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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 5</text>
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            <text>Dremel, Koser Resign from SGA</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Dremel, Koser Resign from&#13;
Loumos Wants Union Board&#13;
to Run Activities Building&#13;
Jniversify of Wisconsin - Parkside fI"®©&#13;
Volume 6 Number 5 February 7,1972&#13;
ministraters and alumni.&#13;
Loumos told the audience,&#13;
"We can establish by ourselves&#13;
how we would like the building&#13;
to be run. Then we have to deny&#13;
any other source of control the&#13;
right to make the rules and&#13;
regulations.&#13;
"What are we really asking&#13;
for — something that has never&#13;
been done before?" he asked,&#13;
"No. I think one of the things we&#13;
should ask for is a temporary&#13;
Student Union Board to oversee&#13;
the operation of the building&#13;
until such time as the Student&#13;
Union is built."&#13;
According to the moderator of&#13;
the program, Student Senator&#13;
Jerry Murphy, the Union won't&#13;
be completed till the fall of 1974.&#13;
Loumos said further that the&#13;
next Director of Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises should be named by&#13;
this temporary Board.&#13;
"Why can't this be done&#13;
here?" he asked, "we get some&#13;
jive about state funds being&#13;
involved, and how hard they&#13;
fought for us to get beer on&#13;
campus. Apparently, to get beer&#13;
on this campus, they gave away&#13;
our rights and established all&#13;
sorts of rules and strict&#13;
regulations which are impossible&#13;
to enforce."&#13;
He asserted, "I think we all&#13;
can agree that this place could&#13;
be run differently, and maybe it.&#13;
will be eventyally. But, I don't&#13;
think you have to wait. I'm not&#13;
going to.&#13;
"I think we should act like&#13;
this building is ours," he said.&#13;
"I think we should start doing&#13;
things here that have never&#13;
been done before. I think you&#13;
should do whatever you want to&#13;
do, and not wait for somebody to&#13;
tell you it's alright now."&#13;
He concluded by saying&#13;
another meeting to discuss the&#13;
Activities Building would be&#13;
held Wednesday, February 9,&#13;
and that as for now, SGA had&#13;
bought two half barrels of beer&#13;
for Student consumption.&#13;
by Larry Jones of the Newscope staff&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) meeting of Thursday,&#13;
February 3, reminded me very little of a&#13;
significent news story, or, to put it another way,&#13;
treasurer Dan Trotter had the right idea when he&#13;
dozed off half-way through It.&#13;
Not that it was really their fault, mind you. It&#13;
was just one of those meetings . . .&#13;
Of greatest interest was SGA's reaction to the&#13;
all student meeting they sponsored earlier in the&#13;
day at the activities building (see separate story).&#13;
Student Union Committee chairman Jerry Mury&#13;
and VP Bruce Volpintesta were pleased with the&#13;
general reaction, and felt Wednesday's open&#13;
meeting would be even more successful because&#13;
more students would hav heard about it ant take&#13;
interest. Two half-barrels of free beer (which were&#13;
provided by SGA) will usually generate a good&#13;
deal of interest. Murphy, however, was disappointed&#13;
with the written response he received. He&#13;
asked students to write down complaints and&#13;
suggestions about the Activities Building, but got&#13;
only six responses. "We will need much more than&#13;
this to show administration' people that we have&#13;
student support," he said.&#13;
Also on the subject of the Activities Building,&#13;
the senate authorized president Dean Loumos to&#13;
send a letter to administration officials involved in&#13;
the operation of the SAB, requesting that a&#13;
"Temporary Student Union Board be established&#13;
state aids may be barred from juniors and seniors&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the Newscope staff&#13;
While Parkside is making 30 per cent more financial aid&#13;
available to students than it did one year ago, an effort is underway&#13;
which would affect the disposition of state grants so that they would&#13;
primarily benefit underclassmen. A few months ago, Jan Ocker,&#13;
Director of Financial Aids and Placement, informed Newscope&#13;
that $550,000 from federal, state and private sources is available to&#13;
Parkside students this school year. Of this sum, federal funding&#13;
accounts for $210,000, private sources make available $38,000, and&#13;
state grants and loans total a whopping $212,000. $73,500 in state&#13;
grants and scholarships is the amount which is most directly affected&#13;
by the changes in disposition.&#13;
In recent weeks Newscope has learned that the Higher&#13;
Educational Aids Board (HEAB) has taken it upon itself to change&#13;
the rules that affect the disposition of financial aids. Such rules will&#13;
probably not go into effect until the fall of 1972.&#13;
The proposed change in financial aids rules represents one&#13;
effect of the recent merger. The UW System Executive Council of&#13;
Chancellors discussed the financial aids question first in its&#13;
January 6 meeting. The Council had been informed that an HEAB&#13;
committee was considering rule changes that would: (1) make&#13;
need the sole rather than the primary criterion in awarding grants&#13;
(2) limit all state aid to freshmen and sophomores, cutting junior&#13;
and seniors off from such assistance (3) require the campuses to&#13;
allocate non-state aid, (federal and private sources) on the same&#13;
basis as they had before, thereby continuing their past "level of&#13;
effort" with non-state funds.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie was asked to draft a position paper&#13;
delineating the Executive Council's views toward the rule changes.&#13;
Wyllie presented the paper to the HEAB advisory committee&#13;
meeting in Madison on January 10.&#13;
In his testimony, Wyllie said, "we are sympathetic to the social&#13;
and educational goals that the HEAB committee has in mind, but&#13;
we question how helpful rigid rules would be in reaching these&#13;
goals. Obviously the neediest students should get the most help, but&#13;
that can be accomplished by making need the primary rather than&#13;
the sole factor in determining eligibility. We think students who&#13;
have need should have it considered through all four years. It is no&#13;
great favor to a disadvantaged student to bring him in under this&#13;
program and abandon him in his junior and senior years."&#13;
Wyllie added that he was also concerned about the administrative.&#13;
.confusion that would arise if aid from non-state&#13;
sources was brought under state rules. Presently federal rules set&#13;
forth guidelines for federal assistance, and private sources are&#13;
disposed of in accordance with the donor's wishes.&#13;
During his testimony before the HEAB advisory committee,&#13;
the chancellor noted that the concentration of all financial aid in the&#13;
freshman and sophomore years would have different effects on the&#13;
various campuses, because the percentage of upper and under&#13;
classmen varies. In Madison 56 per cent of the undergraduate&#13;
students are juniors and seniors, while in Green Bay and Parkside&#13;
only 32 per cent rank in that category. Wyllie stated that "we think&#13;
it would be better to allow some flexibility, and not tie the institutions&#13;
to a rule that would concentrate all state aid in the first&#13;
two years."&#13;
Though the Executive Council supports the idea of giving&#13;
substantial aid to freshmen and sophomores, it does not favor a&#13;
system under which juniors and seniors would be completely cut off&#13;
from state grants. Such a situation would force upper classmen to&#13;
take out loans.&#13;
As a result of the January 10 HEAB advisory committee&#13;
meeting, it was decided to recommend a formula under which 70&#13;
per cent of state aid would go to underclassmen in the 1972-73 school&#13;
year, and 80 per cent in the 1973-74 year and thereafter. The committee&#13;
will also recommend that need be the primary but not sole&#13;
factor in determining grant eligibility. On the issue of the administration&#13;
of non-state aid, the committee agreed not to make a&#13;
recommendation that would require the institutions to maintain&#13;
their past "level of effort" with federal and private funds.&#13;
"What we have gained," Wyllie said, "is an opportunity for&#13;
input before the rules are finally drawn, and a chance for direct&#13;
communication between the chancellors and the HEAB staff and&#13;
