<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/items/browse?output=omeka-xml&amp;page=192&amp;sort_field=added" accessDate="2026-05-07T12:07:23+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>192</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>4375</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="2607" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4396">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/883dfbca676dd2c095b3eff4c3c3a5fe.pdf</src>
        <authentication>865e0842b6a7427ccf73e0e15560db1b</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63603">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 2</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63604">
              <text>SGA Book Exchange Successful Despite Handicaps</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63611">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89889">
              <text>The SGA Voter Registration table attracted over 500 students during second semester registration. Left, Andi Giese watches&#13;
while Danny Trotter charts precincts for Felica Sielski.&#13;
SGA Book Exchange Successful Despite Handicaps&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The University Bookstore's&#13;
monopoly on selling books to&#13;
UW-P students was jolted twice&#13;
last week as the Parkside Book&#13;
Exchange opened last Friday&#13;
with unexpected success, and as&#13;
Attorney Jay Schwartz told&#13;
Student Government leaders he&#13;
would be willing to sue the&#13;
University and the book store in&#13;
the event negotiations with&#13;
them fell through.&#13;
The Book Exchange, despite a&#13;
minimum of publicity and&#13;
opening Friday, after the bulk&#13;
of registration was over, had&#13;
over $350 in sales, with another&#13;
$100 estimated in sales made&#13;
before the books could be&#13;
processed. The organizers said&#13;
over 80 people brought books in&#13;
to be sold. They estimated 400&#13;
people stopped in during the&#13;
day.&#13;
Because of the success, they&#13;
announced the Exchange will&#13;
continue next week from 11:00&#13;
a.m. to 8:00 p.m. in apartment&#13;
117 i n Parkside Village.&#13;
The exchange was organized&#13;
jointly by students Fred Zievers&#13;
and Tom Werbie along with&#13;
Student Government.&#13;
Prior to this, SGA President&#13;
Dean Loumos with Vice&#13;
President Bruce Bolpintesta&#13;
and Treasurer Danny Trotter&#13;
had spoken with Racine Lawyer&#13;
Jay Schwartz about what they&#13;
termed the high prices the&#13;
University Book Store charges&#13;
for books.&#13;
They reported to the SGA&#13;
Senate that Schwartz expressed&#13;
interest in the situation and was&#13;
willing to do, among other&#13;
things:&#13;
— i ncorporate SGA,&#13;
— represent SGA in&#13;
negotiations with the University&#13;
and the Bookstore&#13;
— sue the University and&#13;
Bookstore in the event a&#13;
satisfactory solution couldn't be&#13;
found&#13;
— incorporate a book co-op&#13;
that would be the plaintiff in the&#13;
case.&#13;
Aside from the fees for incorporation,&#13;
he would do this for&#13;
free, they reported.&#13;
The Senate, in a somewhat&#13;
suspicious mood, established a&#13;
book co-op committee that&#13;
would investigate alternatives&#13;
to the Bookstore. They further&#13;
agreed to retain Schwartz as a&#13;
consultant and to have him&#13;
incorporate SGA.&#13;
Further meetings with him&#13;
are planned.&#13;
President Loumos said a few&#13;
days after the Senate meeting&#13;
that while Schwartz hadn't been&#13;
authorized to negotiate for SGA,&#13;
"Once we do begin negotiations,&#13;
Schwartz will be our&#13;
representative. As of now,&#13;
we're not at that stage yet. The&#13;
Senate has to first decide what&#13;
demands it will make."&#13;
A decision to sue the&#13;
University and the Bookstore&#13;
would have to be made by the&#13;
Senate, he said. "I would favor&#13;
a suit if negotiations failed," he&#13;
stated.&#13;
Book Exchange&#13;
The success of the Book&#13;
Exchange surprised most of its&#13;
organizers. They noted the&#13;
handicaps — the refusal of the&#13;
University to allow them to hold&#13;
it on campus, the lack of&#13;
organization, the lack of&#13;
publicity, the fact it was held&#13;
after most students had&#13;
registered, and many had&#13;
already bought their books, the&#13;
difficulty of obtaining a book&#13;
list, and the famed apathy of&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
Tom Werbie said of his&#13;
reaction, "I was surprised. I&#13;
brought along a deck of cards to&#13;
pass the time."&#13;
Danny Trotter echoed his&#13;
thoughts, "Things are changing&#13;
at Parkside alright, but I sure&#13;
didn't expect this."&#13;
Loumos, perhaps, was the&#13;
only one who professed no&#13;
surprise. Dean said, "I expected&#13;
the turnout. The students&#13;
seemed interested in it during&#13;
registration. It felt right to them&#13;
and they responded. I never&#13;
have believed the students here&#13;
are really apathetic. It's just a&#13;
matter of organization.&#13;
"It should be obvious the&#13;
Bookstore isn't fulfilling the&#13;
needs of the students," he&#13;
continued. "That should be&#13;
apparent with the response we&#13;
have received."&#13;
He said later, very simply,&#13;
"The time was right."&#13;
He credited the two students,&#13;
Werbie and Zievers, for making&#13;
the Exchange a success. Werbie&#13;
said in turn, "It couldn't have&#13;
happened without the help of&#13;
Asst. Chancellor Allen Dearborn&#13;
and Ken Pagel, the&#13;
manager of Parkside Village."&#13;
He explained how Dearborn&#13;
had jarred lose a bureaucratic&#13;
logjam that had prevented them&#13;
from getting a booklist, and how&#13;
Pagel had allowed them to use&#13;
an unfinished Village apartment&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
The Book Exchange itself&#13;
works this way: A student&#13;
brings in the books he wants to&#13;
sell. He writes his name in his&#13;
books and the prices he wants&#13;
for them. He then takes a note&#13;
card and writes down his name,&#13;
address, phone number, the&#13;
books he has for sale, and the&#13;
money he wants. This card is&#13;
then filed, and the books are put&#13;
on the shelves. If someone&#13;
wants to buy one of his books, he&#13;
pays the money to the coordinators,&#13;
who check the book off&#13;
the seller's list.&#13;
The money will then be given&#13;
to the sellers when the Book&#13;
Exchange closes.&#13;
A brief check of the prices&#13;
showed them to be cheaper, or&#13;
the approximate price of the&#13;
used books on sale at the&#13;
Bookstore. The difference being,&#13;
as many people noted, was&#13;
that the students made the&#13;
money here, and not the&#13;
Bookstore.&#13;
Attention!&#13;
Newscope staff meeting&#13;
on Wednesday at 5p.m.&#13;
at the office. &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE January 17,1972&#13;
'Come visit our pizza&#13;
kitchens or have&#13;
some delivered'&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5—12&#13;
except Sunday&#13;
4615—7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
i-fotWzzA&#13;
LIBRARY&#13;
Try first THE NEW YORK TIMES&#13;
FILM REVIEWS (1913-1970), in&#13;
the Library. Then try FILM&#13;
FACTS (1958)1972). If you&#13;
need still more information,&#13;
check the READER'S GUIDE&#13;
under the subject "Moving&#13;
Picture Plays - c riticisms,&#13;
plots, etc." If you don't&#13;
find it, ask a librarian.&#13;
UWP Hosts&#13;
Kovacs F ilm&#13;
An exclusive showing of a&#13;
film about the man Playboy&#13;
magazine called "the only true&#13;
genius developed by the&#13;
television medium," Ernie&#13;
Kovacs, will be shown Friday,&#13;
January 21, at the Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
In 1951, when television was in&#13;
its infancy, the smiling,&#13;
mustachioed, cigar-smoking&#13;
comic first appeared with his&#13;
unique brand of humor. During&#13;
the next ten years, Kovacs&#13;
wrote, directed and performed&#13;
some of the wildest and most&#13;
memorable comedy shows in&#13;
the history of television. He&#13;
appeared on all three major&#13;
networks.&#13;
Kovacs won critical and&#13;
national audience acclaim for&#13;
his brilliant, advanced mastery&#13;
of comedy using the television&#13;
medium. Kovacs began his&#13;
experiments with television&#13;
comedy, creating such comedy&#13;
classics as "Percy Dovetonsils",&#13;
the martini-lathed poet&#13;
laureate; the famous "Mack the&#13;
Knife" comedy blackouts; "The&#13;
Nairobi Trio" of musical apes;&#13;
and Kovacs' memorable syncopated&#13;
sequences in which&#13;
inanimate objects perform&#13;
rhythmically to symphonic&#13;
music.&#13;
In 1962, Kovacs was killed in a&#13;
tragic automobile accident. At&#13;
that time all his videotapes&#13;
were placed in a permanent&#13;
private archive. Because there&#13;
has been a strong and continuous&#13;
interest in the man and&#13;
his comedy, special permission&#13;
was granted to produce the&#13;
documentary film. UW-P will&#13;
be the second university in the&#13;
U.S. to present this film. It&#13;
premiered Jan. 13 at the&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
See this momentous film&#13;
Friday at 8 p .m. Admission 75&#13;
cents.&#13;
Snowmobile Cub&#13;
REGULAR PRICE $399.00&#13;
OR&#13;
WITH PURCHASE OF ANYTHING&#13;
IN THE STORE $150.00&#13;
OR&#13;
WITH PURCHASE OF $299.00&#13;
STEREO CONSOLE $99.00&#13;
F O R W I N T E R ' S H E A V Y S N O W S&#13;
SNO TIGER snow biower&#13;
light weight (less tha n 10 lbs.)&#13;
rugged, non-clogging, easy&#13;
starting, comp letely portab le.&#13;
Great fo r small ar eas or dig ging&#13;
a ca r out of a s nowbank.&#13;
Reasonably priced at $1 09 0 0-&#13;
R.C. Service&#13;
Ron Casperson-owntrr&#13;
1240 N. Main Street&#13;
Racine Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
featuring Admiral Mastercare Warranty*&#13;
• d mA i r al M a s&#13;
ter car e w a&#13;
f '&#13;
a n t y : T&#13;
h i s warranty cover s the entire&#13;
produ ct, no cha rge w ill be made for p arts or labor on r e p l a c e ­&#13;
men t of defectiv e par ts. w a&#13;
"&#13;
a n t y good at a dm i r a&#13;
I dealers&#13;
throughout the IJ .S•&#13;
BLUES NIGHT CLUB — Mandolinest Johnny Young and his&#13;
Chicago Blues Band will be appearing at PABs first night club of&#13;
the Spring semester. He will appear at the Student Activities&#13;
Building January 22 from 9-1 a.m.&#13;
Regents O pen-up Meetings&#13;
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin system&#13;
decided Friday to provide time at future meetings for faculty,&#13;
students, and the general public to appear before the board.&#13;
Board Pres. W. Roy Kopp, Platteville, said the decision —&#13;
reached after prolonged discussion with a representative of the&#13;
state attorney general — is a reaffirmation of the positions of the&#13;
boards which were merged.&#13;
"We are asking, of course, for an orderly process so that the&#13;
comments will make the greatest contribution possible," Kopp&#13;
said. "We also are asking that those wishing to appear notify the&#13;
president of the board at a reasonable time, in advance of the&#13;
meeting, of the subject on which they wish to appear."&#13;
CLIO - a new journal&#13;
A new scholarly journal edited by four University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside English professors has made its first appearance.&#13;
&#13;
The publication, called CLIO, is described by its editors as&#13;
an "interdisciplinary journal of literature, history, and the&#13;
philosophy of history" and will be published three times per&#13;
year.&#13;
Associate professor Robert H. Canary and assistant&#13;
professor Henry Kozicki are editors; James Seay Dean, Jr.,&#13;
assistant professor, is associate editor; and Andrew M.&#13;
McLean, assistant professor, is review editor.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
MONDAY, JAN. 17&#13;
Instruction begins: Second semester&#13;
classes start.&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs. Southern&#13;
lllinois-Edwardsville at Edwardsville.&#13;
&#13;
TUESDAY, JAN. 18&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs. Indiana&#13;
State-Evansville at Evansville.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 19&#13;
Film: Parkside Film Society will&#13;
sponsor showing of the film&#13;
"Goldstein" and short subject, "The&#13;
Grateful Dead" at 8 p.m. in Room&#13;
103 Greenquist Hall. Adm. 50 cents.&#13;
FRIDAY, JAN. 21&#13;
Hockey: UW-P Club vs. Illinois&#13;
Benedictine at 9 p.m. at Wilson Park&#13;
Recreation Center, Milwaukee.&#13;
Film: Documentary, "Ernie&#13;
Kovacs". Includes videotapes of his&#13;
comedy routines not seen since his&#13;
death in 1962. 8 p.m., Activities&#13;
Building. Adm. 75 cent$.&#13;
SATURDAY, JAN. 22&#13;
Fencing: Rangers vs. IllinoisChicago&#13;
Circle and Cornell&#13;
University at Chicago.&#13;
Gymnastics: Rangers at Oshkosh&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
Indoor Track: NAIA at Kansas City,&#13;
Mo.; Chicago Open at Chicago.&#13;
Wrestling: Rangers vs. Eastern&#13;
Illinois and Ball State at Charleston.&#13;
Lecture: Eugene Gasiorkiewicz,&#13;
associate professor, life science, will&#13;
lecture on "The Prairie Restoration&#13;
Project at Parkside" at an open&#13;
meeting of the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Nature Conservancy at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room D-137.&#13;
SUNDAY, JAN. 23&#13;
Meeting: The UW-P Chess Club will&#13;
meet from 1 to 4 p.m. in the Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
jixwaooFi&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR&#13;
ASSOCIATE EDITOR&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR&#13;
COPY EDITOR&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Jerry Socha&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
Larry Jones&#13;
Rick Pazera&#13;
Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
the &amp; a? '"?.&#13;
ependent student newspaper composed by students:&#13;
varau™ ° ^isconsin-Parkside Published weekly except durin&#13;
reven.?r w »k Studen&#13;
! obtained advertising funds are the sole source &lt;&#13;
distributer?»h!«.e °»Vl,0n 0f Newscope. 6,000 copies arfe printed an&#13;
University F d 9 the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as th&#13;
DeadUne for SP™ ar# available Upon re9uest&#13;
Thursdav'' 7?&#13;
a&#13;
"&#13;
uscrip,s submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. th&#13;
photoqraohs is the sil"!'&#13;
0&#13;
" 3011 must be ,yped double-spaced. Deadline fc&#13;
and phmoaraohs m* ?" Pri0r to pub&#13;
"«tion. Unsolicited manuscripl&#13;
miss?or? a^ter wh!rh rec,aimed within 30 days after the date of sul&#13;
NewscoDe offire c i Wi&#13;
" become tbe property of Newscope Ltd. Th&#13;
zz-ZT' or&#13;
°~ ou&#13;
"&#13;
din&#13;
""&#13;
A)cusc&lt;ye Staff Mee+.n^&#13;
~fK\s d&lt;k V&#13;
"t" kc orf'ict&#13;
-New lAe Lry Vjtl come &#13;
The Power of Women&#13;
January 17,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
By Marc Eisen, News Editor&#13;
"The most potent force to change the political&#13;
structure is the power of women," so said Betty&#13;
Friedan, noted spokeswoman for Women's&#13;
Liberation, as she addressed an overflow crowd at&#13;
Dominican College last Tuesday.&#13;
The author of The Feminine Mystique and the&#13;
founder of the National Organization for Women&#13;
(NOW), Frieden was one of the earliest&#13;
proponents of Women's Liberation, and since has&#13;
consistently been in the forefront of the fight for&#13;
feminine equality.&#13;
"A new human politics will be born in 1972,"&#13;
she told the predominantly female audience. She&#13;
forecasted ^ new alliance of women, the young,&#13;
and the oppressed that will take the monopoly of&#13;
power away from the white upper class wasps —&#13;
"post menopausal businessmen" she termed them&#13;
at one point.&#13;
Calling women's liberation "the biggest&#13;
revolution of our time", she saw the movement&#13;
entering a third stage: the demanding of an equal&#13;
share of political power.&#13;
"We will no longer do the housework of&#13;
politics. We'll no longer look up the zip codes and&#13;
the address the envelopes," she told the applauding&#13;
crowd. "We demand our share of&#13;
political power."&#13;
She warned, "The institutions won't change&#13;
unless we have the power." She pointed out:&#13;
— President Nixon's vetoing of the Day Care&#13;
bill — "How can you cut down welfare and then not&#13;
provide child care?" she asked.&#13;
— the failure of the Equal Rights Amendment&#13;
to pass — "Women are the only group it's legal to&#13;
discriminate against," she said.&#13;
— the continued resistance to legalized&#13;
abortions and contraceptives — "It should be the&#13;
inalienable right of a woman to control her body,"&#13;
she contended.&#13;
"It's urgent that we demand our rights now,"&#13;
she told the audience.&#13;
Tracing the development of the Women's&#13;
Liberation movement, she saw the first stage as&#13;
the consciousness raising level — "We found out&#13;
we weren't alone," she said.&#13;
Prior to liberation women were brainwashed&#13;
into thinking of herself as a freak if she desired to&#13;
do things for herself. "She was alone, isolated,"&#13;
Friedan said. "She was made to feel guilty for&#13;
wanting to work."&#13;
Her place instead was the home. "Every&#13;
woman was expected to do for love or nothing&#13;
what no man would do for anything," she observed.&#13;
&#13;
This image was nurtured by television — "Her&#13;
greatest achievement was to get the kitchen sink&#13;
or her husband's shirts clean. The image of&#13;
woman herself was: "She looks bad. She smells&#13;
bad. She must be disguised at all costs."&#13;
"Where is the image of woman as a person?"&#13;
she asked.&#13;
The second stage reached was the commitment&#13;
to organize. It's achievement required&#13;
the overcoming of self hatred and the lack of self&#13;
confidence.&#13;
"It amazes me so many women have overcome&#13;
their feelings of self degradation," she said.&#13;
She argued, "This put down of women is built into&#13;
the Judeo-Christian tradition; it exists as part of&#13;
the social structure."&#13;
She maintained in her speech, "The only&#13;
enemy that can stop us is us. We must overcome&#13;
our timidity, our fears."&#13;
She rejected the contention of some&#13;
liberationists that man is the enemy. "Man as a&#13;
class is not oppressing women as a class," she&#13;
said. "Man himself is oppressed."&#13;
She warned against the dangers of "man&#13;
hatred." She described it as a reactionary position&#13;
cloaked in a radical guise. It's a two sex society we&#13;
live in, she said, and man hatred is a dead end&#13;
proposition.&#13;
"Can we be asked to give up love? " she asked.&#13;
"It's a basic force. We have to recognize it." She&#13;
added puckishly, "I think man is here to stay."&#13;
Friedan asserted though, "Women have one&#13;
advantage over men. They weren't brought up to&#13;
be men. They weren't brought up to prove their&#13;
manhood by killing someone.&#13;
She called for those women who have been&#13;
traditionally quiescent to become politically active&#13;
in 1972. She stressed the need for women to&#13;
run for public office.&#13;
"Women have confronted the realities of life,"&#13;
she said, "not memorandums."&#13;
"Ours is a unique revolution," she said at the&#13;
end of her speech. "It is life giving."&#13;
Campus Security&#13;
Add Two Men&#13;
MADISON — Tow additional&#13;
members of the safety and&#13;
security staff at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside were&#13;
sworn in as police officers by&#13;
the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents at its meeting Friday.&#13;
The two are Dennis Leland&#13;
Cartier, 2809 25th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha, and Kent Harper&#13;
Mayes, Box 125, Oakdale&#13;
Estates, Kenosha.&#13;
Both have been trainees with&#13;
the Parkside force since Nov. 1&#13;
and have completed four weeks&#13;
of police recruit school at&#13;
Waukesha Technical Institute.&#13;
Their appointments as police&#13;
officers are effective Dec. 26.&#13;
The new appointments bring&#13;
to nine the total number of&#13;
Parkside police officers, including&#13;
Safety and Security&#13;
Director Ronald Brinkmann,&#13;
Sergeant Donald Krogh and&#13;
seven patrolmen. The force also&#13;
includes five security men.&#13;
ft #&#13;
ALL textbooks tor A LL courses&#13;
now sold at M ain Book Store&#13;
on Wood Rd.&#13;
^rSMW-CLASSESr JAN 1" 1**7-21 jg&#13;
$MAIN BOOK STORE: ft&#13;
SiMon.-Thurs. - 7:30 A.M.-8:30 P.M.g&#13;
^ F r i d a y - 8 : 0 0 A . M . - 4 : 30 P . M M&#13;
f KENOSHA- AND RACINE STORES:&#13;
jgMp.a.-Fxi^ay..-&#13;
" NO Books Will Be Sold At&#13;
Kenosha &amp; Racine Stores&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
FOR&#13;
FOREIGN&#13;
CAR&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
and PARTS&#13;
call&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
CAR&#13;
CENTER&#13;
652-6667 5919-35 Ave&#13;
Keno&amp;ha, Wis.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
BEAT POET DIES&#13;
(CPS) — Kenneth Patchen, the fourth major American poet to&#13;
die in the past two years, succumbed to a fatal heart attack at his&#13;
home in Palo Alto, Calif., Saturday, January 8.&#13;
Patchen, who was 60, pioneered poetry reading to the accompaniment&#13;
of jazz during the 1950's.&#13;
His anti-war poetry, some written 40 ye ars ago, has recently&#13;
regained popularity because of the Vietnam war.&#13;
Patchen died one day after Pulitzer Prize winning poet John&#13;
Berrymen jumped to his death from a bridge over the Mississippi&#13;
River in Minneapolis.&#13;
Paul Blackburn died at Cortland, New York, last August and&#13;
Charles Olson succumbed to cancer in New York City in January,&#13;
1970.&#13;
STUDENT WINS ABORTION CASE&#13;
GAINSVILLE, Fla. (CPS) — The editor of the University of&#13;
Florida's student newspaper. The ALLIGATOR, has been found&#13;
innocent of any crime in printing information on abortion referral&#13;
in the paper last Fall. A county felony court ruled that the state's&#13;
193-year-old abortion law was unconstitutional.&#13;
y ipvi i&#13;
•faswr petstsr.&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
9a.m.—4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
0) a bottle or&#13;
" 5 a g l a s s&#13;
_c and&#13;
O a s teak sandwich or&#13;
s— a bratwurst or&#13;
q a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NOR THW EST C O RNE R OF HIGHWAYS 1-94 A N D 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.—12 p.m.&#13;
Availab le f o r F&#13;
r a t e r n i t y o r S ° l&#13;
°'ity pattie s &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE January 17, 1972&#13;
Next time yoac\re ^ please decide fo do&#13;
cat wifK yoar triend^Q someftvihj ihtereS+t'hg&#13;
FLO'S&#13;
Home Cooking&#13;
HWY 31&amp;County Trunk E&#13;
6AM-6PM Specials Daily&#13;
Ladies:&#13;
The beer's on&#13;
Frenchie&#13;
That's rightfree&#13;
beer&#13;
for you girls, if&#13;
you're over 21 of course,&#13;
anytime after 8 pm on&#13;
Tuesdays.&#13;
The&#13;
food's great, the beer's&#13;
cold, and if you don't&#13;
like our musicbring&#13;
your&#13;
own.&#13;
by Paul Lomartire, Feature Editor&#13;
John Goray is an artist, and the Mayor&#13;
of H arbor West, Kenosha's art community.&#13;
Like fine wine, he gets better with age. The&#13;
years have brought white hair to his&#13;
physical appearance. The passing seasons&#13;
of t hese years have added a gruff mumblerumble-grumble&#13;
to his speech.&#13;
Mr. Goray is not the sort of person one&#13;
can listen to with only one ear. His delivery&#13;
of the English language and assorted tones,&#13;
depends heavily on the patience and&#13;
imagination of the listener. Many times an&#13;
ingenious metaphor or analogy will pass&#13;
from his mouth, swirl about the listener's&#13;
head only once, and pass into the wind.&#13;
Being the informal Mayor of the&#13;
thriving art community near Kenosha's&#13;
port, Mr. Goray is a source of valuable information&#13;
about the area and beyond. I find&#13;
him very helpful when I am looking for a&#13;
restaurant to eat in and review.&#13;
"Listen, you have to try Bob's," he said&#13;
one day last fall, referring to Bob's Koffee&#13;
Pot on Seventh Avenue in Kenosha. "The&#13;
food is okay, but the walls are great, you&#13;
have to see the walls. Some of the local&#13;
artists are pitchin' in and doing a mural," he&#13;
said.&#13;
I went to the Koffee Pot and found the&#13;
best cheeseburger in the area, and by far the&#13;
most interesting walls. As a source of&#13;
o——.j-museum,&#13;
referred me to a Chi&#13;
Racine, with a typi&#13;
mendation; the food t&#13;
good, but I had to see th&lt;&#13;
those Cantonese delica&#13;
out.&#13;
Last week I drove&#13;
panion, Maggie, to Rac&#13;
2517 Durand Avenue Jo&#13;
a thousand with his "gov&#13;
wondered if he would&#13;
string to two with a r&lt;&#13;
what looked to be a c&#13;
store.&#13;
I am like many otl&#13;
eat in a Chinese rest&#13;
dering a Coke with my&#13;
visit pass without doin^&#13;
related verbal impress&#13;
Maggie's reaction i&#13;
She looks from side to&#13;
There's no other way&#13;
So there I was, high atop Mount Potosi 'neath a&#13;
mythology tree. It was Fall, and the leaves they&#13;
did. The wind changed and all around me Dylan,&#13;
singing:&#13;
Lay down your weary tune lay down&#13;
lay down the song you strum&#13;
and rest yourself 'neath the strength of strings&#13;
no voice can hope to hum&#13;
One of those days.&#13;
I casually examined one of the leaves. It, too,&#13;
had obviously seen better days; perhaps it had&#13;
once been the highest, even. It didn't matter.&#13;
Though it was the color of Midas, of the robe of his&#13;
prettiest harem girl, it now read (in surprisingly&#13;
small letters):&#13;
this leaf died for the times they are a'changin'&#13;
bob dylan has sun something new&#13;
I dropped the leaf and hopped a passing mountain&#13;
steamboat to the nearest record store.&#13;
The man there touched my money and the fine&#13;
blue album like they felt the same. God I hate that.&#13;
I forgot it and plugged the music into my ear.&#13;
Greatest Higs. Genius and Gall. And Lord I swear&#13;
any side of this one heard on a burning transistor&#13;
radio would still sound number one. '&#13;
Ah yes but. I feel so forced into humility and I&#13;
should hope so, but like you I have my opinions.&#13;
76.19 per cent of these longs have been redorded&#13;
and released by him before, and it sure is nice to&#13;
have them all together in this incredible collage,&#13;
but. "Lay, Lady, Lay" falls right between "Don't&#13;
Think Twice" and "Memphis Blues." We all love&#13;
Nashville Skyline and all, but in that vein I rather&#13;
listen to Hank Williams ("my first idol" he says on&#13;
the back of Joan Baez in Concert Part Two) and&#13;
Jimmie Rodgers and lately Kris Kristofferson (in&#13;
that same vague vein.) I mean why not "Chimes of&#13;
Freedom" there instead?&#13;
thru the mad mystic hammering of the wild&#13;
ripping hail&#13;
the sky cracked its poems in naked wonder&#13;
that the clanging of the church bells blew far&#13;
into the breeze&#13;
leaving only bells of lightning and its thunder&#13;
telling for the searching ones, on their&#13;
speechless seeking trail&#13;
wonderful names like Plenty O'Toole and Tiffany&#13;
films, "From Russia With Love", "Dr. No", "Gi&#13;
"Thunderball", "You Only Live Twice", "On Her&#13;
Secret Service", and now, "Diamonds Are Foreve:&#13;
nonsense and like Mother Goose, nonsense has alw;&#13;
kind of addictive fun.&#13;
DIRTY HARRY&#13;
Clint Eastwood&#13;
Andy Robinson&#13;
by Warner Bros.&#13;
DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER&#13;
Sean Connery&#13;
Jill St. John&#13;
by United Artists&#13;
As a reasonably healthy, T-bone fed, young psychopath, I&#13;
would sit emphatically enthralled with those outrageous and&#13;
impossible Bond films; my heart nearly vibrating out of my&#13;
chest as my alter ego gunned, sprayed or eyed his adversaries to&#13;
death . . . his hand ass-patting a volupto-nymph.&#13;
It was fun borrowing that cool smile and ardent stride&#13;
clanking my way down high school corridors letting the fantasy&#13;
mingle with my own juries. That juicv fun returned over&#13;
Christmas recess with the joyous psychopathy of "Diamonds&#13;
are Forever", coming on slightly remodeled, with a returned&#13;
Sean Connery playing a more contemporary and less perfect&#13;
James Bond. Saltzman and Broccoli, producers of the Bond&#13;
syndrome, seem to be accurately guessing their audiences&#13;
again, as we find the hero piling up what looks like the entire Las&#13;
Vegas Police Department in a car chase that rivals any that I've&#13;
seen yet (in sheer madness). There's plenty of simple humor&#13;
made to order for Bond-goers who love the exhilarating speed of&#13;
constant action rather than reflective comedy.&#13;
The film is almost without slory line, making it a simple&#13;
thing to place Ernst Stavro Blofeld and jester Bond in the ring&#13;
and let them fight it out, gimmicking the hell out of each other&#13;
. . .the bell ringing for quickies with those wonderful girls with&#13;
Getting away from total fantasy on the Police&#13;
move to an attempt at seriousness called "Dirty h&#13;
film has received superlative reviews from near]&#13;
who voiced his opinion. At the risk of being risky, I \&#13;
it fell somewhat short of their descriptions.&#13;
There's this Harry Callahan, who carries a mi&#13;
magnum which he asserts as "the most powerful hai&#13;
world" (probably the most unwieldy, too . . • W(&#13;
shown from where he pulls this howitzer). Harry&#13;
with another detective to track down a psychotic kill&#13;
himself Scorpio. The chase is strange enough with se&#13;
before Harry finally catches up with the killer; hi&#13;
tried and is released when it is found that his C(&#13;
Rights have been abused . . . namely the Fourth,&#13;
and Fourteenth Amendments. The film takes a nan&#13;
bureaucratic confusion, and Constitutional tn&#13;
suspects is shown to be too lenient in extreme cases.&#13;
Eventually the killer strikes again, command*&#13;
full of children and its driver — his ransom includes&#13;
an unhampered jet plane flight out of the country. I&#13;
are to be met without interference.&#13;
In full Eastwood style, Callahan goes after&#13;
anyway, jumping on top of the moving bus from an ^&#13;
short chase occurs, the villian is destroyed and&#13;
turns in his star . . ah . . . badge.&#13;
I am growing accustomed to Eastwood an&#13;
because there is but one Eastwood, and ma&#13;
"J, *&#13;
which to put him, the disc-jockey from Play Mis'&#13;
primarily the same man who wields this .44. Wni&#13;
some very nice Fellini-like shots that capture&#13;
camera backing off from a nighttime stadiurr&#13;
standing on Robinson's wounded leg, torturing lr*&#13;
KMO Douglas • open till II ilf T«M SC UIVllN REINCARNATION &#13;
January 17,1972 NEWSCOPE&#13;
he proved to be excellent.&#13;
Jks ago I ran into the Mayor in&#13;
ood, standing in front of his art&#13;
museum. At that time he&#13;
to a Chinese restaurant in&#13;
1 u typical Goray recomhe&#13;
food tasted alright, even&#13;
d&#13;
to see the fine colors. Some of&#13;
ese delicacies are really fark&#13;
I drove my constant comie,&#13;
to Racine to eat at Chiam,&#13;
lvenue. John Goray had batted&#13;
th his 'gourmet" advice, and I&#13;
he would be able to run his&#13;
with a restaurant housed in&#13;
to be a converted appliance&#13;
many other Yankees when I&#13;
nese restaurant. Besides or-&#13;
'• with my meal, I rarely let a&#13;
lout doing a Charlie Char., or&#13;
1 impression.&#13;
reaction is always the same,&#13;
n side to side when I start in&#13;
h0&#13;
?&#13;
inB s&#13;
°™&#13;
Chinese fella will come over and punch me&#13;
ending once and for all my apparent&#13;
disrespect for ttfe immediate surroundings&#13;
• r&#13;
e a s o n&#13;
' on evening we&#13;
visited Chiam, I didn't indulge in the idiocy&#13;
I felt very relaxed and comfortable in the&#13;
restaurant, and the service was so good I&#13;
had no time to slant my eyes at Maggie and&#13;
begin. This ldiosyncracy can be dissected in&#13;
a remote way, only to reveal that this&#13;
Chinese restaurant isn't hoaky in any way&#13;
When the waitress came to take our&#13;
order we were ready. Maggie decided to eat&#13;
steak with pea pods ($3.75). My eyes being&#13;
bigger than her stomach, I urged her to&#13;
order the complete dinner, which costs&#13;
seventy five cents more and includes juice&#13;
or soup, egg foo-young (l), rolls and butter&#13;
dessert. '&#13;
I ordered shrimp egg foo-young, the&#13;
complete dinner. We both chose egg drop&#13;
soup as the first course.&#13;
I noticed the restaurant wasn't full, but&#13;
for a Thursday evening during an economic&#13;
Page 5&#13;
recession, the place was respectably filled. I&#13;
sensed many "regulars" within the bounds&#13;
of the dining area. I was to soon find out how&#13;
easily this place can become a personal&#13;
favorite.&#13;
The food is excellent, or at least it was&#13;
on our visit. Maggie's slices of beef tenderloin&#13;
were large, tender and numerous in&#13;
the large serving of steak and pea pods. The&#13;
rice was very tender, and not starchy, according&#13;
to her.&#13;
My shrimp egg foo-young was fine also.&#13;
There were generous pieces of shrimp in the&#13;
fried patties. I could not lodge a formidable&#13;
complaint at the food I ate at Chiam. Maggie&#13;
and I both enjoyed the entire meal, right&#13;
down to the fortune cookie which told me I&#13;
will someday be wise and prosperous.&#13;
The fortune cookie brought to mind John&#13;
Goray. A few more rough winters, fine&#13;
springs and warm summers and mother&#13;
nature will add another white hair or two,&#13;
and a gruffer mumble-rumble-grumble.&#13;
This will establish Mr. Goray, I'm sure, as&#13;
Kenosha's only artist-sage in residence.&#13;
his&#13;
gly&#13;
;in'&#13;
ain&#13;
ine&#13;
at.&#13;
ar.&#13;
iar&#13;
tor&#13;
A I&#13;
ns.&#13;
led&#13;
to&#13;
ge,&#13;
n't&#13;
tve&#13;
ler&#13;
on&#13;
nd&#13;
(in&#13;
of&#13;
ild&#13;
ar&#13;
er&#13;
sir&#13;
for the lonesome hearted lovers, with too personal&#13;
a tale&#13;
and for each unharmful gentle soul misplaced&#13;
inside a jail&#13;
and we gazed upon the chimes of freedom&#13;
flashing&#13;
Now how do the lyrics of any Nashville Skyline&#13;
song stand up in print? Even though they are&#13;
easier to listen to and even sound so fine, Dylan is&#13;
Dylan. The same goes for "Tonight I'll Be Staying&#13;
Here With You." But I'm forced into humility. The&#13;
collage would be incomplete without something off&#13;
that album. The rest, of course, is awe-inspiring.&#13;
And that something new he's sung, the last five&#13;
songs on the last (fourth) side. "Tomorrow Is a&#13;
Long Time" was published and recorded live in&#13;
1963, unreleased, and it sure belongs here as&#13;
"new." So warm in the face of the fire of genius.&#13;
"When I Paint My Masterpiece," recorded by The&#13;
Band on their new album, is nevertheless Dylan's&#13;
song; and I don't have much to say about it, but&#13;
it's a fine upstanding song. Then the last three,&#13;
recorded in October 1971 with Happy Traum on&#13;
Bass, Banjo, Second Guitar and Vocal Harmony.&#13;
(Never heard of him? Well, he taught me to pick&#13;
my first song "Freight Train" — in a book, I'm&#13;
sorry to say,) he's editor of Sing Out! — the folk&#13;
song magazine published irregularly, and he's&#13;
been pickin' and grinning' 'round Woodstock for a&#13;
long time; he now has an album or two with his&#13;
brother.) And, oh man, it's so fine to know Bob&#13;
Dylan is alive and well. So alive. More alive than&#13;
he's seemed to me in years. "I Shall Be Released"&#13;
is the same song recorded by The Band on their&#13;
first album, but Dylan chopped off the first vers. If&#13;
he had to do it, I at least think it was the right one.&#13;
So it!&#13;
s shorter, but it is, as a friend put it,&#13;
"funkier" (I think that's the same as "more&#13;
alive.") And "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere" is&#13;
changed even more, even to the point of being a&#13;
"new" song. The third verse, for instance, used to&#13;
be (on the Byrds' Sweetheart of the Rodeo, and on&#13;
one of his bootleg albums):&#13;
buy me a flute and a gun that shoots&#13;
tailgates and stubstitutes&#13;
strap yourself to a tree with roots&#13;
you ain't goin' nowhere&#13;
Now it's&#13;
buy me some rings and a gun that sings&#13;
a flute that toots and a bee that stings&#13;
a sky that cries and a bird that flies&#13;
a fish that walks and a dog that talks&#13;
and damned if that don't make me feel better. It's&#13;
the chorus that makes the song, though. Listen to&#13;
it for yourself. Finally, "Down in the Flood". This&#13;
song, too, is a few years old, but (am I being&#13;
redundant?) is alive and well right now in hour&#13;
local neighborhood sounds shop. Well. God bless&#13;
the man and I can't wait for the further adventures&#13;
of.&#13;
I hopped a steamboat back up the mountain and&#13;
sat beneath the tree. I sang a song and sipped a&#13;
Coors and waited for another leaf to fall in the&#13;
Dylan wind.&#13;
Brian Kipp&#13;
Tiffany Case. The&#13;
Jo", "Goldfinger",&#13;
On Her Magesty's&#13;
Forever", are all&#13;
has always beep a&#13;
: Police Parade, we&#13;
'Dirty Harry". The&#13;
m nearly everyone&#13;
•isky, I will say that&#13;
5.&#13;
ies a monstrous .44&#13;
?rful handgun in the&#13;
... we are never&#13;
Harry is assigned&#13;
otic killer who calls&#13;
i with several dying&#13;
iller; he cannot be&#13;
t his Constitutional&#13;
fourth, Fifth, Sixth&#13;
s a hard line on the&#13;
•nal treatment of&#13;
; cases.&#13;
nmandeering a bus&#13;
icludes $200,000 and&#13;
jntry. His demands&#13;
after the madman&#13;
•om an over-head, a&#13;
d and Dirty Harry&#13;
&gt;d and his method&#13;
many situations in&#13;
ay Misty for Me is&#13;
14. While there are&#13;
ipture attention -&#13;
tadium, Eastwood&#13;
ing him into telling&#13;
him where he has hidden a dying girl — the film is an attempt at&#13;
the genre and is successful in that attempt with excellent acting&#13;
on the part of Andy Robinson, whose animal howling was sufficiently&#13;
insane ... but should have fallen on the detective ears&#13;
of someone like Rod Stieger instead of this Hollywood Idol.&#13;
FRENCH CONNECTION&#13;
Gene Hackman&#13;
Roy Schneider&#13;
by 20th Century Fox&#13;
By far the best of the Police Parade, and probably the best&#13;
film I've seen corrje out of 1971, is The French Connection. It is&#13;
stronger than Dirty Harry, in that it neither breaks nor makes&#13;
any heros and refrains from judging this outer world where only&#13;
cops and robbers tread.&#13;
Gene Hackman is as maniacal at getting his portrayal of&#13;
Jimmy Doyle perfect as Doyle is at being a narc. The character&#13;
Doyle is a mirror image of the real life Eddie Egan, little being&#13;
lost in translation as Ernest Tidyman, screenwriter, brought the&#13;
strings together in one of the few overwhelmingly real films that&#13;
I can recall, Hackman's feeling for the art adding the final&#13;
touches so that we can look at the city through Jimmy Doyle's&#13;
eyes.&#13;
A jungle is what we see, everyone predatory. Norman&#13;
Mailer said of this world in 1957 what seems to be the roots of the&#13;
"game" being played in Connection, "Hip is the American&#13;
Existentialist way to live. The psychopathic brilliance of hipster&#13;
style is modeled on the black experience. The negro has the&#13;
simplist of alternatives live a life of constant humility or everthreatening&#13;
danger ... to survive he must remain cool stay on&#13;
top of life at every threatening moment and live 'the enormous&#13;
present'."&#13;
We can see both sides in their psychopathic clarity in&#13;
Connection as Doyle and Russo discover 60 keys of skag imported&#13;
in a Lincoln Continental. The characters, setting and&#13;
situation is absolutely real demonstrating the negative and&#13;
positive of the entire other world of crime and its control. This&#13;
film is one that everyone should see. . . that's my opinion.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
SAFE, LEGAL&#13;
EARLY PREGNANCY&#13;
ABORTIONS&#13;
Now available in ibe Midwest&#13;
• Sympathetic, p ersonal t reatment.&#13;
• Low Cost.&#13;
312-775-2685&#13;
COLLECT 312-774-6911&#13;
Non-Profit Service&#13;
For Women In Need&#13;
Providing P regnancy Testing.&#13;
Confidential Counselling.&#13;
Post-Operative Counselling.&#13;
m&#13;
I&#13;
Ate. y on looking for ware/ \o tgo'mg to I&#13;
Ihe rtxoorY s omeday?.* I'm t \ot, [&#13;
upper cu&#13;
•1700 Sheridan Id.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
ilililil'lilil'lil"lililililil"lil"lililililil«lililili&#13;
JUST ARRIVED&#13;
?Mud -Mem&#13;
V *Jl/li&lt;jhtyJl/[aht -/U&lt;m&#13;
fflmit itemedfdwmtffhilh 3.42&#13;
fdho'Uitemedtd-bhhtb 2.34&#13;
Stcny Slewed ffweat tPhfafa 3.64&#13;
FREE&#13;
awe dichc-tmb with ernhy&#13;
bhiltfiubchabed.&#13;
E.F. Madrigrano.Inc.&#13;
1831-55th Street&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
[•I'I'I'I'IIIiIIIII 1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1T1&#13;
. .&#13;
*" ? *&#13;
M *&#13;
•&gt;*&amp;%&#13;
••-j?&#13;
5010 7th Ave.&#13;
* m• *+'iiUuX&amp;w 1 '&#13;
Mori, thru Fri.^.M%.&#13;
11 a.m. — tO p.m.&#13;
1&#13;
Saturday&#13;
11 a.m. - 9 p.m.&#13;
Sunday&#13;
Noon - 6 p.m. Phone: 654 -6032&#13;
N EW R E LE AS ES&#13;
Don McLean&#13;
"AMERICAN PIE" —$?.8S&#13;
McCartney&#13;
"WINGS WILD LIFE" — $3.85&#13;
Carole King&#13;
"CAROLE KING MUSIC" — $3.85&#13;
Black Oak Arkansas&#13;
"BLACK OAK ARKANSAS" — $3.85&#13;
George Harrison&#13;
"CONCERT FOR BENGLA DESH" — $12.88&#13;
Rolling Stones&#13;
"STONES GREATEST HITS" (Double) — $7.40&#13;
Emerson, Lake and Palmer&#13;
"LIVE "PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION " — $3.85 &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE January 17,1972&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
TITLE: The Ra Expeditions&#13;
AUTHOR: Thor Heyerdahl&#13;
PUBLISHER: Doubleday &amp; C ompany,&#13;
Inc. ($10.00)&#13;
It's been an unusual week. On the day&#13;
I lost my job, I set sail from Safi on a&#13;
papyrus raft, eighth imaginary crew&#13;
member on a crew of seven. Thor&#13;
Heyerdahl, our captain, told me that&#13;
the raft was originally designed some&#13;
5,000 years ago. We were sailing to&#13;
Barbados to show people that the ancient&#13;
Phoenicians and Egyptians could&#13;
have landed in the Americas millenia&#13;
before Christo Columbo. The voyage&#13;
helped to pass the time while I waited&#13;
for my first unemployment check.&#13;
The Ra Expeditions is a fascinating&#13;
340 page anthropological travel book&#13;
that describes the preparations for, and&#13;
voyages of the Ra and Ra II. It is just&#13;
chock full to the gills with all sorts of&#13;
little known facts about ancient&#13;
civilizations, that, when put into the&#13;
modern perspective of the Ra voyages,&#13;
give them a life and meaning which&#13;
make anthropology and history exciting&#13;
to the uninitiated reader. Ra&#13;
delves back millenia: Heyerdahl flies&#13;
into the past on a four cylinder bird and&#13;
floats out on a paper raft, leaving his&#13;
imaginary crew members intrigued.&#13;
The whole point of the voyages was to&#13;
show that ancient Phoenician and&#13;
Egyptian sailors could have colonized&#13;
South America, just as they did the&#13;
North African coast. During his travels&#13;
in Mexico, Africa, and Egypt Heyerdahl&#13;
had discovered startling&#13;
similarities between the artifacts left&#13;
behind by the ancient civilizations: Sun&#13;
worshiping, pyramid building, the fact&#13;
that ancient Aztec and Inca legend had&#13;
A few weeks too late, and the hurricane&#13;
season would be in full swing on the&#13;
American side of the Atlantic.&#13;
The first Ra fell apart 200 miles off&#13;
the coast of Barbados after weathering&#13;
squalls, high seas, broken rudders and&#13;
Sharks. It fell apart because the&#13;
BOOK&#13;
indicated that "white men with beards"&#13;
had taught their prehistoric ancestors,&#13;
the Olmecs, almost everything they&#13;
knew. Heyerdahl wanted to show that&#13;
the "white men with beards" of 5,000&#13;
years ago could have come from the&#13;
Mediterranean civilizations.&#13;
Building the Ra was a race against&#13;
time. Heyerdahl had to locate someone&#13;
capable of building a raft from papyrus&#13;
reeds (finally discovered in Chad), he&#13;
had to build it in the desert next to the&#13;
Pyramids, in order to obtain enough&#13;
reed, then transport the completed raft&#13;
to a port on the ocean, while at the same&#13;
time assembling an international crew.&#13;
builders and crew of the raft failed to&#13;
understand a seemingly minor detail in&#13;
the drawing of the raft, which they&#13;
copied from the walls of an Egyptian&#13;
pyramid.&#13;
A few months later Ra II was completed,&#13;
this time built exactly as the&#13;
drawings depicted. In 57 days Ra II&#13;
reached Bridgetown, Barbados, having&#13;
drifted on prevailing currents for 3,200&#13;
miles. Heyerdahl again asks if a crew&#13;
of inexperienced sailors could cross the&#13;
Atlantic, why not an experienced crew&#13;
of Phoenicans or Egyptians, using the&#13;
same raft.&#13;
Ever tye humanist, Heyredahl points&#13;
Ripon Society Opposes&#13;
Child Care Centers&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS)&#13;
— The self-pronounced liberal&#13;
Ripon Society recently praised'&#13;
President Nixon's veto of the&#13;
legislation that would have set&#13;
up child care centers across the&#13;
nation.&#13;
In the January issue of its&#13;
magazine the society said the&#13;
Democrats have no idea of the&#13;
costs and needs involved in antipoverty&#13;
programs. Additionally,&#13;
the society said the&#13;
child care plan erred because it&#13;
would have sent women into the&#13;
labor market in a time of high&#13;
unemployment.&#13;
out that the Ra is an "experiment&#13;
within an experiment". He often&#13;
relegates the Ra to the position of a&#13;
sociological microcosm, indicating that&#13;
if an international crew of seven men,&#13;
speaking seven different languages,&#13;
praying to seven different gods, etc.,&#13;
could manage to cross the Atlantic&#13;
without murdering each other, why&#13;
then can't, and you know the rest.&#13;
An interesting, and famous discovery&#13;
was made by the Ra, as it drifted its&#13;
way to Barbados. Seems there's oil&#13;
slicks in the middle of the ocean these&#13;
days. Except for this condition of&#13;
modern times, Heyerdahl comes to feel&#13;
a kinship with the ancient sailros of the&#13;
Mediterranean, this was their raft, the&#13;
provisions were the same as theirs,&#13;
packed away in the same type of earthen&#13;
jars, the only thing the ancients&#13;
lacked seemed to be the oil slicks.&#13;
In addition to the text, a multitude of&#13;
photographs is included in The Ra&#13;
Expeditions. The quality of the photos&#13;
reminds me of "National Geographic",&#13;
and really helps to justify the high price&#13;
of the book.&#13;
Ra is an extremely interesting book,&#13;
one from which you can learn a lot&#13;
about little known things, and one from&#13;
which you can gain a new perspective&#13;
and respect for the kind of man who&#13;
lived 5,000 years ago.&#13;
Courtesy of t he Book Mark, 622 - 59th&#13;
St., Kenosha.&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
FREE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
'/a Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH T HE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
1»IZZAt&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue K enosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days o week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
m,&#13;
if&#13;
FOR SALE — acoustic 120 guitar&#13;
amp, Traynor PA system with&#13;
mikes, Ludwig double bass drum&#13;
set. Must be sold soon — drafted.&#13;
657-9392 after 6 p.m.&#13;
FOR SALE — Skis and ski rack.&#13;
Head standards 6'1". Good condition.&#13;
652-7242.&#13;
HELP WANTED — Bartenders,&#13;
waitresses and go go girls full or&#13;
part time. Racine 632-3785. Afternoons&#13;
or nights.&#13;
FOR SALE — Wig - dark brown,&#13;
human hair, very long. Call ext.&#13;
2412,8:00-4:30; or 654-2017 after 5:00.&#13;
Ask for Wilma.&#13;
FOR SALE — Snowmobile - Bolens&#13;
Husky Sprint. Brand new 18 hp. List&#13;
$795. Sell for $625. Won in a raffle.&#13;
Phone 652-2538 after 12 noon.&#13;
ROOMMATE WANTED—Two girls&#13;
need third to share large 3 bedroom&#13;
apartment (furnished) on North side&#13;
of Kenosha. $43 per month (utilities&#13;
included). Call Judy or Roxanne,&#13;
658-3998.&#13;
k&#13;
| j + f purcKasea «-&#13;
T&#13;
I Book Mart&#13;
I S22-5&lt;?*St.&#13;
^Kthoskft J*&#13;
X;&#13;
1&#13;
%&#13;
K E N OS HA -R A C I NE&#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;
by Jim Casper&#13;
With two additional losses&#13;
Parkside's basketball squad&#13;
now has a 1-11 r ecord.&#13;
UW-Platteville routed the&#13;
Rangers 92-76 at Memorial Hall&#13;
and then the Rangers traveled&#13;
to Chicago where they absorbed&#13;
a 77-76 defeat at the hands of St.&#13;
Xavier.&#13;
In the Platteville game, the&#13;
Rangers fell behind 45-33 at the&#13;
half and were outscored by four&#13;
in the second half.&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, top scorer&#13;
for Parkside this season, led the&#13;
January 17,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Mark Peck, Parkside rolled to a&#13;
42-30 ha lf-time lead.&#13;
Tom Joyce was a key factor&#13;
for Parkside in the fine first half&#13;
showing as he drilled in 15&#13;
points. He could not keep up&#13;
that scoring pace in the second&#13;
half as Xavier held him to a&#13;
mere two points the rest of the&#13;
way.&#13;
Xavier forced Parkside into a&#13;
running game for a stretch of&#13;
about eight minutes in the&#13;
second half, and it was that&#13;
period, more than anything&#13;
futile and the story was the&#13;
same again — an other loss.&#13;
In coming so close to victory&#13;
because of a strong comeback it&#13;
is clear that the Rangers have&#13;
not given up.&#13;
It is true, however, that the&#13;
prospects for significant im*&#13;
provement in the won-loss mark&#13;
are dim.&#13;
With games against the&#13;
University of Missouri-St.&#13;
Louis, Southern Illinois&#13;
University-Edwardsville, and&#13;
Indiana State UniversityRangers&#13;
Lose to Platteville, Xavier&#13;
Rangers with 25 points. Fifteen&#13;
of Chambliss's points came at&#13;
the foul line where the former&#13;
Racine Park ace dropped in all&#13;
15 of his attempts.&#13;
Tom Joyce put in 16 points,&#13;
while Dennis Routheaux had 14&#13;
and Tom Heller 13.&#13;
Bow in Chicago&#13;
Next for the Rangers was a&#13;
match with St. Xavier in&#13;
Chicago, a team that split with&#13;
Parkside last season.&#13;
In the first game of the 1970-71&#13;
campaign the Rangers dropped&#13;
a 111-97 affair to the&#13;
Chicagoans. Later in the season&#13;
the Rangers avenged that&#13;
setback by turning in a strong&#13;
second half to defeat the&#13;
Cougars 112-79.&#13;
The first Xavier game turned&#13;
out to be a good one this season&#13;
but unfortunately it proved to be&#13;
yet another defeat for Parkside&#13;
in this dismal year.&#13;
Strengthened by the addition&#13;
of second semester eligibles&#13;
Tom Joyce, Bob Popp and&#13;
else, that proved fatal.&#13;
When Xavier's Bernard&#13;
Redfield scored a lay-up after&#13;
the ball had been pirated from&#13;
the Rangers, the hustling&#13;
Cougars took the lead for good&#13;
at 57-55.&#13;
Parkside did not give up.&#13;
Despite the fact that the Xavier&#13;
team rolled to a 73-62 le ad the&#13;
determined Rangers were able&#13;
to make a game of it.&#13;
The gap was closed to 76-74&#13;
with 45 seconds left in the&#13;
contest when Mike Joyce&#13;
scored.&#13;
Pat Divine then converted the&#13;
front end of a bonus situation to&#13;
give the Chicago squad a 77-74&#13;
advantage.&#13;
Popp tipped the ball in,&#13;
pulling the Rangers to within&#13;
one at 77-76.&#13;
Time was running out but the&#13;
Rangers got a last chance when&#13;
Xavier turned the ball over.&#13;
Getting close to the basket,&#13;
Parkside had four tip-in opportunities&#13;
but they were all&#13;
Winter Sports are&#13;
on the Road Again&#13;
All University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
winter sports teams&#13;
will be on the road this weekend&#13;
and although the basketball&#13;
squad is idle, it will swing back&#13;
into action Tuesday at Milton.&#13;
Track Coach Bob Lawson will&#13;
take three Rangers to the&#13;
National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics championships&#13;
at Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Likely to make the trip for the&#13;
Rangers are distancemen Rudy&#13;
Alvarez and Lucian Rosa and&#13;
walker Mike De Witt. Alvarez,&#13;
the freshman out of Horlick who&#13;
'placed 15th in the national cross&#13;
country race last fall and&#13;
earned all-American honors, is&#13;
rated a good bet for a place by&#13;
his coaches while Rosa, the&#13;
barefoot flash from Ceylon, is&#13;
adjusting to the indoor running&#13;
and will join Alvarez in the two&#13;
mile at the NAIA.&#13;
De Witt, a Kenosha senior&#13;
who's made a habit of walking&#13;
his way to a number of wins and&#13;
school records, is entered in the&#13;
two mile walk.&#13;
Coach Dave Donaldson's&#13;
gymnasts will begin their 1972&#13;
action at the Titan Invitational&#13;
in Oshkosh Saturday. Eight&#13;
Rangers are entered in the&#13;
meet, which also includes&#13;
Chicago, Northern Iowa,&#13;
Northern Michigan, St. Cloud&#13;
and UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
Key men for Donaldson are&#13;
senior captain Warren&#13;
McGiilivray and sophomore&#13;
Dan Boswein, both all-around&#13;
men. Joining them in the&#13;
competition will be Mike Monti&#13;
on the high bar and rings, Kevin&#13;
O'Neil on the parallel bars, side&#13;
horse and rings and Wayne&#13;
DuQuoine on the rings and free&#13;
exercise.&#13;
Newcomers this semester&#13;
whom Donaldson is counting on&#13;
include Kerry Pfeifer on the&#13;
•vault, Keiley Carney on the&#13;
parallel bars and side horse and&#13;
in free exercise and Rick&#13;
Bedore on the side horse.&#13;
Coach Jim Koch's wrestlers,&#13;
fresh from a swing through the&#13;
south where they met Southwestern&#13;
Louisiana and&#13;
Louisiana State, head for&#13;
Charleston, 111., Saturday where&#13;
they'll meet Ball State and&#13;
Eastern Illinois in a double dual&#13;
meet.&#13;
Probable lineup for Koch was&#13;
Frank Velasquez at, 118; Rick&#13;
Mauldin at 126; Bill West or Ken&#13;
Martin at 134; Martin or Kyle&#13;
Barnes at 142; Jeff Jenkins at&#13;
150; Ron Adams at 158; Tom&#13;
Beyer at 167; Rick Shoeffler at&#13;
177; Mark Barnhill at 190; and&#13;
Steve Sulk at heavyweight.&#13;
The UW-Parkside fencers will&#13;
face off against rugged Cornell&#13;
and Illinois-Chicago Circle&#13;
Saturday at Chicago. Heading&#13;
the list of Loran Hein's entries&#13;
are John Tank in foil; Pete&#13;
Shemanske in sabre and John&#13;
Hanzalik in epee.&#13;
The basketball squad will&#13;
face Milton College at Milton&#13;
Tuesday night, Jan. 25, as three&#13;
newly-eligible players, Mark&#13;
Peck, Tom Joyce and Bob Popp,&#13;
are expected to give Steve&#13;
Stephens cagers some bench&#13;
strength and reverse the tides of&#13;
the season's first half which saw&#13;
them go 1-10.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
Evansville coming up, the&#13;
chances for a victory are not&#13;
great. To compound the&#13;
problem the latter two games&#13;
are on the road.&#13;
Later on in the season, on&#13;
Feb. 8, Parkside plays UW-M at&#13;
the Arena in Milwaukee.&#13;
Recently UW-M demolished the&#13;
Rangers in the friendly confines&#13;
of Memorial Hall.&#13;
Chances at the Arena for the&#13;
Rangers are greatly minimized&#13;
especially in the light of t he fact&#13;
that UW-M scored an impressive&#13;
88-77 win over&#13;
Southern Illinois UniversityCarbondale&#13;
at the Milwaukee&#13;
Arena. Yes, that is the same&#13;
school that defeated Marquette&#13;
in the finals of the N.I.T.&#13;
tournament in 1967. They had a&#13;
player by the name of Walt&#13;
Frazier that yeaf.&#13;
Clearly, Parkside is not&#13;
taking the easy way out in&#13;
scheduling and as a result&#13;
numerous defeats are&#13;
inevitable.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racipe&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
JAN. 14 - WRESTLING at Southwest Louisiana .&#13;
Lafayette, La.&#13;
JAN. 15 - WREST:OMG at Louisiana State, Baton&#13;
Rouge, La.; BASKETBALL vs. Missouri-St.&#13;
Louis, Memorial Hall, Racine, 8 p.m.; FENCING&#13;
vs. Minnesota, Chicago, Iowa State, St.&#13;
Thomas at Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
JAN. 14-15 - HOCKEY CLUB at Drake University,&#13;
Des Moines, la.&#13;
JAN. 17 - BASKETBALL at Southern Illinois,&#13;
Edwardsville.&#13;
JAN. 18 - BASLETBA:: at Omdoama State,&#13;
Evansville.&#13;
U.W P. Student Activities&#13;
presents&#13;
BUDDAH RECORDING ARTISTS&#13;
&amp; WOODSTOCK ATTRACTION&#13;
N A N A&#13;
Sun. Feb.6 8PM&#13;
BRADFORD H.S. AUDITORIUM&#13;
U.W.P. Students $3 50 with fee card (limit 2 per card)&#13;
General Admission $4.00&#13;
Student Activities Office- Tallent Hall&#13;
j-|Jxr&gt;l~M~W~lil~M-W~«~|-|&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
i , lh C,ROUND BF.F.F&#13;
ON F'RFNCH CRUST&#13;
BR FAD DRF.SSFO&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LF.TTIICF AND OUR&#13;
SPF.CIAI. SAUCF&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
URII.l.FP COUNTRY&#13;
MAM A C I1FFSF ON&#13;
WIIOI.F WHFATBUN&#13;
WITH I.FTTUCF.&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAiSF&#13;
.80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPI.F DFC.KFR OF BURC.FR, CHFFSF&#13;
BACON I.FTTUCF TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISF ON TOAST 90c&#13;
THE RA NCH&#13;
N O R T H 331 1 S HE RI D AN R O AD S O U T H 7 5 00 SH ER I D A N R O AD&#13;
put your&#13;
under our&#13;
wings&#13;
1 1 1 I I I N I K I MINU S I&#13;
s M 1 ^ 1 4&#13;
mmm Downtown Kenoshu&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sixes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16" §&#13;
§ ALSO ^&#13;
4 . RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN *&#13;
f GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA I&#13;
J . SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
§ CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY &lt;&#13;
A "YOU RING . . . WE BRING" |&#13;
§ 657-9843 or \ f 658-4922&#13;
Service Center&#13;
245 Tallent Hall&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Doris Lantz, Representative&#13;
Home Office&#13;
25A A. W. Peterson Bldg.&#13;
750 University Ave.&#13;
Madison, Wis. 53706&#13;
CREDIT UNION &#13;
Page8 NEWSCOPE January 17,1972&#13;
by Fred Noer, Jr., of the Newscope staff&#13;
A short time ago in The Kenosha News, Sports&#13;
Editor Jim Kornkven, prompted by Parkside's&#13;
100-56 l oss to UW-Milwaukee, wrote an article&#13;
about Parkside's basketball team entitled,&#13;
"Parkside: play game or quit." Known as Kornkie's&#13;
Column, in it he said Parkside must decide&#13;
to play basketball seriously, i.e., get money to&#13;
recruit good players so Parkside has a respectable&#13;
team and win-loss record, or terminate the sport&#13;
altogether. KornkvPn also attacked Coach Steve&#13;
. Stephens' methods of scheduling and lack of&#13;
school and community support.&#13;
Reading Kornkie's Column one gets the impression&#13;
that Kornkven is really slapping Coach&#13;
play? Here is where Stephens answers questions&#13;
about the Rangers' basketball scheduling, keeping&#13;
in mind the name of the university. Athletics is one&#13;
important means of promoting a university.&#13;
Parkside's philosophy about scheduling is to play&#13;
schools of like philosophy and in similar situations&#13;
that will give Parkside a reputable standing.&#13;
Coach Stephens completely agrees with&#13;
Parkside's scheduling policies, but still he is given&#13;
total freedom when laying out a schedule.&#13;
But Coach Stephens is optimistic. A man full&#13;
of ideas, a lack of funds keeps his hands tied until&#13;
next year when the new athletics building is&#13;
completed. He feels the new facility will provide a&#13;
new image which will encourage student support,&#13;
Want t o Stop Smoking?&#13;
Parkside Professor William Morrow and a few advanced&#13;
psychology students are offering a program to help Parkside&#13;
students who wish to stop smoking cigarettes.&#13;
The program involves meeting with one of the staff of the&#13;
program a few times a week for 2 to 5 weeks. It's FREE to all&#13;
Parkside students although a limited number of applications will&#13;
be accepted. New variations of previously used procedures which&#13;
have shown a high success rate will be used.&#13;
If you wish to participate:&#13;
Pick up registration forms at Tallent Hall Library Main Desk.&#13;
Quitters Never Win&#13;
Stephens and the Parkside Athletics Department&#13;
in the face and there is nothing they can do about&#13;
it. Sure, Coach Stephens could continue and make&#13;
it into a controversial issue.&#13;
But he sees the article in a different light — an&#13;
expression of Kornkven's opinion. Stephens says&#13;
Kornkven is making his own judgments which is a&#13;
good form of criticism, unfavorable now, but will&#13;
help to open a few people's eyes in the future.&#13;
How does Stephens explain the ill-matched&#13;
comparison to UW-M? He states simply that it is&#13;
all a question of money. At UW-M the money&#13;
comes from the students in the form of a selfimposed&#13;
mandatory activity fee amounting to $15&#13;
per semester. Figuring UW-M has approximately&#13;
22,000 students, it is clear to see why UW-M has a&#13;
fine representative basketball team. Money talks.&#13;
On the other hand, Parkside, a school of 4,500&#13;
students, has no guaranteed source of athletics&#13;
money (a student activity fee) to match the&#13;
mature, near-professionalism of UW-M, a 75-&#13;
years-old, well-established school. Stephens must&#13;
rely on the Parkside 200 Club, a group of Kenosha&#13;
businessmen interested in Parkside's future, for&#13;
his monetary main stream for recruitment. As a&#13;
result, only three players were given the cost of&#13;
two semesters' tuition (about $500), and the rest of&#13;
his team consisted of students who just wanted to&#13;
play.&#13;
If Parkside has no "scholarships", then why&#13;
vital to a prospering athletics program, particularly&#13;
basketball. As with just about everything&#13;
on campus, the students hold the key to the door of&#13;
success for all of the athletics teams, not just&#13;
basketball. Stephens would like to see the students&#13;
adopt a policy of paying an activity fee of $10 each&#13;
semester to be spent on the athletics program.&#13;
Then there would be a definite sum of $45,000 that&#13;
would be easily accessible to help the athletics&#13;
department get some direction. Planning for the&#13;
future becomes difficult when the department&#13;
does not know for sure the origin of the next&#13;
money.&#13;
In the meantime, Coach Stephens is immensely&#13;
satisfied with his players' performances,&#13;
realizing that they are going through the building&#13;
stages. He says they are putting forth a very good&#13;
effort for which he has an infinite amount of&#13;
respect because his team has had to face some&#13;
strong teams.&#13;
Stephens, a man accustomed to winning, said&#13;
this season is not going to let him down and he&#13;
must maintain a positive attitude. He sees making&#13;
fine progress next year by providing a quality&#13;
program, staffed by an athletic department full of&#13;
forward-minded people. Building on a sound basis,&#13;
Coach Stephens looks ahead to the future and says,&#13;
"I'd like to give the students something to be&#13;
proud of."&#13;
Seswincf the tf-inedt&#13;
Piffla &amp; 9talum Qotxk&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 656-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
WATCHES PERFUMES&#13;
Rolex - Accutron&#13;
UltrachrOn - Longine&#13;
Bulova • Movtdo&#13;
Caravelle - Timex&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
Frar.ce's&#13;
Finest -&#13;
Perfume* and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
5617 et* Ave.&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
% D iscount to students and F aculty with i'. q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Reed &amp; Rarton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon • Orrefor*&#13;
Seneca - Lalique&#13;
Royal Worcester&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents a weekend of entertainment&#13;
First Nightclub of the Spring Semester&#13;
an evening of&#13;
B E E R&#13;
BLUES&#13;
Johnny Young&#13;
and his&#13;
Chicago Blues Band&#13;
9PM-1AM Adm $1.50&#13;
Student Activities-Building -&#13;
UWP &amp; Wis. I.D. required&#13;
Friday, January 21 Saturday, January 22 </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63600">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 2, January 17, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63601">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63602">
                <text>1972-01-17</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63605">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63606">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63607">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63608">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63609">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63610">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="200">
        <name>dean loumos</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="153">
        <name>marc eisen</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2608" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4394">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/d0352f8ebf4abdb42428614718f4c053.pdf</src>
        <authentication>a2f90fed1e5f27360bd3da69c6d13ed5</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63615">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 3</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63616">
              <text>Funds Approved for Newscope</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63623">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89890">
              <text>Funds Approved f or Newscope&#13;
by Larry Jones&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
In a last ditch effort to prevent Newscope from&#13;
dying a sudden death, Parkside's Student&#13;
Government Association (SGA) Wednesday approved&#13;
a measure to give the paper $2,000.&#13;
The measure was approved unanimously by&#13;
SGA in response to a plea from newly elected&#13;
Editor John Koloen. In a letter to each senator,&#13;
Koloen said: "We are currently rising out of an&#13;
economic slump which has resulted in a debt of&#13;
almost $5,000, with assets of nearly $4,000. This&#13;
last figure, however, is misleading in that it&#13;
represents accounts receivable, many of which&#13;
cannot be collected because the advertiser has&#13;
gone bankrupt. We have been running in the red&#13;
for over a year, but have managed to trim the total&#13;
debt from a high of $8,000 last September to its&#13;
present level. Unfortunately, our printer, and&#13;
principal creditor, has informed us that unless a&#13;
very substantial portion of the debt is paid by the&#13;
end of January, he will not print the paper."&#13;
According to Koloen, $4,000 of the debt was&#13;
inherited from the old Collegian and the previous&#13;
operators of Newscope. As the surviving Parkside&#13;
student paper, the current editors were still&#13;
responsible for paying the money back.&#13;
The $2,000 granted by SGA will be immediately&#13;
applied to the debt and put the paper&#13;
back on its feet, Koloen said.&#13;
The money itself will come from SGA's&#13;
Student Group Support Funds, which stood at&#13;
$4,104.09 as of the Wednesday, January 19,&#13;
meeting.&#13;
According to Koloen, Newscope is going to&#13;
lease its own computerized composing machine at&#13;
a cost of approximately $150 p er month, which is&#13;
substantially less than is now paid for the same&#13;
service from the printer. Leasing of the machine&#13;
will not only save money, but will also improve the&#13;
quality of the paper by allowing for more comprehensive&#13;
copy and proof-reading, will speed the&#13;
entire make-up process by allowing stories to be&#13;
justified and pasted into proofs as they come in —&#13;
rather than everything being done in one day at&#13;
the printer, will give the editors more time and&#13;
flexibility, and will also give Newscope an opportunity&#13;
to raise further revenue by obtaining&#13;
contracts to do composing work for others in the&#13;
area, Koloen said.&#13;
Newscope is planning to present a request for&#13;
additional funds to several foundations in the near&#13;
future, in an effort to insure stability and selfsufficiency&#13;
for the paper in the coming years,&#13;
Koloen said.&#13;
CCC Discover Flaws in Rules, SGA&#13;
Gains P artial Control O ver Money&#13;
by Marc Eisen of the Newscope staff&#13;
Student Government has gained a measure of c ontrol over the&#13;
portion of t he segregated fees intended for Student Support Groups&#13;
— b ut not without first going thru what has to be considered the&#13;
most bizarre and contradictory series of events of the school year.&#13;
The funds represent an estimated $4,104. SGA will be able to&#13;
divide the money up among student groups with the concurrence of&#13;
the Campus Concerns Committee (CCC), and the approval of&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen Dearborn.&#13;
Dearborn indicated in a meeting with SGA leaders that if the&#13;
Student Senate approved an appropriation and the CCC concurred&#13;
with it, he would go along with the decision.&#13;
But before this method of dispersing the funds was agreed&#13;
upon, SGA leaders and members of the Administration were locked&#13;
into a bitter argument that saw SGA accuse Dearborn and the&#13;
Director of the Business Office, Erwin Zuehlke, of lying to them&#13;
and deceiving them of how the funds could be obtained.&#13;
Zuehlke, in turn, accused the President of SGA, Dean Loumos,&#13;
and Treasurer Danny Trotter of lying to the CCC and&#13;
misrepresenting to them what he had told SGA about their proposal&#13;
to disperse the funds.&#13;
The CCC, a joint faculty-student committee that deals with&#13;
student life and interests on campus, met last Monday night for the&#13;
first time of the academic year. It is composed of seven faculty&#13;
members, five students, and the Dean of Students, or his&#13;
representative.&#13;
It was prevented from meeting first semester because the SGA&#13;
had not presented the Chancellor a list of students from which to&#13;
make the student selections.&#13;
After the Committee had chosen Marion Mochon, anthropology,&#13;
as its chairwoman, Loumos, a member of the committee,&#13;
asked that the first item on the agenda be that the CCC give&#13;
its power to make a budget for student organizations to Student&#13;
Government.&#13;
Loumos told the committee that Erwin Zuehlke, the director of&#13;
the Business Office, had told him soon after his election to the SGA&#13;
presidency, that as of July 1 there was an estimated $6,400&#13;
available for student support groups (This is determined by a&#13;
formula that allocated $.93 from each full time student's tuition for&#13;
the first semester, and $1.00 for the second semester. A different&#13;
formula is used for part time students.).&#13;
Loumos said that Zuehlke had told him that while the moneywas&#13;
there, there were no procedures to disperse it to student&#13;
groups, and that it was unclear how the money would be dealt out.&#13;
He said then SGA began to formulate procedures to handle&#13;
budget requests. A copy of them was passed out to Committee&#13;
members.&#13;
Noting in his speech that last year's CCC had voted to dissolve&#13;
itself because they felt many duties of the Committee could be&#13;
handled by Student Government, he asked that the authority to&#13;
make a budget be given to SGA.&#13;
Members of the committee had discovered prior to this that the&#13;
committee was set up so that the faculty was always in the&#13;
majority — if m ore students than faculty showed up for a meeting,&#13;
the number exceeding the faculty couldn't vote.&#13;
Marion Mochon, herself a member of the codification committee&#13;
of the Faculty Senate that structured all student-faculty&#13;
committees, described the CCC as being "poorly codified"&#13;
Loumos said further SGA had spoken with the University&#13;
lawyer in Madison to have him check out their budget request form&#13;
for any possible loopholes. He suggested they add a clause in which&#13;
(Continued on Pagetf)&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
WARNING!&#13;
Parkside's police will now be ticketing everyone they catch&#13;
driving faster than 15 MPH anywhere on campus and anyone not&#13;
coming to a complete stop at any one of the posted stop signs. The&#13;
citations are the same as those issued by State police and the same&#13;
penalties apply.&#13;
Be forewarned! You could conceivably lose your license doing&#13;
45 MPH in the parking lot.&#13;
Volume 6 Number 3 January 24, 1972&#13;
The Psychic Circus&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of th e Newscope staff&#13;
ESP is slowly wending its&#13;
mysterious way into the thick&#13;
entangled maze of psychology&#13;
as a valid phenomenon of the&#13;
human brain, scientistphilosophers&#13;
as diverse as&#13;
Aldous Huxley and Timothy&#13;
Leary have been 2ply intrigued&#13;
by it and other&#13;
parapsychological phenomena.&#13;
Newscope got into the act about&#13;
a year ago, when it presented a&#13;
two part series concerning&#13;
Kenosha's self-proclaimed&#13;
psychic-in-residence, Normal&#13;
Slater ESP.&#13;
The timid looking psychic&#13;
with weird peepers, seemed to&#13;
have demonstrated his faculty&#13;
for Extra Sensory Perception to&#13;
various Newscope staffers, and&#13;
the impression many of them&#13;
came away with was one of&#13;
bewildered awe. Since that&#13;
time, many people have consulted&#13;
Slater on the psychic&#13;
world, and many of them have&#13;
since related incidents to me in&#13;
which Slater revealed things&#13;
that no one but themselves&#13;
could have possibly known.&#13;
Others have indicated him as a&#13;
fraud at worst, and a lousy&#13;
psychic at best. Personally, I&#13;
don't care either way, so with&#13;
this in mind I took the assignment&#13;
to report on Norm Slater's&#13;
ESP lecture held at the Vogue&#13;
Theater Sunday night, January&#13;
16. I'd predicted that few people&#13;
would pay the $1.50 admission&#13;
charge. As it turned out I was&#13;
wrong, either that or a lot of&#13;
people snuck in.&#13;
The large crowd was composed&#13;
of the weirdest collection&#13;
of freaks I've ever encountered&#13;
at one time, under one roof.&#13;
Beside the usual motley crew of&#13;
hippie gigglers, there were&#13;
silent and intense longhair&#13;
believers, with the remainder of&#13;
the seriously interested&#13;
audience made up of coiffeured&#13;
middle aged housewives and&#13;
psychic dilletantes, elderly&#13;
rotund matrons, truckdriver&#13;
types, young straights dressed&#13;
in their going out duds, with&#13;
their snazzed up young ladies in&#13;
tow, and of course Norm&#13;
himself. It was really quite a&#13;
collection to behold.&#13;
When word got out that I was&#13;
a reporter. Norm's two&#13;
managers accosted me, and&#13;
demanded to know what I was&#13;
going to write. Rather than&#13;
explain that I didn't know yet, I&#13;
decided to take the more impressive&#13;
freedom of press route.&#13;
I invoked the prior censorship&#13;
case of the U.S. v. New York&#13;
Times, et. al. The very paranoid&#13;
and excited managers of the&#13;
psychic went away for a consultation&#13;
with Norm, neither of&#13;
them understanding what the&#13;
New York Times had to do with&#13;
it. Finally the psychic himself&#13;
granted me an audience. Accoutered&#13;
in a purple panoply,&#13;
Norm told me that he was&#13;
simply afraid I'd put ESP down.&#13;
I explained that I didn't care&#13;
either way, thinking that if he's&#13;
a psychic he ought to know what&#13;
I'm going to write anyway, and&#13;
that maybe I should ask him.&#13;
But maybe he already read that&#13;
question in my mind, so I&#13;
decided mum's da woid. I asked&#13;
him what he'd been doing with&#13;
himself lately. He told me about&#13;
the classes in "development of&#13;
conscious awareness" he'd&#13;
been teaching at KTI and RTI.&#13;
He also invited me to come&#13;
along on a research expedition&#13;
to the Bermuda Triangle this&#13;
summer. I politely said I'd think&#13;
about it. After shaking hands&#13;
with me seven separate times, I&#13;
thanked him for his indulgence,&#13;
and wormed my way through a&#13;
small hallway lined with young&#13;
devotees, waiting to see the&#13;
master. Out in the audience, I&#13;
scribbled impressions while&#13;
waiting for Norm's entre.&#13;
The program was divided into&#13;
two parts: The first half consisted&#13;
of a brief biographical&#13;
sketch of the psychic followed&#13;
by a panel "discussion", and a&#13;
demonstration of ESP. The&#13;
(Continued on Page 8) &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE January 24, 1972&#13;
EDITORIAL - Friends or Enemies I + HPf&#13;
It's strange what the sight of a tape recorder will do to a&#13;
Parkside administrator. There's a great gnashing of teeth, a&#13;
bubbling of anger, finally an eruption of indignation — My God,&#13;
tape record the conference? Never! They rise in mass — We'll walk&#13;
out if you tape record this! they threaten. Wow, you say to yourself.&#13;
You remember the time the poet — black nationalist Leroi&#13;
Jones spoke at Carthage — You'll capture my spirit if you record&#13;
this, he had warned solemnly as he forbid any taping.&#13;
Yes, that must be the key, the point of speculation. The administrators&#13;
must be incarnates of the devil! You don't see them in&#13;
mirrors, you can't record their voices. More than one paranoid's&#13;
suspicions would be confirmed . . .&#13;
You ask — Why can't it be recorded?&#13;
The assistant Chancellor answers: We're here to discuss the&#13;
problems of Student Government. We don't know what other&#13;
questions you would ask.&#13;
Tony Totero answers: I have allowed Newscope to record interviews&#13;
with me in the past, and things haven't come out as they&#13;
were intended.&#13;
— When did this happen? you ask Tony&#13;
— This is not the place to go into it, he replies. Alright, you&#13;
think, maybe this deserves a story in the future: Tony Totero Tells&#13;
How Newscope Has Wronged Him.&#13;
The Director of the Business Office, Erwin Zuehlke, scores it&#13;
finally — We know why you want it recorded. You don't trust us.&#13;
Ah, yes, you nod in agreement, the answer at last — You don t&#13;
trust us. He's summed it all up — You don't trust us. Yup, you're&#13;
right, you think. We don't trust you.&#13;
Now the climoA: Dearborn says — I'll tell you this, if the&#13;
discussions we have at this meeting are printed in Newscope, it will&#13;
be the last time we have this type c' meeting.&#13;
Kapowie. It's crystal clear now.&#13;
Why record it?&#13;
Example 1: Approximately two months ago, Dean Loumos&#13;
says that Zuehlke told him money was available for student&#13;
organizations — except it was unclear who would deal it out, and&#13;
what procedures would be used to do it. Loumos says that Zuehlke&#13;
suggested SGA draw up the guidelines for the utilization of the&#13;
money.&#13;
Two months later, Zuehlke denies saying this, and lo and&#13;
behold, he reveals procedures had existed all along for the&#13;
utilization of the money. About $2,000 of the supposedly untouchable&#13;
money is discovered spent.&#13;
Some probable solutions of the conundrum are:&#13;
(1) Zuehlke lied to SGA at the first meeting,&#13;
(2) SGA lied about what Zuehlke told them at the first meeting,&#13;
(3) SGA misunderstood what Zuehlke told them,&#13;
(4) Zuehlke mistakenly gave SGA the wrong information.&#13;
What is the truth? What actually occurred? It's unknown,&#13;
almost undiscoverable at this point. How could this have been&#13;
avoided? The meeting could have been recorded, and the confusion&#13;
