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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 7</text>
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            <text>Administration to Blame: Faculty Morale Low</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Administration To Blame&#13;
Faculty Morale Low&#13;
~he Social Science Division of the&#13;
Umv.erslly of Wiscansin.Parkside held a&#13;
special meeting Oct. 30 and strongly&#13;
blamed the Administration for low faculty&#13;
~o~ale and for indifference toward indivIdual&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
The. Division approved a statement&#13;
submitted by Mr. Phillip Simpson (Pol&#13;
Sc.).. The statement follows: .&#13;
Resolution presented to the Social&#13;
Science DiVisi?n, October 28, 1970,by P~il&#13;
SImpson, political science.&#13;
Th~~ocial Science Division asks that the&#13;
admml~trallve leadership of the&#13;
Um:,~rslty of Wisconsin-Parkside take&#13;
POSItiveand prompt action to alleviate the&#13;
atmosphere of hostility, fear, mistrust,&#13;
and low faculty morale which has built up&#13;
durin~ the course of the last few months.&#13;
The climate of opinion among both faculty&#13;
and students IS hardly conducive to&#13;
teaching, scholarship, or education&#13;
generally. Whether accurate or not,&#13;
faculty preceptions of reality at Parkside&#13;
generally seem to be painting a very; grim&#13;
picture indeed. .&#13;
These perceptions of reality appear to&#13;
have the following common elements:&#13;
(a) that the faculty is not respected and&#13;
has no vital role to play in setting policy or&#13;
establishing the long-range goals of the&#13;
university;&#13;
(b) that the administration is bent on&#13;
"instant greatness". which translates into&#13;
an immediate purge of junior faculty and&#13;
punishment of senior faculty without&#13;
giving these groups a fair chance to prove&#13;
themselves as being worthy of a quality&#13;
institution;&#13;
(c) that the administration, independent&#13;
of the faculty, has established a severe&#13;
"publish or perish" attitude which translates&#13;
into a near complete de-emphasis of&#13;
Financial Aid Doubled&#13;
Financial aid available to students at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside this&#13;
schoolyear is double that of last year and&#13;
nearly seven times greater. than that&#13;
avaUabIe during UWP's firsf year of&#13;
operation in 1968-69.&#13;
Some $379,000has been distributed to&#13;
students this year and the total will climb'&#13;
to about $400,000,according to Jan Ocker,&#13;
UWP's Director of Financial Aids. That&#13;
compares to $201,000in 1969-70and $58,000&#13;
duringParkside's first year of operation in&#13;
1968-69.&#13;
This dramatic increase in financial aids&#13;
is viewedby University officials as a vote&#13;
of cmfidence in the accomplishments and&#13;
potential of Parkside on the part of the,&#13;
federal, state and private agencies which&#13;
Il"Ovidethe funds.&#13;
MacKinney Elected&#13;
Arthur C. MacKinney, dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, has&#13;
been elected a Fellow of the American&#13;
Psychological Association, effective Jan.&#13;
1, by the APA Council of Representatives.&#13;
Election as an APA Fellow is in&#13;
recognition of scientific achievement&#13;
influential in the advancement of&#13;
P6ychologyas a profession, particularly in&#13;
the area of research.&#13;
Fellows are selected on the basis of a&#13;
series of complex screening processes&#13;
eValuating the candidate's scholarly and&#13;
professional accomplishment.&#13;
Before coming to his Parkside post on&#13;
July I, MacKinney headed the psychology&#13;
department at Iowa State University,&#13;
":here he had been a psychology professor&#13;
SUlCe1957.He also has held visiting lecturer&#13;
and professor appointments at life·&#13;
Uruversity of Michigan, University of&#13;
Minnesota and University of CaliforniaBerkeley&#13;
and consultant posts with major&#13;
industries.&#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;
MacKinney currently is serving a three&#13;
year term as an elected member of the&#13;
APA's Committee on Advisory Services&#13;
for Education and ·Training. He previously&#13;
was chairman of its Commission on Accreditation&#13;
and of the committees that&#13;
prepared the APA guidelines for the Ph.D.&#13;
IIld M.A.degrees in industrial psychology.&#13;
Federal fundTng, for example, for the.&#13;
work-study program, national defense&#13;
student loans and educational opportunity&#13;
grants has increased 120 per cent, from&#13;
$58,000to $127,000,at a time when many&#13;
colleges and universities throughout the&#13;
country face federal leveling off or even&#13;
cutbacks. Ocker, who prepares Parkside&#13;
applications, said federal officials were&#13;
impressed. with UWP's rapid enrollment&#13;
growth, which is the highest among&#13;
Wisconsin's 13 public four-year campuses.&#13;
Other categories of student aid also show&#13;
sharp increases from last year. State&#13;
scholarships and loans went from $120,000&#13;
&lt;0 ~198000 (65 per cent), while guaranteed&#13;
student loans from banks and savings and&#13;
·loan associations, mostly in Kenosha and&#13;
.Racine, jumped from $23,000to $53,000(129&#13;
per cenll. .&#13;
Financial aid for Parkslde students has&#13;
increased. at an even faster rate than&#13;
enrollment. On a per capita basis, the aid&#13;
available to Parkside's 1,796 students in&#13;
1968-69 averaged $32 per student. Last&#13;
year, with 2,911 students, the ave~age was&#13;
$69 per student. This year, WIth 4,100&#13;
students, the average went up to $98.&#13;
The number of students actually&#13;
receiving financial aid has increas~&#13;
signUicantly, as has the average amo~&#13;
of aid each receives. The 193 students&#13;
receiving aid in 1968-69 averaged $302&#13;
each the 393 last year averaged $512,and&#13;
the ~timated 650who will receive aid this&#13;
school year will average about $630.&#13;
Ocker's office also coordmales student&#13;
on-campus employment a.s well as&#13;
maintaining a placement .~rvlce for ~rt.&#13;
time jobs in the commumties. In addition&#13;
to the 650 students who receive loans,&#13;
scholarships, grants and ,work-study&#13;
funds, another 750 students will he placed&#13;
this year in jobs in Kenosha, Racrne Of.on&#13;
campus. That brings to 1,400, or one-~rd&#13;
of the student body, the number recelvmg&#13;
financial aid or job placement through&#13;
Ocker's office.&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!!&#13;
Six weeks grades for all students who&#13;
have received a "0" or uF" will be mailed&#13;
out Monday, November 9, 1970. Those&#13;
students are encouraged to contact their&#13;
instructors or an Academic Adviser in the&#13;
Office of Student Affairs located on the&#13;
Racine and Kenosha campuses or an&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Students who wish to DROP a course&#13;
have until Friday. November J3, 197•.&#13;
teaching and the use of students as objects&#13;
of an elaborate public relations and&#13;
"numbers game";&#13;
(d) and finally that democracy is dead at&#13;
Parkside. This translates into a feeling&#13;
that faculty-student committees and&#13;
organs are fronts, are "listened to" as long&#13;
as the administration agrees with them&#13;
and that communication and power at&#13;
Parkside runs in only one direction - from&#13;
top 10 bottom.&#13;
Whether these perceptions accurately&#13;
describe the actual situation at Parkside&#13;
seems to be a question of some concern. If&#13;
not accurate, certain officers of the&#13;
university have at least contributed to the&#13;
perceptions of the hostile and hateful&#13;
climate at Parkside. Rather than having&#13;
-developed "instant greatness", this institution&#13;
seems to have developed instant&#13;
rumor, instant division, and instant and&#13;
Dear total destruction of morale and institutional&#13;
commitment&#13;
In conclusion, the members of this&#13;
division feel that the administration should&#13;
know that these perceptions of reality are&#13;
widespread and that, if untrue, actions&#13;
should be forthcoming to create a climate&#13;
for their correction. We ask nothing more&#13;
than to be trea ted as honora ble people in&#13;
an honorable endeavor.&#13;
Research Receiving&#13;
Overemphasis&#13;
Madison, Wis. - (!.P.l- Research may&#13;
be getting overemphasis at expense of&#13;
undergraduate teaching, according to a&#13;
recent report on campus tensions at U.S.&#13;
universities.&#13;
Prof. George Bunn of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Law School, a member of the&#13;
special study committee, said the uwMadison&#13;
campus is an example of how the&#13;
need for increased attention to teaching&#13;
has been recently re-evaluated.&#13;
"We recommend a better balance by&#13;
giving ~ood teaching greater recognition&#13;
in hiring and promotion. The report also&#13;
suggests that students be consulted on&#13;
faculty teaching competence before&#13;
decisions on tenure or promotion are&#13;
.made. And to improve the teaching quality&#13;
of teaching assistants, we urged greater&#13;
supervision by the professors."&#13;
Colloquium Here&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Two major contemporary panish&#13;
novelists will be among participants In a&#13;
coHoquium on .. e« Trends 10 the'&#13;
ovelists or the Generation oll950" which&#13;
wiU he held under sponsorshIp of th&#13;
faculty d the University d WisconsIn&#13;
Parkslde Thursday, Nov. 12.&#13;
o reservations are required for ~ fref'&#13;
program at 7 p m. on Greenqurst Hall&#13;
Participating in the discussion WIll be&#13;
Juan Goyusolo and AntoniO Ferres. two&#13;
major writers of the period. and Jose&#13;
Ortega, an associate professor at liWP&#13;
and organizer of the colloquium&#13;
Born in Barcelona in 1931, GoyLisoloha&#13;
lived in Paris since 1956with occasional&#13;
visits to his native Spain and to Morocco.&#13;
Cuha and the Umted States He presently&#13;
is a writer in residence at BOl!tCMl&#13;
University.&#13;
The influence of the Spani h CiVilWar IS&#13;
evident in all or Goylisolo's novels,&#13;
especially "Duelo en eI Paraiso". and 10&#13;
his most recent works, "Senas de identidad"&#13;
and "Relvindicacion del Conde Don&#13;
Julian". His books have been translated&#13;
into more than 20 languages,&#13;
Ferres, presently a visiting prole 'or at&#13;
'orthern Illinois niveraity, was born 10&#13;
Madrid in 1924 and spent the Civil War&#13;
years there. In 1956he left a career as an&#13;
engineer and three years tater pubh hed&#13;
the award-winning novel- "La Prqueta"&#13;
Some of his novels. including "Los vencidos",&#13;
have been banned bY the Franco&#13;
regime and were subsequently pubh hed&#13;
abroad. His most recent work. "En et&#13;
Segundo Hemisferio", is an account of hts&#13;
observalions of the American scene.&#13;
Ortega. a widely-pubhshed teacher.&#13;
lecturer and critic. joined the Park id&#13;
Spanish faculty in July after peevrously&#13;
teaching at Case Western Reserve&#13;
University and Smith College He&#13;
currently is writing a book tilled&#13;
"Alienation in the Modern Span! h Nove'"&#13;
which includes studies of several work by&#13;
Goytisolo and Ferres. Ortega. 36. also is a&#13;
native of. Spain and taught at several&#13;
Spanish institutions before coming lo the&#13;
U.S. in 1960.&#13;
Robert Goldstein, prdessor of communicative&#13;
disorders and rehabilitalton&#13;
medicine at the University of Wisconsin,&#13;
Madison, is the new president~elect of the&#13;
American Speech and Hearing&#13;
Association.&#13;
Members of the CCC met Friday to discuss the&#13;
ratification of the Student Government Constitution.&#13;
Although two major problems concerning policy setting for&#13;
student concessionshamper progress, there is an expected&#13;
preliminary OK set for next week.&#13;
Administration To Blame&#13;
Faculty Morale Low&#13;
1:}ie ~ial Science Division of the&#13;
Uruv_ersity of Wisconsin-Parkside held a&#13;
special meetin~ _Oct. 30 and strongly&#13;
blamed the Administration for low faculty&#13;
~o~ale and for indifference toward individual&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
Th~ Division approved a statement&#13;
submitted by Mr. Phillip Simpson (Pol. Sc.)_. The statement follows:&#13;
~esolu~o~ . presented to the Social&#13;
~1ence Division, October 28, 1970, by Phil&#13;
Simpson, political science.&#13;
Th~ ~ocial ~ience Division asks that the&#13;
ad~m1~trahve leadership of the&#13;
Uru~~rsity of Wisconsin-Parkside take&#13;
positive and prompt action to alleviate the&#13;
atmosphere of hostility, fear, mistrust,&#13;
and_ low faculty morale which has built up&#13;
durm~ the course of the last few months.&#13;
The climate of opinion among both faculty&#13;
and students 1s hardly conducive to&#13;
teaching, scholarship, or education&#13;
generally. Whether accurate or not&#13;
faculty preceptions of reality at Parksid;&#13;
generally seem to be painting a very grim picture indeed.&#13;
These perceptions of reality appear to&#13;
have the following common elements:&#13;
(a) that the faculty is not respected and&#13;
has no vital role to play in setting policy or&#13;
establishing the long-range goals of the&#13;
university;&#13;
(b) that the administration is bent on&#13;
"instant greatness", which translates into&#13;
an immediate purge of junior faculty and&#13;
punishment of senior faculty without&#13;
giving these groups a fair chance to prove&#13;
themselves as being worthy of a quality institution;&#13;
(c) that the administration, independent&#13;
of the faculty, has established a severe&#13;
"publish or perish" attitude which translates&#13;
into a near complete de-emphasis of&#13;
teaching and the use of students a objects&#13;
of an elaborate public relations and&#13;
"numbers game" ;&#13;
&lt; di and finally that democracy is dead at&#13;
Parkside. This translates mto a feeling&#13;
that faculty-student committees and&#13;
organs are fronts, are "Ii tened to" a long&#13;
as the admini tration agrees with them&#13;
and that communication and power al&#13;
Parkside runs in only one direction - from&#13;
top to bottom.&#13;
Whether these perceptions accurately&#13;
describe the actual ituation at Park de&#13;
seems to be a question ol. some concern. If&#13;
not accurate, certain officers of the&#13;
university have at least contributed to the&#13;
perceptions or the hostile and hateful&#13;
climate at Parkside. Rather than having&#13;
•developed "instant greatn " , th institution&#13;
seems to have developed instant&#13;
rumor, instant division, and instan and&#13;
near total destruction of morale and institutional&#13;
commitment&#13;
In conclusion, the members of this&#13;
division feel that the admini !ration should&#13;
know that these perceptions of reality are&#13;
widespread and that, if untrue, actions&#13;
should be forthcoming to create a climate&#13;
for their correction. We ask nothing more&#13;
than to be treated as honorable people in&#13;
an honorable endeavor.&#13;
Research Receiving&#13;
Overemphasis&#13;
Madison, Wis. - (l.P.&gt; - Research may&#13;
be getting overemphasis at expense of&#13;
undergraduate teaching, according to a&#13;
recent report on campus tensions at U.S. universities.&#13;
Colloquium Here&#13;
Thursday&#13;
financial Aid Doubled&#13;
Prof. George Bunn of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Law School, a member of the&#13;
special study committee, said the UWMadison&#13;
campus is an example of how the&#13;
need for increased attention to teaching&#13;
has been recently re-evaluated Financial aid available to students at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside this&#13;
school year is double that of last year and&#13;
nearly seven times greater. than that&#13;
available during UWP's first year of&#13;
operation in 1968-69.&#13;
Some $379,000 has been distributed to&#13;
students this year and the total will climb ·&#13;
to about $400,000, according to Jan Ocker,&#13;
DWP's Director of Financial Aids. That&#13;
compares to $201,000 in 1969-70 and $58,000&#13;
during Parkside's first year of operation in&#13;
1968~9.&#13;
This dramatic increase in financial aids&#13;
is viewed by University officials as a vote&#13;
of confidence in the accomplishments and&#13;
potential of Parkside on the part of the,&#13;
federal, state and private agencies which&#13;
provide the funds.&#13;
MacKinney Elected&#13;
Arthur C. MacKinney, dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, has&#13;
been elected a Fellow of the American&#13;
Psychological Association, effective Jan.&#13;
1, by the APA Council of Representatives.&#13;
Election as an AP A Fellow is in&#13;
