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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, Issue 5</text>
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            <text>Library Tightens Security</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3 • Number 5 Mlrch 1, 1971&#13;
Constitutional&#13;
Referendum&#13;
~Library Tightens Security=====--==w&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
If you have bees in the Tallent Hall&#13;
Library in the past month, you couldn't&#13;
help noticing the girl guarding the exit.&#13;
Her purpose is to prevent theft. Pure&#13;
and simply our main library has lost&#13;
some 20,000 tt~Q1Ssince. it opened, and&#13;
the girls are there to help control this. I&#13;
Maximum Security?&#13;
(PholDs by _ hbeI)&#13;
had a talk with Mr. Philip Burnett, the&#13;
Director of Libraries.&#13;
Burnett said, "This began small and&#13;
informally. There was no money, staff,&#13;
or people in '67. Now the new building&#13;
will have turnstyle control to stop&#13;
things from 'drifting away.'&#13;
"The first big thing we 10$twas a $65&#13;
Rand-McNally Commercial Atlas, it&#13;
I..ted three months. The desk people&#13;
couldn't watch all the time. Things got&#13;
bad when books started disappearing&#13;
from the 'reserved' shelf.&#13;
Our Judy Hamilton figured fifty&#13;
books a month were being lost and il&#13;
was costing 56000 a year. he said. (I got&#13;
another figure of 515.000 from another&#13;
source.) We can't find out how many&#13;
we've lost since we would have 10 count&#13;
them.&#13;
"This is pure theft. either a person&#13;
might have a passionate desire 10 possess&#13;
books or he might be stealing them to&#13;
sell. Then we have the person afflicted&#13;
with irresponsible carelessness who&#13;
might lake a reserved book (0 have an&#13;
advantage over the rest of the class.&#13;
"We chose to hire the girls because&#13;
turnstyles are expensive and we're&#13;
moving anyway. Besides they are&#13;
cheerful, friendly, and nice looking.&#13;
They make people want to show their&#13;
books.&#13;
"Originally counts were made and we&#13;
found the leakage taking place:'&#13;
Burnet t said. "We checked Madison and&#13;
found they had control points around&#13;
the library. In Milwaukee they have 3&#13;
single control at the cntr nee.and we&#13;
found this preferable. The 56000 we&#13;
spend on the girls will just abou t cover&#13;
the cost of loses. but there is also the&#13;
factor of efficiency of service. If we can&#13;
produce 85% of books asked for we'd&#13;
be doing good-60% is our present&#13;
figure. In the beginning the girls were&#13;
checking every page of the notebooks&#13;
people were carrying: now we are less&#13;
stringent. "&#13;
I also spoke with the circulation&#13;
manager, Mike Reid, who is in charge of&#13;
the security, He told me-that the most&#13;
frequent gripe dealt. not wuh secunty.&#13;
bUI fines. People think a dollar. day on&#13;
overdue 3 day rAse rv e book . or 50&#13;
cents an hour on two hour reserves, I a&#13;
lillie stiff.&#13;
The five girls hired for the 'P"&lt;If1c&#13;
purpose .of library security are Mr.&#13;
Theil Prevention Checkpoint&#13;
Mary S. Vena, 1r. Shirley Ann&#13;
Mandernack, Mrs Carol M.&#13;
Levonowich, irs. Jean A Jensen, and&#13;
Mr . Jeanine . iad n, Ana rney have&#13;
caught pe pie Sin e they have started.&#13;
Exploring E.S.P.&#13;
By John Koloen&#13;
This is a story of personal experiences,&#13;
the experiences and reactions of a wide&#13;
range of people all. sharing one common&#13;
bond.Each of them probably had different&#13;
reasons and their attitudes varied from&#13;
hostile skepticism to the desperate&#13;
graspings of the insecure but strangely the&#13;
object of their feelings found its mark in.&#13;
one man: Norman Slater E.S.P.&#13;
Norman lives in a converted garage&#13;
behind a large house on Washington Road&#13;
west of the old North Shore Railroad&#13;
viaduct. It's a well lighted place and on a&#13;
cold night looks very warm ftom the&#13;
outside. One room is made to serve as&#13;
bedroom, living room and kitchen. A small&#13;
bathroom lies on one corner, hidden from&#13;
view by a pair of swinging doors. The&#13;
furniture is as varied as his clients, consisting&#13;
of old painted wagon wheels attached&#13;
to the ceiling, antiquish desks and a&#13;
Collection of records from Marches by&#13;
Sousa to the Band. It is the kind of place a&#13;
collector of out of the way articles would&#13;
spent half a day handing the various objects&#13;
which appeal to his eye in second&#13;
hand stores and antique shops.&#13;
But Norman Slater is no second hand&#13;
man and he'll tell you that if you start&#13;
talking about yourself before he's had the&#13;
chance to tell you. "You've come to me to&#13;
have Yourlife read ... if you want to go to&#13;
SOmeoneelse and pay fifty dollars and tell&#13;
about yourself so they can tell you, fine. I&#13;
'don'f mean to be rude, I just don't want&#13;
you to tell me these things. Let me tell&#13;
you."&#13;
When Ifirst met him we shook hands and&#13;
instead of asking how my health was he&#13;
smiled and said, "Isee your aura is green&#13;
I'll tell you what it means later.' Then h~'turned to my two companions and&#13;
began a conversation about the newspaper&#13;
and our economic situation. They had met&#13;
him earlier and asked me to come along to&#13;
help write an article on Norman. One of&#13;
them was skeptical from the start, the&#13;
other uncertain, and I was anxious to know&#13;
what a green aura meant.&#13;
During the next several hours. Ilist~ed&#13;
as they talked. Their conversation drifted&#13;
from the newspaper to Norman and E.S.P.&#13;
One of my friends made some calls to&#13;
people who had contact with Norman and&#13;
while he was talking I asked Norm~,h,ow&#13;
he had started in E.S.P. He rephed, I ve&#13;
had this gift since Iwas nine years old but&#13;
only since about five years ago ~as Iable&#13;
to cultivate it. My gift is God given and I&#13;
will only use this gift in a fitting manner ..I&#13;
do not charge for my services. I use this&#13;
gift not for money, not for fame, but to h~p&#13;
those in need, the way God would want It.&#13;
When a group invites me as a guest&#13;
speaker I show them E.S.P., de~onstrate&#13;
it, not just talk about It . . . . Mter a&#13;
moment he added, "When Jean Dixon was&#13;
Norman Sialer&#13;
in Racine she talked in front of a thousaod&#13;
people but she never went to the people&#13;
and asked if someone wanted a reading."&#13;
Then my companion handed me the&#13;
phone and after a cordial greeting the&#13;
person on tbe other end spoke of the recent&#13;
California earthquake. .. orman came&#13;
over February eighth and looked very&#13;
upset. He told us of bow he had had a&#13;
dream and forsaw an earthquake and was&#13;
literally shaken out of sleep. Norman said&#13;
he believed the quake would be very very&#13;
soon because he had had earlier&#13;
premonitions of the aCCOUll~but none as&#13;
violent as that last night." The next&#13;
morning at approximately 6:05 one of&#13;
California's worst quakes struck Los&#13;
Angeles. I glanced at my friend and he&#13;
shook his head as if to say it was true,&#13;
whether or not Iwanted to believe it.&#13;
In a skeptical way I said, "Fine, that's&#13;
one point for Norman, but it doesn't make&#13;
him a psychic." Then my other companion&#13;
volunteered this experience with Norman.&#13;
"Norman was at my house and, you know,&#13;
I dared him to play the game where you&#13;
drop a dollar bill between someone's&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
Volume 3 . Number 5 March I, 197 I&#13;
Constitutional&#13;
Referendum&#13;
Library Tightens Security======--==-&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
If you have beeR in the Tallent Hall&#13;
Library in the past month, you couldn't&#13;
help noticing the girl guarding the exit.&#13;
Her purpose is to prevent theft. Pure&#13;
and simply oµr main library has lost&#13;
some 20,000 \t~ms since. it opened, and&#13;
the girls are there to help control this. I&#13;
(Pholln by StM Zabel)&#13;
Maximum Security?&#13;
had a talk with Mr. Philip Burnett, the&#13;
Director of Libraries.&#13;
Burnett said, "This began mall and&#13;
informally. There was no money, staff,&#13;
or people in '67. Now the new building&#13;
will have turnstyle control to stop&#13;
things from 'drifting away.'&#13;
"The first big thing wr lo.st was a 65&#13;
Rand-McNally Commercial tlas, it&#13;
Exploring E.S.P.&#13;
By John Koloen&#13;
This is a story of personal experiences,&#13;
the experiences and reactions of a wide&#13;
range of people all. sharing one common&#13;
bond. Each of them probably had different&#13;
reasons and their attitudes varied from&#13;
hostile skepticism to the desperate&#13;
gr~spings of the insecure but strangely the&#13;
ObJect of their feelings found its mark in&#13;
one man: Norman Slater E.S.P.&#13;
N?rman Jives in a converted garage&#13;
behind a large house on Washington Road&#13;
"'.est of the old North Shore Railroad&#13;
Viaduct. It's a well lighted place and on a&#13;
cold_ night looks very warm from the&#13;
outside. One room is made to serve as&#13;
::droom, living room and kitchen. A small&#13;
. throom lies on one corner, hidden from&#13;
vte~ by a pair of swinging doors. The&#13;
f~r~ture is as varied as his clients, consisting&#13;
of old painted wagon wheels attached&#13;
to the ceiling, antiquish desks and a&#13;
collection of records from Marches by&#13;
Sousa to the Band. It is the kind of place a&#13;
collector of out of the way articles would&#13;
~pent half a day handing the various ob-&#13;
:ts which appeal to his eye in second&#13;
nd stores and antique shops.&#13;
But Norman Slater is no second hand&#13;
rnan and he'll tell you that if you start&#13;
~!king about yourself before he's had the&#13;
ha ance to tell you. "You've come to me to&#13;
so ve your life read ... if you want to go to&#13;
rneone else and pay fifty dollars and tell&#13;
about yourself so they can tell you, fine. I&#13;
·don'( mean to be rude, I just don't want&#13;
you to tell me these things. Let me tell&#13;
you."&#13;
When I first met him we shook hands and&#13;
instead of asking how my health was he&#13;
smiled and said, " I see your aura is green&#13;
... I'll tell you what it means later." Then&#13;
he turned to my two companions and&#13;
began a conversation about the newspaper&#13;
and our economic situation. They had met&#13;
him earlier and asked me to come along to&#13;
help write an article on Norman. One of&#13;
them was skeptical from the start, the&#13;
other uncertain, and I was anxious to know&#13;
what a green aura meant.&#13;
During the next several hours I listened&#13;
as they talked. Their conversation drifted&#13;
from the newspaper to Norman and E .S.P .&#13;
One of my friends made some calls to&#13;
people who had contact with Norman and&#13;
while he was talking I asked Norman how&#13;
he had started in E.S.P. He replied, " I've&#13;
had this gift since I was nine years old but&#13;
only since about five years ago was I able&#13;
to cultivate it. My gift is God given and I&#13;
will only use this gift in a fitting manner. I&#13;
do not charge for my services. I use this&#13;
gift not for money, not for fame, but to he~p&#13;
those in need, the way God would want 1t&#13;
When a group invites me as a guest&#13;
speaker I show them E.S .. P ., de~onstrate&#13;
it, not just talk about 1t . . . After a&#13;
moment he added, "When Jean Dixon was&#13;
la ted three months. The de. k pe pie&#13;
couldn't watch all the time. Thing g t&#13;
bad when book tarted disappearing&#13;
from the 'reserved' helf.&#13;
Our Judy Hamilton figured fifty&#13;
book a month were being lo t and it&#13;
was co ting 6000 a year. he said. (I got&#13;
another figure of 15,()()() from another&#13;
ource.) We can't find out how man&#13;
we've lo t . in e we would have to count&#13;
them.&#13;
"Thi i pure theft , either a peron&#13;
might have a pa ionate de ire to po. se~&#13;
book or he might be teahng them 10&#13;
sell. Then we have the per .on affiicted&#13;
\\.ith irre pon ible 1.-arele. ne who&#13;
might take a re erved book to have an&#13;
advantage over the re ·t of the cla. ,&#13;
''We cho e to hire the girl becau. e&#13;
turn tyle are expen ive and we're&#13;
moving anyway. Be ide they are&#13;
cheerful. friend)}'. and ni e looking.&#13;
They make people want to how their&#13;
books.&#13;
"Originally count were made and we&#13;
found the leakage ta ·ing pla e."&#13;
Burnett said. "\\'e checked. tad1. on and&#13;
found they had ontrol p int around&#13;
the library· In • 1ilwaukee the · have a&#13;
in ;: ~ I tr ut !. \,, ... ntr '°e,&#13;
found thi preferable. The 6()()() we&#13;
spend on the girls will ju t about ~over&#13;
the co t of lo e . but there is al. the&#13;
factor of efficiency of o;en·ice. If we can&#13;
produce 5% of book a ked for we'd&#13;
be doing good 60% i our pre nt&#13;
figure. In the beginning the girl were&#13;
checking every page of the notebook&#13;
people were carrying: now we are le.&#13;
stringent."&#13;
I al o spoke with the circulation&#13;
manager, Mike Reid, who i in harge of&#13;
the security, He told me-that the mo t&#13;
orman&#13;
in Racine she talked in front of a thousand&#13;
people but she never went to the people&#13;
and asked if someone wanted a reading."&#13;
Then my companion handed me the&#13;
phone and after a cordial greeting the&#13;
