<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4417" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/4417?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T20:23:29+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="4920">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/8d98ad7dab2e224c28b90595d4a7888b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3f38cd1e4d08d770e3d752745a13189a</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="91476">
            <text>III&#13;
III&#13;
~ II. .- u"..'&#13;
~&#13;
~ -c&#13;
."l:'&#13;
fJ)&#13;
0&#13;
t:&#13;
Q)&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
.. :::&#13;
•':";&#13;
~.- ...0.&#13;
.E. I J" •:; .. ~s ..&#13;
EE&#13;
Kenosha Art Fair&#13;
,&#13;
Newscope photographer Darrell&#13;
Borger caught a glimpse of nature at&#13;
Lincoln Park in Kenosha. While the&#13;
concrete jungles of the midwest Industrial&#13;
machine eat up flora and&#13;
fauna, there still remain a few places&#13;
where a person can sit on grass that&#13;
isn't imitation and smell real flowers.&#13;
The few Edens left are many times&#13;
only walking or bicycling distance&#13;
away, and instead of cursing the heat,&#13;
a few moments of quiet green can&#13;
make you realize that we fit right into&#13;
the scheme of things at 98.6degrees.&#13;
Photographs By Darrell Borger&#13;
~~&#13;
I&#13;
Newscope photographer Darrell&#13;
Borger caught a glimpse of nature at&#13;
jncoln Park in Kenosha. While the&#13;
con c rete jungles of the midwest Industrial&#13;
machine eat up flora and&#13;
fauna, there still remain a few places&#13;
where a person can sit on grass that&#13;
isn't imitation and smell real flowers.&#13;
The few Edens left are many times&#13;
only walking or bicycling distance&#13;
away , and instead of cursing the heat,&#13;
a few moments of quiet green can&#13;
make you realize that we fit right into&#13;
the scheme of things at 98.6 degrees.&#13;
Photographs By Darrell Borger&#13;
Photographs BY Darrell Borger&#13;
Sunday brought a&#13;
pleasant, coudless day and&#13;
with it, the artists. The&#13;
annual Kenosha Air Fair&#13;
attracted an overflow crowd&#13;
of critics; both the curious&#13;
and the committed.&#13;
This year's Fair differed&#13;
from last year's in that a&#13;
larger location, Library&#13;
Park, was selected to&#13;
display the works of the&#13;
artists. Previous Art Fairs,&#13;
held in Civic Center Park,&#13;
presumably fixed the&#13;
number o'fartists on display&#13;
to the space available. The&#13;
Library Park location was&#13;
to alleviate these restrictions.&#13;
Although many more&#13;
works were on display, the&#13;
move for more room seems&#13;
to have lost its purpose.&#13;
The displays were set up&#13;
along the walkways that&#13;
meander through the park.&#13;
Although this serves the&#13;
interests of both conserva&#13;
tion and ecology, it&#13;
causes many strained eyes&#13;
and stepped on feet. For the&#13;
greater part of the da) the&#13;
walkways were uncomfortably&#13;
crowded ne&#13;
was unable to spend a&#13;
leisure unday afternoon&#13;
enjoying the art of&#13;
Southeastern Wi consin&#13;
The show itself wa the&#13;
better of last year's and&#13;
reflects the improvement&#13;
the Fair has shown as lime&#13;
goes on. The range from&#13;
traditional to contemporary&#13;
was well represented, meluding&#13;
copies of the&#13;
masters, potteries,&#13;
ceramics, metal sculpture.&#13;
photography and macrame&#13;
Photographs B&#13;
Sunday brought a&#13;
pleasant, coudless day and&#13;
with it, the artists. The&#13;
annual Kenosha Air Fair&#13;
attracted an overflow crowd&#13;
of critics; both the curiou&#13;
and the committed .&#13;
This year's Fair differed&#13;
from last year's in that a&#13;
l~rger location, Library&#13;
Park, was selected to&#13;
display the works of the&#13;
artists. Previous Art Fairs,&#13;
held in Civic Center Park,&#13;
presumably fixed the&#13;
number of artists on display&#13;
to the space available . The&#13;
Library Park location was&#13;
to alleviate these restrictions.&#13;
Although many more&#13;
works were on display, the&#13;
move for more room seems&#13;
to have lost its purpose.&#13;
The displays were set up&#13;
along the walkways that&#13;
meander through the park.&#13;
Although this serves the&#13;
interests of both conservation&#13;
and ecology, it&#13;
causes many strained eyes&#13;
and stepped on feet. For the&#13;
Darr ll r ,.&#13;
PBge2 NEWSCOPE July 12,1971&#13;
Company in Kenosha .&#13;
the Centrex system ha~~d&#13;
installed at a cost of abou~&#13;
$3,000. About 250 lines ha&#13;
been cut into se ve&#13;
i.mitiia11y, but a capacirtVlce&#13;
1,500 lines will provid Yf 0(&#13;
future .expansion ase :&#13;
university grows.&#13;
Other campuses it&#13;
Centrex service will :1h&#13;
the UW-Green Bay camrve&#13;
later this year and wI: Oshkosh next year. .&#13;
Metz sai~ the Parksicte&#13;
sWltchove~ IS the first st&#13;
10 establishing new ep&#13;
h f&#13;
ex·&#13;
c anges or about 4000&#13;
telephone sUbscriber~ in&#13;
north.ern Kenosha ' southern Racine and part of the&#13;
Somers-Parkside area thia&#13;
summer. About $3 millionin&#13;
computerized switching&#13;
equipment, known as Ess&#13;
will b~ installed in the n~&#13;
switching office on 22nd&#13;
Avenue by August.&#13;
ANNOUNCINGTHE OPENING ON JULY 1, 1971&#13;
OF K &amp; S ASSOCIATES&#13;
A PROFESSIONAL VOCATIONAL&#13;
GUIDANCESERVICE&#13;
Offering Services in the following areas&#13;
Centrex Brings New&#13;
Numbers To Parkside&#13;
The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks ide has new&#13;
telephone numbers.&#13;
A new telephone system,&#13;
Centrex, began serving the&#13;
UW-P campus Saturday,&#13;
July 10, when Wisconsin&#13;
~Telephone Company cut the&#13;
university's telephones into&#13;
an electronic central office&#13;
at 255 - 22nd Avenue, called&#13;
the Parkside Exchange.&#13;
The main university&#13;
telephone number is now&#13;
553-2121. However, all&#13;
university telephones have&#13;
their own four-diget extension&#13;
numbers preceded&#13;
by 553 and may be dialed&#13;
directly from outside the&#13;
university. Racine and&#13;
Kenosha telephone books&#13;
coming out later this&#13;
summer will Include 66&#13;
different office listings.&#13;
Meantime, persons calling&#13;
553-2121 are being routed to&#13;
the office they want.&#13;
Career &amp; Educational Planning&#13;
Diagnostic Testing by Licensed&#13;
Psychologists&#13;
Occupational Information and&#13;
Employment Outlook&#13;
1303 Douglas Ave, Racine 633-2132&#13;
Further Information Available Unon Request&#13;
USHORT STUFF"&#13;
9:00 P-.M. - 1:00 A.M.&#13;
JULY 17&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID Required&#13;
-&#13;
2112 - 14 - 52 ST .&#13;
K~SHA&#13;
I MIDTOWN BAR I&#13;
&amp; REST AURANT I&#13;
PIZZA _ S.EAFOODS&#13;
ITALIAN_AMERICAN e occ I&#13;
COCKTAll,.S&#13;
E;:NTERTAINMENT&#13;
\"&#13;
BOOKS - NOVELS&#13;
GREENING OF AMERICA&#13;
by Charles Reich&#13;
~).&#13;
.' .. ' f .' ~-:-c~y.&#13;
,U;~i~. " '" .... ~.\\ --) .' ,'&#13;
Q\l,.,IFORNIA GENERATION&#13;
by .1acqueline Briskin&#13;
\ .&#13;
THE COUPLE&#13;
by Mr. &amp; Mrs. K&#13;
~&#13;
R-K NE~S AGENCY~~&#13;
Newspape~s • Paperbacks· Magazines ~&#13;
5816 Sixth Ave. &amp; Pershing Plaza&#13;
NEED BOOKS?&#13;
The Kenosha &amp; Racine Campus&#13;
Book Stores are now closed for&#13;
the summer, but all books are&#13;
still available from the store on&#13;
the Wood Road Campus.&#13;
/01&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
h, four Sius 9'" • ·12" - I.... - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• l'IS • S'AGHB'TI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNoceHI ..... VIOLl • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA. FOOD • SANDWICHU&#13;
CAllY.oUTS - DELIVElY&#13;
"YOU .'NG ... WE atlHC'"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
Some frequently called&#13;
Parks ide numbers are;&#13;
Admissions 2241, Athletics.&#13;
2245 Business 2201,&#13;
Cha~cellor 2211, Education&#13;
Division 2241, Humanistic&#13;
Studies 2331, Science&#13;
Division 2326, Social Science&#13;
Division 2316, Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises 2294, Information&#13;
Center 2345,&#13;
Library 2238, Protection and&#13;
Security 2455, Public Information&#13;
2233, Student&#13;
Affairs 2225, University&#13;
Extension 2312,&#13;
Management Science&#13;
Division 2271, Engineering&#13;
Science Division 2314.&#13;
Persons dialing the old&#13;
Parkside number are told&#13;
the new number by recording.&#13;
The greater part of&#13;
both Kenosha and Racine is&#13;
now able to call Parkside&#13;
toll free.&#13;
Joe Metz, manager of the&#13;
Wisconsin' Telephone&#13;
For What It's Worth&#13;
by Sandy Principe&#13;
It's no news that there is presently a job crisis in the&#13;
United States. A college education no longer guarantees I&#13;
job let alone a position related to your major. Statistics&#13;
show it harder to obtain a position equipped with a Ph. D.&#13;
than with a M.A. Television ten years ago was saturated&#13;
with commercials begging for teachers.&#13;
Since then, education has become one of the m.. t&#13;
crowded of all professional .fields. This overflow was 3&#13;
reflected in the social sciences and has begun to affect the&#13;
science i.e., physics and chemistry.&#13;
Seeing so many friends uriable to practice within their&#13;
choosen fields gave me the idea for this column. Each week&#13;
I will choose one major and research as be&amp;t (as best II&#13;
available statistics allow) the opportunities for that field.I&#13;
will also talk to counselors at Parks ide whenever possible.&#13;
I hope it will be intersting, informative, and most ofall&#13;
relevant.&#13;
Presents Paper In USSR&#13;
~«: r;: 'll Fa r Newscope •&#13;
A trip of Moscow to deliver an&#13;
invited paper before the 13th&#13;
International Congress of the&#13;
History of Science will climax a&#13;
summer of research for Frank&#13;
N. Edgerton, an assistant&#13;
professor of history at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Edgerton's research is&#13;
supported by grants from the&#13;
UW Graduate School and the&#13;
American Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Edgerton left June 15 for&#13;
Cambridge, England, where he&#13;
Editor warren Nedry&#13;
Copy Edi tor John Koloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Gray&#13;
NEWS STAFF&#13;
BobBorchardt, Darrell Borger,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen, Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Mike Stevesand Janet Sabol,&#13;
Mike Starr. '&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott.&#13;
will continue research begWl&#13;
last year on the life of HewettC.&#13;
Watson, the 19th cenlury's&#13;
foremost student of the&#13;
distribution and variation d&#13;
British plants, and his influence&#13;
on Charles Darwin's theory rJ.&#13;
evolution by natural selection.&#13;
Edgerton will remain in&#13;
England until mid·Augusl&#13;
before going to Moscowfortbe&#13;
history of science congressA~.&#13;
16 through 25.The topicofh~&#13;
paper for the cong:ess 1~&#13;
"Darwin's AnalySIS 0&#13;
Biological Competition", ,.&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
is aD&#13;
Summer NewScope r&#13;
independentstudentnews~&#13;
composedand publishedw()bl17&#13;
through the summersess'ty II&#13;
students of the. Unive~~&#13;
Wisconsin-Park~l~e. are&#13;
ohtained advertismgrunds (of&#13;
the sole source of reven~ ..&#13;
the operationofNewsCf ~...&#13;
copies are prtnte tbI&#13;
distributed thrOUg~crJP'&#13;
Kenosha and Racln ....&#13;
munities as well ~s ".&#13;
University. Free cor" available uponcequ..&#13;
' Page2 NEWSCOPE July 12 , 1971&#13;
AN , OU NCI NG TI-IE OPE ING ON JULY l, 1971&#13;
OF K &amp; S ASSOCIAT ES&#13;
A PROFESSIO 'AL VO CATION AL&#13;
GUIDANCE SERV I CE&#13;
Offering Services i n t he foll ow ing areas&#13;
Career &amp; tduc a t i onal Planning&#13;
Di agnostic Testing by Lice nsed&#13;
Psycholog ists&#13;
Occupationa l Inform a tion an d&#13;
Employmen t Outl ook&#13;
1303 Douglas Av e , Ra c ine 6 33- 2 132&#13;
f urt l1e r Informa t ion Avai l ab le Up on Request&#13;
''SHORT STUFF''&#13;
9:00 ~.M. - 1:00 A.M.&#13;
JULY 17&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
