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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 4</text>
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            <text>Smoke-In Staged in Madison</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>,..&#13;
"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" -Matthe A Ilnner 1/' ,I W' .&#13;
. W rnold S y OJ tscom m ' Parksidt&#13;
"J".~,"GP.&#13;
Smoke-ion Staged •&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
ManagingEdilor&#13;
[,aStSaturday the YIPPIES&#13;
Id a marijuana smoke~m In&#13;
~OI1's Brittingham Park.&#13;
ijl2llded by several hundred&#13;
_Ie, a noonrally at the park&#13;
~ a march up Main&#13;
tUt"llothe capitol building in&#13;
lIlPP"'lof the legalization of&#13;
IDIrijUo1l'\3.&#13;
and catch-phrases that were&#13;
immediately snatched up and&#13;
echoed by the enthusiastic&#13;
audience.&#13;
At the' park, though several&#13;
squads of police stood nearby&#13;
?undreds of joints were smoked&#13;
In a large open shelter while&#13;
Beal entertained the crowd with&#13;
pro-marijuana songs accompanied&#13;
by a tambourine and&#13;
"This is the first time a stoned mob has seized the Straight&#13;
l'Jpllol."&#13;
IIIed as the Dana Beal Prona,&#13;
Anti-Heroin March,&#13;
.... as the herald of yet&#13;
~issue inradical politics.&#13;
l1li, whowas recently busted&#13;
bJ the Madison police while&#13;
lilcb-hiltingfornpossession of&#13;
ImraI pounds of grass, has&#13;
... been aclive in the drive for&#13;
It legalizationof marijuana.&#13;
lIIIIiIm KunsUer is handling&#13;
l1li'. case while a number of&#13;
III known radicals, Abbie&#13;
8IIIman for ODe. are aiding the&#13;
~_Ibrough fund raising ac-&#13;
-.- to defer legal fees.&#13;
lIII8eaIspolteat the Brittingham&#13;
y and at the Capitol&#13;
~og his light monologue&#13;
I&lt;ollageof slogans, chants&#13;
his own accoustic guitar. Unlike&#13;
most radical gatherings the&#13;
rally proceeded in a facile vein&#13;
partly because Beal was more&#13;
an entertainer than a&#13;
provocateur, and partly&#13;
because the police remained at&#13;
a discreet distance from the&#13;
illegalities, threatening as HIe&#13;
overcast September sky. The&#13;
organizers of the rally-march&#13;
had obtained permits from the&#13;
Madison city council and the&#13;
police were present to insure&#13;
that the park was not abused.&#13;
No attempt was made to bust&#13;
anyone though Inspector&#13;
Thomas, in charge of the police&#13;
contingent, and two assistants&#13;
circled the shelter numerous&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
Parks' of the Newscope staff&#13;
Ot~ aa'de has a new Vice Chancellor,&#13;
Bowl' uer, Bauer, 39, comes from&#13;
... logGreen State University where .. Was theAss' ,&#13;
Student "stant Vice President for&#13;
JIOot AffairS.He began his Parkside&#13;
, OnSeptember I&#13;
His duti .-&#13;
....... es are 10 the academic&#13;
10 v.,,' buthe will also represent UW-P&#13;
PIr1s ;05 slate agencies and to toebr&#13;
IiIn are the University, RepOrting to&#13;
Science the Deans of the College 01&#13;
IlocIern and Society, and the School of&#13;
dep.rtznIndustry, as are several other&#13;
ents of the University.&#13;
Ianan't· cltscribed'" ervlew with Newscope, he&#13;
)llIloa his POSitionas "a Iantastic&#13;
_L. . ceept" PresenUy he said he is .......It.ffiatingh' , ,&#13;
Ilbijities . IIDself to his responIllo&#13;
IllStitand ISbecoming familiar witll&#13;
Ir&gt;d the ~tional structure of Parkside&#13;
Bauer n.lv~rslty of Wisconsin.&#13;
be ""cep~d m accepting tlle position&#13;
IncIu.triaJe the. IDStitutional goal of an&#13;
.... _&gt; MISSIon.To achieve this he&#13;
.....~out "w '&#13;
--... , e need to do some real&#13;
-~. '" the Sc ~.. bool of Modern In-&#13;
~ e~plained that while the&#13;
"ll ~~g Science Division was quite&#13;
Ibe..... llped, httle development in&#13;
~ ~ of Management Science and&#13;
". dcn,;"'°IllICShas occurred. IoIIw OUr ~ how we could possibly&#13;
..... ~'on If we do not give&#13;
to Management Science&#13;
Bauer Stresses Criticism as&#13;
Aspect of Academic Life&#13;
and Labor Economics," he said.&#13;
Part of the problem is, he said, "You&#13;
shouidn't really staff the School of&#13;
Modern Industry in the absence of a&#13;
Dean. or in the absence of the&#13;
Divisional Chairmen. Because these&#13;
men when they are appointed. a~e&#13;
going to want to have some impact m&#13;
their areas." .&#13;
Asked his views on "teaching versUS&#13;
research", he replied, 'I~e research&#13;
function is just as crucl-al as the&#13;
teaching function. How you go about&#13;
defining research Is important. I prefer&#13;
to 1define research in its broade~t&#13;
possible way, An instructor engageshm&#13;
the kind of research that Improv.es is&#13;
teaching. He erigages in the kmd of&#13;
research that seeks new data.&#13;
"People like to _ say unless you&#13;
publish you're not playing the g:,:&#13;
right" 'he continued. "I don't buy a .&#13;
Facuity members have more ways of&#13;
. ling with one another than&#13;
commumca&#13;
through journals.". at&#13;
He mentioned reading papers&#13;
conventions and holding semmars&#13;
among the faculty, . th in&#13;
"Ideally a professor is active bo .&#13;
teaching ~nd research. In practice,&#13;
you're going to find some peopl~ do one&#13;
function better than tbe other, Bauer&#13;
Madison&#13;
;n&#13;
o&#13;
x&#13;
11&#13;
»&#13;
N&#13;
'";n&#13;
»&#13;
times while the smoking was&#13;
laking place.&#13;
At first sigbt of the police&#13;
there. was some hesitancy at&#13;
smoking the grass for fear of&#13;
arrest, and it wasn't until the&#13;
people crowded into the shelter&#13;
that the smoke-in began&#13;
Relatively assured that the&#13;
police wanted to avoid confrontation,&#13;
as evidenced by the&#13;
mcenspicuousness of their clubs&#13;
(concealed benea th their pant&#13;
legs), many of the people lit&#13;
their joints as other&#13;
"samaritans" tossed out&#13;
handiuls to those who had come&#13;
empty-handed.&#13;
In contract to the stark reality&#13;
of the legal consequences of&#13;
smoking marijuana, the entire&#13;
event, though political, in&#13;
essence evolved in the freewheeling&#13;
style of counter&#13;
culture happenings. The only&#13;
moments of apprehension occurred&#13;
as the police initially&#13;
marched into the park and then&#13;
later, as the marchers broke&#13;
into a run across the capitol&#13;
lawn. Several times an individual&#13;
hurled obscenities at&#13;
the police but was drowned out&#13;
by the silence tha t greeted&#13;
him, teslifying to the peaceful&#13;
nature of the majority of&#13;
demonstrators.&#13;
Besides introducing slogans&#13;
and chants such as "I smoke&#13;
pot, and I like it a lot". and&#13;
leading the audience in an&#13;
irreverent rendition of the "Star&#13;
Spangled Marijuana ... ". he&#13;
predicted that "somedsy m&#13;
Washington, D.C., a president&#13;
will say, 'I legalize&#13;
marijuana', "&#13;
He dwelled little on any&#13;
particular point as it was covious&#13;
from the beginning tllat&#13;
his audience needed little&#13;
persuasion to take up the cause,&#13;
though he emphasized the antiheroin&#13;
nature of the gathermg&#13;
and warned that "heroin kills".&#13;
--&#13;
FREE&#13;
,Merger Eff ct&#13;
UWPCouldB&#13;
On&#13;
vere&#13;
hy Warren _'edry&#13;
Editor-in-Chi t&#13;
Chancellor Irvin WyUle&#13;
thinks the merger of the&#13;
with tlhe W U system "could&#13;
have a severe impact on tlhe&#13;
operations at Parksld "&#13;
He laId .' ewscope "The&#13;
governor tied mer er to the&#13;
budget and the bud et i at&#13;
distinctly lower fundIng&#13;
levels than we anticipated ••&#13;
tate enroUment fundlllg-110&#13;
universities I i based on an&#13;
average allotment per&#13;
student. TradJtIOnally rw&#13;
funding levels ha ve been&#13;
higher than those of the&#13;
W sy tern Under the&#13;
merger, fundlllg to all 1Ilstitutions&#13;
will he at the W&#13;
levels&#13;
"In addition to lower&#13;
funding levels," Wylhe said&#13;
"The budget failed to cover&#13;
rn &lt;:MJr&#13;
on&#13;
or&#13;
"~&#13;
N&#13;
~&#13;
;II&#13;
:..- ~&#13;
z&#13;
punished by&#13;
lila I ... ont&#13;
function," be t.ted&#13;
• Ian) pi hay lried to rrl"""&#13;
1M cnl fu liOn in ord« 10&#13;
t.be \8l1\'eI"'S.lt)' s (m I&#13;
conllnued "From my point f \&#13;
should flOdID "', to be C1 lin our&#13;
cntiel m"&#13;
Whol rol .nd&#13;
f.cuIly hay lD • I&#13;
feel et")' stt'O C'On&#13;
sult.llOIl I thm It 1.1 nd&#13;
crucial. and 1 tlllOk .. thoul 11 )ou'r&#13;
doomed to l.tlure&#13;
wtf I.ttempted to unpooe. policy.&#13;
the ... ,lIlUJon, II ould f.,!." he&#13;
·decI.red "It's nol tll. w.»ou ork&#13;
"l\jl people. It' not lhr "")' ) u get&#13;
commltmenl&#13;
"The only ... )' )'OU c.n &amp; I com'&#13;
ffiJlment IS to Iry lo"or .. ,th th 10&#13;
tlle produ t tluIt comes OUI I one th •&#13;
feel they ha,. had some say m&#13;
"The consulting pr IS nole y,"&#13;
he emphaslZed "It's very difficult&#13;
because )-ou don'l ftnd groupli that&#13;
&lt;:ometogetller aod say, 'OIl. yes, .... 11&#13;
want to do It tIus w.y.' It d sn't 'OI'k&#13;
thIS w.y.&#13;
"BuIll you work ..lth people, there's&#13;
a kind of consensus thai begllls to form&#13;
Hopefully, what beglOS to develop -&#13;
and ,f I don'l ach .. \'O tIus, I'U be ,'ery&#13;
dasappo,nted - IS mutual respect.&#13;
That's a tremendous key. You need to&#13;
de\'elop tlle confidence of the faculty&#13;
and ," be &lt;&gt;lDC:.111ded&#13;
said. "and if a man can do a really fme&#13;
job of teaching, be should be rewarded,&#13;
and U a man does a really fin. job in a&#13;
creative area be should be rewarded."&#13;
Bauer sees an extension upon the&#13;
three traditional aspects of academIc&#13;
life - teaching, research. and community&#13;
service "At the nsk of ha,ing&#13;
myself misunderstood, I personally&#13;
think there is a fourth function&#13;
criticism. "&#13;
He believes academicians should look&#13;
critically upon the unh'ersities&#13;
tllemselves. and upon SOClety&#13;
"I tllmk the university. in a larae&#13;
- "Journalism is Litera~re in a Hurry" -Matth A Un,·i- 11· , I W · .&#13;
ew rnold uS J o1 1sro1. 1n _ p "d,&#13;
· wn····"·p,Jll'&#13;
Smoke-i-n Staged • 1n Madison&#13;
b) John Koloen&#13;
\tanaging Editor&#13;
(.aSt Saturday the YIP1:l~S&#13;
8 marijuana smoke~m m&#13;
011 -5 Brittingham Park.&#13;
ed by several hundred&#13;
and catch-phrases that were&#13;
immediately snatched up and&#13;
echoed by the enthusiastic&#13;
audience.&#13;
times while the smoking w&#13;
taking place&#13;
At first sight of the pohce&#13;
there was some hesitancy at&#13;
smoking the grass for fear oi&#13;
arrest, and it wa n't until the&#13;
people crowded into the helter&#13;
that the smoke-in began.&#13;
Relatively assured that the&#13;
police wanted to avoid confronta&#13;
tion, as evidenced bv the&#13;
inconspicuousness of their clubs&#13;
(concealed beneath their panl&#13;
legs&gt;, many of the people ht&#13;
their joints a other&#13;
"samaritans " tos ed out&#13;
handfuls to tho e who had come empty-handed.&#13;
8 noon rally at the park&#13;
'ed a march up Main&#13;
1 to the capitol building in&#13;
l of the legalization of&#13;
At the· park, though several&#13;
squads of police stood nearby&#13;
hundreds of joints were smoke&lt;j&#13;
in a large open shelter while&#13;
Beal entertained the crowd with&#13;
pro-marijuana songs accompanied&#13;
by a tambourine and&#13;
lJ&#13;
n&#13;
;It&#13;
1l&#13;
&gt;&#13;
N&#13;
111&#13;
lJ&#13;
&gt;&#13;
"This i&#13;
C'lpitol."&#13;
the first time a stoned mob has seized the Straight&#13;
In contract to the tark reality&#13;
of the legal consequences oi&#13;
smoking marijuana, the entire&#13;
event, though political, in&#13;
essence evolved in the freewheeling&#13;
style of counter&#13;
culture happenings. The onl-.&#13;
moments of apprehen ion oc- curred as the police initiall&#13;
marched into the park and th n&#13;
later, as the marchers broke&#13;
into a run across the capitol&#13;
lawn. Several times an n·&#13;
dividual hurled o ceniti at&#13;
the police but wa drowned ou&#13;
by the silence that r ed&#13;
him, testifying to the pea ful&#13;
nature of the m j orit~ of&#13;
demonstrators.&#13;
his own accoustic gwtar. Unlike&#13;
most radical gatherings the&#13;
rally proceeded in a facile vein&#13;
partly because Beal was more&#13;
an entertainer than a&#13;
provocateur, and partly&#13;
because the police remained at&#13;
a discreet distance from the&#13;
illegalities, threatening as Hie&#13;
overcast September sky. The&#13;
organizers of the rally-march&#13;
had obtained permits from the&#13;
Madison city council and the&#13;
police were present to insure&#13;
that the park was not abused.&#13;
No attempt was made to bust&#13;
anyone though Inspector&#13;
Thomas, in charge of the police&#13;
contingent, and two assistants&#13;
circled the shelter numerou&#13;
Be ide introduoing lo&#13;
and chants uch ru ·•1 smo&#13;
pot, and I like it a lo ", nd&#13;
leading the audi ce in an&#13;
irreverent rendition of th ·• tar&#13;
pangled .1arijuana .. ."', he&#13;
predicted that " omedav n&#13;
Washington, D.C., a pr ident&#13;
will ·ay, ' I le hi&#13;
marijuana'."&#13;
He dwelled little on&#13;
particular point a it&#13;
vio from th be ·nni that&#13;
his audience n eded htll&#13;
per uasion to ta e up th&#13;
though he empha ized t anti·&#13;
heroin natur of th therin&#13;
and warned that "h m kt "&#13;
by Marc Ei en&#13;
Park . of the ·ew cope staff&#13;
Baide ha a new Vice Chancellor&#13;
u B ' . r. auer, 39, comes from&#13;
ng Green State University where&#13;
aa th Ass· ' udent Aff . 1 tant Vice President for&#13;
airs. He began his Parkside&#13;
on September l&#13;
duti : ere es are m the academic&#13;
van' but he will also represent UW-P&#13;
0&#13;
~us state agencies and to toehr&#13;
are lhe University. Reporting to&#13;
lhe Deans of the College of f1d Society, and the School of&#13;
rtm n&lt;lustry, as are several other&#13;
eots of the University.&#13;
,:t~ervie~ _with Newscope, he&#13;
to hi P&lt;&gt;S1tton as "a fantastic&#13;
~Pl". ;Presently, he said, he is&#13;
r g hunself to his respon-&#13;
!it:td 15 becoming familiar with&#13;
1.0nal structure of Parkside&#13;
Ba Uo_iversity of Wisconsin.&#13;
ac :a•d in _accepting the position&#13;
~et~he. mstitutional goal of an&#13;
ed ' 1ss1on. To achieve this he&#13;
out "W ' in the e need to do some real ." School or Modern Ine~pla&#13;
ined that while the&#13;
e~g Scien_ce Division was quite&#13;
areas °r· httJe development in&#13;
I.. E O Management Science and&#13;
'l don~;xioroics has occurred.&#13;
our se~ ~ow _we could possibly&#13;
~ 1. ion 1f we do not give&#13;
18 lo Man emen Science&#13;
Bauer Stresses Criticism&#13;
Aspect of Academic Lil&#13;
and Labor Economic , " he said .. , Part of the problem is, he said, You&#13;
shouldn't really staff the School of&#13;
Modern Industry in the ab ence of a&#13;
Dean or in the ab ence of the&#13;
Divisional Chairmen. Beca_use the· e men, when they are appo1~ted. a~e&#13;
going to want to have some impact m&#13;
their areas." • . Asked his views on "teaching versus&#13;
research"' he replied, "'l~e research&#13;
function is just as crucial as the&#13;
teac:,hing function. How you go about&#13;
defining research is important. I prefer&#13;
to define research in its broade. t&#13;
possible way. An instructor engages m&#13;
the kind of research that impco~e bi&#13;
teaching. He engages in the kind of&#13;
research that seeks new data. ·ou&#13;
"People like to say_ unless ~ e&#13;
publish you're not playmg the g::nt 'ght "'he continued. "I don't buy a .&#13;
~acuity members have more wa~ of · ting wt'th one another than&#13;
commumca&#13;