person on the other end spoke of the recent&#13;
California eaTthquake. " ·orman came&#13;
over February eighth and looked very&#13;
upset. He told us of how he had had a dream and forsaw an earthquake and was&#13;
literally shaken out of sleep. Norman said&#13;
he believed the quake would be very very&#13;
soon because he had had earlier&#13;
iremonitions of the account, but ncme a&#13;
purpo&#13;
Th ft Pr '\ nli n point&#13;
P IDs by R A , d)&#13;
later&#13;
.,,;olent a that last night." T ne t&#13;
morning at approxunately 6:05 one of&#13;
California· worst quak stru L&#13;
Angeles. I glanced at my friend and he&#13;
shook his head as if to ay it v.as true,&#13;
whether or not I wanted to believe it.&#13;
In a keptical way I said "Fine, that'&#13;
one point for orman, but it d n't make&#13;
him a psychic." Then my other companion&#13;
volunteered this experience with Norman.&#13;
" orman was at my house and, you knov.,&#13;
I dared him to play the game where you&#13;
drop a dollar bill between someone's&#13;
&lt;Continued on Page 6) &#13;
NEWSCOPE Mond ay, Marth Newsco 1,1tII&#13;
Volume 3, Number 4 'Pe&#13;
Tuesday, February 23 • ,1971&#13;
EDITORIAL BOARD&#13;
Jim Nolan&#13;
Warren Ned;;" : : : : : : .. " . l'ubh...&#13;
Marc Elsen " . . ... ,Ed]&#13;
Jerry Owens . .... : NewsF4.&#13;
John Leighton .A'dBuslnes'M .... Vertisin ~&#13;
EDlTQRIAL STAFF gM"""&#13;
Sven Taffs Jim K I&#13;
M k B· , a oen J h&#13;
ar arnhill , Bill ,On K~&#13;
Jacoby, John Potente DSorenSOn&#13;
H. Post, Mike Kurth' ean I.oum&#13;
Breach, Jerry Socha 'lm Smith~D&#13;
Lomartire , James Ca; en KOnkol""&#13;
Sunball, Kevin M k&#13;
er&#13;
, 80b ~&#13;
Bob Borchardt. . cay, CarolJ""&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha Don M . , arjala John&#13;
. Published weeki b ' Gill&#13;
ORGANIZA nON y y the NEWSCOIi&#13;
Wisconsin- Parksid~t ~;~niver'l)&#13;
Road, Kenosha, Wi'sconsinW~&#13;
are the opinion of the Ed" Edit",,",&#13;
and are not to be I(oria!8&lt;ort&#13;
opinions of the UniverstOn~ldered&#13;
faculty, or administratioty&#13;
, Its51_ n.&#13;
TELEPHONES:&#13;
Business 652-4177&#13;
Editorial 658-4861, ext. 36&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Rosa Heads Welfare Committee&#13;
Draft Seminars practices and discrimin.ation. .&#13;
Rates for a family of five, he said, as set&#13;
by the State Department of Social Services&#13;
is $186 a month, while the Racme&#13;
Gene~al Assistance. Department gives&#13;
$140.For a family of nine the State rate is&#13;
$306 and Racine gives $244. In all cases the&#13;
Racine Department of General Assistance&#13;
gives less than what is prescribed by the&#13;
State Social Services Department.&#13;
Rosa went on to say that his request for&#13;
an open public meeting - possibly March&#13;
13 _ seems to be in the making. He explained&#13;
that he had received a letter from&#13;
Richard LaFave, Chairman, Racine&#13;
County Board, which said that he was&#13;
asking the County Board to call a meeting&#13;
and hoped it could be set up soon.&#13;
The EWC, meanwhile, has been aiding&#13;
General Assistance applicants with funds&#13;
obtained by donations.&#13;
When asked what students could do to&#13;
help, Rosa replied, "Advise people of&#13;
meetings, tell people about the problems,&#13;
and let the EWC know of any cases where&#13;
people have been abused. Rosa's office is&#13;
at the Spanish Center, 1031 Douglas&#13;
Avenue in Racine.&#13;
b) Dean Loum05&#13;
The Department of General Assistance&#13;
d. the Racine County Board has been&#13;
criticized by the Emergency Welfare&#13;
Committee for its treatment of General&#13;
Assistance applicants.&#13;
Earlier. the Spanish Center of Racine, in&#13;
a meeting with General AssistanCe&#13;
Chairman Hubert Braun and his staff, had&#13;
tned to dJscuss their grievances, but&#13;
""",h'ed utue cooperation. Then, Felix&#13;
Rosa. acting on his own, called another&#13;
meeting 0/ interested persons and groups.&#13;
Some of those attending were represen&#13;
-&#13;
tab\'es of 'AAcP. Brown Berets, t.es&#13;
Aspm 's o/fice, RYM, and others. At this&#13;
meetIng the Emergency Welfare Commlu.ee&#13;
....'35 formed with Mr. Rosa as&#13;
chairman. The EWCthen drew up a list of demands&#13;
and presented them at a rally held at the&#13;
General Assistance o[fice. Among the&#13;
demands listed were:&#13;
1 We demand that all applicants be&#13;
treated equally without racial and class&#13;
c:hscrimination. Rose explained that there&#13;
had been cases where "Puerto Ricans&#13;
were told to go back to Puerto Rico, and&#13;
were asked why they had come to Racine&#13;
lor help."&#13;
2. Giving up of license plates and titles&#13;
to aU motor vehicles not be required. Rosa&#13;
expl~ined that, "just about everyone who&#13;
applies for help has to give his license&#13;
away."&#13;
3: yJe demand that the guidelines and&#13;
policies of the office of General Assistance&#13;
be revised and changed to adequately&#13;
mee~.!.heemergency needs of low·income&#13;
families. The committee to review and&#13;
change these guidelines should be imme:(hately&#13;
set up and include representatives&#13;
from Black, Spanish-speaking and&#13;
other low-income people. '&#13;
Rosa added that "The guidelines serve&#13;
to harass applicants. In some cases these&#13;
guidelines aren't even followed and applicants&#13;
are subject to very arbitrary&#13;
Sunnyside Florisb&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
Rowers - Frlit .~~ . ..... - ~II&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till II p.m. 7 day.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone: 6194·6700&#13;
VI and fRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021- 75TH,T&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN UljO Phone 657 -97 47&#13;
lOc OFF&#13;
On Any Order Of&#13;
BELL'S FRIED&#13;
CHI,CKEN&#13;
II be 1I0le Ior que lions and&#13;
ion&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood with this coupon&#13;
Good Wed., March 3&#13;
thru Tues., March 9&#13;
7601 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Adl.e,nt to Nlitlon.1 FltOd&#13;
\\\1&#13;
270&lt;11lofhrop ........ 'ocin,. WiJconJin&#13;
Students get red cafpet service&#13;
(SO does everyone e t s e ' )&#13;
HUXHOlD'S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
SO. Green Ba)' Rd.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-97/6&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
~NOUB:~LNDT'S-RACINE SOUND ROOM&#13;
in sound L ~IND ALL the brands you know&#13;
and 45's eiudl~ment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
a Iscount pr ices&#13;
Sto . .&#13;
checkb~~n a;d blow your mind, not your&#13;
Department ee and talk to Mark, our&#13;
student and ~anager, who is a Parkside&#13;
equipment Will talk your language, both in&#13;
purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY - Tape re PANASONIC _ c:rd~rs, Radios, TV &amp; Record playerS&#13;
KOSS _ Headsetsadlo, TV, Recorders, StereQrecordpl'ytrI&#13;
KENWOOD - Re . MARANTZ _ Re c~lvers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
AZTEC _ Speakecr:lvers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C - Rec . GERRARD elvers &amp; Radios&#13;
G E R - Turntables&#13;
.. - adios &amp;&#13;
Also, Patch Record players 'Ie&#13;
are here, sho c~rds, blank Tapes and accessories.WIUtts t&#13;
Southeastern W~ or Jewelry, Sporting goods and GI&#13;
Isconsl·n's I . owest ·prlces.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
512 MAIN STREET&#13;
on the west .dSl e of Monument Square&#13;
RACINE'S&#13;
GREAT&#13;
DOWNTOW~",usf&#13;
DiSCOUNT rt"&#13;
Draft Seminars&#13;
page 2 NEWSCOPE Mon .. ay, March l&#13;
•• ewsco .1&#13;
Rosa Heads Welfare Committee&#13;
Volume 3, Number 4 Pe&#13;
Tuesday, February 23, 197\ I&#13;
EDITORIAL BOARD '&#13;
Jim Nolan&#13;
Rosa added that "The guidelines serve&#13;
to ~ar~ss applicants. In some cases these&#13;
~1dehnes aren't .even followed and applicants&#13;
are subJect to very arbitrary&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lothrop A••-, ltocine, Wisconsin&#13;
Students ge t r ed ca rpe t se rv ice&#13;
( So does everyon e e lse!)&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
o. Green Bay Rd.&#13;
Ke11osht1&#13;
63-+-9.., 16&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
practices and discrimin_ation. . Rates for a family of five, he said, as set&#13;
by the State Department ?f Social S~rvices&#13;
is $186 a month, while the Racine&#13;
Gene~al Assistance Department gives&#13;
$140. For a family of nine the State rate is&#13;
$306 and Racine gives $244. In all cases the&#13;
Racine Department of General Assistance&#13;
gives less than what is prescribed by the&#13;
State Social Services Department.&#13;
Rosa went on to say that his request for&#13;
an open public meeting - possibly March&#13;
13 - seems to be in the making. He explained&#13;
that he had received a letter from&#13;
Richard LaFave, Chairman, Racine&#13;
County Board, which said that he was&#13;
asking the County Board to call a meeting&#13;
and hoped it could be set up soon. The EWC, meanwhile, has been aiding&#13;
General Assistance applicants with funds&#13;
obtained by donations.&#13;
When asked what students could do to&#13;
help, Rosa replied, "Advise people of&#13;
meetings, tell people about the problems,&#13;
and let the EWC know of any cases where&#13;
people have been abused. Rosa's office is&#13;
at the Spanish Center, 1031 Douglas&#13;
Avenue in Racine.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
10c OFF&#13;
On Any Order Of&#13;
BELL'S FRIED&#13;
CHl·CKEN&#13;
with this coupon&#13;
Good Wed., March 3&#13;
thru Tues., March 9&#13;
7601 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Adj1cent lo National Food&#13;
Warren Ned.ry · : : : · · · · · · ... Pub!&#13;
Marc Eisen ...... : · · · · · ...... f:d,&#13;
Jerry Owens . . . · · · · ·: NeWs Ed&#13;
John Leighton .. A. d. Business \1 · · · · verti · ·&#13;
EDITQRlAL STAFF sing \!a&#13;
Sven Taffs Jim K I M ' · 0 oen J ark Barnhill, Bill ' 0hn Ko1&#13;
Jacoby, John Potente D Sorenson&#13;
H. Post, Mike Kurth' ~an Lou;&#13;
Breach, Jerry Socha ' Jun Smith D&#13;
Lomartire James C ' Ken Konkoi&#13;
S b II ' asper B b , un a ' Kevin McKa ' o \lalll!&#13;
Bob Borchardt. Y, Carol J&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha Don M . ' ariala Jotu&#13;
· Published week! b ' · C&#13;
O~GANIZATlONyat ~~he EWSCOP[&#13;
Wisconsin- Parkside 37~~ntversity&#13;
Road, Kenosha, Wi'scon . Walhi&#13;
are the opinion of the Jt Edit&#13;
and are not to b 11?rtal&#13;
opinions of the Univ:rsi~onsidered&#13;
faculty' or administrati onY, lls st .&#13;
TELEPHONES:&#13;
Business 652- 4177&#13;
Editorial 658- 4861 , ext. 36&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
Flowers - Fruit D-•... . - ... - Gifts&#13;
Phone: 684-6700&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021 • 75TH ST&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 531'0&#13;
~~UB:~NDT'S-RACINE SOUND ROOM&#13;
in sound L ~IND ALL the brands you know&#13;
and 45,s :iudi~ment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
S . 1scount prices.&#13;
top m and blo . checkbook S w your mind, not your&#13;
Departme~t ee and talk to Mark, our&#13;
student an ~anager, who is a Parkside&#13;
equipmentd will talk your language, both in&#13;
purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY - Tape record . PANASONIC_ Ra ~rs, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets dio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record playe~&#13;
KENWOOD - R . MARANTZ R eceiverS, Tuner and Amps&#13;
AZTEC _ Speak:cr:iverS, Speakers, Record players&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C - Re . GERRARD ce,;ers &amp; Radios&#13;
G E R -:-- urntables&#13;
· • - ad1os &amp; R Also, Patch cor:cord players ·1e&#13;
are here, shop for S, blank Tapes and accessories, Wh:tts&#13;
Southeastern w· _J~welry, Sporting goods and G&#13;
isconsm s lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT, S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
512 MAIN STREET&#13;
on the west side of Monument Square&#13;
RACINE'S&#13;
GREAT&#13;
oowNroWN 0usE&#13;
01scouNT H &#13;
Monday, March 1, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
-&#13;
Porkside's Athletic Engineer&#13;
by KEN KONKOL&#13;
If you are one of those involved with&#13;
athletics on campus, you already know&#13;
Tom Rosandich, If you are not, you might&#13;
be interested in taking a look at VFW&#13;
magazine for February. In looking&#13;
through it to page 24, you will come on an&#13;
article about him. It tells about the man&#13;
far better than I ever would.&#13;
Rosandich, who doesn't look a bit like&#13;
Paul Newman, has been involved in the&#13;
athletic progr~ms of 51 countrtes, but&#13;
came to Parkside to accept the challenge&#13;
of taking nothing and molding it into the'&#13;
finest athletic program in the state.&#13;
It has not been easy. For one thing,&#13;
communication is practically.non-existent&#13;
between staff, faculty and students. For&#13;
another there is poor sports coverage from&#13;
local newspapers. Radio -is something to&#13;
dream about. Part of this trouble stems&#13;
from difficulties of arranging locations for&#13;
home games. .. .&#13;
"Our teams work out in two counties,&#13;
four communities, and at nineteen different&#13;
sites. Some of our teams might be&#13;
up at 5 a.m. working out at Washington&#13;
Park High. Others might be seen at&#13;
midnight at J. I. Case after a basketball&#13;
game - running cross country, and our&#13;
