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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, Issue 5</text>
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            <text>2170 Return to Campus</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Pollution&#13;
Symposium&#13;
Here F riday&#13;
2170 Return to Campus&#13;
A marked increase in the&#13;
refuSgftudSs386 ^ ^ pere,Wa«&#13;
e of&#13;
^£pSfedXs,udeMsi"&#13;
pro£Si lhal&#13;
tv, exceeded.&#13;
finalpnrnif am.°ug 016 h'gW'ghts of the •&amp;TSSS£^t7, °' "* 4102&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside this fall "&#13;
1Versity of&#13;
from2mner&#13;
t&#13;
Cent enrollmen&#13;
t increase -&#13;
1a™1! l3St&#13;
/&#13;
ear ~&#13;
is highest among the&#13;
3 public State University and UW campuses&#13;
an d the b reakdiwn sh ows Zt&#13;
reasons retentlon 1S amon6 th&#13;
e prime&#13;
^n™2&#13;
,!70 continuing students returned&#13;
' about 75 cent of the&#13;
all, 1969, student body. Last year, 1152&#13;
students returned from 1968, a percentage&#13;
of 64 per cent.&#13;
"Those who were with us in 1969 liked us&#13;
well enough to return, and that is a very&#13;
good sign," said Chancellor Irvin G&#13;
Wyllie.&#13;
University officials also are pleased with&#13;
the doubling of e nrollment — fr om 426 to&#13;
894 students — in the School of Modern&#13;
Industry, which was established to focus&#13;
on Parkside's special mission of urbanindustrial&#13;
oriented studies in its divisions&#13;
of management science, engineering&#13;
science and labor economics.&#13;
The breakdown shows that Parkside&#13;
exceeded its state projection for "full-time&#13;
equivalency" (FTE) by 202 students.&#13;
Parkside was projected at 3007 FTE&#13;
students, but enrolled the equivalent of&#13;
3209 full-timers (based on a formula which&#13;
assumes 15 credit hours per semester is a&#13;
full schedule).&#13;
The number of students transferring to&#13;
Parkside from other schools also increased&#13;
strikingly, from 433 to 624, up 44&#13;
per cent!&#13;
Included in a total freshman class of 1873&#13;
are 1113 new frosh. This compares to 1831&#13;
freshmen last year, including 1001 new&#13;
ones.&#13;
The increase in the other classes is&#13;
dramatic. Sophomores are up from 597 to&#13;
1017, ju nimrs from 274 to 622, and seniors&#13;
from 85 to 212.&#13;
Nearly 50 per cent of t he new freshmen,&#13;
553, are from Racine County, while 43 p er&#13;
cent, 474, are from Kenosha County. Of th e&#13;
total enrollment of 4102, 47 per cent are&#13;
from Racine County (1915), 45 per cent&#13;
from Kenosha County (1864).&#13;
The remiaining eight per cent, or 323&#13;
students, are from 38 different counties in&#13;
Wisconsin, 14 states and four foreign&#13;
countries. Parkside nearly tripled its&#13;
enrollment from Milwaukee, Walworth,&#13;
Waukesha and Rock counties, moving&#13;
from 69 to 182 students. The out-of-state&#13;
enrollment is 78 students, compares to 50&#13;
last year, with 55 c oming from Illinois.&#13;
Men outnuumber women, 2402 to 1700.&#13;
Ten per cent of the men (252) are receieing&#13;
veterans' benefits, as are 13 women.&#13;
Don't Hunt&#13;
Near Campus&#13;
Kenosha County Sheriff William P.&#13;
Schmitt has warned that anyone caught&#13;
hunting on or within 1700 fe et of the new&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside campus&#13;
will have his firearms confiscated, be&#13;
taken into immediate custody and&#13;
prosecuted.&#13;
Schmitt said his department now is&#13;
paying particular attention to the 700-acre&#13;
Parkside campus in northern Kenosha&#13;
county because of the thousands of&#13;
students, staff and workmen there.&#13;
Schmitt cited the state statute which&#13;
prohibits hunting on or within 1700 feet of&#13;
any hospital, sanitarium or school&#13;
property, and the Wisconsin Administrative&#13;
Coade which, under state&#13;
statute, provides for the confiscation and&#13;
Too Many Myths About Women&#13;
Says Women's Lib Speaker&#13;
Asked humanistic approach.&#13;
To PRESENT PAPER&#13;
Jose Ortega, associate professor of&#13;
Spanish, will present an invited paper on&#13;
"Marks of Identity" in the works of&#13;
Spanish novelist Juan Goytisolo at the&#13;
•Midwest Modern Language Association's&#13;
annual meeting Oct. 30 in Milwaukee.&#13;
Ortega came to Parkside this fall from&#13;
Case Western Reserve University where&#13;
e also was an associate professor. He has&#13;
itten widely on Spanish literature for&#13;
scholarly publications and received two&#13;
grants supporting his research from the&#13;
American Philosophical Society.&#13;
Gloria Steinem, women's liberation&#13;
advocate, spoke here last Tuesday to an&#13;
audience of more than four hundred.&#13;
Dorothy Pittman was to have appeared&#13;
with Miss Steinem, but was ill.&#13;
Contrary to most of what is heard or said&#13;
about women's liberation, Gloria Steinem&#13;
is neither out-spoken nor without make-up.&#13;
Born and raised among the working&#13;
classes of Toledo, Ohio, she called for a&#13;
humanistic approach by both men and&#13;
women to the movement. Miss Steinem&#13;
cited numerous myths as the cause of&#13;
women's suppression — myths so "deep in&#13;
our heads" we don't know they're there.&#13;
The idea that women are biologically&#13;
inferior was the first of th e myths to be put&#13;
doiWn. Our bodily functions are almost&#13;
identical and the female is less subject to&#13;
the diseases of stress than the male.&#13;
Sexism in history was the second myth&#13;
listed by Miss Steinem. Historians are&#13;
guilty of writing as though the male is&#13;
superior. True, the men did the hunting,&#13;
the tracking, the wage-earning, etc. But it&#13;
must be remembered that women built the&#13;
houses, farmed, and formed the bases for&#13;
languages. "I don't want to prove the&#13;
superiority of women," Miss Steinem said,&#13;
"that would be repeating the mistake&#13;
made by men." She went on to say, "Make&#13;
life styles according to the individual and&#13;
not to the circumstances of birth."&#13;
Religion also promoted a myth about&#13;
women. As priests became more elevated,&#13;
the state of women became lower. The&#13;
reason is that priests taught people to see&#13;
women as unclean, as a temptation. That&#13;
myth is dissolving, however, as women are&#13;
ascending to the pulpit, and given the right&#13;
to vote in the church (the Episcopalian&#13;
church women recently won that right).&#13;
Freud and his theory of 'penis envy'' was&#13;
the fourth. myth detailed by Gloria&#13;
Steinem. She stated that it's only natural&#13;
that the second class group envy the&#13;
powers and rights of the first class group.&#13;
Miss Steinem referred to the penis as "the&#13;
most chauvinistic male emblem".&#13;
College was listed as a myth contributing&#13;
to women's suppression. Miss&#13;
Steinem said that of those persons earning&#13;
more than $10,000 per year, only five&#13;
percent were women. Women comprise&#13;
fifty-three per cent of the population.&#13;
Women seldom get equal rights or equal&#13;
pay _ even if identically qualified with a&#13;
man. Women have the power to vote and to&#13;
be consumers, but they have no influence&#13;
over the choices before them.&#13;
"The only place where we've gained&#13;
equality is on the top of the FBI list."&#13;
Women, Miss Steinem went on to say,&#13;
often receive longer sentences because of&#13;
supposedly being of higher morals and so&#13;
are more dangerous than men.&#13;
Gloria Steinem listed marriage as the&#13;
sixth of the myths concerning women.&#13;
Many of the civil rights a woman is entitled&#13;
to are taken away by the marriage&#13;
contract. Depending on the state, the right&#13;
to use your own name, the right to sign a&#13;
credit agreement, the right to start a&#13;
business, and the right to build a house are&#13;
civil rights, among others, taken away by&#13;
the marriage contract. As the marriage&#13;
laws are now, even the husband suffers&#13;
because he is responsible for any debts&#13;
incurred by his wife. The women's&#13;
liberation movement is studying the&#13;
marriage laws in order to effect some&#13;
changes.&#13;
Miss Steinem went on to say there is the&#13;
myth of women not liking other women —&#13;
which is true in so far as those of the&#13;
second class will compete among themselves&#13;
for the favors of the first class. The&#13;
liberation movement is showing the&#13;
A symposium on air pollution, focusing&#13;
on problems of urban, industrial&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin, will be held at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 30, in Greenquist&#13;
Hall at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The symposium, which is free and open&#13;