through journals." . at&#13;
He mentioned reading pa~&#13;
conventions and holding seminar&#13;
among the faculty. . . h in&#13;
"Ideally' a professor is active bot.&#13;
teaching and research. In pracuce.&#13;
you're going to find some peopl.~ do one&#13;
function better than the other. Bauer&#13;
0&#13;
..J&#13;
..J&#13;
~&#13;
0&#13;
..&#13;
&gt;&#13;
n&#13;
;JI,&#13;
;JI,&#13;
,.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
,.&#13;
z&#13;
E &#13;
Letters to the Editor Seplember27,1971 Page2 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Editorial tradition here at P&#13;
Iexpect to hear :ksid.l)&#13;
screams of theeu1(li~&#13;
Government conce Student&#13;
letter in future ~:ug thi,&#13;
'''Pos&#13;
"What's he doiu .&#13;
terment of StudJt for bet.&#13;
merit? How can We Gov~.&#13;
have an effective IlOssl~, ith h gov...._ ' WI. . sue 'a tOUlliUlri·~".~&#13;
minIstration hoverin an adHow&#13;
can we ever OV; over~!&#13;
apathy that strangles t~IIl·1he&#13;
campus mess?" Thest three.&#13;
be some of the questi shouJd&#13;
at me in the weeks t ODs u.r..,;&#13;
I caution you to l~kCOIlle, bot&#13;
selves in chang' to YOUr.&#13;
situations-after .Jug th...&#13;
to be elected, did~~asklll&#13;
Remember the oldline " You'&#13;
who live in glasS:eor;.&#13;
shouldn't throw stones!lJ °Use,&#13;
BestW'18bes&#13;
Ethelred theUlll'ead!&#13;
Twelve Officers Patrol Parkside&#13;
and come to another meeting of&#13;
the Student Senate. How can we&#13;
as students have any faith in a&#13;
Senate that refuses to honor its&#13;
election obligations to us? It is&#13;
simplest to say that the student&#13;
body is apathetic, as It lindoubtedly&#13;
is, but I fail to see&#13;
how this apathy can be overcome&#13;
by these games the Senate&#13;
has chosen to play. These are&#13;
"games", as they have completely&#13;
reduced the effectiveness&#13;
and integrity of the&#13;
Senate! (Since these are&#13;
"games", and the Student&#13;
senate is of such an exciting&#13;
nature, perhaps the Student&#13;
Government might print a&#13;
roster of the names of the&#13;
remaining Student Senators so&#13;
that the student body can cross&#13;
the names off that resign in&#13;
meetings to come! We might&#13;
call this "Musical senators",&#13;
letting the game become a real&#13;
To the E"tIitor:&#13;
It is with regret that Iread of&#13;
yet another Student Gove':!-&#13;
ment meeting (9-16-7\), III&#13;
which the reins of de!"ocracy&#13;
are pushed still further into the&#13;
hands of the Administration.&#13;
Perhaps democracy is too&#13;
strong a word. A better term&#13;
might be monotony. I am tired&#13;
of the dramatics that seem to be&#13;
such common occurrances at&#13;
our Student Senate Meetings&#13;
(Max Sennett might find them&#13;
more amusing"). It seems that&#13;
every time a student senator&#13;
resigns he is giving up his&#13;
responsibilities to tbe Administration,&#13;
while at the same&#13;
time reneging his duties to that&#13;
percentage of students who&#13;
voted for him.&#13;
Mr. Konkol. cballenges the&#13;
students of this University to&#13;
"Prove Parkside is not&#13;
apathetic to its own cancer" I&#13;
POT&#13;
"Marijuana has undesirable effects on the body. no matter "in&#13;
what form it is used. The user loses mental and sometimes physical&#13;
control of himself, and may commit violent crimes. Marijuana users&#13;
often become so devoted to the drug and Its effects that they lose lnterest&#13;
in any useful or lntelledual occupation. Probably one of the&#13;
greatest dangers of marl juana Is that persons who use it soon look for&#13;
stronger drugs. and often become addicted to heroin.'&#13;
This statement Is taken from the 1962edition of The World Book&#13;
Encyclopedia. Since 1962many studies and scientific experiments&#13;
have been performed to determine the ectue! effects of marijuana on&#13;
the user and to dispel the many myths connected with the drug. Local,&#13;
state and national governments, universities and private institutions&#13;
have contributed to the increasing stockpile of information but as yet&#13;
no concrete evidence has established that marijuana is a killer as&#13;
some people contend or that is Is a harmless drug that should be freely&#13;
marketed. It probably falls somewhere in between.&#13;
Recently, at a meeting of the Am~\can Chemical Society,&#13;
Biochemists Harris Rosenkrantz and Yugal Luthra reported evidence&#13;
of brain damage and even deaths In their experiments with rats injected&#13;
with a marijuana extract and THC (a synthetic form of&#13;
marijuana). But. they also stated that the smallest dose given to any&#13;
group of rats was 30 times that of the chronic marijuana smoker (SO&#13;
[otnts a day over a period of months). Thldy times the recommended&#13;
dosage of asprln would kill a person and there Is no doubt that the&#13;
same cverecse Of pure grain alcohol dally over a period of months&#13;
would cause a loss of Interest "tn any useful or Intellectual occupation".&#13;
Also. it might be added that before someone could abuse&#13;
either alcohol or marijuana to such an extent they would probably&#13;
pass out.&#13;
To say that heroin addicts started out using merttuene is just as&#13;
startling as saying that an alcoholic probably drank beer In high&#13;
school. L1kealco:"lOllsm,drug addiction Is caused by psychological and&#13;
emotional problems that are rooted Inside the individual rather than&#13;
any outside stimulus. Too often our society would rather focus on the&#13;
manifestation of a social problem than onthe problem itself.&#13;
The marijuana laws should be relaxed further If not taken off the&#13;
books entirely, if for no other reason than that it is impossible to&#13;
police. Mariiuana has already alienated too many youths from society&#13;
and has given them a false Impression of what is the true and&#13;
necessary job of the police. Laws can't be basedon what someonewho&#13;
is not an expert says they think might happen. They must be based on&#13;
fact and the facts concerning marijuana prove, so far, that marijuana,&#13;
like alcohol. or anything else, is harmful only when abused and when&#13;
usedproperly it can be a pleasant and useful drug.&#13;
and the Kenosha Sherifr'iffilo&#13;
which can be contactedin&#13;
o~ emergency, as in CI&amp;t&#13;
disturbance. Crowd&#13;
There is hope by Sgt. ~&#13;
to get a teletype machinewhich&#13;
would join us to the nalillllWid!&#13;
net, thus enabling an alnuIt&#13;
Immediate check on,uchlhinga&#13;
as weather, stolen cars 8lId&#13;
registration numbers on stolen&#13;
articles.&#13;
The largest probl.m 0'&#13;
campus bas heen 1DU'epOrt«I&#13;
theft - of things from Ca&gt;&#13;
struction tools to no parking&#13;
signs. There is seidolll any&#13;
trouble with students exceptfor&#13;
the occational one caught&#13;
sneaking into dances. But&#13;
parking tickets are what they&#13;
are most noted for. f{/ p&lt;IIJle&#13;
noted this by 1 p.m. Thursday.&#13;
police officers carry guns,&#13;
which are required by state law.&#13;
The guns will become less&#13;
conspicuous when the officers&#13;
adopt their new uniform blazers&#13;
in the near future.&#13;
Six police officers (the&#13;
recommended number was&#13;
twelve, with six security officers),&#13;
but there are plans to&#13;
add two more in the near future&#13;
to improve efficiency.&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Some call them pigs, but most&#13;
people call them campus cops.&#13;
They are responsible for the&#13;
maintaining of order on campus.&#13;
A group of twelve. men,&#13;
only four of whom are on duty at&#13;
anyone time, responsible for a&#13;
campus of hundreds of acres&#13;
with a population of nearly 5,000&#13;
(students, faculty, employees&#13;
and construction workers).&#13;
The patrol has two squad cars&#13;
to blanket three campuses. For&#13;
this reason the police work at&#13;
the Racine campus is handled&#13;
by the Racine city police while&#13;
the Kenosha Sheriff's office&#13;
might be better able to handle&#13;
an emergency at the Kenosha&#13;
campus. There is a reaio&#13;
hookup between the campus&#13;
They are divided into two&#13;
groups - six police officers and&#13;
five security officers, with a&#13;
newly-arrived Director of&#13;
Security, Ronald Brinkman, a&#13;
police specialist from the&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Criminal&#13;
Justice.&#13;
Of the twelve, only the six&#13;
Pat Nelson&#13;
FREE&#13;
popcorn with beer purchase&#13;
every tuesday 5-11 Is it&#13;
logical&#13;
to&#13;
believe&#13;
inGod?&#13;
Begining October 10 •&#13;
OPEN SUNDAY 12-6&#13;
Student Activities Bldg&#13;
Editorial Starr&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Manager Fred Noer,&#13;
Jr.&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, P.&#13;
McDermid, Barb Scott&#13;
Phones:'&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Newscope is au independoll&#13;
student newspaper coInpIolI&#13;
by students of the UniwrsilyIi&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside pubiisbed&#13;
weekly except du~ vllCllicli&#13;
periods. Student obtBioed 1&amp;&#13;
vertising funds are lbe ..&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
opera tion of Newseope· UII&#13;
copies are print.d aad&#13;
distributed throughout !be&#13;
Kenosha and Racine cOJll·&#13;
munities as well as tbt&#13;
University. Free ~ Ilf&#13;
available upon request&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Bor~hardt, James Casper,&#13;
~arc ~lsen, Kelly Infuslno,&#13;
Kim King, Jim Koloen Ken&#13;
Konkol, Bill Lane, Dale Martin,&#13;
Pat Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross&#13;
Jeff Scoville, Jerry Socha~ ,&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio Becky&#13;
Ecklund: Ken Ziman~:&#13;
Yes, but no newspaper&#13;
ad can convince you&#13;
of God's presence and&#13;
power.&#13;
What will convince you&#13;
is a radically new view&#13;
of God as Love itself. As&#13;
all in\elligence. As the&#13;
very Principle of your&#13;
being.&#13;
This scientifically-based&#13;
view of God healed&#13;
all types of disease 2000&#13;
years ago, and it is&#13;
healing many people&#13;
right now_&#13;
If you are searching for&#13;
_ new ideas about God,&#13;
you will enjoy reading&#13;
the current Bible Lesson&#13;
in our Reading Room.&#13;
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE&#13;
READING ROOM&#13;
bro"".e&#13;
stop&#13;
• newly arrriving books&#13;
• greeting cards&#13;
• gift items&#13;
• records&#13;
VAJ!O'S ~ =:Y&#13;
,'\NO ITALIAN SAUSAGE a:::M3ERS&#13;
51121-11111 AYIIIItK"- 151--&#13;
Open 6 days 0 week from 4 p.m., cfosed M'JI"iays&#13;
available at&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE 302 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE 633-7842&#13;
Pagez OPE eplember 27, 1971 Letters to the Editor Editorial&#13;
POT&#13;
"Marijuana has undesirable effeds on the body, no matter In&#13;
what form ii is used. The user loses mental and sometimes physical&#13;
control of himself, and may commit violent crimes. Marijuana users&#13;
often become so devoted tot e drug and Its effeds that they lose int&#13;
rest in any useful or intelledual occupation. Probably one of the&#13;
greatest dangers of marl juana ls that persons who use it soon look for&#13;
stronger drugs, and often become addicted to heroin."&#13;
This statement Is taken from the 1962 edition of The World Book&#13;
Encyclopedia. Since 1962 many studies and scientific experiments&#13;
have been performed to determine the adual effeds of marijuana on&#13;
the user and to dispel the many myths connected with the drug. Local,&#13;
state and national governments, universities and private institutions&#13;
have contributed to the increasing stockpile of Information but as yet&#13;
no concrete evidence has established that marijuana is a killer as&#13;
some people contend or that Is ls a harmless drug that should be freely&#13;
marketed. It probably falls somewhere In between.&#13;
Recently, at a meeting of the American Chemical Society,&#13;
Biochemists Harris Rosenkrantz and Yugal Luthra reported evidence&#13;
of brain damage and even deaths In their experiments with rats injected&#13;
with a marijuana extract and THC (a synthetic form of&#13;
m rijuana). But, they also stated that the smallest dose given to any&#13;
group of rats was JO times that of the chronic marijuana smoker (SO&#13;
joints a day over a period of months). Thirty times the recommended&#13;
dosage of asprln would kill a person and there Is no doubt that the&#13;
same ~verdose of pure gra n alcohol dally over a period of months&#13;
would cause a loss of interest "In any useful or Intellectual occupation".&#13;
Also, it might be added that before someone could abuse&#13;
either alcohol or marijuana to such an extent they would probably&#13;
pa s out.&#13;
To say that heroin addicts started out using marijuana is just as&#13;
startling as saying that an alcoholic probably drank beer in high&#13;
school . Like alco:,olism, drug addiction Is caused by psychological and&#13;
motional problems that are rooted Inside the Individual rather than&#13;
ny outside stimulus. Too often our society would rather focus on the&#13;
manifestation of a social problem than on the problem itself.&#13;
The marlluana laws should be relaxed further If not taken off the&#13;
books entirely, If for no other reason than that it is Impossible to&#13;
police Marijuana has already alienated too many youths from society&#13;
and has given them a false Impression of what is the true and&#13;
necessary job of the police. Laws can't be based on what someone who&#13;
is not an expert says they think might happen . They must be based on&#13;
f~ct and the facts concerning marijuana prove, so far, that marijuana,&#13;
like alcohol, or anything else, is harmful only when abused and when&#13;
used properly It can be a pleasant and useful drug.&#13;
Pat Nelson&#13;
F R EE&#13;
popcorn with beer purchase&#13;
every tuesday 5-11&#13;
Begining October 10&#13;
OPEN SUNDAY 12-6&#13;
Student Activities Bldg&#13;
•&#13;
browse&#13;
stop&#13;
newly arrriving rooks&#13;
• greeting cards&#13;
• gift items&#13;
• records&#13;
available at&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
To the E-ditor:&#13;
It is with regret that I read of&#13;
yet another Student Gover~-&#13;
ment meeting (9·16-71), m&#13;
which the reins of democracy&#13;
are pushed still further· into the&#13;
hands of the Administration.&#13;
Perhaps democracy is too&#13;
strong a word. A better term&#13;
might be monotony. I am tired&#13;
of the dramatics that seem to be&#13;
such common occurrances at&#13;
our Student Senate Meetings&#13;
(Max Sennett might find them&#13;
more amusing!). It seems that&#13;
every time a student senator&#13;
resigns he is giving up his&#13;
responsibilities to the Ad·&#13;
ministration, while at the same&#13;
time reneging his duties to that&#13;
percentage of students who&#13;
voted for him.&#13;
Mr. Konkol challenges the&#13;
students of this University to&#13;
"Prove Parkside is not&#13;
apathetic to its own cancer",&#13;
and come to another meeting of&#13;
the Student Senate. How can we&#13;
as students have any faith in a&#13;
Senate that refuses to honor its&#13;
election obligations to us? It is&#13;
simplest to say that the student&#13;
body is apathetic, as it l.mdoubtedly&#13;
is, but I fail to see&#13;
how this apathy can be overcome&#13;
by these games the Senate&#13;
has chosen to play. These are&#13;
"games", as they have completely&#13;
reduced the effectiveness&#13;
and integrity of the&#13;
Senate! (Since these are&#13;
"games", and the Student&#13;
Senate is of such an exciting&#13;