advisory committee."&#13;
After a meeting of the Executive Council on February 3, there&#13;
will be a public meeting on the proposed rule changes before HEAB&#13;
on February 24. Final Board action will occur on February 25.&#13;
to: 1) change the name of the SAB to the Temporary&#13;
Student Union; 5) oversee the operations of&#13;
said TSU until such a time as the final Student&#13;
Union is completed and a Student Union Board is&#13;
established; and c) search for, screen and approve&#13;
the hiring of the next director of Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises." Copies of the letter will also be sent&#13;
to Chancellor Wyllie, UW president John Weaver,&#13;
and Governor Pat Lucey.&#13;
In other business, Loumos noted that SGA is&#13;
working closely with the Faculty Bookstore&#13;
Committee in collecting complaints about the&#13;
Bookstore. From the stack he produced, it seemed&#13;
obvious they are having no difficulty at all&#13;
soliciting such complaints from students, faculty,&#13;
publishers and other bookstores. Loumos and&#13;
senator Jim Bielefelt were unanimously approved&#13;
by the senate to fill student positions on the FBC.&#13;
PSGA then regretfully accepted the&#13;
resignation of recording secretary Jeanette&#13;
Dremel who cited inconvenient meeting times as&#13;
her reason for leaving. Her resignation leaves&#13;
three posts vacant, as corresponding secretary&#13;
Dan Koser recently decided he did not have&#13;
enough time for; the job, and senator Jim De Berg&#13;
transferred to another school.&#13;
Loumos also made a plea to senators to do&#13;
anything they could to help the SGA sponsored&#13;
Day Care Center which is in desperate need of&#13;
both volunteers and money.&#13;
HEAB Favors&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Stu den t G o ver n m ent&#13;
President Dean Loumos,&#13;
speaking last Thursday before a&#13;
noon hour audience at the&#13;
Student Activities Building,&#13;
called for the establishment of a&#13;
Temporary Student Union&#13;
board to oversee the operations&#13;
of the building.&#13;
Since the recent resignation&#13;
of the Director of Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises, Verne Martinez,&#13;
the building is reportedly being&#13;
managed on a temporary basis&#13;
by William Niebuhr and Dave&#13;
Bishop of the Student Affairs&#13;
Office.&#13;
Loumos asked, in addition,&#13;
that the next Auxiliary Enterprises&#13;
Director be named by&#13;
the temporary Union Board.&#13;
Membership of Student Union&#13;
Boards usually consists of&#13;
students, faculty, adCentralization&#13;
of Financial Aids &#13;
I'age 2 NEWSCOPE February 7,1972&#13;
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AFFILIATED WITH A MAJOR&#13;
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General anesthesia is usetj for&#13;
patient comfort.&#13;
Low costs of abortion procedures:&#13;
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Pregnancy&#13;
up to 10 wks., D &amp; C, $150&#13;
up to 14 wks., D &amp; C, $250&#13;
14-24 weeks, Saline or&#13;
Mechanical Induction $400&#13;
In all cases over 10 weeks&#13;
pregnancy, Wickersham's medical&#13;
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overnight hospital stays.&#13;
Free professional services&#13;
available to abortion patients&#13;
include psychiatric counseling,&#13;
family planning and birth control.&#13;
No referral needed. No&#13;
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No red tape.&#13;
DIRECT SERVICE LINE&#13;
TO MEDICAL CENTER&#13;
(212) PLaza 5-6805&#13;
Call 8 AM to 8 PM&#13;
Mondays through Saturdays&#13;
foitoRIAL&#13;
It has been abnormal at Parkside for Student Government, or,&#13;
for that matter, any student organization to be successful in its&#13;
programs. Rather, the norm has been inaction and ineptitude, and,&#13;
subsequently, an unarticulated student voice.&#13;
Student Government has changed this. It h as become a functional&#13;
body capable of formulating a program, and capable of instituting&#13;
a program. The voter registration booth at registration,&#13;
the $4,000 in funds for student organizations it secured, the Book Coop,&#13;
and the Child Day Care bare witness to this. Hopefully, their&#13;
investigation of the Activities Building will be as successful.&#13;
In brief, Student Government has established itself. It has&#13;
made itself credible — no small task when its handicaps are&#13;
examined: a legacy of student apathy and complacency, an administration&#13;
that was used to wielding its power in a near vacuum,&#13;
a Constitutional Committee that labored for six months to produce&#13;
a mediocre document, an initial student government whose&#13;
ineptitude was complete.&#13;
Yet Student Government has reached a level of success;&#13;
despite that many of the Senators are young and inexperienced;&#13;
despite no candidates at all ran for one of the executive positions.&#13;
Credit for this success must go to those SGA leaders who have&#13;
shown initiative and dedication in their work. Dean Loumos, the&#13;
President of SGA, deserves special praise. His approach of&#13;
revolutionary rhetoric mixed with a positive program, along with&#13;
the unusual combination of idealism, pragmatism, naivete and&#13;
cynicism has proved to be successful.&#13;
His approach has been demonstrated to be a correct one, while&#13;
the approach of the preceding president's, a policy of accommodation&#13;
and cooperation with the Administration, has proved&#13;
a failure —the positive success' of his administration were nil.&#13;
Student Government has gained a momentum. Its leaders have&#13;
been fueled by the belief that Parkside students aren't really&#13;
apathetic; that if the students are presented with the proper&#13;
program they will respond — mark the $1,200 in sales at the Book&#13;
Co-op.&#13;
It m ay be naive to believe this, but if i t is true, and Student&#13;
Government continues to provide the leadership, more than one&#13;
change may occur at Parkside.&#13;
WE LIKE IT&#13;
IN&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
THE SANDS&#13;
SANDWICHES AT SPORTS BAR&#13;
ALL TIMES—BAR and Hwy 32&#13;
PACKAGE GOODS&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMP TIOUS&#13;
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BIG TOP Cre a my hot f u d g e over&#13;
A big s u n d ae loa ded with ice cre am a n d&#13;
fresh strawberries, w h ipp ed b a n a n a s&#13;
cre a m, nuts a n d cherry 70c&#13;
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N O R T H 331 1 S H E RID AN R O AD S O U T H 7 5 00 S H E R I D AN R O AD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
y&#13;
Rn.&#13;
^\cF&#13;
&gt;P&lt;A£ ?&#13;
&lt;S&gt;4$&#13;
°v&#13;
Marine Corps&#13;
Builds Men?&#13;
(CPS) — "When we had to go&#13;
and eat we went to the mess hall&#13;
and we had to yell 'kill' at the&#13;
top of our lungs three times&#13;
before we were allowed to eat.&#13;
These are the words of an exU&#13;
S. Marine describing a part of&#13;
his training at the Marine Boot&#13;
Camp on Parris Island, S.C.&#13;
This particular Marine deserted&#13;
following his tour of duty in&#13;
Vietnam in 1968 and now lives in&#13;
Sweden. His observations, and&#13;
those of men like him, are&#13;
recorded in Mark Lane s&#13;
Conversations with Americans&#13;
(Simon &amp; Schuster: N.Y. 1970).&#13;
"We used to run around&#13;
saying, 'VC, VC, Kill, Kill, Kill,&#13;
Gotta kill, Gotta kill, 'Cause it's&#13;
fun, 'Cause it's fun.'&#13;
This same Marine told of a&#13;
prayer posted in every barracks&#13;
on Parris Island. "It's a prayer&#13;
for war. Every night before we&#13;
went to bed at night at nine&#13;
o'clock we had to pray that&#13;
there'd be a war, so that the&#13;
Marine Corps could always be&#13;
on the move, because that was&#13;
their job, to fight."&#13;
The text of the prayer&#13;
follows:&#13;
Though I walk Thru the&#13;
Valley&#13;
In the Shadow of DEATH&#13;
I fear no EVIL&#13;
For I Am the Biggest&#13;
Baddest Mother-Pucker&#13;
In the Valley&#13;
Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep&#13;
I Pray the LORD the WAR&#13;
to Keep&#13;
So MARINES can come and&#13;
Save the Day&#13;
And I Can Earn My God&#13;
Damn PAY&#13;
God Bless the United States&#13;
God Bless the Drill Instructors&#13;
&#13;
God Bless the Marine Corps&#13;
Chaplin To&#13;
Appear at&#13;
Whiteskellar&#13;
The Parkside Activity&#13;
Board's (PAB) coffeehouse&#13;
(north lounge of Greenquist&#13;
Hall) opens again on Thursday,&#13;
February 10, at 2:00 P.M.&#13;
Entertainment will be a&#13;
"Charlie Chaplin Spectacular"&#13;
with three of his films. The&#13;
three are "The Immigrant",&#13;
"The Adventurer", and "Bambi&#13;
