheet of the&#13;
. dmini tration or ar we working to present students with wha~ really&#13;
mt t th m? It' difficult question to answer when you reallz~ that 't r o rating on university property. And we're trymg to&#13;
nt tudent intere ts. Th op i . oing to work for cooperation between students,&#13;
pr , nd dmini tr tion. \\'e hope to build channels of communi&#13;
ation for th exchange of information and ideas between&#13;
tu ·nt , pr , nd administration. Who knows? We may promote and&#13;
mpli h th impo ible. . . n1 · . ·. tudent Pre s Association stated the whole situation&#13;
utifully: '' th campuses have gotten more po~it_ical, and as&#13;
II r hav reflected that politicalization, adm1m.strato~s and&#13;
u l hav adopt d the Agnew thesis: you can stop dissent 1f you&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
Volime 2 - No. 1 Sept. 29, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NQER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
MikeGogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Edit&#13;
Business Mana or Advertising M ger anager Photographer&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the Unive.rs"t&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Mailing address is Pa ~Y-/: WisconsinUW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53140. Business and ~d~~ e_ s Newscope&#13;
number is 658-4861, Ext. 24. 1 orial telephon~&#13;
il n th m di of di enl. And whereas Agnew's attacks stop at a&#13;
th tri al lb it d ng rous level of intimidation, the ac.ti?ns now being&#13;
ly u d or di cus ed by nervous college adm1mstrators and&#13;
· n rin official pick up where he leaves off: editors are Poetry Corner PHONE 658-3551&#13;
, funds are cut off, offices are locked up. AIELLO •. " W can ay It Can't Happen Here and continue to publish on&#13;
Dawn sets forth from within,&#13;
instigated even by a loss;&#13;
Within me I see a. burst of brightness, fa ith in fri ndly liberal administrators or at the expense of our for all the world to behold.&#13;
ind itorial relevance, but whether we like it or not, co-called&#13;
fr m of th . tud nt press, which was always so openly advocated&#13;
v n if privat ly di regarded, is now- thanks to the legitimacy of Mr.&#13;
n w' vi ws, aired ironically enough by that same media he&#13;
"ti i1. - publicly criticized as a luxury of the past, or at least only&#13;
r rv d for th good niggers of the present.&#13;
Not me. A beautiful force within -&#13;
droplets of love giving birth&#13;
8Yfid-To1xJn&#13;
FLORIST,&#13;
to smiles,&#13;
satisfaction A Complefe"floral SePV·- • ace&#13;
- for all to seek, W;tl, MoJern Design to understand and become aware,&#13;
to eat and participate&#13;
to live· and stand out,&#13;
2108 FIFTY SECOl'iD.STREE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN T "Th college environment was traditionally seen ~s _a protected&#13;
nvironment, but, as the notion of in loco parentis was shouted down in&#13;
th 'lrly '60' and shot down in the early '7l's, the protection was seen&#13;
fo r wh t it really is: control, protecting not students' interests, but&#13;
th int r ts which exploit most people in this country and the rest of&#13;
Ut world. Thus, the protection of offices and printing presses and&#13;
financial ·upport for college papers has also become seen for what it&#13;
r lly i : a mechanism of control just like those parietal hours. Student&#13;
j ~rn~lists _are being bound and gagged clamoring for their conwithin&#13;
me and without me.&#13;
Freedom, at last, Use Classifieds&#13;
titutional rights, not only at the college level but in the high schools as&#13;
w. ll. And each voice silenced brings one step closer the demise of the&#13;
till-"protected" papers. This is the perspective from which we must&#13;
n operate. . . " It is also one_ which most student newspapers are woefully&#13;
mc apable of confronting, because of lack of technical ability lack of&#13;
fu nd .. ~ack of ~erve, lack of confidence, and lack of vision. '&#13;
There is hope. The g:owth of underground and community&#13;
pap rs have ~h?wn us there 1s a readership and financial base untapped&#13;
by ~x1stmg media . The development of new technologies has&#13;
mad ~rmtmg cheaper ~nd simpler each year. Experiments in staff&#13;
~ollectives and cooperative publishing, advertising and newsgathering&#13;
ve sho~m that new ways of working together provide the knowledg&#13;
n confidence to face the future." e&#13;
curricular activities. To begin with I was&#13;
I~- love and that alone is enough t~ com- i icate any academic career. On top of my&#13;
F&#13;
ovedaffairs, I tried to support a model T or and I had t h I - lime 1·obs to tako o d down three part- e care of my h d&#13;
expenses of $13 75 over- ea went okeh but my. stu ad. weelk. Everything ·t ies. couldn't swi I -My envolvements got the best of ng I became a dropout I me and&#13;
letting that h · really goofed-off by&#13;
services we hav:ri:n. _The counselling&#13;
invented yet in the ay ~imply h~dn't been&#13;
What followed d ~ar y twenties.&#13;
years is another sturmg the next forty-five&#13;
successful careerso~~ · · · · a~d I've got two&#13;
around to report" prove it. I might get&#13;
chapters if this co\~'fn~~ a few of those&#13;
Now I must get backasts long enough.&#13;
counselling services on to_ my offer of&#13;
have a hang-up on th goofing-off. If you&#13;
college life and e ups and downs of&#13;
I. t - need a is ener' flag me down I' sympathetic ~d who knows? . ma ~ood listener.&#13;
listening to some of .. you might wind up&#13;
May~e we can swa my own problems ... .&#13;
of thmgs bugging ~~ -~~~re ~re a couple&#13;
very well do without which I could&#13;
. But let me warii o~ ' m edgewise, too A~ ·, I II_ get a few words&#13;
of the "goof" ·. d I II discuss both "d ·11 com. Havi t . s1 es w1 also point out th ng r1ed one side I&#13;
other. e pros and cons of the&#13;
It seems that wh&#13;
to get into much e~ a ~ellow gets too old&#13;
hank · 1111sch1ef h d . ermg to give ad . • e evelops those ·h vice Well a w o are willin · · · · . only to&#13;
And you don't h g to read and r t ave to follow it. is en.&#13;
Ut111.~&#13;
- for all to be.&#13;
Growing in a dynamic reality&#13;
setting forth on a journey toward&#13;
newness,&#13;
a sea of love, (ALL THOSE DROPLETS)&#13;
a crystallizing of a bond&#13;
that creates&#13;
this community,&#13;
growing, touching the sun,&#13;
widening our sight,&#13;
opening a soul,&#13;
. children - laughing, caring ,&#13;
crymg:&#13;
Let it all be together:&#13;
within&#13;
me.&#13;
I stepped on a dead robin today&#13;
as I watched a butterfly flutter away.&#13;
Both .sat in the same sunlight,&#13;
both were beheld in my sight,&#13;
One the symbol of sorrow&#13;
the other, the joys of tom~rrow&#13;
Life slips away and then ·&#13;
we "_Vatch it creep back again,&#13;
Teac~mg us, keeping us aware,&#13;
. of_ its _burden we shrink to bare&#13;
fmding m the desolation of today&#13;
tomorrow's better way. · · '&#13;
Fabric Savings For&#13;
Back-to-School&#13;
Wardrobe&#13;
THE SINGER CO.&#13;
5716 6th Ave.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
MULLEN'SThreads&#13;
For&#13;
The Back&#13;
Fittings For&#13;
The Feet&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Next door to the Wis. qas &amp; _Electrlc&#13;
R-K NEWS&#13;
Kenosha's&#13;
Finest Entertainment&#13;
Live Bands&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sal,&#13;
Open Seven Days a Week&#13;
3931 45 St. . Ph. 652·8711&#13;
L-----------_____, r-:---.:----:----:-------====~---·_____, J~st South of B&#13;
u&#13;
Talent Hal~ - NOW OPEN!!!&#13;
MON.-THURS. - 8 a.m.-10 p.111.&#13;
FRI. - 8 a.m.-1 a.m.&#13;
SAT. &amp; SUN. _ SPECIAL EVENTS ONLY&#13;
STUDENT &amp; WIS. ID REQUIRED&#13;
GAMES BANDS . POPCORN&#13;
MUSIC FOOD DRINKS&#13;
CURRENT MOVIES&#13;
. I&#13;
l&#13;
D&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
s&#13;
T&#13;
u&#13;
D&#13;
E&#13;
N&#13;
T THIS _WEEK&#13;
~i. &amp; Sat. j GREGORY JAMES, ~~~! , . ~ ACTIVITIES t_:.::--: / &#13;
Experts Study Prairie Here&#13;
- .~ &lt; •••F:-&#13;
" :;:".&#13;
:, :~~~.&#13;
~I' ,. ,&#13;
I ~ \\ v'~~'~\if~~~~~,~\\~!\~&#13;
~J~I\'~~k.f£~"l.\~ '" ~&#13;
Leading tours of the Chiwaukee Prairie during the Second Biennial Prairie- Can.&#13;
ference held at UW-P on Sept. 21were Parkside faculty members Eugene Gasiorliiewicz&#13;
associate professor of Life Science (far right) and Charles Holzbog, assistant professor&#13;
of art (center).&#13;
More than 100 experts on prairie&#13;
management and scientists whose&#13;
research centers on prairie life convened&#13;
at The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Sept. 20 for the final sessions of the second&#13;
biennial Prairie Conference. Initial&#13;
sessions of the three day conference were&#13;
held at UW-Madison.&#13;
Participants attended from throughout&#13;
the United States and from several&#13;
Canadian provinces.&#13;
The program at Parkside included&#13;
several talks and panel discussions, and an&#13;
afternoon field trip to the Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie.&#13;
The morning session, devoted to&#13;
discussion of "Prairies and People" was&#13;
moderated by Prof. Eugene C.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz of Parkside's life science&#13;
faculty and included presentations by&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie, Prof. Charles&#13;
Holzbog of the UWP art faculty, and&#13;
George P. Hanson, senior biologist at the&#13;
Los Angeles State and County Arboretum.&#13;
A second panel, on "Plans of Action,"&#13;
focused on economic and recreational&#13;
pressures on natural environments and&#13;
environmental design. Participants were&#13;
James Zimmerman, chief naturalist at the&#13;
UW-Madison Arboretum, Hanson, and&#13;
Holzbog.&#13;
The afternoon session began with a talk'&#13;
on the Chiwaukee Prairie by Phil Sander&#13;
of the Kenosha-Racine Chapter of Nature&#13;
Conservancy followed by a tour of the&#13;
prairie.&#13;
The Chi waukee Prairie tract was&#13;
acquired by 1&lt;ature Conservancy and&#13;
presented to Parkside as a - nature&#13;
preserve' for scientific, educational and&#13;
aesthetic purposes. More than 3()()species&#13;
of plants have been cataloged on the tract.&#13;
The Prairie Conference was jointly&#13;
sponsored by the UW Arboretum,&#13;
Madison, the Parkside Division of Science&#13;
and the Wisconsin Department of Natural&#13;
Resources. The first such conference was&#13;
held two years ago at Knox College,&#13;
Galesburg, ill.&#13;
Use the Classifieds&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR REAR END!&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR TOPSIDE&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR SIDE!&#13;
FOREIGN&#13;
CARS DUALS&#13;
BRAKE SERVICE&#13;
WHILE-U-IAIT 20 MIN.&#13;
MUFFLER&#13;
INSTA LLA TI0 N~;;;;;I~I'!'R'W'I&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
MON. and Fri. - 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
TUES. thru THURS. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
SAT. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
fREE DELIVERY&#13;
More than 100 experts on prairie&#13;
management and scientists whose&#13;
research centers on prairie life convened&#13;
at The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Sept. 20 for the final sessions of the second&#13;
biennial Prairie Conference. Initial&#13;
sessions of the three day conference were&#13;
held at UW-Madison.&#13;
Participants attended from throughout&#13;
the United States and from several&#13;
Canadian provinces.&#13;
The program at Parkside included&#13;
several talks and panel discussions, and an&#13;
afternoon field trip to the Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie.&#13;