Director of Intramurals would be right out&#13;
there with them.&#13;
"We are probably the only Varsity&#13;
basketball team in the country that has to&#13;
work out' at 10 a.m. Our intramurals are&#13;
probably Ute only ones run at twelve noon.&#13;
Our athletic facilities on the Racine&#13;
campus consist of an eight by ten room.&#13;
"Recently we played Carthage College,&#13;
an away game, one mile from here. Our&#13;
next game was at home. WeplayedatJ. I.&#13;
Case, 20 miles from here. Talk about a&#13;
home court advantage! Parkside owns one&#13;
basketball hoop - it's mounted on the barn&#13;
outside the athletics office.&#13;
"We haven't let the lack of facilities stop&#13;
us though. We are the NAIA Cross Country&#13;
14thDistrict Champiuns. In soccer we beat&#13;
Ohio State. In basketball we've beat every&#13;
school in the Wisconsin _Gateway Conference.&#13;
In Wrestlit}gw y¥'e ~on a major&#13;
tourname~t at ~ilX&gt;n. In Gymnastics we&#13;
~on ~e WiSCOnSinOpen. Our fencing lea&#13;
IS nationally ranked m&#13;
."Our Skiing club ;on the USSA Central&#13;
~IVlSlOr:aCross Country Ski Championship&#13;
10 .Nordi~ Skiing and came in second in the&#13;
~ISCO~SIn Intercollegiate Alpine championships.&#13;
Another of our sport -clubs .&#13;
saIlmg, won the WiSconsin Intercouegia~&#13;
Regatta.&#13;
"All this was done While spending less&#13;
mO,ney on Intercollegiate athletics than&#13;
OhIO State spends on telepbone recruiting&#13;
or LSD spends on golf. Our success is due&#13;
spectators. There will be a pool. mainly (or&#13;
recreational swimming. as well as com.&#13;
petition .&#13;
"Besides the pool, there will be facilities&#13;
for fencing, basketball, "eights. "ork out,&#13;
bandball, tennis, volleyball and badminton.&#13;
There will be roll-away bleachers&#13;
for best utilization of space when not in&#13;
use. We have asked for a syntbeue floor for&#13;
multi-purpose use (or student aetivities.&#13;
There will be the potential for hghhng,&#13;
sound, and auditorium type acoustics&#13;
"We have a plan to allocate 100 acres for&#13;
play fields, intramural and club sports&#13;
Tom Rosandich with Joe Newton, high scboollrack coacb from Elmhurst,&#13;
lIl.&#13;
to dedicated coaches who are prepared to&#13;
meet with the players anyplace -&#13;
anytime.&#13;
"Bids are being made right now for a&#13;
building to be completed by the summer of&#13;
'72. The emphasis is on utilization or space&#13;
~or ~('t1vities rather than DO seating (or&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
If you read the curfent Rolling Stone&#13;
you'll find an interview with the late AI&#13;
Wilson of Canned Heat, and in it he&#13;
reveals a perceptive eye for the&#13;
contemporary blues scetle, and says&#13;
among other things, "Sam Lay is a titan;&#13;
I consider him the first or second best&#13;
drunner I've heard in the blues."&#13;
A few Fridays ago, Parkside students&#13;
were not only able to see Sam Lay&#13;
perform, but Lucille Spann, the widow&#13;
of pianist Otis Spann and a fine singer in&#13;
her Own right, and Bonnie Raitt, a&#13;
young white country blues singer of&#13;
Whom mOre will be heard.&#13;
Lay is probably the best known blues&#13;
drummer around' his reputation having&#13;
been secured by playing with the likes&#13;
of Muddy Waters, Paul Butterfield on&#13;
his early (and best) albums, and on their&#13;
j 0 i n t .album, Farhers and Sons, and&#13;
albums with Waters, Butterfield, Mike&#13;
Bloomfield, "Duck" Dunn, Otis Spann,&#13;
and Buddy Miles. .&#13;
Lay has his own group now, and IS&#13;
currently on tour of colleges in th.e&#13;
state. The band, surprisingly enough, IS&#13;
made up of four longhairs, plus Lay and&#13;
Mrs. S!'ann. Their perfonnance was&#13;
disappOinting.&#13;
While the band plays the standard&#13;
urban blues expected of a Chicago blues&#13;
band it's hard to escape the thought&#13;
that 'Lay employs the longhairs in an&#13;
attempt to establish rapport WIth Ihe&#13;
college audience.&#13;
Only two of the longhairs seemed to&#13;
be of top rate calibre, Garfield Angove,&#13;
Sam Lay Playing the Blues&#13;
programs. We DOW have a :tLX mile running&#13;
trail built (or cross country aDd&#13;
recreational nmning. There are plans (or&#13;
tennis courts and on outdoor running track&#13;
with synthetic surfaces. We envision the&#13;
possiMity of a field house to satisfy the&#13;
tlemand (or space, but we have no plans&#13;
for a tadsurn, per Our &lt;mph I&#13;
toward hfeUm. port&#13;
..w. hold tile lead"""",p for rt clu&#13;
In the late of \\ nsin Ouldoor llrt i&#13;
dCllng a tory 01 our hunt r, In ad&#13;
gun club There are 550, hunt to&#13;
WIsconsin. ·0 oU",r port h thaI kInd of&#13;
parucipauon. On cam",," our gun club ha&#13;
'200 members Our rt club COUI'I&lt;11&#13;
starung a cychng cornpeuuoo&#13;
"OUr Intramural touch football gam&#13;
between Racme and Kenosha \10.. th&#13;
great t attended gam " had yl'l, J I&#13;
the Racine-Ken"""a baskelbell game"&#13;
the most attended ID thaI field&#13;
··Wedon'l ha'eahell 01 a 101 of ple n&#13;
the Lands but th er e are a h kola&#13;
number enrolled There are at I I&#13;
lhousand involved In . ports clut. on&#13;
campus. Fifty per cent of the , luden art.&#13;
Involved in Inlramural . ports clubs one&#13;
way or the other&#13;
"We hold a pos,t,on 01 leade lop ID&#13;
Wisconsin In the area of ~callonal&#13;
ports. Our\loomen's ere count11- team&#13;
the only one In WISCon 10 - and til • '\&#13;
played an tmportant part In devet pment&#13;
of the WtSConSIO Women's tntercoll rete&#13;
Athletic Association program&#13;
"We have been hIghly u Iul with&#13;
coeducational P E. 10 the area or "omen'&#13;
athletics Thi gives us better utilization of&#13;
ume.faciliti aadcoach than II "ould If&#13;
we held parate program for" om n&#13;
"Our staff is ded,cated WlthOUl ex&#13;
ceplion each member leachE'S P E&#13;
coaches a sporl. and I In-.:ohed In In&#13;
tTamwal acuvlues "&#13;
lr Rosandlch. who has been quoted a&#13;
saymg he dldn'l believe 10 holaf'Shjps&#13;
feels that the purpose of athlell I to&#13;
leach a student a III In the area or ~m&#13;
tifellme port "beth... thaI be . kling,&#13;
shooting. gymna tics. or somethmg I&#13;
"Parkslde does nol orrer either a maJOl'&#13;
or minor tn PhYSical Education I fed lhal&#13;
students should develop their kIll "" th Ir&#13;
(NI,"o !e\·eI. Intramural or extramural (Club&#13;
sports) or lnlercolleglale to&#13;
If you would like l() show )'our . uppot"t to&#13;
our athletic program. you will hav~ lh&#13;
opportuDlty. Our Gymnastics team, raled&#13;
the number one new learn In th country, I&#13;
holding a gymna IIcS m I Tueoday.&#13;
March 2nd. at Wasillngton Park HIgh&#13;
School in RaclOe at 730 Why not com on&#13;
down and show your . upport GET I.&#13;
VOLVED.&#13;
vocals and mouth harp. and '-tark Freer.&#13;
a fine bassist who was handi~apptd&#13;
because he wasn't amplified enough&#13;
Angove is a fair harpi " bUI a mellow&#13;
singer-much like early Buuerfield.&#13;
having too Butterfield's mannerism.&#13;
combinalion greaser and Southside&#13;
sharpie.&#13;
I find it hard to believe 'hal Lay&#13;
would bring this band into a black bar&#13;
in Chicago. Supposedly these areas hne&#13;
been off limits for white bluesmen IDee&#13;
around the lime Bunerfield and&#13;
Bloomfield went on 10 better lime .&#13;
Take into consideration too thai B &amp;. 8&#13;
had a measure of skill and toughn.&#13;
this band lacks.&#13;
Overall Ihe band Jus, didn', Jell&#13;
together. It play.d well, but not "i'h&#13;
inspiration. The band lacks anyone who&#13;
can drive Lay lo do beller. and suffers&#13;
for it. Lay didn', display the power h.,&#13;
noted for, excepl when playing two&#13;
Waters' classics. "Walking in the Park:'&#13;
and "Got iy Mojo Working."&#13;
When Mrs. Spann sang the band W3&#13;
tighter, and Lay's drummiligharder. yel&#13;
still 'he band couldn't build the&#13;
momentum that would carry it on.&#13;
................. . ' '" ., . ".&#13;
Th perfomun,e of 'he band pol&#13;
more when II I omp red to 111&#13;
{'harhe tu Iwhue pUI n If I&#13;
eme 'er. I~}' b3nd prub3 I&#13;
te ·hm 3ll~ beller 'h3n lu Iwh I .&#13;
b3nd bui [h2the' b nd h.d th pwel&#13;
and the ,."e tha' led 10 3 g~ ..&#13;
perform.nee It "'a undoobledl 3 hIgh&#13;
POlOt for P.u . Id lhal rainY ;d 1C'IIK&gt;On&#13;
The eventn cndcod when BunOlC'&#13;
R2m did an une peeled sci afler L:J)-&#13;
finished \tl RaHl. a \10 hlle ('Ollnl"&#13;
blue 1O@(r UI ot e YOll. had been&#13;
In hlw3ukeco nn a bill Wllh&#13;
ieg.l· hWIII CI whue blue b.lld \I\lt&#13;
ofCh' 0.)&#13;
e dlo,e to P.,k Ide be 3U'l&lt; ,e&#13;
was a ran of Uh,ltI pann. and ";anted&#13;
lo seC' her perlorrn, he lilt (OUf m&#13;
'hree of them \10 Ippl deha wn~ .&#13;
and "'1'3 an e Iriordm,1rI1 Jotld&#13;
a"ouMK gultarl t&#13;
'h RaIU 1 3 \'CI) ~arp hi k. :I\toilre&#13;
of the IDcongrully \If a} ou"l! "'hIle gill&#13;
IDglOg an old black man' hlue II r&#13;
name i be~omlO 10 be mcoull ncd \&#13;
mu I'" cnl1", . And le I umh)ublcdl)&#13;
g 109 pia e .&#13;
_;--------;.;;~~-L~- Monday: March 1, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
Parks ide 's Athletic Engineer&#13;
by KEN KONKOL&#13;
If you are one of those involved with&#13;
athletics on campus, you already know&#13;
Tom Rosandich. If you are not, you might&#13;
be interested in taking a look at VFW&#13;
magazine for February. In looking&#13;
through it to page 24, you will come on an&#13;
article about him. It tells about the man&#13;
far better than I ever would.&#13;
Rosandich, who doesn't look a bit like&#13;
Paul Newman, has been involved in the&#13;
athletic programs of 51 countries, but&#13;
came to Parkside to accept the challenge&#13;
of taking nothing and molding it into the&#13;
finest athletic program in the state.&#13;
It has not been easy. For one thing,&#13;
communication is practically .non-existent&#13;
between staff, faculty and · students. For&#13;
another there is poor sports coverage from&#13;
Jocal newspapers. Radio ·is something to&#13;
dream about. Part of this trouble stems&#13;
from difficulties of arranging locations for&#13;
home games. · · ·&#13;
"Our teams work out in two counties,&#13;
four communities, and at nineteen different&#13;
sites. Some of our teams might be&#13;
up at 5 a.m. working out at Washington&#13;
Park High. Others might be seen at&#13;
midnight at J. I. Case after a basketball&#13;
game - running cross country, and our&#13;
Director of Intramurals would be right out&#13;
there with them.&#13;
"We are probably the only Varsity&#13;
basketball team in the country that has to&#13;
work out" at 10 a.m. Our intramurals are&#13;
probably the only ones run at twelve noon.&#13;
Our athletic facilities on the Racine&#13;
campus consist of an eight by ten room.&#13;
tournament at Ripon. In Gymnastics we&#13;
:,von ~e Wisconsin Open. Our fencing team&#13;
1s nationally ranked.&#13;
-"~r Skiing club won the USSA Central&#13;
~1V1s1on Cross Country Ski Championship&#13;
10 _Nordi~ Skiing and came in second in the&#13;
~1sco~sm Intercollegiate Alpine champi~~hips.&#13;
Another of our sport -clu~ in&#13;
sailmg, won the Wisconsin Intercollegiate Regatta.&#13;
"All this ~as done while spending less&#13;
m~ney on mtercollegiate athletics than&#13;
Ohio State spends on telephone recruiting&#13;
or um spends on golf. Our success is due&#13;
"Recently we played Carthage College,&#13;
an away game, one mile from here. Our&#13;
next game was at home. We played at J. I.&#13;
Case, 20 miles from here. Talk about a&#13;
home court advantage! Parkside owns one&#13;
basketball hoop- it's.mounted on the barn&#13;
outside the athletics office.&#13;
Tom Rosandich with Joe Newton, high school track coach from Elmhurst.&#13;
Ill.&#13;
"We haven't let the lack of facilities stop&#13;
us though. We are the NAIA Cross Country&#13;
14th District Champions. In soccer we beat&#13;
Ohio State. In basketball we've beat every&#13;
school in the Wisconsin Gateway Conference.&#13;
In Wrestling. we won a major&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
If you read the current Rolling Stone&#13;
you'll find an interview with the late A1&#13;
Wilson of Canned Heat, and in it he&#13;
reveals a perceptive eye for the&#13;
contemporary blues scene, and says&#13;
among other things, "Sam Lay is a titan;&#13;
I consider him the first or second best&#13;
drunner I've heard in the blues."&#13;
A few Fridays ago , Parkside students&#13;
were not only able to see Sam Lay&#13;
perform, but Lucille Spann, the widow&#13;
of pianist Otis Spann and a fine singer in&#13;
her own right, and Bonnie Raitt, a&#13;
young white country blues singer of&#13;
whom more will be heard.&#13;
Lay is probably the best known blues&#13;
drummer around; his reputation ha~ing&#13;
been secured by playing with the likes&#13;
of Muddy Waters, Paul Butterfield on&#13;
to dedicated coaches who are prepared to&#13;
meet with the players anyplace -&#13;
anytime.&#13;
"Bids are being made right now for a&#13;
building to be completed by the summer of&#13;
'72. The emphasis is on utilization of space&#13;
{or &lt;1ctivities rather than on seating for&#13;
his early (and best) albums, and on their&#13;
joint album, Fathers and Sons, and&#13;
albums with Waters, Butterfield, Mike&#13;
Bloomfield, "Duck" Dunn, Otis Spann,&#13;
and Buddy Miles. . Lay has his own group now, and 1s&#13;
currently on tour of colleges in th_e&#13;
state. The band, surprisingly enough, 1s&#13;
made up of four longhairs, plus Lay and&#13;