to the public, will be sponsored by&#13;
Parkside's lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
and the Kenosha Rotary Club.&#13;
Speakers will be Carl Burke. Detroit,&#13;
assistant chief automotive engineer for&#13;
American Motors Corp.; Brooks Becker.&#13;
Madison, director of the Bureau of Air&#13;
Pollution Control and Solid Waste Disposal&#13;
of the Wisconsin Department of Natural&#13;
Resources; and Dr. H. M. Miles.&#13;
Milwaukee, assistant professor of biology&#13;
at Marquette University.&#13;
A question and answer period will follow&#13;
the speaker's presentations.&#13;
The symposium is one in a series of four&#13;
informational programs on various&#13;
aspects of environmental pollution being&#13;
sponsored by Kenosha Rotarians in observance&#13;
of the club's Fiftieth Anniversary&#13;
year.&#13;
disposal of firearms carried or used on&#13;
University of Wisconsin property by&#13;
unauthorized persons.&#13;
State statutes and UW rules and&#13;
regulations also prohibit unauthorized&#13;
snomobiling, horseback riding, motorcycling&#13;
and the building of f ires on the&#13;
campus, Schmitt said, and added that pets&#13;
on the campus must be on leash.&#13;
common problems of women and trying to&#13;
bring women to work together. Gloria&#13;
Steinem further explained the myth that&#13;
regards working women as bad wives.&#13;
The last two myths dispelled by Miss&#13;
Steinem concerned the ideas that the&#13;
liberation movement is against men and&#13;
that the movement is frivolous. She&#13;
pointed out that men have something to&#13;
gain in that there will be fewer child-like&#13;
and over-dependent women in marriage.&#13;
Men can help the movement by helping in&#13;
the social orientation of their daughters.&#13;
Miss Steinem cited the parallel between&#13;
blacks and women as the deepest truth in&#13;
nature. Myths are suffered by all in the&#13;
second class groups. However, women&#13;
were the first to be oppressed.&#13;
Regarding the future success of the&#13;
women's liberation movement, "we all&#13;
have to do it together or it's not going to&#13;
work." To the idea of women permeating&#13;
the political realm, Miss Steinem said, "I&#13;
personally would rather have had&#13;
Margaret Mead in the White House than&#13;
either Johnson or Nixon — at least she&#13;
wouldn't have to prove her masculinity."&#13;
Masculinity, she went on, doesn't depend&#13;
on the submission of other people and real&#13;
manhood - do esn't depend on the subjugation&#13;
of anybody.&#13;
Audience numbered more than 400. &#13;
COMMENTS o n the news&#13;
Lost In Red Tape i it ... Whatever happened to the student government issue? en wi&#13;
the constitutional committee elected last spring for the p po&#13;
constructing the student constitution have that documen r&#13;
student vote? Who or what is holding up the process.&#13;
Students must be made aware of their specific rig fnrlim&#13;
individuals and as a body. Right now we students hay^ ,&#13;
established for the sole purpose of dealing with one another,&#13;
ministration, the faculty, etc., etc. mntin„p&#13;
We of the Newscope feel we cannot effectively continue5 t&#13;
operate as the only viable organization on campus for the exPress&#13;
'&#13;
student rights. We can print campus news, national campus new ,&#13;
coming events, special features, student opinion. What we canNOT do&#13;
is specifically advise students as to their rights as students. We student&#13;
editors are not entirely sure about the specific rights we have&#13;
stu en^fore the first faU isgue Qf thig paper was printed, we heard that&#13;
the constitution devised by the constitutional committee would be put&#13;
to student vote before the end of the third week of c lasses. It w as no .&#13;
Are we soon to see a proposed constitution or has the issue been lost in&#13;
the channels of red tape and communication?&#13;
STEELE&#13;
America&#13;
went&#13;
looking for'&#13;
a man.&#13;
And&#13;
got a&#13;
president...&#13;
SLE3ZH RidER&#13;
•• w2&lt;&#13;
*, . i ; • :• .&#13;
l» • ' &gt; J, •»&#13;
- V. " ' ' « A , * .• ' • V; '&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
MINI-SKIRTS ARK DANGEROUS&#13;
The pedestrian traffic flow was in the&#13;
direction of Lake Hall on the Racine&#13;
campus. Classes would begin in ten&#13;
minutes. Everyone was on the move.&#13;
1 was headed east on the sidewalk. A&#13;
couple of spectacular creatures in miniskirts&#13;
were ahead of m e. (1 had politely let&#13;
them pass since the eyes in the back of my&#13;
head are much less efficient than those in&#13;
front.) There was a fellow short-cutting&#13;
across the lawn to my right. He was&#13;
watching these girls, too. And he walked&#13;
smack into a tree! ... he really hit it. His&#13;
glasses fell off . . . his books fell to the&#13;
ground. He was all shook-up.&#13;
One girl nudged the other. They knew&#13;
what had happened. I could see that they&#13;
were pretty pleased with themselves.&#13;
Now Girls! 1 don't care how exotically&#13;
you dress . . . just so your get-up is&#13;
feminine (i.e., sexy) and neat. But when&#13;
you wear minis so short that a fellow&#13;
collides with a tree when you pass by, then,&#13;
as a conservationist, 1 suggest that we&#13;
study this situation which, in its acute&#13;
stages, can create the hazard of fellows&#13;
crashing into trees. It's simply not fair to&#13;
trees.&#13;
1 probably sound like a throw-back to the&#13;
Victorian Age when skirts were ankle&#13;
length. Now I ask myself, "What is&#13;
modesty?" Is there anything "virtuous"&#13;
about modesty? (You tell me.)&#13;
I'll say this for the girls at Parkside . . .&#13;
They are really an eye-pleasing bunch of&#13;
young women. I've only seen one or two on&#13;
campus who remind me of some of the&#13;
pictures I take — underdeveloped and&#13;
over-exposed. But most of our girls are&#13;
terrific.&#13;
The other end of the length-of-skirt&#13;
spectrum is what the girls wear in the Far&#13;
East — the Orient. In Thailand, for instance,&#13;
they wear the skin-tight sheath&#13;
that ripples with each movement of the&#13;
body. Incidentally, it's against the law in&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 5&#13;
October 26,1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI&#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;
•SB •So ||&#13;
d&#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, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#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;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
Bangkok for girls to wear a mini. The&#13;
authorities say that it's conducive to rape.&#13;
That's understandable.&#13;
And the Chinese women! . . . Oh, boy!&#13;
. . . Do I enjoy watching those tight-fitting&#13;
shifts with slits up the side. Just stand in&#13;
front of the Mandarin Hotel in Hong Kong&#13;
and you'll see what I mean. And the silk&#13;
kimonos are still being worn by many&#13;
women in Japan. They are really&#13;
beautiful.&#13;
Why even the Hawaiian muu-muu is an&#13;
attention-arrester because it keeps so&#13;
many secrets. You don't know what a&#13;
muu-muu is? Well, it's sort of an anklelength,&#13;
technicolored flour bag, airconditioned&#13;
from the bottom up and the&#13;
woman's head comes out on top.&#13;
Oriental women have the answers when&#13;
it comes to the business of how-to-attracta-man.&#13;
Their long dresses are the sexiest&#13;
lures in their entire bag of tricks. They can&#13;
make a man climb a wall. I get a bigger&#13;
charge out of wa tching a long slinky dress&#13;
pass by than I do when I stand right next to&#13;
a Bunny at a Playboy Club.&#13;
As far as I'm concerned, a mini gives&#13;
away too many secrets. The girl shortchanges&#13;
herself. A garment covering a fair&#13;
amount of the female body will generate&#13;
more romantic ideas than a mini-skirt will&#13;
ever do. I see a girl in a mini and hope that&#13;
she doesn't get a cold on her chest.&#13;
Girls in mini-skirts, I love you! And now&#13;
that you've proven beyond a reasonable&#13;
doubt (again) that you do have shapely&#13;
legs, how about giving the trees a break by&#13;
keeping the hemlines of those tutus you're&#13;
wearing sort of i n the temperate zone&#13;
say about half-way between the hip and&#13;
knee. You get them any higher than that&#13;
and you'll have me walking into a tree.&#13;
I can just hear myself explaining to Mrs&#13;
Gruhl about how I got a dent in my&#13;
forehead. "Serves you right," she'd say&#13;
. and then she'd add, "How's the tree?"&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
We of the dramatic bent have been&#13;
chided by certain members of the faculty&#13;
for giving up our efforts to form a&#13;
dramatic society here at Parkside. Now,&#13;
