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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 2</text>
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            <text>SGA Book Exchange Successful Despite Handicaps</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>The SGA Voter Registration table attracted over 500 students during second semester registration. Left, Andi Giese watches&#13;
while Danny Trotter charts precincts for Felica Sielski.&#13;
SGA Book Exchange Successful Despite Handicaps&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The University Bookstore's&#13;
monopoly on selling books to&#13;
UW-P students was jolted twice&#13;
last week as the Parkside Book&#13;
Exchange opened last Friday&#13;
with unexpected success, and as&#13;
Attorney Jay Schwartz told&#13;
Student Government leaders he&#13;
would be willing to sue the&#13;
University and the book store in&#13;
the event negotiations with&#13;
them fell through.&#13;
The Book Exchange, despite a&#13;
minimum of publicity and&#13;
opening Friday, after the bulk&#13;
of registration was over, had&#13;
over $350 in sales, with another&#13;
$100 estimated in sales made&#13;
before the books could be&#13;
processed. The organizers said&#13;
over 80 people brought books in&#13;
to be sold. They estimated 400&#13;
people stopped in during the&#13;
day.&#13;
Because of the success, they&#13;
announced the Exchange will&#13;
continue next week from 11:00&#13;
a.m. to 8:00 p.m. in apartment&#13;
117 i n Parkside Village.&#13;
The exchange was organized&#13;
jointly by students Fred Zievers&#13;
and Tom Werbie along with&#13;
Student Government.&#13;
Prior to this, SGA President&#13;
Dean Loumos with Vice&#13;
President Bruce Bolpintesta&#13;
and Treasurer Danny Trotter&#13;
had spoken with Racine Lawyer&#13;
Jay Schwartz about what they&#13;
termed the high prices the&#13;
University Book Store charges&#13;
for books.&#13;
They reported to the SGA&#13;
Senate that Schwartz expressed&#13;
interest in the situation and was&#13;
willing to do, among other&#13;
things:&#13;
— i ncorporate SGA,&#13;
— represent SGA in&#13;
negotiations with the University&#13;
and the Bookstore&#13;
— sue the University and&#13;
Bookstore in the event a&#13;
satisfactory solution couldn't be&#13;
found&#13;
— incorporate a book co-op&#13;
that would be the plaintiff in the&#13;
case.&#13;
Aside from the fees for incorporation,&#13;
he would do this for&#13;
free, they reported.&#13;
The Senate, in a somewhat&#13;
suspicious mood, established a&#13;
book co-op committee that&#13;
would investigate alternatives&#13;
to the Bookstore. They further&#13;
agreed to retain Schwartz as a&#13;
consultant and to have him&#13;
incorporate SGA.&#13;
Further meetings with him&#13;
are planned.&#13;
President Loumos said a few&#13;
days after the Senate meeting&#13;
that while Schwartz hadn't been&#13;
authorized to negotiate for SGA,&#13;
"Once we do begin negotiations,&#13;
Schwartz will be our&#13;
representative. As of now,&#13;
we're not at that stage yet. The&#13;
Senate has to first decide what&#13;
demands it will make."&#13;
A decision to sue the&#13;
University and the Bookstore&#13;
would have to be made by the&#13;
Senate, he said. "I would favor&#13;
a suit if negotiations failed," he&#13;
stated.&#13;
Book Exchange&#13;
The success of the Book&#13;
Exchange surprised most of its&#13;
organizers. They noted the&#13;
handicaps — the refusal of the&#13;
University to allow them to hold&#13;
it on campus, the lack of&#13;
organization, the lack of&#13;
publicity, the fact it was held&#13;
after most students had&#13;
registered, and many had&#13;
already bought their books, the&#13;
difficulty of obtaining a book&#13;
list, and the famed apathy of&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
Tom Werbie said of his&#13;
reaction, "I was surprised. I&#13;
brought along a deck of cards to&#13;
pass the time."&#13;
Danny Trotter echoed his&#13;
thoughts, "Things are changing&#13;
at Parkside alright, but I sure&#13;
didn't expect this."&#13;
Loumos, perhaps, was the&#13;
only one who professed no&#13;
surprise. Dean said, "I expected&#13;
the turnout. The students&#13;
seemed interested in it during&#13;
registration. It felt right to them&#13;
and they responded. I never&#13;
have believed the students here&#13;
are really apathetic. It's just a&#13;
matter of organization.&#13;
"It should be obvious the&#13;
Bookstore isn't fulfilling the&#13;
needs of the students," he&#13;
continued. "That should be&#13;
apparent with the response we&#13;
have received."&#13;
He said later, very simply,&#13;
"The time was right."&#13;
He credited the two students,&#13;
Werbie and Zievers, for making&#13;
the Exchange a success. Werbie&#13;
said in turn, "It couldn't have&#13;
happened without the help of&#13;
Asst. Chancellor Allen Dearborn&#13;
and Ken Pagel, the&#13;
manager of Parkside Village."&#13;
He explained how Dearborn&#13;
had jarred lose a bureaucratic&#13;
logjam that had prevented them&#13;
from getting a booklist, and how&#13;
Pagel had allowed them to use&#13;
an unfinished Village apartment&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
The Book Exchange itself&#13;
works this way: A student&#13;
brings in the books he wants to&#13;
sell. He writes his name in his&#13;
books and the prices he wants&#13;
for them. He then takes a note&#13;
card and writes down his name,&#13;
address, phone number, the&#13;
books he has for sale, and the&#13;
money he wants. This card is&#13;
then filed, and the books are put&#13;
on the shelves. If someone&#13;
wants to buy one of his books, he&#13;
pays the money to the coordinators,&#13;
who check the book off&#13;
the seller's list.&#13;
The money will then be given&#13;
to the sellers when the Book&#13;
Exchange closes.&#13;
A brief check of the prices&#13;
showed them to be cheaper, or&#13;
the approximate price of the&#13;
used books on sale at the&#13;
Bookstore. The difference being,&#13;
as many people noted, was&#13;
that the students made the&#13;
money here, and not the&#13;
Bookstore.&#13;
Attention!&#13;
Newscope staff meeting&#13;
on Wednesday at 5p.m.&#13;
at the office. &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE January 17,1972&#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;
i-fotWzzA&#13;
LIBRARY&#13;
Try first THE NEW YORK TIMES&#13;
FILM REVIEWS (1913-1970), in&#13;
the Library. Then try FILM&#13;
FACTS (1958)1972). If you&#13;
need still more information,&#13;
check the READER'S GUIDE&#13;
under the subject "Moving&#13;
Picture Plays - c riticisms,&#13;
plots, etc." If you don't&#13;
find it, ask a librarian.&#13;
UWP Hosts&#13;
Kovacs F ilm&#13;
An exclusive showing of a&#13;
film about the man Playboy&#13;
magazine called "the only true&#13;
genius developed by the&#13;
television medium," Ernie&#13;
Kovacs, will be shown Friday,&#13;
January 21, at the Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
In 1951, when television was in&#13;
its infancy, the smiling,&#13;
mustachioed, cigar-smoking&#13;
comic first appeared with his&#13;
unique brand of humor. During&#13;
the next ten years, Kovacs&#13;
wrote, directed and performed&#13;
some of the wildest and most&#13;
memorable comedy shows in&#13;
the history of television. He&#13;
appeared on all three major&#13;
networks.&#13;
Kovacs won critical and&#13;
national audience acclaim for&#13;
his brilliant, advanced mastery&#13;
of comedy using the television&#13;
medium. Kovacs began his&#13;
experiments with television&#13;
comedy, creating such comedy&#13;
classics as "Percy Dovetonsils",&#13;
the martini-lathed poet&#13;
laureate; the famous "Mack the&#13;
Knife" comedy blackouts; "The&#13;
Nairobi Trio" of musical apes;&#13;
and Kovacs' memorable syncopated&#13;
sequences in which&#13;
inanimate objects perform&#13;
rhythmically to symphonic&#13;
music.&#13;
In 1962, Kovacs was killed in a&#13;
tragic automobile accident. At&#13;
that time all his videotapes&#13;
were placed in a permanent&#13;
private archive. Because there&#13;
