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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, Issue 3</text>
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            <text>Final Enrollment Now is 4,102</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>B ©&#13;
"SH&#13;
?u&#13;
CN&#13;
&lt;N&#13;
Final Enrollment Now Is 4,102&#13;
Les Aspin&#13;
Canvassing&#13;
Between 350 and 400 volunteers began a&#13;
canvassing of the First District for&#13;
Democratic congressional candidate Les&#13;
Aspin, Saturday, Oct. 10. It is an attempt to&#13;
poll the opinions of the district voters.&#13;
Students are asked to join the effort now,&#13;
as polling will continue on Saturdays Oct.&#13;
17 and 24. Canvassing is also tentatively&#13;
scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 31.&#13;
Canvassers will go door-to-door with a&#13;
questionnaire which will include queries&#13;
about opinions on federal spending for&#13;
pollution control, the economy, national&#13;
priorities, and the incumbent Schadeberg.&#13;
The objective is not to the force the&#13;
opinions of Aspin on the voters, but to&#13;
impartially record the voters' opinions.&#13;
The canvassers are instructed to be&#13;
friendly, polite, and to have a neat apThe&#13;
final fall' enrollment of 4,102 announced&#13;
by the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
is 41 per cent higher than last&#13;
year, the greatest such increase among&#13;
the 13 public institutions in the UW and&#13;
State University systems.&#13;
The official enrollment also shows that&#13;
UWP's absolute increase of 1191 students&#13;
more than the 2911 enrolled last fall is the&#13;
second greatest total increase in the two&#13;
systems, exceeded only by UWMilwaukee,&#13;
which increased by slightly&#13;
more than 2,000.&#13;
This marks the third straight year —&#13;
since its beginning in 1968 — that Parkside&#13;
has led all state schools in percentage&#13;
growth.&#13;
Although enrollment figures from all the&#13;
public universities have not yet been&#13;
processed, UWP's 41 per cent increase is&#13;
easily the leader. The next highest&#13;
enrollment hike is UW-Green Bay's 22 per&#13;
cent. UWM is up about 12 per cent, the&#13;
seven-unit Center System will stay about&#13;
the same, and the Madison campus is&#13;
down slightly from 1969. Stevens Point&#13;
leads the State Universities with an 800, or&#13;
11 per cent, increase.&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
said, "It is significant that Parkside&#13;
achieved its enrollment success in the face&#13;
of higher tuition costs, a general downturn&#13;
in the economy, and a shortage of financial&#13;
aids and summer jobs for students. At a&#13;
time when other institutions across the&#13;
country are stabilizing or falling off,&#13;
Parkside is moving ahead," he said.&#13;
Wyllie said he viewed enrollment as "a&#13;
Let's hear it for Parkside's little helpers" ... service with a smile.&#13;
measure of success in the educational&#13;
marketplace. Every registration," he&#13;
said, "is an expression of institutional&#13;
preference. Parkside's spectacular&#13;
growth indicates that we are meeting the&#13;
educational needs of ou r region, and that&#13;
we are the right track in ou r i nstitutional&#13;
development."&#13;
The chancellor said two things in the&#13;
enrollment picture bode well for the&#13;
future. "First, by enrolling more full-time&#13;
students we exceeded the official state&#13;
projections for full-time eouivalent&#13;
students (determined by averaging the&#13;
part-timers). Second, we expect analysis&#13;
will show that our retention rate for&#13;
continuing students improved substantially.&#13;
That means that those who&#13;
were with us in 1969 liked us well enough to&#13;
return, which is a very good sign.".&#13;
Wyllie said he was encouraged by the&#13;
number of Racine students in Parkside's&#13;
freshmen class. Although exact figures&#13;
aren't yet available, about 55 percent of&#13;
the new frosh from Racine and Kenosha&#13;
counties are expected to be from Racine.&#13;
Last year the class was equally divided&#13;
between the two counties, and in 1968&#13;
nearly 60 per cent were from Kenosha&#13;
County.&#13;
"This does not mean that fewer Kenosha&#13;
County students are attending Parkside,"&#13;
Wyllie said. "Parkside was strong from&#13;
the beginning in Kenosha, and students&#13;
from that county are increasing every&#13;
year. What it does mean is that Racine&#13;
County students also are turning to&#13;
Parkside in great numbers."&#13;
nr&#13;
Midnight L ibrary Hours P roposed&#13;
A proposal to extend library hours at&#13;
Tallent Hall to twelve midnight, five nights&#13;
a week is now under consideration. Tight&#13;
personnel budget costs, however, give it&#13;
only a slight chance according to Head&#13;
Librarian Philip Burnett.&#13;
The proposal is the result of a petition&#13;
submitted by junior John Werwie and a&#13;
letter by Dr. Anna Williams sympathizing&#13;
with the students' need for more&#13;
study and research time. The petition,&#13;
asking for an extension of hours to midnight,&#13;
Sunday through Thursday, instead&#13;
pearance. The canvassers are also to be&#13;
impartial, not arguing or offering any of&#13;
their own opinions.&#13;
After recording the responses to the&#13;
short questionnaire, the volunteers will&#13;
leave Aspin's brochure with the voter. But&#13;
the purpose is primarily to gather information&#13;
for the opinion poll.&#13;
Anyone interested in helping with the&#13;
canvass should call the Racine Aspin&#13;
headquarters at 632-4487 or the Kenosha&#13;
headquarters at 654-7900. Interested&#13;
persons may also go to 226 Main St. in&#13;
Racine on Oct. 17 or Oct. 24 at 8:30 a.m.&#13;
of 10:30, was signed by 26 students and&#13;
submitted to David Streeter, head of&#13;
circulation and references, on September&#13;
28.&#13;
According to John, a pre-med student,&#13;
the present library hours do not allow&#13;
'enough study time for students in such&#13;
fields as engineering or medicine.&#13;
Burnett said the library is sympathetic&#13;
to the student's request and upon receipt of&#13;
the petition a head-count was started to&#13;
determine library attendance. It was&#13;
found that definitely more students are&#13;
using the library than last year and about&#13;
five or six students use the library past ten&#13;
o'clock.&#13;
The added cost of remaining open one&#13;
and a half hours longer five nights a week,&#13;
if started in November, would be between&#13;
400 and 500 dollars, utilizing one staff&#13;
member.&#13;
"We will remain open if we can but&#13;
because of the personnel bind we may not&#13;
be able to," he said. "The people here are&#13;
taking a very pessimistic view."&#13;
Students having late-night classes that&#13;
end around ten o'clock may be encouraged&#13;
to study in the library if it remained open&#13;
longer, said Burnett. He noted that&#13;
campus libraries at Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee remain open past midnight and&#13;
some libraries are maintained 24 ho urs a&#13;
day.&#13;
The proposal is Burnett's decision, and if&#13;
passed it w ould probably go into effect in&#13;
November. If not this year, then most&#13;
possibly next year.&#13;
A number of students last year were&#13;
given permission to remain at Kenosha&#13;
campus library after closing time. But&#13;
library help was on a "voluntary basis"&#13;
and custodial problems necessitated it&#13;
being a temporary arrangement, said&#13;
Burnett.&#13;
Deadline Coming&#13;
Indications, Parkside's literary&#13;
magazine, has set the deadline for the&#13;
second edition. All materials must be&#13;
submitted to Pat Nelson or to the&#13;
Newscope office on or before Oct. 25.&#13;
Sales of the second edition will take&#13;
place at the bookstores on all three&#13;
campuses. The price of Indications is fifty&#13;
cents.&#13;
Predicts Bright Sports Future for Parkside&#13;
Last year John Hanzalik finished&#13;
number one in epee at the National Finals&#13;
of the United States Sports Council, and&#13;
was one of 15 fencers to represent the U.S.&#13;
at the World University at Turin, Italy.&#13;
This p-happened remarkably only a little&#13;
more than a year and a half after he began&#13;
fencing.&#13;
Extraordinary as this sounds, John said&#13;
that as a freshman "I came out just to see&#13;
what it was like. Once I gave it a chance, it&#13;
worked on me. I had to practice hard at it.&#13;
To some people it comes easily, though. It&#13;
didn't for me."&#13;
He was a .500 fencer as a freshman, but&#13;
improved as the season went on. At the end&#13;
of it he knew he had a faint chance for&#13;
making the U.S. team the following year.&#13;
He set his goal at that, and after a year&#13;
of continuous practice, he had achieved it&#13;
by winning 92 per cent of his matches, and&#13;
by winning the National Finals at Notre&#13;
Dame in epee to qualify for the team.&#13;
He went to Italy and in the pressure of&#13;
international competition he lost his first&#13;
two matches to an Englishman and a&#13;
Russian.&#13;
He rebounded then and beat an Indonesian&#13;
and a Cuban. But he lost to an&#13;
Italian in the fifth match by one touch after&#13;
tying 4-4 after four minutes, and was thus&#13;
eliminated in the first round. The Italian&#13;