don't get us wrong, we admire and respect&#13;
these instructors very much and are not&#13;
upset because of their chidings. But, after&#13;
several discussions on the point, we have&#13;
finally become incensed and have decided&#13;
once more to tangle with the red tape of&#13;
this institution's bureaucracy.&#13;
In other words, there will be a meeting&#13;
SOON of the Parkside Players for all interested&#13;
persons. As of no w, a night of oneact&#13;
plays is planned for December. These&#13;
will be student directed and try-outs for&#13;
them will be announced, hopefully, at the&#13;
first meeting.&#13;
However, we, like the Newscope, need&#13;
your support. For further information,&#13;
contact me by letter at 9432 C addy Lane,&#13;
Caledonia, Wisconsin 53108, or by&#13;
telephone at (1) 762-4744.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Lucy Catlett, President&#13;
Parkside Players&#13;
Letter From&#13;
A Friend&#13;
By SVEN TAFFS&#13;
I got a letter last week from a friend of&#13;
mine in the Marine Corps who is now&#13;
stationed at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.&#13;
Maybe it isn't particularly relevant in the&#13;
Parkside environment, but I thought it was&#13;
kind of amusing; if it's funny, it doesn't&#13;
have to be relevant.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Hey Sven,&#13;
I got your letter a couple days ago. It&#13;
was a surprise to hear from you after so&#13;
long. I know how busy you are with school&#13;
and all, and it makes me glad that you can&#13;
find a minute to write once every five&#13;
years or so.&#13;
No kidding, it is nice to hear from you&#13;
guys at home. The only other contact we&#13;
have with the mainland is we get week old&#13;
newspapers, and you know how much&#13;
they're worth.&#13;
I see by these papers that somebody&#13;
named Agnew, who seems to be America's&#13;
most popular TV show, has been touring&#13;
Asia. I think he is wasting his time touring&#13;
the sticks with such a sure-fire dynamite&#13;
act — it loses so much in translation. He&#13;
ought to come to Cuba, where the people&#13;
appreciate American humor&#13;
According to these newspapers,&#13;
Washington, D.C., has been plagued with a&#13;
29 per cent increase in serious crime this&#13;
^nni T j&#13;
S mflux of amateu&#13;
rs upsets&#13;
people like me who think thievery and&#13;
thT^t688 SlTld 1)6 left in hands of the professionals. Congress&#13;
You can see what the American press is&#13;
thi'nesha kV' S comforting to know that&#13;
l inn are just like 1 left them.&#13;
fripnH g&#13;
° n&#13;
°&#13;
W' Sven&#13;
' 1 Promised this&#13;
MmfhS TC 0131 rd g0 sw'&#13;
mming with him this afternoon. If the weather holds&#13;
K aim? pr,,vidrf sharks leave&#13;
fS'Oen'tWhowa.es'^S™;1&#13;
.&#13;
Swite&#13;
sh™'?W&lt;!&gt; &lt;"™ Tile&#13;
shoot tnck-or-treaters on sight.&#13;
Sirs:&#13;
October 21&#13;
Re your banner headline in the O ct 1 9&#13;
1970 issue — INSTRUCTOR quit&#13;
BECAUSE OF CLASS SIZE - I urge you&#13;
to investigate the situation further.&#13;
This teacher was called on the carpet by&#13;
Vice Chancellor Harris after one student&#13;
went before Harris and totally&#13;
misrepresented the situation in class&#13;
namely the way the teacher was con&#13;
ducting the class. Harris gave this teacher&#13;
a "conform-to-Parksides' criterion-orelse"&#13;
ultimatium; in response, this&#13;
"education teacher" told Mr. Harris that&#13;
under such conditions, he could not e ffectively&#13;
conduct the class.&#13;
I believe you owe the student body a n&#13;
explanation, and this teacher an ap ology&#13;
Michael S. O'Brien&#13;
720 GooldSt.&#13;
Racine, Wis. 53402&#13;
Forum To Honor&#13;
Exiled P oet&#13;
The first meeting of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Poetry Forum at /&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 27, in Ro om 221 of&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the Wood Road campus&#13;
will feature a birthday tribute to e xiled&#13;
poet Ezra Pound, who is 85 this m onth&#13;
The purpose of the Poetry Forum is to&#13;
promote interest in poetry and to g utstudents,&#13;
faculty and residents 0&#13;
community an opportunity to rea&#13;
poems, according to Andrew Mcbe ,&#13;
assistant professor of English at UW&#13;
faculty adviser to the forum. ,&#13;
At the initial meeting poems b y r&#13;
will be read by Clark Anderson, a stud (&#13;
and James Dean, an assistant pro&#13;
English at Parkside and a published p&#13;
Planetarium Open&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Pa^&#13;
Planetarium will be open to sc&#13;
community groups by appw ^&#13;
throughout the remainder 01&#13;
y&#13;
ear&#13;
- vieW flif&#13;
About 3,000 area residents vi&#13;
various planetarium programs e&#13;
to see the stars and planets proje ,eneo&#13;
overhead dome screen in the&#13;
planetarium. piectron^'&#13;
The projector is operated e ^cW the&#13;
from a master console and c (r0®&#13;
positions of celestial bo&#13;
anywhere on earth at any tim j^je's&#13;
The planetarium, located at Roa(j.&#13;
Kenosha Campus, 3700 Was 1 6 ^&#13;
is equipped to show virtually ^0&#13;
constellations including t e ^Hpticconstellations&#13;
which lie along ^ various&#13;
or imaginary, path of the sun.&#13;
phases of the moon also ca&#13;
Groups of 15 or more person the&#13;
The Lost and Found isl # c&#13;
at the information Cent'&#13;
Tallent Hall, 2 0 &#13;
Library Services Explained&#13;
The main main lihrarv of thp „r library of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside is located on the first&#13;
floor of Tallent Hall. There are also branch&#13;
libraries on the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Campuses. Students may withdraw&#13;
materials from any of the libraries by&#13;
showing their student identification card&#13;
or fee card. Other persons may borrow&#13;
materials by presenting a driver's license&#13;
or other identification. Library hours are&#13;
as follows:&#13;
Monday - Thursday: 7:15 - 10:30, All&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Friday: 7:15 - 5:00, All Campuses.&#13;
Saturday: 9:00 - 5:00, Tallent Hall; 9:00 -&#13;
3:00, Kenosha and Racine.&#13;
Sunday: 2:30 - 10:30, Tallent Hall;&#13;
Closed all day, Kenosha and Racine.&#13;
Special hours will be posted for&#13;
examination and vacation periods.&#13;
Books and Pamphlets&#13;
Books and pamphlets in the general&#13;
collection may be withdrawn from the&#13;
library for a period of two weeks. They&#13;
may be renewed for additional two-week&#13;
periods if they have not been requested by&#13;
another person.&#13;
Faculty may retain books as long as they&#13;
are needed. If a book is requested by&#13;
someone else, it is subject to recall after&#13;
two weeks. If a book is recalled, the&#13;
original faculty member may put a hold on&#13;
the book, for delivery to him when the&#13;
second patron has returned it. In order&#13;
that books borrowed may not inadvertently&#13;
be overlooked, the library will&#13;
request that books charged to faculty be&#13;
returned to the library at the end of each&#13;
semester.&#13;
Reference books, many government&#13;
publications, and some other books will&#13;
normally not circulate. These may be&#13;
consulted in the library. See also&#13;
restrictions on Reserves (below).&#13;
Reserves&#13;
Books or other items on two-hour&#13;
reserve may be checked out during the day&#13;
for two hours, or overnight. Overnight&#13;
items may be checked out after 8:30 p.m.&#13;
iccKea at the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Campuses on Saturday are due Mondav&#13;
morning. At Tallent Hall items checked&#13;
out on Saturday after 3:00 p.m are due&#13;
Sunday at3:00 p.m. Items placed on three&#13;
during theed&#13;
may ^ checked out a&#13;
"y time&#13;
thri a y and must ^ returned in&#13;
«&#13;
ayS&#13;
' Th&#13;
'&#13;
Se no, £&#13;
. Periodicals&#13;
eriodicals may be borrowed by faculty&#13;
members for three days. However, the&#13;
most recent issues of weekly and many&#13;
other periodicals will not be circulated&#13;
and other special circumstances may also&#13;
restrict circulation of periodicals to&#13;
faculty. Periodicals do not circulate to&#13;
students.&#13;
Phonograph Records&#13;
The circulation of phonograph records is&#13;
governed, for both students and faculty, by&#13;
the same provisions that govern the circulation&#13;
of books. Popular new records&#13;
will circulate for three days.&#13;
Newspapers and Microforms&#13;
Newspapers and microforms do not&#13;
circulate.&#13;
Overdue Notices&#13;
A library item is overdue when it has not&#13;
been returned within the circulation&#13;
period.&#13;
A book out on circulation to faculty is&#13;
overdue four days after the date of sending&#13;