would have been avoided.&#13;
Example 2: A Newscope reporter is working on an investigative&#13;
story on a Parkside administrater. He interviews&#13;
another administrater, who refuses to allow the discussion to be&#13;
taped. Some damaging information is revealed in the interview.&#13;
A few weeks later the reporter checks back with the adQ)&#13;
&#13;
U&#13;
O&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
I •&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
9a.m.—4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
a bottle or&#13;
a glass&#13;
and&#13;
a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a b eefburger&#13;
and&#13;
trench fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
u&#13;
Z)&#13;
O&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brut is where its at'&#13;
N O R T H W E S T C O R N E R O F HIGH W A Y S 1-94 AND&#13;
open 9 a.m.—12 p.m.&#13;
Ava ilab le for f r a t&#13;
e&#13;
'&#13;
n ' t y or sorority p arties&#13;
50&#13;
ministrater to reverify the information. The ad,mmistra ter deny&#13;
ever having said it. The reporter is incredulous He checks his&#13;
notes; the revelation is written down there, hie has it down as^&#13;
direct quote. He asks the administrater again |n the end,&#13;
administrater denies emphatically ever having said .&#13;
the reporter doesn't use the quote - it's too questionable.&#13;
But how to explain what happened?&#13;
(1) The administrater actually did say it, but lied in enying&#13;
(2) The reporter lied in claiming he had said&#13;
(3) The reporter misunderstood what he had saidI the tr •&#13;
(4) The administrater gave the wrong information th&#13;
but denied later having said it. Mnw&#13;
Where lies the truth? At this point it's ,nd,st&#13;
'"9&#13;
u,sh«&#13;
bl®; .&#13;
could this have been avoided? The interview could have been tape&#13;
recorded. . ... . + ,t&#13;
If the absolute truth itself is beyond recovery at this point,, at&#13;
least it is possible to consider who would profit the most by the tru&#13;
being obscured — the administration or the students.&#13;
First, it has to be recognized that the students may ave&#13;
misunderstood what was told to them. The fact that they have less&#13;
of a knowledge of the workings of the University than the administraters&#13;
gives them an incomplete perspective from which to&#13;
comprehend things. A misunderstanding is possible.&#13;
But the students didn't profit from the misunderstandings, the&#13;
administraters did. In the first case, SGA lost total control of&#13;
money for student clubs, while a third of the money had already&#13;
been spent on peripheral items. In the second case, damaging&#13;
evidence against an administrater was denied legitimacy.&#13;
Furthermore, it was the administraters who prevented an&#13;
objective record from being made, not the students. A determination&#13;
of who is lying is impossible to make.&#13;
Then there is Dearborn's intimidation of Newscope — you prinf&#13;
anything said in this meeting and this will be the last meeting. The&#13;
implication seems clear — it's better to keep the student body&#13;
ignorant of a meeting that greatly affects them than to have them&#13;
informed of it.&#13;
Newscope, of course, rejects this. Our aim is not to insure&#13;
ignorance on key issues among students, but rather to inform them&#13;
of the issues. An open marketplace of information is the best environment&#13;
for important decisions to be made within. If people are&#13;
offended by this, we can only reply they don't realize what&#13;
newspapers are for.&#13;
We point out in conclusion; it has been certain administraters&#13;
that have prevented an objective record of key meetings with&#13;
students from being made; it has been these administraters that&#13;
have benefitted from the subsequent obfuscation of what was said&#13;
in these meetings.&#13;
We believe it has been these administraters, and not the&#13;
students, that have changed their stories from one meeting to&#13;
another. Whether they lied maliciously, or made honest mistakes is&#13;
known only by them. The fact is that we believe their stories have&#13;
changed.&#13;
So, ultimately, Zuehlke was right — we don't trust the administraters.&#13;
They burned us once, they burned us twice, if the&#13;
burn us for a third time, we're fools. We, as students, can&#13;
realistically only conclude that these people can not only be our&#13;
friends, they can also be our enemies.&#13;
Model Abortion&#13;
Program&#13;
Immediate Help With No Delays&#13;
WLCKERSHAM&#13;
WOMENS&#13;
MEDICAL&#13;
CENTER&#13;
133 Hast 58th Street, New York&#13;
A COMMUNITY&#13;
ABORTION SERVICE&#13;
AFFILIATED WITH A MAJOR&#13;
METROPOLITAN HOSPITAL&#13;
Unequalled safety record of&#13;
in-patient and out-patient abortions&#13;
by Board-certified gynecologists&#13;
and anesthesiologists.&#13;
General anesthesia is used for&#13;
patient comfort.&#13;
Low costs of abortion procedures:&#13;
&#13;
Pregnancy&#13;
up to 10 wks., D A C , $150&#13;
up to 14 wks., D &lt;4 C, $250&#13;
14-24 weeks, Saline or&#13;
Mechanical Induction $400&#13;
In all cases over 10 weeks&#13;
pregnancy, Wickersham's medical&#13;
safety standards require&#13;
overnight hospital stays.&#13;
Free professional services&#13;
available to abortion patients&#13;
include psychiatric counseling,&#13;
family planning and birth control.&#13;
No referral needed. No&#13;
referral fee or contribution solicited&#13;
ever. Private. Confidential.&#13;
No red tape.&#13;
DIRECT SERVICE LINE&#13;
TO MEDICAL CENTER&#13;
(212) PLaza 5-6805&#13;
Call 8 AM to 8 PM&#13;
Mondays through Saturdays&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racine&#13;
Letter&#13;
To The&#13;
Editor&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
To the Editor;&#13;
Strange. Very strange. That's&#13;
what any student with normal&#13;
intelligence would have to say&#13;
concerning the situation they&#13;
face when dealing with the&#13;
Parkside Bookstore. Strange,&#13;
that there are 27 booklists for&#13;
approximately 3,700 students,&#13;
25 of those booklists were&#13;
printed up by student gov't,&#13;
(with the cooperation of a few&#13;
secretaries and the Duplicating&#13;
and Processing Dept.).&#13;
About four weeks ago PSGA&#13;
decided to attempt to set up a&#13;
book exchange in the Student&#13;
Act. Bldg. To get such an exchange&#13;
off a booklist was a&#13;
necessity. Further research&#13;
uncovered legal problems with&#13;
the university in running such&#13;
an exchange. Apparently it&#13;
would be in violation of a contract&#13;
between the university&#13;
and the bookstore. So the&#13;
booklists went from faculty to&#13;
administration to the bookstore.&#13;
It was "private property" and&#13;
was denied to student government.&#13;
&#13;
Constant pressure by PSGA&#13;
resulted in an agreement from&#13;
Ass. Chancellor Dearborn,&#13;
Jewel Echalbarger, and Anthony&#13;
Totero promising that a&#13;
complete booklist would be&#13;
available to students 3 days&#13;
prior to registration. But&#13;
everyone knows promises are&#13;
made to be broken; or to keep&#13;
disenchanted students quiet.&#13;
Nobody ever explained why the&#13;
list wasn't printed, but most of&#13;
us can guess. So on Monday and&#13;
Tuesday (10th and 11th of&#13;
January) the PSGA with the&#13;
help of the secretaries printed&#13;
25 booklists and made them&#13;
available around the campus.&#13;
Without a booklist the&#13;
students are forced to buy their&#13;
books at a bookstore which has&#13;
lost $20,000 in their past&#13;
operations. That means you and&#13;
I are paying higher prices to&#13;
make up for their losses. I hope&#13;
that all students will react to&#13;
this injustice by taking the time&#13;
to write a letter to Ass. Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn, Rm. 284,&#13;
Tallent Hall, telling him just&#13;
how you feel.&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
Vice-President, PSGA&#13;
For The Record&#13;
idi&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
I II I I I \ i k ' 1 1 I N v • £ IN &gt;&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
1 1 ' &#13;
Muskie Scene&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Burton Scott, Kenosha's District&#13;
Attorney, stood at the entrance of the&#13;
United Auto Workers all purpose hall&#13;
the night of January 18th. He was&#13;
greeting strangers, well wishers and&#13;
acquaintances in his capacity as a&#13;
"Muskie for President" organizer.&#13;
Twitches of uneasiness seemed to&#13;
infect the D.A. between handshakes&#13;
and casual greetings. The minutes were&#13;
piling up on the wrong side of seven&#13;
o'clock. After cancelling one Kenosha&#13;
appearance weeks before, Senator&#13;
Edmund Muskie was almost a half an&#13;
hour late.&#13;
Many of the individuals in the large&#13;
room were unconcerned and unaware&#13;
of the elapsing time. An older rotund,&#13;
cigar smoking gentleman was leaning&#13;
against a table talking to a friend he&#13;
obviously had not seen in some time.&#13;
Every so often he would turn and shout&#13;
hello to someone just coming in, and&#13;
they would see his pin. Attached to his&#13;
green shortsleeve shirt was a political&#13;
button featuring a donkey producing a&#13;
cloud if ill smelling gas. Within the&#13;
cloud, on the very large pin were the&#13;
words, "Nixon gone with the wind in&#13;
'72"&#13;
On the other side of the room, a girl&#13;
was beginning to drink her third free&#13;
beer, a feature of the Muskie rally. She&#13;
turned to her companion and asked if a&#13;
"Muskie" was a fish. The companion, a&#13;
college aged male, just laughed and&#13;
asked the girl when the rally was to&#13;
start. She thought seven, but as long as&#13;
the free beer held out, she said she&#13;
didn't mind if the candidate was late.&#13;
Clusters of. individuals sat, stood,&#13;
miled about, and talked. Burton Scott&#13;
began to appear restless as he continued&#13;
shaking hands, though&#13;
periodically glancing over the heads&#13;
out the glass entrance doors into the&#13;
darkness.&#13;
Two young Muskie workers, finished&#13;
with last minute details, had taken up a&#13;
vigin in the crisp January air, standing&#13;
at the building's main entrance staring&#13;
blankly at Washington Road. They&#13;
were hoping to spot a line of official&#13;
looking cars — one of them carrying&#13;
their candidate.&#13;
A boy dressed in a blazer, wearing&#13;
freshly pressed pants, with his hair&#13;
very neatly parted, played "Roll Out&#13;
the Barrel" on an organ supplied for&#13;
the evening by the Hammond Organ&#13;
Studios. He didn't look to be much older&#13;
than Little League age. The boy&#13;
alternated furnishing music with an&#13;
adult that could have been his father.&#13;
The two kept a steady flow of polkas&#13;
and old favorites coming out of the&#13;
organ, making the delay seem short.&#13;
A teenage girl wearing a simple pink&#13;
dress strolled about the gymnasium&#13;
sized room carrying a stack of&#13;
reproduced charcoal drawings and a&#13;
money box. With an appealing smile,&#13;
she approached most everyone, asking&#13;
if they would like to buy a sketch of Ed&#13;
Muskie done by Kenosha artist George&#13;
Pollard. The drawings were fifty cents,&#13;
ideal for framing.&#13;
Meanwhile, at the entrance, the&#13;
shortsleeved Muskie volunteers talked&#13;
to each other, neither appearing to be&#13;
listening to the other. Burton Scott was&#13;
still shaking hands with those who were&#13;
arriving about half past seven.&#13;
A partition, which had closed off&#13;
about a quarter of the hall, had to be&#13;
opened, as rows of people three and&#13;
four deep began forming behind the few&#13;
hundred chairs that were occupied. A&#13;
cheer went up from the crowd as the&#13;
partition slid open.&#13;
The two young Muskie workers still&#13;
waiting, registered looks of shock when&#13;
they heard the cheering. They must&#13;
have thought the candidate had&#13;
somehow gotten past their blank stares.&#13;
They were relieved to know that only a&#13;
new portion of the room had made an&#13;
appearance.&#13;
At twenty-nine minutes past seven,&#13;
four American Motors products slowly&#13;
made the way up a small hill from the&#13;
west on Washington Road. The cars&#13;
swung into the driveway of the union&#13;
building, slowly heading for a back&#13;
entrance.&#13;
Senator Edmund Muskie had arrived.&#13;
Smiles hit the Muskie workers, their&#13;
flesh a ruddy color having been exposed&#13;
to the cold. They loudly announced the&#13;
candidate had arrived. A grin streamed&#13;
across Burton Scott's face, as he shook&#13;
the last few hands with a confident&#13;
vigor which had been slowly draining&#13;
from him in the last half hour.&#13;
The rally was to begin.&#13;
Detectives from the Kenosha Police&#13;
Department kept photographers and&#13;
other assorted bodies away from the&#13;
entrance Muskie was approaching. The&#13;
door opened, in came members of the&#13;
senator's staff, Muskie himself sandwiched&#13;
between the front and back&#13;
ranks.&#13;
Muskie wore a broad politicians'&#13;
smile as he was greeted by the twenty&#13;
or so people in the side hall with random&#13;
cheers, popping flashbulbs,&#13;
assorted clapping, and a few handshakes&#13;
by those who had weaseled past&#13;
the detectives.&#13;
He wore a perfect fitting dark blue&#13;
suit, traditional black shoes, a white&#13;
shirt and silk blue tie, tied in an almost&#13;
perfect Winsor knot. His face had deep&#13;
lines cutting into it. A tired glaze dulled&#13;
the color of his eyes, and there were&#13;
noticable bags under each one. The&#13;
wind had arranged his hair in an inJ&#13;
a unary 24, 1972&#13;
teresting disarray, but he quickly used&#13;
a free hand to push it back into shape, a&#13;
part forming like magic.&#13;
Burton Scott whisked the Senator into&#13;
a room at the right of the door he had&#13;
just entered. The room was marked&#13;
"Board Room". Muskie was to meet&#13;
the Executive Board of the United Auto&#13;
Workers, Local 72, headed by Ralph&#13;
Daum. The board had endorsed the&#13;
Presidential hopeful earlier in the&#13;
month.&#13;
Word reached the main hall that the&#13;
Senator had arrived. There was a&#13;
bustle of movment as some people went&#13;
to locate signs to wave when Muskie&#13;
came in; "Kenosha for Muskie",&#13;
"UAW for Ed", "ESM in '72".&#13;
The candidate came out of the conference&#13;
room smiling. He shook hands&#13;
in the hall, upon entering the large&#13;
room full of cheering people, and on his&#13;
way to his seat near the podium. As&#13;
soon as he was seated, the artist about&#13;
fifteen feet to his right began sketching&#13;
the Senator. The screams, shouts,&#13;
applause, yelps and bobbing signs&#13;
made those in the Muskie organization&#13;
smile, from the football player sized&#13;
bodyguard types standing near him to&#13;
Mr. Scott, the Kenosha based&#13;
organizer.&#13;
The Mayor of Kenosha presented the&#13;
Senator from Maine with a pin replica&#13;
of Wisconsin. Local dignitaries were&#13;
introduced, Ralph Daum spoke, wife of&#13;
the slain civil rights leader Medger&#13;
Evers spoke, and finally, almost an&#13;
hour off schedule, Senator Edmund&#13;
Muskie began to tell the crowd why&#13;
they were right in supporting him, and&#13;
why he wanted more support, enough to&#13;
win the primary in April.&#13;
The speech, comprised of human&#13;
interest stories, a joke, and promises&#13;
was not interrupted often by audience&#13;
response. The only rousing cheers&#13;
came after Muskie pointed out Nixon&#13;
failures in economics, foreign relations&#13;
and the war. He called for an all out&#13;
effort by all Democrats to unite to rid&#13;
the populus of Nixon leadership. The&#13;
predominently blue collar audience&#13;
came to life with solid response.&#13;
Hubert Humphrey's 1968 running&#13;
mate did not answer or ask for&#13;
questions from the audience. He spoke&#13;
to the crowd without the benefit of notes&#13;
NKWSCOl'K 1'anc 8&#13;
or a prepared speech. The content of&#13;
the speech was accepted with mixed&#13;
emotion, but when it was over, there&#13;
was no question Mr. Muskie was&#13;
through speaking.&#13;
The conclusion of the speech sent&#13;
some individuals to the exits, but there&#13;
were those who had bought the original,&#13;
reproduced charcoal sketches that they&#13;
were determined to get autographed.&#13;
Others simply wanted to slap the man&#13;
from Maine on the back, wish him luck,&#13;
and shake his hand. A student reporter&#13;
was determined to get an interview,&#13;
and the Muskie staff was equally&#13;
determined to get their man to an exit&#13;
through a path previously cleared&#13;
through a sea of empty, non-folding&#13;
chairs. A mass of humanity had grown&#13;
fifteen deep around the Presidential&#13;
candidate immediately after his final&#13;
- words of the speech.&#13;
Muskie staffers waved frantically at&#13;
^ the tall, stocky Senator, but to no avail.&#13;
° The path that had been cleared for his&#13;
m exit was to remain clear and void of&#13;
z everything, as the Senator headed for&#13;
m the wrong exit through the middle of the&#13;
z few hundred chairs, autographing, and&#13;
handshaking his way into disaster.&#13;
A woman who looked about fifty who&#13;
was to later admit she had waited six&#13;
months to shake Muskie's hand, leaped&#13;
for the Senator, catching the lapel of his&#13;
dark blue suit. A man, back-peddling a&#13;
few steps ahead of the human beehive,&#13;
stumbled, fell, and was buried by&#13;
chairs, causing the small army to head&#13;
a few degrees further off course into&#13;
still more chairs.&#13;
The young reporter, determined to&#13;
get exclusive statements from the man&#13;
running for President, almost hit his&#13;
subject in the mouth with his&#13;
microphone, as the pushing and&#13;
shoving was beginning to alarm the few&#13;
detectives and aides trying to protect&#13;
the candidate.&#13;
Muskie, realising he was heading into&#13;
impending doom, used the advantage of&#13;
his height to seek out a new route, while&#13;
shaking hands and signing autographs.&#13;
The members of his staff who had&#13;
engineered an almost flawless entrance,&#13;
were frantically trying to clear&#13;
a way, but carefully enough so as not to&#13;
injure any potential Muskie votes.&#13;
Amazingly, Muskie was making&#13;
headway toward an exit. As he did,&#13;
those wanting signatures or handshakes&#13;
became more desperate. The&#13;
young reporter, being carried like a&#13;
rusty tin can over a large wave, no&#13;
longer cared about an interview. He&#13;
was apparently more interested in the&#13;
safety of his recording equipment, and&#13;
himself. Muskie finally approached the&#13;
narrow doorway, after Burton Scott&#13;
and others had cast chairs in all&#13;
directions making a path. The doorway&#13;
trimmed away layers of human beings&#13;
that the Senator had been carrying&#13;
from the podium. He turned left in the&#13;
hallway, then right, and was relatively&#13;
free of his followers. The cars were&#13;
quickly filled with the Muskie party,&#13;
and they were off to an airport.&#13;
The man who was wearing the large&#13;
donkey button was gone, as was the girl&#13;
selling pictures. The organ was silent,&#13;
and Burton Scott was standing in the&#13;
doorway to the hall shaking hands, of&#13;
those who were leaving.&#13;
There were beads of sweat on his&#13;
forehead, and a faint smile on his face.&#13;
It just didn't seem that the coming&#13;
election could be as hard on him as&#13;
clearing a path for Muskie through that&#13;
sea of chairs.&#13;
WATCH ES_&#13;
Rolex - Accutron&#13;
Ultrachron - Longine&#13;
Bulova - Movado&#13;
Caravelle • Timex&#13;
LcCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
FSneet -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Di amond Setting&#13;
Compl et e Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
«yz- Vi'X 5817 «Ui Ave.&#13;
&amp;71A&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
0% Discou nt to students and Facul ty with | . q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Reed &amp; Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDA'.&#13;
REGISTRV&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
TiHon - Orrefore&#13;
Seneca • lallque&#13;
Royal Worcester&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
(1»IZZA4&gt;&#13;
V , ^&#13;
C ustom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE VII I.AGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE January 24,1972&#13;
by Michael Stevesand&#13;
If you have wondered, as I have in the past&#13;
twelve months, where is rock going?, or more&#13;
pragmatically where is rock?, why has it limped off&#13;
and how can I find it?, there's good news from the&#13;
East.&#13;
Eyeing the cowboys and the Englishboys if at&#13;
all with a certain ironic amusement, are several&#13;
sinister bands with outlooks not so predictable, and&#13;
laughter cheerfully blacker, each on its own axis,&#13;
but all more or less dedicated to preserving rock at&#13;
the gut level of awareness that created the original&#13;
vacuum of power and identity which made rock&#13;
necessary. Or to put it another way, despite all the&#13;
amputaions you can still dance to the rock &amp; roll&#13;
stations.&#13;
Dancing is important. Maintaining in the city&#13;
requires setting up countervibrations or a force&#13;
field temporarily against the civic madness and it's&#13;
no coincidence that these killer bands thrive in the&#13;
population centers. The Velvet Underground from&#13;
New York. The J. Geils Band from Boston. And god&#13;
Bless Detroit for Alice Cooper and Mitch Ryder.&#13;
Detroit may know more about rock &amp; roll and&#13;
the natural facts in general than any other City in&#13;
the world. Consider the cultural indignities of&#13;
spending days and years in the shadow of Motor&#13;
City. Consider the potential energy taut and ready&#13;
to be released behind bands that know how to be a&#13;
fuse. And imagine the shock wave exploding from&#13;
your speakers and nailing you to the wall.&#13;
"Long Neck Goose" comes on like the Detroit&#13;
Wheels of old — Mitch still sounds hoarse and even&#13;
the name is a throwback. Allow yourself a fleeting&#13;
sense of deja vu and then fasten into a bass line or&#13;
Johnny Bee's diesel drums and realize the support&#13;
they're shoveling under Mitch would have split&#13;
1965's radios. It just drives and drives. And without&#13;
a blink they're into "Is It You or Is It Me?" a&#13;
bouncing bop doo wah that you might like to do the&#13;
funky chicken to. "It Ain't Easy" marches along on&#13;
acoustic guitar and harp until a monster riff rears&#13;
back and shows what Mountain could have been if&#13;
they weren't half English which probably figures&#13;
because Leslie West used to be lead guitar for none&#13;
other than the Detroit Wheels. In any case the punch&#13;
is there and if momentum has any meeting left it&#13;
slams right into:&#13;
"Rock and Roll" by N.Y.'s angelic rocker Lou&#13;
Reed is possibly the best song ever written about it:&#13;
Ginny said when she was just five years old&#13;
there was nothin happenin at all&#13;
Every time she listened to the radio there was&#13;
nothin goin down at all&#13;
But one day she heard a Detroit station, she&#13;
couldn't believe what she heard at all&#13;
She started dancin to that fine fine music&#13;
Her life was saved by rock &amp; roll,&#13;
charging behind the Decatur Gator's blown Injected&#13;
guitar and if you can sit still after ten seconds you&#13;
better check the batteries in your pacemaker. This&#13;
song has been known to cause structural damage to&#13;
the cortex and sprained ankles. Forewarned ,s&#13;
forearmed. . ,, .&#13;
(Pant pant) between sides pause to reflect on&#13;
the spare quality of the music. For a band of seven&#13;
including a full time conga and tambourine player&#13;
these boys stick close to the skeleton of a song so the&#13;
sound is anything but crowded and in fact although&#13;
the piano-organ and double guitars leave the impression&#13;
of brass there is no brass. Which is not to&#13;
say that it's not conducive because these songs are&#13;
wired in series and a current runs from beginning to&#13;
end Washed out Mitch stands knee deep in flowing&#13;
quitar-organ harmonies in the soulful weeper&#13;
"Drinking" a paen to the bleary-eyed staggers.&#13;
Even the guitar sounds tipsy in a sinuous sort of&#13;
way "Box of Old Roses" is just a total gas and one.&#13;
of the few current nostalgoid 1961 period pieces that&#13;
could actually have been a hit in 1961. Check the&#13;
organ comping for all he's worth the stride piano&#13;
and bassman W. R. Cooke's convincing ducktail&#13;
vocal. Cooke is rumored to believe himself the&#13;
reincarnation of Bobby Rydell. Quick cut to Wilson&#13;
Pickett by way of the Electric Flag and "I Found a&#13;
Love". The Nashville lessons have been learned&#13;
well and Mitch may well have screamed himself&#13;
into a different time factor during the recording of&#13;
this. We won't know till the next one.&#13;
By the time the next one comes around Mitch&#13;
Ryder and Detroit may have evolved into a force too&#13;
devastating to be contained in a stereo system.&#13;
When that happens the components must all&#13;
vaporize leaving black smoking residue. But the&#13;
music will keep on playing.&#13;
'Bread', the&#13;
rated by Billboa&#13;
artists for 1971,&#13;
Phys-Ed Center&#13;
appearance is b&lt;&#13;
Board.&#13;
Tickets for I&#13;
thage's Student&#13;
Chiappetta's (do&#13;
Racine, tickets £&#13;
Electronics in E&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Nowscopo staff&#13;
Last night, "On tha Nod" decided to&#13;
become a kid again, and Imbibe&#13;
Wednesday night bickers of brew at a&#13;
teeny bar, a place where under 21's&#13;
gain their alcoholic baptism, and&#13;
receive communion in the shape of a&#13;
bratwurst. I ' put drinking in a&#13;
theological framework because alcohol&#13;
has a lot to do with my metaphysic.&#13;
This was old memories night; many&#13;
were the times that my teeny contemporaries&#13;
and I split pitchers of beer,&#13;
while discussing Existentialism and&#13;
Marxism, screaming at the war,&#13;
wondering about the possible harmful&#13;
effects of devil weed, afraid of acid&#13;
because you didn't wanna end up&#13;
jumpin' outa no window. I remember&#13;
also that the Bratstop was the first bar&#13;
to kick me out, and for, of all reasons,&#13;
growing hair.&#13;
My how the times have changed. The&#13;
Bratstop is just a different place these&#13;
days; boys get to grow their hair long&#13;
now, and there's four bars scattered&#13;
through the building including a&#13;
downstairs room with pool tables,&#13;
strobe lights that make you sick, bands,&#13;
and pinball machines. Wowwee! It&#13;
seems that the only things that haven't&#13;
changed are the TV, the quarter admission&#13;
charge, and the war.&#13;
Willie Sorensen, Newscope's ace&#13;
media-excommunicator and part-time&#13;
bartender, accompanied me on this&#13;
foray into teeny nightlife scenes. We&#13;
breezed past the ID checkers booth, and&#13;
huffed and puffed at the outrageous&#13;
$1.50 cover charge. There was a noisy&#13;
adolescent band called Freefall, that&#13;
attempted to knock people down with&#13;
overamplifications, covering the trails&#13;
left by bad riffs with noise. After&#13;
touring the place, checking things out,&#13;
Bill and I settled in a corner of the bar&#13;
nearest the Teevee and discussed&#13;
Miller, Millett, Kubrick, Soch and Clint&#13;
Eastwood before going on the nod. I .&#13;
wanted to get as far away as possible&#13;
from the band, and a strobe light whose&#13;
only value seemed to be its ability to&#13;
make everybody an existentialist, it&#13;
produced a lot of nausea. A bar just&#13;
ain't a place for strobes, noway. We&#13;
pooled our resources and ordered&#13;
bottles of Bud priced at 60 cents a bottle&#13;
if you buy just one, or $1.00 for two.&#13;
It was about 7:30 when we arrived,&#13;
and the bar was already crowded.&#13;
Willie told me the big nights are&#13;
Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. This&#13;
place has something for everyone so&#13;
you can take your mind off the fact that&#13;
the Brat isn't a real bar. It's a teen bar&#13;
and you never forget it. Patrons all had&#13;
young unformed faces, laughing it up,&#13;
drinking beer until they ran out of&#13;
money, and to get the parents car&#13;
home, or threw up because they weren't&#13;
experienced enough to know when to&#13;
stop. Keeps em off the streets.&#13;
The beer selection is surprisingly&#13;
impressive, the Brat has Hamms and&#13;
Falstaff on tap, and bottled beer with&#13;
labels like Bud, Pabst, Michelob, etc.,&#13;
they even have a stock of what I consider&#13;
to be the Edsel of alcohol, Right&#13;
Time. Willie said the food was good,&#13;
"priced at about what you'd expect. . .&#13;
probably the best brat I ever had,&#13;
definitely worth the money (60 cents)."&#13;
Waiting for my next Bud, I surveyed&#13;
the .area around our niche; the same&#13;
synthetic woocf panelling that lines the&#13;
walls of all other newly built or&#13;
remodeled taverns, formica bars,&#13;
comfortable barstools. Actually I'm not&#13;
quite sure if the barstools were comfortable&#13;
or not — let's just say I was&#13;
feelin' no pain.&#13;
shattered the atmosphere; your car is&#13;
blocking the drive, your car has its&#13;
lights on, your mother is at the door,&#13;
etc. A bar with a public address system,&#13;
far out. I was approaching a critical&#13;
phase that would lead either to on the&#13;
nod or disaster, liftoff was beautiful and&#13;
all systems were go, through the&#13;
stratosphere, ionosphere, through the&#13;
Van Allen belt, every sip preceded by a&#13;
carefully considered choice, nearing&#13;
the point of no return, breaking through&#13;
the ozone. I escaped on Brat's orbit, I&#13;
was On the Nod.&#13;
I noticed the phenomenal number of&#13;
chicks, thousands of nubile females, it&#13;
was too much, better than the dance in&#13;
the gym, and they was gettin' drunk.&#13;
Ouwee as Bobby D says. Ouwee indeed.&#13;
I looked over at Bill, he was jumping&#13;
around on the floor, brandishing a&#13;
broom screaming I'm a liberal, I'm a&#13;
liberal. He then performed his famous&#13;
Karateballet, trying to chop up frying&#13;
pans and whacking away at the bar. It's&#13;
good to know that even a karateguy&#13;
can't break a bar in half, it's sort of&#13;
reassuring, invincibility.&#13;
Pitchers were priced at a somewhat&#13;
dubious $1.70, cheaper than a lime&#13;
amount of bottled suds, but we&#13;
qualitiopted for a more reliable 12 oz.&#13;
Bud instead. In between Millet and&#13;
Socha, a disembodied voice suddenly&#13;
The service was quite good, friendly&#13;
bartenders were overworked but still&#13;
managed to converse with patrons, in&#13;
fact it was just about as good as when&#13;
Basil, an old friend of mine, worked the&#13;
bar when we were teenies and deluged •&#13;
me with free pitchers. The prices, I&#13;
suppose are about what you'd expect&#13;
from a teen bar. If you worked it right&#13;
'THE EXECUTIONER'S FACE IS ALWAYS WELL HIDDEN"&#13;
Title: The Vantage Point&#13;
Author: Lyndon Baines Johnson&#13;
Publisher: Holt, Rinehart and Winston ($15.00) «9&#13;
Former President Lyndon B. Johnson is taking the skeleton&#13;
out of the closet for public scrutiny. Unfortunately, it's not quite&#13;
the skeleton we always knew was there, it's been touched up in&#13;
places, especially where the hip bone is connected to the DMZ.&#13;
Demonstrating that LBJ is not a man of few words, though I&#13;
strongly doubt that most of the words in this&#13;
politicautobiography were written solely by him, the former&#13;
Commander-in-Chief presents his "Perspectives of the&#13;
Presidency 1963-1969" in a bulky 569 pages (not including appendices).&#13;
&#13;
The Vantage Point, of course, was wherever LBJ happened&#13;
to be during his more than five years in office, but wherever it&#13;
was, it had the Presidential Seal embossed on it somewhere. It's&#13;
with mixed emotions that I review (and read) this book, because&#13;
LBJ is no longer the powerogre he once was, he can no longer&#13;
tell me to go to war, he can no longer force me to kill for peace.&#13;
LBJ is now a certified refiree, a grandfather resting after a&#13;
lifetime of service to country, on his ranch by the Perdanales&#13;
Riyer. And who likes to kick grandfathers?&#13;
But the truth must out, as the Pentagon Papers reveal. In&#13;
judging this book one also judges LBJ, to believe everything that&#13;
is said in it, one must forget about credibility gaps. I am survivor&#13;
of the '60s, when turbulence, crisis and war were willing&#13;
bedfellows, when idealists were imprisoned for believing in&#13;
their country's dreams, when lies were confused with truth, and&#13;
truth with lies.&#13;
The Vantage Point reveals that LBJ was incapable of&#13;
comprehending the basic fallacy that kept us in Viet Nam; that&#13;
we belonged there. To the end, LBJ refuses to deny this; we&#13;
belonged there because the commies were taking over; we&#13;
belonged there so we could lead the people to democracy; we&#13;
belonged there because the South Vietnamese wanted us to&#13;
protect them from the evil Ho Chi Minh (years earlier, of&#13;
course, we refused to aid him in instituting a democratic&#13;
government); that we belonged there because dominoes fell&#13;
down. We were fhere because the American people believed the&#13;
lies their government told them.&#13;
1963-1969 encompases the era of the secret document;&#13;
nobody outside the higher echelons of government knew what&#13;
was going on. Yet Johnson condemned the rising numbers of&#13;
dissenters because, he says, each time they protested the war,&#13;
they strengthened the enemy's psychological front, while&#13;
American boys (as well as Vietnamese women, children) were&#13;
dying yet winning on the military front. He says that he sympathized&#13;
with the war protesters, but blames them because they&#13;
didn t know enough about what was going on, didn't know he&#13;
was, he says, seeking peace "through every available channel".&#13;
If he was seeking peace, why didn't he let the American people&#13;
know? Because it was a secret. Catch-22.&#13;
The Vantage Point presents us with many views of the&#13;
President, most of them flattering, a precious few of them&#13;
revealing. For example, he tells us that a few minufes after&#13;
giving the go ahead for the renewed bombing of Hanoi, he was in&#13;
a church kneeling, praying to the God (of Peace). At other times&#13;
we see him on the hot line, asking Kosygin to intervene with the&#13;
. . in stopping the Six Day War, or addressing the huge crowds&#13;
that came out to show their support in the 1964 elections.&#13;
But the war was only one aspect of what I call LBJ's&#13;
schizopolitick. While pursuing a hideous war in Nam, LBJ&#13;
por rays himself as the relentless peaceseeker in other parts of&#13;
e globe. Continually, he says, he plugged away for disarmament,&#13;
for se1&#13;
setting up foreic&#13;
nations emerge. I&#13;
more internatior&#13;
ward nations: Ui&#13;
daddy. He told th&#13;
that developing i&#13;
their destiny tog&#13;
direct. Yeah, su&#13;
But no matte&#13;
really can't ig'&#13;
President before&#13;
reaching social I'&#13;
There were two&#13;
hey, LBJ- how&#13;
Johnson the n&#13;
l&#13;
amazing to read&#13;
over due civil '&#13;
etc., legislation&#13;
1&#13;
knight of justice&#13;
He describe&#13;
lifted the heavy1&#13;
senators and c&#13;
meaningful soci&#13;
many-ofVanta&#13;
fellow feeling *&#13;
wants rememb&#13;
motivation, by&#13;
It's an indicato&#13;
pulling themse&#13;
r i.A +hP dl &#13;
January 24, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
le hottest musical quartet on the scene today and&#13;
oard Magazine as No. 15 out of the top 100 single&#13;
1, will appear in concert at the Carthage College&#13;
ir Jan. 30 ( Sunday), at 8 p.m. The 'Bread' group's&#13;
being sponsored by the Carthage Student Activities&#13;
* the J an. 30 performance are now on sale at Carit&#13;
Activities Office, Bidinger's Music House and&#13;
Jowntown and Pershing Plaza stores) in Kenosha. In&#13;
; are availabel at Cook-Gere Music Store, and Team&#13;
Elmwood Plaza.&#13;
bottled beer was 50 cents. The tap was&#13;
30 cents, about a dime more than a real&#13;
bar, in fact everything was a dime&#13;
more than a real bar. The juke", Wil lie&#13;
informed me, was "Top 10 and not&#13;
much else."&#13;
Perhaps what impressed me most&#13;
about the Bratstop was its hugeness.&#13;
This ain't a bar, it's a ballroom lined&#13;
with bars, hundreds of people walking&#13;
around, watching the band destroy&#13;
their hearing, sitting in booths, and at&#13;
the bar. Conversation was carried on&#13;
mouth to ear, the cacaphony created by&#13;
a hundred mouths proved to be quite an&#13;
obstacle to our reasonable discourse.&#13;
Ah ha, another reason for going On the&#13;
Nod.&#13;
The Brat must have a high turnover&#13;
of customers each year, but there's&#13;
always a wave of new faces eager to&#13;
enter the door after the old ones have&#13;
bid their fond adieu ready to search for&#13;
a real bar. Alot of graduates from teen&#13;
bars never return for post grad&#13;
drinking. I think that means something.&#13;
The Bratstop is a place where you can&#13;
lose yourself in t he crowd, where teens&#13;
can be just like everybody else and not&#13;
be noticed, where it's easy to talk to&#13;
strangers because they'll always&#13;
remain anonymous. The big thing is not&#13;
to confuse teen bars with the real item,&#13;
cause there's a hell of a lot of difference.&#13;
But if you're under 21, you&#13;
really ain't got much of a choice.&#13;
GOLDSTEIN&#13;
Directed by Philip Kaufman and Benjamin Monaster&#13;
Altura Films&#13;
Wednesday night, .Goldstein and The Grateful&#13;
Dead, only 50 cents to see films that are seldom&#13;
available . . . not bad. A student can enjoy hesitant&#13;
laughter and intellectual company right here on&#13;
campus, courtesy of The Parkside Film Society. A&#13;
nice liberal way to spend an evening off.&#13;
After viewing Goldstein I app roached Hal Stern,&#13;
French professor and world traveler, to ask his&#13;
opinion, telling him that I thought the film entertaining,&#13;
he replied that "it was a little obscure",&#13;
and looked at me in a way that ushered me to a place&#13;
short of the third level of consciousness (a look t hat I&#13;
have grown accustomed to since my first attempt at&#13;
reviewing films).&#13;
The film, a 1965 release, grinds the then contemporary&#13;
life style of Chicago into sausage, as is the&#13;
fate of a n ogre cop who is pushed into one of those&#13;
machines by an ambiguous sculptor (Thomas&#13;
Erhart) who has taken it upon himself to find the&#13;
newly arisen Elijah, a soggy old man who walks up&#13;
and out of Lake Michigan to make metaphysical fun&#13;
of Daley's deluge.&#13;
Lou Gilbert, the old man, is the drone around&#13;
which the film manifests the bureaucratic idiocy of&#13;
police, public puritanism and aborted babies. Other&#13;
tickles are plentiful w.th existential baseball anecdotes,&#13;
yes men and a comic bear played by Benito&#13;
Carruthers who serves as Abbott and Costello.&#13;
Hal was probably right though, as the film wired&#13;
along with many jokes and few revelations, the old&#13;
man finally dancing off into Lake Michigan without&#13;
changing much of what was so funny in the first&#13;
place. I ha ven't seen Hallelujah the Hills yet, but I&#13;
would like to, seeing that Goldstein tried to do for&#13;
Chicago what that film did for Vermont (according to&#13;
Eugene Archer, another reviewer).&#13;
Along with this presentation came The Grateful&#13;
Dead, a sound and sight syncopation of one of the&#13;
very first Acid Rock bands. It reminded me of Ken&#13;
Kesey and his Pranksters, who made a film that&#13;
probably bore some similarity to this egocentric&#13;
picture of the Dead.&#13;
Their music serves as a kind of trip tripping&#13;
background for stop action, reversal, overexposure&#13;
and trip clicking of film. An instant insight into the&#13;
group and putting us into what would seem to be a&#13;
rehearsal with short acid burned moments in the&#13;
sunlight, retinas flinching in Lysergic confusion,&#13;
is early Dead, without stovepipe hats, still the burnt&#13;
out beachboy look, but heavy.&#13;
The film society let me in for next to nothing and&#13;
I'd like to thank them for that and ask you Newscope&#13;
readers to take in a few of their films. For the money&#13;
yer gettin' a good deal. Stop in and tell em Bill se nt&#13;
ya.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
settling the Middle East crisis diplomatically,&#13;
'ign aid programs designed to help emerging&#13;
. He initiated a foreign policy that would demand&#13;
anal participation in the development of backUncle&#13;
Sam was tired of being the world's sugar&#13;
fhe world that wherever U.S. aid went, he wanted&#13;
I nation to form a regional alliance to work out&#13;
&gt;gether. U nca Sam would help, but he wouldn't&#13;
ure.&#13;
ter what you may think of his foreign policy, you&#13;
jnore his (Jekvll) domestic side. No other&#13;
"e LBJ instituted as much progressive and far&#13;
legislation in the history of our beloved republic.&#13;
1 LBJ's, on e we shouted at from the streets, hey,&#13;
many boys did you kill today; the other was&#13;
lumanitarian, the civil rights advocate. It's&#13;
f about his progress in initiating a plenum of long&#13;
rights, conservation, education, labor, health,&#13;
: That the black knight of war was also the white&#13;
J Was the paradox of this President.&#13;
es bow he cajoled, persuaded, and sometimes&#13;
gauntlet of the Presidency to convince reluctant&#13;
congressmen of the need for immediate and&#13;
ial legisla tion. It's those sections, and there are&#13;
go that leave the reader with a quiet respect and&#13;
or the President, those are the chapters LBJ&#13;
&gt;ered. We are touched by his own personal&#13;
is own e xperiences with racism and poverty,&#13;
of his complexity; he didn't believe in the poor&#13;
ves UP by their bootstraps bUllshit, and yet he&#13;
omino theory.&#13;
lead the struggle to end racism, poverty,&#13;
er&#13;
' i°b'essness, and it was the historic mandate&#13;
" ed bim with the leverage to institute such laws&#13;
as: Medicare, Aid to Higher Education, Model Cities, Clean&#13;
Rivers, Urban Mass Transit, Indian Bill of Rights, Fair&#13;
Housing, Guaranteed Student Loans, Gun Controls, AntiPoverty&#13;
Program, Clean Air, and scores of o thers. If hi story's&#13;
memory suffers amnesia about the war, LBJ has a sizeable&#13;
niche next to the good guys.&#13;
But this reviewer doesn't forget. The cloud of the war looms&#13;
large over LBJ's head, as well it should. Under him our involvement&#13;
increased from 69,000 troops to 525,000, and the&#13;
maimed and broken survivors multiply ten-fold the more than&#13;
44,000 dead. That's not even to mention the billions of dollars&#13;
diverted from urgently needed-domestic programs.&#13;
In places the writing is touching, speckled with drawlsy&#13;
anecdotes, interesting and sometimes exciting. In other places,&#13;
much longer and more of them, it's dry, humorless and boring.&#13;
It's a long book and LBJ was obviously selective about what&#13;
went in; his Presidential years are painted as years of great&#13;
social upheaval and advancement, which they were, and years&#13;
of questing for peace, which they really weren't. If I seem&#13;
biased against LBJ's vantage point, it's because I too shouted&#13;
peace now, and was never answered.&#13;
Some of the especially boring sections of Vantage Point&#13;
occur when LBJ describes various Cabinet meetings during&#13;
sundry crises. He did what his advisors and he thought best,&#13;
based on the information they had. He won't admit mistakes.&#13;
Late in the book he describes how peace negotiations were&#13;
finally agreed upon, and that Saigon was the side that dragged&#13;
its feet. He even indicated that Nixon men had counseled Thieu&#13;
and Ky into believing they would have a mote acceptable ally,&#13;
once Nixon took office. Saigon sat out the Peace Talks for a&#13;
while, and LBJ thinks that this delay won Nixon the-election. He&#13;
was never to quite forgive the Saigon regieme for this delay, and&#13;
we may never be able to quite forgive LBJ for his.&#13;
(Courtesy of the Book Mart, 622-59th S treet, Kenosha.)&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
Ladies:&#13;
The beer's on&#13;
Frenchie&#13;
That's rightfree&#13;
beer&#13;
for you girls, if ^&#13;
you're over 21 of course,&#13;
anytime after 8 pm on&#13;
Tuesdays.&#13;
The&#13;
food's great, the beer's&#13;
cold, and if you don t&#13;
like our music-&#13;
:• bring your&#13;
own.&#13;
3050 Douglas*open till 12 &#13;
1'agHi MiVVSCOFK January 21, 1972&#13;
VCome visit our pizza&#13;
j kitchens or have&#13;
\ some delivered'&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5—12&#13;
except S unday&#13;
4615—7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
-RO^MZP.&#13;
DAUNTLESS DEFENDER OF QDAUTY&#13;
DAUNTJMP&#13;
noMB&#13;
trt&#13;
BAUNTIESS DEFENDER OF UlAlffl&#13;
SGA into&#13;
Biz arre Situation&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
the organization would pledge&#13;
to use the money for the purposes&#13;
they requested it for. SGA&#13;
added it.&#13;
Ricardo Quintana ,&#13;
mathematics, asked if the CCC&#13;
would have any veto power over&#13;
any appropriations made.&#13;
Loumos replied no.&#13;
After further discussion the&#13;
CCC voted unanimously to allow&#13;
SGA to make the appropriations.&#13;
&#13;
So jubilation reigned supreme&#13;
for Student Government — th ey&#13;
had $6,400, and the authority to&#13;
allocate it to student&#13;
organizations. So they thought.&#13;
Tuesday afternoon, Loumos&#13;
met with Zuehlke to arrange the&#13;
transfer of funds to Student&#13;
Government's account — rather&#13;
he though he would. Zuehlke&#13;
told him, he told Newscope,&#13;
procedures to utilize the funds&#13;
already existed, and, alas, only&#13;
$2,400 was left — the money had&#13;
been used for office supplies&#13;
and equipment, telephones and&#13;
carpeting, among other things.&#13;
Loumos walked out.&#13;
W e dne sda y m o rni ng&#13;
Loumos, Trotter and myself,&#13;
representing SGA, met with&#13;
Dearborn, Zuehlke, Tony&#13;
Totero and Jewel Echelbarger&#13;
of Student Affairs, and Duane&#13;
Nuendorf of the Business office.&#13;
Stu d e nt G o v e r n m e nt&#13;
desired to tape record the&#13;
conference — the misunderstandings&#13;
that have arisen&#13;
out of past meetings was their&#13;
justification. The administrators&#13;
refused. At one&#13;
point, believing the meeting&#13;
was being recorded, they got up&#13;
as if to walk out.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn threatened, "I'll tell&#13;
you this, if the discussions we&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
'/2 Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line S°ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All It ems Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
have at this meeting are printed&#13;
in Newscope, it will be the last&#13;
time we have this type of&#13;
meeting."&#13;
The meeting was not&#13;
recorded.&#13;
Zuehlke began by saying he&#13;
had given SGA the wrong&#13;
figures the day before. An&#13;
estimated $4,104 remained of&#13;
the funds, not $2,400. He&#13;
provided a breakdown of how&#13;
the money had been spent.&#13;
Significant expenditures included:&#13;
$585 for office equipment&#13;
and furnishings; $609 for&#13;
telephone rental and tolls; $209&#13;
for student salaries; $155 for&#13;
supplies.&#13;
Zuehlke accused Loumos and&#13;
Trotter of lying to the CCC in&#13;
saying he had approved the&#13;
SGA budget request forms.&#13;
Loumos denied this.&#13;
He charged, in turn, Zuehlke&#13;
had lied to them two months&#13;
earlier in saying no procedures&#13;
existed for utilizing the funds,&#13;
and that SGA could draw up&#13;
such forms. Why, he asked, did&#13;
Zuehlke say no procedures&#13;
existed and the money could not&#13;
be reached because of this,&#13;
when, in fact, such procedures&#13;
did exist, and the money was&#13;
being used?&#13;
Zuehlke denied, in turn, ever&#13;
saying this.&#13;
At this point, I said a recording&#13;
of the meeting would have&#13;
obviously shown who was lying.&#13;
There was no reply.&#13;
Dearborn maintained that, in&#13;
the first place, the CCC had no&#13;
authority to relinquish its&#13;
budget making authority; just&#13;
as the CCC last year had no&#13;
authority to abolish itself.&#13;
The SGA leaders accepted&#13;
this, and gradually a compromise&#13;
was worked out: any&#13;
allocation of funds would have&#13;
to be approved by SGA, and the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
Dearborn would then concur if&#13;
the two bodies first okayed it.&#13;
So student organizations will&#13;
be in line to receive an&#13;
estimated $4,104, and SGA will&#13;
have a say in how it's allocated.&#13;
After it was all over, Loumos&#13;
commented wearily, "At least&#13;
everything is straightened out&#13;
now."&#13;
&lt;"3 171 "&#13;
/ /&#13;
I I v"&#13;
cv:&#13;
/ M&#13;
PIPES&#13;
PAPERS&#13;
POSTERS&#13;
PATCHES&#13;
AND MORE&#13;
.J&#13;
5010 7th Are.&#13;
r* ,A/&gt;&#13;
TRUCK on DOWN&#13;
OPENMON.-FRI.&#13;
NOON"9&#13;
SAT. 9-9&#13;
SUN. NOON"6&#13;
NEW RELEASES&#13;
Crazy Horse&#13;
"LOOSE" — $3.85&#13;
Yes&#13;
"FRAGILE" — $3.95&#13;
Rolling Stones&#13;
"HOT ROCKS" — $7.40&#13;
NEW BREAD ALBUM — $3.85&#13;
Osibisa Wcyay&#13;
"OSIBISA WCYAY" — $3.85&#13;
NEW KING CRIMSON — $3.85&#13;
$12.80&#13;
Phone: 654-5032&#13;
George Harrison and friends&#13;
"CONCERT FOR BANGLA DESH"&#13;
Emerson, Lake and Palmer&#13;
"LIVE "PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION " — $3.85&#13;
WANT TO SEE THE&#13;
CLASSIC FILMS?&#13;
During the next six months,&#13;
there will be a number of&#13;
exciting movie offerings in&#13;
the Parkside area. Check&#13;
the bulletin board in the&#13;
Tallent Hall Library for&#13;
the week's current films —&#13;
and reviews. &#13;
^ * i 7&#13;
POETRY&#13;
* FO RU M&#13;
c&lt; f-jpwage t o&#13;
ralolo Nerudft&#13;
WOO f.n\, We^lhei^ay&#13;
it January 26- i&#13;
Whifertelfcir CoTfi^hwe&#13;
/ Qreeh^is't&#13;
January 24,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
fi Parkside Activities Board fimenk&#13;
ACADEMY AWARD —&#13;
WINNER&#13;
THEY SHOOT&#13;
HORSES,&#13;
DON'T THEY?&#13;
GIG YOUNG BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR&#13;
JANE FO NDA BEST ACTRESS OF THE YEAR&#13;
New Yolk Film Critics&#13;
BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR&#13;
National Board of Revlow&#13;
Fri. Jan . 28 8 =00 P .M&#13;
Student Ac t. Bl dg. Ad m. 75 '&#13;
Parkside 8. W ise. ID R equired&#13;
CAP CMP CAP CAP c&gt;PSo E)&#13;
9Gutwfo.&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"-&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
. SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING . . . W E BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
RIZZA HUT&#13;
&lt; It's back!&#13;
S BEER NIGHT&#13;
5 20{ mugs&#13;
u $1.25 pitchers&#13;
Ladies night =E 1&#13;
GALS BUY w 1&#13;
20&lt; mugs g 1&#13;
$ 1.00 pitchers -&lt; 1&#13;
( w i t h t h e o r d e r of o n e&#13;
l a r g e me a t p i z z a ) 1&#13;
c&#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;
Key...w:iat do you nave&#13;
planned over semester break?&#13;
Why not join parkside in sunny ...&#13;
ACAPULCO&#13;
MEXICO&#13;
APRIL 2 THRU 9&#13;
ONLY $225&#13;
PLUS TAX &amp; SERVICE&#13;
includes;&#13;
•ROUND TRIP AIR VIA&#13;
DC-8 JET&#13;
* FIRST CLASS HOTELS&#13;
•MEXICO CITY, CUERNAVAGA,&#13;
TAXCO AND GLAMOROUS SUN&#13;
CAPITOL OF ACAPULCO&#13;
'/: DAY OCEAN YACHT&#13;
CRUISE&#13;
*ALL LAND TRANSFERS&#13;
For complete information and&#13;
more details contact the&#13;
Student Activities Office,&#13;
Tallent nail&#13;
cX=&gt; cifC&gt;o&#13;
tifu W.P. Student Activitie s&#13;
presents ... in concert&#13;
POPULAR RECORDING ARTISTS &amp;&#13;
WOODSTOCK ATTRACTION&#13;
SHA NA NA&#13;
"Rock fn Roll is Here to Stay"&#13;
Sun. Feb. 6 8=00 P.M.&#13;
RESERVED SEAT TICKETS S3.5U&#13;
(Limit 2 per fee card)&#13;
Available at the Student Activities Office &#13;
PageS NEWSCOPE January 24, 1972&#13;
The Psychic Circus&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
I T 'S S C R U M P T I O U S&#13;
80c&#13;
V~v ^ HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
BIG TOP Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
N O R T H 3311 SH E RID AN R O AD S O U T H 7 500 S HE R I D AN R O AD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
ALL textbooks tor A LL courses I&#13;
now sold at Main Book Store&#13;
on Wood Rd.&#13;
2nd W E E K O F C L A S S E S , JAN. 2*4 -28 , 1972&#13;
M A IN B O O K S T O R E:&#13;
Mon .-Th urs . - 8 : 00 A.M. - * 4 : 3 0 P .M.&#13;
6:3 0 P.M. - 8:0 0 P.M.&#13;
F r i d ay - 8:0 0 A.M. - * 4 : 3 0 P .M.&#13;
K E N O S H A A N D R A C I NE S T O R E S:&#13;
M o n.- Fri day - 8:0 0 A.M. - 1:30 P.M.&#13;
No Books Will Be Sold At&#13;
Kenosha &amp; Rac&#13;
i&#13;
ne Stores&#13;
I&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
Round Trip Jet&#13;
Ground Transferi&#13;
Eight Nights&#13;
Lodging —&#13;
Sightseeing&#13;
Optional Sidetrips&#13;
Shopping&#13;
Sign Up Early,&#13;
Space Limitedl&#13;
For Additional Information&#13;
plaata oontact:&#13;
William Ncebuhr. Coordinator&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
University ol Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin S3140&#13;
Phono, (414) 553-2226&#13;
University of Wisconsin, Parkside&#13;
Overnight flight from Chicago to ROME, ITALY, via Alitalia Airlines,&#13;
DC-8 Jet. Your overseas flights will include complimentary meals and&#13;
/ beverages.&#13;
Transportation from and to airport and hotel, via deluxe buses.&#13;
In ROME. ITALY, the most vibrant of European capitols where the past&#13;
lives with the present. There's much to see and savor; the Sistine Chapel,&#13;
Art Treasures of the Vatican, the Roman Forum, legendary squares and&#13;
'fountains. "Roma Di None" with the monuments and fountains beaulfully&#13;
illuminated, dinner at a family-style "Trattoria" or a more formal&#13;
"Ristorante" (perhaps one overlooking the city). Nite Spots .... plenty!&#13;
At one you can dance amidst the ancient ruins and of course there's always&#13;
time for "people-watching" on the Via Veneto and an "expresso" at&#13;
a sidewalk cafe where you can enjoy ROME with the lively and charming&#13;
Romans.&#13;
The Spanish Steps, the Catacombs and The Appian Way!&#13;
Good category hotels.&#13;
Tour includes a full days sightseeing tour of the VATICAN, COLOSSEUM,&#13;
ROMAN FORUM. CATACOMBS and the SPANISH STEPS.&#13;
Via Aurelia, Trevi Fountain and St. Peter's Square!&#13;
One day optional side trips will be offered to FLORENCE,.famed city of&#13;
Renaissance art, and to POMPEII-NAPLES-SORRENTO.&#13;
.What to buy in ITALY? Everything! .... Craftsmanship is excellent ....&#13;
Don't miss s look at the leathergoods of all kinds, art books and prints,&#13;
fabrics and beautifully wrought silver and gold. Question is "What not to&#13;
buy?"&#13;
9 Days Only $276&#13;
Plus $20.00 Tax &amp; Service&#13;
Depart: Chicago, March 30&#13;
Return: Chicago, April 8&#13;
$50.00 Deposit Balance due 30 (thirty) days prior to departure.&#13;
LSD music and a hard rock light&#13;
show. Gawd! I stepped out for a&#13;
moment and reentered&#13;
refreshed.&#13;
Norm walked out to the&#13;
audience for the second half of&#13;
the program, with mike in hand,&#13;
this time to explain that ESP is&#13;
"God Given" and asking for&#13;
questions, taking time out to&#13;
forecase a few predictions, and&#13;
informing the audience that his:&#13;
managers were trying to get&#13;
him on the Carson show. Here is&#13;
where the circus began. The&#13;
ESP lecture had turned into a&#13;
route, it was the Ask Norman&#13;
show, Stump the Psychic, and&#13;
finally a revival meeting.&#13;
People seriously asked him if&#13;
they should take a trip to&#13;
another city, they asked him&#13;
what they should do about&#13;
certain problems, etc. Norm&#13;
answered some and told others&#13;
that a psychic couldn't simply&#13;
turn his powers on and answer&#13;
questions, just like that. Some&#13;
people heckled him, and here I&#13;
must give Norm credit. He&#13;
handled hecklers well by not&#13;
answering them, instead he&#13;
went into a rap that centered&#13;
around various historical&#13;
figures who had to suffer persecutions&#13;
and ridicule for what&#13;
they believed. Exit hecklers. At&#13;
other times Norm used his&#13;
psychic powers to answer&#13;
unasked questions that he'd&#13;
"received" from members of&#13;
the audience; he told people&#13;
about their pasts, their health,&#13;
that sort of thing. Nobody told&#13;
him if he was right, if they did I&#13;
couldn't hear them. One&#13;
longhair walked out haflway&#13;
through the show, casually&#13;
saying "I stumped him."&#13;
During this time, Norm was&#13;
speaking in his incredible speed&#13;
'o light monotone and people&#13;
were raising their hands to be&#13;
called on, while others yelled&#13;
out questions. Slater would&#13;
answer a question and then&#13;
move directly into an unfortunately&#13;
stagnant rap on&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
panel didn't discuss anything,&#13;
rather they asked trick&#13;
questions like what's ESP, and&#13;
what's the Bermuda Triangle.&#13;
Norm helpfully answered the&#13;
obviously spontaneous&#13;
questions. The answers may&#13;
have been interesting, I don't&#13;
quite know because Norm&#13;
doesn't speak in a way that's&#13;
conducive to communication.&#13;
He has a tendency to fracture&#13;
the English language, and&#13;
speaks in an incredible&#13;
monotone, accenting nothing,&#13;
punctuating nothing, simply&#13;
spieling out words that pile atop&#13;
each- other until he runs out of&#13;
breath. I heard some of it, but&#13;
I'd have liked to hear more.&#13;
After the panel "discussion"&#13;
was completed, Norm left the&#13;
stage and took the floor, mike in&#13;
hand. He was going to&#13;
demonstrate ESP, using the&#13;
audience. Ten objects were&#13;
placed on a table, while two&#13;
volunteers were dubiously&#13;
isolated in the back of the&#13;
theater. Amplifying his words&#13;
through the sound system, he&#13;
picked out one object for each&#13;
half of the audience to concentrate&#13;
on. The volunteers&#13;
were brought back in and instructed&#13;
to pass a hand over the&#13;
objects, and pick up the one&#13;
which radiated the most&#13;
psychic heat. The first volunteer&#13;
failed. The second simply&#13;
gave up after Norm asked the&#13;
hapless hipster if he was "on a&#13;
trip."&#13;
With that failure behind him,&#13;
Norm picked out another&#13;
volunteer from the audience.&#13;
This time Norm himself was&#13;
going to transmit the image of&#13;
the object. With the volunteer&#13;
facing the lighted screen in the&#13;
back of the stage, Norm showed&#13;
everyone in the audience what&#13;
he was going to concentrate on.&#13;
I'm not sure if the volunteer&#13;
didn't see it either. It seems that&#13;
the object's dark outline was&#13;
projected onto the top of the&#13;
screen, which the volunteer was&#13;
facing. He many have seen it,&#13;
and then again he may not have.&#13;
Anyway, the volunteer picked&#13;
the correct object, and scattered&#13;
applause ensued. At&#13;
which time Norman beat a&#13;
hasty exit, and promised&#13;
predictions to come.&#13;
Two electric guitarists by&#13;
name of Corrigan &amp; Liepke took&#13;
over the amps while the&#13;
Psychedelic Scientist volunteered&#13;
his sighshow. I could&#13;
just imagine what the older folk&#13;
in the audience were thinking;&#13;
YOU CAN E AT!&#13;
only $1.39&#13;
Serving from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.&#13;
pizza, chicken,&#13;
'mo-jo' potatoes,&#13;
and tossed salad&#13;
SHEETS&#13;
BUM-LUNGE'&#13;
Highway 31 at&#13;
60th Street&#13;
Phone 654-0485&#13;
Lathrop^ Ave. Racine 633-6307&#13;
********#************************&lt;£&#13;
Christ, the Word and God&#13;
evangelical style, evangelical&#13;
at its worst.&#13;
Slater was also predicting&#13;
things, as he promised earlier,&#13;
and making a few hilarious&#13;
mistakes along the way. For&#13;
example, he predicted that in&#13;
1978 a 17 year old would take the&#13;
place of "James Hendrickson"&#13;
(Jimi Hendrix), that Lindsay&#13;
would be President in 1974 (an&#13;
off year), and that the U.S.&#13;
would be (surprise) completely&#13;
different in 2000 from what it is&#13;
today. However, beside a few&#13;
absurd "predictions" the&#13;
psychic also forecast that a&#13;
"pyramid on he t moon would be&#13;
found in 1973", the war wouldn't&#13;
end for years, that in 1980 the&#13;
U.S. would be in a war with&#13;
South Africa, that draft&#13;
resistors would not be allowed&#13;
to repatriate, that great earth&#13;
tremors would shake the&#13;
Midwest in 1974, that Atlantis&#13;
will rise again, and the Statue of&#13;
Liberty would be blown up in&#13;
1973. He also predicted that an&#13;
assassination attempt will be&#13;
made on Nixon while he visits&#13;
China.&#13;
ESP may well be an emerging&#13;
science, evidence seems to&#13;
indicate its validity, but Sunday&#13;
night's program didn't do much&#13;
in proving its case. The last half&#13;
of the program was pure&#13;
theater, it was absurd comedy,&#13;
a melange of fast talking car&#13;
salesmen, Monte Hall, Ann&#13;
Landers and What's My Line. I&#13;
could only laugh. I&#13;
congratulated Eric Prentnieks&#13;
for his stroke of genius in introducing&#13;
live theater to the&#13;
Vogue (he'd told me earlier that&#13;
it's "one of a continuing series&#13;
of lectures"), and I for one hope&#13;
it continues.&#13;
If Norman Slater is to be a&#13;
crusader for ESP, he's going to&#13;
have to learn how to present a&#13;
serious program that doesn't&#13;
sink (ascend?) to theater. As it&#13;
turned out, the biggest block to&#13;
accepting ESP was the&#13;
evangelist-psychic himself.&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
O N S O U T H S H E R I D A N RO A D IN KE N O S H A 6 5 4 - 0 4 1 1 </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63612">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 3, January 24, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63613">
                <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="63614">
                <text>1972-01-24</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="63617">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63618">
                <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="63619">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63620">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63621">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63622">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="156">
        <name>assistant chancellor allen dearborn</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="217">
        <name>campus concerns committee</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="218">
        <name>erwin zuehlke</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="206">
        <name>larry jones</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="219">
        <name>segregated fees</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="210">
        <name>student government association</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2609" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3254">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/d2de69bf0e2a704b6706799a225a3f11.pdf</src>
        <authentication>471e83bd50f180c4015003ef97647a10</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63627">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 4</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63628">
              <text>Humphrey Hits Kenosha</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63635">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63624">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 4, January 31, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63625">
                <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="63626">
                <text>1972-01-31</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="63629">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63630">
                <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="63631">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63632">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63633">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63634">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2610" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4393">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/29bfa667e4b498e463a75ac80a6ae56e.pdf</src>
        <authentication>651e16956c0dd0e27dedc94500017370</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63639">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 5</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63640">
              <text>Dremel, Koser Resign from SGA</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63647">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89891">
              <text>Dremel, Koser Resign from&#13;
Loumos Wants Union Board&#13;
to Run Activities Building&#13;
Jniversify of Wisconsin - Parkside fI"®©&#13;
Volume 6 Number 5 February 7,1972&#13;
ministraters and alumni.&#13;
Loumos told the audience,&#13;
"We can establish by ourselves&#13;
how we would like the building&#13;
to be run. Then we have to deny&#13;
any other source of control the&#13;
right to make the rules and&#13;
regulations.&#13;
"What are we really asking&#13;
for — something that has never&#13;
been done before?" he asked,&#13;
"No. I think one of the things we&#13;
should ask for is a temporary&#13;
Student Union Board to oversee&#13;
the operation of the building&#13;
until such time as the Student&#13;
Union is built."&#13;
According to the moderator of&#13;
the program, Student Senator&#13;
Jerry Murphy, the Union won't&#13;
be completed till the fall of 1974.&#13;
Loumos said further that the&#13;
next Director of Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises should be named by&#13;
this temporary Board.&#13;
"Why can't this be done&#13;
here?" he asked, "we get some&#13;
jive about state funds being&#13;
involved, and how hard they&#13;
fought for us to get beer on&#13;
campus. Apparently, to get beer&#13;
on this campus, they gave away&#13;
our rights and established all&#13;
sorts of rules and strict&#13;
regulations which are impossible&#13;
to enforce."&#13;
He asserted, "I think we all&#13;
can agree that this place could&#13;
be run differently, and maybe it.&#13;
will be eventyally. But, I don't&#13;
think you have to wait. I'm not&#13;
going to.&#13;
"I think we should act like&#13;
this building is ours," he said.&#13;
"I think we should start doing&#13;
things here that have never&#13;
been done before. I think you&#13;
should do whatever you want to&#13;
do, and not wait for somebody to&#13;
tell you it's alright now."&#13;
He concluded by saying&#13;
another meeting to discuss the&#13;
Activities Building would be&#13;
held Wednesday, February 9,&#13;
and that as for now, SGA had&#13;
bought two half barrels of beer&#13;
for Student consumption.&#13;
by Larry Jones of the Newscope staff&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) meeting of Thursday,&#13;
February 3, reminded me very little of a&#13;
significent news story, or, to put it another way,&#13;
treasurer Dan Trotter had the right idea when he&#13;
dozed off half-way through It.&#13;
Not that it was really their fault, mind you. It&#13;
was just one of those meetings . . .&#13;
Of greatest interest was SGA's reaction to the&#13;
all student meeting they sponsored earlier in the&#13;
day at the activities building (see separate story).&#13;
Student Union Committee chairman Jerry Mury&#13;
and VP Bruce Volpintesta were pleased with the&#13;
general reaction, and felt Wednesday's open&#13;
meeting would be even more successful because&#13;
more students would hav heard about it ant take&#13;
interest. Two half-barrels of free beer (which were&#13;
provided by SGA) will usually generate a good&#13;
deal of interest. Murphy, however, was disappointed&#13;
with the written response he received. He&#13;
asked students to write down complaints and&#13;
suggestions about the Activities Building, but got&#13;
only six responses. "We will need much more than&#13;
this to show administration' people that we have&#13;
student support," he said.&#13;
Also on the subject of the Activities Building,&#13;
the senate authorized president Dean Loumos to&#13;
send a letter to administration officials involved in&#13;
the operation of the SAB, requesting that a&#13;
"Temporary Student Union Board be established&#13;
state aids may be barred from juniors and seniors&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the Newscope staff&#13;
While Parkside is making 30 per cent more financial aid&#13;
available to students than it did one year ago, an effort is underway&#13;
which would affect the disposition of state grants so that they would&#13;
primarily benefit underclassmen. A few months ago, Jan Ocker,&#13;
Director of Financial Aids and Placement, informed Newscope&#13;
that $550,000 from federal, state and private sources is available to&#13;
Parkside students this school year. Of this sum, federal funding&#13;
accounts for $210,000, private sources make available $38,000, and&#13;
state grants and loans total a whopping $212,000. $73,500 in state&#13;
grants and scholarships is the amount which is most directly affected&#13;
by the changes in disposition.&#13;
In recent weeks Newscope has learned that the Higher&#13;
Educational Aids Board (HEAB) has taken it upon itself to change&#13;
the rules that affect the disposition of financial aids. Such rules will&#13;
probably not go into effect until the fall of 1972.&#13;
The proposed change in financial aids rules represents one&#13;
effect of the recent merger. The UW System Executive Council of&#13;
Chancellors discussed the financial aids question first in its&#13;
January 6 meeting. The Council had been informed that an HEAB&#13;
committee was considering rule changes that would: (1) make&#13;
need the sole rather than the primary criterion in awarding grants&#13;
(2) limit all state aid to freshmen and sophomores, cutting junior&#13;
and seniors off from such assistance (3) require the campuses to&#13;
allocate non-state aid, (federal and private sources) on the same&#13;
basis as they had before, thereby continuing their past "level of&#13;
effort" with non-state funds.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie was asked to draft a position paper&#13;
delineating the Executive Council's views toward the rule changes.&#13;
Wyllie presented the paper to the HEAB advisory committee&#13;
meeting in Madison on January 10.&#13;
In his testimony, Wyllie said, "we are sympathetic to the social&#13;
and educational goals that the HEAB committee has in mind, but&#13;
we question how helpful rigid rules would be in reaching these&#13;
goals. Obviously the neediest students should get the most help, but&#13;
that can be accomplished by making need the primary rather than&#13;
the sole factor in determining eligibility. We think students who&#13;
have need should have it considered through all four years. It is no&#13;
great favor to a disadvantaged student to bring him in under this&#13;
program and abandon him in his junior and senior years."&#13;
Wyllie added that he was also concerned about the administrative.&#13;
.confusion that would arise if aid from non-state&#13;
sources was brought under state rules. Presently federal rules set&#13;
forth guidelines for federal assistance, and private sources are&#13;
disposed of in accordance with the donor's wishes.&#13;
During his testimony before the HEAB advisory committee,&#13;
the chancellor noted that the concentration of all financial aid in the&#13;
freshman and sophomore years would have different effects on the&#13;
various campuses, because the percentage of upper and under&#13;
classmen varies. In Madison 56 per cent of the undergraduate&#13;
students are juniors and seniors, while in Green Bay and Parkside&#13;
only 32 per cent rank in that category. Wyllie stated that "we think&#13;
it would be better to allow some flexibility, and not tie the institutions&#13;
to a rule that would concentrate all state aid in the first&#13;
two years."&#13;
Though the Executive Council supports the idea of giving&#13;
substantial aid to freshmen and sophomores, it does not favor a&#13;
system under which juniors and seniors would be completely cut off&#13;
from state grants. Such a situation would force upper classmen to&#13;
take out loans.&#13;
As a result of the January 10 HEAB advisory committee&#13;
meeting, it was decided to recommend a formula under which 70&#13;
per cent of state aid would go to underclassmen in the 1972-73 school&#13;
year, and 80 per cent in the 1973-74 year and thereafter. The committee&#13;
will also recommend that need be the primary but not sole&#13;
factor in determining grant eligibility. On the issue of the administration&#13;
of non-state aid, the committee agreed not to make a&#13;
recommendation that would require the institutions to maintain&#13;
their past "level of effort" with federal and private funds.&#13;
"What we have gained," Wyllie said, "is an opportunity for&#13;
input before the rules are finally drawn, and a chance for direct&#13;
communication between the chancellors and the HEAB staff and&#13;
advisory committee."&#13;
After a meeting of the Executive Council on February 3, there&#13;
will be a public meeting on the proposed rule changes before HEAB&#13;
on February 24. Final Board action will occur on February 25.&#13;
to: 1) change the name of the SAB to the Temporary&#13;
Student Union; 5) oversee the operations of&#13;
said TSU until such a time as the final Student&#13;
Union is completed and a Student Union Board is&#13;
established; and c) search for, screen and approve&#13;
the hiring of the next director of Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises." Copies of the letter will also be sent&#13;
to Chancellor Wyllie, UW president John Weaver,&#13;
and Governor Pat Lucey.&#13;
In other business, Loumos noted that SGA is&#13;
working closely with the Faculty Bookstore&#13;
Committee in collecting complaints about the&#13;
Bookstore. From the stack he produced, it seemed&#13;
obvious they are having no difficulty at all&#13;
soliciting such complaints from students, faculty,&#13;
publishers and other bookstores. Loumos and&#13;
senator Jim Bielefelt were unanimously approved&#13;
by the senate to fill student positions on the FBC.&#13;
PSGA then regretfully accepted the&#13;
resignation of recording secretary Jeanette&#13;
Dremel who cited inconvenient meeting times as&#13;
her reason for leaving. Her resignation leaves&#13;
three posts vacant, as corresponding secretary&#13;
Dan Koser recently decided he did not have&#13;
enough time for; the job, and senator Jim De Berg&#13;
transferred to another school.&#13;
Loumos also made a plea to senators to do&#13;
anything they could to help the SGA sponsored&#13;
Day Care Center which is in desperate need of&#13;
both volunteers and money.&#13;
HEAB Favors&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Stu den t G o ver n m ent&#13;
President Dean Loumos,&#13;
speaking last Thursday before a&#13;
noon hour audience at the&#13;
Student Activities Building,&#13;
called for the establishment of a&#13;
Temporary Student Union&#13;
board to oversee the operations&#13;
of the building.&#13;
Since the recent resignation&#13;
of the Director of Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises, Verne Martinez,&#13;
the building is reportedly being&#13;
managed on a temporary basis&#13;
by William Niebuhr and Dave&#13;
Bishop of the Student Affairs&#13;
Office.&#13;
Loumos asked, in addition,&#13;
that the next Auxiliary Enterprises&#13;
Director be named by&#13;
the temporary Union Board.&#13;
Membership of Student Union&#13;
Boards usually consists of&#13;
students, faculty, adCentralization&#13;
of Financial Aids &#13;
I'age 2 NEWSCOPE February 7,1972&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOW SR S HOP&#13;
in west&#13;
R a cin e&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
CARL'S P IZZA&#13;
In Four Siies 9" - 1 2" - 1 4" - 16"&#13;
AISO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI . CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
. SEA FOOD « SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING . . . WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Model Abortion&#13;
Program&#13;
Immediate I Iitlp Willi No Delays&#13;
WLCKERSHAM&#13;
WOMENS&#13;
MEDICAL&#13;
CENTER&#13;
133 East 58th Street, New York&#13;
A COMMUNITY&#13;
ABORTION SERVICE&#13;
AFFILIATED WITH A MAJOR&#13;
METROPOLITAN HOSPITAL&#13;
Unequalled safety record of&#13;
in-patient and out-patient abortions&#13;
by Board-certified gynecologists&#13;
and anesthesiologists.&#13;
General anesthesia is usetj for&#13;
patient comfort.&#13;
Low costs of abortion procedures:&#13;
&#13;
Pregnancy&#13;
up to 10 wks., D &amp; C, $150&#13;
up to 14 wks., D &amp; C, $250&#13;
14-24 weeks, Saline or&#13;
Mechanical Induction $400&#13;
In all cases over 10 weeks&#13;
pregnancy, Wickersham's medical&#13;
safety standards require&#13;
overnight hospital stays.&#13;
Free professional services&#13;
available to abortion patients&#13;
include psychiatric counseling,&#13;
family planning and birth control.&#13;
No referral needed. No&#13;
referral fee or contribution solicited&#13;
ever. Private. Confidential.&#13;
No red tape.&#13;
DIRECT SERVICE LINE&#13;
TO MEDICAL CENTER&#13;
(212) PLaza 5-6805&#13;
Call 8 AM to 8 PM&#13;
Mondays through Saturdays&#13;
foitoRIAL&#13;
It has been abnormal at Parkside for Student Government, or,&#13;
for that matter, any student organization to be successful in its&#13;
programs. Rather, the norm has been inaction and ineptitude, and,&#13;
subsequently, an unarticulated student voice.&#13;
Student Government has changed this. It h as become a functional&#13;
body capable of formulating a program, and capable of instituting&#13;
a program. The voter registration booth at registration,&#13;
the $4,000 in funds for student organizations it secured, the Book Coop,&#13;
and the Child Day Care bare witness to this. Hopefully, their&#13;
investigation of the Activities Building will be as successful.&#13;
In brief, Student Government has established itself. It has&#13;
made itself credible — no small task when its handicaps are&#13;
examined: a legacy of student apathy and complacency, an administration&#13;
that was used to wielding its power in a near vacuum,&#13;
a Constitutional Committee that labored for six months to produce&#13;
a mediocre document, an initial student government whose&#13;
ineptitude was complete.&#13;
Yet Student Government has reached a level of success;&#13;
despite that many of the Senators are young and inexperienced;&#13;
despite no candidates at all ran for one of the executive positions.&#13;
Credit for this success must go to those SGA leaders who have&#13;
shown initiative and dedication in their work. Dean Loumos, the&#13;
President of SGA, deserves special praise. His approach of&#13;
revolutionary rhetoric mixed with a positive program, along with&#13;
the unusual combination of idealism, pragmatism, naivete and&#13;
cynicism has proved to be successful.&#13;
His approach has been demonstrated to be a correct one, while&#13;
the approach of the preceding president's, a policy of accommodation&#13;
and cooperation with the Administration, has proved&#13;
a failure —the positive success' of his administration were nil.&#13;
Student Government has gained a momentum. Its leaders have&#13;
been fueled by the belief that Parkside students aren't really&#13;
apathetic; that if the students are presented with the proper&#13;
program they will respond — mark the $1,200 in sales at the Book&#13;
Co-op.&#13;
It m ay be naive to believe this, but if i t is true, and Student&#13;
Government continues to provide the leadership, more than one&#13;
change may occur at Parkside.&#13;
WE LIKE IT&#13;
IN&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
THE SANDS&#13;
SANDWICHES AT SPORTS BAR&#13;
ALL TIMES—BAR and Hwy 32&#13;
