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              <text>Pioneers Find Living (In)Convenient</text>
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              <text>byWilham Sorensen&#13;
ber 12 13 and 14, "The Firebugs", a&#13;
NoveJJ1ase~ent and lessons that are never Frisch is ranked as one of the best COn.&#13;
~,y ofappettenby May Frisit in 1953 as a radio temporary plaYWrights and ISal 0 a major wrucr&#13;
lea~ed';:ved throughou~ Euro~e sinc.e its first of prose. He later became Involved In journahsm&#13;
sCript, r rformance in 1958 In Zurich, SWitzerland. and finally architecture, where he learned or the&#13;
stagedpe lth complacent western man and his despairing expedient art of ruction that Influences&#13;
It unger~rl. blindness, his unconscious self his works so."&#13;
(lIaterted"allS 1.~ the implements of comfort and Other recent works written by Frisch an'&#13;
crOwn Wlunable to' come to terms with reality "Count Odes-land", 1951, a plea for the existential&#13;
statuSq~'ict becomes that reality and something and "Don Juan, or the Love of Geometry". 19:;2. .:..I&#13;
whe&#13;
nCO the half closed eyes of bloated porn- .,_ re story of a lofe of quantity rather lhan quahty Ills&#13;
morethan nd ignorance are needed to resist. works deal with questions that many Pilrksldt.~&#13;
poosn~~naTwO_fOld,it teHsof the general denial bug Sludents might ask themselves beforc thcy walk&#13;
corru~'t 'and involvement so much a part of the out into this world of expediency.&#13;
ofadl&#13;
VI Yrary American status quo, The play is scheduled for 8 p.m. November 12.&#13;
con temPO Activity and involvement seemed Admission is 13and 14 at the Kenosha Campus $1 Fme Arts Hoom&#13;
d ically common at the Kenosha Campus Director: Marilyn Baxter; fC:;siSlantDirector11'''~&#13;
rnomwhere, amid the sound of clanging and Slage Manager: Terry Kollman.&#13;
FiDe ~ and ringing saws Italked with Marilyn Choreographer: Anna Antaramian&#13;
ham~efacultydirector and carpenter, about the Baxu:;r, Cast: Gottlieb Biedermann. Kenneth&#13;
st andthe play. LaBrasea; Babette. Pat Engdahl. Anna. Van .sa&#13;
ca "Theplay has been accepted extremely well Boyle; Sepp Schmitz. Ray Waldie. Willie&#13;
campuses, its most frequent forum." She Eisenring, Arthur Dexter; A Pohceman, Mike&#13;
~ated thephilosophy and contest of the play for Ingram; A. Ph. D • Todd Rattle; Mrs. Knechthng,&#13;
provoking interest In Its contemporary Karen Glaeser; The Chorus of Firemen' Paul&#13;
me, t Bussey. Karen Glaeser. Angel Flores. ~lIkc&#13;
·lm~·.·••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• _ ••••••••• ~ln;g~r;~~.~T~dRattle.T~paoo~DrolwiIICII~.&#13;
"]oumaU,m i, Literature ina Hurry" -Matthew Arnold U"iloersity Of Wisronsi" _ Parkside&#13;
•••• G.P.&#13;
Volume5 Number.lO November-a, 1971&#13;
Pioneers Find Living&#13;
by Fred Noer, Jr., of the Newscope Staff&#13;
The Parkside Village "pioneers" have&#13;
finallyestablished a frontier!&#13;
Allofthe Villagers, mostly UW-P students&#13;
andfaculty members, who sighed contracts&#13;
are now in their apartments and find them&#13;
convenientliving, which is amazing because&#13;
Iileycontinue to put up with numerous inconveniences&#13;
created by uncompleted constructionwork.&#13;
Theft is becoming a problem at Parkside&#13;
Villageas evidenced by the fact that one&#13;
tenant, Rick Pazera, had a battery stolen&#13;
fromhis car while parked in the unlighted and&#13;
IDlpalroliedparking lot immediately behind&#13;
Iile.aparhnents, provided specifically for the&#13;
resIdents'use. (The tenants received notices&#13;
Iilat they must park in the lot unless they can&#13;
finda spacs among the approximately 6 to· 8&#13;
cars 10 front of the complex nearest the&#13;
StudentActivities BUilding. For use of the lot,&#13;
a Villager is charged $3 per montn.)&#13;
Pazera reported the loss "to the&#13;
management, and he says they have yet to&#13;
Contacthim about the matter. In an October&#13;
1:ilh NEWSCOPE letter, Pazera challenged&#13;
~ management of Parkside Village, namely&#13;
. EmIl Avendroth President. of Global&#13;
Construction Co., to publicly come out and&#13;
~swerquestions about the parking situation.&#13;
us far, no response.&#13;
$! ~e other incident involved the robbery of&#13;
, worth of stereo and TV equipment from :e°Uhe apartments entered by the use of a&#13;
y. Inere are many master keys "floating around" P . SJru arkslde Village - giveft to conction&#13;
workers, managers and students&#13;
SGA ti:dent Governmenl elec-&#13;
'lId are sch.eduledfor !he 17, 18&#13;
19th of Novembe Thi·· lIIeflrsl. r. s IS&#13;
faDdidelectionthai will see ifs '&#13;
.... ates serving a fuU one&#13;
'.... term' . f!turns. . III office. Early&#13;
Ieltin Indi"!'te lhal studenls&#13;
t1IOlfig&#13;
candidate petitions for tbouIter and Sena lor positions&#13;
'-'I of ~cE!e?Iasl spring's lurn&#13;
fiveOff2 petitIons filed for lbe&#13;
Senatod~ersand 22 for !he 17&#13;
Fiv seats.&#13;
IlIit~ Snmenl Union Comlor&#13;
eI PosItIonsare also open&#13;
t1udin ootion. All sludenls indesireg~reshmen,who&#13;
ha~e a&#13;
~irs govern their Own afQOInin3reurged&#13;
. 10 pick up ·a&#13;
Stuct;~tIng. peti lion al Ihe&#13;
"'lIlpu AffaIrs office on either c."ern:n Or al Ihe Siudenl&#13;
" .... Iloaenl office, corner of&#13;
d and county highway&#13;
Elections&#13;
employed by the management. Residents&#13;
have complained of workers using the keys at&#13;
their own discretion, showing little respecl to&#13;
the individuals' privacy.&#13;
Larry Jones recalled one time when a&#13;
worker, "armed" with a master key. inconsiderately&#13;
entered his apartment without&#13;
knocking, even when the door was locked. The&#13;
worker then went into-Jones's bedroom and ~&#13;
told him that "you have had enough sleep OJ&#13;
N&#13;
anyhow," and proceeded to do his work. -c&#13;
Other complaints center around such "-&#13;
things as inadequate lightning in the rooms, G&#13;
no frost-free refrigerators, and strict enrr&#13;
forcement of the rules by the managers. (For&#13;
example, no visitors are permitted to slay&#13;
overnight in any of the apartments.&#13;
It is clear the main concern is not about&#13;
the Villagers' well-being, but rather just to&#13;
finish construction as soon as possible. Mrs.&#13;
Sharyn Ribecky, former Parkside ViUage&#13;
representative in charge of rentals, thmks the&#13;
management has its priorities reversed&#13;
because Global Construction Co. should serve&#13;
and satisfy the people first. Difference m&#13;
opinions over this issue is the primary reason&#13;
why she resigned from the firm about 1112&#13;
months ago. .&#13;
She said Mr. Avendroth's mam concern&#13;
was the building progress, so the students,&#13;
who did not pressure anyone, were forced to&#13;
live under substandard conditions.&#13;
Mrs. Ribecky felt the managers should&#13;
become more actively involved and should he&#13;
ready to accept more responSIbIlities. Instead,&#13;
the managers are&#13;
(Continued on Page 2)&#13;
Next&#13;
"A". Many students have .expressed&#13;
an interest in runrnng&#13;
for an office but have asked !hal&#13;
!he deadline be extended to&#13;
aHow !hem lime 10 fIll theIr&#13;
petitions. Nominating petilJons&#13;
require 25 signatures of&#13;
currently enrolled students to&#13;
place Ihe candidale on the&#13;
ballot. The new pelIlIon&#13;
deadline isWednesday, Nov. 10.&#13;
However, candidates walti~g&#13;
!his long will not have Ihe,r&#13;
picture or plalform prinled m&#13;
Ihe Special EleclJon EdItion of&#13;
Newscope which also was&#13;
moved up to Wednesday, NoV.&#13;
10.Lasl Spring il was found Ihal&#13;
Ihe election edition of the paper&#13;
proved !he mosl valuable volegetting&#13;
1001 for many of I~&#13;
victorious candidates, S&#13;
.missing this could prove falaI 10&#13;
an otherwise well-run cam·&#13;
(I n)'Convenient&#13;
Week&#13;
paign. The importance of lbe&#13;
election edition belOg what It IS,&#13;
candidates are warned that&#13;
material received later than&#13;
Monday, Nov. 8, will prohably&#13;
not gel printed.&#13;
In addition to the newspaper,&#13;
each candidate is given 500 fr~&#13;
handbills. A sample handbIll&#13;
must be submitted on 81Jzx 11&#13;
while paper 10 !he Sludeni&#13;
Government Office. HandbIlls&#13;
taken to the printer in. the&#13;
morning can usually be pIcked&#13;
up thai aflernoon.&#13;
Two debates are currently&#13;
scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 9&#13;
and Friday, Nov. 12. AddItional&#13;
days and times may be&#13;
scheduled as needed but eandidates&#13;
are urged to sel up Ihelr&#13;
own debates or dISCUSSIOns&#13;
!hrough !he Studenl Govermenl&#13;
- (Continued on Page 6)&#13;
FREE&#13;
CSC to ResearchStudent&#13;
Complaints&#13;
by Larry A. Jones. Campus EdilOr&#13;
Last week's storm seemed 10 have slowed 10 a drizzle al&#13;
Thursday night's meeting of Ihe Concerned ludent's&#13;
Coalition (CSC).&#13;
The group's ranks thinned to twenty· five stUdents, or less&#13;
than half of what showed up for the initial meeting one we k&#13;
ago, and nothing even approaching the disord r of that&#13;
meeting was visible.&#13;
Co-chairmen Dean Loumos and Bruce Volpentesla spent&#13;
aboul 45 minutes mapping out a proposed plan of action for&#13;
the CSC. Basically, the plan called for the formalion of&#13;
research groups to delve into complaints of sludents in four&#13;
major areas: I) Academic Affairs, 2) Studenl Affairs and the&#13;
Activities Building, 3) The Bookstore, and 4) ommunity&#13;
Relations.&#13;
According to Loumos, the result of the research would be&#13;
a "Whole plan for a University divided into four areas. Thi i&#13;
on the nod&#13;
see page five&#13;
the kind of thing we want to do. We want to draw up our idea&#13;
of what Parkside should be like ... The kind of school that we&#13;
(the students) would like to go to."&#13;
Volpentesla added that the main thing "is to students&#13;
into the administration asking questions. If they're pushed&#13;
into questions, they're going to have to come up with answers&#13;
that satisfy the students, or they're going to have pissed-off&#13;
students, and if they have pissed-off students, they don't have&#13;
a university."&#13;
Research groups were set up in each of the four areas,&#13;
with the results to be reported at the next meeting of the esc&#13;
on Thursday, November 18.&#13;
by .wniiam Sorensen&#13;
ber 12, 13 and 14, "The Firebugs", a&#13;
Novern easement and l~s~o~s that are never .1ay of apP_tten by May Fns1t m 1953 as a radio&#13;
1earn&#13;
I" ed • wri ·ved throughou t E urope · ·t · smce 1 s first . t rece1 . Z . h S ·t scriP • rformance in 1958 m unc , w1 zerland.&#13;
5tagedpe 'th complacent western man and his&#13;
It ling~\~s~~ blindness, his unconscious self Jllateria 'th the implements of comfort and crowned wiunable to- come to terms with reality&#13;
stat115 q:!ict becomes that reality and something when c~ the half closed eyes of bloated pom- Jllore t nand ignorance are needed to resist .&#13;
pausn~i~n rwo-fold, it tells of the general denial&#13;
corru~ .&#13;
1 ·and involvement so much a part of the of activi Yrary American status quo.&#13;
conte~i\vity and involvement seemed&#13;
A ·cally common at the Kenosha Campus&#13;
~ra~~~ room where, amid the sound _of clan~ing finemers and ringing saws I talked with Marilyn 11amte faculty director and carpenter, about the sax r, st and the play. ca "The play has been accepted extremely well&#13;
1 campuses, its most frequent forum." She&#13;
~ated the philosophy and ~on~est of the play for rovoking interest m its contemporary me, P&#13;
comment.&#13;
lira&#13;
bug&#13;
"JournaUamiaLiteratureinaHurry"-MatthewArnold Uniiiersity of Wisromin - P,trkside&#13;
•••••••• FREE&#13;
Volume 5 Number .10 November~, 1971&#13;
Pioneers Find Living {/ n )Convenient&#13;
by Fred Noer, Jr., of the Newscope Staff .&#13;
The Parkside Village "pioneers" have&#13;
finally established a frontier!&#13;
employed by the management. Residents&#13;
have complained of workers using the keys at&#13;
their own discretion, showing little respect to&#13;
the individuals' privacy. All of the Villagers, mostly UW-P students&#13;
and faculty members, who sighed contracts&#13;
are now in their apartments and find them&#13;
convenient living, which is amazing because&#13;
they continue to put up with numerous inconveniences&#13;
created by uncompleted construction&#13;
work.&#13;
Larry Jones recalled one time when a&#13;
worker, " armed" with a master key, inconsiderately&#13;
entered his apartment without&#13;
knocking, even when the door was locked. The&#13;
worker then went into Jones's bedroom and ~ told him that "you have had enough sleep w&#13;
Theft is becoming a problem N&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Village as evidenced by the fact that one&#13;
tenant, Rick Pazera, had a battery stolen&#13;
from his car while parked in the unlighted and&#13;
unpatrolled parking lot immediately behind&#13;
the_apartments, provided specifically for the&#13;
residents' use. (The tenants received notices&#13;
that they must park in the lot unless they can&#13;
find a_space among the approximately 6 to·8&#13;
cars m front of the complex nearest the&#13;
Stu~ent Activities Building. For use of the lot,&#13;
a Villager is charged $3 per montn.)&#13;
anyhow, " and proceeded to do his work. &lt;(&#13;
Other cJmplaints center around such a.&#13;
things as inadequate lightning in the rooms, G&#13;
no frost-free refrigerators, and strict en- a: forcement of the rules by the managers. (For&#13;
example, no visitors are permitted to stay&#13;
overnight in any of the apartments.&#13;
Pazera reported the loss to the&#13;
management, and he says they have yet to&#13;
contact him about the matter. In an October 25th NEWSCOPE letter, Pazera challenged&#13;
:e man~gement of Parkside Village, namely&#13;
Cr. Emil Avendroth, President of Global&#13;
onstruction Co., to publicly come out and&#13;
;~swer questions about the parking situation.&#13;
us far, no response.&#13;
It is clear the main concern is not about&#13;
the Villagers' well-being, but rather just to&#13;
finish construction as soon as possible. Mrs.&#13;
Sharyn Ribecky, former Parkside ,Village&#13;
representative in charge of :e~t~ls, thinks the&#13;
management has its priorities reversed&#13;
because Global Construction Co. should serve&#13;
and satisfy the people first. J?ifference in&#13;
opinions over this issue is the primary reason&#13;
why she resigned from the firm about l 12&#13;
months ago. She said Mr. Avendroth's main concern&#13;
$! 00&#13;
The other incident involved the robbery of&#13;
• O worth of stereo and TV equipment from&#13;
was the building progress, so the students,&#13;
who did not pressure anyone, were forced to&#13;
live under substandard conditions. Mrs. Ribecky felt the managers should&#13;
~ne 0&#13;
~ the apartments entered by the use of a&#13;
ey, here are many master keys "floating around" p ·&#13;
become more actively involved a?~ ~~ould be&#13;
ready to accept more respons1b1hties. Instruc&#13;
. arks1de Village - given stead the managers are to conhon&#13;
workers, managers and students ' (Continued on Page 2)&#13;
SGA Elections Next Week&#13;
u!tudent Government elecand&#13;
s&#13;
1&#13;
~: sch~uled for the 17, ~8&#13;
lhef. of November This is 1rst elect· : . cancl'd ion that will see its&#13;
Year 1&#13;
:;s s~rving l;l full one&#13;
returns . m . In office. Early 5'ek' rnd1cate that students au~~~ candidate petitions for&#13;
ShouJdlcer and Senator positions&#13;
OJt of ~:Cee? ~ast spring's turn&#13;
five Off' petitions filed for the&#13;
Senato !alcers and 22 for the 17&#13;
F. n seats&#13;
tve St · lltittee ~~ent Union Comfor&#13;
el ~!hons are also open cludinecrtion. All students in- g r h , desire t es men, who have a&#13;
lairs O govern their own afnorni:;~.&#13;
urged to pick up a&#13;
Student ing. petition at the&#13;
carnPusAffairs office on either&#13;
Governm or at the Student&#13;
\\'Ood ll ent office, corner of&#13;
Gad and county highway&#13;
"A". Many students have ~xpressed&#13;
an interest in runmng for an office but have asked that&#13;
the deadline be extended ~&#13;
0&#13;
allow them time to fill . t~e1r&#13;
petitions. Nominating petitions&#13;
require 25 signatures of&#13;
currently enrolled students to&#13;
place the candidate on. ~he&#13;
ballot. The new petition&#13;
deadline isWednesday, N°".· .&#13;
10· However, candidates waitu~g this long will not have the_1r&#13;
picture or platform pri~~ed m&#13;
the Special Election Edition of&#13;
Newscope which also was&#13;
moved up to Wednesday, Nov.&#13;
10. Last Spring it was found that&#13;
the election edition of the paper proved the· most valuable votegetting&#13;
tool for many of the&#13;
victorious candidates, so&#13;
missing this could prove fatal to&#13;
an otherwise well-run campaign.&#13;
Th~ _impo~tance of_ t~e election edition bemg what it is, candidates are warned that&#13;
material received later than&#13;
Monday, Nov. 8, will probably&#13;
not get printed. In addition to the newspaper,&#13;
each candidate is given 500 fr~&#13;
handbills. A sample handbill&#13;
must be submitted on 8112 x 11&#13;
white paper to the Stud7nt&#13;
Government Office. Ha_ndb1lls taken to the printer m_ the&#13;
morning can usually be picked&#13;
up that afternoon.&#13;
Two debates are currently&#13;
scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 9&#13;
and Friday, Nov. 12. Additional&#13;
days and times may be&#13;
scheduled as needed but ca~-&#13;
dida tes are urged to s7t up t~e1r&#13;
own debates or d1scuss1ons&#13;
through the Student Goverment&#13;
- (Continued on Page 6)&#13;
CSC to Researc&#13;
Student Compl&#13;
by Larry A. J on , C':t mpu t:dilor&#13;
Last week's storm eemed to have low d to , driul t&#13;
Thursday night's meeting of the one rn d Stud nt'&#13;
Coalition &lt;CSC &gt;.&#13;
The group's ranks thinn d to tw nty five stud n , r I •&#13;
than half of what showed up for the initial m tin 1 on , · k&#13;
ago, and nothing even approaching the di ord r of tha t&#13;
meeting was visible. Co-chairmen Dean Loumo and Brue olp nlc ta pc•nt&#13;
about 45 minutes mapping out a propo · d plan of ac tion for&#13;
the CSC. Basically, the plan called for th format ion of&#13;
research groups to delve into complain of tud nt in f ur&#13;
major areas: 1) Academic Affairs, 2&gt; tud nt Affai a nd t_h&#13;
Activities Building, 3 &gt; The Bookstore, and -t &gt; ommunit&#13;
Relations.&#13;
According to Loumos, the result of the r earch would&#13;
a "Whole plan for a University divided into four area . Thi · i&#13;
on the nod&#13;
see page five&#13;
the kind of thing we want to do. We want to draw up our idea&#13;
of what Parkside should be like . . . The kind of school that we&#13;
(the students) would like to go to."&#13;
Volpentesta added that the main thing "is to students&#13;
into the administration asking questions. If they're pushed&#13;
into questions, they're going to have to come up with answers&#13;
that satisfy the students, or they're going to have pissed-off&#13;
students, and if they have pissed-off students, they don't have&#13;
a university."&#13;
Research groups were set up in each of the four areas,&#13;
with the results to be reported at the next meeting of the CSC&#13;
on Thursday, November 18. &#13;
Page2 NEWSCOPE November-a, 1971&#13;
Parkside Village (can't)&#13;
to be a contrast from the&#13;
present situation' as&#13;
Villagers feel the managers'&#13;
presence, but they never&#13;
seem to do anything.&#13;
Talk among a couple of&#13;
Villagers finds them considering&#13;
the formation of a&#13;
tenants' union and&#13;
withholding rent money in&#13;
an escrow account until&#13;
some important questions&#13;
are answered by Avendroth.&#13;
Questions such as: What is&#13;
the exact number of master&#13;
keys? Who has them? What&#13;
are the intentions of hiring a&#13;
security guard? What is to&#13;
be done about the parking&#13;
facilities? Is the parking&#13;
problem going to be placed&#13;
in the hands f&#13;
security, Who ~ghYW.J&gt;&#13;
down more rUles Set&#13;
guarantee 24 but&#13;
protection? Why ov~hour&#13;
visitors are not allow m;gbt&#13;
Overall, this situa~'&#13;
paradoxical show on is&#13;
Avendroth's stat~ by&#13;
ab~ut apartment fa ~~nt&#13;
which appreared .cilibes&#13;
S e pte m b e r In the&#13;
NEWSCOPE: ".. I~'Ot b&#13;
Inconvenience, but at S an&#13;
same time we a ~&#13;
charging for. th~~ not&#13;
convemence. We ill m.&#13;
make it inconvenien~for not&#13;
student. He can have wany&#13;
he wants and we will pa ~t&#13;
it on this temporary b y. or asI8."&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
living in free apartments&#13;
and have a list of phone&#13;
numbers to call if there are&#13;
any dificulties. While Mrs.&#13;
Ribecky was living at the&#13;
site, she was deeply committed&#13;
and concerned about&#13;
people's problems and was&#13;
constantly trying to make&#13;
the abnormal conditions&#13;
more bearable. This seems&#13;
~&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
~&#13;
••&#13;
-&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS c&#13;
o&#13;
Presented by Parkside PIA&#13;
B p.m. Kenosha Campus~rs.&#13;
Arts Room. Admission char:'"&#13;
Also Nov. 13 and 14. e.&#13;
Feature Film. "The Sa d.&#13;
pebbles" . .s p.m. Student ~e.&#13;
tivi ties Building. Admission75e.&#13;
Parkside . and Wisconsin lD&#13;
required.. -&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 13&#13;
Cross.country. NAIADistrictII&#13;
Meet. AtEau Claire. .&#13;
,Dance. "Willie Williamssoui~&#13;
Out Review", Sponsored bl&#13;
Parkside . Activities Board. i&#13;
1'.(11 .• 1 a.m, aaAdmission$I~.&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin lD&#13;
required,&#13;
Monday. Nov. 8&#13;
Meeting. Psychology Club. 7:30&#13;
p.m. room 226, Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Tuesday. Nov. 9&#13;
Meeting. Student International&#13;
Meditation Society, 7 p.m, room&#13;
105, Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Wednesday. Nov. to&#13;
Meeting. Art club. 7: 30 p.m.&#13;
room 140, Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Soccer. Rangers vs. Drake.: 2&#13;
p.m. Parkside Athletic Field.&#13;
Concert, Music students will&#13;
present an Honors: Concert. 8&#13;
p.m .. RachineCampus Badger&#13;
Room.&#13;
Friday, Ngv. 12&#13;
Play. "The Firebugs"&#13;
400 Main St.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
racine&#13;
thursday 11&#13;
friday 12&#13;
saturday 13i&#13;
Pool TouramentSchedu led&#13;
Of special interest to the pool&#13;
players on campus, the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board will&#13;
be sponsoring a pocket billiards&#13;
tournament. It will be held in&#13;
the Student Activities Building.&#13;
Prizes will be awarded and&#13;
winners sent to the Association&#13;
of College Unions International&#13;
(ACU-ll Region B playoffs at&#13;
Stevens Point in February. The&#13;
tournament is open to all&#13;
students and will' have two&#13;
categories, male and female.&#13;
Read next week's Newscopefor&#13;
further details .&#13;
••••••••&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Editorial Staff Martin, Pat Nelson, Janice&#13;
Editor-In-Chief Warren Nedry Wilde&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Sports Editor James Casper&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
BusinessManager John Beck&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross,Jeff&#13;
Scoville&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDermid&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Marc Eisen, Phones:&#13;
Kelly, Infusino, Kim" King, Jim Editorial 553·2496&#13;
Koleen, Ken Konkol, Dale Business 553-2498&#13;
Ne~co~e is an independenf'student newspaper composedby student501&#13;
the ~nlvers~ty of Wisconsin-Parkside published weekly exceptdurlrl9&#13;
vacation pertoos. student obtained advertising funds are the solesourceof&#13;
r7've.:'ue for the operation of Newsccpe. 6,000 copies are printedlind&#13;
~~!r Ibu!ed throUgho~t the Kenosha and Racine communities aswellesthe&#13;
Iverslt~. Free copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadlme for all manuscripts submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. tlte&#13;
ThurSday pri~r to publication and must betyped double-spaced.Deadline.~&#13;
photographs ISthe Saturday prior to publication. Unsolicitedmanuscrlub_&#13;
an.d~hotographS ~ay be reclaimed within ~O days after the dafeof ~e&#13;
~Isslon, after Which they will become the property of NewsCOpe~td. Inewsc~pe&#13;
office is located in the Student Organizations building,&#13;
tersectlon of Highway A and Wood Road.&#13;
" .-. -&#13;
, ·0&#13;
f - ";&#13;
.--- . .&#13;
~!!O'S C:J&#13;
DINNERS 4:00 p.m.-t2::00 I,&#13;
-'\NO ITALIAN SAUSAGE B::/vt3ERS&#13;
5021-11111 AYeIIII Kenoslla &amp;51..Q91&#13;
Open 6 doys a week from 4 p.m., closec/ /.lOf'days&#13;
•&#13;
m.. Ewt.&#13;
tkd 1n.tUU.A(iJM'1uA,.&#13;
(]"~&#13;
refresh men .&#13;
--------'--- ... ----~---~.&#13;
Page2&#13;
-·&#13;
~&#13;
-&#13;
C&#13;
0&#13;
NEWSC0PE November 8, 1971&#13;
Parkside Village (con't)&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
racine&#13;
lhursday 11&#13;
lriday 12&#13;
saturday 13;&#13;
,• -•&#13;
- •L&#13;
I •o&#13;
..&#13;
to be a contrast from the&#13;
livi~ontii~u7r~;ma;:;:~~nts present situation a~&#13;
g 1· t of phone Villagers feel the ma~agers&#13;
in the hands of&#13;
-security, who ntighyw.p&#13;
down more rules set&#13;
g u a r a n t e e 2 4 and have a • but is th er numbers to call if there are presence, but _ey nev protection? Why ov h ~ u r&#13;
visitors are not allo ern,g1it any dificulties. While Mrs. seem to do anythmg. I f&#13;
Ribecky was living at the Talk a~ong a coup e o . Wed?&#13;
site she was deeply com- Villagers fmds the_m conmitted&#13;
and concerned about sidering the formation of a&#13;
Overall, this situar , .&#13;
paradoxical show;on ts&#13;
Avendroth's stat by&#13;
about apartment fa ej~nt&#13;
which appreared t ities&#13;
S e p t e m b e r n the&#13;
0 le's problems and was tenants' union a~d&#13;
~n~\antly trying to make withholding rent money 1~&#13;
the abnormal conditions an escrow account ~nbl&#13;
more bearable. This seems some important questions&#13;
- -&#13;
.• . . · .. ...&#13;
are answered by A vendroth.&#13;
Questions such as: What is&#13;
the exact number of master&#13;
keys? Who has them? What&#13;
are the intentions of hiring a&#13;
security guard? What is to&#13;
be done about the parking&#13;
facilities? Is the parking&#13;
problem going to be placed&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
Monday, Nov. 8&#13;
Meeting. Psychology Club. 7 : 30&#13;
p.m. room 226, Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 9&#13;
Meeting. Student International&#13;
Meditation Society, 7 p.m. room&#13;
105, Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 10&#13;
Meeting. Art club. 7 :30 p.m.&#13;
room 140, Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Soccer. Rangers vs. [!rake. · 2&#13;
p.m. Parkside Athletic Field.&#13;
Concert., M4sic stmlents will&#13;
present an Honors . Concert. 8&#13;
p.m. Ra&lt;,:hine .campus Badger&#13;
Room.&#13;
Friday, Ngv.12&#13;
Play. "The Firebugs"&#13;
~EWSC~PE: " ... I~'~ th&#13;
mconve~ience, but at t~~ same time · we are&#13;
charging for . that ~ot . inconvemence.&#13;
We will&#13;
k ·t · not ma e 1 mconvenient for t d any s u ent . He can have Wha&#13;
~e wan~ and we will pay ro:&#13;
it on this temporary bas· ,, IS.&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Presented by Parkside Pltiyers&#13;
8 p.m. Kenosha Campus Fin~&#13;
Arts Room. Admission charge&#13;
Also Nov. 13 and 14. ·&#13;
Feature Film. "The Sandpebbles".&#13;
8 p.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Admission 75c&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID&#13;
required ..&#13;
Saturday, Nov.13&#13;
Cross .Country. NAIA District 14&#13;
Meet. At, Eau Claire.&#13;
Dance. "Willie Williams Soule4&#13;
Out Review",. Sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Activities Board. 9&#13;
p.,;n. -1 a.m. aaAdmission$1-.50.&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID&#13;
r,equired.&#13;
·Pool Tourament Scheduled&#13;
Of special interest to the pool&#13;
players on campus, the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board will&#13;
be sponsoring a pocket billiards&#13;
tournament. It will be held in&#13;
the Student Activities Building.&#13;
Prizes will be awarded and&#13;
winners sent to the Association&#13;
of College Unions International&#13;
(ACU-1) Region 8 playoffs at&#13;
Stevens Point in February. The&#13;
tournament is open to all&#13;
students and will· have two&#13;
categories, male and female.&#13;
Read next week's Newscope for&#13;
further details .&#13;
•••••••• "Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
ea·mpus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Sports Editor James Casper&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Martin, Pat Nelson, Janice&#13;
Wilde&#13;
Photography itaff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross, Jeff&#13;
Scoville&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey' Dave Kraus, . Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDermid&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Marc Eisen, Phones: 553.2496&#13;
553.2498 Kelly lnfusino, Kim · King, Jim Editorial&#13;
Koloen, Ken Konkol, Dale Business&#13;
. . d b students of Newscope 1s an independent'student newspaper compose Y during&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -Parkside published weekly except of&#13;
vacation periods. Student obtained advertising funds are the sole_ so:~nd&#13;
revenue for the operation of Newscope. 6,000 copies are print the&#13;
distributed throughout the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as&#13;
Universit~. Free copies are available upon request. . . m, the&#13;
- ---&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts submitted to Newscope 1s 4.3o ~-I" e tor&#13;
ThurSday pri~r to publication and must be typed double-s~a~ed. oea u~ripts&#13;
photographs 1s the Saturday prior to publication. Unsolicited man f sub·&#13;
an_d t?hotographs may be reclaimed within 30 days after the dat:~d- n,e&#13;
mission, after Which they will become the property of NewscoP~ d" 9 In·&#13;
Newscope office is located in the Student Organizations buil in '&#13;
tersection of Highway A and Wood Road.&#13;
., .&#13;
* -: . ,.&#13;
---=-. J .&#13;
~!!o·s----~&#13;
-~&#13;
PIZZA-t·'&#13;
refreshmen. 8'-l DINNERS 4:00 p.m.-12::00 '&#13;
-~D ITALIAN SAUSAGE EOv'BERS&#13;
5021- 11th AYellle Kenosha &amp;51..Q91&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed M&lt;Jl)days&#13;
-------.-.... ---- -- ~,._ .. _ _.......,,,,,.,.,,..,,,,,,..,, ----&#13;
byKen Konkol&#13;
NewScopestaff PageJ&#13;
.flb&lt; k we left the issue of&#13;
Lastweeens inhabiting our&#13;
V.lkSwatgPark unresolved as&#13;
Laieir.n&#13;
ted only one side of&#13;
wepres&#13;
enThis week we shall&#13;
theIssue.to' present a view of&#13;
endea:o~owish to preserve the&#13;
thosehi h bas been a Kenosha parkw Ie&#13;
l n since 1919.&#13;
tradi10 bly Bill 859is the issue&#13;
Asse~Briefly, this proposes&#13;
at /lan 'toKATa section .of the&#13;
1.lease "1 hich is now primari y&#13;
par~a: a~ athletic and practice&#13;
use for all area schools and&#13;
fieldthat field into a storage&#13;
tu~ forthe Volkswagens which&#13;
arl&#13;
the country through the en er&#13;
GreatLakes.&#13;
The bill, authored and submitted&#13;
by Assemblyman&#13;
GeorgeMolinaro and Eugene&#13;
[)Orff, has the support of the&#13;
Kenosha Harbor Commission,&#13;
TeamstersL.U. 43, and the&#13;
Longshoreman's Association&#13;
LU 1315and was requested by&#13;
K~~osha Mayor Wallace&#13;
8urkee.Total support for the&#13;
billis limited to sixteen people&#13;
whoregistered in favor of the.&#13;
bill mostly members of&#13;
LOn'gshoreman's 1315. Mr.&#13;
Molinaroand Mr. Dorff have&#13;
said that they are not supportingthebilleven&#13;
though they&#13;
submittedit. Yet, when the bill&#13;
was discussed in committee,&#13;
they tooktheir wives to Madison&#13;
to register for the bill.&#13;
00 the other side of the coin,&#13;
oppositionis high. Facing the&#13;
sixteenwhn favor the bill are&#13;
1119persnns who traveled at&#13;
theirownexpense to Madison to&#13;
register against the bill. Also&#13;
againstthe bill is nearly every&#13;
school'in the area. Students&#13;
from these schools have&#13;
secured an additional 10,000&#13;
signatures on petitions circulatedagainst&#13;
the bill.&#13;
Persons against 859 include&#13;
.~ Issue Rests on Bill 859&#13;
members of the Eagles CI b&#13;
Aldermen, Bradford H~h&#13;
School, Tremper High School&#13;
Lance Junior High, McKinley&#13;
Junior . High, the Kenosha&#13;
EdUc~tIon ASSociation, the&#13;
American Federation of&#13;
Teachers L.U. 557, the Unified&#13;
School Board, the Concerned&#13;
Property Owners Association&#13;
the Lakefront Committee'&#13;
Machinist· Lodge 34, Kenosh~&#13;
Landmark Preservation&#13;
Society, and American Motors,&#13;
On the day Bill 859 was&#13;
discussed in the Governmental&#13;
and Veterans Affairs Com-'&#13;
mittee seven people spoke for it&#13;
taking I \&gt;2 hours to do so. This&#13;
left only an hour for 14 people to&#13;
speak in opposition to the bill&#13;
because of the semi-fillibuster&#13;
of those preceding them. There&#13;
were others who wished to&#13;
speak against but could not&#13;
because of the lack of time.&#13;
Opposition for the bill was&#13;
summed up best in an Oct. 11&#13;
statement by State Senator&#13;
Joseph Lourigan:&#13;
"On May 29, 1919, the&#13;
Wisconsin Legislature&#13;
authorized the City of Kenosha&#13;
to reclaim the submerged land&#13;
beneath the waters of Lake&#13;
Michigan for public park&#13;
purposes. This area is known as&#13;
Lakefront and Eichelman Park.&#13;
"It is used from early spring'&#13;
to late fall by thousands. Local&#13;
72 used the stadium for a mass&#13;
meeting of its membership of&#13;
7,000. Marching hands and drill&#13;
teams from allover the midwest&#13;
used this area for competitive&#13;
drills to the enjoyment&#13;
and pleasure of thousands. The&#13;
Festival of Music attracted 18&#13;
Novembers. 1911&#13;
~elI-known bands including one&#13;
rom Canada. The VFW annual&#13;
~rc~s IS held in Lakefront&#13;
ar . More than 1,500 persons&#13;
~ttended the Nash Car Club of&#13;
menca shOwing at the&#13;
Lakefront Stadium. Locally we&#13;
have many fine musical units&#13;
~lOg this area, the Bradford&#13;
and, Park City Grays and the&#13;
Shorehners to name a few.&#13;
Lakefront Park is used by all&#13;
the se~or and junior high&#13;
schools 10 the City of Kenosha&#13;
for football and musica! events.&#13;
Lakefront Park is within&#13;
walking distance of the Mary D&#13;
Bradford High School and is the&#13;
only field available to this fine&#13;
school. I could go on and on but&#13;
time will not permit.&#13;
."On May 11, 1971,Assembly&#13;
Bill 859 was introduced at the&#13;
request of Mayor Burkee. The&#13;
title of the bill reads as follows'&#13;
'An act to amend Section 1 of&#13;
Chapter 230 Laws of 1919&#13;
rela ting to the dockline of the&#13;
City of Kenosha'. This title is&#13;
misleading, deceptive and&#13;
deceitful. The area involved is&#13;
over three city blocks away&#13;
from the dockline. The bill and&#13;
its amendment changes the&#13;
state law and permits tbe&#13;
Mayor and Aldermen (not the&#13;
people of Kenosha) to use this&#13;
lakefront area for other purposes.&#13;
Mayor Burkee has said&#13;
that he intends to lease this area&#13;
(at a small fee of $1 per car) to&#13;
KAT Corp. for the storage of&#13;
Volkswagens.&#13;
"The supporters of Assembly&#13;
Bill 859 are playing a numbers&#13;
game. On July 21 they said 35&#13;
new jobs would be created. On&#13;
Aug. 19 the figure wa~ raised to&#13;
100 and the latest figure is 200&#13;
jobs.&#13;
"These figures are&#13;
propaganda initiated by people&#13;
10 the KAT Corporation and&#13;
Morelli Corporation. They will&#13;
tell you anything in order to get&#13;
,their paws on our Lakefront&#13;
Park. The truth is that for the&#13;
most part these are only part&#13;
time jobs filled by moonlighters&#13;
and part time help. The shipping&#13;
season on the Great Lakes&#13;
is for a period of about seven&#13;
months.&#13;
"KAT owns the entire south&#13;
shore of the Kenosha Harbor&#13;
and the abutting property with&#13;
frontage of 1,030 feet on Lake&#13;
Michigan. They leased their&#13;
property to tenants and now&#13;
they want the City of Kenosha to&#13;
give them a lease on' our&#13;
Lakefront Park for storage of&#13;
Volkswagens.&#13;
"More than 9,000 people are&#13;
employed in Kenosha in the&#13;
manufacture of automobiles. If&#13;
we pass Assembly Bill 859 or its&#13;
amendment and permit a&#13;
foolish and headstrong mayor to&#13;
subsidize Volkswagens by&#13;
leasing our public parks we will&#13;
be exporting jobs and importing&#13;
unemployment. Don't let KAT&#13;
or anybody ,else rob us in&#13;
Kenosha of our heritage, environment&#13;
and economy."&#13;
DEFEAT ASSEMBLY BILL&#13;
859.&#13;
James Fowler. Principal of&#13;
Mary D. Bradford High School,&#13;
had this to say when questioned&#13;
about 859.&#13;
"The Lakefront Park is the&#13;
only facility within three miles&#13;
_we can use. We are the only&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
school in the conference which&#13;
does not have a field of its own&#13;
and are adamently opposed to&#13;
any measure that would take&#13;
the Park away from us. The&#13;
fields aren't great but their&#13;
what we've got, and we'll fight&#13;
for them until we get something&#13;
better. "&#13;
When I called Public&#13;
Relations at American Motors,&#13;
I could solicit no opinion at all&#13;
on the bill which would bring&#13;
into thecity the prime competitor&#13;
for American Motors'&#13;
Own mini-car, the Gremlin.&#13;
However, Carl Barbee, attorney&#13;
for American Motors,&#13;
registered himself and&#13;
American Motors Corporation&#13;
against Assembly Bill 859.&#13;
After trying to contact Mr.&#13;
Barbee for most of a day. I&#13;
finally reached him at his office&#13;
the next morning.&#13;
Mr. Barbee declined to give a&#13;
reason for his and American&#13;
Motors' opposition to bill 859.&#13;
but said that any conjecture on&#13;
the part of this reporter&#13;
probably would be correct.&#13;
Bringing Volkswagen directly&#13;
into the city would grant the&#13;
company those same advantages&#13;
enjoyed by AMC, that&#13;
is, reduced transportation costs&#13;
from port of entry and convenient&#13;
access to source of&#13;
supply. Reducing these costs by&#13;
having immediate delivery&#13;
assured would mean that more&#13;
people in the area may be in a&#13;
position where buying a&#13;
Volkswagen might look like a&#13;
better idea than buying AMC&#13;
products,&#13;
The battle lines have been&#13;
drawn and it is wait and see if&#13;
Bill 859 succeeds in the&#13;
legislature. Strong opposition to&#13;
a bill doesn't necessarily&#13;
guarantee its defeat, as&#13;
evidenced by recent legislative&#13;
action. The future of Lakefronl&#13;
parkland hangs in the balance.&#13;
L....--=-"W",A T,-:CCC",,'::' c:--'! I&#13;
"ole .. - Ac&lt;:"tron&#13;
Ultrac n· t..1l11in.&#13;
• "1 • __ 0&#13;
C vell. _ Tl..,.xLeCo"ltr.&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
Clidu~te Gemologist-Certified Di~mo"tologist&#13;
Tired of&#13;
BtA II ?&#13;
I"r.nc:.'a&#13;
" t _&#13;
h&lt;f" ....&#13;
ColOllln ••&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
W,tchu - Jewelry&#13;
Di,mond Setting&#13;
Complete Rep,ir&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Rin" Desivnin,V&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658·3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wall..,.· L"nt&#13;
II........ rton&#13;
......... Id •• tc.&#13;
Y~g'g~&#13;
It does mde ~ diflennce ""-ere you shop!&#13;
SILVERWARE CRYSTAL&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
Tltfon·Orl'O'fora&#13;
$en",. - !.ali.....&#13;
110)'01 ter&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
f;/e. 0 I'~r I&#13;
t&#13;
il" :::::~_t_ot_"c ~--..ill ~ !it...rl...!'lI\Ja;i. ..r 81~. ,&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
Newscope starr&#13;
of the k we left the issue of&#13;
November 8, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page3&#13;
1,ast weeens inhabiting our&#13;
volkswatg Park unresolved as&#13;
1,aiefron ted only one side of&#13;
we ~resen This week we shall&#13;
the issue. · · f to present a view o&#13;
Issue Rests on Bill 859&#13;
members of the Eagles Cl b&#13;
Aldermen, Bradford H;h&#13;
School, Tremper High School&#13;
Lan~e Jun_ior High, McKinley&#13;
Junior . High, the Kenosha&#13;
Educ~bon Association, the&#13;
American Federation of&#13;
Teachers· L.U. 557, the Unified&#13;
School Board, the Concerned&#13;
Property Owners Association&#13;
the Lakefront Committee'&#13;
Machinist· Lodge 34, Kenosh~&#13;
Landmark Preservation&#13;
Society, and American Motors.&#13;
school in the conference which&#13;
does not have a field of its own&#13;
and are adamenUy opposed to&#13;
any measure that would take&#13;
the Park away from us. The&#13;
fields aren't great but their&#13;
what we've got, and we'll fight&#13;
for them until we get something&#13;
better."&#13;
endea~0&#13;
: 0 wish to preserve the&#13;
those h'ch has been a Kenosha park w 1&#13;
l n since 1919.&#13;
tradi 10 bly Bill 859 is the issue&#13;
Asser Briefly, this proposes&#13;
at han ·&#13;
10 KAT a section .of the&#13;
to lease hich is now primarily&#13;
par: a: an athletic and practice&#13;
use for all area schools and&#13;
field that field into a storage&#13;
turn for the Volkswagens which&#13;
are1&#13;
a the country through the en er Great Lakes.&#13;
The bill, authored and sub-&#13;
·tted by Assemblyman&#13;
~~rge Molinaro and Eugene&#13;
Dorff, has the support ?f _the&#13;
Kenosha Harbor Comm1ss10n,&#13;
Teamsters L.U. 43, an~ !he&#13;
1,ongshoreman's Association&#13;
LU 1315 and was requested by&#13;
K·e~osha Mayor Wallace&#13;
Burkee. Total su~port for the&#13;
bill is limited to sixteen people&#13;
who registered in favor of the&#13;
bill mostly members of&#13;
Lodgshoreman's 1315. Mr.&#13;
Molinaro and Mr. Dorff have&#13;
said that they are not supporting&#13;
the bill even though th~y&#13;
submitted it. Yet, when the bill&#13;
was discussed in committee,&#13;
they took their wives to Madison&#13;
to register for the bill.&#13;
On the other side of the coin,&#13;
opposition is high. Facing the&#13;
sixteen who favor the bill are&#13;
109 persons who traveled at&#13;
their own expense to Madison to&#13;
register against the bill. Also&#13;
against the bill is nearly every&#13;
school in the area. Students&#13;
from these schools have&#13;
secured an additional 10,000&#13;
signatures on petitions circulated&#13;
against the bill.&#13;
Persons against 859 include&#13;
On the day Bill 859 was&#13;
discussed in the Governmental&#13;
and Veterans Affairs Com- ·&#13;
mit_tee seven people spoke for it,&#13;
taking 1112 hours to do so. This&#13;
left only an hour for 14 people to&#13;
speak in opposition to the bill&#13;
because of the semi-fillibuster&#13;
of those preceding them. There&#13;
were others who wished to&#13;
speak against but could not&#13;
because of the lack of time.&#13;
Opposition for the bill was&#13;
summed up best in an Oct. 11&#13;
statement by State Senator&#13;
Joseph Lourigan:&#13;
"On May 29, 1919, the&#13;
Wisconsin Legislature&#13;
authorized the City of Kenosha&#13;
to reclaim the submerged land&#13;
beneath the waters of Lake&#13;
Michigan for public park&#13;
purposes. This area is known as&#13;
Lakefront and Eichelman Park.&#13;
