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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 9</text>
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            <text>Storm in Greenquist Hall</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>by John Koloen, Managing Editor&#13;
Last Wednesday it rained, but Thursday&#13;
there was a storm in Greenquist Hall as the&#13;
Concerned Students Coalition held its first&#13;
general meeting. Attended by more than&#13;
fifty students and several members of the&#13;
Student Activities staff, who sat like&#13;
focal point of the battle grew out of a&#13;
general disaffection with the university&#13;
administration, particularly the Student&#13;
Activities office.&#13;
Early in the meeting the die was cast&#13;
when recurrent duels broke out between&#13;
one or more of the disaffected and the&#13;
Storm In Greenquist Hall&#13;
targets in the back of the room, it served as&#13;
an opportunity for the more outspoken to&#13;
have their day in court.&#13;
Chaired by Dean Loumos and Bruce&#13;
Volpentesta, the meeting began with a&#13;
series of arguments culminating in&#13;
disorder before fifteen minutes had passed.&#13;
Accusations flew like rumors in a war zone&#13;
and with about as much accuracy. The&#13;
representatives of the university and the&#13;
more moderate students present. A&#13;
number of allegations grew out of the&#13;
recent John Denver and Superstar concerts&#13;
centering around the funding and selection&#13;
of the groups. One student claimed, "They&#13;
didn't put John Denver on for the students,&#13;
but for the people in the community."&#13;
This distinction evolved into an argument&#13;
The University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
November 1,1971 Volume5 Numbers "Journalism is Literature in a Hurry"— Matthew Arnold&#13;
Winds Could Blow 'Bugs' To Lakefront&#13;
by Larry A. Jones&#13;
Campus Editor&#13;
The winds of controversy have&#13;
been blowing around the port of&#13;
Kenosha the past few weeks&#13;
over the city's proposal to lease&#13;
a section of lakefront land to&#13;
Kenosha Auto Transport as a&#13;
parking lot for imported cars.&#13;
Part of the problem has arisen&#13;
from the fact that there is a state&#13;
law declaring that the land in&#13;
question — about ten acres of&#13;
Lakefront park located immediately&#13;
south and east of&#13;
Lakefront Stadium — may be&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
used only as park land. Part of&#13;
the land is used as a practice&#13;
field for several schools' football&#13;
teams and marching bands.&#13;
At the request of Kenosha&#13;
Mayor Wallace Burkee,&#13;
Assemblymen George Molinaro&#13;
and Eugene Dorff authored&#13;
Assembly Bill 859 which would&#13;
permit the City of Kenosha to&#13;
use the area "in the public interest"&#13;
rather than for strictly&#13;
park purposes.&#13;
The rest of the controversy&#13;
stems from the city's idea of&#13;
"the public interest" with&#13;
regard to the land site.&#13;
Burkee has said the plan is to&#13;
lease the land to KAT, which is&#13;
currently negotiating for importation&#13;
rights to Volkswagens&#13;
to be distributed in the midwest.&#13;
According to Burkee, the lease&#13;
would result in up to 200 new&#13;
jobs and millions of dollars in&#13;
additional income to the city.&#13;
Foes of the bill argue against&#13;
despoiling the lakefront park for&#13;
commercial purposes.&#13;
Opposition to the bill has been&#13;
registered by both the&#13;
Republican and Democratic&#13;
parties of Kenosha County, the&#13;
Unified School Board and the&#13;
Kenosha Education Association.&#13;
Numerous student organizations&#13;
have also voiced opposition.&#13;
During the past week, myself&#13;
and Newscope staff member&#13;
Ken Konkol interviewed several&#13;
people close to the project, both&#13;
pro and con. Below are portions&#13;
of those interviews.&#13;
Mr. Ralph MacDonald,&#13;
president of Kenosha Auto&#13;
Transport:&#13;
NS: What do your negotiations&#13;
with Wolkswagen entail?&#13;
KAT: First of all, everyone&#13;
seems to be talking about&#13;
Volkswagen, which is, of course,&#13;
one important manufacturer.&#13;
What we're trying to do is to&#13;
develop the port to handle import&#13;
vehicles. We just recently&#13;
brought in some 400 Ford&#13;
Capri's and some 300 MG's. Of&#13;
course, in volume, VW's would&#13;
be the largest.&#13;
The distributor we are talking&#13;
with is the Midwest VW&#13;
distributor. They are now&#13;
shipping some 30,000 units per&#13;
f&#13;
year into the Great Lakes area&#13;
via the Calumet-Chicago&#13;
Harbor, and these are the units&#13;
we would like to see shipped via&#13;
Kenosha's port.&#13;
NS: Have there been any tentative&#13;
agreements with the city&#13;
as to terms of the lease financially?&#13;
KAT: We have not yet finalized&#13;
our arrangements with VW, so&#13;
w h a t e v e r f i n a n c i a l&#13;
arrangements we make with&#13;
them will decide to what degree&#13;
we can work with the city&#13;
financially. I'll tell you that a&#13;
dollar a car has been discussed,&#13;
but as far as us agreeing to&#13;
(Continued on Page 3)&#13;
leading to an accusation of the Activities&#13;
Board for not consulting students before&#13;
choosing concert groups. One representative&#13;
of the board replied to this criticism,&#13;
"The Activities Board is trying to (serve&#13;
the students), but the students don't count&#13;
before there is a concert, we have no way of&#13;
knowing what they want, we can only speak&#13;
for our own interests what we think the&#13;
students want."&#13;
As the argument reached a pitch&#13;
Volpentesta returned the meeting to order&#13;
reminding the audience that "The purpose&#13;
of th is meeting is to find out what is wrong;&#13;
D e a n i _ o u m o s ( f o r e g r o u n d ) a n d B ' u c e&#13;
v o l p e n t e s t a a t l a st t h u r s d a y » s a l l&#13;
s t u d e n t m e e t i ng .&#13;
why are we having this kind of argument?&#13;
We shouldn't have this kind of argument&#13;
and we're all students here, this is the&#13;
bitch. We all have a lot of complaints;&#13;
Dearborn has a lot of complaints, we as&#13;
students have a lot of complaints, instructors&#13;
have complaints, but we've got to&#13;
find a medium."&#13;
Dave Carls responded by suggesting the&#13;
Board survey the student body before&#13;
choosing concert groups adding angrily,&#13;
"God, you could at least ask the people." A&#13;
board member commended the suggestion&#13;
and Carls expressed amazement that they&#13;
had not thought of it before. This left the&#13;
room quiet long enough for Volpensta to&#13;
reply to the question of where and how&#13;
funds are made available for the Activities&#13;
Building.&#13;
He told the audience he could not find&#13;
enough information to answer any&#13;
questions on the disbursement of funds&#13;
which Carls then turned into the threads of&#13;
another assault.&#13;
Calculating the cost of beer at the Activities&#13;
Building, he told the audience,&#13;
"They're making $59 on a half barrel of&#13;
beer." Turning to Totero he demanded,&#13;
"When you start counting all the barrels&#13;
... are you trying to tell me that it takes&#13;
that much to buy that crummy building,&#13;
plus the money they're getting from those&#13;
companies for putting their food out there,&#13;
their machines, their juke-boxes — w here&#13;
does all this money go for godsakes?" In&#13;
return Totero told the audience that he was&#13;
concerned with student activities while the&#13;
Activities Building was under Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises administered by Vern Martinez.&#13;
Before long a rigid pattern had developed&#13;
where as soon as an issue was breached it&#13;
was drowned in a wave of accusations only&#13;
to rise later, unresolved. Dwelling on the&#13;
Activities Building, Carls asked, "Who&#13;
does Vern work for; the school, or the&#13;
people who run that rip-off joint down&#13;
there. Who does he get paid by? We're&#13;
paying him to run that building for those&#13;
companies that run that place? Bullshit!&#13;
He's the director of Auxiliary Enterprises,&#13;
he only runs that place down there, the&#13;
people down there tell him what kind of&#13;
sandwiches to push . . . they come out with&#13;
their big bucks and say, 'All right, Vern,&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE November 1,1971&#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, 1 972&#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;
Ellsberg...&#13;
Boston, Mass (CPS) -&#13;
Although Daniel Ellsberg has&#13;
been indicted and faces trial&#13;
this January, the federal&#13;
government continues to investigate&#13;
other people who&#13;
might have had knowledge of&#13;
Ellsberg or his activities. Last&#13;
week grand juries investigating&#13;
the Pentagon Papers case in&#13;
Boston and Los Angeles issued&#13;
at least seven new subpoenas.&#13;
Additionally, it was learned that&#13;
FBI agents around the country&#13;
have been conducting what&#13;
appear to be harrassing interviews&#13;
with individuals in the&#13;
academic and publishing world.&#13;
In Boston, Massachusetts&#13;
Institute of Technology&#13;
professor Noam Chomsky has&#13;
been subpoenaed to appear&#13;
before the grand jury or.&#13;
Thursday. Harvard assistant&#13;
professor Sam Popkin has been&#13;
subpoenaed for the second time.&#13;
Popkin was interviewed by FBI&#13;
agents in August and appeared&#13;
before the Boston grand jury&#13;
briefly last month. Howard&#13;
Webber, Director of the MIT&#13;
Press, received a subpoena to&#13;
appear this week.&#13;
In Los Angeles, the grand&#13;
jury again subpoenaed Ms.&#13;
Linda Sinay, a personal friends&#13;
of Ellsberg's who has&#13;
previously testified about&#13;
Ellsberg using her copying&#13;
machine to Zerox certain&#13;
papers. New subpoenas were&#13;
also issued for the following:&#13;
—A1 Appleby, a Los Angeles&#13;
anti-war businessman who&#13;
voluntarily formed a Dan&#13;
Ellsberg Defense Fund.&#13;
—Mel Gurtove, a former&#13;
Rand employee and now&#13;
teacher at the University of&#13;
California at Riverside who has&#13;
commented favorably to the&#13;
Gustography&#13;
(or, how to draw the best beer)&#13;
faces indictments&#13;
press on Ellsberg's courage.&#13;
—Evon Svenle, a personal&#13;
friend of Ellsberg's from when&#13;
he lived in Los Angeles and&#13;
worked at Rand.&#13;
FBI agents, in recent weeks,&#13;
have attempted to interview at&#13;
least five guests who attended a&#13;