recognition of scientific achievement&#13;
influential in the advancement of&#13;
psychology as a profession, particularly in&#13;
the area of research.&#13;
Fellows are selected on the basis of a&#13;
series of complex screening processes&#13;
evaluating the candidate's scholarly and&#13;
professional accomplishment.&#13;
Before coming to his Parkside post on&#13;
July 1, MacKinney headed the psychology&#13;
department at Iowa State University,&#13;
~here he had been a psychology professor&#13;
smce 1957. He also has held visiting lectur~r&#13;
and professor appointments at tlfe·&#13;
U~versity of Michigan, University of&#13;
Mmnesota and University of California-&#13;
~rkeley and consultant posts with major industries.&#13;
MacKinney's major interest as an industrial&#13;
psychologist is in the im·&#13;
provement of human performance,&#13;
especially of managers, and in the&#13;
measurement of performance.&#13;
MacKinney currently is serving a three&#13;
Year term as an elected member of the&#13;
APA's Committee on Advisory Services&#13;
for Education and Training. He previously&#13;
was chairman of its Commission on Accreditation&#13;
and of the committees that&#13;
prepared the AP A guidelines for the Ph.D.&#13;
and M.A. degrees in industrial psychology·&#13;
Federal fundrng, for example, for the&#13;
work-study program, national defense&#13;
student loans and educational opportunity&#13;
grants has increased 120 per cent, from&#13;
$58,000 to $127,000, at a time when many&#13;
colleges and universities throughout the&#13;
country face federal leveling off or even&#13;
cutbacks. Ocker, who prepares Parkside&#13;
applications, said federal officials were&#13;
impressed with UWP's rapid enrollment&#13;
growth, which is the highest among&#13;
Wisconsin's 13 public four-year campuses.&#13;
Other categories of student aid also show&#13;
sharp increases from last year. State&#13;
scholarships and loans went from $120,000&#13;
co ,198 000 ( 65 per cent), while guaranteed&#13;
student loans from banks and savings and&#13;
loan associations, mostly in Kenosha and&#13;
Racine, jumped from $23,000 to $53,000 &lt; 129&#13;
per cent).&#13;
Financial aid for Parkside students has&#13;
increased at an even faster rate than&#13;
enrollment. On a per capita basis, the aid&#13;
available to Parkside's 1,796 students in&#13;
1968-69 averaged $32 per student. Last&#13;
year, with 2,911 stude~ts, the ave~age was&#13;
$69 per student. This year, with 4,100&#13;
students, the average went up to $98.&#13;
The number of students actually&#13;
receiving financial aid has increased&#13;
significantly, as has the average amo~&#13;
of aid each receives. The 193 students&#13;
receiving aid in 1968-69 averaged $302&#13;
each, the 393 last year averag~ $51~, a~d&#13;
the estimated 650 who will receive aid this&#13;
school year will average a~ut $630.&#13;
Ocker's office also coordinates student&#13;
on-campus employment as well as&#13;
maintaining a placement service for l?~rttime&#13;
jobs in the communities. I~ addition&#13;
to the 650 students who receive loans,&#13;
scholarships, grants and _work-study&#13;
funds, another 750 students will b_e placed&#13;
this year in jobs in Kenosha, Racine or_on&#13;
campus. That brings to 1,400, or one-~~rd&#13;
of the student body, the number receiving&#13;
financial aid or job placement through&#13;
Ocker's office.&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!!&#13;
Six weeks grades for all s~dents ~ho&#13;
have received a "D" or "F" will be mailed&#13;
out Monday, November 9, 1970. T~&#13;
students are encouraged to contact their&#13;
instructors or an Academic Adviser in the&#13;
Office of Student Affairs located on ~e Racine and Kenosha Campuses or m&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Students who wish to DROP a course&#13;
have until Friday, November 13, 1970.&#13;
"We recommend a better balance by&#13;
giving -good teaching greater recognition&#13;
in hiring and promotion. The report also&#13;
suggests that students be consulted on&#13;
faculty teaching competence before&#13;
decisions on tenure or promotion are&#13;
.made. And to improve the teaching quality&#13;
of teaching assistants, we urged greater&#13;
supervision by the professors."&#13;
Robert Goldstein, prof&#13;
municative di orders&#13;
medicme at the niv&#13;
. tad1 on, ~ the new pr&#13;
American pee ch&#13;
Assoc1allon.&#13;
Members&#13;
ratification&#13;
of&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
the&#13;
CCC met Friday to discuss the&#13;
Student Government Constitution.&#13;
Although two major problems concerning policy setting for&#13;
student concessions hamper progress, there is an expected&#13;
preliminary OK set for next week. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Apathy&#13;
Oh! It's been said many times - student apathy. It is particularly&#13;
disturbing when working for a student organization, as we&#13;
are, to look down upon uncommited, static students. The reason we say&#13;
"look down upon" is that we, too, were once in the same boat - and&#13;
bored tiff.&#13;
In a recent editorial board meeting we discussed the problem of&#13;
apathy among Parkside students and have arrived at some interesting&#13;
conclusions. l.l Since many Parkside students have recently joined the&#13;
university from Kenosha and Racine high schools, the main problem&#13;
might lie in that area. The idea in high school was NOT to join a club or&#13;
orgaruzation. A high rate of freshmen not involved or even caring what&#13;
happens show us that the phenomenon has carried over to events at&#13;
this university. 2'&gt; A "who cares" attitude among the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
iety or the American society as a whole. How many times have you&#13;
heard someone say "Who cares about this club or the administration of&#13;
thl school ... who is the dean anyway?" And how about this one:&#13;
"Oh. we've got a student union now." You probably don't hear&#13;
anything at all, just the sight of bowed heads of busy 'ants' on their&#13;
daily routines of school, class, home.&#13;
Aman addressed us once when we were freshmen and said, "I'll&#13;
at I a t li ten to anything the students want and try to fulfill their&#13;
wi hes." (Referring to student organizations.) 0 one can give us the&#13;
argument that the administration isn't at least superficially trying to&#13;
help u .&#13;
The whole point of this editorial is that apathy is your own fault.&#13;
All organizations on this campus need and depend on you for survival.&#13;
'ote: if you ever do get involved you'll notice a change in yourselfwalt.&#13;
omeday YOU'll "see".&#13;
Again .. Lost In Red Tope?&#13;
Let' see - we have a newspaper, we have an activities building,&#13;
..... have numerou student organizations. But 0 student government.&#13;
ince last spring a group of elected students have been working&#13;
on the .....riting of a proposed constitution. To our knowledge, that&#13;
document wa completed about seven weeks ago. This is the eighth&#13;
.....eek - and still 0 student government.&#13;
We of the NEWSCOPE feel such delay and lack of information on&#13;
uch an i ue as student government is inexcusable. Once the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee votes on the proposed constitution, who sees it&#13;
next? Or don't the students have a right to know what exactly is happening?"&#13;
Who's At Fault?&#13;
Hello, Maintenance Department.&#13;
"Who's in charge of clearing debris such as broken bottles from&#13;
the parking lots?"&#13;
We are.&#13;
"Oh. Do you have some sort of schedule for checking the lots for&#13;
broken glass?"&#13;
o. If someone sees a broken bottle they come in and tell us and&#13;
.....e go and clean it up.&#13;
The above phone conversation took place after a student came&#13;
mto the EWSCOPE office and asked us to write something about the&#13;
glas in the parking lots. The reason? His hand was bleeding because&#13;
he had had to clear broken glass away from his car in order to drive it&#13;
from the lot. Enough said.&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
ceere Ion 01 a Frnhman raise the difference so that we could bail&#13;
out our president It was slow-going&#13;
because I averaged about two-bits a room.&#13;
The the last thing I remember about that&#13;
evening is that J wound up in a bun-session&#13;
on the third floor and the subject under&#13;
discussion was "Girls" ... and what to-do&#13;
aboot the brazen coeds who had raised the&#13;
hems of their dresses so that they were&#13;
half-way between the ankle and knee. You&#13;
could actuaUy see most of the calf (please&#13;
pardon the expression&gt;. Our decision as I&#13;
recaU. was that we would he helpful. : . we&#13;
would all pitch in and help the girls raise&#13;
their hemlines.&#13;
Having settled that problem, the other&#13;
subject on the evening's agenda was&#13;
"Girls' Dormitories" ... ,and what they&#13;
were like inside. For good. and sufficient&#13;
rea~ I was the class authority on that&#13;
subJeCt so I had to slick around. My major&#13;
dorm was Ormsby Hall and its environs&#13;
The !elJ0'4'S were pwnping me for in:&#13;
formation as to how come I knew so rnu~&#13;
I gave them some bum steers about easy&#13;
access to Ormsby Vla a certain downspout&#13;
I learned later that one of the guys took th~&#13;
baIt and got caught on the back ledge of&#13;
Ormsby later that night. He retreated in&#13;
A recent letter from a )'oung friend of&#13;
mIne ha Ju,t brought back a nnod of&#13;
nost.algl memOl"lf. He's a freshman at&#13;
La ....rtnc~ nl\'erslt) at Appleton&#13;
WI c:on~tn The school "'..as caUed&#13;
"La"ren« CoUege" "hen I was up there&#13;
for one lear&#13;
I auess I'U ne"er forget the cham ol&#13;
...... ts wtuch began aboot seven· thirty one&#13;
Fnda)' t'Venlrti tn October. 1921, I was m&#13;
my room ,n Brokn Hall. on the second&#13;
noor undor the porIlCO. I was busy planfUnl&#13;
the night's fora)' and pondering o\'er&#13;
my .. al OPIJOOS"hen a couple of my&#13;
c1Jl mat came IOto my room and&#13;
repor1ed thai the sophomores had kid·&#13;
napped our cl pres"l..,t ..•• a feUow&#13;
named Ceorge Maxon&#13;
WeU, thole coNvmg sophs reall)' had&#13;
MaxQIt and were holding him incommunicado&#13;
for $2500 ransom Our first&#13;
ruClJon w that that wa a pretty steep&#13;
pnce lor )l8llon. but the real problem was&#13;
nomic W't only had $6 30 10 the class&#13;
Ir sur) and I wa Ttea ur .. of the Class&#13;
ol'2S&#13;
I began knocking on doors. tryIng to&#13;
NewsEditor&#13;
Feature Edit&#13;
B&#13;
. or&#13;
usmessEdit&#13;
Advertising Mana or&#13;
ger&#13;
Sports Edit&#13;
Photography sta':;&#13;
AdvISor&#13;
~~&#13;
~O&#13;
•...rn J~J.i r..,&#13;
~&#13;
.-., STAFFJerry&#13;
Houston, D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol ;Z;.Marc Eisen, P~uI Lomarlire, Arthur Grubl, Jim Janis, Walters.....&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the U~iversily. of Wiscolllil&gt;&#13;
Parkside Kenosba Wisconsin. 53140. Mailing address is Parkside's Newseope,&#13;
3700wast'ungton Rd., Kenosha. Business and editoriai telephone numberis_&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 6524177.&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 1&#13;
November 9. 1970&#13;
BILL itOLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors.. .&#13;
sven Taffs&#13;
CarroU Smolinsky&#13;
Mike Gogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John pesta&#13;
Notes From Other Campuses&#13;
Chicago, Ill.. (J.P.) - Universities that&#13;
encourage and arrange for faculty and&#13;
students to engage in political activities&#13;
are in danger of destroying academic&#13;
freedom declares Philip B. Kurland,&#13;
Professor of Law at the University of&#13;
Chicago, editor of "The Supreme Court&#13;
Review", and a constitutional law expert.&#13;
"A university," he said, "C3IUlotbe both&#13;
a political force and an institution&#13;
dedicated to the search for knowledge and&#13;
its dissemination, As a university makes a&#13;
political commitment, it destroys its claim&#13;
to academic freedom. And without&#13;
academic freedom, the search for and&#13;
dissemination of knowledge becomes more&#13;
shadow than substance."&#13;
Kurland also criticized universities for&#13;
allowing students to receive credit for&#13;
courses they did not allend, for paying&#13;
faculties for not teaching while they are&#13;
engaged in political activities, and for&#13;
allowing campus facilities tobe used for&#13;
those purposes,&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Palo Alto, Calif. . (J.P.) - Starling this&#13;
fall, the sole penalty for failure to complete&#13;
an undergraduate course satisfactorily&#13;
at Stanford University will he loss of&#13;
credit toward graduation, Following more&#13;
than three years of study, the Faculty&#13;
Senate has approved a comprehensive&#13;
overhaul of the university's grading&#13;
system for undergraduates.&#13;
The only grades recorded will be "A" for&#13;
exceptional performance "B" for&#13;
superior performance, "C" 'for satisfactory&#13;
performance, and "pass" for nonletter-graded&#13;
work equivalent to a "C" or&#13;
better.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
such a. hurry that he sprained an ankle"&#13;
when he hit the ground. Unfortunately:&#13;
he was the only good kicker on the football&#13;
team and he did a lousy job during&#13;
our game with Ripon the following after-&#13;
~oon. His average punt was about&#13;
fifteen yards,&#13;
. Now .thatl am protected by the statue of&#13;
limitations, I will really tell you how it was&#13;
that I was so well-informed about Ormsby&#13;
Hall. Very.simple .... all you have 10&#13;
have IS an inside accomplice. Mine was a&#13;
doll named Virginia. She not only lived in&#13;
Orms?y but she worked 'as a waitress in&#13;
the kitchen. And there was a basement&#13;
door around the back of Ormsby to which&#13;
very few people paid any attention&#13;
or even kne~ about. At a predeter~i'n~&#13;
:;;:~ of the mght I would go down the fire&#13;
pe outs,de the second noor washroom'&#13;
at Brokaw cross the foot b 'dg th ba' - n eandgoto&#13;
e ck door of Ormsby. There I would&#13;
scratch the door thr ti&#13;
I&#13;
'k ee. mes make a. no,'se lealom t . , open the dca i . . . and guess who would&#13;
oor.&#13;
So here I sit aI . later wo d . . . .. most f,fly years&#13;
v' .'. .n ermg . . . . I wonder what&#13;
lrgm,a 's doing tonight And h t • hap d . W a ever&#13;
rais:'~ to Maxon. I know that we never&#13;
hearing ~~malll'h~rnand I d?n't recall ever&#13;
1m or seemg hi . Maybe he's still in ad' m agam.&#13;
someplace I wond . ungeon m Appleton&#13;
inidentified bod er If they ever found an&#13;
of '24 put h' . Y up there. Maybe the class&#13;
1mm a weIghted ba&#13;
tum into the Fox River g and threw&#13;
hecame of tbat six dOli' And I wo~der what ars and th,rty cents.&#13;
tZt4411.,.ft,ua&#13;
II Traveling,&#13;
Must Give Notice&#13;
The facully has heen informed..&#13;
henceforth any faculty member I.....&#13;
the state during weeks when classes .&#13;
regular session must give writtel&#13;
notification to his divisional chail1Dla.&#13;
Asst. Chancellor Brockman two........&#13;
advance. -&#13;
A faculty member travelling orf.....&#13;
within the state must give three ...&#13;
advance notice. These rules applyIIIII&#13;
facully members whether they ..&#13;
travelling" on university or pri,*&#13;
business, even if travelling at their •&#13;
expense.&#13;
Sunml'iJe [JlorlJb&#13;
&amp; (jremhowes&#13;
R_II- ""H...... - Il1o&#13;
Phone: 64Hl00 •&#13;
Viand FRANK WEINSTIlCK I&#13;
3021· 7!1THIT.&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN "140&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHO&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 e.m, till 11 p.m. 7 do,"&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 651-9747&#13;
THE&#13;
OT&#13;
51&#13;
COFFEE_&#13;
HER&#13;
DE&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
VI......&#13;
2704 LDthrop ,A" ...•• cI".,&#13;
I" t •• I't&#13;
Students Ret red cafpe&#13;
,II,H&#13;
(SO does everyone&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Apathy&#13;
it ri I board meeting we discussed the problem of&#13;
i tud ts and have arrived at some interesting&#13;
tudents have recently joined the&#13;
Th&#13;
• Lost In Red Tape?&#13;
Who's At Fault?&#13;
ome sort of schedule for checking the lots for&#13;
a broken bottle they come in and tell us and&#13;
a Fr man&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An A ware Square&#13;
rai e the difference so that we could bail&#13;
out our pr ident. It was slow-going&#13;
caus I averaged about two-bits a room.&#13;
Th the la t thing I remember about that&#13;
evening i that I wound up in a bull-session&#13;