"It is used from early spring&#13;
to late fall by thousands. Local&#13;
72 used the stadium for a mass&#13;
meeting of its membership of&#13;
7,000. Marching bands and drill&#13;
teams from all over the midwest&#13;
used this area for competitive&#13;
drills to the enjoyment&#13;
and pleasure of thousands.· The&#13;
Festival of Music attracted 18&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
wf eil-known bands including one rom Canada Th VF · . · e W annual&#13;
~rckus is held in Lakefront ar · More than 1 500 tte d , persons a n ~d the Nash Car Club of&#13;
America showing at the&#13;
Lakefront St~dium. Locally we&#13;
ha_ve m~ny fme musical units&#13;
usmg this area, the Bradford&#13;
Band, :13ark City Grays and the&#13;
Shorelmers to name a f&#13;
Lak~fro~t Park is used by e~j the se~ior and junior high&#13;
schools m the City of Kenosha&#13;
for football and musical events.&#13;
Lakefront Park is within&#13;
walking distance of the Mary D&#13;
Bradf?rd High School and is the&#13;
only field available to this fine&#13;
school. I could go on and on but&#13;
time will not permit.&#13;
_"On May 11, 1971, Assembly&#13;
Bill 859 was introduced at the&#13;
request of Mayor Burkee. The&#13;
title of the bill reads as follows:&#13;
'An act to amend Section 1 of&#13;
Chapter 230 Laws of 1919&#13;
relating to the dockline of the&#13;
City of Kenosha'. This title is&#13;
misleading, deceptive and&#13;
deceitful. The area involved is&#13;
over three city blocks away&#13;
from the dockline. The bill and&#13;
its amendment changes the&#13;
state · law and permits the&#13;
Mayor and Aldermen (not the&#13;
people of Kenosha) to use this&#13;
lakefront area for other purposes.&#13;
Mayor Burkee has said&#13;
that he intends to lease this area&#13;
(at a small fee of $1 per car) to&#13;
KAT Corp. for the, storage of&#13;
Volkswagens.&#13;
"The supporters of Assembly&#13;
Bill 859 are playing a numbers&#13;
game. On July 21 they said 35&#13;
new jobs would be created. On&#13;
Aug. 19 the figure wa! raised to&#13;
Diana&#13;
E&#13;
100 and the latest figure is 200&#13;
jobs.&#13;
"Th.ese figures are&#13;
~ropaganda initiated by people&#13;
m the KAT Corporation and&#13;
Morelli Corporation. They will&#13;
tell you anything in order to get&#13;
their paws on our Lakefront&#13;
Park. The truth is that for the&#13;
most part these are only part&#13;
time jobs filled by moonlighters&#13;
a~d part time help. The shipping&#13;
season on the Great Lakes&#13;
is for a period of about seven&#13;
months.&#13;
"KAT owns the entire south&#13;
shore of the Kenosha Harbor&#13;
and the abutting property with&#13;
frontage of 1,030 feet on Lake&#13;
Michigan. They leased their&#13;
property to tenants and now&#13;
they want the City of Kenosha to&#13;
give them a lease on our&#13;
Lakefront Park for storage of&#13;
Volkswagens.&#13;
"More than 9,000 people are&#13;
employed in Kenosha in the&#13;
manufacture of automobiles. If&#13;
we pass Assembly Bill 859 or its&#13;
amendment and permit a&#13;
foolish and headstrong mayor to&#13;
subsidize Volkswagens by&#13;
leasing our public parks we will&#13;
be exporting jobs and importing&#13;
unemployment. Don't let KAT&#13;
or anybody else rob us in&#13;
Kenosha of our heritage, environment&#13;
and economy.''&#13;
DEFEAT ASSEMBLY BILL&#13;
859.&#13;
James Fowler, Principal of&#13;
Mary D. Bradford High School,&#13;
had this to say when questioned&#13;
about 859.&#13;
"The Lakefront Park is the&#13;
only facility within three miles&#13;
we can use. We are the only&#13;
When called Public&#13;
Relations at American Motors,&#13;
I could solicit no opinion at all&#13;
on the bill which would bring&#13;
into thecily the prime competitor&#13;
for American Motors'&#13;
own mini-car, the Gremlin.&#13;
However. Carl Barbee, attorney&#13;
for American Motors,&#13;
registered himself and&#13;
American Motors Corporat;on&#13;
against Assembly Bill 859.&#13;
After trying lo contact Mr.&#13;
Barbee for most of a day, I&#13;
finally reached him at his office&#13;
the next morning.&#13;
Mr. Barbee declined to give a&#13;
reason for his and American&#13;
Motors' opposition to bill 859,&#13;
but said that any conjecture on&#13;
the part of this reporter&#13;
probably would be correct.&#13;
Bringing Volkswagen directly&#13;
into the city would grant the&#13;
company those same advantages&#13;
enjoyed by AMC, that&#13;
is, reduced transportation cost&#13;
from port of entry and convenient&#13;
access to source of&#13;
supply. Reducing these costs by&#13;
having immediate delivery&#13;
assured would mean that more&#13;
people in the area may be in a&#13;
position where buying a&#13;
Volkswagen might look like a&#13;
better idea than buying AMC&#13;
products.&#13;
The battle lines have been&#13;
drawn and it is wait and see if&#13;
Bill 859 succeeds in the&#13;
legislature. Strong opposition to&#13;
a bill doesn't necessarily&#13;
guarantee its defeat, as&#13;
evidenced by recent legislative&#13;
action. The future of Lakefront&#13;
parkland hangs in the balance.&#13;
.___w_A_T_CH_E_s _ __,! ~I __ P_ER_F_uM_ E_s _ __, REPAIR DEPT. __j&#13;
W,tchu - Jewelry Di,mond Sett,ng Complete Rep1or&#13;
Intermezzo&#13;
F"rance ' •&#13;
F1nHt•&#13;
P'erl'umH ancf&#13;
Colovn•• Dept. Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Wallace· Lunt ••H ~ aarton&#13;
Sheffield • etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon • Orrefor-9&#13;
Seneca • Lali~u•&#13;
lloyal WOf"Ceater&#13;
i:&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
=&#13;
I&#13;
= = ;&#13;
Tired of&#13;
Bull?&#13;
=&#13;
=&#13;
=&#13;
=&#13;
=&#13;
= =&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
t&#13;
s&#13;
i&#13;
i &#13;
Page. NEWSCOPE' .November 8. 1911&#13;
by ·Paul Lemartlre, Feature Editor&#13;
In the summer of 1969, I ran into Norman&#13;
Mailer eating a hot dog at a Nathan's in New York&#13;
City. . .&#13;
While strolling through a park m Washmgton,&#13;
D.C., last spring, I happened upon Abbie Hoffman&#13;
reading a newspaper.&#13;
Three weeks ago, while eating at the Big Boy&#13;
Restaurant on Wisconsin A venue in Milwaukee,&#13;
Maggie and I noticed the original -Mother of Invention,&#13;
Frank Zappa, quietly eating a steak&#13;
across the aisle from us.&#13;
After noticing various personalities in the&#13;
commonest of situations, it is little woneer when I&#13;
sometimes recognize some famous person, as was&#13;
the situation at the Burger King on 75th Street last&#13;
week.&#13;
After walking in, ordering, and sitting down to&#13;
eat Iglanced into a corner of the dining area, and&#13;
th~ght I saw Attorney General John Mitchell&#13;
having a Whaler, fries and a shake. He was SItting&#13;
alone dressed in a dark suit, dark tie, cream&#13;
color.'.d trench coat, and smug look.&#13;
To the right of where he was sitting was a&#13;
large sign that read, "Customer Code ~f Conduct".&#13;
There are five rules all must observe If they want&#13;
to eat at the Burger King.&#13;
Rule number one informs the patron, no&#13;
congregating outside of cars, horn honking or&#13;
"show-ott driving" in the parking lot. Rules two&#13;
and three bar alcohol and profane language.&#13;
Number three also outlaws "loud talking".&#13;
Patrons are reminded in rules. four and five,&#13;
loitering is in no way tolerated. "Do not come on&#13;
the premises unles you first and immediately are&#13;
prepared to be a customer of this business by&#13;
consuming food or beverage."&#13;
A final note on the sign tells everyone the rules&#13;
were made necessary "by a very small group whc&#13;
are old enough to be reasonably well behaved,&#13;
quiet, and considerate of o~ers".&#13;
After reading all this, I expected the&#13;
restaurant to be swarmed by iz year old demons u;&#13;
black leather jackets riding rmm bikes. I though&#13;
signs of this type were only props 10 James Dean&#13;
of Hell's Angels movies, when the small town bar&#13;
had to take a stand before the bikers and hoods&#13;
arrived for their yearly bash.&#13;
I reasoned further. Consideridering the fact&#13;
that an election year was approaching, I COUld&#13;
only assume the management Was trying to at.&#13;
tract the "law and or~er conservative" v.otersto&#13;
'their business. Election years breed political&#13;
consciousne£!s in almost ~veryon~. Individuals&#13;
who feel rules and regulations are becoming too&#13;
lax in this society could take heart at Bruger King&#13;
They can eat facing a "Customer Code of cOO:&#13;
duct". -&#13;
In any case, I settled down to eat the Yumbo&#13;
French fries and Coke I had purchased. A Yum~&#13;
is a ham and cheese sandwich, costing 69 cents I&#13;
didn't think the sa~dwich was worth the mon.;y,&#13;
even if the girl behmd the counter did give me a&#13;
bicycle safety coloring book with the purchase.&#13;
'Maggie, meanwhile, was wading thrOUgha&#13;
Whaler, which anyone can ca tch for 49 cents. The&#13;
alternative to these two major items on the Burger&#13;
King menu is the famous "Whopper", which is a&#13;
giant hamburger for 59 cents.&#13;
In terms ?f econoinics, Burger King has&#13;
surpassed McDonald's. While McDonald's slowly&#13;
price themselves out of the working class, Burger&#13;
King offers odds and ends for kiddies, coupons to&#13;
save money, and food in quantity that nicely&#13;
parallel the prices. This is indeed a family place.&#13;
As for myself, I probably will never again eat&#13;
at Bruger King on 75th Street. The idea of com.&#13;
plying with a code of conduct in a hamburger&#13;
stand doesn't· appeal to me. I don't like to eat with&#13;
people who need signs to remind them to be civil.&#13;
While clearing my table, as rule number six&#13;
instrueled, I glanced back into the corner at the&#13;
man who I.thought was John Mitchell.&#13;
, If he wasn't the Attorney General of the&#13;
United States, he sure could be. Any law and order&#13;
advocate would like to eat in a place like this,&#13;
especially with today's economy and an election&#13;
year coming on.&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
or the Newscope staff&#13;
Tille: Ueyond Freedom &amp; Dignity&#13;
Author: B. F. Skinner&#13;
Publisher: Alfred A, Knopf ($6.95)&#13;
The old must give way to the new,&#13;
science must reign supreme, and man&#13;
·must now become modern. A science of,&#13;
bheavior, on a par with physics and&#13;
chemistry, is necessary and presently&#13;
incipient, its taks is to redesign man's&#13;
environment scientifically to enable his&#13;
culture to survive. The first premise of&#13;
life being man does not act on the&#13;
world. the world acts on him.&#13;
Beyond Fruedem &amp; Dignity is a 225&#13;
page behavioral treatise that&#13;
sometimes sounds like a manifesto. It&#13;
presents the reader with an analysis of&#13;
the traditional (and archaic) concepts&#13;
of freedom and dignity and shows how&#13;
the perpetuation of these concepts is&#13;
detrimental to man. Skinner says that&#13;
we must go beyond freedom, we must&#13;
destroy the myth of the autonomous&#13;
man, we must acknowledge the fact&#13;
that man is controlled by his environment,&#13;
that free will is a pipe&#13;
dream. The concept of freedom is&#13;
presented in the literature of freedom&#13;
has outlived its usefulness because the&#13;
conditions in the environment which&#13;
fostered that type of freedom no longer&#13;
exist. Today tyranny wears a veil, the&#13;
aversive contingencies are not overt,&#13;
·"the techniques of control which breen&#13;
revolt or escape" have been refined,&#13;
the literature of freedom is behind the ,&#13;
times. The literature of freedom cannot&#13;
cope with the need for control, it brands&#13;
all control as wrong. Modern man&#13;
whether he likes it or not is controlled&#13;
by his envir.onment. Skinner's point is&#13;
to make the most of it, if man is controlled&#13;
by his environment then let him&#13;
redesign it in his favor. The think is to&#13;
redesign the environment with a&#13;
maximum of positive reinforcers and&#13;
contingencies so that the individual as&#13;
Norm (left), and me.&#13;
well as the culture will survive. How&#13;
does he know that the environment&#13;
controls man? He really doesn't. He&#13;
assumes it because we have the&#13;
technology to redesign the environment.&#13;
We don't know how to&#13;
redesign man.&#13;
Freedom has been perpetua ted&#13;
beyond its usefulness in part because&#13;
the literature of freedom made the&#13;
no one really controls because all&#13;
control is reciprocal, there is an interchange&#13;
between controller and&#13;
controlled. The contingencies of&#13;
reinforcement would be designed to&#13;
maximize the positive and minimize&#13;
the negative aspects of life. It would not&#13;
lead ut uniformity, rather it would&#13;
foster diversity by allowing men more&#13;
time to pursue their -own interests.&#13;
'\,&#13;
mistake of defining it in terms of states&#13;
of mind or feelings. It has failed to&#13;
acknowledge the necessity of control&#13;
because it refuses to accept the fael&#13;
that man is indeed controlled by his&#13;
environment, that if freedom or&#13;
tyranny existed it was because of&#13;
negative contingencies and reinforcers&#13;
in the environment and not a so-called&#13;
will to be free.&#13;
Ilthe goals of freedom are to be attained,&#13;
man must redesign his environment&#13;
and not waste time&#13;
redesigning himself. A person would&#13;
not be a racist if the aversive (environmental)&#13;
contingencies were'nt&#13;
such that they foster racism. Delete the&#13;
racist reinforcers and replace them&#13;
with positive ones and racism will be&#13;
nonexistent. Poof.&#13;
But who is to design the culture, who&#13;
is to be the controller? Skinner says&#13;
everyone is in a way a designer of a&#13;
culture, everyone participates in extending&#13;
the life of a given culture&#13;
simply by observing its customs. And&#13;
as far as who is to control is concerned&#13;
a&#13;
As a behaviorist, Skinner attacks the&#13;
mentalistic outlook that most men have&#13;
toward themselves. Things like&#13;
opinions, feelings, attitudes are&#13;
illusions because they are produced by&#13;
the environment, they are products of&#13;
contingencies of reinforcement and&#13;
have nothing to do with behavior.&#13;
Implicit in the redesigning of the&#13;
culture is the need for a more precise&#13;
language, one in which metaphors are&#13;
no longer needed to perpetuate&#13;
Ignorance, "state of mind" being a&#13;
meta phor hiding our ignorance of how&#13;
the mind works. l&#13;
Why is there a need for control? If&#13;
man doesn't control his culture, if he&#13;
doesn't design it, its development may&#13;
he random, if men don't scientifically&#13;
redesi~n the environment, tyranny can&#13;
enter into the scene, a dictator could&#13;
redesign it for his own benefit. If the&#13;
culture is scientifically designed it&#13;
would he impossible for a tyrant to ~ain&#13;
the ascendancy simply because the&#13;
reinforcers and contingencies&#13;
f&#13;
exist. Ideally, anyway. A properly&#13;
designed environment would end the&#13;
need for morality, free will, respoosibility.&#13;
Here the argument is oot too&#13;
clear, there is a circularity in the&#13;
reasoning and a beavy reliance on the&#13;
specific behavioral definitions of the&#13;
concepts.&#13;
Beyond Freedom is written in a&#13;
simplified style, the reader hils merely&#13;
to cope with a few behavioral terms in&#13;
order to grasp the gist of Skinner's&#13;
arguments. Each chapter is ended~ya&#13;
brief summary of the important pmnlll&#13;
elicited in it, it's quite helpw am&#13;
clarifies much of what is contained m&#13;
the chapters. My only complaint is&#13;
Skinner's somewhat fatuous use of&#13;
absurd examples to ilIus~at.e. bis&#13;
contentions and what I think IS a&#13;
tendency to'overextend the definitiooof&#13;
control. He goes as far as to say that a&#13;
physicist is under the control.of the&#13;
subatomic particles he is studY~· H:&#13;
fails to distinguish between diIf~&#13;
levels of control, using the one word t&#13;
include everything from tyrannY :&#13;
subatomic particles. The argumen&#13;
loses some of its effectiveness. IeIJl&#13;
It's an interesting book and, ~t of&#13;
for me, clarified tbe rn~nmg!he&#13;
behavioralism. Let's hear It ffll'&#13;
positive reinforcers. . is an&#13;
Beyond Freedom &amp; .DlgDity&#13;
't be&#13;
important treatise, It c:;:'rilY&#13;
overlooked, nor can the, Skinner'S&#13;
inherent in many of .tiCl1S&#13;
arguments, the questionable def~&#13;
of traditional concepts such as cannot&#13;
and dignitg, and fl~IlY we wbid'&#13;
ignore an inapprOprIate~tratill1S&#13;
characterizes many of the illncePts ID&#13;
he draws to explain his co t&lt;P.g..y&#13;
many ways Beyond Freedom maJnI to&#13;
is old wine in a new bag. Itre viDlaa'&#13;
be seen if it is bad wine. one&#13;
which comes to mind is 1984.c..,...,&#13;
Beyond Freedom &amp; DignityIIIS~&#13;
of the The BO!&gt;kMart. 622. 59&#13;
, necessary or a tyranny would' not Kenosha. --t··&#13;
~---"&#13;
r-, ....",&#13;
" t IV-r N..",. Hv.r&#13;
.&#13;
-&#13;
~ ~ RockOn .Monume"t Co. I&#13;
I'&#13;
J&#13;
.1.&#13;
,~&#13;
Page4 NEWSCOPE · November 8, 1971&#13;
by Paul Lomartire·, Feature Editor&#13;
-In the summer of 1969, I ran into Norman&#13;
Mailer eating a hot dog at a Nathan's in New York&#13;
acy. . . While strolling through a park m Washington,&#13;
D.C., last spring, I happened upon Abbie Hoffman&#13;
reading a newspaper. .&#13;
I reasoned further. Consideridering the fact&#13;
that an election year was approaching, I could&#13;
only assume the management was trying to attract&#13;
the "law and order conservative" voters to&#13;
their business. Election years breed political&#13;
consciousness in almost everyon~. Individuals&#13;
who (eel rules and regulations are becoming too&#13;
Jax in this sociecy ~ould t~e heart at Bruger King.&#13;
They cari eat facmg a Customer Code of Conduct"&#13;
. Three weeks ago, while eating at the Big Boy&#13;
Restaurant on Wisconsin Avenue in Milwaukee,&#13;
Maggie and I noticed the original -Mother of Invention,&#13;
Frank Zappa, quietly eating a steak&#13;
across the aisle from us.&#13;
quiet, and considerate of o~ers". the&#13;
After reading . all this, I expected .&#13;
In any case, I settled down to eat the Yumbo&#13;
French fries and Coke I had purchased. A Yumix;&#13;
is a ham and cheese sandwich, costing 69 cents. I&#13;
didn't think !he sa~dwich was wor~ th~ money,&#13;
even if the girl behmd the counter did give me a&#13;
bicycle safety coloring book with the purchase.&#13;
After noticing various personalities in the&#13;
commonest of situations, it is little woneer when I&#13;
sometimes recognize some famous person, as wa~&#13;
the situation at the Burger King on 75th Street last&#13;
week.&#13;
After walking in, ordering, and sitting down to&#13;
eat I glanced into a corner of the dining area, and&#13;
th~ght I saw Attorney General John Mi~~ell&#13;
having a Whaler, fries and a shake. He was sitting&#13;
alone, dressed in a dark suit, dark tie, cream&#13;
colored trench coat, and smug look.&#13;
restaurant to be swarm~ by 12_ y~~ old demons m&#13;
black leather jackets riding mim ~ikes. I thought&#13;
signs of this type were only props m James Dean .&#13;
of Hell's Angels movies, when the small town bar&#13;
had to take a stand before the bikers and hoods&#13;
arrived for their yearly bash.&#13;
·Maggie, meanwhil~, was wading through a&#13;
Whaler, which anyone can catch for 49 cents. The&#13;
alternative to these two major items on the Burger&#13;
King menu is the famous "Whopper", which is a&#13;
giant hamburger for 59 cents.&#13;
To the right of where he was sitting was a&#13;
large sign that read, "Customer Code ~f Conduct''.&#13;
There are five rules all must observe if they want&#13;
to eat at the Burger King.&#13;
Rule number one informs the patron, no&#13;
congregating outside of cars, horn honking or&#13;
"show-off driving" in the parking Jot. Rules two&#13;
and three bar alcohol and profane language.&#13;
Number three also outlaws "loud talking".&#13;
Patrons are reminded in rules, four and five,&#13;
loitering is in no way tolerated. "Do not come on&#13;
the premises unles you first and immediately are&#13;
prepared to be a customer of this business by&#13;
consuming food or beverage."&#13;
A final note on the sign tells everyone the rules&#13;
were made necessary "by a very small group whc&#13;
are old enough to be reasonab~y well behaved,&#13;
In terms of economics, Burger King has&#13;
surpassed McDonald's. While McDonald's slowly&#13;
price themselves out of the working class, Burger&#13;
King offers odds and ends for kiddies, coupons to&#13;
save money, and food in qtianticy that nicely&#13;
parallel the prices. This is indeed a family place.&#13;
As for myself, I probably will never again eat&#13;
at Bruger King on 75th Street. The idea of complying&#13;
with a code of conduct in a hamburger&#13;
stand doesn't appeal to me. I don't like to eat with&#13;
· people who need signs to remind them to be civil.&#13;
While clearing my table, as rule number six&#13;
instructed, I glanced back into the corner at the&#13;
man who I thought was John Mitchell.&#13;
. If he wasn't the Attorney General of the&#13;
United States, he sure could be. Any law and order&#13;
advocate would like to eat in a place like this,&#13;
especially with today's economy and an election&#13;
year coming c;m.&#13;
Norm (left), and me.&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
o( lhe Newscope slaH&#13;
Tille : Beyond Fre edom &amp; Dignily&#13;
Author: B. F. Skinner&#13;
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf ($6.95)&#13;
The old must give way to the new,&#13;
science must reign supreme, and man&#13;
·must now become modern. A science of ,&#13;
bheavior, on a par with physics and.&#13;
chemistry, is necessary and presently&#13;
incipient, its taks is to redesign man's&#13;
environment scientifically to enable his&#13;
culture to survive. The first premise of&#13;
life being man does not act on the&#13;
world , the world acts on him.&#13;
Beyond Fr1·edom &amp; Uignily is a 225&#13;
page behavioral treatise that&#13;
sometimes sounds like a manifesto. It&#13;
presents lhe reader wilh an analysis of&#13;
the traditional (and archaic) concepts&#13;
of freedom and dignity and shows how&#13;
the perpetuation of these concepts is&#13;
detrimental to man. Skinner says that&#13;
we must go beyond freedom, we must&#13;
destroy the myth of the autonomous&#13;
man, we must acknowledge the fact&#13;
that man is controlled by his environment,&#13;
that free will is a pipe&#13;
dream. The concept of freedom is&#13;
presented in the literature of freedom&#13;
has outlived its usefulness because the&#13;
conditions in the environment which&#13;
fostered that type of freedom no longer&#13;
exist. Today tyranny wears a veil, the&#13;
aversive contingencies are not overt,&#13;
" the techniques of control which breen&#13;
revolt or escape" have been refined,&#13;
the literature of freedom is behind the ...._&#13;
times. The literature of freedom cannot&#13;
cope with the need for control, it brands&#13;
all control as wrong. Modern man&#13;
whether he likes it or not is controlled&#13;
by his environment. Skinner's point is&#13;
to make the most of it, if man is controlled&#13;
by his environment then let him&#13;
redesign it in his favor. The think is to&#13;
redesign the environment with a&#13;
maximum of positive reinforcers and&#13;
contingencies so that the individual as&#13;
well as the culture will survive. How&#13;
does he know that the environment&#13;
controls man? He really doesn't. He&#13;
assumes it because we have the&#13;
technology to redesign the environment.&#13;
We don't know how to&#13;
redesign man.&#13;
Freedom has been perpetuated&#13;
beyond its usefulness in part because&#13;
the literature of freedom made the&#13;
mistake of defining it in terms of states&#13;
of mind or feelings. It has failed to&#13;
acknowledge the necessicy of control&#13;
because it refuses to accept the fact&#13;
that man is indeed controlled by his&#13;
environment, that if freedom or&#13;
tyranny existed it was because of&#13;
negative contingencies and reinforcers&#13;
in the environment and not a so-called&#13;
will to be free.&#13;
If the goals of freedom are to be attained,&#13;
man must redesign his environment&#13;
and not waste time&#13;
redesigning himself. A person would&#13;
not be a racist if the aversive (environmental)&#13;
contingencies were'nt&#13;
such that they foster racism. Delete the&#13;
racist reinforcers and replace them&#13;
with positive ones and racism will be&#13;
nonexistent. Poof.&#13;
But who is to design the culture, who&#13;
is to be the controller? Skinner says&#13;
everyone is in a way a designer of a&#13;
culture, everyone participates in extending&#13;
the life of a given culture&#13;
simply by observing its customs. And&#13;
as far as who is to control is concerned,&#13;
no one really · controls because all&#13;
control is reciprocal, there is an interchange&#13;
between controller and&#13;
controlled. The contingencies of&#13;
reinforcement would be design~ to&#13;
maximize the positive and minimize&#13;
the negative aspects of life. It would not&#13;
lead ut uniformicy, rather it would&#13;
foster diversity by allowing men more&#13;
time to pursue their own interests.&#13;
As a behaviorist, Skinner attacks the&#13;
mentalistic outlook that most men have&#13;
toward themselves. Things like&#13;
opinions, feelings, attitudes are&#13;
illusions because they are produced by&#13;
the environment, they are products of&#13;
contingencies of reinforcement and&#13;
have nothing to do with behavior.&#13;
Implicit in the redesigning of the&#13;
culture is the need for a more precise&#13;
language, one in which metaphors are&#13;
no longer needed to perpetuate&#13;
ignorance, "state of mind" being a&#13;
metaphor hiding our ignorance of how&#13;
the mind works. ,&#13;
exist. Ideally, anyway. A properly&#13;
designed environment would end the&#13;
need for moralicy, free will, responsibility.&#13;
Here the argument is not too&#13;
clear, there is a circularity in the&#13;
reasoning and a heavy reliance on the&#13;
specific behavioral definitions of the&#13;
concepts. Beyond Freedom is written in a&#13;
simplified scyle, the reader has mere)y&#13;
to cope with a few behavioral terms in&#13;
order to grasp the gist of Skinner's&#13;
arguments. Each chapter is ended ~Ya&#13;
brief summary of the important points&#13;
elicited in it, it's quite helpf~ a~&#13;
clarifies much of what is contained in&#13;
the chapters.· My only complaint is&#13;
Skinner's somewhat fatuous use ~f&#13;
absurd examples to illus~ate. hIS&#13;
contentions and what I think is a&#13;
tendency to' overextend the definition of&#13;
control. He goes as far as to say that a&#13;
physicist is under the control of the&#13;
subatomic particles he is studying. H~&#13;
fails to distinguish between diffe~e~&#13;
levels of control, using the one wor t~&#13;
include everything from tyrannY t&#13;
subatomic particles. The argumen&#13;
loses some of its effectiveness. 1 t&#13;
It's an interesting book and, ~t ea5r&#13;
for me clarified the meaning ;e behavio;alism. Let's hear it for&#13;
positive reinforcers. . 't is an&#13;
Beyond Freedom &amp; Digru Y t be . t , f it canno important rea ise, . culari1Y&#13;
overlooked, nor can t~ ~inner's&#13;
inherent in many O definitions&#13;
arguments, the questionable eedol1l&#13;
of traditional concep~ such as fr cannot&#13;
and dignit)i, and fu~lly we which&#13;
ignore an inappropriate~ss tratiOOS&#13;
characterizes many of the musepts In&#13;
he draws to explain his co~ Diplty&#13;
many ways Beyond Freedom · aiJIS to&#13;
is old wine in a new ~g. It rem yjntage&#13;
be seen if it is bad wme. one&#13;
which comes to mind is 1&#13;
~· coUrldY&#13;
Beyond Freedom &amp; Digru Y th street.&#13;
of the The Book Mart, 622 - 59&#13;
Why is there a need for control? If&#13;
man doesn't control his culture, if he&#13;
doesn't design it, its development may&#13;
be random, if men don't scientificall:,&#13;
redesign the environment, cyranny can&#13;
enter into the scene, a dictator could&#13;
redesign it for his own benefit. If the&#13;
culture is scientifically designed it&#13;
would be impossible for a tyrant to ~ain&#13;
the ascendancy simply because the&#13;
reinforcers and contingencies&#13;
necessary for a tyranny would not Kenosha. r----------------------------------------------------&#13;
----------------------- RockOt\ .Monument Co. &#13;
:,;. , .... 'hiarrev~etw"'e-r'-'-f.""~...;l·W"'h-Y...-'",~ '''ee ~~ ~&#13;
before launc ng 10 0 my irst up the place bee . ms that Ed IS givi,&#13;
pert&gt;aP'1 shouldexplain exactly what this Yeah, this is ~U~~Offmancial difficulli:&#13;
"""'1~peS to acc?mplish .. Indeed, why .brOUgh. s IS the last lime, I'm&#13;
~ barreview? I liKe to drmk. What are 'Yhatehya going to do.&#13;
,"1e;15ofOn The Nod? To perpetuate the I m gon'!" ~ove to Pittsbur&#13;
1iI!~ 01 drinking by painstakingly seeking About this time a few of the e,&#13;
fiO' mostcongenialwatering places in the to pay their respects I ys opped in&#13;
"ll/le()therthantbatlstandfi~minmYbelief spirits had pi k d . n short order Ed's&#13;
..... drinkingis an end 10 istelf. A good and played ~~desa~P as he took out his harp&#13;
illal doesnot drink merely to get drunk, . goodies' She'll Bg acmedIey of oldies but&#13;
tiJlk~rbesavorseachsiPwhiledrinkingin M t: e omm' 'Round th&#13;
iO,ratmosphereof the bar and constantly thoun am Wben Sbe Comes ("and I wa bee&#13;
iii! a ere when she comes") AM' nna&#13;
".;otainlnga stronggripon .his.awareness. A ending up with a soulful r~nd7~0 :ra&#13;
, and _er worthhis.shot does 1I0t pass out in a was time for a little footstamp~. taps. It&#13;
"a:&#13;
w&#13;
N&#13;
-c&#13;
Q.&#13;
U'"&#13;
a:&#13;
tit aspassingout minimizes the pleasure he&#13;
mayattain; maximize pleasure and don't&#13;
staliller.&#13;
RwIX! one: Hardman's Hard Rock Cafe&#13;
Cast ln the most of the master himself, W.&#13;
C. Fields, Ed Hardman is founder and head&#13;
illrtender of Hardman's Hard Rock Cafe&#13;
formerly Hardman's Hospitality House:&#13;
1Alcaled on 60th Street and 25th Avenue&#13;
~dman's provides a gathering place fo;&#13;
ongbm hardcore drinkers and older&#13;
~ime friends of the bar. The Hard Rock i~&#13;
~ Drinker's Drinker's establishment; no&#13;
Ia ,jllSt booze (most of the time , a long&#13;
.;s;~a pool table and congeniality. On this&#13;
the lIghts were unlit presumably to&#13;
~e electricity, but th~ glow from Ed·&#13;
~ .... provided ample illumination. I had&#13;
lIOinted. my usual Bud only to be disapSchJitz'&#13;
no more Bud. What you got then&#13;
. and Pabst. At Hardman's pride is 'not&#13;
l virtue.&#13;
Soon Ed ran out of Schlitz and Pabst. 'We&#13;
offered to buy a six and bring it in for a drink&#13;
but Ed was averse to the suggestion. Nope,&#13;
I'm closing for good.&#13;
And that's the way it was, Hardman's again&#13;
closing for good.&#13;
·If the Hard Rock does reopen probably the&#13;
best deal in any bar is Ed's stock of Ripple.&#13;
For 85 cents one can imbibe an entire bottle of&#13;
the red scum at the bar. Indeed a substantial&#13;
savings. If Ed fails to reopen the Hard Rock,&#13;
Kenosha's most colorful bartender will be&#13;
without a job; we'll aU miss the stories, the&#13;
Temperance speeches, and most of all, old&#13;
Ed's nose.&#13;
"fIere's to ya. .&#13;
. In its glory days, the Hard Rock provided&#13;
hot lunches, a fair stock of bard liquor aod&#13;
plenty of beer. It was a time when longbairs&#13;
packed the bar till closing. Those times are&#13;
gone. The single remaining vestige of a&#13;
bygone era is the jukebox, a fine juke&#13;
fea turing Joplin, the Doors, Stones, the&#13;
Airplane and Qqicksilver to nake a few of the&#13;
artists. As Ed says, when you see your face 00&#13;
the barroom floor, it's time to quit.&#13;
WithPabst] ha' •&#13;
,.. ci hi 10 nd I hstened as Ed retold a&#13;
lis bead"many adventures, ending l1P with&#13;
10 his hands repeating the plaint;&#13;
ALADDI.N&#13;
,,~ERSHOP&#13;
Racial .&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
For The Record&#13;
;}~:S1'H~sl".LAHlbC;.",,!&#13;
TilE I'INI;1-: TlIl:&gt;:';S l' ~'l'!'l .•,· •&#13;
... Downtown Kenosha&#13;
1700 Sheridan 1l4.&#13;
KENOStfA. WISCONSIN&#13;
NOveID..... ', 1111 EWSCOPE PaCt $&#13;
come to Andrea's in kenosha&#13;
for the finest in pipes&#13;
and tobacco&#13;
-ce l l iu&#13;
-preben holm&#13;
-ch ar ara n-corno&#13;
-savinelli-gbd",and many other&#13;
+experr counseling ervlce+&#13;
Visit our gift shop ...&#13;
Weathervane Coffee Shop&#13;
Hallmark card shop ...&#13;
~~ TOBACCONIST ~HC£ t9JJ&#13;
2,4Q1-60" ST ICEKO$IlA.WIse 53140&#13;
Jim Koloen, Barrev1ewer .&#13;
oy before launching into my first&#13;
per~P5 1 should explain exactly what this&#13;
:,rrevre~ s to accomplish. Indeed, why 1&#13;
.~~mn ba:eview? I like to drink. What are&#13;
fTlle 8&#13;
1 of on The Nod? To perpetuate the&#13;
die g~ sf drinking by painstakingly seeking&#13;
fine ar O ost congenial watering places in the&#13;
-------~·· -- !~&#13;
why __ Jll_eL wny · me.&#13;
- It seem th -&#13;
~ . f,. ~ Up the place because of f' s ~t Ed 1s givil..lfs&#13;
Yeah, this is it this i;~:t1&#13;
al di~ficulties.&#13;
.hrough. ' ast time, I'm&#13;
'Yhatchya going to do.&#13;
I m gonna move to Pittsburgh About this time a few of th b - to pay their res e oys dropped in&#13;
~t ~:::er than that I stand firm in my belief&#13;
area. drinking is an end in istelf. A good ,&#13;
~t does not drink merely to get drunk,&#13;
;ink~er he savors each sip while drinking in&#13;
~.ra unosphere of the bar and constantly&#13;
:lle, ataininga strong~ip_on_!rls_~~areness. A&#13;
::er worth ~i~_sh~t does !)Ot pass out in a&#13;
spirits had pickegects. I~ short order Ed's&#13;
and played and sa~P !s me took out h~ harp ' goodies· She'll B g e~ey of oldies but&#13;
M ta: e Comm' 'Round th&#13;
tar as passing out minimizes the pleasure he&#13;
may attain; maximize pleasure and don't&#13;
stagger.&#13;
Round one: Hardman's Hard Rock Cafe&#13;
Ca_st in the most of the master himself, W.&#13;
C Fields, Ed Hardman is founder and head&#13;
iartender of Hardman's Hard Rock Cafe,&#13;
formerly Hardman's Hospitality House.&#13;
L-Ocated on 60th Street and 25th Avenue&#13;
Hardm~n's provides a gathering place fo;&#13;
long~air hardcore drinkers and older,&#13;
(ongtrme friends of the bar. The Hard Rock is&#13;
:rit~er's Drinker's establishment; no&#13;
la s, Just booze (most of the time , a long&#13;
. ~~ a poo) table and congeniality. On this&#13;
the hghts were unlit, presumably to&#13;
~serve electricity, but the glow from Ed- ~:r"ose provided ample illumination. I had&#13;
l',ll t ed my usual Bud only to be disapSc~~;&#13;
no more Bud. What you got then . z 8nd Pabst. At Hardman's pride is not , virtue.&#13;
With Pabst· few of hi m hand I listened as Ed retold a his hea s_ ma~y adventures, ending up with&#13;
d m his hands repeating the plaint;&#13;
oun m When She Comes ("and I e the~e when she comes'!), Ave M w~nna be&#13;
ending up with a soulful rendition ana, and&#13;
was time for a little footstamping.of taps. It&#13;
c(&#13;
a:&#13;
w&#13;
N&#13;
c(&#13;
a.&#13;
~&#13;
u&#13;
-&#13;
a:&#13;
Soon Ed ran out of Schlitz and Pabst. We&#13;
offered to buy a six and bring it in for a drink&#13;
but Ed was averse to the suggestion. Nope,&#13;
I'm _closing for good.&#13;
And that's the way it was, Hardman's again&#13;
closing for good.&#13;
If the Hard Rock does reopen probably the&#13;
best deal in any bar is Ed's stock of Ripple.&#13;
For 85 cents one can imbibe an entire bottle of&#13;
the red scum at the bar. Indeed a substantial&#13;
savings. If Ed fails to reopen the Hard Rock,&#13;
Kenosha's most colorful bartender will be&#13;
without a job; we'll all miss the stories, the&#13;
Temperance speeches, and most of all, old&#13;
Ed's nose.&#13;
"'ilere's to ya.&#13;
In its glory days, the Hard Rock provided&#13;
hot lunches a fair stock of hard liquor and&#13;
plenty of b~r. It was a time when longhairs packed the bar till closing. Th!&gt;se times are&#13;
gone. The single re':°aining vesti_ge ~f a&#13;
bygone era is the Jukebox, a fme Juke&#13;
featuring Joplin, the Doors, Stones, the&#13;
Airplane and Qqicksilver to nake a few of the&#13;
artists. As Ed says, when you see your face on&#13;
.the barroom floor, it's time to quit.&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
For The Record&#13;
~~:.,H:5•£-LA.--'• T II p; F I 1' p; Is T 11 I :,.: ' : !' I ' '1 I . ~ I l&#13;
.__.. ____ DoU'ntoU'n Kenosha----•&#13;
:]~11 Uffe'I Supper Cfut&#13;
1700 Sheridon llq.&#13;
l(ENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Novembers, l971 r s&#13;
come to Andrea 's ,n en h&#13;
for the fin st 1n pip s&#13;
and to&#13;
-pre&#13;
haratan -&#13;
-savinelli-gbd ... and man&#13;
+expert coun eling er&#13;
Visit our gift shop ...&#13;
omo '&#13;
th · r&#13;
ice+&#13;
W eathert ane of/ hop&#13;
Hallmark card "hop ...&#13;
KEN.OSHA. WISC 53140 &#13;
Page6 IIOEWSCOPE I';ovember8.1971&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
~&#13;
-----'-,~&#13;
li&#13;
3322 SHERIDI&gt;N ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
310 Green Bay Road. Kenosha. Wisconsin rpu'mMp~"~'&#13;
f6J $ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVEl&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
lOW - 20W - JOW soc per quart&#13;
AFSCON.O. lOW-20W-JOW 34c per quart&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE 11.39 per gallon&#13;
l20Z_ HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID .t'c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on 011 Filter ••&#13;
Air Filters. Tune Up Kits. Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax .&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
I&#13;
9a.m.-4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
. &lt;5 a glass •&#13;
-e: and&#13;
U a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Thelrat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND SO&#13;
.open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Available tor Fraternity or sorority parties&#13;
Elections o n Nov. 17,&#13;
(Continued from Page I)&#13;
Office or Student Activities.&#13;
According to current&#13;
President Tim Eaker, the newly&#13;
elected Senate will have its full&#13;
budget now that the state&#13;
budget is signed. The funds for&#13;
Sjudent Government come from&#13;
the Student Organizations fund,&#13;
part of theSegregated Fee. This&#13;
money was frozen in the state&#13;
treasury by University of&#13;
Wisconsin President John&#13;
Weaver when little hope for an&#13;
early settlement of the state&#13;
budget crises was seen July l.&#13;
Since then, the current&#13;
government was operating on&#13;
approximately $400 left over&#13;
from the previous Student&#13;
Government which folded three&#13;
years ago. Mr. Eaker went on to&#13;
say that the new goverrunent&#13;
will find the going a bit-rough.&#13;
"Because of many unforseen&#13;
problems. we were .not ~ble to&#13;
organize our operation like we&#13;
wanted. I hope the new Officers&#13;
and Senators are more&#13;
dedicated and put up a strong&#13;
united fight rather than fighting&#13;
among themselves "&#13;
The outlook is b··&#13;
future. and we allT1~htf?, I!l,&#13;
tirnistic, but to borro""'alII'I&gt;&#13;
from the United Fw a Phrase&#13;
paign: IF YOU DON';d CallI.&#13;
IT WON'T GET DONE. !Xl 1'1,&#13;
The Election C&#13;
reminds stUdents th ~lDlDitt"&#13;
be unable to vote ~nIthey'OilI&#13;
present their brown f ess they&#13;
the polling place.T: card at&#13;
required to be still card ~&#13;
student's possessionllI I!l,&#13;
students were notifiedor .and&#13;
registration. this at&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
6S4-9968&#13;
~ave&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
-Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#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;
'Come visit our pizza&#13;
kitchens or have&#13;
some delivered'&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Opeq 5-12&#13;
except sunday&#13;
4615-7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
654-7ll1&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
are YOU offended&#13;
by nudity?&#13;
The Adult Bookstore&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine&#13;
if not, stop in.&#13;
SPECIAL 15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
Complete selection . ~~&#13;
of contemporary 'adult Olerchatl&#13;
Page6 NEWSCOPE November 8, 1971&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin 'PU,. m···pc ... ,y c; ••&#13;
f8J $ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
ANO SAVEi&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
l0W- 20W - 30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12oz. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
S1 .39 per gallon&#13;
41c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on OIi FIiters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday I 9a.m.-4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
· 0 a glass •&#13;
-c:: and&#13;
U a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
fThe Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND 50&#13;
_ open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Av ail a bl e for f r a t ernity or sorority p arti e s&#13;
Elections on Nov. 17&#13;
( Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Office or Student Activities.&#13;
According to current&#13;
President Tim Eaker, the newly&#13;
elected Senate will have its full&#13;
budget now that the state&#13;
budget is signed. The funds for&#13;
SJudent Government come from&#13;
the Student Organizations fund,&#13;
part of theSegregated Fee. This&#13;
money was frozen in the state&#13;
treasury by University of&#13;
Wisconsin President John&#13;
Weaver when little hope for an&#13;
early settlement of the state&#13;
budget crises was seen July 1.&#13;
Since then, the current&#13;
government was operating on&#13;
approximately $400 left over&#13;
from the previous Student&#13;
Government which folded three&#13;
years ago. Mr. Eaker went on to&#13;
say that the new government&#13;
will find the going a bit rough.&#13;
"Because of many unforseen&#13;
problems, we were _not ~ble to&#13;
organize our operation hke we&#13;
wanted. I hope the new Officers&#13;
and Senators are more&#13;
dedicated and put up a strong&#13;
united fight rather than fighting&#13;
among themselves."&#13;
The outlook is b .&#13;
f~t~re_ and we al{~ght f?r the&#13;
bm1sbc, but to borro~rna1n O!)-&#13;
fr~m the United Fun a Phrase&#13;
pa1gn: IF YOU DON"r d Cani.&#13;
IT WON'T GET DONE;_Do rr,&#13;
The Election C&#13;
reminds students thaf:ittee&#13;
be unable to vote u I Y Will&#13;
present their brown£° ess they&#13;
the polling place. Thi~ card at . d s card . reqwre to be still . is&#13;
student's possessionin the&#13;
students were notified f _and&#13;
reg is tra tion. 0 this at&#13;
Wtd--.,&#13;
/0:~0A.f\l&#13;
'&#13;
BEER&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE Join With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
~ave&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKE:E&#13;
are you offended&#13;
·by nudity?&#13;
ii not, stop in.&#13;
fCome visit our pizza&#13;
kitchens or have&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5-12&#13;
except sunday&#13;
4615-7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
The Adult Bookstore&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine&#13;
SPECIAL· 15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
Complete selection &#13;
Hockey Club Enters 2nd Season--:;:;:Ne=Vember~8'~1971_~l\E~WSC.2!:!:OPE~~P.£.!....ge1&#13;
