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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Last Night A Go-Go?</text>
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            <text>Starving&#13;
Artist's&#13;
Fair&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Last year nearly 10,000 people&#13;
visited it and 125 artists entered. This&#13;
year 175 artists are entered and the&#13;
attendance is expected to surpass last&#13;
summer's.&#13;
Things are looking good for the&#13;
Racine Starving Artist's Fair, according&#13;
to Mrs. Carol Madsen,&#13;
director of the fair.&#13;
This year's event will be held for the&#13;
first time on the front lawn of the UWParkside's&#13;
Racine campus on Sunday?&#13;
August 1, from 10 a .m. until 6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The fair is unTque in that all works&#13;
are priced at less than $20,00 —&#13;
making it truly a starving artists'&#13;
(and patrons') fair.&#13;
"Many of the artists just want to&#13;
recoup the costs of materials," Mrs.&#13;
Madsen explains.&#13;
It's an unjuried fair, which means&#13;
that in order to enter an artist need&#13;
not pass a screening committee that&#13;
grants entrance based upon the acceptability&#13;
of his work. A $2 entry fee&#13;
is required.&#13;
In comparison, the Kenosha and&#13;
Racine art fairs are juried events.&#13;
Last year the fair sales netted&#13;
$7,000.&#13;
"A whopping $7,000," says Mrs.&#13;
Madsen, as she points out that the&#13;
highest price paid was the $20.00 tag.&#13;
Also, there was no institutional&#13;
purchasing, characteristic of other&#13;
fairs.&#13;
The entrants are mostly from&#13;
Racine and the surrounding area. As&#13;
painters, they vary from "Sunday&#13;
painters" to professional. The fair is&#13;
often the first place where a beginning&#13;
artist exhibits.&#13;
The types of art exhibited include&#13;
oils, watercolors, graphics, ceramics,&#13;
hand wrought jewelry, sculpture, and&#13;
original craft work such as macrame.&#13;
The only stipulation is that the work&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
'Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Volume 4 _ NUMBER 5 July 26,1971&#13;
Orientation&#13;
Issue&#13;
Inside&#13;
Last Night A Go-Go?&#13;
m&#13;
o:&#13;
This Could Be&#13;
The Last Time&#13;
Tonight could be the last night&#13;
to combine drinking and&#13;
dancing.&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
In 1968 Mi ke Royko won the&#13;
Heyward Broun award for&#13;
outstanding journalism lor his&#13;
coverage of the Democratic&#13;
National Convention in Chicago&#13;
in which he criticized the city's&#13;
handling of the demonstrations.&#13;
In 1971 h e published a book&#13;
entitled The Boss in which he&#13;
describes the rise of Richard J.&#13;
Daley from a neighborhood&#13;
political hack to leader of one of&#13;
the most powerful political&#13;
machines in the nation's&#13;
history.&#13;
Royko has been on top of the&#13;
Chicago political scene for a&#13;
number of years and perhaps,&#13;
with Daley himself as the only&#13;
exception, its most&#13;
knowledgeable authority.&#13;
Newscope spoke with Royko&#13;
about his recent book, journalism&#13;
in general, and Chicago&#13;
politics.&#13;
Newscope: Because your&#13;
columns frequently focus on&#13;
Daley and machine politics, do&#13;
you find any resentment on the&#13;
part of the city administration?&#13;
Royko: As a matter of fact I&#13;
get on quite well with public&#13;
officials. I knew these people&#13;
before I became a columnist&#13;
and they know that when I'm&#13;
Newscope Interview&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The hour soon approaches when we may&#13;
be able to say that topless-bottomless taverns&#13;
are a thing of the past.&#13;
Monday a federal district judge will hear&#13;
the case of the city versus the half-dozen or so&#13;
tavern owners who have taken the brunt of&#13;
city council and mayoral criticism for&#13;
months.&#13;
One of the owners, who declined to be&#13;
named, said that his lawyers were optimistic&#13;
about the outcome of t he case. Meanwhile, at&#13;
Bruce and Murph's a not so promising&#13;
number of hardy customers weathered a light&#13;
rain to see what may be the next to the last&#13;
night of drinking and dancing.&#13;
If the decision goes against the owners,&#13;
they will most likely offer nude dancing but&#13;
will not be allowed to serve beer.&#13;
"I'll stay open to prove a point", one&#13;
owner said. "I don't want to cater to eighteen&#13;
year olds and I don't really want to stay open,&#13;
but the city did some unfair things to us and&#13;
I'll stay open if for nothing more than the&#13;
principle involved."&#13;
Apparently the principle referred to&#13;
concerns the issue whether or not nudity per&#13;
se is offensive or obscene. The owners contend&#13;
that it isn't; the mayor and half of the common&#13;
council disagree.&#13;
Accordingly, the council and the mayor&#13;
claim that the topless-bottomless taverns&#13;
nave deteriorated the city's reputation, while&#13;
on the other hand, the owners insist that they&#13;
have contributed significantly to the economy&#13;
as a result of th e added income brought in by&#13;
the entertainment. They claim that the go-go&#13;
girls attract customers from Illinois and&#13;
elsewhere and that gas stations and&#13;
restaurants have all benefited from the influx&#13;
of c usumers.&#13;
The owners maintain that the city had&#13;
dealt with them in a prejudicial manner and&#13;
that the local government had a "vendetta"&#13;
against them.&#13;
But between the arguments the show must&#13;
go on and it did in most places. Freddie's was&#13;
reported closed Sunday night but Josie was&#13;
dancing at the Velvet Swing.&#13;
She stepped on stage dressed in black lace&#13;
panties and top with a robe draped over her&#13;
shoulders. The first song, a selection of&#13;
Creedence Clearwater Revival ended with her&#13;
robe on the stage. A secon d song, and then a&#13;
third by Hugh Masakella saw her top float off&#13;
and Blood Sweat and Tears played as she&#13;
slowly lowered her lace panties.&#13;
Each song was followed by a faint sound&#13;
of a pplause until the final number by Janis&#13;
Joplin. Half way through the song Josie had&#13;
surrendered her panty and for the next minute&#13;
or so danced in the nude. As Janis trailed on&#13;
the record Josie turned her back to the&#13;
audience like a child standing in a corner and&#13;
then to the flapping of a slightly louder applause&#13;
slipped into her robe and left the stage&#13;
to sit at the end of the bar until the next&#13;
number when again the audience would give&#13;
her their undivided attention.&#13;
taking a shot at somebody I'm&#13;
not doing it to entertain myself,&#13;
or amuse myself. If I say&#13;
someone's a bad guy it's&#13;
because I think he is.&#13;
As for the reaction among&#13;
political people toward the&#13;
book, many of them told me&#13;
they liked it. A number of t hem&#13;
are a part of Daley'&#13;
Moyer's, 'Bill, have you read&#13;
it?' Bill said no and Foran said,&#13;
'Gee, you ought to read it, it's&#13;
terrific.'&#13;
Newscope: Has Mayor Daley&#13;
shown any reaction to the book?&#13;
Royko: Mrs. Daley was interviewed&#13;
by some fawning&#13;
free-lance magazine writer.&#13;
The writer asked if she had read&#13;
read it. If she would have said&#13;
anything other than that, I&#13;
would have been surprised.&#13;
One thing she said bothered&#13;
me, and she's said this before,&#13;
people like myself print second&#13;
hand information rather than&#13;
getting it directly from the&#13;
source, meaning the mayor. I&#13;
would have been happy to in-&#13;
Mike Royko:&#13;
Chicago's Daley News&#13;
Mike Royko&#13;
organization^oo^vva^oin^T&#13;
television show with Tom&#13;
Foran, (Kup's Show), and he&#13;
was there, more or less as&#13;
Daley's man. Bill Moyers was&#13;
on the show, too. While we were&#13;
on the air, Foran was taking all&#13;
kinds of shots at the books,&#13;
which is his job, but during the&#13;
commercial break he said to&#13;
the book. She said she had and&#13;
that I was an underdevelopedunderachiever.&#13;
I was struck by the expression&#13;
and ever since I have been&#13;
trying to figure out what it&#13;
means. She said the book was&#13;
trash. One night she reviewed it&#13;
for Mr. Daley before bdti and&#13;
tOld him he shouldn't bother&#13;
terview the mayor. I wrote him&#13;
a letter telling him that I was&#13;
going to do the book and wanted&#13;
to interview him, but he never&#13;
answered my letter.&#13;
I couldn't have done the&#13;
book if I didn't have some damn&#13;
good sources right in the&#13;
organization.&#13;
Newscope: Do you think there&#13;
is much weight behind the&#13;
recent criticism directed at the&#13;
press concerning objectivity,&#13;
etc.?&#13;
Royko: I think newspapers&#13;
are probably more accurate,&#13;
more responsible than they&#13;
were when I started in the&#13;
business. You don't have the old&#13;
cops-and-robbers mentality on&#13;
newspapers anymore. You have&#13;
fewer police reporters on&#13;
newspapers than in the past.&#13;
They hung around police&#13;
stations to cover police news,&#13;
most of which reflected the&#13;
point of view of the police&#13;
department.&#13;
But every story is slanted&#13;
one way or another. I don't&#13;
know how you could ever put out&#13;
a scrupulously fair newspaper.&#13;
What newspapers should try to&#13;
do basically, is print the facts as&#13;
they find them. I don't think we&#13;
should try to print the truth&#13;
because how the hell do we&#13;
know what the truth is?&#13;
I think in general,&#13;
newspapers should make very&#13;
clear what is an attempt to print&#13;
facts and what is a writers'&#13;
opinion. When people read a&#13;
news account they're entitled to&#13;
know they're getting an attempt&#13;
at objectivity and as many facts&#13;
(Continued,on Page 6)&#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE July 26,1971&#13;
TO&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Maybe it's something in&#13;
the air, or just a feeling one&#13;
gets once in a while, but it&#13;
would almost seem to me,&#13;
possibly others as well, that&#13;
a type of conspiracy has&#13;
developed here at the&#13;
University of Dust and Dirt.&#13;
It seems that no matter&#13;
which way you look, there is&#13;
someone standing behind&#13;
you waiting to take any&#13;
monies you may have, will&#13;
have, or might have.&#13;
Although there are lesser&#13;
rip-offs (in terms of&#13;
amounts) which are a part&#13;
of this campus's day to day&#13;
life, one only has to look to&#13;
the south of Tallent Hall and&#13;
view the enormous erection&#13;
known as Parkside Village.&#13;
I can remember back&#13;
when several of o ur leaders&#13;
participated in the various&#13;
hoi palloi involved in&#13;
making the announcement&#13;
that student on (or close to)&#13;
campus housing was to be&#13;
built by private developers&#13;
with the students in mind.&#13;
Sounded really nice until the&#13;
developers oiled up their&#13;
cash registers and laid down&#13;
their brochures. What was&#13;
that now? Somewhere&#13;
around 35 dollars for a one&#13;
bedroom el cheapo pad.&#13;
Sounded pretty cheap until&#13;
your "friend" pointed out&#13;
that the occupancy of such a&#13;
room can only be had that&#13;
cheap with the addition of&#13;
three other roommates. Use&#13;
your imagination, you'll fit&#13;
'em all in.&#13;
As a transfer student at&#13;
UWP from WSU-O, I was&#13;
really surprised to find that&#13;
while providing a listing of&#13;
apartments in the area, the&#13;
University seemingly did&#13;
nothing to insure the&#13;
prospective occupants a&#13;
suitable place to live. I'm&#13;
not saying that the "village"&#13;
roofs will leak or things of&#13;
such nature, but rather&#13;
lacks basic student needs&#13;
like a measure of privacy,&#13;
ample study area and&#13;
facilities including a desk&#13;
for each resident, plenty of&#13;
shelving, closet room, etc.&#13;
From the view portrayed in&#13;
the sketches shown it sure&#13;
looks as if the village will&#13;
fall far short of this and if&#13;
these items are planned for&#13;
inclusion, why were they not&#13;
shown in the sketches instead&#13;
of that spacious twobed&#13;
comfortable living&#13;
bullshit when your rates are&#13;
for four occupants.&#13;
In closing all I wish to say&#13;
is that for any poor student&#13;
who has no choice when&#13;
renting a PV apartment&#13;
The runaway bestseller is on the screen.&#13;
COLUMBIA PICTURES Prasenls Sean Connery&#13;
in A ROBERT M. WEITMAN PRODUCTION The Anderson Jf Tapes&#13;
ORPHEUM A UNITED ARTISTS THEATRE&#13;
STARTS&#13;
AUGUST 4th&#13;
—I— a-1^ 9TWDC&#13;
UUkV Ol&#13;
(\ £&gt;e n i? n&#13;
LAST CHANCE THIS WEEK WE MUST BEGIN TO RETURN&#13;
ALL REMAINING TEXTBOOK S TO THE&#13;
PUBLISHERS. IF YOU ST I L L NEE D BOOKS,&#13;
GET THEM NOW, WHILE THEY ARE S T IL L&#13;
AVA I LABLE. UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
ought to get his head&#13;
together with the others in&#13;
the form of a tenants' union&#13;
or something because&#13;
village people are here to rip&#13;
students off a s deep as they&#13;
can.&#13;
MarcH. Colby&#13;
P.S.: Almost forgot to tell&#13;
ya, if you want furniture, it&#13;
will cost extra per month. If&#13;
you want a sun deck it's&#13;
gonna cost some more&#13;
money as will a phone and&#13;
air conditioning. If you're&#13;
single, even though you're&#13;
paying rent, you won't be&#13;
allowed to park at the&#13;
village; it seems that some&#13;
sort of arrangement will be&#13;
worked out with the&#13;
University for the Tallent&#13;
lot, and who knows, maybe&#13;
that will cost extra too.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Last week the Science&#13;
Division Executive Committee&#13;
of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside,&#13;
chaired by Dr. Norbert&#13;
Isenberg, made public its&#13;
decision not to alter its&#13;
previous recommendation&#13;
regarding renewal of the&#13;
contract of Dr. James&#13;
Russell Brokaw. It affirmed&#13;
its decision of April 2, when&#13;
it recommended nonrenewal&#13;
of Dr. Brokaw's&#13;
contract.&#13;
The Brokaw Defense&#13;
League protests this recent&#13;
act of the Executive&#13;
Committee. In the open&#13;
hearing of June 24, Dr.&#13;
Brokaw showed all of the&#13;
stated reasons for nonrenewal&#13;