The morning session, devoted to&#13;
discussion of "Prairies and People" was&#13;
moderated by Prof. Eugene C.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz of Parkside's life science&#13;
faculty and included presentations by·&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie, Prof. Charles&#13;
Holzbog of the UWP art faculty, and&#13;
George P. Hanson, senior biologist at the&#13;
Los Angeles State and County Arboretum.&#13;
A second panel, on "Plans of Action,"&#13;
focused on economic and recreational&#13;
pressures on natural environments and&#13;
environmental design. Participants were&#13;
James Zimmerman, chief naturalist at the&#13;
UW-Madison Arboretum, Hanson, and&#13;
Holzbog.&#13;
The afternoon session began with a talk&#13;
on the Chiwaukee Prairie by Phil Sander&#13;
of the Kenosha-Racine Chapter of Nature&#13;
Conservancy followed by a tour of the&#13;
prairie.&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie tract was&#13;
acquired by '&amp;ature Conservancy and&#13;
presented to Parkside as a · nature&#13;
preserve· for scientific, educational and&#13;
aesthetic purposes. More than 300 species&#13;
of plants have been cataloged on the tract.&#13;
The Prairie Conference was jointly&#13;
sponsored by the UW Arboretum,&#13;
Madison, the Parkside Division of Science&#13;
aqd the Wisconsin Department of Natural&#13;
Resources. The first such conference was&#13;
held two years ago at Knox College,&#13;
Galesburg, Ill.&#13;
Use the Classifieds&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR REAR END!&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR TOPSIDE&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR SIDE!&#13;
FOREIGN&#13;
CARS&#13;
20 MIN.&#13;
MUFFLER&#13;
INSTALLATION&#13;
DUALS&#13;
BRAKE SERVICE&#13;
WHILE-U-WAIT&#13;
-&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
MON. and Fri. - 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
TUES. thru THURS. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
SAT. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY &#13;
Assistant Attorney General .&#13;
Kashiwa of the Justice Department' Shiro&#13;
and Natural Resources Division ha SLand&#13;
that "we can see no jUStifica~ stated.&#13;
allowing cour~ actions by individ °l'~or&#13;
In short, It seemed to saua&#13;
s.&#13;
vironmentalists that the NI' me en,&#13;
. . t ti d " xon Ad rrurus ra ron, espite Its strong h .&#13;
was hedging in favor of big bUSi~etorie,&#13;
industrial interests. ess and&#13;
Reaction from many sides w .&#13;
mediate and scathing: as un-&#13;
- .Stewart Udall, former Secr t&#13;
the Interior t sai.d, "Environmental~s~ry or&#13;
fear that the NIxon Administration' Who&#13;
pollution drive may be half rhetor' anti·&#13;
promises and half politics have i&#13;
C&#13;
' hall&#13;
strange new ally. The Justice Dep~~:Ua&#13;
(Continued on Page 5) t&#13;
. Ii statement enThe&#13;
prosecutIOn po ICy to use the 1899&#13;
d US Attorneys .' t&#13;
courage .: h or prevent sigmflcan&#13;
I~w "to P~~ch are either accidental or&#13;
discharges, hi h are not of a coninfrequent,&#13;
but w 11~ngfrom the ordinary&#13;
tinuing nature resu I nufacturing planl."&#13;
operations o~ a rna&#13;
(\laliCs supphed') t while J ti Departmen ,&#13;
The I dgusn:ethat industrial pollution.&#13;
acknow e I '6/ t t threat to -the' eo-&#13;
. ed" the grea es d&#13;
pos ,,' ed that the Nixon A -&#13;
vironmen~l claim d hard at work to&#13;
ministratlOn was airea Y from polluting.&#13;
stop large ma~ufa,J,t;:{:;S Quality AdThe&#13;
Federa . . . d had set up&#13;
ministration, J~s~lcem~slerc:eedures" to&#13;
"programs, pOliCies an. P t to the&#13;
which "we shall defer WIth res~c At"&#13;
bringing of actio.os under the Re use c.&#13;
Refuse Ad Allows Citizens&#13;
To Prosecute Water polluters r d polluter to&#13;
Basically, once you 10 a detailed&#13;
attack, you should prepare a notary&#13;
statement, sworn to before a&#13;
public, setting forth:. f material&#13;
• the nature of the re use&#13;
discharged; hod f discharge;&#13;
• the source and met 0 f the&#13;
• the location, name and address, 0 .&#13;
person or persons causing or contrIbutmg&#13;
tD the discharge; di harge&#13;
• each date on which the sc&#13;
occurred, f 11per&#13;
• the names and addresses 0 a .&#13;
sons known to you. including yourself, Wh~&#13;
saw or knows about the discharges an&#13;
could testify about them if necessa~Y;&#13;
• a statement that the discharge IS n~t 't 'f a permit authorized by Corps perml • Of! 1&#13;
was granted, state facts sh0v.:mg tJ.tat the&#13;
alleged \,jolater is not .complymg With any&#13;
condition of the permit;&#13;
• if the waterway into which the&#13;
discharge occurred is not, commonly&#13;
known as navigable. or as a trIbUtary of a&#13;
navigable waterway, stale facts to show&#13;
such status;&#13;
• where possible, photographs should h.&#13;
taken and samples of the poUutant .or&#13;
foreign substance collected in a clean Jar&#13;
which is then sealed. These should be&#13;
labeled with information showing who took&#13;
the photograph or sample, where, and&#13;
when. and how; and who retained custody&#13;
of the film jar, ,. '&#13;
This will be your basic ammumtion In&#13;
the suit and should bC filed in a U.S.&#13;
dIstrict' court. which apparently h~ve&#13;
exclusive jurisdiction to hear and deCIde&#13;
such suits, The Supreme Court has upheld&#13;
Qui Tam suits in the past on the basis that&#13;
the citizen·inIormer has a financial interest&#13;
in the fine and therefore can sue to&#13;
collect It. - . .&#13;
Actually. the 1899 Refuse Act eo~tams a&#13;
provision that suits against Violators&#13;
should be filed by lhe government, and the&#13;
U.S, Attorneys should "vigorously&#13;
prosecute all offenders". The U.S. Attorneys&#13;
are also authorized to seek injunctions&#13;
to stop pollution of navigable&#13;
waterways and to force the violators to&#13;
clean up. at their own expense.&#13;
However, recent actions by the Nixon&#13;
Administration. through the Justice&#13;
Department, have led many environmentalists&#13;
to question the likelihood&#13;
that U.S. Attorneys will fulfill their legal&#13;
obligations under the 1899 law. This doubt&#13;
has led to emphasis on Qui Tam.&#13;
In July, the Justice Department issued a&#13;
fascinating memorandum called&#13;
"Cuidelines for litigation Under the&#13;
Refuse Act" and set it out to all U.S. Attorneys.&#13;
B) JOII" II \\IER&#13;
tolt it Pr . s nice&#13;
E\l"r he rd of Qui Tam'!&#13;
,'0, )OU can't get It at a Chinese&#13;
taurant And it's not a village In South&#13;
\It''tnam&#13;
Qui Tam I a v nerablc old legal prmcrpt&#13;
'Ahi h alia"" you, the mdIndual&#13;
cun n. to hie Ull in the name of the&#13;
IOv('rruntnt agam t people who break&#13;
rertain IB'A. , and thrn collect half of the&#13;
fln Cor a COIl\lCliOO&#13;
Th" id ha been gellIng a lot of att&#13;
nil n lately coupled .. llh another crusty&#13;
old law called the Rcfu'. Act of t899... hich&#13;
rorbtd 3n)One or an~' group. Crom&#13;
thrm\ln~ pollutanLS IOl0 any navIgable&#13;
'Aal 10 the- OIllod ·tates Without a&#13;
pt.'rmll&#13;
'", 3\180 ht ""atf:rs" are, defined as&#13;
rl\ rs 13k ,. tr am~or their tributaries&#13;
Urrl(.'I~nt to n at a boat or log at high&#13;
Willer&#13;
Pt'rmlls af 1 sUfi! by the U. Army&#13;
( or o( 1':~ln('t·r.;,but . loce the Corps&#13;
ha tr~,dltlnn II)' conct:rned Itself chlcny&#13;
'Alth drt,,(~lnK, filling nnd con....truction,&#13;
rt'lallH'1) ft''A p4.·rmll .. ha\,(' ever b&lt;'cn&#13;
I lJ("d i\nd tho ""ho hov(" them I mostly&#13;
InliLAIn olH n vlnlatr p('rmlt provIsions&#13;
b) dumpln~untrt'at ·ddiS harges Into the&#13;
"alt.'r&#13;
What nil thl rnt'.m I that 00"" you can&#13;
pl"oc"('OC(t dlrt'(.'"tl) 10 your local ncighlOrhond&#13;
Indu trl,ll pnlluH·r. galht&gt;r some&#13;
Infornl ,hon and Implt .. and ttK'n filc a&#13;
tilt "lm"h l"Ulild hrml{ a hnl' of not more&#13;
th:an 2 ~IU nur II s than :,011 for each day&#13;
0( \lol.,lIon uf ....hu,:h )nu gt't hair It could&#13;
I 0 tott'tth" pollull'r lhrov,n In jail for not&#13;
I th.H) I da) nor mor(, th;,l11one ycar,&#13;
"lm'h I unhk'iv bul nlCl' to lhlllk about.&#13;
l (" ur t}x, tW;J Ht·rust' Acl and the Qui&#13;
Tilill CUlll'l'pt hi.J\(' b(.'{'n slron~l)" ad-&#13;
\IJC,',llrd rt.....:t·nth h, thc HOlL')£! Subt.'1U11IIIIttt.&#13;
on Consl',,\'ation and Natural&#13;
Itt (Jun:t.' • led by Hs chrurman. Rep&#13;
Ih'un H,l'U"s t t&gt; WIS) ReuS"c.;himself has&#13;
ht ...1. (~ui Tam achons against four&#13;
plUuhon c mpaOlcs In Milwaukee&#13;
Tht.'Subc:ommittCt' has Just completed a&#13;
fl.'porl 'lui TaUl A tlon. and the 1899&#13;
Rdust.' At:t CItizen Lawsuits Against&#13;
polluter. or the Nation's \\'atcrways",&#13;
\\.hlch will be released within two weeks&#13;
and "Ill be avaIlablc from the U.S.&#13;
CO\'l'rnm ot Printing Office. Washington,&#13;
[) 204112. lor 15cenlS It lells you exactly&#13;
how to ROabout colle&lt;:lInp: evidence. riling&#13;
SUit. and Clt('S Impressive legal precedent&#13;
to help you "to your case&#13;
8&lt;' ,dt"S the H.elL'; suits, two other Qui&#13;
TaRt 'lions have b&lt;'cn filed rccenlly, one&#13;
by a S altle altorn } and the other by an&#13;
org nl1.allon of bass fishermen in&#13;
Alabama \13ny rnvironmentalists are&#13;
hoPIOfr.ta lot more suits Will be filed this&#13;
f.11l&#13;
"This IS a tx&gt;uuliful prOject for college&#13;
. tuckols i.lOd ('Col~}' groups:' asserts&#13;
Clem I)msmorc, legal assistant to the&#13;
Con:t'r\'alion nd :\atural R('sources&#13;
.'ubt.'ommltll't'. y,ho b&lt;'lpcd research and&#13;
pr 'part.' th &gt; ft.'port. "U's i.l great way to go&#13;
~Ifll'rpullutt'rs t·&#13;
[)lfI.&lt;1,IIl0f(' f( 'omnwnds that student&#13;
t!roup (:ombml' the talt'nts of law schools&#13;
,lOd blUing) dt'partmcnts 10kl"Cp legal fees&#13;
ut mlmmum and qUilhty of endence at a&#13;
111~'Xlmum&#13;
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Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday&#13;
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THE THEATRE WITH A NE~ TRADITION&#13;
Refuse Act Allows Citizens&#13;
To Prosecute Water Polluters&#13;
r. d a polluter to&#13;
Ba. ically, once you 10 detailed&#13;
attack, you should preb~r~e a a notary&#13;
.tatement, sworn to eo&#13;
public, setting forth; r material • the nature of the re use&#13;
di charged; di h ge· e the source and method of SC ar th'&#13;
• the location. name and address_ o . e per on or persons causing or contr1butmg&#13;
ID the di charge: . • each date on which the discharge&#13;
'Curred; r 11 per • the names and addresses o a · ·on. ·nown to "OU including yourself, who • J ' ct· h rges and sa\\ or knows about the 1sc a&#13;
could testify about them if necessa~y;&#13;
• a statement that the discharge IS n~t . ·r permit authorized by Corps permit, or, 1 a&#13;
wa granted, state facts sho"'.ing tJ:iat the&#13;
all ged \'iolater is not complying with any&#13;
condition of the permit; . • if the waterway into which the&#13;
discharge occurred is not . commonly&#13;
knoY. n as navigable, or as a tributary of a&#13;
navigable waterway, state facts to show&#13;
such statu.; d h • where po sible, photographs shoul e&#13;
taken and samples of the pollutant . or&#13;
foreign ubstance co11ected in a clean Jar&#13;
which is then ealed. These should be&#13;
labeled with information showing who took&#13;
the photograph or sample, where, and&#13;
wh •n, and how: and who retained custody&#13;
of th film jar. . . This will be your basic ammunition m&#13;
th . uit, and should be filed in a U.S.&#13;
di. trict court, which apparently have&#13;
clu. ive jurisdiction to hear and decide&#13;
uch suits. The upreme Court has upheld&#13;
(lui Tam suits in the past on the basis that&#13;
the citizen-informer has a financial intere~t&#13;
111 the fine and therefore can sue to&#13;
