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              <text>Student Activities Offers No Smiles</text>
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              <text>. rr i&gt; I* a .. University of Wisconsin - Parkside Journalism is Literature in a Hurry —Matthew Arnold s J&#13;
*1&#13;
Volume 5 Number 8 October 25,1971&#13;
Student Activities Offers No Smiles&#13;
i&#13;
&lt;&#13;
a:&#13;
UJ&#13;
N&#13;
&lt;&#13;
a.&#13;
*&#13;
o&#13;
•Parting Shot1&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"you ask me why 1 don't smile&#13;
is there something bothering&#13;
me,&#13;
just open your eyes and look&#13;
around&#13;
and tell me what do you see . .&#13;
Johnny Rivers&#13;
Last Tuesday was a dull day.&#13;
Besides omniscent rain clouds&#13;
looming overhead, there was a&#13;
foggy mist in the air. The&#13;
campus police at the Wood&#13;
Road campus even appeared to&#13;
be doggin' it a bit as they&#13;
handed out parking tickets.&#13;
They had lost their apparent&#13;
zeal to the natural forces of&#13;
gloom.&#13;
Marc Eisen and I were to talk&#13;
to Mr. Tony Totero, Coordinator&#13;
of Student Organizations. Along&#13;
with Mr. William Neibuhr, who&#13;
heads Student Activities, Tony&#13;
Totero is to help shape the&#13;
extra-curricular and social&#13;
atmosphere on campus.&#13;
Marc and I wanted to talk&#13;
about rules, authority, and the&#13;
role of Student Activities on&#13;
campus, as Newscope had run&#13;
into problems during their last&#13;
dance in the area of rules and&#13;
authority.&#13;
The guest policy was in&#13;
question, as we wanted a&#13;
definite interpretation of the&#13;
working rule. Discussion of this&#13;
sort between the two of us and&#13;
the administration usually&#13;
uded in artument, and this&#13;
grey Tuesday was no exception.&#13;
Someone on campus made&#13;
crude signs telling students to&#13;
boycott the Carthage-Parkside&#13;
SGA Fails to Reach Quorum&#13;
by John Koloen, Managing Editor&#13;
Last Thursday seven members of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association attended&#13;
a meeting scheduled for 7:30 p.m. and for&#13;
the fifth time this semester failed to make&#13;
quorum. Bound by by-laws that set the quorum at&#13;
two-thirds of the membership, the senate continues&#13;
to be plagued by a high rate of absenteeism.&#13;
Thus far only one meeting has succeeded in&#13;
reaching a quorum and that ended very suddenly&#13;
when two of the senators resigned in protest.&#13;
In order for a meeting to be legal at least ten&#13;
senators must be present. What happened at&#13;
Thursday's aborted meeting prompted one&#13;
senator to suggest a motion for the impeachment&#13;
of half-a-dozen senators.&#13;
At 7:45 Senator Ken Konkol had left the&#13;
meeting room to call the absent members in a&#13;
final effort to reach a quorum. By 8:00 most of the&#13;
senators present had left and Konkol had not&#13;
returned.&#13;
Members present beside Konkol included Tim&#13;
Eaker, President; Tom Garner, Vice-President;&#13;
Jeanette Dreme, Secretary; and Senators Dale&#13;
Martin, Gary Adelson and R. E. Williams. When it&#13;
became apparent that a quorum would not be&#13;
reached Williams remarked, "Where are all the&#13;
concerned students tonight?" No one replied, but&#13;
it was obvious where they weren't.&#13;
In other SGA matters Eaker told Newscope&#13;
that the results of the recent referendum were&#13;
"debatable". A number of alleged violations and&#13;
mis-shights in the administration of the&#13;
referendum may cause it to be overturned. Thus&#13;
far the results have not been tabulated and any&#13;
final decisions may be postponed until the Senate&#13;
is able to hold a meeting.&#13;
inside&#13;
sponsored event "Jesus Christ&#13;
Superstar", because of ticket&#13;
prices. We had nothing to do&#13;
with these signs, except to&#13;
wonder why they had been&#13;
taken down, and by whom.&#13;
There seemed to us, to be the&#13;
principle of a Freedom of&#13;
Speech involved here.&#13;
Our questions and artuments&#13;
presented to Mr. Totero were&#13;
med head-on by him, with rules&#13;
from a handbook. We were&#13;
buried in rules. Rules and&#13;
authority. My mind left the&#13;
scene in his office and went&#13;
back to my years at Tremper&#13;
High School, where authority&#13;
was stressed over all else.&#13;
The posters were taken down&#13;
by a student employee of the&#13;
Student Activities Office. Mr.&#13;
Totero told us he had instructed&#13;
his employees long before to&#13;
take down all posters that did&#13;
not fit the specifications listed&#13;
in the rules for Student&#13;
Organizations.&#13;
The rules state that a poster&#13;
must not be over 11 by 14 inches.&#13;
The poster must show sponsorship,&#13;
and be placed in the&#13;
proper place. I asked him why&#13;
this rule was not enforced in the&#13;
past, and why Student Activities&#13;
posters were "illegally" taped&#13;
to windows (in direct defiance&#13;
to rules concerning posters,&#13;
made up in part by Mr. Totero&#13;
himself, posters may not be&#13;
taped to windows).&#13;
No explanation was given&#13;
when I pointed to a Student&#13;
Activities poster put up by those&#13;
authorized to see the poster&#13;
rules were enforced. The&#13;
specific poster I pointed out was&#13;
directly outside the Assistant&#13;
Vice Chancellor's office. Taped&#13;
to glass, the Student Activities&#13;
poster stared me in the face,&#13;
unexplained.&#13;
So the bickering continued.&#13;
The questions, answers, and&#13;
arguments went into reruns&#13;
when I injected into the conversation&#13;
my motive in bringing&#13;
up these seemingly minor&#13;
hassles.&#13;
I told Mr. Totero I thought&#13;
recent actions by the Office of&#13;
Student Activities had created a&#13;
gap between itself and the&#13;
students it was to serve. The&#13;
reasons I cited were these:&#13;
1) Ticket prices for dances&#13;
were too high in relation to the&#13;
talent offered. I offered the&#13;
Newscope philosophy behind&#13;
sponsoring dances, which involved&#13;
putting on dances for the&#13;
students. We kept the prices&#13;
down (never over $1.25 (for two&#13;
bands) in an effort to stimulate&#13;
good feeling between between&#13;
our organization and the public&#13;
(students).&#13;
Eating Out&#13;
Returns!&#13;
2) I felt that the prices for the&#13;
John Denver concert were too&#13;
high ($3.50 and $4.50). Mr.&#13;
Totero admitted that only about&#13;
40 per cent of the audience at&#13;
the concert were Parkside&#13;
students, which would indicate&#13;
to me a lack of insight into the&#13;
choice of John Denver, or ticket&#13;
prices too high for students.&#13;
3) Tickets for "Jesus Christ&#13;
Superstar" were not within a&#13;
reasonable financial realm of&#13;
college students ($4.50, $6.50,&#13;
$7.50). Certainly many&#13;
Parkside students couldn't&#13;
attend the high-priced event put&#13;
on for them.&#13;
4) Finally, I thought that the&#13;
Office of Student Activities&#13;
under Mr. Niebuhr was not&#13;
fulfilling its purpose on campus.&#13;
I wondered if the students&#13;
weren't coming second to the&#13;
community when events were&#13;
planned. I didn't think the&#13;
people in charge realized that&#13;
they were to serve Parkside&#13;
students before dollar bills,&#13;
personal egos and sell-outs.&#13;
All of my questions involving&#13;
a gap between the students and&#13;
the Office of Student Activities&#13;
were answered in the announcement&#13;
by Mr. Totero that&#13;
a free folk concert would be&#13;
presented to the students by the&#13;
Student Activities Office.&#13;
Theoretically, the concert&#13;
would shore up any displeasure&#13;
in past events. The fact that the&#13;
entertainment provided at this&#13;
free concert wasn't in the&#13;
financial status of a John&#13;
Denver or Superstar production&#13;
didn't seem to matter. For once&#13;
in the argument, the Coordinator&#13;
of Szudent&#13;
Organizations seemed to fall&#13;
back on something other than&#13;
written rules. It was the "good&#13;
intentions" we were to admire,&#13;
I assumed.&#13;
I thought over the whole&#13;
session a few days later.&#13;
Arguing about where you want&#13;
to drive a car, when you don't&#13;
have the keys didn't appeal to&#13;
me. I accepted the good intention&#13;
theory for the time&#13;
being, rather than continue to&#13;
argue in vain.&#13;
I was sitting in the lounge in&#13;
Tallent Hall on a day similar to&#13;
the one on Tuesday. I watched a&#13;
student employee put up a&#13;
poster for the free folk concert.&#13;
All the "good intentions" I had&#13;
expected with the benefit of a&#13;
doubt quickly dissipated when I&#13;
read the poster.&#13;
The Student Activities Board&#13;
had taken so much time in&#13;
preparing a "little something"&#13;
for the students, they failed to&#13;
spell the name of the folk artist&#13;
correctly on the poster.&#13;
prog)&#13;
Jesus Christ Superstar&#13;
page 9 &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE October 25.1971&#13;
'All You Need is Love 99&#13;
McGOVERN ANNOUNCES AMENSTY&#13;
FOR WAR RESISTERS — IF ELECTED&#13;
(CPS) — Presidential hopeful Sen. George McGovern (D-SD).&#13;
announced Sept. 23 that if e lected he would grant amensty to men in&#13;
jail or expatriated for resisting the draft and the war.&#13;
In the Washington Press Club conference, he also stated that he&#13;
opposes war crimes trials for American political leaders who led the&#13;
U.S. into the war in Indochina.&#13;
TIIE GUARDS AT SING-SING SAID NO&#13;
CPS) — D uring the early stages of the uprising of prisoners at the*&#13;
maximum-security New York prison at Attica, prison officials ordered&#13;
black and Puerto Rican guards from the other maximum&#13;
security New York prison, Sing-Sing, to beef up the nearly all-white&#13;
guard staff at Attica.&#13;
The guards took a vote, and then refused to go.&#13;
KENT STUDENTS ASK FOR FEDERAL PROBE&#13;
Kent, Ohio (CPS) — More than 9,000 Kent State University&#13;
students have signed a petition asking for a federal grand jury investigation&#13;
into the deaths of the four students killed while demonstrating&#13;
against the invasion of Cambodia.&#13;
The petition asks President Nixon to overrule Attorney General&#13;
Mitchell, who said last August 13 there should be no investigation of&#13;
the May 4, 1970, incident.&#13;
ACLU ASKS SUPREME COURT TO REVIEW&#13;
FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS OF COLLEGE STUDENTS&#13;
Washington, D.C. (CPS) — Asserting that "college students are&#13;
entitled to the identical First Amendment protections on the campus&#13;
as they or any other citizen would have in the community-at-large,"&#13;
the American Civil Liberties Union asked the Supreme Court to review&#13;
two cases: one involving demonstrations inside campus buildings, the&#13;
other involving official recognition of student political organizations.&#13;
If the court agrees to hear the cases, it will mark the first time in&#13;
37 years that the Justices have addressed themselves to freedom of&#13;
speech and assembly for college students.&#13;
CHARTER FLIGHT&#13;
$168.00&#13;
Chicago to London&#13;
and return&#13;
Aboard Chartered BOAC VC10&#13;
Leave Dec. 26, 1971 - Return Jan. 11, 1972&#13;
Open to students, staff or faculty of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system or their dependent&#13;
families. A $50 deposit obtains your&#13;
seat priority number.&#13;
Eight credit study programs are also being&#13;
offered. Detailed itineraries available for:&#13;
Contemporary British Theatre&#13;
Comparative British Govt.&#13;
Archeology of England &amp; France&#13;
Law Enforcement in Great Britain&#13;
Studies in French &amp; Italian Art&#13;
French Civilization&#13;
Spanish Civilization&#13;
Social Research in Israel&#13;
FINAL APPLICATION DEADLINE —&#13;
NOVEMBER 15, 1971&#13;
Write or call:Division of Extended Services&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
Oshkosh, Wisconsin 54901&#13;
$389&#13;
$385&#13;
$455&#13;
$389&#13;
$435&#13;
$439&#13;
$499&#13;
$598&#13;
Tel: (414) 235-6220, Ext. 714&#13;
by Kim King&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Traveling south from the&#13;
harbor on Sixth Street in&#13;
Kenosha, you come upon a&#13;
conglomeration of buildings,&#13;
signs, people, and a number of&#13;
other things. This is distinctly&#13;
called downtown. Within this&#13;
mess of overpopulated crap,&#13;
there seems to be nowhere a&#13;
person can be discovered as&#13;
himself. All emphasis&#13;
throughout the area tends to be&#13;
dominated by the cold hands of&#13;
business.&#13;
However, if you keep your&#13;
eyes open, you'll find that a&#13;
couple of doors north of "The&#13;
Pad" and this side of the bridge,&#13;
there is a place with no sign,&#13;
nothing but a sloppy paint-job&#13;
on the window. This place is a&#13;
coffeehouse. A "Natural Highcoffeehouse.&#13;
&#13;
From the outside, it looks like&#13;
the perfect place to get away. It&#13;
has all the qualities of being a&#13;
"Jesus Freak" establishment,&#13;
and appears that by entering&#13;
you could terminate your&#13;
hatred of crowds, smoke and&#13;
noise.&#13;
As I entered, the first thing I&#13;
saw was a small window to the&#13;
right that looked like a ticket&#13;
office. The sign read&#13;
"DONATIONS 50c". Handing&#13;
the clean-cut ticket taker a five,&#13;
I was informed that he didn't&#13;
have enough change. After five&#13;
minutes of searching triumphantly&#13;
for a dollar bill, I was&#13;
allowed to enter on friendly&#13;
terms.&#13;
Proceeding into what looked&#13;
to be a converted pizza parlor, I&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISORS&#13;
'Come visit our pizza&#13;
kitchens or have&#13;
v some delivered'&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5-12&#13;
except Sunday&#13;
4615—7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
finally managed to find an&#13;
empty chair just vacated by&#13;
someone that left for the&#13;
bathroom. Looking around, I&#13;
found the situation quite interesting.&#13;
When I asked what&#13;
there was to do, a person on my&#13;
right said, "You can either join&#13;
the friendly poker game in the&#13;
corner, or talk to the man with&#13;
the Bible."&#13;
Relaxing in the stiff wooden&#13;
chair, I noticed another window&#13;
where you could buy two things.&#13;
One thing was pop, the other&#13;
was burnt kernels of popcorn.&#13;
The place reeked so bad of&#13;
burnt popcorn that I finally&#13;
broke down and bought a Pepsi&#13;
in order to get the rotten taste&#13;
out of my mouth. While drinking&#13;
my pop, I was confronted with,&#13;
"Do you mind if I join you?"&#13;
Some people would call him a&#13;
"Jesus Freak" though the name&#13;
of the organization is the "Jesus&#13;
People".&#13;
In his presentation, he talked&#13;
about the four basic steps for&#13;
establishing a relationship with&#13;
Jesus Christ. He explained the&#13;
coffeehouse is set up mainly to&#13;
help young people. "We try to&#13;
teach people how to pray," he&#13;
stated after a long winded&#13;
speech. Finishing, he asked if&#13;
you will let Jesus enter your&#13;
heart, and leaves the answer up&#13;
to you.&#13;
After the man with the Bible&#13;
finally departed, I sat there and&#13;
thought for awhile. When I got&#13;
my senses back I decided to&#13;
leave. As I retreated from my&#13;
talbe, through the entrance hall,&#13;
and out the door, I once again&#13;
found myself on the peaceful&#13;
sidewalk of Sixth Avenue,&#13;
downtown, Kenosha.&#13;
The "Natural High" coffeehouse&#13;
is a great place for&#13;
kids who really don't have any&#13;
place else to go. There they&#13;
have someone to talk to, work&#13;
out their problems, and even&#13;
find a few friends who care.&#13;
Basically the "Jesus People"&#13;
are o.k., though now and again&#13;
they do get a bit pushy in&#13;
stressing that Jesus is the only&#13;
way. I can think of only one&#13;
organization that would be&#13;
more helpful to kids, and it&#13;
would have one requirement:&#13;
"All you need is love".&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
213 SIXTH S TR E E T RA C I N E -&lt;Sc*&#13;
you offended by nudity?&#13;
if not, stop in.&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise&#13;
SPECIAL '5% O FF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine &#13;
October 25,1971 NKWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
part 1&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The merger of the governing&#13;
boards of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin is now a reality. This&#13;
merger combined the old&#13;
University of Wisconsin and the&#13;
Wisconsin State University&#13;
system to form the third largest&#13;
University in the nation — the&#13;
new University of Wisconsin.&#13;
There was only one man to&#13;
thank, or as many people in the&#13;
area say, to blame for this&#13;
merger — the Governor of the&#13;
state, Patrick Lucey. Without so&#13;
much as a whisper during his&#13;
election campaign this man has&#13;
held up the state budget of 5&#13;
billion, 865 billion dollars for&#13;
three and one-half months until&#13;
he could force the merger down&#13;
the throats of the state&#13;
legislators.&#13;
In the legislature, it was&#13;
known from the start that the&#13;
Democrat-controlled Assembly&#13;
would approve anything that&#13;
Democratic governor Lucey&#13;
wanted. It was only in the&#13;
Republican-controlled Senate&#13;
that the merger issue could be&#13;
stopped, and for a while it&#13;
looked as though it might be.&#13;
Why did the merger make it&#13;
through the Senate? It might&#13;
have something to do with the&#13;
AFL-CIO. This politically influential&#13;
labor group had&#13;
originally opposed the merger,&#13;
but by die time the governor&#13;
spoke before the senate the first&#13;
time it changed its position. It&#13;
was shortly after this that&#13;
Republicans started breaking&#13;
ranks to come out in favor of the&#13;
merger.&#13;
In all, enough Republicans&#13;
came out in favor of the merger&#13;
for it to pass the Senate by three&#13;
votes. One notable thing occurred&#13;
though; two state&#13;
senators did the almost unheard&#13;
of thing of going against a&#13;
governor of their own party. Of&#13;
the two Democratic Senators&#13;
who voted against the merger&#13;
one was Joseph Lourigan of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Senator Lourigan is a unique&#13;
man in this age of party politics.&#13;
He is a man who likes to make&#13;
up his own mind. Originally&#13;
open-minded about the concept&#13;
of merger, he came to see that&#13;
in the long run it would cost the&#13;
state additional hundreds of&#13;
thousands of dollars while doing&#13;
great damage in his 22nd Senate&#13;
District, which includes the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
&#13;
Upon merger of the two&#13;
systems funding for Parkside&#13;
was reduced to the level of the&#13;
old Wisconsin State University.&#13;
In addition, the extra start-up&#13;
funds Parkside had been getting&#13;
as a newly-formed University&#13;
were cut out entirely. This&#13;
means the quality of education&#13;
will be reduced because there&#13;
are fewer monies available for&#13;
Parkside than anticipated&#13;
before the merger.&#13;
Lourigan pointed out that as&#13;
far as University spending is&#13;
concerned "Parkside is at the&#13;
tail end of the appropriation&#13;
train."&#13;
Parkside will actually receive&#13;
less money per semester hour&#13;
than some schools under the old&#13;
State University system.&#13;
Initially Senator Lourigan&#13;
voted to kill the merger bill.&#13;
Then, when he saw things were&#13;
going unfavorably, he worked to&#13;
modify the bill to reduce its&#13;
impact and then worked to kill&#13;
the bill he helped modify.&#13;
When Governor Lucey&#13;
learned of Senator Lourigan's&#13;
opposition to the merger, he&#13;
paid the senator a visit at his&#13;
office to try and change his&#13;
mind. But Mr. Lourigan had&#13;
decided that merger was bad&#13;
for the people of Wisconsin and&#13;
refused to be swayed. This is&#13;
what the senator told Lucey and&#13;
this was the reason the&#13;
Governor swore at Lourigan in&#13;
his office and told him to tell our&#13;
Chancellor to "go to hell".&#13;
Senator Lourigan was&#13;
disappointed when the senate&#13;
passed the merger. He was&#13;
disappointed that Henry Dorman,&#13;
the senator from Racine,&#13;
went against the best interests&#13;
of his own constituents and&#13;
voted in favor of merger. He&#13;
was disappointed when a&#13;
delegation from Parkside went&#13;
to Madison, but failed to meet&#13;
with the Senate. He was&#13;
disappointed with the mayor of&#13;
Kenosha who moderated a&#13;
panel at Parkside to discuss the&#13;
merger and then "sat on his&#13;
hands and did nothing . . . It's a&#13;
good thing he has an administrative&#13;
assistant to write&#13;
his speeches," he added. He&#13;
was disappointed at how&#13;
students were misled in merger&#13;
talks, but most of all, he was&#13;
disappointed that the city of&#13;
Kenosha obligated over $5&#13;
million and gave Parkside 700&#13;
acres of land, ("Racine didn't&#13;
give one red cent"), with the&#13;
understanding that Parkside&#13;
would be a University of&#13;
Wisconsin school, only to have&#13;
the status of UW removed after&#13;
the money had been spent.&#13;
Senator Lourigan is going to&#13;
try to get some of that $5 million&#13;
back for Kenosha. He plans to&#13;
appeal to the Supreme Court for&#13;
reimbursement because the&#13;
merger results in a breach of&#13;
contract.&#13;
The merger is now a reality&#13;
and has been for nearly three&#13;
weeks. When Governor Lucey&#13;
first learned of Senator&#13;
Lourigan's stand he told him he&#13;
didn't like his attitude. After he&#13;
realized that merger had&#13;
passed he wrote the Senator a&#13;
long flowery letter praising him&#13;
for standing up for what he&#13;
believed in. He could afford to&#13;
be generous. But Joe Lourigan&#13;
remembers that first argument&#13;
and it looks as though he will not&#13;
conveniently fade into obliviou&#13;
but will continue to vote each&#13;
measure on its own merits.&#13;
The Death oi a University&#13;
r ^&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will help any woman regardless&#13;
ol race, religion, age or financial&#13;
status. We do not moralize, but&#13;
merely help women obtain qualified&#13;
Doctors for abortions, if this is&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early abortion is more&#13;
simple and less cosily, and can be&#13;
periormed on an out patient basis.&#13;
Call:&#13;
Pot Consumption Increasing Pharmacologist Claims&#13;
Marijuana could become&#13;
competitive with alcohol as a&#13;
popular intoxicant, a University&#13;
of California at Los Angeles&#13;
pharmacologist forecast here&#13;
recently.&#13;
"It is conceivable that&#13;
marijuana could become&#13;
competitive with alcohol,&#13;
exhibiting many of the same&#13;
qualities for moderate and&#13;
excessive use over long periods&#13;
of time," declared Professor&#13;
William H. McGlothlin.&#13;
"Future patterns of&#13;
marijuana use will include&#13;
amounts substantially above&#13;
those typically observed today,&#13;
with daily consumption of four&#13;
to six cigarettes not being uncommon&#13;
among regular users,"&#13;
he predicted.&#13;
"With the availability of&#13;
themore potent (cannabis)&#13;
preparations, some individuals&#13;
will likely consume several&#13;
times this amount," Professor&#13;
McGlothlin said. At present the&#13;
typical, current "marijuana&#13;
user" in this country probably&#13;
smokes no more than one&#13;
cigarette per week, he noted.&#13;
"A student who smokes one&#13;
marijuana cigarette daily&#13;
would be considered a heavy&#13;
user by current standards— yet&#13;
his consumption is only 15 p er&#13;
cent of what is considered&#13;
moderate in Eastern countries&#13;
and no more than one or two per&#13;
cent of what is regarded as very&#13;
heavy use" there, Professor&#13;
McGlothlin said.&#13;
"A significant increase" in&#13;
the number of persons who&#13;
daily consume four to six&#13;
marijuana cigarettes appears&#13;
likely in the next few years, he&#13;
added.&#13;
"While this level of usage is&#13;
not generally considered&#13;
disruptive for the Eastern&#13;
countries, it remains to be seen&#13;
whether the same conclusion&#13;
will hold in a much more&#13;
complex Western society. It&#13;
would not be surprising if some&#13;
individuals daily consume 40&#13;
marijuana cogarettes or more,&#13;
an amount that greatly exceeds&#13;
that presently observed in this&#13;
country."&#13;
Four factors contribute to this&#13;
prediction, he explained: 1) the&#13;
majority of marijuana users&#13;
are still in the "experimenter"&#13;
stage; 2) in comparison with&#13;
other countries, the doses of&#13;
marijuana now being used in&#13;
the U.S. are "quite low"; 3) " in&#13;
spite of earlier conclusions to&#13;
the contrary, tolerance to&#13;
cannabis apparently does&#13;
develop, especially for the more&#13;
potent preparations"; and 4)&#13;
hashish or other strong&#13;
preparations are likely to&#13;
become more available.&#13;
"It should not be concluded&#13;
that a relatively high percentage&#13;
of future marijuana&#13;
users will be considered to&#13;
consume excessive amounts,"&#13;
he declared. "Rather the&#13;
standards of what is considered&#13;
light, moderate, and heavy&#13;
usage are likely to be shifted&#13;
upward.&#13;
"Also, the more potent&#13;
cannabis preparations will not&#13;
necessarily replace preference&#13;
for marijuana among many&#13;
users, any more than the&#13;
availability of distilled liquors&#13;
eliminates the demand for beer&#13;
and wine."&#13;
At present, he concluded, the&#13;
prevalence of one or more trials&#13;
of marijuana among students at&#13;
urban West Coast colleges&#13;
appears to be around 60 per&#13;
cent. The rate for urban East&#13;
Coast schools is slightly less,&#13;
while those of Midwest and&#13;
Southern colleges probably are&#13;
no more than half to two-thirds&#13;
the West Coast rate. I 312 922-0777&#13;
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Page 4 NEWSCOPE October 25,1971&#13;
bitomL&#13;
The record of the Student Government&#13;
Association speaks for itself: One out of the past six&#13;
meetings came off. Not much to say, is it.&#13;
The elected representatives of the student body&#13;
promised to serve their constituents when they were&#13;
elected last spring but have failed miserably. The&#13;
blame for this lies on the shoulders of those senators&#13;
who have renewed their obligations to the students by&#13;
failing to attend government meetings. The same&#13;
general apathy that infects the student body at-large,&#13;
i.e. poor election turn-outs, is exemplified by the&#13;
attendance records at meetings.&#13;
Nothing can be more damaging to the prospects&#13;
of a strong student voice in the university than an&#13;
irresponsible and apparently disinterested portion of&#13;
the senate. It is not even possible to impeach these&#13;
senators guilty of absenteeism unless they attend the&#13;
meetings. It is not possible to change the quorum&#13;
ruling unless there is first a quorum reached. It is no&#13;
possible for the SGA to adopt an operating budget&#13;
without the full senate to vote on it.&#13;
At the very least these senators who do not want&#13;
the responsibility of serving the students should attend&#13;
one meeting in order to give those who would like&#13;
to serve the opportunity to do so.&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
516 Monument Square&#13;
RACINE&#13;
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Sixes 7ft.12&#13;
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A Round Trip Jet Over nigh I flight from your city via a regularly scheduled Air Prance flight to&#13;
PARIS with an immediate connecting flight to GENEVA. SWITZERLAND. Your&#13;
overseas flight will include complimentary meals and beverages&#13;
Ground Transfer* Transpor tation from and lo GENEVA via deluxe buses&#13;
£ Seven Nights Tlte last through the seventh day in COURCHEVEL. FRANCE, the most m odern&#13;
and extensively developed ski area m EUROPE situated at B.I 05 leel in the center&#13;
ot a vast domain ot v»owfields Abundant snow, remarkable sunshine ret ord, runs&#13;
from beginner's to expert's with intermediate runs from top to bottom COURCHEVEL&#13;
was developed by Emile Allan, French Olympic champion 2 big cabin&#13;
tableways. 6 gondolas. 36 ski and chair hits. 30.000 ascents per h our. J ski |timp.&#13;
35 marked runs including EUROPE'S fastest Olympic run. ski school 200 mstruc&#13;
tors, a 50 man maintenance and rescue team, 2 skating rinks, and lt"&gt; discotheques&#13;
lessons S13 00 tor 12 2 hour lessons, rental-skis and poles $2 00 per day&#13;
fapprox)&#13;
jjk Lodging Your lodging in the ski area will be in modern new apartments and chalets all with&#13;
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A R"» end Party On the seventh day there will be a giant slalom race for your group with an awards&#13;
party in the evening complete with wine, pri/es and ttophies&#13;
Eighth Night In GENEVA with three great opt'Ons^or that day&#13;
/O, Continue skiing in COURCHEVEL and that afternoon depart lor your over&#13;
^ night in GENEVA&#13;
Ski in a di fferent area s uch as LA PLAGNE and then go to GENEVA tor the&#13;
^ night&#13;
@&#13;
Depart in the morning lor GENEVA where you will fvave Ihe day lor shopping&#13;
and sightseeing Overnight in GENEVA in a good category hotel&#13;
4|K Ninth Night In PARIS. In ihe morning you will depart for PARIS where you will have time to&#13;
shop and spend the evening on the town. O vernight in a good category hotel The&#13;
next morning you will catch your Air Pram* Might home&#13;
Guides Multilingual guides will meet your group upon your arnval m EUROPE and will be&#13;
available to assist you at all tunes until departure&#13;
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:&#13;
Mr. William Ntabuhf. Coordinator&#13;
Student Activity&#13;
Univaruty ol Wiacomtn - Parkdda&#13;
Kenmh, Wfocomin MHO&#13;
Phona: (4141 5S&gt;22»&#13;
lODays&#13;
Only $264&#13;
Plui eto.oo Tax andSarwca&#13;
Dop.H t: GNSKJU January&#13;
Return: Oncaim January&#13;
LETTERS TO&#13;
. .Letters to the editor should be&#13;
double-spaced, typed, and&#13;
should not exceed 350 words.&#13;
Letters must be signed by the&#13;
writer, but names will be&#13;
withheld upon request.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
During a recent broadcast in&#13;
honor of the late U.S. Supreme&#13;
Court Justice Hugo Black, his&#13;
philosophy was reviewed. Here&#13;
is what he believed.&#13;
When asked if certain&#13;
decision of the high court had&#13;
not made it more difficult to get&#13;
a conviction, Black said, "Of&#13;
course."&#13;
He went on to say that this is&#13;
the intention of the Bill of&#13;
Rights: to protect the individual&#13;
from misuse of authority by&#13;
representatives of government.&#13;
The men who wrote the&#13;
Constitution and the Bill of&#13;
Rights were well acquainted&#13;
with the tyranny of governments&#13;
in Europe, from which&#13;
many had fled. Many of those&#13;
governments had persecuted&#13;
citizens for their political&#13;
beliefs.&#13;
Allegations of arrested&#13;
citizens being beaten while&#13;
handcuffed and of the prisoners&#13;
being shot in the back have a&#13;
tendency to shake one's confidence&#13;
in the government. But&#13;
we must remember that the&#13;
Constitution and the Bill of&#13;
Rights do not condone such&#13;
misuse of power. And punishment&#13;
will be meted out if the&#13;
charges are substantiated and&#13;
the guilty are identified.&#13;
Justice Black said no man&#13;
should be punished for thoughts&#13;
he thinks, the words he writes or&#13;
for the ideas he speaks.&#13;
o um yWEST&#13;
&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phono 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Avo.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
However, during the last,&#13;
decade, it seems that many in&#13;
State and mostly in local&#13;
government have tried to&#13;
punish for these reasons. And&#13;
they have succeeded mainly in&#13;
cases where the person was too&#13;
poor to get high quality legal&#13;
defense of hi5 or her constitutional&#13;
rights.&#13;
After hearing Supreme Court&#13;
Justice Black's beliefs, I almost&#13;
think that Racine needs a&#13;
Supreme Courtjustice by itself,&#13;
because of the way some&#13;
members of our city council act.&#13;
To me they are exactly what&#13;
Justice Black stood against&#13;
(tyranny of governments).&#13;
Irate in Racine&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In Response to your editorial&#13;
of October 18, 197i:&#13;
There seemed to be some&#13;
gross errors in fact in Mr.&#13;
Koloen's editorial in the October&#13;
18 iss ue of Newscope. It&#13;
seems that he is confusing the&#13;
Student Union Committee with&#13;
the Student Activities Board. It&#13;
is not possible to "just sign up"&#13;
for the Student Union Committee.&#13;
The students on the&#13;
committee were elected in the&#13;
April elections. It is possible to&#13;
sign up for an interview for the&#13;
Student Activities Board.&#13;
It is also the Activities Board,&#13;
along with the Activities Office,&#13;
that does the booking of concerts,&#13;
movies, etc. (The Student&#13;
Activities Office holds the final&#13;
say on what is booked though.)&#13;
The Union Committee had&#13;
nothing to do with either the&#13;
John Denver concert or the&#13;
Jesus Christ Superstar performances.&#13;
(The Denver&#13;
concert I disagreed with but I&#13;
think the Superstar concert is&#13;
great.) In fact, our chairman&#13;
Dean Loumos (Halloween&#13;
senator) has not called a&#13;
meeting of the Union Committee&#13;
since May. The last time&#13;
we did meet, we did discuss the&#13;
advantages and disadvantages&#13;
of booking these large concerts.&#13;
There seemed to be a slight&#13;
majority of concensus that&#13;
concerts of this nature were&#13;
doing little to benefit the student&#13;
body as a whole.&#13;
So if there are any further&#13;
criticisms of the activities&#13;
booking on campus, please send&#13;
them to the Student Activities&#13;
Board or the Student Activities&#13;
Office and not at the&#13;
disorganized Student Union&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Student Union CommitteeElect,&#13;
&#13;
Tim Daley&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I feel that this university&#13;
should open a Vietnamese&#13;
Culture Center and begin&#13;
teaching courses in Vietnamese&#13;
history, past and present. This&#13;
would expand our awareness of&#13;
different people and customs,&#13;
as well as provide a wellrounded&#13;
education.&#13;
The history of Viet Nam, for&#13;
obvious reasons, is ignored or&#13;
only superficially touched upon&#13;
by most history texts. Perhaps&#13;
if more students and faculty&#13;
demanded that this relevant&#13;
course be added, Parkside&#13;
would start getting accurate&#13;
history books. It is important&#13;
that we learn about Saigon, the&#13;
Paris of the East, Hanoi, the&#13;
northern capitol, how the&#13;
Withdrawal Notice&#13;
ATTENTION: ALL STUDENTS&#13;
The deadline for DROPPING A COURSE is Friday, October,&#13;
29, 1971. Student Records office hours are as follows:&#13;
7:45 A.M. to 11:45 A.M.; 12:30 P.M. to 4:30 P.M. daily, Monday&#13;
through Friday. Student Records is located in ROOM 283,&#13;
TALLENT HALL. The deadline for WITHDRAWING FROM&#13;
SCHOOL (dropping your entire academic load) is Friday,&#13;
November 26, 1971. If you have any questions regarding your&#13;
program, please contact the Office of Student Records.&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-ln-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Sports Editor James Casper&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross, Jeff&#13;
Scoville, Jerry Socha&#13;
FVoduction Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio, Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Zimany&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Marc Eisen,&#13;
Kelly Infusino, Kim King, Jim&#13;
Koloen, Ken Konkol, Dale&#13;
Martin, Pat Nelson, Janice&#13;
Wilde&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDermid&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
^&#13;
ew6cope&#13;
'&#13;
s an independent student newspaper composed by&#13;
udents of the Universty of Wisconsin-Parside published weekly&#13;
excep uring vacation periods. Student obtained advertising funds&#13;
6 e source of revenue for the operation of Newscope. 6,000&#13;
opies are printed and distributed throughout the Kenosha and&#13;
a^&#13;
Ci&#13;
,&#13;
|1eK.COmmUnitieS as we&#13;
" as the University. Free copies are&#13;
available upon request.&#13;
_ m ^?ad&#13;
!ire for aM manuscrips submitted to Newscope is 4:30&#13;
w , ' n ,&#13;
e U l&#13;
* f day p ri o r to publication and must be typed doubleDnhiira+i&#13;
adlm,&#13;
e for Photographs is the Saturday prior to&#13;
claimpH ^ih 6d manuscript&#13;
s and photographs may be remel&#13;
wf,, k " 30 d3yS a,,er ,he °' submission, after which&#13;
offirPiJ the Property of Newscope Ltd. The Newscope&#13;
of HiahwA f m the Student Organizations building, Intersection&#13;
ot Highway A and Wood Road.&#13;
# R*DDD&#13;
I SS^S^ad#ddddddd®dddddddddI)&#13;
^^TTTTT*THE«EFFFTPFtfEFTrcEFFFEEE * SSS^QCCO;:-:4 ^HE*EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE&#13;
* SSS5SsSsss«aS*TTTTTTTTTTTTraTTTT '&#13;
* * * • * * *&#13;
•TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT&#13;
• # « * • * * &#13;
October 25.1971 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
THE EDITOR&#13;
government system works in&#13;
the Democratic Republic of Viet&#13;
Nam (North) as in the South.&#13;
We could explore the people's&#13;
habits, customs, language and&#13;
contributions to civilization.&#13;
America is deeply involved in&#13;
that nation's economic and&#13;
social status. So students of&#13;
Vietnamese history could learn&#13;
why this is and also how our&#13;
presence affects life in their&#13;
huts and hamlets. I'm sure the&#13;
administration will eagerly&#13;
promote such a course, since it&#13;
would be interesting, attract&#13;
more students to Parkside, and&#13;
of course, we'd be the first&#13;
university to have such a Center&#13;
and history course. Three&#13;
credits would be earned, and&#13;
plane trips to the country should&#13;
be arranged, such as those&#13;
going to European, African and&#13;
Mid-East nations for long range&#13;
studies. This ought to be a&#13;
worthwhile course and should&#13;
be added to our program.&#13;
David Myer&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Parkside villagers have,&#13;
since the beginning of the school&#13;
year, had to put up with many&#13;
inconveniences and&#13;
inadequacies, but, Friday (Oct.&#13;
15) drew the final straw when&#13;
the battery was stolen from my&#13;
car while parked in the&#13;
Parkside Village authorized&#13;
parking lot.&#13;
Up until Oct. 13,we villagers&#13;
had been able to park our cars&#13;
alongside of the apartment&#13;
complex and in full view of at&#13;
least eight apartments. Now we&#13;
are forced to park the cars in&#13;
the rear parking lot which has&#13;
no access side walks, no&#13;
protective lighting nor is it in&#13;
view of enough apartments to&#13;
discourage any would-be thief&#13;
from taking whatever he&#13;
pleases. What's more, we're&#13;
going to be charged a monthly&#13;
parking fee for the use of the lot.&#13;
I think that Parkside villagers&#13;
have put up with quite enough.&#13;
So I challenge the management&#13;
of Parkside Village to come out&#13;
and publicly answer these&#13;
questions: 1) What is going to be&#13;
done to protect the villagers&#13;
from vandals, thieves, or&#13;
possibly muggers and rapists&#13;
which may use this lot as a site&#13;
for their crimes; and 2) What&#13;
arrangements, if any, will be&#13;
made for reimbursement of the&#13;
victims for stolen articles or&#13;
damage done to their cars while&#13;
parked in this new parking lot?&#13;
Rick Pazera&#13;
Parkside Village resident&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The lead story in last week's&#13;
Newscope, on the possible&#13;
reintroduction of the Peace&#13;
Corps to Indonesia and the role&#13;
the Parkside Athletic Director&#13;
has had in this, reeks. It reeks of&#13;
i fawning obsequious ass kiss.&#13;
I have never read a more&#13;
pandering, grovelling piece of&#13;
hype in my life. A more blatant&#13;
example of hucksterism in the&#13;
guise of journalism would be&#13;
hard to imagine.&#13;
While Newscope's role in this&#13;
is somewhat mitigated because&#13;
of the shortage of copy and,&#13;
because the story was not&#13;
written by a staff member,&#13;
Newscope still demeaned itself&#13;
by publishing it. It has&#13;
destroyed, I think, some of the&#13;
credibility Newscope has&#13;
established over the past year.&#13;
The story is an insult. It is an&#13;
insult to our readers, journalism,&#13;
and, ultimately, to the&#13;
very people to which it panders.&#13;
Marc Eisen,&#13;
Newscope staff member&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I've just finished voting on the&#13;
amendments to the Constitution&#13;
and saw thdt the ballot was&#13;
weighted so that people would&#13;
tend to vote for the passage of&#13;
the amendments. In order to&#13;
pass all the amendments all you&#13;
had to do was make one check.&#13;
In order to vote against them&#13;
you had to make a large number&#13;
of c hecks. I'd like to know who&#13;
designed the ballot and hear&#13;
them explain why it was&#13;
weighted the way it was.&#13;
Somehow I suspect it wasn't out&#13;
of s heer stupidity.&#13;
Curtis Sahakin&#13;
Volunteers for Head Start&#13;
What are you doing today&#13;
between the hours of 9 a.m. and&#13;
1 p.m.? How about Monday,&#13;
fuesday or any day of the week&#13;
between those hours?&#13;
If you answered "nothing" to&#13;
either of those questions, then&#13;
how does this sound?&#13;
Project Head Start in&#13;
Kenosha is looking for volunteers&#13;
to work in our Centers (we&#13;
have five). You set a time&#13;
(between 9 and 1) and we do the&#13;
rest. Volunteers help at&#13;
mealtime, storytime, playtime&#13;
and assist on field trips and&#13;
walks.&#13;
Our children range in age&#13;
from four to five. If you are&#13;
interested call 652-6326 and ask&#13;
for Miss Marshall - Social&#13;
Worker, or Miss Watts - 658-&#13;
2371, Extension 77 (Principal).&#13;
The most&#13;
Meaningful Semester&#13;
you'll ever spend...&#13;
could be the one on&#13;
World Campus Afloat&#13;
bailing Feb. 1972 to Africa and the Orient&#13;
fhrough a transfer format, more than 5,000&#13;
students from 450 c ampuses have part icipated&#13;
for a sem ester in t his unique p rogram in i nterlational&#13;
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WCA will bro aden yo ur ho rizons, literally a nd&#13;
iguratively ... and give you a better chance to&#13;
nake it—meaningfully—in this c hanging, world.&#13;
You'll study at sea with an experienced cosnopolitan&#13;
facul ty, and then durin g port stops&#13;
you'll study the world itself. You'll discover that&#13;
no m atter how foreign and far-away, yo u have a&#13;
lot in common wi th pe ople of other la nds.&#13;
WCA isn' t as expensive as you mig ht thin k;&#13;
we've done ou r best to br ing it wi thin rea ch o f&#13;
most college studen ts. Write to day for free&#13;
details.&#13;
TEACHERS: Summer travel with credit for teachers&#13;
and administrators .&#13;
Write Today to:&#13;
Chapman College,&#13;
Box CC 26, Ora nge, Calif ornia 9266 G&#13;
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Page 6 NEWSCOPE October 25,1971&#13;
Parks i (J £• S&#13;
7 iferary ma qo. xi'v*--&#13;
S a t&gt; mil" t/Our Uot'k&#13;
at tke&#13;
n&#13;
"&#13;
a&#13;
«*»»* ^ 'k^sr&#13;
«v.*f&#13;
PlXXA-K^&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racine&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
, The Wine|&#13;
leaking j&#13;
i Season |&#13;
is Here... ? 15&#13;
i- and we've g ot Lji&#13;
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jy b eginners o r e xperts i&lt;&#13;
t at S PECIAL PRICES.&#13;
0W»0 5&#13;
crcc-CT&#13;
HWY 1&#13;
reduced prices&#13;
on al l wine re cks,&#13;
winemaking kits&#13;
" ifts.&#13;
HWY A&#13;
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You can make wines like&#13;
those you buy at a iiaction V&#13;
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•;.j It's simple, fun and fascin- 7&#13;
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ing equipment and supplies, ji;&#13;
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if&#13;
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IS V£Jty WO&amp;TH&#13;
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INTAKE IS TWO BUCKS AND YOUR TEN TRANSISTOR RADIO&#13;
"What's Intake?"&#13;
Intake is a multi media concert, Friday, October 29, 8:15 P.M.,&#13;
Uihlein Hall at the Performing Arts Center. It's for college&#13;
students, no "old" folks, nothing uptight. It's mostly surprises&#13;
including jazz-rock and lights. Call it the Milwaukee Symphony&#13;
without tuxedos. But bring that transistor radio along.&#13;
"What?"&#13;
You'll need to bring a transistor radio. Yehuda Yannay of UWM's&#13;
music faculty has written "Concerto for Audience and Orchestra"&#13;
for this concert. He'll need an all electronic audience. Bring a&#13;
transistor radio and you'll have something to do. The audience&#13;
performs the transistor radio passages and the Milwaukee Symphony&#13;
plays back up. That's it!&#13;
"Sounds Outrageous!"&#13;
It is. Bring that radio, though. Especially bring those lucky models&#13;
that have FM and short wave bands. These instruments carry a&#13;
wider range of available sound. Directions will be flashed on&#13;
screens up front. Imagine this. You're setting in velvet comfort.&#13;
You're composed and ready for action. It starts. You manipulate&#13;
your dials, discriminating, selecting, taking solos, adjusting. You&#13;
are the performer.&#13;
Bring that radio!&#13;
The composer personally intends to reward each radio operator. Be&#13;
there. You'll get surprises no crud. Make your own music for a&#13;
change . . . Intake, October 29.&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
For The Record&#13;
Till: riNIK Till N O S IN Ml'f IT&#13;
Downtown Kenosha •&#13;
DAUNTLESS DEFENDER OF QUALITY DAUNT; —&#13;
IT ; _&#13;
R „ j DAI)&#13;
oAilHRESS DEFENDER OF QtlAUTl&#13;
Saturday October 29th&#13;
Steve Freeman&#13;
Folksinger&#13;
Spanish Guitar—Vocals&#13;
6p.m.-l lp.m.&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
on wood road just south of parkside &#13;
»interviewi&#13;
October 25, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Jesus Christ Superstar&#13;
photographs by rick pazera&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
of th e Newscope Staff&#13;
JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR&#13;
came to the Racine Case&#13;
Fieldhouse last Saturday for two&#13;
performances of the sometimes&#13;
controversial Webber and Rice&#13;
rock-opera. At Parkside,&#13;
specifically, much of the controversy&#13;
revolved around the price&#13;
of tickets. Newscope interviewed&#13;
Tom Westerman, who played the&#13;
role of Christ, on this and other&#13;
topics. What follows is a transcription&#13;
of the interview.&#13;
Newscope: How do you feel about&#13;
making big business out of&#13;
something of this nature?&#13;
Westerman: The feeling, really, is&#13;
that we're all professional people&#13;
and we're doing this for a job. I was&#13;
in Hair before this and people&#13;
asked the same kind of questions,&#13;
y'know, talking about ecology and&#13;
putting down big business and then&#13;
charging $9.50 a seat. You have to&#13;
realize that the people who wrote&#13;
this work wrotet it as a theater&#13;
piece to sell and make money. So&#13;
that's where their at, and that's&#13;
good. That's how they make their&#13;
living. I feel very lucky to be in a&#13;
show like this that has something to&#13;
say, but if I wasn't in this show I'd&#13;
be in something else to make a&#13;
living so I can't put it down.&#13;
NS: In other words, it's strictly a&#13;
job, and you wouldn't consider it a&#13;
cause or a crusade.&#13;
Westerman: I think theater itself&#13;
can be a cause, and I think it is a&#13;
crusade because I really dug what&#13;
it had to say so I auditioned for it&#13;
and was lucky enough to get the&#13;
part. I could have gone and done&#13;
"Hello Dolly" somewhere in&#13;
summer stock which is good, but&#13;
doesn't have anything to say except&#13;
that it's a great form of entertainment.&#13;
I chose this, so in my&#13;
own way I feel I'm saying&#13;
something, but I'm getting paid for&#13;
it just like I'd be for anything else.&#13;
The two are interwoven.&#13;
NS: Obviously this play is getting a&#13;
reaction, more than any other at&#13;
this time. Where • is your pro&#13;
reaction coming from and where is&#13;
your con reaction coming from, if&#13;
you could . . . generalize.&#13;
Westerman: Mostly the con&#13;
reaction is coming from&#13;
established church groups because&#13;
they think the work may be like&#13;
heresy to the church. But every&#13;
time people come to see it with&#13;
their minds like that I think their&#13;
minds changed because the work&#13;
concerns the last seven days of&#13;
Christ's life as a man and it doesn't&#13;
say if h e was God or the son of God.&#13;
We don't attempt to even make a&#13;
statement that he was the son of&#13;
God, or wasn't. We're telling what&#13;
happened to him and the crusade&#13;
he was on. I personally was&#13;
brought in the church and I believe&#13;
he was the son of God, or if he&#13;
didn't have a good chance of being&#13;
the son of God, he wouldn't have&#13;
been in history like he is because he&#13;
would have been a nobody.&#13;
Whatever you believe, that's up to&#13;
you, but people are saying, 'you're&#13;
saying this' or 'you're saying that'&#13;
— we're saying nothing. We're&#13;
saying this is what happened to this&#13;
man, so there's nothing&#13;
sacreligious about it. It's how you&#13;
take it, and if you take it to be&#13;
something dirty or smutty, then its&#13;
gonna be that way. People did that&#13;
with Hair, too.&#13;
NS: Is this play going to be&#13;
remembered ... as something&#13;
that marked a new period in&#13;
drama?&#13;
Westerman: The work is called a&#13;
'rock opera'. When "Porgy and&#13;
Bes' opened as a musical it was a&#13;
different thing. It was like an&#13;
opera, but still a musical comedy&#13;
not having the true opera form.&#13;
This and "Tommy" have similarly&#13;
come along and brought the rock&#13;
world into a more classical state.&#13;
It's really very legit so they call it a&#13;
rock opera. When Handel wrote the&#13;
"Messiah" he wasn't commissioned&#13;
by the church, he did it&#13;
as a theater piece. It was opened&#13;
and presented in a theater. He&#13;
wrote about the passion of Christ,&#13;
but it was completely a theater&#13;
piece and after time went by the&#13;
church adopted it. Who's to say&#13;
that 50 years from now Superstar&#13;
won't be that same type of thing. I&#13;
think it definitely is going to have&#13;
its place in our classical scheme of&#13;
things.&#13;
NS: ecause of the nature of this&#13;
play have you ever been asked to&#13;
perform for nothing, or for very&#13;
nominal fees?&#13;
Westerman: No.&#13;
NS: Would you do it for nothing?&#13;
Westerman: No. Our whole&#13;
company here is the original&#13;
company from the people that&#13;
wrote the play. There's Broadway&#13;
and us. It's completely&#13;
professional.&#13;
NS: At this school there was a&#13;
movement to boycott Superstar. A&#13;
rip-off seven-fifty for tickets was&#13;
Considered unrealistic and inappropriate.&#13;
What would you say to&#13;
these people as far as the expense,&#13;
who gets the money, and so forth.&#13;
Westerman: I'm getting the money&#13;
for doing my job; the light men are&#13;
getting the money for doing their&#13;
job, mostly the people that wrote&#13;
the play are getting the money. All&#13;
I can say is that if it's too much&#13;
money to come to any type of entertainment&#13;
you can choose not to&#13;
go, so you're not being ripped-off.&#13;
If you choose to take out your&#13;
wallet and pay for a ticket to go see&#13;
some entertainment you've done it&#13;
because you wanted to. It's not a&#13;
rip-off.&#13;
NS: But a lot more people could&#13;
choose to go if the prices were&#13;
lower.&#13;
Westerman: What's the lowest&#13;
ticket for this?&#13;
NS: $4.50&#13;
Westerman: Broadway prices are&#13;
fifteen-ninety five.&#13;
NS: But that's Broadway and not&#13;
Westerman: That's inflation. It's&#13;
really bad that prices are so high,&#13;
but you can't take an artistic thing,&#13;
or anything, and say that it's too&#13;
much money because everyones'&#13;
on this grand scale, everybody gets&#13;
paid and everybody has to pay, and&#13;
that's life. To me it's not a rip-off.&#13;
This work is not a charity thing, it's&#13;
a piece of theater. People pay to&#13;
see theater the same as they pay to&#13;
get a haircut.&#13;
NS: And the nature of "the play&#13;
wouldn't change that in any way?&#13;
Westerman: No. First of all it's a&#13;
commercial work.&#13;
NS: About a non-commercial&#13;
person.&#13;
Westerman: So what?&#13;
NS: It just seems incongruous,&#13;
sometimes.&#13;
Westerman: That's like people&#13;
wanting to get something for&#13;
nothing. The work isn't exploiting&#13;
anything, it's telling you the story&#13;
of a man. &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE October 25,1971&#13;
by JimKoloen&#13;
of the Newscipe staff&#13;
Title: Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee&#13;
Author: Dee Brown&#13;
Publisher: Holt, Rinehart &amp; Winston&#13;
($10.95)&#13;
"There was no hope on earth, and God&#13;
seemed to have forgotten us. Some said&#13;
they saw the Son of God; others did not see&#13;
Him. If He had come, He would do some&#13;
great things as He had done before. We&#13;
doubted it because we had seen neither&#13;
Him nor His works.&#13;
"The people did not know; they did not&#13;
care. They snatched at the hope. They&#13;
screamed like crazy men to Him for&#13;
mercy. They caught at the promise they&#13;
heard He had made.&#13;
"The white men were frightened and&#13;
called for soldiers. We had begged for life,&#13;
and the white men thought we wanted&#13;
theirs. We heard that soldiers were&#13;
coming. We did not fear. We hoped that we&#13;
could tell them our troubles and get help. A&#13;
white man said the soldiers meant to kill&#13;
us. We did not believe it, but some were&#13;
frightened and ran away to the Badlands."&#13;
— Red Cloud&#13;
Once proud Oglala Sioux war Chief Red ,&#13;
Cloud was an agency Indian when he spoke&#13;
those words, once strong warrior was old&#13;
and cautious when he'd heard about the&#13;
massacre of Big Foot and 300 women,&#13;
children and unarmed warriors of the&#13;
Standing Rock Sioux at Wounded Knee&#13;
Creek. In 1877 th e mother and father of '&#13;
Crazy Horse had buried the bones and"&#13;
heart of their warrior son in the Pine Ridge&#13;
area near Wounded Knee Creek. In the&#13;
"Moon When the Deer Shed Their Hors",&#13;
"the fourth day after Christmas in the&#13;
Year of Our Lord 1890", a nation of people&#13;
died their symbolic death, thus ending the&#13;
systematic murder of a culture that had&#13;
begun in earnest little more than a hundred&#13;
years earlier.&#13;
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee is an&#13;
"Indian history of the American West".&#13;
Dee Brown, Indian scholar and presently&#13;
librarian at the University of Illinois,&#13;
wrote it after years of research; footnotes&#13;
and bibliography to this 490 page history&#13;
total 25 pages. I suggest you read the book&#13;
without looking up the footnotes because 1&#13;
like a used car. None of the Indians ever&#13;
able to undersand how the land could be&#13;
sold since no one but the Great Spirit, who&#13;
created it, could ever own it, men just&#13;
lived on it.&#13;
Greed, Christianity, politics, all conspired&#13;
to clear the West of the savages&#13;
General Sheridan had said were best when&#13;
dead. When the Indians felt their camps&#13;
threatened they went to war, fighting with&#13;
old guns, little ammunition, bows and&#13;
BOOK&#13;
they tend to obstruct the continuity.&#13;
Brown begins Bury My Heart with a&#13;
brief look at the white man's march across&#13;
the American East where the natives, who&#13;
had at first looked Upon th e aliens from&#13;
another shore as children who needed their&#13;
help, too late saw them as an enemy. After&#13;
the American East there came the&#13;
American West, new land just waiting&#13;
there for the white man to plow up, cut&#13;
down, build roads upon, dig up and claim&#13;
as their own by reasin of Manifest Desityn.&#13;
Bury My Heart is a painful book to read,&#13;
it makes your heart bad to feel even one&#13;
molecule of the resurrected red frustration&#13;
unearthed by Brown. Proud warriors,&#13;
their women and children hunted from one&#13;
end of the country to another, captured&#13;
then "hereded like buffalo" across frozen&#13;
rivers to reservations where they were&#13;
forced to sell the land for broken promises,&#13;
arrows and guerrilla tactics they eventually&#13;
gained the respect and admiration&#13;
of some of their adversaries. General&#13;
Crook (Three Stars) became a defender of&#13;
the Indians after spending 20 yea rs of his&#13;
life conquering them. "Indian lovers" like&#13;
Crook ended their service to their country&#13;
by resigning their commissions; hobody&#13;
likes an "Indian lover".&#13;
When the Bluecoats had finally forced&#13;
the Indians to surrender, by a combination&#13;
of superior weaponry, numbers and the&#13;
bitter cold, the time for treaty talks came.&#13;
The "permanent Indian frontier" would be&#13;
re-established hundreds of miles further&#13;
West or South, for the expropriated land&#13;
the Indian tribes would receive an unfulfilled&#13;
promise of food, clothing, shelter.&#13;
Later, Indian commissioners were to label&#13;
the defeated Indians as free-loaders. The&#13;
Great Father in. Washington would invite&#13;
the Chiefs to visit him, and air their&#13;
complaints. The old warriors would return&#13;
to their people with more empty promises,&#13;
and sinhy metal on their coats, and the&#13;
knowledge that the White man could not be&#13;
defeated, that he comes like "fire across&#13;
the grass".&#13;
Back on the reservations the Chiefs were&#13;
told that their people would be "made into&#13;
white men". Young warriors who&#13;
remembered their freedom would leave&#13;
the reservation to be hunted down by&#13;
Bluecoats, older men and finally even&#13;
Sitting Bull could only speak about the past&#13;
and how they'd been cheated out of their&#13;
land. Having lost their power after&#13;
"touching the pen" the chilefs were&#13;
merely spokesmen, their tribes made up of&#13;
widows, orphans and broken warriors.&#13;
The Black Hills (Paha-Shpa) were taken&#13;
and ripped open by miners, roads were&#13;
built through the sacred lands where the&#13;
"center of the world" was. The nation's&#13;
hoop had been broken in the name of Gold,&#13;
Christ and the American way.&#13;
Bury My Heart is an informative history&#13;
of a race whose only trace is in the names&#13;
of the lands they left behind. Brown&#13;
utilizes some of the Indian syntax, interspersing&#13;
the writing with quotes from&#13;
Chiefs and photographs. It is a book you&#13;
can read in a day, it engrosses you and&#13;
taints your day because the history of the&#13;
American West is a history of much&#13;
badness. The Chiefs and warriors brought&#13;
honesty and nobility to the peace talks,&#13;
they received insults, lies and exile from a&#13;
land that was dear to them. Sheridan got&#13;
his wish.&#13;
Highly recommended along with Black&#13;
Elk Speaks by John Neihardt. If you read&#13;
but two books this year, read these tow.&#13;
(Courtesy of the'Book Mart)&#13;
Free Aioiye&#13;
"fk&lt;. A r o d Kcfv® »\, o £ •&#13;
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1820 - 52nd Street, Kenosha&#13;
FRIDAY OCTOBER 29 7:30 AND 9:45 P.M.&#13;
SATURDAY OCTOBER 30&#13;
SUNDAY OCTOBER 31&#13;
The best movies in town this weekend are;&#13;
Waiting For G odot&#13;
by NOBEL PRIZE winning playwrite&#13;
SAMUEL BECKETT&#13;
starring the original broadway cast&#13;
zero Mostel EStragon&#13;
Burgess ^erideth v'adimir&#13;
Kurt Ka sznar pozzo&#13;
^Ivin EPStein ;-[_ucky&#13;
also&#13;
[Darkness Darkness P3&#13;
*&#13;
DARKNESS DARKNESS is a film a bout heroin&#13;
During the film the viewer enters the world of&#13;
the addict. Actually seeing what it is like to&#13;
be addicted is a powerful deferent against its&#13;
use. The viewer will possess a new understanding&#13;
about the hard drug experience after&#13;
he has seen DARKNESS DARKNESS&#13;
Admission $1.00 in advance or $1.25 at the&#13;
door. Advance tickets may be purchased at&#13;
the Newscope Office or any Art Gallery in&#13;
Harbor West - Kenosha. In Racine at The&#13;
Earth Works and It's A Beautiful Day.&#13;
WAITING FOR GODOT&#13;
"Words! Oh, words!" rattling, mumbling on the&#13;
condition of man, Samuel Beckett's playscreenplay&#13;
Godot is one of the most satiristic&#13;
pieces ever written for theatre, or film. It revels in&#13;
the same blasting outrageous light shared with&#13;
Joyce and Kafka and adjusts the controls of&#13;
perception and time, truth being its only constant.&#13;
The audience is tossed about from ancient&#13;
vaudeville routines to the mockery of God and&#13;
belief showing them as the reason for greed and&#13;
alienation the audience is eventually led into a&#13;
more arbitrary definition of existence (into&#13;
collectiveity away from essentials).&#13;
With many themes, the fate of Lucky and Pozzo&#13;
inseparable in their final blindness seems particularly&#13;
significant. Pozzo-God-Lucky-Man are&#13;
what might be called the status quo of belief;&#13;
Lucky, in "thinking", asserts "for reasons&#13;
unknown, the facts are there". They visit the&#13;
waiting Estragon and Vladimir (Zero Mostell and&#13;
Burgess Meredith) who await the impending&#13;
Godot (whose arrival is as impossible, as is optimism&#13;
impossible) always coming as hope is&#13;
always coming and activity wastes away in the&#13;
waiting.&#13;
Godot is now, it reflects a coming of activity and&#13;
doing merely by showing the waiting for nothing.&#13;
We can hear the echo of Abbie Hoffman and Jerry&#13;
Ruben and all the rest as students of Beckett. They&#13;
express the need to find something other than the&#13;
're-creation' of happiness..&#13;
DARKNESS, DARKNESS&#13;
It is assumed that when an enigmatic thing is&#13;
finally defined and categorized it loses its quality&#13;
to the process of measurement. While it would&#13;
seem to me nothing is categorizable or definable&#13;
the film Darkness, Darkness left the impression of&#13;
definition and category on the quantity called&#13;
Heroin, scaring those hard pressed by a society&#13;
into taking it; away.&#13;
The needle is shown as a dissonant item on&#13;
several occassions throughout the film burrowing&#13;
Burroughslike into the skin of the user and the&#13;
frontal lobes of the viewer.&#13;
Before and after is used as a major them as the&#13;
image of an existential gold and green hued postuser&#13;
talkes candidly about the bad trip in jive. He&#13;
makes simplistic sense of it all, and should be&#13;
listened to carefully. His general summation could&#13;
be called shooting yourself into nature (an open&#13;
system) rather than shooting into yourself (a&#13;
closed one).&#13;
With the stoned rap of a user the denial of the&#13;
personal is complete. While only a few phrases are&#13;
understandable the realization that "It has&#13;
become (his) wife" and "stay away from it, you'll&#13;
feel too good" are sufficient reasons for me to&#13;
stick with something less intraveinous.&#13;
The same messages were as aptly told in The&#13;
Velvet Underground's audio attacks in the form of&#13;
another so-positive-so-bad syntax, "Heroin" and&#13;
"waitin' For My Man" with even more of the pain&#13;
so inherent in the society that makes a thinking&#13;
being do it in the first place. T Then, it would&#13;
seem, that I agree with the film on all points except&#13;
that it failed to identify any reason for a&#13;
person doing it in that first place. Reasons should&#13;
be easy enough to find.&#13;
The New Vogue has been consistently a worthwhile&#13;
experience and diserves its chairs to be&#13;
full.&#13;
On this occassion a criticism is necessary. The&#13;
programming of Darkness, Darkness and Waiting&#13;
for Godot is a mind-racking experience. Heroin&#13;
and the "despairing clowns" of a Beckett farce&#13;
are almost too much in one night.&#13;
William Sorensen &#13;
r&#13;
by Paul Lomartire, Feature Editor&#13;
Eating Out and I were having a light lunch of&#13;
cold cuts, soup and lemonade on a Tuesday during&#13;
the waning weeks of August. No words were&#13;
spoken during the meal. Only the uneven music of&#13;
silverware and dishes broke the uncomfortable&#13;
silence.&#13;
Watching Eating Out salt away sandwiches, I&#13;
realized that the weekly bit of writing, which has&#13;
begun as a snack, had grown into a full course&#13;
dinner, consumed by many readers.&#13;
Eating Out made it known to me that it wanted&#13;
to end its weekly appearance in Newscope. The&#13;
demands had become great. Some people were&#13;
taking the weekly feature too seriously.&#13;
Restaurant owners and managers either badgered&#13;
Eating Out into visiting their establishment, or&#13;
they wanted to complain about something that had&#13;
appeared in the column. Probably worst of all,&#13;
Eating Out and I found ourselves flat broke. We&#13;
were eating between Newscope sponsored free&#13;
meals, on the lowest ebb of the sandwich scale, in&#13;
our opinion. One of us had to go out into the "real&#13;
world" and get a job, or continue to eat bologna.&#13;
An affair that had begun many sentences and&#13;
paragraphs before, between Eating Out and I, was&#13;
in jeopardy. Eating Out was just plain tired. After&#13;
talking over the situation, it was decided by&#13;
mutual agreement that Eating Out and I would&#13;
take a needed vacation from the journalism dinner&#13;
table.&#13;
The afternoon of the meeting was the last I&#13;
saw of the feature for over a month. I didn't even&#13;
get a card. I had heard through word of mouth,&#13;
that a similar piece of writing, known as "state&#13;
Street Gourmet" had found a home at the&#13;
University of Madison on the Daily Cardinal. I&#13;
didn't want to even bother going to Madison to see&#13;
if the State Street eater had seen or heard of&#13;
Eating Out. I decided to be patient.&#13;
Late oneevening last week, after the 11:20 had&#13;
rumbled down the tracks across from my apartment,&#13;
shaking ever dish in the place, I heard a&#13;
knock. I opened the door and saw Eating Out.&#13;
Although a bit thin, the collection of restaurant&#13;
reviews, past and future, looked good.&#13;
After we talked a bit, it was decided by mutual&#13;
agreement, that Eating Out would return to bimonthly&#13;
appearances in Newscope. I had a parttime&#13;
job to support us now, and we were braced for&#13;
hassles.&#13;
Eating Out had returned to stay, or at least&#13;
until things got too heavy, or everything turned&#13;
back into bologna.&#13;
' m m m ^ ~ — —p—11—i n.njn_ru~xru-ij-u~Li~Li-ij~ij~unj-i nri n.n_&#13;
October 25,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 9&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
Imagine—John Lennon and The&#13;
Plastic Ono Band (with the Flux&#13;
Fiddlers)&#13;
Produced by John Lennon,&#13;
Yoko Ono and Phil Spector&#13;
By Robert Cos&#13;
I would suggest this album to&#13;
every music listener who, from&#13;
the first time they hears"I Want&#13;
to Hold Your Hand" has&#13;
followed every note, bar and&#13;
work written by the now&#13;
deceased Beatles. I would go as&#13;
far as to suggest this album to&#13;
anyone, excluding my parents.&#13;
Since the Beatles split in '69&#13;
all four have made efforts to go&#13;
it alone. Harrison has produced&#13;
a triple album which would&#13;
Band album has been the best&#13;
one produced since the split.&#13;
"Imagine" is running a close&#13;
second.&#13;
The lyrics and vocals seem to&#13;
be a bit shallow and monotonous&#13;
at times, but the instrumental&#13;
compositions more than makes&#13;
up for it. The musicians in this&#13;
group are all standouts. The&#13;
late King Curtis on siz, John&#13;
Lennon on one hell of a rythm&#13;
guitar, piano, and mouth organ,&#13;
Geroge Harrison on guitar,&#13;
slide guitar, and dobro, Nicky&#13;
Hopkins, who has played with&#13;
such greats as "The Rolling&#13;
Stones", "The Steve Miller&#13;
Band" etc; on piano, Klaus&#13;
Voorman l)n bass, and Alan&#13;
have been much more&#13;
pleasurable as a single disc.&#13;
McCartney has done two on his&#13;
own in which he is still trying to&#13;
give his fans the "church choir&#13;
boy" image. Paul seems to be&#13;
quite successful in that&#13;
department, but falls short in&#13;
respect to his musical compositions.&#13;
Ringo's shaudy attempt&#13;
at country western&#13;
(Beaucoups of Blues) and his&#13;
unforgettable "Sentimental&#13;
Journey," which I would like to&#13;
see performed on "The&#13;
Lawrence Welk Show" are also&#13;
far less than what we expected.&#13;
But we must also keep in mind&#13;
that they are all working under&#13;
the stress of the legal and&#13;
personal aspects concerning&#13;
their break up.&#13;
Musically, Lennon seems to&#13;
be the least affected by it all. To&#13;
this date, his second Plastic Ono&#13;
White on drusm. All vocals and&#13;
lyrics are done by Lennon.&#13;
There is one cut on&#13;
"Imagine" which I consider to&#13;
be way below Lennon's&#13;
capabilities, and that being "I&#13;
Don't Wanna Be a Soldier&#13;
Mamma, I Don't Wanna Die".&#13;
The lyrics consist of the title&#13;
with the works failure, begger,&#13;
thier, sailor, churchman, etc.,&#13;
thrown into replace the work&#13;
soldier. The instrumental, as a&#13;
whole, is just as boring. But,&#13;
taken as a whole, "Imagine" is&#13;
an enjoyable and worthwhile&#13;
album. „&#13;
As is true with almost all rock&#13;
albums, there are a few cuts&#13;
which stand out on "Imagine .&#13;
In this case, I am thinking of he&#13;
songs entitled "How Do You&#13;
Sleep," "Crippled Inside,^ and&#13;
the title song, "Imagine.&#13;
"How Do You Sleep is a&#13;
person to person song to McCartney.&#13;
The bitterness John&#13;
feels towards McCartney is&#13;
expressed and becomes quite&#13;
obvious in his lyrics:&#13;
those freaks was right when&#13;
they said you was dead&#13;
the one mistake you made was&#13;
in your head&#13;
how do you sleep?&#13;
the only thing you done was&#13;
yesterday&#13;
and since you've gone your're&#13;
just another day&#13;
how do you sleep?&#13;
Right or wrong, he gets the&#13;
message across very clearly.&#13;
The orchestration on this song is&#13;
done well, and is hauntingly&#13;
reminiscent of Sgt. Pepper.&#13;
Very precise and different.&#13;
"Cripple Inside" is a different&#13;
form of music in that it breaks&#13;
away from the traditional rock&#13;
'n' roll style that has made&#13;
Lennon a star. It vaguely&#13;
reminds you of the same form of&#13;
the 1930's vaudeville music.&#13;
Harrison does an excellent job&#13;
of fitting in a very well played&#13;
dobro.&#13;
The first time I heard&#13;
"Imagine" was on a car radio&#13;
infected with more static than&#13;
music. But even through all the&#13;
static, it was umistakably&#13;
another Lennon song. The lyrics&#13;
consist of the same antireligious,&#13;
nation and war&#13;
message which Lennon has&#13;
been preaching for years. The&#13;
only difference in this song is&#13;
that it is sung with more sincerity&#13;
and depth than he has&#13;
ever had before. His piano&#13;
playing also works along with&#13;
and supports his vocal&#13;
arragnement very affectively.&#13;
Through the years John&#13;
Lennon has taken it upon&#13;
himself to be concerned and&#13;
active in many of the world's&#13;
cultures and problems. A leader&#13;
for peach, the avante garde art&#13;
movement, guru, and an outstanding&#13;
writer. But after all he&#13;
has said and done, he is a&#13;
dedicated musician first. And I&#13;
would like to add, one of the best&#13;
rock 'n' roll has ever offered. &#13;
Page 10 NEWSCOPE October 25,1971&#13;
j4oude of Yjutrition&#13;
NATURAL COSMETICS&#13;
NATURAL GRAINS&amp;CEREALS&#13;
UNSULPHURED FRUITS&#13;
HEALTH FOODS&#13;
6221 - 22ND AVENUE KENOSHA PHONE 652&gt;4787&#13;
"Here's To Your Good Health"&#13;
j _ u r nr '&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
i , lb ('•ROUND BF.KL&#13;
ON FRENCH CRUST&#13;
BREAD DRESSED&#13;
WI TH CRISP&#13;
I KTTUCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
C,RII.LED COUNTRY&#13;
HAM A CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLEWHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE.&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
.80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OF BURC.ER CHEESE.&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISE ON TOAST 90c&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 331 1 SHEFJIDAN. ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROADPussycat&#13;
Lounge&#13;
Racine&#13;
632-3785 or&#13;
633-3805&#13;
Tast To Save A People'&#13;
On Wednesday, November 3, Parkside will&#13;
participate in a nation-wide effort aimed at&#13;
helping the nine million East Pakistani&#13;
refugees now in India. The November 3,&#13;
"Fast to Save a People" will involve a&#13;
massive fund-raising campaign, coupled with&#13;
an attempt to return the critical situation in&#13;
West Bengal and the other refugee areas to&#13;
the awareness of the American public.&#13;
It is shocking and dismaying that what has&#13;
happened and is still happening in that part of&#13;
the world should have passed so quickly from&#13;
the nation's public forums of d iscussion, and&#13;
out of the consciousness of the average&#13;
citizen. The refugees from East Pakistan&#13;
were victims of a devastating cyclone last&#13;
November which claimed half a million lives&#13;
and effectively removed the year's food crop,&#13;
and then, in March, of an eruption of civil&#13;
strife which resulted in the violent deaths of&#13;
another quarter million people. These events&#13;
precipitated a massive exodus of terrified&#13;
East Pakistani citizens out of their country&#13;
and into neighboring India, where their&#13;
present number, nine million, is enlarged by&#13;
thirty thousand daily. They are crowded into&#13;
makeshift camps whose facilities are most&#13;
generously described as extremely&#13;
inadequate; in many cases, the camps serve&#13;
merely as grisly arenas in which starvation&#13;
and disease end the long journey arbitrarily&#13;
for thousands of people.&#13;
When she opened her borders to the&#13;
refugees, India automatically made a&#13;
commitment of one billion dollars for their&#13;
care. This is an intolerable strain upon India's&#13;
very limited resources, especially in view of&#13;
the fact that she faces possible famine herself&#13;
in the area of West Bengal province due to&#13;
crop loss from monsoon flloding. Outside aid&#13;
is desperately needed, and unless generous&#13;
amounts of it are forthcoming, it is generally&#13;
feared that a significant fraction of the&#13;
refugees will starve to death, or die of exposure&#13;
and the attendant diseases, during the&#13;
coming winter. If that is allowed to happen, it&#13;
will have been the most disastrous human&#13;
catastrophe in modern history.&#13;
The November 3 "Fast to Save a People",&#13;
jointly sponsored by Oxfam-America and&#13;
Project Relief, is designed to focus national&#13;
attention upon these shocking facts. On that&#13;
Wednesday, the students of our nation's high&#13;
schools and colleges are being urged to skip&#13;
one or all of the day's meals, and donate the&#13;
money thus saved to the relief operation. It is&#13;
hoped that an enormous amount of money will&#13;
be raised, so that the Fast day may stand as a&#13;
true, unprecedented people-to-people relief&#13;
experiment. So that the community at large&#13;
might follow their example in observing the&#13;
Fast, it is necessary that the students' participation&#13;
be as close as possible to universal.&#13;
The effectiveness with which money&#13;
donated to the relief effort is converted into&#13;
tangible necessities for the refugees is&#13;
startling: all money collected during the Fast&#13;
will go directly to Osfam's Field Director in&#13;
India, where a dollar can provide one refugee&#13;
for an entire month with supplementary highnutrient&#13;
foods, multivitamins, powdered&#13;
milk, medicines, sanitation services, basic&#13;
clothing, corrugated plastic shetlers, and&#13;
tarpaulins. Oxfam has many years of experience&#13;
in development work in Indian and&#13;
was well established in the provinces around&#13;
East Pakistan when the refugees first began&#13;
to pour across. Working closely with local&#13;
Indian groups, Oxfam has achieved an exceptional&#13;
reputation within the relief effort&#13;
for the efficient management of funds and for&#13;
the production of a maximum of relief for&#13;
each dollar donated. No administrative costs&#13;
will be deducted from the proceeds of the&#13;
November 3 "Fast to Save a People". Every&#13;
penny will go to the camps in India.&#13;
Checks payable to "The November 3 Fast",&#13;
or cash, or any questions you may have can&#13;
be brought to the organizing center for the&#13;
Fast.&#13;
A fast is, of course, a symbolic act. Ir can&#13;
serve to make dramatically clear on a personal&#13;
level what prolonged hunger can do to a&#13;
human being. And it is admirably suited to&#13;
reminding the public of what the news media&#13;
have partially forgotten: that the situation in&#13;
the area of Bengal has not dissipated, but has&#13;
in fact grown more critical. It is expected that&#13;
the successful Fast on November 3 will&#13;
trigger a nationwide response, whose form&#13;
might be individual and collective efforts to&#13;
raise money and to resurrect the issue as&#13;
headline news: artists, musicians, educators,&#13;
clergy, all Americans of means or talent may&#13;
take their cue from the student action and&#13;
donate whatever services are characteristic&#13;
of their professions.&#13;
Sign up for the fast donations will be on&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 2, when buttons will be on sale&#13;
for 25 cents. Fast donations can be made the&#13;
next day at all three campuses on November 3&#13;
in the student lounges at Kenosha and Racine&#13;
and in the activities building at Parkside.&#13;
More activities are in the planning stages.&#13;
Sponsored by the Newman Club through&#13;
information provided by the Student&#13;
Government Association.&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
Rolex - Accutron&#13;
Ultrachron • Longine&#13;
Bulova - Movado&#13;
Caravelle - Timex&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France'*&#13;
FS neat -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Craduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
.•/ Vl-X 5817 6th Ave.&#13;
VmmJMv&amp;SonA&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace • Lunt&#13;
Reed &amp; Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefora&#13;
Seneca • Lalique&#13;
Royal Worceater&#13;
LOST &amp; FOUND&#13;
FOUND: Sunglasses, Sweater&#13;
Jacket. Contact lost &amp; found dept.,&#13;
information Center. 2nd floor&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
LOST: 1 navy blue knit pancho in&#13;
vicinity of Greenquist Lounge about&#13;
Sept. 20. Contact Wendy, 654-1593.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1966 Mustang 289 - 2 bbl. 3 speed on&#13;
floor. Must sell. Call Marty at 658-&#13;
3023 after 5:30. Good condition.&#13;
1969 Charger RT 440 Magnum, .4-&#13;
speed, extras 5110 - 23rd Ave. 658-&#13;
3659 after 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Goodyear Polyglass Tires 2-60x15,&#13;
Ansen Spring Mags, 658-3659 after 6.&#13;
1967 Ford Mustang - 6 cyl,&#13;
Automatic, 2 door hardtop, Call 639-&#13;
1777 after 6:00 p.m.&#13;
1965 Volkswagen - 23,000 mi. on&#13;
rebuilt engine, reupholstered and&#13;
painted last year. Maroon with black&#13;
interior, new exhaust system, radiorear&#13;
speaker, 23-27 mpg. Asking&#13;
S500. Call 694-5138 after 4 p.m.&#13;
1962 Rambler - automatic, good&#13;
condition, best offer. 564-2665.&#13;
FOR SALE — 1967 Norton 750 cc&#13;
Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing. Phone 552-8347 or&#13;
Newscope office. Leave message for&#13;
Rick Pazera.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WANTED — Guitar case - cheap.&#13;
554-9174. For a Folk guitar.&#13;
WANTED — Male student to share&#13;
one bedroom, furnished apartment&#13;
at 1327 Howe St., Racine. $10 per&#13;
week. Contact Robin - 6 34-4775.&#13;
MEN — Your spare time is needed&#13;
by a boy 7 -17 years old who doesn't&#13;
have a father. Can you provide an&#13;
example of good character and&#13;
citizenship while shooting pool,&#13;
fishing, skating, etc.? If so call Big&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha, Inc. 694-6585.&#13;
I need a ride to the Sunnyside area of&#13;
Kenosha from Hwy. A. area. Any or&#13;
all days Monday - Fri. Must be at&#13;
work 8:00 a.m. Willing to help on gas&#13;
money. Call 552-8960 and ask for&#13;
Deborah.&#13;
NEEDED — Poetry, short stories,&#13;
drama for "Indications" magazine.&#13;
Deadline Nov. 1, 1971. Send to:&#13;
Newscope, Hwy A and Eood Rd.,&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Ludwig Drum Set — Blue sparkle 3&#13;
piece wity cymbols, hi-hat, etc. Was&#13;
$424, asking $250. A-1. Phone 554-&#13;
9174.&#13;
PHOTO COPY SERVICE — up to&#13;
8'/2Xl4, 19C ea. plus tax. Can do much&#13;
longer copy, too. We make all kinds&#13;
of rubber stamps. Businessmen&#13;
contact us for Monthly Statement&#13;
Service. The Order Mart, 3520&#13;
Roosevelt Rd., Kenosha. 652-4025.&#13;
2pr Ski Boots. 1 - N ordita 8V2 narrow&#13;
men's; 1 - Kastinger 9Vi men's. Both&#13;
in good condition. $15 a pair. Call&#13;
Ellen at 639-2052.&#13;
3 Bedroom Home, IV2 bath, built-ins,&#13;
see through fireplace, 2V2 car attached&#13;
garage, V2 acre lot, 1 mile&#13;
from Parkside — asking $34,900 by&#13;
owner. 552-8183.&#13;
Scuba tank, boot, gauge, regulator,&#13;
back pack and weight belt. $100. Call&#13;
632-1611 ext. 783.&#13;
FOR SALE — Bausch 8. Lomb&#13;
Microscope. 2 eye pieces, 3 objective&#13;
lens. Call 639-0354. $75.00&#13;
SPACE HEATER — very good&#13;
condition. 6325 8th Ave. 652-6669.&#13;
SKIS — 170 cm. Head 360's. With&#13;
Marker step in bindings. Used once.&#13;
$150 . 633-781.&#13;
RAINCOAT with zip-out pile lining.;&#13;
Size 38 regular - worn twice - natural&#13;
tan. Originally $45. Sell for $15. Call554-9174.&#13;
&#13;
ELECTRIC GUITAR — 6 st. Gibson,&#13;
1 yr old, Lectrolab amplifier 120&#13;
volts, both in excel, cond. Sunbeam&#13;
elec. razor 727 fastback. 654-0050.&#13;
(4) MAGS for AMC product. $60. Call&#13;
654-1106, ask for Bob.&#13;
FOR SALE — Bar, all formica, $75,&#13;
great shape. Call Kelly 658-3070.&#13;
MINOR CAR REPAIRS CHEAP —&#13;
Tune-ups, oil changes, etc. Call Don,&#13;
652-6426, or Kelly 568-3070.&#13;
PANASONIC 8 track car tape and&#13;
speakers $65 or best offer. Call Bob&#13;
639-2677.&#13;
Come Touch Me. A new poetry book&#13;
by Ron Schulz and Larry Roach.&#13;
Available at all UWP Bookstores.&#13;
FOR SALE — Lovely Lenox china.&#13;
Starlight pattern. Service for six&#13;
(almost). Cost $240. Sacrifice at $95.&#13;
543-3149.&#13;
FREE! Wh 0 will adopt a timid,&#13;
sensitive shelty (toy collie). One&#13;
year old male who needs patience&#13;
and love for training. 543-3149.&#13;
FOR SALE — Head skis and bindings&#13;
210 centimeters. $35. Call 632-&#13;
1611, ext. 783.&#13;
Lined, embroidered sheepskin coat&#13;
— Woman's — 654-3170.&#13;
COUCH — fold out ben and gas&#13;
stove. Call 637-1556.&#13;
FOLK GUITARS — From $12. Call&#13;
658-2832 after 4 p.m. &#13;
October 25,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 11&#13;
Physical Fitness C ourse Shaping Up PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTIZERS&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Nearly everyone has heard&#13;
about physical fitness, but&#13;
relatively few probably understand&#13;
how it can apply to&#13;
their own lives. Parkside is&#13;
currently offering a way to find&#13;
out.&#13;
Newscope talked to Bob&#13;
Lawson about his new fitness&#13;
classes.&#13;
One of the classes is called&#13;
Beginning Fitness 100, while the&#13;
other one is Figure Improvement&#13;
114.&#13;
Lawson said that it was&#13;
originally set up so boys would&#13;
take Beginning Fitness and&#13;
girls would take Figure Improvement,&#13;
but the way it&#13;
worked out they are coeducational&#13;
classes and will&#13;
stay that way. Both classes&#13;
have the same theory.&#13;
"The idea is to teach young&#13;
people how to take care of their&#13;
bodies, how to get physically fit&#13;
through a variety of methods,&#13;
mainly through jogging, so that&#13;
when they get out of school it&#13;
can be a carry-over activity,"&#13;
said Lawson.&#13;
The courses teach people the&#13;
value of jogging, how it affects&#13;
the circulatory system, and how&#13;
it relates to a healthier life,&#13;
partly by lessening the chances&#13;
of h eart attacks and other heart&#13;
Mills Fund&#13;
BB Game&#13;
On Friday, November 5, the&#13;
second basketball game to raise&#13;
money for the Harlow Mills&#13;
Scholarship Fund will be held at&#13;
Lance Junior High School in&#13;
Kenosha. In this game, the&#13;
science faculty will try to swat&#13;
the Insects who last year stung&#13;
the faculty in an upset victory.&#13;
Game time is 7:15 p.m.&#13;
Minimum donation is 75 cents&#13;
and tickets are available at&#13;
Student Affairs or from life&#13;
science majors.&#13;
The Harlow Mills Scholarship&#13;
Fund was established in honor&#13;
of th e late Dr. Mills, a Parkside&#13;
life science professor who&#13;
retired last January. He was a&#13;
very distinguished entomologist,&#13;
ecologist and&#13;
naturalist. This scholarship is&#13;
awarded to an undergraduate&#13;
life science major at Parkside.&#13;
Come and enjoy this fastmoving.&#13;
if not skillful, display of&#13;
basketball prowess by the&#13;
faculty in their fruitless attempt&#13;
to exterminate the Insects.&#13;
It's the®&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Trade-mark ®&#13;
related problems.&#13;
The main purpose of the&#13;
courses is so students can understand&#13;
and design a program&#13;
that would be beneficial to them&#13;
in the long run.&#13;
It should be emphasized that&#13;
the courses are not designed to&#13;
force a person to get into shape&#13;
and then have him leave the&#13;
class and never exercise again.&#13;
"We are trying to let a student&#13;
see how things are done and let&#13;
him make his own decisions,"&#13;
said Lawson.&#13;
One credit will be given for&#13;
the first eight weeks and one for&#13;
the second. Students can sign up&#13;
for the second eight weeks&#13;
which begins November 1. The&#13;
course is offered on the Kenosha&#13;
Campus at 10 a.m. on Mondays&#13;
and Wednesdays. They will be&#13;
offered evenings in the second&#13;
semester.&#13;
The only written work is a&#13;
final exam which is a take-home&#13;
test. In this test the student will&#13;
design his own fitness program,&#13;
emphasizing what he would like&#13;
to do in regards to a fitness&#13;
program when he leaves the&#13;
class. Lawson will evaluate the&#13;
test to see if the studentdesigned&#13;
program would meet&#13;
the minimum needs to keep fit.&#13;
It will be handed back, also.&#13;
Grading is based on attendance,&#13;
attitude in class and&#13;
the final exam — nothing else.&#13;
Rangers Suffer Two Shutoufs&#13;
a i . . „ by Jim Casper, Sports Editor&#13;
iu. J&#13;
ac&#13;
„&#13;
0 °ffens&#13;
e ruined the soccer team's bid for road victories as&#13;
PlatSfn W, t&#13;
f&#13;
W° 3&#13;
"&#13;
0 decisions&#13;
- Illinois-Dhicago and UW- Platteville dealt the defeats to Parkside.&#13;
The two shutouts left the booters at the .500 mark with a 3-3 record,&#13;
showing S1X gameS last year&#13;
' the Ran&#13;
g&#13;
ers had amassed a 2-3-1&#13;
on.f.°ll0Vir&#13;
;&#13;
g&#13;
^&#13;
ree more road games the Rangers will be home to&#13;
entertain Lake Forest on November 315 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Harriers L ose One, W in One&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Ranger harriers suffered a 24-&#13;
32 defeat at the hands of Northwestern&#13;
University while&#13;
defeating the Kegonsa Track&#13;
Club 21-35 in double dual meet&#13;
at Wilmette, Illinois.&#13;
Individual winner was&#13;
Parkside's Lucian Rosa with a&#13;
30:44.3 time for the six mile run.&#13;
His time broke the old record of&#13;
31:04.9 held by Northwestern's&#13;
Jim Noe, who ran second in this&#13;
race. Rudy Alvarez of the&#13;
Rangers ran third.&#13;
Despite the victory over&#13;
Kegonsa and the fairly close&#13;
defeat to Northwestern,&#13;
Assistant Coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
was not entirely satisfied with&#13;
the performance.&#13;
"The score was respectable&#13;
against a good Big Ten team,&#13;
but our third and fourth runners&#13;
didn't carry through and this&#13;
prevented us from winning," he&#13;
said.&#13;
A victory over a Big Ten team&#13;
would undoubtedly mean much&#13;
to the young Rangers.&#13;
"It wasn't that we weren't&#13;
capable of winning, we just had&#13;
W,&#13;
people who had been running&#13;
well who did not run well,"&#13;
Godfrey said.&#13;
He continued, "There is some&#13;
excuse for this in that we ran a&#13;
series of difficult workouts&#13;
during the week and there was a&#13;
fatigue factor going into the&#13;
race. This showed up in the&#13;
meet."&#13;
newscope&#13;
classifieds&#13;
use 'em are&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
the university bookstore&#13;
on the racine campus # f&#13;
will be closed as of ' ^&#13;
October 29. we are&#13;
consolidating with the main&#13;
store on wood road.&#13;
stop in and see us!&#13;
the university bookstore&#13;
Isermann's is having a&#13;
"PANTS TRADE IN SA LE"&#13;
Any old pair of pants accepted!&#13;
wearable pants will be donated to charity&#13;
LARGE GROUP OF NEW PANTS&#13;
TO TRADE YOUR OLD ONES IN ON&#13;
Old pants worth $3.00 on&#13;
new pantspriced from&#13;
$10.00 —$14.00&#13;
Including popular straights&#13;
and fashion Flairs&#13;
Plain and pattern&#13;
LOTS OF FUN — LOTS OF VALUE&#13;
ISEHMANN&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
614-616 56th Street&#13;
OPEN DAILY9:30-5:30—FRIDAY NITES'TIL 9&#13;
/AISO'S&#13;
PlZZA£&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS 4;oo p.m.—12 :00 a&#13;
-&#13;
ffl&#13;
-&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCNBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 ft Avenue Rewsha 657—6191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
Custom tailored suits REGULAR s162.50&#13;
OCTOBER PRICE $137.50&#13;
Gino's Tailor Shop&#13;
and Sportswear&#13;
2212—60th street in Kenosha&#13;
We give the personal touch'&#13;
We do all types of alterations and repairs&#13;
All styles to choose&#13;
from in 17&#13;
different colors&#13;
complete line&#13;
of menswear &#13;
Page 12 NEWSCOPE October 25, 1971&#13;
Newscope String Snapped&#13;
Se/utitUf the rf-inedt&#13;
PvfflCi &amp; Oicdkut tf-oodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 65S-313I&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
The Newscope gridders&#13;
suffered their first loss in the&#13;
last game of the season to the&#13;
Schooners, now undefeated.&#13;
Playing on a wet field, the&#13;
Newscope team opened the&#13;
game with an interception and&#13;
played defense from then on.&#13;
The Schooners' larger line&#13;
made shambles of the&#13;
Newscope defense on end&#13;
sweeps and on their way to a 21-&#13;
0 victory. Dennis Serpe passed a&#13;
number of long completions,&#13;
enabling the Schooners to mix a&#13;
(m\nG Friday o\°\&#13;
PaulN&amp;AXW&#13;
KeNNECtf&#13;
CDCStba&#13;
IOQCCI133&#13;
good running and passing&#13;
game.&#13;
On the losers' side, several&#13;
team members reported&#13;
critical injuries to the team&#13;
manager. "Flash" Pazera,&#13;
nursing an old arm-wrestling&#13;
injury, aggravated his condition&#13;
with a series of hard shocks.&#13;
However, the team physician,&#13;
Timothy Leary, refused to&#13;
amputate the painful arm so&#13;
Pazera continued to play.&#13;
"Zip" Borchardt sustained a&#13;
broken toggle switch, jeopardizing&#13;
his career as a concert&#13;
pianist. Finally, Kim "Widget"&#13;
King complained of a slipped&#13;
disc.&#13;
John "Crash" Koloen&#13;
displayed gridiorn brilliance as&#13;
he continued to ship through the&#13;
line and harass the QB into&#13;
forcing desperation passes.&#13;
Mike "Wildman J. Smilin'&#13;
Snake" Von Gunten showed&#13;
fabulous physical prowess on&#13;
the defensive and offensive&#13;
teams. His one pass reception&#13;
and marvelous pass rushing&#13;
was an inspiration to all who&#13;
watched.&#13;
Shaunte "P.J." (Prime&#13;
Juice) Stills took over as QB&#13;
from Dave Kraus and he&#13;
fascinated his fellow Newscope&#13;
teammates with fine pass plays&#13;
and outstanding sportsmanship.&#13;
He even passed to one of the&#13;
officials on a broken up pattern,&#13;
but the referee was denied the&#13;
reception as he accidentally&#13;
misjudged the torrid action.&#13;
Also, his defensive alertness&#13;
proved invaluable as he was&#13;
named HVP by his team.&#13;
It was clearly evident that the&#13;
gods were against the gallant&#13;
Newscope team because a large&#13;
dark rain cloud loomed over the&#13;
field while the game took place.&#13;
The team members will testify&#13;
to this fact because their beam&#13;
bus was flooded with water as&#13;
"Flash" motored it over to the&#13;
Pizza Hut for post-game&#13;
festivities.&#13;
STUCJ BJMT&#13;
%:oo Rtv ftow "75" 4&#13;
+-V»3\?aCQT\1&gt;\P&gt; IDtesejfivfcD&#13;
&amp;Y ftwewoE&#13;
F»&lt;v\«nvs&#13;
UW-Parkside Gymnastics Coach Dave Donaldson was a recent&#13;
speaker at a gymnastics clinic at York High School, Elmhurst, 111.,&#13;
where he lettered in the sport in 1960-61.&#13;
+ + + +&#13;
UW-Parkside's Lucian Rosa, a freshman from Ceylon who runs&#13;
barefoot, set a meet reocrd of 25:29.2 for five miles and paced his team&#13;
to a second in the Platteville Invitational recently.&#13;
^ 4- +&#13;
Two of UW-Parkside's three soccer victories have come against&#13;
schools rated high in the national football polls, Ohio State and Notre&#13;
Dame. The Rangers' other win came against Wisconsin at Madison.&#13;
+ +•••+&#13;
UW-Parkside's basketball opener is Dec. 1 against Western&#13;
Michigan at Kalamazoo while the Ranger wrestling squad starts its&#13;
dual campaign the same day at home against Big Ten power Northwestern.&#13;
&#13;
+ + +&#13;
UW-Parkside will host the U.S. Track and Field Federation's Mid&#13;
American Cross Country Championships Nov. 6 at the Parkside&#13;
campus.&#13;
Travel With the&#13;
Hockey Team&#13;
Travel with the hockey team. We need ticket takers, timers,&#13;
statisticians, announcers, an equipment manager and a trainer. For&#13;
further information contact Tom Krimmel at 552-8634 or Vic Godfrey&#13;
at the Athletic Department, 553-2245.&#13;
the e lections c ommittee&#13;
student g overnment&#13;
ammendment referendum / / ANNOUNCEMENT&#13;
invalidated / I general elections for all student&#13;
due t o unethical p ractices a t th e p olls a nd / / government positions will be held on&#13;
lack o l s ufficient a dvance n otice, the / / november 17, 18, §19. p ick up nominating&#13;
ammendment r etterendum has been / /petitions at the student gov t office october&#13;
declared i nvalid. / /28—november 3.&#13;
detailed information to follow </text>
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              <text>"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" - Matthew Arnold University 0 I W'. .&#13;
'~N ~ . 'J ISC01tStn • Parlesult' It":.~,~.I'.FREE&#13;
....&#13;
McGovern Urges&#13;
isen of the Newscope staff&#13;
by MarcE ter was the key to it. "It's Time&#13;
lfaYbethe POdsand if the motivation of the 180 "Itsal, t k d' WeW(]Il, id $5 apiece to eat a s ea inner&#13;
~e whoe~cGovern could he known, mayhe It&#13;
'lith Ge011 t. It's time we won. . . •. ~&#13;
iIfIlId betha .Govern wrapped up his third major&#13;
"'?'1e&#13;
':'g through the state a couple of&#13;
","PaJgIl with first a dinner and then a&#13;
lJl1daYS.m ~ . . ~goK osha If his other stops were as f&#13;
,.:epti ul as the Kenosha Visit, his campaign or&#13;
",cessI, DC appears to be belling.&#13;
~ prem~ lifue that was newsworthy - instead&#13;
Hesal tions from the audiences as he&#13;
~.5~ded:~tand against the war, condemned&#13;
",~rat~ent'swage-price freeze, and made a call&#13;
~PreSl Iamnesty for draft resisters.&#13;
tJt ag"."": riod of time when style is more&#13;
But m th~ substance McGovern scored&#13;
iDIJl1rtantveJ e. the flesh.' Gone was the liberal · ..... 1 y-m I .,&#13;
1DIt"'-;-ess that characterizes his te evision a pmusbin&#13;
Instead there was the relaxed p!Il'8Ilees.&#13;
Involvement&#13;
. His responses to aUdienc:e questions were the&#13;
fight blend of rhetoric and fact. At.times almost&#13;
K~~n~deyesque sounding - "Sometimes I'm&#13;
criticized for being a one issue candidate. I don't&#13;
think I am. My positions are broadly hased Upon&#13;
the major domestic and foreign policy questions&#13;
as anyone else's who has been mentioned. as a&#13;
candidate for the presidency. But if a person is to&#13;
be identified by anyone issue, peace isn't too bad a&#13;
place to stand."&#13;
He hit hard at the President's economic&#13;
policies, saying at one point Nixon deliberately&#13;
planned an increase in unemployment to depress&#13;
inflation. '&#13;
But there was the dodgings and the weavings&#13;
of the politician, too,&#13;
Asked if he thought students should vote at&#13;
their college residences he answered yes, to loud&#13;
applause. Then he countered, "I feel that way with&#13;
federal elections. It may be that an argument can&#13;
he made that in local elections you shouls have&#13;
some period. of residence in the college town."&#13;
presidential candidate George&#13;
McGovem at a recent&#13;
appearance in Kenosha.&#13;
Flanked by several youn9&#13;
people he stressed political&#13;
lnvolveq1ent as·Q means&#13;
to change the system.&#13;
IIlII in U:ho is going to stand the most&#13;
center of the road, we're&#13;
o&#13;
z&#13;
'":&gt;&#13;
...&#13;
z&#13;
a:'"&#13;
Ul&#13;
N&#13;
«&#13;
..&#13;
u"&#13;
a:&#13;
The place where the 18 year old vot~ ~OUI~be&#13;
lBUanceofawinner; a directness and solidity of most effective is, of course, mglhotc:~i~ ~tion&#13;
llalurethat Middle America could gran on to, If When clarification was s~u there was&#13;
!bey couldonly see him. . li ti of marijuana _&#13;
Hewasimpressive, and the effect of this Was on the lega Izah&#13;
~nh had said at UWM,he replied&#13;
~ the good liberals who have tIll. now heen confustion on w iail e tences for possession, but&#13;
lilting onthe fence sizing up the candidates , .. he was against jai sen t the removal of restric- !be good liberals who wI'11do the hump work - thet he also was agains till more was known&#13;
tions against manjuana&#13;
riDg the doorbells and stuff the envelopes. He ahout .its effects. bordered on the facile. A -like a winner. 'At times his an;;wer~ t he would say to the '!be beneficiary of this will he McGovern s long hair asked hIm w I~ who don't helieve the l1Ilallbut already effective grass roots thousands of young poop&#13;
lianization in Kenosha. His trump card 10 the&#13;
llalewillundoubtedlybe this - his organizalton (Continued on Page 6) GeoraeMcGovern-------,&#13;
;~lbe:lo:caJ~le:ve:I~.__ ~ _::~::--:::~~~ b&#13;
anybody yel bu'" 'r budd, . "We're only about halfway relauonsh,p w'lh lhtm \I lhe urn gOI ti Nixon is a McGovern. ds the kind of reform goals lOy 'e" good ~1A1l th&#13;
'ngto lose the elec on ~ d I home towar . the McGovern Com- enunl'oled AUla Wor.r. ddl' the ISSUes, an that were set.m ..&#13;
master in slra mgDemocrat who is 'dehnes Amalgamat d ~"Iult rI,&#13;
don't know of any . " mission gUI 'nk ~use the activists o\mal.amated ClOthl, W ... k&#13;
What hetter at it than he IS, ·ti n if the Do you thl themselv .. so long o01er~nions I ltunk I' Imp,...... &amp;'.. 111&#13;
will be your t!?"sn&#13;
l&#13;
°adopts a have fought ahamonhee&#13;
g&#13;
n Jostto restore the ~ AF' I IC&#13;
nven 10 that the time s po5lUon",th t,~ lUI&#13;
Democra tic ~ ts the attitudes the Democratic party? think so I think the "Th. po5lUons I h" I&#13;
platform that ':d~ McGover.: "I don't .'m- PreSIdent', Ixon' am. p1ln&#13;
1968 platfo~n:'I Iw~uldn't support that fact our national chal~~:'~ of Ill&#13;
ven&#13;
me greater ICCfPlabll~l ";th the&#13;
McGovern. That was a platform mediately camed o~t the . p the AFl"CIO than I had,," fI&#13;
kind of platfof~;ShlY committed the the '68 conventIon mw::::nr :haIred hamm.nng on the "ar oil&#13;
that ver~ to support Lyndon reform commISSion 'd bring oul a How do you a J n&#13;
Democrallc par~ I think it cost us disproves that, aod we di chances of WIMIn&amp; the ~m&#13;
Johnson's war pohcy, • • oomlllation' cha&#13;
the election." • ty polaws McGovera~1 ~-:::'::,I;W unhk I II&lt;the&#13;
- -faith "Inpar good set of guidelines ~wichad...opellte0d.V...1 ~':~a~ would nomonat a c:an,hdat. It '~who unW a coup•• d ". a 0" a a U ' stances would you half the states have e are moving !if I ng Republican&#13;
nderwhatCIrcu,m f a third party? think that indicates w ~I~m g'.d he's on thf Dtm ratlC fallon 0 b 'ng ~ [ltl&#13;
support the '?Ir:n't even want to gnto towards reitofO:;;"y'ou before we w.... only Tty nd J hope he has a great ulW'f&#13;
McGovern: .. , ow. I'm trym "When wards reform, It po ~ bul when you rtf........t a&#13;
up the PosslbIilty.,:ratic party, and. 1 half way home w~'11 stop making ~e ag~'lJ) thf problepeom pld. buu':~~&#13;
reform the Dem y own plans 10 doesn'l mean won throUgh lJ) the cosliuo", the more f&#13;
think to/alk u::~~u~a::;y weaken:a~~~ progr~ssCo~~=o':' we're going to he fracturIngdthacyt~i~':rebyd1~:.~~1 ':;&#13;
terms 0 a f reaching any r th m Miaffil d progress thf presl en • ful ..&#13;
chance Ihave 0 , g to convince ~'c making stea Y mpie at'1IIinois, which for on. person to he UCces5&#13;
Democrats in tr~~m the Democra I "LOOk~for :amost People becBuse of y t1unk then it IS poss,b1. lor a n&#13;
we need to ref in the muds . Chicago in 1968 IS a cos:on 10 enler the politIcal~.'&#13;
rty . 0 the difficulties ':" Yet IDinois has IIlcGovern: "1 do. J really do e,:;;&#13;
pa . [ have chosen t hopeless situation, , fundamental im rtant change that has occu,&#13;
"In - other ,,:otUci, ranks of the carried out some ;:~ate selection Sl": '68 is the 18 )..,r old vot•. II h&#13;
operate withm ~f that fails thth&#13;
en&#13;
reforms in theIl" ou add II millIon teena e", lI&gt; th. t&#13;
Democra I f time to I. I to process. think Laber 'c party. th'nk of e" shied y 'cry significant has fotIng stream that s a v there js plenty 0 'ght be availab e Why do you ndidacy' change." . 's that m' f m your ca . endorsed alternatIve . rty away ra u'l1leY haven't&#13;
us." _ . the Democratic pa'7 McGovern: ~&#13;
Do you thInk d fully since 1968, ~ ••••••••••••••••••••• has heen reforme _&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
Ul&#13;
II&#13;
'Raider' Highl n&#13;
Calls for Coali i n&#13;
by Kelly In.fusion&#13;
of the NewKOpe starr&#13;
Parkside students had lhe&#13;
opportwlily to Ii len 10 Dr&#13;
Joseph Highland Wednesday a&#13;
he spoke in the tudent Activities&#13;
BUilding. Dr HIghland&#13;
is assistant to Ralph Nader and&#13;
an active member of aders&#13;
Raiders. r&#13;
Dr. Highland called or&#13;
campuses around the state of&#13;
Wisconsin to band together to&#13;
form a coalition for consumer&#13;
protection. This would mclude&#13;
probing the fields ol corporalf&#13;
fraud, . false advertIsing and&#13;
other problems lhe consumer&#13;
"Journalism is Literature in a Hu"y" - Moithew Arnold U niVersity of Wis com in - p tlr ksid&#13;
••••••••&#13;
Volume 5 Number 6 October 11, 1971&#13;
McGovern Urges Involvement . f the Newscope staff . His responses to audienc:e questions were the&#13;
by M.,.&lt; Emm&#13;
O&#13;
as the key to it. "It's Tune right blend of chetonc and fact. At times almost&#13;
~"'"' tba !"''&#13;
te,&#13;
d ~f the motivation of th_e 180 Kennedeyesque sounding - "Sometimes I'm_ 1&#13;
, W~," it ~d, an iece to eat a steak &lt;hnne, cciticized lo, being a one issue candidate. I don't&#13;
'&#13;
1&#13;
, .00 pa,d $5 ap could be known, maybe it think I am. My positions are bcoadly based upon&#13;
'7 a.,,ge Mc".,,v:'.::e we won. , . the majo, domestic and foreign policy qu,.tions&#13;
',M be that!! ' ' apped up his third majo, as anyone else's who has been mentioned as a&#13;
' G,org• MeGo,ern ';, the state a couple of candidate foe the presidency. Butif a P""on is to&#13;
,m~ign swm~:~t a runner and then a be identified by any one issue, peace isn 'ttoo bad a &amp;indaYS ago WI h If his other stops were as place to stand."&#13;
reception in Ken~e~~sha v~sit, his campaign for He hit hard at the President's economic&#13;
sttcessf~ as thea ears to be helling. . policies, saying at one point Nixon deliberately ~e pres1den~y ~h t was newsworthy _ mstead planned an increase i!) unemployment to depress&#13;
be fielded ~ues&#13;
1&#13;
Hesfild httl:. ~d ~ against from the the audiences war, condemned as be infla!::-:'ibere Was the dodging, and the wea,ings&#13;
.. ;terated his sta . freeze and made a call of the politician, too.&#13;
"' 'd nt's wage-price ' Asked if he thought students should vote at&#13;
;,r,,s, e "''Y foe draft ,esisten. thei, college cesidenc"' he answered yes, to loud&#13;
• • i-•' ~00 of time when style is more •PPlause. Then he countered, "If eel that way w,th&#13;
Bui ma pen bstance McGovern scored fedecal elections. It may be that an a,gument can .... m 1;"" io ·~e flesh.' Gone wastbe. liberal be made that in local elections you shouls h~~e&#13;
impre_ss1ve -t character1·zes his telev1s1on ap- "od f "dence i·n the college town mw;hmess d there was the re ax tha l ed some pen o res1 · ~arances. Instea .-----·--·&#13;
Presidential candidate George&#13;
McGovem at a recent&#13;
appearance in Kenosha.&#13;
0&#13;
z&#13;
UI&#13;
::J&#13;
1£.&#13;
z&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
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Ill&#13;
!II:&#13;
Flanked by several yo~~g&#13;
people he stressed pol1t1-&#13;
cal lnvolve1J1ent as-a means&#13;
to change the system.&#13;
'Raid '&#13;
Calls for&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
a:&#13;
w&#13;
N&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
n.&#13;
X:&#13;
u&#13;
-&#13;
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ear old vote would be d The place where the 18 y i·n local elections. . tn sand solidity of f t· is of course, ·t· n !Muranceofa winner; a 1rec es to If most ef ec 1ve ·, . ght on his pos1 10&#13;
stature that Middle America could gran on · When clarification was ~~u na _ there was&#13;
lhey could only see him. ff t f this was on the legalization of :rru:iJ~ UWM, he replied&#13;
lie was impressive, and the e eo, o been confustion ~ wh_atte ha te.':es foe possess;on, but&#13;
upon the good liberals who have till _ now . he was against Ja1 s~::St the removal of restr1csitting&#13;
on the fence sizing up the ca&#13;
ndida~e:rk :__: thet he also was a~~ na till more was known&#13;
U.""" liberals who will dn the hump He lions against manJua .&#13;
ring the doorbells and stuff the envelopes. about its effects. bordered on the facile. A&#13;
i.t.a like a winner. . . Govern', Attimes his •n,;w~ t he would say to the&#13;
The beneficiary of this will be Mc roots long hair asked him:,&#13;
1&#13;
~ who don't believe&#13;
th&#13;
e small but already effective gras~ . the thousands of young P P&#13;
Drganization in Kenosha. His tr~p car -&#13;
1&#13;
~tion (Continued on Page G) Georae MC "'le will Undoubtedly be this - h,s o,gamz 0&#13;
~~tt:helo:c:al~l:ev:e:I.:~::_~~~-------.-.:::::::-~;;;:;; half "&#13;
By Marc Ei&amp;en&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Why hasn't the activist wing of the&#13;
Democratic party jelled behind one&#13;
C&lt;1ndidate? -&#13;
"1cGovern: "I think the activists in the&#13;
~rty are beginning to come forward in&#13;
lllcreasing numbers behind my candidacy,&#13;
We have already recrui~&#13;
'llbat I believe to be the most effective&#13;
~P&lt;&gt;rters who were behind the late&#13;
·-uuert Kennedy and Senator Mc- Carthy. •&#13;
"l think we have the nucleus of both&#13;
~ organizations actively committed&#13;
lll e~ery key state already. Your&#13;
QUeshon is probably based on the polls&#13;
;her~ it doesn't appear that any one&#13;
~~date has attracted most of ~e activists,&#13;
a?.lllay be that people are in more of&#13;
w l'iti~aJ and reflective mood than they&#13;
ca:: lll l96e_ They're exercising more&#13;
'lie ion. But, I'm very hopeful that as&#13;
"' lllove around the country and get ·••ore e . t·&#13;
bee lCposure and my pos1 10n&#13;
ac~r~s lllore clear, that we will buil~&#13;
Do ltion that will carry us to fictory ·&#13;
eoa,/0&#13;
u think the old Democratic&#13;
lhe 8tion of labor, minority groups a~d&#13;
the ~~ Will be strong enough to wm ~ e tction in 1971? •&#13;
lle~overn: "I really don't. I think if the&#13;
callditf ts Pllt up a traditional type of ~~o e Who competes with Richard&#13;
SlilJ ~ on Who is going to stand the most&#13;
Ill the center of the road, we're&#13;
. "We"re only about 'Iii ., . McGovern. th kind of reform g election - Nixon is a home towards . e e tcG0\'ttn Com· going to_ lose the in the issues, and. I that were ~et _m ~.&#13;
master m&#13;
str&#13;
~d!Y gDemocrat who is mission gmd~line~use the activ·&#13;
don't know o e is " Do you thmk themselves so lo&#13;
better at it than !ur. ·position if the have fought amo~n lost to restore th&#13;
What will be y tion adopts a that the time has&#13;
Democratic c1,".,;:~n the attitudes the Demomtic,!",ty?t think so. I think _the&#13;
platform that r~ ? McGovern: I d_on al chairman Im·&#13;
1968 platforn;i, d1\uldn't support that fact our nat_1: out the mandate of&#13;
McGovern, I w Thal was a platlorm me&lt;hately carr,tion m settiag up . th&#13;
kind of platform_. committed the the '68 conv~ . n which I charred&#13;
that ver~ foohshlfo supPQrt Lyndon reform com~: we did bring out a Democratic parn: I think it cost us disproves that, - Johnson's war pohcy. z · . the election" • • arty po itics '"&#13;
-faith in p od set of gu;delines whoch,:.:::i. I&#13;
' / ' go tates have now ·ng&#13;
nces would you half the s . . tes we are mo ·1 what circumsta third party? think that ind1ca&#13;
Und",' the fonnatioo of a want to bring towanl, refonn. before we w..-. °'"!&#13;
suppor "I don't even trying to "When I told you ds reform, t&#13;
McGovem, ow I'm d I home towa, king&#13;
the possibility n ati~ party, an . hall way an we' ll stop m~ the&#13;
up the Democr own plans m doesn't me . now on through&#13;
,etorn; talk abollt my eakens any prog,,ss. I think we're going to be&#13;
think o third party w regular iami Convention ess&#13;
terms of a of reaching a~y e them Making steady progr ·Illinois which&#13;
cha~ce I t•:: t,ying to coo,;:ocratic m,,Look, for exampl&#13;
1&#13;
e.;!ple ~u,e of&#13;
Democ;; 'to reform the in the min&lt;b of m~lcago In 1968 is •&#13;
we ne . the difficulties 1:° Yet Illinots ha&#13;
party. have chosen to hopeless situati":. ,.ry fundamen_L•l&#13;
"In other v-:otdtli; ranks . of ti!:~ carried o_ut ~:. delegate selection&#13;
operate ~ithparm ty. If thatth~:f:sof the refo:1:" m Labor has shied D mocrabc · e to 1 t proc · think e . lenty of t!m available o Why do you . ndidacy?&#13;
.there JS. p that might be Y from your ca ha en' endorsed&#13;
alternatives . rty awa . "They v&#13;
" Democratic pa? McGovern. us. . th"nk the . e 1968 . Do you I ed fully smc&#13;
has been refor&#13;
F &#13;
by Dave Kraus&#13;
ofthe Newscope staff&#13;
might not expect a Notre Dame&#13;
~e s administratIOn major who&#13;
bllSlnesnfusedly reported a "cold ass&#13;
once,codownfrom Canada" to become&#13;
Jl101Jlngnchormanfor a metropolitan TV&#13;
newsa but John McCullough has&#13;
statIon,&#13;
IICceeded.&#13;
s is reporter had the pleasure ot&#13;
Th to the very personable and'&#13;
IaUU~'eMcCullough at the WTMJ-TV&#13;
lIke:uarters in Milwaukee on Sepheab~&#13;
23. (McCullough is the anteJll&#13;
an for the ten o'clock, "Night chorm&#13;
Scene" news.) .&#13;
"The most important thmg a TV&#13;
man should have is a pleasing,&#13;
:'given personality," McCullough&#13;
told Newscope during his intervie,w.&#13;
McCulloughis certamly endowed WIth&#13;
thi' quality, and displayed the various&#13;
facets of his personality durmg the&#13;
disCussion.&#13;
The channel 4 newsman was queried&#13;
a widerange of topics. The following&#13;
~ excerpts of some of the questions&#13;
and discussionbetween Newscope and&#13;
McCullough: .&#13;
NewsCope: What is your education or&#13;
joUrnalisticbackground?&#13;
IIcCullough:My education background&#13;
is based on a business degree from&#13;
Notre Dame, with a minor in advertisingand&#13;
journalism. I am largely&#13;
self-taughtin writing style and news&#13;
reporting,and my presentation value is&#13;
God-given, Iworked at a newspaper in&#13;
Rockford,Illinois, on a part-time basis,&#13;
mostlysummers, and after school.&#13;
NS: What are the essential differences'&#13;
between' writing for a newspaper and&#13;
writing for television?&#13;
McCullough:Writing for a newspaper&#13;
is writing for someone else to read,&#13;
writing for television is writing for&#13;
yourself, or someone else to read for the&#13;
audience's ears. Newspapers are&#13;
Jl'eCise, but less conversational, they&#13;
tendto be cliche ridden. They tend to&#13;
lIlewords that you don't use in ordinary&#13;
conversation. For example,&#13;
newspapers constantly i'lse the word&#13;
"persons".We (TV newswriters) don't&#13;
-we use "people". The great Barbara&#13;
Streisand hit wasn't "Persons, Persons&#13;
Who Love Persons" ~but people, that's&#13;
the waywe talk. Television news has to&#13;
~ understood with one reading, or&#13;
bearing.&#13;
NS: Do you feel the element 01 emotion&#13;
or crisisis over-used in TV news?&#13;
!I'Culiough: The medium of television&#13;
isTHEGIIEATESTSINGLE motivator&#13;
Ot-t~r II. lSil&#13;
Cha:nneI4'8 John McCullough&#13;
I that God has ever put '&#13;
you say that televist on this earth. J[&#13;
. ISlon fOCuses th&#13;
emotional, that's the nature of beir .e&#13;
mg in&#13;
the news, that's what makes news, The&#13;
emphasis on the critical is basic in&#13;
human -nature.&#13;
NS: Would you like to see educational&#13;
TV subsidized by the Government?&#13;
McCUllough: I'm afraid of getting&#13;
bureaucrats involved in anything like&#13;
that. I'm in favor of educational&#13;
television, but it faces a never ending&#13;
problem of audience attraction.&#13;
Television as we know it, has proven&#13;
itself as an entertainment and news&#13;
medium, but it has not proven itself as&#13;
an educational medium, full-time.&#13;
People seem to be looking for escapist&#13;
entertainment rather than education.&#13;
t'm in favor of more, but Idon't know&#13;
how you can get people to watch it.&#13;
Maybe we have to have a Seseame&#13;
Street for adults.&#13;
NS: How do you feel about RV news&#13;
ratings'?&#13;
McCUllough: It's a good-news, badnews&#13;
thing, You have to have an&#13;
audience to be successful, but you can't&#13;
sacrifice any journalistic principles to&#13;
make the news entertaining either.&#13;
There is a tendency in our business L....&#13;
move toward show business too much,&#13;
moving away from jourialistic&#13;
judgements. That does not say that we&#13;
can't interject some humor, that our&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin 'Pu-m'~p'~"""&#13;
&amp; $ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVEl&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
cash &amp; Carry&#13;
~YAl TRITON&#13;
PE~KERSTATE 10W-20W-30W ~NZOll&#13;
~FSCON.O. lOW _20 W _30W&#13;
PERMANENTTYPE ANTI.FREEZE&#13;
110Z . .&#13;
. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
sOc per quart&#13;
3«: per quart&#13;
$1.39per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Clsh and Carry Prices on 011 Fillers.&#13;
Air Fillers, Tune Up Kits. Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items SUbject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax ,&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
Grand Opening.&#13;
people on the air can't be more per.&#13;
SOnable. It seems there's room for this&#13;
and the a~ience, by its acceptance:&#13;
prove.s that It wants this kmd of thlll,g.&#13;
The interplay between the venous&#13;
newsm.en on a broadcast tends to&#13;
humamze the news&#13;
NS: What are y~ur views ~ the&#13;
remarks of Mr. Agnew about TV news.&#13;
and the men who prepare it')&#13;
l\1~~u.llough:I agree with some of hts&#13;
criticisms, but diaagree with others, A&#13;
far as the Eastern orientation, that's&#13;
probably lr.ue. It seems to me though,&#13;
that the Vice President ecnvemently&#13;
forgets one thing, the majority of&#13;
Americans don't get their news from&#13;
the £i~e·thirty news" The majonty of&#13;
Amer-icans get their news from the&#13;
locally produced ten-oclock news, How&#13;
can there be an Eastern ortentauon In&#13;
Rockford, Illinois, or Shrevepor-t,&#13;
Louisiana? Some people say thoogh&#13;
that the opinion-makers are On the nvethirty&#13;
news, but 1 don't buy that. I&#13;
disagree most wholeheartedly m am&#13;
attempt for the government to assume&#13;
any more control to change the media.&#13;
our freedoms are based upon our right&#13;
to know. Your right to know IS&#13;
paramount.&#13;
NS: It is said that TV is the "Masses!"&#13;
of mediums, and mass audiences have&#13;
a low threshold or boredom Is 1'\'&#13;
geared too low?&#13;
McCUllough: f don't accept the first&#13;
part of your question at all" I think&#13;
that's an academic kind of criticism of&#13;
TV, and Idon't think it holds any water&#13;
People in the academic world tend to&#13;
view things that have mass appeal as&#13;
lacking quality, That's simply not true,&#13;
shows like the "Today Show", and&#13;
"Sixty Minutes", are examples of&#13;
quality viewing. obody says television&#13;
'has to be constantly informing, or&#13;
constantly educational, it says that It&#13;
has to be there to stand on Its O"-"Tl&#13;
merits, and I think that some of its&#13;
merits are escapist entertainment at&#13;
some times of the day. So if you say all&#13;
of TV is geared too low, no, of course&#13;
not. There's nobody in our new room&#13;
that skips a hard word because he&#13;
thinks the audience may be at a sixth&#13;
grade level. You can't paint lele\"1 100&#13;
with one big brush. Audience appeal I&#13;
a big part of TV.&#13;
NS: What's the most hwnorou or&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
All ladies 104:/beer&#13;
w&#13;
With every pizza&#13;
I t pitcher of beer 2&#13;
We deliver to Parlcside&#13;
and Carthage&#13;
461S-7th avenue&#13;
'next door to the Windjammer'&#13;
Remember-We're open mondays&#13;
~ I 1P 1P 1Ph t uphy und1A. Other'lA.rlwork to lndiculions C 0 llewscope Q)uomit oetry, rose, oogr ,&#13;
phone 654-7111&#13;
open 5-12&#13;
closed sundays&#13;
by Dave Kraus Ott rll, 111&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
might not exp~t a Not~e Dame&#13;
~e s administration maJor who&#13;
bUs•nes nfusedly reported a "cold ass&#13;
once_ co down from Canada" to become&#13;
rnovingnchorman for a metropolitan TV&#13;
new_s a but John McCullough has&#13;
station,&#13;
u.a?:"~nnel 4's John McCullough&#13;
you say that ~:1&#13;
::i~~no~ this earth. If&#13;
emotional, that's the nati:eusoefsbeo_n t~e&#13;
ucceeded.&#13;
s This reporter had the pleasure o(.&#13;
. g to the very personable ancf&#13;
~l:;le McCullough at the WTMJ-TV&#13;
hk d uarters in Milwaukee on Sepbe3&#13;
~r 23. (McCullough is the an-&#13;
::man for the ten o'clock, "Night&#13;
Scene" news.) •"fhe most importan~ thing a . TV&#13;
man should have 1s a pleasmg,&#13;
:~given personality," McCullough&#13;
Id Newscope during his interview.&#13;
~~cCullough is cer~ainly endowed :Vith&#13;
th' quality, and displayed the various&#13;
fa~ets of his personality during the&#13;
discussion. . The channel 4 newsman was queried&#13;
a wide range of topics. The following&#13;
:e excerpts of some of the questions&#13;
and discussion between Newscope and&#13;
McCullough: - sewscope: What is your education or&#13;
journalistic bac)5ground?&#13;
~lcCullough: My education background&#13;
is based on a business degree from&#13;
Notre Dame, with a minor in advertising&#13;
and journalism. I am largely&#13;
self-taught in writing style and news&#13;
reporting, and my presentation value _is&#13;
God-given. I worked at a newspaper m&#13;
Rockford, Illinois, on a part-time basis,&#13;
mostly summers, and after school.&#13;
NS: What are the essential differences'&#13;
between· writing for a newspaper and&#13;
writing for television?&#13;
McCullough: Writing for a newspaper&#13;
is writing for someone else to read,&#13;
writing for television · is writing for&#13;
yow-self, or someone else to read for the&#13;
audience's ears. Newspapers are&#13;
precise, but less conversational, they&#13;
tend to be cliche ridden. They tend to&#13;
IRwords that you don't use in ordinary&#13;
conversation. For example,&#13;
newspapers constantly ase the word&#13;
"persons". We (TV newswriters) don't&#13;
-we use "people". The great Barbara&#13;
Streisand hit wasn't "Persons, Persons&#13;
Who Love Persons", but people, that's&#13;
the way we talk. Television news has to&#13;
be understood with one reading, or hearing.&#13;
NS: Do you feel the element of emotion&#13;
or crisis is over-used in TV news?&#13;
McCullough: The medium of television&#13;
is THE G~EATEST SINGLE motivator&#13;
mgm&#13;
the news, that's what makes news. The&#13;
emphasis on the critical is basic in&#13;
human nature.&#13;
NS: Would you like to see educational&#13;
TV subsidized by the Government?&#13;
McCullough: I'm afraid of getting&#13;
bureaucrats involved in anything like&#13;
that. I'm in favor of educational&#13;
television, but it faces a never ending&#13;
problem of audience attraction.&#13;
Television as we know it has proven&#13;
itself as an entertainment and news&#13;
medium, but it has not proven itself as&#13;
an educational medium, full-time .&#13;
People seem to be looking for escapist&#13;
entertainment rather than education.&#13;
f'm in favor of more, but I don't know&#13;
how you can get people to watch it.&#13;
Maybe we have to have a Seseame&#13;
Street for adults.&#13;
NS: How do you feel about RV news&#13;
ratings?&#13;
McCullough: It's a good-news, badnews&#13;
thing. You have to have an&#13;
audience to be successful, but you can't&#13;
sacrifice any journalistic principles to&#13;
make the news entertaining eill)er.&#13;
There is a tendency in our business • .,&#13;
move toward show business too much,&#13;
moving away from jour11alislic&#13;
judgements. That does not say that we&#13;
can't interject some humor, that our&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin Pu~·m···p~-~y Uno Grand Opening.&#13;
&amp; $ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVEi&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
lOW - 20W-30W&#13;
AFscoN.o.&#13;
lOW- 20W- JOW&#13;
PERM&#13;
ANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
i2oz Ii . . EAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
Sl .39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on OIi FIiters,&#13;
Air FIiters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
Tue d&#13;
-&#13;
phone 654-7111&#13;
open 5-12&#13;
closed sundays&#13;
• n&#13;
I&lt;X/beer ith ever&#13;
the&#13;
I r pit her o h er&#13;
We deliver to Parkside&#13;
and Carthage&#13;
4615-7th a enu&#13;
'next door to the indjamm r'&#13;
Remember-We're open mondays&#13;
SuLmil 1Poelry,1Prose,1Phologruphy,und'lll Other'l.rlwork lo naicntions C 0 ewscope &#13;
Movies In 'The New Vogue'&#13;
Bill Sorensen, Fine Arts Editor b th&#13;
by bs me to think that something as .:. ose who live here. In a short .&#13;
IIdiStur Art can be placed in a supply and Me want It Ornot, this city will becoWhtle,whether&#13;
.,J1J8bI' a~ation governed by either awareness Mil~alotohs, stretching from ~ha part of a&#13;
~dsl th' au ee,thetmportanceof dt . icago to&#13;
, euJturai :':itI;the sincerity of Jim Smith and ::::~:n cUlture is imperative. The =~~I:o a more&#13;
S&lt;&gt; It wlnal&#13;
.•,. whenthey welcomed a regretfully creaslbneglcommglust another thoroughfartyeof this&#13;
""""pre .,.., , . ht t thei N V Y eVIdent· IS m- "~. dience Friday rug a. err ew ogue surround h . as concrete parking I I&#13;
•• 11 au . K h c am stores and' 0 s&#13;
.... 182052ndAve. m enos a. by hours spe t i f pastime is determined&#13;
'[1JeItre, , I d n 10 ront of the "glass teat"&#13;
whocame enjoyed An Adventure With a educati~n ~O\say that we are worthy of an 1';" a Czechfilm that, in a slapstick way, would lik' u thaNhis education is worthy of us I&#13;
~edyedOl'the&#13;
immat~rity of bureaucracy and the some of ~h~erym~ch to see man~ of the people, ~r&#13;
~'OII of regulation. The story takes place beside me a~~ ~ who read this review, sitting&#13;
~ a tram in Prague, a small boy, naked, The corr t ew Vogue Theatre.&#13;
j"Ird a riolwith his innocence. ~is kiad of film Vogue. is as f~~lo~~IOber schedule for the New&#13;
...... tiogbecause the cultural.differences. . . October 15 16 .&#13;
•~~ expressions, speech, bridge the gap Feature, "Ba~ P anl~,17- FRENCH COMEDY.&#13;
ct a societiesand broaden our understanding Oct 22 23 24ee ,shorts to be announced&#13;
~es. " . " Featur~: "Cbaied Elbo~~~~~GROUN~, ~,ILMS.&#13;
1" second film, Ammal farm" was a Over Teakettle and Other F.rel~tiVlty, Horse&#13;
'cisl's dream. George Orwell s satire- Oct 29 30 31 I rns .&#13;
",.anti ='~direCtedby John Halas and Joy Bat· DRUGS AND BECKE-DOCUMENTARY ON&#13;
an animated version of the story that Godot" documenta . ~;;~ture: "Waiting for&#13;
'''Pig'' become revolutionary jargon. It is Th~ first week :CY. ar ness ~arkness""&#13;
~ an excellent analysis of the totalitarian to something' old 0 e evwerycmoFnthwill be applied&#13;
... H' ,., . . lelds, Laurel and&#13;
.,.ropment. ardy, etc. One foreign film and de&#13;
1beoeed for the New Vogue must be realized film will also be shown ea h °thnepunlrground&#13;
c mon . ease come.&#13;
Ever been to an old&#13;
fashioned record hop?&#13;
Ever beento an old fashioned&#13;
I!IllI'dboplRemember hack in&#13;
lit 50's,the slicked back hair,&#13;
~psnlsandleather jacketsl&#13;
'ell, Ihst's what will be happotiD&amp;&#13;
saturday night, October&#13;
Il. 9 p.m.,at the Student Ac·&#13;
miles building. Bob ReilInan&#13;
will present~ "Rock'n Roll&#13;
Iltrivsl" to the students of&#13;
ParIside.&#13;
IIio consists of a regular&#13;
lllflllllirecordsfrom all the&#13;
fISl bigs Iithe '50's. With a&#13;
iiotd, Mr. Reitman presents&#13;
• tbe IlWIldsand background&#13;
that was rock of the late '50's in&#13;
the format of an old radio show.&#13;
Mr. Reitman currently is&#13;
program director at WZMF·FM&#13;
Menomonee Falls and features&#13;
this type of music every&#13;
Wednesday night on his show.&#13;
The Student Activities Board&#13;
will also feature games and&#13;
activities centering around the&#13;
rock revival theme. Prizes will&#13;
be awarded for best '50's&#13;
costumes and other assorted&#13;
events. It should be a "dif·&#13;
ferent" type of evening filled&#13;
with nostalgia and fun!&#13;
Theminstrels and their&#13;
mistresses...&#13;
Fastliving, free loving&#13;
Putting out savage, driving,&#13;
rhythmic music to the pulse&#13;
of the Now Generation ...&#13;
Seeit from the inside&#13;
screaming out!&#13;
October II. 1111 ~E\\. PE&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIOE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
.HPERM ISSIVE"&#13;
Filmed entirely in England&#13;
where the 'Groupie' thing originated&#13;
r Featuring I&#13;
'Forevermore". 'Cosmos' • 'Titus Groan'&#13;
Reduced rate with any student 1.0. - $1.50&#13;
Venetian Theater&#13;
505 Ma in in beautiful downtown Rac~e L....:.:...:..:..:..._------&#13;
DIScount Prius on&#13;
Records and T up&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES Hoffman's&#13;
tI213&#13;
SIXTH STREET RAel E&#13;
......................&#13;
Jhe 'llew ogue healer&#13;
The e&gt;.!ew.y To IDrbor West&#13;
1120· Unel St.... t. Kenoslwl&#13;
FRIDAY, SATURDAY .nd SUNDAY&#13;
OCTOBER 15, lUnelI7&#13;
FRENCH COMEDY&#13;
BANANA PEEL&#13;
Starring: Jean·Paul Belmondo and Jeanne&#13;
Moreau&#13;
"Fast and Furious! An Ingenious&#13;
comedy melodrama. Superlative cast worth&#13;
watching for hours and perhaps days on&#13;
end." THE NEW YORKER&#13;
"Banana Peel has a plot as tricky as its&#13;
title. Viewers will never lose Interest than 5&#13;
to two shrewd pertormers, Jean·PauI&#13;
Belmondo and Jeanne Moreau," TIME&#13;
-----_._- .&#13;
ALSO_..._--- --&#13;
ACADEMY AWARD WINNING SHORT&#13;
THE CHICKEN&#13;
Admission $1.00 In advance· $1.25 at the&#13;
door&#13;
Advance tickets may be purchased at the&#13;
NEWSCOPEoffice or at any Art Gallery In&#13;
HARBOR WEST&#13;
.............................&#13;
. COnnie"&#13;
\.&#13;
CJIIo-.......... . .. ~ .. ",-. '.-&#13;
•&#13;
..&#13;
,. .&#13;
• '" ·0, ••&#13;
Movies In 'The New Vogue, .&#13;
11 Sorensen, Fine Arts Editor b th .&#13;
~Y 8~5 me to think that something as ,1e ose ~ho hve here. In a shor . It d1stur Art can be placed in a supply and Me want it ~r not, this city will b: while, whether&#13;
,,aJuable ~:uation governed by either awareness Mil!a10J01_1s, ~tretching fromo~h~ part of a imand s1 th' au ee, the importance of . . icago to&#13;
, cul~rala:':itlf the sincerity of Jim Smith and :i:~:n cultur~ is i_mperative. Tha:Jus~~i~o a moi:e&#13;
SO ~~:tnieks when th,er welcome? a regretfully creasi~~~m~~~iust another th:OSughf~~ ~~ ~~~ ::rich d1·ence Friday rught at _their New Vogue surround h . ent as concrete parking 1 t&#13;
,nail au A . K sha c am stores a d . o s . tre 1820 52nd ve. m eno . by hours spent inf t n pastime is determined&#13;
n,ea ' I d ron of the "glass teat,,&#13;
ose who came enjoyed An A"dventure With a educatiin ~~t ~ay ~at we are worthy of an&#13;
~ B Y a Czech film that, in a slapstick way, would like' at this education is worthy of us 1&#13;