nature, perhaps the Student&#13;
Government might print a&#13;
roster of the names of the&#13;
remaining Student Senators so&#13;
that the student body can cross&#13;
the names off that resign in&#13;
meetings to come! We might&#13;
call this "Musical Senators",&#13;
letting the game become a real&#13;
tradition here at p&#13;
I expect to hear ar~ide•&#13;
screams of tb~e 1ndj8na&#13;
Government conce ~tuden1&#13;
letter in future ~n1ng !his&#13;
t1tscollt1&#13;
"What's be doin ·&#13;
terment of Stud~t for bet. ment? How can we Govern.&#13;
have an effective l&gt;Ossibfy ·th gove""- · w1_ . such ·a totalita : ... 11&#13;
m1rustration hoverin nan ad. How can we ever ov; over 11s,&#13;
apathy that strangles ~:me the&#13;
campus mess?" Tues/three,.&#13;
be some of the questi sli~&#13;
at me in the weeks toons ~ I caution you to lookcorne, bit&#13;
selves in changi to YoUt.&#13;
situations - after all ng these&#13;
to be elected, did~?'J&amp;sk~&#13;
Remember the old line .~ You'&#13;
who live in glass' :eo~&#13;
shouldn't throw stones!" 0USes&#13;
BestWithEthelred&#13;
the U~~&#13;
Twelve Officers Patrol Parkside&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Some call them pigs, but most&#13;
people call them campus cops.&#13;
They are responsible for the&#13;
maintaining of order on campus.&#13;
A group of twelve men,&#13;
only four of whom are on duty at&#13;
any one time, responsible for a&#13;
campus of hundreds of acres&#13;
with a population of nearly 5,000&#13;
(students, faculty, employees&#13;
and construction workers).&#13;
They are divided into two&#13;
groups - six police officers and&#13;
five security officers, with a&#13;
newly-arrived Director of&#13;
Security, Ronald Brinkman, a&#13;
police specialist from the&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Criminal&#13;
Justice.&#13;
Of the twelve, only the six&#13;
Is it&#13;
logical&#13;
to&#13;
believe&#13;
inGod?&#13;
Yes, but no newspaper&#13;
ad can convince you&#13;
of God's presence and&#13;
power.&#13;
What will convince you&#13;
is a radically new view&#13;
of God as Love itself. As&#13;
all in!elligence. As the&#13;
very Principle of your&#13;
being.&#13;
This scientifically-based&#13;
view of God healed&#13;
all types of disease 2000 ·&#13;
years ago, and it is&#13;
healing many people&#13;
right now.&#13;
If you are searching for&#13;
new ideas about God&#13;
you wiJl enjoy readin~&#13;
the current Bible Lesson&#13;
in our Reading Room.&#13;
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE&#13;
READING ROOM&#13;
302 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE 633-7842&#13;
police officers carry guns,&#13;
which are required by state law.&#13;
The guns will become less&#13;
conspicuous when the officers&#13;
adopt their new uniform blazers&#13;
in the near future.&#13;
Six police officers ( the&#13;
recommended number was&#13;
twelve, with six security officers),&#13;
but there are plans to&#13;
add two more in the near future&#13;
to improve efficiency.&#13;
The patrol has two squad cars&#13;
to blanket three campuses. For&#13;
this reason the police work at&#13;
the Racine campus is handled&#13;
by the Racine city police while&#13;
the Kenosha Sheriff's office&#13;
might be better able to handle&#13;
an emergency a t the Kenosha&#13;
campus. There is a reaio&#13;
hookup between the campus&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Manager Fred Noer&#13;
h. '&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Bor~hardt, James Casper,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Kelly Infusino&#13;
Kim King, Jim Koloen K~&#13;
Konkol, Bill Lane, Dale Martin,&#13;
Pat Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross&#13;
Jeff Scoville, Jerry Socha• '&#13;
Production Start&#13;
Denise Anastasio Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Ziman~.'&#13;
and the Kenosha Sherur 9f&#13;
which _can be contacted: cf¥:;,&#13;
of emergency as in lie&#13;
disturbance. ' Crowd&#13;
There is hope by Sgt ~&#13;
to get ~ t~letype mach~e Whidt&#13;
would Jorn us to the natiOOWide&#13;
?et, th~s enabling an almCII&#13;
1mmed1ate check on such things&#13;
as _weat~er, stolen cars and&#13;
reg_1stration numbers on stol&#13;
articles. en&#13;
The largest problem 0&#13;
campus has been Wll'eported&#13;
theft - of things from ~&#13;
s!-t"uction tools to no parking&#13;
signs. There is seldom am&#13;
trouble with students except fo~&#13;
the occational one caught&#13;
sneaking into dances. But&#13;
parking tickets are what they&#13;
are most noted for. 57 peoJ1e&#13;
noted this by 1 p.m. Thursda,&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, Barb Scott&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Newscope is an independenl&#13;
student newspaper coiopostd&#13;
by students of the University d.&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside pubiisbed&#13;
weekly except during vacab&lt;C&#13;
periods. Student obtainei •&#13;
vertising funds are the salt&#13;
source of revenue for !he&#13;
operation of Newscope. 6· copies are printed aod&#13;
distributed throughout !ht&#13;
Kenosha and Racine co!D·&#13;
munities as well 85 th&#13;
University. Free copies art&#13;
available upon request&#13;
VAffO"S C':)&#13;
PIZZA!"&#13;
ALSO G-!IO&lt;EN DINN~ :;c,:, .. :' ... .:. . • ;~ ,.111.-12.:• ....&#13;
,t\ND ITAUA"I SAUSAGE OCM3ERS&#13;
5021- 30th AYIIIII K• lfll 157-1191&#13;
Open 6 days o week from 4 p.m., closed /.+Of'days &#13;
f)llor'S N:;ay evening about&#13;
OIl Wedn NewSCope reporter&#13;
.-. p,,,,., hardt interrupted&#13;
..... Bore f'old's game ':":, .. 10 Morgan I .&#13;
11"""'. Y to ask for an m-&#13;
; ()Sln~o hlues artist was to&#13;
""~'. less than an hour --wIll,n .&#13;
,,_.~~a crowd of about 350 in&#13;
..... Case Field House.&#13;
IlJClne id h _ Morganfield SBI e&#13;
»r be haPPY to talk to the&#13;
o«Pd right after the hand&#13;
~~ed. The atmosphere&#13;
... rei ed and informal. The&#13;
... ,ax nowed from the first&#13;
~~ to an informal con-&#13;
~':, among the other band&#13;
~bers. McKinley&#13;
,e f',old and Bob Bor- IIorjan '&#13;
~i followSis an interview&#13;
fllh Muddy Waters.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
_po: Is it true that the&#13;
1116"'''' with you printed in&#13;
.... , Slone (September 16,&#13;
11'1' was two years old? .&#13;
lIIldJ' Walers: Yea, that m- .&#13;
_ was done right when I&#13;
"out ofthe hospital, I believe.&#13;
Howwould you gauge your&#13;
",055 today? Do ynu judge it&#13;
laOOC"Iiy?&#13;
lIIIdy Waters: Well, that's a&#13;
lid quesUon, hut today I'll&#13;
'l"'k the truth. I've played fnr&#13;
.. money for so many people&#13;
• my lifetime . . . now I'm&#13;
,amg old, Ineed the finances.&#13;
Illed that money in the bank.&#13;
: Howlong do you plan on&#13;
lIIym'!&#13;
.... y: I'm gonna go full steam&#13;
• blg as I can. After that I'll&#13;
"'''ldown. Butlong as I can go&#13;
l1li steam, I'm on my way, ya&#13;
....&#13;
: I'd like to ask you about&#13;
...... , You have a white harp&#13;
pal" in your group. You&#13;
OIIidn'tsay the hlues is a black&#13;
.,. wouldyou!&#13;
.... y: Naw, I've never said&#13;
.. in one of my interviews.&#13;
• blacks feel the blues and&#13;
lIoyblues. There's one thing I&#13;
always tell e.verybody I have an&#13;
Interview WIth, that the white&#13;
can play Just as good as&#13;
anybody in the blues, but the&#13;
one thing they lack is the vocals&#13;
That's down the blues line"&#13;
Otherwise they can play t~&#13;
blues as good as anyone else.&#13;
NS: Can you tell the difference&#13;
listening to a recrod whether&#13;
it's a black or a white artist?&#13;
Muddy: Sure I can teII the&#13;
NS: Who do you respect amon&#13;
the people in Your field' g&#13;
Muddy: I got a heck of ~ lot of&#13;
:;:sepct for a lot 01 the boys out&#13;
re ya know, if YOU're speakin'&#13;
of the old people in the field like&#13;
me. You got some good comln'&#13;
up ~ellas, White and black. You&#13;
can t leave out Paul Butterfield&#13;
You don'tleave out Junior We~&#13;
and BUddy Guy, all those&#13;
people.&#13;
L&#13;
en&#13;
"&#13;
"&#13;
'"n&#13;
o&#13;
&lt;&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
en&#13;
difference.&#13;
NS: How about playing a guitar&#13;
or harp?&#13;
Muddy: Yea, I can tell the&#13;
difference there, too. Especially&#13;
if they're playin' the same type&#13;
of blues we're playin'. It seems&#13;
like the whites put a little bit&#13;
more into it than the black&#13;
people, like notes. That takes&#13;
out a little of the feelin'.&#13;
NS: Do you think that you could&#13;
label 'an age of blues' or a&#13;
decade when the best of the&#13;
blues was played?&#13;
Muddy: When I was in&#13;
Mississippi, and wets sitlin' on&#13;
the Coca-Cola boxes pickin' the&#13;
guitar and blowin' a jazz horn.&#13;
That was anywhere from '31 on&#13;
up to the '40's.&#13;
NS: Is there any difference&#13;
Arn..e-r Lc...a.n&#13;
~ E.ct.""'-t&gt;.-....&amp;. __ WHEnS&#13;
• «(,d1J&#13;
RaCinG WHeeLS '\.'~.S:'l&#13;
~ II U!.~!~·I·............~~~,&#13;
Mike Davis Speed City&#13;
4807 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA, WiSCONSIN&#13;
GRAND OPENING&#13;
October first, second &amp; third&#13;
Your&#13;
Choice&#13;
HotDog&#13;
or&#13;
Corn Dog&#13;
or&#13;
Cheese Dog&#13;
and '&#13;
The Un cola&#13;
15t&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
on 22nd A avenue at 44th street in Kenosha&#13;
.Across from Holy Rosary&#13;
between the bl_ you lib ed&#13;
down there and the blues you&#13;
played m Oucago'&#13;
Muddy: f played the same blues&#13;
bere as I dJd at home&#13;
NS: Where do you tIunIt the&#13;
connection lies bet'N'tal ) our&#13;
bl.ues and let: s say Diuy&#13;
Glllespe's jazz, or P4u1 Butterfield's&#13;
blues and Olarhe&#13;
Bird's jan"&#13;
Mudd): Well, that questlOll IS&#13;
too hard for me to anav.er I&#13;
don't know what the dJfrOftl&gt;&lt;:e&#13;
would be or the conned"OIl&#13;
because I feel that way bef~&#13;
my time the blues was the root&#13;
of all of tJus that has gott""&#13;
started&#13;
N: So you being mvolved&#13;
dJrectIy in th,s would gl\&#13;
creedance to the fact that ).,1&#13;
and everytlung eI5e ,"\'oh the&#13;
blues&#13;
Muddy: Ifeel like that, yea&#13;
I\'S: Do )'OU tIunIt that performing&#13;
the blues WiU ev r&#13;
haclt to the early SlXlies. liJce&#13;
when you could go cto.." to&#13;
Cbicago to the Plug ,',cltel or&#13;
the Unicorn, all small clubs1&#13;
Muddy: It will probably go bac:l&lt;&#13;
to the clubs, 1 leellike .1 ,,'III go&#13;
haclt to the clubs We dIS some&#13;
clubs and it was good, 'cause It&#13;
Muddy Waters&#13;
was majjed packed and&#13;
everybody's up on thelJ' feet&#13;
givin' lIS some good dteu to&#13;
ahead. I'm defimtely a club&#13;
man, 'cause Ithulk m I small&#13;
club you can bear me better.&#13;
N : The money's got to be a lot&#13;
different between the clubs and&#13;
the big halls&#13;
Mudd : The mOlley can depe&gt;d&#13;
on the club. liJce • lISter Kell 's&#13;
or a small club. The best blues&#13;
club thougb was called B&#13;
John's up on Well , but&#13;
the)' "ent OUl 01 buaul and&#13;
they tore the place down. Th"" man,&#13;
it was Mother Blues then" ba&#13;
"ent to the Plug.·1 eI The)'&#13;
or&#13;
If&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesda and Thur da&#13;
I&#13;
~m,-4p,m,&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
. (5 a glass&#13;
-e: and&#13;
U a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGH AYS 1-9' AND so&#13;
open 9 a,m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Avallablt for Fllt,rAHy 01 Sorority parties&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISER_.S _&#13;
, ·ote: ~ nesday evening about&#13;
~ed Newscope reporter&#13;
p.rn., hardt interrupted&#13;
. ~o~c Iorganfield's g~e&#13;
lll e) to ask ror an m-&#13;
,J ~ . ;e blues artist was to&#13;
~· in Jess than an ho~r&#13;
crowd of about 350 m a ease Field House.&#13;
Ractne 'd h !.lorganfield sa1 e&#13;
r. be hllPPY to talk to the&#13;
r right after the hand&#13;
riru' bed. The atmosphere&#13;
rela~ed and informal. ~he&#13;
;ie',\' nowed from the first&#13;
• 5 to an informal contloo&#13;
among the other band&#13;
mbers, McKinley&#13;
er anfield, and Bob Bor1i&#13;
follows is an interview&#13;
1uddy Waters.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
pt: Is it true ~at t~&#13;
ie't\. with you printed m&#13;
ne (September 16,&#13;
wa two years old?&#13;
1 \\11trs: Yea, that in-&#13;
. • was done right when I&#13;
' of the hospital, I believe.&#13;
How would you gauge your&#13;
today? Do you judge it&#13;
'ally~&#13;
Waters: Well, that's a&#13;
question, but today I'll&#13;
the truth. I've played for&#13;
money for so many people&#13;
y lifetime . . . now I'm&#13;
old, 1 need the finances.&#13;
that money in the bank.&#13;
How Jong do you plan on&#13;
-&#13;
,: I'm gonna go full steam&#13;
as I can. After that I'll&#13;
0011.n. But long as I can go&#13;
am, I'm on my way, ya&#13;
~way~ tell e_verybody I have an&#13;
mterv1ew ~th, that the white&#13;
can play Just as good as&#13;
anybo~ in the blues, but the&#13;
one thing they Jack is the vocal&#13;
That's down the blues lines.&#13;
Otherwise they can play t~&#13;
blues as good as anyone else.&#13;
~S: ~n you tell the difference&#13;
~1~tenmg to a recrod whether&#13;
1l s a black or a white artist?&#13;
Muddy: Sure I can tell the&#13;
difference.&#13;
NS: How about playing a guitar&#13;
or harp?&#13;
Muddy: Yea, I can tell the&#13;
difference there, too. Especially&#13;
if they're playin' the same type&#13;
of blues we're playin'. It seems&#13;
like the whites put a little bit&#13;
more into it than the black&#13;
people, like notes. That takes&#13;
out a little of the reelin'.&#13;
Am..,e...r~&#13;
~ £.ctYA.,prn.e.M&#13;
MIIGNESU,IAACINGwttEll.S&#13;
NS: Who do you respect amon&#13;
the people in your field? g&#13;
Muddy: I got a heck of a lot o&#13;
::epct for a lot or the boy out&#13;
re ya know, if you're peakin'&#13;
of the old people in the field like me. You got some good c . ,&#13;
up fellas, white and black~1n&#13;
can't leave out Paul Butter'r1el~&#13;
You don'tleave outJuniC'lr Welli&#13;
and Buddy Guy, all tho e&#13;
people.&#13;
L&#13;
ll1&#13;
... _&#13;
(A&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&lt;&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
NS: Do you think that you could&#13;
label •an age of blu · or a&#13;
decade when the be t of the&#13;
blues was played?&#13;
Muddy: When I wa in&#13;
Mississippi, and we' ittin'&#13;
the Coca-Cola boxes pickin' the&#13;
guitar and blowin' a jazz horn.&#13;
That was anyv,bere from '31&#13;
up to the '40's.&#13;
· : ls there any differen&#13;
4807 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA ,&#13;
GRAND OPENING&#13;
October first, second &amp; third&#13;
I&#13;
Your&#13;
Choice&#13;
Hot Dog&#13;
or&#13;
Corn Dog&#13;
or&#13;
Cheese Dog and&#13;
TheUncola&#13;
15C&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
on 22nd A avenue at 44th street in Kenosha&#13;
. Across from Holy Rosary&#13;
(1)&#13;
u&#13;
0&#13;
-C&#13;
u&#13;
'-&#13;
:::&gt;&#13;
0&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
.m.&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
a r r&#13;
french frie&#13;
p alad&#13;
.1&#13;
ic&#13;
or&#13;
The Br&#13;
'Tht Brat is u/hn-t its at'&#13;
ORTH EST COR ER OF HIGH AYS 1-94 A O 50&#13;
ope 9 a.m.- 12 p.m.&#13;
AVlllablt for flltunll or sororlly p11t&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERT SERS &#13;
Pagt&gt;-I NI::WS(;QPE Seplember27,1971&#13;
****************&#13;
JIll! 11.ew ,Vogue Jlteuler&#13;
The Gateway To Harbor West&#13;
1820- 52ndStreet, Kenosha&#13;
THE NEW VOGUE THEATER is attempting&#13;
to bring to Kenoshaa new concept&#13;