coll&lt;'ct it. . . Actually. the 1899 Refuse Act eontams a&#13;
provision that uits against violators&#13;
should be filed by the government, and tl1e&#13;
. . Attorneys should "vigorously&#13;
prosecute all offenders". The U.S. Attorney&#13;
are also authorized to seek injunctions&#13;
to stop po11ution of navigable&#13;
waterways and to force the violators to&#13;
de n up, at their own expense.&#13;
However, recent actions by the Nixon&#13;
Administration, through the Justice&#13;
Department, have led many environmentalists&#13;
to question the likelihood&#13;
that .S. Attorneys will fulfill their legal&#13;
obligations under the 1899 law. This doubt&#13;
has led to emphasis on Qui Tam.&#13;
In July, the Justice Department issued a&#13;
fascinating memorandum called&#13;
··Guidelines for litigation Under the&#13;
Refuse Act" and set it out to all U.S. Attorneys.&#13;
&#13;
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. r statement en- The prosecution po icyt use the 1899&#13;
d us Attorneys O .• courage · : h prevent sigmf1cant&#13;
law "to pun~ h ~~e either accidental or discharges, w c h" h ar~ not of a coninfrequent,&#13;
but w :: g from the ordinary&#13;
tinuin~ nature resu :nufacturing plant."&#13;
opera t10ns of_ a m&#13;
(Italics supplied.) t t while r Depar men,&#13;
The Ju~ ice t industrial pollution.&#13;
acknow,l,edgmg; e:!st threat to the . enposed&#13;
the gr . d that the Nixon Advironmen~,"&#13;
claime hard at work to&#13;
ministration was already from polluting.&#13;
stop large manufacturers lit AdThe&#13;
Federal ~a~er_ Quahaf set up&#13;
ministration, J~s~1ce ms1sler~edures" to&#13;
" programs, policies an~ p t to the&#13;
h. h "we shall defer with respec "&#13;
;ri~ging of actio.ns under the Refuse Act.&#13;
Assistant Attorney General .&#13;
Kashiwa of the Justice Department' Shiro&#13;
and Natural Resources Division h s Land&#13;
that "we can see no justifica~~ statect&#13;
allowing cour~ actions by individu:Jn ,!or&#13;
In short, 1t seemed to so s.&#13;
vironmentalists that the Nixme en.&#13;
ministration, despite its strong in A_dwas&#13;
hedging in favor of big bus/ etor1c,&#13;
industrial interests. ness and&#13;
Reaction from many sides w . mediate and scathing: as 1rn.&#13;
- Stewart Udall, former Seer t&#13;
the Interior, sai_d, "EnvironmentaJ~s:Y of&#13;
fear that th~ Nixon Administration' Wh?&#13;
pollution drive may be half rhetor· 8 anti.&#13;
promises and half politics have t· half&#13;
strange new ally. The Justice Depi~nd a&#13;
(Continued on Page 5) rnent&#13;
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live entertainment--&#13;
Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday&#13;
sour hour and beer blast nightly&#13;
8:00-9:00 p.m.&#13;
sour mixed drinks 25C beer 10(&#13;
ladies nights Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
Free drink with this ad, uTI . ff)1 . • u tie ...,Ufftu;o/tn 1210 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
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,I~~~~!i(~ation To Air Vets' Testimony&#13;
Veterans A . t 1 - Vietnam Johnson witnessed the burning and&#13;
are ti gains the War, in preparation destruction of villages, and has given . a n~ ronal commission on U S W Crimes In lat N '. ar testimony to that effect at a number of&#13;
all Indo hi eWovember, has called upon local-level war crimes commissions that&#13;
ward .~ Itnha&#13;
ar veterans to come for- the national Committee has helped&#13;
.. 1 ey have testimony about atrocities committed by Arne . . th organize in nine cities since March.&#13;
proce~s of waging war in ASr~~ansin e Veterans who have testimony that they&#13;
Thel.r purpose .is to show that U.S.- would like to give can call or write the&#13;
~ommltted war cnrnes like My Lai are not officers of the Winter Soldier InIsolated&#13;
aberrations by battle-crazed GIs vestigation, 156 Fifth Avenue, Suite 1003&#13;
but a logical outcome of U.S. policies lik~ New York, NY 10010(212) 533-2734. They&#13;
search-aDd-destroy "mad . 't" will also be glad to give any assistance in&#13;
". , mmu e, setting up campus or community veterans massive relocatton" (a euphemism for&#13;
C?Dce!11ratlOn camps), chemical. groups against the war. And speakers and&#13;
bIOlogical weaponry, "free fire zones" local commissions can be set up on&#13;
devices, - and. electrical wiring and other tortu~ec .=a=m~pu=s=es=--a=n:d:....:i~n_c~o:m=m~un=it:ie:s,---- l"&#13;
~==============~&#13;
"Individual soldiers should not be made&#13;
~apegoats for policies designed at the&#13;
highest levels of government. Instead&#13;
responsibility for War Crimes should b~&#13;
placed where it truly belongs - upon the&#13;
U.S. Government," said the Vets in the&#13;
call for the Winter Investigation.&#13;
. TheWinter Soldier Investigation, which&#13;
IS being coordinated by the National&#13;
Com~lllttee for .3 Citizens' Commission of&#13;
Inquiry on U.S. War Crimes in Vietnam&#13;
wi.ll be held in Detroit, Michigan, and&#13;
windsor, Ontario, Canada, Nov. 30- Dec. 2.&#13;
After an \introductory session with a&#13;
num.ber. of national anti-war figures, investigations&#13;
sessions will be held with&#13;
veterans and other experts giving specific&#13;
testimony concerning U.S. atrocities.&#13;
Under existing law, veterans who are no&#13;
longer on active duty cannot be prosecuted&#13;
for any war crimes they have participated&#13;
in and later admit to. The point of the&#13;
whole investigation is to show that the&#13;
individual GI in the field, while executing&#13;
war policy, has almost no choice but to&#13;
participate in acts which would be ruled as&#13;
war crimes by any existing international&#13;
standards - the Nuremburg Principles&#13;
and the Geneva Accords.&#13;
"Most of our operations are designed to&#13;
eliminate Vietnamese peasants," said&#13;
Robert Johnson, an ex-Army Captain, a&#13;
West Point graduate, and a Vietnam&#13;
veteran. "If we applied the Nuremburg&#13;
~inciples in Vietnam, Westmoreland,&#13;
Nixon, Johnson would be hung - plus key&#13;
people in corporations, foundations,&#13;
government and universities."&#13;
The Detroit site was chosen because of&#13;
the proximity to Canada, which will be&#13;
necessary for the testimony of Vietnamese&#13;
victims, intellectuals, and scientists who&#13;
are not allowed in lbe United States. The&#13;
hearings will be linked by electronic&#13;
transmissions.&#13;
"Almost every veteran has witnessed&#13;
atrocities," said Johnson. "But many&#13;
times they don't even realize that what&#13;
they're doing is a war crime, because its&#13;
an a'ccepted part of their jobs."&#13;
1899 Law&#13;
(Continued rrom Page 4)&#13;
is trying to prove they are right."&#13;
_ The Conservation Foundation a&#13;
respected, national .group, stated, "Our&#13;
basic difficulty ... IS with the underlying&#13;
policy. of the (Justice Department's)&#13;
Guidelmes . , . The policy you articulate&#13;
disregards the lbeory behind the Federal&#13;
Water pollution Control Act; federal&#13;
leverage is required to force states to&#13;
establish and implement water quality&#13;
standards."&#13;
_ And Henry Reuss, Wisconsin&#13;
Congressman, complained that the Justice&#13;
Department's "limited enforcement"&#13;
doctrine "favors the polluter over the&#13;
public'S interest in preventing the&#13;
poHution of our watersays."&#13;
In a speech in the House, Reuss charged&#13;
"total abdication" by Justice of its&#13;
"statutory duty" to enforce the 1899 act.&#13;
"The Attorney General," Reuss said,&#13;
"whose sworn duty is to enforce law and&#13;
order, is a scoff law where water pollution&#13;
is concerned."&#13;
Andin a statement tbat turned one of the&#13;
Nixon Administration's favorite tactics&#13;
back on itself, Reuss declared: "The&#13;
Justice Department is quite willing to&#13;
enforce the law against the occasional&#13;
polluter, but not against the big corporate,&#13;
polluters who continuously violate our&#13;
pollution laws. It is this type of ragged&#13;
enforcement that breeds contempt and&#13;
disrepsect for the law."&#13;
Reuss and the Subcommittee he heads&#13;
have also been active in forcing the Corps&#13;
of Engineers to revise its regulations&#13;
concerning issuance of permits. Perhaps&#13;
surprisingly to some, the Corps has shown&#13;
great improvement in the past few&#13;
months, at least on paper. And Reuss&#13;
seems confident that they will vigorously&#13;
enforce their new standards.&#13;
The basic problem in the entire area of&#13;
water pollution law enforcement and&#13;
prevention seems to be the underlying&#13;
difference of opinion between the Nixon&#13;
Administration and environmental activists&#13;
concerning individual citizen involvement.&#13;
Activists want to increase it;&#13;
the Administration tries to decrease it.&#13;
Wilb the widespread emergence of the&#13;
Qui Tam concept, the conflict may be&#13;
decided in favor of environmentalists.&#13;
Many believe this will be a vital gain. As&#13;
Ramsey Clark, former U.S. Attorney&#13;
General, said in recent Senate testimony:&#13;
" ... tbere isn't any single symptom that&#13;
better expresses the frustrations of&#13;
modern life. than the powerlessness of&#13;
people to affect things of vital importance&#13;
to them: You can't sue. You've just got to&#13;
livewith it. If the garbage isn't collected, if&#13;
the park you sit in is being leveled by&#13;
bulldozers, you can't do anything. We can't&#13;
go on like that. People have to have the&#13;
power through legal process to affect&#13;
things that are important to them."&#13;
658-2233&#13;
(fJ&#13;
~·t~~Wtnwt4-&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and RANCH&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NDRTH &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICH ES '&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
~\iI&#13;
~&#13;
2910 ROOSEVELT RD., KENOSHA&#13;
"THE LAh WORO IN&#13;
THRILLERS. TERRIFIC."&#13;
-Gene Shalit. L.ook Magazine&#13;
Nightly&#13;
thru&#13;
Thursday&#13;
3M&#13;
:- .&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATIC?NFlL BANK&#13;
WIIiOIM&#13;
DELICATESSEN -BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 fl"Y·SECOND STUn&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a day/? days a week&#13;
Organ Music&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Fram 9 p.rn. til 2 e.m.&#13;
ALCOA SUBSIDARY&#13;
Immediate Openings for&#13;
Porters&#13;
Part Time Work&#13;
20 hrs. a Week&#13;
3 Evenings &amp; Sat.&#13;
$50 a Week&#13;
INTERVIEWS TUESDAY, SEPT. 29&#13;
Racine Campus 9:30 a.m. Rm. 201&#13;
Greenquist 12:30 p.m. Rm. 231&#13;
Kenosha 2:30 p.m. Rm. 243&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS • TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF • • •&#13;
~exkan (liood&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican food is fun food • • .&#13;
so Taco Kings' are fun places"&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
HAT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 654-5717&#13;
1899 Law&#13;
(Continued frnm Page 4)&#13;
is trying to prove they are right." _ The Conservation Foundation a&#13;
respected_ national . gro~p, stated, "Our&#13;
basic difficulty .. . 1s with the underlying&#13;
policy of the (Justic_e Department's)&#13;
Guidelines . . . The pohcy you articulate&#13;
disregards the theory behind the Federal&#13;
water Pollution Control Act; federal&#13;
leverage is required to force states to&#13;
establish and implement water quality&#13;
standards.,,&#13;
_ And Henry Reuss, Wisconsin&#13;
Congressman, complained that the Justice&#13;
Department's "limited enforcement"&#13;
doctrine "favors the polluter over the&#13;
public's interest in preventing the&#13;
pollution of our watersays."&#13;