speech by Dan Ellsberg given at&#13;
the home of Yale professor&#13;
Robert Lifton on August 6 in&#13;
Wellfleet on Cape Cod where&#13;
Lifton has a summer home.&#13;
Ellsberg spoke in order to raise&#13;
money for the Berrigan Defense&#13;
fund.&#13;
Other activity in the Pentagon&#13;
Papers case included U.S.&#13;
District Judge Arthur Garrity's&#13;
ruling last week that Leonard&#13;
Rodberg, an aide to Senator&#13;
Mike Gravel of Alaska, must&#13;
appear before a Boston grand&#13;
jury. Garrity stated that&#13;
Rodberg may not be questioned&#13;
about his actions "to the extent&#13;
that they were taken at the&#13;
Senator's direction either at a&#13;
meeting of the sub-committee&#13;
(on Public Buildings and&#13;
Ground at which Gravel read&#13;
the Pentagon Papers into the&#13;
public record) or in preparation&#13;
for the meeting." Garrity's&#13;
order, however, permits&#13;
questioning about Rodberg's&#13;
role in arranging for Beacon&#13;
Press to publish the Pentagon&#13;
Papers.&#13;
Garrity decided that Senator&#13;
Gravel's arranging for private&#13;
publication of the Pentagon&#13;
Papers is not protected by&#13;
Congressional immunity.&#13;
Theft at Village&#13;
Several Parkside Village residents were left with a stack of&#13;
records and a set of rabbit ears Wednesday after burglars relieved&#13;
them of $1,000 worth of stereo and television equipment.&#13;
The large-scale rip-off occurred between 8 p.m. and 11 p.m., with&#13;
the final tally including a stereo set, two speakers, a cassette tape&#13;
deck, a reel to reel tape deck and a portable TV, according to one of the&#13;
npees.&#13;
All four of the apartment's occupants were out at the time of the&#13;
theft. The apartment was entered with the aid of a key that was left&#13;
under the doormat. The merchandise was taken out through sliding&#13;
patio doors at the side of the apartment. Only the most valuable pieces&#13;
were taken. F&#13;
The sheriff's department was called to investigate, but no immediate&#13;
leads were turned up.&#13;
..... To d.ate' this is the second reported robbery at the Parkside&#13;
Village sde. A car battery was stolen from the new, unlighted parking&#13;
lot at the rear of the complex on October 23.&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
1/2 B,ock South of Kenosha-Racine County Line ump&#13;
$ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HE^VY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
Lakefront Up for Grabs November 1,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
(Continued from Paee l)&#13;
anything, or the city agreeing to&#13;
anything, is, at this time, a bit&#13;
premature.&#13;
NS: To what degree do you&#13;
think this would create jobs in&#13;
the Kenosha Area?&#13;
KAT: The bulk of the jobs would&#13;
originate from the Morelli&#13;
corporation, which is the port&#13;
operator. They would probably&#13;
be in the form of la nd unloading&#13;
crews and could be considerable.&#13;
Our projections&#13;
would be in the area of 65 new&#13;
jobs, these being permanent&#13;
truck drivers.&#13;
F irst District Assemblyman&#13;
George Molinaro&#13;
GM: . . . any money taken in&#13;
from this leasing should be&#13;
segregated into a fund for a new&#13;
stadium at Anderson Park. The&#13;
city should not use it for any&#13;
other purposes. Now, I haven't&#13;
seen them do that, so I'm not&#13;
very anxious about the bill one&#13;
way or another.&#13;
NS: How much land would be&#13;
used and what would be done to&#13;
it?&#13;
GM: About ten acres would be&#13;
fenced in at the company's&#13;
expense; it would be graveled,&#13;
there would be no blacktop or&#13;
cement, and only lights would&#13;
be installed. It would have&#13;
adequate security, KAT would&#13;
maintain the lot, it would have&#13;
open access for anyone who&#13;
wanted to go in and fish off the&#13;
rock-pile, and it would have&#13;
only one big entrance where the&#13;
cars would go in and out.&#13;
The Volkswagen Corporation&#13;
is entered into a lease with a&#13;
Greek shipping company to use&#13;
600 ft. ships to haul the cars.&#13;
That alone would bring a&#13;
tremendous amount of money&#13;
into Kenosha's economy. On its&#13;
return, no ship wants to leave a&#13;
port empty which would increase&#13;
the activities of the&#13;
Kenosha harbor by centralizing&#13;
for more shipment out of the&#13;
city and county of Kenosha.&#13;
I am highly interested that we&#13;
do not peddle off any of our&#13;
lakefront property to anybody&#13;
for anything but temporary use&#13;
with the restrictions that are&#13;
attached to it.&#13;
NS: Will this proposed parking&#13;
in any way damage the&#13;
property for later use as a park&#13;
again?&#13;
GM: No. They would have to&#13;
remove the fence, the gravel&#13;
and the lights and put back the&#13;
dirt they had covered with&#13;
gravel.&#13;
NS: Sen Lourigan was quoted in&#13;
the Kenosha News recently as&#13;
saying this parking would be&#13;
"exporting jobs and importing&#13;
employment". How do you feel&#13;
on that statement?&#13;
GM: All I know is that the jobs&#13;
that will be created will be&#13;
created by people from the&#13;
Kenosha area that neither&#13;
board the ships or get off. They&#13;
are the land crew, and this is&#13;
what the people will have to&#13;
hire.&#13;
NS: Is Kenosha the only city&#13;
bidding for the contract?&#13;
GM: Green Bay has offered&#13;
them 600 acres of their park&#13;
land on the pay, at half the&#13;
price. There are also Chicago&#13;
and Milwaukee bidding on it.&#13;
NS; But Volkswagen would like&#13;
a more central location?&#13;
GM: They want a port where&#13;
they don't have to stay and pay&#13;
the demerge charge waiting for&#13;
them to unload or load. They&#13;
want a place where they can&#13;
come in and unload, load-up,&#13;
and leave. If they go to Chicago&#13;
or Milwaukee they have to take&#13;
their turn and sit at anchor until&#13;
there is room for them to come&#13;
in, whereas in Kenosha or&#13;
Green Bay it's usually easy&#13;
going. They would prefer&#13;
Kenosha because it is more&#13;
centrally located, but if&#13;
Kenosha doesn't want it they'll&#13;
go to Green Bay. It'll be alright&#13;
with me wherever they go. I&#13;
don't think it's going to hurt&#13;
anyone.&#13;
And so the sides have been&#13;
taken on a controversial&#13;
proposal. In the end, however,&#13;
the outcome lies with the&#13;
assembly in Madison who must&#13;
change the wording of a state&#13;
law. Up to this printing, there&#13;
appears little chance that bill&#13;
859 will pass. Whether that is&#13;
good or bad will probably be&#13;
open to discussion for a long&#13;
time to come.&#13;
Inspecting the first Pike River measuring station on the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside campus are (from left) William&#13;
Rose, field engineer for the U.S. Geological Survey attached to the&#13;
State Division of Water Resources, and UW-P assistant professors&#13;
Chelvadurai Manogaran, geography, and Joseph Belsano, life&#13;
science.&#13;
Measuring Station on Pike&#13;
The first permanent&#13;
measuring station on the Pike&#13;
river has been established on&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside campus bu the United&#13;
States Geological Survey&#13;
(USGS) and the state Division&#13;
of Water Resources.&#13;
The measuring and recording&#13;
instruments are enclosed in a&#13;
metal shelter located on high&#13;
ground near the river on the&#13;
west-central portion of the 700-&#13;
acre campus. A pipe runs from&#13;
the shelter to below water level&#13;
in the river. The depth of the&#13;
river is automatically determined&#13;
every 15 minutes by&#13;
means of a pressure bubble&#13;
gauge and recorded in the&#13;
shelter. Depth level can be&#13;
converted into river discharge&#13;
measurement which is an&#13;
important factor in pollution.&#13;
Plans also are being made for&#13;
installation of a sediment&#13;
measuring meter.&#13;
Come visit our pizza&#13;
kitchens or have&#13;
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;
-ANNOUNCINGMonday-&#13;
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Pitchers $1.00&#13;
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Open 9am—12pm&#13;
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Ava i labl e f o r Fra terni t y and Soror i t y par t i e s .&#13;
The&#13;
Library&#13;
has 1970 c ensus&#13;
figures for Population&#13;
and Housing; 1961&#13;
figures for Agriculture; 1967&#13;
figures for Business, Construction&#13;
Industries, Manufacturing, and Mineral&#13;
Industries; as well as previous censuses.&#13;
CENSUS-LIBRARY-CENSUS&#13;
We also have census block statistics,&#13;
Congressional district data, current&#13;
construction reports, foreign&#13;
trade reports, special&#13;
studies, and more.&#13;
Ask for help.&#13;
It's worth&#13;
it!&#13;
are you offended by nudity?&#13;
if not, stop in.&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise&#13;
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with any student I.D.&#13;
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Page 4 NEWSCOPE November 1,1971&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#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;
ELECTION&#13;
COMMITTEE&#13;
PROTESTS&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
You may be interested tc&#13;
know that Tim Eaker has taker&#13;
it upon himself to become a oneman&#13;
student government.&#13;
After a meeting of the con&#13;
cerned parties to formulate&#13;
procedures and dates for an&gt;&#13;
upcoming elections, during&#13;
which such plans and&#13;
procedures were scheduled, and&#13;
after which such plans and&#13;
procedures were sent to&#13;
NEWSCOPE for publication —&#13;
After all this, Mr. Eaker&#13;
decided he didn't like the&#13;
procedures formulated and&#13;
decided to make up some of his.&#13;
own. He did this and cancelled&#13;
the publication that had been&#13;
prepared by the Elections&#13;
Committee, without consultation&#13;
with any member of&#13;
that committee. Then he caused&#13;
to be inserted in last week's&#13;
issue the ad appearing on the)&#13;
back page. This ad bears the|&#13;
signature of the electionsi&#13;
committee. It should rather1&#13;
bear the signature of Tim I&#13;
E a k e r . T h e E l e c t i o n s C o m -j&#13;
mittee never saw this ad until it I&#13;
came out.&#13;
Also, the Elections Committee&#13;
had nothing to do with&#13;
scheduling the dates of the&#13;
student government elections,&#13;
this was done by Tim Eaker&#13;