Falls in Love".&#13;
All Parkside Students are&#13;
invited to attend and the cost is&#13;
a nickel!&#13;
Two weeks from this date, the&#13;
PAB wishes to host a showing of&#13;
student films at the&#13;
Whiteskellar Coffeehouse. All&#13;
wTio are interested are asked to&#13;
contact Jerry Horton, Chairman&#13;
of PAB's film committee.&#13;
Students are invited to attend&#13;
Whiteskellar and students or&#13;
organizations that would like to&#13;
appear at the Whiteskellar are&#13;
asked to contact Kim Rudat,&#13;
chairman of the PAB coffee&#13;
house committee. And again,&#13;
watch for the large&#13;
Whiteskellar sign in the&#13;
G r e e n q u i st con cou rse&#13;
proclaiming that Parkside's&#13;
coffeehouse is again open for&#13;
business.&#13;
SCS Offers Exam Counseling&#13;
On Wednesday, February 9th, Student Counseling Services is&#13;
offering three fifty minute sessions designed to help students&#13;
prepare for six weeks exams.&#13;
Members of the faculty and the counseling staff will be on hand&#13;
to discuss such things as how to study for examinations, the differences&#13;
in preparation for an essay exam as opposed to an objective&#13;
exam, how to write an exam, etc. Study tip sheets will be&#13;
handed out and time will be open for questions and disucssion.&#13;
All three sessions are on Wednesday, February 9th.&#13;
Kenosha at 10:00, Room 117.&#13;
Greenquist at 1:30, Room D101.&#13;
Racine at 3:00, Room 104.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY,FEB.8&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs. UWMilwaukee&#13;
at Milwaukee Arena, 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY, FEB. 11&#13;
Regents Meeting: Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System will&#13;
meet in Van Hise Hall, Madison.&#13;
Film: Feature film "Blow Up" will&#13;
be shown at 8 p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Building. Adm. 75c. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin ID required.&#13;
Hockey: UW-P vs. Triton Junior&#13;
College at Park Ridge, III., 12:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Gymnastics: UW-P vs. Western&#13;
Illinois at Macomb.&#13;
SATURDAY, FEB. 12&#13;
Fencing: UW'P vs. UW-Madison&#13;
and Michigan State at Madison.&#13;
Wrestling: UW-P vs. Chicago Circle&#13;
Campus at Chicago.&#13;
Hockey: UW-P vs. Western Illinois&#13;
University at Peoria, 10 a.m.&#13;
SUNDAY, FEB. 13&#13;
Concert: University Artists Concert&#13;
Series will present classical&#13;
guitarist James Yoghourjian at 4&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist Hall. Gen. adm.&#13;
$1; student adm. 50c; children 12&#13;
and under free.&#13;
Hockey: UW-P vs. Illinois State&#13;
University at Peoria, 10 a.m.&#13;
Track UW-P in Illinois Open Meet at&#13;
Champaign.&#13;
'Don't believe everything ycu read."&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR&#13;
ASSOCIATE EDITOR&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR&#13;
COPY EDITOR&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Jerry Socha&#13;
Bill So renson&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
Larry Jones&#13;
Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Wolfgang Salewski&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#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;
revenue for the operation of Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the&#13;
mversity. Free copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and photographs submitted to Newscope is&#13;
4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to publication. Manuscripts must be typed and&#13;
double spaced. Unsolicited manuscripts and photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 d ays after the date of submission, after which they become the&#13;
property of Newscope, Ltd. The Newscope office is located in the Student&#13;
Organizations building, intersection of Highway A and Wood Road. &#13;
SAB Changeover R aises Questions&#13;
February?, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
by JohnKolpen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The recent resignation of&#13;
Verne Martinez as Director of&#13;
Auxiliary Enterprises has&#13;
spawned an epidemic of&#13;
rumors and speculation as to&#13;
the future of the Student Activities&#13;
Building. Martinez, who&#13;
served as Director since 1968,&#13;
left Parkside in favor of a job in&#13;
Denver. For the remainder of&#13;
the semester, or until a&#13;
replacement can be found, the&#13;
administration of the Activities&#13;
Building will be taken up by&#13;
David Bishop, Coordinator of&#13;
Academic Advising, and&#13;
William Niebuhr, Coordinator&#13;
of Student Activities. Bishop&#13;
will be in charge of the day to&#13;
day operations of the building&#13;
while Niebuhr will handle&#13;
programming.&#13;
Early last week the studentbartenders&#13;
employed at the&#13;
Activities Building met with&#13;
Bishop to discuss policy&#13;
changes and operation of the&#13;
building. The principal question&#13;
raised by the bartenders concerned&#13;
the effect the&#13;
changeover would have on their&#13;
jobs. Bishop told the group that&#13;
he anticipated no employee&#13;
changes though the distinction&#13;
of "head" bartender was&#13;
eliminated. Previously the head&#13;
bartender was' the employee&#13;
with most seniority during a&#13;
particular shift.&#13;
Relieving some of the anxiety&#13;
several of the bartenders expressed&#13;
toward job security the&#13;
practice of giving away free&#13;
beers was brought up. Several&#13;
bartenders argued on behalf of&#13;
the practice noting that it was&#13;
common in many bars for a&#13;
bartender to give an occasional&#13;
free drink to regular customers.&#13;
Bishop opposed the practice&#13;
and told the group that he&#13;
"wants to prevent favoritism."&#13;
One of the bartenders said, "if&#13;
someone comes in here and&#13;
spends a lot of cash I don't see&#13;
any reason why we shouldn't&#13;
give him a free beer."&#13;
Several bartenders stressed&#13;
"the human element" of the&#13;
jobs, but Bishop finally ended&#13;
the debate maintaining that&#13;
"we have to treat every student&#13;
alike."&#13;
At the end of the meeting each&#13;
bartender was given a list of&#13;
conduct rules after which they&#13;
were asked to sign a paper&#13;
stating that they had read them.&#13;
Bishop warned the group that if&#13;
the rules were broken, including&#13;
the serving of free beer, the&#13;
•bartender would "face the&#13;
consequences."&#13;
After the meeting Bishop told&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Trad«-mark®&#13;
H&#13;
' yv&#13;
&amp; Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
O N S O U TH S H E R I D A N RO A D IN K E N O S H A 6 5 4 - 041 1&#13;
Newscope that he "wanted to&#13;
see honesty and integrity in the&#13;
operation." He added that the&#13;
previous administration had&#13;
been no different but wanted to&#13;
make his intentions clear to the&#13;
employees. He said additional&#13;
stand-by bartenders may be&#13;
hired on especially busy nights&#13;
such as weekend dances, but&#13;
that it would not affect the&#13;
present bartenders. He emphasized&#13;
that he was only&#13;
taking over the responsibility of&#13;
operating the building on an&#13;
interim basis and that he hoped&#13;
to see a replacement for&#13;
Martinez before June.&#13;
At the recent all student&#13;
meeting at the Activities&#13;
Building Mark Barnhill, a&#13;
bartender, said that "all their&#13;
doing now is changing policy;&#13;
it's going to be a little tighter&#13;
around here. Mr. Bishop sounds&#13;
like he's going to do a pretty fair&#13;
job, but I don't know if he can do&#13;
it."&#13;
The senate has authorized me to send a letter to the&#13;
appropriate administrator's asking that a Temporary&#13;
Student Union Board be established to:&#13;
a. change the name of the Student Activities Building to&#13;
the Temporary Student Union;&#13;
b. over see the operations of this Temporary Student&#13;
Union until such a time as the final Student Union is completed&#13;
and a Student Union Board is established;&#13;
c. search for, screan and approve the hiring of the next&#13;
Auxiliary Enterprise Director.&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
Ecology C ourse Postponed 1 Week&#13;
The University Extension&#13;
class "Ecology: The Science of&#13;
Survival" has been postponed&#13;
for one week, and will begin&#13;
Wednesday, February 9 at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The course will include a&#13;
study of the fundamentals of&#13;
ecology, and how man, in order&#13;
to survive, must learn to relate&#13;
to his eco-system. The instructor,&#13;