in the world of films by presenting a wide&#13;
range of movies produced primarily outside&#13;
of the Hollywood studio. Our long range&#13;
schedule calls for classic, foreign, underground&#13;
and experimental movies. THE&#13;
NEW VOGUE THEATER will be open&#13;
every Friday, Saturday and Sunday night&#13;
offering two complete showings each&#13;
evening, beginning at approximately 7:30&#13;
and 9:45 P.M.&#13;
~&#13;
Grand opening,&#13;
Friday, October 1, Saturday, October 2, and&#13;
Sunday, October 3.&#13;
W.C. Fields Revival&#13;
feature:&#13;
shorts:&#13;
THE BANK DICK&#13;
THE BIG THUMB&#13;
CALIFORNIA BOUND&#13;
CIRCUS SLICKER&#13;
Admission S1.25at the door&#13;
S1.00in advance&#13;
Advance tickets may be purchased at any&#13;
art gallery in Harbor West or at the Student&#13;
Services Office at Carthage College.&#13;
Coming Attraction for October 8, 9 &amp; 10&#13;
feature: AN IMAL FARM&#13;
short: THE ADVENTURES OF A&#13;
NAKED BOY&#13;
****************&#13;
REVOLUTIONARY THEATRE&#13;
DIRECT fROM SAN QUENTINl 41' The Uni~.Of WlSConsin-Parkside&#13;
TBECAGE&#13;
by RICK CLUCHEY&#13;
"STRANGE AND WILD ..• I WOULD GO TO&#13;
PRISON FOR ITS RIGHT TO SAY WHAT IT&#13;
IS SAYING!' -ell'/. a.rn.... N.Y. Tim••&#13;
"HARROWING, FUNNY AND MOCKING.&#13;
IT'S QUITE A PLAY!" -Edwin Newmen. WNBe-TV&#13;
""M STILL REELING FROM ITS IMPACT.&#13;
GRim, TOUGH AND UITERLY ABSORBING."&#13;
-Emof")' Lewis, Th. Record&#13;
Thursday September 30 8:00p.m.&#13;
Kenosha Tremper Aucl;torium&#13;
le.ervec:l Seats '&#13;
Porluide Students $1.00 General Public $2.50&#13;
liclt.t. Avoilabl.: Stwd.", Acti.,.iti•• Offic.&#13;
loam 206, Tall."t Hall&#13;
YES, IT IS NOT&#13;
BILLY JACK Billy Jack&#13;
Tom Laughlin Jean Roberts&#13;
Delores Taylor "&#13;
SCreenplay by Frank and Teresa Christina&#13;
Direction by T. C. Franck&#13;
"Youth instinctively understands the .pre~ent&#13;
environment - the electric dr-ama; It lives&#13;
mythically and in depth. This is the r~ason for the&#13;
great alienation between generatlOn.&#13;
s. Wars,&#13;
revolutions and civil uprisings are m~erfac~s&#13;
within the new environments created by electr-ic&#13;
informational media'." It would seem to me that&#13;
the exploitation of interface probably never entered&#13;
the mind of Marshall Mcluhan when ~e&#13;
wrote this most interpretive phrase 10 The Me~la&#13;
is The Message circa 1967. The viewing of B~lly&#13;
Jack, an interfacial exploitive film, was .upsetting&#13;
in that it coolly insulted McLuhan and many-of the&#13;
new concepts that may be conn?ta~ed&#13;
revolutionary or denotated necessary. This film&#13;
aids in putting back in and on the breakfast .f~od&#13;
box all of the ideals it took so long to un-plasticIze&#13;
and recognize in a purist sense. It has also been&#13;
held over in the Racine-Kenosha area for three&#13;
weeks.&#13;
A Robin Hood hero is placed in an environment&#13;
of evil men, who, in their black-hatted&#13;
ignorance are trying to close down a "Free~om&#13;
School" that is producing fulfilled human beings&#13;
at no cost to The individual. While the concept of&#13;
having a school of this kind is beyond reproach it is&#13;
certainly questionable that the town folk would&#13;
ban the members of the place to enter their city&#13;
because they were "hippy freaks", making it&#13;
necessary for the violent war hero turned nonviolent,&#13;
green beret turned non-green beret to&#13;
battle half of the town in a none to non-violent&#13;
demonstration of green beret learned Hapkido&#13;
Karate. At this point we can see the aging side of&#13;
the interface, violence for violence sake, filmed as&#13;
a pleasurable sequence, not as a thought&#13;
provoking scene that would be persuasive in&#13;
another way_&#13;
We meet crazy Bernard in an earlier episode&#13;
of the film. His father wants him to shoot wild&#13;
horses for glue, but he is unable to. Now, I am not&#13;
sure if the director just ran out of conflict or&#13;
characters to use, but we suddenly find this&#13;
init8ally likeable fellow who is sensible enough not&#13;
to kill horses with his father pouring flour over one&#13;
or two of the Indian children who live at the school,&#13;
after which he rapes the directress. She looks&#13;
her assailant, and with the same fervor th lJpat&#13;
vows free love she exclaims, '1I'1I see you inat.she&#13;
for the rest of your life!" priSon&#13;
His final action is the killing-of Martin .&#13;
unassuming Indian boy who has been ac~a qllJet&#13;
balling the town deputy's daughter. From t~&#13;
of the film Martin is pushed, Punched, kicked&#13;
eventually mangled by four bullets in the hea~d&#13;
could not help but feel sorry for him' firsi/&#13;
because he was tortured. so; secondly a~d y&#13;
. ta b .hi uff . ,more impor n~l ~ause IS s ermg was played u&#13;
as less significant than the action taken in':&#13;
name. ... more. interface. Situations that let the&#13;
negative and positive SIde of an issue holdan equa}&#13;
position.&#13;
The film is laced with American [neli&#13;
sp~ritua!ism . and the now popular mys~&#13;
existential Will over reason, Which.may explain&#13;
some of the scenes where the attacking of anotbe&#13;
individual w~s mor~ important then the hwna~&#13;
factor of mte~actlOn. Ou~ hero attacking&#13;
desperately at his oponent, his face in a kindof&#13;
spastic turmoil, is finally diminished, in the light&#13;
of empirical ~bservation ~s he finally gives up .. ,&#13;
seeing two Sides of the interface coin.&#13;
He is eventually forced to avenge the life 01&#13;
poor Martin and stands an entire army of stale&#13;
troopers. He holds up in a church as thoughem.&#13;
battled at the Alamo; true to the Robin Hood&#13;
image even to the point where he is talked oul01&#13;
dying alone by his persuasive rapee, Jean.&#13;
While the film is a commercial successit is not&#13;
a very good cultural document but it had some&#13;
retrieving qualities in that it contained a coupleof&#13;
interesting improvisational comedy scenes that&#13;
made visual some of those great sitll8tiooa1&#13;
commentaries similar to those put out by Firesign&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Acting on the part of Delores Taylor was in·&#13;
triguing, in that she fits the definition Udifferent",&#13;
She is not a beauty in terms of Raquel Welch, but&#13;
she has a quiet strength that reflects more of&#13;
reality than the pseudo plastic image of the sex&#13;
queen. This is a woman I would enjoy seeingin a&#13;
role of more difficulty and demand.&#13;
This film probably did not have a very large&#13;
budget but we have seen amateur films lhat have&#13;
minute budgets that are much closer to brllliance&#13;
than this one. We should expect more.&#13;
WilliamSOr......&#13;
ALADDI&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
RaciCle&#13;
Your best music buys are at&#13;
Bidingers House&#13;
of Music&#13;
in Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Page -I :\EWS('OPE september2i, 1971&#13;
****************&#13;
he 1flew 1 ague 2 heuler&#13;
The Gateway To Harbor West&#13;
1820 - 52nd Street, Kenosha&#13;
THE NEW VOGUE THEATER is attempting&#13;
to bring to Kenosha a new concept&#13;
in the world of films by presenting a wide&#13;
range of movies produced primarily outside&#13;
of the Hollywood studio. Our long range&#13;
schedule calls for classic, foreign, underground&#13;
and experimenta l movies. T HE&#13;
NEW VOGUE THEATER will be open&#13;
every Friday, Saturday and Sunday night&#13;
offering two complete showings each&#13;
evening, beginning at approximately 7: 30&#13;
and 9: 45 P.M.&#13;
Grand Opening,&#13;
riday, October 1, Saturday, October 2, and&#13;
unday, October 3.&#13;
w.c. Fields Revival&#13;
feature:&#13;
shorts:&#13;
THE BANK DICK&#13;
THE BIG THUM B&#13;
CALIFORNIA BOUND&#13;
CIRCUS SLICKER&#13;
Admission S1.25 at the door&#13;
Sl.00 in advance&#13;
Advance tickets may be purchased at any&#13;
art gallery in Harbor West or at the Student&#13;
Services Office at Carthage College.&#13;
Coming Attraction for October a, 9 &amp; 10&#13;
feature: ANIMAL FARM&#13;
short: THE ADVENTURES OF A&#13;
NAKED BOY&#13;
****************&#13;
REVOLUTIONARY THEATRE&#13;
DIRECT fROM SAN QUENTINI&#13;
i.JJr The University of Wisconsin-Parkside -,, preae nh ...&#13;
THE CAGE&#13;
by RICK CLUCHEY&#13;
"STRANGE AND WILD ... I WOULD GO TO&#13;
PRISON FOR ITS RIGHT TO SAY WHAT IT&#13;
IS SAYING," - Clive Barnes, N.Y. Timn&#13;
"HARROWING, FUNNY AND MOCKING. IT'S QUITE A PLAY!" -Edwin Newman. WNBC-TV&#13;
" l'M STILL REELING FROM ITS IMPACT. GRlm, TOUGH AND UTTERLY ABSORB- ING.'' -Emory L-••. The Record&#13;
thuraday September 30 8:00p.m.&#13;
ICenoaho Tremper Aucfitorium&#13;
R•1erv•d Seots&#13;
Porliside Students S1.00 General Public S2.50&#13;
Ticke t• Availa'-le : Student Activitiea Office&#13;
l oo"' 206, Ta llent Holl&#13;
YES,ITIS NO T&#13;
BILLY JACK Billy Jack&#13;
Tom Laughlin Jean Roberts&#13;
Delore Taylor . . Screenplay by Frank and Teresa Christina&#13;
Direction by T. C. Franck " Youth instinctively understands the _pre~ent&#13;
environment - the electric drama; it hves&#13;
mythically and in depth. This is the r~ason for the&#13;
great alienation between generation_s. Wars,&#13;
revolutions and civil uprisings are m;erfac~s&#13;
within the new environments created by electric&#13;
informational media'." It would seem to me that&#13;
the exploitation of interface probably never entered&#13;
the mind of Marshall Mclu~an when ~e&#13;
wrote this most interpretive phrase m The M~1a&#13;
i The Message circa 1967. The viewing of B!IIY&#13;
Jack, an interfacial exploitive film, was upsetting&#13;
in that it coolly insulted McLuhan and many of the&#13;
new concepts that may be conn?ta~ed&#13;
revolutionary or denotated necessary. This film&#13;
aids in putting back in and on the breakfast _f~od&#13;
box all of the ideals it took so long to un-plastJc1ze&#13;
and recognize in a purist sense. It has also been&#13;
held over in the Racine-Kenosha area for three&#13;
weeks.&#13;
A Robin Hood hero is placed in an environment&#13;
of evil men, who, in their black-hatted&#13;
ignorance are trying to close down a "Freedom&#13;
School" that is producing fulfilled human beings&#13;
at no cost to 'the individual. While the concept of&#13;
having a school of this kind is beyond reproach it is&#13;
certainly questionable that the town folk would&#13;
ban the members of the place to enter their city&#13;
because they were "hippy freaks", making it&#13;
necessary for the violent war hero turned nonviolent,&#13;
green beret turned non-green beret to&#13;
battle half of the town in a none to non-violent&#13;
demonstration of green beret learned Hapkido&#13;
Karate. At this point we can see the aging side of&#13;
the interface, violence for violence sake, filmed as&#13;
a pleasurable sequence, not as a thought&#13;
provoking scene that would be persuasive in&#13;
another way.&#13;
We meet crazy Bernard in an earlier episode&#13;
of the film. His father wants him to shoot wild&#13;
horses for glue, but he is unable to. Now, I am not&#13;
sure if the director just ran out of conflict or&#13;
characters to use, but we suddenly find this&#13;
initSally likeable fellow who is sensible enough not&#13;
to kill horses with his father pouring flour over one&#13;
or two of the Indian children who live at the school,&#13;
after which he rapes the directress. She looks&#13;
her assailant, and with the same fervor lb llpat&#13;
vows free love she exclaims, "I'll see you in at _she&#13;
for the rest of your life!" Pr1SOn&#13;
His final action is the killing of Martin .&#13;
unassuming Indian boy: who has been ac~ a QUiet&#13;
balling the town deputy's daughter. From t~ of&#13;
of the film Martin is pushed, punched, kickeds art&#13;
eventually mangled by four bullets in the heaid&#13;
could not help but feel sorry for him· firsu 1&#13;
because he was tortured so; secondly a~d rn '&#13;
importan~, b~ause his suffering was played ore&#13;
as less s1gmflca~t than the. action taken i~&#13;
name . .. more interface. Situations that let the&#13;
neg~~ve and positive side of an issue hold an equa1&#13;
pos1t10n.&#13;
The film is laced with American Indi&#13;
spiritualism and the now popular mys~n&#13;
existential will over reason, which may explai~&#13;
some of the scenes where the attacking of another&#13;
individual w?s mor~ important then the human&#13;
factor of mte~act1on. Our hero attacking&#13;
desperately at his oponent, his face in a kind of&#13;
spastic turmoil, is finally diminished, in the light&#13;
of empirical observation as he finally gives up ..&#13;
seeing two sides of the interface coin. ·&#13;
He is eventually forced to avenge the life of&#13;
poor Martin and stands an entire army of state&#13;
troopers. He holds up in a church as though emba~tled&#13;
at the Alamo; true to the Robin Hood&#13;
image even to the point where he is talked out of&#13;
dying alone by his persuasive rapee, Jean.&#13;
While the film is a commercial success it is not&#13;
a very good cultural document but it had some&#13;
retr\eving qualities in that it contained a couple of&#13;
interesting improvisational comedy scenes that&#13;
made visual some of those great situational&#13;
commentaries similar to those put out by Firesign&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Acting on the part of Delores Taylor was in·&#13;
triguing, in that she fits the definition "different".&#13;
She is not a beauty in terms of Raquel Welch, but&#13;
she has a quiet strength that reflects more of&#13;
reality than the pseudo plastic image of the sex&#13;
queen. This is a woman I would enjoy seeing in a&#13;
role of more difficulty and demand.&#13;
This film probably did not have a very large&#13;
budget but we have seen amateur films that have&#13;
minute budgets that are much closer to brilliance&#13;
than this one. We should expect more.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Your best music buys are at&#13;
Bidingers House&#13;
of Music&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
l&#13;
ALADDI&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Rocioe&#13;
in Downtown Kenosha&#13;
~ IJf/ The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
-,;-" PRESENTS .. .. IN CONCERT&#13;
JOHN DENVER&#13;
'TA KE ME HOME COUN TR Y ROADS'&#13;
SAT. OCT. 2 8:00 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA TREMP ER AUD.&#13;
RES. SEAT TICKETS $3-50&#13;
AVAILABLE:&#13;
Student Activities Office &#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
. The Female Eunuch&#13;
Title. . Germaine Greer&#13;
AUthl~r·her· McGraw-Hili Book pub IS .&#13;
pany ($6.95)&#13;
com weeks ago I wrote a disap-&#13;
~?g review on Sexual Politics by&#13;
polntm . d.&#13;
Millett. The review was isap-&#13;
/(ale . di t t·&#13;
• 'ntf beCause or 10 n-ee proper Ion&#13;
1"'1011,... ·11 t d· th fact that Ml et was a rsapto.&#13;
Ie g writer; her style lacked&#13;
po,n In . Iiti d h idity and emotive qua lies, an ~r&#13;
lue enls concerned conundrums: In&#13;
:;;::Imallhoughher analysis may havesharp&#13;
her pen was dull.&#13;
beeI'l • ~ Greer is a 32 years old&#13;
Get~i~l~(with a PQ.D. mind you) ~nd&#13;
AUStraremale Eunuch is her fir-st&#13;
Tb;liShed book. In addition to this 350&#13;
Pu rreatise she has also written ar- :rfor 0' and recently for Esquire.&#13;
eS ites in a lucid, emotive style and&#13;
:: foesn't concern herself. with the&#13;
th opological-psychologlcal comanr&#13;
d·MiG p1exilieslhat Millett oes. ss reer&#13;
. ncerned with the actual dynamiCS&#13;
~ ~ved iD society's attitudes toward&#13;
mv en her propositions are presented&#13;
~cl~arIY, and she demonstratesher&#13;
qw elusions by utilizing apt and ObVIOUS&#13;