with no consultation with&#13;
anyone but Tim Eaker. The&#13;
Elections Committee hereby&#13;
must go on record protesting&#13;
the unethical practices of Tim&#13;
Eaker.&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
Acting Chairman,&#13;
Elections Committee.&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
There are a lot of things going&#13;
on around here on campus that&#13;
many people are not looking&#13;
into and are missing out of&#13;
something because of it.&#13;
One such happening that&#13;
seemingly has not gathered&#13;
much interest is the courses and&#13;
lectures given pertaining to&#13;
EOTORIAL&#13;
The recent meeting of the Concerned Students&#13;
Coalition points out the need for understanding from&#13;
both the students and the administration. Essentially&#13;
the problem is one of communication; students are&#13;
dissatisfied with the red-tape of the university&#13;
bureaucracy and administrators quick on the defense&#13;
whenever a student group makes a demand.&#13;
Thus far Parkside has never seen a demonstration&#13;
ala Columbia, ad infinitum. There are no&#13;
guns floating around in lockers, no stockpiles of tear&#13;
gas lining basement walls, it is still a quiet and&#13;
relatively uneventful campus. But in order for it to&#13;
remain that way there is a need for clear channels of&#13;
communication where a student can go for information&#13;
regardless of how sensitive it may be,&#13;
above all, he should not be given the run-around or&#13;
lied to in order to meet the exigencies of the moment.&#13;
We suspect that in so far as the rules and&#13;
regulations booklet put out by Student Activities is&#13;
concerned that the likelyhood of two of the booklets&#13;
having errors which are not present in the remaining&#13;
28 is very difficult to swallow. It is hard to accept that&#13;
whoever printed the first twenty-eight would&#13;
deliberately change the type for the last two in order&#13;
to start a controversy.&#13;
Furthermore, the odds of only the SCA and the&#13;
SGA receiving these two copies do not seem to be the&#13;
best and asking us to believe this on top of it is sheer&#13;
naivete. The first thing that must be understood in&#13;
communicating is that you can only fool some of the&#13;
people.&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDI&#13;
TATION as taught by&#13;
Maharishi Mahehs Yogi and&#13;
sponsored by Students International&#13;
Meditation Society.&#13;
I think many people read the&#13;
posters about it, but pass it off&#13;
as something weird without&#13;
getting the facts, or looking into&#13;
it.&#13;
So, in order to dispel some of&#13;
the weird ideas people have in&#13;
their heads about something&#13;
like this, I include the following&#13;
article.&#13;
"This article was written by&#13;
John Fliss from Racine who has&#13;
just come from a two month&#13;
teacher-training course for 800,&#13;
mainly young, people held by&#13;
Maharishi himself on the islana&#13;
of Majorca. He was paying a&#13;
short visit to Aberystwyth&#13;
University in the company of&#13;
one of the MAGI performing&#13;
groups.&#13;
"Maharishi Mahesh Yogi&#13;
exclaims a message of the&#13;
revival of the knowledge of Life&#13;
itself.&#13;
"We see a need for a change&#13;
today on the individual, community&#13;
and international levels.&#13;
What is needed is a greater&#13;
ability to communicate through&#13;
creativity and be more efficient&#13;
at solving the frustrations each&#13;
encounters. What is really&#13;
needed is a way for each person&#13;
to expand his awareness.&#13;
Because the individual is the&#13;
basis of any group, community&#13;
or nation the solution must&#13;
come ultimately from the level&#13;
of the individual.&#13;
"The seed of revival is the&#13;
new knowledge of the ancient&#13;
wisdom which contains within&#13;
itself the natural technique for&#13;
its own success. Many versions&#13;
and interpretations of ancient&#13;
wisdom have come to us in the&#13;
past but we have had no harvest&#13;
of enlightenment in this present&#13;
day. Many groups and societies&#13;
have grown around one exponent&#13;
or exposition of the&#13;
truth, each different from the&#13;
other and often seeming to&#13;
contradict the other in some&#13;
essential aspect. Where different&#13;
interpretations of the&#13;
truth exist, it indicates that the&#13;
truth has not been fully understood.&#13;
So in the modern&#13;
world ancient wisdom comes&#13;
under suspicion or is ignored.&#13;
Theories that do not produce the&#13;
results cannot stand up in such&#13;
a scientific age.&#13;
"The results of expanded&#13;
awareness are human happiness&#13;
and personal fulfillment,&#13;
creativity and energy, social&#13;
harmony and world peace.&#13;
Several have envisaged this&#13;
human aspiration and some&#13;
have even spoken it out clearly,&#13;
but for many centuries no one&#13;
has been able to provide&#13;
practical means or techniques&#13;
for realising it.&#13;
"Maharishi, which means&#13;
Great Teacher, has brought to&#13;
us not only an inspiring vision of&#13;
the possibilities of life but also a&#13;
natural technique for its full&#13;
realisation in any man. He has&#13;
said that being born a man is&#13;
enough for fulfillment and&#13;
anyone who can think can&#13;
realise a fully developed life.&#13;
The technique does not depend&#13;
on one's education, philosophy,&#13;
religion or personal&#13;
background. A man starts to&#13;
evolve from where he is to live a&#13;
full life through Transcendental&#13;
Meditation. The technique has&#13;
been proven out by thousands of&#13;
people on every continent. A&#13;
process of instruction has been&#13;
developed through sixteen&#13;
years of experience of teaching&#13;
this meditation. And it is now&#13;
made available to the world&#13;
through the teachers of Transcendental&#13;
Meditation who are&#13;
trained by Maharishi himself.&#13;
Keith Rusecki&#13;
REBUTTAL&#13;
Newscope:&#13;
We realize that you are the 'intellectual giants' of&#13;
this campus, but we would like to take the opportunity&#13;
to correct a few of the numerous errors that have&#13;
appeared in previous articles pertaining to the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, and in particular to the&#13;
Jesus Christ Superstar and John Denver concerts.&#13;
1. It is the Parkside Activities Board and not the&#13;
Union Committee that selects the concert fare for the&#13;
campus.&#13;
2. The Parkside Activities Board selects new&#13;
members on the basis of applications and interviews,&#13;
while the Union Committee's members were elected&#13;
last Spring in the Student Government elections. The&#13;
Union Committee is a committee of Student Government&#13;
and not an extension of the Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
3. The Parkside Activities Board attempts to&#13;
bring varied types of entertainment to Parkside and&#13;
to appeal to varied tastes, and not to an£ one particular&#13;
interest.&#13;
4. The Parkside Activities Board does not.attempt&#13;
to define the "average student", and once&#13;
again attempts to appeal to all of those who pay&#13;
tuition at Parkside.&#13;
5. We realize that the prices charged for the&#13;
"good seats" for Superstar were the highest ever&#13;
charged at a Parkside concert, because the expenses&#13;
incurred were also the highest. Granted, if we had a&#13;
13,000 seat facility as in Madison, we could also&#13;
c h a r g e $ 3 , b u t . . . .&#13;
6. Contrary to popular belief, the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board made the final decision as to whether or&#13;
not Superstar was to be presented.&#13;
7. Ticket price for the John Denver concert was&#13;
$3.50, and not $3.50 and $4.50 as stated in the&#13;
Newscope argument of October 25th.&#13;
This aptly illustrates Newscope's own motto&#13;
which states. "Don't Believe Everything You Read."&#13;
Love,&#13;
Marc Colby&#13;
Debbie Kemper&#13;
Buz Faust&#13;
Sue Wesley&#13;
Curt Sahakian&#13;
Rudy Lienau&#13;
Jerry Horton&#13;
Sue Nevin&#13;
Gregory Barrette&#13;
Kim Rudat&#13;
Alex Marl is&#13;
Pam Miller&#13;
James Croxford&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Members&#13;
Attention Seniors&#13;
For senior students who are thinking of graduate school immediately&#13;
after college graduation or in future years, it is important&#13;
that you consider taking the Graduate Record Examination&#13;
required by most graduate schools. The 1971-72 GRE Information&#13;
Bulletins and applications are available through the Student&#13;
Counseling Service.&#13;
Tallent Rm. 234, Racine Rm 202, Kenosha Rm. 135.&#13;
"Hon't believe everything you read.'&#13;
Edttorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-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;
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;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross, Jeff&#13;
Scoville,&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. Mc Derm id&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
vacation periods Student 7*s'de Published weekly except during&#13;
revenue forTe £!££* "t?. advertisi"9 are the sole source of&#13;
distributed throughout the K^o^haTnd'K i*'000 C°P'eS ar® printed and&#13;
"""Sad?' ^ RES =te™,1ia\'et«„CreEQR.MUNMESA5™EL1 'S ""&#13;
Thursday PfMor to pubMcat'lon'anrf nuSTjI?" NewKOPe is "0 P-f- the&#13;
Photographs Is t he Saturday DK»"i"e.'°r&#13;
and photographs may be reclaimedwithinX h Un^l,cited manuscripts&#13;
mission, after which they will ber^P 1* the date of sub"&#13;
Newscope office is located in P![0perty of News«&gt;Pe Ltd. The&#13;
tersection of Highway A and Wood Road °r9anizatIons building. InPicasso&#13;
Exhibition in Milwaukee&#13;
Dalp Martin ..F IL_ &gt;,&#13;
November l, 1971&#13;
TnbklI)ale,M1artin 0f the Newscope staff&#13;
the MilwfuSnCenfeHf °'S birthday' age 90-&#13;
a Picasso Pvt^t ^18 now currently holding&#13;
contemporary sculptures also are present&#13;
stages of ht rr aSf Can be viewed f™&gt; many&#13;
has a large section „„ bJ flgfi" ™ °enter&#13;
nno V W deluded four pieces of sculpture&#13;
One is done at ceramics, another bronze and a&#13;
of cardbMrri sf °HCaKdboard- Thetwo madeout&#13;
made nfTJ a" seven feet h«h and are&#13;
The wL piaces(ot card boafd and scotch&#13;
tape lne whole effect is a man form Tt i&lt;? a&#13;
wonder the sculptures last more than one showing&#13;
they seem so hastily constructed.&#13;
obscure FW ^ comPosed of the more&#13;
,, , e Picasso then normally seen. Nearly all&#13;