Douglas LaFollette,&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Chemistry and UW-Parkside,&#13;
aims to help the concerned&#13;
citizen understand the environmental&#13;
problems involved&#13;
and how best to combat them.&#13;
This six-week course will be&#13;
held on the Racine Campus of&#13;
UW-Parkside. Registrations&#13;
are being accepted at the&#13;
University Extension office,&#13;
phone Racine or Kenosha 553-&#13;
2312.&#13;
•-yf -&lt;&#13;
•:~r. / /&#13;
i .. £ v&lt;*&#13;
A...&#13;
k, . • v - v- ^ '&#13;
f.&#13;
PIPES&#13;
PAPERS&#13;
POSTERS&#13;
PATCHES&#13;
AND MORE&#13;
5010 7th Ave.&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
A&#13;
aJSW&#13;
•J&#13;
a DOWN&#13;
MON. thra FRI.- NOON to 10pm&#13;
SAT.- 9am to 9pm m&#13;
SUN- NOON to Epm 'M&#13;
NEW RELEASES&#13;
Crazy Horse&#13;
"LOOSE" — $3.85&#13;
Yes&#13;
"FRAGILE" — $3.95&#13;
Rolling Stones&#13;
"HOT ROCKS" — $7.40&#13;
NEW BREAD ALBUM — $3.05&#13;
Osibisa Wcyay&#13;
"OSIBISA WCYAY" — $3.85&#13;
NEW KING CRIMSON — $3.85&#13;
George Harrison and friends&#13;
"CONCERT FOR BANGLA DESH" — $12.80&#13;
cc4 cnoo Emerson, Lake and Palmer&#13;
Pnone: oo4-o(J.54 "LIVE "PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION " — $ 3.85&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Va Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W - 2 0W - 30W&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE February 7,1!)72&#13;
Reviewer dwarfed by a friendly pillar as he grabs it just as it was&#13;
about to fall down.&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Flash — Kenosha, Thursday, Feb. 3 —&#13;
world premier night for the Train&#13;
Station —&#13;
The bulletin had come over the wire&#13;
service while I was blithely resting my&#13;
feet on the managing editor's cluttered&#13;
desk, with a well-deserved cup of coffee&#13;
in my hands, resting from the hectic&#13;
razzle-dazzle-frazzle life of a Newscope&#13;
dupe. Suddenly the serenity of the&#13;
restful scene was shattered forever by&#13;
the frenetic grumblings of the&#13;
managing editor, as he thrust the&#13;
bulletin before my startled eyes.&#13;
Wearily I realized this could only&#13;
mean another assignment. Lordy,&#13;
lordy, lordy.&#13;
It was opening night and On the Nod&#13;
would be there to record the historic&#13;
occasion. My first problem was&#13;
deciding what On the Nod was to wear;&#13;
white tie, black tie, tie die, tails, heads,&#13;
top hat, bowler, golfer? I realized that&#13;
too few bars premier in today's hectic&#13;
time-for-only-a-quick-shot-and-a-beer&#13;
society. The ritual of the opening night&#13;
(of a bar) unfortunately is not embedded&#13;
in our culture nearly as well as&#13;
in moviedumb, we have forgotten the&#13;
litany to the baptism; Good taste and&#13;
bad taste are not prescribed. So I came&#13;
as I went, society be danged, and&#13;
though I may not be on the 10 best&#13;
dressed list, last night I was certainly&#13;
on the 10 b est drunk list.&#13;
The Train Station is the old Kenosha&#13;
North Shore station reincarnated in the&#13;
best of all possible forms, a bar. Ah,&#13;
yes, as I entered the bar I was harkened&#13;
back to my misspent youth, when I was&#13;
no bigger than the cork on a bottle of&#13;
Chianti. I could visualize the old North&#13;
Shore crossing as I waited for the deep&#13;
rumble of the train as it challenged my&#13;
existence. And now, here I was again,&#13;
standing in what was once the waiting&#13;
room.&#13;
Local celebrities trickled in&#13;
throughout the evening unannounced as&#13;
the North Star perilously hovered over&#13;
this humble city on the shore of Lake&#13;
Michigan; a celestial beacon, a good&#13;
omen reflecting His benelovence in&#13;
granting man yet another haven&#13;
from the hustle and trestjes of life.&#13;
Among the celebrities braving the&#13;
fierce north wind to greet the new&#13;
arrival, bearing gifts in the form of a&#13;
50c cover charge, were such illustrious&#13;
captains of business and industry as&#13;
Jon Perry, and Richard Sward and his&#13;
old lady, scholars like Rick Sereno and&#13;
Kevin "Crowbait" McKay coming&#13;
down from their ivory towers, an&#13;
executive member of the media Jerry&#13;
"the Sosh" Socha, and the tireless&#13;
afficianado Brian P. Kipp. I sat wondering&#13;
when the traditional&#13;
congratulatory telegrams from the free&#13;
world leaders would pour in.&#13;
The Train Sfation opened at six, and&#13;
featured the muzak of the Dream. The&#13;
cover charge of 50c was reasonable&#13;
considering the fact that even if you&#13;
didn't like the band, you did get free&#13;
peanufs, which I think, is a nice touch.&#13;
Anything that is free is a nice touch.&#13;
The Train Station is, of course,&#13;
decorated in the motif of a train&#13;
station; railroad signs and&#13;
paraphenalia adorn the red brick walls,&#13;
the floor is ceramic tile, formica tables&#13;
and comfortable chairs line one side of&#13;
the main building while a breathtaking&#13;
copper-topped bar stretches 50 feet&#13;
down the other side.&#13;
Bars are becoming more complicated&#13;
these days, and The Train Station is no&#13;
exception as it offers a multitude of&#13;
options to suit the particular needs and&#13;
persuasions of the patron. In addition to&#13;
the main building which houses a wine&#13;
room from which a customer may&#13;
purchase a bottle for $2.00, a meeting&#13;
room to which a party can retire to&#13;
pursue a more serious mode of drinking&#13;
or whatever, there is yet another&#13;
smaller one room building. This&#13;
smaller room does not charge cover&#13;
fees, and it is happily equipped with a&#13;
Loenbrau tap (25c for a 12 oz. tap),&#13;
three pool tables, a juke and a pinball&#13;
machine which Socha says is lousy.&#13;
Now the stock report: Prices from six&#13;
to nine steady at 30c per tap, and $1.25 a&#13;
pitcher, the Miller and Schltz taps aner&#13;
nine ask 40c fo r a glass and $1.50 for a&#13;
pitcher. Waitresses asked us&#13;
repeatedly to call them if we needed&#13;
service rather than go to the bar ourselves.&#13;
The offer sounded like some&#13;
WoLib trick, so I declined it. Hard&#13;
liquor proved to be expensive, Rick&#13;
Sereno related an incident to me in&#13;
_ which he had ordered a gimlet that cost&#13;
him 85c, but he said he was most perturbed&#13;
by an essential lack of vodka in&#13;
the correct proportions. Perhaps the&#13;
most unfortunate price is the 65c&#13;
charged for a bottled beer. I think&#13;
there's definitely room for improvement&#13;
here, though it must be&#13;
emphasized that it is a new bar, and&#13;
there will undoubtedly be growing&#13;
pains.&#13;
When we'd arrived at 7:30, the bar&#13;
(was fairly empty, people were scattered&#13;
down the length of the bar,&#13;
&lt; watching their copper reflections and&#13;
J tracing circles in small puddles of&#13;
o spilled beer. Everyone seemed apw&#13;
prehensive, looking around, as if&#13;
£ waiting for something to happen,&#13;
tr Slowly the bar filled up and people took&#13;
w to the tables. One aspect of the bar&#13;
which proved somewhat disconcerting&#13;
was the lack of a timepiece. The&#13;
presence of a clock could have&#13;
cushioned the shock of paying a quarter&#13;
more for a pitcher of beer that I'd&#13;
bought just a few minutes before, for a&#13;
quarter less; I could have paced myself&#13;
better.&#13;
I approached the copper-topped bar&#13;
with reverence, it was like meeting&#13;
Paul ..Bunyon, a myth come real. I&#13;
timidly peaked at the reflection of my&#13;
face in the shiny top, growing bold I&#13;
stared transfixed at my visage, for a&#13;
few brief moments I had attained a&#13;
mystical state. But business is business&#13;
so I checked out the juke; it wasn't very&#13;
high quality, the juke in the smaller&#13;
building was far superior. Kippster&#13;
thinks he can remember a price difference&#13;
also. The juke in the main&#13;
buildings plays only two songs for a&#13;
quarter, a pernicious practice, the&#13;
origin of which should be investigated&#13;
by a congressional committee, the&#13;
other juke might play three songs for a&#13;
quarter. It's difficult to remember all&#13;
these things.&#13;
The friendly manager informed me&#13;
that sandwiches would be served in the&#13;
coming weeks, and that a beef garden&#13;
would be instituted in the courtyard&#13;
separating the two buildings during the&#13;
summer months.&#13;
The opening night crowd was of a&#13;
very diverse character; distilled long&#13;
hairs and semi-hipsters sat next to&#13;
middleaged working class heros, while&#13;
a gaggle of secretarial types sat coiffeured&#13;
at the tables. One of the group of&#13;
well dressed businessmen accused&#13;
Crowbait McKay of being a bad pool&#13;
