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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 12</text>
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            <text>Athletics, Story One</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Athletics:&#13;
story one&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Two former Parkside athletes&#13;
have revealed how they said&#13;
they were lied to and misled by&#13;
Parkside Athletic Director Tom&#13;
Rosandich when they were&#13;
recruited to come here. A third&#13;
athlete, still active in UW-P&#13;
athletics, told of similar&#13;
statements made to him, but&#13;
declined to characterize them&#13;
as being either misleading or&#13;
lies.&#13;
Stories similar to these have&#13;
surfaced on campus before but&#13;
have never been substantiated.&#13;
The three, Mary Libal, John&#13;
Patten and Judy Zimmerman,&#13;
told of their experiences in&#13;
separate interviews. Patten is&#13;
presently a pole vaulter on the&#13;
track team, while Mary is a&#13;
student here and Judy a student&#13;
at UWM.&#13;
The girls' stories, besides&#13;
giving evidence of Parkside's&#13;
recruiting methods, tell how&#13;
their experience with UW-P&#13;
athletics has destroyed their&#13;
desire to compete anymore.&#13;
Mary, who ran on the girl's&#13;
track and cross country teams&#13;
for two years, related that at the&#13;
time of her recruitment she was&#13;
lied to or misled in regards:&#13;
— to there being an indoor&#13;
track at Parkside&#13;
— that there was a strong&#13;
possibility she would get&#13;
financial aid&#13;
— that housing would be&#13;
found for her&#13;
— th at a girl's cross-country&#13;
and track team existed.&#13;
Prior to coming to Parkside&#13;
she spent her freshman year at&#13;
UW-Green Bay, which had no&#13;
girl's track team. Instead she&#13;
ran for a private club, and&#13;
captured the Wisconsin&#13;
Women's AAU titles in the 100&#13;
yard dash, tne 220, and the&#13;
quarter mile run.&#13;
She attended the training&#13;
camp founded by Rosandich,&#13;
Olympia Village, in northern&#13;
Wisconsin during the summer&#13;
of 1969. He then talked to her&#13;
about coming to Parkside.&#13;
"He told me they had a&#13;
woman's track team," Mary&#13;
said. "He said they would bring&#13;
their team to national meets. He&#13;
also told me they had an indoor&#13;
track, which I was enthused&#13;
about because I live in Green&#13;
Bay, and it gets very cold&#13;
there."&#13;
She liked the idea of practicing&#13;
indoors during winter.&#13;
"He also told me he thought&#13;
he could get me financial aid,"&#13;
she continued. "He implied it&#13;
was almost positive. But I never&#13;
did sign a scholarship contract.&#13;
"He also said he would get me&#13;
a place to live down here. I&#13;
would pay the rent, but they&#13;
would find me a place to live.&#13;
When I did transfer down here&#13;
they didn't do this. They&#13;
suggested I go to the Y."&#13;
She added that Verne Martinez,&#13;
the director of Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises, spent part of a day&#13;
looking for apartments with&#13;
her, and that Paul Ward of the&#13;
coaching staff did the same for&#13;
a couple of hours one day.&#13;
Mary said the extent the&#13;
campus was split was not made&#13;
clear to her. She didn't actually&#13;
see the campus till after she&#13;
committed herself to come. "So&#13;
when I did see it I was&#13;
disillusioned. We used to spend&#13;
three or four hours a day just&#13;
taking buses and driving to&#13;
places to work out. We practiced&#13;
all over the two cities."&#13;
"When I started working out I&#13;
was the girl's cross country&#13;
team," she said. For the first&#13;
month she was the only girl out.&#13;
Then about 12 girls came out,&#13;
but only a few were serious&#13;
about competing she said. The&#13;
team went to only one major&#13;
meet the whole season.&#13;
She said of this: "I resented&#13;
the fact I was training with the&#13;
men when I had been promised&#13;
a woman's team to work out&#13;
with. A lot of times I had to lift&#13;
weights with the guys, which&#13;
was embarrassing to me — to&#13;
CONTINUED ON BACK PAGE&#13;
Hockey Boards&#13;
Have Trouble&#13;
Finding A Home&#13;
by Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Building construction affects&#13;
almost everyone at&#13;
Parkside one time or another.&#13;
But the Hockey Club has&#13;
experienced the results of the&#13;
University's growing pains in a&#13;
special way. Since the Hockey&#13;
Club does not have National&#13;
Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA) certification&#13;
because it is not a UW-P varsity&#13;
team, Parkside has not&#13;
provided an adequatelyequipped&#13;
rink where Hockey&#13;
Club members can practice. As&#13;
a result, to be prepared for their&#13;
26-game schedule, once a week&#13;
the club members must travel&#13;
to Wilson Park in Milwaukee to&#13;
practice, often until late into the&#13;
night. For the use of t he Wilson&#13;
Park facilities, the club must&#13;
pay $25 to $30 p er hour.&#13;
Bill Westerlund, president of&#13;
the Parkside Hockey club, said&#13;
the Kenosha Hockey&#13;
Association (KHA) is willing to&#13;
donate $2,000 worth of rink&#13;
boards to Parkside because&#13;
there is a lack of h elp to set up&#13;
(Continued on Page 2)&#13;
The University of Wisconsin - Parkside vivseor&#13;
Volume 5 Number 12 November 22,1971 "/oumoii.m is Literature in a Hurry" - Matthew Arnold&#13;
Director of Housing at parkside ms. S h i rl e y Dorfman&#13;
$chmerling ha s been named to the National women's&#13;
Rights Advisory council.&#13;
Shirley Schmerling&#13;
Named To NWRAC&#13;
Ms. Shirley Dorfman Schmerling,&#13;
rumored to be&#13;
Parkside's next Director of&#13;
Auxiliary Services, has been&#13;
selected to serve on the&#13;
National Women's Rights&#13;
Advisory Council. She is&#13;
presently head of student&#13;
housing at UW-P.&#13;
The NWRAC is a recently&#13;
formed organization to assist in&#13;
the presidential campaign of&#13;
Senator George McGovern.&#13;
Other members of the council&#13;
include Flora Crater, editor and&#13;
publisher of The Woman Activist;&#13;
Frances Tarlton&#13;
council.&#13;
McGovern said the function of&#13;
the council is to insure that&#13;
issues of concern to women do&#13;
not get overlooked. McGovern's&#13;
platform includes appointments&#13;
of women to cabinet and&#13;
security council positions.&#13;
"He's the only one that I could&#13;
really back, since he shows a&#13;
definite interest in students,&#13;
women's rights and the future&#13;
of America," Ms. Schmerling&#13;
said.&#13;
"He was against the war&#13;
wnen it wasn't popular to be&#13;
against the war and couldn't be&#13;
Eating Out goes Dining Out: page 4&#13;
Farenthold, Texas State&#13;
Representative and the only&#13;
woman in the House of&#13;
Representatives; Carolyn&#13;
Naylor, Minnesota National&#13;
Coordinator of National Welfare&#13;
Rights Organization; and&#13;
Gloria Steinem, contributing&#13;
editor and political columnist&#13;
for New York magazine. Ms.&#13;
Schmerling is the only woman&#13;
pressured to change his convictions.&#13;
I really believe him to&#13;
be sincere," she added.&#13;
Asked about the possibility of&#13;
McGovern speaking at&#13;
Parkside, she said, "He would&#13;
definitely be here after the first&#13;
of the year."&#13;
"We would be happy to&#13;
welcome any students into the&#13;
working campaign for Senator&#13;
McGovern," she concluded.&#13;
Athletics:&#13;
story two&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Newscope has learned that&#13;
Director of Athletics Tom&#13;
Rosandich and Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie personally paid a portion&#13;
of a girl athlete's tuition last&#13;
fall.&#13;
This, and the method in which&#13;
the girl was recruited opens the&#13;
possibility that her recruitment&#13;
violated the rules of the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic Conference,&#13;
which specifically&#13;
forbids athletic scholarships or&#13;
financial aid tied to athletic&#13;
participation being given to&#13;
women.&#13;
This was learned after an&#13;
investigation of charges made&#13;
against Rosandich by two&#13;
former Parkside girl athletes.&#13;
One girl charged she had been&#13;
told scholarship type funds&#13;
were not available when she&#13;
was recruited, when, in fact,&#13;
other athletes had received&#13;
them.&#13;
Rosandich was asked to&#13;
comment in a series of interviews&#13;
on the various charges&#13;
made against him. When he&#13;
refused to disclose the specifics&#13;
of how Beverly Crawford&#13;
received financial aid, a subsequent&#13;
talk with the Chancellor&#13;
revealed the facts of her&#13;
recruitment.&#13;
Beverly, a black runner in&#13;
track from Pittsburgh, dropped&#13;
out of school because of personal&#13;
problems at the end of the&#13;
fall semester last year.&#13;
Rosandich initially said little&#13;
of her recruitment except to&#13;
maintain emphatically that she&#13;
had not received a scholarship&#13;
from the Athletic Department&#13;
— which would have been a&#13;
direct violation of the women's&#13;
conference rules.&#13;
He pointed out these rules&#13;
were the operating code of his&#13;
office, and claimed, "This is not&#13;
anti-woman. It's not against&#13;
Woman's Lib. It was written by&#13;
women, and put into the constitution&#13;
by women."&#13;
"There is no way we were&#13;
going to go out and offer a girl a&#13;
scholarship when we are trying&#13;
to develop that conference," he&#13;
said. "We would destroy the&#13;
program we are in."&#13;
When he was told her name&#13;
was on a list of scholarship&#13;
recipients on a budget report&#13;
from the Office of Athletics&#13;
from the fall of 1970 - her&#13;
tuition was listed under the&#13;
Chancellor's funds, he paused,&#13;
paced around, and remained&#13;
silent for a time. He said, then,&#13;
"I can't explain this to you."&#13;
His only statement for&#13;
publication was, "She did not&#13;
come here with the promise of a&#13;
scholarship from this office.&#13;
Someone else in the community&#13;
arranged for her to come here. I&#13;
felt a moral responsibility to&#13;
make up for it when this person&#13;
did not deliver on his promise."&#13;
A check with the Chancellor&#13;
supplied a different perspective&#13;
on what happened.&#13;
The Chancellor related that&#13;
two or three months before the&#13;
fall semester last year&#13;
Rosandich came to him and told&#13;
him of a fine young black girl&#13;
who came from Wyllie's home&#13;
town — Pittsburgh, and who&#13;
had great ability in track.&#13;
"My line was that 1 had no&#13;
interest in that. I wanted to&#13;
know what academic&#13;
capabilities and interests she&#13;
had," the Chancellor said.&#13;
Rosandich wanted to know if&#13;
she could get financial aid.&#13;
Wyllie responded he should go&#13;
to the Office of Financial Aids,&#13;
and that she should be judged&#13;
like any other student — on need&#13;
and ability.&#13;
The Chancellor said he also&#13;
told him of a man in Racine who&#13;
had once indicated he wanted to&#13;
help a minority student who&#13;
couldn't get financial aid&#13;
through regular sources. The&#13;
Chancellor said he told&#13;
Rosandich this was a&#13;
possibility, but the man himself&#13;
would make the final decision&#13;
whether he would do it.&#13;
CONTINUED ON BA C K P AG E&#13;
% &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE November 22,1971&#13;
EMW&#13;
The Tom Rosandich story may or may not represent the&#13;
truth about athletics. It depends on whose story you believe&#13;
— the athletes or the administrator.&#13;
Who is to be discredited? Perhaps the majority of&#13;
athletes at Parkside would comment favorably on Mr.&#13;
Rosandich's behalf if only to avoid controversy, but this&#13;
does not necessarily negate the charges made by the&#13;
women. In their disillusionment they adequately expressed&#13;
the contradictions of big time sports on a small time&#13;
campus, incongruity. Championship athletes just do not&#13;
grow on injuries, and good coaches do not ignore them.&#13;
There is also a question of recruiting practices. Part of&#13;
the problem here lies in the discriminatory rules of the&#13;
conference forbidding scholarships to women while&#13;
allowing them for men. But the second part deals with the&#13;
vagueness with which it is administered. The women were&#13;
not aware of the total situation, including the conference&#13;
rules, and hence open to the empty promises of goods that&#13;
didn't exist.&#13;
And finally, the importation of a minority student as if&#13;
she were the only worthy minority student available. We&#13;
are certain a cursory glance at the rosters of local high&#13;
school teams would have revealed deserving people living&#13;
in Parkside's home territory.&#13;
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Hockey&#13;
Boards&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
the boards at a rink in Kenosha.&#13;
The Hockey Club members, 45&#13;
per cent of them KHA&#13;
"graduates", would assist in&#13;
running a city league, much like&#13;
they did while in the&#13;
association. He felt this working&#13;