coUec«„rgS 3nd Pri"b are fr°&lt;" pnV^te&#13;
pjcasso comes through as a man who wastes&#13;
drawines^hea0^ ? PieCGS ^P^ted were&#13;
some lara • tIS probab,y dld in preparation for&#13;
three pafnifn^ H The show&gt; however, had only&#13;
Manv ^ ' f 3nd n°ne °f them rea"y large.&#13;
th^e nr f *a™ngs consisted of no more than&#13;
three or four slashes, to give the drawing its form&#13;
designs 3re Simple with simple&#13;
speed at whinhn! , y' to°' repre speea at which the artist works sented the&#13;
the5mmevi" Durer also is showing, celebrating&#13;
Ms fine SSL-fT® h'S birth Hc is well-known for&#13;
printe Pnn The Sh°W has over 48&#13;
North-South Deadline Nears&#13;
The North-South Program is a&#13;
joint effort program coordinated&#13;
with the UW-Madison&#13;
campus. This program provides&#13;
an unforgettable experience for&#13;
the student who for a semester&#13;
goes to and lives on a Black&#13;
University campus in the South.&#13;
It is an exchange program&#13;
with three accredited Black&#13;
Universities in the South. The&#13;
program provides uniqueness&#13;
that is different and educational&#13;
for the prospective participant.&#13;
Students are exchanged for one&#13;
semester and their credits&#13;
transferrable back to their&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
campus. The program offers&#13;
the opportunity for gaining&#13;
considerable knowledge and&#13;
insight about black culture and&#13;
life by living on and being part&#13;
of a Black University.&#13;
Spring semester, Wisconsin&#13;
students will attend North&#13;
Carolina Central University&#13;
only because of the availability&#13;
of funds. North Carolina Central&#13;
University has a student&#13;
population of around 3,500. It is&#13;
located in the circle of&#13;
academic institutions which&#13;
includes Duke University in&#13;
Durham and the University of&#13;
North Carolina in neighboring&#13;
Chapel Hill. Textiles and&#13;
tobacco industries are also&#13;
predominant in the Durham&#13;
area, and the weather is mild.&#13;
The population of Durham is&#13;
about 95,438 in the 1970 census.&#13;
There is an agreement by&#13;
North Carolina Central and&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
campuses (except Madison)&#13;
that exchange students are&#13;
permitted to pay Wisconsin&#13;
tuition on their Wisconsin&#13;
campus before they leave for&#13;
NCCU. Thus they avoid paying&#13;
North Carolina out-of-state&#13;
tuition at NCCU.&#13;
Students will pay room and&#13;
board at NCCU. Official room&#13;
and board costs per semester&#13;
(381.25) will be reduced in the&#13;
amount of $150.00 in assistance&#13;
from the program. The student&#13;
purchases books and provides&#13;
his own spending money.&#13;
Total estimated costs are:&#13;
UW tuition - $275.00&#13;
Room and board (actual cost&#13;
to Wisconsin student) - $231.25&#13;
Books (estimate) - $60.00&#13;
Miscellaneous spending&#13;
money (UW estimate) - $225.00&#13;
Total - $791.25&#13;
Application Schedule&#13;
1. Pick up application from&#13;
Isom Fearn - Office of Student&#13;
Services.&#13;
2. Deadline for applications&#13;
and related forms is November&#13;
5. Material to be turned in includes:&#13;
o Student Exchange Application&#13;
form&#13;
o Official UW transcript&#13;
o Letter of Recommendation&#13;
o Parental Consent Form (if&#13;
student is under 21).&#13;
3. When the forms are turned&#13;
in the student will make&#13;
arrangements for interviews.&#13;
4. Notification of selection&#13;
will be made by November 19.&#13;
5. Orientation will be held in&#13;
Madison early in December.&#13;
6. Students will leave for&#13;
NCCU approximately January&#13;
5, 1972.&#13;
If you are interested, contact&#13;
Student Affairs, telephone&#13;
number 553-2225 for further&#13;
information.&#13;
VA Interviews Next Week&#13;
R. J. Ballman, Director of the&#13;
Milwaukee Regional Office of&#13;
the Veterans Administration,&#13;
reports that veterans in college&#13;
under the G.I. Bill today were&#13;
given a checklist with their&#13;
Certificates of Eligibility to&#13;
insure that checks arrive on&#13;
time, at the right place and in&#13;
the correct amount. A check is&#13;
normally received approximately&#13;
30 days after the&#13;
VA has received the enrollment&#13;
certification from the school.&#13;
1. On initial enrollment, turn&#13;
in your Certificate of Eligibility,&#13;
in duplicate, to your college&#13;
Veterans Coordinator as soon as&#13;
you register.&#13;
2. Ask the school official to&#13;
return it promptly to the VA.&#13;
3. If you change your college&#13;
or course of study, apply immediately&#13;
to the VA for a new&#13;
Certificate of eligibility.&#13;
4. If you change the address to&#13;
which your checks are coming,&#13;
notify both the VA and the Post&#13;
Office.&#13;
5. Inform the VA immediately,&#13;
by telephone or most&#13;
expeditious means, of any&#13;
dependency changes due to&#13;
marriage, divorce, births or&#13;
deaths.&#13;
6. Return prompbly the&#13;
Certificate of Attendance card&#13;
you will receive from the VA&#13;
near the end of your enrollment&#13;
period.&#13;
7. If you drop out of school —&#13;
or even reduce your course load&#13;
— tell the VA immediately.&#13;
The VA has made&#13;
arrangements for a&#13;
representative to interview&#13;
students who are having&#13;
payment problems not due to&#13;
normal processing. The VA&#13;
representative will be on the&#13;
campus on Nov. 9 in Room 216,&#13;
Tallent. from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
Military Notes&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, October 21 — The Marine Corps Officer&#13;
Selection Team will visit the University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin campus, on November 2nd and 3rd to interview&#13;
students interested in becoming commissioned officers.&#13;
The Officer Selection Team will be located in Tallent Hall to&#13;
provide information pertaining to Marine Officer Programs, according&#13;
to Captain R. W. Dunlap, the Marine Corps Officer&#13;
Selection Officer.&#13;
The Marine Corps offers programs leading to a commission as&#13;
a 2nd Lieutenant. These programs are open to undergraduates as&#13;
well as graduating seniors. To be eligible, students must have a&#13;
"C" or better average, pass a written examination, be physically&#13;
qualified and have the leadership potential required of a Marine&#13;
Officer.&#13;
Aviation Officer Programs are open to highly qualified&#13;
students.&#13;
Woman Officer Programs are available to junior and senior&#13;
women.&#13;
On Tuesday, November 2, at 2:00 p.m. there will be an information&#13;
seminar in the Student Activities Building to give&#13;
students the opportunity of gaining correct information and answers&#13;
to questions about the military service and selective service.&#13;
Coalition Statement&#13;
To Newscope:&#13;
thP Say that P"Side is the way " is because of&#13;
nf tudent Tbe mistake here is to put the blame on us,&#13;
whh'iZingfthat the P'Side ^udent has been bombarded&#13;
techni(lues which create the machine people&#13;
exkf Th! structures, like P-Side, desparetely need to&#13;
^ The comparison of the P-Side administration to a corporate&#13;
tructure is a real and frightening thing. Our universities are no&#13;
hSLt Plac'f°r, aufree exchan8e of ideas, but a profit seeking&#13;
business with deals being made with special interest groups in a&#13;
very secretive and shady manner.&#13;
ctnwnro3??ctbf P"?de Student is t0 be]ieve that the internal&#13;
r®of P"Slde's f,ne&lt;and not in need of the change. The P-Side&#13;
"Je"1 G?vt'~ a force whlch could've moved out — was divided&#13;
with the feeling among some that the school structure needed&#13;
changing; and the others feeling that the calibur of students were&#13;
Th ,°^ .? th°Se that wanted to do something, frustrated by&#13;
those that didn t approve of what they wanted to do. As a result&#13;
Student Govt, cannot help the P-Side student in any way.&#13;
We re going to explain the Madison Ave. techniques I mentioned&#13;
before. All of us have heard of the ridiculous rents for&#13;
apartments around the Madison and Milw. campuses. Only a few of&#13;
us are aware of the rent strikes and Tennant Unions which have&#13;
justifiably hampered rip-off landlords. What P-Side did is to put the&#13;
campus out in the middle of a forest and then contract out housing&#13;
to a developer and then let them monopolize all the housing&#13;
anywhere near the campus. Not only the housing but there are even&#13;
money 3 COmmercial area- with stores Just waiting for our&#13;
Student Activities shouldn't even be called that, it should be&#13;
called Parkside Promoters' with a slogan of "We book anything"&#13;
and then somewhere below the dotted line, where you sign your soul&#13;
away, As long as we get our name in the paper". There has never&#13;
been an attempt by Student Activities to find out just what sort of&#13;
entertainment P-Side students would like to have. This could be&#13;
done so easily during registration that we wonder if all thev truly&#13;
care about is getting their name in the paper.&#13;
Our judgment of individual teaching by the teaching awards&#13;
presented to the best teacher has proven to be the kiss of death the&#13;
last 3 years in a row for the winner was fired. Deciding that to fire a&#13;
lew at a time was a waste of time the administration attempted&#13;
major surgery' — to quote ex-Dean MacKinney — and told 27&#13;
teachers to go get screwed. Luckily they were stopped and 2 of the&#13;
men responsible were let go, hoping that this would assure us that&#13;
tactics like these wouldn't be used again. The fact is that they are&#13;
ri? d!?hng when il comes t0 getting rid of someone&#13;
they don t like — as Dr. Brokaw's open hearing clearly proved.&#13;
-Side offers very little extra help to minority students and&#13;
almost no recruitment - except for Athletics - whatsoever.&#13;
Racine has the largest population of Blacks percentage-wise in the&#13;
rrn nflk °?y 80 B,3cks attending p"Side ~ not even 2 per&#13;
cent of the total enrollment. There are even fewer Chicanos and we&#13;
doubt any Indians.&#13;
1 he handling of veterans paperwork under the G.I. Bill is often&#13;
confusing and sometimes deliberately withheld for some&#13;
r.HretaaUCraK1C ITI' With over 300 vets on campus - we feel their&#13;
enoug^Bull-Shit d mUCh easier'for they've been through&#13;
In our classrooms we are expected to greedily compete for the&#13;