:teffijXlrary and historical example,s,&#13;
Men are not the enemy because, In&#13;
the case or the systematic de:gr~d~tion&#13;
01 womenby society, the vlchmlzers&#13;
are also the victims. If men hate&#13;
women because they are bitches, it is&#13;
Se-pt~mber2i. 19i1 the men who made them bitches. She&#13;
constantly underlines the circular&#13;
character or the "sex war", and states&#13;
that women cannot be liberated unless&#13;
me.n are also, until the present societal&#13;
athtu?es .concerning the ramily, sex,&#13;
Promtscuity, love and marriage are&#13;
seen for what they are, rnlsan.&#13;
turing or society and not wasung time&#13;
with anthropological theories. Even ir&#13;
matriarchy did precede matriarchy It&#13;
wouldn't change the present reality.&#13;
The woman must regain. perhaps&#13;
discover for the first ume. her real sell,&#13;
the self that has been condilloned OUIof&#13;
her since she was born tfeminity IS noL&#13;
assume the exual Jmtlatl\(" \loh\ dot&#13;
he have ·10 withstand .11 of th&#13;
pressurej Women must a ume&#13;
respon iblhty for themsetve -. a, Greer&#13;
says. ··UIe cunt must com mto II&#13;
own" The sexes musl fl. above th "Ir&#13;
conventional polarity, each mdividual&#13;
must develop a an mW\'ldual and&#13;
people mu t realize thaI so called&#13;
female and male traits are no mere&#13;
than arburarv convenuons. that If&#13;
there are any irea \\ e are all fr ak&#13;
The F.-mal" Eunuch I an un&#13;
pressive e a). mort." rmpres IU'&#13;
beC3USf! It doesn't overwbclm IMlt.&gt; d&#13;
it assimilates you Be Ide lund pro 1,.'&#13;
The F'ema le Eunuch I. hbttral1~&#13;
seasoned \\ uh quotb from 111torH,'al&#13;
figures ranglOg from J S 'hll to&#13;
Wilham Blake, from Valene lan~ 10&#13;
Mar) \...·011tonecraft, The \\orllttr IS not&#13;
loath to explam Ibmgs 10graphll' lerl11&#13;
. fore. ample. 'OA chloral or~a In "llh&#13;
a fuJI cunl 15 nI er (han 3 elnoral&#13;
orgasm With an empt) one" a~ far a. I&#13;
can tell, at tea f ,. U' an lOionnatl\ l"&#13;
ess3). II" • good book&#13;
"The Ume has rome \\ hen S()ltlt&#13;
women are read) to II I(.on, and (ht Ir&#13;
number I gro\\tng. H I tlrn(" 31"0 for&#13;
these \\omen 10 peak. ho\\("\er un&#13;
cerulinly. ho\\e\"er haltlngl)'" and for&#13;
th \\orJd to Ii ten."&#13;
What Will you do""&#13;
&lt;:OUrl~S) of lht Kook 'I..rt, Ii!! • .:i91h&#13;
Street. J\.fflo!)ha.&#13;
thromorphic. ThOUgh many of her&#13;
suggested alternatives to the present&#13;
norm may seem radical to some, her&#13;
lucid style cushions the effect" the most&#13;
radical alternatives seem paJata~le&#13;
because she presents both sides of the&#13;
sex war, and il will be both sides that&#13;
benefit by the restructuring of social&#13;
norms.&#13;
The misanthromorphic character of&#13;
contemporary sopal values cannot be&#13;
isolated from the family. motherhood.&#13;
education, the bringing up of children.&#13;
It makes little sense to argue over&#13;
whether matriarchy preceded&#13;
patriarchy (as Millette does) when the&#13;
real problem is right in fronl of you, the&#13;
real problem concerns the restruc.&#13;
necessarily ° temalel. Boy and Girl&#13;
children are victims or their mother's&#13;
frustration, she is a bitch to her&#13;
husband because she resents hi&#13;
comparalive rreedom, she doe n't&#13;
know how to escape her prison-home&#13;
because she w.as never allowed to&#13;
develop a questioning attitude toward&#13;
the problems or lire. she doesn't kno\\&#13;
what to do. she has been castrated he&#13;
has never lived.&#13;
Men have the responsibility for&#13;
bringing home the hashbop. for&#13;
presenting a "masculine" image. ror&#13;
initiating sex. Evidence points to lhe&#13;
fact that mep don't want aU of the&#13;
responsibility on their shoulders alone.&#13;
Nosirreee, why does Ole man have to&#13;
----Inside rTheCage'-----.,&#13;
The four harrowing days at The Dime ~eer!&#13;
New York's Attica bring into&#13;
,.un perspective the realiti~s of&#13;
aD inhumane and anxIOus&#13;
cmditioncommon' to many of&#13;
this country'spenal institutions.&#13;
Withforty men dead and a&#13;
growing determina tion to in·&#13;
formon the part of groups in&#13;
and out of these institutions no&#13;
bettertime than now exists to&#13;
have "The Cage" here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
On Sep!. 30 members of The&#13;
Cage Production Company, all&#13;
San Quentinparolees, will visit&#13;
IJIYchology,sociology and other&#13;
related courses to ra p on their&#13;
experiences in prisl:m.&#13;
~eslions wili be appreciated.&#13;
At 8:00 p,m. that same evening&#13;
aClor·playwright Rick&#13;
Ouchey's The Cage will be&#13;
!l"esenled at the Tremper High&#13;
School'sauditorium. Advance&#13;
•tickets are now on sale at&#13;
Student Affairs - Students&#13;
$1.00, General $2.50.&#13;
The play is allegorical in&#13;
nature and was the first written&#13;
by an inmate to be performed&#13;
behind prison walls. This year it&#13;
has toured over 40 campuses&#13;
including many Wiscor.sin&#13;
schools. bringing to Ihem ils&#13;
shocking and surreal portrayal&#13;
of man's confinement by the&#13;
very society that brings about&#13;
many of the situational conditions&#13;
inherent in the criminal&#13;
act.&#13;
Following the presentation&#13;
the actors will again put on the&#13;
mask of consultant and hold&#13;
another talk session concerning&#13;
their experiences and gladly&#13;
answer questions raised by the&#13;
audience.&#13;
From San Quentin to New&#13;
York the reviews have been&#13;
superlative, making Tuesday&#13;
evening's visilto Tremper High&#13;
a must for those who appreciate&#13;
good drama and for those who&#13;
would like to gain a greater&#13;
insighl into what really happen&#13;
behind bars.&#13;
LUNCHEON l&gt;PECIAL&#13;
Mon_Fli&#13;
All YOU can eat&#13;
S·gg&#13;
First 100z. beer&#13;
$.01 per oz.&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
All 10 oz mUls of bee.&#13;
a enee an ount.&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN KE""OSHA&#13;
....-1 NEED HELP!!!&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TIME&#13;
S25 Guarenleed for every 100 envelopes&#13;
you sluff&#13;
All poslage prepaid&#13;
send sramped, self-addressed envelope&#13;
plus Sl for registration and hand_&#13;
ling 10&#13;
ALLEN KING CORPORATION&#13;
P.O. BOX 6525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Bought and sold&#13;
(we buy and sell)&#13;
'A little out of the way,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
310 Green 8.ly Road. Kenosh •• WisconSin&#13;
l2 Block South of Kenosha, Rac,ne: Count"lllOt&#13;
tiPump&#13;
f6y $ave&#13;
MCFarland. Aulo sales&#13;
7904 WASH IN GTON&#13;
AVENUE RACINE.&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
1700 Sheridan R~.&#13;
KENOSHA,WISCONSIN&#13;
are you offended by nudity?&#13;
i. not, stop in.&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVEl&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W·20W·~W SOc per quart&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W·20W·~W 34(;per quart&#13;
15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
SPECIAL 47C per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on 011 Fillers.&#13;
Air Fillers. Tune Up Kits. Spark Plugs&#13;
All ileITISSublecllo 4 Per Cent Sal.s Tax&#13;
The Adult Bookstore .&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown RaCine&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
. The Female Eunuch&#13;
ntJe .. Germaine Greer&#13;
Auth1~\er· McGraw-Hill Book pub I '&#13;
-pany ($6.95) .,..,,.. weeks ago I wrote a disapTW?""&#13;
review on Sexual Politics by lllll•'b . d' • tillelt. The review was 1sapK~te&#13;
,.., b""ause or in direct proportion 10th&#13;
the 'b ract ""' that M ill e tt was d. a isap10.&#13;
t·ng writer; her style lacked polO I • )"t" d h idity and emotive qua i ies, an ~r )UC ents concerned conundrums; m um 1 . h rt although her ana ys1s may ave&#13;
sharp her pen was dull. n~ Greer is a 32 years old Gerrn_ain (with a Ph.D. mind you) and&#13;
traf:male Eunuch is her first 111bJished oook. In addition to this 350&#13;
?l treatise she has also written arplr&#13;
for Oz and recently for Esquire.&#13;
UC e rrites in a lucid, emotive style and&#13;
doe n't concern herself_ with the&#13;
antbropological-psycholog1~al compl&#13;
:alies that Millett does. Miss Gr~er&#13;
ncerned with the actual dynamics&#13;
~\'ed in society's attitudes toward&#13;
uw en her propositions are presented&#13;
: c]~arly, and she demonstrates_ her&#13;
C1l1 clusions by utilizing apt and obvious&#13;
:temporary and historical exampl~.&#13;
~en are not the enemy because, m · case o( the systematic d~gr~d~tion&#13;
of v.omen by society, the v1ct1m1zers&#13;
ar also the victims. If men hate&#13;
men because they are bitches, it is&#13;
the men who made them bitches. he&#13;
constantly underlines the circular&#13;
character of the "sex war", and tat es&#13;
that women cannot be liberated uni&#13;
me_n are aJso, until the present ocietal&#13;
attitu~es _concerning the family, sex.&#13;
promiscuity, love and marriage are&#13;
seen for what they are. misanthr~morphic.&#13;
Though many of her&#13;
suggested alternative to the pre ent&#13;
norm may seem radical to some, her&#13;
lucid style cushions the effect, the mo t&#13;
radical alternatives seem palatable&#13;
because she presents both sides of the&#13;
sex war, and it will be both ides that&#13;
benefit by the restructuring of social&#13;
norms.&#13;
The misanthromorphic character of&#13;
contemporary sopal values cannot be&#13;
isolated from the family, motherhood,&#13;
education, the bringing up of children.&#13;
It makes little sense to argue over&#13;
whether matriarchy preceded&#13;
patriarchy (as Millette does) when the&#13;
real problem is right in front of you, the&#13;
real problem concerns the restruc-&#13;
----Inside rThe Cage'----&#13;
The four harrowing days at&#13;
·ev. York's Attica bring into&#13;
grim perspective the realiti~s of&#13;
an inhumane and anxious&#13;
condition common· to many of&#13;
thi cowitry's penal institutions.&#13;
With forty men dead and a&#13;
gro ·ng determination to inform&#13;
on the part of groups in&#13;
and out of these institutions no&#13;
tter lime than now exists to&#13;
hne "The Cage" here at&#13;
Park ide.&#13;
On Sept. 30 members of The&#13;
Cage Production Company, all&#13;
n Quentin parolees, will visit&#13;
i-Ychology, sociology and other&#13;
related courses to rap on their&#13;
experiences in prison.&#13;
tlons will be appreciated.&#13;
8:00 p.m. that same evening&#13;
ctor-playwright Rick&#13;
au hey's The Cage will be&#13;
ll' nted at the Tremper High&#13;
hool's auditorium. Advance&#13;
, tickets are now on sale at&#13;
Student Affairs - Students&#13;
$1.00, GeneraJ $2.50.&#13;
The play is allegorical in&#13;
nature and was the first written&#13;
by an inmate to be performed&#13;
behind prison walls. This year it&#13;
has toured over 40 campuses&#13;
1700 Sheridan Rcj.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
including many Wi cor.. in&#13;
school , bringing to them it&#13;
shocking and urreal portrayal&#13;
of man's confinement by the ·&#13;
very society that bring about ,&#13;
many of the ituational conditions&#13;
inherent in the cnminal&#13;
act.&#13;
Following the presentation&#13;
the actors will again put on th&#13;
ma k of con ultant and hold&#13;
another talk se ion concerning&#13;
their experience and gladly&#13;
answer question raised b)' th '&#13;
audience.&#13;
From an u nttn to • · ·&#13;
York the re\ie\\ hai·e been&#13;
superlative, making Tue da)&#13;
evening's \'i it to Tremper High&#13;
a must for those who appreciate&#13;
good drama and for th . e who&#13;
would like to gain a greater&#13;
insight into what really happ n&#13;
behind bars.&#13;
William Sor n · n&#13;
sought and sold&#13;
(We buy and sell)&#13;
'A little out of the way,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
MCfarlands Auto sales&#13;
7904 WASHINGTON&#13;
AVENUE RACI E.&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
are you offended by nudity?&#13;
ii not, stop in.&#13;
C omplete adult merchandise selection of contemPorary&#13;
I&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
I&#13;
IS% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore . 406 Main Street Downtown Racme&#13;
LU&#13;
All ou can eat&#13;
S·H&#13;
IGH&#13;
firs 10oz. 0ee1&#13;
s .Ol p I oz&#13;
OSHA&#13;
.-1 EED HELP.!!&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---P RT Tl E $25 Guarenteed for every 100 envelo e&#13;
you stuff&#13;
All postage prepaid&#13;
send stamped, elf-addressed env lope&#13;
plus Sl for reg strat1on an h ndling&#13;
to&#13;
ALLE Kl G CORPOR TION&#13;
P.O. BOX 6525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PE 15212&#13;
ump&#13;
&amp; $av&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE Fl EST GASOLI&#13;
ANO SAVEi&#13;
ROYAL TRITO&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
lOW • 'ZOW - YJW&#13;
lOW - '10 W · YJW&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE A Tl-FREEZE&#13;
12oz. HEAVY OU Y BRAKE FLUID&#13;
SOc per qu r&#13;
J&lt;lc perquar&#13;
Sl.39per9alloo&#13;
A7c per c n&#13;
&lt;Ash and Carry Prices on OIi FIiters.&#13;
Air Fl ers, Tune Up Kits, Spar Plugs&#13;
All I enµ Subject o" Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE &#13;
P.,e' NEWSCOPE ficPfc.lpcr 21 1111 The Buildings of Athletics&#13;
~&#13;
YOU'LL LIKE I~&#13;
WHAT YOU FIND&#13;
and what you hear.&#13;
FM/AM Portable Radio-model 1221.&#13;
only 4%" H. offers 'performance far in excess&#13;
of its size and price. Telescoping FM&#13;
antenna. no drift FM /AFC. slide rule dial&#13;
and vernier tuning. Private-Iisterling earphone&#13;
plus batteries in- S1495 eluded. Only ...&#13;
JOERN NTURA&#13;
PHONE&#13;
654-3559&#13;
61R ,&gt;,1. ~ll1Hl keNO~HA WI~CONSIN&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff .&#13;
Among construction projects&#13;
currently underway on cam~us&#13;
is the building of the facility&#13;
which will centralize athletiC&#13;
,functions on campus. Instead of&#13;
23 different sites for home&#13;
games at various Racme ~d&#13;
Kenosha high schools, we will&#13;
have the one location which will&#13;
include athletic building and&#13;
fields. -&#13;
The building, which will have&#13;
48,000 square feet of floor space,&#13;
housea a 108 x 181 foot gym&#13;
included in which are three fullsize&#13;
42 x 96 foot basketball&#13;
courts. Also in the building is a&#13;
25 yard, eight-lane pool, official&#13;
AA competition size. There ~e&#13;
eight lanes instead of SIX,&#13;
requested by head coach Tom&#13;
Rosandich, to add increased&#13;
flexibility for simultaneous&#13;
laps, instruction an~ diving at&#13;
the 3 foot diving point,&#13;
Additional facilities include&#13;
two handball courts, a large&#13;
exercize room with universal&#13;
gym, combative room for&#13;
practice of judo and karate, a&#13;
conference room-press box&#13;
overlooking the gym, offices,&#13;
Jocker rooms, showers and a coed&#13;
sauna.&#13;
Because of the great diversity&#13;
of the facility it is possible to&#13;
have nine badminton games, six&#13;
volleyball games or six&#13;
basketball courts in operation&#13;
at once. Roll-away bleachers&#13;
covering one of the three&#13;
basketball courts will provide&#13;
seating for 2,500 spectators.&#13;
Roll-away, to allow better&#13;
utilization of space when not in&#13;
use.&#13;
Thanks to the generosity of a&#13;
local citizen, the athletic&#13;
department will nave a little&#13;
more to spend on equipment.&#13;
Mr. Aldo Madrigrano of the 7-&#13;
Up Bottling Company is&#13;
donating not one but two multipurpose&#13;
score boards, located in&#13;
