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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 8</text>
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            <text>Student Activities Offers No Smiles</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>. rr i&gt; I* a .. University of Wisconsin - Parkside Journalism is Literature in a Hurry —Matthew Arnold s J&#13;
*1&#13;
Volume 5 Number 8 October 25,1971&#13;
Student Activities Offers No Smiles&#13;
i&#13;
&lt;&#13;
a:&#13;
UJ&#13;
N&#13;
&lt;&#13;
a.&#13;
*&#13;
o&#13;
•Parting Shot1&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"you ask me why 1 don't smile&#13;
is there something bothering&#13;
me,&#13;
just open your eyes and look&#13;
around&#13;
and tell me what do you see . .&#13;
Johnny Rivers&#13;
Last Tuesday was a dull day.&#13;
Besides omniscent rain clouds&#13;
looming overhead, there was a&#13;
foggy mist in the air. The&#13;
campus police at the Wood&#13;
Road campus even appeared to&#13;
be doggin' it a bit as they&#13;
handed out parking tickets.&#13;
They had lost their apparent&#13;
zeal to the natural forces of&#13;
gloom.&#13;
Marc Eisen and I were to talk&#13;
to Mr. Tony Totero, Coordinator&#13;
of Student Organizations. Along&#13;
with Mr. William Neibuhr, who&#13;
heads Student Activities, Tony&#13;
Totero is to help shape the&#13;
extra-curricular and social&#13;
atmosphere on campus.&#13;
Marc and I wanted to talk&#13;
about rules, authority, and the&#13;
role of Student Activities on&#13;
campus, as Newscope had run&#13;
into problems during their last&#13;
dance in the area of rules and&#13;
authority.&#13;
The guest policy was in&#13;
question, as we wanted a&#13;
definite interpretation of the&#13;
working rule. Discussion of this&#13;
sort between the two of us and&#13;
the administration usually&#13;
uded in artument, and this&#13;
grey Tuesday was no exception.&#13;
Someone on campus made&#13;
crude signs telling students to&#13;
boycott the Carthage-Parkside&#13;
SGA Fails to Reach Quorum&#13;
by John Koloen, Managing Editor&#13;
Last Thursday seven members of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association attended&#13;
a meeting scheduled for 7:30 p.m. and for&#13;
the fifth time this semester failed to make&#13;
quorum. Bound by by-laws that set the quorum at&#13;
two-thirds of the membership, the senate continues&#13;
to be plagued by a high rate of absenteeism.&#13;
Thus far only one meeting has succeeded in&#13;
reaching a quorum and that ended very suddenly&#13;
when two of the senators resigned in protest.&#13;
In order for a meeting to be legal at least ten&#13;
senators must be present. What happened at&#13;
Thursday's aborted meeting prompted one&#13;
senator to suggest a motion for the impeachment&#13;
of half-a-dozen senators.&#13;
At 7:45 Senator Ken Konkol had left the&#13;
meeting room to call the absent members in a&#13;
final effort to reach a quorum. By 8:00 most of the&#13;
senators present had left and Konkol had not&#13;
returned.&#13;
Members present beside Konkol included Tim&#13;
Eaker, President; Tom Garner, Vice-President;&#13;
Jeanette Dreme, Secretary; and Senators Dale&#13;
Martin, Gary Adelson and R. E. Williams. When it&#13;
became apparent that a quorum would not be&#13;
reached Williams remarked, "Where are all the&#13;
concerned students tonight?" No one replied, but&#13;
it was obvious where they weren't.&#13;
In other SGA matters Eaker told Newscope&#13;
that the results of the recent referendum were&#13;
"debatable". A number of alleged violations and&#13;
mis-shights in the administration of the&#13;
referendum may cause it to be overturned. Thus&#13;
far the results have not been tabulated and any&#13;
final decisions may be postponed until the Senate&#13;
is able to hold a meeting.&#13;
inside&#13;
sponsored event "Jesus Christ&#13;
Superstar", because of ticket&#13;
prices. We had nothing to do&#13;
with these signs, except to&#13;
wonder why they had been&#13;
taken down, and by whom.&#13;
There seemed to us, to be the&#13;
principle of a Freedom of&#13;
Speech involved here.&#13;
Our questions and artuments&#13;
presented to Mr. Totero were&#13;
med head-on by him, with rules&#13;
from a handbook. We were&#13;
buried in rules. Rules and&#13;
authority. My mind left the&#13;
scene in his office and went&#13;
back to my years at Tremper&#13;
High School, where authority&#13;
was stressed over all else.&#13;
The posters were taken down&#13;
by a student employee of the&#13;
Student Activities Office. Mr.&#13;
Totero told us he had instructed&#13;
his employees long before to&#13;
take down all posters that did&#13;
not fit the specifications listed&#13;
in the rules for Student&#13;
Organizations.&#13;
The rules state that a poster&#13;
must not be over 11 by 14 inches.&#13;
The poster must show sponsorship,&#13;
and be placed in the&#13;
proper place. I asked him why&#13;
this rule was not enforced in the&#13;
past, and why Student Activities&#13;
posters were "illegally" taped&#13;
to windows (in direct defiance&#13;
to rules concerning posters,&#13;
made up in part by Mr. Totero&#13;
himself, posters may not be&#13;
taped to windows).&#13;
No explanation was given&#13;
when I pointed to a Student&#13;
Activities poster put up by those&#13;
authorized to see the poster&#13;
rules were enforced. The&#13;
specific poster I pointed out was&#13;
directly outside the Assistant&#13;
Vice Chancellor's office. Taped&#13;
to glass, the Student Activities&#13;
poster stared me in the face,&#13;
unexplained.&#13;
So the bickering continued.&#13;
The questions, answers, and&#13;
arguments went into reruns&#13;
when I injected into the conversation&#13;
my motive in bringing&#13;
up these seemingly minor&#13;
hassles.&#13;
I told Mr. Totero I thought&#13;
recent actions by the Office of&#13;
Student Activities had created a&#13;
gap between itself and the&#13;
students it was to serve. The&#13;
reasons I cited were these:&#13;
1) Ticket prices for dances&#13;
were too high in relation to the&#13;
talent offered. I offered the&#13;
Newscope philosophy behind&#13;
sponsoring dances, which involved&#13;
putting on dances for the&#13;
students. We kept the prices&#13;
down (never over $1.25 (for two&#13;
bands) in an effort to stimulate&#13;
good feeling between between&#13;
our organization and the public&#13;
(students).&#13;
Eating Out&#13;
Returns!&#13;
2) I felt that the prices for the&#13;
John Denver concert were too&#13;
high ($3.50 and $4.50). Mr.&#13;
Totero admitted that only about&#13;
40 per cent of the audience at&#13;
the concert were Parkside&#13;
students, which would indicate&#13;
to me a lack of insight into the&#13;
choice of John Denver, or ticket&#13;
prices too high for students.&#13;
3) Tickets for "Jesus Christ&#13;
Superstar" were not within a&#13;
reasonable financial realm of&#13;
college students ($4.50, $6.50,&#13;
$7.50). Certainly many&#13;
Parkside students couldn't&#13;
attend the high-priced event put&#13;
on for them.&#13;
4) Finally, I thought that the&#13;
Office of Student Activities&#13;
under Mr. Niebuhr was not&#13;
fulfilling its purpose on campus.&#13;
I wondered if the students&#13;
weren't coming second to the&#13;
community when events were&#13;
planned. I didn't think the&#13;
people in charge realized that&#13;
they were to serve Parkside&#13;
students before dollar bills,&#13;
personal egos and sell-outs.&#13;
All of my questions involving&#13;
a gap between the students and&#13;
the Office of Student Activities&#13;
were answered in the announcement&#13;
by Mr. Totero that&#13;
a free folk concert would be&#13;
presented to the students by the&#13;
Student Activities Office.&#13;
Theoretically, the concert&#13;
would shore up any displeasure&#13;
in past events. The fact that the&#13;
entertainment provided at this&#13;
free concert wasn't in the&#13;
financial status of a John&#13;
Denver or Superstar production&#13;
didn't seem to matter. For once&#13;
in the argument, the Coordinator&#13;
of Szudent&#13;
Organizations seemed to fall&#13;
back on something other than&#13;
written rules. It was the "good&#13;
intentions" we were to admire,&#13;
I assumed.&#13;
I thought over the whole&#13;
session a few days later.&#13;
Arguing about where you want&#13;
to drive a car, when you don't&#13;
have the keys didn't appeal to&#13;
me. I accepted the good intention&#13;
theory for the time&#13;
being, rather than continue to&#13;
argue in vain.&#13;
I was sitting in the lounge in&#13;
Tallent Hall on a day similar to&#13;
the one on Tuesday. I watched a&#13;
student employee put up a&#13;
poster for the free folk concert.&#13;
All the "good intentions" I had&#13;
expected with the benefit of a&#13;
doubt quickly dissipated when I&#13;
read the poster.&#13;
The Student Activities Board&#13;
had taken so much time in&#13;
preparing a "little something"&#13;
for the students, they failed to&#13;
spell the name of the folk artist&#13;
correctly on the poster.&#13;
prog)&#13;
Jesus Christ Superstar&#13;
page 9 &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE October 25.1971&#13;
'All You Need is Love 99&#13;
McGOVERN ANNOUNCES AMENSTY&#13;
FOR WAR RESISTERS — IF ELECTED&#13;
(CPS) — Presidential hopeful Sen. George McGovern (D-SD).&#13;
announced Sept. 23 that if e lected he would grant amensty to men in&#13;
jail or expatriated for resisting the draft and the war.&#13;
In the Washington Press Club conference, he also stated that he&#13;
opposes war crimes trials for American political leaders who led the&#13;
U.S. into the war in Indochina.&#13;
TIIE GUARDS AT SING-SING SAID NO&#13;
CPS) — D uring the early stages of the uprising of prisoners at the*&#13;
maximum-security New York prison at Attica, prison officials ordered&#13;
black and Puerto Rican guards from the other maximum&#13;
security New York prison, Sing-Sing, to beef up the nearly all-white&#13;
guard staff at Attica.&#13;
The guards took a vote, and then refused to go.&#13;
KENT STUDENTS ASK FOR FEDERAL PROBE&#13;
Kent, Ohio (CPS) — More than 9,000 Kent State University&#13;
students have signed a petition asking for a federal grand jury investigation&#13;
into the deaths of the four students killed while demonstrating&#13;
against the invasion of Cambodia.&#13;
The petition asks President Nixon to overrule Attorney General&#13;
Mitchell, who said last August 13 there should be no investigation of&#13;
the May 4, 1970, incident.&#13;
ACLU ASKS SUPREME COURT TO REVIEW&#13;
FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS OF COLLEGE STUDENTS&#13;
Washington, D.C. (CPS) — Asserting that "college students are&#13;
entitled to the identical First Amendment protections on the campus&#13;
as they or any other citizen would have in the community-at-large,"&#13;
the American Civil Liberties Union asked the Supreme Court to review&#13;
two cases: one involving demonstrations inside campus buildings, the&#13;
other involving official recognition of student political organizations.&#13;
If the court agrees to hear the cases, it will mark the first time in&#13;
37 years that the Justices have addressed themselves to freedom of&#13;
speech and assembly for college students.&#13;
CHARTER FLIGHT&#13;
$168.00&#13;
Chicago to London&#13;
and return&#13;
Aboard Chartered BOAC VC10&#13;
Leave Dec. 26, 1971 - Return Jan. 11, 1972&#13;
Open to students, staff or faculty of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system or their dependent&#13;
families. A $50 deposit obtains your&#13;
seat priority number.&#13;
Eight credit study programs are also being&#13;
offered. Detailed itineraries available for:&#13;
Contemporary British Theatre&#13;
Comparative British Govt.&#13;
Archeology of England &amp; France&#13;
Law Enforcement in Great Britain&#13;
Studies in French &amp; Italian Art&#13;
French Civilization&#13;
Spanish Civilization&#13;
Social Research in Israel&#13;
FINAL APPLICATION DEADLINE —&#13;
NOVEMBER 15, 1971&#13;
Write or call:Division of Extended Services&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
Oshkosh, Wisconsin 54901&#13;
$389&#13;
$385&#13;
$455&#13;
$389&#13;
$435&#13;
$439&#13;