higher grades, so our records can look impressive. Meanwhile the&#13;
f-bide administration is worried about the percentage of failing&#13;
marks getting lower and lower. No attempt at trying out new&#13;
grading systems — such as Pass-Fail in non-major areas —&#13;
thereby giving students more time to concentrate on their special&#13;
interests instead of having to fight through required courses which&#13;
nobody can give any reason for taking, except to screw up your&#13;
grade point average.&#13;
We of the Concerned Student Coalition believe that a total&#13;
examination of P-Side is long overdue. Decisions continue to be&#13;
made arbitrarily depending upon the whim of a few people in&#13;
ialient Hall.&#13;
A Moratorium on Parkside should be arranged for the first two&#13;
3J.of tbf spring semester - similar to the Rap-70 sessions held at&#13;
UWM - but under complete student control. This will give us the&#13;
time to research and gather facts so we won't be overwhelmed with&#13;
the slick talking bureaucrats of the administration. We cannot&#13;
over emphasize the importance of gathering facts and be able to&#13;
call their lies with facts to back us up.&#13;
Another meeting will be held soon, at which time more details&#13;
of the moratorium will be explained to the students. Those willing&#13;
to help work out the details should come to a meeting next week&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 4, in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Concerned Student Coalition&#13;
Catholic Campus Ministry&#13;
CATHOLIC CAMPUS MINISTRY&#13;
Mass will be celebrated for students, faculty and staff in the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine Area starting on Sunday, October 10.&#13;
TIME: 12:00 Noon on Sundays&#13;
PLACE: St. Matthew Parish Hall, 5900 7th Ave., Kenosha&#13;
Two full-time champlains serve the campuses: Father Gary Kees&#13;
Rt 4, Box 613, Kenosha (phone 552-8626); Sr. Catherine Biggons, 5510&#13;
58th Ave., Kenosha (phone 568-4438).&#13;
oa&amp;e 3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
Page 6 •tfEWSCOPE November 1,1971&#13;
byJimKoloen&#13;
Title: The Last Whole Earth Catalogue&#13;
Editors: Stewart Brand, Gurney&#13;
Norman, Lloyd Kahn, Ken Kesey, Paul&#13;
Krassner&#13;
Publisher: Portola Institute - Random&#13;
House $5&#13;
The Last Whole Earth Catalogue is a&#13;
450 (141/2x101/2x1) page-more-than-acatalogue&#13;
which provides an "access to&#13;
tools", all kinds of tools from steam&#13;
engines to kites, buses to breastfeeding,&#13;
you name it, it's in there. The various&#13;
tools are reviewed and assessed and the&#13;
addresses of the most helpful, dependable&#13;
and inexpensive places to get&#13;
them are provided.&#13;
Is a kite a tool? I don't know, it all&#13;
depends on how you look at it.&#13;
Needless to say, but I have to fill&#13;
space, I haven't read every or even&#13;
many of the tool assessments. My&#13;
hippie friends tell me it's a "trip"&#13;
&lt;hi; ;ie jargon) to page through when&#13;
you're (they're) "stoned". I wouldn't&#13;
know about that. All I know about being&#13;
stoned is what I read in books.&#13;
Is this then the end of the review.&#13;
Nope. For a novel, of so rts, is included&#13;
in the catalogue as a preferred friends&#13;
bonus. It is printed in the lower right&#13;
hand corner of t he odd numbered pages&#13;
and can best be described as an earth&#13;
novel about earth people. The viewpoint&#13;
shifts from first person to third* at&#13;
places downshifting to reverse,&#13;
presenting the reader with both in(f)-&#13;
terior monologue and descriptive&#13;
narrative in third person, among other&#13;
viewpoints. The novel is divided inti&#13;
eight sections which describe the&#13;
travels and trials of D. R. (Divine&#13;
Right) Davenport, as he trips the hip&#13;
life freakastic and ends up founding the&#13;
Magic Rabbit Foundation, an&#13;
organization dedicated to restocking&#13;
the soil anywhere with rabbit shit.&#13;
Divine Right's Trip, which is, incidentally,&#13;
the title of the nove, was&#13;
written by Gurney Norman, a name&#13;
which, at least to me at this earlylate&#13;
hour, suggests a cow of softs, a grass&#13;
— 1&#13;
We can't put it together.&#13;
It is together.&#13;
1&#13;
BOOK&#13;
chewer who writes with his hooves,&#13;
down homey, colloquial, dibactic,&#13;
pretentious, simpleand&#13;
sometimesoften simple-minded. To&#13;
round out the story Gurney the cow&#13;
includes the themes of love, death,&#13;
dope, religion, along with finding&#13;
yourself by simplifying the world, going&#13;
back to the land, and ending up happy&#13;
ever after. The narrative progresses&#13;
from metaphysical wordiness to down&#13;
home drawlsy, reflecting the&#13;
protagonist's progressive selfrealization&#13;
which is catalyzed by the&#13;
people he meets. Indirectly it's a&#13;
handbook on how to be hip. It reminds&#13;
me of Moll Flanders in a way, of&#13;
Vonnegut and Walden in others, and in&#13;
the section in which D.R. listens to the&#13;
Kenducky dirt farmers' complaints&#13;
about landgraggers id definitely&#13;
plagerizes Grapes of Warth. It's a&#13;
"nice" book to read and an easy one to&#13;
ignore. It's what I call a catalogue&#13;
novel and so far the best yet published.&#13;
And also the worst.&#13;
The cast of characters include&#13;
colorful hippies with dayglo names and&#13;
strung out monomaniacs, smalltownies&#13;
and a VW microbus named Urge. The&#13;
secondary characters, except possibly&#13;
for Estelle (the love element) are all&#13;
stereotypes, composites of a type,&#13;
people you can only come into contact&#13;
with in novels. Perhaps one of the most&#13;
impressive scenes of the novel is the&#13;
description of an acid freakout. It's&#13;
quite accurate and well-handled,&#13;
presenting the paranoia yet adventure&#13;
of acid in mytho-descriptive terms.&#13;
After reading the first hundred pages&#13;
of the novel I said to myself what the&#13;
hell, what do I know about catalogue&#13;
novels, who am I to judge a new genre. I&#13;
decided the best way to read the Trip&#13;
was to shut off my critical faculties and&#13;
just flow with it. I found it to be a "nice"&#13;
story, entertaining, it doesn't stick out&#13;
in the catalogue, it's just there to read,&#13;
it blends in with the tool assessments so&#13;
that you can take a rest from the story&#13;
every few pages and glance over the&#13;
earth tool information. Do that for a&#13;
while and then go back to the story. You&#13;
don't lose anything.&#13;
Unlike most catalogues, The Last&#13;
Whole Earth Catalogue is not trying to&#13;
sell you something you don't need, it is&#13;
a sourcebook of earth materials which&#13;
have been evaluated over the past three&#13;
years by hundreds of people: It also&#13;
includes do-it-yourself ideas on how to&#13;
make wine, etc. The Whole Earth&#13;
Catalogue is worth the five dollar price&#13;
tag. It can't help but come in handy and&#13;
who knows, maybe one day it'll be a&#13;
collector's item. The layout is generally&#13;
good, though crowded, the assessments&#13;
informative and the index helpful. What&#13;
more can you ask of the Finnigan's&#13;
Wake of cataloguing.&#13;
The Last Whole Earth Catalogue&#13;
courtesy of the Book Mart, 522 - 59th&#13;
Street, Kenosha.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
1 1 , 1 I I \ K ' IT H I N G S I N M I ' f I ( •&#13;
Dou ntou n Kenosha •&#13;
ALADDIN FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racine&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
£&amp;UM*Uf, Ute. QuteAt&#13;
Piyy* &amp; 9 toluoi fyoadi.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 6 53-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
o&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SHELL&#13;
WA S H INGTON RO A D&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
654 -996 8&#13;
Four programs have been scheduled in the&#13;
1971-72 Lecture and Fine Arts series at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
The series will begin Nov. 18 with a talk on&#13;
new aspects of U.S.-Chinese relations by Harrison&#13;
LiGCtlLVG Salisbury- Pulitzer prize-winning Asia expert and&#13;
assistant managing editor of the New York Times.&#13;
Salisbury will speak at 8 p.m. in the Greenquist&#13;
Hall Concourse on the Wood Road campus.&#13;
On Nov. 19, the UW-Milwaukee Theater Arts&#13;
Department production of the First Folio edition&#13;
of "Hamlet" will be presented at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Racine campus Badger Room.&#13;
A moog synthesizer concert is scheduled for&#13;
Dec. 7 at 8 p.m. in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
On March 28, the National Shakespeare&#13;
Company will present "Twelfth Night" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Bradford High School Auditorium, Kenosha.&#13;
All Lecture and Fine Arts programs are open&#13;
to the public. The first three programs scheduled&#13;
are free. Ticket information on the National&#13;
Shakespeare Company production will be announced.&#13;
Additional programs in the series also are to&#13;
be announced when arrangements have been&#13;
completed.&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
Fine&#13;
•&#13;
Arts&#13;
Rolax - Accutron&#13;
Uttraehron - Long in.&#13;
Rulova - Movado&#13;
Caravalla - Tlmex&#13;
LaCoultr*&#13;
France's&#13;
Rlnaat -&#13;
Nrfum.1 and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
fl//"" »•« Ava.&#13;
It dots make * difference where you shop!&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace . Lunt&#13;
Read A Barton&#13;
Sheffield - ate.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tllfon - Or refers&#13;
Seneca . Lallqua&#13;
Royal Worcester&#13;
SL VatLf Supper CU&#13;
1700 Sheridan&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
November 1.1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
SUPERSTAR:&#13;
'DON' T YOU REMEMBER YOU TOLD ME YOU L OVED ME BABY? '&#13;
Clint Eastwood — David Carver&#13;
Jessica Walter — E velyn Draper&#13;
Directed by Clint Eastwood&#13;
A shocker again! Replete with knives and the&#13;
people they somehow end up carving. This one has&#13;
a woman at the wooden end. My curiosity arose at&#13;
the thought of an updated version of sweet Lizzie&#13;
Borden, with the added inate fear that most failing&#13;
chauvinists have to knife wheeling females I&#13;
couldrf t resist this one. I am happy to report that&#13;
the carving and the fear of it were hallucination&#13;
It takes three cigarettes, five bubble gum&#13;