opposite corners of the gymnasium.&#13;
A unique part of the training&#13;
room is a physical fitness&#13;
testing laboratory for&#13;
measuring cardiovascular&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
o&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Athletic Director Tom Rosandich, center, and James G&#13;
of Planning and Construction, right. at the site of the n~ ~1Itra1"&#13;
building. lhIet.&#13;
response oxygen intake, blood&#13;
pressure' and stress analysis.&#13;
When completed the building&#13;
will have the largest enclosed&#13;
area on campus, capable of&#13;
holding 4,500 for special functions.&#13;
The special tartar floor on&#13;
the basketball courts makes&#13;
maintenance easy.&#13;
Mr. Galbraith of Planning&#13;
and Construction estimates that&#13;
~e ~~:X;nc3~ul~i:;te~~e~a~~:&#13;
lots at Hallent Hall. This would&#13;
take 90 Joads of a 50 passenger&#13;
bus. Making a run every ten&#13;
minutes would necessitate 15&#13;
buses, each making six runs.&#13;
Chartering 15 buses for a two&#13;
hour concert could cost quite a&#13;
bit of money - which would be&#13;
added to the cost of the ticket.&#13;
But it is desired not to mess up&#13;
the ecology of the neighborhood&#13;
with parking lots.&#13;
Cost of the athletic bUll .&#13;
construction will be $1.8 ~&#13;
With an additional $376 000&#13;
on fornishing and 'mo SJlenI&#13;
equipmefit, . va bI,&#13;
Included in the albl .&#13;
building program ar. ~'&#13;
athletic fields. A huge '&#13;
bowl will enclose the v::"~&#13;
field, a % mile all-weather&#13;
track and SIX tennis COUrts In&#13;
all 100 acres of land Will' be&#13;
developed for intramural III¢&#13;
intercollegiate sport,&#13;
Seating at the howl Will be&#13;
informal - on the gra... The&#13;
SIdes nse one foot for eachthree&#13;
feet lian in a European.typo&#13;
arrangement.&#13;
The fields, which will CfOt&#13;
$92,000, are expected to be&#13;
completed in late spring,aboot&#13;
the same time as the buiJdiJlI,&#13;
which is now II'.! monthsahead&#13;
of schedule.&#13;
Pre-Law Club Will M••t&#13;
The Parkside Pre-Law Club will hold two organizational meet~&#13;
on Monday, October 4, and Tuesday, October 5. Both meetingswill&#13;
begin at 7:30 p.m. at Greenquist Hall in room D-ll!. Prospective&#13;
members and old members are urged te attend.&#13;
Possible speakers to be brought on campus will be discussed, "&#13;
well as the purpose and the 1971-72 project of the Pre-Law Club.JUDi"&#13;
and senior Pre-Law students will be present to answer any questims.&#13;
Anyone interested but unable to attend may call Tim Prostko a'&#13;
652-4142. (Kenosha) or Becky Ecklund at 554-7160 (Racine).&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
For Sale - '6.J V.W. $275.00. 3509&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha.&#13;
1961·Chev., 6 cvt., auto trens., pwr.&#13;
steering, very gOOd mecn. condo $150&#13;
- call 859·2..12.&#13;
1969 Honda 175cc Scrambler. Ex.&#13;
cond."$&lt;C25.includeS 2 helmets. Call&#13;
Ed, 639--'940.&#13;
1"2 hick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
6:U-U45 or 633·2791.&#13;
1951 Ramb. American. Dependable,&#13;
rustlc, and cheap. 135. 3209 - 28th St.&#13;
1940 Ramb. American. Dependable.&#13;
170. 3209 . 21th St .• KenOSha.&#13;
1970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr., Hardtop,&#13;
V-I, Automatic, power steering,&#13;
634·4606.&#13;
1969 Charger RT - 4CI Mag., 4 sp.,&#13;
mags,seeor call ~..., 6 p.m .• 658-&#13;
36Sot,5110 - 23rd Ave.&#13;
1968 Opel Ka~t, 1966 CorvaJr, Both&#13;
good condo Call Harris, \5-141.2361&#13;
67 Ambassador .. dr. sedan. auto., ~&#13;
cyl. Trans recently overhauled $775.&#13;
Call 553-2345.&#13;
68 Plymouth RoadrWtner 313. Gold&#13;
with Black vinyl top. Ex. condo 5Sot.&#13;
8751.&#13;
1'71 TRAVIL TRAILeR - 15 Ft&#13;
Ught . V..-y easy to tow - Buill In&#13;
Surge brakes - USed only ttlree&#13;
weeks - Must sell . Going to schOol,&#13;
5122 oiSlh St . Ph. 652-3014.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus Camper. Stove,&#13;
refrlg., and SO gal. gas tank., in.&#13;
cluded. First $150.00 takes all. call&#13;
632·55« aft..- 5:30.&#13;
FOR SALE 1967 NORTON 7SOcc&#13;
Notorcycle. engine rebuilt, specl.1&#13;
gearing. Phone 654·1770 - or&#13;
Newscope oHlce. LHve message tor&#13;
Rick Paz..- •.&#13;
1963 Buick For Sale - 4 barrel «:",&#13;
eng. In gOOd condo Autom. on the&#13;
floor. Body fn·gOOdcondo For Sale At&#13;
1250. ALSO&#13;
.. barrel Chev. carb and bottom piece&#13;
tor only $30.00 take it. Call 633-07847&#13;
10 p.m. Racine.&#13;
"Legalize Marijuana" Bumper&#13;
stickers 25c. NIoney goes to ACLu.&#13;
send large self addressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Art Dexter, P.O. 133,&#13;
Union Grove 53182.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling plus the right. Phone 1-&#13;
352-4050_&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
1967Austin-Healey 3000, After 5 p.m.&#13;
539·2407 (Burlington).&#13;
1068 Ford Torino 302-VtI. Low mil.&#13;
Automatic, power steering, Radio,&#13;
Heater, 652-n.45, see at 5234 - 44th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impala Super Sport 327, After&#13;
4:30 p.m., 3022 - 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 R5, 1971, Exc. Cond.&#13;
654·572", Eve.&#13;
650 Triumph T.T. rebuilt engine,&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
heiniets, $100.00 or best oHer. See at&#13;
5723 - 40th Ave.&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs SOme clutch woN&lt;., $250.00.&#13;
634-0871.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3 suitcases, very good condo $25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
·For a Good night's Sleep _&#13;
·Waterbeds. 3701 - 60th street. Can&#13;
.654-9....7.&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us an&#13;
cHer .-Call 654-4862.&#13;
Com. TOUdi Me. A new poetry book&#13;
by ~on SchUlZ and Larry RoaCh.&#13;
Available at all UWP Bookstores.&#13;
•&#13;
~OR SALE - Muskrat fur' jacket,&#13;
size 14. 25. Inches long. New lining.&#13;
SSG.OO.Anita. 652-6754.&#13;
.JUDO UNIFORMS. SIze3and SIIe 4,&#13;
10.00 each. call Kay at 694-6674.&#13;
Q,lcago - casette tape lo trade Jor&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3836.&#13;
PUblic Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Cleek&#13;
ours first high quelity - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Slide Rule $10.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis - Mens, Including poles and&#13;
boots. ~22A5.&#13;
TOIlS"'" 15.00. steam (roll $5.00. Call&#13;
55J.234S.&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set Irons and woods,&#13;
$3.t6 new will sell for 1245.&#13;
Legalize Marliuana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. 50c donation. Be at Student&#13;
Activities Building Wed.&#13;
St..-eo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
amplifier, turntable, 2 speakers.&#13;
Newlng, must sell. $50. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
aROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva. Wis.&#13;
aEWARE OF CAT MAN - He is a&#13;
"(arc&#13;
EngliSh Springer SpanielS, 6 weeks&#13;
old. AKC Good hunting and ·family&#13;
dog. 639·4593.12004 Cedar Creek St .•&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Explore ttle world of ESP whh&#13;
Norman Slater, Apt. by telephone&#13;
only. 6s.c-2375.&#13;
MEN - Your spare time is needed&#13;
by a boy 7 - 17 years old who doesn't&#13;
have a father. Can you provide an&#13;
example of good character and&#13;
citizenShip while shooting pool.&#13;
fiShing, skating, etc.? If SO call Big&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha, Inc. 694-6585.'&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION Introduc1ory Lecture-Tues.&#13;
Sept. 28, 8 p.m., rm 138,&#13;
Kenosha campus; Wed. Sept. 29, 8&#13;
p.m., rm 105, Racine Campus;&#13;
Thurs. Sept. 30, 4 &amp; 8 p.m., rm 100,&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75 - 14 Rim, Real'" end&#13;
Shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 LOg FM Ant. 654-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5. Show tire &amp; rim $1. File&#13;
boxes $1 &amp; $1.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
DiSp.· Cal} 5Jl-7161 aft. 4 p.m.&#13;
2 Bedroom.. House, Parkside area.&#13;
Liv. R., Dining Room ·.comb.,&#13;
Fireplace, over one acre land, '552-&#13;
9012. \&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
wlnemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and- plums; 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Gt&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805 .&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
VOlkswagen - Good condition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-)4,y.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will-share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, :S1-9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from west· Allis5&#13;
days a week, 7:45·..:30. Call.~li&#13;
HELP WANTED -2 Spll'lllhgu/l.&#13;
players work in PizZI H~.PhCI'lt&#13;
551-8906 or stop In and ask tor JDIln&#13;
Attractive girlS over 21. Elm tu1llClll&#13;
and book money. Danelnt l&#13;
Waitress work. If nudfty otrendI&#13;
you, do not apply. ClII 651_.'&#13;
or&#13;
stop at 4426 • SherJdan RoId.&#13;
WANTED - TIM)anr.dlvt, apII'Iminded&#13;
fem.le stuctentl 10 ::&#13;
small apartment with .. RIdJII&#13;
students. Apt. 1 blOCk ~-.-tIlIlI&#13;
campuS. For further """,P"'-"&#13;
write to: Peter Noll, APt·"nnAve.,&#13;
Racine. Wis.&#13;
FREE Kittens: 6 weeki okL:&#13;
trained. Good with chlld'tft. CIII&#13;
and female, assorted ex::; HIll&#13;
Sharon. Ext. 20. Racine&#13;
201. or 634-6215 after 5 p.m. _&#13;
FOR RENT _&#13;
FOR RENT-Mod«DofIkt;':i&#13;
Carpeted and.alr. ~~l fllllf&#13;
per mo. Utillt,es ,nd..--&#13;
at 652-39..5 or 654·7410. _&#13;
For Rent - 1 tJedrOOrn apt. ..-&#13;
633.4990.&#13;
LOST &amp; FOUND ___&#13;
. '" l1l'/I' ~ 'Prescription G1as~' In~&#13;
wedding ring. At T~~tflt t4111.&#13;
cen....::'e::r.::,2n d_t100r_~' -:":=__&#13;
- 5...... '&#13;
FOUND: Sunglas5ts~ .. ~&#13;
Jacket. Contect lost' 2nd f1....&#13;
Information c",tef.&#13;
Tallent Hall. ____&#13;
newscope&#13;
c1assifieds&#13;
are free&#13;
Page&amp; NEWSCOPE sntciubcc 21, ,,11&#13;
YOU'LL LIKE&#13;
WHAT YOU FIND&#13;
..&#13;
and what you hear.&#13;
~- . ' ...&#13;
11111111111111111111111: , 111111~ f;&#13;
FM /AM Portable Radio-model 1221,&#13;
only 4¾" H, offers performance far in excess&#13;
of its size and price. Telescoping FM&#13;
antenna, no drift FM /AFC, slide rule dial&#13;
and vernier tuning. Private-lister,ing earphone&#13;
plus batteries in- s14ss&#13;
eluded. Only ...&#13;
...... WHEELS&#13;
•&#13;
PHONE&#13;
65-C-3559&#13;
For Sale - ·~ v.w. S275.00. 3509&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha.&#13;
1963 Buick For Sale - 4 barrel ~&#13;
eng. In good cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floor. Body in good cond. For Sale At&#13;
S250. ALSO&#13;
4 barrel Chev. carb and bottom piece&#13;
for only $30.00 take It. Call 633-078-' 7 196l•Chev., 6 cyl., auto trans., pwr-.&#13;
steering, very good mech. cond. $150&#13;
- call &amp;59-2412.&#13;
lO p.m. Racine.&#13;
The Buildings of Athletics&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff .&#13;
Among construction proJects&#13;
currently underway on c~~us&#13;
is the building of the fac1h~y&#13;
which will centralize athletic&#13;
,functions on campus. Instead of&#13;
23 different sites fo~ home&#13;
games at various Racine ~d&#13;
Kenosha high schools, ~e w~l&#13;
have the one location which will&#13;
include athletic building and&#13;
fields. . The building, which will have&#13;
48,000 square feet of floor space,&#13;
housea a 108 x 181 foot gym&#13;
included in which are three fullsize&#13;
42 x 96 foot basketball&#13;
courts. Also in the building. i~ a&#13;
25 yard, eight-Jane pool, official&#13;
AA competition size. There ~e&#13;
eight Janes instead of six,&#13;
requested by head c~ch Tom&#13;
Rosandich, to add mcreased&#13;
flexibility for simultaneous&#13;
laps, instruction an~ diving at&#13;
the 3 foot diving pomt.&#13;
Additional facilities include&#13;
two handball courts, a large&#13;
exercize room with universal&#13;
gym, combative room for&#13;
practice of judo and karate, a&#13;
conference room-press box&#13;
overlooking the gym, offices,&#13;
locker rooms, showers and a coed&#13;
sauna.&#13;
Because of the great diversity&#13;
of the facility it is possible to&#13;
have nine badminton games, six&#13;
volleyball games or six&#13;
basketball courts in operation&#13;
at once. Roll-away bleachers&#13;
covering one of the three&#13;
basketball courts will provide&#13;
seating for 2,500 spectators.&#13;
Roll-away, to allow better&#13;
utilization of space when not in&#13;
use.&#13;
Thanks to the generosity of a&#13;
local citizen, the athletic&#13;
department will have a little&#13;
more to spend on equipment.&#13;
Mr. Aldo Madrigrano of the 7-&#13;
Up Bottling Company is&#13;
donating not one but two multipurpose&#13;
score boards, located in&#13;
opposite corners of the gymnasium.&#13;
&#13;
A unique part of the training&#13;
room is a physical fitness&#13;
testing laboratory for&#13;
measuring cardiovascular ft u u&#13;
"Legallze Marijuana" Bumper&#13;
slick«s 25c. Nv:Jney goes lo ACLu.&#13;
Send large self addressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Art Dexter, P.O. 133,&#13;
Union Grove 53182.&#13;
Athletic Director Tom Rosandich, center, and James G lbr.&#13;
of Planning and Construction, right, at the site of the new :th 11~&#13;
building. let 11:&#13;
response, oxygen intake, blo?rl&#13;
pressure and stress analysis.&#13;
When completed the building&#13;
will have the largest enclosed&#13;
area on campus, capable of&#13;
holding 4,500 for special functions.&#13;
The special tartar floor on&#13;
the basketball courts makes&#13;
maintenance easy.&#13;
Mr. Galbraith of PlanninE&#13;
and Construction estimates thal&#13;
all 4,500 could be bused down&#13;
the hill in 30 minutes to parking&#13;
lots at Hallent Hall. This would&#13;
take 90 loads of a 50 passenger&#13;
bus. Making a run every ten&#13;
minutes would necessitate 15&#13;
buses, each making six runs.&#13;
Chartering 15 buses for a two&#13;
hour concert could cost quite a&#13;
bit of money - which would be&#13;
added to the cost of the ticket.&#13;
But it is desired not to mess up&#13;
the ecology of the neighborhood&#13;
with parking lots.&#13;
Cost of the athletic bUiJ .&#13;
c~nstruction will be $1.S mil~&#13;
with an additional $376 000 ~&#13;
on fornishing and 'm spebnt equipmeit. ova le&#13;
Included in the alhl&#13;
building program are ~t&#13;
athletic fields. A huge gra e&#13;
bowl will enclose the va . fi Id rs1ty&#13;
e , a ¼_ mile all-weather&#13;
track and six tennis courts 1&#13;
all 100 a~res of land wm' ~&#13;
developed for intramural &amp;nd&#13;
intercollegiate sport.&#13;
Seating at the bowl will be&#13;
i~orm_al - on the gra s. ~&#13;
sides rise one foot for each~&#13;
feet 6an in a European-tvpe&#13;
arrangement. ·&#13;
The fields, which will ci.t&#13;
$92,000, are expected to be&#13;
completed in late spring, about&#13;
the same time as the building&#13;
which is now 11/2 months ahead&#13;
of schedule.&#13;
Pre-law Club Will Meet&#13;
The Parkside Pre-Law Club will hold two organizational meet·&#13;
on Monday, October 4, abd Tuesday, October 5. Both meetings will&#13;
begin at 7:30 p.m. at Greenquist Hall in r,oom D-111. Prospecure&#13;
members and old members are urged te attend.&#13;
Possible speakers to be brought on campus will be discu sed, as&#13;
well as the purpose and the 1971-72 project of the Pre·Law Chili. Juru&#13;