Jim Casper. Sports Editor "fantastic slap shot .&#13;
'~'s bockey club, which is supported help the overall de! IS a ,~ood skater, and should&#13;
parkSI the players themselves, Will soon Another. ense,&#13;
",,".UY b~d season, hoping to improve on last the ahility o;~:~~n~ factor for the team will he&#13;
"" I~sec&lt;&gt;ark which was not a bad record Tilly and Bill W t rl hne (Mark Conrad, Dave&#13;
tJI~s4-9-3~ wa~the team's first year of corn- . The opene e~ er ~nd) to play strong defense&#13;
pering 1 Marquette Uni~er~[t t e hockey club is against&#13;
~non newpersonnel should strengthen the Park in Milwaukei' on Nove~ber I.4that Wilson&#13;
some tbe teani considerably this year. Tickets to the a . Game time IS 6:15 p.m.&#13;
,ppk of baS new depth at left wing and right all twelve ho;e mgeare $1, and season tickets for&#13;
".team I th . ames cost $5 tbat sbould he p e scoring. . While this will he the' ...&#13;
llCaDdR'ck Roskos switched from center to new season the cJ b first official game of the&#13;
,!lOl, d sbould help both offensively and game with 'White u t has played an exhibition li"'" an W h ks wa er, and they defeated the&#13;
'v~Y ar aw 6-5 desptts the ab f ~cording to a team member, Roskos has a players.' sence 0 three key&#13;
fop Coaches Featured at Wrestling Clinic&#13;
top coaches and two all- team and last year as a&#13;
~n wrestlers will he sophomore at South Dakota&#13;
jII!tored in the second annual State placed second in the&#13;
II rsity of Wisconsin- NCAA College Division&#13;
:00 wrestling clinic to be National Tournament. Smith is&#13;
11II saturday, Nov. 13,?t currently wrestling for the&#13;
fl&lt;IIlper High School m Army with an eye on the&#13;
Olympics and was a two-time&#13;
~;rkside Coach Jim NCAA placewinner and all-&#13;
(ldI, Tremper mentor Gerry American pick at South Dakota&#13;
IIIJf and Sioux Falls (S.D.) State.&#13;
,oil coacb Dan Koch will lead Eight of the most vital areas&#13;
• instructionin the day-long in wrestling - escapes and&#13;
• whichlast year attracted reversals, takedowns, break-&#13;
_' than 600 coaches and. downs and rides, international&#13;
IIIletes. Aiding them will be style as applicable to college&#13;
111 of tbe nation's top 'and high school, takedown&#13;
1WSllers Stan Opp and Jerry 'counters, pin combinations, leg&#13;
lIlkb. ' wrestling, and international&#13;
(IIIllast year was named -'h'Style of wrestling ,~. will he&#13;
10tie Coacb of the Year" hy covered. Each dinic par-&#13;
.leur Wrestling News fQr j tiCipant will be able to spend an&#13;
IiIgiog the Rangers to a hig~' . hour each on four areas of his&#13;
.Iiooal placing in his first choice, with approximately half&#13;
IISlIl. Barr who has coached the hour devoted to instruction&#13;
IrVeral state' placewinners arid'&#13;
~t bis 1970-71 team to the&#13;
IIIIlher tworating in the state,&#13;
.. an outstanding wrestler 'at&#13;
I&amp;J·LaCrossewhile Dan Koch&#13;
... built a strong reputation in&#13;
IftSlIing-mindedSouth Dakota&#13;
III! bas coached Opp to&#13;
1IoliolaI AAU and National&#13;
lrestling Federation cham-&#13;
","""p titles.&#13;
ow was an alternate for the&#13;
1171Pan American Games&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
ON sour .&#13;
H SH&amp;RIDA N ROAD IN KENOSHA 654-0411&#13;
and half the opportunity for&#13;
application.&#13;
Four different sessions will be&#13;
.held at 10 and 11 in the morning&#13;
and the second tour will go at&#13;
1:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Following the afternoon&#13;
sessions will be a half-hour of&#13;
individual help from the clinic&#13;
staff and an intra-squad dual&#13;
meet with UW-Parkside&#13;
wrestlers participating from 4&#13;
to 5 p.m.&#13;
Koch said the clinic is sanctioned&#13;
by the W.I.A.A. and the&#13;
W.I.S.A. A $.75 registration fee&#13;
will be charged to defray expenses;&#13;
this can be paid at the&#13;
door during the 9 a.m.&#13;
registration or in advance at the&#13;
Parkside athletic office. Participants&#13;
are urged to bring&#13;
locks and towels. Lunches will&#13;
be available in the school&#13;
cafeteria during the noon break.&#13;
t!!j~-:'!!it:-~#?~:;&#13;
r&#13;
i The lineal&#13;
~making ;,. (~S ~ i~eason i~ ". H ,~ ~r:IS ,ere ·.. rn&#13;
~/:Ind .1 " Ilf ~&#13;
,.~ n,r,tMnl fir ~1 ib,.imrs Ir ex,erts ~&#13;
{~';It SPECIAL PRICES. r~&#13;
~i ,~I 11 l••~ ~-J 01 ~il I'i"&#13;
II'P ~t&#13;
I~I "'r&#13;
~\ ~&#13;
~. r!, ,~, i~&#13;
~\ '~! ,f" You can make wines like 1.':;&#13;
j" those you buy at a traction I!&#13;
l~~ of the cost the year aroun.d. ~~~&#13;
~. It's simple, fun and fascm- i;;!:&#13;
il!~ating. Send for FREE IlIus· !i.&#13;
~itrated catalog of wmemak- ';ii&#13;
.~ ing equipment and supplies. I,&#13;
il"&#13;
".&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
1,1" l;ROlJ:'\OO8FF~ cRlllf.O COU'TR'&#13;
Of\: ~RF'CII CRlI~T IIAM r, CIU:''''SF O~&#13;
aRFAO ORFSSfn WIIOI f Wl-iFATHlI,&#13;
WITH CRISP WITH I En-lief&#13;
LFITlICF. A'O OUR To""ro "sO&#13;
SPECiAl (;,..\lICE "", 0' 'AISI&#13;
80c .80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPI F nfC')"fR ot' RlIRt.fH: Cliff. I'&#13;
BACO, I t-:n'lIlT TOM,\TO '\~D \4 ,&#13;
OS'..\lc;F t l' TO,\ST 90c&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
"IORTH 3311 SHEf!1 AN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN RO.-.O&#13;
Hot Dog&#13;
and Soft Drink&#13;
~uthor. Uo.rrlson ~allsbur~&#13;
15 comm9 to &amp; p¢o.k&#13;
at Parksld~ on Nou 18.&#13;
Wt ar¢&#13;
sao/a. c.-bon&#13;
carr~tn~ a Olea&#13;
of h\~ books,&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
The Midnight Cowboys have again emerged as the leaders in the&#13;
Racine 1M football league, but the season is still young and Molly's&#13;
Men are in hot pursuit.&#13;
The teams will clash Nov. 13in the shodowngame.&#13;
The bowling league has started play on Wednesdays at tbe J &amp; W&#13;
lanes, but additional bowlers are still needed. All interesested. bowlers&#13;
are urged to come tomthe lanes at 4:30 p.m. Wednesdays WIth $1.30&#13;
bowling fee all that is needed.&#13;
Stop and saa us \&#13;
UNlVt~S\T~Q\)~~S10Rt&#13;
,..--------vv:'-..... e&#13;
ed&#13;
v n&#13;
ee&#13;
r •&#13;
y d&#13;
a&#13;
y&#13;
Special!&#13;
Specia I!&#13;
Hot Dog Day&#13;
at&#13;
Albee'&#13;
Also try Albee's ,leW&#13;
Bar-B-Que sa'ldwich&#13;
26~&#13;
41(&#13;
on 22nd avenue&#13;
at 45 th street in&#13;
Albeets&#13;
Drive I~&#13;
kenosha&#13;
~ockey Club Enters 2nd Season&#13;
Jim Casper, Sports Editor . _b\ hockey club, which is supported&#13;
parks1d~ the players themselves, will soon&#13;
iaUY ~d season, hoping to improve on last&#13;
its seco ark which was not a bad record&#13;
/s 4-_9-3 ri wa; the team's first year of com- ·idering&#13;
· ~on. w personnel should strengthen the&#13;
me ~~e team considerably this year.&#13;
k of m has new depth at left wing and right&#13;
'[11e ;::hat should help the scoring. .&#13;
an Rick Roskos switched from center to&#13;
.\ISO.and should help both offensively and&#13;
·ively. b R k h dl·ng to a team mem er, os os as a Accor&#13;
"fantastic slap shot is a help the overall defense .~ood skater, and should&#13;
Another importa t f · the ability of the thi~d rtor for the team will be&#13;
Tilly and Bill Westerlun~~~o(~ark Conrad, Dave&#13;
The opener for the p ay stron~ defense. Marquette Univ · hockey club 1s against&#13;
Park in Milwa:1ty o~ Noven:iber 1_4th at Wilson&#13;
Tickets to the ee. ame hme 1s 6:15 p.m.&#13;
all twelve homgeamge are $1, and season tickets for . . . ames cost $5.&#13;
While this will be the first official game of the new season the club h 1&#13;
game with 'wh·t t as payed an exhibition I ewa er, and they defeated the&#13;
Wlarhawks 6-5, despite the absence of three key&#13;
payers.&#13;
Top Coaches Featured at Wrestling Clinic&#13;
top coaches and two all- team and last year as a&#13;
~n wrestlers will be sophomore at South Dakota&#13;
ed in the second annual State placed second in the&#13;
.:rsity o! W_is~onsin- NCAA College Division&#13;
:tside wrestling clime to be National Tournament. Smith is&#13;
:~ Saturday, Nov. 13, ~t currently wrestling for the&#13;
;:-emper High School m Army with an eye on the&#13;
Olympics and was a two-time&#13;
~:~rkside Coach Jim NCAA placewinner and all-&#13;
.xh. Tremper mentor Gerry American pick at South Dakota&#13;
rr and Sioux Falls (S.D.) State.&#13;
,ell coach Dan Koch will lead Eight of the most vital areas&#13;
U1Struction in the day-long in wrestling - escapes and&#13;
which last year attracted reversals, takedowns, break-&#13;
. than 600 coaches and downs and rides, international&#13;
l!llletes. Aiding them will be _style as applicable to college&#13;
of the nation's top and high school, takedown&#13;
mstlers, Stan Opp and Jerry · counters, pin combinations, leg&#13;
th. wre&amp;tling, and international&#13;
gocb last year was named . --style of wrestling - will be&#13;
Rrdie Coach of the Year" by covered. Each clinic par-&#13;
,1mateur Wrestling News for , tJcipant will be able to spend an&#13;
!ringing the Rangers to a high • ·. hour each on four areas of his&#13;
!IIOooal placing in his first choice, with approximately half&#13;
ieason. Barr, who has coached the hour devoted to instruction&#13;
era! state placewinners and&#13;
lrooght his 1970-71 team to the&#13;
and half the opportunity for&#13;
application.&#13;
Four different sessions will be&#13;
held at 10 and 11 in the morning&#13;
and the second £.our will go at&#13;
1:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Following the afternoon&#13;
sessions will be a half-hour of&#13;
individual help from the clinic&#13;
staff and an intra-squad dual&#13;
meet with UW-Parkside&#13;
wrestlers participating from 4&#13;
to 5 p.m.&#13;
Koch said the clinic is sanctioned&#13;
by the W.I.A.A. and the&#13;
W.I.S.A. A $.75 registration fee&#13;
will be charged to defray expenses;&#13;
this can be paid at the&#13;
door during the 9 a .m.&#13;
registration or in advance at the&#13;
Parkside athletic office. Participants&#13;
are urged to bring&#13;
locks and towels. Lunches will&#13;
be available in the school&#13;
cafeteria during the noon break.&#13;
. her two rating in the state,&#13;
an outstanding wrestler at&#13;
'-Lacrosse while Dan Koch&#13;
built a strong reputation in&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
mstling-minded South Dakota&#13;
i!ld has coached Opp to&#13;
National AAU and National&#13;
restling Federation chami*lll'ihip&#13;
titles.&#13;
Opp was an alternate for the&#13;
r.1 Pan American Games&#13;
The Midnight Cowboys have again emerged as the leaders in the&#13;
Racine IM football league, but the season is still young and Mully's&#13;
Men are in hot pursuit.&#13;
The teams will clash Nov. 13 in the shodown game.&#13;
The bowling league has started play on Wednesdays at the J &amp; W&#13;
lanes, but additional bowlers are still needed. All interesested bowlers&#13;
are urged to come tomthe lanes at 4:30 p.m. Wednesdays with 1.30&#13;
bowling fee all that is needed.&#13;
-~---~ .. ~-, --·- .,.t::i ;Fj'J+-=-"-;.::-_ ~'f?.:=;:_ r :· -&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
r! The Wine·. ; lmaking ~&#13;
Swing at ~ Season r~&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
ON SOUT . H SHS.RIDAN ROAD IN KENOSHA 654-0411&#13;
~· . H :~ ~~: 1s are ... !,.&#13;
~;:: and we' va got t~ ~~ nerything for · l 'i beginners or axperts ~&#13;
f\ If SPECIAL PRICH. ti;&#13;
if.; ,I I f,&#13;
'ti&#13;
·i~ ~"i! l •• ~&#13;
' 1! .&#13;
t,~I .n, l~&#13;
~l i;,,&#13;
·t .r-,&#13;
,t,&#13;
J-1.&#13;
·~~&#13;
~·-&#13;
~ _ij:&#13;
j;t l&#13;
1'.-0vernber , 19il&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL ,t, l'.R( I&#13;
0 .. I-RF. Cl · BRF, 0 ORF . H)&#13;
WITII RI.I'&#13;
l.F..TTUCF.. ·o Ol&#13;
PF.Cl, I II F.&#13;
80&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
ORTH 33 11 SH E~I A ROAO SOUTH 7 SHE 10&#13;
~uthor. U11rr1son Sal,s b11r~&#13;
IS COmll\s to spaak&#13;
at Park$1da on Nau 18.&#13;
Wt ara.&#13;
saJaci,on&#13;
Stop ,n&#13;
c.arr~,n~ a n,ca&#13;
of h,s books.&#13;
and sa.a us\&#13;
OAO&#13;
.------------w:---...&#13;
Special!&#13;
Special!&#13;
Hot o&#13;
t&#13;
Alb&#13;
ed&#13;
V n&#13;
ee&#13;
r&#13;
yd&#13;
a&#13;
7 y&#13;
and&#13;
Also try Albee's new&#13;
Bar-B-Que sandwich 41(&#13;
0 )'&#13;
rink&#13;
on 22nd avenue&#13;
Al beets&#13;
Drive I~&#13;
at 45 th street in kenosha &#13;
LIKES THESE BEST!_&#13;
I'&gt;EWSCOPE November 8. 1971&#13;
wednesday•&#13;
~&#13;
10 oz. BEER IS¢&#13;
PITCHER 7S¢&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
on wood road just south oj parkside&#13;
It'sthe&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke. Tfade miI,k@&#13;
•... =-----L__ ---.:=..~~~&#13;
and&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
-&#13;
I&#13;
~tluutb~&#13;
~ 't"1eJ ll!ttL6t' ~&#13;
~ Wf .£Hti t"1eJ e-Mt ~ ~&#13;
en&#13;
L ~&#13;
• ~&#13;
c:i ...Q&#13;
Eo al H&#13;
~o ..&#13;
~ :i o ~ u&#13;
&lt;: I 0&#13;
- 0 -e Lll ~&#13;
&gt;"'0 ~ ..&#13;
..... -:. -{&#13;
~1lot ...... .,.. '.&#13;
~ Vl c(&#13;
-I;j "'6 +&#13;
RC~&#13;
rtcordi_i&#13;
si..rs&#13;
-.s&#13;
.. - .&#13;
VI "Q .E Cb&#13;
CJ c$&#13;
~~&#13;
.... --&#13;
~ ::i c .; ·2"&#13;
~c&#13;
' 3et -{.:.&#13;
&lt;J&#13;
~&#13;
.. " j ~&#13;
~~l&#13;
&lt;r&#13;
.. ~ -4: ...:.( .. ~&#13;
• ~ 3&#13;
d. Cl...&#13;
Gino's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
Com plete Line Menswear&#13;
2212-60th street in kenosha&#13;
.... 11&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• IllS • S'AGH(l.T1 • cMfCllN&#13;
GNOCCHI • u,VIOLI • LA SA&amp;'"&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANlWlCHIS&#13;
CARlY -OUTS- • DfLIYIII&#13;
"YOU liNG 'III ,.,"'"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
it&#13;
JOERN&#13;
she bought at ... PHONE&#13;
654-3559&#13;
.'" db Wi.M,Ili' PUp•&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS FOR SALE - 1964 Ford stencn&#13;
wagon less enatne; interior and&#13;
transmissiOn (automatic) in good&#13;
condition. $SO. 878-1892.&#13;
1068 Toranado. pwr. brakes, pwr.&#13;
steering, pwr. seats, faetirv air&#13;
$2,000 or best offer. Immaculat&#13;
condition. Call Jim 654-0353.&#13;
1969 Opet Rally, new wide ovals,&#13;
AM.FM. 13.000 miles: clli!l 633-0471.&#13;
Goodyear Polyglass Tires 2.60x15.&#13;
ArIsen Spring Mags. 658-3659 after 6.&#13;
\970 TriumPh GT6 - BritiSh Racing&#13;
green A-1 condition, '\.800 miles. two&#13;
new radial tires. Best offer over&#13;
S2,400.OO,inquire apt: 2\0, Parkside&#13;
Village, Building one.&#13;
1966 Mustang 289 - 2 bbl. 3 speed on&#13;
floor. Must sell. Call Marty at 658.&#13;
30~ after 5:JO. Good condition.&#13;
1969 Charger RT ".40 Magnum ....&#13;
SPeed, extras- 5110 . 23rd Ave. 6.58.&#13;
3659 after 6:00 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS'&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1967 Ford Mustang _ 6 cyl,&#13;
Automatic, 2 door hardtop. Call 639.&#13;
.\7" after 6:00 p.m.&#13;
ELECTRIC GUITAR- 6st. Gibson&#13;
1 yr old, Lectrolab amplifier 120&#13;
volts, both in excet. condo Sunbeam&#13;
elec. razor 727 fastback. 6504-0050. 1965 Volkswagen 23,000 mi. on&#13;
rebuilt engine. reupholstered and&#13;
palntl!'d last year. Maroon with black&#13;
Interior, new exhaust system. radio.&#13;
rear speaker, 23-27 mpg. ASking&#13;
1500. Call 694·5138 after 4 p.m.&#13;
(4) MAGS for AMC product. S60. Call .&#13;
654-1106. ask for Bob.&#13;
FOR SALE - Bar, all formica. $75,&#13;
great Shape. Call Kellv 658-3070.&#13;
FREE KITTENS - save a kitten&#13;
from the gas chamber; mutttcolored.&#13;
Call 878-1892.&#13;
DrummerwanfstoWOl' k"'~'''- ed (Ill Kit&lt;&#13;
equipment - experitAC •&#13;
878-1892. ___&#13;
FIfYl.11 l1li"&#13;
HELP WANt'ED: or- GOIII&#13;
tenders and w'~~~J715orgirlS,&#13;
top wages.&#13;
3805.&#13;
PANASON tc 8 track cal' tape and&#13;
speakers $65 or best offer. Call Bob&#13;
639-2677.&#13;
Christmas gifts for th,e entire family&#13;
from Avon. Something for everyone.&#13;
Wrapped for Christmas FREE.&#13;
Phone 6504-2237.No obligation.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Ride wanted to Chicago any&#13;
weekend. Call 73-3836. --P-E-R-SO~N::-:~ ---- ____ :::;:::;;, olffi'&#13;
REGN~NCYI 10"&#13;
PROBLEM P vice. Free rJIo'&#13;
Consultation ser Iternatlves&#13;
counseling. ~I~:.-.&#13;
srdered. Call "&#13;
.~&#13;
~\&#13;
~oJ.\\ ~\(&#13;
~~ ~ .J&#13;
,,;:.\.,0 r-.'O~ ,I!'f&#13;
+~t\'V'~&#13;
WELCOME . COME BROWSE _&#13;
"hand in heart" gift ShOp, 5\7 - 16&#13;
street Racine. Open 12 to 5 p.m.&#13;
Tuesdays thru Sundays. Fridays til&#13;
9:00p.m .. Beautiful handmade items&#13;
sold - creative work also welcomed.&#13;
WANTED: bartender Who can make&#13;
$59 per 'h barrel of beef at current&#13;
St. Act. Bldg. costs and prices.&#13;
.'MosQte Bass Guitar. Double pickup.&#13;
hOllow·body With plush.lined&#13;
hard Shell case. Good condition. Was&#13;
$.4SO new. will sell for $100. Contact&#13;
Larry. Parkside Village, Atp. 109,&#13;
552·8347, or leave message at&#13;
Newsco:pe office.&#13;
I need a ride to the Sunnyside area of&#13;
Kenosha from Hwy. A. area. Any or&#13;
all days IY.onday - Fri·. Must be at&#13;
'M)rk 8:00a.m. Willing to helpon gas&#13;
money. Call 552·8960 and ask for&#13;
Deborah.&#13;
NEEDED - Poetry. short stories,&#13;
drama for "Indications" magaZine.&#13;
Deadline Nov. '1, 1971. Send to:&#13;
Newscope, Hwy A and Eood Rd.,&#13;
KenOSha. Wis.&#13;
FO~ SALE Dog - Wire.flairecl fox&#13;
terner. AKC reg., 6 wks old. call 553.&#13;
2329. or 652,3565.&#13;
Pagel! !1.EWSCOPE Novembers, 1971&#13;
I Wednesday •&#13;
10 oz. BEER 15¢ ~ PITCHER 75¢&#13;
PIZZA HUT ..&#13;
-·&#13;
on wood road just south of parkside I&#13;
.&#13;
~ ~ ~&#13;
~ I tlw OJlU6t I ~&#13;
~ ~-o-tv tl,e; ~ tw&lt;Y lM,UU;&#13;
in Gino's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
Complete Line Menswear&#13;
2212-60th s~reet_ in kenosha&#13;
LIKES THESE BEST!_&#13;
and&#13;
bought&#13;
JOERN&#13;
she&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1068 Toronado, pwr. brakes, pwr.&#13;
steering, pwr. seats, factiry air&#13;
S2,000 or best offer. lmmaculat&#13;
condition. Call Jim 65"-0353.&#13;
Goodyear Polyglass Tires 2-60x15,&#13;
Ansen Spring Mags, 658-3659 after 6.&#13;
1966 Mustang 289 - 2 bbl. 3 speed on&#13;
floor. Must sell. Call Marty at 658-&#13;
3023 after 5:30. Good condition.&#13;
1969 Charger RT «o Magnum, 4.&#13;
speed, extras- 5110 - 23rd Ave. 658-&#13;
3659 after 6:00 p.m.&#13;
1967 Ford Mustang - 6 cyl,&#13;
Automatic, 2 door hardtop, Call 639-&#13;
17n after 6:00 p.m.&#13;
1965 Volkswagen . 23,000 mi. on&#13;
rebuilt engine, reupholstered and&#13;
painted last year. Maroon with black&#13;
interior, new exhaust system, radiorear&#13;
speaker, 23-27 mpg. Asking&#13;
$500. Call 694-5138 after 4 p.m .&#13;
it at .. PHONE&#13;
654-3559&#13;
bl~ ',~ ,k \!RIii , . . K!NO\HA Wl~CQNSIN&#13;
NElNSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FOR SALE - 1964 Ford sta.tion&#13;
wagon less engine; interior and&#13;
transmission (automatic) in good&#13;
condition. $SO. 878-1892.&#13;
1969 Opel Rally, new Wide ovals,&#13;
AM-FM, 13,000 miles: cllll 633-0471.&#13;
1970 Triumph GT6 - British Racing&#13;
green A-1 condition, 1,800 miles, two&#13;
new radial tires. Best offer over&#13;
$2,400.00, inquire apt: 210, Parkside&#13;
Village, Building one.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS·&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
ELECTRIC GUITAR - 6st. Gibson&#13;
1 yr old, Lectrolab amplifier 120&#13;
volts, both in excel. cond. Sunbeam&#13;
etec. razor 727 fastback. 65"-0050.&#13;
(4) MAGS for AMC product. $60. Call -&#13;
654-1106, ask for Bob.&#13;
FOR SALE - Bar, all formica, $75,&#13;
great Shape. Call Ketlv 658-3070.&#13;
FREE KITTENS - save a kitten&#13;
from the gas chamber ; multicolored.&#13;
Call 878-1892.&#13;
Christmas gifts for the entire family&#13;
from Avon. Something for everyone.&#13;
Wrapped for Christmas FREE.&#13;
Phone 65"-2237. No obligation.&#13;
WELCOME - COME BROWSE -&#13;
"hand in heart" gift Shop, 517 · 16&#13;
street Racine. Open 12 to 5 p.m.&#13;
Tuesdays thru Sundays . Fridays til&#13;
9:00 p.m.· Beautiful handmade items&#13;
sold - creative 'NOrk also welcomed.&#13;
·· Mosr!_te Bass Guitar. Double pickup,&#13;
hollow-body with plush-lined&#13;
hard shell case. Good condition. Was&#13;
$450 new, will sell for $100. Contact&#13;
Larry, Parkside Village, Atp. 109,&#13;
552-8347, or leave message at&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
FOR SALE - Dog . Wire-haired fox&#13;
terrier' A KC reg., 6 wks old. call 553_ 2329, or 652-3565.&#13;
PANASONIC 8 track car' tape and&#13;
speakers $65 or best offer. Call Bob&#13;
639-2677.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Ride wanted to Chicago any&#13;
weekend. Call 73-3836.&#13;
WANTED: bartender who can make&#13;
$59 per ½ barrel of beef at current&#13;
St. Act. Bldg. costs and prices.&#13;
I need a ride to the Sunnyside area of&#13;
Kenosha from Hwy. A. area. Any or&#13;
all days Monday . Fri. Must be at&#13;
work 8:00 a.m. Willing to help on gas&#13;
money. Call 552-8960 and ask for&#13;
Deborah:&#13;
NEEDED - Poetry, short stories,&#13;
drama for " Indications" magazine.&#13;
Deadline Nov. '\1, 1971. Send to:&#13;
Newscope, Hwy A and Eood Rd., Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
en&#13;
L .. ca, -!'&gt; ci ..Q&#13;
Eo H cQ to .. 0 .:..:. 'T.': 0 ::i :C:: I &lt; " Ll'I ... - 0&#13;
~o .,, ...;. -a •&#13;
-is O"" ~~ ·-&#13;
~ I. Ul&#13;
~ d ...... 6 +&#13;
RC~&#13;
-cs L -. VI d&#13;
0 £ ~&#13;
aJ d -:::::s, .,,&#13;
., - ::::::. +!&#13;
.c 0., .. I J. '&gt;&#13;
-{.!. I -'&#13;
~c&#13;
3ct ~ "&#13;
w ·- ~~&#13;
~~= 7S&#13;
..l(&#13;
... &lt; ~&#13;
~ + i t 'j d.. Q..,&#13;
111 four Sizes 9" · 12" · 14" . If&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIIS • SPAGHO&gt;TI • CHICIIN&#13;
GMOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGIIA&#13;
• ~EA FOOD • SANDWICNIS&#13;
CARlY -OUTS- • D£LIVEI~ "YOU I/HG Wf Pf/I('&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
k 111a111,fi0d Orummerwantstowor ed can Kiili&#13;
equipment . experilllC .&#13;
87~&#13;
Female i,,r· HELP WANt'ED: or GO GO&#13;
tenders and wai~~~,3715or ~ girls, top wages.&#13;
3805.&#13;
-----.;-&#13;
~·&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
GNANCl'' ioc• - PROBLEM pRE vice, Fret ~-&#13;
Consultation ser 111ernativt5&#13;
I. g All counse in • 352.,t050. sidered. Call l -&#13;
. ~ ,l'&#13;
~~ ~~'' , l j&#13;
c..Pi ;o ,o1 t, ~ ~" &amp;\)', ,(&#13;
+fl'" '\~"" </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 10, November 8, 1971</text>
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                <text>1971-11-08</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63523">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63525">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63526">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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        <name>concerned students coalition</name>
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        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
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        <name>parkside village</name>
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        <element elementId="97">
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              <text>Photographs by Jack Kazarian</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>U11i1ersil) of Wisconsin -Parkside&#13;
IJJ!WIJCOPll&#13;
Volumes Xumbfr ll ;,.01·ember 1~. 1971&#13;
,. ;&#13;
I&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
II&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
N&#13;
(&#13;
:,:&#13;
:,:&#13;
u&#13;
(&#13;
-, &#13;
NEWSCOPE K'ovember li. 1111&#13;
C IRUNA Concerned with U.S. Imports For The Record&#13;
1 11&#13;
~~ I I I , I I.: I II I , ~ · S I, 'I I !I, I 1·&#13;
D&lt;JU·ntou•n K~osha ____ ,.&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
'Come visit our pizza&#13;
itchens or have&#13;
ome deliver:td'.&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5-12&#13;
except sunday&#13;
4615-7th avenue&#13;
10 kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
(New York) - The Southern Africa :rask&#13;
Fe&gt;rce Committee or the Council on Jntemation•J&#13;
Relations and United Nations Affairs ¼CIRUNA)&#13;
is deeply conctrned. over the Senate ameodme:tt ':&lt;&gt;&#13;
the Military Procurement Bill wl:tich would per~•t&#13;
importation of chrom~ from R,hodesia (Zun•&#13;
babwe&gt;. For 8 number of reasons. the S~tbern&#13;
Africa Ta.sit FOTce Committee opposes the unport&#13;
ffhodesia. and against the UN sancti a vote to acknowledge and stre u..'""'""'1411,&#13;
racist regime of Ian Smith. The b:':cks ~9Slhe "'d&#13;
of the people of Rhodesia) are controlled byl&gt;Of o,~&#13;
per ~ent whit, minority. an~,&#13;
Lastly, there ex.ism no chrome&#13;
of chrome from Rhodesia. . Imports from Rhodesia would be in direct&#13;
violation of the mandatory sanctioos voted b'y the&#13;
UN Security CounciJ with the support and assent of&#13;
the UnitedStolles. If the Military Procore~en~ Bill&#13;
is enacted, the U.S. will join South Africa. and&#13;
Portugal as the only countrieS publicly comm1Ued&#13;
to breaking the embargo. This bill would go&#13;
against the Obllgalivns of the U.S. unde• the _UN&#13;
Charter (article 41J and under the U.S. Umted&#13;
Nation.,; Participation Act (which was passc.-d by&#13;
bOth Houses or Congress). The cbiel lobbyilll: and&#13;
pressure groups for the import of chrome from&#13;
Rhodesia are Union Carbide and Foote Mlooral.&#13;
who own the chrome mines.&#13;
prompt such drastic and uncalled, ro ICa!'&lt;"il)t :.&#13;
strategic stockpile pn,sently amoun~ ~&lt;ttoo 'I\,&#13;
tons, of which 2,225,000 tons are 1 ° $,lk.111)&#13;
foreseeable need$. In addition. authoo, tx:ceq &lt;i&#13;
been requested of Cong.-- to S&lt;!l1 1 '""ltoo ti.,&#13;
Only about ten per cent of the 900 ooo~,- C..,.&#13;
grade chrome used annually in u\e u ;i- 01 Ing), defense purpooos. · · g.., fer&#13;
Again, the Southern Africa Task&#13;
Committee of CffiUNA "'Pl&gt;&lt;&gt;ies the . Per,.&#13;
chrome from Rhodesia. We ugt you !:Pon Cl&#13;
~me. ~~&#13;
A vote ror the imp0rt or chrome lrom&#13;
. (The Council on International Rei.r&#13;
Urut~ ~ations ~fairs is a national tOllS. aad&#13;
organization. our interest lies i.n five . ~ all dealing with foreign policy r:1;~&#13;
Africa Task Force Committee is one Cl the :i.,,,&#13;
topical committees ol CIRUNA.) .,..,&#13;
Voters' Conference Called&#13;
Over 100 student body&#13;
presidents from colleges and&#13;
universities across America&#13;
joined with Che Association of&#13;
Student Governments·"this w«k&#13;
in calling for an Emergency&#13;
Conference for New Vote.rs to&#13;
organize students as votlng&#13;
delegates to lhe national party&#13;
nominating conventions ln 1972.&#13;
The Emergency_ Conference is&#13;
slated !or Dec. 3, 4 and S at&#13;
l..Dyola Unive-rsity in Ch1cago.&#13;
''The events or the past month&#13;
cJearly indicate that neither of&#13;
the two major political parties&#13;
welcome the yowig, left-leaning&#13;
voters as fully-enfranchised&#13;
participants in the parties,"&#13;
said Duane Drape,, President&#13;
of the ASG aod Chairman of the&#13;
steering committee for the&#13;
Emergency Conterence,&#13;
''These events create a crisis&#13;
situation for the millions of&#13;
)")Wig people who wish to ellect&#13;
constructive change through&#13;
existing institutions. Unless we&#13;
begin the task immediately ol&#13;
organizing students within the&#13;
party proceSS&lt;lS, we will find&#13;
ourselves totally excluded from&#13;
the delegate selections and the&#13;
Presidential · nominating&#13;
procedures, thus effectively&#13;
disenfr81lchised despite the 26th&#13;
amendment.''&#13;
The eyents Draper referred to&#13;
were the Democratic O,mmlttee's&#13;
M!lection of Patricia&#13;
Harris as temporary chairman&#13;
of the credentials committee&#13;
over liberal Senator Harold&#13;
Hughes(D-lowa), who had been&#13;
viewed by many as the key to&#13;
enforcement of the McGovern&#13;
Commission reforms at the&#13;
Democratic convention in&#13;
Miami.&#13;
On ttle Republican side,&#13;
pressure from higher echelon&#13;
Republican officials to thwart&#13;
congressman Pat McCloskey"s&#13;
(R·CBl.1 challnge to President&#13;
Nixon in the primaries has&#13;
caused serious £inancial&#13;
problems for McCloskey's&#13;
campaign, and could essentially&#13;
e.Jiminate him as an alternative&#13;
Rcpubllcan candldate. ''lt is impcctative that the 25&#13;
million 18--24 year olds in this&#13;
country are aware of tit&#13;
mockery tliat both n._..,tic&#13;
and Repu~lican party off'ICu&#13;
are making or the rtlon,&#13;
movements in lhe parties&#13;
continued Draper. ·&#13;
'"Young people m1Et...,. Ult&#13;
urgency ol this meeting 01 U.&#13;
student communit)' and the&#13;
absolute necessity ol mollllllllll&#13;
very quickly to combat u.&#13;
forces who woukl seek to1solate&#13;
us from the recular· part,&#13;
procedures. We mist&#13;
remember that Ihm are llttll&#13;
m.nbcr or people fn both pe.ro,,&#13;
who would prefer IO wmd ~&#13;
their conventions with S,OOJ&#13;
stllde.nts outside chantiJ'I IDstead&#13;
ol 300 studaito .- voting. We do not intend lol,lft&#13;
them that sali&amp;lactioo," be&#13;
concluded. The Emergency Con!"'""&#13;
for New Voters is tbe last&#13;
national galhering ol swdtn1&gt;&#13;
befure the del,cate ,elect,.,&#13;
process b&lt;gins, whieb in """&#13;
stales ls as •arly as FebnlarJ&#13;
The conference at Loyoll •ill&#13;
include a number or wortr,bopl.&#13;
se,nlnars and panels to disc,..&#13;
voter reglstr.tion and pciih&lt;II&#13;
organization. A series of&#13;
national speakers, to bt a&amp;&#13;
nounced at a latu dal&lt;. w1II&#13;
addr,!ss the studeol$ 11 lh!&#13;
Oih.:~go conference «-0el'flilll&#13;
the issues confronUl'II them 111&#13;
this election year.&#13;
Cappa Cappa Gusto&#13;
that great beer drinking fraternity w,tA flus&#13;
f/011.JE;R Coupon &#13;
l,\ission: K.T. Inc. truck, piled high with&#13;
•d-shaped wooden boxes and other assorted&#13;
.,.,en route to the flaming steel wigwam. Even&#13;
lilt IS mph limit is obeyed, the load might&#13;
-.bit lo the ground when children are present.&#13;
photographs by jack kazarian&#13;
Oes1ination: Industrial Keoosha·s solution to disposal.&#13;
Towering above old, run-down trucks that b&lt;-ing tis food&#13;
from American .V.Otors, the glutton seems to have an&#13;
unsatisfiable hunger as It Is constantly eating.&#13;
,, Delivery: A K.G. Inc. truck bringing in a load to ~ " d1sposed&#13;
~ An ecologist should stop and ask K.T. Inc., and possibly him~i':•&#13;
~oes one get away with this. Has the word "recycle" los s&#13;
ll'lean,ng?&#13;
The perfed end for all&#13;
Success: ts- a raging fire- and&#13;
burna_ble ob1e~ time when one cannot&#13;
pollutl;"'• In h in the backyard barrel,&#13;
burn his trasli ashcan continues to&#13;
this symbo c&#13;
glow(er). &#13;
Spring Trip to Mexico Planned&#13;
u,p to Mexico next&#13;
,.,:Y be otfered by the&#13;
,ii,"'"· of Wisconsln- ~,tfr eOOO,h people are :::;".s. ,t was announced&#13;
,,;,! MtJ&lt;ieo Living, the _trip&#13;
)il&lt;d unieersity credit '"&#13;
,tll"rr'i _ One cre&lt;lil would&#13;
~ bY those par• ,.,, oolY in the trip; three&#13;
~Id be given for those&#13;
,-0 t.oi• th&lt; entire second&#13;
:,.,.,cours• and als-0 go oo&#13;
, °' tnll cl approximately&#13;
Ill ill • .,ould be taken&#13;
- ~ recess at UW•P, ,_,.,. rrom Mar. SJ-April&#13;
_. da)'S would be spent in&#13;
flt City visiting the&#13;
-. , Museum and the&#13;
::. ft History ,nd Art, as .•&#13;
., • unp«lant landmarks.&#13;
1111 .,.,Id be made to the&#13;
,.,...,.,,1 1 sites or&#13;
i,,1.(JD, Tula. Sanla&#13;
_, iJIJlpan, Cuicuilco and&#13;
)dlll. .as ,.·ell as an overnight ,,_ Puebla, a Spanish&#13;
_, olY and capitol of the&#13;
• DI Puebla Departure for&#13;
tlllldSIJltes would be from&#13;
-:::.ll'S and guides for the&#13;
w1llid be Marion Mochon&#13;
byCUrlSabaklen&#13;
hrtskltActlvitles Hoard&#13;
-...., music is hard to find. --•in Uihlein Hall&#13;
It !',r!orm,ng Arts Center&#13;
lhluee. It was for a&#13;
,.am. put on by area&#13;
-• called Intake, a ..,_ peace concer~&#13;
t-. Ille dir•dion of Ken-&#13;
• Schermerhorn, the .,.,1,, Symphony Or-&#13;
- Clllnlcted me on a&#13;
llltal Journey Ken was&#13;
._rd Bernstein's un• .._, at Tanglewood and&#13;
-led many orchestras ....... lb,.,..,r1d. He is very&#13;
lllole4&amp;eable about con•&#13;
~Y composers. His&#13;
-IWIJCt 14·as what you&#13;
• tlp,ed from someone of&#13;
locqroond - fantastic.&#13;
""""'ce ol hearing the -....,. Symphony per·&#13;
tac tontemporary work&#13;
"1WJ1ns111g.&#13;
~ lfn,baU light show&#13;
'llir Pletures on the screen&#13;
._ tll. orch,.ira plaved a&#13;
"1tt,i, by one of the&#13;
and John Van Willigen of the&#13;
UW•P anthropology faculty.&#13;
Cost of the trip is estimated at&#13;
between$250and$30(), including&#13;
round trip fljght from Chicago&#13;
or Milwaukee to Mexico bus&#13;
lransportation in Mexic~ all&#13;
botel accommodations, and the&#13;
6 Faculty with&#13;
tuition ror one credit&#13;
1r·Thooe inte..,.1«1 ill !hes study 1&#13;
P are requested to COnta&lt;t the-&#13;
\JW.p Student Alfa,rs an~&#13;
~-2294&gt; so lhat officials can . term1ne ir there 1S sulfitH~•Dl&#13;
interest to ~ ... w·u, .,_ • .-•-~ I ,..._n. rung.&#13;
lnternationa I Qualifications&#13;
Six faculty members or the University or w·&#13;
have been chosen lor inclusion in the third editi ~:m·Parb,de&#13;
"Faculty Wilh International Qualifications" i~~ 0 bl~IJ'EClor)•. UW Office of International Studies and 0...:.... pu by~&#13;
Cr. •·rt • , ..,, ams . he a . for selection are the amount and type 01 oveneu&#13;
ex()P..!'IPntt, mterwt in over,eu work and applicab.m o( ,&#13;
specialty to foreign assistance projects especl u Y • 8)-.n nations. a Y m emerganc&#13;
The six Parkside representatives and their overseas intere:t-t&#13;
areas are:&#13;
.Philllp 1:lurnett, professor of history and director ol hbrarit:s&#13;
Lattn America and W~tern Europe; ·&#13;
John Harbeson, assistant prolessor. political science Africa&#13;
Heroort Kubly, professor, English, Eu~. Middle East '&#13;
Thom~s R:osandleh1 assistant professor, physical educabon&#13;
and athletic direct.or. Southeast Asia, Afrida ; , Harold Stern, instructor, French, Eu.rope:&#13;
And, _Hel&gt;,Hslaog Yuan, instructor, English, Northeast Asia . South Asta, Western Europe.&#13;
The direetory lists faculty memb(n from the uw Center&#13;
System, University Extensioo and the Madison ?tWwaukee Green&#13;
Bay and Parkside campuses. ' '&#13;
members of the light show,&#13;
Sigmund Snop&lt;!k Ill. This ex- perience wa~ givPn ~ standing&#13;
ovation by an audience which&#13;
was made up or people&#13;
representing every corner of&#13;
our society. And the ending was&#13;
fantastic l How else would you&#13;
end a musicaJ trip but with a&#13;
musical orgasm, Straus·s&#13;
complete symphonic tone poem. Tnctodf'd \l'U Sprac:h&#13;
Zarathustra together ••th&#13;
readings from Neilche's wo~k of&#13;
the same n•me. It was very impres.sivt.&#13;
promising to be even better next&#13;
ye.at .&#13;
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Guest Editorial ____ ~ ---------------- caucus of our own - the :outh Caucus·- to 7""'-&#13;
RE: Emergency Conference for New Voters, that one or both of the national parties non,· 014ir1&#13;
December 3, 4 and 5, Loyola University. Chicago. candidate acceptable to the young and the ~n~t~ a&#13;
As college students, we are almost all 18·&#13;
24 years country. r •nthI1&#13;
old, which means that the twenty-sixth amendment to Those of us who worked for Eugene Meta&#13;
the Constitution entitles us to do somethlnd11.;~ haf~~ and Robert Kennedy In 1968 learned that the str r1tiy&#13;
never done before - vote for a can I a e . of the old politics buckles under hard pr ucti,,,&#13;
Pres;dent of the United States. We are eleven mil hon correctly applied. The power elite did not denyes&amp;ure.&#13;
in number and we possess a political potential greater Presidency in 1968; an assassin did, and wh•r"he&#13;
than almost any other single group In the country. tragedy of Robert Kennedy's death Is ,;&#13;
1&#13;
: Ille&#13;
Organized, we could have a remarkable impact on comprehensible. It does not convince us that 1~&#13;
politics next November, but the opportunity Is about political system can repel all efforts to change It the&#13;
to quietly slip away. OnlybyaconcertedeffortlnChicagocan...:,._ __&#13;
The situation in the two major political parties to rival the power and organization of the ;;i11&#13;
•~&#13;
indicates that neither party is particularly anxious to machines which run our political parties. •·~ 1&#13;
CII&#13;
welcome the young, newly enfranchised voters as _full b I S I ""'the&#13;
partitipants in the politics of 1972. It is quite possible process muSt eg n now. er ous reform In the 111,._&#13;
that both the Democrat• and the Republicans will Is dependent upon the mass numbers Which "'Ir&#13;
simply fill their "youth slots" on their national young epople can bring to bear and In niany stalls&#13;
convention delegations with young party hacks - delegate selection will be effectively finished by the&#13;
1 bl' t· 'thout end of February. If you care about using !he 1 thereby fulfilling their numerlca o iga ,ons, w 1 . elections as an effective mechanism for ch• -"!.&#13;
changing the philosophical base of the parties • . ,.. ., whatsoever. We cannot allow that to happen. America, we Invite you to join us In the work al Hit&#13;
The Emergency Conference wil l mark an end and Emergency Conference for New Voters, Decembert&#13;
a beginning In the politics of 19n. 11 will see the en- 4 and 5, at Loyola University in Chicago. Come 11&#13;
ding of the bi-partisan voter registration efforts of the Chicago and cooperate In the planning and org1111z1111 past six months and the beginning of the struggle for which alone will give us real power inside !he con.&#13;
delegate power in the nominating conventions of the vention halls in 1972.&#13;
Democratic and Republican parties. It is in Chicago - Doane Draper, Chairman&#13;
that we must set the national strategy by which young of the steering committee for the Emergency Con.&#13;
people, in cooperation w ith the already •formed ference, and President of the National Association of&#13;
minority and women's caucuses, can formulate a Student Governments in Washi ngton, D.C.&#13;
&amp;.itofflA&#13;
On November 11. 18, and 19 elections for student&#13;
representath'es will be held . Ballots can be cast in the&#13;
Greenquist Concourse and at the Racine and Kenosl1a&#13;
campuses during the regular school hours.&#13;
Now. when the University of Wisconsin-Parkside is still&#13;
it its infancy is no time for student disorganization and&#13;
a1,athy. We, the students who are present at the Unh1&#13;
ersity&#13;
during this crucial growing period ha,·e a grave resp.on~&#13;
sibility not only to ou.1·selves, but also to all those students&#13;
who wilt follow us. Whether those students look back on&#13;
these early days of the University and condemn us as&#13;
1(-m,urn~ or the ·so•s or see u:ii as a ~olid block in the r,mndation&#13;
of a meaningful Unh•ersity depends largely on how&#13;
we shoulder the responsibilily of elecling our 1·epresenl8tives.&#13;
·&#13;
Student elections. or any elections for that matter.&#13;
aren't popularity contests. It is our obligation as mambers&#13;
of the University to choose representatives who are going to&#13;
work consistenlly in the best interests of the students and&#13;
the University. Students now have the right and the&#13;
responsibility t, vote in national, state and local elections.&#13;
and to shape the future that we will have to llve with . If we&#13;
can't meet dutieti we face in these student elections, th11n wP&#13;
don't deserve tht national \1&#13;
0te. then we are the most&#13;
outrageous hypocrites. •~ students at the University are&#13;
content t.o be breast-fed by the Administration, if we are&#13;
willing to relinquish our voice in the democ.ratic system, to&#13;
wallow in a void or non-think. then we don't have the right to&#13;
tall ourselves tollege students.&#13;
No mauer what your political inclination.s, no matter&#13;
what your philosophic.al ouUook, no matt.er what your&#13;
aspirations for the future.. vote on election days to get those&#13;
ideas out or your head and into the system.&#13;
Rebuttal&#13;
To: Newscope&#13;
The article about cheerleaders was partly !rot&#13;
Lance has a great squad. "What makes a cheerleader&#13;
lick" qualities weren't so true. Pep, determination&#13;
personal satisfaction, a loud mouth and pride In her&#13;
school are the qualities of a cheerleader. Gymnastla&#13;
are not.&#13;
If you want to see "back flips, splits and hand&#13;
springs, al l executed with perfect accuracy", ame&#13;
see our girls gymnastic team. They're greet I Sols our&#13;
guys team.&#13;
The cheerleaders are working under a co.iple of&#13;
handiC&amp;p$: no gym to practice in and time schedules&#13;
Practices are scheduled between class and working&#13;
schedules. Junior and high school studenls have men&#13;
free time after school. Even with our handicaps'"'&#13;
have seven cheerleaders who are willing to support&#13;
our teams. After all, how many people would sit&#13;
through a soccer game when It's cold enough to snow?&#13;
If you're not staisfied with our cheerleading squad.&#13;
come out and cheer OUR team on toa victory.&#13;
Be glas Parkside has cheerileaders. That makes•&#13;
few people in th&lt;1 st.inds when no one else shoWS up.&#13;
However, we would like to thank the faithful few who&#13;
do come.&#13;
The Cheerleaders: Pam Engdahl, Julie While&#13;
Debbie Wade, Pam Kngrovillt&#13;
Joni K.-ebs, Anita FuhrrnlM&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADYERTIS(~&#13;
are you offended ••••••••&#13;
by nudity?&#13;
d.,. ·•nnn't h@Ueve everything you rea . ,., "&#13;
Editorial Staff Madin, P.-t Ntl-'•&#13;
Editor-In-Chief Warren Nedry WIide&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Qtmpus Editor lclrry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Ar-ts Editor 8111 Sorensen It not, stop In.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine&#13;
15% OFF all purchases SPECIAL with any student 1.0 .&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise&#13;
Sports Editor Jame, casper&#13;
Photo Editor Ride Pa:zera&#13;
Circulatioo ~'. Fred Noor, Jr.&#13;
Business ManAger John Beck&#13;
Pl,Otogrl!l~Y Staff ll&lt;O' J1"&#13;
Jack Kazarian, 8'1111&#13;
Scoville&#13;
Busineu Staff tc.rJVf- Pl'&#13;
John G.-ey, [)a... IJl"""I&#13;
McDermld, T. D. 1/V.&#13;
Writing SfAtf&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Marc Elsen, P!lonH: IP"°&#13;
Kelly lnfuslno, Kim King, Jim Editorial SS,.~&#13;
Koloen, Ken Konkol, Dale Business ~'&#13;
Newseope Is an 1ndepende.\t student ~per aimP""',:.,, ~ the Univer-slty Of Wl$COOSln•Parksl&lt;:W p\Jbli5hed wNtlf1f .,,. -"",.&#13;
vacation periods. Student obtained actv~ising fundS ~ ar• r,,lflf' ., revMue for the opeiration of Newsa,pe. 6,000 coptel 11,.,. _..."'&#13;
distributed throu,ghou1 the KenoSha and Ra:IM a,n1n1unl ft#&#13;
Unlversi1y. Fret coptes ere available upcl't request. il ;;JO p.fl'I w&#13;
o,..cHtne for all tnanuscrlpts s 1.1bmitt«&gt;d to H~.citd, ~~ Thurkt,6yprior toput&gt;ucatlon andmuttbetypeddDUt&gt;le•s~ JMdtftlll""':',,&#13;
Photographs is the Saturday prior to publl:.atk&gt;n, Un~~ 1t1• ;,!If" ,,.&#13;
an_d PhOtooral)hs may be reclaimed within 3C daVS •, ,.~~ •&#13;
m1u1on, after \Wlic:n they w ill bt&gt;alme the prop«"fY O tion• ou1--&#13;
Newscope offlc:e Is located in tt.e StudlW'!t o,van,P&#13;
fetMctlon ot Hlgl'lway A and Wood Road. &#13;