PACKAGE GOODS&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMP TIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
&gt;"v -\ HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
BIG TOP Cre a my hot f u d g e over&#13;
A big s u n d ae loa ded with ice cre am a n d&#13;
fresh strawberries, w h ipp ed b a n a n a s&#13;
cre a m, nuts a n d cherry 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
N O R T H 331 1 S H E RID AN R O AD S O U T H 7 5 00 S H E R I D AN R O AD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
y&#13;
Rn.&#13;
^\cF&#13;
&gt;P&lt;A£ ?&#13;
&lt;S&gt;4$&#13;
°v&#13;
Marine Corps&#13;
Builds Men?&#13;
(CPS) — "When we had to go&#13;
and eat we went to the mess hall&#13;
and we had to yell 'kill' at the&#13;
top of our lungs three times&#13;
before we were allowed to eat.&#13;
These are the words of an exU&#13;
S. Marine describing a part of&#13;
his training at the Marine Boot&#13;
Camp on Parris Island, S.C.&#13;
This particular Marine deserted&#13;
following his tour of duty in&#13;
Vietnam in 1968 and now lives in&#13;
Sweden. His observations, and&#13;
those of men like him, are&#13;
recorded in Mark Lane s&#13;
Conversations with Americans&#13;
(Simon &amp; Schuster: N.Y. 1970).&#13;
"We used to run around&#13;
saying, 'VC, VC, Kill, Kill, Kill,&#13;
Gotta kill, Gotta kill, 'Cause it's&#13;
fun, 'Cause it's fun.'&#13;
This same Marine told of a&#13;
prayer posted in every barracks&#13;
on Parris Island. "It's a prayer&#13;
for war. Every night before we&#13;
went to bed at night at nine&#13;
o'clock we had to pray that&#13;
there'd be a war, so that the&#13;
Marine Corps could always be&#13;
on the move, because that was&#13;
their job, to fight."&#13;
The text of the prayer&#13;
follows:&#13;
Though I walk Thru the&#13;
Valley&#13;
In the Shadow of DEATH&#13;
I fear no EVIL&#13;
For I Am the Biggest&#13;
Baddest Mother-Pucker&#13;
In the Valley&#13;
Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep&#13;
I Pray the LORD the WAR&#13;
to Keep&#13;
So MARINES can come and&#13;
Save the Day&#13;
And I Can Earn My God&#13;
Damn PAY&#13;
God Bless the United States&#13;
God Bless the Drill Instructors&#13;
&#13;
God Bless the Marine Corps&#13;
Chaplin To&#13;
Appear at&#13;
Whiteskellar&#13;
The Parkside Activity&#13;
Board's (PAB) coffeehouse&#13;
(north lounge of Greenquist&#13;
Hall) opens again on Thursday,&#13;
February 10, at 2:00 P.M.&#13;
Entertainment will be a&#13;
"Charlie Chaplin Spectacular"&#13;
with three of his films. The&#13;
three are "The Immigrant",&#13;
"The Adventurer", and "Bambi&#13;
Falls in Love".&#13;
All Parkside Students are&#13;
invited to attend and the cost is&#13;
a nickel!&#13;
Two weeks from this date, the&#13;
PAB wishes to host a showing of&#13;
student films at the&#13;
Whiteskellar Coffeehouse. All&#13;
wTio are interested are asked to&#13;
contact Jerry Horton, Chairman&#13;
of PAB's film committee.&#13;
Students are invited to attend&#13;
Whiteskellar and students or&#13;
organizations that would like to&#13;
appear at the Whiteskellar are&#13;
asked to contact Kim Rudat,&#13;
chairman of the PAB coffee&#13;
house committee. And again,&#13;
watch for the large&#13;
Whiteskellar sign in the&#13;
G r e e n q u i st con cou rse&#13;
proclaiming that Parkside's&#13;
coffeehouse is again open for&#13;
business.&#13;
SCS Offers Exam Counseling&#13;
On Wednesday, February 9th, Student Counseling Services is&#13;
offering three fifty minute sessions designed to help students&#13;
prepare for six weeks exams.&#13;
Members of the faculty and the counseling staff will be on hand&#13;
to discuss such things as how to study for examinations, the differences&#13;
in preparation for an essay exam as opposed to an objective&#13;
exam, how to write an exam, etc. Study tip sheets will be&#13;
handed out and time will be open for questions and disucssion.&#13;
All three sessions are on Wednesday, February 9th.&#13;
Kenosha at 10:00, Room 117.&#13;
Greenquist at 1:30, Room D101.&#13;
Racine at 3:00, Room 104.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY,FEB.8&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs. UWMilwaukee&#13;
at Milwaukee Arena, 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY, FEB. 11&#13;
Regents Meeting: Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System will&#13;
meet in Van Hise Hall, Madison.&#13;
Film: Feature film "Blow Up" will&#13;
be shown at 8 p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Building. Adm. 75c. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin ID required.&#13;
Hockey: UW-P vs. Triton Junior&#13;
College at Park Ridge, III., 12:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Gymnastics: UW-P vs. Western&#13;
Illinois at Macomb.&#13;
SATURDAY, FEB. 12&#13;
Fencing: UW'P vs. UW-Madison&#13;
and Michigan State at Madison.&#13;
Wrestling: UW-P vs. Chicago Circle&#13;
Campus at Chicago.&#13;
Hockey: UW-P vs. Western Illinois&#13;
University at Peoria, 10 a.m.&#13;
SUNDAY, FEB. 13&#13;
Concert: University Artists Concert&#13;
Series will present classical&#13;
guitarist James Yoghourjian at 4&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist Hall. Gen. adm.&#13;
$1; student adm. 50c; children 12&#13;
and under free.&#13;
Hockey: UW-P vs. Illinois State&#13;
University at Peoria, 10 a.m.&#13;
Track UW-P in Illinois Open Meet at&#13;
Champaign.&#13;
'Don't believe everything ycu read."&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR&#13;
ASSOCIATE EDITOR&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR&#13;
COPY EDITOR&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Jerry Socha&#13;
Bill So renson&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
Larry Jones&#13;
Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Wolfgang Salewski&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent student newspaper composed by students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside published weekly except during&#13;
vacation periods. Student obtained advertising funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the&#13;
mversity. Free copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and photographs submitted to Newscope is&#13;
4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to publication. Manuscripts must be typed and&#13;
double spaced. Unsolicited manuscripts and photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 d ays after the date of submission, after which they become the&#13;
property of Newscope, Ltd. The Newscope office is located in the Student&#13;
Organizations building, intersection of Highway A and Wood Road. &#13;
SAB Changeover R aises Questions&#13;
February?, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
by JohnKolpen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The recent resignation of&#13;
Verne Martinez as Director of&#13;
Auxiliary Enterprises has&#13;
spawned an epidemic of&#13;
rumors and speculation as to&#13;
the future of the Student Activities&#13;
Building. Martinez, who&#13;
served as Director since 1968,&#13;
left Parkside in favor of a job in&#13;
Denver. For the remainder of&#13;
the semester, or until a&#13;
replacement can be found, the&#13;
administration of the Activities&#13;
Building will be taken up by&#13;
David Bishop, Coordinator of&#13;
Academic Advising, and&#13;
William Niebuhr, Coordinator&#13;
of Student Activities. Bishop&#13;
will be in charge of the day to&#13;
day operations of the building&#13;
while Niebuhr will handle&#13;
programming.&#13;
Early last week the studentbartenders&#13;
employed at the&#13;
Activities Building met with&#13;
Bishop to discuss policy&#13;
changes and operation of the&#13;
building. The principal question&#13;
raised by the bartenders concerned&#13;
the effect the&#13;
changeover would have on their&#13;
jobs. Bishop told the group that&#13;
he anticipated no employee&#13;
changes though the distinction&#13;
of "head" bartender was&#13;
eliminated. Previously the head&#13;
bartender was' the employee&#13;
with most seniority during a&#13;
particular shift.&#13;
Relieving some of the anxiety&#13;
several of the bartenders expressed&#13;
toward job security the&#13;
practice of giving away free&#13;
beers was brought up. Several&#13;
bartenders argued on behalf of&#13;
the practice noting that it was&#13;
common in many bars for a&#13;
bartender to give an occasional&#13;
free drink to regular customers.&#13;
Bishop opposed the practice&#13;
and told the group that he&#13;
"wants to prevent favoritism."&#13;
One of the bartenders said, "if&#13;
someone comes in here and&#13;
spends a lot of cash I don't see&#13;
any reason why we shouldn't&#13;
give him a free beer."&#13;
Several bartenders stressed&#13;
"the human element" of the&#13;
jobs, but Bishop finally ended&#13;
the debate maintaining that&#13;
"we have to treat every student&#13;
alike."&#13;
At the end of the meeting each&#13;
bartender was given a list of&#13;
conduct rules after which they&#13;
were asked to sign a paper&#13;
stating that they had read them.&#13;
Bishop warned the group that if&#13;
the rules were broken, including&#13;
the serving of free beer, the&#13;
•bartender would "face the&#13;
consequences."&#13;
After the meeting Bishop told&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Trad«-mark®&#13;
H&#13;
' yv&#13;
&amp; Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
O N S O U TH S H E R I D A N RO A D IN K E N O S H A 6 5 4 - 041 1&#13;
Newscope that he "wanted to&#13;
see honesty and integrity in the&#13;
operation." He added that the&#13;
previous administration had&#13;
been no different but wanted to&#13;
make his intentions clear to the&#13;
employees. He said additional&#13;
stand-by bartenders may be&#13;
hired on especially busy nights&#13;
such as weekend dances, but&#13;
that it would not affect the&#13;
present bartenders. He emphasized&#13;
that he was only&#13;
taking over the responsibility of&#13;
operating the building on an&#13;
interim basis and that he hoped&#13;
to see a replacement for&#13;
Martinez before June.&#13;
At the recent all student&#13;
meeting at the Activities&#13;
Building Mark Barnhill, a&#13;
bartender, said that "all their&#13;
doing now is changing policy;&#13;
it's going to be a little tighter&#13;
around here. Mr. Bishop sounds&#13;
like he's going to do a pretty fair&#13;
job, but I don't know if he can do&#13;
it."&#13;
The senate has authorized me to send a letter to the&#13;
appropriate administrator's asking that a Temporary&#13;
Student Union Board be established to:&#13;
a. change the name of the Student Activities Building to&#13;
the Temporary Student Union;&#13;
b. over see the operations of this Temporary Student&#13;
Union until such a time as the final Student Union is completed&#13;
and a Student Union Board is established;&#13;
c. search for, screan and approve the hiring of the next&#13;
Auxiliary Enterprise Director.&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
Ecology C ourse Postponed 1 Week&#13;
The University Extension&#13;
class "Ecology: The Science of&#13;
Survival" has been postponed&#13;
for one week, and will begin&#13;
Wednesday, February 9 at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The course will include a&#13;
study of the fundamentals of&#13;
ecology, and how man, in order&#13;
to survive, must learn to relate&#13;
to his eco-system. The instructor,&#13;
Douglas LaFollette,&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Chemistry and UW-Parkside,&#13;
aims to help the concerned&#13;
citizen understand the environmental&#13;
problems involved&#13;
and how best to combat them.&#13;
This six-week course will be&#13;
held on the Racine Campus of&#13;
UW-Parkside. Registrations&#13;
are being accepted at the&#13;
University Extension office,&#13;
phone Racine or Kenosha 553-&#13;
2312.&#13;
•-yf -&lt;&#13;
•:~r. / /&#13;
i .. £ v&lt;*&#13;
A...&#13;
k, . • v - v- ^ '&#13;
f.&#13;
PIPES&#13;
PAPERS&#13;
POSTERS&#13;
PATCHES&#13;
AND MORE&#13;
5010 7th Ave.&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
A&#13;
aJSW&#13;
•J&#13;
a DOWN&#13;
MON. thra FRI.- NOON to 10pm&#13;
SAT.- 9am to 9pm m&#13;
SUN- NOON to Epm 'M&#13;
NEW RELEASES&#13;
Crazy Horse&#13;
"LOOSE" — $3.85&#13;
Yes&#13;
"FRAGILE" — $3.95&#13;
Rolling Stones&#13;
"HOT ROCKS" — $7.40&#13;
NEW BREAD ALBUM — $3.05&#13;
Osibisa Wcyay&#13;
"OSIBISA WCYAY" — $3.85&#13;
NEW KING CRIMSON — $3.85&#13;
George Harrison and friends&#13;
"CONCERT FOR BANGLA DESH" — $12.80&#13;
cc4 cnoo Emerson, Lake and Palmer&#13;
Pnone: oo4-o(J.54 "LIVE "PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION " — $ 3.85&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Va Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W - 2 0W - 30W&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE February 7,1!)72&#13;
Reviewer dwarfed by a friendly pillar as he grabs it just as it was&#13;
about to fall down.&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Flash — Kenosha, Thursday, Feb. 3 —&#13;
world premier night for the Train&#13;
Station —&#13;
The bulletin had come over the wire&#13;
service while I was blithely resting my&#13;
feet on the managing editor's cluttered&#13;
desk, with a well-deserved cup of coffee&#13;
in my hands, resting from the hectic&#13;
razzle-dazzle-frazzle life of a Newscope&#13;
dupe. Suddenly the serenity of the&#13;
restful scene was shattered forever by&#13;
the frenetic grumblings of the&#13;
managing editor, as he thrust the&#13;
bulletin before my startled eyes.&#13;
Wearily I realized this could only&#13;
mean another assignment. Lordy,&#13;
lordy, lordy.&#13;
It was opening night and On the Nod&#13;
would be there to record the historic&#13;
occasion. My first problem was&#13;
deciding what On the Nod was to wear;&#13;
white tie, black tie, tie die, tails, heads,&#13;
top hat, bowler, golfer? I realized that&#13;
too few bars premier in today's hectic&#13;
time-for-only-a-quick-shot-and-a-beer&#13;
society. The ritual of the opening night&#13;
(of a bar) unfortunately is not embedded&#13;
in our culture nearly as well as&#13;
in moviedumb, we have forgotten the&#13;
litany to the baptism; Good taste and&#13;
bad taste are not prescribed. So I came&#13;
as I went, society be danged, and&#13;
though I may not be on the 10 best&#13;
dressed list, last night I was certainly&#13;
on the 10 b est drunk list.&#13;
The Train Station is the old Kenosha&#13;
North Shore station reincarnated in the&#13;
best of all possible forms, a bar. Ah,&#13;
yes, as I entered the bar I was harkened&#13;
back to my misspent youth, when I was&#13;
no bigger than the cork on a bottle of&#13;
Chianti. I could visualize the old North&#13;
Shore crossing as I waited for the deep&#13;
rumble of the train as it challenged my&#13;
existence. And now, here I was again,&#13;
standing in what was once the waiting&#13;
room.&#13;
Local celebrities trickled in&#13;
throughout the evening unannounced as&#13;
the North Star perilously hovered over&#13;
this humble city on the shore of Lake&#13;
Michigan; a celestial beacon, a good&#13;
omen reflecting His benelovence in&#13;
granting man yet another haven&#13;
from the hustle and trestjes of life.&#13;
Among the celebrities braving the&#13;
fierce north wind to greet the new&#13;
arrival, bearing gifts in the form of a&#13;
50c cover charge, were such illustrious&#13;
captains of business and industry as&#13;
Jon Perry, and Richard Sward and his&#13;
old lady, scholars like Rick Sereno and&#13;
Kevin "Crowbait" McKay coming&#13;
down from their ivory towers, an&#13;
executive member of the media Jerry&#13;
"the Sosh" Socha, and the tireless&#13;
afficianado Brian P. Kipp. I sat wondering&#13;
when the traditional&#13;
congratulatory telegrams from the free&#13;
world leaders would pour in.&#13;
The Train Sfation opened at six, and&#13;
featured the muzak of the Dream. The&#13;
cover charge of 50c was reasonable&#13;
considering the fact that even if you&#13;
didn't like the band, you did get free&#13;
peanufs, which I think, is a nice touch.&#13;
Anything that is free is a nice touch.&#13;
The Train Station is, of course,&#13;
decorated in the motif of a train&#13;
station; railroad signs and&#13;
paraphenalia adorn the red brick walls,&#13;
the floor is ceramic tile, formica tables&#13;
and comfortable chairs line one side of&#13;
the main building while a breathtaking&#13;
copper-topped bar stretches 50 feet&#13;
down the other side.&#13;
Bars are becoming more complicated&#13;
these days, and The Train Station is no&#13;
exception as it offers a multitude of&#13;
options to suit the particular needs and&#13;
persuasions of the patron. In addition to&#13;
the main building which houses a wine&#13;
room from which a customer may&#13;
purchase a bottle for $2.00, a meeting&#13;
room to which a party can retire to&#13;
pursue a more serious mode of drinking&#13;
or whatever, there is yet another&#13;
smaller one room building. This&#13;
smaller room does not charge cover&#13;
fees, and it is happily equipped with a&#13;
Loenbrau tap (25c for a 12 oz. tap),&#13;
three pool tables, a juke and a pinball&#13;
machine which Socha says is lousy.&#13;
Now the stock report: Prices from six&#13;
to nine steady at 30c per tap, and $1.25 a&#13;
pitcher, the Miller and Schltz taps aner&#13;
nine ask 40c fo r a glass and $1.50 for a&#13;
pitcher. Waitresses asked us&#13;
repeatedly to call them if we needed&#13;
service rather than go to the bar ourselves.&#13;
The offer sounded like some&#13;
WoLib trick, so I declined it. Hard&#13;
liquor proved to be expensive, Rick&#13;
Sereno related an incident to me in&#13;
_ which he had ordered a gimlet that cost&#13;
him 85c, but he said he was most perturbed&#13;
by an essential lack of vodka in&#13;
the correct proportions. Perhaps the&#13;
most unfortunate price is the 65c&#13;
charged for a bottled beer. I think&#13;
there's definitely room for improvement&#13;
here, though it must be&#13;
emphasized that it is a new bar, and&#13;
there will undoubtedly be growing&#13;
pains.&#13;
When we'd arrived at 7:30, the bar&#13;
(was fairly empty, people were scattered&#13;
down the length of the bar,&#13;
&lt; watching their copper reflections and&#13;
J tracing circles in small puddles of&#13;
o spilled beer. Everyone seemed apw&#13;
prehensive, looking around, as if&#13;
£ waiting for something to happen,&#13;
tr Slowly the bar filled up and people took&#13;
w to the tables. One aspect of the bar&#13;
which proved somewhat disconcerting&#13;
was the lack of a timepiece. The&#13;
presence of a clock could have&#13;
cushioned the shock of paying a quarter&#13;
more for a pitcher of beer that I'd&#13;
bought just a few minutes before, for a&#13;
quarter less; I could have paced myself&#13;
better.&#13;
I approached the copper-topped bar&#13;
with reverence, it was like meeting&#13;
Paul ..Bunyon, a myth come real. I&#13;
timidly peaked at the reflection of my&#13;
face in the shiny top, growing bold I&#13;
stared transfixed at my visage, for a&#13;
few brief moments I had attained a&#13;
mystical state. But business is business&#13;
so I checked out the juke; it wasn't very&#13;
high quality, the juke in the smaller&#13;
building was far superior. Kippster&#13;
thinks he can remember a price difference&#13;
also. The juke in the main&#13;
buildings plays only two songs for a&#13;
quarter, a pernicious practice, the&#13;
origin of which should be investigated&#13;
by a congressional committee, the&#13;
other juke might play three songs for a&#13;
quarter. It's difficult to remember all&#13;
these things.&#13;
The friendly manager informed me&#13;
that sandwiches would be served in the&#13;
coming weeks, and that a beef garden&#13;
would be instituted in the courtyard&#13;
separating the two buildings during the&#13;
summer months.&#13;
The opening night crowd was of a&#13;
very diverse character; distilled long&#13;
hairs and semi-hipsters sat next to&#13;
middleaged working class heros, while&#13;
a gaggle of secretarial types sat coiffeured&#13;
at the tables. One of the group of&#13;
well dressed businessmen accused&#13;
Crowbait McKay of being a bad pool&#13;
player as he payed the inimitable&#13;
Newscoper his just due. The crowd was&#13;
about as diverse as you'd want it, but&#13;
the bulk of patrons I would judge to be&#13;
under 30.&#13;
The Train Station is obviously a bar&#13;
with great potential, it offers an impressive&#13;
choice of options for the&#13;
patron, and if prices can be maintained&#13;
at a reasonable level, it should provide&#13;
more than enough competition for the&#13;
Zodiac. Even good musical groups will&#13;
not be appreciated to their fullest until&#13;
the acoustics can be improved. The&#13;
Train Station disproves once and for all&#13;
the old adage that when you see your&#13;
face on the bartop it's time to leave.&#13;
by Paul Lomartire, Feature Editor&#13;
Setting out to devastate success with n,&#13;
criticism is a foolhardy game as I see it, esoeri&#13;
when the success is viewed in financial ter&#13;
There are "experts" in various fields who r&#13;
tinually try it; for example leveling shots at s&#13;
diverse solo and collective talents as Rod McKu&#13;
the Baltimore Orioles, Grand Funk Railnua&#13;
Erich Segal. d&#13;
'&#13;
Many poetry critics bombard Rod McKi&#13;
with charges that his poetry contains noth&#13;
technically good enough to warrant respect in&#13;
craft. Certainly nothing good enough to allow /&#13;
McKuen to be the best selling poet alive. Not be&#13;
able to explain his mass popularity efficiently&#13;
critics make no real case. In terms of the dol&#13;
bill and his poetry, the raspy voiced poet is to&#13;
I found an occurrence similar to this, wh&#13;
dining at a popular restaurant in Kenosha. 7&#13;
place does a good business, but I would be the I,&#13;
one to explain why. I can only relate the evei&#13;
which gave me no reason to enjoy eating at 1&#13;
North Ranch Restaurant at 3311 Sheridan R0;&#13;
late last week.&#13;
Maggie and I ate at the Ranch nean&#13;
QAL UKE. IMAfAA"&#13;
MAN IN THE WILDERNESS&#13;
Richard Harris — Zachary Bass&#13;
John Huston — Captain Henry&#13;
The Bear — Peggy The Bear&#13;
Directed by Richard Sarafian&#13;
Warner Brothers&#13;
STRAW DOGS&#13;
Dustin* Hoffman — David&#13;
Susan George — Amy&#13;
Tom Heddon — Peter George&#13;
Directed by Sam Peckinpah&#13;
ABC Pictures&#13;
Richard Harris, scar tissued excursions into the peaceful wild ;&#13;
a close-up sip of a springwater handbook on how to appreciate the&#13;
whole earth without the aroma of Butternut coffee.&#13;
An expedition of trappers moves across the Northwest&#13;
territory, trailing a riverboat in 1920 guided by burly Zach Bass.&#13;
Alone, Zach is mangled by a Grizzly Bear, his body torn to shreds,&#13;
but he won't die.&#13;
The expedition finds him this way, heart pounding in Godhating,&#13;
fish-hooked madness. This life-death turmoil is actualized&#13;
with a series of flashbacks that coagulate the man's past history&#13;
one of early Victorian mores, taught with a switch arid realized in&#13;
hypocrisy; his love of wife and child the only love he dare want&#13;
Two men are left in a death vigil; Zach expendable.&#13;
With all of this we find Invincoman, an early American individualistic&#13;
lone hero, who, with guts and sheer will defuses death.&#13;
The comic book feeling becoming necessary for the real aim of the&#13;
film; to bring those who watch it ever closer to an almost forgotten&#13;
reality. Water, fire and are are removed from the zodiac and the&#13;
bathroom and placed in a more original frame of reference Amphibian&#13;
man, crawling, born again.&#13;
The captain (John Huston), saw Zach as his son, but "he never&#13;
saw me as his father." A symbolistic departure methinks, as Zach&#13;
is left to die by his pseudo-father, who, on a journey of fortune,&#13;
leaves his pseudo-son dying into a new awareness of that whole&#13;
earth, the source contemporaries left to chemical or spiritual death&#13;
and recovery, their fathers' journeys of fortune sustained by a&#13;
collective, man made wilderness of spiraling towers and metallic&#13;
neasts.&#13;
The film asserts Mr Harris' big-as-all-outdoors ego again;&#13;
honor and dignity as pie&#13;
departures like Cromwell&#13;
like him, though. His cor&#13;
will and individuality be&#13;
respect this Barabas wit&#13;
A thought provoking&#13;
Harris' charisma withou&#13;
you'll like the film . • •&#13;
There exists another&#13;
the non-antics of Harris,&#13;
and totally contemporar&#13;
Harris asserts, Hoffmar&#13;
courageous assurance at&#13;
On the bumbling sic&#13;
realization, turning us at&#13;
Straw Dogs has been mi&#13;
born of plain animal moti&#13;
to disagree, seeing that&#13;
The violence was to&#13;
misconstrued as exciting&#13;
that evokes manly Idem*&#13;
bestial proportions in Sir&#13;
film as a middle class w&lt;&#13;
destroyed thousands m&#13;
whatever methods avai&#13;
The story is simplemathematician&#13;
living Wl&#13;
near a small rural town&#13;
men are hired to repaira &#13;
letty&#13;
ially&#13;
'ms.&#13;
consuch&#13;
&#13;
uen,&#13;
and&#13;
(uen&#13;
hing&#13;
the&#13;
Mr.&#13;
eing&#13;
, the&#13;
illar&#13;
ops.&#13;
hile&#13;
The&#13;
last&#13;
jnts&#13;
the&#13;
&gt;ad,&#13;
rest&#13;
Parkside, assuming many students eat there&#13;
because of its location (there is another Ranch run&#13;
by the iame management on the south end of&#13;
Kenosha). It w as about five p.m., and the dininq&#13;
area was moderately full. There were four&#13;
waitresses on duty at this time.&#13;
While we glanced at the placemat menus, two&#13;
Parkside student-friends came in. They were&#13;
having supper before a class at the Racine&#13;
campus. I liked th e idea of using their criticism in&#13;
this column, although I didn't tell them I was&#13;
reviewing the Ranch.&#13;
I ord ered a B-B-Q sliced beef sandwich with&#13;
French fries and cole slaw, costing a dollar thirtyfive&#13;
cents. Maggie decided to eat what the Ranch&#13;
called a "Gringo Special", which consisted of "a&#13;
third of a pound ground beef on French crust&#13;
bread, dressed with crisp lettuce and our special&#13;
sauce", priced at eighty cents. The "Gringo" also&#13;
attracted the attention of one of the studentfriends.&#13;
&#13;
The second student chose to eat a "steak&#13;
sandwich", which cost seventy-five cents. There&#13;
was no description offered on the menu for the&#13;
sandwich. Between the four of us, we had the&#13;
opportunity to sample three popular low priced&#13;
sandwiches offered by the North Ranch.&#13;
After waiting about ten minutes, a new face&#13;
brought my sliced beef sandwich and a Gringo to&#13;
the table. (We had received drinks almost immediately&#13;
after ordering.) But now, a new&#13;
waitress stood with two plates asking who ordered&#13;
what.&#13;
It was decided that Maggie would eat the first&#13;
Gringo, as the waitress promised the students'&#13;
food w ould be delivered very quickly.&#13;
A dozen or so minutes passed, when a third&#13;
waitress delivered the steak sandwich and the&#13;
other Gringo. Because Maggie and I only nibbled&#13;
at our food while waiting for our friends' sandwiches&#13;
to be served, we now were confronted with&#13;
cold f ood. The waitress situation brought to my&#13;
mind an experiment the Chicago Cubs once tried&#13;
A K I N 6 OF T H F "2.0S&#13;
in the early 1960s.&#13;
Instead of hiring one manager to run the team,&#13;
the front office hired ten coaches. They finished&#13;
last that year. Our service, whether as innovative,&#13;
or merely accidental, proved to be as inefficient as&#13;
the Cubs' experiment.&#13;
My beef sandwich was pretty good, except for&#13;
being cold due to the wait. The cole slaw, which&#13;
one of the waitresses said was concocted on the&#13;
premises, was terrible, a total waste of time on the&#13;
part of the kitchen. The paper serving cup yielded&#13;
enough liquid to cover the bottom of the platter my&#13;
entire meal was served on. The two teaspoons of&#13;
actual "slaw" was too sweet for me to eat, even&#13;
after I h ad drained the excess liquid.&#13;
Maggie, who had adjusted herself to eating&#13;
even bad food for economical reasons, left over&#13;
half of her Gringo sandwich. The meat was cold,&#13;
tough, and too well done. The "special sauce"&#13;
seemed to be a dabble of French dressing, the&#13;
sickly wilted lettuce she passed off as "out of&#13;
season". Maggie rated the Gringo very low, not&#13;
recommending it to anyone in the condition it was&#13;
served to her.&#13;
The student who ordered a "steak sandwich"&#13;
was somewhat surprised by the appearance of the&#13;
"steak". It s eemed to be a piece of hamburger.&#13;
After trading a few bites with the other student&#13;
who ordered a Gringo he said that he could not&#13;
honestly tell the difference between the two pieces&#13;
of m eat. He left a quarter of the sandwich, but ate&#13;
all the potato chips served him.&#13;
The student who ordered a Gringo ate the&#13;
entire sandwich, stating only that it was a bit&#13;
tough. She said she would not order it again, if&#13;
indeed she ever returned to the North Ranch.&#13;
The meal was a failure. I w as the only participant&#13;
who could offer a recommendation, as I&#13;
thought the sliced beef sandwich was alright. The&#13;
cole slaw was not though. After the four of us had&#13;
experienced the poor service and mediocre food, it&#13;
seemed that a second cup of coffee would be a&#13;
consolation.&#13;
The table was a shambles of open plastic&#13;
cream containers, dishes, sticky napkins, dirty&#13;
silverware and empty coffee cups. At a time when&#13;
the restaurant was only slightly busier than when&#13;
we had entered, we could not find even one of our&#13;
three waitresses, or none of them could find us. We&#13;
waited over fifteen minutes for someone to ask us&#13;
how the meal was, or at least offer dessert, but we&#13;
were ignored.&#13;
Disgusted, the two students headed for&#13;
Racine, vowing to buy a cup of instant coffee from&#13;
the school's vending machine. They figured it&#13;
would be better than flagging down a waitress and&#13;
asking her to clear the table and refill the coffee&#13;
cups.&#13;
Throughout the meal, there was an Arctic&#13;
draft coming from a vent at our feet, just below&#13;
the large window at booth B-5. Maggie warded off&#13;
the chill with a scarf wrapped around her ankles.&#13;
The two students said their car would be much&#13;
warmer. The breeze added to their premature&#13;
departure.&#13;
While taking a few notes, and talking to&#13;
Maggie after they left, I wo uld not condemn the&#13;
Ranch. I ha ve to give any restaurant the benefit of&#13;
a doubt when I onl y visit it o nce.&#13;
The waitress situation could have been caused&#13;
by a schedule problem, the flu or who knows what&#13;
else. The cooks preparing the food could have been&#13;
working under handicaps unknown to the&#13;
customer, or whatever. Thedraft might have been&#13;
avoided i.f w e had moved.&#13;
All this seems highly possible to me, but I also&#13;
know that Rod McKuen, the Baltimore Orioles,&#13;
Grand Funk Railroad and Erich Segal do not leave&#13;
many obvious cracks in their production or&#13;
product, as their phenomenon does not allow it.&#13;
A critic might be able to drive a wedge into&#13;
that crack, and in s ome cases even affect public&#13;
opinion.&#13;
February 7,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
lentiful a s they were in o ther Invincoman&#13;
'II and A Man Called Horse. I ca n't help but&#13;
insistent, sometimes noisy defense of free&#13;
before and behind the camera makes me&#13;
'ith a c onscience.&#13;
'9 film Man In The Wilderness excels in&#13;
iut tfle need of dialogue. If yo u like Harris&#13;
• i f not ...&#13;
:r side °f t he spectrum brought to light by&#13;
• If i s the almost pitiable, nearly confused,&#13;
3ry film image of Dustin Hoffman. While&#13;
an suggests, creating this dichotomy of&#13;
and bumbling success.&#13;
ilde, we usually hate to pay the price of&#13;
ut face in our thoughts and our actions,&#13;
"^interpreted as a violent, senseless film&#13;
&gt; ivation and male chauvinism. I wo uld like&#13;
1 Payed t he price.&#13;
00 disagreeable and too disgusting to be&#13;
n9 or a dventurous, with the same violence&#13;
1 'cation in Wild erness becoming a ritual of&#13;
raw' Do9&#13;
s&#13;
- I would be wrong to dismiss the&#13;
we dream as so many have. We, who have&#13;
n&#13;
,&#13;
a sen&#13;
seless war must realize, through&#13;
1 ® e, what senseless death is.&#13;
vith\- ^&#13;
avid (Hoffman), an inobtrusive&#13;
' Lolita&#13;
-&#13;
|ike wi&#13;
f&#13;
e&#13;
' AmY' in Cornwall&#13;
'n "&#13;
e west of England. A few local workage&#13;
on fhe newly acquired homestead.&#13;
Amy is a native of the area and the workmen know her, Venner,&#13;
one of them, having once gone with her. The workmen harass the&#13;
couple in an assured you-in-the-back way; David appeases while&#13;
Amy baits them cheesecake style.&#13;
A hunting trip is undertaken in lieu of a near confrontation, the&#13;
family cat found in the bedroom closet, David appeasing again.&#13;
While he is gone Venner and Scutt (Ken Hutchinson) rape Amy, she&#13;
enjoys some of it.&#13;
David remains ignorant of this escapade and he and his wife&#13;
are eventually invited to a church social where Henry Niles (David&#13;
Warner), considered the town pervert, leaves the affair with&#13;
teasing Janice. Her disappearance is discovered and the shouts of&#13;
her searchers causes her accidental suffocation.&#13;
David and Amy, on their way home, hit Henry with their car.&#13;
Tom Heddon (Peter Vaughn), who organized the search party finds&#13;
out about this and the true conflict begins, David refusing to turn&#13;
over the wounded Henry who now resides at the homestead. They&#13;
attack the house in drunken fury.&#13;
Through numbed fear and resourcefulness David destroys the&#13;
attackers, one by one in a mixture of boiling oil, cracked heads, and&#13;
bear trapped necks.&#13;
The film is savage, yes. The film is fanciful, yes. The film is&#13;
useless, no! The violence it carries is possible as was the violence&#13;
possible in the real life account of Capote's reportage of In Cold&#13;
Blood, or the real life reportage of America's In Vietnam. We&#13;
Americans must learn to pay for our fury, Straw Dogs makes in&#13;
plain terror.&#13;
If you you really like Straw Dogs . . . .don't.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
For The Record&#13;
i idinapvMUSIC&#13;
HOUSE ^/«&#13;
b&#13;
.&#13;
ill i i \ i i: i 1 1 I \ \ • t- in m i ? -&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
FHamnfo.&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
ZJL VJLj Suprr CU&#13;
1700 Sheridan&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
I3©SS'KOFFEE&#13;
7-VW*&#13;
. £ 50&#13;
r&#13;
-&#13;
HSr. &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE February 7,1972&#13;
Do We Knead This? Bread Concert.&#13;
36 PER CENT OF NEW YOUNG VOTERS REGISTERED&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) — An astounding 36 per cent of the&#13;
newly eligible 18-20 year-old voters have already registered, according&#13;
to a recent survey by the Youth Citizenship Fund.&#13;
The assessment was based on the results of a recent telephone&#13;
survey of registration officials in 102 cities and counties&#13;
representing 35 s tates.&#13;
REPORT SAYS PAPER RECYCLING CAN&#13;
CUT BIG CITY WASTE BY 25 PER CENT&#13;
LOS ANGELES (CPS) — In a report released recently by the&#13;
Bank of America, solid waste from large cities was cited as being&#13;
37 per cent to 60 per cent paper. And, says the report, increased&#13;
recycling of that waste would cut the solid waste explosion by as&#13;
much as 25 pe r cent.&#13;
GOVERNMENT WARNS AGAINST WATERBEDS;&#13;
LANDLORDS CAN SAY, "NO."&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) — The government, in a recent&#13;
Department of Housing and Urban Development advisory pamphlet,&#13;
told the managers of public housing projects and other&#13;
federally assisted housing they may ban water beds because of&#13;
their excessive weight.&#13;
ALL textbooks tor A LL courses&#13;
now sold at M ain Book Store&#13;
on Wood Rd.&#13;
BOOK STORE HOURS:&#13;
MAIN BOOK STORE:&#13;
Mon.-Thurs . - 8&#13;
6&#13;
Friday - 8&#13;
00 A.M.&#13;
30 P.M.&#13;
00 A.M.&#13;
- * 4: 30 P.M.&#13;
- 8:00 P.M.&#13;
- * 4: 30 P.M.&#13;
1&#13;
KENOSHA AND RACINE STORES:&#13;
Mon.-Thurs . ONLY - 10:00 A.M. - 1:00 P.M&#13;
No Booh Will Be Sold At&#13;
Kenosha &amp; Racine Stores&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
,TOM ^p-o&#13;
JAMMED&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
THE W INDJAMMER&#13;
TENDERLOIN STEAK f&#13;
AND TUMBLED O NIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN ROOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— HE RBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
SENATOR PROXMIRE&#13;
from the Music Desk&#13;
In terms of gross income the&#13;
person who made the decision to&#13;
bring Bread to the Carthage&#13;
Field house January 29th&#13;
deserves a special footnote in&#13;
the yearbook. That's really the&#13;
only standard applicable, the&#13;
room was packed and the&#13;
concert was a success. Certainly&#13;
the J. Geils Band could&#13;
have come for the same price&#13;
but from the treasurer's&#13;
viewpoint superior music was&#13;
irrelevant and we can forget&#13;
him.&#13;
The very mass of people that&#13;
made his day however was&#13;
afflicted with the kind of inertia&#13;
that is killing, has, in the&#13;
opinion of some, already killed&#13;
the live rock &amp; roll scene in&#13;
America. This was not your&#13;
typical wine and reds audience,&#13;
such as attracted by Black&#13;
Sabbath or Grand Funk. Obnoxious&#13;
as this kind of group&#13;
identity can be, they have some&#13;
idea of what rock is for and&#13;
aren't afraid to shake it up. The&#13;
crowd at this affair exhibited a&#13;
trend much more insidious.&#13;
N o t h w i t h s t a n d i n g t h e&#13;
necessary applause at the end&#13;
of each number and the&#13;
screams of recognition for the&#13;
certified radio biggies, Bread&#13;
played a two-hour set with&#13;
absolutely no help from the&#13;
audience. Judee Sill, latter-day&#13;
folkie who tried to precede&#13;
Bread onstage, was treated to&#13;
an even healthier dose of apathy&#13;
and walked off after four&#13;
numbers citing "lack of&#13;
audience response."&#13;
Bread seemed to be used to&#13;
this situation though. In fact it's&#13;
probable that they create it. To&#13;
give them their due, they're&#13;
four competant studio&#13;
musicians wich professional&#13;
voices and chops who hit big in&#13;
the highly competetive AM&#13;
singles sweepstakes and&#13;
decided to grag off a piece of the&#13;
coast-to-coast touring-makesyou-crazy&#13;
action becuase what&#13;
the hell, that's what a 1972 rock&#13;
band does, right? No typically&#13;
hungry musician would pass up&#13;
the chance for two parallel&#13;
careers instead of one, and so&#13;
Bread gives the impression of&#13;
professional schizophrenia;&#13;
vicarious dream lovers&#13;
manifested in sweet lightweight&#13;
singles which flutter sensitive&#13;
young hearts, and grass-root&#13;
stumping, risking some of the&#13;
soft-focus perfection radio&#13;
allows to meet the fans eye to&#13;
eyeTheir&#13;
stage act leans heavily&#13;
on their gold records and if you&#13;
haven't been keeping track&#13;
you'd be surprised at hoe many&#13;
there are. Production and&#13;
random studio magic gives&#13;
records fullness and depth that&#13;
a four piece group just can't&#13;
muster on stage and so these&#13;
came off very weak, rather like&#13;
skimmed milk. The rest of the&#13;
show presented heavier&#13;
numbers in the vein of "Mother&#13;
Freedom", all more less of the&#13;
same length, in the same&#13;
tempo, and except for the odd&#13;
switch from guitar to organ or&#13;
piano, very similar. The only&#13;
thing to pass for a surprise was&#13;
the Chuck Berry medly which&#13;
they didn't understand.&#13;
After the show wer were&#13;
informed that there was to be a&#13;
press conference and just the&#13;
idea was enough to make us&#13;
stick around. Rock journalism!&#13;
We waited at the appointed spot&#13;
with about twenty young girls,&#13;
some clutching autograph&#13;
albums, some, who we took to&#13;
be other crack reporting teams,&#13;
fondling tape recorders. Down&#13;
the hall we encountered more&#13;
fans clustered around the bass&#13;
player who was dispensing&#13;
signatures and charm. Once in&#13;
the sanctum we sat quietly&#13;
collecting our thoughts whila&#13;
young short-haired girl introduced&#13;
herself to the guitar&#13;
player as a member of the&#13;
underground press on her first&#13;
assignment and confessed to a&#13;
case of nerves. A tall girl&#13;
sprawled on a chair asked if she&#13;
wanted a pill. Soon several&#13;
microphones were gathering&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
TAPE RECORDER — G. E. Solid&#13;
State, reel to reel. Battery or&#13;
adapter. $20. Ph. 553-2345. Mrs.&#13;
Zimmerman.&#13;
FOR SALE — Mosrite Bass Guitar&#13;
Double pickup, double cutaway&#13;
hollowbody. With plush lined hard&#13;
shelled case. Was $450 new. Ex&#13;
cellent condition. $100. Call Larry&#13;
552-8347, or come to P-Village, apt&#13;
109 (The Swamp).&#13;
CAMERA — Rikoh "Nikon type"&#13;
35mm, f 1.4 Itns. All black pro&#13;
model, with haze filter, 2X zoom&#13;
extender, case. $375 new. Sell for&#13;
$175. Used only twice. Phone Mel&#13;
Messina 654-6771.&#13;
answers to riddles like 'Have&#13;
you always liked music?' and&#13;
'Do your songs have special&#13;
meanings?'&#13;
Several insiders stared in our&#13;
direction but gave no signs of&#13;
acknowledgement so we&#13;
decided to break the ice and&#13;
asked some meaningless&#13;
question which evolved into a&#13;
discussion on significant contribution&#13;
to music in terms of&#13;
the test of time. Guitar player&#13;
opined that Bread's songs would&#13;
wear better than oh, say&#13;
"Honky Tonk Woman" or any&#13;
other hard rocker because their&#13;
music has a timeless quality&#13;
and also great variety. "Take&#13;
any rock song, its chord&#13;
structures and melodies, and it&#13;
soulds like 4,000 o ther songs."&#13;
We suggested that this was the&#13;
main impression of most of&#13;
their songs and received a&#13;
quizzical look. The girl in the&#13;
chair began singing "Puff the&#13;
Magic Dragon". Does this mean&#13;
something? She didn't offer us a&#13;
pill.&#13;
The press conference died&#13;
and we shuffled back to the car&#13;
and the pipe discussing good old&#13;
rock &amp; roll. Pretty much&#13;
nothing had happened; the&#13;
evening was like a couple of&#13;
Carvons. There's nothing much&#13;
in particular to say when&#13;
there's nothing to blame. $3.50&#13;
could buy a night of music to&#13;
remember from any number of&#13;
bands but too often it buys a&#13;
downer circus like this one. Any&#13;
way you figure it out it's a&#13;
vicious circle and meanwhile&#13;
live rock &amp; roll is becoming&#13;
extinct.&#13;
Mike Stevesand&#13;
Training for&#13;
CC-Skiing&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
A practical training session in&#13;
cross country skiing has been&#13;
set for 7:30 p.m., Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 9, at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside main&#13;
campus on Wood Road in north&#13;
Kenosha County.&#13;
To be held under the direction&#13;
of Finnish skier Bill Knuuti, the&#13;
clinic, which will include a&#13;
preliminary classroom session&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the&#13;
Racine YMCA, affords the&#13;
public a chance to learn of one&#13;
of the nation's newest and&#13;
fastest-growing sports.&#13;
Advance registration is&#13;
necessary and may be made by&#13;
calling 634-1994.&#13;
FOR SALE — Snowmobile - Solens&#13;
Husky Sprint. Brand new 18 hp. List&#13;
$795. Sell for $625. Won in a raffle.&#13;
Phone 652-2538 after 12 noon.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT — SALES&#13;
PEOPLE WANTED — Male or&#13;
female. Part time. Lots of work.&#13;
Lots of money. Ph. 652-3833.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
EXPERIENCED TYPIST — Will&#13;
type term papers, assignments etc.&#13;
at my home. Ph. 552-8773.&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
DOG LOST — Near East Berry ville&#13;
Road. Black Labrador Male. Ph.&#13;
552 8835&#13;
STUDENTS— If you had a locker on&#13;
the Racine Campus last semester&#13;
and are not using it this semester,&#13;
please inform the Racine Main&#13;
Office (553 2121, exy. 20) so we can&#13;
reassign it.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1955 Chev. NHRA legal, 4.88 posi,&#13;
Super Sun Tach, 6x15 Rocket Mags,&#13;
301 Chevy short block with 12.5:1&#13;
TRW pistons, balanced. Spare 4.88&#13;
posi. 320 degree Isky hydraulic&#13;
camshaft and lifters. Borg-Warner&#13;
T-10 4 spd, with Hurst shifter.&#13;
Contact Fred Noer at Newscope or&#13;
phone 1-414-275-2464 anytime.&#13;
1960 GTO. New tires, mags, 4 speed,&#13;
excellent condition. Must sell. $V,200,&#13;
willing to talk. 633-1069 any time&#13;
after 5:00. &#13;
Winter Sports Teams on Road&#13;
February 7,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
All UW-Parkside winter sports teams will be&#13;
on the road this week and all are aiming to peak&#13;
soon with performances that will carry them&#13;
headlong into championship competition.&#13;
Steve Stephens' cagers, 85-59 losers to Aquinas&#13;
College on the road last week, meet UWMilwaukee&#13;
Tuesday at the Arena in Milwaukee in&#13;
the second half of the two schools' home and home&#13;
series. The Panthers emerged with an easy win&#13;
the last time they tangled with the Rangers, 100-56,&#13;
but Parkside has added new faces to its starting&#13;
lineup since then in forward Bob Popp and center&#13;
Mark Peck.&#13;
After the UW-M game, the Rangers have only&#13;
three remaining, Feb. 17 at UW-Green Bay; Feb.&#13;
19 at Lakeland; and Feb. 21 at Dominican.&#13;
The UW-Parkside gymnastics team, aiming to&#13;
qualify Kelly Carney, Kevin O'Neil and Kerry&#13;
Pfeifer for the NAIA national meet along with&#13;
senior captain Warren McGillivray, will travel to&#13;
Coach Dave Donaldson's alma mater, Western&#13;
Illinois, to take on the always-rugged Leathernecks.&#13;
&#13;
The UW-Parkside track team, with Lucian&#13;
Rosa heading the way in the distances, will&#13;
compete Sunday in the Illinois Open at Champaign&#13;
and prepare for further indoor competition that&#13;
includes multi-team meets at UW-Oshkosh and&#13;
UW-LaCrosse.&#13;
The UW-Parkside wrestlers, 21st in the NAIA&#13;
national meet in 1971, will be aiming to improve&#13;
that position this time around with Ken Martin&#13;
leading the way. Martin, now wrestling at 142&#13;
pounds but expected to drop to 134 for the&#13;
nationals, has won 13 straight matches and is&#13;
getting stronger weekly. Impressing also is&#13;
sophomore Bill West at 134 pounds, who is likely to&#13;
go to 126 for the nationals.&#13;
The Rangers will battle Chicago and IllinoisChicago&#13;
Circle Saturday at Chicago.&#13;
The UW-P fencers, 4-2 on the year heading into&#13;
last Saturday's confrontation with fencing&#13;
strongholds Notre Dame, Oberlin and Chicago&#13;
Circle, will face defending Big Ten champion&#13;
Michigan State and UW-Madison at Madison&#13;
Saturday. The Rangers have been improving&#13;
weekly, said Coach Loran Hein, but he still expects&#13;
every meet to be a cliffhanger because of the&#13;
Rangers' difficult schedule.&#13;
All-staff&#13;
meeting&#13;
Wed. 5:00&#13;
office&#13;
UW-Parkside wrestler Ken Martin has won 13 straight matches&#13;
at 142 pounds this year, but it was at 134 that he earned all-America&#13;
honors last year and it's to that weight that the Coleman sophomore&#13;
will likely move for the NAIA national meet next month.&#13;
Se/utitUf tUe&gt; fyuupt&#13;
PiyyL &amp; OtcJian tf-ooal&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 65$-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
PARKSIDE AGnVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
Whiteskellar&#13;
north lounge, greenquist&#13;
NICKELODEON&#13;
r \&#13;
Flicker&#13;
Classics&#13;
THREE&#13;
CHARLIE CHAPUN&#13;
FILMS&#13;
2PMTHURS. FEB. 10&#13;
adm. one nickle&#13;
AMMM MMM MIUIR*IUI ^ WA M**&#13;
—Honest George Sale — during February&#13;
:V:V:V:V:V q free cherry tree with purchase of any major item ••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Freezers — start at $194&#13;
Admiral Color TV start at $199&#13;
18" Color start at $299&#13;
Heavy duty washers start at $169&#13;
Apartment size washers start at $109&#13;
Refrigerators start at $179&#13;
Warehouse Discount Prices&#13;
micro-ovens, air conditioners&#13;
R. C. Service&#13;
One Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
Ron Casperson - owner&#13;
FLO'S&#13;
Home Cooking&#13;
HWY 31&amp;County Trunk E&#13;
6AM-6PM Specials Daily&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
pizzA&#13;
I ri i; delivery TO PARKSIDE MEEM i l&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 - 301" Aven ue Kenosha 657—5191&#13;
Open ^ days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
y y y y y ^ y y y ^ y y y y y y y y y y y y *&#13;
Young&#13;
Marrieds&#13;
d iscover a&#13;
Credit Union&#13;
JOIN TODAY!&#13;
Whether it's borrowing&#13;
money tor an immediate&#13;
emergency or saving&#13;
tor that future bundle&#13;
ol |oy. we will help you&#13;
discover the RIGHT&#13;
way to make it Discover a&#13;
Credit Union today&#13;
have the money you need&#13;
tomorrow Stop in where&#13;
you work .&#13;
We're&#13;
a beautiful way to plan&#13;
for the future&#13;
Hours:&#13;
Mon. &amp; Wed. — 1:00 - 4:00&#13;
Tues. &amp; Thurs — 12:30 - 2:30&#13;
&lt;1&#13;
Service Center&#13;
245 Tallent Hall&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Doris Lanfz,&#13;
Representative&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF&#13;
o3%&#13;
CREDIT UNION &#13;
PageH NEWSCOPE February 7,1972&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
"We got one thing to say to you&#13;
fuckin' hippies, and that is it's rock and&#13;
roll and it's here to stay." This&#13;
statement, well oiled with grease&#13;
dialect, was delivered just before the&#13;
first encore of three, and by that time&#13;
nobody in the wildly cheering crowd&#13;
needed any convincing. By the time Sha&#13;
Na Na finished their last encore,&#13;
everybody's ears were ringing,&#13;
everybody's face was smiling, and Sha&#13;
na na had pulled off a celebration of joy,&#13;
physical consciousness, and rock and&#13;
roll in Kenotown.&#13;
Sunday night, Sha na na brought rock&#13;
and roll to Bradford High School's&#13;
auditorium, a school known for its&#13;
greasers, and for an hour and a half&#13;
played and danced and sang before a&#13;
nearly packed house. About five after&#13;
eight, the group took the stage and held&#13;
it for two sets; three guitars, drums,&#13;
sax, keyboard, 12 members in all, all of&#13;
whom sang magnificent colos and&#13;
harmony. The New York City natives&#13;
can best be described as raunchy,&#13;
skinny, paunchy, greasy, sparkling,&#13;
high stepping, solid singing, intimidating&#13;
and friendly. It's an act but&#13;
Rock On&#13;
it's soo good.&#13;
The crowd, hipsters, semihipsters,&#13;
aging rock and rollers, professors and a&#13;
few greasers was gradually so overwhelmed&#13;
by Sha na na that, by the end,&#13;
everyone was on their feet, clapping&#13;
hands to the rhythm of good ol' rock and&#13;
roll, hooting and hollering and&#13;
screaming for more, wishing it would&#13;
never, never end. One of the members&#13;
of t he group, Scotter who's been with it&#13;
since its inception, answered the&#13;
question whether rock and roll is here&#13;
to stay; he said "it never went.away".&#13;
The crowd was a rock and roll crowd,&#13;
by the second set people sere crowding&#13;
the stage, a few dancing, a lot shaking.&#13;
Scotter told Newscope that it was a&#13;
little less than the reacion they get from&#13;
major campuses such as Berkeley or&#13;
Madison ("where everyone just went&#13;
wild"). A few bottled of Cold Duck were&#13;
being passed around, and as far as I&#13;
could tell no reefer was being smoked;&#13;
this audience was intoxicated by the&#13;
music.&#13;
On state twelve funny jester-greasers&#13;
were shaking and pirouetting, running&#13;
around in circles, miming, playing&#13;
guitars while lying on their backs,&#13;
jumping out into the audience, combing&#13;
monumentally greased hair, singing&#13;
songs that produced their own&#13;
choreography, backed up by expert&#13;
lighting.&#13;
The beauty of Sha na na is in their&#13;
execution. The choreography and&#13;
lighting is so well times, so reflective of&#13;
the songs they play, so obviously intentionally&#13;
corny that it pulls laughter&#13;
and howls of joy from your gut. It's all&#13;
there inside us, it took Sha na na to pull&#13;
it out, make us loose, happy and&#13;
sweaty. Their repertoire is composed of&#13;
the jerky ballads and writing madness&#13;
of the '50s; "Let's go to the Hop", "Blue&#13;
Moon, "Teen Angel", "Duke of Earl",&#13;
and "Runaround Sue". Everyone a&#13;
singer, everyone a dancer, everyone a&#13;
madman, jerking off with mike stand&#13;
and guitar phalluses, shaking, shaking,&#13;
shaking, exhorting "everybody rock."&#13;
None of it fell on deaf ears. They're&#13;
professionals, there is none of the interminable&#13;
tuning between songs that&#13;
characterizes so many other rock&#13;
groups, there was never more than a&#13;
fifteen second interval between songs&#13;
that were so energetic you wondered&#13;
when the group would collapse in&#13;
masse.&#13;
The ass that Sha na na kicks is the ass&#13;
in our heads, and they kick it with their&#13;
music, our music, until we're standing&#13;
up and dancing and clapping and&#13;
celebrating the essential joy of rock and&#13;
roll, until we realize that rock and roll is&#13;
a physical thing, an event that we are a&#13;
part of and that is a part of us, always&#13;
has been and always will be.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presented us with our music, our&#13;
heritage, our theater and it's about&#13;
time. It's about time we had a chance to&#13;
stamp our feet, and reaffirm the fact&#13;
that music is our very special friend.&#13;
'Come visit our pizza&#13;
kitchens or have&#13;
some delivered'&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5—12&#13;
except sunday&#13;
4615—7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
ijg&gt;yg)i©MS)«aK&lt;ax6)x&lt;ai&#13;
I&#13;
I -&#13;
do you have&#13;
planned over semester break?&#13;
\ s\\hy not join narkside in sunny ...&#13;
ACAPULCOf&#13;
MEXICO ®&#13;
APRIL 2 THRU 9&#13;
ONLY $225&#13;
( P L U S $20 00 TAX ( S E R V I C E )&#13;
includes:&#13;
ROUND TRIP AIR VIA&#13;
DC-8 JET&#13;
FIRST CLASS HOTELS&#13;
MEXICO CITY. CUERNAVACA,&#13;
TAXCO AND GLAMOROUS SU&#13;
CAPITAL OF ACAPULCO&#13;
»/2 DAY OCEAN YACHT&#13;
CRUISE&#13;
ALL LAND TRANSFERS&#13;
For complete information and&#13;
more details contact the Student&#13;
Activities Office, Tallent llall. </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63636">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 5, February 7, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63637">
                <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="63638">
                <text>1972-02-07</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="63641">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63642">
                <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="63643">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63644">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63645">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63646">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="223">
        <name>student union</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="170">
        <name>wyllie</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2611" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4645">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/d10cd7bc8c271f01091875db52174de5.pdf</src>
        <authentication>84ca6ae3bd8c98b7da0ebfb22fe67cb0</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63651">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 6</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63652">
              <text>27 new teachers hired for College of Science and Society</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63659">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90401">
              <text>27 New Teachers&#13;
Hired for College of&#13;
- Science and Society&#13;
by Mire Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Next fall should bring at least&#13;
21 new faculty members to the&#13;
College of Science and Society.&#13;
The recruiting season Is at Its&#13;
peak now, and the Dean of the&#13;
College, Eugene Norwood, has&#13;
authorized the !\Iring of ten new&#13;
people In the Humanities&#13;
division, ten In the Social&#13;
Sciences, and seven In the&#13;
Science division. Further&#13;
authorizations are posslble.&#13;
Norwood said of the progress&#13;
In recruiting, " I have considerable&#13;
hope for this year."&#13;
This stands In contrast to the&#13;
agony of a year ago. Last year,&#13;
the then Vice Chancellor tor&#13;
Academic Affairs and the then&#13;
Dean of the College of Science&#13;
and Society took recruiting out&#13;
of the hands of the faculty and&#13;
attempted to terminate t he&#13;
contracts of 27 faculty mem&#13;
bers. They falled, and a Her the&#13;
en5ulng uproar they reslgne&lt;l&#13;
their positions.&#13;
Following this. Governor&#13;
Lucey instituted upon his&#13;
election a hiring freeze&#13;
throughout the state In an&#13;
austerity m ove. Ultimately,&#13;
there were only three appolntmen&#13;
ts in the Social&#13;
Sciences, five In the&#13;
Humanities, and nine In the&#13;
Sciences. Many of these were&#13;
replacemen ts for faculty&#13;
resignations.&#13;
The year before that was a&#13;
bumper year with 46 people&#13;
being rec;ruited In the College -&#13;
11 In the Socia! Sciences, 13 In&#13;
the Sc, c ,n · 2 in • the&#13;
Humanll,es.&#13;
This year recruitment Is&#13;
being handled by the faculty,&#13;
and so far there is no hiring&#13;
freeze, and no subsequent delay&#13;
in tr ying to find qualified&#13;
people.&#13;
Social Science, the smallest of&#13;
the three division, presently has&#13;
25 members. It has&#13;
authorization to hire two people&#13;
In Anthropology, one ln&#13;
Economics, two In Geography,&#13;
two in Political Science, and&#13;
three In Sociology.&#13;
Its Chairman, Leon Ap&#13;
plebaum, explained this ls the&#13;
time of the year to recruit, and&#13;
while it is a buyer's market,&#13;
recruitment must be done'&#13;
quickly - before the good&#13;
prospects find positions. " I hope&#13;
Presenting&#13;
within the next six weeks we&#13;
have our recruiting finished,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
"We have offers out, and&#13;
people are c;omlng In. We have&#13;
some people who on paper look&#13;
very good," he noted.&#13;
The Science division, with SO&#13;
members, has authori zation to&#13;
hir e two new faculty members&#13;
in Psychology, two In&#13;
Mathematics, and three in&#13;
Earth Science. Further&#13;
authorizations are pending in&#13;
Life Science Md Chemistry.&#13;
Eugene Gaslorklewlcz, the&#13;
chairman, said he was pleased&#13;
how recruitment has&#13;
progressed so far. " We'r e&#13;
seeing better looking people In&#13;
terms of their back9round then&#13;
we ever have before."&#13;
He stated, " With these&#13;
authorizations we can provide a&#13;
solid program, and have t he&#13;
ability to dl verslfy ovr l&gt;f.&#13;
ferlng."&#13;
Humanl!IM, w ltn a staff of 58,&#13;
has authorization for three&#13;
people in Communications, two&#13;
in Phi losophy, thr ee (and&#13;
possibly morel In Music, and&#13;
two In Art.&#13;
There are no additions In any&#13;
of the foreign languages.&#13;
Chairman of the Division,&#13;
Stella Gray, descr ibed&#13;
recr uitment as "golng very&#13;
well . We've had many ap&#13;
pllcatlons." She sees Musk, Art&#13;
and Communlcations as being&#13;
parllcularly strengthened with&#13;
their additions.&#13;
The responsl blllty for&#13;
recruitment Iles within the&#13;
h1cully, the d1vlslonol chn1rman&#13;
said. It begins at the dlsclpllne&#13;
level where requests for new&#13;
authorizations are lnltlally&#13;
made. A critical 11nalyse1 of the&#13;
program is made in regards to&#13;
whether announced classes are&#13;
being gi ven. the needs based on&#13;
enrollment projections. actual&#13;
student demands, and&#13;
resignations of personnel.&#13;
From this, personnel needs&#13;
are decided, and then given to&#13;
the Divisional Chairman who&#13;
makes an evaluation based on&#13;
Divlsional needs. The Dean then&#13;
makes the decision - con&#13;
slderin9-alil he doe$, the needs of&#13;
the college In general.&#13;
It Is then up to the dlsclpllne&#13;
to generate a 11st of c:andldates.&#13;
This Is done by advertising in&#13;
prolesslonal magazines, senLindsay&#13;
&#13;
by Larry Jones of the Newscope stAff&#13;
The Activities Building was again the site for free beer on&#13;
Wednesday afternoon, February 9, as representat ives of&#13;
Democrat ic Presidenllal hopeful John Lindsay spoke out for their&#13;
candidate.&#13;
The main speaker for the event was for mer Wisconsin attorney&#13;
general Bronson LaFollette, who has been stumping the state for&#13;
Lindsay the past two weeks.&#13;
Approximately 250 students In the SAB gave very little of their&#13;
attention to Lafollette as he spent an hour trying to make himself&#13;
heard above the crowd.&#13;
Lafollette Interview p. 3&#13;
The focal point of LaFollette's remarks was what he terme&lt;l&#13;
"the courage of John Lindsay". He attempted to convince what&#13;
audlenc:e he had that Lindsay was the man for ' 72 by relating&#13;
several of the battles he had gone through as the l&amp;Jyor of New&#13;
York, and the courage he had shown In standing up to major&#13;
American pressure groups In his city.&#13;
While he admitted that Lindsay and Senator George McGovern&#13;
are almost Identical on the Issues, La Follette said that only Lindsay&#13;
carried enough appeal among young and old and minority&#13;
groups to defeat Nixon In '72.&#13;
La Follette then asked for questions, which brought a volley of&#13;
querrles which could only have been answered by Lindsay himself,&#13;
and which did very little to help the Impact of La Follette's&#13;
presentation.&#13;
Stella Gray&#13;
ding letters to departments,&#13;
sending representatives to&#13;
professional meetings, or by&#13;
word of mouth.&#13;
Invitations to visit the&#13;
campus are sent to those who&#13;
are ludged the most promising.&#13;
While on campus candidates&#13;
meet with faculty members,&#13;
talk with students, meet with&#13;
Dean (and the Vice Chancellor&#13;
and O,ancellor if he may be&#13;
offered tenure l and lectures&#13;
either In a class, In a seminar,&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
or in a colloquium.&#13;
All three divisional chairmen&#13;
stressed candidates would ha~&#13;
to lecture before an offer would&#13;
be made. Student reaction&#13;
would be important in their&#13;
consideration, they said.&#13;
The discipline would decide&#13;
who should bemadeanoffer. Its&#13;
decision would be evaluated by&#13;
the di visinoal Executive&#13;
Committees, who would then&#13;
recommend to the Dean who&#13;
should be made an otter, and at&#13;
U11frersity of W isconsi11 - P"rkJide&#13;
Leon Applebaum&#13;
what level . The Chair m an&#13;
would give the recommendation&#13;
to the Dean, along with a cover&#13;
letter saying why this per $00&#13;
should be hired.&#13;
Executive Committee&#13;
recommendations are&#13;
traditionally followed by Deans.&#13;
Recruiting this year is aimed&#13;
at best filling needs, rather than&#13;
recruiting senior {tenured)&#13;
level faculty, as opposed to&#13;
tree&#13;
lllB:W6JJffJJGPJII&#13;
Volume 6 Number 6 February 14, 1972&#13;
Service Main Aim of Security Force&#13;
by Fred Noer,tr .,ofthe Newscopestaff&#13;
A vlldl pcirl of any college campus is lhe&#13;
pro ind r.1:CUrny rare • I 1.. c. by R11nc&gt;IJ&#13;
Brinkman, chief administrative officer, the force&#13;
at Parkside Is ready 24 hours every day to help the&#13;
students, faculty administration, staff, and other&#13;
people on campus in any way within Its means.&#13;
" We would rather be more service-oriented&#13;
than enforcement-oriented, but we will enforce&#13;
when called lor/' says Brinkman. He continues by&#13;
saying, "We would llke to have a confrontation&#13;
across the desk rather than on the campus. I'm&#13;
sure a mutual agreement could be reached. Gas&#13;
masks and nightsticks don't solve any problem."&#13;
This philosophy has been effective so far&#13;
Decause thefe have been only small disagree&#13;
ments which have been solved by discussion of the&#13;
problem. However, Brinkman em phasizes that&#13;
"we will el'\force what we have to enforce."&#13;
Besides Chief Brinkman, the department&#13;
consists of one sergeant, seven police officers, five&#13;
security officers, and two part-time secur ity of&#13;
ficers. Each man must complete 240 hours of&#13;
tr aining at a certified recruit school and must hold&#13;
an advanced certificate In first aid.&#13;
Many of the men are taking extra steps to&#13;
advance themselves by taking the police science&#13;
program at KTI, or taking courses about report&#13;
writing and human relations at Parkside. This&#13;
extra work helps for promotion and personal&#13;
betterment.&#13;
The pollceofficers have full lurisdictlon under&#13;
the state statutes. They also follow the state traffic&#13;
code and the regulations established by the&#13;
Parking and Traffic Committee of the University.&#13;
The jurlsdicttonal powers apply to all of the UWP&#13;
property , Wood Road, and County Highways E&#13;
and A.&#13;
In c:ase of needed extra assistance, Parkside&#13;
relies heavily on the Kenosha Sheriff's Department&#13;
. Brinkman has a high regard for the KSD&#13;
bec11use many times they have provided valuable&#13;
technical Information and expertise sometimes&#13;
lacking on the Parkside force . For example, lust&#13;
two weeks ago there were three car s stolen from&#13;
the Parkside campus. Brinkman notified the&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff' s Department and t hey broadcast&#13;
the descriptions of the automobiles state-wide. As&#13;
a result, this helped to recover one of the cars.&#13;
Chief Brinkman urges students to come and&#13;
talk lo him or Sgt. Krough If there are any&#13;
problems about parking. If a student feels he has&#13;
been treated unfairly or Is unable to pay a ticket ,&#13;
many times agreeable arrangements can be&#13;
Ronald B"inkman&#13;
worked out.&#13;
In the future, Brinkman feels "if we can&#13;
promote and show what we are, then we can do a&#13;
lot of good for the students." When the sec:ur ity&#13;
office is moved into Tallent Hall probably in&#13;
August or Seplember, then Brinkman hopes&#13;
community relations will be better. He hopes to set&#13;
up a time and place where students could have&#13;
quesilons answered about parking and other&#13;
servic:es that the forc;e performs on campus. For&#13;
fall registration he plans on having a table&#13;
manned by two officers to hand out pamphlets and&#13;
onswer questions.&#13;
( On the Nod Goes to Town] &#13;
Page2 NEWSCOPE '1bruary 14, 1972&#13;
=LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
invite to lecture&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
For anyone and everyone&#13;
interested In children, "Parents&#13;
and Citizens Interested In&#13;
Emotional Child Advocacy"&#13;
wishes to Invite you to attend a&#13;
lecture at Lance Jr. High on&#13;
Feb. 17th at 8: 00 P .M. Our&#13;
speaker will be Or. Westman&#13;
who will speak on "Children Are&#13;
OJr Most Important Resourc~"&#13;
and the public will be invited.&#13;
capacities In which Jack C.&#13;
Westman, M.D., has served:&#13;
M.D. University of Michigan&#13;
Medical School · 19S2&#13;
Internship, Duke Hospital in&#13;
Durham, North Carolina - 1953&#13;
Psychiatrist, U.S. Navy and&#13;
U.S. Marine Corp. - 1953,55&#13;
Residency In Psychiatry and&#13;
Child Psychiatry, Dept. of&#13;
Psych la try, Uni verslty of&#13;
Michigan Medical (.enter - 1955-&#13;
59&#13;
Associate Profeuor of&#13;
Psychlatry University of&#13;
Michigan Medical School - 1964&#13;
Professor of Psychiatry,&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Medical School and Director,&#13;
Oiild Psychiatry, University of&#13;
Wisconsin Hospltal • 1965&#13;
Co-ordinator, Diagnostic and&#13;
Treatment Unit. University of&#13;
Wisconsin Human Development&#13;
. 1966&#13;
Research interests In the&#13;
families of children with&#13;
learning dlsabl I ltles, the&#13;
psychiatric evaluation of young&#13;
children, individual differences&#13;
in children and the procus of&#13;
psychiatric consultation.&#13;
Child Advocacy Officers:&#13;
Mr. Donald Fir chow, Chairman&#13;
Mr. Robert Muzlnskl, Vice&#13;
Oialrman&#13;
Mrs. Gueflter Jud, Secretary&#13;
Publicity, Mrs. Kenneth Pfaff&#13;
Mrs. Donald Flrchow&#13;
Mrs. Mel HIiier&#13;
Mrs. Walter Stein&#13;
Phone 69-'-3462&#13;
P AB concerned&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
· I am writing this as an open&#13;
fetter to the students of UWParkslde.&#13;
My concern is the&#13;
recent concert presented by the&#13;
PAB featuring Sha Na Na. We&#13;
can all agree with the article In&#13;
NEWSCOPE (February 7l that&#13;
the show was excellent. In the&#13;
article were printed these&#13;
words: "The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board presented us with&#13;
our music, our heritage, our&#13;
theater, and It's about time."&#13;
The Board was pleased with the&#13;
response, but we may never be&#13;
able to hold a concert like thl!&#13;
ageln.&#13;
On Nv:,nday, Bradford called&#13;
and told us of the damage we&#13;
had caused. The brand new&#13;
carpeting In their auditorium&#13;
was full of cigarette burns,&#13;
there were a large number of&#13;
wine bottles and beer cans left&#13;
strewn about, and a large drum&#13;
from the Bradford Music&#13;
Department ttiat was backstage,&#13;
had been stashed.&#13;
They Informed us they are&#13;
not sure we will be allowed to&#13;
use their auditorium for our&#13;
next concert already scheduled&#13;
for this spring. This concert ls&#13;
going to feature the outstanding&#13;
drummer and band leader,&#13;
Buddy Rich. ( He appeared here&#13;
last year, and that concert was&#13;
sold out.)&#13;
The PAB had the Sha Na Na&#13;
concert ushered and supervised,&#13;
and provided for smoking&#13;
breaks during the show. The&#13;
fact remains that the crowd&#13;
didn't cooperate. Let me point&#13;
out a few examples of what&#13;
occurs when this happens at&#13;
other universities. At the&#13;
University of Miami damage&#13;
was done during a concert that&#13;
featured Jefferson Airplane.&#13;
The University Activities Office&#13;
Is no longer allowed to hold&#13;
concerts. And 1 ust last&#13;
weekend, Whitewater presented&#13;
Sha Na Na and the students&#13;
caused damage to their&#13;
fieldhouse. Whitewater was told&#13;
flat out, "No N-.ore Concerts."&#13;
So where does this leave UWP?&#13;
If Bradford refuses to let us&#13;
have a concert, why should&#13;
Case or Tremper take a chance&#13;
on us?&#13;
It's up to the students at&#13;
Parkside to conduct themselves&#13;
property. If they don't, they're&#13;
only hurting themselves. And&#13;
all that has to be done Is follow a&#13;
few simple rules.&#13;
1) Save your drinking till&#13;
after the concert, and don't&#13;
litter the bulldlng or parking&#13;
lots.&#13;
2) Keep your cigarette habit&#13;
In check during the concert, and&#13;
If you must smoke, smoke only&#13;
where It Is permitted.&#13;
3) Don't cause senseless&#13;
damage.&#13;
Remember, if there are to be&#13;
more great concerts at UW-P In&#13;
the future (llke O,lcago, Sha Na&#13;
Na, and Superstar) and If we&#13;
are going to be allowed to use&#13;
the new facilltles ne:d year&#13;
(Com-Arts building, fleldhouse,&#13;
etc) then It Is up to us, the&#13;
students and members of UWParkslde&#13;
to condud ourselves&#13;
accordingly.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Kim Rudat, President&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
ecology the issue&#13;
Mr. Editor:&#13;
The October 1969 Issue of&#13;
Landscape Archltedure has an&#13;
article about the ecologlcal&#13;
basis used In planning the&#13;
Parkside campus. The artlcle&#13;
states that the campus wlll be&#13;
bullt upon 'existing conditions,&#13;
rather than Imposing a predetermined&#13;
"design" upon the&#13;
landscape.'&#13;
Perhaps the plans aren't as&#13;
devastating as other plans for&#13;
campuses. But I see the existing&#13;
conditions tread upon by&#13;
bulldoiers and heavy&#13;
machinery. I've seen a whole&#13;
orchard of apple trees&#13;
destroyed. I see parking tots&#13;
where there was once green&#13;
land. I see gaping holes In the&#13;
earth. Trees have been cut&#13;
down. A forest has been wiped&#13;
out to make room for two&#13;
buildings.&#13;
So the people who brought 'the&#13;
University here can talk of the&#13;
ecological basis of the campus&#13;
plans. They can watch the&#13;
buildings going up. And they&#13;
can smile at 1he rnooey the&#13;
University Is bringing to the&#13;
area. This is good business. But&#13;
Is It ecology? I do not think so.&#13;
Barbara Scott&#13;
to the&#13;
music desk&#13;
This letter is a response to&#13;
last week's article on the Bread&#13;
concert at Carthage. As two&#13;
Carthage students who attended&#13;
the concert, we feel your artlcte&#13;
Is absolutely unfair and&#13;
unrepresentative. We would&#13;
like to know what you base your&#13;
Ideas on - Are you comparing&#13;
Carthage students' response to&#13;
Parkside's?&#13;
First of all In regards to the&#13;
comments on Judy Sill, this&#13;
performer did more to detrad&#13;
from her performance than the&#13;
audience did. Her negative&#13;
attitude was apparent and was&#13;
quickly communicated to the&#13;
audience, which subsequently&#13;
lost Interest. Furthermore, her&#13;
early exit from the stage was&#13;
her choice, not the audience's.&#13;
In short If she had come with a&#13;
more appropriate attitude&#13;
things would have gone&#13;
smoother.&#13;
Secondly, we would like to&#13;
clarify the fad that a large&#13;
percentage of those ln at·&#13;
tendance were not carthage&#13;
students. Therefore, we have&#13;
reason to resent your lnslnvatlon&#13;
that Carthege&#13;
students acted Immaturely.&#13;
Also is Is our opinion that the&#13;
audience, as a whole, was not as&#13;
1.r1responsive as you made It out&#13;
to be.&#13;
Thirdly, regarding Bread.&#13;
Everyone's taste In music Is&#13;
different. Since you mentioned&#13;
Grand Funk.and Black Sabbath&#13;
it Is apparent you are a fan of&#13;
hard rock. As we see It the&#13;
people who attended this con•&#13;
cert liked Bread or they&#13;
wouldn't have come. We really&#13;
are sorry it was a "downer&#13;
circus" for you.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
Ruth Suckow and Lynda Novak&#13;
proud of Marines&#13;
That article printed In&#13;
February 7, 1972 Newscope Is&#13;
not the whole story. As a&#13;
deserter goes. I'm a Marine&#13;
myself as well as my future&#13;
husband. And PROUD OF&#13;
BEING A MARINE.&#13;
As far as the prayers, the&#13;
meal one Is true. But the h&#13;
discontinuance of the night time&#13;
prayer Is going Into effed&#13;
because It riled the men too&#13;
much. The reason for the Klll&#13;
KIii KIii .before mess hall&#13;
(which is just an ordinary&#13;
cafeteria l Is to have the men get&#13;
their "spirit" and "gun ho" up.&#13;
If they ever do go to war the&#13;
men aren't chicken.&#13;
The marine corps otters over&#13;
25 fields to choose from. And Its&#13;
procedures are the same as In&#13;
the Navy or Alrforce. Only&#13;
harder because If a man is no1&#13;
for the marines they are gonna&#13;
break afore becom Ing a Marine.&#13;
Yes. Marine Corps builds men&#13;
as well as women. 0 surprised&#13;
I'm a female. 0 yes. Its quite&#13;
t~h for us but I am a Marine.&#13;
A Women Marine. I made it and&#13;
the men are supposed to be able&#13;
to endure training of Marines&#13;
too. Men can take more than a&#13;
female. I've seen training on&#13;
action I think I can take most of&#13;
It. But I would never desert.&#13;
What has the Man who llves In&#13;
Sweden got to say to that.&#13;
A Woman Marine&#13;
lauds&#13;
book exchange&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I would like to extend my&#13;
sincere thanks to the SGA and&#13;
the other students who provided&#13;
us with the book exchange. I&#13;
hope It was as much a success&#13;
for them as it was for my&#13;
friends and I.&#13;
We saved over 50 per cent on&#13;
books that would have cost us&#13;
$50 In the book store. There wes&#13;
also a good opportunity for&#13;
students to sell their books at a&#13;
higher rate than the book store&#13;
would have given them. I am&#13;
tired of being oppressed by&#13;
people interested only in their&#13;
own profit.&#13;
I'd also like to mention our&#13;
fine hockey club, they have&#13;
played some great games and&#13;
now have an outstanding&#13;
record. I urge you to attend one&#13;
of their games.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
Lester Zangotowlcz&#13;
one of the foremost expanenfs of h1nov.teon III AmerlcM&#13;
educilion, University oj MasSM:huHtb School of Education DtM&#13;
Dwight W. AJlen, will pres..,t • free public IKfur• 1t • p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, '1b. 16, In GrNnqulst Hall 1t the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Wood Road campus.&#13;
Dean Allen' s topic will be " Making the Future of Education&#13;
Less Certain". His talk Is sponsored by the Parkside Ledure and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee •&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Under New Constitution&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board Is now operating under&#13;
Its new constitution. The con&#13;
stltutlon calls for a boardcommittee&#13;
system. The PAB Is&#13;
made up of nine programming&#13;
committees. These handle the&#13;
programming In specific areas,&#13;
subJed to approval by the&#13;
executive council. The committees&#13;
meet as oflen as&#13;
necessary, but not less than&#13;
once a month, and the executive&#13;
council must meet every week.&#13;
This constitution was approved&#13;
by the original PAB members&#13;
on Jan. 17, 1972.&#13;
Nomination papers for&#13;
President and Vice-President&#13;
were then accepted and on Jan.&#13;
28, the first official board&#13;
elections were held. Kim Rudat&#13;
was elected President and Sue&#13;
Nevin was elec ted Vi ce,&#13;
President of the board.&#13;
Kim had been Acting&#13;
Chairman and Buz Faust Adlng&#13;
Vice-Chairman since the start&#13;
of the Fall semester.&#13;
The committees then met to&#13;
elect t~elr chairmen and&#13;
representatives to the executive&#13;
board. The members had one&#13;
6)000&#13;
PEOPLE&#13;
READ&#13;
TH\~&#13;
AD. -&#13;
week to do this. These are the&#13;
results:&#13;
Dance . Sue Wesley, Fine Arts&#13;
• Bea Jaglello, Special Events •&#13;
Pat Watte, Cof-feehouH • Kim&#13;
Rudat, Games • Sue Nevin,&#13;
FIim - Jerry Horton, House •&#13;
Jim Croxford, Pop and Mini&#13;
Concert . Buz Faust, and OJtlng&#13;
- Don Martata. They were approved&#13;
on Feb. •· The PAB works with the&#13;
Student Activities Office and ts&#13;
responsi ble for campus&#13;
programming.&#13;
Questions about the board are&#13;
asked to be directed to Kim&#13;
Rudat or any committee&#13;
chairman of the PAB. People&#13;
wlshlnliJ to totn the PAB should&#13;
contact Sue Nevin or stop up In&#13;
room 217 Tallent Hall and pick&#13;
up an application blank.&#13;
••••••••&#13;
Robin O.vld , Pat McO.mld,&#13;
Marc E11,n, Jean Frthm, Larrv&#13;
Jonu , Jim Koloen, John Xoloen, ~ lch Lipke, Paul Lomartire. !lob&#13;
Mainland, Kevin McKay, Fred&#13;
Hoer, Jr , 8rlan Ross, Wolfgang&#13;
Sal•wskl. Mdy Schrnl'lllng. B•b&#13;
Scoll, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, BIii Sorenaen, Mike&#13;
Str.,esand, Debbie Venskus&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
BuslnH$&#13;
Newscope 11 an independent&#13;
student newspaper compoSed by&#13;
students of tht University of&#13;
Wl1con1 In-Parks Ide pu bllshed&#13;
week I y except during vacation&#13;
periods. Studitnt obtain~ ad&#13;
venlli"9 funds are the 101• sour« of revenue for tht operation of&#13;