Mrs. Sra~n. Their performance was&#13;
disappomtmg. While the band plays the tandard&#13;
urban blues expected of a Chicago blue&#13;
band, it's hard to escape the. th?ught&#13;
that Lay employs the longhair. m an&#13;
attempt to establish rapport with the&#13;
college audience.&#13;
Only two of the longhairs seemed to&#13;
be of top rate calibre, Garfield Angove,&#13;
Sam Lay Playing the Blues&#13;
programs. We now have a :,IX mile runni&#13;
trail built for cro countr) and&#13;
recreational nmning. There are plan for&#13;
tennis courts and on outdoor runnin trac&#13;
with synthetic surfaces. We em:· _ion th&#13;
possibility of a field house to sati fy the&#13;
tlemand for space, but we have no plan&#13;
TT) it on.&#13;
............ . ..................... . &#13;
F.\ F.R ~/'OCFOR MY FATHER&#13;
• I&#13;
Mel-)" Dougla - Father&#13;
_ Cen Hackman - Son&#13;
r&lt;l _ DorOlh) St,ckney - Mother&#13;
_ E t lie Par&gt;Ons - Daughter&#13;
_ Ehzabeth Hubbard - Son's&#13;
out of the son's newly acquired love for ~e&#13;
old man and her insistent hatred for hun.&#13;
The son wins out and stays on, but soon&#13;
decides to take a look at a private and a&#13;
state institution. What follows is a&#13;
masterpiece in flashback. Sound and Sight&#13;
are used in much the same way they were&#13;
used in "Love Story", without excessive&#13;
affectation; although the music score&#13;
seemed inappropriate at times.&#13;
The tour through the institutions cornbines&#13;
close-ups of old folks and flashbacks&#13;
of Mr. Garrison's face amidst this sad&#13;
picture of slow death. This progressive&#13;
collage is even more impressive when the&#13;
renow who is directing the tour comments,&#13;
"The other side of our miracle drugs. - .&#13;
We keep them alive . . . but a grim&#13;
alternative."&#13;
Needless to say, Son Gene decides to&#13;
take the old fellow to the west coast with&#13;
him ... but he just won't go, holding on to&#13;
pride and seH respect as final handholds to&#13;
a slowly deteriorating manhood.&#13;
An argument between son and father&#13;
insues. The son finally releases his wrath&#13;
upon the old man, defining the roles that&#13;
they played throughout their lives - as&#13;
strangers ... not as father and son. In the&#13;
end, the old fellow dies as that stranger, in&#13;
a hospital as alone as he always was.&#13;
The film, as a social commentary, was a&#13;
good example of modern realism in con~&#13;
trast to the cliche-building satire that has&#13;
been accepted almost universally. Both&#13;
forms are of value; one type, the realist&#13;
film, takes extra reflection on the part of&#13;
the viewer.&#13;
t American dllemma i aired (or&#13;
at m rtcan public .• whether or&#13;
not to d an mg parent to an inhtuhon&#13;
tit 1 t him lay on with the second&#13;
ot'r lion A problem that i almost&#13;
xC'lu I\' I) 8 part of that great American&#13;
IM'nt R It. htr,lage thai could very well&#13;
I mC'd senile ,tself&#13;
The lory I a serrcus autobiographical&#13;
tud) b) I1M' renO'o'"ed playwTight -&#13;
Hobert Anderson The dialogue was exIlrnt&#13;
In a cia Ie sense. The hnes were&#13;
h~..able and portrayed the emotions&#13;
th I w.... ,mportant In building the&#13;
charactrnullOO necessar}" In producing a&#13;
trong confl'ct&#13;
II)' far, I1M'mo I effective portrayal was&#13;
lhat of Me",n Oouglas as Tom Carrison.&#13;
Thl" character became so real that this&#13;
r \, wer round h.mseH identifying with&#13;
th n The "old man" was stolid, set in&#13;
his \ltay • and as hardened as any man&#13;
could be al the age of 81, reflecting again&#13;
Ihe reahsl lyle or Robert Anderson.&#13;
Arter Margaret's demise. the daughter&#13;
glDS to question the old fellow's ability to&#13;
ur\'l\'e alone IShe has held a grudge&#13;
agall .. t h,m because he had thrown her out&#13;
of th house for marrying a Jew.) She&#13;
wantrd rtvenge. and anolher conflict grew William Sorensen&#13;
.~"!'~ 1Irif{/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/f«£&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
~ 40th AVE . '&#13;
I&lt;ENQSHA W1S OL7-15174 .&#13;
Fruit Baskets _" ..&#13;
Corsages ,'.' "&#13;
lj;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!U- d ":,e'&#13;
i _Can y ..&#13;
NEWsCOPE Monday, March 1. lt71&#13;
by MARK TlMPANY .&#13;
There is no original thought. Enghsh&#13;
itself is a mass medium. '" got~ use&#13;
words when 1 talk to you." Everything we&#13;
do is music. . .&#13;
The great schism in LuddIte IS, ?VCL&#13;
Luddite has been granted proVIsIOnal&#13;
operating authority by. the otnce of&#13;
Student AffairS to functIOn as a student&#13;
organization apart from the co~c~rned&#13;
Students Coalition. The prov~slO.nal&#13;
government of Luddite is n.ot at tins nme&#13;
connected with the Luddlte of George&#13;
Metesky. Metesky may be working with&#13;
the Student Goverrunent in Exile (S.G.E.)&#13;
or he may be trying to continue the work&#13;
of "Luddite 1". Luddlte will now be&#13;
operated as a social group which functi.ons&#13;
as a politically oriented art cooperati~e.&#13;
Werlo not consider ourselves to be Luddite&#13;
II and we will not refer to ourselves in that&#13;
w~y. The provisional government of&#13;
Luddite advises caution in dealing with&#13;
Geroge Metesky and his New Luddlte&#13;
Foundation.&#13;
The first Luddite multi-media event (not&#13;
to be confused with those events which&#13;
were illicitly identified as Luddite events&#13;
by Mr. Metesky) will be held in the Racine&#13;
Campus Badger Room on Thursday,&#13;
March 11, at 7:30 p.m. The event will be a&#13;
"Night of Operant Condltioning". Sin~e&#13;
Luddite intends to be a comprehenSlvlst&#13;
organization, we will prove Parkside as an&#13;
organic whole in several media. It is the&#13;
view of Luddite that we must now&#13;
critically evaluate the work of B. F.&#13;
Skinner and its effect on student behavior&#13;
at Parkside. We must determine whether&#13;
to accept the Orgone or the Skinner box.&#13;
Luddite now exists in time and paper,&#13;
world without end. We demand anarchy,&#13;
but anarchy of a different kind.&#13;
When man is overwhelmed by in~&#13;
formation, he resorts to myth. Myth is the&#13;
simultaneous awareness of a complex·&#13;
group of causes and effects. Myth is inclusive,&#13;
involving, and participatory. Join&#13;
us in the mystique, the mysterious and&#13;
mythological world above the clouds of&#13;
Mount Olympus. We do not accept the&#13;
divine rights of kings. We accept only the&#13;
rites of spring. The present day composer&#13;
refuses to die.&#13;
........ ..c""....&#13;
CAREER&#13;
COUNC'UNG&#13;
Career counseling has been av '1 b&#13;
in the Student Affairs office : at~e&#13;
Kenosha Campus for .more than e&#13;
but f&#13;
d&#13;
a year now, ut ew stu ents are aware ofth·&#13;
service, and only a very few have t k IS&#13;
advantage of it. All students are 'm&#13;
a&#13;
. en Vlted&#13;
to make use of the Career Informal'&#13;
Center Monday through Friday f 'On&#13;
8:00 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. rom&#13;
The files with career information are&#13;
open to students for browsing When&#13;
ff&#13;
. ever&#13;
the Student A airs Office is open h .' . 1 ,and t ere IS a vocaticna counselor Willingto&#13;
help students and answer questions h&#13;
day from 8:00 to 12:00. ",c&#13;
The Career Information Center has&#13;
on file descriptions of many jobs'&#13;
pamphlet form for quick reading m&#13;
well as t:vo volu~es of the Directory ~~&#13;
OccupatIOnal Titles, which Coni'&#13;
inf!'lrmation on 22.000 jobs. Th':&#13;
~ublica~ions c~ntain up to date&#13;
information on Job reqUirements a d&#13;
employment opportunities. n&#13;
According to Mrs. Larson tftt&#13;
v.ocational guidanc~ counselOr', the&#13;
liberal arts education is no longer&#13;
completely adequate assurance of&#13;
employment. Counseling may help&#13;
students find practical uses for their&#13;
liberal arts degrees.&#13;
An important aspect of such&#13;
counseling is that it provides up to date&#13;
in formation about special&#13;
opportunities. "Students must stay in&#13;
touch with the economic scene. Toa&#13;
many students are training for jobs&#13;
which will not exist in the near future•&#13;
according to Mrs. Larson. '&#13;
Students who want additional help&#13;
call extension 41 for an 1ppointmetlt&#13;
with Mrs. Larson.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
We have room in a private homefor up"&#13;
three girls· one garage space· kltchll&#13;
privileges. Inquiries directed to Ik. W&#13;
Mrs~ Hanson. 712427th Ave., Ken .• phone&#13;
658-3888.&#13;
'69 DODGE CHARGER, 383, Buekeh.. lI.&#13;
air. best offer or take over payments.CIII&#13;
654-5365 after 4:00 .&#13;
WANT E D - Swing band wants eo·&#13;
perienced jazz piano player. ContactI).&#13;
Reynolds at ~usic Department.&#13;
WANTEO'TO BUY - ~mm omn&#13;
telescopic lens. Prefer Nikon For FetdIl&#13;
Call 658-3058 after five. Bruce CI1apu!,ll11&#13;
52nd 51.. Kenosha. - SUZUKI 305 - 1 year old. $4lO.00. fIIIII&#13;
694-2263.&#13;
\TIIER&#13;
out of the n' newly acquired love for _the&#13;
old man and her insistent hatred for him.&#13;
The on wins out and stays on, but soon&#13;
decid to take a look at a private and a&#13;
tate in titution. 'What follows is a&#13;
ma terp1ece in fla hback. Sound and Sight&#13;
are used in much the same way they were&#13;
us d in ''Love Story", without excessive&#13;
affectation: although the music score&#13;
. med inappropriate at times.&#13;
Th tour through the institutions comn&#13;
· clo e-ups of old folks and flashbacks&#13;
of Ir. Garrison's face amidst this sad&#13;
picture of slow death. This progressive&#13;
collage i even more impressive when the&#13;
fellow who is directing the tour comments,&#13;
"Th other ide of our miracle drugs . . .&#13;
We keep them alive . . . but a grim&#13;
alternative."&#13;
, "eedless to ay, Son Gene decides to&#13;
take the old fellow to the west coast with&#13;
him ... but he just won't go, holding on to&#13;
pride and self respect as final handholds to&#13;
a lowly deteriorating manhood.&#13;
An argument between son and father&#13;
insues. The son finally releases his wrath&#13;
upon the old man, defining the roles that&#13;
they played throughout their lives - as&#13;
trangers . . . not as father and son. In the&#13;
end, the old fellow dies as that stranger, in&#13;
a hospital as alone as he always was.&#13;
The film, as a social commentary, was a&#13;
good example of modern realism in contrast&#13;
to the cliche-building satire that has&#13;
been accepted almost universally. Both&#13;
forms are of value; one type, the realist&#13;
film, takes extra reflection on the part of&#13;
the viewer.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
by MARK TIMPANY .&#13;
There is no original thought. Engbsh&#13;
itself is a mass medium. "I gotta use&#13;
words when I talk to you." Everything we&#13;
do is music. . . The great schism in Luddite is_ ?ve1.&#13;
Luddite has been granted pro~s1onal&#13;
operating authority by the Office of&#13;
Student Affairs to function as a student&#13;
organization apart from the Co~c~rned&#13;
Students Coalition. The prov~s10_nal&#13;
government of Luddite is n_ot at this time&#13;
connected with the Luddite of. Geor_ge&#13;
Metesky. Metesky may be working with&#13;
the Student Government in Exile (S.G.E.)&#13;
or he may be trying to continue the work&#13;
of "Luddite I". Luddite will now be&#13;
operated as a social group which functi_ons&#13;
as a politically oriented art cooperab~e.&#13;
We do not consider ourselves to be Luddite&#13;
II and we will not refer to ourselves in that&#13;
w~y. The provisional government of&#13;
Luddite advises caution in dealing with&#13;
Geroge Metesky and his New Luddite&#13;
Foundation.&#13;
The first Luddite multi-media event (not&#13;
to be confused with th'ose events which&#13;
were illicitly identified as Luddite events&#13;
by Mr. Metesky) will be held in the Racine&#13;
Campus Badger Room on Thursday,&#13;
March 11, at 7:30 p.m. The event will be a&#13;
"Night of Operant Conditioning". Since&#13;
Luddite intends to be a comprehensivist&#13;
organization, we will prove Parkside as an&#13;
organic whole in several media. It is the&#13;
view of Luddite that we must now&#13;
critically evaluate the work of B. F.&#13;
Skinner and its effect on student behavior&#13;
at Parkside. We must determine whether&#13;
to accept the Orgone or the Skinner box.&#13;
Luddite now exists in time and paper,&#13;
world without end. We demand anarchy,&#13;
but anarchy of a different kind.&#13;
When man is overwhelmed by information,&#13;
he resorts to myth. Myth is the&#13;
simultaneous awareness of a complex&#13;
group of causes and effects. Myth is inclusive,&#13;
involving, and participatory. Join&#13;
us in the mystique, the mysterious and&#13;
mythological world above the clouds of&#13;
Mount Olympus. We do not accept the&#13;
divine rights of kings. We accept only the&#13;
rites of spring. The present day composer&#13;
refuses to die.&#13;
·rtrl' K MiJI/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
NEW SCOPE Monday, March l, 1971&#13;
CAREER&#13;
COUNCfllNG&#13;
Career counseling has been avail b&#13;
in the Student Affairs office at at~e&#13;
Kenosha Campus for .more than a e&#13;
b " d Year&#13;
now, ut 1ew stu ents are aware oftJi·&#13;
service, and only a very few have t k IS&#13;
advantage of it. All students are m· a_1&#13;
en&#13;
VI ed&#13;
to make use of the Career Information&#13;
Center Monday through Friday f&#13;