relationship with the city would&#13;
be beneficial in giving Parkside&#13;
a good name as it would be a&#13;
"center of action".&#13;
The KHA feels that by giving&#13;
the boards to Parkside,&#13;
someone will be getting some&#13;
use out of them, rather than&#13;
letting them deteriorate while&#13;
in storage.&#13;
However, the UW-P administration&#13;
is hesitant to accept&#13;
the donation because this&#13;
would require lights be erected&#13;
so the rink could be used more&#13;
effectively. Vice-Chancellor&#13;
Bauer stated it would not be&#13;
feasible to erect lights because&#13;
the present rink, located&#13;
directly southwest of the&#13;
Athletics building, is only a&#13;
temporary location. Construction&#13;
on a new Athletics&#13;
building is now in progress, to&#13;
be completed about one year&#13;
from now. Upon completion, the&#13;
hockey rink will be re-located&#13;
near the new building.&#13;
But will the Kenosha Hockey&#13;
Association still be silling to&#13;
donate the boards at that time?&#13;
u f"&#13;
If you are a radical, and not&#13;
having much success, or if you&#13;
are thinking about becoming&#13;
one, this article will be of great&#13;
interest.&#13;
1. Appearance: Male - look&#13;
like Che Guevara; if you aren't&#13;
old enough to grow a beard, look&#13;
like Howdy Doody with long&#13;
hair; if you're semi-bald look&#13;
like Floyd Swartz. Female -&#13;
look like Racquel Welch, but&#13;
keep reminding everyone you&#13;
aren't a sex object.&#13;
2. Never wear new clothes. If&#13;
you have some clothes, and they&#13;
happen to be new, let a straight&#13;
friend wear them for at least 8&#13;
months. If you don't have any&#13;
straight friends, let a gay dog&#13;
wear them for 3 months.&#13;
3. Try to act paranoid. When&#13;
someone asks you about your&#13;
organization, convince him that&#13;
the 67 year old regional FBI&#13;
agent who lives at the KYF is&#13;
trying to infiltrate your&#13;
organization. Also, whenever&#13;
you see a cop, swallow the 3&#13;
trams of tin foil you keep hidden&#13;
in your shoe.&#13;
4. Formulating your ideology:&#13;
This is very easy, it's even&#13;
easier if you don't have one. In&#13;
any case, be vague. Try picking&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will h elp any woman regardless&#13;
ol race, religion, age or linancial&#13;
staius. We do not moralize, bul&#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 costly, and can he&#13;
performed on an out patient basis.&#13;
Letter To The E ditor&#13;
r 312 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Aaalatance of Chicago&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Did you know that we young&#13;
people were honored by the&#13;
mayor of Kenosha, the citizens,&#13;
and a group called the Optimists?&#13;
&#13;
All these people proclaimed&#13;
November 8-14 as Youth Appreciation&#13;
Week. Now for the&#13;
dig. Guess what president&#13;
signed into public law (No. 92-&#13;
43) to be exact, November 8-14&#13;
as National Youth Appreciation&#13;
Week? You guessed right.&#13;
How's that for adding insult to&#13;
injury?&#13;
Youths and blacks are suffering&#13;
depression-like rates of&#13;
unemployment due to youknow-who's&#13;
lopsided economic&#13;
policies. The draft has been&#13;
extended two more murderous&#13;
long years, funds to higher&#13;
education are being slashed like&#13;
welfare, and people continue to&#13;
starve, mainly children in this&#13;
land of pelnty.&#13;
qThis bold face hypocrisy is a&#13;
slap at all of us. We must&#13;
organize for the slap back in '72.&#13;
Or better yet, how about a&#13;
clenched fist blast in the chops?&#13;
David Myer&#13;
Indications, Newscope and Auxiliary Enterprises are&#13;
bringing Parkside its only Thanksgiving celebration this&#13;
Wednesday night.&#13;
At first Indications was going to hold a dance to make&#13;
some money to put out their next edition, but Newscope&#13;
joined in and both got caught up in the holiday spirit and&#13;
decided to do it for free. The only problem being the costs of&#13;
cleanup and security for the Student Activities Building and&#13;
that of a band. Here's the deal: We're charging a quarter at&#13;
the door to pay for the cops and cleanup; you'll get a free&#13;
beer ticket at the time (worth 30 cents) compliments of&#13;
Auxiliary Enterprises, and the music will be provided by a&#13;
four-hour tape we made last weekend of what we think are&#13;
some of the best rock tunes on record. The sound system is&#13;
being provided through cooperation with Student Activities&#13;
who also deserve a top billing if this comes off.&#13;
So Tuesday stay home and Watch George Harrison on the&#13;
Cavett Show, but Wednesday come to the Student Activities&#13;
Building at nine and plan on four hours of good music, dancing&#13;
and a free beer. And ya won't have to get up for class&#13;
Thursday morning. A splendid time is guaranteed for all.&#13;
What do you want for nuthin?&#13;
Consultation between a local pastor and Parkside students on a&#13;
one-to-one basis is now available. Pastor Gordon Buchholz is&#13;
available upon appointment to visit with students or faculty in&#13;
room 235 Tallent Hall. Appointments can be made through the&#13;
Student Activities Office.&#13;
Alpha Omega&#13;
something that has an air of&#13;
Socialism about it. Right now&#13;
Socialism is very "in", but it&#13;
could switch to Nazism any day.&#13;
Keep your ears open. There's&#13;
nothing worse than a radical&#13;
who is always one movement&#13;
behind everyone else.&#13;
5. Never have a final overall&#13;
objective in mind. If possible&#13;
limit your thinking to two weeks&#13;
ahead.&#13;
6. Every radical should have&#13;
a working vocabulary of jive.&#13;
These words must be in your&#13;
vocabulary: rip, rap, hack,&#13;
hassle, hash, trash, crash, hype,&#13;
hypo, smoke, toke, strike-out,&#13;
hit, score, infield, fly rule.&#13;
7. If you're talking with a&#13;
group and the conversation&#13;
turns to movies, ask them if&#13;
they saw "They Shoot Horses&#13;
Don't They?"&#13;
8. Cliches: "That's exactly&#13;
the way the Establishment&#13;
wants you to think" (used when&#13;
someone presents a logical&#13;
argument proving that you are&#13;
insane).&#13;
"Let's Shut down Case."&#13;
"People's Bookstore - 302&#13;
Main."&#13;
" .All in the Family' is the&#13;
way life really is."&#13;
9. Miscellaneous:&#13;
Slogan (important) Power to&#13;
the People.&#13;
Trademark (Your choice)&#13;
Clenched fist, 69, A picture of&#13;
Snoopy on skis saying: "Don't&#13;
eat yellow snow."&#13;
Cigarettes (optional) Kools,&#13;
Salem Menthols, Camel&#13;
straights, Virginia Slims.&#13;
Favorite rock group&#13;
(required) Grand Funk. (If&#13;
none is immediately&#13;
aggainable, use an old Monkee&#13;
album.)&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Editorial 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,&#13;
Wilde&#13;
Pat Nelson, Janice&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross/-Jeff&#13;
Scoville&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDerfnid&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
1&#13;
8 AM-10 PM—7 DAYS&#13;
A NON PROFIT ORGANIZATION&#13;
Newscope is an independent student newspaper composed by students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside published weekly except during&#13;
vacation periods. Student obtained advertising funds are the sole source of&#13;
r&#13;
J\en&#13;
}'e for ,he operation of Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the&#13;
University. Free copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. the&#13;
mursday prior to publication and must be typed double-spaced. Deadline for&#13;
Photographs is the Saturday prior to publication. Unsolicited manuscripts&#13;
and photographs may be reclaimed within 30 days after the date of subi&#13;
ion, after which they will become the property of Newscope Ltd. The&#13;
•l!r2C!&#13;
0pe&#13;
°&#13;
,,&#13;
.&#13;
i&#13;
.&#13;
ce is loca&#13;
ted In the Student Organizations building, Intersection&#13;
of Highway A and Wood Road. &#13;
November 22, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
WisPIRG Concerned with Students NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
By John Graham&#13;
The Wisconsin Public Interest Research&#13;
Group is studnts. For years college students&#13;
have lead the way in our society. Students&#13;
were among the first individuals to protest&#13;
the war in Indochina, to demonstrate their&#13;
opposition to racism in America, to point out&#13;
to America the tragedy of pollution and&#13;
resource waste. And students on the college&#13;
campuses of America realize now, more than&#13;
ever, their energies are needed desperately&#13;
by society.&#13;
But today their energies are being wasted&#13;
by actions such as demonstrations to&#13;
runresponsive administrations. So new actions&#13;
must be taken, and students realizing&#13;
this have started PIRGs all over the country.&#13;
A Public Interest Research Group (PIRG)&#13;
is simply a special interest group created in&#13;
the public interest, rather than an interest&#13;
group created by the various economic&#13;
powers for their own selfish needs. It is&#13;
neither difficutlt nor illogical to assume that&#13;
these special needs do not coincide with the&#13;
general welfare needs of the people.&#13;
Therefore, it is out of necessity that citizens&#13;
must unite in a non-partisan effort to&#13;
represent their human needs to the decisionmaking&#13;
process. WisPIRG is just such an&#13;
effort.&#13;
Representing human needs as viable public&#13;
interest values and participating in the&#13;
decision-making process requires sensitivity&#13;
to those public interest values, resources,&#13;
time, and energy. It is because the student&#13;
community satisfies these requirements that&#13;
they assume such responsibility. And it is to&#13;
provide themselves with both a non-partisan&#13;
organization and a continuity that students&#13;
turn to WisPIRG.&#13;
The purposes of WisPIRG are: to provide&#13;
the citizens with adequate information for&#13;
enlightened discussion of those Wisconsin&#13;
problems affecting basic human needs which&#13;
are subject to legislative, administrative, or&#13;
special interest consideration; to participate&#13;
in the decision-making process in a way that&#13;
will compell this process to be responsive to&#13;
the public interest values ; and to challenge by&#13;
legal means those decisions which clearly&#13;
disregard such public interest values.&#13;
In other words, WisPIRG is to be a statewide&#13;
program not unlike NADER'S&#13;
RAIDERS to deal with the state problems of&#13;
pollution, consumer fraud, and ohter related&#13;
problems. But unlike Nader's Public Interest&#13;
Research Group, WisPIRG will be completely&#13;
governed, and for the most part financed, by&#13;
the college students throughout the state.&#13;
But can this actually happen right here in&#13;
Wisconsin? Quite simply, YES!&#13;
In states like Oregon and Minnesota,&#13;
students have agreed to impose upon&#13;
themselves a two dollar per semester surcharge&#13;
on their tuition charge, and with this&#13;
money they have established successful&#13;
PIRGs now working in their states.&#13;
This funding procedure has proven to be a&#13;
reliable source of income, with which they&#13;
hire recognized experts to help them formulate&#13;
responsible pubiic interest positions.&#13;
No student is required in any way to contribute&#13;
to the PIRG. Any student who does not&#13;
want to participate in the WisPIRG program&#13;
will have the opportunity to get the surcharge&#13;
amount refunded at their shool with no&#13;
questions asked.&#13;
Does Wisconsin need WisPIRG? Most&#13;
definitely yes! It is up to the college students&#13;
of Wisconsin to help provide the citizens of&#13;
this state with the services that are so badly&#13;
needed to carry out the above mentioned&#13;
purposes. In other states across the country&#13;
PIRGs are being started and are working&#13;
admirably. There is no reason why we, the&#13;
students of Wisconsin cannot all join together&#13;
to build a PIRG right here. But we of&#13;
WisPIRG need your help. Petitioning,&#13;
exhibiting support for WisPIRG, will begin&#13;
November 29. And if you want futher information,&#13;
please call Chris Morelli at 639-&#13;
4956.&#13;
'Summertree'&#13;
"Summertree", Ron Cowen's sensitive portrayal&#13;
of the generation gap in middle-class&#13;
America opned at the Racine Theatre Guild,&#13;
Friday, Nov. 19. It will play weekends through&#13;
December 5.&#13;
When "Summertree" sprang into the full leaf of&#13;
its New York success in 1968, considerable comment&#13;
arose over the fact that its author, Ron&#13;
Cowen, was only 22, a very early age for a&#13;
playwright to achieve a successful major&#13;
production of a play. Speaking as an authentic&#13;
voice of American youth at this time, Mr. Cowen&#13;
depicts an everyday situation with such depth and&#13;
sensitivity as to keep it from being commonplace.&#13;
The drama takes place in the mind of a young&#13;
hero at the moment of his death in battle in&#13;
Vietnam. The scene is a great spreading tree in&#13;
the backyard of his very middle-class family's&#13;