eventually finished in a three way tie for&#13;
the gold medal.&#13;
Overall, counting individual and team&#13;
matches, John finished with a 5-8 record.&#13;
Considering the U.S. has never won any&#13;
medals at the Games, his showing was a&#13;
good one.&#13;
He said the best fencers in the world are&#13;
in Europe, and that they were superior to&#13;
American fencers in technique. But it's not&#13;
because they have more talent than&#13;
Americans do. It's that they have more&#13;
opportunity to compete.&#13;
This success of John's was mirrored by&#13;
the success of the entire team last year.&#13;
His talent was only part of the reason for&#13;
the good showing Parkside fencing enjoyed.&#13;
Clark Anderson, Grant Anderson&#13;
(who has transferred to Madison), Keith&#13;
Herbrechsmeir, John Zanotti and captain&#13;
Bruce Bosman also were key components&#13;
in Parkside's 21 and 4 record in dual meets&#13;
last year.&#13;
The team last year ranked fourth in the&#13;
Midwest. Ahead, to the pride of the team,&#13;
of Madison, which finished fifth and which&#13;
was beaten by the Parkside team.&#13;
John feels three things contribute to the&#13;
unusual success of the team, the skill and&#13;
dedication of Loren Hein as a coach, the&#13;
degree of commitment to the sport the&#13;
fencers have, and inherent ability of the&#13;
team.&#13;
He says of Hein, "He's instilled some of&#13;
his incentive into the individual fencers.&#13;
Plus, which is very important, he went out&#13;
and fought to get our schedule. If we had&#13;
stayed fencing teams like the University of&#13;
Chicago every year, I don't think we would&#13;
be as good as we are. In order to get better&#13;
you have to play somebody as good or&#13;
better than you are."&#13;
A few years ago the meet with the&#13;
University of Chicago was the highlight of&#13;
the season; now the Jay Vees play them.&#13;
But the attitude of the team itself may&#13;
have made the crucial difference last&#13;
year. "I think, mainly, it was that individually&#13;
Clark, myself, Keith and all the&#13;
other lettermen committed ourselves to do&#13;
something, and because we wanted to&#13;
accomplish this something we worked&#13;
hard, and we gave ourselves to the sport.&#13;
That's the big thing."&#13;
Commitment may be the key word for&#13;
Parkside's fencers. The season runs over&#13;
six months, and the first meet doesn't&#13;
occur till December 5, more than nine&#13;
weeks after practice begins. The fencers&#13;
practice five days a week for two to three&#13;
hours a day.&#13;
And if the fencer wants to compete&#13;
outside of school as John did, it requires&#13;
year round practice.&#13;
The result is that "we weed out the&#13;
people who don't want to fence. If you want&#13;
to fence on the team, you're going to do it&#13;
because you really want to. I think that's&#13;
one of the reasons for our success. We&#13;
weed out those who aren't serious."&#13;
Fencing requires a physical agility as&#13;
well as mental agility. John describes it as&#13;
"The coordination of your mind and body&#13;
into one action. That's one way in which&#13;
fencing is unique. When you combine these&#13;
two things they have to be done naturally.&#13;
It has to be second nature. You react instinctively.&#13;
It's like a game of physical&#13;
chess."&#13;
John feels this year's team may be the&#13;
school's best ever. Where 20 people were&#13;
out for the nine varsity positions last year&#13;
(foil, epee and sabre each have three&#13;
starting positions), 35 are out this year.&#13;
Most of last year's starters are back, too.&#13;
But this year the schedule is tougher,,&#13;
too. Some of the opponents will be the&#13;
University of Ohio, last year's Big Ten&#13;
champions, Notre Dame, the University of&#13;
Illinois, Purdue, and on December 5 at&#13;
Parkside, the University of Minnesota&#13;
With opposition the caliber of that, John&#13;
said, the team would appreciate if more&#13;
fans would come out to the home meets. He&#13;
noted the typical turnout for home meets&#13;
last year was about ten people. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
It's Your Paper&#13;
You will notice the legend "five cents" on the front page of this&#13;
periodical. That means exactly what it ways, this paper costs money&#13;
now. People say that it didn't cost money last year. This paper wasn't&#13;
printed last year. That was an administration-oriented paper almost&#13;
fully funded by the administration. This is a student-oriented paper&#13;
funded by the students. We have to break even in advertising and&#13;
circulation versus expenses to stay in print. This is your paper —&#13;
DON'T LET IT FAIL! This is your paper, you have the opportunity to&#13;
give your views on anything you want. DON'T LOSE THAT! Help us.&#13;
We are in need of advertisers, people to sell the paper, and articles.&#13;
Which can you do! Both ad-people and distributors get a commission,&#13;
so you can help yourself a little by helping us a lot!!&#13;
If you wish to sell ads to help us out — contact Jim Hanlon! If y ou&#13;
wish to sell papers to help us out — contact Ken Konkol! If you want to&#13;
do some writing — contact the editors!!&#13;
Book Problems&#13;
Last week, our news editor suggested that we students organize&#13;
a co-op bookstore. Not meaning to expound on the apathy of students,&#13;
but don't you care about the outrageous prices you pay for texts? With&#13;
the formation of a co-operative, students would have a viable place for&#13;
selling and buying books from other students — at reasonable prices.&#13;
But even a co-operative may not be the answer: some instructors&#13;
change texts every semester, thereby cutting the market for used&#13;
books.&#13;
e&#13;
•gs&#13;
•So P&#13;
Volume 2, Number 3&#13;
October 12. 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Carroll Smolinsky .&#13;
Mike Gogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Business Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jerry Houston, D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Paul Lomartire, Arthur Gruhl, Jim Janis, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53140. Mailing address is Parkside s Newscope,&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 658-&#13;
4861, e xt. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
LETTERS the edito ors&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
GIRLFRIEND IN MADRID&#13;
The other day I was reading an article&#13;
about Spain. It reminded me of an experience&#13;
I had in Madrid a year ago. Mrs.&#13;
Gruhl and I were there with a Lawrence&#13;
University Alumni tour group. (They call&#13;
it a "continuing education program" . . .&#13;
actually it is a gimmick to give affluent&#13;
alumni an easy excuse to get out of town.)&#13;
Well, anyway, our group was being&#13;
guided ("herded" would be more accurate&#13;
terminology) through the famous Prado&#13;
National Museum. It really is a tremendous&#13;
place. Ask Dr. Burnett, our librarian .&#13;
. . he was there recently. Well, we were&#13;
going through the place and I was getting a&#13;
little bored with too-long discourses. When&#13;
that happens I drop out and sit down some&#13;
place and engage in one of my favorite&#13;
past-times — p eople watching. I've got to&#13;
get my culture in small doses. I'd rather&#13;
remember five things well than wind up&#13;
the day with a blur.&#13;
1 always carry a small tape recorder&#13;
with me on such trips ... a fantastic&#13;
miniature Sony which I can carry in the&#13;
palm of my hand. I tell the recorder&#13;
everything I want to remember. For me&#13;
taking written notes on a trip is for the.&#13;
birds. My phonetic shorthand becomes&#13;
meaningless.&#13;
On this particular afternoon I told Mrs.&#13;
Gruhl to go ahead with the group ... I'd&#13;
wait for her in the foyer of the museum. So&#13;
she went on to another pari of t he museum&#13;
and I sa t in the foyer watching people and&#13;
talking to the tape recorder.&#13;
While I was sitting there, a very attractive&#13;
young woman walked up to me.&#13;
She was wearing a black outfit with a red&#13;
sash and red accessories. Very chic. She&#13;
smiled and said, "Pardon me, Sir, you&#13;
must be a gentleman and a scholar to be so&#13;
interested in our museum to record so&#13;
many notes about what you have seen."&#13;
I kind of choked a little, removed my&#13;
beret, stood up, of c ourse, and said, "Yes,&#13;
I'm probably a little of each . . . I'm&#13;
recording some of the things I want to be&#13;
sure to remember."&#13;
She said, "I'm an artist, too . . . &gt;. ould&#13;
you like to see some of my work?"&#13;
I ex plained that I h ad better stay in the&#13;
foyer . . . that my wife would be back&#13;
shortly. Then she assured me that the&#13;
group wouldn't get back here for half an&#13;
hour . . . that she knew the route they&#13;
would take. She also assured me that her&#13;
studio was just around the corner and not&#13;
wanting to be impolite, I agreed to go with&#13;
her.&#13;
When we got out in the street she said we&#13;
would save time if we took a taxi. We did so&#13;
and her "right around the corner" studio&#13;
was at least a mile away up on Case Del&#13;
Goja street. As we drove I asked wnere she&#13;
had learned to speak such good English&#13;
and she said, "In a convent."&#13;