of a recall notice.&#13;
If an item is overdue for approximately&#13;
two weeks, an overdue notice will be sent.&#13;
If the item is not returned, a bill for the lost&#13;
item will be sent after five weeks from the&#13;
date of the original loan. For reserve books&#13;
and periodicals, overdue notices and bills&#13;
will be sent appropriately earlier.&#13;
Overdue notices for all items will be sent&#13;
to both students and faculty. Such notices&#13;
are sent for the convenience of the&#13;
borrower. Failure to receive a notice does&#13;
Play Review Roar&#13;
By DAVE FOBART&#13;
Back in late 1968, a group of students&#13;
from the Kenosha and Racine areas formed&#13;
Newtheatre, Inc. in hopes of presenting&#13;
modern, imaginative theater in our area.&#13;
The group was then, and is now entirely&#13;
student-operated.&#13;
Since that time, Newtheatre has&#13;
presented five plays in the Kenosha area.&#13;
Its fifth, "The Roar of the Greasepaint, the&#13;
Smell of the Crowd", was performed on&#13;
Oct. 15, 16 and 17 at Kemper Hall, and it&#13;
characterizes the problems Newtheatre&#13;
has had in the past.&#13;
"The Roar of the Greasepaint, the Smell&#13;
of the Crowd" is a very difficult play to&#13;
perform from a simply technical standpoint.&#13;
The show contains many well-known&#13;
songs "Who Can I Turn To?", "Nothing&#13;
Can Stop Me Now", "On a Wonderful Day&#13;
Like Today", "The Joker", and "Feelin'&#13;
Good", to name a few. The music would be&#13;
a challenge to most adult actors in the&#13;
Kenosha area, but Newtheatre managed to&#13;
hnd the people to do these roles among&#13;
Kenosha youth.&#13;
Rick Ponzio, a Parkside student, plays&#13;
me lead role of Sir. Rick is a veteran of&#13;
several St. Joseph high school musicals,&#13;
New Gallery One&#13;
My father was very disappointed; I&#13;
ould have made a good barber", quotes&#13;
ugo Claus in his book about Karel Appel.&#13;
,&#13;
skou&#13;
J&#13;
d fee' fortunate indeed that&#13;
PPel rejected trimming in favor of&#13;
•"^feting an(j printmaking. The&#13;
1 °§raPhs of Appel can be viewed&#13;
ginning October 19 at the New Gallery&#13;
"&#13;
e located at 503 Main Street, Racine.&#13;
GaU Gallery One, formerly La Porte&#13;
n&#13;
ery&gt; is still owned and operated by&#13;
cha a 3C ^&#13;
ay&#13;
' Tlle 8&#13;
allery name was&#13;
nged for purely aesthetic reasons; its&#13;
shm?' kowever&gt; remains the same. The&#13;
anntv, °&#13;
f ApP&#13;
el&gt; and also Akechinsky,&#13;
grnim&#13;
er Prominent member of the Cobra&#13;
icu remain at the gallery until the&#13;
oner, November. The New Gallery One is&#13;
Mnna nday through Saturday and&#13;
nay and Friday evenings until nine.&#13;
and in his first performance with&#13;
Newtheatre, he does a creditable job with&#13;
a very big role. The part occasionally&#13;
tested his vocal capabilities and even his&#13;
memory, but Rick seemed at home on the&#13;
stage as well as with his role.&#13;
The other major part is that of Cocky,&#13;
the foil for the Wily Sir. Louis Mattiolo, a&#13;
Tremper student and Newtheatre veteran,&#13;
plays the part to the hilt. Louis masters the&#13;
most difficult part in the show and performs&#13;
with enviable vigor throughout. He&#13;
sings each song with great meaning and&#13;
steals the show with his reactions to Sir's&#13;
injustices. Louis is Cocky in this show and&#13;
few others could have handled the part as&#13;
well as he did.&#13;
Several other minor roles in the play&#13;
also have difficult songs. Kid, played by&#13;
Karen Willems, seems adequately bratty,&#13;
and is competently handled by the St.&#13;
Joseph student. Another bright spot in the&#13;
cast is Carl Spearce, a music major from&#13;
Carthage, who enlivens a lagging spot in&#13;
the show with a soulful rendition of&#13;
"Feeling Good".&#13;
The chorus members play Urchins,&#13;
requiring a somewhat ragged performance,&#13;
which is fortunate, for the&#13;
chorus lacked much in age and numbers.&#13;
The spirit is evident in their boisterous,&#13;
happy numbers.&#13;
Overall, the performance did reach the&#13;
technical skill necessary for such a difficult&#13;
show. The time necessary to learn&#13;
these tough parts is taken from time&#13;
usually spent polishing an easier show.&#13;
Except for Cocky, most of the parts&#13;
seemed to be missing the polish and pizzazz&#13;
to make this a first class show.&#13;
TwutaA&#13;
DELICATESSEN - BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 FIFTY-SECOND STREET&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Use Classifieds&#13;
not change the borrower's responsibility&#13;
for the item.&#13;
Fines&#13;
There is a five-day grace period after&#13;
the due date of any item out on two-week&#13;
loan. On the sixth day a fine of 60 cents will&#13;
be charged; thereafter, 10 cents a day will&#13;
be charged. The fines for overdue two-hour&#13;
reserve books are 50 cents for the first&#13;
hour and 25 cents for each succeeding hour&#13;
that the library is open. One dollar per day&#13;
is charged for overdue three-day reserve&#13;
books.&#13;
When an overdue item is returned, the&#13;
fine will be cut in half if i t is paid then and&#13;
there at the library desk. If it is paid later,&#13;
or is billed through the Bursar, the full rate&#13;
will apply.&#13;
Faculty are excused from pavment of&#13;
fines.&#13;
Lost Itesm&#13;
A lost item will be charged for as&#13;
follows: (a) the cost of replacement&#13;
(where a book is available only in&#13;
paperback, the paperback price plus $1.50&#13;
for binding; where a book is out of print,&#13;
normally a flat charge of $10.00); plus (b)&#13;
a processing charge of $1.00. which&#13;
represents staff time required to order the&#13;
item and get in on the shelves; plus (c) the&#13;
fines accumulated to the date on which the&#13;
item was declared lost. So, if you lose a&#13;
library item, report the loss at once.&#13;
Charges for lost items (except for fines)&#13;
apply to faculty as well as to students.&#13;
If a lost item is found and returned after&#13;
it has been paid for, the patron will be&#13;
reinbursed for the cost of the item (but not&#13;
for the processing charge).&#13;
Restriction of Borrowing Privileges&#13;
The library may restrict borrowing&#13;
privileges in cases of persistent violations&#13;
of library regulations.&#13;
Students' grades and transcripts will be&#13;
withheld and new registration will not be&#13;
permitted until library bills have been&#13;
paid.&#13;
Services&#13;
There are typing areas in each library;&#13;
also areas for record playing. Photocopying&#13;
services are also available.&#13;
Lounge areas located near each library&#13;
are available for smoking and eating.&#13;
Each campus library front desk has a&#13;
place for making suggestions: to improve&#13;
service, to acquire books and other library&#13;
materials. Your suggestions will be&#13;
welcomed.&#13;
Return of Materials&#13;
Any library item, other than reserve&#13;
material, may be returned to any one pf&#13;
the three campuses or to such library&#13;
return box as may be established in&#13;
Greeriquist Hall.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
27Q4 Lathrop Avm., Racint, Wisconsin&#13;
Students get red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else,!)&#13;
j+nut£L4-&#13;
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3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS&#13;
Nickie 's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 - 56th Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
LATEST FA SHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Reg. $45.00&#13;
Now $27.50&#13;
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FRI. &amp; SA T. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
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with Almondine Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RIB &#13;
National Policy&#13;
In H igher Ed?&#13;
ST. LOUIS {CPS) — The American&#13;
Council on Education has commended the&#13;
'Scranton Commission "for its fair and&#13;
factual, definition of the problem of&#13;
campus unrest.&#13;
The commendation was first announced&#13;
at ACE's 53rd annual meeting here OcR-K&#13;
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'ST 'In"?"8&#13;
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5 that the Commission's&#13;
lull report should be widely and&#13;
thoughtfully read" and that "serious and&#13;
open-minded consideration be accorded&#13;
the r&#13;
eco&#13;
mmendations in the report.'&#13;
year's ACE convention was con- This&#13;
vened around the subject of open admissions&#13;
but resulted in no general endorsement&#13;
or plan of a ction on the themeHigher&#13;
Education for Everybody?"&#13;
In the wake of this spring's antigovernment&#13;