and senior Pre-Law students will be present to answer any questions.&#13;
Anyone interested but unable to attend may call Tim Prostko 11&#13;
652-4142 (Kenosha) or Becky Ecklund at 554-7160 (Racine&gt;.&#13;
u ••• n n n .....&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling plus the right. Phone 1·&#13;
352-4050.&#13;
u •&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Alli$!&#13;
days a week, 7: 45-4: 30. Call ~-1415&#13;
HELP WANTE0-2 Sp.,ish gu fl&#13;
players work in Pizza HUI. PtM,it&#13;
551-3906 or stop in and ask for Johll&#13;
1969 Honda 175cc Scrambler. Ex.&#13;
CCl\d.-M25. fflCIUdn 2 helmet,. &lt;:all&#13;
Ed, 639~40.&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Attractive .girls over 21. Eam tui ,on&#13;
and book money. Dancing '&#13;
Waitress work. If nudity offenll$&#13;
you, do not apply. Call 652-20031"&#13;
stop at «26 . Sheridan Rold.&#13;
!Hl 8ulck 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
634-.ut.S or 633-2791.&#13;
1951 Ramb. American. Dependable,&#13;
rustle, and cheap. S35. 32&lt;W . 28th St.&#13;
19d0 Ramb. American. Dependable.&#13;
170. 3209 - 28th St .• Kenosha.&#13;
1970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr., Hara.&#13;
oP, V-S, Automatic, power steering,&#13;
6344~.&#13;
1969 OilrliJer RT . 440 MlliJ,, 4 sp.,&#13;
mlllilS, ,eeor call Al t,ler 6 p.m., 658,&#13;
36SI, Sl 10 23rd Ave.&#13;
19611 Opet Kadel, 1966 Corvalr, Both&#13;
VOOd col\d. Call Harris, ~843,2361&#13;
67 AmbasslldOr o4 dr. sedan, auto., 6&#13;
cyl Trans recently ov«hauled $775.&#13;
Ca II 553 2345.&#13;
61 Plymouth Roadrunner 383. Gold&#13;
with Bleck vinyl top. Ex. cond. 554. 8757.&#13;
1,11 TltAVEL TRAILER - 15 Ft&#13;
L lilh1 • V«y HSY to tow · Built In&#13;
Slirge brakes . Used only three&#13;
weeks - Must s.ell . Going to ,chool,&#13;
5122 45th St · Ph. 652-JOM.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus camp«. Stove,&#13;
refrig., and 50 gel. gas tank, in- duded. First $750.00 takes 1111. c-,11&#13;
632-SSU aft rr S · 30.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc&#13;
Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing . Phone 6S4-1770 - or&#13;
N•wscope office. LNve message for&#13;
Rick Paz.-1.&#13;
1967 Austin-Healey 3000, After 5 p.m.&#13;
539-2-407 ( Burlington).&#13;
1068 Ford Torn'IO 302-Va. Low mil.&#13;
Automatic, power steering, Radio,&#13;
Heal«, 652-7745, see at 5234 . 44th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impala Sup« Sport 327, After&#13;
4;30 p.m., 3022 · 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 RS, 1'171, Exe. Cond.&#13;
654-5724, Eve.&#13;
650 Triumph T.T. rebuilt engine,&#13;
lace palnt on frame and tank, 2&#13;
hefmets, S800.00 or best offer. See al&#13;
5723 • 40th Ave. ·&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs some clutch ~. $250.00. 63-4-0871.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
lsuitcases, very good ccnd. S25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
,For II Good night's sleep -&#13;
-Waterbeds. 3701 . a&gt;th street. Call&#13;
,6/l4-94'7.&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Maq us an offer .• call 654-41162.&#13;
Come Toudl Me. A new poetry book&#13;
by Ron Schulz and Larry Roach&#13;
Available at au UWP Bookstores:&#13;
.. FOR SALE - Muskrat fur jacket&#13;
size 14, 25 inches long. N- lining'.&#13;
SS0.00. Anita, 652-675-4.&#13;
,JUDO UtUFORMS, Size 3 and site 4,&#13;
10.00 each. Call Kay at 694-6674.&#13;
Chicago . casette tape ½o trade Jor&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633·3836.&#13;
Publlc Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Slide Rule $10.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis - Mens, lnchJdlng poles and&#13;
bOots. 553-22A5.&#13;
Toaster 15.00, steam 1ro11 $5.00. Call&#13;
553-2345.&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and woods,&#13;
5346 new will sell for $245.&#13;
L•gallze Marijuana Bumper&#13;
Stlck•rs. 50c do,nalion. Be at Student&#13;
Activltles Bulldlng Wed. .&#13;
Stereo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
amplifier, h.rntable, 2 speek•rs.&#13;
Moving, must sell. $SO. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
. .&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lak• Geneva, Wis.&#13;
BEWARE OF CAT MAN - He is a Narc&#13;
EngliSh Springer Spaniels, 6 -eks&#13;
old. AKC Good hunting and ·family&#13;
dog. 639--4593, 1204 Cedar Creek St.,&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Explore the world Of ESP Wlth&#13;
Norman Slater, Apt. by telephone&#13;
only. 65"'-2375.&#13;
MEN - Your spare time is needed&#13;
by a boy 7 . 17 years old who doesn't&#13;
have a father. Can you provide an&#13;
example of good character and&#13;
citizenship wh ile shooting pool,&#13;
fiShing, skating, etc.? If so call Big&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha, Inc. 694-6585.·&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION Introductory Lecture-Tues.&#13;
Sept. 28, 8 p.m ., rm 138,&#13;
Kenosha campus; Wed. Sept. 29, 8&#13;
p.m., rm 105, Racine Campus;&#13;
Thurs. Sept. 30, 4 &amp; 8 p .m., rm 100,&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75 . 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
Shocks for '67·'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 65"'-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire &amp; rim $1 , FIie&#13;
boxes S1 &amp; $1.50, call 634,3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
Disp: Cal_l 5)1-7161 aft. 4 p.m .&#13;
2 BedroolTI., House, Parkside area,&#13;
Liv. R., Dining Room · .comb.,&#13;
Fireplace, over one acre land, 552· 9012.&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
wlnemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums; 6328&#13;
Wasnlngton Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Nloney - Bartend &amp; Gt&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633,3805 •&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen - Good condition and&#13;
not too expenslv•. J11n 69-4,34,-,.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, 5.51-9429.&#13;
WANT ED - Two attractive, QIIIII·&#13;
minded female students to Shift&#13;
small apartment with !WO flllll&#13;
s1udt'nls. Apt. 1 block from R':&#13;
campus. For further 1ntonri•&#13;
write to; Peter Noll, Apt. 3, 1111 W'i&#13;
Ave., Racine, Wis. _&#13;
k5 old I ttl' FREE Kittens: 6 wee. ',MIit&#13;
trained Good with ctuhren. . ssorted colon and female, II • e Maifl tll&#13;
Sharon, Ext. 20, Racin&#13;
201, or 634-6215 after 5 P~&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
--------=-=· FOR RENT - Mode~ offiCf s::-&#13;
Carpeted and air_ cond1:"~il ror. per mo. Utilities inciud ·&#13;
at 652-3945 or 654-74!0. ---&#13;
m apt, llacklf&#13;
For Rent - l bedroG&#13;
633,4990.&#13;
LOST&amp;FO~&#13;
------.-=car kf)'Si ~ · Prescription Gla5~ 5• 1 forll'a!iOI'&#13;
wedding ring. "\~~ell; Hall·&#13;
center, 2nd floor, •_ -&#13;
5.,,,,,,r&#13;
FOUND: 5ungli1SSfSf0111ddtPI•&#13;
Jacket. Contad IOSI &amp; 211d fl&#13;
Information center·&#13;
Ta~&#13;
newscope classifieds&#13;
are tree &#13;
,.rIlSlde Hosts Peace Corps&#13;
.Itlletic Training Program&#13;
. of ' he NewsCope starr I resmc •&#13;
~,IIY': athletiC stall. offered a warm """de 0 Borjas Fnday as he came to&#13;
ttif!Jf:' to Col.p&#13;
~ce Corps Athletic training&#13;
ell .lbe h~d at Parkside.&#13;
~ to be chosen to hold the program&#13;
p,rtside. W:e&#13;
colonel's words, its "expert&#13;
....-. of: lnd.ts ability to "deliver the goods".&#13;
~. ~ dopment in the Philippines had&#13;
"*,,c ~~ng World War II. Due to economic&#13;
Coosedlb:~ducational and Athletic systems&#13;
~, post-war years. In the latter portion&#13;
~ III coaches were named to go to the&#13;
.... five&#13;
andwork wotu our athletic prog~ams.&#13;
~ bes were Howard Auer, assistant&#13;
Ii'" ":ach at the University of Illinois;&#13;
~in. Idaho track coach; Bill McKuozle.&#13;
IllC lc team volleyball star and former&#13;
OI~P~e Denver Athletics; Fred Dennis,&#13;
...... nngschampionJind former All-American&#13;
;...oar -&#13;
NewscopeWins but Loses, Too&#13;
t Wednesday the In- ;ural Football League&#13;
ngameof the week focused&#13;
... gridiron battle between&#13;
~ and the House Apes.&#13;
1'lt Newseope team entered&#13;
game with only three&#13;
........ while tbe House Apes&#13;
lIIdoI a full compliment of&#13;
,~" '01'&#13;
gymnast from South II"&#13;
W'l ern ImOlS' and Richa d&#13;
I son, manager of th • r&#13;
Shakespere Company. e Archery division of&#13;
C&#13;
The program at Parkside is to train Peace&#13;
orps workers to work' lh '"&#13;
athletic directors and coa~~es TehPhilJppmes ~s&#13;
be' Oct . e program Will&#13;
At g:;: . I and last about four and a half weeks&#13;
e end of the program the trainess will be'&#13;
sworn In as Peace C k Ph T . orps war ers and sent to the&#13;
I ippines. They will be taught the culture of the&#13;
Philippines and the languages. The volunteers will&#13;
th,en be distributed around one country to work&#13;
With the programs,&#13;
One of the purposes for the program is to&#13;
prepare a team from the Philippines for the 1976&#13;
Olympic games.&#13;
Tom Bosandtch, the Athletic Director of&#13;
Parkside, has been a great Iielp in the planning f&#13;
th~program. He is, in the Colonel's words a "tr::e&#13;
Ir-iendcf the Philippines and the progra;"".&#13;
men with, substitutes on the&#13;
sidelines. NW team captain,&#13;
"Flash" Pazera, carrying a bit&#13;
of excess weight from the offseason,&#13;
played a standout&#13;
defensive game for which he&#13;
suffered a minor injury.&#13;
Assisted by "Knobnose" Nedry&#13;
and "Crash" Koloen, the House&#13;
HarriersTrounce Carthage&#13;
byW.F. Lane&#13;
\twSCope Sportswriter&#13;
III Tuesday. September 21,&#13;
Parks ide Cross-Country&#13;
Iw1 defeated three other&#13;
IlIo&gt;Is m a quadrangular meet&#13;
IJ1utewalerSta~eUniversity.&#13;
Partside nmner Lucian Rosa&#13;
iII!lod ft,st. followed in third&#13;
C1Ilck Detbnan. Jim MchIIIen&#13;
of Parkside finished&#13;
IIh with Rudy Alverez and&#13;
'.'ramural Schedule&#13;
_yo Sept. 21&#13;
r.Jocks vs. Newscope&#13;
....... y. Sept. 29&#13;
",. Schoonersvs. Mad Dogs&#13;
frWal. Oct. I&#13;
lbao Apes vs. Pink Racists -l.Oct. 4&#13;
Jocks vs. The Schooner&#13;
....... y. Oct. 6&#13;
PlDi racists vs. Newscop~&#13;
It'sthe~~&#13;
real thing.&#13;
~e.&#13;
-~&#13;
• Apes were hard pressed to&#13;
complete a pass.&#13;
Rounding out tbe Newscope&#13;
team were Dennis Serpe at QB,&#13;
Kieth Bosman. back; Wayne&#13;
Bosman, offensive safety; and&#13;
one unidentified freak who&#13;
works a t the union.&#13;
The House Apes, led by sucb&#13;
tail-less monkeys (Websters)&#13;
Mark Barbill, scored seven&#13;
points early in the game, but&#13;
faced with a small but inspired&#13;
Newscope defensive line, never&#13;
came close to raising their&#13;
score. Newscope's offense, led&#13;
by Serpe, utilized spectacularly&#13;
long passes and quick legs to&#13;
compile 13 points on two TD's&#13;
and one extra point.&#13;
For the record, the House&#13;
Apes were credited 't\ith a&#13;
victory by default as Newscope&#13;
used players from other learns&#13;
to fill the gaps in its non--existent&#13;
backfield.&#13;
Gary Lance in eighth and ninth&#13;
places, respectively.&#13;
Carthage came in second with&#13;
three men finishing-in the top&#13;
ten places. Stevens Point was&#13;
third. followed by Whitewater.&#13;
Team scores were Parkside 26,&#13;
Carthage 45, Stevens Point 66&#13;
and Whitewater 84.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson of&#13;
Parkside commented that for&#13;
the first meet the team ran well&#13;
and he is looking forward to an&#13;
excellent season. He said he&#13;
really did not expect to do that.&#13;
well against Carthage Slllce&#13;
they are a noted state and&#13;
national power .&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers Get Acquarnted Oller&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
Wi"' Oil &amp; Filrer Chance&#13;
PARKSIOE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAO&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE&#13;
650-9968&#13;
0,-0...., .....&#13;
...,. ,-&#13;
....,".. ,." .&#13;
,. "0"· ~o" ..&#13;
....... ...,_ ,_ c • ,.•• ~ ,&#13;
0_ ..... Il "" " c •&#13;
Col "runi de Borja 01 UI~ P.lu.hpp..... mlk_ \lhlt't&#13;
F'f:deralioo •• bo reeeeu \- ,t.f1I PI lICIt'10 .kna. pta. ,. UI"&#13;
upcoming Peace 0f"I"0 lra101.11&lt; pr'O(T'J;. • .. 1" 8«"Ja au'&#13;
Parkside Lnck coeclll BlU La_wa..... I 1t'UC'DlI"f'C'Ler'nom.&#13;
Rosandicb. origmalOr .f lAe' Pan.. Mlm&#13;
Remember&#13;
Octoberfest&#13;
lomOIH 101'&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I. fMlt 5«:"1 ,-. 11 U "&#13;
"&gt;0&#13;
• 111$ • 1'A.,,"o.t • (N~ .. tw&#13;
4t'tO(CMI ..... "'10'-' • lA \. ..&#13;
....... ,000 • ~DW·(..-O&#13;
cuu.oUTS • O£lIY(U&#13;
rOll IJ"" .. , U&#13;
657·9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
HOWL&#13;
BACK AT&#13;
WINTER&#13;
VERY DEfINlTEl Y&#13;
GEAR BOX·&#13;
. .&#13;
S40&#13;
Richman&#13;
."OTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
arkside Hosts Peace Corps&#13;
f' •tllletic Training P rogram&#13;
. of the Newscope staff&#13;
·r)IJ !"r~1~:uc staff_ offered a warm&#13;
par de 5 D sorjas Fnday as he came to&#13;
to C0\ e ce Corps Athletic training&#13;
~ ,the ~ at Parkside.&#13;
:n to be ~ chosen to hold the program ·c1e was d ·t " t . th colonel's wor s, 1 s exper&#13;
of. ind ·tseability to "deliver the goods". "an I Ph·1· · had . . lo ment in the 1 1ppmes&#13;
eu deveg P,,orld war II. Due to economic .• ...A durin ° - ~ Educational and Athletic systems&#13;
• es the t-war years. In the latter portion&#13;
1Jded in posches were named to go to the&#13;
fi,;e coa hl t· nd work wotu our at e 1c programs.&#13;
es aches were Howard ~uer, ass!s~nt&#13;
Ii coa ch at the University of Illmo1s;&#13;
co~daho track coach; Bill McKunzie,&#13;
~· team volleyball star and former&#13;
Ol};P~e Denver Athletics; Fred De~nis,&#13;
nngschampion;md former All-American&#13;
gymnast from Southern ur . . . Wilson mana er mois, and Richard&#13;
Sh k ' g of the Archery d1\'ision or a espere Company.&#13;
C The program at Parkside is to train Peace&#13;
orps workers to work in the Ph'l' thl ti di 1 1ppmes a a e c rectors and coaches Th be · 0c · e pro ram 1,1, IU&#13;
gm t. 1 and last about four and a half we .&#13;
At the . end of the program the trainess will .&#13;
sw?~" I~ as Peace Corps worker and ent to the&#13;
Ph!1!PP!nes. They will be taught the culture of t&#13;
Ph1hppm~ a~d the languages. The \'Olunteers "111&#13;
th_en be distributed around one country lo wor with the programs.&#13;
One of the purposes for the program i . td&#13;
prepar~ a team from the Philippines for the 19i&#13;
Olympic games.&#13;
T~m Rosandich, the Athletic Director of&#13;
Parkside, has been a great nelp in the planning of&#13;
th~ program. He is, in the Colonel's words, a 'true&#13;
friend of the Philippines and the program".&#13;
Newscope Wins but Loses, Too&#13;
Wednesday the Inal&#13;
Football League&#13;
me of the week focused&#13;
gridiron battle between&#13;
pe and the House Apes.&#13;
. ·t'*-scope team entered&#13;
ame with only three&#13;
while the House Apes&#13;
1 [ull compliment of&#13;
men with substitutes on the&#13;
sidelines. NW team captain,&#13;
"Flash" Pazera , carrying a bit&#13;
of excess weight from the off.&#13;
season, played a standout&#13;
defensive game for which be&#13;
suffered a minor injury.&#13;
Assisted by "Knobnose" Nedry&#13;
and "Crash" Koloen, the House&#13;
Harriers Trounce Carthage&#13;
b~ \\,. F. Lane&#13;
t'tl ~ope Sport writer&#13;
Tuesday, September 21,&#13;
Parkside Cross-Country&#13;