given by the&#13;
Committee to be invalid.&#13;
Further, the dual role&#13;
played by Dr. William&#13;
Morrow, who acted both as a&#13;
member of the Executive&#13;
Committee and as Dean of&#13;
the College of Science and&#13;
Society, casts doubts on the&#13;
legality of the original&#13;
recommendation of April 2.&#13;
The BDL has written a&#13;
letter to Dean Morrow,&#13;
e x p r e s s i n g o u r&#13;
dissatisfaction with several&#13;
matters relating to the&#13;
organization of the open&#13;
hearing. Our primary&#13;
concern was the lack of&#13;
notification of Dr. Brokaw's&#13;
access to his file, and written&#13;
notification of the&#13;
hearing itself, until two days&#13;
before the hearing.&#13;
We feel it is significant&#13;
that a large volume of data&#13;
was submitted to Dr.&#13;
Brokaw's file after the&#13;
Executive Committee had&#13;
already made its decision&#13;
for non-renewal, apparently&#13;
as justification for its&#13;
THE&#13;
decision. There are ar large&#13;
number of documents in the&#13;
file dated June 3, just three&#13;
weeks before the hearing.&#13;
Another matter of concern&#13;
is the testimony introduced&#13;
at the open hearing which&#13;
suggests that the Chancellor&#13;
was involved in the&#13;
Executive Committee&#13;
decision. This testimony&#13;
also could invalidate the&#13;
April 2 recommendation of&#13;
the committee.&#13;
While the final decision&#13;
must rest with Dr. Brokaw,&#13;
the Brokaw Defense League&#13;
believes that preparations&#13;
for the open hearing have&#13;
produced a strong legal case&#13;
and we are urging him to&#13;
take legal action against the&#13;
University toward a&#13;
resolution of these issues.&#13;
Nancy MacKay&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to make a few&#13;
remarks on Mayor Huck's&#13;
statements, on the&#13;
restraining order the&#13;
federal courts gave the city&#13;
concerning the denial of&#13;
liquor licenses to the three&#13;
go go bars.&#13;
I would like to remind you&#13;
that Racine didn't waste any&#13;
time going to federal court,&#13;
when they were going to&#13;
close the coast guard&#13;
1&#13;
it's the 1&#13;
real thing [&#13;
Cc ijoy )V&#13;
New Salary Protection&#13;
During the first week of&#13;
August, classified employees&#13;
should receive information&#13;
and application&#13;
forms for a new Salary&#13;
Protection plan offered by&#13;
the University. Academic&#13;
personnel will be receiving&#13;
information in early October.&#13;
This voluntary coverage&#13;
will guarantee at least 60&#13;
per cent of gross salary at&#13;
age 65 should an employee&#13;
become disabled either on&#13;
or off the job. An individual&#13;
will know in advance the&#13;
amount of benefits that will&#13;
be received, regardless of&#13;
how much may or may not&#13;
be paid by Workmen's&#13;
Compensation, social&#13;
security, or retirement&#13;
plans. Individuals may&#13;
select a 30, 60, 90 o r 365 day&#13;
waiting period to fit their&#13;
personal needs. Premiums&#13;
(based on the waiting&#13;
period, gross salary, and&#13;
age) will be payroll&#13;
deducted month.y.&#13;
Details on the plan and&#13;
rates will be included in the&#13;
information packet.&#13;
Questions on the plan should&#13;
be referred to the Personnel&#13;
and Payroll Office, Tallent&#13;
Hall, telephone number&#13;
2204.&#13;
Security School&#13;
Three members of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside protection and&#13;
security staff are attending&#13;
an eight-week course at the&#13;
Wisconsin State Patrol&#13;
Academy at Camp McCoy.&#13;
They are William Cartner,&#13;
Burnell Anderson and&#13;
Richard Atkins, all of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The course, which runs&#13;
through Sept. 2, will give the&#13;
men the same training as&#13;
state patrol officers get in&#13;
their first eight weeks at the&#13;
academy.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
CARL'S P IZZA 9" - 12" - 14" - 16" 4&#13;
ALSO 1&#13;
In Four Sizes&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARHY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU KING . . . WP BUNG"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
Copy Editor JohnKoloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Gray&#13;
NEWS STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen, Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Janet Sabol,&#13;
Mike Starr.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott.&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Summer Newscope is&#13;
independent student newspi&#13;
composed and published we&#13;
through the summer sessioi&#13;
students of the University&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Stu'&#13;
obtained advertising funds&#13;
the sole source of revenue&#13;
the operation of Newscope. (&#13;
copies are printed&#13;
distributed through&#13;
Kenosha and Racine c&#13;
munities as well as&#13;
University. Free copies&#13;
available upon request.&#13;
July 26,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
station, and again against&#13;
Mt. Pleasant. To go so far as&#13;
to say "federal courts&#13;
should stay out of local&#13;
government", is a disgrace&#13;
to the whole American&#13;
system. When a mayor lets&#13;
his Aldermen disregard the&#13;
United States Constitution&#13;
like Aid. Frank Barry does,&#13;
then by all means the&#13;
federal courts are needed.&#13;
After all Racine is still part&#13;
of the United States. I do&#13;
think it's a shame that&#13;
citizens of Racine have to go&#13;
to federal court to protect&#13;
their rights as Americans.&#13;
I do agree with the Mayor&#13;
on full time aldermen. By&#13;
having full time aldermen,&#13;
we'd be able to get some&#13;
qualified aldermen, because&#13;
I think that most of our&#13;
present aldermen do not&#13;
qualify to hold the office in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
In conclusion I think we&#13;
pay enough tax money, not&#13;
to have Aid. Frank Barry&#13;
and Mr. Edward Krenzke&#13;
waste it in court battles, now&#13;
I see Racine even hired&#13;
another attorney, for the gogo&#13;
issue. All they're doing is&#13;
trying to take away people's&#13;
rights as Americans, with&#13;
their stand. If they insist,&#13;
then let them pay the cost of&#13;
this outside attorney, and&#13;
the whole court cost out of&#13;
their own pockets. I personally&#13;
don't want to pay for&#13;
any of their future campaigns,&#13;
with my taxes! And&#13;
why does Mr. Krenzke even&#13;
need this attorney in the&#13;
first place? Doesn't he have&#13;
enough confidence in&#13;
himself, or isn't he&#13;
qualified? I do realize that&#13;
taking away American&#13;
people's rights in a federal&#13;
court is a hard if not impossible&#13;
job.&#13;
The question I would like&#13;
to ask is: If the city is&#13;
successful in taking away&#13;
the go-go bars liquor&#13;
licenses, what have they&#13;
proved? They'll continue&#13;
with the same type of entertainment,&#13;
only without&#13;
liquor. Then you realize&#13;
people under 21 years old&#13;
will be allowed in, and they&#13;
wouldn't have any set&#13;
closing time, (all night). So&#13;
as long as the owners are&#13;
still willing to talk to the city&#13;
and reach an agreement,&#13;
why doesn't the city do so?&#13;
If the go-go bars do win in&#13;
court, which it looks like&#13;
they will, then what? At&#13;
least now they're willing to&#13;
bend a little so why&#13;
shouldn't Aid. Barry???&#13;
Charlene Kuipuo&#13;
Look What Happened&#13;
To Student Government&#13;
by Mark Timpany&#13;
Special Correspondent&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association&#13;
met last Tuesday night at 7&#13;
p.m. and passed two&#13;
resolutions relating to the&#13;
latest non-renewals of&#13;
Parkside faculty members.&#13;
The first resolution&#13;
directed the PSGA&#13;
Corresponding Secretary to&#13;
communicate in written&#13;
form dissatisfaction with&#13;
the latest non-renewals to&#13;
President Weaver, Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie, the Chairman&#13;
of th e Board of Regents, the&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty&#13;
Senate, and the Secretary of&#13;
the Faculty.&#13;
The resolution stated,&#13;
"The manner in which they&#13;
were conducted leads to the&#13;
question of whether the nonrenewals&#13;
were political&#13;
rather than academic.&#13;
Communications shall ask&#13;
for immediate action on the&#13;
December 10 policy&#13;
statement of the Chancellor&#13;
and a moratorium on&#13;
faculty non-renewals until&#13;
such time as the policies&#13;
stated by the Chancellor&#13;
have been implemented."&#13;
The second resolution&#13;
directed Gary Davis,&#13;
Chairman of the PSGA's&#13;
Academic Policies Committee,&#13;
and other interested&#13;
members of the Student&#13;
Government Association, to&#13;
travel to Madison on the&#13;
Brokaw Defense League's&#13;
bus trip to Madison to meet&#13;
with President Weaver in&#13;
order to report back to the&#13;
Student Government on the&#13;
outcome of that meeting.&#13;
The second resolution also&#13;
charged Gary Davis, "time&#13;
and conditions permitting,&#13;
to solicit the opinions of&#13;
President Weaver concerning&#13;
the recent nonrenewals."&#13;
The members discussed&#13;
means of making student&#13;
government more visible to&#13;
the student body and of&#13;
allowing for greater participation&#13;
by the student&#13;
body in the decision making&#13;
processes of student&#13;
government.&#13;
the next meeting of the&#13;
PSGA was scheduled for&#13;
Friday, July 30, at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
CHAT N CHEW 1&#13;
X'&#13;
y,&#13;
«&#13;
William Ross (second from left) of the Water Resources Division of the United States&#13;
Geological Survey in Madison explains to UW-Parkside geography students how to take&#13;
various kinds of measurements on the Pike River.&#13;
UWP Decl a r es Wa r On Pi k e&#13;
The opening volley in an&#13;
all-out war on the polluted&#13;
Pike River has been fired by&#13;
a summer geography class&#13;
at the University of&#13;
W isconsin-Parkside.&#13;
The class, "Special&#13;
Problems of the Pike&#13;
River", is taking to the field&#13;
and laboratories to gather&#13;
basic data about the river,&#13;
which originates in Mt.&#13;
Pleasant, just west of the&#13;
city of Racine, and empties&#13;
into Lake Michigan on the&#13;
north side of Kenosha.&#13;
Ultimate victory will&#13;
depend on adequate support&#13;
of a comprehensive and&#13;
systematic battle plan&#13;
drawn up by UW-P&#13;
specialists, and an alliance&#13;
among the university and&#13;
the five townships and cities&#13;
through which the offending&#13;
river flows. Restoring a&#13;
polluted river, even a small&#13;
one which meanders only 15&#13;
miles through two counties,&#13;
is a major ecological&#13;
project.&#13;
But the recreational and&#13;
esthetic dividends which&#13;
would accrue from a clean&#13;
Pike River flowing through&#13;
the heavily populated&#13;
southeastern corner of the&#13;
state, including the 700-acre&#13;
Parkside campus, has&#13;
stireed enthusiasm on the&#13;
part of city and county officials&#13;
of Racine and&#13;
Kenosha and the townships&#13;
of Mt. Pleasant, Sturtevant&#13;
and Somers.&#13;
UW-P staff share their&#13;
enthusiasm and see the&#13;
project as a way to help&#13;
fulfill the new university's&#13;
formal educational mission&#13;
| 40th Avenue &amp; 5 2nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
| SUNDAY THR U THURSDAY |&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS 40&lt; &amp; 24( §&#13;
| SUPERCHEW (Triple de cker) %&#13;
| 55&lt; I&#13;
RELAX&#13;
^fllTrfrTTTTTT^&#13;
JNBOW GARDENS!&#13;
AMUSEMENT CENTER&#13;
MINI-GOLF&#13;
ARCHERY&#13;
87th &amp; SHERIDAN RD.&#13;
of relating and responding&#13;
to the needs of its industrial,&#13;
rapidly growing urban&#13;
setting.&#13;
The class will update&#13;
mapping of the entire river&#13;
and its tributaries, determine&#13;
its discharge through&#13;
depth, width and flow&#13;
measurements at critical&#13;
points, pinpoint pollution&#13;
points, particularly uncharted&#13;
field tiles which&#13;
enter the river below water&#13;
level, and analyze water&#13;
samples for various kinds of&#13;
chemical and thermal&#13;
pollution.&#13;
That kind of raw data,&#13;
essential to a serious effort&#13;
to restore the river, is either&#13;
incomplete or non-existent.&#13;
But everyone knows the&#13;
river is polluted.&#13;
Bathers know it every&#13;
time a quarter-inch of rain&#13;
raises the Pike's pollution to&#13;
unsafe levels and forces city&#13;
officials to close Kenosha's&#13;
expansive Lake Michigan&#13;
beaches for two or three&#13;
days.&#13;
Picnickers at parks along&#13;
its banks know it when the&#13;
aroma of c harcoal is lost in&#13;
the Pike's own pungency.&#13;
Warning signs seem only&#13;
to belabor the obvious.&#13;
Cooperation and support&#13;
from city and township&#13;
officials has been excellent,&#13;
according to the class instructor,&#13;
Chelvadurai&#13;
Manogaran, assistant&#13;
professor of geography at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Information about the&#13;
river gathered to date by the&#13;
various municipalities has&#13;
been made available to the&#13;
class, and officials have&#13;
encouraged land owners to&#13;
allow access to the private&#13;
property they have to cross&#13;
to reach the river.&#13;
Both Kenosha and Racine&#13;
health departments have&#13;
made their laboratories and&#13;
equipment available to the&#13;
students who are doing&#13;
chemical analysis, and the&#13;
Kenosha public works&#13;
department has provided&#13;
instruction in surveying and&#13;
provided instruments.&#13;
A Somers official experienced&#13;
in chemical&#13;
analysis of the river has&#13;
trained students in water&#13;
sampling and location of&#13;
field tiles.&#13;
Mt. Pleasant officials&#13;
invited Manogaran and the&#13;
students to the town board&#13;
meeting and pledged support.&#13;
State and federal agencies&#13;
also have expressed interest&#13;
in the project. An engineer&#13;
from the United States&#13;
Geological Survey (USGS)&#13;
in Madison visited the&#13;
campus to instruct students&#13;
in measuring techniques.&#13;
Later this fall the USGS and&#13;
UW-P will establish a&#13;
permanent measuring&#13;
station on campus to record&#13;
water level, rate of flow and&#13;
pollution levels.&#13;