8:00 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. rom&#13;
The files with career information&#13;
d f . are&#13;
open to stu ents or browsing when&#13;
ff . ever&#13;
the Student A alfS Office is open d&#13;
there is ·a vocational counselor will;: an u,g to&#13;
help students and answer questions ee h&#13;
day from 8:00 to 12:00.&#13;
The Career Information Center h&#13;
on file descriptions of_ many jobs :&#13;
pamphlet form for quick reading&#13;
well as t~o volu~es of the Directo~ ~~ Occupational Titles, which conta'&#13;
inf?rmation on 22,000 jobs. n,:s&#13;
~ublica~ions c~ntain up to da:&#13;
mformation on Job requirements and&#13;
employment opportunities.&#13;
According to Mrs. Larson tltc&#13;
v_ocational guidanc~ counselor', the&#13;
hberal arts educat10n is no longer&#13;
completely adequate assurance of&#13;
employment. Counseling may help&#13;
students find practical uses for the1r&#13;
liberal arts degrees.&#13;
An important aspect of uh&#13;
counseling is that it provides up to date&#13;
information about special&#13;
opportunities. "Students must stay in&#13;
touch with the economic scene. Too&#13;
many students are training for job&#13;
which will not exist in the near future ~&#13;
according to Mrs. Larson. '&#13;
Students who want additional help&#13;
call extension 42 for an ~ppointment&#13;
with Mrs. Larson.&#13;
,u u n&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
We have room in a private home for up to&#13;
three girls - one garage space - kltdlln&#13;
privileges. Inquiries directed to flt. or&#13;
Mrs; Hanson, 7124 27th Ave., Ken., phone&#13;
658-3888.&#13;
'69 DODGE CHARGER, 383, Bucket sea&#13;
air, best offer or take over payments. Cl&#13;
654-5365 after 4:00.&#13;
WANTED - Swing band wants er&#13;
perienced jazz piano player. Contact I&gt;&#13;
Reynolds at Music Department.&#13;
WANTED 'TO BUY - 35mm Camer•&#13;
telescopic lens. Prefer Nikon For P!n'11&#13;
Call 658-3058 after five. Bruce Chaput, 24&#13;
52nd St., Kenosha.&#13;
SUZUKI 305 - 1 year old. $-450.00, fllOII&#13;
694-2263. &#13;
)\ooday,March I, 1971 NEWSCOPE&#13;
c&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
Jerry Rubin once said that if he were&#13;
on death row and given his right to one&#13;
final meal, he'd order the all-American&#13;
meal; a hamburger, french fries, and a&#13;
Coke.&#13;
This struck me as very interesting&#13;
when Ifirst read this, but I dwelled on&#13;
the statement as-I waited in the doctor's&#13;
office.&#13;
Sitting between a pregnant woman,&#13;
and a man with gout, Ireflected on my&#13;
own eating habits. Those midnight&#13;
feasts at all night truck stops, the early&#13;
lunch at nine in the morning, or the&#13;
Wooden Nickel&#13;
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young&#13;
There seems to be a lot of excitement&#13;
about the new, live Crosby, Stills, Nash,&#13;
Young double album. However, very&#13;
few people realize that there has been a&#13;
live C,S,N,Y album out for about a year&#13;
and a half. One catch; it's a bootleg&#13;
album. There is one place that might&#13;
have it, Rose's (Chicago on Wabash). It&#13;
matters little where you get it but please&#13;
do. You won't be disappointed. It's the&#13;
best they've done.&#13;
The recording was done at the&#13;
Wooden Nickel and although the mixing&#13;
is screwed up at times, the music is&#13;
outrageous. The best thing about this&#13;
album is the feeling you get listening to&#13;
live, original spontaneity in their music&#13;
and raps. Many live performances fall&#13;
short of expectation because the group&#13;
only duplicates the album. The Band,&#13;
Prinstance, has no rapport with the&#13;
audience. C,S,N &amp; Y not only&#13;
communicate with the audience, but&#13;
have a good time playing ang singing to&#13;
one another.&#13;
As far as the cuts themselves go,&#13;
"Down By the River" takes the prize. If&#13;
your into the way groups open a song,&#13;
this one is guaranteed to melt you all&#13;
Overthe floor.&#13;
The music itself is tremendous!&#13;
Steven Stills shows off on this album.&#13;
Page 5&#13;
snack before bed.&#13;
Well, it had all caught u .&#13;
Those frequent p WIth me.&#13;
replaced I&#13;
Cups of coffee that&#13;
mea s the b&#13;
vegetables and fn:·t f a sence of&#13;
aiet, and here I I rom my erratic&#13;
stomach cramps. was, suffenng from&#13;
haJ~:t~~C~; ~m:P3:asked me where J&#13;
asked as ree meals. He then&#13;
oft ~e what I had consumed and how&#13;
Men. t all looked bad for my stomach&#13;
y answers just made him shake hi~&#13;
head, and make me feel ridiculous&#13;
. The doctor asked me why I had taken&#13;
~t upo~ myself to keep every greasy&#13;
poon In town prospering. Why had I&#13;
~h~sen such a basic diet of all that is&#13;
a for the human body. It was no&#13;
~on?er that Ihad pains rivaling a junkie&#13;
10 Withdrawal.&#13;
He . gave me a month's supply of&#13;
medicines ~o cure my ailment, and some&#13;
sound advice. He also slipped a bland&#13;
diet into my hand, and it was then and&#13;
there that I realized my last meal on&#13;
death row would have to be boiled&#13;
baked or broiled. Maybe a hamburger'&#13;
baked potato and salad. '&#13;
Dallas Taylor also shows what he's got&#13;
on this album. He is really a great&#13;
drummer. 1 Just can't say enough goo&lt;ll&#13;
things about this album. Speaking of&#13;
good things, if you liked "Guenivere"&#13;
on their first album, you'll love it on&#13;
this one. David Crosby and Graham&#13;
Nash seem to fit into a whole different&#13;
thing. The patterns they weave are very&#13;
close to nirvana.&#13;
Shiva's Headband&#13;
"I went up on a mountain, to see&#13;
what I could see. There in the far, far&#13;
distance, ] spotted the back of me. And&#13;
I'm a wave upon the ocean. I'm a little&#13;
ripple on the sea .;" This is just a spasm&#13;
of "RIPPLE", a song by Shiva's&#13;
Headband. Shive's is a band out of&#13;
Austin, Texas that people down there&#13;
are screaming about. They play hard&#13;
country-rock that's almost as fun to&#13;
listen to as a Spiro T. Agnew speech.&#13;
The band is made up of the usual,&#13;
plus an electric violin and a girl singer.&#13;
Armadillo fans, you must dig this. The&#13;
music on this album is all original and&#13;
really put together fine. Shi .. 's will&#13;
never be on American Bandstand, '"Take&#13;
me to the mountains if you please. I&#13;
would gladly trade the cement for the&#13;
trees." Right on!&#13;
SunbaU&#13;
L:!ATcHn II&#13;
u....... _· .........&#13;
____...n- --- _.&#13;
-&#13;
DPA" Arl.&#13;
10'10&#13;
courtesy Discount&#13;
to students and DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Facult Y GrHal" c. hak'.c.mfie4 Oi • 1 p.&#13;
(Must Show 1.0_)ffI/. ~&#13;
Falrtrade ,~t:861fA,&#13;
excepted It _ ....... 4_ -- ,...-,l&#13;
II'DAl _.- I£C1STU -=--- ...~&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK" SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
Special This Week&#13;
Save 20% on&#13;
Parkside Winter Jackets&#13;
'Tradition or E"c"U"nce&#13;
KING of ORGA&#13;
/ (&#13;
s.J. h\elTlek"Mr. HI_II4I" hr O.. rutad Slnlel • TrIl4lt-II VII..&#13;
Giltaf Tan-eIU Calleet&#13;
I walked out of his office. past the&#13;
pregnant lady and the man wnh gOOl&#13;
determined to tum over a new leaf 0;&#13;
cease to exist due to an o\erdose' of&#13;
grease.&#13;
, All t~is is very important to m} ne t&#13;
journalism project. W,th all this behind&#13;
me, and the experience Iha ..'e in eaung&#13;
] have appointed myself gourmet fo;&#13;
this paper. I will leave the high class&#13;
places to Mr. Kubly and the hl... u .ee&#13;
Journal, and review the restaurants most&#13;
frequented by those In my peer group.&#13;
With these qualificanons. I also have&#13;
a partner who graduated from the&#13;
Williamson School of Cookery and was&#13;
an ex-waitress. She will consult me as to&#13;
the finer points of the art. and she will&#13;
eat the spicy things I'm nOI supposed&#13;
to.&#13;
Together taggie and Iwill enter the&#13;
world of knives and forks in order to&#13;
save the reader stomach aches. realizing&#13;
that there are other peoples stomachs at&#13;
stake. AI",,] think Jerry RubIO deserves&#13;
the best hamburger, french Ines and&#13;
Coke if he gels life in Kenosha's County&#13;
Jail.&#13;
gating gn&#13;
The Park.side NewscOpe will.&#13;
beginning with the next issue, in lude a&#13;
short cooking column.&#13;
Andrew McLean, an EnglIsh&#13;
Instructor at Parkside, will wnte me&#13;
column. He is currently in the process&#13;
of compiling a book of recipes and&#13;
men u s which are wnclesom and&#13;
economical. He says, &lt;"Students can eat&#13;
well and cheaply too."&#13;
The column will be generally oriented&#13;
toward non-cookers and other people&#13;
who are for the most part unfamiliar&#13;
with the most economical means to&#13;
purchase and prepare food. It WIll.&#13;
however. contain information and&#13;
techniques of which even skilled&#13;
cookers are often unaware.&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~~&#13;
91a1mn~&#13;
PI4,,";"g a parlJ,&#13;
wtt/J;"g or ba"'1I1t1,&#13;
"0 party /()()stfIaiJ.&#13;
CAli 654-9123&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMO&#13;
For&#13;
Rtstroations&#13;
Phont&#13;
694-0455&#13;
(W)UT'H .MtJIt}DAII IIIlIOoUI ..a«T'M Off "'''1'11. ~".t&#13;
KI.HOSMA. wllCOH.'N&#13;
H37 - 22nd " •• nu.&#13;
Kenosho. Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Frn 0&lt;""" 8) 654~ 74 .-..... _".I'.&#13;
Start $lIVing a little bread eech&#13;
week_&#13;
Next Week&#13;
RACINE SAVI&#13;
ANa LOAN AS$OClA T1OIO&#13;
ao-tlJCM'" OHa&#13;
_ .. C I IAV'IIlIlJII&#13;
...s.-OfIce&#13;
, ... AIM*QTOIl "'-&#13;
ORG&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
Jerry Rubin once said that if he were&#13;
on death row and given his right to one&#13;
final meal, he'd order the all-American&#13;
meal; a hamburger, french fries, and a&#13;
Coke.&#13;
This struck me as very interesting&#13;
when I first read this, but I dwelled on&#13;
the statement as I waited in the doctor's&#13;
office.&#13;
Sitting between a pregnant woman,&#13;
and a man with gout, I reflected on my&#13;
own eating habits. Those midnight&#13;
feasts at all night truck stops, the early&#13;
lunch at nine in the mornin$, or the&#13;
Wooden Nickel&#13;
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young&#13;
There seems to be a lot of excitement&#13;
about the new, live Crosby , Stills, Nash,&#13;
Young double album. However, very&#13;
few people realize that there has been a&#13;
live C,S,N,Y album out for about a year&#13;
and a half. One catch; it's a bootleg&#13;
album. There is one place that might&#13;
have it, Rose's (Chicago .on Wabash). It&#13;
matters little where you get it but please&#13;
do. You won't be disappointed. It's the&#13;
best they've done.&#13;
The recording was done at the&#13;
Wooden Nickel and although the mixing&#13;
1s screwed up at times, the music is&#13;
outrageous. The best thing about this&#13;
album is the feeling you get listening to&#13;
live, original spontaneity in their music&#13;
and raps. Many live performances fall&#13;
short of expectation because the group&#13;
only duplicates the album. The Band ,&#13;
frinstance, has no rapport with the&#13;
audience. C,S,N &amp; Y not only&#13;
communicate with the audience, but&#13;
have a good time playing an&lt;.! singing to&#13;
one another.&#13;
As far as the cuts themselves go,&#13;
"Down By the River" takes the prize. If&#13;
yo_ur into the way groups open a song,&#13;
this one is guaranteed to melt you all&#13;
over the floor.&#13;
The music itself is tremendous!&#13;
Steven Stills shows off on this album.&#13;
10%&#13;
Pages&#13;
snack before bed&#13;
Th::1, / had ~ll caught up with me&#13;
replace~equent !cups of coffee thai&#13;
mea s the abse f&#13;
vegetables and f , ·t f . nee o diet and here rut rom my erratic&#13;
sto~ach I was, suffering from&#13;
cramps.&#13;
haJ~:t~~ctor ;imply asked me where I&#13;
asked my ast three meals. He then&#13;
~ten. ~e at1~~~:Jt~~1~~~: s~~~~~; y answers just made him sh k h . .&#13;
head, and make me feel ridiculou: e 1&#13;
. The doctor asked me why I had· taken&#13;
it upo~ myself to keep every grea y&#13;
spoon m town prospering. Why had I&#13;
~hosen ~uch a basic diet of all that is&#13;
ad for the human body. It was no&#13;
~on?er that I had pains rivaling a 1·unkie&#13;
tn withdrawal.&#13;
H~ . gave me a month's supply of&#13;
med1cmes to cure my ailment and&#13;
d d . , ome s&lt;:&gt;un_ a vice. He also slipped a bland&#13;
diet mto my hand , and it was then and&#13;
there that I realized my last meal on&#13;
death row would have to be boiled&#13;
baked or broiled. Maybe a hamburger'&#13;
baked potato and salad. ·&#13;
Dallas Taylor also shows what he's got&#13;
on this album. He is really a great&#13;
drummer. I Just can't say enough go0&lt;1\&#13;
things about this aloum. Speaking of&#13;
good things, if you liked "Guenivere ''&#13;
on their first album, you'll love it on&#13;
this one. David Crosby and Graham&#13;
Nash seem to fit into a whole different&#13;
thing. The patterns they weave are very&#13;
close to nirvana.&#13;
Shiva's Headband&#13;
"I went up on a mountain, to ee&#13;
what I could see. There in the far. far&#13;
distance, I spotted the back of me. And&#13;
I'm a wave upon the ocean. I'm a little&#13;
ripple on the sea ... " This is just a spasm&#13;
of "RIPPLE", a song by hiva 's&#13;
Headband. Shiva's is a band out of&#13;
Austin , Texas that people down there&#13;
are screaming about. They play hard&#13;