ravings and the stained steel nerve of a movie&#13;
reviewer to reach Waukegan from Kenosha during&#13;
the highway 32-42 b ar rush. There are times that&#13;
this little tour of paved, mercury vapor washed&#13;
Amerikana isn't worth it.&#13;
Clint Eastwood acts as director and directed&#13;
in "Play Misty for Me", a film that uses too much&#13;
footage and patience in getting to an unconscious&#13;
few terror scenes.&#13;
Reeking of blood and gore, the film's purpose&#13;
is to raise the dying spectre of fear and hatred&#13;
usually attached to the demented personality A&#13;
fear which is currently being stored away with&#13;
other pre-Freudian taboos.&#13;
The story involves, no, radiates from the rock&#13;
hard visage of Eastwood, an exported-imported&#13;
actor in another lean role of ancient masculinity&#13;
Evelyn Draper (Jessica Walter) falls into a&#13;
possessive love with the radio voice and body of&#13;
David Garver . . . playboy-gargoyle and disc&#13;
jockey jargonist. Continuing to badger him, she&#13;
reveals her intentions, which are really quite&#13;
simple, but somehow (with the help of the&#13;
Aristotle-eye of Garver) she is more than&#13;
bananas. In her paranoid schizophrenia, the need&#13;
for identity-love and identity-affection is wasted&#13;
on the unfeeling bachelor. The machinations of her&#13;
condition eventually devour the physical aspect of&#13;
love" developing it into a mad, one-sided&#13;
tw ^r°In ginning, it is apparent that what&#13;
this tortured woman needs is love, or at least&#13;
attention, but Garver tries desperately to finish&#13;
what has already gone too far . . . provoking the&#13;
girl s attempted suicide and stabbing attack on the&#13;
wealthy, comfortable D.J.'s cleaning lady.&#13;
GJrber's true love (played by Donna Mills)&#13;
then becomes the object of Evelyn's 'insane&#13;
jealousy . As Poe's Annabelle she moves in with&#13;
Garver's chick and plans to finish off both of them&#13;
instead she kills a helpful father-image police&#13;
sargeant, mistaking and misknifing the wrong&#13;
The hero is just in time and saves his lovely&#13;
from the knife. In the process he is strategically&#13;
sliced but not enough to stop his burley right fist&#13;
from striking the murderess hard enough to knock&#13;
her through a window, onto the terrace, over the&#13;
balistrade, and about 400 feet to her death among&#13;
the rocky waters of the Pacific.&#13;
Yes, the film did have its good, bad and ugly&#13;
parts but the best part was the acting of Jessica&#13;
Walter, her interpretation of the murderess was&#13;
very good, needless to say it was the only&#13;
believeable performance in the while film. The&#13;
production wasn't really worthy of this actress'&#13;
talents.&#13;
Photography was excellent technically, but&#13;
the subject matter seemed Utopian with its lovely&#13;
sunsets, and lovely sunrises, made me feel like&#13;
gom' west cause thar's gold in them thar hills.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Huim Jot College WuWn&#13;
The National Collegiate&#13;
Literary Review, a new&#13;
national magazine designed to&#13;
give national exposure to&#13;
outstanding collegiate writing,&#13;
is scheduled for publication in&#13;
the spring of 1972.&#13;
"This magazine is designed to&#13;
be highly provocative, indicating&#13;
what students think&#13;
and believe today. Importantly,&#13;
it will give a national format to&#13;
student thought and opinion,"&#13;
according to Michael S. Standish,&#13;
a spokesman for The&#13;
National Collegiate Literary&#13;
Review.&#13;
Standish stated further that&#13;
"This magazine is unique since&#13;
never before has such an opportunity&#13;
existed for a student&#13;
to gain broad exposure of his&#13;
creative writings. They are no&#13;
longer campus bound in the&#13;
expression of their ideas. For&#13;
the first time the thinking of&#13;
America's youth will have&#13;
national exposure."&#13;
The magazine will be&#13;
available to all students and&#13;
distributed to major cbllege and&#13;
public libraries. In addition,&#13;
copies will be forwarded to&#13;
newspapers and magazines for&#13;
review.&#13;
The National Collegiate&#13;
Literary Review is now accepting&#13;
applications for the&#13;
spring, 1972, issue. The entries&#13;
are in four categories: poems,&#13;
short essays, political and&#13;
social commentaries, and pen&#13;
and ink drawings. Poems and&#13;
essays may be no longer than&#13;
three hundred words. Original&#13;
pen and ink drawings may be no&#13;
larger than five by eight inches.&#13;
All works must be original but&#13;
may have been published&#13;
previously.&#13;
An application must be accompanied&#13;
by a registration fee&#13;
of $6.00. If the submission is&#13;
accepted for publication by the&#13;
editorial board the author will&#13;
receive membership in the&#13;
Society of Collegiate Writers&#13;
and a complementary copy of&#13;
the 1972 National Collegiate&#13;
Literary Review. Membership&#13;
is limited exclusively to student&#13;
authors whose works are&#13;
published.&#13;
If the submission is found&#13;
unacceptable by the board, the&#13;
full application fee will be&#13;
refunded. Entries and application&#13;
fee should be forwarded&#13;
to The National&#13;
Collegiate Literary Review, 746&#13;
Hinman Avenue, Evanston,&#13;
Illinois 60202.&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
•CAsridiku'&#13;
ZLIndicot ions cu'i M soom.&#13;
be o iA~f"&#13;
+ I ' i e &lt;r+rj k ) o r ocr1" m o r k&#13;
pkofo&lt;j r(Lplt s&#13;
C/o Al A •+ Wood RJ&#13;
Ken Danby SilJcscrcens New Gallery One&#13;
503Main Street&#13;
Racine. Wis&#13;
^heTleu/Yogiie theater&#13;
1820 - 52nd Street/ Kenosha (Shore Liner Hall)&#13;
Gateway to Harbor West&#13;
Friday, Novembers —7:30and 9:45 P.M.&#13;
Saturday, November 6 — 7:30and 9:45 P.M.&#13;
Sunday, November 7 — 7:30 a nd 9:45 P.M.&#13;
W.C. F ields F estival&#13;
Part II&#13;
feature: MY LITTLE CHICKADEE&#13;
shor t : THE FATAL GLASS OF BEER&#13;
sundoy&#13;
afternoon&#13;
special&#13;
1:30-6:00 P.M.&#13;
live&#13;
music&#13;
featuring&#13;
OTIS PLUM&#13;
and more&#13;
Admission for Rock Concert $1.00 at the door only&#13;
Admission for Movies $1.25 a t the door, $T.00 in&#13;
advance&#13;
Advance tickets are available in the Newscope&#13;
Office, Romulius and Co., or any art gallery in&#13;
Harbor West in Kenosha; and in Racine at The&#13;
Daisy and The TEarth Works.&#13;
Next Week&#13;
Ingemar Bergman's "THE MAGICIAN"&#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE November 1,1971&#13;
Students Air Complaints&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
contract time, now who gets in;&#13;
us with our money or them&#13;
creeps.' Do the students have&#13;
any vote in who gets the contracts&#13;
down there? Any at all?&#13;
No, nothing, right, zero . . .&#13;
we're putting money into that&#13;
place and it's Vern and you&#13;
(Totero) who get all our&#13;
dough."&#13;
A recurrent theme of the&#13;
meeting concerned the&#13;
availability of information&#13;
about Auxiliary Enterprises&#13;
and other organizations. One&#13;
student told of h is experience in&#13;
dealing with the university: "I&#13;
went to find out the information&#13;
Bruce was talking about&#13;
(funding). I went to what I&#13;
thought was the logical place to&#13;
go; to budget. I went to budget&#13;
and they said, 'Well, we'll make&#13;
an appointment and you can&#13;
come talk to the budget man&#13;
tomorrow.' Okay, I came there&#13;
tomorrow. I didn't see the&#13;
budget man, the secretary told&#13;
me that he didn't have the information&#13;
and if he did he&#13;
wouldn't be able to give it to me.&#13;
She said to go to the Assistant&#13;
Chancellor. I went to the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor that day.&#13;
He was busy, but I probably&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We w i l l h e l p a n y w o m a n r e g a r d l e s s&#13;
^ c e ' r e l i 9 i o n . a g e o r f i n a n c i a l&#13;
s t a l u s . W e d o n o t m o r a l i z e , b u t&#13;
m e r e l y h e l p wo m e n o b t a i n q u a l i f i e d&#13;
w h a 0 I £ f ° L a b o r l i o n s . f t h i s i s&#13;
w h a t t h e y d e s i r e . P l e a s e d o n o t&#13;
a y , a n e a r l y a b o r t i o n i s m o r e&#13;
o«£?mirfd less coslly' and can be&#13;
p e r f o r m e d o n a n o u t p a t i e n t b a s i s .&#13;
Call:&#13;
r 312 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Auislan.ce of Ctiicago&#13;
8 AM-10 PM—7 DAYS&#13;
A NON- P R O F I T ORGAN I Z A T I O N&#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;
$500. Call 694-5138 after 4 p.m.&#13;
FOR SALE — 1964 Ford station&#13;
wagon less engine, interior and&#13;
transmission (automatic) in good&#13;
condition. $50. 878-1892.&#13;
1969 Opel Rally, new wide ovals,&#13;
AM-FM, 13,000 miles, call 633-0471.&#13;
1970 Triumph GT6 - British Racing&#13;
green A-l condition, 1,800 miles, two&#13;
new radial tires. Best offer over&#13;
$2,400.00, inquire apt. 210, Parkside&#13;
Village, Building one.&#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-l. Phone 554-&#13;
9174.&#13;
ELECTRIC GUITAR —6st. 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;
COUCH — fold out ben and gas&#13;
stove. Call 637-1556.&#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;
FREE KITTENS - save a kitten&#13;
from the gas chamber; multicolored.&#13;
Call 878-1892.&#13;
Christmas gifts for the entire family&#13;
from Avon. Something for everyone.&#13;
Wrapped for Christmas FREE.&#13;
Phone 654-2237. No obligation.&#13;
WELCOME - COME BROWSE —&#13;
"hand in heart" gift shop, 517 - 16&#13;
street Racine. Open 12 to 5 p.m.&#13;
Tuesdays thru Sundays - Fridays til&#13;
9:00 p.m. Beautiful handmade items&#13;
sold - creative work also welcomed.&#13;
SPACE HEATER - very good&#13;
condition. 6325 8th Ave. 652-6669.&#13;
wouldn't be able to get it from&#13;
him either, so she says go to&#13;
Dean Dearborn. I go to Dean&#13;
Dearborn and he says, 'Well, I&#13;
don't have the information and&#13;
if you want the information I&#13;
can tell you where to go get it.&#13;
You can get it from Mr. Zuelke.'&#13;
That's where I went, I finally&#13;
got it, but it took a lot of ru nning&#13;
around."&#13;
Carls took this as his cue and&#13;
stated, "You know, you can't&#13;
find anything out about that&#13;
building. Have you ever tried to&#13;
figure out where all that money&#13;
goes; you can't find out. Who do&#13;
you talk to, Vern says, 'Well, we&#13;
paid out this and we paid out&#13;
that.' Horseshit! How many&#13;
people you got working down&#13;