Newscx,pe. 6,000 copies are printed&#13;
and dlstrl bUtltd throughout th•&#13;
Kenosha and Racine commun1tl•&#13;
as well as the University. FrH&#13;
00p111 we available upon request.&#13;
Deedllne for all manuscripts and&#13;
Ph0tograp111 su1&gt;mltted to *WIC'OPlt&#13;
Is .C:lD p.m. Iha ThUl'JdaY prlOr to&#13;
publlcatlon. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and CIOUble-1pac1td. Un· IOllclted menuKrlpts and&#13;
Photographs mav be reclefmed&#13;
Within 30 days •tt• the Clet• of&#13;
Stlbmlsslo, after wtllCII they bllCl)ffl8&#13;
the property of N•wsO&gt;J)e, Ltd. Th8&#13;
NltWIO'lpt otflC. II loc•t8d In th•&#13;
Stude,,t Oroanlzatlons bullding,&#13;
lnterSKtlOn of HlghWIY,,. and WOOd&#13;
Ro&amp;d. &#13;
-La Follette and Lindsay&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The modishly dressed,&#13;
compactly built, somewhat&#13;
impish looking young man had&#13;
just finished his speech on how&#13;
greiit John Lindsay Is, what a&#13;
great President he'd make. He&#13;
was fielding questions that&#13;
came from the jaw of the beast,&#13;
the couple hundred students&#13;
who came to the Lindsay rally&#13;
for whatever sundry reason one&#13;
goes to the union between the&#13;
hours of three and five; many&#13;
tables were littered with the&#13;
papercup evidence of free beer,&#13;
some of the questions asked by&#13;
the beast were grunts, others&#13;
artlcul11ted but hard to hear.&#13;
L11ter, the fatigued former&#13;
Attorney General of the sober&#13;
St11te of Wisconsin would say he&#13;
was lucky to escape with his&#13;
skin.&#13;
Newscope asked Bronson&#13;
LaFollette for an interview, an&#13;
interview which, as it turned&#13;
out, lasted almost an hour and a&#13;
half. The Interview was punctuated&#13;
with periodic phone&#13;
calls; he'd be late for his next&#13;
engagement, he'd try to make a&#13;
staff meeting, he couldn't get l!I&#13;
plane before 7: 30, planning tor&#13;
another hectic day, another&#13;
sleepless night.&#13;
"The thing Is they expect me&#13;
to know the mayor's record In&#13;
New York and they throw all&#13;
this shit, but he's not running&#13;
for mayor of the country. For&#13;
Oirissake, I don't give a ...&#13;
you know he's had some balls&#13;
and 11111 these dudes are for other&#13;
candidates, so, you know, they&#13;
get all these poop sheets out,&#13;
ask this question, ask that&#13;
question. The question that&#13;
ought to be asked Is why Is a&#13;
senator more appropriate t han&#13;
a mayor to run for the&#13;
Presidency."&#13;
" In this crowd I was lucky to&#13;
get out with my skll'\, but ah&#13;
... " another phone call,&#13;
another Interruption. "Dudes&#13;
up there were passing me&#13;
messages that I' ve got a phone&#13;
call, I mean what the hell, I'm&#13;
sorry operator, the number Is&#13;
• • • I mean that's f ust u,, _&#13;
believable. Well , It's not going.&#13;
"to happen on my tour up north,&#13;
because It's going to be handled&#13;
• .. better."&#13;
Newscope asked the tired&#13;
campaigner what he thought of&#13;
the crowd. "There's one couple,&#13;
f ust making out, right In the.&#13;
middle of the audience. How&#13;
long have they been here?&#13;
Because 1 was In the area&#13;
before three, but It took me&#13;
another hour to find the place."&#13;
I told him the rally began at&#13;
three, that's when the beer&#13;
started flowing. "That's what&#13;
blew It, because my people&#13;
didn't everi give me the right&#13;
directions. God that got me so&#13;
pissed off, just driving around&#13;
and around and around. And&#13;
they've got all these buildings&#13;
going up, and there's no, ah, and&#13;
this place (Student Activities&#13;
Bldg.) looks like the back hall of&#13;
a " ... phone rings again.&#13;
"The man's going to do it. I'm&#13;
out of politics. I'm In real estate&#13;
development." Newscope asked&#13;
the former Attorney General&#13;
why he was campaigning for&#13;
Lindsay. "Well first of all, he's&#13;
got everything Bobby hdd plus a&#13;
whole lot more. He's got the&#13;
administrative experience&#13;
basically, and his ability to cut&#13;
through. He understands the&#13;
bureaucratic mess that we're&#13;
In, because he's fought It at two&#13;
levels. He understands the basic&#13;
problems of this country more&#13;
than any other human being&#13;
allve today, because he's II ved&#13;
'em every day In his city. You&#13;
know, he walks the streets of his&#13;
city." Yeah, I retorted, but with&#13;
an armed guard. "Come on,&#13;
in the jaw of the beast&#13;
armed guard? Come on." The&#13;
short man with an Infectious&#13;
smile asked me if I'd read&#13;
Lindsay's book. Nope. "Well&#13;
then, you don't know where of&#13;
you speak. It just ain' t true. The&#13;
fact is Lindsay's the f irst person&#13;
to come elong in a long time&#13;
who has been on the front line&#13;
battle line facing the problems&#13;
of urban America, and fighting&#13;
the difficult crisis of where the&#13;
money's coming from : What to&#13;
do with the bureavcrafh .. me!'&gt;::.&#13;
from state to city to federal, and&#13;
to take It on with guts and try to&#13;
make ft work. What turned me&#13;
on when I got to thinking about&#13;
his political phllosophy Is what&#13;
he's doing In New York right&#13;
no~. He's putting to work the&#13;
votes. So I went back and said,&#13;
gee whiz this isn't a life for me. I&#13;
don't wanna be In the public&#13;
eye; the challenge of the admini&#13;
stratlve part and the sense&#13;
of accomplishment, that wa:o:.&#13;
great, but as far as going out&#13;
and having lo go through the&#13;
kind of things you have to do In&#13;
the campaign, and the compromises&#13;
you have to make,&#13;
forget it. Like on that statement&#13;
I made on gvn control a month&#13;
after Bobby was kltled, I was&#13;
ready to just say screw It, I&#13;
made whet I thought was a&#13;
reasonable statement at lhe&#13;
time. We register cars, boats,&#13;
all kinds of things so why not&#13;
guns. But It didn't go over very&#13;
well In this state because It's&#13;
uTHE QUESTION THAT OUGHT TO BE ASKED ISWHY&#13;
IS A SENATOR MORE APPROPRIATE THAN A MAYOR&#13;
TO RUN FOR THE PRESIDENCY"&#13;
old La Follette progressive&#13;
tradltlonal political philosophy,&#13;
which made this state a leader&#13;
In the counfl-y."&#13;
I asked LaFollette about his&#13;
own po~ltl cal experiences.&#13;
"After I got In office In '68, my&#13;
intention was to run again In ' 70,&#13;
through the primary and I ust&#13;
carry it all forward. There's a&#13;
good chance I'd be In Madison&#13;
now If I'd have run, but I walked&#13;
away from It after getting my&#13;
head back together, after what&#13;
I'd gone through in those four&#13;
years. When I was elected I was&#13;
28, and In ' 66 I was the only&#13;
Democrat In a state office with&#13;
a Republican legislature and a&#13;
Republican governor. They&#13;
threw every damn hot potato at&#13;
me, and I handled it the best&#13;
way I could. And we had a great&#13;
time, we had a great bunch of&#13;
young, bright attorneys, and I&#13;
think we did a reasonably good&#13;
job. But after I went through It,&#13;
I said to myself what Is 1thls&#13;
doing to me as a per~. I was&#13;
complete bananas, I had to get&#13;
my head together. My mother&#13;
always said never go Into&#13;
politlcs; my father committed&#13;
:suicide In 19-46 after being&#13;
defeated by McCarthy by 5,000&#13;
like a frontier In places, I'm a&#13;
hunter myself."&#13;
" Take Lindsay on gun con -&#13;
trol. In terms of population,&#13;
New York City ranks 16th In&#13;
homicide. He pushed through a&#13;
hand gun law for those Saturday&#13;
Night Specials ; 25,000 legally&#13;
registered handguns and not a&#13;
slngle homicide has been&#13;
committed with a legally&#13;
llcensed gun. This kind of ex•&#13;
perlence McGovern simply&#13;
doesn't have, Bobby didn't have&#13;
It until he went Into New York&#13;
as a senator.&#13;
What cire you're political&#13;
aspirations? "None, none&#13;
whatsoever, I'm only c11m -&#13;
paigning for Li ndsay now&#13;
because he's the best man for&#13;
the (ob. I'm paid travellng&#13;
expenses, and get to generally&#13;
pick out the things I want to do.&#13;
If Lindsay doesn't win the&#13;
nomination, I' d probllbly work&#13;
for whoever the Democratic&#13;
candidate might be."&#13;
Another phone call and the&#13;
interview came to an end.&#13;
Bronson LIi Follette, Lindsay&#13;
man, was off and rushing to&#13;
ful fl II another appointment,&#13;
exhausted, worn out with no end&#13;
In sight.&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin 'Pli•mMpc~m, Un,&#13;
&amp; $ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVEi&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash&amp; Carry&#13;
10W -'1.0W - JOW&#13;
lOW - 20 W • 'JOW&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12oz. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
3«: per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47cpercan&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on OIi FIiters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Sub(ectto 4 Per Cent &amp;ales Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
February 14, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page3&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
Non. thru Thurs.:&#13;
5 7 p.m. - All the beer&#13;
you can drlnk $1.00&#13;
7 . closing - Pitchers $1.00&#13;
tes&#13;
Mon.: 8 closing - "College Night" Food&#13;
Wed.: Beer and pretz.el night&#13;
Thurs.: "Ladles' Night"&#13;
½ price for women&#13;
Fri.: 4 • 7 p.m. -&#13;
"Double Bubble" Double mixed drink for the price of one&#13;
Sat.: 2 - 6 p.m . - All the beer you can drink $2.00&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
M.on . . Thurs. - 4 - closing&#13;
Sat. and Sun. - Noon . closing&#13;
--~ - - - --&#13;
82.31 Sheridan Road&#13;
Kenosha., lJ;scons&gt;r\&#13;
Telephone: &lt;o57-3 311&#13;
R1CHARD G. CAPELLI I prop. &#13;
Page4 NEWSCOPE February 14, 1972&#13;
NEVWS BRIEFS&#13;
Maior Education Reform Supported&#13;
WASHINGTON, O.C. (CPS) - The concept of a federal&#13;
foundation to promote major reform In higher education has won&#13;
strong endorsement from II task force formed to study the possible&#13;
objectives and activities of such II foundation.&#13;
The task force views the proposed National Foundation of PostSecondary&#13;
Education as working towards general educ11tlonal&#13;
reforms as opPosed to the curref'\t piecemeal reform felt only by&#13;
students In e1&lt;perimental programs, a recently released task force&#13;
report states.&#13;
Avoid Genital Deodorants&#13;
Advises Consumer Reports&#13;
MOUNT VERNON, N.Y. (CPS) - &lt;:onsumer Reports&#13;
Magazine announced last week It wlll give Its two million readers&#13;
three words of advice about genital deodorant products: "Don't use&#13;
then,."&#13;
The non.profit magazine's rePQrt finds fault with the medlcal&#13;
nature of "feminine hygiene sprays," and Is hlghly critical of the&#13;
premarket cllnlcal test ing by the largest maker of such products,&#13;
Alberto.Culver C.o.&#13;
Private Schools Exempted From Controls&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) Tuition and room and board&#13;
fees of private, non profit colleges and universities have been&#13;
exempted from price controls by the Cost of Living Council.&#13;
The action affects thousands of church related schools and&#13;
other private schools nationwide The Council justified Its action by&#13;
saying that fees charged by such schools "are usually insufficient&#13;
lo cover educational costs_"&#13;
Army Cross With Cross&#13;
(CPS) - Private James Stephen Cleghorn of Huntsville,&#13;
Alabama, was sente,1(.t=d lu four months In Army prison because ot&#13;
ornamentation worn on his uniform. The ornamentation was not&#13;
the now-lamlllar peace symbol, but the crossFor&#13;
The Record&#13;
q;).idi&#13;
&amp;MUSIC 00~&#13;
I ti t I I '\, 1 I ' I I I '- 1o !" I \ I lt&#13;
._ _____ Dou·ntou·11 Kenosha----•&#13;
VAtEO'S- {" ~ \&#13;
(!iIZZAtJ&#13;
Custom made fur you&#13;
I· ltH·. 01·.Ll\'l-'.H\' TO PAttKSIJJI,' \'II I . \W·&#13;
ALSO OilO&lt;EN 011'-t-JERS&#13;
/'' JO ITAUN I ~AUSACE COf3ERS&#13;
Open 6 days a v,eck from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
[)nlis Wea-.. of 'Mcdouct will be in K..,._, 'Thur.day ~ng to&#13;
attand 1he McGo""'"" rally sd,.l,led b the loboJ union 1731 hall.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
SUNDAY, FE•. 1)&#13;
Conc..-t: James Y09hourt1ian,&#13;
claulcal guitarist. U'llv~r,11y Ar&#13;
tlsts SfflH. GrN:nquist Hell con•&#13;
course. 4.00 p.m. Genral ldm,ulon&#13;
SI; student admission SOC ; children&#13;
12 and under free.&#13;
Hockey: uw p VI. llllnols Slate&#13;
University at Pa,rla, 10·00 a.m.&#13;
Track: uw p In llllnols Open Meel&#13;
at Cham~lgn.&#13;
Poetry Reading : James 5eay Dean,&#13;
Parkside faculty member, reading&#13;
his own poetry and other setect10n1. 5',orl-,red 1JV the Perkslde Po.rry&#13;
Forum, Kenolha Public MUwum,&#13;
2:00 and 4 00 p.m.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, F•• .16&#13;
Lecture: "Making tt,e Future of&#13;
Education L"• c .. taln", Ow,ght&#13;
Allen, Dean of the university ol&#13;
Massacnusetts School of Education.&#13;
~sored by the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts CommlttH. a 00 p m .&#13;
Ifs the&#13;
real thing. Coke.&#13;
... •r&#13;
GrNnQUIII H•II. Room IOl. Free 10&#13;
the public.&#13;
THURSD4Y, F •• 17&#13;
Basketball: Ranven vs. uw Gr-,&#13;
S.y •I Gr1«1 8ey.&#13;
FRIDAY, FE a. 11&#13;
Oymnutlcs: uw.p v,. Stevens&#13;
Poinl •nd St. Cloud (Minn,) State at&#13;
Stevens Point.&#13;
SATURDAY, FIE• It&#13;
•allletball: uw p "'· Lakel•nd&#13;
COiiege •t Sfleboygan.&#13;
,.,nclng: UW P v,. ~troll, llllno11,&#13;
MATCandWayneStateat Bullen Jr. Hi&lt;;lh School, 1(-lfla 10 CIO e m. Tracl11 UW P at Tlton Open,&#13;
Osnkolh,&#13;
Wre1tt1n11 : uw.p vs. Mlch,gan State&#13;
Ind Lake Super,or State at&#13;
Houghton, Mich.&#13;
Dance: "STarbOys.. sponsored by&#13;
INDICATIONS Literary MaQaline,&#13;
SIUClent Ac:tlvltiH Butldlng, NJ.&#13;
mission ll.25 1 :00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m .&#13;
uw.p and Wisconsin 1.0. required.&#13;
!Ka.nur,;}.&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Women's&#13;
Caucus&#13;
Meets Thursday&#13;
The Wisconsin Women·s&#13;
Polltlcal Caucus (WWPC) will&#13;
hold en Informational me.ting&#13;
at the Racine YWCA Thursday,&#13;
February 17, at 7:30 p.m .&#13;
Patti Nowak of Milwaukee,&#13;
WWPC state CO.()rdlnator, Will&#13;
,peak on tht Caucus's&#13;
t,eckground and alms. Eight&#13;
Racine women rumlng for City&#13;
Council and County Boerd seats&#13;
have also been Invited to give&#13;
campaign stat ements. They&#13;
are: County Bo.rd - Ruth&#13;
Gewardt (Incumbent), 1st&#13;
district ; All at Sorensen, 13th;&#13;
Opal Hammes, 16th ; and&#13;
Constance Barrington (In.&#13;
cumbent), 18th. City Council -&#13;
Qleryl Lofton and Helen Patton,&#13;
both In the :2nd ward;&#13;
0,arlene Kulpuo, loth: end&#13;
Setty Rowley, ISth.&#13;
The meeting Is ~ to t he&#13;
public.&#13;
The WWPC, a branch of the&#13;
Natlonal Women's Polltlcat&#13;
Caucus organized last summer&#13;
In Washington. wll I "seek an&#13;
ectlve voice and place for&#13;
women In politics and work for&#13;
an end to sexism. racism,&#13;
poverty and Institutional&#13;
violence," according to Ms.&#13;
Nowak. Women of both polltlcal&#13;
partlH, and of all races, ages,&#13;
occupations and educational&#13;
backgrounds are welcome to&#13;
par-tlcl~te&#13;
Pi an ist Petit&#13;
to So lo&#13;
in Milwaukee&#13;
French pianist Annie Petit, a&#13;
member of the music faculty of&#13;
the University of Wisc:onslnParkslde,&#13;
wlll appear as soloist&#13;
with the Wisconsin College&#13;
Con~valOf"Y Orchestra In a&#13;
benefit concert at 7:JO p.m. on&#13;
Feb. 29 In Bradley Pavilion at&#13;
MllwaukN's Performing Arts&#13;
c.enter.&#13;
M iss Petit also ls on the&#13;
College Conservatory faculty.&#13;
Miss Petit wlfl play a&#13;
movement from a Rach•&#13;
manlnoff concerto with the&#13;
orchestra, conducted by&#13;
Kenneth Schermerhorn.&#13;
The bene11t concert, which&#13;
also wilt feature the Conservatory's&#13;
O,amber Players&#13;
and Jau QJlntct. 1s part of the&#13;
first annual Corinthian Concert&#13;
Ball being sponsored by the&#13;
Board of Trusten and Women's&#13;
League of the school.&#13;
During the recent holidays&#13;
Miss Petit returned to her&#13;
native France to appear In&#13;
concert with the LIiie&#13;
Phllharmonlc Orchestra, In a&#13;
Paris radio recital and a .-ecltal&#13;
In Strasbourg.&#13;
M iss Petit, who joined lhe&#13;
Parkside music faculty In fall.&#13;
1970. previously taught at the&#13;
Indiana University School of&#13;
~le&#13;
While a student at the&#13;
National Conservatory of Paris,&#13;
she won first prize medals In&#13;
piano and chamber music and,&#13;
In 1956, received the In•&#13;
terpretatlon prtie at the Franz&#13;
Lint International Competition&#13;
In Budapest. She has appeared&#13;
In concert throughout Europe.&#13;
ALADDI&#13;
FLOW=R SHOP&#13;
1n west&#13;
Rocine &#13;
February 14, 1972 NEWSCOPE Pages&#13;
Blood Money in Waukegan&#13;
by Doglips Calhoun&#13;
For centuries Redman and Whiteman lived in America, off the&#13;
land. If you listen closely you can almost hear the voices of our&#13;
ancestors, "Bartholomew get off your fat ass and get us some&#13;
meat," or "Sna~e Eye you no good savage, go stalk some buffalo.&#13;
It was a fried and true way of life, living off the land. But then&#13;
civilization struck with all Its glory and splendor and pollution and&#13;
asphalt. Redman has since turned pink and Whiteman, well, let's&#13;
just say he's not as white as he used to be. But the question does&#13;
arise, Is it possible to live off the asphalt as our forefathers I lved off&#13;
the land?&#13;
No, no, and Hell no. Deer don't thrive on a diet of DDT and&#13;
asphalt and as for the buffalo, you can count them on one hand. So&#13;
what do you do when a thought like 'I need some bread, money,&#13;
coins,expendable capital, scratch .. .' flashes through your head?&#13;
Well my friend you can work (the word makes you shudder&#13;
doesn't ltl beg, steal, plunder, pillage, rip off, starve, move home,&#13;
join the marines, become a monk, or, if you're of age, you can sell&#13;
some blood.&#13;
The reputable blooclletters will only accept 'donations' once&#13;
every two months but the extra $10.00 has never done me any harm.&#13;
How are these places where they suck your blood? Well, I can only&#13;
speak from experience.&#13;
My pals and I walked In. They Immediately gave us a number&#13;
and made us fill out a registry which included name, address, and&#13;
S.S. number. After that they took my phallic middle finger and&#13;
stuck a pin into it. Blood Immediately appeared and they drew it&#13;
into a narrow glass tube thru capillary action.&#13;
The people running the place (nurses and technicians) ran a&#13;
test on it to make sure I wasn't anemic or drunk or high on drugs. I&#13;
passed for some reason and was assigned the number -4. Next came&#13;
the questions and they asked alot. ~est Ions about hepatitis,&#13;
leprosy, V.D., heart murmers, operations, and other diseases I&#13;
could accept. But no, I've never been pregnant or even had my&#13;
period because you see I'm a male according to clinical and&#13;
( Continued from Page 1)&#13;
junior level faculty.&#13;
Applebaum said, "We have&#13;
not been told by the Dean to look&#13;
specifically for senior people.&#13;
We're looking for the best&#13;
people to fill our needs." He&#13;
added, "My hope Is that we can&#13;
find some senior people,&#13;
though."&#13;
Mrs. Gray said slmltarly,&#13;
"We go for the best person we&#13;
can find. We'd llketo hire senior&#13;
level people - but not some old&#13;
stodgle. It's future performance&#13;
that counts."&#13;
The divisions are also seeking&#13;
to eliminate ad hoc positions.&#13;
Applebaum explal ned, "It's not&#13;
that they're bad 'klachers, btJI&#13;
that their only obligation ls to&#13;
show up three times a week. to&#13;
teach. A faculty member's&#13;
function Is more than to meet&#13;
with his class."&#13;
The recruiting process Itself&#13;
was summarized by Dean&#13;
Norwood as "a juggling act.&#13;
You try to keep as many options&#13;
open as p0sslbl c at the&#13;
Discipline, Division end College.&#13;
levels. Yet you want to move&#13;
with dispatch when the right&#13;
candidate appears. If a wellquellfled&#13;
person appears, you&#13;
take him. You take advantage&#13;
of the situation.''&#13;
Scholarship for&#13;
Engineering Science&#13;
Students&#13;
The Society of Manufacturing&#13;
Engineers Chapter No. 2 has&#13;
announced the Robert N. Freres&#13;
Scholarship lo go lo a $lu~nl&#13;
entering his third or fourth&#13;
year, maforlng In any&#13;
curriculum related to tool and&#13;
manufacturing engineers. The&#13;
award Is In the amount of three&#13;
hundred dollars ($300).&#13;
Selection will be made on high&#13;
schotastic standard with emphasis&#13;
in mathematics and&#13;
science. For further In•&#13;
formation contact the Office of&#13;
Flnancial Aids and Placement&#13;
oo County Trunk A, Telephone&#13;
553.2291 ~&#13;
tl~e NeVIJ~pf!.e ~ dass tf ,ec.t '{ols,. ~&#13;
~ They're Fl&lt;EE..&#13;
practical definitions.&#13;
I passed the question and answer session like a charm by&#13;
merely saying "no, I never had that," to everything. (Oneot my&#13;
buddies wasn't accepted because he'd been in Viet Nam where they&#13;
have a lot of really bad diseases.)&#13;
For the next part you absolutely must have your S.S. card and&#13;
drivers license or state 1.0. The lady behind the desk checked my&#13;
papers and then stuck an electronic thermometer in my mouth. The&#13;
gadget started a digital computer running and my score, 99.1&#13;
degrees, appeared on a viewer. I was high but not too high.&#13;
She stuck my finger In something that looked like a thimble.&#13;
That gave my pulse on a gauge and low and behold I passed that&#13;
too.&#13;
You lay down on a couch with your feet elevated and the&#13;
sanitation process began. They pat your vein and pinch them and&#13;
become ecstatic when they see you really do have them. After&#13;
about four drenchings of antiseptic they stick the needle in you. The&#13;
needle is connected to a little rubber hose which is connected to a&#13;
plastic bag which Is connected to a mild form of vacuum cleaner.&#13;
It's al I over ln four to eight minutes and you're left laying there&#13;
feeling high In a loony way. The nurse took the needle out and layed&#13;
the bag of blood next to my stomach. I was quite frankly surprised&#13;
to see that it wasn't blue in color. I said. "That's really warm. I&#13;
never had my own blood laying next to me before."&#13;
The nurse, an old army nurse, said, "It's not yours anymore,&#13;
Honey."&#13;
For Mike "the Roach" Stevesand and I it was nothing. But&#13;
some people do feel a I ittle dizzy so the center gives away soup and&#13;
coffee for fortification. The only fortification we needed was the&#13;
check.&#13;
The place we went to is known as the Beverly Blood Center,&#13;
Inc. located in Waukegan on 226 North Genesee St. It's right down&#13;
town and it doesn't open until 4 p.m. during the week. It's the only&#13;
place I know of that pays cash on the line for blood from the veins&#13;
and personally it wasn't bad at all.&#13;
~&#13;
Faculty Bookstore Committee -· '&#13;
Some of you have seen a Bookstore complaint&#13;
--,questionnaire, some of you have even filled them out. If you&#13;
are not aware of this and cannot find a questionnaire, write&#13;
down your complaints on a sheet of paper and drop it off, or&#13;
mall it to the SGA office.&#13;
• I&#13;
. ---- ----------&#13;
~ ~~,&#13;
~&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
BIG TOP Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream ond&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
creom, nuts and cherry 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
NORTH ~311 SH ERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
of the [W&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Fuh\re&#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;
MILWAU.KEE&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
0&#13;
111 Fo11r Sites 9 .. - 12" • 14'' • 16" l&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHO.TI • CHICKEM&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SJ.GJ.14&#13;
• ~EA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARllY-OUTS - DELIVElY&#13;
"YOU tm•r; • . Wf BIIING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
0 -Lip~i &#13;
Page6 NEWSCOPE February 14, 1972&#13;
SUCH GOOD FRIENDS&#13;
circuit got a hold on a good product It all&#13;
becomes a beautiful story, totally original&#13;
and double chic. Be aware and heep your&#13;
Cor11ette I Karma and Clldll lacs J&#13;
MORE OF THE SAME, with the comic&#13;
Doctor Spector (James Coco) who carries the&#13;
fllm like a shoe salesman carrying a pair of&#13;
size 9 pumps (A cross between Hubert&#13;
Humphrey and Trumein Capote), pretty&#13;
funny.&#13;
Julie Messinger - Dyan cannon&#13;
TO ME THOUGH, Genre was stretched to&#13;
generality In this fllm, something the guys&#13;
might mention between holes at the club, or&#13;
the girls could discuss with their beauticians&#13;
whlle having their faces chromed. It has the&#13;
look of Big Bucks all over It, without much&#13;
strain.&#13;
WHILE WRITER EDITOR HUSBAND&#13;
lies dying, Mrs. Messinger Is stoned by&#13;
revelation after revelation finding ou1 about&#13;
side tine activities, (all of the female good&#13;
friends) with these discoveries we see her&#13;
past, flashbacks from nowhere, Lesbian&#13;
encounters and near climaxes all rushing In&#13;
as not so sensuous woman, a large helping of&#13;
remorse at no extra cost.&#13;
Dr. Timmy Spector James Coco&#13;
Produced and directed by Otto Preminger&#13;
A Paramount film&#13;
ON THE MONEY .. : Dyan Cannon Is&#13;
fondling delicate sensibilities again as Julie&#13;
Messinger, upper middle class heroine.&#13;
Directed by Otto Preminger, (the same mM&#13;
who has brought other film classics to us - In&#13;
Harms Way and Hurry Sundown - plastic&#13;
sea bat1Ies and contemporary Uncle Tom's)&#13;
the film repeats a commoo theme from a few&#13;
days ago ... Living for today. This theme&#13;
was side glanced when the Beats came up&#13;
with If. back In the 50's, and considered cu1e,&#13;
by this set, when the Beatles comment sung&#13;
about it in the 60's, and when Hoffman and&#13;
Ruben began to talk about doing It, NOW.&#13;
They near Iv Qot the shaft. But since the TWA&#13;
THIS BELATED IN NESS follows with a&#13;
M.A.S.H. like treatment of hospital&#13;
bureaucracy, when buxom Dyan's husband&#13;
has a mole removed from the side of his neck,&#13;
complications set In, and all is chaos for&#13;
awhile after they give the patient blood with&#13;
the wrong RH fl!lctor, sending him Into a&#13;
coma, necessitating the removal and&#13;
replacement of all his blood. Some funny&#13;
things happen as Kidney men &amp;nd Liver men&#13;
enter Into It, the biggest bro-ha-ha of all,&#13;
coming when Dyan gathers her friends&#13;
together at the bloodbank, where these&#13;
Dorian donors start. playing coctall party:&#13;
everybody consoling .. themse,ves.&#13;
THE ENO .•• Husband dead now .•&#13;
Dyan and her two boys walking Into Central&#13;
Park (God, I hope they don't get mugged) no&#13;
sunset. (She thinking . . • Scarsdale) A&#13;
symbolic exit marked by 0. C. Smith who Is&#13;
straining "Life is not for waiting, not for hide&#13;
and seeking." Walt a minute! The only guy&#13;
who had a good time and was consistent with&#13;
the film's Jive for today theme Is the dead&#13;
husband I ~I me a rewrite man I&#13;
Next week . • . A Oockwork Orange!&#13;
TITLE: Who Owns America?&#13;
AUTHOR: Waller J. Hickel&#13;
PUBLISHER: Prt&gt;ntice Hall Inc ($6.95)&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the Newscope staff&#13;
'Ntlo Owns America is one of those books born of&#13;
mediocrity and destined for obscurity, the author is in&#13;
the political limelight for a brief moment and then&#13;
returns to his home slate to tend to his own garden. I'm&#13;
trying to figure out how all this relates to the reader,&#13;
what if makes me. It was Indeed a hesitant moment&#13;
when I picked out this bool&lt;, now l realize I should have&#13;
he:-.liloh:d o ,:,midgin longer.&#13;
Anyway. who owns America? We all do. Ha, ha,&#13;
ha. That's a rich one, oboy is that funny Hickel, former&#13;
Secretl'lry of the Interior, and former Governor of&#13;
Alaska, takes 328 pages out of our lives In order lo&#13;
describe his; explaining his Job, what he accomplished&#13;
and what he wanted to do, how he was fired, where he&#13;
grew up, how he made his way by building houses and&#13;
motels in the undeveloped state of Alaska, how he&#13;
fought for statehood, and how he became the Walter J.&#13;
Hickel. If Nixon Is a Mr. Hyde, Wally is the Hickel.&#13;
Who OWns America is flooded with optimism. old&#13;
Wally says some people look for reasons not to do&#13;
things, " I look for reasons to do things." He did a&#13;
creditable lob In D.C.; he Instituted reform In the&#13;
Bureau of Indian Affairs, forced oll companies to&#13;
initiate tougher safeguards to prevent oil well blowouts&#13;
of the type seen on the coast of sunny Cllllfornla, set&#13;
drawing by Richard Lipke&#13;
aslde more public lands for park purposes, aided Earth&#13;
Day programs, why he even pointed out to Dick the&#13;
error of his inflammatory and alienating ways. He just&#13;
wasn't the kind of politico Dick wanted around, he&#13;
didn't llke being told hP wi.c; f"llible.&#13;
The most interesting aspects of this book deal with&#13;
Hickel 's relatlonshlp with the Prexy; moving from the&#13;
Intimate relationship of surrOQate candidate. In which&#13;
he represented Nixon during the Presldentlal cam,&#13;
palgn, to 22 months later when the President com&#13;
pletely cul off communications with his Secretary of&#13;
the lnlPrlor.&#13;
Hickel came to office under fire from environmentalists&#13;
and the media, he was sub(ected to l!ln&#13;
unusually harsh and lengthy Senate Cooflrmalion&#13;
Hearing, and stayed around long enough to disprove&#13;
the reasoning behind their opposition. He wl!lsn•t a yes&#13;
man. nor was he a no man, he tried to strike a balance&#13;
between resource development and conservation l!lnd&#13;
its explollatioo. He lost his balance when four students&#13;
were murdered at Kent State, a day after he walked&#13;
out of a Cabinet meeting exploding inside at the&#13;
Cambodia incursion, he fell from grace with a crash&#13;
that Impressed many people. Ultimately, the fact that&#13;
he was fired for doing a good fob reveals more about&#13;
his employer than abou1 himself, and for that reason,&#13;
perhaps this book Is almost worth reading. It depends&#13;
on how much time vou've got, I suppose.&#13;
(Courtesy of The Bookmart, wherever they are.)&#13;
BARMYTHOLOGY: A&#13;
Mockus Tap&#13;
Chris's Tavern&#13;
... !Io's Wonder Bar&#13;
by Jim Wol&#13;
0, the Nod decided thl&#13;
wanted to travel, see ttlew,&#13;
bottle, he wanted to emller&#13;
head was beselged by III er&#13;
be In heroic proportions. O&#13;
would be Achlllesand Mike&#13;
work ou1 perfectly, the lire&#13;
the pin ball cyclops at MK&#13;
knNs in abeyance, sw111o,&#13;
Mockus, Olrls's and Nill&#13;
neighborhood corner bers, ~&#13;
recognize each other, wlltr&#13;
whole point. All three bars c&#13;
pointless jukes (usually lie,&#13;
and Nelles, decade5 of 111J&gt;t&#13;
are operated by the farnfly&#13;
(11 Indeed he exists) blllln&#13;
Neighborhood bars HIit&#13;
working-drinking class. ft&#13;
practice of mouthing a ,_r&#13;
weaker sex Is present, 11 fr,&#13;
the refrain; one more time&#13;
these bars courteo~ly a,&#13;
aged folk. O,ce In a whtll:&#13;
somesuch drunk topic, Ir\&#13;
tensive mou1h to shut uppr&#13;
Mockus Tap (located It&#13;
block, by the time you 11&#13;
.---&#13;
above the street; a sm&#13;
Mockus wa!&gt; the first&#13;
warriors of the biker m&#13;
spiffy first place tavern&#13;
played and as fatewo!Ac&#13;
along was a bad om&#13;
I consulted the 0-&#13;
coffers yielded an art&#13;
Lincoln, a fin but one I&#13;
heavily, bu1 we coul&#13;
had succumbed to te&#13;
Old Style and PabSt&#13;
shorties for JOc. Har&#13;
more. Top shelf rangeq&#13;
operated by Cliff tMvei,&#13;
of alcohol ; other fea&#13;
topped bar, and a hlg &#13;
bowling machine.&#13;
The elder /IAeyer a form team lost that he c~uld ,, er race car driver, told our crew before hls&#13;
pool "'While K&#13;
I whip anybody under a hundred years old In&#13;
pool · Cfinal out~;~=~~ the Mockus team were losing on the felt fleld of&#13;
f1nallysworebltt i) Mike, Jerry and I cafoled, carressed, and&#13;
were dwlndli er ~aths at the reluctant pinball machine. The coffers&#13;
mockery of 0&#13;
:~• s:~ :,~;h~.yclops simply winked its flashing eye In&#13;
I beseeched my two st t 11·&#13;
bef ou a Ies of the need to continue our ·Iourney&#13;
ore a mol'tal blow to O ff • on a fo h ur co ers was visited upon us We embarked&#13;
R&#13;
ur-w eeled vessel and navigated to Chris's Tap l~cated at 2724&#13;
oosevelt Road I disco ed • that I'd · ver as we mounted the barstools at O,ris's&#13;
od somehow lost my notebook In our travels, the epic strains of&#13;
~i;ned ~~sey somewhere singing their refrain to the dirty snow. I&#13;
11 my companions and Informed them that we'd have to start&#13;
a&#13;
I&#13;
o~er · However, before retracing our steps back to our embarkation&#13;
~t~ w~ 5&#13;
':,"1 two beers time bathing in the amber llght of Chris's It&#13;
~sc;;,~) t;• t\~~r as I know, In Kenosha (or perhaps In southe~st&#13;
mere di a s served a tap beer (Hamms or Old Style) for a&#13;
lesson hme, and a schooner for 20c. The world can be taught a great&#13;
ere. Bottom shelf hard liquor costs a mere 30c; I asked the&#13;
:~tg ~~:n:er '!, he co~ld make a daiquiri, his curt reply was " we&#13;
Jo em· The Iuke featured such musical luminaries as&#13;
1&#13;
ann Paycheck, the PoOI table was set off in a separate room of the&#13;
arge tavern, along the wall opposite the solid wood topped bar&#13;
wooden booths were made available to the patrons. This bar, perhaps'.&#13;
?ii has the largest stock of hard liquor of the three reviewed, though the&#13;
:S service on review night wasn't quite up to the level one expects •t b Olrls's. "'&#13;
t Oirl s's Tap Is lneeed a working-dJlnklng class bar, the patrons were&#13;
A DRUNK ODYSSEY&#13;
(oloel'I of the Newscope staff&#13;
!hat one bar a night just wasn 't enough, he&#13;
wcrld filtered through the bottom of a beer&#13;
ark on an odyssey; If the next morning his&#13;
army of hangover demons, it would at least&#13;
o, the Nod would be Ulysses, Jerry Socha&#13;
ce Stevesand could be Henry Aaron ; It would&#13;
rensof the juke at Nello's would tempt him,&#13;
ockus' would defy him and force him to his&#13;
lowing dimes, glvlng no quarter.&#13;
ello's, three neighborhood bar s, two of them&#13;
i, where everyone knows everyone or at least&#13;
ere fellowship and an Inexpensive time Is the&#13;
softer sandwhlches, pool tables, mediocre to&#13;
,eavlly country), and in the cases of Mockus&#13;
1perience behind the bar. Mockus and Nello's&#13;
ly more or less, white I've yet to catch Chris&#13;
1ind h (s bar.&#13;
e these are the backbone of the American&#13;
they are the last bastion of morality; the&#13;
ur letter word denoting Intercour se, while the&#13;
rrowned upon . Many are the times I've heard&#13;
1eyou use that word and out you go. Yet all of&#13;
accommodate hopsters as well as middle&#13;
e some dude might pop off about long hair or&#13;
ind always the bartender will order the of&#13;
pronto or leave. There's no par anola.&#13;
,t 4619 · 8th Ave.) I~ stuck In the middle of the&#13;
1it down at the bar you're already five feet&#13;
~II stairw 1 sto ay eads the patron up to bar level.&#13;
•t ~ ~ our agenda, here we three hearty&#13;
· 1 " n McKay who shoots the cue on Mockus'&#13;
1 :Vue pool team. That evening a match was&#13;
. ve It, Mockus lost, perhaps bringing Socha&#13;
le (Soch l tree a ii$ to our flnanclal condition, his&#13;
'kt sure, 11 pointillist portrait of honest Abe 1&#13;
1 bra ~ ark's; we could look, the oracle said&#13;
ptat~ It. By night's end the Oracle himself&#13;
on.&#13;
ras 15c a 1 r $pl It ap while 12 oz. bottles went for AS&lt;:,&#13;
frornr s cost .-&gt;c and when ml~ed, a nickel&#13;
Bl'ld h~ to $1.00. Very reasonable. Mockus ls&#13;
·es 1 ~ son Darrel, and offers a good selection&#13;
ly C:.. ude • plal'lO and an organ, a formic&amp;&#13;
J&gt;e11tlve Pinball m achine as well as a&#13;
all regulars, most middle aged; the refreshments are incredibly&#13;
Inexpensive, one dollar here could go a long way in changing one's&#13;
general attitude of the world outside.&#13;
We had, nowever, yet to retrace our path from Mockus', On the Nod&#13;
had lost his notes, we had to start at the beginning again, a fate worse&#13;
than • • • my mind was boggled soggy, I couldn't think what fate ours&#13;
was worse than, I couldn't even remember our fate. Oi Zeus, why hast&#13;
thou bewildered me?&#13;
Wlth the expert guidance of the gods, our party managed to return to&#13;
Mockus' Intact. By this time my brain was so soggy that I had to enlist&#13;
the aid of Darrel Mockus (the younger) as a sci;lbe. Soon I found that&#13;
my compatriots had h.id enough, I alone was to enter the portals of the&#13;
Wonderbar. My final Bacchanalian task.&#13;
Nell o's Wonder Bar, located on the corner of 52nd St. and 19th&#13;
Avenue, Is a newly built bar featuring a pleasant, subdued, for the&#13;
most part, atmopshere, a bowling machine, pool table, juke and color&#13;
TV set. The reasonably priced stock of hard spirits is ample and a tap&#13;
Bud costs 20c, wh ile bottle beer goes for 45 or 50c. It's the only bar of&#13;
the three On the Nod visited t hat wasn't equipped with tables, this&#13;
because there's no room . Nelle's is my home bar since It's across the&#13;
street from my apartment, I have spent many early mornings and late&#13;
evenings at the bar ; in the mornings llstenlng to a crew of garbagemen&#13;
joke about their new t itle of ecologists, reading the&#13;
newspaper, and in the evening, after nine, watching the tube and (ust&#13;
plain wondering.&#13;
Nello Is an unassuming bartender who knows the ways of tending a&#13;
bar Inside out having been engaged in the noble art for more than two&#13;
decades. Nello's most noisy, crowded hours are between three and&#13;
nine, when the workers come In for a I ift, otherwise it's a quiet restful&#13;
establ lshment. Nello's is a good place to top off a night of drinking, writing, pum&#13;
ping gas, anything, because of the Inherent serenity of the place. It,&#13;
like the two other bars 01 the Nod visited, is a bar you don't have to&#13;
cope with, you are assimilated; service is friendly and the cllentele ls&#13;
generally amiable. Mockus, Chris's and Nelle's are representative of the great majority&#13;
of watering places In Kenosha, they all have their own per sonality,&#13;
their prices are generally reasonable and their bartenders are&#13;
basically pros. The lights were being turned off, the door was being&#13;
locked, It was time for On the Nod to open the old aspirin bottle, the&#13;
odessey was over.&#13;
!&#13;
February 14, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page7&#13;
1••······························ • • • •&#13;
: CALL FOR CANDIDATES :&#13;
• + + + •&#13;
: SGA Spring Election :&#13;
• March 7 and 8 •&#13;
• + + + •&#13;
: The following posltions are open: :&#13;
• Senator ( 1) • I Recording Secretary (1) ;&#13;
• Corresponding Secretary ( 1) • • • • Nominating Petitions are available at SGA office •&#13;
; or Student Activities . Tallent Hall ;&#13;
• •&#13;
; ( Filing Deadline February 25, 1972) ;&#13;
• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
( C YOU&gt;R E A&#13;
\?OOD MANJ&#13;
CHARl.\E BROWN.')&#13;
COZY COMFOllTABLE DINING&#13;
~ THE WINDJAMMER ~eo.oe&#13;
\&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• S£A FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
~ 658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S CHIii ROOII&#13;
FOR PRIUTE PARTIES&#13;
flEl FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OVI CATllllNG . ,&#13;
FIi.OM 10 TO 100&#13;
''°' 7th AVt. • KlMOSNA&#13;
" OFFERI NG HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WI NDJAMM&#13;
ER DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
- HERBE RT KUBLY&#13;
" WONDERFUL FOOD" - SENATOR PROXMIR ______ _ &#13;
Page a NEWSCOPE February 14, 1972&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
WE LIKE IT&#13;
IN&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Government Steps up&#13;
Search for Loan Defaulters&#13;
SANDWICHES AT&#13;
ALL TIMES-BAR and&#13;
PACKAGE GOODS&#13;
TH E SANDS&#13;
SPQR rs BAR&#13;
Hwy 32&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
~me 1·is1i our pizz11 J kitchens or hm·e&#13;
~ome deliz·ered'&#13;
,,sk t1bo11I&#13;
our speci,tls&#13;
Open 5-_12&#13;
&lt;.:xcc.:pt sunday&#13;
4615- 7th avenue&#13;
in kcnosha&#13;
6547111&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
(CPS) - Q\ every major&#13;
campus In the country there are&#13;
students who are going to school&#13;
with the federal govcrl'mont&#13;
footing the bill. In most cases,&#13;
though, these students have&#13;
obtained loans, not scholarships,&#13;
and are t herefore&#13;
obi lgated to pay back the&#13;
money.&#13;
But now the federal government&#13;
Is worrying about these&#13;
loans. From January 31 to&#13;
September JO there was a threefold&#13;
Increase In the number of&#13;
defaulted loans. The actual&#13;
number of defaulted loans&#13;
jumped from 3,0A9 to 8,963.&#13;
Under the provisions of the&#13;
loan, the student Is obligated to&#13;
begin paying back the government&#13;
nine months after college&#13;
graduation. A slight Interest Is&#13;
added to the loan, but this does&#13;
not take effect until the student&#13;
begins making payments.&#13;
The Office of Education, a&#13;
subsidiary of the Department of&#13;
Health, Education and Welfare&#13;
(HEW) and the government&#13;
body which supervises the loan&#13;
program, blames Its Inability to&#13;
catch debtors on underS'tafflng.&#13;
In °"der to make up for th\s&#13;
deficiency, HEW's 1972 budget&#13;
rf'(JUE!St calls for 52 additional&#13;
claims collectors. At present&#13;
there are only three employees&#13;
working In this area.&#13;
This beefing up of the&#13;
colledlon arm of the department&#13;
slgnals a crack-down on&#13;
defaulted loans.&#13;
Comptroller General Elmer&#13;
8. Staats, who oversees the use&#13;
of federal funds, has recommended&#13;
a tightening up of the&#13;
administration of the loan&#13;
program. In a report to&#13;
Congress two weeks ago, Staats&#13;
pointed out the proliferation of&#13;
loan defaults and said that&#13;
federal law requires prompt&#13;
processing of clalms.&#13;
Staats criticized the Office of&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20th Ave.&#13;
Phone· 657-3911&#13;
Kenoeha.Wllconm&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
111111'111 M "'"'-"MM IIIIIM MM M MM 1111111111 """'" M "-" 11111 M"IUl.11 "" """" 11111 "-""""'" M Mf\11&#13;
.·,·············· -Honest George Sale - during February :::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::: a free cherry tree with purchase of any major item ~\\\\llsri:}\&#13;
micro-ovens,&#13;
R. C. Service&#13;
One Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
Ron Casperson - owner&#13;
Education for not proceeding&#13;
against all llable parties,&#13;
"Collection action was being&#13;
taken against the student&#13;
borrower and not against cosigners,&#13;
such as parents or&#13;
spoUffs."&#13;
He said, too, that form letters&#13;
used to celled the debts "are&#13;
not sufficient! y forceful to&#13;
Impress the debtor of his legal&#13;
obligation to repay."&#13;
Staan' study of the loan&#13;
program showed that as of&#13;
January Jl, 1971, Sl billion In&#13;
over one mllllon loans had been&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Ole of the most glarlng&#13;
defects In the program that&#13;
Staats found was the lack of&#13;
uniform pollcy for participating&#13;
schools to refund money when&#13;
students died, dropped out or&#13;
stopped attending school for&#13;
various reasons.&#13;
Staan pointed out that "In&#13;
some cases, no refunds are&#13;
made unless Inquiries are sent&#13;
directly to the schools. In other&#13;
cases, schools make refunds&#13;
directly to students."&#13;
HEW hopes that Its new hardllne&#13;
stance wl II discourage&#13;
would-be debt evaders and&#13;
catch up with the almost 9,000&#13;
outstanding debtors. In ad&#13;
dltlon, there may now be fewer&#13;
loan applications due to the&#13;
slighter chance of evading, or&#13;
postponing, HEW.&#13;
Help Fight Heir Pollution&#13;
Zero Population Growth Is III nationally known non-profit&#13;
organization founded by Paul Ehrlich tor the purpose of stopping&#13;
the population explosion through education and polltlcal activity. A&#13;
Parkside chapter is being started and all Interested people are&#13;
encouraged to see Bob Moore on the Kenosha Campus Room 116-B.&#13;
The telephone extension Is 34K.&#13;
Merger Implementation Group&#13;
Welcomes Suggestions&#13;
MADISON, Wis. - A committee&#13;
studying the best ways to&#13;
merge the state's two former&#13;
university system&amp; wll I&#13;
welcome ideas and suggestions&#13;
from all Interested persons and&#13;
groups.&#13;
,qThat Is the word from&#13;
President John C. Weaver of the&#13;
new University of Wisconsin&#13;
System. He also Is serving as&#13;
secretary of the Merger lmplementatlon&#13;
Study Committee&#13;
established by the Legislature.&#13;
"Faculty and student groups&#13;
In the former University of&#13;
Wisconsin and former&#13;
Wisconsin State Universities&#13;
systems are preparing reports&#13;
and recommendations for the&#13;
Implementation Committee,"&#13;
Weaver said. "We also wlll&#13;
welcome suggestions and&#13;
recommendations from any and&#13;
all Interested persons and&#13;
organizations."&#13;
Written suggestions should be&#13;
sent before March 1 to&#13;
President Weaver, Van Hise&#13;
Hall, Madison, Wis 53706.&#13;
Catering to 1111 types end size oroups&#13;
1700 Sheridan llr.l.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
n .CoM1NG sooNJ&#13;
ANNUAL&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Wat,h Our Ad&#13;
for Date&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE &#13;
.February 14, 1972 NEWSCOPE Pagef forum--------------------------~&#13;
by Robin Dnld&#13;
These are transltlonal years&#13;
~d the dies wlll be heavy.&#13;
Change ls quick but revolution&#13;
will take a while.&#13;
America has not even begun as&#13;
yet.&#13;
This continent Is seed.&#13;
Diane de Prima&#13;
"Revolutionary Letter 10"&#13;
Remember the grape strike?&#13;
It began In 1965 In Delano,&#13;
California, when farm workers&#13;
nnally shouted. Basta( . . .&#13;
Enough I •.. and walked out of&#13;
the fields. The purpose of the&#13;
strike was to enable the farm&#13;
worken, who conslstet: mostly&#13;
of O,lcano migrants, the opportunity&#13;
to form a union thus&#13;
receiving minimum wage and&#13;
other benefits. Today's greatest&#13;
non-violent leader, Cesar&#13;
O,avez. lead the migrants to&#13;
victory.&#13;
Atter five very long years of&#13;
plcl(etlng, boycotting, ~tings,&#13;
and some near to starvation the&#13;
strike came to an end. UFWOC,&#13;
United Farm Workers&#13;
Organizing Comm ittee. affiliated&#13;
with the AFL-CIO and&#13;
became a reality with growers&#13;
signing contracts w ith the&#13;
laborers. However. this was not&#13;
the beginning of the end, this&#13;
was not even the end of the&#13;
beginning.&#13;
La CAUSA continues and la&#13;
La Huelga Goes On&#13;
HUELGA goes on.&#13;
Although the table grape&#13;
Pickers have come under&#13;
contract the wine grape pickers&#13;
have not. Their strike began in&#13;
1966 and, even though&#13;
negotiations are near ending, It&#13;
Is still going on. Boycotttn; of&#13;
products by non-union companies&#13;
Is happening throughout&#13;
the country. And It has come to&#13;
Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Luana Boutilier and her&#13;
husband Gene, now head of the&#13;
Racine Urban Ministry, have&#13;
been with the strike since lb&#13;
origin. Mr. Boutilier had a&#13;
church in the area of the&#13;
original grape strike and when&#13;
Chavez called for clergy to join&#13;
the picket lines Gene and Luana&#13;
began to march. Gene even.&#13;
tually lost his job with the&#13;
church because of his activities&#13;
so the family devoted full time&#13;
to the movement. Later the&#13;
Boutlllers were asked to be&#13;
registered lobbyfsts for the&#13;
workers In Washington.&#13;
Having moved to Racine&#13;
Luana was contacted by UFWOC&#13;
to organize boycotting in&#13;
this area. Since the end of&#13;
January she has called&#13;
meetings at the Racine Spanish&#13;
Center which were open to the&#13;
public and she and other&#13;
volunteers have checked liquor&#13;
stores for the selling of scab&#13;
wine. As of now two stores are&#13;
being plcketted In Racine,&#13;
Timer Liquor and Supply Co.&#13;
located at UOl Washington Ave.&#13;
and Shorecrest Liquor Store at&#13;
3900 Erle St. Plckettlng has&#13;
gone on for three weeks of thne&#13;
stores and will continue until&#13;
the wine Is either removed from&#13;
the shelves or negotiations&#13;
come to an end. The plckettlng&#13;
Is usu.ally done on Friday,&#13;
Saturday and Sunday when&#13;
stores have the most business.&#13;
Luana has sent out a request&#13;
for the help of Parkside&#13;
students. Help Is needed on the&#13;
picket lines for there are stores&#13;
that will soon be plcketted In&#13;
Kenosha. Also, students are&#13;
needed for office work.&#13;
research, and speaking to&#13;
groups. With enough student aid&#13;
the fol'"matlon of a Freedom&#13;
School Is a very good&#13;
posslblllty. People are needed&#13;
who would be Interested In&#13;
volunteering their time for this&#13;
project, she Is especially Interested&#13;
In getting students who&#13;
are Into education and art&#13;
although all are welcome. For&#13;
those who would like credits for&#13;
their work Luana has stated she&#13;
will try her best to arrange this.&#13;
Nan Freeman, an eighteen&#13;
year old college student In&#13;
Florida, was killed on the picket&#13;
lines two weeks ego. She was&#13;
•••••••••••&#13;
• • • Ed,toria( •&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
• Board • • t •&#13;
• M.ee in~ •&#13;
• • • • • Tvesda'1 •&#13;
e 1:~o p,m. :&#13;
• • • • .A, ,-llE •&#13;
: ~FFICE :&#13;
• • • • •••••••••••&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOA SALE - Marimbl, 21&#13;
h oct. $100; Sct,wlnn b icycle. 1 speed,&#13;
couter brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N. Oal(land, MIiwaukee,&#13;
Wis.&#13;
SKIS - H•t camaro With Cubcle&#13;
bindings. s200 new, sell tor S15. Also&#13;
Gerard turntable, sell at cost. Ph.&#13;
652 8N6,&#13;
Snowtilres for VW, sin 5.60&gt;&lt;15, used&#13;
700 ml. cost $55 new, make an offer,'&#13;
call 632-8929.&#13;
3 Room Apt. North side Keno.&#13;
Privacy assu&lt;ed. Situated well tor&#13;
4'11 campuses. can 552-8970.&#13;
To whom It may concern - We want&#13;
our 3 dlSh pans bllck now.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
EXPERIENCED TYPIST - Will&#13;
type term papen, assignments etc.&#13;
at my hOme. Pl1. 552 8773.&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
DOG L.OST- Near east Serryvilte&#13;
Road. Black Labr1dor Male. Ph.&#13;
552 883S&#13;
plckettlng the Talisman Sugar&#13;
C-ompany when a company&#13;
truck ran her over. She believed&#13;
In la CAUSA and La HUELGA&#13;
and gave her life. We at&#13;
Parkside can at le..s\ "t,lve a&#13;
little of our time.&#13;
If lnh:rested In helpl"SI In any&#13;
way contact Luana Boutilier at&#13;
632..0U,.&#13;
Mon-Unlon N•~ Valley Wines&#13;
1. Beringer Brothers, Inc.&#13;
Brands: (wtnes) Uvas, Medal&#13;
Royal; (champagne) Louis A.&#13;
Boneslo; (vermouth) Uvas&#13;
2. F . . Korbel &amp; Sons. Inc.&#13;
Brands: Korbel&#13;
3. Kornel I Champagne&#13;
Cellars. Brands: Hanns Kornell.&#13;
Third Generation&#13;
4. Charles Krug Winery.&#13;
Brands: Olarles Krug. Nappa&#13;
Vista, C. K., Mondovi Vintage.&#13;
5. Louis M. Martini. Brands:&#13;
Louis M. ·Martini&#13;
6. Robert Mondavi Winery.&#13;
Brands: Robert Mondavl&#13;
Winery&#13;
7. Samuele Sebastian I.&#13;
Brands: (wines) Sebastian!,&#13;
Vino Augusto; (champagne and&#13;
Vermouth) Sebastian!&#13;
8. Weibel, Inc. 9rands:&#13;
Weibel. Chateau Napoleon,&#13;
Chateau Du Chevalier, Chatuea&#13;
Lafayette&#13;
9. Wente Brothers. Brands:&#13;
• Valle de Oro, Wente&#13;
Dennis Weaver&#13;
Garrard SL.X-2 "Module" series&#13;
tumtan,e; con,ole stereo. Celt Rey&#13;
6548178. WHEEL~ 2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
at McGovern Rally&#13;
6758 - Uth Ave,&#13;
Labor Union&#13;
737 Hall&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 17&#13;
at 7 p.m.&#13;
Sl.00 donation&#13;
Also&#13;
Reggie McLean&#13;
Detroit folksinger&#13;
Authorized and paid tor&#13;
by G . M. Hansen.&#13;
51123 , 61111 Ave.&#13;
Kenosha, W,s&#13;
Diana&#13;
DRUMS FOA SALE - L.Udwick&#13;
a,mplete set, excellent condition.&#13;
Best offer over S125. Ph 633-5666&#13;
after 4:00. Jerry or Bob.&#13;
STEREO TAPE RECORDER -&#13;
Sorty 252 o One year otd. List S135.00,&#13;
wit for S70.00. Ph. Jerry 652.2538 or&#13;
553 2,,196.&#13;
CAMERA - Rikot, "Nikon type"&#13;
35mm. f 1 ~ IMS. Alt black pro&#13;
model. with haze filter, 2X zoom&#13;
extender, cll5e SJ75 new. Seti for&#13;
5175. used only twice. F'l1onc Mel&#13;
Meulna 65A 6771&#13;
FOR SALE - Snowmobile l!JolenS&#13;
Husky St)rlnt. Brand new 18 hp, List&#13;
$795. S~I for U25. Won in a r1Hlt.&#13;
Phone 652•2538 after 12 noon.&#13;
C--W•TCHt~ _JC •01•• • AC(\ltfffl&#13;
l,,l lttacftrOn • L.oAG•n•&#13;
• 111~• "' ,...., ...&#13;
ca,,_,v•il• • T•ffl•• LA-Co i.tl t1•&#13;
1960 GTO. New tires, mags, A speed,&#13;
excellent a&gt;ndltlon. Must sell. $1,200,&#13;
· willing to talk. 633-1069 any time&#13;
after 5:00.&#13;
1967 Opel Rally• s,peed, "40,000 miles,&#13;
1850. Call 654-5032 ask for Sarb or&#13;
Do119.&#13;
STUDENTS- If you had ii locker on&#13;
tne Racine Campus last semest«&#13;
ar1&lt;1 are not 11~ing It this seme!&gt;te.-&#13;
please inform the Racine Mi!lil&#13;
Office (SSJ 2121, exv. 20) so we can&#13;
reassign i t&#13;
EMPLOYMENT SALES&#13;
PEOPLE WANTED - Male or fll!male. Part time. Lots ot work.&#13;
t nts of mooey. Ph. 652,3833.&#13;
PERFUM!S&#13;
,,..~···&#13;
f11,w,tt • ~,,..,fl'l ••• , ..c1&#13;
cotoe,w,a&#13;
Rfl'AIR DFPT&#13;
W1tchH • Jrwelty&#13;
Dr4mond Scf!ing Cvmvlctc R1!'p•,r&#13;
Oopt&#13;
Ring Oeu9n1n9&#13;
Craduate Gemo1Dg1st Certified O,amontolor.•~t&#13;
Intermezzo&#13;
Jl'~ii''g~ I&#13;
It does ,,..Ice • diffelfnce wlu:re YDU shop! I&#13;
I 0% o iscount to students and F ac.ulty with 1-D.&#13;
~IL VERWARE-:J&#13;
W all~ - Lv"t&#13;
........... ,. Sft ..... ld•.U•&#13;
IRIDA1•&#13;
RECISTRV&#13;
L__CRYSTAL ~ Tiffoft • Ol'f'9'f.,•• ~"41C-A t•l•tU,.1•&#13;
• .,..1 -~,.,. &#13;
Page lO NEWSCOPE Febt-uary l4, 1972&#13;
An Advance Man With a Grin&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Jerry Bruno sat In the Viking Room&#13;
of the Kenosha Holiday Inn. Outside it&#13;
was nine degrees below zero, windy,&#13;
clear and very brlgh I. He was seated at&#13;
a table next to a large picture window&#13;
overlooking a dormant harbor. He was&#13;
finishing the last few spoonfuls of&#13;
Special K cereal. Next to his chair, on&#13;
the floor, were two morning papers, the&#13;
Chicago Sun -Times and the Milwaukee&#13;
Sentinel.&#13;
He was quietly talking to the man&#13;
sharing the table wlth hin'l, Spencer&#13;
Dickenson from Rhode Island, who also&#13;
was finishing breakfast, mopping up&#13;
egg yoke with a piece of toast The&#13;
dining room was almost empty, save&#13;
for a half dozen other people eating.&#13;
The hands of the clock p0inted to a&#13;
quarter of eight.&#13;
Both men were temporarily living at&#13;
the downtown motel In connection with&#13;
the upcoming Presidential primary.&#13;
Mr. Dlcke"lson, reminding one of the&#13;
bespectacled character Atticus Finch&#13;
in "To Kill A Mocklngbord", was&#13;
handling Jchn Lindsay's Presidential&#13;
bid, specifically in the First District.&#13;
Jerry Bruno, described by writer Jeff&#13;
Greenfield as " Bull1 l!ke a fire&#13;
hydrant", was also tn Kenosha working&#13;
for Lindsay, as a Political f'.onsultant.&#13;
In a January 31st National Affairs&#13;
story, Newsweek labeled Jerry Bruno&#13;
"a near legendary figure" as "the most&#13;
celebrated advance man in American&#13;
politics." Bruno's book, " The Advance&#13;
Man", Is in Its third hard cover prln&#13;
ting, first paper-back printing. He was&#13;
an advance mon for the Kennedys,&#13;
John and Robert . He handled&#13;
everything for them from campaign&#13;
stops In the early 60's, to Robert's&#13;
funeral In 1968. Sitting In the dining&#13;
area on this Mronday morning, Jerry&#13;
Bruno, a part of contemporary history,&#13;
did not attract much attention.&#13;
A waitress came to the table and&#13;
began clearing empty dishes. She asked&#13;
if there was anything they would like.&#13;
Spencer Dickenson asked for another&#13;
glass of grapefruit juice, Jerry Bruno&#13;
requested a second cup of coffee.&#13;
After returning with both, the&#13;
waitress, Chris, walked over to a cord&#13;
controlling the large curtains on the&#13;
picture window. She pulled one cord,&#13;
closing the curtains, blocking the&#13;
sunlight that had been drenching the&#13;
Consultant.&#13;
"There, how ls that," asked the&#13;
waitress, expecting no answer. It was&#13;
better the other 'fl/JY, Jerry Bruno said,&#13;
sitting ln a shadow, II was better open.&#13;
Somewhat surprised, Chris reopened&#13;
the curtains letting the sunshine wash&#13;
over Jerry Bruno. That's good he said,&#13;
That's It.&#13;
He began talking about the days In&#13;
Kenosha when he was a forklift driver&#13;
at American Motors, the times he hung&#13;
around the Italian American with his&#13;
core of friends. He remembered all of&#13;
their names, and a few stories about&#13;
each, shoving to the back of his mind&#13;
the Presidents and other people he has&#13;
known.&#13;
You know, he continued talking about&#13;
Kenosha, people tried to change the city&#13;
manager form or government fourteen&#13;
times before my friends and I got involved&#13;
and chal"lged it the first time we&#13;
tried. The hends of the clock spelled&#13;
almost eight thirty. Mayor Burkee was&#13;
probably getting ready to begin his day&#13;
as INJyor of the city. We were radicals&#13;
back in the fifties he said.&#13;
Jerry Bruno began his Involvement In&#13;
politics helping William Proxmire&#13;
become Governor of the state. When&#13;
Senator Joe Mccarthy died, he helped&#13;
Proxmire become Senator. From there&#13;
he worked for John Kennedy. The rest&#13;
Is history and discussed In his book coauthored&#13;
by Jeff Greenfield.&#13;
Jimmy Breslin was going to coauthor&#13;
my book, he said talking about&#13;
" The Advance INJn", but the publisher&#13;
thought he was too big a name.&#13;
Spencer Dickenson had pushed&#13;
himself away from the table, llstenlng&#13;
intently. Jerry Bruno Is very easy to&#13;
listen to. Hts manner of talktng tends to&#13;
Involve all those within earshot.&#13;
The fact he Is a national figure came&#13;
up. Just after nls memoirs were&#13;
published, he made an appearance on&#13;
the Johnny Carson Tonight Show.&#13;
I was petrified, he commented, I had&#13;
only been on televislon once, In&#13;
Syracuse, New York, a few days before.&#13;
Talking about the Tonight Show, he&#13;
went on, I sat In their Green Room for&#13;
over an hour waiting to go on, then they&#13;
took me up to an entrance just behind&#13;
the curtain.&#13;
I was told to llsten for my name, then&#13;
go oristage. There I was, my knees&#13;
shaking. Then I thought, Robert&#13;
Kennedy used to ask my opinion on Viet&#13;
Nam before people llke Schlesinger or&#13;
McBundy. I decided I could handle&#13;
nationwide television and Johnny&#13;
Carson. He went onstage, answered&#13;
questions about his book, mentioned his&#13;
hometown, and flt right Into the flow of&#13;
conversation, all went fine.&#13;
Oller an address system In the motel&#13;
came the name Jerry Bruno. He had a&#13;
telephone call waiting at the desk. A&#13;
few heads turned from the breakfast&#13;
tables In response to the name.&#13;
Upon returning to his seat, another&#13;
waitress, named Josie, asked him If he&#13;
had enjoyed skiing the day before. He&#13;
said he had, as she poured more coffee.&#13;
Spencer Dickenson asked If he had gone&#13;
to Wilmot. Jerry Bruno said he had&#13;
gone to INJf estlc HIiis. He had to check&#13;
It out as Lindsay said he wanted to ski&#13;
when he visited. It was the second time&#13;
Jerry Bruno had skied.&#13;
Josie, her attention focuse,d on the&#13;
man In the dark blue suit, walked over&#13;
to the cord controlling the curtains and&#13;
closed them for the second lime of the&#13;
morning, not knowing about the first&#13;
episode. No, no he began, but she&#13;
needed no more, quickly reopening&#13;
them, allowing In sunshine. Spencer&#13;
Dickenson began to laugh.&#13;
Conversation et the breakfast table&#13;
had been bouncing around for almost&#13;
an hour and a half. After another phone&#13;
call, Jerry Bruno announced that he&#13;
had lo do a radio show from his motel&#13;
room at nine a.m. He asked for the&#13;
P.:1rks,Je Student Gov~rnmcm T ~ GOVERNMENT&#13;
1s Sfonsor-,11:1 d&#13;
CO-OP LIJN(H ;;T noon,&#13;
F~brv~ry l61 /9 ? .J.. at +1-,. Student'&#13;
Adivifle5 Bu,·/cJinJ fo cl ~k ft&gt;r&#13;
Coniri'bvtions of- money, ioys1 .1n d&#13;
VOI..VNTEER HE.LP for the d;)y - c.&gt;rc - cel"lh:r.&#13;
We v&lt;~e st11deot ~ -\-c, br'ioj breaJ,&#13;
chH.s~ -f &lt;vi+ or w r,Q1eve (.&#13;
2 #·&#13;
C&gt; ~o&#13;
z ~&#13;
~ ~~ o ~o&#13;
g~&#13;
see back paqe for further information&#13;
check, signed It, left a tip, and led the&#13;
way to room 204 and a telephoned radio&#13;
show.&#13;
Kathy, his personal secretary, was&#13;
waiting In the room. She had taken a&#13;
few calls for him and jotted down lnformstlon&#13;
on a pad in her lap. It was&#13;
almost nine a.m. Jerry Bruno look off&#13;
his sportcoat, sat on his unmade bed,&#13;
and took a powder blue phone off the&#13;
nlghttable.&#13;
The question and answer show was to&#13;
be aired over station WROC radio In&#13;
Rockford, 111\nols. He was talking to the&#13;
host of the show, Bill Taylor, minutes&#13;
before he was to be introduced.&#13;
Earller in the dining room, he said&#13;
the questions on this type of show were&#13;
usually similar. Jerry Bruno predicted&#13;
someone would ask about Dallas; they&#13;
always did, he added.&#13;
On the third call into the show,&#13;
someone asked what part he played In&#13;
the Dallas Kennedy visit. He answered&#13;
he had done the advance work for the&#13;
trip, he didn't go Into detail.&#13;
Someone then asked a question about&#13;
an advance man. He's the guy In the&#13;
back of a packed hall listening to his&#13;
candidate speak. He's usually sweating&#13;
with a grin on his face, he answered.&#13;
At one point, the telephone hookup&#13;
was Interrupted by a call placed by a&#13;
salesman from Salem, Wisconsin, to&#13;
another party. During the short delay,&#13;
Bruno said, with a hand over the&#13;
receiver, he always forgot to plug his&#13;
book. His publisher had to remind him.&#13;
The Interrupted question concerned his&#13;
book.&#13;
The rest of the radio show went along&#13;
smoothly. Questions concerned past&#13;
experiences, Nixon's 1968 campaign,&#13;
Humphrey, LBJ, etc. People wanted to&#13;
know why he supported Lindsay, why&#13;
Lindsay should be President, and when&#13;
Lindsay would be In the area&#13;
After the show, Spencer Dickenson&#13;
asked Bruno If the last chapter of his&#13;
book, predicting Lindsay as the next&#13;
President, had anything to do with&#13;
Bruno's working for the candidate a&#13;
year later. The Polltlcal Consultant&#13;
said he did not know he would be&#13;
working for Lindsay when the book was&#13;
written, It was lust the way he sized up&#13;
the 1972 race at the time.&#13;
Kathy, sitting on a radiator next to a&#13;
window, began talking to Mr. Bruno&#13;
about the day's business. He was back&#13;
on the powder blue phone In minutes,&#13;
dialing someone In New York.&#13;
Spencer Dickenson excused himself,&#13;
he also had many details to work out&#13;
concerning Lindsay's first visit to the&#13;
area within the next two weeks. Jerry&#13;
Bruno waved good by while on the&#13;
phone.&#13;
After the short conversation to New&#13;
York, he listened to the secretary rattle&#13;
off names, times and places. He stood&#13;
In the middle of the room listening, tie&#13;
loosened, cuffs partly rolled up.&#13;
He looked like the sort of guy standing&#13;
In the back of a packed hall,&#13;
listening to his candidate draw cheers&#13;
from the crowd; a sweating advance&#13;
man, with a grin on his face. &#13;
'1bruary 14, 1,12 NEWSCOPE P•ge 11&#13;
Cagers Face Tough Climax&#13;
"I've really been pleased with Winter Sports Melting&#13;
our effort In the last two games&#13;
and most especially against&#13;
UW-Mllwaukee."&#13;
That's how Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens of the University of&#13;
wisc00sln-Parkslde assessed&#13;
his team •s performance as the&#13;
young group of Rangers&#13;
prepares for Its final three&#13;
games of the season.&#13;
Parkside will meet UW Green&#13;
Bay Thursday night at the&#13;
erown County Arena In Green&#13;
Bay, Lakeland Saturday night&#13;
at the Sheboygan Municipal&#13;
Armory and Dominican&#13;
MondaY night at Racine at the&#13;
1.akers· Theater-Gym complex&#13;
All three begin at 8 p.m.&#13;
The Rangers lost to UWMllwaukee&#13;
last week at the&#13;
~ena, but Stephens expressed&#13;
pleasure with his freshmandominated&#13;
squad. which held&#13;
the Panthers to a 39-30 half-time&#13;
tead and was not out of the&#13;
game until about eight minutes&#13;
remaining. UW-M won 94-60.&#13;
"It's a real credit to a group&#13;
of young players with the kind&#13;
of record that we have (3-161&#13;
thattheystlll have enough pride&#13;
and desire to play to the finish of&#13;
f!Vlf'Y game."&#13;
O,uck Chambllss, with 17&#13;
points against UW-M, remains&#13;
the Rangers' top scorer with a&#13;
16.Javerage for 18 games, while&#13;
Bob Popp, with a 1-4.0 average&#13;
for eight games, Is I ust ahead of&#13;
starting guard Tom Joyce, who&#13;
has a 13.9 average for 19 games.&#13;
Stephens sees the Rangers&#13;
having no easy time with any of&#13;
the three opponents. Green Bay&#13;
defeated the Rangers 103-66 In&#13;
early Decemberwhlle Lakeland&#13;
and Dominican are leaders In&#13;
the Gateway Conference. The&#13;
Llkers are a big, ph yslcal team&#13;
and outrebounded UWMllwaukee&#13;
despite losing to the&#13;
Panthers.&#13;
"We expect three real tough&#13;
oames," Stephens said, "and&#13;
we'll just be going out there to&#13;
do our best and end up the&#13;
The UW-Parkslde track team, paced In the early season by two&#13;
miler Lucian Rosa, miler Dennis Biel and walker Mike DeWitt, wlll&#13;
jump into competition at Oshkosh Saturday with the host sc~t,&#13;
Whitewater, Stevens Point, Platteville and Lawrence In the Titan&#13;
Open meet.&#13;
The UW-Parkslde fencing team, with a 5-4 season mark&#13;
heading Into last weekend's battle against Michigan State and UWMadison,&#13;
will host lllinols, Detroit, Tri-State and M.A.T.C. at Bullet&#13;
jr. high in Kenosha at lOa.m. Saturday.&#13;
The UW-Parkside gymanstfcs squad will close its dual season&#13;
Saturday at Stevens Point with St. Cloud State and the Pointers as&#13;
Its opponents. Then senior captain Warren McGilllvray, freshman&#13;
vaulter Kerry Pfeifer and freshman rings man Kevin O'Neil wilt&#13;
begin practicing for the NAIA national meet March 24-25 at&#13;
Eastern llllnols University in Charleston.&#13;
Dogged by forfeits because of Injuries and resultant lack of&#13;
depth, the UW-Parkslde wrestling team is readying for another&#13;
double dual this weekend at Houghton, Mich., against Lake&#13;
Superior State and Michigan Tech. Ken Martin, with a 15•2-l won•&#13;
loss record, continues as the team's top wrestler and must be&#13;
considered a good bet for top national honors, as last year, when he&#13;
placed in second in the NA IA at 134pounds.&#13;
0&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
m&#13;
·- 2 .. season on a good note." ,ppg ; forwards, Bob Popp,&#13;
Burlington j&amp;Jnlor, 1.t.O, and&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, Racine&#13;
freshman, 16.3; guards, Tom&#13;
Joyce, Greendale freshman,&#13;
13.'9. and Denn Is ( Oeke)&#13;
Routheaux, Ewen, Mich.,&#13;
junior, 7 .s.&#13;
. , .. . - .. Stephens wlll probably go&#13;
with the same lineup that has&#13;
carried the Rangers recently,&#13;
one which Includes the team's&#13;
top five scorers: Center, Tom&#13;
Heller, Kenosha freshman, 11.,&#13;
EIGHT RACINE AREA JAYC~ RECENTLY BRAVED&#13;
-6 DEGREE WEATHER TO COLLECT FUNDS TO FIGHT&#13;
CYSTIC FIBROSIS. THEIR "TOLL ROAD" IS PART&#13;
OF ASTATE·NATIONAL FROJECT.&#13;
H; Fol ks! T"e beenthe&#13;
circ.ulati~n r,~najer to-r NE'WSCOPE for&#13;
+he lasi half ~edr or so. We U +he. s~d news&#13;
jc.; T'm 3oin~ -hi ha"e -b 9i\le up 4\\is 'P.festi~io1J5&#13;
pos ,tion -for an under h"rs st..\tus Q-+ 4-he.&#13;
TIMES- REPORTER.&#13;
NE.\JSCOPE.'5 9oin__1 -\o be need\t'\_3 a rep\acerri'-nt&#13;
for me ancl ~.!tu cou\cl ~ ir H ! .:c.P 'iov ha"e Q cdr&#13;
8C\d are. -tre.e. on Tuesd.a'1 morl'\inqs or ~~tet"noo ns ~ n-e.e c\ ~ ou. ~ .a tu r a n1 NEW SC.crPE ('o \I~~ '-f out'&#13;
+, a.ve..l e~ pen., ~.s.&#13;
J:.f "lo"'re. inte,~st(!c!1 ple.l~~ phone. SS:!.--.2'¾&lt;fb&#13;
and. "to"'l\ be wh,skEd +o -\-\,Q +op ot a&#13;
pi\e o-f newspcl pers. &#13;
?resents ~&#13;
THE&#13;
Saturday, FebruarJ I 'lfh ·&#13;
9 f'•m. - J_ a.m.&#13;
*&#13;
STUDENT AlTIVITIE~ BIJILDING&#13;
Admission - $ /, 2 5&#13;
/Jrh;Je anQ 1/isconsin ID. 's Re'i-vired </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63648">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 6, February 14, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63649">
                <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="63650">
                <text>1972-02-14</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="63653">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63654">
                <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="63655">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63656">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63657">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63658">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="968">
        <name>college of science and society</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="176">
        <name>george mcgovern</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4605">
        <name>student loans</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="229">
        <name>tallent hall</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2612" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4436">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/5cf1d44c00cc9914be96fd472a038490.pdf</src>
        <authentication>48dc69965e1f79d00898ea75bd9b23e8</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63663">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 7</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63664">
              <text>Lindsay in Kenosha</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63671">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89892">
              <text>VOTER REGISTRATION DEADLINE FEB. 2 3&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parks ide&#13;
Volume 6 Number 7 February 21,1972&#13;
Lindsay in Kenosha&#13;
by Paul Lomartireand Marc&#13;
Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
For Jerry Bruno it was&#13;
another successful performance.&#13;
The legendary advance&#13;
man brought his '72&#13;
candidate home to Kenosha,&#13;
giving the locals a chance to&#13;
see, hear, and touch the heir&#13;
apparent to charismatic&#13;
politics, John Lindsay.&#13;
Bruno, long associated with&#13;
the Kennedys, orchestrated a&#13;
highly polished campaign stop&#13;
for the presidential hopeful,&#13;
before a packed crowd of 500 in&#13;
the Saint Joseph High School&#13;
cafeteria.&#13;
The public was invited to the&#13;
Sunday afternoon reception by&#13;
mailed invitation. The Kenosha&#13;
native was producing excitement&#13;
reminiscent of his&#13;
work during the Kennedy era.&#13;
"They're your guests," he&#13;
told a roomful of giddy junior&#13;
hostesses, referring to the&#13;
growing crowd, "you must be&#13;
courteous." The volunteers,&#13;
wearing smiles and "Lindsay"&#13;
sashes, were to form a human&#13;
corridor for their candidate&#13;
from the entrance of the&#13;
cafeteria to the podium.&#13;
Standing in the school's office,&#13;
temporarily labelled&#13;
"Press", were plain clothes&#13;
detectives quietly talking, as&#13;
reporters waited for their copy.&#13;
In the cafeteria, hostesses&#13;
served coffee and cookies to a&#13;
crowd of local politicos, hard&#13;
core Democrats, establishment&#13;
typ e s , on-t he-m ove&#13;
professionals, and the curious&#13;
citizenry in search of a handshake&#13;
and autograph.&#13;
Jerry Bruno had prepared&#13;
Kenosha" for the Mayor of New&#13;
York City.&#13;
He moved quickly, flashing a&#13;
movie star smile. His face was&#13;
tan, angular in shape, his hair a&#13;
sandy-gray hue. He -Wore a&#13;
(Continued on Page 4)&#13;
BOARD OF&#13;
DIRECTORS&#13;
MEETING&#13;
at the office&#13;
Tues. 7 pm&#13;
charcoal colored suit and vest, a&#13;
tie, unshined black shoes, and a&#13;
slightly wrinkled blue pinstripped&#13;
shirt. There was an&#13;
easiness to him, an outward&#13;
unconcern for the details of his&#13;
appearance.&#13;
He mounted the cramped&#13;
speaker's platform, shook the&#13;
hands of a few local dignitaries&#13;
and smiled through a short&#13;
introduction by Kenosha Attorney&#13;
David Phillips. He began&#13;
his verbal campaign.&#13;
The tax load in the country&#13;
must be restructured, he&#13;
asserted. "If elected President,&#13;
I intend to shift the burden of&#13;
taxation away from the&#13;
property tax to the federal&#13;
government."&#13;
It was a mistake, furthermore,&#13;
to use property taxes&#13;
to finance welfare programs.&#13;
Noting the number of&#13;
millionaires that pay no income&#13;
taxes, he said, "Every nickel&#13;
earned by working men and&#13;
women in this country is fully&#13;
taxable. This is not true of a&#13;
great many other Americans. I&#13;
intend to change a system in&#13;
which hundreds of Americans&#13;
go without paying taxes. I intend&#13;
to change a system in&#13;
Gay Lib organizing&#13;
at UWP&#13;
by Jim Koloenofthe Newscope staff&#13;
Political organizations with minority views are nothing new to&#13;
Parkside; the Young Socialist Alliance is a defunct example, the&#13;
YAF is another . A new minority group is presently in the process of&#13;
gaining recognition as a campus organization, that group is Gay&#13;
Liberation. Gay Lib is perhaps the only political organization (with&#13;
the exception of Women's Lib) which can find detractors on each&#13;
side of the political spectrum, an organization whose very name&#13;
elicits gut reactions of repugnance from some, and an uncertain&#13;
bemusement from others. It, like Women's Lib, represents a&#13;
sexopolitical movement, still an enigma in conventional political&#13;
thought.&#13;
Gay Lib may soon be a reality at P-side, and the two students&#13;
Newscope recently interviewed, Junior Dan Robeski and Fresh&#13;
man Nat Evanoff, are its guiding force. The two articulate&#13;
longhairs told Newscope they began the effort to gain recognition&#13;
two weeks ago, and were initially greeted with an "is it even&#13;
legal?" reply, followed by a suggestion that they "change the name&#13;
to something more obscure." Even so, they explained that so far&#13;
things have been going smoothly, and that they don't foresee any&#13;
major setbacks in their quest for recognition.&#13;
Evanoff explained the organization would be open to everyone,&#13;
gay and straight, and that its purpose for the present is both&#13;
educational and "necessarily political because we constitute a&#13;
minority." Evanoff further explained that "we want to help the gay&#13;
members of the university to establish a sense of identity and group&#13;
pride." "What we want to do," added Robeski, "is form some sort&#13;
of group cohesion, as well as educating the community and&#13;
possibly, in the future, allying ourselves with other Gay&#13;
organizations in the state."&#13;
They told Newscope that rather than go out and recruit&#13;
members, "we'll let them come around to us." The two Gay Lib&#13;
bers also expressed the hope that by organizing at Parkside, "we&#13;
can set an example to gay members of the smaller, private, more&#13;
restrictive schools in the area such as Carthage and Dominican."&#13;
Newscope asked how their idea had been received by fellow&#13;
students. They said the reaction was generally favorable. Evanoff&#13;
expressed the hope that a violent opposition wouldn't emerge such&#13;
as he'd experienced at Rice University while organizing a Gay Lib&#13;
there; "people weje getting beat up in dorms!"&#13;
Their advisor is Hal Stern, and though their membership is&#13;
presently composed of only themselves, they expressed the belief&#13;
that, in the near future their ranks will swell considerably. Once&#13;
recognized they hope to present speakers, and that other plans&#13;
depend upon what opportunities they will gain from being&#13;
recognized. Asked if their efforts were being aided from outside the&#13;
campus, they told Newscope that suggestions and encouragement&#13;
were coming from the Madison, Chicago and Milwaukee Gay&#13;
communities. They said one of the biggest stumbling blocks, as&#13;
well as a major reason for organizing a Gay Lib, is to combat the&#13;
"old queer syndrome". Evanoff said, "we'd like to see it die."&#13;
A new move&#13;
PARKSIDE ANNEXATION&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
ofthe Newscope staff&#13;
A new move is presently&#13;
underway to annex Parkside,&#13;
and some of the land that lies&#13;
between the campus and the&#13;
city of Kenosha to Kenosha.&#13;
This latest move is being instituted&#13;
by United States&#13;
General Inc., a Brookfield,&#13;
Wis., based land development&#13;
firm, in the form of a petition&#13;
requesting a referendum on the&#13;
issue. Unlike the last&#13;
referendum, which failed, Psi8e&#13;
students who reside in&#13;
Parkside Village are being&#13;
asked to sign the petition.&#13;
The first annexation move&#13;
(the referendum took place&#13;
October 12,1971) failed by a 11-4&#13;
vote. At that time only 17&#13;
electors of Somers were eligible&#13;
to vote; of this number ten&#13;
signed the petition requesting&#13;
the annexation be put on a&#13;
referendum. Heated debates&#13;
ensued between the City of&#13;
Kenosha (whose city council&#13;
approved of the annexation)&#13;
and the Town of Somers. A&#13;
threat was reported against the&#13;
well-being of one of the electors.&#13;
The 11-4 vote demonstrated a&#13;
dramatic turn of events, as&#13;
many of those who signed the&#13;
petition requested that an&#13;
nexation be put on a referendum,&#13;
voted against it. This turn&#13;
of events can be attributed to&#13;
either the more full airing of the&#13;
facts that occurred between the&#13;
time the petition was filed and&#13;
the final vote took place, or to&#13;
the reaction the voters felt at&#13;
the threat upon one of their&#13;
numbers. Mayor Burkee of&#13;
Kenosha, who vigorously&#13;
backed the annexation move,&#13;
was quoted in the Kenosha&#13;
News immediately after the&#13;
referendum results were known&#13;
as saying, "It is unfortunate&#13;
that a handful of farmers is able&#13;
to stifle the growth of a great&#13;
university."&#13;
Now a new petition is being&#13;
circulated with a few significant&#13;
changes; the acreage concerned&#13;
is up from 1,340 to 1,417,&#13;
and there are more than 350&#13;
eligible electors in compariosn&#13;
to the 17 eligible during the first&#13;
referendum. A substantial&#13;
number of these new electors&#13;
live at Parkside Village.&#13;
Why annex? The basic issues&#13;
argued by the city include the&#13;
realization of the city's land&#13;
investment at P-side, concern&#13;