In addition to field work,&#13;
members of the class meet&#13;
three hours per week for&#13;
lecture and discussion. The&#13;
data gathering process,&#13;
which cannot be completed&#13;
in an eight-week summer&#13;
course, will be continued in&#13;
the fall.&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
Kenosha Racine&#13;
:iS±*&#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPK July 26,1971&#13;
Freddie Hubbard&#13;
"Straight Live"&#13;
CTI Records&#13;
CTI 6007&#13;
Freddie Hubbard —&#13;
Trumpet-Flueglglehorn&#13;
Ron Carter — B ass&#13;
Jack DeJohnette — Drums&#13;
Herbie Hancock — Piano&#13;
Joe Henderson —&#13;
Tenor Sax&#13;
Richard "Pablo" Landrum&#13;
Percussion&#13;
George Benson — Guitar&#13;
Finding a really good jazz&#13;
album is getting to be a&#13;
problem. Not that there&#13;
aren't plenty of t hem on the&#13;
market, but in searching&#13;
through the overabundant&#13;
dead weight one might&#13;
become considerably&#13;
frustrated. Jazz unfortunately&#13;
has found it&#13;
profitable to commercialize.&#13;
The hierarchy of the inby&#13;
Bob Borchardt&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
dustry has presented the&#13;
public with a line of slicklyproduced&#13;
cutely-covered&#13;
albums that when played&#13;
reveal nothing more than&#13;
the sound track of the "Bill&#13;
Cosby Show".&#13;
While Quincy Jones has&#13;
done a lot to further the&#13;
course of jazz in the mass&#13;
media since taking over as&#13;
musical director for the&#13;
show, the music is nevertheless&#13;
watered down,&#13;
lacking purpose and conviction.&#13;
It certainly isn't a&#13;
style that deserves to&#13;
dominate the market in a&#13;
time when so much really&#13;
innovative talent is around.&#13;
Furthermore, to present a&#13;
"complete" line of jazz, the&#13;
moneymen have felt it&#13;
necessary to record&#13;
everything from sloppy&#13;
Dixieland to fertility rites. If&#13;
your tastes lie somewhere in&#13;
between, you are left with&#13;
two choices: trusting a&#13;
record reviewer or finding a&#13;
shop where the proprietor is&#13;
so benevolent as to let you&#13;
play his entire stock before&#13;
making a selection. While&#13;
the former is dubious, the&#13;
latter is impossible and so&#13;
you are left with the lesser&#13;
of two evils.&#13;
"Strait Life" is the prize&#13;
of the hunt. Deep amid the&#13;
jungles of Don Sebelsky and&#13;
Ramsey Lewis the album&#13;
was discovered cooly&#13;
awaiting its chance to&#13;
strike. It's a record that's&#13;
gone well beyond Quincy but&#13;
would be hard pressed to&#13;
find much of a camaraderie&#13;
with Sun Ra and his Solar&#13;
Arkestra. It very definitely&#13;
swings, which above all else&#13;
is the trademark and beauty&#13;
of jazz itself.&#13;
Listening to "Mr. Clean"&#13;
should prove the point. De&#13;
Johnette on drums, Carter&#13;
on bass and Benson on&#13;
guitar join to form the&#13;
perfect rhythm section,&#13;
something a jazz soloist&#13;
UDIO I&#13;
would like to find under the&#13;
Christmas tree. They serve&#13;
more than just a&#13;
background, uniting to&#13;
spark ideas for the soloist —&#13;
a sort of musical thesarus. It&#13;
serves to enhance the&#13;
amazing things that Hubbard&#13;
does on trumpet. His&#13;
range gives him the use of&#13;
an almost unexplored&#13;
frontier as he weaves ideas&#13;
into complete pictures.&#13;
On piano, Hancock once&#13;
again proves his supremacy&#13;
at the jazz keyboard. Never&#13;
content to stay with the&#13;
standard phrases or ideas,&#13;
he constantly explores,&#13;
often coming with amazing&#13;
results.&#13;
The high point, however,&#13;
is "Here's That Rainy&#13;
Day". Miles has done it, Diz&#13;
has done it, but Hubbard&#13;
proves it to be his tune. The&#13;
combination of this song and&#13;
Hubbard's lyric fluglehorn&#13;
shows him to be the horn&#13;
player critics hoped he&#13;
would be with the release of&#13;
his first recordings. Hubbard&#13;
proves to be one man&#13;
who has listened and&#13;
learned.&#13;
Eating In&#13;
By Prof. Koch&#13;
Mueller elbow macaroni&#13;
offers these two "tested&#13;
recipes" which are good for&#13;
quick summer meals.&#13;
Elbow Macaroni&#13;
and Cheese&#13;
What you need:&#13;
1 Pkg. elbow macaroni&#13;
1 tablespoon butter&#13;
1 tablespoon flour&#13;
1 teaspoon salt&#13;
2V4 cups milk&#13;
cups grated Cheddar&#13;
cheese&#13;
2 te aspoon paprika&#13;
What to do:&#13;
Melt butter, blend in flour&#13;
and salt, add milk and cook.&#13;
Stir until cheese melts. Cook&#13;
elbow macaroni as directed&#13;
on side panel. Combine&#13;
cooked elbow macaroni with&#13;
sauce in a greased&#13;
casserole. Sprinkle top with&#13;
paprika. Bake in moderate&#13;
(375 degree) oven 25&#13;
minutes. Makes 6 s ervings.&#13;
Elbow Macaroni Salad&#13;
What you need:&#13;
1 pkg. elbow macaroni&#13;
4 c up mayonnaise&#13;
1 tablespoon lemon juice&#13;
1 teaspoon salt&#13;
1 teaspoon sugar&#13;
'/4 teaspoon celery seed&#13;
1 tomato diced&#13;
1 cup diced celery&#13;
2 pime&#13;
2 pimientos, chopped&#13;
tablespoons green&#13;
pepper&#13;
chopped — if desired&#13;
What to do:&#13;
Cook elbow macaroni as&#13;
directed on side panel, rinse&#13;
with cold water, drain. Mix&#13;
mayonnaise with lemon&#13;
juice, salt and sugar&#13;
Combine cooled elbow&#13;
macaroni, vegetables&#13;
celery seed and mayonnaise&#13;
m i x t u r e , b l e n d i n g&#13;
thoroughly. Serve on crisp&#13;
lettuce leaves and garnish&#13;
with radish roses. Makes 6-8&#13;
servings. i-n'i sot&#13;
mm&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Teenager, the star of recent 7-Up Uncola&#13;
ads on TV, came through town last week on&#13;
some sort of tour. I was chosen as his official&#13;
guide during his stay, and although the task&#13;
was somewhat hard, many felt that I would do a&#13;
fine job, especially with my imagination.&#13;
I was to pick him up at the Chicago and&#13;
Northwestern train station at noon. Because of&#13;
other details surrounding his visit, I was&#13;
delayed for almost half an hour.&#13;
When I did arrive, I expected to find him&#13;
either waiting restlessly on the platform, or&#13;
sitting aimlessly in the station. He was in&#13;
neither place. I decided to call the Uncola&#13;
people to see if he had come, when I spotted&#13;
him. He was pitching pennies in the alley next&#13;
to Becker's Cigar Store with a various assortment&#13;
of high school drop-outs.&#13;
He was a vision out of th e past. About 5 feet&#13;
9 inches tall, with the beginnings of a beer belly&#13;
and a mustache. He was fresh from the barber&#13;
with a Hollywood hair style, a worn, leather&#13;
jacket with zipper pockets thrown over his&#13;
shoulder, sleeveless tee-shirt and a pair of&#13;
greasy levis choking his hips.&#13;
Realizing that I would have to make him&#13;
feel at home, I had come prepared to pick him&#13;
up. I wore a tight pair of black pants with cuffs,&#13;
white socks, a black tee-shirt with a pack of&#13;
Camels rolled up in the sleeve, and a fine pair of&#13;
pointed black shoes with lightning bolts up the&#13;
sides. My hair weighed in at about three&#13;
pounds, parted down the middle, slick as a&#13;
sewer cap in the rain.&#13;
I had borrowed a '56 Chevy with crome&#13;
reverse, a tape player, and various other articles&#13;
that would make any teenager proud. 11&#13;
also bought Flamin Groovies and Sha-na-na!&#13;
tapes, and a six pack of beer. I greeted him with1&#13;
my best "New Yawk" accent. When he saw me,&#13;
he slid a comb through his hair, glanced from&#13;
side to side, and hopped into the car, bidding his&#13;
penny pitchers a "catch ya around."&#13;
One of the reasons I was picked as his guide&#13;
was because I could take Teenager "to lunch&#13;
based on all my experience with this column. I&#13;
had to think of a place where Teenager would&#13;
be welcome, and fit in. Someone had told me&#13;
that beneath all the grease, Teenager was a&#13;
warm, tender person. I tried to think of a place&#13;
where the hamburgers would fit the same&#13;
criteria.&#13;
On the corner of 22nd Avenue and 75th&#13;
Street I took Teenager for a late dinner. The&#13;
Spot proved to be an excellent place where we&#13;
both could relax, dig the atmosphere, and feel&#13;
at home. There were other reasons I picked this&#13;
place.&#13;
There is constant police protection at The&#13;
Spot. I can't really remember the last time I&#13;
failed to see at least one police car protecting&#13;
the citizens while they ate hamburgers. At least&#13;
here, Teenager wouldn't get into a rumble.&#13;
Another reason we went to this drive-in was&#13;
because the prices are pretty good. Although&#13;
hamburgers are forty cents, they are famous. A&#13;
"Spot Hamburger" is one step above a regular&#13;
one, it seems. This is the most popular eating&#13;
place after ten p.m. in the entire county.&#13;
The service is fast, as the car-hops rely on&#13;
tips from the customers to supplement their&#13;
wages. The food is very good in my book, all the&#13;
way from the chicken to hot dogs. The item that&#13;
draws the most people though is ice cold root&#13;
beer.&#13;
Teenager and I each downed a couple of&#13;
hamburgers and French fries. He watched the&#13;
car-hops smile and scurry from car to car. Car&#13;
radios and tape players composed a sort of&#13;
original moog synthesized ballad, as Teenager&#13;
and I washed down root beer after root beer&#13;
while watching bugs bounce off of the neon&#13;
signs.&#13;
Teenager was thumbing his nose at the&#13;
Uncola generation as he sat back and relived&#13;
the fifties at the only place in Kenosha he really&#13;
could in style, The Spot.&#13;
THAT CIGAR SHAPED&#13;
THING IN THE SKY&#13;
Elke Sommer&#13;
Erika Sltschul&#13;
Michael York&#13;
Jeffrey Richter Douglas&#13;
Ettienne Perier&#13;
Director&#13;
This was one week that I&#13;
had a little difficulty finding&#13;
a film worth watching, let&#13;
alone reviewing. I chose a&#13;
picture that lies somewhere&#13;
between the "Blue Max"&#13;
and "2001, A Space&#13;
Odyssey". It was about&#13;
World War I and the famous&#13;
zeppelins . . . or at least for&#13;
the first ten minutes of the&#13;
film, that's what I thought it&#13;
was about.&#13;
Instead, it turned out to be&#13;
one of the most far-fetched&#13;
films I have ever seen. We&#13;
find the World War I German&#13;
zeppelin turning into a&#13;
Flash Gordon-like vehicle,&#13;
complete with Elke Sommer&#13;
as Dale, dressed in this&#13;
year's leather, which will,&#13;
no doubt, catch on. As an&#13;
added spectacle, espionage&#13;
is included in the form of a&#13;
none too willing Scottish spy&#13;
(Michael York). This was&#13;
T only the beginning? • - ;&#13;
A technically impressive&#13;
job of miniaturization&#13;
turned immensity our&#13;
Goodyear blimp is so&#13;
grandiose that I could&#13;
almost see Sigmond Freud&#13;
turn over in his grave . . .&#13;
What more fitting creature&#13;
to have running around,&#13;
inside of, on top of and&#13;
underneath this monstrosity&#13;
than Elke Sommer? Cliff&#13;
Richardson must be commended&#13;
for special effects&#13;
for they were impressive.&#13;
The story concerns a&#13;
Scottish lieutenant whc&#13;
conveniently has relatives&#13;
in Germany and France. He&#13;
is sent to Germany by the&#13;
British to discover the&#13;
secret of bl imp No. LZ36; he&#13;
is more than successful, of&#13;
course. Elke comes into the&#13;
picture as the wife of our&#13;
spy's former professor,&#13;
extremely educated and&#13;
beautiful, the cliche which&#13;
she will always be.&#13;
We find the Germans have&#13;
a plan too . . . The Scot is to&#13;
get them to a Scottish castle&#13;
where, it just so happens,&#13;
the Magna Carta and other&#13;
pieces of historical value&#13;
are being stored for the&#13;
duration. These are to be&#13;
destroyed or captured. It is&#13;
all a success until our hero,&#13;
who by the way has a fear of&#13;
heights, throws a wrench in&#13;
the works. In the end, Elke&#13;
and Michael plus a few&#13;
nondescript crewmen&#13;
escape to France, where the&#13;
great blimp burns. This&#13;
fantasy is sprinkled with&#13;
blood and bodies alike, and&#13;
this in particular makes it a&#13;
lousy film.&#13;
On the same bill with this&#13;
flick was an even more&#13;
disgusting example of much&#13;
of the same. It was a John&#13;
Wayne blockbuster that&#13;
plays on all the heart strings&#13;
that make this country at&#13;
least partially sick. It is&#13;
probably the worst film I've&#13;
ever seen in my life. It is&#13;
called "Chisum" and makes&#13;
"Zeppelin" look good in&#13;
comparison. They are both&#13;
Warner Brothers products,&#13;
which seems also to be&#13;
saying something.&#13;
When these films come to&#13;
town, get yourself an old Tshirt,&#13;
a can of beer and stay&#13;
at home and watch NET.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Dean Dearborn Tim Eaker&#13;
Dear New Student:&#13;
It is extremely important for a campus to have new&#13;
faces each year, for with them come fresh ideas and different&#13;
approaches. I hope that you will provide us with this&#13;
by being imaginative and enthusiastic in your involvement&#13;
in the academic and social aspects of campus life. It is far&#13;
too easy today to be negative and pessimistic. I submit that&#13;
this is the easy way out and attitudes such as these if&#13;
carried far enough could seriously harm not only this&#13;
campus but the greater society of which it is a part.&#13;
Share with us the excitement and satisfaction of&#13;
building and perfecting a new institution of higher learning.&#13;
By doing this, I am sure that one day we all will look back&#13;
with great pride at that which we collectively took part in&#13;
building.&#13;
I am pleased to extend to you the welcome of Chancellor&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie and the entire Parkside community. We are&#13;
happy that you have chosen this campus for attaining your&#13;
educational goals and in those pursuits we wish you the very&#13;
best.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Dean of Students&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association welcomes those who have never&#13;
attended this campus, especially those new to&#13;
the college environment. You will find that&#13;
college becomes a different "society" from&#13;
that which you may be accustomed. It is the&#13;
transitory stage from home life to independent&#13;