there?" '&#13;
Answering Carls, one student&#13;
said, "One person can't do it all,&#13;
and that's what this meeting is&#13;
all about because there are&#13;
different groups in here and&#13;
what we're supposed to do is get&#13;
together because the only way&#13;
we can get anything done is if&#13;
we do get together."&#13;
Up to-this point the meeting, if&#13;
anything, was characterized by&#13;
a very obvious and deeply held&#13;
dissonance which labeled one&#13;
returns&#13;
next week...&#13;
NOT wfl be 1,&#13;
a&#13;
newscope&#13;
staffer j&#13;
Lined, embroidered sheepskin coat&#13;
— Woman's — 654-3170.&#13;
FOLK GUITARS - From $12. Call&#13;
658-2832 after 4 p.m.&#13;
WANTED&#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;
I ne ed a ride to the Sunnyside area of&#13;
Kenosha from Hwy. A. area. Any or&#13;
all days Monday - Fri. Must be al&#13;
work 8:00a.m. Willing to help on gas&#13;
money. Call 552-8960 and ask for&#13;
Deborah.&#13;
Drummer wants to work again, good&#13;
878 tsST1 " eXperienced" Ca" Kim&#13;
group of students as moderate&#13;
to pro-administration as opposed&#13;
to definitely antiOadministration.&#13;
At this point&#13;
Loumos brought the meeting to&#13;
order and introduced Carsten&#13;
Vesterlund who lashed out at&#13;
Totero intimating that the&#13;
Student Activities office had&#13;
manipulated the controversial&#13;
student organization handbook,&#13;
particularly on the matter of the&#13;
size of posters that can be&#13;
placed on bulletin boards.&#13;
Vesterlund told the audience&#13;
that "a booklet was printed&#13;
called Rules and Regulations&#13;
saying that posters must be&#13;
11x14, otherwise they get torn&#13;
down, see. They (Student Activities)&#13;
went around tearing&#13;
down a lot of posters (anti-&#13;
Superstar) because they&#13;
weren't the right size. So, as a&#13;
concerned student at Parkside&#13;
trying to see that all the rules&#13;
are upheld, I ran around and&#13;
tore down all those posters that&#13;
were the wrong size (including&#13;
posters advertizing Cool Hand&#13;
Luke presented by Student&#13;
Activities). I called him and&#13;
told him. He told me that it was&#13;
a misprint in the book and that&#13;
it was supposed to be 14x22. You&#13;
say 11x14 and Totero puts his&#13;
posters up so when somebody&#13;
tries to clean your ass up you&#13;
turn around and say 14x22.&#13;
That's crap. What size is it?"&#13;
Totero hesitated in responding&#13;
until several others joined&#13;
Vesterlund in demanding an&#13;
answer. Totero replied* "Only&#13;
two books with those numbers&#13;
were ever handed out, every&#13;
other book handed out starting&#13;
three weeks ago had 14.22 in it."&#13;
Vesterlund continued his&#13;
questioning of Totero concluding&#13;
that "You might throw&#13;
me out of th is son of a bitch, but&#13;
I'm going to run around tearing&#13;
all your goddamn posters up."&#13;
A number of other questions&#13;
were raised byt like the others&#13;
ended in mumbled half sentences&#13;
and equivocation. After&#13;
Vesterlund finished, Loumos&#13;
introduced Tony Chapman, a&#13;
black student who, in contrast&#13;
to the excitement characterizing&#13;
the meeting, spoke&#13;
calmly about minorities at&#13;
Parkside, a priority issue with&#13;
the coalition. As a representative&#13;
of the Black Student&#13;
Union, Chapman discussed the&#13;
low percentage of blacks attending&#13;
Parkside in relation to&#13;
the population in the area.&#13;
When Chapman finished&#13;
speaking the group had become&#13;
quiet and Loumos was able to&#13;
follow the outline prepared for&#13;
the meeting, concluding with a&#13;
showing of a three minute film&#13;
made in the Greenquist lounge.&#13;
The next scheduled meeting&#13;
of the Concerned Students&#13;
Coalition is November 4.&#13;
FOR SALE — Dog - Wire-haired fox&#13;
terrier, AKC reg., 6 wks old. call 553-&#13;
2329, or 652-3565. Sr.^M. K. Gibbons — This Is Your&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
Somebody s Concerned&#13;
by Kelly Infusino&#13;
Last Tuesday, I was driving&#13;
down highway 32. Just as I&#13;
passed the Kenosha-Racine line&#13;
heading into Kenosha, I forced&#13;
my car to an abrupt stop.&#13;
On the billboards that&#13;
acknowledge some of Kenosha's&#13;
fine establishment somebody&#13;
had nailed a gigantic white&#13;
sheet. On the sheet was printed&#13;
the words "Turn off power, turn&#13;
on clean air." The letters were&#13;
printed on the sheet in blazing&#13;
red letters. Complementing the&#13;
words was painted a couple of&#13;
evergreen trees growing in a&#13;
blue-skyed environment. Some&#13;
one has decided that talking&#13;
about clean air won't get us any&#13;
and that something has to be&#13;
done.&#13;
The Oak Creek Power Plant&#13;
burns 3 RR carloads of coal per&#13;
hour or 4,320 TONS a day to&#13;
supply southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
(Kenosha, Racine, Milwaukee)&#13;
the electricity to run our air&#13;
conditioners, electric can&#13;
opener, our 3 TVs, 4 radios, 14&#13;
light bulbs, etc., etc. The result&#13;
of burning coal to produce&#13;
electrical power is sulpher&#13;
dioxide.&#13;
The dangers of sulpher&#13;
dioxide range from burning&#13;
holes in the clothes to eating&#13;
away at peoples' lungs.&#13;
The sheet on the sign didn't&#13;
really shut down the Oak Creek&#13;
Plant but if it makes somebody&#13;
stop and think about the environment&#13;
it will have well been&#13;
worth it.&#13;
psych club&#13;
looking for&#13;
'guinea pigs'&#13;
The Psychology club of&#13;
Parkside wishes to announce&#13;
your opportunity to become the&#13;
subject of an experiment. The&#13;
subject to be dealt with is&#13;
computer matching; the results&#13;
we are looking for is to see&#13;
exactly what it is that the&#13;
average student looks for in a&#13;
date. Is it merely looks? Good&#13;
teeth? Personality? Or is it how&#13;
well the person is doing in that&#13;
calculus class you're flunking?&#13;
Exactly what is it?&#13;
Because this is a legitimate&#13;
experiment and to do an experiment&#13;
one needs subjects.&#13;
The Psychology club is offering&#13;
this to you FREE OF CHARGE.&#13;
Some of the things included in&#13;
the questionnaire are family&#13;
life, how others see you, how&#13;
you see yourself, future goals,&#13;
etc. If you will be willing to lend&#13;
yourself to the clutches of our&#13;
computer, we will have you&#13;
matched up with three individuals&#13;
that you have shown&#13;
through the data on the&#13;
questionnaire will be most&#13;
compatable with you. Then&#13;
after an ample amount of time&#13;
we will request that you give us&#13;
some feedback on the meetings&#13;
you have had with these people.&#13;
The questionnaires will be&#13;
handed out during the- week of&#13;
November 1 through 5. The&#13;
matches will be given back to&#13;
you during the week of&#13;
November 15 through&#13;
November 19 in Greenquist&#13;
concourse only.&#13;
Questionnaires will be&#13;
available at the Greenquist&#13;
lounge, Racine campus lounge&#13;
and the lounge at Kenosha&#13;
between the hours of 9 a.m. -11&#13;
a.m.; 1 p.m. - 3 p.m.; and 7 p.m.&#13;
- 9 p.m.&#13;
And one more thing, keep the&#13;
night of December 11 free.&#13;
November 1.1971 NEWSCOPE Page 9&#13;
Parenthood Clinic&#13;
Planned Parenthood of Kenosha announced a change in clinic&#13;
hours.&#13;
Mrs. Donald Jensen, chairman, said the family planning clinic&#13;
at Kenosha Memorial Hospital will conduct Thursday sessions&#13;
beginning November 4. Previous clinics were held on Wednesdays.&#13;
Though clinic hours are from 7 to 9 p.m., new patients are&#13;
asked to report at 7 p.m. All new patients are shown a film and&#13;
assisted in their choice of birth control methods before seeing the&#13;
doctor.&#13;
Supported by Planned Parenthood of Kenosha and affiliated&#13;
with Planned Parenthood Association of Wisconsin, clinic facilities&#13;
are located in the out-patient area at Memorial Hospital.&#13;
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Gino's&#13;
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Page 10&#13;
Alpha-Omega Arrives&#13;
Alpha Omega, a coalition&#13;
organization formed by the&#13;
extreme leftist members of the&#13;
Weathermen, members of the&#13;
Black Panther Party who&#13;
thought Huey Newton was too&#13;
much of an "Uncle Tom", thos&#13;
who called the Madison math&#13;
research blast a "token effort"&#13;
Tests Find 25 Persons with&#13;
and also some linebackers from&#13;
the Chicago Bears, has arrived&#13;
in Kenosha at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Since its origin during the&#13;
Democratic convention in '68&#13;
(which they later disavowed&#13;
because the really big confrontation&#13;
never came off) they&#13;
have stayed underground ex-&#13;
Sickle Cell Anemia&#13;
•Parting&#13;
\ ^ o mass testing in Kenosha for sickle cell anemia traits&#13;
was hdd Sunday, Oct. 31, at St. James Catholic Church, 5804&#13;
Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Sickle cell anemia is a hereditary blood disorder, most commonly&#13;
found among Negroes.&#13;
The testing program, which involves taking of blood samples,&#13;
s sponsored by the Kenosha Branch NAACP in cooperation with&#13;
Mpd,v«!VTrShy i Wisc°nsin-Parkside and the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Medical Technologists Society.&#13;
thev wThfS °fithe,med tech society took the blood samples and&#13;
as ca^rvin! if m b? UW"P laboratories. Persons identified&#13;
Persons whoH ? n°tified by their family Persons who do not carry the trait will be notified by lettePrh. ysicians.&#13;
of thP 9q-TlmaSS tfSti"^s held t0 date in Kenosha revealed that 25&#13;
the 293 persons tested carried the trait.&#13;
HeaUh1ni)aStfSUmfmeraUW"P ^P61-3^ with the Racine City&#13;
some 400'^rsoT RaCi"e branCh °f NAACP in lestin§&#13;
cept for occasional skirmishes&#13;
with the bourgeoisie which the&#13;
FBI is now investigating.&#13;
Alpha Omega is a militant&#13;
organization which is violently&#13;
opposed to almost anything a&#13;
midd-aged construction worker&#13;
can name: the flag, mom, the&#13;
pope, Tremper High School, etc.&#13;
"The beauty of our&#13;
organization is the fact that it is&#13;
unstructured and spontaneous,&#13;
it lives only in the hearts and&#13;
minds of the people," said the&#13;
groups' executive vice&#13;
president in charge of personnel&#13;
relations from his office at&#13;
Parkside .Village.&#13;
Parkside is one lucky student&#13;
proletariat to be blessed with&#13;