has been a strong and continuous&#13;
interest in the man and&#13;
his comedy, special permission&#13;
was granted to produce the&#13;
documentary film. UW-P will&#13;
be the second university in the&#13;
U.S. to present this film. It&#13;
premiered Jan. 13 at the&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
See this momentous film&#13;
Friday at 8 p .m. Admission 75&#13;
cents.&#13;
Snowmobile Cub&#13;
REGULAR PRICE $399.00&#13;
OR&#13;
WITH PURCHASE OF ANYTHING&#13;
IN THE STORE $150.00&#13;
OR&#13;
WITH PURCHASE OF $299.00&#13;
STEREO CONSOLE $99.00&#13;
F O R W I N T E R ' S H E A V Y S N O W S&#13;
SNO TIGER snow biower&#13;
light weight (less tha n 10 lbs.)&#13;
rugged, non-clogging, easy&#13;
starting, comp letely portab le.&#13;
Great fo r small ar eas or dig ging&#13;
a ca r out of a s nowbank.&#13;
Reasonably priced at $1 09 0 0-&#13;
R.C. Service&#13;
Ron Casperson-owntrr&#13;
1240 N. Main Street&#13;
Racine Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
featuring Admiral Mastercare Warranty*&#13;
• d mA i r al M a s&#13;
ter car e w a&#13;
f '&#13;
a n t y : T&#13;
h i s warranty cover s the entire&#13;
produ ct, no cha rge w ill be made for p arts or labor on r e p l a c e ­&#13;
men t of defectiv e par ts. w a&#13;
"&#13;
a n t y good at a dm i r a&#13;
I dealers&#13;
throughout the IJ .S•&#13;
BLUES NIGHT CLUB — Mandolinest Johnny Young and his&#13;
Chicago Blues Band will be appearing at PABs first night club of&#13;
the Spring semester. He will appear at the Student Activities&#13;
Building January 22 from 9-1 a.m.&#13;
Regents O pen-up Meetings&#13;
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin system&#13;
decided Friday to provide time at future meetings for faculty,&#13;
students, and the general public to appear before the board.&#13;
Board Pres. W. Roy Kopp, Platteville, said the decision —&#13;
reached after prolonged discussion with a representative of the&#13;
state attorney general — is a reaffirmation of the positions of the&#13;
boards which were merged.&#13;
"We are asking, of course, for an orderly process so that the&#13;
comments will make the greatest contribution possible," Kopp&#13;
said. "We also are asking that those wishing to appear notify the&#13;
president of the board at a reasonable time, in advance of the&#13;
meeting, of the subject on which they wish to appear."&#13;
CLIO - a new journal&#13;
A new scholarly journal edited by four University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside English professors has made its first appearance.&#13;
&#13;
The publication, called CLIO, is described by its editors as&#13;
an "interdisciplinary journal of literature, history, and the&#13;
philosophy of history" and will be published three times per&#13;
year.&#13;
Associate professor Robert H. Canary and assistant&#13;
professor Henry Kozicki are editors; James Seay Dean, Jr.,&#13;
assistant professor, is associate editor; and Andrew M.&#13;
McLean, assistant professor, is review editor.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
MONDAY, JAN. 17&#13;
Instruction begins: Second semester&#13;
classes start.&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs. Southern&#13;
lllinois-Edwardsville at Edwardsville.&#13;
&#13;
TUESDAY, JAN. 18&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs. Indiana&#13;
State-Evansville at Evansville.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 19&#13;
Film: Parkside Film Society will&#13;
sponsor showing of the film&#13;
"Goldstein" and short subject, "The&#13;
Grateful Dead" at 8 p.m. in Room&#13;
103 Greenquist Hall. Adm. 50 cents.&#13;
FRIDAY, JAN. 21&#13;
Hockey: UW-P Club vs. Illinois&#13;
Benedictine at 9 p.m. at Wilson Park&#13;
Recreation Center, Milwaukee.&#13;
Film: Documentary, "Ernie&#13;
Kovacs". Includes videotapes of his&#13;
comedy routines not seen since his&#13;
death in 1962. 8 p.m., Activities&#13;
Building. Adm. 75 cent$.&#13;
SATURDAY, JAN. 22&#13;
Fencing: Rangers vs. IllinoisChicago&#13;
Circle and Cornell&#13;
University at Chicago.&#13;
Gymnastics: Rangers at Oshkosh&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
Indoor Track: NAIA at Kansas City,&#13;
Mo.; Chicago Open at Chicago.&#13;
Wrestling: Rangers vs. Eastern&#13;
Illinois and Ball State at Charleston.&#13;
Lecture: Eugene Gasiorkiewicz,&#13;
associate professor, life science, will&#13;
lecture on "The Prairie Restoration&#13;
Project at Parkside" at an open&#13;
meeting of the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Nature Conservancy at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room D-137.&#13;
SUNDAY, JAN. 23&#13;
Meeting: The UW-P Chess Club will&#13;
meet from 1 to 4 p.m. in the Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
jixwaooFi&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR&#13;
ASSOCIATE EDITOR&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR&#13;
COPY EDITOR&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Jerry Socha&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
Larry Jones&#13;
Rick Pazera&#13;
Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
the &amp; a? '"?.&#13;
ependent student newspaper composed by students:&#13;
varau™ ° ^isconsin-Parkside Published weekly except durin&#13;
reven.?r w »k Studen&#13;
! obtained advertising funds are the sole source &lt;&#13;
distributer?»h!«.e °»Vl,0n 0f Newscope. 6,000 copies arfe printed an&#13;
University F d 9 the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as th&#13;
DeadUne for SP™ ar# available Upon re9uest&#13;
Thursdav'' 7?&#13;
a&#13;
"&#13;
uscrip,s submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. th&#13;
photoqraohs is the sil"!'&#13;
0&#13;
" 3011 must be ,yped double-spaced. Deadline fc&#13;
and phmoaraohs m* ?" Pri0r to pub&#13;
"«tion. Unsolicited manuscripl&#13;
miss?or? a^ter wh!rh rec,aimed within 30 days after the date of sul&#13;
NewscoDe offire c i Wi&#13;
" become tbe property of Newscope Ltd. Th&#13;
zz-ZT' or&#13;
°~ ou&#13;
"&#13;
din&#13;
""&#13;
A)cusc&lt;ye Staff Mee+.n^&#13;
~fK\s d&lt;k V&#13;
"t" kc orf'ict&#13;
-New lAe Lry Vjtl come &#13;
The Power of Women&#13;
January 17,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
By Marc Eisen, News Editor&#13;
"The most potent force to change the political&#13;
structure is the power of women," so said Betty&#13;
Friedan, noted spokeswoman for Women's&#13;
Liberation, as she addressed an overflow crowd at&#13;
Dominican College last Tuesday.&#13;
The author of The Feminine Mystique and the&#13;
founder of the National Organization for Women&#13;
(NOW), Frieden was one of the earliest&#13;
proponents of Women's Liberation, and since has&#13;
consistently been in the forefront of the fight for&#13;
feminine equality.&#13;
"A new human politics will be born in 1972,"&#13;
she told the predominantly female audience. She&#13;
forecasted ^ new alliance of women, the young,&#13;
and the oppressed that will take the monopoly of&#13;
power away from the white upper class wasps —&#13;
"post menopausal businessmen" she termed them&#13;
at one point.&#13;
Calling women's liberation "the biggest&#13;
revolution of our time", she saw the movement&#13;
entering a third stage: the demanding of an equal&#13;
share of political power.&#13;
"We will no longer do the housework of&#13;
politics. We'll no longer look up the zip codes and&#13;
the address the envelopes," she told the applauding&#13;
crowd. "We demand our share of&#13;
political power."&#13;
She warned, "The institutions won't change&#13;
unless we have the power." She pointed out:&#13;
— President Nixon's vetoing of the Day Care&#13;
bill — "How can you cut down welfare and then not&#13;
provide child care?" she asked.&#13;
— the failure of the Equal Rights Amendment&#13;
to pass — "Women are the only group it's legal to&#13;
discriminate against," she said.&#13;
— the continued resistance to legalized&#13;
abortions and contraceptives — "It should be the&#13;
inalienable right of a woman to control her body,"&#13;
she contended.&#13;