turmoil on the nation's&#13;
campuses, the Council held eight panel&#13;
discussions focusing on problems of&#13;
Higher Education" using background&#13;
papers from various sociologists, political&#13;
scientists and administrators. Student&#13;
representation on the panels was limited to&#13;
two students from Washington University&#13;
in St. Louis. None of t he demands or issues&#13;
of last spring's student strike were&#13;
discussed.&#13;
The main task confronting "Higher&#13;
Education," issued in pleas by two&#13;
separate keynote speakers, is the&#13;
development of national leadership in the&#13;
academic community in pressing for&#13;
legislation to establish universal higher&#13;
education.&#13;
Daniel P. Moynihan, special counsellor&#13;
to the President, suggested that college&#13;
and university administrators could begin&#13;
to solve problems on their campuses by&#13;
responding to the Nixon administration&#13;
proposals for higher education. He lauded&#13;
the Higher Education Opportunity Act&#13;
which would provide federal subsidies to&#13;
be "used in such a way that the resources&#13;
available to poor students are brought up&#13;
to the level of middle income students." It&#13;
would also provide loan funds for upperincome&#13;
students. Last year Moynihan&#13;
called for reforms in the secondary&#13;
education system which would emphasize&#13;
"vocational" training, particularly for&#13;
: "minority" groups, to help build "a stable&#13;
working class population."&#13;
Moynihan suggested that "the universities&#13;
are so preoccupied with internal&#13;
problems — the difficulty of managing&#13;
what now exists — that they cannot for the&#13;
moment give much thought to the larger&#13;
problems of expansion."&#13;
Noting that the Nixon administration is&#13;
addressing itself to this need to "expand"&#13;
access to colleges and universities to solve&#13;
their problems, Moynihan described the&#13;
proposal for creation of a National&#13;
Foundation for Higher Education, to be&#13;
administered by a semi-autonomous board&#13;
and director appointed by the President,&#13;
whose purpose it would be "to redress the&#13;
imbalances that earlier forms of federal&#13;
aid have wrought." The Foundation would&#13;
provide funds to support "excellence, new&#13;
ideas and reform in high education;"&#13;
\yould strengthen institutions which "play&#13;
a uniquely valuable role" or are "faced&#13;
with special difficulties;" and would&#13;
provide an organization concerned with&#13;
"the development of national policy in&#13;
higher education."&#13;
Arthur S. Flemming, last year's ACE&#13;
chairman and president of Macalester&#13;
College, echoed Moynihan's plea for&#13;
"expansion" and called for the development&#13;
of a plan "that will narrow&#13;
significantly the gap between the promise&#13;
our nation has made of equal opportunity&#13;
for higher education for all Americans and&#13;
the reality which confronts us today." He&#13;
added that he thought that "all-out&#13;
dedication to the cause of universal access&#13;
to post-secondary education will provide&#13;
new incentives for needed reforms in our&#13;
system of higher education."&#13;
In another speech at the convention,&#13;
Samuel B- Gould, who most recently&#13;
resigned as chancellor of the beleaguered&#13;
State University of New York, chided&#13;
administrators for forgetting that they are&#13;
educators as well. "There are four kinds of&#13;
presidents left," he said, " those in&#13;
transition, those in flight, those in&#13;
desperation, and those who are newly&#13;
anointed." SUNY has four university&#13;
centers.&#13;
Road Ralley&#13;
Startling&#13;
Success&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers (Ski-Rangers)&#13;
pulled off another one on Sunday. It&#13;
couldn't have been a better day. The sun&#13;
was out with a pleasant and best of all,&#13;
fifty-four cars showed. One-by-one they&#13;
took off to conquer the course and win one&#13;
of those trophies from the Jimmy Clark&#13;
Memorial Road Ralley.&#13;
They all finished except number 10.&#13;
Better luck next time, Mike and Tom.&#13;
Those who lost didn't mind because the&#13;
party helped them forget their sorrows.&#13;
After everyone was well-oiled and the&#13;
officials tabulated the results, the trophies&#13;
were awarded.&#13;
Bill Petit, driver, and Roger Clausen,&#13;
navigator, both of KTI, won first in a&#13;
Gremlin. Second place went to Garvin&#13;
Williams and Karen Badtke in an AustinHealy&#13;
sprite. They're both from Racine. A&#13;
team of pretty girls in a Mustang wrapped&#13;
up third. Leone Storlie of Kenosh and&#13;
Theresa Kempter of Racine were the lucky&#13;
girls. Booby prize was awarded to another&#13;
team of girls, Sue Verhaefre and Bev Ward&#13;
of Racine.&#13;
Weight-Training&#13;
Facilities Now At&#13;
Both Campuses&#13;
In addition to the present weight room at&#13;
Kenosha Campus, a second weighttraining&#13;
room has been established on&#13;
Racine Campus. It is in the heated garage&#13;
adjoining Wadewitz Hall, which is located&#13;
south of the R-Campus.&#13;
According to the director of weighttraining,&#13;
Jim Koch, the hours during&#13;
which the facilities will be available are&#13;
greatly extended. They can be used by&#13;
Parkside students and faculty from 8:00&#13;
a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday,&#13;
and 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Friday.&#13;
Scheduled supervision has been confined&#13;
to the noon hours. However, anyone&#13;
wishing to receive instruction or advice on&#13;
weight-training is encouraged to contact&#13;
Mr. Koch in Room 144, Kenosha, or Mr.&#13;
Suh, Room 142, Kenosha. Mr. Koch does&#13;
advise that the inexperienced weighttrainser&#13;
confine their lifting to the&#13;
Universal Gym set which is relatively&#13;
safe. He also encourages any woman interested&#13;
in figure development to make&#13;
use of the facilities.&#13;
Conviction&#13;
Rate Declines&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) — Figures&#13;
released recently by Selective Service&#13;
officials reveal that the rate of conviction&#13;
for violations of the draft laws have fallen&#13;
to about one-third of the total number of&#13;
cases decided for the first nine months of&#13;
fiscal year 1970.&#13;
During fiscal year 1968 (J uly '67 - June&#13;
'68) the rate of convictions was 64.8 per&#13;
cent. Fiscal year 1969 sh owed a drop in&#13;
these figures to 47.2 per cent, and the&#13;
figures for the first three years of fiscal&#13;
1970 wo rk out to 33.6 per cent.&#13;
Due to the fact that the number of c ases&#13;
has been steadily increasing, from 1,153&#13;
decisions during fiscal 1968 to 2,069 du ring&#13;
the first three quarters of fiscal 1970, t he&#13;
actual number of convictions is increasing.&#13;
In 1965 there were 256 convictions;&#13;
in 1968, 747; in 1969, 884; and in&#13;
the first nine months of 1970, 615.&#13;
The decline in the rate of convictions can&#13;
be attributed to the growth of the number&#13;
of skilled draft lawyers, the far greater&#13;
frequency of errors at overworked local&#13;
boards, recent liberalization of the laws&#13;
through court decisions and the greater&#13;
preparedness of present draft law&#13;
violators for court fights.&#13;
Students To Study Pike River&#13;
A group of seven concerned students met&#13;
last Monday with Mr. Kugel, Mr. Ziemer&#13;
and Mr. Holzbog to discuss proposals to be&#13;
submitted to the National Science Foundation&#13;
for approval. The proposal, if accepted&#13;
by the NSF, will entitle the students&#13;
to Foundation financial backing for&#13;
research.&#13;
Although the proposal has not been&#13;
finalized, it will deal with the problem of&#13;
the Pike River. If the students receive NSF&#13;
backing, they will be paid for the research&#13;
they do.&#13;
It was emphasized by Mr. Kugel that&#13;
more students are needed for a more effective&#13;
research team. Interested students&#13;
should contact Mr. Kugel or Mr. Ziemer.&#13;
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Kenosha &#13;
How Does Silent Majority&#13;
Here's KK's Answer&#13;
Operate?&#13;
By KENKONKOL&#13;
A few of the less apathetic of you readers&#13;
have asked me how the Silent Majority&#13;
works. The answer is simplicity itself. The&#13;
opinions of the Silent Majority are those&#13;
opinions which are professed by no less&#13;
than 90 per cent of those people who talk to&#13;
me during the week. On the average I&#13;
discuss my past columns and ideas for&#13;
future columns with roughly ten people&#13;
each day. These persons range from&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie to first semester freshmen.&#13;
to janitors, librarians, and bus&#13;