In a speech in the House, Reuss charged&#13;
"total abdication" by Justice of its&#13;
"statutory duty" to enforce the 1899 act.&#13;
"The Attorney Ge~eral," Reuss said,&#13;
"whose sworn duty is to enforce law and&#13;
order, is a scoff law where water pollution&#13;
is concerned."&#13;
And in a statement that turned one of the&#13;
Nixon Administration's favorite tactics&#13;
back on itself, Reuss declarl;ld: "The&#13;
Justice Department is quite willing to&#13;
enforce the law against the occasional&#13;
polluter, but not against the big corporate , polluters who continuously violate our&#13;
pollution laws. It is this type of ragged&#13;
enforcement that breeds contempt and&#13;
disrepsect for the law."&#13;
Reuss and the Subcommittee he heads&#13;
have also been active in forcing the Corps&#13;
of Engineers to revise its regulations&#13;
concerning issuance of permits. Perhaps&#13;
surprisingly to some, the Corps has shown&#13;
great improvement in the past few&#13;
months, at least on paper. And Reuss&#13;
seems confident that they will vigorously&#13;
enforce their new standards.&#13;
The basic problem in the entire area of&#13;
water pollution law enforcement and&#13;
prevention seems to be the underlying&#13;
difference of opinion between the Nixon&#13;
Administration and environmental activists&#13;
concerning individual citizen involvement.&#13;
Activists want to increase it;&#13;
the Administration tries to decrease it.&#13;
With the widespread emergence of the&#13;
Qui Tam concept, the conflict may be&#13;
decided in favor of environmentalists.&#13;
Many believe this will be a vital gain. As&#13;
Ramsey Clark, former U.S. Attorney&#13;
General, said in recent Senate testimony:&#13;
" ... there isn't any single symptom that&#13;
better expresses the frustrations of&#13;
modern life . !pl!n the powerlessness . of&#13;
people to affect things of vital importance&#13;
to them: You can't sue. You've just got to&#13;
live with it. If the garbage isn't collected, if&#13;
the park you sit in -is being leveled by&#13;
bulldozers, you can't do anything. We can't&#13;
go on like that. People have to have the&#13;
power through legal process to affect&#13;
things that are important to them."&#13;
F~ 658-2233&#13;
~ It&#13;
Town //;&#13;
(t)&#13;
~-iUJlU'hronb.:-0~&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES ,&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS- -&#13;
1~Y,~s!i,~sation To Air Vets' Testimony&#13;
Veterans Against the W 1. - Vietn~m Johnson witnessed the burning and&#13;
are a national comm· a_r, m preparation destruction of village and ha given C . . 1ss1on on us War t r th • rimes m late Novembe h · · es 1mony to at effect at a number of&#13;
all Indochina War vet r, as called upon local-level war crimes commi · 10ns that&#13;
ward if they have ert~~t!0 come for- the ~ati?na! Co~mit~ee ha helped atrocities committed b Am _ony ~bout organize m nme cities smce !\larch. process of waging wa Y_ Ae~icans m the Veterans who have testimony that they&#13;
Their purpose is 1: mh s,a .th wo~ld like to give can call or write the&#13;
committed war crimes r: : ~t U.S.- off1~ers of the Winter Soldier In- isolated aberrations by ~ettl Y Lai are not veshgation, 156 Fifth Avenue, Suite 1003&#13;
but a logical outcome of US e-cr~z_ed ~Is, N~w York, NY 10010 (212 ) 533-2734. They&#13;
search-and-destroy .. ~~dohc~es, hk,~ w1ll _also be glad to give any a sist.ance in&#13;
"massive relocation,', ( h m~nute, setting up campus or community veteran&#13;
concentration cam a tup e~is~ for groups against the war. And speaker and&#13;
biological weaponry ·¼~ ' f c em,ca\: local commissi?ns can be set up on&#13;
DELICATESSEN-BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 FIFTY-SECOND STREET&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
and electrical wirin'g ~ thire zones, campuses and m communities&#13;
d eVIces. . _ an o er torture , ,-------------------------------&#13;
"Individual soldiers should not be made&#13;
s~apegoats for policies designed at the&#13;
highest levels of government. Instead&#13;
responsibility for War Crimes should b~&#13;
placed where it truly belongs _ upon the&#13;
U.S. Government," said the Vets in the&#13;
call for the Winter Investigation.&#13;
. The_Winter Soldier Investigation, which&#13;
1s be1?g coordinated by the National&#13;
Committee for fl Citizens' Commission of&#13;
Inquiry on U.S. War Crimes in Vietnam&#13;
wi_ll be held in Detroit, Michigan, and&#13;
Wmdsor, Ontario, Canada, Nov. 30-Dec. 2.&#13;
After an introductory session with a&#13;
nunt_ber. ol national anti-war figures, investLgations&#13;
sessions will be held with&#13;
veterans and other experts giving specific&#13;
testimony concerning U.S. atrocities.&#13;
Under existing law, veterans who are no&#13;
longer on active duty cannot be prosecuted&#13;
~or any war crimes they have participated&#13;
m and later admit to. The J.)Oint of the&#13;
whole investigation is to &amp;how that the&#13;
individual GI in the field, while executing&#13;
war policy, has almost no choice but to&#13;
participate in acts which would be ruled as&#13;
war crimes by any existing international&#13;
standards - the Nuremburg Principles&#13;
and the Geneva Accords.&#13;
"Most of our operations are designed to&#13;
eliminate Vietnamese peasants," said&#13;
Robert Johnson, an ex-Army Captain, a&#13;
West Point graduate, and a Vietnam&#13;
veteran. "If we_ applied the Nuremburg&#13;
Principles in Vietnam, Westmoreland,&#13;
Nixon, Johnson would be hung - plus key&#13;
people in corporations, foundations,&#13;
government and universities."&#13;
The Detroit site was chosen because of&#13;
the proximity to Canada, which will be&#13;
necessary for the testimony of Vietnamese&#13;
victims, intellectuals, and scientists who&#13;
are not allowed in the United States. The&#13;
hearings will be linked by electronic&#13;
transmissions.&#13;
"Almost every veteran has witnessed&#13;
atr.ocities," said Johnson. "But many&#13;
times they don't even realize that what&#13;
they're doing is a war crime, because its&#13;
an accepted part of their jobs."&#13;
1;1:,}1¥!,~ie·M&#13;
2910 ROOSEVELT RD., KENOSHA&#13;
"THE LA~T WORD IN&#13;
THRILLERS, TERRIFIC."&#13;
-Gene Shalit, Look Magazine&#13;
Nightly&#13;
thru&#13;
Thursday&#13;
6:45 &amp; 9:00&#13;
3h&#13;
-&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
'-,1HOIM&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a day/ 7 days a week&#13;
Organ Music&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2 a.m.&#13;
ALCOA SUBSIDARY&#13;
Immediate Openings for&#13;
Porters&#13;
Part Time Work&#13;
20 hrs. a Week&#13;
3 Evenings &amp; Sat.&#13;
$50 a Week&#13;
INTERVIEWS TUESDAY, SEPT. 29&#13;
Racine Campus 9:30 a.m. Rm. 201&#13;
Greenquist 12:30 p.m. Rm. 231&#13;
Kenosha 2:30 p.m. Rm. 243&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS • TAMALES&#13;
'COMPLETE MENU OF.&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican food is fun food • • .&#13;
so Taco Kings' are fun places"&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11 a.m.&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
"AT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 654-sn 7&#13;
. .&#13;
. &#13;
Kenosha's Own Prophet rttl "Yes it was a&#13;
Kenosha notoriOUS City on the Grow, The girl blus~ all ~h:~ould ~ay about&#13;
ha flnall'.:gr- ..sn enough to ment its own phonenumber, IS a Norm before that&#13;
~ v.... it. She had never seen&#13;
Prophet In Residence . lng&#13;
.oern : hmuck (a pseudonym to protect evening. I t of his time heipi&#13;
.. .. li" the occult Norm spends a 0 e of stolen articles he&#13;
hJs privacy) IS prac clng.. other people. He spok hosts exorcised from&#13;
sciences. clairvoyancy. ps}'hcoklOeSl~, had helped recover, g .' talked&#13;
and gtn('rally "doH\@, ESP" on anyone \\ 0 buildings. and potential sfUolrClad~wmore&#13;
needs. or wants It done .. the whole mess&#13;
The Prop~t 1 to his middle to late into facing . h even prevents ac-&#13;
, all recce- years. He claims e ouple of incidents&#13;
t.... nties, and lives m 8 sm Db' ts cidents, and gave us tabec co',nc'ldence. He structed garage. urrounded by jec no&#13;
d' rt r hgu)t.1. statutes and pamtmgs, that mayor may world affairs,&#13;
hrines dt-dJ ated to the Virgin Mother and has no influence ;;:ident Kennedy's&#13;
John F K-ool"!-', Con/.ed rate Ilags, and a though. He gave I&#13;
.../ b b ac assasination as an examh&#13;
P~~an Dixon or&#13;
proru 100 or uncla_ lraable ric-a· r r "No matter how mue ed him it still&#13;
Th hrtn p&lt;onde a .ort of, focus or body would have warn "11&#13;
orm v.ho IS both deepl)' rehglous anda any ed It was God's WI ,&#13;
rl h~al K noroy v.orshlpper, JF K.m would have happen . t I no one can&#13;
'arh ut r He can quottl verbatim and nobody, not you, 00 t d Sighs' then&#13;
P ge or, pe&lt;:tabll' lenglh from both change that" Norm sor ,&#13;
P'lh'. BIble and vartOUS Kennedy goes on hurriedly. Id edictions?"&#13;
" "How about some wor pr&#13;
baographle ed bout orm gave us ten or twenty.&#13;
~orm hrst realized h(' was gift ,a th Some examples: .' '72&#13;
r~r \ r ago "I .ort or gOl 10 With e . . going to WID 10 .&#13;
"r~·· ,·r-·d. \"00 knov.').. he . ays ....Ith a&#13;
l&#13;
Nixon I~ II '11 close their door~ ". ...,,, "'.... , h' h hoD Ten major co eges Wl&#13;
ehar.lel ",lie .lammer I1kea Ig .~, by 1987, due to lack of funds.&#13;
boy fumbling ....Ith a. new language, , l .....~ First man on Mars, 1987. d'&#13;
".. ding "hal you mIght ealla ",Id hfe No Red China will occupy the Holy Lan to&#13;
dop" or anylNng, but loISof beer, Any"ay&#13;
1h d om h me aft r a Wild beer party, I~ere will be an assasination attempt on&#13;
nd I\1,&gt;8 Sitting In my roo":,.......onderlng ixon's life in six or seven w~s.&#13;
what I v.as dOing With my life. and sud· Mr Agnew is going tobepresuientsome&#13;
elt·nly a vo,e . tarled to talk to me. Th~t day. (Dick will be t.oosick to carry on.)&#13;
" fOu' y'ears ago, The VOIcetold me 0 Marijuana legahzed, 1974. tho&#13;
ptay and r ad the Bible;, The VOicehas The worst winter in twenty years, IS&#13;
n ..uth m ever mce&#13;
w~n ked about other manirestations ye::~ can took forward to a Russo-Chinese&#13;
of thiS "girt"'. arm descnbed an ~ur~.&#13;
I ou see' Like war in 16 years. .&#13;
"\t. ort of electrlca , y. Noah's Ark will be found 10 1972.&#13;
IItr .. Norm potOledto one of several other Norm accepts no pay for his work, but&#13;
VCoPI 10 the room, a girl I have kn",,'n for asks every""e for a prayer. As Norml~tUtllSe&#13;
. • rat ve rs. "U' sort of green, S? I r and a 1&#13;
• , tg ng it "I can do more with a praye . a know. he 's a friendly, warm,.ou 01 ESP than anybody can do by poppmg&#13;
kmd or a person ." orm cont~nued for pill Listen to music, or read the Bible an?f&#13;
everat minutes more With the meditate. Anyone can do w~a~ I do, 1&#13;
b,ographlcal data you expect from a th . t take the time for It mstead of&#13;
rea_ably good side-show fortune teller. si::rn~~~ front of the TV all the time." .&#13;
He paused for a moment, as If he had When we left, Norm smiled a sby little&#13;
flDlshed, then adds ". and Isee a piece or smile and told us he would remember us m&#13;
paper youtJave taken the paper from your&#13;
W'9l1ft 1 see numbers on the paper. You his prayers.&#13;
I'll Drink to That&#13;
JIM JANIS&#13;
.BY. series of articles that&#13;
This is the first 10 a the subject of :&#13;
will appeaXI:;;':~% :'verages. Today's&#13;
Knowmg d Whiskey&#13;
subject: Blende meni defines and&#13;
The U.S, g~vfern t types of whiskies.&#13;
. 29 dif eren ith ven&#13;
recogOlzes . familiar WI se&#13;
The average J&gt;E:fSOnISBlended Whiskey,&#13;
types: An:encan enne~see Whiskey ~nd&#13;
• Burbon WhIskey, T 5 otch CanadIan&#13;