on th third floor and the subject under&#13;
cw ion wa " Girls'' ... and what to-do&#13;
about the brazen coeds who had raised the&#13;
ms their dre o that they were&#13;
lf-wa) between the ankle and knee. you&#13;
could actually e most of the calf (please&#13;
pardon thee pr ionl. Our decision as I&#13;
r 11, ·.-.a !hat ~ewould be helpful . _'. we&#13;
\I.OUld all pitch m and help the girls raise&#13;
their hemline .&#13;
Ha, ing settled that problem, the other&#13;
u~ject on the evening's agenda was&#13;
"Girl ' Dormitorie " . ... and what they&#13;
"er hke inside. For good and sufficient&#13;
r son I wa the class authority on that&#13;
ub:,ect o I had to tick around. ty major&#13;
dorm wa Orm by Hall and its environs.&#13;
The ~ellow ·ere pumping me for ini&#13;
rmalion as to how come I knew so much&#13;
I ga ·e them ome ~um steers about easy&#13;
to Orm by via a certain downspout&#13;
I l~amed later that one of the guys took th~&#13;
blut and got caught on the back ledge f&#13;
m by later that night. He retreated fn&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 7&#13;
Dil November 9, 1970&#13;
~~ BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOEil&#13;
Co-Editors. .&#13;
.! 0 Sven Taffs&#13;
• W Carroll Smolinsky&#13;
•iii Pl\ Mike Gogola&#13;
PA VJ. Jim Hanlon&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Edit B . or usmessEdito&#13;
Advertising Mana r ger&#13;
VA ~ Bill Jacoby, John Potente - Mark Barnhill Sports Editor&#13;
Photography Slaff&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
J.i r ... , . . .... STAFF -&#13;
Advisor&#13;
I, . Jerry Houston, D. !f· Post, Becky Ec~und, K~n Konkol&#13;
~ Marc Eisen, Paul Lomartire, Arthur Gruhl, Jim Jarus, Walter Brea&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University of Wiseo .&#13;
Parkside Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Mailing address is Parkside's Newsc ~in3700&#13;
Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editoriat teleph9ne number is t'.&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
Notes From Other Campuses&#13;
Chicago, Ill. - (I.P.) - Universities that&#13;
encourage and arrange for faculty and&#13;
students to engage in political activities&#13;
are in danger of destroying academic&#13;
freedom, declares Philip B. Kurland,&#13;
Professor of Law at the University of&#13;
Olicago, editor of "The Supreme Court&#13;
Review", and a constitutional law expert.&#13;
"A university," he said, "cannot be both&#13;
a political force and an institution&#13;
dedicated to the search for knowledge and&#13;
its dissemination. As a university makes a&#13;
political commitment, it destroys its claim&#13;
to academic freedom. And without&#13;
academic freedom, the search for and&#13;
dissemination of knowledge becomes more&#13;
shadow than substance."&#13;
Kurland also criticized universities for&#13;
allowing students to receive credit for&#13;
courses they did not attend, for paying&#13;
faculties for not teaching while they are&#13;
engaged in political activities, and for&#13;
allowing campus facilities to be used for&#13;
those purposes.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Palo Alto, Calif. - (I.P.) - Starting this&#13;
fall, the sole penalty for failure to complete&#13;
an undergraduate course satisfactorily&#13;
at Stanford University will be loss of&#13;
credit toward graduation. Following more&#13;
than three years of study, the Faculty&#13;
Senate has approved a comprehensive&#13;
overhaul of the university's grading&#13;
system for undergraduates.&#13;
The only grades recorded will be "A" for&#13;
exceptional performance "B" for&#13;
superior performance, "C" 'for satisfactory&#13;
performance, and "pass" for nonletter-graded&#13;
work equivalent to a "C" or&#13;
better.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
such a . hurry that he sprained an ankle·&#13;
wnen he hit the g·round. Unfortunately .&#13;
he was the only good kicker on the foot~&#13;
ball team a?d h~ did a lousy job during&#13;
our gam~ with Ripon the following afternoon.&#13;
His average punt was about&#13;
fifteen yards.&#13;
. N_ow .that I am protected by the statue of&#13;
hmilabons, I will really tell you how it was&#13;
that I was so_well-informed about Ormsby&#13;
Hall. _Yery. siI?ple · · · . all you have to&#13;
have 1s an 1ns1de accomplice M'&#13;
d 11 . . me was a o named Virginia. She not only lived in&#13;
Orms?y but she worked ·as a waitress in&#13;
the kitchen. And there was a basement&#13;
door around the back of Ormsby to which&#13;
very few people paid any attention&#13;
: even kne~ about. At a predeter~in~&#13;
ur of the ?ight I would go down the fire&#13;
:;pek outside the second floor washroom .&#13;
the baro akwd, cross the foot-bridge and go to c oor of Ormsby Th 1 scratch the doo . · ere would&#13;
l.k r three_ times make a noise&#13;
1 e a tomcat d '&#13;
open the doo i . . . an guess who would&#13;
r.&#13;
So here I sit al . later, wonderin. . . . most fifty years&#13;
Virginia is doin~ to~igt/ Awnodndehr twhat&#13;
happe d t · w a ever . ne o Maxon. I know that w raised the ransom and , e never&#13;
hearing from h' I don t recall ever&#13;
Maybe he's still i: ;~ seeing ~im again.&#13;
someplace. I wonder if ~geon m Appleton&#13;
inidentified bod ey ever found an of '24 put h" · Yup t~re. Maybe the class&#13;
im m a weighted ba&#13;
him into the Fox River. g and threw&#13;
became of that six doll And I wo?der what&#13;
ars and thirty cents.&#13;
~411.~&#13;
If Traveling,&#13;
Must Give Notice&#13;
The faculty has been informed&#13;
henceforth any faculty member lea,&#13;
the state durin~ weeks when classes arr&#13;
regular sess10n must give writ&#13;
notification to his divisional chainnan&#13;
Asst. Chancellor Brockman two weets m&#13;
advance.&#13;
_A ~aculty member travelling off camiwithm&#13;
the state must give three&#13;
advance notice. These rules apply to&#13;
faculty members whether they&#13;
travelling · on university or prin&#13;
business, even if travelling at their&#13;
expense.&#13;
SUlZnlfside gfo,Ms&#13;
&amp; Grunhoum&#13;
R-11 - Frtit Well - Cilll&#13;
Phone: 649-6700 I&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK I&#13;
3021 • 75TH ST.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7dayi&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone i,51-9141&#13;
THE&#13;
OT&#13;
SI&#13;
HER&#13;
DE&#13;
COFFEE •&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood · Wi,...,,. 2704 Lothrop ,he., ••••n•,&#13;
cl&#13;
et ser&#13;
Students get red carp&#13;
else 'l&#13;
(So does everyone &#13;
By.KEN KONKOL&#13;
In the last issue Mr. Gruhl had a long&#13;
article called "The Academic Totem&#13;
polell in which he advanced the theory&#13;
that the Administration at this institution&#13;
knew what they were doing since they&#13;
were hired through a competitive&#13;
screening process. Now, just because an&#13;
administrator is hired doesn't mean he is&#13;
competent, it justmeans that ~e may have&#13;
been hired to carryon the Incompetent&#13;
policies of those who hired him as in the&#13;
case of Vice Chancellor Harris and Dean&#13;
MacKinney, who by their own words ha ve&#13;
proved their own worl?1essness. As for&#13;
respecting someone with an academic&#13;
degree and standing in awe of them, I have&#13;
yet to respect an idiot and the ~n.ly awe I&#13;
have is that most of OUf adminIstrators&#13;
weren't dismissed already. Having a PhD&#13;
doesn't make a .man competent, it just&#13;
makes him more able to carry out any&#13;
incompetent policies he might have, I&#13;
make no pretentions of telling anyone how&#13;
to run things, I just say dismiss the present&#13;
crop of wrong-doers and hire some people&#13;
who can do the job right. Being a teacher&#13;
and a PhD do not necessarily go hand-inhand,&#13;
in fact I find those instructors who&#13;
are sweating at getting their doctorates&#13;
are often poorer teachers than those who&#13;
put their students first. The student is the&#13;
ONLY reason this school exists, either&#13;
serve him or leave. One of the finest&#13;
researchers at this school also holds the&#13;
undisputed title of worst teacher, (He no&#13;
doubt will soon be granted tenure.)&#13;
+ + +&#13;
About two weeks ago I turned in a news&#13;
story about the Sergeant Shriver visit to&#13;
Aspin headquarters, but due to some foulup&#13;
it was not printed then or last ~week.&#13;
Following are a few excerpts from his&#13;
speech:&#13;
"The President's aides are those&#13;
responsible for bringing those outside&#13;
agitators to disrupt his speeches. Nixon&#13;
must run against something."&#13;
IIw&#13;
LEADER&#13;
.dow&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE&#13;
ll\;&#13;
1I(~&#13;
wdivi~uu~&#13;
... and make it our business&#13;
to know what our individual&#13;
customers want and need&#13;
We specialize in fashions&#13;
geared to modern living&#13;
hand·picked for style, qual·&#13;
ity and value. And, most&#13;
importallt. :you can' count on&#13;
prompt. courteous. personal&#13;
serviGe at all times C,ome&#13;
In and browse .. see how much&#13;
more fun it is to shop in a&#13;
relaxed. friendly atmosphere ..&#13;
Hope to see you ... soonl&#13;
MAaCURITIE'S&#13;
6207 • nnd Avenue&#13;
kenosha, Wisconsin 531 AO&#13;
Phone: 652·2681&#13;
"Th Ke ent State indictments should b&#13;
handled bv rd' e&#13;
od . e er-a! IOvestigalion&#13;
m w~rated by an ou.tside thir-d party:' .&#13;
b en asked by this writer how he felt&#13;
a oo.t . faculty supression by university&#13;
ad,~tnlstrators in our colleges. be replied'&#13;
Teachers and students should form an&#13;
atmosphere where faculty and students&#13;
can :~eate progress. As in football the&#13;
~d~T1Intstration should help the player~. As&#13;
It IS, Our faculties are weighted with the&#13;
bureaucracy of administration. We have&#13;
freel.oade~s administering things. Buck.&#13;
pa.s~tng IS a good definition for adminIstration&#13;
.':&#13;
I later asked Mr. Aspin (Soon&#13;
Cong,ressman Aspin) how he felt about the&#13;
Pubhsh or Perish philosophy nurtured bv&#13;
Dean MacKinney in the paper I gave hi~.&#13;
He answered:&#13;
"Publish or Perish in our universities&#13;
has gone too far. Teachers should be hired&#13;
to teach and only to teach. Administration&#13;
should krep their hands off:'&#13;
So you see. even our politicians who&#13;
usu~lly side with the establishment. at£&gt;&#13;
agamst the lousey way our administralors&#13;
are handling things.&#13;
There have been a number of students&#13;
indicted at Kent State. Instead of persecuting&#13;
the student. let's make those&#13;
balistics tests public and find out which&#13;
National Guardsmen murdered who. try&#13;
them for Murder 1, and settle this Ihing&#13;
one way or the other.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Some of those students who have&#13;
received parking tickets have found out&#13;
that they cannot appeal. Tickets are&#13;
handled by the Board of Regents, and if&#13;
you feel they are unjust and refuse to pay.&#13;
your records are held up until you do. Also,&#13;
a parking ticket on campus can cost five&#13;
times what you would pay on the city&#13;
streets. Where does this money go?&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The names of the Tenure and&#13;
Curriculum Committee have been&#13;
released, If you have a beef about your&#13;
favorite instructor being canned, write one&#13;
or all of the following: Leon Applebaum,&#13;
Stella Gray, Jim Shea, Anna Williams.&#13;
Eric Forrest, Harry Lantz, John Vozza.&#13;
I am compiling a list of those instructors&#13;
and administrators this school would be.&#13;
better off without to be printed in the local&#13;
newspapers before the committee makes&#13;
their final decisions for this year. Any&#13;
suggestions for or against, write to me&#13;
care of Newscope.&#13;
So far only three Psychology instructors&#13;
have received a total of six votes as&#13;
competent, while two others have received&#13;
23 votes as most incompetenl teacher at&#13;
this school. Does anyone else wish to vote?&#13;
Results will be published in my first&#13;
December column,&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE'&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Murphy&#13;
Exhibiting Ceramics&#13;
NEW UW PRESIDE:\T&#13;
JOHN WEAVER '.\\'S:&#13;
"TIle Un~verslty of WI. on. 10 I. 00(' (If&#13;
the great centers 01 learnmg and of un&#13;
fettered InqUIr) In the world II fanwd&#13;
Iradlllons call In these troobled and fa I&#13;
movulg days not alone for preservation.&#13;
bul for readaptaticn and enhan('( mont u&#13;
well"&#13;
Dr Weaver adds" "The hcarllwal ollhl&#13;
vital In tnuuon deserv . pretecnon. both&#13;
from rbose destructive rorco that (.·.HI&#13;
bnng dlsruphon from wrthm and from&#13;
those potenuatly crippling fnrc.Ts of&#13;
repression that may bear down UpOIl 11&#13;
from wuheut."&#13;
Ceramist John Satre Murphy. a member&#13;
of the art faculty. IS represented by foor&#13;
works in two Current shews&#13;
Murphy is exhibiting a stoneware drip&#13;
pot and a procelam wall hanging at the Art&#13;
National Round Up. presently on display in&#13;
Las Vegas.&#13;
Two of his stoneware bowls with&#13;
platinum and gold lusters Will be included&#13;
in the Craft Committment Show which&#13;
opens Dec. 7 at the Rochesler Minn.I Arl&#13;
Center. The invitational show Will Ir3n'I&#13;
for two years to various galleries around&#13;
the country.&#13;
Murphy's ceramics have been widelv&#13;
exhibited and were included 10 last wi~-&#13;
tee's l\lontana Crafstmen Exhibit at theSmithsonian&#13;
Institution. :\Iurphy. who&#13;
received his graduate degree from the&#13;
University of .10ntana, joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty lasl year.&#13;
658-2233&#13;
UW ENROLLMENT&#13;
P 4 PER CENT&#13;
University of Wisconsin enrollment has&#13;
reached a neY.·high of 67,874 students. an&#13;
increase of four per cenl o"er 1969-70 for&#13;
the campuses.&#13;
All of the net additional students are&#13;
Wisconsin residents and nearly all of them&#13;
are undergraduates.&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTl1 CITY LIMITS&#13;
1040 as1ers .Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almandine- Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RIB&#13;
•&#13;
By. KEN KONKOL&#13;
In the last issue Mr. Gruhl had a long&#13;
article called "The Academic Totem&#13;
Pole" in which he advanced the theory&#13;
that the Administration at this institution&#13;
knew what they were doing since they&#13;
were hired through a competitive&#13;
screening process. Now, just because an&#13;
administrator is hired doesn't mean he is&#13;
competent, it just;neans that he may have&#13;
t,een hired to carry on the incompetent&#13;
policies of those who hired him as in the&#13;
case of Vice Chancellor Harris and Dean&#13;
MacKinney, who by their own words have&#13;
proved their own wort~essness. As for&#13;
respecting someone with an academic&#13;
degree and standing in awe of them, I have&#13;
vet to respect an idiot and the only awe I&#13;
iiave is that most of our administrators&#13;
• weren't dismissed already. Having a PhD&#13;
doesn;t make a man competent, it just&#13;
makes him more able to carry out any&#13;
incompetent policies he might have. I&#13;
make no pretentions of telling anyone how&#13;
to run things, I just say dismiss the present&#13;
crop of wrong-doers and hire some people&#13;
who can do the job right. Being a teacher&#13;
and a PhD do not necessarily go hand-inhand,&#13;
in fact I find those instructors who&#13;
are sweating at getting their doctorates&#13;
are often poorer teachers than those who&#13;
put their students first. The student is the&#13;
ONLY reason this school exists, either&#13;
serve him or leave. One of the finest&#13;
researchers at this school also holds the&#13;
undisputed title of worst teacher. (He no&#13;
doubt will soon be granted tenure.)&#13;
+ + +&#13;
About two weeks ago I turned in a news&#13;
story about the Sergeant Shriver visit to&#13;
Aspin headquarters, but due to som~ foulup&#13;
it was not printed then or last week.&#13;
Following are a few excerpts from his&#13;
speech:&#13;
"The President's aides are those&#13;
responsible for bringing those outside&#13;
agitators to disrupt his speeches. Nixon&#13;
must run against something."&#13;
/lie&#13;
LEADER&#13;
dou&#13;
lr\;&#13;
DOWNTOWN /KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE&#13;
1ftr&#13;
uuliv,'clua~&#13;
... and make it our business&#13;
to know what our individual&#13;
customers want and need&#13;
We specialize in fashions&#13;
geared to modern living&#13;
hand-picked for style. quality&#13;
and value. And, most&#13;
important. you can count on&#13;
prompt. courteous. personal&#13;
service at all times. C_ome&#13;