over fire and police protection,&#13;
and an uncertainty as to&#13;
Somers' ability to provide&#13;
adequate water and sewer&#13;
services. Perhaps an equally&#13;
substantial though less laudable&#13;
item, is future land development.&#13;
&#13;
Mayor Burkee has argued&#13;
about Kenosha's investment in&#13;
the land that the University now&#13;
stands on, the 748 acres it&#13;
purchased from the Somers&#13;
land owners, many of whom&#13;
were reluctant to give it up at&#13;
any price. He has spoken about&#13;
the uncertainty of Somers'&#13;
ability to provide adequate&#13;
sewer and water facilities.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie has gone on&#13;
record stating that Parkside&#13;
has adequate facilities for the&#13;
next few years, while Somers&#13;
and Mt. Pleasant have undertaken&#13;
feasibility studies in&#13;
connection with a proposed&#13;
treatment plant to be located&#13;
near the Parkside campus; a&#13;
plant (^signed to fulfill the&#13;
expected needs of the university&#13;
in the years ahead.&#13;
The Mayor and others have&#13;
pointed out the need for police&#13;
and fire protection. Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie has stated that Parkside&#13;
has its own security force, while&#13;
Somers has pointed out that it&#13;
has a firm agreement from Mt.&#13;
Pleasant to combine their fire&#13;
fighting forces in the event of a&#13;
(Continued on Page 5)&#13;
P R O P O S ED A N N E X AT I 0N -&#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
Come visit our pizza&#13;
kitchens or have&#13;
some delivered'&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5—12&#13;
except Sunday&#13;
4615—7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
3a»*&#13;
i&#13;
tfzzA&#13;
jmuimuii' i ,• ii.i.i.'.i.'.i.'.i m u' i,u.M.i.i.'.cg:&#13;
RUBYS&#13;
A j Jjmaj&#13;
t&gt; tyty OJ^AKJ tie- U/uV (hyMj&#13;
5535-6 A ve. Kenosha&#13;
J O O O O O O O O O O O O O Q O O O O O O O O O O Q l f li&#13;
JOM sm&#13;
WINDJAMMER&#13;
TENDERLOIN S TEAK&#13;
*ND T UMBLED O NIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Sefwing Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DININC&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN R OOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WIND&#13;
JAMMER DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
- HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
SENATOR PRQXMIRE&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
( T H E F OL L O W I N G L E T T E R&#13;
IS A R EP L Y T O AN A R T I C LE&#13;
W H ICH A P P E A R E D IN L AS T&#13;
W E E K 'S N E W S C OP E. T H E&#13;
A R T I C L E E N T I T L E D&#13;
G O ES O N ' .&#13;
T H E CU R R E N T&#13;
B O Y C O TT O P&#13;
G R A P ES A N D&#13;
L A H UE L G A&#13;
C O N C E R N ED&#13;
N A T I O N W I DE&#13;
C A L I F O R N IA&#13;
R E L A T E D F A R M P RO D U C TS&#13;
Nine wineries in Northern&#13;
California are being subjected&#13;
to illegal secondary boycotts of&#13;
their products at certain retail&#13;
outlets. As part of the U.F.-&#13;
W.O.C. (United Farm Workers&#13;
Organizing Committee) effort&#13;
to force itself on our employees,&#13;
that Union has resorted to a&#13;
series of falsehoods and&#13;
distortions, and has completely&#13;
ignored one basic fact. The&#13;
U.F.W.O.C. has NEVER&#13;
presented convincing evidence&#13;
of employee support at any of&#13;
the firms involved and is not&#13;
even remotely interested in the&#13;
employee's preference in the&#13;
matter. Their propaganda&#13;
constantly overlooks the&#13;
following basic issues:&#13;
1. Employee wages, fringe&#13;
benefits, hospitalization and&#13;
housing at the wineries being&#13;
boycotted are among the best in&#13;
the agricultural industry and&#13;
considerably above those called&#13;
for in existing U.F.W.O.C.&#13;
contracts.&#13;
2. The wineries concerned&#13;
have consistently supported the&#13;
concept of a free secret ballot&#13;
election under Government&#13;
supervision to determine the&#13;
wishes of the employees in an&#13;
atmosphere free of coercion,&#13;
restraint or intimidation.&#13;
3. U.F.W.O.C. has refused to&#13;
allow employees to participate&#13;
in the secret ballot election&#13;
process and has refused even to&#13;
discuss a secret ballot election&#13;
in order to determine employee&#13;
desires. The Union wants the&#13;
wineries to sign a contract&#13;
which requires employees to&#13;
pay dues and fees to the Union&#13;
after seven days of employment&#13;
as a precondition to the employees'&#13;
ability to work. The&#13;
wineries feel that to force such a&#13;
contract upon their employees&#13;
without the employees' consent&#13;
violates a basic American&#13;
freedom, the worker's right to a&#13;
free choice under the secret&#13;
ballot. The wineries will continue&#13;
to extend this offer of&#13;
secret ballot elections to&#13;
U.F.W.O.C. in the belief that&#13;
such an election protects the&#13;
rights of the U.F.W.O.C., the&#13;
wineries, and most importantly,&#13;
wawa&lt;a&lt;as&gt;B&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Robin David, Pat McDermid,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Jean Frahm, Larry&#13;
Jones, Jim Koloen, John Koloen,&#13;
Rich Lipke, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Kevin McKay, Fred&#13;
Noer, Jr., Brian Ross, Wolfgang&#13;
Salewski, Andy Schmelling, Barb&#13;
Scott, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, Bill Sorensen, Mike&#13;
Stevesand, Debbie Venskus&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
THE EMPLOYEES. We do not&#13;
intend to succumb to illegal&#13;
boycott pressure nor do we&#13;
intend to sacrifice the rights of&#13;
our employees to improper and&#13;
immoral union demands.&#13;
We ask for your understanding,&#13;
your patience, and&#13;
your support to protect the&#13;
rights and privileges of our&#13;
employees, customers and the&#13;
public at large.&#13;
Beringer Brothers&#13;
Kornell Champagne Cellars&#13;
Louis Martini Winery&#13;
Sebastiani Vineyards&#13;
F. Korbel and Bros.&#13;
Charles Krug Winery&#13;
Robert Mondavi Winery&#13;
Weibel, Inc.&#13;
Wente Brothers&#13;
Dear John Koloen,&#13;
Editor of Newscope&#13;
In your February 7th T972&#13;
issue there was an article&#13;
written about the North Ranch&#13;
Restaurant. I am the proprietor&#13;
of the Ranch and very proud to&#13;
be so. I have been in the&#13;
Restaurant business in Kenosha&#13;
for 22 years, and have been very&#13;
successful at it.&#13;
A good part of my business&#13;
patrons come from Parkside&#13;
and Carthage. I enjoy their&#13;
patronage and I am sure they&#13;
must enjoy the North and South&#13;
Ranch or they wouldh't keep&#13;
coming back.&#13;
I employ nine students from&#13;
Parkside as waitresses and&#13;
cooks, and I must say they are&#13;
all good employees. Through&#13;
the years I have helped over a&#13;
100 students earn their way&#13;
through college and other&#13;
schools, and I intend to continue&#13;
to do so. There are five families&#13;
that derive their sole support&#13;
from the Ranch Restaurants&#13;
and I am sure that they want to&#13;
keep our reputation at a high&#13;
level.&#13;
Paul Lomartire wrote a very&#13;
prejudice article on the Ranch&#13;
Restaurant. I was working the&#13;
night that he was there at the&#13;
Ranch. The waitresses that&#13;
were on duty at the time are all&#13;
good waitresses. It is possible&#13;
that some of his complaints&#13;
were true, but if I did&#13;
everything wrong that he accused&#13;
us of, how could I possibly&#13;
be one of the most successful&#13;
Restaurants in town.&#13;
We serve over 500,000 people a&#13;
year at the Ranch Restaurants,&#13;
and we get very few complaints,&#13;
and a lot of compliments.&#13;
It is a sorry thing when&#13;
unqualified people can do&#13;
damage to a reputable business&#13;
and its many good employees.&#13;
Let's hope that the press in the&#13;
future is used for honest endeavor.&#13;
&#13;
I hold no anger towards&#13;
Parkside student or any of the&#13;
faculty,'but I think you as editor&#13;
should screen your material&#13;
before printing, so as tc&#13;
properly represent the people&#13;
that are responsible for&#13;
Newscope, and not represent&#13;
two irresponsible people.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Richard St. Germain&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained ad&#13;
vertising funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
Photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
w.thm 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road.&#13;
local...&#13;
SGA ELECTIONS&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association will hold an&#13;
election on March 7 and 8 to fill vacancies in the senate. Interested&#13;
candidates should obtain nominating petitions at the SGA office&#13;
(Hwy. Aand Wood Road, 553-2493or 553-2244) or at the Tallent Hall&#13;
Student Activities Office. Deadline for filing is February 25,1972 - 4&#13;
p.m. Additional information and instruction may be obtained at the&#13;
SGA office.&#13;
The following offices are vacant: Senator, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary and Recording Secretary.&#13;
Volunteers also are needed to work at the polls. If you are interested&#13;
please contact Jim Twist, Chairman of Elections, or sign&#13;
up at the SGA office.&#13;
Pre-Law Club to Write Election Laws&#13;
Last Wednesday, February 9, at a regular meeting of the PreLaw&#13;
Club, a special committee was formed to write the election&#13;
laws for the upcoming and future student government elections at&#13;
the request of the PSGA.&#13;
Members of the committee are Timothy W. Prostko, chairman,&#13;
Peter Gallo, co-chairman, Rebecca Ecklund, Mark Harris, John&#13;
Regnery, and Michael Baxter. The committee would welcome any&#13;
suggestions made by students or faculty members. Suggestions&#13;
may be made in a letter or in person to any committee member, or&#13;
to Professors Richard Rosenberg (ext. 51K) and Oliver Hayward&#13;
(ext. 35R).&#13;
$1/000 Grant for Parkside&#13;
MADISON — A $1,000 grant from the Standard Oil (Indiana)&#13;
Foundation to be awarded in recognition of outstanding teaching at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside was accepted Friday by the&#13;
UW System Board of Regents.&#13;
Mr* re9eu&#13;
TSrf&#13;
IS° aPProved an unrestricted grant of $100 from&#13;
Library °&#13;
n&#13;
°' Laguna HMIs&#13;
' CaMf&#13;
" f&#13;
°&#13;
r Parkside&#13;
nationalFormer&#13;
Narc Calls For&#13;
Decriminalization of Marijuana&#13;
John Finlator, recently retired Deputy Director of the Federal&#13;
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, today said he strongly&#13;
avors the immediate decriminalization of marijuana, and predicts&#13;
legalization&#13;
- And until this is done, Finlator said, he&#13;
aoubts that any of our efforts to combat the heroin problem in this&#13;
oun ry, or any other serious drug abuse problems can be effective.&#13;
Resolution to Impeach Rockefeller lnroduced&#13;
&#13;
A th&#13;
BU&#13;
^&#13;
F&#13;
t&#13;
LY' N Y* (CPS) ~~ New York state Assemblyman&#13;
rln « h8S introduced a resolution in the state Assembly&#13;
*f. '!n9 the irnPeachment of Governor Nelson Rockefeller for his&#13;
is an ing of the Attica prison riot last September which cost the&#13;
lives of 43 people.&#13;
Fe?r&#13;
Sp^&#13;
ky&#13;
.&#13;
Spy t0 SPot Fields&#13;
defprtoH k Marijuana and opium poppy fields are soon to be&#13;
launrh^H ?kV an earth resource&#13;
s satellite that is scheduled to be&#13;
Tho .&#13;
I&#13;
.xSpring&#13;
' accord&#13;
ing to a recent Associated Press story,&#13;
will ho I',"&#13;
9 *&#13;
atel,ite&lt; scheduled for launching in May or June,&#13;
says AP P3 6 detec&#13;
*'&#13;
n9 Pot or poppy fields from 100 miles up, &#13;
Educator Speaks in C oncourse&#13;
February 21,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
by Jim Koloenofthe Newscope staff&#13;
The big, wavy haired man dressed in a gray&#13;
striped suit, paisley shirt and yellow tie, told the&#13;
over 400 listeners in the Greenquist concourse that&#13;
Parkside's catalogue "has the word innovation in&#13;
every other line." He continued, "I just hope nobody&#13;
tor real is running around the campus thinking&#13;
Parkside is innovative." He explained to the by now&#13;
applauding crowd that the word is obviously "just&#13;
for the catalogue writer."&#13;
Dwight Allen, Dean of the University of&#13;
Massachusetts School of Education, spoke Wednesday&#13;
night at 8 p.m. on the topic of "Making the&#13;
Future of Education Less Certain." He was brought&#13;
to Parkside under the auspices of the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee, and the free lecture was very&#13;
well attended.&#13;
Allen spoke for an hour and twenty minutes,&#13;
pacing back and forth on the podium while explaining&#13;
that the more certain the future of&#13;
education is, the worse off it will be. The educator&#13;
who bore a slight resemblance to Billy Graham,&#13;
presented a lecture to the sweltering audience that&#13;
was both humorous and serious, informative and&#13;
interesting. He spoke on the "freedom to fail",&#13;
"institutional racism", student participation in the&#13;
administration of the educational system, and the&#13;
need for teachers who are "biased, dedicated and&#13;
committed".&#13;
During the course of the lecture, Prof. Allen&#13;
explained that at his school, next year all grades&#13;
will be abolished; a person will receive a pass or a&#13;
no record grade, "we'll put on a student's record&#13;
what he can do rather than write down what he can't&#13;
do."&#13;
Another step he plans to take will be the&#13;
elimination of the semester system. He told the&#13;
audience that there is absolutely no reason a&#13;
specific class should require a standard number of&#13;
weeks to teach, that each instructor should set his&#13;
own time limits based on his own experiences. In a&#13;
direct reference to Parkside, Allen said there was&#13;
no conceivable reason for having required courses.&#13;
He explained further that if a student passes a&#13;
course which exacts required courses he hasn't&#13;
taken, that student should receive pass grades for&#13;
those courses as well.&#13;
After asking the audience for answers to some&#13;
of the questions he threw at them", and receiving few&#13;
replies, he spoke of the need for integrating as many&#13;
alternatives and choices as possible in education.&#13;
He said, "a school is where the most risks should be&#13;
taken", to be innovative requires experimentation,&#13;
and though this approach assumes the possibility of&#13;
error, it is also the only way one can discover the&#13;
best educational methods.&#13;
Varying the tone of his voice from a whisper to a&#13;
^hnut. the Massachusetts educator attacked the&#13;
"objectivity lie" that runs rampant in elementary&#13;
and secondary schools. He said a "teacher cannot&#13;
live and be neutral," that ideally a teacher should&#13;
be "biased, dedicated and committed, in&#13;
recognition of the pluralistic society America is".&#13;
He explained that a teacher can no longer teach&#13;
values because he is expected to be either "neuter&#13;
or neutral". "Even citizenship is too controversial&#13;
to teach." As far as subject matter is concerned,&#13;
Allen told the audience that "the school should&#13;
teach everything which is legal, in so doing you will&#13;
be assured of alternatives; allow for a choice."&#13;
But the topic Allen stressed most vehemently&#13;
during his lecture concerned institutional racism,&#13;
the need to destroy it but the primary need of&#13;
recognizing it first. "Scholars can no longer hide&#13;
from these realities if society is to continue."&#13;
"Lower admission standards do not combat&#13;
racism", he continued, "they perpetuate it. "Before&#13;
there can be equality there must be equity.'" To&#13;
emphasize his point Allen used the example of&#13;
"Winning the American West" as a typical subject&#13;
for American History. The textbook version, he&#13;
said, "is the sanitized, American white majority&#13;
version. This is racist! What we need to do is incorporate&#13;
as many viewpoints as possible; the&#13;
French, the British, and Spanish." He continued the&#13;
list of viewpoints by adding the Indian, and the&#13;
"Coolie" viewpoint of the "Winning of the American&#13;
West". He told the audience that if the educational&#13;
system doesn't end its institutional racism, racism&#13;
will never end.&#13;
He spoke briefly of the objective of education.&#13;
"One is sheer, crass status." He pointed out the&#13;
recent merger of the UW system and said that the&#13;
status is gone from a UW degree "because there are&#13;
so many around." "Now we are trying to discover a&#13;
new status symbol to take the place of the degree."&#13;
Professor Allen ended the lecture with an explanation&#13;
of what he wanted to do during the&#13;
evening. "I want to make you feel uneasy about&#13;
education at all levels, and I w ant to help you feel&#13;
powerful, make you feel we can change things."&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Black Newsman to Visit Campus&#13;
The Black Student Union, in&#13;
cooperation with the Racine&#13;
Commission on Human&#13;
Relations, and UW-f^arkside&#13;
Student Services, is bringing&#13;
Mel Goode, nationally known&#13;
black news commentator and&#13;
analyst, to Parkside.&#13;
Goode joined ABC as one of&#13;
its UN correspondents in 1962,&#13;
after fourteen years with the&#13;
Pittsburgh Courier and many&#13;
years of broadcasting experience&#13;
in radio and television&#13;
with Pittsburgh area stations.&#13;
He was educated in the public&#13;
schools of Homestead, Pennsylvania,&#13;
and graduated from&#13;
the University of Pittsburgh.&#13;
He was employed for twelve&#13;
years as a laborer in the steel&#13;
mills while in high school and&#13;
college, and for five years after&#13;
graduation.&#13;
After working for many of the&#13;
local medias in Pittsburgh, his&#13;
big break finally came when he&#13;
was employed by ABC in 1962.&#13;
He was the first Black&#13;
newsman employed as a&#13;
regular network correspondent,&#13;
and the first Black to hold&#13;
membership in the National&#13;
Association of Radio and TV&#13;
News Directors, and the&#13;
Association of Radio and TV&#13;
News Analysts.&#13;
Goode covered both the&#13;
Democratic and Republican&#13;
conventions with the ABC news&#13;
team in 1964 and 1968.&#13;
During ABC's intensive&#13;
coverage of the aftermath of&#13;
Dr. -King's death, Goode&#13;
distinguished himself with&#13;
interviews of those who had&#13;
come to Atlanta to mourn the&#13;
death of the famed civil rights&#13;
leader.&#13;
Goode has interviewed many&#13;
of the world's top figures including&#13;
President Johnson,&#13;
President Nixon, Ambassadors&#13;
Zorin and Malik of the Soviet&#13;
Union; Sir Patrick Dean and&#13;
Lord Caradon of Great Britain;&#13;
the late Adlai Stevenson, former&#13;
UN Ambassador Arthur&#13;
Goldberg, Governors Scranton,&#13;
Rockefeller, Maddox and&#13;
Wallace; Senators Eastland,&#13;
Brooke, Javits, Fulbright,&#13;
Goodell and the late Robert&#13;
Kennedy.&#13;
Goode will speak in the&#13;
Badger Room of Racine&#13;
Campus Monday, February 28,&#13;
at 8:00 P.M. The public is invited&#13;
to attend.&#13;
CORRECTION&#13;
Mockus Tap is owned by June&#13;
Johnson and operated by Cliff&#13;
Meyer. Last issue's On the Nod&#13;
stated that Meyer was owner of&#13;
the Tap. We apologize for this&#13;
error.&#13;
U-W.&#13;
ELasfcr Break&#13;
Trips To:&#13;
ROME&#13;
(2nd plane)&#13;
ACAPULCO&#13;
Information Available at&#13;
Student Activities Office — Tallent Hall&#13;
m***********************************************************&#13;
—Honest George Sale — during February&#13;
smm a free cherry tree with purchase of any major ite i m&#13;
Freezers — start at $194&#13;
Admiral Color TV start at $199&#13;
18" Color start at $299&#13;
Heavy duty washers start at $169&#13;
Apartment size washers start at $109&#13;
Refrigerators start at $179&#13;
Warehouse Discount Prices&#13;
micro-ovens, air conditioners&#13;
R. C. Service&#13;
One Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
Ron Casperson - owner&#13;
VK W IAIIAI IAI IAI IAIIA4104IAIIAIIAIIAIIAIIAIIAIIAI IAI IAI IAI IAI IAI IAIIAI IAI ITU Vtf MM MM &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
Help Fight Heir Pollution&#13;
Zero Population Growth is a nationally known non-profit&#13;
organization founded by Paul Ehrlich for the purpose of stopping&#13;
the population explosion through education and political activity. A&#13;
Parkside chapter is being started and all interested people are&#13;
encouraged to see Bob Moore on the Kenosha Campus Room 116-B.&#13;
The telephone extension is 34K.&#13;
£*\porhrs of&#13;
/mers&#13;
7&#13;
/ H O I W ^ U o j + o n / U .&#13;
5 0&#13;
I r\ up+own Ro^ci ne&#13;
Tky I v\C£,&#13;
•—d*K)rvffor&#13;
ood-&#13;
£e/uu*Uf the fytitedt&#13;
Pvpy* £ 9taiUm Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LldUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
CALL FOR CANDIDATES&#13;
+ + +&#13;
SGA Spring Election&#13;
March 7 and 8&#13;
-f + +&#13;
The following positions are open:&#13;
Senator (1)&#13;
Recording Secretary (1)&#13;
Corresponding Secretary (1)&#13;
Nominating Petitions are available at SGA office&#13;
or Student Activities - Tallent Hall&#13;
(Filing Deadline February 25,1972)&#13;
Humphrey speaks in Milwaukee&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Speaking at a non-partisan&#13;
voter registration rally in&#13;
Milwaukee last Saturday&#13;
Presidential hopeful Hubert&#13;
Humphrey told several hundred&#13;
young people that "Nothing&#13;
comes easy. Nothing is instant.&#13;
People who have power do not&#13;
relinquish that power easily and&#13;
it will be the task of the new&#13;
voter to make the changes that&#13;
are required in this land."&#13;
The rally, sponsored by the&#13;
Boston Store, featured former&#13;
Senator and Governor of Alaska&#13;
Ernest Gruening who Humphrey&#13;
called "the Ben Franklin&#13;
of modern America", st&#13;
State Senators James Devitt&#13;
and Niles Soik, and other&#13;
representatives of the various&#13;
Presidential candidates.&#13;
In a short speech Gruening&#13;
warned the audience that&#13;
"we're in danger of becoming a&#13;
police state if we have four&#13;
more years of Richard Nixon."&#13;
Devitt, a Republican, spoke of&#13;
the power of the youth vote&#13;
stating that "young people will&#13;
be the salvation of o ur nation."&#13;
Supporters for most of the&#13;
candidates attended the rally&#13;
bearing placards and trumpeting&#13;
support for their candidate&#13;
during the speeches, but&#13;
until Humphrey arrived the&#13;
meeting was relatively quiet if&#13;
not attentive. Gruening's&#13;
speech was interrupted to allow&#13;
Mr. Humphrey to speak. The&#13;
extraneous noise dropped&#13;
dramatically as he took the&#13;
podium and for the first time&#13;
the television cameras turned to&#13;
the stage.&#13;
Referring to legislation that&#13;
would provide universal voter&#13;
registration Humphrey said,&#13;
"We intend to use the very same&#13;
services of government that&#13;
send a tax blank to the&#13;
American citizen — the Post&#13;
Office, Census Bureau and the&#13;
Revenue Service — to provide&#13;
registration for every citizen of&#13;
this country."&#13;
He encouraged young people&#13;
to become involved in the&#13;
political process, urging them&#13;
to participate in party&#13;
caucuses. "That's exactly what&#13;
is needed today. Young people&#13;
entering the political process&#13;
and having something to say&#13;
about platforms, programs and&#13;
candidates."&#13;
He warned them not to expect&#13;
immediate results pointing out&#13;
that Gruening had worked for 25&#13;
years to get Alaska its&#13;
statehood. "I ask you to be the&#13;
distance runner, I ask you to&#13;
stay with what you believe and&#13;
not give up, but more importantly&#13;
I ask you to go to&#13;
(Continued from pac&#13;
which oil companies an&lt;&#13;
giants come forward eac&#13;
without paying their fail&#13;
of taxes."&#13;
Moving to the war, he f&#13;
to end it immediately u&#13;
election.&#13;
As for a national he;&#13;
surance program, he s&#13;
strongly favored one.&#13;
Confronting the ques&#13;
whether a Mayor is qua|&#13;
be President, he declai&#13;
was in the federal gove&#13;
for upwards of ten years&#13;
can tell you that any&#13;
week as Mayor of Nev&#13;
City teaches one more&#13;
HUMPHREY B ACKER ENJ OYING HERSELF AT RALLY&#13;
work."&#13;
After his speech Humphrey&#13;
indicated that present&#13;
legislation affecting welfare&#13;
reform was not adequate adding&#13;
that he opposed compulsory&#13;
work provisions for&#13;
women with families. He voiced&#13;
a need for "child development&#13;
centers" and denounced&#13;
President Nixon's veto of the&#13;
Child Care and Development&#13;
Center Program as "cruel and&#13;
outlandish."&#13;
Following his speech Humphrey&#13;
left the rally to meet with&#13;
his supporters at his campaign&#13;
headquarters on Wisconsin&#13;
Avenue. While there Newscope&#13;
asked his opinion of legalizing&#13;
marijuana. Humphrey said, "I&#13;
would and do recommend a&#13;
very sharp reduction in&#13;
penalties. I think the idea of&#13;
making the user a felon is&#13;
ridiculous and that at the most&#13;
it should be down as a&#13;
misdemeanor and really with&#13;
no court orders or sentences on&#13;
the first offense."&#13;
Reacting to the controversial&#13;
Drug Commission report he&#13;
said, "I think that when we get&#13;
our full reports then we have to&#13;
act accordingly, I mean from&#13;
the scientific and medical&#13;
community, that's when we&#13;
act."&#13;
Responding to President&#13;
Nixon's much publicized opposition&#13;
to the Drug Commission's&#13;
suggestions he said,&#13;
"The President said that he&#13;
doesn't care what the evidence&#13;
shows, what kind of President is&#13;
that? That's like saying you&#13;
don't care what the court&#13;
rules."&#13;
Lor/p&#13;
ON THE NOD SPEAKS OUT&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the IN&#13;
(The following speech was presented at the qu&#13;
My fellow Americans, you are all painfully i&#13;
spirocy" presently being foisted upon us, we the A&#13;
price public. First we gave "the kids" (howdec&lt;&#13;
the privilege of wearing the proud uniform of th&#13;
provided them with a war so they could distingi&#13;
combat. But were they satisfied? You bet your s&#13;
offspring demanded, yes friends, demandedthey&#13;
our wishy-washy, kneejerk, liberals in the Nation&#13;
called "kids". What these hippy, jobless wonderhi&#13;
prospect for the hard-working, right-thinkinjfAme&#13;
Were they satisfied then? No! Yes, my fri&#13;
barricades, it's time to show these kids where we&#13;
our state house, this pernicious progeny, the bet&#13;
our democratically elected legislators into passlnj&#13;
be lowered to 18. I ask you, is this not thestra&#13;
ultimate corkscrew?&#13;
Marihuana wasn't good enough for them, no, i&#13;
and guts, the very elbows of the meat and potatoe&#13;
them their pot and give us the glass. In the imm&#13;
unsung heroes, "Millions for lids but not an ou i&#13;
remain nameless as he fears the almost certain&#13;
kids".&#13;
To the mothers of America, I ask you do you&#13;
company is seldom the exception rather than the&#13;
the evil brew, taught how to use profane language&#13;
out, NO! It is a proven fact that beer leads to here&#13;
dupes of the "youth conspirocy" smoke thegenth&#13;
addict.&#13;
You fathers, do you want your daughter deba&#13;
little girl from the ruffians who occasionally (an&#13;
What about your son? Do you want him to lose his&#13;
inspired such statues as David; the strength that&#13;
to those locked behind the iron curtain? Then si&#13;
belly, whose affects are only now being discoverei&#13;
And to you, my hearty comrades, to you the ;&#13;
your carefully cultivated haunts invaded by a g-c&#13;
students and giggling girls? Yes, you too are the&#13;
youth are let loose to drink wherever they pleas'&#13;
devasting. I foresee in the days ahead a serioi&#13;
perienced during the dark days of the prohibition&#13;
I therefore beseech you, the more rational y&#13;
leave your leaders, renounce them, stamp their v&#13;
flagon, be a true rebel, and stay in school kids. t&#13;
waiting for. I rest my case.&#13;
ecm of &#13;
DSAY&#13;
Page ^&#13;
; and other&#13;
I each year&#13;
fair share&#13;
he pledged&#13;
ly upon his&#13;
health lnhe&#13;
said he&#13;
s.&#13;
question of&#13;
qualified fo&#13;
eclared, "I&#13;
jovernmenf&#13;
ears, and I&#13;
any single&#13;
New York&#13;
nore abouf&#13;
communities and people than do&#13;
all those years put together.&#13;
"I'm running for President&#13;
because change must come,"&#13;
Lidsay said. "This great&#13;
country of ours must stand for&#13;
justice. It must be a country&#13;
that properly rewards a man for&#13;
the sweat of his brow, and give&#13;
the next man in line a chance to&#13;
be rewarded equally."&#13;
Lindsay smiled as the&#13;
audience cheered his last&#13;
campaign promise. Standing&#13;
about twenty feet behind the&#13;
podium to the right, in a crowd&#13;
was Jerry Bruno.&#13;
The advance man had&#13;
presented his candidate to&#13;
Kenosha. He could do no more.&#13;
F the Newscope staff&#13;
the quarterly meeting of UFO post 5.)&#13;
Fully aware by now, of the vicious "youth conthe&#13;
American tax paying, peace but-not-at-anyv&#13;
de ceiving, that seemingly innocuous phrase)&#13;
i of the American military man, why we even&#13;
stinguish themselves on t he honorable field of&#13;
your swe et biped they weren't. The avaricious&#13;
1 they be given the right to vote! And what did&#13;
lation's Capital do? Why they coddled these soiderhogs&#13;
will do with the vote is too terrifying a&#13;
g American breadwinner to even consider,&#13;
ay friends, it's time to once again man the&#13;
re we, the American drinking class, sits. Up in&#13;
le betrayers of their fathers, have hoodwinked&#13;
assing a bill calling for the legal drinking age to&#13;
- straw that broke the winemaker's cask, the&#13;
i, no, now they want to sit next to the very, heart&#13;
otatoes of the American dinner table. I say give&#13;
immortal words of one of America's foremost&#13;
in ounce for drink." This unsung hero asks to&#13;
^rtain reprisals which will emanate from "the&#13;
o you want your daughte r in a bar where polite&#13;
in the rule? Do you want your son corrupted by&#13;
guage and to play pool? American mothers sing&#13;
0 heroin addiction. Let the innocent victims and&#13;
gentle weed, without fear of becoming a crazed&#13;
• debauched? Then protect her, protect daddy's&#13;
v (and once is enough) fre quent drinking halls,&#13;
ise his supple, trim, athletic build, the build that&#13;
1 that brought peace to the world and gives hope&#13;
hen shield him from the dreaded disease beerovered,&#13;
affects akin to the dreaded beri beri.&#13;
J the seasoned veterans of the vat, do you want&#13;
^ ^ gangling horde of longhair hippietypes, shy&#13;
e he victims. Rememb er this, if the millions of&#13;
p ease, the resulting shortage of spirits will be&#13;
serious shortage of spirits not unlike that exjition&#13;
holocaust.&#13;
jnal youth caught in the "youth conspirocy" to&#13;
tieir vile ideas into the ground. Do not pick up the&#13;
ii s. After all, anything worth wanting is worth&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
w&#13;
SL VJlif Supper CfuL&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
551-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan td.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Annexation&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
major fire at Parkside. This&#13;
force includes a hundred foot&#13;
laddeK Those people who&#13;
support the annexation move&#13;
have pointed out that in the&#13;
event of a disaster, Somers and&#13;
Mt. Pleasant could not even&#13;
together combat it. Jerome&#13;
Gumbinger, the recently retired&#13;
Fire Chief of Kenosha, had&#13;
stated earlier that in the event&#13;
of a catastrophe at Parkside,&#13;
his department would help out&#13;
anyway. It is believed by some&#13;
citizens that if Kenosha is to&#13;
afford fire protection to the Pside&#13;
area it would have to invest&#13;
in a new fire station.&#13;
The Somers residents&#13;
themselves fear that if annexation&#13;
were to come about, a&#13;
prohibitive rise in their taxes&#13;
would drive many from their&#13;
land, much of which they htfve&#13;
worked for generations. They&#13;
also fear the imminent&#13;
possibility of rezoning ordinances&#13;
being passed, which&#13;
would open the way for commercial&#13;
exploitation of the land.&#13;
Money-making is a central&#13;
item in the issue, the mayor has&#13;
stated that the city wants to&#13;
cash in on the anticipated $100&#13;
million investment that&#13;
Parkside will represent in a&#13;
decade, land developers such as&#13;
USGI want to build apartment&#13;
houses, shopping centers, etc.&#13;
Newscope spoke with some&#13;
area residents who voted&#13;
against the annexation&#13;
referendum last year. They said&#13;
that beside fears of prohibitive&#13;
taxes, rezoning, and the belief&#13;
that Somers is capable of&#13;
handling the needs of P-side at&#13;
this time, they also expressed a&#13;
firm disagreement with the way&#13;
in which the annexation is&#13;
presently drawn up. They told&#13;
Newscope that it was too&#13;
irregular, that it was a bits and&#13;
pieces affair. If presented with,&#13;
an uniform annexation of the&#13;
area, instead of the irregular&#13;
form, they would be more&#13;
amenable to it. The way it is&#13;
drawn up now is unacceptable,&#13;
they said.&#13;
This time 350 electors will be&#13;
in on a vote, many of them&#13;
students, some of whom may&#13;
continue to live near Parkside,&#13;
many of whom won't, many of&#13;
whom won't fear being driven&#13;
from their land.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in w e st&#13;
Racine&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
~&lt;X r\«C* pliKCt&#13;
f o r « s +&#13;
^our boclyH&#13;
6 I H - 8&#13;
4 4&#13;
/ A v e .&#13;
**• otLoWATCHES&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
Hole* • Accutron&#13;
UltrachrOn - Longine&#13;
Bulova - Movado&#13;
Caravel te - Time*&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
France's&#13;
FSnest •&#13;
Perfume* and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
5617 6th Ave.&#13;
VmuuSco Si £&amp;rvi&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
10% Dis count to students and Fa culty with | . q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Wellact • Lunt&#13;
Reed A 6»rton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefors&#13;
Seneca • Ialique&#13;
Royal Worce*ter &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
^ pL Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
O N S O U TH S H E R I D A N RO A D I N K E N O S H A 6 5 4 - 04 11&#13;
MISSED THAI FIRST ONE!&#13;
U.W.P. Ragtime Rangers&#13;
announces -&#13;
A Second Trip To&#13;
Whitecap Mt.&#13;
March 17-19&#13;
$32.50 for ski club members&#13;
$37.50 for students and faculty&#13;
$42.50 for registered guests&#13;
Sign up at room 217 Tallent Hall&#13;
$ 1 0 00 NO N - R E F U N D A B L E D E P O S I T R E O U I R E D&#13;
includes:&#13;
Transportation, lodging, lift tickets, meals,&#13;
beer party, beginning ski lessons and A GOOD TIME&#13;
. — — - - — &lt;-a~iri 111 I_ii w •&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
1&#13;
, Ih V,HOUND BF.KF&#13;
ON FRENCH CRUST&#13;
BREAD DRESSED&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
I.ETTUCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
DRILLED COUNTRY&#13;
MAM A CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLE WIJEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE.&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
-80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE. DECKER OE BURGER. CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISE ON TOAST 9QC&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
N ORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROA D SOUT H 7500 SHERIDAN RO A D&#13;
, , , i 11 -,, „ , n , - I , , , ,, n&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Vi Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
Pump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
forum&#13;
Newscope Today&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
We missed two stories this week. We missed&#13;
them because we didn't have the people to cover&#13;
them, and that's why you won't read about the&#13;
Women's Caucus and the Faculty Senate meeting,&#13;
and that's why there may not be a Newscope in a&#13;
few weeks. We don't have the personnel.&#13;
It's ironic really when you consider that we feel&#13;
the paper has finally jelled. Contentwise, we're the&#13;
best we've ever been. Financially, we're in a&#13;
relatively stable situation. But it's for nothing&#13;
because we're going to die - possibly this semester,&#13;
almost assuredly by next fall — unless new people&#13;
join the staff.&#13;
Our present Editor and Managing Editor will&#13;
probably leave their positions during the first week&#13;
of March. They were elected last December to serve&#13;
on an interim basis then — at which time we&#13;
had hopes of electing new editors who would serve&#13;
for the remainder of the spring semester and for&#13;
part of the fall semester.&#13;
It's not going to be like that. Right now, there is&#13;
no one to whom to hand the paper over. Hopefully,&#13;
we'll try to patch things together with existing&#13;
personnel, and hold another interim election to&#13;
finish off the semester — an obvious result of which&#13;
would be a decline in the quality of the paper.&#13;
Writing personnel will be forced to do management&#13;
and production work.&#13;
But even if things are patched together, or even&#13;
if the current editors do stay, it will mean nothing&#13;
for the continuation of the paper in the fall. The bulk&#13;
of the current staff will have gone either to live on&#13;
the sides of mountains, transferred to other schools,&#13;
ventured (however timidly) out into the REAL&#13;
WORLD, or, perchance, even have graduated.&#13;
The future of Newscope then depends upon new&#13;
staff members — and there are none.&#13;
We've tried to recruit over the past three&#13;
semester, and have failed almost totally in our&#13;
efforts. We've called meetings, explained that we'ie&#13;
jerks in handling people, told you to ignore our&#13;
bumbling efforts, pointed out that if you want to&#13;
write and have a modicum of talent to go ahead, you&#13;
have carte blanche to do what you want.&#13;
Nothing. Almost no results ... Do you realize&#13;
the posibilities, the potential of this paper? They're&#13;
going to be blown, the opportunities will disappear&#13;
unless they are utilized. It's all very easy to see. The&#13;
paper is going to die because the student body&#13;
doesn't give a fuck, or else it's too stupid to supply&#13;
the personnel requirements of a paper.&#13;
I say that seriously. SEVEN current Newscope&#13;
staff members worked three years ago on a campus&#13;
underground paper called the Committee. The&#13;
same people handle the writing, production, and&#13;
management responsibilities of Newscope. They&#13;
are, in effect, Newscope.&#13;
Seven people who worked three years ago on the&#13;
Committee. Seven peddle who work today on&#13;
Newscope. There has not been, aside from Warren&#13;
Nedry, anyone else who has approached Newscope&#13;
and has had similar newspaper talent, initiative,&#13;
leadership.&#13;
It would seem reasonable to expect at least one&#13;
or two people with a similar interest in journalism&#13;
to join the paper each semester. Even the law of&#13;
probability would indicate this.&#13;
That's all it would take and Newscope would&#13;
have a chance in the fall. But, having been around&#13;
here for a while, you learn not to expect too much.&#13;
Wisconsin Ballet in Kenosha&#13;
The Wisconsin Ballet Company will present a program of&#13;
classical and contemporary dance under sponsorship of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 26,fn Kenosha's Bradford High&#13;
School Auditorium. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
The Madison-based company of 25 dancers is directed by Tibor&#13;
Zana and currently is on a ten-city state tour.&#13;
The Kenosha program will include "Hungarian Rhapsody"&#13;
choreographed by Zana to msuic by Liszt; "Huapango"&#13;
choreographed by Enrique Martinez to music by Moncayo;&#13;
"Concert Champetre" choreographed by Zana to music by Lecocq;&#13;
and "Dello Joio", a modern dance choreographed by Anna Nassiff&#13;
to music by Dello Joio.&#13;
Fellini Film to be Shown&#13;
Nights of Cabiria, a film&#13;
directed by Federico Fellini,&#13;
will be presented Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 23, at 8 p.m. in room 103 of&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
Wood Road campus.&#13;
The showing is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Film Society.&#13;
Winner of an Academy Award&#13;
for Best Foreign Language&#13;
Film in 1957, Nights of Cabiria&#13;
stars Fellini's wife, Giulietta&#13;
Masina,as Cabiria, a prostitute&#13;
living on the outskirts of Rome.&#13;
Fellini's film is the third part of&#13;
his unofficial "trilogy of&#13;
solitude". The first two were La&#13;
Strada and II Bidone.&#13;
Neighbors will be the short&#13;
film following the feature. It&#13;
depicts a conflict over a flower&#13;
growing between the properties&#13;
of two neighbors.&#13;
Sen. Gravel&#13;
to Speak&#13;
The Parkside Coalition for&#13;
Muskie and the Parkside Young&#13;
Democrats are co-sponsoring&#13;
the appearance of Senator Mike&#13;
Gravel (D-Alaska) as a&#13;
representative and supporter of&#13;
Senator Muskie — the&#13;
Democratic presidential frontrunner.&#13;
&#13;
Gravel is the out-spoken&#13;
junior senator from Alaska who&#13;
officially entered the Pentagon&#13;
Papers into the Congressional&#13;
Record. Gravel is especially&#13;
concerned with problems of the&#13;
environment and is a&#13;
congressional leader in the area&#13;
of environmental reform.&#13;
Gravel will speak in this area&#13;
because of the out-standing&#13;
response to Parkside students&#13;
to a petition, circulated by the&#13;
Parkside Coalition for Muskie,&#13;
which requested "Senator&#13;
Muksie or his representative"&#13;
to speak in this area.&#13;
The talk will be held Saturday,&#13;
February 26, at 2:30 in&#13;
Local 72 Union Hall, across&#13;
from Kenosha Campus on&#13;
Washington Road.&#13;
I/ALEO'S&#13;
(jPIZZAt.&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 -r 30th Avenue Kenosha 657—5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#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;
Shussing at Playboy&#13;
bv John Koloen of tho M0...0 . .. &amp;&#13;
February 21,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
by John Koloen of the Newscope staff&#13;
A haven for big spenders, friends of big spenders and thoi&#13;
families, lies nestled in the hilly outskirts of Lake Gen^l&#13;
Protected by fences and accessible by a guarded blactop road th*&#13;
Playboy Club attracts thousands of guests weekly, some black&#13;
some white, but all with a purpose. For as many reasons as there&#13;
are people the club mv.tes its guests to relax, entertain and be&#13;
entertained to their pocketbooks' content.&#13;
Newscope visited the club last Sunday to review one of its&#13;
malor winter attractions - its ski facilities - and came away&#13;
unimpressed and puzzled by its popularity. y&#13;
A Playboy brochure advertises six ski runs serviced by two&#13;
chairlifts capable of lifting 1,900 skiers per hour. The six runs in&#13;
elude one for beginners aptly dubbed Bunny Run, one for the novice&#13;
called Little Annie Fanny and four runs for the intermediate skier&#13;
Together with a long wood trough used for tobogganing and areas&#13;
set as ide for snowmobiling, the facilities appeal to a spectrum of&#13;
cold weather sportsmen.&#13;
Newscope tested the intermediate runs and found them at&#13;
best, unchallenging. This writer had not strapped on skis in years&#13;
so I depended on the opinion of my companion who has been attached&#13;
to hers for sixteen. Her comment was, "the Playboy Club is&#13;
no Iron Mountain."&#13;
It is easy to see once one overcomes the illusory hype of the&#13;
typical Playboy experience. There are superlatives and there are&#13;
superlatives, and then there is Playboy. One does not simply go&#13;
skiing at the club because one must first be a card carrying&#13;
member, or at least go with someone who is, and then only if you&#13;
are willing to tolerate some of the extravagant prices. At 75 cents&#13;
for a hog dog one must think twice before satiating his appetite&#13;
following an afternoon of skiing. It is enough to make Oscar Mayer&#13;
enter the retail market.&#13;
Back at the slopes, and after a half-dozen runs, we realized that&#13;
the runs were pretty much straight and down hill, ending conveniently&#13;
near the lifts. The average skier might find the hills&#13;
worthwhile for the $7 weekend charge, but for any accomplished&#13;
Slow Week l or&#13;
Parkside Sports&#13;
schusser worth his wedeln the big advantage of the Playboy Club&#13;
lies in what stands at the bottom of the hill, the chalet.&#13;
On the day we were there a guitarist, accompanied by an accordion,&#13;
played smoothed over jazz in the Jug of Wine bar while&#13;
others swarmed to the Loaf of Bread cafeteria warming their toe;&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
the ultimate trip!&#13;
at the fireplace or simply loaving. I have heard a great deal about&#13;
the social life one finds at exclusive clubs, particularly the Playboy&#13;
Club, and the activity in the bar seemed to support this, but my&#13;
meagre expense account would not allow me to prove it.&#13;
I suppose if you're interested in more than skiing and have the&#13;
money to do it, the Playboy Club could turn into a bargain, but as&#13;
for myself the kind of money it would take to have a good time could&#13;
better be spent in Aspen, or on the rent. However, in all fairness, if&#13;
you want to try the club go there on a weekday after seven, the cost&#13;
for a ticket is a reasonable $3 and who knows, the social life may be&#13;
more accessible.&#13;
\ SPACE ODYSSEY&#13;
Friday, Feb. 25, 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission 75c 160 min.&#13;
Student Act. Bldg.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. ID'S required&#13;
It'lll be a "slow" week for&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
winter sports teams&#13;
as the basketball squad completes&#13;
its season Monday night&#13;
at Dominican and the gymnasts&#13;
are idle, while the three others,&#13;
wrestling, fencing and track, all&#13;
will compete on the road.&#13;
The Parkside wrestlers, still&#13;
battling sickness and injury,&#13;
will travel to Allendale, Mich.,&#13;
to take on Grand Valley State&#13;
and Hillsdale in a double dual&#13;
meet Friday night.&#13;
Coach Jim 'Koch has five&#13;
wrestlers who have managed to&#13;
stay uninjured and sicknessfree&#13;
throughout the season and&#13;
it's from them that he needs&#13;
wins Friday if the Rangers are&#13;
to close out their dual meet&#13;
season on a winning note. The&#13;
only competition remaining for&#13;
Parkside after the duals is the&#13;
NAIA Tournament March 9-11&#13;
at Klamath Falls, Ore.&#13;
The Parkside fencers also are&#13;
winding down their season and&#13;
will battle three tough foes this&#13;
weekend on a swing through&#13;
Ohio. The Rangers will face&#13;
Bowling Green State Friday&#13;
afternoon and then take on Big&#13;
Ten power Ohio State and the&#13;
University of Chicago some 24&#13;
hours later in Columbus.&#13;
John Tank, a sophomore&#13;
foilist from Kenosha, has been&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Coach Loran Hein's big gun&#13;
lately, taking five of six matches&#13;
against tough Michigan&#13;
State and Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
opponents in the Rangers'&#13;
recent narrow 15-12 losses to the&#13;
Big Ten strongmen. Parkside&#13;
will return home next week for&#13;
its last home meet of the year, a&#13;
10 a.m. Saturday encounter&#13;
with Illinois-Circle, Tri-State&#13;
and Milwaukee Tech at Bullen&#13;
Jr. High in Kenosha.&#13;
The UW-Parkside track team,&#13;
with its first taste of Invitational&#13;
competition last week&#13;
at Oshkosh, will jump into it&#13;
again Saturday as the Rangers&#13;
face UW-LaCrosse, UWPlatteville,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh and&#13;
Loras at LaCrosse.&#13;
Three-event school recordholder&#13;
Lucian Rosa will again&#13;
anchor the Parkside attack,&#13;
with the barefoot freshman&#13;
likely to be entered in the mile&#13;
and two mile runs.&#13;
The Rangers will stay on the&#13;
road the following weekend and&#13;
compete on Illinois' 260-yard&#13;
track in an open meet at&#13;
Champaign.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
BLVHTISER&#13;
J A •* % \&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
"lone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
Hours - Effective Feb. 28, 1972&#13;
Mon. thru Fri. 8 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha &amp; Racine Campus&#13;
Mon. &amp;Thurs. only&#13;
10 A.M. to 1 P.M. &#13;
B KOFFEE&#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
Sb*5r P®T&#13;
Dennis W eaver in Ke nosha&#13;
by Michael Kite&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
When asked to represent the&#13;
Newscope at the Senator&#13;
McGovern fund raising rally&#13;
featuring Dennis Weaver I&#13;
immediately accepted. After all&#13;
it isn't everyday that someone,&#13;
such as myself, has the opportunity&#13;
to meet a well-known&#13;
Movie and Television personality.&#13;
Anyway there would&#13;
be free refreshments,&#13;
something I rarely pass up.&#13;
Last Thursday evening I&#13;
found myself and some friends&#13;
standing before the offices of&#13;
the Construction Laborers&#13;
Local 237. As we neared the&#13;
entrance we saw five black&#13;
youths peering in the windows&#13;
but unable to pay the $1.50&#13;
admission.&#13;
Upon entering, we were&#13;
greeted by the well-known&#13;
smiling face of Shirley Schmerling,&#13;
who was responsible&#13;
for the rally. The smile quickly&#13;
faded into "Tickets please."&#13;
Surrendering my ticket, I&#13;
proceeded past a police officer,&#13;
sporting a well-waxed handlebar&#13;
moustache, standing&#13;
ready to thwart any evil doers.&#13;
Glancing around at the crows,&#13;
consisting mostly of older&#13;
couples and families, I was&#13;
surprised at how few young&#13;
people of the 18-21 category&#13;
there were.&#13;
The meeting hall itself was&#13;
rather small, as a crowd of&#13;
close to 200 pa cked it. It was&#13;
adorned with the usual political&#13;
paraphernalia, the walls held&#13;
those posters of a smiling face&#13;
that have infiltrated into every&#13;
phase of American life, now&#13;
smiling for McGovern.&#13;
While waiting for the rally to&#13;
begin I decided to sample the&#13;
refreshments, which consisted&#13;
of soda, coffee and popcorn.&#13;
Finding it difficult to eat popcorn&#13;
out of a shoebox, I stuck to&#13;
the liquids.&#13;
Preceding Weaver was&#13;
Reggie McLeon, a folk singer&#13;
from Detroit, who did fair&#13;
renditions of songs by Bob&#13;
Dylan, Neil Young and others.&#13;
Due to the obvious rudeness of&#13;
the audience, busy talking&#13;
amongst themselves, he was&#13;
very difficult to hear.&#13;
When the singer finished, I&#13;
attempted to ask him a few&#13;
questions, which I found very&#13;
difficult as Mr. McLeon would&#13;
not take his eyes off a young&#13;
lady in the audience. After&#13;
finally gaining his attention&#13;
long enough to ask why he&#13;
supported McGovern, he&#13;
replied, "I got tired of walking&#13;
to work; they pay my transportation.&#13;
He (McGovern) says&#13;
it straight, with no shit. And I&#13;
get good vibes when I hear him&#13;
speak." As the last word was&#13;
uttered, he turned back to the&#13;
girl. Knowing when to give up, I&#13;
headed back to a chair to await&#13;
Weavers' arrival. A few&#13;
moments later the back door&#13;
opened and in he strode, without&#13;
his stetson, but his fans were not&#13;
disappointed.&#13;
On his way to the meeting&#13;
room where his admirers were&#13;
awaiting him, he was asked why&#13;
he supported McGovern, to&#13;
which he replied, "Why&#13;
shouldn't I support him, his&#13;
beliefs are the same as mine.&#13;
Even Mr. Weaver, a star of&#13;
rrfovies and television, did not at&#13;
first command the full attention&#13;
of the audience. But it was not&#13;
long until he not only had their&#13;
attention but their loudly&#13;
cheering support.&#13;
In the course of his speech&#13;
Mr. Weaver related Senator&#13;
McGovern's beliefs, future&#13;
plans and policies that he would&#13;
enact if given the chance.&#13;
Speaking most forcefully on&#13;
McGovern's promise of a shift&#13;
in national priorities, by placing&#13;
our economy in the top spot, to&#13;
be done by bringing an end to&#13;
the conflict in East Asia, he&#13;
pointed out that McGovern was&#13;
the first Senator to take an&#13;
active stand against the conflict&#13;
in Vietnam.&#13;
After touching lightly on some&#13;
of the other issues such as&#13;
pollution and inequality, he&#13;
forcefully stated, "We need a&#13;
man like McGovern to solve&#13;
these problems. And to achieve&#13;
this he needs our support. We&#13;
can change things if we will just&#13;
get up off our apathy and do&#13;
something about it!"&#13;
He then left the cheering&#13;
crowd for a small room where&#13;
he would be photographed with&#13;
about 150 of the 200 people&#13;
present. Pictures were sold for&#13;
$1.00 fo r black and wljite and&#13;
$1.50 for color. Also during this&#13;
period some young ladies were&#13;
"giving away" McGovern&#13;
teeshirts for a minimal donation&#13;
of $2.00.&#13;
McLeon returned once again&#13;
to a much more receptive&#13;
audience, as most of the elders&#13;
were in line for their pictures.&#13;
Across the room I saw the five&#13;
young blacks who were once on&#13;
the outside, they must have&#13;
finally found an open door.&#13;
After about an hour of constantly&#13;
flashing camera bulbs,&#13;
the bleary eyed Weaver entered&#13;
the room where the&#13;
representatives of the press had&#13;
been patiently waiting.&#13;
He discussed McGovern's&#13;
fight for the support of&#13;
minoirites. Weaver said that&#13;
they were doing better than&#13;
expected. At this time a&#13;
colleague, digesting this last&#13;
piece of information pointed out&#13;
to Mr. Weaver that even though&#13;
this rally was held in a&#13;
predominatly black neighborhood,&#13;
there was not one&#13;
adult black at the rally. Mr.&#13;
Weaver contributed this to&#13;
apathy and ignorance on the&#13;
part of the black community.&#13;
Shortly after this, he bade&#13;
farewell and was gone. On my&#13;
way back to the meeting hall, to&#13;
'ind out if my friends were still&#13;
there, I ran into Shirley Schmerling&#13;
once again, smiling&#13;
even bigger this time. She w as&#13;
very pleased with the turn out&#13;
for the evening.&#13;
I finally got back to the&#13;
meeting room to find that&#13;
almost everyone was gone, gone&#13;
home with their autographed&#13;
pictures and their tales of when&#13;
they met Mr. Dennis Weaver.&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE C LASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS1960&#13;
GTO. New tires, mags, 4 speed,&#13;
excellent condition. Must sell. $1,200,&#13;
willing to talk. 633-1069 any time&#13;
after 5:00.&#13;
1967 Opel Rally 4 speed, 40,000 miles,&#13;
$850. Call 654-5032 ask for Barb or&#13;
Doug.&#13;
DRUMS FOR SALE — Ludwick&#13;
complete set, excellent condition.&#13;
Best offer over $125. Ph 633-5666&#13;
after 4:00. Jerry or Bob.&#13;
FOR SALE — 69 Plymouth Wagon -&#13;
Custom Suburban. 1 owner. V-8, 318&#13;
engine, air, power brakes and&#13;
steering, 57,000 miles. Excellent&#13;
condition. Call 658-1285.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE — Marimba, 2Vi oct.&#13;
$100; Schwinn bicycle. 1 speed,&#13;
coaster brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N . Oakland, Milwaukee,&#13;
Wis. "&#13;
Garrard SLX-2 "Module" series&#13;
turntalbe; console stereo. Call Ray&#13;
654-8878.&#13;
STEREO TAPE RECORDER —&#13;
Sony 252 D One year old. List $135.00,&#13;
sell for $70.00. Ph. Jerry 652-2538 or&#13;
553-2496.&#13;
MODEL NEEDED for life drawing&#13;
class. Contact David Zaig, Room&#13;
217, Gre enquist Hall - A rt Dept.&#13;
BABY-SITTER NEEDED 4 2 boys,&#13;
ages 20 months and 10 months.&#13;
About 6 hours a day, 2 weekdays.&#13;
Days and time flexible. My home -&#13;
North side of Kenosha. Call 654-4593&#13;
afternoons or evenings.&#13;
Will the lady that phoned in the&#13;
classified ad for typing last Wed.&#13;
please call us again ... we lost your&#13;
phone number.&#13;
3 Room Apt. North side Keno.&#13;
Privacy assured. Situated well for&#13;
all campuses. Call 552-8970.&#13;
To whom it may concern — We want&#13;
our 3 dish pans back now.&#13;
SKIS — Hart Camaro with^Cubcle&#13;
bindings. $200 new, sell for $75. Also&#13;
Gerard turntable, sell at cost. Ph.&#13;
652-8796.&#13;
WANTED — '63, 64 or 65&#13;
Volkswagen. Good running condition&#13;
- reasonable. Call 654-1684 or 658-&#13;
3998.&#13;
PERSONAL — BILL THATCHROOF&#13;
— Come home or call&#13;
callect - all is forgiven - we love you -&#13;
you don't have to get a haircut. Mom&#13;
and Dad.&#13;
FOR RENT — 1 furnished bedroom&#13;
with kitchen - off street parking.&#13;
$50.00 per month including utilities.&#13;
552-8172. 5306 South Lake Shore Rd.&#13;
(just off Sheridan Road), Racine.&#13;
FOR SALE — Roth violin with case.&#13;
Very good condition. $260.00 new,&#13;
$125.00 or best offer. Electronic&#13;
adaptor also available. Phone 654-&#13;
1731.&#13;
Snowbires for VW, size 5.60x15, used&#13;
700 mi. cost $55 new, make an offer,&#13;
call 632-8929. </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63660">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 7, February 21, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63661">
                <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="63662">
                <text>1972-02-21</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="63665">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63666">
                <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="63667">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63668">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63669">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63670">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="231">
        <name>annexation</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4054">
        <name>LGBTQ</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="232">
        <name>wallace burkee</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2613" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4437">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/d2b6c9bcc95467866deff082b59a0268.pdf</src>
        <authentication>254ef9de0a43e5da4f2952669d5d32de</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63675">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 8</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63676">
              <text>Student Charged by Activities Board</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63683">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89893">
              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
no one is inn ocent in Babylon&#13;
Student Charged by Activities Board&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
On Friday afternoon the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board held&#13;
a meeting which Newscope&#13;
wished to, in part, cover. Paul&#13;
Lomartire, a Newscope staffer,&#13;
was scheduled to undergo a&#13;
hearing concerning an alleged&#13;
irregularity which occurred&#13;
during the recent Sha Na Na&#13;
concert. Paul is a probationary&#13;
member of the Board and&#13;
served as an usher during the&#13;
concert.&#13;
The alleged irregularity involves&#13;
the accused allowing a&#13;
guest to attend the concert free.&#13;
The Board had originally accused&#13;
Paul of letting a friend&#13;
attend Sha Na Na without&#13;
paying for a ticket. Unable to&#13;
attend the meeting in person,&#13;
Newscope has been forced to&#13;
rely on the accused's testimony.&#13;
Paul informed Newscope that&#13;
even assuming he did let a guest&#13;
in free, "there is no way they&#13;
can prove it". The convicted&#13;
felon explained that the&#13;
auditorium "was too dark, and&#13;
two crowded". Further, he&#13;
accused other members of the&#13;
Activities Board of bringing in&#13;
dates free, he said it was&#13;
"common practice for members&#13;
to bring in free dates by&#13;
appointing them ushers".&#13;
Apparently no one is innocent in&#13;
Babylon.&#13;
Lomartire explained that he&#13;
was approached by one of the&#13;
Superstar L eft P arkside&#13;
Holding the B ag&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the Newscope staff&#13;
Last year the Student Activities Board brought "Jesus Christ&#13;
Superstar" to Case High School's auditorium. One reason for&#13;
choosing Superstar over another group was the fact that it was a&#13;
Broadway show, an informed administration source told&#13;
Newscope that Bauer Productions "gave us a good deal, with no&#13;
risk involved".&#13;
This week Newscope has learned that Bauer Productions has&#13;
yet to pay for the rental of chairs, a piano, and police protection;&#13;
the sundry expenses which a company incurs in producing a show.&#13;
The estimated debt is $600, and though Newscope was told that&#13;
Parkside was in no way libel for the debt, the Activities Board is&#13;
presently considering the options before it makes a final decision&#13;
on the matter.&#13;
When asked if Bauer Productions has ever produced shows&#13;
without paying their debts, the informed source explained that&#13;
"They've tried it in Milwaukee". "They'd produced the Summerfest&#13;
Shows so we figured they knew what they were doing.&#13;
Either they're trying to pull one off on us, or they're just bad&#13;
businessmen."&#13;
When asked what Parkside might do in this hassle, Newscope&#13;
was told that the situation is presently being studied; "by Monday&#13;
the situation should be much clearer." One possibility is to file suit&#13;
against Bauer Productions, but this is an extreme move, one which&#13;
at the moment Parkside is reluctant to make.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
BERRIGANS NOMINATED FOR PEACE PRIZE&#13;
(CPS) — The Reverends Daniel and Philip Berrigan have been&#13;
nominated by the Swedish parliament for the 1972 Nobel Peace&#13;
Prize.&#13;
The Reverend Daniel Berrigan was granted parole last week&#13;
from his three-year sentence on a conviction of destroying draft&#13;
records in Catonsville, Md. He will be released on Feb. 24.&#13;
Philip Berrigan is on trial in Harrisburg, Pa., for allegedly&#13;
plotting to kidnap White House foreign affairs adviser Henry&#13;
Kissinger.&#13;
SCHOOLS DISCOURAGE STUDENTS TO TEACH&#13;
(CPS) — Colleges and universities across the nation are&#13;
"turning off the faucets" and discouraging many of their students&#13;
from entering education fields.&#13;
Thirty-seven per cent of all college graduates are certified to&#13;
teach, and some 234,100 new graduates will be competing for&#13;
115t900 jobs in U.S. public schools this year, according to figures&#13;
released by the National Education Association (NEA).&#13;
AWAITING THE PIPELINE STATEMENT&#13;
Conservationists are anxiously awaiting the release of the&#13;
Department of Interior's final impact statement on the Alaskan&#13;
pipeline which Secretary Morton said would be released about&#13;
January 15th, but has now been postponed until about March 15th.&#13;
Morton has indicated that he does not expect to hold public&#13;
hearings on the final impact statement and that the project will be&#13;
approved shortly after the statement's release. Judge George Hart&#13;
of the U.S. District Court recently rejected a move to require Interior&#13;
to hold hearings.&#13;
The Alaska Coalition of environment groups in Washington,&#13;
D.C., is urging all interested citizens to write President Nixon to&#13;
demand that public hearings be held.&#13;
UW Failures Blamed on Lack of Respect&#13;
Board members and asked to&#13;
publicly apologize at the&#13;
hearing, "I was told to be&#13;
apologetic and things would&#13;
work out". Lomartire informed&#13;
Newscope that during the&#13;
hearing itself, he was told that&#13;
"it's the first case like this&#13;
we've ever had". "They told me&#13;
that it is 'a serious charge and&#13;
vou don't seem to be taking it&#13;
very seriously'. I retorted by&#13;
pointing out the fact that the&#13;
burden of proof is on them."&#13;
During the closed hearing, Paul&#13;
said, "The charge was changed&#13;
from letting A person in to&#13;
Some."&#13;
Just before they told Paul to&#13;
leave the meeting room while&#13;
the Board members decided on&#13;
the disposition of the case, the&#13;
accused was informed that they&#13;
"weren't trying to railroad&#13;
me". The penalty which the&#13;
accused faces is expulsion from&#13;
the Board. Lomartire explained&#13;
that there would have to be at&#13;
least one more meeting before&#13;
the hearing is concluded.&#13;
Why was Newscope locked&#13;
out of the Board meeting, a&#13;
campus organization whose&#13;
finances are publicly funded,&#13;
and which supposedly operates&#13;
in the students' interest? This&#13;
reporter was told that the press&#13;
is sometimes "a hindrance" by&#13;
a Board member. But a&#13;
misinformed as well as an&#13;
uninformed press, is much&#13;
more of a hindrance than an&#13;
informed one.&#13;
Our apologiesTgoocl friends&#13;
for the fr acture of good order&#13;
the burning of paper&#13;
instead of chhuillddrc en — DANIEL BERRIGAN&#13;
Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
Meets March 6th&#13;
The Parkside's Women's&#13;
Caucus is now forming and will&#13;
hold its first program on&#13;
Monday, March 6, from 7:30 to&#13;
9:30 p.m. in the Whiteskellar in&#13;
Greenquist. (The lounge immediately&#13;
to the right and&#13;
downstairs after entering&#13;
Greenquist northernmost.)&#13;
PWC is open to any woman&#13;
student, staff or faculty&#13;
member and is aiming to enable&#13;
women at Parkside to gain a&#13;
more positive view of themselves&#13;
as women and to&#13;
examine issues related to&#13;
women in today's society.&#13;
The program on March 6th&#13;
will consist of listening to parts&#13;
of tapes of recent lectures by&#13;
Gloria Steinem and Betty&#13;
Friedan followed by group&#13;
discussion on the pros and cons&#13;
of the women's movement.&#13;
The Parkside Women's&#13;
Caucus will be presenting a&#13;
number of lectures and panels&#13;
on campus and in addition,&#13;
plans to form small study&#13;
groups on women's issues.&#13;
Projects can also be undertaken,&#13;
as the membership&#13;
desires. All women are encouraged&#13;
to attend the March&#13;
6th meeting as planning for&#13;
future meetings will be open for&#13;
discussion.&#13;
Representing UW-Parkside in the Association of College Unions-International Region 8 student&#13;
playoffs in union sports at UW-Oshkosh were (front row, from left) Ted Jensen, Kenosha; Robert&#13;
Hinderholtz, Racine? Edward Lobacz, Kenosha; Ed Arndt, Kenosha; and Tim Duesing, Kenosha;&#13;
(back row, from left) Tim Alfredson, Kenosha; Gregg Hansen, Kenosha; Mike Jenrette, Racine;&#13;
Reid Knitter, Kenosha; and Haig Derderian, Racine. UW-P competed in. bowling, chess and&#13;
pocket billiards.&#13;
By Mark P. McElreath&#13;
MADISON — The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Madison failed to&#13;
meet the challenges of the late&#13;
1960s because certain administrators&#13;
lacked respect for&#13;
the Wisconsin legislature.&#13;
That is one of several&#13;
provocative conclusions drawn&#13;
from a collection of articles&#13;
analyzing the University during&#13;
the late 1960s and published in a&#13;
new book, "Academic Supermarkets",&#13;
by Jossey-Bass Inc.,&#13;
San Francisco.&#13;
Other reasons for the UW's&#13;
ineffective response to the&#13;
crises of those times, cited by&#13;
some of the 18 contributors to&#13;
the new book, are a confused&#13;
faculty unwilling to wield effective&#13;
power, and militant&#13;
students viewing themselves as&#13;
apart from the rest of Madison&#13;
and severely questioning&#13;
traditional authority.&#13;
The editors of the book —&#13;
Prof. Philip G. Altbach and&#13;
graduate student Sheila McVey&#13;
of the UW-Madison School of&#13;
Education, and Robert S.&#13;
Laufer, sociology professor at&#13;
State University oMMew York at&#13;
Albany — describe the UW as&#13;
"A multiversity in crisis." &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE February 28,1972&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
S&amp;uhmg. the. Qinedt&#13;
'' ^Median fyoodi.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
RUBYS&#13;
"Ruby's has&#13;
the best corned&#13;
beel sandwich&#13;
in town"&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
A tyhoMj to- &lt;yy&#13;
oJ^AAj tfb&amp; (yOj\A&gt; (JUmj&#13;
5535-6 Ave. Kenosha&#13;
'I'l'lllil'llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll]&#13;
child rare center&#13;
needs help&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
The Co-op Lunch at the&#13;
Student Activities Building has&#13;
come and gone, but the funds&#13;
donated to the Parkside Child&#13;
Care Center are slated for investment&#13;
in large equipment&#13;
and new material for the&#13;
children. Special thanks go to&#13;
the students and the staff of&#13;
Student Services for their&#13;
participation in the Co-op Lunch&#13;
and their interest in the continuation&#13;
and improvement of&#13;
the Center. It is the concern of&#13;
all those on campus which will&#13;
ultimately determine the&#13;
quality of services the Center&#13;
can provide.&#13;
At present the Center is selfsupporting&#13;
financially, but the&#13;
budget can handle only small&#13;
purchases to create a more&#13;
enriching environment for the&#13;
fifty children enrolled. There is&#13;
a great need for volunteer help&#13;
to assist the staff and make it&#13;
possible to give each child individual&#13;
attention.&#13;
Interested parties are&#13;
welcome to visit the Center at&#13;
2620 - 14th Place (Hwy E) to&#13;
observe its function or call for&#13;
information at 552-8322 f rom 8&#13;
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday&#13;
through Friday.&#13;
Eileen Hanson, Director&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center&#13;
health planning&#13;
meeting soon&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Racine County Planning&#13;
Council in cooperation with the&#13;
Comprehensive Health Planning&#13;
Agency of Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, Inc. is planning an&#13;
informational meeting on&#13;
health planning on Wednesday,&#13;
March 1, 1972, 7:30 P.M. at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theatre, 14th&#13;
and Howe Streets, Racine.&#13;
Health planning is being&#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;
| WATCHES PERFUMES&#13;
Bolcx - Accutron&#13;
Ultrnchron • Longin.&#13;
• ulov. - Mov.do&#13;
C.r.v.ll. - TTmex&#13;
LeCoultr.&#13;
France'*&#13;
FSne.t -&#13;
P.rfume. and&#13;
Cologne*&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
S6J7 8th Ave.&#13;
VwuuMo &amp; Son*&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
0% Disc ount to students and Faculty with |.d&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
W.llac* • Lunt&#13;
Reed * Barton&#13;
Sheffiald • etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrtfori&#13;
Seneca • Lalique&#13;
Hoy a I Worcester&#13;
undertaken as the result of&#13;
Public Law 89-749. In response&#13;
to this law, Wisconsin has been&#13;
divided into districts. Racind&#13;
County and the six neighboring&#13;
counties of Kenosha,&#13;
M i l w a u k e e, Ozau kee,&#13;
Walworth, Washington and&#13;
Waukesha form the southeastern&#13;
region.&#13;
We are anxious that our&#13;
community learns about health&#13;
planning — what it means and&#13;
how it can affect the delivery&#13;
and cost of health services and&#13;
most important what is&#13;
presently being done in Racine&#13;
County in health planning.&#13;
There will be a film and a&#13;
pannel presentation on Comprehensive&#13;
Health Planning.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
G. P. Ferrazzano, M.D.&#13;
Chairman&#13;
Racine County Health&#13;
Planning Corporate&#13;
Committee&#13;
dirt is filthy&#13;
Newscope:&#13;
If I had to print any filth, I&#13;
would not print anything! You&#13;
must have a lot of pride to put it&#13;
out where anyone can see it!!!&#13;
No wonder the world is so&#13;
wicked!!&#13;
Disgusted&#13;
Benefit and Memorial&#13;
Dances Planned&#13;
This weekend Parkside&#13;
Students will have an opportunity&#13;
to support two very&#13;
fine causes and enjoy themselves&#13;
besides.&#13;
The Gene Fox Memorial&#13;
Association will be sponsoring a&#13;
dance Friday, March 3rd, from&#13;
9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. at the&#13;
student activities bldg. All&#13;
proceeds are going to the&#13;
K.Y.F. for wrestling equipment&#13;
for young boys. The Starboys&#13;
are donating their services and&#13;
providing the entertainment.&#13;
You will be asked to donate&#13;
$1.00 at the door.&#13;
A benefit dance will also be&#13;
held this Saturday, March 4, in&#13;
the Student Activities Building&#13;
with proceeds going to support&#13;
the Parkside Day Care Center.&#13;
The Day Care Center, a&#13;
Student Government project, is&#13;
in need of specific educational&#13;
toys for children and other&#13;
equipment. Volunteer help is&#13;
also needed. Anyone interested&#13;
in giving their services, contact&#13;
Elaine Birch at the Student&#13;
Government Office.&#13;
The Dance featuring "Union"&#13;
is sponsored by the Day Care&#13;
Center Association and&#13;
everyone is urged to attend.&#13;
Your attendance will help to&#13;
support a a good cause. The&#13;
dance begins at 9:00 P.M. and&#13;
there is a $1.50 admission at the&#13;
door.&#13;
SECURITY&#13;
OFFICER&#13;
PROMOTED&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, director&#13;
of safety and security at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
today announced the&#13;
promotion of security officer&#13;
Laurence S. Augustine to police&#13;
officer 1. Augustine joined the&#13;
15-member safety and security&#13;
staff last April and is presently&#13;
attending a 240-hour recruit&#13;
training school at the Racine&#13;
Police Academy. He lives at&#13;
7857 23rd Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, FEB. 29&#13;
Meeting. Student Government&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103. 7-30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAR. 2&#13;
Student Films. Sponsored by PAB&#13;
Coffee House Committee.&#13;
Whiteskellar, Greenquist Hall. 2:30&#13;
p.m. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, MAR.3&#13;
Dance. "Starboys" sponsored by the&#13;
Gene Fox Memorial Association.&#13;
Student Activities Building. Adm.&#13;
Chrg. 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. UW-P&#13;
and Wisconsin I.D. required.&#13;
SATURDAY, MAR. 4&#13;
Track. UW-P at Illinois Track Club,&#13;
Champaign.&#13;
Fencing. Ul-Chicago Circle Campus,&#13;
M.A.T.C., Tri-State.&#13;
Dance. "Union" sponsored by the&#13;
Day Care Center Association.&#13;
Student Activities Building. 9:00&#13;
p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D. required. Adm. $1.50.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Films&#13;
THURSDAY MARCH 2&#13;
2:30 P.M.&#13;
North Lounge Greenquist Hall&#13;
Robin David, Pat McDermid,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Jean Frahm, Larry&#13;
Jones, Jim Koloen, John Koloen,&#13;
Rich Lipke, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Kevin McKay, Fred&#13;
Noer, Jr., Brian Ross, Wolfgang&#13;
Salewski, Andy Schmelling, Barb&#13;
Scott, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, Bill Sorensen,. Mike&#13;
Stevesand, Debbie Venskus&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Par ks(de published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road. &#13;
February 28,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
PREP program in action finds Surinder Datta, associate&#13;
professor of life science at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
talking on biological discoveries and their social implications with&#13;
students at Racine's William Horlick High School. Above, left to&#13;
right, are Horlick social science instructor Ruth Bonady; Alan&#13;
Rench, 6703 Novak Road, Racine; Prof. Datta; Sheila White, 1104&#13;
Isabelle Ave., Racine; and Jim Small, 1406 Jefferson St., Racine.&#13;
Rench, Small and Miss White are seniors at Horlick. PREP, which&#13;
stands for Parkside Resource Enrichment Professors, this&#13;
semester will bring UW-P faculty members into high school&#13;
classrooms in Kenosha, Racine and Walworth counties.&#13;
Toys for Child&#13;
Center Sought&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center is&#13;
in need of your active support&#13;
and four centers will be set up&#13;
from Wednesday morning&#13;
March 1 until Friday noon,&#13;
March 3, in an effort to'reach all&#13;
the interested people on campus.&#13;
&#13;
There will be boxes for the&#13;
donation of toys or cans of juice&#13;
at the Greenquist Concousre,&#13;
the Student Activities Building,&#13;
the Racine Center Lounge, and&#13;
the Kenosha Center Lounge.&#13;
Each box will be posted with&#13;
information regarding the need&#13;
of the Center for volunteer help&#13;
and procedures for arranging&#13;
credit for working at the Center.&#13;
There will be someone at each&#13;
station to answer questions and&#13;
explain the function of the&#13;
Center.&#13;
Women's Caucus to Meet&#13;
A strategy session on&#13;
selection of delegates to the&#13;
national Democratic and&#13;
Republican conventions will be&#13;
held at 8 p.m. Wednesday,&#13;
March 1, at 4916 B yrd Avenue,&#13;
Racine. Wisconsin Women's&#13;
Political Caucus (WWPC)&#13;
representatives will explain&#13;
party procedures of choosing&#13;
delegates, how to become a&#13;
candidate for delegate, and how&#13;
much it will cost to attend the&#13;
conventions.&#13;
Lynn Hoff, a WWPC spokeswoman,&#13;
stated that the session&#13;
is intended primarily for&#13;
members or potential members&#13;
of the two political parties, and&#13;
for workers in current&#13;
presidential primary campaigns,&#13;
although anyone interested&#13;
may attend.&#13;
The meeting's purpose is to&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
assure equal representation of&#13;
women on all party delegate&#13;
slates, consistent with recent&#13;
party reforms, and to promote,&#13;
on the local party level, serious&#13;
discussion of issues concerning&#13;
women.&#13;
For further information,&#13;
those interested may contact&#13;
Ms. Hoff at 634-1237.&#13;
Driving Course Offered&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will again be offering&#13;
the National Safety Council's&#13;
Defensive Driving Course for&#13;
those employees who have not&#13;
as of yet taken the course.&#13;
The National Defensive&#13;
Driving Course has. been a&#13;
prerequisite for the operation of&#13;
all state owned vehicles since&#13;
December 31, 1970. University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside employees&#13;
(employees are considered&#13;
to be faculty, staff, or a&#13;
volunteer driver) who intend to&#13;
use state owned vehicles are&#13;
required to complete this course&#13;
before permission can be&#13;
granted to drive state owned&#13;
vehicles.&#13;
The course will be held on&#13;
Saturday, March 25, 1972, from&#13;
8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Please&#13;
submit to this office by March&#13;
17, 1972, the names of those&#13;
individuals that will be attending&#13;
the course. Attendees&#13;
will be receiving by mail a&#13;
letter giving the location of the&#13;
class and materials that they&#13;
should read.&#13;
VOLUNTEERS&#13;
WE NEED T HEM FOR POLL DUTY&#13;