P,,rk ide and Wiscon in ID Required&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
f I&#13;
~. ._ __________ /_... . ...&#13;
\&#13;
"&#13;
Kenosha - Racine&#13;
BOOKS - NOVELS&#13;
GREENING OF AMERICA&#13;
by Cha rle s Reich&#13;
TH E COUPLE&#13;
by Mr. &amp;Mrs . K&#13;
CAL IFORNIA GENERAT ION&#13;
-~ · =&#13;
by Jacqueline Briskin&#13;
R-K NE~S AGENCY *~ Newspape~s - Paperbacks - Magazines ~&#13;
5816 Sixth Ave. &amp; Pershing Plaza&#13;
NEED BOOKS?&#13;
The Kenosha &amp; Racine Campus&#13;
Book Stores are now closed for&#13;
the summer, but all books are&#13;
still available from the store on&#13;
the Wood Road Campus.&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
Centrex Brings New&#13;
The U n iv ersity of&#13;
\\'isconsin -Parkside has new&#13;
telephone numbers .&#13;
A new telephone system,&#13;
Centrex, began serving the&#13;
UW-P campus Saturday ,&#13;
July 10 , when Wisconsin&#13;
5elephone Company cut the&#13;
university's telephones into&#13;
an electronic central office&#13;
at 255 - 22nd A venue, called&#13;
the Parkside Exchange.&#13;
The main university&#13;
telephone number is now&#13;
553 -2121. However, all&#13;
university telephones have&#13;
their own four-diget extension&#13;
numbers preceded&#13;
by 553 and may be dialed&#13;
directly from outside the&#13;
university . Racine and&#13;
Kenosha telephone books&#13;
coming out later this&#13;
summer will i nclude 66&#13;
different office listings .&#13;
Meantime, persons calling&#13;
553 -2121 are being routed to&#13;
the office they want.&#13;
I MIDTOWN BAR I&#13;
~ &amp; RESTAURANT I&#13;
PIZZA - SEAFOODS&#13;
I I TALIAN-AMERICAN FOOC&gt; I&#13;
COCKTAI L,.$&#13;
l;::NTERTAI N MENT&#13;
I 2112 - 14 - 52 ST.&#13;
K~SHA.&#13;
111 Four Sizes 9" . 12" _ 14" _ 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIIS • SPAGHOTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GHOCCHI • llAVIOll • LA SAGHA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SAHDWICHU&#13;
CAltlLY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
" YOU II/HG .. . WE IIJHG"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
I&#13;
Numbers To Parkside&#13;
Some frequently called&#13;
Parkside numbers are:&#13;
Admissions 2241, Athletics&#13;
2245 Business 2201 ,&#13;
Cha~cellor 2211, Education&#13;
Division 2241, Humanistic&#13;
Studies 2331 , Science&#13;
Division 2326 , Social Science&#13;
Division 2316, Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises 2294, Information&#13;
Center 2345 ,&#13;
Library 2238 , Protection and&#13;
Security 2455 , Public Information&#13;
2233, Student&#13;
Affairs 2225, University&#13;
Extension 2312,&#13;
Management Science&#13;
Division 2271 , Engineering&#13;
Science Division 2314 .&#13;
Persons dialing the old&#13;
Parkside number are told&#13;
the new number by recording.&#13;
The greater part of&#13;
both Kenosha and Racine is&#13;
now able to call Parkside&#13;
toll free .&#13;
Joe Metz , manager of the&#13;
Wisconsin- Telephone&#13;
Company in Kenosha .&#13;
the Centrex system ha~ bsaict&#13;
installed at a cost of ~en&#13;
$3 ,000. About 250 linesah ut&#13;
b a~ een cut into se .&#13;
. ·t· 11 b rv1ce m1 ia y, ut a capac ·t&#13;
I. . 1 Y or 1,500 mes will provid r&#13;
fu~ure . expansion as e t~r&#13;
umvers1ty grows. e&#13;
Other campuses .&#13;
C t . With&#13;
en rex service will s&#13;
th UW erve&#13;
e -Green Bay ca"'&#13;
I t th. ..,pus&#13;
a er 1s year and WSU&#13;
Oshkosh next year. ·&#13;
Metz said the Park .d ·t h . SI e sw1 c over 1s the first t&#13;
in establishing new s ep&#13;
h f e~&#13;
c anges or about 4 000&#13;
telephone subscriber; in&#13;
northern Kenosha southe&#13;
Ra . , rn&#13;
cme and part of th&#13;
Somers-Parkside area th~&#13;
summer. About $3 million . t . 1n&#13;
co~pu enzed switching&#13;
~mpm~nt, known as Ess ,&#13;
will be mstalled in the new&#13;
switching office on 22nd&#13;
A venue by August.&#13;
For What It's Worth&#13;
by Sandy Principe&#13;
It's no news that there is presently a job crisis in the&#13;
United States. A college education no longer guarantees a&#13;
job let alone a position related to your major. Statistics&#13;
show it harder to obtain a position equipped with a Ph. D.&#13;
than with a M.A. Television ten years ago was saturated&#13;
with commercials begging for teachers.&#13;
Since then , education has become one of the most&#13;
crowded of all professional fields~ This overflow was soon&#13;
reflected in the social sciences and has begun to affect the&#13;
science i.e., physics and chemistry.&#13;
Seeing so many friends unable to practice within their&#13;
choosen fields gave me the idea for this column. Each week&#13;
I will choose one major and research as best (as best as&#13;
available statistics allow) the opportunities for that field . I&#13;
will also talk to counselors at Parkside whenever possible.&#13;
I hope it will be inters ting, informative, and most of all&#13;
relevant.&#13;
Presents Paper In USSR&#13;
A trip of Moscow to deliver an&#13;
invited paper before the 13th&#13;
In te rnational Congress of the&#13;
History of Science will climax a&#13;
summer of research for Frank&#13;
N. Edgerton , an assis tant&#13;
professor of his tory at the&#13;
Uni v ersi ty of WisconsinParkside&#13;
.&#13;
Edgert on ' s research is&#13;
supported by grants from the&#13;
UW Graduate School and the&#13;
American Philosophical&#13;
Socie ty.&#13;
Edgerton left June 15 for&#13;
Cambridge, England, where he&#13;
will continue research begu n&#13;
last year on the life of Hewett C.&#13;
Watson , the 19th centur y'&#13;
foremost student of the&#13;
distribution and var iation of&#13;
British plants , and his influence&#13;
on Charles Darwin 's theory of&#13;
evolution by natural selection.&#13;
Edgerton will rema in in&#13;
England until mid -Augu.t&#13;
before going to Moscow fo r the&#13;
history of science congr ess Auf&#13;
16 through 25 . The topic of h!&#13;
paper for the cong: ess 1&#13;
" Darwin's Anal ysis of&#13;
Biological Competi ti on ".&#13;
:::i.~~~QQP'.?WW881&amp;:rr···11 ;·;;·;r~ Newscape (I&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
Copy Editor John Koloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature E_ditor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Gray&#13;
NEWS STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen Bill&#13;
Sorensen. '&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Mike Stevesand Janet Sabol&#13;
Mike Starr. ' '&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott.&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2~&#13;
553-24&#13;
· an&#13;
Summer Newscope , 15 1&#13;
independent stude~t ne"!i:ri&gt;&#13;
composed and published . b&#13;
through the summer session :i · rs1t, ~ students of the uruve ·dent&#13;
Wisconsin-Park~i~e . 5! art&#13;
obtained advertising fun ue tor&#13;
the sole source of reven 4&#13;
the operation of Newscope. 'nd&#13;
· ted 8 copies are pnn tht&#13;
distributed thro~gh corn·&#13;
Kenosha and Racine tbt&#13;
munities as well as art&#13;
University. Free copies&#13;
available upon request.&#13;
--&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
f the Newscope Staff&#13;
Th: Science Division Executive&#13;
mmittee has voted to reaffirm its&#13;
eOrlier recommendation that Prof.&#13;
~~mes Russell Brokaw's faculty&#13;
pointment not be renewed beyond ap&#13;
June 1972. .&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie has concurred&#13;
·th this recommendation.&#13;
~'Brokaw, an assistant professor of&#13;
ychology, said in reaction to this,&#13;
~ThiSisn't the end of the matter. I do&#13;
tend to see recourse at higher&#13;
~vels. It's perfectly obvious .they&#13;
haven't listened to the rna terial I&#13;
presented. "&#13;
volves Dean Morrow. He involved&#13;
himself In making the decision at the&#13;
diVISIOnal level, and then later&#13;
reviews that decision as Dean I&#13;
don't see how that could fail to 'influence&#13;
the decision at the divisional&#13;
level."&#13;
Brokaw said further that Dean&#13;
Morrow hampered his presentation&#13;
before the Executive Committee by&#13;
allowing him to see his personnel file&#13;
only two days before the hearing.&#13;
The written notification allowing&#13;
him to. do this came the same day as&#13;
his written notifica tion of the time of&#13;
the hearing came.&#13;
Except, Brokaw noted, "I never&#13;
Jut) u. 1971&#13;
questions on these two matters and&#13;
then left the room." he said. "I did&#13;
not take part in any of the Committee's&#13;
deliberationS."&#13;
He added that after the Committee&#13;
reached its decision Professor&#13;
Isenberg asked him to put In writing&#13;
what he had told the Committee&#13;
orally.&#13;
The Dean emphasized that the&#13;
Committee did not ask him his&#13;
opinion on the matter, and that he&#13;
did not tell the Committee what it&#13;
was.&#13;
He said, also, that to hi&#13;
knowledge Chancellor Wyllie had&#13;
never told the Executive Committee&#13;
Brokaw Termination Stands&#13;
the cience division and with the&#13;
admmistration wa . when he brought&#13;
Dr Joel Green poon to Park. 'de m&#13;
the prmg of 1970&#13;
Greenspoon. a psychologi t, wa&#13;
being considered for an appointment&#13;
at Parkside at the lime&#13;
Bro aw tressed that "Green&#13;
. poon is a big man 10 p Y chology ,&#13;
and I got the irnpre: ron that the&#13;
reaction he received from the pie&#13;
m the division wa that the\ did not&#13;
hke him." .&#13;
"Furthermore: he !&gt;a,d.·1 got&#13;
the impres ion that the Chancellor&#13;
may have been offended by&#13;
something Greenspoon id It'. r-----------...&#13;
He claimed the act itself was&#13;
political in nature. He said, "I think&#13;
manyof my problems are due to the&#13;
fact that I was active in campus life.&#13;
1maintain there is reason to believe&#13;
IIlatmy participation on the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee, and other&#13;
organizations such as the Luddites&#13;
led to my firing."&#13;
Twoweeks ago Brokaw spoke for&#13;
oearly three hours before an open&#13;
hearing of the Executive Committee&#13;
as he rebutted the charges made&#13;
against him in the Committee's&#13;
initial recommendation of nonrenewal.&#13;
Hecontended then that Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie personally sought the termination&#13;
of his contract.&#13;
Brokaw asserts that he was&#13;
!reated unfairly in the re-evalation&#13;
Gf his case. He feels the Dean of the&#13;
OJIlege of Science and Society,&#13;
WimamMorrow 1 is the prime cause&#13;
af this.&#13;
He told Newscope, "The most&#13;
glaring instances of unfairness&#13;
tbroughout the whole matter inreceived&#13;
oral notification that I&#13;
could inspect my personnel file prior&#13;
to Tuesday, even thouth the Dean&#13;
had given me oral notification of the&#13;
hearing many days before that."&#13;
In addition to this, Brokaw&#13;
maintains that the time of the&#13;
hearing was set despite the fact he&#13;
had a severe case of laryngitis and&#13;
told the Dean that his voice might&#13;
not hold up through the hearing.&#13;
In answer to these charges, Dean&#13;
Morrow told Newscope that he did&#13;
not take part in the deliberations of&#13;
the Science Division Executive&#13;
Committee.&#13;
He explained, "At the request of&#13;
the Executive Committee, I appeared&#13;
before the Committee to&#13;
answer questions of information on&#13;
two matters: student complaints&#13;
that may have been communicated&#13;
to me regarding Professor Brokaw's&#13;
teaching, and a specific dispute&#13;
between a group of students and&#13;
Professor Brokaw.&#13;
"I responded to the Committee's&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
or the Newscope Staff&#13;
One of the most controversial issues in recent&#13;
struck Kenosha six months ago in the form of&#13;
female dancers. Aside from under-the-breath&#13;
and perhaps an amorphous bunch of dirty old&#13;
who oggle the ladies anyway, an estimated 25,000&#13;
pellOllllans have visited the handful of toplessmiess&#13;
nightspots, presumably uninspired by the&#13;
Is of the prurien t.&#13;
". you've followed this foremost issue, you are&#13;
. r with the Mayor's indignation at the June 21&#13;
ting of the Common Council. At the June 7&#13;
g when the council voted to a 9 to 9 tie to renew&#13;