life styles in society at large. In&#13;
keeping with this view, Parkside sustains that&#13;
kind of community life in which the student's&#13;
total educational experience is deepened and&#13;
enriched. The college encourages selfgovernment&#13;
and grants as much personal&#13;
freedom as is consistent with the best interests&#13;
of the individual and the group.&#13;
The social life of the campus — a most&#13;
important part of college society — c enters&#13;
around events planned for the entire student&#13;
body and includes many informal dances,&#13;
movies, lectures, concerts and most any other&#13;
activity you could be interested in. There is a&#13;
good selection of student organizations but&#13;
their success is dependent on your interest&#13;
and support.&#13;
I hope that some of you will seriously&#13;
consider taking an active part in Student&#13;
Government while attending Parkside. This&#13;
will be our first full year of operation which&#13;
can provide you with unique experience of&#13;
organizing a governing body. Participation in&#13;
Student Government fosters the development&#13;
of responsibility, leadership ^pd dependability&#13;
which are demanded of the collegetrained&#13;
individual. The Student Senate is&#13;
composed of five Officers and seventeen&#13;
Senators, elected in the eighth week of t he fall&#13;
semester from the student body at large. It&#13;
sponsors certain all-campus social functions,&#13;
considers matters of student interest and&#13;
welfare, and serves as an agency whereby&#13;
sentiment and initiative may help determine&#13;
college policy and practice.&#13;
I would like to again welcome you to&#13;
Parkside and hope that -I get the chance to&#13;
meet most of you sometime during the next&#13;
year. Student Government is to serve your&#13;
needs and it can be successful only with your&#13;
cooperation and help. Take an active interest&#13;
in the University for it holds the key to your&#13;
future.&#13;
Tim Eaker, President&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
University of&#13;
W isconsin-Parkside&#13;
\&lt;) I'AHKIV*- IX tl'XTiai&#13;
vim; UW&#13;
The office of Auxiliary Enterprises&#13;
encompasses the Student&#13;
Activities Building, student&#13;
lounges, food and vending service,&#13;
the bookstore, Student Housing&#13;
Services, and any special luncheons&#13;
or dinners held on the&#13;
campus.&#13;
The Student Activities Building&#13;
is located on Wood Road just south&#13;
of Tallent Hall. During the&#13;
academic year, it is open from 8:00&#13;
A.M. to 10:00 P.M. and until 1:00&#13;
A.M. on weekends during&#13;
programmed events. The majority&#13;
of programmed events are held in&#13;
this building. In this building, as&#13;
well as in the student lounges at&#13;
Racine and Kenosha, hot meals are&#13;
served during the noon hour and&#13;
full-line vending is also available.&#13;
Beer is also available in Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
There are three locations of the&#13;
University Bookstore. The main&#13;
store is located just south of the&#13;
Student Activities Building, and&#13;
there are branch stores located on&#13;
the Racine and Kenosha campuses.&#13;
In addition to textbooks, an&#13;
assortment of paperback novels,&#13;
sweatshirts, jackets, records, and&#13;
other sundries are available at&#13;
each location.&#13;
Student Housing Services is&#13;
located in Room 278, Tallent Hall.&#13;
This office maintains an up-to-date&#13;
file of rooms, apartments, flats and,&#13;
homes that are available for&#13;
students, as well as faculty, to rent&#13;
in Kenosha and Racine, as well as&#13;
in the county.&#13;
Auxiliary Enterprises&#13;
If you want to learn, and not just what is&#13;
required, and if you want to do serious work,&#13;
the Honors Program is what you're looking for.&#13;
"It's something for those who want to get a&#13;
little more out of classes than is normally&#13;
required," Charles Kugel, the director of the&#13;
Gifted Student Program, explained.&#13;
Entrance is solely on a volunteer basis- To&#13;
enter, freshmen must have graduated in the&#13;
top 10 per cent of their class. Continuing&#13;
students must have at least a 3.25 grade point&#13;
average to be eligible.&#13;
But that rule is flexible. Anyone can take an&#13;
Honors course with the consent of the instructor,&#13;
regardles of g .p.a. or whether he has&#13;
officially applied.&#13;
To graduate with an Honors degree one&#13;
needs to have completed at least 30 c redits in&#13;
the Honors program, and to have at least a 3.25&#13;
cumulative g.p.a. To earn Honors credit one&#13;
must earn either an A or a B in a class.&#13;
Honors work might entail extra papers,&#13;
additional readings, or a one-day-a-week&#13;
luncheon-seminar. In the performing arts it&#13;
might require special recitals.&#13;
Kugel said about three fourths of all classes&#13;
offered are available for Honors credit. In most&#13;
Honors&#13;
Program&#13;
cases work is done in conjunction with regular&#13;
classes, though there will be some special&#13;
classes or special sections restricted to Honors&#13;
students.&#13;
There will be fewer of these this year,&#13;
however, because of the UW budget situation.&#13;
Central Admission has said every faculty&#13;
Newscope is in a one-time&#13;
general store at the intersection&#13;
of Wood R oad and&#13;
Hwy. A. The biggest hype&#13;
you could attach to&#13;
Newscope is that it's here.&#13;
No joke. It's so new that the&#13;
editors are looking back on&#13;
the past six months as a&#13;
rehearsal for the real thing&#13;
this fall.&#13;
That's not to say that the&#13;
editors didn't give a damn&#13;
last semester, because they&#13;
did. What it means is that it&#13;
took six months for&#13;
Newscope to get on its feet.&#13;
It started with a group of&#13;
people who wanted to write&#13;
and put out a student paper,&#13;
but for the most part none of&#13;
them had any real experience&#13;
in college journalism.&#13;
Oh yeh, there were some&#13;
who came from an underground&#13;
paper that folded&#13;
two years ago. Others have&#13;
come from area high&#13;
schools where they&#13;
m imeo g r a p h e d u n derground&#13;
rags as an&#13;
alternative to graduation.&#13;
The only thing they had in&#13;
common was the desire to&#13;
do something constructive&#13;
about what they saw around&#13;
them, and perhaps learn&#13;
from it.&#13;
At times Newscope tends&#13;
to look cooly at traditional&#13;
j o u r n a l i s m . T h o u g h&#13;
Newscope has a long way to&#13;
go before it can brag about&#13;
its content, the staff enjoys&#13;
the opportunity to experiment&#13;
with their work.&#13;
There is no standard way of&#13;
writing in Newscope, just as&#13;
there is almost no standard&#13;
anything. Each person sets&#13;
his own standards, does his&#13;
own work and learns from&#13;
his own mistakes. It's&#13;
honest work, but it ain't&#13;
steak.&#13;
Presently, there are&#13;
openings on the staff for&#13;
almost anybody, regardless&#13;
of his particular interests. If&#13;
you're into business why not&#13;
see if you can help run ours.&#13;
We have a yearly budget&#13;
projected into the tens of&#13;
thousands of dollars with&#13;
incorporation slated for&#13;
later this summer.&#13;
It is as free an&#13;
organization as there is, fFee&#13;
from administrative ties,&#13;
free from obligations to any&#13;
interest group and subject to&#13;
its own rules, the most&#13;
important of which are&#13;
economic.&#13;
If you want to work in the&#13;
office you can contribute as&#13;
much as you wish. No one&#13;
will force you to do layout if&#13;
you don't like it. But if&#13;
you've never tried it how do&#13;
you know you don't like it?&#13;
The present layout manager&#13;
never heard of layout eight&#13;
months ago. Without an&#13;
instructor to tell him what to&#13;
do he did things as he saw&#13;
them and if you want you&#13;
can do the same.&#13;
If you want to write, you&#13;
don't have to be pretentious&#13;
about it and think you can't&#13;
learn from experience. It is&#13;
not a classroom situation;&#13;
on Newscope you have to&#13;
meet deadlines, you have to&#13;
do interviews, you have to&#13;
check your own sources, you&#13;
have to do everything&#13;
yourself. There's no one to&#13;
look over your shoulder to&#13;
guide or limit you.&#13;
Newscope isn't looking for&#13;
perfection, though you&#13;
should be; Newscope just&#13;
wants to give you the chance&#13;
to make mistakes without&#13;
dropping a grade.&#13;
All you need to work for&#13;
Newscope is dedication,&#13;
p e r s e r v e r a n c e a n d&#13;
toleration; everything after&#13;
that will work itself out.&#13;
We're sure that if you take&#13;
the time to talk with a&#13;
Newscope staffer he'll be&#13;
able to tell you more.&#13;
If you need more&#13;
motivation, you can receive&#13;
credits for most work done&#13;
at Newscope. In many ways&#13;
it's one of the most innovative&#13;
programs in the&#13;
academic discipline, though&#13;
it isn't really a program.&#13;
We're as close as student&#13;
organizations will ever get&#13;
to being taken seriously,&#13;
simply because it's difficult&#13;
to ignore* a weekly paper&#13;
that prints 6,000 copies. We&#13;
have an effective medium&#13;
for communication which&#13;
you can help to develop.&#13;
member should generate 100 credit hours as a&#13;
work load, which translates to three classes of&#13;
an average of 33 students each. So if a n Honors&#13;
class has 15 students, another class will have to&#13;
make up the difference.&#13;
The practical advantages of the Honors&#13;
Program are many. The emphasis on independent&#13;
work is good training for graduate&#13;
school. An Honors graduate receives special&#13;
consideration when enrolling in graduate&#13;
school and usually in job opportunities.&#13;
Honors students register the first day of&#13;
registration in order to enroll in the classes&#13;
they want. They also receive special library&#13;
privileges and have closer contact with&#13;
professors.&#13;
While the advantages of the program are&#13;
many, student reaction to it has been disappointing&#13;
to Kugel. Only about 150 students&#13;
retistered for the program last year, and only&#13;
85 followed through. In June, only three&#13;
students graduated with Honors.&#13;
"I'm definitely not satisfied with the turnout,"&#13;
Kugel said. "The cause is a combination&#13;
of things, Student apathy is the easy answer.&#13;
Realistically, I don't feel that Kenosha and&#13;
Racine are communities that are higher&#13;
education oriented. A large percentage of the&#13;
students are going to school 'to get a better&#13;
job'."&#13;
"Even though the program concentrates on&#13;
quality in education and trys to discourage just&#13;
additional work, there is no doubt that it does&#13;
take more time."&#13;
"The people who participate in the&#13;
program think it's worthwhile and not that&#13;
much extra work," Kugel explained. "Students&#13;
don't necessarily suffer grade-wise, which&#13;
seems to be one of the bigger concerns of&#13;
students. Actually 90 per cent of t he grades are&#13;
A's and B's."&#13;
Kugel spoke of an Honors coffee hour held&#13;
last spring at which he answered questions&#13;
about the program. A student there charged&#13;
that the program was elitist.&#13;
"He felt an Honors program contributes to&#13;
an intellectual elitism. But this isn't&#13;
necessarily so. My concern is that a lot of good&#13;
kids have come out of hi gh school and into big&#13;
classes where many of the student attitudes are&#13;
indifferent. They become turned off.&#13;
'They say, 'I've sat beside these clowns for&#13;
four years in high school and they didn't do&#13;
anything there, and now I'm sitting with them&#13;
again and it's not very stimulating.'&#13;
My feeling is that we should give these&#13;
students an opportunity to get in with kids who&#13;
have the same attitudes. If this is elitism,&#13;
? conceded. "But elitism isn't the idea&#13;
behind it.&#13;
* •C*ea *s no* *° se8regate them, but to&#13;
get them into a group that has their same interests,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
The biggest handicap to the program,&#13;
Kugel thinks, is simply the lack of knowledge&#13;
about it.&#13;
fK most rewarcling thing to me has been&#13;
the enthusiasm of some of the kids involved -&#13;
many of whom started the program apprehensively,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
The Student Affairs Office offers&#13;
a vareity of counseling services.&#13;
They include academic advising,&#13;
career planning, help in reading&#13;
and learning skills, personal&#13;
counseling and draft counseling.&#13;
Academic planning includes&#13;
advice on courses, University&#13;
requirements and the choice of a&#13;
major.&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, the Coordinator&#13;
of Counseling services,&#13;
described the course of academic&#13;
advising as beginning with freshman&#13;
orientation and then continuing&#13;
until a student choses a&#13;
major and is referred to a faculty&#13;
adviser.&#13;
She feels that at times it is&#13;
preferrable to seek the advice of a&#13;
counselor rather than a faculty&#13;
member.&#13;
"We can be of extra help,&#13;
because it's not our discipline, and&#13;
we're not going to be hung up on&#13;
how many students are in each&#13;
class, Miss Echelbarger said.&#13;
"We're not trying to sell a&#13;
program.&#13;
"Last year we were at such a&#13;
developmental stage that we were&#13;
afraid that what we told students&#13;
one day might be changed by the&#13;
faculty the next. So we usually just&#13;
referred them to the faculty. Now&#13;
we have a solid base curriculum we&#13;
can work with."&#13;
"Looking at the resources we&#13;
have, and comparing them to other&#13;
Universities, I think we offer a&#13;
very good program," Miss&#13;
Echelbarger pointed out. "It's&#13;
unfortunate more students aren't&#13;
using it. But I think it's because it's&#13;
new."&#13;
Interest tests are also given as&#13;
part of career planning. It's proved&#13;
the most popular aspect of the&#13;
service.&#13;
"It's not a test," Miss&#13;
Echelbarger said, "That's the nice&#13;
thing about it. It's an interest&#13;
profile. You answer questions&#13;
regarding if you like a certain&#13;
activity. As you look at the profile,&#13;
you see there is nothing negative&#13;
about it. The only thing it does is&#13;