. ports are c, I t' Rye. The im . ke In this article e s&#13;
and Ir-ish wbis .y. Whiskey commonly&#13;
discUSSthe Amencan&#13;
known as the Ble~latiOnS specify that&#13;
Government reo t least 20 per cent of&#13;
blends must. contain aa roof gallon basis&#13;
straight whIskey on r ~n combination,&#13;
and, separately o. ilS and bottled not&#13;
Whiskey or neutral splr . ' n Whiskies are f Amenca .&#13;
less than 80 proo ' As many as 75 dlfmasterfully&#13;
ble~~f.kies and grain neutral&#13;
ferent StraIght mium blend brands.&#13;
spirits go I~to th~~r~hiskies and spirits&#13;
after blendmg, mingle together for a&#13;
are allowed Ito th of time known as the&#13;
considerable e~g" '&#13;
"marry!ng period " d f distilled&#13;
I&#13;
the leadmg bran 0 .&#13;
In. s~ es, d it dominates the lIst&#13;
spints ISa blend, an wide margin. In 1967&#13;
of brand sales bK a cases of spirit blends&#13;
J1.1orethf~~~rm..1~o:rket share of 22.6 perf&#13;
were so f' sta tes in the sale 0&#13;
nt The top Ive . Oh' ce . Y it Pennsylvama, 10, blends are New or.,.&#13;
New Jersey ~nd MIC~7~~g to alcoholic&#13;
Any questIOns per taO 'ng needs&#13;
beverages or your e..nter Inl ,&#13;
write in care of NewsbcopeWhiSkey and&#13;
Next Week: Bur on&#13;
Tennessee Whiskies.&#13;
To Present Paper&#13;
Erik Forrest, associate professor ?f a~t&#13;
t the University of Wisconsin-Parkslde, IS&#13;
aresenting a paper this wee~ before. the&#13;
p Id congress of the lnternalionaJ SocIety&#13;
,,;o~ducation Through Art in Lo,:,don.&#13;
o Forrest's paper is titled, "Art In a Ne.w&#13;
University: Theoretical Problems. m&#13;
Devising a New Art and Art EducatIon&#13;
Program".&#13;
film Society&#13;
Plans Season&#13;
Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, W, C&#13;
Fields and Peter Sellers star in five shori&#13;
comic films to be shown at 8 p.m. Wed.&#13;
nesday in Room 103, Greenquist Hall a&#13;
the Parkside Film Society opens its s":o~&#13;
season.&#13;
Chaplin appears in two films: "The&#13;
Rink" (1916), where he demonstrates his&#13;
agility a~ walter who spends his lunch&#13;
hour at a roller-skating rink, and "Th&#13;
Cure" (917), which shows what hap~&#13;
when Chaplin arrives at a spa to take&#13;
rest cure, accompanied by a lrunkful o~&#13;
liquor that gets dumped mto the resort's&#13;
restorative waters.&#13;
Keaton plays in "Cops" and Fields isin&#13;
"The Pharmacist". Peter Sellers stars in&#13;
"The Case of the Mukkinese Battle Horn"&#13;
a spoof of British detective stories. '&#13;
Admission to the films is 50 cents.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days'&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phana 657 -9747&#13;
RENT8MMOLDTIME MOVIES&#13;
HOME MOVIt=S&#13;
LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
Silent and Sound ProJectors&#13;
CAIRO CAMERA SHOP&#13;
5815 -11TH AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WIS. 53140&#13;
dc~lroyed the paper"&#13;
i' Complete news coverage of campus events&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
* Photos of events and personalities&#13;
iC Advertising of interest to all students&#13;
* Coverage of national news of student interest&#13;
Coming Next Week: New Feature Page with Events&#13;
Calendar and listing of Area Things-to-Dol&#13;
Kenosha's Own Prophet rttle "Yes itwasa&#13;
The girl blus~d all ~he ~-ould ;ay about&#13;
phone number, is a Norm before that&#13;
it. he had never seen&#13;
C\"emng. 1 t of his time helping 'o m ""nds a O · I he&#13;
. r r k f stolen artic es other people. He spo ~~ts exorcised from&#13;
had helped recover. g . · ·des talked . . nd potentJal SUICI&#13;
bu1ldm~s, a . 1 mess for a few more&#13;
mto racing the _Y.ho e ven prevents acycar&#13;
He claims he e pie of incidents&#13;
cidents, and gav~ us: ~~oincidence. He&#13;
that may or ma)' no r world affairs,&#13;
ha no influence ive 'dent Kennedy's though. He gave res1&#13;
a ~ination as an exampl\an Dixon or&#13;
"• ·o matter how much J him it still&#13;
nybody would have warned God. 's will&#13;
h h =ned It was '&#13;
would ave ap,,_ · t I no one can&#13;
nd nobodv • not you, no ' . hs ' then&#13;
th -t .. 'orm sort of s1g , ch ng a · • 0 - on hurriedly. ed' lions?" " HoY. about some world pr ic .&#13;
• 'orm _gave us ten or twenty.&#13;
Some examples: . . ,&#13;
2 ·,xon is going to wm m 7 . .&#13;
1 en major colleges will close their door!&gt;&#13;
bv 1987, due to lack or funds.&#13;
. Fir ·t man on Mars, 1987. d . Red China will occupy the Holy Lan in&#13;
I Th re will be an assasina lion attempt on&#13;
"ixon's life in six or seven w~s.&#13;
• tr Agnew is going to be president some&#13;
day. &lt;Dick will be l~osick to carry on.)&#13;
1arijuana legalized, 1974. th'&#13;
The worst winter in twenty years, is&#13;
year · W~ can look forward to a Russo-Chinese&#13;
war in 16 years. . Noah's Ark will be found in 1972.&#13;
'orm accepts no pay for his work, but&#13;
ru k everyone for a prayer. As Norm ~uts&#13;
it "I can do more with a prayer and a_ httl!&#13;
ESP than anybody can do by popping&#13;
pill Listen to music, or read the Bible an~&#13;
meditate. Anyone can do w~a~ I do, I&#13;
they just take the time for it. mst~ad of&#13;
itting in front of the TV all the time. .&#13;
When we left, Norm smiled a shy htt~e&#13;
smile and told us he would remember us m&#13;
hi prayers.&#13;
I'll Drink to That&#13;
By JIM JANIS . l that . . . a series of art~c es . This is the first in the subJect of . weekly on Tod y's will a_ppear lcoholic Beverages. a Knowing A Whiskey.&#13;
subject: Blended nt defines and&#13;
The U.S. g?vern~1ypes of whiskies.&#13;
recognizes 29 differ~n familiar with seven&#13;
The average ix:rson isBlended Whiskey'&#13;
types: A~enca~ennessee Whiskey ~nd&#13;
Burbon Whiskey, S otch Canadian . rts are c ' I t'&#13;
Rye. The imIJ? In this article e s&#13;
and Irish Wh1sk~Y- Whiskey commonly&#13;
discuss the American&#13;
known as the Ble~~lations specify that&#13;
Government re_ at least 20 per cent ?f&#13;
blends must contain oof gallon basis . h'skey on a pr . . straight w I in combmat10n,&#13;
and, separately o~ ·ts and bottled not&#13;
Whiskey or neutral spm. ' n Whiskies are&#13;
f America . less than 80 proo . As many as 75 d1fmasterfull~&#13;
ble;~~kies and grain neutral&#13;
ferent Straight ·um blend brands .&#13;
spirits go i~to th~~r:i\skies and spirits&#13;
after blending, . gle together for a&#13;
are allowed to ;::inf time known as the&#13;
considerable le~g,, 0 '&#13;
"marryjng period] d.. g brand of distilled&#13;
I S the ea in 1· t&#13;
In s~ e ' d ·t dominates the is&#13;
spirits is a blend, an w:de margin. In 1967&#13;
of brand sales ~r a cases of spirit blends&#13;
more than 27 m1 io~ket share of 22.6 per&#13;
were sold for af_ma tales in the sale of&#13;
t The top ive s . h'&#13;
cen . y k Pennsylvania, 0 IO, blends are New or_ ' .&#13;
New Jersey ~nd Me1crhta1f!~g to alcoholic&#13;
Any questions P . . eed&#13;
beverages or your entertammg n s,&#13;
write in care of NewsbcopeWhiskey and&#13;
Next Week: Bur on&#13;
Tennessee Whiskies.&#13;
To Present Paper&#13;
Erik Forrest, associate p~ofessor _of a~t&#13;
t the University of Wisconsm-Parks1de, IS&#13;
a t· g a paper this week before the&#13;
presen m · I s · ty&#13;
Id congress of the Internabona oc1e&#13;
;o~ducation Through Art in Lo~don.&#13;
Forrest's paper is titled, "Art ma NE:w&#13;
University: Theoretical Problems. m&#13;
Devising a New Art and Art Education&#13;
Program".&#13;
film Society&#13;
Pia ns Season&#13;
Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, w. C&#13;
Fields and Peter Sellers star in five sho i&#13;
comic films to be shown at 8 p.m. W~.&#13;
nesday in Room 103, Greenquist Hall a&#13;
the Parkside Film Society opens its sec'on~&#13;
season.&#13;
Chaplin appears in two films: "The&#13;
Rink" (1916?, w~ere he demonstrates his&#13;
agility a~ waiter who spends his lunch&#13;
hour at a roller-skating rink, and "Th&#13;
Cure" (1917?, whi~h shows what happen:&#13;
when Chaplm arrives at a spa to take a&#13;
rest cure, accompanied ?Y a trunkful or&#13;
liquor that gets dumped mto the resort's&#13;
restorative waters.&#13;
Keaton plays in "Cops" and Fields is in&#13;
"The Pharmacist". Peter Sellers stars in&#13;
"The Case of the Mukkinese Battle Horn" a spoof of British detective stories. '&#13;
Admission to the films is 50 cents.&#13;
. WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days·&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
RENT BMM OLD TIME MOVIES&#13;
HOME MOVIES&#13;
LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SIient and Sound Projectors&#13;
CAI RO CAM ERA SHOP&#13;
5815 - llTH AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WIS.53140&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
1C Complete news coverage of campus events&#13;
* Photos of events and personalities&#13;
1C Advertising of interest to all students&#13;
* Coverage of national news of student intereSI&#13;
Coming Next Week: New Feature Page with Events&#13;
Calendar and listing of Area Things-to-Doi &#13;
PARKSIDE SOCCER&#13;
FULL OF MUSCLE&#13;
coach Jim Gibson predicts the Ranger ThParksideplayed Notre Dame on Sept. 20.&#13;
cef team will surprise most teams., e Parkside team did a fine job tying&#13;
s~ should be true in view of Parkside's 1- Notre .name O~Owith ten tough minutes of&#13;
T IScord in its first season. According to overtime. Coach Gibson stated that&#13;
~ rech Gibson this year's team should be Charles Lees did an outstanding job as&#13;
oatimes better. The main reason is this goal. keeper. Tony Kriedel also did ext:'r's&#13;
strong defence. But with the team ceptIonally well playing halfback. Ed St&#13;
~ing better the scheduled meets are also P~ter also started to come around in hi~&#13;
ch tougher than last year. third game of play. Gibson said he showed&#13;
m~ven though Parkside lost its first meet he. was capable of handling his own&#13;
gainst Ottawa, you must account for the posttton.&#13;
~ ct that Ottawa is one of the strongest Coach Gibson also wishes anyone in-&#13;
~ms in the nation. The game was played tere~ted in soccer or wishing to be on the&#13;
onUW·p's newfield on the main campus. varsity Would contact one of the Soccer&#13;
Frank Va)e~ine broke open the players or himself. Coach Gibson can be&#13;
careless 3..0 match 14 minutes into the contacted at the Athletics Office.&#13;
~'rst quarter with a 20-footer for Ottawa.&#13;
F&#13;
"'fteen minutes into th.e second half, S SOCCER&#13;
ed M k G n ept, 30 - UW Green Bay, 3 p.m. Valentine center to 18.0 rgas w 0 Oct. 3 - At Ohio State, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
headed it in from close to give the Kansas Oct. 7 - Illinois-Chicago, 3 p.m.&#13;
school a 2-6 halftime lead. After a Oct. 10 _ At Purdue, 10 a.m.&#13;
scoreless second half, Al Gomez tipped in a Oct. 17 _ Platteville, 2 p.m.&#13;
reboundsbot with two minutes left to play. Oct. 24 - Wisconsin Junior All Stars, 2&#13;
Ottawa got off 16 shots on goal to eight . PC p.m.&#13;
for the Rangers, prompting UW- oach Oct. 31 - At UW-Green Bay, 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Gibson to promise some changes in his&#13;
front four. "Dale Nickel and Stan&#13;
Markovic did all rigbt in the middle but&#13;
we're hadly in need of help on the two&#13;
outside forwards," Gibson said.&#13;
Hanzalik Finishes&#13;
5·8 In Italy&#13;
John Hanzalik showed a record of tbree&#13;
wins against five defeats in epee for the&#13;
United States team as the American&#13;
fencers were eliminated in the first round&#13;
of the World Collegiate Games which&#13;
concluded Sept. 14.&#13;
Hanzalik, a UW-P-junior, was 1-3against.&#13;
Great Britain, who defeated the five man&#13;
U.S. team 10-5, and was 2-2 against Portugal&#13;
as the U.S. beat Portugal 9-5. Hanzalik&#13;