in and browse .. see how much&#13;
more fun 1! is to shop in a&#13;
relaxed. friendly atmosphere.&#13;
Hope to see you . _ . soon'&#13;
MARGURI'ITE'S&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
"Th K&#13;
h e ent State indictment. hould b andled bv f d . e - e eral investigation m~erated by an outside third partv:· .&#13;
b hen asked by this writer how tie felt a ou_t . faculty supression by university administrators in our colleges h 1&#13;
.ed "T h . e rep 1 · t eac ers and student should form a~&#13;
a mosphere where faculty and tudent can _c~eate progress. As m football the&#13;
~d~m1stration ~hould help the player'. As&#13;
it is, our faculties are weighted with the&#13;
bureaucracy of administration. We ha\'e&#13;
freel_oade:s administering things. Buckpa_s~mg&#13;
is a good definition for ad- m1mstration ...&#13;
I later asked !\lr. Aspin I oon&#13;
Cong_ressman Aspinl how he felt about the&#13;
Pubhsh or Perish philosophy nurtured bv&#13;
Dean MacKinney in the paper 1 gaH~ ht~&#13;
He answered:&#13;
"Publish or Perish in our universities&#13;
has gone too far. Teachers should be hired&#13;
to teach and only to teach. Administration&#13;
should kfep their hands off."&#13;
So you see, e\·en our politicians who&#13;
usu~lly side with the E&gt;stabli hment. are&#13;
against the lousey way our administrator· are handling things.&#13;
_ T_here have been a number of students&#13;
md1cted at Kent State. Instead of persecuting&#13;
the student, let's make tho e&#13;
balistics tests public and find out which&#13;
National Guardsmen murdered who. tr\'&#13;
them for Murder 1, and settle this thing one way or the other.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Some of those students who have&#13;
received parking tickets have found out&#13;
that they cannot appeal. Tickets are&#13;
handled by the Board of Regents, and if&#13;
you feel they are unjust and refuse to pay.&#13;
your records are held up until you do. Also.&#13;
a parking ticket on campus can cost five&#13;
times what you would pay on the city&#13;
streets. Where does this money go?&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The names of the Tenure and&#13;
Curriculum Committee have been&#13;
released. If you have a beef about your&#13;
favorite instructor being canned, write one&#13;
or all of the following : Leon Applebaum,&#13;
Stella Gray, Jim Shea, Anna Williams.&#13;
Eric Forrest, Harry Lantz, John Vozza.&#13;
I am compiling a list of those instructors&#13;
and administrators this school would be&#13;
better off without to be printed in the local&#13;
newspapers before the committee makes&#13;
their final decisions for this year. Any&#13;
suggestions for or against, write to me&#13;
care of Newscope.&#13;
So far only three Psychology instructors&#13;
have received a total of six votes as&#13;
competent, while two others have received&#13;
23 votes as most incompetent teacher at&#13;
this school. Does anyone else wish to vote?&#13;
Results will be published in my first&#13;
December column.&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE·&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Murphy&#13;
Exhibiting Ceramics&#13;
Cerami t John a re Murphy. a m mber&#13;
of the art facult) _ r pr ented by four&#13;
work in two curr nt :hO\\ .-&#13;
. turphy i exhibiting a tonewar drip&#13;
pot and a procelain wall hanging at the rt&#13;
'ational Round p. pres ntly on di. play in&#13;
Las Vega .&#13;
Two of hi toneware bowl "ith&#13;
platinum and gold lu .. ters "ill be iocluded&#13;
in the Craft Committmenl hO\\ \\"hich&#13;
open Dec. 7 at the Roch _ ter (. Jinn.) rl&#13;
Center. The in\'itational how will tra\· I&#13;
for two years to \"3nou gallen&#13;
the countrv.&#13;
:\lurphy·· ceramic ha\ e n \\id h&#13;
exhibited and \\ ere included m la, t "i~-&#13;
ter·s . lontana Craf. tm n E. h1b1t at th&#13;
Smithsonian ln:titution_ • lurphy. \\ho&#13;
recei\'ed hi graduate dt r('(' fr m th&#13;
lini\'er ity of . lonlana . join d the&#13;
Park ide faculty la:t year.&#13;
U\\' E:'\R LLl\lE. "T&#13;
UP 4 PER E. "T&#13;
ni\'er ity or Wi con in enrollment ha.&#13;
reached a new high of 67,874 .-1udenl.. an&#13;
increase of four per cent O\·er I ;o for&#13;
the campu es.&#13;
All or the net additional tudents are&#13;
Wiscon in residents and nearlv all or th m&#13;
are undergraduates. ·&#13;
65&amp;-2233&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTli CITY L MITS&#13;
asters 8040&#13;
.Sheridan Rd.&#13;
•&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Souce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RIB &#13;
Example Of New Breed Of police&#13;
and more people within the i\lStitution will&#13;
progress, be disSatisfied."&#13;
As for confrontations on C~PUSt he&#13;
contended that "in urban Amenca, 1.97~1a&#13;
great many students, probably a maJorIty,&#13;
bring with them to the c~pus a&#13;
tremendous hostility to the police. The&#13;
hostility is not restricted to those who are&#13;
black and poor." . . .&#13;
'This reservoir of hostihty. he said,&#13;
"provides a ready tool for thos~ who would&#13;
use it. If a police over:r~~tlOn ~an. be&#13;
provoked. radical actIVIties win Immediate&#13;
converts among the ~called&#13;
silent majority. Previously uncommitted&#13;
students are 'radicalized'. The pollee are&#13;
the common enemy and 'gelling the pigs&#13;
off campus' becomes the common goal.&#13;
"We in Madison," said Hanson, "have&#13;
learned that just the appearance of the&#13;
police on campus in some circumstances&#13;
and under some conditions can turn a calm&#13;
meeting into an angry confrontation. But&#13;
there is no fail-safe formula for use by&#13;
Wliversity and police officials in determining&#13;
when the appearance of police on&#13;
campus quells or incites mobs.&#13;
"And while student anger at the&#13;
presence of police on campus is predictable/'&#13;
he pointed out, "the fact remains&#13;
that college campuses are particularly&#13;
vulnerable and, against the threat of open&#13;
force, university officials have no choice&#13;
but to use their own police and to call in&#13;
outside police whenever the threat is&#13;
heyond the capacity of the campus police&#13;
forces. "&#13;
The Progressive was founded in 1909at&#13;
Madison by Senator Robert ("Fighting&#13;
Bob") LaFollette, the famous anti-war&#13;
dissenter who years earlier was a student&#13;
on the University of Wisconsin campus at&#13;
Madison. The magazine now circulates in&#13;
all 50 states and 120 foreign countries.&#13;
The pnme causes for student disturbances.&#13;
id Ralph E Hanson. head of&#13;
campus securit)' forces at the Uruversity&#13;
oi W,scon 10. are "the .bihty, social&#13;
con .crence. political sensitivity. and&#13;
hone t reall 10 of tnday's students&#13;
"I believe that . tudents toda)" take&#13;
IOUI) the .deal Iaught in schools and&#13;
churche , .nd oiten .t home, but "hen&#13;
th y g I ""tsld ,. 10 a college or&#13;
uOlvenllly. the)· a system lhat denies&#13;
Its .de I rn re.l hre ..&#13;
H n'lOf\. hose .nalysi or campus&#13;
vteteoce ppears In the tcvember i ue of&#13;
Pro~ he m swne, i w.rector of&#13;
prut 'lion nd secunt) on the Madison&#13;
c mpU&#13;
In bnri prela to hts article. "&#13;
. onhng It" on Camp ", TIle ProtlT h·e&#13;
nbed 1\ n_,.nd' H.,·en PolICe&#13;
tlu f J.m Ahern, "ho rved on the&#13;
Pr Id nt' Comm, ,on on Campus&#13;
'or I, .. mpl 01 ". n"" breed 01&#13;
puli , till tr. IC II) limIted ,n number,"&#13;
thatl I' m t'lI"I from th riot-torn c,tles&#13;
ndeRl of ron .,&#13;
1\ nson "I atr lned police oificer," the&#13;
m 4&amp;1100 .d, """00 ha ,,"on many&#13;
fn lOon prot'StlOg tudents because&#13;
he h lrequ II) expr concern to gel&#13;
I th c. 01 conn,ct rather lhan to&#13;
empha lie th club .nd gun "&#13;
Th U II" police chI I cited these areas&#13;
requiring prompt attentton to a..-ert&#13;
(urtht'f "'1Olence on campus'&#13;
'·Ont.' - Un,..er ',lles and colleges must&#13;
'cum mor rrIr"ant to current 1 uesII&#13;
AVY ou o&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Here lS ,J. eood WilY to dis·&#13;
cover \lrh:u 'Fisher sound'&#13;
1\ liLe PI.J) J.record on the&#13;
Fisher 125. Play the same&#13;
rC\;ord on .lnolher make&#13;
I ,tcn tor lhe: difference.&#13;
,,""\pc~ull) In the ...ery low&#13;
J.nd vcr} high rrequcncie&#13;
A fuht, Jim1'ly JOlmds&#13;
"""u. And the Fisher 125&#13;
I the firsl complete AMfM&#13;
lerN MUSIC Center&#13;
101Ot.lL:l arc.u 3J 11'\Ouods&#13;
.... ndH •••&#13;
Fl_rSI.,eo'&#13;
40 W~lll u( M~ P\J_CI&#13;
IIHH • \\ Iik' R..ne-t At.&#13;
'oJr" kl:lnl:" 1 ..nd FM&#13;
)lcrN ""lib FET ..no! Ie" In&#13;
hl'n~ etW ~tOJ If slqn .....&#13;
\pulJ AUlomatl" Turntablt&#13;
_,11'1 Cut Cunltol. Anli-Sl..:ll&#13;
'''1 \ th'tn-llto.: ,h"l·ofT • T .. -n&#13;
n" sllUtly.MilllChtd TwoW;I)&#13;
rub, S&gt;",ICIM• Full&#13;
,\ud-.. ConHoh Wllh T ~pt and&#13;
~h,clhllot1o&#13;
Hammond Orton&#13;
Stud_ofK_&#13;
J2/5 60111SI.&#13;
658-/80/&#13;
SPIOIAL '.OLUDES&#13;
SIM filII llleOIlDS&#13;
ALCOA subs·d· h· . . • I ,Iary as Immediate openings for&#13;
parttlme employment .&#13;
3 evttnings plus Satu.rdays $57.50&#13;
Scholarships available·&#13;
see Mr. OHeson for an interview on T~esday Nov. 10&#13;
at Greenquist Hall '&#13;
social peace, war,&#13;
discrimination.&#13;
"Two _ A much larger segment of our&#13;
society must be brought into our colleges&#13;
and universities.&#13;
"Three - The vast. uncommitted, silent&#13;
majority of our student and faculty&#13;
populations must become- more involved.&#13;
"Four _ More faculty, staff, and&#13;
students must be involved in decisionmaking&#13;
processes within the university. 10&#13;
other words, the democratic process&#13;
should be applied to our institutions of&#13;
higher learning.&#13;
"Five _ Minorities should be prevented&#13;
from manipulating the campuses and&#13;
uni....ersltles for their own private purposes&#13;
"SiX _ The administrative processes of&#13;
universities and campuses have got to be&#13;
streamlined and made more responsive to&#13;
a rapidly changing and volatile social&#13;
atmosphere and climate. It&#13;
Pointing up the conflict that students see&#13;
between society'S stated ideals and its&#13;
practices, Hanson said:&#13;
"Racial injustice and the war in Vietnam&#13;
stand out as prime illustrations of our&#13;
society's deviation from professed ideals&#13;
and of the slowness with which the system&#13;
relorms itself. That they seemingly can do&#13;
little to correct the wrongs through conventional&#13;
political machinery tends--to&#13;
produce in the most idealistic and&#13;
energetic students a strong sense of&#13;
frustration. It&#13;
II lany of these idealists/' Hanson&#13;
continued, "have developed the idea that&#13;
these: flaws are end~mic in the workings of&#13;
our democracy. They argue that their&#13;
form of pressure - direct action, sit-ins,&#13;
and in some cases, physical violence - is a&#13;
legitimate tool comparable to other forms&#13;
of pressure such as large political contributions,&#13;
lobbying, and the like.&#13;
"For some of these students," Hanson&#13;
writes, "their universities have become&#13;
slD"rogates for society. The university&#13;
adminlslralion is close at hand. One can&#13;
easily bedevil and strike out at it. U thE&#13;
frustrated activist cannot beat the system,&#13;
he can at least insist that the university nol&#13;
lend itsell to the system."&#13;
He asked, "May not the fault lie with us&#13;
of the older generation?&#13;
"Must we not acknowledge that we have&#13;
somehow failed to transmit to many of the&#13;
ablest young men and women a sense of&#13;
values, of reason, order and moderation,&#13;
or an appreciation of the fact that freedom&#13;
depends upon voluntary restraint?"&#13;
Universities contribute to student&#13;
unrest, he said, because they have not&#13;
made the "radical changes" needed to&#13;
meet "the demands of a rapidly changing&#13;
and dynamic society," and they "still tend&#13;
to be authoritarian, formal, and paternalistic&#13;
toward students."&#13;
&lt;lIt seems clear eveD to a casual observer,"&#13;
Hanson said, "that most of the&#13;
important campus decisions are made&#13;
largely on tbe basis of who has the most&#13;
power. When power is concentrated in&#13;
formal, authoritarian structures, more&#13;
Rm. 110&#13;
AMBITIOUS?&#13;
M!Jdern Language C/t,b&#13;
A meeting Was h~ld Oct. 29in r&#13;
Greenqwst to dISCUss plans00rn10l1t&#13;
Parkside Modern Language Clubfor IIle&#13;
Several tdeas were tossed ar .&#13;
film, Thomas Mann's "Herr ~ 8Ilda&#13;
(Man and Dog) will he prese~ !IQ",t&#13;
club on Tuesday, Nov. 24, at the by IIle&#13;
lure Hall at Greenquist; the u l~ '-&#13;
p.m. une "I",&#13;
Representatives from th&#13;
languages were elected to act e virioooa&#13;
representatives from their res as ........&#13;
of i~terest. They were: Di~ti"lldd&#13;
Spamsh; Dana Williams F ne Kaae,&#13;
Rick Beiser, German. M.:oy ~ IIId&#13;
other mterested students also- lad&#13;
attendance and plansfor fUluref~ II&#13;
plays were discussed. lad&#13;
Anyone Wishing membershi or&#13;
ideas of what they would like ~ d _till&#13;
the club may contact an 0 WitIIil&#13;
representatives or the H~ l1.Ibt&#13;
Department. mlmu..&#13;
4437 - 22nd Aven.1&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
-Free Delivery&#13;
654.Q774&#13;
~..MP"&#13;
~.&#13;
10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Example Of New Breed Of Police Mpdern Language Clztb&#13;
A meeting was held Oct. 29 i&#13;
Greenquist to discuss pla~oom 104 a&#13;
Parkside ~odern Language Club for the&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
S.. and Hear&#13;
Fisher Stereo!&#13;
cnlcr&#13;
•nd&#13;
PECIAL INCLUDES&#13;
$It FIIE1&#13;
E RECORDS&#13;
0&#13;
pe ce, war, ocial and more people within the institution will&#13;
progress, be dissatisfied." · rimination.&#13;
"T\\o - A much larger segment of our&#13;
iety must be brought into our colleges&#13;
d unh ties.&#13;
"Three - The va t, uncommitted, silent&#13;
m j ity or our tudent and faculty&#13;
pul lions must become- more involved.&#13;
''Four - lore faculty, staff, and&#13;
uden mu t be involved in decisionm&#13;
in pr within the university. In&#13;
oth \\Or , the democratic process&#13;
uld be applied to our institutions of&#13;
high r learning.&#13;
"Fl\ e - . tinorities hould be prevented&#13;
fr m manipulating the campuses and&#13;
LD'liv itie for their own priyate pur-&#13;
" i · - The administrative processes of&#13;
un ver"itie and campuses have got to be&#13;
tr amlined and made more re ponsive to&#13;
a rapidly changing and volatile social&#13;
atm p re and climate."&#13;
Pointing up the conflict that students see&#13;
tween society's stated ideals and its&#13;
pract ·, Hanson said:&#13;
"Racial inju lice and the war in Vietnam&#13;
tand out a prime illustrations of our&#13;
iety' _ d viation from professed ideals&#13;
and of the lowness with which the system&#13;
reform.:. it If. That they seemingly can do&#13;
htUe to correct the \\Tongs through con-&#13;
\ ntional political machinery tends to&#13;
produce in the most idealistic and&#13;
en rgetic llldents a strong sense of&#13;
fru tration."&#13;
" Ian} of these idealists," Hanson&#13;
continued, "have developed the idea that&#13;
th e flaw are endillllic in the workings of&#13;
our democracy. They argue that their&#13;
form of pressure - direct action, sit-ins.&#13;
and in some cases, physical violence - is a&#13;
legitimate tool comparable to other forms&#13;
of pressure such as large political contributions,&#13;
lobbying, and the like.&#13;
"For some of these students," Hanson&#13;
·writes, "their universities have become&#13;
urrogates for society. The university&#13;
administration is close at hand. One can&#13;
easily bedevil and strike out at it. ff the&#13;
frustrated activist cannot beat the system,&#13;
he can at least insist that the university not&#13;
lend itself to the system."&#13;
He asked, " fay not the fault lie with us&#13;
of the older generation?&#13;
"Must we not acknowledge that we have&#13;
somehow failed to transmit to many of the&#13;
ablest young men and women a sense of&#13;
values, of reason, order and moderation,&#13;
or an appreciation of the fact that freedom&#13;
depends upon voluntary restraint?"&#13;
Universities contribute to student&#13;
unrest, he said, because they have not&#13;
made the "radical changes" needed to&#13;
meet "the demands of a rapidly changing&#13;
and dynamic society," and they "still tend&#13;
to be authoritarian, formal, and paternalistic&#13;
toward students."&#13;
"It seems clear even to a casual observer,"&#13;
Hanson said, " that most of the&#13;
important campus decisions are made&#13;
largely on the basis of who has the most&#13;
power. When power is concentrated in&#13;
formal, authoritarian structures, more&#13;