&lt;Oph J)OSlle the Editonal Pa•, w 1ch ·. ~&#13;
Sa1· b is, directly under&#13;
tS Ur}· s su - received the Pthu1on&#13;
Cl 0v.....,.. Pr ... ub Award !or lh• besl I&#13;
news coverage. oreun&#13;
.. ~a:i~ury·s books mclu:le . = Days· The Siege of&#13;
~B mgrad", "Orbit or Cluna· .. ehmtt tN!I L1nc21 • Hanoi-•&#13;
MoScow Jouma .. "K"··· .. "Am · - · • -..-ia , encan in Russia' ··r&#13;
M~w and Beyond" ., ~ x ~ Russia". and his m~t ~~ published last March •·~&#13;
Many Americas Shall Be Ont'&#13;
lie al-.o wrote a novel •·nw&#13;
Northern Palmyra A/lair and&#13;
edited and wrotf' the· introduction&#13;
and commf'nran· to ' 'Marshan Zhukov's Gre8tl'St&#13;
Battles".&#13;
, SaHsbury first went to R1AUa&#13;
'" 1944 to head the Urtited Prf:,,5&#13;
bureau ln Moscov., then&#13;
returned to the t.: S. as l,,., foreign news edilor. also&#13;
covering the birth of t~ t· ru.led&#13;
Nations.&#13;
In 19-19 Salisbury J(llned Tho&#13;
New York Times and rtturred&#13;
to Russia as us correspondtnt&#13;
!or five years.&#13;
Tim es Editor t o Give&#13;
Free Lectu r e&#13;
Upon his return to the Us. i.o&#13;
1954 he dtd a series of art1clesoo&#13;
Russia U'hith ~ulled 1n a&#13;
Russian ban on his relurn to&#13;
that country. The ban wa, lilled&#13;
temporarily In 19$9 when&#13;
Salisbury was permitll'&lt;I to&#13;
return with ther,.\'ice Pre-1c;kr.t&#13;
Nixon on his \tlSil to Russia&#13;
C., A Cquomred Offer&#13;
FREE LU BE&#13;
••011 &amp; · Filter Chance&#13;
,,~KSIDESHELL&#13;
'"" l~CTON "OAO&#13;
&amp; l0TH AVE&#13;
61•-9968&#13;
North Vietnam with lhe approval&#13;
of the U.S. Department&#13;
or St.ate and in the same year&#13;
v:sited Laos, Burma , the&#13;
Himalayan Indian border,&#13;
Mongolia and Siberia.&#13;
He has assessed the tensions&#13;
between Russia and China&#13;
along their frontier and in&#13;
listening posts in Tokyo. Hong&#13;
Kong, Seoul, Moscow, Londan&#13;
and Paris.&#13;
His travels, study and investigations&#13;
have resulted in a&#13;
continuous series or front•page&#13;
headlines and bylines over the&#13;
year!S, numerous awards. and&#13;
many books.&#13;
In addition to receiving the&#13;
Pulitzer PrizQ for lntornational&#13;
Correspondence in 1955, he has&#13;
received the George Polk&#13;
Memorial Award for Foreign&#13;
Reporting (l!IS7) and the Sigma&#13;
Delta Chi Award Foreign&#13;
Correspondence (1958). Last&#13;
March the New York 'ri.mes&#13;
innovative "Op. Ed. Page"&#13;
For a period 1n tl'K- m1d-hfbes&#13;
he covered k,cal ~ev.: Ybrk&#13;
news for The Times and h~&#13;
sotires on Juvenile dehnqu~&#13;
resulted in a book called '1'11&lt;'&#13;
Shocik-Up Generallon •· SaJisbur)" was bom in Min· neapolis in um and attf'J'lded&#13;
the Univenily of Minnesota Ht&gt;&#13;
began his career in )ournaJ15m&#13;
on the coUegc newspaper and at&#13;
the same lime v.orked for the&#13;
St. Paul Bureau ol United&#13;
Pr~ss. UPon graduallon. he&#13;
moved to the Ctucago Bureau of&#13;
UP and among other nev.-"S&#13;
sotires CO\'ert.-d part of the&#13;
Prohibition gang wars and the&#13;
tt'ia 1 o( Al Capone In 19-IO hr&#13;
transferred: to UP'Fo«ign Oe,.K.&#13;
in WaY\ington, and in l!Ml&#13;
became the l,..ondon 8u~u·s&#13;
managing d.rector during&#13;
co,·crage or the war _ in E~pe&#13;
before being a~1gned to thl'-&#13;
;\IOS(-Ov.:· Bureau the rou~mg&#13;
year.&#13;
VAyo'S C ~ ~&#13;
~IZZAf)'&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
fRll DlLIVIRl'&#13;
AL.S:)OIIO&lt;CN DINNERS 4:IO p.llL-12:IO l .M.&#13;
.'NO ITAUAl'I SAUSAGE s:;M3ERS&#13;
5021-:11111 Avtflllt K-slla '5l-Q91&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 pm .• closed i;,:,,wJars&#13;
Intermezzo&#13;
- -,-,.=vEaWARi7&#13;
W•ll- . L•"'&#13;
..........&#13;
·-&amp;.-......&#13;
, .. , ...&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISIRS&#13;
a ce,.&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
l\.lo nda,, Tucsdav .ind 'l'hur,Ja,&#13;
I · 9;1.m . ...:..l p.m. •&#13;
a schooner ,,,.&#13;
Q) a bottle ,,,. u&#13;
·- a glass •&#13;
_g and&#13;
u a steak sandwich&#13;
~ a bratwurst or 6 a beefburger&#13;
&gt;- and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
po tato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
or&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
The Brat is uhtrt its at'&#13;
,oRTH•Es- co•~E- O F HIGH•AVS ,_,. AN D 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.- 12 p.m. ... ¥1! bl• fol F'UltUlty 01 s o co , 11 , p, 11t, .. i &#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
Candida.le rorSGA Prei ldent&#13;
Student Go\'ernment on most campuses&#13;
doesn't do much more than ours cbd last&#13;
year. They are usu,,lly frustrated by&#13;
misled vottrs, administration coercion.&#13;
and unenlightened Jeide.-ship. All or these&#13;
and more tend to rob Student Govern• ments of the character and identity it&#13;
would have The Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition has been atlempling to instill and&#13;
promote ll community among Parkside&#13;
students. We do not reel that there should be a Student Activities aQninistration &amp;t all. Jt&#13;
ls not the administrailion's job to build us a&#13;
building to have fun in. ll 1.s not the ad•&#13;
ministration's job to ~an entertainment&#13;
and activities for us. It is the ad•&#13;
ministration's job to see that we receive an&#13;
Oennis tashlon •&#13;
Candidate forSGA Pre-sidtnt&#13;
It is obvious to all of us that the past&#13;
year's student government was grossly&#13;
inactive and ina~q·1ate. Some claim this&#13;
was due to administrative harrassment~ others say it was dJe to student apathy;&#13;
and stm others maintain that lack or&#13;
student know-how was the prime reason&#13;
(or inaction. Regardless or the n~asor\s, Ule issues&#13;
remain the same : £inancia1 automony&#13;
from the universily, co-op bookstores,&#13;
student involvement on all on-campus&#13;
organi1ations and total Parkside com•&#13;
mtlment to the Racine-Kenosha area.&#13;
These problems are not without answers. But. they caiMol be dealt with in a student&#13;
go.,·ernment wrapped up ln ideological&#13;
bickering and rhetoric coupled with a lack&#13;
or facts, articuJated by those who are the&#13;
first to quit when the going gets rought.&#13;
We must reaUze that the UnivcrsHy is a&#13;
political and economic Institution. A.enouncement or political interest and&#13;
activity breeds apathy. Failure to&#13;
recognize its economic importance leads&#13;
students astray when they w•nt 10 apply&#13;
pressure to gain their ends. Many university and college student&#13;
governments have come from under the&#13;
restramLS of financial ac:countabiJity to the&#13;
univer$ity admmistretion b)' incorporating.&#13;
This is a long and tedious&#13;
process. It takes th? cooperation of all the&#13;
students - full and part-time alike.&#13;
Through in.corporation, student owned and&#13;
operated c»ol)S can be started. without the&#13;
use or state runds, which is the only way it&#13;
t'An h,. Ac.'COmplished&#13;
With the passage or the 26th amendment,&#13;
18-20 year olds ca."l now vote. With this&#13;
potential power, $ludents in the RacineKenosha&#13;
area are eligi~le to run for&#13;
elet,ted ollice Should this happen, there is&#13;
no reason why political pressure could not&#13;
Cl&#13;
• %&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
•&#13;
...&#13;
,.&#13;
.,,&#13;
..&#13;
X&#13;
0&#13;
..,&#13;
0&#13;
" " ~&#13;
" n&#13;
,&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
N&#13;
..&#13;
»&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Bruce Volplntesta&#13;
C.ndida&amp;e fo.r SGA \'ioe Prdidenl&#13;
exce11ent education without having to be&#13;
hassled by pelly bureaucratic problems.&#13;
NS far as entertainment and activities are&#13;
concerned - we can plan our own. and the&#13;
administration should help us solely as an&#13;
inform&amp;tional deseminaling network for&#13;
student use. Given ihe budget c.risis (chat University&#13;
offlcials would have us believe we are&#13;
experiencing) we feel that .at least half of&#13;
the salaried administrators in Tallent Hall&#13;
could b&lt;? replaced with students given&#13;
academic credit~ instead &lt;1f drawing on&#13;
tax.payers, who not only pay forimost or&#13;
the educational process, but are forced to&#13;
pay the salaries of people whose function&#13;
often has nothing to do with what goes on in&#13;
the classroom.&#13;
be brought upon Parkside to aid in the&#13;
achie"cment or student eods. There has already bee11 too much talk&#13;
and griping about the problems and not&#13;
enough energy spent to corr~t them . Here&#13;
is an opportunity ; but it will take all of us&#13;
lo do i t. ll c.an be done .&#13;
Frank Chiapeua&#13;
Candidate £or SGA Vice Pre,jident&#13;
The University of Wi&amp;eonsin-Parkside is&#13;
in a slate of physical growth and turmoil.&#13;
lts student body is growing at a faster rate&#13;
than ~ny other state campus. And its&#13;
poten_t1al ror being a great center of&#13;
learning and activities is far above that of&#13;
any other state university.&#13;
The reasons for lnis are obvious&#13;
Parkside is located betwoon two great&#13;
megalopol1.s centers and will, widoubledly,&#13;
attract people, benefits and activities from&#13;
surrounding cities.&#13;
. But until Parkside reaches its potential&#13;
it, nee~ s~ud~l leadership to influence th~&#13;
direeLion 1t will follow in fulfilling students*&#13;
needs. l'ark.si~e is here to serve the&#13;
students; so it is up to us to influence how&#13;
our needs are to be met.&#13;
The most effective way to express&#13;
Slu~nt needs to the administration is&#13;
througl_l an erreclive Student Government.&#13;
Up until now our Studemt Government has&#13;
been less than effective&#13;
1n scc~ing th~ vice iesidency, I make&#13;
no ~romi~. 1t 1s not my desire to impose&#13;
my •d~as if elected, but rather to see that&#13;
the wishes of the enlire student bodv&#13;
~C'Ome a re.aUty. ~&#13;
It is up to you, the students, lo give the&#13;
St1:1dent Government the leaders it needs. It ,s, then, the responsit:.tity of the leaders&#13;
to follow through and light lor the needs of&#13;
the students. The first ~ction is yours the&#13;
second would be mine '. .&#13;
Danny Trotter&#13;
c,n~idate tor SGA Treasurer&#13;
The CSC has b&lt;?en asslstbg Student&#13;
groups helping to get their projects&#13;
organized. However, we feel that this is the&#13;
maJn function of a Student Government&#13;
We also reel that to take over what should&#13;
be done by our Student Government will&#13;
only further weaken, instead of bolster the&#13;
official voice o( the students. For this&#13;
reason the CSC has decided to run some&#13;
members (or positions i:t Student&#13;
Government. we hope in this campaign&#13;
that we will be able to raise enough islues&#13;
and point out enough proble.ms to create an&#13;
involvement among many more students&#13;
to help us solve some of the silly haS$les or&#13;
our school, and to help us bulld a Parkside&#13;
which is creative, new. stimulating, and&#13;
not Just a place to go to get a degree.&#13;
Norntan Pietras&#13;
Candidate for Studenl Senate&#13;
l believe that I can get the studel'lt&#13;
government and the adtninistrati_on&#13;
together to iron out some or the difflcult1es&#13;
in communication that they've been&#13;
having. I think that I can logically think&#13;
out both sides of the situation, and come up&#13;
with some answers. J want to see a m~&#13;
effective student government then we ,,-e&#13;
been having the last couple of years. ll i•&#13;
entirely up to you, the student bOdY, io&#13;
elect a group of people as )~ur&#13;
representatives lhat will do just· that.&#13;
REPRESENT YOU. In my estimatio'."&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE bas a gre;,t !ulureand1t S&#13;
up to you to make sure it doe&gt;. Elect me.as&#13;
your senator and I will do the Job. ,.&#13;
Jeanette Dremel&#13;
Cendldate £or SGA Sf:Crelar)'&#13;
Qualiflcattons: Can u,ke shorlhand.:,,::;:&#13;
type welJ. Junior standlll: - E,,..&#13;
major, Communications minor. . tesof&#13;
Pledge: To record and report ,ninll """''&#13;
the meetinllS so that studeolS and st&#13;
government can stay informed tor ia&#13;
Background: PresenUY a Sen8 alt&#13;
Student Government (attended&#13;
meetings this semester l. ieoJ1JIC&#13;
Chairman of the Gricwance and C&#13;
House Committee. tpb Accomplishments: Arrar,ged for ~ Hanson, Head of Security, to C()!11;UI lb&lt;&#13;
Madison to tell him how wt fell • aU&lt;IDC&#13;
campus police wearing gurs and w&#13;
around the corridors of the sch001· t,eel'&#13;
Notified administration •~d ha~~-..e:&#13;
promtsed a clock iu orcenqwst. c~--&#13;
pencil sharpeners at Greenqu,st. ested ID&#13;
Along with Ken Konkol. prol ,r b)'&#13;
Professor Kubly about tt.e m•"" ,,,_. which the Excellent Teacher awardl&#13;
decided last semester. .-- Offered the Idea of a child care &#13;
Tom Taskonls&#13;
Candidate for Studenl~nate&#13;
People in the know around here find&#13;
certain lhings jusl a little hard lo swallow&#13;
- usually administration policy.&#13;
The first thing to hit us this semester was&#13;
the chanceUor's "welcoming" message in&#13;
the Registration Ts.sue of Newseope (Aug.&#13;
23). Nai 1;e to most; ludicrous to those&#13;
remunely aware of administration policy.&#13;
I haven't heard such a schmaltzy, "all's•&#13;
nght-with·the-world" message since&#13;
befon: the Viet Nttm WM ( ,vhich h.o::s :sil\ce&#13;
spread lo all of Indochina).&#13;
The chancellor talks of "grappling" with&#13;
a ~crete problem - well grapple with&#13;
this one. There are three buildings on this&#13;
cam~ and two on two other campuses,&#13;
all crammed up the hump with rip,oll&#13;
1-..ding machines that survive by eating&#13;
our pockets. During last sprlng's campaicn&#13;
I suggested lunch counters at all&#13;
three campuses. to be open as long as the&#13;
buiJdings were open, Lunch counters with&#13;
decent rood - not the Sllme garbage that&#13;
crawls into those machines and dies there&#13;
-lhen we get to buy it for 4-0 cents only if&#13;
tht machine works on the first 40 cents.&#13;
.Sow get this quote £rom the chancellor:&#13;
"'Jhe right •action' is the constructive&#13;
dttd that improves the unii.•ersily or&#13;
improves society."&#13;
Now I ask you. what would improve this&#13;
•ar-torn area more, wholesome food for&#13;
bungry people or perpetuation of the "blue&#13;
bandits".&#13;
He also suggests that we students may&#13;
110t c~r-o to think obout bow we're OJ&gt;-&#13;
preued. Again his naivete shows through.&#13;
Any concerned, aware individual realJzes&#13;
it's an oppres~i\'e system all around If he&#13;
doesn•~ it's only bc&lt;:auS&lt;? he's constantly&#13;
led whitewashed rocts by people like the&#13;
chancellor who make a profession of brainwaslung.&#13;
&#13;
He l~n basically implies that there is no&#13;
place m HlS university for anyone who&#13;
&lt;\sagrtes with HIM. Here, his "Mayor&#13;
Daley-Russian Tsar" attitude shows itself.&#13;
The,, he says that student. that appeal to&#13;
oUter StuelenLS on the basis of "negative"&#13;
ideas and values get a "5mall and short"&#13;
!olloWing. That's guts! Even at HIS&#13;
ParQide over 1,000 st.udEnl$ saw Jerry&#13;
Rub.n ~nd other good people speak at the&#13;
&lt;letivlt1es Building last siring. A "small&#13;
and short following" stood in front of&#13;
~Uent HaU last ran with picket signs and&#13;
H.idtcameras present. This gave "Wyllie's&#13;
away" a bad image and soon aJlerw-ard&#13;
the contracts of Zi' teachers were&#13;
JlU~td away from the fire. But then last&#13;
SPfma. as MOn as a ''small nnd short&#13;
::chowi11g" left for Washington, five more . ers gol "Wyllie'$ Political Axe".&#13;
,. FinaUy, the man qootes Jefferson:&#13;
Malice wiU always find bad motives for&#13;
COOd act.ions.••&#13;
,, 1 Wish to remind the students that: ._?ect 1&#13;
. it always rinds good motives for bad&#13;
- ions."&#13;
1 also 6nd it imperative (since student&#13;
:v•rnment is a myth, particularly in this&#13;
ace) that student government Conn a ;"':!, relationship with the Concerned u ts CoaliUoo in ot'der to mo.ximh.@&#13;
SChoo!-co~unity relations and, also in&#13;
:-,;un•Uon with the Black Student Union,&#13;
d Y to get more aid for the less finan- ..:Y fortunate black brothers and sisters&#13;
lo go lo school.&#13;
James Twist&#13;
A Ca ndidate for Studeal Sena It&#13;
to Vast &amp;mount of opportunities ,ire open&#13;
~I 5t':klent government on a new and&#13;
op111g campus. Along with these&#13;
t-!tb.tniliee are certain obligations that&#13;
A govtrning body has to its students.&#13;
lta •tudent government in the forming&#13;
ltS bu the advantage cf building from&#13;
,. , ::-:==-~'~°'!;f19lwr£!!!~:.Jtl!S.,J.!lt7!!!.l _____ ~,:!•·~-~h(~•!?_!!-!:._" ____ _!~l!..!~- i..ie ground Roor 1b ..,.... ~ ••• 1• t . • v.id - vices and events 't t array or 5tl"&#13;
by the lack or ini~i~~~ on:" is only hmitt-ct&#13;
represent you. l\e O those: decled to&#13;
Parks.ide's student&#13;
CO ligation to invest. go\'ernmax has an&#13;
plaints that have •sate lh• many ....,,. months. It also h!'""• aired m lhepa&gt;t r ... , Parkside studen•·s the opportun,1y to orrt:r&#13;
l .., such servt«s&#13;
reg $lration an(I ecotogy jec as votPr&#13;
also become involl·ed in~ ts II mijjl,1&#13;
pletr_1entation lo insure that~ m~er im- a fair shake. ar-1de gtu&#13;
a.'f"e 6PPOrtunities are •ndl ... _ SGA .Ji:~!~ :;a~= '1.:1~ to ~'Ork.&#13;
~p :J:~~ '!SI ~ear spults for ::i~-:1:..:; SlnCtte, dedicated and 1n,.&#13;
volved set or candidates •rill be elected to&#13;
::~\:; aa:d ;!=hon that will ha\'"&#13;
Student govemmeni should ..,... hub or orga ud . ·e a.~ • Parkside I~ student aeti\,ty at&#13;
d . . must Cune:tton as a eannghouse for student CGmplamL II&#13;
must attempt to deal w,lh lht Special&#13;
p-oblems of students at a commuter&#13;
cam~us. Jt must also 5er\'e the M..tdents m&#13;
a variety or ways other than social events&#13;
Only. when SGA begins '° olrer&#13;
something to lh• students a1 uw.p .,,u "&#13;
establish i~lf as a meaninaful and&#13;
valuable organization.&#13;
Micbiel Lorton&#13;
Candidate for SLudmt Sena tr&#13;
My platform consists of certaK'I general&#13;
alms and goals whaeh anclude&#13;
clarification or and-or 1n11ueneean exutang&#13;
admimstrali\'t policie,; as the:;.e rdate to&#13;
ll.Ude.nts:&#13;
Establishing a basis or studient&#13;
,oodarity. lhereb:; aiding 111 the ronn.a~on&#13;
or a positive student ident.t1y·&#13;
HeJpmg student govcnunent at Parkside&#13;
to continue Crom its early ra11enn&amp; at&#13;
tempts to a more adv&amp;l'K.'t'd form of&#13;
representation which may ln lhe future&#13;
lake its place with the admma!lnll«I and&#13;
faculty as a detennining racl.lr m the&#13;
future of this school:&#13;
By student go\·emment _ acum. to M&#13;
pre~ents or student paruc1pab00 rn I.he&#13;
functions of lhlS school&#13;
Somewhat more speofic as.sues are&#13;
-&lt;:0nferring on use-control of them~&#13;
that is, bulletin boards, Juke boxes. 1 .. r.&#13;
nets Ne\\scope, mailings and otbtr. -~ainta1ning active student,facully&#13;
and student govern.men.I committeu. - impr6ved student•Caculty&#13;
administration cammumcatioo; - increasing recruitment_ of mu10nbet,&#13;
~tabhshing accoun1.1~ty u, dollars&#13;
and cents at all tevets Wlthtn Parksack' • -creating 5-0me form of fecult)'&#13;
evaluation;&#13;
-reviewing and amending rules on&#13;
student actwities end orgamz.abons&#13;
n,e Student &lt;;overnmenl should not be&#13;
only a smaU group oC people. ,, mU$1 also&#13;
be a pipehne of 1nrormalion for tht student&#13;
t,ody. It can take on 31 v1tality-1r and ~-ben&#13;
_ it actually assumes the voice or the&#13;
collective student body. Park:Stde needs a student government to bn.Dg bal~ and&#13;
dlr«tion to it . . now&#13;
Tony Korobol&#13;
Candi.date for S1udNal Setaat.t&#13;
A$ your Student Apathy Party I SAP&gt;&#13;
candidate. 1 resoJ\.·e, if elected. to makt no&#13;
campaign promises. to hedge al iSRS. and&#13;
generally not give a damn. My fOJth is "'&#13;
all the apalh•tic students of Parksule, v.-ho&#13;
1 t,ope will neglect to vole ,n the up-coming&#13;
election. ay my plutorm I .in coun~&#13;
every vote not ca.st a conficler(:f! vott m&#13;
For thoSe wbO ar• trapped u,to ,-..ung :eUlose who eccl it i• their duty to \'Olt but&#13;
don't care anyway, just put )&lt;lllr X down&#13;
by my nan&gt;•-&#13;
f:la1,w, :\I Btrcb&#13;
(aM ...... .f'fOl'"~l......,_W'&#13;
[: - - o{ Ibo ~-"' tlM, Studml Go&gt; fflllDftll bas beffl u.at 111.,-&#13;
ha\ e DOl bll!ftl able 10 rudl a quanun Al a&#13;
,.,..., .,._,.,. .. --m,) -Uon al Pa~ 4..-m, Ibo_,,,., oad laU oC&#13;
"72 and - 7&gt;, I• t,c, --for CJ•&#13;
Smale l,leetlr.t&gt; Lot• Ccl Tocdhtt'&#13;
'!be ..,., prot,lem - lo Ir - of&#13;
C()!,Oft,ICATIO, Tb&lt;N .,.. 1n1tta1&#13;
- aJld actiYlua ..- tho 1• - 17 of&#13;
IOnrunC - - Ld • Gd "'-tOMr lo.-n-hfre 11wllaw Wbat \1,,.,.,, and \Ila o{- a&lt;IMII&lt;&gt; llttflU to b,-&#13;
IIUSSllC p.,t,opo a -• m&lt;amce!~&#13;
R.fgialn~tlon - op&lt;1I - IOnle C1111DIDUll.iit.aUan ~ A.bo Ct'&#13;
elecled l&gt;fflalon - Ill, -le MN'llllp&#13;
- bo .._. r,ad:!y a•ailabl~ IO oil&#13;
SI-Ii a a - o1 &lt;Om1111allcali&lt;a&#13;
Lot •• C.t nie,,tbfr'&#13;
Part1&lt;1 a,... '"91. bul lo b&lt;Uu r&lt;l"ftftll&#13;
the si~ b.Jd;y I am nmt11J11 u •n e,&#13;
df-pet 1 J nndide•~ I •m • mt"mbrr el&#13;
tlle Col~a Pftl !-1-1 Coah1- W hll••&#13;
- ~ the tho Day ~ Cmltt&#13;
Commilltt&#13;
I am• con1inul:1!11tud&lt;t-.! .. -..:iobul ... • .,.,. tllo lwl1 , ou'n pvt,abl) -.!&#13;
- of my "1iloooplly In Socio1oQ aod&#13;
£4Ja- &lt;Jasin. ii not U-..T:i Gt'T&#13;
TI&gt;CE'IHER&#13;
811hr •-ay R¢mu )-wr bitdl h&#13;
llittb.&#13;
Jerry \lorpll) (at1111da1.-,_,,..._, -sc-oaw In.,.._ 1w ~tlldt-nl Smato I ltd tllal&#13;
I am 11•1D11 1M students at Parbldo a&#13;
m&lt;dian all.,,..tlw .. IO • b&gt;.-b t.ind GI&#13;
'""'"""'Ul'- they -.anl 9-tinl acCUN,mna&#13;
..- btinl ..,_.Jllf- ....._. dM mat&#13;
lddo&lt;D aceomplis!Md a")1hlnl V.°MI -&#13;
nted b a "orlling ~ludml -I&lt;&#13;
I l&lt;fl thal the rrwn eb)t«ln ol 1h,&#13;
Seoale ohc,uld be to ro(dct lludPIII o..da&#13;
and deslns. '!be linl ma)., COQC, m b&#13;
Iba• of a,cadml,c: al!ain Examples ol llll&gt;&#13;
.,.,..Id be a •-• 1n raao11y ..-a1ua~&#13;
adda\iOII of. COW'l8 Of" 11vlJII cn'd,I for&#13;
extraa,,n,,ular wwti Midi as p.11y1,&#13;
.a'thleuc&#13;
Mitfll The&#13;
teems&#13;
other&#13;
or&#13;
ma.,.-&#13;
f'\tlll 1-l~&#13;
C'ltln(T'rn ~&#13;
b lbt&#13;
oooal actMo .. in ..-hkh ltudcnts par&#13;
uc,p,1r ~ «11Kcru. fvnd ~"-.&#13;
clt-&amp;n-UP and Giber m-campa or O&lt;igl&gt;&#13;
bonqicommumty a&lt;tint•" att unpcrtanl&#13;
to tilt lltl.denl Th, s.,,a,. lhould be Ille&#13;
deanng-houoe for up,_nc studont&#13;
opan:om in these rna1ten&#13;
A $ll"Olt&amp; Student Smalt JS uftil Hf) GO&#13;
• """ na campuo suc:h u """ On• - lS lbal • • mU&gt;I build up th•&#13;
reputation of Parks&gt;d• a. bellll a ld""'1&#13;
"Ahett lhe itudenlA ha\.'e a SA) m lh,sr&#13;
educ-ahon Another ,.._ d 1M n...:I fo,r&#13;
~ting the rights oC the students 1n all&#13;
matlfn A lltOnl Salatt can aa,ompbsb&#13;
lh,. &#13;
Pages&#13;
b) Jim Koloen&#13;
TITLE: Tm; OTIIER&#13;
\l'TIIOH: Thomas Tr)·o•&#13;
l'l'BtlSIIER: Alfrtd ,\, Knupf&#13;
CSG.fl.ll&#13;
Tom 'l'ryon factor lW'ned wnttr&gt; is&#13;
lryin' very hnrd and Th.- 0Lhr ls a 280&#13;
page novel about a de.id 11,1,-m brother.&#13;
and lhe 11, c one becomin4 lhc other&#13;
brother, t1nd another other, gf&gt;l that1&#13;
The setting for th1-. Ameru~trin golhic&#13;
11Q\·l'l 1s Pt.-quot L.lndmg. a small, rural&#13;
New England tov.·11 , Lhe time 193.'l. the&#13;
po111l of ,·1ew s&lt;&gt;ems to be fin;t person&#13;
,wrrattoo The narralor is unidentified&#13;
Wlhl the fmal f 1ve page-;, 8!-. it turn~ out&#13;
the narrator 1!&gt; tht- prot.igomst 25 or !-,0&#13;
)·ear~ ulder than hr was wht"fl lhc action&#13;
took place The point of "·1cw is &lt;."Onlosrng&#13;
thou~. bt:caWl.c 1t ~•ms HI l,c&#13;
omn1sc-wnt, &gt;·el lhe narrator couldn'l&#13;
po:,s1bly know C-\&lt;er} llung he's telhng&#13;
Ui Trvon blends th&lt;: ommsclent&#13;
n,1rr~11c)n w1lh first pt•r~n. 1t'-; &lt;.-un·&#13;
tu-.,ng and yet effective&#13;
\\ 1th thl• exn•µt,oo of lhl' 1&gt;rotagom:,t&#13;
So\'embtr IS, 1911&#13;
Nile Perry and possibly Aunt Ada. the&#13;
secondary characters are stock ~ypes,&#13;
there's a town gossip, a stlrf se,cton, 3&#13;
handyman prone to fits of alcoholism,&#13;
elc. The protagonist 1s a 13 years old&#13;
boy, Niles PerTy, sensitive, intelligent.&#13;
occult, who is burdened by 8 dysfunc·&#13;
honally advanced imaginahon His&#13;
Aunt Ada ha!! helped Niles develop his&#13;
1mnginat1on b)' teaching him ''the&#13;
game"&#13;
"The game,•· consists or the person&#13;
concentratin@ on an object, describing&#13;
it until he discovers its .. essence", it&#13;
t-omb111cs astrol projection and rnind&#13;
rcacbng, veri occult and very in·&#13;
tr1gwng. After Holland's dealh Niles&#13;
be&lt;:omes a victim of "the game'\ he&#13;
creates an image or his dead brother,&#13;
he emulates him until he becOmes&#13;
Holland It seems that Holland was&#13;
sadistic ·cthe opposite of Niles), prone. to&#13;
kiUing smaU animals. Niles goes htm&#13;
Lwo £urther by murdering a c,usin &amp;nd&#13;
a&#13;
an old neighbor lady and finaUy a onemon1h-old&#13;
baby boy. It seerns that&#13;
llollandhadhad murdered his old man.&#13;
Niles bc,comes Holland and murdtts&#13;
everybody else. ('..ties ls the \'it:lim of a.n&#13;
occult schizophrenia and the result 1s&#13;
horror. The style of writing is heavily&#13;
descriplivc with an occasional&#13;
~ragraph of forced pretty prose.&#13;
Tryon tends 10 get carried a&#13;
images and bleak words gh•:z Dart&#13;
a •yrup ol foreboding, or in, •&lt;n-~&#13;
tragedy; !he bleak words reint ""1~&#13;
reflect the theme. I ha\•c to (f &lt;&gt;rte~&#13;
credit for his handling o( t11e'"' T110,&#13;
element in the fir-st two s.t'C::t.:J&gt;ielist&#13;
third and final section is bas: Tht&#13;
anticHmatic~ it ties up an th 1&#13;
-ca.11)&#13;
ends. answers all the ~ti ' loost&#13;
clarifies the contustion. oiu; 1~&#13;
'l'he Other is good escapsim tam$ all the elements or a -cla,s..~c rt c011&#13;
novel; set on a rundov.1'1 farm_ • ID'Jiw.&#13;
England. with an emphasis on ~JD N!:'1i•&#13;
the recalling o! Ada's early y •1Nt1t&#13;
Russia and her belier in lH~ t'.tfl 11&#13;
~uperstitio~s, the presence of r---~&#13;
in u,e lamily, occultism and ~ murders all combine for an ah:$.o ....... tale. Read it as escapism and yc:x,j r-..,&#13;
be disappointed. · WOn&#13;
If you•re looking for a good&#13;
novel. The Other is as g()()(I as escapbt&#13;
The Other cou.rtesy ot lb, Bto11; ~ 622 59th S1... Keno,ha. I\&#13;
Pre9nant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
Sell your stuff with&#13;
Newscope clawfiuls&#13;
we .,.1 "'•'II 11\f •om1n •e11••~'••• ol ,,ce. ,.i.,1ot1. ••·• or 1,11.,.c ,fl •••1..,, w• clo no, ,.o,.i.,, ~~!&#13;
,..,,.1w 11,111 •e"""' o•t••" c~•l•••o Ooc!(H• lo• , e o,1lon1. II ,~,, II&#13;
...... , 111., cllt,re ,. ... ,e cl• ~01&#13;
delay '" e.,:, abo,ho .. ls lftCfl&#13;
l ·•l!'jttl lfld IHI Clllly, -~• Cl'&gt; b l 11••10, ... ,d on • ., o.,, p 151r,1 '.Ul•I&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
Call:&#13;
8 AM-10 PM-7 DAYS ., ,,,.n,,. . 11 . nFIT n • r.&amp;N,1£-10111&#13;
i!, ti ~ 1 I •~f- ccc:,p Cl)&#13;
c:,CCI) -&#13;
1 I ,c,zc,&#13;
I ::z::c:,l:C&#13;
..... c,c,c,&#13;
w&#13;
&gt; 0:&#13;
u. 0&#13;
&gt;- g ...&#13;
0: :(]&#13;
tr&#13;
'Jhe 1lew "Vogue 'Jheuler&#13;
j&#13;
' ...&#13;
1820-52ND STREET KENOS-IA&#13;
"\n,· l,aJ/f.r,· Otk'&#13;
."io:1 .\/&lt;tltJ :-.·, n ,,v&#13;
lltWUN'. hf,,&#13;
by Jim Ko,loen. Bar,·cviewer&#13;
ZIMMfo:R:\'lAN'S (ZIMMIE'S) TAVERN&#13;
Zimmie's is a Kenosha tavern located on the&#13;
corner of 50th streel af\d 11th Avenue. whose&#13;
chentele is composed or working dass heroes.&#13;
senior citizens. and a few althernatcs of tt.e&#13;
alternative culture. On this for.1y I enlisted. the aid&#13;
uf my scotch and soda specialist. Brian P. Kipp,&#13;
M.A. cmaster of alcohol), who took his M.A. al&#13;
lhtnhna,l's while lending bur there. Incidentall)',&#13;
it has come to my aUentic,o that some people here&#13;
gained the mistaken impression U1at Hardman's is&#13;
closed, from last wee.k's stellar review. Let me mp&#13;
1his evil rumor in the bud, so to speak. Hardman'$&#13;
is nol closed.&#13;
Back ~o Z1mmies. On review night George and&#13;
Honky were Lreading tJ\c long formic.a-topped bar.&#13;
F'or 01)Cf\CJ'S Bria:a and I ordered a hamburger and&#13;
n Bud~ for the p:ice an unbeatable combination .&#13;
The lap beer is 20 cents for at least !O 0W1ces and&#13;
the 50 cent l\amburge.r is of a type that the chain&#13;
hambw-jter stands can on1y advert11.e about.&#13;
Repast completed, 1 survl.!)'od the bar; six taps,&#13;
Bud, Schlitz. Old Style. Lowenbrau, Pabst and I&#13;
lhink Schliti Matt Liquor. The stock and selection&#13;
or hard spirits Is more than ample.&#13;
It was aner six and the night crowd wat&gt;&#13;
trickling in when we decided 10 put Honky to t:'lC&#13;
letit. The big, gruff talkiog, Italia n looking bartender&#13;
proceeded to sen-e up a t,COtch and sell.zi?r&#13;
1 make sure you ask for seltzer or you could end up&#13;
wilh 7-Up&gt;. utilizing the Lops.heir H &amp; H scotch .&#13;
Brian said i1 ~s "nice and light and high in&#13;
drinkability, like your everyday run of the gin mi11&#13;
!Kolch, better for drinkin~ Ulan reviewing.'' lli~&#13;
~ 1.0~~ how clean&#13;
final comment on the sc~tch and seltzer was, ''ict&#13;
cubes and gJass, as (unctional as any." I'd~&#13;
a gin and tonic {Mr. BQISton Gill), it \litat d°'u&#13;
smooth and did Uie trick, [uned my vision and&#13;
loosened me up.&#13;
The general attitude of the c1ientele ts IM: and&#13;
lel li\'e, no hassles, the bartender, are frielXll&gt;&#13;
it's a place to drink with your friends eilher al tilt&#13;
bar or around the square woodc,, tables. ma&gt;t&gt;t:&#13;
,;;-vPn play a game of pool. One can spend hmm&#13;
sipping on a drink and staring at the most im&#13;
pressive picture of a nude chick that l\'e nu lald&#13;
my eyes on.&#13;
Defore dismounling our barstools to contmw our lir~less quest for congenial wtenng ~ICft.&#13;
Brian suggested yel another l&lt;ot £or the bor&#13;
lender. He ordered a Black Ru..o;sian, unfommateh&#13;
George was unable to comply with the r,que,t ai&#13;
lhe bar didn't have any Kohlua (coffee liqUft'I Ht&#13;
was not lo be daunted, hQY.'C\'er, as a vodka and&#13;
creme de cacao soon reflected his admiring v!Sllf&#13;
before him. His commen1 wa.~, .. It C1.1drl't qwte&#13;
make 1t." H~ recommended imbibing fi\t Bla&lt;i&#13;
Russians in a row, but creme de cacao "don't eo&#13;
d()wn as fine as posoevsky."&#13;
Zlmmie.'s is a bar that serves long hair$ a.11 ,.di as middle aged workers alld the affable 0,'ld..,.&#13;
[lappable Honky enjoys talking with •~•&#13;
customers. Zimmie's is highly recommeodei Tht&#13;
only real weakness is the juke. it is O\'e~tulftd&#13;
with Jc.rry Vale and easy listening muzak. bJt 1&#13;
supp0se one has to expect that in a bar hke_Zlmm.ie's.&#13;
As the world turns, the undaunted driobr&#13;
spins.&#13;
I lhoueht&#13;
J&amp;V&#13;
oncy "ii: :1::·;::&#13;
' ~,; got my&#13;
and sold&#13;
stereos?&#13;
bJOU$P!&#13;
6 t 8-S5th street&#13;
In Kt•osha&#13;
phone 654-3559 &#13;
p,-t Lontarlire. ,. ... eature Editor&#13;
Sill '&amp;ue-n is a familiar (igure on daytime ,,... Ile has kept himself in_ the public eye&#13;
If'!" ·be years by l)ercommg associated with quiz.. ~ · hoY--S like "The Price Is Righi''. Those&#13;
~I v.ho don't watch morning television&#13;
t,ate inStead b«ome acquainted with his&#13;
""' a daily, syndicated radio show.&#13;
Wbilt: drMng lo the Wood Road Campus the&#13;
,c,rdaY I turned on the radio, catching his five&#13;
tt ~ on one ol the Chicago stations. He&#13;
lfll""'tly launches into interesting and thought&#13;
,iw,g wbjeets. On this sp,cific show, Bill&#13;
~ t,,egandtSCUssing a topic lhat means instant ,.,_,.., .. to many poople, including myself.&#13;
:.,j &lt;li&gt;J•&lt;l is travel. The sound of the word sets&#13;
-, mtO visions or boarding jets and lounging on&#13;
ldtbtS lD far away places.&#13;
s,3 Cullen was explaining the development of&#13;
a 5trtt ba1tle among Uie major commercial in1m,1c1onal&#13;
airlines for the public's dollar. Th.is&#13;
..,...,uon had produced all-time lows in ticket&#13;
,,.. Lo !)!rope.&#13;
F,r some unknown reason, I was aboard Air&#13;
blia before Bill Cullen's five minute show was&#13;
1u- Instead of waiting for tile light to change&#13;
• ~ mtersection or Thirtieth Avenue and&#13;
Ja,11,igtoo Road, I was waving to friends through&#13;
1 p&lt;rtbole window from the jel, in a daydream&#13;
JIOITol by the thought of travel.&#13;
.liter I almost ran over a fat Jady in front o(&#13;
m.mydaydream made an unsdleduled landing. 11,.,..; to the rest of Bill Cullen's show without IN!! 1.slong thP ~t.,.wnr(l,:,,s wbal Umt we would&#13;
lllld111Rome.&#13;
l forgot this bit of escapisr.1 unti1 evening.&#13;
111!1 I wished I could happen upon a good&#13;
imtn.nttoeatanddaydream in, l explained my&#13;
- Rome trip to Maggie 8nd asked her if she&#13;
,.tlHke lo ,at at a plaee I was told had good&#13;
food.&#13;
There was once a bar at the intersection or&#13;
lllrUi 22nd Avenue and Birch Road in Kenosha&#13;
lllollnas"Tl~Center of the World". Today, at Lhe&#13;
amt location is a combined Jiquor store· """"••t. Casa Capri.&#13;
c._ C-apri ad\'eruses an ··old world" at•&#13;
~~~ -c&#13;
rnosphere. I was at&#13;
restaurant environme tractec:t lo th.is son OI&#13;
.. live" my daydn•am"' ~fan e(fort lo remot('h&#13;
ltalianf&lt;&gt;ocl. socasaCa , aggie w.u hunlP') ro·r&#13;
our dinner i.hat eveni~n was 8 logical chcrn:e for&#13;
The Old World J had&#13;
through Na.lion.al Geo &amp;~own lo kllO'.\ so \\·elJ&#13;
reasonablyreprOducJ;~~~c over the )tan y,a~ upon a casual look around sa C.pr1, So I thought&#13;
When I sat down I reahz,d magazines and Lhe • Casa lhe Old World ,n&#13;
were in dirl'Ct eontrasl A Capn represtn!ahon listing of the I t e,·et")· table v,a, a&#13;
com ng SChedule ol "Lwg .. Al . do&#13;
and the_ res1 of lhe Milwaukee Bucks 1Th can r&#13;
so~ething un-Old World about this ';t "'a~&#13;
enhgluenment. 1 was visabJy crushed of&#13;
side '!;;~t:any,_a.~emd e!\t bor asts "the finest pizza thi~ · · u gmg rom my e,cposure lo other&#13;
pizza ads, they Share the title \li'.ith a fev. :lozcn&#13;
other places in ~e area, not to mention a few•·&#13;
thousand this side of Little llaly m :,.;.,. Yori.&#13;
alone. Not wanting to involve m,..self .... th l L t di . ,/ "I an '9t• .~mp O sered.it their claim, I ordered lhr&#13;
llouse Spectal, Casa Ste.ak Au Jus'• rea11.11ng&#13;
salad. onion rings, ranch style pot.at~ ior ~uX'&#13;
order of Spaghetti) and coffee. All for two d:lllar..&#13;
and sevent)' cents&#13;
Mag~, filled her desire for llalian tood ~ 1th&#13;
spaghetti and meat balls. A lull dinnor would ha,•&#13;
cos~ two dollars and twenty•five cenb. but W&#13;
decided on a half order costing a dollar tv.entv fa, t&#13;
cents.&#13;
In orde.nng, we both passed up$UCh dtnnttS a!-.&#13;
Baked Lasagna t2.25), ~•ul(ed R,galom 12961,&#13;
Cli!ckcn 12.25), Ravoli (2 6S, half order I 251,&#13;
Clucken and Spaghell1 (2.551 and Perch I t.251&#13;
. Round.ir.,g out the menu, piua is reasonabl)&#13;
pnced, and an excephonal bargam 1f it is the besl&#13;
this side o! ltaly. Drinks were se.J'\·ed m a&#13;
moderate price range (martini 70 cents). Both of&#13;
us were impressed with Casa capri pnces..&#13;
Alter eating the "House Special". I fclt&#13;
satisfied, but not stuffed. I asked !or the steak&#13;
medium rare, and got it that way. Ranc.h St)lt"&#13;
potatoes are like giant French fries mm\6 an&#13;
excess of grease. A minor c:bsappointment I ex· perienced wilh the meal was the l'A'O orUon "Lr\g.S&#13;
Maggie pointed out that the spaghetti \l.l$ not&#13;
in Lhe least biL 5t,1;u-•chy1 a pitfall of ltali;.u-.; oa both&#13;
sides of lhc Atlantic. 1 tasted her food and had to&#13;
agree that il was very good. Taking mlo aocou.nt&#13;
the good fo«I and exeellent serv,ee .,.. rtffi,td&#13;
Maggie and I decided to return at a future dale to&#13;
see if it wasn't all a Duke. Only coN1.$lanC)· "' u in&#13;
question, as H Is ln any resturan t upon JU.'l Oil('&#13;
visit.&#13;
The pleasant reality or Casa C'.apn Jre,er.ed&#13;
me from re-entering another daydream dur111 I-! the&#13;
meal. On my way to the ear Lough, I c•Uiht&#13;
myself mentally sending B,11 Cullen a thank you&#13;
post card for sparking the da)dr""m that ltd&#13;
Maggie and me to a fim: meal&#13;
,·~ - ... ...:!,:,.&#13;
i Iha Wine•&#13;
,11king F&#13;
,Season ii&#13;
VOTE NOV. 17-19&#13;
lis ~ere .. J&#13;
1 ... "'" ir. \ '-Yl'l11 hr !&#13;
( -" Ir 11,1rt1 1&#13;
• 11 IIClll PIICES. f ,. 1:~,&#13;
I :~&#13;
r~!• ~t l f&#13;
! I&#13;
I Y111r ffl, ~ tose tao •ake wines like ;;:j&#13;
I ~ Ille )Ill&gt; buy at a fraclion i!I&#13;
ll's 1 ~I Ille yea, a1oood. ~•1&#13;
1 · s"e· fun and fascin· i;J!i • ,, C:1&#13;
~o, f,RE~ i llu!- !i, , 'l !qu t o winernak- l;:j 'll&lt;tlenl and supplies. ,,,&#13;
~&#13;
I 'Jh:)USQ&#13;
, ~-~~, ~1111"" •1 37&amp; 1mi rd.I&#13;
. l"IE ~HCON!IIN Sl-102&#13;
F11 1-! ll'f tokO.ys. ·: 111 ·'dJ11 12 \ Su n;J-,1 ),,&#13;
Ral:ine T heatre Guild&#13;
presents OPENS&#13;
NOV. 19&#13;
601 High St.&#13;
6334218&#13;
hi son to •'be a man' '. does heWh&#13;
ell meani= rather tells s&#13;
en aw * •-e h n's'&gt;&#13;
mean 111S kind of man, (It t e So •&#13;
Performance Oates: 28 Dec 3 4 5&#13;
Nov. J9, 20, 2l. 26,27•1)«. 4 '&#13;
5.'1:i &amp; 9:00 pm TWO Performances • ·&#13;
Curtain: S 7•-&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sal. 8:15; un. ·-&#13;
Seal;;,,io swdenl$ SI 25 Fri, • s1111.&#13;
•&#13;
n&#13;
" • &gt;&#13;
~&#13;
..&#13;
~&#13;
&gt;&#13;
ht.••&#13;
Parting Shot(s) Ill __ _&#13;
.&#13;
JltG,...,11 .. ., WOi,N ~• Wt,coMHI fl?IJ'iilP'-•-&#13;
&amp; $ave&#13;
SERVE YOUA:SELF WITH THE FINEST G,UOl.lHC&#13;
AND SAVEi&#13;
ROYAL TRITOH&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCONO&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cuh&amp;C.rry&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12oz HEAVY OUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
soc..., ........&#13;
C&amp;li\ end C.ny Pr1c• on OU Fut..,,&#13;
Jtur filttn, Tunt U1&gt; )(lt1. ~rk Pti,g,-&#13;
AJI 1,_,.., Sub1.c:1to 4 ~ Ctnt S.IH Tu&#13;
SAV E - SAVE - SAVE &#13;
1•a&amp;it18&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Ful\lre&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
,.._. 65&amp;-2573&#13;
Sith St. at 6th Avt.&#13;
MAIN OfflC(&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MllWAUKH&#13;
lolffOVJ lor&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I• Few, S....,, t "' 12· • 14 , 16"&#13;
AUO&#13;
• • •H • l'AC.Nt"l,tl • (Nl((tN&#13;
CiNO((NI • IAYIOI.I • lA SAC.NA&#13;
• ''"" tOO. • l••O• ICMU&#13;
c.-1,r-ou11 0t:LIV1lT&#13;
rOc.1 •1HG w, u ,-.~-·&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1161 PONTIAC OTO - J o,. _,w&#13;
~&#13;
ffl•l••o•- IOhd dWII bh.oe w•t, tinted&#13;
, .... spo-.,. ........ 1 *""&#13;
"'-V rim, w"' ,..,a N'IWl'TI. .., • ..,.«&#13;
d&lt;1rll. rAM11de ¥1-l'INI CO\ltr. 10.000&#13;
"""' ""', .... ,, /Yry , •• !iOft .. t p,tl&lt;.•&#13;
,l(("f"Qtf,Cf M,x.t ... ,.-s, 90t"9 -.&#13;
C4n.ada c..u eJ• 1)16. ,nll b- Allan&#13;
u .. CM.VY If - #fl90'\, ''llf'ldard.&#13;
,4.,goor1 concM1on.USOlftCll.ld n9&#13;
trio•"'"" 011 SU t9S6 evw+lnos or&#13;
-·-&#13;
.-o,,n,•c. ~1•••••0 ,.., - L•"• ,....,,.,._., ~ mtf\g,,..,l"'twi,a1ftt,&#13;
'"'IIQi ...,.,.t ... , 194 .• · 5&#13;
1f'48£\.AI. CHIVY-'Wl'ule4clt' ,&#13;
IUIJ.lfteoollllcCW"IG ttOn SS..Jltf.•U2&#13;
•~•er .. , Ori'V•&#13;
H6J F,11 OLO~Oell.l - VI&#13;
il"'O•P-llff"N 4dr~,'&lt;llfrY&#13;
VOOdc.on&lt;J N&gt;tull 0nl"OwnH . S4.000&#13;
,,. ..,,. o,...-. voo c.tl '"' )tl1&#13;
".'O\t• ber IS. lt71&#13;
Oal~ Martin&#13;
Candidate for Student Sena le&#13;
Parbidr need. somfrOne who cares and&#13;
kn~ what as h11pperu-111 TI,e Senal~ man&#13;
has to comprthcnd probltm.s as they&#13;
h.appen. know v.hat causes them and what&#13;
can bt dme ,buut 1l. 1bt mGlli unporumt&#13;
thing 11 that thr Semite man carts enough&#13;
to co to IJ'le mHt.ings&#13;
The -l• man nHdl the ba&lt;:kmC ol all&#13;
Wtludent1 So you who read this, do ~·hat&#13;
h'ff )OU can l4 show w )'OUT ~upporl Last&#13;
tttm \\t did DOC have )Wt bac:k.ir,g and •e wrre hurting. 1 M mNtlngs ,tuted to tall&#13;
apart thf' second •e- had ~ You. the&#13;
a1""6e-nt.e. bleoa. It 'lc,,t did nol sho'II an&#13;
O\·erwhelmmg lnttrcst 1n the electaon As a&#13;
r-11 a buncll o/ block h,_d« were elected&#13;
who did not care enoug/1 to atl&lt;nd&#13;
meL-t1ngs Olttk the bJltol again this )'ear&#13;
and notu.:f ... nat • &lt;mall aelection you have&#13;
to ct,..., Crom You can t,,ke U from there&#13;
how{ar ..,c·re going togo this year without&#13;
Y'4.&gt;t.r blnsed "iUpport&#13;
Moot of you hllto to be preoch&lt;d •• and I&#13;
Mn"t preach \·ery good, "° l auess th1.s is&#13;
lht last time I'll preacb It YoU Pc,son11ly,&#13;
I Im go.ng lo be loo b.a) tr) 1ng to g,c ...- 00 called mudrnll gu&gt;ernmonl off It'•&#13;
li1Uo p1nlues and on 10111 big fal feel'&#13;
•'e"' siuderll.3 reaJ..u .. tiat a sludml&#13;
governmtnt can do r@r lhem How could&#13;
)OU havi.ng nf'\tr had one that (W1Cli&lt;med&#13;
bclnre"' l can tNI )"09 one thing - there&#13;
w,11 be n big change once \\·e get your&#13;
upport So m•k• your!ldr felt and get it&#13;
LutJelher Vou 11:now that v.:e don't live&#13;
fore,,·er and we dofl'I go to Park.aide&#13;
Candidates (con't.)&#13;
fon,·er _ or "°"""" I'm not spoalotli lor&#13;
evtt')oae Fre~tn and Sophomores, get 11110&#13;
Part.id,. You h•d )'OW- shar• of doing&#13;
nothing b111 going to cla.ses wtiere you&#13;
punch an and punch out. Do what you can&#13;
... )'OU will not ..... left high sd,ool There&#13;
I go, pre•clling al )'&lt;)U again. I !"'P' ~ Jet&#13;
tht me.ss&amp;1e. Work, people: I m gomg lo.&#13;
t.o mort preacllh1g; thank you all&#13;
Ken Konkol&#13;
Candldalt' tor Suidtnt Stn1te&#13;
So lar the Student Senate hasn"t ac•&#13;
ccmpliihed much foe this school, This has&#13;
been due mainly to those penons \lo-ho&#13;
made,. game or the Spring £I e&lt;&gt;lioos and&#13;
wtte dCC1.cl as • lark. I aam speaking&#13;
primarily ot those peop1, -,.;ho ran 1ndcr&#13;
the so-called Halloween Party ond thooe&#13;
olhtn who deliberately do not attond&#13;
meet-.soltheSenate,yet do not ha..e the&#13;
~ncy to resign ao at least n qmrum&#13;
could be formed .. ilhoul lhcm, This type or&#13;
pen,on isn't worth shlt end should ro&lt; be&#13;
running ror office. Unfortunately, we do&#13;
have :,ame of lhb type runnil1' Oj/aln.&#13;
The-re are committee cba1nnen v.: bo&#13;
have not colled a meeting of their commitlHS&#13;
sanc-e last semfft.er This type of&#13;
penon we aon•t ~ The J&gt;W'POM ot lM&#13;
commiltecb is to provide an access far I.he&#13;
students or the university to mo.ke their&#13;
feelings known to unh·er1tty ad·&#13;
ministration. When no committee&#13;
mttt.ngs are held, it doN become difficult&#13;
for ~wdent1 to hove such organized acct'liS&#13;
to hi,t;her echelons or university auttiorlty.&#13;
I myself have been a member of the&#13;
fliihly inlluontial Gnevance and Cleanng&#13;
House Com.mittc.&gt;t which is influenllul&#13;
l&gt;N,at..se ol ready acceu to Unh'erslty&#13;
off1r-'-'ll"- "ho can tzet thlllgs done. This&#13;
committee, chaired by Jeanette D,cmcl,&#13;
has tone to lmglhs to improve the student&#13;
relat1onsh1p on campus We have StCUred&#13;
proir.ises ot the ndrninlstralion to inst.nll&#13;
pencil sbarpenen m C""'l'ljuist Hall. and&#13;
to put a clock in the concourse. These are on order. Also we have been negotiating&#13;