We got out of the cab. I paid the driver.&#13;
We went up a flight of stairs to her studio.&#13;
She turned on the light. So help me! . .. she&#13;
did have a studio ... all of the sketches&#13;
were painted right on the wall . . . they&#13;
were all nudes!&#13;
Well, I wasn't born yesterday and I&#13;
usually have an appropriate remark for&#13;
any situation but before I could open my&#13;
mouth she had slipped off her blouse . . .&#13;
she was tatooed from horizon to horizon! . .&#13;
. and as I stood there spellbound she&#13;
started unzipping something and said, "I&#13;
have even prettier pictures on my&#13;
stomach.&#13;
At that moment . . . Sorry, folks, I've&#13;
used up all of the column inches I'm&#13;
allowed. You'll just have to wait for the&#13;
next issue of the Newscope.&#13;
Students! Support the Newscope. It&#13;
supports you.&#13;
Newscope classifieds 50 c ents a line —&#13;
use them!&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
An editorial in last week's NEWSCOPE&#13;
complained that, the Coordinator of&#13;
Student Activities, Mr. Bill Niebuhr, who&#13;
this year is sponsoring a series of popular&#13;
feature films, "completely disregarded&#13;
and over-powered a faculty member who&#13;
happened to have made arrangements on&#13;
the same night, same time, and same&#13;
building for his film society." Now, it is&#13;
true that the Parkside Film Society, in&#13;
which I serve as one of two faculty advisors,&#13;
did originally wish to show it's&#13;
films on Friday nights in the new Student&#13;
Activities Building. And it is true that we&#13;
were prevented from doing this when Mr.&#13;
Niebuhr belatedly informed us that he had&#13;
signed a contract with Warner Brothers&#13;
to show his own films on Friday nights&#13;
and already made arrangements to use the&#13;
new building. However, as I explained to&#13;
you, our differences with Mr. Niebuhr on&#13;
this point were settled when we decided to&#13;
show our films on Wednesday nights,&#13;
rather than to compete and thus deprive&#13;
persons of the chance to attend both series.&#13;
We are disappointed that our films&#13;
cannot be shown under the pleasant&#13;
conditions of the Activities Building, but&#13;
instead must be screened in a formal&#13;
lecture hall; but Mr. Niebuhr should not be&#13;
blamed for this. As I understand, Mr.&#13;
Lavern Martinez, the Director of Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises, decided to allow special&#13;
events to take place in the new building&#13;
only on Friday nights and weekends,&#13;
leaving it open to the general public on&#13;
other nights. Under this ruling, the&#13;
feature-film series does seem to be getting&#13;
preferred treatment, and this is unfortunate&#13;
because our society is a&#13;
recognized campus organization of&#13;
students and faculty. Personally I believe&#13;
that the Student Activities Building should&#13;
be open to all students as often as possible.&#13;
America&#13;
,l A use. it once...&#13;
throuj it aujay...&#13;
America'S&#13;
//jWSCf&gt;£_&#13;
.mr&#13;
Other facilities for the showing of films&#13;
exist on campus, and the feature films&#13;
could be shown elsewhere. The Activities&#13;
Building should approach a genuine&#13;
student union.&#13;
One point in your editorial caused be&#13;
great grief: the repeated statement that&#13;
the Parkside Film Society is "my"&#13;
society. As I've already said, I am simply&#13;
an advisor, along with Harold Stern. The&#13;
co-chairmen, Evelyn Milich and Mary&#13;
Geraets, and other students, do all the&#13;
work.&#13;
The Coordinator of Student Activities&#13;
could have coordinated things a little&#13;
better by communicating to us his intention&#13;
to show nineteen feature films. But&#13;
the editorial contains certain&#13;
misrepresentations, and I wish you would&#13;
follow your own advice and communicate&#13;
better with your faculty advisor.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
On Wednesday night, Oct. 7, Parkside's&#13;
Convention made all the changes they&#13;
wanted in the final copy. On Thursday of&#13;
the previous week three members of our&#13;
committee, Tom Kreul, Rich Polansky and&#13;
myself, met with Dean Dearborn and two&#13;
other administrators to discuss the&#13;
document and find out what they would&#13;
object to. I must also explain that during&#13;
the week before we met with a lawyer to&#13;
have the wording and its legality checked.&#13;
We were told that certain of the rights&#13;
were guaranteed to us in the U.S. Constitution,&#13;
and that we need not say&#13;
anything more to explain or qualify them.&#13;
It is these rights that became some of the&#13;
most heated issues in our discussion with&#13;
the dean.&#13;
We listed, as a student right, that&#13;
"Students shall have the right to distribute&#13;
or sell information of a printed nature."&#13;
There are restrictions in this in the&#13;
Regents Rules which say that only student&#13;
organizations can do this and they must&#13;
have permission from the Dean of&#13;
Students and must make a written&#13;
statement saying they will pick up any&#13;
discarded copies. The lawyer told us that&#13;
this was ridiculous and that they can only&#13;
punish the person who discards the paper;&#13;
not the person who distributes it. There&#13;
were other rights listed which were&#13;
covered in a booklet published by the&#13;
American Civil Liberties Union on student&#13;
rights on university and college campuses.&#13;
We expressed our viewpoint and they&#13;
expressed theirs.&#13;
Before the administration had heard our&#13;
arguments it accused us of b eing catalysts&#13;
and passively trying to start someting with&#13;
the students. This made me very angry&#13;
and insulted. We had been asking for help&#13;
from both a lawyer and from the administration&#13;
in trying to find if there were&#13;
any statements that could be taken in a&#13;
way that was against our original idea. I&#13;
told them that if we were indeed trying to&#13;
use this document as an instrument for&#13;
radical rebellion, we would not have gone&#13;
to a lawyer and we certainly would not&#13;
have been sitting in the offices of the administration.&#13;
They later conceded that&#13;
perhaps we of the constitutional convention&#13;
would not use the document as&#13;
such, but that later there might develop a&#13;
radical organization that may try to&#13;
misuse it. My thoughts were that the fear&#13;
(Continued on Page 5) &#13;
Killer Dogs on Campus, Police C arrying&#13;
Cattle Prods, and Other Absurd Rumors&#13;
By D. H. POST&#13;
It's really unfortunate that the pseudoradicals&#13;
on campus (yes! It's true,&#13;
Parkside is part of the Movement) are&#13;
wasting their time starting ill-founded&#13;
rumors. The latest rumors are concerned&#13;
with the night watchmen who are driving&#13;
around in that ridiculous station wagon&#13;
with "Security" stenciled in block letters&#13;
on the side with dry markers. These oppressive&#13;
fascists have irritated a number&#13;
of freedom-loving students, so this&#13;
newspaper decided on a confrontation. I&#13;
was sent to talk to the chief of the Tough&#13;
Police. The following is an account of the&#13;
first, but far from the last, episode of&#13;
guerrilla theater at Parkside, and the&#13;
beginning of radical politics initiated by&#13;
Newscope in the interest of reform.&#13;
Newscope's student vanguard&#13;
discovered that the man responsible for&#13;
the oppression held the official title of&#13;
Chief of the Physical Plant (which once&#13;
more exposes the assbackwards values of&#13;
this bourgeoisie administration in that&#13;
they have yet to appoint someone in&#13;
charge of the spiritual plant), and had the&#13;
unofficial title of Mr. Simkus. The office&#13;
was discovered in Tallent Hall, and an&#13;
attack was coordinated, and one of the&#13;
Student Vanguard politely kicked open the&#13;
door and screamed, "May I please talk to&#13;
you, sir? I'll only take a moment."&#13;
Our tactics took him completely by&#13;
surprise, and he was forced to lose face by&#13;
offering us a chair and politely replying,&#13;
"Certainly, come and sit down."&#13;
We immediately took advantage of our&#13;
initiative by confronting him with the&#13;
question of the presence of first aid&#13;
equipment in the station wagon. He was&#13;
uneasily forced into an admission there&#13;
was not only a stretcher in the station&#13;
wagon, but OXYGEN AS WELL! Further&#13;
probing led to the additional admission&#13;
that ALL SIX SECURITY MEN HAVE&#13;
RECENTLY HAD EXTRA TRAINING IN&#13;
FIRST AID! This was not the least of the&#13;
facts revealed! On the third shift one of the&#13;
watchmen has an enormous German&#13;
Shepherd! The implications are here clear&#13;
to any thinking member of this university,&#13;
and the feeble justification given is not&#13;
fooling anyone. The Chief of the Physical&#13;
Plant actually believes we're going to&#13;
swallow a story about the watchman not&#13;
having any place to keep his pet. Poppycock!&#13;
It's just part of the continuing&#13;
psychological warfare of the administration&#13;
to keep its students niggers.&#13;
The fact that the dog is only present during&#13;
the late night and early hours when no&#13;
students are around is just one more proof&#13;
of the administration's intent. WHY ARE&#13;
THEY AFRAID TO LET US PET THE&#13;