did not fence in the Americans' 14-2&#13;
loss to Italy in the double elimination&#13;
tourney. Along with his 2-3 record in individual&#13;
competition, Hanzalik finished&#13;
with an overall 5-8 record in the games&#13;
which brought 2,000 athletes from 56&#13;
countries together for competition in nine&#13;
sports at Turin, Italy ..Hanzalik had earned&#13;
a berth on the U.S. team by winning the&#13;
national epee trials at Notre Dame last&#13;
spring.&#13;
Russia dominated fencing, winning the&#13;
overall team title and taking all tbree&#13;
individual weapon -championships.&#13;
Hungary and Italy were second and third&#13;
in team competition.&#13;
- World University&#13;
Games Held In Italy&#13;
By COACHLOREN HEIN&#13;
The World University games were held&#13;
inTurin, Italy, from Aug. 28 through Sept.&#13;
6, with 62 countries and 4,000 athletes and&#13;
officials taking part.&#13;
The events were basketball (with the&#13;
USAlosing by six points to Russia for the&#13;
GoldMedal), wa ter polo, volleyball, field&#13;
and track, swimming and diving, gymnastics,&#13;
and fencing. .&#13;
Itwas a great tbrill to represent the USA&#13;
in such an event, especially in the opening&#13;
day ceremonies, which are patterned after&#13;
the Olympics. There were about 50,000&#13;
people in the stadium.&#13;
John Hanzalik UWP student who&#13;
participated in fe~cing at the games, got&#13;
himself into a difficult pool at tbe beginning&#13;
ofthe epee individual competition and&#13;
he lost his first two bouts. Hanzalik won&#13;
the next two and lost the fifth to an Italian&#13;
hy a Score of 5-4 and thus lost the right to&#13;
goup to the next round. This same Italian&#13;
finished second in the epee event, so John&#13;
had lost to one of the best.&#13;
John felt as did the rest of the USA&#13;
fencers, th~t we could have done better if&#13;
we had the opportunity to do more international&#13;
fencing. We really are not as&#13;
bad as the Scores always show, but you&#13;
can't beat experience on the international&#13;
strips.&#13;
The fencers were the only group not to&#13;
have any sort of camp or national ex·&#13;
Perience before they went over. The other&#13;
sPorts had used the money. If we want&#13;
resUlts,we had better pay for it or not go,&#13;
~orthere is no need to look so poor. With&#13;
Justa little experience and national camps&#13;
we can do the job.&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
SHORTS&#13;
For all you hockey fans, this is the year.&#13;
The UW-P now has a hockey club. Last&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 20, the members met and&#13;
elected officers. They are: Bill&#13;
Westerlund, president; Mark Helfrich,&#13;
vice president-secretary; and Tom&#13;
Krimmel, treasurer, The club needs more&#13;
members. They started skating last week.&#13;
You can come out and watch them practice&#13;
at Wilson Park in Milwaukee (27th&#13;
street and Howard avenue) at 10 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday nights.&#13;
The club will be one of four competing in&#13;
the Wilson league this year. Marquette,&#13;
Whitewater and Milwaukee School of&#13;
Engineering are the other three hockey&#13;
teams ..&#13;
+ + +&#13;
In the line of intramurals, Parkside has&#13;
new members on the intramural staff. Jim&#13;
Kock will help run the Kenosha Intramurals&#13;
with Vic Godfrey. On the&#13;
Racine campus, Bill Ballester with Dick&#13;
Frecka. There are many things coming up&#13;
with the intramural program.&#13;
The Racine bowling league will start on&#13;
Sept. 30. Any other people interested&#13;
should contact Coach Frecka in Racine at&#13;
Rm. 303. The Kenosha Bowlers who wish to&#13;
start a bowling league should contact&#13;
Coach Koch in Rm. 44 at Kenosha or Vic&#13;
Godfrey at the Wood Road campus.&#13;
The Powder Puff Foothallieague, which&#13;
consists of two teams (one each from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine) will have games&#13;
scheduled to challenge each other and any&#13;
other girls wishing to join in the ~un of the&#13;
game. Contact the intramural director of&#13;
your campus. KTI has challenged the&#13;
Parkside All Star powder puff team to a&#13;
game which hasn't yet been scheduled.&#13;
INTERESTED? Then contact Coaches&#13;
Koch Batlester or Godfrey. There are&#13;
. many male volunteers to coach the teams.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Plans are underway to conduct an intramural&#13;
archery tourney at the Wood&#13;
Road campus. .&#13;
There will also be an open golf and tenms&#13;
tourney which will include participation by&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Ranger Cage Season&#13;
features 26 Games&#13;
The University of Wisconsin+Parkside's&#13;
1970-71basketball schedule announced by&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens will find the&#13;
Rangers meeting 23 different opponents as&#13;
part of a as-game schedule which includes&#13;
two Christmas tournaments in Virginia&#13;
and South Dakota.&#13;
Eleven of the games will be played at&#13;
home, which means high school sites in&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties since UWP's&#13;
physical education facility will not be&#13;
completed this season. Five contests will&#13;
'be played at St. Joseph's in Kenosha, four&#13;
at Case in Racine, and one each at Salem&#13;
Central and Union Grove.&#13;
Parkside, an independent which was 11·&#13;
10 in its first season of varisty play, will&#13;
meet 12 opponents for the first time, including&#13;
the Swedish national team which&#13;
will be touring the United States; Wayne&#13;
State University of Detroit; Northern&#13;
Michigan University, Marquette;&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee;&#13;
University of Missouri-St. Louis; Prudue&#13;
University-North Central, Westville, Ind.;&#13;
and Xavier College, Chicago.&#13;
Parkside will play three games in the&#13;
eight-team Quantico, Va., Marine Invitational&#13;
Tournament Dec. 17-19, and two&#13;
games in the Dakota Wesleyan Invitational&#13;
Dec. 30-31in the Mitchell, S.D.,&#13;
Corn Palace. Parkside's opening Quantico&#13;
game will be against New York Slate at&#13;
Old Westbury, followed by either North&#13;
Carolina A &amp; T or Greensboro or Marist&#13;
College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Pairings are&#13;
incomplete for the Wesleyan Invitational,&#13;
which will include the host school,&#13;
LaCrosse (Wis.) State University and&#13;
Northwestern College, Orange City, Iowa.&#13;
Parkside will open at Xavier Dec, 1 and&#13;
at home Dec. 4 against Purdue-North&#13;
Central in Kenosha. Other Kenosha games&#13;
will be against UW·Green Bay, Southern&#13;
Bill Ballester - Parkside gymnastics&#13;
coach - Fred Dennis . national rings&#13;
champion from Waukegan, Illinois, and&#13;
Parkside coach in the Philippines and Col.&#13;
DeBorja - president of Philippine AAA and&#13;
undersecretary for Education.&#13;
Cross Country Opener Saturday&#13;
Tbe Ranger Cross Country team opens&#13;
the 1970 season Sept. 26 at WSUWhitewater&#13;
against the bost school, WSUPlatteville&#13;
WSU-Oshkosh and national&#13;
power Augustana of Illinois.&#13;
Freshmen will head this year's squad&#13;
with Mike DeWitt of Kenosha back from&#13;
last year's squad. To~ranked rearhngs&#13;
include Rick Lund and Chuck DIttman of&#13;
Marinette. Both ranked among the top&#13;
milers in the sta te last sprmg. .&#13;
St Catherine's heralded Tim McGllsky&#13;
and 'State B mile and X-C c~mplon Jim&#13;
M Fadden will also be on dIsplay.&#13;
~cFadden's running mate, Gary Lanc~,&#13;
n Wagner of York high ~chool m&#13;
~17~~~hare high school t:~:~~~~l~ur;e~&#13;
collegiate X·C runners&#13;
this well-balanced squad. k&#13;
Keith Merritt, a Tremper ru~er, Mar&#13;
C&#13;
d from Racine Case and Jim Bark of&#13;
onra h freshmen.&#13;
R~~i;r~ ~~~~i:~~, .= veteran ro~ddr:~&#13;
from Dayton, Ohl&#13;
t&#13;
0, I~ ' n~n:pe~peration.&#13;
this, fall due 0&#13;
Cross Country Schedule&#13;
Sept. 26 - Whitewaler, Oshkosh, Platteville,&#13;
Augustana, Parks Ide at&#13;
Whitewater, 11 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 3 - UW-Milwaukee at Milwaukee&#13;
Esterbrook Park, 10 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 10 - Platteville Invitational at&#13;
Platteville, 11:30 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 13 - Platteville, Dominican at home,&#13;
4 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 17 - Open&#13;
Oct. 20 - Open&#13;
Oct. 24· Marquette - 5 miles, at home, 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Oct. 31- Loras - 4 miles, at home, 11:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 7 - Mid-American·6 miles, home, 8&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 14 - Central Collegiates, Southern&#13;
Illinois, Carbondale.&#13;
Nov. 21 - NAIA - 5 miles, Kansas City,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
Nov. 2:l - National AAU . 6 miles,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Illinois-Edwardsville, Lakeland ollege of&#13;
Sheboygan and Northeastern Illmois State&#13;
of Chicago. Racine contests will include&#13;
the Swedish team, Xavier, Lakehead&#13;
University or Port Arthur, Ontario. and&#13;
Northland College of Ashland. UWP Will&#13;
meet Milton College at Union Grove and&#13;
Hope College of Holland. Mich, at Salem&#13;
Central.&#13;
Other opponents will be DOminican&#13;
College, Racine, Grand Valley State&#13;
College, Allendale. Mich.. and Lake Forest&#13;
(Ill.) College, all in road games.&#13;
Basketball Schedule&#13;
Dec. 1 • at Xavier (Chicago), 8 p.rn&#13;
Dec. 4 - Prudue-North Central, St.&#13;
Joseph's H.S.&#13;
Dec. 5 - Swedish National Team. Case&#13;
H.S.&#13;
Dec. 8 . at Northern Michigan. 8 p.m&#13;
Dec. 12 - UW-Green Bay, St. Joseph's&#13;
Dec. 17-19 - Quantico, Va., Invitational&#13;
Dec. 23 - Southern Illinois-Edwardsville,&#13;
St. Joseph's&#13;
Dec. 30-31 - Dakota Wesleyan lnvitational&#13;
at Mitchell, S.D.&#13;
Jan. 6 • Millon, Union Grove H.S.&#13;
Jan. 9 - Lakehead. Case&#13;
Jan. t2 - N.E. Illinois State, t. Joseph's&#13;
Jan. 16 - at Wayne State, 8 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 19 • at Dominican. 8 p.rn.&#13;
Jan. 30 - Hope, salem Central HS&#13;
Feb. 1 - at Grand Valley State (Mich.!. 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 - at Lake Forest, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 9 - at UW-Green Bay, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 13 - at UW-Milwaukee, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 16 . Xavier, Case&#13;
Feb. is - Lakeland, St. Joseph's&#13;
Feb. 23 - Northland, Case&#13;
Feb. 26 - at Missouri-St. Louis. 8 p.m&#13;
Feb. 27 • at Southern HhnoisEdwardsville.&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
(All home games begin at8 p.rn.!&#13;
FENCING PRACTICE&#13;
For All&#13;
New Students&#13;
Start Immediately&#13;
See Cooch Hein in basement of&#13;
Kenosha Campus&#13;
Any Afternoon F,om 1:00 till 5:00&#13;
POWER&#13;
Automotive &amp; Speed Shop&#13;
201252nd&#13;
"First and Finest&#13;
In Speed"&#13;
O",en Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
fo:' Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECKI NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENTS&#13;
ANO RETIREES&#13;
3928 Sixtieth StTe.,t&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
PARKSIDE SOCCER&#13;
FULL OF MUSCLE&#13;
coach Jim Gibson predicts the Ranger Parkside played Notre Dame on Sept 20 er team will surprise most teams.•. The Parkside team did a fine job tying&#13;
}~c should be true in view of Parkside's 1- Notre _Dame o-o with ten tough minutes of&#13;
15cord in its first season. According to overtime. Coach Gibson stated that&#13;