class "B" liquor licenses of the establishments the&#13;
yor exercised his authority and in each case voted&#13;
deny~enewal. The owners subsequently requested&#13;
tthe,r licenses be renewed with the condition that&#13;
diSContinue nude entertainment. At the June 7&#13;
. g the mayor stated that he would veto the&#13;
'f the Council recanted its previous decision to&#13;
Y renewal. The outcome of' this meeting blunted&#13;
tavern keepers hopes of remaining in business.&#13;
Now the~wners, by court ruling, will remain open&#13;
busllless until July 26. A hearing is scheduled for&#13;
date at the Federal District court in Milwaukee.&#13;
. CItyattorney's office is handling the city's case,&#13;
I Jay Schwartz is defending the tavern keepers.&#13;
, n a slm,lar case in Madison, the Dangle, a&#13;
ern advertising topless-bottomless enterent,&#13;
lost its liquor license at the hands of the&#13;
COuncil.Though the issue in the Dangle case, and'&#13;
bly the Kenosha cases, was the response of&#13;
ntonUdity, the Madison council could not ban&#13;
,Cinders and the Dangle has since turned mto a&#13;
~house featuring topless-bottomless en-&#13;
1Ilers. Because no liquor is served the Dangle&#13;
1h minors as well as an over twenty-one crowd. __illSupreme Court has ruled that nudity of itself&#13;
egal or offensive, the Madison counc~1 ~uc-&#13;
. III reducing the number of restrictions&#13;
ling nUde entertainment to the point of actually&#13;
not to renew Prol. Brokaw's contract.&#13;
In regard to Prof. Brokaw being&#13;
notified as tate as he was that he·&#13;
could see his personnel file, Dean&#13;
Morrow said, "Both the Division&#13;
Chairman and myself have been&#13;
operating under instructions to&#13;
consult with the niversity Lawyer&#13;
(Burt Wagner 1 regarding mailers of&#13;
procedure.&#13;
"We were not advised earlier that&#13;
this should be done. As soon as we&#13;
were so advised, I communicated so&#13;
with Professor Brokaw," he said.&#13;
"I'm no lav,"yer," he continued.&#13;
"My impression is that such&#13;
procedures carried out on ad\'ise 01&#13;
the University lawyer have gone&#13;
considerably beyond what may be&#13;
required by the Roth Judicial&#13;
decision in affording rights and&#13;
privileges to laculty members In&#13;
appealing a non·renewal decisIOn."&#13;
Brokaw told 'ewscope that he&#13;
thought the turning point in his&#13;
relations with the senior laculty in&#13;
obvious Greenspoon is a verv Iorthright&#13;
guy, and he would have not&#13;
put up with Ihe kmd of poliuc thC)&#13;
ha ve been practicing."&#13;
It wa after th. VI it that tud -nt&#13;
complaints about Brokaw' teachrng&#13;
began 10 appear lie ,. Ih OJ a&#13;
prompted by the adrnini rrauon II~&#13;
POints out that In contra. t 10 th' he&#13;
had received "hal he de ribed a. a&#13;
fairly ubstantial merit mer -nu-nt III&#13;
salary&#13;
In answer to thi . D~3n \torrO',&#13;
said, "I really don't think reacuon&#13;
to Professor Greenspoon I'nten'&lt;l&#13;
into the ba~'IS of th(O to: -~utl\ 1&#13;
Committee dec' ',on. and certalnh&#13;
not In my own d 'I- Jon" .&#13;
Dean ~Iorro\\ mdlcatl d thaI he&#13;
has a fa\'orable Impr '.. ,on of Dr&#13;
Greenspoon a a p. y choln', I&#13;
Concerning the merit Inl"rt'llll'nl&#13;
the Dean aid It "as onl) an 3\ l'r.lgt"&#13;
ize increment, and that tht' d("C'1Ion&#13;
on It wa reached l'arllcr 10th(' \l ar&#13;
Though new' of 'I \I . n'l con;"\l'&lt;l&#13;
to Profcs r Brokaw 1111 th' . pel/l '&#13;
semesler&#13;
increa Ing the number of pot nllal pllrol\!&#13;
In Kenosha there eem. to be a con. 'd 'r I Aap&#13;
between charg leveled by th alderm nand Ih&#13;
defense held by th tavern own rs l-). nil lIy Ih'&#13;
owners claim that the c,ty, 'f ,t . u . ,n d n)',nR&#13;
them licenses, wtlllnterfere with th Ir earn,n pow I'r&#13;
Severa I ow:ners ha v been In bw m. for ov r tw ,'nl \&#13;
years, long before entertamers w r featured and for&#13;
them it may be d,fflcult to fmd altemat mplo) m"nt&#13;
Secondly, there 's the right of the palron 10 dl'I,'rmln"&#13;
the type of enterlamm nl he w,lI enJOY He 'nl,. UC&#13;
facing the upreme Court have focu&gt;ed on lh~ In&#13;
dividuals right, and "h ther or not h ha ,t to r ',I&lt;I&#13;
pornographic material, watch X rated him., '10m&#13;
of the issues involved here ,. the per. onal fn'&lt;'dnm of&#13;
the mdividualto choos hi' pol. n and to u. " llllll' a&#13;
he desires.&#13;
DUring the coun ,I h arlnR:, ald,'rm,'n nl'[lOSlng&#13;
the tavern owner' rehed hea\,ly on \ague and ab&#13;
stract assertions Their argumen . c1a,med thaI th,'&#13;
presence of nude entertam rs defiled the reputat, 11 of&#13;
the city, furnished an atmosphere conducl\ to&#13;
prostitition. set ,mproper moral ·tandard for&#13;
children; caused di re peet (or law and authonty, and&#13;
promoted an "w,de open c,ty" effeet&#13;
In addition the aldermen contended that law&#13;
enforcement problems have mcreased a a result of&#13;
the entertainment necessitatmg an Increase In poltce&#13;
man hours to deal with it. According to the council&#13;
minutes o( June 21 the main problems were parking&#13;
and litter violations. It also mentioned that patrols&#13;
were heard to shout obscenities and that "crimes of a&#13;
violent nature" have gone up.&#13;
These latter charges are supportable by polIce&#13;
records but to ascertain their causes, that is, to&#13;
determine that they resulted from a combination of&#13;
nude dancers and liquor is difficult. Dancers have&#13;
been arrested on charges of lewdnesd but this infraction&#13;
is a misdemeanor and carries a fine of $250 if&#13;
convicted, but it hardly constitutes a crime of a violent&#13;
nature. A source close to the owners told this writer&#13;
that there have been very few arrests for lewdness&#13;
(Centinued on Page 61&#13;
DARRELL BORGER&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
f the Newscope Staff&#13;
Th; Science Division Executive&#13;
rnrnittee has voted to reaffirm its&#13;
co )ier recommendation that Prof.&#13;
e:~es Russell Brokaw's faculty&#13;
J pointment not be renewed beyond ap&#13;
June 1972 . .&#13;
Chancellor Wylhe ha~ concurred&#13;
with this recommendation.&#13;
Brokaw , an assistant professor of&#13;
,vchology , said in reaction to this,&#13;
frhis isn't the end of the matter. I do&#13;
intend to see recourse ~t higher&#13;
levels. It's perfectly obvious _they&#13;
1iaven't listened to the material I&#13;
presented ."&#13;
v?lves J?ean Morrow . He involved&#13;
~~s~lf m making the decision a t the&#13;
div~s1onal level, and then later&#13;
reviews that decision as Dean I&#13;
don' t see how that c ould fa il to .influence&#13;
the decis ion at the divisional&#13;
level. "&#13;
Brokaw said further tha t Dean&#13;
Morrow hampered his presentation&#13;
befor~ the_ Executive Committee bv&#13;
allowing him to see his personnel file&#13;
only two ?'1YS before the hea r ing.&#13;
. The written notification allowing&#13;
h~m to_ do this came the same day as&#13;
his written notification of the time of&#13;
the hearing came.&#13;
Except, Brokaw noted, " I ne ver&#13;
j&#13;
J11l)l! , 1 ii&#13;
que ·tions on the two m tt&#13;
then left the room." he id. "I did&#13;
not take part in anv of th Committee'&#13;
deliberations . ..&#13;
He added that after th Com mitt&#13;
reached it- decLion Prof or&#13;
I enberg a ked him to put in \\Titin&#13;
what he had told the ommitt&#13;
orally.&#13;
The Dean empha::ized that h&#13;
Committee did not a - him hi&#13;
opinion on the matter and hat h -&#13;
did not tell the om~ittee \"hat it&#13;
was.&#13;
He aid. al o, that to hi&#13;
knowledge hancellor \\ vllie had&#13;
never told the E. ·ecutive omm1tt&#13;
Brokaw Termination Stands&#13;
He claimed the act itself was&#13;
political in nature. He said, "I think&#13;
many of my problems are due to the&#13;
fact that I was active in campus life.&#13;
I maintain there is reason to believe&#13;
that my participation on the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee, and other&#13;
organizations such as the Luddites&#13;
led to my firing ."&#13;
1\vo weeks ago Brokaw spoke for&#13;
nearly three hours before an open&#13;
hearing of the Executive Committee&#13;
as he rebutted the charges made&#13;
against him in the Committee's&#13;
initial recommenda t ion of non renewal.&#13;
He contended then that Ch a n cellor&#13;
Wyllie personally sought the termination&#13;
of his contract.&#13;
Brokaw asserts that h e wa s&#13;
treated unfairly in the re-evalat ion&#13;
or his case. He feels the Dean of the&#13;
College of Science a nd Society,&#13;
William Morrow , is the prim e cause&#13;
of this .&#13;
He told Newscope , " The mos t&#13;
glaring instances of unfairness&#13;
throughout the whole matter inby&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
received oral notifica tion that I&#13;
could inspect my personnel fil e prior&#13;
to Tuesday, even thouth the Dean&#13;
had given me oral notifi cation of the&#13;
hearing many days befo r e t hat."&#13;
In addition to t his, Brokaw&#13;
maintains that the ti m e of the&#13;
hearing wa s s et despite t he fact he&#13;
had a severe case of laryngitis and&#13;
told the Dean that his voice might&#13;
not hold up through the hearing.&#13;
In answer to the se charges. Dean&#13;
Morrow told Newscope that he did&#13;
not take part in the deliberations of&#13;
the Science Division Executive&#13;
Com m ittee.&#13;
He explained, "At the request of&#13;
the Executive Committee. I appeared&#13;
before the Committee to&#13;
a nswer questions of information on&#13;
tw o matters: student complaints&#13;
that may ha ve been communicated&#13;
to me r egarding Professor Brokaw·s&#13;
teachi ng, and a specific dispute&#13;
between a group of students and&#13;
Professor Broka w.&#13;
" I responded to the Co m mittee's&#13;
One of the most controversial issues in recent&#13;
) rs struck Kenosha six months ago in the form of&#13;
111~ female dancers . Aside from under-the-breath&#13;
nes and perhaps an amorphous bunch of dirty old&#13;
nwho oggle the ladies anyway, an estimated 25 ,000&#13;
kenoshans have visited the handful of toplesstomless&#13;
nightspots , presumably uninspired by the&#13;
erests of the prurient.&#13;
b )f_ you '_ve followed this foremost issue , you are&#13;
mil_iar with the Mayor ' s indignation at the June 21&#13;
t~ng of the Common Council. At the June 7&#13;
hng when the counc il voted to a 9 to 9 tie to renew&#13;
clas s " B" liquor lice nses of the establis hme nts the&#13;
Yor ex ercised his authority and in each case vote d&#13;
d ny renewal. The owners subsequently r equested&#13;
t th eir licenses be renewed with the condition that&#13;
discontinue nude entertainment. At the June 7&#13;
ting the mayor stated that he would ve to the&#13;
ng if the council recanted its previous decis ion to&#13;
Y renewal. The outcome of this m eeting blunted&#13;
tavern keepers hopes of remaining in business.&#13;
for No~ the owners, by court ruling , will remain open&#13;
business until July 26. A hearing is scheduled for&#13;
d~te at the Federal District court in Milwaukee.&#13;
il city attorney 's office is handling the city ' s case,&#13;
;/ay ~c~wartz is defending the tavern keepers.&#13;
~ a similar case in Madison, the Dangle, a talJ:~ advei:tisi!lg tople ss-bottomles s e nter -&#13;
ty nt , lost its liquor licen&amp;e at the hands of the&#13;
~ouncil. Though the issue in the Dangle case, a nd ·&#13;
tnabJy the Kenosha cases was the response of&#13;
et'tnan to nudity the Madiso~ council could not ban&#13;
rrca nders and the Dangle has since turned into a&#13;
eehouse featuring topless -bottomless enainers.&#13;
Because no liquor is served the Dangle&#13;
~ . d nunors as well as an over twenty-one crow ·&#13;
not ~e Supreme Court has ruled that nudity o! itself&#13;
!~gal or offensive, the Madison counc~l ~uc.&#13;
in reducing the number of restrictions&#13;
ting nude entertainment to the point of actually&#13;
not to renew Prof. Bro ·aw· con tract.&#13;
In rega r d to Prof. Brokaw bein&#13;
notified a late a he \'a· that h •&#13;
could ee h1 per onnel file, Dean&#13;
Morrow said, "Both the Di\'Lion&#13;
Chairman and my elf ha,e b n&#13;
operating under in truction to&#13;
consult with the ni\-ersity Lawy r&#13;
&lt;Burt Wagner ) regarding matter · of&#13;
procedure.&#13;
"We\\ ere not advised earlier that&#13;