DOG!&#13;
I will let the administration damn&#13;
themselves with their own words. Mr.&#13;
Simkus (Chief of the Physical Plant) said,&#13;
"We now have stretchers in some area in&#13;
both buildings. We have a protection patrol&#13;
car equipped with oxygen and first aid&#13;
equipment. First aid, if anything happens,&#13;
is handled like this. All someone has to do&#13;
is call the operator. The operator notifies&#13;
us and the emergency squad from the&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff's department. We have&#13;
had very good response from them in the&#13;
past. In the near future, possibly&#13;
December, a new patrol car will be on&#13;
campus, equipped with more elaborate&#13;
POET RY COR N ER . .&#13;
FRIEND&#13;
Silent thunder&#13;
and within my eyes&#13;
I perceive the gladdened sighs&#13;
of happy-together-feeling&#13;
and seek the silent thunder&#13;
of your soul.&#13;
Beautiful storms can be heard&#13;
within you&#13;
as you immerse the landscape&#13;
with your mind.&#13;
One looks&#13;
and&#13;
wants&#13;
to&#13;
travel&#13;
with&#13;
you.&#13;
STREETQUEEN&#13;
I watched her overflowing&#13;
into the arms of faceless men&#13;
leading them into a countlessly trod path&#13;
seeking continuity into a journey&#13;
that never ends . . .&#13;
The constantly fading light of&#13;
her face:&#13;
awakening the hidden dreams&#13;
of those who dare not possess them&#13;
and yet she annoints them&#13;
with a salve she keeps in a safe,&#13;
incessantly open for any wanderer;&#13;
encased in smoke, yet apparent&#13;
to all, a dim light burning&#13;
brightly proclaiming to all:&#13;
"Bring your burdens here and maybe the darkness&#13;
will clear away!"&#13;
Swaying, she falls&#13;
standing atop the minds of men,&#13;
Omnipresent goddess of delights&#13;
offering graces to those who implore —&#13;
standing at the door of her nocturnal&#13;
temple,&#13;
keeping vigil,&#13;
awaits the dead seed&#13;
of a passion.&#13;
TO PRESENT PAPER&#13;
John W. Harbeson, an assistant&#13;
professor of political science at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, has&#13;
been invited to present a paper before the&#13;
annual meeting of the African Studies&#13;
Association, the principal professional&#13;
organization for U.S. and Canadian&#13;
Africanists from all academic disciplines.&#13;
The association will meet Oct. 21 through&#13;
24 i n Boston. Prof. Harbeson's paper is&#13;
titled "Ethnic Integration and Political&#13;
Modernization of East Africa: Model for&#13;
Southern Africa?".&#13;
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DIAMOND CONSULTANTS&#13;
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excepted It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Elect MacKinney&#13;
To Special Group&#13;
Arthur C. MacKinney, dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, has&#13;
been elected to the American&#13;
Psychological Association Committee on&#13;
Advisory Services for Education and&#13;
Training for a three year term.&#13;
His selection was announced by the&#13;
association's Council of Representatives&#13;
at the group's annual meeting in&#13;
Washington, D.C., this week.&#13;
MacKinney assumed the deanship of&#13;
Parkside's larger academic unit on July 1.&#13;
He previously headed the psychology&#13;
department at Iowa State University,&#13;
where he had been a psychology professor&#13;
since 1957.&#13;
He also has held visiting lectures and&#13;
professor appointments at the University&#13;
of Michigan, University of Minnesota and&#13;
University of California-Berkeley and&#13;
consultant posts with major industries.&#13;
Prior to his newly-announced American&#13;
Psychological Association post, he served&#13;
as chairman of its Commission on Accreditation&#13;
and of the committees that&#13;
prepared the APA guidelines for the Ph.D.&#13;
and M.A.' degrees in industrial&#13;
psychology.&#13;
MacKinney's major interest as an industrial&#13;
psychologist is in the improvement&#13;
of human performance,&#13;
especially of managers, and in the&#13;
measurement of performance.&#13;
Rock Concert&#13;
"Intake!" is a special rock concert to be&#13;
sponsored by the Metro Milwaukee Activities&#13;
Staffs on Friday, Oct. 23, in Uihlein&#13;
Hall, the Performing Arts Center. The&#13;
New York Electric String Ensemble will&#13;
join the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra&#13;
in presenting the multimedia peace&#13;
concert. Reserve your tickets now.&#13;
first aid equipment. We are remodelling a&#13;
room at Greenquist to be equipped with&#13;
stretcher and cots and other first aid&#13;
equipment. The security men have just&#13;
completed training at a special Red Cross&#13;
seminar in Racine, so we will be protected&#13;
in case of accidents . . ."&#13;
Sunnyside florists&#13;
Qreenhouses&#13;
FIOMIS - Fruit Batktb - Cifb&#13;
Phone: 649-6700&#13;
Viand FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021 - 7 STH ST.&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN S3I40&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your Back...&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet!&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN K ENOSHA&#13;
FOR SALE — Stereo (Hi Fi) $40. Inquire&#13;
at Newscope office or contact Jim Hanlon&#13;
694-5823.&#13;
. . . a n d m a k e i t o u r b u s i n e s s&#13;
to know w hat ou r ind ividual&#13;
customers w ant an d n eed.&#13;
We s pecialize in f ashions&#13;
geared to m odern livin g&#13;
hand-picked fo r sty le, qu ality&#13;
and value. And, most&#13;
important, y ou can c ount on&#13;
prompt, cou rteous, per sonal&#13;
service a t all tim es. Come&#13;
in and browse.. see how much&#13;
more fun it is to sh op in a&#13;
relaxed, frie ndly atm osphere.&#13;
Hope to se e yo u ... soon'&#13;
MARGURITTE'S&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
City Sandal, pow-powered in potent Patent, $22.00&#13;
513 57th Street&#13;
Kenosha &#13;
Concert Series Parkside M a y Grow a Lake&#13;
Begins Sunday&#13;
In its first University Artists Series, the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside will&#13;
present 13 Sunday afternoon concerts&#13;
during the 1970-71 season beginning Oct.&#13;
18. The concerts will feature both members&#13;
or Parkside's outstanding music staff&#13;
and guest artists.&#13;
The varied series will include both instrumental&#13;
and vocal programs and solo&#13;
and ensemble performances.&#13;
Season tickets may be obtained by&#13;
writing Parkside's Public Information&#13;
Office at the Wood Road Campus,&#13;
Kenosha. Adult season tickets are $10 and&#13;
student season tickets are $5. Single admission&#13;
tickets are $1 and 50 cents&#13;
respectively. Children 12 and under will be&#13;
admitted free.&#13;
Parkside musicians participating will be&#13;
Carmen Vila, the Spanish-born pianist&#13;
currently beginning her third season as&#13;
artist-in-residence at the campus; Annie&#13;
Petit, a French-born pianist who joined the&#13;
staff this fall as an affiliate artist; Keiko&#13;
Furiyoshi, a Japanese violinist also new to&#13;
Parkside and an affiliate artist; and Harry&#13;
Lantz, a distinguished cellist and an&#13;
associate professor of music at UWP.&#13;
Guest artists will be Ilona Kombrink,&#13;
soprano, of the UW-Madison music&#13;
faculty; James Yoghourtjian, classical&#13;
guitarist of the Wisconsin College Conservatory;&#13;
Edward Druzinsky, Chicago&#13;
Symphony harpist; Gary Kendall,&#13;
baritone, of Indiana University; and the&#13;
David Baker Jazz Quintet, also of Indiana&#13;
U.&#13;
Concert dates and participating artists&#13;
are Oct. 18, Misses Petit and Furiyoshi;&#13;
Nov. 1, Miss Vila; Nov. 15, Miss Kombrink&#13;
and Vila (lieder); Nov. 22, Miss Furiyoshi;&#13;
Dec. 13, Miss Petit; Jan. 10, Yoghourtjian;&#13;
Feb. 14, Druzinsky; Feb. 28, Miss Petit;&#13;
March 14, Kendall (operatic selections);&#13;
March 28, Misses Petit and Furiyoshi;&#13;
April 25, Baker quintet; May 2, Miss Vila;&#13;
and May 16, Lantz and Misses Petit and&#13;
Furiyoshi.&#13;
All concerts will be at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus. Shuttle bus service will be&#13;
available from the Tallent Hall parking&#13;
lot.&#13;
Piano Teachers&#13;
Study Jazz&#13;
Piano teachers can study jazz and pop&#13;
music with a professional jazz musician in&#13;
a four-session workshop Wednesday from&#13;
9-11:30 a.m. on the Universtiy of Wisconsin&#13;
Waukesha County campus beginning Oct.&#13;
21.&#13;
Presented by University Extension, the&#13;
course will feature Gerald Borsuk, wellknown&#13;
Madison jazz pianist.&#13;
The sessions are intended to give private&#13;
piano teachers a review or introduction to&#13;
jazz piano as a supplement to the standard&#13;
keyboard repertoire and methods. Emphasis&#13;
will be on the total concept of jazz,&#13;
chording, and jazz patterns and structures&#13;
as an introduction to improvisation.&#13;
Borsuk, who holds a bachelor of music&#13;
degree from the UW, has been a piano&#13;
soloist, band leader and teacher and a staff&#13;
musician for commercial radio and&#13;
television. He has played professionally&#13;
for such celebrities as Patti Page, Vaughn&#13;
Monroe, and the Bob Hope Show.&#13;
Information on fees and registration is&#13;
available from University Extension Arts,&#13;
DN 404-600 West Kilbourn Ave., Milwaukee&#13;