for a 1oot-11ded bulletin board fir the&#13;
conc»urse and dnnting fountains in the&#13;
student louoge at OreenqulsL 0.&#13;
concrete side of Jung, ,.., 11&gt;, loo,&#13;
.. -ortmg oo suet, U11ogs •• st,"""- .._ student power on C'ampus but h~&#13;
NSults because of lhe unbtl1&#13;
.,.:.-; ~ apolhy. "lld!ii&#13;
Additionul lhi~ I have beer,&#13;
!or bll\"• bttn •boul-.nent al ~&#13;
Acliviues&#13;
takes powor&#13;
Board&#13;
away&#13;
""""&#13;
from lhe&#13;
this&#13;
mo, ::&#13;
nl&#13;
~ ""i&#13;
oritnted Student Union Co•,...__&#13;
releasing overytlung cl...irie,t •'"':i.t&#13;
information for l)llblicau.., OJ.ua .. l&gt;lbi,,&#13;
,m,reallthestudo0Lmon,y ~ students lh_h.,. dee:~ ,.::-1o&#13;
searegaled fee mooey goa, 11a,,, '-&#13;
aid In maldng up t'-clato ~..,_&#13;
than have them len up to the l'llor&#13;
of ln•truclors and the dot..,:. ........ SUXk.nl, &amp;ud [1.0A1l1 Cu haYt ~ f( h&#13;
mot! of Ille say in the racwty .,_ pro&lt;:css aa lar II lirlng1 lOII ~ rent'Wals are oollt'emed ·-•,..&#13;
As a member d the ~,.sr.,.&#13;
have interviewed nearly ., ..,,. ,n,:_: public official in the aroo .;....,.&#13;
Governor, and have made the Plillll III It&#13;
Parkside stude-nt known to tht:m '-&#13;
I •ill oontinu• lo -i,; lor ,._ pr-ovemenl of this Univ..-.ity, i.. , .. ";;&#13;
better able to do •o as a member ol l!lrt&#13;
S&gt;udcnt Senale, n.. bod) •"-I ,._ non-apathetic st1.ldent body and •&#13;
members that "'II strive to &amp;fl ~ done, can accomplish 111uch e,, lit&#13;
Umversuy.&#13;
Know who you are votina ror Plnd.-r&#13;
candidates for ol'ke an, .--c to•• "-&#13;
ptOmlst: to attend Senatt- m~i.ap.&#13;
I would like to '4,c lhe ""'°"" SIWll,a&#13;
ConslllUIIOO cltaq;ed. lolm"'C&#13;
U1ose amendm,nts propoo.J":''!&#13;
aborted Coostiluhooal Rd,..,.._ 1&#13;
hehen the amerdmmt "'°""' - i.&#13;
mor(! r&lt;!presentatlve If handlld U.rv,p&#13;
the atudenl body ,ather th.In the Scult u&#13;
anyone else feels the coMlltuooe "• • the primary faults m the lll&lt;'k of a 11:r&lt;wf&#13;
Student Govemrrentaod "C1Wdlib1el"'1&#13;
ronn a committee £or the P,.rpcllt' c( a--&#13;
proving i~ I would hke help Even !h"'lh I&#13;
lryk I can't do a demandtn, JOblillo llla1'9'&#13;
myself.&#13;
Chess Club Meeting Alpha Omega Attention chess playen and peoplt 'Abo are lntero.ted in tMrning&#13;
lh&lt;' game The Park:!td&lt;' Che!li5 Club wJJJ hold it.A second meetinw&#13;
Thursday ,ov 18. frorn ~ to 6:4S pm in room 201 on the Racille&#13;
C-,mpus If thi~ ume if mconvenient. plea.st contact eithc-r Sharon&#13;
Schwandt, 634-4623, Ti'!\ Vaccaro, 657-7'..:11l, or Ken Vlach. 835-2.'!93. You&#13;
can also lea\·e yuur rume and trlt:phone number in the Studenl Ae,.&#13;
ll\'the5 Office and ,.,"ii ~ gotten m touch \\1th. 'The C~ Oub &amp;a&#13;
planning tournaments ond olhcr event&amp;, plus they wlll be endinG a&#13;
'rJim to the ~1atitn of C'-Ol~ge Unions lntematio.W competition&#13;
1700 $heridcn lcf.&#13;
KfNOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Omcgo, the J)l.&gt;(J!)le'• mililanl&#13;
=o!uUonary socialist party,&#13;
plans to shut down O C. uni~&#13;
lhe,,e nor&gt;ncgohable demands&#13;
of thtir organization ore met&#13;
We dem&gt;nd;&#13;
t. Freeing ol all political&#13;
l)nionera;&#13;
2. Res,anataon or Nixon,&#13;
Agnew, Eaker, Daley, Hoover,&#13;
Halas, and Wyllle;&#13;
3. The rcplocing of the&#13;
Washingt01 Monument with u&#13;
Warren Ntdry Ml'fllOrial t a 200&#13;
loot grunlle syringe&gt;;&#13;
4 A Parktlde Ph)•.sical&#13;
Ea.lcation cour-se in guerilla&#13;
tnctics~&#13;
S A ne., pin ball machine&#13;
""•TY "'"' in lbe Student&#13;
Union'&#13;
6 Guflrantce evtrJ&#13;
American a -t klOIHral&#13;
7 The Ytolenl OTttttnw ~&#13;
Auxiliary Enlerprl1t1.&#13;
culmunbne tn a 11CU!k ~ Ir&#13;
bookSlJJr&lt;',&#13;
8. Replacing Vrrn t.lllltJIS&#13;
wllb a nk:kle pn bill - 9. Tbe channellrc of al It&#13;
funds from the sp.ict pr;crm&#13;
to lhe ddense fund f• llMlif&#13;
Manson.&#13;
10, A r&lt;turn en~Ollltd ilJ&#13;
the ",oice ol thP ~&#13;
John Denver,&#13;
If )OU have I landlori&#13;
shopo-»ner or mothtl"· • bt&#13;
who's been hasslinayou-ffl';&#13;
us and we·u pul our llr'!l"JI&#13;
tt-am m it. Povotr ·.,,tm' ~&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISfti&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
lOtl• Toronedl&gt;, pwt . bl'lktl, pwr&#13;
""' I\CI, OM". MIIS f,K"tlry el(&#13;
11.(11)11 OI best .. ,.- 1~..:,,,i•t•&#13;
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•t,o Triumpn GT6 lrlt1th Rac1no&#13;
or.., A.-1 CIQndlHon. 1,800 ml1fl, 1WO&#13;
..,...., rN•el hr.s 8tSI our ov•&#13;
11,400.0I,. '""" ... _,, ,,., "'•ks.ff&#13;
VUla,oe, 81,Hldln!J one&#13;
••• Opeil -• 1y, new w d• o••l'I.&#13;
AN FM. ll.009 m1lt1 c:•11 6J:l.«Mll&#13;
ll'OR SALe - , ... Fo(o M•tiO'l&#13;
•IIOOn '"' envww. ..,.,..,..., a,n,o&#13;
trW\sm,ss,°" (tuto,r•t•d In 9000 COf'IO•lion \JO. 171 11?2.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
I or 1 f*""•'• roo"'"•'" to .,..,. .-,,ne,f d...,.,no ~ ,.,,_e,stw&#13;
Cl!I '3'2 , •• , oe1WH"I I ano S p.m&#13;
Asit t« c,~c.t1en&#13;
Ride w11n1eo "to Chlceoo env&#13;
WM&gt;ktnd C611 7l+Jt.M.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOLK GVIT AR$ We,~,-rn oun ...&#13;
w!,h Rostwooc bOCfV, 12,, Folk&#13;
9'- t• $1' C.11.$51 2tl'l aft., 4 p.,n&#13;
FOLD GUITAR - With caae Sl$1&#13;
CIOffiptete S4t chlldr9"'$ Go,ldt,\ Boo"&#13;
Etlc-,&lt;.fOIMC;t H ., Ptrfttt COnelihon :,°.,.ce11 sn 240:lt&gt;Moresp,m, week.&#13;
Oirla:lmH9lft$ for thc, tntlre ftimltv&#13;
trom AYOn Somefhlng for • VWYOn•.&#13;
Wr9Pped for Olristm•s FREe.&#13;
Phone 45,,t !237. No Obllt;:t•llon.&#13;
Wl!:LCOMt COME BRO·NSE -&#13;
•'h,no in 11e«1·• O•ft Np, $11 1, . Mreei R•dne. Ol)ln 12 to $ p,m.&#13;
Tu~ays l'lru sunoevs f=ridavs tll&#13;
9 00 P m INllfift.,I h..W,m_,. fl_,.t&#13;
aold cre,o·lve wor ll. •so •••corn"&#13;
.V.01rit• It• &lt;;ult.,-. Double pick.&#13;
I.ID, hOllolt,tx,ay "'-•fh PhnlH n • cl "·l'"d Sh~I CHe. Good conclllkln. WH&#13;
kSO new, win MIi tor 1100. Contact'&#13;
LMrv, P.,ksid,e Vlll~•- Alp. lot, s.u 1J,1, or 1ea1te met.sage a,&#13;
N• Moop~ otti~o.&#13;
FOR SALii - 0Qo • WirM•lrt&lt;I fox&#13;
1err1~ ,AICC '~--. WkS otd. Call SS3 2l1t, Of 6D.J.S6S,&#13;
~-, lktd, size 10 lkl boo 15, Sl.00.&#13;
INFORNIATION tt"11,.a - fOr&#13;
tirowsino •• ;:, t11t,1e 1r1 tl'le 1n&#13;
forma11011 Cmt•r, T•11on1 Hall, "'°"' 101&#13;
PR.el KITTEN'S - Sl"'f t::&#13;
from tt\e g.S Cflll'l'IDII'.&#13;
CDIOrwd Gell 111 11'1&#13;
PERSONALS _ &#13;
Soccer Team Defeats Platteville&#13;
1'nND~ u. lffl Papll&#13;
;oe's soecer team&#13;
I" ~ay-off victory and ;.4 • ". s,asoo record to&#13;
,,_.i ''! overtime victory ~· ... ' ,;I P1allev1lle. ... (11'· ' Ill play-off bal~e&#13;
IV~• was loaded with&#13;
.-FIJI ms 1,atUed to a ,,.. .. 111:~ner regul~llon&#13;
~ two five m1(!ute&#13;
;,, .w&lt;tbe score remained I•&#13;
~ . .,.. a play-off&#13;
"""' '&#13;
1&#13;
had lo be 1": ~ :'r7team had five&#13;
.,i,d st,olS. with Platteville :::.C oo• 10 Parkside's&#13;
... ~ were made from 11&#13;
11' "'' and Rang..- goalie ""'n,on,,on made • strong&#13;
,. e!forl ' stopping two&#13;
-: anticipoUng correctly _, . tinS quickly.&#13;
-:.,,:.,., UW-Green Bay&#13;
1ollle ror Playoff B,rth&#13;
., the week UW-Green&#13;
..'::OiPJatteville 3·1 so now&#13;
1 t,,t-.-etn Parkside and&#13;
Cross&#13;
Country&#13;
,.,,ooa1 and ~gional cross&#13;
9f1'1 championships were&#13;
iGi111 11 Parkside in a U.S.&#13;
bl and Field Federation&#13;
~meet.&#13;
rmag the men•s national&#13;
-·• UUe was John Kot· wofMilwaukee, while Amy&#13;
lllnan. also of Milwaukee,&#13;
lltdll nabonal women's tiUe.&#13;
Jilm Lath of the Chicago&#13;
hlQllb,.,asanother winner.&#13;
- dlt ten team open meet&#13;
Pllliid, placed fourlll, with&#13;
Illy Alvarez emergi...i as the&#13;
'""111'1' r,msher, capturing&#13;
"'place.&#13;
Qiu Ottlman finished 12th,&#13;
"'1 Lance 17th, Bill Carlson&#13;
Ill. Ind Keith Merritt +1th.&#13;
'lie Ringers would have&#13;
.. • belier showing had&#13;
- Rosa and Jim Mc• hldni hem able to run. Illness&#13;
•~)lrieskepl them oul of the&#13;
111&lt;t °"'"1s Biel was unable lo&#13;
....&#13;
"It •·ere considerably&#13;
~,.ed" said Assist.ant&#13;
~ \~ic Godfrey. "We we&#13;
llllcl bl,·e run the way we&#13;
::, run we would have&#13;
second." ~ ~olvenuy of Chicago&#13;
Club look first In lhe&#13;
""lolob This club is com-&#13;
~ ol tJ&lt;-wllegians, most of&#13;
-i:1 '-'trt stars on colJege&#13;
~•nd lwo were national&#13;
~. ''There is no way&#13;
" ~ bavt beaten them " ~ added. •&#13;
Green Bay for the Play-off spot.&#13;
(n an earliar meellng the h\•o&#13;
learns balUed lo a tie al Green&#13;
Bay.&#13;
Coach Beza Martiny com,&#13;
menled on how the learn has&#13;
progressed. "The team has&#13;
suffered a large number oi&#13;
Injuries which have had a&#13;
negative effect. As a unil lhe&#13;
leam Is doing ••ell nonethe1-&#13;
wl!h Rick Lednn,. a lreshma11.t&#13;
being the top sccrtr so var- "&#13;
Martiny continued. ..Al&#13;
pre.1ent the team is wortUl&amp; on&#13;
drills lo improve both thf&#13;
defense and offense»&#13;
"Our hardest ,natch v.ill be&#13;
the upcoming came against&#13;
UW-Gr..,.. Bay," be added.&#13;
Women Gymnasts Win Two Meets&#13;
Parkside women gymnasts be.at UW·Whlt.ewattr at the 1n&#13;
termediate optional level, ~231,, Wednesday, Nov. 11, at Park Htgh&#13;
School. Parkside winners were Kathy Kramer, Mary Jo G1anot11 and&#13;
Karen Sivley in valuting and floor exercise evenL'i- Gianotti 'and&#13;
Kramer took second and third m the uneven parallel bars. All~a.round&#13;
•.vinners were Kramer, Sivley and Undy R&lt;id. Al the beg1mer ievd&#13;
Liz Slellberg took third in vaulU.,g and all-around competition.&#13;
In earlier competition Parhide beal UW.Stevens Point 65.."' to&#13;
26'10. Slellberg won aJl·around competition al the beginner l"'el In&#13;
mtermediate optional contests Kramer won noor exertise, ~t!ni,&#13;
and all-around~ Gianotti won vaulting and Si\•ley was second on the&#13;
balance beam .&#13;
The gymnasls traveled to Oskhold Moodo.y, Nov 15. and met&#13;
Oshkosh and Stevens Point. Saturday, November 20, is the reg10ral&#13;
meet at Whitewater at 11 a,m, LaCrosse hosts the s~le meet&#13;
~mber4.&#13;
'71-'72 UW-P&#13;
Basketball Schedule&#13;
Coach Steve Stephus-Asst. Ken Oberbru~r&#13;
Dec. 1-Western Michigan Kalamazoo, Mich.&#13;
Dec. 4-Wayne St.ate Parkside (Case HS.&gt;&#13;
Dec. a-Lake Forest Parkside (Racine Memonal&#13;
Hall)&#13;
Doc. 11 - uw-oreenBay Parkside(CascHS,&#13;
Dec. 18-Northern Michigan Park&amp;de &lt; Memonal&#13;
Hall&gt; . Doc. 21 - Purdue-Nonb Central w .. 1v1lle, fod.&#13;
Dec 29-:IO-Green 8'1yClassic Green Bay, \I as.&#13;
Jan: ii-UW•Milwaukee Parkside ( Memorial&#13;
Hall) W t-• V. Jan 5- carroll College au =••· 15&#13;
Jan: 8- UW-Plattevitte Parkside&lt; Mem~1al Hall I&#13;
Jan. 11 - Xavier Coll&lt;11e &lt;Chicago• Chicago, rn&#13;
Jan. 15-Missouri-St.l.ouis Parkslde(Memonal&#13;
Hall)&#13;
Jan. 17-Southern Dlinoi., . rdsville, lJl&#13;
Edwardsville _ Ed\\a&#13;
Jan. 18-lndlana Sta~Evansv1lle E\'ansville,&#13;
Ind. Milton, Wis t!~: ;5-~~1&#13;
;:.~:e . Grand Rapi~:~~:. Feb. 5-Xavier College ( Chicago&gt;&#13;
( Memoria l H•ll &gt; .... . k Milwaukee. nlS Feb. 8-UW-Mllwau ee C B Was •=· Green Bay reen •&gt;· Feb. 17- v ,.. Sheboygan WIS&#13;
Feb.19-LakelandC&lt;&gt;llege n-one Wis&#13;
0 · · can College ~ ' Feb. 21- om1ru W I CA Pla•offs&#13;
Feb. 29 . Mar. 4 - · · : · ,..,;.r&#13;
M~r. 1:3.18-M A.l.A.NataonaJ Ka~City, Mo&#13;
namenl C s=;n 11-P M All UW-Parkttide Home ames ... &amp;-&#13;
Central Standard Time&#13;
!I&#13;
It's the. realth1ng.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
wednesday&#13;
10 oz. BEER 15¢&#13;
PITCHER 75¢&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
on uood road JUSI south of parltiid~&#13;
The lacc,c )C) le,&#13;
and accc~\Oric,&#13;
including After&#13;
Six are ac&#13;
:,&#13;
-·&#13;
-&#13;
CD&#13;
GINO&#13;
SPORT~WEAR&#13;
2212-60 ,tn:ec&#13;
in kenosha</text>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Athletics, Story One</text>
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              <text>Athletics:&#13;
story one&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Two former Parkside athletes&#13;
have revealed how they said&#13;
they were lied to and misled by&#13;
Parkside Athletic Director Tom&#13;
Rosandich when they were&#13;
recruited to come here. A third&#13;
athlete, still active in UW-P&#13;
athletics, told of similar&#13;
statements made to him, but&#13;
declined to characterize them&#13;
as being either misleading or&#13;
lies.&#13;
Stories similar to these have&#13;
surfaced on campus before but&#13;
have never been substantiated.&#13;
The three, Mary Libal, John&#13;
Patten and Judy Zimmerman,&#13;
told of their experiences in&#13;
separate interviews. Patten is&#13;
presently a pole vaulter on the&#13;
track team, while Mary is a&#13;
student here and Judy a student&#13;
at UWM.&#13;
The girls' stories, besides&#13;
giving evidence of Parkside's&#13;
recruiting methods, tell how&#13;
their experience with UW-P&#13;
athletics has destroyed their&#13;
desire to compete anymore.&#13;
Mary, who ran on the girl's&#13;
track and cross country teams&#13;
for two years, related that at the&#13;
time of her recruitment she was&#13;
lied to or misled in regards:&#13;
— to there being an indoor&#13;
track at Parkside&#13;
— that there was a strong&#13;
possibility she would get&#13;
financial aid&#13;
— that housing would be&#13;
found for her&#13;
— th at a girl's cross-country&#13;
and track team existed.&#13;
Prior to coming to Parkside&#13;
she spent her freshman year at&#13;
UW-Green Bay, which had no&#13;
girl's track team. Instead she&#13;
ran for a private club, and&#13;
captured the Wisconsin&#13;
Women's AAU titles in the 100&#13;
yard dash, tne 220, and the&#13;
quarter mile run.&#13;
She attended the training&#13;
camp founded by Rosandich,&#13;
Olympia Village, in northern&#13;
Wisconsin during the summer&#13;
of 1969. He then talked to her&#13;
about coming to Parkside.&#13;
"He told me they had a&#13;
woman's track team," Mary&#13;
said. "He said they would bring&#13;
their team to national meets. He&#13;
also told me they had an indoor&#13;
track, which I was enthused&#13;
about because I live in Green&#13;
Bay, and it gets very cold&#13;
there."&#13;
She liked the idea of practicing&#13;
indoors during winter.&#13;
"He also told me he thought&#13;
he could get me financial aid,"&#13;
she continued. "He implied it&#13;
was almost positive. But I never&#13;
did sign a scholarship contract.&#13;
"He also said he would get me&#13;
a place to live down here. I&#13;
would pay the rent, but they&#13;
would find me a place to live.&#13;
When I did transfer down here&#13;
they didn't do this. They&#13;
suggested I go to the Y."&#13;
She added that Verne Martinez,&#13;
the director of Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises, spent part of a day&#13;
looking for apartments with&#13;
her, and that Paul Ward of the&#13;
coaching staff did the same for&#13;
a couple of hours one day.&#13;
Mary said the extent the&#13;
campus was split was not made&#13;
clear to her. She didn't actually&#13;
see the campus till after she&#13;
committed herself to come. "So&#13;
when I did see it I was&#13;
disillusioned. We used to spend&#13;
three or four hours a day just&#13;
taking buses and driving to&#13;
places to work out. We practiced&#13;
all over the two cities."&#13;
"When I started working out I&#13;
was the girl's cross country&#13;
team," she said. For the first&#13;
month she was the only girl out.&#13;
Then about 12 girls came out,&#13;
but only a few were serious&#13;
about competing she said. The&#13;
team went to only one major&#13;
meet the whole season.&#13;
She said of this: "I resented&#13;
the fact I was training with the&#13;
men when I had been promised&#13;
a woman's team to work out&#13;
with. A lot of times I had to lift&#13;
weights with the guys, which&#13;
was embarrassing to me — to&#13;
CONTINUED ON BACK PAGE&#13;
Hockey Boards&#13;
Have Trouble&#13;
Finding A Home&#13;
by Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Building construction affects&#13;
almost everyone at&#13;
Parkside one time or another.&#13;
But the Hockey Club has&#13;
experienced the results of the&#13;
University's growing pains in a&#13;
special way. Since the Hockey&#13;
Club does not have National&#13;
Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA) certification&#13;
because it is not a UW-P varsity&#13;
team, Parkside has not&#13;
provided an adequatelyequipped&#13;
rink where Hockey&#13;
Club members can practice. As&#13;
a result, to be prepared for their&#13;
26-game schedule, once a week&#13;
the club members must travel&#13;
to Wilson Park in Milwaukee to&#13;
practice, often until late into the&#13;
night. For the use of t he Wilson&#13;
Park facilities, the club must&#13;
pay $25 to $30 p er hour.&#13;
Bill Westerlund, president of&#13;
the Parkside Hockey club, said&#13;
the Kenosha Hockey&#13;
Association (KHA) is willing to&#13;
donate $2,000 worth of rink&#13;
boards to Parkside because&#13;
there is a lack of h elp to set up&#13;
(Continued on Page 2)&#13;
The University of Wisconsin - Parkside vivseor&#13;
Volume 5 Number 12 November 22,1971 "/oumoii.m is Literature in a Hurry" - Matthew Arnold&#13;
Director of Housing at parkside ms. S h i rl e y Dorfman&#13;
$chmerling ha s been named to the National women's&#13;
Rights Advisory council.&#13;
Shirley Schmerling&#13;
Named To NWRAC&#13;
Ms. Shirley Dorfman Schmerling,&#13;
rumored to be&#13;
Parkside's next Director of&#13;
Auxiliary Services, has been&#13;
selected to serve on the&#13;
National Women's Rights&#13;
Advisory Council. She is&#13;
presently head of student&#13;
housing at UW-P.&#13;
The NWRAC is a recently&#13;
formed organization to assist in&#13;
the presidential campaign of&#13;
Senator George McGovern.&#13;
Other members of the council&#13;
include Flora Crater, editor and&#13;
publisher of The Woman Activist;&#13;
Frances Tarlton&#13;
council.&#13;
McGovern said the function of&#13;
the council is to insure that&#13;
issues of concern to women do&#13;
not get overlooked. McGovern's&#13;
platform includes appointments&#13;
of women to cabinet and&#13;
security council positions.&#13;
"He's the only one that I could&#13;
really back, since he shows a&#13;
definite interest in students,&#13;
women's rights and the future&#13;
of America," Ms. Schmerling&#13;
said.&#13;
"He was against the war&#13;
wnen it wasn't popular to be&#13;
against the war and couldn't be&#13;
Eating Out goes Dining Out: page 4&#13;
Farenthold, Texas State&#13;
Representative and the only&#13;
woman in the House of&#13;
Representatives; Carolyn&#13;
Naylor, Minnesota National&#13;
Coordinator of National Welfare&#13;
Rights Organization; and&#13;
Gloria Steinem, contributing&#13;
editor and political columnist&#13;
for New York magazine. Ms.&#13;
Schmerling is the only woman&#13;
pressured to change his convictions.&#13;
I really believe him to&#13;
be sincere," she added.&#13;
Asked about the possibility of&#13;
McGovern speaking at&#13;
Parkside, she said, "He would&#13;
definitely be here after the first&#13;
of the year."&#13;
"We would be happy to&#13;
welcome any students into the&#13;
working campaign for Senator&#13;
McGovern," she concluded.&#13;
Athletics:&#13;
story two&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Newscope has learned that&#13;
Director of Athletics Tom&#13;
Rosandich and Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie personally paid a portion&#13;
of a girl athlete's tuition last&#13;
fall.&#13;
This, and the method in which&#13;
the girl was recruited opens the&#13;
possibility that her recruitment&#13;
violated the rules of the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic Conference,&#13;
which specifically&#13;
forbids athletic scholarships or&#13;
financial aid tied to athletic&#13;
participation being given to&#13;
women.&#13;
This was learned after an&#13;
investigation of charges made&#13;
against Rosandich by two&#13;
former Parkside girl athletes.&#13;
One girl charged she had been&#13;
told scholarship type funds&#13;
were not available when she&#13;
was recruited, when, in fact,&#13;
other athletes had received&#13;
them.&#13;
Rosandich was asked to&#13;
comment in a series of interviews&#13;
on the various charges&#13;
made against him. When he&#13;
refused to disclose the specifics&#13;
of how Beverly Crawford&#13;
received financial aid, a subsequent&#13;
talk with the Chancellor&#13;
revealed the facts of her&#13;
recruitment.&#13;
Beverly, a black runner in&#13;
track from Pittsburgh, dropped&#13;
out of school because of personal&#13;
problems at the end of the&#13;
fall semester last year.&#13;
Rosandich initially said little&#13;
of her recruitment except to&#13;
maintain emphatically that she&#13;
had not received a scholarship&#13;
from the Athletic Department&#13;
— which would have been a&#13;
direct violation of the women's&#13;
conference rules.&#13;
He pointed out these rules&#13;
were the operating code of his&#13;
office, and claimed, "This is not&#13;
anti-woman. It's not against&#13;
Woman's Lib. It was written by&#13;
women, and put into the constitution&#13;
by women."&#13;
"There is no way we were&#13;
going to go out and offer a girl a&#13;
scholarship when we are trying&#13;
to develop that conference," he&#13;
said. "We would destroy the&#13;
program we are in."&#13;
When he was told her name&#13;
was on a list of scholarship&#13;
recipients on a budget report&#13;
from the Office of Athletics&#13;
from the fall of 1970 - her&#13;
tuition was listed under the&#13;
Chancellor's funds, he paused,&#13;
paced around, and remained&#13;
silent for a time. He said, then,&#13;
"I can't explain this to you."&#13;
His only statement for&#13;
publication was, "She did not&#13;
come here with the promise of a&#13;
scholarship from this office.&#13;
Someone else in the community&#13;
arranged for her to come here. I&#13;
felt a moral responsibility to&#13;
make up for it when this person&#13;
did not deliver on his promise."&#13;
A check with the Chancellor&#13;
supplied a different perspective&#13;
on what happened.&#13;
The Chancellor related that&#13;
two or three months before the&#13;
fall semester last year&#13;
Rosandich came to him and told&#13;
him of a fine young black girl&#13;
who came from Wyllie's home&#13;
town — Pittsburgh, and who&#13;
had great ability in track.&#13;
"My line was that 1 had no&#13;
interest in that. I wanted to&#13;
know what academic&#13;
capabilities and interests she&#13;
had," the Chancellor said.&#13;
Rosandich wanted to know if&#13;
she could get financial aid.&#13;
Wyllie responded he should go&#13;
to the Office of Financial Aids,&#13;
and that she should be judged&#13;
like any other student — on need&#13;
and ability.&#13;
The Chancellor said he also&#13;
told him of a man in Racine who&#13;
had once indicated he wanted to&#13;
help a minority student who&#13;
couldn't get financial aid&#13;
through regular sources. The&#13;
Chancellor said he told&#13;
Rosandich this was a&#13;
possibility, but the man himself&#13;
would make the final decision&#13;
whether he would do it.&#13;
CONTINUED ON BA C K P AG E&#13;
% &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE November 22,1971&#13;
EMW&#13;
The Tom Rosandich story may or may not represent the&#13;
truth about athletics. It depends on whose story you believe&#13;
— the athletes or the administrator.&#13;
Who is to be discredited? Perhaps the majority of&#13;
athletes at Parkside would comment favorably on Mr.&#13;
Rosandich's behalf if only to avoid controversy, but this&#13;
does not necessarily negate the charges made by the&#13;
women. In their disillusionment they adequately expressed&#13;
the contradictions of big time sports on a small time&#13;
campus, incongruity. Championship athletes just do not&#13;
grow on injuries, and good coaches do not ignore them.&#13;
There is also a question of recruiting practices. Part of&#13;
the problem here lies in the discriminatory rules of the&#13;
conference forbidding scholarships to women while&#13;
allowing them for men. But the second part deals with the&#13;
vagueness with which it is administered. The women were&#13;
not aware of the total situation, including the conference&#13;
rules, and hence open to the empty promises of goods that&#13;
didn't exist.&#13;
And finally, the importation of a minority student as if&#13;
she were the only worthy minority student available. We&#13;
are certain a cursory glance at the rosters of local high&#13;
school teams would have revealed deserving people living&#13;
in Parkside's home territory.&#13;
9Gunm&amp;.&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
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Mr. WUftom Nbbuhr&#13;
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Half day orientation tour of PARIS to let you become acquainted with thit&#13;
great city.&#13;
me. Montpernene. Sidewalk Cafe.I&#13;
nional half and one day tide trip, to VERSAILLES, FOUNT AINBLEAU.&#13;
CHARTRES and the LOIRE VALLEY.&#13;
Multilingual guide, will meet your group upon arrival in EUROPE and will&#13;
ba available to anitt you at all time, until departure.&#13;
TORINO OPTION, for information plean see reverie tide.&#13;
Return on Jan 6 rather than Jan. 4 - llait two night! on your own - total&#13;
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Hockey&#13;
Boards&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
the boards at a rink in Kenosha.&#13;
The Hockey Club members, 45&#13;
per cent of them KHA&#13;
"graduates", would assist in&#13;
running a city league, much like&#13;
they did while in the&#13;
association. He felt this working&#13;
relationship with the city would&#13;
be beneficial in giving Parkside&#13;
a good name as it would be a&#13;
"center of action".&#13;
The KHA feels that by giving&#13;
the boards to Parkside,&#13;
someone will be getting some&#13;
use out of them, rather than&#13;
letting them deteriorate while&#13;
in storage.&#13;
However, the UW-P administration&#13;
is hesitant to accept&#13;
the donation because this&#13;
would require lights be erected&#13;
so the rink could be used more&#13;
effectively. Vice-Chancellor&#13;
Bauer stated it would not be&#13;
feasible to erect lights because&#13;
the present rink, located&#13;
directly southwest of the&#13;
Athletics building, is only a&#13;
temporary location. Construction&#13;
on a new Athletics&#13;
building is now in progress, to&#13;
be completed about one year&#13;
from now. Upon completion, the&#13;
hockey rink will be re-located&#13;
near the new building.&#13;
But will the Kenosha Hockey&#13;
Association still be silling to&#13;
donate the boards at that time?&#13;
u f"&#13;
If you are a radical, and not&#13;
having much success, or if you&#13;
are thinking about becoming&#13;
one, this article will be of great&#13;
interest.&#13;
1. Appearance: Male - look&#13;
like Che Guevara; if you aren't&#13;
old enough to grow a beard, look&#13;
like Howdy Doody with long&#13;
hair; if you're semi-bald look&#13;
like Floyd Swartz. Female -&#13;
look like Racquel Welch, but&#13;
keep reminding everyone you&#13;
aren't a sex object.&#13;
2. Never wear new clothes. If&#13;
you have some clothes, and they&#13;
happen to be new, let a straight&#13;
friend wear them for at least 8&#13;
months. If you don't have any&#13;
straight friends, let a gay dog&#13;
wear them for 3 months.&#13;
3. Try to act paranoid. When&#13;
someone asks you about your&#13;
organization, convince him that&#13;
the 67 year old regional FBI&#13;
agent who lives at the KYF is&#13;
trying to infiltrate your&#13;
organization. Also, whenever&#13;
you see a cop, swallow the 3&#13;
trams of tin foil you keep hidden&#13;
in your shoe.&#13;
4. Formulating your ideology:&#13;
This is very easy, it's even&#13;
easier if you don't have one. In&#13;
any case, be vague. Try picking&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will h elp any woman regardless&#13;
ol race, religion, age or linancial&#13;
staius. We do not moralize, bul&#13;
merely help women obtain qualified&#13;
Doctors for abortions, if this is&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early abortion is more&#13;
simple and less costly, and can he&#13;
performed on an out patient basis.&#13;
Letter To The E ditor&#13;
r 312 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Aaalatance of Chicago&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Did you know that we young&#13;
people were honored by the&#13;
mayor of Kenosha, the citizens,&#13;
and a group called the Optimists?&#13;
&#13;
All these people proclaimed&#13;
November 8-14 as Youth Appreciation&#13;
Week. Now for the&#13;
dig. Guess what president&#13;
signed into public law (No. 92-&#13;
43) to be exact, November 8-14&#13;
as National Youth Appreciation&#13;
Week? You guessed right.&#13;
How's that for adding insult to&#13;
injury?&#13;
Youths and blacks are suffering&#13;
depression-like rates of&#13;
unemployment due to youknow-who's&#13;
lopsided economic&#13;
policies. The draft has been&#13;
extended two more murderous&#13;
long years, funds to higher&#13;
education are being slashed like&#13;
welfare, and people continue to&#13;
starve, mainly children in this&#13;
land of pelnty.&#13;
qThis bold face hypocrisy is a&#13;
slap at all of us. We must&#13;
organize for the slap back in '72.&#13;
Or better yet, how about a&#13;
clenched fist blast in the chops?&#13;
David Myer&#13;
Indications, Newscope and Auxiliary Enterprises are&#13;
bringing Parkside its only Thanksgiving celebration this&#13;
Wednesday night.&#13;
At first Indications was going to hold a dance to make&#13;
some money to put out their next edition, but Newscope&#13;
joined in and both got caught up in the holiday spirit and&#13;
decided to do it for free. The only problem being the costs of&#13;
cleanup and security for the Student Activities Building and&#13;
that of a band. Here's the deal: We're charging a quarter at&#13;
the door to pay for the cops and cleanup; you'll get a free&#13;
beer ticket at the time (worth 30 cents) compliments of&#13;
Auxiliary Enterprises, and the music will be provided by a&#13;
four-hour tape we made last weekend of what we think are&#13;
some of the best rock tunes on record. The sound system is&#13;
being provided through cooperation with Student Activities&#13;
who also deserve a top billing if this comes off.&#13;
So Tuesday stay home and Watch George Harrison on the&#13;
Cavett Show, but Wednesday come to the Student Activities&#13;
Building at nine and plan on four hours of good music, dancing&#13;
and a free beer. And ya won't have to get up for class&#13;
Thursday morning. A splendid time is guaranteed for all.&#13;
What do you want for nuthin?&#13;
Consultation between a local pastor and Parkside students on a&#13;
one-to-one basis is now available. Pastor Gordon Buchholz is&#13;
available upon appointment to visit with students or faculty in&#13;
room 235 Tallent Hall. Appointments can be made through the&#13;
Student Activities Office.&#13;
Alpha Omega&#13;
something that has an air of&#13;
Socialism about it. Right now&#13;
Socialism is very "in", but it&#13;
could switch to Nazism any day.&#13;
Keep your ears open. There's&#13;
nothing worse than a radical&#13;
who is always one movement&#13;
behind everyone else.&#13;
5. Never have a final overall&#13;
objective in mind. If possible&#13;
limit your thinking to two weeks&#13;
ahead.&#13;
6. Every radical should have&#13;
a working vocabulary of jive.&#13;
These words must be in your&#13;
vocabulary: rip, rap, hack,&#13;
hassle, hash, trash, crash, hype,&#13;
hypo, smoke, toke, strike-out,&#13;
hit, score, infield, fly rule.&#13;
7. If you're talking with a&#13;
group and the conversation&#13;
turns to movies, ask them if&#13;
they saw "They Shoot Horses&#13;
Don't They?"&#13;
8. Cliches: "That's exactly&#13;
the way the Establishment&#13;
wants you to think" (used when&#13;
someone presents a logical&#13;
argument proving that you are&#13;
insane).&#13;
"Let's Shut down Case."&#13;
"People's Bookstore - 302&#13;
Main."&#13;
" .All in the Family' is the&#13;
way life really is."&#13;
9. Miscellaneous:&#13;
Slogan (important) Power to&#13;
the People.&#13;
Trademark (Your choice)&#13;
Clenched fist, 69, A picture of&#13;
Snoopy on skis saying: "Don't&#13;
eat yellow snow."&#13;
Cigarettes (optional) Kools,&#13;
Salem Menthols, Camel&#13;
straights, Virginia Slims.&#13;
Favorite rock group&#13;
(required) Grand Funk. (If&#13;
none is immediately&#13;
aggainable, use an old Monkee&#13;
album.)&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Sports Editor James Casper&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Marc Eisen,&#13;
Kelly Infusino, Kim King, Jim&#13;
Koloen, Ken Konkol, Dale&#13;
Martin,&#13;
Wilde&#13;
Pat Nelson, Janice&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross/-Jeff&#13;
Scoville&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDerfnid&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
1&#13;
8 AM-10 PM—7 DAYS&#13;
A NON PROFIT ORGANIZATION&#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;
r&#13;
J\en&#13;
}'e for ,he operation of Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the&#13;
University. Free copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. the&#13;
mursday prior to publication and must be typed double-spaced. Deadline for&#13;
Photographs is the Saturday prior to publication. Unsolicited manuscripts&#13;
and photographs may be reclaimed within 30 days after the date of subi&#13;
ion, after which they will become the property of Newscope Ltd. The&#13;
•l!r2C!&#13;
0pe&#13;
°&#13;
,,&#13;
.&#13;
i&#13;
.&#13;
ce is loca&#13;
ted In the Student Organizations building, Intersection&#13;
of Highway A and Wood Road. &#13;
November 22, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
WisPIRG Concerned with Students NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
By John Graham&#13;
The Wisconsin Public Interest Research&#13;
Group is studnts. For years college students&#13;
have lead the way in our society. Students&#13;
were among the first individuals to protest&#13;
the war in Indochina, to demonstrate their&#13;
opposition to racism in America, to point out&#13;
to America the tragedy of pollution and&#13;
resource waste. And students on the college&#13;
campuses of America realize now, more than&#13;
ever, their energies are needed desperately&#13;
by society.&#13;
But today their energies are being wasted&#13;
by actions such as demonstrations to&#13;
runresponsive administrations. So new actions&#13;
must be taken, and students realizing&#13;
this have started PIRGs all over the country.&#13;
A Public Interest Research Group (PIRG)&#13;
is simply a special interest group created in&#13;
the public interest, rather than an interest&#13;
group created by the various economic&#13;
powers for their own selfish needs. It is&#13;
neither difficutlt nor illogical to assume that&#13;
these special needs do not coincide with the&#13;
general welfare needs of the people.&#13;
Therefore, it is out of necessity that citizens&#13;
must unite in a non-partisan effort to&#13;
represent their human needs to the decisionmaking&#13;
process. WisPIRG is just such an&#13;
effort.&#13;
Representing human needs as viable public&#13;
interest values and participating in the&#13;
decision-making process requires sensitivity&#13;
to those public interest values, resources,&#13;
time, and energy. It is because the student&#13;
community satisfies these requirements that&#13;
they assume such responsibility. And it is to&#13;
provide themselves with both a non-partisan&#13;
organization and a continuity that students&#13;
turn to WisPIRG.&#13;
The purposes of WisPIRG are: to provide&#13;
the citizens with adequate information for&#13;
enlightened discussion of those Wisconsin&#13;
problems affecting basic human needs which&#13;
are subject to legislative, administrative, or&#13;
special interest consideration; to participate&#13;
in the decision-making process in a way that&#13;
will compell this process to be responsive to&#13;
the public interest values ; and to challenge by&#13;
legal means those decisions which clearly&#13;
disregard such public interest values.&#13;
In other words, WisPIRG is to be a statewide&#13;
program not unlike NADER'S&#13;
RAIDERS to deal with the state problems of&#13;
pollution, consumer fraud, and ohter related&#13;
problems. But unlike Nader's Public Interest&#13;
Research Group, WisPIRG will be completely&#13;
governed, and for the most part financed, by&#13;
the college students throughout the state.&#13;
But can this actually happen right here in&#13;
Wisconsin? Quite simply, YES!&#13;
In states like Oregon and Minnesota,&#13;
students have agreed to impose upon&#13;
themselves a two dollar per semester surcharge&#13;
on their tuition charge, and with this&#13;
money they have established successful&#13;
PIRGs now working in their states.&#13;
This funding procedure has proven to be a&#13;
reliable source of income, with which they&#13;
hire recognized experts to help them formulate&#13;
responsible pubiic interest positions.&#13;
No student is required in any way to contribute&#13;
to the PIRG. Any student who does not&#13;
want to participate in the WisPIRG program&#13;
will have the opportunity to get the surcharge&#13;
amount refunded at their shool with no&#13;
questions asked.&#13;
Does Wisconsin need WisPIRG? Most&#13;
definitely yes! It is up to the college students&#13;
of Wisconsin to help provide the citizens of&#13;
this state with the services that are so badly&#13;
needed to carry out the above mentioned&#13;
purposes. In other states across the country&#13;
PIRGs are being started and are working&#13;
admirably. There is no reason why we, the&#13;
students of Wisconsin cannot all join together&#13;
to build a PIRG right here. But we of&#13;
WisPIRG need your help. Petitioning,&#13;
exhibiting support for WisPIRG, will begin&#13;
November 29. And if you want futher information,&#13;
please call Chris Morelli at 639-&#13;
4956.&#13;
'Summertree'&#13;
"Summertree", Ron Cowen's sensitive portrayal&#13;
of the generation gap in middle-class&#13;
America opned at the Racine Theatre Guild,&#13;
Friday, Nov. 19. It will play weekends through&#13;
December 5.&#13;
When "Summertree" sprang into the full leaf of&#13;
its New York success in 1968, considerable comment&#13;
arose over the fact that its author, Ron&#13;
Cowen, was only 22, a very early age for a&#13;
playwright to achieve a successful major&#13;
production of a play. Speaking as an authentic&#13;
voice of American youth at this time, Mr. Cowen&#13;
depicts an everyday situation with such depth and&#13;
sensitivity as to keep it from being commonplace.&#13;
The drama takes place in the mind of a young&#13;
hero at the moment of his death in battle in&#13;
Vietnam. The scene is a great spreading tree in&#13;
the backyard of his very middle-class family's&#13;
home. Here he swings backward and forward in&#13;
time through his childhood, college days, and&#13;
through all the events leading to his tragic death.&#13;
The nameless Young Man, played by George&#13;
Mangold, is caught in a constant conflict of battles&#13;
between a father, (Frank Reisenauer) who wants&#13;
to mold his son in his own image; a mother (Karen&#13;
Reisenauer) who shelters him from all bodily pain&#13;
by being far too overprotective, but who can never&#13;
understand the conflicts within his mind; and a&#13;
girlfirend (Alice Anne Conner) who loves him but&#13;
will give him no promise of endless loyalty while&#13;
he is in Vietnam. A little boy (Joe Thompson)&#13;
personifies the Young Man as a child and Jim&#13;
Keefe plays another soldier in the war.&#13;
"Summertree" may be seen at 8:15 Friday and&#13;
Saturday evenings, Sunday performances are at&#13;
7:30 p.m. On Saturday, Dec. 4, there will be a&#13;
special matinee at 5:15 p.m. and a second performance&#13;
at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Norman C. McPhee is the director for this&#13;
production.&#13;
Box office hours will be from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday&#13;
through Sunday of each performance&#13;
week.&#13;
happy&#13;
turkey&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. of 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
Minneapolis (CPS)—Armed FBI agents, along with&#13;
Madison, Wisconsin, police, have arrested an alleged&#13;
Weatherman fugitive, Gary L. Wilson, 22, during an early&#13;
morning raid last week.&#13;
Wilson was indicted June 2 b y a Tucson, Arizona, Grand&#13;
Jury investigating Weathermen and other anti-war activity&#13;
at the University of Arizona. He, along with Martha K.&#13;
Sowerwine, and Jeffrey A. Hoff, were charged with conspiracy&#13;
to manufacure pipe bombs, and with possession of&#13;
incendiary devices.&#13;
Wilson had been missing since last February when FBI&#13;
agents raided his apartment. Charges against Sowerwine&#13;
and Hoff were dropped October 26 wh en federal prosecutors&#13;
failed to produce the unnamed key witness.&#13;
Wilson is being held in the Dane County Jail with bail set at&#13;
$25,000, pending an extradition hearing.&#13;
The Tucson Grand Jury, which delivered Wilson's indictment&#13;
was considered by many to be a "witch hunt" interested&#13;
in harassing anti-war activists. During the year-long&#13;
probe fifteen indictments have been handed down.&#13;
New York (CPS)—The FBI has subpoenaed and received a paper&#13;
delivered before a Council on Foreign Relations seminar by Dr.&#13;
Daniel Ellsberg under strict rules of confidentiality.&#13;
The private study group of 1,500 prominents Americans&#13;
surrendered the paper when advised by lawyers that they could not&#13;
successfully resist the subpoena.&#13;
The paper, on "Escalation as a Military Strategy in Limited&#13;
War", was given at a seminar in November of 1970. Ellsberg is the&#13;
former Pentagon researcher who was admitted giving the&#13;
classifeid Pentagon Papers to the press.&#13;
New Brunswich, N.J. (CPS)—David Meiswinkle, student&#13;
government president of Rutgers University in New Brunswick,&#13;
New Jersey, in a dramatic gesture on behalf of his campaign to&#13;
legalize marijuana, smoked what he claimed was a marijuana&#13;
cigarette in the presence of Howard Crosby, dean of students,&#13;
declaring, "I defy that which I consider unjust."&#13;
Meiswinkle was not arrested. When a campus patrolman arrived&#13;
in response to Crosby's call, Meiswinkle had finished his smoke,&#13;
and there was no physical evidence left.&#13;
New York (CPS)—A recently-released study by the Council on&#13;
Economic Priorities indicates that most environmental advertising&#13;
is done by industries which do the most polluting.&#13;
The Council, seeking information on corporate responsibility,&#13;
studied 1970 environmental advertising in all issues of Time,&#13;
Newsweek, and Business Week magazines. It concluded that $3.3&#13;
million, or over half, of the $6 million spent on such ads was spent&#13;
by the iron and steel, electric utility, petroleum, chemical, and&#13;
paper industries. A recent McGraw-Hill study named these same&#13;
five industries as the country's worst polluters, the Council said.&#13;
Minneapolis (CPS)—The Metropolitan Medical center, a&#13;
complex of two hospitals and a 20-story medical office building in&#13;
downtown Minneapolis, was fined $300 last week in Municiapl Court&#13;
after pleading guilty to violating the city's air pollution ordinance&#13;
on Oct. 6.&#13;
The Center was fined $100 last winter for a similar offense. The&#13;