country-rock that's almo t as fun to&#13;
listen to as a Spiro T. Agnew peech.&#13;
The band is made up of the u ual.&#13;
plus an electric violin and a girl singer.&#13;
Armadillo fans, you mu t dig thi . The&#13;
music on this album is all original and&#13;
really put together fine. hiva'. will&#13;
never be on American Band tand. "Take&#13;
me to the mountain if you plea e. I&#13;
would gladly trade the cement for the&#13;
trees." Right on!&#13;
Sunball&#13;
L:'!ATCHES I IL--.:::.•~t,..;.;l-'-'-11;._D_i_ff_. -.J&#13;
- -- Wat&lt;MS-.,.._., ., ___ ...,.... D~S.ltilltl&#13;
_- , • - C..-,lett •• ,~,, .. _,.._ ~..,. - . .. De .... "'11&#13;
IIIDAL&#13;
1£CISTU'&#13;
Court~sy Discount&#13;
to Students and DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Facult Y Crl4•-'• C-Oloiist-Cettit.4 ~ telecist&#13;
(Must Show 1.0 .) If//. ~ " P AAAt,e ~&#13;
Falrtrade ,'~oc c:&gt;v,v..11&#13;
excepted It ha _. • a,.,- .,-. ,.. -.I&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
Special This Week&#13;
Save 20% on&#13;
Parkside Winter Jackets&#13;
a partner&#13;
William o'l&#13;
e,en&#13;
re.&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE ~~&#13;
#lalian ~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or baNJutt&#13;
no party too small.&#13;
CAIi 654-9123&#13;
K Gof&#13;
rRay rRadi9an '&#13;
J / ood&#13;
Ii&#13;
.. 437 - 22 d&#13;
e o, o,&#13;
Free De/it ery&#13;
6.5 -0&#13;
scon in 531 0&#13;
saving little b&#13;
N ext Week&#13;
RACINE SAVING&#13;
SN Ji Merri ck " r. Ha on II f:or G arant od sw,ico l Tr dt-ill Ya lu&#13;
Out of Town-Call C1ll1ct&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
1.!~~o 111 ~c!!'!:; "I} Better Orra,u oreB,uk, HtlllUltOltd ..U BwiJ,l n,,,.• &#13;
History Association Formed&#13;
A HI tory AssoCla~on, to be made up of&#13;
but not restricted to history majors. is in&#13;
the prot of being formed at Parkside,&#13;
seeeedrng to 8111 IcGo,"gBl. McGonigal is&#13;
anempung to orgaruze the group and has&#13;
the boding of hIStory professors at&#13;
Park Ide&#13;
IcGomgal the ASSOCIationas a first&#13;
tep In dev loping an Intellectual communIty&#13;
at Park id ' He says, "We don't&#13;
ha,,' • tru lnlellectual community here.&#13;
We don't have .any 8l'OUPSon campus&#13;
de&lt;b ted to the development 01 Ideas,&#13;
.,'&#13;
Y,ou',. a winner-'couse you&#13;
SImply con'f lose with our&#13;
~Jl:citing new "looks" for&#13;
bock·lo9COmpUS" or career. w..". bunting at the seoms&#13;
~llh smart clothes for day·&#13;
tim. and dot.time ... some&#13;
danies, others the very&#13;
newest "in" things, but all&#13;
slated for success. Come in&#13;
and choose yours ... nowl&#13;
6207 - 22nd A.. nu.&#13;
Kenosha, WiKon,in 53140&#13;
Phon., 652·2681&#13;
"Right now," he continued, "it seems&#13;
like students just attend school here, and&#13;
that their aims are solely individual,&#13;
,,"It seems, too," he said, "because of&#13;
divisional strUcture there is no depart·&#13;
mental interests. In other words. if there&#13;
was a history department, there would be&#13;
departmental interests in developing&#13;
through about historical concepts,&#13;
"Instead tbere is divisional interests&#13;
which are too broad to take tbese narrow&#13;
interests into consideration," he said&#13;
McGonigal sees the Association as encouraging&#13;
members to present papers to&#13;
the group, and as bringing speakers on&#13;
campus to IBlk about history. He believes&#13;
the first speakers would be Parkside&#13;
history prolessors speaking on their&#13;
particular subject areas, and then an&#13;
effort would be made to bring in speakers&#13;
rrom outside campuses.&#13;
He forsow, too, the Association helping&#13;
to get its members into graduate school.&#13;
He emphasized, however, that the&#13;
AssOCiationwould not be set up with any&#13;
strict definitions in mind; that the&#13;
members would make the final determination&#13;
or its direction.&#13;
McGonigal pointed out the membership&#13;
would not be restricted to history majors,&#13;
hut open to anyone who wanted to help&#13;
build an intellectual community. He said,&#13;
too, the Association would remain&#13;
politically neutral.&#13;
Anyone who wishes to join the group,&#13;
McGonigal said, should conlBct him (he&#13;
lives at 23Q Ohio Street in Racine), or leave&#13;
their name with a history professor. The&#13;
greatest need of the Association, he said,&#13;
at t he present is members.&#13;
Twenty-three faculty members at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside will&#13;
reteive UW Graduate School Awards&#13;
totaling $73,416 in support of summer&#13;
research projects. Ten of the awards are&#13;
for research in science, six for social&#13;
studies, six for humanities and one for&#13;
engineering science.&#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE Monday, March 1,ItIJ&#13;
While we called Ilisted several -&#13;
facts about Norman Slater' aPParoot&#13;
vehemently opposed any 10 ' fIrSt, ....&#13;
f&#13;
nts servi rmofpa .. or is services: second, he didn' .YIneru.&#13;
idea of predictions because th tlike !he&#13;
help with people's prohlemsey w,OUldo't&#13;
wants to expose fakes' fourth' thU'1l,he&#13;
all people have E,S,P, butlhat' he bell",..&#13;
never know it because they most\!eoplt&#13;
it.. never dev....,&#13;
By 'ten thirty we had upwards&#13;
people committed to attendin of twenty&#13;
With Norman at my compan~, se&amp;sioD&#13;
ment because as Norman told aPart·&#13;
phone calls all the time and it w ~, "11lOt&#13;
we're interrupted." on t wtw\ d&#13;
We left Norman's at eleve I&#13;
know what a green aura m'::; t wanted10&#13;
more I wanted to see for mY~f ~nd"'OIl&#13;
E.S,P, When we arrived I w bebad&#13;
skeptiCism and decided th t .as set ia&#13;
really a psychic he would beaab~ he w"&#13;
it heyond a douht that evening ~o PlrNt&#13;
mcreased as people began ar »: y dcoJbt&#13;
said, .,Imake mistakes nvmI&#13;
g, and , be&#13;
too." . .. m bUJlllb.&#13;
(Continued Next Week)&#13;
(Continued from Page 1J&#13;
Hngers and they try to catch it. Well, first I&#13;
did it on myself because I can do it and&#13;
then I did it to Norman. Oh, we were- using&#13;
a check instead 'cause I didn't have a&#13;
dollar bill. "Anyway, Norman couldn't catch it and&#13;
I figured his psychic powers, you know,&#13;
would let him know when it dropped. Aller&#13;
a half dozen times we stopped and as he&#13;
gave me the check back he said, 'You lost&#13;
your checkbook recently' and then told me&#13;
I had a broken watch in a box in my&#13;
bedroom, The truth was I had lost it two&#13;
weeks ago and it was about the first time I&#13;
ever lost anything and I did have a broken&#13;
watch in a box in my dresser and I didn't&#13;
even know it until I went to look."&#13;
After several moments during which two&#13;
young girls had entered with the intention&#13;
of seeing Norman, I asked what he wanted&#13;
to do with his gill and he replied, "I just&#13;
want to help people who come to me with&#13;
their personal problems so they can go out&#13;
in the world and use their gifts to help&#13;
others. I believe that a person has to get&#13;
rid of his own problems before he can&#13;
really do anything in life . . . I see a&#13;
problem in you that is blocking you from&#13;
using your potential," he added casually, I&#13;
turned away self-consciously and asked&#13;
what he did for a living, to which he&#13;
replied, "I work in the kitchen at Carthage."&#13;
Then one of my friends asked if he&#13;
would mind if we got a group of people&#13;
together to have him do readings. He&#13;
quickly 'agreed and we sIBrted phoning&#13;
everyone we could think of. The two girls&#13;
who had joined our group agreed to allend&#13;
and Norman said that ne would like sixteen&#13;
or more people if possihle.&#13;
While phoning and paging through the&#13;
phonehook I asked if he could read fUlures&#13;
md he said that he could hut that, "There&#13;
are some had things that I can forsee, If 1&#13;
warn the person they can avoid it, but&#13;
there are some things that can't be stopped,&#13;
Those I never telL" I asked what he&#13;
meant and he replied flatly, "Like death.&#13;
If I see, a tragedy of this kind coming there&#13;
IS nothing I can do, Death is the only thing&#13;
a&#13;
Campus visits by two well.&#13;
contemporary poets and a ser! kn ...&#13;
f&#13;
nes of&#13;
poetry . orums are scheduled b open&#13;
Hnlversity of Wisconsin _ P k Y 'Thr&#13;
spring semester. ar Side rex&#13;
Galway Kinnell, whose latestb&#13;
poems IS tilled "Body Rags" 'Ir'~&#13;
at Parkside on March' I~I speu&#13;
.sponsorship of the Lecture and u~&#13;
Arts Committee and James ."&#13;
whose books include "Blue H Liddy,&#13;
"A L'r f ouse IIId leo Stephen Dedalus" '0&#13;
the campus on April 6, ,WI VU1I&#13;
The Parkside Poetry Forum will bdd&#13;
four monthly open meetings ,II&#13;
p.m. on Sunday afternoon; at'~&#13;
Kenosha Public Museum,&#13;
On Mar, 28, Richard CarringtOl.&#13;
aS~lstant professor of communicatD&#13;
WIll read from the poetry of Archibal4&#13;
Maclelsh and Randall Jarrell,&#13;
On April 25, Carl Lindner, ,saiUI&#13;
professor of English, will tali&#13;
"c (;mcre e .poetry, a new form t" wbdco&#13;
relles partially on graphic presenlatiol.&#13;
Several Parkside students win ....&#13;
thm poems May 23,&#13;
Bridge Players&#13;
Parkside Open Pairs Invitational&#13;
Duplicate Bridge Tournament&#13;
(A.C.B.L. Supervised)&#13;
TOURNAMENT LIMITED TO&#13;
AREA STUDENTS, FACULTY &amp; STAFF&#13;
Saturday, March 13&#13;
2 p.m. starting time at&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Parkside Campus.&#13;
S'Ign up at your respective&#13;
student activity centers&#13;
before Wed., March 10.&#13;
REGISTER NOW&#13;
Student&#13;
Activities&#13;
Bui/ding&#13;
1T1Mdt 3 &amp;&#13;
Entry Fee $1.00&#13;
Double &amp; Single Matches&#13;
PRIZES&#13;
TROPHIES&#13;
AM-FM Transistor Radio&#13;
History Association Formed&#13;
Y_ou'r o winn -r-'couse you&#13;
rmply con' lose with our&#13;
citin n w "looks" for&#13;
" bod•lo-compus" or career.&#13;
W 'r bursting at the seams&#13;
':'ith smart clothes for day-&#13;
,m ond dotetime •.. some&#13;
classics, others the very&#13;
n west "in" things, but all&#13;
slated for success. Come in&#13;
and choose yours ... now!&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53UO&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
" Right now," he continued, "it seems&#13;
like students just attend school here, and&#13;
that their aims are solely individual.&#13;
," It seems, too " be said, "because of&#13;
divi ional tructure there is no departmental&#13;
interests. In other words, if there&#13;
w a hi tory department, there would be&#13;
departmental interests in developing&#13;
through about historical concepts.&#13;
"Instead there is divisional interests&#13;
which are too broad to take these narrow&#13;
inter ts into consideration," he said&#13;
tcGonigal sees the Association as encouraging&#13;
members to present papers to&#13;
the group, and as bringing speakers on&#13;
campu to talk about history. He believes&#13;
the first peakers would be Parkside&#13;
hi tor) profe sors speaking on their&#13;
particular subject areas, and then an&#13;
effort would be made to bring in speakers&#13;
from outside campuses. He forsaw, too, the Association helping&#13;
to get its members into graduate school.&#13;
He emphasized, however, that the&#13;
ociation would not be set up with any&#13;
trict definitions in min(l; that the&#13;
members would make the final determination&#13;
of its direction. 1cGonigal pointed out the membership&#13;
would not be restricted to history majors,&#13;
but open to anyone who wanted to help&#13;
build an intellectual community. He said,&#13;
too , the Association would remain&#13;
politically neutral.&#13;
Anyone who wishes to join the group,&#13;
kGonigal said, should contact him (he&#13;
lives at23Q Ohio Street in Racine), or leave&#13;
their name with a history professor. The&#13;
greatest need of the Association, he said,&#13;
at the present is members.&#13;
Twenty-three faculty members at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside will&#13;
reeeive UW Graduate School Awards&#13;
totaling $73,416 in support of summer&#13;
research projects. Ten of the awards are&#13;
for research in science, six for social&#13;
studies, six for humanities and one for&#13;
engineering science .&#13;
Bridge Players&#13;
Parkside Open Pairs Invitational&#13;
Duplicate Bridge Tournament&#13;
(A.C.8.L. Supervised)&#13;
TOURNAMENT LIMITED TO&#13;
AREA STUDENTS, FACULTY &amp; STAFF&#13;
Saturday, March 13&#13;
2 p.m. starting time at&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
- Parkside Campus.&#13;
s· ign up at your respective&#13;
student activity centers&#13;
before Wed., March 10.&#13;
page 6 NEWSCOPE Monday, March 1 , 197)&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
fingers and they try to catch it. Well, first I&#13;
did it on myself because I can do it and&#13;
then I did it to Norman. Oh, we were using&#13;
a check instead 'cause I didn't have a&#13;
dollar bill.&#13;
"Anywe.y, Norman couldn't catch it and&#13;
I figured his psychic powers, you know,&#13;
would let him know when it dropped. After&#13;
a half dozen times we stopped and as he&#13;
gave me the check back he said, 'You lost&#13;
your checkbook recently' and then told me&#13;
I had a broken watch in a box in my&#13;
bedroom. The truth was I had lost it two&#13;
weeks ago and it was about the first time I&#13;
ever lost anything and I did have a broken&#13;