drivers, to anyone I should accost in the&#13;
halls, such as the member of the Coordinated&#13;
Council for Higher Education in&#13;
Wisconsin that 1 cornered last week. This,&#13;
I feel, should make up a pretty&#13;
representative sample, and I can't be&#13;
accused of confining my interviews with&#13;
student radicals as some administrators&#13;
think&#13;
You remember how Dean MacKinney&#13;
stuck his opinions in his address to the&#13;
faculty. I found it amazing that he was&#13;
able to talk at all with his foot in his mouth&#13;
like that The members of the Silent&#13;
Majority were quick to realize that the&#13;
competence of our administrators is in&#13;
inverse relationship to how much they&#13;
agree with MacKinney's speech. We all&#13;
know (hat Dr. Gray, if not the most&#13;
competent administrator at this school, is&#13;
at least one of the best, disagreed with Mr.&#13;
MacKinney. and was not afraid to do so&#13;
because she has tenure. We also know that&#13;
Dr. Isenberg, one of our less competent&#13;
administrators (oneof a very large group)&#13;
agreed with the speech, but Dr. Isenberg is&#13;
just "nicing" Dean MacKinney. We knowthat&#13;
this writer talked and discussed the&#13;
speech with some 17 members of the&#13;
faculty and Administration this past week&#13;
and could not find one single person who&#13;
did not disagree with Mr. MacKinney.&#13;
Therefore, the Silent Majority and Thorn&#13;
feel this school could be run much better&#13;
should we call for the dismissal and-or&#13;
resignation of Dean MacKinney, Dr.&#13;
Isenberg, Vice Chancellor Harris, and any&#13;
and all other members of the Administration&#13;
who feel as they do, as long as&#13;
they continue to do so. Either that or shape&#13;
up&#13;
If anyone wishes to defend these persons&#13;
against the accusations I have advanced,&#13;
they have only to let it be known and this&#13;
person will interview them personally.&#13;
While I feel that nothing I say will ever&#13;
require retraction, unless forced upon me&#13;
against my will, some things might be&#13;
ammended if necessary to let the whole&#13;
truth be known.&#13;
My editors and I do not always see eye to&#13;
eye on every issue, but I feel it is evidence&#13;
of their fairness that some of my stuff gets&#13;
in at all. While I voted Democrat (for&#13;
LaFolletl) in the primary. I feel that&#13;
political ads appearing in this paper&#13;
should be paid for. I refer to those front&#13;
page insertions about students canvassing&#13;
for Aspin Also I feel that you, the reader,&#13;
should be made aware of how hard up for&#13;
money this paper really is, so perhaps you&#13;
could help us. While we are no longer&#13;
charging for this paper, containers are&#13;
available for donations in the bookstores&#13;
and libraries at all three campuses.&#13;
You will remember in my last column I&#13;
asked you if we had a competent&#13;
Psychology teacher at this school. As of&#13;
now, not a single person has offered the&#13;
name of a single one. I ask you again, "Do&#13;
we have a competent Psych teacher at this&#13;
school? If I do not receive any answer by&#13;
Wednesday, I will have to call for the&#13;
dismissal of the entire depertment; you&#13;
the members of the Silent Majority will&#13;
have requested it by your silence.&#13;
Who is responsible for the incompetent&#13;
instructors at this school? The fault is&#13;
certainly that of the instructors themselves;&#13;
often they cannot help it that they&#13;
are, often they may be trying their best as&#13;
instructors to become teachers, but&#13;
because they were hired 90 per cent to do&#13;
research and only ten per cent to teach,&#13;
they do no succeed. Don't blame your&#13;
instructors for being incompetent; dismiss&#13;
them yes, but don't blame them. Rather,&#13;
blame the administrators for hiring them&#13;
as instructors in the first place. Blame the&#13;
administrators, and then dismiss them&#13;
also so t his is not repeated.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Last Wednesday the Coordinated&#13;
Council for Higher Education in Wisconsin&#13;
had a meeting. According to Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie it was "a review by the staff of&#13;
parts of the ten year plan for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside which&#13;
The Byrds&#13;
The price of it came&#13;
for your riches and fame,&#13;
Was it all a strange game&#13;
you're a little insane,&#13;
The money it came and the public acclaim,&#13;
Don't forget what you are&#13;
You're a rock 'n roll star.&#13;
The Byrds&#13;
+ + +&#13;
When I was in junior high I listened to&#13;
the radio at night when I did my&#13;
homework. Ron Riley, or whoever was&#13;
spinnin' the top forty would be an echo in&#13;
the back of my mind.&#13;
These days of my life weren't full of too&#13;
much excitement, until I listened to that&#13;
radio closely for about three minutes one&#13;
night.&#13;
I heard a song about a man who would&#13;
take me on a trip upon a magic swirling&#13;
ship, and that sounded like it could be&#13;
worth something.&#13;
Some five years later I was on that trip&#13;
in New York City, not knowing why or for&#13;
how long. I was just there.&#13;
My mind wandered in strawberry fields&#13;
as I sat in Fillmore East awaiting the next&#13;
group. The crowd was happy, restless, and&#13;
pretty well zapped. Most Fillmore patrons&#13;
had made the evening enjoyable with&#13;
everything from killer week to junk. I felt&#13;
right at home.&#13;
There was some problem with the light&#13;
show, so the second group on the three act&#13;
bill was delayed a bit. After about fifteen&#13;
minutes somebody walked onstage and&#13;
introduced the Byrds.&#13;
McGuinn lead the Byrds to their instruments&#13;
and the rest was like a dream.&#13;
Joshua's Lights provided a show for the&#13;
eyes, and the Byrds filled the mind. Mr.&#13;
Tambourine Man took everyone eight&#13;
miles high, and no return scheduled.&#13;
To me, the Byrds are about the best&#13;
thing to come out of American culture.&#13;
Their songs dissolved reality and provided&#13;
fantasy. Musical trips to take me away&#13;
from what I saw and lived everyday. From&#13;
that night in Fillmore East, I was&#13;
dedicated to Byrd philosophy.&#13;
I don't care that the group has gone&#13;
through many changes in personnel. The&#13;
changes have resulted in more good&#13;
music; Dillard and Clark, The Flying&#13;
Burritto Brothers, and Crosby, Stills, Nash&#13;
and Young.&#13;
Those individuals who like to get into the&#13;
politics and gossip of rock, can see that&#13;
this group has not worked together in a&#13;
Utopian atmosphere. Crosby was asked to&#13;
leave for political reasons, and other&#13;
hassles have resulted in juicy "rolling&#13;
Stone" type trash. Through all" t his, and&#13;
more, the Byrd legend has survived.&#13;
The band appeared here and there on&#13;
occasion and put out two or three albums a&#13;
few months after the New York show at&#13;
Fillmore. They seemed to be tiring, as&#13;
more changes and problems caused them&#13;
to rely on their previous hits during personal&#13;
appearances. They were gliding on&#13;
one wing. A slow, quiet, painful submission.&#13;
&#13;
A little more than a year later I was at&#13;
the Aragon to see A1 Kooper. The cavern&#13;
was full of people having a good time, on&#13;
everything from that same killer weed to&#13;
Ttalked to one member of the Council&#13;
iT- if thP Council was considering&#13;
disregarding the Sd of Regents' plan&#13;
for the University as being a stnctly un&#13;
dergraduate institution, and implementing&#13;
Kfrategems of&#13;
Dr Isenberg to make this a&#13;
School. His answer; "Wedo not disregar&#13;
entirely the possibility of Parksiae&#13;
becoming a Graduate School." Proving&#13;
once again that the wrong people swing a&#13;
lot of weight in the right places.&#13;
nsvchedelics, and on up. I was straight and&#13;
happy to be in that state of mind. A nice&#13;
feeling only to become'licer wherH[found&#13;
out that I was to run into the Byrds agam.&#13;
The audience was getting restle®®&#13;
because of one of the Aragon s famous&#13;
delays between groups. The Byrds were&#13;
introduced and received the Pollt® tyP®^&#13;
applause I suppose they expected. After&#13;
all they once were a fine group who turned&#13;
people on to good music. They did make&#13;
audiences feel good with that refined,&#13;
beautiful talent. They deserved respect&#13;
The group at the Aragon was composed&#13;
of Roger McGuinn, Clarence White, Gram&#13;
Parsons and Skip Battin. Clarence White&#13;
had a broken leg in a cast almost up to his&#13;
hip The symbolism in this bothered me. I&#13;
didn't think I could stand to see or hear the&#13;
Byrds do a bad set.&#13;