iak e~ the immat~rity of bureaucracy and the som~ of th~ery mrch to see man~ of the people, ~r&#13;
))rtr3fon of regulation. The story takes place beside me a~p ~ who read this review, sitting&#13;
::ofUSI 3 tram in Prague, a small boy, naked, The corr te ew Vogue Theatre.&#13;
~a riot with his innocence. T~is kiad of film Vogue is as f:110~~:ober schedule for the New&#13;
. sting because the cultural.differences . . . October 15 16 d&#13;
illr~al expressions, speech, bridge the gap Feature "Ba~a p an1,,~7 h FRENCH COMEDY.&#13;
~t _a O societies and broaden our understanding Oct' 22 23 24 ee ' s orts to be announced ;~1es. " . ,, Featur~: "Chafed Elbo~~~~~GR~U_N~, ~.ILMS.&#13;
'!be second film, Ammal farm' , wa~ a Over Teakettle and 0th F. Rel~tiv1ty ' Horse&#13;
nticist's dream. George Orwell s sabre- Oct 29 30 3 er Ilms .&#13;
';13 directed by John Halas and Joy Bat- DRUGS AND BEC~ - DOCUMENTARY ON&#13;
;:\ an animated version of the story that Godot" documenta ~~:teature: "Waiting for&#13;
e '"Pig" become revolutionary jargon. It is Th~ first week ? · arkness ~arkness" .&#13;
~ an excellent analysis of the totalitarian to something' old 0&#13;
° e evWerycmoFn.th will be applied ,.,., H ' · ·, · . 1elds, Laurel and&#13;
i 1-elopment. ardy, etc. One foreign film d d&#13;
'!be need for the New Vogue must be realized film will also be shown h an othne un erground eac mon . Please come.&#13;
Ever been to an old&#13;
fashiqned record hop?&#13;
Ever been to an old fashioned&#13;
record hop? Remember back in&#13;
50's, the slicked back hair,&#13;
~t pants and leather jackets?&#13;
ell, that's what will be happ!ning&#13;
Saturday night, October&#13;
16, 9 p.m., at the Student Aclivities&#13;
building. Bob Reitman&#13;
will present his "Rock'n Roll&#13;
Rel'ival" to the students of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
This consists of a regular&#13;
irogram of records from all the&#13;
geat bigs of the '50's. With a&#13;
md, Mr. Reitman presents&#13;
the sounds and background&#13;
that was rock of the late '50's in&#13;
the format of an old radio show.&#13;
Mr. Reitman currently is&#13;
program director at WZMF-FM&#13;
Menomonee Falls and features&#13;
this type of music every&#13;
Wednesday night on his show.&#13;
The Student Activities Board&#13;
will also feature games and&#13;
activities centering around the&#13;
rock revival theme. Prizes will&#13;
be awarded for best '50's&#13;
costumes and other assorted&#13;
events. It should be a "different"&#13;
type of evening filled&#13;
with nostalgia and fun!&#13;
The minstrels and their&#13;
mistresses ...&#13;
Fast living, free loving&#13;
Putting out savage, driving,&#13;
rhythmic music to the pulse&#13;
of the Now Generation ...&#13;
See it from the inside&#13;
screaming out!&#13;
. HP ERM ISSIVE"&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
Filmed entire,y in England&#13;
where the 'Groupie' thing originated&#13;
1---Featuring I&#13;
'D ,.T. G , rorevermore' ·• ,.Cosmos' • itus roan&#13;
Reduced rate with any student I.D. - $1.SO&#13;
Venetian Theater&#13;
SOS Ma in in beautiful downtown Racije L&#13;
lob r 11, I 71&#13;
I 'Otl ti Pri&#13;
~ ord nd · 'P&#13;
i&#13;
213 SIXTH STREET RACI&#13;
ill&#13;
The Gateway To H ~bor&#13;
1820 - 52nd Str t, Ke o&#13;
ft 0 r&#13;
FRIDAY, SATURDAY nd SUNDAY&#13;
OCTOBER 15, 16 and 17&#13;
FRENCH COMEDY&#13;
BANANA PEEL&#13;
Starring: Jean-Paul Belmondo and J&#13;
Moreau&#13;
THEC&#13;
Admission Sl.00 In&#13;
door&#13;
Advance tic ets m y&#13;
N EWSCOPE o f ce or&#13;
HARBOR WEST&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
conn1e· &#13;
Harriers Win One 0&#13;
by Jim Casper ' rop Two&#13;
o/the&#13;
J\iewscopestaff&#13;
MaJlY have heard ahout the&#13;
court advantage in&#13;
bam'thaILandthe home edge in :::auandlootball, but does it&#13;
¢'muchdillerence m cross&#13;
ntrY? Cllicoach Bob Lawson answered&#13;
., es" to this question.&#13;
~'" yOU knowthe course aud&#13;
""" th' hills and all the o~;&#13;
stades it can he beneficial,&#13;
Lawson said. "It is to your&#13;
adVantageto know when to&#13;
!Doveout and when you have a&#13;
resting area, such as a downhill&#13;
;retch,"&#13;
LaWsonemphasized the fact&#13;
lbal yoo have,a psychological&#13;
advantageover your opponent&#13;
.m wouldhe unfamiliar with&#13;
lbeCOUrse"You know where to .&#13;
go andyour opponent doesn't&#13;
knOW hOW to run the course so&#13;
j'OlIjusttakeadvantage of your&#13;
oomecourse experience," he&#13;
added,&#13;
Th' Rangersmade good use&#13;
.their homecourse advantage&#13;
• defeatingUW-Milwaukee 16-&#13;
~ on the friendly grounds at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
coaCh Bob Laws on&#13;
Chuck Dettman of th&#13;
Rangers took individual ho e ith . nors&#13;
WI. a time of 27: 26 over the f'&#13;
mile course. lye&#13;
Lucian Rosa followed D ttman,&#13;
while Rudy Alvarez ~h&#13;
former Horlick star, was third~&#13;
Gary Lance placed fourth and&#13;
Jim McF adden sixth '&#13;
This success was preceded by -&#13;
0&lt; toller II. 1171 NEWSCOPE&#13;
I NEED HELPIII&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TIME&#13;
$25 Guarenleed fir IVery 100 ennllplS&#13;
YIU sluff&#13;
All plStage 'prepald&#13;
send sramped, self-addrlssed enniopi&#13;
p.luS$1 for reglstratlln and hand.&#13;
ling to&#13;
ALLEN KING CORPORATION&#13;
P.O. BOX 6525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212&#13;
The Facists ran three&#13;
plays and with 54 seconds&#13;
left Newscope found&#13;
themselves deep in&#13;
trouble as referee Roy&#13;
Medina was able to call&#13;
Nedry for pass i nterference&#13;
30 yards&#13;
downfield. But with only&#13;
60 seconds left and no&#13;
rema ining time outs, the&#13;
Facists could not&#13;
capitalize.&#13;
Booters Defeat Madison&#13;
by Jim Casper of the Newscope staff&#13;
The Ranger booters scored their first victory of the season when&#13;
they defeated UW-Madison 3-2 at the Parkside soccer field. On the&#13;
following day the Rangers turned in another home victory, this time&#13;
over Notre Dame, by a 2·1 count.&#13;
In the game against UW-Madison, Rick Kilps' fourth period goal&#13;
provided the winning margin. Rick Lechusz and Stan Markovic accounted&#13;
for the other Ranger laliies against the Badgers.&#13;
The Fifhting Irish went down 2-1 in a game that saw Parkside&#13;
goalie Tom Thomsen sparkle on defense. He stopped 13 shots by the&#13;
Irish. Providing the offensive fireworks for the Rangers with one goal&#13;
,apiece were Lechusz and Joe Orr.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Last week at Oktober fest, the Rangers laced Quicny College. the&#13;
number one ranked team in the NAIA.&#13;
Coach Geza Martiny had little to say·prior to the game other than&#13;
that he hoped the men play their best and gain experience. . .&#13;
. He did say, however, tfiat the team is workmg on some baSICdrills&#13;
and that the squad is "improving on passing". "The defense needs&#13;
much work though," Martiny cautioned,&#13;
defeats the p .&#13;
haQds of Mi::VlOUS day at the&#13;
at Des MOines",;ota and Drake&#13;
If ever the Ra OW3.&#13;
home course ngers needed a&#13;
Was the ti advantage that ime beca&#13;
schools are two f use these&#13;
around in cross 0 the toughest&#13;
P&#13;
. country&#13;
arkSlde was .&#13;
Minnesot defeated by&#13;
BUlldogs o~D~~7, while the&#13;
a 20-38 defeat t e admInistered&#13;
A b . 0 the Rangers&#13;
was ~~tl~pot in the two losses&#13;
Ra me shOWing of the&#13;
ngers' Lucian Rosa&#13;
~osa took third over' the four&#13;
rm e distance WIth a ti&#13;
20:25. That was' me of&#13;
more than th . Just 14 seconds&#13;
the' e lime required by&#13;
M&#13;
. winner, Garry Bjorkland of&#13;
mnesota B' kl . time Bi jor and IS a two--&#13;
with . g 10 champion along&#13;
h&#13;
being the national six-mile&#13;
cnampmn.&#13;
According to L&#13;
B' kl awson jor and will most likel ~&#13;
representing the United S~t&#13;
on the Olympic team in the 1;;;&#13;
games.&#13;
J'Other Ranger finishes were&#13;
im McFadden 11th RUdy&#13;
Alvarez 12th, Gary La~ce 15th&#13;
and Dennis Biel 19th '&#13;
Newscope Wins legit! .&#13;
R&#13;
. k"The F&#13;
b&#13;
•Y " QB scrambling and&#13;
Ie ash Pazera - throwing lldl The N EWSCOP E . . _ WI y. Two&#13;
footballteam under the 1,~tti~~eyPt~_ns,one by Jeff&#13;
b r i I I I ant c a _ zow Ingers" Guelquarterbackingof&#13;
Dave P and a later one by&#13;
"IronArm" Kra d az~ra squashed aII the&#13;
us an Faclsts' ho f -&#13;
Warren "Knob Nose" t mes or VIC- Ned orv.&#13;
ry. rolled over the W.th I&#13;
Pi k F I only 40 seconds&#13;
~nflr:fIS:i~2.~~0 ~~;: left in the game, Nedry&#13;
victories. lofted a soft pass to&#13;
For the first time in Pazera ~ver the left side&#13;
history the N for the final score. • ewscope'-&#13;
Item acluaIIy had more&#13;
players than was&#13;
I'«essarywith a total of&#13;
ten players shOWing up&#13;
by gametime.&#13;
Firsthalf action found&#13;
::. only scoring to be&#13;
ona long pass from'&#13;
~austo Nedry. who thEm '&#13;
10PpedOverthe goaI Iine&#13;
"s~iOVideNewscope with&#13;
rst Score&#13;
Th .&#13;
helde defensive team&#13;
endur more than their&#13;
lU 0 the game. The&#13;
,,..P8rbrushing of John&#13;
Iarzan" Red' "Wild Iske. Mike&#13;
Snak ,t;Jan J. Smilin'&#13;
"Th e Von Guriten Bob&#13;
andeFZlp" BorCh~rdt,&#13;
red "?" N USUaIl h . oer&#13;
Y ad the Facist's&#13;
-.&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISORS&#13;
STARTING&#13;
LAST&#13;
SUNDAYI&#13;
Student&#13;
Activities&#13;
Building&#13;
OPEN SUNDAYS&#13;
12-6&#13;
-ANNOUNCING&#13;
Monday-Friday&#13;
llnppy&#13;
'llour&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGHWAYS 1-94 &amp; SO&#13;
Available for Fraternity and Sorority parties.&#13;
Clr~ you offend.d by nudity? 6pm-7pm&#13;
if not, .top in.&#13;
Completeselection of co~temporary adult merchandise&#13;
SPEt'AL 15% OFF all purchases&#13;
r ·with any student I.D.·&#13;
The Adult Bookstore&#13;
........ 406 Main Street Downtown Racine&#13;
Pitchers $1.00&#13;
Glass 20¢&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
Open 9am-12pm&#13;
Harriers Win One 0&#13;
.,,..,ca,pe, ' rop TWO&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Iii y have beard about the an court advantage in&#13;
bo;:tball,and the home edge in&#13;
b-1 ball and football, but does it&#13;
:;e much difference in cross&#13;
ntrY7 ('l)llcoach Bob Laws~n answered&#13;
··yes" to this question. "if you know the course and&#13;
jnoW the hills and all ~~ o~~ iacles it can be benef1c1al,&#13;
~wson said. "It is to your&#13;
advantage to know when to&#13;
1110ve out and when you have a&#13;
resting area, such as a downhill&#13;
stretch." 1,awson emphasized the fact&#13;
that you have a psychofogical&#13;
advantage over your opponent&#13;
•ho would be unfamiliar with&#13;
Ille course. "You know where to&#13;
go and your opponent doesn't&#13;
know how to run the course so&#13;
you just take advantage of your&#13;
00me course experience," he&#13;
added. The Rangers made good use&#13;
ii their home course advantage&#13;
:n defeating UW-Milwaukee 16-&#13;
{1 on the friendly grounds at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
coach Bob Lawson&#13;
Chuck Dettman of th&#13;
R~nger_s took individual honor:&#13;
w1_th a time of 27 :26 over the f&#13;
mile course. ive&#13;
Lucian. Rosa followed Dettman,&#13;
while Rudy Alvarez the&#13;
former Horlick star was th . . d Ga L , ir. . ry ance placed fourth, and&#13;
Jim McFadden sixth&#13;
This success was p~eceded by&#13;
defeats the P . bar.ids of Min~ev1ous day at the&#13;
at Des Moines ~ota and Drake&#13;
If ever the R owa. home cour angers needed a&#13;
.. was the ti:e a:antage that&#13;
schools are tw cause these&#13;
around . o of the toughest P ~n cross country arks1de was d f . Minnesota 20-37 e ea_ted by&#13;
Bulldogs of Drak ' w~1~e the a 20-38 defeat t e adm1mstered&#13;
A bright spot ~ /!e t:~gers. was the r osses Ra me showing of the&#13;
ngers' Lucian Rosa&#13;
~osa_ took third over· the f&#13;
mile distance w·th . our&#13;
20:25. That was _1 a time of&#13;
more than th t' Just 14 s_econds the . e ime reqwred by&#13;
MiO:~ner, G~rry Bjorkland of&#13;
t&#13;
. ~ta. BJorkland is a two1me&#13;
Big 10 ch . with be' amp1on along&#13;
Ch _mg the national six-mile&#13;
amp1on.&#13;
According to L&#13;
BJ'orkl d awson an will most like! ~ representing the United siat&#13;
on the Olympic team in the 1;;&#13;
games.&#13;
J 'Other Ranger finishes were&#13;
im McFadden 11th, Rudy&#13;
Alvarez 12th, Gary Lance 15th&#13;
and Dennis Biel 19th. '&#13;
Newscope Wins Legit!&#13;
R" k"Th :v ,, QB scrambling and&#13;
1c e lash Pazera - throwing "ldl&#13;
The NEWSCOPE interce t· w1 y. Two&#13;
The Facists ran three&#13;
plays and with 54 seconds&#13;
left Newscope found&#13;
themselves deep in&#13;
trouble as referee Roy&#13;
Medina was able to call&#13;
Nedry for pass interference&#13;
30 yards&#13;
downfield. But with only&#13;
60 seconds left and no&#13;
remaining time outs, the&#13;
Facists could not&#13;
capitalize.&#13;
football team under the "Stick: ~-ns, on~, by Jeff&#13;
b r i I I i a n t c O _ zow and ,~g~rs Guelquarterbacking&#13;
of Dave Pazera a aher one by&#13;
"Iron Arm" Kraus and F . squas ed all the ac,sts' homes to ·&#13;
Warren "Knob Nose" t r vtcNedry,&#13;
rolled over the 0 ;:th Pink F · ts I only 40 seconds&#13;
its fir!f1swi~2-~~o ~~ri: left in the game, Nedry&#13;
victories. lofted a soft pass to&#13;
For the first time in Pazera ~ver the left side&#13;
history the N for the final score. , ewscope&#13;
team actually had niore&#13;
players than was&#13;
necessary with a total of&#13;
ten players showing up&#13;
by game time.&#13;
FirSt half action found&#13;
!he only scoring to be&#13;
done on a long pass from .&#13;
~~aus to Nedry, who then&#13;
tipped over the goal line&#13;
?~ovide Newscope with&#13;
,~ f ,rst score&#13;
The defe · · held ns1ve team&#13;
end up more than their&#13;
of the superb . game. The&#13;
''T rushing of John&#13;
arzan" Red· "Wild 1ske, Mike&#13;
Snake'~an J · . Sm iii n'&#13;
''Th Von Gunten Bob&#13;
e Zip" B , and F ore ha rdt, red ,,,,, N&#13;
usually h · oer&#13;
ad the Facist's&#13;
Booters Defeat Madison&#13;
by Jim Casper of the Newscope staff&#13;
The Ranger hooters scored their first victory of the season when&#13;
they defeated UW-Madison 3-2 at the Parkside soccer field. On the&#13;
following day the Rangers turned in another home victory, this time&#13;
over Notre Dame, by a 2-1 count.&#13;
In the game against UW-Madison, Rick Kilps' fourth period goal&#13;
provided the winning margin. Rick Lechusz and Stan Markovic accounted&#13;
for the other Ranger tallies against the Badgers. The Fifhting Irish went down 2-1 in a game that saw Parkside&#13;
goalie Tom Thomsen sparkle on defense. He stopped 13 shots by the&#13;
Irish. Providing the offensive fireworks for the Rangers with one goal&#13;
apiece were Lechusz and Joe Orr.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Last week at Oktober fest, the Rangers faced Quicny College, the&#13;
number one ranked team in the NAIA. Coach Geza Martiny had little to say-prior to the game other than&#13;
that he hoped the men play their best and gain ~xperience. . . . He did say, however, that the team is working on some basic drills&#13;
and that the squad is "improving on passing". "The defense needs&#13;
much work though," Martiny cautioned.&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE . ADVERTISORS&#13;
ilre you ollend•d by n11dity?&#13;
ii not, stop in.&#13;
CornpI ete selection of contemporary adult merchandise&#13;
SPECIAL ·&#13;
15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student 1.D ..&#13;
The Adult Bookstore&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine&#13;
October 11, 1971 • ·t.W PE&#13;
I NEED HELP!!&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART Tl E&#13;
$25 Guarenteed for every 100 envelopes&#13;
you stuff&#13;
All postage ·prepaid&#13;
send stamped, self-addressed envelope&#13;
P_lus $1 for reclstration and tiandling&#13;
to&#13;
ALLEN KING CORPORATION&#13;
P.O. BOX &amp;525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212&#13;
Pag ,&#13;
STARTING&#13;
LAST&#13;
SUNDAY!&#13;
Student&#13;
Activities&#13;
Building&#13;
OPEN SUNDAYS&#13;
12-6&#13;
Monda y-f riday&#13;
uppy&#13;
our&#13;
6pm- pm&#13;
Pitch r&#13;
Gla&#13;
$ .00&#13;
20&#13;
The Brat Stop 'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
Open 9am-12pm&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF H I GHWAYS 1-94 &amp; SO&#13;
Available for Fraternity and Sorority parties. &#13;
Pagoz NEWSCOPE 0&lt;1obor 11.1971&#13;
THE WAR&#13;
The reasons and holy purposes for even one&#13;
American being in Vietnam, much less dying there,&#13;
have been completely washed away by the hoax of an&#13;
election that was held on October 3rd in Vietnam. We&#13;
have beentold that we are fighting to insure democracy&#13;
and liberty there but, as this recent election has proven,&#13;
our pious goal has been missed completely and we&#13;
should finally and irrevocably accept that verdict and&#13;
get out completely, today.&#13;
On nation.wide TV we were able to witness a&#13;
Vietnamese casting two ballots for President Thieu in&#13;
two separate polling places. One day after the election&#13;
there were wide spread reports of an election fraud. The&#13;
fraud was so superficial that it read like a Nlarx&#13;
Brothers movie. It would be funny - if so many&#13;
Americans, Vietnamese, Korean, Australian and Thai&#13;
soldiers hadn't been killed to insure Vjetnam and&#13;
President Thieu the right to this farce ..&#13;
Faith with the Vietnamese government and even the&#13;
people in Vietnam has long since been broken. We&#13;
should not begiving support to a dictatorial government&#13;
in the name of democracy. The people of the United&#13;
States should not accept one more American death in&#13;
Vietnam.&#13;
If certain politicians are afraid the country might&#13;
loose face in a total and immediate withdrawal, or if&#13;
they feel the time isn't right to gain the full political&#13;
impact from such a move, then the soldiers who are left&#13;
there might gladly hand over their M·16's to them. Let&#13;
those brave hawks be killed in a useless and wasteful&#13;
war, and let us get on with the job of repairing our&#13;
country.&#13;
When the last American body comes home in the&#13;
last wooden box, on the last troop carrier; his mother&#13;
and father, his wife and childr.en, might very well be&#13;
wishing that the '72elections had been held In 1971. .&#13;
Pat Nelson&#13;
VAffO'S c ~ -,&#13;
&lt;rIZZAz,1&#13;
Custom made ~~&#13;
F"EE DELIVERY&#13;
4:aa ,.m·-12,:aa I.m. AL.90 Q-!IO&lt;EN DINNERS'&#13;
.&lt;\NOITALIAN SAUSAGE B::M3ERS&#13;
Open 6 days 0 week from 4 o.m., closed Mondays&#13;
fro""nl... face&#13;
.-shlr.s ••2.75&#13;
available only&#13;
at&#13;
.. 'IVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
to the ·~tor: .&#13;
We......need your help immediately!&#13;
The Wisconsin&#13;
Legislature is scheduled to&#13;
adjourn on October 14th.&#13;
Assembly Bill 1057, the&#13;
Wisconsin Consumer Act, still&#13;
needs to be passed.&#13;
Won't you write or call your&#13;
state representative and your&#13;
state senator? Ask them to pass&#13;
Assembly Bill 1057, the&#13;
Wisconsin Consumer Act.&#13;
The Wisconsin Consumer Act&#13;
is the most important piece of&#13;
consumer legislation ever Introduced&#13;
in Wisconsin. It wis&#13;
introduced at the request of the&#13;
Wisconsin Conswners League,&#13;
the Greater Milwaukee Consumer&#13;
League, the Allied&#13;
Council of Senior Citizens, the&#13;
Wisconsin State AFI.rCIO, the&#13;
Madison Federation of Labor,&#13;
the United Auto Workers,&#13;
Region 10, the National Farmers&#13;
Organization, and the&#13;
Wisconsin Federation of&#13;
Cooperatives.&#13;
The Act covers all areas of&#13;
consumer credit, including both&#13;
loans and merchandise sales&#13;
contracts.&#13;
Interest rates in the bill are 15&#13;
per cent on the first $300 and 12&#13;
per cent on amounts over $30?&#13;
Representatives. of the credit&#13;
granting industry are putting on&#13;
pressure to prevent passage of&#13;
this bill. Their bill increases&#13;
interest rates 300 per cent from&#13;
12per cent to 36 per cent on the&#13;
first $300, with,21 per cent on&#13;
$300to $1,000,and 15 per cent on&#13;
amounts over $1,000.&#13;
Write or call your stale&#13;
representative and senator. Ask&#13;
your relatives ana friends to&#13;
write or call. Get your&#13;
organization to start a letterwriting&#13;
campaign p .of' . 06t ,"'-&#13;
1 ormation Where it ....&#13;
seen, at work, in stores ~n be&#13;
busy places. ' IIIother&#13;
You can't afford not&#13;
busy and help deVelop to get&#13;
for this bill. A few min~PI&gt;&lt;I1&#13;
hours may save you hunm:, or&#13;
dollars on your next p ~&#13;
and will save you thous':':-&#13;
dollars over the years U 36 It&#13;
cent interest pas~es Per&#13;
yourself will be to b You&#13;
Support Assembly 8U11115~'&#13;
Sincel'Ol Arlene Miller Pres' y,&#13;
Wisconsin Consum~rs~-'&#13;
For materials for gue&#13;
organiza tion and for fa:;:&#13;
information -eontact· A I&#13;
Mill . r eDe I er, 5501West MorganA&#13;
Ml1waukee, Wis. 53220_ ':;'&#13;
leave a message at: Milw."";&#13;
414-723-U70, Madison6Oll_2S6-&#13;
8601.&#13;
SCulptor Rollin Jansky applies a layer of&#13;
transparent coating to one of his massive&#13;
polyester impregnated fiberglass castings in bis&#13;
UW-Parkside studio above. A show of his retftlt&#13;
work opened Sunday, Oct. 3. at DominklD&#13;
College. An assistant professor of art at&#13;
Parkaide, Jansky is spending the academic year&#13;
as an exchange professor in England.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, OCT. 12&#13;
Meeting. Students International&#13;
Meditation Society. 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Room lOS, Racine Campus.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT, t3&#13;
Soccer. UW-P vs. U. of Illinois,&#13;
Chicago Circle Campus. At&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Recital. Carmen Vila. 7:30 p.m.&#13;
'Room t03 Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 13&#13;
Poetry Forum: Pat Nelson&#13;
reading his poems; Steve&#13;
Mazzareli playing and singing&#13;
his songs; Ronald R. Achulz&#13;
reading from his book, "Come&#13;
Touch Me", written with Larry&#13;
Roach. DI0l Greenquist Hall,&#13;
7:30 p.rn.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 15&#13;
Feature Film: "Where Eagles&#13;
Dare" 8:00 p.rn. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Admission 7Sc.&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID's&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. t6&#13;
Cross Country. UW-P vs. Noethwestern&#13;
and Loyola at Evanston.&#13;
Soccer. UW·p vs. Platteville at&#13;
Platteville.&#13;
Dance. "Bob Reitman's Rock&#13;
and Roll Revival" 9:00 - 1:00&#13;
a.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Prizes for best 50's costumes.&#13;
October 23&#13;
Jesus Christ Superstar. Racine&#13;
Case Fieldhouse. The original&#13;
No. 1 cast and album version.&#13;
More than 50 members in the&#13;
cast. Two shows - 7:00 p.m. and&#13;
10:00 p.m. Tickets: $7.50, $6.00&#13;
and $4,50. Available at Student&#13;
Activities Office, Tallent Hall.&#13;
No Mail Orders.&#13;
JANUARY4-14&#13;
Ski the Alps: 10days for $2&amp;1.l1li&#13;
plus tax. Includes air aad&#13;
ground transportation, !od&amp;lDc&#13;
and overnight stops in Geneva&#13;
and Paris, Opento Universityof&#13;
Wisconsin students and per--&#13;
sonnel only, For details cmtact&#13;
Bill Niebuhr, Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 106,TallentIIIII.&#13;
••••••••&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Businsss Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, James Casper,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Kelly Infusino,&#13;
Kim King, Jim Koloen, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Dale Martin, Pat&#13;
Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross Jeff&#13;
Scoville: Jerry Socha '&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Ziman~&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDermid,&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial 553-*&#13;
Business 553-.&#13;
Newscope is an independlal&#13;
student newspaper colnpoold&#13;
by students of the Univemlyof&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside pubIisbed&#13;
weekly except during vacalioD&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the ...&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
operation of Newscope·6.1l1li&#13;
copies are printed aDd&#13;
distributed througbout tile&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as weJl as the&#13;
University. Free copies are&#13;
available upon request&#13;
oclo-ber sale&#13;
Custom tailo~ed suits REGULAR s162.5O&#13;
OCTOBER PRICE s137.5O ---------&#13;
Gino's Tailor Shop&#13;
and Sportswear&#13;
2212-6Oth street in Kenosha complete line&#13;
'We give the personal touch' of mensWear&#13;
.' jrs&#13;
"--'.__ ....W_e_d_o_a ..."-.ty..;:.:.p..:'e.:.s~o:.:f_a.:.'~te:.':..:a:t~;o:.:.n:.:.s..a....n~d....'''''8.... p...''_&#13;
All styles to chOOS'&#13;
from in 17&#13;
different colors&#13;
-&#13;
Pagez NEWSCOPE October 11, 1971&#13;
THE WAR&#13;
The reasons and holy purposes for even one&#13;
American being in Vietnam, much less dying there,&#13;
have been completely washed away by the hoax of an&#13;
election that was held on October 3rd in Vietnam. We&#13;
have been told that we are fighting to insure democracy&#13;
and liberty there but, as this recent election has proven,&#13;
our pious goal has been missed completely and we&#13;
should finally and irrevocably accept that verdict and&#13;
get out completely, today.&#13;
On nation-wide TV we were able to witness a&#13;
Vietnamese casting two ballots for President Thieu in&#13;
two separate polling places. One day after the election&#13;
there were wide spread r~ports of an election fraud. The&#13;
fraud was so superficial that it read like a Marx&#13;
Brothers movie. It would be funny - if so many&#13;
Americans, Vietnamese, Korean, Australian and Thai&#13;
soldiers hadn't been killed to insure Vietnam and&#13;
President Thieu the right to this farce.&#13;
Faith with the Vietnamese government and even the&#13;
people in Vietnam has long since been broken. We&#13;
should not be giving support to a dictatorial government&#13;
in the name of democracy. The people of the United&#13;
States should not accept one more American death in&#13;
Vietnam.&#13;
If certain pol iticians are afraid the country might&#13;
loose face in a total and immediate withdrawal, or if&#13;
they feel the time isn't right to gain the full political&#13;
impact from such a move, then the soldiers who are left&#13;
there might gladly hand over their M -16's to them. Let&#13;
those brave hawks be killed in a useless and wasteful&#13;
war, and let us get on with the job of repairing our&#13;
country.&#13;
When the last American body comes home in the&#13;
last wooden box, on the last troop carrier; his mother&#13;
and father, his wife and chlldr.en, might very well be&#13;
wishing that the '72 elections had been held in 1971 . .&#13;
Pat Nelson&#13;
~f!O'S c~"'&#13;
~IZZAf;'&#13;
Custom made for yo~.,&#13;
AL.SO D-ilO&lt;EN DINNERS&#13;
'\NO ITALIAN S.AJJSAGE B:M3ERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
•:oa p.m,-12.:oa a.m.&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondats&#13;
frowning face&#13;
•-shlr'ls••2.7S&#13;
available only&#13;
at&#13;
. ':VERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
lETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
to the ~tor: . We-.. need your help im·&#13;
mediately! The Wisconsin&#13;
Legislature is scheduled to&#13;
adjourn on October 14th.&#13;
Assembly Bill 1057, t~e&#13;
Wisconsin Consumer Act, still&#13;
needs to be passed. Won't you write or call your&#13;
state representative and your&#13;
state senator? Ask them to pass&#13;
Assembly Bill 1057, the&#13;
Wisconsin Consumer Act.&#13;
The Wisconsin Consumer Act&#13;
is the most important piece of&#13;
consumer legislation ever in·&#13;
troduced in Wisconsin. It was&#13;
introduced at the request of the&#13;
Wisconsin Consumers League,&#13;
the Greater Milwaukee Consumer&#13;
League, the Allied&#13;
Council of Senior Citizens, the&#13;
Wisconsin State AFL-CIO, the&#13;
Madison Federation of Labor,&#13;
the United Auto Workers,&#13;
Region 10, the National Farmers&#13;
Organization, and the&#13;
Wisconsin Federation of&#13;
Cooperatives.&#13;
The Act covers all areas of&#13;
consumer credit, including both&#13;
loans and merchandise sales&#13;
contracts.&#13;
Interest rates in the bill are 15&#13;
per cent on the first $300 and 12&#13;
per cent on amounts over $300.&#13;
Representatives_ of the credit&#13;
granting industry are putting on&#13;
pressure to prevent passage of&#13;
this bill. Their bill increases&#13;
interest rates 300 per cent from&#13;
12 per cent to 36 per cent on the&#13;
first $300, with 21 per cent on&#13;
$300 to $1,000, and 15 per cent on&#13;
amounts over $1,000.&#13;
Write or call your state&#13;
representative and senator. Ask&#13;
your relatives ana friends to&#13;
write or call. Get your&#13;
organization to start a letterwriting&#13;
campaign p ·nr . · ost 11.,. 1 ormation where it "llli&#13;
seen, at work, in stores ~n be&#13;
busy places. ' lil 0ther&#13;
You can't afford not to&#13;
busy and help develop get&#13;
for this bill. A few m· suP!&gt;ort inut.es hours may save you hu dr or dollars on your next n edc; ~&#13;
and will save you tho!~:~&#13;
dollars over the years H 36 of&#13;
cent interest pas~e Iler&#13;
yourself will be to sbl You&#13;
Support Assembly Bill 105;me.&#13;
Sincer~Jy . Ar~ene Miller, Preside '&#13;
W1sconsm Consumers Lea nt&#13;
For materials for gue · ti Your ?rgamza _on and for further&#13;
mformahon -eontact· A 1 M·11 . r ene ! er, 5501 West Morgan Ave&#13;
Milwaukee, Wis. 53220 _ o/&#13;
leave a message at: Milwauk~&#13;
414 · 723-6670, Madison 608 . 25&amp;-&#13;
8601.&#13;
Sculptor Rollin Jansky applies a layer of&#13;
transparent coating to one of his massive&#13;
polyester impregnated fiberglass castings in hi&#13;
UW-Parkside studio above. A show of his recent&#13;
work opened Sunday, Oct. 3, at Dominican&#13;
College. An assistant professor of art al&#13;
Parkside, Ja~sky is spending the academic year&#13;
as an exchange professor iri England.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, OCT.12&#13;
Meeting. Students International&#13;
Meditation Society. 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Room 105, Racine Campus.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT.13&#13;
Soccer. UW-P vs. U. of Illinois,&#13;
Chicago Circle Campus. At&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Recital. Carmen Vila. 7: 30 p.m.&#13;
Room 103 Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 13&#13;
Poetry Forum: Pat Nelson&#13;
reading his poems ; Steve&#13;
Mazzareli playing and singing&#13;
his songs; Ronald R. Achulz&#13;
reading from his book, "Come&#13;
Touch Me", written with Larry&#13;
Roach. DlOl Greenquist Hall,&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT.15&#13;
Feature Film: "Where Eagles&#13;
Dare" 8:00 p.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Admission 75c.&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID's&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 16&#13;
Cross Country. UW-P vs. Northwestern&#13;
and Loyola at Evanston.&#13;
&#13;
Soccer. UW-P vs. Platteville at&#13;
Platteville.&#13;
Dance. "Bob Reitman's Rock&#13;
and Roll Revival" 9:00 . 1:00&#13;
a .m . Student Activities&#13;
Building. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Prizes for best 50's costumes.&#13;
October 23&#13;
Jesus Christ Superstar. Racine&#13;
Case Fieldhouse. The original&#13;
No. 1 cast and album .version.&#13;
More than 50 members in the&#13;
cast. Two shows· 7:00 p.m. and&#13;
10:00 p.m. Tickets: $7.50, $6.00&#13;
and $4.50. Available at Student&#13;
Activities Office, Tallent Hall.&#13;
No Mail Orders.&#13;
JANUARY 4.14&#13;
Ski the Alps: 10 days for $264.00&#13;
plus tax. Includes air and&#13;
ground transportation, lodging&#13;
and overnight stops in Geneva&#13;
and Paris. Open to University or&#13;
Wisconsin students and per·&#13;
sonnel only. For details contact&#13;
Bill Niebuhr, Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 106, Tallent Hall .&#13;
• "Don't believe •••••• everything you read."&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor · Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Businsss Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, James Casper,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Kelly Infusino,&#13;
Kim King, Jim Koloen, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Dale Martin, Pat&#13;
Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross Jeff&#13;
Scoville, Jerry Socha '&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Zimany&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
,John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDermid,&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial 553-24&#13;
Business 553-24~&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed&#13;
by students of the University d&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacatioo&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the ~&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
operation of Newscope. 6.&#13;
copies are printed aod&#13;
distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine com·&#13;
munities as well as tbe&#13;
University. Free copies are&#13;
availab~e upon request.&#13;
octo-ber sale&#13;
Custom, tailo~ed suits REGULAR S162.50&#13;
OCTOBER PRICE S137.50 ---------.!.--&#13;
Gino's Tailor Shop&#13;
and Sportswear&#13;
2212-60th street in Kenosha&#13;
'We give the personal touch'&#13;
All styles to choose&#13;
from in 17&#13;
different colors&#13;
complete line&#13;
of menswear&#13;
We do al~ types of · . d pairs alterations an re &#13;
Page" NEWSCOPE O&lt;:tober II, 1911 •&#13;
3322 SHERIDNi ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD, KENOSHA 658·3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
in association with&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
presents&#13;
JESUS CHRIST&#13;
SUPERSfAR&#13;
"f&#13;
A ROCK OPERA&#13;
MU,fic hy&#13;
Alldr.-w Lloyd Webber&#13;
t.vncs ny&#13;
Tim Rice&#13;
Original Concert Presentation&#13;
From the Cast Album&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 23 - TWO SHOWS&#13;
7:00 &amp; 10:00 P.M.&#13;
CASE FIELDHOUSE, RACINE&#13;
PRICES $7.S0, $6.00, $4.50&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT:&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE 206 TALLENT&#13;
with each otber, com fun&#13;
each other's tal~nt ""!inc&#13;
youngsters, COm '. 'I'bt&#13;
speaking, show p~rahV_ly&#13;
respect for the Wolfmm&#13;
-Doe&#13;
never lind them horn;;. ~""n&#13;
one of his leads or t g.m '"&#13;
overshadow him, if SUcb'Ying.10&#13;
were possihle. They gi: thing&#13;
ample solo spaces Whje biJii&#13;
makes extremely gOOdch ~&#13;
and do their ample best ;: Ill,&#13;
, a respectably kee;&#13;
background. On the otherS~~~&#13;
the Woll gives .vervhM........&#13;
chance to take off .mel -, •&#13;
own poers. Again no~ their&#13;
down. The boys fr~m the S • let&#13;
show a remarkable senaetswe.&#13;
taste and accuracy fo III&#13;
dirt, Chicago blues. Her: i~&#13;
to be the Wolf that feelabaa&#13;
miration. Givern their l"h.~&#13;
they lay back' and p~y~&#13;
nobody white and undershould&#13;
be able to. I'd ha III&#13;
contradict what MUddysa: 10&#13;
last week's interview it&#13;
anyone would line it hard'tobut&#13;
that there are white cats ... ':&#13;
album.&#13;
. I'd like to see this album In&#13;
time capsule, or the Library:&#13;
Congress, or just anYWhereIIIat&#13;
a heritage can be assured 01&#13;
future. I'd feel sorry for an~&#13;
who never gets a cbancetoboor&#13;
II.&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
or the Newscope staff&#13;
THE HOWLIN'WOLF&#13;
LONDON SESSIONS&#13;
Rating: 3 Grammy Awards,&#13;
The Legion of Merit, The Medal&#13;
of Honor, and a very, very&#13;
sincere Oh Yaaaaaahhhhh&#13;
For a while I was worried&#13;
that I might never see this&#13;
album. Alter all, the industry&#13;
had been trying records of this&#13;
type for a long time with, in my&#13;
opinion, little financial or&#13;
esthetic success. It was a&#13;
logical premis, I suppose. Take&#13;
an established, original blues&#13;
artist, team him up with a few&#13;
current "stars", do a combination&#13;
of old and new tunes,&#13;
and you should come up with&#13;
something worthwhile. The only&#13;
. flaw is that in dealing in music,&#13;
you're not dealing in logic. Most&#13;
attempts resulted in a confusion&#13;
of originality and commercialism,&#13;
with a style neither&#13;
conducive to the young artist or&#13;
the old ("Fathers and Sons"&#13;
being the only notable exception).&#13;
For one reason or&#13;
another they never accomplished&#13;
what it was&#13;
believed they could.&#13;
All the more credit to "The&#13;
Howlin' Wolf London Sessions".&#13;
Any blues buff worth his turntable&#13;
will have to admit to its&#13;
perfection. I know that's a bad&#13;
word for a critic to use, but it&#13;
applies. As strong as the&#13;
negative intangability was that&#13;
kept the previous attempts from.&#13;
getting off the ground, there is a&#13;
stronger force that has made&#13;
this record a master piece.&#13;
Very simply, it is a case of the&#13;
arlist, instead of conflicting&#13;
ReCycle This Paper&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
......&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
~&#13;
We will help any womar. "&#13;
of race. leHgion "S"&#13;
status. We do nOI ~',,'&#13;
merely help women O~:oI'&#13;
Doctors Io r aborll:&gt;ns&#13;
what they desire. Plc',1&#13;
delay, an early abc n.rsimple&#13;
and less co~!ly ,i"&#13;
performed on an (lui ;1."&#13;
Call:&#13;
312922-om&#13;
Problem Pret~&#13;
~.I.lance of ChIaiIe&#13;
8 AM·l0 PM-7 0"",&#13;
A NON.I'ROF IT (\(&#13;
To Parkside&#13;
from Albee's&#13;
MGMpresents a&#13;
Jerry Gershwin·.E1lioll K8IlIIr&#13;
picture starring&#13;
.lip dlol0utp&#13;
']ood&#13;
ut&#13;
md ']ushionpdlPricps&#13;
You can't beat Albee's!&#13;
Car hop service from 5pm&#13;
Open all year round&#13;
Albee's DriveIn&#13;
on 22nd avenue at&#13;
44th place in Kenosha&#13;
Sun- Thurs&#13;
Fri-Sat&#13;
P4novislon·ondMetroedct IS I!!l&lt;o FRIDAY OCT.&#13;
8:00 P._·&#13;
ACT. BLDG. AO_.;5'&#13;
PARKSIDE &amp; WIS. 10 ~&#13;
11:00a m-l:OOa m&#13;
11:00am-3:00am&#13;
Pag~~ NEWSCOPE October ll, 1971 •&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KEMJSHA&#13;
2129 BIRCH RO. KENOSHA 653-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
in association with&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
prc,ents&#13;
JFSUS CHRIST&#13;
SUPERSTAR&#13;
T&#13;
A ROCK OPERA&#13;
Mu&lt;ic hy&#13;
Andr&lt;'w Lloyd Webber&#13;
I ww, hy&#13;
Tim Ri&lt;'C&#13;
Original Concert Pre cntation&#13;
Fn,111 the Cast Album&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 23 - TWO SHOWS&#13;
7:00 &amp; 10:00 P.M.&#13;
CASE FIELDHOUSE, RACINE&#13;
PRICES $7.50, $6.00, $4.S0&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT:&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE 206 TALLENT&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
THE HOWLIN'WOLF&#13;
LONDON SESSIONS&#13;
Rating: 3 Grammy Awards,&#13;
The Legion of Merit, The Medal&#13;
of Honor, and a very, very&#13;
sincere Oh Yaaaaaahhhhh&#13;
For a while I was worried&#13;
that I might never see this&#13;
album. After all, the industry&#13;
had been trying records of this&#13;
type for a long time with, in my&#13;
opinion, little financial or&#13;
esthetic success. It was a&#13;
logical premis, I suppose. Take&#13;
an established, original blues&#13;
artist, team him up with a few&#13;
current "stars", do a combination&#13;
of old and new tunes,&#13;
and you should come up with&#13;
something worthwhile. The only&#13;
flaw is that in dealing in music,&#13;
you're not dealing in logic. Most&#13;
attempts resulted in a confusion&#13;
of originality and commercialism,&#13;
with a style neither&#13;
conducive to the young artist or&#13;
the old ("Fathers and Sons"&#13;
being the only notable exception).&#13;
For one reason or&#13;
another they never accomplished&#13;
what it was&#13;
believed they could. All the more credit to "The&#13;
Howlin' Wolf London Sessions".&#13;
Any blues buff worth his turntable&#13;
will have to admit to its&#13;
perfection. I know that's a bad&#13;
word for a critic to use, but it&#13;
applies. As strong as the&#13;
negative intangability was that&#13;
kept the previous attempts from ,&#13;
getting off the ground, there is a&#13;
stronger force that has made&#13;
this record a master piece.&#13;
Very simply, it is a case of the&#13;
artist, instead of copflicting&#13;
ReCycle This Paper&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
To Parkside&#13;
from Albee's&#13;
-11p Jo 10rrle&#13;
'JJooJ&#13;
rrl&#13;
~ lJ 'JJrrshione J1Prices&#13;
You can't beat Albee's!&#13;
Car hop service from 5pm&#13;
Open all year round&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
on 22nd avenue at&#13;
44th place in Kenosha&#13;
Sun-Thurs&#13;
Fri-Sat&#13;
11:00a m-1:00a m&#13;
11:00a m-3:00a m&#13;
with each other com litn&#13;
each other's' tal~n en~&#13;
youngsters, com t. . The&#13;
speaking, show P~rative1y&#13;
respect for the w ~rnrnense&#13;
never find them ho~ ~~·n&#13;
one of his leads or t g_ tn on&#13;
overshadow him, if suchl'Ying. to&#13;
were possible. They g· a t~ !Ve i.:..::&#13;
ample solo spaces Which'lllll&#13;
makes extremely gOOd be&#13;
and do their ample best ;:' Ii,&#13;
' a respectably ~ background. On the oth s~~~~e the Wolf gives every~~&#13;
chance to take off und;"' .•&#13;
own poers. Again, nobody•~&#13;
down. The boys from the S let&#13;
show a remarkable !ones&#13;
taste and accuracy ~ ~ dirt, Chicago blues. Her! -~ to be the Wolf that f~ has&#13;
miration. Givern their ~ they lay back · and play lib&#13;
nobody white and unde&#13;
should be able to. I'd ha~ 50&#13;
contradict what Muddy 'd ~ last week's interviewSII ID&#13;
anyone would fine it hard 'to=&#13;
that there are white cats 011 tbia&#13;
album.&#13;
I'd like to see this album . time capsule, or the Libra;~&#13;
Cong~ess, or just anywhere that&#13;
a heritage can be assured of&#13;
future. I'd feel sorry for an~&#13;
:,vho never gets a chance to bear&#13;
1t. .&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help? We will help any 'lwOm;rn r•' .;&#13;
of race. religion . Jge ,&#13;
status. We do no! IT'O'.t 1&#13;
merely help women ob!a n qJ.&#13;
Doctors tor abortioris 1&#13;
what they desire. Pll';1:-e :;&#13;
delay, an early abor!1cn&#13;
simple and less costly. d"~&#13;
performed on an out pt1!;,·'"'&#13;
Call :&#13;
312 922-om&#13;
Problem Prqn-,&#13;
~altlance of Clllcatlo&#13;
8 AM-10 PM-7 DAYS&#13;
A NON -PROFIT oc•,:,·.&#13;
MGM presents a&#13;
Jerry Gershwin-Elliott "--&#13;
picture starring &#13;
Page6 XEWSCOPE October II. 1971 McGovern Urges Youth To Participate&#13;
(Continued from Page J)&#13;
system still works,&#13;
"I would say this. Nothing is beyond&#13;
redemption," he answered smilingly. "If you don't&#13;
like the way the system is working, join me and&#13;
help me change it!" He was interrupted by applause.&#13;
"I know that after the Chicago Convention&#13;
a lot of young people just said, 'To hell with&#13;
politics. '&#13;
"That is not the way to change the course of&#13;
American politics. The way to do it is the way I've&#13;
tried to de it- by working withinthe party.&#13;
"I chared the Democratic Commission on&#13;
Party Reform' to look at the way we nominate a&#13;
president," he continued. "I think our states are&#13;
making great progress as a result of that commission's&#13;
guidelines. I think we are going to have a&#13;
more open and honest delegate selection process&#13;
in 1972. I'm willing to take my chances.&#13;
"So get into politics," he offered, "get active,&#13;
and don't be discouraged if you get a bloody nose&#13;
the first time around, or if you f&#13;
backs." su fer a f...&#13;
He added that the 18-20 year Ids '"&#13;
million people with a vote a:d rep....... I&#13;
presidential election was d";id d bthat tbt ~&#13;
votes. "1 don't know what more e Y 01le11lilIioo,&#13;
opportunity for young people to ~nbedonelolilt&#13;
emphasized. infIu",tiaI, - ..&#13;
But if he evaded a few quesn&#13;
seemed a bit fatuous, he was alslons&#13;
, aDd at H.._&#13;
"M fi t . . 0 on the ..... Y Irs action If I were Presid ~&#13;
States would be to end the war ~nt ortheu-;&#13;
over I would follow the preced nee the""&#13;
Lincoln set at the end of the centlthat Af........&#13;
. _ I IVI War -:'1-&#13;
Issue a genera amnesty for draft r t : "'-&#13;
He said, too, of his recent tri es~."&#13;
was struck not only by the drug a.fdi&#13;
to&#13;
VI"",- I&#13;
but with the general demOralized&#13;
CtiOllJ1rlllIIoIa,&#13;
troops. I really feel we ought t slale 0( "-&#13;
with almost the urgency mat 0 get theIn -..&#13;
people from a burning building one wOll1d ...&#13;
.,&#13;
It'sthe ~- ~"........,.&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
• C«(('ttr~11£&#13;
RaCinG WHEELS 'l"'-\'W:;:;~~.&#13;
~ fI&#13;
~[~~~!~.1·a..... ·..Illa...·...··~&#13;
Mike Davis Speed City&#13;
4807 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
WHEELS WANTED: Male student to&#13;
share one bedroom, furnished.&#13;
apartment at 1327 Howe St., R~&#13;
cme. $10 per week. Contact&#13;
Robin - 634-4775.&#13;
1962 RAMBLER - Automatic&#13;
good condition. best offer. 654:&#13;
2665.&#13;
MEN ~ Your spare time is needed&#13;
by a boy 7· tz veers old who doesn't&#13;
have a father. Can you provide an&#13;
e~~mple .pt good character and&#13;
c.'t,~enshlP while shooting pool.&#13;
fIshing, Skating, etc.? It so call Big&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha, Inc. 6904-6585.&#13;
HELP WANTED - 2 Spanish guitar&#13;
players work in Pizza Hut. Phone&#13;
551·8906 or stop in and ask tor John.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus Camper. steve,&#13;
refrig .• and 50 gal. gas 'ank, ln.&#13;
ctueee First $150,00fakes all. Call&#13;
632 S5A. after S;30.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc&#13;
Motorcycle. engine rebuilt. !lpecial&#13;
gearing. Phone 65"·8710 . or&#13;
Ne\N5cope office. LNve message for&#13;
Rick Palera.&#13;
'71 Ford Ma\'erick; 6 cyL, stick&#13;
3,200 miles. $2.700 or best aCCe;&#13;
over $2,650. AlSO: Vox 12 string&#13;
folk electric guitar - once&#13;
belonged to Neil Diamond -&#13;
$525 Inquire 1602 A, 61st Sl.&#13;
Kenosha. '&#13;
NEEDED - Poetry, short&#13;
S~Orl~S, drama for "IndicatIOns"&#13;
magazine. Deadline&#13;
Nov.l, 1971. Send to: Newscope&#13;
Hwy A aDd Wood Rd. Kenosha'&#13;
W·IS. "&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE DODGE DART- 1965. $495 or&#13;
best offer. Must sell. Excellent&#13;
co~dltlon. 632-4422 ext. 202. Miss&#13;
BrIggs. 8-5 p.m. FOR SALE - Lovely Lenox&#13;
chIna. Starlight pattern. Service&#13;
for six (almost). Cost $240. WANTED Sacrifice of $95. 543-3149.&#13;
earn Eliltr. Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go O.,ce. 632·3715or 633·380S. FREE! Who will adopt a timid&#13;
sensitive shelly (toy collieL On~&#13;
ye~r old male who needs&#13;
patience and love ror training&#13;
543-3149. .&#13;
WA~TED - Guitar case&#13;
cheap. 554·9174. For a Folk&#13;
guitar.&#13;
Patronize Newscope Advertisers&#13;
ALADDI&#13;
. FLOWER SHOP&#13;
In west&#13;
Recipe&#13;
1700 Sheridan let&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIED'&#13;
FOR SALE - Head skis and&#13;
bcinld&#13;
l&#13;
ings 210 centimeters. $35.&#13;
a 632-1611, ext. 783.&#13;
The most&#13;
Meaningful Semester&#13;
you'll ever spend ...&#13;
could be the one on&#13;
World Camp.usAfloat&#13;
Sailing Feb. 1972 to Africa and the Orient&#13;
Through a transter format, more than 5,000&#13;
students from ~50 campuses have participated&#13;
for a semester in this unique program in international&#13;
education,&#13;
WCA will broaden your horizons, literally and&#13;
figuratively. . end give you a better chance to&#13;
make it_meaningfully~in this changing world.&#13;
You'll study at sea with an experienced cosmopolitan&#13;
faculty, and then during port stops&#13;
you'll study the world itself. You'll discover that&#13;
no matter how foreign and far-away, you have a&#13;
lot in common with people of other lands,&#13;
WCA isn't as expensive as you might think;&#13;
we've done our best to bring it within reach of&#13;
most college students. Write today for free&#13;
details.&#13;
TEACHERS: Summer travel with credit for teachers&#13;
and administrators.&#13;
~~~~ (8 Write Today to:&#13;
Chapman College,&#13;
Box CC26, Orange, California 92666&#13;
Scuba tank, boot, gauge,&#13;
re~ulator, back pack and&#13;
weight belt. $100. Call 632-1611&#13;
ext. 783.&#13;
FOR SALE - Bausch &amp; Lomb&#13;
MIcroscope. 2 eye pieces 3&#13;
objective lens. Call 639-0354&#13;
$75.00 .&#13;
SPACE HEATER - very good&#13;
condItion. 6325 8th Ave. 652-6669.&#13;
SKIS - 170 em. Head 360's.&#13;
WIth Marker step in binding&#13;
Used once. $150. 633-781. s.&#13;
RAINCOAT with zipout ile&#13;
h~ng. Size 38 regular - w~rn&#13;
twice - natural tan. Originall&#13;
$45 - sell for $15. Call 554-917:&#13;
PHOTO COpy SERVICE&#13;
~o 81&#13;
2X14, 19c ea. plus taxCup&#13;
o much longer co . an&#13;
make all k' d py too. We&#13;
starn .10 s of rubber&#13;
us f~: ~usmessmen contact&#13;
Service. Th~n6~Zr Statement&#13;
Roosevelt Rd K Mart, 3520&#13;
4025. ., enosha. 652-&#13;
The Dime Beerl&#13;
LUNCHEON SPECIAL&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN" KENOSHA&#13;
Bought and sold&#13;
(we buy and sell)&#13;
lA_little out of th,e way,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
MCFarlands Auto sales&#13;
7904 WASHINGTON&#13;
AVENUE RACINE.&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
Mon_Fri&#13;
A II YOU can eat&#13;
$ ·99&#13;
First IOoz. beer&#13;
$.01 per oz.&#13;
Couch - fold out bed and gas&#13;
stove. Call 637-1556.&#13;
FILM MAKERS - need help&#13;
.makmg your film for class? A&#13;
s~asoned film maker is at your&#13;
disp~sal at no money cost. For&#13;
details, call Jerry, 654-5188,&#13;
between 10 a.m. and 12 a.m.&#13;
INDICATIONS (a literary&#13;
ma~azine) needs poems, short&#13;
stones, plays and what have&#13;
you. Drop your Iiterary work off&#13;
at Newscope office.&#13;
Ludwig Drum Set .......Blue&#13;
sparkle 3 piece with cymbojs hi-'&#13;
hat, etc. Was $424 asking $250&#13;
A-I. Phone 554-9174. .&#13;
FCOIL&#13;
I&#13;
K&#13;
6&#13;
GUITARS: From $12.&#13;
a 58-2832 after 4 p.m.&#13;
~ Bedroom Home, 1% bath, builtlOS,&#13;
see through fire-place, 2%&#13;
car ?ttached garage, % acre lot,&#13;
I mile from Parkside - asking&#13;
$34,900 by owner. 552-8183.&#13;
LINED, EMBROIDERED&#13;
SHEEP SKIN COAT- Woman's&#13;
- 654-3170.&#13;
EngliSh Sprin S· -&#13;
old. AKC Go ger p~mels, 6 weeks&#13;
dog. 639.4593o~2~ntlng and family&#13;
Racine. Wis: Cedar Creek St.•&#13;
ouality sportswear&#13;
for wOllen&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SKIRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNtC TOr$&#13;
HUNDREDS OF BLoum&#13;
ANN'S SMUTWUI&#13;
3120 WASHINGTON AU&#13;
RACINE&#13;
I&#13;
WEDNESOAY NIGHT&#13;
A" 10 oz mUl' 011'"&#13;
a pence an OUiU&#13;
Explore the world 01 ESP&#13;
Norman Slater, APt· bY""&#13;
only. 654·2375. - BROWSE - BreadlOlf"'-:&#13;
261Broad Street, LlU~&#13;
Ch icago . casette tlP'~:&#13;
working tape Doof'Sr .... -&#13;
Newscope office. - 2 pro Ski Boots. I- flGI'III&#13;
narrow men's; 1- ~&#13;
men's. Bolb in good ~&#13;
$15 a pair. CallEUen~&#13;
.;&#13;
Come Touch Me· An ... ,...,.....&#13;
by Ron Schulz and ~&#13;
Available at all UVl~&#13;
.... Ill'"&#13;
FOR SALE - MUs'U "",'"&#13;
size 14. 25 inches MWlI·&#13;
$50.00. Anit., 6S2-67~ ----:,......&#13;
JUDO UNIFORM5,~"&#13;
10~&#13;
~&#13;
FOUND: sung" .. ~~&#13;
Jacket. contad lOS:" ...&#13;
In_~~~~~~I~ cen ~&#13;
Ta~loIIit~&#13;
LOST: 1 navy:::;~&#13;
in vicinity of G ~ ..&#13;
about Sept. 20.&#13;
654-1593.&#13;
Page6 :\EW COPE October 11, 1971 McGovern Urges Youth To Participate&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
system still works. "I would say this. Nothing is beyond&#13;
the first time around, or if you f&#13;
backs." su fer a few&#13;
He added that the 18-20 year Ids&#13;
million peopl~ with a vote a 0&#13;
d repr&#13;
presidential election was d~id ~ that the&#13;
votes. "I don't know what more e by one&#13;
opportunity for young people to ~an_ be done lo&#13;
I It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Am...eA""Lc-o.A,&#13;
~ Lc\~rn.e.n.t&#13;
MAOHlSIUM IUoCING WHULS&#13;
Mike Davis Speed City&#13;
4807 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA , WISCONSIN&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
I. ·2 RA:\lBLER - Automatic&#13;
good condition, best offer. 554'.&#13;
2665.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus Campe,- Stove&#13;
re frig .• and 50 gal. gas tank, in'.&#13;
eluded. First S750.00 takes all. Call&#13;
632 ss.u afte,- s :30&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc&#13;
Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing . Phone 6S-' 8770 or&#13;
Newscope office. Leave message for&#13;
R,ck Pazera .&#13;
'ii Ford Ma,erick: 6 cyl. , stick.&#13;
3•200 mile $2,700 or best offer&#13;
O\'Cr $2,650. ALSO Vox 12 string&#13;
folk electric guitar _ once&#13;
longed to 'eil Diamond -&#13;
$525. Inquire 1602 A, 6lst St.&#13;
Kenosha . '&#13;
DODGE D.\RT- 1965. $495 or&#13;
-i ~~fer. i'.\tu t sell. Excellent&#13;
co~d1tton. 632-4422 ext. 202. Miss&#13;
Brigg , 8·5 p.m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp;. Go&#13;
Go Dance . 632 371S or 633-380S.&#13;
\\'A:\TED - Guitar case&#13;
cheap. 554-9174. For a Folk&#13;
guitar.&#13;
WANTED: Male student to&#13;
share one bedroom, furnished&#13;
a~artment at 1327 Howe St., Rcme:&#13;
$10 per week. Contact&#13;
Robm - 634-4775.&#13;
MEN - Your spare time is needed&#13;
by a boy 7 • lTyears old who doesn't&#13;
have a father. Can you provide an&#13;
e~~mple Of good character and&#13;
c_,t,~enship while shooting pool,&#13;
f,Shong, skating, etc.? If so call Big&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha, Inc. 694_6585_&#13;
HELP WANT~0 - 2 Spanish guitar&#13;
players work on Pizza Hut. Phone&#13;
SSl-8906 or stop in and ask for John.&#13;
NEf:DED - Poetry, short&#13;
s~ones, drama for " 1 ndications"&#13;
magazine. Deadline&#13;
ov. l , 1971. Send to: Newscope&#13;
H\\'Y A aod Wood Rd. Kenosha'&#13;
W. ' •&#13;
IS.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
F~R SALE - Lovely Lenox&#13;
chma. Starlight pattern. Service&#13;
for six (almost). Cost $240&#13;
Sacrifice of $95. 543-3149. ·&#13;
FREE! Who will adopt a timid&#13;
sensitive shelty ( toy collie). On~&#13;
ye~r old male who needs&#13;
patience and Jove for training 543-3149. .&#13;
redemption," he answered smilingly. "If you don't&#13;
like the way the system is working, join me and&#13;
help me change it!" He was interrupted by applause.&#13;
"I know that after the Chicago Convention&#13;
a lot of young people just said, 'To hell with emphasized. e tnfluentia1 ~&#13;
But if he evaded a few quest' '&#13;
politics.' seemed a bit fatuous, he was al ions, and at ti "That is not the way to change the course of&#13;
American politics. The way to do it is the way I've&#13;
tried to do it- by working within the party.&#13;
"M Y f" t t· · so on the 1rs ac 10n 1f I were Preside llloney States would be to end the war Ont of the U&#13;
over I would follow the precede ~ce the llar&#13;
Lincoln set at the end of the c·".1&#13;
that Abr "I chared the Democratic Commission on&#13;
Party Reform· to look at the way we nominate a&#13;
president," he continued. "I think our states are&#13;
making great progress as a result of that commission's&#13;
guidelines. I think we are going to have a more open and honest delegate selection process&#13;
in 1972. I'm willing to take my chances.&#13;
"So get into politics," he offered, "get active,&#13;
and don't be discouraged if you get a bloody nose&#13;
. iv1 War issue a g~neral amnesty for draft re .. I \I'&#13;
He said, too, of his recent tri s~sters:&#13;
was struck not only by the drug ad;o Y1&#13;
etnalllbut&#13;
with the general demoralizedcbon Pto&#13;
troops. I really feel we ought t state of&#13;
with almost the urgency tnat O get them&#13;
people from a burning building~ne would r&#13;
Patronize Newscope Advertisers&#13;
ALADDI&#13;
. FLOWER SHOP&#13;
1n west ... ,,&#13;
Rae ire -r~I.&#13;
:J/ie Uffe'I Supper Cful ~ • ·~~ 1700 Sheridan lei.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
The most&#13;
Meaningful Semester&#13;
you'll ever spend ...&#13;
could be the one on&#13;
World Campus Afloat&#13;
Sailing Feb. 1972 to Africa and the Orient&#13;
Through a transfer format, more than 5,000&#13;
students from 450 campuses have participated&#13;
for a semester in this unique program in international&#13;
education. WCA will broaden your horizons, literally and&#13;
figuratively ... and give you a better chance to&#13;
make it- meaningfully- in this changing world.&#13;
You'll study at sea with an experienced cosmopolitan&#13;
faculty, and then during port stops&#13;
you'll study the world itself. You'll discover that&#13;
no matter how foreign and far-away, you have a&#13;
lot in common with people of other lands.&#13;
WCA isn't as expensive as you might think;&#13;
we've done our best to bring it within reach of&#13;
most college students. Write today for free&#13;
details.&#13;
TEACHERS: Summer travel with credit for teachers&#13;
and administrators.&#13;
"~"~ • Write Today to , Chapman College,&#13;
Box CC26, Orange, California 92666&#13;
sought and sold&#13;
(We buy and sell)&#13;
'A_little out of the way,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
MCfarlands Auto sales&#13;
7904 WASHINGTON&#13;
AVENUE RACINE.&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
ouality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SKIRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
HUNDREDS OF BLOUSE!&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWEU&#13;
3120 W.ASHINGTON AV£&#13;
RACINE&#13;
. The Dime Beerl&#13;
LUNCHEON SPECIAL&#13;
MOn-fri&#13;
All vou can eat&#13;
$·99&#13;
first 10oz. beer&#13;
$ .01 per oz.&#13;
I&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
All 10 oz mugs ol btll&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN· KENOSHA&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FOR SALE - Head skis and&#13;
bindings 210 centimeters. $3 C II 5. a 632-1611, ext. 783.&#13;
Scuba tank, boot, gauge,&#13;
re~ulator, back pack and&#13;
weight belt. $100. Call 632-1611&#13;
ext. 783.&#13;
F?R SALE - Bausch &amp; Lomb&#13;
Mt~ro~cope. 2 eye pieces, 3&#13;
obJecbve lens. Call 639-0354&#13;
$75.00 ·&#13;
SPA~~ HEATER - very good&#13;
condition. 6325 8th Ave. 652--6669.&#13;
S~IS - 170 cm. Head 360's.&#13;
With Marker step in bindin s Used once. $150. 633-781. g .&#13;
~~INCOAT with zipout ii&#13;
hrung. Size 38 regular p e twice - t - worn na ural tan. Originall&#13;
$45 - sell for $15. Call 554-917i&#13;
PHOTO COPY SERVICE&#13;
~o s1 2xl4, 19c ea. plus tax Cup o much longer co . an make all kinds PY too. We&#13;
stamps B . of rubber&#13;
us for. M~s~~~fsmen contact&#13;
Service. The Orcfer Statement&#13;
Roosevelt Rd K Mart, 3520&#13;
4025. ·, enosha. 652-&#13;
Couch - fold out bed and gas&#13;
stove. Call 637-1556.&#13;
FIL~ MAKERS - need help&#13;
makmg your film for class? A&#13;
s~asoned film maker is at your&#13;
disp~sal at no money cost. For&#13;
details, call Jerry, 654-5188,&#13;
between 10 a.m. and 12 a .m.&#13;
INDICATIONS (a literary&#13;
ma~azine) needs poems, short&#13;
stories, plays and what have&#13;
you. Drop your literary work off&#13;
at Newscope office.&#13;
Ludwig Drum Set - Blue&#13;
sparkle 3 piece with cymbols hi-·&#13;
hat, etc. Was $424 asking $250&#13;
A-1. Phone 554-9174. ·&#13;
FOLK GUITARS: From $12&#13;
Call 658-2832 after 4 p.m. ·&#13;
~ Bedroom Home, l ½ bath, builtms,&#13;
see through fire-place 211:&#13;
car ~ttached garage,½ acr~ lot~&#13;
1 mile from Parkside - asking&#13;
$34,900 by owner. 552-8183.&#13;
LINED, EMBROIDERED&#13;
SHEEPSKIN COAT- Woman's - 654-3170.&#13;
EngliSh Sp · old. AKC ~nger Sp~niels, 6 weeks&#13;
dog. 639-"'59l 0 ~2~untmg and family&#13;
Racine, Wis.' Cedar Creek St.,&#13;
Explore the world of ESP&#13;
Norman Slater, A!)t. by,_.-&#13;
only. 65"'-2375.&#13;
---------&#13;
BROWSE - ereacnoaf ~ •&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake~~&#13;
...--------- - . Chicago . casette tape to 11'"" tt&#13;
working tape 0oors, Byrd!,&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
---------&#13;
2 pr. Ski Boots. 1- Nordill narrow men's; 1 · Ka51ingtf&#13;
men's. Both in good c~&#13;
$~&#13;
Come Touch Me, A newpoetr!_,;&#13;
by Ron Schulz and L•rt ~&#13;
A~&#13;
FOR SALE - Muskral 11¥&#13;
size 14. 25 inches IOl19 Ntil'&#13;
sso.oo. Anita, 652-6754.__......, =-------=--3 ,ndi' JUDO UNIFORMS,Slle&#13;
10~ "'"'' &#13;
Poge8 NEWSCOPE QetoIJer 11, 1971&#13;
Scholarships Made Available&#13;
the newly-formed University&#13;
of Wisconsin Scholarship&#13;
Foundation of Kenosha has&#13;
been accorded official status as&#13;
a tax-exempt foundation&#13;
authorized to receive tax.&#13;
deductible contributions, its&#13;
board of directors has announced.&#13;
The foundation was organized&#13;
by the Wisconsin Alumni Club of&#13;
Kenosha litO. expand its&#13;
scholarship program and revise&#13;
existing criteria" for grants as&#13;
well as to insure lax-deductible&#13;
status Cor contributors.&#13;
From 1965 through the&#13;
current academic year.&#13;
Kenosha Alumni have awarded&#13;
more than $10,000 in scholarships&#13;
to 35 Kenosha County&#13;
students attending University of&#13;
Wisconsin campuses. The bulk&#13;
of the awards have gone to&#13;
tudents attending UWPerkstde&#13;
and, prior to opening&#13;
of the new four-year school in&#13;
1968, to students attending the&#13;
former Kenosha Center campus.&#13;
Alumni awards for the 1971-72&#13;
academic year total $2,680. The .&#13;
swn represents full tuition for&#13;
five Kenosha students, three of&#13;
whom are attending UW-P.&#13;
Prior to 1965, the alumni&#13;
awarded at least one scholarship&#13;
of $100 each year.&#13;
The foundation will offer&#13;
scholarships in live different&#13;
categories depending upon the&#13;
availability of funds and&#13;
identification of qualified&#13;
candidates.&#13;
The categories are:&#13;
National Merit Scholarship -&#13;
awarded to one or more high&#13;
school graduates who are&#13;
National Merit Finalists but do&#13;
not receive one of the Merit&#13;
awards or other sizeable&#13;
scholarships.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
I1II 11'1'" I 'II'~;~ I' ~11'l'lt'&#13;
.. ----- Doumtoum Kenosha ---- ..&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
I I I'" (;ROUND BEEF (;RILLfD COUNTRY&#13;
ON I;RFNCII CRUST HAM r. CHEESE ON&#13;
HRfl\D DRESSED WIlOLF WHEA.T BUN&#13;
WITH CRISP WIT" LETIlICE&#13;
'ETTUCE AND OUR TOMATO AND&#13;
SPECIAl SAUCE MAYONNAISE&#13;
80c .80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
i\ TRIPI.E OECKER Of BURGER CHEESE&#13;
MACON I.ETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAIC;F. ON TOAST 90c&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHf;:RIQAN. ROAD.. SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
... ,oan-..., ---naM,,",*ClM'ACTl&#13;
............. 0....-&#13;
--............. ,.....&#13;
...--.-.....,....&#13;
.....&#13;
Leadership and Service -&#13;
awarded to one or more&#13;
students continuing at a UW&#13;
campus who have dem0!lstrated&#13;
outstanding leadershIp&#13;
and service to church, school&#13;
and-or community.&#13;
Performing Arts - awarded&#13;
to one or more students who&#13;
have demonstrated outstanding&#13;
performance in music, drama&#13;
or art.&#13;
Letters and Science -&#13;
awarded to one or more high&#13;
school graduates who ha ve&#13;
demonstrated exceptional and&#13;
outstanding ability in one or&#13;
more of the liberal arts&#13;
disciplines.&#13;
Pre-professional - awarded&#13;
to one or more high school&#13;
'graduates who have demonstrated&#13;
exceptional ability and&#13;
performance in one or more of&#13;
lhe disciplines normally&#13;
associated with the profession&#13;
he is interested in pursuing&#13;
(engineering, dentistry,&#13;
medicine, law, etc.).&#13;
Final selection of all candidates&#13;
is made by the&#13;
executive board of the Alumni&#13;
club.&#13;
Members of the foundation's&#13;
board of directors, all of&#13;
Kenosha, are: Robert Baker,&#13;
III, 7761 Sixth Ave.; Nels&#13;
Christensen, 6404 - 40th Ave.;&#13;
Mark Gorman, 572 - 49th Ave.;&#13;
Robert Haubrich, 8323 - 43rd&#13;
Ave.; Frances Jaeschke, 6220&#13;
Third ave.; Ray F..Johnson,&#13;
6565Fifth Ave.; Charles Kugel,&#13;
Rt. 4, Box 659; Lee Pierangeli,&#13;
716 - 58th St.; Fred PIous, 7114&#13;
Third Ave.; Eugene Putman,&#13;
4300 Taft Road; Terry Rose,&#13;
7933 - 47th Court; Robert B.&#13;
Schneider, 407 - 73rd St.; Rita&#13;
Tallent, 6313- 42nd Ave.; Ralph&#13;
Tenuta, 4227 Wilson Road; and&#13;
Mary Winton, 3706 - 59th SI.&#13;
student&#13;
Teaching&#13;
APplications&#13;
spring Semester 1972&#13;
contact&#13;
carolyn Gannaway&#13;
Room 266 Tallent&#13;
I" Four Sizes 9" - 12" • , .... _ I, ..&#13;
AlSO&#13;
• illS. S'AGHPTI • CHICk(N&#13;
GNOCCHI • UVIOLI • LA SAGH.&#13;
• SUO FOOD -e SANDWICHES&#13;
CAUr -OUTS - DElIVERY&#13;
"YOU .'HG WI '.'HC"&#13;
657·9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Some fanciful viewers see it as a giant gungle gym ...&#13;
conjure a modern sculpture with Orwellian overtones. .:-&#13;
structure above is actually the framework for the COOlin' ..&#13;
the heating and chilling plant presently under construe I':&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside. The 45-foottall tower wID-.&#13;
tion as a man-made waterfall, part of a closed cycle in wbldl ....&#13;
used in the heating and chilling process for all academJe ~&#13;
on campus is cooled by being run in small droplets over the .....&#13;
grids of the tower's sides. The chilled water then is retW'lled.1It&#13;
academic buildings through an underground tunnel system "-&#13;
it picks up heat, then is returned to the tower for re-cyella•. _.&#13;
also will be used for steam in the heating operation. WbeII-.&#13;
pieted. the tower will be lost to public view - encased bye~&#13;
walls on two sides and by brick-faced louvred walls on the otlttrt ..&#13;
sides. In the meantime, it contributes an intriguing sllbneue &amp;I&#13;
Parkside's prairie skyline. General contractor for the be.tiIe iii&#13;
chilling plant is Nelson Incorporated of Wisconsin, a Rae~&#13;
firm.&#13;
LaFollette Raps Sanguine&#13;
by Kelly Intusino&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Last Wednesday Tremper&#13;
High School hosted Parkside's&#13;
professor of Ecology and&#13;
Chemistry, Doug LaFollette.&#13;
In his speech Lalrullette&#13;
called out for student involvement&#13;
in matters concerning&#13;
the environment including&#13;
the recycling of cans,&#13;
bottles and paper. He also&#13;
brought out the idea of parental&#13;
apathy calling on the students to&#13;
set examples for their parents.&#13;
LaFollette, himself very&#13;
active in the politics of Ecology,&#13;
brought to the attention of the&#13;
students the fact that one&#13;
ecological rape of the environment&#13;
may he delayed or&#13;
halted by presenting suits in&#13;
courts and working within the&#13;
framework of the legal setup of&#13;
the government.&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
'bone 658·2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
One of lbe instanees dtad bJ&#13;
LaFollette was lhe delay of til!&#13;
Navy project SanguiDe.&#13;
Project Sanguine is I NaYJ&#13;
project to build an immeIIe'&#13;
transmitting station is IIlII1bln&#13;
Wisconsin. This would ClIIIIiItll&#13;
burying a matrix of eabIea 111&#13;
feet under ground and donudiaI&#13;
the countryside of lIe-'&#13;
natural landscape. 1be IJIIII'I'&#13;
of the project would be to ..&#13;
messages, world wide, to U.s.&#13;
submarines. The reo.... for fa&#13;
suit against the projectII'"'&#13;
fold; one, it wl1l rape tho ..&#13;
viromnent, two, ~&#13;
studies by two scientisll....&#13;
that the project may not ....&#13;
.work.&#13;
Mr. LaFollette's last calllD&#13;
the students was to wak .... -&#13;
realize who now has tile P""":&#13;
in the country and wbo iboaId&#13;
have it.&#13;
r&#13;
-···&#13;
UW_PARKSIDE&#13;
I STUDENT ACTIVlTlIS&#13;
I PRESEMTS&#13;
•&#13;
Bob Reitman'&#13;
s&#13;
~&#13;
"Rockin' Roll&#13;
Revival" --&#13;
PRIZES FoR THE BEsT&#13;
50'S COSTUMES&#13;
NTESTS ALSO OTHER co&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT.:&#13;
. 9:00 P.M._1:00 A.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
$&#13;
1 PARHSIDE'&#13;
ADM. D&#13;
WIS. 10 REQUIRE&#13;
Pages NEWSCOPE October 11, 1971&#13;
Scholarships Made Available&#13;
the newly-formed University&#13;
of Wisconsin Scholarship&#13;
Foundation of Kenosha has&#13;
been accorded official status as&#13;
a tax-exempt foundation&#13;
authorized to receive taxdeductible&#13;
contributions, its&#13;
board of directors has an- nounced.&#13;
The foundation was organized&#13;
by the Wi consin Alumni Club of&#13;
Kenosha "to . expand its&#13;
. cholarship program and revise&#13;
existing criteria" for grants as&#13;
well a to in ure tax-d .ductible&#13;
tatu for contributors.&#13;
From 1965 through the&#13;
current academic year,&#13;
Kenosha Alumni have awarded&#13;
more than $10,000 in cholarhip&#13;
· to 35 Kenosha County&#13;
stud nt attending University of&#13;
Wi con in campuses. The bulk&#13;
the award have gone to&#13;
tudent attending UWP~rk&#13;
id and, prior to opening&#13;
of the new four-year school in&#13;
1968, to students attending the&#13;
former Kenosha Center campus.&#13;
&#13;
Alumni awards for the 1971-72&#13;
academic year total $2,680. The&#13;
sum represents full tuition for&#13;
five Kenosha students, three of&#13;
whom are attending UW-P.&#13;
Prior to 1965, the alumni&#13;
awarded at least one scholarship&#13;
of $100 each year.&#13;
The foundation will offer&#13;
scholarships in five different&#13;
categories depending upon the&#13;
availability of funds and&#13;
identification of qualified&#13;
candidates.&#13;
The categories are:&#13;
National Merit Scholarship -&#13;
awarded to one or more high&#13;
school graduates who are&#13;
National Merit Finalists but do&#13;
not receive one of the Merit&#13;
awards or other sizeable&#13;
scholarships.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
._ _____ Doumtou•n Kenosha----•&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS. GRINGO SPECIAL PORKY SPECIAL 1 1 lh l ,ll()lJ, 0 HF.Fl l,RILLF.0 COU 'TRY&#13;
01'.' l·RI' ·c11 RUST HAM r. CIIEFSE ON&#13;
HRE,\I) DRESSF.D WIIOLF WHEAT BU&#13;
\ ITII CRISP WITII LETTUCE ! f': ITllCF A ·o OUR TOMATO /\ND&#13;
SPF.C"IAI &lt;;AtlCE MAYO NAISE&#13;
80c .80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH 1\ Tllll'I I- OfCI\FR 01' BURCF.R CHEESE&#13;
HACO I Frnrcr TOMATO A D MAY&#13;
nr-;1':Al&lt;;F. O"I TOAST 90c&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHF.RIDAN ROADJ. SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
UnlYer'llyaWlloonln-Pcmlde&#13;
special&#13;
...._.._---e::-;:::::,-;;:;a- ·-T---.......... 0-....,1 11"'1t from yo,,,, atv ¥11 • ,-.,,-1y _,lod /u, F,m f1i11,1 ID --PAlllla "'"' n..,, on ... ,_,. _ a,rrc,1.....,,,-y _,"'I 11"'11 ___ 10 GIJIEVA, _ ~Ill.AMI. y-&#13;
_ .... , ...... ........ T,.._....,..,onh"om..,toOIMVA~dek.l••buse.&#13;
·---.••••••••••• Tho 1"11 lllrouf, 11w -,111 doy w, ~l. fltANCE. tho--&#13;
Md .--..,., --lk1 ._ ., IUIICW'I s,10.1.t at-6.1061-t ., --~ of •-..t ...,._,. of n&gt;wf..._ Abundant .-.ow. f8ffllrbibllLWllllhanefWDDnl.naw 1'om _,,,.., 10 •pan's •th .,..,,,...__ runs from top to bottom. COUii,.&#13;
~&#13;
CNIWL - -- by Em,lo Al..._ Frencn Olymp,c "'"'-1. 2 ... _, G ..-, 38 oi, ond chw hhs. 30.000 _,,. ps hour I lki j&amp;-.&#13;
35 nwud ,una: inctudtn9 IURICJfll', t1111est Otvmpte run, st 1. JC:hool. ·200 ....;_&#13;
IOl'I. • 50,.n,wi mwtl---=elnd re.:ue teem, 2sbttngrinks.lnd 16~&#13;
=SIJ.00 for 12-2 hour -,,,._ ,_,,_._,ltd ond - S2.00 ps ..&#13;
- ....... • • • ••••• •• • • ·•• You,~"' lhl*•--wtll be., modlrn new.-inwitsandCNlltJ: .&#13;
- . k-. boloony- ............. bods. --&#13;
- _ _......, • • • • • • • • • • On .,. ••uh dly ttwe •H bl 1 ••'If slllom race to, vour grc:M4) with an_. _.., wt 1hl...,.. oompla11 w.tt1 ..,., p,,na Ind troph-.&#13;
...................... ln-VAMlhthrw.-0pt-fortho1doy&#13;
(D ~:~~A ~L ond "'°' .,,.,,_, dlport.., __&#13;
(2) Siu In • do-t ~- ad! • I.A PLAGN1 m t'*i 90 ,o - 1or .. ...... Q) 0..-, ., tho --for Cll!•VA -• - wiH 1-llwdoy lor~&#13;
•&#13;
- ond ..,_,._ 0-....,t., GIIIIVA., • good ca._.,_ . ..... •••.•....•• ln PAN1.1n11w_.,,,._..,,,_,torPA1tia&#13;
""'Pm_.__.,,.on1tw1-i.o- · -----• _, ,_,.,,. yoa .. u encl, vour Aw Franoo fl::..:.:. good.....,., - lie&#13;
...... ... . ... . .. . .... . .....,......, ..... 11._vou, .&#13;
_IO_t _ .... , -.:.:=:-OffNOI Ml ll\lllCIN ..... l,t&#13;
---- ... -.- ---- ......&#13;
----- _mt -&#13;
lODqys&#13;
9nlY$264. .___T __ _&#13;
~~~ f4&#13;
--&#13;
-...... ___ _ 11111&#13;
Leadership and Service -&#13;
awarded to one or more&#13;
students continuing at a UW&#13;
campus who have demo!lstrated&#13;
outstanding leadership&#13;
and service to church, school&#13;
and-or community. Performing Arts - awarded&#13;
to one or more students who&#13;
have demonstrated outstanding&#13;
performance In music, drama&#13;
or art.&#13;
Letters and Science -&#13;
awarded to one or more high&#13;
school graduates who have&#13;
demonstrated exceptional and&#13;
outstanding ability in one or&#13;
more of the liberal arts&#13;
disciplines.&#13;
Pre-professional - awarded&#13;
to one or more high school&#13;
graduates who have demonstrated&#13;
exceptional ability and&#13;
performance in one or more of&#13;
the disciplines normally&#13;
associated with the profession&#13;
he is interested in pursuing&#13;
( engineering, dentistry,&#13;
medicine, Jaw, etc.).&#13;
Final selection of all candidates&#13;
is made by the&#13;
executive board of the Alumni&#13;
club.&#13;
Members of the foundation's&#13;
board of directors, all of&#13;
Kenosha, are: Robert Baker,&#13;
III, 7761 Sixth Ave.; Nels&#13;
Christensen, 6404 - 40th Ave. ;&#13;
Mark Gorman, 572 - 49th Ave. ;&#13;
Robert Haubrich, 8323 - 43rd&#13;
Ave.; Frances Jaeschke, 6220&#13;
Third ave.; Ray F .. Johnson,&#13;
6565 Fifth Ave.; Charles Kugel,&#13;
Rt. 4, Box 659 ; Lee Pierangeli,&#13;
716 - 58th St. ; Fred Pious, 7114&#13;
Third Ave.; Eugene Putman,&#13;
4300 Taft Road ; Terry Rose,&#13;
7933 - 47th Court; Robert B.&#13;
Schneider, 407 - 73rd St.; Rita&#13;
Tallent, 6313 - 42nd Ave.; Ralph&#13;
Tenuta, 4227 Wilson Road; and&#13;
Mary Winton, 3706 - 59th St.&#13;
student&#13;
reaching&#13;
APPiications&#13;
spring semester 1972&#13;
contact&#13;
carolyn&#13;
111 Four Sizes 9•• . 12" . 14•• • J6··&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• IIIS • SPAGHBTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • IAVIOU • LA SAGNA 0 UA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARltY-OUTS - DELIVHY&#13;
"YOU IIHG w, 11/HC••&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Some fanciful viewers see it as a giant gungle gym while ot1ien&#13;
conjure a mode.rn sculpture with Orwellian overtones, but ~&#13;
structure above 1s actually the framework for the cooling lower ti&#13;
the heating and chilling plant presently under construction at th&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside. The 45-foot tall tower will fur~&#13;
tion as a man-made waterfall, part of a closed cycle in which wattr&#13;
used in the heating and chilling process for all academic buildlap&#13;
on.campus is cooled ~y being run?' small droplets over the slantlag grids of the tower's sides. The chilled water then is returned to !ht&#13;
academic buildings through an underground tunnel system wbtre&#13;
it picks up heat, then is returned to the tower for re-cycling. \\attr&#13;
also will be used for steam in the heating operation. When completed,&#13;
the tower will be lost to public view - encased by coorrttr&#13;
walls on two sides and by brick-faced louvred walls on the other l•o&#13;
sides. In the meantime, it contributes an intriguing silhouttlf l&#13;
Parkside's prairie skyline. General contractor for the heating and&#13;
chilling plant is Nelson Incorporated of Wisconsin, a Racine-based&#13;
firm.&#13;
Lafollette Raps Sanguine&#13;
by Kelly Intusino&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Last Wednesday Tremper&#13;
High School hosted Parkside's&#13;
professor of Ecology and&#13;
Chemistry, Doug LaFollette.&#13;
In his speech LaFollette&#13;
called out for student involvement&#13;
in matters concerning&#13;
the environment including&#13;
the recycling of cans,&#13;
bottles and paper. He also&#13;
brought out the idea of parental&#13;
apathy calling on the students to&#13;
set examples for their parents.&#13;
LaFollette, himself very&#13;
active in the politics of Ecology,&#13;
brought to the attention of the ·students the fact that one&#13;
ecological rape of the environment&#13;
may be delayed or&#13;
halted by presenting suits in&#13;
courts and working within the ~&#13;
framework of the legal setup of&#13;
the government.&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKE:E&#13;
One of the instances cited by&#13;
LaFollette was the delay of ~&#13;
Navy project Sanguine.&#13;
Project Sanguine is a NI\')'&#13;
project to build an immense · transmitting station in northem&#13;
Wisconsin. This would coosist d&#13;
burying a matrix of cables siI&#13;
feet under ground and denuding&#13;
the countryside of trees and&#13;
natural landscape. The~&#13;
of the project would be to seod&#13;
messages, world wide, to U&#13;
submarines. The reason for lht&#13;
suit against the project is&#13;
fold; one, it will rape the environment,&#13;
two, independenl&#13;
studies by two scientists&#13;
that the project may not&#13;
·work.&#13;
Mr. LaFollette's last call&#13;
the students was to wake up&#13;
realize who now has the ~&#13;
in the country and who&#13;
have it.&#13;
r-------- 1 UW-PARKSIDE 1&#13;
·= STUDENT ACTIVITIES I ·I PRESENTS I&#13;
I&#13;
B~·s&#13;
"Rockin' Roll&#13;
Revival''--&#13;
E eEST PRIZES FOR TH&#13;
so•s cosTuMES&#13;
rHfsTS&#13;
ALSO OTHER CO&#13;
SATURDAY, ocT,: . 9:00 P.M.-l:0O A ..&#13;
STUDENT ACTl','ITIES&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
$l pARt&lt;SIOE &amp;&#13;
ADM. ED&#13;
WIS. ID RfQUIR </text>
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>English</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63478">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>ralph nader</name>
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        <name>richard nixon</name>
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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>"Do those people exist in prison?</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>&#13;
'Do those people exist in prison?'&#13;
By Bill Sorensen&#13;
Fine-Arts Editor&#13;
"'l1lE CAGE" - Rick Cluchey&#13;
The audience was accused and&#13;
IIIeoced Thursday night when Barb1ft&#13;
Productions presented. The Cage;&#13;
alilegorical play that invited us all&#13;
au an inferno of penance that we&#13;
lIIped in writing, directing and&#13;
A place where humility is&#13;
upas poor replacement for the&#13;
01 men.&#13;
Plainly effective and sincere, with&#13;
I'I'fuI humnr, the play retained' its&#13;
.11I goalwith the rabid dialogue of&#13;
It enclosure, bordering on The&#13;
Ilorquis De Sade, and not to be&#13;
_ken for Gorilla Theatre. _&#13;
lilt Slatewas empty except for a&#13;
Ioptismaltoiletand a few blankets, and&#13;
.. presence of Iigbt that varied from&#13;
lIIzmc to bloodred. We are confronted&#13;
.... the Sounds of Prison and prepared&#13;
.. f) mWard. On our odyssey we meet&#13;
IIot&lt;het,a demerited man whose&#13;
""""""nia leads the games. The :=..exceeds brilliance in tbe bands of&#13;
Nechels. Doc is tbe Seeming&#13;
rr.c..lor, he hustles in and out of the&#13;
IIIk thaI surround him. The part is&#13;
::,redasreal by Donald Ross. Al is a ,iafStd homosexual,his self hatred is&#13;
..;:: through a biting dialogue of&#13;
""eelom" n~ellation that tested and&#13;
• plo theskJilsof Jack Clemons. Jive&#13;
"" yedby Gary Pettinger, he is the&#13;
~SOner I the matrix of the game,&#13;
r_ or hISyounggirlfriend. In reality,&#13;
-"I IS a . k&#13;
Illaxed a . qulC humored fellow,&#13;
"tr nd.n control but in the play ans! .' ,&#13;
~' ormation was complete in its&#13;
b7 H. Ie COnfusion.The guards, played&#13;
.... ~taEVerharl and Terry Joyce&#13;
11th H po-hke and in accordance&#13;
enry "B ghd d" t'Qrnmenl" . a a Everhart's Soaet ,,' Prasons are a microcosm of&#13;
li'I~r' t~e anger and situational&#13;
IIIl.alleY 0 function reflected on a&#13;
,,_ r SCale.&#13;
',", play' "'-lentb s general excellence was&#13;
"-1dent t&#13;
utreasons for this are not so&#13;
~I 0 the audience . . . Bruce&#13;
IItsl~,atchel)exemplifies this best&#13;
~.itttion cnme" was Conscientious&#13;
'-inerly&#13;
'ano~ out on appeal, he was&#13;
late, WhereS udent. at San Francisco&#13;
TVBroadc .he majored in Radio and&#13;
~ltlped asm~. In his senior year he&#13;
"lIoie.j at ~ mterest in drama' and&#13;
llft&gt;est.,. I e Untversity for ne'\fly a&#13;
""ed th~l~ 1967, he .became so in-&#13;
~inrad. dldn t flO1Shhis master's&#13;
""IlIO.ed'lhis loand ~e)evision.Later, he&#13;
..,.,. Jab' d'UrsUlt and studied at an&#13;
be rn~~anada, learning Mime. In&#13;
l\e Alar' Dan Caldwell and worked&#13;
~IY~~ Shakespeare festival.&#13;
~uerry :aaspired to films such a.s&#13;
tement and zabrisky&#13;
photographs by bill sqrnrsnr&#13;
NS: Do you think it would have helped&#13;
the situation at Attica if Rockefeller&#13;
had appeared as the prisoners&#13;
requested?&#13;
Bruce: Definitely. Just poor judgement&#13;
was used all around. Myself, being a&#13;
conscientious objector I really fell an&#13;
importance to the value of life .. , and&#13;
Idon't think that someone can respect&#13;
anyone else's life if he doesn't respect&#13;
his own first, and I really felt thaI&#13;
Rockefeller should have stepped in,&#13;
even if it was to lie, even if it was to say&#13;
'Ya, we're going to grant you guys&#13;
everything you want, .. you can have&#13;
it all," just to save those lives, but by&#13;
not doing so 40 or possibly more have&#13;
been lost.&#13;
NS: Do you think the demands made by&#13;
the prisoners were justified?&#13;
Bruce: I think just about everyone of&#13;
them were very just demands, because&#13;
conditions in prisons are really, really&#13;
brutal .. ,you're not a human being in&#13;
a prison, you're an animal. They just&#13;
wanted the people to realize this, that&#13;
they are human beings. If the purpose&#13;
for going to prison is rehabilitation well&#13;
then all over the country, prisons have&#13;
failed in their jobs miserably and this is&#13;
what the prisoners were trying to point&#13;
out.&#13;
NS: Do you think the militancy inside&#13;
the prisons is jus,tified? ,&#13;
Bruce: Well how else is anybody gomg&#13;
to find out about it? What else can you&#13;
do? Finally, you're driven to a point&#13;
where you are an animal, and that&#13;
people are playing games w'.~ you on&#13;
the inside, plus on the ~uts1?e 1t~ sort of&#13;
an out of sight out of mmd Situation, and&#13;
when it comes to that it is the only way&#13;
you can get anybodY to hear about it. It&#13;
was very unfortunate what happened at&#13;
Attica or at San Quentin, but, my God,&#13;
what's happening now throughout the&#13;
country as far as people ~m~ng&#13;
aware has been amazing and tt 1S~Olng&#13;
to help in the future. Again, speaking of&#13;
the militancy behind prison walls and&#13;
all' first of all, they weren't trying to&#13;
es~ape and I don't think it would have&#13;
been that brutal or that militant, as you&#13;
asked earlier, had Rockefeller stepped&#13;
in or had the warden granted them all&#13;
th'eir demands, at least showed so~e&#13;
respect not only life of prisonser but hfe&#13;
of their own men,&#13;
NS' Bobby Seale showed up for about&#13;
fiv~ minutes .. ' ?O you t~k ~at&#13;
token visit accomphshed anythmg.&#13;
II don'l because&#13;
Bruce' Oh no I rea Y , . " t ell done everything had been pret y wII d 't&#13;
when he got out there, I rea Y on&#13;
think it helped at all. the&#13;
NS: What, if anything, has changed&#13;
prisoners' attitudes, not~~ ~~ s::;&#13;
Quentin, Tombs and s;'1that changed&#13;
prisons .. ' What 1S I 'from&#13;
their attitudeS? Is it something&#13;
the outside, or is it somelhing more&#13;
from the inside!&#13;
Bruce: I would think it, right now, is&#13;
more from the inside because you·\"e&#13;
got younger, smarler guys going to&#13;
prison, for such reasons as being CO·s,&#13;
or getting busted for dope . . , and&#13;
these are some very intelligent guys&#13;
who are becoming politically aware.&#13;
Plus I'm sure the Black Panthen from&#13;
the inside are informing their brothen&#13;
or&gt; the inside what their rights are. [I'&#13;
starling to hit everybody and they're&#13;
starting to wake up to it now bec:ause&#13;
they're g&lt;!lling some good information&#13;
from people that not ooIy come in from&#13;
the outside, and are a breath of fresh&#13;
air and maybe have an insJgllt to whal's&#13;
happening, but people who are stil1 0Cl&#13;
the outside trying to help&#13;
NS: The press told us that it "as&#13;
basically because the guards " re&#13;
while, and a 101 of the prison&lt;n ,,~&#13;
black that the trouble basically arose,&#13;
BNee Ned&gt;.t. (H"""'-'l&#13;
then again, if your play you say .the&#13;
black and white thing is kind of lost, m a&#13;
general brotherhood&#13;
Bruce: Maybe it's coming to that noW,&#13;
but in the past it hasn't been that wa)' at&#13;
all. As a mailer of fact, one of the&#13;
biggest problems is the guards p1aymg&#13;
little games with the prisoaers under&#13;
the theory that you have to keep the&#13;
prisoners separated in order to get&#13;
them into bars, so they will go up to&#13;
black prisoners and say, 'You better&#13;
watch it man, those black guy-s have&#13;
some knives and they're out to get you&#13;
guys: and then go over to the black&#13;
prisoners and say there are some wasp;s&#13;
and Nat.i lovers over there \\-ilo don t&#13;
Ukeyou blacks at all. We don't want ynu&#13;
to get burt, we cIon't want any trouble,&#13;
so we're just telling ynu and you'd&#13;
beller look out. So immediately there is&#13;
Uus paranoia that e&lt;hnlC or raCIal&#13;
that k..". u aong. But they are&#13;
star'LU1g to w up to Ulot t .-&#13;
Ynu're noI go to rUldtoo much more&#13;
of Ulol t gOtn on an ,....,...,&#13;
_ ,Do nu think the guardo wiD be put&#13;
under mere stralD h&lt;l:.- of Attlea&#13;
now'&#13;
IIntce, Idon't think tbe). i'llU!db&lt;! able&#13;
not to be&#13;
: Irs ically penonal problem&#13;
WIth the guar&lt;Ia thou&amp;h bo't .t'&#13;
IIntce, I don't know hooo to or tha&#13;
not ha\ b&lt;l:n in a a'. priJan&#13;
my If,r, in a reder1ll prIaon I&#13;
don't think the guard&gt; that I&#13;
~lilicd or that ell u-ained_ nd&#13;
the) \ got Ibetr httle the) ha&#13;
to pl •• too It unlor1W&gt;8l bul th&#13;
Illa,n the urden 01 the pr\Jnn hu&#13;
a b job and he ~d&#13;
hule bll bet or he d&#13;
nut for who' for bun. h I&#13;
to la • blUe:mOM!ume LO rnl.Df:h&#13;
mplceand I'&#13;
ondhe-.t.H '.not.-II a&#13;
;-bars on&#13;
, Do ynu think thaI th I,m·&#13;
pro\: no" of It&#13;
Attica'&#13;
IIntce: W 1I.• t had&#13;
of th '.IIIpro\,&#13;
ha 'th&#13;
hale to that AlliC.&#13;
but unfortunat&lt;"l. It&#13;
Ie to up and&#13;
f quest Von ell&#13;
do're'- If th 0 th h&#13;
dk proll up, I,t&#13;
tbetter I eI f m&#13;
alter the audJen&#13;
and cd th.... q m&#13;
.... are or lbl , per cenl ollhem 0&#13;
nut. think. ut It for t 0 ~, nd&#13;
then go on about tMlr If th&#13;
,keeps happen "ru b&lt;! a 10 l'.IIIe&#13;
before there '. any reform at all&#13;
Hopefully ,t's gOlten to a poml no&#13;
where a lot of cong COl are om to&#13;
s1art looting lDto It a hltle better.&#13;
S : n.. play bali heal pretty e/fectl&#13;
though. hasn't 1tot&#13;
Bruce: Ob yes '.t bali. '.t' n awfully&#13;
effechve One questlon Ulor eel&#13;
IS 'Do tho peopl exist u&gt; pnson"&#13;
Uke the fnur pnsoners preoenled 0Cl the&#13;
s1age., Well, hell y they do. Yourc&#13;
guys th""'" 10 for the ru-st lime u&gt; th....&#13;
li\"es. l.hro~n m "..,th very hard core&#13;
guys; homosexuality. yes, .t nI'lS&#13;
rampant in Prisons, and there are&#13;
Hatchets, too, "no""" very crunmally&#13;
insane, wrapped up 10 theu- ""'" httle&#13;
games that they play and consequently&#13;
wonting eVer}1&gt;odY to join in.&#13;
In the end Hatchet lrills Jive and tells&#13;
us, the accused, that be has done our&#13;
will. In the writing and productiOClof&#13;
this play J hope that "n.. Cage" has&#13;
done our will.&#13;
By Bill Sorensen&#13;
Fine-Arls Editor&#13;
IE CAGE" - Rick Cluchey&#13;
The audience was accused and&#13;
ced Thursday night when BarbProductions&#13;
presented The Cage;&#13;
allegorical play that invited us all&#13;
ato an inferno of penance that we&#13;
ped in writing, directing and&#13;
g. A place where humility is&#13;
t&amp;red up as poor replacement for the&#13;
of men.&#13;
Plainly effective and sincere with&#13;
pa u1 humor, the play retain~· its&#13;
ial goal with the rabid dialogue of&#13;
enclosure, bordering on The&#13;
1 De Sade, and not to be&#13;
taken for Gorilla Theatre.&#13;
The late was empty except f~r a&#13;
ma! toilet and a few blankets and&#13;
iresence of light that varied from&#13;
g lo blood red. We are confronted&#13;
I~ Sounds of Prison and prepared&#13;
inward. On our odyssey we meet&#13;
tcbet, a demerited man whose&#13;
enia leads the games. The&#13;
rt ~~ds brilliance in the hands of&#13;
~echels. Doc is the Seeming&#13;
tor, he hustles in and out of the&#13;
lhat surround him. The part is&#13;
red as real by Donald Ross. Al is a&#13;
ered homosexual, his self hatred is&#13;
Yed l!1rough a biting dialogue of&#13;
edomic 0agellation that tested and&#13;
pla. lhe skills of Jack Clemons. Jive&#13;
)ed by Gary Pettinger he is the&#13;
Prisoner, the matrix of the game&#13;
r 0( his young girlfriend. In reality'&#13;
x~ a a . quick humored fellow'.&#13;
Iran r"d-tn c.ontrol, but in the play,&#13;
ormation was complete in its&#13;
IC COnf · l! usion. The guards, played&#13;
enryC Everhart and Terry Joyce esta""-l'k " rr I e and in accordance&#13;
nenry "B ghd d" ent ,. a a Everhart's&#13;
y" ' trrtsons are a microcosm of r ', e anger and situational&#13;
ler Y of function reflected on a SCa)e&#13;
The play' · nt b s general excellence was&#13;
nt tut reasons for this are not so&#13;
1 ( ~ the audience . . . Bruce&#13;
His .. :~~heti,exemplifies this best&#13;
lection ime was Conscientious&#13;
rly ·/0&#13;
~ out on appeal, he was&#13;
Whe s udent at San Francisco&#13;
'I'\' Broac1cre .he majored in Radio and&#13;
,t-_ , asmg. In his senior year he ~ an · d at the mt~rest in drama and er I university for nel\rly a&#13;
ed that~ 1&#13;
~ 7 he became so inee&#13;
in rad~ didn't finish his master's&#13;
'lied this 10 and ~elevision. Later, he&#13;
lab in Jurswt and studied at an&#13;
he rnet D anada, learning Mime. In&#13;
Marin an Caldwell and worked&#13;
llyheh Shak.espeare festival.&#13;
hiberry : aspired to films such a.s atement and Zabrisky&#13;
rDo those peo1nl · . .&#13;
r e exist in prison?&#13;
NS: Do you think it would have helped&#13;
the situation at Attica if Rockefeller&#13;
had appeared as the prisoners&#13;
requested?&#13;
Bruce: Definitely. Just poor judgement&#13;
was used all around. Myself, being a&#13;
conscientious objector I really fell an&#13;
importance to the value of life . . . and&#13;
I don't think that someone can respect&#13;
anyone else's life if he doesn't respect&#13;
his own first, and I really felt that&#13;
Rockefeller should have stepped in,&#13;
even if it was to lie, even if it was to say&#13;
'Ya, we're going to grant you guys&#13;
everything you want ... you can have&#13;
it all," just to save those lives, but by&#13;
not doing so 40 or possibly more have&#13;
been lost.&#13;
NS: Do you think the demands made by&#13;
the prisoners were justified?&#13;
Bruce: I think just about everyone of&#13;
them were very just demands, because&#13;
conditions in prisons are really, really&#13;
brutal ... you're not a human being in&#13;
a prison, you're an animal. They just&#13;
wanted the people to realize this, that&#13;
they are human beings. If the purpose&#13;
for going to prison is rehabilitation well&#13;
then all over the country, prisons have&#13;
failed in their jobs miserably and this is&#13;
what the prisoners were trying to point&#13;
out.&#13;
NS: Do you think the militancy inside&#13;
the prisons is justified? . Bruce: Well how else is anybody going&#13;
to find out about it? What else can you&#13;
do? Finally, you're driven to a point&#13;
where you are an animal . and that&#13;
people are playing gam~ w1.~ you on&#13;
the inside, plus on the ~uts1~e 1t ~ sort of&#13;
an out of sight out of mind s1tuabon, and&#13;
when it comes to that it is the only way&#13;
you can get anybody to hear about it. It&#13;
was very unfortunate what happened at&#13;
Attica or at San Quentin, but, my God,&#13;
what's happening now throughout ~e&#13;
country as far as people ~m~&#13;
aware has been amazing and it ,s ~o,ng&#13;
to help in the future. Again, speaking of&#13;
the militancy behind prison walls and&#13;
all· first of all, they weren't trying to&#13;
es~ape and I don't think it would have&#13;
been that brutal or that militant, as you&#13;
asked earlier, had Rockefeller stepped&#13;
in or had the warden granted them all&#13;
th~ir demands, at least showed soi:ie&#13;
respect not only life of prisonser but hfe&#13;
of their own men.&#13;
NS: Bobby Seale showed up f?rka~~~&#13;
five minutes . . · ~o you t~ ?&#13;
token visit accomplished anything·&#13;
Bruce . Oh no I really don't, because • ' ' 11 done everything had been pretty we , when he got out there, I really don t&#13;
think it helped at all.&#13;
NS: What, if anything, has ~hanged the&#13;
prisoners' attitudesd ~0&#13;
~J~: ~~t s:i;&#13;
Quentin, Tombs an. .~ that 'changed&#13;
prisons What is 1&#13;
their attit~des? Is it something from&#13;
photo raph b bill&#13;
then again, if your play you&#13;
black and white thin is kind I&#13;
general broth~~ood . , Bruce: taybe 1t s coming to tha no ,&#13;
but in the past it hasn been that ;-a~ at&#13;
all. As a matter of fact, one of th&#13;
biggest problem is the guards pla)&#13;
little games ith the prisoner under&#13;
the theory that you ha\'e to eep th&#13;
prisoners separated in order to e&#13;
them into bars. so they ill go up to&#13;
black prisoners and sa:, , You better&#13;
watch it man. those bla gtry ha · some knives and the) 're out to et ·ou&#13;
guys,' and then go o\'er to the bla&#13;
prisoners and say there are some ·~&#13;
and azj lo\'ers over there who doo' t&#13;
like you blacks at all. ·e don't ant you&#13;
to get hurt, we don't want any trouble,&#13;
so we're just telling :,ou and you'd&#13;
better loo ou . So immediate! • there · &#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
taken a chance, lately, of right. But our Gove&#13;
counting "heads" reliable making its second wrnrnent is&#13;
sources estimate the figure first ~as PrO-hibi~~ng,The&#13;
between 27,000,000 and second IS the New Prohibn&#13;
,.the&#13;
34000000 as of 1971. Potheads Marihuana, 'hooou'tnu:nber&#13;
blacks, chicanos or "Santdl YOU've bee .&#13;
Indians. And They're still op- much too long." Sly : ~tting&#13;
pressed! Family Stone meant An lhe&#13;
"Scientific results say that and they meant mer""&#13;
marihuana can cause brain !,arkside. Students You, too,&#13;
damage in rats." Provided Involved by talking t' '. get&#13;
these same rats blow 40 joints a Talk to old penple 0rPe&lt;lPl e.&#13;
day. High dosages of any young people. Talk t~w:lk to&#13;
substance may be harmful to Talk to clergy. Write Irk.rs.&#13;
the body. High dosages of Just don't sit. Becaus.'ll.rs.&#13;
sugar, for example, is quite want you to crawl. They&#13;
harmful to the body. Union GroveCom .&#13;
One other argument against To Legalize Ma ~'tlee&#13;
legalization is floating around. Arthurr ~ llana&#13;
"Two' wrongs _don't make a chaiell:ter&#13;
,&#13;
right." These peopl~ are For. information about,,"an&#13;
suggesting that mar-ihuana committee write: Art DexOUr&#13;
coupled with alcohol are both P.O. Box 133, Union G le',&#13;
wrong. These people may be 53182. mv.&#13;
Page2 :\E\\'SCOPE October -1,1971&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
The following are falasies and&#13;
the Union Grove Committee to&#13;
Legalize Marihuana would like&#13;
to expose them:&#13;
"Marihuana leads on to&#13;
harder drubs (heroin)." One&#13;
can safely assume most pot&#13;
smokers drink alcohoL So we&#13;
can say alcohol leads on to&#13;
marihuana and marihuana&#13;
leads on to harder drugs&#13;
(heroin). So if one drinks booze&#13;
he probably shoots smack: This&#13;
is all quite foolish.&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
ON SOUTH SHERIDA N ROA.D IN KENOSHA 654-0411&#13;
"Marihuana is only smoked&#13;
by drug addicts, hippies and&#13;
wild-eyed jazz musicians."&#13;
Based on U.S. Government&#13;
estimates there were 20,000,000&#13;
Americans that smoked pot at&#13;
least once, but this was in 1967.&#13;
•&#13;
Though the Government hasn't&#13;
.....,;'." "-&#13;
r~r-., HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
'--/ BIG TOP Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae laoded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strcwberrles, whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry 70e&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
aOC&#13;
Senate Meeting Fails&#13;
President. Guests included&#13;
Terry Tobias, Cathy Gibbons&#13;
(Chaplain on campus),&#13;
Joyce Butera, Dawn&#13;
Christensen, Chuck Perroni,&#13;
Jack Kacarian and Dave&#13;
Kerner.&#13;
Since there was no&#13;
quorum and since a quorum&#13;
could. not be gathered, the&#13;
meeting was immediate!&#13;
adjourned. Y&#13;
Next attempt at a Student&#13;
Government will be&#13;
Thursday, October j, at 1:311&#13;
p.m. in room 101.&#13;
Reported by Jeanette&#13;
Dremel, Senator.&#13;
The meeting had been&#13;
called for 4:00 p.m. The&#13;
meeting was called to order&#13;
at 5:00 p.m. Those in attendance&#13;
were: Tom&#13;
Meyers, Jeanette Dremel,&#13;
Ken Konkol, Mike&#13;
Mayesheba, Dean Loumos&#13;
(Senators) and Tim Eaker,&#13;
7Sc&#13;
SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD,' NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin CAMPUS EVENTS 'Pu"m~p&lt;""''''"'&#13;
&amp; $ave&#13;
Parkside gymnasts.&#13;
Polka Party: A polka party.&#13;
dance will be held at theathie"&#13;
office parking lot beginningal&#13;
4:40 p.m.&#13;
Dance: A dance with livemusic&#13;
will be held at the Activities&#13;
Building begmning at 9 a.m.&#13;
Adm. Cbg. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin ID required.&#13;
Cross Country: PlattevilleState&#13;
Invitational . Platteville,&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.10&#13;
Film: Intercollegiate Film&#13;
Council will sponsor showingof&#13;
the film "If' at 7 p.m. at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater,&#13;
Racine. Tickets availableat the&#13;
Information Center, Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
at 8 a.m. at the Pershing Courts,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Golf: Varsity golf tournament&#13;
will be held at 9· a.m. at&#13;
Petrifying Springs course.&#13;
Soccer: Parkside Invitational:&#13;
losers of Friday's games meet&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. at the athletic&#13;
field.&#13;
Fencing: Parkside fencers&#13;
meet Shorewood Fencing Club'&#13;
at noon at the athletic field.&#13;
Rugby: UW-P vs. UW-Madison&#13;
at I p.m. at the athletic field.&#13;
Equestrians: An equestrian&#13;
demonstration will be held at&#13;
2:30 p.m. at the athletic field.&#13;
Soccer: Invitational finals:&#13;
Friday winners meet at 3 p.m.&#13;
Half-time demonstration by&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT. 7&#13;
Documentary Film: The film,&#13;
"The Canaris Affair", will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in Room 101&#13;
Greenquist Hall under sponsorship&#13;
of the German Club.&#13;
Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 8&#13;
Regents Meeting: The UW&#13;
Board of Regents will meet at&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
Oktoberfest Activities&#13;
Soccer: Parkside :Invitational&#13;
Tournament, Ohio State vs.&#13;
Eastern Illinois, 10:30 a.m.,&#13;
athletic field.&#13;
Tennis: Intramural tennis&#13;
tournament finals, Pershing&#13;
Courts, Racine, morning.&#13;
GoU: Intramural golf tournament&#13;
finals, Petrifying&#13;
Springs Course, morning.&#13;
Archery: Archery competition,&#13;
1 to 2: 30 p.m., athletic field.&#13;
Soccer: Parkside Invitational,&#13;
UW-P vs. Quincy College,&#13;
Athletic Field, 3 p.m.&#13;
Polka Party: A polka partydance&#13;
will be held from 4:30 to&#13;
8:30 p.m. at the athletic office&#13;
parking lot. (The activities&#13;
building also will be open.)&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 9&#13;
Oktoberfest Activities&#13;
Regatta: UW-P sailing regatta&#13;
will be held at 8 a.m. at the&#13;
Kenosha Yacht Club.&#13;
Tennis: Faculty-staff tennis&#13;
tournament finals will be held&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLiNE&#13;
ANO SAV'E!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
IOW·20W·30W . SOcper quart ewscope ,&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus,Pal&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDermid,&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Businsss Manager John Beck&#13;
AFsCON.O. IOW·20W·30W 34&lt;:per quart&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI·FREEZE $1.39 per gallon&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID 47c per can&#13;
. Newscope is an ind&lt;pel!de~&#13;
student newspaper com",~&#13;
by students of the Universi~&#13;
Wisconsin-ParkSlde pub .&#13;
weekly except duringv~al::&#13;
periods. Student obtalD sole&#13;
vertising funds are lite ~.&#13;
sourc~ of reNenue for6.(01&#13;
operation of New~cO~'aDd&#13;
copies are pnnte the&#13;
distributed tbroughOut&#13;
.~. . e CIIU' Kenosha and Rac,n ~.&#13;
munities as well ~s are&#13;
University. Free cop'"&#13;
available upon request.&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on 011 Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
f'1l Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, James Casper,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Kelly Infusino,&#13;
KIm King, Jim Koloen, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Dale Martin, Pat&#13;
Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross, Jeff&#13;
Scoville, Jerry Socha&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Zimany&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
october sale&#13;
REGULAR S162.50&#13;
OCTOBER PRICE S137.50&#13;
----------&#13;
Custom toilored suits&#13;
l!AtEO'S c:Y&#13;
A~·~·I~~gl~~;~;:; ';;·p.m,_ll:IO·'"&#13;
/""0 ITALIAN SAUSAGE Env8ERS&#13;
51121- 30111AVetI!e KenoshJ &amp;51.Q11&#13;
Open 6 doy, a week from 4 p.m., closed Monday'&#13;
All styles to choose&#13;
from in 17&#13;
different colors&#13;
Gino's Tailor Shop&#13;
and Sportswear&#13;
2212-60th street in Kenosha&#13;
'We give the personal touch'&#13;
complete line&#13;
of menswear&#13;
We do all types of alterations and repairs&#13;
Page2 ;\;E\\'SCOPE October -1, 1!)71 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
taken a chance, lately, of right. But our Gove&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
0 N SOU TH SHER ID A N RO A D IN KE NOSH A 6 5 4 - 04 1 1&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
The following are falasies and&#13;
the Union Grove Committee to&#13;
Legalize Marihuana would like&#13;
to expose them:&#13;
"Marihuana leads on to&#13;
harder drubs (heroin)." One&#13;
can safely assume most pot&#13;
smokers drink alcohol. So we&#13;
can say alcohol leads on to&#13;
marihuana and marihuana&#13;
leads on to harder drugs&#13;
(heroin). So if one drinks booze&#13;
he probably shoots smack: This&#13;
is all quite foolish.&#13;
"Marihuana is only smoked&#13;
by drug addicts, hippies and&#13;
wild-eyed jazz musicians.''&#13;
Based on U.S. Government&#13;
estimates there were 20,000,000&#13;
Americans that smoked pot at&#13;
least once, but this was in 1967.&#13;
Though the Government hasn't&#13;
counting "heads" reliable making its second wrnrnent is&#13;
sources estimate the figure first was Prohib{ong, The&#13;
between 27,000,000 and seco?d is the New Pr~~fb~'. the&#13;
34 ooo ooo as of 1971. Potheads Manhuana. 1hon-.&#13;
o~tnu~ber blacks, chicanes or "Santd! You've be .&#13;
Indians. And They're still op- muc~ too long." 81/:nsitting&#13;
pressed! Family Stone meant A d ~he&#13;
"Scientific results say that and they meant rnerica&#13;
marihuana can cause brain ~arkside. Students You, loo,&#13;
damage in rats." Provided involved by talking t · · · get&#13;
these same rats blow 40 joints a Talk to old people O leopJe.&#13;
day. High dosages of any young people. Talk t~ w:lk to&#13;
substance may be harmful to Talk to cler.gy. Write I rkers.&#13;
the body. High dosages of Just don't sit. Becaus/tters.&#13;
sugar, for example, is quite want you to crawl. They&#13;
harmful to the body. Union Grove Com . One other argument against To Legalize Ma .~1ttee&#13;
legalization is floating around. Arthurr ~ uana&#13;
"Two wrongs don't make a Ch .exter,&#13;
right.'' These peopl~ are For. information abo~tnan&#13;
suggesting that marihuana committee write: Art Dex~ur&#13;
coupled with alcohol are both P.O. Box 133, Union Gr er, wrong. These people may be 53182. ove&#13;
Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
TOP Senate Meeting Fails&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry 70c '&#13;
75c&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7S00 SHERIDAN ROADt'&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
The meeting had been&#13;
called for 4:00 p.m. The&#13;
meeting was called to order&#13;
at 5:00 p.m. Those in attendance&#13;
were: Tom&#13;
Meyers, Jeanette Dremel,&#13;
Ken Konkol, Mike&#13;
Mayesheba, Dean Loumos&#13;
(Senators) and Tim Eaker,&#13;
President. Guests included&#13;
Terry Tobias, Cathy Gibbons&#13;
(Chaplain on campus),&#13;
Joyce Butera, Dawn&#13;
Christensen, Chuck Perroni,&#13;
Jack Kacarian and Dave&#13;
Kerner.&#13;
Since there was no&#13;
quorum and since a quorum&#13;
could_ not be gathered, the&#13;
m~etmg was immediate!&#13;
ad3ourned. Y&#13;
Next attempt at a Student&#13;
Government will be&#13;
Thur~day, October 7, at 7 :3o&#13;
p.m_ m room 101.&#13;
Reported by Jeanette&#13;
Dremel, Senator.&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Fp Li'" iri"•pC·""'Y Lio,&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
&amp; $ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON .O.&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
lOW - 20W - 30W&#13;
1 OW - 20 W - 30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12oz. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
S1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
.f'-11 Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT. 7&#13;
Documentary Film: The film,&#13;
"The Canaris Affair". will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in Room 101&#13;
Greenquist Hall under sponsorship&#13;
of the German Club.&#13;
Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 8&#13;
Regents Meeting: The UW&#13;
Board of Regents will meet at&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
Oktoberfest Activities&#13;
Soccer: Parkside Invitational&#13;
Tournament, Ohio State vs.&#13;
Eastern Illinois, 10:30 a.m.,&#13;
athletic field.&#13;
Tennis: Intramural tennis&#13;
tournament finals, Pershing&#13;
Courts, Racine, morning.&#13;
Golf: Intramural golf tournament&#13;
finals, Petrifying&#13;
Springs Course, morning.&#13;
Archery: Archery competition,&#13;
1 to 2:30 p.m., athletic field.&#13;
Soccer: Parkside Invitational&#13;
UW-P vs. Quincy College:&#13;
Athletic Field, 3 p.m.&#13;
Polka Party: A polka partydance&#13;
will be held from 4: 30 to&#13;
8:30 p.m. at the athletic office&#13;
parking lot. (The activities&#13;
building also will be open.)&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 9&#13;
Oktoberfest Activities&#13;
Regatta: UW-P sailing regatta&#13;
.will be held at 8 a.m. at the&#13;
Kenosha Yacht Club.&#13;
Tennis: Faculty-staff tennis&#13;
tournament finals will be held&#13;
october sale&#13;
Custom tailored suits REGULAR S162.SO&#13;
OCTOBER PRICE s137 .SO&#13;
Gino'.s Tailor Shop&#13;
and Sportswear&#13;
All styles to choose&#13;
from in 17&#13;
different colors&#13;
2212-60th street in Kenosha complete line&#13;
'We give the personal touch' of menswear&#13;
We do all types ol alterations and repairs&#13;
at 8 a.m. at the Pershing Courts,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Golf: Varsity golf tournament&#13;
will be held at 9 a.m. at&#13;
Petrifying Springs course.&#13;
Soccer: Parkside Invitational:&#13;
losers of Friday's games meet&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. at the athletic&#13;
field.&#13;
Fencing: Parkside fencers&#13;
meet Shorewood Fencing Club&#13;
at noon at the athletic field.&#13;
Rugby: UW-P vs. UW-Madison&#13;
at 1 p.m. at the athletic field.&#13;
Equestrians: An equestrian&#13;
demonstration will be held at&#13;
2:30 p.m. at the athletic field.&#13;
Soccer: Invitational finals:&#13;
Friday winners meet at 3 p.m.&#13;
Half-time demonstration by&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor · Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Businsss Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, James Casper,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Kelly Infusino,&#13;
Kim King, Jim Koloen, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Dale Martin, Pat&#13;
Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross, Jeff&#13;
Scoville, Jerry Socha&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Zimany&#13;
Becky&#13;
Parksiqe gymnasts.&#13;
Polka Party: A polka party.&#13;
dance will be held at the athletic&#13;
office parking lot beginning at&#13;
4:40 p.m.&#13;
Dance: A dance with live music&#13;
will be held at the Activities&#13;
Building beginning at 9 a.m.&#13;
Adm. Chg. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin ID required.&#13;
Cross Country: Platteville State&#13;
Invitational - Platt~ville.&#13;
SUNDAY, OCT. IO&#13;
Film: Intercollegiate Film&#13;
Council will sponsor showing of&#13;
the film "If" at 7 p.m. at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater,&#13;
Racine. Tickets available at the&#13;
Information Center, Tallenl&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDermid,&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-24~&#13;
553-2498&#13;
· Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newsp!lper com\J°sed&#13;
by students of the Univers!ty ~ Wisconsin-Parkside publist 011&#13;
weekly except during .v:a ~dperiods.&#13;
Student obtaID sole&#13;
vertising funds are the (he&#13;
sourc~ of revenue for G.!K'l&#13;
operation of Newscope. d · ted an copies are prin the&#13;
distributed throughout 001• · e C Kenosha and Racin !he&#13;
munities as well as are&#13;
University. Free copies&#13;
available upon request.&#13;
VA LE O'S . -----·---,-c,-----&#13;
(!'IZZAb&#13;
j,('f&lt;SIJ§~RY&#13;
Aun 0-il&lt;XEN o1~N~RS:::: ' ,:oo p.m.-12:00 •·111,&#13;
/\,'\JD ITALIAN SAUSAGE e::;tv13ERS&#13;
5021- llfh Ave111e K•sha &amp;57-6191&#13;
Open 6 days o week from 4 p.m., closed Mond&lt;J'/5 &#13;
Day Care Center for P-side _~Oc;;;;';lober;;;~"";;;;;;' ~~;;,;Pf::;;:;;;;:;;:=;I"f';;,3&#13;
is hoped the rates can be set&#13;
strictly on the basis of what the&#13;
mothers can afford, the&#13;
minimal needs of the center&#13;
along with demand, "If the&#13;
demand is not great for the&#13;
service, the rate would obviously&#13;
have to be higher than if&#13;
the demand is great," Kugel&#13;
said.&#13;
The questionnaire, which&#13;
should be in the mail soon, can&#13;
C&#13;
ampus Editor Jones, .&#13;
~LJf'Y t'onnaire is being&#13;
~ qUesI arried Parkslde&#13;
,ell to all ~ncerning the&#13;
'od'!''' t of Day·Care&#13;
~tJbliShmenthe main cam-&#13;
~bes near •&#13;
,.. uestionnaire was&#13;
flie '\, Charles Kugel,&#13;
~red tbe UWP Gifted&#13;
",d of Program According&#13;
;IlIle!'~the progr~m would be&#13;
Kugel, ru and unaf-&#13;
-'Iv non-pro', '&#13;
""'"' 'th the Umvers,ty,&#13;
Jed Wlmplywith strict state&#13;
Toco s one full time&#13;
... ,I,1IOn , d h t&#13;
••, ed director waul ave a&#13;
~ Otherhelp would be on&#13;
teer basis - probably I"un and students in the&#13;
~hO would be. willing to&#13;
lei their time and services&#13;
... te id effort,he Sal '&#13;
~Ihough no charges have&#13;
If( beenset for the services, It&#13;
be returned to all three UWP&#13;
hbr~nes. marked boxes at the&#13;
Racme and Kenosha campuses&#13;
or to Kugel's office, GR 201. '&#13;
Organizational meetings&#13;
are being planned for the near&#13;
future and will be publicized,&#13;
The student organizers of the&#13;
c~nter would appreciate those&#13;
WIth a need for the service&#13;
filling out the questionnaire and&#13;
returning it as Soon as possible.&#13;
3322 SHERIONJ RO/lD KENOSHA&#13;
..... 1&lt;:1&lt;:1&lt;:Ie te Ie lit It It Ie It It I I&#13;
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Sickle Cell March Oct. 8 ...... by Bill Sorensen, Fine-Arts Editor&#13;
. On.Oct. 9at 8:~ a.m. a marc~ will take place from Pershing Park&#13;
In Racine to Case HIgh School.lt 1S a desperate 15minute walk against&#13;
a kille~ ~nd disab~e~ ~hat can. be treated but not cured. Commonly&#13;
called .SIckle Cell It IS genetically transmitted causing a low con.&#13;
centration of blood oxygen that results in an anemic condition that&#13;
~ay cause d~th. More often the disease hangs on making the victim&#13;
suffer, som.ehmes. consta~tl~, until life is more misery than living. It is&#13;
a unique disease m that It IS almost exclusively a disabler of Black&#13;
people.&#13;
The Rev. James Sanders, College student, father, and Pastor of&#13;
the Mount Olive Baptist Church, is the chairman of the march and the&#13;
Racine Sickle Cell Foundation. The Foundation will need marchers&#13;
who will get private business to sponsor their trek on a 'per mile&#13;
walked' basis, Money will go 10 families that are plagued by this&#13;
problem and will take on many forms in helping them.&#13;
Not long ago Jimmy, Rev. Sanders' son, died from complications&#13;
brought about by the sickle cell. So that this kind of thing can at least&#13;
be delayed and maybe stopped someday, come and walk on Oct. 9, and&#13;
if you are a businessman, help someone walk.&#13;
Participant-Sponsor entry sheets can be picked up at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
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Sale ...... ...&#13;
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~perS8rComing ......&#13;
......&#13;
l1Ie original production of&#13;
Je$U5 Christ,'Superstar" will&#13;
""'"' in Racine Oct. 23 for two&#13;
!Ill) staged performances, the&#13;
t1yersity of wtsconstnParkside&#13;
has announced; .&#13;
1be Racine production IS&#13;
.... the direction of the&#13;
ilIbert Stigwood Group. Ltd"&#13;
• Englishoriginating campaay&#13;
and the only company&#13;
IIowed to perform the' complrtf&#13;
verionsor advertise the&#13;
~ "Jesus Christ, Superstar".&#13;
'[be production appearing in&#13;
llIl:me will open later this fall&#13;
II Broadway, Its local ap·&#13;
"",nee will be held at Racine&#13;
r.high school and feature a&#13;
CIIl or about SO, in addition to&#13;
,.. mestration. It is being&#13;
_red ~y UW·Par~side in&#13;
lIIO&lt;ialion with Carthage&#13;
CIIlege.&#13;
l'W·Parkside Student Ac·&#13;
DnbeS Office spokesmen said&#13;
ot prices and outlets would&#13;
amounced in about a week,&#13;
-.I urged the public to await&#13;
IIrtber ticket announcements&#13;
nlller Ihan calling the&#13;
IIItersity for information ..,h~nol yel available, Two&#13;
~ performances will be&#13;
WdatCase,tentatively set for&#13;
aod 10 p,m,&#13;
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""'"&#13;
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""&#13;
WRKR Begins Stereo Programming&#13;
WRKR (FMJ will begin broadcasting in stereo Monday, OCtober&#13;
4th. That annOWlcement came recently from Richard F. PalmqUIst&#13;
President and General Manager of WRKR. He said: "This step. we&#13;
fell, will greatly enhance our sOWld and provide a total serVice to&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin listeners."&#13;
The station signed on the air as WRKR Det:ember 1st, 1970, and&#13;
operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week, progr~mming Top 40 and&#13;
progressive rock music aimed at a young adult a~dience. • af.&#13;
Special ceremonies are planned at th~ s~atIon late Mo~day&#13;
ternaan to mark the official start of the statIon 5stereo operation.&#13;
8 FOR O.&#13;
PLUS A PENNY&#13;
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Park Drugs -...... ...&#13;
~&#13;
Rise to face UN other day&#13;
011 22nd onmu&#13;
just north oj Wa, hinf!.to71Road&#13;
...... ...&#13;
......&#13;
...... "&#13;
Open 9a.m.-9:30p.m .&#13;
Sunday 8:30a.m.-2p.m.&#13;
Sale ends October 10th&#13;
1 It 1 Ie I I I I 1 Ie I Ie 1&#13;
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-A&#13;
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"&#13;
LADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
" Welt&#13;
RacinllJ&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
Hoffman's •&#13;
ich e er pIzza&#13;
1 c pic her f beer 2&#13;
DOWN.!OWN KENOSHA r&#13;
We deliver to Parkside&#13;
and Carthage&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
4615-7ch a enue&#13;
'next door to the Windjammer'&#13;
Remember-We're open mcndays&#13;
phone 654-7111&#13;
open 5-12&#13;
closed sundays&#13;
Campus Editor&#13;
r)· Jones, · · being L'f . na ire 1s&#13;
ques1100 ·ect Parkside 11 marri&#13;
to a concerning the&#13;
eots t of Day-Care · bmen , bh the main camue·&#13;
near .&#13;
uestionnaire was&#13;
fbe h Charles Kugel,&#13;
red th UWP Gifted&#13;
d of Pr~ram. According&#13;
ts he rogram would be&#13;
el, t p r·t and unaf- non-pro' . 'th the University. ted v., ly with strict state&#13;
To ~mp one full time&#13;
at1ons, d h t&#13;
ed director woul ave o 1 Other help would be on&#13;
· basis - probably unteer . th nd students m e&#13;
h/ would be -willin~ to&#13;
their time and services&#13;
te 'd effort, he sa1 .&#13;
Although no charge~ ha".e&#13;
been set for the serVIces, 1t&#13;
~uperstar Coming&#13;
original production of&#13;
Christ, ·superstar" will&#13;
in Racine Oct. 23 for two&#13;
aged performa_nces, ~he&#13;
er ity of W1sconsm-&#13;
.de has announced.&#13;
Racine production is&#13;
the direction of the&#13;
Stigwood Group, Ltd.,&#13;
English originating corny&#13;
and the only company&#13;
-:red to perform the comwrions&#13;
or advertise the&#13;
"Jesus Christ, Superstar".&#13;
The production appearing in&#13;
will open later this fall&#13;
Broadway. Its local apnce&#13;
will be held at Racine&#13;
high school and feature a&#13;
of about 50, in addition to&#13;
orchestration. It is being&#13;
red lly UW-Par)cside in&#13;
1ation with Carthage&#13;
·Parkside Student AcOffice&#13;
spokesmen said&#13;
prices and outlets would&#13;
1llllounced in about a week,&#13;
urged the public to await&#13;
er ticket announcements&#13;
r than calling the&#13;
ersity for information&#13;
h IS not yet available. Two&#13;
performances will be&#13;
at Case, tentatively set for&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
is hoped the rates can be set&#13;
strictly on the basis of what the&#13;
mothers can afford, the&#13;
minimal needs of the center&#13;
along with demand. "If the&#13;
demand is not great for the&#13;
service, the rate would obviously&#13;
have to be higher than if&#13;
the demand is great," Kugel&#13;
said.&#13;
The questionnaire, which&#13;
should be in the mail soon, can&#13;
~ re~urned to all three WP&#13;
hbr~nes, marked boxes at the&#13;
Racme and ;Kenosha campuse ,&#13;
or to Kugel s office, GR 201.&#13;
Organizational meeting are being planned for the near&#13;
future and will be publicized&#13;
The student organizers of the&#13;
c~nter would appreciate th e&#13;
with a need for the ervice&#13;
filling out the questionnaire and&#13;
returning it as soon as po ible.&#13;
Sickle Cell March Oct. 8&#13;
by Bill Sorensen, Fine-Arts Editor&#13;
. On_ Oct. 9 at8:~ a.m. a mare~ will take place from Per hing Par·&#13;
m Racme to Case High School. It 1s a desperate 15 minute \\a]k agam t&#13;
a killer and disabler that can be treated but not cured. Commonlv&#13;
called '_Sickle Cell' it is genetically transmitted causing a lov. concentration&#13;
of blood oxygen that results in an anemic condition that&#13;
may cause d~ath. More often the disease hangs on making the victim&#13;
suff~r, so~ehmes_ consta~tl~, until life is more misery than living. It i&#13;
a umque disease m that 1t 1s almost exclusively a disabler of Blac · people.&#13;
The Rev. James Sanders, College student, father, and Pa tor of&#13;
the Mount Olive Baptist Church, is the chairman of the march and the&#13;
Racine Sickle Cell Foundation. The Foundation will need marche .&#13;
who will get private business to sponsor their trek on a 'per mile&#13;
walked' basis. Money will go to families that are plagued by th1&#13;
problem and will take on many forms in helping them.&#13;
Not long ago Jimmy, Rev. Sanders' son, died from complicatio -&#13;
brought about by the sickle cell. So that this kind of thing can at lea t&#13;
be delayed and maybe stopped someday, come and walk on Oct. 9, and&#13;
if you are a businessman, help someone walk.&#13;
Participant-Sponsor entry sheets can be picked up at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
WRKR Begins Stereo Programming&#13;
WRKR (FM) will begin broadcasting in stereo londay, Octo~&#13;
4th That announcement came recently from Richard F. Palmqu1&#13;
Pr~sident and General Manager of WRKR. He said: "Thi te?, w&#13;
fell, will greatly enhance our sound and provide a total erv1ce to&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin listeners."&#13;
The station signed on the air as WRKR Deeember_ 1 t, 1970, and&#13;
operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week, progr~mmmg Top and&#13;
progressive rock music aimed at a young adult a~dience. d af. s ecial ceremonies are planned at the station late . 1o!1 3)&#13;
terioon to mark the official start of the station's stereo operallon.&#13;
Rise to face UN other day&#13;
- It l&#13;
-A.&#13;
-&#13;
--A&#13;
--A&#13;
-&#13;
~&#13;
--A&#13;
--A&#13;
--A&#13;
--A&#13;
-&#13;
-~&#13;
_o&#13;
_z&#13;
-z&#13;
-o&#13;
-A&#13;
~ ... - ....&#13;
l l&#13;
Sae&#13;
-A -c&#13;
~ "' . t) FOR O ·&#13;
._&#13;
PLUS A PENNY -&#13;
--A&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
Pa ug&#13;
011&#13;
JU 11 ,:th of t hi 1 I 11 R 1d&#13;
Open 9a.m.-9:30p.m.&#13;
Sunday 8:30a.m.-2p.m.&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
- ...... Sale ends October 10th - - l 1 l l 1 l I l l l -&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes&#13;
Grand Open· g&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWN,!OWN KENOSHA&#13;
••&#13;
phone 654-7111&#13;
open 5-12&#13;
closed sundays&#13;
0 .,&#13;
/beer .&#13;
I()&#13;
l t pit her&#13;
We deliver to Parkside&#13;
and Carthage&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
'61 --7rh a enuc&#13;
'ne.'1:I door to th 'i11djamm ,.·&#13;
Remember-We're open m~ndays &#13;
Page4 NEWSCOPE O&lt;tober 4.1911&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Title: The New Centurions&#13;
Author: Joseph Wambaugh&#13;
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company&#13;
($6.95)&#13;
On the book jacket the publisher says&#13;
"The New Centurions: a novel about&#13;
policemen by a policeman. Tough, but&#13;
compassionate, it'll make you understand&#13;
- perhaps lor the first timewhatit's&#13;
really like to be a cop." Joseph&#13;
Wambaugh, boy author, should arrest&#13;
the publisher for false advertising and&#13;
then, as a gesture of good will, swallow&#13;
his typewriter. Open wide, Joey.&#13;
The New Centurions is an L. A.&#13;
policeman's first novel and hopefully&#13;
his last, for several reasons: 1) his first&#13;
novel is 376 pages too long; 2) I don't&#13;
think it's right for copszo moonlight; 3)&#13;
the writing is bland, effete, anticreative,&#13;
authoritarian, and overall&#13;
smacks of Reader's Digest. Incidentally,&#13;
TNC has been on the vest&#13;
seller list for quite a while, and as is&#13;
characteristic of most members of that&#13;
select group, it is a multimucho bad&#13;
novel. TNC lits perfectly.&#13;
But there is a story. In alternating&#13;
chapters, Wambaugh portrays the first&#13;
five police years of Serge Duran, "a&#13;
tough, competent Mexican-American&#13;
and ex-Marine who learns everything&#13;
fast - except how to forget his Mexican&#13;
blood; Gus Plebesly, a little man with&#13;
the lace 01 a baby, the speed 01 an&#13;
antelope, and a panicky lear of&#13;
1violence; and Roy Fehler, a college&#13;
man with ideas like a social worker,&#13;
who discovers - too late - that you can&#13;
new centurions from rookie to right&#13;
wing senility. Wambaugh didn't know&#13;
when to stop, I hope he does now. The&#13;
three cops advance from the radio. car&#13;
to vice squad, to juvenile to alcohol~sm,&#13;
divorce, unself discovery, marrIage&#13;
and the lamily.&#13;
\&#13;
get killed that way." Serge, Gus and&#13;
Roy ate the (ta-daa) new centurions.&#13;
The new centurions meet many interesting&#13;
people: pimps, whores,&#13;
niggers, child beaters, father rapers,&#13;
snipers, "fruits", lemons and limes,&#13;
burglars, looters, juvenile delinquents,&#13;
wives who divorce them, all in all just&#13;
plain down home people. What Joyce&#13;
did lor the Stephen Dedalus' 01 the&#13;
world in Portrait of the Artist, warnbaugh&#13;
does lor the PO-lice. Both&#13;
authors are concerned with a&#13;
maturation theme: Joyce's Dedalus&#13;
Irom baby to young man; Wambaugh's&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
I&#13;
9a.m.-4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
.0 a glass&#13;
-c and&#13;
U a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french. fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The cops in TNC are familiar, we've&#13;
seen them in B, C, C-and D grade&#13;
movies, they think basically on parallel&#13;
levels, humanity loses its layer of the&#13;
humane, people become bastards, the&#13;
young liberal Joe Fehler turns to the&#13;
right, they see people when no one else&#13;
ever sees them and what they see&#13;
disgusts them. The job requires better&#13;
men, stronger men. This is the only&#13;
point the novel brings out which is&#13;
worth any mention. Wambaugh does&#13;
this in secrecy. Like the Bible, TNC is&#13;
amenable to interpretation.&#13;
The cops are as corrups as the&#13;
"criminals", the only catch is that the&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will help, any woman regardless&#13;
01 race, religion, age or Imancial&#13;
slatus. We do nol moralize, but&#13;
merely help women obtain qualihed&#13;
Doctors lor aborllons. II this IS&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early abortion is more&#13;
simple and less costly, and can be&#13;
perlormed on an oul patient basis.&#13;
Call:&#13;
312 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
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8 AM-tO PM-7 DAYS&#13;
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Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
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SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658·2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MllWAUnE&#13;
are you ollended by nudity?&#13;
it not, stop in.&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise&#13;
SPECIAL 15%OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student 1.0.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine&#13;
cops "know what good and .&#13;
that they have a speciallaiow:11 are,"&#13;
no one else has. Wambaugh dgethat&#13;
with a straight lace. The corru,ay&#13;
, this&#13;
the centurions comes out ptnessof&#13;
lines as "~et's go over to theWlth SUCh&#13;
bust a lew fruits, we baven't g:rk and&#13;
in a few days." Another pee d&#13;
ne that&#13;
we did just that (staying str~~llllo: "If&#13;
the law and department re r WIthin&#13;
we wouldn't convice one ~ ahons),&#13;
week. The goddamn streets shole a&#13;
, sale even lor us." You get towouldn'tbe&#13;
just who the centurions are Wondering&#13;
and what they are protecting ~~tecthJg&#13;
Any\Vay the novel culminate:i~olll.&#13;
Watts riot, the world Iragmenlin . the&#13;
lace 01 the centurions, writhin ~In the&#13;
lile kicking the ass 01 order g~ aOSOI&#13;
one thing that the centuri~ C os the&#13;
cope with, their first prem~s cannot&#13;
1&#13;
·1 II· n ISe or th I esy ogrsm a alse one' life . e&#13;
Th . ,IS order&#13;
e Watts mferno done th .&#13;
centurions become chu~m e three&#13;
ahead lor two weddings, lea~' t~lan&#13;
to know each other when Sudd~1 get&#13;
IS shot dead 10 a routine lamily Y Joe&#13;
call. A real tearjerker. quarrel&#13;
The world is ready lor a novel bo&#13;
policemen, it just ain't ready lorJ a ut&#13;
Wambaugh. oseJil&#13;
The New Centurions cour~sy of the&#13;
Bookmart, 622 - 59th Street Ke b ' nos a.&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Velvet Underground - Loaded&#13;
Cotillion SD 9034&#13;
Doug Yule - Organ, Piano,&#13;
Bass, Drums, Lead Guitar,&#13;
Acoustic Guitar, Vocals,&#13;
Lyrics and Song Composition&#13;
Sterling Morrison - Lead and&#13;
Rhythm Guitars, Song&#13;
Composition&#13;
. Lou Reed - Rhythm Guitar,&#13;
Piano, Vocals, Lyrics and&#13;
Song Composition&#13;
Moe Tucker. - Drums&#13;
elementary logic.&#13;
Premis: I thought the fmal&#13;
scene 10 Macbeth had a certain&#13;
humorous value.&#13;
Therefore: "Loaded" is a&#13;
good album even taken at race&#13;
value.&#13;
Velvet Underground has&#13;
always had strong roots inNew&#13;
York, apparent on this albumas&#13;
m.uch as on the previous.&#13;
DIrect, unpretentious and&#13;
uncomplicated, they could&#13;
never be accused of intellectualizing&#13;
music for the&#13;
The most dillicult part 01&#13;
writing a review is getting&#13;
started, and this haunting&#13;
feeling I've got is making it&#13;
twice as hard as usual. I suppose&#13;
it's just an occupational&#13;
hazard, but it's albums like&#13;
these that cause a reviewer to&#13;
think twice belore putting a&#13;
word down on paper. To pride&#13;
myself I could call it&#13;