player as he payed the inimitable&#13;
Newscoper his just due. The crowd was&#13;
about as diverse as you'd want it, but&#13;
the bulk of patrons I would judge to be&#13;
under 30.&#13;
The Train Station is obviously a bar&#13;
with great potential, it offers an impressive&#13;
choice of options for the&#13;
patron, and if prices can be maintained&#13;
at a reasonable level, it should provide&#13;
more than enough competition for the&#13;
Zodiac. Even good musical groups will&#13;
not be appreciated to their fullest until&#13;
the acoustics can be improved. The&#13;
Train Station disproves once and for all&#13;
the old adage that when you see your&#13;
face on the bartop it's time to leave.&#13;
by Paul Lomartire, Feature Editor&#13;
Setting out to devastate success with n,&#13;
criticism is a foolhardy game as I see it, esoeri&#13;
when the success is viewed in financial ter&#13;
There are "experts" in various fields who r&#13;
tinually try it; for example leveling shots at s&#13;
diverse solo and collective talents as Rod McKu&#13;
the Baltimore Orioles, Grand Funk Railnua&#13;
Erich Segal. d&#13;
'&#13;
Many poetry critics bombard Rod McKi&#13;
with charges that his poetry contains noth&#13;
technically good enough to warrant respect in&#13;
craft. Certainly nothing good enough to allow /&#13;
McKuen to be the best selling poet alive. Not be&#13;
able to explain his mass popularity efficiently&#13;
critics make no real case. In terms of the dol&#13;
bill and his poetry, the raspy voiced poet is to&#13;
I found an occurrence similar to this, wh&#13;
dining at a popular restaurant in Kenosha. 7&#13;
place does a good business, but I would be the I,&#13;
one to explain why. I can only relate the evei&#13;
which gave me no reason to enjoy eating at 1&#13;
North Ranch Restaurant at 3311 Sheridan R0;&#13;
late last week.&#13;
Maggie and I ate at the Ranch nean&#13;
QAL UKE. IMAfAA"&#13;
MAN IN THE WILDERNESS&#13;
Richard Harris — Zachary Bass&#13;
John Huston — Captain Henry&#13;
The Bear — Peggy The Bear&#13;
Directed by Richard Sarafian&#13;
Warner Brothers&#13;
STRAW DOGS&#13;
Dustin* Hoffman — David&#13;
Susan George — Amy&#13;
Tom Heddon — Peter George&#13;
Directed by Sam Peckinpah&#13;
ABC Pictures&#13;
Richard Harris, scar tissued excursions into the peaceful wild ;&#13;
a close-up sip of a springwater handbook on how to appreciate the&#13;
whole earth without the aroma of Butternut coffee.&#13;
An expedition of trappers moves across the Northwest&#13;
territory, trailing a riverboat in 1920 guided by burly Zach Bass.&#13;
Alone, Zach is mangled by a Grizzly Bear, his body torn to shreds,&#13;
but he won't die.&#13;
The expedition finds him this way, heart pounding in Godhating,&#13;
fish-hooked madness. This life-death turmoil is actualized&#13;
with a series of flashbacks that coagulate the man's past history&#13;
one of early Victorian mores, taught with a switch arid realized in&#13;
hypocrisy; his love of wife and child the only love he dare want&#13;
Two men are left in a death vigil; Zach expendable.&#13;
With all of this we find Invincoman, an early American individualistic&#13;
lone hero, who, with guts and sheer will defuses death.&#13;
The comic book feeling becoming necessary for the real aim of the&#13;
film; to bring those who watch it ever closer to an almost forgotten&#13;
reality. Water, fire and are are removed from the zodiac and the&#13;
bathroom and placed in a more original frame of reference Amphibian&#13;
man, crawling, born again.&#13;
The captain (John Huston), saw Zach as his son, but "he never&#13;
saw me as his father." A symbolistic departure methinks, as Zach&#13;
is left to die by his pseudo-father, who, on a journey of fortune,&#13;
leaves his pseudo-son dying into a new awareness of that whole&#13;
earth, the source contemporaries left to chemical or spiritual death&#13;
and recovery, their fathers' journeys of fortune sustained by a&#13;
collective, man made wilderness of spiraling towers and metallic&#13;
neasts.&#13;
The film asserts Mr Harris' big-as-all-outdoors ego again;&#13;
honor and dignity as pie&#13;
departures like Cromwell&#13;
like him, though. His cor&#13;
will and individuality be&#13;
respect this Barabas wit&#13;
A thought provoking&#13;
Harris' charisma withou&#13;
you'll like the film . • •&#13;
There exists another&#13;
the non-antics of Harris,&#13;
and totally contemporar&#13;
Harris asserts, Hoffmar&#13;
courageous assurance at&#13;
On the bumbling sic&#13;
realization, turning us at&#13;
Straw Dogs has been mi&#13;
born of plain animal moti&#13;
to disagree, seeing that&#13;
The violence was to&#13;
misconstrued as exciting&#13;
that evokes manly Idem*&#13;
bestial proportions in Sir&#13;
film as a middle class w&lt;&#13;
destroyed thousands m&#13;
whatever methods avai&#13;
The story is simplemathematician&#13;
living Wl&#13;
near a small rural town&#13;
men are hired to repaira &#13;
letty&#13;
ially&#13;
'ms.&#13;
consuch&#13;
&#13;
uen,&#13;
and&#13;
(uen&#13;
hing&#13;
the&#13;
Mr.&#13;
eing&#13;
, the&#13;
illar&#13;
ops.&#13;
hile&#13;
The&#13;
last&#13;
jnts&#13;
the&#13;
&gt;ad,&#13;
rest&#13;
Parkside, assuming many students eat there&#13;
because of its location (there is another Ranch run&#13;
by the iame management on the south end of&#13;
Kenosha). It w as about five p.m., and the dininq&#13;
area was moderately full. There were four&#13;
waitresses on duty at this time.&#13;
While we glanced at the placemat menus, two&#13;
Parkside student-friends came in. They were&#13;
having supper before a class at the Racine&#13;
campus. I liked th e idea of using their criticism in&#13;
this column, although I didn't tell them I was&#13;
reviewing the Ranch.&#13;
I ord ered a B-B-Q sliced beef sandwich with&#13;
French fries and cole slaw, costing a dollar thirtyfive&#13;
cents. Maggie decided to eat what the Ranch&#13;
called a "Gringo Special", which consisted of "a&#13;
third of a pound ground beef on French crust&#13;
bread, dressed with crisp lettuce and our special&#13;
sauce", priced at eighty cents. The "Gringo" also&#13;
attracted the attention of one of the studentfriends.&#13;
&#13;
The second student chose to eat a "steak&#13;
sandwich", which cost seventy-five cents. There&#13;
was no description offered on the menu for the&#13;
sandwich. Between the four of us, we had the&#13;
opportunity to sample three popular low priced&#13;
sandwiches offered by the North Ranch.&#13;
After waiting about ten minutes, a new face&#13;
brought my sliced beef sandwich and a Gringo to&#13;
the table. (We had received drinks almost immediately&#13;
after ordering.) But now, a new&#13;
waitress stood with two plates asking who ordered&#13;
what.&#13;
It was decided that Maggie would eat the first&#13;
Gringo, as the waitress promised the students'&#13;
food w ould be delivered very quickly.&#13;
A dozen or so minutes passed, when a third&#13;
waitress delivered the steak sandwich and the&#13;
other Gringo. Because Maggie and I only nibbled&#13;
at our food while waiting for our friends' sandwiches&#13;
to be served, we now were confronted with&#13;
cold f ood. The waitress situation brought to my&#13;
mind an experiment the Chicago Cubs once tried&#13;
A K I N 6 OF T H F "2.0S&#13;
in the early 1960s.&#13;
Instead of hiring one manager to run the team,&#13;
the front office hired ten coaches. They finished&#13;
last that year. Our service, whether as innovative,&#13;
or merely accidental, proved to be as inefficient as&#13;
the Cubs' experiment.&#13;
My beef sandwich was pretty good, except for&#13;
being cold due to the wait. The cole slaw, which&#13;
one of the waitresses said was concocted on the&#13;
premises, was terrible, a total waste of time on the&#13;
part of the kitchen. The paper serving cup yielded&#13;
enough liquid to cover the bottom of the platter my&#13;
entire meal was served on. The two teaspoons of&#13;
actual "slaw" was too sweet for me to eat, even&#13;
after I h ad drained the excess liquid.&#13;
Maggie, who had adjusted herself to eating&#13;
even bad food for economical reasons, left over&#13;
half of her Gringo sandwich. The meat was cold,&#13;
tough, and too well done. The "special sauce"&#13;
seemed to be a dabble of French dressing, the&#13;
sickly wilted lettuce she passed off as "out of&#13;
season". Maggie rated the Gringo very low, not&#13;
recommending it to anyone in the condition it was&#13;
served to her.&#13;
The student who ordered a "steak sandwich"&#13;
was somewhat surprised by the appearance of the&#13;
"steak". It s eemed to be a piece of hamburger.&#13;
After trading a few bites with the other student&#13;
who ordered a Gringo he said that he could not&#13;