$499&#13;
$598&#13;
Tel: (414) 235-6220, Ext. 714&#13;
by Kim King&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Traveling south from the&#13;
harbor on Sixth Street in&#13;
Kenosha, you come upon a&#13;
conglomeration of buildings,&#13;
signs, people, and a number of&#13;
other things. This is distinctly&#13;
called downtown. Within this&#13;
mess of overpopulated crap,&#13;
there seems to be nowhere a&#13;
person can be discovered as&#13;
himself. All emphasis&#13;
throughout the area tends to be&#13;
dominated by the cold hands of&#13;
business.&#13;
However, if you keep your&#13;
eyes open, you'll find that a&#13;
couple of doors north of "The&#13;
Pad" and this side of the bridge,&#13;
there is a place with no sign,&#13;
nothing but a sloppy paint-job&#13;
on the window. This place is a&#13;
coffeehouse. A "Natural Highcoffeehouse.&#13;
&#13;
From the outside, it looks like&#13;
the perfect place to get away. It&#13;
has all the qualities of being a&#13;
"Jesus Freak" establishment,&#13;
and appears that by entering&#13;
you could terminate your&#13;
hatred of crowds, smoke and&#13;
noise.&#13;
As I entered, the first thing I&#13;
saw was a small window to the&#13;
right that looked like a ticket&#13;
office. The sign read&#13;
"DONATIONS 50c". Handing&#13;
the clean-cut ticket taker a five,&#13;
I was informed that he didn't&#13;
have enough change. After five&#13;
minutes of searching triumphantly&#13;
for a dollar bill, I was&#13;
allowed to enter on friendly&#13;
terms.&#13;
Proceeding into what looked&#13;
to be a converted pizza parlor, I&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISORS&#13;
'Come visit our pizza&#13;
kitchens or have&#13;
v some delivered'&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5-12&#13;
except Sunday&#13;
4615—7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
finally managed to find an&#13;
empty chair just vacated by&#13;
someone that left for the&#13;
bathroom. Looking around, I&#13;
found the situation quite interesting.&#13;
When I asked what&#13;
there was to do, a person on my&#13;
right said, "You can either join&#13;
the friendly poker game in the&#13;
corner, or talk to the man with&#13;
the Bible."&#13;
Relaxing in the stiff wooden&#13;
chair, I noticed another window&#13;
where you could buy two things.&#13;
One thing was pop, the other&#13;
was burnt kernels of popcorn.&#13;
The place reeked so bad of&#13;
burnt popcorn that I finally&#13;
broke down and bought a Pepsi&#13;
in order to get the rotten taste&#13;
out of my mouth. While drinking&#13;
my pop, I was confronted with,&#13;
"Do you mind if I join you?"&#13;
Some people would call him a&#13;
"Jesus Freak" though the name&#13;
of the organization is the "Jesus&#13;
People".&#13;
In his presentation, he talked&#13;
about the four basic steps for&#13;
establishing a relationship with&#13;
Jesus Christ. He explained the&#13;
coffeehouse is set up mainly to&#13;
help young people. "We try to&#13;
teach people how to pray," he&#13;
stated after a long winded&#13;
speech. Finishing, he asked if&#13;
you will let Jesus enter your&#13;
heart, and leaves the answer up&#13;
to you.&#13;
After the man with the Bible&#13;
finally departed, I sat there and&#13;
thought for awhile. When I got&#13;
my senses back I decided to&#13;
leave. As I retreated from my&#13;
talbe, through the entrance hall,&#13;
and out the door, I once again&#13;
found myself on the peaceful&#13;
sidewalk of Sixth Avenue,&#13;
downtown, Kenosha.&#13;
The "Natural High" coffeehouse&#13;
is a great place for&#13;
kids who really don't have any&#13;
place else to go. There they&#13;
have someone to talk to, work&#13;
out their problems, and even&#13;
find a few friends who care.&#13;
Basically the "Jesus People"&#13;
are o.k., though now and again&#13;
they do get a bit pushy in&#13;
stressing that Jesus is the only&#13;
way. I can think of only one&#13;
organization that would be&#13;
more helpful to kids, and it&#13;
would have one requirement:&#13;
"All you need is love".&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
213 SIXTH S TR E E T RA C I N E -&lt;Sc*&#13;
you offended by nudity?&#13;
if not, stop in.&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise&#13;
SPECIAL '5% O FF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine &#13;
October 25,1971 NKWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
part 1&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The merger of the governing&#13;
boards of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin is now a reality. This&#13;
merger combined the old&#13;
University of Wisconsin and the&#13;
Wisconsin State University&#13;
system to form the third largest&#13;
University in the nation — the&#13;
new University of Wisconsin.&#13;
There was only one man to&#13;
thank, or as many people in the&#13;
area say, to blame for this&#13;
merger — the Governor of the&#13;
state, Patrick Lucey. Without so&#13;
much as a whisper during his&#13;
election campaign this man has&#13;
held up the state budget of 5&#13;
billion, 865 billion dollars for&#13;
three and one-half months until&#13;
he could force the merger down&#13;
the throats of the state&#13;
legislators.&#13;
In the legislature, it was&#13;
known from the start that the&#13;
Democrat-controlled Assembly&#13;
would approve anything that&#13;
Democratic governor Lucey&#13;
wanted. It was only in the&#13;
Republican-controlled Senate&#13;
that the merger issue could be&#13;
stopped, and for a while it&#13;
looked as though it might be.&#13;
Why did the merger make it&#13;
through the Senate? It might&#13;
have something to do with the&#13;
AFL-CIO. This politically influential&#13;
labor group had&#13;
originally opposed the merger,&#13;
but by die time the governor&#13;
spoke before the senate the first&#13;
time it changed its position. It&#13;
was shortly after this that&#13;
Republicans started breaking&#13;
ranks to come out in favor of the&#13;
merger.&#13;
In all, enough Republicans&#13;
came out in favor of the merger&#13;
for it to pass the Senate by three&#13;
votes. One notable thing occurred&#13;
though; two state&#13;
senators did the almost unheard&#13;
of thing of going against a&#13;
governor of their own party. Of&#13;
the two Democratic Senators&#13;
who voted against the merger&#13;
one was Joseph Lourigan of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Senator Lourigan is a unique&#13;
man in this age of party politics.&#13;
He is a man who likes to make&#13;
up his own mind. Originally&#13;
open-minded about the concept&#13;
of merger, he came to see that&#13;
in the long run it would cost the&#13;
state additional hundreds of&#13;
thousands of dollars while doing&#13;
great damage in his 22nd Senate&#13;
District, which includes the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
&#13;
Upon merger of the two&#13;
systems funding for Parkside&#13;
was reduced to the level of the&#13;
old Wisconsin State University.&#13;
In addition, the extra start-up&#13;
funds Parkside had been getting&#13;
as a newly-formed University&#13;
were cut out entirely. This&#13;
means the quality of education&#13;
will be reduced because there&#13;
are fewer monies available for&#13;
Parkside than anticipated&#13;
before the merger.&#13;
Lourigan pointed out that as&#13;
far as University spending is&#13;
concerned "Parkside is at the&#13;
tail end of the appropriation&#13;
train."&#13;
Parkside will actually receive&#13;
less money per semester hour&#13;
than some schools under the old&#13;
State University system.&#13;
Initially Senator Lourigan&#13;
voted to kill the merger bill.&#13;
Then, when he saw things were&#13;
going unfavorably, he worked to&#13;
modify the bill to reduce its&#13;
impact and then worked to kill&#13;
the bill he helped modify.&#13;
When Governor Lucey&#13;
learned of Senator Lourigan's&#13;
opposition to the merger, he&#13;
paid the senator a visit at his&#13;
office to try and change his&#13;
mind. But Mr. Lourigan had&#13;
decided that merger was bad&#13;
for the people of Wisconsin and&#13;
refused to be swayed. This is&#13;
what the senator told Lucey and&#13;
this was the reason the&#13;
Governor swore at Lourigan in&#13;
his office and told him to tell our&#13;
Chancellor to "go to hell".&#13;
Senator Lourigan was&#13;
disappointed when the senate&#13;
passed the merger. He was&#13;
disappointed that Henry Dorman,&#13;
the senator from Racine,&#13;
went against the best interests&#13;
of his own constituents and&#13;
voted in favor of merger. He&#13;
was disappointed when a&#13;
delegation from Parkside went&#13;
to Madison, but failed to meet&#13;
with the Senate. He was&#13;
disappointed with the mayor of&#13;
Kenosha who moderated a&#13;
panel at Parkside to discuss the&#13;
merger and then "sat on his&#13;
hands and did nothing . . . It's a&#13;
good thing he has an administrative&#13;
assistant to write&#13;
his speeches," he added. He&#13;
was disappointed at how&#13;
students were misled in merger&#13;
talks, but most of all, he was&#13;
disappointed that the city of&#13;
Kenosha obligated over $5&#13;
million and gave Parkside 700&#13;
acres of land, ("Racine didn't&#13;
give one red cent"), with the&#13;
understanding that Parkside&#13;
would be a University of&#13;
Wisconsin school, only to have&#13;
the status of UW removed after&#13;
the money had been spent.&#13;
Senator Lourigan is going to&#13;
try to get some of that $5 million&#13;
back for Kenosha. He plans to&#13;
appeal to the Supreme Court for&#13;
reimbursement because the&#13;
merger results in a breach of&#13;
contract.&#13;
The merger is now a reality&#13;
and has been for nearly three&#13;
weeks. When Governor Lucey&#13;
first learned of Senator&#13;
Lourigan's stand he told him he&#13;
didn't like his attitude. After he&#13;
realized that merger had&#13;
passed he wrote the Senator a&#13;
long flowery letter praising him&#13;
for standing up for what he&#13;
believed in. He could afford to&#13;
be generous. But Joe Lourigan&#13;
remembers that first argument&#13;
and it looks as though he will not&#13;
conveniently fade into obliviou&#13;
but will continue to vote each&#13;
measure on its own merits.&#13;
The Death oi a University&#13;
r ^&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will help any woman regardless&#13;
ol race, religion, age or financial&#13;
status. We do not moralize, but&#13;
merely help women obtain qualified&#13;
Doctors for abortions, if this is&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early abortion is more&#13;
simple and less cosily, and can be&#13;
periormed on an out patient basis.&#13;
Call:&#13;
Pot Consumption Increasing Pharmacologist Claims&#13;
Marijuana could become&#13;
competitive with alcohol as a&#13;
popular intoxicant, a University&#13;
of California at Los Angeles&#13;
pharmacologist forecast here&#13;
recently.&#13;
"It is conceivable that&#13;
marijuana could become&#13;
competitive with alcohol,&#13;
exhibiting many of the same&#13;
qualities for moderate and&#13;
excessive use over long periods&#13;
of time," declared Professor&#13;
William H. McGlothlin.&#13;
"Future patterns of&#13;
marijuana use will include&#13;
amounts substantially above&#13;
those typically observed today,&#13;
with daily consumption of four&#13;
to six cigarettes not being uncommon&#13;
among regular users,"&#13;
he predicted.&#13;
"With the availability of&#13;
themore potent (cannabis)&#13;
preparations, some individuals&#13;
will likely consume several&#13;
times this amount," Professor&#13;
McGlothlin said. At present the&#13;
typical, current "marijuana&#13;
user" in this country probably&#13;
smokes no more than one&#13;
cigarette per week, he noted.&#13;
"A student who smokes one&#13;
marijuana cigarette daily&#13;
would be considered a heavy&#13;
user by current standards— yet&#13;
his consumption is only 15 p er&#13;
cent of what is considered&#13;
moderate in Eastern countries&#13;
and no more than one or two per&#13;
cent of what is regarded as very&#13;
heavy use" there, Professor&#13;
McGlothlin said.&#13;
"A significant increase" in&#13;
the number of persons who&#13;