While I entertained thoughts of wandering&#13;
around and waiting for A1 Kooper,&#13;
that twelve string guitar summons me,&#13;
and like their music at Fillmore, they&#13;
made me deram. After a few songs I&#13;
realized that the tired Byrds were on their&#13;
way up again. That same full sound was&#13;
there, more alive than ever, right out of&#13;
my junior high radio.&#13;
The respectful applause blossomed into&#13;
genuine appreciation and shouts for more.&#13;
The Byrds obliged with their version of&#13;
"So You Want to Be A Rock 'n Roll Star".&#13;
The lyrics unfolded the life of today's rock&#13;
star, individuals who communicate on&#13;
"plastic ware".&#13;
The Byrds have weathered plenty in&#13;
their six years. Like everything shared by&#13;
the masses in America, they have come&#13;
under too much strain, but unlike America&#13;
herself, the individuals and their music&#13;
have come out ahead.&#13;
Now I can listen to their new double&#13;
album "Untitled", which has beauty that&#13;
is believable. One record is a live performance,&#13;
with a full side of "Eight Miles&#13;
High". The other album is two sides of new&#13;
Byrd music. The best comment I ever hope&#13;
to make about any record is that it is nice.&#13;
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What is your opinion on the rising personal&#13;
cost of education today? And would&#13;
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"I think it's awful, but what can we do&#13;
about that? The books are definitely&#13;
too costly. Yes, 1 would be in favor of a coop!"&#13;
Darlene Fitch&#13;
AND OTHER SELECTED SHO RTS &amp; SPECIAL ACTIVITIES&#13;
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31s t 10:00 P. M.&#13;
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"The thing that gripes me are the rising&#13;
cost of books. I would help to support a&#13;
student co-op." Steve Knutson&#13;
What is your opinion on the set-up of the&#13;
washrooms at the temporary Student&#13;
Activities Building?&#13;
"There are no curtains on the stalls,&#13;
which causes a lot of laughter and causes&#13;
grief at the movies because no one can&#13;
hear the movie over the laughter. Those&#13;
bathrooms will be the cause of extreme&#13;
constipation for the girls on campus. We&#13;
want curtains!" Robin Strangberg&#13;
^fcSlDE STUDENT ACT/wfJ^&#13;
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"Having to pay for the use of the&#13;
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someone has to pay for the lights and&#13;
janitors. Undesirables stay out." Michael&#13;
Fieramosca&#13;
PARKSIDE FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
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Coming Friday A Unitea Art ist Theatre&#13;
What do you think of the Student Activities&#13;
Building?&#13;
"It's better than nothing. I don't goto the&#13;
dances, but they should be cheaper." Steve&#13;
Preston.&#13;
Revolutions&#13;
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ACTIVITIES&#13;
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STUDENT&#13;
FRIDAY "I think free juke boxes would work if&#13;
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Wisconsin&#13;
COMING . • • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7TH &#13;
A college-credit course in hunter safety?&#13;
"For this area, it's a natural," says Tom&#13;
Rosandich, athletic director at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha. Rosandich bases his comment on&#13;
a recent survey of 3,000 prospective&#13;
students. T he survey indicated that the&#13;
hunter safety course, which began its&#13;
second year at UW-Parkside September&#13;
22, is among the top R. E. courses judged&#13;
by college-bound students as the "most&#13;
likely to be interesting." It has had a turn&#13;
away enrollment.&#13;
Initiated at UW-Parkside at Rosandich's&#13;
urging, and with the support of the&#13;
Department of Natural Resources (DNR),&#13;
the course is designed to qualify instructors&#13;
to teach hunter safety programs.&#13;
The Curriculum of Physical Education 401,&#13;
as it is called, consists of 16 weekly night&#13;
sessions on a rchery and firearm use and&#13;
safety, plus advanced techniques in&#13;
teaching the subject to others. The onecredit&#13;
course is conducted by university&#13;
faculty members, DNR personnel, and&#13;
volunteers from the Kenosha County&#13;
Conservation club, the P&amp;H Trap club, and&#13;
the National Rifle association. The class&#13;
will utilize the Southport Gun club rifle&#13;
range and the Kenosha County Conservation&#13;
club trap range.&#13;
Rosandich maintains that the course is&#13;
in keeping with the university's&#13;
philosophy of teaching "lifetime sports":&#13;
activities such as golf or tennis, which can&#13;
be enjoyed by an individual as lifelong&#13;
interests.&#13;
"The possibility of playing football or&#13;
basketball the rest of your life is limited,"&#13;
Rosandich explains. "Besides, only five&#13;
per cent of our students get involved in&#13;
intercollegiate athletics, while 95 per cent&#13;
of them participate in our lifetime sports&#13;
program. We even have some faculty&#13;
members taking the hunter safety&#13;
course."&#13;
Rosandich hopes to build a cadre of&#13;
certified instructors from among the UWParkside&#13;
faculty members who enroll so&#13;
that the university can be more selfsufficient&#13;
in conducting the course".&#13;
Ultimately, the objective is to reach&#13;
Hein, Fencing Mag's&#13;
Fencer of Month&#13;
By ED SAMPON&#13;
of FENCING MAGAZINE&#13;
Loran Hein could well be considered the&#13;
,&#13;
mbar(&#13;
Ii of fencing in Wisconsin. He&#13;
rted teaching fencing at Parkside four&#13;
:p&#13;
e&#13;
a&#13;
ars a§&#13;
0 and this past season ranked the&#13;
tP It '&#13;
n ^e Midwest, an area exn&#13;
ing from Canada to Missouri and from&#13;
'° to the Rocky Mountains.&#13;
with"^ tlleir first y&#13;
ear of competition&#13;
an Jour year schools, UWP startled&#13;
ryone by placing fourth in the Great&#13;
J?, invitational Meet. The highlights of&#13;
Sto. seasan included victories over Wayne&#13;
cant? an&#13;
f uw"Madison. His students have&#13;
WiL such hon&#13;
°rs as the 1970&#13;
sernnaSI&#13;
i&#13;
n ^&#13;
en s Foh Championships, a&#13;
Cham .&#13;
ace&#13;
'&#13;
n Ihe '70 Midwest Men's Foil Championships.&#13;
•horn'ins mvffCS • Mathematics in the&#13;
evpnm,, D, fencing in the afternoon and&#13;
season 21-4 team win record last&#13;
minatin '&#13;
S, ^e result of Hein's deterbest&#13;
eff n f ,&#13;
exPect nothing short of the&#13;
°rts in each and every bout from&#13;
each man on the team. He is interested in&#13;
wins not excuses and the boys know it.&#13;
This ability to develop such a powerful&#13;
team from a school with an enrollment of&#13;
only 4,100 reflects well on the ability and&#13;
dedication of the coach to our sport of&#13;
fencing and incidentally, he is doing it with&#13;
Wisconsin boys so the Wisconsin Division&#13;
will be the gainers in the years ahead.&#13;
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A College Credit&#13;
Course in Hunter Safety?&#13;
Would you like to become an active or&#13;
involved student at UW-Parkside? This is&#13;
your chance to rid yourself of the feeling&#13;
that you ".don't feel a part of things here;&#13;
you just go to classes and go home."&#13;
Because the publicity got out so late,&#13;
cheer-leading and Rangerettes tryouts&#13;
have been postponed for two weeks, to give&#13;
all interested girls a chance.&#13;
Practices will be held on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 28, f rom 4 t o 6 p.m., and on Friday,&#13;
Oct. 30, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Racine&#13;
Campus Badger Room. Tryouts will be&#13;
held Tuesday, Nov. 3, from 4 to 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Badger Room. Don't say it's too hard,&#13;
without trying it first!&#13;
Cheerleading tryouts will consist of a&#13;
few short cheers, some jumps, and two&#13;
optional stunts. Rangerettes tryouts will&#13;
include a short pom-pom routine and a&#13;
short kicking routine.&#13;
Both groups have a new advisor. She is&#13;
Miss Doren Kristjanson, a 1969 graduate&#13;
of the University of North Dakota, where&#13;
she was a cheerleader. This is her second&#13;
year of teaching at Washington Park high&#13;
school in Racine, where she also advises&#13;
their pom-pom girls. Her hobbies include&#13;
sewing, corcheting, water-skiing, and&#13;
bowling.&#13;
Don't worry if you don't think you have&#13;
any experience. The practices will give it&#13;
to you! Come in and see what it's like. v&#13;
teenagers through hunter safety training&#13;
conducted by "graduates" of P.E. 401.&#13;
Rosandich notes that hunting is a major&#13;