53203, phone (414) 228-4791.&#13;
^pAcunJt,&#13;
j-emutaA658-2233&#13;
&#13;
wn&#13;
Cocfctoik' lfumcWrun)inyneU&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS&#13;
At some unmentionable time the&#13;
University plans to build a lake. The plan&#13;
seems to be most dependent on whether or&#13;
not the Pike River gets cleared&#13;
up. In other words, Parkside officials are&#13;
not rushing out with their shovels to dig it.&#13;
The proposed lake is to be situated by the&#13;
corner of Wood Road to the Highway A.&#13;
The first concern in building the lake is&#13;
to include biological study areas. The plan&#13;
also calls for the possible use of the south&#13;
shore as a recreational area.&#13;
One premise for making the lake would&#13;
be that it would not flood valuable&#13;
ecological areas. Another premise would&#13;
be to flood it for the maximum use of&#13;
shoreline. The study also must decide how&#13;
to make the lake in such a way that sailing&#13;
and other activities would not interfere&#13;
with the scientific study areas^ Thei lake&#13;
would be a park-like environment in which&#13;
^AUhe presesent Parkside has a number&#13;
of ponds. About five of them are located&#13;
around the campus. Contrary to the Ibeli&#13;
of many people, UW-P personnel did not&#13;
make these ponds. The ponds were created&#13;
by farmers of the area to water the apple&#13;
trees that formerly occupied our campus^&#13;
Some ponds were created by the farmers&#13;
by the use of a dragging divice. The soil is&#13;
naturally fine and so holds water very&#13;
well. Most of the ponds are maintained by&#13;
rainwater. Some of the ponds contain fish.&#13;
Parkside presently uses these ponds only&#13;
for scientific study. The ponds will most&#13;
likely be used in the master plan to&#13;
enhance the campus.&#13;
Carthage Players Revive&#13;
Broadway Hit Produ ction&#13;
When Carthage College's Theater&#13;
Department presents its first play of the&#13;
season, "George Washington Slept Here",&#13;
Oct. 15-17 in Warburg Auditorium, it will&#13;
be a "revival" of the original Broadway&#13;
play. The show will be produced exactly as&#13;
it was on Broadway in 1940.&#13;
The problems that this poses for play&#13;
director Greg Olson and technical director&#13;
William Ruyle are numerous. Stage sets,&#13;
musical recordings, slang and fashions&#13;
must be recreated in the 1940 mode. Few&#13;
people realize, however, the painstaking&#13;
work that is involved in costuming a show&#13;
of that period, which was a scant 30 years&#13;
ago.&#13;
Students of drama find it easy to&#13;
recognize costumes of the Greek or&#13;
Shakespearian theatre because they study&#13;
a great deal about those particular eras.&#13;
The 1940s present a different problem.&#13;
Since it was such a recent period, there is&#13;
not much "teaching" done in the area of&#13;
1940-era costumes. The student not only&#13;
has been unable to study that period in the&#13;
detailed way he studies Shakespeare, but&#13;
few of Carthage's present students can&#13;
remember what clothing looked like in&#13;
1940, making it very difficult to costume&#13;
the play.&#13;
Play director Olson has had to engage in&#13;
considerable research himself as he&#13;
wasn't born until 1947. Most of the cast&#13;
members were born between 1949 and&#13;
1952.&#13;
Olson adopted a sort of "search and&#13;
seizure" type of attitude towards costumes&#13;
for the G.W.S.H. production. First, Olson&#13;
and the cast members researched the&#13;
period in detail. They noted the various!&#13;
trends in clothing styles — such as padded&#13;
shoulders, midi-length dresses, doublebreasted&#13;
suits, etc. After isolating&#13;
distinctive details in the fashions of that&#13;
day, they searched out and impounded any&#13;
article of clothing from 1940. The customer&#13;
who received the clothes discussed each&#13;
article in turn with the director and&#13;
designed the costumes accordingly.&#13;
Some of the clothes were found in&#13;
Carthage's own costume department. Cast&#13;
members went home and rummaged&#13;
through their attics and closets. Many&#13;
parents were shocked to find out they had&#13;
clothes in their closets dating back to 1940.&#13;
Olson and his thespians also visited all&#13;
the Goodwill, Salvation Army and St.&#13;
Vincent de Paul stores in Racine, Kenosha&#13;
and the surrounding area communities.&#13;
Even the theatre department's secretary&#13;
showed up for work one morning with an&#13;
old dress to contribute.&#13;
One Carthage teacher's husband is&#13;
minus his old work clothes, and a Kenosha&#13;
father lost his coveralls. Despite all the&#13;
items collected, the cast members still&#13;
came up short as there are several&#13;
costume changes in the play which has a&#13;
17-member cast. So, theater department&#13;
sewing machines went to work and the&#13;
costumers skillfully sewed together&#13;
everything from skirts and slacks to&#13;
swimming suits.&#13;
"George Washington Slept Here" is a&#13;
three-act comedy, written by the late Moss&#13;
Hart and George S. Kaufman. The plot&#13;
revolves around members of the Fuller&#13;
family who purchase an American&#13;
Revolution Era farmhouse in Bucks&#13;
VILLAGE INN&#13;
and&#13;
Pancake House&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
SUN. 6 a.m.-12 a.m&#13;
FRI. 6 a.m.-l p.m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancakes&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
PIPE SMOKER'S ...&#13;
Come to Andrea's&#13;
In K enosha Tobacconist&#13;
• Expert counselling service SinCC 1911&#13;
• Finest briars including Savinelli's hand&#13;
carved $100 autographed rare grain pipe&#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, Z'ippo Lighters&#13;
• Garcia Vega, Bering, Wm. Allen, Cuesta Reg,&#13;
Creme de Jamaica, Don Diego, Uhle and Domestic&#13;
Cigars fresh from our Humidor Room&#13;
• Chess Sets ... Talbett Silk Ties ,.. 3-M Games&#13;
Toiletries by Dunhill, English Leather&#13;
HALLMARK C ARDS&#13;
FANNIE M AY&#13;
RUSSELL S TOVER C ANDIES&#13;
County, Pennsylvania. The Fullers subsequently&#13;
discover that it wasn't General&#13;
Washington but the infamous Benedict&#13;
Arnold who stayed overnight at the&#13;
dilapidated old farmhouse which eventually&#13;
costs the Fullers a fortune to&#13;
renovate. Curtain times are 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Thursday (Oct. 15) and 8:15 p.m. Friday&#13;
and Saturday (Oct. 16-17).&#13;
the Ice Age National Scientific Reserve&#13;
is a program set up in a bill passed by the&#13;
U.S. Senate on Oct. 7. The bill, if signed by&#13;
Nixon, calls for a 32,500 acre outdoor&#13;
preservation site in nine Wisconsin&#13;
counties.&#13;
R-K NEWS&#13;
FRUIT BASKETS AND CANDY&#13;
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FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
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OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. - 6 P.M.... FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P.M. . . . SUNDAY 10 A.M. 2 P.M. &#13;
Public Splits on Time Off for Politics&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
CARTHAGE&#13;
Play — Wartburg Auditorium&#13;
"George Washington Slept Here".&#13;
October 15-16-17. Thursday night at&#13;
7:30 p.m. and Friday and Saturday&#13;
nights at 8:15 p.m. Admission - Adults&#13;
$1.75 a nd Students $1.25.&#13;
Football — October 17 a t Decatur,&#13;
Illinois, Millikin College. Game starts&#13;
at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
October 20 — J V football, Wheaton&#13;
College here.&#13;
Fine Arts — October 21, The Eleo&#13;
Pomaro Dance Company. Performance&#13;
at 8:30 p.m. in the Field&#13;
House. Admission $2.50.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
KENOSHA and RACINE&#13;
Jimmy Clark Memorial Road Rally&#13;
— October 18. Tickets $5.00 per car.&#13;
Registration 11:30 at Tallent Hall.&#13;
Rally starts at 1:00. Party at Chapparal&#13;
following. Free beer and food.&#13;
Parkside University League&#13;
presents "Fall Fashion Show" —&#13;
October 13 at Holleb's in Kenosha.&#13;
Social hour, 7:00 p.m., Show time,&#13;
8:00 p.m. Limited tickets, $1.50.&#13;
Contact Mrs. J. Sokow, UWP X211.&#13;
UWP Film Offerings — The next upcoming&#13;
film brought to you by the&#13;
Film Society Series is the flick&#13;
"Sabotage" scheduled for October 14&#13;
at 8:00 p.m. This is a free special.&#13;
The Intercollegiate Film Council —&#13;
presents "Teorema", to be shown on&#13;
November 8 a 17:00 p. m. at the Golden&#13;
Rondell in Racine. Tickets available&#13;
at the Greenquist Hall Concourse&#13;
near the main entrance during&#13;
Thursday and Friday noon hours.&#13;
Limit Two' per student. Tickets&#13;
are free.&#13;
CONCERTS COMING UP&#13;
FROM CHICAGO&#13;
October 16 — Laura Nyro,&#13;
Auditorium Theatre, tickets from&#13;
$3.50 to $6.50.&#13;
October 17 — The Guess Who,&#13;
Auditorium Theatre, tickets from&#13;
$3.50 to $6.50.&#13;
October 24 — WCFL presents Leon&#13;
Russell in concert at the Auditorium&#13;
Theatre, tickets from $3.50 to $6.50.&#13;
On the question of whether or not&#13;
students should take time out from their&#13;
classes to join in political campaigning, a&#13;
recent Gallup Poll found public opinion&#13;
split down the middle on the question.&#13;
Forty-seven per cent of those polled&#13;