this should be done . A~- oon a " '&#13;
were so advised , I communicated . o&#13;
\\ith Profe or Brokaw:' he said.&#13;
"I'm no lawyer, " he continued.&#13;
"l\1y impre ion i · that uch&#13;
procedure· carried out on adv1 of&#13;
the 'niversity lawyer hav go&#13;
considerably beyond what ma y be&#13;
required by the Roth Judicial&#13;
deci ion in affording right nd&#13;
privileg to faculty m . in&#13;
appealing a non -ren wal d i ion ."&#13;
Brokaw told . ·e ,. cope that h&#13;
thought the turning point in hi.&#13;
relation with th .: nior faculty in&#13;
DAR RE L L BORGER&#13;
PF. Pa 3&#13;
By Bob Borchardl&#13;
LIghthouse One Fine Morning&#13;
Evolution - 3007&#13;
LIGHTHOUSE&#13;
kip Prokop Drums. Percus&#13;
ion, vocals, Paul Hoffert&#13;
Piano, Bives, Ralph Cole Guitar,&#13;
Vocal ,Don DIOOVO,Viola; Dick&#13;
Arrmn , Cello, Louie Ycknin,&#13;
Ba . Keith Jolimore, Sax, Flute,&#13;
Vocals. Larry rruth, Trombone,&#13;
Vocal ,Howard hore, Sax, Pete&#13;
Pantaluk, Trumpet. Bob Mc-&#13;
Bride, Lead Vocal , Percussion.&#13;
In last week's review, I mentioned&#13;
that in my opinion, BS&amp;T&#13;
and Chicago could be 10danger of&#13;
intell tualizrng their music to&#13;
the point where It becomes&#13;
:1 rile&#13;
Lighthouse will never have to&#13;
worry about that.&#13;
Whil Ii temng to the album, I&#13;
somehow get the feeling thatthey'"&#13;
collectively strained&#13;
ev ry available creative muscle&#13;
to the break 109 POlOtjust to accomplish&#13;
what they have on this&#13;
album To go any farther would&#13;
be to overload a mental circuit.&#13;
However. there is a lot that can be&#13;
said for, and about, what is on&#13;
"One Fine Morning."&#13;
FIrst, the writers for&#13;
LIghthouse apparently still feel it&#13;
appropriate to start a tune with&#13;
eight bars of a Sandy Nelson&#13;
drum beat, which makes you&#13;
wonder wben this album was&#13;
recorded. That type of intro lost&#13;
July I!. 19i1&#13;
its effectiveness back in the days&#13;
of "Wipe Out" and has only been&#13;
perpetuated by one Mr. B. Rich&#13;
who couldn't care when it went&#13;
out as long as he was playing a&#13;
solo.&#13;
Secondly, the lyrics at times&#13;
seem to be the product of whoever&#13;
it was that did those road-side&#13;
masterpieces for Burma-Shave.&#13;
On occassion, both words and&#13;
music come plagiaristicatly&#13;
together to cause the listener&#13;
considerable mental distress as&#13;
he tries to remember where he's&#13;
heard that strongly familiar&#13;
original composition.&#13;
After all that, it sounds funny to&#13;
say that I like the album. I like it&#13;
not so much for what it is, but&#13;
what it could be. There are even&#13;
some redeeming factors that&#13;
make this album worthwhile, as&#13;
is. First of all, although many of&#13;
the musical themes are simply&#13;
variations of someone elses&#13;
material, they've been changed&#13;
enough to sound fresh, at times&#13;
even vital. They've got a big&#13;
sound and they are one of the few&#13;
groups around that know how to&#13;
use it. The absence of good&#13;
soloists (the piano player's attempts&#13;
are sometimes comical)&#13;
seems to lighten and improve&#13;
them as an ensemble. The horn&#13;
parts are written in close&#13;
structure almost in the style of a&#13;
Barbershop Quartet enabling&#13;
them to sound full seven ths and&#13;
ninths with only three or four&#13;
parts.&#13;
But the success of the album is&#13;
due to one simple fact. The&#13;
musicians are experienced and&#13;
can play. Instrumentally, in the&#13;
words of Steppin Fetchit, "Dey&#13;
shoo ain't no flies on dem".&#13;
Just listen once, and you'll be&#13;
able to tell that they're all&#13;
seasoned vets and simply don't&#13;
make mistakes. Their creativiity&#13;
is distinctly separa ted from their&#13;
instrumental musicionship. While&#13;
one is lacking, the other is&#13;
flawless. What this group could do&#13;
with some high caliber charts&#13;
would be something to hear.&#13;
As an ensemble, thffl:I perfect.&#13;
In fact, they more than match&#13;
Chicago. Range is no problem for&#13;
the horns while weird meters&#13;
present none for the rythm section.&#13;
Even vocally, there outstanding.&#13;
In the end, what hurts&#13;
the record is lack of good charts&#13;
that would let the band show.what&#13;
thy're very capable of doing.&#13;
BANANAS&#13;
With Woody Allen and&#13;
Louise Lasser&#13;
When it comes to assured&#13;
laughter, the kind that&#13;
always seems to come,&#13;
there are three people who&#13;
come to mind . . . Peter&#13;
Sellers, Steve Allen and&#13;
Woody Allen. They all deal&#13;
10 innuendo and inference,&#13;
seasoned with slapstick and&#13;
satire ... a combination&#13;
that never fails to get me&#13;
off.&#13;
Woody Allen successfully&#13;
got me laughint again with&#13;
"Banas.", a superficial&#13;
saure that deals only with&#13;
the obvious. This treahnent&#13;
provides old Woody with the&#13;
perfect comedy environment;&#13;
coming on with&#13;
all the relevance of Voltaire&#13;
and the silliness of "Mad&#13;
Magazine" .&#13;
I feel that one of the important&#13;
things to do when&#13;
entering the realm of Allen&#13;
is a kind of seU perusal. One&#13;
should carefully leave all&#13;
civility and affectation&#13;
behind him and try to&#13;
remember the kid who&#13;
always sat in the rear of the&#13;
eighth grade classroom.&#13;
Remember, too, how you&#13;
enjoyed his pure silliness&#13;
and courage; and how, in&#13;
your parasitic joy you egged&#13;
him to go even further, until&#13;
all punishment fell on his&#13;
kindly head. Some of these&#13;
poor fellows never quite&#13;
realized what they were,&#13;
but, some of the did. Woody&#13;
Allen was one who did.&#13;
With a latent theme of&#13;
revolution we find Woody&#13;
moving thru the continuous&#13;
joke of involvement. His&#13;
first stereo-typical love with&#13;
Louise Lasser, who, with a&#13;
certain genius, plays upon&#13;
the image of today's&#13;
missionary in-crowder. who&#13;
looks upon Woody's&#13;
hilarious world as a cancerous&#13;
growth, while&#13;
learning to smile un·&#13;
derstandingly about it. The&#13;
conversations are really&#13;
very funny. . . a play on not&#13;
listening and not saying&#13;
(anything worth listening&#13;
to). Eventually the monster&#13;
of rationalization finds&#13;
Woody the revolutionary&#13;
president of a mythical&#13;
carribbean coup-sprung&#13;
republic. He returns to the&#13;
United States where more&#13;
fun is poked at the FBI&#13;
democracy, love, pride and&#13;
the world at large.&#13;
His new image as the&#13;
great emancipator attracts&#13;
the "missionary" again.&#13;
They are married, and a&#13;
truly hilarious scene occurs&#13;
where their first night of&#13;
mating is portrayed as a&#13;
box109 match ... complete&#13;
WIth narration and interviews&#13;
with the participants&#13;
by Howard Cosell&#13;
. . . I simply can't go on. . .&#13;
heh-heh-heh-he-he-he_ho-ho_&#13;
ho-ho-ho-hi-hi-hi-haw_haw_&#13;
haw-haw-eek-eek-ook-ook&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope slall&#13;
If the air is still, you may hear a .&#13;
Faces are flushed, strained. Nec~l1let~&#13;
Stomachs fight to free thel!lseJ art III&#13;
boundaries imposed by belts, girdlesVesfill&#13;
waisted clothing. Hands soothe aodand ilIl&#13;
extended and swollen bellies .PIt&#13;
appreciation of "a job well d~~'&#13;
smoke creeps and curls into the ~~-&#13;
versa tions are a t a minimum ovatr. l4&#13;
splattered and cluttered with bolJitJleI lIbIe&#13;
and tasteless food, sweating waterg~"'"&#13;
crumpled napkins, sticky with &amp;reaIe ...&#13;
This scene is taken from what I ~&#13;
becoming an American phellOmell!hII&#13;
catching on faster and faster in diffl!l'ed .....&#13;
everywhere. The phenomen is best ,&#13;
the invitation displayed in many ~&#13;
"All You Can Eat". With this semi-dan&#13;
atmosphere and an empty slomadl,·1It&#13;
people will devour anything in P&amp;u..i&#13;
proportions except straight poiscJa for ._&#13;
prrce,&#13;
Many restaurants are using this lure&#13;
Hut and Shakey's Pizza Parlor eadI "-&#13;
evenings when pizza can be cOll8UDl•ed&#13;
proportion for the fixed price. A\aO in "-&#13;
the eating 'facilities at Grant's in ""-I&#13;
Plaza have, for some time, offered DIlU&#13;
as fish and chicken in the same ..&#13;
Howard Johnson's chain even Utlillell ~&#13;
of letting the public pay the nat ralulII&#13;
until they call it quits.&#13;
Not everyone who frequeIlII&#13;
smorgasbord, or similar restaurant III&#13;
of course. Many like this style 01eatiDg&#13;
of the wide choice it offers. But !be GDiIIr-'&#13;
and invitation is stillthere, 1oO:fI!mplIII&#13;
many to pass up, "All You Can'Eat."&#13;
I decided to tryout three plaeellIIIl&#13;
this offer. I visited three dIIfeNI1llJJ11&#13;
restaurants that were still similar. IfInl&#13;
the Anchor Inn Restaurant on Soulh&#13;
Road in Kenosha.&#13;
Realizing that I could eat aU lIII&#13;
shrimp, chicken or ham I wantedto, I.&#13;
mind the fact that sound judgemeDl.&#13;
your job, ilstarlllD&#13;
your mind"&#13;
"When IWIIIlid.&#13;
nothing to say,lDIIl'I&#13;
just talking abaal&#13;
We had notbiDlllD&#13;
eighteen years 014&#13;
you had to wtrl&#13;
married, ... go lD&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Glancing at James&#13;
Murphy, one would&#13;
probably not speculate what&#13;
is beneath the twinkle in his&#13;
eye. Given a good cigar, and&#13;
an interested audience,&#13;
James Murphy will inadvertently&#13;
show what singles&#13;
him out of the working class&#13;
of which he is a part.&#13;
Murphy, six year Marine&#13;
veteran, father, Parkside&#13;
Physical Plant worker,&#13;
jack-of-all-trades master of&#13;
none, can make people&#13;
instant friends. With that&#13;
good cigar, and half of the&#13;
Newscope staff as an&#13;
audience, James Murphy&#13;
told why he decided to go to&#13;
college after being out of&#13;
school for eighteen years.&#13;
He also told of his&#13;
philosophies, his attitudes,&#13;
his likes and dislikes.&#13;
After only a few minutes&#13;
of conversation, one realizes&#13;
that James Murphy is&#13;
preferrably called Murph.&#13;
He is a Physical Plant&#13;
worker at Parkside. This job&#13;
includes ~knowledge in&#13;
plumbing, carpentry, and&#13;
electricity, to name but a&#13;
few fields. He likes his job&#13;
very much, but feels "once&#13;
you become satisfied with&#13;
Worki&#13;
Jack&#13;
PE J I:?, 19il&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
, Pereven&#13;
vital. They've got a big&#13;
sound and they are one of the few&#13;
groups around that know how to&#13;
use it. The absence of good&#13;
soloists (the piano player'~ attempts&#13;
are sometimes ~omical)&#13;
seems to lighten and improve&#13;
them as an ensemble. The horn&#13;
parts are written in close&#13;
structure almost in the style of a&#13;
Barbershop Quartet enabling&#13;
them to sound full sevenths and&#13;
ninths with only three or four&#13;
If the air is still, you may hear a&#13;
Faces are flushed, strained. Neck qm 1&#13;
Stomachs fight to free themsel . ar&#13;
boundaries imposed by belts, girdles\ 1&#13;
waisted clothing. Hands soothe and an&#13;
extended and swollen bellies seern·P-i&#13;
appreciation of "a job well d~ne." ~f&#13;
smoke creeps and curls into the atr&#13;
versations are at a minimum O\·&#13;
its effectiveness back in the d_ays&#13;
of "Wipe Out" and has only been&#13;
perpetuated by one tr. ~- Rich&#13;
who couldn't care when 1t went&#13;
out a long as he was playing a&#13;
solo&#13;
condJy, the lyrics at times&#13;
~m to be the product of whoever&#13;
it was that did those road-side&#13;
ma ·terpieces for Burma-Shave.&#13;
On occa ion. both words and&#13;
mu 1c come plagiaristicatly&#13;
together to cause the listener&#13;
considerable mental distress as&#13;
parts. .&#13;
d 1&#13;
, er&#13;
splattered an c uttered with bones&#13;
and tasteless f~, sw_eating water g '&#13;
crumpled napkins, sticky with grease&#13;
r have to h tries to remember where he's&#13;
But the success of the album is&#13;
due to one simple fact. The&#13;
musicians are experienced and&#13;
can play. Instrumentally, in the&#13;
words of Steppin Fetchit, "Dey&#13;
sho' ain't no flies on dem".&#13;
Just listen once, and you'll be&#13;
able to tell that they're all&#13;