"It's urgent that we demand our rights now,"&#13;
she told the audience.&#13;
Tracing the development of the Women's&#13;
Liberation movement, she saw the first stage as&#13;
the consciousness raising level — "We found out&#13;
we weren't alone," she said.&#13;
Prior to liberation women were brainwashed&#13;
into thinking of herself as a freak if she desired to&#13;
do things for herself. "She was alone, isolated,"&#13;
Friedan said. "She was made to feel guilty for&#13;
wanting to work."&#13;
Her place instead was the home. "Every&#13;
woman was expected to do for love or nothing&#13;
what no man would do for anything," she observed.&#13;
&#13;
This image was nurtured by television — "Her&#13;
greatest achievement was to get the kitchen sink&#13;
or her husband's shirts clean. The image of&#13;
woman herself was: "She looks bad. She smells&#13;
bad. She must be disguised at all costs."&#13;
"Where is the image of woman as a person?"&#13;
she asked.&#13;
The second stage reached was the commitment&#13;
to organize. It's achievement required&#13;
the overcoming of self hatred and the lack of self&#13;
confidence.&#13;
"It amazes me so many women have overcome&#13;
their feelings of self degradation," she said.&#13;
She argued, "This put down of women is built into&#13;
the Judeo-Christian tradition; it exists as part of&#13;
the social structure."&#13;
She maintained in her speech, "The only&#13;
enemy that can stop us is us. We must overcome&#13;
our timidity, our fears."&#13;
She rejected the contention of some&#13;
liberationists that man is the enemy. "Man as a&#13;
class is not oppressing women as a class," she&#13;
said. "Man himself is oppressed."&#13;
She warned against the dangers of "man&#13;
hatred." She described it as a reactionary position&#13;
cloaked in a radical guise. It's a two sex society we&#13;
live in, she said, and man hatred is a dead end&#13;
proposition.&#13;
"Can we be asked to give up love? " she asked.&#13;
"It's a basic force. We have to recognize it." She&#13;
added puckishly, "I think man is here to stay."&#13;
Friedan asserted though, "Women have one&#13;
advantage over men. They weren't brought up to&#13;
be men. They weren't brought up to prove their&#13;
manhood by killing someone.&#13;
She called for those women who have been&#13;
traditionally quiescent to become politically active&#13;
in 1972. She stressed the need for women to&#13;
run for public office.&#13;
"Women have confronted the realities of life,"&#13;
she said, "not memorandums."&#13;
"Ours is a unique revolution," she said at the&#13;
end of her speech. "It is life giving."&#13;
Campus Security&#13;
Add Two Men&#13;
MADISON — Tow additional&#13;
members of the safety and&#13;
security staff at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside were&#13;
sworn in as police officers by&#13;
the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents at its meeting Friday.&#13;
The two are Dennis Leland&#13;
Cartier, 2809 25th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha, and Kent Harper&#13;
Mayes, Box 125, Oakdale&#13;
Estates, Kenosha.&#13;
Both have been trainees with&#13;
the Parkside force since Nov. 1&#13;
and have completed four weeks&#13;
of police recruit school at&#13;
Waukesha Technical Institute.&#13;
Their appointments as police&#13;
officers are effective Dec. 26.&#13;
The new appointments bring&#13;
to nine the total number of&#13;
Parkside police officers, including&#13;
Safety and Security&#13;
Director Ronald Brinkmann,&#13;
Sergeant Donald Krogh and&#13;
seven patrolmen. The force also&#13;
includes five security men.&#13;
ft #&#13;
ALL textbooks tor A LL courses&#13;
now sold at M ain Book Store&#13;
on Wood Rd.&#13;
^rSMW-CLASSESr JAN 1" 1**7-21 jg&#13;
$MAIN BOOK STORE: ft&#13;
SiMon.-Thurs. - 7:30 A.M.-8:30 P.M.g&#13;
^ F r i d a y - 8 : 0 0 A . M . - 4 : 30 P . M M&#13;
f KENOSHA- AND RACINE STORES:&#13;
jgMp.a.-Fxi^ay..-&#13;
" NO Books Will Be Sold At&#13;
Kenosha &amp; Racine Stores&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
FOR&#13;
FOREIGN&#13;
CAR&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
and PARTS&#13;
call&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
CAR&#13;
CENTER&#13;
652-6667 5919-35 Ave&#13;
Keno&amp;ha, Wis.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
BEAT POET DIES&#13;
(CPS) — Kenneth Patchen, the fourth major American poet to&#13;
die in the past two years, succumbed to a fatal heart attack at his&#13;
home in Palo Alto, Calif., Saturday, January 8.&#13;
Patchen, who was 60, pioneered poetry reading to the accompaniment&#13;
of jazz during the 1950's.&#13;
His anti-war poetry, some written 40 ye ars ago, has recently&#13;
regained popularity because of the Vietnam war.&#13;
Patchen died one day after Pulitzer Prize winning poet John&#13;
Berrymen jumped to his death from a bridge over the Mississippi&#13;
River in Minneapolis.&#13;
Paul Blackburn died at Cortland, New York, last August and&#13;
Charles Olson succumbed to cancer in New York City in January,&#13;
1970.&#13;
STUDENT WINS ABORTION CASE&#13;
GAINSVILLE, Fla. (CPS) — The editor of the University of&#13;
Florida's student newspaper. The ALLIGATOR, has been found&#13;
innocent of any crime in printing information on abortion referral&#13;
in the paper last Fall. A county felony court ruled that the state's&#13;
193-year-old abortion law was unconstitutional.&#13;
y ipvi i&#13;
•faswr petstsr.&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
9a.m.—4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
0) a bottle or&#13;
" 5 a g l a s s&#13;
_c and&#13;
O a s teak sandwich or&#13;
s— a bratwurst or&#13;
q a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NOR THW EST C O RNE R OF HIGHWAYS 1-94 A N D 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.—12 p.m.&#13;
Availab le f o r F&#13;
r a t e r n i t y o r S ° l&#13;
°'ity pattie s &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE January 17, 1972&#13;
Next time yoac\re ^ please decide fo do&#13;
cat wifK yoar triend^Q someftvihj ihtereS+t'hg&#13;
FLO'S&#13;
Home Cooking&#13;
HWY 31&amp;County Trunk E&#13;
6AM-6PM Specials Daily&#13;
Ladies:&#13;
The beer's on&#13;
Frenchie&#13;
That's rightfree&#13;
beer&#13;
for you girls, if&#13;
you're over 21 of course,&#13;
anytime after 8 pm on&#13;
Tuesdays.&#13;
The&#13;
food's great, the beer's&#13;
cold, and if you don't&#13;
like our musicbring&#13;
your&#13;
own.&#13;
by Paul Lomartire, Feature Editor&#13;
John Goray is an artist, and the Mayor&#13;
of H arbor West, Kenosha's art community.&#13;
Like fine wine, he gets better with age. The&#13;
years have brought white hair to his&#13;
physical appearance. The passing seasons&#13;
of t hese years have added a gruff mumblerumble-grumble&#13;
to his speech.&#13;
Mr. Goray is not the sort of person one&#13;
can listen to with only one ear. His delivery&#13;
of the English language and assorted tones,&#13;
depends heavily on the patience and&#13;
imagination of the listener. Many times an&#13;
ingenious metaphor or analogy will pass&#13;
from his mouth, swirl about the listener's&#13;
head only once, and pass into the wind.&#13;
Being the informal Mayor of the&#13;
thriving art community near Kenosha's&#13;
port, Mr. Goray is a source of valuable information&#13;
about the area and beyond. I find&#13;
him very helpful when I am looking for a&#13;
restaurant to eat in and review.&#13;
"Listen, you have to try Bob's," he said&#13;
one day last fall, referring to Bob's Koffee&#13;
Pot on Seventh Avenue in Kenosha. "The&#13;
food is okay, but the walls are great, you&#13;
have to see the walls. Some of the local&#13;
artists are pitchin' in and doing a mural," he&#13;
said.&#13;
I went to the Koffee Pot and found the&#13;
best cheeseburger in the area, and by far the&#13;
most interesting walls. As a source of&#13;
o——.j-museum,&#13;
referred me to a Chi&#13;
Racine, with a typi&#13;
mendation; the food t&#13;
good, but I had to see th&lt;&#13;
those Cantonese delica&#13;
out.&#13;
Last week I drove&#13;
panion, Maggie, to Rac&#13;