fines, in both instances, were stayed by the court.&#13;
Washington (CPS)—A study by the Carnegie Commission on&#13;
Higher Education has concluded that 494 s mall, obscure colleges&#13;
with relaxed admission policies are the kind "most likely to&#13;
become extinct."&#13;
"American higher education may suffer a severe loss of its&#13;
diversity," the report said, unless steps are taken to save some of&#13;
them. The colleges enroll about 500,000 students and represent&#13;
nearly one-fourth of the undergraduate colleges in this nation.&#13;
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1820-52ND STREET KENOSHA &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE November 22,1971&#13;
by Paul Lomartire, Feature Editor&#13;
Maggie and I were "Eating Out" with a big&#13;
leaguer. We had paid our dues. Gone, at least for&#13;
an evening, were our worst memories of the minor&#13;
league stops on the culinary circuit; all night truck&#13;
stops"featuring surly waitresses, greasy spoons,&#13;
side street restaurants offering luke-warm food,&#13;
and best forgotten cafes.&#13;
We were "Dining Out" with a superstar of&#13;
restaurant critics, Herbert Kubly. A hero of the&#13;
kitchen table gourmets; those individuals who&#13;
and recorded his impressions.&#13;
When he ordered his meal he was very specific&#13;
in regard to the food accompanying his T-Bone&#13;
steak, as he asked the waitress how the hashbrown&#13;
potatoes were prepared. When he found out&#13;
Maggie was once an employee of the Windjammer&#13;
he used her as an insight into the restaurant s&#13;
inner-workings. He questioned her about bacon&#13;
bits, seafood, tumbled onions, and other specifics&#13;
which would serve as foundations for his&#13;
evaluations.&#13;
point, I think, Mr. Kubly learned a bit about the&#13;
chemistry of small time restaurant reviewers;&#13;
they are generous.&#13;
I decided from the outsent of the meal I would&#13;
not review the food at the Windjammer since there&#13;
was a possibility Mr. Kubly would feature this&#13;
restaurant in his column. The thought of bumping&#13;
"columns" with an individual well acquainted&#13;
with aged steak, vintage wine, doormen and fresh&#13;
lobster didn't appeal to my common sense.&#13;
Also, before the meal I had worried about the&#13;
religiously read his column, "Dining Out",&#13;
featured in the Insight section of the Sunday&#13;
Milwaukee Journal. Novelist, gourmet, teacher,&#13;
Mr. Kubly had accepted an invitation to go on an&#13;
"Eating Out" adventure.&#13;
The refined style of "Dining Out", and the&#13;
unorthodox elegance of "Eating Out", were to&#13;
meet at an inconspicuous table at the Windjammer&#13;
Restaurant in Kenosha. Along with Mr.&#13;
Kubly, Maggie and myself, was another guest,&#13;
Genevieve Turk, free-lance writer, student,&#13;
mother, ex-restauranteur, and proud member of&#13;
"the Daniel Ellsberg generation".&#13;
The idea of taking the well-known critic to&#13;
dinner in "Eating Out" territory was suggested&#13;
several times by readers of this column. Realizing&#13;
my weekly feature was a direct offspring of&#13;
"Dining Out", I thought the idea was both novel&#13;
and appropriate.&#13;
It was interesting to note when Maggie and I&#13;
walked into the restaurant the night of t he dinner a&#13;
waitress friend of ours, and reader of Newscope,&#13;
asked if I was going to review the Windjammer. It&#13;
appeared the employees were one up on me as&#13;
they knew I was there as the "guy who writes&#13;
Eating Out". The identity of the gentleman eating&#13;
dinner with us seemed irrelevant to them. The&#13;
irony created a smile on my face in answer to the&#13;
waitress' question.&#13;
Herbert Kubly blended into the Windjammer&#13;
as easily as the soft music piped into the dining&#13;
area. After he was seated, Mr. Kubly fished into&#13;
his pocket and produced a few small pieces of&#13;
tablet paper and a pen. With a casual air of&#13;
professionalism, he looked around the resturant&#13;
After we received our food, and had a few&#13;
minutes to sample it, the waitress asked if&#13;
everything was all right "so far". Mr. Kubly&#13;
looked up from his steak and answered, "Yes, so&#13;
far." At this point, I began to see a bit of the&#13;
chemistry involved in high class dining. There are&#13;
no concessions made in big league restaurant&#13;
reviewing.&#13;
As I thought about writing restaurant reviews&#13;
on his level, I couldn't resist asking Mr. Kubly if&#13;
any restaurant owners had ever tried to buy him&#13;
off. With the positive effect of a good review, I&#13;
assumed there had to be people offering to pay for&#13;
his literary nod of approval. He confided once an&#13;
owner offered him a substantial amount of money&#13;
for a "good" review, only to be laughed at by the&#13;
writer. I realized at this point top flight gourmets&#13;
must have ethics blended with their talents.&#13;
I had ordered what the Windjammer called&#13;
"Surf 'n Turf", which is lobster and steak. While&#13;
taking notes Mr. Kubly wanted to verify what I&#13;
had ordered. In a bit of rhetorical jest he asked,&#13;
"Wasn't it Sea 'n Prairie" or something? Big&#13;
Metropolitan newspaper gourmets must also be&#13;
quick witted, I decided.&#13;
Our meal was being enjoyed to its fullest&#13;
potential. Maggie's hunger was being satisfied&#13;
with a petite filet, Genevieve Turk complimented&#13;
her steak with occasional comments, and I was&#13;
savoring every bite of lobster dipped in warm&#13;
butter.&#13;
Mr. Kubly was busy between bites jotting&#13;
down notes concerning his meal, when he asked&#13;
me how the mushrooms were I had received with&#13;
the steak portion of my meal. Accustomed to&#13;
eating with Maggie, and freely trading morsels,&#13;
bites and tidbits of food with one another,&#13;
disregarding etiquette, I speared a fat juicy&#13;
mushroom with my fork, and air-lifted it to Mr.&#13;
Kubly's plate for his first-hand approval. At this&#13;
conversation that would transpire during the&#13;
evening. As I was finishing my meal, I realized all&#13;
had gone very well. We kicked politics around for&#13;
a considerable time, as Maggie and I are recently&#13;
enfranchised voters, Mr, Kubly a Democrat, and&#13;
Mrs. Turk a radical affiliated with no major party.&#13;
I was in the middle of telling Mr. Kubly I&#13;
wouldn't support any Presidential candidate until&#13;
McCarthy announced his intentions, when the&#13;
waitress asked if anyone wanted dessert. I&#13;
couldn't find anything extravagant enough to&#13;
follow the lobster, and Maggie was full. Mrs. Turk&#13;
and Mr. Kubly ordered peppermint ice cream, but&#13;
the gourmet went a little further and asked for a&#13;
side order of chocolate syrup. Gourmets can add&#13;
class to even the simplest items on a menu.&#13;
All the observations I was making and compiling&#13;
mentally gave me a clear first-hand view of&#13;
gourmets. The final lesson came when Mr. Kubly&#13;
decided he would like to ask a few basic questions&#13;
pertaining to the restaurant. Genevieve Turk went&#13;
to find the manager, but in his absence, brought&#13;
the head bartender. Vic Ruffalo was to be introduced&#13;
to the individual who was really&#13;
reviewing the Windjammer.&#13;
The bit of irony that had produced a smile on&#13;
my face earlier in the evening dissolved the color&#13;
in the face of the bartender. So this was the Herbert&#13;
Kubly who wrote for the Milwaukee Journal.&#13;
After the plates had been cleared, the food&#13;
digested, and the questions answered, I realized&#13;
the tie I wore was beginning to choke me, and the&#13;
smooth elegance of dinner music was creating a&#13;
headache. I began thinking back to the minor&#13;
leagues, juke boxes, hamburgers, French fries&#13;
and ice cold Coca Colas.&#13;
The only differences between "Eating Out"&#13;
and "Dining Out", as I see it, lie in the price of the&#13;
meals, the air of professionalism and the&#13;
chocolate syrup used at just the right time.&#13;
By Jim Kolen&#13;
Title: A Rap on Race&#13;
Author: Margaret Mead,&#13;
James Baldwin&#13;
Publisher: J. B. Lippincott&#13;
Company ($6.95)&#13;
A Rapon Race is a 256 page transcript&#13;
of a conversation between anthropologist&#13;
Margaret Mead and author&#13;
James Baldin, which was recorded&#13;
August 26-7 in the year of our Liberal,&#13;
1970. I picked the book up because I&#13;
think Margie Mead is a nice person, and&#13;
Jimmy Baldwin is, at least to me,&#13;
somewhat of an enigmatic angryman;&#13;
James Baldwin as Baldwin the writer,&#13;
not as James Baldwin as a Black man.&#13;
Remember that last line because it is&#13;
characteristic of the contests of the&#13;
book.&#13;
It is difficult to begin a review of this&#13;
book (and that's the hardest part,&#13;
beginning) because criticizing a conversation&#13;
is a little like asking the man&#13;
on the street for his opinion, and then&#13;
telling him he's wrong. Conversation is&#13;
not writing, and both of these people are&#13;
known basically for their writing; it's&#13;
not as self-conscious, it's prone to&#13;
emotionalism, to sentimentalism, to&#13;
anything that comes to mind, so it can&#13;
reveal things about a person that hisher&#13;
published works could never&#13;
reveal. It takes either a lot of guts or a&#13;
train to cry to publish one of your&#13;
conversations. I can hear the whistle&#13;
BOOK&#13;
blowing as the train smashes into a pile&#13;
of guts. Enough!&#13;
A Rap on Race is Angryman&#13;
liberalized, and grandmother malting&#13;
sure he stays that way. One thing I&#13;
learned about Baldwin is that he ain't&#13;
got his shite together; in one page he&#13;
justifys what he says (which happens to&#13;
be either self-contradicotry or incoherent)&#13;
because "I'm a poet" (in the&#13;
romantic-mystic sense), two pages&#13;
later he says "I'm no romantic". Indeed.&#13;
What or whom is James Baldwin&#13;
anyway? "An exile." The reader has&#13;
reached the point where he-she no&#13;
longer cares.&#13;
So, what is a rap on race? It's when&#13;
Marge and Jimmy are sitting down&#13;
arguing and discussing race; Marge&#13;
utilizing her liberalobotomy, and&#13;
Baldwin holding up the mask of fury,&#13;
putting it down when Marge slaps his&#13;
face with a condescending smile.&#13;
Much of their argument-discussion&#13;
seems to be an unself conscious parody,&#13;
much of it is inconsistent, much of it is&#13;
mutual admiration society bullshite.&#13;
It's really amazing to discover how&#13;
stupidly liberal, self-contradictory, and&#13;
naive, two famous and supposedly&#13;
intelligent people can be when they talk&#13;
to each other. One person talks about&#13;
how he feels, and the other about how&#13;
she knows or has experienced, one&#13;
about the "now", and the other about&#13;
Samoa in the '40's, then one switching&#13;
from now to the past, and the other&#13;
from Samoa to the present. It gets to be&#13;
quite hilarious, if you have the right&#13;
attitude.&#13;
Mead clearly has the edge in the&#13;
arguments; Baldwin is continually&#13;
adjusting his premises and terms to her&#13;
yes', and no's, and hmmmmms'. It's&#13;
amazing, how easily an Angryman can&#13;
be castrated by a grand-(old lady)-&#13;
mother-anthrop. It's bullshite like&#13;
Baldwin talking about how much he has&#13;
suffered, and Mead agreeing, and then&#13;
Baldwin telling her she's suffered, and&#13;
her saying no, I didn't, not like you. It's&#13;
backscratching and inane, obtuse and&#13;
just plain too bad. Mead sits back and&#13;
controls the entire discussion by condescension&#13;
and standing firm while&#13;
Baldwin rides her rollercoaster.&#13;
Baldwin and Mead are simply in two&#13;
different classes; Baldwin can't argue&#13;
nearly as well as Marge and she knows&#13;
it; his arguments become emotional,&#13;
and when Mead says no, that isn't right&#13;
and you know it, he says, yeah I know.&#13;
It's at times like these th$t a rap on&#13;
race becomes one of the world's poorer&#13;
jokes.&#13;
If it seems like I'm putting Baldwin&#13;
down more than Mead, it's because I&#13;
am. No man in his right mind could give&#13;
Baldwin any credance, after hearing&#13;
him complain about people putting&#13;
down Blacks because of their color, and&#13;
then, in the next paragraph, putting&#13;
down hippies because of a life style&#13;
(and hip is a life style). Inconsistencies&#13;
are always striking.&#13;
I suppose A Rap on Race is worth&#13;
$6.95 simply and, in this case, only, for&#13;
its historical value; two historical&#13;
figures conversing. Ok, but anything&#13;
else it ain't. It's two middleaged people&#13;
looking on and discussing the U.S. and&#13;
the World, and for seven bucks one can&#13;
go to any bar and hear the same thing,&#13;
possibly less literate, possibly more.&#13;
For seven bucks it's enough to make&#13;
you think twice. They ain't so smart&#13;
afterall. When Nice Person meets&#13;
Angryman, nothin' happens.&#13;
Perhaps I have the wrong attitude.&#13;
A Rap on Race, courtesy of The Book&#13;
Mart, 622 59th street, Kenosha. &#13;
November 22,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
by Robert Cox&#13;
and dedicated to Larry Olsen&#13;
and Joe BERTA&#13;
Van Morrison — Tupelo Honey&#13;
Produced by Van Morrison and&#13;
Ted Templeman&#13;
Deviating from the normal&#13;
and expected of today's rock&#13;
scene, Tupelo Honey is not&#13;
based around ecology, politics,&#13;
revolution, dope, and in&#13;
general, all the bandstanding&#13;
that rock groups feel necessary&#13;
to make an album sell.&#13;
In the Dylan tradition, he has&#13;
given up making people feel,&#13;
guilty about pollution and how&#13;
corrupt the government is, and&#13;
has decided to use his record&#13;
space to make people feel a&#13;
little bit happier than before&#13;
they bought his album. He is&#13;
content in just singing about&#13;
things like the love between him&#13;
and his wife, friendship,&#13;
drinking moonshine whiskey,&#13;
and watching that evening sun&#13;
go down. In other words, all the&#13;
things that make him happy and&#13;
help him get through this world&#13;
filled with polluted rivers,&#13;
Richard Nixons and Tommy&#13;
James and The Shondells.&#13;
To me, there's nothing I like&#13;
to hear more than something&#13;
that is happy, and in turn, can&#13;
make me happy. That is what&#13;
this album does for me and that&#13;
is quite an accomplishment for&#13;
an album these days.&#13;
Morrison's vocals and lyrics&#13;
vary from funky to very&#13;
beautiful. He, catches the&#13;
listener off guard throughout&#13;
the entire album. You can be&#13;
feeling out one of his excellent&#13;
love songs such as the title song,&#13;
"Tupelo Honey", when the next&#13;
cut sneaks up on you sounding&#13;
like a jazzy country wentern&#13;
tune.&#13;
The musicians accompanying&#13;
Morrison on "Tupelo Honey"&#13;
are of the same caliber which&#13;
played on his previous album,&#13;
"Moondance", which was voted&#13;
by the rock newspaper, Rolling&#13;
! W&#13;
Stone, as the best rock album of&#13;
the year 1969. That is very&#13;
prestigious if one considers that&#13;
both the Beatles and Rolling&#13;
StoneS produced albums that&#13;
same year. Altogether there are&#13;
13 musicians varying from Luis&#13;
Gasca on trumpet, to Ronnie&#13;
Montrose on mandolin to&#13;
Roberta Williams on zither.&#13;
The only complaint I have of&#13;
this album is that there are only&#13;
nine cuts. But, at least the nine&#13;
cuts on "Tupelo Honey" are&#13;
done well.&#13;
"Wild Night", the first cut on&#13;
the album, is one of the best&#13;
ever done by Morrison. Billy&#13;
Church's bass playing is superb&#13;
and Jack Schroer's sax is&#13;
played just as well. If you do not&#13;
enjoy this song (it's played on&#13;
the radio about 100 times a day)&#13;
then chances are Van Morrison&#13;
is not your style of music. Other&#13;
high points of this album are the&#13;
background vocals on "I Wanna&#13;
Roo You", which are led by&#13;
Morrison's wife, Janet Planet.&#13;
John McFee's steel guitar&#13;
playing on the same song, the&#13;
'boogy' piano playing done by&#13;
Mark Jordon on "When That&#13;
Evening Sun Goes Down", and&#13;
the excellent voice range of Van&#13;
Morrison on every selection of&#13;
"Tupelo Honey".&#13;
If you have never been turned&#13;
on to Van Morrison's previous&#13;
album, "Moondance", do so&#13;
before you purchase this one. In&#13;
my opinion "Moondance" has a&#13;
slight edge over it. If you have&#13;
heard "Moondance" and enjoyed&#13;
it, then the next time you&#13;
scrape up four bucks, head on&#13;
down to your favorite record&#13;
shop and pick up on it.&#13;
Other new albums worth&#13;
purchasing: "Cahoots" by The&#13;
Band; "Rock On" by Humble&#13;
Pie; "The Yes Album" by Yes;&#13;
'.'The J Geils Band";&#13;
"Madura"; "The Siegal Schwall&#13;
Band"; "Meet The&#13;
Beatles" by the Beatles.&#13;
The Firebugs-Something For Everyone&#13;
By William Sorensen&#13;
The day's nervous audience sat smoldering,&#13;
expectant of a play with a "cutely" misleading&#13;
name. Their personality was parental as the&#13;
breezes of grinning pride brought the wavering&#13;
heads together. Whispering, they would part with&#13;
a belly laugh only to grin again with feverish teareyed&#13;
joy that seemed to say "our little boy" or&#13;
"our little girl". Someone struck a match.&#13;
That audience and I sat somewhere on stage,&#13;
participating in this farce of expediency.&#13;
Biedermann, believably portrayed by Ken&#13;
Labrasca, is Everyman. His fear of reality is so&#13;
great that thenintruderarsonists, Sepp Scmitz&#13;
(Ray Waldie) and Willie Eisenring (Arthur&#13;
Dexter) infest themselves with no difficulty on this&#13;
non-exigent Adam and Eve. Babbette is Biedermann's&#13;
wife, played by Pat Engdahl.&#13;
Blind Biedermann eventually gives the arsonists&#13;
the means to destroy him, illustrating the&#13;
importance of his role as the indecisive and accommodating&#13;
fool, and directing the attention of&#13;
the audience to the historical referent. His own&#13;
tailoring of the wove's sheepskin is readily seen as&#13;
the image of a pre-war Europe who accommodated&#13;
Adolph Hitler, fighting only when&#13;
they were nearly beaten. Biedermann's will is&#13;
nonexistent and hfs reason has run wildly into a&#13;
netherworkd if abstractuib,&#13;
The play encompasses any oppressor and is&#13;
reliant on audience interpretation. This empathy&#13;
inserts the roles of oppressor and oppressed where&#13;
ever the viewer wishes them inserted. This&#13;
universality is interesting and telling. . . the night&#13;
that I saw the play one couple went crashing out of&#13;
the foom, nearly falling as they went, within the&#13;
first 15 minutes! We don't have to ask whom they&#13;
identified with.&#13;
While the play was primarily written as a post&#13;
analysis of the pre-WWII situation, I wondered&#13;
who the original firebugs and appeasers were.&#13;
How was the play originally used? Max Fisch is&#13;
Swiss and wrote the work in 1953, at that time in&#13;
America paranoic Joe McCarthy was still looking&#13;
for Communists. Europe was still in transition;&#13;
only eight years before war reparations tore&#13;
Germany in two. The Western section producing a&#13;
quasi-American Democracy. Capitalism came&#13;
easy to the energetic German people with distrust&#13;
and animosity growing between East and West, at&#13;
first slowly and then snowballing with the construction&#13;
of the Berlin wall in 1961. T he wall and&#13;
the madness that both sides used to build it, still&#13;
stand.&#13;
In 1958 the play premiered in Zurich, Switzerland.&#13;
Considering Swiss neutrality and&#13;
economic strength it would seem that this was an&#13;
excellent observation post for Fisch to watch the&#13;
goings-on in Europe. It is doubtful that the play did&#13;
not orignally assume anti-communist connotations.&#13;
&#13;
The set design was at once simple and ample, a&#13;
hard line etched against a black backdrop.&#13;
Marilyn Baxter, faculty director, redesigned the&#13;
basic set. She also found it necessary to eliminate&#13;
the last scene; it was an extreme of the main&#13;
theme and since it takes place in hell, construction&#13;
of the set would have been a trifle more difficult.&#13;
Ken Labraxa's in-character-consistency was&#13;
obvious and the relaxed delivery that he maintained&#13;
helped to soothe a few minor mistakes in&#13;
cueing on the part of others in the cast.&#13;
A little bit of Art Dexter came through the&#13;
diabolical character, Eisenring, but this proved to&#13;
be more the result of good casting th an mis-acting.&#13;
Jerry Socha (sound effects) and I agreed that&#13;
Art's performance was probably the most persuasive&#13;
reaching a level of believability&#13;
precipitated by Art's own perception of self.&#13;
Ray Waldie, as Sepp Schmitz, was the chief&#13;
source for humor in the play and he achieved this.&#13;
Pat Engdahl, who plays Babbette, has contributed&#13;
time and talent in virtually every theatre&#13;
production in the Kenosha area. While her part&#13;
was essentially supportive, the calm, easy stage&#13;
presence she reaily attained reinforced my&#13;
general impression of the play.&#13;
Thanks are due to Marilyn Baxter, faculty&#13;
director, and Terry Killman, student director, for&#13;
turning out a reasonably good collegiate&#13;
production. I enjoyed it.&#13;
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Noveber 22,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
and then he might not even have&#13;
a fire truck in the station!"&#13;
"After a third look at what&#13;
happened, you can't put him&#13;
down for what happened. He's&#13;
doing what any other athletic&#13;
director would do in the whole&#13;
United States. You see, he does&#13;
it better than anybody else," he&#13;
concluded.&#13;
+ + -+-&#13;
Judy Zimmerman is a bright'&#13;
eyed and blond haired girl from&#13;
West Allis. She was a member&#13;
of last year's girl's track and&#13;
cross country team. She now&#13;
attends UWM. Prior to coming&#13;
to Parkside she ran for a&#13;
private club in Milwaukee, and&#13;
had captured the Wisconsin&#13;
Women's AAU titles in the 440,&#13;
the 880 yard runs, the cross&#13;
country mile, mile and a half&#13;
and ten mile runs.&#13;
She spoke guardedly when&#13;
interviewed, but revealed her&#13;
complaints were that she was&#13;
told by Rosandich there were no&#13;
scholarship type funds&#13;
available when, in fact, there&#13;
were, and that when she was&#13;
recruited it was agreed that&#13;
Parkside would send her to as&#13;
many meets as she qualified for&#13;
agreement was that I wouldn't&#13;
receive any scholarship funds,&#13;
but they would cover all my&#13;
traveling expenses. They would&#13;
send me to any meet I qualified&#13;
for in the U.S. or Canada in&#13;
return for not getting a&#13;
scholarship. That was the only&#13;
W my parents could afford to&#13;
send me there, because if I&#13;
didn't go there I'd have to pay&#13;
for my own traveling."&#13;
Was it followed through with?&#13;
It s kind of touchy because&#13;
Rosandich and the Parkside&#13;
staff didn't really follow&#13;
through, but I was taken to&#13;
meets because of another&#13;
coach," she answered.&#13;
She said the girls didn't really&#13;
know what was happening at&#13;
first, but Jerry Hutchinson, who&#13;
was their coach but who was&#13;
only a student himself, took&#13;
them to the meets. They didn't&#13;
know who was paying for it. It&#13;
turned out, she said, that&#13;
Hutchinson and Vic Godfrey,&#13;
the cross country coach, were&#13;
paying the expenses out of their&#13;
own pockets.&#13;
Was she sent to all the meets&#13;
as promised?&#13;
"I got an injury and we were&#13;
But as she looked back over&#13;
her experiences with Parkside&#13;
athletics, she said, "I went to&#13;
Parkside knowing full well what&#13;
I was getting into. I had seen the&#13;
campus. I can only look back&#13;
and say I should have had a&#13;
contract. I should have had Mr.&#13;
Rosandich write down exactly&#13;
what we had discussed. My dad&#13;
should have gone in with him&#13;
and gotten it on contract, and&#13;
Uien we should have held him to&#13;
it. Then there wouldn't have&#13;
been any problems at all."&#13;
MORE&#13;
But there is more to the&#13;
stories of Mary Libal and Judy&#13;
Zimmerman.&#13;
Between them the girls once&#13;
held the Wisconsin Women's&#13;
AAU titles in the 100 yard dash,&#13;
the 220, the 440, the 880, the&#13;
cross country mile, mile and a&#13;
half, and ten mile runs. Track&#13;
was their lives, they say simply.&#13;
Today they don't compete.&#13;
The reason why is a combination&#13;
of factors. Injuries are&#13;
part of it, but above that, they&#13;
both say they lost their desire to&#13;
compete after their experiences&#13;
with Parkside athletics.&#13;
Mary Libal spoke of it when&#13;
story one&#13;
in the U.S. and Canada, which it&#13;
didn't really, she said.&#13;
"I wanted to go to a school&#13;
that had coaches that would&#13;
bring out every ounce of&#13;
potential I had," Judy said. "I&#13;
wanted to see if it would be&#13;
worthwhile for me to stay in the&#13;
field. So I went to Parkside&#13;
because the coaching staff from&#13;
what I had heard in clinics&#13;
sounded like they knew what&#13;
they were doing.&#13;
"I have to be honest and say&#13;
that I knew it was going to be a&#13;
pioneer campus, because things&#13;
weren't established, and that I&#13;
would need a pioneer attitude,"&#13;
she admitted. "Luckily, I didn't&#13;
expect too much, although they&#13;
made promises for the future.&#13;
"I was told I couldn't have a&#13;
scholarship, and that there&#13;
weren't any scholarships&#13;
available. I was going because&#13;
they would give me a lot of&#13;
travel and exposure," she said.&#13;
"That would sort of balance&#13;
things out. I wouldn't get a&#13;
scholarship, but they would pay&#13;
for the travel.&#13;
"That was the disappointment,"&#13;
she explained.&#13;
"The very same day I got there&#13;
I found out other athletes had&#13;
gotten money — at least for&#13;
books, tuition, or they had had&#13;
out of state tuition waived.&#13;
There were scholarship type&#13;
funds handed out, and I had&#13;
been told there was no such&#13;
funds. I felt they hadn't been&#13;
honest with me.&#13;
"I was kind of hurt," she said,&#13;
"Because I want to have faith in&#13;
my coaches, and if they could&#13;
pull that on me, I wondered&#13;
what else could happen."&#13;
She told of a gentleman's&#13;
agreement between her father&#13;
and Tom Rosandich. "The&#13;
never able to test them on it.&#13;
When Jerry said he wouldn't&#13;
coach for the school anymore,&#13;
and wouldn't spend his money,&#13;
at that time I got an injury and&#13;
couldn't compete anyway. So&#13;
we never got to see what the&#13;
school would do, although there&#13;
were meets where the school&#13;
said they wouldn't send us, and&#13;
Jerry paid for it, and took us&#13;
anyway."&#13;
Like Mary she injured herself&#13;
performing for Parkside. She&#13;
strained her achilles tendon and&#13;
it necessitated her going to a&#13;
specialist on three occasions.&#13;
Like Mary she had to pay for the&#13;
doctor and the x-rays on her&#13;
own.&#13;
She said of the coaching she&#13;
received: "Jerry worked us into&#13;
the ground. I was running twice&#13;
a day and traveling every&#13;
weekend. I wound up a nervous&#13;
wreck, and found out I couldn't&#13;
handle the type of training that&#13;
would be necessary to be a&#13;
national champion.&#13;
"I don't think the coaches&#13;
knew how to handle girls," she&#13;
continued. "They knew how to&#13;
run a guy's team, but I don't&#13;
think they knew the psychology&#13;
behind working with girls. We&#13;
were just pushed right along&#13;
like we were in Marine camp."&#13;
She left Parkside she said&#13;
because of money. She has&#13;
decided not to train as strictly&#13;
as she once did so "there was no&#13;
reason to go to a school that&#13;
lacked a campus atmosphere&#13;
and pay that kind of money.'?&#13;
She adds even now, "This&#13;
year they're supposed to have&#13;
better facilities. I'm going to&#13;
look things over, and if they&#13;
have a good program, and the&#13;
campus is centralized, I could&#13;
go back."&#13;
asked if running was important&#13;
for her. "I would say so," she&#13;
said in understatement. "I've&#13;
spent maybe $400 to $500 of my&#13;
own money going to meets. I&#13;
used to work out seven days a&#13;
week, regardless of anything. In&#13;
fact, I even stopped going out&#13;
with one of my boy friends&#13;
because I didn't have the time.&#13;
"I thought it was worth it —&#13;
till all this happened at&#13;
Parkside. I wanted to make the&#13;
Olympic team in 1972, and I was&#13;
willing to give up everything for&#13;
it," she said. "I had no social&#13;
life at all because I worked&#13;
when I was in high school so I&#13;
would have money to go to&#13;
meets. I trained in all my spare&#13;
time. And I never went any&#13;
place and I never did anything&#13;
because I wanted to be in shape.&#13;
"Now I have the feeling,&#13;
'What can I say? It's all past,' "&#13;
she continued. "I don't feel like&#13;
competing and there's nothing&#13;
that can be done about it. That's&#13;
what was important ' to me.&#13;
That's what I lost at Parkside."&#13;
Judy Zimmerman echoed&#13;
Mary's comment. "I don't&#13;
consider myself competitive at&#13;
this time. I was burned out at&#13;
Parkside., I was driven so hard&#13;
and for so long that I lost the&#13;
edge. What happened was that I&#13;
got so nervous before meets I&#13;
lost the enjoyment of competing.&#13;
&#13;
"There was pressure on us&#13;
when we learned the staff didn't&#13;
want to put the money on us to&#13;
go to meets they thought we&#13;
wouldn't do well in. Then to go&#13;
to a meet and to realize what&#13;
they were thinking and then not&#13;
to do well, you felt like crawling&#13;
into a hole, you felt like you had&#13;
put the school to shame."&#13;
fill&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
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REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
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REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tlffon - Orrefora&#13;
Seneca • Lallque&#13;
Roval Worcester&#13;
Dates Announced&#13;
For Billiards Tourney&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, in conjunction with the&#13;
Association of College Unions -&#13;
International, will sponsor a&#13;
men's and women's billiards&#13;
tournament to select the&#13;
Parkside representatives for&#13;
the regional playoffs in Oshkosh&#13;
on February 17,18 and 19, 1972.&#13;
The winners of the Oshkosh&#13;
tournament will then advance&#13;
to the International tourney to&#13;
be held April 19-21, 1972, in San&#13;
Jose, California. Participants in&#13;
both regional and international&#13;
events will have their expenses&#13;
paid.&#13;
Both men's and women's&#13;
campus play will be 14.1 Continuous&#13;
Pocket Billiards&#13;
(safeties allowed), played&#13;
under the rules and regulations&#13;
set down by the Billiard&#13;
Congress of America.&#13;
Preliminary tournament play&#13;
will consist of single elimination&#13;
match play with the best two out&#13;
of three games to 75 points&#13;
determining the winner. Semifinal&#13;
and final rounds will be&#13;
conducted on a doubleelimination&#13;
basis, with best 2&#13;
out of 3 games to 150 points&#13;
determining the winner. All&#13;
play will take place in the&#13;
Student Activities Building on a&#13;
special 5' x 9' competition table.&#13;
Registration will be held for&#13;
the next 3 weeks in the Student&#13;
Activities Building Office.&#13;
. Tournament play will be held&#13;
starting January 19, 1972, with&#13;
the finals held on Wednesday&#13;
night, February 2. An entry fee&#13;
of $1.50 will be charged to help&#13;
defray local and national&#13;
tournament costs and prizes.&#13;
Local prizes will be trophies for&#13;
first and second places.&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Se/ioincj the, fyine&amp;t&#13;
Ptyyz &amp; 9iaUa*t Qoodl&#13;
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LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
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• • • -• ',•.&gt;4&#13;
Ken Danby Silkscreens New Gallery One&#13;
5U3 Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wis &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE November 22,1971&#13;
By Alexous Doo Dah&#13;
Special Correspondent&#13;
to Newscope&#13;
Always on the ball, Newscope editor&#13;
was thumbing through the annals of the&#13;
K-News last week when his gaze fell&#13;
upon an article on page 99 pertaining to&#13;
a rash of sniping in the K-Town area.&#13;
This fine editor said, "Ah, a job for&#13;
Alexous Doo Dah - none other will do."&#13;
My assignment: Interview the Police&#13;
Chief and victims of the K-Town mad&#13;
sniper and reveal the story behind the&#13;
story. So, I tnade my appointment to&#13;
see the Chief. When I walked into his&#13;
office he was sitting at his desk behind&#13;
large piles of paperwork. All were&#13;
letters to K-Town citcitizens&#13;
She went running out to do his bidding.&#13;
Better pay 'em. They double fast you&#13;
know. Heh Heh.&#13;
Now about this niper. Yes, we do have&#13;
'one. But let me make one thing perfectly&#13;
clear. (He pointed his middle&#13;
finger at the sky) I, the commander in&#13;
cheif, have commanded my officers to&#13;
conduct an around the clock investigation&#13;
into the whereabouts of this&#13;
rascal. We'll get 'em. We always get&#13;
'em - just like the Mounties.&#13;
And when we do, it won't go easy for&#13;
'3m. We'll throw the book at 'em. He&#13;
rose from his desk and with a&#13;
monumental effort picked up a law&#13;
book three feet thick! See how heavy it&#13;
is? It's mighty heavy and it's going to&#13;
hurt.&#13;
modus operandi. M - 0 - D - U. . .&#13;
Newscope: Gotcha ya. The sniper&#13;
snipes old ladies.&#13;
Chief: Don't ever interrupt! Metermaid!&#13;
Metermaid! She came running&#13;
in. Urn yas, give this man (me again) a&#13;
few more parking tickets. She went&#13;
running out to do his bidding. Better&#13;
pay- • ^&#13;
Newscope: I know, I know. They&#13;
double fast. Heh Heh. That'll teach me.&#13;
You got the Powah.&#13;
Chief: DOO DAH! Your're an incorrigable&#13;
lout and I'm surprised my&#13;
men haven't run you in - or have they?&#13;
Newscope: Not lately, but&#13;
Chief: Nevermind. I'll see that they do&#13;
for something. Are you on evil killer&#13;
devil weed? See how heavy, how&#13;
taperecorder was recording his every&#13;
obscenity.)&#13;
Chief: I oke that, boy, Showing proper&#13;
respect to an enforcer. I know I can&#13;
trust you. ,&#13;
Newscope: You bet your ass you can&#13;
SIR' I cleared my throat. Do you have&#13;
any leads on who this perverted&#13;
derriere stinger is?&#13;
Chief: Um, quite frankly, yes. Through&#13;
our superb system of computers,&#13;
eavesdropping, wiretap, univax,&#13;
teletype, and with the colse cooperation&#13;
of the F.B.I, and C.I.A^ we&#13;
believe our man to be a drunken dope&#13;
craxed fiendish half-breed who escaped&#13;
from Waupun two weeks ago. He's a&#13;
lifer by the name of Crowbait&#13;
The Reign Of Crowbait Cavanaugh&#13;
threatening to set the cops on 'em if&#13;
they didn't pay their library fines. He&#13;
was signing them with a flourish, a&#13;
scrawl, and a snarl.&#13;
Newscope: Hello, uh, chief, uh, Sir,&#13;
officer sir. I'm the mild ma-mannered&#13;
reporter from Newscope, Alexous Doo&#13;
Dah. And I'm here because it's a&#13;
matter of gr - grave pubic I mean public&#13;
concern when there's a mad sniper&#13;
loose on our fair streets.&#13;
Chief: Ah well Doo Dah, when's the last&#13;
time you had a haircut?&#13;
Newscope: When's the last time you&#13;
brushed your teeth, Sir?&#13;
Chief: Metermaid! Metermaid!&#13;
She came running in. Um yas, give&#13;
this man (me) a few parking tickets.&#13;
Newscope: Yes. It seems mighty heavy&#13;
to me too.&#13;
Chief: You're Damn-Tootin it's heavy.&#13;
Heavy, Heavy, Heavy. Anyhow, enough&#13;
promises. Our first complaint was filed&#13;
last week by a certain Eleonora Sushe,&#13;
81, Within hours our man (the outlaw)&#13;
struck again and again and again.&#13;
Treated and released in fair condition&#13;
(all things considered) from KMemorial&#13;
were Dorloona Smutslapper,&#13;
82, Alvinia Snodgrass, 83, and an old&#13;
colored lady Annamaria Paisono, 84.&#13;
I know you're not a trained enforcer&#13;
like me, Doo Dah, but notice the pattern.&#13;
His victims are all female; 81, 82,&#13;
83, and 84. That means they're all old&#13;
too. Pretty good huh? We'll call that his&#13;
mighty heavy this book is? Just wait.&#13;
Where were we? Oh yes. . . our&#13;
sniper, Damn him, is believed to be&#13;
armed and dangerous.&#13;
Newscope: I thought all snipers have to&#13;
be armed.&#13;
Chief: DOO DAH! I'm warning you for&#13;
the last time, SHADDUP!!!! Yes? His&#13;
weapon is believed to be either a Daisy&#13;
or Crosman air pistol. Our ballistic's&#13;
men found one golden B.B. at the scene&#13;
of each crime.&#13;
All the victims were shot in either the&#13;
right or left side of their ass. . .but for&#13;
the record Doo Dah - buttocks. It sounds&#13;
so much better.&#13;
Newscope: Gottcha Chief. Mum's the&#13;
word sir, officer sir. (My hidden&#13;
Cavanaugh. Cracked in '65 for biting&#13;
the big left toe off his grandmother and&#13;
spitting it out in the street, he got sent&#13;
up the river in '66. She was 80 and we&#13;
nowh have reason to believe he has this&#13;
thing about old ladies.&#13;
If it is Crowbait, no Mother's mother&#13;
is safe. He's a slick, cunning savage&#13;
and a dead shot with a B.B. gun. But&#13;
what's worse is his effect upon the&#13;
moral of America and what it stands&#13;
for ' ' ' Apple&#13;
pie . . .Motherhood . . .law and order&#13;
. . .sob. We goota get 'em, just&#13;
gotta!&#13;
Will Crowbait's reign of terror&#13;
continue? Find out next week in part II.&#13;
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Noveber 22,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 9&#13;
Michigan; St. Louis, Chicago&#13;
and Champaign, Illinois, while&#13;
the men's cross country team&#13;
never left the state.&#13;
Coach Godfrey added, "Judy&#13;
received an invitation from&#13;
Philadelphia to run there, but&#13;
we said there's no way she&#13;
should run there. We couldn't&#13;
let her run in that. No way. We&#13;
prohibited from buying insurance&#13;
on athletes. We have&#13;
never stopped working on this&#13;
problem. The basic procedure&#13;
used is that no athlete is allowed&#13;
to participate in a single day of&#13;
practice without insurance."&#13;
A survey of athletes revealed&#13;
95^per cent of them have insurance&#13;
he said — mostly&#13;
But that still doesn't cover&#13;
doctor bills. He repled, "What&#13;
we have managed to do through&#13;
some doctors in the two communities&#13;
is send most of our&#13;
kids to them for treatment, and&#13;
it's been a gratis type thing."&#13;
Overall, Rosandich expressed&#13;
amazement at the charges&#13;
made against him. He said&#13;
story two&#13;
couldn't let our athletes run in&#13;
any meet they weren't prepared&#13;
for."&#13;
Rosandich readily admits&#13;
insurance for athletes is a&#13;
major problem. "It's probably&#13;
the saddest thing in the&#13;
University," he said. "The&#13;
University by state law is&#13;
through their father's&#13;
hospitalization plan. "You know&#13;
who isn't covered by this is&#13;
someone who doesn't have a&#13;
father, or comes from a poor&#13;
economic background," he&#13;
pointed out. "The only hope for&#13;
them is the $30.00 policy offered&#13;
through the University. That's&#13;
less than acceptable."&#13;
avenues for athletes to express&#13;
dissatisfaction were open for&#13;
them through the Captain's&#13;
Council and the Sports Club&#13;
Council.&#13;
He maintained in particular,&#13;
"We took the leadership and&#13;
still have the leadership in&#13;
women's track."&#13;
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Two Performances Dec. 4, 5:15 &amp; 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Curtain:&#13;
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VALUES TO s22.00&#13;
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a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
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open 9 a.m.—12 p.m.&#13;
Available for F&#13;
rate r nity or so f o r i t y parties &#13;
Page 10 NEWSCOPE November 22,1971&#13;
(CPS)—If striking soft-coal miners stay out for another 30 days&#13;
lllMAX* M N J M i H A L A VAf - which appears unlikely - if United Mine Workers Present&#13;
Miners —ana Dine DOXGS Tony Boyle continues to Withhold strAe benefits ti ™ major&#13;
r confrontation in the coal fields of Appalachia. The nation s major&#13;
Coal users, electric utilities, have another thirty day supply on hand&#13;
because they stocked up in anticipation of the strike, but after that&#13;
anything goes, including massive blackouts.&#13;
One miner told a government official in Washington recent y a&#13;
if National Guardsmen are sent in to keep the mines open, es&#13;
Virginia won't be no Kent State. The Guard will leave in pine&#13;
boxes."&#13;
Gino's&#13;
has something&#13;
for everyone&#13;
in clothes.&#13;
10% STUDENT&#13;
DISCOUNT&#13;
on any&#13;
purchase&#13;
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CHRISTMAS&#13;
Gino's&#13;
Sportswear 4&#13;
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Newscope&#13;
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AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCtvBERS&#13;
5021 - 30th Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
LOSTAND FOUND&#13;
LOST - brown leather wallet with&#13;
sun engraved. Any knowledge&#13;
pertaining to its whereabouts&#13;
contact Newscope. Keep the money&#13;
but please return the identification.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Students International Meditation&#13;
Society. A lecture on transcendental&#13;
meditation will be given Thursday,&#13;
Nov. 8, 7:30 p.m., Greenquist hall,&#13;
room 101.&#13;
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
Consultation Service. Free local&#13;
counseling. All alternatives considered.&#13;
Call 1-352-4050.&#13;
INFORMATION FILE — for&#13;
browsing at a table in the Information&#13;
Center, Tallent Hall,&#13;
room 201.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
1 or 2 female roommates to share&#13;
apartment during 2nd semester.&#13;
Call 632-1691 between 1 and 5 p.m.&#13;
Ask for Gretchen.&#13;
RIDE from 65th street &amp; Sheridan&#13;
road to Parkside 5 days per week at&#13;
7:30 a.m. or earlier and ride back at&#13;
4:30 p.m. or later. Will pay well for&#13;
dependability. Call 654-2502 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Drummer wants to work again, good&#13;
equipment - experienced. Call Kim&#13;
878-1892.&#13;
Ride wanted to Chicago any&#13;
weekend. Call 73-3836.&#13;
Sax Players needed for 12 piece&#13;
orchestra. Make money, have fun.&#13;
Call 654-5777 or 857-2780.&#13;
Piano teacher needs students - any&#13;
age. Call 654-5777.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOLK GUITARS — Western guitar&#13;
with Rosewood body, $28, Folk&#13;
guitar $14. Call 658-2932 after 4 p.m.&#13;
FOLD GUITAR — with case $15,&#13;
complete set children's Golden Book&#13;
Encyclopedias in perfect condition&#13;
$10. Call 553-2403 before 5 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
&#13;