home. Here he swings backward and forward in&#13;
time through his childhood, college days, and&#13;
through all the events leading to his tragic death.&#13;
The nameless Young Man, played by George&#13;
Mangold, is caught in a constant conflict of battles&#13;
between a father, (Frank Reisenauer) who wants&#13;
to mold his son in his own image; a mother (Karen&#13;
Reisenauer) who shelters him from all bodily pain&#13;
by being far too overprotective, but who can never&#13;
understand the conflicts within his mind; and a&#13;
girlfirend (Alice Anne Conner) who loves him but&#13;
will give him no promise of endless loyalty while&#13;
he is in Vietnam. A little boy (Joe Thompson)&#13;
personifies the Young Man as a child and Jim&#13;
Keefe plays another soldier in the war.&#13;
"Summertree" may be seen at 8:15 Friday and&#13;
Saturday evenings, Sunday performances are at&#13;
7:30 p.m. On Saturday, Dec. 4, there will be a&#13;
special matinee at 5:15 p.m. and a second performance&#13;
at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Norman C. McPhee is the director for this&#13;
production.&#13;
Box office hours will be from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday&#13;
through Sunday of each performance&#13;
week.&#13;
happy&#13;
turkey&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. of 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
Minneapolis (CPS)—Armed FBI agents, along with&#13;
Madison, Wisconsin, police, have arrested an alleged&#13;
Weatherman fugitive, Gary L. Wilson, 22, during an early&#13;
morning raid last week.&#13;
Wilson was indicted June 2 b y a Tucson, Arizona, Grand&#13;
Jury investigating Weathermen and other anti-war activity&#13;
at the University of Arizona. He, along with Martha K.&#13;
Sowerwine, and Jeffrey A. Hoff, were charged with conspiracy&#13;
to manufacure pipe bombs, and with possession of&#13;
incendiary devices.&#13;
Wilson had been missing since last February when FBI&#13;
agents raided his apartment. Charges against Sowerwine&#13;
and Hoff were dropped October 26 wh en federal prosecutors&#13;
failed to produce the unnamed key witness.&#13;
Wilson is being held in the Dane County Jail with bail set at&#13;
$25,000, pending an extradition hearing.&#13;
The Tucson Grand Jury, which delivered Wilson's indictment&#13;
was considered by many to be a "witch hunt" interested&#13;
in harassing anti-war activists. During the year-long&#13;
probe fifteen indictments have been handed down.&#13;
New York (CPS)—The FBI has subpoenaed and received a paper&#13;
delivered before a Council on Foreign Relations seminar by Dr.&#13;
Daniel Ellsberg under strict rules of confidentiality.&#13;
The private study group of 1,500 prominents Americans&#13;
surrendered the paper when advised by lawyers that they could not&#13;
successfully resist the subpoena.&#13;
The paper, on "Escalation as a Military Strategy in Limited&#13;
War", was given at a seminar in November of 1970. Ellsberg is the&#13;
former Pentagon researcher who was admitted giving the&#13;
classifeid Pentagon Papers to the press.&#13;
New Brunswich, N.J. (CPS)—David Meiswinkle, student&#13;
government president of Rutgers University in New Brunswick,&#13;
New Jersey, in a dramatic gesture on behalf of his campaign to&#13;
legalize marijuana, smoked what he claimed was a marijuana&#13;
cigarette in the presence of Howard Crosby, dean of students,&#13;
declaring, "I defy that which I consider unjust."&#13;
Meiswinkle was not arrested. When a campus patrolman arrived&#13;
in response to Crosby's call, Meiswinkle had finished his smoke,&#13;
and there was no physical evidence left.&#13;
New York (CPS)—A recently-released study by the Council on&#13;
Economic Priorities indicates that most environmental advertising&#13;
is done by industries which do the most polluting.&#13;
The Council, seeking information on corporate responsibility,&#13;
studied 1970 environmental advertising in all issues of Time,&#13;
Newsweek, and Business Week magazines. It concluded that $3.3&#13;
million, or over half, of the $6 million spent on such ads was spent&#13;
by the iron and steel, electric utility, petroleum, chemical, and&#13;
paper industries. A recent McGraw-Hill study named these same&#13;
five industries as the country's worst polluters, the Council said.&#13;
Minneapolis (CPS)—The Metropolitan Medical center, a&#13;
complex of two hospitals and a 20-story medical office building in&#13;
downtown Minneapolis, was fined $300 last week in Municiapl Court&#13;
after pleading guilty to violating the city's air pollution ordinance&#13;
on Oct. 6.&#13;
The Center was fined $100 last winter for a similar offense. The&#13;
fines, in both instances, were stayed by the court.&#13;
Washington (CPS)—A study by the Carnegie Commission on&#13;
Higher Education has concluded that 494 s mall, obscure colleges&#13;
with relaxed admission policies are the kind "most likely to&#13;
become extinct."&#13;
"American higher education may suffer a severe loss of its&#13;
diversity," the report said, unless steps are taken to save some of&#13;
them. The colleges enroll about 500,000 students and represent&#13;
nearly one-fourth of the undergraduate colleges in this nation.&#13;
ReCycle This Paper&#13;
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1820-52ND STREET KENOSHA &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE November 22,1971&#13;
by Paul Lomartire, Feature Editor&#13;
Maggie and I were "Eating Out" with a big&#13;
leaguer. We had paid our dues. Gone, at least for&#13;
an evening, were our worst memories of the minor&#13;
league stops on the culinary circuit; all night truck&#13;
stops"featuring surly waitresses, greasy spoons,&#13;
side street restaurants offering luke-warm food,&#13;
and best forgotten cafes.&#13;
We were "Dining Out" with a superstar of&#13;
restaurant critics, Herbert Kubly. A hero of the&#13;
kitchen table gourmets; those individuals who&#13;
and recorded his impressions.&#13;
When he ordered his meal he was very specific&#13;
in regard to the food accompanying his T-Bone&#13;
steak, as he asked the waitress how the hashbrown&#13;
potatoes were prepared. When he found out&#13;
Maggie was once an employee of the Windjammer&#13;
he used her as an insight into the restaurant s&#13;
inner-workings. He questioned her about bacon&#13;
bits, seafood, tumbled onions, and other specifics&#13;
which would serve as foundations for his&#13;
evaluations.&#13;
point, I think, Mr. Kubly learned a bit about the&#13;
chemistry of small time restaurant reviewers;&#13;
they are generous.&#13;
I decided from the outsent of the meal I would&#13;
not review the food at the Windjammer since there&#13;
was a possibility Mr. Kubly would feature this&#13;
restaurant in his column. The thought of bumping&#13;
"columns" with an individual well acquainted&#13;
with aged steak, vintage wine, doormen and fresh&#13;
lobster didn't appeal to my common sense.&#13;
Also, before the meal I had worried about the&#13;
religiously read his column, "Dining Out",&#13;
featured in the Insight section of the Sunday&#13;
Milwaukee Journal. Novelist, gourmet, teacher,&#13;
Mr. Kubly had accepted an invitation to go on an&#13;
"Eating Out" adventure.&#13;
The refined style of "Dining Out", and the&#13;
unorthodox elegance of "Eating Out", were to&#13;
meet at an inconspicuous table at the Windjammer&#13;
Restaurant in Kenosha. Along with Mr.&#13;
Kubly, Maggie and myself, was another guest,&#13;
Genevieve Turk, free-lance writer, student,&#13;
mother, ex-restauranteur, and proud member of&#13;
"the Daniel Ellsberg generation".&#13;
The idea of taking the well-known critic to&#13;
dinner in "Eating Out" territory was suggested&#13;
several times by readers of this column. Realizing&#13;
my weekly feature was a direct offspring of&#13;
"Dining Out", I thought the idea was both novel&#13;
and appropriate.&#13;
It was interesting to note when Maggie and I&#13;
walked into the restaurant the night of t he dinner a&#13;
waitress friend of ours, and reader of Newscope,&#13;
asked if I was going to review the Windjammer. It&#13;
appeared the employees were one up on me as&#13;
they knew I was there as the "guy who writes&#13;
Eating Out". The identity of the gentleman eating&#13;
dinner with us seemed irrelevant to them. The&#13;
irony created a smile on my face in answer to the&#13;
waitress' question.&#13;
Herbert Kubly blended into the Windjammer&#13;
as easily as the soft music piped into the dining&#13;
area. After he was seated, Mr. Kubly fished into&#13;
his pocket and produced a few small pieces of&#13;
tablet paper and a pen. With a casual air of&#13;
professionalism, he looked around the resturant&#13;
After we received our food, and had a few&#13;
minutes to sample it, the waitress asked if&#13;
everything was all right "so far". Mr. Kubly&#13;
looked up from his steak and answered, "Yes, so&#13;
far." At this point, I began to see a bit of the&#13;
chemistry involved in high class dining. There are&#13;
no concessions made in big league restaurant&#13;
reviewing.&#13;
As I thought about writing restaurant reviews&#13;
on his level, I couldn't resist asking Mr. Kubly if&#13;
any restaurant owners had ever tried to buy him&#13;
off. With the positive effect of a good review, I&#13;
assumed there had to be people offering to pay for&#13;
his literary nod of approval. He confided once an&#13;
owner offered him a substantial amount of money&#13;
for a "good" review, only to be laughed at by the&#13;
writer. I realized at this point top flight gourmets&#13;
must have ethics blended with their talents.&#13;
I had ordered what the Windjammer called&#13;
"Surf 'n Turf", which is lobster and steak. While&#13;
taking notes Mr. Kubly wanted to verify what I&#13;
had ordered. In a bit of rhetorical jest he asked,&#13;
"Wasn't it Sea 'n Prairie" or something? Big&#13;
Metropolitan newspaper gourmets must also be&#13;
quick witted, I decided.&#13;
Our meal was being enjoyed to its fullest&#13;
potential. Maggie's hunger was being satisfied&#13;
with a petite filet, Genevieve Turk complimented&#13;
her steak with occasional comments, and I was&#13;
savoring every bite of lobster dipped in warm&#13;
butter.&#13;
Mr. Kubly was busy between bites jotting&#13;
down notes concerning his meal, when he asked&#13;
me how the mushrooms were I had received with&#13;
the steak portion of my meal. Accustomed to&#13;
eating with Maggie, and freely trading morsels,&#13;
bites and tidbits of food with one another,&#13;
disregarding etiquette, I speared a fat juicy&#13;
mushroom with my fork, and air-lifted it to Mr.&#13;
Kubly's plate for his first-hand approval. At this&#13;
conversation that would transpire during the&#13;
evening. As I was finishing my meal, I realized all&#13;
had gone very well. We kicked politics around for&#13;
a considerable time, as Maggie and I are recently&#13;
enfranchised voters, Mr, Kubly a Democrat, and&#13;
Mrs. Turk a radical affiliated with no major party.&#13;
I was in the middle of telling Mr. Kubly I&#13;
wouldn't support any Presidential candidate until&#13;
McCarthy announced his intentions, when the&#13;
waitress asked if anyone wanted dessert. I&#13;
couldn't find anything extravagant enough to&#13;
follow the lobster, and Maggie was full. Mrs. Turk&#13;
and Mr. Kubly ordered peppermint ice cream, but&#13;
the gourmet went a little further and asked for a&#13;
side order of chocolate syrup. Gourmets can add&#13;
class to even the simplest items on a menu.&#13;
All the observations I was making and compiling&#13;
mentally gave me a clear first-hand view of&#13;
gourmets. The final lesson came when Mr. Kubly&#13;
decided he would like to ask a few basic questions&#13;
pertaining to the restaurant. Genevieve Turk went&#13;
to find the manager, but in his absence, brought&#13;
the head bartender. Vic Ruffalo was to be introduced&#13;
to the individual who was really&#13;
reviewing the Windjammer.&#13;
The bit of irony that had produced a smile on&#13;
my face earlier in the evening dissolved the color&#13;
in the face of the bartender. So this was the Herbert&#13;
Kubly who wrote for the Milwaukee Journal.&#13;
After the plates had been cleared, the food&#13;
digested, and the questions answered, I realized&#13;
the tie I wore was beginning to choke me, and the&#13;
smooth elegance of dinner music was creating a&#13;
headache. I began thinking back to the minor&#13;
leagues, juke boxes, hamburgers, French fries&#13;
and ice cold Coca Colas.&#13;
The only differences between "Eating Out"&#13;
and "Dining Out", as I see it, lie in the price of the&#13;
meals, the air of professionalism and the&#13;
chocolate syrup used at just the right time.&#13;
By Jim Kolen&#13;
Title: A Rap on Race&#13;
Author: Margaret Mead,&#13;
James Baldwin&#13;
Publisher: J. B. Lippincott&#13;
Company ($6.95)&#13;
A Rapon Race is a 256 page transcript&#13;
of a conversation between anthropologist&#13;
Margaret Mead and author&#13;
James Baldin, which was recorded&#13;
August 26-7 in the year of our Liberal,&#13;
1970. I picked the book up because I&#13;
think Margie Mead is a nice person, and&#13;
Jimmy Baldwin is, at least to me,&#13;
somewhat of an enigmatic angryman;&#13;
James Baldwin as Baldwin the writer,&#13;