seasoned vets and simply don't&#13;
make mistakes. Their creativiity&#13;
is distinctly separated from their&#13;
instrumental musicionship. While&#13;
one is lacking, the other is&#13;
flawless. What this group could do&#13;
with some high caliber charts&#13;
would be something to hear.&#13;
This scene is taken from what I&#13;
becoming an American phenomen&#13;
catching on faster and faster in differ 1 everywhere. The phenomen is best def&#13;
the invitation displayed in many r&#13;
"All You Can Eat". With this semi-&lt;tare&#13;
atmosphe~e and an empty stomac1i' 1&#13;
people . will devour a~ything in g1u,&#13;
pr?porhons except straight poison for 8&#13;
B \ , "A. "A&#13;
·ith Woody Allen and&#13;
Loui La r&#13;
Wh n it come to assured&#13;
1 ughter , the kind that&#13;
alway eem to come,&#13;
there ar three people who&#13;
come to mind . . . Peter&#13;
lier . teve Allen and&#13;
Woody lien . They all deal&#13;
in i nnuendo and inference ,&#13;
oned with lap tick and&#13;
tire . . . a combination&#13;
that never fails to get me&#13;
off.&#13;
Woody Allen successfully&#13;
ot m laughint again with&#13;
" 8.ana ' , a uperficial&#13;
tire that deal only with&#13;
th obviou . Thi treatment&#13;
provid old Woody with the&#13;
p rfect comedy en\&#13;
i ronment ; coming on with&#13;
all the relevance of \'oltaire&#13;
nd the silliness of ' ·. lad&#13;
1agazine".&#13;
I f I that one of the important&#13;
things to do when&#13;
entering the realm of Allen&#13;
i a kind of elf peru al. One&#13;
hould carefully leave all&#13;
heard that strongly familiar&#13;
civility and affectation&#13;
behind him and try to&#13;
remember the kid who&#13;
always sat in the rear of the&#13;
eighth grade classroom.&#13;
Remember, too, how you&#13;
enjoyed his pure silliness&#13;
and courage; and how, in&#13;
your parasitic joy you egged&#13;
him to go even further, until&#13;
all punishment fell on his&#13;
kindly head. Some of these&#13;
poor fellows never quite&#13;
realized what they were,&#13;
but, some of the did . Woody&#13;
Allen was one who did.&#13;
With a latent theme of&#13;
revolution we find Woody&#13;
moving thru the continuous&#13;
joke of involvement. His&#13;
first stereo-typical love with&#13;
Louise Lasser, who, with a&#13;
certain genius, plays upon&#13;
the image of today's&#13;
missionary in~rowder, who&#13;
looks upon Woody's&#13;
hilarious world as a cancerous&#13;
growth, while&#13;
learning to smile understandingly&#13;
about it. The&#13;
conversations are really&#13;
price.&#13;
As an ensemble, thtN:l perfect.&#13;
Many restaurant&amp; are using this lure&#13;
Hut and Shakey's Pizza Parlor each r&#13;
evenings when pizza can be consumed&#13;
proportion for the fixed price. Also in K&#13;
the eating 'facilities at Grant's in p&#13;
Plaza have, for some time, offered m&#13;
as fish and chicken in the same v&#13;
Howard Johnson's chain even utilizes a&#13;
of letting the public pay the flat rate&#13;
In fact, they more than match&#13;
Chicago. Range is no problem for&#13;
the horns while weird meters&#13;
present none for the rythm section.&#13;
Even vocally, there outstanding.&#13;
In the end, what hurts&#13;
the record is lack of good charts&#13;
that would let the band show what&#13;
thy're very capable bf doing.&#13;
until they call it quits.&#13;
Not everyone who frequen&#13;
smorgasbord, or similar restaurant is a&#13;
of course. Many like this style of eating&#13;
of the wide choice it offers. But the op&#13;
and · invitatiorr is still there, too temp&#13;
many to pass up, "All You Can Eat."&#13;
I decided to try out three places that&#13;
this offer. I visited three different I)&#13;
restaurants that were still similar. I firs&#13;
the Anchor Inn Restaurant on South&#13;
very funny . . . a play on not&#13;
listening and not saying&#13;
(anything worth listening&#13;
to). Eventually the monster&#13;
of rationalization finds&#13;
Woody the revolutionary&#13;
president of a mythical&#13;
carribbean coup-sprung&#13;
republic. He returns to the&#13;
United States where more&#13;
fun is poked at the FBI&#13;
democracy, love, pride and&#13;
the world at large.&#13;
His new image as the&#13;
great emancipator attracts&#13;
the "missionary" again.&#13;
They are married, and a&#13;
truly hilarious scene occurs&#13;
where their first night of&#13;
mating is portrayed as a&#13;
~xing match ... complete&#13;
with narration and int~~&#13;
views with the participants&#13;
by Howard Cosen&#13;
. . . I simply can't go on&#13;
heh-heh-heh-he-he-he-ho~h~-ho-&#13;
ho-ho-hi-hi-hi-haw-hawhaw-&#13;
haw-eek-eek-ook-ook&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Road in Kenosha.&#13;
Realizing that I could eat all&#13;
shrimp, chicken or ham I wanted to I&#13;
mind the fact that sound judgement&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Glancing at James&#13;
Murphy, one would&#13;
probably not speculate what&#13;
is beneath the twinkle in his&#13;
eye. Given a good cigar, and&#13;
an interested audience,&#13;
James Murphy will inadvertently&#13;
show what singles&#13;
him out of the working class&#13;
of which he is a part.&#13;
Murphy, six year Marine&#13;
vet~ran, father, Parkside&#13;
Physical Plant worker,&#13;
jack-of-all-trades master of&#13;
none, can make people&#13;
instant friends. With that&#13;
good cigar, and half of the&#13;
Newscope staff as an&#13;
audience, James Murphy&#13;
told why he decided to go to&#13;
college after being out of&#13;
school for eighteen years.&#13;
He also told of his&#13;
philosophies, his attitudes,&#13;
his likes and dislikes.&#13;
After only a few minutes&#13;
of conversation, one realizes&#13;
that James Murphy is&#13;
preferrably called Murph.&#13;
He is a Physical Plant&#13;
worker at Parkside. This job&#13;
includes "' knowledge in&#13;
plumbing, carpentry, and&#13;
electricity, to name but a&#13;
few fields. He likes his job&#13;
very much, but feels "once&#13;
you become satisfied with&#13;
your job, it starts&#13;
your mind."&#13;
"When I was a&#13;
nothing to say, 1&#13;
just talking aboo&#13;
We had nothing&#13;
eighteen years old&#13;
you had to&#13;
married, or go&#13;
- Jul) 12.1971&#13;
suming any food is sensible, and the phrase&#13;
"your eyes are bigger tban your stomach" is all&#13;
too true.&#13;
Among the fish nets, buoys, Hermann&#13;
Melville's ghost, and a waitress who thought&#13;
everythmg was funny, Maggie, a friend, and I&#13;
began to sample what The Anchor Inn had to&#13;
offer, for the two dollars and fifty cents each&#13;
individual is to pay.&#13;
When first served, we played games trying to&#13;
find bits of shrimp 10 the hunks of fried&#13;
breading. The jokes really flew when we&#13;
searched for shreds of meat in the fried&#13;
chicken. It was almost hilarious when we&#13;
nodded at each other as we caught faint tastes&#13;
of fish in the angular forms and finally we&#13;
were sick by the time we realized that the ham&#13;
wasn't deep fried.&#13;
. I didn't even notice if the other food was&#13;
edible. I tasted a few onion rings before the&#13;
main dishes were served. I remember seeing a&#13;
salad or two on the table during the meal. All I .&#13;
am sure that was present at the Anchor Inn the&#13;
night I dined there, were a few deformed,&#13;
contorted light brown pieces of deep fried&#13;
shrimp, chicken and fish that became very&#13;
menancing after I digested them.&#13;
Weall quietly walked out of the restaurant,&#13;
not speaking a word to each other, after those&#13;
few pieces of each delicacy. Once in my&#13;
apartment, I camped next to the toilet and&#13;
watched my entire meal in full color as it&#13;
returned the exact route I had sent it down.&#13;
It is important to know that the friend that&#13;
accompanied Maggie and I was Michael "Cast&#13;
Iron Stomach" Kite. He got his nickname one&#13;
evening when he ate an entire can of pre-made&#13;
cake frosting, without getting diabetes on the&#13;
spot. After treating him to dinner, I shared my&#13;
lavatory facilities with him.&#13;
After a few weeks, I regained my blind&#13;
faith in restaurants and ate at My's Feast Fair&#13;
in downtown Kenosha. This restaurant struck&#13;
me as an excellent facility for those in&#13;
Kenoshaland who either don't have a kitchen to&#13;
cook in, or can't comprehend the jargon used in&#13;
cookbooks.&#13;
The food seemed to me, to accomplish&#13;
nothing more than filling the stomach cavity.&#13;
The mashed J?Ota~oeswere so tas.tele.ss th.at I&#13;
wondered What kept them from bemg invisible.&#13;
Other items that did have distinctive tastes&#13;
would have been better off without.&#13;
The most valuable thing about my visit&#13;
there was a conversation with someone who I&#13;
thought had to be one of My's frequent guests.&#13;
He told me how a veteran smorgasbord eater&#13;
goes about getting his money's worth. It was all&#13;
very interesting, as he pointed out foods to&#13;
avoid because they are too Cliling. At times&#13;
when he spoke, I got the impression some foods&#13;
were offered as part of a Communist plot to fill&#13;
up the eater.&#13;
I tried his plans, but found that there is no&#13;
way for me to get my money's worth from&#13;
My's, unless they give me the food raw before&#13;
they get a chance to cook it.&#13;
. I was almost completely against going to&#13;
still another food freakout, as I was beginning&#13;
to call them. Someone suggested a "fine and&#13;
worthwhile" restaurant in Waukegan called&#13;
The Swedish Manor. As a pessimest I decided&#13;
to subject Maggie to whatever they offered.&#13;
The Swedish Manor has the "classiest" setup&#13;
of the places I visited. I first became aware&#13;
of this "class" when I read in their restaurant&#13;
they they offer "all you Care to eat" for a fixed&#13;
rate. Of all the smorgasbords Swedish Manor&#13;
allows the individual to be a giutton "in style".&#13;
. The dining room is very large, the service&#13;
ISvery good, and the food is the best of the three&#13;
places. The best time to eat here is between the&#13;
luncheon hours, II a.m. til 4 p.m. on Saturday&#13;
At this time, all you can eat of fish, various&#13;
salads, spaghetti, and other odds and ends costs&#13;
only a dollar fifty cents. An evening visit costs&#13;
two dollars and fifty-five cents per person for&#13;
the same offer, plus roast beef and shrimp.&#13;
In talking to regular customers of Swedish&#13;
Manors throughout the Chicago surburbs&#13;
(there are 6), the Arlington Heights Manor got&#13;
the most positive responses. The Waukegan&#13;
Manor surprised me as to how many families&#13;
ate there, and the sizes of the families. Afew of&#13;
the families numbered from twelve to fourteen&#13;
members.&#13;
There are a few items that I thought were&#13;
terrible. The roast beef was stringy (we ate&#13;
here in the evening for the extra dollar and got&#13;
this bonus) the pudding was tasteless, and the&#13;
canned peach slices were hard as rocks.&#13;
Waitresses serve beverages that are very&#13;
reasonably priced, and cocktails. They also&#13;
collect the money after the meal. These people&#13;
are very pleasant that work here.&#13;
It struck me that most of the people that&#13;
served -me in these type places were overly&#13;
pleasant and physically thin. None of them&#13;
were fat, as I recalled. It all seemed to make&#13;
sense to me though, as I reasoned that people&#13;
who help heroin addicts don't touch the stuff&#13;
themselves, so those who watched humans O.D.&#13;
on food tend to eat like birds.&#13;
This all seemed logical to me in the&#13;
Swedish Manor as I pushed aside a pile of&#13;
bones, a sweaty water glass and a greasy&#13;
napkin. I had met the challenge at the Swedish&#13;
Manor, and eaten all I cared to.&#13;
80&#13;
b) Jame-s Kol~n&#13;
or the "Ii'e" cOI)eslaff&#13;
Riccard Brautigan is another kmd of writer wriung&#13;
about "another kind of library" A 10 hi other novels,&#13;
Brautigan weaves a diaphanous veil of fantasy Into the&#13;
story, while maintaining an aura of crazy innocence and&#13;
simplicity around the body of his mam character&#13;
Fantasy and simplicity fuse with or are fused by the&#13;
author's poetic style presenting the reader With a qUIck&#13;
reading, rhthymoetic and poignhumorous book The&#13;
concept of another kmd of library IS good meat for the&#13;
ab urd grinder, Vonnegut, Barth and Ke y would have&#13;