~ rech Gibson this year's team should be Charles Lees did an outstanding job as&#13;
oa times better. The main reason is this goal_ keeper. Tony Kriedel also did exte;r's&#13;
strong defence. But with the team ceptionally well playing halfback. Ed St.&#13;
~ing better the scheduled meets are also P~ter also started to come around in his&#13;
ch tougher than last year. third game of play. Gibson said he showed&#13;
m~ven though Parkside lost its first meet he . ~as capable of handling his own gainst Ottawa, you must account for the position. f ct that Ottawa is one of the strongest Coach _Gibson also wishes anyone int:ams&#13;
in the nation. The game was played tere~ted m soccer or wishing to be on the&#13;
0 UW-P's new field on the main campus. varsity would contact one of the soccer&#13;
°ሬ Frank Vale.!1,ine broke open the players or himself. Coach Gibson can be&#13;
coreless 3-0 match 14 minutes into the contacted at the Athletics Office.&#13;
:irst quarter with a 20-footer for Ottawa.&#13;
Fifteen minutes into the second half, Sept. 30 _ UW sg~~~:ay, 3 p.m.&#13;
Valentine centered to Misko Grgas who Oct. 3 - At Ohio State, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
headed it in from close to give the Kansas Oct. 7 - Illinois-Chicago, 3 p.m.&#13;
school a 2-0 halftime lead. After a Oct. 10 - At Purdue, 10 a.m.&#13;
scoreless second half, Al Gomez tipped in a Oct. 17 - Platteville, 2 p.m.&#13;
rebound shot with two minutes left to play. Oct. 24 - Wisconsin Junior All Stars 2&#13;
Ottawa got off 16 shots on goal to eight , . U C h p.m. for the Rangers, promptmg W-P oac Oct. 31 - At UW-Green Bay, 1:30 p.m. Gibson to promise some changes in his&#13;
front four. "Dale Nickel and Stan&#13;
Markovic did all right in the middle but&#13;
we're badly in need of help on the two&#13;
outside forwards," Gibson said.&#13;
Hanzalik Finishes&#13;
5-8 In Italy&#13;
John Hanzalik showed a record of three&#13;
wins against five defeats in epee for the&#13;
United States team as the American&#13;
fencers were eliminated in the first round&#13;
of the World Collegiate Games which&#13;
concluded Sept. 14.&#13;
Hanzalik, a UW-P-jonior, was 1-3 against -&#13;
Great Britain, who defeated the five man&#13;
U.S. team 10-5, and was 2-2 against Portugal&#13;
as the U.S. beat Portugal 9-5. Hanzalik&#13;
did not fence in the Americans' 14-2&#13;
loss to Italy in the double elimination&#13;
tourney. Along with his 2-3 record in individual&#13;
competition, Hanzalik finished&#13;
with an overall 5-8 record in the games&#13;
which brought 2,000 athletes from 56&#13;
countries together for competition in nine&#13;
sports at Turin, Italy. Hanzalik had earned&#13;
a berth on the U.S. team by winning the&#13;
national epee trials at Notre Dame last&#13;
spring.&#13;
Russia dominated fencing, winning the&#13;
overall team title and taking all three&#13;
individual weapon championships.&#13;
Hungary and Italy were second and third&#13;
in team competition.&#13;
, World University&#13;
Games Held In lta ly&#13;
By COACH LOREN HEIN&#13;
The World University games were held&#13;
in Turin, Italy, from Aug. 28 through Sept.&#13;
6, with 62 countries and 4,000 athletes and&#13;
officials taking part.&#13;
The events were basketball (with the&#13;
USA losing by six points to Russia for the&#13;
Gold Medal), water polo, volleyball, field&#13;
and track, swimming and diving, gymnastics,&#13;
and fencing. .&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
SHORTS&#13;
For all you hockey fans, this is the year.&#13;
The UW-P now has a hockey club. Last&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 20, the members met and&#13;
elected officers. They are: Bill&#13;
Westerlund, president; Mark Helfrich,&#13;
vice president-secretary; and Tom&#13;
Krimmel, tre·asurer. The club needs more&#13;
members. They started skating last week.&#13;
You can come out and watch them practice&#13;
at Wilson Park in Milwaukee (27th&#13;
street and Howard avenue) at 10 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday nights.&#13;
The club will be one of four competing in&#13;
the Wilson league this year. Marquette,&#13;
Whitewater and Milwaukee School of&#13;
Engineering are the other three hockey&#13;
teams . .&#13;
+ + +&#13;
In the line of intramurals, Parkside has&#13;
new members on the intramural staff. Jim&#13;
Kock will help run the Kenosha Intramurals&#13;
with Vic Godfrey. On the&#13;
Racine campus, Bill Ballester with Dick&#13;
Frecka. There are many things coming up&#13;
with the intramural program.&#13;
The Racine bowling league will start on&#13;
Sept. 30. Any other people interested&#13;
should contact Coach Frecka in Racine at&#13;
Rm. 303. The Kenosha Bowlers who wish to&#13;
start a bowling league should contact&#13;
Coach Koch in Rm. 44 at Kenosha or Vic&#13;
Godfrey at the Wood Road campus.&#13;
The Powder Puff Football league, which&#13;
consists of two teams (one ea~h from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine) will have games&#13;
scheduled to challenge each other and any&#13;
other girls wishing to join in the fun of the&#13;
game. Contact the intramural director of&#13;
your campus. KTI has challenged the&#13;
Parkside All Star powder puff team to a&#13;
game which hasn't yet been scheduled.&#13;
INTERESTED? Then contact Coaches&#13;
Koch, Ba1lester or Godfrey. There are&#13;
many male volunteers to coach the teams.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Plans are underway to conduct an intramural&#13;
archery tourney at the Wood&#13;
Road campus. . There will also be an open golf and tenms&#13;
tourney which will include participation by&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Ranger Cage Season&#13;
features 26 Games&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
1970-71 basketball schedule announced by&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens will find the&#13;
Rangers meeting 23 different opponents as&#13;
part of a 26-game schedule which includes&#13;
two Christmas tournaments in Virginia&#13;
and South Dakota.&#13;
Eleven of the games will be played at&#13;
home, which means high school sites in&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties since WP's&#13;
physical education facility will not be&#13;
completed this season. Five contests will&#13;
·be played at St. Joseph's in Kenosha, four&#13;
at Case in Racine, and one each at Salem&#13;
Central and Union Grove.&#13;
Parkside, an independent which was 11-&#13;
10 in its first season of varisty play, will&#13;
meet 12 opponents for the first time, including&#13;
the Swedish national team which&#13;
will be touring the United States; Wayne&#13;
State University of Detroit; Northern&#13;
Michigan University, Marquette :&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee :&#13;
Univershy of Missouri-St. Louis; Prudue&#13;
University-North Central, Westville, Ind.,&#13;
and Xavier College, Chicago.&#13;
Parkside will play three games in the&#13;
eight-team Quantico, Va., Marine Invitational&#13;
Tournament Dec. 17-19, and two&#13;
games in the Dakota Wesleyan Invitational&#13;
Dec. 30-31 in the Mitchell, S D .&#13;
Corn Palace. Parkside's opening Quantico&#13;
game will be against New York State at&#13;
Old Westbury, followed by either orth&#13;
Carolina A &amp; T or Greensboro or Marist&#13;
College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Pairings are&#13;
incomplete for the Wesleyan Invitational,&#13;
which will include the host school,&#13;
Lacrosse (Wis.) State University and&#13;
Northwestern College, Orange City, Iowa.&#13;
Parkside will open at Xavier Dec, l and&#13;
at home Dec. 4 against Purdue-North&#13;
Central in Kenosha. Other Kenosha games&#13;
will be against UW-Green Bay, Southern&#13;
Bill Ballester - Parkside gymnastics&#13;
coach - Fred Dennis - national rings&#13;
champion from Waukegan, Illi~ois, and&#13;
Parkside coach in the Philippines and Col.&#13;
DeBorja - president of Philippine AAA and&#13;
undersecretary for Education.&#13;
Ilhnoi ·-Edwardsville , Lake! nd Coll ' of&#13;
heboygan and :-:orthea t rn lllinoi t t&#13;
of Chicago. Racine cont t will includ&#13;
the wedish team, Xa,; r, Lak h • d&#13;
niver ·ity of Port Arthur, Ontario, and&#13;
• 'orthland Colleg of A hland WP ~,ll&#13;
meet Milton College at mon Grov • and&#13;
Hope College of Holland, :\1ich .. at al m&#13;
Central.&#13;
Other opponents will be Dominican&#13;
College, Racine, Grand Valley tat&#13;
College, Allendale, Mich., and Lak 1-'or t&#13;
&lt;Ill.&gt; Colle&amp;e, all m road gam .&#13;
Ba kelball ·chedule&#13;
Dec. 1 - al Xavier &lt;Chicago), 8 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 4 - Prudue- orth Central, t.&#13;
Joseph's H.S.&#13;
Dec 5 wedi h National Team, as&#13;
H.&#13;
Dec 8 - at orth rn Michigan. 8 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 12 - W-Green Ba . l. Jo cph'&#13;
Dec. 17-19 . Quantico, Va .. Invitational&#13;
Dec. 23 - outh rn Illinoi -Edward ·ville.&#13;
St. Joseph's&#13;
Dec. 30-31 - Dakota Wes! yan In·&#13;
vitational at :\1 itchell. D&#13;
Jan. 6 - Milton, ·mon Gro,e H ..&#13;
Jan. 9 - Lakehead.&#13;
Jan. 12 - .E. llhno1&#13;
Jan. 16 - at Wayne tale , 8 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 19 - at Dom1mcan, 8 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 30 - Hope, Salem Central H&#13;
F'eb. l - al Grand Valley late ( Mich ). 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 - at Lake For ·t. 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 9 - at W-Green Bay, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 13 - at \\'-Milwaukee, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 16 - Xavier, Ca e&#13;
Feb. 19 - Lakeland, t. Jo eph' ·&#13;
Feb. 23 - orthland, Ca ·e&#13;
Feb. 26 - at Mi oun- t Loui , 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 27 - at ou them I II I noi&#13;
Edward ville, 8 p.m.&#13;
&lt;All home game begin at Sp m.l&#13;
FENCING PRACTICE&#13;
For All&#13;
New Students&#13;
Start Immediately&#13;
See Cooch Hein in ba sement of&#13;
Kenosha Campus&#13;
Any Afternoon From 1:00 till 5:00&#13;
POWER&#13;
Automotive &amp; Speed Shop&#13;
2012 52nd&#13;
"First and Finest&#13;
In Speed"&#13;
Oµen Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Moon&#13;
It was a great thrill to represent the USA fo· Your Convenience&#13;
in such an event, especially in the opening&#13;
day ceremonies, which are patterned after&#13;
the Olympics. There were about 50,000&#13;
people in the stadium.&#13;
Cross Country Opener Saturday&#13;
John Hanzalik, UWP student who&#13;
~rticipated in fencing at the games, ~ot&#13;
himself into a difficult pool at the begmning&#13;
of the epee individual competition and&#13;
he lost his first two bouts. Hanzalik won&#13;
the next two and lost the fifth to an Italian&#13;
by a score of 5-4 and thus lost the right to&#13;
go up to the next round. This same Italian&#13;
finished second in the epee event, so John&#13;
had lost to one of the best.&#13;
John felt, as did the rest of the USA&#13;
fencers, that we could have done better_ if&#13;
we had the opportunity to do more mternational&#13;
fencing. We really are not as&#13;
bad as the scores always show, but you&#13;
can't beat experience on the international&#13;
strips.&#13;
The fencers were the only group not to&#13;
have any sort of camp or national experience&#13;
before they went over. The other&#13;
sports had used the money. If we want&#13;
results, we had better pay for it or not ~o,&#13;
~or there is no need to look so poor. With&#13;
JU5t a little experience and national camps&#13;
we can do the job.&#13;
The Ranger Cross Country team opens&#13;
the 1970 season Sept. 26 at WSUWhitewater&#13;
against the host school, ~SUPlatteville,&#13;
WSU-Oshk?sh_ and national&#13;
power Augustana of Illm01s.&#13;