professional caution, but what it&#13;
boils down to is an old lashioned&#13;
lear 01 placing one's foot&#13;
squarely in one's mouth.&#13;
"Loaded", lika a Zappa&#13;
recording, is an enigma. It&#13;
seems to straddle a fine line&#13;
between seriously good music&#13;
and a remarkable put on with&#13;
only the band knowing where it&#13;
really is. Saying that I like it&#13;
just lor what it is therelore, -&#13;
could put me in the dubious&#13;
position of a man .burstmg into&#13;
uproarious laughter during the&#13;
death scene 01 Macbeth, interpreting&#13;
it as a Keystone Cop&#13;
routine. It becomes apparent to&#13;
me now that the .only way to&#13;
decide where to stand (present&#13;
fmances find me without a coin&#13;
to flip) is to use some&#13;
...-1 NEED HELP!!!&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TIME&#13;
$25 Guarenteed for every 100 envelopes&#13;
you stuff .,&#13;
All postage prepaid&#13;
send stamped, self_addressed envelope&#13;
plus $1 for registration and handling&#13;
to&#13;
ALLEN KING CORPORATION&#13;
P.O. BOX &amp;525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212&#13;
sake 01 sanctimony. In lact,the&#13;
major part 01 the album is&#13;
based on one key and four&#13;
chords.&#13;
Iinvoke the time-honoredUSo&#13;
what! "&#13;
Ilit should ever cometo the&#13;
time when music is ratedon the&#13;
number of notes rather than&#13;
what the notes do, it'll be a sad&#13;
state of affairs for musiciansin&#13;
all fields. No, lor musical&#13;
content, the Undergroundgets&#13;
an A. It's a pleasure to just.t&#13;
back and listen withoutbavill!&#13;
your senses stretched, or suffer&#13;
through someone trYingto.&#13;
Velvet Underground, Youseg~&#13;
class. t sake, For argumen s he&#13;
someone might point out t&#13;
similarity between the U~&#13;
derground sound and aleWt~to&#13;
and true groups. It's bard1M&gt; .&#13;
think 01 the Stones a?dDY::'&#13;
, a lew spots but agalO,,0 I&#13;
Ilike the Stones, I lik~.~;:&#13;
and lor a long time I've I for&#13;
Velvet Undergro~nd.,~nd~ed".&#13;
whatever it is, I like ~ what&#13;
Ilyou're not worned a.&#13;
they might say, pick It up·&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Available fOI e t ate tnl ty 01 sorority parties&#13;
Page4 NEWSCOPE&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Title : The New Centurions&#13;
Author: Joseph Wambaugh&#13;
Publisher: Little, Brown and Com- pany ($6.95 )&#13;
On the book jacket the publisher says&#13;
"The New Centurions: a novel about&#13;
policemen by a policeman. Tough, but&#13;
compassionate, it'll make you understand&#13;
- perhaps for the first time -&#13;
what it's really like to be a cop." Joseph&#13;
Wambaugh, boy author, should arrest&#13;
the publisher for false advertising and&#13;
then, as a gesture of good will, swallow&#13;
his typewriter. Open wide, Joey.&#13;
The New Centurions is an L. A.&#13;
policeman's first novel and hopefully&#13;
his last, for several reasons: 1) his first&#13;
novel is 376 pages too long ; 2) I don't&#13;
think it's right for cops to moonlight; 3 )&#13;
the writing is bland, effete, anticreative,&#13;
authoritarian, and overaJ]&#13;
smacks of Reader's Digest. Incidentally,&#13;
TNC has been on the vest&#13;
seller list for quite a while, and as is&#13;
characteristic of most members of that&#13;
select group, it is a multimucho bad&#13;
novel. TNC fits perfectly.&#13;
But there is a story. In alternating&#13;
chapters, Wambaugh portrays the first&#13;
five police years of Serge Duran, "a&#13;
tough, competent Mexican-American&#13;
and ex-Marine who learns everything&#13;
October 4, 1971&#13;
fast- except how to forget his Mexican&#13;
blood; Gus Plebesly, a little man with&#13;
the face of a baby, the speed of an&#13;
antelope, and a panicky fear of 1 violence; and Roy Fehler, a college&#13;
man with ideas like a social worker,&#13;
who discovers - too late - that you can&#13;
get killed that way." Serge, Gus and&#13;
Roy ac,e the (ta-daa) new centurions.&#13;
The new centurions meet many interesting&#13;
people : pimps, whores,&#13;
niggers, child beaters, father rapers,&#13;
snipers, "fruits" , lemons and limes,&#13;
burglars, looters, juvenile delinquents,&#13;
wives who divorce them, all in all just&#13;
plain down home people. What Joyce&#13;
did for the Stephen Dedalus' of the&#13;
world in Portrait of the Artist, Wambaugh&#13;
does for the PO-lice. Both&#13;
authors are concerned with a&#13;
maturation theme: Joyce's Dedalus&#13;
from baby to young man ; Wambaugh's&#13;
new centurions from rookie to right&#13;
wing senility. Wambaugh didn't know&#13;
when to stop I hope he does now. The&#13;
three cops advance from the radio_ car&#13;
to vice squad, to juvenile to alcohol~sm,&#13;
divorce, unself discovery, marriage&#13;
and the family.&#13;
The cops in TNC are familiar, we've&#13;
seen them in B, C, C-and D grade&#13;
movies, they think basically on parallel&#13;
levels, humanity loses its layer of the&#13;
humane, people become bastards, the&#13;
young liberal Joe Fehler turns to the&#13;
right, they see people when no one else&#13;
ever sees them and what they see&#13;
disgusts them. The job requires better&#13;
men, stronger men. This is the only&#13;
point the novel brings out which is&#13;
worth any mention. Wambaugh does&#13;
this in secrecy. Like the Bible, TNC is&#13;
amenable to interpretation.&#13;
The cops are as corrups as the&#13;
"criminals", the only catch is that the&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
cops "know what good and .&#13;
that they have a special knowt11 are:•&#13;
no one else has. Wamba h edgethat&#13;
with a straight face. The c'!rusays this&#13;
the centurions comes out ptness of&#13;
lines as "Let's go over to thewit~ such&#13;
bust a few fruits, we haven't S: k anct&#13;
in a few days." Another pee d_ne that&#13;
did . t th ca illo· "I&#13;
we JUS at (staying strict! : f&#13;
the law and department re r ~1thin&#13;
we wouldn't convice one gu ations),&#13;
. week. The goddamn streets w:ssho~e a&#13;
safe even for us." You get to Uldn t be&#13;
just who the centurions are wondering&#13;
and what they are protecting pritecting&#13;
Anyway the novel culmina~ 0 _frorn.&#13;
Watts riot, the world fragmenti~ 1&#13;
.n the&#13;
face of the centurions, writhing tin the&#13;
life kicking the ass of order ~ aos of&#13;
one thing that the centuri~ c aos the&#13;
cope with, their first prem~s cannot&#13;
l'f 11 . r. ise of th 1 esy og1sm a 1hlse one· li'fe · e&#13;
Th . , 1s orde e Watts mferno done th r. centurions become chu~m e three&#13;
ahead for two weddings, learru~' t~lan&#13;
to know each other when suddegl get&#13;
is shot dead in a routine family n Y Joe&#13;
call. A real tearjerker. quarrel&#13;
1:he worl~ i~ ready for a novel abo&#13;
policemen, 1t Just ain't ready for J ut&#13;
Wambaugh. oseph&#13;
The New Centurions court~sy of th&#13;
Bookmart, 622 - 59th Street Ke h e , nos a.&#13;
elementary logic.&#13;
SPECIAL Pregnant?&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Velvet Underground - Loaded&#13;
Cotillion · SD 9034&#13;
Premis: I thought· the fm 1&#13;
scene in Macbeth had a certa~&#13;
humorous value.&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
I 9a.m.-4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
·o a glass&#13;
-e and&#13;
u a steak sandwich&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
f rench fries&#13;
potato salad&#13;
or&#13;
$1.15&#13;
or&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
AVaitable for Fraternity or sorority parties&#13;
Need Help? We will help any woman regardless&#13;
of race. religion, age or financial&#13;
status. We do not moralize, but&#13;
merely help women obtain qualified&#13;
Doctors for abortions, if this is&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early abortion is more&#13;
simple and less costly, and can be&#13;
performed on an out patient basis.&#13;
Call:&#13;
312 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
,Assistance of Chicago&#13;
8 AM-10 PM-7 DAYS&#13;
A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
FuNre&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKE:E&#13;
are you offended by nudity?&#13;
ii not, stop in.&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise&#13;
SPECIAL 15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore·&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine&#13;
Doug Yule - Organ, Piano,&#13;
Bass, Drums, Lead Guitar,&#13;
Acoustic Guitar, Vocals,&#13;
Lyrics and Song Composition&#13;
Sterling Morrison - Lead and&#13;
Rhythm Guitars, Song&#13;
Composition&#13;
.. Lou Reed - Rhythm Guitar,&#13;
Piano, Vocals, Lyrics and&#13;
Song Composition&#13;
Moe Tucker - Drums&#13;
The most difficult part of&#13;
writing a review is getting&#13;
started, and this haunting&#13;
feeling I've got is making it&#13;
twice as hard as usual. I suppose&#13;
it's just an occupational&#13;
hazard, but it's albums like&#13;
these that cause a reviewer to&#13;
think twice before putting a&#13;
word down on paper. To pride&#13;
myself I could call it&#13;
professional caution, but what it&#13;
boils down to is an old fashioned&#13;
fear of placing one's foot&#13;
squarely in one's mouth.&#13;
"Loaded", lika a Zappa&#13;
recording, is an enigma. It&#13;
seems to straddle a fine line&#13;
between seriously good music&#13;
and a remarkable put on with&#13;
only the band knowing where it&#13;
really is. Saying that I like it&#13;
just for what it is therefore, -&#13;
could put me in the dubious&#13;
position of a man .bursting into&#13;
uproarious laughter during the&#13;
death scene of Macbeth interpreting&#13;
it as a Keyston~ Cop&#13;
routine. It becomes apparent to&#13;
me now that the only way to&#13;
decide where to stand (present&#13;
finances find me without a coin&#13;
to flip) is to use some&#13;
Therefore: "Loaded" is a&#13;
good album even taken at face&#13;
value.&#13;
Velvet Underground has&#13;
always had strong roots in New&#13;
York, apparent on this album as&#13;
m_uch as on the previous.&#13;
Direct, unpretentious and&#13;
uncomplicated, they could&#13;
never be accused of intellectualizing&#13;
music for the&#13;
sake of sanctimony. In fact, the&#13;
major part of the album is&#13;
based on one key and four&#13;
chords. I invoke the time-honored "So&#13;
what!"&#13;
If it should ever come to the&#13;
time when music is rated on the&#13;
number of notes rather than&#13;
what the notes do, it'll be a sad&#13;
state of affairs for musicians in&#13;
all fields. No, for musical&#13;
content the Underground gets&#13;
an A. It's a pleasure to just.sit&#13;
back and listen without having&#13;
your senses stretched, or suffer&#13;
through someone trying to.&#13;
Velvet Underground, Youse got&#13;
class.&#13;
For arguments sake,&#13;
someone might point out the&#13;
similarity between the ~;&#13;
derground sound and a few tn 1&#13;
and true groups. It's hard not -~&#13;
think of the Stones and Dylanh 1&#13;
t · sow a· a few spots but again, 1 • l'k oyan, I like the Stones, I 1 \ed the&#13;
and for a long time I've hd so for&#13;
Velvet Undergro~nd· .~n aded"·&#13;
whatever it is, I l~ke ~t what&#13;
Ifyou'renotworr1eda_ u they might say, pick ,t ~-&#13;
~1 NEED HELP!!!&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TIME&#13;
$25 GUarenteed for every 100 envelopes&#13;
you stuff&#13;
All postage prepaid send stamped, self-addressed envelope&#13;
plus $1 for registration and handling&#13;
to&#13;
ALLEN KING CORPORATION&#13;
P.O. BOX 6525&#13;
' PITTSBURG, PENN 15212 &#13;
October4.'''' . 'El\'SCOPE&#13;
OKTOBERFEST&#13;
Friday • Saturday&#13;
SOCCER 10:30 A, " 3 P.M.&#13;
RUGBY 1 P.M. SATURDAY&#13;
DANC ING 4: 30 P.M, FR I. &amp; SAT.&#13;
MUSIC FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
BEER FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
BRATS FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
SAUERKRAUT FR I. &amp; SAT.&#13;
POPCORN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
SOFT DRINKS FRI. &amp; SAT.&#13;
FENCING NOON SATURDAY&#13;
GYMNASTICS SATURDAY&#13;
SAllING 8 A.M. SATURDAY&#13;
GOLF ALL WEEK; SATURDAY&#13;
TENNIS FRIDAY, SATURDAY&#13;
ARCHERY FR IDAY&#13;
CONTESTS!!! SATURDAY&#13;
PLUS A SATURDAY NITE DANCE--9 P.M.&#13;
AT THE STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG.&#13;
51 iHIZA&#13;
near athletic bldg&#13;
on wood rd&#13;
October"· 1 , 1&#13;
OKTOBERFEST&#13;
Friday - Saturday&#13;
rr:sn&#13;
near t 1&#13;
le1· c Id&#13;
on wood 1rd&#13;
SOCCER 10: 30 • • I 3 P , •&#13;
RUGBY 1 P, • S TURDAY&#13;
DA CI G 4: 30 P. • FR 1. S r,&#13;
USIC FRIDAY &amp; s TURDAY&#13;
BEER FRID y s TUR y&#13;
BRATS FRIDAY &amp; SATURD y&#13;
SAUERKRAUT FR I s T,&#13;
POPCOR FRIDAY&#13;
SOFT ORI KS FRl I&#13;
FE Cl G 00 SATURDAY&#13;
GY ASTICS SATURDAY&#13;
SAIL! G 8 A, . SATURDAY&#13;
GOLF ALL EEK; SATURDAY&#13;
TENtlS FRIDAY, SATURDAY&#13;
ARCHERY FRIDAY&#13;
corTESTS! ! ! SATURDAY&#13;
PLUS A SATURDAY NITE DANCE--9 P,M, AT THE STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG, &#13;
Pago6 NEWSCOPE&#13;
.f'&#13;
OCtober 4.19'11&#13;
Oktoberfest Commemorates&#13;
German King's Marriage&#13;
As Parkside begins its first&#13;
Oktoberrest, perhaps it's appropriate&#13;
to look at Germany.&#13;
where it all started, and see-just&#13;
what Dktoberfest means and&#13;
encompasses.&#13;
In Germany, the Oktoberfest .&#13;
is known as the world's biggest&#13;
beer bust, and the tapping of the&#13;
first keg is the ceremony which&#13;
opens the Bavarian festival.&#13;
The annual celebration&#13;
commemorates the marriage of&#13;
King Ludwig I of Bavaria in&#13;
1810 and usually draws about&#13;
five million visitors to Munich&#13;
for its 16·day TWl.&#13;
Festival attractions include&#13;
circus performers and carnival&#13;
rides but the attraction, or&#13;
commodity, that packs 'em in,&#13;
wbether they he tourists or&#13;
natives. is the beer.&#13;
And there's a lot of it - over a&#13;
million gallons, in huge tents set&#13;
up by Munich's breweries.&#13;
Priced at 88 cents per quart, the&#13;
special brew is served up inI"&#13;
earthenware mugs to the sound&#13;
oj blaring brass bands.&#13;
Oktoherfest organizers also&#13;
expect visitors to conswne half&#13;
a million roasted chickens and&#13;
800,000pairs of pork wurst.&#13;
At Parkside, Oktoberlest is on&#13;
a somewhat smaller scale, but&#13;
that won't rob it of any of its&#13;
splendor. Music, dancing and&#13;
the complete line of Germanstyle&#13;
refreshments will be&#13;
featured along with the"&#13;
traditional athletic events&#13;
which reflect the glory of next&#13;
year's Olympic Games in the&#13;
Bavarian capitol.&#13;
The parking lot near the&#13;
Olfice of Athletics will become&#13;
the dance "platz" and the&#13;
singers will be ~German in&#13;
costume and song. Oktoberfest,&#13;
at Parkside, while it doesn't&#13;
celebrate a king's marriage,&#13;
may be just as important for the"&#13;
university.&#13;
Fencer to Coach for Army&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier, the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
athlete of the year in&#13;
1968-69, will become an&#13;
assistant fencing coach at the.&#13;
U.S. Military Academy upon&#13;
completion of basic training.&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier, a 1967&#13;
Kenosha Tremper graduate.&#13;
placed 11th nationally in foil in&#13;
1970while under the direction of&#13;
UW-P fencing master ,Loran&#13;
Hein. Last season he finished&#13;
third in the Chicagoland Open,&#13;
the second largest meet in the&#13;
nation.&#13;
•'The prime reason he wanted&#13;
and sought the position," Hein&#13;
explained, "is that Keith saw&#13;
the opportunity to have a steady&#13;
diet of fencing "between now and&#13;
next June.&#13;
"He hopes to make the U.S.&#13;
Olympic, team," Hein noted.&#13;
"This is a tremendous opportunity&#13;
for him.: With his&#13;
persistence, who knows?"&#13;
That same persistence was&#13;
enough to earn Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
an "A"&#13;
classification, . similar to the&#13;
black belt of judo, after only one&#13;
and one-half years or fencing. It&#13;
made him one of the top&#13;
collegians in the Midwest. It&#13;
brought him two Wisconsin&#13;
State foil championships.&#13;
And it prompted comment,&#13;
Hein recalled, that after such a&#13;
short time as a fencer, Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
had "reached the&#13;
height of fencing".&#13;
Oktoberfest Parkside Style&#13;
Oktoberfest, Parkside-style, is just about&#13;
here.&#13;
Activities begin Friday morning at the&#13;
Parkside athletic area with the start or the&#13;
Parkside Invitational Soccer Tournament, pitting&#13;
NAIA power Eastern Illinois against a strong Ohio&#13;
State club Irorn the Big Ten.&#13;
But a lot has actually started even before&#13;
then; the intramural golf tournament, with six&#13;
flights ror men and women raculty and stafr&#13;
members and students began last Friday. The&#13;
intramural tennis tournament starts early Friday&#13;
morning at the Pershing Courts in Racine.&#13;
Archery competition will lead orr the afternoon&#13;
segment or the lirst day, rollowed by the&#13;
second soccer match of the day, this one with host&#13;
parkside racing the always strong team rrom&#13;
Quicny (Ill.) College.&#13;
Highlighting the arternoon and early evening&#13;
will be the Oktoherfest Polka Party taking place&#13;
on the OUice of Athletics parking lot and&#13;
surroundcng area. Parkside students, raculty and&#13;
starr members and their guests may enter the&#13;
"beer garden" to purchase beer, brats and other&#13;
rerreshments. Admission to this area will be by&#13;
special "Oktoherlest" button, which features the&#13;
famed smiling race and may he purchased rrom&#13;
German Club or Varsity Club members.&#13;
There will he no letup on Saturday; the activity&#13;
will increase, w.ith a wide v.ariety of intramural&#13;
orrerings, spectator sports and social&#13;
get-togethers.&#13;
- Intramural activities include a sailing regatta&#13;
for experienced sailors in penguin boats at 8 a.m.&#13;
at the Kenosha Yacht Club, and faculty tennis&#13;
tournament finals at the Pershing Courts in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Soccer will again be in full swing, with the&#13;
losers from Friday playing a consolation match at&#13;
10:30 a.m. and the winners playing ror the&#13;
championship at 3 p.m.&#13;
Before soccer gets underway in the afternoon&#13;
fans who like football may thrill to a new form 01&#13;
gridiron madness in rugby. Rougher than football,&#13;
reqwrmg more skill and coordination than almost&#13;
any. other sport, rugby is a grand old game now&#13;
reVItalized by many of the nation's colleges. The&#13;
match here ~ll pit Parkside Rugby Club against&#13;
the Wlsconsm (Madison) Rugby Club.&#13;
An~ ~here'l1 be demonstrations as well - in&#13;
horse rIding and gymanstics - to follow the noon&#13;
rencm~ competition with the Shorewood Club. The&#13;
Parkslde EquestrIan Club will perform at 2: 30&#13;
p.m. WIth Parkside gymnasts demonstratin&#13;
varIOUSskills during the halftime of the afternoo~&#13;
soccer game.&#13;
At the conclusion of the championship lilt&#13;
~wa~ds WIll be presented for all intramural ac:&#13;
lIvllIes and then the polka party will get into full&#13;
SWI~, WIththe beer garden opening and dancing,&#13;
mUSIc, refreshments and special contests slated&#13;
At 9 p.m. there ~Il he a dance at the Studeni&#13;
ActIVIties Building to close out Parkside's f' t Oktoherfest. Irs&#13;
Oktoberfest&#13;
Schedule&#13;
FRIDAY. OCTOBER 8&#13;
\&#13;
.lI'ennis Tournament, Pershing Courts, Racine (Co&#13;
Intramura • .' f . forman nlac Coach Dick Frecka 10 Racpm~ .~r. 10 ~r~a ion.) I&#13;
Intramural Golf Tournament, e ri ymg prmgs Golf Course, n .&#13;
P&#13;
rogress. (Contact Coach Steve Stephens at the Olliee of Alb1OWet.~&#13;
for informa Ion. ti ) .. I I"&#13;
. 0 _ Soccer. Parkside Invitational Tournament. Oh'&#13;
to.3 a;~stern Illinois. Parkside athletic field. InStat,&#13;
vs. _ Archery Competition. Near athletic field.&#13;
1 p.m. _ Soccer. Parkside Invitational Tournam~nt. Parks'd&#13;
3 p.m. ks d thl t' fi Id I e vs Quincy College. Par i e a e ic Ie.. .&#13;
4:30-8:30 p.m. - Oktoberfest Polka Party - musI~, dancing,refr&#13;
ments for Parkside students, faculty and their guests. Parks~&#13;
athletic area and pa:~ng lo.t. .. de&#13;
9 p.m. _ Student ActiVities Building open.&#13;
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9&#13;
8 a.m. - Sailing Regatta. InttraCmurhal&#13;
V&#13;
'StGodfudents,faculty, stalf&#13;
Kenosha Yacht Club. (Contac oac IC rey at the Officeoi&#13;
Athletics for information,) .&#13;
8 a.m. _ Tennis. Faculty tenms tournament flnals. Pershing Courts&#13;
Racine.' ,&#13;
9 a.m. - Gall. Varsity golf tournament. Faculty-staff tournament&#13;
Petrifying Springs GOlfrCo~nfSe.(cot~tact) Coach Steve Stephens at&#13;
the Office of Athletics or 1 orma Ion.&#13;
10:30 a.m. - Soccer. Parkside Invitational Soccer Tournament. Third&#13;
place game between Friday losers. Parkside athletic field.&#13;
Noon _ Fencing Competition.Parkslde vs. Shorewood Club.Parkside&#13;
athletic area.&#13;
I p.m. _ Rugby Match. Parkside vs. Wisconsin Rugby Club.Parkside&#13;
athletic Held.&#13;
2:30 p.m. - Equestria," Demonstration. Parkside Equestrian Club.&#13;
Parkside athletic area.&#13;
3:00 p.m. - Soccer. Parkside Invitational Tournament. Championship&#13;
game between Friday winners.&#13;
4:30 p.m. - Awards Presentation.&#13;
4:30 _ 8:30 p.m. - Polka Party. Special contests. Parkside athletic&#13;
area and parking lot. Dancing, music, refreshments. FOi Parkside&#13;
" students, faculty and their guests.&#13;
9 p.m. - Dance. Student Activities Building.&#13;
In case of inclement weather all post-game activities will be&#13;
moved into the Student Activities Building.&#13;
touche! lilt&#13;
. . wiUbeo.'o&#13;
. Fen.cing competition with the Shorewood. !?ub lb lb' ;..JP'"&#13;
"high pomts of the Oktoherfest athletic actiVItieS, wi .•&#13;
scheduled to begin clashing at noon Saturday. "Lo"~&#13;
UW-Parkside Coach Loran Hein, once dubbed the ear.&#13;
rencing". has managed to put together good teams.everJ.~ 8.. ::&#13;
This one promises to be no exception, witb bas bed' If&#13;
Kenosha senior. expected to lead the team. which nd Io~oOil&#13;
su~ce.ssful against Big Ten opponents in the past. a 1911.&#13;
IlhnOis and Michigan State of that major conference III&#13;
Remember I. ,&#13;
. OctoberteS&#13;
Page&amp; NEWSCOPE&#13;
Oktoberfest Commemorates&#13;
German King's Marriage&#13;
As Parkside begins its first&#13;
Oktoberfest, perhaps it's appropriate&#13;
to look at Germany,&#13;
where it all started, and see just&#13;
what Oktoberfest means and&#13;
en com passes.&#13;
In Germany, the Oktoberfest.&#13;
is known as the world's biggest&#13;
beer bust, and the tapping of the&#13;
first keg is the ceremony which&#13;
opens the Bavarian festival.&#13;
the complete line of Germansty&#13;
le refreshments will be&#13;
featured along with the·&#13;
traditional athletic events&#13;
which reflect the glory of next&#13;
year's Olympic Games in the&#13;
Bavarian capitol.&#13;
Office of Athletics will become&#13;
the dance "platz" and the&#13;
singers will be • German in&#13;
costume and song. Oktoberfest&#13;
at Parkside, while it doesn't&#13;
celebrate a king's marriage,&#13;
may be just as important for the&#13;
The parking wiiversity. lot near the&#13;
The annual celebration&#13;
commemorates the marriage of&#13;
King Ludwig I of Bavaria in&#13;
1810 and usually draws about&#13;
five million visitors to Munich&#13;
for its 16-day rwi.&#13;
Fencer to Coach for Army&#13;
Festival attractions include&#13;
circus performers and carnival&#13;
rides but the attraction, or&#13;
commodity, that packs 'em in,&#13;
whether they be tourists or&#13;
natives, is the beer.&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier, the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
athlete of the year in&#13;
1968-69, will become an&#13;
assistant fencing coach at the.&#13;
U.S. Military Academy upon&#13;
completion of basic training.&#13;
next June. "He hopes to make the U.S.&#13;
Olympic. team," Hein noted.&#13;
"This is a tremendous opportunity&#13;
for him. · With his&#13;
persistence, who knows?"&#13;
And there's a lot of it - over a&#13;
million gallons, in huge tents set&#13;
up by Munich's breweries.&#13;
Priced at 88 cents per quart, the&#13;
special brew is served up in'&#13;
earthenware mugs to the sowid&#13;
of. blaring brass bands.&#13;
Oktoberfest organizers also&#13;
expect visitors to consume half&#13;
a million roasted chickens and&#13;
800,000 pairs of pork wurst.&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier, a 1967&#13;
Kenosha Tremper graduate,&#13;
placed 11th nationally in foil in&#13;
1970 while wider the direction of&#13;
UW-P fencing master Loran ·&#13;
Hein. Last season he finished&#13;
third in the Chicagoland Open,&#13;
the second largest meet in the&#13;
nation.&#13;
That same persistence was&#13;
enough to earn Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
an "A"&#13;
classification, . similar to the&#13;
black belt of judo, after only one&#13;
and one-half years of fencing. It&#13;
made him one of the top&#13;
collegians in the Midwest. It&#13;
brought him two Wisconsin&#13;
State foil championships.&#13;
At Parkside, Oktoberfest is on&#13;
a somewhat smaller scale, but&#13;
that won't rob it of any of its&#13;
splendor. Music, dancing and&#13;
"The prime reason he wanted&#13;
and sought the position," Hein&#13;
explained, "is that Keith saw&#13;
the opwrtwiity to have a steady&#13;
diet of fencing between now and&#13;
And it prompted comment,&#13;
Hein recalled, that after such a&#13;
short time as a fencer, Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
had "reached the&#13;
height of fencing".&#13;
Oktoberfest Parkside Style&#13;
Oktoberfest, Parkside-style, is just about&#13;
here.&#13;
Activities begin Friday morning at the&#13;
Parkside athletic area with the start of the&#13;
Parkside Invitational Soccer Tournament, pitting&#13;
NAIA power Eastern Illinois against a strong Ohio ·&#13;
State club from the Big Ten.&#13;
But a lot has actually started even before&#13;
then ; the intramural golf tournament, with six&#13;
flights for men and women faculty and staff&#13;
members and students began last Friday. The&#13;
intramural tennis tournament starts early Friday&#13;
morning at the Pershing Courts in Racine.&#13;
Archery competition will lead off the afternoon&#13;
segment of the first day, followed by the&#13;
second soccer match of the day, this one with host&#13;
parkside facing the always strong team from&#13;
Quicny (Ill.) College.&#13;
Highlighting the afternoon and early evening&#13;
will be the Oktoberfest Polka Party taking place&#13;
on the Office of Athletics parking lot and&#13;
surrowidcng area. Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff members and their guests may enter the&#13;
"beer garden" to purchase beer, brats and other&#13;
refreshments. Admission to this area will be by&#13;
special "Oktoberfest" button, which features the&#13;
famed smiling face and may be purchased from&#13;
German Club or Varsity Club members.&#13;
There will be no letup on Saturday; the activity&#13;
will increase, with a wide v.ariety of intramural&#13;
offerings, spectator sports and social&#13;
get-togethers.&#13;
Intramural activities include a sailing regatta&#13;
for experienced sailors in penguin boats at 8 a.m.&#13;
at the Kenosha Yacht Club, and faculty tennis&#13;
tournament finals at the Pershing Courts in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Soccer will again be in full swing, with the&#13;
losers from Friday playing a consolation match at&#13;
10:30 a.m. and the winners playing for the&#13;
championship at 3 p.m.&#13;
Before soccer gets underway in the afternoon&#13;
fans who like football may thrill to a new form of&#13;
gridiron madness in rugby. Rougher than football&#13;
requiring more skill and coordination than almost&#13;
any_ ot~er sport, rugby is a grand old game now&#13;
rev1tahzed by many of the nation's colleges. The&#13;
match_ here will pit Parkside Rugby Club against&#13;
the Wisconsin (Madison) Rugby Club.&#13;
An~ ~here'll be demonstrations as well - in&#13;
hors~ r1dmg and gymanstics - to follow the noon&#13;
fencm~ competiti~n with the Shorewood Club. The&#13;
Parkside Equestrian Club will perform at 2·30&#13;
P-~- wi~ Par~side gymnasts demonstrati0&#13;
ng&#13;
various skills durmg the halftime of the afternoon&#13;
soccer game.&#13;
At th~ conclusion of the championship tilt&#13;
3:w:1:ds will be presented for all intramural ac~&#13;
hv!hes a~d then the polka party will get into full&#13;
swm_g, with the beer garden opening and dancing&#13;
music, refreshments and special contests slated'&#13;
_A~? p.m .. there will be a dance at the Student&#13;
Achv1hes Building to close out Parkside' f' t&#13;
Oktoberfest. . s 1rs&#13;
Oktoberfest&#13;
Schedule&#13;
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8&#13;
1 !fennis Tournament, Pershing Courts, Racine (Co&#13;
IntrcamuhraDi'ck Frecka in Racine for information.) · ntact&#13;
oac P t · f · S · G&#13;
1 t ural Golf Tournament, e ri ymg prmgs olf Course&#13;
n r;r~gress. (C?ntact Coach Steve Stephens at the Office of A~~;i~&#13;
for information.) . . . , .30 _ Soccer. Parkside Inv1tabonal Tournament. Oh' 8&#13;
16· a.m. ks'd thl f f Id 10 tat Eastern Illinois. Par I e a e 1c 1e . e&#13;
vs. _ Archery Competition. Near athletic field.&#13;
1 p.m. 'd I ·t t· al T _ Soccer. Parks1 e nvi a 10n ournam~nt. Parks'd&#13;
3 PQtrincy College. Parkside athletic field. . 1 e vs.&#13;
4.30 _ 8:30 p.m. -Oktoberfest Polka Party - music, dancing, refr&#13;
· ments for Parkside students, faculty and their guests. Parks~-&#13;
athletic area and parking lot. e&#13;
9 p.m. _ Student Activities Building open.&#13;
SATURDAY,OCTOBER9&#13;
8 a.m. _ Sailing Regatta. Intramural. . Students, faculty, starr&#13;
Kenosha Yac~t Club. &lt;_Contact Coach Vic Godfrey at the Office oi&#13;
Athletics for mformabon.). .&#13;
8 a.m. _ Tennis. Faculty tenms tournament fmals. Pershing Courts&#13;
Racine. '&#13;
9 a.m. _ Golf. Varsity golf tournament. Faculty-staff tournamenL&#13;
Petrifying Springs &lt;?olf Co~se. (Co~tact Coach Steve Stephens at&#13;
the Office of Athletics for mformahon.)&#13;
io:30 a.m. _ Soccer. Parksi?e Invitational Soc~er Tournament. Third&#13;
place game between_ 1:riday los~rs. Parkside athletic field.&#13;
Noon_ Fencing Competition. Parkside vs. Shorewood Club. Parkside&#13;
athletic area.&#13;
1 p.m. _ Rugby Match. Parkside vs. Wisconsin Rugby Club. Parkside&#13;
athletic field.&#13;
2:30 p.m. _ Equestrian Demonstration. Parkside Equestrian Club.&#13;
Parkside athletic area.&#13;
3: oo p.m. - Soccer. Parkside Invitational Tournament. Championship&#13;
game between Friday winners.&#13;
4:30 p.m. - Awards Presentation.&#13;
4:30 _ 8:30 p.m. - Polka Party. Special contests. Parkside athletic&#13;
area and parking lot. Dancing, music, refreshments. For Parkside&#13;
. students faculty and their guests.&#13;
9 p.m. - D~nce. Student Activities Building.&#13;
In case of inclement weather all post-game activities will be&#13;
moved into the Student Activities Buildlng.&#13;
touchel ,~ . . 'UbeoneO&#13;
Fencing competition with the Shorewood Club WI the we•Po"&#13;
high points of the Oktoberfest athletic activities, witb .,&#13;
scheduled to begin clashing at noon Saturday. 111,oJJlblrdi&#13;
UW-Parkside Coach Loran Hein, once dubbed the year,&#13;
fencing", has managed to put together good teams_eve7ohn flaJI';!&#13;
This one promises to be no exception, wi~b has l,etll 11&#13;
Kenosha senior, expected to lead the team, which d tosl onlY&#13;
su~c«:ssful against Big Ten opponents in the past. 8~971.&#13;
Illm01s and Michigan State of that major conference 10 &#13;
Pa , 0._ •.•".&#13;
Oktoberfest Big&#13;
on Intramurals&#13;
RUGBY . A Lesso&#13;
Violence, Sports a s ip&#13;
Rugby can be mosl pi&#13;
described as lootball ,lho&lt;a&#13;
pads. But it IS ruIly more \ban&#13;
that. It IS tile maot p/l) I of&#13;
aD contact r13&#13;
Yet there is aloo a .... of&#13;
spnrtsrnanslup ch IS uruque&#13;
One 01 the most wumpntUnI&#13;
unntten rules eaus lor a part)&#13;
spnnsored b the haol chm .Iter&#13;
the match. Rug!&gt;· hard Iut·&#13;
ling and most competlll,., but&#13;
each pIa) r bas a h rd&#13;
lor e'ier)' _ and for penonal&#13;
spnrlsmanship.&#13;
Each team IS ~n1ed b&#13;
ISmen with ooe addlIJonal man&#13;
to act as hne judge .·0 substitutions&#13;
are a"""ed chn&#13;
thegamee of&#13;
IIlJ"'es &lt;lurq the ftrSl I.&#13;
rmoutes of pla On! the one&#13;
offietal can caD tim Each&#13;
haJJ IS usually 30 to m&#13;
long.&#13;
PoIIllS)'5tem: Spain -a ttY&#13;
_ p1a=g ball on p-ound 0&#13;
npp&gt;nenl's pl 2 poon -&#13;
" COO\'ers,H)ft - extra&#13;
added after a ttY a place&#13;
IS taken anY"tlere 011the hold&#13;
011a tine parallel to the sidehnt&#13;
!rom the poont here the baD&#13;
..... placed on the gr-o&lt;I&gt;d • S&#13;
pnlllts - a drop kJdt - I",",&#13;
Paul&#13;
Car&#13;
Troll&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
UniVersityI . . h "III&lt;d "Roo 0 Wlsconsin-Parkside wrestling coach Jim xoc was&#13;
~ kie Coach 01 the Year" for 1970 by Amateur Wreslling&#13;
first~Parkside Invitational Soccer Tournament will highlight the&#13;
~ual Oktobertest celebration at the University of Wisconstn&#13;
-&#13;
campus Oct. 8-9.&#13;
Univern .•eht&#13;
"oj COach I Y orWisconsin.Par-kside track coach Bob Lawson 13......&#13;
"""her o~ track Ior.seven months in the Philippines last year as a&#13;
the Parkside coaching team.&#13;
Ullivern Ilc:bis the I y or Wisconsin-Parkside athletic director Tom Ro~·&#13;
.\lbielics secretary or the National Association or IntercollegIate&#13;
sports chiefs' committee.&#13;
UIliVersi . dseO ~ ty of Wisconsin-Parkside bas~dball star Mike Ma&#13;
~ r"'turned to Kenosha arter • four nation baSkelballlltour&#13;
-...: OUr European nations with a collection of MIdwest co ege&#13;
YOU'1i_ girl. lik. the..... d _ -- at "'i. __ ....t. oI&lt;tobeIf .. ,. The uw-f'al\t.id. ......eacIer ...... P""'1"'" girl. will be 01'1 hand 10 eM« 01'1 the Rongen i.the _COf tou_ ~ i.~ olla'-'· rv&lt;Pf __ ••• , \JlHolDdi ......&#13;
0c .... ,.1,i1&#13;
0 0&#13;
on I&#13;
UW-Parkside's sailors extraordinaire l(enosha 1·uniors M"k p ba , ' e o r and Jerry Ruffol&#13;
show (ieza Martiny's sailing class how it's done during a ti . o,&#13;
oslta yacht Club. prac ce session at the KenRUGBY&#13;
-&#13;
Violence,&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
U111Yersity of w· . "Rook· isconsm-Parkside wrestling coach Jim Koch was . ie Coach of the Year" for 1970 by Amatelll" Wrestling&#13;
'!be Park.,ide In ·tat· · · w· ht th&#13;
11\nua] Ok VI 10nal Soccer ToW"Dament will h1g . 1g . e ~ earn toberfest celebration at the University of W1sconsm- pus Oct. 8-9.&#13;
lJ .... lllYersity of w· - ugh ._ COachect isconsin-Parkside track coach Bob Lawson ta t&#13;
her of thtrack, for seven months in the Philippines last year as a&#13;
e Parkside coaching team.&#13;
lJniYersit . h IS the Y of Wisconsin-Parkside athletic director Tom Ro~-&#13;
tica spo~eta!Y ?' the National Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
chiefs committee.&#13;
u-\'ersit . . ~ ~of WISConsin-Parkside bas~dball star Mike Madsen&#13;
.:--. foUr E ed to Kenosha after 2 four nation basketball tour&#13;
uropean nations with a collection of Midwest college&#13;
you•II ... girls like se and aawy - at&#13;
cheerleaders and flO"'"PO" girls will be on t.ld tD&#13;
and In so--, aftanoon's ,uf/:1, v-,e uguinst uw....,..11111&#13;
7 &#13;
PageS NEWSCOPE October 4,1971&#13;
Soccer Highlights Oktoberfest Sports&#13;
Jaehne,Tom&#13;
Jenrette, Mike&#13;
Kiefer, Wolf Dieter&#13;
Kilps, Rick&#13;
Lechusz, Rick&#13;
Markovic, Stan&#13;
Martinson, Tim&#13;
Nassauer t Kurt&#13;
Orr, Joe&#13;
J&gt;hanturat,Ftay I&#13;
Schneider, Dietmar&#13;
Thomsen, Tom&#13;
- Wentzell, Dave&#13;
Weyrauch, Paul&#13;
with Quincy ·should be a tough&#13;
test for the Rangers. . "We're young, inexperienced&#13;
and building for the future,"&#13;
UW-Parkside soccer coach&#13;
Geza Martiny says.&#13;
Martiny is optimistic about&#13;
the future of the soccer&#13;
program at Parkside,' which&#13;
will face a big test this weekend&#13;
in the first Parkside Invitational&#13;
Tournament in&#13;
conjunction wi th the&#13;
Oktoberfest activities.&#13;
"We're just working on&#13;
fundamentals and trying to play&#13;
game by game," Martiny&#13;
pointed out.&#13;
His big gun, Joe Orr, an allMidwest&#13;
pick at halfback in&#13;
1970,is perhaps the key, but no&#13;
less important is the teamwork&#13;
needed to produce a winner.&#13;
Parkside showed that&#13;
teamwork in its first game&#13;
against the Wisconsin All Stars,&#13;
controlling the ball and keeping&#13;
it in the All Starz' zone. But the&#13;
Rangers were unable to score&#13;
until the fourth period and had&#13;
already given up three goals to&#13;
put the game nearly on ice for&#13;
the Stars.&#13;
Two freshmen from&#13;
Milwaukee - Rick Kilps and&#13;
Rick Lechusz - are expected to&#13;
be key performers in this third&#13;
season of soccer at Parkside.&#13;
They, with some older, more&#13;
experienced hands, hopefully&#13;
will help UW·P improve on its 4·&#13;
6·1 mark of 1970.&#13;
The teams here this weekend&#13;
are Ohio State of Big Ten,&#13;
Eastern Illinois and powerful&#13;
Quincy College. The first game&#13;
Ilw&#13;
1\1&#13;
CF1l&#13;
LW&#13;
CF&#13;
LIiB&#13;
ilFa&#13;
IlW&#13;
IlI1B&#13;
LI&#13;
ilFa&#13;
G&#13;
IlW&#13;
G&#13;
U'they pass that one and upset&#13;
Quincy, they'll face the winner&#13;
of Friday morning's Ohio StateEastern&#13;
Illinois game for the&#13;
championship at 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
UW.p 1971 Roster&#13;
Andacht, Chris&#13;
Bi1lings, Charles&#13;
Brieske, Elliott&#13;
Hopkins-Matt&#13;
LW&#13;
LFB&#13;
LFB&#13;
.RW'&#13;
&lt;&#13;
II:&#13;
III&#13;
N fu&#13;
&lt;&#13;
Q.'&#13;
U"&#13;
II:&#13;
....&#13;
Gymnasts Start Practice&#13;
at Park H.S.&#13;
The Parkside gymnastics&#13;
learn is preparing for its second&#13;
season under new head coach&#13;
Dave Donaldson and will&#13;
demonstrate various tricks at&#13;
halftime of Saturday afternoon's&#13;
soccer championship&#13;
game.&#13;
Warren McGillivray and Don&#13;
Boswein are back from last&#13;
year's squad, which placed&#13;
Sixth in the NAJA in Parkside's&#13;
first year of competition.&#13;
New squad members&#13;
'presently working out with the&#13;
team at Park high school in&#13;
flacine are Carl Greene, Devin&#13;
O'Neal, Mike Monti, Wayne&#13;
DuQuoine and Kelly Carney.&#13;
It's rather early for predictions,&#13;
but the team appears well&#13;
balanced and able to cover all&#13;
even~. The first competitive&#13;
test will be the Midwest Open in&#13;
November.&#13;
Harriers at Platteville&#13;
UW·Parkside's cross country&#13;
team will compete in the tough&#13;
Platteville Invitational&#13;
Saturday over a five mile&#13;
course.&#13;
difficult we compete in all&#13;
year". .&#13;
"It's a rugges course," he&#13;
noted, "and it always seems to&#13;
give us trouble. But all the good&#13;
colleges in the area will be there&#13;
and it's a good opportunity for&#13;
US."&#13;
Barefoot freshman Lucian&#13;
Rosa is currently running as the&#13;
number one man on the&#13;
Parkside squad, with&#13;
sophomores Chuck Dettman&#13;
and Jim McFadden close&#13;
behind.&#13;
"We're progressing normally&#13;
for a young team," Lawson&#13;
said. "Nearly everyone improved&#13;
from the first meet- 'to&#13;
the second."&#13;
Others battling for top spots&#13;
include freshman Rudy&#13;
Alvarez, sophomore Gary&#13;
Lance, freshman Dennis Biel&#13;
senior Mike DeWitt, sophomor~&#13;
Keith Merritt and freshmen Bill&#13;
Carlson and Kim Whitmore.&#13;
The Rangers will head for&#13;
Platteville again Oct. 16to face&#13;
the WSU school in a dual affair.&#13;
Gymnast Warren McGillivray Other top teams competing&#13;
WIth the Rangers include&#13;
Mankato (Minn.) State, Carthage,&#13;
"Platteville State and&#13;
Loras,&#13;
UW-P Coach Bob Lawson&#13;
called the meet "one of the most&#13;
Anyone interested in joining&#13;
the squad should contact Coach&#13;
Donaldson in Racine or meet&#13;
him at practice at Park high&#13;
from 6 to 7 p.m.&#13;
Coach Bob L.... en&#13;
Parkside '200'&#13;
Maybe you've heard of Parkside 200.Maybe you haven't.&#13;
But they don't necessarily expect to be heard or seen.&#13;
I;S members love intercollegiate athletics, and want to helpo,ut&#13;
That s all that's needed': For $100a year they can join the organization&#13;
and help support UW-P athletics. . .&#13;
B~sically, the members are local men who have seen ~&#13;
Parkside's Olympic and lifetime sports programs somethingt/I8&#13;
t&#13;
s&#13;
desperately needed and can be of vital importance to this area,&#13;
perhaps more in the future than at the present time, but important&#13;
nonetheless .&#13;
. In return for their contributions they receive membershiP cards&#13;
which admit them to Parkside home athletic contests, a pin, a car&#13;
decal and a monthly newsletter. '&#13;
They are invited to all special activities, such as the okloberi~&#13;
an? varIOUS ~embers are taking part in the golf tournament;er'&#13;
gomg on and 10 the tennis tournament to be run off Saturday at&#13;
shing Courts in Racine.&#13;
Some of them do special, unasked-for things- ;ng&#13;
Ken Joarus of Kenosha has taken Parkside freshman ru;ev'&#13;
~~nsatIon Lucian Rosa into his home and basketball coachSOCCerephens,&#13;
also a 200 member has done the same with IJ8S&#13;
basketball player Ray Phantur~t of Thailand: Aida Madrigran&#13;
o&#13;
'cal&#13;
ed&#13;
donateda $4,000 scoreboard for the new athletics and pbYS'&#13;
ucatIon building. . .' fred s.&#13;
Des The Board of Directors for the organizatIon lOcludes:t.tQSk8,&#13;
Bo Imo~e, Richard Ellison, Dam Tirabassi, Jr., Chester e past.&#13;
b White and Irving Silver. It meets monthly 10 dis~ th&#13;
present, but most especially, the future of Parksideathlet'CS.&#13;
U's rugby, and the fi "&#13;
citing. It will be an 1m ertant action IS what makes the game exwith&#13;
the Parkside RU~bY Cluta~~Of,lhe big O~toberfest weekend,&#13;
Rugby Club at I p.m. Satu d hstmg th~ Wisconsin (Madison)&#13;
r ay on t e Parksfde athletic field. Help' ,&#13;
p~e .Xniversity of Wisconsin-&#13;
"H t"' e Rugby Club has a&#13;
e P Wanted" sign. posted.&#13;
Th.e team is without a coach&#13;
and rs looking for someone who&#13;
has coached or played rugb .&#13;
the past to guide it throuJ', ~&#13;
schedule that includes the UWMadison,.&#13;
Milwaukee School of&#13;
E"!lmeermg, Illinois Valley and&#13;
University of Iowa clubs&#13;
Games are generally played \&#13;
on Sundays but the next home&#13;
encounter, against the Madison&#13;
club, will be part of Parkside's&#13;
Oktoberfest activities and will&#13;
~ played at 1 p.m. Saturday Wanted&#13;
1. 9. '&#13;
Anyon~ who might be interested&#13;
10 coaching is asked to&#13;
call'Coach V' Go UW P ksi IC dfrey at the - ar SIde Office f&#13;
AtWetics, phone 414-553-231~.&#13;
Pages NEWSCOPE October 4, 1971&#13;
Soccer Highlights Oktoberfest Sports . with Quincy should be a tough Jaehne, To~&#13;
...... ...-a ,,, «P0.i.rnr -&#13;
Gymnasts Start Practice&#13;
The Parkside gymnastics&#13;
team is preparing for its second&#13;
season under new head coach&#13;
Dave Donaldson and will&#13;
demonstrate various tricks at&#13;
halftime of Saturday afternoon's&#13;
soccer championship&#13;
game.&#13;
at Park H.S.&#13;
"We're young, inexperienc~&#13;
and building for the future,&#13;
UW-Parkside soccer coach&#13;
Geza Martiny says. Martiny is optimistic about&#13;
the future of the soc~er&#13;
program at Parksi.de, · which&#13;
will face a big test this weekend&#13;
in the first Parkside Invitational&#13;
Tournament in&#13;
conjunction with the&#13;
Oktoberfest activities.&#13;
"We're just working on&#13;
fundamentals and trying to play&#13;
game by game," Martiny&#13;
pointed out.&#13;
His big gun, Joe Orr, an a~lMidwest&#13;
pick at halfback m&#13;
1970, is perhaps the ~y, but no&#13;
less important is the teamwork&#13;
needed to produce a winner.&#13;
Parkside showed that&#13;
teamwork in its first game&#13;
against the Wisconsin All s1a:rs,&#13;
controlling the ball and keepmg&#13;
it in the All Starz' zone. But the&#13;
Rangers were unable to score&#13;
until the fourth period and had&#13;
already given up three goals to&#13;
put the game nearly on ice for&#13;
the Stars.&#13;
Two freshmen from&#13;
Milwaukee - Rick Kilps and&#13;
Rick Lechusz - are expected to&#13;
be key performers in this third&#13;
season of soccer at Parkside.&#13;
They, with some older, more&#13;
experienced hands, hopefully&#13;
will help UW-P improve on its 4-&#13;
6-1 mark of 1970.&#13;
The teams here this weekend&#13;
are Ohio State of Big Ten,&#13;
Eastern Illinois and powerful&#13;
Quincy College. The first game&#13;
t f th Rangers. Jenrette, Mike&#13;
tes or e Kiefer, Wolf Dieter&#13;
If they pass that one and ~pset&#13;
Quincy, they'll face th~ wmner&#13;
of Friday morning's Ohio State -&#13;
Eastern Illinois game for the&#13;
championship at 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
UW-P 1971 Roster&#13;
,\Jldacht, Chris&#13;
Billings, Charles&#13;
Brieske, Elliott&#13;
Hopkins_, Matt&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
0::&#13;
I.LI&#13;
N&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
n.&#13;
)£&#13;
u&#13;
-&#13;
0::&#13;
-\&#13;
• •1: ....&#13;
LW&#13;
LFB&#13;
LFB&#13;
RW,&#13;
Kilps, Rick&#13;
Lechusz, Rick&#13;
Markovic, Stan&#13;
Martinson, Tim&#13;
Nassauer, Kurt&#13;
Orr,Joe&#13;
Phanturat, Ray&#13;
Schneider, Dietmar&#13;
Thomsen, Tom&#13;
- Wentzell, Dave&#13;
Weyrauch, Paul&#13;
RW.&#13;
Rt&#13;
CFa&#13;
L\V&#13;
CF&#13;
LllB&#13;
ll.Fa&#13;
RW&#13;
RIIB&#13;
Lt&#13;
RFB&#13;
G&#13;
RW&#13;
G&#13;
Warren McGillivray and Don&#13;
Boswein are back from last&#13;
year's squad, which placed&#13;
sixth in the NAIA in Parkside's&#13;
first year of competition.&#13;
Harriers at Platteville&#13;
New squad members&#13;
presently working out with the&#13;
team at Park high school in&#13;
Racine are Carl Greene, Devin&#13;
O'Neal, Mike Monti, Wayne&#13;
DuQuoine and Kelly Carney.&#13;
It's rather early for predictions,&#13;
but the team appears well&#13;
balanced and able to cover all&#13;
events. The first competitive&#13;
test will be the Midwest Open in&#13;
November.&#13;
Help&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Gymnast warren McGillivray&#13;
Anyone interested in joining&#13;
the squad should contact Coach&#13;
Donaldson in Racine or meet&#13;
him at practice at Park high&#13;
from 6 to 7 p.m.&#13;
UW-Parkside's cross country&#13;
team will compete in the tough&#13;
Platt eville In vi t ati onal&#13;
Saturday over a five mile&#13;
course.&#13;
Other top teams competing&#13;
with the Rangers include&#13;
Mankato (Minn.) State, Carthage,&#13;
Platteville State and&#13;
Loras.&#13;
UW-P Coach Bob Lawson&#13;
called the meet "one of the most&#13;
.. It's ru~by, and the fierce action is what makes the game exci~mg.&#13;
It will ~ an important part of the big Oktoberfest weekend,&#13;
with the Parkside Rugby Club hosting the Wisconsin (Madison)&#13;
Rugby Club at 1 p.m. Saturday on the Parkside athletic field.&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Rugby Club has a&#13;
"Help Wanted" sign. posted.&#13;
The team is without a coach&#13;
and is looking for someone who&#13;
has coached or played rugby in&#13;
the past to guide it through a&#13;
schedule that includes the UWMadison,&#13;
Milwaukee School of&#13;
Engineering, Illinois Valley and&#13;
University of Iowa clubs. \&#13;
Games are generally played&#13;
on Sundays but the next ·home&#13;
encounter, against the Madison&#13;
club, will be part of Parkside's&#13;
Oktoberfest activities and will&#13;
be played at 1 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
Oct. 9.&#13;
Anyone who might be interested&#13;
in coaching is asked to&#13;
call Coach Vic Godfrey at the&#13;
UW-Parkside Office of&#13;
Athletics, phone 414-553-2310.&#13;
difficult we compete in all&#13;
year".&#13;
"It's a rugges course," he&#13;
noted, " and it always seems to&#13;
give us trouble. But all the good&#13;
colleges in the area will be there&#13;
and it's.. a good opportunity for&#13;
us."&#13;
Barefoot freshman Lucian&#13;
Rosa is currently running as the&#13;
number one man on the&#13;
Parkside squad, with&#13;
sophomores Chuck Dettman&#13;
and Jim McFadden close&#13;
behind.&#13;
"We're progressing normally&#13;
for a young team," Lawson&#13;
said. "Nearly everyone improved&#13;
from the first meet-to&#13;
the second."&#13;
Others battling for top spots&#13;
include freshman Rudy&#13;
Alvarez, sophomore Gary&#13;
Lance, freshman Dennis Biel,&#13;
senior Mike DeWitt, sophomore&#13;
Keith Merritt and freshmen Bill&#13;
Carlson and Kim Whitmore.&#13;
The Rangers will head for&#13;
Platteville again Oct. 16 to face&#13;
the WSU school in a dual affair.&#13;
Co~ch Bob Lawson&#13;
Parkside '200'&#13;
Maybe you've heard of Parkside 200. Maybe you haven't.&#13;
But they don't necessarily expect to be heard or seen. h 1 out.&#13;
Its members love intercollegiate athletics and want to ~ifation&#13;
That's all that's needed For $100 a year they can join the org&#13;
and help support UW-P athletics. seen in&#13;
Basically, the members are local men who ha:n that is&#13;
Parkside's Olympic and lifetime sports programs som~t Js area,&#13;
desperately needed and can be of vital import_ance 0t important&#13;
perhaps more in the future than at the present time, bu&#13;
nonetheless. . . shiP cards&#13;
In return for their contributions they receive member in a car&#13;
which admit them to Parkside home athletic contests, a P '&#13;
decal and a monthly newsletter. Oktoberfest,&#13;
The~ are invited to all spec~al activi~ies, such as lhe nament now&#13;
an? various members are takmg part m the golf tour day at per·&#13;
gomg on and in the tennis tournament to be run off Satur&#13;
shing Courts in Racine.&#13;
Some of them do special, unasked-for thi~gs. man running&#13;
Ken Joanis of Kenosha has taken Parkside fres~ oach sieve&#13;
sensation Lucian Rosa into his home and basketbal ;ith soecer·&#13;
Stephens, also a 200 member, has done the same drigrano bas&#13;
basketball player Ray Phanturat of Thailand: Aid~ Ma and physical&#13;
donated a $4,000 scoreboard for the new athletics&#13;
education building. . . . Iudes Alfred 5· The Board of Directors for the orgam~ation me ter MatoskB•&#13;
DeSimone, Richard Ellison, Dom Tirabassi, Jr., C:~uss the pas~&#13;
Bob White and Irving Silver. It meets monthlr to 1fetics.&#13;
present, but most especially, the future of Parkside alh &#13;
CRY UNCLE&#13;
rs - Allen Garfield&#13;
jol' Mast' people who brought us "JOE" fool&#13;
111' same&#13;
n&#13;
more with Cry Uncle, a film that&#13;
''''\~'classic image of the detective. Mike&#13;
fIIb wouldeven laugh at some of the nearly&#13;
iIIlO"'erearlyslapstick humor that is thrown at&#13;
~~ence like a pie of another kind. Sex,&#13;
I 't be perverse or plain, was the meat that&#13;
:: }tlmtogether as the viewer sinks into an&#13;
jIIIfd 'skin nick' world where avery one seems to&#13;
fOl1ottenwhere they put their clothes. -:"ethin&amp; may be wrong with me, but after&#13;
_twenty minutes of this ~exual bomba.r~ent&#13;
film became boring. I decided I was a victim of&#13;
,..,o.aunt&#13;
" a premature hardening of the ar-&#13;
_ simil~ to that found in cases ~f senil~ty.&#13;
11* twentyminutes took all the boyish behmd&#13;
.. borIl PlayhoyMagazine fun out of sex, and&#13;
_ the humorwas sometimes a little slow in&#13;
~ all of the grunting an~ groaning seemed&#13;
iDtermissionrather than intercourse.&#13;
ltiinkJohnBarth in his floating opera sums up&#13;
.. bout30words what it took the film nearly an&#13;
... and ahallto get across ... And then I looked in&#13;
mirror on my dresser, beside us - an&#13;
8DUillly largemirror that gave back our images&#13;
0&lt; .......... 1011 r. rt&#13;
~&#13;
PEPSI·COLA&#13;
~&#13;
full-length and life size - and ther&#13;
Betty Ju~e's face buried in the PillOw~:: g:~~y&#13;
as a Whippet and braying like an ass it was&#13;
mar~elo~!y funny; Iexploded with laughter 1&#13;
Nothmg IS mtrinsicaIly funny to be sure, but ;~ ,;,~&#13;
nothl,ng IS SO consistently, profoundly earth&#13;
sha~mgly funny as we animals in the' act or&#13;
mating."&#13;
The story consists of a millionaire's desire to kill&#13;
seve,ral p~ple ,who were involved in a group sex&#13;
film,mg With him, The real image of Hedonism&#13;
getting soft. He pays a million dollars to a tall&#13;
gaunt blonde sleep-in girl to get rid of aU of them.&#13;
Our pudgy. ov.er.weight private iey is employed as&#13;
a method to fmd them so the girl can knock them&#13;
off. the detective is unaware of the killings until&#13;
tile, en? where he solves the crime and lets the&#13;
pohce In on what is going on, The title of the film is&#13;
derived from the detective's relationship with hiw&#13;
nephew who constantly follows him about, getting&#13;
baIled by the gaunt blonde and acting innocent.&#13;
A couple of funny scenes and long inactive parts&#13;
made the film just passable. I expected a little&#13;
more than what I got.&#13;
.e Bill Sorensen.&#13;
PATRON,ZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
Popcorn&#13;
Tuesdays&#13;
5-11&#13;
FREE&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
II' Oil&amp; Filter Change&#13;
PlRKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
6S4-9968&#13;
The Dime Beer!&#13;
!!INCHEDN SPECIAL I&#13;
MOn_Fr!&#13;
All 'tou can eat&#13;
$·99&#13;
,hst 100l, beer&#13;
$.01 pe r oz.&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN" .KENOSHA&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
-&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
'" foil' SiZe'S , ... 1'- - I..... 16"&#13;
• ,5O&#13;
•• 115 • 5,.GH(J.11 • CHICIOt&#13;
GHOCCHI ..... vrcu • LA 5.C .....&#13;
• 'o(A fOOD. SAt&lt;lOW1CH1.5&#13;
CAllY -OUTS - D£lIVUY&#13;
"YOU .tHG ,." .alHe'"'&#13;
657.9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
brovvse&#13;
stop&#13;
• newly arrriving books&#13;
• greeting cards&#13;
• gift items&#13;
• records&#13;
available at&#13;
THE U IVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
****************&#13;
f:Grand Opening=]&#13;
Friday. October 1.Saturday. October 2. and&#13;
Sunday. October 3.&#13;
w.e. Fields Revlvl!Il&#13;
ew . ague . hpnlH&#13;
* * * * * * * * *-** * * * * *&#13;
The ~teway To Harbor West&#13;
18'20-Slnd Street. Kenosha&#13;
THE NEW VOGUE THEATER Is at&#13;
tempting to bring to Kenoshaa new concept&#13;
In the world of films by presenting a Wide&#13;
range of movies produced promarlly outside&#13;
of the Hollywood studio, Our long rang&#13;
schedule calls tor class c. toreign. un&#13;
derground and experimental movi s. THE&#13;
NEW VOGUE THEATER will be open&#13;
every Friday. Saturday and Sunday nIght&#13;
offering two complete showings ach&#13;
evening. beginning at approximately 7:30&#13;
and 9:4SP.M.&#13;
feature:&#13;
shorts:&#13;
THE BANK DICK&#13;
THE BIG THUMB&#13;
CALIFORNIA BOUND&#13;
CIRCUS SLICKER&#13;
ST ACT BLDG&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
\&#13;
All 10 oZ mUIS of beer&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
Admission $1.25at the door&#13;
$1.00in advance&#13;
Advance tickets may be purchased at any&#13;
art gallery in Harbor West or at the Student&#13;
services Office at Carthage College.&#13;
Coming Attraction for October 8. 9 &amp; 10&#13;
feature: ANIMAL FARM&#13;
short: THE ADVENTURES OF A&#13;
NAKED BOY&#13;
rs _ Allen Garfield&#13;
taste people who brought us "JOE" fool&#13;
.same 1 f"l h . more with Cry Unc e, a 1 m t at&#13;
• 1&#13;
;e:1assic image of the detective. Mike&#13;
er would even laugh at some of the nearly&#13;
. nearly slapstick humor that is t_hrown at&#13;
tdi ce like a pie of another kind. Sex,&#13;
a : be perverse or plain? was t~e me_at that&#13;
the film together as the viewer smks mto an&#13;
, kin flick' world where averyone seems to&#13;
f .-gotten where they put their clothes.&#13;
~thing may be wro~g with me, but after&#13;
twenty minutes of this ~exual bomba_r~ent&#13;
film became boring. I decided I was a victim of&#13;
erf]aunt" a premature hardening of the arsimil~&#13;
to that found in cases ~f senil~ty.&#13;
twenty minutes took all the boyish behind&#13;
barn Playboy Magazine fun out of sex, and&#13;
tbe humor was sometimes a little slow in&#13;
all of the grunting and groaning seemed&#13;
termission rather than intercl)urse.&#13;
I John Barth in his floating opera sums up&#13;
bout 30 words what it took the film nearly an&#13;
and a half to get across. "And then I looked in&#13;
rrurror on my dresser, beside us - an&#13;
Uy large mirror that gave back our images&#13;
full-length and life size - and th&#13;
B tty J , ere we ·ere· e u~e s face buried in the pillow; mega I· .&#13;
as a whippet af!.d braying like an a , it v.a·&#13;
mar~elo~ly funny; I exploded with laughter&#13;
Not~mg 1~ intrinsically funny to be sure, but i~ ~~ noth1_ng is so consistently, profoundly, earth&#13;
sha~mgly funny as we animals in the act of&#13;
matmg."&#13;
The story consists of a millionaire's desire to ill&#13;
sev~ral ~pie _who were involved in a group se&#13;
film_mg with him. The real image of Hedoni m&#13;
getting soft. He pays a million dollars to a tall&#13;
gaunt blonde sleep-in girl to get rid of all of them.&#13;
Our pudgy, o"'.er·weight private iey is employed a&#13;
a method to fmd them so the girl can knock them&#13;
off, the detective is uraware of the killings until&#13;
the end, where he solves the crime and le the&#13;
police in on what is going on. The title of the film i&#13;
derived from the detective's relationship v.ith h1v.&#13;
nephew who constantly follows him about, gettin,&#13;
balled by the gaunt blonde and actin,g innocent.&#13;
A couple of funny scenes and long inactive part&#13;
made the film just passable. I expected a little&#13;
more than what I got.&#13;
.• Bill Soren en.&#13;
PATRONJZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
illl Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
FREE&#13;
Popcorn&#13;
Tuesdays&#13;
5-11&#13;
ST ACT BLDG&#13;
The Dime Beerl&#13;
--!!,NCHEON SPECIAL&#13;
t,ton-Fri&#13;
411 vou can eat&#13;
$-99&#13;
111 t 10oz. beer&#13;
$.01 per oz.&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
I&#13;
All 10 oz mues of beer&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30 TH AVE N U E IN· -KENO SH A&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
famous&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I• Four Siu, 9• · 12· · 1,~ · Ir&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIIS • srAGHOTI • CHICl(H&#13;
GHOCCHI • a.-VIOLI • LA SAGHA&#13;
• ~IA fOOD • SAHDWICHlS&#13;
CAUY-OUTS - DELIVUY&#13;
"YOU I/HG v,,r HIHC&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
6S8-4922&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
• ne arrn 1n&#13;
• greeti cards&#13;
gift i tern&#13;
ail {&#13;
THE I E S, Y&#13;
BOOKSTOI&#13;
**&#13;
Grand Op n&#13;
r day, 0c o r 1, urd y, 0c o&#13;
unday, 0c r 3.&#13;
W.C. F Id&#13;
eature:&#13;
shorts:&#13;
Admission Sl.25 a door&#13;
Sl.00 In advance&#13;
D&#13;
Advance tic ets may be purchased a any&#13;
art gallery in Harbor es o at Stud nt&#13;
Serv ces Office at Carthage Colleg •&#13;
Com ng Attraction for October 8, 9 &amp; 10&#13;
feature: A IMAL FARM&#13;
short: THE AOVE TURES OF A&#13;
AKEO BOY&#13;
* * * * * * * * * '* * * * * * * &#13;
Page 10 NIi:WSCOPE October 4, 1971&#13;
Constitutional Referendum Planned&#13;
As exciting as tomorrow&#13;
in design Model. 1778"ideal anywhere,&#13;
is just one of many value packed Magnavox entertainment&#13;
values for home or away. It has FM jAFC, slide&#13;
rule dial and illuminated flip digital clock, tone control&#13;
and slide controls, built-in antennas, wake-ta-music&#13;
and wake-to-alarm controls, plus a slumber switch.&#13;
It even has an AM /PM 24-hotH&#13;
alarm set. Low profile styling, $3995&#13;
too. See it and hear it today.&#13;
JOERN NTURA&#13;
PHONE'&#13;
654-3559&#13;
A constitutional Referendum&#13;
is planned for Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday, october 19th and&#13;
zoui. This referendum is&#13;
proposed to amend the present&#13;
constitution in areas which have&#13;
been difficult to operate under&#13;
_ committee organization and&#13;
quorum problems to name two.&#13;
Persons inherested in being&#13;
on the committee to draw up&#13;
amendments should contact the&#13;
student government office,&#13;
extension 2244. At least four&#13;
meetings will be held to construct&#13;
said amendments. These&#13;
meetings will be held Tuesday,&#13;
OCtober sth, at 4: 30 p.m. in the&#13;
student government building,&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 7 at 10:llOa.m. in&#13;
the Greenquist concourse,&#13;
Monday, October 11 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Kenosha lounge, and&#13;
Wednesday, October 13, at 1:30&#13;
p.m. in the Greenquist lounge.&#13;
Other meetings may be&#13;
scheduled at the convenience of&#13;
those persons who with to be on&#13;
the committee.&#13;
Copies of proposed amendments&#13;
will be printed Thursday,&#13;
Oct 14tlr. To comply with the&#13;
present constitution it shall be&#13;
necessary for ten per cent of the&#13;
student body to approve said&#13;
amendments by written&#13;
petition. Such petitions shall be&#13;
circulated on Friday, October&#13;
15.&#13;
People to man polling places&#13;
shall have a general meeting on&#13;
Monday, Oct. 1&amp;,at a time and&#13;
place to be 'announced.&#13;
The referendum will be held&#13;
on all three campuses, Oct. 19th&#13;
and 20th. If an amendment has&#13;
the approval of a majority of the&#13;
votes cast t~e amendment shall&#13;
pass. If there exists a case of&#13;
alternate subsections to an&#13;
amendment, the subsections&#13;
receiving the plurality of votes&#13;
will be adopted, provided that&#13;
the amendment itself is passed&#13;
with a majority.&#13;
Results of the constitutional&#13;
referendum will be tabulated by&#13;
4 p.rn. Thursday, Oct. 21. The&#13;
new constitution will be sent to&#13;
Newscope for publication and to&#13;
the printer for duplication. All&#13;
students will receive copies of&#13;
the constitution by Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 27.&#13;
Because of the necessity of&#13;
holding the constitutional&#13;
referendum prior to the general&#13;
elections, the general elections&#13;
will be moved back one&#13;
the second week in N week,to&#13;
since senators and o\re~ber,&#13;
might be elected und ofhcers&#13;
constitution. er a new&#13;
On Oct. 25, candidat&#13;
office may pick up n .es for&#13;
petitions at th omInation&#13;
government bUi~' studenl&#13;
candidates must ~ng. All&#13;
petitions signed by 25v~ the~&#13;
Petitions must be turn~ ~dents.&#13;
p.m. Friday, Oct. 29. Inby4&#13;
Upon presentation of&#13;
nom ina ting petition their&#13;
didates may start th~' can·&#13;
. elf cam&#13;
paigns. Each candid ..&#13;
engiUed to 10 poster boa:;:: IS&#13;
1,000 printed leaflets. and&#13;
General election date&#13;
ject to change with outes subConstitutional&#13;
Referend olDeof U1n.&#13;
Exam Prep Sessions&#13;
On Monday, October rtth, the&#13;
Student Counseling Service of&#13;
the Office of Student Affairs is&#13;
offering three fifty minute \&#13;
sessions designed to' help&#13;
students prepare for six weeks&#13;
exams. The sessions are open to&#13;
all those who' face university&#13;
exams for the first time as well&#13;
as to those who feel they would&#13;
like to brush up on their study&#13;
and exam taking skills.&#13;
Members of the faculty,&#13;
several honors students.iand the&#13;
counseling staff will be on hand&#13;
to discuss such things as how to&#13;
study for examinations, the&#13;
differences in preparation for&#13;
an essay exam as opposed to an&#13;
objective exam, how to write an&#13;
exam, etc. Study tip sheets will&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS 1962 RAMBLER - Automatic&#13;
good condition, best offer. 654:&#13;
2665. 1963Buick For Sale - 4 barrel 442&#13;
eng. in good condo Autom. on the&#13;
floor. Body in good condoFor SaleAt&#13;
S2SO. ALSO&#13;
4barrel Chev. carb and bottom piece&#13;
for only SJO.OOtakeit. Call 633·07847&#13;
·10 p.m. Racine.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
2SnowTires, 7.75·14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
~ocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
H.tch, 8 ~og FM Ant. 654·7312.&#13;
Wet SUitSS, Showtire &amp; rim $1, File&#13;
boxes $1 &amp; $1.50,call 634·3757.&#13;
For Sale - '63 V.W. $275.00.3509&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha.&#13;
1961~hev., 6 cvr.. eutc trans., pwr.&#13;
steering, very goOdmech. condoSlSO&#13;
- call 859·2412.&#13;
FOLK GUITARS: From $12.&#13;
Call 6511·2832after 4 p.m. 1971 TRAVEL TRAILER - 15 Ft&#13;
light - Very easy to 'ow - Bum in&#13;
Surge brakes Used only three&#13;
weeks - Must sell· Going to schOOl,&#13;
512245th St . Ph. 652-3084. ~ Bedroom Home, 1112bath, builtlOS,&#13;
see thrOUgh fire-place, 21/2&#13;
car ~ttached garage, 1;2 acre lot,&#13;
1 mile from Parkside - asking&#13;
$34,900by owner. 552-8183·.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus Camper, Stove,&#13;
refrig., and SO gal. gas tank, included.&#13;
First $750.00takes all. Call&#13;
632·5544after 5:30.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967NORTON 750cc&#13;
Mo'orcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing. Phone 65...·8770 - or&#13;
Newscopeoffice. leave messagefor&#13;
Rick Pazera.&#13;
LINED, EMBROIDERED&#13;
SHEEP SKIN COAT- Woman's&#13;
- 654-3170.&#13;
ComeTouChMe. A new poetry book&#13;
by ~on Schulz and Larry Roach&#13;
Available at all UWP Bookstores:&#13;
FOR SALE - Muskrat fur lacket&#13;
size 14. 25.inches long. New lining:&#13;
550.00.Anita, 652·675....&#13;
JUDO UNiFORMS. Size3and size 4,&#13;
10.00each. Call Kay at 694-.6674.&#13;
'71 Ford Maverick: 6 cyl., stick.&#13;
3,200 miles. $2,700 or best offer&#13;
over $2,650.ALSO: Vox 12 string&#13;
folk electric guitar - once&#13;
belonged to Neil Diamond -&#13;
$525. Inquire 1602 A, 61st St.,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Mike Davis Speed City&#13;
4607 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
,&#13;
·"~egaliZe Mariiuana" Bumper&#13;
-ettckees 25c. Money goes to AClu.&#13;
send large self -edcressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Art Dexter, P.O. 133,&#13;
Union Grove 53182.&#13;
Couch - fold out bed and gas&#13;
stove. Call 637-1556.&#13;
FILM MAKERS.- need help&#13;
making your film for class? A&#13;
s~asoned film maker is at your&#13;
disp~sal at no money cost. For&#13;
detaIls, call Jerry, 654-51&amp;8,&#13;
between 10 a.m. and 12 a.m.&#13;
INDICATIONS (a literary&#13;
ma~azine) needs poems, short&#13;
stones, plays and what have&#13;
you: Drop your literary work off&#13;
at Newscope office,&#13;
LudWig Drum Set - Blue ___&#13;
sparkle 3 piece with cymbols, hihat,&#13;
etc. Was $424, asking $250.&#13;
A-I. Phone 554-9174.&#13;
FOR SALE - Lovely Lenox&#13;
chma ..Starlight pattern. Service&#13;
for SIX (almost). Cost $240.&#13;
Sacnflce of $95. 543-3149.&#13;
FREE! Who will adopt a timid&#13;
senSItIve shelty (toy colliel. On~&#13;
ye~r old male who needs&#13;
patience and love for tra' .&#13;
543.3149. mmg.&#13;
EngliSh Springer scenrets. 6 weeks&#13;
old. AKC Good hunting and family&#13;
dog.,639-4593,1204Cedar Creek sr.,&#13;
Raclne, wis.&#13;
Explore the world of ESP whh&#13;
Norman Slater, Ap,. by telephone&#13;
only. 654-2375.&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261Broad Street, lake Geneva, Wis.&#13;
Chicago - casette tape to trade for&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
winemaking_ Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums. 6328&#13;
WaShington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785or 633-3805.&#13;
HELP WANTED - 2 Spanish guitar&#13;
players work in Pizza Hut. Phone&#13;
551-8906or stop in and ask for John.&#13;
Attractive girls over 21. Earn tuition&#13;
an~ book money. Dl!Incing &amp;&#13;
,Waitress work. If nudity offends&#13;
yOu, do not apply. Call 652-20031or&#13;
stop a~ 4426 - Sheridan Road.&#13;
W~N.TED TIM) l!Ittractive, openminded&#13;
female s'udents to share&#13;
small apartment with two male&#13;
stUdents. Apt. 1 block from Racine&#13;
campus. For further information&#13;
write to: Peter NOli, Apt. 3, 1111Wis&#13;
Ave., Racine, Wis. .&#13;
be handed out and time will be&#13;
o~en ~or questions and&#13;
diSCUSSIOn. A student ID&#13;
request individual help fay&#13;
d&#13;
. or&#13;
ea mg and study skills&#13;
following these sessions ifhe&#13;
desires. ,so&#13;
. AI! three sessions will be held&#13;
on Monday, October 11th Tbe&#13;
first session is in room lOs on&#13;
the Racine Campus frOID 12&#13;
noon to 12:50 p.m. FollOWing&#13;
this the session at Greenquist&#13;
WIll be held from 1:30 p.m. to&#13;
2:20 p.m. in room 103and onthe&#13;
Kenosha campus, a sessionwill&#13;
be offered in room 103from3&#13;
p.m. to 3:50 p.m.&#13;
Registration for these&#13;
sessions is encouraged in order&#13;
to insure space, however&#13;
students may drop in if they&#13;
Wish. Students may register for&#13;
the sessions by calling tbe&#13;
Kenosha Student Affairs Office&#13;
(553-2121,extension 43).&#13;
I ,&#13;
Musicians&#13;
Needed&#13;
The Parkside concert bandis&#13;
in need of qualified musicians&#13;
for the current schoolyear. All&#13;
instrwnents can be used, but&#13;
there is a special needfor reed&#13;
players and percussionists.Any&#13;
.interested musicians should&#13;
contact Mr. Stiner through bis&#13;
Kenosha office. (l\Iusic major&#13;
not required.)&#13;
WANTED: Male student to&#13;
share one bedroom, furnished&#13;
apartment at 1327HoweSt.,R·&#13;
cine. $10 per week. Contact&#13;
Robin - 6344775.&#13;
-------:-&#13;
MEN '- Your seare time ISJI~&#13;
by a boy 7 - 17 yearsoldwhO ~an&#13;
have a father. Can yOUprovide&#13;
and&#13;
example of good character I,&#13;
citizenship while shootIngr'Bi9&#13;
fishing, skating, etc.t If so ~~_.&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha,InC.___&#13;
FREE Kittens: 6 weekSOld,~:&#13;
trained. Good with children. call&#13;
and female, assort~ COMIO~~Hall&#13;
Sharon, Ext. 20, Racme a&#13;
.201,or 634-6215after 5 p.m~&#13;
FOR RENT ---------.tRlIclne&#13;
For Rent - 1 bedroom ap .&#13;
633·4990.&#13;
lOST &amp; FOUN~&#13;
swelter',&#13;
FOUND: SunglaSSes, nddepl.,&#13;
Jacket. Contad lost &amp; f~~d !lOO'&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
Tallent Hall. ____&#13;
\aI.t panehO&#13;
LOST: 1 navy blue .I J,Oun8'&#13;
in vicinity of GreenqU1't1&#13;
wendY,&#13;
about Sept. 20. ContaC&#13;
654-1593. ___&#13;
PER'ON~ ___ --:-:::: ,VI ,,119\&#13;
PROBLEM PRE~NANFree !OC~.&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
. service. :...."'" consu ta Ion right. t"f"" ..&#13;
counseling piUSthe&#13;
35~&#13;
Pagel0 Nli:WSCOPE October 4, 1971&#13;
As exciting as tomorrow&#13;
in design Model 1778, .ideal anywhere,&#13;
is just one of many value packed Magnavox entertainment&#13;
values for home or away . It has FM/ AFC, slide&#13;
rule dial and illuminated flip digital clock, tone control&#13;
and slide controls, built-in antennas, wake-to -music&#13;
and wake -to -alarm controls, plus a slumber switch.&#13;
It even has an AM /PM 24-hour&#13;
alarm set . Low profile styling, s399s&#13;
too . See it and hear it today .&#13;
JOERN&#13;
APPUANC£&#13;
CENTER&#13;
NTURA&#13;
PHONE'&#13;
654-3559&#13;
Constitutional Referendum Planned&#13;
votes cast t~e amendment shall&#13;
pass. If there exists a case of&#13;
alternate subsections to an&#13;
amendment, the subsections&#13;
receiving the plurality of votes&#13;
will be adopted, provided that&#13;
the amendment itself is passed&#13;
with a majority.&#13;
will be moved back on A Constitutional Referendum&#13;
is planned for Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday, October 19th a~d&#13;
20th. This referendum 1s&#13;
proposed to amend the present&#13;
constitution in areas which have&#13;
been difficult to operate under&#13;
- committee organization and&#13;
quorum problems to name two. Results of the constitutional&#13;
referendum will be tabulated by&#13;
4 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 21. The.&#13;
new constitution will be sent to&#13;
Newscope for publication and to&#13;
the printer for duplication. All&#13;
students will receive copies of&#13;
the constitution by Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 27.&#13;
Because of the necessity of&#13;
holding the constitutional&#13;
referendum prior to the general&#13;
elections, the general elections&#13;
the second week in Ne Week, to · ovembe smce senators and . r,&#13;
might be elected und officers&#13;
constitution. er a new&#13;
&lt;?n Oct. 25, candida&#13;
office may pick up n t_es for&#13;
petitions at the omination&#13;
government buildi student&#13;
candidates must hang. All&#13;
petitions signed by 25 v~ their&#13;
Petitions must be turn~ ~dents.&#13;
p.m. Friday, Oct. 29. Inby4&#13;
Upon presentation of&#13;
nominating petition their&#13;
didates may start th~· can. . e1r earn pa1gns. Each candida . · engitled to 10 poster boa Je is&#13;
1,000 printed leaflets. r s and&#13;
General election dat&#13;
ject to change with ou;s subConstitutional&#13;
Referend ome of um.&#13;
Persons inherested in being&#13;
on the committee to draw up&#13;
amendments should contact the&#13;
student government office,&#13;
extension 2244. At least four&#13;
meetings will be held to construct&#13;
said amendments. These&#13;
meetings will be held Tuesday,&#13;
October 5th, at 4:30 p.m. in the&#13;
student government building,&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 7 at 10:00 a.m. in&#13;
the Greenquist concourse,&#13;
Monday, October 11 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Kenosha lounge, and&#13;
Wednesday, October 13, at 1:30&#13;
p.m. in the Greenquist lounge.&#13;
Other meetings may be&#13;
scheduled at the convenience of&#13;
those persons who with to be on&#13;
the committee.&#13;
Exam Prep Sessions&#13;
Copies of proposed amendments&#13;
will be printed Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 14th. To coml)ly with the&#13;
present constitution it shall be&#13;
necessary for ten per cent of the&#13;
student body to approve said&#13;
amendments by written&#13;
petition. Such petitions shall be&#13;
circulated on Friday, October&#13;
15.&#13;
People to man polling places&#13;
shall have a general meeting on&#13;
Monday, Oct. is., at a time and&#13;
place to be announced.&#13;
The referendum will be held&#13;
on all three campuses, Oct. 19th&#13;
and 20th. If an amendment has&#13;
the approval of a majority of the&#13;
On Monday, October 11th, the&#13;
Student Counseling Service of&#13;
the Office of Student Affairs is&#13;
offering three fifty minute'&#13;
sessions designed to help&#13;
students prepare for six weeks&#13;
exams. The sessions are open to&#13;
all those who face university&#13;
exams for the first time as well&#13;
as to those who feel they would&#13;
like to brush up on their study&#13;
and exam taking skills.&#13;
Members of the faculty,&#13;
several honors students,.and the&#13;
counseling staff will be on hand&#13;
to discuss such things as how to&#13;
study for examinations, the&#13;
differences in preparation for&#13;
an essay exam as opposed to an&#13;
objective exam, how to write an&#13;
exam, etc. Study tip sheets will&#13;
Mike Davis Speed City&#13;
4807 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
be handed out and time will be&#13;
oren ~or questions and&#13;
d1scuss10n. A student&#13;
t . d' , may red1;1es m 1v1dual help for&#13;
ea m~ and study skills&#13;
followmg these sessions if he&#13;
desires. ' 80&#13;
Al! three sessions will be held&#13;
~n Monday, October 11th. Th&#13;
first session is in room 105 0 e&#13;
the Racine Campus from 1~&#13;
noon to 12:50 p.m. Following&#13;
this the session at Greenquist&#13;
will be h~ld from 1:30 p.m. to&#13;
2:20 p.m. m room 103 and on the&#13;
Kenosha campus, a session will&#13;
be offered in room 103 from 3&#13;
p.m. to 3:50 p.m.&#13;
Registration for these&#13;
sessions is encouraged in order&#13;
to insure space, however&#13;
students may drop in if they&#13;
wish. Students may register for&#13;
the sessions by calling the&#13;
Kenosha Student Affairs Office&#13;
(553-2121, extension 43).&#13;
Musicians&#13;
Needed&#13;
The Parkside concert band is&#13;
in need of qualified musicians&#13;
for the current school year. All&#13;
instruments can be used, but&#13;
there is a special need· for reed&#13;
players and percussionists. Any&#13;
· interested musicians should&#13;
contact Mr. Stiner through his&#13;
Kenosha office. (Music major&#13;
not required.)&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1963 Buick For Sale - 4 barrel 442&#13;
eng . in good cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floor . Body in good cond . For Sale At&#13;
$250. ALSO&#13;
4 barrel Chev. carb and bottom piece&#13;
for only $30.00 take it. Call 633-0784 7&#13;
· 10 p.m. Racine.&#13;
For Sale - '63 v.w. $275.00. 3509&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha.&#13;
1961 ~hev., 6 cyl., auto trans., pwr.&#13;
steering, very good mech. cond. 5150&#13;
- call 859-2412.&#13;
1971 TRAVEL TRAILER - 15 Ft&#13;
Light · Very easy to tow . Built in&#13;
Surge brakes · Used only three&#13;
weeks · Must sell . Going to school,&#13;
5122 45th St . Ph. 652-3084.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus Camper . Stove,&#13;
refrig ., and 50 gal. gas tank, in -&#13;
cluded. First $750.00 takes all. Call&#13;
632-5544 after 5:30.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc&#13;
Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gear Ing . Phone 654-8770 . or&#13;
Newscope office. Leave message for&#13;
Rick Pazera .&#13;
'71 Ford Maverick: 6 cyl. , stick.&#13;
3,200 miles. $2,700 or best offer&#13;
over $2,650. ALSO: Vox 12 string&#13;
folk electric guitar - once&#13;
belonged to Neil Diamond -&#13;
$525. Inquire 1602 A, 61st St.,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
1962 RAMBLER - Automatic&#13;
good condition, best offer. 654~&#13;
2665.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FORSALE&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75. 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
Sh_ocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 ~og FM Ant. 654.7312 _&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire &amp; rim $1, File&#13;
boxes $l &amp; Sl.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
FOLK GUITARS: From $12.&#13;
Call 658-2832 after 4 p.m.&#13;
~ Bedroom Home, 1 ½ bath, builtms,&#13;
see through fire-place, 2112&#13;
car ~ttached garage, 'rl acre lot,&#13;
1 mlle from Parkside _ asking&#13;
$34,900 by owner. 552-8183.&#13;
LINED, EMBROIDERED&#13;
SHEEP SKIN COAT- Woman's - 654-3170.&#13;
Come Touch Me. A new poetry book&#13;
by Ron Schulz and Larry Roach&#13;
Available at all UWP Bookstores:&#13;
FOR SALE - Muskrat fur jacket&#13;
size 14. 25_ inches long. New lining'.&#13;
SS0.00. Anita, 652-6754.&#13;
JUDO UNiFORMS, Size 3 and size 4,&#13;
10.00 each. Call Kay at 694-6674.&#13;
"Legalize Marijuana" Bumper&#13;
stickers 25c. Money goes to ACLu.&#13;
Send large self addressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Art Dexter, P.O. 133,&#13;
Union Grove 53182.&#13;
Couch - fold out bed and gas&#13;
stove. Call 637-1556.&#13;
FIL~ MAKERS - need help&#13;
makmg your film for class? A&#13;
s~asoned film maker is at your&#13;
disposal at no money cost. For&#13;
details, call Jerry, 654_5188&#13;
between 10 a.m. and l2 a.m. '&#13;
INDICATIONS (a literary&#13;
ma~azine) needs poems, short&#13;
stones, plays and what have&#13;
you. Drop your literary work off&#13;
at Newscope office.&#13;
Ludwig Drum Set - Bluesparkle&#13;
3 piece with cymbols, hihat,&#13;
etc. Was $424, asking $250.&#13;
A-1. Phone 554-9174.&#13;
F~R SALE - Lovely Lenox&#13;
chma._ Starlight pattern. Service&#13;
for .s~x (almost). Cost $240.&#13;
Sacrifice of $95. 543-3149.&#13;
FRE:~ ! Who will adopt a timid,&#13;
sensitive shelty (toy collie). One&#13;
ye~r old male who needs&#13;
pahence and love for training 543-3149. ·&#13;
EngliSh Springer Spaniels, 6 weeks&#13;
old. AKC Good hunting and family&#13;
dog·. 639-4593, 1204 Cedar Creek St.,&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Explore the world of ESP w°Jth&#13;
Norman Slater, Apt. by telephone&#13;
only. 654-2375.&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, Wis.&#13;
Chicago · casette tape to trade for&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
winemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums. 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
HELP WANTED - 2 Spanish guitar&#13;
players work in Pizza Hut . Phone&#13;
551-8906 or stop in and ask for John.&#13;
Attractive girls over 21. Earn tuition&#13;
an~ book money. Dancing &amp;&#13;
Waitress work. If nudity offends&#13;
You, do not apply. Call 652-20031 or&#13;
stop at 4426 . Sheridan Road.&#13;
W:A,NTED - Two attractive, openminded&#13;
female students to share&#13;
small apartment with two male&#13;
students. Apt. 1 block from Racine&#13;
ca'!'pus. For further information&#13;
write to: P_eter Noll, Apt. 3, 1111 Wis&#13;
Ave., Racine, Wis. ·&#13;
WANTED: Male student to&#13;
share one bedroom, furnished&#13;
apartment at 1327 Howe St., R·&#13;
cine. $10 per week. Contact&#13;
Robin - 634-4775.&#13;
MEN·- Your spare time ls.need~&#13;
by a boy 7 . 17 years old whO ~oes~"&#13;
have a fat her. Can you provideaod&#13;
example of good character 1&#13;
citizenship while shooting r:i~&#13;
fishing, skating, etc.? If 50 '~-6S8lBrothers&#13;
of Kenosha, Inc. 6&#13;
----------- FREE! Kittens: 6 wee~s old,:~&#13;
trained. Good with children~ call&#13;
and female, assorte~ CDMI0\~ Hail&#13;
Sharon, Ext. 20, Racine a&#13;
201, or 634-6215 after 5 P.::--&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
--------&#13;
---&#13;
1 Racloe&#13;
For Rent - 1 bedroom ap .&#13;
633&#13;
~&#13;
-4990.&#13;
sweater, FOUND: Sunglasses, d dept.,&#13;
Jacket. Contact lost &amp; 102&#13;
~d 1Ioor&#13;
T~&#13;
Information center.&#13;
kn't paochO LOST: 1 navy blue .1 1,-0uoge&#13;
in vicinity of Greenqlllstt weodY,&#13;
~&#13;
about Sept. 20. Contac&#13;
PERSONA~&#13;
----.:;.cv? c1er9i&#13;
PROBLEM pRE~NA Free '°'~- consultation servic~lght, f'llone&#13;
counseling plus the&#13;
35~ &#13;
No Break for You ng Harr ie rs _!!!:.!!!Oclobor~~~,197L.-I--'~. E\\~'ltl=I'f._-..:..:I·~I.:-1&#13;
r of the Newscope staff&#13;
b)' jim Caspe&#13;
t to find out Iwhere and are able to close the gaps&#13;
"We wdand where qur goals between our number one and&#13;
tan an "b f· \lit s. eweareayoung team. num er lye men Ithink we can&#13;
areSlnCascross country coa~h run with, mos,t of the small&#13;
TbalW n speaking about his schools In this part of the&#13;
BobLa~SOtotheir meet against country. Because we are very&#13;
teamprior and Drake last inexperienced, that is our&#13;
)llnne,s~tDesMoines. .goal:" he said.&#13;
f'rtd~ and Minnesota are Wlth the squad comprised&#13;
Dr ~al powers in the almost completely' of unperenn&#13;
!. Vaney and Big Ten derc1assmen the inexperience&#13;
)!1SSO:~cesrespectively. can have a negative effect.&#13;
cU!fe&#13;
. good to throw them Lawson elaborated on this'&#13;
"II 15 . "Th t h t thi .&#13;
. t the wolves once In e aug es mg for these&#13;
agalun5" said Lawson. after kids is to adjust from the one&#13;
lOt e, . t&#13;
rigoroUS ass1gnm en&#13;
~:sonhopeS to come home&#13;
and beat a few teams.&#13;
SaturdaYthe Rangers had an&#13;
rtunity for that a thorne :'inS.l UW·Milwaukee, Beloit&#13;
and RIpon. .&#13;
Though the schedule IS _t Lawson remams undauntedabout&#13;
facing it. He is&#13;
realistic about .hi~ team's&#13;
_cos and is satisfied so far.&#13;
"We have made good&#13;
JI'Oil'ess and are right ~n&#13;
id1edule as far as the team IS&#13;
cmcemed.Winning or losing&#13;
IDes not always indicate. hos&#13;
wblleam is doing," he added.&#13;
"U we continue progressing&#13;
byLarry Jones&#13;
CampusEditor and Right&#13;
Tackle&#13;
'The mighty Newscope intramural&#13;
football team is still&#13;
lIldefeated, hut has yet to win a&#13;
game.&#13;
For the second week in a row,&#13;
NewKope gridders were forced&#13;
10 lorfeit due to a lack of the&#13;
nquired seven men. Monday's&#13;
gamecaught the majority of the&#13;
ItaII (and team) at the printer&#13;
plIttIng together Monday's&#13;
181'" - thus accounting for the&#13;
ICcuteman-power shortage.&#13;
Anyway,three stalwart staff-&#13;
~d members did make it&#13;
lllto the field with their heads&#13;
heldhigh. When the forfeit was&#13;
announced, they gamely&#13;
cballenged this week's victims,&#13;
"TheJocks" , to lend them a few&#13;
men and carryon.&#13;
With team captain Ricky&#13;
"F1ash" Pazera .holding down&#13;
the left side of the line, Dave&#13;
"Dead-Eye" Kraus centering&#13;
the ball and cleaning out the&#13;
mIddle,Larry "Lightnin' Bolt"&#13;
~nes wiping out (and being&#13;
"'ped out by) the right sde of&#13;
the hne, and several unidenIlfjed&#13;
Jocks handling the run·&#13;
nang, passing, catching, the&#13;
makeshift Newscope team&#13;
toppledthe parent club 13·6.&#13;
Brilliant defensive play by the&#13;
reg~ars,including a touchdown&#13;
setting up interception by&#13;
Pazera, kept the Jocks from&#13;
gaming any significant yar-&#13;
~ge. The lone touchdown was&#13;
YIelded on a busted play in&#13;
Buy Indications&#13;
SO¢&#13;
at the Bookstore&#13;
Quality Sportswear&#13;
for worn en&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SK IRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
"UNOREDS OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWEAR&#13;
3120 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
...... R A C IN E&#13;
and a half and two mile races in&#13;
hi~h school to the five and six&#13;
mile runs in college."&#13;
"This is a completely different&#13;
world:' said Lawson.&#13;
"These kids are short distance&#13;
'runners. like miters and half&#13;
miters. and now they are&#13;
competing in the world of&#13;
distance running which takes a&#13;
different type of athlete. so in&#13;
this respect these kids have&#13;
made a good adjustment. explained&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
q:).idi rtJ/MU~~&#13;
... Downtown Kt1IO ba ----. " "&#13;
, ..&#13;
Newscope Defaults&#13;
Cagers Train for Future&#13;
by Jim Casper of the Ncwseupc SI;lrr&#13;
If Parksides cagers appear to have a little extra hustle on tlu-nfast&#13;
breaks this winter and are able to get back quickly on 0PPOlll'Ilt'S&#13;
breaks, perhaps some of the quickness can be attributed 10a nUlIllll1-!.&#13;
program instituted by Coach Steve Stevens.&#13;
Prospective players run every weekday near the soccer field (or&#13;
15minutes - a figure soon to be increased to 30 minutes.&#13;
. On Mondays; Wednesdays and Fridays the team does weightlifttng&#13;
at the Athletic barn. Thursday is the busiest day as the men do the&#13;
regular running, springs and a timed half mile.&#13;
When asked 'if this was done in the past, Stevens replied, "This is&#13;
the first year that we have really had the facilities for this." Stevens&#13;
sees. the program as being helpful in improving a player's quickness&#13;
and overall physical shape, along with aiding in developing team&#13;
unity.&#13;
which the entire Newscope&#13;
team thought the Jock halfback&#13;
had been downed after a short&#13;
pass ~ which he hadn't. He&#13;
waved from the endzone as NS&#13;
watched in disgust.&#13;
On offense, two touchdown&#13;
passes - one long, one short,&#13;
and an extra point, wrapped up&#13;
the second straight victory for&#13;
still winless Newscope gridders.&#13;
In other, less spectacular&#13;
action, a touchdown pass from&#13;
QB Dennis Serpe to Tom&#13;
Thompson and a TD run up the&#13;
middle by a back named&#13;
Chapman left the "Schooners"&#13;
to a 13-0 win over the "Mad&#13;
Dogs". ,&#13;
. Intramural Schedule&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 6&#13;
Pink Facists vs. Newscope&#13;
Friday. Oct. 15&#13;
Newscope vs. Mad Dogs&#13;
Friday. Oct. 22&#13;
Newscope vs. The Schooners&#13;
'i&#13;
213 SIXTH STREET RACINE -""',&#13;
-------------------~&#13;
FREE&#13;
Root Beer&#13;
Good for on&#13;
free root be r&#13;
with any pur&#13;
---Coupon good on an&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
date--J&#13;
h&#13;
Come in and bring the family&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
Opt1l 0/1 .lear round&#13;
on 22nd a cnuc&#13;
at 44th place in Keno ha&#13;
We hale a I'ariet) oj food&#13;
at reasOIUlbleprice.&#13;
Bought and sold -------,&#13;
(we buy an" sell)&#13;
-A little out of the way,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
MCFarlands Auto sales&#13;
7904 WASHINGTON&#13;
AVENUE RACINE.&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Tr1Ide.m-rk@&#13;
•&#13;
--&#13;
g~ tJ,s ~ilfe4t&#13;
Pvno-' g !J141wt- ~&#13;
KENOSHA 658·3131&#13;
2129 BIRCH ROE·BAR DINING ROOM&#13;
LIQUOR STOR, '&#13;
o,... ..... t ~ ...&#13;
...-,.'"""-' -&#13;
PUT ON YOUR GLAD RAGS&#13;
TAP YOUR TOES AND BE ......PPY&#13;
PURE FUN IN CREPE p...TE T upp AS&#13;
OF APPLE REO N"'VY OR BL. ...CK SI&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
bI Jim Casper&#13;
: want to find out where and are able to close the gaps&#13;
•·\\e d d where QUr goals between our number one and&#13;
,-e tan a; are a young team." number five men I think we can&#13;
and a half and two mile race· m&#13;
high school to the five and :ix&#13;
mile runs in college ... are since w ross country coach run with most of the small&#13;
11iat was ~ speaking about his schools in this part of the&#13;
sob La~5\ 0 their meet against country. Because we are very&#13;
arnprtotr and Drake last inexperienced, that is our&#13;
"This i a complete)\' different&#13;
world." aid Law on.&#13;
"These kids are short di tance ,, nneso a 1 " h · d ,u1• , at Des Moines. goa : e sa1 .&#13;
frida) and Minnesota are With the squad comprised -runners, like miler and half&#13;
milers, and now they are&#13;
competing in the wo;ld of&#13;
distance running which takt- · a&#13;
different type of athlete. o in&#13;
this respect the e kids h ,·e&#13;
made a good adju tment. t':&gt;.·&#13;
plained Lawson&#13;
Drak~ 1 powers in the almost completely· of unperenni_a&#13;
Valley and Big Ten derc1assmen the inexperience ssoun . 1 h t· ences respecllve y. can ave a nega 1ve effect.&#13;
conrer. good to throw them Lawson elaborated on this:&#13;
"(t t the wolves once in "The toughest thing for these&#13;
31ilns " said Lawson. after kids is to adjust from the one h e. . t&#13;
al rigorous ass1gnmen th hopes to come home l.,a\l'SOn d beat a few teams.&#13;
Saturday the Rangers had an&#13;
rtunity for that at hom_e&#13;
op:nst UW-Milwaukee, Beloit&#13;
and Ripon. . Though the sche~ule 1s&#13;
1DUght, Lawson rem~ms u~-&#13;
dlunted about facing 1t. He 1s&#13;
ealistic about his team's&#13;
~ances and is satisfied so far.&#13;
"We have made good&#13;
irogress and are right ~n&#13;
schedule as far as the tealll: 1s&#13;
concerned. Winning or losmg&#13;
ooes not always indicate hos&#13;
ht team is doing," he added.&#13;
"ll we continue progressing&#13;
Cagers Train for Future&#13;
by Jim Casper of the :'\e\\!.CO()(' ,tafl&#13;
If Parkside's cagers appear to have a little extra hu. t It- on tht•rr&#13;
fast breaks this winter and are able to get back quickly on opporwn1 ·:--&#13;
breaks, perhaps some of the quK:kness can be attributed to a nm11111,.:&#13;
program instituted by Coach Steve Stevens.&#13;
Prospective players run every weekday near the soccer li&lt;'ld for&#13;
15 minute!;- a figure soon to be increased to 30 minute .&#13;
On Mondays, Wednesdays and Frid_ays the team does ,,eighlJif.&#13;
ting at the Athletic barn. Thursday is the busiest dav as the men do the&#13;
regular running, springs and a timed half mile. -&#13;
When asked if this was done in the past, Stevens replied, "Thi i ·&#13;
the first year that we have really had the facilities for this... teven ·&#13;
sees. the program as being helpful in improving a player's quickn&#13;
and overall physical shape, along with aiding in developing team&#13;
unity.&#13;
New scope Defaults&#13;
by Larry Jones&#13;
Campus Editor and Right&#13;
Tackle&#13;
The mighty Newscope intramural&#13;
football team is still&#13;
l.lldefeated, but has yet to win a&#13;
game.&#13;
For the second week in a row,&#13;
t'A cope gridders were forced&#13;
to forfeit due to a lack of the&#13;
required seven men. Monday's&#13;
ame caught the majority of the&#13;
staff (and team) at the printer&#13;
putting together Monday's&#13;
paper - thus accounting for the&#13;
accute man-power shortage.&#13;
Anyway, three stalwart staffsquad&#13;
members did make it&#13;
onto the field with their heads&#13;
held high. When the forfeit was&#13;
announced, they gamely&#13;
challenged this week's victims,&#13;
"The Jocks", to lend them a few&#13;
men and carry on.&#13;
With team captain Ricky&#13;
'f1ash" Pazera holding down&#13;
the left side of the line Dave&#13;
"D ' ead-Eye" Kraus centering&#13;
~ ball and cleaning out the&#13;
middle, Larry "Lightnin' Bolt"&#13;
~~nes wiping out (and being&#13;
ped out by) the right si'.le of&#13;
the line, and several unidenli!ied&#13;
Jocks handling the running,&#13;
passing, catching, the&#13;
makeshift Newscope team&#13;
toppled the parent club 13-6.&#13;
Brilliant defensive play by the&#13;
regulars, including a touchdown&#13;
etting up interception by&#13;
Pa_zera, kept the Jocks from&#13;
gaming any significant yar-&#13;
~ge. The lone touchdown was&#13;
Yielded on a busted play in&#13;
Buy Indications&#13;
50¢&#13;
at the Bookstore&#13;
Quality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SKIRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
fiUNo~EDs OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN•s SMARTWEAR&#13;
l I 2 O YI -A S H IN G T O N A V E&#13;
RACINE&#13;
which the entire N ewscope&#13;
team thought the Jock halfback&#13;
had been downed after a short&#13;
pass - which he hadn't. He&#13;
waved from the endzone as NS&#13;
watched in disgust.&#13;
On offense, two touchdown&#13;
passes - one long, one short,&#13;
and an extra point, wrapped up&#13;
the second straight victory for&#13;
still winless Newscope gridders.&#13;
In other, less spectacular&#13;
action, a touchdown pass from&#13;
QB Dennis Serpe to Tom&#13;
Thompson and a TD run up the&#13;
middle by a back named&#13;
Chapman left the "Schooners"&#13;
to a 13-0 win over the "Mad&#13;
Dogs". ,&#13;
. Intramural Schedule&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 6&#13;
Pink Facists vs. Newscope&#13;
Friday, Oct. 15&#13;
Newscope vs. Mad Dogs&#13;
Friday, Oct. 22&#13;
Newscope vs. The Schooners&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing. Coke.&#13;
Trade-mark@&#13;
II&#13;
...&#13;
8ought and sold&#13;
(We buy and sell)&#13;
'A little out of tne woy,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
MCfartands Auto sates&#13;
7904 WASHINGTON&#13;
AVENUE RACINE .&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
s~ th q.uu,,,a Piff'i' c. Jl.t;J.ia,,- tJJ,"""-4,&#13;
KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
2129 BIRCH RO. BAR DINING ROOM&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, ,&#13;
II I I I I&#13;
._ _____ Dou 11tow11 Kt 10 ha------&#13;
:---FREE----:-----1&#13;
I I&#13;
! Root Beer i&#13;
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I___ up n g&lt; d &gt;n an ' datc--J&#13;
Come in and brin th a,n il ,&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
Op 1 all_ w,· rou11d&#13;
n _2n&#13;
"ch I 1 cc in ,. h. at eno&#13;
Jr hn a t'ut·i I of jfJ d ..&#13;
al , at. 011 1bl pri&#13;
PUT O YOUR GLAD AG&#13;
AP YOU 0 S 0 HA&#13;
PURE FU C P A&#13;
OF APPL RED A Y 0 &#13;
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611 PEGGER® JEANS&#13;
Button front, no back pockets, flared. Great fit for guys and gals.&#13;
$9.00-$12.00 a pair. ·&#13;
Available in alZ-sizes and colors at ,&#13;
Crystal's Men's and Young Me'n's Shop&#13;
\ · in downtown Kenosha \&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
______ ,,_&#13;
Volume 5 Number 5 October 4, 1971 ,&#13;
FREE&#13;
Special&#13;
Oktoberfest&#13;
Section&#13;
CAGE Interview </text>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63466">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Smoke-In Staged in Madison</text>
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              <text>,..&#13;
"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" -Matthe A Ilnner 1/' ,I W' .&#13;
. W rnold S y OJ tscom m ' Parksidt&#13;
"J".~,"GP.&#13;
Smoke-ion Staged •&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
ManagingEdilor&#13;
[,aStSaturday the YIPPIES&#13;
Id a marijuana smoke~m In&#13;
~OI1's Brittingham Park.&#13;
ijl2llded by several hundred&#13;
_Ie, a noonrally at the park&#13;
~ a march up Main&#13;
tUt"llothe capitol building in&#13;
lIlPP"'lof the legalization of&#13;
IDIrijUo1l'\3.&#13;
and catch-phrases that were&#13;
immediately snatched up and&#13;
echoed by the enthusiastic&#13;
audience.&#13;
At the' park, though several&#13;
squads of police stood nearby&#13;
?undreds of joints were smoked&#13;
In a large open shelter while&#13;
Beal entertained the crowd with&#13;
pro-marijuana songs accompanied&#13;
by a tambourine and&#13;
"This is the first time a stoned mob has seized the Straight&#13;
l'Jpllol."&#13;
IIIed as the Dana Beal Prona,&#13;
Anti-Heroin March,&#13;
.... as the herald of yet&#13;
~issue inradical politics.&#13;
l1li, whowas recently busted&#13;
bJ the Madison police while&#13;
lilcb-hiltingfornpossession of&#13;
ImraI pounds of grass, has&#13;
... been aclive in the drive for&#13;
It legalizationof marijuana.&#13;
lIIIIiIm KunsUer is handling&#13;
l1li'. case while a number of&#13;
III known radicals, Abbie&#13;
8IIIman for ODe. are aiding the&#13;
~_Ibrough fund raising ac-&#13;
-.- to defer legal fees.&#13;
lIII8eaIspolteat the Brittingham&#13;
y and at the Capitol&#13;
~og his light monologue&#13;
I&lt;ollageof slogans, chants&#13;
his own accoustic guitar. Unlike&#13;
most radical gatherings the&#13;
rally proceeded in a facile vein&#13;
partly because Beal was more&#13;
an entertainer than a&#13;
provocateur, and partly&#13;
because the police remained at&#13;
a discreet distance from the&#13;
illegalities, threatening as HIe&#13;
overcast September sky. The&#13;
organizers of the rally-march&#13;
had obtained permits from the&#13;
Madison city council and the&#13;
police were present to insure&#13;
that the park was not abused.&#13;
No attempt was made to bust&#13;
anyone though Inspector&#13;
Thomas, in charge of the police&#13;
contingent, and two assistants&#13;
circled the shelter numerous&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
Parks' of the Newscope staff&#13;
Ot~ aa'de has a new Vice Chancellor,&#13;
Bowl' uer, Bauer, 39, comes from&#13;
... logGreen State University where .. Was theAss' ,&#13;
Student "stant Vice President for&#13;
JIOot AffairS.He began his Parkside&#13;
, OnSeptember I&#13;
His duti .-&#13;
....... es are 10 the academic&#13;
10 v.,,' buthe will also represent UW-P&#13;
PIr1s ;05 slate agencies and to toebr&#13;
IiIn are the University, RepOrting to&#13;
Science the Deans of the College 01&#13;
IlocIern and Society, and the School of&#13;
dep.rtznIndustry, as are several other&#13;
ents of the University.&#13;
Ianan't· cltscribed'" ervlew with Newscope, he&#13;
)llIloa his POSitionas "a Iantastic&#13;
_L. . ceept" PresenUy he said he is .......It.ffiatingh' , ,&#13;
Ilbijities . IIDself to his responIllo&#13;
IllStitand ISbecoming familiar witll&#13;
Ir&gt;d the ~tional structure of Parkside&#13;
Bauer n.lv~rslty of Wisconsin.&#13;
be ""cep~d m accepting tlle position&#13;
IncIu.triaJe the. IDStitutional goal of an&#13;
.... _&gt; MISSIon.To achieve this he&#13;
.....~out "w '&#13;
--... , e need to do some real&#13;
-~. '" the Sc ~.. bool of Modern In-&#13;
~ e~plained that while the&#13;
"ll ~~g Science Division was quite&#13;
Ibe..... llped, httle development in&#13;
~ ~ of Management Science and&#13;
". dcn,;"'°IllICShas occurred. IoIIw OUr ~ how we could possibly&#13;
..... ~'on If we do not give&#13;
to Management Science&#13;
Bauer Stresses Criticism as&#13;
Aspect of Academic Life&#13;
and Labor Economics," he said.&#13;
Part of the problem is, he said, "You&#13;
shouidn't really staff the School of&#13;
Modern Industry in the absence of a&#13;
Dean. or in the absence of the&#13;
Divisional Chairmen. Because these&#13;
men when they are appointed. a~e&#13;
going to want to have some impact m&#13;
their areas." .&#13;
Asked his views on "teaching versUS&#13;
research", he replied, 'I~e research&#13;
function is just as crucl-al as the&#13;
teaching function. How you go about&#13;
defining research Is important. I prefer&#13;
to 1define research in its broade~t&#13;
possible way, An instructor engageshm&#13;
the kind of research that Improv.es is&#13;
teaching. He erigages in the kmd of&#13;
research that seeks new data.&#13;
"People like to _ say unless you&#13;
publish you're not playing the g:,:&#13;
right" 'he continued. "I don't buy a .&#13;
Facuity members have more ways of&#13;
. ling with one another than&#13;
commumca&#13;
through journals.". at&#13;
He mentioned reading papers&#13;
conventions and holding semmars&#13;
among the faculty, . th in&#13;
"Ideally a professor is active bo .&#13;
teaching ~nd research. In practice,&#13;
you're going to find some peopl~ do one&#13;
function better than tbe other, Bauer&#13;
Madison&#13;
;n&#13;
o&#13;
x&#13;
11&#13;
»&#13;
N&#13;
'";n&#13;
»&#13;
times while the smoking was&#13;
laking place.&#13;
At first sigbt of the police&#13;
there. was some hesitancy at&#13;
smoking the grass for fear of&#13;
arrest, and it wasn't until the&#13;
people crowded into the shelter&#13;
that the smoke-in began&#13;
Relatively assured that the&#13;
police wanted to avoid confrontation,&#13;
as evidenced by the&#13;
mcenspicuousness of their clubs&#13;
(concealed benea th their pant&#13;
legs), many of the people lit&#13;
their joints as other&#13;
"samaritans" tossed out&#13;
handiuls to those who had come&#13;
empty-handed.&#13;
In contract to the stark reality&#13;
of the legal consequences of&#13;
smoking marijuana, the entire&#13;
event, though political, in&#13;
essence evolved in the freewheeling&#13;
style of counter&#13;
culture happenings. The only&#13;
moments of apprehension occurred&#13;
as the police initially&#13;
marched into the park and then&#13;
later, as the marchers broke&#13;
into a run across the capitol&#13;
lawn. Several times an individual&#13;
hurled obscenities at&#13;
the police but was drowned out&#13;
by the silence tha t greeted&#13;
him, teslifying to the peaceful&#13;
nature of the majority of&#13;
demonstrators.&#13;
Besides introducing slogans&#13;
and chants such as "I smoke&#13;
pot, and I like it a lot". and&#13;
leading the audience in an&#13;
irreverent rendition of the "Star&#13;
Spangled Marijuana ... ". he&#13;
predicted that "somedsy m&#13;
Washington, D.C., a president&#13;
will say, 'I legalize&#13;
marijuana', "&#13;
He dwelled little on any&#13;
particular point as it was covious&#13;
from the beginning tllat&#13;
his audience needed little&#13;
persuasion to take up the cause,&#13;
though he emphasized the antiheroin&#13;
nature of the gathermg&#13;
and warned that "heroin kills".&#13;
--&#13;
FREE&#13;
,Merger Eff ct&#13;
UWPCouldB&#13;
On&#13;
vere&#13;
hy Warren _'edry&#13;
Editor-in-Chi t&#13;
Chancellor Irvin WyUle&#13;
thinks the merger of the&#13;
with tlhe W U system "could&#13;
have a severe impact on tlhe&#13;
operations at Parksld "&#13;
He laId .' ewscope "The&#13;
governor tied mer er to the&#13;
budget and the bud et i at&#13;
distinctly lower fundIng&#13;
levels than we anticipated ••&#13;
tate enroUment fundlllg-110&#13;
universities I i based on an&#13;
average allotment per&#13;
student. TradJtIOnally rw&#13;
funding levels ha ve been&#13;
higher than those of the&#13;
W sy tern Under the&#13;
merger, fundlllg to all 1Ilstitutions&#13;
will he at the W&#13;
levels&#13;
"In addition to lower&#13;
funding levels," Wylhe said&#13;
"The budget failed to cover&#13;
rn &lt;:MJr&#13;
on&#13;
or&#13;
"~&#13;
N&#13;
~&#13;
;II&#13;
:..- ~&#13;
z&#13;
punished by&#13;
lila I ... ont&#13;
function," be t.ted&#13;
• Ian) pi hay lried to rrl"""&#13;
1M cnl fu liOn in ord« 10&#13;
t.be \8l1\'eI"'S.lt)' s (m I&#13;
conllnued "From my point f \&#13;
should flOdID "', to be C1 lin our&#13;
cntiel m"&#13;
Whol rol .nd&#13;
f.cuIly hay lD • I&#13;
feel et")' stt'O C'On&#13;
sult.llOIl I thm It 1.1 nd&#13;
crucial. and 1 tlllOk .. thoul 11 )ou'r&#13;
doomed to l.tlure&#13;
wtf I.ttempted to unpooe. policy.&#13;
the ... ,lIlUJon, II ould f.,!." he&#13;
·decI.red "It's nol tll. w.»ou ork&#13;
"l\jl people. It' not lhr "")' ) u get&#13;
commltmenl&#13;
"The only ... )' )'OU c.n &amp; I com'&#13;
ffiJlment IS to Iry lo"or .. ,th th 10&#13;
tlle produ t tluIt comes OUI I one th •&#13;
feel they ha,. had some say m&#13;
"The consulting pr IS nole y,"&#13;
he emphaslZed "It's very difficult&#13;
because )-ou don'l ftnd groupli that&#13;
&lt;:ometogetller aod say, 'OIl. yes, .... 11&#13;
want to do It tIus w.y.' It d sn't 'OI'k&#13;
thIS w.y.&#13;
"BuIll you work ..lth people, there's&#13;
a kind of consensus thai begllls to form&#13;
Hopefully, what beglOS to develop -&#13;
and ,f I don'l ach .. \'O tIus, I'U be ,'ery&#13;
dasappo,nted - IS mutual respect.&#13;
That's a tremendous key. You need to&#13;
de\'elop tlle confidence of the faculty&#13;
and ," be &lt;&gt;lDC:.111ded&#13;
said. "and if a man can do a really fme&#13;
job of teaching, be should be rewarded,&#13;
and U a man does a really fin. job in a&#13;
creative area be should be rewarded."&#13;
Bauer sees an extension upon the&#13;
three traditional aspects of academIc&#13;
life - teaching, research. and community&#13;
service "At the nsk of ha,ing&#13;
myself misunderstood, I personally&#13;
think there is a fourth function&#13;
criticism. "&#13;
He believes academicians should look&#13;
critically upon the unh'ersities&#13;
tllemselves. and upon SOClety&#13;
"I tllmk the university. in a larae&#13;
- "Journalism is Litera~re in a Hurry" -Matth A Un,·i- 11· , I W · .&#13;
ew rnold uS J o1 1sro1. 1n _ p "d,&#13;
· wn····"·p,Jll'&#13;
Smoke-i-n Staged • 1n Madison&#13;
b) John Koloen&#13;
\tanaging Editor&#13;
(.aSt Saturday the YIP1:l~S&#13;
8 marijuana smoke~m m&#13;
011 -5 Brittingham Park.&#13;
ed by several hundred&#13;
and catch-phrases that were&#13;
immediately snatched up and&#13;
echoed by the enthusiastic&#13;
audience.&#13;
times while the smoking w&#13;
taking place&#13;
At first sight of the pohce&#13;
there was some hesitancy at&#13;
smoking the grass for fear oi&#13;
arrest, and it wa n't until the&#13;
people crowded into the helter&#13;
that the smoke-in began.&#13;
Relatively assured that the&#13;
police wanted to avoid confronta&#13;
tion, as evidenced bv the&#13;
inconspicuousness of their clubs&#13;
(concealed beneath their panl&#13;
legs&gt;, many of the people ht&#13;
their joints a other&#13;
"samaritans " tos ed out&#13;
handfuls to tho e who had come empty-handed.&#13;
8 noon rally at the park&#13;
'ed a march up Main&#13;
1 to the capitol building in&#13;
l of the legalization of&#13;
At the· park, though several&#13;
squads of police stood nearby&#13;
hundreds of joints were smoke&lt;j&#13;
in a large open shelter while&#13;
Beal entertained the crowd with&#13;
pro-marijuana songs accompanied&#13;
by a tambourine and&#13;
lJ&#13;
n&#13;
;It&#13;
1l&#13;
&gt;&#13;
N&#13;
111&#13;
lJ&#13;
&gt;&#13;
"This i&#13;
C'lpitol."&#13;
the first time a stoned mob has seized the Straight&#13;
In contract to the tark reality&#13;
of the legal consequences oi&#13;
smoking marijuana, the entire&#13;
event, though political, in&#13;
essence evolved in the freewheeling&#13;
style of counter&#13;
culture happenings. The onl-.&#13;
moments of apprehen ion oc- curred as the police initiall&#13;
marched into the park and th n&#13;
later, as the marchers broke&#13;
into a run across the capitol&#13;
lawn. Several times an n·&#13;
dividual hurled o ceniti at&#13;
the police but wa drowned ou&#13;
by the silence that r ed&#13;
him, testifying to the pea ful&#13;
nature of the m j orit~ of&#13;
demonstrators.&#13;
his own accoustic gwtar. Unlike&#13;
most radical gatherings the&#13;
rally proceeded in a facile vein&#13;
partly because Beal was more&#13;
an entertainer than a&#13;
provocateur, and partly&#13;
because the police remained at&#13;
a discreet distance from the&#13;
illegalities, threatening as Hie&#13;
overcast September sky. The&#13;
organizers of the rally-march&#13;
had obtained permits from the&#13;
Madison city council and the&#13;
police were present to insure&#13;
that the park was not abused.&#13;
No attempt was made to bust&#13;
anyone though Inspector&#13;
Thomas, in charge of the police&#13;
contingent, and two assistants&#13;
circled the shelter numerou&#13;
Be ide introduoing lo&#13;
and chants uch ru ·•1 smo&#13;
pot, and I like it a lo ", nd&#13;
leading the audi ce in an&#13;
irreverent rendition of th ·• tar&#13;
pangled .1arijuana .. ."', he&#13;
predicted that " omedav n&#13;
Washington, D.C., a pr ident&#13;
will ·ay, ' I le hi&#13;
marijuana'."&#13;
He dwelled little on&#13;
particular point a it&#13;
vio from th be ·nni that&#13;
his audience n eded htll&#13;
per uasion to ta e up th&#13;
though he empha ized t anti·&#13;
heroin natur of th therin&#13;
and warned that "h m kt "&#13;
by Marc Ei en&#13;
Park . of the ·ew cope staff&#13;
Baide ha a new Vice Chancellor&#13;
u B ' . r. auer, 39, comes from&#13;
ng Green State University where&#13;
aa th Ass· ' udent Aff . 1 tant Vice President for&#13;
airs. He began his Parkside&#13;
on September l&#13;
duti : ere es are m the academic&#13;
van' but he will also represent UW-P&#13;
0&#13;
~us state agencies and to toehr&#13;
are lhe University. Reporting to&#13;
lhe Deans of the College of f1d Society, and the School of&#13;
rtm n&lt;lustry, as are several other&#13;
eots of the University.&#13;
,:t~ervie~ _with Newscope, he&#13;
to hi P&lt;&gt;S1tton as "a fantastic&#13;
~Pl". ;Presently, he said, he is&#13;
r g hunself to his respon-&#13;
!it:td 15 becoming familiar with&#13;
1.0nal structure of Parkside&#13;
Ba Uo_iversity of Wisconsin.&#13;
ac :a•d in _accepting the position&#13;
~et~he. mstitutional goal of an&#13;
ed ' 1ss1on. To achieve this he&#13;
out "W ' in the e need to do some real ." School or Modern Ine~pla&#13;
ined that while the&#13;
e~g Scien_ce Division was quite&#13;
areas °r· httJe development in&#13;
I.. E O Management Science and&#13;
'l don~;xioroics has occurred.&#13;
our se~ ~ow _we could possibly&#13;
~ 1. ion 1f we do not give&#13;
18 lo Man emen Science&#13;
Bauer Stresses Criticism&#13;
Aspect of Academic Lil&#13;
and Labor Economic , " he said .. , Part of the problem is, he said, You&#13;
shouldn't really staff the School of&#13;
Modern Industry in the ab ence of a&#13;
Dean or in the ab ence of the&#13;
Divisional Chairmen. Beca_use the· e men, when they are appo1~ted. a~e&#13;
going to want to have some impact m&#13;
their areas." • . Asked his views on "teaching versus&#13;
research"' he replied, "'l~e research&#13;
function is just as crucial as the&#13;
teac:,hing function. How you go about&#13;
defining research is important. I prefer&#13;
to define research in its broade. t&#13;
possible way. An instructor engages m&#13;
the kind of research that impco~e bi&#13;
teaching. He engages in the kind of&#13;
research that seeks new data. ·ou&#13;
"People like to say_ unless ~ e&#13;
publish you're not playmg the g::nt 'ght "'he continued. "I don't buy a .&#13;
~acuity members have more wa~ of · ting wt'th one another than&#13;
commumca&#13;
through journals." . at&#13;
He mentioned reading pa~&#13;
conventions and holding seminar&#13;
among the faculty. . . h in&#13;
"Ideally' a professor is active bot.&#13;
teaching and research. In pracuce.&#13;
you're going to find some peopl.~ do one&#13;
function better than the other. Bauer&#13;
0&#13;
..J&#13;
..J&#13;
~&#13;
0&#13;
..&#13;
&gt;&#13;
n&#13;
;JI,&#13;
;JI,&#13;
,.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
,.&#13;
z&#13;
E &#13;
Letters to the Editor Seplember27,1971 Page2 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Editorial tradition here at P&#13;
Iexpect to hear :ksid.l)&#13;
screams of theeu1(li~&#13;
Government conce Student&#13;
letter in future ~:ug thi,&#13;
'''Pos&#13;
"What's he doiu .&#13;
terment of StudJt for bet.&#13;
merit? How can We Gov~.&#13;
have an effective IlOssl~, ith h gov...._ ' WI. . sue 'a tOUlliUlri·~".~&#13;
minIstration hoverin an adHow&#13;
can we ever OV; over~!&#13;
apathy that strangles t~IIl·1he&#13;
campus mess?" Thest three.&#13;
be some of the questi shouJd&#13;
at me in the weeks t ODs u.r..,;&#13;
I caution you to l~kCOIlle, bot&#13;
selves in chang' to YOUr.&#13;
situations-after .Jug th...&#13;
to be elected, did~~asklll&#13;
Remember the oldline " You'&#13;
who live in glasS:eor;.&#13;
shouldn't throw stones!lJ °Use,&#13;
BestW'18bes&#13;
Ethelred theUlll'ead!&#13;
Twelve Officers Patrol Parkside&#13;
and come to another meeting of&#13;
the Student Senate. How can we&#13;
as students have any faith in a&#13;
Senate that refuses to honor its&#13;
election obligations to us? It is&#13;
simplest to say that the student&#13;
body is apathetic, as It lindoubtedly&#13;
is, but I fail to see&#13;
how this apathy can be overcome&#13;
by these games the Senate&#13;
has chosen to play. These are&#13;
"games", as they have completely&#13;
reduced the effectiveness&#13;
and integrity of the&#13;
Senate! (Since these are&#13;
"games", and the Student&#13;
senate is of such an exciting&#13;
nature, perhaps the Student&#13;
Government might print a&#13;
roster of the names of the&#13;
remaining Student Senators so&#13;
that the student body can cross&#13;
the names off that resign in&#13;
meetings to come! We might&#13;
call this "Musical senators",&#13;
letting the game become a real&#13;
To the E"tIitor:&#13;
It is with regret that Iread of&#13;
yet another Student Gove':!-&#13;
ment meeting (9-16-7\), III&#13;
which the reins of de!"ocracy&#13;
are pushed still further into the&#13;
hands of the Administration.&#13;
Perhaps democracy is too&#13;
strong a word. A better term&#13;
might be monotony. I am tired&#13;
of the dramatics that seem to be&#13;
such common occurrances at&#13;
our Student Senate Meetings&#13;
(Max Sennett might find them&#13;
more amusing"). It seems that&#13;
every time a student senator&#13;
resigns he is giving up his&#13;
responsibilities to tbe Administration,&#13;
while at the same&#13;
time reneging his duties to that&#13;
percentage of students who&#13;
voted for him.&#13;
Mr. Konkol. cballenges the&#13;
students of this University to&#13;
"Prove Parkside is not&#13;
apathetic to its own cancer" I&#13;
POT&#13;
"Marijuana has undesirable effects on the body. no matter "in&#13;
what form it is used. The user loses mental and sometimes physical&#13;
control of himself, and may commit violent crimes. Marijuana users&#13;
often become so devoted to the drug and Its effects that they lose lnterest&#13;
in any useful or lntelledual occupation. Probably one of the&#13;
greatest dangers of marl juana Is that persons who use it soon look for&#13;
stronger drugs. and often become addicted to heroin.'&#13;
This statement Is taken from the 1962edition of The World Book&#13;
Encyclopedia. Since 1962many studies and scientific experiments&#13;
have been performed to determine the ectue! effects of marijuana on&#13;
the user and to dispel the many myths connected with the drug. Local,&#13;
state and national governments, universities and private institutions&#13;
have contributed to the increasing stockpile of information but as yet&#13;
no concrete evidence has established that marijuana is a killer as&#13;
some people contend or that is Is a harmless drug that should be freely&#13;
marketed. It probably falls somewhere in between.&#13;
Recently, at a meeting of the Am~\can Chemical Society,&#13;
Biochemists Harris Rosenkrantz and Yugal Luthra reported evidence&#13;
of brain damage and even deaths In their experiments with rats injected&#13;
with a marijuana extract and THC (a synthetic form of&#13;
marijuana). But. they also stated that the smallest dose given to any&#13;
group of rats was 30 times that of the chronic marijuana smoker (SO&#13;
[otnts a day over a period of months). Thldy times the recommended&#13;
dosage of asprln would kill a person and there Is no doubt that the&#13;
same cverecse Of pure grain alcohol dally over a period of months&#13;
would cause a loss of Interest "tn any useful or Intellectual occupation".&#13;
Also. it might be added that before someone could abuse&#13;
either alcohol or marijuana to such an extent they would probably&#13;
pass out.&#13;
To say that heroin addicts started out using merttuene is just as&#13;
startling as saying that an alcoholic probably drank beer In high&#13;
school. L1kealco:"lOllsm,drug addiction Is caused by psychological and&#13;
emotional problems that are rooted Inside the individual rather than&#13;
any outside stimulus. Too often our society would rather focus on the&#13;
manifestation of a social problem than onthe problem itself.&#13;
The marijuana laws should be relaxed further If not taken off the&#13;
books entirely, if for no other reason than that it is impossible to&#13;
police. Mariiuana has already alienated too many youths from society&#13;
and has given them a false Impression of what is the true and&#13;
necessary job of the police. Laws can't be basedon what someonewho&#13;
is not an expert says they think might happen. They must be based on&#13;
fact and the facts concerning marijuana prove, so far, that marijuana,&#13;
like alcohol. or anything else, is harmful only when abused and when&#13;
usedproperly it can be a pleasant and useful drug.&#13;
and the Kenosha Sherifr'iffilo&#13;
which can be contactedin&#13;
o~ emergency, as in CI&amp;t&#13;
disturbance. Crowd&#13;
There is hope by Sgt. ~&#13;
to get a teletype machinewhich&#13;
would join us to the nalillllWid!&#13;
net, thus enabling an alnuIt&#13;
Immediate check on,uchlhinga&#13;
as weather, stolen cars 8lId&#13;
registration numbers on stolen&#13;
articles.&#13;
The largest probl.m 0'&#13;
campus bas heen 1DU'epOrt«I&#13;
theft - of things from Ca&gt;&#13;
struction tools to no parking&#13;
signs. There is seidolll any&#13;
trouble with students exceptfor&#13;
the occational one caught&#13;
sneaking into dances. But&#13;
parking tickets are what they&#13;
are most noted for. f{/ p&lt;IIJle&#13;
noted this by 1 p.m. Thursday.&#13;
police officers carry guns,&#13;
which are required by state law.&#13;
The guns will become less&#13;
conspicuous when the officers&#13;
adopt their new uniform blazers&#13;
in the near future.&#13;
Six police officers (the&#13;
recommended number was&#13;
twelve, with six security officers),&#13;
but there are plans to&#13;
add two more in the near future&#13;
to improve efficiency.&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Some call them pigs, but most&#13;
people call them campus cops.&#13;
They are responsible for the&#13;
maintaining of order on campus.&#13;
A group of twelve. men,&#13;
only four of whom are on duty at&#13;
anyone time, responsible for a&#13;
campus of hundreds of acres&#13;
with a population of nearly 5,000&#13;
(students, faculty, employees&#13;
and construction workers).&#13;
The patrol has two squad cars&#13;
to blanket three campuses. For&#13;
this reason the police work at&#13;
the Racine campus is handled&#13;
by the Racine city police while&#13;
the Kenosha Sheriff's office&#13;
might be better able to handle&#13;
an emergency at the Kenosha&#13;
campus. There is a reaio&#13;
hookup between the campus&#13;
They are divided into two&#13;
groups - six police officers and&#13;
five security officers, with a&#13;
newly-arrived Director of&#13;
Security, Ronald Brinkman, a&#13;
police specialist from the&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Criminal&#13;
Justice.&#13;
Of the twelve, only the six&#13;
Pat Nelson&#13;
FREE&#13;
popcorn with beer purchase&#13;
every tuesday 5-11 Is it&#13;
logical&#13;
to&#13;
believe&#13;
inGod?&#13;
Begining October 10 •&#13;
OPEN SUNDAY 12-6&#13;
Student Activities Bldg&#13;
Editorial Starr&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Manager Fred Noer,&#13;
Jr.&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, P.&#13;
McDermid, Barb Scott&#13;
Phones:'&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Newscope is au independoll&#13;
student newspaper coInpIolI&#13;
by students of the UniwrsilyIi&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside pubiisbed&#13;
weekly except du~ vllCllicli&#13;
periods. Student obtBioed 1&amp;&#13;
vertising funds are lbe ..&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
opera tion of Newseope· UII&#13;
copies are print.d aad&#13;
distributed throughout !be&#13;
Kenosha and Racine cOJll·&#13;
munities as well as tbt&#13;
University. Free ~ Ilf&#13;
available upon request&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Bor~hardt, James Casper,&#13;
~arc ~lsen, Kelly Infuslno,&#13;
Kim King, Jim Koloen Ken&#13;
Konkol, Bill Lane, Dale Martin,&#13;
Pat Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross&#13;
Jeff Scoville, Jerry Socha~ ,&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio Becky&#13;
Ecklund: Ken Ziman~:&#13;
Yes, but no newspaper&#13;
ad can convince you&#13;
of God's presence and&#13;
power.&#13;
What will convince you&#13;
is a radically new view&#13;
of God as Love itself. As&#13;
all in\elligence. As the&#13;
very Principle of your&#13;
being.&#13;
This scientifically-based&#13;
view of God healed&#13;
all types of disease 2000&#13;
years ago, and it is&#13;
healing many people&#13;
right now_&#13;
If you are searching for&#13;
_ new ideas about God,&#13;
you will enjoy reading&#13;
the current Bible Lesson&#13;
in our Reading Room.&#13;
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE&#13;
READING ROOM&#13;
bro"".e&#13;
stop&#13;
• newly arrriving books&#13;
• greeting cards&#13;
• gift items&#13;
• records&#13;
VAJ!O'S ~ =:Y&#13;
,'\NO ITALIAN SAUSAGE a:::M3ERS&#13;
51121-11111 AYIIIItK"- 151--&#13;
Open 6 days 0 week from 4 p.m., cfosed M'JI"iays&#13;
available at&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE 302 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE 633-7842&#13;
Pagez OPE eplember 27, 1971 Letters to the Editor Editorial&#13;
POT&#13;
"Marijuana has undesirable effeds on the body, no matter In&#13;
what form ii is used. The user loses mental and sometimes physical&#13;
control of himself, and may commit violent crimes. Marijuana users&#13;
often become so devoted tot e drug and Its effeds that they lose int&#13;
rest in any useful or intelledual occupation. Probably one of the&#13;
greatest dangers of marl juana ls that persons who use it soon look for&#13;
stronger drugs, and often become addicted to heroin."&#13;
This statement Is taken from the 1962 edition of The World Book&#13;
Encyclopedia. Since 1962 many studies and scientific experiments&#13;
have been performed to determine the adual effeds of marijuana on&#13;
the user and to dispel the many myths connected with the drug. Local,&#13;
state and national governments, universities and private institutions&#13;
have contributed to the increasing stockpile of Information but as yet&#13;
no concrete evidence has established that marijuana is a killer as&#13;
some people contend or that Is ls a harmless drug that should be freely&#13;
marketed. It probably falls somewhere In between.&#13;
Recently, at a meeting of the American Chemical Society,&#13;
Biochemists Harris Rosenkrantz and Yugal Luthra reported evidence&#13;
of brain damage and even deaths In their experiments with rats injected&#13;
with a marijuana extract and THC (a synthetic form of&#13;
m rijuana). But, they also stated that the smallest dose given to any&#13;
group of rats was JO times that of the chronic marijuana smoker (SO&#13;
joints a day over a period of months). Thirty times the recommended&#13;
dosage of asprln would kill a person and there Is no doubt that the&#13;
same ~verdose of pure gra n alcohol dally over a period of months&#13;
would cause a loss of interest "In any useful or Intellectual occupation".&#13;
Also, it might be added that before someone could abuse&#13;
either alcohol or marijuana to such an extent they would probably&#13;
pa s out.&#13;
To say that heroin addicts started out using marijuana is just as&#13;
startling as saying that an alcoholic probably drank beer in high&#13;
school . Like alco:,olism, drug addiction Is caused by psychological and&#13;
motional problems that are rooted Inside the Individual rather than&#13;
ny outside stimulus. Too often our society would rather focus on the&#13;
manifestation of a social problem than on the problem itself.&#13;
The marlluana laws should be relaxed further If not taken off the&#13;
books entirely, If for no other reason than that it is Impossible to&#13;
police Marijuana has already alienated too many youths from society&#13;
and has given them a false Impression of what is the true and&#13;
necessary job of the police. Laws can't be based on what someone who&#13;
is not an expert says they think might happen . They must be based on&#13;
f~ct and the facts concerning marijuana prove, so far, that marijuana,&#13;
like alcohol, or anything else, is harmful only when abused and when&#13;
used properly It can be a pleasant and useful drug.&#13;
Pat Nelson&#13;
F R EE&#13;
popcorn with beer purchase&#13;
every tuesday 5-11&#13;
Begining October 10&#13;
OPEN SUNDAY 12-6&#13;
Student Activities Bldg&#13;
•&#13;
browse&#13;
stop&#13;
newly arrriving rooks&#13;
• greeting cards&#13;
• gift items&#13;
• records&#13;
available at&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
To the E-ditor:&#13;
It is with regret that I read of&#13;
yet another Student Gover~-&#13;
ment meeting (9·16-71), m&#13;
which the reins of democracy&#13;
are pushed still further· into the&#13;
hands of the Administration.&#13;
Perhaps democracy is too&#13;
strong a word. A better term&#13;
might be monotony. I am tired&#13;
of the dramatics that seem to be&#13;
such common occurrances at&#13;
our Student Senate Meetings&#13;
(Max Sennett might find them&#13;
more amusing!). It seems that&#13;
every time a student senator&#13;
resigns he is giving up his&#13;
responsibilities to the Ad·&#13;
ministration, while at the same&#13;
time reneging his duties to that&#13;
percentage of students who&#13;
voted for him.&#13;
Mr. Konkol challenges the&#13;
students of this University to&#13;
"Prove Parkside is not&#13;
apathetic to its own cancer",&#13;
and come to another meeting of&#13;
the Student Senate. How can we&#13;
as students have any faith in a&#13;
Senate that refuses to honor its&#13;
election obligations to us? It is&#13;
simplest to say that the student&#13;
body is apathetic, as it l.mdoubtedly&#13;
is, but I fail to see&#13;
how this apathy can be overcome&#13;
by these games the Senate&#13;
has chosen to play. These are&#13;
"games", as they have completely&#13;
reduced the effectiveness&#13;
and integrity of the&#13;
Senate! (Since these are&#13;
"games", and the Student&#13;
Senate is of such an exciting&#13;
nature, perhaps the Student&#13;
Government might print a&#13;
roster of the names of the&#13;
remaining Student Senators so&#13;
that the student body can cross&#13;
the names off that resign in&#13;
meetings to come! We might&#13;
call this "Musical Senators",&#13;
letting the game become a real&#13;
tradition here at p&#13;
I expect to hear ar~ide•&#13;
screams of tb~e 1ndj8na&#13;
Government conce ~tuden1&#13;
letter in future ~n1ng !his&#13;
t1tscollt1&#13;
"What's be doin ·&#13;
terment of Stud~t for bet. ment? How can we Govern.&#13;
have an effective l&gt;Ossibfy ·th gove""- · w1_ . such ·a totalita : ... 11&#13;
m1rustration hoverin nan ad. How can we ever ov; over 11s,&#13;
apathy that strangles ~:me the&#13;
campus mess?" Tues/three,.&#13;
be some of the questi sli~&#13;
at me in the weeks toons ~ I caution you to lookcorne, bit&#13;
selves in changi to YoUt.&#13;
situations - after all ng these&#13;
to be elected, did~?'J&amp;sk~&#13;
Remember the old line .~ You'&#13;
who live in glass' :eo~&#13;
shouldn't throw stones!" 0USes&#13;
BestWithEthelred&#13;
the U~~&#13;
Twelve Officers Patrol Parkside&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Some call them pigs, but most&#13;
people call them campus cops.&#13;
They are responsible for the&#13;
maintaining of order on campus.&#13;
A group of twelve men,&#13;
only four of whom are on duty at&#13;
any one time, responsible for a&#13;
campus of hundreds of acres&#13;
with a population of nearly 5,000&#13;
(students, faculty, employees&#13;
and construction workers).&#13;
They are divided into two&#13;
groups - six police officers and&#13;
five security officers, with a&#13;
newly-arrived Director of&#13;
Security, Ronald Brinkman, a&#13;
police specialist from the&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Criminal&#13;
Justice.&#13;
Of the twelve, only the six&#13;
Is it&#13;
logical&#13;
to&#13;
believe&#13;
inGod?&#13;
Yes, but no newspaper&#13;
ad can convince you&#13;
of God's presence and&#13;
power.&#13;
What will convince you&#13;
is a radically new view&#13;
of God as Love itself. As&#13;
all in!elligence. As the&#13;
very Principle of your&#13;
being.&#13;
This scientifically-based&#13;
view of God healed&#13;
all types of disease 2000 ·&#13;
years ago, and it is&#13;
healing many people&#13;
right now.&#13;
If you are searching for&#13;
new ideas about God&#13;
you wiJl enjoy readin~&#13;
the current Bible Lesson&#13;
in our Reading Room.&#13;
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE&#13;
READING ROOM&#13;
302 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE 633-7842&#13;
police officers carry guns,&#13;
which are required by state law.&#13;
The guns will become less&#13;
conspicuous when the officers&#13;
adopt their new uniform blazers&#13;
in the near future.&#13;
Six police officers ( the&#13;
recommended number was&#13;
twelve, with six security officers),&#13;
but there are plans to&#13;
add two more in the near future&#13;
to improve efficiency.&#13;
The patrol has two squad cars&#13;
to blanket three campuses. For&#13;
this reason the police work at&#13;
the Racine campus is handled&#13;
by the Racine city police while&#13;
the Kenosha Sheriff's office&#13;
might be better able to handle&#13;
an emergency a t the Kenosha&#13;
campus. There is a reaio&#13;
hookup between the campus&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Manager Fred Noer&#13;
h. '&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Bor~hardt, James Casper,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Kelly Infusino&#13;
Kim King, Jim Koloen K~&#13;
Konkol, Bill Lane, Dale Martin,&#13;
Pat Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross&#13;