2517 Durand Avenue Jo&#13;
a thousand with his "gov&#13;
wondered if he would&#13;
string to two with a r&lt;&#13;
what looked to be a c&#13;
store.&#13;
I am like many otl&#13;
eat in a Chinese rest&#13;
dering a Coke with my&#13;
visit pass without doin^&#13;
related verbal impress&#13;
Maggie's reaction i&#13;
She looks from side to&#13;
There's no other way&#13;
So there I was, high atop Mount Potosi 'neath a&#13;
mythology tree. It was Fall, and the leaves they&#13;
did. The wind changed and all around me Dylan,&#13;
singing:&#13;
Lay down your weary tune lay down&#13;
lay down the song you strum&#13;
and rest yourself 'neath the strength of strings&#13;
no voice can hope to hum&#13;
One of those days.&#13;
I casually examined one of the leaves. It, too,&#13;
had obviously seen better days; perhaps it had&#13;
once been the highest, even. It didn't matter.&#13;
Though it was the color of Midas, of the robe of his&#13;
prettiest harem girl, it now read (in surprisingly&#13;
small letters):&#13;
this leaf died for the times they are a'changin'&#13;
bob dylan has sun something new&#13;
I dropped the leaf and hopped a passing mountain&#13;
steamboat to the nearest record store.&#13;
The man there touched my money and the fine&#13;
blue album like they felt the same. God I hate that.&#13;
I forgot it and plugged the music into my ear.&#13;
Greatest Higs. Genius and Gall. And Lord I swear&#13;
any side of this one heard on a burning transistor&#13;
radio would still sound number one. '&#13;
Ah yes but. I feel so forced into humility and I&#13;
should hope so, but like you I have my opinions.&#13;
76.19 per cent of these longs have been redorded&#13;
and released by him before, and it sure is nice to&#13;
have them all together in this incredible collage,&#13;
but. "Lay, Lady, Lay" falls right between "Don't&#13;
Think Twice" and "Memphis Blues." We all love&#13;
Nashville Skyline and all, but in that vein I rather&#13;
listen to Hank Williams ("my first idol" he says on&#13;
the back of Joan Baez in Concert Part Two) and&#13;
Jimmie Rodgers and lately Kris Kristofferson (in&#13;
that same vague vein.) I mean why not "Chimes of&#13;
Freedom" there instead?&#13;
thru the mad mystic hammering of the wild&#13;
ripping hail&#13;
the sky cracked its poems in naked wonder&#13;
that the clanging of the church bells blew far&#13;
into the breeze&#13;
leaving only bells of lightning and its thunder&#13;
telling for the searching ones, on their&#13;
speechless seeking trail&#13;
wonderful names like Plenty O'Toole and Tiffany&#13;
films, "From Russia With Love", "Dr. No", "Gi&#13;
"Thunderball", "You Only Live Twice", "On Her&#13;
Secret Service", and now, "Diamonds Are Foreve:&#13;
nonsense and like Mother Goose, nonsense has alw;&#13;
kind of addictive fun.&#13;
DIRTY HARRY&#13;
Clint Eastwood&#13;
Andy Robinson&#13;
by Warner Bros.&#13;
DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER&#13;
Sean Connery&#13;
Jill St. John&#13;
by United Artists&#13;
As a reasonably healthy, T-bone fed, young psychopath, I&#13;
would sit emphatically enthralled with those outrageous and&#13;
impossible Bond films; my heart nearly vibrating out of my&#13;
chest as my alter ego gunned, sprayed or eyed his adversaries to&#13;
death . . . his hand ass-patting a volupto-nymph.&#13;
It was fun borrowing that cool smile and ardent stride&#13;
clanking my way down high school corridors letting the fantasy&#13;
mingle with my own juries. That juicv fun returned over&#13;
Christmas recess with the joyous psychopathy of "Diamonds&#13;
are Forever", coming on slightly remodeled, with a returned&#13;
Sean Connery playing a more contemporary and less perfect&#13;
James Bond. Saltzman and Broccoli, producers of the Bond&#13;
syndrome, seem to be accurately guessing their audiences&#13;
again, as we find the hero piling up what looks like the entire Las&#13;
Vegas Police Department in a car chase that rivals any that I've&#13;
seen yet (in sheer madness). There's plenty of simple humor&#13;
made to order for Bond-goers who love the exhilarating speed of&#13;
constant action rather than reflective comedy.&#13;
The film is almost without slory line, making it a simple&#13;
thing to place Ernst Stavro Blofeld and jester Bond in the ring&#13;
and let them fight it out, gimmicking the hell out of each other&#13;
. . .the bell ringing for quickies with those wonderful girls with&#13;
Getting away from total fantasy on the Police&#13;
move to an attempt at seriousness called "Dirty h&#13;
film has received superlative reviews from near]&#13;
who voiced his opinion. At the risk of being risky, I \&#13;
it fell somewhat short of their descriptions.&#13;
There's this Harry Callahan, who carries a mi&#13;
magnum which he asserts as "the most powerful hai&#13;
world" (probably the most unwieldy, too . . • W(&#13;
shown from where he pulls this howitzer). Harry&#13;
with another detective to track down a psychotic kill&#13;
himself Scorpio. The chase is strange enough with se&#13;
before Harry finally catches up with the killer; hi&#13;
tried and is released when it is found that his C(&#13;
Rights have been abused . . . namely the Fourth,&#13;
and Fourteenth Amendments. The film takes a nan&#13;
bureaucratic confusion, and Constitutional tn&#13;
suspects is shown to be too lenient in extreme cases.&#13;
Eventually the killer strikes again, command*&#13;
full of children and its driver — his ransom includes&#13;
an unhampered jet plane flight out of the country. I&#13;
are to be met without interference.&#13;
In full Eastwood style, Callahan goes after&#13;
anyway, jumping on top of the moving bus from an ^&#13;
short chase occurs, the villian is destroyed and&#13;
turns in his star . . ah . . . badge.&#13;
I am growing accustomed to Eastwood an&#13;
because there is but one Eastwood, and ma&#13;
"J, *&#13;
which to put him, the disc-jockey from Play Mis'&#13;
primarily the same man who wields this .44. Wni&#13;
some very nice Fellini-like shots that capture&#13;
camera backing off from a nighttime stadiurr&#13;
standing on Robinson's wounded leg, torturing lr*&#13;
KMO Douglas • open till II ilf T«M SC UIVllN REINCARNATION &#13;
January 17,1972 NEWSCOPE&#13;
he proved to be excellent.&#13;
Jks ago I ran into the Mayor in&#13;
ood, standing in front of his art&#13;
museum. At that time he&#13;
to a Chinese restaurant in&#13;
1 u typical Goray recomhe&#13;
food tasted alright, even&#13;
d&#13;
to see the fine colors. Some of&#13;
ese delicacies are really fark&#13;
I drove my constant comie,&#13;
to Racine to eat at Chiam,&#13;
lvenue. John Goray had batted&#13;
th his 'gourmet" advice, and I&#13;
he would be able to run his&#13;
with a restaurant housed in&#13;
to be a converted appliance&#13;
many other Yankees when I&#13;
nese restaurant. Besides or-&#13;
'• with my meal, I rarely let a&#13;
lout doing a Charlie Char., or&#13;
1 impression.&#13;
reaction is always the same,&#13;
n side to side when I start in&#13;
h0&#13;
?&#13;
inB s&#13;
°™&#13;
Chinese fella will come over and punch me&#13;
ending once and for all my apparent&#13;
disrespect for ttfe immediate surroundings&#13;
• r&#13;
e a s o n&#13;
' on evening we&#13;
visited Chiam, I didn't indulge in the idiocy&#13;
I felt very relaxed and comfortable in the&#13;
restaurant, and the service was so good I&#13;
had no time to slant my eyes at Maggie and&#13;
begin. This ldiosyncracy can be dissected in&#13;
a remote way, only to reveal that this&#13;
Chinese restaurant isn't hoaky in any way&#13;
When the waitress came to take our&#13;
order we were ready. Maggie decided to eat&#13;
steak with pea pods ($3.75). My eyes being&#13;
bigger than her stomach, I urged her to&#13;
order the complete dinner, which costs&#13;
seventy five cents more and includes juice&#13;
or soup, egg foo-young (l), rolls and butter&#13;
dessert. '&#13;
I ordered shrimp egg foo-young, the&#13;
complete dinner. We both chose egg drop&#13;
soup as the first course.&#13;
I noticed the restaurant wasn't full, but&#13;
for a Thursday evening during an economic&#13;