daily consume four to six&#13;
marijuana cigarettes appears&#13;
likely in the next few years, he&#13;
added.&#13;
"While this level of usage is&#13;
not generally considered&#13;
disruptive for the Eastern&#13;
countries, it remains to be seen&#13;
whether the same conclusion&#13;
will hold in a much more&#13;
complex Western society. It&#13;
would not be surprising if some&#13;
individuals daily consume 40&#13;
marijuana cogarettes or more,&#13;
an amount that greatly exceeds&#13;
that presently observed in this&#13;
country."&#13;
Four factors contribute to this&#13;
prediction, he explained: 1) the&#13;
majority of marijuana users&#13;
are still in the "experimenter"&#13;
stage; 2) in comparison with&#13;
other countries, the doses of&#13;
marijuana now being used in&#13;
the U.S. are "quite low"; 3) " in&#13;
spite of earlier conclusions to&#13;
the contrary, tolerance to&#13;
cannabis apparently does&#13;
develop, especially for the more&#13;
potent preparations"; and 4)&#13;
hashish or other strong&#13;
preparations are likely to&#13;
become more available.&#13;
"It should not be concluded&#13;
that a relatively high percentage&#13;
of future marijuana&#13;
users will be considered to&#13;
consume excessive amounts,"&#13;
he declared. "Rather the&#13;
standards of what is considered&#13;
light, moderate, and heavy&#13;
usage are likely to be shifted&#13;
upward.&#13;
"Also, the more potent&#13;
cannabis preparations will not&#13;
necessarily replace preference&#13;
for marijuana among many&#13;
users, any more than the&#13;
availability of distilled liquors&#13;
eliminates the demand for beer&#13;
and wine."&#13;
At present, he concluded, the&#13;
prevalence of one or more trials&#13;
of marijuana among students at&#13;
urban West Coast colleges&#13;
appears to be around 60 per&#13;
cent. The rate for urban East&#13;
Coast schools is slightly less,&#13;
while those of Midwest and&#13;
Southern colleges probably are&#13;
no more than half to two-thirds&#13;
the West Coast rate. I 312 922-0777&#13;
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Page 4 NEWSCOPE October 25,1971&#13;
bitomL&#13;
The record of the Student Government&#13;
Association speaks for itself: One out of the past six&#13;
meetings came off. Not much to say, is it.&#13;
The elected representatives of the student body&#13;
promised to serve their constituents when they were&#13;
elected last spring but have failed miserably. The&#13;
blame for this lies on the shoulders of those senators&#13;
who have renewed their obligations to the students by&#13;
failing to attend government meetings. The same&#13;
general apathy that infects the student body at-large,&#13;
i.e. poor election turn-outs, is exemplified by the&#13;
attendance records at meetings.&#13;
Nothing can be more damaging to the prospects&#13;
of a strong student voice in the university than an&#13;
irresponsible and apparently disinterested portion of&#13;
the senate. It is not even possible to impeach these&#13;
senators guilty of absenteeism unless they attend the&#13;
meetings. It is not possible to change the quorum&#13;
ruling unless there is first a quorum reached. It is no&#13;
possible for the SGA to adopt an operating budget&#13;
without the full senate to vote on it.&#13;
At the very least these senators who do not want&#13;
the responsibility of serving the students should attend&#13;
one meeting in order to give those who would like&#13;
to serve the opportunity to do so.&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
516 Monument Square&#13;
RACINE&#13;
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A Round Trip Jet Over nigh I flight from your city via a regularly scheduled Air Prance flight to&#13;
PARIS with an immediate connecting flight to GENEVA. SWITZERLAND. Your&#13;
overseas flight will include complimentary meals and beverages&#13;
Ground Transfer* Transpor tation from and lo GENEVA via deluxe buses&#13;
£ Seven Nights Tlte last through the seventh day in COURCHEVEL. FRANCE, the most m odern&#13;
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ot a vast domain ot v»owfields Abundant snow, remarkable sunshine ret ord, runs&#13;
from beginner's to expert's with intermediate runs from top to bottom COURCHEVEL&#13;
was developed by Emile Allan, French Olympic champion 2 big cabin&#13;
tableways. 6 gondolas. 36 ski and chair hits. 30.000 ascents per h our. J ski |timp.&#13;
35 marked runs including EUROPE'S fastest Olympic run. ski school 200 mstruc&#13;
tors, a 50 man maintenance and rescue team, 2 skating rinks, and lt"&gt; discotheques&#13;
lessons S13 00 tor 12 2 hour lessons, rental-skis and poles $2 00 per day&#13;
fapprox)&#13;
jjk Lodging Your lodging in the ski area will be in modern new apartments and chalets all with&#13;
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A R"» end Party On the seventh day there will be a giant slalom race for your group with an awards&#13;
party in the evening complete with wine, pri/es and ttophies&#13;
Eighth Night In GENEVA with three great opt'Ons^or that day&#13;
/O, Continue skiing in COURCHEVEL and that afternoon depart lor your over&#13;
^ night in GENEVA&#13;
Ski in a di fferent area s uch as LA PLAGNE and then go to GENEVA tor the&#13;
^ night&#13;
@&#13;
Depart in the morning lor GENEVA where you will fvave Ihe day lor shopping&#13;
and sightseeing Overnight in GENEVA in a good category hotel&#13;
4|K Ninth Night In PARIS. In ihe morning you will depart for PARIS where you will have time to&#13;
shop and spend the evening on the town. O vernight in a good category hotel The&#13;
next morning you will catch your Air Pram* Might home&#13;
Guides Multilingual guides will meet your group upon your arnval m EUROPE and will be&#13;
available to assist you at all tunes until departure&#13;
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:&#13;
Mr. William Ntabuhf. Coordinator&#13;
Student Activity&#13;
Univaruty ol Wiacomtn - Parkdda&#13;
Kenmh, Wfocomin MHO&#13;
Phona: (4141 5S&gt;22»&#13;
lODays&#13;
Only $264&#13;
Plui eto.oo Tax andSarwca&#13;
Dop.H t: GNSKJU January&#13;
Return: Oncaim January&#13;
LETTERS TO&#13;
. .Letters to the editor should be&#13;
double-spaced, typed, and&#13;
should not exceed 350 words.&#13;
Letters must be signed by the&#13;
writer, but names will be&#13;
withheld upon request.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
During a recent broadcast in&#13;
honor of the late U.S. Supreme&#13;
Court Justice Hugo Black, his&#13;
philosophy was reviewed. Here&#13;
is what he believed.&#13;
When asked if certain&#13;
decision of the high court had&#13;
not made it more difficult to get&#13;
a conviction, Black said, "Of&#13;
course."&#13;
He went on to say that this is&#13;
the intention of the Bill of&#13;
Rights: to protect the individual&#13;
from misuse of authority by&#13;
representatives of government.&#13;
The men who wrote the&#13;
Constitution and the Bill of&#13;
Rights were well acquainted&#13;
with the tyranny of governments&#13;
in Europe, from which&#13;
many had fled. Many of those&#13;
governments had persecuted&#13;
citizens for their political&#13;
beliefs.&#13;
Allegations of arrested&#13;
citizens being beaten while&#13;
handcuffed and of the prisoners&#13;
being shot in the back have a&#13;
tendency to shake one's confidence&#13;
in the government. But&#13;
we must remember that the&#13;
Constitution and the Bill of&#13;
Rights do not condone such&#13;
misuse of power. And punishment&#13;
will be meted out if the&#13;
charges are substantiated and&#13;
the guilty are identified.&#13;
Justice Black said no man&#13;
should be punished for thoughts&#13;
he thinks, the words he writes or&#13;
for the ideas he speaks.&#13;
o um yWEST&#13;
&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phono 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Avo.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
However, during the last,&#13;
decade, it seems that many in&#13;
State and mostly in local&#13;
government have tried to&#13;
punish for these reasons. And&#13;
they have succeeded mainly in&#13;
cases where the person was too&#13;
poor to get high quality legal&#13;
defense of hi5 or her constitutional&#13;
rights.&#13;
After hearing Supreme Court&#13;
Justice Black's beliefs, I almost&#13;
think that Racine needs a&#13;
Supreme Courtjustice by itself,&#13;
because of the way some&#13;
members of our city council act.&#13;
To me they are exactly what&#13;
Justice Black stood against&#13;
(tyranny of governments).&#13;
Irate in Racine&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In Response to your editorial&#13;
of October 18, 197i:&#13;
There seemed to be some&#13;
gross errors in fact in Mr.&#13;
Koloen's editorial in the October&#13;
18 iss ue of Newscope. It&#13;
seems that he is confusing the&#13;
Student Union Committee with&#13;
the Student Activities Board. It&#13;
is not possible to "just sign up"&#13;
for the Student Union Committee.&#13;
The students on the&#13;
committee were elected in the&#13;
April elections. It is possible to&#13;
sign up for an interview for the&#13;
Student Activities Board.&#13;
It is also the Activities Board,&#13;
along with the Activities Office,&#13;
that does the booking of concerts,&#13;
movies, etc. (The Student&#13;
Activities Office holds the final&#13;
say on what is booked though.)&#13;
The Union Committee had&#13;
nothing to do with either the&#13;
John Denver concert or the&#13;
Jesus Christ Superstar performances.&#13;
(The Denver&#13;
concert I disagreed with but I&#13;
think the Superstar concert is&#13;
great.) In fact, our chairman&#13;
Dean Loumos (Halloween&#13;
senator) has not called a&#13;
meeting of the Union Committee&#13;
since May. The last time&#13;
we did meet, we did discuss the&#13;
advantages and disadvantages&#13;
of booking these large concerts.&#13;
There seemed to be a slight&#13;
majority of concensus that&#13;
concerts of this nature were&#13;
doing little to benefit the student&#13;
body as a whole.&#13;
So if there are any further&#13;
criticisms of the activities&#13;
booking on campus, please send&#13;
them to the Student Activities&#13;
Board or the Student Activities&#13;
Office and not at the&#13;
disorganized Student Union&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Student Union CommitteeElect,&#13;
&#13;
Tim Daley&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I feel that this university&#13;
should open a Vietnamese&#13;
Culture Center and begin&#13;
teaching courses in Vietnamese&#13;
history, past and present. This&#13;
would expand our awareness of&#13;
different people and customs,&#13;
as well as provide a wellrounded&#13;
education.&#13;
The history of Viet Nam, for&#13;
obvious reasons, is ignored or&#13;
only superficially touched upon&#13;
by most history texts. Perhaps&#13;
if more students and faculty&#13;
demanded that this relevant&#13;
course be added, Parkside&#13;
would start getting accurate&#13;
history books. It is important&#13;
that we learn about Saigon, the&#13;
Paris of the East, Hanoi, the&#13;
northern capitol, how the&#13;
Withdrawal Notice&#13;
ATTENTION: ALL STUDENTS&#13;
The deadline for DROPPING A COURSE is Friday, October,&#13;
29, 1971. Student Records office hours are as follows:&#13;
7:45 A.M. to 11:45 A.M.; 12:30 P.M. to 4:30 P.M. daily, Monday&#13;
through Friday. Student Records is located in ROOM 283,&#13;
TALLENT HALL. The deadline for WITHDRAWING FROM&#13;
SCHOOL (dropping your entire academic load) is Friday,&#13;
November 26, 1971. If you have any questions regarding your&#13;
program, please contact the Office of Student Records.&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-ln-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Sports Editor James Casper&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross, Jeff&#13;
Scoville, Jerry Socha&#13;
FVoduction Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio, Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Zimany&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Marc Eisen,&#13;
Kelly Infusino, Kim King, Jim&#13;
Koloen, Ken Konkol, Dale&#13;
Martin, Pat Nelson, Janice&#13;