favor giving students a two-week ess&#13;
this fall for the purpose of campaiging for&#13;
congressional candidates. Forty-five per&#13;
cent opposed the idea.&#13;
This is the question asked in the Sept. 11-&#13;
14 survey conducted in more than 300&#13;
selected localities across the nation:&#13;
"Many college students are being given a&#13;
two-week recess — to be made up at some&#13;
point during the school year — to give&#13;
them a chance to campaign for&#13;
congressional candidates. How do you feel&#13;
about this — do you approve or disapprove?"&#13;
&#13;
After interviews with 1,513 adults 21 and&#13;
over, the national results are the&#13;
following: Approve — 47 per cent;&#13;
Disapprove — 45 per cent; No opinion — 8&#13;
per cent.&#13;
As a result of the poll, it was found that&#13;
as many as two out of three young adults&#13;
(21-29) approved of the prior-election plan.&#13;
However, some political leaders predict&#13;
campaign efforts by students will be&#13;
counter-productive.-&#13;
Another Gallup Poll revealed that many&#13;
young Americans would be willing to&#13;
listening to the students. To the question&#13;
"Would you like to have one of the students&#13;
come to talk to you about his views, or&#13;
not?", 38 per cent answered yes and 62 per&#13;
cent gave a negative reply.&#13;
Whiskey&#13;
Facts&#13;
LETTER&#13;
.(Continued from Page 2)&#13;
of having any trouble oh this campus has&#13;
led to a mistrust and suspicion of students&#13;
in general, which is disappointing if not&#13;
disgusting.&#13;
Speaking for myself, I did not spend all&#13;
of my time at the pom-pom squad practice,&#13;
basketball games, planning bus trips hnd&#13;
working on other activities just so that I&#13;
could come back this year and be accused&#13;
of trying to start some radical student&#13;
movement. I believe I speak for the group&#13;
in saying that many of our members were&#13;
also active in student organizations, and&#13;
that they did not spend one night a week&#13;
spring, summer, and now, fall, to plan&#13;
against the school.&#13;
The meeting ended with the administration&#13;
members reminiscing about&#13;
the good old days. Now we are supposed to&#13;
meet with a faculty committee. The&#13;
Faculty Senate will then get the proposed&#13;
copy of the constitution — then the C.C.C.&#13;
of the Board of Regents will review it.&#13;
Bev Noble&#13;
By JIM JANIS&#13;
It is said that the first Burbon Whiskey,&#13;
"genuine, old fashioned, homemade, sour&#13;
mash Bourbon", was made in 1789 in&#13;
Georgetown in Scott county, Kentucky. At&#13;
that time, Scott county was a part of&#13;
Bourbon county, thus the whiskey was&#13;
first known as Bourbon county whiskey,&#13;
and now Bourbon.&#13;
Today, more than half of all Bourbon is&#13;
distilled and bottled in Kentucky. The&#13;
Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee region is&#13;
traditional Burbon country. Illinois has&#13;
been a Bourbon center for years.&#13;
In order for a whiskey to be called&#13;
Bourbon, Goverment regulations state&#13;
that: 1) The mashing formula (grain&#13;
proportions) must have at least 51 per cent&#13;
corn grain; 2) Be distilled at a proof no&#13;
higher than 160 and no lower than 80 ; 3) To&#13;
be further identified as a straight Bourbon&#13;
whiskey, a distillate must be stored in new&#13;
charred oak barrels between 80 and 125&#13;
proof for at least two years. Most Bourbons&#13;
on the market today are at least four&#13;
years old.&#13;
Sour Mash Whiskey is made from a&#13;
yeast mash soured with lactic culture for a&#13;
minimum of six hours; the fermenter&#13;
mash must contain at least 25 per cent of&#13;
the screened residue from the base of the&#13;
whiskey still and the fermenting time must&#13;
be at least 72 hours.&#13;
Bottled-in Bond bourbon is not a&#13;
separate type of whiskey. It is produced&#13;
and bottled in accordance with the bottling-in&#13;
bond act, a federal law dating back&#13;
to 1897. Bottle-in Bond whiskey must be at&#13;
least four years old (most are older); it&#13;
must be bottled at 100 proof; and the&#13;
whiskey in the bottle must be produced in a&#13;
single distillery, by the same distiller, and&#13;
be the product of a single season and year.&#13;
Tennessee Whiskey: The production&#13;
begins with the sour mash process similar&#13;
to the method described under bourbon.&#13;
Although some parts of the Tennessee&#13;
whiskey production process are related to&#13;
that of bourbon, it is not bourbon. It differs&#13;
primarily in the extra steps that take place&#13;
immediately after distilling. At that point&#13;
the whiskey is seeped slowly, very slowly,&#13;
through vats packed with charcoal.&#13;
Charcoal is important. Charcoal used in&#13;
the production of Tennessee whiskey&#13;
comes from the Tennessee highlands hard&#13;
maple region.&#13;
Whiskey in America:&#13;
1811: Kentucky had 2,000 distilleries.&#13;
1848: First appearance of the word&#13;
Bourbon on the label of a bottle.&#13;
Any questions pertaining to the subjects&#13;
of these articles or your entertaining&#13;
needs, write to: Jim Janis care of&#13;
Newscope.&#13;
Next week: Scotch, Canadian and Irish&#13;
Whiskies.&#13;
8040&#13;
Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Supper Club ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR IT S FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RIB&#13;
WLS HIT&#13;
PARADE&#13;
October 4,1970&#13;
1. Cracklin' Rosie, Neil Diamond - Uni&#13;
2. All Right Now, Free - A&amp;M&#13;
3." I'll Be There, Jackson Five - Motown&#13;
4. Indiana Wants Me, R. Dean Taylor -&#13;
Rare Earth&#13;
5. Candida, Dawn - Bell&#13;
6. Do What You Want To Do, Five Flights&#13;
Up - Bell&#13;
7. Out In The Country, Three Dog Night -&#13;
Dunhill&#13;
8. Looking Out My Back Door, Creedence&#13;
Clearwater Revival - Fantasy&#13;
9. I Know (I'm Losing You), Rare Earth -&#13;
Rare Earth&#13;
10. Julie, Do Ya' Love Me, Bobby Sherman&#13;
- Metromedia&#13;
11. Green-Eyed Lady, Sugarloaf - Liberty&#13;
12. We've Only Just Begun, Carpenters -&#13;
A&amp;M&#13;
13. That's Where I Went Wrong, Poppy&#13;
Family - London&#13;
14. Lola, Kinks - Reprise&#13;
15. War, Edwin Star- Gordy&#13;
16. We Can Make Music, Tommy Roe -&#13;
A.B.C.&#13;
17. Joanne, Michael Nesmith - R.C.A.&#13;
18. I (Who Have Nothing), Tom Jones -&#13;
Parrot&#13;
19. Ain't No Mountain High Enough,&#13;
Diana Ross - Motown&#13;
20. Groovy Situation, Gene Chandler -&#13;
Mercury&#13;
21. L ook What They've Done To My Song,&#13;
Ma, Seekers - Electa&#13;
22. De eper &amp; Deeper, Freda Payne - Invictus&#13;
&#13;
23. P atches, Clarence Carter - Atlantic&#13;
24. Somebody's Been Sleeping, 100 Proof -&#13;
Buddah&#13;
25. It Don't Matter To Me, Bread - Electra&#13;
26. I Just Can't Help Beleiving, B. J.&#13;
Thomas - Scepter&#13;
27. N eanderthal Man, Hotlegs - Capitol&#13;
28. Snowbird, Anne Murray - Capitol&#13;
29. Fire &amp; Rain, James Taylor - Warner&#13;
Brothers&#13;
30. S olitary Man, Neil Diamond - Bang&#13;
WLS Hit Parade Bound&#13;
Lucretia MacEvil, Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears -&#13;
Columbia&#13;
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RECORDS&#13;
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R A C I NE&#13;
OCT. 14-20 - Nitely at 7 &amp; 8:45&#13;
IS A RIP-SNORTER. A TRIUMPH!"&#13;
—Judith Crist&#13;
" •••,,* BRILLIANTLY CONCEIVED,&#13;
BRILLIANTLY DONE! DEVASTATINGLY FUNNY!"&#13;
— Kathleen Carroll. New York Daily News&#13;
COLOR A CANNON RELEASE O R &#13;
Pre-Med Group&#13;
Meets Tuesday&#13;
Parkside Pre-Med Group will hold its&#13;
first meeting at 7:30 p.m. October 20 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Dr. Richard Holmes of the admissions&#13;
staff of Wisconsin School of Medicine will&#13;
be guest speaker. Election of new officers&#13;
will also be held.&#13;
The group's plans for this year include a&#13;
field trip to the Wisconsin School of&#13;
Medicine, witnessing of a live operation,,&#13;
and a talk by Doug Devan, last year's&#13;
group president and currently a medical&#13;
student at Madison.&#13;
Pre-Med group began last year as an&#13;
interest group under faculty adviser Dr.&#13;
Anna Williams. Vice president John&#13;
Werwie is the group's only returning officer.&#13;
&#13;
Membership in the group is open to all&#13;
students with pre-medical interest. The&#13;
number of pre-medical students enrolled&#13;
at Parkside currently is more than 35.&#13;
Will Perform&#13;
With Symphony&#13;
Bruce Gordon, Administrative Assistant&#13;
for the Center for Afro-American Culture&#13;
at UW-M, will perform dramatic poetry&#13;
readings with the Milwaukee Symphony in&#13;
the "Intake" program. The Harlem-bornand-raised&#13;
poet-photographer-actor-film&#13;
director refers to himself as an "experimenter&#13;
in the arts". He is currently&#13;
completing a small volume of verse and&#13;
rewriting "Sarah and Sax" for dramatic&#13;
reading in which he will take the role of&#13;
Sax.&#13;
Bruce Gordon's present arts experimentation&#13;
deals with still-life&#13;
photography in both black-and-white and&#13;
color, and he has been making tape&#13;
recordings that incorporate poetry and&#13;
sonic effects designed to illustrate&#13;
progressions of abstractions.&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Ranger Runners Take First&#13;