Page 5&#13;
recession, the place was respectably filled. I&#13;
sensed many "regulars" within the bounds&#13;
of the dining area. I was to soon find out how&#13;
easily this place can become a personal&#13;
favorite.&#13;
The food is excellent, or at least it was&#13;
on our visit. Maggie's slices of beef tenderloin&#13;
were large, tender and numerous in&#13;
the large serving of steak and pea pods. The&#13;
rice was very tender, and not starchy, according&#13;
to her.&#13;
My shrimp egg foo-young was fine also.&#13;
There were generous pieces of shrimp in the&#13;
fried patties. I could not lodge a formidable&#13;
complaint at the food I ate at Chiam. Maggie&#13;
and I both enjoyed the entire meal, right&#13;
down to the fortune cookie which told me I&#13;
will someday be wise and prosperous.&#13;
The fortune cookie brought to mind John&#13;
Goray. A few more rough winters, fine&#13;
springs and warm summers and mother&#13;
nature will add another white hair or two,&#13;
and a gruffer mumble-rumble-grumble.&#13;
This will establish Mr. Goray, I'm sure, as&#13;
Kenosha's only artist-sage in residence.&#13;
his&#13;
gly&#13;
;in'&#13;
ain&#13;
ine&#13;
at.&#13;
ar.&#13;
iar&#13;
tor&#13;
A I&#13;
ns.&#13;
led&#13;
to&#13;
ge,&#13;
n't&#13;
tve&#13;
ler&#13;
on&#13;
nd&#13;
(in&#13;
of&#13;
ild&#13;
ar&#13;
er&#13;
sir&#13;
for the lonesome hearted lovers, with too personal&#13;
a tale&#13;
and for each unharmful gentle soul misplaced&#13;
inside a jail&#13;
and we gazed upon the chimes of freedom&#13;
flashing&#13;
Now how do the lyrics of any Nashville Skyline&#13;
song stand up in print? Even though they are&#13;
easier to listen to and even sound so fine, Dylan is&#13;
Dylan. The same goes for "Tonight I'll Be Staying&#13;
Here With You." But I'm forced into humility. The&#13;
collage would be incomplete without something off&#13;
that album. The rest, of course, is awe-inspiring.&#13;
And that something new he's sung, the last five&#13;
songs on the last (fourth) side. "Tomorrow Is a&#13;
Long Time" was published and recorded live in&#13;
1963, unreleased, and it sure belongs here as&#13;
"new." So warm in the face of the fire of genius.&#13;
"When I Paint My Masterpiece," recorded by The&#13;
Band on their new album, is nevertheless Dylan's&#13;
song; and I don't have much to say about it, but&#13;
it's a fine upstanding song. Then the last three,&#13;
recorded in October 1971 with Happy Traum on&#13;
Bass, Banjo, Second Guitar and Vocal Harmony.&#13;
(Never heard of him? Well, he taught me to pick&#13;
my first song "Freight Train" — in a book, I'm&#13;
sorry to say,) he's editor of Sing Out! — the folk&#13;
song magazine published irregularly, and he's&#13;
been pickin' and grinning' 'round Woodstock for a&#13;
long time; he now has an album or two with his&#13;
brother.) And, oh man, it's so fine to know Bob&#13;
Dylan is alive and well. So alive. More alive than&#13;
he's seemed to me in years. "I Shall Be Released"&#13;
is the same song recorded by The Band on their&#13;
first album, but Dylan chopped off the first vers. If&#13;
he had to do it, I at least think it was the right one.&#13;
So it!&#13;
s shorter, but it is, as a friend put it,&#13;
"funkier" (I think that's the same as "more&#13;
alive.") And "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere" is&#13;
changed even more, even to the point of being a&#13;
"new" song. The third verse, for instance, used to&#13;
be (on the Byrds' Sweetheart of the Rodeo, and on&#13;
one of his bootleg albums):&#13;
buy me a flute and a gun that shoots&#13;
tailgates and stubstitutes&#13;
strap yourself to a tree with roots&#13;
you ain't goin' nowhere&#13;
Now it's&#13;
buy me some rings and a gun that sings&#13;
a flute that toots and a bee that stings&#13;
a sky that cries and a bird that flies&#13;
a fish that walks and a dog that talks&#13;
and damned if that don't make me feel better. It's&#13;
the chorus that makes the song, though. Listen to&#13;
it for yourself. Finally, "Down in the Flood". This&#13;
song, too, is a few years old, but (am I being&#13;
redundant?) is alive and well right now in hour&#13;
local neighborhood sounds shop. Well. God bless&#13;
the man and I can't wait for the further adventures&#13;
of.&#13;
I hopped a steamboat back up the mountain and&#13;
sat beneath the tree. I sang a song and sipped a&#13;
Coors and waited for another leaf to fall in the&#13;
Dylan wind.&#13;
Brian Kipp&#13;
Tiffany Case. The&#13;
Jo", "Goldfinger",&#13;
On Her Magesty's&#13;
Forever", are all&#13;
has always beep a&#13;
: Police Parade, we&#13;
'Dirty Harry". The&#13;
m nearly everyone&#13;
•isky, I will say that&#13;
5.&#13;
ies a monstrous .44&#13;
?rful handgun in the&#13;
... we are never&#13;
Harry is assigned&#13;
otic killer who calls&#13;
i with several dying&#13;
iller; he cannot be&#13;
t his Constitutional&#13;
fourth, Fifth, Sixth&#13;
s a hard line on the&#13;
•nal treatment of&#13;
; cases.&#13;
nmandeering a bus&#13;
icludes $200,000 and&#13;
jntry. His demands&#13;
after the madman&#13;
•om an over-head, a&#13;
d and Dirty Harry&#13;
&gt;d and his method&#13;
many situations in&#13;
ay Misty for Me is&#13;
14. While there are&#13;
ipture attention -&#13;
tadium, Eastwood&#13;
ing him into telling&#13;
him where he has hidden a dying girl — the film is an attempt at&#13;
the genre and is successful in that attempt with excellent acting&#13;
on the part of Andy Robinson, whose animal howling was sufficiently&#13;
insane ... but should have fallen on the detective ears&#13;
of someone like Rod Stieger instead of this Hollywood Idol.&#13;
FRENCH CONNECTION&#13;
Gene Hackman&#13;
Roy Schneider&#13;
by 20th Century Fox&#13;
By far the best of the Police Parade, and probably the best&#13;
film I've seen corrje out of 1971, is The French Connection. It is&#13;
stronger than Dirty Harry, in that it neither breaks nor makes&#13;
any heros and refrains from judging this outer world where only&#13;
cops and robbers tread.&#13;
Gene Hackman is as maniacal at getting his portrayal of&#13;
Jimmy Doyle perfect as Doyle is at being a narc. The character&#13;
Doyle is a mirror image of the real life Eddie Egan, little being&#13;
lost in translation as Ernest Tidyman, screenwriter, brought the&#13;
strings together in one of the few overwhelmingly real films that&#13;
I can recall, Hackman's feeling for the art adding the final&#13;
touches so that we can look at the city through Jimmy Doyle's&#13;
eyes.&#13;
A jungle is what we see, everyone predatory. Norman&#13;
Mailer said of this world in 1957 what seems to be the roots of the&#13;
"game" being played in Connection, "Hip is the American&#13;
Existentialist way to live. The psychopathic brilliance of hipster&#13;
style is modeled on the black experience. The negro has the&#13;
simplist of alternatives live a life of constant humility or everthreatening&#13;
danger ... to survive he must remain cool stay on&#13;
top of life at every threatening moment and live 'the enormous&#13;
present'."&#13;
We can see both sides in their psychopathic clarity in&#13;
Connection as Doyle and Russo discover 60 keys of skag imported&#13;
in a Lincoln Continental. The characters, setting and&#13;
situation is absolutely real demonstrating the negative and&#13;
positive of the entire other world of crime and its control. This&#13;
film is one that everyone should see. . . that's my opinion.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
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"WINGS WILD LIFE" — $3.85&#13;
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"CAROLE KING MUSIC" — $3.85&#13;
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"BLACK OAK ARKANSAS" — $3.85&#13;
George Harrison&#13;
"CONCERT FOR BENGLA DESH" — $12.88&#13;
Rolling Stones&#13;
"STONES GREATEST HITS" (Double) — $7.40&#13;
Emerson, Lake and Palmer&#13;
"LIVE "PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION " — $3.85 &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE January 17,1972&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