point out your strong interest&#13;
areas, and the areas you're not&#13;
interested in."&#13;
There are many materials&#13;
available for career planning. For&#13;
instance, if a student wants to know&#13;
what employment possibilities a&#13;
certain major will give him, there&#13;
are statistics that indicate how&#13;
many people have jobs with this&#13;
type of background. There is also a&#13;
file that shows what jobs are open&#13;
to a student when he chooses a&#13;
major.&#13;
"We're here to paint a realistic&#13;
picture of job opportunities for&#13;
students," Miss Echelbarger said.&#13;
In addition, Career Planning has&#13;
a file of graduate school&#13;
catalogues.&#13;
Reading and study skills counseling&#13;
hasn't been fully developed&#13;
yet. The faculty does offer a course&#13;
in reading improvement.&#13;
"We're not here to teach the&#13;
courses, we're here to help individuals&#13;
who need help. We have&#13;
the equipment to help them," Miss&#13;
Echelbarger explained.&#13;
She calls the study systems&#13;
fantastic. They were devised by the&#13;
University of Minnesota and help a&#13;
student develop his own study&#13;
techniques.&#13;
Tutoring is available also: Except,&#13;
as Miss Echelbarger noted,&#13;
few students, no matter how much&#13;
academic trouble they're in, are&#13;
willing to pay a tutor $2 an hour for&#13;
help.&#13;
Career planning is a rapidly&#13;
growing area of counseling. At&#13;
Parkside, Barbara Larson does&#13;
most of this type of advising.&#13;
Personal counseling is done&#13;
primarily by Wendy Musich, Miss&#13;
Echelbarger and Steve Bangert.&#13;
All have been trained in this type of&#13;
work.&#13;
The most frequent problems they&#13;
encounter involve troubled family&#13;
relationships and male-female&#13;
problems.&#13;
The counselors try to work with&#13;
existing community agencies.&#13;
Agreements have been worked out&#13;
with the Racine Mental Health&#13;
Service and the Kenosha Family&#13;
Counseling Center so that students&#13;
can be referred to them. This is&#13;
done without charge. With other&#13;
referrals the University will pay&#13;
part of the cost.&#13;
The counselors also receive help&#13;
from the Bacon Clinic, except it is&#13;
used more to. counsel the counselors&#13;
when they find themselves&#13;
with problems they don't know the&#13;
answers to.&#13;
If they do find themselves getting&#13;
in too deep, they are quick to pull&#13;
back.&#13;
"We work to the level of our&#13;
knowledge," Miss Echelbarger&#13;
noted. "We're quick to refer a&#13;
student if we feel .we're getting in&#13;
over our heads."&#13;
She sees granting of confidentiality&#13;
to personal files as a&#13;
major development in personal&#13;
counseling. They can no longer be&#13;
supeonaed by the courts. This&#13;
insures privacy.&#13;
The types of counseling available&#13;
include group therapy and group&#13;
discussion at all levels and at the&#13;
level of counseling the student&#13;
needs.&#13;
Draft counseling at Parkside is&#13;
handled by Steve Bangert. He's&#13;
been working on the development&#13;
of it since he came here last fall. He&#13;
sees himself in an educational role,&#13;
trying to help each individual&#13;
decide what he wants to do.&#13;
He has general information&#13;
about military service and is&#13;
currently concentrating on learning&#13;
about procedural rights in&#13;
dealing with the Selective Service.&#13;
"It seems that every time the&#13;
board meets, about three days&#13;
later people come in and ask&#13;
questions about the draft which&#13;
indicates to me students aren't&#13;
really giving this much&#13;
forethought," Bangert said.&#13;
this trip will include air fare&#13;
and the use of a rented car&#13;
with one full tank of g as and&#13;
unlimited mileage.&#13;
Spring trips under&#13;
discussion and consideration&#13;
include such&#13;
places as Acapulco, Mexico,&#13;
Spain and the Caribbean.&#13;
Details and bids from&#13;
various travel agencies will&#13;
help determine what the&#13;
warm weather offering will&#13;
be in the spring of 1972.&#13;
Also planned are short&#13;
trips to events like&#13;
Milwaukee Bucks basketball&#13;
games. Last fall Coach&#13;
A1 McGuire of Marquette&#13;
spoke at Parkside, and a&#13;
trip to the Bucks game&#13;
followed. Something along&#13;
this line will again be offered,&#13;
according to Niebuhr.&#13;
While no major rock attraction&#13;
has been announced&#13;
yet, there will be concerts&#13;
again this year. Dances will&#13;
feature bands from the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area and&#13;
the state.&#13;
With this potential of&#13;
social events on campus, it&#13;
appears that those easily&#13;
disenchanted students will&#13;
indeed be in the minority.&#13;
Co l l e g e s t u d e n t s&#13;
sometimes feel that an&#13;
academic semester is unbearably&#13;
long because of&#13;
exams, long reading&#13;
assignments and research.&#13;
These students can take&#13;
heart, since there is a well&#13;
balanced calendar of events&#13;
at Parkside to break up&#13;
periods of disenchantment&#13;
that sometimes impede&#13;
school work.&#13;
Out of the offices of&#13;
Student Activities, headed&#13;
by William Neibuhr, comes&#13;
a full year of campus events&#13;
and activities that run the&#13;
gamut between dances and&#13;
trips to Europe.&#13;
During the 1970-71 school&#13;
year, Parkside students&#13;
enjoyed such internationally&#13;
acclaimed acts as The Fifth&#13;
Dimension, Buddy Rich and&#13;
his Orchestra, and the rock&#13;
group, Chicago. There were&#13;
also concerts by Charley&#13;
Musselwhite (free), Sam&#13;
Lay and Lucille Span, The&#13;
Neighborhood, Johnny&#13;
Young Blues Band, Your&#13;
Father's Mustache and The&#13;
Gregory James Group.&#13;
Along with these musical&#13;
events were films that were&#13;
shown for 75 cents per&#13;
person in the Student Activities&#13;
Building. Some of&#13;
the films shown included&#13;
"True Grit", "Butch&#13;
Cassidy and the Sundance&#13;
Kid", "Good-Bye Columbus",&#13;
and "Four for Texas".&#13;
In the form of European&#13;
ventures, the Student Act&#13;
i v i t i e s C o o r d i n a t o r s&#13;
arranged a mid-winter ski&#13;
trip to France and a spring&#13;
trip to Spain. Both tours&#13;
proved to be so successful&#13;
that three additional&#13;
in appeasing the moviegoers&#13;
on campus. The first&#13;
film for the fall semester&#13;
will be shown on Friday&#13;
evening, Sept. 10. The movie&#13;
will be "The Reivers",&#13;
starring Steve McQueen.&#13;
Other films to follow include&#13;
"Brewster McCloud",&#13;
"Dirty Dingus McGee",&#13;
"Blow-Up", "Rosemary's&#13;
Baby", "Cool Hand Luke",&#13;
"Where Eagles Dare",&#13;
"Charley", "Sandpebbles",&#13;
"Butch Cassidy and the&#13;
Sundance Kid" (probably&#13;
hours in the form of live&#13;
entertainment or films.&#13;
These events depend on the&#13;
budget according to&#13;
Niebuhr.&#13;
Between January 4 and&#13;
the 14, Parkside students&#13;
will be able to ski on the&#13;
fastest Olympic track in the&#13;
Alps near the southern&#13;
border of France. An Air&#13;
France 747 jet will take&#13;
students from Chicago to&#13;
Paris, with connections to&#13;
Geneva, on a skiing holiday&#13;
summer trips to Europe&#13;
were offered to Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
The job of bridging the&#13;
gaps among the variety of&#13;
cultural tastes is as difficult&#13;
a job as it sounds. But with a&#13;
successful and eventful year&#13;
behind them, the Student&#13;
Activities Coordinators&#13;
have planned well into the&#13;
1971-72 sc hool year.&#13;
The line-up of featured&#13;
films shows the variety used&#13;
the last time this film will be&#13;
shown in the state, since the&#13;
studio is taking it off the&#13;
market), and at Christmas&#13;
time, "Oliver". There are&#13;
still two or three yet to be&#13;
announced films.&#13;
AS for other forms of&#13;
entertainment, Student&#13;
Activities would like to offer&#13;
a few nightclub or coffee&#13;
house features. Also being&#13;
considered is some&#13;
• programming during school&#13;
offered through Parkside.&#13;
The cost for air and ground&#13;
transportation, plus lodging&#13;
and other incidentals, will&#13;
be about $259 plus tax.&#13;
In addition, non-skiers&#13;
will be offered a motoring&#13;
option. This will include the&#13;
same flight to Paris or&#13;
Geneva, but instead of&#13;
spending the ten days on the&#13;
slopes, students will have an&#13;
opportunity to motor&#13;
through Europe. The cost of&#13;
Counnseling&#13;
A thletics•&#13;
Welcome to Parkside!&#13;
We in the Office of Athletics hope you share our enthusiasm&#13;
for this university and what it can offer you, both&#13;
academically and athletically in a total lifetime sports&#13;
program.&#13;
Our program is open to both men and women, with 26&#13;
intramural sports, 16 cl ub sports and eight varsity sports,&#13;
enough to satisfy the most varied tastes. We offer a&#13;
coaching certificate as a major part of our physical&#13;
education program.&#13;
Our club sports teams have been most successful, with&#13;
the skiing club planning a trip to the Italian Alps this winter&#13;
after a successful tour of the French Alps last year. Our&#13;
sailing club is second to none, with interest high and many&#13;
of our winter-time skiers turning to sailing in the summer.&#13;
We offer a sailing class for the inexperienced would-be&#13;
sailor.&#13;
We believe in sports which will benefit you during your&#13;
lifetime. To name only a few, we can offer instruction and&#13;
guidance in sports such as archery, badminton, fencing,&#13;
golf, handball, ice skating, paddleball, squash, tennis and&#13;
volleyball. There are more, and the opportunities are endless.&#13;
We have varsity sports, too, and if you're not participating,&#13;
.you can watch the Rangers in action in&#13;
basketball, soccer, cross country, wrestling, fencing,&#13;
gymnastics, track, tennis or golf.&#13;
In short, the message of Parkside is opportunity. The&#13;
key to that opportunity is participation. We can offer you&#13;
the chance, but you must go from there.&#13;
We can offer you help, advice, instruction and guidance&#13;
in just about any sport or athletic endeavor you can&#13;
imagine.&#13;
We are here and we are welcoming you to Parkside.&#13;
Enjoy the university and take part in its athletic programs&#13;
in some way. We think you'll be a better person for it.&#13;
Thomas P. Rosandich&#13;
Athletic Director&#13;
The Office of Athletics&#13;
offers Parkside students a&#13;
balanced sports program&#13;
that includes physical&#13;
education, club sports,&#13;
intramurals and intercollegiate&#13;
athletics.&#13;
All students, men and&#13;
women alike, are provided&#13;
the opportunity to take&#13;
elective courses in physical&#13;
education should they desire&#13;
to learn a particular sport&#13;
skill. After a survey of the&#13;
State of Wisconsin indicated&#13;
that over 56 p er cent of the&#13;
high school coaches in the&#13;
State had no formal&#13;
training, the Office of&#13;
Athletics established a&#13;
professional courses which&#13;
seek to develop the "total&#13;
coach".&#13;
Included in these are&#13;
courses detailing the officiating&#13;
of individual, dual&#13;
and team sports, preventing&#13;
and caring for athletic&#13;
injuries, sports psychology,&#13;
body mechanics, scientific&#13;
basis of conditioning,&#13;
organization arid administration&#13;
of athletics and&#13;
coaching theory courses in&#13;
football, basketball,&#13;
wrestling and track and&#13;
field.&#13;
Reflecting the Olympic&#13;
concept of both the sports&#13;
program and the staff,&#13;
Rosandich, himself a wellknown&#13;
international coach&#13;
with wide experience in&#13;
various parts of Asia.&#13;
The athletic program at&#13;
Parkside is open to both&#13;
men and women. Most&#13;
physical education classes&#13;
are co-educational and&#13;
equal opportunity is offered&#13;
in all sports.&#13;
A n ew physical education&#13;
building, which will serve as&#13;
a base for intramurals, club&#13;
sports, intercollegiate&#13;
athletics and physical&#13;
education is now under&#13;
construction on County&#13;
Road JR, west of the present&#13;
site of th e Office of Athletics&#13;
s?&amp;&#13;
r&#13;
IJ&#13;
Mi&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKS IDE PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND ATHLETICS BUILDING&#13;
program leading&#13;
coaching certificate.&#13;
to&#13;
Believing&#13;
terscholastic&#13;
periences are&#13;
contribute&#13;
physiological,&#13;
psychological,&#13;
ethical and&#13;
development of&#13;
that inathletic&#13;
exdesigned&#13;
to&#13;
to the&#13;
anatomical,&#13;
educational,&#13;
moral&#13;
the participants,&#13;
the required&#13;
courses for the awarding of&#13;
the coaching certificate&#13;
include a broad base of&#13;
Parkside coaches are now in&#13;
the Philippines forming an&#13;
athletic program on all&#13;
civilian and military levels.&#13;
The Office of Athletics has&#13;
close ties to the Peace Corps&#13;
and a training program for&#13;
American coaches who will&#13;
go to Asia will be held at&#13;
Parkside in the early fall.&#13;
This program will be&#13;
under the direction of&#13;
athletic director Tom&#13;
on Wood Road.&#13;
Parkside athletes have&#13;
traveled to various parts of&#13;
the globe in the short two&#13;
years since Parkside opened&#13;
its doors. Apart from the ski&#13;
club, two Parkside athletes&#13;
have been picked for trips&#13;
abroad, fencer John Hanzalik&#13;
and basketball center&#13;
Mike Madsen, currently a&#13;
member of the all-star team&#13;
touring four European&#13;
countries.&#13;
Honors have come to&#13;
Parkside as well. Wrestling&#13;
coach Jim Koch was picked&#13;
as "Rookie Coach of the&#13;
Year" by a national&#13;
wrestling magazine and&#13;
grappler Ken Martin earned&#13;
all-American status with his&#13;
second place finish in the&#13;
national championships.&#13;
And gymnast Doug Anderson&#13;
also earned all-&#13;
American acclaim in the&#13;
first year his sport existed&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
The club sports concept is&#13;
an important one and&#13;
reflects the increased&#13;
emphasis on lifetime sports&#13;
and on others that are not&#13;
traditionally intercollegiate&#13;
in nature.&#13;
The clubs are generally&#13;
extramural in nature, with&#13;
top flight schedules including&#13;