a field day, but the inherent absurdity of the library i not&#13;
depicted by Brautigan. Brautiga,~ choose to POSit the&#13;
library as a "crazy sort of place and then leaves It as&#13;
such Why should it be absurd? Why should anything be&#13;
absurd? That's what I mean by poignhumorous. What's&#13;
the library like? Il's a place wh re unpublished 'Hiler&#13;
can register their books and pul them on the helv s&#13;
That's the kind of place it IS.&#13;
The 226 pages of abortion repre nt Brauugan'&#13;
longest effort to date, HISfrrst person point of view. th&#13;
protagonist looking back on the few months Just passed.&#13;
enhances the limitations of that point of Vie"&#13;
We aren't told everything. we don't everything,&#13;
but what we do see is significant and oft n 10 the form of&#13;
a statement without really being a statement If&#13;
things are obvious; they're also poetic, If they're not&#13;
obvious they're till there&#13;
As in Brautigan's pa t novels, ther I very litlle, If&#13;
any overt action. Time is slowed down and 10each day&#13;
only a few moments, which are often hours long, hav&#13;
any significance, have any business bemg wr-itten about&#13;
OK, now what about the abortion? The abortion I'&#13;
when Vida (pronounced V-eye-da} Kramer walks into the&#13;
library and hands the 31 year old librarian (who wear&#13;
friendly clothes) her book. The book IS entitled "My&#13;
Body", and Vida's problem is her body. If you know what&#13;
it's like to live inside someone else's body, then you know&#13;
Vida's problem. 37-19-36.&#13;
Once having met the librarian, she mak love and&#13;
eventually becomes pregnant, sitteth on the nght hand of&#13;
the library, and descendeth unto waiting for Foster&#13;
Foster is connected with the library, he's got a "buffalo&#13;
heavy blond hair" and is"a regular explosion of a man"&#13;
Anyway, Foster arranges for the abortion lak ov r&#13;
the library and things turn out about the way they hould&#13;
The librarian is kicked out by a middle aged lady who&#13;
complains that the library isn't run corr tly and lh&#13;
librarian becomes a hero on the Berekely Campus.&#13;
So that's the novel, and it's a good one, and If thl&#13;
review doesn't do justice to the novel, It' because JIm&#13;
Morrison died, and I ain't shittin'&#13;
I asked James Murphy&#13;
about his job, and what he&#13;
thought of Parkside. He&#13;
already had said that the&#13;
cross section of students he&#13;
meets on his job make It&#13;
interesting, but I wondered&#13;
what he thought of the&#13;
people he worked for.&#13;
"The supervision at&#13;
Parkside is very good, fine&#13;
organization You know&#13;
what you have to do, you&#13;
know what your job is,"&#13;
Murph said. "There is no&#13;
guessing, especially at the&#13;
Physical Plant." Other&#13;
reasons why he liked his&#13;
work included the fact that&#13;
\be hours give him more&#13;
time for himself.&#13;
In lalking about the&#13;
potential of Parkside, with&#13;
the insight that he has,&#13;
Murph said, "You're gonna&#13;
have what I estimate will be&#13;
one of the finest universities,&#13;
one of \be finest&#13;
campuses. There is natural&#13;
beauty here. You're going to&#13;
have, if not the besl center&#13;
of education, one of the most&#13;
beautiful, "&#13;
at Parkside as a psychology&#13;
major. "Being around&#13;
people who are learning&#13;
influences you to learn," he&#13;
said, HSO I'm going to peck&#13;
away and get a college&#13;
degree."&#13;
"I live average," he went&#13;
on to say, "You learn to like&#13;
he chose psychology as his&#13;
major.&#13;
"Keats is one of my&#13;
favorite poets," he said, as&#13;
we found out that reading is&#13;
one of Murphy's favorite&#13;
past-times, other than&#13;
raising his. five daughters.&#13;
"I can read anything and I&#13;
maintenance man at&#13;
Parkside, he plans to take&#13;
six credits in the .Iall, and&#13;
reminds, "This is just a&#13;
start." He has already taken&#13;
classes at Parkside while&#13;
working, and finds it very&#13;
rewarding. He said thai the&#13;
facilities available to him&#13;
Class Hero:&#13;
Murphy--&#13;
All Trades&#13;
people, and then you want to&#13;
know about them." After&#13;
working with people all his&#13;
life, and enjoying it, Murph&#13;
wants to know what makes&#13;
thpm ti,..\r 1'hi!'; i~the reason&#13;
can understand it, and&#13;
appreciate what }he person&#13;
is trying to say.. .&#13;
Mentioning this past-time&#13;
led to his spare time. After&#13;
working a full day as a&#13;
are excellent, and the attracti&#13;
veness of further&#13;
education will lead many&#13;
other Kenosha and Racine&#13;
adults into returning to&#13;
school for a college degree.&#13;
Th cigar thai he had&#13;
begun to moke when h t&#13;
down was down to I I t&#13;
few puff Whil cienus&#13;
explor whit and blu&#13;
collar worker , on an fforl&#13;
to see why many lurn Into&#13;
"vegelabl "on thelr)O ,&#13;
turph find new horizons to&#13;
explore a a phy ica! plant&#13;
worker and stud nt at&#13;
Parksld&#13;
While continually doing a&#13;
publIc relations Job for the&#13;
school that would make a&#13;
Madison Avenue veteran&#13;
blush, Jam Murphy will&#13;
tell you with a twmkle on hi&#13;
eye that this corner 01 the&#13;
slate will omeday be a&#13;
renowned center of learning.&#13;
And you just have te&#13;
believe him, a working clas!&#13;
hero.&#13;
-------&#13;
Newscope would&#13;
appreciate&#13;
suggestions&#13;
for the /lor king&#13;
Class Hero&#13;
(blumn&#13;
su ming any fo~ is sensible, and the phrase&#13;
"your eyes are bigger than your stomach" is all&#13;
too true.&#13;
Among the fish nets, buoys , Hermann&#13;
Melvill~' s ghost, and a wait:ess who thought&#13;
everythmg was funny, Maggie, a friend, and I&#13;
began to sample what The Anchor Inn had to&#13;
offer, for the two dollars and fifty cents each&#13;
individual is to pay.&#13;
When first served, we played games trying to&#13;
find bits of shrimp in the hunks of fried&#13;
breading. The jokes really flew when we&#13;
searched for shreds of meat in the fried&#13;
chicken. It was almost hilarious when we&#13;
nodded at each other as we caught faint tastes&#13;
of fish in the angular forms and finally we&#13;
were sick by the time we realized that the ham&#13;
wasn't deep fried.&#13;
I didn't even notice if the other food was&#13;
edible. I tasted a few onion rings before the&#13;
main dishes were served. I remember seeing a&#13;
salad or two on the table during the meal. All I .&#13;
am sure that was present at the Anchor Inn the&#13;
night I dined there, were a few deformed,&#13;
contorted light brown pieces of deep fried&#13;
shrimp, chicken and fish that became very&#13;
menancing after I digested them.&#13;
We all quietly walked out of the restaurant,&#13;
not speaking a word to each other, after those&#13;
few pieces of each delicacy. Once in my&#13;
apartment, I camped next to the toilet and&#13;
watched my entire meal in full color as it&#13;
returned the exact route I had sent it down.&#13;
It is important to know that the friend that&#13;
accompanied Maggie and I was Michael "Cast&#13;
Iron Stomach" Kite. He got his nickname one&#13;
evening when he ate an entire can of pre-made&#13;
cake frosting, without getting diabetes on the&#13;
spot. After treating him to dinner, I shared my&#13;
lavatory facilities with him.&#13;
After a few weeks, I regained my blind&#13;
faith in restaurants and ate at My's Feast Fair&#13;
in downtown Kenosha. This restaurant struck&#13;
me as an excellent facility for those in&#13;
Kenoshaland who ei.ther don't have a kitchen to&#13;
cook in, or can't comprehend the jargon used in&#13;
cookbooks.&#13;
The food seemed to me, to accomplish&#13;
nothing more than filling the stomach cavity.&#13;
The mashed potatoes were so tasteless that I&#13;
wondered what kept them from being invisible .&#13;
Other items that did have distinctive tastes&#13;
would have been better off without.&#13;
The most valuable thing about my visit&#13;
there was a conversation with someone who I&#13;
thought had to be one of My's frequent guests.&#13;
He told me how a veteran smorgasbord eater&#13;
goes about getting his money's worth. It was all&#13;
very interesting, as he pointed out foods to&#13;
avoid because they are too filling. t bm&#13;
when he spoke, I got the impr ion ome food&#13;
were offered as part of a Communist plot to fill&#13;
up the eater.&#13;
I tried his plans, but found that ther j- no&#13;
way for me to get my monev· worth from&#13;
My's, unless they give me the food raw before&#13;
they get a chance to cook it.&#13;
. I was almost completely against going to&#13;
stlll another food freakout, a I was beginning&#13;
to call them . Someone suggested a "fine and&#13;
worthwhile" restaurant m Waukegan called&#13;
The Swedish Manor. As a pessimest I decided&#13;
to subject Maggie to whatever thev offered&#13;
The Swedish Manor has the "cla 1e-t" ~tup&#13;
of the places I visited. I first became a ·are&#13;
of this "class" when I read in their restaurant&#13;
they they offer "all you Care to eat" for a fi. ed&#13;
rate. Of all the smorgasbords , Swedi h . Ianor&#13;
allows the individual to be a glutton "in tyle".&#13;
The dining room is very large, the service&#13;
is very good, and the food is the best of the three&#13;
places. The best time to eat here is between the&#13;
luncheon hours, 11 a .m . til 4 p.m. on aturday&#13;
At this time, all you can eat of fish. vanou&#13;
salads, spaghetti , and other odds and ends costs&#13;
only a dollar fifty cents. An evening visit co t&#13;
two dollars and fifty-five cents per person for&#13;
the same offer, plus roast beef and shrimp&#13;
In talking to regular customers of Swedish&#13;
Manors throughout the Chicago surburb&#13;
(there are 6 ), the Arlington Heights 1anor got&#13;
the most positive responses. The Waukegan&#13;
Manor surprised me as to how many fam11ie&#13;
ate there, and the sizes of the families. A few of&#13;
the families numbered from twelve to fourteen&#13;
members.&#13;
There are a few items that I thought were&#13;
terrible. The roast beef was stringy (we ate&#13;
here in the evening for the extra dollar and got&#13;
this bonus) the pudding was tasteless , and the&#13;
canned peach slices were hard as rocks.&#13;
Waitresses serve beverages that are very&#13;
reasonably priced, and cocktails . They also&#13;
collect the money after the meal. These people&#13;
are very pleasant that work here.&#13;
It struck me that most of the people that&#13;
served me in these type places were overly&#13;
pleasant and physically thin. None of them&#13;
were fat, as I recalled. It all seemed to make&#13;
sense to me though, as I reasoned that people&#13;
who help heroin addicts don 't touch the stuff&#13;
themselves, so those who watched humans O.D.&#13;
on food tend to eat like birds.&#13;
This all seemed logical to me in the&#13;
Swedish Manor as I pushed aside a pile of&#13;
bones, a sweaty water glass and a gre~y&#13;
napkin. I had met the challenge at the Swedish&#13;
Manor, and eaten all I cared to .&#13;
at Parkside as a psychology&#13;
major. "Being around&#13;
people who are learning&#13;
influences you to learn," he&#13;
said, "so I'm going to peck&#13;
away and get a college&#13;
degree."&#13;
he chose psychology as his&#13;
major.&#13;
"Keats is one of my&#13;
favorite poets," he said, as&#13;
we found out that reading is&#13;
one of Murphy's favorite&#13;
past-times, other than&#13;
raising his five daughters.&#13;
"I can read anything and I&#13;
maintenance man at&#13;
Parkside, he plans to take&#13;
six credits in the .fall, and&#13;
reminds , "This is just a&#13;
start." He has already taken&#13;
classes at Parkside while&#13;
working, and finds it very&#13;
rewarding. He said that t_he&#13;
facilities available to him "I live average," he went&#13;
on to say, "You learn to like&#13;
Class Hero ·=&#13;
Murphy--&#13;
All Trades&#13;
people, and then you want to&#13;
know about them." After&#13;
working with people all his&#13;
life , and enjoying it, Murph&#13;
wants to know what makes&#13;
L~s..fue__reason&#13;
can understand it, a nd&#13;
appreciate what the person&#13;
is trying to say .. " .&#13;
Mentioning this past-time&#13;
led to his spare time. After&#13;
working a full day as a&#13;