Christmas gifts for the entire family&#13;
from Avon. Something for everyone.&#13;
Wrapped for Christmas FREE.&#13;
Phone 654-2237. No obligation.&#13;
WELCOME - COME BROWSE —&#13;
"hand in heart" gift shop, 517 - 16&#13;
street Racine. Open 12 to 5 p.m.&#13;
Tuesdays thru Sundays - Fridays til&#13;
9:00 p.m. Beautiful handmade items&#13;
sold - creative work also welcomed.&#13;
Mosrite Bass Guitar. Double pickup,&#13;
hollow-body with plush-lined&#13;
hardshell case. Good condition. Was&#13;
$450 new, will sell for $100. Contact"&#13;
Larry, Parkside Village, Atp. 109,&#13;
552-8347, or leave message at&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
FOR SALE — Dog - Wire-haired fox&#13;
. terrier, AKC reg.,6wksold. call 553-&#13;
2329, or 652-3565.&#13;
Gals: Dress up for the Holidays in a&#13;
1933 brown crepe; long bloused&#13;
velvet sleeves; separate sleeveless&#13;
jacket. Worn 3 times. Call 657-7223.&#13;
1 pair of men's ski boots (laced), size&#13;
10 for $8. Call Info. Cntr., ext. 2345.&#13;
Cold Heart Warmer - size 14,&#13;
muskrat fur jacket $50. Call 652-6754.&#13;
Typewriter - Remington portable,&#13;
with case. $35. Call 654-0272 from 9-5,&#13;
or 652-2788 after 5.&#13;
FREE - F unny little gerbils, call 634-&#13;
9173.&#13;
HOUSE - rent free for neat mature&#13;
female. Call 552-8835 after 4 p.m.,&#13;
Kris.&#13;
FREE KITTENS - save a kitten&#13;
from the gas chamber; multicolored.&#13;
Call 878-1892.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1968 PONTIAC GTO — 2 dr, low&#13;
mileage, solid dark blue with tinted&#13;
windows, five-spoke wheels with&#13;
mag rims with red inserts, interior&#13;
dark, rawhide wheel cover, 10,000&#13;
rpm sun tach. Any reasonable price&#13;
accepted. Must sell fast, going to&#13;
Canada. Call 634-2316, ask for Allan.&#13;
1966 CHEVY II — Wagon, standard,&#13;
radio, good condition, $650 including&#13;
snow tires. Call 552-8956 evenings or&#13;
weekends.&#13;
PONTIAC FIREBIRD 1967 — Like&#13;
new condition, 326 engine, new paint,&#13;
mag wheels. 694-2075.&#13;
1064 BELAIR CHEVY — White 4dr.,&#13;
$150, in good condition. 554-7719, 4532&#13;
Ridge Crest Drive.&#13;
1965 F-85 OLDSMOBILE — V8,&#13;
auto., pwr steering, 4 dr sedan, very&#13;
good cond. no rust. Oneowner, 54,000&#13;
mi. NF green - $700. Call 6^4-3937.&#13;
1970 Triumph GT6 - British Racing&#13;
green A-l condition, 1,800 miles, two&#13;
new radial tires. Best offer over&#13;
$2,400.00, inquire apt. 210, Parkside&#13;
Village, Building one.&#13;
1969 Opel Rally, new wide ovals,&#13;
AM-FM, 13,000 miles, call 633-0471.&#13;
FOR SALE — 1964 Ford station&#13;
wagon less engine, interior and&#13;
transmission (automatic) in good&#13;
condition. $50. 878-1892.&#13;
1068 Toronado, pwr. brakes, pwr.&#13;
steering, pwr. seats, factiry air.&#13;
$2,000 or best offer. Immaculate&#13;
condition. Call Jim 654-0353.&#13;
FOR SALE -1964 Chrysler Newport,&#13;
dependable. Call 639-0379.&#13;
FOR SALE 1966 Triumph 650 T.T.&#13;
Runs great, but needs little work.&#13;
$500 or best offer. Call 552-8987.&#13;
1967 Cougar, 3 speed on floor, 289&#13;
eng. Clean interior, 4 new tires, 2&#13;
owner. Call 654-0272 from 9-5, or 652-&#13;
2788 after 5.&#13;
JUGUAR - 1966 XKE coupe. Very&#13;
good mechanically &amp; structurally,&#13;
best offer over $1950. Contact Prof.&#13;
Beyer evenings at ext. 53 on Racine&#13;
Campus.&#13;
FOR SALE - '65 Plymouth 426&#13;
automatic, 2 dr. hardtop, bucket&#13;
seats, mags. Must sell. $800. Call 654-&#13;
7346 after 4:30. &#13;
November 22,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 11&#13;
Schooners Take&#13;
Intramural Title&#13;
The Parkside intramural&#13;
football season recently drew to&#13;
a close, with 1971 to be&#13;
remembered as the year of the&#13;
Schooners.&#13;
Defensively the Schooners&#13;
were unscored upon in regular&#13;
season play, and conceded a&#13;
mere 18 points in three playoff&#13;
games. Offensively the&#13;
Schooner machine amassed&#13;
over 100 reg ular season points&#13;
and a total of 48 playoff points.&#13;
Key wins by the champions&#13;
were a hard fought game over&#13;
the House Apes 7-6, and the&#13;
championship game 21-6 over&#13;
Mully's Men of Hacine.&#13;
Offensive stars performing&#13;
for the Schooners were&#13;
scrambling quarterback Dennis&#13;
Serpe, wide receiver Tom&#13;
Jaehne, and fullback Dave&#13;
Bolyard. Anchoring the line&#13;
were Jeff Frank and Bob&#13;
Martin, along with Paul Grey&#13;
and Marty Hogan.&#13;
Bolyard, Grey and Hogan also&#13;
performed their heroics on&#13;
defense along with Mike Zizich&#13;
and player-coach Steve&#13;
Hagenow in the forward wall of&#13;
the Doomsday defense.&#13;
Starring at middle linebacker&#13;
was Woody, winner of a game&#13;
bal against the Apes. The AllLeague&#13;
secondary was comprised&#13;
of Denis Crane and Kent&#13;
Newsam at cornerbacks, along&#13;
with Rick Davis at free safety.&#13;
Coach Hagenow labeled this&#13;
team as his best ever and was&#13;
happy to mold this array of&#13;
talent into a winning unit.&#13;
A final thanks goes out to&#13;
scouts Rock Jurvis, Mike&#13;
Fitzgerald and Ed VanTine&#13;
along with part-time stars Tom&#13;
Thomsen and Tom Findreng.&#13;
Soccer Setback&#13;
In a rough injury-riddled&#13;
contest, the Ranger boosters&#13;
suffered a 3-0 defeat at the&#13;
hands of arch-rival UW-Green&#13;
Bay.&#13;
Emotion ran high in the hard&#13;
fought struggle which saw three&#13;
Rangers ejected.&#13;
Parkside's Rick Kilps can&#13;
attest to the ruggedness of the&#13;
game as he suffered a broken&#13;
leg.&#13;
With the victory, Green Bay&#13;
emerges as the District 14&#13;
champions, while the Rangers&#13;
finish with a .500 record at 6-6-1.&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
"N 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;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside ,&#13;
Round Trip J«t.&#13;
$ Ground Trmfen .&#13;
If. Sown Nights&#13;
• Lo«»9lng&#13;
ond forty .&#13;
• Eighth Night...&#13;
$ Ninth Night&#13;
$Guidos ....&#13;
. Overnight flight from your city via a regularly 10&#13;
PARIS with an immediate connecting flight to GENEVA, SWITZERLAND. Your&#13;
overseas flight will include complimentary meals and beverages&#13;
. Transportation from and to GENEVA via deluxe buses.&#13;
. The first through the seventh day in COURCHEVEL. FRANCE, the most modern&#13;
and extensively developed ski area in FUROPE situated at-6,105 feet ,n the center&#13;
of a vast domain of snowtields. Abundant snow, remarkable sunshine record, runs&#13;
from beginner's to expert's with intermediate runs from top to bottom COURCHEVEL&#13;
was developed by Emile Allais, French Olympic champion. 2 big cabin&#13;
cableways. 6 gondolas, 36 ski and chair lifts. 30.000 ascents per hour 1 ski ,ump.&#13;
36 marked runs including EUROPE', fastest Olympic run ski school 200 instructors.&#13;
a 50 man maintenance and rescue team. 2 skating rinks, and 16 discotheques.&#13;
Lessons-$ 13.00 for 12-2 hour lessons, rental-skis and poles $2.00 per day&#13;
(approx).&#13;
, Your lodging in the ski area will ue in modern new apartments and chalets all with&#13;
bath, kitchenette, balcony and individual beds.&#13;
, On the seventh day there will be a giant slalom race for your group with an awards&#13;
party in the evening complete with wine, prizes and trophies&#13;
, In GENEVA with three great options lor that day&#13;
/tn Continue skiing in COURCHEVEL and that afternoon depart for your over&#13;
^ night in GENEVA&#13;
Ski in a different area s uch as LA PLAGNE and then go to GENEVA to. the&#13;
® night.&#13;
Depart in the morning for GENEVA where you will have the day for shopping&#13;
® and sightseeing Overnight in GENEVA in a good category hotel.&#13;
In PARIS. In the morning you will depart for PARIS whore you will have time to&#13;
shop and spend the evening on the town. Overnight in a good category hotel,&#13;
next morning you will catch your Air France flight home&#13;
Multilingual guides will meet your group upon your arrival m EUROPE and will be&#13;
available to assist you at all times until departure&#13;
FOR AOOtTION&gt;\L INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:&#13;
Mr. William Nlatxjhr. Coordinator&#13;
Studant Activuiar&#13;
Unhandy of WiiconUn - Parkltda&#13;
Kanoih. WlKomln 53140&#13;
Phona: (414) S6J2225&#13;
lODays&#13;
Only $264&#13;
Plui t»oo Tax and Service&#13;
Depart: Chcaga January 4&#13;
Return: Chicago. January 14&#13;
Three Gymnasts&#13;
In I nternational&#13;
Competition&#13;
Coach Dave Donaldson will&#13;
enter three members of his first&#13;
gymnastics team at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
in the Midwest Open&#13;
Saturday at Conant High School&#13;
in Hoffman Estates, 111.&#13;
Senior Warren McGillivray,&#13;
sophomore Dan Boswein and&#13;
freshman Kevin O'Neil are&#13;
entered for the Rangers.&#13;
McGillivray will compete in&#13;
the free exercise and the vault,&#13;
Boswein on the side horse and&#13;
O'Neil on the rings.&#13;
"We're entering primarily to&#13;
get exposure to top-notch people&#13;
and experience at a very high&#13;
level of competition,"&#13;
Donaldson said. "There are&#13;
entries from all over the&#13;
country and many competitors&#13;
will be of international caliber.&#13;
"This is traditionally the first&#13;
large meet to open the season&#13;
and we think it provides a lot of&#13;
opportunity for us."&#13;
No team scores are kept,&#13;
although most Wisconsin&#13;
schools and many from Illinois&#13;
and surrounding states send&#13;
representatives. Preliminaries&#13;
are set for 10 a.m. Saturday&#13;
with finals scheduled at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
"We've come a long way&#13;
since we started in September,"&#13;
Donaldson said. "We've still got&#13;
a long way to go but some things&#13;
we're struggling with now will&#13;
start to come together."&#13;
By Jim Casper, Sports Editor&#13;
The Ranger icemen squared their season mark at 1-1 with a&#13;
5-4 victory over Marquette.&#13;
While outshooting the Warriors 23-20, t he Rangers picked&#13;
up five goals among three players.&#13;
Mark Broderick and Dave Bradshaw each came up with&#13;
two goals, while Marc Tutlewski accounted for the other&#13;
score.&#13;
Parkside's cross country squad captured the NAIA's&#13;
District 14 t itle, earning the right to compete in the NAIA&#13;
national championships at Liberty, Missouri.&#13;
Pacing the Rangers were Lucian Rosa and Rudy Alvarez&#13;
qho finished 1-2.&#13;
Dennis Biel finished seventh, Chuck Dettman eighth, and&#13;
Jim McFadden 10th.&#13;
Parkside totaled 28 points in winning, while Carthage&#13;
placed second with 33. Further back were River Falls with 62&#13;
and Stout at 109.&#13;
Two Parkside judo classes will hold a grudge battle judo&#13;
tournament at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 30, at Kenosha&#13;
Athletics. A donation of 25 cents for the one hour tourney will&#13;
be asked to raise money for Judo Club queen candidate&#13;
Bonnie Eppees and the Harlow Mills .Schoalarship Fund.&#13;
Three members of the Parkside Judo Club captured second&#13;
place honors recently in two different tournaments.&#13;
Helmut Kah earned second place in green belt at the&#13;
Chicago Black Belt Tournament while Hayes Norman was&#13;
second in blue belt at the same competition.&#13;
Bonnie Eppees was runner-up in the green belt class at the&#13;
Milwaukee Women's Tournament.&#13;
REC 0RD&#13;
DANCE&#13;
Wt&lt;J. A/ov.21&#13;
8.OO-1.00&#13;
R+&#13;
SM.Act&#13;
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HoUy K'A&#13;
^^K^/UJCR JL&#13;
IFREE BEEf\ A&#13;
I per J*** rto K&#13;
This package contains;&#13;
Y0UNGBL00DS&#13;
BEATLES&#13;
CREAM QUICKSILVER&#13;
STONES DYLAN&#13;
JEFFERSON AIRPLANE MOTHERS&#13;
HENDRIX&#13;
BEACH BOYS&#13;
KINKS CROSBY&#13;
ANIMALS STILLS&#13;
VELVET UNDERGROUND NAS H&#13;
DOORS Y0UN G&#13;
TRAFFIC&#13;
The BAND and many more ; (kE.«F»k:^ &#13;
be the only girl working out with&#13;
15 guys."&#13;
"After I got down here they&#13;
insisted on training me like a&#13;
distance runner even though&#13;
I'm a sprinter," she continued.&#13;
"The first year I was here they&#13;
trained me to be in the pentathelon&#13;
because they thought I&#13;
was strong enough. So they&#13;
were training me for the discus,&#13;
and I'm not a discus thrower. I&#13;
consider myself a sprinter. I got&#13;
a serious knee injury from&#13;
practicing the discus which&#13;
ruined most of the indoor track&#13;
season for me.&#13;
"The original injury happened&#13;
at Rosandich's training&#13;
camp. They decided after they&#13;
talked me into transferring to&#13;
Parkside to be the pentathelon&#13;
girl. I injured my knee and had&#13;
trouble walking.&#13;
"They kept saying 'We don't&#13;
want you to go home. We'll work&#13;
with you. We'll use water&#13;
therapy and it'll be okay.' So I&#13;
did stay at the camp," Mary&#13;
said. "When I got home I went&#13;
to an orthopedic surgeon and he&#13;
said it was a partial tear of the&#13;
ligaments, but it had started to&#13;
heal, and for the time being he&#13;
wouldn't do anything with it."&#13;
When she came to Parkside&#13;
her knee was sore but she could&#13;
run on it. She Started training on&#13;
the discus and hurt it again. "I&#13;
always told them it bothered&#13;
me, but they just assumed I was&#13;
a hypocondriac I think."&#13;
At semester break she went to&#13;
an orthopedic surgeon and he&#13;
put her in a cast from her ankle&#13;
to her hip to immpbilize her leg&#13;
for a month and a half.&#13;
Her doctor bills came to $200,&#13;
and she had to pay it herself.&#13;
State law prohibits state funds&#13;
from being used to insure&#13;
athletes, and Parkside Athletics&#13;
has no plan to cover its athletes&#13;
in case of injury.&#13;
She came back to Parkside&#13;
last fall because she had an&#13;
academic scholarship, and&#13;
because two runners were&#13;
coming, Judy Zimmerman and&#13;
Bev Crawford. Both of whom&#13;
were very good, she said.&#13;
They had a new coach, too,&#13;
Jerry Hufchinson, who was a&#13;
transfer student ffom Ohio&#13;
State.&#13;
"We worked really hard in the&#13;
cross country season, even&#13;
though none of us were' really&#13;
cross country runners," Mary&#13;
said. "We did go to the U.S.&#13;
National Cross Country Meet,&#13;
and we didn't do very well&#13;
because we were running&#13;
against the best in the nation.&#13;
"Mr. Rosandich was apparently&#13;
disgusted with us&#13;
because we didn't do better. He&#13;
was supposed to have remarked&#13;
he was ashamed of us." This&#13;
with the athletic policies&#13;
because of the crazy hours we&#13;
were working out and the hours&#13;
we were wasting."&#13;
Mary's track career at&#13;
Parkside ended soon after when&#13;
she quit over a dispute with her&#13;
coaches. One coach said she&#13;
could miss a meet to go watch&#13;
the Big Ten championship meet&#13;
in Madison. Then the head track&#13;
coach said she couldn't after&#13;
she had already bought tickets&#13;
and made arrangements to stay&#13;
in Madison.&#13;
She went anyway. When she&#13;
returned she heard she was&#13;
dropped from the team, she&#13;
said. Subsequently she was told&#13;
she wasn't dropped — that it&#13;
was all a mistake. She quit then&#13;
of her own volition. "I had had&#13;
enough of their athletic&#13;
policies," she said.&#13;
Crawford. She didn't do much&#13;
for them either."&#13;
+ + +&#13;
John Patten, a pole vaulter, is&#13;
a transfer student from a junior&#13;
college in California. He was&#13;
recruited to come to Parkside&#13;
after spending the summer of&#13;
1970 training at Olympia&#13;
Village, the camp Rosandich&#13;
founded.&#13;
His story is similar to that of&#13;
Mary, except time has given&#13;
him a more philosophical view&#13;
of what happened.&#13;
He said that Rosandich told&#13;
him Parkside was a new and&#13;
growing school. "I was told&#13;
there was going to be more&#13;
facilities and more equipment&#13;
than there was when I actually&#13;
got here. I was told the Phy Ed&#13;
building would be up when I&#13;
arrived, that there was an instory&#13;
one&#13;
she said was overheard by one&#13;
of the girls on the team.&#13;
"This rather disgusted us&#13;
after we had practiced so much.&#13;
Jerry worked us too hard. He&#13;
had us running 8 to." 10 m iles a&#13;
day. He was just a student&#13;
himself, but he had free rein&#13;
over us. By the time the indoor&#13;
season came he had just about&#13;
run us to death, and no one had&#13;
any enthusiasm for the new&#13;
season.&#13;
"We had crazy practice hours&#13;
where we had to get up at 5&#13;
o'clock in the morning to&#13;
practice at Park High School.&#13;
Then we had to come out to&#13;
Parkside at three in the afternoon&#13;
to work out again,"&#13;
Mary said. "Sometimes we&#13;
couldn't get into Park High&#13;
School. So we had to work out&#13;
between 7 and 11 o'clock at&#13;
night."&#13;
The result was that "most of&#13;
the girls were getting disgusted&#13;
What was her impression of&#13;
Tom Rosandich, the man who&#13;
recruited her? "He's a&#13;
manipulator of people who's out&#13;
to gain his own fame."&#13;
While she readily&#13;
acknowledged that the track&#13;
coaches are talented, she says&#13;
of them, "First of all, I think the&#13;
coaches are most concerned&#13;
about their own- names.&#13;
Secondly, they'll try to develop&#13;
the name of Parkside. Only last&#13;
are they concerned with the&#13;
athletes. The only athletes they&#13;
do take good care of are the&#13;
ones they think will further&#13;
their names.&#13;
"I did feel used," she continued.&#13;
"The first year I was&#13;
here I wasn't running the&#13;
national times they thought I&#13;
'would. It was like they&#13;
discarded me to place their&#13;
hopes on Judy. Then when Judy&#13;
wasn't doing too well they&#13;
thought they could rely on Bev&#13;
door track. Like many people&#13;
that rebelled I was insulted by&#13;
this. I was told I was to work out&#13;
in a normal athletic manner. I&#13;
was told the facilities were&#13;
here."&#13;
When he arrived there wasn't&#13;
even a vaulting pit for him to&#13;
practice in.&#13;
"I kinda griped at this," he&#13;
admits. "But when you come&#13;
down to it, and analyze the&#13;
problem, this was no fault of&#13;
theirs. There was a cutback in&#13;
money.&#13;
"Everyone griped at first.&#13;
Then it seemed to separate, and&#13;
the ones that continually griped&#13;
were the ones who never really&#13;
got into it. They never tried to&#13;
make the best of a bad situation.&#13;
The others seemed to overcome&#13;
it."&#13;
He. added, "In my career as&#13;
an athlete I've never seen so&#13;
much subversion in the ranks as&#13;
I did at Parkside — men and&#13;
women, even the coaches. But I&#13;
think it was a normal reaction&#13;
to the situation — with so much&#13;
money being cut. The team&#13;
simply broke apart as a whole."&#13;
Patten chose to characterize&#13;
the dissension on the team as&#13;
subversion. He noted that in a&#13;
week's time that it was mere&#13;
luck if the entire team practiced&#13;
together just once. The problem&#13;
being that people had classes on&#13;
three different campuses, and&#13;
the team practiced in five&#13;
different locations.&#13;
He said now the dissension on&#13;
the team is diminishing as&#13;
Parkside acquires more&#13;
facilities. He sums up his own&#13;
experiences as "a temporary&#13;
dissatisfaction led to a&#13;
gratifying, rewarding learning&#13;
experience. The way I felt m- for&#13;
a couple of months is not the&#13;
way I've felt for the last year."&#13;
His view of Tom Rosandich,&#13;
the man who recruited him?&#13;
"He's quite a politician. I highly&#13;
respect the guy. He's the kind of&#13;
guy I would like to have on my&#13;
staff if I were an Athletic&#13;
Director. He has this great&#13;
ability to make things sound&#13;
fantastic, whether they are or&#13;
not. This is what turned a lot of&#13;
people off — including myself at&#13;
first."&#13;
Is that supposed to be a&#13;
compliment?&#13;
"I'm complimenting the guy&#13;
for making things sound great,"&#13;
Patten responded. "I'm not&#13;
saying he lies, or stretches the&#13;
point. He's doing a darn good&#13;
job of getting people out here,&#13;
and if they get turned off from&#13;
the program, that's a chance he&#13;
takes.&#13;
"He's the kind of guy that&#13;
could be sitting in a firehouse,&#13;
and you could call up and say&#13;
your home was on fire. He could&#13;
make you feel so confident that&#13;
everything was under control —&#13;
(Continued on Page 7)&#13;
The follow through on this&#13;
was that the man was in&#13;
Arizona on vacation and&#13;
couldn't be contacted. Meanwhile,&#13;
the Chancellor continued,&#13;
"Tom had the impression he&#13;
had on a firm deal on this. This&#13;
wasn't true."&#13;
So Beverly Crawford came to&#13;
Parkside, her tuition supposedly&#13;
taken care of. She&#13;
dropped out then, and in&#13;
February of this year, according&#13;
to a letter the Chancellor&#13;
revealed to this reporter,&#13;
the Bursar asked Rosandich if&#13;
she was on the grant-in-aid list&#13;
Athletics had made — her&#13;
tuition of $899 hadn't been paid&#13;
yet.&#13;
Rosandich replied he thought&#13;
the Chancellor was taking care&#13;
of it out of a special fund he had&#13;
for minority students.&#13;
To which the Chancellor&#13;
responded in a letter he had no&#13;
special fund for minority&#13;
students, nor the money to&#13;
transfer to cover the item.&#13;
He told Rosandich his only&#13;
assurance to him had been to&#13;
raise the question of aid to the&#13;
individual, not that the aid was&#13;
assurred.&#13;
The Chancellor then&#13;
reprimanded Rosandich for&#13;
reporting on a budget document&#13;
that her tuition would be&#13;
covered from the Chancellor's&#13;
funds when he had made no&#13;
such committment.&#13;
He further censured&#13;
Rosandich for unilaterally&#13;
escalating preliminary and&#13;
exploratory conversations with&#13;
him into firm budget committments&#13;
and program approval.&#13;
&#13;
The resolution of the problem&#13;
was that the Office of Financial&#13;
Aids, because it can remit 8 per&#13;
cent of the total out-of-state&#13;
tuitions paid in, picked up part&#13;
of the bill, while Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie contributed $150 and&#13;
Rosandich $100 and Beverly&#13;
Crawford's tuition was finally&#13;
paid.&#13;
The question now is whether&#13;
what happened constitutes a&#13;
violation of the Women's conference&#13;
rule against financial&#13;
aid for athletic ability.&#13;
The rules state: "Any student&#13;
who receives an athletic&#13;
scholarship, financial award,&#13;
financial assistance,&#13;
specifically designated for&#13;
athletes is not eligible to&#13;
compete. An athletic&#13;
scholarship is defined as a&#13;
scholarship in which one or&#13;
more of the following conditions&#13;
exist: (1) The scholarship is&#13;
dependent primarily upon one's&#13;
athletic ability. (2) The&#13;
scholarship is dependent upon&#13;
participation in the athletic&#13;
program. (3) The scholarship is&#13;
awarded as a result of undue&#13;
happened to have exceptional&#13;
athletic ability.&#13;
Rosandich's response to&#13;
whether it constituted a&#13;
violation was: "No, it wasn't. It&#13;
wasn't granted in the form of an&#13;
athletic scholarship. Here was a&#13;
minority girl who had a&#13;
financial problem that received&#13;
some help. There was no tender.&#13;
There was no grant. There was&#13;
no athletic scholarship. It's as&#13;
simple as that."&#13;
Rebuttal&#13;
In response to other charges&#13;
that he had lied or misledathletes&#13;
when he recruited&#13;
them, Rosandich said it was the&#13;
policy of his office to&#13;
specifically avoid the chance of&#13;
that happening.&#13;
He read from a memo to his&#13;
staff: "Whatever is promised&#13;
should be in black and white, so&#13;
that they do not come around&#13;
The money for them comes&#13;
primarily from the Parkside 200&#13;
Club.&#13;
In response to Mary Libal's&#13;
charge that he told her that&#13;
Parkside had an indoor track,&#13;
he replied, "I can say that I did&#13;
not tell her we had an indoor&#13;
track. There is no way I would&#13;
tell any student athlete that I'm&#13;
going to build an indoor track&#13;
when even now .in the final&#13;
stages of the building of the&#13;
Phy. Ed. there's no indoor&#13;
track."&#13;
He said he purposefully chose&#13;
not to have one — even though&#13;
he has a track background. He&#13;
feels a swimming pool is more&#13;
useful because more people will&#13;
use it.&#13;
Rosandich stated further, "I&#13;
can show you memorandums to&#13;
my staff that establishes the&#13;
policy ^hat no person should&#13;
story two&#13;
influence by a member of the&#13;
athletic department, physical&#13;
education department, or coach&#13;
who is aware of the athletic&#13;
ability of an applicant.&#13;
However, athletes may receive&#13;
academic scholarships or&#13;
economic scholarships,&#13;
provided none of the conditions&#13;
above apply.&#13;
"Financial assistance shall&#13;
npt be offered directly-or indirectly&#13;
as a means of&#13;
recruitment of participants or&#13;
prospective participants into&#13;
the athletic program.&#13;
Recruitment of student athletes&#13;
to enhance the institution's&#13;
athletic teams is not approved."&#13;
The question is whether&#13;
Beverly Crawford was&#13;
recruited because she was a&#13;
deserving minority student,&#13;
from Pittsburgh, or whether she&#13;
was a deserving minority&#13;
student from Pittsburgh who&#13;
and say this was promised to&#13;
me ... If you're going to say&#13;
something to someone, you put&#13;
it in writing."&#13;
He said Parkside does not&#13;
have the typical scholarship&#13;
program, which consists of&#13;
room, board, books, tuition and&#13;
spending money. "Parkside&#13;
does not have that kind of&#13;
program. We do believe we can&#13;
buy a boy books, which is&#13;
fundamental to his education.&#13;
We believe that in the case of an&#13;
exceptional blue chip athlete we&#13;
will give him tuition. We will do&#13;
this for a man. It is a staff&#13;
decision."&#13;
Rosandich said that initially&#13;
28 book scholarships werf&#13;
allocated at a maximum valut&#13;
of $150 a piece. The books are&#13;
used as part of a lending library&#13;
program. He said there were a&#13;
total of 11% tuition scholarships&#13;
given.&#13;
ever be recruited for this&#13;
University without first seeing&#13;
our facilities."&#13;
To Mary's accusation that she&#13;
was told there was a girl's track&#13;
team at Parkside when there&#13;
wasn't, Vic Godfrey, the cross&#13;
country coach, responded, "As&#13;
far as anyone saying there was&#13;
a team at that time it would&#13;
have been very difficult for us to&#13;
say that. I was up at Olympia&#13;
Village at the time she was&#13;
training and I don't know who&#13;
would have told her we had a&#13;
team. I know we talked aboiJt&#13;
having a woman's program."&#13;
Rosandich said too his staff&#13;
did their best to try and find&#13;
Mary housing. He noted one of&#13;
his coaches, Paul Ward, spent&#13;
three days searching for a room&#13;
for her before she arrived at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
He said Judy Zimmerman&#13;
was right in saying the Office of&#13;
Athletics did not pay the&#13;
traveling expenses of the girl's&#13;
track and cross country teams.&#13;
"I don't know if Jerry paid out&#13;
of his pocket, or if anybody else&#13;
did. They ran as a club last year&#13;
and not as a team. There is a&#13;
very simple reason for this. A&#13;
team is eight girls. We never&#13;
had eight girls. They gathered&#13;
about seven people together."&#13;
This included a girl from St.&#13;
Catherine's high school and&#13;
Rosandich's eight year old&#13;
daughter. "Obviously, I can't&#13;
take funds from the University&#13;
and put these people on the road&#13;
against competition that is not&#13;
collegiate — they couldn't find&#13;
another college team to run&#13;
against," he said.&#13;
"We had a couple of experienced&#13;
girls, and just found&#13;
the rest," he explained. "We&#13;
decided the way to go was to&#13;
build a club."&#13;
Club sports at Parkside are&#13;
not funded because of the lack&#13;
Qf mo ney, he said. But they do&#13;
receive help in scheduling, help&#13;
in finding coaches, and are&#13;
given safety equipment if they&#13;
need it.&#13;
"Funds he said to operate the&#13;
girl's teams came from&#13;
donations. He said too his wife&#13;
often drove them, or else&#13;
supplied the use of one of their&#13;
cars.&#13;
To Judy's charge that she&#13;
wasn't sent to all the meets that&#13;
she was promised she would be,&#13;
Rosandich responded, "Where&#13;
Judy Zimmerman did not run&#13;
was the indoor meets, and that's&#13;
because the invitations weren't&#13;
there, and she didn't have the&#13;
ability to go out and perform.&#13;
You don't ever send someone to&#13;
a level of competition where&#13;
they're going to be lapped three&#13;
times. It's as simple as that.&#13;
He pointed out she did run at&#13;
Canton, Ohio; Ypsilanti,&#13;
(Continued on Page 9) </text>
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              <text>Loumos Wins SGA Presidency</text>
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              <text>"Journalism it Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold U"»*rsity of WisCOmi* • Parkside&#13;
VXWfCOVS&#13;
Volume 5 Number 13 November 29,1971&#13;
Loumos Wins SGA Presidency ir*&#13;
by Ken Konkol of the Newscope staff&#13;
In an election that saw only 17 per cent of the&#13;
student body casting votes the Concerned Students&#13;
Coalition scored a solid victory by capturing three of&#13;
the top offices from more moderate candidates. Amid&#13;
rumors of alleged ballot box stuffing (see guest&#13;
editorial), Dean Loumos won the presidency over&#13;
Dennis Cashion by 29 v otes while his running mate,&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta, easily defeated his nearest&#13;
challenger, Frank Chiapetta. Rounding out the CSC&#13;
victory, Canny Trotter pulled 458 votes in winning the&#13;
treasurer's office.&#13;
Jeanette Dremel ran uncontested for recording&#13;
secretary and received 498 votes, tops for any of the&#13;
candidates. Don Kosher ran away with the&#13;
corresponding secretary's contest, but received a&#13;
total of only 129 votes.&#13;
In the race for President Warren McGillvrey&#13;
received 122 votes as a write-in candidate and may&#13;
have played a significant role in Cashion's defeat.&#13;
McGillvrey, a conservative, took votes that most&#13;
likely would have gone to Cashion as a moderate.&#13;
For the Student Union Committee, Bob Wingate&#13;
received 381 votes, far above second place Pat Waite&#13;
who received 31. Rounding out the committee are&#13;
Jerry Ruffalo, 24; Mike Pobar, 15; and Kurt&#13;
Sahakian, 8.&#13;
The 14 people who were on the ballot for the office&#13;
of Senator came in the top 14 positions for the office.&#13;
In addition, successful write-in campaigns were&#13;
waged by Jim DeBerge, Ken Martin and Mark&#13;
Barnhill who edged out John Hanzlik by one vote for&#13;
the 17th position.&#13;
Election results:&#13;
President, Dean Loumos 273, Dennis Cashion 244,&#13;
Warren McGillvrey 122, Tony Kombol 59.&#13;
Vice President, Bruce Volpintesta 263, Frank&#13;
Chiapetta 202, C. S. O'Brian 95, Ed Vantine 88.&#13;
Treasurer, Danny Trotter 458.&#13;
Recording Secretary, Jeanette Dremel 498.&#13;
Corresponding Secretary, Don Koser 128, Dave&#13;
Walden 15.&#13;
Senators, Elaine Birch 289, Dale Martin 243,&#13;
Carol Kubinski 233, Ken Konkol 226, Mike Lofton 224,&#13;
Jerry Murphy 221, Tom Taskonis 207, Mike Baxter&#13;
195, James Twist 190, Dave Kerner 155, Norman&#13;
Pietras 142, John Grimes 127, Dan Voisin 111, James&#13;
Bielefeldt 97, Jim DeBarge 70, Ken Martin 47, Mark&#13;
Barnhill 44.&#13;
Student Union Committee, Bob Wingate 381, Pat&#13;
Waite 31, Jerry Ruffalo 24, Mike Pobar 15, Kurt&#13;
Sahakian 8.&#13;
First&#13;
Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Meeting&#13;
THURSDAY AT 3:30 IN EI THER&#13;
101 OR 103 GREENQUIST HALL&#13;
AGENDA:&#13;
A. "STATE OF THE SCHOOL ADDRESS&#13;
1. RESPONSIBILITY OF STUDENT&#13;
GOVERNMENT OFFICIERS&#13;
2. BUDGET OUTLINE&#13;
3. EXPLANATION OF STANDING&#13;
COMMITTEES&#13;
4. INTRODUCTION OF PROJECTS&#13;
5. OUTLINE OF COMMITTEES&#13;
6. STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE November 27,1971&#13;
Letter To T he E ditor&#13;
During the recent student government elections it&#13;
seemed that the classical Parkside student apathy&#13;
was replaced as a chief source of concern for conscientious&#13;
students by Student Affairs' mishandling of&#13;
the election. Since the current student constitution&#13;
contains no definitive or explanatory election laws,&#13;
local regulations were supposedly in force (i.e.&#13;
Wisconsin State Statutes). However, I observed&#13;
violations as well as unethical practices which I feel&#13;
are worth considering.&#13;
First, the displaying on the balloting tables in&#13;
Kenosha and Greenquist of the list of organized&#13;
government write-in candidates was a violation of&#13;
election ethics. Even though the Athletic Department&#13;
prodded, candidates entered the race on the first day&#13;
of voting, this affords them no excuse to receive&#13;
preferred treatment. Similarly then, all candidates&#13;
should have had their campaign literature on the&#13;
balloting tables too; but they didn't, so the organized&#13;
student government candidates shouldn't have had&#13;
theirs. Interestingly, this was in direct violation of a&#13;
typewritten law taped on all balloting tables which&#13;
stated there should be no soliciting (powters, campaign&#13;
literature, etc.) within 50 yards of the polling&#13;
place. A rule that was obviously not enforced.&#13;
Another violation was in campaign literature&#13;
found at all three campuses which violates Chapter&#13;
12, Section 16 of the Wisconsin State Statutes. This law&#13;
prohibits the issuing or circulating of campaign&#13;
literature, that fails to provide the name of the author&#13;
and the candidate in whose behalf this literature was&#13;
published and circulated. The literature in question&#13;
carried the title "Vote for Violence?!!" and was a&#13;
general rip off of the C.S.C. candidates, especially&#13;
Dean Loumos. Even though I didn't vote for him and&#13;
other C.S.C. candidates, I raise the issue. Why? For&#13;
the reason of one anonymous charge deserves&#13;
another and another and another, etc. until charges,&#13;
denials, propaganda and B.S. are hurled about&#13;
irresponsibly causing the meaningless campaign and&#13;
more important confused and apathetic voters.&#13;
These flyers should have been picked up immediately&#13;
by the Student Affairs. However, they were&#13;
not. Interestingly enough, posters were taken down&#13;
earlier in the semester because they violated the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Code Book size for posters;&#13;
yet campaign literature issued during the election, in&#13;
violation of the Wisconsin State Statutes, was left&#13;
untouched.&#13;
Concerning the polling station attendents, while&#13;
they did not violate any laws to my knowledge, there&#13;
is considerable room for improvement. Since they&#13;
were getting paid by the hour for doing a job, I feel the&#13;
job didn't include talking to girlfriends or doing&#13;
homework while curiously passing and glancing&#13;
students walked by. I would suggest the job they&#13;
should get paid for is attending the polling station and&#13;
attracting passing students to vote, and if not,&#13;
reminding them that they should vote.&#13;
For the above reasons among others, it appears&#13;
that Student Affairs did a poor job in handling and&#13;
assuring the fairness of the campaign.&#13;
I am not out to indict anyone, but help Parkside&#13;
be the great university it deserves to be. This can only&#13;
come about by a vigorous and effective student&#13;
government, which is the result of a well managed&#13;
and fair election.&#13;
Timothy W. Prostko,&#13;
President, Pre-Law Club&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
November 15 was one day in&#13;
the life of a generally reserved&#13;
Parkside student. This student&#13;
was relatively depressed on this&#13;
particular day. He decided to&#13;
have a few beers. Well, one led&#13;
to another and he became intoxicated.&#13;
While under this&#13;
intoxication, he said words that&#13;
he had not offended any individuals.&#13;
The powef of alcohol&#13;
can be somewhat, controlled.&#13;
The student was entirely nonviolent.&#13;
He was asked to leave&#13;
by a few fellow students, he&#13;
refused. "I haven't done&#13;
anything wrong."&#13;
This young man was left alone&#13;
for a while, then a security&#13;
officer was summoned to the&#13;
scene of this senseless interaction&#13;
of students in the&#13;
Activity Building. The officer&#13;
was asking questions and informed&#13;
the student that a&#13;
complaint was reported. The&#13;
officer was asked what the&#13;
150 Protest&#13;
Draft Clause&#13;
Madison, Wis. (CPS) — Three&#13;
persons were arrested Thursday&#13;
as more than 150&#13;
demonstrators surrounded the&#13;
bus which was to take 20 men to&#13;
Milwaukee for draft physicals&#13;
or induction.&#13;
The demonstration, organized&#13;
by the Madison Area Draft&#13;
Reistances, was to protest&#13;
against what the group considered&#13;
to be illegal induction&#13;
orders. Citing a November 10&#13;
decision by a California federal&#13;
court which issued a restraining&#13;
order prohibiting induction of a&#13;
man against his will within 90&#13;
days of the signing of the draft&#13;
law. The 90 d ays will be up on&#13;
December 28.&#13;
Federal Judge Robert J.&#13;
Kelleher said last week that the&#13;
argument of 23-year-old Karl S.&#13;
Bohn of Santa Barbara "seems&#13;
to present a case of national&#13;
importance."&#13;
Bohn's case is based on a&#13;
draft law section that reads:&#13;
"No person shall be inducted or&#13;
ordered into active service&#13;
without his consent under this&#13;
title within 90 days after the&#13;
date of its enactment."&#13;
The clause was part of the&#13;
1948 revival of the World War II&#13;
draft law, and the 90 day&#13;
moratorium apparently was&#13;
intended to give the Selective&#13;
Service time to set up its&#13;
operation again.&#13;
The 60 days injunction only&#13;
affects Bohn, however,&#13;
although other cases presenting&#13;
the same point as Bohn's have&#13;
been filed in California.&#13;
U.S. Attorney Alan Peryam,&#13;
representing the government,&#13;
told the judge the case would&#13;
affect 10,000 men facing induction&#13;
in the next two months.&#13;
nature of the complaint was. I&#13;
don't know I'm just following&#13;
orders." I asked the officer his&#13;
name, he gave it to me and&#13;
made a phone call. I then made&#13;
a phone call to Mr. Martinez to&#13;
find out the nature of the&#13;
complaint. While I was on the&#13;
phone a well-dressed security&#13;
officer came in and then there&#13;
was two. They took the student&#13;
into the utility room and locked&#13;
the door. After 15 minutes of&#13;
interogation, the student would&#13;
confess nothing and was let go.&#13;
The well dressed security officer&#13;
was asked his name and&#13;
replied, "I don't have to give&#13;
you my name." Then Mr. Noname&#13;
left and Gary had another&#13;
beer.&#13;
MORAL: If you get intoxicated&#13;
in the Act. Bldg., don't&#13;
open your mouth, you might get&#13;
locked up .... in the utility&#13;
room.&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
Conference to Organize&#13;
New Voters&#13;
(CPS) — Over one hundred&#13;
student body presidents from&#13;
colleges and universities across&#13;
America joined with the&#13;
Association of Student&#13;
Governments this week in&#13;
calling for an Emergency&#13;
Conference for New Voters to&#13;
organize students as voting&#13;
delegates to the nationwide&#13;
party nominating conventions&#13;
in 1972.&#13;
The Emergency Conference&#13;
is slated for December 3,4 and 5&#13;
at Loyola University in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
"The events of the past month&#13;
clearly indicate that neither of&#13;
the two major political parties&#13;
welcome the young, leaning&#13;
voters as fully-enfranchised&#13;
participants in the parties,"&#13;
said Duane Drapter, President&#13;
of ASG and Chairman of the&#13;
steering committee for the&#13;
Emergency Conference.&#13;
"These events create a crisis&#13;
situation for the millions of&#13;
young people who wish to effect&#13;
constructive change through&#13;
existing institutions. Unless we&#13;
begin the task immediately of&#13;
organizing students within the&#13;
party processes, we will find&#13;
ourselves totally excluded from&#13;
the delegate selections and the&#13;
Presidential nominating&#13;
procedures, thus effectively&#13;
disenfranchised despite the 26th&#13;
amendment. The events&#13;
Drapter referred to were the&#13;
Democratic Committee's&#13;
selection of Patricia Harris as&#13;
temporary chairman of the&#13;
credentials committee over&#13;
liberal Senator Harold Hughes&#13;
Iowa), who had been viewed by&#13;
many as the key to enforcement&#13;
of the McGovern Commission&#13;
reforms at the Democratic&#13;
convention in Miami.&#13;
On the Republican side,&#13;
pressure from high echelon&#13;
Republican officials to thwart&#13;
Congressman Pat McCloskey's&#13;
(R-Cal) challenge to President&#13;
Nixon in the primaries has&#13;
caused serious financial&#13;
problems for McCloskey's&#13;
campaign, and could essentially&#13;
eliminate him as an alternate&#13;
candidate.&#13;
"It is imperative that the&#13;
twenty-five million 18-24 year&#13;
olds in the country are aware of&#13;
the mockery that both&#13;
Democratic and Republican&#13;
party officials are making of the&#13;
reform movements in the&#13;
parties," continued Draper.&#13;
The Emergency Conference&#13;
for New Voters is the last&#13;
national gathering of students&#13;
before the delegate selection&#13;
process begins, which in some&#13;
states is as early as February.&#13;
The conference at Loyola will&#13;
include a number of workshops,&#13;
seminars, and panels to discuss&#13;
voter registration and political&#13;
organization.&#13;
50* OFF&#13;
LARGE PIZZA&#13;
(with coupon)&#13;
10 oz. BEER 15 *&#13;
PITCHER 75*&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Sports Editor James Casper&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Manager Fred Noer,Jr.&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 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;
University. Free copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. the&#13;
Thursday prior to publication and must be typed double-spaced. Deadline for&#13;
photographs is the Saturday prior to publication. Unsolicited manuscripts&#13;
and photographs may be reclaimed within 30 days after the date of submission,&#13;
after which they will become the property of Newscope Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the Student Organizations building, Intersection&#13;
of Highway A and Wood Road.&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
on wood road just south of parkside &#13;
November 21), 1971 NEWSC'OPE Page:)&#13;
PART II&#13;
TERROR IN THE PARK&#13;
by Alexous Doo Dah&#13;
This, which you are about to read, is&#13;
the continuing story of Crobait&#13;
Cavanaugh vs. the world. A story about&#13;
the man who shot from behind, at the&#13;
behind, and which is so elegantly&#13;
covered by a crack ace Newscope&#13;