Jeff Scoville, Jerry Socha• '&#13;
Production Start&#13;
Denise Anastasio Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Ziman~.'&#13;
and the Kenosha Sherur 9f&#13;
which _can be contacted: cf¥:;,&#13;
of emergency as in lie&#13;
disturbance. ' Crowd&#13;
There is hope by Sgt ~&#13;
to get ~ t~letype mach~e Whidt&#13;
would Jorn us to the natiOOWide&#13;
?et, th~s enabling an almCII&#13;
1mmed1ate check on such things&#13;
as _weat~er, stolen cars and&#13;
reg_1stration numbers on stol&#13;
articles. en&#13;
The largest problem 0&#13;
campus has been Wll'eported&#13;
theft - of things from ~&#13;
s!-t"uction tools to no parking&#13;
signs. There is seldom am&#13;
trouble with students except fo~&#13;
the occational one caught&#13;
sneaking into dances. But&#13;
parking tickets are what they&#13;
are most noted for. 57 peoJ1e&#13;
noted this by 1 p.m. Thursda,&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, Barb Scott&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Newscope is an independenl&#13;
student newspaper coiopostd&#13;
by students of the University d.&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside pubiisbed&#13;
weekly except during vacab&lt;C&#13;
periods. Student obtainei •&#13;
vertising funds are the salt&#13;
source of revenue for !he&#13;
operation of Newscope. 6· copies are printed aod&#13;
distributed throughout !ht&#13;
Kenosha and Racine co!D·&#13;
munities as well 85 th&#13;
University. Free copies art&#13;
available upon request&#13;
VAffO"S C':)&#13;
PIZZA!"&#13;
ALSO G-!IO&lt;EN DINN~ :;c,:, .. :' ... .:. . • ;~ ,.111.-12.:• ....&#13;
,t\ND ITAUA"I SAUSAGE OCM3ERS&#13;
5021- 30th AYIIIII K• lfll 157-1191&#13;
Open 6 days o week from 4 p.m., closed /.+Of'days &#13;
f)llor'S N:;ay evening about&#13;
OIl Wedn NewSCope reporter&#13;
.-. p,,,,., hardt interrupted&#13;
..... Bore f'old's game ':":, .. 10 Morgan I .&#13;
11"""'. Y to ask for an m-&#13;
; ()Sln~o hlues artist was to&#13;
""~'. less than an hour --wIll,n .&#13;
,,_.~~a crowd of about 350 in&#13;
..... Case Field House.&#13;
IlJClne id h _ Morganfield SBI e&#13;
»r be haPPY to talk to the&#13;
o«Pd right after the hand&#13;
~~ed. The atmosphere&#13;
... rei ed and informal. The&#13;
... ,ax nowed from the first&#13;
~~ to an informal con-&#13;
~':, among the other band&#13;
~bers. McKinley&#13;
,e f',old and Bob Bor- IIorjan '&#13;
~i followSis an interview&#13;
fllh Muddy Waters.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
_po: Is it true that the&#13;
1116"'''' with you printed in&#13;
.... , Slone (September 16,&#13;
11'1' was two years old? .&#13;
lIIldJ' Walers: Yea, that m- .&#13;
_ was done right when I&#13;
"out ofthe hospital, I believe.&#13;
Howwould you gauge your&#13;
",055 today? Do ynu judge it&#13;
laOOC"Iiy?&#13;
lIIIdy Waters: Well, that's a&#13;
lid quesUon, hut today I'll&#13;
'l"'k the truth. I've played fnr&#13;
.. money for so many people&#13;
• my lifetime . . . now I'm&#13;
,amg old, Ineed the finances.&#13;
Illed that money in the bank.&#13;
: Howlong do you plan on&#13;
lIIym'!&#13;
.... y: I'm gonna go full steam&#13;
• blg as I can. After that I'll&#13;
"'''ldown. Butlong as I can go&#13;
l1li steam, I'm on my way, ya&#13;
....&#13;
: I'd like to ask you about&#13;
...... , You have a white harp&#13;
pal" in your group. You&#13;
OIIidn'tsay the hlues is a black&#13;
.,. wouldyou!&#13;
.... y: Naw, I've never said&#13;
.. in one of my interviews.&#13;
• blacks feel the blues and&#13;
lIoyblues. There's one thing I&#13;
always tell e.verybody I have an&#13;
Interview WIth, that the white&#13;
can play Just as good as&#13;
anybody in the blues, but the&#13;
one thing they lack is the vocals&#13;
That's down the blues line"&#13;
Otherwise they can play t~&#13;
blues as good as anyone else.&#13;
NS: Can you tell the difference&#13;
listening to a recrod whether&#13;
it's a black or a white artist?&#13;
Muddy: Sure I can teII the&#13;
NS: Who do you respect amon&#13;
the people in Your field' g&#13;
Muddy: I got a heck of ~ lot of&#13;
:;:sepct for a lot 01 the boys out&#13;
re ya know, if YOU're speakin'&#13;
of the old people in the field like&#13;
me. You got some good comln'&#13;
up ~ellas, White and black. You&#13;
can t leave out Paul Butterfield&#13;
You don'tleave out Junior We~&#13;
and BUddy Guy, all those&#13;
people.&#13;
L&#13;
en&#13;
"&#13;
"&#13;
'"n&#13;
o&#13;
&lt;&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
en&#13;
difference.&#13;
NS: How about playing a guitar&#13;
or harp?&#13;
Muddy: Yea, I can tell the&#13;
difference there, too. Especially&#13;
if they're playin' the same type&#13;
of blues we're playin'. It seems&#13;
like the whites put a little bit&#13;
more into it than the black&#13;
people, like notes. That takes&#13;
out a little of the feelin'.&#13;
NS: Do you think that you could&#13;
label 'an age of blues' or a&#13;
decade when the best of the&#13;
blues was played?&#13;
Muddy: When I was in&#13;
Mississippi, and wets sitlin' on&#13;
the Coca-Cola boxes pickin' the&#13;
guitar and blowin' a jazz horn.&#13;
That was anywhere from '31 on&#13;
up to the '40's.&#13;
NS: Is there any difference&#13;
Arn..e-r Lc...a.n&#13;
~ E.ct.""'-t&gt;.-....&amp;. __ WHEnS&#13;
• «(,d1J&#13;
RaCinG WHeeLS '\.'~.S:'l&#13;
~ II U!.~!~·I·............~~~,&#13;
Mike Davis Speed City&#13;
4807 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA, WiSCONSIN&#13;
GRAND OPENING&#13;
October first, second &amp; third&#13;
Your&#13;
Choice&#13;
HotDog&#13;
or&#13;
Corn Dog&#13;
or&#13;
Cheese Dog&#13;
and '&#13;
The Un cola&#13;
15t&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
on 22nd A avenue at 44th street in Kenosha&#13;
.Across from Holy Rosary&#13;
between the bl_ you lib ed&#13;
down there and the blues you&#13;
played m Oucago'&#13;
Muddy: f played the same blues&#13;
bere as I dJd at home&#13;
NS: Where do you tIunIt the&#13;
connection lies bet'N'tal ) our&#13;
bl.ues and let: s say Diuy&#13;
Glllespe's jazz, or P4u1 Butterfield's&#13;
blues and Olarhe&#13;
Bird's jan"&#13;
Mudd): Well, that questlOll IS&#13;
too hard for me to anav.er I&#13;
don't know what the dJfrOftl&gt;&lt;:e&#13;
would be or the conned"OIl&#13;
because I feel that way bef~&#13;
my time the blues was the root&#13;
of all of tJus that has gott""&#13;
started&#13;
N: So you being mvolved&#13;
dJrectIy in th,s would gl\&#13;
creedance to the fact that ).,1&#13;
and everytlung eI5e ,"\'oh the&#13;
blues&#13;
Muddy: Ifeel like that, yea&#13;
I\'S: Do )'OU tIunIt that performing&#13;
the blues WiU ev r&#13;
haclt to the early SlXlies. liJce&#13;
when you could go cto.." to&#13;
Cbicago to the Plug ,',cltel or&#13;
the Unicorn, all small clubs1&#13;
Muddy: It will probably go bac:l&lt;&#13;
to the clubs, 1 leellike .1 ,,'III go&#13;
haclt to the clubs We dIS some&#13;
clubs and it was good, 'cause It&#13;
Muddy Waters&#13;
was majjed packed and&#13;
everybody's up on thelJ' feet&#13;
givin' lIS some good dteu to&#13;
ahead. I'm defimtely a club&#13;
man, 'cause Ithulk m I small&#13;
club you can bear me better.&#13;
N : The money's got to be a lot&#13;
different between the clubs and&#13;
the big halls&#13;
Mudd : The mOlley can depe&gt;d&#13;
on the club. liJce • lISter Kell 's&#13;
or a small club. The best blues&#13;
club thougb was called B&#13;
John's up on Well , but&#13;
the)' "ent OUl 01 buaul and&#13;
they tore the place down. Th"" man,&#13;
it was Mother Blues then" ba&#13;
"ent to the Plug.·1 eI The)'&#13;
or&#13;
If&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesda and Thur da&#13;
I&#13;
~m,-4p,m,&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
. (5 a glass&#13;
-e: and&#13;
U a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGH AYS 1-9' AND so&#13;
open 9 a,m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Avallablt for Fllt,rAHy 01 Sorority parties&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISER_.S _&#13;
, ·ote: ~ nesday evening about&#13;
~ed Newscope reporter&#13;
p.rn., hardt interrupted&#13;
. ~o~c Iorganfield's g~e&#13;
lll e) to ask ror an m-&#13;
,J ~ . ;e blues artist was to&#13;
~· in Jess than an ho~r&#13;
crowd of about 350 m a ease Field House.&#13;
Ractne 'd h !.lorganfield sa1 e&#13;
r. be hllPPY to talk to the&#13;
r right after the hand&#13;
riru' bed. The atmosphere&#13;
rela~ed and informal. ~he&#13;
;ie',\' nowed from the first&#13;
• 5 to an informal contloo&#13;
among the other band&#13;
mbers, McKinley&#13;
er anfield, and Bob Bor1i&#13;
follows is an interview&#13;
1uddy Waters.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
pt: Is it true ~at t~&#13;
ie't\. with you printed m&#13;
ne (September 16,&#13;
wa two years old?&#13;
1 \\11trs: Yea, that in-&#13;
. • was done right when I&#13;
' of the hospital, I believe.&#13;
How would you gauge your&#13;
today? Do you judge it&#13;
'ally~&#13;
Waters: Well, that's a&#13;
question, but today I'll&#13;
the truth. I've played for&#13;
money for so many people&#13;
y lifetime . . . now I'm&#13;
old, 1 need the finances.&#13;
that money in the bank.&#13;
How Jong do you plan on&#13;
-&#13;
,: I'm gonna go full steam&#13;
as I can. After that I'll&#13;
0011.n. But long as I can go&#13;
am, I'm on my way, ya&#13;
~way~ tell e_verybody I have an&#13;
mterv1ew ~th, that the white&#13;
can play Just as good as&#13;
anybo~ in the blues, but the&#13;
one thing they Jack is the vocal&#13;
That's down the blues lines.&#13;
Otherwise they can play t~&#13;
blues as good as anyone else.&#13;
~S: ~n you tell the difference&#13;
~1~tenmg to a recrod whether&#13;
1l s a black or a white artist?&#13;
Muddy: Sure I can tell the&#13;
difference.&#13;
NS: How about playing a guitar&#13;
or harp?&#13;
Muddy: Yea, I can tell the&#13;
difference there, too. Especially&#13;
if they're playin' the same type&#13;
of blues we're playin'. It seems&#13;
like the whites put a little bit&#13;
more into it than the black&#13;
people, like notes. That takes&#13;
out a little of the reelin'.&#13;
Am..,e...r~&#13;
~ £.ctYA.,prn.e.M&#13;
MIIGNESU,IAACINGwttEll.S&#13;
NS: Who do you respect amon&#13;
the people in your field? g&#13;
Muddy: I got a heck of a lot o&#13;
::epct for a lot or the boy out&#13;
re ya know, if you're peakin'&#13;
of the old people in the field like me. You got some good c . ,&#13;
up fellas, white and black~1n&#13;
can't leave out Paul Butter'r1el~&#13;
You don'tleave outJuniC'lr Welli&#13;
and Buddy Guy, all tho e&#13;
people.&#13;
L&#13;
ll1&#13;
... _&#13;
(A&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&lt;&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
NS: Do you think that you could&#13;
label •an age of blu · or a&#13;
decade when the be t of the&#13;
blues was played?&#13;
Muddy: When I wa in&#13;
Mississippi, and we' ittin'&#13;
the Coca-Cola boxes pickin' the&#13;
guitar and blowin' a jazz horn.&#13;
That was anyv,bere from '31&#13;
up to the '40's.&#13;
· : ls there any differen&#13;
4807 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA ,&#13;
GRAND OPENING&#13;
October first, second &amp; third&#13;
I&#13;
Your&#13;
Choice&#13;
Hot Dog&#13;
or&#13;
Corn Dog&#13;
or&#13;
Cheese Dog and&#13;
TheUncola&#13;
15C&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
on 22nd A avenue at 44th street in Kenosha&#13;
. Across from Holy Rosary&#13;
(1)&#13;
u&#13;
0&#13;
-C&#13;
u&#13;
'-&#13;
:::&gt;&#13;
0&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
.m.&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
a r r&#13;
french frie&#13;
p alad&#13;
.1&#13;
ic&#13;
or&#13;
The Br&#13;
'Tht Brat is u/hn-t its at'&#13;
ORTH EST COR ER OF HIGH AYS 1-94 A O 50&#13;
ope 9 a.m.- 12 p.m.&#13;
AVlllablt for flltunll or sororlly p11t&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERT SERS &#13;
Pagt&gt;-I NI::WS(;QPE Seplember27,1971&#13;
****************&#13;
JIll! 11.ew ,Vogue Jlteuler&#13;
The Gateway To Harbor West&#13;
1820- 52ndStreet, Kenosha&#13;
THE NEW VOGUE THEATER is attempting&#13;
to bring to Kenoshaa new concept&#13;
in the world of films by presenting a wide&#13;
range of movies produced primarily outside&#13;
of the Hollywood studio. Our long range&#13;
schedule calls for classic, foreign, underground&#13;
and experimental movies. THE&#13;
NEW VOGUE THEATER will be open&#13;
every Friday, Saturday and Sunday night&#13;
offering two complete showings each&#13;
evening, beginning at approximately 7:30&#13;
and 9:45 P.M.&#13;
~&#13;
Grand opening,&#13;
Friday, October 1, Saturday, October 2, and&#13;
Sunday, October 3.&#13;
W.C. Fields Revival&#13;
feature:&#13;
shorts:&#13;
THE BANK DICK&#13;
THE BIG THUMB&#13;
CALIFORNIA BOUND&#13;
CIRCUS SLICKER&#13;
Admission S1.25at the door&#13;
S1.00in advance&#13;
Advance tickets may be purchased at any&#13;
art gallery in Harbor West or at the Student&#13;
Services Office at Carthage College.&#13;
Coming Attraction for October 8, 9 &amp; 10&#13;
feature: AN IMAL FARM&#13;
short: THE ADVENTURES OF A&#13;
NAKED BOY&#13;
****************&#13;
REVOLUTIONARY THEATRE&#13;
DIRECT fROM SAN QUENTINl 41' The Uni~.Of WlSConsin-Parkside&#13;
TBECAGE&#13;
by RICK CLUCHEY&#13;
"STRANGE AND WILD ..• I WOULD GO TO&#13;
PRISON FOR ITS RIGHT TO SAY WHAT IT&#13;
IS SAYING!' -ell'/. a.rn.... N.Y. Tim••&#13;
"HARROWING, FUNNY AND MOCKING.&#13;
IT'S QUITE A PLAY!" -Edwin Newmen. WNBe-TV&#13;
""M STILL REELING FROM ITS IMPACT.&#13;
GRim, TOUGH AND UITERLY ABSORBING."&#13;
-Emof")' Lewis, Th. Record&#13;
Thursday September 30 8:00p.m.&#13;
Kenosha Tremper Aucl;torium&#13;
le.ervec:l Seats '&#13;
Porluide Students $1.00 General Public $2.50&#13;
liclt.t. Avoilabl.: Stwd.", Acti.,.iti•• Offic.&#13;
loam 206, Tall."t Hall&#13;
YES, IT IS NOT&#13;
BILLY JACK Billy Jack&#13;
Tom Laughlin Jean Roberts&#13;
Delores Taylor "&#13;
SCreenplay by Frank and Teresa Christina&#13;
Direction by T. C. Franck&#13;
"Youth instinctively understands the .pre~ent&#13;
environment - the electric dr-ama; It lives&#13;
mythically and in depth. This is the r~ason for the&#13;
great alienation between generatlOn.&#13;
s. Wars,&#13;
revolutions and civil uprisings are m~erfac~s&#13;
within the new environments created by electr-ic&#13;
informational media'." It would seem to me that&#13;
the exploitation of interface probably never entered&#13;
the mind of Marshall Mcluhan when ~e&#13;
wrote this most interpretive phrase 10 The Me~la&#13;
is The Message circa 1967. The viewing of B~lly&#13;
Jack, an interfacial exploitive film, was .upsetting&#13;
in that it coolly insulted McLuhan and many-of the&#13;
new concepts that may be conn?ta~ed&#13;
revolutionary or denotated necessary. This film&#13;
aids in putting back in and on the breakfast .f~od&#13;
box all of the ideals it took so long to un-plasticIze&#13;
and recognize in a purist sense. It has also been&#13;
held over in the Racine-Kenosha area for three&#13;
weeks.&#13;
A Robin Hood hero is placed in an environment&#13;
of evil men, who, in their black-hatted&#13;
ignorance are trying to close down a "Free~om&#13;
School" that is producing fulfilled human beings&#13;
at no cost to The individual. While the concept of&#13;
having a school of this kind is beyond reproach it is&#13;
certainly questionable that the town folk would&#13;
ban the members of the place to enter their city&#13;
because they were "hippy freaks", making it&#13;
necessary for the violent war hero turned nonviolent,&#13;
green beret turned non-green beret to&#13;
battle half of the town in a none to non-violent&#13;
demonstration of green beret learned Hapkido&#13;
Karate. At this point we can see the aging side of&#13;
the interface, violence for violence sake, filmed as&#13;
a pleasurable sequence, not as a thought&#13;
provoking scene that would be persuasive in&#13;
another way_&#13;
We meet crazy Bernard in an earlier episode&#13;
of the film. His father wants him to shoot wild&#13;
horses for glue, but he is unable to. Now, I am not&#13;
sure if the director just ran out of conflict or&#13;
characters to use, but we suddenly find this&#13;
init8ally likeable fellow who is sensible enough not&#13;
to kill horses with his father pouring flour over one&#13;
or two of the Indian children who live at the school,&#13;
after which he rapes the directress. She looks&#13;
her assailant, and with the same fervor th lJpat&#13;
vows free love she exclaims, '1I'1I see you inat.she&#13;
for the rest of your life!" priSon&#13;
His final action is the killing-of Martin .&#13;
unassuming Indian boy who has been ac~a qllJet&#13;
balling the town deputy's daughter. From t~&#13;
of the film Martin is pushed, Punched, kicked&#13;
eventually mangled by four bullets in the hea~d&#13;
could not help but feel sorry for him' firsi/&#13;
because he was tortured. so; secondly a~d y&#13;
. ta b .hi uff . ,more impor n~l ~ause IS s ermg was played u&#13;
as less significant than the action taken in':&#13;
name. ... more. interface. Situations that let the&#13;
negative and positive SIde of an issue holdan equa}&#13;
position.&#13;
The film is laced with American [neli&#13;
sp~ritua!ism . and the now popular mys~&#13;
existential Will over reason, Which.may explain&#13;
some of the scenes where the attacking of anotbe&#13;
individual w~s mor~ important then the hwna~&#13;
factor of mte~actlOn. Ou~ hero attacking&#13;
desperately at his oponent, his face in a kindof&#13;
spastic turmoil, is finally diminished, in the light&#13;
of empirical ~bservation ~s he finally gives up .. ,&#13;
seeing two Sides of the interface coin.&#13;
He is eventually forced to avenge the life 01&#13;
poor Martin and stands an entire army of stale&#13;
troopers. He holds up in a church as thoughem.&#13;
battled at the Alamo; true to the Robin Hood&#13;
image even to the point where he is talked oul01&#13;
dying alone by his persuasive rapee, Jean.&#13;
While the film is a commercial successit is not&#13;
a very good cultural document but it had some&#13;
retrieving qualities in that it contained a coupleof&#13;
interesting improvisational comedy scenes that&#13;
made visual some of those great sitll8tiooa1&#13;
commentaries similar to those put out by Firesign&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Acting on the part of Delores Taylor was in·&#13;
triguing, in that she fits the definition Udifferent",&#13;
She is not a beauty in terms of Raquel Welch, but&#13;
she has a quiet strength that reflects more of&#13;
reality than the pseudo plastic image of the sex&#13;
queen. This is a woman I would enjoy seeingin a&#13;
role of more difficulty and demand.&#13;
This film probably did not have a very large&#13;
budget but we have seen amateur films lhat have&#13;
minute budgets that are much closer to brllliance&#13;
than this one. We should expect more.&#13;
WilliamSOr......&#13;
ALADDI&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
RaciCle&#13;
Your best music buys are at&#13;
Bidingers House&#13;
of Music&#13;
in Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Page -I :\EWS('OPE september2i, 1971&#13;
****************&#13;
he 1flew 1 ague 2 heuler&#13;
The Gateway To Harbor West&#13;
1820 - 52nd Street, Kenosha&#13;
THE NEW VOGUE THEATER is attempting&#13;
to bring to Kenosha a new concept&#13;
in the world of films by presenting a wide&#13;
range of movies produced primarily outside&#13;
of the Hollywood studio. Our long range&#13;
schedule calls for classic, foreign, underground&#13;
and experimenta l movies. T HE&#13;
NEW VOGUE THEATER will be open&#13;
every Friday, Saturday and Sunday night&#13;
offering two complete showings each&#13;
evening, beginning at approximately 7: 30&#13;
and 9: 45 P.M.&#13;
Grand Opening,&#13;
riday, October 1, Saturday, October 2, and&#13;
unday, October 3.&#13;
w.c. Fields Revival&#13;
feature:&#13;
shorts:&#13;
THE BANK DICK&#13;
THE BIG THUM B&#13;
CALIFORNIA BOUND&#13;
CIRCUS SLICKER&#13;
Admission S1.25 at the door&#13;
Sl.00 in advance&#13;
Advance tickets may be purchased at any&#13;
art gallery in Harbor West or at the Student&#13;
Services Office at Carthage College.&#13;
Coming Attraction for October a, 9 &amp; 10&#13;
feature: ANIMAL FARM&#13;
short: THE ADVENTURES OF A&#13;
NAKED BOY&#13;
****************&#13;
REVOLUTIONARY THEATRE&#13;
DIRECT fROM SAN QUENTINI&#13;
i.JJr The University of Wisconsin-Parkside -,, preae nh ...&#13;
THE CAGE&#13;
by RICK CLUCHEY&#13;
"STRANGE AND WILD ... I WOULD GO TO&#13;
PRISON FOR ITS RIGHT TO SAY WHAT IT&#13;
IS SAYING," - Clive Barnes, N.Y. Timn&#13;
"HARROWING, FUNNY AND MOCKING. IT'S QUITE A PLAY!" -Edwin Newman. WNBC-TV&#13;
" l'M STILL REELING FROM ITS IMPACT. GRlm, TOUGH AND UTTERLY ABSORB- ING.'' -Emory L-••. The Record&#13;
thuraday September 30 8:00p.m.&#13;
ICenoaho Tremper Aucfitorium&#13;
R•1erv•d Seots&#13;
Porliside Students S1.00 General Public S2.50&#13;
Ticke t• Availa'-le : Student Activitiea Office&#13;
l oo"' 206, Ta llent Holl&#13;
YES,ITIS NO T&#13;
BILLY JACK Billy Jack&#13;
Tom Laughlin Jean Roberts&#13;
Delore Taylor . . Screenplay by Frank and Teresa Christina&#13;
Direction by T. C. Franck " Youth instinctively understands the _pre~ent&#13;
environment - the electric drama; it hves&#13;
mythically and in depth. This is the r~ason for the&#13;
great alienation between generation_s. Wars,&#13;
revolutions and civil uprisings are m;erfac~s&#13;
within the new environments created by electric&#13;
informational media'." It would seem to me that&#13;
the exploitation of interface probably never entered&#13;
the mind of Marshall Mclu~an when ~e&#13;
wrote this most interpretive phrase m The M~1a&#13;
i The Message circa 1967. The viewing of B!IIY&#13;
Jack, an interfacial exploitive film, was upsetting&#13;
in that it coolly insulted McLuhan and many of the&#13;
new concepts that may be conn?ta~ed&#13;
revolutionary or denotated necessary. This film&#13;
aids in putting back in and on the breakfast _f~od&#13;
box all of the ideals it took so long to un-plastJc1ze&#13;
and recognize in a purist sense. It has also been&#13;
held over in the Racine-Kenosha area for three&#13;
weeks.&#13;
A Robin Hood hero is placed in an environment&#13;
of evil men, who, in their black-hatted&#13;
ignorance are trying to close down a "Freedom&#13;
School" that is producing fulfilled human beings&#13;
at no cost to 'the individual. While the concept of&#13;
having a school of this kind is beyond reproach it is&#13;
certainly questionable that the town folk would&#13;
ban the members of the place to enter their city&#13;
because they were "hippy freaks", making it&#13;
necessary for the violent war hero turned nonviolent,&#13;
green beret turned non-green beret to&#13;
battle half of the town in a none to non-violent&#13;
demonstration of green beret learned Hapkido&#13;
Karate. At this point we can see the aging side of&#13;
the interface, violence for violence sake, filmed as&#13;
a pleasurable sequence, not as a thought&#13;
provoking scene that would be persuasive in&#13;
another way.&#13;
We meet crazy Bernard in an earlier episode&#13;
of the film. His father wants him to shoot wild&#13;
horses for glue, but he is unable to. Now, I am not&#13;
sure if the director just ran out of conflict or&#13;
characters to use, but we suddenly find this&#13;
initSally likeable fellow who is sensible enough not&#13;
to kill horses with his father pouring flour over one&#13;
or two of the Indian children who live at the school,&#13;
after which he rapes the directress. She looks&#13;
her assailant, and with the same fervor lb llpat&#13;
vows free love she exclaims, "I'll see you in at _she&#13;
for the rest of your life!" Pr1SOn&#13;
His final action is the killing of Martin .&#13;
unassuming Indian boy: who has been ac~ a QUiet&#13;
balling the town deputy's daughter. From t~ of&#13;
of the film Martin is pushed, punched, kickeds art&#13;
eventually mangled by four bullets in the heaid&#13;
could not help but feel sorry for him· firsu 1&#13;
because he was tortured so; secondly a~d rn '&#13;
importan~, b~ause his suffering was played ore&#13;
as less s1gmflca~t than the. action taken i~&#13;
name . .. more interface. Situations that let the&#13;
neg~~ve and positive side of an issue hold an equa1&#13;
pos1t10n.&#13;
The film is laced with American Indi&#13;
spiritualism and the now popular mys~n&#13;
existential will over reason, which may explai~&#13;
some of the scenes where the attacking of another&#13;
individual w?s mor~ important then the human&#13;
factor of mte~act1on. Our hero attacking&#13;
desperately at his oponent, his face in a kind of&#13;
spastic turmoil, is finally diminished, in the light&#13;
of empirical observation as he finally gives up ..&#13;
seeing two sides of the interface coin. ·&#13;
He is eventually forced to avenge the life of&#13;
poor Martin and stands an entire army of state&#13;
troopers. He holds up in a church as though emba~tled&#13;
at the Alamo; true to the Robin Hood&#13;
image even to the point where he is talked out of&#13;
dying alone by his persuasive rapee, Jean.&#13;
While the film is a commercial success it is not&#13;
a very good cultural document but it had some&#13;
retr\eving qualities in that it contained a couple of&#13;
interesting improvisational comedy scenes that&#13;
made visual some of those great situational&#13;
commentaries similar to those put out by Firesign&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Acting on the part of Delores Taylor was in·&#13;
triguing, in that she fits the definition "different".&#13;
She is not a beauty in terms of Raquel Welch, but&#13;
she has a quiet strength that reflects more of&#13;
reality than the pseudo plastic image of the sex&#13;
queen. This is a woman I would enjoy seeing in a&#13;
role of more difficulty and demand.&#13;
This film probably did not have a very large&#13;
budget but we have seen amateur films that have&#13;
minute budgets that are much closer to brilliance&#13;
than this one. We should expect more.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Your best music buys are at&#13;
Bidingers House&#13;
of Music&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
l&#13;
ALADDI&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Rocioe&#13;
in Downtown Kenosha&#13;
~ IJf/ The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
-,;-" PRESENTS .. .. IN CONCERT&#13;
JOHN DENVER&#13;
'TA KE ME HOME COUN TR Y ROADS'&#13;
SAT. OCT. 2 8:00 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA TREMP ER AUD.&#13;
RES. SEAT TICKETS $3-50&#13;
AVAILABLE:&#13;
Student Activities Office &#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
. The Female Eunuch&#13;
Title. . Germaine Greer&#13;
AUthl~r·her· McGraw-Hili Book pub IS .&#13;
pany ($6.95)&#13;
com weeks ago I wrote a disap-&#13;
~?g review on Sexual Politics by&#13;
polntm . d.&#13;
Millett. The review was isap-&#13;
/(ale . di t t·&#13;
• 'ntf beCause or 10 n-ee proper Ion&#13;
1"'1011,... ·11 t d· th fact that Ml et was a rsapto.&#13;
Ie g writer; her style lacked&#13;
po,n In . Iiti d h idity and emotive qua lies, an ~r&#13;
lue enls concerned conundrums: In&#13;
:;;::Imallhoughher analysis may havesharp&#13;
her pen was dull.&#13;
beeI'l • ~ Greer is a 32 years old&#13;
Get~i~l~(with a PQ.D. mind you) ~nd&#13;
AUStraremale Eunuch is her fir-st&#13;
Tb;liShed book. In addition to this 350&#13;
Pu rreatise she has also written ar- :rfor 0' and recently for Esquire.&#13;
eS ites in a lucid, emotive style and&#13;
:: foesn't concern herself. with the&#13;
th opological-psychologlcal comanr&#13;
d·MiG p1exilieslhat Millett oes. ss reer&#13;
. ncerned with the actual dynamiCS&#13;
~ ~ved iD society's attitudes toward&#13;
mv en her propositions are presented&#13;
~cl~arIY, and she demonstratesher&#13;
qw elusions by utilizing apt and ObVIOUS&#13;
:teffijXlrary and historical example,s,&#13;
Men are not the enemy because, In&#13;
the case or the systematic de:gr~d~tion&#13;
01 womenby society, the vlchmlzers&#13;
are also the victims. If men hate&#13;
women because they are bitches, it is&#13;
Se-pt~mber2i. 19i1 the men who made them bitches. She&#13;
constantly underlines the circular&#13;
character or the "sex war", and states&#13;
that women cannot be liberated unless&#13;
me.n are also, until the present societal&#13;
athtu?es .concerning the ramily, sex,&#13;
Promtscuity, love and marriage are&#13;
seen for what they are, rnlsan.&#13;
turing or society and not wasung time&#13;
with anthropological theories. Even ir&#13;
matriarchy did precede matriarchy It&#13;
wouldn't change the present reality.&#13;
The woman must regain. perhaps&#13;
discover for the first ume. her real sell,&#13;
the self that has been condilloned OUIof&#13;
her since she was born tfeminity IS noL&#13;
assume the exual Jmtlatl\(" \loh\ dot&#13;
he have ·10 withstand .11 of th&#13;
pressurej Women must a ume&#13;
respon iblhty for themsetve -. a, Greer&#13;
says. ··UIe cunt must com mto II&#13;
own" The sexes musl fl. above th "Ir&#13;
conventional polarity, each mdividual&#13;
must develop a an mW\'ldual and&#13;
people mu t realize thaI so called&#13;
female and male traits are no mere&#13;
than arburarv convenuons. that If&#13;
there are any irea \\ e are all fr ak&#13;
The F.-mal" Eunuch I an un&#13;
pressive e a). mort." rmpres IU'&#13;
beC3USf! It doesn't overwbclm IMlt.&gt; d&#13;
it assimilates you Be Ide lund pro 1,.'&#13;
The F'ema le Eunuch I. hbttral1~&#13;
seasoned \\ uh quotb from 111torH,'al&#13;
figures ranglOg from J S 'hll to&#13;
Wilham Blake, from Valene lan~ 10&#13;
Mar) \...·011tonecraft, The \\orllttr IS not&#13;
loath to explam Ibmgs 10graphll' lerl11&#13;
. fore. ample. 'OA chloral or~a In "llh&#13;
a fuJI cunl 15 nI er (han 3 elnoral&#13;
orgasm With an empt) one" a~ far a. I&#13;
can tell, at tea f ,. U' an lOionnatl\ l"&#13;
ess3). II" • good book&#13;
"The Ume has rome \\ hen S()ltlt&#13;
women are read) to II I(.on, and (ht Ir&#13;
number I gro\\tng. H I tlrn(" 31"0 for&#13;
these \\omen 10 peak. ho\\("\er un&#13;
cerulinly. ho\\e\"er haltlngl)'" and for&#13;
th \\orJd to Ii ten."&#13;
What Will you do""&#13;
&lt;:OUrl~S) of lht Kook 'I..rt, Ii!! • .:i91h&#13;
Street. J\.fflo!)ha.&#13;
thromorphic. ThOUgh many of her&#13;
suggested alternatives to the present&#13;
norm may seem radical to some, her&#13;
lucid style cushions the effect" the most&#13;
radical alternatives seem paJata~le&#13;
because she presents both sides of the&#13;
sex war, and il will be both sides that&#13;
benefit by the restructuring of social&#13;
norms.&#13;
The misanthromorphic character of&#13;
contemporary sopal values cannot be&#13;
isolated from the family. motherhood.&#13;
education, the bringing up of children.&#13;
It makes little sense to argue over&#13;
whether matriarchy preceded&#13;
patriarchy (as Millette does) when the&#13;
real problem is right in fronl of you, the&#13;
real problem concerns the restruc.&#13;
necessarily ° temalel. Boy and Girl&#13;
children are victims or their mother's&#13;
frustration, she is a bitch to her&#13;
husband because she resents hi&#13;
comparalive rreedom, she doe n't&#13;
know how to escape her prison-home&#13;
because she w.as never allowed to&#13;
develop a questioning attitude toward&#13;
the problems or lire. she doesn't kno\\&#13;
what to do. she has been castrated he&#13;
has never lived.&#13;
Men have the responsibility for&#13;
bringing home the hashbop. for&#13;
presenting a "masculine" image. ror&#13;
initiating sex. Evidence points to lhe&#13;
fact that mep don't want aU of the&#13;
responsibility on their shoulders alone.&#13;
Nosirreee, why does Ole man have to&#13;
----Inside rTheCage'-----.,&#13;
The four harrowing days at The Dime ~eer!&#13;
New York's Attica bring into&#13;
,.un perspective the realiti~s of&#13;
aD inhumane and anxIOus&#13;
cmditioncommon' to many of&#13;
this country'spenal institutions.&#13;
Withforty men dead and a&#13;
growing determina tion to in·&#13;
formon the part of groups in&#13;
and out of these institutions no&#13;
bettertime than now exists to&#13;
have "The Cage" here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
On Sep!. 30 members of The&#13;
Cage Production Company, all&#13;
San Quentinparolees, will visit&#13;
IJIYchology,sociology and other&#13;
related courses to ra p on their&#13;
experiences in prisl:m.&#13;
~eslions wili be appreciated.&#13;
At 8:00 p,m. that same evening&#13;
aClor·playwright Rick&#13;
Ouchey's The Cage will be&#13;
!l"esenled at the Tremper High&#13;
School'sauditorium. Advance&#13;
•tickets are now on sale at&#13;
Student Affairs - Students&#13;
$1.00, General $2.50.&#13;
The play is allegorical in&#13;
nature and was the first written&#13;
by an inmate to be performed&#13;
behind prison walls. This year it&#13;
has toured over 40 campuses&#13;
including many Wiscor.sin&#13;
schools. bringing to Ihem ils&#13;
shocking and surreal portrayal&#13;
of man's confinement by the&#13;
very society that brings about&#13;
many of the situational conditions&#13;
inherent in the criminal&#13;
act.&#13;
Following the presentation&#13;
the actors will again put on the&#13;
mask of consultant and hold&#13;
another talk session concerning&#13;
their experiences and gladly&#13;
answer questions raised by the&#13;
audience.&#13;
From San Quentin to New&#13;
York the reviews have been&#13;
superlative, making Tuesday&#13;
evening's visilto Tremper High&#13;
a must for those who appreciate&#13;
good drama and for those who&#13;
would like to gain a greater&#13;
insighl into what really happen&#13;
behind bars.&#13;
LUNCHEON l&gt;PECIAL&#13;
Mon_Fli&#13;
All YOU can eat&#13;
S·gg&#13;
First 100z. beer&#13;
$.01 per oz.&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
All 10 oz mUls of bee.&#13;
a enee an ount.&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN KE""OSHA&#13;
....-1 NEED HELP!!!&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TIME&#13;
S25 Guarenleed for every 100 envelopes&#13;
you sluff&#13;
All poslage prepaid&#13;
send sramped, self-addressed envelope&#13;
plus Sl for registration and hand_&#13;
ling 10&#13;
ALLEN KING CORPORATION&#13;
P.O. BOX 6525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Bought and sold&#13;
(we buy and sell)&#13;
'A little out of the way,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
310 Green 8.ly Road. Kenosh •• WisconSin&#13;
l2 Block South of Kenosha, Rac,ne: Count"lllOt&#13;
tiPump&#13;
f6y $ave&#13;
MCFarland. Aulo sales&#13;
7904 WASH IN GTON&#13;
AVENUE RACINE.&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
1700 Sheridan R~.&#13;
KENOSHA,WISCONSIN&#13;
are you offended by nudity?&#13;
i. not, stop in.&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVEl&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W·20W·~W SOc per quart&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W·20W·~W 34(;per quart&#13;
15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
SPECIAL 47C per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on 011 Fillers.&#13;
Air Fillers. Tune Up Kits. Spark Plugs&#13;
All ileITISSublecllo 4 Per Cent Sal.s Tax&#13;
The Adult Bookstore .&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown RaCine&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
. The Female Eunuch&#13;
ntJe .. Germaine Greer&#13;
Auth1~\er· McGraw-Hill Book pub I '&#13;
-pany ($6.95) .,..,,.. weeks ago I wrote a disapTW?""&#13;
review on Sexual Politics by lllll•'b . d' • tillelt. The review was 1sapK~te&#13;
,.., b""ause or in direct proportion 10th&#13;
the 'b ract ""' that M ill e tt was d. a isap10.&#13;
t·ng writer; her style lacked polO I • )"t" d h idity and emotive qua i ies, an ~r )UC ents concerned conundrums; m um 1 . h rt although her ana ys1s may ave&#13;
sharp her pen was dull. n~ Greer is a 32 years old Gerrn_ain (with a Ph.D. mind you) and&#13;
traf:male Eunuch is her first 111bJished oook. In addition to this 350&#13;
?l treatise she has also written arplr&#13;
for Oz and recently for Esquire.&#13;
UC e rrites in a lucid, emotive style and&#13;
doe n't concern herself_ with the&#13;
antbropological-psycholog1~al compl&#13;
:alies that Millett does. Miss Gr~er&#13;
ncerned with the actual dynamics&#13;
~\'ed in society's attitudes toward&#13;
uw en her propositions are presented&#13;
: c]~arly, and she demonstrates_ her&#13;
C1l1 clusions by utilizing apt and obvious&#13;
:temporary and historical exampl~.&#13;
~en are not the enemy because, m · case o( the systematic d~gr~d~tion&#13;
of v.omen by society, the v1ct1m1zers&#13;
ar also the victims. If men hate&#13;
men because they are bitches, it is&#13;
the men who made them bitches. he&#13;
constantly underlines the circular&#13;
character of the "sex war", and tat es&#13;
that women cannot be liberated uni&#13;
me_n are aJso, until the present ocietal&#13;
attitu~es _concerning the family, sex.&#13;
promiscuity, love and marriage are&#13;
seen for what they are. misanthr~morphic.&#13;
Though many of her&#13;
suggested alternative to the pre ent&#13;
norm may seem radical to some, her&#13;
lucid style cushions the effect, the mo t&#13;
radical alternatives seem palatable&#13;
because she presents both sides of the&#13;
sex war, and it will be both ides that&#13;
benefit by the restructuring of social&#13;
norms.&#13;
The misanthromorphic character of&#13;
contemporary sopal values cannot be&#13;
isolated from the family, motherhood,&#13;
education, the bringing up of children.&#13;
It makes little sense to argue over&#13;
whether matriarchy preceded&#13;
patriarchy (as Millette does) when the&#13;
real problem is right in front of you, the&#13;
real problem concerns the restruc-&#13;
----Inside rThe Cage'----&#13;
The four harrowing days at&#13;
·ev. York's Attica bring into&#13;
grim perspective the realiti~s of&#13;
an inhumane and anxious&#13;
condition common· to many of&#13;
thi cowitry's penal institutions.&#13;
With forty men dead and a&#13;
gro ·ng determination to inform&#13;
on the part of groups in&#13;
and out of these institutions no&#13;
tter lime than now exists to&#13;
hne "The Cage" here at&#13;
Park ide.&#13;
On Sept. 30 members of The&#13;
Cage Production Company, all&#13;
n Quentin parolees, will visit&#13;
i-Ychology, sociology and other&#13;
related courses to rap on their&#13;
experiences in prison.&#13;
tlons will be appreciated.&#13;
8:00 p.m. that same evening&#13;
ctor-playwright Rick&#13;
au hey's The Cage will be&#13;
ll' nted at the Tremper High&#13;
hool's auditorium. Advance&#13;
, tickets are now on sale at&#13;
Student Affairs - Students&#13;
$1.00, GeneraJ $2.50.&#13;
The play is allegorical in&#13;
nature and was the first written&#13;
by an inmate to be performed&#13;
behind prison walls. This year it&#13;
has toured over 40 campuses&#13;
1700 Sheridan Rcj.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
including many Wi cor.. in&#13;
school , bringing to them it&#13;
shocking and urreal portrayal&#13;
of man's confinement by the ·&#13;
very society that bring about ,&#13;
many of the ituational conditions&#13;
inherent in the cnminal&#13;
act.&#13;
Following the presentation&#13;
the actors will again put on th&#13;
ma k of con ultant and hold&#13;
another talk se ion concerning&#13;
their experience and gladly&#13;
answer question raised b)' th '&#13;
audience.&#13;
From an u nttn to • · ·&#13;
York the re\ie\\ hai·e been&#13;
superlative, making Tue da)&#13;
evening's \'i it to Tremper High&#13;
a must for those who appreciate&#13;
good drama and for th . e who&#13;
would like to gain a greater&#13;
insight into what really happ n&#13;
behind bars.&#13;
William Sor n · n&#13;
sought and sold&#13;
(We buy and sell)&#13;
'A little out of the way,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
MCfarlands Auto sales&#13;
7904 WASHINGTON&#13;
AVENUE RACI E.&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
are you offended by nudity?&#13;
ii not, stop in.&#13;
C omplete adult merchandise selection of contemPorary&#13;
I&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
I&#13;
IS% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore . 406 Main Street Downtown Racme&#13;
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IGH&#13;
firs 10oz. 0ee1&#13;
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ENVELOPE STUFFERS---P RT Tl E $25 Guarenteed for every 100 envelo e&#13;
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All postage prepaid&#13;
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ALLE Kl G CORPOR TION&#13;
P.O. BOX 6525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PE 15212&#13;
ump&#13;
&amp; $av&#13;
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ANO SAVEi&#13;
ROYAL TRITO&#13;
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DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
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61R ,&gt;,1. ~ll1Hl keNO~HA WI~CONSIN&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff .&#13;
Among construction projects&#13;
currently underway on cam~us&#13;
is the building of the facility&#13;
which will centralize athletiC&#13;
,functions on campus. Instead of&#13;
23 different sites for home&#13;
games at various Racme ~d&#13;
Kenosha high schools, we will&#13;
have the one location which will&#13;
include athletic building and&#13;
fields. -&#13;
The building, which will have&#13;
48,000 square feet of floor space,&#13;
housea a 108 x 181 foot gym&#13;
included in which are three fullsize&#13;
42 x 96 foot basketball&#13;
courts. Also in the building is a&#13;
25 yard, eight-lane pool, official&#13;
AA competition size. There ~e&#13;
eight lanes instead of SIX,&#13;
requested by head coach Tom&#13;
Rosandich, to add increased&#13;
flexibility for simultaneous&#13;
laps, instruction an~ diving at&#13;
the 3 foot diving point,&#13;
Additional facilities include&#13;
two handball courts, a large&#13;
exercize room with universal&#13;
gym, combative room for&#13;
practice of judo and karate, a&#13;
conference room-press box&#13;
overlooking the gym, offices,&#13;
Jocker rooms, showers and a coed&#13;
sauna.&#13;
Because of the great diversity&#13;
of the facility it is possible to&#13;
have nine badminton games, six&#13;
volleyball games or six&#13;
basketball courts in operation&#13;
at once. Roll-away bleachers&#13;
covering one of the three&#13;
basketball courts will provide&#13;
seating for 2,500 spectators.&#13;
Roll-away, to allow better&#13;
utilization of space when not in&#13;
use.&#13;
Thanks to the generosity of a&#13;
local citizen, the athletic&#13;
department will nave a little&#13;
more to spend on equipment.&#13;
Mr. Aldo Madrigrano of the 7-&#13;
Up Bottling Company is&#13;
donating not one but two multipurpose&#13;
score boards, located in&#13;
opposite corners of the gymnasium.&#13;
A unique part of the training&#13;
room is a physical fitness&#13;
testing laboratory for&#13;
measuring cardiovascular&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
o&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Athletic Director Tom Rosandich, center, and James G&#13;
of Planning and Construction, right. at the site of the n~ ~1Itra1"&#13;
building. lhIet.&#13;
response oxygen intake, blood&#13;
pressure' and stress analysis.&#13;
When completed the building&#13;
will have the largest enclosed&#13;
area on campus, capable of&#13;
holding 4,500 for special functions.&#13;
The special tartar floor on&#13;
the basketball courts makes&#13;
maintenance easy.&#13;
Mr. Galbraith of Planning&#13;
and Construction estimates that&#13;
~e ~~:X;nc3~ul~i:;te~~e~a~~:&#13;
lots at Hallent Hall. This would&#13;
take 90 Joads of a 50 passenger&#13;
bus. Making a run every ten&#13;
minutes would necessitate 15&#13;
buses, each making six runs.&#13;
Chartering 15 buses for a two&#13;
hour concert could cost quite a&#13;
bit of money - which would be&#13;
added to the cost of the ticket.&#13;
But it is desired not to mess up&#13;
the ecology of the neighborhood&#13;
with parking lots.&#13;
Cost of the athletic bUll .&#13;
construction will be $1.8 ~&#13;
With an additional $376 000&#13;
on fornishing and 'mo SJlenI&#13;
equipmefit, . va bI,&#13;
Included in the albl .&#13;
building program ar. ~'&#13;
athletic fields. A huge '&#13;
bowl will enclose the v::"~&#13;
field, a % mile all-weather&#13;
track and SIX tennis COUrts In&#13;
all 100 acres of land Will' be&#13;
developed for intramural III¢&#13;
intercollegiate sport,&#13;
Seating at the howl Will be&#13;
informal - on the gra... The&#13;
SIdes nse one foot for eachthree&#13;
feet lian in a European.typo&#13;
arrangement.&#13;
The fields, which will CfOt&#13;
$92,000, are expected to be&#13;
completed in late spring,aboot&#13;
the same time as the buiJdiJlI,&#13;
which is now II'.! monthsahead&#13;
of schedule.&#13;
Pre-Law Club Will M••t&#13;
The Parkside Pre-Law Club will hold two organizational meet~&#13;
on Monday, October 4, and Tuesday, October 5. Both meetingswill&#13;
begin at 7:30 p.m. at Greenquist Hall in room D-ll!. Prospective&#13;
members and old members are urged te attend.&#13;
Possible speakers to be brought on campus will be discussed, "&#13;
well as the purpose and the 1971-72 project of the Pre-Law Club.JUDi"&#13;
and senior Pre-Law students will be present to answer any questims.&#13;
Anyone interested but unable to attend may call Tim Prostko a'&#13;
652-4142. (Kenosha) or Becky Ecklund at 554-7160 (Racine).&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
For Sale - '6.J V.W. $275.00. 3509&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha.&#13;
1961·Chev., 6 cvt., auto trens., pwr.&#13;
steering, very gOOd mecn. condo $150&#13;
- call 859·2..12.&#13;
1969 Honda 175cc Scrambler. Ex.&#13;
cond."$&lt;C25.includeS 2 helmets. Call&#13;
Ed, 639--'940.&#13;
1"2 hick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
6:U-U45 or 633·2791.&#13;
1951 Ramb. American. Dependable,&#13;
rustlc, and cheap. 135. 3209 - 28th St.&#13;
1940 Ramb. American. Dependable.&#13;
170. 3209 . 21th St .• KenOSha.&#13;
1970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr., Hardtop,&#13;
V-I, Automatic, power steering,&#13;
634·4606.&#13;
1969 Charger RT - 4CI Mag., 4 sp.,&#13;
mags,seeor call ~..., 6 p.m .• 658-&#13;
36Sot,5110 - 23rd Ave.&#13;
1968 Opel Ka~t, 1966 CorvaJr, Both&#13;
good condo Call Harris, \5-141.2361&#13;
67 Ambassador .. dr. sedan. auto., ~&#13;
cyl. Trans recently overhauled $775.&#13;
Call 553-2345.&#13;
68 Plymouth RoadrWtner 313. Gold&#13;
with Black vinyl top. Ex. condo 5Sot.&#13;
8751.&#13;
1'71 TRAVIL TRAILeR - 15 Ft&#13;
Ught . V..-y easy to tow - Buill In&#13;
Surge brakes - USed only ttlree&#13;
weeks - Must sell . Going to schOol,&#13;
5122 oiSlh St . Ph. 652-3014.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus Camper. Stove,&#13;
refrlg., and SO gal. gas tank., in.&#13;
cluded. First $150.00 takes all. call&#13;
632·55« aft..- 5:30.&#13;
FOR SALE 1967 NORTON 7SOcc&#13;
Notorcycle. engine rebuilt, specl.1&#13;
gearing. Phone 654·1770 - or&#13;
Newscope oHlce. LHve message tor&#13;
Rick Paz..- •.&#13;
1963 Buick For Sale - 4 barrel «:",&#13;
eng. In gOOd condo Autom. on the&#13;
floor. Body fn·gOOdcondo For Sale At&#13;
1250. ALSO&#13;
.. barrel Chev. carb and bottom piece&#13;
tor only $30.00 take it. Call 633-07847&#13;
10 p.m. Racine.&#13;
"Legalize Marijuana" Bumper&#13;
stickers 25c. NIoney goes to ACLu.&#13;
send large self addressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Art Dexter, P.O. 133,&#13;
Union Grove 53182.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling plus the right. Phone 1-&#13;
352-4050_&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
1967Austin-Healey 3000, After 5 p.m.&#13;
539·2407 (Burlington).&#13;
1068 Ford Torino 302-VtI. Low mil.&#13;
Automatic, power steering, Radio,&#13;
Heater, 652-n.45, see at 5234 - 44th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impala Super Sport 327, After&#13;
4:30 p.m., 3022 - 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 R5, 1971, Exc. Cond.&#13;
654·572", Eve.&#13;
650 Triumph T.T. rebuilt engine,&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
heiniets, $100.00 or best oHer. See at&#13;
5723 - 40th Ave.&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs SOme clutch woN&lt;., $250.00.&#13;
634-0871.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3 suitcases, very good condo $25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
·For a Good night's Sleep _&#13;
·Waterbeds. 3701 - 60th street. Can&#13;
.654-9....7.&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us an&#13;
cHer .-Call 654-4862.&#13;
Com. TOUdi Me. A new poetry book&#13;
by ~on SchUlZ and Larry RoaCh.&#13;
Available at all UWP Bookstores.&#13;
•&#13;
~OR SALE - Muskrat fur' jacket,&#13;
size 14. 25. Inches long. New lining.&#13;
SSG.OO.Anita. 652-6754.&#13;
.JUDO UNIFORMS. SIze3and SIIe 4,&#13;
10.00 each. call Kay at 694-6674.&#13;
Q,lcago - casette tape lo trade Jor&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3836.&#13;
PUblic Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Cleek&#13;
ours first high quelity - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Slide Rule $10.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis - Mens, Including poles and&#13;
boots. ~22A5.&#13;
TOIlS"'" 15.00. steam (roll $5.00. Call&#13;
55J.234S.&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set Irons and woods,&#13;
$3.t6 new will sell for 1245.&#13;
Legalize Marliuana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. 50c donation. Be at Student&#13;
Activities Building Wed.&#13;
St..-eo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
amplifier, turntable, 2 speakers.&#13;
Newlng, must sell. $50. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
aROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva. Wis.&#13;
aEWARE OF CAT MAN - He is a&#13;
"(arc&#13;
EngliSh Springer SpanielS, 6 weeks&#13;
old. AKC Good hunting and ·family&#13;
dog. 639·4593.12004 Cedar Creek St .•&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Explore ttle world of ESP whh&#13;
Norman Slater, Apt. by telephone&#13;
only. 6s.c-2375.&#13;
MEN - Your spare time is needed&#13;
by a boy 7 - 17 years old who doesn't&#13;
have a father. Can you provide an&#13;
example of good character and&#13;
citizenShip while shooting pool.&#13;
fiShing, skating, etc.? If SO call Big&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha, Inc. 694-6585.'&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION Introduc1ory Lecture-Tues.&#13;
Sept. 28, 8 p.m., rm 138,&#13;
Kenosha campus; Wed. Sept. 29, 8&#13;
p.m., rm 105, Racine Campus;&#13;
Thurs. Sept. 30, 4 &amp; 8 p.m., rm 100,&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75 - 14 Rim, Real'" end&#13;
Shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 LOg FM Ant. 654-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5. Show tire &amp; rim $1. File&#13;
boxes $1 &amp; $1.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
DiSp.· Cal} 5Jl-7161 aft. 4 p.m.&#13;
2 Bedroom.. House, Parkside area.&#13;
Liv. R., Dining Room ·.comb.,&#13;
Fireplace, over one acre land, '552-&#13;
9012. \&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
wlnemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and- plums; 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Gt&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805 .&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
VOlkswagen - Good condition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-)4,y.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will-share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, :S1-9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from west· Allis5&#13;
days a week, 7:45·..:30. Call.~li&#13;
HELP WANTED -2 Spll'lllhgu/l.&#13;
players work in PizZI H~.PhCI'lt&#13;
551-8906 or stop In and ask tor JDIln&#13;
Attractive girlS over 21. Elm tu1llClll&#13;
and book money. Danelnt l&#13;
Waitress work. If nudfty otrendI&#13;
you, do not apply. ClII 651_.'&#13;
or&#13;
stop at 4426 • SherJdan RoId.&#13;
WANTED - TIM)anr.dlvt, apII'Iminded&#13;
fem.le stuctentl 10 ::&#13;
small apartment with .. RIdJII&#13;
students. Apt. 1 blOCk ~-.-tIlIlI&#13;
campuS. For further """,P"'-"&#13;
write to: Peter Noll, APt·"nnAve.,&#13;
Racine. Wis.&#13;
FREE Kittens: 6 weeki okL:&#13;
trained. Good with chlld'tft. CIII&#13;
and female, assorted ex::; HIll&#13;
Sharon. Ext. 20. Racine&#13;
201. or 634-6215 after 5 p.m. _&#13;
FOR RENT _&#13;
FOR RENT-Mod«DofIkt;':i&#13;
Carpeted and.alr. ~~l fllllf&#13;
per mo. Utillt,es ,nd..--&#13;
at 652-39..5 or 654·7410. _&#13;
For Rent - 1 tJedrOOrn apt. ..-&#13;
633.4990.&#13;
LOST &amp; FOUND ___&#13;
. '" l1l'/I' ~ 'Prescription G1as~' In~&#13;
wedding ring. At T~~tflt t4111.&#13;
cen....::'e::r.::,2n d_t100r_~' -:":=__&#13;
- 5...... '&#13;
FOUND: Sunglas5ts~ .. ~&#13;
Jacket. Contect lost' 2nd f1....&#13;
Information c",tef.&#13;
Tallent Hall. ____&#13;
newscope&#13;
c1assifieds&#13;
are free&#13;
Page&amp; NEWSCOPE sntciubcc 21, ,,11&#13;
YOU'LL LIKE&#13;
WHAT YOU FIND&#13;
..&#13;
and what you hear.&#13;
~- . ' ...&#13;
11111111111111111111111: , 111111~ f;&#13;
FM /AM Portable Radio-model 1221,&#13;
only 4¾" H, offers performance far in excess&#13;
of its size and price. Telescoping FM&#13;
antenna, no drift FM /AFC, slide rule dial&#13;
and vernier tuning. Private-lister,ing earphone&#13;
plus batteries in- s14ss&#13;
eluded. Only ...&#13;
...... WHEELS&#13;
•&#13;
PHONE&#13;
65-C-3559&#13;
For Sale - ·~ v.w. S275.00. 3509&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha.&#13;
1963 Buick For Sale - 4 barrel ~&#13;
eng. In good cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floor. Body in good cond. For Sale At&#13;
S250. ALSO&#13;
4 barrel Chev. carb and bottom piece&#13;
for only $30.00 take It. Call 633-078-' 7 196l•Chev., 6 cyl., auto trans., pwr-.&#13;
steering, very good mech. cond. $150&#13;
- call &amp;59-2412.&#13;
lO p.m. Racine.&#13;
The Buildings of Athletics&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff .&#13;
Among construction proJects&#13;
currently underway on c~~us&#13;
is the building of the fac1h~y&#13;
which will centralize athletic&#13;
,functions on campus. Instead of&#13;
23 different sites fo~ home&#13;
games at various Racine ~d&#13;
Kenosha high schools, ~e w~l&#13;
have the one location which will&#13;
include athletic building and&#13;
fields. . The building, which will have&#13;
48,000 square feet of floor space,&#13;
housea a 108 x 181 foot gym&#13;
included in which are three fullsize&#13;
42 x 96 foot basketball&#13;
courts. Also in the building. i~ a&#13;
25 yard, eight-Jane pool, official&#13;
AA competition size. There ~e&#13;
eight Janes instead of six,&#13;
requested by head c~ch Tom&#13;
Rosandich, to add mcreased&#13;
flexibility for simultaneous&#13;
laps, instruction an~ diving at&#13;
the 3 foot diving pomt.&#13;
Additional facilities include&#13;
two handball courts, a large&#13;
exercize room with universal&#13;
gym, combative room for&#13;
practice of judo and karate, a&#13;
conference room-press box&#13;
overlooking the gym, offices,&#13;
locker rooms, showers and a coed&#13;
sauna.&#13;
Because of the great diversity&#13;
of the facility it is possible to&#13;
have nine badminton games, six&#13;
volleyball games or six&#13;
basketball courts in operation&#13;
at once. Roll-away bleachers&#13;
covering one of the three&#13;
basketball courts will provide&#13;
seating for 2,500 spectators.&#13;
Roll-away, to allow better&#13;
utilization of space when not in&#13;
use.&#13;
Thanks to the generosity of a&#13;
local citizen, the athletic&#13;
department will have a little&#13;
more to spend on equipment.&#13;
Mr. Aldo Madrigrano of the 7-&#13;
Up Bottling Company is&#13;
donating not one but two multipurpose&#13;
score boards, located in&#13;
opposite corners of the gymnasium.&#13;
&#13;
A unique part of the training&#13;
room is a physical fitness&#13;
testing laboratory for&#13;
measuring cardiovascular ft u u&#13;
"Legallze Marijuana" Bumper&#13;
slick«s 25c. Nv:Jney goes lo ACLu.&#13;
Send large self addressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Art Dexter, P.O. 133,&#13;
Union Grove 53182.&#13;
Athletic Director Tom Rosandich, center, and James G lbr.&#13;
of Planning and Construction, right, at the site of the new :th 11~&#13;
building. let 11:&#13;
response, oxygen intake, blo?rl&#13;
pressure and stress analysis.&#13;
When completed the building&#13;
will have the largest enclosed&#13;
area on campus, capable of&#13;
holding 4,500 for special functions.&#13;
The special tartar floor on&#13;
the basketball courts makes&#13;
maintenance easy.&#13;
Mr. Galbraith of PlanninE&#13;
and Construction estimates thal&#13;
all 4,500 could be bused down&#13;
the hill in 30 minutes to parking&#13;
lots at Hallent Hall. This would&#13;
take 90 loads of a 50 passenger&#13;
bus. Making a run every ten&#13;
minutes would necessitate 15&#13;
buses, each making six runs.&#13;
Chartering 15 buses for a two&#13;
hour concert could cost quite a&#13;
bit of money - which would be&#13;
added to the cost of the ticket.&#13;
But it is desired not to mess up&#13;
the ecology of the neighborhood&#13;
with parking lots.&#13;
Cost of the athletic bUiJ .&#13;
c~nstruction will be $1.S mil~&#13;
with an additional $376 000 ~&#13;
on fornishing and 'm spebnt equipmeit. ova le&#13;
Included in the alhl&#13;
building program are ~t&#13;
athletic fields. A huge gra e&#13;
bowl will enclose the va . fi Id rs1ty&#13;
e , a ¼_ mile all-weather&#13;
track and six tennis courts 1&#13;
all 100 a~res of land wm' ~&#13;
developed for intramural &amp;nd&#13;
intercollegiate sport.&#13;
Seating at the bowl will be&#13;
i~orm_al - on the gra s. ~&#13;
sides rise one foot for each~&#13;
feet 6an in a European-tvpe&#13;
arrangement. ·&#13;
The fields, which will ci.t&#13;
$92,000, are expected to be&#13;
completed in late spring, about&#13;
the same time as the building&#13;
which is now 11/2 months ahead&#13;
of schedule.&#13;
Pre-law Club Will Meet&#13;
The Parkside Pre-Law Club will hold two organizational meet·&#13;
on Monday, October 4, abd Tuesday, October 5. Both meetings will&#13;
begin at 7:30 p.m. at Greenquist Hall in r,oom D-111. Prospecure&#13;
members and old members are urged te attend.&#13;
Possible speakers to be brought on campus will be discu sed, as&#13;
well as the purpose and the 1971-72 project of the Pre·Law Chili. Juru&#13;
and senior Pre-Law students will be present to answer any questions.&#13;
Anyone interested but unable to attend may call Tim Prostko 11&#13;
652-4142 (Kenosha) or Becky Ecklund at 554-7160 (Racine&gt;.&#13;
u ••• n n n .....&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling plus the right. Phone 1·&#13;
352-4050.&#13;
u •&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Alli$!&#13;
days a week, 7: 45-4: 30. Call ~-1415&#13;
HELP WANTE0-2 Sp.,ish gu fl&#13;
players work in Pizza HUI. PtM,it&#13;
551-3906 or stop in and ask for Johll&#13;
1969 Honda 175cc Scrambler. Ex.&#13;
CCl\d.-M25. fflCIUdn 2 helmet,. &lt;:all&#13;
Ed, 639~40.&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Attractive .girls over 21. Eam tui ,on&#13;
and book money. Dancing '&#13;
Waitress work. If nudity offenll$&#13;
you, do not apply. Call 652-20031"&#13;
stop at «26 . Sheridan Rold.&#13;
!Hl 8ulck 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
634-.ut.S or 633-2791.&#13;
1951 Ramb. American. Dependable,&#13;
rustle, and cheap. S35. 32&lt;W . 28th St.&#13;
19d0 Ramb. American. Dependable.&#13;
170. 3209 - 28th St .• Kenosha.&#13;
1970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr., Hara.&#13;
oP, V-S, Automatic, power steering,&#13;
6344~.&#13;
1969 OilrliJer RT . 440 MlliJ,, 4 sp.,&#13;
mlllilS, ,eeor call Al t,ler 6 p.m., 658,&#13;
36SI, Sl 10 23rd Ave.&#13;
19611 Opet Kadel, 1966 Corvalr, Both&#13;
VOOd col\d. Call Harris, ~843,2361&#13;
67 AmbasslldOr o4 dr. sedan, auto., 6&#13;
cyl Trans recently ov«hauled $775.&#13;
Ca II 553 2345.&#13;
61 Plymouth Roadrunner 383. Gold&#13;
with Bleck vinyl top. Ex. cond. 554. 8757.&#13;
1,11 TltAVEL TRAILER - 15 Ft&#13;
L lilh1 • V«y HSY to tow · Built In&#13;
Slirge brakes . Used only three&#13;
weeks - Must s.ell . Going to ,chool,&#13;
5122 45th St · Ph. 652-JOM.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus camp«. Stove,&#13;
refrig., and 50 gel. gas tank, in- duded. First $750.00 takes 1111. c-,11&#13;
632-SSU aft rr S · 30.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc&#13;
Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing . Phone 6S4-1770 - or&#13;
N•wscope office. LNve message for&#13;
Rick Paz.-1.&#13;
1967 Austin-Healey 3000, After 5 p.m.&#13;
539-2-407 ( Burlington).&#13;
1068 Ford Torn'IO 302-Va. Low mil.&#13;
Automatic, power steering, Radio,&#13;
Heal«, 652-7745, see at 5234 . 44th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impala Sup« Sport 327, After&#13;
4;30 p.m., 3022 · 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 RS, 1'171, Exe. Cond.&#13;
654-5724, Eve.&#13;
650 Triumph T.T. rebuilt engine,&#13;
lace palnt on frame and tank, 2&#13;
hefmets, S800.00 or best offer. See al&#13;
5723 • 40th Ave. ·&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs some clutch ~. $250.00. 63-4-0871.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
lsuitcases, very good ccnd. S25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
,For II Good night's sleep -&#13;
-Waterbeds. 3701 . a&gt;th street. Call&#13;
,6/l4-94'7.&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Maq us an offer .• call 654-41162.&#13;
Come Toudl Me. A new poetry book&#13;
by Ron Schulz and Larry Roach&#13;
Available at au UWP Bookstores:&#13;
.. FOR SALE - Muskrat fur jacket&#13;
size 14, 25 inches long. N- lining'.&#13;
SS0.00. Anita, 652-675-4.&#13;
,JUDO UtUFORMS, Size 3 and site 4,&#13;
10.00 each. Call Kay at 694-6674.&#13;
Chicago . casette tape ½o trade Jor&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633·3836.&#13;
Publlc Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Slide Rule $10.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis - Mens, lnchJdlng poles and&#13;
bOots. 553-22A5.&#13;
Toaster 15.00, steam 1ro11 $5.00. Call&#13;
553-2345.&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and woods,&#13;
5346 new will sell for $245.&#13;
L•gallze Marijuana Bumper&#13;
Stlck•rs. 50c do,nalion. Be at Student&#13;
Activltles Bulldlng Wed. .&#13;
Stereo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
amplifier, h.rntable, 2 speek•rs.&#13;
Moving, must sell. $SO. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
. .&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lak• Geneva, Wis.&#13;
BEWARE OF CAT MAN - He is a Narc&#13;
EngliSh Springer Spaniels, 6 -eks&#13;
old. AKC Good hunting and ·family&#13;
dog. 639--4593, 1204 Cedar Creek St.,&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Explore the world Of ESP Wlth&#13;
Norman Slater, Apt. by telephone&#13;
only. 65"'-2375.&#13;
MEN - Your spare time is needed&#13;
by a boy 7 . 17 years old who doesn't&#13;
have a father. Can you provide an&#13;
example of good character and&#13;
citizenship wh ile shooting pool,&#13;
fiShing, skating, etc.? If so call Big&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha, Inc. 694-6585.·&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION Introductory Lecture-Tues.&#13;
Sept. 28, 8 p.m ., rm 138,&#13;
Kenosha campus; Wed. Sept. 29, 8&#13;
p.m., rm 105, Racine Campus;&#13;
Thurs. Sept. 30, 4 &amp; 8 p .m., rm 100,&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75 . 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
Shocks for '67·'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 65"'-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire &amp; rim $1 , FIie&#13;
boxes S1 &amp; $1.50, call 634,3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
Disp: Cal_l 5)1-7161 aft. 4 p.m .&#13;
2 BedroolTI., House, Parkside area,&#13;
Liv. R., Dining Room · .comb.,&#13;
Fireplace, over one acre land, 552· 9012.&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
wlnemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums; 6328&#13;
Wasnlngton Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Nloney - Bartend &amp; Gt&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633,3805 •&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen - Good condition and&#13;
not too expenslv•. J11n 69-4,34,-,.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, 5.51-9429.&#13;
WANT ED - Two attractive, QIIIII·&#13;
minded female students to Shift&#13;
small apartment with !WO flllll&#13;
s1udt'nls. Apt. 1 block from R':&#13;
campus. For further 1ntonri•&#13;
write to; Peter Noll, Apt. 3, 1111 W'i&#13;
Ave., Racine, Wis. _&#13;
k5 old I ttl' FREE Kittens: 6 wee. ',MIit&#13;
trained Good with ctuhren. . ssorted colon and female, II • e Maifl tll&#13;
Sharon, Ext. 20, Racin&#13;
201, or 634-6215 after 5 P~&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
--------=-=· FOR RENT - Mode~ offiCf s::-&#13;
Carpeted and air_ cond1:"~il ror. per mo. Utilities inciud ·&#13;
at 652-3945 or 654-74!0. ---&#13;
m apt, llacklf&#13;
For Rent - l bedroG&#13;
633,4990.&#13;
LOST&amp;FO~&#13;
------.-=car kf)'Si ~ · Prescription Gla5~ 5• 1 forll'a!iOI'&#13;
wedding ring. "\~~ell; Hall·&#13;
center, 2nd floor, •_ -&#13;
5.,,,,,,r&#13;
FOUND: 5ungli1SSfSf0111ddtPI•&#13;
Jacket. Contad IOSI &amp; 211d fl&#13;
Information center·&#13;
Ta~&#13;
newscope classifieds&#13;
are tree &#13;
,.rIlSlde Hosts Peace Corps&#13;
.Itlletic Training Program&#13;
. of ' he NewsCope starr I resmc •&#13;
~,IIY': athletiC stall. offered a warm """de 0 Borjas Fnday as he came to&#13;
ttif!Jf:' to Col.p&#13;
~ce Corps Athletic training&#13;
ell .lbe h~d at Parkside.&#13;
~ to be chosen to hold the program&#13;
p,rtside. W:e&#13;
colonel's words, its "expert&#13;
....-. of: lnd.ts ability to "deliver the goods".&#13;
~. ~ dopment in the Philippines had&#13;
"*,,c ~~ng World War II. Due to economic&#13;
Coosedlb:~ducational and Athletic systems&#13;
~, post-war years. In the latter portion&#13;
~ III coaches were named to go to the&#13;
.... five&#13;
andwork wotu our athletic prog~ams.&#13;
~ bes were Howard Auer, assistant&#13;
Ii'" ":ach at the University of Illinois;&#13;
~in. Idaho track coach; Bill McKuozle.&#13;
IllC lc team volleyball star and former&#13;
OI~P~e Denver Athletics; Fred Dennis,&#13;
...... nngschampionJind former All-American&#13;
;...oar -&#13;
NewscopeWins but Loses, Too&#13;
t Wednesday the In- ;ural Football League&#13;
ngameof the week focused&#13;
... gridiron battle between&#13;
~ and the House Apes.&#13;
1'lt Newseope team entered&#13;
game with only three&#13;
........ while tbe House Apes&#13;
lIIdoI a full compliment of&#13;
,~" '01'&#13;
gymnast from South II"&#13;
W'l ern ImOlS' and Richa d&#13;
I son, manager of th • r&#13;
Shakespere Company. e Archery division of&#13;
C&#13;
The program at Parkside is to train Peace&#13;
orps workers to work' lh '"&#13;
athletic directors and coa~~es TehPhilJppmes ~s&#13;
be' Oct . e program Will&#13;
At g:;: . I and last about four and a half weeks&#13;
e end of the program the trainess will be'&#13;
sworn In as Peace C k Ph T . orps war ers and sent to the&#13;
I ippines. They will be taught the culture of the&#13;
Philippines and the languages. The volunteers will&#13;
th,en be distributed around one country to work&#13;
With the programs,&#13;
One of the purposes for the program is to&#13;
prepare a team from the Philippines for the 1976&#13;
Olympic games.&#13;
Tom Bosandtch, the Athletic Director of&#13;
Parkside, has been a great Iielp in the planning f&#13;
th~program. He is, in the Colonel's words a "tr::e&#13;
Ir-iendcf the Philippines and the progra;"".&#13;
men with, substitutes on the&#13;
sidelines. NW team captain,&#13;
"Flash" Pazera, carrying a bit&#13;
of excess weight from the offseason,&#13;
played a standout&#13;
defensive game for which he&#13;
suffered a minor injury.&#13;
Assisted by "Knobnose" Nedry&#13;
and "Crash" Koloen, the House&#13;
HarriersTrounce Carthage&#13;
byW.F. Lane&#13;
\twSCope Sportswriter&#13;
III Tuesday. September 21,&#13;
Parks ide Cross-Country&#13;
Iw1 defeated three other&#13;
IlIo&gt;Is m a quadrangular meet&#13;
IJ1utewalerSta~eUniversity.&#13;
Partside nmner Lucian Rosa&#13;
iII!lod ft,st. followed in third&#13;
C1Ilck Detbnan. Jim MchIIIen&#13;
of Parkside finished&#13;
IIh with Rudy Alverez and&#13;
'.'ramural Schedule&#13;
_yo Sept. 21&#13;
r.Jocks vs. Newscope&#13;
....... y. Sept. 29&#13;
",. Schoonersvs. Mad Dogs&#13;
frWal. Oct. I&#13;
lbao Apes vs. Pink Racists -l.Oct. 4&#13;
Jocks vs. The Schooner&#13;
....... y. Oct. 6&#13;
PlDi racists vs. Newscop~&#13;
It'sthe~~&#13;
real thing.&#13;
~e.&#13;
-~&#13;
• Apes were hard pressed to&#13;
complete a pass.&#13;
Rounding out tbe Newscope&#13;
team were Dennis Serpe at QB,&#13;
Kieth Bosman. back; Wayne&#13;
Bosman, offensive safety; and&#13;
one unidentified freak who&#13;
works a t the union.&#13;
The House Apes, led by sucb&#13;
tail-less monkeys (Websters)&#13;
Mark Barbill, scored seven&#13;
points early in the game, but&#13;
faced with a small but inspired&#13;
Newscope defensive line, never&#13;
came close to raising their&#13;
score. Newscope's offense, led&#13;
by Serpe, utilized spectacularly&#13;
long passes and quick legs to&#13;
compile 13 points on two TD's&#13;
and one extra point.&#13;
For the record, the House&#13;
Apes were credited 't\ith a&#13;
victory by default as Newscope&#13;
used players from other learns&#13;
to fill the gaps in its non--existent&#13;
backfield.&#13;
Gary Lance in eighth and ninth&#13;
places, respectively.&#13;
Carthage came in second with&#13;
three men finishing-in the top&#13;
ten places. Stevens Point was&#13;
third. followed by Whitewater.&#13;
Team scores were Parkside 26,&#13;
Carthage 45, Stevens Point 66&#13;
and Whitewater 84.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson of&#13;
Parkside commented that for&#13;
the first meet the team ran well&#13;
and he is looking forward to an&#13;
excellent season. He said he&#13;
really did not expect to do that.&#13;
well against Carthage Slllce&#13;
they are a noted state and&#13;
national power .&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers Get Acquarnted Oller&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
Wi"' Oil &amp; Filrer Chance&#13;
PARKSIOE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAO&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE&#13;
650-9968&#13;
0,-0...., .....&#13;
...,. ,-&#13;
....,".. ,." .&#13;
,. "0"· ~o" ..&#13;
....... ...,_ ,_ c • ,.•• ~ ,&#13;
0_ ..... Il "" " c •&#13;
Col "runi de Borja 01 UI~ P.lu.hpp..... mlk_ \lhlt't&#13;
F'f:deralioo •• bo reeeeu \- ,t.f1I PI lICIt'10 .kna. pta. ,. UI"&#13;
upcoming Peace 0f"I"0 lra101.11&lt; pr'O(T'J;. • .. 1" 8«"Ja au'&#13;
Parkside Lnck coeclll BlU La_wa..... I 1t'UC'DlI"f'C'Ler'nom.&#13;
Rosandicb. origmalOr .f lAe' Pan.. Mlm&#13;
Remember&#13;
Octoberfest&#13;
lomOIH 101'&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I. fMlt 5«:"1 ,-. 11 U "&#13;
"&gt;0&#13;
• 111$ • 1'A.,,"o.t • (N~ .. tw&#13;
4t'tO(CMI ..... "'10'-' • lA \. ..&#13;
....... ,000 • ~DW·(..-O&#13;
cuu.oUTS • O£lIY(U&#13;
rOll IJ"" .. , U&#13;
657·9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
HOWL&#13;
BACK AT&#13;
WINTER&#13;
VERY DEfINlTEl Y&#13;
GEAR BOX·&#13;
. .&#13;
S40&#13;
Richman&#13;
."OTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
arkside Hosts Peace Corps&#13;
f' •tllletic Training P rogram&#13;
. of the Newscope staff&#13;
·r)IJ !"r~1~:uc staff_ offered a warm&#13;
par de 5 D sorjas Fnday as he came to&#13;
to C0\ e ce Corps Athletic training&#13;
~ ,the ~ at Parkside.&#13;
:n to be ~ chosen to hold the program ·c1e was d ·t " t . th colonel's wor s, 1 s exper&#13;
of. ind ·tseability to "deliver the goods". "an I Ph·1· · had . . lo ment in the 1 1ppmes&#13;
eu deveg P,,orld war II. Due to economic .• ...A durin ° - ~ Educational and Athletic systems&#13;
• es the t-war years. In the latter portion&#13;
1Jded in posches were named to go to the&#13;
fi,;e coa hl t· nd work wotu our at e 1c programs.&#13;
es aches were Howard ~uer, ass!s~nt&#13;
Ii coa ch at the University of Illmo1s;&#13;
co~daho track coach; Bill McKunzie,&#13;
~· team volleyball star and former&#13;
Ol};P~e Denver Athletics; Fred De~nis,&#13;
nngschampion;md former All-American&#13;
gymnast from Southern ur . . . Wilson mana er mois, and Richard&#13;
Sh k ' g of the Archery d1\'ision or a espere Company.&#13;
C The program at Parkside is to train Peace&#13;
orps workers to work in the Ph'l' thl ti di 1 1ppmes a a e c rectors and coaches Th be · 0c · e pro ram 1,1, IU&#13;
gm t. 1 and last about four and a half we .&#13;
At the . end of the program the trainess will .&#13;
sw?~" I~ as Peace Corps worker and ent to the&#13;
Ph!1!PP!nes. They will be taught the culture of t&#13;
Ph1hppm~ a~d the languages. The \'Olunteers "111&#13;
th_en be distributed around one country lo wor with the programs.&#13;
One of the purposes for the program i . td&#13;
prepar~ a team from the Philippines for the 19i&#13;
Olympic games.&#13;
T~m Rosandich, the Athletic Director of&#13;
Parkside, has been a great nelp in the planning of&#13;
th~ program. He is, in the Colonel's words, a 'true&#13;
friend of the Philippines and the program".&#13;
Newscope Wins but Loses, Too&#13;
Wednesday the Inal&#13;
Football League&#13;
me of the week focused&#13;
gridiron battle between&#13;
pe and the House Apes.&#13;
. ·t'*-scope team entered&#13;
ame with only three&#13;
while the House Apes&#13;
1 [ull compliment of&#13;
men with substitutes on the&#13;
sidelines. NW team captain,&#13;
"Flash" Pazera , carrying a bit&#13;
of excess weight from the off.&#13;
season, played a standout&#13;
defensive game for which be&#13;
suffered a minor injury.&#13;
Assisted by "Knobnose" Nedry&#13;
and "Crash" Koloen, the House&#13;
Harriers Trounce Carthage&#13;
b~ \\,. F. Lane&#13;
t'tl ~ope Sport writer&#13;
Tuesday, September 21,&#13;
Parkside Cross-Country&#13;
defeated three other&#13;
in a quadrangular meet&#13;
ewater State University.&#13;
Pli ide runner Lucian Rosa&#13;
fir l, followed in third&#13;
Dettman. Jim Mcof&#13;
Parkside finished&#13;
,:h Rudy Alverez and&#13;
•&#13;
Gary Lance in eighth and ninth&#13;
places, respectively.&#13;
Carthage came in second with&#13;
three men finishing in the top&#13;
ten places. Stevens Point was&#13;
third followed by Whitewater.&#13;
Tea~ scores were Parkside 26,&#13;
Carthage 45, Stevens Point 66&#13;
and Whitewater 84.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson of&#13;
Parkside commented that for&#13;
the first meet the team ran well&#13;
and he is looking forward to an&#13;
excellent season. He said he&#13;
really did not expect to do ~hat .&#13;
well against Carthage since&#13;
they are a noted state and&#13;
national power.&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
•&#13;
• Apes were hard pr ed to&#13;
complete a pass.&#13;
Rounding out the . ·~ pe&#13;
team were Dennis Serpe at QB, Kieth Bosman, back Wayne&#13;
Bosman, offensive safety; and&#13;
one unidentified freak who&#13;
works at the union.&#13;
The House Ape , led by uch&#13;
tail-less monke:&gt; &lt; Web ·ters&#13;
Mark Barhill, cored even&#13;
points early in the game, but&#13;
faced with a mall but in pired&#13;
Newscope defen ive line, ne\ r&#13;
came close to raUng ir&#13;
score. Newscope·s offat e, led&#13;
by Serpe, utilized pectacularl~&#13;
long passes and qui - legs to&#13;
compile 13 points on two TD'&#13;
and one extra point.&#13;
For the record. the Ho&#13;
Apes were credited \\i lh a&#13;
victory by default as e\\&#13;
used player from other m&#13;
to fill the gap in it · non-e.xi t n&#13;
backfield.&#13;
Get Acqua ,nted Oller&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Cba ce&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTO ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE .&#13;
654-996&#13;
. .,, ............... . ,. •• •O\ol • TOIi a.a e •• -·•~•&#13;
..... ., 11 •• c.•c•• ,..Tt•T ••••&#13;
OIi' ••• t 11t•• •••• o• e L • C• t&#13;
Remember&#13;
Oc oberfe&#13;
6S7-9843 o&#13;
658 972&#13;
Elm Pl z· &#13;
PageS NEWSCOPE seplember 27,1971&#13;
October Events&#13;
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2f&#13;
Film: "The Hawks and The&#13;
SparroW5", Pier Paolo Pasolln!.&#13;
Short: "Off-On". SCott Bartlett&#13;
FRIDAY1Oet.l&#13;
"Sutch Cassity". Adm. 7SCPerkside&#13;
&amp; Wis. 10 required&#13;
Cross Country: Minnesota. Drake·&#13;
OesMolnl!'$&#13;
Lat. Payment: $.50.00 Penalty· by&#13;
Friday, Oct. 1, 1911 (End of fourth&#13;
week)&#13;
",TURDAY. OCT.'&#13;
Cross Coun1ry: Platteville State&#13;
Invitational· Platteville&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.lD&#13;
Intercollegl.te Film Council&#13;
presents "'f", 7 p.m., Golden&#13;
Rondelle. Racine. Tickets available&#13;
at Information Center, Free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY,OCT. U&#13;
Concert: Mary O. Bradford&#13;
aUditorium Mltry Sauer pianist&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.1S&#13;
Film: "Where Eagles Dare", Adm.&#13;
7SC Parksldc! &amp; Wls 10 required&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 16&#13;
Crou Country: Northwestern.&#13;
Loyola - Evanston&#13;
TUESDAY, OCT. l'&#13;
Film: "see You At Mao". Jeen-Luc&#13;
Godwd Short: "Why"""" Creates",&#13;
saul Bass&#13;
WEDNESDAY. OCT. 20&#13;
Studfllt hOnors concert, I p.rn:.&#13;
Badger Room. Racine.&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.22&#13;
o.nce: Student Activities.&#13;
SATURDAY .OCT. 23&#13;
Concert: J.e. Super Star, case Field&#13;
House. Tickets at Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
Cross Country: Marquette, UI·&#13;
O'tlcavo Circle· Milwaukee.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 2t&#13;
Film: "Cool Hand luke", adm. 7St:&#13;
Parkslde and Wis. 10 required.&#13;
o.acllne to drop couru&#13;
SATURDAY. OCT. 30&#13;
Croll Country: loras - Dubuque&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.2&#13;
Concert: JOhn Denver •• e.m.,&#13;
Kenos"" Tremper high school&#13;
auditorium. Adm. 1:3.50. TlcMts&#13;
avall"ble at the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 206, Tallent Hall.&#13;
Cross Country: WU·Mllwaukee,&#13;
Beloit· Parkslde&#13;
SUNDAY ,OCT. J&#13;
P.rksl... sculptor Rollin Jansky&#13;
eXhibition ., Dominican College.&#13;
Racine and KenoSh. Alumni Picnic&#13;
&amp; Dance fOr Parkslde Faculty and&#13;
Administrative Staff. Student Ac·&#13;
tlvltles, begIns at 4:30&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT., OCT.' &amp;,&#13;
Odoberfest: WHkend of athletic&#13;
and social ....ents. Competition In&#13;
Cross Co\rltry, Soccer. Golf. Tennis.&#13;
Rugby and 5alllng. Also, beer and&#13;
br.ts .t soccer game on Saturday&#13;
afternoon and dances at the Student&#13;
Activities Building Friday and&#13;
saturday NigMS.&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
,..ORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOU'TH 7500 SHERIDAN R-OAO&#13;
SEAFOOD SPECIALTIES&#13;
RANCH'S FISH&#13;
DINN.ER $1.45&#13;
SEAfOOD PlATTER FRESH LAKE PERCH&#13;
Golden Fried ShrilllP and Fish Golden fried Lake.... eh&#13;
.. rved with Onion Rings, _ved with FrenchFriea&#13;
Conage Che... Sauce cole s1_andbreod&#13;
and Bread $1.85 $ 1.75&#13;
FRIED JUMBO&#13;
SHRIMP DINNER $1.75&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Merger Could Hurt Parkside&#13;
1) roductive programs, One advanta&#13;
(Continued from Page . I fern orary instructors merger syste:e&#13;
.Of tho&#13;
levels of ~unding and d~ma elim~nated, non-filling of rewording of the I ~s tho&#13;
of the ktnds of sta~, ~~ vacancies, shorter library will open tbe egislaliooJ&#13;
money we still n~. ed hours and beneral overall creating a gradua~oor . ~&#13;
characterIzed the owe~'A reductions. At this time it program at Parks' ,&#13;
fundin~ levels t ~s the cannot be determined which previous legislationIde. '!'be&#13;
potentIal threauw'~ nd areas will be most affected a four year SCboo~realeu&#13;
.quality" of the . ' ain_ because the budget figures Disadvantages are O!IIy,&#13;
saId,. A de~IOpmgecial are not yet available and the to raise the salariestbectl&amp;t&#13;
shtution IS u e~e:~t of levels of funding have not WSU professors to tbOf Ibt&#13;
pressures as ,~ been determmed. UW professors Ole ~&#13;
these changes. .&#13;
The merger calls for the&#13;
creation of a governing&#13;
board changing of the&#13;
names' of the institutions,&#13;
and. equal levels of funding.&#13;
No other changes are in the&#13;
merger as it . stands now.&#13;
Each system will be administered&#13;
separately, as&#13;
they exist now, until 1973.&#13;
During the next two years&#13;
a committee composed of&#13;
three regents from each&#13;
system and three citizens&#13;
will study the operations of&#13;
the two systems and&#13;
recommend the' legislation&#13;
needed to implement a fully&#13;
merged system beyond 1973.&#13;
Some possible effects of&#13;
the merger on Parkside are&#13;
larger classes, elimination&#13;
of those less attractive and&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes·&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
I Comejoin in the fun I&#13;
Grand Opening&#13;
Sept 30-0ct 1-0d 2&#13;
Robert Wayne School of Music&#13;
SS16-6th Avenue Kenosha&#13;
e Artists Performing r:W':":'O':""R-L--D:-:'S-lA-R-GEST--'&#13;
e Refreshments&#13;
e Free Gift for Everyone GUITAR ON DISPLAY&#13;
I ---------'9"'1 With These Coupons-T&#13;
- _&#13;
I Gui!~~8~t!ings Regal !ip I .Smile I e FENDER I Drumsticks I GUItar Straps&#13;
L ~ PRICE I ~ PRICE I ~ PRICE I&#13;
-----------------~--~---~-~--~~&#13;
Parking Reminder&#13;
Up to September 19thCampus&#13;
Safety has issued warning&#13;
tickets to illegally parked&#13;
vehicles. Beginning Monday,&#13;
September 20th, Parking&#13;
Citations will be issued to&#13;
illegally parked vehicles. From&#13;
October 1st on, citations also&#13;
will be issued to vehicles not&#13;
displaying the UW-Parkside&#13;
Parking Permit.&#13;
plications duri&#13;
registration processog u..&#13;
Faculty and Stall s~ tin&gt;o&#13;
received the material ha ..&#13;
camRus mail last "eek~&#13;
Hoc Faculty and L: .M&#13;
Term Classifiedperson:lled&#13;
receive the material "",-~&#13;
If you have not _~-'''Y '~",ved . structions on obta·. II&gt;&#13;
P k&#13;
· 10lna ar mg Permit st -e I&#13;
should contact the' Reg~d.. ~&#13;
Office and Faculty a':~'l&#13;
may obtain the infonnatll&#13;
from the Bw-sar'. OffICe lJoo&#13;
All students should have&#13;
received UW-Parks'ideParking&#13;
Regulations and Permit Ap-&#13;
-&#13;
ize Our Advertisers&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
Quality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
•&#13;
SK IRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
SANDS TUNIC TOPS&#13;
LARES H·tJNOREOS OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWEU&#13;
~ACINE 3120'I'IASHINGTON AYE&#13;
~ACINE&#13;
l&#13;
ro-------"- i Patron&#13;
io ·_&#13;
'I&#13;
213 SIXTH STREET&#13;
,"~7&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing'&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
ON SOUTH SHE-R.IDA.N ROAP IN KENOSHA 6SoC.. 0411&#13;
......&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
~&#13;
$eIWbuj U- ~&#13;
Pi/jIF1:. !J~~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSH':.,~~~&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, 011'011.-.&#13;
Page8 September 27, 1911&#13;
October Events&#13;
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2'&#13;
FIim : • 'The Hawks and The&#13;
Sparrows", P,er Paolo Pasollnl.&#13;
Short · " Off-On ". Scott Bartlett&#13;
FIUDAY,Oct. 1&#13;
" Butch Cus;ty" , Adm. 7Sc Parkside&#13;
&amp; Wis. ID required&#13;
Cross Country: Minnesota . Drake .&#13;
DttMolnes&#13;
Late Payment: sso.oo Pa,ally . by&#13;
Friday, Oct . 1, 1971 (End of fourth&#13;
week&gt;&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT . 2&#13;
Concert: JOhn Denver, 8 p.m.,&#13;
Kenosha Tremper h lOh school&#13;
auditorium. Adm. SJ.SO. Tickets&#13;
available 1t the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 206, Tallent Hall . Cross Country : WU -MIiwaukee,&#13;
Beloit • Parkside&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.3&#13;
Perks Cit sculptor Rollin Jansky&#13;
exhibition at Dominican College . Racine and Kenosha Alumni Plailc&#13;
&amp; O nee for Parkside Facully Ind&#13;
Administrative Stall, Student Ac ·&#13;
llvltles, beg in, et 4: JO&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT., OCT. I &amp; 9&#13;
Octoberfnt: Weekend of athletic .,d soclal events. Competition In&#13;
Cross Coi.ntry, Soccer, Goll, Tennis,&#13;
Rugby and Salllno . Also, beer end&#13;
brats at soccer oeme on Saturday&#13;
afternoon nd dances et the Student&#13;
Activities Bulldlng Friday and&#13;
S.turday Nights.&#13;
S,..TURDAY,OCT.9&#13;
Cross Country: Platteville State&#13;
Invitational . Platteville&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.10&#13;
lntercollegllle FIim Council&#13;
presents "If", 7 p .m ., Golden&#13;
Rondelle. Rac ine. Tickets available&#13;
al Information Center, Free .&#13;
WEDNESDAY,OCT. 13&#13;
Concert: Mary 0. Bradford&#13;
auditorium Mary Sauer pianist&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.15&#13;
FIim: "Where Eagles Dare". Adm.&#13;
7Sc Parkside a. Wis 10 required&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 1'&#13;
Cross Country: Northwestern,&#13;
Loyola Evanston&#13;
TUESDAY,OCT. 1'&#13;
Fllm: " See You At MMJ", Jean-Luc&#13;
Godard Short : "Why M1!lfl Creates",&#13;
Saul Bass&#13;
WEDNESOAY,OCT. 20&#13;
Stuel.nt hOnors concert, a ?·"'·:&#13;
Badger Room, Racine .&#13;
FIUDAY,OCT.22&#13;
Dance: Student Activities.&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.23&#13;
Concert: J.C. Super Star, case Fleld&#13;
House. Tickets at Student Activities&#13;
Office. Cross Country: Marquette, UI -&#13;
Chlcaoo Circle . MIiwaukee.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 2'&#13;
FIim: "Cool Hand Luke" , adm. 7Sc&#13;
P11rkside and Wis. 10 required.&#13;
De1clln• to drop course SATURDAY,OCT. 30&#13;
Cross Country: Loras · Dubuque&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
• I&#13;
~ORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7S00 SHERIDAN R-OAD&#13;
SEAFOOD SPECIAL TIES&#13;
RANCH1S FISH&#13;
DINNER $1.45&#13;
SEA FOOD PLATTER&#13;
FRIED JUMBO&#13;
SHRIMP DINNER $1. 75&#13;
FRESH LAKE PERCH&#13;
Golden Fried Shrimp and Fish Golden fried Lake Perch 1&#13;
Mrved with Onion Rings, served with French Fri••&#13;
Cottage Cheese Souce cole 1lawandbread&#13;
and Bread $1.85 $1.75&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Merger Could Hurt Parkside&#13;
&gt; productive programs, One advanta&#13;
&lt;Continued f_rom Page 1 . 1 tem orary instructors merger syste:e _of t&#13;
levels of funding an~fma elimYnated non-filling of rewording of the 1 ~s the&#13;
of the kinds. of ~ ,, ;re vacancies, 'shorter library will open the ~g•slatioa&#13;
money w~ still n 1 · d hours and beneral overall creating a graduate 00r ·&#13;
characterized the owe~~A reductions. At this time it program at Parks· ~ f undin~ levels as the cannot be determined which previous legislationtde. 'the&#13;
pote_ntial threaJw~? nd areas will be most affected a four year sch ?eateu&#13;
.qu~1ty" of the . ' ain- because the budget figures Disadvantages are 00 Only_&#13;
s~1d,. A_ dev~lopm~cial are not yet available and the to raise the saianeslhe cost&#13;
stitution is un ere: lt of levels of funding have not WSU professors to th or the&#13;
pressures as .~ r u been determined. UW professors. OSe of&#13;
these changes.&#13;
The merger calls for _the&#13;
creation of a govermng&#13;
board changing of the&#13;
names' of the institutions,&#13;
and equal levels of funding.&#13;
No other changes are in the&#13;
merger as it .stands now.&#13;
Each system will be administered&#13;
separately, as&#13;
they exist now, until 1973.&#13;
During the next two years&#13;
a committee composed of&#13;
three regents from each&#13;
system and three citizens&#13;
will study the operations of&#13;
the two systems and&#13;
recommend the· legislation&#13;
needed to implement a fully&#13;
merged system beyond 1973.&#13;
Some possible effects of&#13;
the merger on Parkside are&#13;
larger classes, elimination&#13;
of those less attractive and&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes·&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUK~E&#13;
Parking&#13;
Up to September 19th Campus&#13;
Safety has issued warning&#13;
tickets to illegally parked&#13;
vehicles. Beginning Monday,&#13;
September 20th, Parking&#13;
Citations will be issued to&#13;
illegally parked vehicles. From&#13;
October 1st on, citations also&#13;
will be issued to vehicles not&#13;
displaying the UW-Parkside&#13;
Parking Permit.&#13;
Reminder&#13;
pli~atrtio~s during reg1s atlon process Fu&#13;
Faculty and Staff sho ll ·&#13;
received the materialuld ha1&#13;
cam~us mail last wee\c~&#13;
Hoc Faculty and L' . . Ad&#13;
Term Classified Pers 'lll11td . . onn~ receive the material 1-.i&#13;
If you have not rec . rtly&#13;
structions on obta~'~ed inp&#13;
k . 1n1no&#13;
ar mg Permit st d° a&#13;
should contact the' R ~ en&#13;
All students should have Office and Faculty ::1.rar,&#13;
received UW-Parkside Parking may obtain the informai~&#13;
Regulations and Permit Ap- from the Bw-sar's Office. -&#13;
'&#13;
·------·-·•-••- 1•11 1111 RI R 111fflNIHNtNI _______ _&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
I&#13;
fl&#13;
O ua I I ty sportswear&#13;
tor women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SKIRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
213 SIXTH STREET RACINE&#13;
TlJ N IC TOPS&#13;
lftJNDREDS OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWUR&#13;
3120'\'/..ASHINGTON AVE&#13;
~q,,,.7 . ~ACINE&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
·swing at&#13;
She.ridan Lanes&#13;
ON SOUTH SHE-RIO AN ROAD IN KENOSHA 654-0411&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
r Come join in the fun I&#13;
Grand Opening&#13;
S.ept 30-Oct 1-Oct 2&#13;
Robert Wayne School of Music&#13;
5516-6th Avenue Kenosha&#13;
• Artists Performing r-W-OR_L_D-,S-LA-R-GEST--&#13;
• Refreshments&#13;
• Free Gift for Everyone GUITAR ON DISPLAY&#13;
1 ---------1 With These Coupons-T---------&#13;
1 Gui!~~e !t!ings I Regal !ip I Smile I&#13;
: • FENDER : Drumsticks I Guitar Straps· I&#13;
L_~2_!~!~~_J __ r~!~~~-J--~~!_!l!C~_l&#13;
s~ tJu,, ~u,at Pvno, 11 !I~ ~&#13;
658-3131 2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSH':_,r.. ROOM&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINI.-, </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 4, September 27, 1971</text>
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>English</text>
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            <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>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63451">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>Text</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63454">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
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      <tag tagId="159">
        <name>john koloen</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="169">
        <name>madison</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="153">
        <name>marc eisen</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="172">
        <name>otto bauer</name>
      </tag>
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        <name>wyllie</name>
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          <name>Issue</name>
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          <name>Headline</name>
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              <text>To or To Not a Student Government</text>
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              <text>ByKen Konkol of the Newscope slall eel'&#13;
1bursday, the 16th of September, at 7:30 p.m, m AIDg·&#13;
. \lOOm101 Greenquist, Parkside witnessed the report from the Student Union Commi -.te ba recb&gt;ed Ita m_benbIp from 21 to 15.&#13;
;::"tmeeting of the Student Senate in four months. -;'85 mos~~ a bitch about enlon:ed subservi ttee bullhooe mteon are pulllnll .... a vahanl ltnIIIIe&#13;
Problems were encountered with notification e admlDlSlration, relegating it to useI= to give students a voice at Parblde&#13;
of mem""rs because cards, which were supposed Gary DaVISspoke eloquenUy for 45 . Ill' '!be StudenI Senate - your help Two the plans of Academic Policies to getn;,u:,o:: on future meetinp have been scheduled al a ume Too r T N 00 which IS hoped will gel better ,&lt;IIeral udenl&#13;
o ot a StUdent Government&#13;
to be mailed the week before, did not reach&#13;
senators till the day of the meeting.&#13;
By some marvelous coincidence a quorum&#13;
was established at 7:51 and the meeting came to&#13;
disorder. . . .&#13;
The first official order of business was the&#13;
resibnation, in writing, of Walter Ulbrights who&#13;
stated the convention was illegal according to the&#13;
senate constitution which called for meeting&#13;
during the summer.&#13;
It was decided more or less by assent among&#13;
the rest of the senators, no vote taken, to suspend&#13;
the constitution retroactively since the last&#13;
Along.about the time the election committee&#13;
reported It was discovered that the senate had&#13;
resigned itself out of a quorum aod the eetin&#13;
broke up. m g&#13;
So, after only five months of operation the&#13;
power for control of Student Affairs, a rip-off o[ the&#13;
University in general, proposals [or the expansioo&#13;
of the mdependent studies program to civic alfairs&#13;
;and the estabtishment of a proposed day care&#13;
,center. In conclusion he gave his oral resignation&#13;
'to the remainder of the senate which was accepted.&#13;
attendance.&#13;
The Gnevance and C1eammg Ho... Com&#13;
mittee will list&lt;ll to and d1scusa ludMI eemplaints&#13;
and problmu with th ~ o[ unn&#13;
results. The committee will meet on Thuraday,&#13;
September 23. al 4: pm ID .-n 103,&#13;
Greenquisl. n.e enure st.udtnt body and anyone&#13;
else is invited to euend,&#13;
The senate will hold a general m IDll on&#13;
Monday, 8epI. 27, at.: pm ID Gr=lqulSl 10\&#13;
Once again, the)'d like to pac thp lecture hall&#13;
Prove Parkside IS nol apathetic to I o""n c r&#13;
- come!&#13;
FREE "Journalismis Literature in a Hurry" -Matthew Arnold University of W isamsin • Parkside&#13;
•••••••&#13;
volume 5 ,Number 3 September 20, 1971&#13;
(Pioneer' Conditions Braved by Parks ide Villagers&#13;
Norwood Interested it) Results&#13;
By Warren Nedry. Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Although Parkside Village is nearing&#13;
CGIIIpletion,the present living conditions&#13;
vary (rom near complete to primitive. Units&#13;
slated to house (rom two to four students are&#13;
JftSeIItly the home for up to ten.&#13;
Adding to the "pioneer" atmosphere at&#13;
Parkside Village is the lack of running&#13;
waler, electricity and telephones. Part of&#13;
IIIiI primitive atmosphere has been normalized&#13;
during the past week, but there&#13;
NIIlSinunits without what most of us term&#13;
"Iecessities". All endure the noise and the&#13;
~us journeys through the 7 - 4:30&#13;
_!ruction world.&#13;
These conditions were brought about by&#13;
lIbat Mr. Emil Avendroth, President of&#13;
Global Construction Company, general&#13;
~ctor for Parks ide Village, termed "the&#13;
liIlJt labor market in the Kenosha-Racine area': and "the inability of suppliers to meet&#13;
JI'OlDised deadlines". Adding to the delay&#13;
... a Week-long, njid·summer. labor strike.&#13;
Asked if it was true that some tenants&#13;
IIIdtouse the bathtub as their .only source of&#13;
IUIIning water - for washing dishes,&#13;
~~, brushing teeth, etc. - Avendroth&#13;
:; 'This is true if they use the facilities in&#13;
IIlen apar~ent, but there are other apartIs,&#13;
bousmg by the same sex, within the&#13;
complex that have facilities and&#13;
IlTangements could be made to use them if&#13;
~ desired to. It's an inconvenience, but at&#13;
~me time we're not charging for that&#13;
vemence. We will not make it in-&#13;
-enient for any student. He can have&#13;
by lIlarc Elsen.&#13;
Sa althe Newscope stan&#13;
YIDg.that he had no&#13;
~'Ved notions of how&#13;
!lIg..:,de should develop,&#13;
IIIthe Norwood,the new Dean&#13;
~ College o[ Scien~e and&#13;
IInieW' slaled m a brIef in·&#13;
lIilb fa that he would first meet&#13;
1IIIkin cully members hefore&#13;
"y g POlicydecisions OU .&#13;
loot;" I can't really work eflllII'&#13;
? unless you have met&#13;
IlIeir SCuItyand have learned&#13;
'OOd&#13;
="&#13;
and plans," Norb\I&#13;
.&#13;
liked~ntly,. the Dean has&#13;
10leI u DlV1s~onalChairman&#13;
1II1bu.,P a serIes of meetings&#13;
"I [acuity.&#13;
liat.n ~~d come to these to&#13;
!lis' o&lt;woodsaid&#13;
4iffer~~ents were markedly&#13;
....'_ n from the initial -neDts of hi • ~ M . S pred~cessor ..&#13;
-, 'Nh acKlOney. MacKin-&#13;
...;. owns appointed to the&#13;
~ PDoltIonlast year at this&#13;
~r"responsible for the&#13;
lostant Greatness"&#13;
what he wants and we will pay for it on this&#13;
temporary basis."&#13;
.Tenants have the choice of living at a&#13;
motel or at the Parkside Village site. If they&#13;
choose a motel they are required to pay rent&#13;
on their uncompleted apartment to help&#13;
defer the added cost of the motel. At&#13;
Parkside Village they are required to pay for&#13;
the space used unless they are in groups of&#13;
eight or more.&#13;
Although all tenants were told Sept. 1&#13;
was the completion date, Avendroth said it&#13;
would be difficult for a tenant to break his&#13;
lease. The lease requires Global to&#13;
demonstrate a best effort to complete on&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Commenting on the possibility of fire or&#13;
health code violations, Avendroth said there&#13;
were no code violations as far as the living&#13;
conditions were concerned and stressed the&#13;
temporary nature of the conditiDns. Present&#13;
conditions require living in and around&#13;
construction life: noisy machines, miles of&#13;
cords lumber piles, refuse piles and open&#13;
fires. 'In some of the complexes fire extinguishers&#13;
are not evident. No telephones&#13;
are available as of yet.&#13;
"We will have sulficient aparbnents for&#13;
all students who bave registered with us,"&#13;
Avendroth said. "They will all be with their&#13;
permanent group, perbaps not in their&#13;
leased apartment, by the end of next week&#13;
(Sept. 25)." At this time apprOJomate1y.60&#13;
people have leased apartments at Parks.de&#13;
t continued on Page 8)&#13;
that led to the attempted&#13;
purging of 27 faculty members.&#13;
When popular resistance. to&#13;
the purge made it imposs.ble&#13;
for it to be· carried out,&#13;
MacKinney, along with. Vice&#13;
Chancellor Harris, resIgned.&#13;
Norwood as Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and SocIety&#13;
will have the Chairmen of the&#13;
Science, Social Scien~e,&#13;
Humanities and EducatIon&#13;
divisions report to him.&#13;
He will be the eollege's&#13;
principal educational and administrative&#13;
officer, and will be&#13;
responsible for staff and&#13;
program development,&#13;
program review, and budget.&#13;
Because of responsibilities. at&#13;
UW-M where he was the acting&#13;
Dean ~f tbe Graduate School,&#13;
Norwood will only be at&#13;
Parkside part time till October&#13;
15. He will he spending three&#13;
days a week at Parkside and&#13;
two at UW-M lill tben.&#13;
Norwood said he had no&#13;
priority poticies he would like to&#13;
see instituted. "It'd be mappropriate&#13;
to commenL It would&#13;
appear I had come With&#13;
preconceived ideas. I'd rather&#13;
talk to tbe faculty and students&#13;
firsl .&#13;
"One thing 1 have learned IS&#13;
that each instilution is different/'&#13;
he said la~1 ".an~ if&#13;
anyone comes into an mstitutioo&#13;
with preconceived notions of&#13;
what to do Wlthout first&#13;
checking with the laculty and&#13;
students, he's going to find&#13;
himself in difficulhes.&#13;
"One uses tbese sour&lt;:e'l...of&#13;
ideas Of he said. "One's job then&#13;
is to' sort out those ideas ~l&#13;
can be instituted, and to expand&#13;
.",.-&#13;
.---&#13;
JERRY SOCHA&#13;
Next Week&#13;
an Interview with&#13;
Muddy Waters&#13;
Iruclur "Good ,d a nOI&#13;
unplemented are 1&#13;
expiaIDed&#13;
"Th place hi to dev op'&#13;
own mold," be e.mph'~lted&#13;
Ialer "II's unique. II can't flI&#13;
already eXlSUn&amp;molds."&#13;
"We're nol 01Dg to sel nul&#13;
With the preconceved nollon of&#13;
being the Harvard of the Pike&#13;
iIlver," he added dryly&#13;
Norwood said be favored a&#13;
strong undergraduate program&#13;
He observed Uus IS a University&#13;
of WisconsIn institutional goal,&#13;
noling President Weaver's&#13;
recenl rea£fll'll\ation of this&#13;
before the JOlnl Finance&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The failure of the stale&#13;
legislature 10 pas$ a budgel has&#13;
hurt the University, par·&#13;
ticularly in recruiting, he said&#13;
Critical teachi~ positions will&#13;
be fll1ed fI1'SL&#13;
What are some of pen.onal&#13;
values? "I have the ,dea people&#13;
come before programs. I'm&#13;
suspicious of rhetoric - I'm&#13;
more interested in results."&#13;
.J IE: fl "'v sOC:".&#13;
DEAN £:U(O.£NE NORWOOD&#13;
those policies that have ""orIted&#13;
in the past.&#13;
'''Ibis does nol mean 1will nol&#13;
he making judgments," he&#13;
noled.&#13;
He sees part of his job as&#13;
making more effective the&#13;
Colle e administrative&#13;
By Ken Konkol of the Newscope staff&#13;
'lbursday, the 16th of September, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
. RoOm 101 Greenquist, Parkside witnessed the&#13;
first meeting of the Student Senate in four months.&#13;
Problems were encountered with notification&#13;
of members because cards, which were supposed&#13;
meeting.&#13;
was A report f~m the Student Union Committee&#13;
the =~~ a bit~ about enforced subservience to&#13;
G uustr~tion, relegating it to uselessness&#13;
th ary Davis spoke eloquently for 45 minutes ~ e plans of Academic Policies to get a hold on ·hich .&#13;
ToorToNot s a tudant Govarnm&#13;
to be mailed the week before, did not reach&#13;
senators till the day of the meeting.&#13;
By some marvelous coincidence a quorum&#13;
was established at 7:51 and the meeting came to&#13;
disorder.&#13;
'lbe first official order of business was the&#13;
resibnation, in writing, of Walter Ulbrights who&#13;
stated the convention was illegal according to the&#13;
senate constitution which called for meeting&#13;
during the summer.&#13;
It was decided more or less by assent among&#13;
the rest of the senators, no vote taken, to suspend&#13;
the constitution retroactively since the last&#13;
Along_ about the time the election committee&#13;
re~rted _it was discovered that the senate had&#13;
resigned itself out of a quorum and the tin&#13;
broke up. mee g&#13;
So, after only five months of operation the&#13;
po~er f~r c?ntrol of Student Affairs, 8 rip-off of the&#13;
Uruv~s1ty m general, proposals for the expansion&#13;
of the mdependent studies program to civic affairs&#13;
. and the establish~ent of a proposed day care&#13;
center. In conclusion he gave his oral res1gnation&#13;
to the remainder of the senate which "a ac- cepted.&#13;
"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" - Matthew Arnold University o j W isrons in - Parkside&#13;
••••••• VqJume 5 _Number 3 September 20, 1971&#13;
nt&#13;
FREE&#13;
'Pioneer' Conditions Braved by Parksid Villag r&#13;
By Warren Nedry, Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Although Parkside Village is nearing&#13;
completion, the present living conditions&#13;
,-ary from near complete to primitive. Units&#13;
slated to house from two to four students are&#13;
presently the home for up to ten.&#13;
Adding to the "pioneer" atmosphere at&#13;
Parkside Village is th~ lack of running&#13;
waler, electricity and telephones. Part of&#13;
this primitive atmosphere has been normalized&#13;
during the past week, but there&#13;
remain units without what most of us term&#13;
'necessities". All endure the noise and the&#13;
d.ingerous journeys through the 7 - 4:30&#13;
COIL5truction world.&#13;
These conditions were brought about by&#13;
what Mr. Emil Avendroth, President of&#13;
Global Construction Company, general&#13;
contractor for Parkside Village, termed "the&#13;
tight labor market in the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
area•: and "the inability of suppliers to meet&#13;
pronused deadlines". Adding to the delay&#13;
1-a a week-long, mid-summer. labor strike.&#13;
Asked if it was true that some tenants&#13;
bad l? use the bathtub as their .only source of&#13;
runn~ng water - for washing dishes,&#13;
Shaving, brushing teeth, etc. - Avendroth&#13;
Iii~, "This is true if they use the facilities in&#13;
their aparbnent, but there are other apartlllents,&#13;
housing by the same sex, within the&#13;
complex that have facilities and&#13;
~nge~ents could be made to use them if&#13;
~Y desir~ to. It's an inconvenience, but at&#13;
lnco sam~ time we're not charging for that&#13;
nvenience. We will not make it inconvenient&#13;
for any student. He can have&#13;
what he wants and we will pay for it on this&#13;
temporary basis."&#13;
Tenants have the choice of living at a&#13;
motel or at the Parkside Village site. U they&#13;
choose a motel they are required to pay rent&#13;
on their uncompleted apartment to help&#13;
defer the added cost of the motel. At&#13;
Parkside Village they are required to pay for&#13;
the space used unless they are in groups of&#13;
eight or more.&#13;
Although all tenants were told Sept. 1&#13;
was the completion date, Avendroth said it&#13;
would be difficult for a tenant to break h.&#13;
lease. The lease requires Global to&#13;
demonstrate a best effort to complete on&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Commenting on the possibility of fire or&#13;
health code violations, Avendroth said there&#13;
were no code violations as far as the living&#13;
conditions were concerned and stre sed the&#13;
temporary nature of the conditions. Present&#13;
conditions require living in and around&#13;
construction life: noisy machines, miles of&#13;
cords lumber piles, refuse piles and open&#13;
fires. ' In some of the complexes fire extinguishers&#13;
are not evident. No telephones&#13;
are available as of yet.&#13;
"We will have sufficient apartments for&#13;
all students who have registered w_ith us,."&#13;
Avendroth said. "They will all be \\-~th the~r&#13;
permanent group, perhaps not m their&#13;
leased apartment, by the end of _next week&#13;
(Sept. 25)." At this time approximately_ 60&#13;
people have leased apartments at Parkside&#13;
(COntmued on Page 8)&#13;
J Y OCHA&#13;
ext We&#13;
an Interview wit&#13;
Muddy Waters&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
Sa "! the Newscope staff&#13;
Ytng that he had no&#13;
~_ceived notions of how&#13;
Eug side should develop&#13;
Ii lhene Norwood, the new Dea~&#13;
Soci e College of Science and&#13;
~~ty, stated in a brief inlnthlew&#13;
that he would first meet&#13;
lllak~acu}~ members before&#13;
Norwood Interested in Results&#13;
"Y ~ policy decisions.&#13;
!etti I can't really work efYvur&#13;
v; Y Unless you have met&#13;
their acuity and have learned&#13;
'°OCd :t and plans," Nor- Su . ~uen_tl~,. the Dean has&#13;
to set u e Divis~onal Chairman&#13;
lrith u/ r a senes of meetings ,.1 acuity&#13;
len~~d co~e to these to&#13;
His 0rwood said&#13;
d1rrer::~ents were markedly&#13;
Ila tern from the initial&#13;
~re~ of ~s predecessor' . lley, Wh acKmney. MacKinlline&#13;
O .~as appointed to the&#13;
IIine, J&gt;Ositton last year at this&#13;
Policy :;s,{esponsible for the&#13;
nstant Greatness"&#13;
that led to the attempted&#13;
purging of '%7 faculty members.&#13;
When popular resistance_ to&#13;
the purge made it impossible&#13;
for it to be carri_ed o~t,&#13;
MacKinney, along with. Vice&#13;
Chancellor Harris, resigned.&#13;
Norwood as Dean of . the&#13;
College of Science and SOCiety&#13;
will have the Chairmen _of the&#13;
Science, Social Scien~e,&#13;
Humanities and Education&#13;
divisions report to him.&#13;
He will be the College's&#13;
principal educati_onal and: administrative&#13;
officer, and will~&#13;
responsible for staff an program development,&#13;
program review, and budget.&#13;
Because of responsibilities_ at&#13;
UW-M where he was the acting&#13;
Dean ~f the Graduate School,&#13;
Norwood will only be at&#13;
Parkside part time till October&#13;
15 He will be spending three&#13;
&amp;ys a week at Parkside and&#13;
two at UW-M till then.&#13;
Norwood said he had no&#13;
priority policies he would ~e to see instituted. "It'd be mappropriate&#13;
to commenl It w°':11d&#13;
appear I had come with&#13;
preconceived ideas. I'd rather&#13;
talk to the faculty and students&#13;
first . ··One thing I have learned IS&#13;
that each institution is different,"&#13;
he said. la~, "_an~ if&#13;
anyone comes into an mstitution&#13;
with preconceived notions_ of&#13;
what to do without first&#13;
checking with the faculty and&#13;
students, he's go!ng to find&#13;
himself in difficulties.&#13;
"One uses these ~..of&#13;
ideas " he said. "One's job then&#13;
is to 'sort out those ideas ~t&#13;
can be insti~ted, and to expand&#13;
J£1'RY SOC'H4&#13;
CEA £UG£ £ ORWOOO&#13;
those policies that ha,· " ed&#13;
in the past.&#13;
"This does not mean I 11 not&#13;
be malting judgments," he&#13;
noted.&#13;
He sees part of his job a&#13;
making more effective the&#13;
Colle e administrative &#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
Pa,e2&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Certain members of the so&#13;
called left wing 01 the Student&#13;
Government are apparently&#13;
trying to sell out the student&#13;
body 01 Parkside to the Administration&#13;
They have&#13;
decided that alter rambling&#13;
around on extraneous issues&#13;
and causing the student&#13;
government to accomplish&#13;
little. that they must exemplily&#13;
their ideal, the administration&#13;
even further They hav~&#13;
deerded to resign m protest&#13;
because they cannot dissolve&#13;
the student government.&#13;
They are Irustrated by the&#13;
fact that no one wilt bow down to&#13;
them, since they are the only&#13;
true god in the university.&#13;
They are attempting to turn&#13;
the students' means of making a&#13;
mark in the uruversity into a&#13;
lal .club of im potence and&#13;
al 0 provide the administration&#13;
WIthan excuse lor not giving the&#13;
students thear due TIghts and&#13;
prmleges&#13;
Gary Adelsen,&#13;
tudent Senate Member&#13;
september %ti. Itt! .&#13;
Ed. Note: This letter was senl&#13;
to NEWSCOPE last week&#13;
shortly after the situation at&#13;
Parkside Village came to our&#13;
attention. It proved to be interesting&#13;
reading material.l&#13;
It has been brought to my&#13;
attention that there is a feeling&#13;
among certain students that&#13;
Parkside is not interested in&#13;
protecting the needs and interests&#13;
of those students who&#13;
are housed 0(( campus. In these&#13;
days when anti-establishmenl&#13;
attitudes run so rampant&#13;
throughout society, it is easy lor&#13;
those who wish to capitalize on&#13;
any situation to feed the flames&#13;
by making accusations against&#13;
those who are responsible for&#13;
administering programs.&#13;
In the August 16, 1971,issue 01&#13;
EWSCOPE there was a&#13;
lengthy article on the ellorts&#13;
made by the campus to secure&#13;
student housing. Since that time&#13;
Parkside Village has begun to&#13;
house a number of students who&#13;
have had to live under rather&#13;
trying conditions due to the lack&#13;
KENOSHA-RACINE&#13;
Complete&#13;
Poster&#13;
Gallery&#13;
also 'Love' and 'Soft Touch' greeting cards&#13;
PARK DRUGS&#13;
Just north of washIngton ROodon .,-... A . h ~~.... venue In K enos a&#13;
10% OCsco...t-lT Wln-l PARKSICE CAR'Tl-lAGE: OR . KTI 1.0.&#13;
01 completed lacilities. We have&#13;
always made it clear that the&#13;
relationship 01 the student&#13;
tenant and the private landlord&#13;
is a contractual relationship in&#13;
which the University is not a&#13;
party. We are, however, concerned&#13;
when students are living&#13;
under difficult circumstances&#13;
and therefore in cooperation&#13;
with the management 01&#13;
Parkside Village have begun&#13;
steps to mutually investigate&#13;
the problems that exist. Miss&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger 01 this office&#13;
along with the Student&#13;
Government President, the&#13;
editor 01 the NEWSCQPE and&#13;
Mr. Agendroth 01 ParksidSe&#13;
Village were able to discuss this&#13;
matter on Thursday, September&#13;
t6, t97t, and it is anticipated .&#13;
that out 01 this meeting&#13;
progress was made both in&#13;
execution and understanding.&#13;
Furthermore, Miss&#13;
Echelbarger has attempted to&#13;
contact as many 01 the student&#13;
residents as possible and it is&#13;
her feeling that although the&#13;
conditions may be somewhat&#13;
dillicult, those directly involved&#13;
are bearing up quite well and&#13;
displaying a relreshing sense 01&#13;
humor and a ce~tain esprit de&#13;
corps.&#13;
Iassure you that we are going&#13;
to maintain contact with this&#13;
specific situation as with any&#13;
others that may arise. Personally,&#13;
I feel that the construction&#13;
of student housing&#13;
must be considered as an asset&#13;
to the campus. It is my hoep&#13;
that you will join with us in'&#13;
encouraging lurther growth 01&#13;
this nature and the attraction of&#13;
more students to our campus. If&#13;
any student would like to&#13;
discusS this matter lurther with&#13;
the parties concerned, Isuggest&#13;
that the Ollice 01 Student&#13;
Services be contacted at the&#13;
earliest moment.&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Ass't Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Ford Foundation is&#13;
pleased to announce the continuation&#13;
of the following&#13;
programs for the 1972-1973&#13;
year:&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
American Indian ~"'Sbi", for&#13;
Doctoral Fell tude.iI&#13;
Black StUdents o"'sbi", for&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
M&#13;
. o....hi eXlcan America Ips br&#13;
Rican Students n alll\ Pu,,\&#13;
These .Iell~shi&#13;
are lor stUdents w~~&#13;
undertaken any ba....&#13;
prolessional stu:aduatt" Wish to pursue the Pt, iIId '10&#13;
enter careers .. D·IId"&#13;
ed ti In hi.- uca ion. Each .....&#13;
support lull-lime .~&#13;
five years conlin 1~lh&#13;
Fellow's SatiSlac~: IIJIOn '"&#13;
toward the Pb.D. IIvtIlI&#13;
InstrUCtions and&#13;
lorms may be ob",a~&#13;
The Ford Foundati IIIed rr..&#13;
43rd Street, N.... ~ 311 "-&#13;
York 10017.AppIicati0It. ""&#13;
three program. ....rur&#13;
complete. by Jan muat It&#13;
We will be h uary 10, l1li.&#13;
additional inl:~:a~ ~&#13;
request. IOn "Plo&#13;
Patricia A.Baduna"&#13;
DoctoralF~&#13;
SPECIAL EVENlll&#13;
SATURDAY.OCT,Z&#13;
Concert - John Den&#13;
p.m. KenoshaTrem: .-&#13;
School Auditorium. ~&#13;
mISSIOn 83.5(). TtcQq&#13;
available at tbe Studoa&#13;
Activities Office R.a ..&#13;
Tallent Hall. '&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.'&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.'&#13;
Octoberle.t - Weel:ead ~&#13;
atWelic and soclaI .-&#13;
CompetitioninClOII01oaItJ&#13;
Soccer, Golf, T ..&#13;
and Sailing. Alao, ..&#13;
brats at soccer .&#13;
Saturday alterDOOl ...&#13;
dances at !be SludIIII ,.&#13;
tivilies Building FridIJ ..&#13;
Saturday nigbts.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
WSU-Whitewater at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22&#13;
Recital - Harpsichord and&#13;
cello recital by Frances&#13;
Bedford and Harry Lantz,&#13;
UW-P music laculty, in 103&#13;
Greenquist, 8 p.m. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 2.&#13;
Film Feature film&#13;
:'Rosemary's Baby" at S p.m.&#13;
10 the Activities Building.&#13;
Adm. 75c.&#13;
SATURDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
Dance Sponsored by&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Activities&#13;
Building. 9-1 a.m. Adm.&#13;
charg~ __._&#13;
Get Acquointed Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change.&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAO&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVe.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658.2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
CAPITOl COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
~&#13;
Editorial Stall&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomarlire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Copy Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Jerry Socha&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
VALEO'S· .~&#13;
IZ&#13;
AND ITAU AN SAUSAGE: El::Ivf3ER5' -'&#13;
5lI2l-lltlt Ay... e Kenoslll &amp;&amp;J-III&#13;
Open 6 days 0 week from 4 p.m., closeel ~&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
North Central- at UW-P .. 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Soccer - UW-P vs. Wisconsin&#13;
Junior All-Stars at UW-P.&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 26&#13;
Concert- Milwaukee Fine Arts&#13;
Quartet sponsored by the&#13;
University Artists Concert&#13;
Series. 4 p.m., 103Greenquisl.&#13;
Adm. $1.00, students $.50,&#13;
children 12 and under free.&#13;
Film- "The Shop on Main&#13;
Street" sponsored by In·&#13;
tercollegiate Film Council. 7&#13;
p.m. Golden Ronde11e&#13;
Theatre, 16th &amp; Howe&#13;
Racine. Limited number of&#13;
tickets available at the Information&#13;
Center, second&#13;
floor. Tallent Hall.&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
.Bob Borchardt, James&#13;
Ca~per, Marc EiseQ, Kelly&#13;
Infusino, Jim Koloen Ken&#13;
Konkol '&#13;
Contributing Staff&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Mike Starr&#13;
Photography&#13;
Darrell Borger, Ricky Pazera&#13;
Production staff&#13;
Becky Ecklund Denise&#13;
Anastasia, Roberta' Williams&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
Connie Kinsella,Dave'"&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones&#13;
Editorial ..&#13;
Business ..&#13;
Newscope is an ~&#13;
student newspaper .......&#13;
by students 01theUai~&#13;
Wisconsin-Parksido&#13;
weekly except duriIC~&#13;
periods. Student oIliafIlI'.&#13;
vertising Ioods .... till til&#13;
source 01 revenue ltr :-&#13;
ope~ation 01 N~~ ..&#13;
copIes are P'~ II&#13;
distributed tbro..--"&#13;
Kenosha and Badat&#13;
mwlities 'as weD • ~::&#13;
sitv. F..... capiea are&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Page2 ''EWSCOPE, eptember2011971'&#13;
LETT-ERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
G ry del 0 n,&#13;
tu nt nate ~tember&#13;
Ed. Note: This letter was sent&#13;
to 'EWSCOPE last week&#13;
shortly after the situation at&#13;
Parkside Village came to our&#13;
attention. It proved to be interesting&#13;
reading material.)&#13;
It has been brought to my&#13;
attention that there is a feeling&#13;
among certain students that&#13;
Park. ide is not interested in&#13;
protecting the needs and interests&#13;
of those students who&#13;
are hou ed off campus. In these&#13;
day when anti-establishment&#13;
attitudes run so rampant&#13;
throughout society, it is easy for&#13;
those who wish to capitalize on&#13;
any situation to feed the names&#13;
by making accusations against&#13;
tho::;e who are responsible for&#13;
administering programs.&#13;
In the August 16, 1971, issue of&#13;
'EWSCOPE there was a&#13;
lengthy article on the efforts&#13;
made by the campus to secure&#13;
tudent housing Since that time&#13;
Park ide Village has begun to&#13;
house a number of students who&#13;
have had to live under rather&#13;
trying conditions due to the lack&#13;
Complete&#13;
Poster&#13;
Gallery&#13;
al o 'Love' and 'Soft Touch' greeting cards&#13;
PARK DRUGS&#13;
Just n&lt;&gt;fth of woshington Rood 00 """'..l A . ,/.f.'"" venue in K enosho&#13;
1'"- DISCXl.NTWITH P~ICE CAc-n_, ' rs I nAGE OR KTI 1.0 .&#13;
of completed facilities. We have&#13;
always made it clear that the&#13;
relationship of the student&#13;
tenant and the private landlord&#13;
is a contractual relationship in&#13;
which the University is not a&#13;
party. We are, however, concerned&#13;
when students are living&#13;
under difficult circumstances&#13;
and therefore in cooperation&#13;
with the management of&#13;
Parkside Village have begun&#13;
steps to mutually investigate&#13;
the problems that exist. Miss&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger of this office&#13;
along with the Student&#13;
Government President, the&#13;
editor of the NEWSCOPE and&#13;
Mr. Agendroth of Parksid8e&#13;
Village were able to discuss this&#13;
matter on Thursday, September&#13;
16, 1971, and it is anticipated .&#13;
that out of this meeting&#13;
progress was made both in&#13;
execution and understanding.&#13;
Furthermore, Miss&#13;
Echelbarger has attempted to&#13;
contact as many of the student&#13;
residents as possible and it is&#13;
her feeling that although the&#13;
conditions may be somewhat&#13;
difficult, those directly involved&#13;
are bearing up quite well and&#13;
displaying a refreshing sense of&#13;
humor and a ce~tain esprit de&#13;
corps. I assure you that we are going&#13;
to maintain contact with this&#13;
specific situation as with any&#13;
others that may arise. Personally,&#13;
I feel that the construction&#13;
of student housing&#13;
must be considered as an asset&#13;
to the campus. It is my hoep&#13;
that you will join with us in&#13;
encouraging further growth of&#13;
this nature and the attraction of&#13;
more students to our campus. If&#13;
any student would like to&#13;
discuss this matter further with&#13;
the parties concerned, I suggest&#13;
that the Office of Student&#13;
Services be contacted at the&#13;
earliest moment.&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Ass' t Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Ford Foundation is&#13;
pleased to announce the continuation&#13;
of the following&#13;
programs for the 1972-1973&#13;
year:&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
American Indian ;7ships r&#13;
Doctoral Fel Udents&#13;
Black Students lowship f&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
Mexican Ameri owship&#13;
Rican Students can anr1&#13;
These . fello~shi&#13;
are for students ~ pr&#13;
undertaken any w O have&#13;
p~ofessional studf aduate&#13;
wish to pursue the Ph and&#13;
enter careers .. D. an! lei&#13;
education. Each in h&#13;
s.upport full-time si~~&amp;rarn&#13;
five years contingeni fct le&#13;
Fellow's satisfacto UP0n&#13;
toward the Ph.D.ry&#13;
Instructions and&#13;
forms may be obta~PPli&#13;
The Ford Foundar mec1 ~ 43rd Street N 10n, 320&#13;
York 10017 'Apel~ York,&#13;
th · P 1cations r ree programs or&#13;
complete.by Janu rnu t&#13;
We will be ha ary 10, I&#13;
additional infof PY to Pro.&#13;
request. rnation&#13;
Patricia A. Bac!unar.:&#13;
Doctoral Feu011&#13;
_CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
WSU-Whitewater at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22&#13;
Recital - Harpsichord and&#13;
cello recital by Frances&#13;
Bedford and Harry Lantz,&#13;
UW-P music faculty, in 103&#13;
Greenquist, 8 p.m. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
Film Feature film&#13;
'.'Rosemary's Baby" at 8 p.m.&#13;
m the Activities Building.&#13;
Adm. 75c.&#13;
SATURDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
Dance Sponsored by&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Activities&#13;
Building. 9-1 a.m. Adm.&#13;
charg~ ---&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change,&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH Ave..&#13;
654-9968&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
5~th St. a_t. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT&#13;
MILWAUKEE ,&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
North Central at UW-P. 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Soccer - UW-P vs. Wisconsin&#13;
Junior All-Stars at UW-P.&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 26&#13;
Concert- Milwaukee Fine Arts&#13;
Quartet sponsored by the&#13;
University Artists Concert&#13;
Series. 4 p.m., 103 Greenquist.&#13;
Adm. $1.00, students $.50,&#13;
children 12 and under free.&#13;
Film- "The Shop on Main&#13;
Street" sponsored by Intercollegiate&#13;
Film Council. 7&#13;
p.m. Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theatre, 16th &amp; Howe,&#13;
Racine. Limited number of&#13;
tickets available at · the Information&#13;
Center second&#13;
floor. T~llent Hall. '&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
F~ature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fme Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
. Copy Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Pho~o Editor Jerry Socha&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
. Bob Borchardt, James&#13;
Ca~per, Marc Eisen, Kelly&#13;
Infusino, Jim Koloen Ken&#13;
Konkol '&#13;
Contributing Staff&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Mike Starr&#13;
Photography&#13;
Darrell Borger, Ricky Pazera&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Becky Ecklund Denise&#13;
Anastasia, Roberta' Williams&#13;
SPECIAL EVE~TS&#13;
SA TURD A y, OCT. z&#13;
Concert - John De nver g&#13;
p.m. Kenosha Tremper' JU&#13;
S~ho?l Auditorium. A&#13;
m1s~1on $3.50. Tic&#13;
avB:il~?le at the Stud&#13;
Activities Office, Room&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.8&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 9&#13;
Octobe~fest _ Weekend rJ&#13;
. athletic and social e~&#13;
Competition in Cross Coun&#13;
Soccer, Golf, Tennis, R&#13;
and Sailing. Also, beer&#13;
brats at soccer game&#13;
Saturday afternoon 1&#13;
dances at the Student At,&#13;
tivities Building Friday&#13;
Saturday nights.&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Da\'e ·&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Newscope is an ind&#13;
student newspaper co&#13;
by students of the Uni1t&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
weekly except during&#13;
periods. Student obl!med&#13;
vertising funds are !ht&#13;
source of revenue for&#13;
operation of Newscope '&#13;
copies are printed&#13;
distributed throughovl&#13;
Kenosha and Racine&#13;
munities as well as the t&#13;
sitv. Frer copies art 1&#13;
upon request.&#13;
VALEO'S . ~ {;&#13;
O&lt;EN 01NNERS·-""'"·" ...... ioo p.m.-tz:•&#13;
AND ITA\ . .JAN SAUSA.GE EDv13ERS,.&#13;
5021- IJth AVellle K•sba &amp;51-61,91&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mo¢&lt;rf5 &#13;
•&#13;
In Being, Busted&#13;
,.lbe Newscopestall&#13;
BYgen Konkol&#13;
ent complaint of past&#13;
•&#13;
A freq1l has been the abun-&#13;
"",est"fparking tickets given&#13;
doJlC" 0 our efficient Campus&#13;
.. I bYty Patrol. .&#13;
socun may feel that the force&#13;
Some I' a little over-zea o~s In&#13;
~ II' g violations, but the ~ In . . b . ,,- I is only doing Its JO In&#13;
J'~ding additional .revenue&#13;
~ theuw-system.&#13;
The person who gets busted&#13;
Ita violationha~ only himself&#13;
_ blame since It IS patently&#13;
rtS'J to avoid the fine.&#13;
IDthe past there was the&#13;
... eIy excuse of a lack of&#13;
~ space but since the&#13;
"",truetionof'the east parking&#13;
Illt thiS excused~sn' t carry as&#13;
""b weightas It used to.&#13;
SoParking areas are clearly ..;ned though, according to&#13;
!gt D. W.Krogh of the security&#13;
ItCf there has been troubie&#13;
lIith~me students ripping off&#13;
IIItsigns.But the lack of one of&#13;
tbo6e signs is no excuse. If you&#13;
park where you shouldn't, you'll&#13;
get.3 ticket, SIgns or no signs.&#13;
TIckets vary in cost&#13;
proportionally to the&#13;
seriousness of the offense. The&#13;
least you can get hit for is three&#13;
bucks for parking without a&#13;
perm~t or with an improper&#13;
permit.&#13;
Overtime parking, parking on&#13;
law?s. or "improper parking in&#13;
designated areas" will also get&#13;
you three. Stiffer fines include&#13;
five dollars for parking in a No&#13;
Parking area and ten dollars for&#13;
being on a sidewalk.&#13;
If you commit a violation that&#13;
is not covered above there is&#13;
also a blank space on the ticket&#13;
that can De filled in to cover any&#13;
contingency.&#13;
If you ignore a ticket it won't&#13;
go away. After five days the fine&#13;
doubles, after forty days you get&#13;
a warning letter, and at the end&#13;
of sixty days you get hauled to&#13;
the D.A. and he doesn't see&#13;
anyone for less than twenty&#13;
doliars.&#13;
A first offense could set you&#13;
hack forty dollar-s if not paid&#13;
promptly and a second will cost&#13;
you anywhere from fifty to onehundred&#13;
dollars!&#13;
If .you wish to appeal a&#13;
parking ticket you can do so&#13;
However, this must be do~&#13;
within five days by completing&#13;
a f~rm available at the Bursar's&#13;
o~ftce. There is no appeal after&#13;
flv~ days, From past exper~ence,&#13;
appeals are usually&#13;
demed.&#13;
During the first two weeks of&#13;
c~asses warning tickets were&#13;
given out. 4C9were distributed&#13;
as of the 16th. Starting this week&#13;
things will begin in earnest&#13;
Don't risk a ticket on the offchance&#13;
you may get away with&#13;
it. The Security Patrol has three&#13;
shifts that work around the&#13;
clock: They don't enjoy giving&#13;
out tickets but it makes them&#13;
mad when you break the law.&#13;
Students are not the only people&#13;
?eing socked, either. Sgt. Krogh&#13;
intends to see all violators -&#13;
faculty, construction workers&#13;
and visitors - busted alike.&#13;
Baroque Players Debut this Week&#13;
TheBaroque Players of the&#13;
l:Diversity of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will present a series of&#13;
tbree programs in the RacineKenosha&#13;
area beginning Sunday.&#13;
'M1e newly-formed group was&#13;
II'ganized by cellist" Harry&#13;
lAot, and harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford, both members&#13;
01 the music faculty at&#13;
PlrUide.They plan to invite&#13;
tIriIIIs guestartists to perform&#13;
..Ill them from time to time,&#13;
Guestartist for the initial&#13;
_rts will be flutist Frank&#13;
!lIIlho1z.&#13;
'\'be group played Sunday at&#13;
IIIe DominicanCollege Theater&#13;
lIaldayat tbe Carthage Colleg~&#13;
.... Room and wili Play&#13;
Wedoesday, Sept. 22, at&#13;
Parkside in Room 103&#13;
GreenquistHall to the Wond&#13;
Road Campus. Ali perbmances&#13;
are at 8 p.m. and are&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Suetbol"the guest artist, is&#13;
• matnnnental music teacher&#13;
~~ Racine Unified' School&#13;
..... m and has Iaught at&#13;
~western University. He&#13;
*'ied nute in New York with&#13;
8Im~ Ba:ron and is currently&#13;
~g WithIsrael Borouchoff&#13;
UW-MIIwaukee.He is a ;ember of the Racine and&#13;
lukeSha Symphony Or- :::a' and has appeared with&#13;
Lan...... ha Symphony.&#13;
at tz,. as associate professor&#13;
DlU;SIC at UW-P, is an in-&#13;
::::'OOSIlY.known cellist and&#13;
...... tor. A Widely-acclaimed&#13;
Ippea oand adjudicator, heh~s&#13;
Witb red ~sa performing artist&#13;
IiIooiesma]OrAmerican sym8lIdl&#13;
under the batons of&#13;
renOWnedconductors as&#13;
...&#13;
Leopoid Stokowski, Bruno&#13;
Walter, Dimitri Mitropolus, Sir&#13;
Thomas Beecham and Leonard&#13;
Bernstein. He founded the&#13;
Houston All-City Orchestra&#13;
which he conducted on a tour of&#13;