Wilde&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDermid&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
^&#13;
ew6cope&#13;
'&#13;
s an independent student newspaper composed by&#13;
udents of the Universty of Wisconsin-Parside published weekly&#13;
excep uring vacation periods. Student obtained advertising funds&#13;
6 e source of revenue for the operation of Newscope. 6,000&#13;
opies are printed and distributed throughout the Kenosha and&#13;
a^&#13;
Ci&#13;
,&#13;
|1eK.COmmUnitieS as we&#13;
" as the University. Free copies are&#13;
available upon request.&#13;
_ m ^?ad&#13;
!ire for aM manuscrips submitted to Newscope is 4:30&#13;
w , ' n ,&#13;
e U l&#13;
* f day p ri o r to publication and must be typed doubleDnhiira+i&#13;
adlm,&#13;
e for Photographs is the Saturday prior to&#13;
claimpH ^ih 6d manuscript&#13;
s and photographs may be remel&#13;
wf,, k " 30 d3yS a,,er ,he °' submission, after which&#13;
offirPiJ the Property of Newscope Ltd. The Newscope&#13;
of HiahwA f m the Student Organizations building, Intersection&#13;
ot Highway A and Wood Road.&#13;
# R*DDD&#13;
I SS^S^ad#ddddddd®dddddddddI)&#13;
^^TTTTT*THE«EFFFTPFtfEFTrcEFFFEEE * SSS^QCCO;:-:4 ^HE*EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE&#13;
* SSS5SsSsss«aS*TTTTTTTTTTTTraTTTT '&#13;
* * * • * * *&#13;
•TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT&#13;
• # « * • * * &#13;
October 25.1971 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
THE EDITOR&#13;
government system works in&#13;
the Democratic Republic of Viet&#13;
Nam (North) as in the South.&#13;
We could explore the people's&#13;
habits, customs, language and&#13;
contributions to civilization.&#13;
America is deeply involved in&#13;
that nation's economic and&#13;
social status. So students of&#13;
Vietnamese history could learn&#13;
why this is and also how our&#13;
presence affects life in their&#13;
huts and hamlets. I'm sure the&#13;
administration will eagerly&#13;
promote such a course, since it&#13;
would be interesting, attract&#13;
more students to Parkside, and&#13;
of course, we'd be the first&#13;
university to have such a Center&#13;
and history course. Three&#13;
credits would be earned, and&#13;
plane trips to the country should&#13;
be arranged, such as those&#13;
going to European, African and&#13;
Mid-East nations for long range&#13;
studies. This ought to be a&#13;
worthwhile course and should&#13;
be added to our program.&#13;
David Myer&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Parkside villagers have,&#13;
since the beginning of the school&#13;
year, had to put up with many&#13;
inconveniences and&#13;
inadequacies, but, Friday (Oct.&#13;
15) drew the final straw when&#13;
the battery was stolen from my&#13;
car while parked in the&#13;
Parkside Village authorized&#13;
parking lot.&#13;
Up until Oct. 13,we villagers&#13;
had been able to park our cars&#13;
alongside of the apartment&#13;
complex and in full view of at&#13;
least eight apartments. Now we&#13;
are forced to park the cars in&#13;
the rear parking lot which has&#13;
no access side walks, no&#13;
protective lighting nor is it in&#13;
view of enough apartments to&#13;
discourage any would-be thief&#13;
from taking whatever he&#13;
pleases. What's more, we're&#13;
going to be charged a monthly&#13;
parking fee for the use of the lot.&#13;
I think that Parkside villagers&#13;
have put up with quite enough.&#13;
So I challenge the management&#13;
of Parkside Village to come out&#13;
and publicly answer these&#13;
questions: 1) What is going to be&#13;
done to protect the villagers&#13;
from vandals, thieves, or&#13;
possibly muggers and rapists&#13;
which may use this lot as a site&#13;
for their crimes; and 2) What&#13;
arrangements, if any, will be&#13;
made for reimbursement of the&#13;
victims for stolen articles or&#13;
damage done to their cars while&#13;
parked in this new parking lot?&#13;
Rick Pazera&#13;
Parkside Village resident&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The lead story in last week's&#13;
Newscope, on the possible&#13;
reintroduction of the Peace&#13;
Corps to Indonesia and the role&#13;
the Parkside Athletic Director&#13;
has had in this, reeks. It reeks of&#13;
i fawning obsequious ass kiss.&#13;
I have never read a more&#13;
pandering, grovelling piece of&#13;
hype in my life. A more blatant&#13;
example of hucksterism in the&#13;
guise of journalism would be&#13;
hard to imagine.&#13;
While Newscope's role in this&#13;
is somewhat mitigated because&#13;
of the shortage of copy and,&#13;
because the story was not&#13;
written by a staff member,&#13;
Newscope still demeaned itself&#13;
by publishing it. It has&#13;
destroyed, I think, some of the&#13;
credibility Newscope has&#13;
established over the past year.&#13;
The story is an insult. It is an&#13;
insult to our readers, journalism,&#13;
and, ultimately, to the&#13;
very people to which it panders.&#13;
Marc Eisen,&#13;
Newscope staff member&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I've just finished voting on the&#13;
amendments to the Constitution&#13;
and saw thdt the ballot was&#13;
weighted so that people would&#13;
tend to vote for the passage of&#13;
the amendments. In order to&#13;
pass all the amendments all you&#13;
had to do was make one check.&#13;
In order to vote against them&#13;
you had to make a large number&#13;
of c hecks. I'd like to know who&#13;
designed the ballot and hear&#13;
them explain why it was&#13;
weighted the way it was.&#13;
Somehow I suspect it wasn't out&#13;
of s heer stupidity.&#13;
Curtis Sahakin&#13;
Volunteers for Head Start&#13;
What are you doing today&#13;
between the hours of 9 a.m. and&#13;
1 p.m.? How about Monday,&#13;
fuesday or any day of the week&#13;
between those hours?&#13;
If you answered "nothing" to&#13;
either of those questions, then&#13;
how does this sound?&#13;
Project Head Start in&#13;
Kenosha is looking for volunteers&#13;
to work in our Centers (we&#13;
have five). You set a time&#13;
(between 9 and 1) and we do the&#13;
rest. Volunteers help at&#13;
mealtime, storytime, playtime&#13;
and assist on field trips and&#13;
walks.&#13;
Our children range in age&#13;
from four to five. If you are&#13;
interested call 652-6326 and ask&#13;
for Miss Marshall - Social&#13;
Worker, or Miss Watts - 658-&#13;
2371, Extension 77 (Principal).&#13;
The most&#13;
Meaningful Semester&#13;
you'll ever spend...&#13;
could be the one on&#13;
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bailing Feb. 1972 to Africa and the Orient&#13;
fhrough a transfer format, more than 5,000&#13;
students from 450 c ampuses have part icipated&#13;
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WCA will bro aden yo ur ho rizons, literally a nd&#13;
iguratively ... and give you a better chance to&#13;
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You'll study at sea with an experienced cosnopolitan&#13;
facul ty, and then durin g port stops&#13;
you'll study the world itself. You'll discover that&#13;
no m atter how foreign and far-away, yo u have a&#13;
lot in common wi th pe ople of other la nds.&#13;
WCA isn' t as expensive as you mig ht thin k;&#13;
we've done ou r best to br ing it wi thin rea ch o f&#13;
most college studen ts. Write to day for free&#13;
details.&#13;
TEACHERS: Summer travel with credit for teachers&#13;
and administrators .&#13;
Write Today to:&#13;
Chapman College,&#13;
Box CC 26, Ora nge, Calif ornia 9266 G&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
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Page 6 NEWSCOPE October 25,1971&#13;
Parks i (J £• S&#13;
7 iferary ma qo. xi'v*--&#13;
S a t&gt; mil" t/Our Uot'k&#13;
at tke&#13;
n&#13;
"&#13;
a&#13;
«*»»* ^ 'k^sr&#13;
«v.*f&#13;
PlXXA-K^&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racine&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
, The Wine|&#13;
leaking j&#13;
i Season |&#13;
is Here... ? 15&#13;
i- and we've g ot Lji&#13;
| everything for ^&#13;
jy b eginners o r e xperts i&lt;&#13;
t at S PECIAL PRICES.&#13;
0W»0 5&#13;
crcc-CT&#13;
HWY 1&#13;
reduced prices&#13;
on al l wine re cks,&#13;
winemaking kits&#13;
" ifts.&#13;
HWY A&#13;
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You can make wines like&#13;
those you buy at a iiaction V&#13;
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•;.j It's simple, fun and fascin- 7&#13;
ating; Send for FREE i llus-&#13;
* trated catalog of wine mak- j'!"&#13;
ing equipment and supplies, ji;&#13;
Come In&#13;
and see our complete line of&#13;
wine racks. We ha ve the&#13;
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if&#13;
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Leao to PV^b»e^s&#13;
15 vfi" THE Trip&#13;
IS V£Jty WO&amp;TH&#13;
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RACINE, WISCONSIN 53402&#13;
OPEN 8-5 Weekdays, j]&#13;
10-5 Saturdays, 12-5 Sundays -&#13;
|&#13;
INTAKE IS TWO BUCKS AND YOUR TEN TRANSISTOR RADIO&#13;
"What's Intake?"&#13;
Intake is a multi media concert, Friday, October 29, 8:15 P.M.,&#13;
Uihlein Hall at the Performing Arts Center. It's for college&#13;
students, no "old" folks, nothing uptight. It's mostly surprises&#13;
including jazz-rock and lights. Call it the Milwaukee Symphony&#13;
without tuxedos. But bring that transistor radio along.&#13;
"What?"&#13;
You'll need to bring a transistor radio. Yehuda Yannay of UWM's&#13;
music faculty has written "Concerto for Audience and Orchestra"&#13;
for this concert. He'll need an all electronic audience. Bring a&#13;
transistor radio and you'll have something to do. The audience&#13;
performs the transistor radio passages and the Milwaukee Symphony&#13;
plays back up. That's it!&#13;
"Sounds Outrageous!"&#13;
It is. Bring that radio, though. Especially bring those lucky models&#13;
that have FM and short wave bands. These instruments carry a&#13;
wider range of available sound. Directions will be flashed on&#13;
screens up front. Imagine this. You're setting in velvet comfort.&#13;
You're composed and ready for action. It starts. You manipulate&#13;
your dials, discriminating, selecting, taking solos, adjusting. You&#13;
are the performer.&#13;
Bring that radio!&#13;
The composer personally intends to reward each radio operator. Be&#13;
there. You'll get surprises no crud. Make your own music for a&#13;
change . . . Intake, October 29.&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
For The Record&#13;
Till: riNIK Till N O S IN Ml'f IT&#13;
Downtown Kenosha •&#13;
DAUNTLESS DEFENDER OF QUALITY DAUNT; —&#13;
IT ; _&#13;
R „ j DAI)&#13;
oAilHRESS DEFENDER OF QtlAUTl&#13;
Saturday October 29th&#13;
Steve Freeman&#13;
Folksinger&#13;
Spanish Guitar—Vocals&#13;
6p.m.-l lp.m.&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
on wood road just south of parkside &#13;
»interviewi&#13;
October 25, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Jesus Christ Superstar&#13;
photographs by rick pazera&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
of th e Newscope Staff&#13;
JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR&#13;
came to the Racine Case&#13;
Fieldhouse last Saturday for two&#13;
performances of the sometimes&#13;
controversial Webber and Rice&#13;
rock-opera. At Parkside,&#13;
specifically, much of the controversy&#13;
revolved around the price&#13;
of tickets. Newscope interviewed&#13;
Tom Westerman, who played the&#13;
role of Christ, on this and other&#13;
topics. What follows is a transcription&#13;
of the interview.&#13;
Newscope: How do you feel about&#13;
making big business out of&#13;
something of this nature?&#13;
Westerman: The feeling, really, is&#13;
that we're all professional people&#13;
and we're doing this for a job. I was&#13;
in Hair before this and people&#13;
asked the same kind of questions,&#13;
y'know, talking about ecology and&#13;
putting down big business and then&#13;
charging $9.50 a seat. You have to&#13;
realize that the people who wrote&#13;
this work wrotet it as a theater&#13;
piece to sell and make money. So&#13;
that's where their at, and that's&#13;
good. That's how they make their&#13;
living. I feel very lucky to be in a&#13;