the presence of the ultimate&#13;
revolutionary movement. Join&#13;
us now before polarization&#13;
starts and avoid mid-term&#13;
cross-fire. If you would like to&#13;
join, just send $75 in small&#13;
unmakred bills to Alpha&#13;
Omega, care of Newscope.&#13;
AO is supported by donations,&#13;
interest on bail money, and by&#13;
the sale of small arms to&#13;
minority groups.&#13;
MMMW |&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
MORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 75 0 0 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
SEAFOOD SPECIALTIES&#13;
famous for CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
RANCH'S FISH&#13;
DINNER $1.45&#13;
FRIED JUMBO&#13;
SHRIMP DINNER $1.75&#13;
SEAFOOD PLATTER FRESH LAKE PERCH&#13;
Golden Fried Shrimp and Fish Golden fried Lake Perch *&#13;
served with Onion Rings, served with French Fries&#13;
Cottage Cheese Sauce cole slaw and bread&#13;
and Bread $1.85 $1.75&#13;
ELECTION NOTICE&#13;
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTION&#13;
PROCEDURES&#13;
Nov. 4 — D eadline for all candidate petitions to be&#13;
filed with the Student Government Association&#13;
Wood Rd. &amp; Co unty "A".&#13;
Nov. 4 —Campaign begins. Open meeting at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
in Room 101, Greenquist Hall. All registered&#13;
candidates are invited to participate.&#13;
Nov. 5 - Noon — Cand idates must submit their picture&#13;
and platform to the NEWSCOPE Office. A special&#13;
edition of NEWSCOPE will be devoted to the&#13;
candidates. (Platform should be approximately&#13;
200 words and must be typewritten.)&#13;
Nov. 8 - NEWSCOPE "Election Edition" will be&#13;
released.&#13;
Nov. 16 — Campaign ends.&#13;
Nov. 17, 18, 19 — Election of Student Government.&#13;
Polling will take place in entrance lobbies in&#13;
Racine, Kenosha and in the concourse of&#13;
Greenquist Hall. Polls will be open from 8:00 a.m.&#13;
to 8:00 p.m. on the 17 and 18. On Friday Nov 19&#13;
until 5:00 p.m.&#13;
CANDIDATE REGULATIONS AND PRIVILEGES&#13;
1. Each registered candidate will be allowed 500&#13;
printed leaflets. This will be done as a service to the&#13;
candidate. Additional leaflets will be at the candidates'&#13;
expense.&#13;
2. Each candidate may hold their own rally, but must&#13;
clear time, place and equipment used thru Student&#13;
Government Office. Open debates are scheduled for&#13;
the 9 and 12 of November with a big rally on the&#13;
16th/the last day of campaigning. Other debates&#13;
will be scheduled if needed.&#13;
Printing and rally arrangements must be made&#13;
through the Student Government Office, Wood Rd and&#13;
County Hwy. "A".&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
November 1.1971 NEWSCOPE Page 11&#13;
Stephens Emphasizes Teamwork&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
Superb puality Jn execution and timing, plus the&#13;
added incentive of personal satisfaction is what&#13;
weems to make every cheerleader tick&#13;
Whenever you watch them you can' think of the&#13;
long hours o practice and drilling that go into every&#13;
cheer. Back flips, splits and hand springs all executed&#13;
with perfect accuracy.&#13;
What's that? You say you've never seen Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders do those maneuvers. You're right thev&#13;
don't. * ' cy&#13;
I'm speaking of the cheerleading squad of a small&#13;
lunior high school on the south side of Kenoshanamely&#13;
Lance.&#13;
Lance's cheerleaders seem to have that desirable&#13;
something that everyone else (including Parkside)&#13;
misses. Last year Lance won its class in state&#13;
cheerleading competition and this year should prove&#13;
to be a repeat performance.&#13;
With virtually no funds to support them (approximately&#13;
$25 per person per year) they still put&#13;
forth an effort and a spirit that makes them excell.&#13;
Perhaps I'm wrong in comparing Parkside's&#13;
cheerleaders to Lance's and making Parkside out to&#13;
be so bad, but Parkside, with its enrollment should&#13;
have a squad with no equal in the county. It's iust too&#13;
bad that they don't.&#13;
Congratulations go to the Lance cheerleaders.&#13;
Keep up the good work. If they ever decide to come to&#13;
Parkside, then we, too, can have cheerleaders to be&#13;
proud of.&#13;
Rick Pazera&#13;
Harriers Display Depth&#13;
by Jim Casper, Sports Editor&#13;
Giving a balanced effort, the Ranger harriers notched victories&#13;
over Marquette and Ul-Chicago Circle at Washington Park in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Of th e first eight men finishing, five were Rangers, and this is&#13;
the type of performance that the coaches wanted — a showing of&#13;
depth.&#13;
Despite the fact that highly touted Lucian Rosa did not win,&#13;
Parkside triumphed quite handily, 22-37 over Ul-Chicago, and 17-42&#13;
over the Warriors of Maruqette.&#13;
Rosa did finish s strong second, and teammates Rudy Alvarez&#13;
and Jim McFadden followed him in that order.&#13;
Dennis Biel, the freshman from Wausau East High who placed&#13;
third in the state prep mile as a senior, finished sixth; while&#13;
Waterford sophomore Gary Lance ran eighth.&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
by Jim Casper, Sports Editor&#13;
An emphasis on teamwork rather than&#13;
eminent individual performances will characterize&#13;
the style of basketball at Parkside this&#13;
season.&#13;
Four starters have departed, and three of&#13;
them were the primary scorers last season — E li&#13;
Slaughter (23.4), Jim Hogan (21.1), and Stan&#13;
White (18.4).&#13;
Beside these vacancies, the leading returning&#13;
scorer, Mike Madsen (ll.l) is currently out of&#13;
action due to a back ailment.&#13;
If the Rangers have any hopes of having at&#13;
least a moderately successful season the gaping&#13;
holes will have to be filled with new faces.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens appears to be taking a&#13;
cautiously optimistic attitude about the forthcoming&#13;
season. He is enthused about a number&#13;
of new players that he is working with.&#13;
"It's a complete rebuilding year, but I'm not&#13;
at all discouraged," said Stephens. "Some of our&#13;
kids have shown real good effort, and we have&#13;
some pretty good size and better overall team&#13;
speed than last year; we just don't have the experience."&#13;
Stephens said that the team was concentrating&#13;
its efforts on fundamentals, particularly defense,&#13;
but some offensive fundamentals have also been&#13;
taught, or are in the process of being taught.&#13;
"We know that when we open with Western&#13;
Michigan Dec. 1 we are going to have some sort of&#13;
defense that will hopefully contain them so we can&#13;
be in the ball game," warned Stevens.&#13;
Newscope: Last year's team had strong&#13;
scoring with the accurate marksmanship of forwards&#13;
Eli Slaughter and Stan White, plus Jim&#13;
Hogan's fine outside shooting ability. These men&#13;
were leaders. Nick Perrine and Ken Rick, two&#13;
other seniors last year, were also leaders. Will this .&#13;
type of leadership arise this year?&#13;
Stephens: "We have had good leadership&#13;
potential emerge on our club, and we have had&#13;
some fine freshmen. We've got two 6-6 f reshmen&#13;
that have really impressed me — Tom Heller from&#13;
St. Joseph's, and Ted Rogers from Monona Grove.&#13;
I think they are really going to improve as the&#13;
season goes along. They have the natural ability&#13;
and look very good.&#13;
"The one returning starter, Mike Madsen, has&#13;
yet to practice with the team and we are hoping&#13;
that he can get back and give us some needed&#13;
height in the middle. Right now, Ed Van Tine is&#13;
our only eligible center."&#13;
Newscope: The experienced guards are gone;&#13;
how will they be replaced?&#13;
Stephens: "We don't have that much experience&#13;
at guard, but there are three boys with&#13;
some college experience. Junior college transfer&#13;
Deke Routheaux should give us some leadership.&#13;
Rick Davis, 6-3 a nd a good shooter, transferred&#13;
here a year ago from West Virginia. He could give&#13;
us a great deal of help. Those two, plus Don Woods&#13;
off of last year's squad, are all we have in the way&#13;
of experienced performers on the backcourt."&#13;
Stephens talked enthusiastically about some&#13;
new prospects:&#13;
"There are some real good young high school&#13;
players that should give us some help, namely&#13;
Tom Joyce and Don Swanson. Also, there is a local&#13;
player from Racine who right nos physically is&#13;
probably our strongest guard — Chuck Chambliss.&#13;
He is a fine jumper and a real strong physical&#13;
player."&#13;
In summing up the situation Stephens said:&#13;
"What we are losing in experience we are making&#13;
up by way of hustle, attitude and overall team&#13;
play.&#13;
"We know it's a building year," he said, "and&#13;
we have set some objectives for our squad — to&#13;
make this year a learning year and at the same&#13;
time win as many games as we can."&#13;
Ail-Star Lineup&#13;
Announced&#13;
The science faculty all-stars&#13;
have announced their teav for&#13;
the Harlow Mills Scholarship&#13;
Fund Basketball game this&#13;
Friday, November 5.&#13;
Life science professors are&#13;
"The Amazin'" Amin, "Effishency"&#13;
Balsano, "Charlie"&#13;
Chen, Robert "Rocket" Esser,&#13;
"Hy-gene" Gasiorkiewicz, and&#13;
"Clean" Gene Goodman.&#13;
Earth science all-stars are&#13;
"Bouncing" Paul Beyer, Hank&#13;
"King" Cole, "The Rock"&#13;
Schneider, and "Bubbles"&#13;
Shea.&#13;
Don "Stats" Piele and "Red&#13;
Baron" Williams from the math&#13;
department," "Quicksliver"&#13;
Quass from chemistry, and&#13;
"Schizo" Schissler also are on&#13;
the squad.&#13;
Tickets for this exciting and&#13;
entertaining evening of&#13;
basketball are 75 cents and are&#13;
available at Student Affairs in&#13;
Tallent Hall or from life science&#13;
majors. The action will start at&#13;
7:15 at Lance Junior High&#13;
School in Kenosha (at 41st Ave.&#13;
and 80th St.).&#13;
M&#13;
Sjbby-HjiOni&#13;
i £ you'al I i k&#13;
h se.e. i&#13;
&lt;*-3&#13;
&lt;*• jOrtJs&#13;
hjsr*&#13;
j? {.• r\t u. S c x+&#13;
friday and Saturday, november 5-6&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
* presents&#13;
Steve Freeman&#13;
folksinger, Spanish guitar,&#13;
vocals 8pm-l2pm&#13;
on wood road just south of parkside&#13;
Pussycat Lounge&#13;
Racine&#13;
632-3785 or&#13;
633-3805&#13;
NEWSCOPE November 1,1971</text>
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