AMBITIOUS?&#13;
As for confrontations on c~m~us, he&#13;
contended that "in urban Amenca, ~97~, a&#13;
great many students, probably a maJonty,&#13;
bring with them to the c~pus a&#13;
tremendous hostility to the police. The&#13;
hostility is not restricted to those who are&#13;
black and poor." . . . This reservoir of hostility, he said,&#13;
"provides a ready tool for thos~ who would&#13;
use it. If a police over-reaction ~an. be&#13;
provoked, radical activities wm immediate&#13;
converts among the so-called&#13;
silent majority. Previously unco~mitted&#13;
students are 'radicalized'. The pohce are&#13;
the common enemy and 'getting the pigs&#13;
off campus' becomes the common goal.&#13;
"We in Madison," said Hanson, "have&#13;
learned that just the appearance of the&#13;
police on campus in some circumstances&#13;
and under some conditions can turn a calm&#13;
meeting into an angry confrontation. But&#13;
there is no fail-safe formula for use by&#13;
university and police officials in determining&#13;
when the appearance of police on&#13;
campus quells or incites mobs.&#13;
"And while student anger at the&#13;
presence of police on campus is predictable,"&#13;
he pointed out, "the fact remains&#13;
that college campuses are particularly&#13;
vulnerable and, against the threat of open&#13;
force, university officials have no choice&#13;
but to use their own police and to call in&#13;
outside police whenever the threat is&#13;
beyond the capacity of the campus police&#13;
forces."&#13;
The Progressive was founded in 1909 at&#13;
Madison by Senator Robert ("Fighting&#13;
Bob") LaFollette, the famous anti-war&#13;
dissenter who years earlier was a student&#13;
on the University of Wisconsin campus at&#13;
Madison. The magazine now circulates in&#13;
all 50 states and 120 foreign countries.&#13;
Several ideas were tossed ar ·&#13;
film, Thomas Mann's "Herr 0&#13;
1lnd a'-1 1&#13;
(Man and Dog) will be prese:~ }{II'-!&#13;
club on Tuesday, Nov. 24, at the by the&#13;
ture Hall at Greenquist; the r 1&#13;
~ ~ p.m. une 18 8·11&#13;
Representatives from the . languages were elected to act va110lla&#13;
representatives from their res~sti 5&#13;
ludeiii&#13;
of i~terest. They were: Dia ve fteJd&#13;
Spamsh; Dana Williams Fr: ~ Rick Beiser, German. M~y fa:; ~ other interested students also ty ~ attendance and plans for future r~':' 111&#13;
plays were discussed. hu11 ~&#13;
Anyone wishing membership&#13;
ideas of what they would like to : 0&#13;
ha.~ the club may contact an Willia&#13;
representatives or the H~ ci. !ht&#13;
Department. man,u&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53!4Q&#13;
Free Delivery •&#13;
654-0774 ..&#13;
ALCOA subs·d· h · . . •&#13;
1 1ary as 1mmed1ate openings for&#13;
parthme employment ·&#13;
3 evenings plus Satu.rdays $57.50&#13;
Scholarships available ·&#13;
see Mr. Otteson for an interview on TUesday, Nov. 10&#13;
at Greenquist Hall&#13;
Rm. 110 10:00 a.m. to 2:00. p.m. &#13;
Drink to that&#13;
major cereal grains - corn, rye, wheat&#13;
and barley malt - and contain no distilled&#13;
spirits less than two years old. They are&#13;
generally bottled at six years of age or&#13;
more, Uless than four years old, it's age&#13;
'must be listed on the label.&#13;
Although the U.s. definition of Canadian&#13;
whiskey does not mention proof, a&#13;
111 .covering U.S. regulation requires that all&#13;
_~.~IY -'- whiskies on the American market must be&#13;
- U'f/V"1I'd at least 80 proof or higher. Canadian&#13;
, " t71I. ..,N&gt;_ whiskey is bottled at 70 degrees proof&#13;
bf)u,O' under the Sykes method. However, the&#13;
Canadian 70 degrees proof is exactly the&#13;
BARBER STUDIO same as the U,S. 80 proof.&#13;
, Irish whiskey is a distinctive product of&#13;
SPECIAl.IZEINMENSHAIR Ireland, produced either in the Irish&#13;
STYLING Republic or in Northern Ireland, in&#13;
STYl.ECUTTING&amp; SHAPING compliance with the laws regulating the&#13;
HAIRPEKES production of Irish whiskey, and conAPPOINTMENTS&#13;
taining no distilled spirits less than three&#13;
1&#13;
..:7.:::SO~9..:4:::5TH.:.:.;.:.:A::.V::E,-...:6::9c:.4-_46=03~years old.&#13;
. As for aging, Irish distillers helieve in&#13;
long maturation to bring out the full flavor&#13;
and bouquet of their products. As the Irish&#13;
say, in the making of whiskey, it takes&#13;
seven days of a man's time and seven&#13;
years of the whiskey's time.&#13;
Whiskey in America: 1903, Michael&#13;
Joseph Owens invented the automatic&#13;
hottlemaking machine; 1909, President&#13;
William Howard Taft issued a legal&#13;
decision defining whiskey types .&#13;
•Recipe for the week: ZOrbas Dance, 1\2&#13;
jigger of Metaxa Brandy and \2 jigger&#13;
Metaxa Ouzo, over cracked ice packed in&#13;
an old fashion glass, ·add a twist of lemon&#13;
and sip and away you go, Esygian.&#13;
Any questions pertaining to the subjects&#13;
By JIM JANIS&#13;
Today's Subject: Scotch, Canadian and&#13;
Irish Whiskies.&#13;
SCotch whiskies are a product of&#13;
SCotland, produced in Scotland in compliance&#13;
with the laws of Great Britain&#13;
regulating the production of Scotch&#13;
whiskey.&#13;
Most SCotch brands are blends of grain&#13;
whiskies and malt whiskies, produced by,&#13;
more than 100 distilleries, among which&#13;
there are four distinct types, each coming&#13;
from a different part of Scotland. There&#13;
are many reasons why Scotch from one&#13;
area of SCotland differs from Scotches of&#13;
other areas.&#13;
Local conditions - water, peat and&#13;
climate and traditional distilling practices&#13;
of individual distilleries are all factors.&#13;
SCotch sales in the U.S. have been&#13;
fantastic. Since 1952 sales have almost&#13;
quadrupled.&#13;
canadian whiskies are whiskey blends.&#13;
canadian whiskies are made from the&#13;
.&#13;
DELICA lESSEN - BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 flm-SECOND STIfET&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Last week thIS writer was fortunate&#13;
enough to he invited to the Holiday Trade&#13;
Presentation of the Schenley Affiliated&#13;
Brands Corp. to witness some of the new&#13;
holiday packaging for .the coming&#13;
hohdays. Let me tell you, it was very&#13;
i~t:Jressive and it solved a lot of my giftgrving&#13;
problems.&#13;
Above is a photo taken at the showing.&#13;
Along with your writer are the salesmen&#13;
who represent the Schenley line-In this&#13;
area from Metro R-K, from left to right,&#13;
Mik~ Zicarelli, yours truly, Diek&#13;
Cuminskey, Sales Manager Nate Rudman&#13;
and Arvin Weeks.&#13;
BLAZE A&#13;
TRAIL JO&#13;
ISERMANN'S&#13;
For All the&#13;
Latest Fashions,&#13;
By Leading Names&#13;
At - Realistic Prices&#13;
ISERMANH'S&#13;
614 56th ST.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
THE UNIVERSAL PEACE;&#13;
(my answer to "Universal Incendiary")&#13;
I'm well,&#13;
With love pervading my being.&#13;
His Holy Spirit inflames my soul,&#13;
It expands and wants out:&#13;
Out of my heart,&#13;
This feeling of brotherhood!&#13;
(The conflagration of hate is in the past,&#13;
And somehow I feel it will never return.)&#13;
The walls of hate fell -&#13;
And with- it&#13;
A chain reaction of love&#13;
Explodes from .my every fiber!&#13;
Springs of living water are before me&#13;
It soothes my outstretched band,&#13;
And I care!&#13;
I&#13;
.want&#13;
all to&#13;
love.&#13;
his&#13;
know&#13;
SPORTSFEST&#13;
Sportslest will be on December 4-S lhil&#13;
year. This will be a weekend III varsity&#13;
sports and exhibitions. Every varsity team&#13;
will show its skilts all throughout this two&#13;
day period.&#13;
This year there is going to be a conlest&#13;
involved with SPORTSFEST, the queens&#13;
contesl This will be a kind III Parltaide&#13;
homecoming for the faU.&#13;
Each varsity sport and athletic club wOJ&#13;
sponsor one girl. The way she becomes a&#13;
queen is decided on how many Ranger&#13;
buttons and Ranger stickers each club&#13;
sells. At Sportsfest the school mascot allo&#13;
will be decided,&#13;
Burnings and lootings were my immaturity,&#13;
No longer am I persecuted,&#13;
I bave eliminated bate and fear!&#13;
I can work within the system&#13;
To create new values of life!&#13;
The blessings of Peace enfold me;&#13;
And I have everything!&#13;
Everything is mine!&#13;
I'm saved! with my dog&#13;
and my daisies,&#13;
and God's eternal son for warmth.&#13;
Amen&#13;
Eileen Jenkins&#13;
of these articles or your entertaining&#13;
needs, write to Jim Janis care of&#13;
Newscope.&#13;
Next week: Brandy, Imported and&#13;
Domestic.&#13;
KENOSHA'Sl.ARGESTSEl.ECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNTPRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTSCENTER&#13;
t4TH AVE.AT 62NDST&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shri mp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Mon•• y.Ttlunciay $1.95&#13;
friday-Sunday $2.25&#13;
Chll...... $1.10&#13;
LADIESNITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues- 8:30 to 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, second drlnk lor 10c&#13;
SUNDAYSPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits aod gravy&#13;
"VING: m. a lIat. I .... ·11, .•.&#13;
... -ftoIn. I ,.•.-11 , .• ,&#13;
"'II~"";&#13;
fOO6 She,1cI.tn !d_&#13;
,....,. 694-1733&#13;
The \IB RAT "Is&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
,&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m,&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20~&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily' 9 A.M.-12 _P.M.&#13;
1~~BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
I' 11 o·rink to that&#13;
By JIM JANIS&#13;
Today's Subject: Scotch, Canadian and&#13;
Irish Whiskies.&#13;
Scotch whiskies are a product of&#13;
Scotland, produced in Scotland in compliance&#13;
with the laws of Great Britain&#13;
regulating the production of Scotch&#13;
whiskey.&#13;
Most Scotch brands are blends of grain&#13;
whiskies and malt whiskies, produced by&#13;
more than 100 distilleries, among which&#13;
there are four distinct types, each coming&#13;
from a different part of Scotland. There&#13;
are many reasons why Scotch from one&#13;
area of Scotland differs from Scotches of&#13;
other areas.&#13;
Local conditions - water, peat and&#13;
climate and traditional distilling practices&#13;
of individual distilleries are all factors.&#13;
Scotch sales in the U.S. have been&#13;
fantastic. Since 1952 sales have- almost&#13;
quadrupled.&#13;
Canadian whiskies are whiskey blends.&#13;
Canadian whiskies are made front the&#13;
• -~t&gt;&#13;
&lt;2/Jen&#13;
BARBER STUDIO&#13;
SPECIALIZE IN MENS HAIR&#13;
STYLING&#13;
STYLE CUTTING &amp; SHAPING&#13;
HAIR PEKES&#13;
7509 45TH AVE.&#13;
APPOINTMENTS&#13;
694-~03&#13;
DELICATESSEN - BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 FlnY-SECOND STIEET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
Last week Uns wnter was fortunate&#13;
enough to be invited to the Holiday Trade&#13;
Presentation of the Schenley Affiliated&#13;
Brands Corp. to witness some of the new&#13;
hol_iday packaging for the coming&#13;
holidays. Let me tell you, it was very&#13;
impressive and it solved a lot of my gift- giving problems.&#13;
Above is a photo taken at the showing.&#13;
Along with your writer are the salesmen&#13;
who represent the Schenley line ·in this&#13;
area from Metro R-K, from left to right,&#13;
Mike Zicarelli, yours truly, Dick&#13;
Cuminskey, Sales Manager Nate Rudman&#13;
and Arvin Weeks.&#13;
major cereal grains - corn, rye, wheat&#13;
and barley malt- and contain no distilled&#13;
spirits less than two years old. They are&#13;
generally bottled at six years of age or&#13;
more: If less than four years old, Ws age 'must be listed on the label.&#13;
Although the U.S. definition of Canadian&#13;
whiskey does not mention proof, a&#13;
' covering U.S. regulation requires that all&#13;
whiskies on the American market must be&#13;
at least 80 proof or higher. Canadian&#13;
whiskey · is bottled at 70 degrees proof&#13;
under the Sykes method. However, the&#13;
Canadian 70 degrees proof is exactly the&#13;
same as the U.S. 80 proof.&#13;
, Irish whiskey is a distinctive product of&#13;
Ireland, produced either in the Irish&#13;
Republic or in Northern Ireland, in&#13;
compliance with the laws regulating the&#13;
production of Irish whiskey, and containing&#13;
no distilled spirits less than three&#13;
years old. As for aging, Irish distillers believe in&#13;
long maturation to bring out the full flavor&#13;
and bouquet of their products. As the Irish&#13;
say, in the making of whiskey, it takes&#13;
seven days of a man's time and seven&#13;
years of the whiskey's time.&#13;
Whiskey in America: 1903, Michael&#13;
Joseph Owens invented the automatic&#13;
bottlemaking machine; 1909, President&#13;
William Howard Taft issued a legal&#13;
decision defining whiskey types.&#13;
·Recipe for the week: Zorbas Dance, 1½&#13;
jigger of Metaxa Brandy and ½ jigger&#13;
Metaxa Ouzo, over cracked ice packed in&#13;
an old fashion glass, ·add a twist of lemon&#13;
and sip and away you go, Esygian.&#13;
Any questions pertaining to the subjects&#13;
BLAZE A&#13;
TRAIL JO&#13;
ISERMANN'S&#13;
For All the&#13;
Latest Fashions,&#13;
By Leading Names&#13;
At - Realistic Prices&#13;
ISERMANN'S&#13;
614 56th ST.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
THE UNIVERSAL PEACE&#13;
(my answer to "Universal Incendiary")&#13;
I'm well,&#13;
With love pervading my being.&#13;
His Holy Spirit inflames my soul,&#13;
It expands and wants out:&#13;
Out of my heart,&#13;
This feeling of brotherhood!&#13;
(The conflagration of hate is in the past,&#13;
And somehow I feel it will never return.)&#13;
The walls of bate fell -&#13;
And with it&#13;
A chain reaction of love&#13;
Explodes from my every fiber!&#13;
Springs of living water are before me&#13;
It soothes my outstretched hand, And I care!&#13;
I&#13;
want&#13;
all to&#13;
love.&#13;
his&#13;
know&#13;
Burnings and lootings were my im- maturity,&#13;
No longer am I persecuted,&#13;
I have eliminated hate and fear!&#13;
I can work within the system&#13;
To create new values of life!&#13;
The blessings of Peace enfold me;&#13;
And I have everything! ·&#13;
Everything is mine!&#13;
I'm saved! with my dog&#13;
and my daisies,&#13;
and God's eternal son for warmth.&#13;
Amen&#13;
Eileen Jenkins&#13;
of these articles or your entertaining&#13;
needs, write to Jim Janis care of&#13;
Newscope.&#13;
Next week: Brandy, Imported and&#13;
Domestic.&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST&#13;
SPORTSFEST&#13;
portsfest will be on December 4-5 th&#13;
year. Thi will be w end ol ty&#13;
sports and e.xhibitio . Every rsfty m&#13;
will show i ills U throughout thi&#13;
day period.&#13;
This year there goin to be a t t&#13;
involved ·ith SPORTSFEST, th qu&#13;
contest. This will be a kind of P&#13;
homecoming for the fall.&#13;
Each varsity sport and athletic club wfll&#13;
sponsor one girl. The way he becom&#13;
queen is decided on how many Rang&#13;
buttons and Ranger tickers each club&#13;
sells. At Sportsfe t the school ma c also&#13;
will be decided.&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Monclay-Thunday $1.95&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2,25&#13;
Children $1.10&#13;
PUii TAX AND llvnMI&#13;
LADIE • "ITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tu - :30 to 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, econd drink for 1 c&#13;
SU DAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and grav&#13;
r -:---'\&#13;
Ancbor&#13;
INN&#13;
U.VING: l'rl. • SaL I J,a,•11 J.a.&#13;
.-..'nnln. I J.•.·11 p.a,&#13;
.... UN---• .... ;&#13;
9006 Sheridan Id.&#13;
Phone 694-1733&#13;
The\\ BRAT 1115&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
pettck Fries or Onion Rings.&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or ~ottle or Glass of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00&#13;
7 p.m. to&#13;
GLASS 20(&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily·9 A.M.-12 _P.M.&#13;
''"'t. BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
8 p.m. &#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
To the Editors&#13;
.. Your recent .;ommenls concerning the&#13;
controversial Dr . tacKinney have&#13;
rorced lht part oC the silent maJOrlt)' to&#13;
,p&lt;'ak up 11 I read between the hnes&#13;
cwrectlv Or ~lacKmne\ 15 sav 109 that&#13;
th quaht) of the leachl~g . tal( IS determined&#13;
by It noter iery ef-tbrougb&#13;
r r('h This I. dtr ll~ related to the&#13;
qualll) of Ihf- students' educauon, \\hlch IS&#13;
dt'l rmmed .001b) \\oMI you learn from the&#13;
IIhIrUCII .... but bv ....hat th(" tud«&gt;nl can do&#13;
on hi ewu \10 Ilh onJ~ bavic know ledge from&#13;
ttl I~lruetor I mt('rl'l~believe that this&#13;
I unpcranv lO (or upper dl\ 1 Ion courses If&#13;