show like this that has something to&#13;
say, but if I wasn't in this show I'd&#13;
be in something else to make a&#13;
living so I can't put it down.&#13;
NS: In other words, it's strictly a&#13;
job, and you wouldn't consider it a&#13;
cause or a crusade.&#13;
Westerman: I think theater itself&#13;
can be a cause, and I think it is a&#13;
crusade because I really dug what&#13;
it had to say so I auditioned for it&#13;
and was lucky enough to get the&#13;
part. I could have gone and done&#13;
"Hello Dolly" somewhere in&#13;
summer stock which is good, but&#13;
doesn't have anything to say except&#13;
that it's a great form of entertainment.&#13;
I chose this, so in my&#13;
own way I feel I'm saying&#13;
something, but I'm getting paid for&#13;
it just like I'd be for anything else.&#13;
The two are interwoven.&#13;
NS: Obviously this play is getting a&#13;
reaction, more than any other at&#13;
this time. Where • is your pro&#13;
reaction coming from and where is&#13;
your con reaction coming from, if&#13;
you could . . . generalize.&#13;
Westerman: Mostly the con&#13;
reaction is coming from&#13;
established church groups because&#13;
they think the work may be like&#13;
heresy to the church. But every&#13;
time people come to see it with&#13;
their minds like that I think their&#13;
minds changed because the work&#13;
concerns the last seven days of&#13;
Christ's life as a man and it doesn't&#13;
say if h e was God or the son of God.&#13;
We don't attempt to even make a&#13;
statement that he was the son of&#13;
God, or wasn't. We're telling what&#13;
happened to him and the crusade&#13;
he was on. I personally was&#13;
brought in the church and I believe&#13;
he was the son of God, or if he&#13;
didn't have a good chance of being&#13;
the son of God, he wouldn't have&#13;
been in history like he is because he&#13;
would have been a nobody.&#13;
Whatever you believe, that's up to&#13;
you, but people are saying, 'you're&#13;
saying this' or 'you're saying that'&#13;
— we're saying nothing. We're&#13;
saying this is what happened to this&#13;
man, so there's nothing&#13;
sacreligious about it. It's how you&#13;
take it, and if you take it to be&#13;
something dirty or smutty, then its&#13;
gonna be that way. People did that&#13;
with Hair, too.&#13;
NS: Is this play going to be&#13;
remembered ... as something&#13;
that marked a new period in&#13;
drama?&#13;
Westerman: The work is called a&#13;
'rock opera'. When "Porgy and&#13;
Bes' opened as a musical it was a&#13;
different thing. It was like an&#13;
opera, but still a musical comedy&#13;
not having the true opera form.&#13;
This and "Tommy" have similarly&#13;
come along and brought the rock&#13;
world into a more classical state.&#13;
It's really very legit so they call it a&#13;
rock opera. When Handel wrote the&#13;
"Messiah" he wasn't commissioned&#13;
by the church, he did it&#13;
as a theater piece. It was opened&#13;
and presented in a theater. He&#13;
wrote about the passion of Christ,&#13;
but it was completely a theater&#13;
piece and after time went by the&#13;
church adopted it. Who's to say&#13;
that 50 years from now Superstar&#13;
won't be that same type of thing. I&#13;
think it definitely is going to have&#13;
its place in our classical scheme of&#13;
things.&#13;
NS: ecause of the nature of this&#13;
play have you ever been asked to&#13;
perform for nothing, or for very&#13;
nominal fees?&#13;
Westerman: No.&#13;
NS: Would you do it for nothing?&#13;
Westerman: No. Our whole&#13;
company here is the original&#13;
company from the people that&#13;
wrote the play. There's Broadway&#13;
and us. It's completely&#13;
professional.&#13;
NS: At this school there was a&#13;
movement to boycott Superstar. A&#13;
rip-off seven-fifty for tickets was&#13;
Considered unrealistic and inappropriate.&#13;
What would you say to&#13;
these people as far as the expense,&#13;
who gets the money, and so forth.&#13;
Westerman: I'm getting the money&#13;
for doing my job; the light men are&#13;
getting the money for doing their&#13;
job, mostly the people that wrote&#13;
the play are getting the money. All&#13;
I can say is that if it's too much&#13;
money to come to any type of entertainment&#13;
you can choose not to&#13;
go, so you're not being ripped-off.&#13;
If you choose to take out your&#13;
wallet and pay for a ticket to go see&#13;
some entertainment you've done it&#13;
because you wanted to. It's not a&#13;
rip-off.&#13;
NS: But a lot more people could&#13;
choose to go if the prices were&#13;
lower.&#13;
Westerman: What's the lowest&#13;
ticket for this?&#13;
NS: $4.50&#13;
Westerman: Broadway prices are&#13;
fifteen-ninety five.&#13;
NS: But that's Broadway and not&#13;
Westerman: That's inflation. It's&#13;
really bad that prices are so high,&#13;
but you can't take an artistic thing,&#13;
or anything, and say that it's too&#13;
much money because everyones'&#13;
on this grand scale, everybody gets&#13;
paid and everybody has to pay, and&#13;
that's life. To me it's not a rip-off.&#13;
This work is not a charity thing, it's&#13;
a piece of theater. People pay to&#13;
see theater the same as they pay to&#13;
get a haircut.&#13;
NS: And the nature of "the play&#13;
wouldn't change that in any way?&#13;
Westerman: No. First of all it's a&#13;
commercial work.&#13;
NS: About a non-commercial&#13;
person.&#13;
Westerman: So what?&#13;
NS: It just seems incongruous,&#13;
sometimes.&#13;
Westerman: That's like people&#13;
wanting to get something for&#13;
nothing. The work isn't exploiting&#13;
anything, it's telling you the story&#13;
of a man. &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE October 25,1971&#13;
by JimKoloen&#13;
of the Newscipe staff&#13;
Title: Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee&#13;
Author: Dee Brown&#13;
Publisher: Holt, Rinehart &amp; Winston&#13;
($10.95)&#13;
"There was no hope on earth, and God&#13;
seemed to have forgotten us. Some said&#13;
they saw the Son of God; others did not see&#13;
Him. If He had come, He would do some&#13;
great things as He had done before. We&#13;
doubted it because we had seen neither&#13;
Him nor His works.&#13;
"The people did not know; they did not&#13;
care. They snatched at the hope. They&#13;
screamed like crazy men to Him for&#13;
mercy. They caught at the promise they&#13;
heard He had made.&#13;
"The white men were frightened and&#13;
called for soldiers. We had begged for life,&#13;
and the white men thought we wanted&#13;
theirs. We heard that soldiers were&#13;
coming. We did not fear. We hoped that we&#13;
could tell them our troubles and get help. A&#13;
white man said the soldiers meant to kill&#13;
us. We did not believe it, but some were&#13;
frightened and ran away to the Badlands."&#13;
— Red Cloud&#13;
Once proud Oglala Sioux war Chief Red ,&#13;
Cloud was an agency Indian when he spoke&#13;
those words, once strong warrior was old&#13;
and cautious when he'd heard about the&#13;
massacre of Big Foot and 300 women,&#13;
children and unarmed warriors of the&#13;
Standing Rock Sioux at Wounded Knee&#13;
Creek. In 1877 th e mother and father of '&#13;
Crazy Horse had buried the bones and"&#13;
heart of their warrior son in the Pine Ridge&#13;
area near Wounded Knee Creek. In the&#13;
"Moon When the Deer Shed Their Hors",&#13;
"the fourth day after Christmas in the&#13;
Year of Our Lord 1890", a nation of people&#13;
died their symbolic death, thus ending the&#13;
systematic murder of a culture that had&#13;
begun in earnest little more than a hundred&#13;
years earlier.&#13;
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee is an&#13;
"Indian history of the American West".&#13;
Dee Brown, Indian scholar and presently&#13;
librarian at the University of Illinois,&#13;
wrote it after years of research; footnotes&#13;
and bibliography to this 490 page history&#13;
total 25 pages. I suggest you read the book&#13;
without looking up the footnotes because 1&#13;
like a used car. None of the Indians ever&#13;
able to undersand how the land could be&#13;
sold since no one but the Great Spirit, who&#13;
created it, could ever own it, men just&#13;
lived on it.&#13;
Greed, Christianity, politics, all conspired&#13;
to clear the West of the savages&#13;
General Sheridan had said were best when&#13;
dead. When the Indians felt their camps&#13;
threatened they went to war, fighting with&#13;
old guns, little ammunition, bows and&#13;
BOOK&#13;
they tend to obstruct the continuity.&#13;
Brown begins Bury My Heart with a&#13;
brief look at the white man's march across&#13;
the American East where the natives, who&#13;
had at first looked Upon th e aliens from&#13;
another shore as children who needed their&#13;
help, too late saw them as an enemy. After&#13;
the American East there came the&#13;
American West, new land just waiting&#13;
there for the white man to plow up, cut&#13;
down, build roads upon, dig up and claim&#13;
as their own by reasin of Manifest Desityn.&#13;
Bury My Heart is a painful book to read,&#13;
it makes your heart bad to feel even one&#13;
molecule of the resurrected red frustration&#13;
unearthed by Brown. Proud warriors,&#13;
their women and children hunted from one&#13;
end of the country to another, captured&#13;
then "hereded like buffalo" across frozen&#13;
rivers to reservations where they were&#13;
forced to sell the land for broken promises,&#13;
arrows and guerrilla tactics they eventually&#13;
gained the respect and admiration&#13;
of some of their adversaries. General&#13;
Crook (Three Stars) became a defender of&#13;
the Indians after spending 20 yea rs of his&#13;
life conquering them. "Indian lovers" like&#13;
Crook ended their service to their country&#13;
by resigning their commissions; hobody&#13;
likes an "Indian lover".&#13;
When the Bluecoats had finally forced&#13;
the Indians to surrender, by a combination&#13;
of superior weaponry, numbers and the&#13;
bitter cold, the time for treaty talks came.&#13;
The "permanent Indian frontier" would be&#13;
re-established hundreds of miles further&#13;
West or South, for the expropriated land&#13;
the Indian tribes would receive an unfulfilled&#13;
promise of food, clothing, shelter.&#13;
Later, Indian commissioners were to label&#13;
the defeated Indians as free-loaders. The&#13;
Great Father in. Washington would invite&#13;
the Chiefs to visit him, and air their&#13;
complaints. The old warriors would return&#13;
to their people with more empty promises,&#13;
and sinhy metal on their coats, and the&#13;
knowledge that the White man could not be&#13;
defeated, that he comes like "fire across&#13;
the grass".&#13;
Back on the reservations the Chiefs were&#13;
told that their people would be "made into&#13;
white men". Young warriors who&#13;
remembered their freedom would leave&#13;
the reservation to be hunted down by&#13;
Bluecoats, older men and finally even&#13;
Sitting Bull could only speak about the past&#13;
and how they'd been cheated out of their&#13;
land. Having lost their power after&#13;
"touching the pen" the chilefs were&#13;
merely spokesmen, their tribes made up of&#13;
widows, orphans and broken warriors.&#13;
The Black Hills (Paha-Shpa) were taken&#13;
and ripped open by miners, roads were&#13;
built through the sacred lands where the&#13;
"center of the world" was. The nation's&#13;
hoop had been broken in the name of Gold,&#13;
Christ and the American way.&#13;
Bury My Heart is an informative history&#13;
of a race whose only trace is in the names&#13;
of the lands they left behind. Brown&#13;
utilizes some of the Indian syntax, interspersing&#13;
the writing with quotes from&#13;
Chiefs and photographs. It is a book you&#13;
can read in a day, it engrosses you and&#13;
taints your day because the history of the&#13;
American West is a history of much&#13;
badness. The Chiefs and warriors brought&#13;
honesty and nobility to the peace talks,&#13;
they received insults, lies and exile from a&#13;
land that was dear to them. Sheridan got&#13;
his wish.&#13;
Highly recommended along with Black&#13;
Elk Speaks by John Neihardt. If you read&#13;
but two books this year, read these tow.&#13;