honestly tell the difference between the two pieces&#13;
of m eat. He left a quarter of the sandwich, but ate&#13;
all the potato chips served him.&#13;
The student who ordered a Gringo ate the&#13;
entire sandwich, stating only that it was a bit&#13;
tough. She said she would not order it again, if&#13;
indeed she ever returned to the North Ranch.&#13;
The meal was a failure. I w as the only participant&#13;
who could offer a recommendation, as I&#13;
thought the sliced beef sandwich was alright. The&#13;
cole slaw was not though. After the four of us had&#13;
experienced the poor service and mediocre food, it&#13;
seemed that a second cup of coffee would be a&#13;
consolation.&#13;
The table was a shambles of open plastic&#13;
cream containers, dishes, sticky napkins, dirty&#13;
silverware and empty coffee cups. At a time when&#13;
the restaurant was only slightly busier than when&#13;
we had entered, we could not find even one of our&#13;
three waitresses, or none of them could find us. We&#13;
waited over fifteen minutes for someone to ask us&#13;
how the meal was, or at least offer dessert, but we&#13;
were ignored.&#13;
Disgusted, the two students headed for&#13;
Racine, vowing to buy a cup of instant coffee from&#13;
the school's vending machine. They figured it&#13;
would be better than flagging down a waitress and&#13;
asking her to clear the table and refill the coffee&#13;
cups.&#13;
Throughout the meal, there was an Arctic&#13;
draft coming from a vent at our feet, just below&#13;
the large window at booth B-5. Maggie warded off&#13;
the chill with a scarf wrapped around her ankles.&#13;
The two students said their car would be much&#13;
warmer. The breeze added to their premature&#13;
departure.&#13;
While taking a few notes, and talking to&#13;
Maggie after they left, I wo uld not condemn the&#13;
Ranch. I ha ve to give any restaurant the benefit of&#13;
a doubt when I onl y visit it o nce.&#13;
The waitress situation could have been caused&#13;
by a schedule problem, the flu or who knows what&#13;
else. The cooks preparing the food could have been&#13;
working under handicaps unknown to the&#13;
customer, or whatever. Thedraft might have been&#13;
avoided i.f w e had moved.&#13;
All this seems highly possible to me, but I also&#13;
know that Rod McKuen, the Baltimore Orioles,&#13;
Grand Funk Railroad and Erich Segal do not leave&#13;
many obvious cracks in their production or&#13;
product, as their phenomenon does not allow it.&#13;
A critic might be able to drive a wedge into&#13;
that crack, and in s ome cases even affect public&#13;
opinion.&#13;
February 7,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
lentiful a s they were in o ther Invincoman&#13;
'II and A Man Called Horse. I ca n't help but&#13;
insistent, sometimes noisy defense of free&#13;
before and behind the camera makes me&#13;
'ith a c onscience.&#13;
'9 film Man In The Wilderness excels in&#13;
iut tfle need of dialogue. If yo u like Harris&#13;
• i f not ...&#13;
:r side °f t he spectrum brought to light by&#13;
• If i s the almost pitiable, nearly confused,&#13;
3ry film image of Dustin Hoffman. While&#13;
an suggests, creating this dichotomy of&#13;
and bumbling success.&#13;
ilde, we usually hate to pay the price of&#13;
ut face in our thoughts and our actions,&#13;
"^interpreted as a violent, senseless film&#13;
&gt; ivation and male chauvinism. I wo uld like&#13;
1 Payed t he price.&#13;
00 disagreeable and too disgusting to be&#13;
n9 or a dventurous, with the same violence&#13;
1 'cation in Wild erness becoming a ritual of&#13;
raw' Do9&#13;
s&#13;
- I would be wrong to dismiss the&#13;
we dream as so many have. We, who have&#13;
n&#13;
,&#13;
a sen&#13;
seless war must realize, through&#13;
1 ® e, what senseless death is.&#13;
vith\- ^&#13;
avid (Hoffman), an inobtrusive&#13;
' Lolita&#13;
-&#13;
|ike wi&#13;
f&#13;
e&#13;
' AmY' in Cornwall&#13;
'n "&#13;
e west of England. A few local workage&#13;
on fhe newly acquired homestead.&#13;
Amy is a native of the area and the workmen know her, Venner,&#13;
one of them, having once gone with her. The workmen harass the&#13;
couple in an assured you-in-the-back way; David appeases while&#13;
Amy baits them cheesecake style.&#13;
A hunting trip is undertaken in lieu of a near confrontation, the&#13;
family cat found in the bedroom closet, David appeasing again.&#13;
While he is gone Venner and Scutt (Ken Hutchinson) rape Amy, she&#13;
enjoys some of it.&#13;
David remains ignorant of this escapade and he and his wife&#13;
are eventually invited to a church social where Henry Niles (David&#13;
Warner), considered the town pervert, leaves the affair with&#13;
teasing Janice. Her disappearance is discovered and the shouts of&#13;
her searchers causes her accidental suffocation.&#13;
David and Amy, on their way home, hit Henry with their car.&#13;
Tom Heddon (Peter Vaughn), who organized the search party finds&#13;
out about this and the true conflict begins, David refusing to turn&#13;
over the wounded Henry who now resides at the homestead. They&#13;
attack the house in drunken fury.&#13;
Through numbed fear and resourcefulness David destroys the&#13;
attackers, one by one in a mixture of boiling oil, cracked heads, and&#13;
bear trapped necks.&#13;
The film is savage, yes. The film is fanciful, yes. The film is&#13;
useless, no! The violence it carries is possible as was the violence&#13;
possible in the real life account of Capote's reportage of In Cold&#13;
Blood, or the real life reportage of America's In Vietnam. We&#13;
Americans must learn to pay for our fury, Straw Dogs makes in&#13;
plain terror.&#13;
If you you really like Straw Dogs . . . .don't.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
For The Record&#13;
i idinapvMUSIC&#13;
HOUSE ^/«&#13;
b&#13;
.&#13;
ill i i \ i i: i 1 1 I \ \ • t- in m i ? -&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
FHamnfo.&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
ZJL VJLj Suprr CU&#13;
1700 Sheridan&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
I3©SS'KOFFEE&#13;
7-VW*&#13;
. £ 50&#13;
r&#13;
-&#13;
HSr. &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE February 7,1972&#13;
Do We Knead This? Bread Concert.&#13;
36 PER CENT OF NEW YOUNG VOTERS REGISTERED&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) — An astounding 36 per cent of the&#13;
newly eligible 18-20 year-old voters have already registered, according&#13;
to a recent survey by the Youth Citizenship Fund.&#13;
The assessment was based on the results of a recent telephone&#13;
survey of registration officials in 102 cities and counties&#13;
representing 35 s tates.&#13;
REPORT SAYS PAPER RECYCLING CAN&#13;
CUT BIG CITY WASTE BY 25 PER CENT&#13;
LOS ANGELES (CPS) — In a report released recently by the&#13;
Bank of America, solid waste from large cities was cited as being&#13;
37 per cent to 60 per cent paper. And, says the report, increased&#13;
recycling of that waste would cut the solid waste explosion by as&#13;
much as 25 pe r cent.&#13;
GOVERNMENT WARNS AGAINST WATERBEDS;&#13;
LANDLORDS CAN SAY, "NO."&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) — The government, in a recent&#13;
Department of Housing and Urban Development advisory pamphlet,&#13;
told the managers of public housing projects and other&#13;
federally assisted housing they may ban water beds because of&#13;
their excessive weight.&#13;
ALL textbooks tor A LL courses&#13;
now sold at M ain Book Store&#13;
on Wood Rd.&#13;
BOOK STORE HOURS:&#13;
MAIN BOOK STORE:&#13;
Mon.-Thurs . - 8&#13;
6&#13;
Friday - 8&#13;
00 A.M.&#13;
30 P.M.&#13;
00 A.M.&#13;
- * 4: 30 P.M.&#13;
- 8:00 P.M.&#13;
- * 4: 30 P.M.&#13;
1&#13;
KENOSHA AND RACINE STORES:&#13;
Mon.-Thurs . ONLY - 10:00 A.M. - 1:00 P.M&#13;
No Booh Will Be Sold At&#13;
Kenosha &amp; Racine Stores&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
,TOM ^p-o&#13;
JAMMED&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
THE W INDJAMMER&#13;
TENDERLOIN STEAK f&#13;
AND TUMBLED O NIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN ROOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— HE RBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
SENATOR PROXMIRE&#13;
from the Music Desk&#13;
In terms of gross income the&#13;
person who made the decision to&#13;
bring Bread to the Carthage&#13;
Field house January 29th&#13;
deserves a special footnote in&#13;
the yearbook. That's really the&#13;
only standard applicable, the&#13;
room was packed and the&#13;
concert was a success. Certainly&#13;
the J. Geils Band could&#13;
have come for the same price&#13;
but from the treasurer's&#13;
viewpoint superior music was&#13;
irrelevant and we can forget&#13;
him.&#13;
The very mass of people that&#13;