are excellent, and the attractiveness&#13;
of further&#13;
education will lead many&#13;
other Kenosha and Racine&#13;
adults into returning to&#13;
school for a college degree.&#13;
Jul) 12, 1 71&#13;
ao&#13;
I a ked Jame turphy&#13;
about hi job, and .,.. hat h&#13;
thought of Park id . H&#13;
already had said that t&#13;
cross section of tud n h&#13;
meets on hi job make it&#13;
interesting, but I v.ond red&#13;
what he thou ht of lh&#13;
people he worked for.&#13;
"The uperviion at&#13;
Parkside i ery ood, fin&#13;
organization. You knoy,&#13;
what you have to do, you&#13;
know what your job i , "&#13;
Murph said. "Th re i · no&#13;
guessing , peciall)' at th&#13;
Physical Plant." ther&#13;
reason why he liked hi&#13;
work included the fact that&#13;
the hours give him more&#13;
time for himself.&#13;
In talking about the&#13;
potential of Parkside, Yoith&#13;
the insight that he has,&#13;
, turph said. "You're gonna&#13;
have what I estimate will be&#13;
one of the finest universities,&#13;
one of the finest&#13;
campuses. There is natural&#13;
beauty here. You're going to&#13;
have, if not the best center&#13;
of education, one of the most&#13;
beautiful. "&#13;
And you&#13;
lie\'e him,&#13;
h ro.&#13;
p&#13;
-------&#13;
1 'ewscope would&#13;
appreciat&#13;
su gestion&#13;
for the ', or king&#13;
Class Hero&#13;
Column&#13;
 EWSCOP.E.&#13;
0:&#13;
W&#13;
o&#13;
0:&#13;
o&#13;
III&#13;
.J&#13;
.J&#13;
W&#13;
0:&#13;
0:&#13;
"c&#13;
A SWAN BEATS THE SUMMER HEAT&#13;
it's the Topless--Bottomless&#13;
real thing 011 JULY 15&#13;
Continued from Page 3)&#13;
since the city cracked down&#13;
on the taverns.&#13;
Similarly, a petition was&#13;
circulated several months&#13;
ago and signed by 2,500&#13;
people stating that they did&#13;
not want nudity in Kenosha.&#13;
The same source claimed,&#13;
"If the tavern owners&#13;
wanted to they could have&#13;
presented 25,000 names."&#13;
Whether or not public&#13;
outrage led the council to&#13;
deny the licenses becomes&#13;
irrelevant in view of the fact&#13;
that only a fraction of the&#13;
population expressed their&#13;
opinion on paper. What is&#13;
important is the pretense on&#13;
just as valid to say that&#13;
mini-skirts and hot-pants set&#13;
improper moral standards&#13;
as it is to say that in six&#13;
months the council can&#13;
actually testify to the fael&#13;
that nude dancing has done&#13;
the same. As more than one&#13;
person has suggested to this&#13;
writer, perhaps the onlyreal&#13;
solution to this problem&#13;
would be via poll of the&#13;
popula tion based not on the&#13;
fact of nudity but on the&#13;
right of a person to see, hear&#13;
or read wha t he chooses&#13;
without intervention by the&#13;
government.&#13;
the part of the council to&#13;
ignore, perhaps fail to find,&#13;
concrete charges substantial&#13;
enough to justity&#13;
their actions. Based on the&#13;
council minutes no mention&#13;
was made of actual&#13;
viola tions committed by the&#13;
owners such as arrests,&#13;
staying open afteer hours,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Undeniably the city has&#13;
the right to grant privileges,&#13;
if for no more reason than to&#13;
regulate, but the city must&#13;
also justify its actions to the&#13;
point where evidence is&#13;
without a doubt in the favor&#13;
of their decision. It would be&#13;
"SUMMERFEST"&#13;
"TODAYS&#13;
TOMORROW"&#13;
STILL $1.00&#13;
RACINE&#13;
JOHNSON PK.&#13;
HIGHWAY 38&#13;
RELAX MOlBECK'S&#13;
NEWSCOPE CLASSIFIEDS,==&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
COMPLETE LINE&#13;
OF HEALTH FOODS&#13;
1949 Harley-Davidson. Will trade.&#13;
Call '~2-6335 between 4 &amp; 6. 3 suitcases, very good condo125. Cltl&#13;
190'i Dodge Super - Vee 383, 4sp., 654-2704.&#13;
console, vinyl top, new Goodyear&#13;
~ tires, 52,()00. Call 652-1443after ~.&#13;
OW GARDENS&#13;
AMUSEMENT CENTER&#13;
MINI-GOLF&#13;
ARCHERY&#13;
IIERB TEAS 1969 Open GT Silver $2,400 or best&#13;
offer. 652-3312 after 4. Dune Buggy.~Brand new. Must tt11.&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tires and Rims. 3814 . 16 Avenue, KenoSha.&#13;
639·8863 after 4:30. STONE GROUND&#13;
FLOIIRS Tape Recorder. 3 speed, mono. HIO&#13;
Shutoff. 3 didget counter good CIDnd.&#13;
Call 657-5992.&#13;
APARTMENT FOR RENT -&#13;
Madison, 3 g'irls need 1 for fall to fill&#13;
modern, furnished apt. on University&#13;
and Bridge. S62.00per mo. per person.&#13;
Call 633-2753. Joyce.&#13;
1'66 Ram. Amer. Con. 7843 - 20th.&#13;
NATURAL VITAMINS&#13;
And many other&#13;
Organic Foods&#13;
1963 VW (40,000 mt.) S600; 1966&#13;
Dodge Coronet {12,OOOmLl $700.&#13;
12911 Washington Ave. Rad.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Attractive Young lady to pose nudI&#13;
tor an aspiring photograph_ ..&#13;
can't afford to compensate tor sum&#13;
services. Write M. Starr. 6517 .•&#13;
Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1962Buick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
1304 GRANGE AVE. 634-4445or 633-2791.&#13;
87th &amp; SHERIDAN RD RACINE 633-7769 1961 Jeep CJ5. Call 694·5744. r·»&gt;:':·~'l':·····X,*,-~ 'CH'AT " ~l f~. N ~] xi&#13;
~ ~ II CHEW I&#13;
{~ 40th Ave. I ~~~ &amp; ~ ~ ~. f 52nd St. i&#13;
~; KENOSHA t it:;: ::~ SUN. THRU THURS. ~&#13;
f;= 11 A M. TILL MIDNlTE £&#13;
KFRI &amp; SA,T. TILL 2 A.M$&#13;
;C: .:.:&#13;
tHAMBURGERS!!1&#13;
40( &amp; 24( {&#13;
SUPERCHEW :~. 8:00 P.M. y.3&#13;
(tripledecker:~)! ADMISSION - 75$ ~UL&#13;
55( t STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDIH,G&#13;
_~_1lIII' 1':'1_im,_«,&gt;_xi_(_&amp;.. c,._~._~_:_~ =====,;;,P,,;.A~R~K~S~I~D~E;,,;a:n:d:,,:W~IS~G~O~N~S~IN~I~D~R~E~Q~U~I~R;E..~...D~~====&#13;
h,., Ustinov, Pamela Tiffin, Jonatlton Wint.f'S,&#13;
John .lutin, K.enan Wynn, Harry Morvan&#13;
The ;",orl?'s :unniest general recaptures the Alamo and th&#13;
~Orl~ S mightiest army can't get him out! Peter Ustinov is the&#13;
exican general who sets off an di . .&#13;
chain reaction in the coed old A ~npreblctable and hilarious&#13;
.,. mencan ureaucracy Op .&#13;
the zany general and his 87" . II' • posmg&#13;
cast led by Jonathan W· t warriors IS an all-star comedy&#13;
• 10 en who play, aN,· I&#13;
Brigadier General and rt ti a rona Guard&#13;
side~splitting political satfr: ~~~:s mattress sa~esman: This&#13;
forget and verifies the fa t th t the Alamo impossible to c a some heroes a bo&#13;
made, and some are hilarious mist ak . re rn, some are &lt;0.&#13;
if 's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
RELAX&#13;
RAINBOW GARDENS&#13;
AMUSEMENT CE NTER&#13;
MINI -GOLF&#13;
AR C H ERY&#13;
87th &amp; SHERIDAN RD.&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENO SHA&#13;
July 1:? l ,il&#13;
011 j LY 15&#13;
,\1 f ERFEST"&#13;
"TODAYS&#13;
TOMORROW"&#13;
STILL $1.00&#13;
RACINE&#13;
JOHNSON PK.&#13;
HIGHWAY 38&#13;
MOLBECK'S&#13;
C0\1PLETE LINE&#13;
OF HEAL TH FOODS&#13;
IIERB TEAS&#13;
TO!'iE GROl'ND&#13;
FLOl RS&#13;
1°' Tl RAL \'ITAI\IINS&#13;
And many other&#13;
Organic Foods&#13;
1304 G RAN GE AVE.&#13;
R A CIN E 633 - 776i&#13;
a : oo P.M.&#13;
A SWAN BEATS THE SUMMER HEAT&#13;
a:&#13;
w&#13;
(.'.)&#13;
a:&#13;
0&#13;
m&#13;
..I&#13;
..I&#13;
w&#13;
a:&#13;
a:&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
a&#13;
T opless--Bottomless&#13;
Continued from Page 3)&#13;
since the city cracked down&#13;
on the taverns.&#13;
Similarly, a petition was&#13;
circulated several months&#13;
ago and signed by 2,500&#13;
people stating that they did&#13;
not want nudity in Kenosha.&#13;
The same source claimed,&#13;
'' If the tavern owners&#13;
wanted to they could have&#13;
presented 25,000 names."&#13;
Whether or not public&#13;
outrage led the council to&#13;
deny the licenses becomes&#13;
irrelevant in view of the fact&#13;
that only a fraction of the&#13;
population expressed their&#13;
opinion on paper. What is&#13;
important is the pretense on&#13;
the part of the council to&#13;
ignore, perhaps fail to find,&#13;
concrete charges substantial&#13;
enough to justity&#13;
their actions. Based on the&#13;
council minutes no mention&#13;
was made of actual&#13;
violations committed by the&#13;
owners such as arrests,&#13;
staying open afteer hours,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Undeniably the city has&#13;
the right to grant privileges,&#13;
if for no more reason than to&#13;
regulate, but the city must&#13;
also justify its actions to the&#13;
point where evidence is&#13;
without a doubt in the favor&#13;
of their decision. It would be&#13;
just as valid to say that&#13;
mini-skirts and hot-pants set&#13;
improper moral standards&#13;
as it is to say that in six&#13;
months the council can&#13;
actually testify to the fact&#13;
that nude dancing has done&#13;
the same. As m ore than one&#13;
person has suggested to this&#13;
writer, perhaps the only real&#13;
solution to this problem&#13;
would be via poll of the&#13;
population based not on the&#13;
fact of nudity but on the&#13;
right of a person to see, hear&#13;
or read what he chooses&#13;
without intervention by the&#13;
government.&#13;
NEWSCOPE CLASSIFIEDS==&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
19oY Dodge Super - Vee 383, 4sp.,&#13;
console, vinyl top, new Goodyear&#13;
tires, s2,ooo. Call 652-1443 after 5 .&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tires and Rims.&#13;
639-8863 after 4 : 30.&#13;
1966 Ram. Amer. Con . 7843 - 20th .&#13;
1963 VW (40,000 mi.) $600; 1966&#13;
Dodge Coronet (12 ,000 m i.l $700 .&#13;
12911 Washington Ave. Raci.&#13;
1962 Buick 2 dr hardtop, S250. Call&#13;
634-4445 or 633 -2791.&#13;
1961 Jeep CJS . Call 694 -5744.&#13;
1949 Harley-Davidson. Will trade.&#13;
Call ·452-6335 between 4 &amp; 6.&#13;
1969 Open GT Silver S2,400 or best&#13;
offer. 652 -3312 after 4.&#13;
APARTMENT FOR RENT -&#13;
Madison, 3 g'irls need l for fall to fill&#13;
modern, furnished apt. on University&#13;
and Bridge. S62.00 per mo. per person .&#13;
Call 633-2753. Joyce.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FORSALE&#13;
Peter Ustinov, Pamela Tiffin, Jonathan Winters,&#13;
Jolin Astin, Keenan Wynn, Harry Mo,van&#13;
The ;"orl~'s ~unniest general recaptures the Alamo and th&#13;
~rl? s mightiest army can't get him out! Peter Ustinov is th:&#13;
ch:~~c:~c~~:;r~ t:~o .. =s 0 ~ff Aan ~nprebdictable and hilarious&#13;
h " mencan ureaucracy Op ·&#13;
t e zany general and his 87 "w · ., . · poSmg&#13;
ca~t I~ by Jonathan Winters :,r~o;la;: :n ;u;~tar toamedy&#13;
Bngad1er General and part-t · a 1ona uard&#13;
side -splitting political satire m~~:s ~:tt~t sa~esman: This&#13;
forget and verifies the fact th t h amo 1mposs1ble to&#13;
a some eroes are bo&#13;
made, and some are hilarious mist k . rn, some are a es.&#13;
3 suitcases, very good cond. S25, Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
Dune Buggy. Brand new. Must sell.&#13;
3814 · 16 Av enue, KenoSha,&#13;
Tape Record er. 3 speed, mono. auto&#13;
Shutoff. 3 didget counter good cond&#13;
Call 657-5992.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Attractive Young lady to pose nudf&#13;
for an aspiring photographer whO&#13;
can't afford to compensate for such&#13;
services. Write M . Starr, 6517 · 2t&#13;
Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
ADMISSION _ 75... JULY 23&#13;
STU - ~ .&#13;
DENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
PARKSIDE and W ISCONSIN ID REQUIRED&#13;
by Jim Casper of the Newscope staff&#13;
A milwaukee golfer, Steve Friebert, who&#13;
recenUyjoined the pro tour, was playing in his&#13;
h metownat the Greater MIlwaukee Open this&#13;
o st weekend and he talked with Newscope&#13;
~out the tour and golf in general.&#13;
a "I started on the tour at Jacksonville about&#13;
threeand a half months ago. This is my home&#13;
townand Iam happy to be doing well here. It's&#13;
niceto be making a good showing in front of the&#13;
peopleI know." .,&#13;
Friebert was asked If quite a few home&#13;
toWnpeople came to watch him play: "On the&#13;
first tee many people showed up, but I three&#13;
puttedthe first green and there were only about&#13;
12people going on to the next hole. I birdied&#13;
thathole and about 50people came back again.&#13;
The pro golf tour can be a difficult, long&#13;
roadto travel for someone aspiring to make it.&#13;
people read about Palmer, Nicklaus and&#13;