So you're looking for places to go. Well,&#13;
look no further.&#13;
Remember the Fog-Cutter? Well, it's the&#13;
Fog-Cutter no more, it's the Unicorn. Open&#13;
to Parkside students, everyone is&#13;
welcome. Listen to these specials: Ladies&#13;
night Tuesday and Thursday — Drinks Vz&#13;
price, Sour Hour and Beer Blast — Beer 10&#13;
cents and sour mixed drinks 25 cents&#13;
between 8 and 9 o'clock.&#13;
On Saturday nights go through their&#13;
maze of mystery and see things you never&#13;
saw before.&#13;
You can't affort to miss it. Come one and&#13;
all and listen to the live music as you indulge.&#13;
&#13;
Grapplers Point&#13;
For Win Year&#13;
The new wrestling coach at Parkside,&#13;
Jim Koch (pronounced cook) has set&#13;
Monday, October 19 as the opening day of&#13;
wrestling practice. He invites anyone who&#13;
is interested in wrestling to try out for the&#13;
team. His office is Room 144 at the&#13;
Kenosha campus.&#13;
The Parkside wrestlers had a 3-8 record&#13;
last year and are aiming to improve on&#13;
The Ranger cross country team beat&#13;
UWM 19-38 and Milwaukee Tech 19-42 in a&#13;
triple dual meet at Milwaukee last week.&#13;
Freshmen Rick Lund and Chuck Dittman,&#13;
both from Marinette, held hands across&#13;
the finish line to take the first two places in&#13;
20:29.6 over the four mile course, but Lund&#13;
was declared the winner. This time was&#13;
also a new school record.&#13;
The Rangers also took a fourth with Tim&#13;
McGilskz from Racine (20:54), fifth Jim&#13;
McFadden (20:56) from Waterford, John&#13;
Wagner seventh from Elmhurst (21:16)&#13;
that. Coach Koch says that they have put&#13;
together a very stiff schedule of 13 duals&#13;
and four tournaments, but he is very&#13;
encouraged with the fine looking group of&#13;
prospects for this year's team. There&#13;
appear to be a couple of boys for each&#13;
weight class except heavyweight. Koch&#13;
says if there are any big fellows who want&#13;
to put in a lot of hard work, and probably&#13;
receive a fair share of bumps and bruises,&#13;
they are welcome to come out for&#13;
wrestling.&#13;
Parkside's first match will be on Friday,&#13;
December 4, when Michigan Technical&#13;
University and Wisconsin State University-Stevens&#13;
Point are here to challenge&#13;
the Parkside Rangers.&#13;
and Gary Lance tenth place and Mike&#13;
Dewitt 11th place.&#13;
The 1970 Ranger XCC team will dedicate&#13;
their new three-mile cross-country trail&#13;
against the top rated WSU-Platteville and&#13;
Dominican College in a five-mile double&#13;
dual. -We hope to have many Ranger&#13;
backers there watching the freshman&#13;
dominated squad&#13;
SOUR HOUR&#13;
&amp;&#13;
BEER BLAST&#13;
Beer 10$&#13;
Sour mixes 25$&#13;
Between 8 &amp; 9&#13;
Ladies night&#13;
Tues.-Thurs.&#13;
Drinks Yi price&#13;
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"Why pay more at the door"&#13;
Heavy Bands&#13;
Every Wed., Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
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But How You Wear It Long"&#13;
Hair Styling - Hair Cutting - Hair Pieces&#13;
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7509 45TH AVE. 694-4603&#13;
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ROAST CHICKEN with B ISCUITS &amp; GRAVY&#13;
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY 8 :30 - 10:30&#13;
LADIES NITE - Buy 1 drink g et 2nd for 10$&#13;
YOUR CHOICE - BAKED POTATO or&#13;
POTATO SALAD&#13;
Cocktails - Sherbet at extra charge&#13;
Monday-Thursday $1.95&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2.25&#13;
Children $1.10&#13;
PLUS TAX AND BIVERAOI&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. ll p.m.&#13;
Son. 12 Noon-9 p.m.; Mon.-Thurs. 5 p.m.10 p.m.&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR CARRY-OUTS&#13;
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Parksidels&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
* Complete news coverage of campus events&#13;
* Photos of events and personalities&#13;
* Advertising of interest to all students&#13;
* Coverage of national news of student interest &#13;
Rangers Bow to I.C.C.&#13;
University of Illinois Circle Campus&#13;
finally cracked Parkside's defense in the&#13;
second half and the Midwest's fourthranked&#13;
soccer team went on to a 3-0 victory&#13;
on UWP's field Wednesday.&#13;
For Jim Gibson's Rangers, who are now&#13;
2-4-1 against some of the best competition&#13;
in the Midwest, it was the same old story —&#13;
no offense to take the pressure off a stout&#13;
but constantly beleaguered defense. The&#13;
closest Parkside came to scoring was in&#13;
the second quarter when a goal by Chris&#13;
Andacht was nullified because of an offside&#13;
penalty.&#13;
Parkside got off only one less shot on&#13;
goal than the Chikas during the scoreless&#13;
first half — seven attempts to six — but the&#13;
winners were on target eight times during&#13;
the second half while their goalie had to&#13;
awaken just once to stop a UWP shot. Even&#13;
so, the third period was nearly over before&#13;
Adam Guzik kicked a short one into an&#13;
open net after Goalie Charlie Lees had&#13;
been drawn out. The final period was all&#13;
Circle as Iby Adel and Stan Forys added&#13;
the clinchers.&#13;
Parkside will travel to Purdue Saturday,&#13;
and if the Rangers can get by the&#13;
Boilermakers they should be able to&#13;
square their record the following Saturday&#13;
when they host Platteville. Platteville lost&#13;
to Illinois Circle 13-0.&#13;
Kari Liekowski makes everyone move when he gets mad. The Rangers lost to&#13;
Illinois Circle Campus 3-0.&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
SHORTS&#13;
By MARK BARNHILL&#13;
There will be an All-Comers cross&#13;
country meet at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct.&#13;
13, on Parkside's new cross country&#13;
course. The race will be 2V&amp; m iles and is&#13;
open to everyone. Coach Vic Godfrey said&#13;
the All-Comers meet will follow the varsity&#13;
meet against Platteville State University&#13;
and will give Parkside students and staff,&#13;
as well as interested townspeople, the&#13;
chance to sample the new UWP layout.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Anyone interested in learning more&#13;
about a bike or wishing to get in with the&#13;
cycling club, contact Vic Godfrey.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The Ranger Sailing club competed in&#13;
three races on October 3. Seven colleges&#13;
took part in this event. The University of&#13;
Michigan won the contest. Sailing for&#13;
Parkside were Jerry Ruffalo, Mike Pobar&#13;
and Carl Kisline. Parkside took fourth&#13;
place.&#13;
+ -F +&#13;
At the Illinois Technical College handicap&#13;
five-mile race at Champaign,&#13;
Parkside's Women's division did an outstanding&#13;
job with Judy Zimmerman, West&#13;
Allis frosh, finishing third with a time of 34&#13;
minutes. Sandy Houston, sophomore of&#13;
Kenosha, had her best time with a 42&#13;
minutes run for five miles. Michelle&#13;
Rosandich, eight-years old daughter of&#13;
Athletic Director Tom Rosandich, finished&#13;
second in the handicap division.&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
By COACH JIM KOCH&#13;
Intramurals at Parkside are in full&#13;
swing after the first three weeks of s chool.&#13;
The big activity in the fall of the year is&#13;
touch football.&#13;
At the Kenosha campus ten teams are in&#13;
competition, each playing at least twice a&#13;
week. At present both Steve Wick's&#13;
Schooners and Tim Alfredson's House&#13;
Apes are undefeated after three games.&#13;
At the Racine campus there are eight&#13;
teams competing in touch football. The&#13;
winner of their league will meet the&#13;
Kenosha champs for the University&#13;
Championships.&#13;
At Parkside the girls also play football.&#13;
Both the Kenosha and Racine girls have&#13;
powder puff football teams which are&#13;
practicing in anticipation of a confrontation&#13;
between the two teams. The&#13;
Dominican College and KTI girls also have&#13;
challenged the Parkside girls in powder&#13;
puff football.&#13;
Other intramural activities which are in&#13;
operation include: a tennis tournament,&#13;
and a golf gournament. A bowling league&#13;
for Parkside students now is in progress at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes in Kenosha. It's at 9:00&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday nights. Any boy or girl&#13;
interested in bowling only needs to come&#13;
and they can get into the league.&#13;
In the coming weeks many more activities&#13;
will be starting. For instance a&#13;
volleyball team made up of any interested&#13;
Parkside students will be playing in the&#13;
Racine City Recreational League.&#13;
The Judo-Karate club will be having a&#13;
meeting this week, Tuesday, Oct. 13, at&#13;
12:15 in the Kenosha Judo room to&#13;
organize their club.&#13;
V. •; ' *.y$rg&lt;W, • jgfo.gl&#13;
O-' -X \ .&#13;
v- .&#13;
f e f S r JL&#13;
m iSte # /&#13;
mm . . • • » i&gt;&#13;
Oi"&#13;
Ballester Joins&#13;
Coaching Staff&#13;
Bill Ballester, 32, the current president&#13;
of the National High School Gymnastics&#13;
Coaches Association, is an assistant&#13;
professor at Parkside.&#13;
In addition to his instructional duties,&#13;
Ballester will organize and coach the first&#13;