defeated three other&#13;
in a quadrangular meet&#13;
ewater State University.&#13;
Pli ide runner Lucian Rosa&#13;
fir l, followed in third&#13;
Dettman. Jim Mcof&#13;
Parkside finished&#13;
,:h Rudy Alverez and&#13;
•&#13;
Gary Lance in eighth and ninth&#13;
places, respectively.&#13;
Carthage came in second with&#13;
three men finishing in the top&#13;
ten places. Stevens Point was&#13;
third followed by Whitewater.&#13;
Tea~ scores were Parkside 26,&#13;
Carthage 45, Stevens Point 66&#13;
and Whitewater 84.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson of&#13;
Parkside commented that for&#13;
the first meet the team ran well&#13;
and he is looking forward to an&#13;
excellent season. He said he&#13;
really did not expect to do ~hat .&#13;
well against Carthage since&#13;
they are a noted state and&#13;
national power.&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
•&#13;
• Apes were hard pr ed to&#13;
complete a pass.&#13;
Rounding out the . ·~ pe&#13;
team were Dennis Serpe at QB, Kieth Bosman, back Wayne&#13;
Bosman, offensive safety; and&#13;
one unidentified freak who&#13;
works at the union.&#13;
The House Ape , led by uch&#13;
tail-less monke:&gt; &lt; Web ·ters&#13;
Mark Barhill, cored even&#13;
points early in the game, but&#13;
faced with a mall but in pired&#13;
Newscope defen ive line, ne\ r&#13;
came close to raUng ir&#13;
score. Newscope·s offat e, led&#13;
by Serpe, utilized pectacularl~&#13;
long passes and qui - legs to&#13;
compile 13 points on two TD'&#13;
and one extra point.&#13;
For the record. the Ho&#13;
Apes were credited \\i lh a&#13;
victory by default as e\\&#13;
used player from other m&#13;
to fill the gap in it · non-e.xi t n&#13;
backfield.&#13;
Get Acqua ,nted Oller&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Cba ce&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTO ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE .&#13;
654-996&#13;
. .,, ............... . ,. •• •O\ol • TOIi a.a e •• -·•~•&#13;
..... ., 11 •• c.•c•• ,..Tt•T ••••&#13;
OIi' ••• t 11t•• •••• o• e L • C• t&#13;
Remember&#13;
Oc oberfe&#13;
6S7-9843 o&#13;
658 972&#13;
Elm Pl z· &#13;
PageS NEWSCOPE seplember 27,1971&#13;
October Events&#13;
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2f&#13;
Film: "The Hawks and The&#13;
SparroW5", Pier Paolo Pasolln!.&#13;
Short: "Off-On". SCott Bartlett&#13;
FRIDAY1Oet.l&#13;
"Sutch Cassity". Adm. 7SCPerkside&#13;
&amp; Wis. 10 required&#13;
Cross Country: Minnesota. Drake·&#13;
OesMolnl!'$&#13;
Lat. Payment: $.50.00 Penalty· by&#13;
Friday, Oct. 1, 1911 (End of fourth&#13;
week)&#13;
",TURDAY. OCT.'&#13;
Cross Coun1ry: Platteville State&#13;
Invitational· Platteville&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.lD&#13;
Intercollegl.te Film Council&#13;
presents "'f", 7 p.m., Golden&#13;
Rondelle. Racine. Tickets available&#13;
at Information Center, Free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY,OCT. U&#13;
Concert: Mary O. Bradford&#13;
aUditorium Mltry Sauer pianist&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.1S&#13;
Film: "Where Eagles Dare", Adm.&#13;
7SC Parksldc! &amp; Wls 10 required&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 16&#13;
Crou Country: Northwestern.&#13;
Loyola - Evanston&#13;
TUESDAY, OCT. l'&#13;
Film: "see You At Mao". Jeen-Luc&#13;
Godwd Short: "Why"""" Creates",&#13;
saul Bass&#13;
WEDNESDAY. OCT. 20&#13;
Studfllt hOnors concert, I p.rn:.&#13;
Badger Room. Racine.&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.22&#13;
o.nce: Student Activities.&#13;
SATURDAY .OCT. 23&#13;
Concert: J.e. Super Star, case Field&#13;
House. Tickets at Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
Cross Country: Marquette, UI·&#13;
O'tlcavo Circle· Milwaukee.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 2t&#13;
Film: "Cool Hand luke", adm. 7St:&#13;
Parkslde and Wis. 10 required.&#13;
o.acllne to drop couru&#13;
SATURDAY. OCT. 30&#13;
Croll Country: loras - Dubuque&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.2&#13;
Concert: JOhn Denver •• e.m.,&#13;
Kenos"" Tremper high school&#13;
auditorium. Adm. 1:3.50. TlcMts&#13;
avall"ble at the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 206, Tallent Hall.&#13;
Cross Country: WU·Mllwaukee,&#13;
Beloit· Parkslde&#13;
SUNDAY ,OCT. J&#13;
P.rksl... sculptor Rollin Jansky&#13;
eXhibition ., Dominican College.&#13;
Racine and KenoSh. Alumni Picnic&#13;
&amp; Dance fOr Parkslde Faculty and&#13;
Administrative Staff. Student Ac·&#13;
tlvltles, begIns at 4:30&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT., OCT.' &amp;,&#13;
Odoberfest: WHkend of athletic&#13;
and social ....ents. Competition In&#13;
Cross Co\rltry, Soccer. Golf. Tennis.&#13;
Rugby and 5alllng. Also, beer and&#13;
br.ts .t soccer game on Saturday&#13;
afternoon and dances at the Student&#13;
Activities Building Friday and&#13;
saturday NigMS.&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
,..ORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOU'TH 7500 SHERIDAN R-OAO&#13;
SEAFOOD SPECIALTIES&#13;
RANCH'S FISH&#13;
DINN.ER $1.45&#13;
SEAfOOD PlATTER FRESH LAKE PERCH&#13;
Golden Fried ShrilllP and Fish Golden fried Lake.... eh&#13;
.. rved with Onion Rings, _ved with FrenchFriea&#13;
Conage Che... Sauce cole s1_andbreod&#13;
and Bread $1.85 $ 1.75&#13;
FRIED JUMBO&#13;
SHRIMP DINNER $1.75&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Merger Could Hurt Parkside&#13;
1) roductive programs, One advanta&#13;
(Continued from Page . I fern orary instructors merger syste:e&#13;
.Of tho&#13;
levels of ~unding and d~ma elim~nated, non-filling of rewording of the I ~s tho&#13;
of the ktnds of sta~, ~~ vacancies, shorter library will open tbe egislaliooJ&#13;
money we still n~. ed hours and beneral overall creating a gradua~oor . ~&#13;
characterIzed the owe~'A reductions. At this time it program at Parks' ,&#13;
fundin~ levels t ~s the cannot be determined which previous legislationIde. '!'be&#13;
potentIal threauw'~ nd areas will be most affected a four year SCboo~realeu&#13;
.quality" of the . ' ain_ because the budget figures Disadvantages are O!IIy,&#13;
saId,. A de~IOpmgecial are not yet available and the to raise the salariestbectl&amp;t&#13;
shtution IS u e~e:~t of levels of funding have not WSU professors to tbOf Ibt&#13;
pressures as ,~ been determmed. UW professors Ole ~&#13;
these changes. .&#13;
The merger calls for the&#13;
creation of a governing&#13;
board changing of the&#13;
names' of the institutions,&#13;
and. equal levels of funding.&#13;
No other changes are in the&#13;
merger as it . stands now.&#13;
Each system will be administered&#13;
separately, as&#13;
they exist now, until 1973.&#13;
During the next two years&#13;
a committee composed of&#13;
three regents from each&#13;
system and three citizens&#13;
will study the operations of&#13;
the two systems and&#13;
recommend the' legislation&#13;
needed to implement a fully&#13;
merged system beyond 1973.&#13;
Some possible effects of&#13;
the merger on Parkside are&#13;
larger classes, elimination&#13;
of those less attractive and&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes·&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
I Comejoin in the fun I&#13;
Grand Opening&#13;
Sept 30-0ct 1-0d 2&#13;
Robert Wayne School of Music&#13;
SS16-6th Avenue Kenosha&#13;
e Artists Performing r:W':":'O':""R-L--D:-:'S-lA-R-GEST--'&#13;
e Refreshments&#13;
e Free Gift for Everyone GUITAR ON DISPLAY&#13;
I ---------'9"'1 With These Coupons-T&#13;
- _&#13;
I Gui!~~8~t!ings Regal !ip I .Smile I e FENDER I Drumsticks I GUItar Straps&#13;
L ~ PRICE I ~ PRICE I ~ PRICE I&#13;
-----------------~--~---~-~--~~&#13;
Parking Reminder&#13;
Up to September 19thCampus&#13;
Safety has issued warning&#13;
tickets to illegally parked&#13;
vehicles. Beginning Monday,&#13;
September 20th, Parking&#13;
Citations will be issued to&#13;
illegally parked vehicles. From&#13;
October 1st on, citations also&#13;
will be issued to vehicles not&#13;
displaying the UW-Parkside&#13;
Parking Permit.&#13;
plications duri&#13;
registration processog u..&#13;
Faculty and Stall s~ tin&gt;o&#13;
received the material ha ..&#13;
camRus mail last "eek~&#13;
Hoc Faculty and L: .M&#13;
Term Classifiedperson:lled&#13;
receive the material "",-~&#13;
If you have not _~-'''Y '~",ved . structions on obta·. II&gt;&#13;
P k&#13;
· 10lna ar mg Permit st -e I&#13;
should contact the' Reg~d.. ~&#13;
Office and Faculty a':~'l&#13;
may obtain the infonnatll&#13;
from the Bw-sar'. OffICe lJoo&#13;
All students should have&#13;
received UW-Parks'ideParking&#13;
Regulations and Permit Ap-&#13;
-&#13;
ize Our Advertisers&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
Quality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
•&#13;
SK IRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
SANDS TUNIC TOPS&#13;
LARES H·tJNOREOS OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWEU&#13;
~ACINE 3120'I'IASHINGTON AYE&#13;
~ACINE&#13;
l&#13;
ro-------"- i Patron&#13;
io ·_&#13;
'I&#13;
213 SIXTH STREET&#13;
,"~7&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing'&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
ON SOUTH SHE-R.IDA.N ROAP IN KENOSHA 6SoC.. 0411&#13;
......&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
~&#13;
$eIWbuj U- ~&#13;
Pi/jIF1:. !J~~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSH':.,~~~&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, 011'011.-.&#13;
Page8 September 27, 1911&#13;
October Events&#13;
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2'&#13;
FIim : • 'The Hawks and The&#13;
Sparrows", P,er Paolo Pasollnl.&#13;
Short · " Off-On ". Scott Bartlett&#13;
FIUDAY,Oct. 1&#13;
" Butch Cus;ty" , Adm. 7Sc Parkside&#13;
&amp; Wis. ID required&#13;
Cross Country: Minnesota . Drake .&#13;
DttMolnes&#13;
Late Payment: sso.oo Pa,ally . by&#13;
Friday, Oct . 1, 1971 (End of fourth&#13;
week&gt;&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT . 2&#13;
Concert: JOhn Denver, 8 p.m.,&#13;
Kenosha Tremper h lOh school&#13;
auditorium. Adm. SJ.SO. Tickets&#13;
available 1t the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 206, Tallent Hall . Cross Country : WU -MIiwaukee,&#13;
Beloit • Parkside&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.3&#13;
Perks Cit sculptor Rollin Jansky&#13;
exhibition at Dominican College . Racine and Kenosha Alumni Plailc&#13;
&amp; O nee for Parkside Facully Ind&#13;
Administrative Stall, Student Ac ·&#13;
llvltles, beg in, et 4: JO&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT., OCT. I &amp; 9&#13;
Octoberfnt: Weekend of athletic .,d soclal events. Competition In&#13;
Cross Coi.ntry, Soccer, Goll, Tennis,&#13;
Rugby and Salllno . Also, beer end&#13;
brats at soccer oeme on Saturday&#13;
afternoon nd dances et the Student&#13;
Activities Bulldlng Friday and&#13;
S.turday Nights.&#13;
S,..TURDAY,OCT.9&#13;
Cross Country: Platteville State&#13;
Invitational . Platteville&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.10&#13;
lntercollegllle FIim Council&#13;
presents "If", 7 p .m ., Golden&#13;
Rondelle. Rac ine. Tickets available&#13;
al Information Center, Free .&#13;
WEDNESDAY,OCT. 13&#13;
Concert: Mary 0. Bradford&#13;
auditorium Mary Sauer pianist&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.15&#13;
FIim: "Where Eagles Dare". Adm.&#13;
7Sc Parkside a. Wis 10 required&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 1'&#13;
Cross Country: Northwestern,&#13;
Loyola Evanston&#13;
TUESDAY,OCT. 1'&#13;
Fllm: " See You At MMJ", Jean-Luc&#13;
Godard Short : "Why M1!lfl Creates",&#13;
Saul Bass&#13;
WEDNESOAY,OCT. 20&#13;
Stuel.nt hOnors concert, a ?·"'·:&#13;
Badger Room, Racine .&#13;
FIUDAY,OCT.22&#13;
Dance: Student Activities.&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.23&#13;
Concert: J.C. Super Star, case Fleld&#13;
House. Tickets at Student Activities&#13;
Office. Cross Country: Marquette, UI -&#13;
Chlcaoo Circle . MIiwaukee.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 2'&#13;
FIim: "Cool Hand Luke" , adm. 7Sc&#13;
P11rkside and Wis. 10 required.&#13;
De1clln• to drop course SATURDAY,OCT. 30&#13;
Cross Country: Loras · Dubuque&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
• I&#13;
~ORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7S00 SHERIDAN R-OAD&#13;
SEAFOOD SPECIAL TIES&#13;
RANCH1S FISH&#13;
DINNER $1.45&#13;
SEA FOOD PLATTER&#13;
FRIED JUMBO&#13;
SHRIMP DINNER $1. 75&#13;
FRESH LAKE PERCH&#13;
Golden Fried Shrimp and Fish Golden fried Lake Perch 1&#13;
Mrved with Onion Rings, served with French Fri••&#13;
Cottage Cheese Souce cole 1lawandbread&#13;
and Bread $1.85 $1.75&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Merger Could Hurt Parkside&#13;
&gt; productive programs, One advanta&#13;
&lt;Continued f_rom Page 1 . 1 tem orary instructors merger syste:e _of t&#13;
levels of funding an~fma elimYnated non-filling of rewording of the 1 ~s the&#13;
of the kinds. of ~ ,, ;re vacancies, 'shorter library will open the ~g•slatioa&#13;
money w~ still n 1 · d hours and beneral overall creating a graduate 00r ·&#13;
characterized the owe~~A reductions. At this time it program at Parks· ~ f undin~ levels as the cannot be determined which previous legislationtde. 'the&#13;
pote_ntial threaJw~? nd areas will be most affected a four year sch ?eateu&#13;
.qu~1ty" of the . ' ain- because the budget figures Disadvantages are 00 Only_&#13;
s~1d,. A_ dev~lopm~cial are not yet available and the to raise the saianeslhe cost&#13;
stitution is un ere: lt of levels of funding have not WSU professors to th or the&#13;
pressures as .~ r u been determined. UW professors. OSe of&#13;
these changes.&#13;
The merger calls for _the&#13;
creation of a govermng&#13;
board changing of the&#13;
names' of the institutions,&#13;
and equal levels of funding.&#13;
No other changes are in the&#13;
merger as it .stands now.&#13;
Each system will be administered&#13;
separately, as&#13;
they exist now, until 1973.&#13;
During the next two years&#13;
a committee composed of&#13;
three regents from each&#13;
system and three citizens&#13;
will study the operations of&#13;
the two systems and&#13;
recommend the· legislation&#13;
needed to implement a fully&#13;
merged system beyond 1973.&#13;
Some possible effects of&#13;
the merger on Parkside are&#13;
larger classes, elimination&#13;
of those less attractive and&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes·&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUK~E&#13;
Parking&#13;
Up to September 19th Campus&#13;
Safety has issued warning&#13;
tickets to illegally parked&#13;
vehicles. Beginning Monday,&#13;
September 20th, Parking&#13;
Citations will be issued to&#13;
illegally parked vehicles. From&#13;
October 1st on, citations also&#13;
will be issued to vehicles not&#13;
displaying the UW-Parkside&#13;
Parking Permit.&#13;
Reminder&#13;
pli~atrtio~s during reg1s atlon process Fu&#13;
Faculty and Staff sho ll ·&#13;
received the materialuld ha1&#13;
cam~us mail last wee\c~&#13;
Hoc Faculty and L' . . Ad&#13;
Term Classified Pers 'lll11td . . onn~ receive the material 1-.i&#13;
If you have not rec . rtly&#13;
structions on obta~'~ed inp&#13;
k . 1n1no&#13;
ar mg Permit st d° a&#13;
should contact the' R ~ en&#13;
All students should have Office and Faculty ::1.rar,&#13;
received UW-Parkside Parking may obtain the informai~&#13;
Regulations and Permit Ap- from the Bw-sar's Office. -&#13;
'&#13;
·------·-·•-••- 1•11 1111 RI R 111fflNIHNtNI _______ _&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
I&#13;
fl&#13;
O ua I I ty sportswear&#13;
tor women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
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