Europe in 1965 and of Mexico in&#13;
1967. He previously taught at&#13;
the University of Houston.&#13;
Mrs. Bedford taught harpsichord&#13;
and piano at Southern&#13;
Illinois University before&#13;
coming to Parkside where she is&#13;
an assistant professor of music.&#13;
She has studied with harpsichordists&#13;
Wesley K. Morgan&#13;
and Robert Conant and has&#13;
given a number of lecturerecitals.&#13;
She is soloist for the&#13;
harpsichord selections on two&#13;
recordings of Renaissance&#13;
music recorded as part of the&#13;
Historical Anthology of Music&#13;
published by Ihe Harvard&#13;
University Press. She will&#13;
perform on a two-manual&#13;
Flemish instrument copied&#13;
after a 1643 Ruckers harpsichord.&#13;
The program for the concerts&#13;
will include two trios, Bach's&#13;
Sonata for Flute and Continuo&#13;
and Handel's Sonata Vll for&#13;
Flute and Figured bass. Mrs.&#13;
Bedford and Suetholz will&#13;
perform Bach's Sonata Il for&#13;
CIavier and Flute and she and&#13;
Lantz will play Bach's Sonata I&#13;
for Clavier and Viola da gamba.&#13;
Mrs. Bedford will play two&#13;
harpsichord solos, The WellTempered&#13;
Clavier by Bach and&#13;
Le Tic-Tac-Choc au les&#13;
Maillotins by Couperin.&#13;
Sickle Cell Clinic Held&#13;
Sopt.m ..... zt • .,,, PE&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
GIVE US YOUR GRIPESI&#13;
Ifsthe&#13;
realthing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
.~&#13;
PaltJ&#13;
The first mass testing in Kenosha for Sickle Cell Anemia traits&#13;
was held Sunday, Sept. 19, at the Second Baptist Church, 3925- 32nd&#13;
Ave., from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. .&#13;
The tesing program, involving the taking of blood samples, IS&#13;
being sponsored by the Kenosha bra~ch of NAACP, With the&#13;
cooperation of the University of Wlsconsm-Parkslde and Sl.&#13;
Catherine's hospital. .&#13;
Samples were taken by lab tectmicians from the ~OSpl.lal.Dr. S. P&#13;
Datta, a geneticist who is an associate professor of hfe scl.ence at w-&#13;
, Parkside will perform the analysis at the UW-P laboratones.&#13;
The Parkside professor and his assistants have ~form~ so~e&#13;
400 such analyses during the past summer while wor.kmg _Ill&#13;
cooperation with tbe Racine NAACP branch and the Racme City&#13;
Health Department. .&#13;
Under the analysis used at UW-P, traits of other types of blood cell&#13;
disorders in addition to Sickle Cell can be detected.&#13;
.u.: 01 ni«:&#13;
AWRAL COSMETICS&#13;
NAWRAL GRAlNS&amp;CEREALS&#13;
UNSULPHURATED FRUIT.&#13;
HEALTH FOOD&#13;
6221· 22"'0 AV£t\tu£ KENOSHA PHON 52·41ti'&#13;
Grievance and&#13;
Clearing House&#13;
Committee&#13;
lIleetsthis thursday&#13;
Sept.25 at 4p.m. in room 103 Greenquist.&#13;
.111students Me invited to participate.&#13;
"Here's To Your Good Health"&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tue da and Thur da&#13;
I&#13;
9a.m.-4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
.0 a glass&#13;
....c: and&#13;
U a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
..&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER Of HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND so&#13;
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Available 'or ftlt.lnlty Of SOloClly partles&#13;
Student Senate&#13;
will meet monday&#13;
Sept. 27 at 4p. m. in Greenquist 101.&#13;
AU studmts are requestuJ to attnld .&#13;
Interested O1IkJolters welcome.&#13;
In Being Busted&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
ol the Newscope staff&#13;
uent complaint of past&#13;
A fr~ has been the abun-&#13;
¢1\est I parking tickets given&#13;
ceb O our efficient Campus t y ~-,rity Patrol. ;:c•- may feel that the force&#13;
rne 1 . a little ov~r-zea ous m&#13;
ttin&amp; violations,_ bu_t t~e&#13;
Po I is only doing its Job m&#13;
patrJdin&amp; additional revenue&#13;
P'° the uw-system.&#13;
fi:tTbe person who gets ?usted&#13;
violation has only himself&#13;
fclb&amp;Jame since it is patently to f. r to avoid the me. ~ the past there was the&#13;
rtadv excuse of a lac_k of&#13;
partlng space, but since the&#13;
coostruction of the east parking&#13;
Joi this excuse doesn't carry as uch weight as it used to.&#13;
·o Parking areas are clearly&#13;
~ked though, according . to&#13;
D. W. Krogh of the security&#13;
llrte, there has been trouble&#13;
th ome students ripping off&#13;
igns. But the lack of one of&#13;
signs is no excuse. H you&#13;
park w~ere yo':1 shouldn't, you'll&#13;
get _a ticket, signs or no signs.&#13;
T1cke!s vary in cost&#13;
pr~portionally to the&#13;
seriousness of the offense. The&#13;
least you can get hit for is three&#13;
bucks for parking without a&#13;
perm~t or with an improper&#13;
permit.&#13;
Overtime parking, parking on&#13;
law~s, or "improper parking in&#13;
designated areas" will also get&#13;
you three. Stiffer fines include&#13;
five dollars for parking in a No&#13;
Parking area and ten dollars for&#13;
being on a sidewalk.&#13;
H you commit a violation that&#13;
is not covered above there is&#13;
also a blank space on the ticket&#13;
that canoe filled in to cover any&#13;
contingency.&#13;
If you ignore a ticket it won't&#13;
go away. After five days the fine&#13;
doubles, after forty days you get&#13;
a warning letter, and at the end&#13;
of sixty days you get hauled to&#13;
the D.A. and he doesn't see&#13;
anyone for less than twenty&#13;
dollars.&#13;
A first off(lnse could set you&#13;
back forty dollars if not paid&#13;
promptly and a second will co.st&#13;
you anywhere from fifty to one- hundred dollars!&#13;
If . you wish to appeal a&#13;
parking ticket you can do so&#13;
H?w~ver, this must be do~&#13;
w1thm five days by completing&#13;
a f~rm available at the Bursar'&#13;
o~f1ce. There is no appeal after&#13;
f1v: days. From past e -&#13;
per~ence, appeals are u ually&#13;
derued.&#13;
During the first two we s of&#13;
c~asses warning tickets were&#13;
given out. 409 were distributed&#13;
as_ of the 16th. Starting this week&#13;
thmgs will begin in earnest.&#13;
Don't risk a ticket on the off-&#13;
~ance you may get away with&#13;
it. The Security Patrol has three&#13;
shifts that work around the&#13;
clock: They don't enjoy giving&#13;
out tickets but it makes them&#13;
mad when you break the law.&#13;
Sh:1dents are not the only people&#13;
~mg socked, either. Sgt Krogh&#13;
mtends to see all violators -&#13;
faculty, construction workers&#13;
and visitors - busted alike.&#13;
Baroque Players Debut this Week&#13;
The Baroque Players of the&#13;
~mversity of WisconsinPark&#13;
ide will present a series of&#13;
ee programs in the RacineKenosha&#13;
area beginning Suny.&#13;
&#13;
The newly-formed group was&#13;
organized by cellist' Harry&#13;
Lantz and harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford, both m'emof&#13;
the music faculty at&#13;
Parkside. They plan to invite&#13;
YVIOUS guest artists to perform&#13;
th them from time to time.&#13;
Guest artist for the initial&#13;
Clllleerts will be flutist Frank&#13;
~lz.&#13;
The group played Sunday at&#13;
lbe Dominican College Theater,&#13;
ooday at the Carthage College&#13;
e Room and will Play&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 22, at&#13;
Park ide in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall tn the Wood&#13;
Road Campus. All performances&#13;
are at 8 p.m. and are&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
etholz, the guest artist, is&#13;
• lllStnunental music teacher&#13;
the Racine Unified· School&#13;
m and has taught at&#13;
Ncirthwestern University. He&#13;
lllldied flute in New York with&#13;
u~I Barron and is currently&#13;
ltludy1ng with Israel Borouchoff&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. He is a ;""her of the Racine and&#13;
allkesha Symphony Orlbe&#13;
lras and has appeared with&#13;
La Kenosha Symphony.&#13;
GI ntz, as associate professor&#13;
m~ic at UW-P, is an in-&#13;
~tionally-known cellist and&#13;
=:tor. A widely-acclaimed&#13;
lppea n and adjudicator, he has&#13;
th red ~s a performing artist&#13;
~ · lllaJor American symh&#13;
ies under the batons of&#13;
renowned conductors as&#13;
Leopold Stokowski, Bruno&#13;
Walter, Dimitri Mitropolus, Sir&#13;
Thomas Beecham and Leonard&#13;
Bernstein. He founded the&#13;
Houston All-City Orchestra&#13;
which he conducted on a tour of&#13;
Europe in 1965 and of Mexico in&#13;
1967. He previously taught at&#13;
the University of Houston.&#13;
Mrs. Bedford taught harpsichord&#13;
and piano at Southern&#13;
Illinois University before&#13;
coming to Parkside where she is&#13;
an assistant professor of music.&#13;
She has studied with harpsichordists&#13;
Wesley K. Morgan&#13;
and Robert Conant and has&#13;
given a nwnber of lecturerecitals.&#13;
She is soloist for the&#13;
harpsichord selections on two&#13;
recordings of Renaissance&#13;
music recorded as part of the&#13;
Historical l\nthology of . lusic&#13;
published by the Harvard&#13;
University Pres . She will&#13;
perform on a two-manual&#13;
Flemish instrument copied&#13;
after a 1643 Ruckers harpsichord.&#13;
&#13;
The program for the concert&#13;
will include two trios, Bach·&#13;
Sonata for Flute and Continuo&#13;
and Handel's Sonata VII for&#13;
Flute and Figured bass. . lrs.&#13;
Bedford and Suetholz will&#13;
perform Bach's Sonata II for&#13;
Clavier and Flute and he and&#13;
Lantz will play Bach's Sonata I&#13;
for Clavier and Viola da gamba .&#13;
Mrs. Bedford ·will play two&#13;
harpsichord solos, The WellTempered&#13;
Clavier by Bach and&#13;
Le Tic-Tac-Choe ou le&#13;
Maillotins by Couperin.&#13;
Sickle Cell Clinic Held&#13;
The first mass testing in Kenosha for Sickle Cell Anemia trai&#13;
was held Sunday, Sept. 19, at the Second Baptist Church, ;:-5 - 32nd&#13;
Ave., from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
The tesing program, involving the taking of blood amp! , i&#13;
being sponsored by the Kenosha bra~ch o_f AAC_P, \\1th th&#13;
cooperation of the University of W1sconsm-Park:1d and&#13;
Catherine's hospital. . Samples were taken by lab technicians from the ~o:;p1.tal. Dr. . P.&#13;
Datta, a geneticist who is an associate professor of hfe sc1_ence at&#13;
• Parkside, will perform the analysis at th~ UW-P laboratories.&#13;
The Parkside professor and his assistants have ~form~ o~&#13;
400 such analyses during the past summer while wor 1 . m&#13;
cooperation with the Racine NAACP branch and the Racme Cit)&#13;
Health Department. . . Under the analysis used at UW-P, traits of other type of blood cell&#13;
disorders in addition to Sickle Cell can be detected.&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
Grievance and&#13;
Clearing House&#13;
Committee&#13;
tneets this thursday&#13;
Sept. 25 at 4p.m. in room 103 Greenquist.&#13;
'1// student · · __ J • • -s are tnvtttJU to parltctpate.&#13;
GIVE US YOUR GRIPfil!&#13;
Ifs the&#13;
real thing. Coke.&#13;
,,_&#13;
!I&#13;
A&#13;
ATURAL GRA&#13;
'S LPH RAT. ·D FR&#13;
HEALTH OD&#13;
622 • 22._D A E J E O HA&#13;
Q)&#13;
u&#13;
·-&#13;
0&#13;
-C&#13;
"Here's To Your Good H I h"&#13;
.m.&#13;
a sch ner or&#13;
a ttle or&#13;
a glass&#13;
nd&#13;
u a steak sand h or&#13;
a brat ur t or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
nd&#13;
trench rie r&#13;
p tato sal d&#13;
$1.1&#13;
The Brat So&#13;
'Th Brat i uh it t'&#13;
ORTH EST CO ER 0 IC A ,_ 4 A&#13;
open 9 .m.-12 p.m.&#13;
A 1llable 101 fr• I I or sororlt p rt&#13;
.. , ,&#13;
D 0&#13;
Student Senate&#13;
will m et m nda&#13;
Sept. 27 at 4p. m. in Greenqui t 101.&#13;
ALL students art requested to attend.&#13;
Interesud onloolters welcome. &#13;
Page. NEWSCOPE Septe .. ber N. Ifll •&#13;
Recycle this Newspaper&#13;
HIGH&#13;
RIBBING&#13;
THE RIBBED KNIT SHIRT.&#13;
Zipped high. Ribbed thick&#13;
and thin. A great casual&#13;
look that's very Fall'71-&#13;
very definitely Gear Box".&#13;
Brown or navy 100%&#13;
polyester knit. S·M·L.&#13;
$9&#13;
Richman BROTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
FRIDAY SEPT 24 e:o.oPM&#13;
ACTIVITIES e-UILDING&#13;
ADMISSION $.75&#13;
'lIwp'ond Wisconsin I.D ..&#13;
pollution&#13;
is also a&#13;
statB 01&#13;
mind.&#13;
We hear a lot about&#13;
pollution of air and water.&#13;
But what about mental&#13;
pollution? Could it affect&#13;
the environment we&#13;
live in?&#13;
Perhaps the answer to&#13;
dirty rivers and smoggy&#13;
air is purer thinking ...&#13;
more spiritual thinking&#13;
that eliminates the greed&#13;
and self-will that cloud&#13;
our thoughts.&#13;
To learn more about&#13;
fighting mental pollution,&#13;
come hear a talk by&#13;
Grace Bemis Curtis, a&#13;
teacher and practitioner&#13;
of Christian Science,&#13;
called "Let's Choose&#13;
Heaven Here."&#13;
CIlistian SOO1ce lecture&#13;
sp.rn. Monday sept. 27th'&#13;
The First Church of Christ, Scientist&#13;
9th and college g aclne ;&#13;
free par1l.ing and child care provided&#13;
~vldence by tne stale, The young man&#13;
toe crime read the book in question sho~ a(&#13;
he was to have committed the act. TheY beIort&#13;
blamed for psychologically inflaming ::.&#13;
action. Through the long overdramalizatiaa 10&#13;
simple counter and attack that plague the a(&#13;
scenes we can see that the boy is innocent OMIt&#13;
already know that he is impotent and thai .. "&#13;
. his college friends did it. DIll! a(&#13;
The court scenes are tiring and&#13;
overplaying simple feats of logic, but~&#13;
that set off the courtroom action are evfll ......&#13;
Superficiality dominates as we see .....&#13;
Corvettes and .'out of sight' clothing loaded~&#13;
the screen as If for advertising purposes ..&#13;
. The sensuality as art vs. pomogr~&#13;
pornography issue is insulted consistenUyby:&#13;
very methods used in the film. Quick, cbeop .....&#13;
ups of over·mammaried, highly cosmet'&#13;
were shown every two minutes or so asin;'~&#13;
to show hos "liberal" society had become.~&#13;
impression that one received is slighUydUf.:'&#13;
The treatment appeared much like a IIkio,&#13;
Spill~ne dream world with women subjegalod.&#13;
plastic clothes awaiting the time whenthey 'OIIlIId&#13;
.be allowed to be undressed and taken.&#13;
In the end the book is saved and P"'IMIIs1llr&#13;
the accused boy is good. Yvonne DeCarloillolIlII&#13;
to be the real author of the book and J. J. Jldwar&#13;
merely a pen name. Everyone lives happier etII&#13;
after.&#13;
Seldom is it that I do not enjoy re~ I&#13;
film. While many of the pictures I have _ caaId&#13;
have been improved in ways that are as obYiaaItI&#13;
many other viewers; but there is alW8)'l ~&#13;
enough to sit and watch until the filmwas flDiIIlel&#13;
This film is an example of hypocritical..&#13;
sorship of pornography for political eodI.&#13;
WDliams.-&#13;
PROBLEMS OF A PERFECT WORLD&#13;
THE SEVEN MINUTES Mike Barrett Wayne Maunder&#13;
Maggie Marianne McAndrew&#13;
Elmo Duncan Philip Carey&#13;
Luther Yerkes Jay C. Fhppen&#13;
Faye Osborn Edy WIlhams&#13;
Produced and Directed by Russ Meyer&#13;
with Yvonne DeCarlo as Constance cu~berl~nd&#13;
Russ Meyer takes the E out of Eros III a .fIlm&#13;
that attempts to render hypocritical censorship of&#13;
pornography for political ends. It is the first time&#13;
that Meyer has worked with a recogmzed hterary.&#13;
work. Previously he has turned out $100,000and&#13;
under sexploitive films that would have to be.&#13;
considered better fare than this current flick.&#13;
Recently the American dream film, Beyond the&#13;
Valley of the Dolls, was also layed waste by this&#13;
director's hand.&#13;
Irving Wallace, the author who wrote The&#13;
Seven Minutes has had two other films adapted for&#13;
the screen, The Chapman Report and The Prize.&#13;
He is also a former resident of Kenosha ... where&#13;
it seems he wrote for the Bradford High&#13;
newspaper and doubled as quite a tennis freak. He&#13;
eventually left for Madison to attend the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, where, if this film is any&#13;
example of his authorship, he could have experienced&#13;
more and imagined less. Albeit, the&#13;
rook has appeared on the best seller lists since its&#13;
release in September of 1969. All words spelled&#13;
correctly and the proper writing techniques applied.The&#13;
story ... An ideal New York publisher&#13;
contacts an ideal young lawyer so that he may&#13;
defend a novel called The Seven Minutes by the&#13;
fictional J. J. Jadway. A small bookstore and its&#13;
owner have been summoned for its sape and our&#13;
hero comes to the rescue.&#13;
An incidental rape is applied to the case as&#13;
Wed. Sept. ~2&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
CD&#13;
It&#13;
Magus Productions presents&#13;
BLUES NIGHT&#13;
MUDDY WATERS at&#13;
also Case High School Fiel&lt;JbollS'&#13;
JOHNNY YOUNG BLUES BAND Racine&#13;
Tickets available at:&#13;
E h 8:00-12:&#13;
30&#13;
art Works -Racine&#13;
The Daisy -Kenosha-Racine&#13;
Bidingers-Kenosh~-W aukee8an&#13;
J&amp;J'sT ape Center -Kenosha-Racine-Bulington&#13;
featuring&#13;
Pagt NEWSCOPE&#13;
Recycle th is&#13;
VERY DEFI NITELY&#13;
GEAR BOX&#13;
THE RIBBED KNIT SHIRT.&#13;
Zipped high. Ribbed thick&#13;
and thin. A great ca sual&#13;
look that's very Fall '71 -&#13;
very definitely Gear Box•.&#13;
Brown or navy 100 %&#13;
polyester kni t. S-M-l.&#13;
$9&#13;
Richman&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
eptember ZO, 1971 •&#13;
ewspaper&#13;
JohnCassavetes&#13;
FRI DA Y SEPT 24 8 : 00P M&#13;
ACTI V I T I ES e ·u1LDING&#13;
A DM I SS I ON$ 75&#13;
uwp·and Wisconsin t .D.&#13;
pollution&#13;
is also a&#13;
state of&#13;
mind.&#13;
We hear a lot about&#13;
pollution of air and water.&#13;
But what about mental&#13;
pollution? Could it affect&#13;
the environment we&#13;
live in?&#13;
Perhaps the answer to&#13;
dirty rivers and smoggy&#13;
air is purer thinking ...&#13;
more spiritual thinking&#13;
that eliminates the greed&#13;
and self-will that cloud&#13;
our thoughts.&#13;
To learn more about&#13;
fighting mental pollution,&#13;
come hear a talk by&#13;
Grace Bemis Curtis, a&#13;
teacher and practitioner&#13;
of Christian Science,&#13;
called " Let's Choose&#13;
Heaven Here."&#13;
Christian Science lecture&#13;
SP,m. MOnday 5_ept. 27th·&#13;
The First Church of Christ, Scientist&#13;
9th and college Racine -&#13;
Free parking and child care provided&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
PROBLEMS uF A PERFECT WORLD&#13;
TIIE SEVEN MINUTES&#13;
Mike Barrett Wayne Maunder&#13;
Maggie Marianne McAndrew&#13;
Elmo Duncan Philip Carey&#13;
Y k Jay C. Flippen&#13;
Luther er es d w·Ir&#13;
Faye Osborn E y l iams&#13;
Produced and Directed by Russ Meyer&#13;
with Yvonne DeCarlo as Constance Cu~berl~d&#13;
Russ Meyer takes the E out of Eros m a _film&#13;
that attempts to render hypocritical cens?rship of&#13;
pornography for political ends. It is t.J:ie fir~t time _&#13;
that Meyer has worked with a recognized literary,&#13;
work. Previously he has turned out $100,000 and&#13;
W1der sexploitive films that would have to _ be.&#13;
considered better fare than this current fbck.&#13;
Recently the American dream film, Beyond the&#13;
Valley of the Dolls, was also layed waste by this&#13;
director's hand. Irving Wallace, the author who wrote The&#13;
Seven Minutes has had two other films adapted for&#13;
the screen, The Chapman Report and The Prize.&#13;
He is also a former resident of Kenosha . . . where&#13;
it seems he wrote for the Bradford High&#13;
newspaper and doubled as quite a tennis freak. He&#13;
eventually left for Madison to attend the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, where, if this film is any&#13;
example of his authorship, he could have ex·&#13;
perienced more and imagined less. Albeit, the&#13;
book has appeared on the best seller lists since its&#13;
release in September of 1969. All words spelled&#13;
correctly and the proper writing techniques applied.&#13;
&#13;
The story . . . An ideal New York publisher&#13;
contacts an ideal yoW1g lawyer so that he may&#13;
defend a novel called The Seven Minutes by the&#13;
fictional J. J. Jadway. A small bookstore and its&#13;
owner have been summoned for its sape and our&#13;
hero comes to the rescue.&#13;
An incidental rape is applied to the case as&#13;
t!Vidence by tne state. The young man&#13;
the crime read the book in question sho a~CUst!d ~ he was to have committed the act. T~e Y ~fore&#13;
blamed for psychologically inflaming ;.&#13;
0rk IS&#13;
action. Through the long overdramaliza un&#13;
simple counter and attack that plague th ti~ ~ scenes we can see that_th~ boy is innocent~ co&#13;
already know that he 1s impotent and th t · . his college friends did it. a 011e ~&#13;
The court scenes are tiring and un .&#13;
overplaying simple feats of logic, but th:eah&#13;
that set off the courtroom action are even ~ Superficiality dominates as we see worse&#13;
Corvettes and _'out of sight' clothing load~OO\'t)&#13;
the screen as 1£ for advertising purposes &lt;XI&#13;
The sens~ality. a~ art vs. pornogr~IXl&#13;
pornography issue 1s insulted consistently b ~ 11&#13;
very methods used in t~e film. Quick, cheap t,&#13;
ups of over-mammaned, highly cosmetic&#13;
were shown every two minutes or so as in atte&#13;
!o show. hos "liberal" s~ciety had become ?&#13;
1mpress1on that one received is slightly differ&#13;
Th~ treatment appeare_d much like a Mi&#13;
Sp1ll~ne dream wo~l_d with women subjegated&#13;
plastic clothes awaiting the time when thev wow · be allowed to be undressed and taken. ·&#13;
In the end the book is saved and prognosi for&#13;
the accused boy is good. Yvonne Decarlo is ro&#13;
to be the real author of the book and J. J. Jadlla&#13;
merely a pen name. Everyone lives happier e •&#13;
after.&#13;
Seldom is it that I do not enjoy re\ie\1'"1 a&#13;
film. While many of the pictures I have seen could&#13;
have been improved in ways that are as obvio115&#13;
many other viewers; but there is always reasoo&#13;
enough to sit and watch until the film was finished.&#13;
This film is an example of hypocritical censorship&#13;
of pornography for political ends.&#13;
William So!'e115e1&#13;
~ Jf· The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
~&#13;
PRESEHTS .. . . IN CONCERT&#13;
JOHN DENVER&#13;
'TAKE ME HOME COUNTRY ROADS'&#13;
SAT. OCT. 2 . 8:00 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA TREMPER AUD.&#13;
RES. SEAT TICKETS $3-50&#13;
AVAILABLE:&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
Magus Productions presents&#13;
BLUES NIGHT&#13;
featuring Wed. Sept. 22&#13;
MUDDY WATERS at&#13;
also Case High School FieidhoU&#13;
JOHNNY YOUNG BLUES BAND Racine&#13;
Tickets available at_:&#13;
E h 8:00-12:30&#13;
art Works -Racine&#13;
The Daisy -Kenosha-Racine&#13;
Bidingers-Kenosh~-W aukee$an&#13;
]&amp; J'sT ape Center -Kenosha-Racine-Bulington &#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
If OIYs with the Enemy&#13;
,...: . lIichlrd oudman&#13;
ttP'6. . Liverighl ($5.95).&#13;
~r. ith the Enemy IS one of&#13;
• p.y' w I occasionally pick out&#13;
".. bOQI&lt;sboOk- i'd ordered hadn't&#13;
•..,1&gt; Ule :I • •&#13;
~a-:ved eenie, meeme, ml~~, a&#13;
ttl am . h moment's [ndeciston.&#13;
""r of tc:ntributing, if not the&#13;
"olher f tor was the length of 40&#13;
~ ac 181 pages which proved to&#13;
s a mere&#13;
pay,. k reading.&#13;
qUJ~ urnalism, old journalism as&#13;
,0\11 JO to the new, where words have&#13;
~ definitions, nuance and&#13;
,ho ..ary buried deep beneath the&#13;
""boIl~ the facts, stright dope: no&#13;
fo&lt;Il..g&#13;
concrete writing. And JourlIIIs!U\s&#13;
what 40 Days is all about.&#13;
~.n is writing an extended Tartickle&#13;
~behind the scenes look at riC Y&#13;
~senemy, be tells a 40 day story of&#13;
.. ever lovin A:latIcS, them&#13;
olutionists what the l\;10ngols,&#13;
rtf French, and Americans so&#13;
:C:'left unbeaten. Can't impede&#13;
........ noway. '~d Dudman is the Washington&#13;
... uchief of the St. Louis Dispatch,&#13;
lIlI! two other "internatIOnal Jour-&#13;
~"Hblundered into no man's land&#13;
_ if tb8t term can be borrowed from&#13;
te(jd conventional wars, where battle&#13;
..... were weB-defined, combatants&#13;
_ wore uniforms, and where most&#13;
,..... couldagree on who were friends&#13;
lI!.bo were enemies." The date of the&#13;
tree joUrnalists' capture was May 7,&#13;
IfIl six days after Nixon's an-&#13;
_menl of the Cambodian inBy&#13;
BobBorchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
t1lAH HEEP - "LOOK AT&#13;
YOIJRSELF"&#13;
IItmIry SRM 1 614&#13;
IIIl Hensley - Organ, Piano,&#13;
Gtitar, Accoustical Guitar&#13;
IIId Vocals&#13;
M Box - Lead Guitar, AcI'QIlical&#13;
Guitar&#13;
~ Byron - Lead Vocal&#13;
PIlI Newson - Bass&#13;
IIiIClerk - Druns&#13;
lodIering through John&#13;
Donor'. album last .week wa~&#13;
• aperience somewhat akin&#13;
-cursion.&#13;
At first suspected of being CIA&#13;
ag~nts, the three reporters feared for&#13;
their h~es as they were led blindfolded&#13;
deeper mto the Cambodian junble, after&#13;
40 days tbey were cleared as journalists&#13;
.and sent back to their friends. Between&#13;
day number one and day number forty&#13;
they were given the opportunity to&#13;
Observ~ the "enemy" first hand, liVing&#13;
Sop/ ........ zt. Ii'll PaIrS&#13;
strategy was to bomb the hell out d the&#13;
countrySide. Hai, the North Vietnamese&#13;
revolutionary who was delegated the&#13;
responsibilily for the safety olthe three&#13;
suspected CIA agents, said that the&#13;
Americans go where they want, "We&#13;
just stay out of their way_" They drop&#13;
many bombs and hit oothing, "hen the)'&#13;
do hit something, they are of ....&#13;
peasant houses.&#13;
with tbem, ealing with them, telling&#13;
each other about their pasts and finally&#13;
coming to laugh together.&#13;
And so while we students closed the&#13;
campuses down and Kent State.became&#13;
a symbol of our national confusion&#13;
Dudman and two younger journalis~&#13;
were captives of the "enemy", liVing&#13;
off the land, and keeping their sarongs&#13;
over their heads so as not to aroUse the&#13;
wrath of peasants whose families had&#13;
been torn apart by Nixon's B52's and&#13;
helicopter gunsbips.&#13;
And what was the inside view of the&#13;
Cambodian incursion? It basically&#13;
consists of fleeing the B52s, the gunships,&#13;
watcbing the flares reflecting off&#13;
rice paddies at night, listening for reCOD&#13;
planes, and passing many boring hours&#13;
by exercising, playing chess with a&#13;
hand made set and answering interrogators'&#13;
questionsj what are you&#13;
doing here, who are you. The American&#13;
album, that's exactly what tbey&#13;
do.&#13;
Heep's sound is built basically&#13;
. around the simultaneous guitar&#13;
work of Mick Box and !Cen&#13;
Hensely, wbo if they badn't&#13;
before, have proven their worth&#13;
on both electric and sensitive&#13;
accoustic guitar. They combine&#13;
to lay a concrete background,&#13;
perfectly setting up anything&#13;
that leaves the melody for a ride&#13;
of its own, while whoever it is or&#13;
the moog takes some very interesting&#13;
~rips. He seems to be&#13;
able to use it as an instrument&#13;
The point is made that Nixon's claim&#13;
that Lon 'ol's government \loa&#13;
popularly supported is a lie. Who fed&#13;
the guerillas, the people: who sheltered&#13;
them, the people; "ho paId for the food,&#13;
the guerillas. Dodman makes one thing&#13;
perfectly clear; the guerillas are the&#13;
people's chosen aIl,es, and that unltke&#13;
the ARVN the guerillas are careful oot&#13;
to alienate the pesants.&#13;
Another ioteresting poinlbroughl out&#13;
in the book is the Viet Gong aod ,-orth&#13;
Vietnamese personal opinion that the&#13;
Cambodian Liberation Front could 001&#13;
have put up any kind of battle agalDSl&#13;
the Americans and the AR\'N with thelr&#13;
help. Hai sllys thai the Cambodians&#13;
have not been lighting for 25 years, they&#13;
have much to learn. One of the lIungs&#13;
they must learn, according to Hal,&#13;
the fact that there are good and bad&#13;
Americans, and lbat the American&#13;
government is not the same as the&#13;
Amenan people On the finl day of&#13;
thetr aptiVlly the JOumali to' apton&#13;
had to sa" e lbtm from purnw&#13;
'meBed to death by a!Cry cambodian&#13;
peasants who sur,,,ed the B52 r cis&#13;
Dudman "as trnpr ed by&#13;
guerilla d ree of cernmnm&#13;
their respect for their aU.&#13;
pelbants II" l!leir country&#13;
ere flghling for lhe AR •&#13;
ran ack d Cambod an boo&#13;
guerillas paId for the r pli&#13;
respeered the pma yof lhelf h&#13;
The lory of th r captor captl, tty&#13;
and e\ ent ua I me r &lt;Is much Ii&#13;
Iicuoo. thll~S "or out rl U)- and&#13;
the human capaCl'y for com on.&#13;
understanding and Crlendsl'llp "'. sho,.,. to be shanod t'qually among&#13;
aptor and apt"e alike E ry1lod)&#13;
a good guy It' th od5Ollltday ""'III&#13;
meet again under dlff~n1 ha pler'&#13;
Clf'OJms~nces roulln&#13;
.... Da) 'MIlch lh~ f:nem) ..an In-&#13;
...... ting bit of)OUnUl m, II by no&#13;
meam. preotenIJow. 10 • nor ~t&#13;
c:realJve Dudm-an is no .1 tl or&#13;
Wolfe he IS 52 un old, I ear&#13;
JOUrnall l "ho f"lally got the P h&#13;
was wa11Jng for Th \-an n&#13;
di\"lduals In\'oh:ed are ad qUill I)&#13;
rsonahzed I h l!lelr .dI •".&#13;
eraci . the "plot' c 01&gt; nawrally&#13;
and aU 10 all ould mak good m t for&#13;
a no,e1 Perhapo "'hat mll5t d P'&#13;
pomtmgabout I boc*: or rather ~ at&#13;
Iea,e. one unaffected, I&gt; lhe f&#13;
that thl&gt; .xaclly h t '" e&#13;
Keep the ",on! enemy In qu&#13;
au:rLt-)' r lhto 8 ,. rl. f.:! ..&#13;
tree{. I\.env ha.&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWN"f.QWN KENOSHA&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Get Together&#13;
Save4~&#13;
on Kosmetics&#13;
Exciting and&#13;
Glamorus&#13;
516 \lollulllt'llt quar&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Poor Boy BOOTS&#13;
5i••• 711-12&#13;
Poloton and Mushroom&#13;
Bulled Suck, olural&#13;
Crepe oUI-sol.&#13;
Career opportunity&#13;
Unlimited earning&#13;
potential&#13;
Flexible working&#13;
schedule&#13;
MEETING&#13;
thursday sept 23&#13;
room 110 gre.nquilt&#13;
lo_am-tPm&#13;
contact Mr. Teub.rt It&#13;
stud.nt emplOyment&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Interplanetary&#13;
Inc.&#13;
'Kosmetics for.&#13;
communities&#13;
of the future'&#13;
Musie Committee presents&#13;
CHARLIE MU.§§ELWHITE&#13;
BLUES BAND&#13;
also appearing Spri1rgbackJames&#13;
SEPTEMBER 22 1:30 PM&#13;
WM UNICN BALLROOM&#13;
Tickenlillie SfUdent Alhirs oftu:e, plln Hall&#13;
- daoo1ng a quart of maple and not a novelty. David Byron&#13;
~. Since modern medicine on vocals is stylistically&#13;
'" to devise the mental predictabie, adopting a choppy&#13;
~rt of the stomach Bee Gee's vibrato, but that can&#13;
~Ille is left to his own be overlooked for its overall&#13;
;;;;;:" to alleviate the at- effect. He's in tune, in time, and&#13;
'II . Fortunately the cure adequately covers the spect:~m&#13;
-....,hund in a double-shot of from all out hollers to sensitive&#13;
iii;""'bylabeled Mercury SRM ballads. Newton (bass) and&#13;
.... the makers of Uriah Clark (drums) do nothing to&#13;
.... gUarant,.d to remedy the stand out, but quite a few people&#13;
~ and physical distress will argue that it's preCIsely thiS&#13;
Sebb ,ton by too much Denver characteristic that marks a&#13;
Ieid ~nl or Teresa Brewer: good rhythm section. .&#13;
I,"lthout prescription. Dissecting the album song by&#13;
'- IS &amp;ratified in more ways song wouldn't serve much&#13;
'Uor~e to ,hear, Heep's latest purpose, since they're all good&#13;
~. Whlie It might be and all basically the same;, But&#13;
IIbo IZing to say that one the high point has to be One&#13;
~ro~es a trend, it July Morning", the one tun~&#13;
DlO&lt;!Jess '"stills bope in tbe the group' seems to really credit&#13;
~ ate future of rock on the liner notes. If they woul?&#13;
lbono,; g. In a time of sac- bave shaved a bit off the end It&#13;
~phOnIes, the record is would have been improved, but&#13;
"" h bul prelentious. In it still is a credit to the gro.up&#13;
lilt. thonest Simplicity they botb as writers and lOW&#13;
bow • Complicated problem strumentalists. . I&#13;
lIod to write and perform All in all, Uriah Heep ;.'I&#13;
s&#13;
'iIh ~USIC. Utilizing charts remind you happily of the Y&#13;
~I,~he notes of tbe "in- hefore the onslought of the ham&#13;
It Put glro,ups,they are free groups a time when four or hve&#13;
~. . Wlce as much 'at the very least, ~"'neted men, ld t IIid lor I energy behind it adequately amplified, cOO ge&#13;
he entire stretch of the u on sta e and raise helL 1&#13;
Two Bands F~r The Price Of One(plus a ~) Sept. 25th&#13;
52S&#13;
(eDaeap)&#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
40 Days with the Enemy&#13;
~ : . Richard Dudman&#13;
of . Liveright ($5.95).&#13;
,-bJlSher, 'th the Enemy 1s one of&#13;
It oays w\ occasionally pick out&#13;
t,o0kS bo&lt;&gt;'·~ i'd ordered hadn't ,.,p the "" . . """.ved eenie, meeru~, m1~~' a t arri , h moment's mdec1s1on .&#13;
r of t :ntributing, if not the&#13;
A other r~ctor was the length of 40&#13;
181 pages which proved to&#13;
a mere&#13;
Y • k reading.&#13;
q111: urnalism, old journalism as&#13;
AA JO to the new, where words have&#13;
,ed definitions, nuance and uon_a ry buried deep beneath the&#13;
~ 1&#13;
: the facts, stright dope! no&#13;
, -~ concrete writing. And Jour-&#13;
'. what 4o Days is all about. · IS ed til . 5 writing an extend ar c e&#13;
~ ~nd the scenes look at Tricky&#13;
, enemy, he tells a ~o ~ay story of&#13;
ever lovin A~iatlcs, them&#13;
olutionists what the ~ongols,&#13;
If' ese French, and Americans so&#13;
i'3-\1y 'left unbeaten. Can't impede&#13;
55 no way.&#13;
Ri(hard Dudman is the Washington&#13;
u chief of the St. Loui~ Disp~tch,&#13;
and two other "international Jour-&#13;
" "blundered into no man's land&#13;
_ that term can be borrowed from&#13;
old conventional wars, where battle&#13;
were well-defined, combatants&#13;
'v wore uniforms, and where most&#13;
· could agree on who were friends&#13;
ho were enemies." The date of the&#13;
JOurnalists' capture was May 7,&#13;
ix days after Nixon's anment&#13;
of the Cambodian in-&#13;
-cursion.&#13;
At first suspected of being CIA&#13;
ag~n~, the three reporters feared for&#13;
their h~es as they were led blindfolded&#13;
deeper into the Cambodian junble after&#13;
40 days they were cleared as jour~alists&#13;
.and sent back to their friends. Between&#13;
day number one and day number forty&#13;
they were given the opportunity to&#13;
observe the "enemy" first hand, living&#13;
with them, eating with them, telling&#13;
each other about their pasts and finally&#13;
coming to laugh together .&#13;
And so while we students closed the&#13;
campuses down and Kent State.became&#13;
a symbol of our national confusion&#13;
Dudman and two younger journalis~&#13;
were captives of the "enemy", living&#13;
off the land, and keeping their sarongs&#13;
over their heads so as not to arouse the&#13;
wrath of peasants whose families had&#13;
been torn apart by Nixon's B52's and&#13;
helicopter gunships.&#13;
And what was the inside view of the&#13;
Cambodian incursion? It basically&#13;
consists of fleeing the B52s, the gunships,&#13;
watching the flares reflecting off&#13;
rice paddies at night, listening for recon&#13;
planes, and passing many boring hours&#13;
by exercising, playing chess with a&#13;
hand made set and answering interrogators'&#13;
questions; what are you&#13;
doing here, who are you. The American&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
album, that's exactly what they&#13;
do.&#13;
Heep's sound is built basically l 1\11 HEEP - "LOOK AT&#13;
Yorn ELF"&#13;
ury SRM 1 614&#13;
Hensley - Organ, Piano,&#13;
G tar, Accoustical Guitar&#13;
and Vocals&#13;
. around the simultaneous guitar&#13;
work of Mick Box and l:{en&#13;
Hensely, who if they hadn_' t&#13;
before, have proven their worth&#13;
on both electric and sensitive&#13;
accoustic guitar. They combine&#13;
to lay a concrete background,&#13;
perfectly setting up anything&#13;
that leaves the melody for a ride&#13;
of its own, while whoever it is or&#13;
the moog takes some very interesting&#13;
trips. He seems to be&#13;
able to use it as an instrument&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes&#13;
Box - Lead Guitar, Actical&#13;
Guitar&#13;
vid Byron - Lead Vocal&#13;
Pl Newson - Bass&#13;
Clark - Druns&#13;
ering through John&#13;
~ r's albwn last week was&#13;
experience some:.Vhat aki~&#13;
'- downing a quart of maple&#13;
· Since modern medicine&#13;
Yet to devise the mental&#13;
lerpart of the stomach , one is left to his own&#13;
ces to alleviate the af.&#13;
te. Fortunately the cure&#13;
found in a double-shot of&#13;
1 e labeled Mercury SRM&#13;
4 by the makers of Uriah&#13;
' guarant:!ed to remedy the&#13;
lal and physical distress&#13;
ti I on by too much Denver,&#13;
v.·an. or Teresa Brewer. 1thoul prescription.&#13;
gratified in rnore ways&#13;
for~e lo _hear Heep's latest&#13;
~-~hile it might be&#13;
tung to say that one&#13;
Ill Proves a trend it&#13;
llledeless instills hope~ the&#13;
~ate future of rock&#13;
· g. In a time of sac-&#13;
. phonies, the record is&#13;
~ but ~retentious. In e lh onest simplicity they&#13;
e complicated problem lo w ·t . n e and perform rnus1c ut·1· . hau ' l 1z1ng charts&#13;
lual}he notes of the "inPut&#13;
gr~ps, they are free&#13;
tr- twice as much ~ ror '~led energy behind it&#13;
he entire stretch of the&#13;
and not a novelty. David Byron&#13;
on vocals is stylistically&#13;
predictable, adopting a choppy&#13;
Bee Gee's vibrato, but that can&#13;
be overlooked for its overall&#13;
effect. He's in tune, in time, and&#13;
adequately covers the spec~~m&#13;
from all out hollers to sensitive&#13;
ballads. Newton (bass) and&#13;
Clark ( drums) do nothing to&#13;
stand out, but quite a fe_w peop~e&#13;
will argue that it's precisely this&#13;
characteristic that marks a&#13;
good rhythm section. .&#13;
Dissecting the album song by&#13;
song wouldn't serve much&#13;
purpose, since they're all good&#13;
and all basically the same;, But&#13;
the high point has to be One&#13;
July Morning" ' the one tune&#13;
the group· seems to really credit&#13;
on the liner notes. If they wot-~&#13;
have shaved a bit off the en I&#13;
would have been improved, but&#13;
it still is a credit to the gr~up&#13;
both as writers and instrumentalists.&#13;
ill&#13;
All in all, Uriah Heep w s&#13;
remind you happily of the day&#13;
before the onslaught of the h~m&#13;
groups a time when four or five , at the very least,&#13;
:a~~ately amplified, could get&#13;
u on sta e and raise hell.&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
D Ol'iNT-OWN KENOSHA&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Get Together&#13;
Save 4&lt;1'/o&#13;
on Kosmetics&#13;
Exciting and&#13;
G/amoros&#13;
Career opportunity&#13;
Un/imitrd eanzing&#13;
potential&#13;
Flexible working&#13;
schedule&#13;
MEETING&#13;
thursday sept 23&#13;
room 110 greenquist&#13;
1 o-am-apm&#13;
contact M'· Teubert at&#13;
student employment&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Interplanetary&#13;
Inc.&#13;
'Kosmetics for .&#13;
communities&#13;
of the future'&#13;
Poor oy&#13;
SitH 1 •l2 Polo an and&#13;
Bu f d Bue&#13;
Crep ou -,o&#13;
Music Committee pr&#13;
CHARLI&#13;
LUE&#13;
(c&#13;
A&#13;
al o appearing 1Jringba&#13;
SEPTEMBER 22 7:3&#13;
WM UNION ALL&#13;
Of&#13;
Jam&#13;
A rs Ofti ce rail ent H I&#13;
Two Bands For The Price Of One(plus a ¼) Sept. 25th &#13;
Pale&amp; NEWSCOPE Seplember 20,1971&#13;
I I&#13;
All John Denver Albums&#13;
list price SS.98&#13;
our price S4.97&#13;
Available at&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE&#13;
ADVERTISERS&#13;
the&#13;
roommate&#13;
that turns&#13;
you on.&#13;
Simulated TV Picture&#13;
Slim-aod-trim Portable TV-model 5003. Photosharp&#13;
9" diagonal measure pictures. Great extra-value&#13;
leatures. Like up-front secondary controls, pre-set VH F&#13;
fine tUning. jack for optional earphone. Even a removable&#13;
sun shield lorglare-Iree viewing in brightly lighted&#13;
or sun-filled rooms. Telescoping antenna and carrying&#13;
handle give true portability. It's just one 01 many in the&#13;
Magnavox line of value-packed roommates-for home&#13;
or away. Component systems and S89&#13;
accessories.radios. tape recorder~ / 95&#13;
players. portable TV and stereo.&#13;
lWIagnav"o~&#13;
Joerndt &amp; Ventura Inc.&#13;
Downtown 'Kenosha 654·3559&#13;
thus far.&#13;
"He gives us maturity and I&#13;
Lawson said. "It's more leadership ~ ..&#13;
now but later on he'll be more vOC8\ ,&#13;
"The guys on the team respect hbn&#13;
for what he's done but also for the lJ"rsoa'*- 00Ij&#13;
What he's done is nothing short of . be il&#13;
His best for 5,000 meters is 14:10.2, "'IUal~\lreooiv,&#13;
mile in the mid 13:30~and on a par With • u...&#13;
notch collegIans. His 29:55.6 for 10000IIlost ~&#13;
came in the Asian Games and ranks hun ~&#13;
NAIA's best at that distance. And aU tha'Oilblllo&#13;
while running barefoot. t be did&#13;
But the marathon is to he his&#13;
although he's never run the 26 D1ileev:- IIId&#13;
grind, Rosa is confident. I ~&#13;
. "I'm here to prepare for the 01 '"&#13;
said. "1 think Coach Lawson can help~ _&#13;
for the marathon. I'm just trying todom.~&#13;
him." ,-.,&#13;
Rosa Paces Harriers&#13;
----....., Soccer Team Inexperienc&#13;
The Ranger's soccer game&#13;
scheduled for last Saturday was&#13;
cancelled, but Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny was not too disappointed&#13;
because four of his&#13;
players were injured.&#13;
The first game now wili be&#13;
Saturday at home against the&#13;
Wisconsin Junior All Stars, a&#13;
team which should prove quite&#13;
(ormidable.&#13;
I\l~wscope talked to Martiny&#13;
at a practice session and asked&#13;
him how practices have been so&#13;
far: "They have been good&#13;
except that there have been so&#13;
many injuries," he said.&#13;
Martiny also expressed the&#13;
Special buttons ad~ilting persons to the Oct. 6-9 ~&#13;
celebration at Parkside· are now on sale for $.50at the O8IlIaa AtWetics and through the sponsoring German ~~uba~ VlIIIIl7 •&#13;
The bultons, which are similar to the smile ~&#13;
sweeping the nation, wili admit the bearers (or wear::1iII.&#13;
toberfest activities, which include a German style wiD .. 1t&#13;
rugby match, soccer games and other events. The buttllDS ....&#13;
good for $.50 off the $1.50admission to the Saturday mght.....&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
, .d oss country prospects&#13;
IfWisconsin-parksl. e cr what one runner has&#13;
are charted on the baSIS 0 oin to be big winners&#13;
done, then tbe Rangers adreg m ~ili start to unfold&#13;
and the j-aallzation of a rea&#13;
for Lucian Ro~a. h been the number one&#13;
Ceylon native Rosa as k Is thus far and&#13;
gh all UW-P wor ou . k man throu 'letting up on the qurc&#13;
shows no sign that hh~11 ::e team leader in his first&#13;
pacethathasmade irn&#13;
season. di . utive distance phenom, a&#13;
And for the mm. d with competition -&#13;
dream that he hO':at~ ~~ the marathon at the&#13;
and posSibly a m t year might just be&#13;
Munich OlympICS nex&#13;
beginning'&#13;
thl uc director Tom Rosandich and&#13;
But a e I h Bob Lawson knew&#13;
track and crOSScountry ~oac t December when&#13;
all these things were possible las . . lng Rosaexpressed interest in parksld~ :;;e~::r~ Asian Games titles at 5,000 and 1 , ch bout ibe&#13;
"We talked with him and his C08k&#13;
'&#13;
d&#13;
a Lawson&#13;
. ilit f coming to Par SI e, possibi 1 Y 0 d th gh on it when we got&#13;
recalled. "Tom followe r~~&#13;
back and nOWRosa's here. . Rosa&#13;
The Ceylonese were anxious to have. f&#13;
attend school in the United States to tram. 0:&#13;
Munich, but Rosa, a b.usiness ~~n:~e:oe~~ ~~~Ot~&#13;
is here for the educatIOn as we a .&#13;
return to business in Ceylon when his college days&#13;
are done. hi nd what&#13;
But the big thing going for im, a&#13;
. ts trai Ing and both brought him to Parkside, IS rami, .,&#13;
Rosa and the University seem to be benefIttmg&#13;
famous&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - ,12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
_ RIBS _ SPAGHOTI - CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI _ RAViOLI - LA SAGNA&#13;
_SEA FOOD - SANDWICHES&#13;
CARlY -OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU IUHG ... WE BRING"&#13;
657·9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
And his best may be good enough10...&#13;
anything he runs in, Lawson said, allhoup..&#13;
cedin,g that hili running may causesome~&#13;
for Rosa. --&#13;
"He's never run cross country before&#13;
never run on hills," Lawson pointed 0Il~-&#13;
small (5-6, 101 lbs.) and needs a lot .............&#13;
strength." •&#13;
One thing he doesn't need work 00 ia '"-&#13;
ship .. He's found plenty of that, esJM!CiaIIJ"-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Joanis of Kl!IIOIba,&#13;
. have taken him into their home for his time:&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
need for conditioolng1DlI1II&#13;
practices so far havesened&#13;
help in this vital area.&#13;
In previeWing the IIpIlllIIioa&#13;
season Martiny predieta •&#13;
miracles. "This is II ..&#13;
perienced team IryiDg to .-&#13;
experience," he said.&#13;
Martiny termed the ....&#13;
very tough Withauch .&#13;
UW-Green Bay, OhIo ...&#13;
Notre Dame and Quiaq II II&#13;
faced. On October I VI&#13;
Madison will be played ...&#13;
In looking at the IIdIIdaII&#13;
appears that much 01tile •&#13;
perienee that thele8mIO"'"&#13;
needs will be gaIneII _&#13;
defeats.&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
Recycle this Paper&#13;
-&#13;
are you offended by nudltr'&#13;
if not, stop in.&#13;
Complete selection&#13;
dise of con~emporary adult mercbafl&#13;
SPEf'AL&#13;
The Adult. Bookstore jne&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Rae ~&#13;
15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D._&#13;
r ge ~E\\' OPE eptember .o. 1971&#13;
I I&#13;
All John Denver Albums&#13;
list price ss. 98&#13;
our price s4_ 97&#13;
Available at&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE&#13;
ADVERTISERS&#13;
the&#13;
roommate&#13;
that turns&#13;
you on.&#13;
S,mulared TV P,crure&#13;
Slim-and-trim Portable TV-model 5003. Photoharp&#13;
9• diagonal measure pictures. Great extra-value&#13;
f atures. Li e up-front secondary controls, pre-set VHF&#13;
fine tuning, jack for optional earphone. Even a removable&#13;
sun shield for glare-free viewing in brightly lighted&#13;
or sun-filled rooms. Telescoping antenna and carrying&#13;
handle give true portability. It's just one of many in the&#13;
Magnavox hne of value-packed roommates-for home&#13;
or away. Component systems and S8995&#13;
accessories. radios, tape recorders/&#13;
players, portable TV and stereo.&#13;
M e1gnc:l'-'c»~&#13;
Joerndt &amp; Ventura Inc.&#13;
Downtown ·Kenosha 654-3559&#13;
Rosa Paces Harriers . d s country prospects lfWisconsin-Parksi_ ecr:hat one runner has&#13;
are charted on the basis o oin to be big winners&#13;
done, then t~ ~ngerfs a~\~m !m start to unfold&#13;
and the reahzation o a r&#13;
for Lucian Ro~a. h been the number one Ceylon native Rosap as kouts thus far and&#13;
man through all ~- w;:tting up on the quick&#13;
shows no sign that hh~ 11 ~~ team leader in his first&#13;
'pace that has made im&#13;
season. th di ·nutive distance phenom, a And for e mi . end with competition -&#13;
dream th:3t he ho~alwill in the marathon at the&#13;
and possibly a ~ t year might just be&#13;
Munich Olympics nex&#13;
beginning.th} tic director Tom Rosandich and&#13;
But a e coach Bob Lawson knew&#13;
track and ~ross country sible last December when&#13;
all these thmgs ~ere P~. Parkside after winning&#13;
Rosa expressed mteres m O 000 meters&#13;
Asian Games titles at 5,000 an? 1 ' h about the&#13;
"We talked with him and his coac . p ksi·de Lawson ·bTt of commg to ar '&#13;
poss11led1 ir'Tom followed through on it when we got reca . ,, back and now Rosa's here. R&#13;
The Ceylonese were anxious to have. fa&#13;
attend school in the United States to tram . or&#13;
Munich but Rosa, a business mana~em~~ f:~of~&#13;
is here for the education as well an_ wo i&#13;
return to business in Ceylon when his college days&#13;
are done. h. d what But the big thing going for . ~m, an&#13;
brought him to Parkside, is trammg, and. 1&gt;?th&#13;
Rosa and the University seem to be beneflttmg&#13;
thus far .&#13;
"He gives us maturity and 1&#13;
Lawson said. "It's more leadership ~del'Ship ~&#13;
now but later on he'll be more vocal exa.n: '&#13;
"The guys on the team respect hi&#13;
for what he's done but also for the pe~ not )&#13;
What he's done is nothing short of. n he . His b~st for 5,~ meters is 14: 10.2, equ~~~ · mile m the mid 13: 30s and on a par With a&#13;
notch collegians. His 29:55.6 for 10 000 m~t ltf. came in the Asian Games and ranks hi I;!&#13;
NAIA's best at that distance. And all : With&#13;
while running barefoot. . at he&#13;
But the marathon is to be his eve&#13;
although he's never run the 26 mile ::· grind, Rosa is confident. ' )&#13;
"I'm here to prepare for the Olym .&#13;
said. "I think Coach Lawsoa can help m~lC&amp;,"&#13;
for the marathon. I'm just trying to do my~&#13;
hi m. " -&#13;
And his best may be good enough to ,&#13;
anything he runs in, Lawson said alth~&#13;
ceding that hill running may cause ~ome obi&#13;
for Rosa. pr&#13;
"He's never run cross country before nd&#13;
never run on hills," Lawson pointed oo.ta ..&#13;
small (5-6, 101 lbs.) and needs a lot of ~onllt&#13;
strength."&#13;
One thing he doesn't need work on is In&#13;
ship. He's found plenty of that, especially&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Joanis of Kenosha,&#13;
have taken him into their home for his time&#13;
~~~tQl&lt;f·Soccer Team Inexperience~&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S P_IZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHO,TI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARILY-OUTS - DELIVERY "YOU RING ... WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The Ranger's soccer game&#13;
scheduled for last Saturday was&#13;
cancelled, but Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny was not too disappointed&#13;
because four of his&#13;
players were injured.&#13;
The first game now will be&#13;
Saturday at home against the&#13;
Wisconsin Junior All Stars, a&#13;
team which should prove quite&#13;
formidable.&#13;
J'\jewscope talked to Martiny&#13;
at a practice session and asked&#13;
him how practices have been so&#13;
far: "They have been good&#13;
except that there have been so&#13;
many injuries," he said.&#13;
Martiny also expressed the&#13;
need for conditioning and&#13;
practices so far have sened&#13;
help in this vital area&#13;
In previewing the u&#13;
season Martiny predicts&#13;
miracles. "This is an&#13;
perienced team trying to&#13;
experience," he said.&#13;
Martiny termed the sch&#13;
very tough with such scoools&#13;
UW-Green Bay, Ohio la&#13;
Notre Dame and Quincy to&#13;
faced. On October 2 I:&#13;
Madison will be played also&#13;
In looking at the schedule&#13;
appears that much of the ei&#13;
perience that the teamso\t&#13;
needs will be gained&#13;
defeats.&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
Special buttons ad~itting persons to the Oct. 8-9 October! i&#13;
celebration at Parkside-are now on sale for $.50 at the Offi&#13;
_Athletics and through the sponsoring German ~!ub _a~~ Varstt)&#13;
The buttons, which are similar to the smile butt~&#13;
sweeping the nation, will admit the bearers (or wearers) to&#13;
toberfest activities which include a German style cele~&#13;
rugby match socce~ games and other events. The buttons \I a&#13;
good for $.50 ~ff the $1.50 admission to the Saturday night danceai&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Recycle this Paper&#13;
are you offended by nudity'I&#13;
ii not, stop in.&#13;
di Complete selection of con~emporary adult merchan&#13;
SPECIAL 15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore . Racu1e 406 Main Street Downtown &#13;
-&#13;
r&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
Meets&#13;
Parkside's Hockey Club&#13;
begins practice at 10: 15 p&#13;
~esday at Wilson park-%&#13;
MIlwaukee. All students&#13;
invited to attend practice&#13;
contact !om Krimmel at 552.&#13;
=~&#13;
8634 or VIC Godfrey at 553-2310 if&#13;
mter~ted in joining.&#13;
ThIrty-five students have&#13;
alre~dy joined the club and are&#13;
lookmg forward to the first&#13;
game N.ov. 6 against Harper&#13;
College In Joliet, Ill. The first&#13;
home game is slated for Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 14, against&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
All home games are played at&#13;
WIlson Park, 4001 S. 20th St&#13;
Milwaukee.'&#13;
Ocloberfest Golf Tourna ment Pia nned&#13;
I....and golf, normally _I 01 as sports for the&#13;
. e have found their&#13;
~p~kside in this fall's&#13;
~"I activities.&#13;
!IJl1I3!1lentswill be held&#13;
..., u"se days in each sport&#13;
II' ~CIIlty,staff and students,&#13;
.. men and women.&#13;
A studenttennis tournam~nt&#13;
be held at the Pershing&#13;
rwt courts in Racine Friday,&#13;
Iktllrom 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
II'ltUdents.&#13;
I faculty·sUlff tournament&#13;
foUowduring the same time&#13;
I""'! Saturday. Only singles&#13;
IIpannedbut doubles will be&#13;
)llyol d time permits. Contact&#13;
b£i Freeka in Racme or VIC&#13;
Godfreyat the Office of.&#13;
lIIIotics, phone 553-2310, for&#13;
--lr&gt;lflooroament will be held&#13;
ana that week. Eighteen&#13;
.... are to be played at the&#13;
Pllrilying Springs Course&#13;
IIIInon Friday, Oct. 1, and&#13;
rnday, Oct. 8. Scores must be&#13;
.m to by a partner and&#13;
InId 10 by 4 p.m. Friday.&#13;
Golfers must sign up for&#13;
flights before playing. The&#13;
flights are "A", for male&#13;
students under 99; "B", for&#13;
male students over 90; "C", for&#13;
female students; "D", for&#13;
faculty-staff men under 90;&#13;
"E", for faculty-staff men over&#13;
90; "F", for faculty-staff&#13;
women. Contact Vic Godfrey or&#13;
Steve Stephens at Athletics for&#13;
details.&#13;
Other intramural activities&#13;
include archery competition on&#13;
Friday and a sailing regatta&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The Parkside Rugby Club will&#13;
play Lincoln Park at 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 26. Lincoln Park&#13;
started rugby in 1969 as a&#13;
member of the Mid-American&#13;
Rugby Football Union.&#13;
All those interested in joining&#13;
the Parkside club contact Vic&#13;
Godfrey at 553-2310 or assembie&#13;
at the athletics fleld at 4:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday or&#13;
Thursday or 2 p.m. Sunday. The&#13;
team will play the Milwaukee&#13;
Rugby Club at 1 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
Oct. 9.&#13;
------ schedule _•••• -&#13;
ldabafest golf tournament&#13;
F.. men and women&#13;
hculty, staff, students&#13;
\I holes to be played at&#13;
Petn!ymgSpringsfrom Friday,&#13;
I. through Friday, Oct. 8.&#13;
IlIdine£orreporting scores is&#13;
Fnday, Oct. 8, at 4 p.m. Scores&#13;
:- be attested to by a part-&#13;
~ Sign'up in advance in-&#13;
~ night. Call Vic Godfrey&#13;
at 553-2310 for more information.&#13;
Flights:&#13;
A - male students under 90&#13;
B - male students over 90&#13;
C - female students&#13;
D _ faculty-staff men under&#13;
90&#13;
E _ faculty-staff men over 90&#13;
F - faculty-staff women&#13;
Turn scorecards in by 4 p.m.&#13;
frid.ay! ! ! !&#13;
.",pl&#13;
Remember&#13;
Octoberfest&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658·3131&#13;
LIQUOR' STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Hill Kruel1er's&#13;
Jlowers&#13;
3113 WASHINGTON AVENUE:&#13;
R....CINE. WISCONSIN 5'.05&#13;
...-1 NEED HELPIII&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TillE&#13;
525 GUIUI.d Itl ... ry 100 .... 1.'"&#13;
y.. stl«&#13;
All ,"taC' 'I.,a,~&#13;
S"~sIam,d, SlIf_"~lessd IInl.,.&#13;
pllS 51 f.1 IIclstnllll ud ba ~-&#13;
linc I.&#13;
AllEN KING CORPORATIO&#13;
P.O, BOX &amp;525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212&#13;
~e\\O&#13;
w~would lik. 1o&#13;
invit you to see ~TH:~~~1&#13;
1 Pants I&#13;
I P I&#13;
I anly I&#13;
I H I&#13;
lose I&#13;
IR'fSI99 I&#13;
I o· I' I&#13;
1.llocool&#13;
I I I s .tI ...&#13;
I oil t •• 0 .p ,&#13;
IL liP ...... '&#13;
IE' 9-16 - I I&#13;
-------&#13;
Heads &amp; Threads&#13;
.I") ...,.••&#13;
w....&#13;
Opt ""''''' ... f ••&#13;
, n 1 .. -Ml ...&#13;
(&#13;
[IJS COPE prHuts&#13;
TWO BANDS&#13;
I&#13;
-r----&#13;
5,,-+.. ,. J,""l'&#13;
5 &lt;f +C ~ b.r 2.5~&#13;
8f..!:o-1~&#13;
...+ 6'+~~.""J /'IJ,-&#13;
P- r;d '" W:S,J:·D.'f I"e~.&#13;
l'OGrMnBoyRoo4,K ., KO 'Pu'm--'--"&#13;
{6; $ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVEl&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
~sh&amp;~rry&#13;
ROYAL TRITO&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10 20'11)4'11&#13;
10W-20W·)4W 34c ptr q rl&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
120Z HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
. Cas/lon4 Corry fltlctson on Flit.,..,&#13;
Air Fllltrs. Tun. Up Is, $pork Plugs&#13;
All 11tm~ Sublecl 10' Per &lt;:en Sol.. Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - S.AVE&#13;
Ii"&#13;
ijctoberfest Golf Tournament Pia nned&#13;
. and golf, normally&#13;
t of as sports for the&#13;
e have found their&#13;
at p~kside in this fall's&#13;
est activities.&#13;
tllfllaments will be held&#13;
tl~se days in each sport&#13;
tr farulty, staff and students,&#13;
men and women.&#13;
udenl tennis tournament&#13;
be held at the Pershing&#13;
coorts in Racine Friday,&#13;
a,from9a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
ents.&#13;
faculty-staff tournament&#13;
Uow during the same time&#13;
Saturday. Only singles&#13;
panned but doubles will be&#13;
if time permits. Contact&#13;
· Frecka in Racine or Vic&#13;
rey at the Office of .&#13;
, phone 553-2310, for&#13;
If tournament will be held&#13;
that week. Eighteen&#13;
are to be played at the&#13;
1f)'lng Springs Course&#13;
n Friday, Oct. 1, and&#13;
y, Oct. 8. Scores must be&#13;
ed to by a partner and&#13;
m by 4 p.m. Friday.&#13;
Golfers must sign up for&#13;
flights before playing. The&#13;
flights are "A", for male&#13;
students under 99; "B", for&#13;
male students over 90; "C", for&#13;
female students; "D", for&#13;
faculty-staff men under 90;&#13;
"E", for faculty-staff men over&#13;
90; "F", for faculty-staff&#13;
women. Contact Vic Godfrey or&#13;
Steve Stephens at Athletics for&#13;
details.&#13;
Other intramural activities&#13;
include archery competition on&#13;
Friday and a sailing regatta&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The Parkside Rugby Club will&#13;
play Lincoln Park at 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 26. Lincoln Park&#13;
started rugby in 1969 as a&#13;
member of the Mid-American&#13;
Rugby Football Union.&#13;
All those interested in joining&#13;
the Parkside club contact Vic&#13;
Godfrey at 553-2310 or assemble&#13;
at the athletics field at 4: 30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday or&#13;
Thursday or 2 p.m. Sunday. The&#13;
team will play the Milwaukee&#13;
Rugby Club at 1 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
Oct. 9.&#13;
•••••• schedule -····&#13;
est golf tournament&#13;
men and women&#13;
It,. staff, students&#13;
hole· to be played at&#13;
U)mgSprings from Friday,&#13;
1, through Friday, Oct. s. ne for reporting scores is&#13;
'1, Oct. 8, at 4 p.m. Scores&#13;
be attested to by a part-&#13;
\ ·ign up in advance inflight.&#13;
Call Vic Godfrey&#13;
at 553-2310 for more information.&#13;
&#13;
Flights:&#13;
A - male students under 90&#13;
B - male students over 90&#13;
C - female students&#13;
D - faculty-staff men under&#13;
90&#13;
E - faculty-staff men over 90&#13;
F - faculty-staff women&#13;
Turn scorecards in by 4 p.m.&#13;
Frid_ay! ! ! !&#13;
r&#13;
1 CW SC OPE rre~._11ts&#13;
TWO BANDS&#13;
I&#13;
'(---&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
Meets&#13;
P~rkside's Hockey Club&#13;
begins practice at 10: 15 p.m.&#13;
~~day at Wilson Park in&#13;
. I _waukee. All students are&#13;
invited to attend practice and&#13;
contact !om Krimmel at 552.&#13;
~ 4 or Vic ~odfrey at 553-2310 if&#13;
inter~ted in joining.&#13;
Thirty-five students ha&#13;
alre~dy joined the club and a~&#13;
looking forward to the fir&#13;
game N_ov. 6 against Harper&#13;
College m Joliet, Ill. Tbe firs&#13;
home game is lated for unday,&#13;
Nov. 14, again t&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
All home games are plaved at&#13;
Wilson Park 4001 s 20th 1&#13;
Milwaukee. ' '&#13;
, I 11&#13;
Remember&#13;
October e&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658·3131&#13;
LIQUOR° STORE, SAR, DI I G OOM&#13;
Rill Krueger's&#13;
1/owcrs&#13;
3113 WASHINGTON AVE VE&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN !1340&#13;
PHON~· 637-94591&#13;
s "'"'t,.. ,,. Jo. 1,&#13;
S&lt;f+i:f"Y\hU 25-&#13;
B~ -1M&lt;&#13;
"'+ 0t~~ -~ct- tlJ,-&#13;
p_ riJ ~ W:s,J: D's r"tj•&#13;
.---1&#13;
SERVE YOU&#13;
ROYAL RI 0&#13;
QUA ER S A E&#13;
PE ZOil&#13;
AFSCO .0.&#13;
ED&#13;
Fl&#13;
LS&#13;
Q . ,0 . JO I&#13;
PER A E T TYPE A fl.FREEZE S1&#13;
12oz. HEAVY DUTY BRA E FLUID&#13;
d carry Prices on&#13;
Air FIi rs, T e I ,,&#13;
A 11 J Sub K 0~ Ce&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
1 &#13;
....e. sr."'" 21. 1171&#13;
RANCH'S IANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
80c ~r.., HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
~ BIG TOP Creamy hat fudge ave&lt;&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream ond&#13;
fresh strawberries. whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry&#13;
75c&#13;
70c&#13;
SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD'&#13;
~ORTH 331' SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
The Dime Beerl&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
\&#13;
A II 10 oz muas of beer&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
LUNCHEON SPECIAL \&#13;
Mon_Frl&#13;
A II vou e en e at&#13;
$ 99&#13;
Flut 1001.. beer&#13;
$.01 per oz.&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN' KENOSHA&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
For '-.e - '63 v.«. $275.00. 350f&#13;
w .... 1ngton Ro.s. Kenolha.&#13;
,.., 0....,. (01\'.. wry good ",echo&#13;
__...... cyl .•• uto. pwr ..... Ing&#13;
SUD·ull "'-JAl2.&#13;
1Mt HilIftCII; 17SCe SCtambl.... Ex.&#13;
c:on4. SGS. Includn 2 helmets. CAli Ed. 639""".&#13;
1M2 Wc": 2 dr h.,.dtop, 1250. call&#13;
~ or 6J3..2791.&#13;
lflI RIlmb. American. ~.b1.-&#13;
rustle. anel cheep.~. J209 -lIrTh St.&#13;
196G Ramb. Amerle-n. Dependebte.&#13;
170. 1209 . 21th SI.• KenoMl.&#13;
\970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr .. H.a·&#13;
toP. V -I, Automatic. power stHt"lng.&#13;
.,.......&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
Quality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SK IRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
tfUNDREDS OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S Stt1ARTWEAR&#13;
3120 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
V illage Pioneers&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
V"illage.&#13;
"We're trying to make a complex here&#13;
that's going to be oriented for students .. he&#13;
continued. '&#13;
"We are looking forward to putting a h'&#13;
lake on this property. We will also ha~&#13;
swimming pools and tennis courts. We're 0 t&#13;
here to build just one complex. we're here ~&#13;
build 1,000 units.&#13;
"We're trying to bring the student into&#13;
an area where he .can get. acquainted and&#13;
have the type of living that ID our estimation&#13;
wiU create men and women of good caliber ..&#13;
Is Parkside Village creating men ~&#13;
women of good caliber? You'd have to ask&#13;
the Parkside Vil1age Pioneers.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Raci['le ,/&#13;
1C:;' . . .&#13;
.3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633·35~&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
" ~- 213 SixTH STREET RACINE&#13;
....,&#13;
Hustl •• brut. this season ... heavy. handsome&#13;
IKKIhurly-burly on • sensational wood-y heel.&#13;
Pure big-heert8d fun i. O.rk Brown antiqued&#13;
.. ether uppen. and Peanut Brown smooth, $iB&#13;
Boughf and sold&#13;
(we buy and $ell)&#13;
A little out of "WIy,&#13;
but ..... .,&#13;
MCFarland, AIt, aiiii&#13;
7904 WASHINOTO;-&#13;
AVENUE RACial&#13;
BY TH E UNDU'AII&#13;
Open Daily 9:30 a.m.·5:30 p.m.&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday 'til 9 p.m.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week. 7: 45-4:30. Call 5£)-2415.&#13;
connie·&#13;
1963 Buick For SIlIe - .. barrel 4A2'&#13;
11"IO. In GOOd cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floOr. 8odYJDgoocI condo For sale A.t&#13;
WO. ALSO&#13;
"bWreI QI.... cwb Md bottom piece&#13;
tor only 13Q.OOt.ke It. Call 633-07U 7&#13;
10 p.m. Redne.&#13;
----&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc&#13;
Ntotorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing. Phon.e 654·8710 - or&#13;
Newscopeoffice. Leave messagefor&#13;
Rick Pazera..&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
- PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling piUSthe right. Phone 1-&#13;
. 352·4050_&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
1967 Austln·Healey 3CIOO, Aft .. sp.m&#13;
539-2«)7 (Burlington).&#13;
..... Ford Torino 3U1·VB. LOw mil.&#13;
Automatic. power steering. Radio,&#13;
Heater, 652-n.-s, see at 5234 - ~&#13;
Ave. 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
650 Triumph T_T. rebuilt enqlne,&#13;
lace paint on frame and talk, 2&#13;
hefmets. S8OO.00orbest offer. See at&#13;
5723 - 40th Ave.&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs some clutch 'NOrk, $250.00.&#13;
MA·Dlf71.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3suitcases, very good condo$25.Call&#13;
654-27Q.t.&#13;
For II Good night's sleep -&#13;
Wa;ftrbeds. 3701. 60th street. Cail&#13;
654-940_&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us ar&#13;
offer. call 654-462.&#13;
Otlcago - casette tape fo trade for&#13;
'NOrklng tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Cali 633-3836.&#13;
PubliC Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
SUde Rule $10.00. Cail 553-2345.&#13;
Skis Mens. including poles and&#13;
boots. 553-22A5.&#13;
~;~.$5.ao,Steam Iron $5.00. Cail&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and WOOds&#13;
1346 new will sell for $2"5. '&#13;
Legalize Marlj uana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. SOc. donation. Be at Student&#13;
Activities BUilding Wed. .&#13;
Stereo CompOnentSystem 60 watt&#13;
amPlifier, t ....nta~le. 2 ~PNkerS&#13;
Nevlng, must seU.$50. Ph. 6S2-OO79~&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book 9'l&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva. ";I~:&#13;
- =-&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
winemaklng. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and can.etope and plums. 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632·3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
VOlkswagen - Good conaltlon and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses. call Kurt, 551.9429.&#13;
LU&#13;
Septem~r Z , 1911&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT ' S SCR U MPTIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
er om, 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
911 SHE IOA ROAD SOUTH 7500 SH E RI DA ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Mon-Fri&#13;
11 ou can at&#13;
S ·99&#13;
t 10oz. b&#13;
s .Ol pe r oz.&#13;
WEDNE SDAY NIGHT&#13;
I&#13;
A ll 10 oz mu es of beer&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
O N 30 TH A V ENUE IN' KENOSHA&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
ouality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SKIRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
HUNDREDS Of BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWEAR&#13;
3120 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Village Pioneers&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Village. "We're trying to make a complex here&#13;
that's going to be oriented for students " he&#13;
continued. '&#13;
"We are looking forward to putting ab.&#13;
lake o~ this property. ~e will also ha~!&#13;
swimmmg pools and tenms courts. We're n t&#13;
here to build j~t one complex, we're here~&#13;
build 1,000 umts.&#13;
"We're trying to bring the student into&#13;
an area where h_e _can get_ acquainted and&#13;
have the type of hvmg that m our estimation&#13;
will create men and women of good caliber ,,&#13;
Is Parkside Village creating men a~d&#13;
women of good caliber? You'd have to ask&#13;
the Parkside Village Pioneers.&#13;
sought and sold&#13;
(We buy and sell)&#13;
·A little out of 1ht ... but wott1i '&#13;
7904 WASHING;;&#13;
AVENUE RAC~ E&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
Open Daily 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday 'til 9 p.m.&#13;
Hustle a brute this season ... heavy, handsome&#13;
and hurly-burly on a sensational wood-y heel.&#13;
Pure big-hearted fun in Dark Brown antiqued&#13;
leather uppers, and Peanut Brown smooth, $18&#13;
conn1e· DOWNTOWN&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
For Salt - '6.l v.w. $275.00. 3509&#13;
W-.n ngton Ro.i. Kenosh•.&#13;
1961 Cht'{, cori.O .. very good mech . "1•pe. 6 cyl., •uto. pwr st..,.lng&#13;
S150 • U II 159 2'12.&#13;
lttt Hl:lnct. 175cc Scr•mbltf". Ex&#13;
cond , IQS, k\cludn 2 helm.ts. c.11&#13;
Ed , 639 .'9«),&#13;
1"1 841 ck 2 dr h•rdtop, $250. C.11&#13;
6l4'4C5 or 6.33 2791,&#13;
R mb Amer I~. Depen°dabl• .&#13;
r Ile. 1na cl\tlC). w:.. J209 • am St.&#13;
196.l Buick For Sale - 4 barrel .u2&#13;
.,g. In oood cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floor . Body Jn gooc1 cond. For Sale At&#13;
$250. ALSO&#13;
4 barrel Chev. cwb 11nd bottom piece&#13;
tor only $30.00 t•tw It. ca11 633-0784 1&#13;
10 p.m. Racine.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing . Phone 654-8770 . or&#13;
Newscope office. Leave message tor&#13;
Rick Pazera.&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
. PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling plus the right. Phone 1-&#13;
. 352-4050.&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
1967 Austin-Healey 3000, After !Ii p.m&#13;
539-2407 (&amp;wllngton).&#13;
1968 Ford Torino JU2-V8. Low mll.&#13;
Automatic, power sreerlng, RadiO, Heater-, 652-n45, see at 5234 . "4th&#13;
Ave. 6;00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impala Super- Sport 327, After&#13;
-4 :30 p.m., 3022 . 23rd Ave.&#13;
Y• maha 350 RS, 1971, Exe. C.Ond. 6S4-572-4, Eve.&#13;
6M Triumph T.T. rebuilt eoqine,&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
helmets, S800.00 or best offer. See at&#13;
5723 . -40th Ave.&#13;
Honda " 150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
eeds some clutch W'Ork, $250.00. 63-4-087 1.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FORSALE&#13;
3 suitcases, very good cond. $25. Call&#13;
65,4. 270-4.&#13;
For II Good night's sleep - Water beds. 3701 • 60th street. Call&#13;
654-94'7.&#13;
Hand Painted mil k cans. Make us er off er. Call 654-4862.&#13;
Ollcago - casette tape to trade tor&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc. Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Cell 633-3836.&#13;
Public Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Oleck&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Sllde Rule Sl0.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis - Mens, incluellng poles and&#13;
boots. 553-2245.&#13;
Toaster '5.00, Steam Iron $5 oo Call&#13;
553-2345. ' '&#13;
Golt Clubs Full set irons and woods&#13;
S346 new will sell for S2-45. '&#13;
Legalize MarlJ uana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. 50c donation . Be at Student&#13;
Activities Building Wed. ·&#13;
Stereo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
ll(llPllfier, turntable, 2 speakers&#13;
Moving, must sell. SSO. Ph . 6S2-0079:&#13;
BROWSE - Breaclloat Book Sh&#13;
~1 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, ,,:i~'.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75. 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
Shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 654-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire &amp; rim S1, File&#13;
boxes Sl &amp; S1.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
C.Olt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
Disp. Call 5J1-7161 aft. -4 p,m.&#13;
2 Bedroom House, Parks,oe area,&#13;
Liv . R., Dining Room· .comb.,&#13;
Fftplace,' over one acre land, 552- 901-2. ·&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and_&#13;
winemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums. 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-378S or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen - Good conaltion and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, 551-9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week, 7:45-4:30. Call _553-241S.&#13;
HELP WANTE0-2Sp9\&#13;
pl ayers work in PIZZI 1M&#13;
551-8906 or stop In and•• </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63432">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 3, September 20, 1971</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63433">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63434">
                <text>1971-09-20</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="63437">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63438">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63439">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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                <text>Text</text>
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              <text>Dearborn Assumes New Position</text>
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              <text>"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Volume 5 Number 2 September 13,1971&#13;
Dearborn Assumes New Position&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn was named Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside in a change of status&#13;
action approved Friday by the UW Board^ of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Dearborn has served as Dean of Students since&#13;
UW-Parkside obtained its first students by&#13;
assuming administrative control of the former&#13;
two-year UW Centers in Kenosha and Racine in&#13;
July, 1968. The following year UW-P opened its&#13;
new campus between the two cities.&#13;
As an Assistant Cahncellor, Dearborn will&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn, the newly appointed&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Student Services at&#13;
Parkside. Dearborn also will continue in his&#13;
present position of Dean of Students.&#13;
assume new and expanded responsibilities in the&#13;
area of student services. The directors of Admissions,&#13;
Auxiliary Enterprises, Financial Aids,&#13;
School and Campus Relations, as well es the&#13;
Registrar, will report directly to him. Dearborn&#13;
will continue to assume the responsibilities of the&#13;
Dean of Students position.&#13;
As UW-P's first Dean of Students, Dearborn&#13;
successfully directed development of a student&#13;
affairs program for what has been the state's&#13;
fastest growing campus each of its first three&#13;
years. Despite a start-up situation where&#13;
physical facilities do not keep pace with growing&#13;
enrollment, UW-Parkside has fashioned a&#13;
program of student activities which is attracting&#13;
increasing attention from more mature campuses.&#13;
&#13;
Dearborn's experience spans both private and&#13;
public higher education, secondary education,&#13;
and private industry. Before coming to UWParkside,&#13;
he earned a reputation as an&#13;
imaginative and energetic administrator at the&#13;
UW Center System's Waukesha County Campus,&#13;
where he was Assistant Dean and Director of&#13;
Student Affairs from 1966 to 1968. Before that he&#13;
served for a year as Dean of S tudent Affairs at&#13;
Milton College, where he had received his undergraduate&#13;
degree in 1949.&#13;
Dearborn left private industry in 1961 to&#13;
become Director of Student Activities for the&#13;
West Bend public schools. During 1963-64 he was&#13;
Guidance Director and taught at Random Lake&#13;
high school, then joined the UW Extension&#13;
Division at Madison as a counselor for one year&#13;
before accepting the Milton post.&#13;
Dearborn was born in Janesville, and attended&#13;
high school in Wisconsin Dells. He earned his&#13;
Master's degree in Counseling from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, where he is a doctoral&#13;
candidate in Higher Education Administration.&#13;
He is married to the former Edna Loofboro, of&#13;
Reedsburg, and is the father of tw o sons, Daniel,&#13;
23, a senior at UW-P currently on active duty&#13;
with the Army Reserve, and David, 17. The&#13;
Dearborns reside in Racine.&#13;
— Newscope In terview&#13;
Sonny &amp; Cher page ^&#13;
&lt;&#13;
X&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
It)&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
ir&#13;
tr&#13;
tu&#13;
Parkside Village&#13;
Nears Completion&#13;
by Larry Jones&#13;
of th e Newscope staff&#13;
Parkside Village is nearing&#13;
completion ... at last.&#13;
All students who have already&#13;
signed leases to live in the new&#13;
student apartment complex,&#13;
located just south of Tallent&#13;
Hall on the east side of Wood&#13;
Road, will be in their completed&#13;
apartments by the end of&#13;
September, according to Mrs.&#13;
Sharyn Ribecky, the owners&#13;
representative in charge of&#13;
rentals.&#13;
As of now, Global Business&#13;
and Residential Centers, Inc.,&#13;
owner of the complex, is&#13;
providing free housing for more&#13;
than 24 students at the Holiday&#13;
Inn, and for ten students in&#13;
partially completed units at the&#13;
site. These include students&#13;
from California, Illinois, and all&#13;
areas of Wisconsin. In addition,&#13;
Mrs. Ribecky said that many&#13;
students are continuing to&#13;
commute until their places are&#13;
ready.&#13;
The Village, which will&#13;
contain 66 units for single&#13;
students and 22 for married&#13;
students and faculty (each&#13;
capable of housing at least four&#13;
people), was supposed to be&#13;
ready for occupancy by September&#13;
1st. However, the&#13;
project has been plagued from&#13;
its outset by numerous setbacks.&#13;
&#13;
According to Ribecky, Global&#13;
began negotiations for the&#13;
purchase of the land early in the&#13;
year, with May 1st as the target&#13;
date for the start of con-&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
After a hundred years of q uantitative&#13;
values, of measuring by number, of&#13;
turning schools into assembly lines, the&#13;
old agrarian values of i ndividual worth&#13;
and independence are returning to the&#13;
American scene. Typified by sensitivity&#13;
groups and other personal encounter&#13;
experiences it is becoming more and&#13;
more aparent that the virtue of conformity&#13;
and regimentation may not be&#13;
Art&#13;
the best way to acculturate children&#13;
into the society.&#13;
One chink in this wall of conformity&#13;
called education is the Creative Art&#13;
Workshop in Kenosha. Set up and&#13;
operated by Mrs. Suellyn Scoon and&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth Diamon, they teach art&#13;
with an eye on the overall personality&#13;
development of the child. It is one of the&#13;
goals of the American education&#13;
system, but one that is met only coincidentally.&#13;
There are simply too many&#13;
students, spending too little time, with&#13;
too few teachers to really be affected in&#13;
a positive way by art education.&#13;
As opposed to the inadequacies of the&#13;
school system, the workshop depends&#13;
on a close relationship with the child in&#13;
order to insure each one the optimum&#13;
attention while focusing on developing&#13;
each child's individual creative&#13;
potential for self-expression..&#13;
"The way the public school systems&#13;
are handling art, the child's innate&#13;
creativity, which every child has no&#13;
matter what the circumstances ... the&#13;
essence of that creativity is fairly well&#13;
destroyed by the time he gets into the&#13;
third grade, because, in the public&#13;
schools conformity is stressed — you&#13;
must do exactly as the other thirty kids&#13;
in the class, otherwise, it's no good."&#13;
Mrs. Diamon said.&#13;
The workshop, which began during&#13;
the summer with four classes of fifteen&#13;
children between the ages of five and&#13;
fifteen, grew out of the women's mutual&#13;
interest in art and art education. Both&#13;
are art students at Parkside, each has&#13;
taught art in the past, and spurred on&#13;
by the development of Harbor West,&#13;
they felt that there was a need for an&#13;
alternative to what they regard as&#13;
programs destructive to children.&#13;
They blamed the problems of the&#13;
public schools on economics and the&#13;
sheer volume of children that attend&#13;
classes. There is a shortage of&#13;
materials and one teacher assigned to&#13;
all the grades in two elementary&#13;
schools, making any real personal&#13;
attention remote at best. "I talked with&#13;
some of the teachers," Mrs. Scoon&#13;
said, "and they said that they never&#13;
learn any of the children's names."&#13;
The fundamental philosophical&#13;
difference between the workshop and&#13;
the schools is basic, and therefore&#13;
difficult to change.&#13;
"You could do the same thing with&#13;
the basic tenents of the art education&#13;
program as it is now if you change your&#13;
life style and your thinking style to the&#13;
point where it is the child who is important&#13;
rather than the product he's&#13;
going to turn out at the end of a given&#13;
period of time," Mrs. Diamon explained.&#13;
&#13;
In practice the workshop offers the&#13;
child more freedom of expression and a&#13;
greater variety of media to work with.&#13;
But the freedom they give the child is&#13;
not the chaos you might expect.&#13;
"In a structured class the teacher&#13;
tells the children that there is a right&#13;
way and a wrong way," Mrs. Diamon&#13;
noted. "We tell them 'there's your way,&#13;
but be ready to defend it and- tell us&#13;
why.' They are especially attracted by&#13;
the idea that a tree does'not necessarily&#13;
have to look like a tree, it can be the&#13;
idea of a tree or the way they feel when&#13;
they see it."&#13;
The summer classes were held&#13;
outdoors at Marytown on Kenosha's&#13;
southwest side with more than one&#13;
purpose in mind. Both women were&#13;
interested more in increasing the&#13;
child's powers of observation and&#13;
understanding then in developing artists.&#13;
"One of our goals is to get the&#13;
children to critique themselves. They&#13;
have to relate verbally to what they do,&#13;
to be able to defend what they do," Mrs.&#13;
Scoon explained. "In the public school I&#13;
think they're told that this is what you&#13;
do; in our school we sit around and talk&#13;
about what they do."&#13;
The classes were divided into two&#13;
parts; four weeks were devoted to work&#13;
with two dimensional media, drawing&#13;
and painting, and four weeks were&#13;
spent on three dimensional work such&#13;
as scuplture. "We had five year olds&#13;
doing stone and metal sculpture, media&#13;
they've never used before, and this in&#13;
itself excited them," she said.&#13;
"That's one of the fallacies of the&#13;
public ^school program," Mrs. Diamon&#13;
observed. "Children do not have to be a&#13;
specified age to do a specific project.&#13;
Obviously a five year old's motor&#13;
control is not going to be as great as a&#13;
fifteen year old's, but he is less conditioned&#13;
as to what he should and should&#13;
not do than the fifteen year old, so he&#13;
may be tremendously more expressive&#13;
in what he does."&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
Workshop Promotes C reativity &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE September 13,1971&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will help any woman regardless&#13;
of race, religion, age or financial&#13;
st atus. We do not moralize, but&#13;
merely help women obtain qualified&#13;
Doctors for abortions, if this is&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early abortion is mor e&#13;
simple and less costly, and can be&#13;
performed on an out patient ba sis.&#13;
3*12 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Assistance of Chicago 1&#13;
8 AM-10 PM—7 DAYS&#13;
A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION&#13;
E3&#13;
Get Ac qu ai nt ed Offe r&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SHELL&#13;
W A SHI NGT ON R O AD&#13;
&amp; 3 0 TH A V E.&#13;
6 5 4 - 9 9 6 8&#13;
ON THE JOB — On hand for the beginning of classes this week&#13;
were The University of Wisconsin-Parkside's two new top administrators,&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Otto F. Bauer (center) and Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society Eugene L. Norwood (right), shown&#13;
discussing UW-P's academic plan with Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie.&#13;
Bauer came to Parkside from Bowling Green (Ohio) State University&#13;
where he was Assistant Vice President of Student Affairs. Norwood&#13;
was Acting Dean of UW-Milwaukee's Graduate School.&#13;
Bus Schedule Posted&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
*21*3 SIXTH STREET RACINE&#13;
-&#13;
r&#13;
^w&#13;
Intercity Bus Schedule&#13;
1971-72&#13;
7:25 a.m. - Leaves Racine •&#13;
Arrives Kenosha 7:55 a.m.&#13;
7:30 a.m. - Leaves Kenosha •&#13;
Arrives Racine 7:55 a.m.&#13;
• Bus will make a stop at the&#13;
Tallent Hall Parking Lot&#13;
8:00 a.m. - Bus Leaves Racine&#13;
Arrives Tallent - 8:30 a.m.&#13;
8:22 a.m. to Greenquist&#13;
8:25 a.m. to Tallent&#13;
8:30 a.m. to Kenosha&#13;
8:00 a.m. - Bus Leaves Kenosha&#13;
Arrives Tallent - 8 :15 a.h.&#13;
8:20 a.m. to Greenquist&#13;
8:25 a.m. to Tallent&#13;
PIZZAf&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 p.m.—12::00 a.m.&#13;
5021 - 30th Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
X *&#13;
==&#13;
KE NOS HA - R A C I N E&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
LETTER TO THE EDITOR&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Please permit me to expres&#13;
mv deepest thanks to the&#13;
PARKSIDE FAMILY, the&#13;
Chancellor, Administration&#13;
Faculty, Staff, Nurse, and&#13;
Students for their kindness and&#13;
help to me through heart&#13;
surgery. To the Blood Donors&#13;
those who wrote letters and&#13;
cards, called, sent flowers and&#13;
telegrams, to those who so&#13;
kindly helped me before and&#13;
after surgery, I express my&#13;
sincerest thanks. With the help&#13;
and prayers of all, I feel that I&#13;
was able to come through.&#13;
Thank you very much.&#13;
Prof. M. deC. Nachlas, Ph.D.&#13;
Shirer Named New Director&#13;
Of Public Information&#13;
Walter Shirer was named&#13;
Director of Public Information&#13;
and Publication at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
in a change of status&#13;
action approved Friday by the&#13;
UW Board of Regents.&#13;
Shirer replaces Bruce&#13;
Weston, who has accepted a&#13;
position as Associate Director&#13;
of Development at Stephens&#13;
College, Columbia, Mo.&#13;
Shirer, 33, has been a&#13;
specialist in the UW-P public&#13;
information and publications&#13;
office since the new university&#13;
opened in 1968. He has been with&#13;
the University six years, having&#13;
joined the UW Center System in&#13;
1965 as public information&#13;
coordinator at the former twoyear&#13;
Kenosha Center and&#13;
journalism instructor at both&#13;
the Kenosha and Racine Centers.&#13;
&#13;
After taking his undergraduate&#13;
degree in journalism&#13;
at UW-Madison, SHirer&#13;
worked three years on the&#13;
Waukesha Daily Freeman. He&#13;
left an editorship on the Daily&#13;
Freeman to take graduate work&#13;
in journalism and public&#13;
relations at the Madison&#13;
campus before joining the&#13;
Center System in 1965. At&#13;
Madison, he worked in editorial&#13;
capacities for UW News Service&#13;
and University Extension.&#13;
Shirer is a native of Middletown,&#13;
Ohio, attended high&#13;
school in Green Bay, and served&#13;
three years military service in&#13;
army intelligence. He is single&#13;
and resides in Kenosha.&#13;
8:30 a.m. to Racine&#13;
The above schedule is&#13;
repeated every hour on the hour&#13;
through 10:10 p.m.; the last bus&#13;
departing for Racine and&#13;
Kenosha at 10:10 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Thursday. On Friday,&#13;
the last bus departs for Racine&#13;
and Kenosha at 5:30 p.m.&#13;
During the hours 7:30 a.m. to&#13;
10:30 p.m. there will be continuous&#13;
shuttle bus service&#13;
between the east Parking Lot&#13;
and Greenquist with a stop at&#13;
the Tallent Hall Bus Shelter. •&#13;
This bus schedule is effective&#13;
Sept. 7, 1971.&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 14&#13;
Film - Parkside Film Society&#13;
presents Charlie Chaplain in&#13;
"The Gold Rush". Also&#13;
Laurel and Hardy and Harold&#13;
Lloyd shorts. 8 p.m. in 103&#13;
Greenquist. Adm. 50c.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 17&#13;
Dance- Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
Fraternity sponsors a dance&#13;
at Activities Building, . 9-1&#13;
a.m. Adm. charge. Parkside&#13;
and Wisconsin ID required.&#13;
NEWSCOPE proudly announces the appointment of&#13;
Jerry Socha to the position of p hotography editor. Mr. Socha&#13;
has previous experience on The Committee where he held a&#13;
similar position. At this point his work consists mainly of&#13;
photos taken with a Brownie Number Four, a Polaroid&#13;
Swinger, or those slick four-for-a-dollar photo machines.&#13;
Newscope looks forward to a long and rewarding association&#13;
with Jerry.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor JohnKoloen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Copy Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Jerry Socha&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, James&#13;
Casper, Marc Eisen, Jim&#13;
Koloen, Ken Konkol&#13;
Contributing Staff&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Mike Starr&#13;
Photography&#13;
Darren Borger, Ricky Pazera&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Becky Ecklund, Denise&#13;
Anastasia, Roberta Williams&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
Connie Ktnsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed&#13;
by students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside .published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
operation of Newscope. 5,000&#13;
copies are printed and mailed&#13;
free to the students of the&#13;
University and 1,000 additional&#13;
free copies are distributed&#13;
throughout the Kenosha and&#13;
Racine communities. Free&#13;
copies are available upon&#13;
request.&#13;
It's the®-&#13;
real thing&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Trade mark® &#13;
September 13,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
Sonny and Cher Bono have their own television show. In the entertainment&#13;
field, this achievement reflects years of building and performing.&#13;
Newscope traveled to the Lake Geneva Playboy Club to talk&#13;
with Sonny and Cher about their careers, experiences, and opinions.&#13;
On the second night of their two week appearance, Warren Nedry,&#13;
Jim Madura and Paul Lomartire interviewed the couple.&#13;
Here is that interview.&#13;
NS: Your concert approach to your songs and the material you wrote&#13;
about was youth oriented, and you had this philosophy that came out in&#13;
your movie, "Chastity". I am interested in the transition to your appeal&#13;
to audiences. How you changed audiences.&#13;
Sonny: It gets a little political, and the point of that was that at a certain&#13;
time I saw what I thought was a splitting of two societies, a youth society&#13;
and an older one. The transition acted as a preventative, let's put it that&#13;
way, that's the reason. We try to bridge whatever was there, that's so we&#13;
didn't run to a segregated audience by age.&#13;
NS: Do you think now, with your present approach that you are reaching&#13;
the youth or ignoring or neglecting them?&#13;
Sonny: I don't know, after awhile you get as political as you can. Now&#13;
everyone is very, very political, We probably have gotten a little quieter&#13;
but it's a matter of not getting SQ bo istrous, because everyone now has&#13;
become boistrous, and you're just one of millions. Whereas back in '65&#13;
nobody was saying anything. I think that Dylan said it all, and at this&#13;
point we're redundant. Now it's action instead of saying it anymore.&#13;
NS: Take Dylan for instance. He was that way in '65, and then he sort of&#13;
leaned the other way, and now he's beginning to go back to his old style&#13;
with public appearances and his style.&#13;
Sonny: You get so rejected by the&#13;
establishment and the public in&#13;
general, that you just get gired, say&#13;
'Christ I'm not getting through, I've&#13;
said it, I've said I've said it' and that's&#13;
all you can do is say I've said it. Then&#13;
you feel that it's time to do what I'm&#13;
gonna do. I went to the Chicago Convention&#13;
in '68, and there was a thing in&#13;
there that said 'we will institute a youth&#13;
commission between the ages of 18 and&#13;
26,' and that's mine. You do it, and you&#13;
do it, and you do it, and finally just say&#13;
it's time to cool it.&#13;
NS: Are you and Cher in any way involved&#13;
in any promotions against&#13;
drugs. A few years ago, underground&#13;
stations carried anti-drug ads with&#13;
excerpts by yourself.&#13;
Sonny: No, no, if I could give anyone&#13;
advice, I'd say pass on drugs, not on a&#13;
moral standpoint, but from an existing&#13;
standpoint. If you use drugs alot, like I&#13;
did, I think it got to become a crutch for&#13;
me, and I think it will for other people.&#13;
It puts a soft lens on everything, and&#13;
that's the danger you have to watch out&#13;
for with drugs. If young kids, 14, get&#13;
onto drugs it gets to be a real&#13;
something to lean on.&#13;
NS: Does that include grass?&#13;
Sonny: Yea, again, if people can handle&#13;
anything, then God bless them, if they&#13;
can handle it. But young kids at 14 can't&#13;
handle the world right now so when they go to grass at 14 or 13 what I say&#13;
to them is watch what you're doin', you're putting a soft lens on what's out&#13;
there, and that tends to make everything out there a little more pleasant.&#13;
The world is real, that's all I'm tryin' to say. It's real and cold and&#13;
businesslike, money, and its' everything that everybody doesn't want it to&#13;
be but that's what it is.&#13;
NS: Before you made it did you try to escape it?&#13;
Sonny: At one point I did, when I was usin' drugs heavy.NS: About the&#13;
movie again, I saw you on one of the talk shows right before you got it&#13;
organized — and you said you were having some trouble getting anyong&#13;
to promote it.&#13;
Sonny: Everybody.&#13;
NS: Yeah, after the movie came out there was almost no Sonny and Cher&#13;
heard of for a year or two.&#13;
Sonny: Almost wiped out our career.&#13;
NS: Yeah . . . what effect say did that treatment have on your outlook on&#13;
what you wanted to do and how you wanted to do it?&#13;
Sonny: It made me aware that the world is very real, very very real, and&#13;
deal with it on real terms. Don't try to deal with it on any other terms than&#13;
the fact that it's real and somebody else is going to come along and other&#13;
things are going to happen and that one person in this world is just not&#13;
that important, or two people and if you know that you'll come back.&#13;
NS: So what did you do personally to reorient yourself?&#13;
Sonny: I changed my whole philosophy from sometimes negative attitude&#13;
to a positive, I mean if I saw something that exists and it was ugly, well&#13;
then I know something ugly is there and what can you make good out of&#13;
something ugly, and you can. If you see poverty, if you see something you&#13;
can do something good about it if you want to. So you just put a positive on&#13;
everything, which I wasn't doing before.&#13;
NS: Were you disappointed with your first movie?&#13;
Sonny: No, I was disappointed in that it wasn't what I wanted it to be. that&#13;
Interview&#13;
was an interesting thing because after we made all our bread I took&#13;
our bread and we were broke again, and made a movie and then it was all&#13;
in tin cans of film and we were broke, and she was pregnant and if you&#13;
don't sell the movie you're finished your career was through so I got&#13;
pretty scared, but I sold it. So again, you said did the establishment help&#13;
you, yeah, they bought the movie, they saved my ass, otherwise we would&#13;
have been down and out.&#13;
I'm not disappointed because I did it, at least I did it, it's like you guys&#13;
running your paper, you're doing it and it's not under the best of circumstances&#13;
at all, but you're doing it and that's what people make it. If&#13;
you can hang in there, that's all I can tell people to do.&#13;
NS: Did you get any help from people who were already established?&#13;
Sonny: No. . . well— wait, yes and no, you know. Record companies and&#13;
establishments, so yea — th ey help you, but you got to prove yourself.&#13;
Unless you're worth money you're not worth anything. So you have to&#13;
make yourself valuable in some form. You have to make yourself worth&#13;
some dollars. I mean if p eople knew that you were right and they would&#13;
sell papers because you were right (Cher: No, it's one of my dirty&#13;
diamonds.) then you'd be worth something. And that's the whole name of&#13;
the "game.&#13;
NS: Do you plan to do any more, say in the movie field, records, popular&#13;
k i n d o f . . . .&#13;
Sonny: I don't know, I don't know.&#13;
NS: Maybe.&#13;
Sonny: I don't know.&#13;
NS: Your nightclub act and your show are quite similar; you developed&#13;
your nightclub act first?&#13;
Sonny: The first show was our nightclub&#13;
act, from then on the writers took&#13;
over but they used that as a format to&#13;
write.&#13;
NS: Do you try to capture the intimacy&#13;
of a club act in your show?&#13;
Sonny: No, we just perform. If you&#13;
become a producer and a performer at&#13;
that high of a level, at a certain point&#13;
you've got to go with the people who are&#13;
the creative end of the show and they&#13;
just tell you what to do and you do it&#13;
and then you keep your fingers.crossed&#13;
and you either get the numbers or you&#13;
don't. If you get the numbers you're on&#13;
the air and if you don't you're off. It's&#13;
that simple, it's cold if yo u want to call&#13;
it that. It's a very cold, real world.&#13;
NS: I guess that's the attitude that any&#13;
outlook you have now you're going to&#13;
base your future on, let's say.&#13;
Sonny: I'm going to face it on the fact&#13;
that is real, yeah, it's positively real.&#13;
I've been exposed to too much not to&#13;
know; I've been down, I've been on the&#13;
bottom and stepped on and so far no&#13;
one's invented a word to soften it up&#13;
yet.&#13;
NS: Does that mean that you won't try&#13;
anything that hasn't been done before,&#13;
say looking at things that are real and&#13;
Sonny: We've tried everything, no, I&#13;
think the show itself is a breakthrough,&#13;
I mean we're the first long hairs to get&#13;
a show, and comparatively speaking,&#13;
the network thinks they're going crazy&#13;
by letting us go through. It took seven&#13;
years to get them to give us a shot and&#13;
that was without going completely their way, without them saying, cut&#13;
your hiar, blah-blah-blah-blah. This is on our terms, you know.&#13;
That took seven years, the point is you gotta bend, but don't let them&#13;
break you.&#13;
NS: You said you're the first long hairs, you may be long hairs physically,&#13;
but the appeal of yo ur show isn't to say to "longhairs".&#13;
Sonny: That won't happen for five yours, before they'll put on a show on&#13;
to longhairs, the network dictates that. You won't see that for five years.&#13;
NS: Do they put any kind of limitations on you?&#13;
Sonny: Oh sure, oh yeah, og God. There's a censor there that's there&#13;
every second, watches everything we play, so every word you say can be&#13;
censored, so you try to slip as many things by as you can.&#13;
NS: Then you work around that rather than against it.&#13;
Sonny: If you buck it head on they'll just slice it off, I mean if you go&#13;
straight on with the guy he'll say no and there's no argument, that's the&#13;
point, there's no argument. He'll say either do it or don't do it, you know,&#13;
it happened to Tommy and Dicky, and they had a successful show, and&#13;
there was no argument.&#13;
NS: How can that kind of a tmosphere be conducive to anything creative&#13;
then?&#13;
Sonny: Well, you have to bend, I don't think you have to conform completely.&#13;
If you don't bend I don't think you can expand yourself, you know.&#13;
I don't know what you consider non conformity?&#13;
NS: Probably pretty much not having to do what you don't want to do.&#13;
Sonny: Well, I'm doing what I want to do, for a living — pr etty much on&#13;
my terms.&#13;
NS: Changing the subject, Cher, I was wondering after watching your&#13;
nightclub act if you've telt any similarity to any of the stars from the&#13;
generation before you, and has anyone ever compared you to any of t hose&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
Two B ands F or The Price O f O ne(plus a ]A) Sept. 25th &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE September 13,1971&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Titlg: Sexual Politics&#13;
Author: Kate Millett&#13;
Publisher: Doubleday &amp; Company Inc.&#13;
($7.95)&#13;
First off: The complex arguments&#13;
presented in Sexual Politics, the&#13;
hypotheses and propositions (perhaps a&#13;
poor word) are best left for discussion in&#13;
an atmosphere conducive to public&#13;
drunkenness. Particularly the literary&#13;
sections of her treatise does n ot lead us&#13;
unto objectivity. As a review is not a bar I&#13;
shall keep this all very simple and as&#13;
objective as my male mind will allow me.&#13;
Second off: Read Prisoner of Sex by&#13;
Norman Mailer, too.&#13;
Sexual Politics is a lengthy analysis of,&#13;
what else, but sexual politics defined as an&#13;
"ancient and universal scheme of the&#13;
domination of one birth group by another&#13;
— the scheme that prevails in the area of&#13;
sek." Kate Millett's treatise involves&#13;
psychology, history, anthropology and&#13;
sociology, but it hinges on literature,&#13;
especially the works of D. H. Lawrence,&#13;
Henry Miller, Jean Genet and Norman&#13;
Mailer.&#13;
This book is not a lot of fun to read, it&#13;
drags in many places, it is often redundant,&#13;
in short it is slow reading, and&#13;
because it is a serious essay it deserves no&#13;
less than the reader's undivided attention.&#13;
It took me over a week to crawl through&#13;
Sexual Politics' 380+ pages, then again&#13;
I'm not what you might call indivisible.&#13;
The first sections of the book are devoted&#13;
to an historical analysis of what we have&#13;
come to call the Woman's Lib Movement.&#13;
It covers the early suffragette days in the&#13;
1800's and winds up in the present. No one&#13;
can deny that the history of women in&#13;
political, legal and ecohomic areas was&#13;
less than a form of servitude. Millett&#13;
brings Engels, Freud, Mills, Bachofen, et&#13;
al, in short, male sociologists,&#13;
philosophers, psychologists into the&#13;
spotlight. She condemns and praises them&#13;
selectively; where they agree with her&#13;
then by golly they're right, when it's not&#13;
so, well . . .&#13;
Anthropological conundrums are&#13;
presented: Which came first, patriarchal&#13;
or another form of societal structure? Who&#13;
knows? If patriarchy is not the original&#13;
structure, then it may just be a stage in&#13;
societal development, possibly matriarchy&#13;
is next in line. Yeah, maybe. In her historical-psychological-anthropological&#13;
&#13;
analysis, we are left with no real answers.&#13;
We do gain many valuable insignts (few of&#13;
which we can remember) into the complex&#13;
problems and questions of sexual politics,&#13;
but no answers. Like I say, we get a lot of&#13;
something, but something do also drag.&#13;
Now, dum de dum dum (arpettio,&#13;
please) Lawrence, Mailer, Miller, Genet.&#13;
A different viewpoint; wipe the slate&#13;
clean, burn the other literary essays, let us&#13;
now learn the real reasons the four&#13;
novelists portray women as they do. And&#13;
she does it, too. They are the four of them&#13;
BOOK&#13;
sexual cripples; Mailer perverted to an&#13;
unimaginable extreme, unimaginable&#13;
until I read what Katie has to say about the&#13;
old boy. She succeeds but there's a trick,&#13;
selectivity. One can take selected&#13;
passages from any writer, put them in a&#13;
single essay and make them into anything&#13;
your first premise calls for. Don't prove a&#13;
thing. I'm not saying that Miller and&#13;
Mailer don't in many ways degrade the&#13;
female, what I am saying is that they're&#13;
not necessarily fanatics, what I am saying&#13;
is that everything a novelist writes is not&#13;
necessarily true, does not necessarily&#13;
reflect themselves. Miller and Mailer have&#13;
their extremes because they're writing is&#13;
of an explosive, living in the moment&#13;
genre. They don't pull punches (a&#13;
Mailerism), they're writers, they're&#13;
conscious of their art. When Mailer wrote&#13;
Stephen Rojack's story in The American&#13;
Dream he wasn't writing stream of consciousness&#13;
about himself, he was thinking&#13;
about what he was writing. Kate won't&#13;
accept that, Rojack is Mailer. I wonder if&#13;
Rojack writes as well as Normy. The&#13;
problem is that she talks more about the&#13;
authors than she does of their works. What&#13;
does that lead us into? It leads us into&#13;
nothing.&#13;
By condemning this century's or any&#13;
century's most explosive literature simply&#13;
because of its grounding in sexual politics,&#13;
Kate's ideal alternative would seem to be&#13;
an insipid novel, a sexless politics. Let the&#13;
battle begin.&#13;
I recommend this book for two reasons:&#13;
It does give us many insights into the&#13;
problem of sexual politics, also it is a valie&#13;
treatise in the literature of the Woman's&#13;
Lib Movement. I must, however, warn you&#13;
not to take her analysis of the four&#13;
novelists too seriously, balance it out by&#13;
reading their works for yourself. I aslo&#13;
suppose it depends upon which side of the&#13;
vence you're on.&#13;
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Tickets are now on sale for the Kenosha concert&#13;
by John Denver, popular stage and recording artist,&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside student activities&#13;
office announced.&#13;
Denver's concert will be held in Kenosha&#13;
Tremper high school auditorium Oct. 2 at 8 p .m.,&#13;
sponsored by UW-P. All tickets are $3.50, are&#13;
reserved, and will be sold on a first come - first serve&#13;
basis. Tickets are available at the UW-P student&#13;
activities office in Tallent Hall on the Wood Road&#13;
campus, at Bidinger's House of Music in Kenosha and&#13;
at Cook-Gere Records in Racine.&#13;
Denver currently has the number one selling&#13;
song in the country, "Take Me Home, Country&#13;
Roads", which has sold over one million copies. His&#13;
current popularity also stems from his latest album,&#13;
"Poems, Prayers and Promises", which is among the&#13;
top selling albums and includes his hit single.&#13;
Denver has been a popular and regular guest on&#13;
Merv Griffin and Johnny Carson television shows&#13;
recently, as well as being featured on an NBC network&#13;
musical special.&#13;
Although Denver has only recently emerged as a&#13;
name performer in his own right, he has enjoyed&#13;
considerable success as a singer, guitarist and&#13;
composer for a number of years. He originally tried&#13;
his luck in show business while a college student at&#13;
Texas Tech, but he got his big break on a trip to Los&#13;
Angeles. There he auditioned for and was hired on the&#13;
spot by folk music impresario Randy Sparks, creator&#13;
of The New Christy Minstrels. He worked for Sparks&#13;
for over a year.&#13;
In 1965 Denver was selected from over 250 a pplicants&#13;
to fill the spot of Chad Mitchell of the then&#13;
extremely popular Chad Mitchell Trio. He led that&#13;
group for nearly four years before making the&#13;
decision to strike out on his own as a solo performer in&#13;
1969. He was immediately signed by RCA records and&#13;
has cut four albums since then.&#13;
Denver is a musician of unusual versatility. He&#13;
has written hit songs for many other performers and&#13;
groups, including his most famous, "Leaving On a Jet&#13;
Plane", for Peter, Paul and Mary. As a folk and 12-&#13;
string guitarist, Denver is considered to be one of the&#13;
best on today's scene.&#13;
Of his work as a performer, Denver has said, "1&#13;
don't want to entertain people, I want to touch them."&#13;
His concerts reflect that philosophy. He uses the first&#13;
portion of the show to get acquainted with the&#13;
audience and the second part — "somewhat heavier"&#13;
— to make what he calls "definite statements".&#13;
He claims he will not perform a song — his own or&#13;
that of anyone else — merely because it has a&#13;
pleasant melody or has become popular. "A gong&#13;
must have meaning to me as an individual before I&#13;
can hope to give it meaning to others," he says.&#13;
Denver's appearance is the first popular concert&#13;
of the 1971-72 schoo l year sponsored by the UW-P&#13;
student activities office. Others will be announced&#13;
later in the year.&#13;
Coming Soon! Newscope&#13;
Joerndt &amp; Ve ntura?&#13;
I M I * * ' ' l I A H C t . C I N T I I&#13;
K E N O jfflA, W I S C O N SIN&#13;
618 - 55th STR E ET R H O N E 454-355? &#13;
CAN TELL BY YOUR OUT FIT.. ..&#13;
LONESOME COWBOYS&#13;
Viva&#13;
Taylor Mead&#13;
Eric Emerson&#13;
Tom Hompertz&#13;
Joe D'Alessandro&#13;
Julian Burroughs&#13;
Louis Waldron&#13;
Direction, Script and Photography&#13;
by Andy Warhol&#13;
FLESH&#13;
Joe D'Alessandro&#13;
Insane, Obscene, Disgusting, Genius,&#13;
Revolutionary, Revolting, Addicted to addiction.&#13;
Mr. Warhol you are al of these things. These titles&#13;
are given, too, as easily to New York City, Mr.&#13;
Warhol, and you do each other justice. You are a&#13;
city dweller in every sense and the city dwells in&#13;
you. In your compartmented world you have&#13;
turned in upon yourself, feeling and fondling as&#13;
you go inward toward center. Soon to find what&#13;
those of us who have room to breathe seldom find,&#13;
the thin line between need and want. In this, Mr.&#13;
Warhol, I am only a stranger looking in.&#13;
My agrarian eyes fell upon two cases of improvisational&#13;
Warhol. The first film was an&#13;
outrageous spoof on wild west film treatments that&#13;
provoked the famed Variety to go so far as to call&#13;
it Warhol's best. It would seem that each of the&#13;
actors were given a general story line about an&#13;
Arizona town where Viva and her male nurse are&#13;
'hold up'. Four lonesome homosexual brothers&#13;
come into town and meet the two; this is where the&#13;
mostly nonsensical plot begins to develop. The&#13;
spoof is replete with advertising which sums up&#13;
Warhol's approach . . . "Now comes Lonesome&#13;
Cowboys. In the great tradition of the American&#13;
Western, filmed entirely on location in Arizona&#13;
with an all-star cast, inspired by the immortal&#13;
legend of Romeo and Juliet, only the camera of&#13;
Andy Warhol could bring to the screen the true&#13;
story of what it was like to live the life of a cowboy&#13;
in the Old West. A story of man among men and&#13;
the woman who tried to interfere."&#13;
The real comedy of the film lies in the city-wise&#13;
approach of the actors in this totally Western&#13;
place. In one scene Eric Emerson shows Joe&#13;
D'Alessandro ballet technique and directs him in&#13;
grooming habits while they both lean up against a&#13;
hitching post, horses gnawing on their bits and all.&#13;
This film was certainly meant to be comical and&#13;
I doubt much more could have been done with t. i It&#13;
seemed that everyone was too stoned to really&#13;
make it into an epic.&#13;
The second film struck the friends I saw it with&#13;
as asmost documentary in nature, I tended to&#13;
agree, while the first contained spontaneous&#13;
conflict Flesh had little or none. The photography&#13;
wasn't as spotty and portrayed a greater feel of&#13;
setting mood.&#13;
Warhol's camera follows D'Alessandro through&#13;
his daily encounters on the street relying heavily&#13;
on the actor's face as narrative. The vanishing&#13;
point is well outside of the film as the camera is&#13;
held steady without any of the action matching&#13;
movements that were a constant throughout&#13;
Cowboys . . . resulting in a participant kind of&#13;
psychological vanishing point.&#13;
In both films Warhol employs film cutting to&#13;
heighten action and break up time lags. He leaves&#13;
a two or three frame runner hole that provokes a&#13;
stickman like jauntiness, after awhile it becomes&#13;
very tiresome.&#13;
Joe D'Alessandro is introduced as Warhol's&#13;
superstar. He hustles his body to other men to&#13;
support his wife and child. Each of the business&#13;
transactions are presented as commonplace but&#13;
audience reaction in this area would almost make&#13;
one think that this activity never took place. The&#13;
sound of laughter presided over parts of the film&#13;
that were meant to be interpreted as real.&#13;
Sitting through two Warhol films in one night is&#13;
about as much as an yone can take. They break&#13;
barriers that were new frontier a couple of years&#13;
ago when they were made, but now that they have&#13;
aged a little and the audience has been hardened&#13;
(or softened) by less creative endeavors at The&#13;
Stewardesses and I am Curious Yellow we are&#13;
given a second look at the motivation involved in&#13;
turning out these expositions. We wonder for a&#13;
moment if the child-like acting in Cowboys was&#13;
representative of raw creation or raw frustration,&#13;
film seeming more like a primal scream than a&#13;
media for expression. I do not wish to stifle with&#13;
criticism something that I am not really qualified&#13;
to judge for I am not New York or Warhol. . . only&#13;
a stranger looking in.&#13;
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PageS NEWSCOPE September 13,1971&#13;
We Made A Name F or O urselves" C laims Soccer C oach&#13;
Despite the myriad troubles&#13;
surrounding the recent Pan&#13;
American Games, UWParkside&#13;
assistant soccer coach&#13;
John Bocwinski credited the&#13;
host country with putting on a&#13;
good show.&#13;
12 can be equal to most and can&#13;
play with them."&#13;
The U.S. played a completely&#13;
defensive game against&#13;
Argentina, Bocwinski said, and&#13;
the Argentines completely&#13;
outplayed the Yanks the first&#13;
time they met, winning 3-0.&#13;
But the second time around&#13;
the Americans were ready for&#13;
the kind of soccer Argentina&#13;
was playing and held the South&#13;
Americans to a scoreless first&#13;
half. That tie held up until the&#13;
Argentines scored with ten&#13;
minutes left in the game.&#13;
Bocwinski said the&#13;
Americans had no problems&#13;
with the Cubans, although&#13;
reports from Columbia indicated&#13;
numerous CubanAmerican&#13;
troubles involving&#13;
other sports.&#13;
"We played a hard, clean&#13;
game against the Cubans,"&#13;
Bocwinski remembered, "and&#13;
we made friends with many of&#13;
the Cuban players.&#13;
"They asked us about the&#13;
United States, but every time&#13;
we'd ask questions about how&#13;
things were in Cuba they'd&#13;
change the subject."&#13;
Bocwinski said the crowds&#13;
ranged from the appreciative to&#13;
the hostile, with the fans booing&#13;
the United States in its first&#13;
game with Argentina, but ne&#13;
noted philosophically that the&#13;
crowds had even booed their&#13;
own countrymen. In the second&#13;
U.S.-Argentina encounter,&#13;
however, the fans cheered the&#13;
Americans, because a win by&#13;
them would have given&#13;
Columbia the gold medal.&#13;
Before the game with Haiti,&#13;
Bocwinski remembered with a&#13;
chuckle, the U.S. coach bought&#13;
eight soccer balls which the&#13;
U.S. players then kicked into&#13;
the stands for the fans, who&#13;
were then "pacified" and&#13;
cheered lustily for the U.S.&#13;
Bocwinski is still looking&#13;
forward to one more game, and&#13;
it'll easily be the biggest one for&#13;
the young American team. The&#13;
Yanks will face El Salvador,&#13;
whom they defeated 1-1 in an&#13;
earlier game in Miami, to&#13;
decide the last Western&#13;
Hemisphere team that will go to&#13;
the Olympic Games in Munich&#13;
next summer.&#13;
"We've got to give Columbia&#13;
a lot of credit," Bocwinski said&#13;
on his return from the&#13;
quadrennial pre-Olympic encounter&#13;
for nations in the&#13;
Western Hemisphere. "It's a&#13;
poor country and the weather&#13;
conditions there made for the&#13;
worst winter they've had.&#13;
John Bocwinski, assistant&#13;
soccer coach. The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
"They always were afraid of&#13;
kidnapings, especially when the&#13;
Cubans defected, and police&#13;
were always around." Intramurals Begin Bocwinski played on the U.S.&#13;
soccer team, which posted a 2-6-&#13;
1 mark and sixth place finish in&#13;
the Pan Am games and a 6-5-5&#13;
mark in all games played,&#13;
which included an elimination&#13;
tournament to select the teams&#13;
which will go to Munich in 1972&#13;
for the Olympic Games.&#13;
famous for&#13;
Parkside's intramural&#13;
program goes into full swing&#13;
this week, with touch football&#13;
teams starting play during the&#13;
noon hour.&#13;
Jim Koch at Kenosha and&#13;
Dave Donaldson at Racine will&#13;
coordinate the program. Entries&#13;
may be given to them at&#13;
any time.&#13;
Dominican, KTI and possibly&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
All men and women interested&#13;
in competitive skiing&#13;
should attend the 7:30 p.m. ski&#13;
class Monday nights in&#13;
Greenquist D-127 or contact Vic&#13;
Godfrey at 553-2310.&#13;
All men interested in rugby&#13;
contact Coach Godfrey. The&#13;
first game will be Oct. 9 at the&#13;
Octoberfest.&#13;
Signups for bowling are due at&#13;
this time, with leagues being&#13;
held Wednesday afternoons. See&#13;
Coach Koch in Kenosha or&#13;
Coach Donaldson in Racine for&#13;
more information.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
ALSO&#13;
. RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
. SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING Wf BRING"&#13;
"We made a name for ourselves&#13;
in Cali," Bocwinski&#13;
claimed. "Argentina beat us&#13;
only 1-0, a game we could have&#13;
won, and they were impressed&#13;
with how good we were.&#13;
"The whole problem for us is&#13;
that we don't have the depth of&#13;
the other teams, though our top&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
The women's powderpuff&#13;
football team has room for&#13;
more girls and will hold an&#13;
organizational meeting at 12:15&#13;
p.m. Wednesday in the Kenosha&#13;
wrestling-judo room. The&#13;
team's schedule includes&#13;
FOR AS LITTLE AS $180.00 PER SEMESTER&#13;
n~" ^&#13;
iff&#13;
•&#13;
DELUXE3 ROOMSUITE&#13;
$275 PER SEMESTER*&#13;
2 ROOMSUITE&#13;
$180 PER SEMESTER*&#13;
DUO BE DS&#13;
BUNK&#13;
DELUXE2 ROOMSU BED ITE&#13;
$218.25 PER SEMESTER * DOUBLE&#13;
DISINK&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
SINK KITCHENETTE&#13;
3 ROOMSUITE&#13;
$254.25 PER SEMESTER*&#13;
BUNK&#13;
B|D&#13;
BUNK&#13;
BED&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
SINK&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
SINK .&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
OWNER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN&#13;
DEVELOPER: GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp; RESIDENTIAL CENTERS&#13;
1744 N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN&#13;
OCCUPANCY SEPT. 1,1971 —CONTACT BILL PAGELOR DAN LEMBERG&#13;
AT PARKSIDE VILLAGE SITE OR CALL (414) 272-0460 COLLECT&#13;
^ 4 ST UDENTS PER SUITE — UNFURNISHED &#13;
Teach Skiing&#13;
Norwegian skier Tom&#13;
Fjermestad will teach the&#13;
popular ski classes at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
this fall, with an eye&#13;
toward competition for students&#13;
with the Parkside Ski Rangers&#13;
and an evehtual winter trip to&#13;
Europe under the auspices of&#13;
the Office of Student Activities.&#13;
Fjermestad, who has been&#13;
skiing since he was three years&#13;
old, has been a member of the&#13;
Norwegian national team and&#13;
has 15 years teaching, coaching&#13;
and training experience in the&#13;
sport, which is easily the most&#13;
popular of the club sports at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Aiding Fjermestad in the&#13;
coordination of the teaching and&#13;
coaching program is Vic&#13;
Godfrey, the director of intramurals&#13;
and club sports, who&#13;
will aid in conditioning training&#13;
and direct the club sport aspect.&#13;
Also deeply involved in&#13;
providing a total ski program is&#13;
Bill Neibuhr of the Student&#13;
Activities Office, who will&#13;
oversee the January trip to the&#13;
Alps, which last year saw a few&#13;
hundred students pack their&#13;
skis during the semester break.&#13;
Fjermestad will accompany&#13;
the expected large group on that&#13;
trip as an instructor, but the&#13;
present is his immediate concern.&#13;
He'll work each Monday&#13;
night with the beginning skiers&#13;
and each Thursday with the&#13;
racing team and real enthusiasts&#13;
of the sport who wish&#13;
to improve their techniques.&#13;
The emphasis in the early fall&#13;
will be placed on conditioning,&#13;
for which Godfrey is responsible,&#13;
but classroom sessions&#13;
will also be held in D-127&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the UW-P&#13;
campus so Fjermestad can&#13;
point out the all-important&#13;
technical aspects of the sport.&#13;
The students will head to&#13;
Wilmot when the snow comes&#13;
and at this time the emphasis&#13;
will be switched from getting in&#13;
shape to maintaining that&#13;
conditioning and tightening up&#13;
on style and technique.&#13;
Special buttons admitting persons to the Oct. 8-9 Octoberfest&#13;
celebration at Parkside are now on sale for $.50 at the Office of&#13;
Athletics and through the sponsoring German Club and the Varsity&#13;
Club.&#13;
The buttons, which are similar to the "smile" buttons now&#13;
sweeping the nation, will admit the bearers (or wearers) to all Octoberfest&#13;
activities, which include a German style celebration, a&#13;
rugby match, soccer games and other events. It will also be good for&#13;
half-price admission to the Saturday night Octoberfest dance.&#13;
All men interested in joining the Parkside Rugby Club contact Bob&#13;
Wingate at 694-2487 or Vic Godfrey at 553-2310.&#13;
There will be a meeting of t he Shooting Club at 8 p.m. Wednesday&#13;
at the Kenosha Campus. Chris Murphy will speak on "Handgun&#13;
Marksmanship".&#13;
Parkside offers a wide variety of women's sports and all women&#13;
are encouraged to participate in any of the seven.&#13;
Tennis has already started and will run until late November, with&#13;
Coach Dick Frecka coordinating the program with Miss Barbara Jo&#13;
Morris. Both volleyball and gymnastics will be handled by Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny and Miss Morris and will run until December.&#13;
Cross Country and Track will operate under Russ Coley, with&#13;
track coaches Bob Lawson and Vic Godfrey doing much of the&#13;
coaching.&#13;
Fencing, with Coach Martiny in charge, and golf, with Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens coordinating, are also open to women.&#13;
All women interested in a sport are urged to contact the respective&#13;
coach or Miss Morris at the Office of Athletics, 553-2245.&#13;
W.IMWWiril&#13;
j4ou&amp;e of Tlutrition&#13;
NATURAL COSMETICS&#13;
NATURAL GRAINS&amp;CEREALS&#13;
UNSULPHURATED FRUITS&#13;
HEALTH FOODS&#13;
6 2 2 1 • 22 N D A V E N U E K E N O S H A P H O N E 65 2 - 4 7 8 7&#13;
"Here's To Your Good Health&#13;
i&#13;
September 13,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
A Modern Love Story&#13;
Parkside's new skiing instructor, Norwegian Tom Fjermstad&#13;
(left), examines two of the implements of his trade with UW-P intramural&#13;
and club sport director Vic Godfrey, who will aid in the&#13;
course, and Bill Niebuhr of the Student Activities Office, who will&#13;
coordinate a winter trip to the Alps.&#13;
Fermestad To&#13;
A love story that bridges an ocean is uncommon&#13;
enough, but when it involves an American Peace&#13;
Corps coach and a Thai basketball-soccer player, you&#13;
know that both of them must be pretty special people.&#13;
But it would take a pretty special person like&#13;
Kirby Nichols, a Whitewater State produce who&#13;
coached at Watertown high school, to save his&#13;
meager Peace Corps earnings for the day he could&#13;
bring Prakong Phanturat to college in America. Or to&#13;
re-enlist in the Peace Corps after his first two-year&#13;
tour was up because he so much wanted to help the&#13;
people of Southeast Asia.&#13;
You don't have to tell Prakong, or Ray, as he&#13;
prefers to be called, all that, because he knows&#13;
Nichols is someone special.&#13;
And he's begun to think that the first people he&#13;
met from Parkside, at the Asian Games last year, are&#13;
about the same. Athletic director Tom Rosandich and&#13;
track coach Bob Lawson have helped him a lot, Ray&#13;
says, but the man who is helping him the most right&#13;
now is Steve Stephens. It just might be the beginning&#13;
of another beautiful friendship.&#13;
Stephens, the basketball coach at UW-P, has&#13;
taken up with Ray where Nichols left off. He's taken&#13;
him into his home and is so taken with the young man&#13;
that he's considering remodeling his home to better&#13;
accommodate Ray for as long as he's here.&#13;
Ray figures he's stumbled into one big happy&#13;
1&#13;
family, because all involved with him know each&#13;
other. Lawson and Rosandich met Nichols a number&#13;
of years ago at Olympia Sport Village in northern&#13;
Wisconsin and it was this association that led Nichols&#13;
to recommend Parkside to Phanturat and Ray to the&#13;
Parkside coaches.&#13;
He's been accepted by all as one of the Stephens&#13;
family and cannot feel out of place because the coach&#13;
treats him, Ray says, "just like his own son."&#13;
And when the hard-court season rolls around,&#13;
he'll be treating Ray like one of his players, because&#13;
Ray is no poor performer with a basketball, since he&#13;
was a member of Thailand's national team and&#13;
gained game experience as a guard in both the Sixth&#13;
Asian Games in his home city of Bangkok last&#13;
December and in the Southeast Asia Peninsula&#13;
Games.&#13;
But before basketball, he'll compete in soccer,&#13;
and rest assured, he's no less accomplished in that&#13;
sport, with playing time to his credit at both the&#13;
center and forward slots on the Bangkok Bank Sport&#13;
Club.&#13;
Ray's been here two weeks and has adjusted&#13;
rather well to the fast cars and contemporary music.&#13;
He probably hasn't yet seen the movie "Love Story"&#13;
but it might remind him of a dedicated friend an&#13;
ocean aw^y who gave him the chance to come to&#13;
America.&#13;
Octoberfest T o Feature R ugby M atch&#13;
One of the highlights of the&#13;
upcoming Octoberfest will be&#13;
the rugby match between UWParkside&#13;
and the Milwaukee&#13;
Rugby Club, to be held at 1 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 9, before the&#13;
championship game of the&#13;
Parkside Invitational Soccer&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
But for those who don't know&#13;
what rugby is or have seen it&#13;
and don't understand its rules, a&#13;
little education might be in&#13;
order.&#13;
Rugby can most simply be&#13;
described as football without&#13;
pads. But it is really more than&#13;
that. It is the most physical of&#13;
all contact sports - an d oftentimes&#13;
the excitable crowds&#13;
have to be restrained from&#13;
entering the playing area.&#13;
Yet there is also a sense of&#13;
sportsmanship which is unique.&#13;
One of the most important&#13;
unwritten rules calls for a party&#13;
sponsored by the host club after&#13;
the match. Rugby is hard hitting&#13;
and most competitive but&#13;
each player has a high regard&#13;
for every other and for personal&#13;
sportsmanship.&#13;
Each team is represented by&#13;
15 men with one additional man&#13;
to act as line judge. No substitutions&#13;
are allowed during&#13;
the game except because of&#13;
injuries during the first five&#13;
minutes of play.&#13;
Only the one official can call&#13;
timeouts, and then only at the&#13;
request of the captain and&#13;
because of injury. Each half is&#13;
usually 30 to 40 minutes long&#13;
with a five minute breather in&#13;
between. There are no forward&#13;
passes but the ball may be&#13;
carried or kicked forward. In&#13;
kicking, only the man who&#13;
kicked the ball or his teammates&#13;
who were behind him&#13;
when he kicked may play the&#13;
ball. There is no blocking and&#13;
anyone who is on the ground&#13;
cannot be in possession of the&#13;
ball.&#13;
A try, similar to football's&#13;
touchdown, is worth three&#13;
points when the ball is downed&#13;
across the opponent's goal line.&#13;
Two points may be added by the&#13;
successful conversion attempt.&#13;
Three points may also be&#13;
scored by the drop kick from&#13;
anywhere on the field that splits&#13;
the up-rights or by a penalty&#13;
kick.&#13;
There are only two set plays,&#13;
the line-cut and the set scrum.&#13;
The line-cut occurs when the&#13;
ball is kicked, carried or thrown&#13;
out of bounds, "touch" by a&#13;
player. The opposing team&#13;
throws the ball and play&#13;
progresses from there.&#13;
A set scrum is awarded to one&#13;
team for a minor infraction of&#13;
the rules by the other. The first&#13;
three men of the scrum lock&#13;
arms and meet the opposing&#13;
team with their shoulders. The&#13;
remaining five forwards bind on&#13;
them, giving support and&#13;
helping push. Hands may not&#13;
touch the ball until it leaves the&#13;
scrum.&#13;
So now you're an expert on&#13;
rugby. Well, maybe not, but it's&#13;
going to be quite a show at the&#13;
Octoberfest, and rugby will be&#13;
an exciting part of it.&#13;
Wed. Sept. 22&#13;
at&#13;
Magus Productions presents&#13;
BLUES NIGHT&#13;
featuring&#13;