UWP gymnastics team beginning this fall.&#13;
In eight years at Waukegan, Ballester's&#13;
teams Were 63-13 and were ranked in the&#13;
top ten in Illinois each year. Coaching in&#13;
the Suburban conference, considered by&#13;
many to be the top prep gymnastics league&#13;
in the country, Ballester developed four&#13;
gymnasts who went on to All-American&#13;
honors, including national All-Around&#13;
champion and Olympic alternate Fred&#13;
Dennis of Southern Illinois.&#13;
As intramural director and physical&#13;
education instructor at Waukegan high&#13;
school, Ballester coordinated fitness and&#13;
recreation programs both in the school and&#13;
within the community which involved&#13;
hundreds of participants ranging from&#13;
children through adults.&#13;
"Bill Ballester's dedication to physical&#13;
fitness and lifetime athletic interests,&#13;
which range far beyond gymnastics,&#13;
relates directly to our philosophy at&#13;
Parkside," Athletic Director Tom&#13;
Rosandich said.&#13;
Ballester received his B.S. degree in&#13;
physical education from Southern Illinois&#13;
University at Carbondale, where he lettered&#13;
in gymnastics under well-known&#13;
coach Bill Meade. He took his M.A. in&#13;
educational administration at Roosevelt&#13;
University in Chicago.&#13;
He also has served as president of the&#13;
Illinois High School Gymnastics Coaches&#13;
Association, and is on the advisory committee&#13;
of the Midwest Gymnastics&#13;
Association.&#13;
Charle Lees lakes lo the air to keep up his reputation as stellar goalie from New&#13;
——&#13;
'&#13;
I -v.',"&#13;
PMK&#13;
1 ' Markovic pufs the drop on ire her^st^ng the kick.&#13;
Wm&#13;
Stan &#13;
RECORD REVIEW&#13;
RECORD: PROFILE . .. NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND&#13;
ALBUM ... UNCLE CHARLIE and his DOG TEDDY&#13;
By CAROL A. AMOLINSKI&#13;
For those of you who fancy the down home, earthy type of&#13;
songs, I suggest you add this album to your country-rock&#13;
collection. Listening to a record such as this, you can picture, if&#13;
you will, in your mind, the image of Mr. Greenjeans sitting on&#13;
his farmyard fence with his banjo on his knee. The banjo&#13;
techniques displayed on this record are very exceptional and it's&#13;
accompanied by some heavy harmonica.&#13;
It's just a regular ole knee-slappin', toe-tappin', hillbillie&#13;
hoe-down direct from the hills of McCoy Country.&#13;
Many of the songs have the old home-type flavor to them,&#13;
but a couple cuts show traits of good rock.&#13;
Most of the lyrics written show some good meaning set&#13;
along with the music behind the songs. Parts of the album&#13;
remind me of the James Gang similar to that of little verbal&#13;
comments thrown in here and through-out the album. Then of&#13;
course what country band would be complete without a washboard.&#13;
I ugge s st you buy this album I'm sure you'll enjoy it.&#13;
'Roar' Opens Friday Night&#13;
Book ReviewHesse's&#13;
'Demian'&#13;
By AMY CUNDARI&#13;
The Bookstores, at both the Greenquist&#13;
and Kenosha campuses, are poorly supplied,&#13;
but nevertheless contain some excellent&#13;
reading material. If you have failed&#13;
to take an interest in the classics or in the&#13;
contemporary works of literary genuis, I&#13;
urge you to acquaint yourself with some of&#13;
the available books.&#13;
The book in review for this week is&#13;
Demian by Hermann Hesse. Beside the&#13;
fact that Hesse is an unusually sensitive&#13;
writer, the reader will note that his&#13;
philosophy of each man's individual and&#13;
psychological control over self and environment&#13;
is of present day relevance.&#13;
Particular attention should be given to the&#13;
way in which Hesse reveals his characters'&#13;
spiritual motives and search for inner&#13;
peace.&#13;
The characters, themselves, transgress&#13;
time and place, exhibiting the&#13;
author's knowledge of man's eternal&#13;
dimensions. The main characters are&#13;
Demian and Sinclair, two impressionable&#13;
and extraordinary youths drawn to each&#13;
other .in their private searches for their&#13;
own destinies.&#13;
The setting is the first World War, the&#13;
place Germany. Young Sinclair meets&#13;
Demian in school and is terrified by the&#13;
power he senses in him. Sinclair's fear is&#13;
not unfounded. Through a series of&#13;
unexplainable performances, Demian&#13;
shows his ability to control and manipulate&#13;
the actions of other by regulating their&#13;
thoughts.&#13;
When Demian realizes that Sinclair's&#13;
world is composed of fear of the unkown&#13;
and those things he cannot fully understand,&#13;
he befriends him. Sinclair,&#13;
however, never fully comprehends the&#13;
influence Demian exercises until they are&#13;
separated. Then it becomes apparent that&#13;
he is now quite alone, and facing an oncoming&#13;
identity crisis. During their&#13;
seperation, a variety of substitutes appear&#13;
proving nothing or no one can fill the void&#13;
left by Demian's absence.&#13;
In desperation Sinclair mails a letter,&#13;
writing only his friend's name on the envolop;&#13;
Somehow, the letter reaches its&#13;
destination. They reunite, Demian is now a&#13;
young officer and Sinclair a newly enlisted&#13;
soldier. The story ends with a promise of&#13;
an eternal relationship.&#13;
In Demaian, Hesse dramatizes the&#13;
dilemma of the marked man, the deviate,&#13;
the quasi-criminal hero whose god is&#13;
Abraxas, and whose goal is the conquest of&#13;
self and the world he created.&#13;
Book of the Week: The Tin Drum By&#13;
Gunter Grass.&#13;
Beauty and the Books&#13;
By AMY CUNDARI&#13;
DAVE FOBART&#13;
If you have lost all faith in mankind and&#13;
believe no one cares enough to help you,&#13;
then you haven't been in the library.&#13;
The library staff is dedicated to making&#13;
college life just a little easier, and how do&#13;
they do this? By assisting anyone who&#13;
needs help with term papers, or research&#13;
material on a variety of topics. For public&#13;
service the library has three librarians&#13;
and one clerk who will help any student&#13;
find subject material in the more than&#13;
100,000 volumes and periodicals presently&#13;
available.&#13;
The library is already faced with a space&#13;
problem. Since the intake of books is about&#13;
30.000 a year, storage is of the utmost&#13;
importance to making books and other&#13;
reference material within the students&#13;
reach. If there is any book in print that the&#13;
library doesn't have, the student need only&#13;
request a copy of the book and it will either&#13;
be purchased or borrowed from Madison.&#13;
The library also has an excellent Microfilm&#13;
service, which contains vast copies of&#13;
periodic literature some dating as far back&#13;
as 1776.&#13;
Students are urged to ask questions&#13;
about the library materials, since many&#13;
volumes, special services and information&#13;
is not visible or listed in the card catolog.&#13;
Problems with these types of materials&#13;
are extensive. Many items such as the&#13;
Opening its second season in the&#13;
Kenosha area, under the new direction of&#13;
Lorrie La ken, New Theatre Productions&#13;
present "The Roar of the Greasepaint and&#13;
the Smell of the Crowd" at Kemper Hall&#13;
October 16, 17 an d 18.&#13;
Literally coming in with a "roar", the&#13;
play deals with a "game of life" and&#13;
presents many interesting views of life in a&#13;
"theatre of the round" atmosphere. While&#13;
playing this game, Sir (Rick Ponzio) and&#13;
Cockyo (Louis Mattioli) backed by interesting&#13;
lesser leads and a chorus of&#13;
pathetic, perceptive, ragged urchins,&#13;
continue in the New Theatre method of&#13;
presenting a different and exciting&#13;
evening of theatre. Many of -the songs will&#13;
be quite familiar; the lively "Wonderful&#13;
Day Like Today", the beautiful ballad,&#13;
"Who Can I Turn To", and the sad&#13;
philosophical "The Joker".&#13;
New Theatre, which began its career in&#13;
Kenosha last year with "The Apple Tree",&#13;
also has presented "Stop The World I Want&#13;
To Get Off" (written by the same creators&#13;
of "The Roar and the Smell" — Newley&#13;
and Bricusse), "Celebration", and "Your&#13;
Own Thing". A branch of New Theatre&#13;
productions, Little Epic Co., created to&#13;
continue theatre in the summer, presented&#13;
Bertold Brecht's "Mother Courage" this&#13;
Government Document Collection and the&#13;
Foreign Relations Series are virtually&#13;
unkown to the student body. The staff has&#13;
also made known the availability of&#13;
library tours to any student or student&#13;
group who wishes to acquaint themselves&#13;
with the facilities.&#13;
What's the future look like? A new&#13;
building, hopefully by "72" and the addition&#13;
of over 300,000 volumes and 2,000&#13;
periodic titles, and students with&#13;
Microform readers. Sound interesting?&#13;
Well, then why don't you get into the action&#13;
going on at the library and visit those&#13;
beautiful people whose first concern is&#13;
YOU, the student.&#13;
last summer. The group will travel with&#13;
the play to Wayland Academy in Beaver&#13;
Dam after its engagement here.&#13;
On the 16th and 17th of October, performances&#13;
will begin at 8:00 p.m. in the&#13;
Kemper Hall auditorium, but a special&#13;
performance can be viewed Thursday,&#13;
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