SPRING ELECTION&#13;
MARCH 7 and 8&#13;
Sign up or call:&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Hwy. A and Wood Road&#13;
(553-2244 or 553-2493)&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
—Honest George Sale — during February&#13;
a free cherry tree with purchase of any major item&#13;
Freezers — start at $194&#13;
Admiral Color TV start at $199&#13;
18" Color start at $299&#13;
Heavy duty washers start at $169&#13;
Apartment size washers start at $109&#13;
Refrigerators start at $179&#13;
Warehouse Discount Prices&#13;
micro-ovens, air conditioners&#13;
R. C. Service&#13;
One Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
Ron Casperson - owner&#13;
MifmAitnimononrfinononoAnrvuniinonorvvwvvywwvy w w w v* vv vv vwm km ww i!r&#13;
Rise t o face UN other day&#13;
(mVJlrJbv&#13;
QoAJuitv&#13;
.&#13;
T0M^rn jammer&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
TENDERLOIN STEAK&#13;
TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
"Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S CABIN ROOM&#13;
FOR PRIVATE PARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENO:MA&#13;
" O F F E R I N G H I GH Q U A L I T Y AT&#13;
R E A S O N A B LE P R I C E S , T H E W I N D&#13;
J A M M ER D E SER V E S ITS P O P U L A RIT Y"&#13;
— H E R B E RT KUBL Y&#13;
" W O N D E R F UL FOO D'&#13;
SENA TOR PRQ X M IRE &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE February 28,1972&#13;
Itfethe&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Ctlleqelnri&#13;
HWY. 32 BETWEEN RACINE AND KENOSHA&#13;
SANDWICHES — PIZZA — PACKAGE GOODS&#13;
Tkis AD \S GOOD FOR A FREE DRANK*!&#13;
She VJLj Supper CU&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan Id.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
.V°V'&#13;
&lt; *&#13;
\\ ' v\e^ ^&#13;
\v&#13;
e \JP&#13;
\^&#13;
e&#13;
MISSED THAT FIRST ONE!&#13;
U.W.P. Ragtime Rangers&#13;
announces -&#13;
A Second Trip To&#13;
Whitecap Mt.&#13;
March 17-19&#13;
Sign up at room 217 Tallent Hall&#13;
OBIE'S&#13;
Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
No one could remember who started the&#13;
disagreement, but by the time I got there, it&#13;
was going full-tilt. Sitting in the Racine&#13;
lounge was a fat kid telling his opponent that&#13;
food prices are so high he could eat at a&#13;
restaurant cheaper than shopping in&#13;
grocery stores.&#13;
A skinny kid with long hair was shaking&#13;
his head, telling the fat kid that he was&#13;
crazy. "You can't eat anywhere and feel&#13;
full," the thin male contended, "you can't&#13;
eat cheaper in a restaurant."&#13;
The fat kid's eyes lit up, "Ya ever eat at&#13;
Obie's?" It all seemed like a television ad.&#13;
"After you eat there, then you can argue&#13;
with me," the big guy said. His opponent&#13;
walked away shaking his head.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
"Geez," Maggie said after I told her the&#13;
story, "I know what the fat kid meant." We&#13;
were sitting in Obie's eating dinner. "You&#13;
want to finish this," she said, pushing a&#13;
plate toward me with a slice of roast beef on&#13;
it. Are you kidding I said, I think I'm gonna&#13;
pass out.&#13;
Obie's in Racine on Lathrop Avenue is an&#13;
"all you can eat" smorgasbord-restaurant.&#13;
In what looks to be a converted bolwing&#13;
alley, they offer the customer any amount of&#13;
a wide choice of food, dessert and beverage&#13;
for one fixed price (a dollar sixty-nine for&#13;
dinner or a dollar thirty-nine for lunch -&#13;
adults). Children can eat for about seventynine&#13;
cents. Once in awhile if there is an&#13;
Obie's coupon in the newspaper they can eat&#13;
for free. The place is open seven days a&#13;
week from eleven a.m. until eight p.m.&#13;
Hog heaven, a glutton's paradise.&#13;
Spaghetti, roast beef au jus, tenderloin tips&#13;
over rice, fried chicken, turkey and&#13;
dressing, mashed or boiled potatoes, salads&#13;
of several types, cottage cheese, jello, hot&#13;
cinnamon rolls with icing, warm bisquits,&#13;
Coca-Cola, coffee, corn, breen beans, on and&#13;
on and on. There is an opportunity to contrive&#13;
quite a beggar's banquet for that flat&#13;
price.&#13;
In the "all you can eat" wonderland, there&#13;
are waitresses to clear tables, serve&#13;
beverages and in general keep the&#13;
customers satisfied. Slicing the roast beef,&#13;
and serving other main elements of the&#13;
adds an aire of "e*ri&#13;
9 9&#13;
I felt very comf* • Veness&#13;
''&#13;
tC&#13;
Peted. paneled d^ing'® ea&#13;
"&#13;
n9 '&#13;
Everything | atG J,&#13;
that comes in rolls of white rrv&#13;
enioyed it. Maggie saw ll rh&#13;
tenderloin tips also ,&#13;
l nntir^ ,&#13;
Were recom I noticed also that other t&#13;
mashed potatoes, d,dn,h°aVe ab&#13;
Some all you can eat" places&#13;
Thaw Hon'/J""&#13;
119 but somewha&#13;
p„&#13;
y&#13;
,?&#13;
0n&#13;
,&#13;
,h?&#13;
vethi&#13;
'Problem at&#13;
Featuring free beverages is a&#13;
One can wash down every b ite o&#13;
without having to f|sh fnto a&#13;
^ my secmd sPr»&#13;
!&#13;
back in the booth. I said the sami&#13;
sure everyone who overeats sa yi&#13;
eat that much, it's )u5t that&#13;
fHhng. In any case, I was g rea&#13;
this time I thought of the fa1&#13;
awarded him a unanimous deck&#13;
question of groceries over restai&#13;
at least in this case.&#13;
I saw the fat kid a few days I&#13;
Racine lounge. He was wiped&#13;
puffed, pale, stomach swollen. Hi&#13;
same table he had argued at d&lt;&#13;
The skinny kid bounced up to&#13;
"Hey, late at Obie's," he said,&#13;
picked his head up off the table&#13;
eyes, and simply groaned.&#13;
$10.00 N ON - R E F U N D A B LE DEP OSI T R E Q UIR ED&#13;
A CLOCKWORK ORANGE&#13;
Alex — Mai com McDowell&#13;
Alex's Gang — Warren Clarke, Jim Marcus, MJichael Tarn&#13;
Directed by Stanley Kubrick&#13;
A Warner Brothers film&#13;
The Micheal Todd Theatre, two doorways in the great wall on&#13;
neon north Dearborn, just south of Randolph Street's El-sheltered&#13;
hall. After six it seems the only cars you can find are the big&#13;
luxurious barges. Electric plush-seated monsters that force rather&#13;
than pick their way to the numerous cocktail lounges that iay just&#13;
as luxurious and just as electric plush up and down, left and right&#13;
on the Loop grid. The effect of all this on a sodbuster like me is&#13;
more than overwhelming. Add to this the burned out feeling that&#13;
one feels when he sees a brilliant Kubrick quasifantasy, and you&#13;
have an exhausted movie reviewer, who, while inspired to write&#13;
great things about a great film, drives bleary-eyed, jabbering his&#13;
way home.&#13;
Alex would have driven fast, on the wrong side of the road&#13;
running oncoming cars off, snarling his way home on synthemesc.&#13;
Alex, a savage beast, is soothed by Beethoven, moved by murder&#13;
and in love with all the immediate brutality of ultraviolence. He&#13;
controls himself gladiator style, lust and desire as motivation&#13;
portrayed equally in book and film as predator and victim.&#13;
In 1962, Anthony Burgess abstracted the character from the&#13;
Mod-Rocker clashes, near contemporaries of Hell's Angel&#13;
escapades. A story with deep idealogical roots that never quite&#13;
resolves its theme of Pavlovian conditioning versus criminal&#13;
nature. The book, a presupposition, is timed like clockwork orange&#13;
or otherwise with environmental controls being suggested by&#13;
Skinner and others. A schism on the verge, an answer in film&#13;
Oily Kubrick would latch on to this kintl of stuff, a perfect story&#13;
media for him to work his magic lense tricks,&#13;
techniques for 2001 Space Odyssey showing thro&#13;
posures, slow motion and of course classical stra&#13;
Beethoven, Rossini, Purcell, Elgar and Rimsky Kors&#13;
favorite being Ludwig's 9th symphony (which I love&#13;
way) all being played by one of those synthes&#13;
causticizing that feel of speed, and chromium grindin&#13;
Gene Kelley's "Singing' in the Rain" shows up as then&#13;
His ninth film in 19 years, Kubrick has mad&#13;
narrative nature of the book to relate the nature of&#13;
wasting the Russo-pubo slang Burgess meticulou&#13;
("Apypoly nogies" — apologies and the old " in-out&#13;
Beethoven is the crux, Alex accidently conditio™&#13;
favorite theme along with ultraviolence. We are led ti&#13;
this eventually restores Alex's love of brutality w&#13;
ditioning goes de-conditioning, his love of the9th reapt&#13;
The change takes place over our brutophiliac&#13;
English-Conditioning-Advocate looking on. As a ntag&#13;
pulled Alex from a prison to condition him. After hi;&#13;
publicized release, a fascist writer, bearing a&#13;
resemblence to Peter Seller's Dr. Strangelove (ano&#13;
film), bombards him with the "9th" until he trie&#13;
suicide, it doesn't quite work .... fade in — Alex&#13;
comical scene follows baby bird Alex mimicking, spc&#13;
mother robin Liberal.&#13;
The film is superbly photographed and g ives&#13;
comfortable position in which he can decide for I&#13;
whether or not he^loves his frontal lobes. It has wo&#13;
Prize for best direction, which I thought was sell deser&#13;
is a genius who says that he gained his virtuosity thro&#13;
lots of silms as a kid. &#13;
lung gentleman who&#13;
&gt;iveness"to the place,&#13;
le eating in the cararea.&#13;
&#13;
ted fine, as I t ried to&#13;
ssible. The roast beef&#13;
ies (I'm not sure if it&#13;
d time) but was very&#13;
) in a tasty natural&#13;
turkey was the kind&#13;
t white meat, I still&#13;
aid the chicken and&#13;
ere recommendable.&#13;
t other items, like&#13;
't have a bland taste,&#13;
t" places serve food&#13;
somewhat tasteless.&#13;
Jroblem at Obie's.&#13;
rages is a fine idea.&#13;
&lt;ery bite or mouthful&#13;
h Into a pocket for&#13;
ond Sprite, I leaned&#13;
d the same thing I'm&#13;
ireats says, "I didn't&#13;
ust that it's all so&#13;
was greased out. At&#13;
of the fat kid, and&#13;
nous decision on the&#13;
&gt;ver re staurant food;&#13;
ew days later at the&#13;
as wiped out, eyes&#13;
wollen. He sat at the&#13;
jued at days before,&#13;
ced up to the table,&#13;
he said. The fat kid&#13;
the table, rolled his&#13;
ned.&#13;
February 28,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
tricks, some of the&#13;
ing through, overexcal&#13;
strains including&#13;
sky Korsakoff; Alex's&#13;
:h I lo ve in a different&#13;
synthesizers synthoi&#13;
grinding teeth. Even&#13;
pas theme song,&#13;
ias made use of the&#13;
ature of the film, not&#13;
leticulously designed&#13;
I "in -out").&#13;
onditioned against his&#13;
are led to believe that&#13;
tality when the con-&#13;
?th reappearing,&#13;
iphiliac with Liberal­&#13;
's antagonist, he had&#13;
After his successfully&#13;
iring a remarkable&#13;
ive (another Kubrick&#13;
he tries to commit&#13;
— Al ex in traction. A&#13;
(ing, spoon fed by the&#13;
I g ives the viewer a&#13;
de for himself as to&#13;
has won the Critics'&#13;
ell deserved. Kubrick&#13;
;ity through watching&#13;
from the Music Desk&#13;
In our never-ending search to turn the&#13;
sophisticated but destitute music lover on to&#13;
just a little more of the mind destroying rock&#13;
&amp; r oll he craves, we of the Music Desk, who&#13;
understand his plight well, being in the same&#13;
boat ourselves, find few experiences more&#13;
satisfying than stumbling across an obscure&#13;
radiant and powerful album in the back bin of&#13;
the shop and being rewarded for impulse by&#13;
music which worms its way into the subconscious,&#13;
wreaks its havoc in the gray room,&#13;
and moves the feet in weird directions.&#13;
BAD MANORS is such an album.&#13;
In a plain gold sleeve with a crowbar on it,&#13;
this little gem could easily be missed. Upon&#13;
finding it, a perusal of the back cover would&#13;
reveal only a long list of credits and the&#13;
names don't give a clue that these boys used&#13;
to back up the legendary Ronnie Hawkins, the&#13;
evil Canadian genius who graduated the Band&#13;
after teaching them all they know. Doing time&#13;
with Hawkins is said to be a terrifying experience&#13;
but those who survive, the legend&#13;
goes, cannot miss a beat or play a wrong note.&#13;
Unless they want to.&#13;
But y'see, Crowbar sometimes wants to. If&#13;
there's one thing besides superhuman&#13;
musicianship that Ronnie Hawkins teaches&#13;
his bands, it's not to take themselves&#13;
seriously. Crowbar never lets convention&#13;
stand in the way of a good time. They cut up&#13;
and mess around, inject odd ball bits and&#13;
pieces in between songs, change tempoes at&#13;
the drop of a finger pick, belch, pant, yodel&#13;
and otherwise carry on like cheerfully spaced&#13;
maniacs. But thmve . trii iciwk i\ w of i th11 iw e trii aduue c • is o th11 ic e wway ay&#13;
!•!• /ilrof C« CAM V ® •' ' ;• ' ' '•'&#13;
its p l a y e d . E v e ry b i t of f o o l i s h n e s s is&#13;
casually calculated and not only strictly in the&#13;
context of the song but in fact to the enhancement&#13;
of the song in every case. Which is to&#13;
say that any band that loose has to be tight&#13;
and Crowbar are tight to just this side of&#13;
telekineticism. They've been in the biz a long&#13;
time and know each other's minds,&#13;
imaginations, needs and fetishes.&#13;
And the music they come up with. Defies&#13;
description. With six members, all possessed&#13;
of fine voices, the American vocal music&#13;
tradition is probably close. Pulling the songs&#13;
from the soil and the ghosts thereon in places&#13;
like Gettysburg and the dust bowl in the&#13;
manner of their spiritual kin, the Band, is an&#13;
approximation also. It e xists in the air in the&#13;
history books, and for Crowbar, in the dime&#13;
novels and kinky sideshows. Hillbilly and&#13;
halleujah, bluegrass and grease. They don't&#13;
know how to boogie woogie but they can reel&#13;
like no one since Jed Clampett. And they can&#13;
rock &amp; r oll.&#13;
"House of Blue Lights" will spin you. A&#13;
supercharged ricke-tick with woodblock&#13;
ticktock, jive piano and idiot scat singing. The&#13;
train song is an institution and also a good&#13;
standard of clack time-motion and "Train&#13;
Keep Roll in'" burns the thin steel rail with&#13;
great whistle guitar and chug. "Let's Play&#13;
House" cuts and runs in triple time yodel&#13;
from King Bisquit Boy and breaks for a neat&#13;
two bars of demented panting. "What a&#13;
Feeling" What a russsshhhh floating up to a&#13;
spoken bridge punched by horns in the perfect&#13;
redneck drug song.&#13;
We come upon Snuffy Smif's still in the&#13;
clearing bubbling merrily away and&#13;
"Mountain Fire" testifyin to those corn&#13;
squeezin's and downhome crazy. "In the&#13;
Dancing Hold" rocks on mercilessly while&#13;
this dupe denies being able to do any dance&#13;
ever invented and then pleads with his grease&#13;
baby to come back and dance with me. All&#13;
leading inexhorably to "Prince of Peace"&#13;
with weird doom parade of religious kooks&#13;
down main street dissolving to honky tonk sax&#13;
and Salvation Army bass drum and sure&#13;
enough, the Day of Judgement complete with&#13;
angelic chorus. This is scary.&#13;
Crowbar makes you laugh and shake at the&#13;
some time and music that can do that is&#13;
alright with me.&#13;
Mike Stevesand&#13;
.... Tickets for the National&#13;
•x Shakespeare Company's&#13;
production of "Twelfth Night''&#13;
&amp; are now on sale at the Student&#13;
g Activities Office, Room 217&#13;
S-Tallent Hall. The performance&#13;
|will he held on Tuesday, March&#13;
£28, at 8 p.m. in Bradford High&#13;
School Auditorium, Kenosha;&#13;
S Ticket sales are limited to the&#13;
£ Parkside &lt;j»mpus through&#13;
g Friday, March 3, affording&#13;
£ students and staff an op^&#13;
importunity for the best seats,&#13;
g After that date, general admission&#13;
tickets will be sold&#13;
! :•: thr o u gh the K e n o sha and&#13;
$ Racine outlets, Bidinger's&#13;
$ Music House and Cook-Gere&#13;
x Records, as well as at Parkside.&#13;
;XJ ^ "&#13;
Reserved seat prices are$1.50&#13;
and $1.00 for Parkside students&#13;
and staff, and $3.00 and $2.00 for&#13;
general admission.&#13;
The event is being sponsored&#13;
by the UW-Parkside LectureFine&#13;
Arts Committee.&#13;
Boss'KorrcE&#13;
Eggs...&#13;
Mon. thru Thurs.:&#13;
5 - 7 p.m. — All the beer&#13;
you can drink $1.00&#13;
7 - closing — Pitchers $1.00 \\&#13;
Sunday: 1-5 p.m. — All the beer you can drink $2;00&#13;
|Mon.: 8 - closing — "College Night" Food&#13;
Wed.: Beer and pretzel night&#13;
Thurs.: "Ladies' Night"&#13;
Vi price for women&#13;
Fri.: 4 - 7 p.m. —&#13;
["Double Bubble" Double mixed drink for the price of one&#13;
Sat.: 2 - 6 p.m. —All the beer you can drink $2.00&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
Mon. - Fri. — 4 - closing&#13;
Sat. and Sun. — Noon - closing&#13;
8231 SWidan Road&#13;
Kenosha, W/sconsm&#13;
Teleph one: 457-3311&#13;
RICHARD G. CAPELLX, prop. &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE February 28,1972&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
Election Laws Drafted&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA* SPLIT&#13;
IT' S S C R U M P T I O U S&#13;
80c&#13;
BIG TOP&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry -jf\&#13;
75c&#13;
N O R T H 3 3 11 SH E R I D A N RO A D S O U T H 75 0 0 SH E R I D A N R O A D&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
r l/ALEO'S&#13;
PIZZAII&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
I KM Dl I.IVI KV TO I'AKKSIDI VILI.AC.i-:&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30th Avenue Kenosha 657—5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
mi&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Easter Break&#13;
Trips To:&#13;
ROME Api&#13;
(2nd plane)-&#13;
ACAPULC0&#13;
Information Available at&#13;
Student Activities Office — Tallent Hall&#13;
In response to the very unprofessional&#13;
manner In which&#13;
elections have been done in the past,&#13;
Student Government has adopted an&#13;
entirely new set of procedures. The&#13;
senate had previously authorized the&#13;
Pre-Law Club to write up&#13;
procedures. The senate has also&#13;
authorized Tim Brotsko, President&#13;
of the Pre-Law Club, and other PreLaw&#13;
members to serve on the&#13;
Election Committee, Chairman&#13;
James Twist.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWSR SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racine&#13;
3309 Washington Ave&#13;
633-3595&#13;
Western&#13;
BULLS&#13;
VERY DEFINITELY&#13;
GEAR BOX®&#13;
Classic Western blue&#13;
jeans — rough 'n ready&#13;
for anything because&#13;
they're hefty bull weight&#13;
(13y2 oz.) cotton denim.&#13;
Flare bottoms, belt-loop&#13;
waist, scoop pockets in&#13;
front, patch pockets in&#13;
back. Si?es 28-38, S-M-L&#13;
lengths.&#13;
Richman&#13;
B R O T H E R S&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
BY LAWS&#13;
to&#13;
ARTICLE I, SECTION D, No. 3&#13;
ELECTION COMMITTEE&#13;
1. By a majority vote of its&#13;
members the Election Committee&#13;
will be empowered to enforce the&#13;
election laws.&#13;
2. It is unlawful for any candidate&#13;
to:&#13;
2.1 not have his name appear on&#13;
all campaign literature sponsoring&#13;
his candidacy.&#13;
2.2 willfully destroy, deface,&#13;
move, or remove from its place any&#13;
poster, sign, banner, or piece of&#13;
campaign literature of any other&#13;
candidate.&#13;
2.3 deceive or attempt to deceive&#13;
through verbal or written communication&#13;
any potential voter.&#13;
3. The Election Committee will&#13;
investigate and judge the merits of&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" '- 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI . RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING . . . W E BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
written complaints by candidates of&#13;
alleged campaign misconduct including,&#13;
but not restricting itself to&#13;
those mentioned in Regulation 2 (By&#13;
Law of Article I, Section D, 3). The&#13;
Election Committee may apply such&#13;
sanction in cases of demonstrated&#13;
misconduct as it sees fit, including&#13;
public censure, disqualification of&#13;
an offending candidate, or requiring&#13;
a new election.&#13;
BY LAWS&#13;
GENERAL&#13;
ELECTION PROCEDURES&#13;
1. The locations of the polls shall&#13;
be well-publicized and shall be&#13;
located to avoid congestion and&#13;
provide easy access to the voter.&#13;
2. A sample ballot shall be made&#13;
available for the voter to study at the&#13;
polling place.&#13;
3. Polls shall open no later than&#13;
8:30 A.M. on election days and shall&#13;
close not before 8:00 P.M.&#13;
4. Ballot boxes shall be sealed on&#13;
the day of the election and shall not&#13;
be opened until the ballots are&#13;
counted.&#13;
5. There shall be no campaigning&#13;
of any kind within 10 yards of the&#13;
polls, nor shall there be campaign&#13;
signs, posters, or other campaign&#13;
literature In evidence within 10&#13;
yards of the polling places on&#13;
election day.&#13;
6. Poll workers shall not make any&#13;
attempt to influence voters.&#13;
7. The ballot counting shall be&#13;
supervised by the Election Committee.&#13;
&#13;
8. Only those certified by the&#13;
Election Committee will be allowed&#13;
to enter the ballot counting room.&#13;
9. No partial results shall be&#13;
released by any person who has&#13;
access TO th e counting room while&#13;
the ballots are being counted.&#13;
10. All ballots must be counted&#13;
within 24 hours of the closing of the&#13;
polls on the last day of the election.&#13;
11. After the vote has been officially&#13;
tabulated and certified, the&#13;
Election Committee will publicly&#13;
release the results.&#13;
12. All ballots will be held at a&#13;
place specified by "the Election&#13;
Committee for 10 class days&#13;
following the election at which time&#13;
they will be destroyed unless an&#13;
appeal, recount, or re-election is&#13;
pending in which case they will be&#13;
held until the dispute is resolved.&#13;
13. A recount:&#13;
13.1 may be made upon a written&#13;
request by a candidate up to 3 class&#13;
days after the election with such a&#13;
recount to be authorized by the&#13;
Election Committee.&#13;
13.2 may be made by the&#13;
Election Committee up to one day&#13;
before the ballots are destroyed.&#13;
HAWAIIAN HOLIDAY&#13;
$28250&#13;
March 25 - April 1st&#13;
April 1st - April 8th&#13;
Braniff Airlines&#13;
Kuhio Hotel&#13;
All Taxes &amp; Tips&#13;
Transfers&#13;
Contact:&#13;
WSA&#13;
WSSC Store&#13;
720 State&#13;
Madison, Wis.&#13;
608-263-2444 &#13;
Sports Teams Prepare for NAIA&#13;
February 28,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
With the 1971-72 basketball&#13;
season safely tucked in the&#13;
record books, UW-Parkside's&#13;
other winter sports teams wind&#13;
up their dual meet seasons and&#13;
prepare for the NAIA national&#13;
championships.&#13;
Coach Loran Hein's fencers&#13;
will host Illinois-Chicago Circle,&#13;
Tri-State and Milwaukee Tech&#13;
at 10 a.m. Saturday at Bullen&#13;
Jr. High School in Kenosha in&#13;
their last home event of the year&#13;
while Dave Donaldson's&#13;
gymnasts take on the&#13;
University of Chicago Friday&#13;
night in the Windy City.&#13;
Steve Stephens' basketballers&#13;
finished the year last week by&#13;
upsetting Dominican at the&#13;
Chambliss&#13;
Tops Statistic s&#13;
Freshman Chuck Chambliss&#13;
topped the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside final&#13;
basketball statistics released&#13;
today.&#13;
The forward from Racine&#13;
Park high school led the&#13;
Rangers in total points, with&#13;
365; in scoring with a 17.4&#13;
average; in rebounding with a&#13;
7.6 average; in free throw&#13;
percentage with a 73.3 per cent&#13;
mark; and in the season's high&#13;
game, with a 30 point performance&#13;
against, Dominican&#13;
Monday.&#13;
It was in that game, the last in&#13;
a 4-18 s eason for the Rangers,&#13;
that Chambliss excelled and led&#13;
Parkside to an upset win over&#13;
the highly-regarded Lakers on&#13;
the Dominican court.&#13;
He hit on 10 shots from the&#13;
floor and 10 of 13 from the foul&#13;
stripe for his 30 big ones and&#13;
added 17 rebounds for the best&#13;
night this year by a Ranger in&#13;
that department.&#13;
Tom Heller, Kenosha freshman&#13;
who prepped at St. Joseph&#13;
high, had the Rangers' highest&#13;
percentage from the floor at&#13;
52.4 per cent.&#13;
Other Rangers who finished&#13;
in double scoring figures for the&#13;
year included Greendal freshman&#13;
Tom Joyce with a 14.1&#13;
average for 22 games;&#13;
Burlington sophomore Bob&#13;
Popp, with a 12.2 average for 11&#13;
games; and Heller, with a 11.5&#13;
ppg mark.&#13;
Lakers' court by an 81-71 score&#13;
as Chuck Chambliss pumped in&#13;
30 points for the season's high&#13;
game by a Ranger. The&#13;
Rangers ended with a 4-18 mark&#13;
hut improvement was&#13;
noticeable throughout the&#13;
second half of the season and&#13;
there were no seniors on the&#13;
squad.&#13;
The wrestling team, coached&#13;
hy Jim Koch, closed out its dual&#13;
season Friday night against&#13;
Grand Valley State and Hillsdale&#13;
(Mich.) College and will&#13;
now prime for the NAIA&#13;
national meet at Klamath Falls&#13;
Ore., March 9-11. The track&#13;
squad, headed by Bob Lawson,&#13;
will compete in the Illinois Open&#13;
at Champaign Saturday alter&#13;
vying at the LaCrosse Invitational.&#13;
John Tank has been&#13;
Parkside's top fencer this year&#13;
and just recently won the&#13;
Wisconsin Closed Foil Tournament&#13;
in Milwaukee,&#13;
defeating 25 other fencers from&#13;
throughout the state.&#13;
Three Parkside gymnasts&#13;
have qualified for the lateMarch&#13;
NAIA nationals at&#13;
Eastern Illinois University.&#13;
Warren McGillivray, a senior&#13;
from Burbank, Cal., and&#13;
Kenosha freshman Kevin&#13;
O'Neil and Kerry Pfeifer have&#13;
all qualified for the national&#13;
meet.&#13;
rugby&#13;
WANT TO PLAY ?&#13;
UW-Parkside needs rugby players!&#13;
A schedule has been set up and all who are interested are&#13;
welcome to join.&#13;
The schedule:&#13;
April 15 — St. Ambrose at Davenport, Iowa&#13;
April 22 - AMOCO at Parkside&#13;
April 28 — Lincoln Park at Chicago&#13;
April 29 — Marquette at Parkside&#13;
May 6 — Minnesota at Parkside&#13;
May 7 — Northern Illinois at DeKalb.&#13;
Each team is represented by 15 men with one additional&#13;
man (reserve) to act as line judge. Rules specify that there&#13;
are no substitutions during the game except because of injury&#13;
during the first five minutes of play. The time for each&#13;
match varies but is usually 30-40 minutes for each half of the&#13;
game (there is a five minute breathing space for half-time&#13;
entertainment).&#13;
There are only two set plays in rugby: a line-out occurs&#13;
when the ball is kicked, carried or thrown out of bounds. At&#13;
this time the opposing team throws the ball over the middle&#13;
of a one-yard alley formed by opposing forwards standing&#13;
five yards from the sideline. The forwards jump for&#13;
possession of the ball and play progresses from there.&#13;
A set scrum is awarded to one team for a minor infraction&#13;
of the rules by the other. To form the scrum the first&#13;
three men of the scrum lock arms and meet the opposing&#13;
team with their shoulders. The remaining five forwards bind&#13;
on them, giving support and helping push. Hands may not&#13;
touch the ball until it leaves the scrum.&#13;
Thtre points — a try — are awarded for placing the ball&#13;
on the ground over the opponent's goal. Two points — a&#13;
conversion — are extra points added after a try. A drop kick&#13;
from anywhere on the field that splits the uprights is worth&#13;
three points. And three points again are awarded for a drop&#13;
kick or place kick taken from the point of a n infraction; this&#13;
is a penalty kick.&#13;
And that, in short, is rugby. It's rough, but it's also fun.&#13;
An ambitious schedule awaits all who might want to play.&#13;
Contact Coach Vic Godfrey at Athletics (553-2310) for more&#13;
information and to sign up for the squad.&#13;
Legal ABORTION&#13;
in Midwest&#13;
you. hay t d&#13;
Choice&#13;
fopl2-775-268S&#13;
(f 312-774-^?!)&#13;
y a norv-profft service&#13;
J&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Va Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
10W - 20 W - 30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oif Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All It ems Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
196/ Opel Rally 4 speed, 40,000 miles,&#13;
$850. Call 654-5032 ask for Barb or&#13;
Doug.&#13;
FOR SALE — 69 Plymouth Wagon&#13;
Custom Suburban. 1 owner. V-8, 318&#13;
engine, air, power brakes and&#13;
steering, 57,000 miles. Excellent&#13;
condition. Call 658-1285.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE — Marimba, 2Vi oct.&#13;
$100; Schwinn bicycle. 1 speed,&#13;
coaster brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N. Oakland, Milwaukee,,&#13;
Wis.&#13;
Garrard SLX-2 "Module" series&#13;
turntalbe; console stereo. Call Ray&#13;
654-8878.&#13;
FOR SALE — Refrigerator. Works&#13;
like a refrigerator should. $20. Ph.&#13;
Doug, 654-0697.&#13;
FOR SALE — Mosrite Bass Guitar.&#13;
Double pickup. Double cutaway,&#13;
hollow body. With plush-lined&#13;
hardshell case. Was $450 new. Excellent&#13;
condition. $100. Call Larry,&#13;
552-8347 or come to P-Village, apt 109&#13;
(The Swamp).&#13;
County Lot — 1.9 acres, 41 Ave. 8. 14&#13;
St. (approx.) Call 654-6317 after 5:00.&#13;
FOR SALE — Roth violin with case.&#13;
Very good condition. $260.00 new,&#13;
$125.00 or best offer. Electronic&#13;
adaptor also available. Phone 654-&#13;
1731.&#13;
DRUMS FOR SALE — Ludwick&#13;
complete set, excellent condition.&#13;
Best offer over $125. Ph 633-5666&#13;
after 4:00. Jerry or Bob.&#13;
STEREO TAPE RECORDER —&#13;
Sony 252 D One year old. List $135.00,&#13;
sell for $70.00. Ph. Jerry 652-2538 or&#13;
553 2496.&#13;
FOR RENT— 1 furnished bedroom&#13;
with kitchen - off street parking.&#13;
$50.00 per month including utilities.&#13;
552-8172. 5306 South Lake Shore Rd.&#13;
(just off Sheridan Road), Racine.&#13;
3 Room Apt. North side Keno.&#13;
Privacy assured. Situated well for&#13;
all campuses. Call 552-8970.&#13;
MODEL NEEDED for life drawing&#13;
class. Contact David Zaig, Room&#13;
217, Greenquist Hall - Art Dept.&#13;
BABY-SITTER NEEDED 4 2 boys,&#13;
ages 20 months and 10 months.&#13;
About 6 hours a day, 2 weekdays.&#13;
Days and time flexible. My home -&#13;
North side of Kenosha. Call 654-4593&#13;
afternoons or evenings.&#13;
WANTED — '63, 64 or 65&#13;
Volkswagen. Good running condition&#13;
• reasonable. Call 654-1684 or 658-&#13;
3998.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED — People who would like&#13;
to help other people. Free training.&#13;
Contact Joe Baker, director Racine&#13;
Hotline, 637-1112. Mon.-Wed.-Fri.&#13;
1:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.&#13;
Photographer wanted — Should be&#13;
available for June 10th wedding,&#13;
reasonable rates. Call 639-8863,&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Female Bartender Wanted — one&#13;
night a week. The College Inn. Ph.&#13;
552-8465.&#13;
Thank you, everybody, for coming&#13;
Feb. 19 to hear us play for you. We&#13;
enjoy sincerely those all that came.&#13;
God's Starboys from Hell&#13;
MOM — come home now! Daddy,&#13;
Jimmy, Johnny, Ethyl, Deloris,&#13;
Petie, Alice, Sammy, Tommy, the&#13;
three dogs and four cats miss you.&#13;
Why did you leave? Come home soon&#13;
we need you. Teddy.&#13;
Would the person who stole the&#13;
radiator out of my brand new&#13;
Volkswagen please return it? No&#13;
questions asked! Contact Chalres&#13;
Leftturn.&#13;
To whom it may concern — We want&#13;
our 3 dish pans back now. &#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63672">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 8, February 28, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63673">
                <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="63674">
                <text>1972-02-28</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="63677">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63678">
                <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="63679">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63680">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63681">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63682">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="239">
        <name>gloria steinem</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="235">
        <name>jesus christ superstar</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="234">
        <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="238">
        <name>parkside women's caucus</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2614" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4438">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/29bf818bcf8dd2d6863bf7f5d3c10d4f.pdf</src>
        <authentication>60b06ad4c1e51103cab2c7c0b2753f87</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63687">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 9</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63688">
              <text>Public Hearing: Opposition to Annexation</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63695">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89894">
              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside ilr&#13;
Number 9 March 6,1972&#13;
Mayor Burkee explained proposed annexation at publie meeting held in Greenquist.&#13;
public hearing&#13;
Opposition to A nnexation&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Room 103 Greenquist Hall&#13;
was the scene last Tuesday&#13;
night of a public meeting&#13;
concerning the latest move to&#13;
annex the Parkside campus and&#13;
a strip of land connecting the&#13;
campus, with the city of&#13;
Kenosha. An hour and a half of&#13;
speeches preceded an almost&#13;
equally long question and answer&#13;
period. Mayor Wallace&#13;
Burkee, City Planner John&#13;
Kolstad and Assistant City&#13;
Planner Tom Pitts presented&#13;
the city's argument for annexation,&#13;
while eight speakers&#13;
including County Supervisors&#13;
Charles Huck and Gilbert&#13;
Ebner, area property owners, a&#13;
Parkside Village resident and&#13;
Dean Loumos, President of&#13;
SGA, spoke against it.&#13;
The hearing which began at&#13;
7:30, was sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association and was moderated&#13;
by Jim Twist, a student senator.&#13;
The three city officials&#13;
presented their arguments first,&#13;
all of which ran over the seven&#13;
minute time limit allotted to&#13;
speeches; later they would be&#13;
asked many pointed questions.&#13;
The three city officials referred&#13;
often to a'series of charts and&#13;
maps they had taped to a blackboard&#13;
earlier in the evening,&#13;
liberally injecting statistics into&#13;
their presentations. The city&#13;
men had obviously been&#13;
through this kind of thing&#13;
before; they spoke in even&#13;
tones, in marked contrast to the&#13;
speakers who would follow&#13;
them, explaining their case&#13;
point by point. Unlike the&#13;
speakers who followed them&#13;
with arguments against the&#13;
proposed annexation, the city&#13;
officials received no reaction&#13;
from the strongly partisan&#13;
audience, except for an occasional&#13;
muffled groan, while&#13;
the other speakers were greeted&#13;
and interrupted by enthusiastic&#13;
applause.&#13;
Mayor Burkee, who spoke&#13;
first, explained that the city&#13;
paid for the 15 inch sewer which&#13;
presently serves Parkside, as&#13;
well as water service. He indicated&#13;
that the existing sewer&#13;
line would be "adequate until&#13;
1973 with no new building, no&#13;
new additions." He explained to&#13;
the audience that after 1973 "the&#13;
present sewer would overflow:&#13;
You just can't put five pounds in&#13;
a three pound bag". He informed&#13;
the 50 to 60 people in the&#13;
audience that three developers&#13;
already have plans for building&#13;
1,000 new apartments in the&#13;
area. "I didn't ask for annexation,&#13;
developers like USGI&#13;
did."&#13;
The modishly dressed Pitts&#13;
followed the mayor's speech&#13;
with an explanation of the&#13;
procedure required of a direct&#13;
annexation, which is the type&#13;
now proposed. Direct annexation,&#13;
he explained, does not&#13;
require a referendum, it needs&#13;
the signatures of 50 p er cent of&#13;
the residents who live in the&#13;
area, and the signatures of 50&#13;
per cent of the property owners&#13;
or the signatures of owners&#13;
whose land is valued at 50 per&#13;
cent of t he assessed value of the&#13;
total area. He told the audience&#13;
that in order to annex Parkside,&#13;
"a corridor of land is necessary&#13;
in order to make the campus&#13;
contiguous to the city." Later&#13;
the opposition would contest his&#13;
statement, they would ask why&#13;
just a corrodor, why not an&#13;
orderly annexation of the entire&#13;
area between Parkside and the&#13;
city.&#13;
Kolstad ended the city's&#13;
presentation stating that the&#13;
"city is more developed and is&#13;
better able to provide all types&#13;
of municipal services to the&#13;
area . . . available upon annexation."&#13;
The City Planner&#13;
pointed out to the audience,&#13;
much of which was composed of&#13;
area farmers, that "farmed&#13;
agricultural land does not pay&#13;
nearly as much as apartments&#13;
would on the same property."&#13;
He expressed the belief that&#13;
annexation is necessary for the&#13;
further growth of the University.&#13;
&#13;
County Supervisor Charles&#13;
Huck spoke next, and said the&#13;
proposed "annexation would&#13;
cut Somers almost in two". He&#13;
echoed the sentiments of many&#13;
in the audience, concerning the&#13;
way in which the annexation is&#13;
drawn up; "It's not orderly."&#13;
He stated that if the "taxes go&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
UWP in U.N. Summer Seminar&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will participate in the&#13;
seventh annual Wisconsin&#13;
Universities United Nations&#13;
Summer Seminar June 19 - Aug.&#13;
12 in New York City.&#13;
The Summer Seminar is an&#13;
eight-week program of intensive&#13;
study of the U.N. at its&#13;
headquarters administered by&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and additionally&#13;
sponsored by ten&#13;
other UW campuses including&#13;
Parkside, the Johnson Foundation&#13;
of Racine, the Institute&#13;
for International Order in New&#13;
York City and the Cudahy Fund&#13;
of Milwaukee.&#13;
The participating universities&#13;
will send a total of 20 juniors&#13;
and seniors to the seminar,&#13;
including one or two from&#13;
Parkside. The representatives&#13;
will be selected from applicants&#13;
later this Spring by the political&#13;
science faculty.&#13;
Students will take six credits&#13;
of political science courses in&#13;
New York taught by UW system&#13;
faculty, supplemented by&#13;
lectures from members of the&#13;
U.N. Secretariat and national&#13;
delegations. Students also will&#13;
attend meetings of the U.N. and&#13;
related agencies.&#13;
Sponsors say they have&#13;
designed the program so that&#13;
the cost to participating&#13;
students is no more than six&#13;
credits and room and board&#13;
would be during the summer at&#13;
UWM, an estimated $520. To&#13;
make this possible, the Seminar&#13;
covers the round-trip air fare&#13;
between Milwaukee and New&#13;
York.&#13;
UW-P students interested in&#13;
applying for the program&#13;
should contact John Harbeson&#13;
of the political science faculty&#13;
or Dean Eugene Norwood by&#13;
Mar. 27. Applicants must be&#13;
Wisconsin residents, be juniors&#13;
or seniors by this summer, have&#13;
had a "substantial" number of&#13;
social science courses, including&#13;
a basic course in&#13;
political science, and have a&#13;
grade point average of at least&#13;
2.50.&#13;
SGA to Co-Sponsor&#13;
Charity Dance&#13;
by Larry Jones of the Newscope staff&#13;
Parkside's Student Government Association (PSGA) has&#13;
agreed to co-sponsor a charity dance with the other four schools in&#13;
the area. Larry Beck, of t he Kenosha Technical Institute, made the&#13;
request for participation at the March 2 meeting of PSGA.&#13;
Beck stated that the basic purpose of the event is to make a&#13;
start at bringing the five schools together — in this case socially,&#13;
and hopefully many other ways in the future. The dance will also&#13;
raise money for a local charity, still to be decided upon.&#13;
According to Beck, the event was held last year with only&#13;
Parkside not participating. The request was turned down by the&#13;
Board of Regents because of technicalities in financing. He said&#13;
they hoped to avoid the problem this year by going directly to the&#13;
student government.&#13;
Last year, the other four schools, KTI, RTI, Dominican and&#13;
Carthage, sponsored the event at Bristol Oaks and drew a crowd of&#13;
some 300 people on a night which included a bad sleet storm. At&#13;
that, they were able to give $250 to Southern Colony.&#13;
The event this year is again planned for Bristol Oaks, with the&#13;
rental cost down from $500 to $200. The hope is that three bands will&#13;
donate their services, which would only leave the rental and police&#13;
protection to be paid for. Should any loss occur, one fifth of it would&#13;
be underwritten by PSGA, according to Beck. No date has yet been&#13;
set for the event.&#13;
In other business at Thursday's meetipg, PSGA:&#13;
— accepted the resignation of Dave Kerner because a full time&#13;
job kept him from devoting enough time to government;&#13;
— tabled a request for funds by the Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
until a complete report on finances is made and other student&#13;
groups submit budgets;&#13;
— ag reed to send a representative to the governor's Student&#13;
Advisory Committee on financial aids, which meets monthly in&#13;
Madison; and&#13;
— established a committee to study the feasibility of a symposium&#13;
which would "offer students educational opportunities&#13;
other than traditional classroom chores."&#13;
Elections will be held Tuesday, March 7, and Wednesday,&#13;
March 8. According to Elections Committee Chairman Jim Twist,&#13;
only two nominating petitions have been filed for four vacant&#13;
positions. Both are for the position of senator, thus leaving the&#13;
positions of recording and corresponding secretaries vacant.&#13;
SGA ELECTIONS&#13;
Two students nave inea&#13;
nomination petitions for four&#13;
vacant positions in the.SGA's&#13;
spring election Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 7 and 9.&#13;
Mark Harris and Tom Haack&#13;
will be running for two senate&#13;
positions vacated by Dave&#13;
Kerner and Jim DeBerge.&#13;
No nominating petitions were&#13;
filed for the offices of recording&#13;
secretary and corresponding&#13;
secretary. Both of these&#13;
positions are vacant due to the&#13;
resignations of Jeanette Dremel&#13;
and Don Koser.&#13;
Write-in candidates will be&#13;
accepted though prospective&#13;
write-ins must abide by the&#13;
elections rules passed by the&#13;
Senate on February 21 and&#13;
published in NEWSCOPE on&#13;
February 28. Copies of the laws&#13;
governing elections are&#13;
available on request from the&#13;
SGA ovvice, Hwy. A and Wood&#13;
Road (553-2493 o r 553-2244).&#13;
Polling places will be located&#13;
in the main lobby of the Racine&#13;
campus, the main entrance to&#13;
the Kenosha campus, and in the&#13;
Greenquist concourse. Polls&#13;
will be open from 8:30 a.m. to&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Violations of the election laws&#13;
or other irregularities should be&#13;
reported to James Twist,&#13;
Chairman of the Election&#13;
Committee, or to committee&#13;
members John Regnery, Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Peter Gallo, Timothy&#13;
Prostko or Mike Baxter.&#13;
STAFF&#13;
ELECTIONS&#13;
Thur. Noon&#13;
at the office&#13;
Thomas E. Haack&#13;
Prospective Senator&#13;
The auspices that I run under&#13;
are that I will not let Parkside&#13;
become another Chicago with a&#13;
"machine" that runs it. I&#13;
believe strongly in student&#13;
involvement in all policies that&#13;
will affect the students, and also&#13;
believe in what the present&#13;
PSGA President and VicePresident&#13;
are trying to do for&#13;
our school.&#13;
CANDIDATE: Mark R.&#13;
Harris&#13;
OFFICE: Student Senator&#13;
The primary purpose of&#13;
Student Government, as I see it,&#13;
is to provide responsible and&#13;
effective representation and&#13;
leadership for the Parkside&#13;
student body. As a voter, you&#13;
should realize that Student&#13;
Government is currently very&#13;
limited in what it can do in&#13;
many areas; thus, in order to be&#13;
effective, I believe that the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association must develop a&#13;
close working relationship with&#13;
both faculty and administration.&#13;
This does not&#13;
imply student acquiescence in&#13;
all the wishes of the administration&#13;
or faculty, but&#13;
rather, it implies responsible&#13;
and constructive criticism,&#13;
which should win the respect of&#13;
faculty members and ad-&#13;
(Continued on Page 6) &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE March G, 1972&#13;
PU* ** fm Art Kfl Wlim KA AM Wl AA KN KN ** Krt IUI K*A* ** Wl I&#13;
RUBYS&#13;
"Ruby's has&#13;
the best corned&#13;
beef sandwich&#13;
in town"&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
A jAucA/, t&gt; (yy&#13;
(X^UJXJ thb lyOjVv (JjyMb&#13;
5535-6 Ave. Kenosha&#13;
'I'I'I'I'I'IIIIIIIIIII'T'Til 1T1T1T1T1T1TIT 1T1T1T»TiTiTil&#13;
^OUU/&#13;
waaXJI, tyutAjXi,&#13;
&lt;£r*Q(JjUA+tJi&#13;
Qit+taljUUJ&#13;
LETTERS TO&#13;
THE EDITOR&#13;
skiers have gas&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
The third annual ski trek' to&#13;
Whitecap Mountain proved to&#13;
be a gas. Six inches of new snow&#13;
on Friday night led to Saturday&#13;
morning's rape of the virgin&#13;
powder by P-Side skiers.&#13;
Having been high on top of&#13;
Whitecap Mountain, The&#13;
Ragtime Rangers et. al. took it&#13;
upon themselves to show the&#13;
northern locals they had no&#13;
claim to supremacy over the&#13;
area. The sparkling white lady&#13;
succumbed graciously to the&#13;
thirty eight P-Side skiers who&#13;
carressed her every flake.&#13;
Saturday night's party&#13;
contributed to Sunday morn's&#13;
overdose of coffee and sun&#13;
glasses, yet the mysterious&#13;
mistress of the mountain&#13;
beckoned to the P-Side skiers&#13;
who went back for seconds.&#13;
As the shadows lengthened,&#13;
weary skiers boarded their bus&#13;
for K-Town with smiles on their&#13;
faces, and sank softly into their&#13;
seats to await the next Whitecap&#13;
trip on March 17, 18 and 19.&#13;
Ragtime Rangers&#13;
tegim*&#13;
Mel Goode, nationally known news commentator for the&#13;
American Broadcasting Company, spoke to a group of 50&#13;
people Februarjy28 in the Badger room of the Racine campus.&#13;
Emphasizing the need for understanding among all&#13;
people Goode said, "In five years with the right kind of&#13;
leadership Racine could be the Ail-American city but this&#13;
couldn't happen if there is no equality." He went on to say&#13;
that inter-communication is the only way to solve the&#13;
problems of the cities.&#13;
"Materially we are the greatest country in the world. . .&#13;
but we haven't been able to get along with each other,"&#13;
Goode said.&#13;
Goode was brought to Parkside through the co-operation&#13;
of the Black Student Union and the Racine Commission on&#13;
Human Relations.&#13;
rings for the blind Shucord to Read Poems&#13;
To the Editor,.&#13;
We are a small group of&#13;
students with a big concern&#13;
about handicapped, underprivileged&#13;
and mentally&#13;
retarded people. We are looking&#13;
for ways to show our care,&#13;
understanding and love. We&#13;
have taken one small step.&#13;
Through St. Mary's on the Hill&#13;
Convent, it is possible to obtain&#13;
a seeing eye dog for the blind in&#13;
exchange for twelve pounds of&#13;
rings from pot-top cans.&#13;
Starting Monday there will be&#13;
.containers in the lounge areas&#13;
on campus. Concerned Students&#13;
Organization is asking you to&#13;
show your concern by&#13;
depositing the rings from your&#13;
pot-top cans in these containers.&#13;
Your cooperation is greatly&#13;
appreciated. If you would like to&#13;
become more involved, or find&#13;
out more about us, contact Dave&#13;
Bahr, 551-7653, or Carol&#13;
Willetts, 633-2698.&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
PARKSIDE ZPG MEETING&#13;
Parkside ZOG will hold a meeting on&#13;
Thursday, March 9, at 3:00 in Room&#13;
116-B on the Kenosha Campus. All&#13;
interested individuals are invited to&#13;
attend. For more information, call&#13;
Bob Lien (President) at 554-9159&#13;
(after 5:00) or Bob Moore (Advisor)&#13;
at Ext. 34-K (before 5:00).&#13;
THURSDAY -STAURDAY&#13;
NAIA Wrestling Championships at&#13;
Klamath Falls, Ore.&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
Track: North Central Relays at&#13;
Naperville, III.&#13;
Fencing: Great Lakes Meet at&#13;
Cleveland, Ohio&#13;
Alan Shucard, an assistant&#13;
professor of English at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
and author of a book of&#13;
poems titled "The Gorgon&#13;
Bag", will present a poetry&#13;
reading at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
March 12, at Wustum Museum,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Shucard, who "started&#13;
writing poetry when I was old&#13;
enough to wonder who I was and&#13;
what all those people were&#13;
doing around me," also has&#13;
published poems and short&#13;
stories in a number of literary&#13;
magazines in the U.S. and&#13;
Canada. He has given previous&#13;
readings in this area at the&#13;
Johnson Foundation's International&#13;
Writers Conference&#13;
at Wingspread, the Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum and the Kenosha&#13;
Public Museum.&#13;
Brooklyn-born, Shucard did&#13;
graduate work at the University&#13;
of St. Andrew, Scotland, and the&#13;
University of Connecticut and&#13;
received his Ph. D. degree from&#13;
the University of Arizona. He&#13;
taught at the University of&#13;
British Columbia before joining&#13;
the Parkside faculty in 1970.&#13;
Legion Blood D rive&#13;
The American Legion&#13;
Somer's post has notified UWParkside&#13;
that it will sponsor a&#13;
blood drive on Friday, April 7,&#13;
from noon until eight at night.&#13;
Blood donations will be used for&#13;
veterans at Woods Veteran's&#13;
Hospital. They are going to be&#13;
collected at the Somer's Post.&#13;
A Milwaukee County blood&#13;
mobile is going to collect the&#13;
blood for Woods Hospital. To be&#13;
eligible to give blood the donors&#13;
are asmed to be between the&#13;
ages of 16 and 65. They must fill&#13;
out a form and these are&#13;
available at the Student Activities&#13;
Office or at the A. L.&#13;
Post on Friday, April 7.&#13;
Every time a veteran at the&#13;
hospital receives blood, the&#13;
county he is from gets the bill.&#13;
Kenosha County currently owes&#13;
for 160 p ints of blood. Though&#13;
the Somer's Post is organizing&#13;
the drive, the entire county of&#13;
Kenosha is affected. They have&#13;
notified the other A. L. Posts,&#13;
the Reserves, and Carthage,&#13;
besides UW-P.&#13;
Donors should follow Kenosha&#13;
County Hwy. E west, traveling&#13;
one-half mile beyond the train&#13;
tracks, until they come to an old&#13;
fire house. There will be signs at&#13;
the front of the building.&#13;
PIZZAi&#13;
Custom made for&#13;
"i" DKLIVI RY TO PARKSim v'h.i AGK&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE DCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue Kenosha 651-5191&#13;
Open 6 days o week from 4 p.m., c/osed Mondays&#13;
Robin David, Kathy Rasch, Pat&#13;
McDermid, Marc Eisen, Jean Frahm,&#13;
Larry Jones, Jim Koloen, Helmut&#13;
Ferber, John Koloen, Rich Lipke,&#13;
Paul Lomartire, Bob Mainland,&#13;
Kevin McKay, Fred Noer, Jr., Brian&#13;
Ross, Wolfgang Salewski, Andy Schmelling,&#13;
Barb Scott, Cleta&#13;
Skovronski, Jerry Socha, Bill&#13;
Sorensen, Mike Stevesand, Debbie&#13;
Venskus, Mike Kite, Sifton Winnow.&#13;
PHONES:,&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation Of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout Ihe&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road. &#13;
March 6, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
Eric J. Olson, U.W.P. student running for Kenosha School Board.&#13;
UWP Student Candidate for School Board&#13;
hv by JJim k'aIaoh 1 im Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
On April 4th, a Parkside&#13;
student will spend a restless day&#13;
wondering if he has won himself&#13;
a new job. Junior English major&#13;
Eric J. Olson announced his&#13;
candidacy for one of two vacant&#13;
seats on the Kenosha school&#13;
board, one week before the&#13;
filing deadline.&#13;
Olson took wome time out of&#13;
his low-keyed campaign to&#13;
discuss his candidacy with&#13;
Newscope. The tall, dark haired&#13;
marine veteran explained why&#13;
he decided to run for public&#13;
office: "The school board needs&#13;
an alternative voice, a different&#13;
viewpoint, one which isn't&#13;
spoken from the position of a&#13;
middleaged, upper middle&#13;
income professional." The&#13;
amiable P-sider told Newscope&#13;
that if elected he would be "the&#13;
youngest member ever to sit on&#13;
the school board. Right now,"&#13;
he continued, "the average age&#13;
of the present board members is&#13;
between 40 and 50, it needs&#13;
younger members."&#13;
The Kenosha native, who is&#13;
making his first bid at elected&#13;
office, explained that the board&#13;
can no longer continue&#13;
"tackling new problems with&#13;
the same old methods. I've&#13;
spoken to a great many people&#13;
since announcing my candidacy,&#13;
and I've received many&#13;
favorable comments from older&#13;
as well as younger voters as to&#13;
the need for a young board&#13;
member. This is all new to me,&#13;
but what really surprised me&#13;
was the amount of interest, you&#13;
could say fervent interest&#13;
people, particularly older&#13;
people have in the school board.&#13;
I think one of the reasons for&#13;
this interest lies in the fact that&#13;
the board has the biggest&#13;
budget in the city government.&#13;
Another reason, of course, is the&#13;
fact that many of these citizens&#13;
have children attending schoool&#13;
in the Kenosha Unified school&#13;
district."&#13;
Olson explained some of the&#13;
goals he wants to meet if he is&#13;
elected: "I'd like to transfer the&#13;
cost of education from local&#13;
property taxes to federal and&#13;
state aids. The elderly particularly&#13;
can no longer afford&#13;
the high property taxes which&#13;
are caused by the rising cost of&#13;
education. I agree with Lindsay&#13;
when he says that education&#13;
must be funded with federal&#13;
monies. We must take the&#13;
burden off the property owners'&#13;
backs, it's gotten so many&#13;
people can no longer afford to&#13;
live."&#13;
When asked about any&#13;
specific proposals he has in&#13;
mind in structuring local&#13;
education he responded that "at&#13;
least 20 per cent of the high&#13;
school student body in this city&#13;
isn't interested in what they're&#13;
learning." Olson explained that&#13;
"these students don't care&#13;
about college prep courses, and&#13;
they find the traditional high&#13;
school curriculum boring.&#13;
These students are interested in&#13;
technical skills, things like&#13;
automotive mechanics." Olson&#13;
said he would like to institute a&#13;
liaison between local industry&#13;
and business with the schools, in&#13;
order to broaden the op&#13;
portunities for students to learn&#13;
technical skills. "For instance I&#13;
can't see why AMC can't help&#13;
organize a course at their plant,&#13;
and take in students who are&#13;
interested in automotive&#13;
mechanics. What it comes down&#13;
to is simply changing your&#13;
approach to education; why&#13;
centralize it all in one&#13;
building?"&#13;
Olson explained that he'd&#13;
been following a recent innovation&#13;
in the Cleveland area&#13;
"which has a school of perhaps&#13;
300 'difficult' students spread&#13;
out over an area of six city&#13;
blocks. These students learn not&#13;
in the traditional classroom&#13;
setting, but in places like the&#13;
backs of stores and neighborhood&#13;
shops. The results of&#13;
this experiment lyive been&#13;
favorable, the students seem to&#13;
be learning."&#13;
The 23 years old candidate&#13;
explained that it was obviously&#13;
correct to emphasize the basic&#13;
courses, such as math and&#13;
English, but* not to the&#13;
detriment of the individual;&#13;
schools should tailor classes to&#13;
the student rather than the&#13;
student to the classes.&#13;
The seat Eric Olson is running&#13;
for has a tenure of three years,&#13;
one incumbent and ten other&#13;
candidates are competing with&#13;
him for the two vacant&#13;
positions. Olson said he would&#13;
like to see UW-P students and&#13;
other new voters come to the&#13;
polls "not only to vote for&#13;
President, but also vote for the&#13;
local offices. People have to get&#13;
involved on the grassroots level&#13;
before they can really tackle the&#13;
Live Music at Whiteskellar&#13;
On Thursday, March y,&#13;
Whiteskellar — Parkside's&#13;
coffeehouse — will again be&#13;
open for business. Starting at&#13;
noon, the small white cavern in&#13;
the north basement of&#13;
Greenquist Hall will be hosting&#13;
the sounds of Tonny Bressette&#13;
and Chris (Jumbo( Inloes.&#13;
Admission is free and open to all&#13;
students.&#13;
It is unique in that Chris is a&#13;
Parkside student, being the first&#13;
to ever be featured at the&#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;
Whiteskellar. The duo describes&#13;
themselves as doing a sort of&#13;
country-folk-soft rock type.&#13;
Both Tony and Jumbo had been&#13;
playing in "hard rock" bands&#13;
but have grown tired of that&#13;
type of music. They've not only&#13;
developed a change in the type&#13;
of music that they play, but feel&#13;
their present style is much&#13;
better.&#13;
Asked about their performance&#13;
at the Whiteskellar,&#13;
Jumbo said, "We perform in a&#13;
tight vocal mannter, both&#13;
playing acoustical guitars.&#13;
During the performance, one of&#13;
us will occasionally switch to&#13;
bass."&#13;
The two have played in many&#13;
parts of the country and backed&#13;
up such groups as: Byrds,&#13;
Siegall-Schwall, New Colony Six&#13;
and Crow.&#13;
They will be playing at the&#13;
Whiteskeller on Thursday,&#13;
March 9, beginning at noon.&#13;
Admission is free.&#13;
FLO'S&#13;
Home Cooking&#13;
HWY 31&amp;County Trunk E&#13;
6AM-6PM Specials Daily&#13;
national offices."&#13;
The candidate explained that&#13;
his campaign will be low-keyed&#13;
and underfinanced: "I want to&#13;
meet people individually, I want&#13;
to go to PTA meetings,&#13;
smokers, whatever, and explain&#13;
who I am and what I'd like to&#13;
do."&#13;
When asked of his&#13;
qualifications for the office, the&#13;
candidate responded that few&#13;
people, if any, are truly&#13;
qualified to serve on the board&#13;
of education. "I have some&#13;
definite ideas, though," he&#13;
continued, "one includes instituting&#13;
a rule whereby every&#13;
member of the board would be&#13;
required to spend a certain&#13;
amount of time in the schools&#13;
themselves, in order to talk and&#13;
listen to students, as well as&#13;
faculty and administrators."&#13;
He indicated that the board&#13;
must be receptive to everyone,&#13;
including students.&#13;
Asked if he had any plans for&#13;
a rally, Olson said that tentatively&#13;
a beer and brat fest at&#13;
Capies was scheduled for&#13;
Sunday afternoon, March 19. He&#13;
explained that the purpose of&#13;
such a get-together would be to&#13;
discuss the upcoming election,&#13;
where he could discuss his&#13;
candidacy in an informal setting.&#13;
&#13;
Newscope asked Olson one&#13;
final question: What are your&#13;
chances at being elected?&#13;
"Right now I think they're very&#13;
good. I've spoken to a lot of&#13;
people, young and old, and their&#13;
reaction has been very positive&#13;
and encouraging."&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at numerous locations&#13;
throughout the nation including&#13;
National Parks, Resort&#13;
Areas, and Private Camps. For&#13;
free information send self-addressed,&#13;
STAMPED envelope to&#13;
Opportunity Research, Dept.&#13;
SJ0, Century Bldg., Poison, MT&#13;
59860. APPLICANTS MUST&#13;
APP LY EARLY . . .&#13;
GO&#13;
KNIT!&#13;
VERY DEFINITELY&#13;
GEAR BOX"&#13;
What a way to go! Knit&#13;
sport coats score high on&#13;
the campus scene! Gear&#13;
Box" model, priced right,&#13;
has fancy flaps and belted&#13;
back. 100% acrylic&#13;
bonded to nylon in denim&#13;
blue, tan, navy and red&#13;
plus blue and red geometric&#13;
pattern. Sizes 35-&#13;
44R, 36-44L. 39^75&#13;
Richman&#13;
B R O T H E R S&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
©BS'KOFTEE&#13;
so* g- P©7" &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE Harch 6,1972&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
oa&amp;e&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
"Message from the Country"&#13;
the Move&#13;
^ _ ColLZGB XUN&#13;
"7/^ Char Irs 3n&lt;T Ajjrgic Huck Ou/nsrs&#13;
V HWY. 32 BETWEEN RACINE AND KENOSHA .*&#13;
SANDWICHES — PIZZA — PACKAGE GOODS -&#13;
tV£Rt WEb. lADlES[pniNKS '/*• ?A/C£&#13;
from the Music Dosk&#13;
This dialogue Is a literal translation&#13;
of the minutes of the meeting of the&#13;
Analytic Dualty Squad In the Gray&#13;
Room.&#13;
Sophisticated but Destitute Music&#13;
Lover: There is suspicion in some&#13;
circles that you are . . . how can I&#13;
compress this? ... a reactionary&#13;
nationalistic purist of the prole with&#13;
sensibilities deadened to the point&#13;
where only American made three&#13;
chord car music gets you off.&#13;
Music Desk: Horseshit. British three&#13;
chord car music gets me off too.&#13;
SDML: It amounts to the same thing as&#13;
three chord car music is American in&#13;
origin. Is it true that you have said&#13;
'The English can pronounce the word&#13;
'elegant' beautifully but they have&#13;
always had trouble with 'raunchy'?&#13;
MD: No, as a matter of fact it is not.&#13;
Bob Dylan said that and if I have&#13;
paraphrased him it is only because he&#13;
has summed it up once again.&#13;
SDML: The infallibility of Bob Dylan is&#13;
not the issue. Assuming this to be true&#13;
however, haven't you turned a&#13;
modest generality into dogma with&#13;
your disdain of superb English bands&#13;
like Yes, the Faces, Emerson, Lake&#13;
and Palmer, and King Crimson?&#13;
MD: Elegance is great. I'm as&#13;
susceptable as anyone to a nice turn&#13;
of phrase, an intelligent guitar line, a&#13;
thumbbusting bass run, or inventive&#13;
drums. English drummers especially&#13;
are technically miles ahead of us&#13;
Yanks. But how much better if these&#13;
elegant parts are unified by some&#13;
themeglue, a visceral vision if you&#13;
will, and you cnn dance to them while&#13;
you admire them.&#13;
SDML: English bands have direction.&#13;
MD: Some do and most don't. I will&#13;
venture to say that not one has as&#13;
much rock &amp; roll relevance as&#13;
"Louie, Lotfie". For noncerebral&#13;
excitement and sore palms you need&#13;
that raunch.&#13;
SDML: Where does that leave the&#13;
Beatles?&#13;
the Double White Album. The difference&#13;
between the Beatles and most&#13;
of the other self-absorbed Cockneys is&#13;
the humor and resolute lack of&#13;
pretension with which they carried it&#13;
off. Next to American raunch, this&#13;
kind of English cleverness is best.&#13;
And now listen to this.&#13;
MD slips the new Move on the turntable.&#13;
&#13;
SDML: "It Wasn't My Idea ? That&#13;
oboe reminds me of the quasiOriental&#13;
music in "Help!". These&#13;
guys are dense. But funny. Or I think&#13;
they are.&#13;
MD: "The Minister" makes me think of&#13;
"Paperback Writer". And this first&#13;
side is the thickest textural approach&#13;
to fantasy music since "Satanic&#13;
Majesties". Until this song.&#13;
SDML: What's Johnny Cash doing on a&#13;
British LP?&#13;
The Record (in manly throat itch):&#13;
I tried my hand at farmin but this dint&#13;
come off&#13;
Seems like there's nothing there for&#13;
me&#13;
It tried my patience which I haven't&#13;
enough&#13;
So I'm destined to work for the steel&#13;
company&#13;
MD: That's not Johnny Cash except in a&#13;
wierd way, but it is the slickets cut at&#13;
truckin music ever done.&#13;
The Record:&#13;
Can't find a job cause I just blew up&#13;
the Ben Crawley Steel Company.&#13;
Heh.&#13;
MD turns the record over, and an&#13;
acoustic guitar shuffles into 'Waitin&#13;
for the Robt. E. Lee.'&#13;
SDML: This band's got no ba&#13;
SDML's anatomical comment is cut&#13;
short by brontosaur bass as the&#13;
harmless music comes down hard&#13;
and turns into "Until Your Mama's&#13;
Gone" one of the two stone rockers on&#13;
the LP. The drums assault this rib&#13;
cage.&#13;
MD: I'm glad you asked. They had only&#13;
one co&gt;ifti iftext; they were themsleves&#13;
and true only to their self conception.&#13;
Lack of direction as direction: look at&#13;
SDML (impressed): Good cut. Who&#13;
produced this frustrating gem? Who&#13;
records drums like that?&#13;
MD: Glad you asked. Cat by the name&#13;
of Roy Wood who also does most of&#13;
the singing, guitar playing, and is&#13;
responsible for that oboe.&#13;
SDML: What's Elvis doing on an&#13;
English LP?&#13;
The Record (in surly grease growl):&#13;
We'll rock on to the feature film and&#13;
tear the seats apart&#13;
But if you gotta treat me rough don&#13;
mess me up.&#13;
MD: That's not Elvis. As in your other&#13;
stupid blunder, that's drummer Bev&#13;
Bevan. Odd voice wot?&#13;
SDML: And this cute English musichall&#13;
number. Didn't you have enough&#13;
when the Beatles did so many of&#13;
them?&#13;
MD: I can say nothing ....&#13;
SDML: You really shouldn't like this&#13;
album. It's diametrically opposed to&#13;
what you think is important in music.&#13;
MD: These boys are so strange and so&#13;
upfront that I can't help it. Things are&#13;
not always what they seem.&#13;
SOsS7&#13;
nt&#13;
«»ba«&#13;
For^week's&#13;
01 D^an th® ne^cope staff&#13;
cronies had been entreat!?^&#13;
Racine bar. Yeah, yeah J\&#13;
me&#13;
their plea, yeah, you gu' ^ 1 reSP°&#13;
r&#13;
and a way back and hi £&#13;
for the politicos to command*?* v^hk&#13;
alas, to no avail. Finally CY, tu ^ *1&#13;
himself to seek out V m2?'^&#13;
suitable to his station high .&#13;
C°T&#13;
Kenosha city; once sc&#13;
fortuity. It was fein, N£ "l*&#13;
™u&#13;
h&#13;
„;:°wa&#13;
b&#13;
y&#13;
anni9hti,,e&#13;
^st&#13;
ha.&#13;
educa.iZi&#13;
ldeve&#13;
en,na&#13;
;a!",&#13;
r&#13;
eS,ln9 £ J&#13;
wou&#13;
|dhegi ^&#13;
still shrieking over Ruby,s d0,&#13;
Kenosha, and end up at Rnrtdone's in Racii&#13;
as wenT "K °&#13;
Verhead in&#13;
S, the Nn'a M?" behMe&#13;
" ,he ,w&#13;
On the Nod would tag along with Sorer&#13;
™'&#13;
e&#13;
l&#13;
a c&#13;
u&#13;
hu&#13;
r&#13;
ch&#13;
- which I, another&#13;
altogether. History would be ma de alo&#13;
way; Nod would begin his evening of reve&#13;
fellowship with a motley crew made up ,&#13;
Grabowski, Ryan Higglnsand Bill Sorens.&#13;
complete the foray with an entirely dil&#13;
and I might add more respectable, grc&#13;
eluding Bob "Neptune" Herrmann, Mary&#13;
and Mike Stevesand. It would be the first t&#13;
the Nod had to change crews in midstre&#13;
Ruby's. Ruby's Restaurant and Bar i&#13;
between a drug store and a dance studio s&#13;
6th Avenue in downtown Kenosha, acre&#13;
street from the First National Bank, ugh,&#13;
On the Nod owes a pile of coconuts. It's c&#13;
Restaurant AND Bar I think because they&#13;
save the best for last.&#13;
Ruby's offers the patron a long padd&lt;&#13;
tables, panelled walls, good lighting (brigl&#13;
bar) and pictures on the wall. Perhaps wt&#13;
Ruby's apart from your run of the ginmill&#13;
are the floor to ceiling windows shich cor&#13;
the bar's front wall; this allows a patror&#13;
what's happening on the outside, while w.&#13;
up on the inside. It's nice to while away th&lt;&#13;
as a sort of candied camera, wtaching the&#13;
Moose Club. Vivian watched the balding man&#13;
work. When he gave the signal, the legalized&#13;
Thursday night Bingo games would begin in Zion.&#13;
Vivian was sittincJ in tho "Iritnhon" r\f the&#13;
On&#13;
a&#13;
Last Chance of the Season!&#13;
U.W.P. Ragtime Rangers&#13;
announces&#13;
A Second Trip To&#13;
Whitecap Mt.&#13;
March 17-19&#13;
Sign Up Deadline - Friday, March 10&#13;
Sign up at room 217 Tallent Hall&#13;
$ 1 0 . 00 N O N - R E F U N D A B L E DE P O S IT R E Q U I R E D&#13;
by Paul Lomartire of the Newscope staff&#13;
It was the first time for Vivian, a middle aged&#13;
woman dressed in black stretch pants and a knit&#13;
print top. Sitting next to her, explaining the rule?,&#13;
regulations and ethics of Bingo, was her cousNin,&#13;
another lady in the middle of life.&#13;
Both women were seated at a pool table&#13;
covered with .two large pieces of heavy green&#13;
cardboard. The room was jammed with people&#13;
prepared for a full night of Bingo. Cigarette smoke&#13;
clouded the air, making one's eyes water.&#13;
A member of the Zion-Benton Moose Club was&#13;
standing in the doorway making final adjustments&#13;
on the microphone he would be using throughout&#13;
the evening. His job would be to keep in touch with&#13;
the other two rooms full of Bingo players in the&#13;
Vivian was sitting in the "kitchen" of&#13;
building, although it was really a dining area,&#13;
the floor above her was another dining area, -&#13;
small gymnasium-type room filled with players,&#13;
and the person calling the letter-numbers for the&#13;
games. Below Vivian, in the basement, was&#13;
another small dining room accommodating a few&#13;
hundred more people.&#13;
At a quarter after seven, fifteen minutes late,&#13;
the balding man in the entrance to the "kitchen"&#13;
announced on the microphone that he was ready.&#13;
Vivian's cousin could be heard by most of those at&#13;
the converted pool table blitzing with a final recap&#13;
of details.&#13;
There would be twenty-five games of regular&#13;
Bingo, each worth thirty dollars to the winner (to&#13;
be split in case of a tei). Special games sprinkled&#13;
throughout the evening were worth from fifty to a&#13;
hundred dollars. There would be a "Jackpot&#13;
Game" worth five hundred dollars (a "Fill Game"&#13;
midway through the twenty-five games consisting&#13;
of only fifty-five calls).&#13;
The special games included the Frame Game,&#13;
Crisscross, the T-Game and the Fill Game. Played&#13;
in succession, the special games and a regular one&#13;
were called New York Bingo.&#13;
The first five games were uneventful as far as&#13;
Vivian and the others in the "kitchen" were&#13;
concerned. All the winners were either in the&#13;
basement or the large dining room. Before the&#13;
sixth game, the caller announced there would be a&#13;
short delay.&#13;
Vivian's cousin left the table to get a couple&#13;
beers from an ad;&#13;
to take;in h er su&#13;
Bingo veten&#13;
They used tape ti&#13;
while novices ha&#13;
upsetting their g&#13;
Moose Club therr&#13;
peanuts, candy, I&#13;
breaks, plastic t&#13;
corn kernels to&#13;
dividuals had go*&#13;
space on the B&#13;
pennies, an earri&#13;
lured fictory. A&#13;
ashtrays and a hi&#13;
eveningVivian&#13;
lister&#13;
dressed in cover&#13;
table. "I've beer&#13;
three states; Kai&#13;
"and I ahven't'&#13;
"There was&#13;
saS)" he c ontim&#13;
daughter throuj&#13;
nights a week."&#13;
disbelief around&#13;
"There were&#13;
honest," he told&#13;
His tale was&#13;
0ff the f irst lei&#13;
Vivian's c ousin&#13;
several times w&#13;
The sixth {&#13;
winners' in the "&#13;
"Crisscross" ga&#13;
Bingo veteran si &#13;
&lt;R&#13;
pe staff&#13;
and his SGA&#13;
, t0 review a&#13;
responded to&#13;
e a way there&#13;
jited patiently&#13;
a vehicle, but&#13;
,d took it upon&#13;
f conveyance&#13;
e lead ether of&#13;
lod resorted to&#13;
barsploratory&#13;
es that On the&#13;
I as well as&#13;
On the Nod&#13;
Gogh sun was&#13;
in downtown&#13;
in Racine with&#13;
mic inkblotter&#13;
the two bars,&#13;
h Sorensen to&#13;
inother story&#13;
ade a long the&#13;
of revelry and&#13;
ade up of Tom&#13;
Sorensen, and&#13;
rely different,&#13;
ble, group ini,&#13;
Mary Smith&#13;
efirsttime On&#13;
midstream,&#13;
id Bar is stuck&#13;
studio at 5535 -&#13;
1a, a cross the&#13;
lk, ugh, where&#13;
s. It's called a&#13;
jse they like to&#13;
g padded bar,&#13;
g (bright for a&#13;
haps what sets&#13;
ginmill tavern&#13;
-lich constitute&#13;
i patron to see&#13;
while warming&#13;
iway the hours&#13;
ling the people&#13;
slip on the ice, observing with bemusement the&#13;
queue of people waiting for buses that never&#13;
come, catching bankers offguard as they react&#13;
obscenely to the mystery roadsters that splash&#13;
their spats with icy slush, or simply staring in&#13;
befuddlement at the Bank's combination clock&#13;
and thermometer across the street, predicting&#13;
seconds before the act the change in time.&#13;
Aside from being confronted with such&#13;
poisonous concoctions as a "Bayou Bomb" or&#13;
"Woody's Suicide Slurp", the patron may also&#13;
choose culinary goodies from a full menu at the&#13;
bar, which of course is not in my area of competence.&#13;
Drinks on the lower forty go for 55 - 60&#13;
cents, whild your top rack spirits hit 65 and&#13;
better down the bar's formica-topped&#13;
straightway. The visible selection of labels&#13;
seemed redundant, though there are undoubtedly&#13;
other spirited names hidden away&#13;
from view; On the Nod's view was less than&#13;
binocular at the time. Unfortunately, Ruby's&#13;
like Rondone's, doesn't offer tap beer; cans go&#13;
for half a rock. The juke, if I remember&#13;
correctly, wasn't of superior quality, though it&#13;
did offer a couple of Bobby D's old love ballads;&#13;
"Just Like a Woman" and "I Want You", which,&#13;
if you're a Dylan freak is enough to make any&#13;
juke look good. As I surveyed the entire width&#13;
and breadth of the bar I discovered that the&#13;
clientele was composed of two jiggers&#13;
businesstypes, a jigger of hippe, and a pinch of&#13;
old salts; an interesting mix.&#13;
Since I can't remember too much more&#13;
about the bar, I must conclude it was good. I&#13;
made the unpardonable mistake of checking out&#13;
the newly tapped kegs in the union a few hours&#13;
earlier, judging them for purity; you'd be surprised&#13;
at the number of kegs they can tap in a&#13;
few hours.&#13;
But no time to dwadle, I ordered the&#13;
drummer boy to muster out the troops, only to&#13;
realize that Obediance U. really hadn't impressed&#13;
this crew of cutthroat braggards and no&#13;
good scum; no one wanted to go to Racine; it was&#13;
mutiny. Thinking quickly I summoned my trusty&#13;
laiison, Woozy Willie, and directed him to drive&#13;
me to AAockus' Tap and proving grounds where I&#13;
shanghaied a new crew.&#13;
Onward to Fondone's. Rondone's Bar is&#13;
located next to an alley at 1330 Albert Street in&#13;
Racine, and offers in its compact confines&#13;
wooden booths as well as a small bar. Behind the&#13;
bar on review night was none other than Tony&#13;
Rondone himself, whacking away with sppc^is at&#13;
some liquor bottles as he played rhythm to the&#13;
songs on the juke. It's not every day you see a&#13;
bartender with a musical bent, especially at this&#13;
9 of specialization. Unfortunagely, about this&#13;
time, | too was a little bent, but like any good cub&#13;
anHwTi,T&#13;
rth hiS huSh PuPPies&#13;
' 1 Persevered&#13;
and walked up to the crowded bar, nudging a few&#13;
customers; outta my way, I'm a reporter, I gotta&#13;
get the facts, quick, before it's too late.&#13;
Rondone's offers Bud and Pabst shorties for&#13;
0 cents and 12 ounce bottles for 45 cents for the&#13;
big guys, as well as a stock of some fine red wine&#13;
25 cents a glass. The lower echelons of liuqors&#13;
demand a toll of 45 cents, while the aristocrats of&#13;
the shelf go for 60 cents.&#13;
n I wobbled up to the juke in the compact bar&#13;
and found .t to be good, though not impressive.&#13;
^&#13;
h&#13;
'&#13;
l&#13;
.&#13;
e ?'&#13;
u™ing t0&#13;
°&#13;
Ur b00th&#13;
' 1 thoroughly investigated&#13;
the walls (feeling my way along them&#13;
tor secret passages) which, to my astonishment&#13;
were made of plaster, a rare phenomenon in&#13;
today s panelled world; one day even mountains&#13;
will be made of formica. Another oddity I&#13;
discovered at Rondone's were the original&#13;
paintings by his son which adorn the wall.&#13;
In addition to an adequate stock, the worldly&#13;
Italian offers a bowling machine as well as a&#13;
P all demon for the diversion of the clientele&#13;
composed of both hips and working class&#13;
straights; on review night two boys in blue sat at&#13;
the bar for a short while. An official of SGA tole&#13;
me, quite cryptically, that a motto for the place&#13;
could be 'humble people always take the back&#13;
door'; he said you can just about tell what kind of&#13;
people come in the bar by which door they use,&#13;
front or the back. On the Nod has nothing to hide&#13;
so he used the front door. In addition to&#13;
everything lese, On the Nod was mesmerized by&#13;
the grating hum of a bass compressor as it&#13;
scrunched and squealed its way into his pure&#13;
brewed heart and respiratory system.&#13;
Rondone's and Ruby's are quite different&#13;
bars; two different atmospheres, two different&#13;
clientele, perhaps even two different schools of&#13;
Barlosophy, yet On the Nod found fault with&#13;
neither. From this moment forward, On the Nod&#13;
pledges on a case of Lafite-Rothsdhild to seek out&#13;
with diligence and foresight, as many Racine&#13;
bars as he possibly can.&#13;
March ft. 197? NEWSCOPFl Page 5&#13;
Robert Bly, recipient of the&#13;
1968 National Bood Award for&#13;
poetry will soon visit the&#13;
Parkside Campus. The Minnesota&#13;
born poet, author of&#13;
"The Light Around My Body",&#13;
will appear Wednesday, March&#13;
15, from 9:30to 11:30 A.M. in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall Whiteskellar.&#13;
On Tuesday evening, March 14,&#13;
Bly will also appear at&#13;
Dominican for a reading that is.&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
In addition to his poetry, Bly&#13;
has published a magazine&#13;
called The Fifties, then The&#13;
Sxities, now The Seventies,&#13;
which has published for the first&#13;
time many European and South&#13;
American poets. In addition to&#13;
writing his own poetry, Bly al£o&#13;
has translated works by the&#13;
Chilean Pablo Neruda, the&#13;
German Georg Trakl and the&#13;
Swede Gunnar Ekelof among&#13;
others.&#13;
Bly is a deeply committed&#13;
writer and has done much to&#13;
make politics a field of poetry.&#13;
He is a founding member of&#13;
American Poets Against the&#13;
Vietnam War, and helped&#13;
organize the first Poetry&#13;
Readings Against the War; in&#13;
addition Bly has refused a $5,000&#13;
government grant on the&#13;
ground that it emanated from a&#13;
government engaged in&#13;
genocide, and has donated his&#13;
Book Award check to the&#13;
Resistance. Today Bly is&#13;
recognized as one of the leaders&#13;
of a poetic revival which has&#13;
returned American literature to&#13;
the world community.&#13;
WW-kUT KR.e»r»lc&#13;
C.OUN6ER WAKT S KWEe&#13;
o E N c *&#13;
w i e t o f " B L U D G E "&#13;
B E £ B © O T T L e&#13;
H A N D .&#13;
O U R C R C AT O I&#13;
M E E T J H I S ' .&#13;
n an adjoining bar. Vivian used the time&#13;
' her surroundings.&#13;
1 veterans could easily be identified.&#13;
1 tape to secure the paper Bingo sheets,&#13;
ices had to worry about wind currents&#13;
their games. They also brought to the&#13;
ib thermoses full of coffee, milk and tea,&#13;
f&#13;
ndy, baked goods to eat or sell during&#13;
lastic boxes for their colored chips, or&#13;
iels to fill the Bingo spaces. Many inhad&#13;
good luck charms filling the "free"&#13;
the Bingo sheet, wedding rings, old&#13;
in earring, silver dollar, or whatever else&#13;
tory. A few "vets" brought their own&#13;
and a healthy supply of cigarettes for the&#13;
n listened to a young longhaired male&#13;
n coveralls sitting at the converted pool&#13;
v een P^yin' Bingo for six months, in&#13;
es&#13;
' Kansas, Missouri and here," he said,&#13;