Ihl I not the (.' thf'n m)o tck'a or a&#13;
1;011.. I t.'t.iUl: hon Il'3 rnulg to thmk on&#13;
our 0"0 ""llh the minimum gUiding In&#13;
nu n'l' h bern &lt;om pi tl'l) :hall&lt;ml&#13;
Gefl(" Gnu.&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
, iml'~i('Qll ~.&#13;
,1lalia II (l(~ille&#13;
Planning a ptlnJ,&#13;
u·eddi1Jf!. or ba11quel,&#13;
110 parI) 100 mall&#13;
,11654-9/23&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY&#13;
5713 7TH AVE&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
• CANDLES&#13;
/iJJ- i'lvP /JI'J,&#13;
•~P: il D" ..Jt't'If"))~ Banquet&#13;
DII Rooms Available&#13;
famous lor&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I" Feu, Suu 9 . 12" - 1.- . 16M&#13;
'UO&#13;
• IllS· 5'AGHOll • CHICKIN&#13;
• COHOCCHI • RAVIOLI· L.A SAGH ...&#13;
• 5Ut '000 • SAHDWICHlS&#13;
CAIlY,OUrs • DRIVElY&#13;
YOU .,He WI •• 'NC·&#13;
657 -9843 or 658-4922&#13;
5140 "~ AV!&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In the current debate over the just&#13;
proportion bel'oleen faculty research and&#13;
teaching. may I add some remarks to&#13;
those 01 Mr Konkol of Xovember 27 The&#13;
issue is. 1 think. the nature of teaching&#13;
excellence. I beheve that the (ollowing&#13;
elements are present in this subject, but in&#13;
an uncertain balance which makes difficult&#13;
a imple either-or dichotomy:&#13;
I The excellent teacher explains the&#13;
text and guides the student through it. He&#13;
explains the text both on its own merits&#13;
and within its intellectual context. But&#13;
"hat qualifies an instructor to do this'? Is a&#13;
B.A enough~ An :\1.A ..,Wh'ere do we stop~&#13;
1 a Ph. D desirable'? Clearly we are&#13;
ascending in teacher excellence; one step&#13;
(urlhC'r and \loe may say !.hat the best&#13;
teacher 15 the most learned, all other&#13;
thin" being equal How is learning&#13;
maOl(c~te(P For the student. grades will&#13;
do for sLarlel'5, For a teacher. one way his&#13;
I('armn~ I mamfested is by the books and&#13;
artld .- he has written and has had ac·&#13;
n.pted b) hi arbiters~ editors and the&#13;
leading . cholars who advise them. or&#13;
C'OU~e. books and articles are no&#13;
guarantee thai he i trul) learned. but as&#13;
m matters or the sort, we seek to make&#13;
. LalemenL that are mosU~ lrUe, not true&#13;
10 t\ f'r~ case.&#13;
2 !he .excellent leacher inspires. And&#13;
00" IS th,s done, pray tell? To begin with,&#13;
the good tea&lt;her will be enthusiastic about&#13;
his material and thereby try to explain&#13;
\loh) the \\-ark h~ been popular with so&#13;
many for so long, Yet. is not such en·&#13;
lhW&gt;ia m necessarily based on a deep&#13;
kno--ledge 01the work and the period that&#13;
brought It forth'll What if a gut·reaction is&#13;
\lorong. based on an inadequate knowledge&#13;
of the psychology of the writer and his&#13;
audience'?&#13;
SCC-ond. enthusia m can be cerebral as&#13;
well as emotional. The fact that a work has&#13;
depth and "resonance" and embodies the&#13;
behefs and emotional attitudes of an entire&#13;
age. hi cause enough for an enthusiastic&#13;
appreciation. Is not learning lhen - a Ph.·&#13;
D. and publication leadership - the best&#13;
support of enthusiasm. all other things&#13;
being ~ual?&#13;
Indeed. is not mtellectual profundity in&#13;
Itself msplrational') I always thooght so,&#13;
t:vcn If the possessor seemed personally&#13;
dull&#13;
3, A good teacher has the strength to&#13;
apply high standards of excellence. to&#13;
himself and. what is germane here to the&#13;
student's wo~k. listen to the re~ulting&#13;
complaints Without getling e.xcited. try to&#13;
s~mpathetlcally assess the student's&#13;
character and brains - and help him to&#13;
"U1'pass himself.&#13;
But who is to decide what standards are&#13;
10 prevail') Alas. only the teacher. I fear&#13;
that only the lonely and agonizing journey&#13;
through a Ph_D_ can mdicate what sland·&#13;
ards can pre\'aiL But why stop there? A&#13;
Ph.D. IS a degree that qualifies one for&#13;
research. and the standards the top-night&#13;
UOlY('rslt~ applies are set not only by Ph.-&#13;
D r1g.ors but by the far more difficult task&#13;
of \\ rtll~ for publication. Only one who&#13;
~s cham·smoked and groaned his way&#13;
through an mtellectual chaos with only a&#13;
recalcltranl bram to bring about a d&#13;
e&#13;
. r er,&#13;
'an appreciate what the standards can and&#13;
must be: If we are to strive for excellence.&#13;
('erl~mly. we do the student no service&#13;
to lei him remain peacefully on le\'els that&#13;
he can lra~scend. Again. I suggest that lhe&#13;
P~.D. an? Its extension. research. al1 other&#13;
Ihmgs bf'lIIg l"Quat. provide a solid base for&#13;
leachmg excellence .&#13;
As an inspirationalleacher once told me&#13;
yo~ should nol have more than three or&#13;
an~ Ihmg: beyond that. your thinking is&#13;
confused 0 I shall close. then. with two&#13;
("lements of leaching excellence not&#13;
releated to research. First. is the knack of&#13;
brmglng about an orgaruc re-creation of&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
WATCHES=-:J,&#13;
• -.. .... C'C-u.. ""rtr_ .._.~._ ..,_..-...&#13;
~._, ..·T;_,.&#13;
LorC_I_&#13;
REPAIR DEPT •&#13;
W.tthn . Jnrelry&#13;
D" .. olNf Setting&#13;
Complete Rep.n&#13;
Dept.&#13;
liftl Oesigftiftg&#13;
CHIMA I&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
lEGISTRY&#13;
To Bonnie&#13;
From Delaney&#13;
IIy JERRY SOCHA&#13;
Ipicked up the new Delaney &amp; Bonnie &amp;&#13;
Friends album by reflex action. I heard&#13;
them on TV a few times and liked their&#13;
music, so when Isaw the album I grabbed&#13;
it. After listening to it, I like them even&#13;
more. The first thing that struck me about the&#13;
album was the diversity in the voices and&#13;
style of both Bonnie and Delaney. At times&#13;
I thought I was listening to Laura Nyro&#13;
where the next cut would be pure Jerry&#13;
Lee Lewis. Backing up the vocals are the&#13;
"Friends" lull, gospel rock sound.&#13;
Among the Friends are Sneaky Pete&#13;
playing steel guitar on "God Knows I Love&#13;
You", Little Richard on piano in "Miss&#13;
Ann" and King Curtis playing tenor sax on&#13;
"They Call It Rock &amp; Roll Music". In the&#13;
past the Friends have included Eric&#13;
Clapton and George Harrison.&#13;
"They Call It Rock &amp; Roll Music" is an&#13;
autobiographical piece on their London&#13;
concert at Albert Hall. The Albert Hall&#13;
stopped booking rock and roll groups since&#13;
the place had been damaged by rock lans&#13;
excited by the music. Delaney &amp; Bonnie &amp;&#13;
Friends were booked there as a Gospel·&#13;
Soul group, For an encore they did a&#13;
medley 01 Little Richard hits which&#13;
brought the audience dancing into the&#13;
aisles. Fearing another riot the manager&#13;
threatened to cut the power unless they&#13;
stopped playing "rock and roll". The song&#13;
goes, "They call it rock and roll music but&#13;
there ain't nothin' we can do about that."&#13;
In his youth Delaney was greatly in·&#13;
nuenced by early country blues artist&#13;
Robert J ohoson. This influence is heard in&#13;
a medley of three songs on the first side.&#13;
!he work - be it literary or intellectualIn&#13;
the classroom i seeing to it by a push&#13;
there, a shove there, that the student is&#13;
abl~ to build it anew, step by logical step,&#13;
as It were by an appreciation of its har·&#13;
mony. and .in~vitability, with the sudden&#13;
daw~mg WIthin the mind of the student of&#13;
th~ tlll~el~s .values of the work. This, I&#13;
tlunk, IS Instinctive, of great value, and&#13;
unmeasurable and unpromotable by&#13;
research and publication.&#13;
Second, and last, the excellent teacher&#13;
should be good-looking. But I'm not&#13;
discouraged: four out of five isn't bad.&#13;
Sincerely.&#13;
Henry Kozicki&#13;
English Discipline&#13;
Humanities Division&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp;-SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
RANCH&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Delaney does a good Iik&#13;
Johnson's voice and his gUi~~ess or baa.&#13;
rattles With each not somethi . The1!IIi"r&#13;
sitar would sound. ng likea '-i&#13;
My lavorite song on the alb .&#13;
The People". You listen to t~rn IS "Frto&#13;
you'll swear it's the m IS so~ IIId&#13;
Salvation Army band vou'veost&#13;
[aM_&#13;
be&#13;
. ' h ,everh---"&#13;
gins Wit a short introduct· Olrd.lt&#13;
I&#13;
doi "R k 'on ,~. so 0 omg OC 01 Ages" N _ull1po(&#13;
tuba that you'll be bobbing ext colllea.&#13;
then Bonme JOInS in with v youlrhead I.&#13;
bo . "F oca and ...&#13;
nne. .ree the people fro laDl.&#13;
Pull the boa tout 01 the raginm&#13;
the fire_&#13;
the Devil he's a liar _ Com g Sea - Tell&#13;
lik I ," T e and save I es 0 me. oward the d the&#13;
almost hear coins rattling inet~t yoU CIa&#13;
Overall the album is very 0 he~.&#13;
worth $3.75 or the bother Ol~'od: It'swlIi IPPlng il c(f&#13;
~J&#13;
. FRUIT BASKETS AND CANDY&#13;
Deliver Across Town or • _ ••- """.......tbew-w&#13;
FABRICS FOR&#13;
ALL OCCASIOIlI&#13;
- 658~12_&#13;
pOWNTOWN K.ENOSHA&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.Il.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
excepted&#13;
1~.&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Facult y&#13;
(Must Show I,D.) Cr.dure Gemololnt·Certifitd Oi.montolo&amp;ist&#13;
Y~gg&lt;mA,&#13;
DU.MOMD CONlt.llTAHU It Jon "",4e , Jilterence wll«e you sbo , p.&#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
To th Edit&#13;
y r&#13;
UPTOW ES AURANT&#13;
and OUNGE&#13;
famous for&#13;
Banquet&#13;
ailable&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I F Sizn r . 12" • I ... 16•&#13;
ALSO&#13;
' II S • SPAGH Tl • CHIC l&#13;
' G OCCHI • RAVIOLI , LA SAG A&#13;
' SIA fOCO • SAl&lt;OWICHU&#13;
CA 11.Y OUTS • OELIVUY&#13;
MOU I WE I c-·&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
St• 6t A l&#13;
1 ()Ii&#13;
'lUTCl!!~I REPAIR DEPT. • •~ • •~ .c:re. ~ w--.:....:.:c.:.:..-=..::.:....:.:.__.l 111• - • .._ .,. •lthH • Jt•tlry&#13;
o ..... -- o .. rao,wl Sclhn9&#13;
c.,.,... • . T .,.. Co plttt Rep,,r&#13;
uc ... tN Dept. 1;.9 Du19n,n9&#13;
llllOAL&#13;
ECISTRY&#13;
Courtes Discount&#13;
o Students and DO TOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Fae ult y&#13;
( ust Sho I. D.) Cuduite ~molog,st Certified O,imontologist&#13;
V~cs&lt;mA, Falrtrade&#13;
e cepted It d~s ,uh • d;Jference wbere you s/, op. '&#13;
To Bonnie&#13;
From Delaney&#13;
By JERRY SOCHA&#13;
I picked up the new Delaney &amp; Bonnie &amp;&#13;
Friends album by reflex action. I heard&#13;
them on TV a few times and liked their&#13;
music, so when I saw the album I grabbed&#13;
it. After listening to it, I like them even&#13;
more. The first thing that struck me about the&#13;
album was the diversity in the voices and&#13;
style of both Bonnie and Delaney. At times&#13;
I thought I was listening to Laura Nyro&#13;
where the next cut would be pure Jerry&#13;
Lee Lewis. Backing up the vocals are the&#13;
"Friends" full, gospel rock sound.&#13;
Among the Friends are Sneaky Pete&#13;
playing steel guitar on "God Knows I Love&#13;
You", Little Richard on piano in "Miss&#13;
Ann" and King Curtis playing tenor sax on&#13;
"They Call It Rock &amp; Roll Music". In the&#13;
past the Friends have included Eric&#13;
Clapton and George Harrison.&#13;
"They Call It Rock &amp; Roll Music" is an&#13;
autobiographical piece on their London&#13;
concert at Albert Hall. The Albert Hall&#13;
stopped booking rock and roll groups since&#13;
the place had been damaged by rock fans&#13;
e.xcited by the music. Delaney &amp; Bonnie &amp;&#13;
Friends were booked there as a GospelSoul&#13;
group. For an encore they did a&#13;
medley of Little Richard hits which&#13;
brought the audience dancing into the&#13;
aisles. Fearing another riot the manager&#13;
threatened to cut the power unless they&#13;
topped playing "rock and roll". The song&#13;
goes, "They call it rock and roll music but&#13;
there ain't nothin' we can do about that."&#13;
In his youth Delaney was greatly influenced&#13;
by early country blues artist&#13;
Robert Johnson. This influence is heard in&#13;
a medley of three songs on the first side.&#13;
~e work - be it literary or intellectual -&#13;
m the classroom; seeing to it by a push&#13;
there, a shove there, that the student is&#13;
abl~ to build it anew, step by logical step,&#13;
as it were by an appreciation of its harmony&#13;
and inevitability, with the sudden&#13;
daw~mg within the mind of the student of&#13;
th~ tm~eless values of the work. This, 1&#13;
thmk, 1s instinctive, of great value and&#13;
unmeasurable and unpromotabl~ by&#13;
research and publication.&#13;
Second, and last, the excellent teacher&#13;
~ould be good-looking. But I'm not&#13;
discouraged: four out of five isn't bad.&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Henry Kozicki&#13;
English Discipline&#13;
Humanities Division&#13;
RANCH&#13;
NORTH &amp;.SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
Delaney does a good lik&#13;
Johnson'~ voice and his gui~;es; of both&#13;
rattles with each not somethi · _he guitar sitar would sound. ng hke a bass&#13;
My favorite song on the alb . The People". You listen to t:m 18 ''Free&#13;
you'll swear it's the m is song a1-1&#13;
Salvation Army band you've OSt fantasltc&#13;
begins with a short introduet~er heard.11&#13;
1 d . "R c ion tru so o omg ock of Ages" N lllPet&#13;
tuba that ~ou_'l~ be bobbing ~xt coines 1&#13;
then Bonme JOms in with vt ~r head lo&#13;
borine. "F:ree the people fro~a and ta&#13;
Pull the boat out of the rag· the fire_&#13;
the Devil he's a liar - Com~ng sea -Ten&#13;
likes of me." Toward the a~d save lhe&#13;
almost hear coins rattling i;t You can&#13;
Overall the album is very go~the ,pot,&#13;
worth $3. 75 or the bother of . : It 8 w r---------r..'.1&#13;
Pcr-P-mg it cxf&#13;
FRUIT BASKETS AND CAN&#13;
Deliver Across Town or Al:.r DY OU !ht W0&lt;14&#13;
VO&#13;
FA G&#13;
B UE&#13;
RI&#13;
FABRICS FOR cs&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658.:.8612 _&#13;
DOWNTOWN K_ENOSHA&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN, THRU THURS,&#13;
11 A,M, TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI, &amp; SAT, TILL 2 A,M,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
{triple decker)&#13;
55( &#13;
Gymnasts usually are good when it comes to do" .&#13;
onewould think they all flipped for Diane Thomas th nng flips, but looking at this photo , elf queen candidate.&#13;
. The Track team and their queen candidate, Sandy Huston, all seem to have a&#13;
bright outlook on the coming of SPORTSFEST. The track team along ith th th&#13;
it t '11 t til' ' WI e 0 er varsi y spor 5, WI S ar. se 109 buttons for their queen candidate. Let's all back this new&#13;
event and make some girl a very happy queen.&#13;
Wrestling Clinic, Another First For UWP&#13;
A New Concept in Clinics&#13;
The Parkside clinic features a complete&#13;
new concept in wrestling clinics. It could&#13;
be called four clinics in one.&#13;
The concept was developed in order to&#13;
lake full advantage of the talent and&#13;
abilities of all five instructors. Each instructor&#13;
or pair of instructors will be&#13;
teaching their favorite area of wrestling on&#13;
separate mats. This will allow a maximum&#13;
~x~sure of the instructors to the participants&#13;
at all times.&#13;
. Four blocks of wrestling will be covered&#13;
In the morning and four blocks in the afUSE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
VILLAGE INN&#13;
and&#13;
Pancake House&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
SUN. 6 a.m.-12 a.m&#13;
FRI.6 a.';'.-l p.m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancake~&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
ternoon. There will be time allowed. for&#13;
each coach and wrestler to pick two blocks&#13;
in the morning and two blocks in the afternoon&#13;
which he would like to see&#13;
covered. This will eliminate the need. of&#13;
sitting through instruction which does not&#13;
particularly interest you. Each block of&#13;
wrestling will consist of approximately 50&#13;
per cent instruction and 50 per cent opportunity&#13;
for application.&#13;
Following the eight formal blocks of&#13;
instruction there will be an opportunity to&#13;
question and seek help from the instructors.&#13;
Areas To Be Covered&#13;
Block 1 - Jim Koch: Leg wrestlingcounters,&#13;
rides and pins.&#13;
Block 2 - Dan Koch-Don Trapp: Escapes&#13;
and reversals, emphasis on standup.&#13;
Block 3 - Gerry Barr: Breakdowns and&#13;
rides.&#13;
Block 4 - Stan Opp: International&#13;
technique, with application to high school&#13;
and college wrestling.&#13;
Block 5 - Jim Koch: Rolls, setups,&#13;
combinations and counters.&#13;
Block 6 - Dan Koch-Don Trapp:&#13;
Takedowns.&#13;