other colleges and&#13;
universities and wide travel&#13;
throughout mid-America.&#13;
Tom Rosandich&#13;
The ski club is the largest on&#13;
campus and is coached by a&#13;
former Olympian. The judo&#13;
club, which is the second&#13;
largest on campus, is also&#13;
active, in extramurals&#13;
along with the hockey,&#13;
baseball, volleyball, rugby,&#13;
sailing, karate and bowling&#13;
clubs.&#13;
Other sport clubs approached&#13;
from a&#13;
recreational standpoint&#13;
include the gun club,&#13;
gymnastics club, equestrian&#13;
club and the booster-pep&#13;
club.&#13;
Students interested in&#13;
being cheerleaders are&#13;
urged to contact the Office&#13;
of Athletics at 553-2245.&#13;
There are also opportunities&#13;
for girls to become involved&#13;
in the sports program as&#13;
Rangerettes (pom pom&#13;
girls) and for men as&#13;
athletic team managers.&#13;
*** — "rrrrwMvinoivui&#13;
Octoberfest&#13;
Highlighting the fall sports season at&#13;
Parkside will be the Octoberfest, featuring&#13;
Parkside's varsity sports teams and clubs in&#13;
action throughout the week of October 2-9.&#13;
The Parkside cross country team will host&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and Beloit College Oct. 2 and&#13;
the Ranger soccer squad will tangle with UWMadison&#13;
on the Parkside soccer field to begin&#13;
the festivities, which the Office of Athletics&#13;
plans to make a traditional celebration.&#13;
Golf and tennis tournaments, sailing&#13;
regattas involving both club and varsity teams,&#13;
a rugby match, a fencing meet and a gymnastics&#13;
turnfest will also be featured during the&#13;
eight day period, which concludes with the&#13;
Parkside Invitational Soccer Tournament Oct.&#13;
8-9.&#13;
Also to be featured at the Octoberfest will&#13;
be a "Bratwurst and Sauerkraut" setting, with&#13;
refreshments available in keeping with the&#13;
spirit of the occastion which will include&#13;
dancing with polka bands and the atmosphere&#13;
of old Europe, complete with Tyrolean hats.&#13;
..-.nr. •• • • -&#13;
Clubs&#13;
They vary from the Film Society&#13;
to the Flying Club, from Students&#13;
for a Clean Environment to the&#13;
Students International Meditation&#13;
Society. These are just four of the&#13;
more than 35 student clubs that&#13;
exist on campus.&#13;
Various types of clubs function at&#13;
Parkside. They include political&#13;
action groups (the Young&#13;
Democrats, the Luddites, the&#13;
Committee for United Student&#13;
Action), recreation clubs (such as&#13;
the hockey, chess, equestrian and&#13;
flying clubs), literary groups&#13;
(Newscope, Indications and Poetry&#13;
Forum), occupational clubs (the&#13;
Management Science, Modern&#13;
Language, and the pre-law clubs),&#13;
and the more traditional fraternities&#13;
and sororities (Alpha Kappa&#13;
Ldmbda, Sigma Delta Psi, Zeta&#13;
Beta Tau).&#13;
In order to form a club you need&#13;
only pick up a registration form&#13;
from Tony Totero at the Student&#13;
Affairs Office, and return it with&#13;
either a faculty or staff member's&#13;
signature as adviser, together with&#13;
either a club constitution or a&#13;
statement of purpose.&#13;
The form is then sent to Student&#13;
"-"V, ^&#13;
preliminary recommendation&#13;
whether it should be recognized as&#13;
a campus organization. It then&#13;
goes to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee which makes the final&#13;
decision.&#13;
Once a club is recognized, it is&#13;
able to use University facilities.&#13;
Facilities can also be used by clubs&#13;
for the purpose of organizing&#13;
before official recognition has been&#13;
given.&#13;
Any questions about campus&#13;
organizations should be directed to&#13;
Totero of the Student Affairs office.&#13;
July 26, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
Now that $150 million has been appropriated&#13;
for drug abuse programs .&#13;
The other night I was sitting in my living&#13;
room with a couple of friends playing a rather&#13;
simple game of throwing kitchen matches into&#13;
a beer bottle.&#13;
That's alright, it's simple. Children play it&#13;
with clothespins and milk bottles, all that&#13;
changed is the sophistication of the pieces.&#13;
Matches were forbidden when I was youngnow&#13;
I 'm making up for all those fantasies that&#13;
went with forbidden things.&#13;
Sex was the same way. The secret&#13;
meetings in someone's basement where&#13;
everyone took turns at playing doctor and&#13;
patient. It made the whole sex scene legitimate,&#13;
doctors did it, we were allowed to pretend, so&#13;
we pretended we were doctors. If you were&#13;
caught pretending behind the garage or in the&#13;
alley, grownups thought you were evil because&#13;
evil things always happened in the alleys at&#13;
night.&#13;
What happened to the evil pretenders&#13;
followed in the lines of whatever particular&#13;
prejudices your parents had. The more&#13;
traditional second generation parents would&#13;
infuse a bit of leather philosophy in the privacy&#13;
of the basement while little brothers and sisters&#13;
peeked down the stairway boiling up with rage&#13;
and shivering with fear at their father's justice.&#13;
Then there were the more liberal parents,&#13;
who would refrain from corporal punishment&#13;
but instead implant the seeds of a sinister&#13;
paranoia. They would lecture and point out that&#13;
if you wanted to know about sex, ask them, and&#13;
they would in turn tell you about the stork. You&#13;
had to be very young to believe it but in time,&#13;
after a friend whispered to meet him behind the&#13;
garage or in the corn field with his sister, you&#13;
would look twice before you went out for some&#13;
evil pretending. As long as no one saw then you&#13;
were all right, as if nothing happened.&#13;
So you met your friend's sister and she&#13;
would strip and you would stare and maybe&#13;
touch, but not really touch because you didn't&#13;
know what would happen.&#13;
But as you got older the evil pretending&#13;
became passe; you didn't have to pretend, you&#13;
could do everything. But you still sought the&#13;
forbidden things and now that what had been&#13;
denied was approachable, you looked for different&#13;
things. In high school you watched films&#13;
on venereal disease and dope. Dope and&#13;
syphillis, somehow they belonged together.&#13;
The films they showed blew your mind.&#13;
Young kids hooked on grass madly opening&#13;
bottles of beer against a brick. They drank it&#13;
glass and all and it was the grass that made&#13;
them do it. You never cared much about&#13;
syphilis because it was a disease, like leprosy,&#13;
but grass, that was different. The films were so&#13;
unreal that you had to find what it was all&#13;
about.&#13;
So one day, in someone's tightly closed&#13;
apartment, or in an alley, you smoked your&#13;
first joint. It wasn't much at first because you&#13;
didn't know how to smoke it but after several&#13;
attempts you finally got high. The distortion&#13;
was new, exciting, unique and best of a ll there&#13;
wasn't any hangover. You got stoned and&#13;
listened to music, drew, talked, anything that&#13;
you could do, almost anything you could do,&#13;
straight. It seemed to take the rat out of the&#13;
race and you could relax. You could share&#13;
things better, mutual jokes, laughter, and&#13;
politics. If was fun, almost a ritual to smoke&#13;
and be together with friends.&#13;
And you knew it was safe because you&#13;
didn't know anyone who was addicted. At that&#13;
time you didn't know of a ny speed freaks, only&#13;
the friend who dealt the grass and he said he&#13;
only did it because he wanted to turn you on. At&#13;
that time the bags of white powder were as far&#13;
away as the sex films in health class.&#13;
But things that are far away have a&#13;
peculiar manner of drawing your attention.&#13;
They come from odd places, like having your&#13;
palm read as a joke; only months later the&#13;
broken life line she told* you about preoccupies&#13;
your mind and you start worrying. The more&#13;
familiar you become with grass the more you&#13;
discover the other drugs because everyone is&#13;
doing new things, looking for the forbidden&#13;
things and then pills became the big mystery.&#13;
So you went to the hallucinogens, did a few&#13;
and waited for the great moments that&#13;
everyone said you would see. It happens, it&#13;
leaves you confused or you block it out of your&#13;
mind. In either case you took the pills and you&#13;
begin to identify with the drug culture. It grows&#13;
out of its isolation from the other cultures.&#13;
Everyone into it feels some sort of bond with&#13;
others and you choose your friends from among&#13;
the numbers prowling the streets at night and&#13;
come up with your very own corner of the&#13;
culture.&#13;
The only hangup is that everyone has a lot&#13;
of friends and they infiltrate into your corner of&#13;
the culture and bring with them new ideas. One&#13;
of them is a heavy dealer, but you don't mind&#13;
because then grass is much more accessible.&#13;
He deals in amphetamines and coke, and&#13;
maybe smack, but he's got ki's of Mexican&#13;
weed and for that you're willing to forgive&#13;
for his business. After all, anyway, he's got to&#13;
make a living too. And anyway, it's none of&#13;
your business what he does.&#13;
You decide that he is one of the evil&#13;
pretenders because he's always doing his&#13;
business at night, in noisy, run-down apartments.&#13;
You visit him looking for grass and he&#13;
and two friends, whom you know, are sitting&#13;
amid a squalor of empty bottles and cans that&#13;
the wind kicks around as it whistles through the&#13;
window. One of them is holding a spoon of clear&#13;
liquid and the other is drawing it into a syringe.&#13;
You can't express shock because who are you to&#13;
judge.&#13;
Instead, you excuse yourself because they&#13;
are busy and walk the long way home past a&#13;
friend's^ house where you stop in and tell him&#13;
what you saw and he shrugs his shoulders and&#13;
says, "What are you gonna do. It's his life."&#13;
And you wonder if it is.&#13;
by Mike Stevesand&#13;
It's 1:30 a.m. and me and&#13;
Starr are. stuck in the&#13;
Chicago Union Station with&#13;
... no way home . . . 'til&#13;
6:30, but I don't care,&#13;
because we just made&#13;
friends with Rod Stewart.&#13;
As a matter of fact an&#13;
ocean of people . . . 10,000?&#13;
. . . 100,000? . . . filling up&#13;
every square foot of the&#13;
Auditorium Theater,&#13;
swaying like those waves of&#13;
grain with the occasional&#13;
favorite cousins, buddies&#13;
and drinking companions to&#13;
all, get up and entertain and&#13;
everybody has a happy,&#13;
boozy old time. Except that&#13;
the music happens to be&#13;
some of the best, cleanest&#13;
and most exciting rock and&#13;
roll currently being played.&#13;
When the Faces were still&#13;
Small, they had a bright,&#13;
fantasy-edged sound that&#13;
contrasted nicely to the&#13;
Cream-based power trios&#13;
that were the fashion of the&#13;
took Ron Wood, one of the&#13;
most under-rated of rock&#13;
guitarists, and went looking&#13;
for some mates. They found&#13;
one another, and, in what&#13;
one imagines to be one of t he&#13;
most musically prolific&#13;
drunken debaucheries of all&#13;
time, the new Faces were&#13;
created.&#13;
And it was a godsend to&#13;
rock fans. The new band is&#13;
probably the happiest bunch&#13;
of p eople ever to hit a stage.&#13;
They love each other,&#13;
scarecrow on somebody's&#13;
shoulders for a better look&#13;
just made friends with Rod&#13;
Stewart. He's an eminently&#13;
likeable chap.&#13;
Making good music is a&#13;
rare talent. Rarer still is the&#13;
maker of good music who&#13;
can project his personality&#13;
to the far balconies of a hall&#13;
as big as the Auditorium and&#13;
unleash an exchange of love&#13;
that charges the atmosphere&#13;
with consideration&#13;
and good&#13;
fellowship and turns a&#13;
sellout rock and roll crowd,&#13;
a notoriously hard-nosed&#13;
kind of group identity, into a&#13;
fabulous party where only&#13;
line things can happen.&#13;
When Rod Stewart and the&#13;
Faces play, it's not really a&#13;
concert at all. It's more like&#13;
a family reunion where the&#13;
time, and that sold almost&#13;
no records, except possibly&#13;
to the introverted Tolkeinreading&#13;
set. Their one big&#13;
single, "Itchykoo Park",&#13;
had the misfortune of&#13;
competing with "Purple&#13;
Haze" for the radio&#13;
audience, and got lost in the&#13;
philosophical shuffle. Steve&#13;
Marriot, leader, singer,&#13;
writer and focal point,&#13;
decided that the route to&#13;
superstardom didn't lie in&#13;
this direction, and split to&#13;
form Humble Pie, leaving&#13;
Ian McLagen, keyboards,&#13;
Ronnie Lane, bass, and&#13;
Kenny Jones, drums, in the&#13;
lurch. That, by all rights,&#13;
should have been it for the&#13;
FSCGS&#13;
But at the same time. Rod&#13;
Stewart became disenchanged&#13;
with Jeff Beck, and&#13;
continually horsing around,&#13;
mugging, dancing, grinning&#13;
like idiots, playing steel and&#13;
silk rock. They love the&#13;
music, beaming like proud&#13;
first graders for a good lick,&#13;
or squinting in concentration&#13;
to pull the big&#13;
fast riffs off their axes.&#13;
But above all, they love&#13;
the audience. Rod himself,&#13;
high stepping like a drum&#13;
major, shadow boxing,&#13;
running laps around the&#13;
stage, twirling the mike&#13;
stand, striking operatic&#13;
poses, is the ultimate&#13;
vaudevillian, always on,&#13;
anything for the show of it.&#13;
It's obvious he needs people,&#13;
and he knows how to get&#13;
them on his side. When&#13;
several fans climbed onto&#13;
the stage, he not only&#13;
restrained the muscular&#13;
ushers from throwing them&#13;
off, he helped them up&#13;
himself, in fact slapping&#13;
eager palms and affectionately&#13;
rubbing the odd&#13;
head. Wine is the sustaining&#13;
force of a Faces performance,&#13;
and Rod passed&#13;
almost a case of various&#13;
wines out to the audience,&#13;
and regretted that there&#13;
wasn't enough for&#13;
everybody.&#13;
The thing about Rod&#13;
Stewart is, he's basically a&#13;
goddam good guy, with a bit&#13;
of the rowdy-juicer&#13;
mystique, a guy you'd like to&#13;
go drinking with, and he&#13;
genuinly would like to go&#13;
drinking with you, too. No&#13;
superstar aloofness; he&#13;
cares about the little people.&#13;