watch in a box in my dresser and I didn't&#13;
even know it until I went to look."&#13;
After several moments during which two&#13;
young girls had entered with the intention&#13;
of seeing Norman, I asked what he wanted&#13;
to do with his gift and he replied, "I just&#13;
want to help people who come to me with&#13;
their personal problems so they can go out&#13;
in the world and use their gifts to help&#13;
others. I believe that a person has to get&#13;
rid of his own problems before he can&#13;
really do anything in life . . . I see a&#13;
problem in you that is blocking you from&#13;
using your potential," he added casually. I&#13;
turned away self-consciously and asked&#13;
what he did for a living, to which he&#13;
replied, "I work in the kitchen at Carthage."&#13;
Then one of my friends asked if he&#13;
would mind if we got a group of people&#13;
together to have him do readings. He&#13;
quickly agreed and we started phoning&#13;
everyone we could think of. The two girls&#13;
who had joined our group agreed to attend&#13;
and Norman said that be would like sixteen&#13;
or more people if possible.&#13;
While phoning and paging through the&#13;
phonebook I asked if he could read futures&#13;
md he said that he could but that, "There&#13;
are some bad things that I can forsee. If I&#13;
warn the person they can avoid it, but&#13;
there are some things that can't be stopped.&#13;
Those I never tell." I asked what he&#13;
meant and he replied flatly, "Like death.&#13;
~ I see_ a tragedy of this kind coming there&#13;
1s nothing I can do. Death is the only thing&#13;
While we called I listed se ---.:.,&#13;
facts about Norman Sla~:.al aPllareo1&#13;
vehemently opposed any for · first, 1..&#13;
f h. . m of pa "'&#13;
_or is services; second, he didn• _Yrnen1&#13;
idea of predictions because th t like the&#13;
help with people's problem/Y ;.0uldn·t&#13;
wants to expose fakes· fourth 'h trd, he&#13;
all people have E.S.P. but that' e believ&#13;
never know it because they n most~&#13;
it. . ever deve10p&#13;
By·ten thirty we had upwards&#13;
J:M:Ople committed to attendin of twenty&#13;
with Norman at my compan~ a 5essic.i&#13;
t be ions' a&#13;
men cause as Norman told Pa11.&#13;
phone ~alls all the time and it ~· "I &amp;el&#13;
we're mterrupted." won t Wort if&#13;
We left Norman's at eleven 1&#13;
know what a green aura m~ t wanted 14&#13;
more I wanted to see for mys~f tnd ever,&#13;
E.S.P. When we arrived I he had&#13;
skepticism and decided that w: set · really a psychic he would be abl he&#13;
~t beyond a doubt that evening ~o P~&#13;
mcreased as people began arr· ·. Y d&#13;
said, "I make mistakes t~ng, and ht&#13;
too." · · · rn burn&#13;
(Continued Next Week)&#13;
Campus visits by two wellcontemporary&#13;
poets and a se . knf&#13;
f nes o 0&#13;
po~try . orums _are scheduled b pt&#13;
Umvers1ty of Wisconsin _ Pa k Y Tht&#13;
spring semester. r side t&#13;
Galway Kinnell, whose latest b&#13;
poems is t_itled "Body Rags," wil~&#13;
at Parkside on March 16&#13;
h. f Und,&#13;
,sponsors 1p o the Lecture d&#13;
Arts Committee and James an . F&#13;
whose books include "Blue H Liddy&#13;
"A L.,. f ouse 11e o Stephen Dedalus,, w·n&#13;
the campus on April 6. ' 1&#13;
The Parkside Poetry Forum will h~&#13;
four monthly open meetings all&#13;
p.m. on Sunday afternoon; at at&#13;
Kenosha Public Museum.&#13;
~n Mar. 28, Richard Carrin&#13;
as_sistant professor of commumca~&#13;
will r~ad from the poetry of Archi&#13;
Macle1sh and Randall Jarrell.&#13;
On April 25' Carl Lindner assistw&#13;
professor of English, will ' talk&#13;
"c&lt;;mcrete . poetry," a new form w&#13;
relies partially on graphic presentati&#13;
~everal Parkside students will r then poems May 23.&#13;
REGISTER NOW&#13;
1TlaJuJt3&amp;&#13;
Entry Fee $1.00&#13;
Double &amp; Single Matches&#13;
PRIZES&#13;
TROPHIES&#13;
AM-FM Transistor Radio&#13;
Student&#13;
Activities&#13;
Building &#13;
March 1, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
~&#13;
Rangers Close Strong&#13;
BY JIM CASPER&#13;
k lde played perhaps its finest&#13;
Par Sir the season against strong&#13;
l"'"I°nd defeating the Gateway&#13;
lake :nc: leaders I 18-99.&#13;
c~ferng on 12 of their first 14 shots,&#13;
[t~angers shot .676 en route to a&#13;
~JO halftime lead. The Rangers&#13;
'""sh d with 65% shooting. Lakeland&#13;
~ ~8%- normally good enough to&#13;
Ibut not this time.&#13;
"'~'arkside's p,Qwerful forward&#13;
bination of Eli Slaughter and Stan&#13;
:" accounted for 71 points. Eli had&#13;
II Stan 30. Both played strong defense&#13;
d contributed key rebounds.&#13;
,uIKen Rick turned in another excellent&#13;
"t&gt; in place of the injured Jim Hogan,&#13;
~"'Ofllingup with 18 p(:llnts, coupled WIth&#13;
fine floor game. Nick Perrine and Ed&#13;
~'anTjnealso were in dou~le figures.&#13;
TheRangers ended their home season&#13;
11thanother good performance as they&#13;
"nt over I IO for the third time in a&#13;
row beating Northland 115-80.&#13;
Afler Northland jumped off to a&#13;
'4-15lead the Rangers went to work as&#13;
d.ey ran, pressed, and scored their way&#13;
toacommanding lead of 105-64 before&#13;
the reservesflooded the court.&#13;
SeniorsEli Slaughter and Stan White&#13;
&lt;ombinedfor 59 points, with Slaughter&#13;
I'ttmg 34, White 25. White hit 25&#13;
dtspite sitting out part of the second&#13;
Iulfwith an ankle injury. He also found&#13;
time to clear 22 rebounds - a school&#13;
record.&#13;
Senior guards Nick Perrine and Ken&#13;
Rick were the pressure points in a very&#13;
Kari Kiekoski of Parkside placed&#13;
"'and in overall Nordic skiing and 24th&#13;
IIll of 50 in overall Alpine in a meet&#13;
wtucll included 9 schools. The meet was&#13;
.... by Michigan Tech.&#13;
JudoClub&#13;
1Ietllng lime will be at 9:0o-p.m. an&#13;
llaaday evenings. Cost of membership&#13;
-12.00 per year. There is an additional&#13;
..... of $1.00 for each meet. A meet&#13;
Is ~g scheduled with Carthage in&#13;
earty March.&#13;
Slimg&#13;
The Club has officially adopted the&#13;
name Rag Time Rangers. They are&#13;
ro-sponsoringwith Student Affairs a Ski&#13;
Spree to White Cap in northern&#13;
.'5&lt;onsin on March 12 13 and 14th. , ,&#13;
Equestrian Club has just completed a&#13;
Ill..:cessfulcinic and is making plans for&#13;
J drill team, a horse show and the&#13;
'''ding of a high pain t trophy for the&#13;
I'I1berScoring the most number of&#13;
!:lnts In horse shows this summer.&#13;
Open Soturdays&#13;
9 A,M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECKI NG&#13;
~CCOUNrs To STUDENTS&#13;
~ND RETIREES&#13;
I8Zs 8lxtietIa ShftC&#13;
~ .....&#13;
effecti~e press which was partly&#13;
responSIble for breaking the game open.&#13;
Rick also Scored 14 points.&#13;
MIke Madson and Ed VanTine were&#13;
other Rangers in double figures_ with 15&#13;
and 10 respectively.&#13;
!he seni?rs accounted for 80 Ranger&#13;
points despite the fact that high scoring&#13;
guard Jim Hogan was unable to play&#13;
because of injury.&#13;
Martin Suffers&#13;
First Defeat&#13;
Coach Jim Koch and his band of&#13;
wrestlers suffered a severe blow when&#13;
freshman sensation Ken Martin.&#13;
separted a shoulder in a quadrangular&#13;
wrestling match with Northern&#13;
Michigan, UW- Milwaukee and Lake&#13;
Superior State.&#13;
Martin suffered the first defeat of his&#13;
college career at the hands of two time&#13;
All-American Mike Tello of Northern&#13;
Michigan. Tello eked out a 54 decision&#13;
in a match that saw Martin put Tello on&#13;
his back but somehow didn't get credit&#13;
for the feat.&#13;
Martin separated the shoulder in the&#13;
next match. Martin's record is 13 wins&#13;
against just the one loss. Doctors havev&#13;
ordered him to take a two-month lay&#13;
off which would eliminate Martin's&#13;
chances at a national crown which he&#13;
has been aiming for. It also subtracts&#13;
anywhere form three to five team points&#13;
that has been a certainty in all but one&#13;
match so far this year.&#13;
Doug Anderwn .orking oul on the blgb hr.&#13;
Gymnasts Aim For&#13;
Have you ever seen a gymnasu.;&#13;
meet? Parkside's first and only h me&#13;
meet will provide the opportunity&#13;
The "Gymnastics Special' will be&#13;
held March ~ at 7:30 p.m. at Park High&#13;
in Racine. Admission is 50 cent .&#13;
The meet will feature all levels fr m&#13;
junior high to high school and olleg&lt;.&#13;
High Schools of Racine and Kenosha. a&#13;
well as the junior highs of Racine will be&#13;
featured.&#13;
The climax of the evening will be a&#13;
dual meet between Steven POint and&#13;
the Rangers.&#13;
Coach Ballester indicated that ,f 'be&#13;
f ,&#13;
Racine Intramural 5&#13;
Racine Intramural All Stars nipped&#13;
their counterparts from Kenosha 6~-61&#13;
in a prelim to the Parkside- orthland&#13;
game. The game followed a script that&#13;
has become a familiar one whenever&#13;
representatives from the two leagues&#13;
meet - an outcome that is close no&#13;
matter who wins.&#13;
Kenosha jumped off to a quick lead&#13;
that at times seemed to indicate that the&#13;
southsiders would not encOUnler too&#13;
much opposition. At the quarter mark&#13;
Kenosha led 21-13 but Racine began to&#13;
find the combination and the game was&#13;
lied 36 up as the half ended. ei'her&#13;
team was able to get more than a J&#13;
point advantage. Racine won in the last&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Rich DeVOll, former Waukegan Slarter&#13;
led the losers with 23 points while&#13;
Racine had even scoring led by Bill&#13;
Masik's 11. Several players were close (0&#13;
UW_PARKSIDE WEEKEND&#13;
SKI SPREE&#13;
MARCH 12, 13, 14 - WHITECAP MT.&#13;
MONTREAL, WISCONSIN&#13;
TRIP INCLUDES:&#13;
ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION,&#13;
LODGING, LIFT TICKETS, FREE SKI&#13;
LESSONS, 2 BREAKFASTS,l DINNER&#13;
AND APRES SKI ACTIVITIES.&#13;
COST OF TRIP:&#13;
$42.00 REGISTERED GUESTS&#13;
537.00 PARKSIDE STUDENT&#13;
$32.50 SKI CLUB MEMBERS&#13;
RESERVATIONS AND ADDITIONAL&#13;
INFORMATION AT THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES DFFtCE - TALENT HALL.&#13;
Nip Kenosha&#13;
him as Rick Jackson had nine. Tom&#13;
Hearn nine n tar-. os, J&#13;
Kale ke and len G,b on e1ghl.&#13;
The next contel!ll Oet\loeen Ihe t"o&#13;
leagues will be laler thi month when&#13;
(he league ch3mpIOn mut for Iht&#13;
AII-ParkSJde Ch'Olp,om/up .&#13;
ationai&#13;
Ran n core I 000 three tune I~)&#13;
",11 qUlhf) lor I rail I meer In&#13;
Lou I aana The R "eer have&#13;
c omph d lb. 1"1: ,.. far&#13;
C""d, lie ter Id h e 10&#13;
turnout • see the mn I&#13;
130.00 for lhe thud IIn&gt;&lt;&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUI. THIIU THUIIS.&#13;
11 l.ll, TIll 1l101lTE&#13;
Fill.• SAT.TIll 2 Ul,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24e&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
SSe&#13;
{jj)ifi in my cld i!Jc/.a("rofiaul,&#13;
.9t /wld&gt; tit ~ Ity /a~..&#13;
ANDREA"S BETA BLEND&#13;
If you're looking for an easy-burning, soft-smoking tobacco WItha&#13;
good pleasant flavor and friendly armoa, ou'v got a "tnn r'&#13;
with 'our Bela Blend_ It's the happy tobacco for day'tn, day~ut&#13;
smoking enjDymenl Try a pouch today. A1soavaLiable tn 8 oz. and&#13;
16 oz. lever-lift tins.&#13;
TOUccoraSTmalll&#13;
&amp;-.01-6011 n ~. WISt S3I4O&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLAIRS&#13;
207 SIXTH sum&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN 53403&#13;
l)ll(laY, March 1, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
~&#13;
Rangers Close Strong&#13;
BY JIM CASPER&#13;
kside played perhap~ its finest&#13;
Par of the season against strong&#13;
ll'11e I nd defeating the Gateway take a ' 8 99 ~ ence leaders 11 · . C~1&#13;
~[ng on I 2 of their first 14 shots, 1 Range rs shot .676 en route to a&#13;
10 halftime lead. The Rangers&#13;
s~ed with 65% shooting. Lakeland&#13;
~t 4 c; - normally good enough to&#13;
but not this time . ~·arkside's p_o werful forwar d&#13;
bination of Eh Slaughter and Stan&#13;
~le accounted for 71 points. Eli had&#13;
; . tan 30. Both played strong defense&#13;
. , ·ontributed key rebounds. · i.~n Rick turned in another excellent&#13;
in place of the injured Jim Hog~n,&#13;
,:ooung up with 18 points, coupled with&#13;
1 .ne floor game. Nick Perrine and Ed&#13;
\' . Tine also were in double figures. The Rangers ended their home season&#13;
·:. another good performance &lt;IS they&#13;
:ent over 110 for the third time in a&#13;
· beating orthland 115-80.&#13;
Afler orthland jumped off to a&#13;
15 lead the Rangers went to work as&#13;
ihe,· ran, pressed, and scored their way&#13;
to i commanding lead of I 05-64 before&#13;
the reserves flooded the court.&#13;
niors Eli Slaughter and Stan White&#13;
combined for 59 points, with Slaughter&#13;
getting 34, White 25. White hit 25&#13;
dcsp11e sitting out part of the second&#13;
lulf v.1th an ankle injury. He also found&#13;
wne to clear 22 rebounds - a school&#13;
re ord.&#13;
nior guards Nick Perrine and Ken · k were the pressure points in a very&#13;
Kari Kiekoski of Parkside placed&#13;
nd in overall Nord ic skiing and 24th&#13;
effecti~e press which was partly&#13;
re_spons1ble for breaking the game open.&#13;
Rick_ also scored 14 points.&#13;
Mike Madson and Ed VanTine were&#13;
other Rangers in double figure . with 15&#13;
and IO respectively.&#13;
!he seni~rs accounted for O Ranger&#13;
points despite the fact that high scoring&#13;
guard Jim Hogan was unable to plav because of injury. ·&#13;
Martin Suffers&#13;
First Def eat&#13;