not as James Baldwin as a Black man.&#13;
Remember that last line because it is&#13;
characteristic of the contests of the&#13;
book.&#13;
It is difficult to begin a review of this&#13;
book (and that's the hardest part,&#13;
beginning) because criticizing a conversation&#13;
is a little like asking the man&#13;
on the street for his opinion, and then&#13;
telling him he's wrong. Conversation is&#13;
not writing, and both of these people are&#13;
known basically for their writing; it's&#13;
not as self-conscious, it's prone to&#13;
emotionalism, to sentimentalism, to&#13;
anything that comes to mind, so it can&#13;
reveal things about a person that hisher&#13;
published works could never&#13;
reveal. It takes either a lot of guts or a&#13;
train to cry to publish one of your&#13;
conversations. I can hear the whistle&#13;
BOOK&#13;
blowing as the train smashes into a pile&#13;
of guts. Enough!&#13;
A Rap on Race is Angryman&#13;
liberalized, and grandmother malting&#13;
sure he stays that way. One thing I&#13;
learned about Baldwin is that he ain't&#13;
got his shite together; in one page he&#13;
justifys what he says (which happens to&#13;
be either self-contradicotry or incoherent)&#13;
because "I'm a poet" (in the&#13;
romantic-mystic sense), two pages&#13;
later he says "I'm no romantic". Indeed.&#13;
What or whom is James Baldwin&#13;
anyway? "An exile." The reader has&#13;
reached the point where he-she no&#13;
longer cares.&#13;
So, what is a rap on race? It's when&#13;
Marge and Jimmy are sitting down&#13;
arguing and discussing race; Marge&#13;
utilizing her liberalobotomy, and&#13;
Baldwin holding up the mask of fury,&#13;
putting it down when Marge slaps his&#13;
face with a condescending smile.&#13;
Much of their argument-discussion&#13;
seems to be an unself conscious parody,&#13;
much of it is inconsistent, much of it is&#13;
mutual admiration society bullshite.&#13;
It's really amazing to discover how&#13;
stupidly liberal, self-contradictory, and&#13;
naive, two famous and supposedly&#13;
intelligent people can be when they talk&#13;
to each other. One person talks about&#13;
how he feels, and the other about how&#13;
she knows or has experienced, one&#13;
about the "now", and the other about&#13;
Samoa in the '40's, then one switching&#13;
from now to the past, and the other&#13;
from Samoa to the present. It gets to be&#13;
quite hilarious, if you have the right&#13;
attitude.&#13;
Mead clearly has the edge in the&#13;
arguments; Baldwin is continually&#13;
adjusting his premises and terms to her&#13;
yes', and no's, and hmmmmms'. It's&#13;
amazing, how easily an Angryman can&#13;
be castrated by a grand-(old lady)-&#13;
mother-anthrop. It's bullshite like&#13;
Baldwin talking about how much he has&#13;
suffered, and Mead agreeing, and then&#13;
Baldwin telling her she's suffered, and&#13;
her saying no, I didn't, not like you. It's&#13;
backscratching and inane, obtuse and&#13;
just plain too bad. Mead sits back and&#13;
controls the entire discussion by condescension&#13;
and standing firm while&#13;
Baldwin rides her rollercoaster.&#13;
Baldwin and Mead are simply in two&#13;
different classes; Baldwin can't argue&#13;
nearly as well as Marge and she knows&#13;
it; his arguments become emotional,&#13;
and when Mead says no, that isn't right&#13;
and you know it, he says, yeah I know.&#13;
It's at times like these th$t a rap on&#13;
race becomes one of the world's poorer&#13;
jokes.&#13;
If it seems like I'm putting Baldwin&#13;
down more than Mead, it's because I&#13;
am. No man in his right mind could give&#13;
Baldwin any credance, after hearing&#13;
him complain about people putting&#13;
down Blacks because of their color, and&#13;
then, in the next paragraph, putting&#13;
down hippies because of a life style&#13;
(and hip is a life style). Inconsistencies&#13;
are always striking.&#13;
I suppose A Rap on Race is worth&#13;
$6.95 simply and, in this case, only, for&#13;
its historical value; two historical&#13;
figures conversing. Ok, but anything&#13;
else it ain't. It's two middleaged people&#13;
looking on and discussing the U.S. and&#13;
the World, and for seven bucks one can&#13;
go to any bar and hear the same thing,&#13;
possibly less literate, possibly more.&#13;
For seven bucks it's enough to make&#13;
you think twice. They ain't so smart&#13;
afterall. When Nice Person meets&#13;
Angryman, nothin' happens.&#13;
Perhaps I have the wrong attitude.&#13;
A Rap on Race, courtesy of The Book&#13;
Mart, 622 59th street, Kenosha. &#13;
November 22,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
by Robert Cox&#13;
and dedicated to Larry Olsen&#13;
and Joe BERTA&#13;
Van Morrison — Tupelo Honey&#13;
Produced by Van Morrison and&#13;
Ted Templeman&#13;
Deviating from the normal&#13;
and expected of today's rock&#13;
scene, Tupelo Honey is not&#13;
based around ecology, politics,&#13;
revolution, dope, and in&#13;
general, all the bandstanding&#13;
that rock groups feel necessary&#13;
to make an album sell.&#13;
In the Dylan tradition, he has&#13;
given up making people feel,&#13;
guilty about pollution and how&#13;
corrupt the government is, and&#13;
has decided to use his record&#13;
space to make people feel a&#13;
little bit happier than before&#13;
they bought his album. He is&#13;
content in just singing about&#13;
things like the love between him&#13;
and his wife, friendship,&#13;
drinking moonshine whiskey,&#13;
and watching that evening sun&#13;
go down. In other words, all the&#13;
things that make him happy and&#13;
help him get through this world&#13;
filled with polluted rivers,&#13;
Richard Nixons and Tommy&#13;
James and The Shondells.&#13;
To me, there's nothing I like&#13;
to hear more than something&#13;
that is happy, and in turn, can&#13;
make me happy. That is what&#13;
this album does for me and that&#13;
is quite an accomplishment for&#13;
an album these days.&#13;
Morrison's vocals and lyrics&#13;
vary from funky to very&#13;
beautiful. He, catches the&#13;
listener off guard throughout&#13;
the entire album. You can be&#13;
feeling out one of his excellent&#13;
love songs such as the title song,&#13;
"Tupelo Honey", when the next&#13;
cut sneaks up on you sounding&#13;
like a jazzy country wentern&#13;
tune.&#13;
The musicians accompanying&#13;
Morrison on "Tupelo Honey"&#13;
are of the same caliber which&#13;
played on his previous album,&#13;
"Moondance", which was voted&#13;
by the rock newspaper, Rolling&#13;
! W&#13;
Stone, as the best rock album of&#13;
the year 1969. That is very&#13;
prestigious if one considers that&#13;
both the Beatles and Rolling&#13;
StoneS produced albums that&#13;
same year. Altogether there are&#13;
13 musicians varying from Luis&#13;
Gasca on trumpet, to Ronnie&#13;
Montrose on mandolin to&#13;
Roberta Williams on zither.&#13;
The only complaint I have of&#13;
this album is that there are only&#13;
nine cuts. But, at least the nine&#13;
cuts on "Tupelo Honey" are&#13;
done well.&#13;
"Wild Night", the first cut on&#13;
the album, is one of the best&#13;
ever done by Morrison. Billy&#13;
Church's bass playing is superb&#13;
and Jack Schroer's sax is&#13;
played just as well. If you do not&#13;
enjoy this song (it's played on&#13;
the radio about 100 times a day)&#13;
then chances are Van Morrison&#13;
is not your style of music. Other&#13;
high points of this album are the&#13;
background vocals on "I Wanna&#13;
Roo You", which are led by&#13;
Morrison's wife, Janet Planet.&#13;
John McFee's steel guitar&#13;
playing on the same song, the&#13;
'boogy' piano playing done by&#13;
Mark Jordon on "When That&#13;
Evening Sun Goes Down", and&#13;
the excellent voice range of Van&#13;
Morrison on every selection of&#13;
"Tupelo Honey".&#13;
If you have never been turned&#13;
on to Van Morrison's previous&#13;
album, "Moondance", do so&#13;
before you purchase this one. In&#13;
my opinion "Moondance" has a&#13;
slight edge over it. If you have&#13;
heard "Moondance" and enjoyed&#13;
it, then the next time you&#13;
scrape up four bucks, head on&#13;
down to your favorite record&#13;
shop and pick up on it.&#13;
Other new albums worth&#13;
purchasing: "Cahoots" by The&#13;
Band; "Rock On" by Humble&#13;
Pie; "The Yes Album" by Yes;&#13;
'.'The J Geils Band";&#13;
"Madura"; "The Siegal Schwall&#13;
Band"; "Meet The&#13;
Beatles" by the Beatles.&#13;
The Firebugs-Something For Everyone&#13;
By William Sorensen&#13;
The day's nervous audience sat smoldering,&#13;
expectant of a play with a "cutely" misleading&#13;
name. Their personality was parental as the&#13;
breezes of grinning pride brought the wavering&#13;
heads together. Whispering, they would part with&#13;
a belly laugh only to grin again with feverish teareyed&#13;
joy that seemed to say "our little boy" or&#13;
"our little girl". Someone struck a match.&#13;
That audience and I sat somewhere on stage,&#13;
participating in this farce of expediency.&#13;
Biedermann, believably portrayed by Ken&#13;
Labrasca, is Everyman. His fear of reality is so&#13;
great that thenintruderarsonists, Sepp Scmitz&#13;
(Ray Waldie) and Willie Eisenring (Arthur&#13;
Dexter) infest themselves with no difficulty on this&#13;
non-exigent Adam and Eve. Babbette is Biedermann's&#13;
wife, played by Pat Engdahl.&#13;
Blind Biedermann eventually gives the arsonists&#13;
the means to destroy him, illustrating the&#13;
importance of his role as the indecisive and accommodating&#13;
fool, and directing the attention of&#13;
the audience to the historical referent. His own&#13;
tailoring of the wove's sheepskin is readily seen as&#13;
the image of a pre-war Europe who accommodated&#13;
Adolph Hitler, fighting only when&#13;
they were nearly beaten. Biedermann's will is&#13;
nonexistent and hfs reason has run wildly into a&#13;
netherworkd if abstractuib,&#13;
The play encompasses any oppressor and is&#13;
reliant on audience interpretation. This empathy&#13;
inserts the roles of oppressor and oppressed where&#13;
ever the viewer wishes them inserted. This&#13;
universality is interesting and telling. . . the night&#13;
that I saw the play one couple went crashing out of&#13;
the foom, nearly falling as they went, within the&#13;
first 15 minutes! We don't have to ask whom they&#13;
identified with.&#13;
While the play was primarily written as a post&#13;
analysis of the pre-WWII situation, I wondered&#13;
who the original firebugs and appeasers were.&#13;
How was the play originally used? Max Fisch is&#13;
Swiss and wrote the work in 1953, at that time in&#13;
America paranoic Joe McCarthy was still looking&#13;
for Communists. Europe was still in transition;&#13;
only eight years before war reparations tore&#13;
Germany in two. The Western section producing a&#13;
quasi-American Democracy. Capitalism came&#13;
easy to the energetic German people with distrust&#13;
and animosity growing between East and West, at&#13;
first slowly and then snowballing with the construction&#13;
of the Berlin wall in 1961. T he wall and&#13;
the madness that both sides used to build it, still&#13;
stand.&#13;
In 1958 the play premiered in Zurich, Switzerland.&#13;
Considering Swiss neutrality and&#13;
economic strength it would seem that this was an&#13;
excellent observation post for Fisch to watch the&#13;
goings-on in Europe. It is doubtful that the play did&#13;
not orignally assume anti-communist connotations.&#13;
&#13;
The set design was at once simple and ample, a&#13;
hard line etched against a black backdrop.&#13;
Marilyn Baxter, faculty director, redesigned the&#13;
basic set. She also found it necessary to eliminate&#13;
the last scene; it was an extreme of the main&#13;
theme and since it takes place in hell, construction&#13;
of the set would have been a trifle more difficult.&#13;
Ken Labraxa's in-character-consistency was&#13;
obvious and the relaxed delivery that he maintained&#13;
helped to soothe a few minor mistakes in&#13;
cueing on the part of others in the cast.&#13;
A little bit of Art Dexter came through the&#13;
diabolical character, Eisenring, but this proved to&#13;
be more the result of good casting th an mis-acting.&#13;
Jerry Socha (sound effects) and I agreed that&#13;
Art's performance was probably the most persuasive&#13;
reaching a level of believability&#13;
precipitated by Art's own perception of self.&#13;
Ray Waldie, as Sepp Schmitz, was the chief&#13;
source for humor in the play and he achieved this.&#13;
Pat Engdahl, who plays Babbette, has contributed&#13;
time and talent in virtually every theatre&#13;
production in the Kenosha area. While her part&#13;
was essentially supportive, the calm, easy stage&#13;
presence she reaily attained reinforced my&#13;
general impression of the play.&#13;
Thanks are due to Marilyn Baxter, faculty&#13;
director, and Terry Killman, student director, for&#13;
turning out a reasonably good collegiate&#13;
production. I enjoyed it.&#13;
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Noveber 22,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
and then he might not even have&#13;
a fire truck in the station!"&#13;
"After a third look at what&#13;
happened, you can't put him&#13;
down for what happened. He's&#13;
doing what any other athletic&#13;
director would do in the whole&#13;
United States. You see, he does&#13;