TITLE: The Ra Expeditions&#13;
AUTHOR: Thor Heyerdahl&#13;
PUBLISHER: Doubleday &amp; C ompany,&#13;
Inc. ($10.00)&#13;
It's been an unusual week. On the day&#13;
I lost my job, I set sail from Safi on a&#13;
papyrus raft, eighth imaginary crew&#13;
member on a crew of seven. Thor&#13;
Heyerdahl, our captain, told me that&#13;
the raft was originally designed some&#13;
5,000 years ago. We were sailing to&#13;
Barbados to show people that the ancient&#13;
Phoenicians and Egyptians could&#13;
have landed in the Americas millenia&#13;
before Christo Columbo. The voyage&#13;
helped to pass the time while I waited&#13;
for my first unemployment check.&#13;
The Ra Expeditions is a fascinating&#13;
340 page anthropological travel book&#13;
that describes the preparations for, and&#13;
voyages of the Ra and Ra II. It is just&#13;
chock full to the gills with all sorts of&#13;
little known facts about ancient&#13;
civilizations, that, when put into the&#13;
modern perspective of the Ra voyages,&#13;
give them a life and meaning which&#13;
make anthropology and history exciting&#13;
to the uninitiated reader. Ra&#13;
delves back millenia: Heyerdahl flies&#13;
into the past on a four cylinder bird and&#13;
floats out on a paper raft, leaving his&#13;
imaginary crew members intrigued.&#13;
The whole point of the voyages was to&#13;
show that ancient Phoenician and&#13;
Egyptian sailors could have colonized&#13;
South America, just as they did the&#13;
North African coast. During his travels&#13;
in Mexico, Africa, and Egypt Heyerdahl&#13;
had discovered startling&#13;
similarities between the artifacts left&#13;
behind by the ancient civilizations: Sun&#13;
worshiping, pyramid building, the fact&#13;
that ancient Aztec and Inca legend had&#13;
A few weeks too late, and the hurricane&#13;
season would be in full swing on the&#13;
American side of the Atlantic.&#13;
The first Ra fell apart 200 miles off&#13;
the coast of Barbados after weathering&#13;
squalls, high seas, broken rudders and&#13;
Sharks. It fell apart because the&#13;
BOOK&#13;
indicated that "white men with beards"&#13;
had taught their prehistoric ancestors,&#13;
the Olmecs, almost everything they&#13;
knew. Heyerdahl wanted to show that&#13;
the "white men with beards" of 5,000&#13;
years ago could have come from the&#13;
Mediterranean civilizations.&#13;
Building the Ra was a race against&#13;
time. Heyerdahl had to locate someone&#13;
capable of building a raft from papyrus&#13;
reeds (finally discovered in Chad), he&#13;
had to build it in the desert next to the&#13;
Pyramids, in order to obtain enough&#13;
reed, then transport the completed raft&#13;
to a port on the ocean, while at the same&#13;
time assembling an international crew.&#13;
builders and crew of the raft failed to&#13;
understand a seemingly minor detail in&#13;
the drawing of the raft, which they&#13;
copied from the walls of an Egyptian&#13;
pyramid.&#13;
A few months later Ra II was completed,&#13;
this time built exactly as the&#13;
drawings depicted. In 57 days Ra II&#13;
reached Bridgetown, Barbados, having&#13;
drifted on prevailing currents for 3,200&#13;
miles. Heyerdahl again asks if a crew&#13;
of inexperienced sailors could cross the&#13;
Atlantic, why not an experienced crew&#13;
of Phoenicans or Egyptians, using the&#13;
same raft.&#13;
Ever tye humanist, Heyredahl points&#13;
Ripon Society Opposes&#13;
Child Care Centers&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS)&#13;
— The self-pronounced liberal&#13;
Ripon Society recently praised'&#13;
President Nixon's veto of the&#13;
legislation that would have set&#13;
up child care centers across the&#13;
nation.&#13;
In the January issue of its&#13;
magazine the society said the&#13;
Democrats have no idea of the&#13;
costs and needs involved in antipoverty&#13;
programs. Additionally,&#13;
the society said the&#13;
child care plan erred because it&#13;
would have sent women into the&#13;
labor market in a time of high&#13;
unemployment.&#13;
out that the Ra is an "experiment&#13;
within an experiment". He often&#13;
relegates the Ra to the position of a&#13;
sociological microcosm, indicating that&#13;
if an international crew of seven men,&#13;
speaking seven different languages,&#13;
praying to seven different gods, etc.,&#13;
could manage to cross the Atlantic&#13;
without murdering each other, why&#13;
then can't, and you know the rest.&#13;
An interesting, and famous discovery&#13;
was made by the Ra, as it drifted its&#13;
way to Barbados. Seems there's oil&#13;
slicks in the middle of the ocean these&#13;
days. Except for this condition of&#13;
modern times, Heyerdahl comes to feel&#13;
a kinship with the ancient sailros of the&#13;
Mediterranean, this was their raft, the&#13;
provisions were the same as theirs,&#13;
packed away in the same type of earthen&#13;
jars, the only thing the ancients&#13;
lacked seemed to be the oil slicks.&#13;
In addition to the text, a multitude of&#13;
photographs is included in The Ra&#13;
Expeditions. The quality of the photos&#13;
reminds me of "National Geographic",&#13;
and really helps to justify the high price&#13;
of the book.&#13;
Ra is an extremely interesting book,&#13;
one from which you can learn a lot&#13;
about little known things, and one from&#13;
which you can gain a new perspective&#13;
and respect for the kind of man who&#13;
lived 5,000 years ago.&#13;
Courtesy of t he Book Mark, 622 - 59th&#13;
St., Kenosha.&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
FREE&#13;
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310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
'/a Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
ump&#13;
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DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
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Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
1»IZZAt&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue K enosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days o week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
m,&#13;
if&#13;
FOR SALE — acoustic 120 guitar&#13;
amp, Traynor PA system with&#13;
mikes, Ludwig double bass drum&#13;
set. Must be sold soon — drafted.&#13;
657-9392 after 6 p.m.&#13;
FOR SALE — Skis and ski rack.&#13;
Head standards 6'1". Good condition.&#13;
652-7242.&#13;
HELP WANTED — Bartenders,&#13;
waitresses and go go girls full or&#13;
part time. Racine 632-3785. Afternoons&#13;
or nights.&#13;
FOR SALE — Wig - dark brown,&#13;
human hair, very long. Call ext.&#13;
2412,8:00-4:30; or 654-2017 after 5:00.&#13;
Ask for Wilma.&#13;
FOR SALE — Snowmobile - Bolens&#13;
Husky Sprint. Brand new 18 hp. List&#13;
$795. Sell for $625. Won in a raffle.&#13;
Phone 652-2538 after 12 noon.&#13;
ROOMMATE WANTED—Two girls&#13;
need third to share large 3 bedroom&#13;
apartment (furnished) on North side&#13;
of Kenosha. $43 per month (utilities&#13;
included). Call Judy or Roxanne,&#13;
658-3998.&#13;
k&#13;
| j + f purcKasea «-&#13;
T&#13;
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I S22-5&lt;?*St.&#13;
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MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE &#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
With two additional losses&#13;
Parkside's basketball squad&#13;
now has a 1-11 r ecord.&#13;
UW-Platteville routed the&#13;
Rangers 92-76 at Memorial Hall&#13;
and then the Rangers traveled&#13;
to Chicago where they absorbed&#13;
a 77-76 defeat at the hands of St.&#13;
Xavier.&#13;
In the Platteville game, the&#13;
Rangers fell behind 45-33 at the&#13;
half and were outscored by four&#13;
in the second half.&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, top scorer&#13;
for Parkside this season, led the&#13;
January 17,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Mark Peck, Parkside rolled to a&#13;
42-30 ha lf-time lead.&#13;
Tom Joyce was a key factor&#13;
for Parkside in the fine first half&#13;
showing as he drilled in 15&#13;