And he's a musician, too.&#13;
His famous voice, which&#13;
sounds like gin shot from a&#13;
Windex bottle, can impart a&#13;
wide range of emotion to a&#13;
song, from the rum-soaked&#13;
rave-up of "Had Me a Real&#13;
Good Time", to the&#13;
nostalgic longing for his&#13;
good old "Country Comforts".&#13;
He can handle a&#13;
rocker with the best, and&#13;
that means Mick Jagger,&#13;
tossing off falsetto whoops&#13;
like exclamation points and&#13;
phrasing machine -gun&#13;
bursts that are seemingly&#13;
beyond human capability.&#13;
But he really shines on&#13;
ballads, where he can snake&#13;
his voice around a line,&#13;
wringing the last drop of&#13;
pain from it, baring his soul.&#13;
Stewart is responsible for&#13;
some of the loveliest&#13;
laments in the history of&#13;
unrequited love, and you&#13;
know suddenly that he's&#13;
been hurt probably as much&#13;
as he's been drunk.&#13;
But it never bogs him&#13;
down, and that's the real&#13;
heart of his success. Rod&#13;
Stewart can maintain joy in&#13;
the face of anything, and it&#13;
just naturally spills over to&#13;
his audience. Someone&#13;
threw a bunch of party hats&#13;
up to the stage, and Rod&#13;
passed them around,&#13;
saying, "Who brought the&#13;
hats? What a marvelous&#13;
idea." Joints, too? Fine,&#13;
he'll pass those around. One&#13;
long-haired guard in particular&#13;
failed to endear&#13;
himself to the crowd by&#13;
attacking bodily some of the&#13;
stage jumpers. Rod put an&#13;
arm around him, sang him a&#13;
chorus of "Feel So Good",&#13;
and mussed his hair, asking&#13;
for a hand for the ushers&#13;
"Who've been such good&#13;
sports."&#13;
And that's it. Such love&#13;
can't go unreturned, and&#13;
I've never seen any performer&#13;
inspire such love&#13;
from his audience. A&#13;
standing ovation, total&#13;
cacophony, squeezed out&#13;
three encores, and the&#13;
tumult merely doubled&#13;
when Stewart announced&#13;
that they'd be back in "dear&#13;
old Chicago" at Christmastime.&#13;
I would suggest that you&#13;
be there, too.&#13;
NEWSCOPE July 26,1971&#13;
By Sandy Principe&#13;
The teacher shortage is over. A&#13;
study on teacher supply and&#13;
demand, released by the State&#13;
Coordinating Council for Higher&#13;
Education this February, revealed&#13;
that of the more than 51,000&#13;
teaching and administrative staff&#13;
positions in Wisconsin public&#13;
elementary and secondary schools,&#13;
only 141 vacancies existed as of&#13;
Sept. 15, 1970. This places the&#13;
recruiters, if no one else, in an&#13;
excellent position.&#13;
"We can be extremely selective&#13;
for the first time," said Walter&#13;
Stenavich, assistant superintendent,&#13;
staff personnel services,&#13;
for the Racine Unified School&#13;
District, in discussing recruitment&#13;
for the 1971-72 s chool year.&#13;
The statistics are changing&#13;
drastically in the field of education.&#13;
Where Education and Labor&#13;
Departments across the U.S. were&#13;
begging for teachers years ago,&#13;
their recent studies reflect a&#13;
complete trend reversal.&#13;
In February, 1971, the State&#13;
Coordinating Council for Higher&#13;
Education released its report&#13;
stating that there is no longer a&#13;
teacher shortage nor is there likely&#13;
to be for many years. The Labor&#13;
Department recommends that all&#13;
young people, especially women,&#13;
planning on entering the&#13;
educational field should think&#13;
about other fields. The release&#13;
stressed directing women away&#13;
from education because of the&#13;
tremendous increase of graduates&#13;
in recent years. Women graduates&#13;
have increased their numbers by&#13;
two-thirds between 1968 and 1970.&#13;
At the same time, two out of five&#13;
professional women are elementary&#13;
and secondary teachers.&#13;
This surplus of teachers is&#13;
complicated by several other&#13;
factors: thfe slumping national.&#13;
openings. For example, a school&#13;
may have an open slot for an Industrial&#13;
Arts and Physcial&#13;
Education teacher. If th ey can find&#13;
one satisfactory applicant to fill&#13;
this dual opening, she (he)&#13;
probably has the job.&#13;
In discussing the present&#13;
economy, a decline in federal&#13;
funding, a lower turnover rate, and&#13;
a general decrease in the school&#13;
age population.&#13;
However, for those seriously&#13;
dedicated to teaching, there is still&#13;
hope. The secret lies in background&#13;
preparation and a willingness to&#13;
teach in rural and inner-core&#13;
areas.&#13;
"In some fields of education,&#13;
securing employment has become&#13;
a frustrating experience for many&#13;
applicants," Gerald Euting,&#13;
Coordinator of Personnel Services&#13;
for the Kenosha Unified School&#13;
District, said. "However, there are&#13;
other areas where we are&#13;
frustrated. Supply and demand are&#13;
just not equal from area to area."&#13;
He suggested that while English,&#13;
social studies and language&#13;
departments find their job&#13;
openings well overmatched by&#13;
applicants, there is still a need for&#13;
men in guidance, and in special&#13;
education such as for the&#13;
emotionally disturbed, and&#13;
remedial reading.&#13;
The rest of the openings seem to&#13;
be limited to subject-combination&#13;
situation in the Kenosha Unified&#13;
School District Euting indicated&#13;
that for primary grade teachers,&#13;
English teachers and history&#13;
teachers, the competition is extremely&#13;
keen. It is unlikely a&#13;
person without prior teaching&#13;
experience or exceptional&#13;
qualifications would be hired at&#13;
this time.&#13;
"My own feelings are that if you&#13;
are willing to define your graphical&#13;
location in broad terms there is a&#13;
job some place in this country&#13;
where you can teach," UWP&#13;
Director of Admissions John&#13;
Elmor said.&#13;
You can no longer choose your&#13;
job as you may have been able to&#13;
do in 1967. However, if you're&#13;
dedicated enough to move to a&#13;
rural or inner-core area, you will&#13;
probably be able to secure a&#13;
teaching position.&#13;
For those of you skeptical of&#13;
leaving the city, Elmor spoke very&#13;
favorably of teaching in a rural&#13;
area. He said the rural area&#13;
provides greater freedom for the&#13;
teacher along with closer and more&#13;
personal relationships with both&#13;
students and parents. In comparing&#13;
his own experiences, Elmor&#13;
stated that he found teaching in a&#13;
rural area much more rewarding&#13;
personally and professionally than&#13;
his teaching stay in a New York&#13;
suburb.&#13;
Elmor noted that there has been&#13;
an increase in the number of&#13;
students entering the teaching&#13;
certification program of&#13;
Parkside's education curriculum.&#13;
There were 90 or 95 student&#13;
teachers last semester and are&#13;
expected to increase to 105 this fall.&#13;
However, he noted that Parkside's&#13;
student population is getting older&#13;
relative to the number of credits.&#13;
That is, there are more juniors and&#13;
seniors this year than before. Since&#13;
the population is not yet stabilized,&#13;
it cannot be said if the percentage&#13;
of teachers is going up or down.&#13;
In reference to elementary and&#13;
secondary teacher preparation,&#13;
Elmor thought the dual major&#13;
system a teacher's greatest&#13;
security. This provides two&#13;
avenues for the graduate to follow.&#13;
Selection of areas is also important&#13;
if the graduate wishes to teach. The&#13;
situation is not much different on&#13;
the University scene.&#13;
Elmor reported some 300 applicants&#13;
in the department of&#13;
education (95 per cent of whom&#13;
held Ph.D.'s) and thousands moe&#13;
more in the sciences.&#13;
These are only the statistics.&#13;
Naturally, desire, qualifications&#13;
and ambition all have to be taken&#13;
into consideration.&#13;
Royko&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
as are available.&#13;
Newscope: Speaking of&#13;
slanted journalism, do you think&#13;
the underground press is&#13;
legitimate-journalistically?&#13;
Royko: The good ones are,&#13;
the ones that know alittle bit&#13;
about what newspapers should&#13;
be. The one on the west coast,&#13;
Rolling Stone, fron what I've&#13;
seen of it that's not a bad paper.&#13;
There's some pretty good&#13;
writing in it.&#13;
Look at the Village Voice.&#13;
All these years it has shown&#13;
many excellent qualities.&#13;
The underground press isn't&#13;
underground anymore, the&#13;
whole thing is laughable.&#13;
They're selling them in stores&#13;
and newstands. This isn't being&#13;
cranked out in the basement&#13;
with the police coming in the&#13;
back door or handed out in the&#13;
dead of night. They're out there&#13;
competing. A young press is&#13;
what it is, and they have to get&#13;
out and compete like anyone&#13;
else to sell their product and if&#13;
it's any good, they'll sell it.&#13;
Newscope: In view of the New&#13;
York Times and the Pentagon&#13;
Papers, how much would you&#13;
say is the press entitled to&#13;
know?&#13;
Royko: As much as we can&#13;
find out. Obvsiously, in the&#13;
matter of secret documents . . .&#13;
if I had a document that I&#13;
genuinely believed was harmful&#13;
to the national interest I just&#13;
wouldn't print it.&#13;
But the Pentagon Papers&#13;
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are so patently phony, it's just a&#13;
bunch of politicians trying to&#13;
hide their mistakes. It's not that&#13;
harmful to the national interest.&#13;
Newscope: What about the&#13;
people who criticize the press?&#13;
Royko: The people who&#13;
complained about what the New&#13;
York Times did, are primarily&#13;
the people who would have&#13;
complained about anything the&#13;
Times did. You'll find the same&#13;
political mentality among the&#13;
opinions given on the Pentagon&#13;
Papers as you will on civil&#13;
rights, and just about any other&#13;
issue that divides the very&#13;
conservative from the rest of&#13;
the country.&#13;
I think that people can&#13;
believe what they read as long&#13;
as their thinking isn't colored by&#13;
political considerations. I think&#13;
the believability of newspapers&#13;
is greater now than in the past.&#13;
"It's funny, guys like Agnew&#13;
always yell about the new York&#13;
Times and Washington Post,&#13;
but never tells about the ones&#13;
who are really guilty of t he most&#13;
slanted journalism and that's&#13;
the very conservative papers&#13;
like the Tribune. They slant&#13;
news more than the Times ever&#13;
did . . .so Agnew takes shots at&#13;
the Times which tries much&#13;
harder to be fair than the&#13;
Tribune ever tried.&#13;
The guy who's probably&#13;
spewed the most misinformation&#13;
over the airwaves,&#13;
misinformation and outright&#13;
flat distortions, is Howard&#13;
Miller. Miller can go on the air&#13;
and say anything; ghastly&#13;
rumors that Kennedy is alive&#13;
somewhere . . .&#13;
These buffoons talk about the&#13;
slanted media and then Howard&#13;
Miller comes on and doesn't&#13;
check his story out, doesn't try&#13;
to confirm whether it's true or&#13;
not, ancUgets on the air.&#13;
Newscope: What effect has&#13;
television had on journalism?&#13;
. Royko: Television has helped&#13;
to make us a little more honest I&#13;
think, a little more accurate and&#13;
careful because what television&#13;
does is just a grotesquely imcompetent&#13;
job of covering news.&#13;
By showing the picture, they act&#13;
as sort of a check on the writers.&#13;
The newscasters on television&#13;
can't cover news, they just want&#13;
to sit down and read something&#13;
for three or four mintues on one&#13;
story. So they just skim the&#13;
surface . . . but they make us&#13;
work harder.&#13;
Newscope: Do you think&#13;
Daley will run for re-election&#13;
again.&#13;
Royko: He's not going to run&#13;
again. He'll be seventy at his&#13;
next birthday. I think what will&#13;
happen is there will be a battle&#13;
among the various factions.&#13;
Daley can't hand pick his&#13;
successor. There are just too&#13;
many ambitious people in that&#13;
organization. I mean, you can&#13;
be boss for twenty years, but&#13;
don't tell us who the next boss&#13;
will be, let us decide who's&#13;
going to boss us.&#13;
Newscope: Because of your&#13;
column do you find yourself&#13;
labeled as the people's defender,&#13;
or that sort of thing?&#13;
Royko: I'd say a fourth of my&#13;
columns result from people&#13;
calling in. They're my best&#13;
sources of information and&#13;
they're what I'm writing about.&#13;
I guess I'm reverse populist. I&#13;
figure that in the long run it isn't&#13;
Daley that I'm mad at, it's the&#13;
average guy.&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
UWP&#13;
Sports&#13;
Mike Madsen, starting&#13;
center on the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside basketball&#13;
team, is among 12&#13;
midwestern players heading&#13;
aborad in mid-August for a&#13;
three-week, 17-game swing&#13;
through four European&#13;
nations.&#13;
Madsen, a 6-8, 240-&#13;
pounder from KenoSha,&#13;
averaged 11 points per game&#13;
with a .561 shooting perJuly&#13;
26,1971&#13;
centage and pulled down 12&#13;
rebounds a contest in&#13;
Parkside's 26 g ames.&#13;
The team, which will be&#13;
coached by Lakeland&#13;
College basketball coach&#13;
Duane Woltzen, was chosen&#13;
by officials of the Swe.dish&#13;
national. team in&#13;
cooperation with American&#13;
coaches when the Swedes&#13;
toured and played&#13;
throughout the United&#13;
NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
States last season.&#13;
Madsen, who will be&#13;
starting his junior year at&#13;
Parkside, said he was&#13;
surprised he was picked and&#13;
expected to gain a lot of&#13;
experience.&#13;
Parkside basketball coach&#13;
Steve Stephens echoed his&#13;
sentiments and said Madsen&#13;
should return from Europe&#13;
with more mobility and&#13;
aggressiveness and confidence&#13;
in his game.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Geza Martiny (center,&#13;
with board) instructs his class in one of the finer points of&#13;
sailing in a recent Thursday night session at the Kenosha&#13;
Yacht Club. UW-P is offering the class in its summer&#13;
session for one credit and the yacht club is supplying the&#13;
sailboats and all facilities.&#13;
They may not be quite ready&#13;
for an intercollegiate&#13;