(Courtesy of the'Book Mart)&#13;
Free Aioiye&#13;
"fk&lt;. A r o d Kcfv® »\, o £ •&#13;
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He Hew Yogtie Heater&#13;
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1820 - 52nd Street, Kenosha&#13;
FRIDAY OCTOBER 29 7:30 AND 9:45 P.M.&#13;
SATURDAY OCTOBER 30&#13;
SUNDAY OCTOBER 31&#13;
The best movies in town this weekend are;&#13;
Waiting For G odot&#13;
by NOBEL PRIZE winning playwrite&#13;
SAMUEL BECKETT&#13;
starring the original broadway cast&#13;
zero Mostel EStragon&#13;
Burgess ^erideth v'adimir&#13;
Kurt Ka sznar pozzo&#13;
^Ivin EPStein ;-[_ucky&#13;
also&#13;
[Darkness Darkness P3&#13;
*&#13;
DARKNESS DARKNESS is a film a bout heroin&#13;
During the film the viewer enters the world of&#13;
the addict. Actually seeing what it is like to&#13;
be addicted is a powerful deferent against its&#13;
use. The viewer will possess a new understanding&#13;
about the hard drug experience after&#13;
he has seen DARKNESS DARKNESS&#13;
Admission $1.00 in advance or $1.25 at the&#13;
door. Advance tickets may be purchased at&#13;
the Newscope Office or any Art Gallery in&#13;
Harbor West - Kenosha. In Racine at The&#13;
Earth Works and It's A Beautiful Day.&#13;
WAITING FOR GODOT&#13;
"Words! Oh, words!" rattling, mumbling on the&#13;
condition of man, Samuel Beckett's playscreenplay&#13;
Godot is one of the most satiristic&#13;
pieces ever written for theatre, or film. It revels in&#13;
the same blasting outrageous light shared with&#13;
Joyce and Kafka and adjusts the controls of&#13;
perception and time, truth being its only constant.&#13;
The audience is tossed about from ancient&#13;
vaudeville routines to the mockery of God and&#13;
belief showing them as the reason for greed and&#13;
alienation the audience is eventually led into a&#13;
more arbitrary definition of existence (into&#13;
collectiveity away from essentials).&#13;
With many themes, the fate of Lucky and Pozzo&#13;
inseparable in their final blindness seems particularly&#13;
significant. Pozzo-God-Lucky-Man are&#13;
what might be called the status quo of belief;&#13;
Lucky, in "thinking", asserts "for reasons&#13;
unknown, the facts are there". They visit the&#13;
waiting Estragon and Vladimir (Zero Mostell and&#13;
Burgess Meredith) who await the impending&#13;
Godot (whose arrival is as impossible, as is optimism&#13;
impossible) always coming as hope is&#13;
always coming and activity wastes away in the&#13;
waiting.&#13;
Godot is now, it reflects a coming of activity and&#13;
doing merely by showing the waiting for nothing.&#13;
We can hear the echo of Abbie Hoffman and Jerry&#13;
Ruben and all the rest as students of Beckett. They&#13;
express the need to find something other than the&#13;
're-creation' of happiness..&#13;
DARKNESS, DARKNESS&#13;
It is assumed that when an enigmatic thing is&#13;
finally defined and categorized it loses its quality&#13;
to the process of measurement. While it would&#13;
seem to me nothing is categorizable or definable&#13;
the film Darkness, Darkness left the impression of&#13;
definition and category on the quantity called&#13;
Heroin, scaring those hard pressed by a society&#13;
into taking it; away.&#13;
The needle is shown as a dissonant item on&#13;
several occassions throughout the film burrowing&#13;
Burroughslike into the skin of the user and the&#13;
frontal lobes of the viewer.&#13;
Before and after is used as a major them as the&#13;
image of an existential gold and green hued postuser&#13;
talkes candidly about the bad trip in jive. He&#13;
makes simplistic sense of it all, and should be&#13;
listened to carefully. His general summation could&#13;
be called shooting yourself into nature (an open&#13;
system) rather than shooting into yourself (a&#13;
closed one).&#13;
With the stoned rap of a user the denial of the&#13;
personal is complete. While only a few phrases are&#13;
understandable the realization that "It has&#13;
become (his) wife" and "stay away from it, you'll&#13;
feel too good" are sufficient reasons for me to&#13;
stick with something less intraveinous.&#13;
The same messages were as aptly told in The&#13;
Velvet Underground's audio attacks in the form of&#13;
another so-positive-so-bad syntax, "Heroin" and&#13;
"waitin' For My Man" with even more of the pain&#13;
so inherent in the society that makes a thinking&#13;
being do it in the first place. T Then, it would&#13;
seem, that I agree with the film on all points except&#13;
that it failed to identify any reason for a&#13;
person doing it in that first place. Reasons should&#13;
be easy enough to find.&#13;
The New Vogue has been consistently a worthwhile&#13;
experience and diserves its chairs to be&#13;
full.&#13;
On this occassion a criticism is necessary. The&#13;
programming of Darkness, Darkness and Waiting&#13;
for Godot is a mind-racking experience. Heroin&#13;
and the "despairing clowns" of a Beckett farce&#13;
are almost too much in one night.&#13;
William Sorensen &#13;
r&#13;
by Paul Lomartire, Feature Editor&#13;
Eating Out and I were having a light lunch of&#13;
cold cuts, soup and lemonade on a Tuesday during&#13;
the waning weeks of August. No words were&#13;
spoken during the meal. Only the uneven music of&#13;
silverware and dishes broke the uncomfortable&#13;
silence.&#13;
Watching Eating Out salt away sandwiches, I&#13;
realized that the weekly bit of writing, which has&#13;
begun as a snack, had grown into a full course&#13;
dinner, consumed by many readers.&#13;
Eating Out made it known to me that it wanted&#13;
to end its weekly appearance in Newscope. The&#13;
demands had become great. Some people were&#13;
taking the weekly feature too seriously.&#13;
Restaurant owners and managers either badgered&#13;
Eating Out into visiting their establishment, or&#13;
they wanted to complain about something that had&#13;
appeared in the column. Probably worst of all,&#13;
Eating Out and I found ourselves flat broke. We&#13;
were eating between Newscope sponsored free&#13;
meals, on the lowest ebb of the sandwich scale, in&#13;
our opinion. One of us had to go out into the "real&#13;
world" and get a job, or continue to eat bologna.&#13;
An affair that had begun many sentences and&#13;
paragraphs before, between Eating Out and I, was&#13;
in jeopardy. Eating Out was just plain tired. After&#13;
talking over the situation, it was decided by&#13;
mutual agreement that Eating Out and I would&#13;
take a needed vacation from the journalism dinner&#13;
table.&#13;
The afternoon of the meeting was the last I&#13;
saw of the feature for over a month. I didn't even&#13;
get a card. I had heard through word of mouth,&#13;
that a similar piece of writing, known as "state&#13;
Street Gourmet" had found a home at the&#13;
University of Madison on the Daily Cardinal. I&#13;
didn't want to even bother going to Madison to see&#13;
if the State Street eater had seen or heard of&#13;
Eating Out. I decided to be patient.&#13;
Late oneevening last week, after the 11:20 had&#13;
rumbled down the tracks across from my apartment,&#13;
shaking ever dish in the place, I heard a&#13;
knock. I opened the door and saw Eating Out.&#13;
Although a bit thin, the collection of restaurant&#13;
reviews, past and future, looked good.&#13;
After we talked a bit, it was decided by mutual&#13;
agreement, that Eating Out would return to bimonthly&#13;
appearances in Newscope. I had a parttime&#13;
job to support us now, and we were braced for&#13;
hassles.&#13;
Eating Out had returned to stay, or at least&#13;
until things got too heavy, or everything turned&#13;
back into bologna.&#13;
' m m m ^ ~ — —p—11—i n.njn_ru~xru-ij-u~Li~Li-ij~ij~unj-i nri n.n_&#13;
October 25,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 9&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
Imagine—John Lennon and The&#13;
Plastic Ono Band (with the Flux&#13;
Fiddlers)&#13;
Produced by John Lennon,&#13;
Yoko Ono and Phil Spector&#13;
By Robert Cos&#13;
I would suggest this album to&#13;
every music listener who, from&#13;
the first time they hears"I Want&#13;
to Hold Your Hand" has&#13;
followed every note, bar and&#13;
work written by the now&#13;
deceased Beatles. I would go as&#13;
far as to suggest this album to&#13;
anyone, excluding my parents.&#13;
Since the Beatles split in '69&#13;
all four have made efforts to go&#13;
it alone. Harrison has produced&#13;
a triple album which would&#13;
Band album has been the best&#13;
one produced since the split.&#13;
"Imagine" is running a close&#13;
second.&#13;
The lyrics and vocals seem to&#13;
be a bit shallow and monotonous&#13;
at times, but the instrumental&#13;
compositions more than makes&#13;
up for it. The musicians in this&#13;
group are all standouts. The&#13;
late King Curtis on siz, John&#13;
Lennon on one hell of a rythm&#13;
guitar, piano, and mouth organ,&#13;
Geroge Harrison on guitar,&#13;
slide guitar, and dobro, Nicky&#13;
Hopkins, who has played with&#13;
such greats as "The Rolling&#13;
Stones", "The Steve Miller&#13;
Band" etc; on piano, Klaus&#13;
Voorman l)n bass, and Alan&#13;
have been much more&#13;
pleasurable as a single disc.&#13;
McCartney has done two on his&#13;
own in which he is still trying to&#13;
give his fans the "church choir&#13;
boy" image. Paul seems to be&#13;
quite successful in that&#13;
department, but falls short in&#13;
respect to his musical compositions.&#13;
Ringo's shaudy attempt&#13;
at country western&#13;
(Beaucoups of Blues) and his&#13;
unforgettable "Sentimental&#13;
Journey," which I would like to&#13;
see performed on "The&#13;
Lawrence Welk Show" are also&#13;
far less than what we expected.&#13;
But we must also keep in mind&#13;
that they are all working under&#13;
the stress of the legal and&#13;
personal aspects concerning&#13;
their break up.&#13;
Musically, Lennon seems to&#13;
be the least affected by it all. To&#13;
this date, his second Plastic Ono&#13;
White on drusm. All vocals and&#13;
lyrics are done by Lennon.&#13;
There is one cut on&#13;
"Imagine" which I consider to&#13;
be way below Lennon's&#13;
capabilities, and that being "I&#13;
Don't Wanna Be a Soldier&#13;
Mamma, I Don't Wanna Die".&#13;
The lyrics consist of the title&#13;
with the works failure, begger,&#13;
thier, sailor, churchman, etc.,&#13;
thrown into replace the work&#13;
soldier. The instrumental, as a&#13;
whole, is just as boring. But,&#13;
taken as a whole, "Imagine" is&#13;
an enjoyable and worthwhile&#13;
album. „&#13;
As is true with almost all rock&#13;
albums, there are a few cuts&#13;
which stand out on "Imagine .&#13;
In this case, I am thinking of he&#13;
songs entitled "How Do You&#13;
Sleep," "Crippled Inside,^ and&#13;
the title song, "Imagine.&#13;
"How Do You Sleep is a&#13;
person to person song to McCartney.&#13;
The bitterness John&#13;
feels towards McCartney is&#13;
expressed and becomes quite&#13;
obvious in his lyrics:&#13;
those freaks was right when&#13;
they said you was dead&#13;
the one mistake you made was&#13;
in your head&#13;
how do you sleep?&#13;
the only thing you done was&#13;
yesterday&#13;
and since you've gone your're&#13;
just another day&#13;
how do you sleep?&#13;
Right or wrong, he gets the&#13;
message across very clearly.&#13;
The orchestration on this song is&#13;
done well, and is hauntingly&#13;
reminiscent of Sgt. Pepper.&#13;
Very precise and different.&#13;
"Cripple Inside" is a different&#13;
form of music in that it breaks&#13;
away from the traditional rock&#13;
'n' roll style that has made&#13;
Lennon a star. It vaguely&#13;
reminds you of the same form of&#13;
the 1930's vaudeville music.&#13;
Harrison does an excellent job&#13;
of fitting in a very well played&#13;
dobro.&#13;
The first time I heard&#13;
"Imagine" was on a car radio&#13;
infected with more static than&#13;
music. But even through all the&#13;
static, it was umistakably&#13;
another Lennon song. The lyrics&#13;
consist of the same antireligious,&#13;
nation and war&#13;
message which Lennon has&#13;
been preaching for years. The&#13;
only difference in this song is&#13;
that it is sung with more sincerity&#13;
and depth than he has&#13;
ever had before. His piano&#13;