it better than anybody else," he&#13;
concluded.&#13;
+ + -+-&#13;
Judy Zimmerman is a bright'&#13;
eyed and blond haired girl from&#13;
West Allis. She was a member&#13;
of last year's girl's track and&#13;
cross country team. She now&#13;
attends UWM. Prior to coming&#13;
to Parkside she ran for a&#13;
private club in Milwaukee, and&#13;
had captured the Wisconsin&#13;
Women's AAU titles in the 440,&#13;
the 880 yard runs, the cross&#13;
country mile, mile and a half&#13;
and ten mile runs.&#13;
She spoke guardedly when&#13;
interviewed, but revealed her&#13;
complaints were that she was&#13;
told by Rosandich there were no&#13;
scholarship type funds&#13;
available when, in fact, there&#13;
were, and that when she was&#13;
recruited it was agreed that&#13;
Parkside would send her to as&#13;
many meets as she qualified for&#13;
agreement was that I wouldn't&#13;
receive any scholarship funds,&#13;
but they would cover all my&#13;
traveling expenses. They would&#13;
send me to any meet I qualified&#13;
for in the U.S. or Canada in&#13;
return for not getting a&#13;
scholarship. That was the only&#13;
W my parents could afford to&#13;
send me there, because if I&#13;
didn't go there I'd have to pay&#13;
for my own traveling."&#13;
Was it followed through with?&#13;
It s kind of touchy because&#13;
Rosandich and the Parkside&#13;
staff didn't really follow&#13;
through, but I was taken to&#13;
meets because of another&#13;
coach," she answered.&#13;
She said the girls didn't really&#13;
know what was happening at&#13;
first, but Jerry Hutchinson, who&#13;
was their coach but who was&#13;
only a student himself, took&#13;
them to the meets. They didn't&#13;
know who was paying for it. It&#13;
turned out, she said, that&#13;
Hutchinson and Vic Godfrey,&#13;
the cross country coach, were&#13;
paying the expenses out of their&#13;
own pockets.&#13;
Was she sent to all the meets&#13;
as promised?&#13;
"I got an injury and we were&#13;
But as she looked back over&#13;
her experiences with Parkside&#13;
athletics, she said, "I went to&#13;
Parkside knowing full well what&#13;
I was getting into. I had seen the&#13;
campus. I can only look back&#13;
and say I should have had a&#13;
contract. I should have had Mr.&#13;
Rosandich write down exactly&#13;
what we had discussed. My dad&#13;
should have gone in with him&#13;
and gotten it on contract, and&#13;
Uien we should have held him to&#13;
it. Then there wouldn't have&#13;
been any problems at all."&#13;
MORE&#13;
But there is more to the&#13;
stories of Mary Libal and Judy&#13;
Zimmerman.&#13;
Between them the girls once&#13;
held the Wisconsin Women's&#13;
AAU titles in the 100 yard dash,&#13;
the 220, the 440, the 880, the&#13;
cross country mile, mile and a&#13;
half, and ten mile runs. Track&#13;
was their lives, they say simply.&#13;
Today they don't compete.&#13;
The reason why is a combination&#13;
of factors. Injuries are&#13;
part of it, but above that, they&#13;
both say they lost their desire to&#13;
compete after their experiences&#13;
with Parkside athletics.&#13;
Mary Libal spoke of it when&#13;
story one&#13;
in the U.S. and Canada, which it&#13;
didn't really, she said.&#13;
"I wanted to go to a school&#13;
that had coaches that would&#13;
bring out every ounce of&#13;
potential I had," Judy said. "I&#13;
wanted to see if it would be&#13;
worthwhile for me to stay in the&#13;
field. So I went to Parkside&#13;
because the coaching staff from&#13;
what I had heard in clinics&#13;
sounded like they knew what&#13;
they were doing.&#13;
"I have to be honest and say&#13;
that I knew it was going to be a&#13;
pioneer campus, because things&#13;
weren't established, and that I&#13;
would need a pioneer attitude,"&#13;
she admitted. "Luckily, I didn't&#13;
expect too much, although they&#13;
made promises for the future.&#13;
"I was told I couldn't have a&#13;
scholarship, and that there&#13;
weren't any scholarships&#13;
available. I was going because&#13;
they would give me a lot of&#13;
travel and exposure," she said.&#13;
"That would sort of balance&#13;
things out. I wouldn't get a&#13;
scholarship, but they would pay&#13;
for the travel.&#13;
"That was the disappointment,"&#13;
she explained.&#13;
"The very same day I got there&#13;
I found out other athletes had&#13;
gotten money — at least for&#13;
books, tuition, or they had had&#13;
out of state tuition waived.&#13;
There were scholarship type&#13;
funds handed out, and I had&#13;
been told there was no such&#13;
funds. I felt they hadn't been&#13;
honest with me.&#13;
"I was kind of hurt," she said,&#13;
"Because I want to have faith in&#13;
my coaches, and if they could&#13;
pull that on me, I wondered&#13;
what else could happen."&#13;
She told of a gentleman's&#13;
agreement between her father&#13;
and Tom Rosandich. "The&#13;
never able to test them on it.&#13;
When Jerry said he wouldn't&#13;
coach for the school anymore,&#13;
and wouldn't spend his money,&#13;
at that time I got an injury and&#13;
couldn't compete anyway. So&#13;
we never got to see what the&#13;
school would do, although there&#13;
were meets where the school&#13;
said they wouldn't send us, and&#13;
Jerry paid for it, and took us&#13;
anyway."&#13;
Like Mary she injured herself&#13;
performing for Parkside. She&#13;
strained her achilles tendon and&#13;
it necessitated her going to a&#13;
specialist on three occasions.&#13;
Like Mary she had to pay for the&#13;
doctor and the x-rays on her&#13;
own.&#13;
She said of the coaching she&#13;
received: "Jerry worked us into&#13;
the ground. I was running twice&#13;
a day and traveling every&#13;
weekend. I wound up a nervous&#13;
wreck, and found out I couldn't&#13;
handle the type of training that&#13;
would be necessary to be a&#13;
national champion.&#13;
"I don't think the coaches&#13;
knew how to handle girls," she&#13;
continued. "They knew how to&#13;
run a guy's team, but I don't&#13;
think they knew the psychology&#13;
behind working with girls. We&#13;
were just pushed right along&#13;
like we were in Marine camp."&#13;
She left Parkside she said&#13;
because of money. She has&#13;
decided not to train as strictly&#13;
as she once did so "there was no&#13;
reason to go to a school that&#13;
lacked a campus atmosphere&#13;
and pay that kind of money.'?&#13;
She adds even now, "This&#13;
year they're supposed to have&#13;
better facilities. I'm going to&#13;
look things over, and if they&#13;
have a good program, and the&#13;
campus is centralized, I could&#13;
go back."&#13;
asked if running was important&#13;
for her. "I would say so," she&#13;
said in understatement. "I've&#13;
spent maybe $400 to $500 of my&#13;
own money going to meets. I&#13;
used to work out seven days a&#13;
week, regardless of anything. In&#13;
fact, I even stopped going out&#13;
with one of my boy friends&#13;
because I didn't have the time.&#13;
"I thought it was worth it —&#13;
till all this happened at&#13;
Parkside. I wanted to make the&#13;
Olympic team in 1972, and I was&#13;
willing to give up everything for&#13;
it," she said. "I had no social&#13;
life at all because I worked&#13;
when I was in high school so I&#13;
would have money to go to&#13;
meets. I trained in all my spare&#13;
time. And I never went any&#13;
place and I never did anything&#13;
because I wanted to be in shape.&#13;
"Now I have the feeling,&#13;
'What can I say? It's all past,' "&#13;
she continued. "I don't feel like&#13;
competing and there's nothing&#13;
that can be done about it. That's&#13;
what was important ' to me.&#13;
That's what I lost at Parkside."&#13;
Judy Zimmerman echoed&#13;
Mary's comment. "I don't&#13;
consider myself competitive at&#13;
this time. I was burned out at&#13;
Parkside., I was driven so hard&#13;
and for so long that I lost the&#13;
edge. What happened was that I&#13;
got so nervous before meets I&#13;
lost the enjoyment of competing.&#13;
&#13;
"There was pressure on us&#13;
when we learned the staff didn't&#13;
want to put the money on us to&#13;
go to meets they thought we&#13;
wouldn't do well in. Then to go&#13;
to a meet and to realize what&#13;
they were thinking and then not&#13;
to do well, you felt like crawling&#13;
into a hole, you felt like you had&#13;
put the school to shame."&#13;
fill&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
Botox - Accutron&#13;
Ultraehron - Lonfline&#13;
•ulova - Movado&#13;
aravolto - Tlmex&#13;
LaCoultro&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
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Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
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Dept.&#13;
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BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tlffon - Orrefora&#13;
Seneca • Lallque&#13;
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Dates Announced&#13;
For Billiards Tourney&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, in conjunction with the&#13;
Association of College Unions -&#13;
International, will sponsor a&#13;
men's and women's billiards&#13;
tournament to select the&#13;
Parkside representatives for&#13;
the regional playoffs in Oshkosh&#13;
on February 17,18 and 19, 1972.&#13;
The winners of the Oshkosh&#13;
tournament will then advance&#13;
to the International tourney to&#13;
be held April 19-21, 1972, in San&#13;
Jose, California. Participants in&#13;
both regional and international&#13;
events will have their expenses&#13;
paid.&#13;
Both men's and women's&#13;
campus play will be 14.1 Continuous&#13;
Pocket Billiards&#13;
(safeties allowed), played&#13;
under the rules and regulations&#13;
set down by the Billiard&#13;
Congress of America.&#13;
Preliminary tournament play&#13;
will consist of single elimination&#13;
match play with the best two out&#13;
of three games to 75 points&#13;
determining the winner. Semifinal&#13;
and final rounds will be&#13;
conducted on a doubleelimination&#13;
basis, with best 2&#13;
out of 3 games to 150 points&#13;
determining the winner. All&#13;
play will take place in the&#13;
Student Activities Building on a&#13;
special 5' x 9' competition table.&#13;
Registration will be held for&#13;
the next 3 weeks in the Student&#13;
Activities Building Office.&#13;
. Tournament play will be held&#13;
starting January 19, 1972, with&#13;
the finals held on Wednesday&#13;
night, February 2. An entry fee&#13;
of $1.50 will be charged to help&#13;
defray local and national&#13;
tournament costs and prizes.&#13;
Local prizes will be trophies for&#13;
first and second places.&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
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• • • -• ',•.&gt;4&#13;
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Page 8 NEWSCOPE November 22,1971&#13;
By Alexous Doo Dah&#13;
Special Correspondent&#13;
to Newscope&#13;
Always on the ball, Newscope editor&#13;
was thumbing through the annals of the&#13;
K-News last week when his gaze fell&#13;
upon an article on page 99 pertaining to&#13;
a rash of sniping in the K-Town area.&#13;
This fine editor said, "Ah, a job for&#13;
Alexous Doo Dah - none other will do."&#13;
My assignment: Interview the Police&#13;
Chief and victims of the K-Town mad&#13;
sniper and reveal the story behind the&#13;
story. So, I tnade my appointment to&#13;
see the Chief. When I walked into his&#13;
office he was sitting at his desk behind&#13;
large piles of paperwork. All were&#13;
letters to K-Town citcitizens&#13;
She went running out to do his bidding.&#13;
Better pay 'em. They double fast you&#13;
know. Heh Heh.&#13;
Now about this niper. Yes, we do have&#13;
'one. But let me make one thing perfectly&#13;
clear. (He pointed his middle&#13;
finger at the sky) I, the commander in&#13;
cheif, have commanded my officers to&#13;
conduct an around the clock investigation&#13;
into the whereabouts of this&#13;
rascal. We'll get 'em. We always get&#13;
'em - just like the Mounties.&#13;
And when we do, it won't go easy for&#13;
'3m. We'll throw the book at 'em. He&#13;
rose from his desk and with a&#13;
monumental effort picked up a law&#13;
book three feet thick! See how heavy it&#13;
is? It's mighty heavy and it's going to&#13;
hurt.&#13;
modus operandi. M - 0 - D - U. . .&#13;
Newscope: Gotcha ya. The sniper&#13;
snipes old ladies.&#13;
Chief: Don't ever interrupt! Metermaid!&#13;
Metermaid! She came running&#13;
in. Urn yas, give this man (me again) a&#13;
few more parking tickets. She went&#13;
running out to do his bidding. Better&#13;
pay- • ^&#13;
Newscope: I know, I know. They&#13;
double fast. Heh Heh. That'll teach me.&#13;
You got the Powah.&#13;
Chief: DOO DAH! Your're an incorrigable&#13;
lout and I'm surprised my&#13;
men haven't run you in - or have they?&#13;
Newscope: Not lately, but&#13;
Chief: Nevermind. I'll see that they do&#13;
for something. Are you on evil killer&#13;
devil weed? See how heavy, how&#13;
taperecorder was recording his every&#13;
obscenity.)&#13;
Chief: I oke that, boy, Showing proper&#13;
respect to an enforcer. I know I can&#13;
trust you. ,&#13;
Newscope: You bet your ass you can&#13;
SIR' I cleared my throat. Do you have&#13;
any leads on who this perverted&#13;
derriere stinger is?&#13;
Chief: Um, quite frankly, yes. Through&#13;