MUDDY WATERS&#13;
also Case High School Fieldho e&#13;
JOHNNY YOUNG BLUES BAND Racine&#13;
Tickets available at:&#13;
Earth Works -Racine 8:00-12:30&#13;
The Daisy -Kenosha-Racine&#13;
Bidingers-Kenosha-Waukeegan&#13;
J&amp;J'sTape Center -Kenosha-Racine-Bulington &#13;
P{&gt;ge8 NEWSCOPE September 13,1971&#13;
Parkside Village&#13;
Three visiting faculty&#13;
members from abroad are&#13;
adding a special cosmopolitan&#13;
atmosphere to the campus of&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
this year and&#13;
Parkside is reciprocating by&#13;
students at the Cheltenham&#13;
College of Art and Design,&#13;
Gloucestershire, England.&#13;
Jansky, who has had several&#13;
recent one-man shows of his&#13;
polyester impregnated&#13;
fiberglass sculptures, will be a&#13;
has taught at DePaul University,&#13;
the University of Notre&#13;
Dame and Universidad&#13;
Javeriana in Bogota, Columbia,&#13;
and comes to Parkside from&#13;
Universidad Nacional de&#13;
Columbia in Bogota.&#13;
Cosmopolitans I nvade U WP&#13;
sending one of its own faculty&#13;
members to teach at an English&#13;
college.&#13;
The three guests are Martin&#13;
Seymour-Smith, a visiting&#13;
professor of English from&#13;
England; Nelo Da Silva Allan,&#13;
visiting associate professor of&#13;
mathematics from Columbia,&#13;
South America; and David John&#13;
Noble, visiting associate&#13;
professor of art from England.&#13;
The Parkside professor is&#13;
Rollin Jansky, associate&#13;
professor of art, who will exchange&#13;
posts with Noble for the&#13;
year, with Noble teaching&#13;
Jansky's students here and&#13;
Jansky instructing Noble's&#13;
senior lecturer in scuplture at&#13;
the English institution.&#13;
Noble, who received his&#13;
training at the Portsmouth&#13;
College of Art and the Royal&#13;
College of Art in London, has&#13;
received a number of awards&#13;
for his sculpture including the&#13;
Sainsbury Award, a national&#13;
award given annually. He also&#13;
was a finalist for the Prix de&#13;
Rome and is represented by&#13;
works in a number of public and&#13;
private collections.&#13;
A native of Brazil, Allan&#13;
received his undergraduate&#13;
degree at the University of&#13;
Brazil and his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
the University of Chicago. He&#13;
Seymour-Smith, who received&#13;
his graduate degree at Oxford&#13;
University, is a free lance&#13;
academic writer, poet and&#13;
literary critic, contributing to&#13;
such English periodicals as&#13;
Encounter, Spectator and the&#13;
Times Literary Supplement.&#13;
His most recent works are&#13;
Poets Through Their Letters&#13;
(vol. 1), published in 1969, and&#13;
Guide to Modern World&#13;
Literature, to be published in&#13;
1972.&#13;
He has taught at a number of&#13;
major British institutions and is&#13;
teaching courses in modern&#13;
poetry and English literature&#13;
this semester at Parkside.&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
struction. An agreement on the&#13;
purchase was not reached with&#13;
the owner, George Feest of&#13;
Kenosha, until the end of May.&#13;
By that time several small&#13;
contractors had decided not to&#13;
undertake the project because&#13;
they felt they would not be able&#13;
to meet the deadline.&#13;
When construction did finally&#13;
begin in the first week of June,&#13;
the crews sent in were not large&#13;
enough to make the rapid&#13;
progress needed. "We found&#13;
ourselves seeking additional&#13;
personnel and crews —&#13;
professional people — union&#13;
people, such as carpenters, to&#13;
do the work — to give us the&#13;
shells, so that our specialties&#13;
people, like plumbing and&#13;
heating could get inside these&#13;
units," Mrs. Ribecky said.&#13;
She added that a final touch&#13;
was a recent carpenters' strike&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
At firs they were worried&#13;
about mixing older youths with&#13;
young children in the same&#13;
classes but learned that "the&#13;
young ones taught the older&#13;
children spontaneity and the&#13;
older ones taught the young&#13;
ones perseverence."&#13;
Elaborating further Mrs.&#13;
Diamon said that "the younger&#13;
kids are unleashing, and the&#13;
older kids are relearning what&#13;
the creative experience is . . .&#13;
that they are not a bunch of&#13;
little automatons that are&#13;
cranked up in the morning and&#13;
to turn out thirty things all&#13;
alike."&#13;
As with any educational&#13;
1969 Honda 175cc Scrambler. Ex.&#13;
cond. $425. Includes 2 helmets. Call&#13;
Ed, 639-4940.&#13;
1962 Buick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
634-4445 or 633-2791.&#13;
1958 Ramb. American. Dependable,&#13;
rustic, and cheap. $35 . 3209 - 2 8th St.&#13;
1960 Ramb. American. Dependable.&#13;
$70. 3209 - 28th St., Kenosha.&#13;
1970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr., Hardtop,&#13;
V-8, Automatic, power steering,&#13;
634-4606.&#13;
1969 Charger RT • 440 Mag., 4 sp.,&#13;
mags.seeor call Al after 6 p.m., 658-&#13;
3654 , 5110 - 23rd Ave.&#13;
1968 Opel Kadet, 1966 Corvair, Both&#13;
good cond. Call Harris, 55-843-2361&#13;
67 Ambassador 4 dr. sedan, auto., 6&#13;
cyl. Trans recently overhauled $775.&#13;
Call 553-2345.&#13;
68 Plymouth Roadrunner 383. Gold&#13;
with Black vinyl top. Ex. cond. 554-&#13;
8757.&#13;
1971 TRAVEL TRAILER — 15 Ft&#13;
Light - Very easy to tow - Built in&#13;
Surge brakes - Used only three&#13;
weeks - Must sell - Going to school,&#13;
5122 45th St - Ph. 652-3084.&#13;
in the area which stopped&#13;
construction completely for a&#13;
full week. "A week's stoppage&#13;
of work, when you include all&#13;
the other people who rely on the&#13;
carpenters finishing their work,&#13;
sets you back much more than&#13;
just those days during which the&#13;
strike exists," she said.&#13;
It might be expected that&#13;
some students would be getting&#13;
a bit upset with the delay, but,&#13;
according to Mrs. Ribecky,&#13;
there are sdme very patient&#13;
people attending Parkside this&#13;
year: "Students are being&#13;
fantastic. They are not&#13;
pressuring us. They can see the&#13;
contractors working like dogs&#13;
around here and they understand&#13;
the things that happen&#13;
to cause this delay. They're&#13;
living willingly with discomforts,&#13;
but, of course, at no cost,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
program the parents of the child&#13;
must take an active interest in&#13;
their child's work in order to&#13;
maintain the consistency of&#13;
perspective that they gain while&#13;
in class. Many times parents&#13;
are simply not interested in&#13;
their children's education and&#13;
when what is learned in class is&#13;
ignored at home the child may&#13;
feel that his time was wasted.&#13;
"At first when we talked with&#13;
the parents they were&#13;
remarkably like the children;&#13;
hesitant, reluctant to participate;&#13;
they didn't want to&#13;
intrude, so we kind of rubbed&#13;
their noses in it, really. If they&#13;
didn't understand something&#13;
the child had done we sat them&#13;
1967 Austin-Healey 3000, After 5 p.m.&#13;
539-2407 (Burlington).&#13;
1968 Ford Torino 302-V8. Low mil.&#13;
Automatic, power steering, Radio,&#13;
Heater, 652-7745, see at 5234 - 44th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impaia Super Sport 327, After&#13;
4:30 p.m., 3022 - 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 R5, 1971, Exc. Cond.&#13;
654-5724, Eve.&#13;
650 Triumph T.T. rebuilt engine,&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
helmets, $800.00or best offer. See at&#13;
5723 - 40th Ave.&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs some clutch work, $250.00.&#13;
634-0871.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3suitcases, very good cond. $25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
For a Good night's sleep —&#13;
Waterbeds. 3701 - 60th street. Call&#13;
654-9447.&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us an&#13;
offer. Call 654-4862.&#13;
down and let the child explain&#13;
what he had done.&#13;
"At first the parents tended to&#13;
judge the work of their child&#13;
comparatively with the work of&#13;
other children but once they had&#13;
been exposed to the class and its&#13;
priority of the child over his&#13;
product, they took a genuine&#13;
interest in their children."&#13;
Mrs. Diamon reported that no&#13;
students dropped out of the&#13;
workshop all summer and that a&#13;
number enrolled for the fall&#13;
classes. The women plan to&#13;
offer six classes each week with&#13;
the first class to begin in early&#13;
October. The classes will be*&#13;
moved to the Women's Club&#13;
during the cold season but they&#13;
don't expect the confines of the&#13;
building to inhibit their approach.&#13;
&#13;
"Sears" Portably typewriter. Good&#13;
condition. Comes with carrying&#13;
case. Will sell for $30.00. Call 637-&#13;
6445.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3836.&#13;
Public Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check&#13;
ours first high quality — 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Slide Rule $10.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis — Mens, including poles and&#13;
boots. 553-2245.&#13;
Toaster $5.00, Steam Iron $5.00. Call&#13;
553-2345.&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and woods,&#13;
$346 new will sell for $245.&#13;
Legalize Marijuana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. 50c donation. Be at Student&#13;
Activities Building Wed.&#13;
Stereo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
amplifier, turntable, 2 speakers&#13;
Moving, must sell. $50. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
BROWSE — Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, Wis.&#13;
Sonny &amp; Cher&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
stars?&#13;
Cher: I don't know, I dig stars of&#13;
that era, but, as a matter of&#13;
fact, I'm more star-like than&#13;
people are today. I really dig&#13;
the idea of stars. The other day&#13;
somebody said Heddy Lamarr.&#13;
We were doing one of the things&#13;
and somebody said, "You&#13;
remind me of Hedy Lamarr."&#13;
NS: If you had a choice between&#13;
any woman of that era, any of&#13;
the stars, who would you most&#13;
like to be like?&#13;
Cher: Oh wow, let me see. I&#13;
think Garbo, I like her alot. We&#13;
watched her on TV the other&#13;
night. It was really groovy.&#13;
NS: Then is there any formula&#13;
to your stage personality?&#13;
Cher: You go with what you've&#13;
got and if that's what you are,&#13;
you are. Like some people say&#13;
you try to be sexy, it doesn't&#13;
work. You just have to be what&#13;
you are, you know. There are&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75 - 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 654-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire 8. rim $1, File&#13;
boxes $1 8. $1.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
Disp. Call 511-7161 aft. 4 p.m.&#13;
2 Bedroom House, Parkside area,&#13;
Liv. R., Dining Room comb.,&#13;
Fireplace, over one acre land, 552-&#13;
9012.&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
winemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums. 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money — Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED — Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen — Good condition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, 551-9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week, 7:45-4:30. Call 553-2415.&#13;
some women that are really&#13;
sexy in all kinds of different&#13;
ways. I think it's taste: what&#13;
you think is sexy maybe this&#13;
guy over there wouldn't think.&#13;
NS: Are you in any sort of&#13;
women's liberation of any kind?&#13;
Cher: No. I can understand the&#13;
idea of it, but I think that the&#13;
people are going on about it all&#13;
wrong. I think women should&#13;
get paid the right amoung, and&#13;
all that, but the only people I&#13;
ever see are a bunch of really&#13;
dog women,. you know, that&#13;
couldn't get a guy if they&#13;
wanted one. I think they should&#13;
get better representation than&#13;
they've got.&#13;
NS: We've kept you here pretty&#13;
long already, one final question&#13;
to wind-up the interview. When&#13;
you both were really down,&#13;
financially and otherwise, what&#13;
brought up from there to where&#13;
you are today?&#13;
Sonny: She did. A relationship.&#13;
Cher: It was definitely our&#13;
relationship.&#13;
and book money. Dancing &amp;&#13;
Waitress work. If nudity offends&#13;
you, do not apply. Call 652-20031 or&#13;
stop at 4426 - S heridan Road.&#13;
WANTED — Two attractive, openminded&#13;
female students to share&#13;
small apartment with two male&#13;
students. Apt. 1 block from Racine&#13;
campus. For further information&#13;
write to: Peter Noll, Apt. 3,1111 Wis.&#13;
Ave., Racine, Wis.&#13;
FREE Kittens: 6 weeks old, litter&#13;
trained. Good with children. Male&#13;
and female, assorted colors. Call&#13;
Sharon, Ext. 20, Racine Main Hall&#13;
201, or 634-6215 after 5 p.m.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
FOR RENT — Modern office space.&#13;
Carpeted and air conditioned. $50.00&#13;
per mo. Utilities included. Call Tony&#13;
at 652-3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
LOST &amp; FOUND&#13;
Prescription Glasses; Car keys; A&#13;
wedding ring. At the information&#13;
center, 2nd floor, Tallent Hall.&#13;
newscope&#13;
classifieds&#13;
use 'em free&#13;
Workshop Promotes Creativity&#13;
Patronize Newscope Advertizers&#13;
NEWSCOPE presents (/)&#13;
Q&#13;
Sat. Sept. 25&#13;
QQ 7:00-1:00&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
adm. $1.25&#13;
+P-side&amp;State I.D.'s&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
o £&#13;
Otis Plum&#13;
and&#13;
Starboys&#13;
(formerly Bulldog Harry) </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 2, September 13, 1971</text>
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                <text>1971-09-13</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63425">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63426">
                <text>English</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63429">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63430">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>assistant chancellor allen dearborn</name>
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        <name>dean of students</name>
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        <name>john koloen</name>
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        <name>parkside village</name>
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              <text>Parkside to Train Peace Corps Coaches</text>
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              <text>unl'versityof Wisconsin~Parkside will tral.·n th .&#13;
... elf various skills&#13;
..... American Peace Corps volunteers In "w '&#13;
*"&#13;
~on' (or tWlryear coaching stints in the educato~;~ ~t to make international physical&#13;
~. .. outlining t~ coaches ~t of them," Sorsby said ..&#13;
r-:rtrainingprogram at Parkside, which will be people wh hP~ogram. They're all highly Quallf,ed&#13;
Tbe ted by Bitt Sorsby of Washmgton, D.C., will dards us; t a to .pass some extremely high stan-&#13;
~ I I and run for four and one-half weeks adulte? get 10 the program. All are college&#13;
~N~v. 5. Soon after, the trainee coaches will lhmk we;IW~th degrees ID physical education so we&#13;
UnitedStates for eight to ten more weeks of "And that sending our best people."&#13;
IIOlf1be and cross·cultural training 10 the Philip- high QU lit IS the main reason we're asking for&#13;
......~ore they are assigned to various provinces. secreta: 1 Yo~OaChes."~~~io de Borja, execuuve&#13;
........ coachingteam will have the responsibility of Federatra ha the. ~,hil,ppme Amateur Athletic&#13;
._ n, s said. We can't afford to fall in this&#13;
Parks.ide 10 Train. Peace Corps Coaches&#13;
.,tlIC with Fihpmo coaches and athletes 10 program"&#13;
.-idiol! a totalphysical education, sport and fitness The t . .&#13;
~-for the island republic. The major sport in Philipp' rammg program and eventual service 10 the&#13;
;'.~am is track and field, with emphasis also team ~~es hare oUigrowths of the Parkside coaching&#13;
.....d. (11 basketball, baseball," gymnastics, swim- Tom' Ros: diw~s o~m~d by uw·p ,athletic drrectcr ~:_A tennis Presid n c ! W 0 IS also adviser on s.por.t to&#13;
.... ION • eSI ent Ferdinand Marcos f the Phili&#13;
According to the Peace Corps contract the Be f th 0 ppmes.&#13;
-'-'-" will work closely with Parkside athletic in ~~~e~osaendisuchcessdofdtheBoParksidecoaching team&#13;
_-- ti taff be I . f ,c an e rja were able to begin .pI1YSicaleduca on s mem rs, earnmg rom here what should lead t be&#13;
...... d aiding them when possibie. in the Phili mes thePeacr Iter things lor sports&#13;
~ith track the most important sport in the the work o~pthe O~~ginal:~~orps coaches take up&#13;
noai&gt;8 program,UW·p track coach Bob Lawson, a The American coach will be . kin&#13;
_of Philippinecoaching and teaching with the coaching and clinic I el with FT . wcr g on a&#13;
_ Parb. ide coaching team, will emphasize the athletes and will be Seekev&#13;
m' Wigt . I 'pmo thcoafchesanold .. .. P tt d t ck' th d 0 Improve e &gt;!ness&#13;
....,can .Tra~ng .a ern. an ra In eory an the youth in the nation and select those 'A;th potenual&#13;
~ lD his sessI~ns WIth the volunteers. Other for specialized athletic training.&#13;
_ 00 they. PkaGrksdfldestadifft- Steve StePhKens, Another major part of the volunteers' programs.&#13;
'-11; IC o. rey, s ance runmng; . en as it was during the stay of the Parkslde coactung&#13;
lIJlrtI'Une!. base~all,.Dave Do~ldson. gymnas~cs; team, will be physical fitness testing with some nlDe&#13;
G81lIartiny, swunrnmg; and Dick Frecka, tennis - •&#13;
wi&#13;
1*1&#13;
COII'dinateactivities in their specialized areas.&#13;
members of the staff will also contribute with&#13;
F R E E&#13;
University of Wisronsin - Parkside&#13;
•••••••&#13;
VOLUME5 NUMBER t&#13;
President Weaver Greets Students&#13;
audience, stated that the park was bemg used b)&#13;
by Marc Eisen "undesirable elements." He saId squad cars bad&#13;
of the Newscope stall been pelted and that at one time barricades ere .!.seemsthat if Kenosha's leens are to do any d&#13;
~ smoking, wme drinking or love makIng on put across the rOO . red. ted&#13;
SUn, on's Island they'll have'to do it before to "It calls for action," be empbasl He no&#13;
o clock that the original ordinance bad been passed&#13;
Will at night because that is when city parks many years ago, and was inte&lt;&gt;dedto all....&#13;
nus' be closed to loiters ff hot mer rughlS people to cool 0 on sum .&#13;
appears to be the situation facing the "People do not flock to the beaches like th,,?&#13;
~ long hairs who frequent the park as the used to do. They have air condItioners .-,&#13;
to Commission voted unanimously last week Nedweski explainedend&#13;
the long standing poII~ic:y~W~hi~'c~h~k~ep~t~Ia~k~e~ ~~~~':~:::::---;:-:-----:;--;-:;-::-=-::;:-"'::'---l&#13;
Curfew Looms Over Simmon's Island&#13;
To !be Students and Faculty of&#13;
Ibe University:&#13;
ltisa great pleasure.for me to&#13;
"'me you' to the 1971-72&#13;
lr8demicyear.&#13;
'or some of you, this will be a&#13;
.. and demanding experience&#13;
• you become acquainted with&#13;
IIltcampus, the community and&#13;
WIth yoor responsibilities as&#13;
~bers of the faculty and&#13;
I1IIdontbndy.For most of you, it&#13;
11 I continuation of the&#13;
~esses of teaching and&#13;
8ming in a familiar, exciting&#13;
lI....phere.&#13;
But there may be some differences&#13;
this year, In~&#13;
UlWeniences - even some&#13;
hardships - may confront us.&#13;
The lack of an established&#13;
budget has made planning&#13;
difficult in every department&#13;
and program. The pay and price&#13;
freeze was a double-edged&#13;
sword: it enabled us to hold the&#13;
line on fees and tuitions for the&#13;
periro of the current freeze, but&#13;
it also was a cruel blow to the&#13;
academic stalf, taking away&#13;
almost twc:rmillion dollars in&#13;
much deserved salary and&#13;
retirement funding ad·&#13;
justments. And in those areas&#13;
where the University must&#13;
support" its operations from&#13;
earnings, salary adjustments&#13;
made before the freeze combined&#13;
with hol&lt;j.(he-hne pnce&#13;
cannot help but cause senous&#13;
financial problem&#13;
As a consequence. lbere rnay&#13;
well be more "closed" ~&#13;
and sections, longer ""a,ting&#13;
lines for varIOUS en'lces&#13;
Nonetheless, we hope thaI the&#13;
Universit)' communll) can&#13;
draw together 10 the faef" of&#13;
these difficultues and roo\&#13;
forward in united effort to&#13;
enhance the In true lion.'&#13;
program and ,n keepll'll&#13;
outstandlOg academiC In~&#13;
stitution a stimulating and&#13;
intellectually exclung place to&#13;
learn and to leach.&#13;
JohnC. Wee' r&#13;
Pre ldent&#13;
Doug laFollette's&#13;
Book Re i ed&#13;
e pa e 4&#13;
Ibore ks The only opposition to the proposed ord1naDCe&#13;
dooinpar open all night, to establish a uniform was voiced by AId. Alvin Hoffman, a member of&#13;
Theg hour oliO p.m. for all city parks.. the audience. "What's going to happen to these&#13;
the P fullCitycouncil is expected to conc4r WIth children whe&lt;&gt;we cJose the parks'" be asked&#13;
Theark CommiSSion action. "Is this going to cause them to go a.....y. to&#13;
Jl'o Park. Commission action came on ~ disappear?"&#13;
1IttoPDsed. ordinance by Ald. Richard Sepanslu He said only a minority of them cause trouble&#13;
""IdCO~plalned tbe noise disturbed the. ar.ea fle suggested as an alternative that poIlce&#13;
&lt;5cat~tssleep. The_Director ot Parks, 10 n- surveillance continue, and appeals be made 10&#13;
doJn IIlg his SUpport .of the ordinace, noted the the Ch.ildren to start policing themselves&#13;
the age and vandalism which has occurred in "The easy way out is to close the park," be&#13;
•• park,&#13;
0( :'.e Wantthe tools to enio"ce the laws," Cluef sai;~ told the Commission be bad ridden with a&#13;
lie licellosman said in favor of the ordinace. squad car to check the situation out, and bad&#13;
~d the youths who go to the park go there to found the youths rather orderly.&#13;
You Wine and take pot. "They give it to Ald. Bilotti asked Chief Bosman that if a&#13;
l!v~~:.;ers, especially young girls," he h band and wife and their children were at the&#13;
The usk looking at the lake and it was after to&#13;
"be Chieftold of his vacation to Boulder, Colo., ~~ock,would they be "'"""ted'&#13;
COn&gt; ~ he was told by residents that hippies had Bosman said no. . II:etely taken over their parks. . . MicJ&gt;ae1Fischer, a City aUorney. corrected&#13;
'""Wdsaid some students at our local univers&gt;ues Bosman "In all deference to the ChIef, if&#13;
o\l hke to do the same thing. sameo"; is just on a blanket looking at the lake ___ ..d~._P_eler Nedweski, speaking from ~the~ ::::~";;" "&#13;
ConsplCUooW . a I from&#13;
medU'll ere an) of !he )&#13;
affected b) tbe anilll8nee&#13;
tln~ a leader of the&#13;
man. a f&lt;Kmderof the K&#13;
a f.... da)... after the m&#13;
Dorfman readily admi there do&#13;
goU'll on at tmmon'S Island. .. ne &lt;In I&#13;
underage kIds. ..,me balling. and rna) be a&#13;
alderman cbal'led. clothes h 011 the&#13;
7;30 10 the morn to dry.&#13;
He saId the Coahtion "'8$ formed n .....ponse&#13;
to tbe ba.ssling by the cops "11' Ume to do&#13;
somellung "hen you' re pushed around Vi e'",&#13;
tired of nmnU'll O\'er)·time som tells 10 mo'&#13;
Lots 01 people say 'ThIS IS Kenosha 11 too&#13;
fucked up to change' It's not. You don'l ha'e to&#13;
go dUo. 'ew York to be a revolullonaF) "&#13;
Most 01 the kids ....·bogo to Slmmoo's 1sla.nd are&#13;
lugh school k'ds. he said - "moslly people tryu~&#13;
to meel other people." Most feel fa"oratile to th&#13;
tContinued on Page 8)&#13;
at&#13;
1'bt university of Wisconsin-Parksi~e will tra!n their various skills&#13;
American Peace Corps vo unteers m "We're out .&#13;
ra251i.011 • for two-year coaching stints in the educators and tcho make mternat1onal pti) 1 coa es out of them · · b&#13;
es outlining the program "Th • · ors y said m&#13;
:ning program at Parkside, which will be people who had t · ey re all high!) qu hf,&#13;
nier; by Bill Sorsby of Washington, D.C., will &lt;lards just to_ ge; fua~esoprrn:greaxmtre_ rnAlell;ahri co 1&#13;
t n- t. 1 and run for four an~ one-half weeks grad t&#13;
OC ·ov. s. soon after, the trainee coaches will th'nk ua es with degrees in physical education&#13;
·united states for eight t_o ~en ~ore wee~ of 1 .. :i~1:~ f:nding o~ be t peopl~."&#13;
tttbe and cross-cultural traming in the Philip- high qualit ~e .~am reason we ~e I f r&#13;
geore they are assigned to various provinces. secretary Y0~ 0 ~~ es, ~~s~10 de B Ja, e h&#13;
bef coaching team will have the responsibility of Federation has .d.~'hWihppme Amateur th 1&#13;
Ttit • sai e can't afford to fail in tht&#13;
Parkside to Train Peace Corps Coaches&#13;
with Filipino coachE:5 an~ athlet~ in program."&#13;
~ a total physical education, sport and fitness The tr"·ni'ng d · d bl' Th · · .., program an eventual n ce int ~ for the islan rep~ ic. . e maJor s~rt in Philippines are outgrowths of the Par ide .&#13;
program is track and field,_ with em~has1s ~lso team, which was formed by UW-P athletic director&#13;
...-i on basketball, baseball, gymnastics, swim- Tom Rosandich wh · 1 d . ,,...- . . , o 1s a so a ,, r on to&#13;
111d tennis. President Ferdinand farcos of th Philipp"&#13;
AcCOf"ding to the Peace ~orps co~tract, t~e Because of the success of the Parkside coachin&#13;
will wor~ closely with Parkside_ athletic in 1971, Rosandich and de Borja er able to in&#13;
adpb) ica! ~cation staff mem~rs, learning from ~ere what should lead to even better thm for port&#13;
111d aiding them whe? possible. . m the Philippines as the Peace Corp coach ta up&#13;
ilh track the most important sport m the the work of the original team.&#13;
irogr~m,_ UW-P tr~ck coach Bo~ La"'.son, a The American coaches will be wor&#13;
.wan of Phihppme _coaching and_ teaching ~1th the coaching and clinic level \\-lth Filipino coach&#13;
Parkside_ c_oaching team, will e~phas1ze the athletes and will be seeking to impro,e the fitn&#13;
Amen(lll Trairung Pattern and track m theory and the youth in the nation and select those ·1th&#13;
lldmiqUe in his sessi~ns with the volunteers. Other for specialized athletic training.&#13;
oo the_ Parkside sta~f - Steve ~tephens, Another major part of the volunteers' pr&#13;
flaketball: Vick Godfrey, distance runnmg; ~en as it was during the stay of the Par 1 e&#13;
(kbruner, base~;_Dave Do~ldson, gymnas~cs; team, will be physical fitness te ting ~itb&#13;
Gaallartiny, sw1mrmng; and Dick Frecka, tennis -&#13;
members of the staff will also contribute with coordinate activities in their specialized areas. F R E E&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
If/---- \'OLUME 5 NUMBER 1 0 JP&#13;
President Weaver Greets Students&#13;
To the Students and Faculty of&#13;
tbt University:&#13;
hardships - may confront us.&#13;
I a great pleasure for me to&#13;
welcome you to the 1971-72&#13;
academic year.&#13;
For some of you, this will be a&#13;
and demanding experience&#13;
• you become acquainted with&#13;
tbtrampus, the community and&#13;
th yrur responsibilities as&#13;
members of the faculty and&#13;
bldent body. For most of you, it&#13;
a continuation of the&#13;
proce ses of teaching and&#13;
ming in a familiar, exciting&#13;
mosphere.&#13;
But there may be some diff&#13;
rence this year. In-&#13;
\eJuences - even some&#13;
The lack of an established&#13;
budget has made plannin&#13;
difficult in every department&#13;
and program. The pay and price&#13;
freeze was a double-edged&#13;
sword: it enabled us to hold the&#13;
line on fees and tuitions for the&#13;
period of the current freeze, but&#13;
it also was a cruel blow to the&#13;
academic staff, taking away&#13;
almost two-million dollars in&#13;
much deserved salary and&#13;
retirement funding adjustments.&#13;
And in those area&#13;
where the University mu t&#13;
support its operati~s from&#13;
earnings, salary adJustments&#13;
made before the freeze comaudience,&#13;
t.ated that the park&#13;
by Marc E\sen "undesirable elements." H . d&#13;
of lhe Newscope staff been pelted and that at on lim&#13;
It ms that if Kenosha's teens are to do any put across the road.&#13;
!11oking, wine drinking, or love making on "It call for action," he emph 1&#13;
, on Island they'll have to do it before 10 that the original ordinanc _had&#13;
0 dock at night because that is when city parks many years ago, and a m&#13;
II~ closed to loiters. people to cool off on ho ummbeiriches&#13;
'llus appears to be the situation facing the "People do not flock to th&#13;
~ long hairs who frequent the park as the used to do. They have a r cond1Uo&#13;
Commission voted unanimously last week Nedweski explained.&#13;
lo end the long _standing poll~k~y:_:w:ru~·~c~h~k=e~pt~la~k:e ____ :'.'.::=::-=::=~---;:--:-------;~~7.=:-=i----1 I Curfew Looms Over Simmon l land&#13;
The only oppo ition to the proposed o&#13;
was voiced by Ald Alvin Hoffman. a mem&#13;
the audience. "What's going to ha~~ to&#13;
children when we close the park .&#13;
~ parks open all night, to establish a uniform&#13;
g hour of.lo p.m. for all city parks.&#13;
The full city council is expected to conc4I" with&#13;
Park Commission action.&#13;
Jr 'lne Park Commission action came on a&#13;
~sed. or~nance by Ald. Richard Sepanski&#13;
t!s' COmplamed the noise disturbed the area 15c id~t·s _sleep. The Director o~ Parks, in i,-&#13;
~hng his support of the ordinace, noted ~e&#13;
~ age and vandalism which has occurred m&#13;
J)ark.&#13;
01''W~want the tools to enfo!"ce the Jaws," Cluef&#13;
ffePo~ice Bosman said in favor of the ordinace.&#13;
~~id ~e youths who go to the park go there to&#13;
'J wine and take pot. "They give it to&#13;
~ng1&#13;
sters, especially young girls," he&#13;
•nea ed.&#13;
~e Chief told of his vacation to Boulder, Colo.,&#13;
CX1rnre he was told by residents that hippies had&#13;
ple~ely taken over their parks.&#13;
..,!~d~d some students at our local universities&#13;
hke to do the same thing.&#13;
A.Id. Peter Nedweski, speaking from the&#13;
"Is this going to cause them to go&#13;
disappear'?" He said only a minonty oC the~ ca&#13;
He suggested a an alternative&#13;
surveillance continue, and appeal m&#13;
the children to start ~cing themseh .,&#13;
"The easy way out 1s to close the par ,&#13;
sai~- told the Commission he had ridden rith&#13;
squ:d car to check the situatioo ou and had&#13;
found the youths rather ~erh · Aid. Bilotti a ed Chi~ a_osrnan that 1f a&#13;
husband and wife and tbe1t children ere a the&#13;
k looking at the Jake and 1t -..;a aft 10&#13;
~:iock, would they be arrested7&#13;
Bosman said no. Michael Fischer, a city attorney, c0r!' t~&#13;
Bo "In all deference to the Oud, if&#13;
sman, _._ · t the la e someone is just on a bla, ... et ing a &#13;
SEWSCOPE Srptembft'S.It71&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
Pomogroplly I ...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Ever)' decade or so,&#13;
sometime even more&#13;
frequently, the United tates&#13;
Supreme Court lnes to draw a&#13;
national line on what is legally&#13;
acceptable and unacceptable. It&#13;
ha never yet ucceeded in&#13;
dra-'lng a permanently&#13;
IIsfactor)' line. No problem&#13;
ha been In court and tested as&#13;
much 85 the issue of poroolP'aphy&#13;
Way back in t~7&#13;
Justice Brennan said, "All&#13;
ide d ahne in pornograplly,&#13;
ha the full prolecllon of the&#13;
uarant of the free speech&#13;
prov\$lons of ,he United States&#13;
C nstjtunon' First Amendm&#13;
nt" To top this off,&#13;
Pre .dent 'ixon had ConlP'ess&#13;
appomt an eighteen man&#13;
comml Ion to make a scientific&#13;
IUdy 01 pornography WeU,&#13;
alttT three years lime, and an&#13;
pend, lure of tWO million&#13;
dollars of our tax money, the&#13;
rtSUlls of the commission were:&#13;
pornography was harmless, and&#13;
their only recommendations,&#13;
keep It away (rom mmors and&#13;
WlW1UlOgadults&#13;
A quote from heUy Winters&#13;
loae 46), "I think nudity is&#13;
ahamelul and disgusling; but if&#13;
I w 22 years old, I'd say it&#13;
.'.&#13;
.~&#13;
WOUld be artishc, tasteful,&#13;
patriotic and a progressive&#13;
religious experience."&#13;
Ilbink her quote hits some of&#13;
Racine's aldermen to a tee.&#13;
They're too old and one sided to&#13;
make any decisioos for me OIl&#13;
pornography. If Presidenl&#13;
Nixon's commission, made up&#13;
of well qualified personnel,&#13;
already spent two million&#13;
doUars and three years time&#13;
studying this issue, I believe&#13;
that their findings are good&#13;
enough for me. So my opinion 011&#13;
the whole issue is: the city&#13;
councils of Racine and Kenosha&#13;
should leave the go go bars and&#13;
movie houses alone. and go on&#13;
to more important subjects, like&#13;
for example, the court leniency&#13;
on dope pushers, or anything&#13;
else they see fit, but they&#13;
shouldn't try to make any of my&#13;
moral decisions for me.&#13;
U Ald. Frank Barry of Racine&#13;
feels so strongly against this&#13;
entertainment, he should tell&#13;
the people of his own ward that&#13;
he won't allow them to&#13;
patronize these places. Just&#13;
leave me alone, Mr. Barry.&#13;
Thank you anyways.&#13;
Ibelieve that the President's&#13;
commission bas. by all means,&#13;
the right solution, and it's also&#13;
my opinion that the members of&#13;
A relver is a con artist.&#13;
A reiver is a rascal. .&#13;
Steve McQueen in&#13;
tThe Reivers'&#13;
Fri. Sept. 10 8:00 p.m.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE&#13;
75&lt; WITH PARKSIDE AND WISCONSIN I 0 AOM&#13;
'" P ""'K SlOE .TUOI[NT ACTlv'T'E. FEATURE FILM&#13;
his committee "are a heck of alot&#13;
more "qualified" than you or&#13;
any local aldermen to make ,3&#13;
decision like this. Now thts&#13;
brings us back to lh~ very&#13;
beginning; if you object to&#13;
nudity, just stay' way. It's up to&#13;
the people and the people only,&#13;
to say when this entertainment&#13;
will stop, and that will be when&#13;
they stop patronizing these&#13;
establishments.&#13;
Charline Kuipuo&#13;
5000 Graceland Blvd.&#13;
Racine, Wis. 53406&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I thought the interview with&#13;
Racine's Mayor Kenneth Huck&#13;
was great. There are a few&#13;
comments that I would like to&#13;
make. There are alot I could&#13;
make, but I'll only mention a&#13;
few.&#13;
I couldn't agree with the&#13;
Mayor more, when he said,&#13;
"Racine needs full time&#13;
aldermen." Il's true Racine has&#13;
eighteen part time aldermen,&#13;
and out of the eighteen I personally&#13;
don't think the majority&#13;
of them are qualified either.&#13;
You take some and I bet you'll&#13;
find that they never even&#13;
finished high school, and others&#13;
that don't know the first thing&#13;
about law. Now if Racine would&#13;
TO&#13;
have six or seven full time&#13;
aldermen; First we could set&#13;
some sort of qualifications,&#13;
they'd have to meet. Then by&#13;
cutting down the number of&#13;
aldermen, we could offer a&#13;
more attractive wage, with the&#13;
full time duties, that the job&#13;
calls for. Now, by having this&#13;
attractive wage increase, I'm&#13;
sure more qualified people&#13;
would consider the job. After&#13;
all, you need more than some&#13;
factory workers or cement&#13;
workers to run the city.&#13;
Ialso agree with the Mayor on&#13;
most points he made on the&#13;
topless and X-rated movies&#13;
controversy. I don't think it's&#13;
right that an X-rated movie&#13;
should be shown at an outdoor&#13;
either. The President's Committee&#13;
on Pornography points&#13;
out that pornography is harmless&#13;
to adults, and keep it&#13;
away from children and unwilling&#13;
adults. So I see no&#13;
reason what so ever the&#13;
slightest point Racine is trying&#13;
to do by closing these places. If&#13;
some Puritan alderman&#13;
(Barry) are going on and on, I&#13;
think you should put a stop to&#13;
them, and put them in their&#13;
place as mayor. The Constitution&#13;
protects these places,&#13;
and the people who patronize&#13;
them. As far as th&#13;
advertising topless'" ~&#13;
tomless, is wrong I iIlcI bet&#13;
these places have ;ig ~ II&#13;
the public what enlellS&#13;
~&#13;
IS being offered. By ~&#13;
think they can serve ....&#13;
purposes. One, by ~ "-&#13;
everyone know it's • eu':'l&#13;
entertainment, is enn~&#13;
vertising. I'm sure --..........&#13;
know, two, no one sh':/:"&#13;
these places in the first be&#13;
that object to them ,,-_1IIct&#13;
the warning signs 'So~'&#13;
1&#13;
. . 111-&#13;
c usron of the nudity'. -&#13;
don't think any fuss sb:'&#13;
made.&#13;
Iwould like to ask !be&#13;
this, how can anybody iudBo""-&#13;
mores of any commlllity! lit&#13;
because a few PUri~ .::&#13;
men led by Ald. FI'8ItIt _&#13;
be the voice of !be-"&#13;
community' The ....&#13;
these establishments ~ •&#13;
this type of entertal.'::&#13;
wouldn't be in busineoI..&#13;
one patronized them, ...:&#13;
they. As long as P"'IIle&#13;
patronize these places. .... fa,&#13;
would say there Is a _&#13;
morality standard, IIId " ..&#13;
large crowds these pIaceo ....&#13;
I'd say some people do ..&#13;
No local judge could .... _&#13;
to a fair decision, wilh ..&#13;
Test Dates for National&#13;
Teacher Examination Announced&#13;
College seniors preparing to&#13;
teach school may take the&#13;
National Teacher&#13;
Examinations on any of the four&#13;
different test dates announced&#13;
today by Educational Testing&#13;
Service, a nonprofit,&#13;
educational organization which&#13;
'prepares and administers this&#13;
testing program.&#13;
New dates for the testing of&#13;
prospective teachers are:&#13;
Nov. 13, 1971, and Jan. 29,&#13;
April 8, and July 15, 1972. The&#13;
tests will be given at nearly 500&#13;
locations throughout the United&#13;
Slates, ETS said.&#13;
Results of the National&#13;
Teacher Examinations are used&#13;
by many large school districts&#13;
as one of several factors in the&#13;
selection of new teachers and by&#13;
several states for certification&#13;
or licensing of teachers. Some&#13;
...•. .;-: .-:w;.:...:.;.•.•....•:::t::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::;::::::::::::::::::;:o:-:::;::::~;:.";:.-;;.~-=--==:;:;:o:&gt;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::::&#13;
!I;&#13;
~ 1..&#13;
..' ::::&#13;
~ N&#13;
I ~':;';~':::a;,=;;;u:;::;t' !.I.I&#13;
~) KENOSHA-RACINE"&#13;
.;. ....;.•. ':.:.:.:.:-:.; .. :.:.:::.:::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::;:::;:::;:::::::.:.:.:.;.:.:-:.;:::;.::::;:;:;:;:::;:::::;::;:::::.::;&#13;
~.&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
Correction&#13;
The front page photograph&#13;
appearing in Newscope's&#13;
registration issue was not taken&#13;
by Neil Haglov as indicated but&#13;
by John Valaske Directo~ ofSummer&#13;
Session and Extended&#13;
day program. The photograph&#13;
was taken in 1966 and somehow&#13;
crept into Newscope files. (ed,&#13;
the photo was nat a picture of&#13;
Tallent Hall as we suspected but&#13;
of the Kenosha campus ...&#13;
Tallent Hall still a weeded field&#13;
at the time the picture was&#13;
taken.)&#13;
EVERY WOMAN&#13;
HAS A OfOICE&#13;
* Free pregnancy testing&#13;
* Free, Confidential&#13;
Counceling and Referral&#13;
• safe, Legal Abort;."&#13;
312-774-6911&#13;
312-775-2685&#13;
CHOICE, INqlRPORA TED&#13;
a nonprofi t 5ervi ce&#13;
for WOmen&#13;
colleges also require all seniors&#13;
preparing to teach to take the&#13;
examinations. The school&#13;
systems and state departments&#13;
of education which use the&#13;
examination results are listed&#13;
in an NTE leaflet entitled Seo.oe&#13;
Usel's which may be obtained&#13;
by writing to ETS.&#13;
On each f~ll day of testing,&#13;
prospective teachers may take&#13;
the Common Examinations&#13;
which measure their&#13;
professional preparation and&#13;
general educationa'i&#13;
background and a Teaching&#13;
Area Examination which&#13;
mearures their mastery of the&#13;
subject they expect to teach.&#13;
Prospective teacben ....&#13;
contact the school ~ ..&#13;
which they seek e~&#13;
or their colleges, lor ....&#13;
advice on which exammetfee&#13;
to take and on wbich dllsa.,&#13;
should be taken .&#13;
The Bulletin '" Ia~&#13;
for Candidates contaiDIa III.,&#13;
test centers, and idfonIIdII&#13;
about the examinatiOlll,_&#13;
as a Registration Form. Capils&#13;
may be obtained lrmI ....&#13;
placement officers, acboeI&#13;
personnel departmeatl •&#13;
directly from Natiooal""'"&#13;
Examinations, BOl til&#13;
Educational Testing Slr\'il!.&#13;
Princeton, New JettI!f ..&#13;
=CAMPUS EVENTS=&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 7:&#13;
Classes begin. Start of the&#13;
first semester.&#13;
FRIDAY. SEPT. 10:&#13;
Regents Meeting - The UW&#13;
Board of Regents will meet in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Feature Film. "The Rievers"&#13;
8:00 p.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Admission 75c.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wisconsin J.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDA Y, SEPT. It:&#13;
Tea - Parkside University&#13;
League presents a tea for all&#13;
Parkside women - staff&#13;
members or wives of staI •&#13;
2:30 p.m. in G...,.".p.lllll&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
Nighclub. "Gregory9:00&#13;
to 1:00 a.m. Studlll&#13;
tivities Building. A~&#13;
$1.50. Parkside&amp;&lt; W~&#13;
required.&#13;
+ SPECIAL EVENtS&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT.!&#13;
Concert. "John IJeD'lI'" III&#13;
p.m. Kenosha '1'reIJII*AdIlI'i!'&#13;
School Auditorium.&#13;
$3.50. Tickets avaiJallle ...&#13;
Student Activities ()fliCI.&#13;
206, Tallent Hall.&#13;
,:;,g,-; mi' ,&#13;
Newscope&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
New's Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
WRITING STAFF&#13;
Darrell Borger, Bob Borchardt,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen, Bill&#13;
Sorensen, Ken Konkol&#13;
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Janet Sabol&#13;
Mike Starr&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
BarbScolt&#13;
•&#13;
Business ~ ==&#13;
NewSCOpe is .. ~&#13;
student newspaper v~&#13;
students of -nWisconsin.Pa~&#13;
~&#13;
weekly excep! .--. ~&#13;
periods. Studelll&#13;
.., '"&#13;
verlising fundi': ,..~&#13;
source of rev ~ lIl:,j&#13;
operation of II..-Jill po&#13;
copies are IJI~ "&#13;
dislributed ~b~ ~&#13;
Kenosha an .. ur:;.&#13;
munities .. weD a:..&#13;
sity. Free~&#13;
upon~-&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
wouJd be arti he, tasteful,&#13;
patriotic and a progressive&#13;
religious experience.''&#13;
I think her quote hits some of&#13;
Ra ine' aldermen to a tee.&#13;
Th •lre too old and one ided to&#13;
m ·e any decisions for me on&#13;
pornography. If President&#13;
'i: on' commi ion, made up&#13;
ell qualified personnel,&#13;
)ready pent two million&#13;
dollars and three years time&#13;
tudying this i ue, I believe&#13;
that their findings are good&#13;
enough for me. So my opinion on&#13;
the whole i ue i : the city&#13;
council of Racine and Kenosha&#13;
should I ve the go go bars and&#13;
movie ho alone, and go on&#13;
to mor import.ant ubjects, like&#13;
for example, the court leniency&#13;
on dope pu:sher , or anything&#13;
el th y fit, but they&#13;
shouldn't try to make any of my&#13;
moral deci ·ion for me.&#13;
If Aid. Frank Barry of Racine&#13;
f l · so ·trongly against this&#13;
entertainment, he should tell&#13;
the people of his own ward that&#13;
he won't allow them to&#13;
patronize the e places. Just&#13;
leave me alone, tr. Barry.&#13;
Thank you anyways.&#13;
I believe that the President's&#13;
commission has, by all means,&#13;
the right solution, and it's also&#13;
my opinion that the members of&#13;
his committee·are a heck of alot&#13;
more " qualified" than you or&#13;
anv local aldermen to make a&#13;
deci ion like this. Now this&#13;
brings us back to the very&#13;
beginning ; if you obJect to&#13;
nudity , just stay way. It's up to&#13;
the people and the people only,&#13;
to say when this entertainment&#13;
will stop, and that will be when&#13;
they stop patronizing these&#13;
establishments.&#13;
Charline Kuipuo&#13;
5000 Graceland Blvd.&#13;
Racine, Wis. 53406&#13;
To the Editor: I thought the interview with&#13;
Racine 's l\Iayor Kenneth Huck&#13;
wa great There are a few&#13;
comments that I would like lo&#13;
make. There are alot I could&#13;
make, but I'll only mention a&#13;
few.&#13;
I couldn't agree with the&#13;
:\Iayor more, when he said,&#13;
" Racine needs full time&#13;
aldermen." It's true Racine has&#13;
eighteen part time aldermen,&#13;
and out of the eighteen I personally&#13;
don't think the majority&#13;
of them are qualified either.&#13;
You take some and I bet you'll&#13;
find that they never even&#13;
finished high school, and others&#13;
that don't know the first thing&#13;
about law. ow if Racine would&#13;
TO&#13;
have six or seven full time&#13;
aldermen; First we could set&#13;
some sort of qualifications,&#13;
they'd have to meet. Then by&#13;
cutting down the :1umber of&#13;
aldermen, we could offer a&#13;
more attractive wage, with the&#13;
full time duties, that the job&#13;
calls for. Now, by having this&#13;
attractive wage increase, I'm&#13;
sure more qualified people&#13;
would consider the job. After&#13;
all, you need more than some&#13;
factory workers or cement&#13;
workers to run the city.&#13;
I also agree with the Mayor on&#13;
most points he made on the&#13;
topless and X-rated movies&#13;
controversy. I don't think it's&#13;
right that an X-rated movie&#13;
should be shown at an outdoor&#13;
either. The President's Committee&#13;
on Pornography points&#13;
out that pornography is harmless&#13;
to adults, and keep it&#13;
away from children and unwilling&#13;
adults. So I see no&#13;
reason what so ever the&#13;
slightest point Racine is trying&#13;
to do by closing these places. If&#13;
some Puritan alderman&#13;
(Barry) are going on and on, I&#13;
think you should put a stop to&#13;
them, and put them in their&#13;
place as mayor. The Constitution&#13;
protects these places,&#13;
and the people who patronize&#13;
them. As far as th .&#13;
advertising topless ese lia&#13;
tomless, is wrong I and&#13;
these places have si behe\e&#13;
the public what en'ns \\'a&#13;
is ?eing offered. By t~~~1&#13;
thmk they can serve 1&#13;
purposes. One, by ~&#13;
everyone know it's .,eh&#13;
entertainment, is e a&#13;
t. . non .. ~&#13;
ver 1smg. I'm sure P -'"f&gt;'l&#13;
kn t eopte ow, wo, no one should&#13;
these places in the f be&#13;
that obje~t to them, ~~ the warnmg signs. S . 1 . ~ m c us1on of the nudity&#13;
don't think any fuss htSsue I&#13;
made. ~d&#13;
I would like to ask the la&#13;
this, how can anybody Ju •&#13;
mores of any communit .,&#13;
because a few Puritan) 8 J&#13;
men led by Ald. Frank &amp;.!&#13;
be the voice of the&#13;
community? The peopl&#13;
these establishments that e 111&#13;
this type of entertain&#13;
wouldn't be in busin ~ one patronized them •&#13;
they. ~s long as peofi&#13;
patromze these place&#13;
would say there is 3'&#13;
morality standard, and bv&#13;
large crowds these places •&#13;
I'd say some people do want&#13;
No local judge could ever&#13;
to a fair decision, \\ith&#13;
: -- ... . ...... t.;· •••••••• • • '1111 _ ... .. -.-.:-:; •• •••• • ·:·: .... ..... ·:·::-· &lt;. ····-:-~-:-:•.•.::. .... : : •• :::: • : •· .... &gt; •• · .•.• · .. . Test Dates for National&#13;
..&#13;
::; PEPSl·COLA :i&#13;
l&#13;
~f&#13;
;::&#13;
,.&#13;
!•:• f JFe wi h the P,,rkside students .. ,&#13;
t " ht1ppy ,ind successful year. =:=:&#13;
~): KENOSHA-RACINE ii/· • :•:•:•:•:•: :-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-::::~:=:::::;::::::::::,::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~:::::·:::-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:;:,:-:~:-:;:::::::::::::::::::::::~=l&#13;
A reiver is a con artist.&#13;
A reiver is a rascal. ..&#13;
Steve McQueen in&#13;
'The Reivers'&#13;
Fri. Sept. 10 8:00 p.m.&#13;
STU DE T ACT IVITI ES OFF ICE&#13;
A O 7 1TH P AR SIDE A O l'I I SCO S I 1 0&#13;
4 P AR S I D I U D • T A C TI I T IES F" EATURE F"ILM&#13;
College seniors preparing to&#13;
teach school may take the&#13;
ational Teacher&#13;
Examinations on any of the four&#13;
different test dates announced&#13;
today by Educational Testing&#13;
Service, a nonprofit,&#13;
educational organization which&#13;
·prepares and administers this&#13;
testing program.&#13;
New dates for the testing of&#13;
prospec tive teachers are :&#13;
ov. 13, 1971 , and Jan. 29,&#13;
April 8, and July 15, 1972. The&#13;
tests will be given at nearly 500&#13;
locations throughout the United&#13;
States, ETS said.&#13;
Results of the National&#13;
Teacher Examinations are used&#13;
by many large school districts&#13;
as one of several factors in the&#13;
selection of new teachers and by&#13;
several states for certification&#13;
or licensing of teachers. Some&#13;
Correction&#13;
The front page photograph&#13;
appearing in Newscope's&#13;
registration issue was not taken&#13;
by Neil Haglov as indicated, but&#13;
by John Valaske Director of&#13;
Summer Session and Extended&#13;
day program. The photograph&#13;
was taken in 1966 and somehow&#13;
crept into Newscope files. (ed.&#13;
the photo was not a picture of&#13;
Tallent Hall as we suspected but&#13;
of the Kenosha campus . . .&#13;
Tallent Hall still a weeded field&#13;
at the time the picture was taken.) - .&#13;
EVERY WOMAN&#13;
HAS A CHOICE&#13;
* Free pregnancy testing&#13;
* Free, Confidential&#13;
Counceling and Referral&#13;
* safe, Legal Abortion&#13;
312-774-6911&#13;
312-775-2685&#13;
CHOICE, IN CORPORA TED&#13;
0 nonprofit Service&#13;
far women&#13;
- --&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Teacher Examination Announced&#13;
colleges also require all seniors&#13;
preparing to teach to take the&#13;
examinations. The school&#13;
systems and state departments&#13;
of education which use the&#13;
examination results are listed&#13;
in an NTE leaflet entitled Score&#13;
Users which may be obtained&#13;
by writing to ETS.&#13;
On each full day of testing,&#13;
prospective teachers may take&#13;
the Common Examinations&#13;
which measure their&#13;
professional preparation and&#13;
general educational&#13;
background and a Teaching&#13;
Area Examination which&#13;
mearures their mastery of the&#13;
subject they expect to teach.&#13;
Prospective teachers&#13;
contact the school sys&#13;
which they seek emp)o)m&#13;
or their colleges, for&#13;
advice on which examma&#13;
to take and on which da&#13;
should be taken.&#13;
The Bulletin or Informal&#13;
for Candidates contains a I d&#13;
test centers, and informa&#13;
about the examination ,&#13;
as a Registration Form. Co&#13;
may be obtained from col&#13;
placement officer&#13;
personnel department&#13;
directly from National T&#13;
Examinations, Box II&#13;
Educational Testing Sen&#13;
Princeton, New Jerse)&#13;
=CAMPUS EVENTS=&#13;
TUESDAY! SEPT. 7:&#13;
Classes begin. Start of the&#13;
first semester.&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 10:&#13;
Regents Meeting - The UW&#13;
Board of Regents will meet in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Feature Film. "The Rievers"&#13;
8:00 p.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Admission 75c.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wisconsin I.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY. SEPT. 11 :&#13;
Tea - Parkside University&#13;
League ·presents a tea for all&#13;
Parkside women staff&#13;
members or wives of ta.ff&#13;
2:30 p.m. in Greenqu!St&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
Nighclub. "Gregory J&#13;
9:00 to 1:00 a.m. tudenl&#13;
tivities Building. Ad&#13;
$1.50. Parkside&amp; Wis&#13;
required.&#13;
+ SPECIAL E\'E&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT.? I&#13;
Concert. ''John Denier&#13;
p.m. Kenosha Tremper&#13;
School Auditorium A&#13;
$3.50. Tickets available•&#13;
Student Activities office&#13;
206, Tallent Hall.&#13;
,:;83f:Q.~ mo:: s:srfo: mmruw::r&#13;
Newscape (I -&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
WRITING STAFF&#13;
Darrell Borger, Bob Borchardt,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen Bill&#13;
Sorensen, Ken Konkol '&#13;
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS&#13;
M!ke Stevesand, Janet Sabol&#13;
Mike Starr&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella Dave Kraus,&#13;
Barb Scott '&#13;
PHONES 553·&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business ~&#13;
Newscope is an ~&#13;
student newspaper J:&#13;
students of T~&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkstde.ng 1-,cJ&#13;
weekly except dun obfJintd&#13;
periods. Student o,t&#13;
vertising funds art (c,&#13;
source of reve~ '&#13;
operation of Ne rinttd&#13;
copies are P dbolll . . d thrOU11. d1str1bute d Rac1nt&#13;
Kenosha_ an as !ht t:&#13;
munities as w~ll art a&#13;
sity. Free eop,es&#13;
upon request. &#13;
IEDITOR&#13;
. g down his neck.&#13;
~Itl';::;MISE" is the most&#13;
IICO t wordin government.&#13;
~I"'r:.e&lt;tto the topless signs&#13;
UyOU ladvertising by these&#13;
ond the a be you could come&#13;
JiI"'" ~ee~ent. I'm sure they&#13;
wand~eetyou half way, by&#13;
""" . g their sings, and you&#13;
""OV~now,they might even&#13;
~~ to cover up more. I&#13;
,gr&lt;f e a fair and open minded&#13;
L&lt;li'" howdmeet with these&#13;
Jllill S buthaving Ald. Frank&#13;
QIl1l"'head the License Comsarr~isa&#13;
disaster. Maybe it's&#13;
!Dl t limeyou, the Mayor of&#13;
~~ step in, and comIlaCJlI"l&#13;
I"mise ... Richard(Buddy)Missureli&#13;
10 the Editor:&#13;
~ereotype - figuratively to&#13;
fiX firmlyor unalterably&#13;
stereotype.in newspaper&#13;
iancecan mean me pourmg&#13;
~eadintoa mold. Out of this&#13;
JDIIidthe roiling presses gl~e&#13;
!he worldand Image ad 10-&#13;
finitum· Rube tei Soitfoliowsthat a u ns em&#13;
~uredinto a mold should&#13;
jtOOuce a "fine corned beef&#13;
ondwich."Soit is with a black&#13;
chiid - !xIrn- that he should&#13;
i1averhythm.Soit is with racist&#13;
~eories- being a theory it&#13;
categorizes.&#13;
Ruby's makes a "fine corned&#13;
beef sandwish"! Relative to&#13;
Howard Johnson's perha&#13;
Ruby's makes a fine cor~~&#13;
beef sandwich.&#13;
No Jew, in his right mind&#13;
would admit or attest th t&#13;
Ruby's has a fine corned ~&#13;
sandwich. The corned b f&#13;
d&#13;
. h . ee san WIC IS rarely ordered at&#13;
Ruby:s by Jews. They know&#13;
what ISserved is simulated. The&#13;
bread is not Jewish Rye&#13;
(remember this is roughly onehalf&#13;
of the sandwish) , The bread&#13;
IS a soft mush wrapped in&#13;
cellophane. The relationship of&#13;
this bread to the rich, peasant&#13;
born, r~l ~ye bread can .only be&#13;
in the Similar five letters of the&#13;
word.&#13;
The corned beef comes to the&#13;
customers (Jew or Gentile)&#13;
thinly shredded, stringy and&#13;
greasy. This is not the issue&#13;
however l because corned beef i~&#13;
not the issue.&#13;
The issue is that the middle&#13;
ages mentality that abounds.&#13;
Not the middles ages of a man's&#13;
lifteime but the middle ages of&#13;
man's span since the birth of&#13;
Christ. The same middle ages&#13;
that had normal men stoning&#13;
the walls of the Ghetto and&#13;
looking upon Jews as outsiders.&#13;
.Seplember6,1971 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Bigots· be 15 t name tod&#13;
they are not begotted ay and&#13;
Today ( lgh . p.m ) ri t now, exactly 3&#13;
H . . the coloration is&#13;
umamsm (Mister Dev&#13;
pr out and&#13;
oven member of tbe I&#13;
HEOn capital letters If ~ft).&#13;
capital letters it . . . ID&#13;
he HE SPEAKS IS an ordmary&#13;
S . . ALL OF GODC&#13;
CHOSEN CHILDREN LOVE&#13;
O~~~D :EEF. SIMULATED&#13;
RIDES· HE MIDDLE AGES&#13;
EVERYTHINgNiN A ~g~;-&#13;
RIDE ON RACISTS .&#13;
The last paragr~ph of the&#13;
arhcle. will ~ve a trip to ZION&#13;
that IS If your desire is to see the&#13;
Passl~n Play: precisely the&#13;
CruclfICaho? DER PAUL is&#13;
cruc~fled. HISspirit is crucified.&#13;
H~ IS martyred. He cannot&#13;
bring himself to help the kid&#13;
With the bicycle. What a way to&#13;
go. Go out like a hero every time&#13;
- (You can always tell the ones&#13;
who love and relish the cornbeef.&#13;
They have the Star of&#13;
David Armbands.)&#13;
Fred Hafkin&#13;
Letter Policy - Letters to the&#13;
.Editor should be double-spaced&#13;
typed, and should not exceed 400&#13;
words. Letters must be signed .&#13;
by lhe writer, but names will be&#13;
wi thheld upon request.&#13;
North-South Exchange Program&#13;
Information concerning the&#13;
Sorti&gt;SouthStudent Exchange&#13;
Programis currently available&#13;
from theStudentAffairs office&#13;
at the Kenosha campus.&#13;
Studenlsinterested in the&#13;
JI'l'Ilamare urged by its&#13;
Parkside coordinator, 1som&#13;
Fearn, to contact him at extensiO\l42K,&#13;
or at his office&#13;
room135 Kenosha. '&#13;
The program, in its sixth&#13;
~, exchanges University of&#13;
WISconsin students with&#13;
sludentsfrom three southern&#13;
S~o Universities during the&#13;
~nng semester. They are&#13;
orth Carolina A &amp; T State&#13;
UOIversity,North Carolina&#13;
~~al University, and Texas&#13;
'them University&#13;
Oli Due to the la~k of dor-&#13;
.,:.es at Parkside, the black&#13;
l!adi go.students are sent to&#13;
SOnIUsteaduf here I'Th .&#13;
~ e program requires a&#13;
said ~ItyP; of person," Fearn&#13;
Uiat'halleakmg uf the problems&#13;
iD the vearIsen in the program&#13;
1'ar' pasl few years (last&#13;
s exchang IlW.Plefth. e student from&#13;
... Weeks ISf&#13;
exchange school a&#13;
"The a ter arriving).&#13;
des· program is not&#13;
~~,to~ntegrate' lhe black&#13;
, earn emphasized ,&#13;
"but simply to expose the&#13;
student to black culture. He&#13;
can't go down there thinking he&#13;
is going to save the black&#13;
people."&#13;
"I don't want to paint an&#13;
overly rosy picture," he said.&#13;
II A person should- weigh in his&#13;
own mind what he wants to get&#13;
out of it."&#13;
Changes in the program&#13;
from last year include a longer&#13;
and more thorough screening&#13;
process of applicants (exchange&#13;
students from past years playa&#13;
key role in this), making it&#13;
better known to counsellors on&#13;
the black campuses that there&#13;
,.&#13;
~&#13;
..~.&#13;
ri&#13;
213 SiXTH STREET RACIN E&#13;
rQ&#13;
Qllce&#13;
Sf:ohsor ed b y&#13;
Newscope&#13;
S~ftetrJbQ.r 2St!J&#13;
are exchange students there.&#13;
Fearn noted that to insulate&#13;
the student too much from the&#13;
prohlems would only defeat the&#13;
purpose of the program - to&#13;
expose students to a black&#13;
culture on a first hand basis.&#13;
He said it's like the&#13;
situation of a black student in an&#13;
all white university. Some&#13;
people just aren't going to like&#13;
him because of his color.&#13;
Fearn said the key to the&#13;
program is that it's a learning&#13;
experience, and that if a person&#13;
realizes that he should give&#13;
serious consideration to taking&#13;
part in it.&#13;
Compact Stereo Phono System-model 9280. Put&#13;
together by Magnavox (the{ve been making great&#13;
sounds for over 60 years). This gem offers you a lot for&#13;
your money. Like 60 Watts EIA music power, an automatic&#13;
4-speed Micro Changer, and two 6" speakers.&#13;
Even a protective dust cover and jack for optional&#13;
headphone. Check out all its features. It's just one of&#13;
many in the Magnavox line of value-packed roommates-for&#13;
home or away. Component&#13;
systems and accessories,&#13;
radios, tape recorders /players,&#13;
S9995&#13;
portable TV and stereo.&#13;
famouS fOl MagftClV"O~&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I&#13;
'In Four§ius ,.. 12" - ••" • ,,"&#13;
AU&lt;&gt;&#13;
• .'IS • srAGHt'aTi • CHICKIN&#13;
t GMOCCHI. RAVIOLI· LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA fOOD • SANDWICHU&#13;
CAIlV.oUTS • DELlVEI\&#13;
"yOU liNG ••• WI. 'p1~&#13;
657.9843 or ..658-4922&#13;
Joernd/ &amp; Yen/Ullli&#13;
tHI' A"lIAIIIlCI. CIf"I •&#13;
ICENOI'H.A:. WISCONSIN&#13;
'U.55lh STREET&#13;
Patronile Newscope Advertisers - ,,~~&#13;
Page 3&#13;
a:&#13;
ur&#13;
o&#13;
a:&#13;
o&#13;
m&#13;
.J&#13;
.J&#13;
W&#13;
a:&#13;
a:&#13;
-c&#13;
o&#13;
&amp;DITOR&#13;
king down his neck.&#13;
1~ter5 ;ROMISE" is the most ,,co t word in government.&#13;
jJJ!J)Or:-ect to the topless signs&#13;
ayoUthe J advertising by these&#13;
and aybe you could come&#13;
?aces&#13;
, meement. I'm sure they&#13;
ioand~eet you half way, by&#13;
woul . g their sings, and you&#13;
reniovikn ow they might even ... vern , I "" . to cover up more. ~ee ea fair and open minded&#13;
celieV hould meet with these&#13;
man 5 but having Ald. Frank&#13;
l)\l'ller\ead the License Com-&#13;
~~; is a disaster. Maybe it's&#13;
Jlll t time you, the Mayor of&#13;
a!JOU • d ' Racine, step m, an comp-omise&#13;
. · · Richard (Buddy) Missureli&#13;
T the Editor: 0&#13;
stereotype _ figura tively to&#13;
/iX firmly or unalterably - Stereotype in newspaper&#13;
riance can mean the pourin:g&#13;
:lead into a mold. Out of ~1s&#13;
mold the rolling_ presses g1:-e&#13;
the world and image ad infinitum.&#13;
· . Soitfollows that a Rubenstein&#13;
!klured into a mold should&#13;
oduce a "fine corned beef&#13;
~dwich." So it is with a black&#13;
child_ bQrn - that he should&#13;
haverhythm. So it is with racist&#13;
lheories - being a theory it&#13;
categorizes.&#13;
Ruby's makes a " fine corned&#13;
beef sandwish" ! Relative to&#13;
Howard J ohnson's perha&#13;
Ruby's makes a fine cori~&#13;
beef sandwich.&#13;
No Jew, in his right mind&#13;
would admit or attest th t&#13;
Ruby's. has a fine corned be!f&#13;
sandwich. The corned b f&#13;
d . h. ee&#13;
san w1c 1s rarely ordered at&#13;
Ruby'.s by Jews. They know&#13;
what 1s s~rved is simulated. The&#13;
bread 1s not Jewish Rye&#13;
(remember this is roughly one-&#13;
~lf of the sandwish). The bread&#13;
1S a soft mush wrapped in&#13;
ce~ophane. The relationship of&#13;
this bread to the rich, peasant&#13;
~rn, r~l :Ye bread can only be&#13;
m the similar five letters of the&#13;
word.&#13;
The corned beef comes to the&#13;
cu_stomers (Jew or Gentile)&#13;
thmly shredded, stringy and&#13;
greasy. This is not the issue&#13;
however, because corned beef i~&#13;
not the issue.&#13;
The issue is that the middle&#13;
ages mentality that abounds.&#13;
Not the middles ages of a man's&#13;
lifteime but the middle ages of&#13;
man's span since the birth of&#13;
Christ. The same middle ages&#13;
that had normal men stoning&#13;
the walls of the Ghetto and&#13;
loo~ing upon Jews as outsiders.&#13;
Bigots is the name t&#13;
they are not begott oday and&#13;
Today ( ·gti ed.&#13;
p.m.) t~1 t now, exactly 3&#13;
H . e coloration is&#13;
umamsm &lt;Mister Devout and&#13;
proven member of h&#13;
~~i~!:-~'!L4!~&#13;
S CHOSEN CHILI}~ OF GODCORNE&#13;
REN LOVE&#13;
ORN D BEEF. SIMULATED&#13;
OT. THE MIDDLE AGES&#13;
RIDES ON p&#13;
EVERYTHING iN A Mgii RIDE ON RACISTS .&#13;
1:he last paragr~ph of the&#13;
artic_le_ will save a trip to ZION&#13;
that i_s if your desire is to see th~&#13;
Pass!~n ~lay: precisely the&#13;
Cru~1~1caho~. DER PAUL is&#13;
~uc~f1ed. His spirit is crucified. ~ is _martyred. He cannot&#13;
b~mg himself to help the kid&#13;
with the bicycle. What a way to&#13;
go. Go out like a hero everytime&#13;
- (You can always tell the ones&#13;
who love anq relish the cornbeef:&#13;
They have the Star of&#13;
David Armbands.)&#13;
FredHafkin&#13;
~etter Policy - Letters to the&#13;
..Editor should be double-spaced&#13;
typed, and should not exceed 400&#13;
words. Letters must be signed&#13;
by the writer, but names will be&#13;
withheld upon request.&#13;
September 6, 1971 NEWSCOPE Pagel&#13;
a:&#13;
w&#13;
C)&#13;
a:&#13;
0&#13;
ID&#13;
..J&#13;
..J&#13;
w&#13;
a:&#13;
a:&#13;
&lt;{&#13;
0&#13;
North-South Exchange Program&#13;
Information concerning the&#13;
North-South Student Exchange&#13;
Program is currently available&#13;
from the Student Affairs office&#13;
at the Kenosha campus.&#13;
Students interested in the&#13;
ir~gram are urged by its&#13;
Parkside coordinator, Isom&#13;
Fearn, to contact him at extension&#13;
42K, or at his office&#13;
room 135 Kenosha. '&#13;
The program, in its sixth&#13;
ye_ar, exchanges University of&#13;
Wisconsin students with&#13;
students from three southern&#13;
Ne~ro universities during the&#13;
spring semester. They are&#13;
No'.th Carolina A &amp; T State&#13;
~niversity, North Carolina&#13;
So ntral University, and Texas&#13;
uthern University.&#13;
· D~e to the lack of dormitories&#13;
at Parkside the black&#13;
exchange t d , Madi .&#13;
5 u ents are sent to&#13;
son instead of here&#13;
"Th · s . e program requires a&#13;
!t:1&#13;
tyP: of person," Fearn&#13;
~at'h peaki~g of the problems . ave arisen · th in th 10 e program&#13;
Year•: e:~t few years (last&#13;
UW-PJeft h_ange student from&#13;
few Weeks I~ exchange school a&#13;
"The a ter arrivin~).&#13;
designed t/rteogram is not&#13;
SCh-Oo!s,, ~n grate' the black&#13;
' earn emphasized I&#13;
"but simply to expose the&#13;
student to black culture. He&#13;
can't go down there thinking he&#13;
is going to save the black&#13;
people."&#13;
" I don't want to paint an&#13;
overly rosy picture," he said.&#13;
"A person should weigh in his&#13;
own mind what he wants to get&#13;
out of it. "&#13;
Changes in the program&#13;
from last year include a longer&#13;
and more thorough screening&#13;
process of applicants ( exchange&#13;
students from past years play a&#13;
key role in this), making it&#13;
better known to counsellors on&#13;
the black campuses that there&#13;
C1 Q/"\ce&#13;
Sf.Or,sor q_J !:, y&#13;
N ewscope&#13;
s~ptern bQ_r 25 t!J&#13;
are exchange students there.&#13;
Fearn noted that to insulate&#13;
the student too much from the&#13;
problems would only defeat the&#13;
purpose of the program - to&#13;
expose students to a black&#13;
culture on a first hand basis. He said it's like the&#13;
situation of a black student in an&#13;
all white university. Some&#13;
people just aren't going to like&#13;
him because of his color.&#13;
Fearn said the key to the&#13;
program is that it's a learning&#13;
experience, and that if a person&#13;
realizes that he should give&#13;
serious consideration to taking&#13;
part in it.&#13;
. famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
l&#13;
'In Four Sins 9" · ll" · 14" - 16"&#13;
AL5'1&#13;
. • RIIS • S,AGHE'Sl'I • CHICKIM&#13;
•1 GMOCCttl • RAVIOLI • LA SAGMA&#13;
• SEA FOOD o SAMDWICHIS&#13;
CAllYiOUTS • DELIVER\&#13;
"YOU RIHG .• · · W.l..Jal~&#13;
657-9843 or ··,.51-4922&#13;
Compact Stereo Phono System- model 9280 . Put&#13;
together by Magnavox (they've been making great&#13;
sounds for over 60 years) . This gem offers you a lot for&#13;
your money. Like 60 Watts EIA music power, an auto -&#13;
matic 4-speed Micro Changer, and two 6" speakers.&#13;
Even a protective dust cover and jack for optional&#13;
headphone. Check out all its features. It's just one of&#13;
many in the Magnavox line of value -packed roommates-for&#13;
home or away. Component&#13;
systems and accessories, sggss radios, tape recorders /players,&#13;
portable TV and stereo .&#13;
Me1gr1crw"O~&#13;
Joerndt &amp; Yentura~ THI• APP\IAtiCl • Clf'fll&#13;
KENOll'H~, WISCONSIM&#13;
,u-ssth STREET ~HONE '54-.3SS9&#13;
Patronize Newscope Advertisers \ &#13;
,'EWSCOPE&#13;
Tille Wisconsin urvtval Handbook&#13;
Author Doug LaFoilelle&#13;
Publisher" w isconste'e ~n\'iroDmental&#13;
Decade IS 9;1&#13;
b) Jim Koloen&#13;
of the :'&lt;le"scope stalr&#13;
In between reading Tropic of Caoc:er.&#13;
s.r,ual Polilics. and TM Age of Reason 10&#13;
nd behold "hat do Ifind 10 my dirty gas&#13;
pumpmg hands but a copy of the Wisconsin&#13;
Sun iul .bndbook. And b) w·hose hand&#13;
we uch Handbook concored" None other&#13;
than Doug LaFollette's chemistry teacher&#13;
t VWP. former aspirant to the first&#13;
dlstncl' congr ional seal, and overtime&#13;
ecol~1 I&#13;
I ldom concern myself with reviewing&#13;
an) th.ng. but hterature (good and bad).&#13;
ft r II my onl) area 01 even seeming&#13;
lorn fence: is literature 115 not strange&#13;
th n ",htn t teave my area of competence&#13;
to tr ad polluted waters" '01 so strange&#13;
me think Doug I my friend and his&#13;
prubl m I shared by all 01 us Hence. a&#13;
revre .. on the "I consin un h.t Hand·&#13;
.......&#13;
Th Hand I short. 125 pages .n·&#13;
rludlng tXleru.l\,e appendices, the style of&#13;
...nhn'(1 I rse and lralllcall)' underscores&#13;
'he urgency 01 the ecopollution tbeme. The&#13;
b"'" I dIVidedmto 13chaplers which deal&#13;
"lh pfC.hc a pfCl&gt;or pollution The lirst&#13;
two chapters are entitled "Air" and&#13;
..Wat..... respectively, the last two are&#13;
"Ecology in the Political Arena", and&#13;
"Courtroom Ecology", il's all quite&#13;
evolutionary. It begins wilb the basics and&#13;
ends with the complex realities 01 a&#13;
anylbing m.eaningful, it's all too abstract&#13;
The problem is billions of tons of garbage,&#13;
the trouble is simply that we are not individually&#13;
affected by a billion tons of&#13;
garbage. What it all means IS that every&#13;
person in the US is directly responsIble lor&#13;
civilization actually trying to kill itself via&#13;
asphyxiation, and it's a short road we have&#13;
to travel.&#13;
In a way the Wisconsin Survival Handbook&#13;
is much like the Boy Scout Handbook,&#13;
neither Handbood is revelatory, both are&#13;
concerned with survival, one in the&#13;
Wilderness and the other of the wilderness.&#13;
Insofar as the statistics quoted in the&#13;
Wisconsin Survival Handbook are con·&#13;
corned, we don't really learn too much, it's&#13;
interesting to read about quantities which&#13;
are measureabJe by the billions, un·&#13;
fortunately it leaves one unaffected When&#13;
you talk about !rillions 01 kilowatts or a&#13;
billion Ions 01 garbage you really don't say&#13;
~&#13;
[ Rise to face UN other day&#13;
•&#13;
7 pounds ol·pollutants each day, alter that&#13;
we can start talking about the other&#13;
pollutants such as industrial, agricultural,&#13;
thermal, etc., that's where statistics come&#13;
in and the meaning goes out.&#13;
Doug tells us we have 50 years to get our&#13;
shittngelber and recycle it, and before the&#13;
corpora te criminals reduce industrial&#13;
pollutants, the individual is going to have&#13;
to renounce the throwaway economy. We&#13;
must tighten our belts and use less,&#13;
perhaps use less is not the right term, it's&#13;
more like waste less, 50 years is a long&#13;
time in a relative sense, most of us will be&#13;
over the hill by Iben anyway, so what the&#13;
bell. Just remember who will live in that&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
PANCAp: IlOUSl&#13;
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:n Book Store Hours (all campuses)1lf I FIRST WEEK OF CLASSES .:llilf&#13;
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TUESDAY THRU THURSDAY&#13;
1:30 A.M,&#13;
TO 8:30 P:M.&#13;
FRID.AY&#13;
8:00 A.M. - 4:30 P.M,&#13;
AFTER FIRST WEEK&#13;
MOIIOAY THRU THUiISlJAY&#13;
8:00 a.m.-4:30 p,rn.&#13;
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~~~f~:;~t~t~:~:I~~:~:~:~~1~~~~~~~~:~~$:~i~~~~~~ili;~%~~;~~~~t~~~1~~~~~f:~~t.t~~~~~~~~~I~t~t~$ --- __ .....J&#13;
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FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD.&#13;
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hell. Nobody.&#13;
The really valuable&#13;
Handbook are: 1) it a....... or&#13;
with. a statewida a:':""11 ~ IliI&#13;
exegesis of Ibe POllUtion': aa .. ';::&#13;
provides an extensive listble.n,IIIIdb&#13;
places, and relerenees :.tIII ~&#13;
utilized to channel our'~ CIt&#13;
wrath into. "political actio ~&#13;
If you read Ibis book D.&#13;
engage in some ecoactiVili8Ild detid,&#13;
best place to start is With ;:' ~ ~&#13;
Handbook. Western PrinH_~or&#13;
use recycled paper beca ...... ""'-&#13;
much. use k CIiIla lit&#13;
The ecological dilemllUl .&#13;
complex, the watcb fa.ciaI ••&#13;
. terdependence, interde;Ofd 11&#13;
finite world. If it comes to it I1deIItt 10 I&#13;
indicted in 50 years I~ 'II!"II&#13;
denied an appeal. If y~ucome ., III&#13;
beady eyed polluter in • dark"~I&#13;
night, .chances are you won'ter ...&#13;
slop him from choking you _ ....&#13;
karale, the polluter may jlllt be "-&#13;
image of yourself. • ....&#13;
Taken 'as a handbook, Doua u~&#13;
work IS good, it is a lIOOd-~&#13;
reference, it doesn't pr-.t It&#13;
analysis, it simply gives US ..&#13;
and followsup with sua...: .....&#13;
actions. Other than that it's lip •__..&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope starr&#13;
John Denver -&#13;
Poems, Prayers &amp; Promises&#13;
RCA LSP 4499&#13;
As far back as I can&#13;
remember, discretion has never&#13;
been one of my outslanding&#13;
virtues. In fact, my lack of it&#13;
has perhaps, become a personal&#13;
trademark. But then again, on&#13;
my plus side, I have always&#13;
excelled in .consistency.&#13;
musicianship is poar ..&#13;
po.rson attemp" -&#13;
Ib,s type, singinc... •&#13;
ballads, accomJlllded ...&#13;
his guitar, he hadbetlIr:'&#13;
enough, vocally ......&#13;
slrumenfally to corq Ifir&#13;
not haVing a blelInIII&#13;
arrangement to leu • I&#13;
might suffice to lIlY --_&#13;
Denver could do wtII to __&#13;
large orchestra bebIIId bill, III&#13;
Ibe closer they oouId _ ..&#13;
Whalever I do, good or bad. I&#13;
have a tendancy to go right on&#13;
doing it Adding the two&#13;
together, and with the un·&#13;
derstanding that John Denver&#13;
will soon be giving a concert at&#13;
P.U., a concert at which the&#13;
,Tallent Hall peopie would like to&#13;
see a large crowd. I take this&#13;
opportunity to say that Mr.&#13;
Denver's album sucks. After&#13;
severallistenings, I've come to&#13;
believe tha t he is a man of&#13;
limited talent, and that it was a&#13;
mistake on Ibe part of RCA to&#13;
record him in the first place.&#13;
"Poems, Prayers and&#13;
Promises" is the product of less&#13;
imagination than that credited&#13;
to a fig. Even under the most&#13;
conscientious examination one&#13;
might find it impossibl~ to&#13;
locate the slightest shred 01 a&#13;
Iresh: original idea. Lacking&#13;
c.onvlctlOn, taste, and particularly&#13;
variety, the album has&#13;
very lillie to ofler beyond in·&#13;
cesant mediocrity.&#13;
To criticize objectively, and&#13;
to be more specific, let me say&#13;
first, that Denver's&#13;
AND ITAUAN SAUSAGE B;M3ERS&#13;
5021- 30111AVllIII8 K.........&#13;
Open 6 days a week fram 4 p.m., closed """"*'"&#13;
drowning him ... t ........,&#13;
would be in direct pnptrIIIIbe&#13;
raising rl ... ....&#13;
quality. At tim.. be.-&#13;
mind an out rl llIII ..&#13;
Goldsboro, complell • I&#13;
disgusting Iltlle viInII ..&#13;
never failed to .. •&#13;
nauseouS. Sin8bC libtIIllf'l&#13;
need some might)' - fill&#13;
picking to sort rlblip".&#13;
but alas, his r III!&#13;
down.He_ ~&#13;
anylbing complicafld. .....&#13;
Ibe listener \ea8 ...&#13;
Nothing starUiJII,&#13;
-=&#13;
brigh~ just a ~&#13;
of mediocrity.&#13;
Perhaps what reeI1 tt:&#13;
me aboot this a!bUID ..&#13;
seems to re~ ..&#13;
James Taylor, Ib!.......&#13;
been adequale!1-&#13;
number 01 YOWlll-: ..&#13;
that aUthat's. J&#13;
and perform bit"-.&#13;
sing aboot a ~&#13;
mention CoIorBdo,.:&#13;
you're 80 ~ __ ..&#13;
back lH1 your U1C ....... , ,.&#13;
Sorry, but I just ell'&#13;
two chapters are entitled "Air" and "Water" respectively, the last tv..·o are&#13;
" Ecology in the Political Arena'', a_nd&#13;
"Courtroom Ecology", it's all quite&#13;
evolutionary. It begin with the basics and&#13;
ends ·ilh the complex realities of a&#13;
cinlization actually trying to kill itself via&#13;
lbph) 1alion, and it's a short road we have&#13;
to travel.&#13;
In a v.av the Wi consin Survival Hand-&#13;
• much like the Boy Scout Handbook,&#13;
neither Handbood is revelatory, both are&#13;
concerned with survival, one in the&#13;
wilderne · and the other of the wilderness. Ill! o!ar as the statistics quoted in the&#13;
\ 'i con in unival Handbook are concerned,&#13;
we don't really learn too much, it's&#13;
inter ting lo read about quantities which&#13;
are mea ureable by the billions, unfortunat&#13;
ly it leaves one unaffected. When&#13;
you talk about trillions of kilowatts or a&#13;
billion ton of garbage you really don't say&#13;
anything m_eaningful, it's all too abstract.&#13;
The problem is billions of tons of garba~e,&#13;
the trouble is simply that we are not mdividually&#13;
affected by a bi!lion tons of&#13;
garbage. What it all means is tha~ every&#13;
person in the US is directly responsible for&#13;
7 pounds of pollutants each day, after that&#13;
we can start talking about the other&#13;
pollutants such as industrial, agricultural,&#13;
th~rmal, etc., that's where statistics come&#13;
in and the meaning goes out.&#13;
Doug tells us we have 50 years to get our&#13;
shit together and recycle it, and before the&#13;
corporate criminals reduce industrial&#13;
pollutants, the individual is going to have&#13;
to renounce the throw away economy. We&#13;
must tighten our belts and use less,&#13;
perhaps use less is not the right term, it's&#13;
more like waste less. 50 years is a long&#13;
time in a relative sense, most of us will be&#13;
over the hill by then anyway, so what the&#13;
hell. Just remember who will live in that&#13;
hell. Nobody.&#13;
The really valuable&#13;
Handbook are: 1) it Presas!&gt;etts llf&#13;
with . a statewide as w:?ts the&#13;
exeg~is of the pollution· prohi as na&#13;
provides an extensive list' em, llld&#13;
places, and references 1: &lt;i&#13;
utilized to channel our w ch can&#13;
wrath into_ "political actio e~v&#13;
If you read th' boo · n . . lS kand&#13;
engage m some ecoactivif detidt&#13;
best place to start is with ~~· ~1'&#13;
Handbook. Western Printin Jllinter of&#13;
use recycled paper beca g. ref&#13;
much. USe 1t ~&#13;
The ecological dilemma fa . complex, the watch CUtg&#13;
. terdependence, interde word u&#13;
finite world. If it comes to ~~ndence&#13;
indicted in 50 years t 1 • We 11;n&#13;
denied an appeal. If y~u ::i KUilt)&#13;
beady eyed polluter in a d kUp . ht ar an-. rug , . chances are you won't (;1&#13;
stop him from choking YOU even a&#13;
~arate, the polluter may j~t ~ ifyflJ&#13;
image of yourself. 1&#13;
Tak~n as a handbook, Doug LaF&#13;
work is good, it is a good&#13;
refere~ce,_ it _doesn't present ~ analysis, 1t simply gives&#13;
and followsup with sugges~· an&#13;
actions. Other than that it's 1&#13;
: ~~&#13;
Patronize Our 1&#13;
Ad vertizers&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
John Denver -&#13;
Poems, Prayers &amp; Promises&#13;
RCA LSP 4499&#13;
As far back as I can&#13;
remember, discretion has never&#13;
been one of my outstanding&#13;
virtues. In fact, my lack of it&#13;
has perhaps, become a personal&#13;
trademark. But then again, on&#13;
my plus side, I have always&#13;
excelled in consistency.&#13;
musicianship is poor,&#13;
pe_rson attempts an albuin&#13;
th1S type, singing down _:&#13;
~lla~, accompanied crily&#13;
his guitar, he had better be&#13;
enough, vocally and&#13;
strumentally to compematt&#13;
not having a backg&#13;
ar~angement to lean Oil&#13;
might suffice to say that&#13;
Denver could do well to hi •&#13;
large orchestra behind him&#13;
the closer they could come&#13;
/::;;·~.~::~:.: .. ·~:;:r:=·::::···::w~:::~r:;:t.:.:.::.:.:.:.~.:.:.:.:.:.: .•. :.:.~.;.:·=-:·•·=~-=~•~:~=~.~.~;.~.~~=-=:=·=·=·=·=······::: ······~-&#13;
}1 Book Store Hours (all campusesH/J!&#13;
@ *&#13;
PANCAKE HOUSE&#13;
RHTAURANT&#13;
Sundal - Thursday&#13;
6 - Midnight&#13;
Friday - Saturday&#13;
6 - 3 A.M.&#13;
f:~ FIRST EEK OF CLASSES lfI&#13;
$EPT· 7 • 10 t:=:=&#13;
TUESDAY THRU THURSDAY&#13;
1:30 A.M.&#13;
TO 8:30 P:M.&#13;
FRID.AV&#13;
8:00 A.M., • 4:30 P.M,&#13;
AFTER FIRST WEEK&#13;
ONDAY TlfRU TlfUkSi.JAY&#13;
8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
6:30 ,,,m.-a:oo p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
uNiViS1rv ti&#13;
~hYi~I.J29:~"~SI P,R,E~M;S,I .. .. ..... ... .... ..... ......... ...... ................... :,••&#13;
~,,, The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
PRESENTS . ..• IN CONCERT ,&#13;
JOHN DENVER&#13;
'TAKE ME HOME COUNTRY ROADS'&#13;
SAT. ocr: 2 . 8:00 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA TREMPER AUD.&#13;
AES. SEAT TICKET~ $3-50&#13;
AVAILABLE:&#13;
THIS&#13;
- 3619 30 AVE . _&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
Get Acqua inted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change .&#13;
PARKSIDE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE .&#13;
654-9968&#13;
Whatever I do, good or bad, I&#13;
have a tendancy to go right on&#13;
doing it. Adding the two&#13;
together, and with the understanding&#13;
that John Denver&#13;
will soon be giving a concert at&#13;
P.U., a concert at which the&#13;
· Tallent Hall people would like to&#13;
see a large crowd, I take this&#13;
opportunity to say that Mr.&#13;
Denver's album sucks. After&#13;
several listenfngs, I've come to&#13;
believe that he is a man of&#13;
limited talent, and that it was a&#13;
mistake on the part of RCA to&#13;
record him in the first place.&#13;
"Poems, Prayers and&#13;
Promises" is the product of less&#13;
imagination than that credited&#13;
to a fig. Even under the most&#13;
conscientious examination one&#13;
might find it impossibl~ to&#13;
locate the slightest shred of a&#13;
fresh~ ~riginal idea. Lacking&#13;
c_onviction, taste, and particularly&#13;
variety, the album has&#13;
very little to offer beyond incesant&#13;
mediocrity.&#13;
To criticize objectively, and&#13;
t? be more specific, let me say&#13;
firSt, that Denver's&#13;
VAtEO#S ~&#13;
t-1z At&#13;
AND ITALJ~ SAUSAGE a:;tvf3ERS&#13;
5021-IJth Avellle K•slla 1&amp;7..Qll&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed MCJftdars &#13;
r&#13;
OUT OF THE CHARIOT AND INTO THE PYRE&#13;
11' ()nl,g. lIIan&#13;
II'" Heston .&#13;
1)1I Hestonproves on film&#13;
J!t.. arother last man. He&#13;
IiII be ~ a symbolically laden&#13;
,.ua~ Withthe finality of&#13;
dll"c teclm0logicalman, he&#13;
~ iUs wayto ~ funeral pyre&#13;
:;btlleremoantsof a matenal&#13;
,.Id gaspingits last fatahstic&#13;
1lIlb' plasticpen and sword .&#13;
~ toforma monument to&#13;
IIl!ri1derofmonuments ..&#13;
\be iJoageis complete 10 a&#13;
mystic way, with long-haIred&#13;
IiIe8S' ridden victims of the&#13;
""lb&lt;ei", revoltingagainst the&#13;
101 quite alone Heston&#13;
{Neville}:renaissance man&#13;
lkM:torarmy colonel, solid&#13;
_ .. : but not unfeeling.&#13;
nailbeings witha Sino-Soviet&#13;
far wbere microbiological&#13;
IlIplllS ·are used, destroying&#13;
..... ld'spopulaceexcept for """rum filledhero, and those&#13;
111&gt; are dying slowly. The,&#13;
Iiseased ones are confined to&#13;
~ aboutat night because&#13;
&lt;I their affected eyes compeling&#13;
theimagery. This is all&#13;
IialllD usin a none 100 subtle:&#13;
IlIsbback.&#13;
After successfully defending&#13;
iiipillboxapartment Neville is&#13;
IDed from his plague-ridden&#13;
lIjiors by an attractive Ne&lt;&gt;-'&#13;
Iiack gir~ clad in plastic bells,&#13;
lIII.nintenseJamesDean like&#13;
Ift-medstudent; both of whom&#13;
IiIe motorcyclesand talk their&#13;
lrandli jivewitb the aplomb of&#13;
aideal. Ifound,too; that these&#13;
IeIlItiful peoplewere doubling&#13;
• ilW'dians for a colony of&#13;
11IIIII cbildren, who, because of&#13;
[r=:==R=ec=,=cle==,h=is=p::::G::::pe=r==;-l&#13;
WHAT&#13;
DOESIT&#13;
TAKE&#13;
their youth have all been saved&#13;
for a time from the disease.&#13;
They retrieve Heston to save&#13;
themselves, for his blood can be&#13;
used to reproduce the serum&#13;
that could save the pitiful&#13;
remains of mankind. He "is&#13;
obliged and delighted 10 find&#13;
that he is not alone.&#13;
The immediate danger of&#13;
Richie's death (a colony&#13;
member) brings Neville to tbe&#13;
rescue. Work begins on a serum&#13;
and the aforementioned girl&#13;
with the .cliche, "If I were tbe&#13;
only boy in the world and you&#13;
were the only girl" t ringing&#13;
ironically true. Reference is&#13;
made again and again to&#13;
Neville's killing of the tertiary&#13;
cases as the now recovered.&#13;
young boy finally. makes an&#13;
attempt to save these wretched .&#13;
few, and in turn is killed by&#13;
them. In an action filled scene,&#13;
Neville finds the boy dead and&#13;
his woman a member of the&#13;
"family" (She has recently&#13;
become a tertiary case). Heston&#13;
is eventually killed by the head&#13;
of the "family" 1 leaving the&#13;
\&#13;
audience to wonder if&#13;
technological man is all that&#13;
bad, but giving food to the idea&#13;
that he is destined to be exiled&#13;
from the planet earth and&#13;
replaced by some less volitable&#13;
form.&#13;
The painstaking journey from&#13;
the beginning to the end of this&#13;
film lies more with the viewer&#13;
than with the film-maker. It is a&#13;
painstaking venture because we&#13;
must sort those things-that are&#13;
placed before our eyes in the&#13;
.narne of science fiction and&#13;
YOUR&#13;
ENEMY?&#13;
those things revealed to us as&#13;
cor!1Ysymbolism. While we are&#13;
trying to figure out how they&#13;
cleared the busy streets of L&#13;
An I . os&#13;
ge es 10 the name of Warner&#13;
,~rothers, we must also strain to&#13;
Ig~ore the .most c?mical long&#13;
. haired equivalents of present&#13;
day a~itators who are sadly&#13;
identified with a general&#13;
decadence and an incomplete&#13;
model of the dying philosophies&#13;
of the past.&#13;
S~mehow. the contemporary&#13;
audience Just doesn't jump&#13;
anymore when something leaps&#13;
.out of the dark. It might be nice&#13;
if we could learn to jump again&#13;
I' . .or at least turn around and&#13;
[see what's going down.&#13;
i This film is not one that&#13;
Ilea ves the audience in reflective&#13;
1 silence but the rough idenItification&#13;
available to those who&#13;
sometimes crave it is available&#13;
.in the form of the classic&#13;
Heston. It suffers from an&#13;
economic place in the world of&#13;
films and is maligned by tbe&#13;
.productivity of a market ... it&#13;
repeats. (Rating. - on a five&#13;
point scale - 2)&#13;
The Parkside Film Society&#13;
has come out with its 1971-72&#13;
schedule and among their listed&#13;
presentations there are some&#13;
worthy of special note.&#13;
The Hawks and The&#13;
Sparrows, Sept. 29&#13;
See You at Mao, Nov. 3&#13;
Wild Strawberries, Dec. 8&#13;
Nights of Cabiria, Feb. 23&#13;
Jules and Jim, March 7&#13;
Un Chien Andalou, March 29&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Sornething more than human love.&#13;
It talc oth es a more spiritual look at yourself and the&#13;
th er fellow.An understanding that you·both have&#13;
e same FathercMother, God. .&#13;
Ittalces aliz :&#13;
\' re ing that no man is your enemy.&#13;
re&#13;
°&#13;
Urrealenemy i~evil _ hate envy, irritation, venWh .. , ha ge. en these are overcome you find you&#13;
Venoenemy..&#13;
R~ .&#13;
and would'like to know God better, come In&#13;
read. Or borrow a book to read at home.&#13;
CItRIST '. IAN SCIENCE READING ROOM&#13;
302 Sixth Street Racine&#13;
Seplember6,1971 NEWSCOPE PageS&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
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I&#13;
SlUDENT ACTIVITIES BJILDING&#13;
si.eo WITH pARKSICE a, WISCCNSIN 1.0&#13;
$1.00 OFF I&#13;
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50-': OFF ~&#13;
~. I&#13;
Small Pizza .! I&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
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NOON SPEQAl. I&#13;
Man_F'i 11:30-1 :.30 I&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
99¢ I&#13;
First beer IO¢ with parhide 1.0. I&#13;
PlZZAHUT I&#13;
® I&#13;
I&#13;
North on 30th Avenue in Kenosllu I&#13;
-------------------------~ 1.------&#13;
Welcome Back Students&#13;
I&#13;
one lNeek only&#13;
Sept.8-J7&#13;
10% STUDENT discount&#13;
on ALL stock with coupon&#13;
400 Main St.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
Racine specializing in Connie&#13;
and Jacquelin shoes ----,-----------------_.1&#13;
Corning!&#13;
This Saturday Sept. 11&#13;
'The Gregory James Group'&#13;
lwiSCoosin'S most popular and&#13;
exciting coIlece nightclub aUI9CUon'&#13;
one week only I&#13;
Sept. 8-17&#13;
10% STUDENT discount&#13;
OUT OF THE CHARIOT AND INTO THE PYRE on ALL stock with coupon&#13;
r,e omega Man&#13;
ltOII Heston . (\at Heston proves on film&#13;
Mf. . another last man. He&#13;
mat he is a symbolically laden&#13;
?lro::er. With the finality of ~ technological man, he&#13;
re~ his way to a funeral P)'.I"e&#13;
~the remnants of a mat~ri~l&#13;
id gasping its last fatahstic&#13;
:ath; plastic pen and sword&#13;
~ting to form a monument to&#13;
lbe·ooilder of monuments .. 1be image is complete m a&#13;
:stic way, with long-haired ~ ridden victims of the .. wooeJ", revolting against the&#13;
not quite alone Heston ,Neville): renaissance man .. doctor, army colonel, solid&#13;
citizen ... but not unfeeling. (tall beings with a Sino-Soviet&#13;
war where microbiological&#13;
wupo~ are used, destroying&#13;
lhe world's populace except for&#13;
oorserum filled hero, and those&#13;
woo are dying slowly. The, mseased ones are confined to&#13;
moving about at night because&#13;
ri their affected eyes comJieting&#13;
the imagery. This is all&#13;
!!alt to us in a none too subtle· llashback.&#13;
After successfully defending&#13;
bis pillbox apartment Neville is&#13;
saved from his plague-ridden&#13;
aptors by an attractive Neoliack&#13;
girl, clad in plastic bells,&#13;
and an intense James Dean like&#13;
ire-med student; both of whom&#13;
!Xie motorcycles and talk their&#13;
lrand of jive with the aplomb of&#13;
111 ideal. I found, toor that these&#13;
~utiful people were doubling&#13;
18 guardians for a colony of&#13;
SIDall children, who, because of&#13;
their youth have all been saved&#13;
for a time from the disease.&#13;
They retrieve Heston to save&#13;
themselves, for his blood can be&#13;
used to reproduce the serum&#13;
that could save the pitiful&#13;
remains of mankind. He -is&#13;
obliged and delighted to find&#13;
that he is not alone.&#13;
The immediate danger of&#13;
Richie's death (a colony&#13;
member) brings Neville to the&#13;
rescue. Work begins on a serum&#13;
and the aforementioned girl&#13;
with the ,cliche, "If I were the&#13;
only boy in the world and you&#13;
were the only girl", ringing&#13;
ironically true. Reference is&#13;
made again arrd again to&#13;
Neville's killing of the tertiary&#13;
cases as the now recovered&#13;
young boy finally makes an&#13;
attempt to save these wretched · few, and in turn is killed by&#13;
them. In an action filled scene,&#13;
Neville finds the boy dead and&#13;
his woman a member of the "family" (She has recently&#13;
become a tertiary case). Heston&#13;
is eventually killed by the head&#13;
of the " family", leaving the&#13;
jaudience to wonder if&#13;
technological man is all that&#13;
bad, but giving food to the idea&#13;
that.he is destined to be exiled&#13;
from the planet earth and&#13;
replaced by some less volitable&#13;
form. The painstaking journey from&#13;
the beginning to the end of this&#13;
film lies more with the viewer&#13;
than with the film-maker. It is a&#13;
painstaking venture because we&#13;
must sort those things that are&#13;
placed before our eyes in the&#13;
. name of science fiction and&#13;
[ Recycle this Paper&#13;
WHAT&#13;
DOES IT&#13;
TAKE&#13;
YOUR&#13;
ENEMY?&#13;
Somethin g more than human love.&#13;
It tak Other es a more spiritual look at yourself and the&#13;
the fellow. An understanding that you both have&#13;
sam~ Father:.Mother, God.&#13;
lttak .. y es realizmg that no man is your enemy·&#13;
.... our real enemy i~ evil - hate envy, irritation, •1aven ,u... · '&#13;
ha ge. "uen these are overcome you find you&#13;
Veno enemy.&#13;
!~~ou Would· like to know God better, come in&#13;
read. Or borrow a book to read at home.&#13;
CJiRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM&#13;
302 Sixth Street Racine&#13;
those things revealed to us as&#13;
cor!ly symbolism. While we are&#13;
trying to figure out how they&#13;
cleared the busy streets of Los&#13;
Angeles in the name of Warner . ~rothers, we must also strain to&#13;
i~ore the _most c?mical long · haired eqmvalents of present&#13;
~Y ~~itators who are sadly&#13;
1dentif1ed with a general&#13;
decadence and an incomplete&#13;
model of the dying philosophies&#13;
of the past.&#13;
· S~mehow_ the contemporary&#13;
audience Just doesn't jump&#13;
anymore when something leaps · out of the dark. It might be nice&#13;
if we could learn to jump again&#13;
i. . . or at least turn around and&#13;
! see what's going down.&#13;
; This film is not one that&#13;
I l~aves the audience in reflective 1 silence but the rough iden- , tification available to those who&#13;
sometimes crave it is available&#13;
. in the form of the classic&#13;
Heston. It suffers from an&#13;
economic place in the world of&#13;
films and is maligned by the ,productivity of a market . . . it&#13;
repeats. (Rating - on a five&#13;
point scale - 2)&#13;
The Parkside Film Society&#13;
has come out with its 1971-72&#13;
schedule and among their listed&#13;
presentations there are some&#13;
worthy of special note.&#13;
The Hawks and The&#13;
Sparrows, Sept. 29&#13;
See You at Mao, Nov. 3&#13;
Wild Strawberries, Dec. 8&#13;
Nights of Cabiria, Feb. 23&#13;
Jules and Jim, March 7&#13;
Un Chien Andalou, March 29&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help? We w,H help any woman regardless&#13;
of race. rehg1on, age or t1nan c1al&#13;
status. We do nol moralize. bul&#13;
merely help women obtain qual1hed&#13;
Doctors for abor11ons. if !his 1s&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early aborhon 1s more&#13;
simple and less costly, and can be&#13;
performed on an out patient basis.&#13;
Call:&#13;
3·12 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
AHl1t1nce of Chicago&#13;
8 AM-10 PM-7 DAYS A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION&#13;
400 Main St.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
Racine specializing i'! Connie&#13;
and Jacquelin shoes&#13;
------------••••••••N•--•••••••N•••••--••N••----&#13;
Coming!&#13;
This Saturday Sept. 11&#13;
'The Gregory James Group'&#13;
•w{scoosin's most l)OPU]ar and&#13;
excitin colle ni&amp;fltclub I.tr. tion•&#13;
S11J[E\JT ACTtVITIES BJILDING&#13;
$1.S:iwrn, PAR&lt;SIDE 8: WISCCNStN 1.0.&#13;
S ecial For Students&#13;
a.---------&#13;
$1.00 OFF&#13;
Large Pizza&#13;
50$0FF&#13;
Small Pizza&#13;
NOON SPECIAL&#13;
Mon-Fri 11:30-1:_30&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
99¢&#13;
first beer 10¢ with parkside I.D.&#13;
PIZZA HUT®&#13;
North on J01n Avenoe in Kenos11u&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
_________________________ I J &#13;
Pale I EWSCOPE Sep&amp;emberl. 1,.,1 African History Offered&#13;
A course in modem African&#13;
history taught by an expert in&#13;
the field will be offered for the&#13;
first time this Fall at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Caned "Africa Since 1880."&#13;
the three-credit course also&#13;
carries political science credit&#13;
and will be taught by John&#13;
Harbeson, assistant professor&#13;
of political science at UW-P.&#13;
Harbeson lived in Kenya from&#13;
1965 to 191&gt;7while doing field&#13;
research for his doctoral&#13;
disser"'tion. During that period&#13;
he also was a research fellow&#13;
and lecturer at the Institute for&#13;
Development Studies at&#13;
University College in Nairobi.&#13;
He is widely published in the&#13;
field and is nu~tin Swahili, one&#13;
of the principal languages of&#13;
East Africa.&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO.SPEClAL PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
, I l,ROU"'O 8FF.~ ,.RULED cOU!'o:TRY&#13;
o t'RF~CU CRUST HAM -,. CHEFSE. O~&#13;
BRFAD D~F~SFl&gt; WIIOLF WHfAT 8li~&#13;
\\ ITIt CRISP WITII lETTUCE&#13;
l F_TTUCF ASP OUR TO\tATO A '0"&#13;
SPFOA.I MILE '1A'tO,'A1SF.&#13;
80c .80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIl'l F Of( "'FR o- BlIRCFR C1lfF.SF.&#13;
t\ACO If rnILt-. T(",,\T( A'\O MAY&#13;
n .... I'\F /l rOAST 90c&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
The course Will&#13;
establishment f ~&#13;
control in Africa 0 ~&#13;
resistance to .~.&#13;
the estabJishm~ ...&#13;
lodependence. 01 ~&#13;
The course Will&#13;
the day. frOm 1Ileet .....&#13;
Tuesdays and 1l:1O-1i~&#13;
Greenquist Hall ~ :&#13;
Rd. campus. ~~~ 'toi&#13;
part-time studi~ _&#13;
Wednesday and II ~~&#13;
nights this week "..,s&#13;
Friday and d,:,::,:"'lIlelll,&#13;
week of classes - ..... IIle ..&#13;
7, all at GreenQl~ .....&#13;
sWEA Plans Campau!&#13;
i&#13;
r:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ The Student Wisconsin Education Association, SWEA (at Parkside is a new student organization on&#13;
campus this year. Currently there are approximately&#13;
25 chapters throughout the state with over 3,000&#13;
members.&#13;
A membership in the organization is unified with&#13;
the local Parkside chapter, the state WEA (Wisconsin&#13;
Education Association) and the NEA (National&#13;
Education Association).&#13;
A student benefits by joining the organization in&#13;
so far as he can receive a better understanding of the&#13;
field and future of education, through programs,&#13;
literature and conferences offered.&#13;
At the local level Parkside's Chapter will offer&#13;
programs once a month with various topics concerning&#13;
future educators, such as contracts and&#13;
negotiations, teaching positions - applying for, and&#13;
conducting your interview, student teaching, field&#13;
experiences and interning to name a few, At Parkside&#13;
there is also a desire to establish a legislative committee.&#13;
This committee would follow state and&#13;
national legislation affecting education and lobbying&#13;
for the best concerns of education.&#13;
From your unified membership with WEA you&#13;
receive a free ticket to the state teachers convention&#13;
in Milwaukee on November 4 and 5. Plus WEA's&#13;
"Wisconsin Journal of Education" ,a monthly journal&#13;
for educators and the WEA "News and Views", a&#13;
newspaper about the WEA, along with the SWEA&#13;
NORTH 3'3, 1 SH~flIQAN ROAO SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
Mus·ic:Committee presents&#13;
CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE&#13;
BLUES BAND&#13;
sz&#13;
(c:heap)&#13;
a/so appearing Springback James&#13;
SEPTEMBER 22 7:10 PM&#13;
WM UNION BALLROOM&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
The NEA part of your membershi&#13;
journal of the NEA "Today'. Ed Polltqlll&#13;
monthly magazine, "Impact" l;IC&amp;Uoa", lilt.&#13;
National Education Association ~ ~ tbe&#13;
membership. It is a release of even~ botiaa II'"&#13;
of 'the SNEA. and......&#13;
.... All 10 all the benefits add to&#13;
several newspapers, "Impact", ': con24~&#13;
programs about education, insurance:::- ....&#13;
conference. • t:IIIItII&#13;
Once you become a teacher to j ,&#13;
and your local, it would cost about':.0u:..~&#13;
your local. ,However. as a student •&#13;
above mentioned benefits for just 5 :.. NliIhI&#13;
Membership forms are availabl&#13;
office in Tallent Hall, or from Car~ It ..&#13;
Kentucky St., Racine, 634-5624,whowID0::-&#13;
to give you more information ..&#13;
The first meeting will be held in mld&#13;
at a date, time and place to be a!JnlJlJll:tlJl."'"&#13;
weekend camput and conference illlDod ...&#13;
first part of October. This will be held lip"&#13;
Wisconsin and is being sponsored by bolIl=....&#13;
Minnesota Education Association and lIte':::-&#13;
The WEA also offers a $100,000 UablUt)'&#13;
plan should you become involved in a .....--&#13;
from bodily injury or property ~ ~&#13;
bursement of attorney fees up to $1 000 and •&#13;
bond is also included. "&#13;
Tickets at 1be SfUdeIlI Affairs office, pUent Hall&#13;
='iii~~ARKSIDE VILLAGE APARTMENT&#13;
I,'~ij FOR AS LITTLE AS $180.00 PER SEMESTER&#13;
I, . II I&#13;
, lUI '...1.+ ' I&#13;
. ,'II II==I¥~&#13;
~&#13;
2 ROOMSUITE&#13;
$180PER SEMESTERo·&#13;
• (0&#13;
BUNK&#13;
BeD&#13;
3~OOMSUITE&#13;
$~.25 Pl:R SEMESTERo&#13;
ltJj]&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
OCCUPANCY SEPT. 1.1971- CONTACT BI ° • STUD AT PARKSIDE VILLAGE 51TE OR CA~~ iAGELOR DAN LEMBERG&#13;
ENTS PER 5UITE _ UNFURNISHED .U) 272·0.60 COLLECT&#13;
OWN . ER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC&#13;
MILWAUKEE WISCONSIN . ...&#13;
DEVELOPER' • E'~~ • GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp; RESIDENTIAL C '''~&#13;
17.. N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN&#13;
HE RANCH&#13;
)11 SH fi!QA ROAD SOUTH 7 500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
African History Ottered&#13;
A course in modern African&#13;
history taught by an expert in&#13;
the field will be offered for the&#13;
first time this Fall at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Called "Africa Since 1880,"&#13;
the three-credit course also&#13;
carries political science credit&#13;
and will be taught by John&#13;
Harbeson, assistant professor&#13;
of political science at UW-P.&#13;
Harbeson lived in Kenya from&#13;
1965 to 1967 while doing field&#13;
research for his doctoral&#13;
dissertation. During that period&#13;
he also was a research fellow&#13;
and lecturer at the Institute for&#13;
Development Studies at&#13;
University College in Nairobi.&#13;
He is widely published in the&#13;
field and is flu~t in Swahili, one·&#13;
of the principal languages of&#13;
East Africa.&#13;
The course w·u&#13;
establishment I r cover&#13;
control in Africa O Eur0pe&#13;
resistance to • rnove · col · q ~e establishmen~lllalisrn&#13;
independence. of Ar&#13;
The course Will&#13;
the day from rneet&#13;
Tuesdays and Th ll:ao.12&#13;
Greenquist Hali llf'Sda&#13;
Rd. campus. R on the I\'&#13;
part-time studen~f!tra!i~&#13;
~ednesday and be~&#13;
rughts this week d _'lnur&#13;
Friday and d~· uri~ tile&#13;
week of classes ~fnn ~ o&#13;
7, all at Greenquist Haa;f&#13;
SWEA Plans Campout&#13;
~.;-;.-;.";.";.";.";.-;.";.";.';.';.':.';.";.";.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.~';.';.~';ii';.';.';.';ii';.';';.i';i~J The Student Wisconsin Education Association, SWEA ( at Parkside is a new student organization on&#13;
campus this year. Currently there are approximately&#13;
25 chapters throughout the state with over 3,000&#13;
members.&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
The NEA part of your membersh'&#13;
journal of the NEA "Today's Ed 1&#13;
P ~ffers&#13;
monthly magazine, "Impact" ~cation'',&#13;
National Education Association ~o :. lhe&#13;
membership. It is a release of eve ~ ibutioo&#13;
of the SNEA. n and ha&#13;
Mus·ic Committee presents&#13;
CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE&#13;
BLUES BAND&#13;
sz&#13;
(cheap)&#13;
al o app ~ring Springback James&#13;
SEPTEMBER 22 7:30 PM&#13;
WM UNION BALLROOM&#13;
Tid&lt;ets at 1fle Sflment Affairs office, rallent Hall&#13;
A membership in the organization is unified with&#13;
the local Parkside chapter, the state WEA (Wisconsin&#13;
Education Association) and the NEA (National&#13;
Education Association).&#13;
A student benefits by joining the organization in&#13;
so far as he can receive a better understanding of th£&#13;
field and future of education, through programs,&#13;
literature and conferences offered.&#13;
At the local level Parkside's Chapter will offer&#13;
programs once a month with various topics concerning&#13;
future educators, such as contracts and&#13;
negotiations, teaching positions - applying for, and&#13;
conducting your interview, student teaching, field&#13;
experiences and interning to name a few. At Parkside&#13;
there is also a desire to establish a legislative committee.&#13;
This committee would follow state and&#13;
national legislation affecting education and lobbying&#13;
for the best concerns of education.&#13;
~rom your _ unified membership with WEA you&#13;
receive a free ticket to the state teachers convention&#13;
in Milwaukee on November 4 and 5. Plus WEA's&#13;
"Wisconsin Journal of Education" , a monthly journal&#13;
for educators and the WEA "News and Views" a&#13;
newspaper about the WEA, along with the SWEA&#13;
. .. . All in all the benefits add u t&#13;
several newspapers "Impact" t O 24 mag&#13;
programs about edu~ation ins~a convenuoo&#13;
conference. ' nee and a&#13;
Once you become a teacher to . .&#13;
and your local, it would cost aboul~1&#13;
~ th;~'EA,&#13;
your local. _However, as a student you~&#13;
above mentioned benefits for just 5 b rectn&#13;
. ME:mbership forms are availableu:S·&#13;
office m Tallent Hall, or from Carl G the&#13;
Kentucky St., Racine 634-5624 who -11 reeoe l&#13;
t . .' , w1aJso o give you more information&#13;
The first meeting will be held in .d&#13;
at a date, time and place to be ann~~ced lat&#13;
~eekend camput and conference is lined&#13;
first part of October. This will be h Id · up !or&#13;
W. . d" . e m H&#13;
~sconsm an 1s ~mg sponsored by both th&#13;
Minnesota Education Association and the~&#13;
The WEA also offers a $100,000 liability. :U&#13;
plan should you become involved in a suit&#13;
from bodily injury or property damage&#13;
burse~ent of _attorney fees up to $l,OOO and 8&#13;
bond 1s also included.&#13;
~::.-.11~ARKSIDE VILLAGE APARTMENTS&#13;
=-- '· FOR AS LITTLE AS $180.00 PER SEMESTER&#13;
~,1&#13;
'&#13;
il&#13;
OCCUPANCY SEPT 1 1971 CONT&#13;
ATPARl&lt;SIOE0&#13;
ViL - ACTBILLPAGELOROANL&#13;
• 'STUDENTS PER SUITE - u~~~~~::iEOOR CALL (414) 272-0460 COLL~~~ERG&#13;
OWNER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC&#13;
DEV MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN . ~5,I&#13;
ELOPER: GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp; RESIDENTIAL CENTE&#13;
1744 N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN &#13;
CroSS Country Outlook Good&#13;
. Jim Casper&#13;
b) scope staff&#13;
of the Newleus of returning&#13;
gnUC ".&#13;
~siron eral promIsmg&#13;
",..,.. pl~~l~~:r the hopes of&#13;
fttShrnen Lawson's cross&#13;
·"en Bob which will be&#13;
"",trY . lea~ughest schedule """g Its&#13;
fit! . from last year's&#13;
Return,JOglost one dual meet&#13;
:tllm wnlened the District 14&#13;
ptur ik JIldca ionship are Mi e&#13;
\t1A champ r and last year's&#13;
Nilt. a semo , . th Chuck ~. along Wl .&#13;
capla~ Tim McGilsky, Jtm&#13;
[l!ttnt, Gary' Lance, and "·&lt;adden,&#13;
"" itt all sophomores. th Merrl , t d&#13;
!II who are expec e ~h"'en .&#13;
r·.......·the team are Lucia,"&#13;
• belPRudy Alvarez, Den~ls&#13;
&amp;058, Dennis Carlson, Kim&#13;
lIel. Tom Williamson, fbitrnore,&#13;
-' Craig Govekar.&#13;
P' an outstanding&#13;
Rosa't from Ceylon, won the&#13;
,esJlOCnd 10000 meter races at&#13;
ilOOA~anGames in 1970. The&#13;
Ibt. star from Ceylon chose&#13;
=de despite having offers&#13;
WestGermany, the S~vlet&#13;
~ and Japan to continue&#13;
~OOling in their country.&#13;
Parkside Athletic Director&#13;
TIm Rosandich attended the&#13;
AiaD Games as part of his role&#13;
rI advisor to sports. for&#13;
PbilippinePresident Ferdinand&#13;
JIartoS. Coach Laws~n. ~as&#13;
.. as coach of the Philippine ""* team, a half year project&#13;
.. Parkside auspices which&#13;
OIled last December.&#13;
Ilosandichand Lawson talked&#13;
II RlEa and Ceylon officials&#13;
bgtheAsian Games and the&#13;
tI)' was cleared for Rosa to&#13;
_ to Parkside.&#13;
Aside from being so fast,&#13;
bas another distinguishing&#13;
cteristic - he runs&#13;
shoes. Whether or not&#13;
-m decide to wear shoes&#13;
be will be a man to watch&#13;
on the. cross country trails this&#13;
fall.&#13;
Alvarez, from Racine, was&#13;
the state high schOOl champ in&#13;
cross country, while Biel, from&#13;
Wausau, has run the mile in&#13;
4: 16.&#13;
While the team has many&#13;
gifted runners, it will still be&#13;
difficult to equal last year's&#13;
record because of the rigors of&#13;
this season's schedule.&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept. 21 - Whitewater,&#13;
Stevens Point, Carthage _&#13;
Whitewater,&#13;
Sept. 25 - North Central&#13;
College - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 1 - Minnesota. Drake_&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
Oct. 2 - UW.Milwaukee.&#13;
BelOIt - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 9 - Platteville State&#13;
Invitational - PlatteVille.&#13;
Oct. 16 - Northwestern&#13;
Loyola - Evanston&#13;
Oct. 23 - ~Iarquette, VI.&#13;
Chicago Circle - l\lilwaukee.&#13;
Oct. 30 - Loras - Dubuque&#13;
Nov. 6 - USTFF Mid&#13;
America Meet - Parkside&#13;
Nov. t3 - NAIA District 14 _&#13;
Eau Claire.&#13;
Nov. 20 - NAIA Championship&#13;
- Kansas City. Mo.&#13;
Soccer to Start&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Parkside openes its&#13;
challenging soccer schedule on&#13;
Sept. 11 when Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny's boosters will battle&#13;
amongst themselves in an intersquad&#13;
tussle.&#13;
The first outside competition&#13;
will bea week later with a home&#13;
game against Polonia.&#13;
Coach Martiny's team will&#13;
begin practice on Sept. 7, and he&#13;
must get a good look at the&#13;
squad before he can assess its&#13;
chances for success with the&#13;
difficult schedule that the team&#13;
faces .&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept. 11. - lntersquad&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sept. 18 - PoIonia&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sept. 25 - Wisconsin ·Junior&#13;
All-Stars - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 2 - University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
Parkside&#13;
_MEETINGS&#13;
1IlttR: Sept. 7 at tne Soccer field; 3 p.m.&#13;
COUNTRY:Sept. 8 at the athletic bleachers; 4 p.m.&#13;
1IILLEYBALL:Nov. 15 at the Racine UMCA; 3 p.m.&#13;
_N'S GYMNASTICS: Sept. 8, at Park H.S. Girls' Gym; 6 p.m.&#13;
-'~'SFENCING: Sept. 8, at Keno~ha Campus Basement; I p.m.&#13;
_N'S VOLLEYBALL: See Miss Morris at the Office of Athlel1cs&#13;
Wllbone553-2245.&#13;
Ilnmural f.ootball.....&#13;
All girls interested in being&#13;
cheerleaders or pom·pom girls&#13;
contact Miss Morris at the&#13;
Office of. Athletics, 553-2245.&#13;
Seasontickets to all Parkside home athletic events will be on&#13;
.. at registration.&#13;
Priced at $5 f.or both students and faCUlty, the price for faculty&#13;
IIdltaffWiU jump to $10, the general public fee, after regustratwn.&#13;
liD 1lte pass will admit the bearer to varsity athletic contests m&#13;
1J.,;~~rsltySports, including cross country, soccer, bask,etball,&#13;
~I gymnastics, indoor track, wrestling, golf, tenms and -.... track.&#13;
_For further !nf?rmation contact the, Office of Athletics, 553.&#13;
~1'~9BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
UOR STORE,BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Oct. 3 - Notre Dame _&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 8~9- Tournament with&#13;
Eastern Illinois, Quincy CoJlege&#13;
and Ohio State'- Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 13;"":"'" University of&#13;
Illinois-Circle Campus&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Oct. 16 - WSU-Platteville _&#13;
Platteville.&#13;
Oct. 21 Marquette&#13;
University - Milwaukee.&#13;
Oct. 23 - University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Green Bay - Green&#13;
Bay.&#13;
Oct. 20 - Southern Illinois&#13;
University - Away.&#13;
Nov. 3 - Lake Forest College&#13;
- Parkside,&#13;
Nov. 6 - Northern Illinois&#13;
University - Parkside.&#13;
Nov. 10 - Drake - Parkside.&#13;
Nov. 20 - NAJA National&#13;
Tournament - Kansas City.&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th 5t. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
HAVE A 6000 TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
e&#13;
Campi.'.&#13;
PO ••• r&#13;
Gallery&#13;
also 'Lol'e' and' oft Touch' gm:ting {tJ,.d.1&#13;
PARK DRUGS&#13;
e In K ''10&#13;
I to&#13;
STUDENT ALTIVITIES BLDG&#13;
R, POPCORN VENDING MACHINES,&#13;
FEATURING BEE , HOT LUNCH EVERY&#13;
GAMES, AND LOUNGE AR~UR"-&#13;
NOON HOUR MON-THUR 9 AM-tO PM&#13;
9 AM-l AM&#13;
FRIDAY pROGR,AMMED EVENTS ONLY SAT-SUN FOR&#13;
cross Country Outlook Good&#13;
Jim Casper b} ' wscope staff&#13;
of the Ne leus of returning g nuc . · g Ii ~tron several prom1sm&#13;
r, ers pl~s lster the hopes of&#13;
rnen ° Lawson's cross&#13;
oach Bob which will be&#13;
trY team ghest schedule ir.g its tou&#13;
,..er . from last year's&#13;
Return_rng 1 st one dual meet&#13;
(!I which~ the District 14&#13;
.a::d captur ionship are Mike&#13;
.\IA cham_p and last year's a senior, h k l)eltl, along with C u~ capiain, r· McGilsky, Jim an im d ~rn ' Gary . Lance, an --"adden,&#13;
ci- ·tt all sophomores. eilh Merri w' ho are expected tw·tunen ·&#13;
on the cross country trails this fall.&#13;
Alvarez, from Racine, was&#13;
the state high school champ in&#13;
cross country, while Biel, from&#13;
Wausau, has run the mile in&#13;
4: 16.&#13;
While the team has many&#13;
gifted runners, it will still be&#13;
difficult to equal last year's&#13;
record because of the rigors of&#13;
this season's schedule.&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept. . 21 - Whitewater,&#13;
Stevens Point, Carthage - Whitewater.&#13;
Sept. 25 - North Central&#13;
College - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 1 - Minne ota, Drake _ Des Moines.&#13;
Oc_t. 2 - l:W-l\Iilwaukee, Bel01t - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 9 - Platte\"ille ta ·e Invitational - Platte\·ille&#13;
Oct. 16 - ~orthwe tern, Loyola - Evanston .&#13;
Oct. 23 - Marquette, Uf.&#13;
Chicago Circle _ l\lilwaukee&#13;
Oct. 30 - Loras - Dubuque&#13;
Nov. 6 - t.:STFF :\lid&#13;
America Meet - Park ide.&#13;
Nov. 13 - NAIA District H -&#13;
Eau Claire.&#13;
Nov . 20 - ~AIA Championship&#13;
- Kansa City, :\lo.&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
ri• h team are Lucian ., help t de Alvarez, Dennis . Ru Y K , Dennis Carlson, im Biel, Tom Williamson, Soccer to Start&#13;
•&#13;
• li1!ltrnore,&#13;
g Govekar. Crru an outstanding&#13;
R~sac,t from Ceylon, won the&#13;
~-~nd lO,OOO meter races at&#13;
Asian . Games in 1970. The&#13;
uig star from Ceylon chose&#13;
=side despite having off~rs&#13;
West Germany, the S~v1et&#13;
and Japan to contmue&#13;
t. ~ooling in their country.&#13;
Parkside Athletic Director&#13;
Rosandich attended the&#13;
:n Games as part of his role&#13;
advisor to sports_ for&#13;
ftilippine President Ferdmand&#13;
l(arcos. Coach Lawson was&#13;
rllere as coach of the Philippine&#13;
1rack team, a half year proj~ct&#13;
er Parkside auspices which&#13;
mded last December. .&#13;
Rosandich and Lawson talked&#13;
IO Rosa and Ceylon officials&#13;
airing the Asian Games and the&#13;
was cleared for Rosa to&#13;
e to Parkside. .&#13;
·de from being so fast,&#13;
has another distinguishing&#13;
racteristic - he runs&#13;
litboot shoes. Whether or not&#13;
will decide to wear shoes&#13;
, he will be a man to watch&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Parkside openes its&#13;
challenging soccer schedule on&#13;
Sept. 11 when Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny's boosters will battle&#13;
amongst themselves in an intersquad&#13;
tussle.&#13;
The first outside competition&#13;
will be a week later with a home&#13;
game against Polonia.&#13;
Coach Martiny' s team will&#13;
begin practice on Sept. 7, and he&#13;
must get a good look at the&#13;
squad before he can assess its&#13;
chances for success with the&#13;
difficult schedule that th~ team&#13;
faces.&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept. 11 - Intersquad&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sept. 18 - Polonia&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sept. 25 - Wisconsin Junior&#13;
All-Stars - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 2 - University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
TEA.\! :'ttEETINGS&#13;
ER: Sept. 7 at the soccer field; 3 p.m.&#13;
·COUNTRY: Sept. 8 at the athletic bleachers; 4 p.m.&#13;
LLEYBALL: Nov. 15 at the Racine UMCA; 3 p.m.&#13;
IE~· GYMNASTICS: Sept. 8, at Park H.S. Girls' Gym; 6 p.m.&#13;
llES' FENCING: Sept. 8, at Kenosha Campus Ba~ement; 1 P-~-&#13;
IE~· VOLLEYBALL: See Miss Morris at the Office of Athletics phone 553-2245.&#13;
lllramural football .....&#13;
All girls interested in being&#13;
cheerleaders or porn-porn girls&#13;
contact Miss Morris at the&#13;
Office o( Athletics, 553-2245.&#13;
Season tickets to all Parkside home athletic events will be on at registration.&#13;
Pticect at $5 for both students and faculty, the price for fac~lty&#13;
tart Will jump to $10, the general public fee, after regustrat10~-&#13;
The pass will admit the bearer to varsity athletic conteSts m&#13;
. arsity sports, including cross country, soccer, bask_etball,&#13;
•J ng, &amp;Ymnastics, indoor track, wrestling, golf, tenms and "'OOr track&#13;
_F·or furth~r information contact the, Office of Athletics, 553·&#13;
~:~&#13;
9 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
UOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Oct. 3 - otre Dame - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 8-9 - Tournament with&#13;
Eastern Illinois, Quincy College&#13;
and Ohio State - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 13,- - Universit) of&#13;
Illinois-Circle Campus&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Oct. 16 - WSU-Plattevllle - Pia tteville.&#13;
Oct. 21 Marquette&#13;
University - Milwaukee.&#13;
Oct. 23 - University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Green Bay - Green&#13;
Bay.&#13;
Oct. 20 - Southern Illinoi&#13;
University - Away.&#13;
Nov. 3 - Lake Forest College&#13;
- Parkside.&#13;
Nov. 6 - Northern Illinoi&#13;
University - Parkside.&#13;
Nov. 10 - Drake - Parkside.&#13;
Nov. 20 - NAIA Xational&#13;
Tournament - Kansas City.&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
-FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKE:E&#13;
APPLE A&#13;
Complet&#13;
Po ter&#13;
Gallery&#13;
also 'Lore' and t oft Tou 'J•&#13;
PARK DRUGS&#13;
J ust north of rashington Rood on 22nd&#13;
10 DI&#13;
DENT AC.'TJV/TIES BLDG&#13;
STU ORN VENDl'-'G MACHINES, FEATURING BEER, POPC , HOT LUNCH EVERY&#13;
GAMES, AND LOUNGE AR~URS&#13;
NOON HOUR MON-THUR 9 AM-10 PM&#13;
FRIDAY 9 .AM-1 AM E VE&#13;
FOR PROGR;:.'-1,MED SAT-SUN&#13;
;&#13;
nd&#13;
10 &#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
John&#13;
Denver&#13;
Coming&#13;
to Parkside&#13;
John Denver. popular smger and songwriter,&#13;
",III preoent a concert on Kenosha on October 2&#13;
pomored b)" the University of wtsccestnPark.&#13;
Ide tudent Activities Office. it was announ&#13;
d today.&#13;
Dem·.r ""II appear at Tremper high school&#13;
uduenum at 8 pm. Ticket outlets and inIorrnauen&#13;
w Ill be available by sept. l.&#13;
~twer currently ha the No.3 nit single in the&#13;
country, "Take Me Home Country Roads," and his&#13;
Ilbum '.p ms. Prayers and Promises" is among&#13;
lhe be I IIIng LPs&#13;
One 0( the most prolific and successful&#13;
songwriters on the popular music scene for&#13;
veral )'ears, Denver's hits Include "Leaving on a&#13;
Jet Plane" and many others. He also has a&#13;
reputation as being one of the better popular&#13;
guitarists.&#13;
Denver has emerged as a fulJ blown star in his&#13;
own right after becoming known originally as the&#13;
replacement for Chad Mitchell in the Chad Mitchell&#13;
Trio.&#13;
The appearance of Denver will~kick off u~-P's&#13;
1971-72 Student Activities Office popular concert&#13;
series. In its short history, UW-Parkside has&#13;
sponsored such popular greens as Chicago, Blood,&#13;
Sweat and Tears, The Fifth Dimension, The First&#13;
Edition, Your Father's Mustache, The New&#13;
Christy Minstrels and Pete Seeger.&#13;
Curfew&#13;
(Continued from Page)&#13;
Coalition, he said.&#13;
"We're loosley formed; there's no formal&#13;
membership. There are people who are&#13;
members who don't even know they're members,"&#13;
he asserted in the true spirit of Abbie and&#13;
Jerry.&#13;
Why didn't he plead his case before the Park&#13;
Commission? "We have no plans to work within&#13;
the system. Idon't think there's any way left to&#13;
work effectively within it. It's not really going to&#13;
help to speak ~to the council. You're better off&#13;
speaking to kids your own age," he answered.&#13;
If the ordinance is passed, what will be their&#13;
response? "Confrontation; or aUeast an attempt&#13;
at it". he said.&#13;
~&#13;
s~rrn~&#13;
~ Sept. 9 7 ~.tfv,&#13;
Poor Boy Boots F'~..''~""""." . \-.",.;, -; :"',~&#13;
..... - c;;N-'&gt;&#13;
'. • '-'&gt; "cit·,&#13;
Flore Jeans ' .&#13;
and Pants&#13;
from $8 to $14&#13;
Poloton ond Mushroom&#13;
Buffed Buck, Natural&#13;
Crepe out-sole&#13;
Si.os 7\\ ·12&#13;
516 Monument Square&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Student Health Insurante&#13;
All full-time students are reminded that they may enron .&#13;
Health Insurance Program offered by the University :lhe~&#13;
Parkside Student Gov~rnment Association throUgh BlueS&#13;
Surgical Care Blue Shield. Craoi iIll&#13;
Brochures and applications are available at the foU .&#13;
Business Office, Room 230, Tallent Hall, Phone ~,&#13;
Edith Isenberg, Campus Nurse, Room 332, Greenquist~&#13;
553-2366. •..... ""'-&#13;
Information Cenler, Room 201, Tallent Hall, Phone&#13;
The deadline for enrollment m the plan is Sept. 17 ,:-&#13;
previous date of Sept. 24. . ,&#13;
Chaplains on Campus&#13;
Father Gary Kees -.Rt. 4, Box 613, Kenosha, Wis.552_&#13;
Sister Catherine Gibbons - 5510 58th Ave" Ken05ba lin.&#13;
-&#13;
of self-understanding, development, and life orientatioo&#13;
Student Chaplains - offering and facilitating lP'OWth&#13;
'--&#13;
Ia~&#13;
the Gospel and solidified in group religious e&gt;&lt;perienee._II&#13;
Speci al Miss ion&#13;
Highlights Course Select.&#13;
The casual observer looking Science and Soci&#13;
over a .univ~rsity of Wisconsin- This faU, for ~-a..&#13;
Parkstde timetable for fall evening cour~&#13;
classes finds, in addition to temporary AmericU. 'c.&#13;
famiHa~ s~unding. c.our~es, and "Urbanism lid&#13;
terms like It~dustr18.hzatlOn, banization" arebeiac-..&#13;
!Doder~ A~eflcan society, ~nd sociology, asweDaa.&#13;
urbanization reoccurr mg course in IIb:=&#13;
regardless of the field of study. Psychology."&#13;
That's by design, because UPP's&#13;
special educational mission&#13;
is to give attention to the unique&#13;
problems of a modern, industrtal,'&#13;
urban.society.&#13;
. Parkside's special mission is&#13;
highlighted in the School .of&#13;
Modern Industry which this fall&#13;
offers some 70 courses during&#13;
the day and evening in such&#13;
fields as engineering science,&#13;
computing, business&#13;
manageme~t~. managemeItt&#13;
science, labor "economics arid&#13;
directly related courses in&#13;
economics.&#13;
But in addition to courses in&#13;
the School of Modern Industry,&#13;
(ncreasing attention is being&#13;
focused '-!n UW-P's special&#13;
mi.ssion in the social sciences,&#13;
sCiences and humanities&#13;
divisions within the College of&#13;
During the day 8ludIIII.,&#13;
choose from sucIl cu.lIII.&#13;
"Problems or .-.&#13;
~erican Soeiety" ...&#13;
science elective'&#13;
dustrializatioo or tbi&#13;
World" forhistGry........&#13;
credit; "Emer....,&#13;
Metropolitian ADNrIta ••&#13;
history course; uC .....&#13;
Transportatioo" ~ •&#13;
contemporary uped i&#13;
field; "Heredity,&#13;
and Society" for&#13;
and a nlDDber111&#13;
courses bearing&#13;
modern man and ...&#13;
vironment.&#13;
Registration for aD lJP.p!ll&#13;
classes continueslhll"_&#13;
during the first weet el__&#13;
beginning Tuesday, l!epl. 7&#13;
Ifsthe&#13;
real,thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
• ®&#13;
...&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS 1961Austin-He-aley 3000, After 5 p.m.&#13;
539·2407 (Burlington).&#13;
1961 Ford Torino J02·V8. Low mil.&#13;
Automatic, pow.,.- steering. Radio,&#13;
Heat •• 652-n..s. see at 5234 - 44th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
"Sens" Porta~IY typewriter. Good&#13;
condition. Comes with carrying&#13;
case. Will sell for SJO.DO. Call 637.&#13;
......&#13;
lNt HonOI 17Jcc SC'.."bI.... Ell:.&#13;
c:onct, IGS. tnclUCln 2 helmets. (All&#13;
Ed. Qt.." ...&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3136.&#13;
... "ell 2 cit' " ... cnop. 1250. c.ll&#13;
aa..-.....s or t.U-m 1. 1967 Impala Super Sport 327, After&#13;
4:30 p.m., 3022 • 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 R5, 1971, Exc. Cond.&#13;
6S4-sn4, Eve.&#13;
Public Wholesale CIMners. 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. low Prices. Check&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
..,. "'mb, Arn ... lc.,. o.p.ndllbl.,&#13;
NStIC. Met ch~ •. W. 320t • 21th Sf_&#13;
1M 'Iamb. Am ... lc-.. DillHncr.bl •.&#13;
110 3* 2tIf'l St., Kenosh,.&#13;
Slide Rule $10.00. Cell 553-23045_&#13;
Skis - Mens. InClUding poles and&#13;
boots. 553-22A5.&#13;
Toa,,., IUIO.Steem Iron IS 00 Call 553-2345. . .&#13;
6SO TriumPh T.T. rebUilt engine.&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
helmets, UOO.OOor best offer. See at&#13;
"10 Pontlk Temp*sf, 2 dr., H.. G- 5723 - .MJth Ave.&#13;
toP. VI. Automatic. power ...... 1_ 6106-..... ....&#13;
1M ~ .... 'IT ... ~., 4 sp .•&#13;
m .... 1ft or c.lI AI eft., 6 p.m .• 651-&#13;
,..,.. S110 • 23rd Ave.&#13;
.... Opet KecMt, 1'" CoN'lr, 80th&#13;
000d &lt;oM eatl ...... '1. SS-IA3-2361&#13;
61 Amba-.dOr 4 dr. Mhn. 1UtO •••&#13;
cyl. T' .... recently ovwh..,led sns&#13;
call s,u2)U. .&#13;
• "'Y1"IOUttl .oecIr...."., 313. Gold&#13;
-'th 81-.::k ""'inyl 109. Ex c-''' ....~ 1757 ' ........ ~&#13;
Honda "1$0" M) per cent restored.&#13;
~ !lOme dutch work, $250.1XI.&#13;
-,.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and WOOds&#13;
$3.i6 new will setl tor $245. •&#13;
Legalize Marijuana Bumper.&#13;
Stickers. 5Oc: donation. Be at StUdent&#13;
Activities Building Wed. ~~~Sfl, very good condo '25. Call&#13;
For I Good night's Sleep _&#13;
w..... beds. 3701 - 60th street Call&#13;
650&amp;-9"7. .&#13;
Hand Painted milk Clns. Make us an&#13;
oft... cell 6$4.4162.&#13;
Stereo Component Sv.stem. 60 watt&#13;
-mPiifl.... h .. nta~le •• 2 spukers.&#13;
Moving, must seli. S50. Ph. 652.(1079.&#13;
BIilOWSE - ereaclloaf Book Sh&#13;
261 Broad Sfreet. Lake G.,evl, ~::&#13;
Wet SUit SS, Show tire &amp; rim $1. File&#13;
boxes $1 &amp; $1.50. call 634·3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab. 3 mo_ old. Good&#13;
DiSp. Call 511-7161 aft. 4 p.m.&#13;
2 Bedroom House. Parksldl! area.&#13;
Llv. R., DIning Room comb.,&#13;
Fireplace. over one acre ~and, 552-&#13;
9012.&#13;
Home grown TOMATOES. Concord&#13;
Grapes for eating or wine making.&#13;
6328 WaSh. Ave .• 633-3836.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
- Go Dance. 632·3785 or 633-3805 .&#13;
WANTED - Rambler Amerlcl!ln or&#13;
Vol kswagen - Good condition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694.1419.&#13;
Apt_ wanted. male junior will Share&#13;
expenses. call Kurt, 551.9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week, 7:45--4:30. Can $33-2415.&#13;
FORR&amp;NT-- .... '::&#13;
carpeted .,d air....._' .. :-&#13;
per mo. UtfUtiei trtd&#13;
at 652-3945 or .".. __&#13;
APARTMENT'0lI~.&#13;
MadIson. 3glrl.nIId 1 ~&#13;
modem,lUml"'OIl:-", ... "&#13;
.,d Bridge."" JItIf'o&#13;
person. Cali 635-21st. :.-.-'&#13;
LOsT • pOUlIlI_&#13;
--=:::.:.--;:: ....&#13;
PrescriptIOn 01_' c:,.;"..,&#13;
_ding ring.N':"' __&#13;
center. 2nd fIOOI". :..."....0"'&#13;
newscope&#13;
dassif.edt&#13;
are tree&#13;
plember&amp;, 19il&#13;
Student Health Insurance&#13;
John&#13;
All full-time students are reminded that they may enroll. Health Insurance Program offered by the University in thes&#13;
Parkside Student Gov~rnment Association through Bl~~ Wi&#13;
Surgical Care Blue Shield. CtOSg&#13;
Denver&#13;
Brochures and applications are available at the foll . Business Office, Room 230, Tallent Hall, Phone 55;~ing o&#13;
Edith Isenberg, Campus Nurse, Room 332, Greenquist ~ -&#13;
553-2366. U, Information Center, Room 201, Tallent Hall Phon&#13;
Coming&#13;
to Parkside&#13;
The deadline for enrollment in the plan is Sept. 17 ~5?3-2.14s previous date of Sept. 24. · l!c&#13;
~&#13;
StaU, ~&#13;
Jfw,,uJat S ¥ · 9 7 P' · nv.&#13;
Jet Plane" and many others. He also has a&#13;
reputatiqn as being one of the better popular&#13;
guitarists. Denver has emerged as a full blown star in his&#13;
own right after becoming known originally as the&#13;
replacement for Chad Mitchell in the Chad Mitchell&#13;
Trio.&#13;
The appearance of Denver will.kick off ~-P's&#13;
1971-72 Student Activities Office popular concert series In its short history, UW-Parkside has&#13;
sponsored such popular ~rouos as Chica~o. Blood, weal and Tears, The Fifth Dimension, The First&#13;
Edition, Your Father's Mustache, The New&#13;
Christy Minstrels and Pete Seeger.&#13;
C,Urfew&#13;
&lt; Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Coalition, he said.&#13;
"We're loosley formed; there's no formal&#13;
membership. There are people who are members who don't even know they're members,"&#13;
he asserted in the true spirit of Abbie and&#13;
Jerry.&#13;
Why didn't he plead his case before the Park&#13;
Commission'? "We have no plans to work within&#13;
the system. I don't think there's any way left to&#13;
work effectively within it. It's not really going to help to speak ·to the council. You're better off&#13;
speaking to kids your own age," he answered. If the ordinance is passed, what will be their&#13;
response'? "Confrontation; or atleast an attempt&#13;
at it", he said.&#13;
Poor Boy Boots F -;, ~· _&#13;
. , ~ \.: ,;, . f''. :'..&#13;
. ;&#13;
;-c•-~ %$~ , ' ,, · aclt ;&#13;
Poloton and Mushroom&#13;
Buffed Buck. Natural&#13;
Crepe out-sole&#13;
Sixes 7½-12&#13;
Flare Jeans·&#13;
and Pants&#13;
from sa to s 14&#13;
516 Monument Square&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Chaplains on Campus&#13;
Fat.her Gary ~ees -_Rt. 4, Box 613, Kenosha, Wis. 552- Sister Catherine Gibbons - 5510 58th Ave., Kenosh u .. 4438 a, n1&amp;,&#13;
Student Chapl~ns - offering and facilitating growth .&#13;
of self-understan~g_, ~ev~lopment, and _life orientation inlll_t&#13;
the Gospel and sohdihed in group religious experien,. li&amp;btt1 -.e.&#13;
Special Mission&#13;
Highlights Course Select•&#13;
The casual observer looking&#13;
over a University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
timetable for fall&#13;
classes finds, in addition to&#13;
familiar sounding courses,&#13;
terms like industrialization,&#13;
modern American society, and&#13;
urbanization reoccurring&#13;
regardless of the field of study. Thafs by design, because UPP's&#13;
special educational mission&#13;
is to give attention to the unique&#13;
problems of a modern, in·&#13;
dustrial; urban,.$ociety.&#13;
. Parkside's special mission is&#13;
highlighted in · the School · of&#13;
Modern Industry which this fall&#13;
offers some 70 courses during&#13;
the day and evening in such&#13;