playing also works along with&#13;
and supports his vocal&#13;
arragnement very affectively.&#13;
Through the years John&#13;
Lennon has taken it upon&#13;
himself to be concerned and&#13;
active in many of the world's&#13;
cultures and problems. A leader&#13;
for peach, the avante garde art&#13;
movement, guru, and an outstanding&#13;
writer. But after all he&#13;
has said and done, he is a&#13;
dedicated musician first. And I&#13;
would like to add, one of the best&#13;
rock 'n' roll has ever offered. &#13;
Page 10 NEWSCOPE October 25,1971&#13;
j4oude of Yjutrition&#13;
NATURAL COSMETICS&#13;
NATURAL GRAINS&amp;CEREALS&#13;
UNSULPHURED FRUITS&#13;
HEALTH FOODS&#13;
6221 - 22ND AVENUE KENOSHA PHONE 652&gt;4787&#13;
"Here's To Your Good Health"&#13;
j _ u r nr '&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
i , lb ('•ROUND BF.KL&#13;
ON FRENCH CRUST&#13;
BREAD DRESSED&#13;
WI TH CRISP&#13;
I KTTUCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
C,RII.LED COUNTRY&#13;
HAM A CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLEWHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE.&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
.80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OF BURC.ER CHEESE.&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISE ON TOAST 90c&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 331 1 SHEFJIDAN. ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROADPussycat&#13;
Lounge&#13;
Racine&#13;
632-3785 or&#13;
633-3805&#13;
Tast To Save A People'&#13;
On Wednesday, November 3, Parkside will&#13;
participate in a nation-wide effort aimed at&#13;
helping the nine million East Pakistani&#13;
refugees now in India. The November 3,&#13;
"Fast to Save a People" will involve a&#13;
massive fund-raising campaign, coupled with&#13;
an attempt to return the critical situation in&#13;
West Bengal and the other refugee areas to&#13;
the awareness of the American public.&#13;
It is shocking and dismaying that what has&#13;
happened and is still happening in that part of&#13;
the world should have passed so quickly from&#13;
the nation's public forums of d iscussion, and&#13;
out of the consciousness of the average&#13;
citizen. The refugees from East Pakistan&#13;
were victims of a devastating cyclone last&#13;
November which claimed half a million lives&#13;
and effectively removed the year's food crop,&#13;
and then, in March, of an eruption of civil&#13;
strife which resulted in the violent deaths of&#13;
another quarter million people. These events&#13;
precipitated a massive exodus of terrified&#13;
East Pakistani citizens out of their country&#13;
and into neighboring India, where their&#13;
present number, nine million, is enlarged by&#13;
thirty thousand daily. They are crowded into&#13;
makeshift camps whose facilities are most&#13;
generously described as extremely&#13;
inadequate; in many cases, the camps serve&#13;
merely as grisly arenas in which starvation&#13;
and disease end the long journey arbitrarily&#13;
for thousands of people.&#13;
When she opened her borders to the&#13;
refugees, India automatically made a&#13;
commitment of one billion dollars for their&#13;
care. This is an intolerable strain upon India's&#13;
very limited resources, especially in view of&#13;
the fact that she faces possible famine herself&#13;
in the area of West Bengal province due to&#13;
crop loss from monsoon flloding. Outside aid&#13;
is desperately needed, and unless generous&#13;
amounts of it are forthcoming, it is generally&#13;
feared that a significant fraction of the&#13;
refugees will starve to death, or die of exposure&#13;
and the attendant diseases, during the&#13;
coming winter. If that is allowed to happen, it&#13;
will have been the most disastrous human&#13;
catastrophe in modern history.&#13;
The November 3 "Fast to Save a People",&#13;
jointly sponsored by Oxfam-America and&#13;
Project Relief, is designed to focus national&#13;
attention upon these shocking facts. On that&#13;
Wednesday, the students of our nation's high&#13;
schools and colleges are being urged to skip&#13;
one or all of the day's meals, and donate the&#13;
money thus saved to the relief operation. It is&#13;
hoped that an enormous amount of money will&#13;
be raised, so that the Fast day may stand as a&#13;
true, unprecedented people-to-people relief&#13;
experiment. So that the community at large&#13;
might follow their example in observing the&#13;
Fast, it is necessary that the students' participation&#13;
be as close as possible to universal.&#13;
The effectiveness with which money&#13;
donated to the relief effort is converted into&#13;
tangible necessities for the refugees is&#13;
startling: all money collected during the Fast&#13;
will go directly to Osfam's Field Director in&#13;
India, where a dollar can provide one refugee&#13;
for an entire month with supplementary highnutrient&#13;
foods, multivitamins, powdered&#13;
milk, medicines, sanitation services, basic&#13;
clothing, corrugated plastic shetlers, and&#13;
tarpaulins. Oxfam has many years of experience&#13;
in development work in Indian and&#13;
was well established in the provinces around&#13;
East Pakistan when the refugees first began&#13;
to pour across. Working closely with local&#13;
Indian groups, Oxfam has achieved an exceptional&#13;
reputation within the relief effort&#13;
for the efficient management of funds and for&#13;
the production of a maximum of relief for&#13;
each dollar donated. No administrative costs&#13;
will be deducted from the proceeds of the&#13;
November 3 "Fast to Save a People". Every&#13;
penny will go to the camps in India.&#13;
Checks payable to "The November 3 Fast",&#13;
or cash, or any questions you may have can&#13;
be brought to the organizing center for the&#13;
Fast.&#13;
A fast is, of course, a symbolic act. Ir can&#13;
serve to make dramatically clear on a personal&#13;
level what prolonged hunger can do to a&#13;
human being. And it is admirably suited to&#13;
reminding the public of what the news media&#13;
have partially forgotten: that the situation in&#13;
the area of Bengal has not dissipated, but has&#13;
in fact grown more critical. It is expected that&#13;
the successful Fast on November 3 will&#13;
trigger a nationwide response, whose form&#13;
might be individual and collective efforts to&#13;
raise money and to resurrect the issue as&#13;
headline news: artists, musicians, educators,&#13;
clergy, all Americans of means or talent may&#13;
take their cue from the student action and&#13;
donate whatever services are characteristic&#13;
of their professions.&#13;
Sign up for the fast donations will be on&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 2, when buttons will be on sale&#13;
for 25 cents. Fast donations can be made the&#13;
next day at all three campuses on November 3&#13;
in the student lounges at Kenosha and Racine&#13;
and in the activities building at Parkside.&#13;
More activities are in the planning stages.&#13;
Sponsored by the Newman Club through&#13;
information provided by the Student&#13;
Government Association.&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
Rolex - Accutron&#13;
Ultrachron • Longine&#13;
Bulova - Movado&#13;
Caravelle - Timex&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France'*&#13;
FS neat -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Craduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
.•/ Vl-X 5817 6th Ave.&#13;
VmmJMv&amp;SonA&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace • Lunt&#13;
Reed &amp; Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefora&#13;
Seneca • Lalique&#13;
Royal Worceater&#13;
LOST &amp; FOUND&#13;
FOUND: Sunglasses, Sweater&#13;
Jacket. Contact lost &amp; found dept.,&#13;
information Center. 2nd floor&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
LOST: 1 navy blue knit pancho in&#13;
vicinity of Greenquist Lounge about&#13;
Sept. 20. Contact Wendy, 654-1593.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1966 Mustang 289 - 2 bbl. 3 speed on&#13;
floor. Must sell. Call Marty at 658-&#13;
3023 after 5:30. Good condition.&#13;
1969 Charger RT 440 Magnum, .4-&#13;
speed, extras 5110 - 23rd Ave. 658-&#13;
3659 after 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Goodyear Polyglass Tires 2-60x15,&#13;
Ansen Spring Mags, 658-3659 after 6.&#13;
1967 Ford Mustang - 6 cyl,&#13;
Automatic, 2 door hardtop, Call 639-&#13;
1777 after 6:00 p.m.&#13;
1965 Volkswagen - 23,000 mi. on&#13;
rebuilt engine, reupholstered and&#13;
painted last year. Maroon with black&#13;
interior, new exhaust system, radiorear&#13;
speaker, 23-27 mpg. Asking&#13;
S500. Call 694-5138 after 4 p.m.&#13;
1962 Rambler - automatic, good&#13;
condition, best offer. 564-2665.&#13;
FOR SALE — 1967 Norton 750 cc&#13;
Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing. Phone 552-8347 or&#13;
Newscope office. Leave message for&#13;
Rick Pazera.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WANTED — Guitar case - cheap.&#13;
554-9174. For a Folk guitar.&#13;
WANTED — Male student to share&#13;
one bedroom, furnished apartment&#13;
at 1327 Howe St., Racine. $10 per&#13;
week. Contact Robin - 6 34-4775.&#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;
I need a ride to the Sunnyside area of&#13;
Kenosha from Hwy. A. area. Any or&#13;
all days Monday - Fri. Must be at&#13;
work 8:00 a.m. Willing to help on gas&#13;
money. Call 552-8960 and ask for&#13;
Deborah.&#13;
NEEDED — Poetry, short stories,&#13;
drama for "Indications" magazine.&#13;
Deadline Nov. 1, 1971. Send to:&#13;
Newscope, Hwy A and Eood Rd.,&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Ludwig Drum Set — Blue sparkle 3&#13;
piece wity cymbols, hi-hat, etc. Was&#13;
$424, asking $250. A-1. Phone 554-&#13;
9174.&#13;
PHOTO COPY SERVICE — up to&#13;
8'/2Xl4, 19C ea. plus tax. Can do much&#13;
longer copy, too. We make all kinds&#13;
of rubber stamps. Businessmen&#13;
contact us for Monthly Statement&#13;
Service. The Order Mart, 3520&#13;
Roosevelt Rd., Kenosha. 652-4025.&#13;
2pr Ski Boots. 1 - N ordita 8V2 narrow&#13;
men's; 1 - Kastinger 9Vi men's. Both&#13;
in good condition. $15 a pair. Call&#13;
Ellen at 639-2052.&#13;
3 Bedroom Home, IV2 bath, built-ins,&#13;
see through fireplace, 2V2 car attached&#13;
garage, V2 acre lot, 1 mile&#13;
from Parkside — asking $34,900 by&#13;
owner. 552-8183.&#13;
Scuba tank, boot, gauge, regulator,&#13;
back pack and weight belt. $100. Call&#13;
632-1611 ext. 783.&#13;
FOR SALE — Bausch 8. Lomb&#13;
Microscope. 2 eye pieces, 3 objective&#13;
lens. Call 639-0354. $75.00&#13;
SPACE HEATER — very good&#13;
condition. 6325 8th Ave. 652-6669.&#13;
SKIS — 170 cm. Head 360's. With&#13;
Marker step in bindings. Used once.&#13;
$150 . 633-781.&#13;
RAINCOAT with zip-out pile lining.;&#13;
Size 38 regular - worn twice - natural&#13;
tan. Originally $45. Sell for $15. Call554-9174.&#13;
&#13;
ELECTRIC GUITAR — 6 st. Gibson,&#13;
1 yr old, Lectrolab amplifier 120&#13;
volts, both in excel, cond. Sunbeam&#13;
elec. razor 727 fastback. 654-0050.&#13;
(4) MAGS for AMC product. $60. Call&#13;
654-1106, ask for Bob.&#13;
FOR SALE — Bar, all formica, $75,&#13;
great shape. Call Kelly 658-3070.&#13;
MINOR CAR REPAIRS CHEAP —&#13;
Tune-ups, oil changes, etc. Call Don,&#13;
652-6426, or Kelly 568-3070.&#13;
PANASONIC 8 track car tape and&#13;
speakers $65 or best offer. Call Bob&#13;
639-2677.&#13;
Come Touch Me. A new poetry book&#13;
by Ron Schulz and Larry Roach.&#13;
Available at all UWP Bookstores.&#13;
FOR SALE — Lovely Lenox china.&#13;
Starlight pattern. Service for six&#13;
(almost). Cost $240. Sacrifice at $95.&#13;
543-3149.&#13;
FREE! Wh 0 will adopt a timid,&#13;
sensitive shelty (toy collie). One&#13;
year old male who needs patience&#13;
and love for training. 543-3149.&#13;
FOR SALE — Head skis and bindings&#13;
210 centimeters. $35. Call 632-&#13;
1611, ext. 783.&#13;
Lined, embroidered sheepskin coat&#13;
— Woman's — 654-3170.&#13;
COUCH — fold out ben and gas&#13;
stove. Call 637-1556.&#13;
FOLK GUITARS — From $12. Call&#13;
658-2832 after 4 p.m. &#13;
October 25,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 11&#13;