points. He could not keep up&#13;
that scoring pace in the second&#13;
half as Xavier held him to a&#13;
mere two points the rest of the&#13;
way.&#13;
Xavier forced Parkside into a&#13;
running game for a stretch of&#13;
about eight minutes in the&#13;
second half, and it was that&#13;
period, more than anything&#13;
futile and the story was the&#13;
same again — an other loss.&#13;
In coming so close to victory&#13;
because of a strong comeback it&#13;
is clear that the Rangers have&#13;
not given up.&#13;
It is true, however, that the&#13;
prospects for significant im*&#13;
provement in the won-loss mark&#13;
are dim.&#13;
With games against the&#13;
University of Missouri-St.&#13;
Louis, Southern Illinois&#13;
University-Edwardsville, and&#13;
Indiana State UniversityRangers&#13;
Lose to Platteville, Xavier&#13;
Rangers with 25 points. Fifteen&#13;
of Chambliss's points came at&#13;
the foul line where the former&#13;
Racine Park ace dropped in all&#13;
15 of his attempts.&#13;
Tom Joyce put in 16 points,&#13;
while Dennis Routheaux had 14&#13;
and Tom Heller 13.&#13;
Bow in Chicago&#13;
Next for the Rangers was a&#13;
match with St. Xavier in&#13;
Chicago, a team that split with&#13;
Parkside last season.&#13;
In the first game of the 1970-71&#13;
campaign the Rangers dropped&#13;
a 111-97 affair to the&#13;
Chicagoans. Later in the season&#13;
the Rangers avenged that&#13;
setback by turning in a strong&#13;
second half to defeat the&#13;
Cougars 112-79.&#13;
The first Xavier game turned&#13;
out to be a good one this season&#13;
but unfortunately it proved to be&#13;
yet another defeat for Parkside&#13;
in this dismal year.&#13;
Strengthened by the addition&#13;
of second semester eligibles&#13;
Tom Joyce, Bob Popp and&#13;
else, that proved fatal.&#13;
When Xavier's Bernard&#13;
Redfield scored a lay-up after&#13;
the ball had been pirated from&#13;
the Rangers, the hustling&#13;
Cougars took the lead for good&#13;
at 57-55.&#13;
Parkside did not give up.&#13;
Despite the fact that the Xavier&#13;
team rolled to a 73-62 le ad the&#13;
determined Rangers were able&#13;
to make a game of it.&#13;
The gap was closed to 76-74&#13;
with 45 seconds left in the&#13;
contest when Mike Joyce&#13;
scored.&#13;
Pat Divine then converted the&#13;
front end of a bonus situation to&#13;
give the Chicago squad a 77-74&#13;
advantage.&#13;
Popp tipped the ball in,&#13;
pulling the Rangers to within&#13;
one at 77-76.&#13;
Time was running out but the&#13;
Rangers got a last chance when&#13;
Xavier turned the ball over.&#13;
Getting close to the basket,&#13;
Parkside had four tip-in opportunities&#13;
but they were all&#13;
Winter Sports are&#13;
on the Road Again&#13;
All University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
winter sports teams&#13;
will be on the road this weekend&#13;
and although the basketball&#13;
squad is idle, it will swing back&#13;
into action Tuesday at Milton.&#13;
Track Coach Bob Lawson will&#13;
take three Rangers to the&#13;
National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics championships&#13;
at Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Likely to make the trip for the&#13;
Rangers are distancemen Rudy&#13;
Alvarez and Lucian Rosa and&#13;
walker Mike De Witt. Alvarez,&#13;
the freshman out of Horlick who&#13;
'placed 15th in the national cross&#13;
country race last fall and&#13;
earned all-American honors, is&#13;
rated a good bet for a place by&#13;
his coaches while Rosa, the&#13;
barefoot flash from Ceylon, is&#13;
adjusting to the indoor running&#13;
and will join Alvarez in the two&#13;
mile at the NAIA.&#13;
De Witt, a Kenosha senior&#13;
who's made a habit of walking&#13;
his way to a number of wins and&#13;
school records, is entered in the&#13;
two mile walk.&#13;
Coach Dave Donaldson's&#13;
gymnasts will begin their 1972&#13;
action at the Titan Invitational&#13;
in Oshkosh Saturday. Eight&#13;
Rangers are entered in the&#13;
meet, which also includes&#13;
Chicago, Northern Iowa,&#13;
Northern Michigan, St. Cloud&#13;
and UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
Key men for Donaldson are&#13;
senior captain Warren&#13;
McGiilivray and sophomore&#13;
Dan Boswein, both all-around&#13;
men. Joining them in the&#13;
competition will be Mike Monti&#13;
on the high bar and rings, Kevin&#13;
O'Neil on the parallel bars, side&#13;
horse and rings and Wayne&#13;
DuQuoine on the rings and free&#13;
exercise.&#13;
Newcomers this semester&#13;
whom Donaldson is counting on&#13;
include Kerry Pfeifer on the&#13;
•vault, Keiley Carney on the&#13;
parallel bars and side horse and&#13;
in free exercise and Rick&#13;
Bedore on the side horse.&#13;
Coach Jim Koch's wrestlers,&#13;
fresh from a swing through the&#13;
south where they met Southwestern&#13;
Louisiana and&#13;
Louisiana State, head for&#13;
Charleston, 111., Saturday where&#13;
they'll meet Ball State and&#13;
Eastern Illinois in a double dual&#13;
meet.&#13;
Probable lineup for Koch was&#13;
Frank Velasquez at, 118; Rick&#13;
Mauldin at 126; Bill West or Ken&#13;
Martin at 134; Martin or Kyle&#13;
Barnes at 142; Jeff Jenkins at&#13;
150; Ron Adams at 158; Tom&#13;
Beyer at 167; Rick Shoeffler at&#13;
177; Mark Barnhill at 190; and&#13;
Steve Sulk at heavyweight.&#13;
The UW-Parkside fencers will&#13;
face off against rugged Cornell&#13;
and Illinois-Chicago Circle&#13;
Saturday at Chicago. Heading&#13;
the list of Loran Hein's entries&#13;
are John Tank in foil; Pete&#13;
Shemanske in sabre and John&#13;
Hanzalik in epee.&#13;
The basketball squad will&#13;
face Milton College at Milton&#13;
Tuesday night, Jan. 25, as three&#13;
newly-eligible players, Mark&#13;
Peck, Tom Joyce and Bob Popp,&#13;
are expected to give Steve&#13;
Stephens cagers some bench&#13;
strength and reverse the tides of&#13;
the season's first half which saw&#13;
them go 1-10.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
Evansville coming up, the&#13;
chances for a victory are not&#13;
great. To compound the&#13;
problem the latter two games&#13;
are on the road.&#13;
Later on in the season, on&#13;
Feb. 8, Parkside plays UW-M at&#13;
the Arena in Milwaukee.&#13;
Recently UW-M demolished the&#13;
Rangers in the friendly confines&#13;
of Memorial Hall.&#13;
Chances at the Arena for the&#13;
Rangers are greatly minimized&#13;
especially in the light of t he fact&#13;
that UW-M scored an impressive&#13;
88-77 win over&#13;
Southern Illinois UniversityCarbondale&#13;
at the Milwaukee&#13;
Arena. Yes, that is the same&#13;
school that defeated Marquette&#13;
in the finals of the N.I.T.&#13;
tournament in 1967. They had a&#13;
player by the name of Walt&#13;
Frazier that yeaf.&#13;
Clearly, Parkside is not&#13;
taking the easy way out in&#13;
scheduling and as a result&#13;
numerous defeats are&#13;
inevitable.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racipe&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
JAN. 14 - WRESTLING at Southwest Louisiana .&#13;
Lafayette, La.&#13;
JAN. 15 - WREST:OMG at Louisiana State, Baton&#13;
Rouge, La.; BASKETBALL vs. Missouri-St.&#13;
Louis, Memorial Hall, Racine, 8 p.m.; FENCING&#13;
vs. Minnesota, Chicago, Iowa State, St.&#13;
Thomas at Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
JAN. 14-15 - HOCKEY CLUB at Drake University,&#13;
Des Moines, la.&#13;
JAN. 17 - BASKETBALL at Southern Illinois,&#13;
Edwardsville.&#13;
JAN. 18 - BASLETBA:: at Omdoama State,&#13;
Evansville.&#13;
U.W P. Student Activities&#13;
presents&#13;
BUDDAH RECORDING ARTISTS&#13;
&amp; WOODSTOCK ATTRACTION&#13;
N A N A&#13;
Sun. Feb.6 8PM&#13;
BRADFORD H.S. AUDITORIUM&#13;
U.W.P. Students $3 50 with fee card (limit 2 per card)&#13;
General Admission $4.00&#13;
Student Activities Office- Tallent Hall&#13;
j-|Jxr&gt;l~M~W~lil~M-W~«~|-|&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
i , lh C,ROUND BF.F.F&#13;
ON F'RFNCH CRUST&#13;
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WITH CRISP&#13;
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URII.l.FP COUNTRY&#13;