fields as engineering science,&#13;
computing, business&#13;
managemeJ½t,, managemeqt&#13;
science, labor· economics arid&#13;
directly related courses in&#13;
economics.&#13;
But in addition to courses in&#13;
~e School of Modern Industry, increasing attention is being&#13;
focused on UW-P's special&#13;
mi_ssion in the social sciences,&#13;
sciences and humanities&#13;
divisions within the College of&#13;
Ifs the&#13;
real thing. Coke.&#13;
jj®&#13;
...&#13;
Science and Society&#13;
Thi~ fall, for example,&#13;
evening courses ,&#13;
temporary Americ~&#13;
and_ ''.U~~anism and l&#13;
ba~1zation are being offend&#13;
sociology, as well as an&#13;
course in "lnd11$&#13;
Psychology."&#13;
During the day students&#13;
choose from such courtes&#13;
"Problems of M •&#13;
American Society" as a&#13;
science elective·&#13;
dustrialization of ~ World" for history or economlcl&#13;
credit; "Emergence ti&#13;
Metropolitian America" • 1&#13;
history course; "Georgraphy el&#13;
Transportation" fOCUSUI oa a&#13;
contemporary aspect of&#13;
field; "Heredity, Popula&#13;
and Society" for science cndl&#13;
and a number of ecoqlr.al&#13;
courses bearing directly&#13;
modern man and his t&#13;
vironment.&#13;
Registration for all UP·P&#13;
classes continues this week&#13;
during the first week of&#13;
beginning Tuesday, Seit. 7&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
ff9 Honda 175cc Scumblw. Ex.&#13;
cond. 1-'2' Includes 2 helmets. C.11&#13;
Ed, 6lt 49«1,&#13;
1'62 .. ell 2 dr hardtop, S250. C.11&#13;
6344445 or '31-2791.&#13;
1951 Aamb Amerlc n 0epe,'ldable,&#13;
rvs!lc, and ch,!lllP· $35 . 3209 • 211h st.&#13;
IHO Aamb. AmerlCM1, ~dable.&#13;
S70 3209 • 2•h St., Kenosha .&#13;
1970 Pont ac Temp.st, 2 dr., Hard- top, v .1, Automatic, Po- steering '3,4606. '&#13;
19 .. Ch(M'ger AT · 4.«I Mag., 4 Sp., fflaQS,SNOI' II AJ attw 6 p.m .• 658.&#13;
, :SllO • 23rd Aw&#13;
• ., Amt&gt;aul!ldOr ' dr. MO..--, AUto,, 6&#13;
CVI. Trans rec tly over auled 177S&#13;
C.11 :ssl-2~5. '&#13;
1967 Austin,Healey 3000, Atter 5 p.m. 539-2«17 (Burlington).&#13;
1968 Ford Torino 302-V8, Low mll.&#13;
Automatic, power steering, Radio, Heater, 652-n.S, see at 523-4 • 4'th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 lmp11111 Super Sport 327, Atter&#13;
4:30 p.m ., 3022 . 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 RS, 1971, Exe. Cond. 654-sn,, Eve.&#13;
6SO Triumph T.T. rebuilt engine,&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
helmets, S800.00or best o~r. See at&#13;
5723 • ,0th Ave.&#13;
Honda "1S0" IO per cent restored. Nffds some clutch work, $250.00 634-0171. .&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FORSALE&#13;
3-uitcases, very good cond. $2S Call 654-2704. .&#13;
For a Good night's sleep _&#13;
Waterb«ls. 3701 . 60th street Call 6S4 9447. '&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us a otter. Call 654-462. n&#13;
"Sears" Porta~ly typewriter. Good&#13;
condition. Comes with carrying&#13;
case. Will sell for $30.00. Call 637-&#13;
6445.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3836.&#13;
Public Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check ours first high quality _ 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Sllde Rule $10.00. Call 553.2345_&#13;
Skis - Mens, including poles and&#13;
boots. 553-2245.&#13;
Toaster 15.00, Steam Iron $5 oo Call 553-23'5. . .&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and woocts&#13;
S3'6 new will sell for S245. '&#13;
Legalize Marlluana Bumper, Stickers. 50c donation . Be at Student Activities Building Wed.&#13;
Steno Component System. 60 watt ll(T!Pllfler, turntable,_ 2 speakers.&#13;
Moving, must sell. $50. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
BROWSE - Breactloaf Book Sh 261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, ,:i~'.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75 . 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 65'-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire &amp; rim Sl, File&#13;
boxes Sl &amp; Sl.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
Disp. Call 511 -7161 aft. 4 p.m.&#13;
2 Bedroom House, Parkside area, Liv. R., Dining Room comb.,&#13;
Fireplace, over one acre ~and, 552-&#13;
9012.&#13;
Home grown TOMATOES, Concord&#13;
Grapes for eating or wine making.&#13;
6328 Wash. Ave., 633-3836.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go - Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or Volkswagen - Good condition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3'19.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male iunior will share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, 551.9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week, 7: .S-4:30. Call S33-2'15.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
----------&#13;
Carpeted&#13;
FOR RE NT - Mod«1I olflC1 ~ and eir condlt~&#13;
per mo. Utllltles included&#13;
at 652-394S or 6SA-7410:.__--&#13;
__,-- _llil '&#13;
APARTMENT FO• •&#13;
Madison, 3 glrls need l lCI&#13;
modem, furnished apt; ,,. "&#13;
and Brlctoe, S6100 Jo'fC'&#13;
pe~&#13;
~ :ies· Cit.,,. Prescription Gla5 ' .. t,Jlfftl- . Al th• ~·&#13;
c~&#13;
wedding ring. rauant&#13;
newscope&#13;
classifieds&#13;
are fret </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 1, September 6, 1971</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63410">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63411">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63412">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
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            <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="63415">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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            <name>Rights</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63418">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Registration Fall 1971</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90833">
              <text>"tH E LI F. P.Y UWP, ' a, • &amp;INOSHA CAMPUS&#13;
- WASHINGTON RO.&#13;
FREE&#13;
Registration&#13;
Fall 1971&#13;
SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SITURDIY&#13;
htut&#13;
2 34567&#13;
I t l0 11 12 13 14&#13;
211, 17 11 19 20 21&#13;
••&#13;
21 ~25262728 31&#13;
5&#13;
12&#13;
'• si. .. __ ..... -:-'t Act. Bldg.&#13;
' "fhe fllwks Ind&#13;
Sii.111111," p· '-11ti · ier Paow&#13;
6&#13;
October&#13;
1 2&#13;
3 4 5 6 7 8 9&#13;
10 11 12 13 ·14 15 16&#13;
17 18 19 20 21 22 23&#13;
24 25 26 27 28 29 30&#13;
31&#13;
labor Day&#13;
13&#13;
late Registration Week. :&#13;
20&#13;
No More Refunds!&#13;
Rosh Hashonah&#13;
~ ~ 27 11,111 4&#13;
concert i:....._ :oo pm -1111111. . ·.&#13;
it, "Sh&#13;
lltrastreet" op on ~ · Golden , 7:oo p.m.&#13;
1 2&#13;
Rec1strat10n Ends&#13;
7 8 9&#13;
Classes Beain .&#13;
14 Film, ' 'The Gokl Rush", 15 16&#13;
Charlie Chaplain .&#13;
Laurel &amp; Hardy Last Day to add classes Harold Uoyd&#13;
Charlie Chaplain&#13;
Laurel &amp; Hardy&#13;
Harold Uoyd&#13;
21 22 23&#13;
28 29 30&#13;
Yom Kippur&#13;
1971 SEPTEMBER&#13;
3&#13;
10 11&#13;
17 18&#13;
last Day for 60 per&#13;
Ref d&#13;
Dance , Alp a appa&#13;
umbda Sl&gt;O d 9 00&#13;
24 o re , " Rosemary s&#13;
Bab(, 8 00 P ude t&#13;
Act. Bide . 7Sc&#13;
pm&#13;
1971 &#13;
NEWSCOPE August 23. 1971&#13;
,.M ~ ,,~constructive deed that im&#13;
university or improves SOCi~ro.l!ll!he&#13;
You will encounter on car:-&#13;
sons who will tell you that ~. Per.&#13;
terribly old-fashioned. that t~ q ali&#13;
build a better world is to deslro 'Yay ~&#13;
that the place to begin is the ui It,iIlI&#13;
They will tell you how YOUhaIVel1ity&#13;
.&#13;
repressed and oppressed (s. ve b";,,&#13;
probably hadn't noticed) ': y~&#13;
gladly supply you with ~ea~_ YiiII&#13;
opiruons on the subject YOU ~ ~&#13;
care to tlunk about indepen&lt;lA.:'.'lIt&#13;
student government. the drug- -&#13;
campus poJicies, or any nl1lllBetlIe,&#13;
important public issues. You Willber of&#13;
these parties by their e .1aIot&#13;
negativism,' and by their r~~qt'DI&#13;
attribute low motives to te:' ~&#13;
"Malice," Thomas JeffersoO erl.&#13;
obs~rved. "will always fin~once&#13;
motives for good actions." There.bad&#13;
place in a university communityql1O&#13;
malice, or discourtesy. or ~&#13;
tiveness. My experience with s!udeoI&#13;
is that they want to work on the ~&#13;
struclive side, and that those :&#13;
appeal to them on the basis of Degaij&#13;
ideas and values get a small and"::&#13;
following.&#13;
The most important single um.&#13;
can do fpr .yourselves and for:;&#13;
cam pus this year is SUCCeed&#13;
academically. Studies of studebl&#13;
satisfaction ar~ very clear onthe pciat&#13;
that the most Important ingredieat iD&#13;
satisfaction is academic success.U YfAI&#13;
do well you will be pleased Willl&#13;
yourselves. and pleased with lh.&#13;
campus.&#13;
This is not a call to drudgery 8IIdI&#13;
dull life. Far from it. Most of you 1liD.&#13;
no doubt. succeed in your studies IDd&#13;
also find time to participate in ltlJdeot&#13;
government, work on campus ID.t&#13;
community problems. pursue priv...&#13;
pleasure, and do many other things !bat&#13;
will give you satisfaction in these, the&#13;
best years of your lives.&#13;
I repeat: this will be our best yeor.&#13;
and you will help make it so.&#13;
To all new and returning students I&#13;
want to extend a warm welcome. This&#13;
will be UW-Parkside's best year. and&#13;
you will help make it so.&#13;
Those of you who have visited or&#13;
studied on campus this swnmer have&#13;
seen the tremendous surge of activity&#13;
connected with our building program.&#13;
This has been a time in which paper&#13;
drawings, long in the making, have&#13;
begun to take the shape of buildings.&#13;
utility tunnels, parking lots, roads, and&#13;
orr-campus apartments. I compliment&#13;
you for not complaining about the&#13;
unsighthness and inconvenience involved.&#13;
and take it as an indication that&#13;
you understand that these activities are&#13;
necessary if we are to build here a true&#13;
university that will serve you and the&#13;
many gen rations of students that will&#13;
come after you&#13;
What is less visible, but even more&#13;
Important, is the expansion and improvement&#13;
of our educational program.&#13;
We now have more courses, covering&#13;
more fields and specialties, and in&#13;
gr ater depth, than ever before. We&#13;
nave more faculty. and better-qualified&#13;
ra ulty, thi year than last. We have&#13;
JOined all the other campuses or the&#13;
VOII rstty on pledging special and&#13;
&lt;.'OOtlnumg errorts to strengthen unoergraduate&#13;
teacbing. You will be the&#13;
beneficiary or all these developments.&#13;
You wilt also find the faculty deeply&#13;
Involved In scholarly activities, and&#13;
wrth important tasks in community and&#13;
institutional service, In some cases you&#13;
'''II participate directly in those activities,&#13;
and in all cases you will benefit&#13;
from faculty involvement in pursuits&#13;
other than teaching, Teaohing is&#13;
enriched by scholarship and by parucrpauon&#13;
in problem-solving efforts&#13;
out sid the university. University&#13;
pect es sors and college teachers are&#13;
alike 10 that teaching is their first&#13;
responsibility. But the university&#13;
professor has a special obligation tc&#13;
discover new knowledge, to share that&#13;
knowledge with others, and insofar as&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
,.. Four Sill'l 9". 12" • I.... _ 16"&#13;
AlSO&#13;
• I"S • $' GHOTI • CHICKIN&#13;
GNOCCHI VIOLl • LA SAG"'''&#13;
• .!o(A FOOD. SANDWICHU&#13;
CAUY-OUTS - O£lIVUY&#13;
"YOU .tHe •. WI _.,HC"&#13;
657 -9843 or.&#13;
658-4922&#13;
A Message From The Chancellor&#13;
0:&#13;
W&#13;
o&#13;
0:&#13;
o&#13;
m&#13;
..J&#13;
..J&#13;
W&#13;
0:&#13;
0:&#13;
«&#13;
o&#13;
CHANCELLOR WYLLIE&#13;
possible apply it 10 the solution of the&#13;
problems of society.&#13;
In ail of this we are really talking&#13;
about students, for without students to&#13;
serve there would be no large need for&#13;
buildings. or faculty. or staff. What&#13;
should be better understood, however,&#13;
is that universities exist to serve&#13;
students intellectually. Whatever else it&#13;
does, a university must nurture the life&#13;
of the mind. It should value reason&#13;
above feeling, fact above opinion, and&#13;
achievement above failure. It should&#13;
help students discover that knowledge&#13;
is the most enduring source of power,&#13;
and that effective power is a function of&#13;
trained intelligence and disciplined&#13;
capacity. The right "trip" at a&#13;
university is ·a trip of intellectual&#13;
discovery. The right "involvement" is&#13;
the grappling of the mind with a concrete&#13;
problem. The right "action" is the&#13;
~r~-:=:::~s.::=:=:::~:=:::::~~:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=:::::::::::::::::::=:=:~:~:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;:~:!:~&amp;:!;!:;i~&#13;
I CHAT N CHEW Ii&#13;
~!40th Avenue &amp; 52nd Street i!ii PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
Copy Editor John Koloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Fe~ture Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager JOM Gray&#13;
Summer Newscope is ,.&#13;
independent student newspoper&#13;
composed and published nSIY&#13;
through the summer ..... ill&#13;
students of the UDiversityII&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Stydot&#13;
obtained advertising fllldi II!&#13;
the sole source of reveille fer&#13;
the operaHon of Newscope.6,111&#13;
copies are pririted aDd&#13;
distributed through Iht&#13;
Kenosha and R-acine COlD·&#13;
munities as well as Ibt&#13;
University. Free copieS II!&#13;
avaiiable upon requelil&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS 40¢ &amp; 24¢&#13;
SUPER-CHEW(Triple decker)&#13;
NEWS STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger,&#13;
James Casper. Jim Koloen. Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
)\1i.ke ~tevesand. Janet :sabol,&#13;
Mike Starr.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus&#13;
Don Marjara. Barb Scott. '&#13;
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, AND THURSDAY&#13;
9:00 a.m .• 5:00 p.m.&#13;
6:30 p.m .. 9:00 p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
9 :00 a.m .. 5:00 p.m.&#13;
GENUINE&#13;
$24.95&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
Page2 . ·Ew COPE August23, 1971&#13;
constructive deed th'at irn&#13;
university or improves soc·P~oves the&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four S11~s 9~. 12- • 14# . 16-&#13;
AlSO&#13;
• RIIS • SPAGHnTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GHOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGHI&#13;
• U fOOO • SAHOWICHU&#13;
CAll-,Y-OUTS • DELIVERY " YOU ••HG •• Wf •1ttHc·•&#13;
657-9843 or,&#13;
658-4922&#13;
A Message from The Chancellor&#13;
CHANCELLOR WYLLIE&#13;
a:&#13;
w&#13;
l?&#13;
a:&#13;
0&#13;
m&#13;
.J&#13;
.J&#13;
w&#13;
a:&#13;
a:&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
0&#13;
You will encounter on c~e Y.&#13;
sons wh9 will tell you that m~us_ Pit.&#13;
te~ribly old-fashioned, that t~ts 1s au&#13;
build a better world is to destr e ~ay to&#13;
that the pla~e to begin is the ;)/ 11, and&#13;
They will tell you how you h tversity&#13;
repressed and oppressed ( ~ve beei&#13;
probably hadn't noticed) Since YOII&#13;
gladly supply you with ~ea~nd Iii!;&#13;
opinions on the subject you Y·tnade&#13;
care to think about indepen rnay ~t&#13;
student government, the drudent1y '&#13;
campus poJicies, or any nu g scene,&#13;
important public issues. You ~~r of&#13;
these parties by their pe . know&#13;
t&#13;
. . . d rs1ste t&#13;
neg~ ivism, an by their readin n&#13;
attribute low motives to 1&#13;
~ to&#13;
"Malice," Thomas Jeffers O ers&#13;
observed, "will always fio~ once&#13;
motives for good actions " Then . had&#13;
l ... · re1s~&#13;
p ace m a uruversity cornmu ·t&#13;
malice, or discourtesy or dnt Y for . ' estruc tiveness. My experience with stud ·&#13;
is that they want to work on the ents&#13;
structive sjde, and that those 1&#13;
~ppeal to them on the basis of nega;v 0&#13;
ideas and values get a small and shoe&#13;
following. rt&#13;
The most important single thing YOO&#13;
can do for _yourselves and for the&#13;
campus. this year is succeed&#13;
ac~dem~cally. Studies of student&#13;
satisfaction ar~ very clear on the point&#13;
that the most important ingredient ·&#13;
satisfaction is academic success. If y! do well you will be pleased With&#13;
yourselves, and pleased with the&#13;
campus.&#13;
possible apply it to the solution of the&#13;
problems of society.&#13;
In all of this we are really talking&#13;
about students, for without students to&#13;
serve there would be no large need for&#13;
buildings, or faculty, or staff. What&#13;
should be better understood, however,&#13;
is that universities exist to serve&#13;
students intellectually. Whatever else it&#13;
does, a university must nurture the life&#13;
of the mind. It should value reason&#13;
above feeling, fact above opinion, and&#13;
achievement above failure. It should&#13;
help students discover that knowledge&#13;
is the most enduring source of power,&#13;
and that effective power is a function of&#13;
trained intelligence and disciplined&#13;
capacity. The right "trip" at a&#13;
university is ·a trip of intellectual&#13;
discovery. The right "involvement" is&#13;
the grappling of the mind with a concrete&#13;
problem. The right "action" is the&#13;
This is not a call to drudgery and a&#13;
dull life. Far from it. Most of you v.ill,&#13;
no doubt, succeed in your studies aoo&#13;
also find time to participate in student&#13;
government, work on campus and&#13;
community problems, pursue private&#13;
pleasure, and do many other things that&#13;
will give you satisfaction in these, the&#13;
best years of your lives.&#13;
I repeat: this will be our best year,&#13;
and you will help make it so.&#13;
~;: .:--···;.;-:--.:. ···:., ·· .: . . ·::::.::... .. . . ....... ·. ~-:,&#13;
I CHAT N CHEW I&#13;
lili 40th Avenue &amp; 52nd Street 1111&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
_FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TILL 2 A,M,&#13;
HAMBURGERS 40¢ &amp; 24¢&#13;
SUPER-CHEW (Triple decker)&#13;
iiii';:;~":~;:;::~~-::;~::::i::iTi;~:;~~;;·iti&#13;
11 WEEK OF REGISTRATION m!J .::::::: ' ;:;:;:;: }i:i AUG, 31, SEPT. 1 - 2 1f:J:i:;&#13;
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, ANO THURSDAY&#13;
9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.&#13;
6:30 p.m. · 9:00 p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.&#13;
FIRST WEEK QF CLASSES&#13;
SEPT· l - 10&#13;
TUESDAY THRU THURSDAY&#13;
l:30 A,M,&#13;
TO 8:30 P.M.&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
8:00 A,M, - 4:30 P,M,&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
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1, .... --wBOQ,lt_STORE I . . ... ':...... .. ..... ;. 'v.-.--: :-:•:·:··:;:;:;:::::;.,; •:::::;. ;,;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;::=-:::::iJ: .~&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
Copy Editor JohnKoloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor 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;
Mi}rn Stevesand, Janee ::sabol,&#13;
Mike Starr.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott.&#13;
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Editorial&#13;
Busines:;:&#13;
553-24&#13;
553·2&#13;
Summer Newscope is pn&#13;
independent student newspaper&#13;
composed and published weekly&#13;
through the summer sessioo by&#13;
students of the University d&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. · Sb}den!&#13;
obtained advertising funds are&#13;
the sole source of revenue for&#13;
the operation of Newscope. 6,&#13;
copies are printed ac&#13;
distributed through&#13;
Kenosha and Racine co · munities as well as e&#13;
University. Free copies are&#13;
available upon requf!?l.&#13;
i:-~~~UiN~-----]L;.i~···-------~ .. ~,&#13;
;} $24.95&#13;
12 VOL TS FULL FEATURES&#13;
TOP MUNTZ QUALITY&#13;
t;~&#13;
::::&#13;
....&#13;
I&#13;
···•· . S~ 0 PEN 9 a.m.- 9 p.m. . .......... ~~~- ···~·•·•·•·•·•·•·•·• •• ...... u~··--:·:~:~:~:.:.:x:.:.:.:_:;:_:_:_:_,::_:::::::;:::::::::::::-;-:·:·····:·.························&#13;
".==============:=::··.=:~::'!- ~-=&#13;
-~'" =---&#13;
3105 60th Street &#13;
. (4) Parking is r '. "" •• 1Z1, 1171 PE&#13;
which must be keptPclohiblled at all times in;;-;a;;:reas;;;;;;---;::::~:;-:=::-.~-~":'-:----:-~---:-:&#13;
para to S· ear for tbe pa.... . . s. aid areas shall be de' -..e of fire apsigns&#13;
reading "Fire Z Signaled by standard&#13;
Day or Night" or "Fir ~' No Parkmg at Any Time&#13;
Day or Night." e ne,NoParkingatAnYTime:&#13;
. (5) Parking is prohib' .&#13;
which must he k ited at all times in areas&#13;
unload. Such area=~:,.~\e~ dor vehicles to load and&#13;
signs. eslgnaled by appropriate&#13;
(6) Motor vehicles pa ked .&#13;
area Without a lt r In a restricted parking&#13;
fire zone, fif# 1!::;~~adO~motor vehicles parked in a&#13;
and I' ,lOg zone or no parking un 'censed or partially dl I zone,&#13;
may, a t the owner' Ismantled motor vehicles&#13;
premises and stor:/"ru~e, ~. ';""ed off university&#13;
after a notice to tit ve rc es, if not claimed&#13;
abonded and shall he': ow,:;,r, shall be considered&#13;
20.909 (I) Wis. Stats. spose of as proVIdedin section&#13;
(7) Parking in uni ity prohibited as req' d fversl parking areas shall be&#13;
snow removal wre or reasons of needed repair and&#13;
(8) Violation of any of the provisions of section UW&#13;
1.04 shall result in a fine of up to $25 as established bv&#13;
II ora m or&#13;
University Rules and Regulations&#13;
poIlce all lands and property under the control of the&#13;
",Is Such officers shall have all the powers&#13;
~ in section 27.01(8), Wis. Stats., 1967, except&#13;
llteresuehpowersare specifically limited or modified&#13;
bJ tile regenls. Such officers may accept concurrent&#13;
Iftllitttmenisas deputy sheriffs, if requested to do so&#13;
bJ tile appropriate county sheriff.&#13;
(2) Police officers shall be identified by an apJl'l"iale&#13;
shieldor badge, bearing the words, "Police,&#13;
lbiversily&lt;iWisconsin" and bearing a number, which&#13;
bIdge shall be conspicuously worn when enforcing&#13;
\f.. Adm. Codesections UW 1.03, 1.04 and 1.05 of these&#13;
ffIllIations. .&#13;
(3) Parking attendants or "meter maids" are&#13;
Illbori2ed to enforce the parking regula tions in section&#13;
UW 1,04.&#13;
UW1.03Motor vehicle regulations. (1) (a) No&#13;
pencil shalloperate any motor vehicle (self-propelled&#13;
_Ie) 00 any roadway under the control of the&#13;
.18 unlesshe hold a valad and current operator's&#13;
Iicooseissuedunder chapter 343, Wis. Stats., except a&#13;
pencil exemptunder the provisions of section 343.05,&#13;
lIII. S1a1s., from the requirement that he hold such a&#13;
..... inorder to operate a motor vehicle on the high-&#13;
..,. &lt;i this state.&#13;
(b) Noperson shall operate any motor vehicle on&#13;
lIy... dwayunder the control of the regents unless the&#13;
- bas been properly registered as provided by&#13;
dIBpter 341, Wis. Stats., unless exempt under the&#13;
IIOIiIlOIII of section 341.05, Wis. Stats., from the&#13;
nqairementthat the vehicle be registered in order&#13;
"tihnay be operated on the highways of this state.&#13;
Il) AU provisions of chapter 346, Wis. Stats., 1967&#13;
lIIIitled "Rules of the Road" which are applicable to&#13;
Ii&amp;bway. as defined in section 340.01 (22), Wis. Stats.,&#13;
:srehereby adopted for the regulation of traffic on&#13;
",-~'!Ways under the control of the regents and are&#13;
- to apply with the same force and effect, exClIptllMlseprOVisionsof&#13;
chapter 346, Wis. Stats., 1967,&#13;
~ are in conflict with any specific 'provision of&#13;
- regulations. .&#13;
.. (3)~ ~y provision of this section is invalid, or if&#13;
II :~catiOO thereof to any person or circumstances&#13;
~d, such invalidity shall not affect other ::°111o~applications which can be given effect&#13;
t the lDvalid provision or application.&#13;
~ 1.14 Parking regulations. (J) Parking is&#13;
-. ~ at ~lltimes on roads, drives, and fIre lanes&#13;
~ UlUversityparks and on all university lands,&#13;
desi that the president of tbe university, or hiS&#13;
~ted re~resentative, and the chief ad-&#13;
.. trativ~officer or his designated representative, lati:UthCl1Zedto establish parking areas, parking&#13;
ihlir •~ !'l~thodsof parking, on the campuses under&#13;
'PedIlc!uriadiction,and may designate parking areas for&#13;
.. ,.,:'"'PS at specific times, providing such areas&#13;
(2) ly posted and pa trolled as parking areas.&#13;
Iol1llhe~ept a.. provided in subsection (3), parking&#13;
"""'" lSily.~rklng areas is prohibited to otber than&#13;
~Ies 'Pecifl~lly assigned to such areas; and motor&#13;
~ed so assigned to any parking areas shall be&#13;
Ile ~ an appropriate parking permit affixed to&#13;
lltiters; as designa ted by the president of the&#13;
lbief a~?,.hlS d~ignated representative, or by the&#13;
"ltooeftta"lIUstrative officer, or hIS deSignated ",ve.&#13;
13) la) In . .&#13;
~ily order to provide off-street parkmg m&#13;
lltiters; parkmg areas for pa trans of pubbc&#13;
~lIlym events, such as, for example, athletic&#13;
.... ~. otor Vehicles may be permitted to park m&#13;
~ti~. for such purpose by the chief ad- ilIaiPubli e Officer,or his designaled representative.&#13;
~ OOtc event:' parking shall be for only a bmlted&#13;
~te r'ceedlng 12 hours continuously, and ap-&#13;
(b)Viseesmay he established.&#13;
~ ltor parking lots may be established, and&#13;
llt!Ilols ~ fees may be established for parking in&#13;
~~ y the chIef administrative officer or hiS&#13;
(e)U rep~esentative.&#13;
~ ~trlCted and unassigned parking areas for&#13;
""be~:bIis~ty, staff and visitors are authorized!'nd&#13;
- ... des' hed by the chief administrative offIcer&#13;
...... !gnaled representative' wbere condItiOns&#13;
the regents, pursuant to the authority provided in&#13;
section 36.06 (II) (b), Wis. Stats., 1969, except that&#13;
V1~labo? of any of the provisions of this section by a&#13;
untverstty student shaH result in the assessment of a&#13;
monetary penalty of up to $25 as established by the&#13;
regents.&#13;
UW 1.05 Trame regulations. (1) In order to assure&#13;
the safety of persons and the orderly now of traffic on&#13;
university lands, all pedestrian and vehicular traffic,&#13;
including bicycles, shall be governed by those&#13;
provisions of chapter 346, Wis. Stats., 1967, entiUed&#13;
"Rules of the Road" which are applicable, and shall&#13;
obey the posted signs regulating traffic as approved by&#13;
the regents.&#13;
(2) The chief administrative officer of a campus or&#13;
other university area is authorized to require the&#13;
registration of all student motor vehicles and to limit&#13;
or prohibit their use in designated areas during&#13;
designated hours, Violation of this subsection shall&#13;
result in the assessment of a monetary penalty of up to&#13;
$25 as established by the regents.&#13;
UW 1.06 Conservation or university parks. (1) The&#13;
dumping of any waste, trash, debris, or other rubbish&#13;
on any university property is prohibited, except only as&#13;
may be specifically authorized by the chief ada:&#13;
"' e&#13;
a:&#13;
o&#13;
&lt;II&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
..&#13;
a:&#13;
a:&#13;
~&#13;
o&#13;
Dean oearbom&#13;
RULES AND REGULATIONS&#13;
I are embodied in the&#13;
The fOIlOWADi~IN~~TfVE CODE adopted by&#13;
WISCONSIN We are publishing them&#13;
the Regents in J~nua?; ::i~orm students and starr of&#13;
in the Newscope 10 or e t rules in the Code have&#13;
their provisions, These Regen&#13;
rry increased penalties:&#13;
the force of la~ '. and n7 ~ and-or prison sentences&#13;
fines up to a mmlmum a 'd 'sed that the rules&#13;
da We have been a VI of up to 90 YS'. developed for the Madison&#13;
that were orlgm"!tY. ali unils of the University.&#13;
campus apply e~a ;;:nWisconsin has a heritage of&#13;
The Urnversl y. ve been adopted by the&#13;
, student freedoms whIch ':oard of Regents over a&#13;
University of Wlsc~~I~lling your attention to.these&#13;
period of years. weall will realize that even liberal&#13;
in the hope tha~ meters in which to operate,&#13;
traditions have given para&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Dean of Studen Is&#13;
. 'th tbe approval of the regents.&#13;
ministrative offIcer WI th . ed by the chief ad-&#13;
(2) Except. as ~u orl~ royal of the regents,&#13;
ministrative offIcer ":.~b~v';tatiOn, wood, timber,&#13;
the removal of anyu: or ~ther products frorn the&#13;
rocks, stone, ea~ , h-b'ted&#13;
university parkS, I~~s~ctio'n or molestation many&#13;
(3) The re~no;afi~h life within the boundaries of&#13;
bird, ammal . hibited except in cases wherem&#13;
university parks nfli"S"'ts° with any order of the departthis&#13;
prOVISionco c&#13;
request the&#13;
(Continued on Page 4)&#13;
TRAFFIC AND CONDUCT ON UNIVERSITY&#13;
pERTY '&#13;
fl!O 01 Designation of University Lands; Chief&#13;
~ 1&#13;
· tive officer. All lands and real property&#13;
,d1111nistra subject to the con_trol of the Regents of the&#13;
awned b{ or of Wisconsin are hereby designated as&#13;
uoivers~ Y arks and as such shall come within the&#13;
vruve~1&#13;
ge!'e and all subsequent rules and regulations&#13;
~ to university lands. For puposes of this&#13;
re]a ting the "chief administrative officer" of a&#13;
chapter, r other university area shall mean the&#13;
camPo~.&#13;
0&#13;
or dean of a campus; in the case of archaRce&#13;
ior experimental stations, or other university&#13;
tioretum;part of a campus under the direct supervision laJ1ds : cellor or dean, it shall mean the university&#13;
ri. 8 _c I&#13;
i~ charge of sue~ Ian~~- In the absence of the&#13;
rJ.fi~I~ dministrative officer" it shall mean the person&#13;
"chie ~ ed to act on behalf of such "chief ad-&#13;
: ~~:tive officer" in his absence.&#13;
UW 1.o2 Police Officers. (1) Such per~ons as shall&#13;
uthorized by the regents shall be constituted police&#13;
ber:cers and shall have the power to enforce these rules&#13;
~ regulations, and for the purposes thereof shall&#13;
. (4) Parking is r hi . ug&#13;
which must be kept lo b1ted at all times in~ a;::rea::::-----:---:------------=---- paratu S . c ear for the passa . . s. aid areas shall be de . ge of fire ap- s1gns reading "Fire Zon s1g~ted by standard&#13;
Day or Night" or "F' r..:, No Parking at Any Time&#13;
Day or Night. " ire ne, NoParkingatAnyTime:&#13;
(5) Parking is p hib'&#13;
which must be ke t ro ited at all times in areas&#13;
~load. Such areas ;ha~~e: dor_ vehicles to load and&#13;
signs. esignated by appropriate&#13;
(6) Motor vehicles ked . area without a perm·t par m a restricted parking&#13;
fire zone fir .. lane 11 do~ motor vehicles parked in a&#13;
d . ' ..,. , oa mg zone or no k · an unlicensed or partiall d' , par ing zone,&#13;
may at the , Y ismantled motor vehicles ' owner s expense be tow d ff . premises and stored S h ' . e . o university after a notice to th uc veh1cles, if not claimed&#13;
abonded and shall b ~ owner, shall be considered&#13;
20.909 (1 ) Wis. Sta~.disposed of as provided in section&#13;
(7) Parking in uni ·ty . prohibited as requir d ters1 parking areas shall be snow removal. e or reasons of needed repair and&#13;
1 04 ~raiiiolati~n. of a~y of the provisions of section UW&#13;
· resu m a fme of up to $25 as established bv&#13;
r&#13;
lion&#13;
f&#13;
University Rules and Regulations&#13;
lice all lands and proper~y under the control of the&#13;
~ ents. Such ?fficers shall ~ave all the powers&#13;
p-ovided in section 27.0l (8), Wis. Stats., 1967, except&#13;
v;heresuch powers are specifically limited or modified&#13;
lri the regents. Such officers may accept concurrent&#13;
appointments as deputy sheriffs, if requested to do so&#13;
b)· the appropriate county sheriff.&#13;
(2) Police officers shall be identified by an app-opriat.e&#13;
shield or badge, bearing the words, "Police,&#13;
UruversityofWisconsin" and bearing a number, which&#13;
t:edge shall be conspicuously worn when enforcing&#13;
Wis. Adm. Code sections UW 1.03, 1.04 and 1.05 of these&#13;
regulations.&#13;
(3) Parking attendants or "meter maids" are&#13;
authorized to enforce the parking regulations in section&#13;
l'W 1.04.&#13;
UW 1.03 Motor vehicle regulations. (1) (a ) No&#13;
~~on shall operate any motor vehicle (self-propelled&#13;
1-ehicle) on any roadway under the control of the&#13;
regents unless he hold a valad and current operator's&#13;
ficense issued under chapter 343, Wis. Stats., except a&#13;
~~on exempt under the provisions of section 343.05,&#13;
Wis. Stats., from the requirement that he hold such a&#13;
~cense in order to operate a motor vehicle on the high- ways of this state.&#13;
(bl No person shall operate any motor vehicle on&#13;
any roadway under the control of the regents unless the&#13;
same has been properly registered as provided by&#13;
chapter 341, Wis. Stats., unless exempt under the&#13;
irovisions of section 341.05, Wis. Stats., from the&#13;
rtq~ement that the vehicle be registered in order&#13;
lhat it may be operated on the highways of this state .&#13;
. 22) All provisions of chapter 346, Wis. Stats., 1967&#13;
~titled "Rules of the Road" which are applicable to&#13;
iugbways as defined in section 340.01 (22), Wis. Stats.,&#13;
!967 are hereby adopted for the regulation of traffic on&#13;
the roadways under the control of the regents and are&#13;
llltended to apply with the same force and effect, ex-&#13;
~t those provisions of chapter 346, Wis. Stats., 1967,&#13;
•thesehi ch are in conflict with any specific 'provision of&#13;
regulations.&#13;
the (&#13;
3&#13;
&gt; If a~y provision of this section is invalid, or if&#13;
_apph_cation thereof to any person or circumstances 15 1&#13;
~v_ahd, such invalidity shall not affect other&#13;
: ~ons o'. ap~lications which can be given effect&#13;
t the mvahd provision or application. Ito~: 1.04 Pa~king regulations. (1) Pa7&#13;
king is&#13;
!rave 1&#13;
~d at ~11 times on roads, drives, and fire lanes&#13;
excep?ing umversity parks and on all university land~,&#13;
es· that the president of the university, or his&#13;
,,,;.:~tnated representative and the chief ad- ..... llll rar ' Ire th iv~ officer or his designated representative,&#13;
-:u Or1Zed to establish parking areas, parking&#13;
their .' a?d ~~thods of parking, on the campuses under&#13;
'PecJ~sdiction, and may designate parking areas for&#13;
are p;c groups at specific ti.mes, providing such areas&#13;
(&#13;
2&#13;
)0flerly posted and patrolled as parking ar~s.&#13;
llniv E~cept as _provided in subsection (3), parking&#13;
rierson:~ity_ ~rkmg areas is prohibited to other than&#13;
hicJes ~ific~lly assigned to such areas; and motor&#13;
rlentified O assigned to. any parking are~ s~all be&#13;
lhe Veh· tan appropriate parking permit affixed to ·vers·ic e as. designated by the president of the&#13;
Chier ~l?r_his designated representative, or by the&#13;
ltpresenta~mstrative officer, or his designated ve.&#13;
~3J (a) In . . etsity order to provide off-street parking in vers· Parking areas for patrons of public&#13;
Coiites~ty events, such as, for example, athletic&#13;
areas d~~otor vehicles may be permitted to park in&#13;
"lliatrar 1&#13;
gned_ for such purpose by the chief _addi&#13;
PUbtve officer, or his designated representative.&#13;
e, not ~ even~ parking shall be for only a limited&#13;
llrOJ&gt;tiate f XCeedmg 12 hours continuously, and ap-&#13;
(b) Vis~ may be established.&#13;
PproPriat:tor Parking lots may be establish~, a~d&#13;
~ lots b fees m~y be established for parking ~n lgJ\a~ Y the chief administrative officer or his&#13;
&lt;c&gt; U rep~esentative.&#13;
dents restricted and unassigned parking areas for&#13;
lllaybe~s~\fty, staff and visitors are authorized ~nd&#13;
ct his d . !Shed by the chief administrative officer Permit. esignated representative where conditions&#13;
the _regents, pursuant to the authority provided in&#13;
s~bo~ 36.06 (11) (b), Wis. Stats., 1969, except that&#13;
VI~labo~ of any of the provisions of this section by a&#13;
un1vers1ty student shall result in the assessment of a&#13;
monetary penalty of up to $25 as established bv the&#13;
regents. •&#13;
UW 1.05 Traffic regulations. (1) In order to a ure the safety of persons and the orderly flow of traffic on&#13;
university lands, all pedestrian and vehicular traffic,&#13;
including bicycles, shall be governed by those&#13;
provisions of chapter 346, Wis. Stats., 1967, entitled&#13;
"Rules of the Road" which are applicable, and shall&#13;
obey the posted signs regula ting traffic as approved by the regents.&#13;
(2) The chief administra tive officer of a campus or&#13;
other university area is authorized to require the&#13;
registration of all student motor vehicles and to limit&#13;
or prohibit their use in designated areas during&#13;
designated hours. Violation of this subsection hall&#13;
result in the assessment of a monetary penalty of up to&#13;
$25 as established by the regents.&#13;
UW 1.06 Conservation of universit} park . (I) The&#13;
dumping of any waste, trash, debris, or other rubbi h&#13;
on any university property is prohibited, except only a&#13;
may be specifically authorized by the chief adDean&#13;
Dearborn&#13;
RULES AND REGULATIO,'&#13;
. I re embodied in th&#13;
The following ru ~;IVE CODE adopted b.&#13;
WISCONSIN_ ADMINISf1971 We are publishing them&#13;
the Regents m J~nua2'; to inform students and staff of&#13;
in the New_s~ope i;~r Regent rules in the Code have&#13;
their prov1s1ons. n:~ow carry increased penalties:&#13;
the force of la";V,. a f $500 and-or prison sentences&#13;
fines up to a minimum o , d , ed that the rules da We have been a VIS of up to 90 Y~·. developed for the . tadi on that were originally in all units of the University.&#13;
Campus ap~ly e~ally f Wisconsin has a heritage of&#13;
The Uruvers1 y o_ch have been adopted by the&#13;
student freedom~ wh1 . Board of Regents over a&#13;
University of Wisconsin lling your attention to the:.e&#13;
period of years. We~r~~ realize that even liberal&#13;
in the hope tha! parameters in which to operate. traditions have given&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Dean of Students&#13;
. 'th the approval of the regents. ministrative officer wi th . d by the chief ad· E ept as au orize (2) xc . 'th the approval of the regents, ministrative officer ~s vegetation, wood. timber,&#13;
the removal of any; or ~ther products from the&#13;
rocks, stone, ea~ , h'b'ted . ty rks 1s pro 1 1 . univers1 pa ' I destruction or molestation of any&#13;
. (3) 1:he re;:;~i~h life within the boundaries ?f&#13;
bird, a~1mal . rohibited except in cases wherein&#13;
univers1~ parks nfli1s ? ts with any order of the depart- this prov1s1on co c&#13;
ill al lo r u t&#13;
&lt;Continued n P &#13;
NEWSCOPE August 23. 1911&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
(Continued from Page 3&gt;&#13;
unauthorized duplication or to duplicate a university&#13;
key. It shall also be illegal to transfer any university&#13;
key from a person entrusted with possession to an&#13;
unauthorized person, or to be in possession of such key.&#13;
(8) Liquor. The use of possession of intoxicating&#13;
liquors, or fermented malt beverages with an alcoholic&#13;
content of more than 5 per cent by weight, is prohibited&#13;
on all university property, except in faculty and staff&#13;
housing, and in married and graduate student housing&#13;
units specifically designated by the chief adrnirustranve&#13;
officer, and at suitable times under&#13;
decorous conditions, in faculty and staff dining, C004&#13;
ference or meeting facilities, subject to statutory age&#13;
regulations.&#13;
(9) Malt Beverages. No fermented beverages&#13;
containing 12 oil per cent or more of alcohol by volume&#13;
hall be sold. dispensed, given away. or furnished to, or&#13;
purchased by or for any persons under the age of 18&#13;
years, on university of Wisconsin property, unless&#13;
accomparued by parent or guardian.&#13;
(lO) Narcotic and Dangerous Drugs. The use or&#13;
possession of narcotics or dangerous drugs as defined&#13;
In chapter 161 Wis, Stats., is prohibited on all university&#13;
property with the specific exceptions set forth in&#13;
chapter 161 The penalty provisions of chapter 161 shall&#13;
apply to VIOlationsof this section.&#13;
f III Picnicking, camping, Etc. Picnicking, campang,&#13;
and similar activities are prohibited on&#13;
university lands, except in such specific areas as are&#13;
designated to be picnic or camping grounds_ All rules&#13;
and regulalions for use of such grounds which are&#13;
posted must be complied with. For purposes of this&#13;
r ~ulalion, camping shall include the parking of&#13;
&lt;:ampcnt or camp trailers, the pitching of tents. or the&#13;
placement or ereclion of any facility or structure.&#13;
(12 nclhng, Canvassing, Peddling, Soliciting. (a)&#13;
o door to door selling, canvassing, peddling or&#13;
sollciling is permitted in the buildings of the univerSity,&#13;
including those used for housing, unless the oc-&#13;
&lt;:upant of a specific living unit or oHice has, in advance,&#13;
requested and given permission for a person&#13;
engaged in such activity to come to that particular&#13;
hVlng Untt or office for that purpose.&#13;
(b) All other canvassing, soliciting, peddling and&#13;
the sales of goods or services are prohibited on the&#13;
grounds or in the buildings or other facilities of the&#13;
university except the following:&#13;
I Individual sales of personal property owned or&#13;
ilcqulred by the seller primarily for his own use.&#13;
2 HaWking of newspapers and other printed&#13;
mailer outside of buildings or facilities.&#13;
3, Subscnption, membership,· ticket sales&#13;
soliCitation. rund-raislng, selling, canvassing and&#13;
solicillng acllvilles carried on by a univecsity or&#13;
registered student organization pursuant to a contract&#13;
Withthe university for the allocation or rental of space&#13;
for lhat purpose.&#13;
4 Admission events in a univerSity building or&#13;
fa&lt;..'lhlypursuant to a contract with the university.&#13;
5. Food and beverage concessions conducted&#13;
pursuant Loa contract with the university.&#13;
IU&gt; Signs. The creclion. posting, or attaching of&#13;
any signs. posters. pictures, etc. in or on any building&#13;
nr on other university property is prohibited except on&#13;
n'tular bulletin boards. The chief administralive ofri&lt;:&lt;,ror&#13;
his deSignee is authorized to allow exceptions&#13;
IClr lemporary periods for lhe areas under his&#13;
Jurisdiction.&#13;
e 14) Smoking. Smoking is prohibited in the&#13;
dassrooms. laboralOries. rest rooms. stOl-erooms and&#13;
t.·twridorsof university buildings except for such areas&#13;
as arc designated for that purpose.&#13;
ll~) wimmmg. Fishing, Boaling, Riding, Etc.&#13;
SwimmIng. fishing. boating. snowmobiling. horseback&#13;
I'ldmg, and similar recreational activities are&#13;
rl'Slnclcd 10 Ihc areas and limes designated by the&#13;
dlid administrative orricer of Ihe campus or area&#13;
l'Ollt·crned. approved by the regents. and denoted by&#13;
lIffielal signs, The sloring of boats. boating gear.&#13;
snuwmoblles and othcr equipment within the boundilnes&#13;
of ull1vcrsity parks. excepl under conditions&#13;
spl'cified by the chief administrative officer. and sp1:&gt;I'ovcdby&#13;
the regents. is prohibited. There shall be no&#13;
SWimming. fishing. docking. or mooring of boats from&#13;
univerSity piers. except as designated by the chief&#13;
administrative officer of the campus or area. approved&#13;
by the regcnts. and denoted by official signs. Unless&#13;
otherw ISC indici:lted, such university facilities are&#13;
available only 10 university personnel. _&#13;
t 16 Restricted Use of Unions. (a) The use of union&#13;
buildtngs and union grounds is restricted to members&#13;
of lhe union. to university faculty. to university staff.&#13;
&lt;lI1dto tnviled guests. except on occasions when all or&#13;
part of the bUildings or grounds are open to the general&#13;
pubhc. The university reserves the right to require&#13;
currently valid evidence of qualification to use the&#13;
union bUildings and union grounds by student identlflCatiOn.car~,.&#13;
uni.on membership card, faculty or&#13;
employe IdentifIcation card. evidence of invitation as&#13;
an lIl.vile:&lt;!guest. or other suitable evidence of&#13;
~uahflcatlon for such use. in any area of the buildings&#13;
~tndgrounds not open to the general public at the time&#13;
when idenlifi~ation is requested. The university&#13;
r~crvcs lhe fight 10 deny the use of union bUildings&#13;
Jnd ~mon grounds to anyone who fails or refuses to&#13;
prOVide such identifieat ion in any such area. Any&#13;
person who falls or refuses to provide such idenlIhcatlon&#13;
Ill. any such area. and who then fails or&#13;
refuses to WIthdraw from the buildings and grounds&#13;
rnay be removed. .&#13;
Ibl For the purposes of this section:&#13;
.. d grounds are "open to the&#13;
I. Union bUildings an d d lng those hours&#13;
~~~~;:dof~Ya i~o~~~I::::~U~~ide ~~~main entrance&#13;
or entrances . . ·t d a&#13;
2. An "i~vited guest" is a ~rson who is invi e&#13;
b&#13;
~&#13;
by the univers.ity, ~y a unive~~lt~ ~e:r~e~~eorunron&#13;
registered university orgaru~tlO.ng a specific conbuildings&#13;
or union grounds uri . .. ki&#13;
ference special function, tour or official VISit ta ~g&#13;
place o~ campus; or b. by a union mer:n~er to u~en o~&#13;
union buildings or grounds for a specific o~ca.slO&#13;
taki ng place on the buildings or registered program I be b rldings or&#13;
grounds, and who is escorted to t ~ I .&#13;
ounds by the member and accompanied by the&#13;
~embers while there. The use of union bUildings ~~d&#13;
grounds by an "invited guest" is limited to the specific&#13;
occasion to which he is invited. A person m~kl~ff&#13;
regular, repeated use of ~e buildings a~d groun WI&#13;
not be regarded as an I invited guest. .&#13;
(c) Any person who fails or refuses to wl~draw&#13;
from union buildings and union grounds after f~l.lmg.or&#13;
refusing to provide the evidence ?f quahflca.tlOn.&#13;
required by this seclion may be penalIzed as provided&#13;
in section UW 1.08.&#13;
(7) Unauthorized Presence. (a) It is unlawful for&#13;
any persons to be pres~nt in ~ny class.. l~ture,&#13;
laboratory period, orientation sesSIOn,exammabon, or&#13;
other instructional session without the consent of a&#13;
member of the university jidministration or faculty or&#13;
other person authorized to give such consent.&#13;
(b) A person is present without consen~ as f~rbidden&#13;
by paragraph (a), in the follOWing clr·&#13;
cumstances:&#13;
1. If he is not then enrolled and in good standing as&#13;
a member of such an instructional session, and refuses&#13;
to leave such session on request of the member of the&#13;
university administration or faculty or other person in&#13;
charge thereof;&#13;
2. If he is present during the conduct of any such&#13;
instructional session and upon reasonable request&#13;
thereof by the person in charge thereof refuses or fails&#13;
to identify himself by written or documentary svidence&#13;
as a person present with the consent required by&#13;
paragraph (a), and refuses or fails to leave such&#13;
session at request'of the person in charge thereof.&#13;
(8) Restrictions on Persons who may Enter&#13;
Campuses During Emergencies. (a) Section 36.45,Wis.&#13;
Stats. provides: HThe chancellor of each university of&#13;
Wisconsin campus or the chief security officer thereof&#13;
. during a period of immediate danger or disruption.&#13;
may designate periods of time during which the&#13;
university campus and designated buildings and&#13;
facilities connected therewith are off-limits to all&#13;
persons who are not faculty members, staff personnel,&#13;
students or any other personnel authorized by the&#13;
above-named officials. Any persons violating such&#13;
order shall be subject to the penalties provided by law&#13;
for criminal trespass." (For penalty, see sections&#13;
943.13 and 943.14, Wis. Stats.)&#13;
(b) During any period so designated, it shall be&#13;
unlawful for any person to remain on the campus, or in&#13;
the designated bUildings and facilities, after failing or&#13;
refusing to identify himself upon request as a person&#13;
entitled to be present. .&#13;
(c) For the purpose of subsection (b),&#13;
1. "To identify himself" means to show a&#13;
university identification card or other written or&#13;
documentary evidence of identity.&#13;
2. "Person entitled to be present" means a&#13;
university faculty member or other employe, a&#13;
university student, or any other person authorized to&#13;
be present by the order issued pursuant to the statutory&#13;
provision set forth in subsection (a) of this section.&#13;
3. The "request" must be made by a police officer&#13;
or other person authorized by the order to make such&#13;
request.&#13;
(9) Persons Prohibited from Entering Campuses.&#13;
(a) Student convicted of dangerous and obstructive&#13;
crime. Sec~ion 36:47, Wis. Stats., provides: "Any&#13;
person who IS conVicted of any crime involving danger&#13;
to ~roperty or persons. as a result of conduct by him&#13;
which obstructs or serlOusly impairs activities run' or&#13;
authorized by a state institution of higher education&#13;
under this chapter or chapter 37,and who, as a result of&#13;
such conduct, is in a state of suspension or expulsion&#13;
~ro~ ~e ins~itulion, and who entere property of that&#13;
Inshtulton Without permission of the administrative&#13;
head of the institution or his designee within 2 years&#13;
~ay ~ for Cflchoffense be fined not more than $5000;&#13;
ImprIsoned not more than 6 months, or both."&#13;
(b) Sludent not covered by (a) who has violated&#13;
regent by-laws. Any person who is suspended or expell~&#13;
fro~ the university for conduct of the kind&#13;
?escnb~ In paragraph (d) 1. of this section, and who is&#13;
In. a s~te of suspension or expulsion from the&#13;
umverslty, or any person who takes leave or resigns&#13;
~der charges after .being charged by the university&#13;
WIthconducl of the kind described in paragraph (d) 1.&#13;
oJ .thiS .sectl?n,. and who enters any campus of the&#13;
unlversl.ty Within one year of the effective date of his&#13;
suspe~slOn or expulsion, or of his talting leave or&#13;
reslgn~ng und~r ~harg.es, without the written consent of&#13;
the .chlef admInlstrahv: officer of the campus or his&#13;
deSignee, may be penahzed as provided in Section UW&#13;
1.08. ~ny pe~so~ ~ho fails to appear before an apPdropnatte&#13;
dt~SCIPldInaryhearing committee, once&#13;
a equa e no Ice an a reasonable time for preparation&#13;
have been ~fforded and a reasonable time and date&#13;
have been hxed, afler being charged by the university&#13;
WIthconduct of the kind described in paragraph (d) 1&#13;
of .thls ,seclt~n,. and who enters any campus of th~&#13;
be&#13;
unflverslhtywlthm ?ne y.ea: ~f his failure to appear&#13;
. ore t e appr~pnate dlsclphnary hearing committee&#13;
Without such wntten Consent may also be so penalized&#13;
as provided in Section UW 1.08.&#13;
(c) Non-student who is convieted of dan&#13;
crime on campus. Any person not a student ~l!I'QIIa&#13;
university who IS convicted of any crime invol !he&#13;
danger to property or persons as a result of OOnd ~&#13;
him on a campus of the university, and who enr.:t1&gt;y&#13;
campus of the university within one year of u.eany&#13;
fective date of hi~. convicti?n without the Writer.&#13;
consent of the chief administrative ollieer f t."&#13;
campus or his designee, may be penalized as pr~ .:::&#13;
in Section UW 1.08. &gt;t&#13;
(d) Conduct. I. The ~o~duct referred to in&#13;
section (b) of this section IS Intentions] cOnductthaSIAlseriously&#13;
damages or destroys university pr~t I.&#13;
attempts to seriously damage or destroy 1lIliv .1It&#13;
property; b. indicates a serious danger to the ~&#13;
safety of other members of the university ea&#13;
munity; c. obstructs or seriously impairs uniVersilinrun&#13;
or university-authorized activities on any earn tyincluding&#13;
activities either outdoors or insideP!a,&#13;
classroom, office, lecture hall, library, labora~·&#13;
theater,. union, reside~ce h~n or oth~r place Where '&#13;
umverstty-run or. umverslty-aulhorlzed activity ~&#13;
carried on. The kind of conduct referred to in 1hia&#13;
paragraph is intentional conduct which by itselflit ill&#13;
conjunelion with the conduct of others preventa tbe&#13;
effective carrying on of the activity - a result wbicb&#13;
the offencer knew or reasonably should have 1m...&#13;
would occur. Illustrations of the kind of cOnductwbieh&#13;
this paragraph (d) I. c. IS deSigned to cover appearill&#13;
section UW 2.01 (3).&#13;
2. For the purposes of section 36.47, Wis..Stata&#13;
conduct by an individual whieh "obstructs or serioua1Y&#13;
impairs" an activity IS conduct which by itself or ill&#13;
conjunction with the conduct of others prevents tbe&#13;
effvtive carrying on of the activity.&#13;
3. For the purposes of section 35.47, Wis.Slala, tbe&#13;
"administrative head of the. institution or' bW&#13;
designee" shall mean the chief administrative olfietr&#13;
as delinel! in section UW 1.01. Eacb administrative&#13;
officer may designate one gther official who may&#13;
under his direction, grant or deny consent to enter ~&#13;
campus pursuant to section 36.47, Wis. Slala" and&#13;
subsections (b) and (c) of this section.&#13;
4. For the purposes of section 36.47, Wis,Slall.,&#13;
and subsection (cf of this section, "crime invoivq:&#13;
danger to property or persons" shall mean any eritne&#13;
defined in chapter 940 (Crimes againstlile and bodlly&#13;
security), section 941.13 (False alarms, and iJI.&#13;
terference with lire lighting), section 941.20 (Reetless&#13;
use of weapons), section 941.22 (Possession ofIiJloI by&#13;
minor), section 941.23 (Carrying concealed weapon),&#13;
section 94124 (Possession of switchblade knife),secliolt&#13;
941.30 (Endangering safety by conduct regardl... III&#13;
life), section 941.31 (Possession of· explosiveslor&#13;
unlawful purpose), section 941.32 (Administeriql&#13;
dangerous or or stupefying drug), sectlOllIKUI&#13;
(Criminal damage.to property), section 943,02 (ArIaD&#13;
of buildings; damage of property by explosivs),&#13;
section 943.03 (Arson of property other than ~),&#13;
section 943.05 (Placing combustible materials an attempt),&#13;
section 943.06 (Molotov cocktails), sectilll&#13;
943.10 (Burglary), section 943.14 (Criminal trespassto&#13;
dwellings), section 943.32 (Robbery), section !144.01&#13;
/(Rape), section 946.41 (Resisting or obstructingof·&#13;
ficer), section 947.015(Bomb scares), or section1&amp;'1.10&#13;
(Fireworks regulated), or Wisconsin Statutes&#13;
(e) Factors to be considered. In granting III&#13;
denying consent to enter a campus pursuant to sectioD&#13;
36.47, Wis. Stats., or subsection (b) or (c) of this ....&#13;
tion, the following factors shall be considered:&#13;
I. The danger that the offensive cOllduc~JliI"&#13;
ticularly if it is of the kind described in paragraplt(dl&#13;
I. of this section, will be continued or repeated by Ihe&#13;
applicant for permission to enter the campus.&#13;
2. The need of the applicant to enter tlte ca'!'!"'"&#13;
for example, to attent a campus disciplinary heariJIll:&#13;
which he is being tried or is to be a wlmess.at&#13;
receive treatment in university hospitals. .&#13;
(20) Picketing, Rallies, Parades, Demonstraand&#13;
Other Assemblies. (a) In order to preserve Ihe&#13;
order which is necessary for the enjoyment or f~&#13;
by members of the university communIty, and m...---&#13;
to prevent activities which physically obstruct ae;:&#13;
to university facilities and prevent the umv~lty rvtce.&#13;
carrying on its instructional, research,. publ.lcseraOY&#13;
and administrative functions; any plcketin~~..U ~&#13;
parade, demonstration, or other assembly ....&#13;
declared unlawful if its participants: reJllIiD&#13;
I. Intentially gather, or intenti?nall) oihe"&#13;
assembled, outside any university building ~ .. ell&#13;
facility in such numbers, in such P~OXlml~.........eoother&#13;
or in such fashion as to phYSically.~---&#13;
trance to, exit from, or normal use of the fac:~'witJiJI&#13;
2. Intentionally congregate or asse'." ·n sudI&#13;
any university building or other facilIty I ersitYfashions&#13;
as to obstruct Of seriously linpall' ':"'~ sudI&#13;
run or university-authorized acllVllles, ~ti&lt;llI:&#13;
fashion as to violate any of the followtO!l .,.;val&lt;&#13;
·ted·ttlte .. ·· a. No group may be ammt In 0 universil1&#13;
oflice of any faculty member or otlter ~ 01&#13;
employe unless invited by the authonzed r:.iJnlb"&#13;
that office, and then not. in excess of t&#13;
designated or invited by that person.. ys, dt#'&#13;
b. Passage through corridors,. stalrw.~&#13;
ways, building. entrances, fire eXIts, ~trUeted II&#13;
areas leading to offices shall not be&#13;
seriously impaired. s]lall JlGlIIO&#13;
ooms, study rooms, or research roomstltOrizedtodD&#13;
entered or occupied by any group not .~ the "......"&#13;
so by the person in immediate char~e admiJlilll'dlt&#13;
by a person designa ted by the chIef&#13;
(Continue&lt;! gn 'pa&amp;~~~&#13;
Pagei 'EW PE August 23, 1971&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
(Continued from Page 3l&#13;
unauthorized duplication or to duplicate a university&#13;
key. It hall al o be illegal to transfer any university&#13;
key from a person entru ted with possession to an&#13;
unauthorized person, or to be in possession of such key.&#13;
(8) Liquor. The use of possession of intoxicating&#13;
liquors, or fermented malt beverages with an alcoholic&#13;
content of more than 5 per cent by weight, is prohibited&#13;
on all univer~ity property, except in faculty an&lt;i staff&#13;
housing, and in married and graduate student housing&#13;
unit: pecifically designated by the chief admini.strallve&#13;
officer, and at uitable times under&#13;
c ro conditions, m faculty and taff dining, conr&#13;
r nc or m ting facilities, subject to statutory age&#13;
r ulations. ( l .1 It Beverage , 'o fermented beverages&#13;
c ntainmg, of l per cent or more of alcohol by volume&#13;
II old, di pens d, given away, or furnished to, or&#13;
pur ha ed by or for any persons under the age of 18&#13;
) , on univ r.;ity of Wi consin property, unless&#13;
comp ni d by parent or gu rd1an,&#13;
( 101 ' rcotic · and Oangeroo Drugs The use or&#13;
po , ion f narcotJcs or dangeroo drugs as defined&#13;
m ch·1pt r 161 W1 tat ., i prohibited on all univer1tv&#13;
pro rty with th pecific exceptions et forth in&#13;
ch pl r 161. The penalty provi ions of chapter 161 shall&#13;
1pply to viol tions of thi. tion&#13;
(1 I l P1 n1ckm , camping, Etc. Picnicking, camnd&#13;
im1lar activiti are prohibited on&#13;
umv 1ty I nd:, exc pt in u h pecific areas as are&#13;
i •ruitcd to be picnic or camping grounds. All rules&#13;
111d r :gul, II for u. or uch grounds which are&#13;
po I l mu t b complied with, For purposes of this&#13;
r •ulallon, c rnping hall include the parking of&#13;
c tmp(·r or camp trailers, the pitching of tents. or the&#13;
pl 1c •m •nl or r lion of any facility or structure.&#13;
112 nclhng, anva ing, Peddling, oliciting. (a)&#13;
• o door to door lling, canva sing, peddling or&#13;
h 1tin 1s permitted in th buildings of the univer1ty,&#13;
mdud1ng th u ed for hou ·ing, unless the oc-&#13;
&lt;·up:.inl of a .-pecific livmg unit or office has, in ad-&#13;
\"111 ', r uested and given permission for a person&#13;
en• ged m such activity to come to that particular&#13;
living unit or office for that purpose.&#13;
(bl All oth r canva sing, soliciting, peddling and&#13;
th al~ of goods or services are prohibited on the&#13;
•rounds or in th buildings or other facilities of the&#13;
univ r 1ty c pt the following:&#13;
I Individual ale of personal property owned or&#13;
acquired by th eller primarily for his own use.&#13;
2 Hawking or newspapers and other printed&#13;
nml ll'r oul!;1d • or buildings or facilities.&#13;
:1. Subscription , membership, ticket sales&#13;
olrc1l ti n, rund-r, ,sing, . elling, canvassing and&#13;
ohc1t111g nctiv1ties earned on by a univecsity or&#13;
re •1slt.'r d studrnl organization pur uant to a contract&#13;
with the univer ·ity for the allocation or rental of space&#13;
lor that purpose.&#13;
4. dmission events in a university building or&#13;
tal'ility pursuant lo a contract with the university.&#13;
5 food and beverage concessions conducted&#13;
pursuant Lo a contract w1Lh the university.&#13;
I t:ll Signs. The cr&lt;.'clion, posting, or attaching of&#13;
any signs, po:;tcrs. pictures, etc. in or on any building&#13;
or on othrr umwrsily properly i prohibited except on&#13;
rl'lular bulletin boards. The chief administrative ofhn•r&#13;
or his d signt-c is authorized to allow exceptions&#13;
for lt•mporar) p riods for the areas under his&#13;
J11ri:d1ction.&#13;
I 1-1 &gt; Smoking 'moking is proh1b1led in the&#13;
dassrooms, laboratories, rc::;t rooms. store rooms and&#13;
rnrric.lor · of univt•rsity buildings except for uch areas&#13;
as an• dt•signall'd for that purpose.&#13;
I IS i Swimming. Fi ·lung, Boating, Riding, Etc.&#13;
. \wnmmg, fishing, boating, snowmobiling, horseback&#13;
ritlmg, and similar recreational activities are&#13;
n -slrn·lt'&lt;I lo the areas and times designated by the&#13;
d11l'f adm1mstrall\e officer of the campus or area&#13;
rnnn•rn •d, approved by the regent . and denoted by&#13;
111!1t·1al signs. The storing of boats, boating gear,&#13;
. 11m,·moh1les and other equipment withm the boun1farll's&#13;
of um\·crsily parks. except under conditions&#13;
. p,•t·iht•d by the chief adminisl rat ive officer. and spprnn-d&#13;
b) the regents. i · proh1b1ted. There shall be no&#13;
s1111nm111g, fishing, docking. or mooring of boats from&#13;
university piers. except a · designated by the chief&#13;
admm1strative officer of the campus or area. approved&#13;
by th r gent , and denoted by official signs. Unless&#13;
olhrrn N' indicated. uch university facilities are&#13;
1vailablt• only to university per onnel. .&#13;
I 16 Hestricled se or nions. &lt;a I The use of union&#13;
bu1ldmgs and union grounds is restricted to members&#13;
01 the umon. lo university faculty, lo university staff,&#13;
and to mviled guests. except on occasions when all or&#13;
I 1rl of the buildings or ground are open lo the general&#13;
l&gt;t1bltc. Th u_niver~ily reserves the right lo require&#13;
cu~renlly_ v~ltd evidence of qualification lo use the&#13;
umon bu1ldmgs and union grounds by student idenlthcallon&#13;
. c r~. _ uni_on membership card, faculty or&#13;
t•mp~oy~ 1denhf1cahon card, evidence of invitation as&#13;
m invited gue t, or other suitable evidence of&#13;
quahf1cation for uch u e, in any area of the buildings&#13;
ind gr~nds_n_ot open l_o the general public al the lime&#13;
hen 1d nt1f1 _ at1on 1s requested. The university&#13;
r rv th right lo d ny the use of union buildings&#13;
,111d ~n1on gr~nds !~ an~one_ who fails or refuses lo&#13;
provide shuchf 1d&#13;
1&#13;
enhf1cat1on m any such area. Anv&#13;
I r ·on w _o a1 s or refuse lo provide such ide~-&#13;
llhcat 100 10 _ any ·uch area, and who then fails or&#13;
rrru • · to withdraw from the buildings and grounds&#13;
may be removed. ·&#13;
1b1 For th purp e of thi ection:&#13;
d "open to the&#13;
1. Union buildings and ground J a'.eg those hours&#13;
bl" " nly in those areas an urin&#13;
~c~~iedoin a notice placed outside the main entrance&#13;
or entrances · · ·t d a&#13;
2. An "i~vited guest" is a J:&gt;Crson who IS rv1 eby ~&#13;
by the university, by a unive'.s1t~ departme~heorunion&#13;
registered univ~rsity orgaruz~t10_ngto a u:~ecific con- buildings or umon grounds urin . . k"&#13;
ference special function, tour or official v1:1t ta ~!&#13;
place o~ campus; orb. by a union meJ?_ber o u~en or union buildings or grounds for a specific o~ca~10&#13;
registered program _taking ptedlace ton t~e :~;IJt::: ~~ grounds, and who 1s escor O e . the&#13;
grounds by the member and accompam_ed_ by&#13;
members while there. The use of union buildings ~~d grounds by an "invited guest" is limited to the spec~f1c&#13;
occasion lo which he is invited. A person maki~g&#13;
regular repeated use of the buildings and grounds will&#13;
not be ;egarded as an "invited guest." . Cc&gt; Any person who fails or refuses to wi~draw&#13;
from union buildings and union grounds after f~1_hng_ or&#13;
refusing to provide the evidence ?f quahf1c3:tion&#13;
required by this section may be penalized as provided&#13;
in section UW 1.08.&#13;
(17) Unauthorized Presence. (a) It is unlawful for&#13;
any persons to be present in ~ny class_, l~ture,&#13;
laboratory period, orientation session, examination, or&#13;
other instructional session without the consent of a&#13;
member of the university administration or faculty or&#13;
other person authorized to give such consent.&#13;
(b) A person is present without consen~ as f~rbidden&#13;
by paragraph (a), in the following circumstances:&#13;
&#13;
1. If he is not then enrolled and in good standing as&#13;
a member of such an instructional session, and refuses&#13;
to leave such session on request of the member of t~e&#13;
university administration or faculty or other person in&#13;
charge thereof;&#13;
2. If he is present during the conduct of any such&#13;
instructional session and upon reasonable request&#13;
thereof by the person in charge thereof refuses or fails&#13;
to identify himself by written or documentary svidence&#13;
as a person present with the consent required by&#13;
paragraph (a), and refuses or fails to leave such&#13;
session at request'of the person in charge thereof.&#13;
08) Restrictions on Persons who may Enter&#13;
Campuses During Emergencies. (a ) Section 36.45, Wis.&#13;
Stats. provides: "The chancellor of each university of&#13;
Wisconsin campus or the chief security officer thereof&#13;
. . . during a period of immediate danger or disruption&#13;
may designate periods of time during which the&#13;
university campus and designated buildings and&#13;
facilities connected therewith are off-limits to all&#13;
persons who are not faculty members, staff personnel,&#13;
students or any other personnel authorized by the&#13;
above-named officials. Any persons violating such&#13;
order shall be subject to the penalties provided by law&#13;
for criminal trespass." (For penalty, see sections&#13;
943.13 and 943.14, Wis. Stats.)&#13;
(b) During any period so designated, it shall be&#13;
unlawful for any person to remain on the campus, or in&#13;
the designated buildings and facilities, after failing or&#13;
refusing to identify himself upon request as a person&#13;
entitled to be present.&#13;
(c) For the purpose of subsection (b),&#13;
l. "To identify himself" means to show a&#13;
university identification card or other written or&#13;
documentary evidence of identity.&#13;
2. "Person entitled lo be present" means a&#13;
university faculty member or other employe, a&#13;
university student, or any other person authorized to&#13;
be present by the order issued pursuant to the statutory&#13;
provision set forth in subsection (a) of this section.&#13;
3. The "request" must be made by a police officer&#13;
or other person authorized by the order to make such&#13;
request.&#13;
09) Persons Prohibited from Entering Campuses.&#13;
(al Student convicted of dangerous and obstructive&#13;
crime. Sec~ion 36:47, Wis. Stats., provides: "Any&#13;
person who 1s convicted of any crime involving danger&#13;
to ~roperty or persons as a result of conduct by him&#13;
which obstructs or seriously impairs activities run or&#13;
authorized by a stale institution of higher education&#13;
under this chapter or chapter 37, and who, as a result of&#13;
such conduct, is in a state of suspension or expulsion&#13;
~rori:i ~e ins~tution, and who entere property of that&#13;
1nslltullon without permission of the administrative&#13;
head of the institution or his designee within 2 years&#13;
?1ay ?C for ~ch offense be fined not more than $500 0;&#13;
1mpr1soned not more than 6 months, or both."&#13;
{bl Student not covered by (a ) who has violated&#13;
regent by-Jaws. Any person who is suspended or expell~&#13;
fro?1 the university for conduct of the kind&#13;
?escribed m paragraph ( d) 1. of this section, and who is&#13;
m _ a s~te of suspension or expulsion from the&#13;
umvers1ly, or any pers?n who takes leave or resigns&#13;
~der charges after _bemg charged by the university&#13;
with ~onduc~ of the kmd described in paragraph (d) 1.&#13;
of _this _secti?n,_ and who enters any campus of the&#13;
un1vers1_ty within one _year of the effective date of his&#13;
sus~e~s1on or expulsion, or of his ta~ng leave or&#13;
res1gn!ng und~r ~harges, without the written consent of&#13;
the _chief adm1mstrativ~ officer of the campus. or his&#13;
des1gnee, may be penalized as provided in Section uw&#13;
1.08. ~ny pe~so~ '_"ho fails to appear before an appropria&#13;
te d1sc1phnary hearing committee&#13;
d t t&#13;
. d , once a equa e no ice an a reasonable time for preparation&#13;
have been ~£forded and a reasonable time and date&#13;
h~ve been fixed, afte'. being charged by the university&#13;
with ~onduc~ of the kmd described in paragraph (d) 1 of _this _sec h~n. _ and who enters any campus of th~&#13;
un1vers1ty within one year of his failure to&#13;
bef th . t d' . . appear . ore e appr~pria e 1sc1phnary hearing committee&#13;
without such written consent may also be so penalized&#13;
as provided in Section UW 1.08.&#13;
(c) Non-student who is convicted of dan&#13;
crime on camp1:15. Any_ person not a student ~1raus&#13;
university who 1s convicted of any crime involv!}ie&#13;
danger to property or persons as a result of conct tng&#13;
him on a campus of the university, and who ente Uct by&#13;
campus of the university within one year of ~ any&#13;
fective date of his conviction without the w ~ er.&#13;
hi f d · · t , ntten consent · of the c e a m1rus rahve officer f&#13;
campu~ or his designee, may be penalized as pr~Vidlhe&#13;
in Section UW 1.08. ed&#13;
(d) Conduc~. 1. T~e ~o~duct_ referred to in&#13;
8 section (b) of this section is mtenbonal conduct tha libseriously&#13;
damages or destroys university propert ta.&#13;
attempts to seriously damage or destroy unive Y .or&#13;
property; b. indicates a serious danger to the per:;ity&#13;
safety of other members _of the university canal&#13;
munity; c. obstructs or seriously impairs univers~rnrun&#13;
or univers~t~-~utho~ized activities on any earn ity.&#13;
including ac~lV!hes either outdoors or insidi-.ts,&#13;
classroom, office, lecture hall, library, labora~a&#13;
theater, union, residence hall or other place wher '&#13;
university-run or university-authorized activity e a&#13;
carried on. The kind of conduct referred to in th~s&#13;
paragraph is intentional conduct which by itself or _LS&#13;
conjunction with the conduct of others prevents !hill&#13;
effective carrying on of the activity - a result Whi~&#13;
the offencer knew or reasonably should have knawn&#13;
would occur. Illustration_s of t~e kind of conduct which&#13;
this paragraph (d) 1. c. is designed to cover appear i&#13;
section UW 2.01 (3). n&#13;
2. For the purposes of section 36.47, Wis. -Stats&#13;
cond~ct by an in~i~id~al which "obs~ructs or serious);&#13;
impairs" an activity is conduct which by itself or in&#13;
conjunction with the conduct of others prevents the&#13;
effvtive carrying on of the activity.&#13;
3. For the purposes of section 35.47, Wis. Stats. the&#13;
"administrative head of the. institution or ' his&#13;
designee" shall mean the chief administrative officer&#13;
as define&lt;! in section UW 1.01. Each administrative&#13;
officer may designate one gther official who may&#13;
under his direction, grant or deny consent to ent.er ~&#13;
campus pursuant to section 36.47, Wis. Stats., and&#13;
subsections (b) and (c) of this section.&#13;
4. For the purposes of section 36.47, Wis. Stats.,&#13;
and subsection (c) of this section, "crime involving&#13;
danger to property or persons" shall mean any crime&#13;
defined in chapter 940 (Crimes against life and bodily&#13;
security), s~ction 941.13 (False alarms, and interference&#13;
with fire fighting), section 941.20 (Reckless&#13;
use of weapons), section 941.22 (Possession of pistol by&#13;
minor), section 941.23 (Carrying concealed weapon!,&#13;
section 94124 (Possession of switchblade knife), section&#13;
941.30 (Endangering safety by conduct regardless of&#13;
life), section 941.31 (Possession of explosives for&#13;
unlawful purpose), section 941.32 (Adrninist.ering&#13;
dangerous or or stupefying drug), section 943.01&#13;
(Criminal damage to property), section 943.02 (Arson&#13;
of buildings; damage of property by explosives),&#13;
section 943.03 (Arson of property other than buildings),&#13;
section 943.05 (Placing combustible materials an attempt)&#13;
, section 943.06 (Molotov cocktails), section&#13;
943.10 (Burglary), section 943.14 (Criminal trespass to&#13;
dwellings), section 943.32 (Robbery), section 944.01&#13;
,,.(Rape), section 946.41 (Resisting or obstructing officer),&#13;
section 947 .015 (Bomb scares), or section 167.10&#13;
(Fireworks regulated), or Wisconsin Statutes&#13;
(e) Factors to be considered. In granting or&#13;
denying consent to enter a campus pursuant to section&#13;
36.47, Wis. Stats., or subsection (b) or (c) of this section,&#13;
the following factors shall be considered:&#13;
1. The danger that the offensive conduct, particularly&#13;
if it is of the kind described in paragraph (dl&#13;
·1. of this section, will be continued or repeated by the&#13;
applicant for permission to enter the campus.&#13;
2. The need of the applicant to enter the ca~pi_s,&#13;
for example, to attent a campus disciplinary hearing 10&#13;
which he is being tried or is to be a witness, or to&#13;
receive treatment in university hospitals. .&#13;
(20) Picketing, Rallies, Parades, Demonstrati:&#13;
and Other Assemblies. (a) In order to preserve&#13;
order which is necessary for the enjoyment of ~re~&#13;
by members of the university community, and m ~&#13;
to prevent activities which physically o~truct ar:&#13;
to university facilities and prevent the uruve~ity \e&#13;
carrying on its instructional, research, publ_ic se~y'&#13;
and administrative functions; any picketing:il ~&#13;
parade, demonstration, or other assembly 5&#13;
declared unlawful if its participants: . main&#13;
1. Intentially gather, or intenti?n~lly re thef&#13;
assembled, outside any university bU11?1&#13;
~g&#13;
0&#13;
~ 0&#13;
each&#13;
facility in such numbers, in such p~ox1&#13;
m1&#13;
l&gt;'. der enother&#13;
or in such fashion as to physically _h_m&#13;
trance to exit from or normal use of the facility. . ... :" , ' ble w1u•" 2. Intentionally congregate or ass~i_n ·n such&#13;
any university building or other faci~ity ! ersih'·&#13;
fashions as to obstruct or serious!~ i~pair ~ 1&#13;
; such run or university-authorized act1v1tl~, 0 ditions:&#13;
fashion as to violate any of the follo~ing ~on private&#13;
a. No group may be admitted mto ~ive~itY&#13;
office of any faculty member or ~ther upant of&#13;
employe unless invited by the authorized :c nUJllbel'&#13;
that office, and then not in excess of t&#13;
designated or invited by that person. . ys do(JI'"&#13;
b. Passage through corridors,_ stair~a r~eptiOll&#13;
ways, building. entrances, fire exits, a~ tr11cted or areas leading to offices shall not be O 5&#13;
seriously impaired. hall not t,e&#13;
ooms, study rooms, or research rooms ~orized todO&#13;
entered or occupied by any group not a~ the r&lt;)Olll,_or&#13;
so by the person in immediate char~e O dministrallre&#13;
by a person designated by the chief a&#13;
( Continued on Page 51 &#13;
~ules'and Regulations&#13;
tinued from Page 4)&#13;
((;0\0 approve requests for the use of rooms for&#13;
Ofi~inlls.Groups shall not assemble immediately&#13;
~'de suchrooms at umes when they are normally in&#13;
t:4Its} classes, study. or research. ...rAnygroup present in a university building shall&#13;
. at the closipg hours established pursuant to&#13;
lei"" UW 1.07 (1) with the exceptions specified in&#13;
sectIOn .&#13;
tb8t&#13;
section. Noparades, picketing, or picket signs supported&#13;
:iandards or. sticks will be permitted in any&#13;
bY mblyin a univerSity building.&#13;
asse3&#13;
. Intentionally create a. volum~ of .noise that&#13;
unreasonably i~tederfert~S't~lth univer-ttty-run or&#13;
. ersity-authorlz ae IVIles.&#13;
1JlIV&#13;
4&#13;
Intentionally employ force or violence, or inteOti~nallYconstitute&#13;
an immediate threat of force of&#13;
. lenceagainst member of the university community&#13;
VlO'· •&#13;
rr IIliversityproperty. -&#13;
(b) For the purpose of subsection (a) of this sectiOO.&#13;
"intentionally" means that the participant or&#13;
totorknew or reasonably should have known that fronductby itselfor in conjunction with the conduct&#13;
«others, would have the prohibited effect.&#13;
(c) The chief administrative officer shall&#13;
deSigI18tea university official or officials who shall&#13;
,-veprimary authority to implement subsection (a) of&#13;
Ibis section. He shall prescribe limitations for any&#13;
IiCketing, rallY, parade,. demonstration_ or other&#13;
.... mblyin order that It Willmeet the reqUlremtnts of&#13;
oiJsection(a) of this section whenever he is requested&#13;
IDOOSO. Suchrequests should be made at least 24 hours&#13;
in advance in order that adequate police protection for&#13;
!be assemblycan be provided. When informed of any&#13;
paeting, rally, parade, demonstration, or other&#13;
.... mblywhich may not comply with subsection (a),&#13;
!be chief administrative officer's designee shall&#13;
IfOCO"dimmediately to the site and determine if&#13;
!U\)SeCtion(a) is being complied with. If he finds that it&#13;
~ not,he may declare the assembly unlawful or he&#13;
mayprescribe such limitations on numbers, location&#13;
rr spacingof participants in the demononstration as&#13;
are reasonably necessary to ensure compliance with ~..&#13;
IUbsection(a). If he prescribes limitations, and if his&#13;
limitationsare not observed by the assembly; he may&#13;
!ben declarethe asseIl)bly unlawful. Any declaration of&#13;
illegalityor prescription of limitations by the chief&#13;
Idministrativeofficer's designee shall be effective and&#13;
Iinding upon t.he participants in the assembly unless&#13;
Illd1Il1ilmodified or reversed by him Qr the chief&#13;
Idministrative.officer.&#13;
(d)Anyparticipant Qr spectator within the group&#13;
.... titutingan unlawful assembly who intentionally&#13;
failsoreefusesto withdraw from the assembly after it&#13;
Iubeen declared unlawful under the section shall be&#13;
Ilbjeclto immediate arresrand liable to the penalties&#13;
II section UW 1.08. Any participant or spectator&#13;
pmentin a group constituting an unlawful assembly&#13;
alter It has been declared unlawful under this section&#13;
liIlo intentially fails or refuses to identify himself&#13;
IIlpon request by the chief administrative officer's&#13;
desha igneeshall be subject to immediate arrest and&#13;
bleto the penalities of section UW 1.08.&#13;
(el If the original picketing, rally, parade,&#13;
demonstration,or other assembly is not declared&#13;
IIl1awful,but spectators are violating subsections (a)&#13;
I.,. (~) 2., (a) 3., or (a) 4. of this section, the chief adIIl1DlStrativeofficer's&#13;
designee may declare that the&#13;
&amp;roup lOcludingthe spectators constitutes an unlawful&#13;
::1Obly subject to the provisions of subsections (cJ&#13;
IIl1a(d) of this section. ,No assembly, lawful or&#13;
wful, shall be deemed to justify an unlawful&#13;
OWnlerassembly.&#13;
(21lProhibitions on Blocking Entrances. In order to&#13;
:vent. activities which physically obstruct access to&#13;
IIliVersllyfunctions or facilities and Which prevent the&#13;
PJbUerslty f~om carrying on its instructional, research,&#13;
~ serVIce and administrative functions, and to&#13;
hedo eorder which is necessary for the enjoyment of&#13;
&lt;un 10by each and every member of the university&#13;
~"mly, the following conduct is p.rohibited:&#13;
iIld:). Intentionally physically blocking entrances to&#13;
facili~ItSfr~m ,offices, classrooms or other university&#13;
~s Withmtent to deny to others their right of&#13;
daSSr to, egress froIl} or use of such offices,&#13;
(b~rns or, other university facilities.&#13;
!glees ~tenbonailY physically to other ingress to or&#13;
dass&#13;
roo&#13;
rom, or the use of university offices,&#13;
deny to:~ or other university facilities with intent to&#13;
II&gt;e use of rs their right of ingress to, egress from. or&#13;
flCilitie such offIces, classrooms, or other univerSity&#13;
s.&#13;
(c) Intenti II rrr.n in ona y physically restraining others&#13;
trUVersigress~ or egress from, or from the use of&#13;
~Cilitie~ .Offl~es, classrooms or other university&#13;
~ toWlthmtent to d3ny to others their right of&#13;
dassr~ egress from, or the use of such offices,&#13;
or other university facilities.&#13;
(22) S \lennittund-Amplifying Equipment. (a) In order to&#13;
'-livers'the use of sound-amplifying equipment on&#13;
~as ~ ~ampus~, if needed for the dissemination of&#13;
lIterrerr' ge.audiences, but to prevent its use from&#13;
"'luir&#13;
e&#13;
109Withuniversity functions which inherently&#13;
1. N~ulet,the following provisions shall apply:&#13;
_ any perSOnmay use sound-amplifying equipment&#13;
-.:trninis~~PUswithout the permission of the chief&#13;
I:tn\'ided. bve officer of that campus or area except as&#13;
2. In In SUbsection (c) of this section.&#13;
lliIolVinggrantlOg or denying such permission, the&#13;
a E pnnclples shall govern:&#13;
'Pedned ~cept in extraordinary circumstances,&#13;
WlbeCa Inadvance by the chief administrative officer&#13;
rnpus, permissiorrmay,be gr.antedto use such&#13;
Augus'23.1911&#13;
equipment only dun th f . 1:30p.m.and5:00pl~gt e. ollowmg hours, 12 noon to&#13;
when the equipment : 07.00 p.rn. every day, and only&#13;
directed awa fro IS more than 50 feet from and&#13;
halls, librar; or ~c~~r c:.sroom building, residence&#13;
These are the f y 109 used as a study hall.&#13;
least interfere~~e~i~~d r~aces ~h~~h will result in the&#13;
. b Th . 0 er activities on the campus.&#13;
burd~n ot eastaPPbhlcah~tfor permission shall have the&#13;
IS 109 the need fo lif communicate with th t" r a~p I ication to fie an icipated audience In pa&#13;
ICU ar, he must shaw that the audi . r- be tici ence can reasonably&#13;
a; icipated t? included at least 250 people.&#13;
. The applicant for permission shall have the&#13;
:rden o~establishing that the volume and direction of&#13;
e ~0W1 from the equipment will be such as to reduce&#13;
th~~nterference to other activities on the campus to a&#13;
rmrumum.&#13;
~. Any request for the permission required by this&#13;
sech~~ m.ust be submitted in writing to the rson&#13;
specified 10 subsection I. of this section at I~t 24&#13;
ho~s pnor to the intended use of the sound-amplifying&#13;
eqwpment, and must be signed by a student or empl0y;e&#13;
of t~e university on the campus where the&#13;
eqwpment IS to be used. Such request shall contain:&#13;
th&#13;
a. ~he proposed hours, date and location where&#13;
e eqwpment IS to be used.&#13;
b. The size of the anticipated audience and the&#13;
reasons why the equipment is needed&#13;
. c. A description of the proposed equipment which&#13;
Includes the manufacturer, model number, and wattage.&#13;
d. The names of the onwer of the equipment and of&#13;
any ~ers.on or persons, in addition to the persigning the&#13;
apP~lcation; who will be responsible for seeing that the&#13;
eqwpment IS operated in compliance with the terms of&#13;
the permit and the provisions of this rule (the chief&#13;
administrative officer of the campus may require such&#13;
additional persons if he believes this necessary to&#13;
assure compliance).&#13;
(b) If permission is granted by the chief adm.inistrative&#13;
officer the applicant shall, notWlthstanding&#13;
the provisions of Wis. Adm. Code section&#13;
UW 1.07 (131, post a sign visible to the audience&#13;
stating: "Permission to use sound-amplification&#13;
equipment at this meeting (sporling events) has been&#13;
granted."&#13;
(c) Permits issued by the chief administrative&#13;
officer shall not be required for the use of university&#13;
sound-amplifying equipment to be used with the&#13;
permission of the university employe having control of&#13;
the equipment for authorized university classes, for&#13;
authorized university research, for meetings of faculty&#13;
or administrative staff, for other authorized meetings&#13;
of faculty or administrative staff, for other authorized&#13;
meetings in university buildings, for Wliversitysponsored&#13;
academic, recreational or athletic activities,&#13;
or for crowd control by authorized university&#13;
officials.&#13;
(d) For the purposes of this section, "soundamplifying&#13;
equipment" means any device or machine&#13;
which is capable of amplifying sound and ~apable of&#13;
delivering an electrical input of one or more watlS to&#13;
the loudspeaker.&#13;
(23) Curfew. (a) Notwithstanding any other&#13;
provision of this code, the chief administrative officer&#13;
of any campus or other area may declare curfew hours&#13;
for the campus or particular buildings, facilities or&#13;
area of the campus, whenever a riot or civil disorder&#13;
endangers the safety of persons or property on the&#13;
~campus, or impairs food or fuel supplies, medical care,&#13;
fire, health, or police protection or other vital services&#13;
to such campus- Such curfew hours shall be.posted on&#13;
appropriate bulletin boards on the. campus, or, in the&#13;
case of buildings, on the building. Such curfew hours&#13;
will remain in effect until ended or modified by the&#13;
chief administrative officer.&#13;
UW 1.08Penalties. Unless otherwise specified, the&#13;
peanalty for violating any of the rules in sections 1!W&#13;
1.06 and 1.07 is a fine of not more than $500, or Imprinsonment&#13;
of not more than 90 days, or both, as&#13;
provided in section 36.06Oil (b, Wis. Stats., 1969.&#13;
CHAPTER 2&#13;
STUDENT MISCONDUCT SUBJECT TO&#13;
UNIVERSITY DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURES&#13;
UW 2.01 Definition of non-academic misc.ondu~t.&#13;
To permit it to carryon its fWlctions, t~e wllversl~y&#13;
may discipline students in onon-academic matters In&#13;
these situations: .&#13;
(1) For intentional condUct that seriously damages&#13;
or destroys university prope~ty ~r attempts to&#13;
seriously damage or destroy uruve~slt~ property ..&#13;
(2) For intentional condUct that indicates a seriOUS&#13;
danger to the perso~al safety of other members of the&#13;
university commuDlty. . (3) For intentional conduct that ob~truct. or&#13;
. ly 'Impairs university-run or unIversityserIOUS&#13;
. 1 d' thorized activities on any campus, inCU 109 .ac-&#13;
~u .t' I'ther outdoors or inside a classroom, offIce, tIYIles e .&#13;
I t hall library laboratory, theater, UOlOn,&#13;
ec ore,' . . 'd hall or other place where a uOlversIty·run or resl ence, ..··ed Th k' d . .ty authorized actiVIty IS carrion. e In W11versl . . d hi h b f' tentional condUct referred to IS con uct w c Y&#13;
~ts~~f or in conjunction wi~ the conduct ~f. others&#13;
t the effective carrYing on of the actIvity - a&#13;
~~:~~~;hich the student knew or reasonably should&#13;
ha ve known would occur. .&#13;
In order to illustrate types of conduct wh~ch&#13;
h (3) is designed to cover the followlOg&#13;
paragrlap e set out These examples are not meant to&#13;
examp es ar '.Jo •&#13;
XEII'SCOPE Page S&#13;
illustrate the only situations or types of conduct 10-&#13;
tended to be covered.&#13;
.. (a) A. student would be inviclaticn If he participated&#13;
10 conduct which he knew or hould have&#13;
known would prevent or block physical entry to. or exu&#13;
from a univers~ty building, corridor. or room to anyone&#13;
apparently entitled to enter or leave in connection With&#13;
a university-run or university-authorized acnvity&#13;
(bl A student would be in violation if. in attending a&#13;
speech or program on campus spnsored by or w ith&#13;
permission of the university. he engaged in shouted&#13;
interruptions, whistling. derisive laughter, or other&#13;
means which by itself or in conjunction with the conduct&#13;
of others. prevented or seriou Iy interferred with.&#13;
a fair hearing of the speech or program.&#13;
(c) A student would be in violation if 10 a classroom&#13;
he. used techniques similar to those specified in the&#13;
preceding paragraph. or filibuster-type tact ics, or&#13;
other tactics. which by themselves or in conjunction&#13;
:-"ith the conduct of others. prevented or seriously&#13;
interfered with the carrying on of the teaching and&#13;
learning process.&#13;
(4) For conviction by a court of a crime. or of&#13;
violation of a municpal ordinance based on aertme. If&#13;
the crime or other offense (il involved the use of (or&#13;
assistance to others in the use of) force. disruption. or&#13;
the seizure of property under the control of the&#13;
university, (i0 was committed with IOtent to prevent&#13;
sdueents or employees at the university from engagmg&#13;
in their duties or pw-suing their studies. (Iii) was of a&#13;
serious nature. and (iv) contributed to substanl1al&#13;
disruption of the administration of the umverslty.&#13;
(5) The principles stated in this section 2.01 are 001&#13;
intended to preclude discipline for intentional conduct&#13;
violating the rules contained in Wis, Adm. Code&#13;
chapter UW 1.&#13;
Section I: Provisions Rrlating \0 thE"\\ hall' l'nh ('I·sil~.&#13;
CHAPTERS&#13;
UNIVERSITY POLICIE 0 USE OF&#13;
FACILITIESandO TSIDE PEAKER&#13;
8.01 University Policy on Siudent Freedom. Free&#13;
inquiry and free expression are essential in a community&#13;
of scholars. As members of such a commumty.&#13;
students should be encouraged to develop a capacity&#13;
for critical judgment and sustained and mdependent&#13;
search for truth. Freedom to learn depends upon appropriate&#13;
opportunities and conditions m the&#13;
classroom, on the campus. and in the larger community_&#13;
8.02 Scope of Studenl Freedom. Students have the&#13;
right, accorded to all persons by the Consbtullon. to&#13;
(reedom of speech, peaceable assembly, pchtlOn and&#13;
association. Students and student organizations may&#13;
examine: and discuss all questions of Interest to them.&#13;
and express opinions publicly as well as privat(&gt;ly.&#13;
They may support causes by lawful meanS which do&#13;
not disrupt the operations of the University or of&#13;
organizations accorded the use of University faeillt i~.&#13;
8.03 Policy of the Board or Rf'gents on Sludrnt&#13;
Freedom. The policy of the Board of Regent IS&#13;
renected in the following statements'&#13;
(l) "The action of the Board of Regents In 1894.&#13;
'Whatever may be the limitations which trammel&#13;
inquiry elsewhere. we beheve that the Gr at ~131e&#13;
University of Wisconsin should ever ncourage that&#13;
continual and fearless sirting and wmnowmg by which&#13;
alone the truth can be found.' shall be appllcablo 10&#13;
teaching 10the classroom and to the u of univerSity&#13;
halls (or pubhc address, under the control o( th&#13;
Pre ident of the niversity With appeal to th&#13;
Regents."&#13;
(2) "Tore to its lime-honored traditl n. the&#13;
University of Wisconsin provideS a forum for the free&#13;
exchange of ideas and viewpoints upon current ev(.'nls&#13;
and issues_"&#13;
(3) "The search for truth ISthe central duty of thl'&#13;
University, but the truth will not be found If lhe ~holar&#13;
is not free. it will not be und rstood If the s(udentl not&#13;
free, it will not be used If the citIzen is not fr . At a&#13;
time when both truth and freedom are under attack th('&#13;
University of Wisconsin must seek the ne and defend&#13;
the other. It must employ with utmost energy the&#13;
power of truth and freedom for the benefit of&#13;
mankind."&#13;
(4) "We must continue to guard the University's&#13;
time-honored freedom of experimentation and X*&#13;
pression _ that fearless, democratic process which IS.&#13;
the essence of the ceaseless search for truth We&#13;
believe that the only indoctrination worthy of thIS m·&#13;
stituUon is in the values of freedom and free inqUiry&#13;
For this we need exposure to a variety of viewpoints.&#13;
brought together in the University's own example of&#13;
freedom's effective power. This is basic In our form of&#13;
government and, we believe, its surest safeguard."&#13;
(5) "The concept of intellectual freedom is based&#13;
upon confidence in man's capacity for growth 10&#13;
comprehending the universe and on faith in unshackled&#13;
intelligence. The University 1S not partisan to any&#13;
party or ideology, but it is devoted.to the discovery of&#13;
truth and to understanding the world in which we live.&#13;
The Regents take this opportunity to rededicate&#13;
themselves to maintaining in this University those&#13;
conditions which are indispensable for the flowering of&#13;
the hum.and mind."&#13;
IU» RegUlation or Student Political Acth'ily.&#13;
(1) The University regulates the time. place and&#13;
manner of conducting political activity by students on&#13;
the campus to prevent interference with Uni\'ersity&#13;
operations.&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
~------------&#13;
Rules' and Regulations&#13;
tinued from Page 4)&#13;
!con to approve requests for the use of rooms for&#13;
dfic~r 5 Groups shall not assemble immediately&#13;
(11::~~s~ch rooms at times when they are normally in&#13;
f classes, study, or research.&#13;
!tie tAnY group present in a unive~sity building shall&#13;
· t the closipg flours established pursuant to&#13;
Jeav~ a UW 1 &lt;fl (1) with the exceptions specified in&#13;
section · th3t section. No parades, picketing, or picket signs supported&#13;
:iandards or. stic~s wi~l _be permitted in any&#13;
by bly in a umvers1ty building.&#13;
asser, Intentionally create a. volum~ of . noise that&#13;
unreasonably i~tederfert~s}1th umverhty-run or . rsity-authoriz ac 1v1 1es.&#13;
uruv: Intentionally employ force or violence, or inti~nally&#13;
constitute an immedia~e thr~t of force of&#13;
:Jenee, against member of the uruvers1t~ community&#13;
ct university property. · (b) For the purpose of subsection (a) of this section&#13;
"intentionally" means that the participant or&#13;
'tator knew or reasonably should have known that&#13;
:Cconduct by itselfor in conjunction with the conduct&#13;
rJ others, would have the prohibited effect.&#13;
(c) The chief administrative officer shall&#13;
designate a university official or officials who shall&#13;
have primary authority to implement subsection (a) of&#13;
this section. He shall prescribe limitations for any&#13;
picketing, rally, par~de,. demonstration_ or other&#13;
assembly in order that 1t will meet the requiremtnts of&#13;
ubsection (a) of this section whenever he is requested&#13;
todoso. Such requests should be made at least 24 hours&#13;
in advance in order that adequate police protection for&#13;
the assembly can be provided. When informed of any&#13;
picketing, rally, parade, demonstration, or other&#13;
assembly which may not comply with subsection (a),&#13;
the chief administrative officer's designee shall&#13;
iroceed immediately to the site and determine if&#13;
subsection (a) is being complied with. If he finds that it&#13;
is not, he may declar~ the assembly· unlawful or he&#13;
may prescribe such limitations on numbers, location&#13;
ix- spacing of participants in the demononstration as&#13;
are reasonably necessary to ensure compliance with -&#13;
subsection (a). If he prescribes limitations, and if his&#13;
limitations are not observed by the assembly; he may&#13;
then declare the assell}bly unlawful. Any declaration of&#13;
illegality or prescription of limitations by the chief&#13;
administrative officer's designee shall be effective and&#13;
linding upon the participants in the assembly unless&#13;
and until modified or reversed by him or the chief&#13;
administrative. officer.&#13;
(d) Any participant or spectator within the group&#13;
constituting an unlawful assembly who intentionally&#13;
fails or refuses to withdraw from the assembly after it&#13;
has been declared unlawful under the section shall be&#13;
subject to immediate arrest and liable to the penalties&#13;
ri section UW 1.08. Any participant or spectator&#13;
iresent in a group constituting an unlawful assembly&#13;
after it has been declared unlawful under this section&#13;
who intentially fails or refuses to identify himself&#13;
unpon request by the chief administrative officer's&#13;
~ignee shall be subject to immediate arrest and&#13;
liable to the penalities of section UW 1.08.&#13;
(e) If the original picketing, rally, parade,&#13;
demonstration, or other assembly is not declared&#13;
unlawful, but spectators are violating subsections (a)&#13;
1,. (~) 2., _&lt;a) 3., or (a) 4. of this section, the chief adhlirust~ative&#13;
officer's designee may declare that the&#13;
groUp mclucting the spectators constitutes an unlawful&#13;
~embly subject to the provisions of subsections (c)&#13;
: (d) of this section. No assembly, lawful or&#13;
awful, shall be deemed to justify an unlawful&#13;
~nter assembly.&#13;
(&#13;
2&#13;
1) Prohibitions on Blocking Entrances. In order to&#13;
Jrevent acti "ti h" lllli . v1 es w 1ch physically obstruct access to&#13;
uni vers~ty functions or facilities and which prevent the&#13;
!Xlbtersity f~om carrying on its instructional, research,&#13;
ire c serVIce and administrative functions, and to&#13;
1r:"e order which is necessary for the enjoyment of&#13;
corn om _by each and every member of the university&#13;
~unity, t~ following conduct is prohibited:&#13;
and t Intentionally physically blocking entrances to&#13;
faciJi;~ts fr_om _offices, classrooms or other university&#13;
ingress s With intent to deny to others their right of&#13;
dassr to, egress froll], or use of such offices,&#13;
(b~ms or_ other university facilities.&#13;
egrees f tentionally physically to other ingress to or&#13;
classroo rom, or the use of university offices,&#13;
~ny to~ or oth~r ~niversity facilities with intent to&#13;
lhe use of rs the~ right of ingress to, egress from. or&#13;
facilitie such offices, classrooms, or other university&#13;
s.&#13;
(c) Int ti from ing en onally physically restraining others&#13;
llniversi ress ~ or egress from, or from the use of&#13;
faCilitiesty _offi~es, classrooms or other university&#13;
lllgresg towith intent to d3ny to others their right of&#13;
classroo ' egress from, or the use of such offices,&#13;
( ms or other university facilities.&#13;
22&gt; Sound-A r · · d t&#13;
Petrnit th mp 1fymg Eqwpment. (a) In or er o&#13;
ltiiversit e use of sound-amplifying equipment on&#13;
Ideas to fa campus~, if needed for the dissemination of&#13;
lllterfer . rge_ audiences, but to prevent its use from&#13;
reqUire nn~ with university functions which inherently&#13;
1, N quiet, the following provisions shall apply:&#13;
~ any&#13;
O person may use sound-amplifying equipment&#13;
adininis~:~pus without the permission of the chief&#13;
lto\'jded . hve officer of that campus or area except as&#13;
2. In in su~ection (c) of this section.&#13;
foUowing ~~nt_mg or denying such permission, the&#13;
a. E P mciples shall govern:&#13;
'llecified ~cept in extraordinary circumstances,&#13;
~ the ca 10 advance by the chief administrative officer&#13;
rnpus, permission may be granted to use such&#13;
Augu t 23, 19il ' E\\&#13;
equipment only dur· th f . l:30p.m. and5:00 /~gt r ollowmg hours, 12 noon to&#13;
when the equipme~t :s&#13;
O .OO p.m. every day, and only&#13;
directed away from an1y ml ore than 50 feet from and&#13;
h 1 . c assroom building ·d a ls, library or facility be' , res1 ence&#13;
These are the ti mg used as a study hall.&#13;
least interferen:e;i~~d r~aces ~h!~h will result in the . b Th . o er a&lt;;tiv1ties on the campus. burd~n e apph~a~t for permission shall have the&#13;
commun~~:t:ta!!~~hthg the. n:ed for a~plification to&#13;
f I e anticipated audience In&#13;
~~~~ic~pe ;:ttsoh~wlthdatdthe audience can r~son:l~ . me u e at least 250 people.&#13;
b t The applicant for permission shall have the&#13;
d:r en oJ ;stablishing that the volume and direction of&#13;
e ~oun rom the equipment will be such as to reduce&#13;
th~ ~nterference to other activities on the campus to a m1rumum.&#13;
~- Any request for the permission required by this&#13;
secti_o~ m_ust be submitted in writing to the person&#13;
spec1f1e~ m subsection 1. of this section at least 24&#13;
ho~s prior to the intended use of the sound-amplifying&#13;
eqwpment, and must be signed by a student or emplo~e&#13;
of t~e university on the campus where the&#13;
eqwpment 1s to be used. Such request shall contain :&#13;
h a. ~he prol;&gt;Osed hours, date and location where&#13;
t e eqwpment 1s to be used.&#13;
b. The size of the anticipated audience and the&#13;
reasons why the equipment is needed.&#13;
. c. A description of the proposed equipment which&#13;
includes the manufacturer, model number and wat- ta~. '&#13;
d. The names of the onwer of the equipment and of&#13;
any ~ers_on or pers~ns, in addition to the persigning the&#13;
app~1cation: who will be responsible for seeing that the&#13;
eqwpment 1s operated in compliance with the terms of&#13;
the permit and the provisions of this rule (the chief&#13;
ad~i~istrative officer of the campus may require such&#13;
additional persons if he believes this necessary to&#13;
assure compliance).&#13;
(b) If permission is granted by the chief administrative&#13;
officer the applicant shall notwithstanding&#13;
the provisions of Wis. Adm. Code ~ection&#13;
UW 1.07 03), post a sign visible to the audience&#13;
stating: "Permission to use sound-amplification&#13;
equipment at this meeting (sporting events) has been&#13;
granted."&#13;
(c) Permits issued by the chief administrative&#13;
officer shall not be required for the use of university&#13;
sound-amplifying equipment to be used with the&#13;
permission of the university employe having control of&#13;
the equipment for authorized university classes, for&#13;
authorized university research, for meetings of faculty&#13;
or administrative staff, for other authorized meetings&#13;
of faculty or administrative staff, for other authorized&#13;
meetings in university buildings, for universitysponsored&#13;
academic, recreational or athletic activities,&#13;
or for crowd control by authorized university&#13;
officials.&#13;
(d) For the purposes of this section, " soundamplifying&#13;
equipment" means any device or machine&#13;
which is capable of amplifying sound and i:apable of&#13;
delivering an electrical input of one or more watts to&#13;
the loudspeaker.&#13;
(23) Curfew. (a) Notwithstanding any other&#13;
provision of this code, the chief administrative officer&#13;
of any campus or other area may declare curfew hours&#13;
for the campus or particular buildings, facilities or&#13;
area of the campus, whenever a riot or civil disorder&#13;
endangers the safety of persons or property on the&#13;
-campus, or impairs food or fuel supplies, medical care,&#13;
fire, health, or police protection or other vital services&#13;
to such campus. Such curfew hours shall be posted on&#13;
appropriate bulletin boards on the campus, or, in the&#13;
case of buildings, on the building. Such curfew hours&#13;
will remain in effect until ended or modified by the&#13;
chief administrative officer.&#13;
UW 1.08 Penalties. Unless otherwise specified, the&#13;
peanalty for violating any of the rules in sections 1!'&#13;
1.06 and 1.07 is a fine of not more than $500, or 1mprinsonment&#13;
of not more than ~ days, or both, as&#13;
provided in section 36.06 (11) (b, Wis. Stats., 1969.&#13;
CHAPTER2&#13;
STUDENT MISCONDUCT SUBJECT TO&#13;
UNIVERSITY DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURE&#13;
UW 2.01 Definition of non-academic misc_ondu~t.&#13;
To permit it to carry on its functions, t~e un1vers1~y&#13;
may discipline students in onon-academ1c matters m&#13;
these situations: . (1) For intentional conduct that ser10usly damages&#13;
or destroys university prope~ty ~r attempts to&#13;
seriously damage or destroy uruve~s1t!' property·. (2) For intentional conduct that md1cates a serious&#13;
danger to the perso~al safety of other members of the&#13;
university community. (&#13;
3) For intentiona_l co~duct that ob~truct . or . sly i·mpairs um versity-run or um vers1tysenou&#13;
· 1 d"&#13;
th . d act1"vities on any campus, me u mg acau&#13;
orize . . ff&#13;
tivities either outdoors or ms1de a classroom, o ~ce,&#13;
1 t hall library laboratory, theater, union,&#13;
ec ure , ' · ·t&#13;
"d hall or other place where a umvers1 y-run or&#13;
res1 ence , . . . ·ed Th k" d . ·ty authorized activity is earn on. e m umvers1 - · d hi h b&#13;
of intentional conduct refer_red to is con uct w c y&#13;
itself or in conjunction w1~ the conduct ?f. others&#13;
t the effective carrying on of the act1V1ty - a&#13;
~~=~~n ;hich the student knew or reasonably should&#13;
have known would occur. . In order to illustrate types of conduct wh!ch&#13;
ra ra h (3) is designed to cover the following&#13;
pa g 1 P e set out These examples are not meant to&#13;
examp esar ·&#13;
I tn·&#13;
Section 1: Pro\ i i n Relating to lht- \\ holr l'ni\ t•r it~ .&#13;
CHAPTER&#13;
I ER&#13;
FA&#13;
• 1 t:niv r it) P lie)'&#13;
tml 111&#13;
•ml I&#13;
8.04 Regulation of tudent Political ,\cti\'ity.&#13;
&lt; l &gt; The University regulates the lime, place and&#13;
manner of conducting political activity by tudenls on&#13;
the campus to prevent interference with niversity&#13;
operations.&#13;
&lt;Continued on Page 6l &#13;
A... U3.1t71&#13;
Uti by Non-University&#13;
8.09 Use 0/ .Unive~l:h F;~v:~:ty are primarily for&#13;
Grou..... Facilities 0 of i::'truction, research· and public&#13;
Uservmv,ersce'~eypur::'tavailable for unrestrictedtusef&#13;
bya&#13;
, If . the Judgrnen 0 non-Universigy groups. t 10. . the meetings&#13;
~~:~:i:r.sd~f~:~~n~~;~~;~o~~n;"il1 ~ontrib~~;&#13;
ho and serve the University's purposes, mverst&#13;
facilities, when available. and J~bj~~ ~:r':'~~yar;;&#13;
routine procedures administere Y th t&#13;
the Faculty or other officer, may be used z r:&#13;
oup but 'Only upon the invitation of un er e&#13;
~ons'orShiP of a University dep~rtment ~&#13;
anization. The Auditoriums Committee, or 1&#13;
~valent, is consulted when the Secretary of the&#13;
Faculty, or other officer, deems It necessary.&#13;
8.10 Use of University Facilities by ~overn-:n.e~tal and&#13;
Public Educational Groups. University. facilities ,may&#13;
be used by governmental and public educational&#13;
agencies when they are available, subject to necessary&#13;
routine procedures administered by th~ S~retary of&#13;
the Faculty, or other officer. The Auditer'iums Committee,&#13;
or its equivalent, is consulted when th,e&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty, or other officer, deems It&#13;
necessary.&#13;
8.11 Use of University Facilities by Political Parti.e~ or&#13;
Candidates for Public Office. Leaders of political&#13;
parties and candidates for statewide. and national&#13;
public offices may hold public meetings o~ each&#13;
campus, if facilities are avrolable,. ~nd subject to&#13;
necessary routine procedures adnllnlstered by the&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty, or other offi~er, in c~nsultation&#13;
with the Auditoriwns CommIttee, or Its&#13;
equivalent. During a primary campaign a University&#13;
auditorium may be made available for one public&#13;
meeting on behalf of each recognized candidate for&#13;
statewide or national public office. In a general&#13;
election year, each political party may use a&#13;
University auditorium for one public meeting on behalf&#13;
of its candidates for national office, and for one public&#13;
meeting on behalf of its candidates' for statewide office.&#13;
Stale conventions of recognized political parties&#13;
may also use University facilities. Members of the&#13;
audience should be given a reasonable opporttmity, in&#13;
appropriate situations, to ask questions at the end of&#13;
the presentation.&#13;
8.12 Use of University Facilities by Faculty and&#13;
Employee Organizations. Faculty and University&#13;
NEWSCOPE employee organizations may use Univ&#13;
on the same terms as University de~IY ~&#13;
8.13 Conditions for Use of University F ~.&#13;
University regulates the use of C8lllpUs·' 1llo&#13;
prevent interference with its activities fa~ ~&#13;
pense to the University is involVed (e· U etIIt It&#13;
service, policing, labor, and light) t~ for ""&#13;
organization must ~ccept responsibility ~&#13;
dePOSIt10advance WIththe University B .forIt, Iild&#13;
funds to cover estimated expense. Th UsiJleo, 0ilI,;&#13;
shall designate a representative ~ ~&#13;
University officials in making arrang"", ""'" ...&#13;
8.14 Revenue-Producing Activities i ents.&#13;
Facilities, Whenever an admission Char; ~.I''!'kl&#13;
other revenue-producing activity is 08;·001IlIdo,.&#13;
University facility, the proceeds must ~ 011_.&#13;
control of the University, or the lIIIder ..&#13;
organization or public educational agen~;V~&#13;
the activity. - ~&#13;
8.15 Freedom from Obstruction. Those Who&#13;
speech or program sponsored b alteJd.&#13;
organizations, University departments Y .t....&#13;
authorized !f'"0ups,have the duty not to o~~ GIIIt&#13;
the University has the obligation to protect IIle it,1Ij&#13;
listen or participate. l'\illt~&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
(Continued from Page 5)&#13;
(2)" The University does not ergulate off-eampus&#13;
political activities of students.&#13;
8.8S Riglll of Slud..... to Invite Guest Speakers: .&#13;
(I) Registered student organizations may invite&#13;
and hear any person of their own choosing, but&#13;
scheduling of facilities requires that they comply WIth&#13;
procedures of the Committee on Student Life and Interests,&#13;
summarized in the Student Organization&#13;
Handbook, before a speaker is invited to appear on the&#13;
campus. .&#13;
(2) Sponsorship of a speaker does not Imply approval&#13;
or endorsement, by the sponsoring group or the&#13;
University, of the views expressed.&#13;
(3) The University does not regulate the content of&#13;
speech.&#13;
8.01 Dull" of Student OrganluUons when Sponsoring&#13;
Gue t Spea ken.&#13;
(l) A student organization sponsoring a spea~er&#13;
should choose him Ireely, without control by an outside&#13;
group, and be satisfied that he is qualilied to address a&#13;
University audience on the proposed subject.&#13;
(2) Members of the audience should be given a&#13;
reasonable opportunity, in appropriate situations, to&#13;
ask questions at the end 01 the presentation.&#13;
8.'7 Purposes of Student Meetings. ..&#13;
. (l) A student organization may use Umverslty&#13;
(acilities for events which are primarily for students&#13;
and laculty&#13;
(2) If admission is charged, the student&#13;
organization must arrange for the handling of ticket&#13;
sales and submit in advance a budget to the office of&#13;
the tudent Organization Advisers, or its equivalent,&#13;
indIcating how proceeds will be used.&#13;
(3) tuclent organizations may invite candidates&#13;
for political olfice to speak on tbe campus only when&#13;
the meetIngs are for students and faculty. Publicity for&#13;
such meetings must indicate that attendance is limited&#13;
to students and faculty, and tbey are not open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
8.08 Use 01Unlvenity Facilities by Students and NonStud......&#13;
In the use of University facilities for the&#13;
exlra-curricular activities of students, student groups&#13;
and non-students must observe the rules of the Committee&#13;
on Student Life and Interests.&#13;
Info Center&#13;
Our mission is simply to direct studentsto wbert&#13;
they can get adVIce about specific PI'ObIttDo.&#13;
There isn't any area of human concern onwbicb&#13;
student can't get expert advice on this ~&#13;
But the question is where?&#13;
Tbere is no question that Parkside has an iJa.&#13;
pressive array Of services available. The CI!Il1er&#13;
has gathered information on the serviCfllIDIi&#13;
refers students to the appropriate Olle. Wewanlill&#13;
make what is here mor,e accessable.&#13;
We have as Immediate anSwers; facultyoflIce&#13;
hours, office locations, classroom locatio... tilDe&#13;
tables, calendars of events, bus scbeduieI,&#13;
parking regula tions, deadlines for addinc aad&#13;
dropping classes, library hours, etc.&#13;
Lost and found is also located atlnfonnatlaD&#13;
Center.&#13;
Let us help you simplify your life. Informatioo&#13;
Center,. Tallent Hall 201, Ext. 2345.&#13;
PARKSIDE VILLAGE APARTMENTS&#13;
~I:lt:--Ir.f~:&#13;
,1ll11,1.IFl~- =::millc=~~&#13;
FOR AS LITTLE AS $180.00 PER SEMESTER&#13;
2 RooMSUITE&#13;
. $180 PER SEMESTER·'&#13;
DELUXE 2 ROOM SU ITE&#13;
$218.25 PER SEMESTER.&#13;
3~ooMSUITE&#13;
$254.25 Pl;R SEMESTER.&#13;
•&#13;
BUNK &lt;0&#13;
BED&#13;
OWNER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN NreA$.&#13;
DEVELOPER: GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp; RESIDENTIAL CE&#13;
1744 N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, ISCONSIN&#13;
OCCUPANCY SEPT.l,1971-CONTACT BILL PAGELOR DAN LEMBERG&#13;
AT PARKSIDE VILLAGE SITE OR CALL (4W 272-0460COLLECT&#13;
• 4.STUDENTS PER SUITE - UNFURNISHED&#13;
Pagel iEWSCOPE August 23, 1971&#13;
F il'f s by Non-University 8.09 Use of University ac_ • ie ·t primarily for&#13;
employee organizations may use Unive .&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
(Continued from Page 5 )&#13;
( 2 )" The University does not ergulate off-campus&#13;
political ctivities of students.&#13;
Right of tudents to Invite Guest Speakers.&#13;
( l ) Registered student organizations may invite&#13;
and hear any person of their own choosing, ~ut&#13;
cheduhng of facilities requires that they comply with&#13;
pro edures of the Committee on Student Life and In·&#13;
t r ts , . ummarized in the tudent Organization&#13;
II ndbo k , before a peaker 1s invited to appear on the&#13;
m~ . . (21 pon. r hip of a speaker does not imply apoval&#13;
or endor ·ement, by the sponsoring group or the&#13;
niv r 1ty, of the view expressed. (31 Th niver ity doe not regulate the content of&#13;
h.&#13;
. 7 Purplr.. or tudent . 1eetlng .&#13;
tud nt organization may use University&#13;
r 11iti for event which are primarily for students&#13;
nd r culty. (2) If admi ion i charged, the student&#13;
r nizatlon must arrange for the handling of ticket&#13;
I nd ubmit in advance a budget to the office of&#13;
th tud nt Organization Advisers, or its equivalent,&#13;
lnd1c ting how proceeds will be used. (3&gt; tud nt organizations may invite candidates&#13;
for political office to peak on the campus only when&#13;
th m ting are for tudents and faculty . Publicity for&#13;
uch m ting' must indicate that attendance is limited&#13;
to tudent and faculty, and they are not open to the&#13;
public&#13;
, of rniver ity Facilities by Students and Nontud&#13;
nt , In th u e of University facilities for the&#13;
extra-curricular activities of students, student groups&#13;
nd non-stud nts must observe the rules of the Committe&#13;
on tudent Life and Interests.&#13;
Gr?ups .. Facilities ;f0&#13;
~~%:t~~~·. :e!:rch·and public&#13;
Uruv_ers1tthy purpos ot available for unrestricted use by service; ey are n . the judgment of a non-Universigy groups. If, 10 • , tings&#13;
Unive~s!tr depart me~ ~r e%f ;;::~~n~mec::ibute&#13;
~ aac!t:e~~f ~:'~ci;;;sity's purposes, University&#13;
facilities when available, and subject to necessar~&#13;
routine procedures administered by the sec;ebtarih o t&#13;
the Faculty or other officer, may be use d Y· t:&#13;
oup but 'only upon the invitation of un er ~&#13;
:ons'orship of a University dep~rtment ?~&#13;
organization. The Auditoriums Committee, or •&#13;
equivalent, is consulted when ~e Secretary of the&#13;
Faculty, or other officer, deems it necessary.&#13;
8.10 Use of University Facilities by ~overn~_e?tal and&#13;
Public Educational Groups. University_ fac1hhes _may&#13;
be used by governmental and pu?hc educational&#13;
agencies when they are available, subJect to necessary&#13;
routine procedures administered by th~ S~retary of&#13;
the Faculty, or other officer. The Auditoriums Committee,&#13;
or its equivalent, is consulted when th_e&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty, or other officer, deems it&#13;
necessary.&#13;
8.11 Use of University Facilities by Political Part~e~ or&#13;
Candidates for Public Office. Leaders of political&#13;
parties and candidates for st~tewide. and national&#13;
public offices may hold pub!•c meetings o~ each&#13;
campus, if facilities are available,_ ~nd subJect to&#13;
necessary routine procedures admm1stered by the&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty, or other officer, in c~nsultation&#13;
with the Auditoriums Committee, or its&#13;
equivalent. During a primary campaign a University&#13;
auditorium may be made available for one public&#13;
meeting on behalf of each recognized candidate for&#13;
statewide or national public office. In a general&#13;
election year, each political party may use a&#13;
University auditorium for one public meeting on behalf&#13;
of its candidates for national office, and for one public&#13;
meeting on behalf of its candidates' for statewide office.&#13;
State conventions of recognized political parties&#13;
may also use University facilities. Members of the&#13;
audience should be given a reasonable opportunity, in&#13;
appropriate situations, to ask questions at the end of&#13;
the presentation.&#13;
8.12 Use of University Facilities by Faculty and&#13;
Employee Organizations. Faculty and University&#13;
on the same terms as University depar7ity faCili!ie&amp;&#13;
8.13 Conditions for Use of University F m~la.&#13;
University regulates the use of cam acmu,,. '!lit&#13;
prevent interference with its activiti:s JaciJiti!!$.&#13;
pense to the University is involved (e · ~!ta ti&#13;
service, policing, labor, and light) ti! for iani~&#13;
organization must accept responsibili S!Jonso,...:&#13;
deposit in advance with the University B~ _for it,-~&#13;
funds to cover estimated expense. Th stness Office&#13;
shall designate a representative t e orgillii.at.iQi&#13;
University officials in making arrangeom Work , . ents.&#13;
8.14 Revenue-Producmg Activities i U ,&#13;
Facilities. Whenever an admission char; . niv,r,i~&#13;
other revenue-producing activity is care_ is rnade,&#13;
University facility, the proceeds must ;ed 0n II! 1&#13;
control of the University, or the llnder&#13;
organization or public educational agen!overrun&#13;
the activity. Y S!Jon.,o&#13;
8.15 Freedom from Obstruction. Those Wh&#13;
speech or program sponsored b O attend 1&#13;
organizations, University departments Y 81Ude&#13;
author!zed ~oups, have t~e duty not to ob~~r .&#13;
0ther&#13;
the Uruvers1ty has the obligation to protect th et it. listen or participate. el'lght~&#13;
Info Center&#13;
Our mission is si~ply to direct students to where&#13;
they can get advice about specific problems&#13;
There isn't any area of human concern on whicJi ·&#13;
student can't get expert advice on this cam~&#13;
But the question is where? ·&#13;
There is no question that Parkside has an impressive&#13;
array of services available. The center&#13;
has gathered information on the services and&#13;
refers students to the ap~ropriate one. We want to&#13;
make what is here mor~ accessable.&#13;
We have as immediate answers; faculty office&#13;
hours, office locations, classroom locatiom, time&#13;
tables, calendars of events, bus schedules&#13;
parking regulations, deadlines for adding and&#13;
dropping classes, library hours, etc.&#13;
Lost and found is also located at Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
Let us help you simplify your life. Information&#13;
Center,. Tallent Hall 201, Ext. 2345.&#13;
fl&#13;
DELUXE2 ROOM SUITE&#13;
$218.25 PER SEMESTER•&#13;
OCCUPANCY SEPT. 1, 1971-CONTACT BILL PAGEL OR DAN LEMBERG&#13;
AT PARKSIDE VILLAGE SITE OR CALL (,'1-4) 272-0460 COLLECT • 4 STUDENTS PER SUITE - UNFURNISHED&#13;
OWNER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN t-iTERS,I&#13;
DEVELOPER: GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp; RESIDENTIAL CE&#13;
1744 N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, ISCONSIN &#13;
The Library Is The Source&#13;
are trying to locate (1l&#13;
U yoU te Hearings on either&#13;
se~ater pollution, (2) a&#13;
It the NEW YORK TIMES&#13;
01 the Pentagon Papers,&#13;
on usical sound track of&#13;
I tbeH~NVENICE, (4) a road&#13;
To/Door. County! (5) a&#13;
let on conSCientIOus&#13;
. P:on or (6) a book that&#13;
'It ~ms to be on the&#13;
ASK A LIBRARIAN!&#13;
Ubrary now has mo~e&#13;
\1Ie SO000 books, and that IS&#13;
1~s than all the high&#13;
libraries of Racine and&#13;
nOSba have combined.&#13;
. the books there are&#13;
12000reels of microfilm,&#13;
50,000 government&#13;
lions and subscriptions&#13;
l,500periodicals.Because the&#13;
t Hall Library is so&#13;
'ted in size, many rooks and&#13;
es of periodicals are kept&#13;
storage. These library&#13;
IIItErialsare available for yo~r&#13;
within 24hours, but you will&#13;
ve 10 ask for them at the&#13;
auen desk if you can't&#13;
te them on the shelves.&#13;
Knowing what is available,&#13;
it is, and how to use it is&#13;
librarian's job. The finding&#13;
for books is the card&#13;
alalog. With more than a half&#13;
lIiIlioocards you might find&#13;
llatit is difficult to find exactly&#13;
lbat yooare looking for. There&#13;
n thousands of volumes of&#13;
esjust for finding articles&#13;
II journals, and even more&#13;
Dlexes for locating governIlent&#13;
publications. Neither&#13;
)Jamals nor government&#13;
publications are listed in the&#13;
card catalog, so you may want a&#13;
brief explanation from a&#13;
librarian about indexes. A good&#13;
beginning for your college&#13;
experience may be a personal&#13;
tour of the Library. Make an&#13;
appointment for your own 5.&#13;
minute lesson.&#13;
There are some functions of a&#13;
university library that you may&#13;
not have encountered in a high&#13;
school or public library. Undoubtedly,&#13;
you will at Some&#13;
point in the year be assigned to&#13;
read from books that are on&#13;
reserve in the Library. Reserve&#13;
materials are kept 'behind the&#13;
circulation desk, and your loan&#13;
period is restricted to either two&#13;
hours, or three days, or a week.&#13;
August 23, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Books are placed on reserve so&#13;
, that many students can have&#13;
the opportunity to read them&#13;
RemeJ?ber, fines on reserv~&#13;
materials are much higher than&#13;
books taken from the general&#13;
collection. It IS possible to run&#13;
up a $10 fine by keeping a twohour&#13;
reserve book out over the&#13;
Weekend.&#13;
. When you start writing your&#13;
first research paper you may&#13;
feel lost and not know quite&#13;
\lfhere to begin. You may not&#13;
find books or magazines you&#13;
know the Library should have&#13;
or you may have rio idea un&#13;
where to look for materials on&#13;
your sUbject. That moment is&#13;
the ideal time to ask for help&#13;
from a reference librarian. ,;..I.................... ..J&#13;
Student Health Insur ance&#13;
All full-time students may enroll in the Student Health Insurance&#13;
Program offered by the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association through Blue Cross and Surgical Care&#13;
Blue Shield.&#13;
Brochures and applications are available now at the following&#13;
offices: .&#13;
Business Office, Rooom 230, Tallent Hall&#13;
Phone 553-2263.&#13;
Edith Isenberg, Campus Nurse,&#13;
Room 332, Greenqusit Hall&#13;
Phone 553-2366.&#13;
Information Center, Room 201, Tallent Hall&#13;
Phone 553-2345.&#13;
These items will also be available at Greenquist Hall during the&#13;
Registration days of August 31, September 1, or September 2.&#13;
Applications and premiums are dur no later than September&#13;
24, three weeks after the beginning of the semester, September 7.&#13;
'Octoberfest' To Be Held 7-9th&#13;
's German Club will&#13;
a three day •'Oc-&#13;
'celebration Oct. 7-8-9&#13;
ation with the Office of&#13;
and the Office of&#13;
t Affairs.&#13;
__ ••;-;- •• during the three day&#13;
Will be numerous athletic&#13;
...... dances, "brat 'n' beer"&#13;
IIII-.ct other happenings.&#13;
• Rangers will meet Ohio&#13;
late, Eastern Illinois and =:y College in the OcI&#13;
est Soecer Tournament at&#13;
I.m. and 3 p.m. both Friday&#13;
lIdSaturday, Oct. 8 and 9.&#13;
tit.Friday winners will play&#13;
':'ChamPionship at 3 p.m .&#13;
.... Y and the first day-&#13;
~11I meet for third place&#13;
y morning&#13;
.::: on. tap f~r Saturday&#13;
eon IS a 1 p.m, rugby&#13;
latcb featuring the UW-P :r club and the U of&#13;
~ conSin-Madison Rugby&#13;
te~r actiVities scheduled for&#13;
IIIf est are faculty and student&#13;
and tennis tournaments ,&#13;
intramural and varsity sailing&#13;
regattas, a fencing meet and a&#13;
gymnastics "turnfest".&#13;
The German Club aims at&#13;
making the atmosphere complete,&#13;
with German-style&#13;
refreshments, dancing and&#13;
bands and Olympic sports, all in&#13;
keeping with the upcoming 1972&#13;
Olympics and accompanying&#13;
festivities in Munich.&#13;
Students and faculty-staff&#13;
may be admitted to the "beer&#13;
garden" by showing an "Octoberfest"&#13;
button, soon to go on&#13;
sale at $.50, or for a $1 admission&#13;
charge at the site .&#13;
•&#13;
...&#13;
It'sthe~~&#13;
realthing.&#13;
Coke. f T,_.m.wl&lt;@,&#13;
-&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR&#13;
&amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
PIZZA _ SEAFOODS&#13;
ITALIAN-AMERICAN FOOt],&#13;
I "cOCl(TAI~S&#13;
I' ~NT~RTAIN"',:'NT2112&#13;
- 14 - 52 5T&#13;
J\ENOSKA&#13;
- --&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filler Change&#13;
PARKSIOE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at Large Edition&#13;
Framed Original&#13;
Geometries&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS $20 . $25&#13;
NEW&#13;
GALLERY ONE&#13;
Phone 658·2513&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
CAPITOl COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
503 Main, Racine&#13;
633-4662 - 634-7168&#13;
.' _ i .r&#13;
VALED'S PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
ALSC&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS 8IId&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE DELNERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M,&#13;
5021 30th Ave,&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
651-5191&#13;
Open 6 Day. a We.k From 4 p,m., Cla.ed Monday.&#13;
A reiver is a con artist.&#13;
A reiver is a rascal. .&#13;
Steve McQueen In&#13;
'The Reivers'&#13;
Fri. Sept. 10 8:00 p.m.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITI!'S OFFICE&#13;
ADM. 75¢ WITH PARKSIDE AND WISCONS IN 1.0.&#13;
A PARKSIOE STUOENT ACTIVITIEs' FEATURE FILM&#13;
The Library Is The Source e trying to locate (1)&#13;
ff you a~ Hearings on either&#13;
rs sena a~er pollution, (2) a&#13;
air _o~f ;e NEW YORK TIMES&#13;
(Ill)) the Pentagon Papers,&#13;
~t on usical sound track of&#13;
JI !~H7N VENICE, (4) a road&#13;
D£! f Door County, (5) a&#13;
1113P 0&#13;
1et on conscientious&#13;
pamP:on or (6) a book that&#13;
~'f!C ' ms to be on the&#13;
oei-er 5~SK A LIBRARIAN! ~ll'es, h Library now as more nie 50 000 books, and that is&#13;
lball 1 ~ks than all the high&#13;
JllOI'\ libraries of Racine and&#13;
,:hOO ha have combined. Kenos ·des the books there are lleSI . f'l al,oUt 12,ooo reels of micro i m,&#13;
50 ooo government orer • . t· blications and subscnp ions&#13;
P11 sooperiodicals. Because the&#13;
~~ent Hall Library is so&#13;
Jil11ited in size, many books and&#13;
teckftles of periodicals are kept&#13;
u: storage. These library&#13;
materials are available for your&#13;
~ within 24 hours, but you will&#13;
bal'e to ask for them at the&#13;
orculation desk if you can't&#13;
ate them on the shelves.&#13;
Knowing what is available,&#13;
where it is, and how to use it is&#13;
the librarian's job. The finding&#13;
gwde for books is the card&#13;
catalog. With more than a half&#13;
million cards you might find&#13;
that it is difficult to find exactly&#13;
Jbat you are looking for. There&#13;
are thousands of volumes of&#13;
ilxlexes just for finding articles&#13;
m journals, and even more&#13;
ilxlexes for locating government&#13;
publications. Neither&#13;
iournals nor government&#13;
publications are listed in the&#13;
ca:d catalog, so you may want a ..&#13;
brief explanation from a&#13;
librarian about indexes. A good&#13;
begin_ning for your college&#13;
experience may be a personal&#13;
tour of the Library. Make an&#13;
appointment for your own 5-&#13;
minute lesson.&#13;
There are some functions of a&#13;
university library that you may&#13;
not have encountered in a high&#13;
school or public library. Undoubtedly,&#13;
you will at some&#13;
point in the year be assigned to&#13;
read from books that are on&#13;
reserve in the Library. Reserve&#13;
materials are kept behind the&#13;
circulation desk, and your loan&#13;
period is restricted to either two&#13;
hours, or three days, or a week.&#13;
Books are placed on reserve so that many students can have&#13;
the opportunity to rE!Jid them.&#13;
Reme';llber, fines on reserve&#13;
materials are much higher than&#13;
books _taken from the general&#13;
collection. It is possible to run&#13;
up a $10 fine by keeping a twohour&#13;
reserve book out over the&#13;
weekend.&#13;
. When you start writing your&#13;
first research paper you may&#13;
feel lost and not know quite&#13;
~here to begin. You may not&#13;
fmd books or magazines you&#13;
know the Library should have&#13;
or you may have no idea 0~&#13;
where to look for materials on&#13;
your subject. That moment is&#13;
the ideal time to ask for help&#13;
from a reference librarian.&#13;
Student . Health Insur a nee&#13;
All full-time students may enroll in the Student Health Insurance&#13;
Program offered by the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association through Blue Cross and Surgical Care&#13;
Blue Shield.&#13;
Brochures and applications are available now at the following offices:&#13;
Business Office, Rooom 230, Tallent Hall&#13;
Phone 553-2263.&#13;
Edith Isenberg, Campus Nurse,&#13;
Room 332, Greenqusit Hall&#13;
Phone 553-2366.&#13;
Information Center, Room 201, Tallent Hall&#13;
Phone 553-2345.&#13;
These items will also be available at Greenquist Hall during the&#13;
Registration days of August 31, September 1, or September 2.&#13;
Applications and premiums are dur no later than September&#13;
24, three weeks after the beginning of the semester, September 7.&#13;
'Octoberf est' To Be Held 7-9th&#13;
Pariside's German Club will&#13;
ac&gt;~sor a three day "Oc1-fest"&#13;
celebration Oct. 7-8-9&#13;
llcooperation with the Office of&#13;
Alllletics and the Office of&#13;
blent Affairs.&#13;