aven t won a cent "&#13;
won. The winning lady had her winning criss cross&#13;
verified by the balding man at the microphone.&#13;
She did not smile when two twenties and a ten&#13;
were handed her, envy oozing all around her. She&#13;
casually slid the money beneath her plastic box of&#13;
chips. A big grin cracked her face only after the&#13;
next game had begun and almost all of the eyes in&#13;
the room were directed away from her.&#13;
The evening wore on for those at the converted&#13;
pool table as none of them had won. It was the&#13;
halfway point, time for the "big one". The game&#13;
everyone who had purchased a dollar Bingo sheet&#13;
was sure they would win. Even some of the novices&#13;
playing with the minimum allowed, three sheets,&#13;
smiled with anticipation.&#13;
The first letter-numbers were called, and on&#13;
and on. It seemed like the "Jackpot Game" was&#13;
Xk&#13;
aven't won a cent."&#13;
re was dris fat lady in Lawrence Kancontinued,&#13;
"who was puttin' her third&#13;
college playin' Bingo seven&#13;
eek.' There were smiles of pleasant&#13;
p The young man sensed&#13;
f&#13;
r&#13;
,&#13;
e&#13;
,&#13;
ar^&#13;
c&#13;
!es in the papers about her,&#13;
ae told his friend.&#13;
!*w®s8&#13;
ree&#13;
tedby the announcer calling&#13;
con • er&#13;
"&#13;
number of the sixth game.&#13;
•im«!ln&#13;
,&#13;
returned with the beers, asking&#13;
S at had ^ eallea&lt;&#13;
n the "t&#13;
nd sevendl games" yielded no&#13;
)ss" a chen". Tbe eighth game was a&#13;
teran -f16 Worth fift&#13;
y dollars. A grizzled&#13;
sitting within twenty feet of Vivian&#13;
going on for hours when the announcer began to&#13;
approach the fifty-fifth call. Everyone dreaded the&#13;
bloodcurdling scream of BINGO. After each call&#13;
following fifty-one, Vivian winced.&#13;
On the fifty-fourth call, Vivian realized she&#13;
was onlv one letter-number away from the winning&#13;
jackpot. Her cousin needed three.Vivian was&#13;
the only player at the converted pool table who had&#13;
a chance of winning. Everyone at the table stared&#13;
at her sheet with only one open space. Vivian s&#13;
cousin pulled nervously at a mole on her cheek&#13;
The thought of someone else winning five&#13;
hundred dollars so easily produced smug looks on&#13;
many faces, and the hope Vivian would lose. A&#13;
man who had just begun calling the letternumbers&#13;
in the dining room milked the tension for&#13;
all_ it was worth. Skeeter told a Joke, no one&#13;
laughed. Vivian clenched her fists, knuckles&#13;
white, breath held. Five hundred bucks. That last&#13;
call. "You all know that if there isn't a winner&#13;
after the last call," Skeeter said, "there's a&#13;
consolation prize." Finally that last call.&#13;
0-72. Vivian was a loser. A smile came over&#13;
her cousin's face. A silence fell over the room as&#13;
no one in any of the three rooms had called Bingo.&#13;
After a long ten seconds, an old woman in the&#13;
dining room regained her voice long enough to let&#13;
everyone in Northern Illinois know she had won it&#13;
all, five hundred bucks.&#13;
"Aw shit," Vivian cursed. She flipped the&#13;
almost full Bingo sheet.into the air. Her cousin,&#13;
content that Vivian was now a confirmed loser,&#13;
offered to buy her a beer.&#13;
There was a fifteen minute break after the&#13;
"Jackpot Game". Vivian appeared to have lost&#13;
interest in Bingo. She turned her attention to the&#13;
balding Moose standing in the entrance. Her&#13;
cousin had been periodically watching the Moose's&#13;
friend. It was now time for the Bingo players to&#13;
loosen stiff muscles and take a breather from the&#13;
thought of winning money.&#13;
Vivian's cousin offered one bit of advice as she&#13;
noticed Vivian watching the Moose, "Don't tell&#13;
them we're cousins," she said. "Tell 'em we're&#13;
just girl friends."&#13;
Both middle aged women smiled, lliey left the&#13;
converted pool table, heading in the general&#13;
direction of the bar, the balding Moose and his&#13;
friend; forgetting momentarily that they were&#13;
losers at the halfway point.&#13;
CvGh ndfolded&#13;
Jc/ l\tx\r£&#13;
3&#13;
01 '&#13;
4 UTS* Ave&#13;
Keh&amp;sLo,&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
Itfe kind of a western.&#13;
He's sort of a cowboy.&#13;
METRO GOLDWYN MAYER Presents&#13;
A BURT KENNEDY PRODUCTION&#13;
sum s i&#13;
DIRTY DIMS&#13;
Mmi Starring&#13;
FRANK SINATRA&#13;
GEORGE KENNEDY&#13;
PANAVISION" , _ A&#13;
METROCOLOR IGP]^ MGM ^&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 10&#13;
STUDENT. ACT. B1_DG.&#13;
8PM ADM. 75&lt;£&#13;
Tim e-1 h r sim in&#13;
P A R K S I D E&#13;
f c W IS I.D. REQ UIR ED &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE March 6,1972&#13;
She VJLj Supper CLl&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan Id.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
SetoAuta the tf-inedt&#13;
Ptyy* &amp; Oialicut fyoodi.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 656-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
9(amm&amp;&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
HAWAIIAN H OLIDAY&#13;
$28250&#13;
March 25 - April 1st&#13;
April 1st - April 8th&#13;
Braniff Airlines&#13;
Kuhio Hotel&#13;
All Taxes &amp; Tips&#13;
Transfers&#13;
Contact:&#13;
WSA&#13;
WSSC Store&#13;
720 State&#13;
Madison, Wis.&#13;
608-263-2444&#13;
S6A Candidate&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
ministrators. Of course, PSGA&#13;
must always stand firm on&#13;
those matters which are of vital&#13;
interest to the student body.&#13;
It is to these purposes that I&#13;
direct my candidacy for the&#13;
office of student senator.&#13;
Regarding specific issues,&#13;
such as control of the student&#13;
activities building or the&#13;
proposed legal action against&#13;
the book store, I can only say at&#13;
this time that I favor investigation&#13;
of such matters&#13;
thoroughly before taking final&#13;
action. I think that the duty of a&#13;
senator is to carefully investigate&#13;
and consider issues&#13;
before coming to a decision, in&#13;
that a senator represents not&#13;
only himself or herself, but also&#13;
the Parkside student body.&#13;
Now a bit about myself and&#13;
my qualifications for office. I&#13;
am currently a junior majoring&#13;
in political science, history and&#13;
modern American society, and&#13;
active in the Pre-Law Club and&#13;
the Honors Program. I have&#13;
been a full-time student at&#13;
Parkside for nearly three years&#13;
now, and I think I have a feeling&#13;
for the needs of UWP and its&#13;
students. I sincerely believe&#13;
that I will be an able and&#13;
thoughtful student senator,&#13;
representing you. I ask for your&#13;
support in the March 7 and 8&#13;
election.&#13;
Finally, why should you be&#13;
interested in Student Government?&#13;
At present, it is the only&#13;
forum for a unified student&#13;
voice on campus. Furthermore,&#13;
Student Government has some&#13;
measure of control over a&#13;
considerable amount of money&#13;
(a portion of which you have&#13;
paid in your tuition fees each&#13;
semester), which may be septn&#13;
to benefit you. PSGA needs your&#13;
interest, support and participation.&#13;
Please take the-time&#13;
to become informed about&#13;
Student Government and&#13;
candidates for office, and then,&#13;
vote.&#13;
Jules and Jim Coming&#13;
The Parkside Film Society&#13;
will sponsor a public showing of&#13;
Francois Truffaut's "Jules and&#13;
Jim" on Tuesday, March 7, at 8&#13;
p.m. in Room 103 Greenquist&#13;
Hall on the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside's Wood&#13;
Road campus.&#13;
Although set in a pre-World&#13;
War I period, the film paints a&#13;
vivid picture of a thoroughly&#13;
modern woman, Kathe, played&#13;
by French acress Jeanne&#13;
Moreau. She loves two fraternal&#13;
friends, Oskar Werner and&#13;
Jacques Serre, and must have&#13;
them both — even if this means&#13;
death. A joyous film, "Jules and&#13;
Jim" established Truffaut as&#13;
the leader of French New Wave&#13;
directors.&#13;
"The Critic", a short directed&#13;
by Mel Brooks, is a spoof of&#13;
experimental, abstract films.&#13;
Winner of an Academy Award&#13;
for Best Short Subject, it will be&#13;
shown before the feature.&#13;
There will be a small admission&#13;
charge (50 cents).&#13;
Marine Corps to Visit Campus&#13;
Milwaukee, Feb. 24 — The&#13;
Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Team will visit the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Kenosha&#13;
campus on March 7 and 8 to&#13;
interview students interested in&#13;
becoming commissioned officers.&#13;
.&#13;
The Officer Selection Team&#13;
will be located in Room 249&#13;
Tallent Hall to peovide information&#13;
pertaining to Marine&#13;
Officer Programs, according to&#13;
Lieutenant J. P. English, the&#13;
Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Officer.&#13;
The Marine Corps offers&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
programs leading to a commission&#13;
as a 2nd Lieutenant.&#13;
These programs are open to&#13;
undergraduates as well as&#13;
graduating seniors. To be&#13;
eligible, students must have a&#13;
"C" or better average, pass a&#13;
written examination, be&#13;
physically qualified and have&#13;
the leadership potential&#13;
required of a Marine Officer.&#13;
Aviation Officer Programs&#13;
are open to highly qualified&#13;
students.&#13;
Women Officer Programs are&#13;
available to junior and senior&#13;
women.&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
•&#13;
• V*&#13;
A0&#13;
.#&gt;vvv e &lt;y&gt;~ ' -A x&#13;
A 0 A ^&#13;
o-\&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1968 Plymouth Valiant top-of-theline&#13;
model "Signet" - 2 dr. Club&#13;
Coupe, 1 owner, auto, trans., pwr.&#13;
steering, radio, air cond. $875 - Call&#13;
654-4982.&#13;
Polaroid Camera - Used 4 times.&#13;
Case, timer, dependable. Truely a&#13;
fine instrument. $25. Ph. Kevin 658-&#13;
4746.&#13;
TAPE RECORDER - Ree| to reel.&#13;
Like new. Orig. $100 sell for $50 Ph&#13;
657-5992 after 4.&#13;
1970 Triumph G.T.-6 + . British&#13;
racing green. 19,000 mi. Inquire Apt&#13;
210- Parkside Village, Building one."&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE — Refrigerator. Works&#13;
like a refrigerator should. $20. Ph.&#13;
Doug, 654-0697.&#13;
FOR SALE — Mosrite Bass Guitar.&#13;
Double pickup. Double cutaway,&#13;
hollow body. With plush-lined&#13;
hardshell case. Was $450 new. Excellent&#13;
condition. $100. Call Larry,&#13;
552-8347 or come to P-Village, apt 109&#13;
(The Swamp).&#13;
STEREO TAPE RECORDER —&#13;
Sony 252 D One year old. List $135.00,&#13;
sell for $70.00. Ph. Jerry 652-2538 or&#13;
553-2496.&#13;
STEREO TAPE DECK — Sony&#13;
252D. List $135. It's yours for $70. A&#13;
tape deck if ever I saw one. Ph. 652-&#13;
2538 - 553-2496 ask for Jerry.&#13;
1955-1963 Chevy trans., 4 speed and&#13;
positraction for 11 rear end. Pin-ball&#13;
machine best offer, or trade for ten&#13;
speed bike. Call 552-8987.&#13;
MODEL NEEDED for life drawing&#13;
class. Contact David Zaig, Room&#13;
217, Greenquist Hall - Art Dept.&#13;
BABY-SITTER NEEDED 4 2 boys,&#13;
ages 20 months and 10 months.&#13;
About 6 hours a day, 2 weekdays.&#13;
Days and time flexible. My home -&#13;
North side of Kenosha. Call 654-4593&#13;
afternoons or evenings.&#13;
3 Room Apt. North side Keno.&#13;
Privacy assured. Situated well for*&#13;
all campuses. Call 552-8970.&#13;
County Lot — 1.9 acres, 41 Ave. &amp; 14&#13;
St. (approx.) Call 654-6317 after 5:00.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Two guys need ride to Florida&#13;
Leave March 30-31. Pay V3 of travel&#13;
expenses. Inquire Apt 120&#13;
Parkside Village, Building one.&#13;
XfJ™"&#13;
5 WANTED - The Loom,&#13;
634 967? " AVe&#13;
" Radne&#13;
" Ph&#13;
"&#13;
WANTED — People who would like&#13;
to help other people. Free training.&#13;
Contact Joe Baker, director Racine&#13;
Hotline, 637-1112. Mon.-Wed.-Fri.&#13;
1:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.&#13;
Photographer wanted — Should be&#13;
available for June 10th wedding,&#13;
reasonable rates. Call 639-8863,&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Female Bartender Wanted — one&#13;
night a week. The College Inn. Ph.&#13;
552-8465. &#13;
Grapplers i n NAIA Nationals&#13;
March 6.1972 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Four UW-Parkside wrestlers&#13;
will compete Thursday through&#13;
Saturday in the NAIA national&#13;
wrestling championships at&#13;
Klamath Falls, Ore.&#13;
Heading the Ranger contingent&#13;
for Coach Jim Koch is&#13;
sophomore Ken Martin, who&#13;
placed second in the meet last&#13;
year as a freshman at 134&#13;
pounds. He's been grapplint at&#13;
142 this year and has an 18-2&#13;
record, but he'll drop down to&#13;
134 for the nationals and should&#13;
be seeded second in that weight&#13;
class.&#13;
"We think Ken has a good&#13;
chance for the championship,"&#13;
Koch said. "He was injured as a&#13;
freshman and still placed&#13;
second.&#13;
"He's had tougher competition&#13;
this year and really has&#13;
everything going for him. Now&#13;
Ken just has to take advantage&#13;
of the breaks."&#13;
Others likely to join Martin in&#13;
the big meet — which the&#13;
Rangers finished 21st in last&#13;
time around — are junior cocaptain&#13;
(with Martin) Jeff&#13;
Jenkins and freshmen Steve&#13;
Sulk and Bill West.&#13;
Jenkins was injured during&#13;
the middle of t his campaign but&#13;
has come on strong in recent&#13;
weeks and Koch rates his&#13;
chances at earning a place, or&#13;
even a berth in the finals, as&#13;
Page 7&#13;
For The Record&#13;
idi&#13;
MUSIC H OUSE /)&#13;
1 1 1 I I N I I ' I II I \ v .; •; |\ M8 I S I i'&#13;
•• Downtown Kenosha •&#13;
Ken Martir\ co-captain has an&#13;
18-2 record at 142 lbs.; he'I&#13;
drop down to 134.&#13;
good at his 150 pound class.&#13;
Koch labels Sulk, a 230 p ound&#13;
freshman from Peshtigo, as&#13;
"big and strong" and primed&#13;
for a wide-open weight class.&#13;
He's posted a 9-2 mark at&#13;
heavyweight since joining the&#13;
squad at the semester.&#13;
West, a Kenosha native,&#13;
compiled a 9-3 mark in the&#13;
second half of the year after&#13;
sitting out the first semester&#13;
matches as a transfer. He's&#13;
battled illness in recent weeks&#13;
Jeff Jenkins, 150 lb.&#13;
co—captain has good chance&#13;
at reaching finals.&#13;
but Koch things he could be&#13;
ready for a good effort.&#13;
The Rangers placed 21st last&#13;
year and obviously Koch would&#13;
like a higher finish this time&#13;
around.&#13;
"It would be nice to get in the&#13;
top ten," he admits, and says&#13;
that "if we can get one man in&#13;
the finals and the others all&#13;
scoring points, we could make&#13;
it.&#13;
"We've just got to be ready at&#13;
the right time."&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
1&#13;
, lh C,ROUND BF.F.F&#13;
ON FRFNCH CRUST&#13;
BREAD DRESSED&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LETTUCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
(".RILLED COUNTRYHAM&#13;
A CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLE WHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE.&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OE BURGER. CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISE ON TOAST 9QC&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORJH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
*&#13;
T01*jurFR&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
HENDERLOIN STEAK&#13;
TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"-&#13;
AISO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING . . . WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
658-2177&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
"O FFERI N G H I GH Q U A LI T Y AT&#13;
R E A SO N AB LE P RI CE S, THE WI N D ­&#13;
J AMM ER D ES ER VES ITS P OP U L AR IT Y"&#13;
— H E RB ERT KUBLY&#13;
" WO N D ER FUL F OO D "&#13;
' • — SE N A TOR P RO XM I R£&#13;
V/ATCHEj^&#13;
Rolex • Accutron&#13;
Ultrachron - Longine&#13;
Bulova - Movado&#13;
Caravel le - Timex&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
FSnest -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
VI'/ SBI7 Oth Ave.&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
10% Dis count to stud ents and Faculty with | . q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Reed C. B arton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
CAPTAIN'S CABIN ROOM&#13;
FOR PRIVATE PARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
Wat ches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Se tting&#13;
Comple te Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring De signing&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefo&#13;
Seneca - Laliqi&#13;
Royal Worce»ti&#13;
823T SWictan Road&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Teleph one: 4)57-3311&#13;
RICHARD G. CAPELLI, prop. STAFF ELECTIONS THURSDAY &#13;
Pages NEWSCOPE March 6,1972&#13;
City meets county&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
up, the rent goes up", and like&#13;
other speakers who were to&#13;
follow him, he contested the&#13;
city's claim that it had paid&#13;
millions for sewer and water&#13;
service to the area by insisting&#13;
that "big federal grants were&#13;
included in the city's investment."&#13;
Answering&#13;
Burkee's earlier statement&#13;
concerning the small amount&#13;
Somers had invested in the&#13;
campus area, Huck told the&#13;
audience that "Somers has paid&#13;
its share"; many residents&#13;
were forced to give up their land&#13;
to the campus.&#13;
Supervisor Ebner explained&#13;
in his speech that because the&#13;
cost of building a treatment&#13;
plant would be shared with Mt.&#13;
Pleasant, Somers wouldn't have&#13;
to pay the estimated $19,500,000&#13;
needed to build it. He told the&#13;
audience that with "expected&#13;
state and federal aids it&#13;
shouldn't cost Somers more&#13;
than $400,000." This&#13;
represented a replv to the city's&#13;
Henry Krause, area property&#13;
owner opposed to annexation&#13;
efforts.&#13;
earlier argument that Somers&#13;
only had bonding power for&#13;
$2,000,000 and therefore couldn't&#13;
possibly afford the projected&#13;
cost of a treatment plant.&#13;
Henry Krause, an area farmer&#13;
who originally brought the&#13;
annexation issue to the attention&#13;
of SGA and Newscope,&#13;
told the audience «that "an&#13;
annexation this large (over&#13;
1,400 acres) is the concern of a ll&#13;
people of Somers and the city of&#13;
Kenosha, as all taxes and rent&#13;
would go up. Mayor Burkee" he&#13;
continued, "has his hands full in&#13;
trying to take care of Kenosha,&#13;
let along a big area of Somers.&#13;
You have noticed many stores&#13;
boarded up and businesses&#13;
leaving town; the bigger the&#13;
city the bigger the trouble."&#13;
Krause charged that the&#13;
unorderly boundaries of the last&#13;
annexation were "deliberately&#13;
planned that way so that not&#13;
many property owners would&#13;
have a chance to vote."&#13;
A student at UWP who also&#13;
resides in the annexable area&#13;
backed up Krause's charge.&#13;
Jack Swartz said that when the&#13;
first annexation was drawn up,&#13;
his family's land was included&#13;
"all the way to our backyard."&#13;
He explained that the city didn't&#13;
include their house in the annexation,&#13;
thus making them&#13;
ineligible to vote.&#13;
Bob Lee, another area&#13;
resident, told the group, "We&#13;
don't want a concrete city from&#13;
Chicago to Milwaukee." He&#13;
indicated that the cost of&#13;
building sewage treatment&#13;
plants should not be the burden&#13;
of th e local residents, but rather&#13;
the responsibility of the federal&#13;
government.&#13;
Mrs. Henry Krause spoke&#13;
after her husband, and in one&#13;
instance personally addressed&#13;
the Mayor. She told the&#13;
audience that "Mayor Burkee&#13;
has his hands full with shooting&#13;
and purse snatching and what&#13;
have you ..." and facing the&#13;
mayor, she admonished him,&#13;
"You really do!"&#13;
Cliff Dodd, a Parkside Village&#13;
resident, compared the city of&#13;
Kenosha to a cancer. He said it&#13;
was "dying on the inside." It&#13;
was his belief that the urban&#13;
problems must be solved before&#13;
an annexation of more land&#13;
would make sense.&#13;
Dean Loumos, SGA&#13;
President, was the final speaker&#13;
of the evening. He told the&#13;
audience, "We should be concerned&#13;
about who suffers most,&#13;
not who benefits most. When the&#13;
state wants land, they get it one&#13;
way or another. Farmers need&#13;
the assurance that they'll be&#13;
able to live out their normal&#13;
lives, and conduct their normal&#13;
business without the threat of&#13;
higher taxes and loss of their&#13;
land." He proposed that "some&#13;
sort of contract be drawn up,"&#13;
which would ensure people the&#13;
right to live as they want.&#13;
He then explained the&#13;
students' plight: "Student&#13;
Activities is not a union, it's a&#13;
hustle, Parkside Village is a&#13;
hustle, the Bookstore is a hustle.&#13;
We pay and pay and now the&#13;
same people who brought us&#13;
Parkside Village and the&#13;
Bookstore, bring you the annexation."&#13;
&#13;
During the ensuing question&#13;
and answer period, members of&#13;
the audience asked the mayor&#13;
about any federal and state aids&#13;
the city had received for the&#13;
sewer line to UWP. He explained&#13;
he wasn't quite sure&#13;
what the percentage of the total&#13;
cost the aid covered was, but&#13;
that he knew it wasn't the 80 per&#13;
cent that some members of the&#13;
audience claimed it was.&#13;
An angry voice in the back of&#13;
the lecture hall spoke heatedly&#13;
with the mayor about tax&#13;
assessments. He explained that&#13;
he has land in the city as well as&#13;
in Somers, and that the tax on&#13;
the city land is more than six&#13;
times that of the land in Somers.&#13;
Eric Olson, a county supervisor,&#13;
rejected the assistant city&#13;
planner's hope that Bill 58&#13;
would ease tax assessment on&#13;
farm land; "Senate Bill 58 has&#13;
been defeated time and again,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
A spokeswoman for the&#13;
Wisconsin Alliance spoke&#13;
briefly to the audience explaining&#13;
that the annexation&#13;
problem is happening all over&#13;
the state. "Somers is not alone&#13;
in its fight against annexation,"&#13;
she said. She told the mayor&#13;
that Madison is no longer annexing&#13;
property because its city&#13;
council is beginning to&#13;
recognize the overwhelming&#13;
problems a city incurs when it&#13;
annexes land.&#13;
Other members of the&#13;
audience spoke out against the&#13;
city's contention that Kenosha&#13;
could adequately handle the&#13;
sewage and water needs of the&#13;
Parkside area. They pointed out&#13;
that residents of the city have&#13;
been complaining for months&#13;
about the inadequacies of the&#13;
treatment plant. The City&#13;
Planner responded that any&#13;
existing problems will soon be&#13;
rectified. Mario Capponi,&#13;
former mayoral candidate, said&#13;
he opposed the annexation&#13;
because it included too large a&#13;
parcel of land. He said annexing&#13;
more than 50 acres at a time is&#13;
too much for the city to&#13;
assimilate.&#13;
The meeting ended with an&#13;
appeal by Judge Carlsen of&#13;
Kenosha to stop any&#13;
divisiveness that may be caused&#13;
by the annexation controversy,&#13;
stating that it's everyone's&#13;
problem. He informed the&#13;
audience that the present&#13;
location of UWP was chosen on&#13;
the basis of its natural beauty, a&#13;
natural beauty which, he said,&#13;
must be preserved.&#13;
Pa rk si de A c tiv iti es Boar d a n d t h e Pa rk side Poe try Forum&#13;
presents&#13;
IFLobert 131 y&#13;
POETRY WORKSHOP&#13;
WEDNESDAY, 15 MARCH&#13;
9:30AM-11:30AM&#13;
MR B L Y WIL L R E A D T U E S NIG HT AT D O MINICA N)&#13;
TONY&#13;
and&#13;
JUMBO&#13;
Thurs. March 9&#13;
Noon - 2p.m.&#13;
Fr e e Liv e En te rta inme n t&#13;
forum&#13;
now the time has come&#13;
By Dan Robeshi&#13;
Now the time has come to fight,&#13;
Laws in the Book of Love burn bright.&#13;
The starting point for revolution is love and it's no different&#13;
for gay liberation. As a matter of fact love is perhaps&#13;
the paramount motivating factor for gays to become involved&#13;
in gay lib because the kind of love we desire has&#13;
always been subject to sexist laws and social restriction.&#13;
Gays share the same discrimination and narrowing down by&#13;
straight society of life's experiences to the most sordid as&#13;
other minority groups. In like fashion as other minorities&#13;
have started to raise their voices in shouts of protest against&#13;
pig attitudes and practices so have gays. As long as one&#13;
person is oppressed we are all oppressed. That is the reason&#13;
for the present forming of gay lib here. No gay can any longer&#13;
hide in a closet out of fear for social ostracism — we've done&#13;
that too long. Our rights as citizens and our dignity as men&#13;
and women have been denied too long. But the only way these&#13;
will be regained is if we demand them. We can best achieve&#13;
this through group effort, group power. There will be an&#13;
initial Gay Youth Coalition meeting this week. Whether or&#13;
not gay lib will make any advances on this camous will&#13;
largely be determined by the turn out of gays at these first&#13;
few meetings. Without numbers we have no power, and&#13;
without power we have no rights — even rights as simple as&#13;
gathering peaceably together in free expression of our life&#13;
style without fear of violence from the straight community.&#13;
The time is overripe that we need no longer fear and hide. We&#13;
can take our destinies out of the hands of straight parents,&#13;
teachers, police, courts, and prisons and make them what we&#13;
want them to be: beautiful, free, gay.&#13;
c&#13;
Q O&#13;
0&#13;
jp I HO I WASH IN6TON Av/E.&#13;
(p IN UPTOWN rp&#13;
(? HidU&#13;
importers G&lt;&#13;
of &amp;&#13;
FINE WINES %&#13;
AN b fe&#13;
spirits W)&#13;
for nearly&#13;
50 &gt;D&#13;
years &gt;d h&#13;
c&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
ON S O UTH S H E R I D AN R O AD IN KEN OSH A 6 5 4 - 0 . 4 1 1&#13;
m m ^ ** ** - ^i^~ii~ij~Li~ii"xrLr'ij~u-ij~j~u~_j~i-i-Lnij-i.r-ijnLr-i_)Tj~ij~L.~u-Ln.i-i.rijn.&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Va Blo ck South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
ump&#13;
$ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63684">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 9, March 6, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63685">
                <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="63686">
                <text>1972-03-06</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="63689">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63690">
                <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="63691">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63692">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63693">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63694">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="231">
        <name>annexation</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="225">
        <name>dean eugene norwood</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="232">
        <name>wallace burkee</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2615" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4439">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/eb3bad86b3470869c7b7c4f2febe44e1.pdf</src>
        <authentication>398582ab52d9242aa3e5b02686098284</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63699">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 10</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63700">
              <text>sga elections results</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63707">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89895">
              <text>sga election results&#13;
UW-Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Spring Election Results — March 7 and 8&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Becky Ecklund - w inner&#13;
Marry Peterson&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Steve Sulk&#13;
Senator&#13;
Greenquist Kenosha&#13;
20&#13;
Racine&#13;
n—&#13;
Greenquist Kenosha Racine&#13;
Tom Haack - winner&#13;
Mark Harris - winner&#13;
Mike Wickware&#13;
Harold Liss&#13;
Neil Lawton&#13;
Jan Michalski&#13;
Mike Mayeshiba&#13;
Mike Pecnic&#13;
Tom Garner&#13;
"55"&#13;
49&#13;
18&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
~53~&#13;
51&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
Total&#13;
'40&#13;
6&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
Total&#13;
54&#13;
55&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
163&#13;
155&#13;
19&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Becky Ecklund - winner (o)&#13;
Nancy Robinson&#13;
Rick Barnhart&#13;
Mike Deutsch&#13;
Lynda Barnes&#13;
Kyle Barnes&#13;
Dave Walden&#13;
Carl Vinson&#13;
Cheryl Troeger&#13;
Greenquist Kenosha&#13;
5&#13;
Racine&#13;
0"&#13;
5 0&#13;
4 0&#13;
0 4&#13;
2 0&#13;
0 3&#13;
0 3&#13;
1 1&#13;
0 0&#13;
Total&#13;
Campus Totals 86 74&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
3&#13;
75&#13;
6&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
235&#13;
(o) In the corresponding secretary race, Becky Ecklund declined,&#13;
and the second place winner, Nancy Robinson, was declared&#13;
winner.&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
'free&#13;
Volume 6 Number 10&#13;
industrial mission&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Crucial to the ultimate success&#13;
of Parkside is the&#13;
development of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry (SMI). By&#13;
state statute, Parkside was&#13;
given this special Industrial&#13;
Mission — and to the extent&#13;
which it fulfills it will be a&#13;
standard against which its&#13;
success will be measured.&#13;
The purpose of the school is&#13;
described as twofold: First to&#13;
educate men and women of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin for&#13;
professional work in&#13;
engineering and management,&#13;
and, secondly, to offer the&#13;
services of the school's industrially&#13;
experienced faculty&#13;
to the industrial and business&#13;
community.&#13;
But while the development of&#13;
Parkside's other academic unit,&#13;
the College of Science and&#13;
Society, has progressed, the&#13;
development of SMI till now has&#13;
been slight.&#13;
Despite this, and despite the&#13;
moratorium on new academic&#13;
programs imposed by the&#13;
recently merged Board of&#13;
Regents, both the acting Dean&#13;
of the School, William Moy, and&#13;
Vice Chancellor Otto Bauer are&#13;
highly optimistic about the&#13;
future of the school.&#13;
"We're going to get the job&#13;
done," Bauer told Newscope.&#13;
Acknowledging there has&#13;
been a lag in development —&#13;
only three of Parkside's 25&#13;
majors are in SMI, and there&#13;
are only nine regular faculty&#13;
members in the entire school —&#13;
Bauer asserted real progress is&#13;
being made this semester.&#13;
The school, as it exists now,&#13;
consists of three divisions,&#13;
Engineering Science, which&#13;
offers a major in Applied&#13;
Science and Technology,&#13;
Management Science, which&#13;
offers a major in Business&#13;
Management, and Labor&#13;
Economics, which offers a&#13;
major in Labor Economics.&#13;
Only Engineering Science is&#13;
relatively well-developed. It has&#13;
the nine full faculty members&#13;
and is headed by Divisional&#13;
Chairman Alan Grossberg.&#13;
Management Science, on the&#13;
other hand, has a staff of two&#13;
visiting professors and the rest&#13;
ad hoc instructors, while -Labor&#13;
Economics has only a visiting&#13;
professor.&#13;
Neither has a full divisional&#13;
chairman.&#13;
Faculty recruitment this year&#13;
is. being concentrated in&#13;
Management Science. Dean&#13;
Moy said four or five appointments&#13;
are being considered&#13;
here, possibly in accounting&#13;
and finance,&#13;
marketing, quantitative&#13;
methods, and personnel.&#13;
A Labor Economist may be&#13;
hired, too. There will be no&#13;
additions in Engineering&#13;
Science, he said.&#13;
"We're late in the recruiting&#13;
season now," Moy noted. He&#13;
said.&#13;
The candidates that have&#13;
visited the campus, he said,&#13;
have left impressed with&#13;
possibilities at Parkside.&#13;
"It's attractive for them to be&#13;
part of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin and its traditions,&#13;
and it's good to be in an environment&#13;
where you're not&#13;
hemmed in," he said. "To be&#13;
honest, that's what impresses&#13;
me about Parkside."&#13;
Moy will serve as acting Dean&#13;
only to the end of the semester.&#13;
assumed his position as acting&#13;
Dean at the start of the spring&#13;
semester, and has only since&#13;
then began work on recruiting.&#13;
"Management Science is one&#13;
of the more difficult areas to&#13;
recruit in," he added. "It's&#13;
difficult to find good people."&#13;
The emphasis is on&#13;
Management Science, he explained,&#13;
because of student&#13;
demand. Over 600 students have&#13;
indicated it as their major,&#13;
making it the biggest major on&#13;
campus (188 of these have offocially&#13;
declared it as their&#13;
major). "The students are&#13;
here," he emphasized. "They&#13;
have demonstrated their needs,&#13;
and they want help."&#13;
About 200 students have indicated&#13;
Engineering Science as&#13;
their major, while only 22 have&#13;
indicated Labor Economics as&#13;
their major.&#13;
At present, he is uncertain of&#13;
what the results will be in&#13;
recruitment — "I'll know more&#13;
at the end of the semester," he&#13;
W i llia m Moy , a c tin g dean of S M I.&#13;
He is a professor 6f Industrial&#13;
Engineering at Madison, and"&#13;
teaches two classes there. He is&#13;
at Parkside only Tuesday thru&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
His main priority is&#13;
recruiting. He adds though,&#13;
"I'm here to help them in any&#13;
way I can. When you have a&#13;
limited amount of time, you do&#13;
what is most feasible."&#13;
A reason often given why SMI&#13;
has not been developed was the&#13;
absence of a Dean and&#13;
Divisional Chairman; it was&#13;
thought unwise to recruit unless&#13;
the top men in the School could&#13;
have a say in it.&#13;
Reportedly, the position of&#13;
Dean was offered to two people&#13;
during the previous school year,&#13;
and in both cases it was refused.&#13;
Vice Chancellor Bauer says the&#13;
position is about to be offered&#13;
again — it's a matter of the&#13;
Regents deciding what role they&#13;
want to play in the selection.&#13;
Moy then is serving in the&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
Newscope Elections&#13;
In its second interim election of the semester, Newscope has&#13;
elected a new set of editors.&#13;
Jerry Socha was elected Editor; Jim Koloen Managing Editor;&#13;
and Paul Lomartire Associate Editor. All ran unopposed. They will&#13;
serve to the end of the semester.&#13;
An interim election was held because none of the candidates&#13;
were willing to serve a full term that would have ended in&#13;
November. Socha said of this: "I have no idea what will happen to&#13;
the paper in the fall. Most of the people working on it now will be&#13;
gone by then. There's a chance we might even collapse this&#13;
semester."&#13;
He said the only way to avoid this is if new people join the paper&#13;
immediately.&#13;
Socha worked previously on Newscope as Photo Editor and&#13;
Managing Editor.&#13;
The retiring editor, John Koloen, is journeying to Colorado to&#13;
begin working on a new paper. Other Newscope staffers are expected&#13;
to follow him during the next few months.&#13;
The new editors, besides constituting the Editorial Board, will&#13;
also function as the Board of Directors to handle the corporate&#13;
matters of the paper. Cleta Skovronski, who was elected by the&#13;
staff, also will serve on the Board of Directors.&#13;
Further editorial appointments will be made by the three&#13;
editors.&#13;
Womens Capsule College&#13;
KENOSHA — The second&#13;
annual Capsule College for&#13;
Women at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will be held&#13;
April 6 in Gr.eenquist Hall at the&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
Because of the popularity of&#13;
the initial Capsule College last&#13;
year — about 400 women attended&#13;
the all-day session — the&#13;
number of session topics has&#13;
been expanded from eight to 19&#13;
and an evening session has been&#13;
added for the convenience of&#13;
women who are employed or&#13;
have other obligations during&#13;
the day.&#13;
Capsule College is sponsored&#13;
by UW-Parkside, University&#13;
Extension and the Kenosha,&#13;
Racine and Walworth&#13;
University Extension Offices.&#13;
Complete information on the&#13;
program and registration&#13;
blanks are available from the&#13;
sponsoring institutions.&#13;
Deadline for registration for the&#13;
daytime sessions is March 23.&#13;
The $4 registration fee includes&#13;
a morning coffee break and&#13;
luncheon. No pre-registration is&#13;
required for the free evening&#13;
session.&#13;
Registrants may choose to&#13;
attend either one 2V2 hour&#13;
workshop and two 75-minute&#13;
seminars or four seminars.&#13;
Workshop topics and lecturers&#13;
are "The Dark Side of the&#13;
Marketplace: The Plight of the&#13;
Consumer" by Jerry Lamert,&#13;
associate regional director of&#13;
the Federal Trade Commission&#13;
and a Chicago Law School&#13;
professor, and "The Novel:&#13;
What Next?" by Robert Najem,&#13;
chairman of the liberal studies&#13;
functional unit of University&#13;
Extension.&#13;
Seminar topics and lecturers&#13;
are:&#13;
4- "Label Logic" by BlancheErkel,&#13;
consumer specialist of&#13;
the Federal Food and Drug&#13;
Administration, Minneapolis;&#13;
4- "Ecology, Morality and&#13;
Religious Traditions" by Wayne&#13;
Johnson, assistant professor of&#13;
philosophy at Parkside;&#13;
4- "Parent Roles: How to&#13;
Live With a Teenager" by Sam&#13;
Stellman, chairman of the&#13;
social work department of&#13;
University Extension;&#13;
+ "Reproduction&#13;
Engineering: Biological&#13;
Discoveries and Their Social&#13;
Implications" by Surinder&#13;
Datta, associate professor of&#13;
life science at Parkside;&#13;
4- "The Modern Hero: A&#13;
Good Man Is Hard to Find" by&#13;
Walter Graffin, assistant&#13;
professor of English at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
4- "How Do You Cope With&#13;
Catestrophic Illness?" by Ann&#13;
L. St. Louis, RN, director of&#13;
education at St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital, Kenosha;&#13;
4- "Movies: Now What" by&#13;
Robert Najem, University&#13;
Extension;&#13;
4- "Health for Women" by&#13;
Elizabeth Steffen, MD, Racine;&#13;
4- "Good Music Is Forever"&#13;
by Carmen Vila, pianist, artistin-residence&#13;
at Parkside;&#13;
4- "Investigation Into&#13;
Identity" by Agnes' Song,&#13;
clinical psychologist, Southern&#13;
Wisconsin Colony'&#13;
4- "The Black Woman in&#13;
Society: A Minority Within a&#13;
Minority" by Eunice Moss,&#13;
i n s t r u c t o r , soc iol o g y,&#13;
Dominican College;&#13;
4- "An English Couple Looks&#13;
at America — And Likes It" by&#13;
Martin Seymour-Smith, visiting&#13;
professor at Parkisde, and&#13;
Janet Seymour-Smith;&#13;
4- "Art Is All Around You"&#13;
by Stanley Walsh, assistant&#13;
professor of art at Parkside;&#13;
(Continued on Page 8) &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
For The Record&#13;
' ''I I I N I r l 1 1 I \ i £ | \ » |&#13;
1 c | ( •&#13;
mm* Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Sp*' .&lt;o^&#13;
&lt;5*&#13;
AC\cf &lt;-e&#13;
# &lt;&gt;&#13;
&amp;&lt;StP&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
^TENDERLOIN STEAK&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
Spmtlj&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
\ • SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN ROOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
— SENATOR PROXAAIRj=_&#13;
help for child&#13;
care center&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I would like to bring to the&#13;
notice of readers of Newscope&#13;
the work being done by a small&#13;
group of hard working and&#13;
committed people in operating&#13;
a Child Care Center for the&#13;
benefit of the students, staff and&#13;
faculty of UW. Parkside. In&#13;
spite of obstacles of varying&#13;
kinds, these dedicated people&#13;
are providing a much needed&#13;
service as evidenced by the 50&#13;
children now registered. The&#13;
use of rooms in the Parkside&#13;
Baptist Church has been kindly&#13;
donated by the congregation&#13;
and others have loaned or&#13;
donated playthings and&#13;
equipment. The center is at&#13;
present self-supporting by&#13;
reason of the small charge&#13;
made to parents using the&#13;
service, but funds are needed&#13;
for the purchase of larger,&#13;
permanent nursery equipment&#13;
and to hire additional staff.&#13;
Those involved in starting the&#13;
center have volunteered many&#13;
hours of their own time without&#13;
recompense and are concerned&#13;
only that the service provided&#13;
shall be of the highest quality.&#13;
In order to attain this goal we&#13;
need the support of ALL&#13;
Parkside people — those "not&#13;
interested" at the present time&#13;
may at some point in the future&#13;
be very glad such a service&#13;
exists. The SGA has helped in&#13;
many ways and this has been&#13;
much appreciated, also the&#13;
participation of the student&#13;
body at large in contributing to&#13;
fund raising. WE have many&#13;
plans for the future of the&#13;
Center and intent to continue&#13;
providing the very best service&#13;
we can but this will only be&#13;
possible with broad based&#13;
support from the Parkside&#13;
community both students and&#13;
faculty.&#13;
B. Lukas,&#13;
student and volunteer.&#13;
chisholm coming&#13;
to racine&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Congresswoman Chisholm is&#13;
one candidate that stands out as&#13;
being different. The real difference&#13;
that makes her stand&#13;
out is not that she is a woman,&#13;
and a black woman at that, but&#13;
that this dynamic woman is a&#13;
catalyst that can bring together&#13;
responsive women, struggling&#13;
minorities, the poor and the&#13;
young who see her as a new&#13;
hope for the system.&#13;
Shirley is fighting for:&#13;
Jobs for Veterans&#13;
A volunteer army&#13;
Consumer protection&#13;
Fighting hard drugs harder&#13;
An end to police control of&#13;
marijuana&#13;
Federal "Bill of Rights" for&#13;
workers&#13;
Free choice abortion&#13;
Amnesty for draft dodgers&#13;
Shirley will speak on these&#13;
topics and others March 17 at&#13;
10:00 a.m. in the Badger Room&#13;
at the Racine campus. If you&#13;
can't wait till Friday, Thursday&#13;
there will be a fund raising&#13;
Mexican dinner with music at&#13;
815 Silver St. (2 blocks east of&#13;
the Racine State St. Post Office)&#13;
from 5:45 to7:30 p.m. donations&#13;
$1.00, children $.50. Following&#13;
dinner a bus and car caravan&#13;
will leave for a rally at St.&#13;
Boniface Church, 11th and&#13;
Clark in Milwaukee.&#13;
There will be child care at the&#13;
Silver Street Day Care Center&#13;
until busses and cars come back&#13;
from Milwaukee.&#13;
Parkside Woman's Caucus&#13;
Shirley Chisholm for President&#13;
Committee&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
DAR SLAMS WOMEN'S LIBERATION&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) — The National Convention of the&#13;
Daughters of the American Revolution, in its meeting last month&#13;
issued an eight-page declaration that the women's liberation&#13;
movement will lead to sexual promiscuity and destroy the morals&#13;
of American society.&#13;
a "XV*™ 5660 liberated for a long time," said Mrs. Nettie&#13;
Arnold Hawkins. "You don't see us leaving our homes to demonstrate&#13;
for abstract movements."&#13;
The DAR paper hinted that the women's liberation movement&#13;
may be a direct link to a communist overthrow of the country.&#13;
STATUE REMOVED FROM HARM'S WAY&#13;
CHICAGO 111. (CPS) — The statue commemorating seven&#13;
policemen killed in the Haymarket Square riot in Chicago in 1886&#13;
has finally been moved to a place where it will be safe from attack&#13;
inside the Chicago police headquarters. The 9-foot-tall statue had&#13;
been blasted from its pedestal by bombs twice within the last three&#13;
ycsrs.&#13;
The first bombing, on Oct. 7, 1969, marked the beginning of the&#13;
Days of Rage' in which radicals lead by the Weather people batt ed&#13;
police '"the streets of Chicago. The statue was patched togeta&#13;
but was bombed from its perch again in 1970&#13;
proS,^,^-^ r&#13;
c&#13;
„f g&#13;
hu&#13;
aar^„eg&#13;
n t&#13;
maintained&#13;
COLURT&#13;
HANT WI™ WH1PLASH AWARDED 54,500 BY&#13;
LOS ANGELES (CPS) — Bimbo the Daneina FiarvK »&#13;
$4,500 in damages for whiplash injuries she recefv&lt;^n&#13;
accident in 1969. received m a traffic&#13;
Superior Court Judge Julius Title made the ruling •&#13;
owner Ted de Wayne claimed $10,000 for injuries received hvT&#13;
rained 16-year-old elephant Bimbo Jr. in a car-truck^accM^n^&#13;
Los Angeles on March 30, 1969. accident near&#13;
The circus owner said that heranco&#13;
lost interest in danc ing and also in a unique wateStg MI*" ^&#13;
DEDENVER?cPS,&#13;
WNn&#13;
ERS BEAT D°&#13;
G C«CHER&#13;
when the d| S ' ~ Tr^ ciZ^V^&#13;
angry crowd of park visitors.&#13;
an Park by an&#13;
The dog catchers have been causing Denver&#13;
grief in recent months by handing out tickets in the mTk!? 3 ?&#13;
f&#13;
who permit their dogs to run around withoul a leash PC°&#13;
P 6&#13;
talent in&#13;
milwaukee&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Because Parkside does not&#13;
yet have a Theatre major, most&#13;
of our actors and technical&#13;
theatre people transfer to&#13;
Milwaukee or Madison. It is&#13;
unfortunate that Parkside is not&#13;
benefiting from these talented&#13;
people. However, it is consoling&#13;
to know that our Communications&#13;
faculty has done&#13;
such a fine job of teaching.&#13;
Marilynn Baxter's acting&#13;
training has evidently payed&#13;
off, especially for the students&#13;
that have transferred to UWMilwaukee.&#13;
&#13;
UWM's recent production of&#13;
Marat Sade, which was given&#13;
excellent reviews by all who&#13;
saw it, had five ex-Parkside&#13;
actors in its cast. Three of the&#13;
main charactors were portrayed&#13;
by Nick Angotti ) Marat&#13;
Sade), Mitch Herbert&#13;
(Coulmier), and Jerry Mathews&#13;
(Dulac); Ricky Donnelly and&#13;
Donnalee Bain Desmond were&#13;
inmates of the asylum.&#13;
Needless to say, this speaks&#13;
well for Parkside's acting&#13;
training and the students who&#13;
chose to transfer in order to&#13;
continue it.&#13;
If you missed Marat Sade, by&#13;
all means catch Nick, Jerry and&#13;
Mitch at UWM's next play, Man&#13;
of La Mancha, which runs April&#13;
21-23 and 25-30. Curtain time is&#13;
8:30 except Sundays when it is&#13;
7:30. Tickets are available at&#13;
the box office.&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAR. 15&#13;
Poetry Workshop. Poet Robert Bly,&#13;
a National Book Award Winner, will&#13;
conduct an informal free public&#13;
poetry workshop from 9:30 to 11:30&#13;
a.m. in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Whiteskellar.&#13;
THURSDAY,MAR. 16&#13;
Concert. Student-faculty opera&#13;
program will present "La Serva&#13;
Padrona" (in English) and selected&#13;
arias at 8 p.m. in the Racine Campus&#13;
Badger Room. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY,MAR. 17&#13;
Dance. "Stars and Stripes".&#13;
Baseball Club. 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Adm.&#13;
$1.50. Wisconsin and Parkside I.D.'s&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY,MAR. 18&#13;
Track. UW-P at UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
SUNDAY,MAR. 19&#13;
Concert. UW Racine Alumni Club&#13;
will sponsor a program by the&#13;
University Singers of UW-Madison&#13;
at 2:30 p.m. in the Horlick Little&#13;
Theater, Racine. Adm. adults $2;&#13;
students $1. Tickets available at&#13;
Student Activities Office. Proceeds&#13;
to local UW Scholarship Fund which&#13;
includes UW-P.&#13;
"Don't beli eve everything you read.'&#13;
Robin David, Kathy Rasch, Pat&#13;
McDermid, Marc Eisen, Jean Frahm,&#13;
Larry Jones, Jim Koloen, Helmut&#13;
Ferber, John Koloen, Rich Lipke,&#13;
Paul Lomartire, Bob Mainland,&#13;
Kevin McKay, Fred Noer, Jr., Brian&#13;
Ross, Wolfgang Salewski, Andy Schmelling,&#13;
Barb Scott, Cleta&#13;
Skovronski, Jerry Socha, Bill&#13;
Sorensen, Mike Stevesand, Debbie&#13;
Venskus, Mike Kite, Sifton Winnow.&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout Ihe&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
,s 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road. &#13;
first meeting March 13,1972 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Gay Lib Attracts Few&#13;
Pago 3&#13;
by Helmut Ferber of the Newscope staff&#13;
It isn t at all hard for me to imagine why&#13;
there were only three persons in the audience at&#13;
the Gay Youth Coalition last Thursday. It isn't&#13;
hard to see why there weren't any constituents of&#13;
a Gay Movement present at the meeting. It&#13;
wasn t at all hard to see why the whole audience&#13;
left after about ten minutes of discussion. What&#13;
is hard for me to see is the feeling that I came&#13;
away with after the meeting had ended. I was all&#13;
ready to put a little more bias and resentment&#13;
into Newscope as I was sitting down there in that&#13;
little white Ratskellar. I couldn't have imagined&#13;
that a person who was Gay should have the&#13;
rights I have and be allowed to express himself&#13;
in the manner he desired. Well, I left that&#13;
meeting after an hour and a half and I felt that I&#13;
came a little closer to seeing a state of being. I&#13;
feel a little more comfortable in getting one step&#13;
closer to seeing that all people are human. I feel&#13;
somewhat more objective in writing a subjective&#13;
article as this is, than to write an uninvolved,&#13;
unfeeling report of discussion that took place.&#13;
Unfeeling Report of&#13;
Discussion and Topics Covered&#13;
On Thursday, March 9, there was a meeting&#13;
sponsored by the Concerned Student Coalition to&#13;
provide speakers and discussion on the subject of&#13;
Gay Liberation. Present at the meeting were two&#13;
members of the Gay Peoples Union from&#13;
Milwaukee as speakers, one member of the Gay&#13;
Youth Coalition from Parkside, one priest, two&#13;
other gentlemen from the Gay community, one&#13;
Newscope reporter, one Newscope&#13;
photographer, a journalist for the Young&#13;
Democrats in Milwaukee, and an audience of&#13;
three. A large-scale turnout to say the least.&#13;
Human rights and the need for progressive&#13;
change in our outmoded sex laws were the main&#13;
topics of discussion. The need for more pressure&#13;
on government officials and candidates was&#13;
stressed as a sound step for more freedom for&#13;
Gay life. The main point was that being gay in no&#13;
way changes the status of a human being.&#13;
End of Unfeeling Report&#13;
People need awakening in order to help&#13;
change old values and attitudes. People need to&#13;
take a good look at themselves in relation to what&#13;
is right, if anything. I sincerely wish that some&#13;
more students would have taken the time and at&#13;
least came and talked to these people. I sincerely&#13;
hope at some time you can talk to a person&#13;
without looking at the sexual beliefs in determining&#13;
if they are a good person or not. I sincerely&#13;
hope . . .&#13;
If you would like information or help call 414-&#13;
342-1722 or write Gay Lib, P.O. Box 90530,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Kenosha Can-Do to Continue&#13;
On the night of - Tuesday,&#13;
February 22, the city of&#13;
Kenosha held a meeting with&#13;
some people of the Can-Do&#13;
organization. Can-Do is a nonprofit&#13;
organization whose&#13;
ultimate goal is the complete&#13;
recycling of waste in the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha area.&#13;
The purpose of this meeting&#13;
was to discuss the turning over&#13;
of the Can-Do facilities to the&#13;
city, who has appropriated&#13;
$10,000 f or the operation.&#13;
For a good part of the meeting&#13;
the subject of discussion was&#13;
the amount of money the city&#13;
could make from this program&#13;
rather than the benefit it would&#13;
give our environment. After&#13;
getting most of the minor points&#13;
straightened out, the city&#13;
decided it would be ready to&#13;
start operations on March 6.&#13;
At present about 2 per cent of&#13;
the city's population is participating&#13;
in the Can-Do&#13;
operation. The city would like to&#13;
up this total to 10 per cent by the&#13;
use of an extensive advertising&#13;
program. The present Can-Do&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
organization has offered its&#13;
existing funds toward publicity&#13;
for the endeavor. This help&#13;
along with the assistance offered&#13;
by the Jaycees and word&#13;
of mouth should give the city its&#13;
much needed publicity for the&#13;
project.&#13;
HOURS OPEN&#13;
Monday - Friday: 1 p.m. to 5&#13;
p.m. Except holidays.&#13;
Saturday: 8 a.m. to 5 p .m.&#13;
Material To Be Accepted&#13;
A. Tin cans cleaned and&#13;
flattened.&#13;
B. Glass&#13;
1. colored - all metal tags&#13;
removed.&#13;
2. clear - all metal tags&#13;
removed.&#13;
C. Paper - not to be accepted&#13;
until a semi trailer can be obtained&#13;
for storage and transport.&#13;
&#13;
ZJlie VJL eij S—&lt; &gt;upper ^&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan td.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
SetoHHf the, tyined&#13;
Ptyy* &amp; OicJicut Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 656-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
Itolex - Accutron&#13;
UltrachrOn - Longine&#13;
Bui ova • Movado&#13;
Caravelle - Time*&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
Uneat -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
s M/ sai7 au, Ave.&#13;
y&amp;fwuteu £ &amp;&amp;TIA&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
o% Dis count to s tudents and Faculty with \ .Q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace • Lunt&#13;
Heed A Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAt.&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefora&#13;
Seneca • Lalique&#13;
Royal Worcester &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972&#13;
McLuhan at USC&#13;
by Mark Timpany&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
In his first public lecture in&#13;
the United States since 1970,&#13;
Marshall McLuhan had little&#13;
new to tell his audience at the&#13;
University of Southern&#13;
California. That's reasonable,&#13;
since, McLuhan points out, we&#13;
live in an eternal present where&#13;
past, present and future are&#13;
simultaneous. It's like going to&#13;
an antique dealer and asking,&#13;
"What's new?"&#13;
McLuhan now has black (not&#13;
grey) hair and wears a&#13;
mustache. He accepts his role&#13;
as "McLuhan", as opposed to&#13;
Professor McLuhan, though he&#13;
still is identified with the&#13;
University of Toronto. He now&#13;
plays the role of prophet, and&#13;
his audience last week did not&#13;
expect a typical college lecture.&#13;
What they got was typical&#13;
McLuhan — ty pical of a person&#13;
who is paid thousands of dollars&#13;
by General Motors to tell them&#13;
that, "The automobile was a&#13;
thing of the past."&#13;
The audience also got a large&#13;
collection of jokes, mostly puns.&#13;
The address could have been&#13;
titled "The Standup Humor of&#13;
Marshall McLuhan". "What is&#13;
a sick joke about Marshall&#13;
McLuhan? .... Who was&#13;
Marshall McLuhan?" Jokes,&#13;
McLuhan tells us, are an expression&#13;
of anguish. A comdeian&#13;
is one who puts on his&#13;
audiences grievances.&#13;
McLuhan did have some&#13;
comments on two other authors&#13;
writing on the contemporary&#13;
scene. Toffler, he said, was not&#13;
aware of breakdown as&#13;
breakthrough. Future Shock is&#13;
thus a look at the future through&#13;
a rear view mirror. B. F.&#13;
Skinner was described by&#13;
McLuhan as "a great man of&#13;
the nineteenth century."&#13;
Xerox was another topic for&#13;
comment. "The Gutenburg&#13;
cycle is completed by Xerox."&#13;
While, under conditions of print,&#13;
everyone could become a&#13;
reader, Xerox allows everyone&#13;
to become a publisher. It means&#13;
makes easy security leaks —&#13;
"the enema of the people".&#13;
These security leaks are&#13;
"anticipatory of participatory&#13;
democracy". Xerox, bv making&#13;
everyone a publisher, turns the&#13;
underground press into an elite&#13;
press.&#13;
The problem with McLuhan,&#13;
it seems, is that once you have&#13;
struggled with what he has been&#13;
saying (the last twenty years)&#13;
enough to understand it,&#13;
everything he's saying becomes&#13;
so obvious that you wonder why&#13;
the great controversy over&#13;
making it explicit. ("We're not&#13;
sure who discovered water, but&#13;
we're quite sure it wasn't a&#13;
fish.") Generalists are always&#13;
hard to work with this way.&#13;
McLuhan did mention several&#13;
uses of the information gleaned&#13;
from his media studies. While&#13;
radio has little effect when&#13;
applied to a literate culture, its&#13;
effects are enormous when&#13;
introduced to an oral culture.&#13;
(The dichotomy is literatevisual-civilization&#13;
— oralculture).&#13;
UNESCO's policy of&#13;
indiscriminately distributing&#13;
radios to "backward" areas is&#13;
akin to "pouring gas on a fire".&#13;
Similarly, the problem in&#13;
Northern Ireland could be&#13;
solved in a week by shutting off&#13;
the radio. This has nothing to do&#13;
with the content of radio, the&#13;
primary effect of any medium&#13;
being its effect as a shaper of&#13;
human sensibility. The medium&#13;
is the message — mass-age —&#13;
massage — mess-age.&#13;
It's been eight years since&#13;
Understanding Media and&#13;
nothing has changed. The&#13;
satellite (as proscenium arch)&#13;
has transformed the globe into&#13;
an art form which we are free to&#13;
program at will. McLuhan is&#13;
fond of recalling the Balinese&#13;
saying, "We have no art, we do&#13;
everything as well as we can."&#13;
The electric information environment&#13;
has made jobs obsolete&#13;
("roles not goals") and&#13;
revived the occult (Norman&#13;
Slater). In a service environment,&#13;
it is unnecessary to&#13;
work to be a productive&#13;
member of society. ("My&#13;
consumers, are they not also&#13;
my producers?") Hardware&#13;
loses primacy to software. Data&#13;
classification yields to pattern&#13;
recognition. Alcohol yields to&#13;
psychedelics. (The inner rather&#13;
than the outer trip.) There are&#13;
no more goals. "You're already&#13;
there."&#13;
In the eight years since Understanding&#13;
Media, McLuhan is&#13;
still the only name associated&#13;
with media study. All that time&#13;
he has said that he would be&#13;
happy to return to being a&#13;
professor of English literature&#13;
(grading papers in Toronto) if&#13;
someone else would become&#13;
interested in researching the&#13;
effects of media (Tom Wolfe&#13;
described McLuhan's field of&#13;
study as cognitive psychology.)&#13;
The effects of media are still&#13;
there. No one has seen fit to&#13;
program them to some human&#13;
end.&#13;
The point is that the media&#13;
don't have to be the message,&#13;
i.e. "whirled without amied'V&#13;
Through a critical awareness of&#13;
the effect of medi&#13;
Possible t 0 program a&#13;
of mmededia ia tno crreate a &lt;&#13;
ratio 0f sensory ex&#13;
'sensibility). While yo&#13;
escaPe rriedia effects,&#13;
P|ck which on es are us&#13;
given time. T o achieve&#13;
awareness, howevei&#13;
necessary to discard&#13;
mense backlog of&#13;
cultural assumptions&#13;
from the pi&#13;
technology). For the A&#13;
they include the woi&#13;
racism, sexism&#13;
nationalism. In the&#13;
(present), it can be&#13;
that one's allegiance&#13;
divided between the ti&#13;
end of the nu clear fan&#13;
the globe (the&#13;
nationalism). In the&#13;
(past), we experience t&#13;
(present) with an a'&#13;
defined by cultural la&#13;
than immediate rea&#13;
live, therefore, in a j&#13;
Frank Zappa's "Rubei&#13;
Jets" album does not&#13;
the fifties.&#13;
McLuhan addressed&#13;
audience last week wil&#13;
°f an Altec mic:&#13;
McLuhan's record albi&#13;
better use of his haltir&#13;
patterns than did hi&#13;
dressing this group. Or&#13;
commented, "You c&#13;
him, you might as&#13;
listening to the radio.&#13;
CRUDSTOPPERS TEXTBOOK&#13;
LONG HAIR LEADS TO FILTH, DEGRADATION, INSANITY,&#13;
DEATH,AND SOCIALISM/ IF YOU SEE A CRUD,&#13;
NOTIFY POLICE. OR, DO THE NEXT BEST&#13;
THING-SHOOT IT/ r&#13;
KENOSHA - The National&#13;
Shakes peare Company&#13;
production of "Twelfth Night"&#13;
will be presented under sponsorship&#13;
of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee at 8&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday, March 28, in&#13;
Bradford High School&#13;
Auditorium, Kenosha.&#13;
Tickets now are on sale at the&#13;
Parkside Student Activities&#13;
Office on the Wood Road&#13;
Campus, at Cook-Gere Co. in&#13;
Racine and Bidinger's House of&#13;
Music in Kenosha. There is no&#13;
mail order. Tickets for the&#13;
general public are $3 and $2,&#13;
with all seats reserved.&#13;
GRAF'S CAFE&#13;
8009 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
by Paul Lomartireof the Newscope staff&#13;
I decided to set up a vigil before the place became&#13;
a tourist attraction. I wanted to see the men who were&#13;
causing such a local commotion with the use of their&#13;
morning coffee break.&#13;
I p arked my car directly across the street from&#13;
Graf's Sausage Kitchen and Cafe in an empty parking&#13;
lot owned by Piggly Wiggly. I slo uched in the front seat&#13;
noting the stillness, the early morning tranquility. It&#13;
was a cold, crisp Thursday.&#13;
I listened intently for the rumble of the big red and&#13;
green "Keep the City Clean" machines, i w as ready to&#13;
record the event for all of mankind and posterity in a&#13;
simple journal. Needless to say, I w as very nervous.&#13;
A little past eight thirty the first monster appeared&#13;
on Twenty-Second Avenue. Then a second, a third. In a&#13;
few minutes the street was partially lined on both sides&#13;
by the mechanical garbage eaters, with fruits of past&#13;
battles affixed to the fronts of the trucks; stuffed&#13;
animals, cardboard signs and pictures, strange tatoos&#13;
of the trade.&#13;
The men climbing out of the cabs of the vehicles&#13;
were burly, husky, steam mouthes in the cold air. They&#13;
tunneled into the small Cafe in search of d aily papers,&#13;
hot coffee, rolls, eggs and pancakes. The scene&#13;
reminded me of a Hell's AngelS - Labor Day - invasion&#13;
of a small, innocent, defenseless town. I di dn't leave&#13;
my car.&#13;
As I watched the events transpire, I thou ght of the&#13;
contributors to the Kenosha News "Voice of the&#13;
People" column, those who had complained about the&#13;
city workers converging on local restaurants during&#13;
their morning breaks. One citizen asked why the men&#13;
couldn't simply carry coffee in thermoses and drink&#13;
during break-time in the truck. Other Kenoshans offered&#13;
advice and opinions in print condemning or&#13;
defending the sanitation engineers and their "on duty"&#13;
habits.&#13;
If th e garbage men could only face their accusers&#13;
right in the middle of Twenty-Second Avenue this&#13;
bright crisp morning, my simple journal would instantly&#13;
blossom into a best-selling novel.&#13;
I w aited quietly, remaining unnoticed while the&#13;
men ate, then re-entered the cold and mounted their&#13;
trucks, twentieth century chariots of waste. The big,&#13;
awkward vehicles faded into the distance north and&#13;
south on the avenue, east and west, invading sleepy&#13;
side streets. I jotted down a few final notes and headed&#13;
into the Cafe.&#13;
Andy Warhol once said that a time would come&#13;
when everyone in America would be a Superstar for&#13;
ten minutes, before fading into oblivion. I think the&#13;
time has come, thanks in part to "Voice of the People"&#13;
type columns. I beli eve Bud Graf, the proprietor of the&#13;
Sausage Kitchen and Cafe, will be propelled into Super&#13;
Stardom if the "garbageman controversy" continues. I&#13;
even think he may be a Superstar for more than ten&#13;
minutes; at least a half hour.&#13;
He is the individual who prepares the food, cuts the&#13;
meat, and serves all the customers under the small&#13;
square roof in the Sausage Kitchen-Cafe. He is a large&#13;
man who looks like he could sling hash in the toughest&#13;
corner of Hells' Kitchen in New York.&#13;
There are only about four booths in his place, and&#13;
as many tables. Next to the dining area is the typical&#13;
neighborhood jammed-packed grocery store — which&#13;
offers everything from potato chips, penny candy and&#13;
goSds^ SaUSageS t0 0003 Co,a&#13;
' che&#13;
ese and bakery&#13;
Judy, the waitress serving the four booths and&#13;
tables, took my order of pancakes and coffee minutes&#13;
after I had selected a place to s it. There&#13;
students, a coffee salesman, two housewi&#13;
man eating alone in th e Cafe; making the&#13;
full.&#13;
For fifty-five cents I got th ree p ancakes,&#13;
of butter and all the coffee I desired. Bud&#13;
had a little of the pancake batter left from tl&#13;
of the he-men earlier in the mo rning, as hi&#13;
three big, fat pancakes, fit fo r th e hungrii&#13;
berjacks, garbagemen or whoever.&#13;
Judy left a bottle of Log Cabin sy rup o&#13;
instead of t hose nasty, sticky plastic contai&#13;
places use. I r ead the Sun-Times w hich \&#13;
table, also appreciating the Tribune and Sen&#13;
disposal.&#13;
Graf's though small, also serves chicker&#13;
a dollar forty-five), steak (one be ing a R&#13;
$2.55), veal parmisan (a buck and a quar&#13;
(.95), shrimp (1.95), and hamburgers, chei&#13;
pizzaburgers. Not to mention any com!&#13;
breakfasts utilizing eggs, bacon, ha m sau:&#13;
cereal, etc.&#13;
Also available to any f oBu d s customer&#13;
Bud Super Special", which c®f&#13;
s&#13;
asked Judy what it consisted o f. She the&#13;
minute and told me it had something to&#13;
cheeseburger and a pizzaburger.&#13;
I at e what I could of the three Pancakes&#13;
I left e nough to permit serious thoughts on&#13;
sending the remains to someone^starving .r&#13;
place. It was definitely worth fifty'-five a&#13;
Before I left Grafs, I wanted sot&#13;
testimony from Judy concerning e ga&#13;
breaktime-"Voice of the Peopte affair,&#13;
this was indeed the Cafe w J &lt;&#13;
hang-out." wanted.&#13;
3&#13;
As" He" I th ought about w riting a&#13;
KenMha News^ice of he t&#13;
suggest that the payers wn k&#13;
the sanitation engineers ^&#13;
situation; on garbagemen s&#13;
coffee during breaktime so &#13;
March 13,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
of media it is&#13;
rogram a balance&#13;
create a desirable&#13;
nsory experience&#13;
While you cannot&#13;
a effects, you can&#13;
nes are useful at a&#13;
ro achieve such an&#13;
however, it is&#13;
} discard an imklog&#13;
of obsolete&#13;
jmptions (derived&#13;
ie preceding&#13;
For the American,&#13;
i the work ethic,&#13;
sexism and&#13;
In the future&#13;
can be expected&#13;
allegiance will be&#13;
reen the tribe (the&#13;
uclear family) and&#13;
(the end of&#13;
In the present&#13;
iperience the future&#13;
ith an awareness&#13;
cultural lag rather&#13;
diate reality. We&#13;
re, in a junkyard,&#13;
j's "Ruben and the&#13;
i does not refer to&#13;
addressed the USC&#13;
t week with the aid&#13;
tec microphone,&#13;
-ecord album made&#13;
f his halting speech&#13;
an did he in adi&#13;
group. One woman&#13;
"You can't see&#13;
might as well be&#13;
the radio."&#13;
National&#13;
ompany&#13;
th Night"&#13;
ider spon-&#13;
,-ersity of&#13;
Lecture&#13;
littee at 8&#13;
irch 28, i n&#13;
School&#13;
sale at the&#13;
Activities&#13;
&gt;od Road&#13;
;re Co. in&#13;
s House of&#13;
here is no&#13;
s for the&#13;
S3 and $2,&#13;
ed.&#13;
i sit. There were two&#13;
wo housewives and a&#13;
making the place half&#13;
} pancakes,three pats&#13;
(Sired. Bud must have&#13;
• left from the invasion&#13;
irning, as he produced&#13;
the hungriest of lumiver.&#13;
&#13;
ibin syrup on the table&#13;
astic containers many&#13;
nes w hich was on the&#13;
•uneand Sentinel at my&#13;
rves chicken (a half for&#13;
5 being a Rib Eye for&#13;
and a quarter), perch&#13;
urgers, cheeseburgers,&#13;
i any combination of&#13;
n, ham sausage, toast,&#13;
I's customer is the "Big&#13;
&gt;ts seventy-five cents. I&#13;
of. She thought for a&#13;
Jmething to do with a&#13;
er.&#13;
ee pancakes served me.&#13;
thoughts on my part of&#13;
e starving in a far away&#13;
fifty-five cents,&#13;
wanted some sort of&#13;
ling the garbagemen -&#13;
ie" affair. I asked her if&#13;
ere all the garbagemen&#13;
nd said, "a few of them&#13;
I wanted.&#13;
writing a letter to the&#13;
^eople" column, I could&#13;
vere complaining, meet&#13;
falk over the whole&#13;
urf over hot cakes and&#13;
e morning.&#13;
paid for by Wisconsin Students For McGovern and Wisconsin McGovern for President Committee. 728 N. Jefferson. Milwaukee. Frank Nikolay, Ch.&#13;
AND WHAT&#13;
ARE YOU DOING&#13;
ABOUT IT?&#13;
FOR OVER A DECADE ONE MAN IN AMERICAN POLITICS HAS HAD THE COURAGE TO SPEAK OUT —&#13;
ALONE — ON THE MAJOR ISSUES FACING THE COUNTRY.&#13;
• in 1963 George McGovern was the first man to oppose the War in Indochina.&#13;
• McGovern has pledged to appoint a woman to the first Supreme Court opening, as well as other major judicial and executive posts.&#13;
He supports all legislation guaranteeing equal rights for women.&#13;
• in 1968 he led a "one-man" crusade which revealed the extent of hunger and malnutrition in America. Out of this effort came Food&#13;
Stamp and School Lunch legislation.&#13;
• only McGovern is committed to grant a general amnesty to all those forced to flee the country rather than fight in an unjust war.&#13;
• only McGovern has spelled out an alternative defense budget for America which would reduce Pentagon spending by $30 billion.&#13;
• McGovern is the only Senator to endorse the 60 points of the Congressional Black Caucus. He co-sponsored every major piece of&#13;
civil rights legislation since he entered the Senate.&#13;
• in 1969 McGovern submitted legislation calling for the termination of the draft.&#13;
• McGovern calls existing penalties for posession of marijuana inequitable and unrealistic.&#13;
• McGovern led in congressional support for Cesar Chavez' efforts to ensure a fair income for farm workers.&#13;
• since 1963 McGovern has been proposing national programs which would shift the economy from military to civilian production.&#13;
• in 1972 McGovern stated the heart of his plan for a better America when he called for a dramatic program of income redistribution and&#13;
tax reform. His plan would have the effect of shifting $29 billion from those at the highest income levels to the vast majority of Americans&#13;
at lower levels, those earning under $12,000. Now, that's radical change!&#13;
McGovern's record on the issues is testimony to what he's been doing about the problems facing our country.&#13;
NOW, IT'S YOUR TURN TO DO YOUR SHARE!&#13;
George McGovern needs your help in the Wisconsin Presidential Primary. He needs two things from you. Your Vote . . . and Your Spring Vacation.&#13;
YOUR VOTE —&#13;
If you have not registered to vote yet, do so before the deadline, March 22 (March 15 in Milwaukee). If you are registered in a city where you will&#13;
not be present on Election Day, April 4, then clip the coupon, which is an application for an absentee ballot. Send this form to the Clerk at the o'fice&#13;
where you register. You will get an absentee ballot in the return mail. Please vote this ballot and return it to the Clerk before April 3.&#13;
ABSENTEE VOTING — APPLICATION FOR BALLOT&#13;
Election Clerk, City Clerk's Offices, Wisconsin&#13;
I hereby certify that I am a citizen of the United States and have been a legal resident&#13;
of the state of Wisconsin for six months, and of the precinct of the ward&#13;
of the city of . ; (or of the Village or Town of );&#13;
County of for ten days next preceding; that I am a duly&#13;
qualified elector therein; that I expect to be temporarily absent from such legal residence&#13;
and cannot appear at the polling place on said date. I, therefore, hereby apply for official&#13;
ballots to be voted by me at such election.&#13;
Dated 1972. Signed&#13;
Residence City or P. O&#13;
(Street and number or rural route)&#13;
Zip&#13;
Mail ballot to No Street&#13;
City or P. O.&#13;
YOUR SPRING VACATION&#13;
For Georae McGovern to win the Wisconsin Primary he needs the volunteer help of many people to canvass the cities and towns and rural areas of the&#13;
state. There is nothing you can do over your Spring Vacation which is as important as electing the next President of the United States. Please help!&#13;
There '1®.?^?.^''®one"of&#13;
3&#13;
these McGovern offices and sign up for a week's work which can be crucial in turning the country around once and for all;&#13;
MadisonMcGwmoffice: 630 W. Washington 608-257-8896 Milwaukee McGovern office: 728 N. Jefferson 414-273-3263&#13;
McGOVERN FOR&#13;
PRESIDENT &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972&#13;
Madison Program on Jewish Experience&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
fSt u f-wk i&lt; j. z.oo ^-y&#13;
AA&#13;
re e&#13;
a.4&#13;
M«-VJ Voqi\« TUJ&#13;
ld2 0 - S 2St&#13;
&lt;t r&#13;
I I ~ ^ Co.^yon .&#13;
/^tJsC)Sr\o, / /-•/{, Corr-iggn \&#13;
Rise to face UN other day&#13;
U.W. Parkside&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
IN&#13;
EUROPE&#13;
Chicago To Amsterdam&#13;
Two Plights&#13;
OR&#13;
JUNE - JULY 3 3&#13;
JUNE 4 - AUGUST 10&#13;
Complete price $214.00 ( Transportation On ly)&#13;
MADISON - The Hillel&#13;
Foundation at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison is sponsoring&#13;
a series of programs&#13;
March 11-24 on the campus to&#13;
study the Holocaust, the extermination&#13;
of six million Jews&#13;
in Europe.&#13;
The schedule is as follows:&#13;
Saturday, March 11 — 8 p.m.,&#13;
"The Shop on Main Street," the&#13;
film on the elimination of Jews&#13;
from a small Czech town; to be&#13;
repeated Sunday, March 12, 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Monday, March 13 — 4 p.m.,&#13;
workshop on writings about the&#13;
Holocaust with David Roskies&#13;
of Brandeis University, noted&#13;
young Yiddish scholar; 8 p.m.,&#13;
multi-media show on "The Rise&#13;
and Fall of the East European&#13;
Jew," presented by Roskies.&#13;
Friday, March 17 — 9 p.m.,&#13;
Prof. Georges Haupt, visiting&#13;
lecturer in the UW-Madison&#13;
history department, discusses&#13;
the Jewish response to the Nazi&#13;
occupation with emphasis on his&#13;
own native village of Falicia.&#13;
Saturday, March 18 — 8 p.m.,&#13;
presentation of the films&#13;
"Border Street," "Sighet,&#13;
Sighet," and "Night and Fog";&#13;
to be repeated at 8 p.m. March&#13;
23.&#13;
Tuesday, March 21 — 8 p.m.,&#13;
Czech author and film producer&#13;
Arnost Lustig screens his film&#13;
"Diamonds in the Night," then&#13;
discusses film making.&#13;
Friday, March 24 — 9 p.m.,&#13;
Prof. Raul Hilberg, University&#13;
of Vermont, author of "The&#13;
Destruction of European&#13;
Jewry," will discuss "The&#13;
Uniqueness of the Holocaust."&#13;
During the two-week period&#13;
special seminars will be held,&#13;
mini-exhibits on the revolt of&#13;
the Warsaw ghetto will be on&#13;
view, and pertinent books will&#13;
be on display ai campus&#13;
bookstores and the Madison&#13;
Public Library.&#13;
All programs will be held at&#13;
the Hillel Foundation, 611&#13;
Langdon st., and are open to the&#13;
"public. A program booklet can&#13;
be obtained by calling 256-8361.&#13;
Teaching Awards&#13;
to be Presented&#13;
Two University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
faculty members will&#13;
be presented with $500&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Awards&#13;
to be made at Commencement&#13;
Exercises this spring. The&#13;
awards are made possible by a&#13;
bequest for that purpose from&#13;
Standard Oil Company. The&#13;
Awards Committee desires&#13;
student nominations with a&#13;
statement of supporting:&#13;
evidence for the nomination not&#13;
to exceed a page in length. The&#13;
letters of support should emphasize&#13;
teaching effectiveness&#13;
and success and how the&#13;
professor contributed to the&#13;
student's learning experience,.&#13;
The awards are not meant to be&#13;
a popularity contest based on&#13;
the charisma of the instructors.&#13;
Next week nomination forms&#13;
will be mailed to each student&#13;
and will also be available to&#13;
students in the three Student&#13;
Services Offices, in the Library&#13;
and in the Divisional Offices.&#13;
These nominations will provide&#13;
the basis of selection of the&#13;
recipient. The Awards selections&#13;
are made by a committee&#13;
of 15. Committee members are&#13;
Professors Herbert Kubly,&#13;
Chairman, and Professors&#13;
Stella Gray, Gene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, Leon Applebaum,&#13;
Alan Grossberg and&#13;
Martin. Professor Martin was a&#13;
1971 winner of the Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Award. Student&#13;
committee members are Jerry&#13;
Grimes, Wolfgang Salewski,&#13;
Robert Lindstroth, Lois Bauer,&#13;
Robert Fornal, Curtis&#13;
Sahakian, James Twist and&#13;
Michael Baxter. Mr. Twist and&#13;
Mr. Baxter are representatives&#13;
on the committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. The fifteenth&#13;
member of the committee is&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger of the&#13;
Student Services Office.&#13;
PAB Needs Members&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, responsible for advising&#13;
the Student Activities Office in&#13;
the area of programming on&#13;
campus, is inviting more&#13;
students to become members.&#13;
The Board helps to organize and&#13;
work on activities on campus.&#13;
Sue Nevin, Vice President of the&#13;
Board and in charge of applications,&#13;
has announced, "The&#13;
Parkside Activities Board has&#13;
been operating for slightly more&#13;
than a year. Now the possibility&#13;
arises for expanding our&#13;
programming, and subsequently,&#13;
our membership."&#13;
The PAB has a series of&#13;
committees that program for&#13;
specific areas. The particular&#13;
committees listed below still&#13;
have room for new members.&#13;
They are:&#13;
Special Events - It is&#13;
responsible for organizing such&#13;
events as "The End",&#13;
Parkside's end of the year&#13;
festival. They also are interested&#13;
in new ideas for activities&#13;
of this type next year.&#13;
Outing - It hopes to offer&#13;
students hiking, skiing (in&#13;
ESqbs'&#13;
cooperation with ski club),&#13;
trips, etc. The possibilities are&#13;
endless but the committee&#13;
needs students to work in these&#13;
areas.&#13;
Games - It recently ran&#13;
tournaments for billiards and&#13;
chess, plus it sent the winners to&#13;
regional tournaments. Plans&#13;
are now being made for foozeball&#13;
and ping pong tournaments&#13;
to be held in the Activities&#13;
Building.&#13;
Fine Arts - Lectures,&#13;
documentary films, and the&#13;
more cultural activities are&#13;
their responsibility. PAB would&#13;
definitely like to go deeper into&#13;
this area.&#13;
Coffee House - Whiteskellar in&#13;
the basement of Greenquist&#13;
Hall has become the base of&#13;
operations for their successful&#13;
activities and their new concept&#13;
of daytime programming.&#13;
However, more interested&#13;
people are needed.&#13;
House - anyone interested in&#13;
sound or lighting systems or in&#13;
spending many hours preparing&#13;
for concerts are needed. They&#13;
help in physical aspects of the&#13;
Board.&#13;
The PAB asks any student&#13;
interested in any or all of the&#13;
above mentioned committees to&#13;
stop in at the Student Activities&#13;
Office, rm. 217, Tallent Hall.&#13;
Students can ask questions and&#13;
hopefully pick up an application&#13;
form.&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE V ILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue Kenosha 657-5181&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#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;