Block 7 - Gerry Barr: Pin combinations,&#13;
Block 8 - Stan Opp: International&#13;
technique.&#13;
Clinic Staff&#13;
Clinic Director Jim Koch: Wrestling&#13;
coach, the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
former outstanding wrestler&#13;
and captain of the perennial national top&#13;
ranked South Dakota State University;&#13;
assistant wrestling coach at SDSU prior lo&#13;
joining the Parkside staff; successfully&#13;
directed many outstanding wrestling&#13;
clinics. .&#13;
Clinic Host Gerry Barr: Wrestling&#13;
coach, Tremper high school, Kenosha,&#13;
former outstanding wrestler and twice&#13;
PHONE 658-3551 •&#13;
AIELLO&#13;
Mid- T O'Udn&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
A Complete flol'Ol SeP'Vic.e&#13;
With MoJe.n Deslqn&#13;
&amp;.108 ,.,trT" S'CONO ST.aIT&#13;
KllNOSHA. WI.CONSIN&#13;
Population To Double&#13;
The United States is the most densely&#13;
populated country on earth, a University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Madison professor said&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Reid A. Bryson, addressing the&#13;
president's luncheon at the annual&#13;
Community Newspaper Conference on the&#13;
UW Madison campus, noted that&#13;
population is too oflen mistaken to mean&#13;
only the number of people living in a given&#13;
area.&#13;
"While the United Slates has only about&#13;
60 people per square mile, each one of&#13;
those people has roughly 150 'energy&#13;
slav~' working for him - cars, washing&#13;
machines, electric lights - all of which&#13;
require food, in the form 0( fue~ and all of&#13;
which have metabolic wastes to he said&#13;
"In essence, our country is 'supporti~&#13;
an equivalent population closer to9 000 per&#13;
square mile - or nearly half the :"'orld's&#13;
total for tbe U.S. as a whole." •&#13;
With such a load, it is no surprise that we&#13;
are facing an environmental crisis&#13;
"There are sewers for human waste .':&#13;
Bryson remarked, "but where are the&#13;
sewers for our machine wastes?"&#13;
Bryson said that while the number of&#13;
people is doubling about every 50 years,&#13;
the nwnbe.r of energy slaves is doubling&#13;
every ten years. Thus, he estimated that&#13;
resulting problems of fuel supply and&#13;
waste disposal are going up by IOO-fold&#13;
every half cenbJry or so.&#13;
Bryson, director of Wisconsin's new&#13;
Institute for Environmental Studies&#13;
divided his talk to the group into tw~&#13;
general areas - the nature of environmental&#13;
problems, and what the&#13;
University is doing to help solve therit.&#13;
Bryson feels a major environmental&#13;
problem is the compounding effects of&#13;
pollution and overpopulation.&#13;
"In the next 20 to 30 years," he told the&#13;
newspapermen, "Wisconsin's human&#13;
population will double, which means the&#13;
circulations of your newspapers will&#13;
prohably double. But the number of your&#13;
advertisers will probably also double.&#13;
Thus, we will probably have twice as many&#13;
r~de~ .rea.ding papers twice as large."&#13;
.With twice as many readers reading&#13;
tWlc.e the .current size newspaper,&#13;
publtshers WIllneed four times the amount&#13;
or paper. So we will have to cut down Iour&#13;
times as many trees and dispose of four&#13;
times as much paper waste. In short, we&#13;
will be taxing the environment four times&#13;
as heavily even though there are only&#13;
twice tbe numher of people."&#13;
Bryson pointed. out that this geometric&#13;
progression is at the core of many environmental&#13;
problems. "It wouldn'l be&#13;
quite so bad if having twice the number or&#13;
people meant twice the amount of&#13;
pollution, but this is never the case. "&#13;
cap~in at ~Cro~se State University;&#13;
president wtsconsm wrestling Coaches&#13;
Association; coached Tremper high school&#13;
to Big 8 conference championship in 1970&#13;
and a fourth place finish in the 1970&#13;
Wisconsin State tournament; coached&#13;
three state place winners in 1970including&#13;
one champion.&#13;
Guest Instructors&#13;
Stan Opp: National AAU Greco Roman&#13;
champion 1970; National AAU Freestyle&#13;
runner-up 1970; National Wrestling&#13;
Fe~eration Freestyle champion 1970;&#13;
National Junior Olympic Trials Greco&#13;
Roman champion 1969; National Junior&#13;
Olympic Trials Freestyle third place 1969;&#13;
South Dakota Amateur Athlete of the year&#13;
1969; Memher of the U.S.A. team to tour&#13;
Europe summer 1970.&#13;
Dan Koch: Coached Stan Opp while in&#13;
high school and has developed Stan into a&#13;
leading contender for the 1972 Olympic&#13;
tea~. Consid,ered the foremost authority&#13;
on international wrestling in South&#13;
Dakota. Former outstanding collegiate&#13;
wrestler - now competing in open meets.&#13;
Don Trapp: NCAA I\ll American 1970'&#13;
NCAA College Division 171 lb. Nationai&#13;
champion 1970; recipient NCAA&#13;
Postgraduate scholarship.&#13;
Marquette&#13;
Crushes Ranger&#13;
Hockey Team&#13;
The Parkside hockey players really put&#13;
on a great show, according to Russ Cooley,&#13;
assistant AD of UWP. Every one played m&#13;
the game. Marquette did W10 with a score&#13;
0(11·3, but the Parkside club ratherd have&#13;
everyone play than bettenng their score&#13;
When the best players did go 1010 tbe game&#13;
two goals were scored The team could&#13;
have done much ~tler but since It was the&#13;
Ranger club's first game it was more&#13;
important to have the whole team play for&#13;
the experience.&#13;
Now, with the first game under their&#13;
bell, the team knows where to improve,&#13;
and how to hetter their defense. The game&#13;
did indicate the hockey talent that tbe club&#13;
has. All of the spectators enjoyed the&#13;
excitement which the players brought on&#13;
There is no question in anyone's mind that&#13;
this club sport will grow on this campus.&#13;
UWP did score the first goal, but it was&#13;
called back because of a penalty Glen&#13;
Carnahan and Tom Krimmel scored the&#13;
Rangers' goals. Krimmel had two goals&#13;
with the assistance of Rich Rosko and Bill&#13;
Westerlund. Kari Liekowki also assisted&#13;
Carnahan. Tbe team's defensive standout&#13;
was Dale Swenson.&#13;
Approximately 100 people attended this&#13;
event, and out of the hundred, 60 pepole&#13;
were Ranger backers. Since the Interest&#13;
was strong there is a possibility of having a&#13;
bus go down on the next meet&#13;
The Ranger dub will travel down to&#13;
Chicago to play at the Rainbow Arena on&#13;
ov, 21 at 10:30 p.m. Let's try and have a&#13;
good turn out for this club.&#13;
T~I PlICI TI .. ,&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
LIrIII'Sellctt ..&#13;
~;;;:p&#13;
626 56th St.&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your &amp;uk. ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
OOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 • 56th Street&#13;
Kenosho, Wis. 652·6904&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Rev. $45.00&#13;
Now $27.50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
.' !.&#13;
FREE DEliVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657·5191&#13;
Gymnasts usually are good when it comes t d . . one would think they all flipped for Diane Thomas 0&#13;
th ~mg fhps, but looking at this photo • eir queen candidate.&#13;
The Track team and their queen candidate Sand H t II&#13;
bright outlook on the coming of SPORTSFEST The tracky teausmon,ala see~thttohhave a ·t t ill · · , ong w1 e other vars1 Y spor s, w star! selhng buttons for their queen candidate. Let's all back this new&#13;
event and make some girl a very happy queen.&#13;
Wrestling Clinic, Another First For UWP&#13;
A New Concept in Clinics&#13;
The Parkside clinic features a complete&#13;
new concept in wrestling clinics. It could&#13;
be called four clinics in one.&#13;
The concept was developed in order to&#13;
take full advantage of the talent and&#13;
abilities of all five instructors. Each instructor&#13;
or pair of instructors will be&#13;
teaching their favorite area of wrestling on&#13;
separate mats. This will allow a maximum&#13;
e_xpasure of the instructors to the participants&#13;
at all times.&#13;
. Four blocks of wrestling will be covered&#13;
m the morning and four blocks in the afUSE&#13;
&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#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.-1 p.m.&#13;
S.AT. 6 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancake~&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
ternoon. There will be time allowed for&#13;
each coach and wrestler to pick two blocks&#13;
in the morning and two blocks in the afternoon&#13;
which he would like to see&#13;
covered. This will eliminate the need of&#13;
sitting through instruction which does not&#13;
particularly interest you. Each Qlock of&#13;
wrestling will consist of approximately 50&#13;
per cent instruction and 50 per cent opportunity&#13;
for application.&#13;
Following the eight formal blocks of&#13;
instruction there will be an opportunity to&#13;
question and seek help from the instructors.&#13;
&#13;
Areas To Be Covered&#13;
Block 1 - Jim Koch: Leg wrestlingcounters,&#13;
rides and pins. Block 2 - Dan Koch-Don Trapp: Escapes&#13;
and reversals, emphasis on standup.&#13;
Block 3 - Gerry Barr: Breakdowns and&#13;
rides.&#13;
Block 4 - Stan Opp: International&#13;
technique, with application to high school&#13;
and college wrestling. Block 5 - Jim Koch : Rolls, setups,&#13;
combinations and counters. Block 6 - Dan Koch-Don Trapp:&#13;
Takedowns. Block 7 - Gerry Barr: Pin combinations.&#13;
Block 8 - Stan Opp: International&#13;
technique.&#13;
Clinic Staff&#13;
Clinic Director Jim Koch: Wrestling&#13;
coach, the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
former outstanding wrestler&#13;
and captain of the perennial national top&#13;
ranked South Dakota State University;&#13;
assistant wrestling coach at SDSU prior to&#13;
joining the Parkside staff; successfully&#13;
directed many outstanding wrestling&#13;
clinics.&#13;
Clinic Host Gerry Barr: Wrestling&#13;
coach, Tremper high school, Kenosha,&#13;
former outstanding wrestler and twice&#13;
PHONE 658-3551&#13;
AIELLO&#13;
9Yf id-T&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
&lt;Yudtt •&#13;
A Complete flo,ol Se,..,ice&#13;
W;fh MoJe,n Oesiqn&#13;
2_108 P"ll'TY 9£C:0N0 STIH&amp;T&#13;
KENOSHA. Wl9CON91N&#13;
Population To Double&#13;
The United Stat · the mo t d n.el)&#13;
populated country on earth a m it&#13;
of Wisconsin- tadi on profe or aid&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Marquette&#13;
Crushes Ranger&#13;
Hockey Team&#13;
Reid A. Bry on , addr ing the&#13;
president's luncheon at the annual&#13;
Community. ·ew paper Conferenc on the&#13;
W 1adison campu , noted that&#13;
population is too often mi taken to mean&#13;
only the number of people living in a given&#13;
area.&#13;
"While the United States has only about&#13;
60 people per squa-re mile, each one of&#13;
those ,peopl~ has r?'lghly 150 'energy&#13;
slav~ working for him - cars, wa hing&#13;
machines, electric lights - all of which&#13;
~uire food, in the form of fuel, and all of.&#13;
which have metabolic waste " he said&#13;
"In ~nee, our country is' upporhng&#13;
an eqwvalent population closer to 9 000 per&#13;
square mile - or nearly half the ~orld'&#13;
total for the U.S. as a whole." •&#13;
With s~ch a load, it is no surprise that we&#13;
are facing an environmental cri is&#13;
"There are sewers for human waste ,;&#13;
Bryson remarked, "but where are the sewers for our machine wastes?"&#13;
Bryson said that while the number of&#13;
people is doubling about every 50 years,&#13;
the nwnber of energy slaves is doubling&#13;
every ten years. Thus, he estimated that&#13;
resultin~ problems of fuel supply and&#13;
waste dtsposal are going up by 100-fold&#13;
every half century or so.&#13;
Br;Yson, director of \ isconsin's new&#13;
l~s_htute. for Environmental Studie ,&#13;
divided his talk to the group into two&#13;
g~neral areas - the nature of en- VJ.rorunental problems, and what the&#13;
University is doing to help solve the~.&#13;
Bryson feels a major environmental&#13;
problem is the compounding effects of&#13;
pollution and overpopulation.&#13;
"In the next 20 to 30 years," he told the&#13;
newspapermen, "Wisconsin's human&#13;
population will double, which means the&#13;
circulations of your newspapers will&#13;
probably double. But the number of your&#13;
advertisers will probably also double.&#13;
Thus, we will probably have twice as many&#13;
r~de~s. rea_ding papers twice as large."&#13;
_With twice as many readers reading&#13;
tw1c_e the . current size newspaper,&#13;
pubhshers will need four times the amount&#13;
of paper. owe will ve to cu do 'fl four&#13;
times as many trees and dispo e of four&#13;
times as much paper waste. In short we&#13;
will be taxing the environment four times&#13;
as heavily even though there are only&#13;
twice the number of people."&#13;
Bryson pointed out that this geometric&#13;
p~ogression is at the core of many enVJronmental&#13;
problems. "It wouldn't be&#13;
quite so bad if having twice the number of&#13;
peqple meant twice the amount of&#13;
pollution, but thi is never the case."&#13;
cap~in at ~Cro_ e State niversity;&#13;
president \ 1sconsm Wre tling Coach&#13;
Ass~iation ; coached Tremper high school&#13;
to Big 8 conference champion hip in 1970&#13;
and a fourth place finish in the 1970&#13;
Wisconsin State tournament; coached&#13;
three state place winn rs in 1970 including&#13;
one champion.&#13;
Gu t In tructo&#13;
Stan Opp: National AA Greco Roman&#13;
champion 1970; 'ational AA Free tvle&#13;
runner-~p 1970; ational Wrestlfng&#13;
Fed_erahon ~reestyle champion 1 70;&#13;
National Juruor Olympic Trial Greco&#13;
Roman champion 1969; 'ational Junior&#13;
Olympic Trials Freestyle third place 1 ,&#13;
South Dakota Amateur Athlete of they r&#13;
1969, 1ember of the .S.A. team to tour _&#13;
Europe summer 1970&#13;
Dan Koch: Coached Stan Opp while in&#13;
high school and has developed Stan into a&#13;
leading co~tender for the 1972 Olympic&#13;
tea~. Cons1d_ered the foremost authority&#13;
on mternallonal wrestling in South&#13;
Dakota. Form-er outstanding collegiate&#13;
wrestler - now competing in open meets.&#13;
Don Trapp: NCAA All American 1970·&#13;
NCAA College Division 177 lb. Nationai&#13;
champion 1970; recipient CAA&#13;
Postgraduate scholarship.&#13;
VAL.ED'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICK EM DIMMERS and&#13;
ITALIAM SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
T t Place Tt IIY&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
L•&amp;nt Sel1ctl111&#13;
626 56th St. Kenosha&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your Back. ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 - 56th Strut&#13;
Kenosho, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS_ Reg. s45_00&#13;
Mow $27.50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
\ ,. I&#13;
FREE DalVERY .C :00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657-5191 &#13;
I PLEASE PRINT I&#13;
Eligibility fa, thi$ ',ip ;$ limited to duden'$, $,aH ond foculty ond&#13;
the menlbel$ of ,hei, ilMledilote family of ,be:&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCOHSIN&#13;
classifieds ISPORTS&#13;
LF-O-R-A-LE--_-So-n-y-.m-S(lU-nd--&lt;&gt;n-_S(lU--nd-+--A:-~-IP-U-F-IE-R-F-O-R-SA-LE----S-=il::-v-er-t::-on-e S H 0 RTS&#13;
track teree Iape deck with accessories. amplifier, 4 channels, 1 speaker, Herald&#13;
Thi IS a $150 deck for only S3SO John Unidirectional microphone; 20 It. cable -&#13;
lurphy, 652.7433. plck·up and jack for folk guitar - $100.&#13;
CaD 694-2769.&#13;
FOR I\LE - Gibson Acousl1cal Electric&#13;
GUitar - beaul1/ul Instrument - double&#13;
po k-up, red fino h. top quality case included-&#13;
SJOO t no blckenngl. Call S3+WI2&#13;
aItr6pm&#13;
F R :\LE - H athlat Ouitar Amph/,er&#13;
lpoW.backl - Zo\O wens peak power. 3&#13;
ch nn I (gUll r, mike, ba t, mirumum&#13;
01'''0 InplJl5 per channel - bottom has Z&#13;
IZ" Jensen and I 12"lugh-frequency horn&#13;
_ $ II ~-e&amp;O:! arter 6 p.m&#13;
FOR LE - Vox Phantom tz-string&#13;
gu,lar - 3 pick-up, tear drop shape and&#13;
white, perfect. condition - $225. Call 31Z·&#13;
395-2309. Antioch, III., ask for Marty, Jr.&#13;
RIDE 'EEDED - to Beloit or Janesville&#13;
any Friday of t1ie present school year -&#13;
contact Barb at 658-8584.&#13;
RIDE WANTED - for Z to Pennsylvania&#13;
over Thanksgiving - call 658-8485 and ask&#13;
for Rosemary.&#13;
Student Honors Concert&#13;
nit: !\I\ snsrrv FWI&#13;
P,\RK IDE&#13;
m, OF. Til !\OR O!\ ERT&#13;
I'O\fmbtr It,It10- :MP.\I.&#13;
Ii I'tO\ha mpu. F"hw rts Room&#13;
PR R."I&#13;
I'T Iud,urn and Fugue, lozarl. Linda&#13;
l'r • viohn; J n t Ptttlk, violin; Arline&#13;