F~tW:ed during the three day&#13;
period will be numerous athletic&#13;
events, dances, "brat 'n' beer"&#13;
and assorted other happenings.&#13;
The Rangers will meet Ohio&#13;
~le, Eastern Illinois and&#13;
Quincy College in the Ocldleriest&#13;
Soccer Tournament at&#13;
10 a m. and 3 p.m. both Friday&#13;
-i Saturday, Oct. B and 9.&#13;
brThe Friday winners will play&#13;
lhe championship at 3 p.m .&#13;
~da~ and the first day· win meet for third place turday morning.&#13;
ar: on . tap for Saturday oon 1s a 1 p.m. rugby&#13;
atch featuring the UW-P&#13;
:,by club and the U of&#13;
ntsco · tlub. nsin-Madison Rugby&#13;
Oie~r activities scheduled for&#13;
Dllf eSl are faculty and student&#13;
and tennis tournaments,&#13;
intramural and varsity sailing&#13;
regattas, a fencing meet and a&#13;
gymnastics "turnfest".&#13;
The German Club aims at&#13;
making the atmosphere complete,&#13;
with German-style&#13;
refreshments, dancing and&#13;
bands and Olympic sports, all in&#13;
keeping with the upcoming 1972&#13;
...&#13;
•&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke. i Trade-mark@,&#13;
Olympics and accompanying&#13;
festivities in Munich.&#13;
Students and faculty-staff&#13;
may be admitted to the "beer&#13;
garden" by showing an "Octoberfest"&#13;
button, soon to go on&#13;
sale at $.50, or for a $1 admission&#13;
charge at the site.&#13;
August 23, 1971 ,'EW C PE Pa ~7&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE .&#13;
654-9968&#13;
large Edition&#13;
Framed Original&#13;
Geometrics&#13;
$20 - 25&#13;
NEW&#13;
GALLERY ONE&#13;
503 Mam, Racine&#13;
633-4662 - 634-7168&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSC&#13;
CHICKEN DINNER$ and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE OEUYERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR&#13;
&amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
PIZZA - SEAFOODS&#13;
ITALIA -AMERICAN. Fnou.&#13;
COCl(TAt s&#13;
~ TEFl't At ._.J: T&#13;
2112 - 14 - 52 ST&#13;
_ J&lt;~SHA _&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 6S8-2S73&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COU T,&#13;
ILWAU EE&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 l).m., Closed Mondoya&#13;
A re i v er is a con a rt is t.&#13;
A reiver is a rascal. ..&#13;
Steve McQueen in&#13;
'The Reivers'&#13;
Fri. Sept. 10 8:00 p.m.&#13;
STUDENT ACT.IVITI ES OFFICE&#13;
ADM 75¢ WITH PARKSIDE AND WtSCONS IN 1.0 .&#13;
A PARKSIDE STUDENT ACTIVITIES' FEATURE FILM &#13;
""ge8 NEWSCOPE Aagu512.:',1971&#13;
Registration Information&#13;
For&#13;
Extended Day Students&#13;
Registration for the first semester&#13;
1971·72late ette-ncco. evening, and&#13;
saturday students will be held&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday, September&#13;
1 and 2. from 6: 30-8:30 p.m.&#13;
Last names beginning With M·Z&#13;
register on Wednesday and A-L on&#13;
Thursday. Registration for all&#13;
campu5e's will be held in Greenquisl&#13;
Hall on the Parkside site. This&#13;
building Is west of Wood Road (30th&#13;
Ave.) between Kenosha County&#13;
Hwy. A and E. Since parking is&#13;
availableonlynexi to Tallent Hall on&#13;
the Nsf side of Wood Road. II ccetinuous&#13;
shuttle bus service will be&#13;
prOvided to Greeoqulst.&#13;
t.ete registrations may be made&#13;
on Fridey from ':30-4:00. On Sept. 7-&#13;
9 late registrations will be accepted&#13;
from 1:30 e.m. to 1:00 p.m. and on&#13;
Sept. 10 from I: X1..4: 00. Classes&#13;
begin TG'esday, Sept. 7.&#13;
Wisconsin residents pay a fee of&#13;
124.25for the first credit and $73.00&#13;
tor Nch additional credit thru 11&#13;
E:-,'ts. Students taking 12 or more&#13;
~._edits pay $275. Non·residents pay&#13;
tuO.25 for the first credit and $79.00&#13;
tor eecn additional credit tnru 11&#13;
ereens. Students taking 12 or more&#13;
credits pay $950.&#13;
Parksicle particularly encourages&#13;
~~ enrollment of adull students&#13;
f"",shing to upgrade their skills.&#13;
E.~p'ete unfinished degrees. or&#13;
,....sue studies for personal enrich·&#13;
~_ent. Admission policies are very&#13;
I"Ie'Xiblein regard to adult stUdents.&#13;
A one·page aPPlication may M&#13;
ompleted at the time of&#13;
~iltratlon. Veterans of the armed&#13;
~Ylces plannlno to continue their&#13;
r-uc~tlon .150 recetve special&#13;
~nllderaflon When applying at&#13;
""arkslde.&#13;
la.~~tion.1 information on any&#13;
~t of the E.tended Day&#13;
I~ am may be obtained from&#13;
~n M. Valask.. Director, 214&#13;
I"allint Hall. Phone from Kenosha or&#13;
Racine: 553-2271.&#13;
neral Degree Requirements&#13;
ill those sections of the general&#13;
to natural sciences, social scien~es&#13;
ses from the following list supplied&#13;
oordinator of Academic Advising.&#13;
ded by the respective academiC&#13;
Ill! prerequisites for any of these&#13;
metable and UW-Parkside catalog.&#13;
L SCIENCES .&#13;
t towards satisfying the 10 credit&#13;
MOlBECK'S&#13;
COMPLETE LINE&#13;
OF HEAL 1'tf FOODS&#13;
tIERB TEAS&#13;
STONE GROUND&#13;
FLOURS&#13;
NATURAL VITAMINS&#13;
And many other&#13;
OrganiC FoOds&#13;
1304 GRANGE A\;/'C."&#13;
RACIN E 633-776Sl1&#13;
SANDWICHES Ge&#13;
HAMIIURGER 45c Parkside students can fuIf&#13;
CHEESEIIURGER sse&#13;
degree requirements pertaining&#13;
and hwnanities by choosing cour&#13;
6-II-Q IIEEF lOt&#13;
to Newscope by Mr. Bishop, C&#13;
These courses are recommen&#13;
SLICED IIEEF lOt&#13;
Divisions. Information regardi&#13;
courses is provided in the rail ti&#13;
GRILLED CHEESE&#13;
NATURA&#13;
4se The following courses COlUl&#13;
FRENCH FRIES 3Sc&#13;
GRILLED HAM 7De ~lIa9'l OLIYE IIURGER sse Inn.&#13;
STEAK SANDWICH 7se I~::~l&#13;
II.L.T. ON TOAST 7De&#13;
GRIL~ED H",M &amp;&#13;
Sunday • Thursday&#13;
.... CHEESE IDe&#13;
6 . Midnight&#13;
HOTDOG 4se&#13;
Friday . Saturday&#13;
'''\UNCH&#13;
6 . 3 ./t,M.&#13;
_ 361930 AVE._&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIOANRO.&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SOUTH7500 SHfRIOAN RO. SANDWICHES&#13;
THE UNIYERSlTYOF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
Announces Registration For&#13;
First Semester Extended Day Program&#13;
(late afternoon, evening and Saturday classes)&#13;
Register Sept. 1 and 2 from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Greenquist Hall, Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
The Extended Day Program at UW-P&#13;
this Fall features 120courses, su after 4:30&#13;
p.m. and on Saturdays, in the fields of&#13;
English, anthropology, engineering science,&#13;
computers, art, business management and&#13;
science, communication, earth science,&#13;
economics, education, French, German,&#13;
Spanish, geography, history, humanities,&#13;
life science, mathematics, music,&#13;
philosophy, physical education, physics,&#13;
political science, psychology, and sociology.&#13;
natural science requirement (the 10 credits must inclUde&#13;
one lab course). at !teat&#13;
Chemistry - 100, 101, 102, 103,104,107 ,108,200, 2Q5&#13;
Earth Science - (+) 101, (+) 103,110, 150, 201 '202 301&#13;
485 also Geography 123, (+) 124' '" 310, 440&#13;
(.;) Only one of these courses may be taken for credit '&#13;
graduation: E.S. 101, 103, Geography 124. loIvant,&#13;
Life Science - 101, 102, 160, 201, 214&#13;
Mathmatics + 184&#13;
Physics - lOS, 106, 201, 202&#13;
Psychology - 203&#13;
SCience - 103&#13;
SOCIAL SCIENCES&#13;
The Social Science Di~sion. rec~mmends that s&#13;
tempting to meet the 9 credit SOCialscience reqUirem~1I1lenrolling&#13;
in 100 and 200 level courses. Note that for 10 br&#13;
fulfilling general degree requirements, Psychology 10~"&#13;
social science credit, and Geography 123, 124 count as..... II&#13;
science credit.. DIttral&#13;
HUMANITIES.&#13;
The following courses count towards satisfying the 9&#13;
humanities requirement. ert.dII&#13;
Art - 121, 343, 361, 444, 460&#13;
Communications -130,201,209, 230, 320, 350,360,364,414&#13;
English - 209,210,211,212,213, 300, 301, 302, 305, 352,355,':"&#13;
370,400,401,405,410,415,450,460,495,499 ,~&#13;
French - 318, 321,322,400,405,420,440,499&#13;
German -318,321,322,421,422,423,424,425,440,499&#13;
Humanities - 200, 250, 300, 325, 421&#13;
Music - 105, 106, 201, 311, 312&#13;
Philosophy - 101, 205, 250, 300, 301, 302, 303, 335, 401, 40S419_&#13;
439, 490, 499 ' , ,&#13;
Spanish - 381, 319, 321,322,335,405, 410, 411, 412, 413, 420 421...&#13;
440, 499 ' '--'&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
STUDENTS WANTED&#13;
GHOSTWRITER&#13;
get Red Carpet treatment&#13;
at the&#13;
Plot semi-political, will&#13;
the hair on the bock 01&#13;
neck stand 5tralght ovt BANK OF egardless of length,&#13;
ELMWOOD INTERESTEDf&#13;
Contact Ed Renick. AI&#13;
Gardens Amusement Contor&#13;
7th and Sherldln R&lt;I.&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
(everyone else does!)&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
ReciRe, Wis.&#13;
P}'amouJ fM, fj'itwtJ&#13;
g;~ W" .9/n1iMt fj'~&#13;
liquor Store&#13;
r;::=:~=&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD- KF.NOSHA 658.1'~1&#13;
~&#13;
PERSI-COLA&#13;
Page l\'EWSCOPE August23, 1971&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
General Degree Requirements&#13;
HAMBURGER 45c&#13;
CHEESEBURGER SSc&#13;
8-B-QBEEF 80c&#13;
SLICED BEEF 80c&#13;
GRILLED CHEESE 4Sc&#13;
FRENCH FRIES lSc&#13;
GRILLED HAM 70c&#13;
OLIVE BURGER SSc&#13;
STEAK SANDWICH 75c&#13;
8,L.T. ON TOAST 70c&#13;
GRIL~ED H~M &amp;&#13;
.... CHEESE IOc&#13;
HOT DOG 4Sc&#13;
'"" RANCH&#13;
NORTH 33 11 SHERIDAN RD .&#13;
SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN RD .&#13;
Parkside students can fulfill those sections of the general&#13;
degree requirements pertaining to natural sciences, social sciences&#13;
and humanities by choosing courses from the following list supp,ied&#13;
to Newscope by Mr. Bishop, Coordinator of Academic Advising.&#13;
These courses are recommended by the respective academic&#13;
Divisions. Information regarding prerequisites for any of these&#13;
courses is provided in the fall timetable and UW-Parkside catalog.&#13;
NATURAL SCIENCES&#13;
The following courses count towards satisfying the 10 credit&#13;
PANCAICl NOUSl&#13;
RHTAURANT&#13;
Sunday - Thursday&#13;
6 - Midnight&#13;
Frid~y - Saturday&#13;
6 - 3 .11.M.&#13;
-3619 30 AVE , _&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
MOLBECK'S&#13;
COMPLETE LINE&#13;
OF HEAL 1·t1 FOODS&#13;
tlERB TEAS&#13;
STONE GROUND&#13;
FLOURS&#13;
NATURAL VITAMIN~&#13;
And many other&#13;
Organic Foods&#13;
1304 GRANGE AVc..&#13;
RACINE 633-77651&#13;
2 IY/ The University of Wisconsin-Parkside -/,, PRESEltTS .... IN CONCERT&#13;
JOHN DENVER&#13;
'TAKE ME HOME COUNTRY ROADS'&#13;
SAT . OCT . 2 . 8:00 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA TREMPER AUD .&#13;
RES. SEAT TICKETS $3·50&#13;
AVAILABLE:&#13;
T H IS WEEK· REGISTRATION LINE&#13;
NEXT WEEK . STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE&#13;
__,,.,_.,:,'•RM . 206 TALLENT HALL&#13;
R~istration Information&#13;
For&#13;
Extended Day Students&#13;
Registrat ion for the first semester&#13;
1971 -72 late afternoon, even ing, and&#13;
saturday students w ill be held&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday, September&#13;
1 and 2, from 6:30-S:30 p.m .&#13;
Lui names beg inning with M -Z&#13;
register on Wednesday and A-L on&#13;
Thursday . Reg i stration for all&#13;
campuses w ill be held in Greenquist&#13;
Hall . on the Parkside site. Th is&#13;
bu1ld1ng Is west of Wood Road (30th&#13;
Ave . ) between Kenosha county&#13;
Hwy. A and E. Since parking is&#13;
available only next to Tallent Hall on&#13;
the east side of Wood Road, a cont,nuous&#13;
Shuttle bus service will be&#13;
provided to Greenquist.&#13;
Late registrations may be made&#13;
on Friday from 8 :30--4 :00. On Sept. 7_&#13;
9 late registrations will be accepted&#13;
from 8 :30 a.m . to 8:00 p.m . and on&#13;
Sep!· 10 from 8:30~:00. Classes&#13;
begin T()esday, Sept. 7.&#13;
Wisconsin residents pay a fee of&#13;
Sl4.25 for the first credit and $23.00&#13;
for each additional credit thru 11&#13;
credits. Students taking 12 or more&#13;
credits pay $275. Non -residents pay&#13;
$80. 25 for the first credit and , 79 00&#13;
for each additional credit thru · 11&#13;
credits. Students taking 12 or more&#13;
credits pay S950.&#13;
Parkside particularly encourages&#13;
lh.e _enrollment of adult students&#13;
w,sh,ng to upgrade their skills&#13;
complete unfiniShed degrees 0;&#13;
rsue studies for personal en'richm~t.&#13;
Admission policies are ver&#13;
lex,ble ,n regard to adult student:.&#13;
one-page application may be&#13;
ompleted at the time of&#13;
eglstrallon . Veterans of the ar ed&#13;
-;Ices planning to continue t'::eir&#13;
onsc'adt,on also receive special , er atlon when a I • Parkside PP y,ng at&#13;
Additional information on&#13;
Pspect of the Extended ~~Y rogram may be Y John M V obtained from&#13;
elaske o· ..... allent Hall Ph ' ,r-,or, 28"&#13;
Racine . ss3'.227~~e from KenoSha or&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
Announces Registration For&#13;
First Semester Extended Day Program&#13;
(late afternoon, evening and Saturday classes)&#13;
R&#13;
RegdistCaer Sept. land 2 from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Greenquist Hall Wood oa mpus. ,&#13;
The Extended Day Program at UW-P&#13;
this Fall features 120 courses, a·11 after 4: 30&#13;
p.m. and on Saturdays, in the fields of&#13;
English, anthropology, engineering science,&#13;
computers, art, business management and&#13;
science, communication, earth science, .&#13;
economics, education, French, German,&#13;
Spanish, geography, history, humanities,&#13;
life science, mathematics, music,&#13;
philosophy, physical education, physics&#13;
political science, psychology, and sociolog/&#13;
natural science requirement (the 10 credits must. one lab course). include at l~st&#13;
Chemistry-100, 101,102,103, 104,.107, 108 200 205&#13;
Earth Science - ( +) 101, ( +) 103, _no, 150, 201 202&#13;
485, also Geography 123, ( +) i24 ' • 301, 310, 44o,&#13;
( +) Only one of these courses may be taken f&#13;
graduation: E.S. 101, 103, Geography 124. or credit towards&#13;
Life Science - 101, 102, 160, 201, 214&#13;
Mathmatics + 184 . Physics - 105, 106, 201, 202&#13;
Psychology - 203&#13;
Science - 103&#13;
SOCIAL SCIENCES&#13;
~e Social Science Di~sion recommends that&#13;
tempting to meet the 9 credit social science reg . students at.&#13;
enr?ll_ing in 100 and 200 level courses. Note th:;r:ment do so by&#13;
fulfillmg general degree requirements Psych 1 or Pllt'pogei; of&#13;
social science credit, and Geography' 123 12~ ogy 101 COUnts as&#13;
science credit. ' count as llalUraJ&#13;
HUMANITIES&#13;
The following courses count towards satisf · humanities requirement. ymg the 9 Credi(&#13;
Art - 121, 343, 361, 444, 480&#13;
Comi:nunications - 130, 201, 209, 230, 320, 350, 360 3&#13;
English - 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 300, 301, 302, 305 '35~· 414, 424, 4&#13;
370, 400, 401, 405, 410, 415, 450, 460, 495, 499 ' ' 355,360,365.&#13;
French-318, 321, 322, 400, 405, 420, 440, 499&#13;
Germa~-:- 318, 321, 322, 421, 422, 423,424,425, 440 499&#13;
Humambes - 200, 250, 300, 325, 421 '&#13;
Music - 105, 106, 201, 311, 312&#13;
Philosophy - 101, 205, 250, 300, 301, 302 303 335 401 40&#13;
439, 490, 499 ' ' ' • 5, 419, 429,&#13;
Spanish - 381, 319, 321, 322, 335, 405 410 411 412 413 440, 499 ' ' ' • , 420, 421, 425,&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
get Red Carpet treatment&#13;
at the&#13;
WANTED&#13;
GHOST WRITER&#13;
BANK OF&#13;
ELMWOOD&#13;
(everyone else does!)&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
RaciAe, Wis.&#13;
Plot semi-political, will malu&#13;
the hair on the back of you&#13;
neck stand straight out&#13;
egardless of length.&#13;
INTERESTED?&#13;
Contact Ed Renick, Rainbo~&#13;
Gardens Amusement Center,&#13;
7th and Sheridan Rd .&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
. w-&#13;
_ gamout&gt; ~ fiin«J&#13;
~~ W' 9/ul«Mt PJO&lt;XB&gt;&#13;
liquor Stor e&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
KENOSHA 658• '\131&#13;
~~~~~~~~~»cb"°"~~.,..,.,."""'"'&#13;
PEP.Sl·COLA ··•·· :=:~&#13;
:=:~&#13;
···· l~&#13;
::::&#13;
~~! We wish the Parkside students I (~ i a happy and successful year,&#13;
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              <text>Student Housing Uncertain</text>
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              <text>., Mart Etaen of the Ne!scope staff, private homes.,,&#13;
ai]ability of student housing for Her listinas as of Jul&#13;
11Je av uncertain at the pr~nt, Roo --a Y ~ are f n--&#13;
1111 f~ see:5 Shirley Sch~erling, ·the ms: Kenosha girls . ~ 0UVW11 :&#13;
~of Housing at Parkside. -~; Kenosba, boys', 16· ·~· ~ctne, girls,&#13;
~-hmerHn n, who has headed her enosba, either, 6, Ra~ine&#13;
=· boy ' 7; JIii .,._.. ... ie • Apartments: Kenosba ! er, 3 •• siPCt! early this year, told Newscope girls, 9; Kenosha bo ,_girls! 9 ; Racine,&#13;
. ' ys, 2, Ractne, boys, o;&#13;
Student Housing Situation Uncertain&#13;
eff ~rts to· find housing have been&#13;
)lei' ~ful as time has gone on, but,&#13;
- SU this is adequate depends upon the&#13;
~ the influx of inquiries in the next&#13;
weets. Rigbtnow," she says, "It's very hard to&#13;
apartments." Though she adds,&#13;
~ ·re many nice rooms available in&#13;
K~os~aS ei~er, ~i Racine, eithe:-, 7.&#13;
re ~ pring registration, 423 students&#13;
n away from home while 3 412&#13;
students lived at home ' An th •&#13;
tdts . . oer223&#13;
s u en desired single housin d&#13;
students wanted married housi g an 101&#13;
"W ta ng. . e s rted out with very little bousin&#13;
available," Mrs. Schmerling said. st!&#13;
,-rnaliamlaLiteratureinaHurry"-MatthewArnold University of Wisconsin_ Par!sidt&#13;
•••••• Number 8_&#13;
uer Appointed New&#13;
Vice Chancellor&#13;
.' trnent of Otto F . Vice Chancellor of the&#13;
Y of WisconsinI&#13;
by"as approved here&#13;
the UW Board of&#13;
and Secretary of the Faculty .&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie said that&#13;
the student-faculty search&#13;
committee was impressed by&#13;
the range and variety of Baue_r's&#13;
institutional experience~ wh~ch&#13;
included a private umy~rstty&#13;
(Northwestern ), a military&#13;
academy (Air Force ), t~e&#13;
nation's most prestigious public&#13;
university (Berkeley),_ and . a&#13;
fast-growing state umvers1ty&#13;
(Bowling Green).&#13;
"He performed ex~re~ely&#13;
well in all of these ins!1tu~~nal&#13;
settings," Wyllie said. We&#13;
know he will do well he~. "Many things stand out 1!1 Otto&#13;
Bauer's record," he _contmued,&#13;
"his youth, his achiev_ements,&#13;
his rich administrahv_e experience,&#13;
his sympathetic understanding&#13;
of students and&#13;
(Continued on page 6)&#13;
New cop&#13;
Irv Kupcin t&#13;
Nor o&#13;
Of sc· n&#13;
h &#13;
Housing Placement Uncertain&#13;
(Continued (nm Pale ))&#13;
wbatthe family is like - if&#13;
the family doesn't drink or&#13;
smoke she won't recommend&#13;
a student wbo does&#13;
drink or smoke move lbere.&#13;
Mrs. Schmerling makes&#13;
sure, too, that if a student is&#13;
expected to work for part of&#13;
his room and board that it is&#13;
'understood from the onset&#13;
how many bours the student&#13;
is to work and at wbat jobs.&#13;
Rooms in private&#13;
residences vary from S7.00&#13;
to $25,00 a wet$ she said.&#13;
"There are more freshmen&#13;
and sopllomores in&#13;
rooms like this," she noted.&#13;
"Mothers like to see their&#13;
kids in pri vate bomes. "&#13;
Juniors and seniors prefer&#13;
apartments,&#13;
"It's exciting when you're&#13;
able to accomplisb&#13;
sometbing," Mrs. Schmerlilllluys&#13;
of ber job. She&#13;
told of a girl who had come&#13;
to Park.side without a car&#13;
from a small town. The&#13;
problem was to find a room&#13;
close to the campus. She&#13;
remembered a lady from&#13;
Somers who bad contacted&#13;
if's f.e&#13;
real thing&#13;
bel' a.few days earlier to&#13;
place a room on listiDg. MrS.- SCbmerlinll introduced lbe&#13;
• two, and each found lbe&#13;
other acceptable.&#13;
The problem now was to&#13;
fmd transportation for the&#13;
girl. Mrs. Scbmerling went&#13;
through lbe school directory&#13;
and found five students from&#13;
Somers. Sbe called each of&#13;
them to see if lbey would&#13;
provide transportation for&#13;
lbe girl. It turned out one&#13;
student lived only five&#13;
houses from lbe girl and was&#13;
willing to give ber a ride. "It&#13;
wound up I found her not&#13;
only a ride, but a new&#13;
friend," Mrs. Schmerling&#13;
said smilingly.&#13;
four Added '0 Dean's Lis'&#13;
Four additional students bave been named to lbe&#13;
Dean's List for secood semester work at lbe University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks ide, it was announced .today.&#13;
Heading the list are two students wilb perfect 4.0&#13;
academic grade point averages; Edna Dearborn, 5837&#13;
Sprillll St., Racine; and Joyce Gyurina, 2410-32nd St.,&#13;
Kenosha. Itwas lbe fourlb straight semester of 4,0 work for&#13;
Mrs. Gyurina. Mrs. Dearborn graduated in June with&#13;
distinctioo.&#13;
Earning high honors was Thomas Cook, 1332Bucbanan,&#13;
Racine, wilb a 3.57 average. Earning honors was Philip T,&#13;
Angeregg, 2301Yout St., Racine, wilb a 3.37average.&#13;
Students named to lbe Dean's List must have at least a&#13;
3.25 (Bvplus) average out of a possible 4.0.&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
• 11b Oil &amp; Filler Chance&#13;
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(;.4LIFORNIA Gf;NERATIOfj&#13;
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W ReX NEWS AGENCY ~&#13;
•• PIPI!S. '4 •Mil ".' ~&#13;
5116 Sid A &amp;,. " • .... '&#13;
BOOKS - NOVELS&#13;
GREENING OF,AMERICA&#13;
by Charles Reich&#13;
THE COUPLE&#13;
Save&#13;
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at&#13;
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MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
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.. ,.. Silos ,. • u" , 14" - \6" '&#13;
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6S7·'843 ..&#13;
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Weston Leaving Parkside&#13;
Mr. Bruce Weston will assume lbe position of&#13;
Director of Develo~ment at Stephens College,~&#13;
september 1, according to Dr. Seymour Smilb, Preai~&#13;
lbe college. -If&#13;
His duties will include direction of lbe Parents&#13;
and an associate's role in the college's developm~&#13;
in community and alumnae rela~ons and in fUOdr.CIflife&#13;
Mr. Wes!'&gt;n has had ~x~enslve ~ublic re!ati .....&#13;
perience as director of p.ubhc mformal1on and PUbliOllBeaat&#13;
lbe University of Wlsconsin-Parkside, KenoshaC8lia11&#13;
where he also assisted in developmental activities' ...&#13;
He also worked as manager of publica tions at' N&#13;
western Unive':lity in .Evanston, Ill., from l~ IIIlbo&#13;
director of public relations. at Garleton College, N~&#13;
Minn., from 1963-65. While at Carleton, Mr. W:~&#13;
publication program received a national award ~I&#13;
American College Public Relations A1Sociation.He_ ...1lIe&#13;
worked as a public relations assistant serving in&#13;
management capacities for Rockefeller Center :-&#13;
New York fcom 1955~. ' ·,It&#13;
A 1953 graduate of Carleton College with a B.A,&#13;
English, Mr. Weston has taken professional It&#13;
sponsored by the Punlic Rela tions Society ofAmer::-&#13;
American College Public Relations Association 81111'&#13;
=&#13;
Publicity Club of New York. _&#13;
He is a member of lbe American Public IleII&#13;
Association and Rotary International. He and his ~&#13;
Charlotte, have three children. •...&#13;
Mr. Weston succeeds Mr. Norman Peters Who Jell&#13;
Stephens to become coordinator for lbe capital _&#13;
campaign at Southwestern University, Georgetown,TIL&#13;
Norwood Chosen as New Dean&#13;
&lt;Continuedfrom Page 1) submitted to the O!a ....&#13;
named Vice Chancellor by a campus sean:b .. mittee made up at faaar&#13;
at ,Parkside. and students. He 81111..&#13;
"In all of his con- other cal!didatea ...&#13;
versations wilb us," Wyllie extensively interviewedbJ&#13;
said, "he made it quite clear lbe committee, !be a..&#13;
lbat his main interest is in cellor, UW PresideDtJaIII&#13;
providing high quality C. Weaver and !leIIIl&#13;
education for un- Frank J. Pellsek.&#13;
dergraduate students. He "There was a strGil&#13;
believes lbat all universities consensus for Nanaod,&#13;
should devote lbeir best Wyllie said. "baaed III MI&#13;
efforts to beginning performance in "'&amp;1' .....&#13;
students, and that new administrative IIIIIIu.&#13;
campuses have a unique within the UnI,.&#13;
opportunity to achieve system. Those wIlo IInI&#13;
distinction by excelling in worked with him report II1II&#13;
this line." he is a very COIlSlnIctIw,&#13;
Norwood was selected helpful and undeislaDdlll&#13;
from a panel of four names colleague."&#13;
fiewscope •&#13;
Editor WarrenNedry&#13;
CopyEditor John Koloen&#13;
•&#13;
NewsEditor Marc Eisen&#13;
'Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
BusinessManager John Gray&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business ::&#13;
Summer NcwlcopeII -&#13;
independentstud..,taa:,:;&#13;
composed and publilllld&#13;
through the summ'!'..... ~&#13;
students of the ~&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. .,.,&#13;
obtained advertisiDIJ ..&#13;
die sole source of J&#13;
theoperatiooofN _&#13;
copies dre prldled It&#13;
distributed throuP tIfI'&#13;
Kenosha and RldlII It&#13;
munities a8 weU II ..&#13;
University. Free ...&#13;
available uponreqUIIIl&#13;
NEWS STAFF&#13;
BobBorchardt, Dar-reDBorger&gt;&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen,Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
i\liJ&lt;e:?teVesand, Janet Sabol&#13;
Mike Starr. -'&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott.&#13;
~&#13;
PERSI-COLA&#13;
Kenoshil Racine&#13;
Housing Placement Uncertain&#13;
her a few days earlier to&#13;
Mn. Shirley Schmerllng&#13;
place a room on listing. Mrs.&#13;
Schmerling introduced the&#13;
two and each found the&#13;
oth~r acceptable.&#13;
The problem now was to&#13;
find transportation for the&#13;
girl. Mrs. Schmerling went&#13;
through the school directory&#13;
and found five students from&#13;
Somers. She called each of&#13;
them to see if they would&#13;
provide transportation for&#13;
the girl. It turned out one&#13;
student lived only five&#13;
houses from the girl and was&#13;
willing to give her a ride. "It&#13;
wound up I found her not&#13;
only a ride, but a new&#13;
friend," Mrs. Schmerling&#13;
said smilingly.&#13;
Four Added to Dean's List&#13;
Four additional students have been named to the&#13;
Dean's List for second semester work at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, it was aMoµnced . today.&#13;
Heading the list are two students with perfe&lt;;t 4.0&#13;
academic grade point averages; Edna Dearborn, 5837&#13;
Spring St., Racine; and Joyce Gyurina, 2410-32nd St.,&#13;
Kenosha. It was the fourth straight semester of 4.0 work for&#13;
trs. Gyurina . Mrs. Dearborn graduated in June with&#13;
distinction. Earning high honors was Thomas Cook, 1332 Buchanan,&#13;
Racine, with a 3.57 average. Earning honors was Philip T.&#13;
Angeregg, 2301 Yout St., Racine, with a 3.37 average.&#13;
Students named to the Dean's List must have at least a&#13;
3.25 (B-plus) average out of a possible 4.0.&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
ith Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
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cHAT~Nciiiil ~&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
-&#13;
WEST&#13;
.·FEDERAL ·&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COU~T,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
...•&#13;
~~ - :=:i /&#13;
40th Avenue &amp; 52nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY&#13;
_11 A.M. TIJ,.L "IDNITE&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TILL 2 A,M,&#13;
HAMBURGERS 40¢ &amp; 24¢&#13;
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GREENING OF AMERICA&#13;
by Charles Reich&#13;
THF. COUPLE&#13;
l bv Mt &amp;Mrs. K&#13;
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by Jacqueline Briskin&#13;
R-X NEWS AGENCY ~ '*'&#13;
Newspa~ · Pape,laocb • Magazines /.1 11&#13;
5116 Sa1h Ave. &amp; Ptnling Pima ~&#13;
.~ff&#13;
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CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
la Fow 5-s 9" · ·12" - 14". l6"·&#13;
• ll1$ • SflAGHnTI • CHICltllN&#13;
GMOc:CHt • ltAVIOU • LA SAGNA • SIA FOOD • SANDWICHU&#13;
CAllY.OUTS - DELIVDY&#13;
-,OU I/HG ., .. • . Wl ~&#13;
6!7-9843 •&#13;
6514922&#13;
Weston Leaving Parkside&#13;
Mr. Bruce Weston will assume the position of As . Director of Develo~ment at Stephens College, er~~te&#13;
September 1, according to Dr. Seymout Smith, Presi:tive&#13;
the college. nt or&#13;
His duties will include direction of the Parents p&#13;
and an associate's role in the college's developme ~&lt;&gt;grain&#13;
in community and alumnae rela~ons and in funct':~!fice&#13;
Mr. Weston has bad extensive public relati ~ -&#13;
perience as director of public information and publions. etat&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha cati~&#13;
where he also assisted in developmental activities ' W11.,&#13;
He also worked as manager of publications at·N&#13;
western University in Evanston, Ill., from 196.5-69 Orth.&#13;
director of public relations at Carleton College No~~ as&#13;
Minn., from 1963-65. Wh_ile at Carleton, M~. Wes tel~&#13;
publi&lt;:ation program r~ce1ved _a national award fro ton,&#13;
Amencan Coll~ge _Pubhc ~elabo~ A .sociation. He ai: ~ worked as a pubhc relations ass1Stant serving in v .&#13;
management capacities for Rockefeller Center 1~"0Ut&#13;
New York fcom 1955-63. ' ·,&#13;
A 1953 graduate of Carleton College with a BA&#13;
English, Mr. West.on has taken professional c~·&#13;
sponsored by the Puolic Relations Society of America rsea&#13;
American College Public Relations Association anl:&#13;
Publicity Club of New York.&#13;
He is a member of the American Public Relati&#13;
Association and Rotary International. He and his Wif!lil&#13;
Charlotte, have three children. e,&#13;
Mr. Weston succeeds Mr_. Norman Peters who lett&#13;
Stephens to became coordinator for the capital r&#13;
campaign at Southwestern University, Georgetown, T':&#13;
Norwood Chosen as New Dean&#13;
(Continued from Page 1) submitted to the Chancellcr&#13;
by a campus search com.&#13;
named Vice Chancellor mittee made up or racu11v&#13;
at ,Parkside. and students. He and !ht&#13;
"In all of his con- other caqdidates were&#13;
versa tions with us," Wyllie extensively interviewed by&#13;
said, "he made it quite clear the committee, the Cba11-&#13;
that his main interest is in cellor, UW President John&#13;
providing high quality C. Weaver and Regent&#13;
education for un- Frank J. Pelisek.&#13;
dergraduate students. He "There was a strong&#13;
believes that all universities consensus for Norwood,"&#13;
should devote their best Wyllie said, "based 011 his&#13;
efforts to beginning performance in high-level&#13;
students, and that new administrative positions&#13;
campuses have a unique within the University&#13;
opportunity to achieve system. Those who .bu&#13;
distinction by excelling in worked with him report that&#13;
this line." he is a very constructi&#13;
Norwood was selected helpful and understanding&#13;
from a panel of four names colleague."&#13;
·28:Wm e ·m SI : 8 ., ;urrr&#13;
Newscope '9&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry Copy Editor John Koloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen ·Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Gray&#13;
NEW$ STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger&#13;
James Casper, Jim koloen, Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
MtJc&amp; ~tevesand, Janet Sabol Mike Starr. · ·'&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus, Don Marjara, Barb Scott.&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Summer Newscope is&#13;
independent student ~&#13;
composed and published . through the summer sesslGI .&#13;
students of the Ull\versilY d&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Slipd&#13;
obtained advertising flllll :&#13;
!he sole source ri revelllf •&#13;
the operati(?n of NewscoPt-"&#13;
copies dre pririted •&#13;
distributed through Kenosha and Racine c&#13;
munities as well 45&#13;
University. Free ~ies&#13;
available upon request&#13;
~:. ·: ......... , ....•. :-:, ............. : ......•... '". : ... :· ...... :-:-:·· ........ -.~~:«*,&#13;
...&#13;
~~ .,&#13;
;§:&#13;
t:=: I t:~ ~§&#13;
PEP.Sl·COLA&#13;
Racine &#13;
by John Koloen of ~~'Newscope staff '&#13;
Forthe pas,~~3y~ Irv Kupcmet has been host of the -,&#13;
''J(up'sShow . in Chicago, and has written a daily cOlumn%~th~&#13;
$JP-Times.His ~rogram s f?rmat shows diversity, and unlike&#13;
_.ny of the national late mght talk shows "Kup's Sh ".&#13;
-- . t lity ts d i .' ow IS ~wn for Its ?p qua . .gues an mteIligent conversation.&#13;
As a journalISt Kup ISm the rather .unique position of hosting his&#13;
0\I'lI talk sh~~, a~ed Saturday mghts at 10:30 p.m, and is&#13;
dedicatedto the lively art of conversation"&#13;
NewscOpesp~ke with Irv Kupcinet last w~k about the art of&#13;
conversation, his column and J~umallsm in general.&#13;
Newscope:w,ttat '!lade y?U decIde to get into a talk show as OJ}- posed to Str~Ight Journalism?&#13;
lupcinet: IJl;lS.thad a .hunch that conversation was the coming&#13;
thingon television and It was a show I could put together because&#13;
Iicontact:', it w~s a s~ow Ithought I could handle because of my&#13;
interests in var~ous fle~ds and all those things kind of meshed&#13;
together.Ifelt It was time for conversation.&#13;
NS:Where did the idea for the format of your show come from'&#13;
was it.modeled after something else? '&#13;
lupcinet: S';JSs~nd s~rted ~s ~how about the same time Istarted&#13;
mine, but his IS a little bit different. And his hadn't come to&#13;
Oricagoyet. '&#13;
So we tried it once and it was quite a sensation in Chicago&#13;
becauseit brought to life some interesting people at an unusual&#13;
hour. We came on at midnight, live, and the first show ran until&#13;
about four o'clock in the morning. The&#13;
response was so great that we were&#13;
convincedthat there was an audience for&#13;
good,intelligent discussion regardless of&#13;
the hour.&#13;
Nobodyused that time in those days,&#13;
this is almost thirteen years ago, so we&#13;
not only opened up a new avenue for&#13;
conversation, we opened up a new time&#13;
slot.We've been a late night show ever&#13;
since,although we now tape the show and&#13;
we have a much better playing time at&#13;
ten-thirty.&#13;
NS:What do you see as the purpose of the&#13;
show? .&#13;
Kupcinet: The purpose of the show is,&#13;
first, to encourage the art of conversation&#13;
whichis kind of disappearing from our&#13;
society,and two is to let the public hear&#13;
authoritative people, who have vast&#13;
knoWledge,discuss the issues of the day&#13;
sothat they get a better comprehension&#13;
Iiwhat the issues are and how we try to&#13;
understand them. We don't resolve many&#13;
issues but we bring a little understanding,&#13;
a little light that's not too&#13;
much heat to a topic.&#13;
NS:How do you choose the topics for the&#13;
show?&#13;
KUPCinet:We don't choose the topics; we&#13;
choose the guests and we go from there.&#13;
On occasion, if there's a major topic,&#13;
we'll go after guests who fit the topic. If&#13;
lbe Vietnam War suddenly emerges with&#13;
a major issue the Pentagon Papers for&#13;
instance, an offshoot of the Vietnam War, we'll go afte~ JilOOple&#13;
Whoare versed in the Pentagon Papers who perhaps ~lIClpated&#13;
in theWriting of them or discussion of them. . . but ordinarily the&#13;
issues fit the guests.&#13;
N8: Do you screen guests? . them&#13;
KUPCinet:We have no way of screening guests. We JUst buy .&#13;
&lt;II their reputation. We try to get peopl~ who are recognized&#13;
authorities in their field and who are timely m the news or who are&#13;
prOminent in entertainment and the arts. th h ?&#13;
N8: Dothe guests you choose often let you ~own o~ I:t soF7ciIows&#13;
Kapclnet: I've been disappointed many times. ., boo~&#13;
)llIrticuIarly authors who write very well and h~.V~:)~~~tin:nd my&#13;
8JId best sellers turn out to be lousy con= ~th ~ people.&#13;
heart goes out to them. Ihave to do some, g th rnselves so I&#13;
You can't just let them sit there if they don t o~ert e·_u&#13;
type' of&#13;
Ad.._.. • almost an m ervI~" -- a different technique, . and gear questions&#13;
~hnique, where I get to them spect~~i,e by means of their&#13;
light to them to make them talk ~ . and bring the best out&#13;
COnversationthe o~r people may _c~~: be deadheads turn nut&#13;
Itthem. Also. guests that I thought uldhe brilliant turn out to be&#13;
to be brilliant and some Ithought wo . medienne of the time&#13;
~.Ihad one actress who was a l.eamt;g ~;na her mouth once.&#13;
8JId she sat there for four hours ~th?u o';"')j;tening'&#13;
Sbe just sat there and said,. 'I'm liste~, I;t so exci~ that they&#13;
But on the other hand, guests some es. right through the&#13;
forget about the commercial and k~p talking 1'on ignoring the&#13;
CO'!UDercial,they j~t c~tinue ~~ ~C;:;~~~aI teievision show,&#13;
caIiber of the show, IgnOnng the ,ac. t wrapped up like they&#13;
ignoring the commercials, they re Jus&#13;
WOuldbe in a bull session. .?&#13;
NS: Do you conside~ it a ~ sess~ ~on. people are sitting&#13;
kllpelnet: Yeah, I think of I.t as. a the li ly art of conversation. A lIl'ound a coffee table engagmg m ve&#13;
.1. .171 NEWlCC)Pf: POI'S&#13;
buII a:essi~ with a little more direction. We are trying to get to&#13;
certain pomts and to give each person a chance to express himself&#13;
wilQa little more order than a bull sesaioo has.&#13;
NS: How do you approach controveniaJ issues on the show?&#13;
KUJl:Clnet:Head on. We have no hesitation; the more controversial&#13;
the ISSuethe more diversified our guests the better we think the show is. •&#13;
NS: Have your opinions been changed on any particular issue as a&#13;
result of the show?&#13;
Kupclnet: Oh yes. In other words, it's a learning process for me,&#13;
too. My research develops a lot of different attitudes I may not&#13;
~ve had before, and listening to the guests expound develops a&#13;
different attitude and different appreciation or the issue.&#13;
NS: How much influence do you think your show has on viewers?&#13;
Kupclnet: Ithink it has influence in that it broadens people's&#13;
vision and horizon. I doo't think we make people change their&#13;
minds radically in that regard, but I think it does open up new&#13;
avenues and new understandings of various issues.&#13;
NS: How does the show relate to your column?&#13;
Kupclnet: It's a tremendous compliment to the column because&#13;
the people IWrite about are the people Iuse 00 the show and the&#13;
people on the show give me items for the column, they go hand in&#13;
hand.&#13;
I pick up a lot of material, background material, items, news&#13;
stories from the guests on the show. It broadens my own vision,&#13;
broadens my own coterie of guests and friends and tipsters. I&#13;
think it helps improve the column.&#13;
S: Do you think the show has more&#13;
Jntl....~ than the column?&#13;
Kapclnet: Well, in certain areas. We get&#13;
into much deeper and more philosophical&#13;
subjects 00 the show than I do in the&#13;
column. I think the column is more&#13;
newsy, informative, while the show is a&#13;
tood discussion of issues.&#13;
o/S:Which do you rind more satisfying,&#13;
:he column or the show?&#13;
l{upcinet: I don't think it's a matter or&#13;
lither or. Irind them both very exciting,&#13;
both very challenging and both very&#13;
fulfilling. I'm deIigh ted to be a participant&#13;
in both.&#13;
NS: In your column, what do you&#13;
primarily focus oo?&#13;
Kapclnet: ames, names and news. A&#13;
column of my type is limited in that most&#13;
of the names Iuse are readily identified&#13;
without any description.&#13;
S: Do you find yourself breaking news&#13;
very often in your column?&#13;
Kupclnet: It doesn't happen very often,&#13;
but there's nothing as satisrying as a&#13;
scoop. 0 matter how sophisticated we&#13;
become in journalism we all love to have&#13;
a scoop and have a beat on the news. I&#13;
make an effort to get news first. It may&#13;
not be very important, but Ilike to be&#13;
first with whatever I print.&#13;
S: Do you get much static as a result of&#13;
what you print in your column?&#13;
Kapclnet: I've had kind of general accusations,&#13;
nothing pin-pointed. When&#13;
they get mad at me they call me a. gossip m0ll:8erer or a g~ip&#13;
columnist. Idon't deal in much gossip. I don't think any colwnrust&#13;
today does. Most of them are well trained newspaper people and&#13;
they don't deal in much gossip anymore. People have mISConceptions&#13;
of what gossip really ~ .anyway. .&#13;
NS: Is there any weight to the cntictsm of people like Agnew ~&#13;
call it biased and sloppy?&#13;
Kupclnet: Iwould say this in the Agnew case, that most of the&#13;
papen I'm speaking generally bere and you know that's always&#13;
danger~, but most of the papen make a sincere effort to be very&#13;
thorough and very fair in their coverage. But there's nodoubt that&#13;
there are inbuilt prejudices among the press who will take an&#13;
Agnew stcry that is derogatcry and blow .it up as much as possible.&#13;
I think be has suffered in this regard. Idisagree WIthmany things&#13;
that Agnew stands for and says, but that still doesn't mean he&#13;
shouldn't get better and fairer coverage.&#13;
NS: Why does it seem that Agnew is.singled. out? . .&#13;
Kapclnet: Well, he lends hjmself to It by bemg a kind of ~foon m&#13;
certain cases and this carries over even when he's senOWl, and&#13;
this attitude that he's a buffoon, carries over. Ithink reporters&#13;
have prejudices like anyone and it comes out in their reporting.&#13;
NS: Has journalism changed much in the last fifteen years?&#13;
Kapcinet: Ithink journalism, like the nation, has become much&#13;
more sophisticated, much mpre concerned about the major issues&#13;
of the day, and much more aware of civic responsibility than it&#13;
was fifteen, twenty, years ago.&#13;
'!be btack situation, beaIth and medical problems, food&#13;
problems; all these were problems that the press in days gooe ~y&#13;
would hardly pay any attention at all. Today these are majOr&#13;
stories in newspapers and we give them considerable coverage by&#13;
experts in the field. We have authorities writing about them, these&#13;
are reporters who are well trained in that field who not only do the&#13;
(Cmtinued OD Pill' Sl&#13;
I&#13;
by Jobn_Koloen of the,Newsco -&#13;
for the pas,~ ~3 ye~ Irv Kupcinet has· be: ~taff -&#13;
"Kup's Show . m Chicago, and has written a da:t of the popular sun-Times. His programs format shows di Y_column for the&#13;
PlaDY of the national late night talk show v~~ity, and unlike&#13;
kJ)oWD for its top quality guests and intelligen~' Kup's ~how" is&#13;
As a journalist Kup is in the rather uni u c~~versation.&#13;
awn talk show, aired Saturday nigh~ ~f~~bon of hosting his&#13;
(ledicated to "the lively art of conversatio ,, :3o p.m. and is&#13;
Newscope spoke with Irv Kupcinet last :~k conversation, his column and journalism in g abor the art of&#13;
Newscope: W!1at ~ade you decide to get into ~~ · h posed to str~1ght Journalism? s ow as opJ{upcinet:&#13;
I Just had a hunch that conversati thing on television and it was a show I could port wa~ the coming rJ contacts, it was a show I thought I could hau oge er because&#13;
interests in various fields and all those thin~~~~a~se of my&#13;
together. I felt it was time for conversation ° meshed&#13;
NS: Where did the idea for the format of you·r sho was it modeled _after something else? w come from;&#13;
J{upcinet: Susskind started his show about the same tim I mine, but his is a little bit different. And his h dn ,f started Chicago yet. a come to&#13;
So we tried it once and it was quite a sensation · Chi because it brought to life some interesting people at m cago&#13;
hour. We ca~e on a_t midnight, live, and the first sho~nr~~i:~ about four o clock m the morning. The&#13;
response was so great that we were&#13;
convinced that there was an audience for&#13;
good, intelligent discussion regardless of&#13;
the hour. ·&#13;
Nobody used that time in those days&#13;
this is almost thirteen years ago, so w~&#13;
not only opened up a new avenue for&#13;
conversation, we opened up a new time&#13;
slot. We've been a late night show ever&#13;
since, although we now tape the show and&#13;
we have a much better playing time at&#13;
ten-thirty.&#13;
NS: What do you see as the purpose of the&#13;
show?&#13;
Kupcinet: The purpose of the show is,&#13;
first, to encourage the art of conversation&#13;
whi_ch is kind of disappearing from our&#13;
society, and two is to let the public hear&#13;
authoritative people, who have vast&#13;
knowledge, discuss the issues of the day&#13;
so that they get a better comprehension&#13;
ci what the issues are and how we try to&#13;
~derstand them. We don't resolve many issues but we bring a little understanding,&#13;
a little light that's not too&#13;
much heat to a topic.&#13;
NS: How do you choose the topics for the show?&#13;
Kupcinet: We don't choose the topics· we&#13;
choose the guests and we go from th'ere.&#13;
On, occasion, if there's a major topic,&#13;
we 11 ~o after guests who fit the topic. If&#13;
the V1_etn~ War suddenly emerges with&#13;
~ maJor issue, the Pentagon Papers for&#13;
mstance, an offshoot of the Vietnam War, we'll go after people&#13;
'.Nho are versed in the Pentagon Papers who perhaps participated ~ the writing of them or discussion of them . . . but ordinarily the&#13;
tssues fit the guests. NS: Do you screen guests? kupc~et: We have no way of screening guests. We just buy tJ:iem&#13;
00 the~ reputation. We try to get people who are recogruzed&#13;
authonties in their field and who are timely in the news or who are&#13;
prominent in entertainment and the arts.&#13;
NS: Do the guests you choose often let you down on the show? Ku~inet: I've been disappointed many times. A lot _o! fellows,&#13;
P&amp;rt1cularly authors who write very well and have exciting books&#13;
and best sellers turn out to be lousy conversationalists, and my&#13;
heart goes out to them. I have to do something with these people.&#13;
You can't just let them sit there if they don't o~er the_mselves, so I&#13;
adopt a different technique, almost an interview type_ of&#13;
~hnique, where I get to them specifically and gear questio~ right to them to make them talk and I hope by means of their&#13;
conversation the other people may chime in and bring the best out&#13;
&lt;i them. Also, guests that I thought woul~ be -~dheads turn 0 1rt&#13;
to be brilliant and-some I thought would be brilli~nt turn out ~ be dull. I had one actress who was a leading comedienne of the time and she sat there for four hours without opening her mouth once.&#13;
She just sat there and said 'I'm listening, I'm listening.' But on the other hand, ~ests sometimes g~t so ~xcited that they&#13;
forget about the commercial and keep talking i:ight _thro~ the CO~ercial, they just continue their convex:sation, 1~~nng the ~lf~r of the show, ignoring the fact _that it IS a teleVIS1~n show,&#13;
lgnonng the commercials, they're JUSt wrapped up like they&#13;
Would be in a bull session.&#13;
NS: Do you consider it a bull session? . . kupcinet: Yeah, I think of it as a bull session. People are ~1tting 81'0Und a coffee table engaging in the lively art of conversation. A&#13;
.. , I 11 ll'Jl E P&#13;
bull&#13;
certain session with a littl · . · . e more direction. e are trving to with lipottlmts and to give each person a chance to . h. Wt a e more order than a bull . on h&#13;
~:: How ~o you approach controv ial 1 u · on th ? th J&gt;:Cinet. Head on. We have no hesitation· the mor contro&#13;
he ~ue the more diversified our guests• th ter . th S OW IS. '&#13;
NS· Havey · · res~t of th:~~;ions beeo changed on any particular ·&#13;
1&#13;
Kupcinet: Ob yes. In other words it' a learning 'fUY'W'b&lt;~C' r&#13;
~; ~Y J~~ch develops a lot ~f different attitud I mar ~ ' . e a . ore, and listening to the gu ts expound d , lo different attitude and different appreciation of e u NS: How much_influence do you think your h h on ri··-,., __ .,&#13;
~u?Cinet: I ~ it has influence in that it broad pl '&#13;
~on and_ honz~n. I don't think we make people cha ·r minds radically m that regard, but I think it does&#13;
avenues and new understandings of vario i u .&#13;
NS: How does the show relate to your column?&#13;
Kupcinet: It's a tremendous compliment to the column a&#13;
the people I write about are the people I use on the nd th&#13;
people on the show give me items for the column th y go h nd m hand.&#13;
I pick up a lot of material, background material, item n&#13;
stones from the guests on the show. It broade my o 111 vi ion broadens my own coterie of guests and friends and ti t . i&#13;
think it helps impro e th column.&#13;
·s: Do you thin.It the w h m&#13;
JnttnPlJCP. than the column?&#13;
. upcinet: ell, in certain area . e g mto_ much deeper and more philo phic l&#13;
subJects on the show than I do in t&#13;
column. I think the column ·&#13;
newsy, informative, rhlle th&#13;
~ooc1 discussion i u .&#13;
S: Which do you find m re&#13;
~e column or the sho •?&#13;
Kupcinet: I don' t think i ' a matter of&#13;
!ither or. I find th m both vel") excitin&#13;
both very challengin, and both · r :&#13;
fulfilling. I'm delighted to be a&#13;
ticipant in both.&#13;
, 'S: In your column ·hat do you&#13;
primarily focus on?&#13;
Kupcinet: ·ames, nam and n&#13;
column of my type 1s limited ·o u, t m t&#13;
of_ the names I use are readily 1d tified without any d ri · .&#13;
• 'S: Do you find yourself br&lt;-ca .. ,uui::&#13;
very often in your column . Kupcinet: It doe n't happen&#13;
but there's nothin a ti yi&#13;
scoop. 'o matter ho phi tic t \\&#13;
become in journalism w all lo to h&#13;
a scoop and have a at on th . I&#13;
make an effort to t n fir t. It m ,&#13;
not be very important, but I lik to&#13;
first with whale r I print. ' : Do you get mu h tatic a r ult f&#13;
what you print m )our c umn?&#13;
Kupcinet: I' e had ind of n ral&#13;
cusations, nothing pin-point . \\'h&#13;
they get mad at me they call me a go ip mo r r or a ip&#13;
columnist. I don't deal in much g 1p. I don't th' n columni t&#13;
today does. Most of them are well trained ne pa r · pl nd&#13;
they_ don't deal in m~ch gossip anymore. P ple hav ·&#13;
ceptions of what go 1p really is an ·ay. S: Is there any weight to the critici m of people lik&#13;
call it biased and sloppy? Kupcinet: I would say this in the Agn , ca tha m&#13;
papers, I'm s~ng generally here and you ~w that&#13;
dangerous, but most of the papers ma ea incer effor to , r thorough and very fair in their coverage. But ther ' no d b that there are inbuilt _prejudices among the pr •ho will k n Agnew story that 1s derogatory and blow it up a much a ibl . I think he has suffered in this regard. I disagr with many hin&#13;
that Agnew stands for and says, but that till n t mean h&#13;
shouldn't get better and fairer coverage.&#13;
NS: Why does it seem that Agnew is singled out?&#13;
Kupcinet: Well, be lends himself to it by being a kind of buffoon in&#13;
certain cases and this carries over e en when he' serious and&#13;
this atti~de. that _he's a buffoon, _carries over. I think repo'rte have pre~udices_ like anyone and 1t comes out in their reporting. NS: Has JOurnalism changed much in the last fifteen years?&#13;
Kupcinet: _I ~ journalism, like the nation, ha become much&#13;
more sophisticated, much mt)l"e concerned about the major i u&#13;
&lt;:I the day, and much more aware of civic responsibility than 1t&#13;
was fifteen, twenty, years ago. 'lbe black situation, health and medical problem , food&#13;
problems; all these were problems that the press in days gone by&#13;
wo~d ~rdly pay any attention at all. Today these are major&#13;
stones~ news~pers and we give them considerable coverage by&#13;
experts m the field We have authorities writing about them these&#13;
are reporters who are well trained in that field who not only 'do the&#13;
(Cootinued on Page S) &#13;
.",'1&#13;
education meant enfottiDc&#13;
codes. . ...-&#13;
I almost pity these&#13;
discover that educati~"&#13;
than keeping your 8lIlrt ....&#13;
tucked in. The shOCk III&#13;
terrible. The John Hos lllllIt lit&#13;
education must hav~t1&#13;
minds because of this atU~&#13;
In the end I lack the ~&#13;
feel true compassion ~ II&#13;
people. My contempt is too a..;&#13;
To realize the amount of ......&#13;
they have fucked up the JIeiIIIe&#13;
they ha ve destr~yed IIIilk&#13;
creativity they have slilledlile&#13;
much. ...&#13;
bumS me. They took him and&#13;
screwed him, and beat him, ~nd&#13;
then chopped his brain up 101:"&#13;
little pieces and reassembeled 1\&#13;
so he was "nonnal".&#13;
I say "they" purposely.&#13;
Because the forces tha t fucked&#13;
him over are nebulous, and are~'t&#13;
even conscious of the psychic&#13;
damage they wreaked. I say&#13;
"they" and I mean the schools, I&#13;
mean aspects of a society tha t&#13;
foster this type of latent&#13;
totalitarianism.&#13;
I feel anger, but more, fear.&#13;
Because I look at myself and see&#13;
what I went through in high&#13;
school. I realize they came close&#13;
to lobotomizing me. They did to&#13;
an extent; I lost a certain cutting&#13;
edge of preception in high school.&#13;
, Something was ground out of me&#13;
there. Visions I began with were&#13;
lost. Lobotomize is the right word.&#13;
I feel ambivalent towards most&#13;
of my high school teachers and&#13;
principals. On one hand I feel&#13;
contempt towards them. I despise&#13;
• them for what they have done to&#13;
education.&#13;
• On the other hand I feel sorry&#13;
• for them. The sense of failure&#13;
they must experience in the dark&#13;
of night when they realize that&#13;
three years ago they believed&#13;
and, to my mind, the inborn&#13;
sensitivity of a poet - he knew&#13;
melancholy. He knew, too, I&#13;
think, the price his rebellion coul,d&#13;
be.&#13;
I saw him two years ago and he&#13;
had changed. There was still the&#13;
pride, the forthrightness, but it&#13;
was different now. Something&#13;
was missing. He hadn't gotten&#13;
past tenth grade. He'd been on the&#13;
road for a while, he said. He'd&#13;
gotten busted once, and now was&#13;
going to Vietnam. He wanted to.&#13;
He thought it was right. He&#13;
believed in it. Something was&#13;
missing.&#13;
At lunch we talked. We talked of&#13;
what had gone on with each of us,&#13;
about Vietnam. We agreed to&#13;
write one another. He wouldn't let&#13;
me pay for his meal.&#13;
I received a letter from him&#13;
about a month later. I had argued&#13;
a point on the War and now he&#13;
wrote he had seen a magazine&#13;
article that supported what I had&#13;
said. I think it was his way of&#13;
saying maybe I was right about&#13;
the War after all.&#13;
I never wrote back - that being&#13;
another story in itself. I baven't&#13;
heard from him since.&#13;
It angers me 'when I think of&#13;
what happened to Claude. It&#13;
IlyMan:~&#13;
I wonder about my friend&#13;
Claude. I wonder what happened&#13;
to him. I wonder if he is alive. I&#13;
wonder what he thinks !lOW.&#13;
He was my boyhood friend -&#13;
not that we were always together,&#13;
but rather that we could understand&#13;
one another. It's&#13;
something tha t people who are&#13;
considered "strange" by others&#13;
often share - empathy.&#13;
I went to school with him till&#13;
tenth grade when he went back&#13;
South with his brother. I saw him&#13;
briefly a lew summers after that,&#13;
and then about two years ago&#13;
before the Army sent him to&#13;
VIetnam&#13;
He was a rebel. He was a rebel&#13;
by brrth and by inclination. He&#13;
was Incapable of being forced to&#13;
do anything - he was too proud,&#13;
100 independent. Maybe it was&#13;
because he came from a dirt poor&#13;
family and had a father who had&#13;
the stature and presence of a&#13;
mountain The old man towered&#13;
over you He was tough and unvarnished&#13;
He told you right off&#13;
what he thought&#13;
laybe this gave Claude the&#13;
uent integrity he had. It was&#13;
there. He was a friend you&#13;
respected. He had intelligence,&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
v&#13;
o&#13;
I&#13;
C&#13;
E&#13;
S&#13;
I .see my friend ClaUde&#13;
tenth grade education fi~'&#13;
a war that has ~1I&#13;
defensible, and belieVingin It..&#13;
I see myself unable to&#13;
Shakespeare volunlarily bee::&#13;
of the memories of S~&#13;
in high school English cIasieI.&#13;
fin~ m~se1f ignorant of I&#13;
prejuediced against c~&#13;
music because of having itforeed&#13;
on me 10 grade scbooL I&#13;
remember dress codes 8IId&#13;
actively rebelling against ,.:&#13;
I see the bones of dead IlIindLI&#13;
see my friend ClaUde.I see JII!fI&#13;
of myself.&#13;
It may be a lell over fear from lost times&#13;
of plague and other forms of holocaust that&#13;
precipitate the disgust we have for small&#13;
creatures. Whatever it may be. many of us&#13;
recall lying face down on a cold Iloor,&#13;
twenty inches below the warm sheets that&#13;
cradled our nightmare, where the number&#13;
and size of the attackers seemed to&#13;
aggravate terror all the more.&#13;
To my mind there is but one&#13;
producer-director who's exploitation&#13;
of our inborn fears&#13;
01 little beasts approaches&#13;
eloquence. He is Alfred&#13;
Hitchcock,thatround&#13;
gentleman who&#13;
would "good&#13;
evening" us into&#13;
chills on the "glass&#13;
teat" or would&#13;
mysteriously show up&#13;
standing on a comer&#13;
an films like&#13;
"Psycho" or "The&#13;
Birds" .&#13;
background story had exhausted itself, I&#13;
learned Willard's despondent mother has&#13;
died, making the young man prey to his bos .&#13;
and deceased father's parther (Ernest&#13;
Borgnine). He wants the large old home&#13;
where Willard and friends live to be torn&#13;
down so they may build' a few apartment&#13;
buildings and make some "big money".&#13;
Willard learns of all this, and, after&#13;
a comical scene where," on&#13;
Willard's command, the rats&#13;
raid a party the boss has&#13;
thrown, the rats are told to&#13;
munch on the empl!'yer,&#13;
which they do,&#13;
realizing a befitting&#13;
end for the man.&#13;
Earlier in the&#13;
sequence of the film&#13;
the old man killed one&#13;
of Willard's favorites&#13;
. .. a rat named&#13;
Socrates, who&#13;
responded extremely&#13;
well to the Sesame&#13;
Street-like training&#13;
given free of charge&#13;
to all Willard's&#13;
friends . . . a bit of&#13;
the old revenge.&#13;
by Sandy Principe&#13;
Artists and designers&#13;
have had something to do&#13;
with nearly every manmade&#13;
object. Consequently,&#13;
the field of art has become&#13;
very broad and diverse. The&#13;
major areas could be listed&#13;
as advertising design,&#13;
illustration, fashion&#13;
illustration, photography,&#13;
industrial design, dimensional&#13;
design, interior&#13;
design, fabric design, fine&#13;
arts and Iasion design. Still,&#13;
there are hundreds upon&#13;
hundreds of careers within&#13;
these fields. All of these&#13;
fields break down into an&#13;
enormous number of&#13;
specific jobs which _.&#13;
fascinating way II&#13;
overlapping, Ink!rloctill&#13;
and leading iDto •&#13;
another. An iDteriar&#13;
designer decides to _.&#13;
lamp and finds that Mila&#13;
~&#13;
become an iDdaIfrIaI&#13;
designer. An advertlilil&#13;
designer paints a piclIre ..&#13;
fit into one of his layulIlIII&#13;
finds that he's aDilllll1nllr&#13;
Commercial art ud&#13;
industrial design lit&#13;
projected as expaIICIllII&#13;
fields. This caD be II·&#13;
My boots had just been shined, Ifve lIT&#13;
take a skuff or two. The shirt I was -me&#13;
was almost free of wrinkles. It was llIICof l1li&#13;
kind you wear without ironing. Mylevis '""&#13;
faded, but only enough to give II.-&#13;
character. Numerous rips and tears in l1l'i&#13;
suede coa t had been sewen with lI1e skill of'&#13;
tailor. According to my standards, I tbDU8bl'&#13;
looked pretty spiffy.&#13;
Unfortunately, my standards and thoIt'&#13;
some restaurants differ measurablyaft8'1111&#13;
wrinkled shirt. Esquire's fasian edIlll1' ;[&#13;
ha ve laughed me off the ten best dreIIId&#13;
but the editors of Seed would probebly bllf&#13;
patted me on the back. TheproblemIbId-:&#13;
this specific attire, was in findiing a ~eII1&#13;
eat a late night dinner, other thaD a&#13;
spoon. ,-&#13;
Maggie and I had just seen M~ III&#13;
Mrs. Miller at the Roosevell1beater.~&#13;
about fifteen minutes after eleven 0111......&#13;
evening. My date had on her fineSl .-&#13;
sweatshirt, corduroy bell-bottom~ ..&#13;
suede shoes direct from May's&#13;
New York City. . at'"&#13;
I tried to think of a nice place to ea:...-&#13;
time of night. We ha:dn't eaten supper, __&#13;
us hunger for something more lbaJI I ,-&#13;
burger. I thought for a minute at !WOo&#13;
came up with Carl's. sIIJlIIII!&#13;
Those college and high scbo01 ...&#13;
who are familiar with this place. ~ III•&#13;
there are two names. If a male IS ItIt&#13;
formal date of sorts, he may ~~ ..&#13;
female he is escorting, 'how a)loU .........&#13;
Villa 0' Carlo?' Someone in m~&#13;
would instead say of the same '1"'-&#13;
'Hey, ya wanna eat at Carl's?' ~.-&#13;
D'Carlo lends itself nicely to&#13;
moods. _ .... fIIl1 ",.&#13;
. Because it was late, we c:vu-JJ -. 01&#13;
pizza at Carl's, so we ordered •&#13;
"YOU DIRTY RATS"&#13;
Due to marvelous WILLARD - Ja me. Cagney&#13;
photography and Bruce Davison&#13;
special effects, the Sondra Locke&#13;
latter of these films Elsa Lanchester&#13;
scared the hell out of Michael Dante&#13;
me, and had me&#13;
looking to the skies Ernest Borgnine&#13;
for that one black- Directed by Daniel Mann&#13;
bird, who, with a devilish look in his dark&#13;
eyes would signal an airborne armada to&#13;
pick my bones, leaving only a belt buckle&#13;
and a plastic-coated Parks ide LD. to tell of&#13;
my fate.&#13;
Hitchcock also compelled Anthony&#13;
PerkillS, the perfect inconspicuous mad.&#13;
man, to carry out these ghastly deeds.&#13;
More than coincidence is working when&#13;
Bruce Davison walks slight and timid into&#13;
the depth of field of "Willard"&#13;
His actions are more labored and&#13;
clumsy, letting on a kind of amateur strain&#13;
rather than the smooth unfaltering intensity&#13;
displayed by Perkins; a quality of&#13;
portrayal that initiates the slow and steady&#13;
build to the end, where the ugly truth is&#13;
uncovered.&#13;
Consistency reigned in this film as Ernest&#13;
Borgnine, a sometimes brilliant&#13;
performer, played the worst role of his&#13;
career.&#13;
IlIStead of feathers I was given fur. The&#13;
fur from hundreds, no, thousands of rather&#13;
talented rats. who befriend Willard in a timf&#13;
of great de,JeCtiOll,filling his depressin~&#13;
world With appreciative squeaks and&#13;
caresses. In fact, their kindness and&#13;
cuteness was SOthoroughly played out that&#13;
I began to find these little fellows to bear a&#13;
::'~n common with my higher caste gerAfter&#13;
uite a long and lIIIDecesaary&#13;
Willard gets the rat&#13;
fur out of his ears&#13;
eyes, nose and throat and comes-to hi~&#13;
senses, ~wns the remaining ra ts and&#13;
burys their remains. He is sure of his ad-:&#13;
justrnent to a normal, ratless existence and&#13;
IOVlles a girl, we see only in profile until&#13;
this point in the film. '&#13;
As Ourlovebirds are eating a quiet dinner&#13;
at home, WIllard spies "Ben" anoth&#13;
head rat, who somehow has es~aped ;:;&#13;
clutChes of the law.&#13;
.The girl is hustled off and the aUdience is&#13;
gIVen a. chance to change its mind about&#13;
':"ts as timid Willard is torn to bits by furry&#13;
IItlle creatures with a grUdge.&#13;
Many of the problems encountered (tinny&#13;
mus~c, sp~lty photography) were&#13;
repa.lr~ble ..Tune would have been the best&#13;
mediclDe ID accomplishing this and it&#13;
seemed. at ~lDts that someone forgot all&#13;
about direction, making a nearly plotless&#13;
• shocker grow weary under the weight of&#13;
s~ntaneity. It's a good one for the kids who&#13;
mIght want to catch it at a Saturday&#13;
matmee, but beware of what they might&#13;
bring home in little cardboard boxes.&#13;
wiJliams 'Sorensen&#13;
and, to my mind, the inborn&#13;
sensitivity of a poet - be knew&#13;
melancholy. He knew, too, 1&#13;
think, the price bis rebellion coul~&#13;
bums me. They took ~m and&#13;
ed him, and beat him, ~nd&#13;
screw h ped his brain up mto then c op beled it little pieces and r~sem .&#13;
education meant enf ol'Cing codes. drea.&#13;
be. he •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
he was "normal . sol say "they" purposely.&#13;
I almost pity these&#13;
discover that educau0~· 'to&#13;
than keeping your sbi ~&#13;
tucked in. The shock rn rt ~&#13;
terrible. The John Hosrna:a ht&#13;
e~ucation must have un Ii&#13;
mmds because of this at ti~Y&#13;
1 saw him two years ago and&#13;
had changed. There was still th_e&#13;
pride, the forthrightness, bu~ it&#13;
was different now. Something&#13;
was missing. He hadn't gotten&#13;
past tenth grade. He'd been on the&#13;
road for a while, he said. He'd&#13;
gotten busted once, and now was&#13;
going to Vietnam. He wanted to.&#13;
He thought it was ri~t. He&#13;
believed in it. Something was&#13;
missing.&#13;
the forces that fucked Because 1 d aren't him over are nebu ous, an hi&#13;
V&#13;
0&#13;
even conscious of the pre C&#13;
damage they wreaked. say&#13;
"they" and I mean the schools, I&#13;
mean aspects of a society that&#13;
foster this type of latent&#13;
totalitarianism·&#13;
I feel anger, but more, fear.&#13;
In the end I lack the cha~&#13;
feel true compassion for "'-lo&#13;
people. My contempt is too ~&#13;
To realize the amount of ~~ they have fucked up, the r:I"'&#13;
they have destroyed~&#13;
creativity they have stilled is~&#13;
~uch.&#13;
At lunch we talked. We talked of&#13;
what had gone on with each of us,&#13;
about Vietnam. We agreed to&#13;
\\Tite one another. He wouldn't let&#13;
I&#13;
C&#13;
E&#13;
s&#13;
Because I look at myself _and ~ee&#13;
what I went through m high&#13;
school. I realize they came ~lose&#13;
to lobotomizing me. Th~y did_ to&#13;
an extent; I lost a ~ert~m cuttmg edge of preception m high school.&#13;
Something was ground o~t of me&#13;
there. Visions I began ~th were&#13;
lost. Lobotomize is the right word.&#13;
I ·see my friend Claude With&#13;
tenth grade education figh~ 1&#13;
a wa~ that has . become in.&#13;
me defensible, and beheving in it pay for his meal. . I received a letter from him&#13;
about a month later. I had argued&#13;
a point on the War and now _he&#13;
wrote he had seen a magazme&#13;
article that supported what I had&#13;
said. I think it was his way of&#13;
saying maybe I was right about&#13;
the War after all.&#13;
1 feel ambivalent towards most&#13;
of my high school teachers and&#13;
principals. On one hand I f~el&#13;
contempt towards them. I despise&#13;
• them for what they have done to&#13;
I see myself unable to ~&#13;
Shakespeare voluntarily beca d&#13;
of the memories of Shakespeare in high school English classes 1 find myself ignorant of ~&#13;
prejuediced against classical&#13;
music bec~use of having it forced&#13;
on me m grade school. I&#13;
remember dress codes and not&#13;
actively rebelling against them&#13;
education. · • On the other hand I feel sorry&#13;
a for them. The sense of failure&#13;
they must experience in the dark&#13;
of night when they realize that&#13;
three years ago they believed&#13;
I never wrote back - that being&#13;
another story in itself. I haven't&#13;
heard from him since.&#13;
It angers me ·when I think of&#13;
what happened to Claude. It&#13;
in&#13;
"P ycho"&#13;
Bird " .&#13;
background story had exhausted itself, I&#13;
learned Willard's despondent mother has&#13;
died, making the young man prey to his bos&#13;
and deceased father's parther (Ernest&#13;
Borgnine). He wants the large old home&#13;
where Willard and friends live to be torn&#13;
down so they may build· a few apartment&#13;
buildings and make some "big money".&#13;
Willard learns of all this, and, after&#13;
a comical scene where, · on&#13;
Willard's command, the rats&#13;
raid a party the boss has&#13;
~~\IPIIL thrown, the rats are told to&#13;
munch on the employer,&#13;
which they · do,&#13;
realizing a befitting&#13;
end for the man.&#13;
Earlier in the&#13;
sequence of the film&#13;
the old man killed one&#13;
of Willard's favorites&#13;
... a rat named&#13;
Socrates, who&#13;
responded extremely&#13;
"YOU DIRTY RATS" well to the Sesame&#13;
Du to marvelous WILLARD&#13;
photography and Bruce Davison&#13;
pedal effects, the Sondra Locke&#13;
I tter of these films Elsa Lanchester&#13;
ared the hell out of Michael Dante&#13;
- Jamea Cagney Street-like training&#13;
given free of charge&#13;
to all Willard's&#13;
friends . . . a bit of&#13;
the old revenge.&#13;
me, and had me Ernest Borgnine&#13;
looking to the skies Directed by Daniel Mann for that one black- Willard gets the rat&#13;
fur out of his ears,&#13;
eyes, nose and throat and comes - to his&#13;
senses, drowns the remaining rats and&#13;
burys their remains. He is sure of his ad-•&#13;
justment to a normal, ratless existence and&#13;
invites a girl, we see only in profile, until this point in the film.&#13;
bird, who, with a devilish look in his dark&#13;
eye would signal an airborne armada to&#13;
pick my bones, leaving only a belt buckle&#13;
and a pla ·tic-&lt;:oated Parkside I.D. to tell of&#13;
my fate.&#13;
Hitchcock also compelled Anthony P kins, the perfect inconspicuous madman,&#13;
to carry out these ghastly deeds.&#13;
More than coincidence is working when&#13;
Bruce Davison walks slight and timid into&#13;
the depth of field of "Willard"&#13;
His actions are more labored and&#13;
clumsy letting on a kind of amateur strain&#13;
rather 1&#13;
than the smooth unfaltering intensity&#13;
displayed by Perkins; a quality of&#13;
portrayal that initiates the slow and stea~y&#13;
build to the end, where the ugly truth 1s&#13;
uncovered.&#13;
on istency reigned in this film as Ern&#13;
l Borgnine, a sometimes brilliant&#13;
performer, played the worst role of his&#13;
c r r.&#13;
Inst ad of feathers I was given fur. The&#13;
fur from hundreds, no, thousands of rather&#13;
tal nted rats who befriend Willard in a tim£&#13;
of gr at dejection, filling his depressin~ world with appreciative squeaks and i car . In fact, their kindness and&#13;
cuten wa so thoroughly played out that&#13;
I began to fmd these little fellows to bear a&#13;
lot in common with my higher caste ger- bils.&#13;
After quite a long and unnecessary&#13;
As our lovebirds are eating a quiet dinner&#13;
at home, Willard spies "Ben", another&#13;
head rat, who somehow has escaped the clutches of the law.&#13;
The girl is hustled off and the audience is&#13;
given a chance to change its mind about&#13;
rats as timid Willard is torn to bits by furry little creatures with a grudge.&#13;
Many of the problems encountered (tinny&#13;
music, spotty photography) were&#13;
repairable. Time would have been the best&#13;
medicine in accomplishing this and it&#13;
seemed at points that someone forgot all&#13;
about direction, making a nearly ploUess&#13;
shocker grow weary under the weight of&#13;
spontaneity. It's a good one for the kids who&#13;
might want to catch it at a Saturday matinee, but beware of what they might&#13;
bring home in little cardb~d boxes.&#13;
Williams ·Sorensen&#13;
I see the bones of dead minds. I&#13;
see my friend Claude. I see pans of myself.&#13;
by Sandy Principe&#13;
Artists and designers&#13;
have had something to do&#13;
with nearly every manmade&#13;
object. Consequently,&#13;
the field of art has become&#13;
very broad and diverse. The&#13;
major areas could be listed&#13;
as advertising design,&#13;
illustration, fashion&#13;
illustration, photography,&#13;
industrial design, dimensional&#13;
design, interior&#13;
design, fabric design, fine&#13;
arts and fasion design. Still,&#13;
there are httndreds upon&#13;
hundreds of careers within&#13;
these fields. All of these&#13;
fields break down into an&#13;
enormous number of&#13;
specific jobs which have 1&#13;
fascinating way&#13;
overlapping, interlocking&#13;
and leading into one&#13;
another. An inter10&#13;
designer decides to design a&#13;
lamp and finds that he bas&#13;
become an&#13;
~ industr11!&#13;
designer. An advertising&#13;
designer paints a picture&#13;
fit into one of his layouts and&#13;
finds that he's an illustrator&#13;
Commercial art and&#13;
industrial design are&#13;
projected as expanding&#13;
fields. This can be at·&#13;
My boots had just been shined, give. or&#13;
take a skuff or two. The shirt I was weartng&#13;
was almost free of wrinkles. It was one ci the&#13;
kind you wear without ironing. My levis were&#13;
faded, but only eno';'gh to give . °:°&#13;
character: Numerous rips and tears _in of i&#13;
suede coat had been sewen with the ~~""ti tailor. According to my standards, I LIIUU6"&#13;
looked pretty spiffy. d&#13;
Unfortunately, my standards and ~ tilt&#13;
some restaurants differ measurably _aft&#13;
wrinkled shirt. Esquire's fasion editor :·&#13;
have laughed me off the ten best dr~ ha&#13;
but the editors of Seed would proba Jd&#13;
patted me on the back. T~e p_ro~~em 1 lace&#13;
this specific attire, was m fmdiing 8 P greasY eat a late night dinner, other than 8&#13;
spoon. McCabe .- Maggie and I had just seen It&#13;
Mrs. Miller at the Roosevelt Theater.sunda.&#13;
about fifteen minutes after eleve~ 0!~ ~&#13;
evening. My date had on her fin nts and&#13;
sweatshirt, corduroy bell-bot~om :rnent&#13;
suede shoes direct from May s ba&#13;
New York City. tattlJal I tried to think of a nice place to ea rna&#13;
time of night. Weha:dn'teatensuptha~ 8 •&#13;
us hunger for something more .... 0 burger · te or ,,. ' . I thought for a mmu&#13;
came up with Carl's. ool st&#13;
Those college and hi~ sch 1tno\l'&#13;
who are familiar with this plat is out tct'&#13;
there are two names. If a ma e est to&#13;
formal date of sorts, he may ~~ dinflel' •&#13;
female he is escorting, 'how_ a mY situl&#13;
Villa D' Carlo'?' Someone m e restslJ11ll&#13;
would instead say of the/~?1carl's or\&#13;
'Hey, ya wanna eat at ~r s · lifestyJeS D'Carlo lends itself mcely to&#13;
moods. could ()Illy r,611 Because it was late, wered 8 12 u,c:b- (le&#13;
pizza at Carl's, so we orde &#13;
OMit ..&#13;
..... years ago, ina land&#13;
-- thel"elived a man&#13;
"'=~w developed the&#13;
.IIJ rkable talent of&#13;
~:liOg 17 mand~rin&#13;
~o g e s w h I I e&#13;
~taoeouSlY bal,:mcing a&#13;
~elon on hIS nose,&#13;
~ Welsh coal mining&#13;
es and accompanying&#13;
~ on the zither played&#13;
'i1b bis toes.&#13;
Tbis strange ability&#13;
zed the local townspeollPiplewho&#13;
turned ~ut&#13;
larly to see him&#13;
~tice Saturday ·af-&#13;
~ns on his front lawn.-&#13;
W1JiIe his fnends enjoyed&#13;
.. tClJing him very much,&#13;
tiel' realized tha this grea t&#13;
"t was hidden in such a&#13;
I1118D townand urged him to ,tothecity where he could&#13;
be appreciated by a great&#13;
III1Dberof people..&#13;
not possibly have been any&#13;
better.&#13;
.But then a sad thing&#13;
happened. He began to grow&#13;
. old. The twelve oranges&#13;
dwindled to ten, then eight.&#13;
The watermelon gave way&#13;
to a small cantalope, and&#13;
saddest of all, those once&#13;
lightning toes could no&#13;
longer perform magic on the&#13;
zither. His fame dwindled&#13;
along with his fortune and .&#13;
one day, friendless and&#13;
dejected, the man disappeared.&#13;
And so he practiced day&#13;
and night and day, until he&#13;
~s ready. At a big festival,&#13;
WIth many people in attendance,&#13;
he ran out on the&#13;
stage with his oranges,&#13;
watermelon and zither and&#13;
began to perform as once&#13;
the master had. The crowd&#13;
overwhelmed by the sight of&#13;
the act being performed,&#13;
. ; 'I . .,&#13;
.:. ,. . .&#13;
, , .&#13;
\._: !\ 'I ". ;......:.:&#13;
enjoy it, but what can you do&#13;
completely 011 your own?"&#13;
The crowd hushed&#13;
awaiting the answer. The&#13;
performer t then ruJjriog&#13;
that in fact there was&#13;
nothing else he could do&#13;
turned slowly and walked&#13;
off the stage, never to be&#13;
seen again.&#13;
THE END&#13;
you can do completely by&#13;
yourself that we can show to&#13;
the public belen it II too&#13;
late?" The group thouIht&#13;
for a minute.&#13;
"00 not worry," said the&#13;
gMlUp in unison sopRno,&#13;
"We, being 01 nimble banda&#13;
and quick minds, can write&#13;
and play songs as ba ve&#13;
never been heard before. We&#13;
shall use such things as folk&#13;
guitars, slow ballads and&#13;
even vocal harmony that we&#13;
may please you."&#13;
This little known&#13;
Bavarian fairyta1e, it is&#13;
rumored, was re-discovered&#13;
by Chris Wright, producer of&#13;
Ten Years After. He also&#13;
being of quick mind, saw in&#13;
it a warning. After. all, he&#13;
thought, hadn't his group&#13;
made it by re-recording old&#13;
rock and Boogie tunes?&#13;
Hadn't they been the&#13;
vanguard of the old rock&#13;
revival? And most important,&#13;
had Ihey ever&#13;
really been noted for their&#13;
originality?&#13;
Answering his own&#13;
questions, he rushed to the&#13;
recording studio.&#13;
liMy boys," be said,&#13;
pointing to the last&#13;
paragraph of the story, "we&#13;
are in grea t danger of&#13;
walking slowly off the stage&#13;
and never being heard from&#13;
again." "Is there nothing&#13;
And after hearing these&#13;
things on their tatest album,&#13;
"A Space in Time", he was&#13;
pleased. He found that they&#13;
could be as delicate and&#13;
sensitive as they we;e RW&#13;
and exciting. He beard them&#13;
play very much in the style&#13;
of the Moody Blues, but&#13;
different enough to still be&#13;
genuinely original. Fine&#13;
harmonization, vocally and&#13;
instrumentally, a distinct&#13;
element of freshness, and&#13;
their flawless execution&#13;
made him so pleased that he&#13;
even let them play a few old&#13;
rock aod Boogie tunes to&#13;
round off this very fme&#13;
recording.&#13;
And so, like all producers,&#13;
he lived happily every after&#13;
Years went by and soon :;&#13;
all that was left were a few'; ,&#13;
fond memories of this once:&#13;
amazing performer, now all&#13;
but forgotten.&#13;
But in another town, many&#13;
miles away from the land of&#13;
the old performer's birth, a&#13;
young man known to be of&#13;
nimble hands and quick&#13;
mind was studying the&#13;
strange legend of the performer&#13;
and his tricks.&#13;
"If this is true," he&#13;
thought, "then why could&#13;
not I, being of nimble hands&#13;
and quick mind, learn to&#13;
perform as he did and&#13;
perhaps recapture his fame.&#13;
lt could make me a very&#13;
wealthy man."&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
once again rose to its feet&#13;
and cheered wildly. He was&#13;
on his way. Just as the&#13;
master before him, his&#13;
amazing talent was in&#13;
demand, bringing him both&#13;
wealth and fame.&#13;
But again, just as before,&#13;
something very sad happened.&#13;
One day, while&#13;
performing in front of a very&#13;
large crowd, a man rose&#13;
from the audience asking if&#13;
he might pose a question.&#13;
i&lt;As an imitator ." he said,&#13;
"you are very good and we&#13;
Doingthis, he soon earned&#13;
!aIDebeyond belief. Across&#13;
!be world people clamored&#13;
fer bis wondrous act. While&#13;
lOme labeled him as&#13;
degenerateand tasteless, he&#13;
DOnetheless became the&#13;
mostpopular performer in&#13;
tbeentertainment biz. For a&#13;
wbileeverything was just&#13;
_derful and, in fact, could&#13;
illustrators and&#13;
photographers Professor&#13;
John lurphy of Park ide's&#13;
Art Department explained&#13;
that "In this locale, many&#13;
persons could be used 10&#13;
graphic design and industrial&#13;
design. These field&#13;
could then lead to advertising&#13;
art and even film&#13;
set up. It'll take a few years&#13;
yet to set up Parks.de for&#13;
this." Still, photograph)'&#13;
becoming increa ingly&#13;
crowded. , lurphy compared&#13;
it to drama school as an&#13;
area hard to get into and&#13;
requiring a lot of time. "You&#13;
have to spend a lot of time&#13;
(CooUnued on pago 81&#13;
growing recognition among&#13;
middle-income families of&#13;
the value of decorators'&#13;
services, and increasing use&#13;
of design services for&#13;
commercial establishments&#13;
should contribute to a&#13;
greater demand for these&#13;
workers. In addition to&#13;
newly created jobs, some&#13;
openings will arise each&#13;
year from the need to&#13;
replace designers and&#13;
decorators who retire or&#13;
leave the field for other&#13;
reasons.&#13;
Graphic communications&#13;
is a rapidly expanding industry.&#13;
Thus there will he a&#13;
need for advertising&#13;
Young people having only&#13;
average ability and little&#13;
specialized training,&#13;
however, will encounter&#13;
competition for beginning&#13;
jobs and will have limited&#13;
opportunity for adopportunities&#13;
for employment.&#13;
Applicants who&#13;
can design and plan the&#13;
functional arrangement of&#13;
interior space will be in&#13;
strong demand. Young&#13;
people without formal&#13;
training will find it increasingly&#13;
difficult to enter&#13;
the field.&#13;
A slow but steady increase&#13;
in employment of interior&#13;
designers and decorators is&#13;
anticipated throughout the&#13;
1970'S. Population growth,&#13;
larger expenditures for&#13;
home and office furnishing, .&#13;
the increasing availability&#13;
of well-designed furnishings&#13;
at moderate prices, a&#13;
lributed to our industrial&#13;
society and growing&#13;
popooJation.An estimated&#13;
50,000commercial artists&#13;
and 10,000 industrial&#13;
designerswere employed in&#13;
1J&amp;ll. Most of these people&#13;
What It's Worth I&#13;
vancement.&#13;
Talented art school or&#13;
college graduates who&#13;
majored in interior design&#13;
and decoration will find&#13;
good opportunities for&#13;
employment. Applicants&#13;
who can design and&#13;
decoration will find good&#13;
lind employment in large&#13;
c:iIiei on the staffs of large&#13;
companies. Employment&#13;
and advancement opportunitiesfor&#13;
talented and&#13;
"oil-trained commercial&#13;
artists and industrial&#13;
designersare expected to be&#13;
throughout the 70's.&#13;
Kup's Show&#13;
(Cootinued from Pago 31&#13;
news stories but interpret them.&#13;
You must explain to the public what&#13;
is behind the government ruling, what&#13;
is behind the government decision,&#13;
what's behind our Jack of housing, our&#13;
food problems and these take&#13;
authorities and newspapers today&#13;
make a habit of hiring people who are&#13;
authorities.&#13;
S: Do you think newspapers have a&#13;
broader sense of social conscience than&#13;
in the past?&#13;
Kupc:lDet: Oh much more, sure.&#13;
NS: Why? Is it public demand ... or&#13;
what? -&#13;
KupelDet: There are a Jot of reasons.&#13;
Public demand and a sense of&#13;
responsibility. We realize that these&#13;
are major problems today and we've&#13;
got to get-in there and explain them to&#13;
the public. We can't just sit on the&#13;
sidelines and report news without&#13;
going out and searching for it,&#13;
analyzing it, doing studies on the urban&#13;
problems and so forth.&#13;
Papers have become much more&#13;
responsible .. The old days of the socalled&#13;
!'yellow journalism", playing up&#13;
divorces and killings and so forth. They&#13;
are still news but they're not played the&#13;
way they used to be played, much more&#13;
room is devoted to the serious&#13;
problems of the day.&#13;
NS: Do you think the press has influenced&#13;
television more than&#13;
(Cootinued on Page 6)&#13;
tender and the cheese still hot. I wasn't really&#13;
amazed that the pizza was good, just a bit&#13;
suprised.&#13;
Anyone eating here during normal serving&#13;
hours can choose from dishes that sound&#13;
like last names on a roster of Italian soccer&#13;
players. Pasta AlI'uovo (home made&#13;
noodles), spaghetti, mostaccrolt, gnocchi&#13;
(home made dumplings) lasagna and ravoli&#13;
(home made with meat). The Amencan lineup&#13;
features steaks, sea foods and sandwiches.&#13;
The prices seem to be quite reas0':'8bl~.&#13;
There may be obvious shortcomings m the&#13;
food and service at Villa D'Carolo, but on my&#13;
visit I ran into none. The service was excellent,&#13;
from the time the waitress lit the&#13;
candle at our table, to the time she asked if we&#13;
were enjoying our meal. The pizza was excellent,&#13;
according to my ex~ences With&#13;
Italian culinary dishes. The price of the pizza&#13;
and drinks came to $2.80. .&#13;
All these good points concernmg the&#13;
jtalian restaurant do not serve as a recommendation,&#13;
but only an explanalJon as to the&#13;
popularity Carl's has earned. On our way&#13;
through the dining area as we left, we saw&#13;
three longhairs equipped With headbands&#13;
eating at one table, a softball player still m&#13;
uniform with his date at another, and a few&#13;
tables away, a couple formally dressed on&#13;
their night out.. . . After eating the pIZza, and enjoYing the&#13;
atmosphere, I paid the check and left the&#13;
waitress a shiny hall dollar. As I glanced back&#13;
at the cashier on my way out the door, I&#13;
noticed she smiled at me m sort of a funny&#13;
y It hit me when I got to the car. She must&#13;
:v~ noticed the wrinkles had fmally. wo~ed&#13;
their way out of my shirt su~lymg just&#13;
enough of an edge to put me solidly on the&#13;
Sunday night best dressed list at Carl's&#13;
Restaurant, not Villa D'Carlo. .&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Maggie'shalf there was to be only cheese. I&#13;
onteredcheese, onions and mushrooms on the&#13;
otherhalf. She got a 7-Up, and I, a Coke.&#13;
After we had ordered I. asked the&#13;
waitress if I could read ov~r the menu. A&#13;
~ole on the cover immediately caught my&#13;
eye. Villa D'Carlo "where food is im-&#13;
~?rtaJized and pizza'is an art." Upon reading&#13;
IS, I looked around the dining area for a&#13;
shrine to ravoli or a monument to steak. I&#13;
~onclUdedthat the food is immortalized only&#13;
In the . mmds of the employees.&#13;
til In glancing around the dining area&#13;
OUgh,I realized that we were sitting in the&#13;
newestaddition to Carl's. This restaurant was&#13;
opened in 1963. Late last year, the&#13;
I1lanagement found they had to expand&#13;
because of the business they had established.&#13;
The new dining room provides an excellent&#13;
~~~.Phere to eat. They also offer banquet&#13;
eililies. Carl's has come into its own.&#13;
M Wewaited only a short tiine for the pizza.&#13;
ter eating a few pieces I realized that the&#13;
truat was excellent, the m'ushrooms juicy and&#13;
- -&#13;
Y years ago, in a land Jl'!,y there lived a man&#13;
"1 1 m;how developed the&#13;
fllO!~kable talent ?f&#13;
reJJI rng 17 mandarin&#13;
jlld 1&#13;
0 g e s w h i 1 e&#13;
o_ r ~taneously balancing a&#13;
siJ!ltermelon on his nose, ~ . g Welsh coal mining&#13;
~ and accompanying&#13;
:self on the zither played&#13;
with his toes.&#13;
fbis stra!}ge abilit_y&#13;
azed the local towns1111&#13;
pie who turned ~ut&#13;
re:ularly to see him&#13;
actice Saturday -af-&#13;
~noons on his front lawn.~&#13;
While his friends enjoyed&#13;
watching him very_ much,&#13;
Ibey realized that his great&#13;
gift was hidden in such a&#13;
SlllBll town and urged him to&#13;
goto the city where he could&#13;
be appreciated by a great&#13;
wmber of people.&#13;
Doing this, he soon earned&#13;
rame beyond belief. Across&#13;
lbe world people clamored&#13;
for his wondrous act. While&#13;
ome labeled him as&#13;
degenerate and tasteless, he&#13;
nonetheless became the&#13;
most popular performer in&#13;
the entertainment biz. For a .&#13;
bile everything was just&#13;
wonderful and, in fact, could&#13;
tributed to our industrial&#13;
ociety and growing&#13;
popoulation. An estimated&#13;
50,000 commercial artists&#13;
and 10,000 industrial&#13;
designers were employed in&#13;
1968. Most of these people&#13;
What It's&#13;
find employment in large&#13;
cities on the staffs of large&#13;
companies. Employment&#13;
and advancement opportunities&#13;
for talented and&#13;
ell-trained commercial&#13;
artists and industrial&#13;
designers are expected to be&#13;
good throughout the 70's.&#13;
not possibly have been any&#13;
better.&#13;
But then a sad thing&#13;
happened. He began to grow&#13;
old. The twelve oranges&#13;
dwindled to ten, then eight.&#13;
The watermelon gave way&#13;
to a small cantalope, and&#13;
saddest of all, those once&#13;
lightning toes could no&#13;
longer perform magic on the&#13;
zither. His fame dwindled&#13;
along with his fortune and&#13;
one day, friendless and&#13;
dejected, the man disappeared.&#13;
&#13;
Years went by and soon&#13;
all that was left were a few :&#13;
fond memories of this once :&#13;
amazing performer, now all&#13;
but forgotten.&#13;
But in another town, many&#13;
miles away from the land of&#13;
the old performer's birth, a&#13;
young man known to be of&#13;
nimble hands and quick&#13;
mind was studying the&#13;
strange legend of the performer&#13;
and his tricks.&#13;
"If this is true," he&#13;
thought, "then why could&#13;
not I, being of nimble hands&#13;
and quick mind, learn to&#13;
perform as he did and&#13;
perhaps recapture his fame.&#13;
It could make me a very&#13;
wealthy man."&#13;
Young people having only&#13;
average ability and little&#13;
specialized training,&#13;
however, will encounter&#13;
competition for beginning&#13;
jobs and will have limited&#13;
opportunity for adWorth&#13;
I&#13;
vancement.&#13;
Talented art school or&#13;
college graduates who&#13;
majored in interior design&#13;
and decoration will find&#13;
good opportunities for&#13;
employment. Applicants&#13;
who can design and&#13;
decoration will find good&#13;
And so he practiced day&#13;
and night and day, until he&#13;
w~s ready. At a big festival,&#13;
with many people in attendance,&#13;
be ran out on the&#13;
stage with bis oranges,&#13;
watermelon and zither and&#13;
began to perform as once&#13;
the master had. The crowd&#13;
overwhelmed by the sight of&#13;
the act being performed,&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
once again rose to its feet&#13;
and cheered wildly. He was&#13;
on his way. Just as the&#13;
master before him, his&#13;
amazing talent was in&#13;
demand, bringing him both&#13;
wealth and fame.&#13;
But again, just as before,&#13;
something very sad happened.&#13;
One day, while&#13;
performing in front of a very&#13;
large crowd, a man rose&#13;
from the audience asking if&#13;
he might pose a question.&#13;
"As an imitator," he said,&#13;
"you are very good and we&#13;
opportunities for employment.&#13;
Applicants who&#13;
can design and plan the&#13;
functional arrangement of&#13;
interior space will be in&#13;
strong demand. Young&#13;
people without formal&#13;
training will find it increasingly&#13;
difficult to enter&#13;
the field.&#13;
A slow but steady increase&#13;
in employment of interior&#13;
designers and decora ors is&#13;
anticipated throughout the&#13;
1970's. Population growth,&#13;
larger expenditures for&#13;
home and office furnishing, · the increasing availability&#13;
of well-designed furnishings&#13;
at moderate prices, a&#13;
tender and the cheese still hot. I wasn't really&#13;
amazed that the pizza was good, just a bit&#13;
suprised. Anyone eating here dur~ normal serving&#13;
hours can choose from dishes that sound&#13;
like last n~mes on a roster of Italian soccer&#13;
players. Pasta All'uovo (~o~e mad~&#13;
noodles), spaghetti, mostaccioh, gnocc~&#13;
(home made dumplings) lasagna a~d ra~oli&#13;
(home made with meat). The Amencan lineup&#13;
features steaks, sea f00?5 and sand"";ches.&#13;
The prices seem to be quite reasoI_13bl~.&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
There may be obvious shortcomings m the&#13;
food and service at Villa D'Carolo, but on my&#13;
visit I ran into none. The service was excellent&#13;
from the time the waitress Ii~ the&#13;
candle 1&#13;
at our table, to the time sh_e asked if we&#13;
were enjoying our meal. The p1~a was ~xcellent,&#13;
according lo my ex~nences '_Vlth&#13;
aggie's half there was to be only cheese. I Italian culinary dishes. The price of the pizza&#13;
ordered cheese, onions and mushrooms on the&#13;
0therhalf. She got a 7-Up, and!, a Coke.&#13;
After we had ordered I asked the&#13;
'N 'tr , ai ess if I could read over the menu. A&#13;
quote on the cover immediately caught my&#13;
eye, Villa D'Carlo "where food is imlll?rtalized&#13;
and pizza' is an art.' ' Upon reading&#13;
th~. I looked around the dining area for a&#13;
Shrine to ravoli, or a monument to steak. I&#13;
~onc}uded that the food is immortalized only&#13;
Ill the minds of the employees.&#13;
In glancing around the dining area&#13;
!hough, I realized that we were sitting in the&#13;
n west addition to Carl's. This restaurant was&#13;
0t&gt;ened in 1963. Late last year, the&#13;
lllanagement found they had to expand&#13;
~use of the business they had established.&#13;
e new dining room provides an excellent&#13;
:~~phere to eat. They also offer banquet&#13;
acilities. Carl's has come into its own.&#13;
Al We Waited only a short tiine for the pizza.&#13;
ter eating a few pieces I realized that the&#13;
crust was excellent, the n{usbrooms juicy and&#13;
and drinks came to $2.80. . All these good points concerrung the&#13;
Italian restaurant do not serve ~s a recommendation&#13;
but only an explanation as to the&#13;
popularity' Carl's has earned. On our way&#13;
through the dining area as w_e left, we saw&#13;
three longhairs equipped with head~n~s&#13;
eating at one table, a softball player still tn&#13;
uniform with his date al another, and a few&#13;
tables away, a couple formally dressed on&#13;
their night out. . . After eating the pizza, and enJoymg the&#13;
atmosphere, I paid the check and left the&#13;
waitress a shiny half dollar. As I glanced back&#13;
at the cashier on my war out the door, I&#13;
noticed she smiled at me m sort of a funny&#13;
way. It hit me when I got to the car. She must&#13;
have noticed the wrinkles ~d fmally_ wor~ed&#13;
their way out of my shirt sup~lymg Just&#13;
enough of an edge to put me solidly on the&#13;
Sunday night best dressed list at Carl's&#13;
Restaurant, not Villa D'Carlo. .&#13;
enjoy it, but what can you do&#13;
completely on your own?" you can do compl t&#13;
The crowd hushed&#13;
awaiting the answer. The&#13;
performer, then realizing&#13;
that in fact there "'as&#13;
nothing else he could do,&#13;
turned slowly and walked&#13;
off the stage, never to be&#13;
seen again.&#13;
THEE 'D&#13;
This 1i ttle no n&#13;
Bavarian fairytale, it ·&#13;
rumored, was re-discovered&#13;
by Chris Wright, producer of&#13;
Ten Years After. He also&#13;
being of quick mind sa ·n&#13;
it a warning. After. all he&#13;
thought, hadn't his group&#13;
made it by ~recording old&#13;
rock and Boogie tunes?&#13;
Hadn't they been the&#13;
vanguard of the old rock&#13;
revival? And most important,&#13;
had they e ·er&#13;
really been noted for their&#13;
originality?&#13;
Answering his own&#13;
questions, he rushed to the&#13;
recording studio.&#13;
" 1:y boys," he said,&#13;
pointing to the last&#13;
paragraph of the story, " ·e&#13;
are in great danger of&#13;
walking slowly off the sta e&#13;
and never being heard from&#13;
again." "ls there nothing&#13;
growing recognition among&#13;
middle-income famili of&#13;
the value of decorators'&#13;
ser ices. and increasing u&#13;
of design service for&#13;
commercial establishmen&#13;
should contribute to a&#13;
greater demand for th&#13;
worker' . In addition to&#13;
new! created jo ·, ome&#13;
openings will arise each&#13;
year from the need to&#13;
repl e d i ner nd&#13;
decorators who retire or&#13;
leave the field for olh r&#13;
reason .&#13;
Graphic communication&#13;
is a rapidl · e. panding indu&#13;
try. Thus the v.ill a&#13;
need for adverti ·ing&#13;
yourself that&#13;
th public&#13;
late'!" The roup&#13;
for a minut .&#13;
Kup's Show&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
. or&#13;
has inthan&#13;
&#13;
Kup's Show&#13;
&lt;Continuedfrom Page 5)&#13;
television bas influenced the press?&#13;
Kupclnet: No doubt television has&#13;
influenced the press m~I7 t1I.BD the&#13;
other way around. TeleVl~lOn IS new,&#13;
it's fresher, it's got a ~fe~ent approach&#13;
it's more immediate in many&#13;
reg~ and the press has had .to&#13;
change considerably because of It.&#13;
Many times we don't cover ~. story&#13;
direct because we feel teleVIsion IS&#13;
covering it ... that doesn't mean we&#13;
aren't going to cover a good hot sto.ry,&#13;
but many times we want to go behind&#13;
the story because televiston ~as done&#13;
such a good job of covermg It.&#13;
NS: Getting back to your show, would&#13;
you say that your show represents&#13;
younger people adequately, or is it top&#13;
heavy with older people?&#13;
Kupclnet: I'd have to say we're top&#13;
heavy on older people. We're always&#13;
looking for good bright young people.&#13;
We don't get enough of them, I admit&#13;
that. I'd like to get more young people,&#13;
We have a problem though. To sell a&#13;
show like this you've got to have names&#13;
and most of the young people don't&#13;
have names that the public recognizes.&#13;
The guests we have on the show are&#13;
famous authors, famous people in&#13;
pOlitics, statesmen, wbatever&#13;
they're in. Young people '--~&#13;
achieved this kind of ~...,&#13;
so it:s a little bit difficult for 111 b1N,&#13;
particular type of operation to ~&#13;
too many young people on. But ::',&#13;
making an effort all the tbne :It&#13;
more. ..&#13;
NS: Of all the shows YOU':ve &lt;1-.&#13;
there any particular show ibat'"&#13;
out in your mind as being ~&#13;
good? '--"&#13;
Kupcinet: Well, I like to tIUnt&#13;
we've had a good number ofsbowa ..&#13;
are above average. Ithink ~ ~&#13;
the show for making news first .... -.&#13;
show that Harry Truman was OIl '-&#13;
he had left the Presidency in ~ fItIt..&#13;
revealed the reason be fired 1"'-":::&#13;
MacArthur was because Ma;~&#13;
wanted to use the A-bomb in r;;r&#13;
For high class, high caliber&#13;
versation we had a show with !be:&#13;
Adlai Stevenson, Sir Charll!llno...::&#13;
Aldous Huxley and Harlow ~&#13;
the astronomer from ~&#13;
University. I think those four&#13;
tlemen were probably as ~&#13;
and as intelligent and brilllant ..&#13;
witty as any guests we've ever bid.&#13;
Here were four people, each of _&#13;
was brilliant in his own right ......&#13;
in a very lively exchange of 1..£&#13;
NEWSCOPE A"-I"It71&#13;
SELLYOUR BOOK&#13;
AUGUST 16-20&#13;
We pay cash for those booles&#13;
which are being used again in&#13;
the FQII semester.&#13;
MAIN CAMPUS STORE ONLY&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPf&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
-&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR&#13;
&amp; RESTAURANT Bauer Bauer look all three of his&#13;
(Continuedfrom Page I) degrees at Northwestern&#13;
faculty. But what impressed University in Evanston,&#13;
me most was his versatility, receiving his Ph.D. in 1959in&#13;
his creativity, and hi" public address and group&#13;
capacity for hard work. In communication. He taught&#13;
education, as in most other at the United States Air&#13;
endeavors, long hours and Force Academy from 195910&#13;
r&#13;
":========-~==:::::;;::~_~ha~rd~w:o:rk~pa~y~Of~f.~" __ ., 1961, when he joined the faculty of Bowling Green ar&#13;
Rfl.AY iUUSEMENT CfNTER ,an instructor in speech.&#13;
-. At Bowling Green he rose&#13;
10 full professor in 1968,and&#13;
MINI- GOLF in 1967 was chosen Faculty&#13;
Man of the Year by a joint&#13;
ARCHEI'l." I student-faculty committee.&#13;
f'- , He served as Direclor of&#13;
Graduate Admissions and&#13;
BIth &amp;; SHERIDAN RD',. Fellowships from .1965 to -----------==~;;.:,;:...::::.:==::..------ .J 1969and during the last two&#13;
'years of that period also was&#13;
Assistant Dean of "-&#13;
Graduate School.&#13;
In 1969Bauer was",&#13;
10 be an American eo.t&#13;
on Education ...&#13;
ministrative inlel'll II "-&#13;
University of CalHonIa,&#13;
Berkeley, where be ...&#13;
under ChanceUor1loIII' ,&#13;
Heyns and Vice I1NmcW&#13;
Robert L. Johnsoa darIII&#13;
the 1969-70academle&#13;
At Berkeley, he W&amp;I&#13;
involved in a wide&#13;
administrative&#13;
including suDel'1lid1il'l&#13;
Student Affain&#13;
during the SpI'iql&#13;
Green in 1970&#13;
He returned&#13;
and&#13;
to&#13;
~=~&#13;
his present posilioll.&#13;
PIZZA - SEAFOODS&#13;
ITALIAN-AMERICAN FOvur&#13;
COCKTAll..~ t&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
2112 - 14 - 52 ST. I&#13;
l&lt;ENOSH.i I&#13;
- --&#13;
ANYONE WANTING&#13;
KINDLING WOOD FOR A&#13;
WI:INER ROAST ON THE&#13;
BEACH CAN GET IT A&#13;
RAINBOW GARDEN~&#13;
FREEthis Wednes&#13;
-The Wandering Troubador&#13;
8:30 --&#13;
'0:30 p.m.&#13;
PltSS&#13;
Ted. Warm brand&#13;
A t 11, 1971&#13;
$ELL YOUR BOOK$&#13;
AUGUST 16-20&#13;
We pay cash for those books&#13;
which are being used again in&#13;
th FtJII semester.&#13;
MAN CAMPUS STORE.ONLY&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
MIDTOW,N BAR&#13;
&amp; RESTAURANT f&#13;
PIZZA - S AFOODS&#13;
1&#13;
I A LI A - A M R ICA FOUtJi&#13;
C OCKTA I S&#13;
NTERTA I M E .,.&#13;
211 2 - 14 - 52 ST.&#13;
i&lt; ENOSH~&#13;
- - -&#13;
Kup's Show&#13;
(Continued from Page 5)&#13;
television has influenced th~ ~ress?&#13;
Kupcinet: No doubt television has&#13;
influenced the press m~r~ t~an the&#13;
other way around. Televi~1on is new.,&#13;
it's fresher, it's got a ?i1fe~ent approach&#13;
it's more immediate m many&#13;
reg~ and the press has bad .to&#13;
change considerably because of it.&#13;
Many times we don't cover ~. story direct because we feel television 1s&#13;
covering it ... that doesn't mean we&#13;
aren't going to cover a good hot sto;1")',&#13;
but many times we want to go behind&#13;
the story because televis!on ~as done&#13;
such a good job of covermg 1t.&#13;
NS: Getting back to your show, would&#13;
you say that your show represents&#13;
younger people adequately, or is it top&#13;
heavy with older people?&#13;
Kupcinet: I'd have to say we're top&#13;
heavy on older people. We're always&#13;
looking for good bright young people.&#13;
We don't get enough of them, I admit&#13;
that. I'd like to get more young people.&#13;
We have a problem though. To sell a&#13;
show like this you've got to have names&#13;
and most of the young people don't&#13;
have names that the public recognizes.&#13;
The guests we have on the show are&#13;
famous authors, famous people in&#13;
politics, statesmen, whatever&#13;
they're in. Young people h field&#13;
achieved this kind of recogmti av~·t&#13;
so it's a little bit difficult for uso~ Yet,&#13;
particular type of operation tot~&#13;
too many young people on. But :·':1i&#13;
making an effort all the time :ere&#13;
more. gei&#13;
NS: Of all the shows you've d&#13;
there any particular show that iie is&#13;
out in your mind as being esn!~&#13;
good'? r ""IClJJ&#13;
Kupcinet: Well, I like to think&#13;
we've had a good number of show tha&#13;
are above average. I think though~&#13;
the show for making news first was i&#13;
show that Harry Truman was on at&#13;
he had left the Presidency in Which~&#13;
revealed the reason he fired Ge~&#13;
MacArthur was because MacArtJi&#13;
wanted to use the A-bomb in Korea~&#13;
For high class, high caliber&#13;
versation we had a show with the~&#13;
Adlai Stevenson, Sir Charles Da~&#13;
Aldous Huxley and Harlow Shapl&#13;
the astronomer from Harva~&#13;
University. I think those four ~ tlemen were probably as articuJa&#13;
and as intelligent and brilliant Bild&#13;
witty as any guests we've ever had.&#13;
Here were four people, each of whom&#13;
was brilliant in his own right engaging&#13;
in a very lively exchange of ideas.&#13;
Bauer&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
faculty. But what impressed&#13;
me most was his versatility,&#13;
his crea ti vi ty, and hi~.&#13;
capacity for hard work. In&#13;
education, as in most other&#13;
endeavors, long hours and&#13;
hard work pay off. "&#13;
Bauer took all three of his&#13;
degrees at Northwestern&#13;
University in Evanston,&#13;
receiving his Ph.D. in 1959 in&#13;
public address and group&#13;
communication. He taught&#13;
at the United States Air&#13;
Force Academy from 1959 to&#13;
1961, when he joined the&#13;
Assistant Dean of l&#13;
Graduate School.&#13;
r-------------~-------------------.. faculty of Bowling Green ar RELAY an instructor in speech.&#13;
In 1969 Bauer was selected&#13;
to be an American Cou&#13;
on Education ad&#13;
ministrative intern at the&#13;
University of California&#13;
Berkeley, where he sened&#13;
under Chancellor Roger&#13;
Heyns and Vice Chancelkr&#13;
Robert L. Johnson durinc&#13;
the 1969-70 academic year&#13;
At Berkeley, he was directJy&#13;
involved in a wide range fl&#13;
administrative activitiel.&#13;
including supervision of Ille&#13;
Student Affairs Office&#13;
during the Spring turmoil&#13;
ANYONE WANTING&#13;
KINDLING 000 FOR A&#13;
tlNEA ROAST ON THE&#13;
BEACH CAN GET IT A&#13;
RAINBOW GARDEN~&#13;
AMUSEMENT CfNTfR At Bowling Green he rose&#13;
to full professor in 1968, and MINI• GQLf in 1967 was chosen Faculty Man of the Year by a joint- AR c HE n v student-faculty committee.&#13;
f'\. I He served as Director of&#13;
Graduate Admissions and&#13;
BZth &amp;. SHERtDAN RD.. Fellowships from .1965 to&#13;
-----------------.;...........,~-----------' 1969 and during the last two&#13;
He returned to Bowlq&#13;
Green in 1970 and assumed ·years of that period also was his present position.&#13;
-The Wandering Troubador&#13;
. 8:30 -&#13;
,o:30 p.m.&#13;
Pflee&#13;
Ted .Warmbrand&#13;
"j i&#13;
..&#13;
.!.&#13;
E "&#13;
e&#13;
~&#13;
j &#13;
by Jim Casper 01 the NewlIcope staff&#13;
"lIIwk" Harrelson, one of baseball's most&#13;
CGICJlful performers in and out of uniform. has&#13;
fgrtaken his baseball career for a try at pro&#13;
..M It's rather unusual for an athlete to switch&#13;
P-O' one professional sport to another. but Ken&#13;
~ does not always do things the usual&#13;
-Y'rreJson's career is discussed in a book ;00 "Hawk" written by Harrelson himself&#13;
.,d AI Hirshberg. ~_I"" brawls. big-money golf matches&#13;
......-. ,&#13;
The&#13;
New&#13;
Hawk&#13;
pool, poker and bair styling are all part of the&#13;
activitiesof Harrelson.&#13;
Neverone to shy away from bets. Harrelson&#13;
WGU1dbet hundreds of dollars that be could win&#13;
II golf and pool. Here is an example of the&#13;
"Hawk" in a poolroom venture.&#13;
"l would do better at nine-ball if I got the&#13;
auer instinct more often - the instinct that&#13;
lIIIkesyouwant to beat a guy's ass until you've&#13;
IOl every cent he owns." Hawk explai~ed ~at&#13;
IIlCIt 01 the time he did not have the killer 10-&#13;
mt but there were instances when he did.&#13;
"One night in Savannah a guy I knew didn't&#13;
lit me started bugging me with smart cracks&#13;
Ibout how I wasn't half the pool player I&#13;
IIIougbI I was, It was true. I was still spotty -&#13;
_here near as consistant as a good pool&#13;
pllyershould be - and I knew he could beat&#13;
1Ill!, I Iinally thought 'the hell with it,' and&#13;
dllllenged him to nine-ball at ten bucks a&#13;
game. We played one game for forty bucks and&#13;
Iwon..Then we played for fifty. game and I&#13;
kept nght on winning. Iran my hanknill up to&#13;
five hundred, and he wanted to play one game&#13;
f~r ~t. 'Let me see your money: I said He&#13;
~dn t have any. 'We'll use markers.' he S&amp;Kl&#13;
Ca~ Ornothing: Isaid, and wallted. '" WIth&#13;
his five hundred dollars."&#13;
Harrelson also discusses his infatuation lor&#13;
golf. and how it somelinnes interferred WIth&#13;
baseball. ow he has given up baseball for golf&#13;
but this took place alter the book was wrItten&#13;
Perhaps some of the most lOtereslinll&#13;
developments in Harrelson's career unfolded&#13;
during his employment under Charley F1nIe)'&#13;
one of baseball's most conlroversl8.l and .;.&#13;
novative owners.&#13;
Ken describes Finley as not the smartest&#13;
baseball owner. but the most int.erestmg With&#13;
Finley in control there was never a chaDee for&#13;
boredom. He did thinIs. regardless 01 wbether&#13;
or not they made sense.&#13;
As Harrelson says, "u he wasn·t finni a&#13;
manager, be was Ilirinll a pinch-~ or&#13;
moving a franchise, or dreaming up a gag or&#13;
shaking up the front office."&#13;
One of Finley's most intereslinll and&#13;
ridiculous gags was his mule mascot named&#13;
Charley O.&#13;
Charley 0 really gained atten 00 ..-ben&#13;
Finley announced that he would bnDi bun ClII •&#13;
road trip so fans in some other AmenalO&#13;
League parks would get an opportumty to see&#13;
him. This was in either 1966or 1967. 'obod)'&#13;
took him seriously because it seemed unlikel)&#13;
that he would pay all those shipping charges for&#13;
just a gag.&#13;
He brought Charley 0 to Yank.. Stadium and&#13;
none other than the Hawk volunteered to ri~&#13;
him around the pan:. A very non-prof 'ooaI,&#13;
but thrilling ride ensued, and It bad the entire&#13;
stadium rocking with laughter.&#13;
While field manager Alvin Dan: understandably&#13;
upset about the risk that nne 01&#13;
his ballplayers had undertaken, Charley Finle)'&#13;
had gotten what be had hoped for - a good&#13;
PARKSIDE VILLAGE APART&#13;
--==,.. ~l FOR AS LITTLE AS $I PER SEMESTER&#13;
...lJ&#13;
3 ROOMSUITE&#13;
5254.25 P.ER SEMESTER2&#13;
ROOM SUITE&#13;
5180 PER SEMESTER0000&#13;
00&#13;
•&#13;
{&#13;
ILL pAGEL OR DAN LEMBERG&#13;
OCCUPANCY SEPT. 1. 1971- CONT~c; ~LL (414) m.- COlLECT&#13;
• AT PARKSIDE VILLAGE SITE&#13;
HTUDENTS PER SUITE - UNFURNISHED&#13;
DELUXE 2 ROOMSUITE&#13;
$2'8.25 PER SEMESTERDELUXE3ROOMSUITE&#13;
$275 PER SEMESTER-&#13;
~~nm&#13;
OWNER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE I&#13;
MILWAUKEE. WISCOHSI&#13;
DEVELOPER: GLOlIAL BUSI ESS" RESIDE TlAt. CE TERS I C&#13;
17'" N FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE. SCOHSI&#13;
by Jim Casper of the Newscope staff&#13;
HJwk" Harrelson, one of baseball's most&#13;
co&amp;orful performers in and out of uniform, has&#13;
ken his baseball career for a try at pro&#13;
It' rather unusual for an athlete to switch&#13;
~ one professional sport to another, but Ken&#13;
garrelson does not always do things the usual&#13;
~rrelsOn's career is discussed in a book&#13;
entitled "Hawk" written by Harrelson himself&#13;
1 Hirshberg. othes, brawls, big-money golf matches,&#13;
The&#13;
New&#13;
Hawk&#13;
J, poker and hair styling are all part of the&#13;
acthities of Harrelson.&#13;
i'e\·er one to shy away from bets, Harrelson&#13;
would bet hundreds of dollars that he could win&#13;
t golf and pool. Here is an example of the&#13;
Hawk" in a poolroom venture. "I would do better at nine-ball if I got the&#13;
tiller instinct more often - the instinct that&#13;
you want to beat a guy's ass until you've&#13;
very cent he owns." Hawk explained that&#13;
t of the time he did not have the killer instinct&#13;
but there were instances when he did.&#13;
• One night in Savannah a guy I knew didn't&#13;
e me started bugging me with smart cracks&#13;
about how I wasn't half the pool player I&#13;
ought I was. It was true. I was still spotty -&#13;
nowhere near as consistant as a good pool&#13;
play r should be - and I knew he could beat . I finally thought 'the hell with it,' and&#13;
Uenged him to nine-ball at ten bucks a&#13;
oo OD 00&#13;
LL PAGEL OR DAN LEMBERG&#13;
OCCUPANCY SEPT. 1, 1971- CONT~&lt;;; ill (.414&gt; 212-0460 COLLECT&#13;
1 AT PARKSIDE VILLAGE SITE&#13;
4 STUDENTS PER SUITE - UNFURNISHED&#13;
DE &#13;
bp' NZWiKXf'E ---....&#13;
~P ... ~&#13;
oIlIle N...-..-,lair&#13;
So far, nineteen-hundred&#13;
IUId seventy-one bas been •&#13;
fairly good year for cab&#13;
drivers in Kenosha. The&#13;
winter wasn't too harsh, the&#13;
streets were cleaned with a&#13;
degree of efficienty, and the&#13;
of "grassroots ·urban&#13;
America". They are&#13;
frequently Used as reliable&#13;
resources in public opinion&#13;
polls, they are asked their&#13;
reaction to fashions,&#13;
politics, trends and the&#13;
weather. Every so often, one&#13;
realizes that a cab driver is&#13;
beginDinl to infiltrate the&#13;
ranks.&#13;
Kenosha has only one&#13;
female who qualifies as a&#13;
full time cabbie. Her name&#13;
is Ellen Pedicone. She&#13;
drives for her "husbandemployer",&#13;
Peppie, who IS&#13;
the founder-owner-manager&#13;
home in the basement,&#13;
where the calls are taken&#13;
and dispa tched to the&#13;
drivers.&#13;
An average day for her&#13;
begins at quarter to five in&#13;
the morning. She works&#13;
between 12 and 14 hours a&#13;
day between driving and&#13;
Working&#13;
Class'&#13;
Heroine:&#13;
Kenosha's Only Woman&#13;
MIS. Ellen Pedicone"&#13;
cold weather didn't prove to&#13;
be too stiff for the best worn&#13;
vehicles that carry individuals&#13;
24 hours a day,&#13;
seven days a week.&#13;
Cabbies in Kenosha were&#13;
also struck with good fortune&#13;
when the city's only&#13;
other public transportation&#13;
system, the buses, folded.&#13;
Anyone wanting to travel&#13;
from or around Kenosha had&#13;
10 either take a cab, or skirt&#13;
the law and hitchhike, if&#13;
they didn't own a car. This&#13;
situation made a part of 1971&#13;
a bit nicer, even if for only&#13;
the cab drivers.&#13;
Cabbies are the epitomy&#13;
one of few people who can&#13;
accurately describe a past&#13;
sporting event of magnitude&#13;
with traces of emotion.&#13;
Bo.bby Thompson's 1951&#13;
home run, and Rock Marciano's&#13;
last fight have been&#13;
relived in cabs everywhere&#13;
thousands of times.&#13;
Sports enters into the day&#13;
10 day life of cab drivers&#13;
very often. There is a&#13;
common interest between&#13;
the male drivers and their&#13;
passengers. 'This trend is&#13;
slowly ending, as talk goes&#13;
from baseball and the Cubs,&#13;
10 fashion and woman's&#13;
Iiberatlon. Women are&#13;
For What It's Worth&#13;
&lt;Continued from Page 6)&#13;
and be very dedicated to it.&#13;
ThaI's the only way you can&#13;
do it in any field of art."&#13;
According to Murphy, the&#13;
program here at Parks ide is&#13;
designed basically to fit the&#13;
needs of those students&#13;
majoring in elementary or&#13;
secondary education. "Most&#13;
of my students majoring in&#13;
art are planning on&#13;
teaching", he said. "A few&#13;
of them take the courses out&#13;
of interest". The program&#13;
presently covers a broad&#13;
spectrum inclUding course&#13;
in two and three dimensional&#13;
design, sculpture, art&#13;
education, painting,&#13;
drawing and ceramics.&#13;
Murphy stressed that&#13;
prospective art teachers&#13;
should realize that they&#13;
must dedicate themselves to&#13;
two thi ngs: their own&#13;
creative art work and their&#13;
class instruction. "You are&#13;
working with students who&#13;
bave a right to your attention.&#13;
Both require a&#13;
separate dedication and&#13;
equal time. There can be a&#13;
......&#13;
DE. MURRAY&#13;
N.GELOLSSON&#13;
-&#13;
and $p«ial au. Star&#13;
• _MT .....&#13;
..... ,."UG :OO,Jll._w.UIl:II~&#13;
llCU1'S H.ClO--,h.GO--M.OO&#13;
:::--· .. ----~ lUoeT_s_.~ .. 1.1JO_"" .... -o-.. ~ ........ .... ...---. ..-.&#13;
of Peppie's Cabs.&#13;
This cab company seems&#13;
synonomus with public&#13;
travel in Kenosha. Almost&#13;
everyone in Kenosha, at one&#13;
time or anotherI has seen&#13;
one of his fleet trudge down&#13;
the street with two, three or&#13;
even four passengers.&#13;
Driving cabs for Peppie are&#13;
longhairs, established&#13;
veterans, and his wife.&#13;
Mrs. Pedicone has been&#13;
operating a cab for five and&#13;
a half years. During this&#13;
time, she has also been a&#13;
part time dispatcher for the&#13;
cab service. The heart of&#13;
Peppie's Cab lies at her&#13;
nice carry-over between the&#13;
two when both you and the&#13;
class are working on the&#13;
same artistic problem.&#13;
You're all talking the same&#13;
language. I find it easy to&#13;
get things acroos when&#13;
you're both doing it."&#13;
One tip Murphy mentioned&#13;
as a basic teaching&#13;
fla w is the a ttem pt to&#13;
develop a student's style too&#13;
early. He feels that as long&#13;
as the student learns the&#13;
basics of working with the&#13;
materials and expressing&#13;
ideas in the classroom, an&#13;
individual style will evolve&#13;
later. Placing too much&#13;
answering calls as a&#13;
dis patcher. She can only&#13;
drive a cab during the&#13;
daylight hours, due to a city&#13;
ordinance. But by the time&#13;
the ·sun goes down, she has&#13;
put in a healthy work day.&#13;
"Since the bus system&#13;
went out of business", Mrs.&#13;
Pedicone said, "the cab&#13;
business has gone up."&#13;
There was a trace of a smile&#13;
on her face when she told me&#13;
this. The hard years of&#13;
establishing the private&#13;
enterprise with her husband&#13;
bad paid off with a little&#13;
honus. But she felt sorry for&#13;
the elderly people, she said,&#13;
importance on style may&#13;
become a trap for the&#13;
student who should be&#13;
working freely and experimenting&#13;
with different&#13;
techniques. This can happen&#13;
- even in graduate work.&#13;
Professor Murphy emphasized&#13;
that all art&#13;
requires true dedication.&#13;
You have to spend time&#13;
developing this skill;&#13;
knowledge is only part of it.&#13;
Thus, the student who&#13;
simply attempts to fulfill the&#13;
requirements as fast as&#13;
possible misses much of this&#13;
developmental process.&#13;
Although the total amount of&#13;
o&#13;
,.&#13;
11&#13;
11&#13;
m&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
[lJ&#13;
o&#13;
11&#13;
o&#13;
rn&#13;
11&#13;
because she felt&#13;
fares were a bit ... _&#13;
those. livinl Oil-lit&#13;
secunty. "All !be ~&#13;
set by the city ~ ...&#13;
said. She!!'eClUeli ' ..&#13;
complaints fl'Olllr:...&#13;
think the cOlDPlIly ...&#13;
price of a ride. lela "&#13;
~~Ien Pedicolle 1"'_ driving a cab _&#13;
Sitting in her fa:r. .....&#13;
in the liVing room ~&#13;
home, I COuldn'tp~ ..&#13;
behind the wheel or • ..&#13;
asked her 10 reflect -.&#13;
five years on the ~ ..&#13;
longest drive Wu ~&#13;
Kenosha to !be ~&#13;
loop. In a very ...,&#13;
mannor, she told IIIe'::&#13;
she had never ~&#13;
any hOstile IIeOPII III&#13;
drunks. The '.....:&#13;
language she ever blIII&#13;
while driVing, she lIIldlIilII&#13;
a smile, was froID.........&#13;
"The best thing about~&#13;
a cab driver," she Ilid,...&#13;
that you never knOW_II&#13;
expect. II&#13;
On the day IlaIIied lliIII&#13;
her, Ellen Pedicalle ..&#13;
readying for a 1bnIe ..&#13;
vacation to the __ 111&#13;
of the country.&#13;
After taking valuabletile&#13;
on this day 10 talk to ...&#13;
said good-bye. I !ell"'11&#13;
think about things lib ...&#13;
was to mow the Ina lIII&#13;
feed the dog while IIIe lIII&#13;
her husband were .....&#13;
For three weeki, IIer&#13;
husband was goillgtolietill&#13;
chauffeur in the ,..,&#13;
Peppie and his wife "'&#13;
going to enjoy the ~&#13;
they had earned as .......&#13;
class heroes.&#13;
degree credits can eGGceivably&#13;
be obtaiJIedII&#13;
three years , the IIudIII&#13;
would be losing muchof till&#13;
valuable training IMI&#13;
comes with time lad&#13;
practice.&#13;
Jobs are scarce III&#13;
teaching scene as 1iIeJ"&#13;
in many other fieldl_&#13;
Murphy mentiolled tMI&#13;
"many artists wiD 1IlIl ••&#13;
place for their art wart'"&#13;
support it by diggiJW ~&#13;
if they have 10." TlilII ..&#13;
dedication Murphy ~&#13;
so often as one of lbe..&#13;
requirements of aD&#13;
FREE NEWSCOPE CLASSIFIIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1969 Honda 175cc Scrambler. Ex.&#13;
condo ~25. Includes 2 helmets. Call&#13;
Ed, 639-.t9«1.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
. FOR SALE&#13;
3"suitcases, ....ery good condo S2S. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
For a Good night's Sleep _&#13;
'Waterbeds. 3701 . 60th street. Call&#13;
.654-' ....7.&#13;
"Sean" Portably typewriter. Good&#13;
condition. Comes with carrying&#13;
case. Will sell for $30.00. Carl 637-&#13;
-..s.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3836.&#13;
Golf Clubs, full set Wilson, $50. Indudes&#13;
accessories, beg, balls, tees,&#13;
head coven - contact John at 652.&#13;
5200 .&#13;
Maggie, I love you - Rico&#13;
legalize Marijuana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. SOc donation. Be at Student&#13;
Activities Building Wed.&#13;
Stereo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
amplifier, turntable,_ 2 speakers.&#13;
~vln~, must_ ~~I._ S50. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
26\ Broad Street, lake Geneva, Wis.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen - Good -condition and.&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419 .&#13;
Rider to Mankato, Mlnn.,or vicinity.&#13;
Either one or both ways. leaving&#13;
Aug. 21. Call 652·9053, Vanessa.&#13;
WANTED - '6.4 -'67 VW or 'Rambler·'&#13;
American In good running condition.&#13;
Contact Marc, 654.5196. .&#13;
FOR RENT - Modem office space.&#13;
Car~ted and air conditionect. $50.00&#13;
per mo. Utilities InCluded. Call Tonv&#13;
at 652-3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
APARTMENT '01 ,:=:.;&#13;
Madison, 3girlsn .. n ~&#13;
modem, furniShed apt. 011... ",&#13;
and Bridge. $62.00 ,.&#13;
person. Cail 633·2753 .... __&#13;
Large EdiuoD&#13;
Framed OrigiD'J&#13;
GeometrieS&#13;
$20· $25&#13;
NEW&#13;
GALLERY OlE&#13;
503 Main. ~&#13;
633-.4662 - - ~&#13;
Pa&amp;el WSCOPE&#13;
by Pall.I Lomartire&#13;
of Lbe. e cope taff&#13;
So far, nineteen-hundred&#13;
and seventy-00e has been a&#13;
fairly good year for cab&#13;
drivers in Kenosha. The&#13;
winter wasn't too harsh, the&#13;
treets were cleaned with a&#13;
degree of efficienty, and the&#13;
Working&#13;
Aapat16, 1'71&#13;
of "grassroots ·urban&#13;
America". They are&#13;
frequently used as reliable&#13;
resources in public opinion&#13;
polls, they are asked their&#13;
reaction to fashions,&#13;
politics, trends and the&#13;
weather. Every so often, one&#13;
realizes that a cab driver is&#13;
Class·&#13;
Heroine:&#13;
nosha's On!&#13;
one of few people ,who can&#13;
accurately describe a past&#13;
porting event of magnitude&#13;
with traces of emotion.&#13;
Bobby Thompson's 1951&#13;
home run, and Rock Marciano's&#13;
last fight have been&#13;
relived in cabs everywhere&#13;
thousands of times.&#13;
ports enters into the day&#13;
to day life of cab drivers&#13;
very often. There is a&#13;
common interest between&#13;
the male drivers and their&#13;
passengers. !'his trend is&#13;
slowly ending, as talk goes&#13;
from baseball and the Cubs,&#13;
to fashion and woman's&#13;
liberation. Women are&#13;
For What It's Worth&#13;
ontinued from Page 6)&#13;
nd be very dedicated to it.&#13;
That' the only way you can&#13;
do it in any field of art."&#13;
According to • forphy, the&#13;
program here at Parkside is&#13;
d igned ba ically to fit the&#13;
need of those students&#13;
majoring in elementary or&#13;
ondary education. "Most&#13;
of my tudents majoring in&#13;
art are planning on&#13;
teaching", he said. "A few&#13;
of them take the courses out&#13;
of interest". The program&#13;
presently covers a broad&#13;
spectrum including course&#13;
in two and three dimensional&#13;
design, sculpture, art&#13;
education, painting,&#13;
drawing and ceramics.&#13;
Murphy stressed that&#13;
prospective art teachers&#13;
should realize that they&#13;
must dedicate themselves to&#13;
two things: their own&#13;
creative art work and their&#13;
class instruction. "You are&#13;
working with students who&#13;
have a right to your attention.&#13;
Both require a&#13;
separate dedication and&#13;
equal time. There can be a&#13;
wltfi&#13;
DEE MURRAY ..... NIGEL OLSSON&#13;
and Special Guest Star&#13;
•AN NICKS AN8 .. IIOT LICKS&#13;
MOHDAT, AUG. ,-a:00 P.M. MII.WAUUI ~IUM&#13;
,icun u .oo-».00-$4.oo ........ ,,.._......,_S... .... (u.T....,S-.~--111J~ ... ,..--·-""-.~ ......... --...... ----------&#13;
beginning to infiltrate the&#13;
ranks.&#13;
Kenosha has only one&#13;
female who qualifies as a&#13;
full time cabbie. Her name&#13;
is Ellen Pedicone. She&#13;
drives for her "husban~-&#13;
employer", Peppie, who lS&#13;
the founder-owner-manager&#13;
home in the basement,&#13;
where the calls are taken&#13;
and dispatched to the&#13;
drivers.&#13;
An average day for her&#13;
begins at quarter to five in&#13;
the morning. She works&#13;
between 12 and 14 hours a&#13;
day between driving and&#13;
0&#13;
)&gt;&#13;
;u&#13;
;u&#13;
Ill&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
m&#13;
0&#13;
;u&#13;
Cl&#13;
Ill&#13;
;u&#13;
Mrs. Ellen Pedicone&#13;
of Peppie's cabs.&#13;
This cab company seems&#13;
synonomus with public&#13;
travel in Kenosha. Almost&#13;
everyone in Kenosha, at one&#13;
time or another, bas seen&#13;
one of his fleet trudge down&#13;
the street with two, three or&#13;
even four passengers.&#13;
Driving cabs for Peppie are&#13;
longhairs, established&#13;
veterans, and his wife.&#13;
Mrs. Pedicone has been&#13;
operating a cab for five and&#13;
a half years. During this&#13;
time, she has also been a&#13;
part time dispatcher for the&#13;
cab service. The heart of&#13;
Peppie's cab lies at her&#13;
nice carry-over between the&#13;
two when both you and the&#13;
class are working on the&#13;
same artistic problem.&#13;
You're all talking the same&#13;
language. I find it easy to&#13;
get things across when&#13;
you're both doing it."&#13;
One tip Murphy mentioned&#13;
as a basic teaching&#13;
flaw is the attempt to&#13;
develop a student's style too&#13;
early. He feels that as long&#13;
as the student learns the&#13;
basics of working with the&#13;
materials and expressing&#13;
ideas in the classroom an&#13;
individual style will ev~lve&#13;
later. Placing too much&#13;
answering calls as a&#13;
dispatcher. She can only&#13;
drive a cab during the&#13;
daylight hours, due to a ~ity&#13;
ordinance. But by the time&#13;
the -sun goes down, she has&#13;
put in a healthy work day.&#13;
"Since the bus system&#13;
went out of business", Mrs.&#13;
Pedicone said, "the cab&#13;
business has gone up. "&#13;
There was a trace of a smile&#13;
on her face when she told me&#13;
this. The hard years of&#13;
establishing the private&#13;
enterprise with her husband&#13;
had paid off with a little&#13;
bonus. But she felt sorry for&#13;
the elderly people, she said,&#13;
importance on style may&#13;
become a trap for the&#13;
student who should be&#13;
working freely and experimenting&#13;
with different&#13;
techniques. _This c_an happen&#13;
even in graduate work.&#13;
Profess·or Murphy emphasized&#13;
that all art&#13;
requires true dedication.&#13;
You have to spend time&#13;
developing this skill;&#13;
knowledge is only part of it.&#13;
Thus, the student who&#13;
simply attempts to fulfill the&#13;
requirements as fast as&#13;
possible misses much of this&#13;
developmental process.&#13;
Although the total amount of&#13;
because she felt the&#13;
fares were a bit ~&#13;
those living on •tiff f~&#13;
security. "All the 10cil)&#13;
set by the city ~ II\&#13;
said. She frequenu " ~ complaints from rid Y Itta&#13;
think the cornpan era ~ price of a ride. y Beta the&#13;
~~len Pedicone 1. dr1vmg a cab very ikta&#13;
Sitting in her favorite 11111cb.&#13;
in the living roorn "~&#13;
home, I couldn't picture her&#13;
behind the wheel of a her&#13;
~sked her to reflect ov~&#13;
five years on the l'Oad.&#13;
longest drive was f He:&#13;
Kenosha to the Chi roin&#13;
loop. In a very easy ~&#13;
mannor, she told rne ~ she had never enc0Unlered&#13;
any ho.stile people&#13;
drunks. The foul~r&#13;
language she ever beard&#13;
whil~ driving, she said.,,;&#13;
a smile, was from a worna&#13;
"The best thing about being&#13;
a cab driver," she said ,&#13;
that you never know ~t&#13;
expect.''&#13;
On the day I talked wt&#13;
her, Ellen Pedicone&#13;
readying for a three weet&#13;
vacation to the western ha!!&#13;
of the country.&#13;
After taking valuable time&#13;
on this day to talk to her I&#13;
said good-bye. I left her 'to&#13;
think about things like 1'bo&#13;
was to mow the lawn and&#13;
feed the dog while she and&#13;
her husband were gome. For three weeks, her&#13;
husband was going to be the&#13;
chauffeur in the famil)&#13;
Peppie and his wife were&#13;
going to enjoy the vacatioo&#13;
they had earned as working&#13;
class heroes.&#13;
degree credits can co ·&#13;
ceivably be obtained i&#13;
three years , the student&#13;
would be losing much cl the&#13;
valuable training that&#13;
comes with time and&#13;
practice.&#13;
Jobs are scarce oo di&#13;
teaching scene as they art&#13;
in many other fields today&#13;
Murphy mentioned tba&#13;
"many artists will set up 1&#13;
place for their art ~ and&#13;
support it by di~ ~ic:&#13;
if they have to." This 15&#13;
dedication Murphy ~!,&#13;
so often as one of the -&#13;
requirements of an artiS1&#13;
FREE NEVVSCOPE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1969 Honda 175cc Scrambler. Ex.&#13;
cond. $425. Includes 2 helmets. Call Ed, 639-4940.&#13;
1H2 Buick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call ~«.45 or 633-2791.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FORSALE&#13;
huitcases, very good cond. $25. Call 654-2704.&#13;
For a Good night's sleep -&#13;
Water beds. 3701 . 60th street. Call 65-4-9447.&#13;
"Sea"" Portably typewriter. Good&#13;
condition. Comes with carrying&#13;
case. Will sell for $30.00. Call 637- 6"5.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3836.&#13;
Golf Clubs, full set WIison, $50. Includes&#13;
accessories, bag, balls, tees,&#13;
head covers - contact John at 652 .&#13;
5200.&#13;
Maggie, I love you - Rico&#13;
Legalize Marl(uana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. 50c donation. Be at Student&#13;
Activities Building Wed.&#13;
Stereo Component System . 60 watt&#13;
a,cnpl ifler, turntable,_ 2 speakers.&#13;
~vlnp, must_ S!'~· $50. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, Wis.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen - Good -condition andnot&#13;
too expensive. Jan 694-3419. ··&#13;
R!derto Mankato, Minn.,or vicinity.&#13;
Either one or both ways. Leaving&#13;
Aug. 21. Call 652-9053, Vanessa.&#13;
WANTED- '64 ·'67 VW or 'Rambler '&#13;
American In good running condition.&#13;
Contact Marc, 654-5196.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
FOR RENT-Modem office space.&#13;
Carpeted and air conditioned. $50.00&#13;
per mo. Utilities Included. Call Tony at 652-3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
tllT - APARTMENT FOR ,:,,tri Madison, 3 girls need 1 UII&#13;
modern, furnished apt. Oil mo ,r and Bridge. $62.00 per&#13;
person. Call 633-2753-~&#13;
Large Edition&#13;
Framed Origin~&#13;
Geometrics&#13;
$20 - $2:&#13;
NlW&#13;
GALLfRY ONf&#13;
503 Main, Raclnt61&#13;
633-4662 - 631-71 </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 4, Issue 8, August 16, 1971</text>
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