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A TRIPI.F DFC.KFR OF BURC.FR, CHFFSF&#13;
BACON I.FTTUCF TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISF ON TOAST 90c&#13;
THE RA NCH&#13;
N O R T H 331 1 S HE RI D AN R O AD S O U T H 7 5 00 SH ER I D A N R O AD&#13;
put your&#13;
under our&#13;
wings&#13;
1 1 1 I I I N I K I MINU S I&#13;
s M 1 ^ 1 4&#13;
mmm Downtown Kenoshu&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sixes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16" §&#13;
§ ALSO ^&#13;
4 . RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN *&#13;
f GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA I&#13;
J . SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
§ CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY &lt;&#13;
A "YOU RING . . . WE BRING" |&#13;
§ 657-9843 or \ f 658-4922&#13;
Service Center&#13;
245 Tallent Hall&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Doris Lantz, Representative&#13;
Home Office&#13;
25A A. W. Peterson Bldg.&#13;
750 University Ave.&#13;
Madison, Wis. 53706&#13;
CREDIT UNION &#13;
Page8 NEWSCOPE January 17,1972&#13;
by Fred Noer, Jr., of the Newscope staff&#13;
A short time ago in The Kenosha News, Sports&#13;
Editor Jim Kornkven, prompted by Parkside's&#13;
100-56 l oss to UW-Milwaukee, wrote an article&#13;
about Parkside's basketball team entitled,&#13;
"Parkside: play game or quit." Known as Kornkie's&#13;
Column, in it he said Parkside must decide&#13;
to play basketball seriously, i.e., get money to&#13;
recruit good players so Parkside has a respectable&#13;
team and win-loss record, or terminate the sport&#13;
altogether. KornkvPn also attacked Coach Steve&#13;
. Stephens' methods of scheduling and lack of&#13;
school and community support.&#13;
Reading Kornkie's Column one gets the impression&#13;
that Kornkven is really slapping Coach&#13;
play? Here is where Stephens answers questions&#13;
about the Rangers' basketball scheduling, keeping&#13;
in mind the name of the university. Athletics is one&#13;
important means of promoting a university.&#13;
Parkside's philosophy about scheduling is to play&#13;
schools of like philosophy and in similar situations&#13;
that will give Parkside a reputable standing.&#13;
Coach Stephens completely agrees with&#13;
Parkside's scheduling policies, but still he is given&#13;
total freedom when laying out a schedule.&#13;
But Coach Stephens is optimistic. A man full&#13;
of ideas, a lack of funds keeps his hands tied until&#13;
next year when the new athletics building is&#13;
completed. He feels the new facility will provide a&#13;
new image which will encourage student support,&#13;
Want t o Stop Smoking?&#13;
Parkside Professor William Morrow and a few advanced&#13;
psychology students are offering a program to help Parkside&#13;
students who wish to stop smoking cigarettes.&#13;
The program involves meeting with one of the staff of the&#13;
program a few times a week for 2 to 5 weeks. It's FREE to all&#13;
Parkside students although a limited number of applications will&#13;
be accepted. New variations of previously used procedures which&#13;
have shown a high success rate will be used.&#13;
If you wish to participate:&#13;
Pick up registration forms at Tallent Hall Library Main Desk.&#13;
Quitters Never Win&#13;
Stephens and the Parkside Athletics Department&#13;
in the face and there is nothing they can do about&#13;
it. Sure, Coach Stephens could continue and make&#13;
it into a controversial issue.&#13;
But he sees the article in a different light — an&#13;
expression of Kornkven's opinion. Stephens says&#13;
Kornkven is making his own judgments which is a&#13;
good form of criticism, unfavorable now, but will&#13;
help to open a few people's eyes in the future.&#13;
How does Stephens explain the ill-matched&#13;
comparison to UW-M? He states simply that it is&#13;
all a question of money. At UW-M the money&#13;
comes from the students in the form of a selfimposed&#13;
mandatory activity fee amounting to $15&#13;
per semester. Figuring UW-M has approximately&#13;
22,000 students, it is clear to see why UW-M has a&#13;
fine representative basketball team. Money talks.&#13;
On the other hand, Parkside, a school of 4,500&#13;
students, has no guaranteed source of athletics&#13;
money (a student activity fee) to match the&#13;
mature, near-professionalism of UW-M, a 75-&#13;
years-old, well-established school. Stephens must&#13;
rely on the Parkside 200 Club, a group of Kenosha&#13;
businessmen interested in Parkside's future, for&#13;
his monetary main stream for recruitment. As a&#13;
result, only three players were given the cost of&#13;
two semesters' tuition (about $500), and the rest of&#13;
his team consisted of students who just wanted to&#13;
play.&#13;
If Parkside has no "scholarships", then why&#13;
vital to a prospering athletics program, particularly&#13;
basketball. As with just about everything&#13;
on campus, the students hold the key to the door of&#13;
success for all of the athletics teams, not just&#13;
basketball. Stephens would like to see the students&#13;
adopt a policy of paying an activity fee of $10 each&#13;
semester to be spent on the athletics program.&#13;
Then there would be a definite sum of $45,000 that&#13;
would be easily accessible to help the athletics&#13;
department get some direction. Planning for the&#13;
future becomes difficult when the department&#13;
does not know for sure the origin of the next&#13;
money.&#13;
In the meantime, Coach Stephens is immensely&#13;
satisfied with his players' performances,&#13;
realizing that they are going through the building&#13;
stages. He says they are putting forth a very good&#13;
effort for which he has an infinite amount of&#13;
respect because his team has had to face some&#13;
strong teams.&#13;
Stephens, a man accustomed to winning, said&#13;
this season is not going to let him down and he&#13;
must maintain a positive attitude. He sees making&#13;
fine progress next year by providing a quality&#13;
program, staffed by an athletic department full of&#13;
forward-minded people. Building on a sound basis,&#13;
Coach Stephens looks ahead to the future and says,&#13;
"I'd like to give the students something to be&#13;
proud of."&#13;
Seswincf the tf-inedt&#13;
Piffla &amp; 9talum Qotxk&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 656-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
WATCHES PERFUMES&#13;
Rolex - Accutron&#13;
UltrachrOn - Longine&#13;
Bulova • Movtdo&#13;
Caravelle - Timex&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
Frar.ce's&#13;
Finest -&#13;
Perfume* and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
5617 et* Ave.&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
% D iscount to students and F aculty with i'. q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Reed &amp; Rarton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon • Orrefor*&#13;
Seneca - Lalique&#13;
Royal Worcester&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents a weekend of entertainment&#13;
First Nightclub of the Spring Semester&#13;
an evening of&#13;
B E E R&#13;
BLUES&#13;
Johnny Young&#13;
and his&#13;
Chicago Blues Band&#13;
9PM-1AM Adm $1.50&#13;
Student Activities-Building -&#13;
UWP &amp; Wis. I.D. required&#13;
Friday, January 21 Saturday, January 22 </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 2, January 17, 1972</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63602">
              <text>1972-01-17</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63605">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63606">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63607">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63608">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63609">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63610">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="200">
      <name>dean loumos</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="153">
      <name>marc eisen</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