Physical Fitness C ourse Shaping Up PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTIZERS&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Nearly everyone has heard&#13;
about physical fitness, but&#13;
relatively few probably understand&#13;
how it can apply to&#13;
their own lives. Parkside is&#13;
currently offering a way to find&#13;
out.&#13;
Newscope talked to Bob&#13;
Lawson about his new fitness&#13;
classes.&#13;
One of the classes is called&#13;
Beginning Fitness 100, while the&#13;
other one is Figure Improvement&#13;
114.&#13;
Lawson said that it was&#13;
originally set up so boys would&#13;
take Beginning Fitness and&#13;
girls would take Figure Improvement,&#13;
but the way it&#13;
worked out they are coeducational&#13;
classes and will&#13;
stay that way. Both classes&#13;
have the same theory.&#13;
"The idea is to teach young&#13;
people how to take care of their&#13;
bodies, how to get physically fit&#13;
through a variety of methods,&#13;
mainly through jogging, so that&#13;
when they get out of school it&#13;
can be a carry-over activity,"&#13;
said Lawson.&#13;
The courses teach people the&#13;
value of jogging, how it affects&#13;
the circulatory system, and how&#13;
it relates to a healthier life,&#13;
partly by lessening the chances&#13;
of h eart attacks and other heart&#13;
Mills Fund&#13;
BB Game&#13;
On Friday, November 5, the&#13;
second basketball game to raise&#13;
money for the Harlow Mills&#13;
Scholarship Fund will be held at&#13;
Lance Junior High School in&#13;
Kenosha. In this game, the&#13;
science faculty will try to swat&#13;
the Insects who last year stung&#13;
the faculty in an upset victory.&#13;
Game time is 7:15 p.m.&#13;
Minimum donation is 75 cents&#13;
and tickets are available at&#13;
Student Affairs or from life&#13;
science majors.&#13;
The Harlow Mills Scholarship&#13;
Fund was established in honor&#13;
of th e late Dr. Mills, a Parkside&#13;
life science professor who&#13;
retired last January. He was a&#13;
very distinguished entomologist,&#13;
ecologist and&#13;
naturalist. This scholarship is&#13;
awarded to an undergraduate&#13;
life science major at Parkside.&#13;
Come and enjoy this fastmoving.&#13;
if not skillful, display of&#13;
basketball prowess by the&#13;
faculty in their fruitless attempt&#13;
to exterminate the Insects.&#13;
It's the®&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Trade-mark ®&#13;
related problems.&#13;
The main purpose of the&#13;
courses is so students can understand&#13;
and design a program&#13;
that would be beneficial to them&#13;
in the long run.&#13;
It should be emphasized that&#13;
the courses are not designed to&#13;
force a person to get into shape&#13;
and then have him leave the&#13;
class and never exercise again.&#13;
"We are trying to let a student&#13;
see how things are done and let&#13;
him make his own decisions,"&#13;
said Lawson.&#13;
One credit will be given for&#13;
the first eight weeks and one for&#13;
the second. Students can sign up&#13;
for the second eight weeks&#13;
which begins November 1. The&#13;
course is offered on the Kenosha&#13;
Campus at 10 a.m. on Mondays&#13;
and Wednesdays. They will be&#13;
offered evenings in the second&#13;
semester.&#13;
The only written work is a&#13;
final exam which is a take-home&#13;
test. In this test the student will&#13;
design his own fitness program,&#13;
emphasizing what he would like&#13;
to do in regards to a fitness&#13;
program when he leaves the&#13;
class. Lawson will evaluate the&#13;
test to see if the studentdesigned&#13;
program would meet&#13;
the minimum needs to keep fit.&#13;
It will be handed back, also.&#13;
Grading is based on attendance,&#13;
attitude in class and&#13;
the final exam — nothing else.&#13;
Rangers Suffer Two Shutoufs&#13;
a i . . „ by Jim Casper, Sports Editor&#13;
iu. J&#13;
ac&#13;
„&#13;
0 °ffens&#13;
e ruined the soccer team's bid for road victories as&#13;
PlatSfn W, t&#13;
f&#13;
W° 3&#13;
"&#13;
0 decisions&#13;
- Illinois-Dhicago and UW- Platteville dealt the defeats to Parkside.&#13;
The two shutouts left the booters at the .500 mark with a 3-3 record,&#13;
showing S1X gameS last year&#13;
' the Ran&#13;
g&#13;
ers had amassed a 2-3-1&#13;
on.f.°ll0Vir&#13;
;&#13;
g&#13;
^&#13;
ree more road games the Rangers will be home to&#13;
entertain Lake Forest on November 315 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Harriers L ose One, W in One&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Ranger harriers suffered a 24-&#13;
32 defeat at the hands of Northwestern&#13;
University while&#13;
defeating the Kegonsa Track&#13;
Club 21-35 in double dual meet&#13;
at Wilmette, Illinois.&#13;
Individual winner was&#13;
Parkside's Lucian Rosa with a&#13;
30:44.3 time for the six mile run.&#13;
His time broke the old record of&#13;
31:04.9 held by Northwestern's&#13;
Jim Noe, who ran second in this&#13;
race. Rudy Alvarez of the&#13;
Rangers ran third.&#13;
Despite the victory over&#13;
Kegonsa and the fairly close&#13;
defeat to Northwestern,&#13;
Assistant Coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
was not entirely satisfied with&#13;
the performance.&#13;
"The score was respectable&#13;
against a good Big Ten team,&#13;
but our third and fourth runners&#13;
didn't carry through and this&#13;
prevented us from winning," he&#13;
said.&#13;
A victory over a Big Ten team&#13;
would undoubtedly mean much&#13;
to the young Rangers.&#13;
"It wasn't that we weren't&#13;
capable of winning, we just had&#13;
W,&#13;
people who had been running&#13;
well who did not run well,"&#13;
Godfrey said.&#13;
He continued, "There is some&#13;
excuse for this in that we ran a&#13;
series of difficult workouts&#13;
during the week and there was a&#13;
fatigue factor going into the&#13;
race. This showed up in the&#13;
meet."&#13;
newscope&#13;
classifieds&#13;
use 'em are&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
the university bookstore&#13;
on the racine campus # f&#13;
will be closed as of ' ^&#13;
October 29. we are&#13;
consolidating with the main&#13;
store on wood road.&#13;
stop in and see us!&#13;
the university bookstore&#13;
Isermann's is having a&#13;
"PANTS TRADE IN SA LE"&#13;
Any old pair of pants accepted!&#13;
wearable pants will be donated to charity&#13;
LARGE GROUP OF NEW PANTS&#13;
TO TRADE YOUR OLD ONES IN ON&#13;
Old pants worth $3.00 on&#13;
new pantspriced from&#13;
$10.00 —$14.00&#13;
Including popular straights&#13;
and fashion Flairs&#13;
Plain and pattern&#13;
LOTS OF FUN — LOTS OF VALUE&#13;
ISEHMANN&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
614-616 56th Street&#13;
OPEN DAILY9:30-5:30—FRIDAY NITES'TIL 9&#13;
/AISO'S&#13;
PlZZA£&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS 4;oo p.m.—12 :00 a&#13;
-&#13;
ffl&#13;
-&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCNBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 ft Avenue Rewsha 657—6191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
Custom tailored suits REGULAR s162.50&#13;
OCTOBER PRICE $137.50&#13;
Gino's Tailor Shop&#13;
and Sportswear&#13;
2212—60th street in Kenosha&#13;
We give the personal touch'&#13;
We do all types of alterations and repairs&#13;
All styles to choose&#13;
from in 17&#13;
different colors&#13;
complete line&#13;
of menswear &#13;
Page 12 NEWSCOPE October 25, 1971&#13;
Newscope String Snapped&#13;
Se/utitUf the rf-inedt&#13;
PvfflCi &amp; Oicdkut tf-oodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 65S-313I&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
The Newscope gridders&#13;
suffered their first loss in the&#13;
last game of the season to the&#13;
Schooners, now undefeated.&#13;
Playing on a wet field, the&#13;
Newscope team opened the&#13;
game with an interception and&#13;
played defense from then on.&#13;
The Schooners' larger line&#13;
made shambles of the&#13;
Newscope defense on end&#13;
sweeps and on their way to a 21-&#13;
0 victory. Dennis Serpe passed a&#13;
number of long completions,&#13;
enabling the Schooners to mix a&#13;
(m\nG Friday o\°\&#13;
PaulN&amp;AXW&#13;
KeNNECtf&#13;
CDCStba&#13;
IOQCCI133&#13;
good running and passing&#13;
game.&#13;
On the losers' side, several&#13;
team members reported&#13;
critical injuries to the team&#13;
manager. "Flash" Pazera,&#13;
nursing an old arm-wrestling&#13;
injury, aggravated his condition&#13;
with a series of hard shocks.&#13;
However, the team physician,&#13;
Timothy Leary, refused to&#13;
amputate the painful arm so&#13;
Pazera continued to play.&#13;
"Zip" Borchardt sustained a&#13;
broken toggle switch, jeopardizing&#13;
his career as a concert&#13;
pianist. Finally, Kim "Widget"&#13;
King complained of a slipped&#13;
disc.&#13;
John "Crash" Koloen&#13;
displayed gridiorn brilliance as&#13;
he continued to ship through the&#13;
line and harass the QB into&#13;
forcing desperation passes.&#13;
Mike "Wildman J. Smilin'&#13;
Snake" Von Gunten showed&#13;
fabulous physical prowess on&#13;
the defensive and offensive&#13;
teams. His one pass reception&#13;
and marvelous pass rushing&#13;
was an inspiration to all who&#13;
watched.&#13;
Shaunte "P.J." (Prime&#13;
Juice) Stills took over as QB&#13;
from Dave Kraus and he&#13;
fascinated his fellow Newscope&#13;
teammates with fine pass plays&#13;
and outstanding sportsmanship.&#13;
He even passed to one of the&#13;
officials on a broken up pattern,&#13;
but the referee was denied the&#13;
reception as he accidentally&#13;
misjudged the torrid action.&#13;
Also, his defensive alertness&#13;
proved invaluable as he was&#13;
named HVP by his team.&#13;
It was clearly evident that the&#13;
gods were against the gallant&#13;
Newscope team because a large&#13;
dark rain cloud loomed over the&#13;
field while the game took place.&#13;
The team members will testify&#13;
to this fact because their beam&#13;
bus was flooded with water as&#13;
"Flash" motored it over to the&#13;
Pizza Hut for post-game&#13;
festivities.&#13;
STUCJ BJMT&#13;
%:oo Rtv ftow "75" 4&#13;
+-V»3\?aCQT\1&gt;\P&gt; IDtesejfivfcD&#13;
&amp;Y ftwewoE&#13;
F»&lt;v\«nvs&#13;
UW-Parkside Gymnastics Coach Dave Donaldson was a recent&#13;
speaker at a gymnastics clinic at York High School, Elmhurst, 111.,&#13;
where he lettered in the sport in 1960-61.&#13;
+ + + +&#13;
UW-Parkside's Lucian Rosa, a freshman from Ceylon who runs&#13;
barefoot, set a meet reocrd of 25:29.2 for five miles and paced his team&#13;
to a second in the Platteville Invitational recently.&#13;
^ 4- +&#13;
Two of UW-Parkside's three soccer victories have come against&#13;
schools rated high in the national football polls, Ohio State and Notre&#13;
Dame. The Rangers' other win came against Wisconsin at Madison.&#13;
+ +•••+&#13;
UW-Parkside's basketball opener is Dec. 1 against Western&#13;
Michigan at Kalamazoo while the Ranger wrestling squad starts its&#13;
dual campaign the same day at home against Big Ten power Northwestern.&#13;
&#13;
+ + +&#13;
UW-Parkside will host the U.S. Track and Field Federation's Mid&#13;
American Cross Country Championships Nov. 6 at the Parkside&#13;
campus.&#13;
Travel With the&#13;
Hockey Team&#13;
Travel with the hockey team. We need ticket takers, timers,&#13;
statisticians, announcers, an equipment manager and a trainer. For&#13;
further information contact Tom Krimmel at 552-8634 or Vic Godfrey&#13;
at the Athletic Department, 553-2245.&#13;
the e lections c ommittee&#13;
student g overnment&#13;
ammendment referendum / / ANNOUNCEMENT&#13;
invalidated / I general elections for all student&#13;
due t o unethical p ractices a t th e p olls a nd / / government positions will be held on&#13;
lack o l s ufficient a dvance n otice, the / / november 17, 18, §19. p ick up nominating&#13;
ammendment r etterendum has been / /petitions at the student gov t office october&#13;
declared i nvalid. / /28—november 3.&#13;
detailed information to follow </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 8, October 25, 1971</text>
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            </elementText>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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