made his day however was&#13;
afflicted with the kind of inertia&#13;
that is killing, has, in the&#13;
opinion of some, already killed&#13;
the live rock &amp; roll scene in&#13;
America. This was not your&#13;
typical wine and reds audience,&#13;
such as attracted by Black&#13;
Sabbath or Grand Funk. Obnoxious&#13;
as this kind of group&#13;
identity can be, they have some&#13;
idea of what rock is for and&#13;
aren't afraid to shake it up. The&#13;
crowd at this affair exhibited a&#13;
trend much more insidious.&#13;
N o t h w i t h s t a n d i n g t h e&#13;
necessary applause at the end&#13;
of each number and the&#13;
screams of recognition for the&#13;
certified radio biggies, Bread&#13;
played a two-hour set with&#13;
absolutely no help from the&#13;
audience. Judee Sill, latter-day&#13;
folkie who tried to precede&#13;
Bread onstage, was treated to&#13;
an even healthier dose of apathy&#13;
and walked off after four&#13;
numbers citing "lack of&#13;
audience response."&#13;
Bread seemed to be used to&#13;
this situation though. In fact it's&#13;
probable that they create it. To&#13;
give them their due, they're&#13;
four competant studio&#13;
musicians wich professional&#13;
voices and chops who hit big in&#13;
the highly competetive AM&#13;
singles sweepstakes and&#13;
decided to grag off a piece of the&#13;
coast-to-coast touring-makesyou-crazy&#13;
action becuase what&#13;
the hell, that's what a 1972 rock&#13;
band does, right? No typically&#13;
hungry musician would pass up&#13;
the chance for two parallel&#13;
careers instead of one, and so&#13;
Bread gives the impression of&#13;
professional schizophrenia;&#13;
vicarious dream lovers&#13;
manifested in sweet lightweight&#13;
singles which flutter sensitive&#13;
young hearts, and grass-root&#13;
stumping, risking some of the&#13;
soft-focus perfection radio&#13;
allows to meet the fans eye to&#13;
eyeTheir&#13;
stage act leans heavily&#13;
on their gold records and if you&#13;
haven't been keeping track&#13;
you'd be surprised at hoe many&#13;
there are. Production and&#13;
random studio magic gives&#13;
records fullness and depth that&#13;
a four piece group just can't&#13;
muster on stage and so these&#13;
came off very weak, rather like&#13;
skimmed milk. The rest of the&#13;
show presented heavier&#13;
numbers in the vein of "Mother&#13;
Freedom", all more less of the&#13;
same length, in the same&#13;
tempo, and except for the odd&#13;
switch from guitar to organ or&#13;
piano, very similar. The only&#13;
thing to pass for a surprise was&#13;
the Chuck Berry medly which&#13;
they didn't understand.&#13;
After the show wer were&#13;
informed that there was to be a&#13;
press conference and just the&#13;
idea was enough to make us&#13;
stick around. Rock journalism!&#13;
We waited at the appointed spot&#13;
with about twenty young girls,&#13;
some clutching autograph&#13;
albums, some, who we took to&#13;
be other crack reporting teams,&#13;
fondling tape recorders. Down&#13;
the hall we encountered more&#13;
fans clustered around the bass&#13;
player who was dispensing&#13;
signatures and charm. Once in&#13;
the sanctum we sat quietly&#13;
collecting our thoughts whila&#13;
young short-haired girl introduced&#13;
herself to the guitar&#13;
player as a member of the&#13;
underground press on her first&#13;
assignment and confessed to a&#13;
case of nerves. A tall girl&#13;
sprawled on a chair asked if she&#13;
wanted a pill. Soon several&#13;
microphones were gathering&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
TAPE RECORDER — G. E. Solid&#13;
State, reel to reel. Battery or&#13;
adapter. $20. Ph. 553-2345. Mrs.&#13;
Zimmerman.&#13;
FOR SALE — Mosrite Bass Guitar&#13;
Double pickup, double cutaway&#13;
hollowbody. With plush lined hard&#13;
shelled case. Was $450 new. Ex&#13;
cellent condition. $100. Call Larry&#13;
552-8347, or come to P-Village, apt&#13;
109 (The Swamp).&#13;
CAMERA — Rikoh "Nikon type"&#13;
35mm, f 1.4 Itns. All black pro&#13;
model, with haze filter, 2X zoom&#13;
extender, case. $375 new. Sell for&#13;
$175. Used only twice. Phone Mel&#13;
Messina 654-6771.&#13;
answers to riddles like 'Have&#13;
you always liked music?' and&#13;
'Do your songs have special&#13;
meanings?'&#13;
Several insiders stared in our&#13;
direction but gave no signs of&#13;
acknowledgement so we&#13;
decided to break the ice and&#13;
asked some meaningless&#13;
question which evolved into a&#13;
discussion on significant contribution&#13;
to music in terms of&#13;
the test of time. Guitar player&#13;
opined that Bread's songs would&#13;
wear better than oh, say&#13;
"Honky Tonk Woman" or any&#13;
other hard rocker because their&#13;
music has a timeless quality&#13;
and also great variety. "Take&#13;
any rock song, its chord&#13;
structures and melodies, and it&#13;
soulds like 4,000 o ther songs."&#13;
We suggested that this was the&#13;
main impression of most of&#13;
their songs and received a&#13;
quizzical look. The girl in the&#13;
chair began singing "Puff the&#13;
Magic Dragon". Does this mean&#13;
something? She didn't offer us a&#13;
pill.&#13;
The press conference died&#13;
and we shuffled back to the car&#13;
and the pipe discussing good old&#13;
rock &amp; roll. Pretty much&#13;
nothing had happened; the&#13;
evening was like a couple of&#13;
Carvons. There's nothing much&#13;
in particular to say when&#13;
there's nothing to blame. $3.50&#13;
could buy a night of music to&#13;
remember from any number of&#13;
bands but too often it buys a&#13;
downer circus like this one. Any&#13;
way you figure it out it's a&#13;
vicious circle and meanwhile&#13;
live rock &amp; roll is becoming&#13;
extinct.&#13;
Mike Stevesand&#13;
Training for&#13;
CC-Skiing&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
A practical training session in&#13;
cross country skiing has been&#13;
set for 7:30 p.m., Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 9, at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside main&#13;
campus on Wood Road in north&#13;
Kenosha County.&#13;
To be held under the direction&#13;
of Finnish skier Bill Knuuti, the&#13;
clinic, which will include a&#13;
preliminary classroom session&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the&#13;
Racine YMCA, affords the&#13;
public a chance to learn of one&#13;
of the nation's newest and&#13;
fastest-growing sports.&#13;
Advance registration is&#13;
necessary and may be made by&#13;
calling 634-1994.&#13;
FOR SALE — Snowmobile - Solens&#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;
EMPLOYMENT — SALES&#13;
PEOPLE WANTED — Male or&#13;
female. Part time. Lots of work.&#13;
Lots of money. Ph. 652-3833.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
EXPERIENCED TYPIST — Will&#13;
type term papers, assignments etc.&#13;
at my home. Ph. 552-8773.&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
DOG LOST — Near East Berry ville&#13;
Road. Black Labrador Male. Ph.&#13;
552 8835&#13;
STUDENTS— If you had a locker on&#13;
the Racine Campus last semester&#13;
and are not using it this semester,&#13;
please inform the Racine Main&#13;
Office (553 2121, exy. 20) so we can&#13;
reassign it.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1955 Chev. NHRA legal, 4.88 posi,&#13;
Super Sun Tach, 6x15 Rocket Mags,&#13;
301 Chevy short block with 12.5:1&#13;
TRW pistons, balanced. Spare 4.88&#13;
posi. 320 degree Isky hydraulic&#13;
camshaft and lifters. Borg-Warner&#13;
T-10 4 spd, with Hurst shifter.&#13;
Contact Fred Noer at Newscope or&#13;
phone 1-414-275-2464 anytime.&#13;
1960 GTO. New tires, mags, 4 speed,&#13;
excellent condition. Must sell. $V,200,&#13;
willing to talk. 633-1069 any time&#13;
after 5:00. &#13;
Winter Sports Teams on Road&#13;
February 7,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
All UW-Parkside winter sports teams will be&#13;
on the road this week and all are aiming to peak&#13;
soon with performances that will carry them&#13;
headlong into championship competition.&#13;
Steve Stephens' cagers, 85-59 losers to Aquinas&#13;
College on the road last week, meet UWMilwaukee&#13;
Tuesday at the Arena in Milwaukee in&#13;
the second half of the two schools' home and home&#13;
series. The Panthers emerged with an easy win&#13;
the last time they tangled with the Rangers, 100-56,&#13;
but Parkside has added new faces to its starting&#13;
lineup since then in forward Bob Popp and center&#13;
Mark Peck.&#13;
After the UW-M game, the Rangers have only&#13;
three remaining, Feb. 17 at UW-Green Bay; Feb.&#13;
19 at Lakeland; and Feb. 21 at Dominican.&#13;
The UW-Parkside gymnastics team, aiming to&#13;
qualify Kelly Carney, Kevin O'Neil and Kerry&#13;
Pfeifer for the NAIA national meet along with&#13;
senior captain Warren McGillivray, will travel to&#13;