Freshmen }Vill head this year's squad&#13;
with Mike DeWitt of Kenosha back f~om&#13;
last year's squad. Top-ranked rearhngs&#13;
include Rick Lund and Chuck Dittman of&#13;
Marinette. Both ranked a~ong the top&#13;
milers in the state last sprmg. .&#13;
St Catherine's heralded Tim M~G1ls~y&#13;
and ·state B mile and X-C c~amp1on Jim&#13;
M Fadden will also be on display.&#13;
~cFadden's running mate, Gary Lane~,&#13;
nd John Wagner of York hi~h school m&#13;
fmnois are high school tw~:~l~~~l~urh:~&#13;
collegiate X-C runners w&#13;
this well-balanced squad. k&#13;
Keith Merritt, ~ Trcempe;n~u.;¥1:\3::::f&#13;
Conrad from Racme ase . d ut the freshmen.&#13;
RaJcme ;'t~:1chi':ison, a veteran road runner erry . . not expected to run from Daytodn, Ohito, I~ knee operation. this fall ue 0&#13;
Cross Country Schedule&#13;
Sept. 26 - Whitewater, Oshkosh, Platteville,&#13;
Augustana, Parkside at&#13;
Whitewater, 11 a.m. Oct. 3 - UW-Milwaukee at Milwaukee&#13;
Esterbrook Park, 10 a.m. Oct. 10 - Platteville Invitational at&#13;
Platteville, 11 :30 a .m. Oct. 13 - Platteville, Dominican at home,&#13;
4 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 17 - Open&#13;
Oct. 20 - Open&#13;
Oct. 24 - Marquette - 5 miles, at home, 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Oct. 31 - Loras - 4 miles, at home, 11 :30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 7 - Mid-American - 6 miles, home, 8&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 14 - Central Collegia tes, Southern&#13;
Illinois, Carbondale.&#13;
Nov. 21 - NAIA - 5 miles, Kansas City,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
Nov. 27 - National AAU - 6 miles,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECK/ NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENTS&#13;
AND RETIREES&#13;
8928 Sbtieth StTeet&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
-&#13;
Plans Made&#13;
For Counter&#13;
Demonstration&#13;
R) 'ICK Oe~1IRTI:-;O&#13;
Colle-gf'Press Sen iceII&#13;
ASHII"GTQN,(CPS. - Forces are&#13;
consobdanng here to plan some sort of&#13;
action against the scheduled appearance&#13;
of South vretnarocse Vice President&#13;
.\gu~ en Cue Kyat a pre-war rally in&#13;
\\ nshington on October 3&#13;
K~'s plans "ere first announced on Sept.&#13;
~ b\ Carl Mclntire. a right-wing funda~t.'nlalist&#13;
radio preacher from New&#13;
Jer- £'\ wno I. planning the Victory in&#13;
\'1{'tn~lm rally. similar to one he organized&#13;
1.1""/\prtl&#13;
Tht.' 1'\1'(00 Administration. as reported&#13;
b~ the \\ ashmgton commercial press. was&#13;
.111atlun-v wh n the announcement was&#13;
made I"oi only did they claim they knew&#13;
oolhlnJ{ about It, but they were pretty&#13;
much a~alJ~t It the event gives the anti-&#13;
'A.tf movement u ready- made organizing&#13;
IXIIIlt for C~lrly fall ..icuons.&#13;
Furth rmore. It may louse up Nixon's&#13;
(k'h(;uu'IMl~,n(.'(' be hope. to project in the&#13;
upcon\ln~ xovcmber Congrcssional&#13;
('It'(,'lltlll!') 11 ImlY be hard tor Nrxon to&#13;
tum llll"e.' people he.' IS really workmg Ior&#13;
IA',u:t' ITI Scuthenxt t\~la wuh :\1~lfshall Ky&#13;
~I\ lIlK war rally speeches on the&#13;
J~n':~m.lt'nl·sback sl eps&#13;
Both . lr lunre and Ky han' issued&#13;
t ..uenu-nts \('rlfyulg the ongll1ally anneuncvd&#13;
pluns. In spite nf reported Adtnllu~lr&#13;
..lIun prt' :-ourt'for Ky 10 c.Uleel out.&#13;
\\ ••shln~lon .lft'a anll·war ~roups have&#13;
l'Il()\j~h ('4.1011(.14.,'11(; • In lhl' ('venl to begin&#13;
pl.lns fClf ,ll'ounlt'r·drmonstral1on Durmg&#13;
Un' \.\.\'('k H( St'pl 14 ..It least five major&#13;
purllllils ul ani I \\ i.lr movcment held&#13;
nH'('lIn~s Tht, groups ranged from&#13;
Oloch:r&amp;.llt.·Iltwr••ls 10 radIcals, including&#13;
('11\\\.Idt, SllItlt'nl '!obilization Committee&#13;
illltl (lUH:r rl'pr('':''('lltatl\'es from D.C&#13;
,,;ollt,~{,s,' ('ontinulng Presence In&#13;
\\ ......hlll~lon la pcace lobbying coalition&gt;.&#13;
S.\:'\t-: and ttl&lt;.' BUSIIlCSS Executives Move&#13;
rorVlctllamPace,theViet~mVeterans&#13;
fur p(' •.1«':(', :md a group of local radicals&#13;
IIKlu(hng Chicago £lght defendant Rennie&#13;
DaVIS&#13;
Most of th('S(' groups want to coodinate&#13;
the plan~ that have already been made. A&#13;
mass meeting to clarify strategy was&#13;
schC'duled for Monday night (September&#13;
21l, after which the call will be made for&#13;
whatcver kind of action is chosen.&#13;
The most likely course of action will&#13;
probably include these features·&#13;
• As large an action as possible, but&#13;
. ta~ed to a\'oid the inevitable crowd&#13;
comparison with the right-wing demonstrahon&#13;
Mcintire mobilized only 15,000&#13;
Ill. I April, hUI that was without Ky's&#13;
presrnc{' And anti-war forces don't have&#13;
much time to coodlOate a national effort&#13;
• The major brunt of leadership would&#13;
have 10 come from the local D.C. people.&#13;
Thi~ tactic has been endorsed by two&#13;
nalionaJ anti-war co..1.litions, the alional&#13;
Pcae(' AcltOn Coalition operating out of&#13;
Cleveland, and the newly formed Coalition&#13;
AgalOst War. Racism and Repression,&#13;
'Ahich IS composed mostly of people from&#13;
Ih(' now-defunct New l\lobc.&#13;
• Th(' counter-dcmonstra lion should&#13;
avoid confrontation with the rightwlngen;&#13;
Thl~ waSll't a universally held&#13;
lx'hef. by an~' means, and will probably be&#13;
thr I1ltun issue that could prevent such&#13;
dl\'ers(' e}(~m('nts as the Youth International&#13;
Party and the Business&#13;
EXl'cull,,"~ :'\'01,'(' for Vjetru1m Peace from&#13;
.tppt'arlOg at n prC's.. conference to announ('e&#13;
jomt plans&#13;
VILLAGE INN&#13;
and&#13;
Pancake House&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
I SUN. 6 a.m.-12 a.m&#13;
FRI. 6 a.m.-1 p.m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancakes&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
Research Institute in&#13;
20th Century History&#13;
"The Archives as a Research In~titutein&#13;
20th Century History" was the t.llIe of a&#13;
paper presented this week by Michael S.&#13;
Holmes, assistant professor of hls.lory at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin~Parkslde.&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
OISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62NO ST,&#13;
h joined the Parkside faculty&#13;
Holmes, w 0 a er to the Arlast&#13;
year, delivered the p P onsored&#13;
h. Institute in Allanta, Ga., sp&#13;
~/~~: ~eorgia State Archives and Emory&#13;
UniversIty.&#13;
tIw&#13;
LEADER&#13;
~&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A,M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT, TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24~&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55~&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
658-1966&#13;
1212, 58th ST. KENOSHA, WIS.&#13;
Coming ... This Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
October 2nd and 3rd&#13;
"Wisconsin's mot most Popular and&#13;
Exciting colleg'e nightclub attraction!"&#13;
The&#13;
GREGORY JAMES&#13;
Group&#13;
9:00-1:00&#13;
FDUR SHOWS NIGHTLY&#13;
NEW STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG.&#13;
REFRESHMENTSSERVEO --&#13;
ADMISSION: $1.50 WITH PARKSIDE AND WISCONSIN STATE 10&#13;
PIPE SMOKER'S&#13;
Come to Andrea's&#13;
In Kenosha&#13;
• Expert ~ounsetlin9 service'&#13;
• Finest briars including Savinelli's hand&#13;
carved $100 autographe'd rare grain pip"&#13;
• Tobacco humidors ••• pipe racks Including&#13;
our expertly crafted floor cabinet for $125.00&#13;
••• leather pouches •• , pipe tools&#13;
• Turkish water pipes&#13;
• Genuine Andrea Bauer Meerschaums&#13;
• Consul, Ronson, Bentley, Zippo lighters&#13;
• Garcia Vega, Bering, Wm. Allen, Cuesta Reg,&#13;
Cre~e ~e Jamaica, Don Diego, Uhle an'd DomestIc&#13;
CIgars fresh from Our Humidor Room&#13;
• Chess Sets ••• Talbett Silk Tie., •• 3-M Games&#13;
Toilet"es by Dunhill, English leather&#13;
HALLMARK CARDS&#13;
FANNIE MAY&#13;
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES&#13;
OPENDAILY 9 A.M•• 6 P.M.". FRIDAY&#13;
• • •&#13;
Tobacconist&#13;
Since 1911&#13;
'TIL 9 P.M•••• SUNDAY 10 A.M.· 2 P."'·&#13;
Plans Made&#13;
For Counter&#13;
Demonstration&#13;
I , \ ' I&#13;
1 t of th • {' group: ,, ~mt lo t·oodinate&#13;
th plan that ha\'c already been made A&#13;
ma m t•ting to clarify strategy wa&#13;
chedulcd for '.\londay night &lt; 'eptember&#13;
21 l , aflrr which the call will b made for&#13;
whalc\'Cr kind of action b chosen.&#13;
·1 h m t hk ly t·ourse or action will&#13;
probably include tl1esr features:&#13;
• ,\ J, r •t• n action as posiible. but&#13;
I, ed to avoid the in •vitable crowd&#13;
comp n. on w1th th right-Wm!-( demonlr.&#13;
11011 t\lcl nlire mobilized only 15,000&#13;
la I pril, but that was without Ky's&#13;
pr• nc . ,\ncl anti-war forces don't have&#13;
much tune lo coodmate a national £'£fort&#13;
• Th major brunt or lcadrrship would&#13;
h. ,·c 10 rom from the local D.C. J){'ople.&#13;
Tiu t ctic ha. bl't'n endor ·pd by two&#13;
na&lt;aonal nli-w r co.1lihon.s. the • 'ational&#13;
P Acll n Coalition operating out of&#13;
I ,. I nd. nd !ht• n wlv formed Coalition&#13;
\ gam t \\'or, Hac1sm · and Repres. ion,&#13;
wluch 1. compo. cd most ly of J){'ople from&#13;
th now -d ru,wt :--:cw :\lobe.&#13;
• Thc&gt; t·ounter-d monslration should&#13;
\OICI confront, t10n with the rightw&#13;
11 •t&gt;r. ·1111. \\ a. n'I a umH•rsally held&#13;
h f. hy any nwan . and will probably be&#13;
th m 111 i u that could pren&gt;nl :uch&#13;
d.h clement a. th Youth Intern&#13;
lion, I Parl\· and the Bu. inc ·s&#13;
E Ull\' Mon! for Vat&gt;tnam Peace from&#13;
confcn•nce to anVILLAGE&#13;
INN&#13;
and&#13;
Pancake House&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
SUN. 6 a.m.-12 a.m&#13;
FRI. 6 a. m.-1 p. m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancakes&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
. . ed the Parkside faculty&#13;
Holmes, wh? 1omd the paper to the ArR&#13;
h I t·tute ., n last year, ?ehv~reAtlanta Ga., sponsored&#13;
esea re n s I chives Insht~te ~~te Arch,ives and Emory by the Georgia&#13;
20th Century History ,.:Um=·ve=rsi=ty. __ -:::;;-;---1&#13;
" The Archives as a Research In~titute in D aJrfl~iJ..- JID.Lt./JL&#13;
20th Century History" was the t_1tle of a UJ,&#13;
paper presented this week by 11~chael S.&#13;
Holmes. assistant professor of h1s_tory at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
STEAKS.&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
SEA FOOD&#13;
658-1966&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT 1212 . 58th ST. KENOSHA, WI~~&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST.&#13;
Coming ... This Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
tlw&#13;
LEADER&#13;
Moie&#13;
October 2nd and '3rd&#13;
"Wisconsin's mot most Popular and&#13;
Exciting colleg·e nightclub attraction!"&#13;
DOWNTOWN/ KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/ RACINE&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
Cl-iEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS,&#13;
The&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI, &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M. GREGORY JAMES&#13;
1:iAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker}&#13;
55(&#13;
Group&#13;
9:00-1:00&#13;
FOUR SHOWS NIGHTLY&#13;
NEW STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG. .,,.&#13;
REFRESHMENTS SERVED&#13;
ADMISSION: $1,50 WITH PARKSIDE AND WISCONSIN STATE ID&#13;
PIPE SMOKER'S • • •&#13;
Come to Andrea's&#13;
In Kenosha&#13;
• Expert counselling serviceTobacconist&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 1, September 29, 1970</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="61525">
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