our superb system of computers,&#13;
eavesdropping, wiretap, univax,&#13;
teletype, and with the colse cooperation&#13;
of the F.B.I, and C.I.A^ we&#13;
believe our man to be a drunken dope&#13;
craxed fiendish half-breed who escaped&#13;
from Waupun two weeks ago. He's a&#13;
lifer by the name of Crowbait&#13;
The Reign Of Crowbait Cavanaugh&#13;
threatening to set the cops on 'em if&#13;
they didn't pay their library fines. He&#13;
was signing them with a flourish, a&#13;
scrawl, and a snarl.&#13;
Newscope: Hello, uh, chief, uh, Sir,&#13;
officer sir. I'm the mild ma-mannered&#13;
reporter from Newscope, Alexous Doo&#13;
Dah. And I'm here because it's a&#13;
matter of gr - grave pubic I mean public&#13;
concern when there's a mad sniper&#13;
loose on our fair streets.&#13;
Chief: Ah well Doo Dah, when's the last&#13;
time you had a haircut?&#13;
Newscope: When's the last time you&#13;
brushed your teeth, Sir?&#13;
Chief: Metermaid! Metermaid!&#13;
She came running in. Um yas, give&#13;
this man (me) a few parking tickets.&#13;
Newscope: Yes. It seems mighty heavy&#13;
to me too.&#13;
Chief: You're Damn-Tootin it's heavy.&#13;
Heavy, Heavy, Heavy. Anyhow, enough&#13;
promises. Our first complaint was filed&#13;
last week by a certain Eleonora Sushe,&#13;
81, Within hours our man (the outlaw)&#13;
struck again and again and again.&#13;
Treated and released in fair condition&#13;
(all things considered) from KMemorial&#13;
were Dorloona Smutslapper,&#13;
82, Alvinia Snodgrass, 83, and an old&#13;
colored lady Annamaria Paisono, 84.&#13;
I know you're not a trained enforcer&#13;
like me, Doo Dah, but notice the pattern.&#13;
His victims are all female; 81, 82,&#13;
83, and 84. That means they're all old&#13;
too. Pretty good huh? We'll call that his&#13;
mighty heavy this book is? Just wait.&#13;
Where were we? Oh yes. . . our&#13;
sniper, Damn him, is believed to be&#13;
armed and dangerous.&#13;
Newscope: I thought all snipers have to&#13;
be armed.&#13;
Chief: DOO DAH! I'm warning you for&#13;
the last time, SHADDUP!!!! Yes? His&#13;
weapon is believed to be either a Daisy&#13;
or Crosman air pistol. Our ballistic's&#13;
men found one golden B.B. at the scene&#13;
of each crime.&#13;
All the victims were shot in either the&#13;
right or left side of their ass. . .but for&#13;
the record Doo Dah - buttocks. It sounds&#13;
so much better.&#13;
Newscope: Gottcha Chief. Mum's the&#13;
word sir, officer sir. (My hidden&#13;
Cavanaugh. Cracked in '65 for biting&#13;
the big left toe off his grandmother and&#13;
spitting it out in the street, he got sent&#13;
up the river in '66. She was 80 and we&#13;
nowh have reason to believe he has this&#13;
thing about old ladies.&#13;
If it is Crowbait, no Mother's mother&#13;
is safe. He's a slick, cunning savage&#13;
and a dead shot with a B.B. gun. But&#13;
what's worse is his effect upon the&#13;
moral of America and what it stands&#13;
for ' ' ' Apple&#13;
pie . . .Motherhood . . .law and order&#13;
. . .sob. We goota get 'em, just&#13;
gotta!&#13;
Will Crowbait's reign of terror&#13;
continue? Find out next week in part II.&#13;
TERROR IN THE PARK!&#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;
319 Groan toy Road, Kanosha, Wisconsin&#13;
V» Block South -—w... w. ofnmwimi-iwniw Konosha-Radno County » Lino&#13;
SPump&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FIHEST GASOLINE&#13;
AHOSAVEI&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
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PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
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Cosh and Carry IVIcotonOII Filtors,&#13;
Air Filtors, Tuna Up Kits, Spork Plugs&#13;
All Itomf Sub|oct to 4 For Cont Solos Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c par quart&#13;
$1.39 par gallon&#13;
47c par can&#13;
Two BarvJs&#13;
SfcM' h op - o,ftol - Qt,-S Pi&#13;
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urv\ &#13;
Noveber 22,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 9&#13;
Michigan; St. Louis, Chicago&#13;
and Champaign, Illinois, while&#13;
the men's cross country team&#13;
never left the state.&#13;
Coach Godfrey added, "Judy&#13;
received an invitation from&#13;
Philadelphia to run there, but&#13;
we said there's no way she&#13;
should run there. We couldn't&#13;
let her run in that. No way. We&#13;
prohibited from buying insurance&#13;
on athletes. We have&#13;
never stopped working on this&#13;
problem. The basic procedure&#13;
used is that no athlete is allowed&#13;
to participate in a single day of&#13;
practice without insurance."&#13;
A survey of athletes revealed&#13;
95^per cent of them have insurance&#13;
he said — mostly&#13;
But that still doesn't cover&#13;
doctor bills. He repled, "What&#13;
we have managed to do through&#13;
some doctors in the two communities&#13;
is send most of our&#13;
kids to them for treatment, and&#13;
it's been a gratis type thing."&#13;
Overall, Rosandich expressed&#13;
amazement at the charges&#13;
made against him. He said&#13;
story two&#13;
couldn't let our athletes run in&#13;
any meet they weren't prepared&#13;
for."&#13;
Rosandich readily admits&#13;
insurance for athletes is a&#13;
major problem. "It's probably&#13;
the saddest thing in the&#13;
University," he said. "The&#13;
University by state law is&#13;
through their father's&#13;
hospitalization plan. "You know&#13;
who isn't covered by this is&#13;
someone who doesn't have a&#13;
father, or comes from a poor&#13;
economic background," he&#13;
pointed out. "The only hope for&#13;
them is the $30.00 policy offered&#13;
through the University. That's&#13;
less than acceptable."&#13;
avenues for athletes to express&#13;
dissatisfaction were open for&#13;
them through the Captain's&#13;
Council and the Sports Club&#13;
Council.&#13;
He maintained in particular,&#13;
"We took the leadership and&#13;
still have the leadership in&#13;
women's track."&#13;
Racine Theatre Guild&#13;
presents&#13;
mvmEKnm&#13;
«f*t&gt;Mcmr&#13;
OPENS&#13;
NOV. 19&#13;
601 High St.&#13;
6334218&#13;
When a well-meaning father tells his son to "be a man", does he&#13;
mean HIS kind of man, or the son's?&#13;
Performance Dates:&#13;
Nov. 19,20, 21,26,27, 28, Dec. 3,4, 5&#13;
Two Performances Dec. 4, 5:15 &amp; 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Curtain:&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 8:15; Sun. 7:30&#13;
Seats:&#13;
$2.50 Students $1.25 Fri. &amp; Sun.&#13;
U)/F/l M/S L Uniutrsiiu&#13;
T/OUJCR. Co^ON J Book. Store&#13;
504 OFF&#13;
LARGE PIZ ZA&#13;
(with coupon)&#13;
10 oz. BEER 1 54&#13;
PITCHER 754&#13;
3&#13;
(D&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
on wood road just south of parkside&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
9a.m.—4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
a bottle or&#13;
a glass&#13;
0)&#13;
u&#13;
Only!&#13;
Nov.&#13;
22nd-30th&#13;
OPEN 9:30-5:30&#13;
TUES-WED-THURS-SAT&#13;
9:30-9:00&#13;
MON-FRI&#13;
PRE-HOLIDAY SALE&#13;
$5.00 and $10.00&#13;
VALUES TO s22.00&#13;
(not all sizes available)&#13;
400 Main St.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
racine&#13;
SHOE&#13;
STOP&#13;
o&#13;
c_&#13;
ID&#13;
£&#13;
a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The B rat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its a&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.—12 p.m.&#13;
Available for F&#13;
rate r nity or so f o r i t y parties &#13;
Page 10 NEWSCOPE November 22,1971&#13;
(CPS)—If striking soft-coal miners stay out for another 30 days&#13;
lllMAX* M N J M i H A L A VAf - which appears unlikely - if United Mine Workers Present&#13;
Miners —ana Dine DOXGS Tony Boyle continues to Withhold strAe benefits ti ™ major&#13;
r confrontation in the coal fields of Appalachia. The nation s major&#13;
Coal users, electric utilities, have another thirty day supply on hand&#13;
because they stocked up in anticipation of the strike, but after that&#13;
anything goes, including massive blackouts.&#13;
One miner told a government official in Washington recent y a&#13;
if National Guardsmen are sent in to keep the mines open, es&#13;
Virginia won't be no Kent State. The Guard will leave in pine&#13;
boxes."&#13;
Gino's&#13;
has something&#13;
for everyone&#13;
in clothes.&#13;
10% STUDENT&#13;
DISCOUNT&#13;
on any&#13;
purchase&#13;
GOOD UNTIL&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
Gino's&#13;
Sportswear 4&#13;
2212-60th Street in Kenosha&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
ipoooooooooi&#13;
TORSAkC&#13;
mo cas ~&#13;
$l&lt;?00&#13;
Call (W128-9573&#13;
/?-Ftev 5-3Op.m.&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Coke. Trademark ®&#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;
(Wtfs&#13;
ATORKeV M\o hMWttiN&#13;
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... fcoTTftf \)S&#13;
You uoooT ftE DisaFPovftfEb&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
PIZZA I:&#13;
C ustom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 p.m.-i2;00 a.m. ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCtvBERS&#13;
5021 - 30th Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
LOSTAND FOUND&#13;
LOST - brown leather wallet with&#13;
sun engraved. Any knowledge&#13;
pertaining to its whereabouts&#13;
contact Newscope. Keep the money&#13;
but please return the identification.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Students International Meditation&#13;
Society. A lecture on transcendental&#13;
meditation will be given Thursday,&#13;
Nov. 8, 7:30 p.m., Greenquist hall,&#13;
room 101.&#13;
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
Consultation Service. Free local&#13;
counseling. All alternatives considered.&#13;
Call 1-352-4050.&#13;
INFORMATION FILE — for&#13;
browsing at a table in the Information&#13;
Center, Tallent Hall,&#13;
room 201.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
1 or 2 female roommates to share&#13;
apartment during 2nd semester.&#13;
Call 632-1691 between 1 and 5 p.m.&#13;
Ask for Gretchen.&#13;
RIDE from 65th street &amp; Sheridan&#13;
road to Parkside 5 days per week at&#13;
7:30 a.m. or earlier and ride back at&#13;
4:30 p.m. or later. Will pay well for&#13;
dependability. Call 654-2502 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Drummer wants to work again, good&#13;
equipment - experienced. Call Kim&#13;
878-1892.&#13;
Ride wanted to Chicago any&#13;
weekend. Call 73-3836.&#13;
Sax Players needed for 12 piece&#13;
orchestra. Make money, have fun.&#13;
Call 654-5777 or 857-2780.&#13;
Piano teacher needs students - any&#13;
age. Call 654-5777.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOLK GUITARS — Western guitar&#13;
with Rosewood body, $28, Folk&#13;
guitar $14. Call 658-2932 after 4 p.m.&#13;
FOLD GUITAR — with case $15,&#13;
complete set children's Golden Book&#13;
Encyclopedias in perfect condition&#13;
$10. Call 553-2403 before 5 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
&#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;
Mosrite Bass Guitar. Double pickup,&#13;
hollow-body with plush-lined&#13;
hardshell case. Good condition. Was&#13;
$450 new, will sell for $100. Contact"&#13;
Larry, Parkside Village, Atp. 109,&#13;
552-8347, or leave message at&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
FOR SALE — Dog - Wire-haired fox&#13;
. terrier, AKC reg.,6wksold. call 553-&#13;
2329, or 652-3565.&#13;
Gals: Dress up for the Holidays in a&#13;
1933 brown crepe; long bloused&#13;
velvet sleeves; separate sleeveless&#13;
jacket. Worn 3 times. Call 657-7223.&#13;
1 pair of men's ski boots (laced), size&#13;
10 for $8. Call Info. Cntr., ext. 2345.&#13;
Cold Heart Warmer - size 14,&#13;
muskrat fur jacket $50. Call 652-6754.&#13;
Typewriter - Remington portable,&#13;
with case. $35. Call 654-0272 from 9-5,&#13;
or 652-2788 after 5.&#13;
FREE - F unny little gerbils, call 634-&#13;
9173.&#13;
HOUSE - rent free for neat mature&#13;
female. Call 552-8835 after 4 p.m.,&#13;
Kris.&#13;
FREE KITTENS - save a kitten&#13;
from the gas chamber; multicolored.&#13;
Call 878-1892.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1968 PONTIAC GTO — 2 dr, low&#13;
mileage, solid dark blue with tinted&#13;
windows, five-spoke wheels with&#13;
mag rims with red inserts, interior&#13;
dark, rawhide wheel cover, 10,000&#13;
rpm sun tach. Any reasonable price&#13;
accepted. Must sell fast, going to&#13;
Canada. Call 634-2316, ask for Allan.&#13;
1966 CHEVY II — Wagon, standard,&#13;
radio, good condition, $650 including&#13;
snow tires. Call 552-8956 evenings or&#13;
weekends.&#13;
PONTIAC FIREBIRD 1967 — Like&#13;
new condition, 326 engine, new paint,&#13;
mag wheels. 694-2075.&#13;
1064 BELAIR CHEVY — White 4dr.,&#13;
$150, in good condition. 554-7719, 4532&#13;
Ridge Crest Drive.&#13;
1965 F-85 OLDSMOBILE — V8,&#13;
auto., pwr steering, 4 dr sedan, very&#13;
good cond. no rust. Oneowner, 54,000&#13;
mi. NF green - $700. Call 6^4-3937.&#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;
1969 Opel Rally, new wide ovals,&#13;
AM-FM, 13,000 miles, call 633-0471.&#13;
FOR SALE — 1964 Ford station&#13;
wagon less engine, interior and&#13;
transmission (automatic) in good&#13;
condition. $50. 878-1892.&#13;
1068 Toronado, pwr. brakes, pwr.&#13;