KENOSHA — Five home&#13;
tennis meets, three home golf&#13;
meets and participation in the&#13;
Drake Relays and the NAIA&#13;
national championships by the&#13;
track squad highlight the 1972&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
spring sports&#13;
schedules announced today by&#13;
Tom Rosandich, director of&#13;
athletics.&#13;
Spring sports coaches are&#13;
Steve Stephens, golf; Dick&#13;
Frecka, tennis; and Bob&#13;
Lawson and Vic Godfrey, track.&#13;
Barbara Jo Morris will coordinate&#13;
the women's tennis and&#13;
track teams, with their&#13;
schedules to be announced at a&#13;
later date.&#13;
The schedules follow:&#13;
Golf: Mon., April 10: Lake&#13;
Forest and Rockford at Lake&#13;
Upcoming Sports Schedule March 13.1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Forest, 111.; Wed., April 19: UWWhitewater,&#13;
Dominican UWMilwaukee&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
(Petrifying Springs);. Fri&#13;
April 21: Milton and Ripon at&#13;
Janesville; Sat., April 22:&#13;
Northwestern and UW-Madison&#13;
at Wilmette, 111.; Wed., April&#13;
26: Loyola, Carthage, UWWhitewater&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
(Petrifying Springs); Fri.&#13;
April 28: Roosevelt Univ at&#13;
Chicago, 111.; Tues., May 2:&#13;
Lake Forest, Dominican, UWGreen&#13;
Bay at Parkside&#13;
(Petrifying Springs); Thurs. -&#13;
Sat., May 4-6: NAIA District 14&#13;
Tournament at Green Lake.&#13;
Tennis: Mon., April 10: UWMilwaukee&#13;
at Milwaukee;&#13;
Wed., April 12: Marquette at&#13;
Parkside (Pershing Courts,&#13;
Racine); Fri., April 14;'&#13;
Dominican at Parkside; Sat.,&#13;
April 15: UW-Green Bay at&#13;
Parkside; Wed., April 26:&#13;
Milton at Parkside; Fri., April&#13;
28: at Dominican, Racine; Sat.,&#13;
April 29: St. Norbert at DePere;&#13;
Fri., May 15: UW-Milwaukee at&#13;
Parkside; Sat., May 6: at UWGreen&#13;
Bay, Green Bay; Wed.,&#13;
May 10: at Milton.&#13;
Track: Sat., April 8: USTFF&#13;
(Indoor) at Madison; Sat., April&#13;
15: at Stevens Point Invitational;&#13;
Sat., April 22: at&#13;
LaCrosse Invitational; Fri.-&#13;
Sat., April 28-29: Drake Relays&#13;
at Des Moines, Iowa; Sat., May&#13;
6: Northern Illinois Relays at&#13;
DeKalb, 111.; Tues., May 9: UWWhitewater&#13;
at Whitewater;&#13;
Wed. - Fri., May 29 - June 2:&#13;
NAIA National Meet at Billings,&#13;
Mont.&#13;
UWP All-Stars vs. Packers&#13;
KENOSHA, Wis. — Six&#13;
faculty and staff members from&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will be on Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens' squad Sunday, March&#13;
19, wh en the Parkside All-Stars&#13;
take on the Green Bay Packers&#13;
in a 1:30 p.m. contest at&#13;
Tremper High School.&#13;
They'll have to be brave,&#13;
because the Packer five will&#13;
carry a huge weight advantage&#13;
in against the All-Star&#13;
squad,wchih will also include&#13;
alumni of recent Ranger squads&#13;
and some from the current&#13;
outfit. But they're out for fun,&#13;
just as are the Packers, and&#13;
UW-P Vice Chancellor Otto&#13;
Bauer is typical of the breed of&#13;
faculty player fans will see on&#13;
the hardcourt.&#13;
But Bauer, like the rest, is&#13;
ready to give it a good go. The&#13;
rest are all basketball buffs and&#13;
include faculty from the various&#13;
educational divisions, with Bob&#13;
Lawson representing education,&#13;
Gene Gasiorkiewicz from&#13;
science, John Buenker from&#13;
social studies, and Peter Martin&#13;
and Walt Graffin from English.&#13;
Tickets are priced at $2 for&#13;
adults, $1 for high school and&#13;
college students and 50 cents for&#13;
children under 12. Ticket outlets&#13;
include Tyson's, Chappie's&#13;
Sports Center, Chet's Sports&#13;
Bar and Nehlsen Sporting&#13;
Goods in Kenosha and&#13;
DeMark's Tavern, Cozy Lounge&#13;
and Mike's Sport Shop in&#13;
Racine. They are also on sale at&#13;
the Parkside Office of Athletics&#13;
on Wood Road.&#13;
Fast 2 Mile for Rosa&#13;
KENOSHA, Wis. — The two&#13;
mile run's "nine-minute"&#13;
barrier can be just as real as the&#13;
mile's more-famed four-minute&#13;
block.&#13;
Just ask University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside trackman&#13;
Lucian Rosa.&#13;
The barefoot phenom&#13;
traveled the route in 8:55.3 at&#13;
the Illinois Open in Champaign&#13;
recently and not only smashed&#13;
his own varsity record but built&#13;
up self-confidence.&#13;
And Coach Bob Lawson,&#13;
pleased with the time,&#13;
pronounced it Rosa's best race&#13;
since early in the cross country&#13;
season.&#13;
"It was the first relaxed race&#13;
he's had since he became sick&#13;
last fall and had to drop out of a&#13;
cross country race," Lawson&#13;
said. "It's the first time this&#13;
indoor season that he's really&#13;
looked like the runner he was&#13;
when he came here. That's a&#13;
good sign because it shows he's&#13;
regaining strength and is&#13;
coming along."&#13;
Rosa admitted that he lacked&#13;
self-confidence and had doubts&#13;
as to whether he would get&#13;
under nine.&#13;
"I didn't think I was running&#13;
that fast," Rosa said. But fast it&#13;
was and his time cracked his old&#13;
Parkside standard by better&#13;
than 10 seconds — and that with&#13;
a lapped runner blocking his&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
V2 Blo ck South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
(Pump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE — SAVE&#13;
way and causing him to lose&#13;
valuable time as he moved up.&#13;
Rosa has been learning to&#13;
pace himself easier these days&#13;
because the Rangers have been&#13;
working on the indoor track at&#13;
Park High School.&#13;
"With just long distance&#13;
running and road work I can't&#13;
do fast workouts," Rosa pointed&#13;
out, "but now I can do intervl&#13;
work twice a week."&#13;
Lawson said Rosa's endurance&#13;
is great and that he'll&#13;
be able to handle a faster race&#13;
pace once he is able to achieve a&#13;
sense of pace.&#13;
As for the barefoot running,&#13;
Rosa said he wouldn't have it&#13;
any other way, although&#13;
Lawson has tried to talk him&#13;
into wearing shoes.&#13;
"I used to run barefoot on the&#13;
roads in Ceylon," he relates.&#13;
"And If I wear shoes I can't run&#13;
as fast. Tracks don't bother me&#13;
even if they're cinders but the&#13;
board tracks do."&#13;
The slender (104 pounds on a&#13;
5'6V2" frame) Rosa will likely&#13;
head to Germany this summer&#13;
to prepare for his 10,000 m eter&#13;
and marathon runs in the&#13;
summer Olympic Games.&#13;
mi/,&#13;
Nearing completion is the University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
$2.1 million multi-use physical education&#13;
building, which will be in use for the first time during the upcoming&#13;
summer session June 19 through August 12. The&#13;
building is located at the southwest corner of the central&#13;
academic area of the 700-acre campus adjacent to the&#13;
athletic fields. The building contains a main gymnasium&#13;
housing three basketball courts, auxiliary gymnasium,&#13;
natatorium with eight-lane pool, handball courts, conditioning&#13;
facilities, locker rooms and faculty and administrative&#13;
offices. The building, with a seating capacity of&#13;
3,000, will be used for various all-school activities as well as&#13;
the physical education program, intercollegiate and intramural&#13;
athletics and recreation programs.&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
1&#13;
, lh C.ROUND BEEF"&#13;
ON FRF.NCH CRUST&#13;
BRF.AD D RFSSFD&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LF.TTUCF AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
DRILLED COUNTRY&#13;
MAM A C UFFSF ON&#13;
WHOLE WHEAT 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;
ONNAISK ON TOAST 9^&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORJH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
— — - -&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1968 Plymouth Valiant top-of-theline&#13;
model "Signet" - 2 dr. Club&#13;
Coupe, 1 owner, auto, trans., pwr.&#13;
steering, radio, air cond. $875 - Call&#13;
654-4982.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Polaroid Camera - Used 4 times.&#13;
Case, timer, dependable. Truely a&#13;
fine instrument. $25. Ph. Kevin 658-&#13;
4746.&#13;
STEREO TAPE DECK — Sony&#13;
252D. List $135. It's yours for $70. A&#13;
tape deck if ever I s aw one. Ph. 652-&#13;
2538 - 553-2496 ask for Jerry.&#13;
1955-1963 Chevy trans., 4 speed and&#13;
positraction for 11 rear end. Pin-ball&#13;
machine best offer, or trade for ten&#13;
speed bike. Call 552-8987.&#13;
i i f t v . ' i A - ' C : ; . . A . .&#13;
FOR SALE — Mosrite Bass Guitar.&#13;
Double pickup. Double cutaway,&#13;
hollow body. With plush-lined&#13;
hardshell case. Was S450 new. Excellent&#13;
condition. $100. Call Larry,&#13;
552-8347 or come to P-Village, apt 109&#13;
(The Swamp).&#13;
Matching Refrigerator (Admiral)&#13;
and Stove (Premier), $125 each,&#13;
olive green. Practically new, owners&#13;
moved out of town, must sell. Both in&#13;
excellent condition. Call 634-6215&#13;
after 5 p.m. or weekends.&#13;
TAPE RECORDER — Reel to reel.&#13;
Like new. Orig. $100 sell for $50. Ph.&#13;
657-5992 after 4.&#13;
FOR SALE — Marimba, 2Vi oct.&#13;
$100; Schwinn bicycle. 1 speed,&#13;
coaster brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N. Oakland, Milwaukee,&#13;
Wis.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED — People who would like&#13;
to help other people. Free training.&#13;
Contact Joe Baker, director Racine&#13;
Hotline, 637-1112. Mon.-Wed.-Fri.&#13;
1:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.&#13;
Photographer wanted — Should be&#13;
available for June 10th wedding,&#13;
reasonable rates. Call 639-8863,&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Female Bartender Wanted — one&#13;
night a week. The College Inn. Ph.&#13;
552 8465.&#13;
WANTED - STAMPS — Collections,&#13;
Accumulations, Mint or Used, On&#13;
Cover or off, First Day covers or&#13;
what ever! U.S. or Foreign. Phone&#13;
694-3398. Ask for Jim or leave&#13;
messate at Newscope office.&#13;
WAITRESS WANTED — The Loom,&#13;
3919 Washington Ave., Racine. Ph.&#13;
634-9676. &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
interim. He said, "Four or five&#13;
years ago it would have been&#13;
better to first bring in a Dean&#13;
and Divisional Chairman, and&#13;
then recruit faculty. But it's not&#13;
four or five years ago, and the&#13;
students are here now, and we&#13;
have to act now."&#13;
Bauer similarly described the&#13;
lack of program development in&#13;
the same context, "There is a&#13;
tendency to hold back on&#13;
program development till you&#13;
have the people who know what&#13;
they are doing."&#13;
Program development will&#13;
also be slowed down by the&#13;
Regent's moratorium on new&#13;
academic programs. A request&#13;
for a major in Computer&#13;
Science will have to be put off&#13;
because of this.&#13;
Vice Chancellor Bauer&#13;
dismisses the possible effect of&#13;
the moratorium. "Everybody&#13;
gives the moratorium too much&#13;
credit. It's too short lived to be&#13;
that important. It will end in&#13;
July of 1973. Even if we add&#13;
good personnel in the Fall, there&#13;
is no way they can offer new&#13;
programs by July. It takes time&#13;
to work on new programs. New&#13;
faculty members need time to&#13;
work with one another."&#13;
Both Bauer and Moy&#13;
acknowledged other UW schools&#13;
have been jealous of Parkside's&#13;
bo uer, moy anc/ smi&#13;
School of Modern Industry —&#13;
particularly of Engineering&#13;
Science.&#13;
Bauer said, "Everyone is&#13;
looking over their shoulders at&#13;
us. I know the other institutions&#13;
are looking at us to see where&#13;
we are going."&#13;
Moy pointed out a great deal&#13;
of jealousy exists among all&#13;
schools — especially where&#13;
student demand for a program&#13;
is limited.&#13;
If Parkside can demonstrate&#13;
a need, he feels, it should get the&#13;
program — except if a school&#13;
with an existing program can&#13;
absorb more students.&#13;
"It's impossible for me to&#13;
conceive of SMI not being&#13;
supported," he said.&#13;
Bauer echoed him: "Granted,&#13;
there was a flat spot in the&#13;
development of SMI, but I'm not&#13;
worried about the growth and&#13;
development of the school. The&#13;
prophets of doom are always&#13;
around the corner. This is a new&#13;
ins tit uti on deve lopin g&#13;
beautifully."&#13;
Dean Moy possibly summed&#13;
things up best: "Potentially, the&#13;
school is one of the most exciting&#13;
things around. It just&#13;
needs a little more time."&#13;
Whether the school gets the&#13;
time and the opportunity to&#13;
develop, and whether Parkside&#13;
is able to realize its ambitions of&#13;
serving the industrial southeast&#13;
of Wisconsin remains to be&#13;
seen.&#13;
Bearing in mind the&#13;
moratorium, the Governor's&#13;
austerity program, the&#13;
Regents' desire to avoid&#13;
duplicating programs, UW&#13;
politics and the present undeveloped&#13;
status of the school&#13;
( p a r t i c u l a r l y L a b o r&#13;
Economics), you realize the&#13;
future well-being of SMI is not&#13;
all that assured.&#13;
capsule college&#13;
i Continued from Page 1)&#13;
+ "The Middle East: Perspectives&#13;
on Crisis" by Robert&#13;
Schacht, director of intern&#13;
atio nal sem inar s,&#13;
University Extension; and&#13;
+ "Vacant Lot: Who Will Be&#13;
Your New Neighbors" by Sam&#13;
Clemens, director of housing&#13;
m a n a g e m e n t, H U D ,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The daytime sessions will be&#13;
conducted from 9:15 a.m.&#13;
(following a half-hour&#13;
registration) to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Two lectures will make up the&#13;
evening program, beginning at&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Su^an Davis of Chicago,&#13;
editor of "Spokeswoman," vice&#13;
president of Urban Research&#13;
Corp. and women's rights activist,'&#13;
will lecture on&#13;
"Discrimination Against&#13;
Women in Business and Industry"&#13;
and Arvonne Fraser,&#13;
vice president of the Women's&#13;
Equity Action League (WEAL)&#13;
and educational and political&#13;
leader, will lecture on&#13;
"Discrimination Against&#13;
Women in Education."&#13;
Members of the Kenosha,&#13;
Racine and Walworth Extension&#13;
Homemakers will serve&#13;
as registrars and hostesses for&#13;
the daytime sessions.&#13;
One of America's best-known&#13;
contemporary poets, National&#13;
Book Award Winner Robert&#13;
Bly, will conduct an informal&#13;
poetry workshop at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
on Wednesday, March&#13;
15.&#13;
The free workshop, open to&#13;
the public, is scheduled for 9:30&#13;
to 11:30 a.m. in the Whiteskellar&#13;
at the north end of D-l level in&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at numerous locations&#13;
throughout the nation including&#13;
National Parks, Resort&#13;
Areas, and Private Camps. For&#13;
free information send self-addressed,&#13;
STAMPED envelope to&#13;
Opportunity Research, Dept.&#13;
SJO, Century Bldg., Poison, MT&#13;
59860. APPLICANTS MUST&#13;
APPLY EARLY . . .&#13;
iM* MHHW*&#13;
on St. Patrick's Day&#13;
(at the Student Activities Building)&#13;
9&#13;
1 ii &amp; li&#13;
•&#13;
22&#13;
i M&#13;
free popcorn with&#13;
every purchase of&#13;
GREEN BEER&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S-" PIZZA&#13;
Jjfffl In Four Sixes 9 " - 12"&#13;
*«&amp;*** J ALS0&#13;
//»Pitf J" • RIBS * SPAGHETTI •&#13;
• v ^ GMOCCHI • RAVIOLI •&#13;
j/J ^ * SEA F00D * SAN0&#13;
In Four Sixes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
LA S AGNA&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"*nu RING ... WE BRINr"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922 </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63696">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 10, March 13, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63697">
                <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="63698">
                <text>1972-03-13</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="63701">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63702">
                <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="63703">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63704">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63705">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63706">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>election results</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="172">
        <name>otto bauer</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="246">
        <name>school of modern industry</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2616" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4411">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/e8f8750636cd3493e1f2df6b410aff4f.pdf</src>
        <authentication>4f99f4defd5515859d30219bf3de2785</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63711">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 11</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63712">
              <text>Students Discuss Annexation</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63719">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89897">
              <text>parkside village&#13;
by Jim Koloen,&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Approximately 30 Parkside&#13;
Village residents, city&#13;
representatives, Somers&#13;
residents and a member of the&#13;
Southheastern Wisconsin&#13;
Planning Commission attended&#13;
a meeting last Sunday in a&#13;
corner of the Activities Building&#13;
to discuss annexation. Howard&#13;
Blackman, Henry Krause, Tom&#13;
Pitts, John Kolstad and Bill&#13;
Evenson presented explanations&#13;
and arguments in&#13;
support of and in opposition to&#13;
the annexation proposal.&#13;
The meeting which was&#13;
sponsored by the Young&#13;
Democrats and moderated by&#13;
student senator Jim Twist saw&#13;
Tom Pitts, assistant city&#13;
planner, introduce the detached&#13;
annexation proposal. The&#13;
proposal, which would allow&#13;
residents to detach their&#13;
property from the annexed&#13;
area, was met with skepticism&#13;
from the area residents in attendance.&#13;
When asked what&#13;
guarantee for detachment the&#13;
area residents would be assured&#13;
of once the annexation is approved,&#13;
Pitts was unable to&#13;
present an unqualified&#13;
statement. He said, "You have&#13;
my word." Pitts explained to&#13;
the still skeptical Somers&#13;
residents in the audience that&#13;
"there is a series of checks and&#13;
balances in this." Pitts later&#13;
addressed the students in the&#13;
audience asking them to&#13;
"consider the long-range implications"&#13;
of the annexation.&#13;
He explained that if the area is&#13;
annexed it would allow for&#13;
better planning and preservation&#13;
of the environment.&#13;
Howard Blackman, who was&#13;
a Somers Town Board member&#13;
at the time the Site Selection&#13;
Committee was scouring the&#13;
area for a suitable location for&#13;
the UW-P campus, predicted&#13;
that if the land is annexed "the&#13;
Students Discuss Annexation&#13;
farmers will have three&#13;
choices: They can lower their&#13;
standard of living; they can sell&#13;
their land immediately; or they&#13;
can borrow money until they&#13;
must sell their land."&#13;
Blackman expressed concern&#13;
over the ability of the city to&#13;
assimilate an area as large as&#13;
that proposed for annexation;&#13;
"It takes a year to develop only&#13;
sixty acres." Blackman appealed&#13;
to the students in attendance,&#13;
asking them if they&#13;
would want their parents to sell&#13;
their "family's land when&#13;
they're sixty years old."&#13;
Henry Krause, an area farmer&#13;
who opposes the annexation,&#13;
appealed to the&#13;
students, asking them not to&#13;
make a decision until they've&#13;
heard all sides of the issue.&#13;
Bill Evanson, a representative&#13;
from the Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Planning&#13;
Commission, explained that no&#13;
plan, including any presented&#13;
by the city, had yet been approved&#13;
by the Commission. He&#13;
revealed to the audience that&#13;
there are "at least six alternative&#13;
plans for providing&#13;
sewer and water services to the&#13;
area." He explained further&#13;
that there are many factors&#13;
involved in determining the&#13;
suitability of the various plans.&#13;
He said there is a possibility&#13;
that Parkside may never reach&#13;
the projected peak enrollment&#13;
of 25,000 students because of the&#13;
"zero population growth" and&#13;
changing attitudes toward the&#13;
desirability of a college&#13;
education. He concluded that&#13;
the projected capacity of a&#13;
treatment plant depends on&#13;
such factors.&#13;
Evenson revealed that one&#13;
advantage of a treatment plant&#13;
located on the Pike River would&#13;
be a benefit to the flow of the&#13;
river. He explained that such a&#13;
plant would force millions of&#13;
gallons of treated water into the&#13;
TOM PITT S, A SST . CITY P L A N N E R S P E A K IN G : B I LL&#13;
E V E N S O N, ST A TE P L A N NIN G COMMISSION R E P&#13;
presently slow moving and thus&#13;
help clean it up. Presently,&#13;
Evenson said, the area around&#13;
Parkside cannot be commercially&#13;
developed because of&#13;
the lack of adequate treatment&#13;
facilities.&#13;
John Kolstad, city planner,&#13;
spoke to the audience about the&#13;
desirability of changes in the&#13;
tax laws. He explained that land&#13;
should be taxed "according to&#13;
use" rather than by the present&#13;
method of assessed value. He&#13;
stated that part of the problem&#13;
in the annexation issue is&#13;
'located in an "antiquated tax&#13;
structure" which places the&#13;
burden of financing local&#13;
projects and services on the&#13;
shoulders of the property&#13;
owner.&#13;
When asked if Kenosha offered&#13;
agricultural zoning Improperly&#13;
in the city, Kolstad&#13;
replied no. He explained that&#13;
land couldn't be zoned for&#13;
agricultural purposes.&#13;
During the meet ing only a few&#13;
Village residents asked&#13;
questions of the speakers,&#13;
though ten villagers did follow&#13;
Somers Clerk's suggestion that&#13;
they register with her before&#13;
leaving the building. After the&#13;
meeting ended, all participants&#13;
were invited to attend a gettogether&#13;
in a Parkside Village&#13;
partment at which beer was&#13;
served, to continue discussion&#13;
on the topic.&#13;
University of W isconsin - Parkside&#13;
5 f r&#13;
Volume 6 Number 11 March 20, 1072&#13;
charity dance&#13;
SGA Plans Ahead&#13;
Final details of the Five-School&#13;
Charity Dance to be held this&#13;
Friday at Bristol Oaks on Highway&#13;
50 were given in a regular&#13;
meeting of the PSGA Senate&#13;
last Thursday. According to&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta and Mark&#13;
Barnhill, members of the SGA&#13;
activities committee, the event&#13;
will be a 'private party' open to&#13;
students of Parkside, Carthage,&#13;
Dominican, RTI and KTI.&#13;
Liquor will be served to&#13;
students 18 and over with ID's&#13;
assuming the age of majority&#13;
PfeiSHE&#13;
-oft cHAKumt&#13;
THIEU&#13;
"DICK, YOU'RE PROBABLY WONDERING HOW WE EVER GOT&#13;
THIEU TO AGREE TO THE PART ABOUT RESIGNING OFFICE&#13;
AND HOLDING FREE ELECTIONS IN SOUTH VIETNAM...."&#13;
bill is signed this week.&#13;
A rock band, nightclub act,&#13;
and coffee-house group will be&#13;
featured in three separate&#13;
rooms at the club. Scheduled to&#13;
appear are Dry Ice and Tony&#13;
and Jumbo along with another&#13;
group yet to be hired. Advance&#13;
tickets are $1 ($1.50 at the door)&#13;
are available this week at the&#13;
SGA office and Student Activities&#13;
Building and in ticket&#13;
booths in the Greenquist Concourse&#13;
and the lobbies of the&#13;
Racine and Kenosha campuses.&#13;
The SGA activities committee&#13;
also reported that several midweek&#13;
activities are being&#13;
considered for the Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
The Senate also agreed to cosponsor&#13;
a symposium with the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
and the Black Student&#13;
Union. Georgia legislator and&#13;
black leader Julian Bond is&#13;
scheduled to speak on campus&#13;
May 8 and several other black&#13;
speakers are being invited to&#13;
speak and participate in&#13;
discussions throughout the day.&#13;
Other events also being looked&#13;
into include a program of other&#13;
American minority groups, a&#13;
two-day film festival and a&#13;
prison reform day:&#13;
In other action the SGA:&#13;
— voted to establish a&#13;
literature table in the Student&#13;
Activities Building to distribute&#13;
a variety of materials of interest&#13;
to students.&#13;
— formed a sub-committee of&#13;
the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
to investigate the&#13;
possibilities of a communityaction&#13;
program which would&#13;
give students credit for their&#13;
work, in cooperation with a UWGreen&#13;
Bay federally funded&#13;
program.&#13;
— appointed Johnny Grimes&#13;
as SGA's representative on the&#13;
Campus Union Building&#13;
Committee.&#13;
— approved a request by Jean&#13;
Koehler of the Women's Caucus&#13;
for $42.94 for printing and&#13;
mailing costs to be allocated&#13;
from Fund 128.&#13;
— instructed the Finance&#13;
Committee to establish additional&#13;
guidelines concerning&#13;
the dispersal of Fund 128 funds&#13;
to student organizations.&#13;
New Radio Drama&#13;
MADISON (CPS) - There is&#13;
a scheme afoot to pump new life&#13;
into radio drama. WHA Radio in&#13;
Madison, Wisconsin, has a fiveyear&#13;
plan to produce from 400 to&#13;
800 radio dramas for noncommercial&#13;
radio.&#13;
The Corporation for Public&#13;
Broadcasting has provided&#13;
$150,000 for the first year of the&#13;
project, known as "Earplay."&#13;
Karl Schmidt, who left his job&#13;
directing the University of&#13;
Wisconsin's extension radio&#13;
activities to head up "Earplay",&#13;
says most of the&#13;
productions will be shorter than&#13;
they were in the old days —&#13;
most productions will be shorter&#13;
than 15 minutes, and many will&#13;
run only 5 or 10 minutes.&#13;
"The days when a family&#13;
would gather in a room and&#13;
listen to an hour of radio drama&#13;
together are gone," said Schmidt.&#13;
&#13;
"We'll do some half-hour&#13;
pieces, but nothing longer, and&#13;
our emphasis will be on the&#13;
shorter ones."&#13;
Schmidt's first task is to find&#13;
scripts. He said he hopes to find&#13;
60 to 100 scripts in the first year.&#13;
He has written literary agents,&#13;
is running ads in literary&#13;
magazines and is staging a&#13;
writing competition.&#13;
"Our script budget runs from&#13;
$200 to $700 a script, and all we&#13;
buy are the non-commercial&#13;
radio rights and, in the case of&#13;
the competition scripts, the&#13;
right to publish them in an&#13;
anthology that we hope to issue&#13;
each year. The author retains&#13;
the copyright and all the&#13;
commercial radio, TV and&#13;
movie rights.&#13;
"In England, movie, stage,&#13;
and TV producers make a habit&#13;
of listening to radio to find new&#13;
talent and material, and we&#13;
hope that's what will happen&#13;
here."&#13;
Writers interested in submitting&#13;
scripts for competition&#13;
or for direct sale are asked to&#13;
send their inquiries to Schmidt&#13;
at "Earplay" WHA, Radio Hall,&#13;
Madison, Wisconsin 53706. &#13;
NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
beer and&#13;
fried brains&#13;
Dear Sirs:&#13;
Although I am by choice no&#13;
longer a student of this&#13;
university, I feel the views&#13;
stated in this letter should be&#13;
read and possibly responded to&#13;
by the students, and so your&#13;
newspaper seems to be the&#13;
logical forum for my opinions.&#13;
From the beginning of the&#13;
1960's we have seen this country&#13;
become youth-oriented to the&#13;
point of absurdity. This concept,&#13;
mainly conceived by the media,&#13;
has left the American parents&#13;
devoid of a ny feeling of o neness&#13;
with their children, has split the&#13;
generations beyond repair, and&#13;
has left the majority of those 14 -&#13;
21 immature, irresponsible, and&#13;
lacking that crucial self-respect&#13;
which is the basis of a complete&#13;
life.&#13;
As a result of this we have&#13;
seen a phenomenon of human&#13;
nature: Instead of the young&#13;
looking to the maturity and&#13;
experience of the old for&#13;
guidance, the over 30&#13;
generation has lapsed into a&#13;
mass second childhood, trying&#13;
in vain to be "hip", trying to&#13;
gain some kind of secure place&#13;
in their childrens' society.&#13;
The politicians, who tend to&#13;
have sharper eyes and keener&#13;
ears than most people, are&#13;
getting into the act for their own&#13;
gain. Look at old LaFollette&#13;
when he was here. Bell Bottoms.&#13;
"Right on." And you&#13;
drank his beer and listened to&#13;
his bullshit, just as your&#13;
parents, conditioned by you&gt;,&#13;
will take the bullshit of&#13;
McGovern, Lindsay, McCarthy.&#13;
And old Georgy will probably&#13;
get the office. But what the hell&#13;
will you get, compared to what&#13;
you have lost? Will amnesty for&#13;
draft dodgers make it easier for&#13;
you to sit in a room with your&#13;
parents without embarrassment?&#13;
Will more rights&#13;
for women stop most men from&#13;
thinking of girls as pieces of&#13;
meat? Will looser drug laws&#13;
stop people from frying their&#13;
brains and making asses out of&#13;
themselves?&#13;
What is really important,&#13;
anyway? Why don't you sit&#13;
down for about 10 minutes of&#13;
you can stand the stress, and&#13;
think. Think of where the&#13;
problems really stem from.&#13;
Could they be from your mouth,&#13;
from your actions? Think about&#13;
it. Please.&#13;
D. Vallone&#13;
need&#13;
volunteers&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Volunteers are still being&#13;
accepted for the Easter party&#13;
for retarded children. We expect&#13;
to have between 40 a nd 50&#13;
retarded ranging in age from 4&#13;
to 21. They are primarily&#13;
mentally handicapped and&#13;
mildly to moderately retarded.&#13;
Parents who wish to volunteer&#13;
may also bring their children up&#13;
to 8 year olds. The party is from&#13;
1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
March 25, in the activities&#13;
building. Contact Dave Bahr,&#13;
551-7653, if you would like to&#13;
volunteer your services.&#13;
Students United in Service&#13;
hasssle&#13;
with police&#13;
To the Editor;&#13;
One afternoon after class, I&#13;
was walking to my car, thinking&#13;
I would take a break from&#13;
school and drive up to Racine.&#13;
When I reached my car, I found&#13;
the car originally parked next to&#13;
me had left and another parked&#13;
within two inches of my left side&#13;
at such an angle as to prevent&#13;
me from backing out without&#13;
putting a big scratch in his paint&#13;
job. Not wanting to pay for a&#13;
new paint job on such a big car,&#13;
I immediately went to Tallent&#13;
Hall and put in a call to the&#13;
Security Police at Parkside.&#13;
The man on the hpone said he&#13;
would send someone out. I&#13;
rushed back to my car, afraid I&#13;
would miss the arrival of the&#13;
Security Police, only to find I&#13;
had to waint ten to fifteen&#13;
minutes for his appearance. I&#13;
was hoping he could in some&#13;
way direct me out of the&#13;
parking space or find the person&#13;
who owned the big, grey convertible.&#13;
&#13;
When the Security Police&#13;
arrived he immediately began&#13;
accusing me of throwing a&#13;
snowball at his car. At first I&#13;
thought he was teasing me but&#13;
then he asked me again why I&#13;
threw a snowball. He told me I&#13;
could get into a lot of t rouble for&#13;
throwing one. I informed him of&#13;
the fact that I never threw a&#13;
snowball and wondered why he&#13;
kept asking me that. But he&#13;
insisted that I threw one and I&#13;
was getting furious at the fact&#13;
that this man had the right to&#13;
hassle a person for something&#13;
they didn't do. I finally joked&#13;
with him and said, "You're just&#13;
WEb. L ADIES' OMNKS '/*.RAtCE&#13;
Se/uu+Uf tlte Qutedt&#13;
;mg, &amp;. 9icJUan fyoodi.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Once before I made a plea for&#13;
student input concerning the&#13;
Student Activities Building. I&#13;
received a few questions and&#13;
some suggestions. Some items&#13;
have been worked on and many&#13;
more are being looked into.&#13;
What I still need is more input.&#13;
For this purpose we have&#13;
resurrected the suggestion&#13;
boxes in the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha lounges and if we don't&#13;
get any hassle, there will soon&#13;
be one in the SAB. If students&#13;
fill them with suggestions and&#13;
complaints they will be emptied&#13;
regularly and nothing will be&#13;
ignored. Anyone interested in&#13;
working for the Student Union&#13;
Committee is invited to the&#13;
meeting this Thursday at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Student Government&#13;
Office.&#13;
Jerry Murphy, Chairman&#13;
Student Union Committee&#13;
"PSYCHOPATH" RELEASED IN MICHIGAN&#13;
HOWELL, MICHIGAN (CPS) - Bert Chapman, 68, has been&#13;
released from Pontiac State Hospital after spending the last 31&#13;
years in Michigan mental institutions for al alleged homosexual&#13;
offense. He was confined as a "criminal sexual psychopath" in&#13;
1940.&#13;
Chapman's case was twice appealed to the Michigan Supreme&#13;
Court, but he was twice deemed a "menace to society", and his&#13;
confinement upheld. The law under which he had been convicted&#13;
was repealed in 1967.&#13;
AjtQ&amp;JjUr S/Co^UL.&#13;
cm/&#13;
fj*rx&gt;&#13;
'Don't believe everylhin* you read.&#13;
Marc tisen, Helmut Ferber, Gary&#13;
Jensen, Larry Jones, Jim Koloen,&#13;
Rich Lipke, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Steve Mazzarell; Pat&#13;
McDermid, Kevin McKay, Kathy&#13;
Rasch, Brian Ross, Wolfgant&#13;
Salewski, Andy Schmelling, Barb&#13;
Scott, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, Bill Sorensen, Mike&#13;
Stevesand, James Twist, Debbie&#13;
Venskus, Mike Kite, "Red" Widely,&#13;
Sifton Winnow.&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
phdtographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
„ / f ) i d i n a e r -&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
e wcilleij —&gt;upper ^&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
1700 Sheridan kd.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
iWr iiNtstj&#13;
* m 4 M * 4 ^ &#13;
city's view on annexation M a rch 20,1072 NKWSCOPK Page 3&#13;
by Jim Koloen,&#13;
Interview With Mayor Burkee&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
In past weeks, Newscope has&#13;
presented articles concerning&#13;
both the past annexation efforts&#13;
and the present attempt begun&#13;
by United States General, Inc.,&#13;
a Brookfield based development&#13;
firm. This coverage has included&#13;
meetings and&#13;
discussions between the parties&#13;
opposed to the annexation and&#13;
those who support it; roughly&#13;
the dichotomy is city meets&#13;
country.&#13;
Mayor Wallace Burkee of&#13;
Kenosha, who vigorously&#13;
supports the annexation of the&#13;
Parkside area, has often been&#13;
singled out by those area&#13;
residents who oppose . annexation&#13;
as their major foe.&#13;
Beginning this week, Newscope&#13;
will present interviews with the&#13;
major proponents of each side&#13;
of the issue; this week&#13;
NEWSCOPE interviewed&#13;
Mayor Burkee, next week&#13;
Newscope will present an interview&#13;
with representatives of&#13;
the opposing viewpoint.&#13;
Why do you wish to annex?&#13;
"The only reason is to service&#13;
Parkside. Parkside wants the&#13;
annexation because soon they'll&#13;
have a sewer problem, among&#13;
other things. Somers can't&#13;
service it, they don't even have&#13;
a sewage treatment plant. They&#13;
(Somers) have said they can&#13;
construct a $19.5 million&#13;
treatment plant for $400,000&#13;
because of federal grants and&#13;
sharing the cost with Mt.&#13;
Pleasant. Well, I don't see&#13;
where they got their information.&#13;
The federal money&#13;
just isn't there. Right now&#13;
Kenosha is only eligible to&#13;
receive something like 50 per&#13;
cent federal aids for a project. I&#13;
can't get a million and a half&#13;
dollars for a sewer project here&#13;
in Kenosha; and they're talking&#13;
about ten million? I just don't&#13;
see where they get their&#13;
figures."&#13;
If the area is annexed what&#13;
would be the projected cost to&#13;
the city? "The sewer would cost&#13;
about a million and a half."&#13;
Tom Pitts, assistant city&#13;
planner who sat in on the interview&#13;
in the mayor's downtown&#13;
office, added, "Fire&#13;
protection will cost $1,495,000&#13;
including a fire station to be&#13;
ZU&#13;
IF you WERE A&#13;
SPOTTED PA/R. OP PANTS&#13;
OA t&gt;mrv COLLAR, YOU'O&#13;
LOVE US TOOF&#13;
QUALITY CLEANERS&#13;
1313- 66th St&#13;
J&gt;H. 65Y - 9355&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
Map of area proposed to be annexed picturing the area to be&#13;
detached after the annexation and the area to be retained.&#13;
located somewhere on the&#13;
corner of Wood Road in&#13;
Somers."&#13;
"We're not making a cent-on&#13;
this," the mayor continued.&#13;
"It'll be at least fifteen years&#13;
before we see a dime, and even&#13;
then I'll be surprised. The&#13;
problem is simple, Parkside is&#13;
in Somers and therefore they&#13;
should be providing sewer and&#13;
water, but they're not. They&#13;
can't, there's no way they can&#13;
do it. I even offered originally to&#13;
put in a sewer for them, and&#13;
they (Somers) could pay&#13;
Kenosha back over a period of&#13;
ten years. But they turned that&#13;
down, so now the problem is ir,&#13;
my lap. And if it isn't resolved&#13;
soon, well, by 1974 the sewers&#13;
will be overflowing and the&#13;
state will just walk in and order&#13;
us to annex the area."&#13;
Previously the area residents&#13;
had objected to the way in&#13;
which the various annexation&#13;
proposals were mapped out.&#13;
What was your reaction to this?&#13;
"Well, it's just a case of never&#13;
being allowed to be right.&#13;
Previously, when we excluded&#13;
homes, they screamed that they&#13;
weren't able to vote. Now when&#13;
we include their homes, they&#13;
scream just as much.&#13;
Why wasn't the area annexed&#13;
to the city when the Parkside&#13;
campus site was first chosen?&#13;
"I wasn't-mayor at the time, but&#13;
there is a state statute which&#13;
wouldn't allow it. We tried to get&#13;
the statute changed by instituting&#13;
a boundary review&#13;
board, but lost by one vote in the&#13;
Assembly. You see the big&#13;
problem here is the fact that&#13;
there are no laws which take&#13;
care of it, it's an unique thing.&#13;
We even. . . our latest plan, the&#13;
detached annexation is a&#13;
loophole we dug up."&#13;
Could you explain the&#13;
det ach ed ann exa tion ?&#13;
"Basically, the idea is to annex&#13;
the area as presently drawn up,&#13;
and then after annexing it, we&#13;
would detach the land of anyone&#13;
(Continue d on P a ge 7)&#13;
jAMM*&#13;
11&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
^TENDERLOIN S TEAK&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEA FOOD&#13;
COCKTAILS&#13;
'Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN R OOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
" OF FERI NG H I GH Q UA LI TY AT&#13;
R EA SO N A BLE P RI CE S, T HE W IN D ­&#13;
J AM MER D ES ER VES ITS P O P UL AR I T Y"&#13;
— H E RB ERT KUBLY&#13;
" WO ND ER F UL F O O D"&#13;
— S E NATOR P R O XM IRE&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Siies 9" - 12" - 14" - 16".&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
. SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RIN G . . . WE BING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Discussion of materials on student organization&#13;
procedures for handbook topics: Recognition,&#13;
•&#13;
Eligibility, Rules for Meetings and Events.&#13;
•&#13;
j March 24 &amp; March 27&#13;
: 12 Noon Whiteskellar &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
an&#13;
V foni&#13;
Coffee House 8. N ight Club&#13;
performers (from New York&#13;
March 21 1 - 3&#13;
March 22 1 - 3&#13;
free&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
For the First Time on our&#13;
Giant New 24 ft. Screen&#13;
42 MEMBER&#13;
COMMUNAL TOURING COMPANY&#13;
HAD DOCS &amp;&#13;
ENGLISHMEN&#13;
ICON BU5SCLL&#13;
(iTS A MOVING PtCTUBt))&#13;
I gp] 'MCW&#13;
March 24 8:00 PM&#13;
Adm. 75(&#13;
Time: 2hrs.&#13;
St. Act. Bldg.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. ID Required&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
* ¥&#13;
• • *&#13;
MAKING&#13;
OF THE&#13;
PRESIDENT&#13;
1968&#13;
An Historical Film of&#13;
Timely Importance in this&#13;
Year of Decision&#13;
Three Showings&#13;
Wed. March 22&#13;
11:45 A.M. Gr. 101&#13;
Thurs. March 23&#13;
1:00 P.M. Whiteskellar&#13;
Thurs. March 23&#13;
7:00 P.M. Gr. 101&#13;
FREE&#13;
by Steve Mazzarelli&#13;
Bree Daniels — Jane Fonda&#13;
John Klute — Donald Sutherland&#13;
Pete Cable — Charles Cioffi&#13;
Add "Klute" to recent films which scan New York City's&#13;
backside and inhabitants thereof. This low-keyed "who-dunit"&#13;
engages the viewer's cortex and gives the viscera a breather.&#13;
Bree is a high priced N.Y.C. call girl who is being shadowed by&#13;
a former client who years ago, in a sado-frenzy, almost killed her.&#13;
Klute is a colorless but competent small town private eye looking&#13;
for a missing friend who he suspects is the same person threatening&#13;
Bree. The "heavy", Mr. Cable, is the employer of Klute's missing&#13;
friend and finances the investigation. By mid-film we know the&#13;
exec is the real sadist and has murdered the missing person to&#13;
avoid future blackmail.&#13;
The real story, however, is Bree's transsformation into a more&#13;
human person. After a near-fatal encounter with the sadist she&#13;
visits an analyst regularly and in these scenes Fonda is superb,&#13;
giving a performance which got her the 1971 Oscar for best actress.&#13;
Tom complicate her identity crisis Klute, the near Christ&#13;
figure, drags Bree, his Mary Magdalene, into the search for the&#13;
sadis and along the way they seduce each other. Bree almost&#13;
throws away this chance to establish a lasting neural ling between&#13;
head and groin by trying to go back to her old junkie-pimp&#13;
boyfriend. Klute stops this from happening but she flees anyway&#13;
and is trapped by Cable.&#13;
Still a bit rational, he tells Bree that we all have "little dark&#13;
corners in our minds that should be left untouched." Bree realizes&#13;
that she was the vehicle and is now the victim of his ruthlessness.&#13;
It's an old lesson. The greatest Insanity is protecting and nurturing&#13;
the monster impulse once it is freed from Freud's super-ego.&#13;
Predictably Klute arrives in-the-nick-of and the trapped exec&#13;
self destructs in a slow motion fade-out. Klute and Bree are last&#13;
seen leaving New York and in a voice over sound Bree tells her&#13;
analyst that she is unsure of what will come next. Nice realistic&#13;
ambiguity.&#13;
As I left the theater I wondered about my own personal demon&#13;
sitting in the dark corner of my head. I look occasionally but don't&#13;
touch.&#13;
This tight psychological thriller will hold your interest all the&#13;
way and probably give you more bad vibes about "Fun City".&#13;
Next Week: Behind the scenes with the National Shakespeare&#13;
Company.&#13;
nuttin'!&#13;
by Jim Koloen, Managing Editor&#13;
Not many nationally known poets come to&#13;
Parkside, and when they do come not many&#13;
students go to see them. Such was the empty&#13;
case when Robert Bly held a workshop in the&#13;
Whiteskellar Wednesday morning to "jabber"&#13;
about poetry, poets, astrology, solitude,&#13;
the war and the inner and outer shells of the&#13;
mind.&#13;
Perhaps 50 in terested students and faculti&#13;
sat rapted around the quaint checkerclothed&#13;
tables in the Whiteskellar to listen, laugh and&#13;
reflect as Bly presented a theatrical, informative&#13;
and engrossing informal jabber&#13;
program. The poet kept his audience by&#13;
controlling the mood; he undulated between&#13;
humor and seriousness, presenting limericks&#13;
and anecdotes, sarcasm and satire, jumpint&#13;
from mood to mood like a magic frog jumping&#13;
from metaphor to lilypad in a poetry pond.&#13;
Bly, a non-teaching Minnesota poet,&#13;
brought to Parkside by the Poetry Forum,&#13;
massaged his facial muscles with fingers that&#13;
would later become seawaves, as he told the&#13;
audience that "we're the country with the&#13;
most brutality; no country can compare to&#13;
ours in brutality on television. A friend of&#13;
mine listened to television for children for two&#13;
weeks before Christmas and heard an advertisement&#13;
for a torture table for dolls. You&#13;
put your doll on and you turn this wheel and it&#13;
pulls off this one arm, and this wheel pulls off&#13;
a leg. How do you like that! How do you expect&#13;
to end the war." Bly further explained,&#13;
"think of the advertising people who put this&#13;
ad together, and the executives who have to&#13;
pass it through, and the other people who&#13;
work to put it out. Do you understand what we&#13;
mean by an insane country?"&#13;
"We're never going to end the war," Bly&#13;
said in a voice laced with resignation. "If you&#13;
really want violence, you practice it first in&#13;
fiction. You get a violent novelist like Mailer,&#13;
and Hemingway, and you fantasize it. But&#13;
then it's not enough, it doesn't satisfy that&#13;
longing for violence, so then you've got to do&#13;
it. So you kill people in Vietnam; but even&#13;
then it's not enough; it's too far away, it's just&#13;
on television, so hopefully one of your kids&#13;
comes home with his leg blown off." While&#13;
absentmindedly fingering a leather thong&#13;
suspended from the string of beads he wore,&#13;
Bly sarcastically predicted the next war "will&#13;
be in Brazil. It's only a thousand miles from&#13;
Miami. It's close enough so that American&#13;
citizens as well as journalists can come and&#13;
watch the helicopters drop napalm. That'd be&#13;
terrific."&#13;
Continuing on the subject of the American'&#13;
state of mind, Bly commented that "the level&#13;
of consciousness in this country is rather low.&#13;
An example is that you see no evil in yourself;&#13;
you project it on others. You know, we're not&#13;
the wicked ones, Russia is; we have a perfect&#13;
democracy, China's evil, it has communism."&#13;
Amplifying his statement, Bly observed that&#13;
"American men tend to die spiritually at the&#13;
age of 35 o r 40. Just look at the face of an&#13;
American man, you'll see that something's&#13;
gone." Bly then read his "Television Poem"&#13;
whose theme illustrated the connection&#13;
between the low level of consciousness in&#13;
America and the Tube. "Television does this&#13;
to a person because it doesn't require&#13;
anything of you, all you need is passivity. You&#13;
learn not to respond.&#13;
"Enough television kills your spirit. You&#13;
look at television and nothin', duhh; you don't&#13;
have to do anything. Gary Snyder who was&#13;
teaching at Humboldt State, told me two art&#13;
teachers resigned on the same day because&#13;
their new freshman students couldn't&#13;
respond. They'd show them a Van Gogh and&#13;
umm, nuthin'; Rembrandt nuttin'; what do&#13;
you think of this, nuttin'. So one day they just&#13;
said, 'this is it, I'm sick of teaching you&#13;
goddamn zombies, I'm going out and get a job&#13;
teaching ditches.' " Placing the story into the&#13;
perspective, Bly explained, "if you watch&#13;
enough television you'll think your teachers&#13;
are TV sets. But a teacher isn't a television&#13;
set," he said softly, "he's a human being."&#13;
"You can't have all this television and not&#13;
pay for it. There's this passive emotional&#13;
quality coming. When your parents read you&#13;
a story, you responded to it, you didn't just&#13;
stare. And that's what happened in the antiwar&#13;
movement. When it started in '67, it was&#13;
like someone telling horrible stories to&#13;
children; the children saying, oohh, that's&#13;
terrible, you gotta stop it, I'm gonna go to&#13;
Washington. They responded. But now it's&#13;
Nixon more like a television set, telling people&#13;
'you know we're killing people in Vietnam,'&#13;
duhh, 'we're dropping more bombs than we&#13;
did in WW II,' duhh. Nobody gives a damn,&#13;
that's what's happening how; it's insane."&#13;
Speaking on the poetic process, Bly explained&#13;
that it is a product of the "inner shell&#13;
of the mind." He said there are two shells; the&#13;
inner and the outer. "The outer is the&#13;
rational, the conscious, the inner is the unconscious,&#13;
where poems and dreams come&#13;
from." When someone in the audience pointed&#13;
out that the theory was very Freudian, Bly&#13;
replied that he'd been reading a great many&#13;
Freudian works: "Freud was the greatest&#13;
man produced in the past 500, 1,000 years."&#13;
"We should take dreams seriously," he&#13;
continued, "we should write them down;&#13;
dreams are poems that don't get into words."&#13;
Bly told the audience that a good poem is&#13;
one which "you've never heard before." He&#13;
explained that it is a true poem because it&#13;
"came from your inner shell," it effuses&#13;
spontaniety. The poet wearing a poncho and&#13;
picking up bits of sugar that had fallen on the&#13;
table from a donut he'd been eating, explained&#13;
that the outer shell, "the rational&#13;
shell is too overdeveloped in the Western&#13;
world." That's why it takes so long for poets&#13;
to develop in America, they have to break&#13;
through to the inner shell. Bly's first&#13;
published book was produced when he was 36.&#13;
Using a Haiku poem as an illustration, Bly&#13;
told the audience a poem should be just&#13;
"verbs and nouns". He explained to some of&#13;
the aspiring poets in the audience that "one&#13;
adjective every three lines is enough".&#13;
Broaching the subject of astrology, Bly told&#13;
the audience that in future editions of his&#13;
magazine (the "Seventies"), he would&#13;
criticize poetry from an astrological&#13;
viewpoint. He explained that the New&#13;
Criticism is overdone, and that he'd like to try&#13;
something new.&#13;
Speaking on the subject of women, Bly&#13;
pointed out there are "almost no women in&#13;
the American novel". He said that men have&#13;
a "fear of women"; "when we've raped&#13;
mother earth, what effect does this have on&#13;
men's relationship to women?" He said t a&#13;
the historical places of men and women have&#13;
been reversed: Man was the hunter an&#13;
always alone, now it's the woman w o s&#13;
alone, locked in a house in the suburbs w i e&#13;
the man goes out with the boys.&#13;
Again addressing the young poets in&#13;
audience, Bly recommended that they spe&#13;
at least six months in the woods alone. ^&#13;
illustrated the point by utilizing his Pers0&#13;
.&#13;
experience in which he had spent two y&#13;
ear&#13;
„&#13;
the woods alone, "two too few I think no •&#13;
He counseled male and female poets o&#13;
perience the solitude of months in thes w &gt;&#13;
and not to get married until they d 9&#13;
through this solitary experience. He&#13;
plained that many of his works now com&#13;
of long hours of solitude on his farm n&#13;
With a reading of "Counting SmallI Boned&#13;
Bodies" and the Russian poem &lt;*7 »&#13;
during which he stood up and read wi ^&#13;
intense, gruff foice, emulating a hQUr&#13;
peasant, Bly concluded a two and a a&#13;
workshop that weemed two hours s o » ^&#13;
seemed a shame because only 50 peop&#13;
to see him. &#13;
March 20.1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
THE WORLDS ,Nr&#13;
tV.&#13;
W*°r'*°&#13;
WT&#13;
y °&#13;
0t&#13;
J&#13;
\ , - THAWM&#13;
CT vow I.T.TJ&#13;
JVQOgS&#13;
OU6C&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
Ml P PIE; EVEN THE PREZf&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Coke.&#13;
&gt; /v^u. \ L y©&#13;
Ay&amp;fcMtl R&#13;
-/sen L o ,&#13;
THW&#13;
btrFzmny&#13;
/also* \_ 3 v&gt;&#13;
PIZZA in&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PAKKSIDI! VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 — 30tti Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
by Jim Koioen&#13;
While memorizing the page numbers in one&#13;
of the Newscalps papers they got lying around&#13;
in the union, On the Nod noticed an ad for a&#13;
place called Capie's. He swelt for a while on&#13;
the part about one dollar pitchers of brew,&#13;
with slow visions of double dubbles rising in&#13;
his desert like brain. "Ah needz irrigation,"&#13;
he exclaimed. He spoke to two cohorts; hey&#13;
Hermann, Socha, youse guys wanna go to&#13;
Capie's? Thunderstruck, they fled; but to no&#13;
avail. Nod would track them down in the&#13;
winter's blizzardry and point the beer glass&#13;
the other way; hands up Neptune, he would&#13;
say, this ain't no beef glass in your back, this&#13;
here is a shot glass. Get moving, creep.&#13;
Capie's is located at 8237 Sheridan Road in&#13;
Kenosha, away from all the other bars and&#13;
offers the two best extremes in contemporary&#13;
drinking; a cheap drunk as well as a very&#13;
exotic regal drunk. Cappie's offers one dollar&#13;
pitchers after 7 while at the same time&#13;
presenting complex* mixed drinks in the two&#13;
dollar range. It's unusual when, a bar,&#13;
especially a small bar, proffers the least as&#13;
well as the most, which to say the least is a&#13;
lot.&#13;
Capie's is indeed a bar of contrasts; Capie&#13;
provides a three acre parking lot although the&#13;
tavern is farily compact. Replete with a&#13;
padded formica topped bar, plush carpet,&#13;
tables with wrought iron chairs, a gas&#13;
powered fire place, lanterns and candles&#13;
hanging from the ceiling, the general ambiance&#13;
is one of rusticity. During the course of&#13;
the evening, Nod would come to appropriate&#13;
the padding on the bar, mistaking it for a&#13;
glorified pillow.&#13;
Capie offers three taps, two of which are&#13;
Schlitz (14oz. glass for 30 cents) and the other&#13;
leading to the source of Chablis. Legend has it&#13;
that this tap was once connected to a sea of&#13;
cold duck. Nod had to admit he'd never seen a&#13;
wine tap before, even though he wasn't quite&#13;
sure he was seeing it then; Nod suggested the&#13;
tap be brought in a little closer for inspection.&#13;
Capie who cinfided in Nod that he was in&#13;
business to help people enjoy themselves, also&#13;
pointed out that a pitcher of Harvey&#13;
Wallbangers could be purchased for $5.00 on&#13;
special nights. Upon measuring the capacity&#13;
of the metalic vessel with that of the beer&#13;
, KOFFLL&#13;
G) ENTION ALL STUDENTS g&#13;
c? BREAKFAST INSIDE&#13;
&gt;3 From 6 A.M. to 11 A.M., Monday thru Friday r$&#13;
Visif Our Neu, FnsiJe C-drpetec)&#13;
DBJLMJC.MC KCCtl 3&#13;
30th aue. and Roosevelt Road %&#13;
&lt;0 Open: (5&#13;
rp Mon. thru Thurs. — 6 A.M. -11 P.M. (x&#13;
rD Friday — 6 A.M. to Midnight ^&#13;
(p Saturday — 9 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Sunday — 9 A.M. to 11 P.M. 0&#13;
TUESDAY, MAR. 21&#13;
Poetry Reading. Knute Skinner,&#13;
Irish poet-in-residence at Western&#13;
Washington State. Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum. Greenquist&#13;
Hall, Whiteskellar. 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Coffee House. Morgan and Jeni.&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Whiteskellar. 12:00 to 3:00 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAR. 22&#13;
Film. "Making of a President, 1968". &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
^ -&lt;P&#13;
» / /&#13;
A &gt; ^&#13;
°&gt;&#13;
# ^&#13;
&lt;/&#13;
&amp;&#13;
3$&gt; cV&#13;
••&amp;£• &amp;&#13;
v&#13;
V&#13;
Mon. thru Thurs.:&#13;
5 - 7 p.m. — All the beer&#13;
you can drink $1.00&#13;
7 - cl osing — Pitchers $1.00&#13;
&gt; Sunday: 1-5 p.m. — All the beer you can drink $2.00&#13;
|AAon.: 8 - c losing — "College Night" Food&#13;
Wed.: Beer and pretzel night&#13;
Thurs.: "Ladies' Night"&#13;
V2 pr ice for women&#13;
Fri.: 4 - 7 p.m. —&#13;
("Double Bubble" Double mixed drink for the price of one&#13;
Sat.: 2 - 6 p.m. —All the beer you can drink $2.00&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
Mon. - Fri. — 4 - closing&#13;
Sat. and Sun. — Noon - c losing&#13;
8237 SWictar* Road&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Telephone: 457-3311&#13;
RICHARD G . CAPELLI, prop.&#13;
uwp policy questioned&#13;
Book Mart Bankrupt&#13;
by Jim Koloen, Managing Editor&#13;
The Book Mar in Kenosha is closed, gone,&#13;
bankrupt, its shelves are, if not barren, decimated&#13;
of books, its atmosphere is a flourescent light left&#13;
on in the back of t he wtore to warn burglars away.&#13;
Kenosha no longer has a store where people can&#13;
buy bestsellers, new releases, or any book with a&#13;
hardcover. In short, Kenosha no longer has a real&#13;
bookstore.&#13;
Why? Newscope asked that question. Why?&#13;
Grace Anderson, former proprietor of the Book&#13;
Mart, told Newscope that one of the major factors&#13;
in the bankruptcy was the non-availability of a list&#13;
of required texts and suggested reading for&#13;
courses at UW-P. In a telephone conversation,&#13;
Mrs, Anderson told Newscope that since Parkside&#13;
moved to its present location in 1969, s he had not&#13;
been able to obtain a book list. Bookstores in&#13;
Racine afso told Newscope that they had not&#13;
received book lists.&#13;
When asked of the Parkside policy toward&#13;
releasing booklists, Erwin Zuehlke, director of t he&#13;
Business Office, told Newscope that as far as he&#13;
knew, no book list was compiled after 1969. He&#13;
explained that the campus bookstore, which will&#13;
eventually relocate in the Libarar-Learning&#13;
Center, does not receive a booklist. "They send out&#13;
forms to instructors based on the information they&#13;
' obta in through the timetables. It's all voluntary, if&#13;
the instructors wish to fill out the form they can."&#13;
I He emphasized that there was no official book list,&#13;
and that "the policy for the present" is not to&#13;
compile one.&#13;
In a fit of journalistic research, Newscope&#13;
talked to a few instructors. When asked how they&#13;
make the required texts available to the students,&#13;
they explained that the campus bookstore sends&#13;
them questionnaires well in advance of each&#13;
Contents of these Prohtees&#13;
In Custody of&#13;
United St ates District Court&#13;
FOR THE £ASl£KlLMSW&lt;Z^_t**&#13;
IN BANKRUPTCY&#13;
MIUIAH •'gf .. S^vQ'-Tcy'&#13;
ADDRESS loxoj[fel&#13;
&lt;V«/ojwrf w*c.«W.&#13;
-TJ.,L~ I# *'"•&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at numerous locations&#13;
throughout the nation including&#13;
National Parks, Resort&#13;
Areas, and Private Camps. For&#13;
free information send self-addressed,&#13;
STAMPED envelope to&#13;
Opportunity Research, Dept&#13;
SJO, Century Bldg., Poison, MT&#13;
59860. APPLICANTS MUST&#13;
A P P L Y E A R L Y . ..&#13;
Vila to perform&#13;
Carmen Vila, Spanish pianist&#13;
and artist-in-residence at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
who recently returned&#13;
from a highly-acclaimed&#13;
European concert series, will&#13;
present a free public lecturerecital&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
March 23, in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
The program will be built&#13;
around 25 Brahms variations&#13;
and fugue on a theme by&#13;
Handel.&#13;
Miss Vila's concert series&#13;
included an appearance with&#13;
the Barcelona Orchestra in a&#13;
Bartok Concerto which one&#13;
critic praised for her "fluid&#13;
technique, vehement approach&#13;
to rhythmic passages and&#13;
suave, poetic phrasing." Said&#13;
another critic: "She is a pianist&#13;
of great natural gifts and&#13;
wonderful technique . . . shows&#13;
fire and strong esthetic temperment&#13;
perfect for romantic&#13;
pieces."&#13;
Miss Vila also appeared with&#13;
the Valencia Orchestra and was&#13;
cited by critics for the "beauty&#13;
and illumination" of her&#13;
"seductive, dense and&#13;
passionate" Brahms.&#13;
Scholarship Offer&#13;
The Business and&#13;
Professional Women's Club of&#13;
Kenosha is offering a $200&#13;
scholarship to female residents&#13;
of Kenosha who will be&#13;
sophomores or juniors and who&#13;
indicate strong academic&#13;
potential and are in need of&#13;
some financial assistance.&#13;
For further information and&#13;
appropriate forms contact the&#13;
Financial Aids Office on&#13;
Country Trunk A (553-2291).&#13;
RFUUNM&amp;.&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Students who are descendents&#13;
of J. I Case Company employees&#13;
are eligible to receive a&#13;
scholarship. Grants are also&#13;
available from the Kenosha&#13;
Branch of American&#13;
Association of University&#13;
Women. Any adult women&#13;
residing in Kenosha County who&#13;
has completed at least one&#13;
semester and has the objective&#13;
of obtaining a bachelor's degree&#13;
is eligible to apply.&#13;
Gruening&#13;
to Speak&#13;
Former senator Ernest&#13;
Gruening of Alaska will appear&#13;
at the Whiteskellar Tuesday,&#13;
Mar. 21, from 10 to 11:30 a.m.&#13;
He will give a short talk&#13;
followed by a rap session.&#13;
Gruening has the distinction&#13;
of being the first governor of&#13;
Alaska and the first editor of&#13;
The Nation. He was also one of&#13;
the two senators who voted&#13;
against the Gulf of Tonkin&#13;
resolution in 1965.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Gruening also will hold an&#13;
informal coffee hour with the&#13;
faculty in the Social Science&#13;
conference room Tuesday from&#13;
9 to 10 a.m.&#13;
semester. When asked if they were in any way&#13;
coerced to rely on the campus bookstore as the&#13;
sole means for making the texts available to&#13;
students, they replied they were not. One instructor,&#13;
who had previously taught at three&#13;
different institutions, told Newscope "this was the&#13;
procedure used on the other campuses I've been&#13;
on."&#13;
The death of a bookstore is never a welcome&#13;
event, when it is a city's only bookstore it approaches&#13;
travesty. Mrs. Anderson had indicated&#13;
that the Book Mar may be re-opened under new&#13;
management in a short while. But there is a cloud&#13;
hanging low. The campus bookstore is a monopoly&#13;
on campus; This, of&#13;
course, makes it quite economically feasible to&#13;
compile an exclusive booklist, which, of course,&#13;
places area bookstores at a distinct disadvantage.&#13;
Exactly how much of an advantage (and why) the&#13;
campus bookstores holds over area competitors&#13;
remains to be seen. &#13;
28 Letters Awarded March 20,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Twenty-eight University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside athletes&#13;
have earned letters in four justcompleted&#13;
winter sports,&#13;
athletic director Tom Rosandich&#13;
has announced.&#13;
Those who earned varsity letters&#13;
in basketball include Racine (Park)&#13;
freshman Chuck Chambliss;&#13;
Kenosha (St. Joseph) freshman Tom&#13;
Heller; Greendale sophomore Mike&#13;
Joyce; Greendale freshman Tom&#13;
Joyce; Jefferson freshman Pete&#13;
Nevins; Cudahy sophomore Mark&#13;
peck; Burlington junior Bob Popp;&#13;
Ewen, Mich., junior Dennis&#13;
Routheaux; and Racine (Case)&#13;
freshman Phil Stewart.&#13;
In fencing, letterwinners include&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) freshman&#13;
Charles Christensen; Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) senior John Hanzalik;&#13;
Sturtevant (Kenosha Bradford)&#13;
lunior Don Koser; Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford) junior Peter Shemanske;&#13;
Wauwatosa (East) sophomore&#13;
John Tank; Racine (Horlick)&#13;
sophomore Bernie Vash; and&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) freshman Steve&#13;
Vepraskas.&#13;
Gymnastics letterwinners include&#13;
Burbank, Cal., senior Warren&#13;
McGillivray; Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
freshman Kevin O'Neil and Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) freshman Kerry Pfeifer.&#13;
For the women's squad, Racine&#13;
(Horlick) freshman Kathy Kramer&#13;
earned a letter.&#13;
Gymnasts Compete&#13;
Three UW-Parkside gymnasts will compete Friday and&#13;
Saturday in the NAIA national gymnastics championships at&#13;
Eastern Illinois University.&#13;
Senior Warren McGillivray and freshmen Kevin O'Neil and&#13;
Kerry Pfeifer have qualified from Coach Dave Donaldson's squad&#13;
McGillivray, a native of Burbank, Cal., whose best mark in allaround&#13;
this year is 45.10, will compete in the rigorous all-event&#13;
competition, while Kenoshans O'Neil and Pfeifer will stay with&#13;
their specialties. O'Neil, captain of the squad, will be going on the&#13;
rings and parallel bars and Pfeifer will be entered in the long horse&#13;
vault.&#13;
It's the final competition of the season for the Rangers.&#13;
Burkee says Annex&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
who doesn't want to be included&#13;
in the annexation. They'd be in&#13;
and out. All it would take would&#13;
be the approval of the city&#13;
council and the Somers town&#13;
board. The only land that&#13;
wouldn't be detached would&#13;
belong to the people who want to&#13;
be annexed, and a 200 foot wide&#13;
corridor which would connect&#13;
Parkside with Kenosha. We&#13;
have to keep the corridor to&#13;
make the area contiguous with&#13;
the city and to provide sewer&#13;
lines." Pitts added that the&#13;
precedent for the corridor&#13;
retention was established in a&#13;
case between Madison and a&#13;
suburb in which the state&#13;
required a minimum width for a&#13;
corridor to make the annexed&#13;
area contiguous with the city.&#13;
You've said that farmers who&#13;
don't want to be included in the&#13;
annexation can detach their&#13;
property from it after the annexation&#13;
has been passed. What&#13;
guarantee do they have that&#13;
they'll actually be able to do it?&#13;
"I would recommend to the city&#13;
council, as soon as the area is&#13;
annexed, to detach the&#13;
property. You see there are&#13;
checks and balances to this&#13;
thing. The voters have the final&#13;
say. They can petition for a&#13;
referendum if they don't like&#13;
something that is happening,&#13;
and pull out. When this&#13;
(detached annexation) goes&#13;
back to the state, they're going&#13;
to flip. They're going to say this&#13;
is a kind of connived deal.&#13;
Somebody could even go to&#13;
court on this."&#13;
Does the city have to annex in&#13;
order to service the campus?&#13;
"If I extend sewer and water&#13;
outside the city limits, I could&#13;
get a taxpayers lawsuit. I could&#13;
have gotten a taxpayers lawsuit&#13;
when I put the original sewer in.&#13;
But people were so anxious to&#13;
help Parkside that nobody was&#13;
going to sue for that. Now they&#13;
would. I'd get a suit because I'd&#13;
be spending the taxpayers&#13;
money of the city of Kenosha&#13;
out in Somers."&#13;
Why do you think the area&#13;
residents are so vehemently&#13;
opposed to the annexation? "It&#13;
all goes back to the fact that&#13;
they don't liknee Pparkside,&#13;
because they can't say they&#13;
don't like me; what have I got to&#13;
do with it? I don't have a sewer&#13;
problem, Somers doesn't have a&#13;
sewer problem. They simply&#13;
resented the fact that their land&#13;
was sold for the Parkside site.&#13;
That's what I think anyway.&#13;
You see the city is doing&#13;
everything it can to solve this&#13;
problem, and they're (Somers)&#13;
not cooperating. If this thing&#13;
falls through, I don't know&#13;
what's going to happen; we've&#13;
done everything we can.&#13;
Somers says they can build a&#13;
treatment plant in conjunction&#13;
with Mt. Pleasant, but I just&#13;
don't see how they'll pay for it.&#13;
And if they can come up with $10&#13;
million in federal aid along with&#13;
the other $10 million they'll&#13;
need, that other ten million will&#13;
have to come out of their taxpayers&#13;
pockets. I think these'&#13;
taxpayers should realize this."&#13;
What happens if annexation&#13;
fails? "I don't know what we'll&#13;
do, when the sewers are&#13;
overflowing in 1974 I might not&#13;
even be here. Then we'll have&#13;
an emergency and the state will&#13;
come in and under Bill 50 they'll&#13;
order an annexation because&#13;
we'll have a pollution problem.&#13;
But then it's too late."&#13;
irish poet here&#13;
Knute Skinner, Irish poet, will&#13;
appear Tuesday at 4 p.m. with&#13;
Poetry Forum. Mr. Skinner,&#13;
spending most of the year in&#13;
Ireland, is currently in the&#13;
Creative Writing program at&#13;
Western Washington State. In&#13;
1961 he won the HuntingtonH&#13;
a r t f o rd F o u n d a t i on&#13;
Fellowship in poetry. His latest&#13;
book will be released shortly&#13;
called "Hearing of the Hard&#13;
Times" Mr. Skinner will read&#13;
selections of his poStry. Admission&#13;
is free.&#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;
Eight Rangers won letters in&#13;
wrestling. They include Peshtigo&#13;
freshman Kyle Barnes; Kenosha&#13;
(St. Joseph) junior Mark Barnhill;&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) junior Jeff&#13;
Jenkins; Coleman sophomore Ken&#13;
Martin; Racine (Case) freshman&#13;
Rick Schoeffler; Peshtigo freshman&#13;
Steve Sulk; Racine (Parkp) freshman&#13;
Frank Velasquez; and Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) sophomore Bill West.&#13;
Elected captains for their&#13;
respective squads are Dennis&#13;
Routheaux, basketball; Peter&#13;
Shemanske, fencing; Kevin O'Neil,&#13;
men's gymnastics; Kathy Kramer&#13;
and Mary Jo Giannottl, women's&#13;
gymnastics; and Jeff Jenkins and&#13;
Ken Martin, wrestling.&#13;
MVPS&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, Peter&#13;
S h e m a n s k e , W a r r e n&#13;
McGillivray, Kathy Kramer&#13;
and Ken Martin have been&#13;
named most valuable for their&#13;
winter sports at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Chambliss, high-scoring&#13;
freshman from Racine, was&#13;
named the cagers' top player in&#13;
a vote of teammates as were&#13;
fencing captain Shemanske, a&#13;
Kenosha junior, and Burbank,&#13;
Cal., senior McGillivray, who&#13;
will compete in all-around in the&#13;
upcoming NAIA national&#13;
gymnastics championships.&#13;
Miss Kramer, who placed&#13;
fifth in the state in floor exercises&#13;
for Parkside's first&#13;
women's gym squad, was&#13;
picked as MVP in that sport&#13;
while Martin, who claimed ailAmerican&#13;
wrestling honors for&#13;
the second time last weekend,&#13;
was named the grapplers' top&#13;
man. Miss Kramer is a Racine&#13;
freshman while sophomore&#13;
Martin hails from Coleman.&#13;
&amp;a.r l*&gt;&#13;
Mm.SU&#13;
'PtopWs u&#13;
UJtd,&#13;
St*io.&#13;
IX az Bottle Beer&#13;
H i W * *&#13;
Ltoe Music-F^i.&#13;
iHT.&#13;
hotS 1"*oryf +hl&#13;
l4k.t rKto.Tt)r&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Vi Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line Pump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
WATCHES^&#13;
Role* • Accutron&#13;
Ultrachron - Longine&#13;
Bui ova • Movado&#13;
Caravelle • Time*&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
FS nest .&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontolof.isf&#13;
ft4 f •«» »-•&#13;
VwuWuc &amp; S&amp;ru,&#13;
It does make » difference where you shop!&#13;
0% Discount to students and Faculty with |.o&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Wallace • Lunt&#13;
Meed &amp; Barton&#13;
Sheffield - ete.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orr.forl&#13;
S.nec. - Clique&#13;
Roy.I Worcetter &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
The Great Salad Controversy&#13;
AT L E F T T H E SM A L L ER A C TIV ITI ES SALAD:. AT RIG HT T H E R A CIN E P O R T I ON I&#13;
A L I T T L E MO R E S AL A D WITH OUR BOW LS P L E A S E .&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Dave Bishop appeared to be&#13;
visably shaken. He stood in his&#13;
office staring at two salads on&#13;
his desk, his chin slowly&#13;
massaged by his left hand.&#13;
"Hmm," he said, "isn't that&#13;
something."&#13;
I stood next to him as he&#13;
thought over what I had named&#13;
"the great salad controversy"&#13;
On his desk were two lettuce&#13;
salads bought by myself at two&#13;
different eating facilities under&#13;
his temporary authority. One&#13;
salad, heaped in a blue glass&#13;
bowl, was comprised of four&#13;
healthy wedges of tomato, bits&#13;
of c elery, slices of radish, and&#13;
fresh, crisp lettuce. The other&#13;
salad, housed in a smaller white&#13;
styrofoam bowl, had no raddish&#13;
or celery, but a thin strip of&#13;
green pepper and the butt-end&#13;
of a tomato.&#13;
"You're sure they're the&#13;
same price," he asked me. "I'm&#13;
positive," I said, "Twenty-five&#13;
cents and a penny tax, the&#13;
healthy one from Racine, the&#13;
scrawny salad from the Student&#13;
Activities Building lunch&#13;
counter." He shook his head&#13;
slowly, seemingly amazed.&#13;
One of Mr. Bishop's duties as&#13;
a Parkside Administrator is to&#13;
keep a watchful eye on the food&#13;
services on the three campuses&#13;
he serves as an interim liaison&#13;
between the students' stomachs&#13;
and the Canteen Company.&#13;
The "great salad controversy"&#13;
was born in a casual&#13;
conversation I once had with&#13;
another Parkside employee,&#13;
Shirley Schmerling. She asked&#13;
me why I, as author of Eating&#13;
Out, didn't review the eating&#13;
facilities at Parkside. I admitted&#13;
at that time the idea had&#13;
been haunting me for quite&#13;
awhile.&#13;
I explained that I didn't want&#13;
to get involved with administrators,&#13;
although I had&#13;
once interviewed Vice Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn concerning the&#13;
food available to students. It&#13;
seems that when Parkside was&#13;
just a suckling, a contract was&#13;
made with the Canteen Company.&#13;
The contract stated&#13;
Parkside could not initiate any&#13;
new food program until it expired.&#13;
Because I could say little&#13;
or nothing good about the&#13;
present set-up, I told Shirley&#13;
Schmerling that I would review&#13;
eating facilities at Parkside&#13;
when the Administration got&#13;
serious about feeding the&#13;
students.&#13;
Injecting a bit of trivial&#13;
detective work on my part, I&#13;
asked her if she knew that the&#13;
salads in Racine were bigger&#13;
than the ones at the Kenosha&#13;
campus or the Activities&#13;
Building. She didn't accept my&#13;
testimony as fact; she wanted&#13;
me to bring her a Racine salad.&#13;
When I did a few weeks later,&#13;
she insisted Dave Bishop, her&#13;
boss, see them.&#13;
He stood over the salads,&#13;
somewhat amazed, I think, and&#13;
a bit bewildered.&#13;
I realized while standing next&#13;
to him, that although I brought&#13;
the salads to him just for the&#13;
sake of proving a point, I was&#13;
still a Newscope writer, and in&#13;
charge of "Eating Out". He&#13;
wasn't in the same league as the&#13;
secretaries and others who had&#13;
been amused by my demonstration.&#13;
He was an Administrator.&#13;
&#13;
Adm inis trat ors and&#13;
politicians have one common&#13;
fear, and that is "unrehearsed&#13;
dialogue", which crops up when&#13;
they are questioned by a hostile&#13;
constituent, student or reporter.&#13;
Nothing is as nightmarish as a&#13;
statement off the top of the&#13;
head, when the statement is&#13;
binding and recorded by a&#13;
machine or mind. That's how&#13;
images are shattered — ask&#13;
George Romney. In this&#13;
respect, the President of the&#13;
United States and the man who&#13;
is to watch over a college food&#13;
program have a common bond.&#13;
I couldn't decide, standing&#13;
next to Mr. Bishop, if he thought&#13;
I was there to reveal a flaw in&#13;
his operation, or if h e realized I&#13;
was only casually proving a&#13;
point, though it had gone beyond&#13;
Shirley Schmerling and a&#13;
casual conversation.&#13;
After staring at the salads for&#13;
a few minutes, burrowing&#13;
through a garden of thought,&#13;
Dave Bishop told me that he&#13;
would personally make a tour of&#13;
the three lunch counters in&#13;
order to straighten out "the&#13;
great salad controversy". He&#13;
told me to call him in a day or&#13;
two.&#13;
Two days later, Dave Bishop&#13;
explained over the phone that&#13;
he had indeed toured the&#13;
campuses and found the salads&#13;
to be different sizes. He had&#13;
called a representative from the&#13;
Canteen Company in&#13;
Milwaukee. The "great salad&#13;
controversy" had now spread to&#13;
three counties in the state I&#13;
realized.&#13;
The salads were in different&#13;
containers, he went on to explain&#13;
over the phone, because&#13;
they were bought at different&#13;
times. There is no dishwasher&#13;
at the Activities Building, so the&#13;
Canteen personnel use&#13;
styrofoam containers, while&#13;
Racine and Kenosha use plastic&#13;
and glass. (Somewhere in&#13;
Parksideland I thought, Doug&#13;
LaFollette, the ecological&#13;
knight, was cringing at the&#13;
mention of styrofoam. "If you&#13;
bury a dead cat, a nail and a&#13;
sytrofoam cup, he tells his&#13;
ecology classes, then dig them&#13;
up years later, which do you&#13;
think will prove to be non biodegradable?")&#13;
&#13;
Bishop went on to say that he&#13;
felt the Kenosha Campus had&#13;
reached a "happy medium" in&#13;
the salad question, a smaller&#13;
version of the Racine model, but&#13;
a bit bigger than the Activities&#13;
Building salad. He would bring&#13;
this all to the attention of the&#13;
Canteen person coming down&#13;
from Milwaukee.&#13;
I asked if he had found any&#13;
other discrepancies on his&#13;
jaunt. He said something about&#13;
hot dogs and beans, and the fact&#13;
that someone somewhere&#13;
wasn't serving bread with the&#13;
meal.&#13;
In perfect politicaladministrative&#13;
rhetoric, he said&#13;
he would "strive for consistency"&#13;
in the lunch program,&#13;
and see to it the students got&#13;
their money's worth.&#13;
There would always be&#13;
complaints, Mr- Bishop&#13;
rationalized, prices and the like,&#13;
but those are the "nature of t he&#13;
beast" gripes. Concluding the&#13;
phone explanation he said a&#13;
"happy medium" had been&#13;
found and the salad affair was&#13;
over. Ceasar Chavez would&#13;
have been proud, I thought, no&#13;
more sickly lettuce salads.&#13;
The "great salad controversy",&#13;
which had begun in a&#13;
casual conversation, spread&#13;
into three counties, and taken a&#13;
few hours of out a couple&#13;
people's lives, was over.&#13;
Although I hadn't reviewed&#13;
the lunch program, I had done&#13;
something, I concluded after&#13;
talking to Dave Bishop. In fact,&#13;
he thanked me for bringing the&#13;
matter to his attention. It appeared&#13;
to have worked out&#13;
alright, but there were losers,&#13;
as in all controversies.&#13;
The vegetarians in Racine&#13;
would now have to be content&#13;
eating "happy medium" salads&#13;
instead of bargain-basement,&#13;
heaping, healthy herbage.&#13;
They would complain, I&#13;
realized, but that would come&#13;
under the "nature of th e beast"&#13;
gripes.&#13;
m mm 'X-Xv.v.v. n&#13;
SH liiMi v.v.v.v&#13;
•X-M-X-:-&#13;
vX;X; jg&#13;
^ Student Activities Built inj (^j) 1 Z 5&#13;
PARKSIDE t ( JI SC. X.b.'S REQUIRED # </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63708">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 11, March 20, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63709">
                <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="63710">
                <text>1972-03-20</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="63713">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63714">
                <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="63715">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63716">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63718">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="231">
        <name>annexation</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="158">
        <name>parkside village</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