Dahlqui t. \1ohn. ntver Harcank,&#13;
viohn. n Dr xler. VIolin; Adrienne&#13;
Gerth, VIola W,lham Bradley. Viola,&#13;
~Tln Durocher, ceUo. Saurie Deming,&#13;
110&#13;
yrln' for Flute. Debu y: Lenee&#13;
Karo.. , nute&#13;
"Wldmuna". chumann:&#13;
p 1 n~meuo lOpe-ano&#13;
Con rt In A lalOr, 01' 1117. Rondo.&#13;
lourt Phdhp m.th. claronet.&#13;
Rhapsody In G IInor, 01'. 79, o. 1&#13;
Brahm Joyce Richards. piano.&#13;
Re&lt;:ltahve "And God Created Ian",&#13;
Ana "In '811\'e Worth" from The&#13;
Cr t,on. Haydn' Joe Gauchel, tenor.&#13;
Andante and Allegro, RoparlZ: George&#13;
Brlew•• trumpet&#13;
Sonata In 0 Major for Violin and Piano,&#13;
dalila-Allegro. Handel: Arline Dahlquist.&#13;
\'10110&#13;
Cantabde for Flute. Op. 25, OeMlchelis:&#13;
Sharron Lee Johnson, nute.&#13;
!\ IN&#13;
Belty&#13;
Two Trumpet Tunes, Purcell; Sonata for&#13;
Brass. Poulenc; lntrada for Brass. Jean&#13;
Berger: John Olisar, trumpet; George&#13;
Brrewa, trumpet; Dianne Chambers,&#13;
French horn; Douglas Johnson. trombone.&#13;
Accompanists: Kathleen Devine, Susan&#13;
Hay. Letha Wood.&#13;
Reception in lounge following concert,&#13;
sponsored by the niversity of Wisconsin·&#13;
Parkside Student Cnapter of M.E.N.C.&#13;
HALF OF UW STUDE TS&#13;
HOLD A PAYING JOB&#13;
Almost hall of University of Wisconsin·&#13;
Mawson students work at a paying job&#13;
while atlending school, according to a&#13;
study recently released by the UW Survey&#13;
Research Laboratory.&#13;
The survey also noted that two out ot&#13;
every five students on the Madison&#13;
campus recehte no financial help from&#13;
parents or other relatives.&#13;
ADULTS STILL LEARN&#13;
About one adult in five has indicated that&#13;
future enrollment in a University of&#13;
Wisconsin adult education program is&#13;
possible for them, according to a UW&#13;
Survey Research Laboratory study.&#13;
By MARK BARNHILL&#13;
Six Players Make&#13;
NAIA AU Star Team&#13;
Six members of the UWP soccer team&#13;
ed to the NAIA District 14 All&#13;
were narn tai Dale Star team. Joseph Orr, team cap In,&#13;
Nickle and Stan Markovic were named o~&#13;
the starting team, while Karl Llekowskl,&#13;
Doug Beveridge and Charles Lees are on&#13;
the reserve team.&#13;
Coach Jim Gibson is very pleased that&#13;
three of his players did make the starting&#13;
line-up and that the other three players&#13;
were named on the team. The soccer team&#13;
finished with a 4--6-1 record.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Skiing Most popular PE Course&#13;
The skiing and life fitness class has the&#13;
largest enrollment of a phy-ed course on&#13;
CamplJs. More than 200 people are in the&#13;
Monday and Tuesday night class. Next&#13;
semester will offer an advanced skiing&#13;
class (306). This course will include a~tual&#13;
skiing at the Wilmot slopes a.nd SkI It?-&#13;
strucuon. Coach Vic Godfrey wJ11run th,~&#13;
class with the assistance of Karl&#13;
Liekowski. Liekowski spent 2lh years on&#13;
the U.S. Olympic Biathlon tearn in Alaska.&#13;
He trained IZ months a year and annually&#13;
toured Europe and "'North American in&#13;
international competition. The biathlon&#13;
race is a crOSS country skiing and rifle&#13;
shooting contest over a 12.5 mile course.&#13;
The winner of this contest is judged by how&#13;
iast he skied and his ability to hit targets.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
NAIA District 14 Invitational at UWP&#13;
Friday, November 13, is the date set for&#13;
the NAJA District 14 Invitational crosscountry&#13;
run. Invitations to this meet are&#13;
limited to the 18 NAIA affiliated colleges.&#13;
All nine state universities plus Green Bay,&#13;
Carthage and most other colleg~ from&#13;
Wisconsin will attend. The favorites of this&#13;
meet will be UWP, Carthage and Platteville.&#13;
Following this meet the NAIA national&#13;
championship meet will be at Kansas City.&#13;
Rich Lund, XCC nmner, stated, "We want&#13;
very much to win the team title for Mr. Vic&#13;
SPEC~~ '*&#13;
_lU'aT ........ TO .. ARtS VIA sPACM)US AND C~A&amp;LI[ ....1....... ANCI[ N1 SUPDt ~&#13;
-..nt IN"'L~T liIO'Vll[.S. C&lt;*NIECTING lleII[DIATI[LY BY AI" TO Gl[NI[VA&#13;
_ITIUtLAH.O WITH THe: "l[TlMN FL~T FROW Gl[NI[VAi ...uus. PARIS T'O&#13;
OUCAOO.&#13;
'*&#13;
'*&#13;
-_ .&#13;
._.-n .&#13;
RETURN FEBRUARY 7 [)(PART JANUARY 29&#13;
From Chlago&#13;
... UP LUlLT "'.tel! UIII1m&#13;
10 DAYS&#13;
Oily $249 I'LUS SlUO&#13;
TAX &amp; S!ItTlCE CIWIGE&#13;
EIghth NIght In&#13;
PA R I S&#13;
,MDTElI.ClUDEDl&#13;
'* .- ..&#13;
'*&#13;
*&#13;
'*&#13;
'*&#13;
_·-.Tw ......&#13;
_ ,.. ••••.. •. .. ... .,.1: ONI: OAY Slot: TlIU" ~ .t.OVAHCI[QSKtPa. INCL"'","-&#13;
NtOTlClIt AM.L '''- LIFTS TO&#13;
IIMI •••••••.•..•...... A 0I1tKT SLA,LDW .. 1tCf. ,.e-, ..-..- _ '''- 'MTN A TATlON PARTY&#13;
COW"\.E'TI[ .. nt .... ZQ AND ~IU"'OfII nc u.s.&#13;
--.... •• •• • •• • • • •• TWO WUL TlLINGUAL GUIOI:S WILL -n YOUIll GftOUP IN GCHEV&#13;
_ AVAtLAaU TO AIIIST YOU AT ALL T.., UNTIL ot:PMlI~.""" wtu..&#13;
...................................&#13;
TNIS TlIl'" IS e-r,..IlMO BY THlE UNlVI[lItS'TY 0.. W1SCClH&amp;lN. "AfllICSlOl[&#13;
,.~ ........ ....,. '*.~oc.G.A.r.oek. .. AIWeric .. u...., ..lIi_.. ,......I . ..... (,&amp;111 -"'1. b.le ' _.11__&#13;
'.~s- ....... .su.&#13;
Godfrey. He has been an inspiration&#13;
whole team. We do feel that Wecan doto.~&#13;
we are all healthy." It if&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Coach Bill Ballester has been&#13;
president of Ihe Southeastern W. et..,'-I&#13;
Gymnastic Association. He will ~&#13;
compulsitory exercise program f te ~&#13;
group. Ballester now is wri~ lhi&#13;
national program. ~&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The fencing team has been acti&#13;
stirring inte~est in the comtnU:f tit&#13;
around Parkside, Loren Hein PUt Ueo&#13;
fencing demonstration at J. I. Case ~&#13;
school. Approxi':latel~ Z,OOO ~ .....&#13;
the fencers exhibit their skills at Case. ~&#13;
team also put on a demonstration at tile&#13;
Racine Teachers Association.&#13;
How The Hockey&#13;
Team Will Win&#13;
By WALTER BREACH&#13;
A brilliant exhibition of sports otratoo&#13;
took place last Tuesday t;elllac.&#13;
Milwaukee's Wilson Hockey Rink WOItIoe&#13;
sight of the action as the UWP club1Gok&#13;
Marquette. Interesting sidelines ~&#13;
much blowing, shooting and droppiog ..&#13;
The whistle, the puck, and backsidetlltloe&#13;
ice were the objects resp&lt;'ctively.&#13;
Back to the strategy, the main ide",.&#13;
to make Marquette and anyone waldolow&#13;
the game think that the HockeyClub 10M&#13;
not yet accepted Dean MacKillter'a&#13;
"instant greatness" idea. The ..&#13;
completely fooled all the advance ~&#13;
walching the game hy forcing the ...&#13;
not to show any of their natural gJ1Ct,&#13;
competitiveness, ability and tearowan..&#13;
was wIficult for them to allow Marqao!II&#13;
to score 11 times and the club slippedu(&#13;
accidentally trea ted themselves to I1nI&#13;
goals for compensation.&#13;
Soon, however, it will be time fer&#13;
club to stop playing Jack the Ripper"&#13;
day oll and make ils move. Look 0IIl,.&#13;
Chicago Blackhawks!&#13;
PLEASE READ AND RETAIN - RESPONSIBILITY AND CAHCELUTtOH&#13;
GROUPTRAVEL ASSOCIATES. INC. _ eOOf*atl" GIII_h 00.1only in ,to. e.. ity of ",. hr"" ,. 11&#13;
"I .... JIMf.Ini., to hotel ac--.dlltion ••• i...... i"" 'oun and " ... portation by"'~ ..&#13;
.... C•• a.r-Ihi, •• ,1_ ........ uc;h, th.., •• 11ftOIN!i.l. '- any Injury, ,...-.llljlrl ...&#13;
• e~, Hlerr •• irr.,ularity wfr.ieh.err N KCU,"'" .lllt. by ' .. Ion01 -.y .. fKt i•...,v.h!ea., • ......,&#13;
tile .u ar Ntault oI .. y e..,..,.,..._ M1gapt!in connyi", tM 'on ....... in c-"/i .. ..,,rile ........&#13;
.. ,. *-&lt;.l, • o!t.rwi .. In c-'iofI V.with. f.,.......tM right wiD.• withoutJIOtic. to .... cMIIH III&#13;
•• ..,ort.ioll.lodti"l ••• igMMc_ ._ ...." BtIftI. i. c_i'" at _'. riM'" ~ Ia _ •&#13;
... ....... and il r~. Airli.... c-...c! ".. JIOt to be hel4 r.IpOll ... I.for any lid, _inioll .....&#13;
clwi-. Ito. ti_ ,.$...... _ JlOt OllltoarollMir .ir.,.lIft. In tM _t of c .. cellolion, •• ofuncI will"" In"&#13;
.. t. 60 4..,. ,..i. 104"'., If h.1I,.-,-t • _ittan notice 01c_.llotion i. not rae.iv'" ~ GT,.,IM:. ••&#13;
w.. 60 "errl ,.i. to,.,., tho. ..... it will "- forfeit.... If. c..c.lloti ........ t i.recoiwocl~ GT,.,"&#13;
len"" 60 4..,. ,.i.to 4 I .. funol will be ,.. OO!lyII on .ligiba. .ub.tiluM i. \lY.il_a. "-,.. ..&#13;
II... I. til relunol will Ion omJlO ...,ic.I ... litho __ of oir I•• col1oct......... ' 61&#13;
,._ •• __ the .. cen will be reIvnoIooI, The tot.1 tow ,..ic. lnduol .. tho _ $3.00 U.s. ...,..&#13;
T,..,ertoliOl Tox (•• oI71V70) b'" F_ign Dep-t .... TCIlIII(pr ... ntly $1.25) _ eot i_lucIM, • .., ..&#13;
"'iect t. d.....&#13;
TJt~AT1ON ~ oUID TO ~N£VJt.. .$WITIEl'LANO VIA. OI[LUXI[&#13;
TOVItING BUSD tz HOIJIItS OF .AUTI"Ut.. SCIEHf:~.&#13;
AT ·GIIIAND IIOC". IN TMI[ AltGl[NTIUI[-CHItMQHIX VALLLY. F1ItANCI[.&#13;
AltGl[NTIUU IS A CHAIIIWING ALPIN![ VILLAGE: LOCATI[D A.L&lt;*GSIOE: TMI[&#13;
AIN'I: fltlVV' AT 'TMI[ BAS«: CW THE"'AMOUS °GlUoND MOHTETS· SKI .. uttS.&#13;
nus ~lt.lS F.-...ous "(MIl THt!: -WON'T BLANC". HIGH,£ST YOUNT AIN IN&#13;
t:\lfIIO~ 115.500 n.l. HVt!: SKJ IS I(ING WITH. Cltllu: CARS. 5 GOtolDOLItS.&#13;
J CHAIM,.Irn.. .6 PQotAS AHD • COG TlIlAIN. IN AAQEN'TII[RI[. '(00 WILL&#13;
JLLt: .. AT ".aDO Fen AND YOU CAH SKI ALL THE WAY UP TD .z.eoo FE£T.&#13;
HOY'CI. f1It"'("I[NICOIATE NtO ~.u. FIIIID...Nl,ME8QU:LTUlU&#13;
TO IUIT TNE.w.. ,..Oft I[XAMP1....C'. THE ~ lI"NCMJS 'Z MILt: L08G -V ...LLlEE&#13;
lM.AIfOC INN" AHO THI[ ~ WONTns· -.1[ItI[ ntl[ ltUNS WJtI[ QESIGNI[D&#13;
~ ~CH.-....oM JAMIts COUTTIET, DfoI ~SI[ fII:UNS DIlLE ALUISWDH&#13;
nc..otltLO eH ..... OASHI ... YOU WILL ,..IND 120 IN.5TltUCTOl'tS. Z SKATING&#13;
fit,.... otJCOTHl:.OUI:S. CItSlMO. C\MLING. £TC. ntl[ OLD ,..MHIDfoII[() MOUNT"&#13;
TO-- Of/' CHItMOHIX HAS KEN .".. CAPIT ....L Of: ....t...'NI[ SPOIItTS SINCE&#13;
TMC Vl$IT Of' ~ N ....JIIOC..EC* III IN tlR. CHAMONIX AHO ItRGIENTII[M.&#13;
..,. LOC:"TI[O QeIILY ..... UTU,....... BOTH swtTIEJltLANO AND IT AL Y.&#13;
I:k/IO'I" TNI: AOY""'A~ ..... 0 C~ QIr YOIM a.M ot:LUXI[ .~L&#13;
A"AlrTWNT wnH T'HI[ CONWNIIE...ce: QIr HOT&amp;L SEtWIC;e IN A Sl:ur&lt;:OM-&#13;
't.... D MIDR'T_ ALL UNtTS ItItl" 10VfT1CAL"T14 nt-.: SINGLE BEDS.&#13;
'.8.A.T1G., ,.ULLY I[CIU~ IUTClCN, ·OINWG04..MNG-1llOOM "1"~C&#13;
T~. T.V••JtAOtO.uIO P"ttCINE. LOOGINGI WILt.. _ J ~ TO AN 1[.&#13;
,., -""'CNT •&#13;
CUIIrMMT .. ATO: Il LLSIONSI'I.OO. IItI[N'TAU: ~AL IKIS AND ~&#13;
ROO"" DAY.&#13;
LAST NAME&#13;
o STUDENTS 0 ST AFF&#13;
FIRST NAM!:&#13;
OF .... CULTY OFAIolILY&#13;
MAIL.ING ADDRESS _&#13;
COTY STATI[&#13;
BU~PHONE _._--&#13;
OMALE OFEM Le OSlNGL£&#13;
IOCIMIM'In_,.,. ):&#13;
HOME PHONE _&#13;
OMARRIED AG!:_&#13;
I WANT TO ItOOM WITH: 2. _&#13;
•._---------&#13;
TWIN«c ionl: $20.00 11.... 1--' I*' ,. ...&#13;
o C_d: "- for TWIN «c--.elation ••&#13;
In'--ati. O!l c.~.1 -.d ,"i-,.n o,eion will bo&#13;
sent •• 1•• 4••.&#13;
Mob err..c" """11111&#13;
t:NOL,OSl:D IS MY CHECK FOR S '""'" T._l .....-·I •.&#13;
MMii_ 4epo.it $.SO.GO-In eo .. 01 40p0.it tho balonc. will M"'''- II&#13;
60 hi.,.,) ...,. bef.. cIet-t .....&#13;
,siGNATURE&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN. PAIKSIOE&#13;
SKI THE ALPS SPECIAL&#13;
PIICE: 124'.00 ,1 ... $11.(111 tOJ&lt;&#13;
APPUCATlOH&#13;
"'11 .. : 'ROU' TRAVEL ASSOCIATES INC.&#13;
53 W. JlICh_ II".,. •• Gin ... III. 6G604&#13;
~llc .._ III" _.,.a .. -., • _iJ.., '" "-, _ rece/"-&#13;
classifieds ] SPORTS&#13;
L----------------_-t_P_LI_F_I_E_R_F_O_R __ LE ___ S_ilv_er_to_n_e SH O RT S&#13;
amplifier, 4 channels, 1 speaker, Herald&#13;
Unidirectiona microphone; 20 ft. cable -&#13;
pie -up and jack for folk guitar - $100.&#13;
Call 694-27 .&#13;
F R LE - Vox Phantom 12-strin&amp;&#13;
guitar - 3 pick-up, tear drop shape and&#13;
~te, perfect. condition - $225. Call 312-&#13;
395-23119, Antioch. Ill., ask for ~iarty, Jr.&#13;
By MARK BARNHILL&#13;
Six Players Make&#13;
NAIA All Star Team&#13;
Six members of the UWP soccer team&#13;
ed to the NAIA District 14 All&#13;
;::rei:a_a:::. Joseph Orr, team captain, Dale&#13;
Nickle and Stan Markovic we~e ~med 0 ~&#13;
the starting team, while Kan L1ekowsk1,&#13;
Doug Beveridge and Charles Lees are on&#13;
the reserve team.&#13;
Coach Jim Gibson is very pleased ~at&#13;
three of his players did make the starting&#13;
line-up and that the other three players&#13;
were named on the team. The soccer team&#13;
finished with a 4-6-1 record.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Godfrey. He has been an inspiration to&#13;
whole team. We do feel that we ca d .the&#13;
we are all healthy." n °1tif&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Coach Bill Ballester has been&#13;
president of the Southeastern w· eiec~&#13;
Gymnastic Association. He will v:r~llSin&#13;
compulsitory exercise program r~~e ~ group. Ballester now is writin this&#13;
national program. g ~&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The fencing team has been acti&#13;
stirring interest in the comm v~ _by&#13;
d P k 'd unities&#13;
aroun ar s1 e. Loren Hein put&#13;
nt Honors Concert Skiing Most Popular PE Course&#13;
The skiing and life fitness class has th€&#13;
largest enrollment of a phy-ed course on&#13;
Campus. More than 200 people are in thE&#13;
Monday and Tuesday night class. ~~xt&#13;
semester will offer an advanced skung&#13;
class (306). This course will include actual&#13;
skiing at the Wilmot slopes a_nd ski i1_1-&#13;
struction. Coach Vic Godfrey will run ~ class with the assistance of Kart&#13;
Liekowski. Liekowski spent 2½ years on&#13;
the U.S. Olympic Biathlon team in Alaska.&#13;
He trained 12 months a year and annually&#13;
toured Europe and 'North American in&#13;
international competition. The biathlon&#13;
race is a cross country skiing and rifle&#13;
shooting contest over a 12.5 mile course.&#13;
The winner of this contest is judged by how&#13;
Iast he skied and his ability to hit targets.&#13;
fencing demonstration at J. I. Case~,!&#13;
school. Approximately 2,000 1 ""Ill&#13;
the fencers exhibit their skills a~~ ~ team also put on a demonstration t lht&#13;
Racine Teachers Association. a&#13;
W DE.'T&#13;
YI. G JOB&#13;
t half of University of Wisconsintadi&#13;
·tud n work at a paying job&#13;
·hile attending chool, according to a&#13;
· tudy r ently released by the UW Survey&#13;
R rch Laboratory. Th ur,;ey al ·o noted that two out ot&#13;
every five students on the fadison&#13;
campu · rec i,;e no financial help from&#13;
parents or other relatives.&#13;
DULT STILL LEAR,.&#13;
About one adult in five has indicated that&#13;
future enrollment in a University of&#13;
Wisconsin adult education program is&#13;
possible for them, according to a UW&#13;
Survey Research Laboratory study.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
NAIA District 14 Invitational at UWP&#13;
Friday, November 13, is the date set for&#13;
the NAIA District 14 Invitational crosscountry&#13;
run. Invitations to this meet are&#13;
limited to the 18 NAIA affiliated colleges.&#13;
All nine state universities plus Green Bay,&#13;
Carthage and most other colleges from&#13;
Wisconsin will attend. The favorites of this&#13;
meet will be UWP, Carthage and Platteville.&#13;
&#13;
Following this meet the NAIA national&#13;
championship meet will be at Kansas City.&#13;
Rich Lund, XCC runner, stated, "We want&#13;
very much to win the team title for Mr. Vic&#13;
How The Hockey&#13;
Team Will Win&#13;
By WALTER BREACH&#13;
A brilliant exhibition of sports ~tratqy&#13;
took place last Tuesday t,eni&#13;
Milwaukee's Wilson Hockey Rink was i&#13;
sight of the action as the UWP club took OIi&#13;
Marquette. Interesting sidelines inclucq&#13;
much blowing, shooting and dropping on.&#13;
The whistle, the puck, and backside to lht&#13;
ice were the objects respectively.&#13;
Back to the strategy, the main ideawu&#13;
to make Marquette and anyone watchq&#13;
the game think that the Hockey Club bad&#13;
not yet accepted Dean MacKinoey',&#13;
"instant greatness" idea. The team&#13;
completely fooled all the advance s«w&#13;
watching the game by forcing thernselvs&#13;
not to show any of their natural gract,&#13;
competitiveness, ability and teamwork It&#13;
was difficult for them to allow Marqueut&#13;
to score 11 times and the club slipped and&#13;
accidentally treated themselves to tint&#13;
goals for compensation.&#13;
Soon, however, it will be time for tbt&#13;
club to stop playing Jack the Ripper 1111111&#13;
day off and make its move. Look out )'GI&#13;
Chicago Blackhawks!&#13;
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 7, November 9, 1970</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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