sports activity in the populous Kenosha&#13;
area, and that qualified instructors are&#13;
badly needed for the Wisconsin hunter&#13;
safety program.&#13;
The statewide program headed by DNR&#13;
prepares boys and girls for the safe use of&#13;
firearms and archery equipment for sport.&#13;
By completing the program a youngster&#13;
can obtain a special permit which allows&#13;
him to hunt between the ages of 14 and 16&#13;
without adult supervision. State law&#13;
normally prohibits such youthful hunters&#13;
from going afield without an accompanying&#13;
adult.&#13;
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Excerpts From the&#13;
President's Commission&#13;
on C ampus U nrest&#13;
THE PEOPLE&#13;
The crisis on American campuses has no&#13;
parallel in the history of the nation. This&#13;
crisis has roots in divisions of American&#13;
society as deep as any since the Civil War.&#13;
The divisions are reflected in violent acts&#13;
and harsh rhetoric, and in the enmity of&#13;
.those Americans who see themselves as&#13;
occupying opposing camps. Campus&#13;
unrest reflects and increases a more&#13;
profound crisis in the nation as a whole.&#13;
This crisis has two components: A crisis&#13;
of violence and a crisis of understanding.&#13;
We fear new violence and growing enmity.&#13;
ON VIOLENCE&#13;
Too many Americans have begun to&#13;
justify as a means of effecting change or&#13;
safeguarding traditions. Too many have&#13;
forgotten the values and sense of shared&#13;
humanity that unite us. Campus violence&#13;
reflects this national condition.&#13;
Much of the nation is so polarized that on&#13;
many campuses a major domestic conflict&#13;
or an unpopular initiative in foreign policy&#13;
could trigger further violence protest and,&#13;
in its wake, counter-violence and&#13;
repression.&#13;
Crimes committed by one do not justify&#13;
crimes committed by another. We condemn&#13;
brutality and excessive force used&#13;
by officers and troops called to maintain&#13;
order.&#13;
Violence must stop because the sounds&#13;
of vi olence drown out all words of reason.&#13;
When students and officials resort to force&#13;
and violence, no one can hear the nation. It&#13;
must stop because no nation will long&#13;
tolerate violence without repression.&#13;
History offers grim proof that repression&#13;
once started is almost impossible to&#13;
contain.&#13;
ON UNDERSTANDING&#13;
Campus protest has been focused on&#13;
three major questions: war. racial injustice,&#13;
and the university itself.&#13;
Behind the student protest on these&#13;
issues and the crises of violence to which&#13;
they have contributed lies the more basic&#13;
crisis of understanding.&#13;
Americans have never shared a single&#13;
culture, a single philosophy or a single&#13;
religion. But in most periods in our history,&#13;
we have shared many common values,&#13;
common sympathies, and a common&#13;
dedication to a system of government&#13;
which protects our diversity.&#13;
We are now in grave danger of losing&#13;
what is common among us through&#13;
growing intolerance of opposing views on&#13;
issues and of diversity itself.&#13;
If this trend continues, if this crisis of&#13;
understanding endures, the very survival&#13;
of the nation will be threatened. A nation&#13;
driven to use the weapon of war upon its&#13;
youth is a nation on the edge of chaos. A&#13;
nation that has lost the allegiance of part&#13;
of its youth is a nation that has lost part of&#13;
its future. A nation whose young have&#13;
become intolerant of diversity, intolerant&#13;
of the rest of its citizenry, and intolerant&#13;
of all traditional values simply because&#13;
they are traditional has no generation&#13;
worthy or capable of assuming leadership&#13;
in the years to come.&#13;
RECOMMENDATIONS&#13;
Far more important than the particular&#13;
recommendations of this commission are&#13;
the underlying themes that are common to&#13;
all:&#13;
Most student protesters are neither&#13;
violent nor extremist. But a small&#13;
minority of politically extreme students&#13;
and faculty members and a small group of&#13;
dedicated agitators are bent on destruction&#13;
of the university to gain their own&#13;
political ends.&#13;
Perpetrators of violence must be&#13;
Cfiiny i&#13;
3)en&#13;
BARBER STUDIQ&#13;
ooo&#13;
"It's Not How Long You Wear It&#13;
But How You Wear It Long"&#13;
Hait Styling - Hair Cutting - Hair Pieces&#13;
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
7509 45TH AVE. 694-4603&#13;
identified, removed from the university as&#13;
swiftly as possible, and prosecuted&#13;
vigorously by the appropriate agencies of&#13;
law enforcement.&#13;
Dissent and peaceful protest are a&#13;
valued part of this nation's way of&#13;
governing itself. Violence and disorder are&#13;
the antithesis of democratic processes and&#13;
cannot be tolerated either on the nation s&#13;
campuses or anywhere else.&#13;
The roots of student activism lie in&#13;
unresolved conflicts in our national life,&#13;
but the many defects of the universities&#13;
have also fueled the campus unrest.&#13;
Too many students have acted&#13;
irresponsibly and even dangerously in&#13;
pursuing their stated goals and expressing&#13;
their dissent. Too many law enforcement&#13;
officers have responded with unwarranted&#13;
harshness and force in seeking to control&#13;
disorder.&#13;
All of us must act to prevent violence, to&#13;
create understanding and to reduce the&#13;
bitterness and hostility that divide both the&#13;
campus and the country.&#13;
Just as the President must offer&#13;
reconciling leadership to reunite the&#13;
nation, so all levels must work to bring&#13;
hostile factions together.&#13;
We recommend that the Federal&#13;
Government review all its current policies&#13;
affecting students and universities to&#13;
assure that neither the policies nor administration&#13;
of them threatens the independence&#13;
or quality of A merican higher&#13;
education. At the same time Government&#13;
should increase its financial support of&#13;
higher education.&#13;
We support the continuing efforts of&#13;
formerly all-white universities to recruit&#13;
blacks, Mexican-Americans, Puerto&#13;
Ricans, and other minority students, and&#13;
we urge that adequate Governmentsponsored&#13;
student aid be made available&#13;
to them. We recommend that in the&#13;
process of becoming more representative&#13;
of the society at large, universities make&#13;
the adjustments necessary to permit those&#13;
from minority backgrounds to take&#13;
maximum advantage of their university&#13;
experience.&#13;
ON LAW ENFORCEMENT&#13;
We urge that peace officers be trained&#13;
and equipped to deal with campus&#13;
disorders, firmly, justly, and humanely.&#13;
They must avoid both uncontrolled and&#13;
excessive response.&#13;
We recommend that national guardsmen&#13;
receive much more training in&#13;
controlling civil disturbances. During the&#13;
last three years, the guard has played&#13;
almost no role in Southeast Asia but has&#13;
been called to intervene in civil disorders&#13;
at home&#13;
Universities must become true com-&#13;
""students must accept the responsibility&#13;
omH nprsu3sivc msnncr. lncy&#13;
recognize that they are citizens of a nation&#13;
S was founded on tolerance and&#13;
diversity and they must become more&#13;
understanding of those with whom they&#13;
^Students should be reminded that&#13;
language that offends wiB seldom persuade.&#13;
Their words have sometimes been&#13;
as offensive to many Americans as the&#13;
words of some public officials have been to&#13;
' The commission has been impressed and&#13;
moved by the idealism and committment&#13;
of A merican youth. But this extraordinary&#13;
commitment brings with it extraordinary&#13;
obligations: to learn from our nation s past&#13;
experience, to recognize the humanity of&#13;
those with whom they disagree and to&#13;
maintain their respect for the rule of the&#13;
law.&#13;
GUEST CONDUCTOR&#13;
Harry Lantz, associate professor of&#13;
music, has been invited to act as guest&#13;
conductor of the Tennessee All-State&#13;
Orchestra at the Tennesses Music&#13;
Educators' Association annual convention&#13;
on Oct. 28 through 30 in Knoxville. Lantz&#13;
also will serve as a clinician at the convention.&#13;
Lantz, an internationally known&#13;
cellist, conductor and music educator, was&#13;
supervisor of instrumental music for the&#13;
Houston Public Schools and conductor of&#13;
the Houston All-City Orche^&#13;
joining the Parkside faculty u H,&#13;
taught at the University of Housl?0 *as&#13;
he was chairman of the i™r°&#13;
n%&#13;
music department and condi.n,&#13;
University Symphony. Uctor of...&#13;
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