steering, pwr. seats, factiry air.&#13;
$2,000 or best offer. Immaculate&#13;
condition. Call Jim 654-0353.&#13;
FOR SALE -1964 Chrysler Newport,&#13;
dependable. Call 639-0379.&#13;
FOR SALE 1966 Triumph 650 T.T.&#13;
Runs great, but needs little work.&#13;
$500 or best offer. Call 552-8987.&#13;
1967 Cougar, 3 speed on floor, 289&#13;
eng. Clean interior, 4 new tires, 2&#13;
owner. Call 654-0272 from 9-5, or 652-&#13;
2788 after 5.&#13;
JUGUAR - 1966 XKE coupe. Very&#13;
good mechanically &amp; structurally,&#13;
best offer over $1950. Contact Prof.&#13;
Beyer evenings at ext. 53 on Racine&#13;
Campus.&#13;
FOR SALE - '65 Plymouth 426&#13;
automatic, 2 dr. hardtop, bucket&#13;
seats, mags. Must sell. $800. Call 654-&#13;
7346 after 4:30. &#13;
November 22,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 11&#13;
Schooners Take&#13;
Intramural Title&#13;
The Parkside intramural&#13;
football season recently drew to&#13;
a close, with 1971 to be&#13;
remembered as the year of the&#13;
Schooners.&#13;
Defensively the Schooners&#13;
were unscored upon in regular&#13;
season play, and conceded a&#13;
mere 18 points in three playoff&#13;
games. Offensively the&#13;
Schooner machine amassed&#13;
over 100 reg ular season points&#13;
and a total of 48 playoff points.&#13;
Key wins by the champions&#13;
were a hard fought game over&#13;
the House Apes 7-6, and the&#13;
championship game 21-6 over&#13;
Mully's Men of Hacine.&#13;
Offensive stars performing&#13;
for the Schooners were&#13;
scrambling quarterback Dennis&#13;
Serpe, wide receiver Tom&#13;
Jaehne, and fullback Dave&#13;
Bolyard. Anchoring the line&#13;
were Jeff Frank and Bob&#13;
Martin, along with Paul Grey&#13;
and Marty Hogan.&#13;
Bolyard, Grey and Hogan also&#13;
performed their heroics on&#13;
defense along with Mike Zizich&#13;
and player-coach Steve&#13;
Hagenow in the forward wall of&#13;
the Doomsday defense.&#13;
Starring at middle linebacker&#13;
was Woody, winner of a game&#13;
bal against the Apes. The AllLeague&#13;
secondary was comprised&#13;
of Denis Crane and Kent&#13;
Newsam at cornerbacks, along&#13;
with Rick Davis at free safety.&#13;
Coach Hagenow labeled this&#13;
team as his best ever and was&#13;
happy to mold this array of&#13;
talent into a winning unit.&#13;
A final thanks goes out to&#13;
scouts Rock Jurvis, Mike&#13;
Fitzgerald and Ed VanTine&#13;
along with part-time stars Tom&#13;
Thomsen and Tom Findreng.&#13;
Soccer Setback&#13;
In a rough injury-riddled&#13;
contest, the Ranger boosters&#13;
suffered a 3-0 defeat at the&#13;
hands of arch-rival UW-Green&#13;
Bay.&#13;
Emotion ran high in the hard&#13;
fought struggle which saw three&#13;
Rangers ejected.&#13;
Parkside's Rick Kilps can&#13;
attest to the ruggedness of the&#13;
game as he suffered a broken&#13;
leg.&#13;
With the victory, Green Bay&#13;
emerges as the District 14&#13;
champions, while the Rangers&#13;
finish with a .500 record at 6-6-1.&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
"N HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
BIG TOP Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside ,&#13;
Round Trip J«t.&#13;
$ Ground Trmfen .&#13;
If. Sown Nights&#13;
• Lo«»9lng&#13;
ond forty .&#13;
• Eighth Night...&#13;
$ Ninth Night&#13;
$Guidos ....&#13;
. Overnight flight from your city via a regularly 10&#13;
PARIS with an immediate connecting flight to GENEVA, SWITZERLAND. Your&#13;
overseas flight will include complimentary meals and beverages&#13;
. Transportation from and to GENEVA via deluxe buses.&#13;
. The first through the seventh day in COURCHEVEL. FRANCE, the most modern&#13;
and extensively developed ski area in FUROPE situated at-6,105 feet ,n the center&#13;
of a vast domain of snowtields. Abundant snow, remarkable sunshine record, runs&#13;
from beginner's to expert's with intermediate runs from top to bottom COURCHEVEL&#13;
was developed by Emile Allais, French Olympic champion. 2 big cabin&#13;
cableways. 6 gondolas, 36 ski and chair lifts. 30.000 ascents per hour 1 ski ,ump.&#13;
36 marked runs including EUROPE', fastest Olympic run ski school 200 instructors.&#13;
a 50 man maintenance and rescue team. 2 skating rinks, and 16 discotheques.&#13;
Lessons-$ 13.00 for 12-2 hour lessons, rental-skis and poles $2.00 per day&#13;
(approx).&#13;
, Your lodging in the ski area will ue in modern new apartments and chalets all with&#13;
bath, kitchenette, balcony and individual beds.&#13;
, 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, prizes and trophies&#13;
, In GENEVA with three great options lor that day&#13;
/tn Continue skiing in COURCHEVEL and that afternoon depart for your over&#13;
^ night in GENEVA&#13;
Ski in a different area s uch as LA PLAGNE and then go to GENEVA to. the&#13;
® night.&#13;
Depart in the morning for GENEVA where you will have the day for shopping&#13;
® and sightseeing Overnight in GENEVA in a good category hotel.&#13;
In PARIS. In the morning you will depart for PARIS whore you will have time to&#13;
shop and spend the evening on the town. Overnight in a good category hotel,&#13;
next morning you will catch your Air France flight home&#13;
Multilingual guides will meet your group upon your arrival m EUROPE and will be&#13;
available to assist you at all times until departure&#13;
FOR AOOtTION&gt;\L INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:&#13;
Mr. William Nlatxjhr. Coordinator&#13;
Studant Activuiar&#13;
Unhandy of WiiconUn - Parkltda&#13;
Kanoih. WlKomln 53140&#13;
Phona: (414) S6J2225&#13;
lODays&#13;
Only $264&#13;
Plui t»oo Tax and Service&#13;
Depart: Chcaga January 4&#13;
Return: Chicago. January 14&#13;
Three Gymnasts&#13;
In I nternational&#13;
Competition&#13;
Coach Dave Donaldson will&#13;
enter three members of his first&#13;
gymnastics team at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
in the Midwest Open&#13;
Saturday at Conant High School&#13;
in Hoffman Estates, 111.&#13;
Senior Warren McGillivray,&#13;
sophomore Dan Boswein and&#13;
freshman Kevin O'Neil are&#13;
entered for the Rangers.&#13;
McGillivray will compete in&#13;
the free exercise and the vault,&#13;
Boswein on the side horse and&#13;
O'Neil on the rings.&#13;
"We're entering primarily to&#13;
get exposure to top-notch people&#13;
and experience at a very high&#13;
level of competition,"&#13;
Donaldson said. "There are&#13;
entries from all over the&#13;
country and many competitors&#13;
will be of international caliber.&#13;
"This is traditionally the first&#13;
large meet to open the season&#13;
and we think it provides a lot of&#13;
opportunity for us."&#13;
No team scores are kept,&#13;
although most Wisconsin&#13;
schools and many from Illinois&#13;
and surrounding states send&#13;
representatives. Preliminaries&#13;
are set for 10 a.m. Saturday&#13;
with finals scheduled at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
"We've come a long way&#13;
since we started in September,"&#13;
Donaldson said. "We've still got&#13;
a long way to go but some things&#13;
we're struggling with now will&#13;
start to come together."&#13;
By Jim Casper, Sports Editor&#13;
The Ranger icemen squared their season mark at 1-1 with a&#13;
5-4 victory over Marquette.&#13;
While outshooting the Warriors 23-20, t he Rangers picked&#13;
up five goals among three players.&#13;
Mark Broderick and Dave Bradshaw each came up with&#13;
two goals, while Marc Tutlewski accounted for the other&#13;
score.&#13;
Parkside's cross country squad captured the NAIA's&#13;
District 14 t itle, earning the right to compete in the NAIA&#13;
national championships at Liberty, Missouri.&#13;
Pacing the Rangers were Lucian Rosa and Rudy Alvarez&#13;
qho finished 1-2.&#13;
Dennis Biel finished seventh, Chuck Dettman eighth, and&#13;
Jim McFadden 10th.&#13;
Parkside totaled 28 points in winning, while Carthage&#13;
placed second with 33. Further back were River Falls with 62&#13;
and Stout at 109.&#13;
Two Parkside judo classes will hold a grudge battle judo&#13;
tournament at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 30, at Kenosha&#13;
Athletics. A donation of 25 cents for the one hour tourney will&#13;
be asked to raise money for Judo Club queen candidate&#13;
Bonnie Eppees and the Harlow Mills .Schoalarship Fund.&#13;
Three members of the Parkside Judo Club captured second&#13;
place honors recently in two different tournaments.&#13;
Helmut Kah earned second place in green belt at the&#13;
Chicago Black Belt Tournament while Hayes Norman was&#13;
second in blue belt at the same competition.&#13;
Bonnie Eppees was runner-up in the green belt class at the&#13;
Milwaukee Women's Tournament.&#13;
REC 0RD&#13;
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This package contains;&#13;
Y0UNGBL00DS&#13;
BEATLES&#13;
CREAM QUICKSILVER&#13;
STONES DYLAN&#13;
JEFFERSON AIRPLANE MOTHERS&#13;
HENDRIX&#13;
BEACH BOYS&#13;
KINKS CROSBY&#13;
ANIMALS STILLS&#13;
VELVET UNDERGROUND NAS H&#13;
DOORS Y0UN G&#13;
TRAFFIC&#13;
The BAND and many more ; (kE.«F»k:^ &#13;
be the only girl working out with&#13;
15 guys."&#13;
"After I got down here they&#13;
insisted on training me like a&#13;
distance runner even though&#13;
I'm a sprinter," she continued.&#13;
"The first year I was here they&#13;
trained me to be in the pentathelon&#13;
because they thought I&#13;
was strong enough. So they&#13;
were training me for the discus,&#13;
and I'm not a discus thrower. I&#13;
consider myself a sprinter. I got&#13;
a serious knee injury from&#13;
practicing the discus which&#13;
ruined most of the indoor track&#13;
season for me.&#13;
"The original injury happened&#13;
at Rosandich's training&#13;
camp. They decided after they&#13;
talked me into transferring to&#13;
Parkside to be the pentathelon&#13;
girl. I injured my knee and had&#13;
trouble walking.&#13;
"They kept saying 'We don't&#13;
want you to go home. We'll work&#13;
with you. We'll use water&#13;
therapy and it'll be okay.' So I&#13;
did stay at the camp," Mary&#13;
said. "When I got home I went&#13;
to an orthopedic surgeon and he&#13;
said it was a partial tear of the&#13;
ligaments, but it had started to&#13;
heal, and for the time being he&#13;
wouldn't do anything with it."&#13;
When she came to Parkside&#13;
her knee was sore but she could&#13;
run on it. She Started training on&#13;
the discus and hurt it again. "I&#13;
always told them it bothered&#13;
me, but they just assumed I was&#13;
a hypocondriac I think."&#13;
At semester break she went to&#13;
an orthopedic surgeon and he&#13;
put her in a cast from her ankle&#13;
to her hip to immpbilize her leg&#13;
for a month and a half.&#13;
Her doctor bills came to $200,&#13;
and she had to pay it herself.&#13;
State law prohibits state funds&#13;
from being used to insure&#13;
athletes, and Parkside Athletics&#13;
has no plan to cover its athletes&#13;
in case of injury.&#13;
She came back to Parkside&#13;
last fall because she had an&#13;
academic scholarship, and&#13;
because two runners were&#13;
coming, Judy Zimmerman and&#13;
Bev Crawford. Both of whom&#13;
were very good, she said.&#13;
They had a new coach, too,&#13;
Jerry Hufchinson, who was a&#13;
transfer student ffom Ohio&#13;
State.&#13;
"We worked really hard in the&#13;
cross country season, even&#13;
though none of us were' really&#13;
cross country runners," Mary&#13;
said. "We did go to the U.S.&#13;
National Cross Country Meet,&#13;
and we didn't do very well&#13;
because we were running&#13;
against the best in the nation.&#13;
"Mr. Rosandich was apparently&#13;
disgusted with us&#13;
because we didn't do better. He&#13;
was supposed to have remarked&#13;
he was ashamed of us." This&#13;
with the athletic policies&#13;
because of the crazy hours we&#13;
were working out and the hours&#13;
we were wasting."&#13;
Mary's track career at&#13;
Parkside ended soon after when&#13;
she quit over a dispute with her&#13;
coaches. One coach said she&#13;
could miss a meet to go watch&#13;
the Big Ten championship meet&#13;
in Madison. Then the head track&#13;
coach said she couldn't after&#13;
she had already bought tickets&#13;
and made arrangements to stay&#13;
in Madison.&#13;
She went anyway. When she&#13;
returned she heard she was&#13;
dropped from the team, she&#13;
said. Subsequently she was told&#13;
she wasn't dropped — that it&#13;
was all a mistake. She quit then&#13;
of her own volition. "I had had&#13;
enough of their athletic&#13;
policies," she said.&#13;
Crawford. She didn't do much&#13;
for them either."&#13;
+ + +&#13;
John Patten, a pole vaulter, is&#13;
a transfer student from a junior&#13;
college in California. He was&#13;
recruited to come to Parkside&#13;
after spending the summer of&#13;
1970 training at Olympia&#13;
Village, the camp Rosandich&#13;
founded.&#13;
His story is similar to that of&#13;
Mary, except time has given&#13;
him a more philosophical view&#13;
of what happened.&#13;
He said that Rosandich told&#13;
him Parkside was a new and&#13;
growing school. "I was told&#13;
there was going to be more&#13;
facilities and more equipment&#13;
than there was when I actually&#13;
got here. I was told the Phy Ed&#13;
building would be up when I&#13;
arrived, that there was an instory&#13;
one&#13;
she said was overheard by one&#13;
of the girls on the team.&#13;
"This rather disgusted us&#13;