Coach Jim Koch and his band of&#13;
wrestlers suffered a severe blow when&#13;
freshman sensation Ken Martin ,&#13;
separted a sh_oulder in a quadrangular&#13;
wrestling match with 'orthern&#13;
Michigan, UW- Milwaukee and Lake&#13;
Superior State.&#13;
Martin suffered the first defeat of hi&#13;
college career at the hands of two time&#13;
All-American Mike Tello of orthern&#13;
Michigan. Tello eked out a 5-4 deci ion&#13;
in a match that saw fartin put Tello on&#13;
his back but somehow didn't get credit&#13;
for the feat.&#13;
Martin separated the shoulder in the&#13;
next match. Martin's record 1s 13 win&#13;
against just the one loss. Doctors have\'&#13;
ordered him to take a two-month lay&#13;
off which would eliminate 1artin'&#13;
chances at a national crown which he&#13;
has been aiming for. It also subtracts&#13;
anywhere form three to five team point&#13;
that has been a certainty in all but one&#13;
match so far this year.&#13;
Doug nd ~&#13;
G;'mnasts Ailn ~ r&#13;
we a t·&#13;
featured.&#13;
The lima of II&#13;
dual meet bet e n&#13;
the Ranger .&#13;
Co ~h Balle ter ind1 ted that 1f th&#13;
r.&#13;
I fat i 11&#13;
CHAT&#13;
CHEW&#13;
t of SO in overall Alpine in a meet&#13;
h included 9 schools. The meet was n by 1ichigan Tech.&#13;
r ' Racine Intramural 5 Nip Kenosha 40th Ave.&#13;
&amp; J do Club&#13;
Me ting time will be at 9:00- p.m. on&#13;
onday evenings. Cost of membership&#13;
2.00 per year. There is an additional&#13;
rge of $ 1.00 for each meet. A meet&#13;
being scheduled with Carthage in&#13;
rly larch.&#13;
nng&#13;
The Club has officially adopted the&#13;
c Rag Time Rangers. They are&#13;
pon oring with Student Affairs a Ski&#13;
rce _to White Cap in northern&#13;
nm on March 12, 13, and 14th.&#13;
Equestrian Club has just completed a c ful clinic and is making plans for&#13;
drill leam, a horse show, and the&#13;
'liardtng of a high point trophy for the&#13;
ber coring the most number of&#13;
~ in horse shows this summer.&#13;
Open Soturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Moon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FRE E CHECK/ NG&#13;
ACcouNrs To STUDENTS&#13;
ANo RETIREES&#13;
3928 Sixtieth Snttt&#13;
keaoa11a&#13;
Racine Intramural All Star nipped&#13;
their counterpart rom en 2- I&#13;
in a prelim to the Parkside-, orthland&#13;
game. The game followed a dipt that&#13;
has become a familiar one whenever&#13;
representatives from the t~vo league~&#13;
meet - an outcome that 1 close no&#13;
matter who wins.&#13;
Kenosha jumped off to a quick lead&#13;
that at times seemed to indicate that the sou thsiders would not encounter too&#13;
much opposition. At the quarter mar Kenosha Jed 21-13 but Racine began to&#13;
find the combination and the game wa&#13;
tied 36 up as the half ended e her&#13;
team was able to get more than J&#13;
point advantage. Racine won in lhe 13 t&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Rich Devon. former Waukegan tart.er&#13;
led the loser with ~3 point while!&#13;
Racine had even scoring led by 8111&#13;
Masik's 11 . everal player. were do e to&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE WE EK END&#13;
SKI SPREE&#13;
MARCH 12, 13, 14 - WHITECAP MT.&#13;
MONTREAL, WISCONSIN&#13;
TRIP INCLUDES:&#13;
ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION,&#13;
LODGING, LIFT TICKETS FREE SKI&#13;
LESSONS, 2 BREAKFASTS, 1 DINNER&#13;
AND APRES SKI ACTIVITIES.&#13;
COST OF TRIP:&#13;
$42.00 REGISTERED GUESTS&#13;
$37.00 PARKSIDE STUDENT&#13;
$32.50 SKI CLUB MEMBERS&#13;
RESERVATION S AND ADDITIONAL&#13;
INFORMATION AT THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES OFFICE - TALENT HALL.&#13;
THOUSA OS&#13;
OF FLAIRS&#13;
52 d t.&#13;
KIENOSH.A&#13;
SU • THRU THUR •&#13;
11 A. • ILL ID IT&#13;
FRI. l SAT. TILL 2 A ••&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
{ ri ple dee r)&#13;
55 (&#13;
.&#13;
(Jl J}l f uolt&#13;
.till~ Ill 6 I/;&#13;
ANDREA"S BETA B D&#13;
If you 're looking foe an y-burni ,&#13;
good, pleasant flavor and f riendl) arm&#13;
with our Beta Blend. It' th happy to cco f&#13;
smoking enjoymenl Try a pouch y. l o&#13;
16 oz. lever-lift tins. &#13;
Gu '\&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN OINNERS and&#13;
IULIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30'" A••.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657·5191&#13;
b rrenne of their live ' BZ. a man w~o&#13;
IS J. penpheral participant o.f 1 e&#13;
lIul id ~ie() vet alien from u tells&#13;
IJrT3 that he ha5"!.een nothing. ~Z ~ds&#13;
up ".allo" mg a bott le ohleepmg pills&#13;
w hile tavmg next to . Iatia in a motel&#13;
room a mile from the desert set where a&#13;
mo'''' has JUS! been compleled. He tells&#13;
her that she "ill be "here he tsone day.&#13;
wakes up the next m~:Hn!ng to find&#13;
Bl dead. Flashing lights bhndmg her an?&#13;
people all over 'he place. Helene, Bl s&#13;
\10 tfe, blames Maria for the death of ~~r&#13;
husband (Helene was balling Marta s&#13;
JOAN DIDION&#13;
ex-husband Carter Lang while Maria said&#13;
her last goodnight to B'l dying). All are&#13;
guilty in Babylon.&#13;
Social relationships are flicked up, a&#13;
nonethic pervades the affluent West of&#13;
movie starlets and low budget directors&#13;
ending in a desert ~ar the set of&#13;
Carter's latest movie. Everybody has a&#13;
complaint. everything is disjointed and&#13;
harmony is a word which is best left&#13;
unspoken. All around her, Maria can see&#13;
the moral carnage, no responsibility,&#13;
and the consequences, well, you reap&#13;
what you sow, forget about it, find&#13;
someone else and do it all over again,&#13;
learn a new position, you know,&#13;
experiment. The author is not writing a&#13;
moral treatise. she is concerned with&#13;
presenting a picture of a young woman&#13;
whose ultimate concern becomes her&#13;
: ...' :--1..;: ~',&#13;
J"1 ~ , i,;.---.:~&#13;
~'"'!1,:~~......&#13;
.\~,~--:&#13;
~:'''6,&#13;
~~&#13;
FREE DEliVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P,M.&#13;
Open 6 Oays.a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
Page 8&#13;
. h r This novel hild and this may save e -.&#13;
;~ w;itten from the .cold ,s~uld" of h a&#13;
IS n who has "seen nothmg, W 0&#13;
to~~~~~~::~;ef~~~:s~e~~~gt~~~~~~ ~~~&#13;
nblgh d You will find the statement in&#13;
a or te . .&#13;
the gray sould of Mana. .&#13;
Conversations are obligated, the,Y&#13;
have and adhere to' a pa~tern; fM~~a&#13;
consciously fulfils her SIde 0 e&#13;
dialogue while predicting what the other&#13;
will say; I've been ~ere before and '.......&#13;
here now and will be here agam.&#13;
Eventually she tells the others th~! they&#13;
et her sick, "physically SIck, and&#13;
~scapes them by ?eing commr tte.d after&#13;
Bl does himself m. In the hospital she&#13;
makes plans for the future: (I~she WIll&#13;
get her daughter ,"(2) liv~, with Kate&#13;
alone, (3) do some cannmg. . .&#13;
In the beginning of the novel Mana IS&#13;
driving a Corvette on the freeway&#13;
(7,000 miles in one month), she knows&#13;
the road like a riverboat captain knows&#13;
the Mississippi IRiver. She doesn't ~ri~e&#13;
to get anywhere in particular, she IS t~&#13;
harmony with the freeway and that IS&#13;
enough. She leaves the freeway when&#13;
she loses the rhythm of the road, when&#13;
she first thinks about getting an&#13;
abortion. From then on the road is for&#13;
getting from one place to another, and&#13;
the places she goes to lead nowhere,&#13;
harmony is lost.&#13;
"An underground nuclear device was&#13;
detonated where Silver Wells had once&#13;
been, and Maria got up before dawn to&#13;
feel the blast. She felt nothing." And&#13;
that is the point, nothing, nothing,&#13;
nothing, no emotions; no feelings. her&#13;
home is blasted and she feels nothing.&#13;
Anesthetize the emotions, that's the&#13;
answer,&#13;
Joan Didion is clearly a writer of&#13;
talent and her theme, at least in Play It&#13;
As It Lays is as close to home as a&#13;
young woman in America today.&#13;
It is a difficult book to ignore.&#13;
PLA Y IT AS IT LA YS IS&#13;
COURTESY OF THE .BOOK MART&#13;
622 59TH STREET, KENOSHA, AND&#13;
COSTS $5.95.&#13;
\\&#13;
The&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
•&#13;
$·1.15 1111111&#13;
o&#13;
e&#13;
NEWSCOPE MOIIda&#13;
Y.~~&#13;
NEWSCOPE'S&#13;
Classifieds are Fr&#13;
New Gallery On&#13;
503 Main St. e&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% Student D'&#13;
on all Posters&amp;'pOll',&#13;
~ rallttl&#13;
, New Gallery T&#13;
. 5U36 SixthA't&#13;
t Ken00~&#13;
~:~ "'0&#13;
~o RANCH ~~&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTl\ SN!IlI~ ..&#13;
-KENOSHA_&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWtCHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROI&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
it's&#13;
real thl&#13;
Brat 01 Steak or 8..........&#13;
an"&#13;
F.... cIIF._ or Onl... RI....&#13;
.. P.tato sO''"'&#13;
.....&#13;
Sch_.r .. ",",... G'•••• f a.o.&#13;
HAPPY HOUR.&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.....to&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20C&#13;
, I..~ A•• II.IlI. F.. p.,.,•• IIC_'" F,..... 'tr ...... '" portte·&#13;
Open Daily' A}A.-12 P.M·&#13;
,,,\ BRAT -STOP&#13;
..........C_I:-W ... H~"&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKE DI ERS and&#13;
JOA DIDION&#13;
e -hu band Carter Lang while Maria said&#13;
her la t goodnight to B·Z dying). All are&#13;
guilty in Babylon.&#13;
ocial relationships are fucked up, a&#13;
noneth1c pervades the affluent West of&#13;
movie tarlets and low budget directors&#13;
ending in a desert ~ar the set of&#13;
arter·s latest movie. Everybody has a&#13;
complaint. everything is disjointed and&#13;
harmony is a word which is best left&#13;
un poken. All around her, Maria can see&#13;
the moral carnage, no responsibility,&#13;
and the consequences, well, you reap&#13;
what you sow, forget about it, find&#13;
omeone else and do it all over again,&#13;
learn a new position, you know,&#13;
experiment. The author is not writing a&#13;
moral treatise, she is concerned with&#13;
presenting a picture of a young woman&#13;
whose ultimate concern becomes her&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
--......&#13;
.,-'~-~ ~- ~&#13;
. ~ !./ - .-~~ --&#13;
I ALIA'tol&#13;
5021&#13;
E&#13;
SAUSAGE&#13;
30th&#13;
OSHA&#13;
Ave.&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
~&#13;
657-5191&#13;
•&#13;
FREE DalVERY .C :00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
page 8&#13;
hild and this may save her. _This novel&#13;
~~ w;itten from the ,cold .s~uld,, of/&#13;
is who has "seen nothing, w o&#13;
wo~n I her retarded daughter and has&#13;
~;~~~r~s and fantasies of the child s~e&#13;
~~orted. You will fin~ the statement m&#13;
the gray sould of Mana. . Conversations are obligated, the_y&#13;
have and adhere to, a pa~tern; Mana&#13;
consciously fulfils her side of the&#13;
dialogue while predicting what the oth: .11 say. I've been here before anc1 .&#13;
:~re n~w and will be here agam.&#13;
Eventually she tells the other~ th~! they&#13;
et her sick, "physically s~ck, and&#13;
!scapes them by ?eing comm1tte_d after&#13;
BZ does himself m. In the hospital s~e&#13;
makes plans for the future: (I) she will&#13;
get her daughter ,"(2) _ liv~, with Kate&#13;
alone, (3) do some cannmg. . . . In the beginning of the novel Mana 1s&#13;
driving a Corvette on the freeway&#13;
(7,000 miles in one month), s~e knows&#13;
the road like a ri.verboat captam knows&#13;
the Mississippi I River. She doesn't ~ri~e&#13;
to get anywhere in particular, she 1s 1~&#13;
harmony with the freeway and that 1s&#13;
enough. She leaves the freeway when&#13;
she loses the rhythm of the road, when&#13;
she first thinks about getting an&#13;
abortion. From then on the road is for&#13;
getting from one place to another, and&#13;
the places she goes to lead n0\"'1ere,&#13;
harmony is lost.&#13;
"An underground nuclear device was&#13;
detonated where Silver Wells had once&#13;
been and Maria got up before dawn to&#13;
feel the blast. She felt nothing." And&#13;
that is the pvint, nothing, nothing,&#13;
nothing, no emotipns;, no feelings, her&#13;
home is blasted and she feels nothing.&#13;
Anesthetize the emotions, that's the&#13;
answer. Joan Didion is clearly a writer of&#13;
talent and her theme, at least in Play It&#13;
As It Lays is as close to home as a&#13;
young woman in America today.&#13;
It is a difficult book to ignore.&#13;
PLAY IT AS IT LAYS IS&#13;
COURTESY OF THE .BOOK MART&#13;
622 59TH STREET, KENOSHA,. AND&#13;
COSTS $5.95.&#13;
NEWSCOPE Monday h&#13;
' '"altb I&#13;
NEWSCOPE'S&#13;
Classifieds are F&#13;
,,.,&#13;
New Gallery On&#13;
503 Main St. e&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% Student D , on all Posters &amp; zFsco,1111 ra11z i New Gallery 1 , 5036 Sixth Au"&#13;
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61761">
              <text>1971-03-01</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61763">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="61764">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="61765">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61767">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61768">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61769">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61770">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61771">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61772">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