Coach Dave Donaldson's alma mater, Western&#13;
Illinois, to take on the always-rugged Leathernecks.&#13;
&#13;
The UW-Parkside track team, with Lucian&#13;
Rosa heading the way in the distances, will&#13;
compete Sunday in the Illinois Open at Champaign&#13;
and prepare for further indoor competition that&#13;
includes multi-team meets at UW-Oshkosh and&#13;
UW-LaCrosse.&#13;
The UW-Parkside wrestlers, 21st in the NAIA&#13;
national meet in 1971, will be aiming to improve&#13;
that position this time around with Ken Martin&#13;
leading the way. Martin, now wrestling at 142&#13;
pounds but expected to drop to 134 for the&#13;
nationals, has won 13 straight matches and is&#13;
getting stronger weekly. Impressing also is&#13;
sophomore Bill West at 134 pounds, who is likely to&#13;
go to 126 for the nationals.&#13;
The Rangers will battle Chicago and IllinoisChicago&#13;
Circle Saturday at Chicago.&#13;
The UW-P fencers, 4-2 on the year heading into&#13;
last Saturday's confrontation with fencing&#13;
strongholds Notre Dame, Oberlin and Chicago&#13;
Circle, will face defending Big Ten champion&#13;
Michigan State and UW-Madison at Madison&#13;
Saturday. The Rangers have been improving&#13;
weekly, said Coach Loran Hein, but he still expects&#13;
every meet to be a cliffhanger because of the&#13;
Rangers' difficult schedule.&#13;
All-staff&#13;
meeting&#13;
Wed. 5:00&#13;
office&#13;
UW-Parkside wrestler Ken Martin has won 13 straight matches&#13;
at 142 pounds this year, but it was at 134 that he earned all-America&#13;
honors last year and it's to that weight that the Coleman sophomore&#13;
will likely move for the NAIA national meet next month.&#13;
Se/utitUf tUe&gt; fyuupt&#13;
PiyyL &amp; OtcJian tf-ooal&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 65$-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
PARKSIDE AGnVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
Whiteskellar&#13;
north lounge, greenquist&#13;
NICKELODEON&#13;
r \&#13;
Flicker&#13;
Classics&#13;
THREE&#13;
CHARLIE CHAPUN&#13;
FILMS&#13;
2PMTHURS. FEB. 10&#13;
adm. one nickle&#13;
AMMM MMM MIUIR*IUI ^ WA M**&#13;
—Honest George Sale — during February&#13;
:V:V:V:V:V q free cherry tree with purchase of any major item ••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Freezers — start at $194&#13;
Admiral Color TV start at $199&#13;
18" Color start at $299&#13;
Heavy duty washers start at $169&#13;
Apartment size washers start at $109&#13;
Refrigerators start at $179&#13;
Warehouse Discount Prices&#13;
micro-ovens, air conditioners&#13;
R. C. Service&#13;
One Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
Ron Casperson - owner&#13;
FLO'S&#13;
Home Cooking&#13;
HWY 31&amp;County Trunk E&#13;
6AM-6PM Specials Daily&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
pizzA&#13;
I ri i; delivery TO PARKSIDE MEEM i l&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 - 301" Aven ue Kenosha 657—5191&#13;
Open ^ days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
y y y y y ^ y y y ^ y y y y y y y y y y y y *&#13;
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have the money you need&#13;
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Hours:&#13;
Mon. &amp; Wed. — 1:00 - 4:00&#13;
Tues. &amp; Thurs — 12:30 - 2:30&#13;
&lt;1&#13;
Service Center&#13;
245 Tallent Hall&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Doris Lanfz,&#13;
Representative&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF&#13;
o3%&#13;
CREDIT UNION &#13;
PageH NEWSCOPE February 7,1972&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
"We got one thing to say to you&#13;
fuckin' hippies, and that is it's rock and&#13;
roll and it's here to stay." This&#13;
statement, well oiled with grease&#13;
dialect, was delivered just before the&#13;
first encore of three, and by that time&#13;
nobody in the wildly cheering crowd&#13;
needed any convincing. By the time Sha&#13;
Na Na finished their last encore,&#13;
everybody's ears were ringing,&#13;
everybody's face was smiling, and Sha&#13;
na na had pulled off a celebration of joy,&#13;
physical consciousness, and rock and&#13;
roll in Kenotown.&#13;
Sunday night, Sha na na brought rock&#13;
and roll to Bradford High School's&#13;
auditorium, a school known for its&#13;
greasers, and for an hour and a half&#13;
played and danced and sang before a&#13;
nearly packed house. About five after&#13;
eight, the group took the stage and held&#13;
it for two sets; three guitars, drums,&#13;
sax, keyboard, 12 members in all, all of&#13;
whom sang magnificent colos and&#13;
harmony. The New York City natives&#13;
can best be described as raunchy,&#13;
skinny, paunchy, greasy, sparkling,&#13;
high stepping, solid singing, intimidating&#13;
and friendly. It's an act but&#13;
Rock On&#13;
it's soo good.&#13;
The crowd, hipsters, semihipsters,&#13;
aging rock and rollers, professors and a&#13;
few greasers was gradually so overwhelmed&#13;
by Sha na na that, by the end,&#13;
everyone was on their feet, clapping&#13;
hands to the rhythm of good ol' rock and&#13;
roll, hooting and hollering and&#13;
screaming for more, wishing it would&#13;
never, never end. One of the members&#13;
of t he group, Scotter who's been with it&#13;
since its inception, answered the&#13;
question whether rock and roll is here&#13;
to stay; he said "it never went.away".&#13;
The crowd was a rock and roll crowd,&#13;
by the second set people sere crowding&#13;
the stage, a few dancing, a lot shaking.&#13;
Scotter told Newscope that it was a&#13;
little less than the reacion they get from&#13;
major campuses such as Berkeley or&#13;
Madison ("where everyone just went&#13;
wild"). A few bottled of Cold Duck were&#13;
being passed around, and as far as I&#13;
could tell no reefer was being smoked;&#13;
this audience was intoxicated by the&#13;
music.&#13;
On state twelve funny jester-greasers&#13;
were shaking and pirouetting, running&#13;
around in circles, miming, playing&#13;
guitars while lying on their backs,&#13;
jumping out into the audience, combing&#13;
monumentally greased hair, singing&#13;
songs that produced their own&#13;
choreography, backed up by expert&#13;
lighting.&#13;
The beauty of Sha na na is in their&#13;
execution. The choreography and&#13;
lighting is so well times, so reflective of&#13;
the songs they play, so obviously intentionally&#13;
corny that it pulls laughter&#13;
and howls of joy from your gut. It's all&#13;
there inside us, it took Sha na na to pull&#13;
it out, make us loose, happy and&#13;
sweaty. Their repertoire is composed of&#13;
the jerky ballads and writing madness&#13;
of the '50s; "Let's go to the Hop", "Blue&#13;
Moon, "Teen Angel", "Duke of Earl",&#13;
and "Runaround Sue". Everyone a&#13;
singer, everyone a dancer, everyone a&#13;
madman, jerking off with mike stand&#13;
and guitar phalluses, shaking, shaking,&#13;
shaking, exhorting "everybody rock."&#13;
None of it fell on deaf ears. They're&#13;
professionals, there is none of the interminable&#13;
tuning between songs that&#13;
characterizes so many other rock&#13;
groups, there was never more than a&#13;
fifteen second interval between songs&#13;
that were so energetic you wondered&#13;
when the group would collapse in&#13;
masse.&#13;
The ass that Sha na na kicks is the ass&#13;
in our heads, and they kick it with their&#13;
music, our music, until we're standing&#13;
up and dancing and clapping and&#13;
celebrating the essential joy of rock and&#13;
roll, until we realize that rock and roll is&#13;
a physical thing, an event that we are a&#13;
part of and that is a part of us, always&#13;
has been and always will be.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presented us with our music, our&#13;
heritage, our theater and it's about&#13;
time. It's about time we had a chance to&#13;
stamp our feet, and reaffirm the fact&#13;
that music is our very special friend.&#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;
ijg&gt;yg)i©MS)«aK&lt;ax6)x&lt;ai&#13;
I&#13;
I -&#13;
do you have&#13;
planned over semester break?&#13;
\ s\\hy not join narkside in sunny ...&#13;
ACAPULCOf&#13;
MEXICO ®&#13;
APRIL 2 THRU 9&#13;
ONLY $225&#13;
( P L U S $20 00 TAX ( S E R V I C E )&#13;
includes:&#13;
ROUND TRIP AIR VIA&#13;
DC-8 JET&#13;
FIRST CLASS HOTELS&#13;
MEXICO CITY. CUERNAVACA,&#13;
TAXCO AND GLAMOROUS SU&#13;
CAPITAL OF ACAPULCO&#13;
»/2 DAY OCEAN YACHT&#13;
CRUISE&#13;
ALL LAND TRANSFERS&#13;
For complete information and&#13;
more details contact the Student&#13;
Activities Office, Tallent llall. </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 5, February 7, 1972</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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