after we had practiced so much.&#13;
Jerry worked us too hard. He&#13;
had us running 8 to." 10 m iles a&#13;
day. He was just a student&#13;
himself, but he had free rein&#13;
over us. By the time the indoor&#13;
season came he had just about&#13;
run us to death, and no one had&#13;
any enthusiasm for the new&#13;
season.&#13;
"We had crazy practice hours&#13;
where we had to get up at 5&#13;
o'clock in the morning to&#13;
practice at Park High School.&#13;
Then we had to come out to&#13;
Parkside at three in the afternoon&#13;
to work out again,"&#13;
Mary said. "Sometimes we&#13;
couldn't get into Park High&#13;
School. So we had to work out&#13;
between 7 and 11 o'clock at&#13;
night."&#13;
The result was that "most of&#13;
the girls were getting disgusted&#13;
What was her impression of&#13;
Tom Rosandich, the man who&#13;
recruited her? "He's a&#13;
manipulator of people who's out&#13;
to gain his own fame."&#13;
While she readily&#13;
acknowledged that the track&#13;
coaches are talented, she says&#13;
of them, "First of all, I think the&#13;
coaches are most concerned&#13;
about their own- names.&#13;
Secondly, they'll try to develop&#13;
the name of Parkside. Only last&#13;
are they concerned with the&#13;
athletes. The only athletes they&#13;
do take good care of are the&#13;
ones they think will further&#13;
their names.&#13;
"I did feel used," she continued.&#13;
"The first year I was&#13;
here I wasn't running the&#13;
national times they thought I&#13;
'would. It was like they&#13;
discarded me to place their&#13;
hopes on Judy. Then when Judy&#13;
wasn't doing too well they&#13;
thought they could rely on Bev&#13;
door track. Like many people&#13;
that rebelled I was insulted by&#13;
this. I was told I was to work out&#13;
in a normal athletic manner. I&#13;
was told the facilities were&#13;
here."&#13;
When he arrived there wasn't&#13;
even a vaulting pit for him to&#13;
practice in.&#13;
"I kinda griped at this," he&#13;
admits. "But when you come&#13;
down to it, and analyze the&#13;
problem, this was no fault of&#13;
theirs. There was a cutback in&#13;
money.&#13;
"Everyone griped at first.&#13;
Then it seemed to separate, and&#13;
the ones that continually griped&#13;
were the ones who never really&#13;
got into it. They never tried to&#13;
make the best of a bad situation.&#13;
The others seemed to overcome&#13;
it."&#13;
He. added, "In my career as&#13;
an athlete I've never seen so&#13;
much subversion in the ranks as&#13;
I did at Parkside — men and&#13;
women, even the coaches. But I&#13;
think it was a normal reaction&#13;
to the situation — with so much&#13;
money being cut. The team&#13;
simply broke apart as a whole."&#13;
Patten chose to characterize&#13;
the dissension on the team as&#13;
subversion. He noted that in a&#13;
week's time that it was mere&#13;
luck if the entire team practiced&#13;
together just once. The problem&#13;
being that people had classes on&#13;
three different campuses, and&#13;
the team practiced in five&#13;
different locations.&#13;
He said now the dissension on&#13;
the team is diminishing as&#13;
Parkside acquires more&#13;
facilities. He sums up his own&#13;
experiences as "a temporary&#13;
dissatisfaction led to a&#13;
gratifying, rewarding learning&#13;
experience. The way I felt m- for&#13;
a couple of months is not the&#13;
way I've felt for the last year."&#13;
His view of Tom Rosandich,&#13;
the man who recruited him?&#13;
"He's quite a politician. I highly&#13;
respect the guy. He's the kind of&#13;
guy I would like to have on my&#13;
staff if I were an Athletic&#13;
Director. He has this great&#13;
ability to make things sound&#13;
fantastic, whether they are or&#13;
not. This is what turned a lot of&#13;
people off — including myself at&#13;
first."&#13;
Is that supposed to be a&#13;
compliment?&#13;
"I'm complimenting the guy&#13;
for making things sound great,"&#13;
Patten responded. "I'm not&#13;
saying he lies, or stretches the&#13;
point. He's doing a darn good&#13;
job of getting people out here,&#13;
and if they get turned off from&#13;
the program, that's a chance he&#13;
takes.&#13;
"He's the kind of guy that&#13;
could be sitting in a firehouse,&#13;
and you could call up and say&#13;
your home was on fire. He could&#13;
make you feel so confident that&#13;
everything was under control —&#13;
(Continued on Page 7)&#13;
The follow through on this&#13;
was that the man was in&#13;
Arizona on vacation and&#13;
couldn't be contacted. Meanwhile,&#13;
the Chancellor continued,&#13;
"Tom had the impression he&#13;
had on a firm deal on this. This&#13;
wasn't true."&#13;
So Beverly Crawford came to&#13;
Parkside, her tuition supposedly&#13;
taken care of. She&#13;
dropped out then, and in&#13;
February of this year, according&#13;
to a letter the Chancellor&#13;
revealed to this reporter,&#13;
the Bursar asked Rosandich if&#13;
she was on the grant-in-aid list&#13;
Athletics had made — her&#13;
tuition of $899 hadn't been paid&#13;
yet.&#13;
Rosandich replied he thought&#13;
the Chancellor was taking care&#13;
of it out of a special fund he had&#13;
for minority students.&#13;
To which the Chancellor&#13;
responded in a letter he had no&#13;
special fund for minority&#13;
students, nor the money to&#13;
transfer to cover the item.&#13;
He told Rosandich his only&#13;
assurance to him had been to&#13;
raise the question of aid to the&#13;
individual, not that the aid was&#13;
assurred.&#13;
The Chancellor then&#13;
reprimanded Rosandich for&#13;
reporting on a budget document&#13;
that her tuition would be&#13;
covered from the Chancellor's&#13;
funds when he had made no&#13;
such committment.&#13;
He further censured&#13;
Rosandich for unilaterally&#13;
escalating preliminary and&#13;
exploratory conversations with&#13;
him into firm budget committments&#13;
and program approval.&#13;
&#13;
The resolution of the problem&#13;
was that the Office of Financial&#13;
Aids, because it can remit 8 per&#13;
cent of the total out-of-state&#13;
tuitions paid in, picked up part&#13;
of the bill, while Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie contributed $150 and&#13;
Rosandich $100 and Beverly&#13;
Crawford's tuition was finally&#13;
paid.&#13;
The question now is whether&#13;
what happened constitutes a&#13;
violation of the Women's conference&#13;
rule against financial&#13;
aid for athletic ability.&#13;
The rules state: "Any student&#13;
who receives an athletic&#13;
scholarship, financial award,&#13;
financial assistance,&#13;
specifically designated for&#13;
athletes is not eligible to&#13;
compete. An athletic&#13;
scholarship is defined as a&#13;
scholarship in which one or&#13;
more of the following conditions&#13;
exist: (1) The scholarship is&#13;
dependent primarily upon one's&#13;
athletic ability. (2) The&#13;
scholarship is dependent upon&#13;
participation in the athletic&#13;
program. (3) The scholarship is&#13;
awarded as a result of undue&#13;
happened to have exceptional&#13;
athletic ability.&#13;
Rosandich's response to&#13;
whether it constituted a&#13;
violation was: "No, it wasn't. It&#13;
wasn't granted in the form of an&#13;
athletic scholarship. Here was a&#13;
minority girl who had a&#13;
financial problem that received&#13;
some help. There was no tender.&#13;
There was no grant. There was&#13;
no athletic scholarship. It's as&#13;
simple as that."&#13;
Rebuttal&#13;
In response to other charges&#13;
that he had lied or misledathletes&#13;
when he recruited&#13;
them, Rosandich said it was the&#13;
policy of his office to&#13;
specifically avoid the chance of&#13;
that happening.&#13;
He read from a memo to his&#13;
staff: "Whatever is promised&#13;
should be in black and white, so&#13;
that they do not come around&#13;
The money for them comes&#13;
primarily from the Parkside 200&#13;
Club.&#13;
In response to Mary Libal's&#13;
charge that he told her that&#13;
Parkside had an indoor track,&#13;
he replied, "I can say that I did&#13;
not tell her we had an indoor&#13;
track. There is no way I would&#13;
tell any student athlete that I'm&#13;
going to build an indoor track&#13;
when even now .in the final&#13;
stages of the building of the&#13;
Phy. Ed. there's no indoor&#13;
track."&#13;
He said he purposefully chose&#13;
not to have one — even though&#13;
he has a track background. He&#13;
feels a swimming pool is more&#13;
useful because more people will&#13;
use it.&#13;
Rosandich stated further, "I&#13;
can show you memorandums to&#13;
my staff that establishes the&#13;
policy ^hat no person should&#13;
story two&#13;
influence by a member of the&#13;
athletic department, physical&#13;
education department, or coach&#13;
who is aware of the athletic&#13;
ability of an applicant.&#13;
However, athletes may receive&#13;
academic scholarships or&#13;
economic scholarships,&#13;
provided none of the conditions&#13;
above apply.&#13;
"Financial assistance shall&#13;
npt be offered directly-or indirectly&#13;
as a means of&#13;
recruitment of participants or&#13;
prospective participants into&#13;
the athletic program.&#13;
Recruitment of student athletes&#13;
to enhance the institution's&#13;
athletic teams is not approved."&#13;
The question is whether&#13;
Beverly Crawford was&#13;
recruited because she was a&#13;
deserving minority student,&#13;
from Pittsburgh, or whether she&#13;
was a deserving minority&#13;
student from Pittsburgh who&#13;
and say this was promised to&#13;
me ... If you're going to say&#13;
something to someone, you put&#13;
it in writing."&#13;
He said Parkside does not&#13;
have the typical scholarship&#13;
program, which consists of&#13;
room, board, books, tuition and&#13;
spending money. "Parkside&#13;
does not have that kind of&#13;
program. We do believe we can&#13;
buy a boy books, which is&#13;
fundamental to his education.&#13;
We believe that in the case of an&#13;
exceptional blue chip athlete we&#13;
will give him tuition. We will do&#13;
this for a man. It is a staff&#13;
decision."&#13;
Rosandich said that initially&#13;
28 book scholarships werf&#13;
allocated at a maximum valut&#13;
of $150 a piece. The books are&#13;
used as part of a lending library&#13;
program. He said there were a&#13;
total of 11% tuition scholarships&#13;
given.&#13;
ever be recruited for this&#13;
University without first seeing&#13;
our facilities."&#13;
To Mary's accusation that she&#13;
was told there was a girl's track&#13;
team at Parkside when there&#13;
wasn't, Vic Godfrey, the cross&#13;
country coach, responded, "As&#13;
far as anyone saying there was&#13;
a team at that time it would&#13;
have been very difficult for us to&#13;
say that. I was up at Olympia&#13;
Village at the time she was&#13;
training and I don't know who&#13;
would have told her we had a&#13;
team. I know we talked aboiJt&#13;
having a woman's program."&#13;
Rosandich said too his staff&#13;
did their best to try and find&#13;
Mary housing. He noted one of&#13;
his coaches, Paul Ward, spent&#13;
three days searching for a room&#13;
for her before she arrived at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
He said Judy Zimmerman&#13;
was right in saying the Office of&#13;
Athletics did not pay the&#13;
traveling expenses of the girl's&#13;
track and cross country teams.&#13;
"I don't know if Jerry paid out&#13;
of his pocket, or if anybody else&#13;
did. They ran as a club last year&#13;
and not as a team. There is a&#13;
very simple reason for this. A&#13;
team is eight girls. We never&#13;
had eight girls. They gathered&#13;
about seven people together."&#13;
This included a girl from St.&#13;
Catherine's high school and&#13;
Rosandich's eight year old&#13;
daughter. "Obviously, I can't&#13;
take funds from the University&#13;
and put these people on the road&#13;
against competition that is not&#13;
collegiate — they couldn't find&#13;
another college team to run&#13;
against," he said.&#13;
"We had a couple of experienced&#13;
girls, and just found&#13;
the rest," he explained. "We&#13;
decided the way to go was to&#13;
build a club."&#13;
Club sports at Parkside are&#13;
not funded because of the lack&#13;
Qf mo ney, he said. But they do&#13;
receive help in scheduling, help&#13;
in finding coaches, and are&#13;
given safety equipment if they&#13;
need it.&#13;
"Funds he said to operate the&#13;
girl's teams came from&#13;
donations. He said too his wife&#13;
often drove them, or else&#13;
supplied the use of one of their&#13;
cars.&#13;
To Judy's charge that she&#13;
wasn't sent to all the meets that&#13;
she was promised she would be,&#13;
Rosandich responded, "Where&#13;
Judy Zimmerman did not run&#13;
was the indoor meets, and that's&#13;
because the invitations weren't&#13;
there, and she didn't have the&#13;
ability to go out and perform.&#13;
You don't ever send someone to&#13;
a level of competition where&#13;
they're going to be lapped three&#13;
times. It's as simple as that.&#13;
He pointed out she did run at&#13;
Canton, Ohio; Ypsilanti,&#13;
(Continued on Page 9) </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 12, November 22, 1971</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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    </tag>
    <tag tagId="181">
      <name>tom rosandich</name>
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</item>