Trevinoand feel that these men have it made.&#13;
Well,they do, but there are many others tha t&#13;
are struggling along.&#13;
Keeping in mind the difficulty of making it&#13;
onthe tour, Friebert was asked why he decided&#13;
togivethe tour a try: "I have been professional&#13;
in this area for about eight years and I've&#13;
always wanted to play the golf tour and I&#13;
worked at some clubs in town to earn my&#13;
membership into the PGA, but I've always&#13;
wantedto goon the tour and finally I am here."&#13;
He explained that when you are a full.&#13;
memberof the PGA you can play in any of the&#13;
co-sponsored PGA tournaments. So you are&#13;
eithera member of the PGA or else you qualify&#13;
throughthe player'S school to go on tour.&#13;
The 25 year old Friebert started playing&#13;
golfwhen he was 12. "We just had some clubs&#13;
layingaround and nobody played much in our&#13;
familyand nobody still does really. I just saw&#13;
someclubs sitting around and got interested&#13;
and it's all I've ever really wanted to do," he&#13;
said. "I guess I was just lucky enough to have&#13;
high. scbool, however, I won the sectional&#13;
qualifymg for the state high school golf tournament.&#13;
That's the only thing I have ever won. I&#13;
see~ to do better against the better competition,&#13;
probably because I try harder When 1&#13;
play a~alnst lower level competition it seems&#13;
that I Just don't get up for it."&#13;
Newscope asked him how much practice is&#13;
needed to develop a strong golf game: "I used&#13;
to practice day in and day out, hours and bours&#13;
of practice, because I enjoyed practicing, but I&#13;
think I ran myself into the ground doing that&#13;
Now I practice my bardest only wben I a~&#13;
playing badly. When I am playing well. hitting&#13;
the ball well and putting well I don't do too&#13;
much of it - just enough to warm up. and if I&#13;
see any problems I will work on them. Other&#13;
than that. I just like to play and work on getting&#13;
the ball in the hole because that's what it's all&#13;
about. You can stand on the practice tee lor&#13;
hours, but if you can't do it on the golf course&#13;
it's not going to help you much."&#13;
"Some players practice themselves right&#13;
out of a good swing because they will say,&#13;
'Maybe if I try this or that it might even get&#13;
better,' and then they usually wind up by&#13;
blowing the whole thing and really hitting it&#13;
badly instead 01 the good swing that they had&#13;
going for them. Yet you have to play frequently&#13;
If you expect to do well consistantly."&#13;
In discussing the pro tour now, Friebert&#13;
Jut) 1%,II1L P. r 7&#13;
"As far as newcomers on th tour, one&#13;
fello" In particular that ha a great m ntal&#13;
attitude is Hubert Green He h "on 000&#13;
tournament this lear and ha had a chanc to&#13;
win a couple of oth rs He Jw.t kno hO\\ ood&#13;
he IS and believes in hrm elf and out nd&#13;
does it."&#13;
teve was a ed about goll otma m •&#13;
companng the dIfference bet" n hlllmg&#13;
fairway woods and woods off the tee "I doni&#13;
try to change my swrng at all, 1 try to win at&#13;
everything the same If you hav one good&#13;
swing it should be apphed to a II the clubs T&#13;
ball has got to go the same way The onh d,f&#13;
Newscope Visits The GMO&#13;
enoughsense or ability with the game to figure&#13;
outsomeswing that I could use to play."&#13;
Newscope asked him when his scoring&#13;
really started to come around to the par and&#13;
sub-parlevel, to which he replied with a smile:&#13;
"I don't even know if I am there yet sometimes.&#13;
It seems like for quite a few years since I have&#13;
beena professional I've had the ability to shoot&#13;
there, it's just getting the experience so you&#13;
don't back up under fire that counts, When&#13;
playingunder pressure it's different than just&#13;
shootinga practice round."&#13;
Whenhe played in the county or city he said&#13;
he didn't win any tournaments. "When I was in&#13;
feels that there is an abundance of good golfers&#13;
on it today: "I think that the tour is much more&#13;
balanced that it was 10 or 12 years ago when&#13;
Arnold Palmer was winning all those tournaments.&#13;
At that time there were only a handful&#13;
of people that you could figure on winning a&#13;
tournament. Now you just don't know, There&#13;
are so many fine players out here. I haven't&#13;
played with anybodY that doesn't have the&#13;
ability to win a tournament as soon a their&#13;
confidence builds up. They are so much better&#13;
consistanUy than they were 100r 12years ago"&#13;
As far as the best players on the tour today.&#13;
Friebert had this to say: "I'd go along with Lee&#13;
Trevino and Jack Nicklaus. I don't think any&#13;
two can compare with them. Trevino has had a&#13;
chance to win his last seven tournaments and&#13;
has 'only' won three or four of them They are&#13;
both tremendous players, both far and above&#13;
anybndy else, Look at their mental a~ti~ude.&#13;
You read in the paper where Jack says, Well. I&#13;
cam going to play in this tournament and I intend&#13;
to win it.' How many guys are rea?llygoing&#13;
to say that and down deep mean It. 0 will&#13;
Trevino. He will tell you he can wm any tournament&#13;
there is."&#13;
c&#13;
by Jim Casper of the Newscope staff&#13;
A milwaukee golfer, Steve Friebert, who&#13;
ently joined the pro tour,_was playing in his&#13;
me town at the Greater Milwaukee Open this&#13;
st weekend and he talked with Newscope&#13;
bout the tour and golf in general.&#13;
a "I started on the tour at Jacksonville about&#13;
ttiree and a half months ago. This is my home&#13;
town and I am happy to be doing well here. It's&#13;
nice to be making a good showing in front of the&#13;
people I know."&#13;
Friebert was asked if quite a few home&#13;
town people came to watch him play: "On the&#13;
first tee many people showed up, but I three&#13;
putted the first green and there were only about&#13;
12 people going on to the next hole. I birdied&#13;
that hole and about 50 people came back again.&#13;
The pro golf tour can be _a. c:!ifficult, long&#13;
road to travel for someone asp1rn1g to make it.&#13;
people read about Palmer, Nicklaus and&#13;
Trevino and feel that these men have it made.&#13;
Well, they do, but there are many others that&#13;
are struggling along.&#13;
Keeping in niind the difficulty of making it&#13;
on the tour, Friebert was asked why he decided&#13;
to give the tour a try: ''I have been professional&#13;
in this area for about eight years and I've&#13;
always wanted to play the golf tour and I&#13;
worked at some clubs in town to earn my&#13;
membership into the PGA, but I've always&#13;
wanted to go on the tour and finally I am here."&#13;
He explained that when you are a full ,&#13;
member of the PGA you can play in any of the&#13;
co-sponsored PGA tournaments. So you are&#13;
either a member of the PGA or else you qualify&#13;
through the player's school to go on tour.&#13;
The 25 year old Friebert started playing&#13;
golf when he was 12. "We just had some clubs&#13;
laying around and nobody played much in our&#13;
family and nobody still does really. I just saw&#13;
some clubs sitting around and got interested&#13;
and it's all I've ever really wanted to do," he&#13;
said. "I guess I was just lucky enough to have&#13;
hi h g . s~hool, however, I won the tio 1&#13;
qualifymg for the state high school olf tournament.&#13;
That's the only thing I have ever w I&#13;
see~ to do better against th be ter com petition,&#13;
~robably because I try harder. \\ n 1&#13;
play a~amst lower level competition it m&#13;
that I Just don't get up for it."&#13;
Newscope asked him how much practic&#13;
needed !o develop a strong golf game : "I ed&#13;
to pract!ce day in and day out, hours and hour&#13;
of practice, because I enjoyed practicing, but I&#13;
thmk I ran myself into the ground doin that.&#13;
Now I practice my hardest onh- ·h n I am&#13;
playing badly. When I am playing ell , hit tin&#13;
the ball well and putting well I don ' t do oo&#13;
much of it - just enough to warm up , and if I&#13;
see any problems I will work on them . Other&#13;
than that, I just like to play and work on gettin&#13;
the ball in the hole because that' what it' all&#13;
about. You can stand on the practice tee for&#13;
hours, but if you can't do it on the golf co&#13;
it's not going to help you much ...&#13;
"Some players practice themseh·es r ight&#13;
out of a good swing becau e they •ill sa •&#13;
'Maybe if I try this or that it might even get&#13;
bette_r, ' and then they usually ·i nd up b:&#13;
blowmg the whole thing and reall) hitt ing it&#13;
badly instead of the good ~ing that th _. had&#13;
going for them . Yet you have to pla: frequ ntl)&#13;
if you expect to do well con i tantlv.'"&#13;
In discussing the pro tour no\\:, Friebert&#13;
ul I • lt7l&#13;
Newscope Visits The GMO&#13;
enough sense or ability with the game to figure&#13;
out some swing that I could use to play.''&#13;
Newscope asked him when his scoring&#13;
really started to come around to the par and&#13;
sub-par level, to which he replied with a smile:&#13;
"I don't even know if I am there yet sometimes.&#13;
It seems like for quite a few years since I have&#13;
been a professional I've had the ability to shoot&#13;
there, it's just getting the experience so you&#13;
don't back up under fire that counts. When&#13;
playing under pressure it's different than just&#13;
shooting a practice round."&#13;
~hen he played in the county or city he said&#13;
he didn't win any tournaments. "When I was in&#13;
' .&#13;
p •7&#13;
~o - o z&#13;
M&#13;
0&#13;
R&#13;
R&#13;
I&#13;
s&#13;
0&#13;
N&#13;
THE DAYS ARE BRIGHT&#13;
AND FILLED WITH PAIN&#13;
-3 a.m., Thursday_&#13;
eulogy: Jim Morrison, a member of the Doors (a&#13;
musical group), is dead&#13;
Morrison, long dark-haired hippie drinker died&#13;
before this issue was in print. To misquote Jim: let me&#13;
have one more kiss before you slip into unconsciousness&#13;
... till ... we meet again ... Jim has slipped, he's&#13;
•. dead and musipoetry is none for the better. Something&#13;
from "Crystal Ship".&#13;
Before you slip into unconsciousness&#13;
I'd like to have another kiss&#13;
Another flashing chance at .bliss&#13;
Another kiss, another kiss.&#13;
The days are bright and filled with pain&#13;
Enclose me in your gentle rain ,&#13;
The time you ran off till . .&#13;
. . . we meet again.&#13;
Oh, tell me where your freedom lies&#13;
the streets are fields that never die .&#13;
The Doors, a mood group pulsating soft eroticism,&#13;
leader Jim Morrison was buried before the death was&#13;
anp.ounced; Thursday, June 8 (3 a.m.), 1971. What can&#13;
we tell you, what can we say, Jim Morrison influenced&#13;
us, he lived, we heard he's dead, we're less alive. Jim&#13;
Morrison.&#13;
- Jim Koloen&#13;
Marc Eisen</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="91477">
            <text>Centrex brings new numbers to Parkside</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="91464">
              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 4, Issue 3, July 12, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="91465">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="91466">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="91467">
              <text>Student publications</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="91468">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="91469">
              <text>Text</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="91470">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="43">
          <name>Identifier</name>
          <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="91471">
              <text>UWPAC124_19710712</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="91472">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="91473">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="91474">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="91475">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4472">
      <name>art festivals</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="133">
      <name>dancing</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="602">
      <name>science division</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