regatta, but thanks to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside and the Kenosha&#13;
Yacht Club, would-be&#13;
sailors in this area are&#13;
learning the fine art of&#13;
sailing this summer.&#13;
Parkside is offering the&#13;
class in its summer session,&#13;
with one credit given for the&#13;
twice weekly, two hours-anight&#13;
stint at the yacht club&#13;
docks. And the club is&#13;
furnishing its facilities, the&#13;
docks, hoists and penguin&#13;
sailboats free of charge to&#13;
the new class.&#13;
Three men have been&#13;
instrumental in forming the&#13;
class and keeping it going.&#13;
Tom Rosandich, athletic&#13;
director at UW-Parkside,&#13;
first suggested the&#13;
possibility of a class last&#13;
winter to Ed Pobar of the&#13;
yacht club, who enthusiastically&#13;
approved and&#13;
laid the groundwork with&#13;
the club for the use of its&#13;
facilities.&#13;
Leading the class in&#13;
learning about the hows,&#13;
whats and whys of s ailing is&#13;
Geza Martiny, who also&#13;
doubles as soccer coach at&#13;
UW-Parkside and has had&#13;
extensive experience in&#13;
varied sports in Canada and&#13;
his native Hungary.&#13;
"When Tom approached&#13;
me during the winter,"&#13;
Pobar remembered, "I&#13;
carried his desires to the&#13;
board of directors, which&#13;
felt the yacht club should be&#13;
operating in the public interest.&#13;
So we have been&#13;
involved with the class from&#13;
the beginning."&#13;
Pobar also has a personal&#13;
interest in sailing, apart&#13;
from his duties as a member&#13;
of the yacht club's board of&#13;
directors. His son Mike is&#13;
one of Parkside's top&#13;
sailors.&#13;
The sailing idea appealed&#13;
to Rosandich as a natural&#13;
extension of both the UWParkside&#13;
Sailing Club and&#13;
the Parkside philosophy.&#13;
"Sailing is a lifetime sport&#13;
and that's what we're trying&#13;
to get people interested in at&#13;
Parkside," Rosandich said.&#13;
"It's a logical part of our&#13;
whole philosophy about&#13;
sport and the role it plays in&#13;
life."&#13;
Martiny, an enthusiastic&#13;
bundle of energy who also&#13;
works with women's&#13;
gymnastics twice weekly in&#13;
Racine, has grappled with&#13;
the challenge of teaching&#13;
sailing to a group of inexperienced&#13;
students and after&#13;
three weeks of classes&#13;
thinks he has come out&#13;
ahead.&#13;
Students have had their&#13;
share of spills and a few&#13;
have tasted water when they&#13;
didn't want to, but Martiny&#13;
said the mistakes are getting&#13;
fewer as the students&#13;
gain experience.&#13;
"This is the first time&#13;
sailing has ever been offered&#13;
here as a class,"&#13;
Martiny pointed out. "Interest&#13;
is great and I think&#13;
it's something that will&#13;
grow.&#13;
"From now on, though,&#13;
they're going on their own&#13;
more often. Now it's just a&#13;
question of selfimprovement&#13;
after learning&#13;
the basics," he said. "Of&#13;
course, I'm-there for advice&#13;
and guidance."&#13;
Seventeen students are&#13;
enrolled in the course, and&#13;
they're not all of college&#13;
age, showing that sailing&#13;
bridges the "generation&#13;
gap".&#13;
On hand to demonstrate&#13;
from time to time are&#13;
Parkside's prolific sailors,&#13;
Mike Pobar and Jerry&#13;
Ruffolo, both juniors-to-be&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
The two were undefeated&#13;
this past season in intercollegiate&#13;
competition&#13;
and have been among the&#13;
top finishers in all open&#13;
meets they've entered.&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the&#13;
impression of one of the&#13;
students that participated in&#13;
UWP's first Study Tour to&#13;
Germany.&#13;
by Eugene Kopp&#13;
The American influence&#13;
on the German Youth is&#13;
quite apparent. We've influenced&#13;
them in schools,&#13;
styles and music. So we can&#13;
picture many of your&#13;
youths' problems with the&#13;
German youths' problems.&#13;
In schools they worry&#13;
about grades just the way&#13;
we do. We're graded by&#13;
letters, A, B, C, D, F., and&#13;
they're graded by numbers,&#13;
1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Many times I've&#13;
heard from American instructors&#13;
they would like to&#13;
have the European teaching&#13;
system, while the European&#13;
instructors are saying they&#13;
would like to have the&#13;
Impressions Of Germany&#13;
American teaching system.&#13;
German youth worries if&#13;
they can get into the&#13;
university or should they go&#13;
into the trades. American&#13;
youth also worries about&#13;
university entrance exams&#13;
and what they will do with&#13;
their lives in the future. In&#13;
Germany right now there&#13;
are so many job openings&#13;
they have to import workers&#13;
from Italy, Turkey,&#13;
Yugoslavia and Spain.&#13;
While in the U.S. it's just the&#13;
opposite, we don't have&#13;
enough jobs for our students&#13;
and college grads.&#13;
It's sort of funny, but&#13;
German youth even worries&#13;
about the service. Their&#13;
army is now modelled after&#13;
the U.S. Army and even&#13;
though they get to go home&#13;
on weekends (unless they're&#13;
on guard duty) no one that I&#13;
talked to wanted anything to&#13;
do with the army, but if they&#13;
would be called only one&#13;
said he would resist. They&#13;
expressed their sympathy&#13;
for us having to go to&#13;
Vietnam.&#13;
In politics they are geared&#13;
much as our American&#13;
youth. They all wanted us&#13;
out of Vietnam! They are&#13;
also in some cases very&#13;
radical towards their&#13;
g o v e r nme n t . T h e i r&#13;
nationalistic feeling is way&#13;
down; they would rather&#13;
everybody be called&#13;
Europeans than Germans or&#13;
other nationalities.&#13;
Our music has also had a&#13;
great effect on them. Where&#13;
I was at I always heard rock&#13;
music being played from&#13;
groups like Chicago, Guess&#13;
Who, Doors, Crosby, Stills&#13;
and Nash, etc. They all&#13;
admitted Germany had no&#13;
groups like these, or what&#13;
we were putting out in&#13;
musical groups.&#13;
Then, of course, there's&#13;
also the problem of drugs.&#13;
Drugs are really starting to&#13;
take hold in European&#13;
youth. In some cases they&#13;
are already in the junior&#13;
high level, just as they are&#13;
here. But one thing I found&#13;
was that it was smoked and&#13;
grown a lot more in the&#13;
open. Law enforcement&#13;
officials have not yet taken a&#13;
firm grip on the problem as&#13;
they have here. It seems&#13;
that through all the&#13;
discipline before the war,&#13;
now they are afraid to enforce&#13;
strict discipline on this&#13;
issue yet. Their parents are&#13;
starting to realize the&#13;
problems of drugs and are&#13;
really starting to worry&#13;
about how great an effect&#13;
drugs are having on their&#13;
youth. I think they are&#13;
definitely behind us in their&#13;
enforcement and cure of the&#13;
drug problem.&#13;
I have now shown a few&#13;
problems that I noticed&#13;
When I was there that were&#13;
very much comparable to&#13;
the problems of our&#13;
American youth.&#13;
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$20 - $25&#13;
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Tape Recorder. 3 speed, mono, auto&#13;
shutoff. 3 didget counter good cond.&#13;
Call 657-5992.&#13;
1969 Olds 442. Automatic, power&#13;
steering and brakes, 14,000 mi.&#13;
$2,500. Call 657-5681 after 5.&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tires and Rims.&#13;
639-8863 after 4:30.&#13;
1966 Ram. Amer. Con. 7843 - 20th.&#13;
1949 Harley-Davidson. Will trade.&#13;
Call -652-6335 between 4 &amp; 6.&#13;
1963 VW (40,000 mi.) $600, 1966&#13;
Dodge Coronet (12,000 mi.) $700.&#13;
12911 Washington Ave. Raci.&#13;
1962 Buick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
634-4445 or 633-2791.&#13;
1961 Jeep CJ5. Call 694-5744.&#13;
1969 Open GT Silver $2,400 or best&#13;
offer. 652-3312 after 4.&#13;
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3 suitcases, very good cond. $25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
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654-9447.&#13;
Mimeograph Paper — Rainbow&#13;
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apiece. Call 654-2726 between 4 &amp; 6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
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Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
APARTMENT FOR RENT —&#13;
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modern, furnished apt. on University&#13;
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654 -996 8&#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE July 26,1971&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Joe Tyjerina tries to&#13;
keep people from becoming&#13;
impersonal code numbers in&#13;
a file cabinet. In his role at&#13;
the Wisconsin State Employment&#13;
Service in&#13;
Kenosha, Joe helps those&#13;
individuals who have&#13;
barriers between themselves&#13;
and employment&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
Working in human&#13;
relations, mostly involving&#13;
Mexican-Americans and&#13;
other members of minority&#13;
groups, he specializes in&#13;
selection, referral and job&#13;
development at the State&#13;
run Employment Service.&#13;
"One of the main&#13;
requirements in my job,"&#13;
Joe told me, "is that I speak&#13;
fluent Spanish. I interview&#13;
all the Mexican-Americans&#13;
who come into the office&#13;
looking for a job."&#13;
The three main objectives&#13;
of the employment service,&#13;
he explained, are to help&#13;
people become successfully&#13;
employed, to help employers&#13;
meet their manpower&#13;
needs, and to help&#13;
communities develop their&#13;
manpower resources.&#13;
Joe Tyjerina is twentyone&#13;
years old. He is a&#13;
valuable link in the employment&#13;
office, between&#13;
the programs and help of-&#13;
TerecF^exicaiwS&#13;
and the people themselves.&#13;
"At times maybe half of&#13;
those I interview can't&#13;
speak English very well,&#13;
This limits them to menial&#13;
jobs, or migrant work,&#13;
neither of which supports a&#13;
battle."&#13;
Joe is a limited term&#13;
employee at the employment&#13;
service. He has a&#13;
high school education, and&#13;
experience in the work he&#13;
does. Recently the&#13;
qualifications for the job&#13;
TtmnUelTiiHS^&#13;
Wisconsin, Kenosha, Racine&#13;
and Walworth. This Tri-&#13;
County Program will serve&#13;
to educate migrants for&#13;
better jobs if they relocate&#13;
in one of the counties.&#13;
Besides education and&#13;
Working&#13;
Class&#13;
Hero:&#13;
Strives For&#13;
Equal&#13;
Employment&#13;
Joe Tyjerina&#13;
family very well," Joe&#13;
.continued.&#13;
"There is job discrimination&#13;
today, but&#13;
Mexican-Americans are&#13;
trying to combat this by&#13;
(getting a better education&#13;
and becoming better informed.&#13;
"The lack of an adequate&#13;
education will stand between&#13;
anyone and their&#13;
potential," he said, "but&#13;
realizing this is a part of the&#13;
were raised. This means&#13;
that Joe will soon have to&#13;
step down from the position&#13;
he holds. A full time employee&#13;
will be hired oil the&#13;
basis of q ualifications. But,&#13;
for the time being, Joe will&#13;
help locate individuals into&#13;
jobs, or educational&#13;
programs that will soon&#13;
qualify the otherwise "hardcore&#13;
Unemployed".&#13;
One such program has&#13;
recently begun in three&#13;
housing, other benefits will&#13;
be offered.&#13;
The advantages of this&#13;
program include bi-lingual&#13;
instructors at places like the&#13;
Kenosha Technical Institute&#13;
to teach the migrants such&#13;
trades as welding. This Tri-&#13;
County Program is an extension&#13;
of the Manpower&#13;
Development Training Act.&#13;
It is one of the first such&#13;
programs in the state, according&#13;
to Joe.&#13;
Even after Joe explained&#13;
programs available to&#13;
minorities like Mexican-&#13;
Americans, it still seemed&#13;
evident that the federal and&#13;
state governments have a&#13;
way to go before the welfare&#13;
rolls are sufficiently&#13;
lightened. Job discrimination&#13;
is a fact of&#13;
life we all live around, but&#13;
few of us live in. Even&#13;
though minorities are&#13;
striving for better schooling,&#13;
one only has to look as far&#13;
south as Chicago and the&#13;
American Indian to see&#13;
backward progress on the&#13;
part of government.&#13;
There are many things&#13;
that Joe sees while&#13;
operating within the Employment&#13;
Service, but for&#13;
many reasons he avoided&#13;
mentioning them. He&#13;
mentioned the favorable&#13;
factors surrounding his job.&#13;
The advantages Joe&#13;
brings to his job include his&#13;
bi-lingual talents, his&#13;
familiarity with the&#13;
Mexican culture, customs&#13;
and life-styles. Most important&#13;
though, is the&#13;
knowledge he has of the&#13;
p r o b l e m s M e x i c a n -&#13;
Americans face.&#13;
Although he now is a short&#13;
term employee, Joe said he&#13;
still would like to get into&#13;
work involving human&#13;
relations, a field that could&#13;
use many more working&#13;
class heroes like himself&#13;
Fair (Continued from Page 1)&#13;
must be original.&#13;
The fair itself is sponsored by the&#13;
Racine Art Guild. The guild has about&#13;
100 members and is comprised mostly&#13;
of women. It meets once a month and&#13;
offers workshops in different fields of&#13;
art.&#13;
Along with food and drinks,&#13;
balloons will be sold, and if it is one's&#13;
"Too many other fairs have&#13;
become highly juried. It's more&#13;
relaxed here, and there's a&#13;
camaraderie among the artists.&#13;
There's not the sense of competition&#13;
that exists at other&#13;
fairs."&#13;
desire, he can have his body painted.&#13;
Portraits and caricatures will be&#13;
offered also.&#13;
Artist reaction to the fair is&#13;
characterized by what one painter&#13;
told Mrs. Madsen.&#13;
"The Starving Artist's Fair is my&#13;
idea of a fair," he said. "Too many&#13;
other fairs have become highly&#13;
juried. It's more relaxed here, and&#13;
there's a camaraderie among the&#13;
artists. There's not the sense of&#13;
competition that exists at other&#13;
fairs."&#13;
"I really think we're going to have a&#13;
nicer fair this year. We h ave better&#13;
grounds and more artists entered,"&#13;
Mrs. Madsen added.&#13;
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o.s</text>
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