crimestopper team. As you recall, last&#13;
week the Police Chief revealed the&#13;
hidden identity of the mad sniper who&#13;
had been terrorizing K-town. He is none&#13;
other than Crowbait! The feared, the&#13;
dreaded, the drunken dope crazed halfbreed.&#13;
And now let us return to that&#13;
fateful interview with the Chief.&#13;
Newscope: Bit the big toe off his&#13;
gramma and spit it out in the street did&#13;
he? Must have tasted awful. I can't&#13;
think of any other reason to spit&#13;
something like that out.&#13;
Chief: That's neither here nor their Doo&#13;
vh hand of the man must be felt again.&#13;
It's almost noon and the topless oottomless&#13;
joints will be opening. I hear&#13;
there's a new dancer on 52nd and I think&#13;
I'll go "investigate" her lewd and&#13;
liscentious dancing.&#13;
Newscope: If it offends you, why do ya&#13;
done?&#13;
Me: He's Crobait Cavanaugh, a&#13;
drunken dope crazed half breed who&#13;
escaped from Waupun two weeks ago.&#13;
He used to live in K-town but got sent up&#13;
for biting his gramma. Since he&#13;
escaped, he's already shot four old&#13;
ladies in the ass with a B.B. gun. The&#13;
police say he has this thing about 'em.&#13;
Editor: I'm aghast. Play me the tape.&#13;
The tape was played ... bit her bit toe&#13;
off and spit it put huh. Must have tasted&#13;
awful.&#13;
Me: That's neither here nor there&#13;
White.&#13;
Editor: Shuttup Doo Dah and keep a&#13;
proper perspective. What I'd like you to&#13;
do now is take the mobil&#13;
Newscopemobil for a few days. Keep&#13;
the police radio tuned in at ALL times&#13;
and next time this Crowbait character&#13;
causes a ruckus, I want you to be there.&#13;
Take Vincent Makroleah, the ace&#13;
camera whizz with you, and don't fuck&#13;
it up! Got it?&#13;
As Vince and I drove into the sunset&#13;
looking for criminals, we heard Perry&#13;
turn up his radio, "There's a hole in my&#13;
bucket, Dear Lisa, dear Lisa . . ."&#13;
"You know Vince," I said, "That song&#13;
Vince, by this time, looked yellow in&#13;
the face and his cheeks were puffed out,&#13;
like he had a mouthful of liquid. When I&#13;
tol&#13;
hime the good news he started flopping&#13;
around on the floor going "uggghhaaa,&#13;
uuggghhhaaa . . ." to voice his approval,&#13;
I presume. He seemed to have a&#13;
lot of internal pressure.&#13;
P-Springs, when we arrived, looked&#13;
like another Democratic Convention.&#13;
There were cops everywhere. Every&#13;
parking lot was full of squads, the roads&#13;
were lined with the boys in blue, and the&#13;
sky was filled with copters chopping&#13;
around. They were even scooting&#13;
around on the golf course mounted on&#13;
Honda 50's and tricycles. One particularly&#13;
burly looking cop jumped off&#13;
his trike as we passed and maced a&#13;
squirrel. He claimed he was ". . . just&#13;
getting warmed up."&#13;
We finally found the center of activity&#13;
over by a bridge. There was a banner&#13;
stretched between two squads which&#13;
read "Hdqtrs. — Police Chief," and&#13;
beneath that banner he sat. Surrounded&#13;
by parolee's waving ostrich feather&#13;
fans, he was sitting at his portable&#13;
throne screaming obscenities into a&#13;
He steered (he squad right toward the&#13;
Chief's portable throne sending us and&#13;
the fan bearer's currying for cover. He&#13;
ran over the bush Vincent was so&#13;
diligently relieving himself on narrowly&#13;
missing Vincent's privates and&#13;
smacked square into the bridge. The&#13;
squad was sunk up to the whidshield&#13;
with bridge but before anyone could&#13;
move, Crowbait crawled from the now&#13;
burning wreck and did a one and a half&#13;
gainer into the murkee depths of PSprings,&#13;
off the roof of the car.&#13;
There was a stunned silence and then,&#13;
one by one the cops began taking their&#13;
helmets off and putting their hands&#13;
over their hearts.&#13;
Newscope: Catch 'em Chief! He's&#13;
swimming away. And whats this with&#13;
the helmets. You gonna play the&#13;
national anthem?&#13;
Chief: God have mercy on him son. He&#13;
won't live two seconds in that polluted&#13;
spring. What a way to go, even for a guy&#13;
like that. I doubt if we'll ever even find&#13;
his body.&#13;
Vince and I walked slowly back to the&#13;
van. A proper ending. Once again&#13;
proving crime doesn't pay. But we had&#13;
a story.&#13;
The Reign Of Crowbait Cavanaugh&#13;
gotta go Chief?&#13;
Chief: For the sake of public decency&#13;
and all that is good and pure, besides, I&#13;
wanna see it. But that's off the record,&#13;
Doo Dah. Whew, just the thought of that&#13;
juicy little ...&#13;
Newscope: Excuse me. Thank you&#13;
chief and you can count on my&#13;
discretion of course. Good luck with&#13;
your lewd, liscentious, and immoral&#13;
investigations, but most of all I hope&#13;
you get that little fart Cavanaugh.&#13;
99 parking tickets later at the&#13;
Newscope office . . .&#13;
Me: Well Perry, I got the interview. All&#13;
on this. I patted my taperecorder.&#13;
Editor: Great Ceasers Ghost, Alexous!&#13;
Don't call me Perry. Mr. White to you.&#13;
Me: Sho'nuff boss. Ah, boss, do you&#13;
think that if a reporter while out on&#13;
assignment ... I mean if he got 99&#13;
parking tickets while on the job, would&#13;
the paper — ah — help him out? A little?&#13;
&#13;
Editor: Hell NO! We're one of the most&#13;
underpaid, underrated orgainizations&#13;
in the entire world. No! No! No! and NO&#13;
again. We can't and won't afford it. The&#13;
facts Alexous. Who is this mad sniper?&#13;
Where'd he come from and what's he&#13;
Perry's playing is a little symbolic."&#13;
But Vince was so wrapped up in&#13;
flashing flashbulbs in his face that he&#13;
didn't answer. For two days, and I&#13;
mean two days, 48 h ours at least, we&#13;
drove and drove and drove, just waiting&#13;
for that elusive clue into the&#13;
whereabouts of the devil, C.&#13;
Cavanaugh. Vince and I by this time&#13;
were eating uppers like M &amp; M's and&#13;
the tension was mounting. He kept&#13;
saying "Alexous, for Peter's sake, you&#13;
have to stop driving just for a minute.&#13;
Please? Please! I have to go to the john.&#13;
It's been two days now."&#13;
"Vince," I'd say, "Hold it just a little&#13;
bit longer. This is for God and country&#13;
and we ain't getting paid to piss on&#13;
some poor bushes." He'd just burst into&#13;
tears and start popping flashbulbs in&#13;
his face. But I had to hand it to him. He&#13;
held it like a man.&#13;
On the third morning the report we'd&#13;
been waiting for came over the police&#13;
radio. "Squads 1 thru 2,460 report to PSprings.&#13;
We've got a 10,478 out there.&#13;
Approach with caution." 10,478 in police&#13;
code means 'armed lunatic sniper'.&#13;
Crowbait Cavanaugh at last! We'd&#13;
found him!&#13;
walky talky. We pulled the van up&#13;
nearby and Vince went crawling full&#13;
speed ahead into the nearest bushes.&#13;
The sound of rushing water, not unlike&#13;
Niagara falls, was neard.&#13;
Newscope: Howdy Chief. Remember&#13;
me? Looks like you got him huh.&#13;
Chief: Whattsa matter with your&#13;
buddy? Can't he walk?&#13;
Newscope: He had to go bad. Sir.&#13;
Chief: Oh. Wanna see me scare this&#13;
cold blooded bastard half to death? We&#13;
got him trapped on that hill over there.&#13;
He raised his megaphone, "alio, alio,&#13;
alio, gyou are wanted for shooting ole&#13;
ladies in the ass and cuttin off peeples&#13;
heds and also for braking some windows&#13;
in the state penitentary. Giv up&#13;
Cavanaugh. You haven't got a prayer."&#13;
Cavanaugh: (from the top of the hill&#13;
"False accustaion's you Motha's. I&#13;
didn't break nobody's window's up and&#13;
I didn't cut nobody's head off either."&#13;
With that a police siren started at the&#13;
top of the hill and squad 99 came&#13;
crashing down thru the underbrush&#13;
with Cavanaugh at the wheel. The siren&#13;
was still going but an ancient Souix war&#13;
cry could be heard over it.&#13;
"WaHOOOOOOOOO."&#13;
As we drove away, Vince saw a&#13;
hitchhiker up the rode a ways. He said,&#13;
"Lets pick the poor guy up." We had an&#13;
arguement over company policy&#13;
concerning riders but I let Vince win.&#13;
He'd had a rough last few days with his&#13;
bladder. We pulled over and the&#13;
stranger stepped into the van.&#13;
Newscope: Whew. Man we could smell&#13;
your body a mile away!&#13;
Hiker: A mile away?&#13;
Newscope: A mile away.&#13;
Hiker: Well, it's not my fault. That park&#13;
oughta be named Pee-Atrofied Springs.&#13;
Don't ever try swimming in that creek.&#13;
Newscope: Yep — We're famous&#13;
newsmen out gatherin news about a&#13;
condemned dope crazed criminal indian.&#13;
God arrest his soul.&#13;
Hiker: (click) I am he brotha, and this&#13;
here armament that I just cocked is my&#13;
pistol. Drive on my friend and we'll&#13;
keep it peaceful. Crowbail Cavanaugh&#13;
at your service.&#13;
Newscope: Shriek, SCREEEECH . . .&#13;
YAAAAAAHHHHH . . . Hail Mary full&#13;
of . . .&#13;
What will happen to Vincent and&#13;
Alexous? There's only one way to find&#13;
out. Stay tuned next week for Part III.&#13;
Terror in a Van.&#13;
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Page 4 NEWSCOPE November 29,1971&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
COURT UPHOLDS SEX EQUALITY IN JOBS&#13;
Washington, D.C. (CPS) — The Supreme Court has let stand two&#13;
major rulings by lower courts involving charges of job discrimination&#13;
because of sex. In one case, domestic airlines were told they must give&#13;
men, as well as women, the opportunity to work as flight attendants.&#13;
In the other, a woman was upheld in her contention that she was&#13;
denied her equal rights by being forced to retire from her brewery job&#13;
at age 62 when men at the same plant were allowed to work until they&#13;
were 65.&#13;
AFL-CIO OPPOSES REHNQUIST&#13;
Washington, D.C. (CPS) — AFL-CIO Legislative Director Andrew&#13;
.J. Biemillio branded Supreme Court nominee William H. Rehnquist a&#13;
"right-wing zealot" before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week.&#13;
He has advocated "unbridled executive power," Biemillio said,&#13;
and defended unregulated wiretapping. The labor organization joined&#13;
civil rights and civil liberties groups in opposing the Assistant Attorney&#13;
General's confirmation.&#13;
PENTAGON SUPPRESSES RAND CORP STUDY&#13;
(CPS) — The Pentagon is suppressing a Rand Corp. study on the&#13;
indoctrination and tactics of the National Liberation Front, the West&#13;
German news magazine Der Spiegel said. The 281-page study, based&#13;
on interviews with NLF deserters, concluded that battlefield successes&#13;
of the movement resulted from high ediological motivation and&#13;
implied that the policy of "Vietnamizing" the war was futile.&#13;
The U.S. government's doctrine is that terror tactics are&#13;
responsible for enemy battlefield success, Der Speigel said.&#13;
the 1971-73 edition of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Catalogue is now available. Students may pick up copies at the&#13;
Information Center and the Library in Tallent Hall on the main&#13;
campus and at the main offices of the Kenosha and Racine campuses.&#13;
&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
Hear a Moog Synthesizer Dec. 7&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
, lb (.ROUND BEEl"&#13;
ON IRENCH CRUST&#13;
BREAD DRESSED&#13;
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THE RANCH&#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;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
N|K Round Trip Jot.. .&#13;
NjR Ground T rmrtari .&#13;
Sewn Nights&#13;
Overnight thght from your city via d regularly scheduled Air France flight to&#13;
PARIS with dn immediate connecting Might to GENEVA. SWITZERLAND. Your&#13;
overseas High! will include complimentsy meals and beverages&#13;
Transportation IrOin and to GENEVA via deluxe bust's.&#13;
The tifst through the seventh day in COURCHEVEL. FRANCE, the most m odern&#13;
and extensively developed s ki atea m EUROPE situated at 6. I0f» feet in theuentei&#13;
ol a vast d omain ol snowtields Abundant s now, temaikable sunshine record. runs&#13;
from beginner's to e*pert's with intermediate runs from lop to bottom COURCHEVEL&#13;
was developed by Fmile Allais. French Olympic champion 2 big cabin&#13;
cableways. 6 gondolas, 36 ski and clvau lilts. 30,000 ascents pei hour. I ski lump,&#13;
35 marked runs including EUROPE'S lasiest Olympic run. ski school. 200 inslruc&#13;
to»s. a 50 man maintenance and ies«:ue team. 2 skating nnks. and 1t&gt; discotheques&#13;
Lessons-$13 00 lor 12 2 Ihhh lessons, rental-skis and poles $2 00 per day&#13;
(appro*)&#13;
Lodging Your lodging in the ski area will be in modern new apartments and chalets all with&#13;
bath, kitchenette, balcony and individual beds&#13;
jjfl Reee end Party On the seventh day there will be a giant slalom race lot yotu group with an awards&#13;
party in Hie evening complete with wine, pii/es and trophies&#13;
3Iff. Eighth Night In GENEVA with thine great options Tor that day&#13;
z-tn Con tinue skiing in COURCHEVEL and that alter noon depart lor your over&#13;
^ night in GENEVA&#13;
®Ski m a different area suc h as LA PLAGNE and then go to GENEVA lor the&#13;
night&#13;
Depart in the morning lor GENEVA where you will have the day lor shopping&#13;
^ and sightseeing Overnight in GENEVA in a good category hotel&#13;
jfC Ninth Ni*it . . . , In PARIS. In the morning you will depart lor PARIS where you will have time 10&#13;
shop and spend the evening on the town. Overnight in a good calegoiy hotel Tlie&#13;
next morning you will catch your Air France Might home&#13;
jflfk Guides Multilingual guides will meet you' group upon your arrival HI EUROPE and will l&gt;e&#13;
available to assist you at all times until departure&#13;
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:&#13;
Mr. William Niabuhr. Coordinator&#13;
Student Actrvitiat&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parksida&#13;
Kenosh. Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: (414) 55*2726&#13;
lODays&#13;
Only $264.&#13;
Plus $20.00 Tax and S*v»ct&#13;
Dqvm C1ue&lt;Kia January 4&#13;
Return Che ,iim January 14&#13;
The electronic music of the&#13;
Moog Synthesizer will be&#13;
featured in a free public concert&#13;
by Chris Swansen, a young&#13;
performer-composer, at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Tuesday, Dec. 7, at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wood Road campus in&#13;
the Greenquist Hall concourse.&#13;
The program is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee.&#13;
Swansen's program will include&#13;
a short introduction to the&#13;
synthesizer followed by a varied&#13;
selection of works by J. S. Bach,&#13;
Paul McCartney, Simon and&#13;
Garfunkle and Blood, Sweat and&#13;
Tears. The final portion of the&#13;
program will include a group of&#13;
compositions by Swansen, who&#13;
was named a composer in&#13;
residence and director of the&#13;
experimental music studio of R.&#13;
A. Moog, Inc., manufacturers of&#13;
the synthesizer, in 1968.&#13;
"All the pieces are presented&#13;
as a solo synthesizer performance&#13;
on top of prepared&#13;
tape which holds the additional&#13;
ten to 25 sy nthesized lines, the&#13;
total of which form the finished&#13;
composition," Swansen points&#13;
out. He will explain various&#13;
works in the program during&#13;
the performance.&#13;
Swansen, 32, received his&#13;
music degree from Dartmouth&#13;
College and played piano,&#13;
trombone, trumpet and a&#13;
number of other instruments&#13;
before turning to electronic&#13;
music. He studied composition&#13;
and orchestration with Herb&#13;
Pomeroy, Gunther Schuller,&#13;
Aaron Copland and Yannis&#13;
X e n a k i s; p e r f o r m ed&#13;
professionally with Phil Woods,&#13;
Gary Burton, Steve Marcus,&#13;
Stan Kenton and Maynard&#13;
Ferguson; and fulfilled commissions&#13;
for Canadian&#13;
Broadcasting Corporation,&#13;
Westdeutsch Rundfunk, the&#13;
N a tio nal E d uca tio nal&#13;
Television Network, Stan Getz,&#13;
The Winemaking&#13;
&#13;
Season&#13;
|is Here... &gt;1&#13;
fe and we've got |&#13;
§ «•&gt;)*•• f.r J&#13;
| beginners or experts |&#13;
I st S PECIAL PRICES.&#13;
Burton and Marcus.&#13;
A graduate of Shorewood&#13;
High School, Milwaukee,&#13;
Swansen is the son of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. T. L. Swansen of Rt. 2,&#13;
East Troy. Mrs. Swansen is a&#13;
cellist with the Kenosha&#13;
Symphony Orchestra.&#13;
Says young Swansen: "My&#13;
music derives from as many&#13;
sources as I can find and use&#13;
electronically. The music is not&#13;
limited by the instrument as&#13;
almost any conceivable sound&#13;
or tone color is possible on the&#13;
synthesizer. Almost every style&#13;
of composition and orchestration&#13;
is used at one time&#13;
or another, with an overall&#13;
freedom given to rhymic and&#13;
harmonic structures of the total&#13;
structure. Jazz, rock, folk&#13;
music of many parts of the&#13;
world, Indian scales and intervals,&#13;
classical and romantic&#13;
western forms and harmonies,&#13;
serial techniques, and Grecian,&#13;
Arabic and Chinese intervalic&#13;
systems, as well as pure&#13;
electronically derived forms&#13;
and patterns all enter into my&#13;
compositions."&#13;
Art Exhibition and Sale&#13;
The art discipline at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will sponsor an&#13;
exhibition and sale of original&#13;
graphic art by contemporary&#13;
and old master artists arranged&#13;
by the Ferdinand Roten&#13;
Galleries of Baltimore on&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3, from 10 a.m. to 4&#13;
p.m. in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse on the Wood Road&#13;
campus.&#13;
Included in the exhibition will&#13;
be over 1,000 o riginal etchings,&#13;
lithographs, and woodcuts by&#13;
artists such as Picasso,&#13;
Chagall, Miro, Dali, Goya,&#13;
Renoir, Kollwitz, and many&#13;
others including contemporary&#13;
American, European and&#13;
Japanese printmakers. Prices&#13;
start at $5.00 with the majority&#13;
priced under $100.&#13;
A representative of the Roten&#13;
Galleries will be present at the&#13;
exhibition to answer any&#13;
questions regarding graphic art&#13;
and printmaking.&#13;
Established in 1932, Roten&#13;
Galleries has one of the largest&#13;
collections of graphic art in the&#13;
country and specializes in&#13;
arranging exhibition sales of&#13;
original graphic art at colleges,&#13;
museums, and art centers&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
Through its one day&#13;
exhibition and sale program,&#13;
the Gallery serves ad an extension&#13;
to art education&#13;
programs by providing students&#13;
and other interested groups&#13;
with an opportunity to view a&#13;
variety of fine graphics. Last&#13;
year, Roten representatives&#13;
visited more than 1,000 sch ools&#13;
and organizations holding&#13;
events. In addition, the Gallery&#13;
sent more than 400 special&#13;
exhibitions to art centers,&#13;
museums and universities all&#13;
over the country.&#13;
Vila&#13;
To Perform&#13;
Spanish pianist Carmen Vila,&#13;
artist-in-residence at the&#13;
University of WisconqinParkside,&#13;
will present a&#13;
University Artist Series Concert&#13;
at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 5, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall at Parkside's&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
Miss Vila, presently in her&#13;
fourth year as resident artist at&#13;
Parkside, is an internationallyknown&#13;
concert pianist and has&#13;
appeared with major orchestras&#13;
and in recital&#13;
throughout Europe, the Middle&#13;
East and South America. She&#13;
also made a Carnegie Hall&#13;
appearance last winter in the&#13;
Juenesses Musicales Internationale&#13;
Artists Series.&#13;
Her performance Sunday will&#13;
precede a series of continental&#13;
concert dates during the holiday&#13;
break at the end of the current&#13;
semester.&#13;
Among them: A TV&#13;
production in Madrid, t\fco&#13;
concerts with the Valencia&#13;
(Spain) Philharmonic Orchestra,&#13;
a radio production in&#13;
Switzerland, two concerts with&#13;
the Barcelona (spain) Orchestra,&#13;
a recording session in&#13;
Madrid and recitals in Vienna,&#13;
Innsbruck and Wells, Austria.&#13;
s, You can make wines like fw)&#13;
[y. those you b uy at a fraction 1^1&#13;
&amp; of the cost the y ear around. i,&#13;
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RACINE, WISCONSIN 53402&#13;
OPEN 8-5 Weekdays,&#13;
10-5 Saturdays, 12-5 Sundays &#13;
November 29,1971 NEWSCOPE Page5&#13;
The camera jerks back and forth with the&#13;
sound of intermittent footsteps and heavy&#13;
machinery mixed, blaspheming the sound of wind.&#13;
It is cold and the camera stops for a moment and&#13;
turns slowly from the concrete grays and browns&#13;
of loo ming Greenquist, its surrounding bare trees&#13;
made small by its size. A dirty sky blue bus&#13;
rumbles by ... a serious longhaired driver and&#13;
serious passengers seriously intent upon their&#13;
destinations are interrupted briefly by this slight&#13;
and look up to see the camera watch.&#13;
The walk continues along the asphalt trail,&#13;
over the boardwalk lifting the lens to the frigid&#13;
glass doors of the box ahead; they open and the&#13;
lens begins to fog. The obscure photographer&#13;
cleans it as if his own eye.&#13;
Flat angular-sharp the restless knife edges of&#13;
pragmatic, static architecture greet the ground&#13;
eye of the camera ... it walks on to look at faces.&#13;
Sitting on one of the burnt orange couches is a&#13;
girl. She is reading something and does not notice&#13;
the intruder. Her eyes dart from the book, blue&#13;
and lean they tell her story with a frown. A&#13;
seeming friend approaches and a smile parts her&#13;
lips. The change of expression is quick and&#13;
machined. They begin to talk with furtive gestures&#13;
for punctuation. The camera moves on.&#13;
Standing, looking through a window twice his&#13;
size is another. A green canvas knapsack law near&#13;
the feet dusty and bulging. Blue wash denimus&#13;
bleached by the sun clothe a rested frame with&#13;
dark hair tangled, the other turns, a face calm and&#13;
unaffected by falseness looks into the lens. A time&#13;
passes before interpretable expression lights the&#13;
geography of the other's face. A smile shows . . .&#13;
amusement and recognition. The camera has&#13;
found a friend.&#13;
Midnight: While I write this to you WRKR —&#13;
the voice of the people, is really talking to me like&#13;
few radio stations ever have. A cold cup of coffee&#13;
nearby. Debby asleep in our bed lonesome warm. I&#13;
should be lying beside her, but as usual there is&#13;
work to be done.&#13;
It isn't really the kind of wo rk that is assigned&#13;
to me or provoked from me, but instead a kind that&#13;
evolves from the quiet anguish of questioning;&#13;
penance for feigning an image to or at someone. I&#13;
could be confessing my dying ego to all who find&#13;
this column a little cryptic or overly critical, but&#13;
truer, I am probably only feeding the damn thing&#13;
again with self-serving scraps of romantic&#13;
bullshit. All I know is that others sing, some talk,&#13;
and I write this column for me and you.&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Orson Wells&#13;
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1820-52ND STREET KENOSHA&#13;
Hurdy Gurdy Donovan Mellow&#13;
by Dale Martin&#13;
of th e Newscope staff&#13;
We sat down at 7:14 p.m. after&#13;
a long hectic journey to McCormick&#13;
Place, through bottleneck&#13;
traffic that went on for&#13;
five miles. At 7:15 p.m., before&#13;
we even had our coats off,&#13;
Donovan walked on the stage.&#13;
He wore white loose fitting&#13;
bells, his curly hair longish but&#13;
not really long compared to&#13;
today's standards. A smile upon&#13;
his face and a guitar in his hand.&#13;
The stage contained a small&#13;
square platform. On it, three&#13;
mikes. One for Donovan's&#13;
vocals, one for his guitar and&#13;
one for the flute player who was&#13;
to come on later.&#13;
Without uttering a word&#13;
Donovan sat cross-legged,&#13;
Indian style, very relaxed. He&#13;
sang "Jenifer Juniper" and&#13;
sang it as one being only,&#13;
Donovan. The guitar became a&#13;
part of him as he strummed the&#13;
cords that have made him a&#13;
legend at 25. He then sang "I&#13;
May as Well Try to Catch the&#13;
Wind".&#13;
The drows had already&#13;
become enchanted and dazed.&#13;
The audience well behaved,&#13;
very little pot is going around,&#13;
you can smell it for a short time&#13;
at the beginning of the concert.&#13;
The party next to me had a&#13;
bottle of wine. They laughed&#13;
and talked through much of the&#13;
show, because they were&#13;
bombed out of their heads. I did&#13;
not even notice them for I had&#13;
tuned Donovan in and them out.&#13;
"So hello, how are you. This&#13;
was a couple of old sorta songs,&#13;
a few years old. This is a new&#13;
one and it's called "A Shape in&#13;
the Sky", says Donovan in his&#13;
Scottish accent. He starts to&#13;
play and decides his guitar is&#13;
out of tune and wordlessly takes&#13;
a few seconds out to tune it.&#13;
"There's a shape in the sky&#13;
and it's beckoning me." The&#13;
song turns out to be a fast&#13;
moving song, sung in a very gay&#13;
fashion. The song although sung&#13;
fast and gay was packed with a&#13;
lot of deep down philosophy.&#13;
One must listen closely or he&#13;
will be traicked by the song's&#13;
gayety. Without pause Donovan&#13;
goes into "Twas then when the&#13;
Hurdy Gurdy man comes&#13;
singing songs of love." Donovan&#13;
needs no reverb to make his&#13;
voice echo. "Hurdy Gurdy,&#13;
Hurdy Gurdy, Hurdy Gurdy is&#13;
sad." The growd goes wild.&#13;
"Down through all eternity the&#13;
crying of humanity".&#13;
"The next song," explains&#13;
Donovan, "is another new one&#13;
and it's called the orginary&#13;
family. The family which we all&#13;
belong to."&#13;
"My father cut his toe off in&#13;
rotary lawnmower . . . We're&#13;
just an ordinary family with the&#13;
ordinary calamities." The song&#13;
is easy and relaxing and is&#13;
about a family that has more&#13;
than its share of calamities.&#13;
Paul Horn was introduced&#13;
and came on stage wearing&#13;
white Nehru type clothing. Horn&#13;
plays the flue and the sax. He&#13;
has recorded 15 albums, the last&#13;
called Concert Ensemble in&#13;
which he mixes rock, classical&#13;
tracks and jazz.&#13;
Horn assisted Donovan for&#13;
most of the remaining numbers.&#13;
In the second set violinist Peter&#13;
Mark joined Horn and Donovan.&#13;
On the slower numbers Mark's&#13;
viola and Donovan's voice often&#13;
vibrated on the same note. The&#13;
effect is very pleasing.&#13;
Donovan took a ten minute&#13;
break for a cup of tea. He told us&#13;
the second set would be longer.&#13;
In all, Donovan played for two&#13;
full hours. He had another&#13;
concert to perform at 10:00 to&#13;
complete Thanksgiving eve.&#13;
The audience did not get into&#13;
it the way Donovan is accustomed.&#13;
We did actually, but&#13;
were too subdued to show it at&#13;
first. Donovan blamed it on&#13;
himself and said he wished he&#13;
had seen the stage set up ahead&#13;
of time. He said that he would&#13;
have had them build a platform&#13;
out into the audience. He said he&#13;
felt as if he were up on the stage&#13;
and that he was singing in a&#13;
room by himself. Donovan said&#13;
with a smile that he would try&#13;
not to let it get him down.&#13;
Many of the tongs towards the&#13;
end of the concert strived to get&#13;
the audience involved. Donovan&#13;
tried to get the audience into the&#13;
music with a song called&#13;
"Happiness Runs". The&#13;
number has a part for the men,&#13;
a part for the women and a part&#13;
for himself. We all broke down&#13;
and became totally apart of&#13;
hime with "Mellow Yellow".&#13;
Donovan wants to be close to&#13;
the audience and they can feel&#13;
it. "We surely have come a long&#13;
way, haven't we( We get near to&#13;
one another. People put what&#13;
they call popstars — they put&#13;
them in another place. Or&#13;
perhaps we feel in another&#13;
place, but I feel it getting nearer&#13;
and nearer. A record is very&#13;
nice to hear . . . but it's better&#13;
to feel the music going out and&#13;
going in around all of us, all us&#13;
feeling together."&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
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"n we st&#13;
Rac ine&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
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KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
Racine Theatre Guild&#13;
presents&#13;
OPENS&#13;
NOV. 19&#13;
601 High St.&#13;
SUMMERTREE 6334218&#13;
k fta rnlWCWBl&#13;
When a well-meaning father tells his son to "be a man", does he&#13;
mean HIS kind of man, or the son's?&#13;
Performance Dates:&#13;
Nov. 19,20, 21,26,27, 28, Dec. 3,4, 5&#13;
Two Performances Dec. 4, 5:15 &amp; 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Curtain:&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 8:15; Sun. 7:30&#13;
Seats:&#13;
$2.50 Students $1.25 Fri. &amp; Su n.&#13;
Ken Dan by Si/kscreens .\ew GalJory One&#13;
503Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wis &#13;
Page 6 NKWSCOPE November 29,1971&#13;
Sports test&#13;
m i k e&#13;
d a v is&#13;
spe ed&#13;
c i t y&#13;
A o9X o°* '&lt;*\&#13;
-x*- d Fjf&#13;
o&#13;
N \&gt;° ^e. &gt;csN A' &lt;,* xr&#13;
&lt;^°&#13;
\0&#13;
Students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside are raising&#13;
money for a scholarship fund&#13;
and electing a queen for UW-P's&#13;
"Sportsfest" at the same time.&#13;
Nine coeds, sponsored by&#13;
athletic groups at UW-P, are in&#13;
the running for queen of&#13;
Sportsfest to be held Dec. 1-4,&#13;
with the winner being determined&#13;
by how much money&#13;
their sponsors raise for the&#13;
Harlow B. Mills Scholarship&#13;
Fund.&#13;
The late Professor Mills, an&#13;
internationally-known entomologist&#13;
who died last April,&#13;
was a full professor at UW-P&#13;
and acting dean of the College of&#13;
Science and Society during late&#13;
1969 and early 1970. Through&#13;
individual contributions and&#13;
bene fit stu den t-f acu lty&#13;
basketball games, nearly $1,000&#13;
has been raised for the&#13;
scholarship fund established in&#13;
his name shortly after his&#13;
death.&#13;
Students are taking their&#13;
campaigns into the cities of&#13;
Kenosha and Racine as well as&#13;
on campus this week and will&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will h elp any w o m a n reg ard les s&#13;
ol rac e, religion, a g e or linan cial&#13;
sta tus . W e do n o t mora lize, but&#13;
mer ely h e lp w o m e n o bta in qualifi ed&#13;
D o cto rs for abo rtio ns, if this is&#13;
w h at they des ire . P l eas e do not&#13;
dela y, an earl y abor tion is m o re&#13;
sim ple a n d les s c o stly, a n d c a n b e&#13;
per for med on an o u t pati ent bas is.&#13;
r 312 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Assistance of Chicago 1&#13;
8 AM-10 P M—7 DAYS&#13;
A NON -PRO FIT ORGA NIZA TION&#13;
Pop art&#13;
By Joseph Schlitz&#13;
Candidates for queen of UW-Parkside's Sportsfest, which&#13;
ushers in the winter sports season Dec. 1-4 are (back row, from&#13;
left) Debbie LaJeunesse, 2308 - 25th Ave., Kenosha, sophomore,&#13;
sponsored by the ski club; Cathy Momper, 11198 G reen Bay Rd.,&#13;
Kenosha, sophomore, equestrian club; and Carol Busch, 7903&#13;
Pershing Blvd., Kenosha, freshman, fencers; (front row, from left)&#13;
Debbie Goudreau, 3529 V ictory Lane, Racine, freshman, hockey&#13;
club; Robin Strangberg, 6406 - 29th- Ave., Kenosha, junior,&#13;
basketball; Mary Fonk, 6511 - 42nd Ave., Kenosha, junior,&#13;
wrestlers; Liz Stellberg, 3055 Ruby Ave., Racine, freshman, tennis;&#13;
and Bonnie Eppers, Rt. 1, Kansasville, senior, judo club. Not&#13;
pictured is Barbara Lundskow, 7929 - 15th Ave., Kenosha,&#13;
sophomore, cross country and track.&#13;
For Mills S cholarship Fund&#13;
set up polling, or contribution,&#13;
places at the main UW-P&#13;
campus and the urban campuses&#13;
in Kenosha and Racine&#13;
next week.&#13;
The candidate who raises the&#13;
most money will be crowned&#13;
queen just before the wrestling&#13;
match between UW-P and&#13;
Northwestern University which&#13;
will kick off Sportsfest Dec. 1.&#13;
The meet will begin at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Kenosha Trempere high school&#13;
with the corwning and&#13;
presentation of court at 7:45.&#13;
Other athletic events over&#13;
which the queen and her court&#13;
will reign are a fenching match&#13;
between UW-P, UW-Madison&#13;
and the University of Chicago&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3, at 6 p.m. at&#13;
Racine Case high school&#13;
fieldhouse; a judo match between&#13;
UW-P and Marquette&#13;
University Saturday afternoon,&#13;
Dec. 4, at 1:30 at Racine Park&#13;
high school fieldhouse; a&#13;
gymnastics meet between UWP&#13;
and Northern Illinois&#13;
University Saturday at 4 p.m. at&#13;
Park; and the home opener&#13;
basketball game Saturday night&#13;
between UW-P and Wayne State&#13;
University at 8 p.m. at Case&#13;
fieldhouse. Sportsfest annually&#13;
opens the winter sports season&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
P/4RIS SPECIM&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
'Parkside&#13;
Air F,ance «&lt;&gt; paris. YOUr&#13;
overseas flight will include complimentary meals and beverages.&#13;
Transportation from and to your hotel via deluxe buses.&#13;
The Eiffel Tower. Champs Elysees. the Flea Market'&#13;
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I E UROPE and will&#13;
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For spoliation Mt r evtric ixk. &#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
College basketball fans in this area&#13;
should have a satisfying winter following&#13;
the progress of the Marquette Warriors,&#13;
who last year ranked number two in the&#13;
nation, running a 26-0 regular season&#13;
record only to be upset by Ohio Stafe 60-59&#13;
in the NCAA Tournament.&#13;
Adding a local angle again this year to&#13;
the Marquette team will be center Jim&#13;
Chones from Racine. Chones, a strong,&#13;
agile performer, is rated as an AilAmerican&#13;
this year by knowledgeable&#13;
basketball sources.&#13;
One of the most highly sought after&#13;
players while in high school, Chones&#13;
proved that the scouts were right by&#13;
having an excellent sophomore season. He&#13;
should be even better this year.&#13;
Newscope talked to Jim about prospects&#13;
for the new season.&#13;
Maruqette last year finished with a 28-1&#13;
record including tournament play. With&#13;
the loss of two regulars, Gary Brell and&#13;
All-American Dean Meminger, it clearly&#13;
leaves gaps on the team.&#13;
Newscope asked Chones whether or not&#13;
these openings can be filled, and how this&#13;
year's' team will compare with the&#13;
previous one.&#13;
Chones: "We have a lot more ability than&#13;
we have ever had."&#13;
Newscope: Even more than last year?&#13;
Chones: "Very easily. It's hard for people&#13;
who don't know basketball to imagine that&#13;
we have more ability, but Bob Lackey is a&#13;
better ballplayer than he showed last year,&#13;
and I am a better ballplayer than what I&#13;
showed, but when you have a Dean&#13;
Meminger you sort of take a back seat&#13;
while everybody is watching Dean. This&#13;
year we won't have the great ball handler&#13;
so that means everybody else will have to&#13;
do a little bit more, and as a result I think&#13;
you will see more individual talent. Instead&#13;
of going to Dean for the pressure&#13;
basket, I'll be getting the ball or Bob will&#13;
be getting it."&#13;
Newscope: Among the new players who&#13;
really impresses you?&#13;
Chones: "We've got a great sophomore in&#13;
Larry McNeil who I think is probably the&#13;
greatest forward in college right now. He&#13;
is a lot like Ken Durrett, wiry and strong.&#13;
We call him Connie Hawkins."&#13;
Newscope: You say there is more overall&#13;
talent this year, but how do you think the&#13;
team will react in tight games without the&#13;
leadership of Dean Meminger?&#13;
Chones: "I think we'll survive. We'll have&#13;
to become more of a team. We can't just&#13;
rely on one person, we'll have to rely on&#13;
each other, and this in itself will bring us&#13;
togehter. People said the same thing when&#13;
Marquette lost George Thompson.&#13;
"You have to remember that Marquette&#13;
doesn't have just good ballpalerys, they&#13;
have ballplayers that would be stars if they&#13;
went to other schools.&#13;
'We just don't have adequate ballplayers&#13;
November 29,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
s Jim Chones&#13;
Foresees Good Year&#13;
anymore, like a Gary Brell who was just&#13;
supposed to play defense and get the&#13;
scraps. Now we have players like McNeil&#13;
who can get the scraps, rebound, shoot,&#13;
dribble and handle all other phases of the&#13;
game. This is the kind of players&#13;
Marquette is recruiting. This is a new kind&#13;
of ball team."&#13;
Newscope: What about UCLA?&#13;
Chones: "They had a good freshman team&#13;
but they played an easy schedule. I don't&#13;
know. I've heard a lot about (Bill) Walton,&#13;
I hear he is a pretty good rebounder. I&#13;
don't like to comment on individual&#13;
players, as far as teams go, I don't really&#13;
know. Mr. Wooden is a great coach, and&#13;
somehow they will come through with a&#13;
decent record."&#13;
"If I were a sportswriter I think I would&#13;
rate them number one just on prestige&#13;
alone. They should be number one until&#13;
somebody knocks them off."&#13;
Newscope: What about the Big 10 this&#13;
year?&#13;
Chones: "I think Michigan is going to take&#13;
it. I don't think Ohio State can beat&#13;
Michigan this year. I heard that (Ken)&#13;
Brady, their 6-9 center, got hurt and if they&#13;
lose him they can almost forget it."&#13;
"Ohio State has a good coach and good&#13;
ballplayers so they could win again."&#13;
Newscope: Would you like to get another&#13;
crack at Ohio State?&#13;
Jim Chones&#13;
Chones: "I don't know. I don't believe they&#13;
will go that far this year. Witte played with&#13;
us this summer in the Pan-American&#13;
Games and he didn't get in that much&#13;
because he is not that mobile of a center,&#13;
but he does what he is supposed to do for&#13;
their type of game. But I can't see them&#13;
going any father because they lost a great&#13;
player in (Jim) Cleamons, and there will&#13;
be some adjustments made, but these are&#13;
great players, not just adequate ones, and&#13;
I think they will have another good team&#13;
and I hope they will go as far as they can so&#13;
we can get another chance at them."&#13;
Newscope: How about your own style of&#13;
play? Will it be changing this year? Will&#13;
they be relying more on you?&#13;
Chones: "I don't know, like I've changed&#13;
my whole game. If you haven't seen me&#13;
play yet this year then you will see that my&#13;
whole game has changed. In the past I&#13;
never had a game, I just played, never&#13;
having something that was steady all the&#13;
time."&#13;
"People sometimes say, 'he is not&#13;
playing his game,' but you couldn't say&#13;
that last year about me because I didn't&#13;
have a game. Now I have developed a&#13;
game by hard work and playing a lot this&#13;
summer."&#13;
"I just want people to see us play&#13;
because they will see an altogether different&#13;
team. Many are skeptical because&#13;
we depended so much on Dean, but I think&#13;
that we will have a better team. I really&#13;
believe this, and the practices have proven&#13;
it. Coach is letting us out early because&#13;
he's been thinking we are peaking too soon.&#13;
We have been really looking good, really&#13;
great."&#13;
Newscope: Who will fill the position that&#13;
Meminger vacated?&#13;
Chones: "It would have been George&#13;
Frazier but he is hur.t right now. but he&#13;
should be back by December 1st. I don't&#13;
know if he will be starting by then. Marcus&#13;
Washington and Randy Wade have been&#13;
looking very good and are battling for the&#13;
job right now."&#13;
Newscope: The schedule this year looks&#13;
much tougher with Jacksonville, South&#13;
Carolina, and Michigan among the tougher&#13;
opponents on it. What do you think about&#13;
it?&#13;
Chones: "Well, I think it has to be tougher&#13;
for the type of ballplayers we have. If&#13;
anything hurt us last year I think it might&#13;
have been those last seven games because&#13;
they weren't that hard and we found it&#13;
difficult to get up for them, and therefore&#13;
weren't prepared to go into tournament&#13;
play."&#13;
"This year, with the tougher schedule,&#13;
we will be better prepared for the strong&#13;
teams."&#13;
Newscope: Does the high national ranking&#13;
make opponents tougher than they normally&#13;
would be9&#13;
Chones: "When you are rated number one&#13;
or two. everybody is out to get you. Every&#13;
game will be tough It's been said so many&#13;
times that people don't really believe it. If&#13;
a Loyola or a South Carolina can beat a&#13;
Marquette, that makes their whole&#13;
seasons. With coach's (A1 McGuire)&#13;
arrogance it makes other teams want to&#13;
beat us all the more so that just adds to it."&#13;
Newscope: What about games against&#13;
highly rated teams? Will they be great&#13;
obstacles?&#13;
Chones: "You seem to be underestimating&#13;
us. We have a good team and I'm not&#13;
worried about anybody. I feel that if we go&#13;
out and play hard against anybody we will&#13;
beat them. You can't judge these teams by&#13;
the way they performed in the past. Some&#13;
of them aren't as good as last year. I don't&#13;
think that Notre Dame and Jacksonville&#13;
are as good as they were last year."&#13;
* "But they are still good enough, and it&#13;
will make their seasons just to beat&#13;
Marquette. We won't play their game, we&#13;
will just play the way we are accustomed&#13;
to, and if we play our best I think we'll do&#13;
all right."&#13;
Newscope: What teams will be toughest&#13;
overall?&#13;
Chones: "Memphis State I know will be&#13;
tought because they are rated well in the&#13;
Missouri Valley Conference. Minnesota&#13;
will be very good. South Carolina will be&#13;
very tough at Stouh Carolina. Jacksonville&#13;
will be tough, and New Mexico State will&#13;
be difficult on the road."&#13;
Newscope: Does the long winning streak at&#13;
the Milwaukee Arena add any pressure?&#13;
(more than 50 consecutive home victories)&#13;
Chones: "I've never thought about the&#13;
victories. I just play. I've heard people&#13;
talking about this streak, but I never think&#13;
about it while playing. That's no added&#13;
pressure to me."&#13;
Newscope: Who do you think will end up as&#13;
NCAA champions?&#13;
Chones: "You can't say. The season hasn't&#13;
even started yet. You can get a better idea&#13;
when you see the teams play. You can see&#13;
how Marquette is doing, how UCLA is&#13;
doing, and go by scores and judge from&#13;
there. That is a very hard thing to predict'&#13;
+ + +&#13;
One thing that can be predicted is that&#13;
Marquette will be fighting for the top spot.&#13;
It seems clear that this team will be among&#13;
the best, and possibly the best in the&#13;
country.&#13;
As far as Jim Chones is concerned, he&#13;
proved last year that he can withstand&#13;
pressure. He feels that he has improved&#13;
much over last season and that is&#13;
frightening news for Marquette opponents.&#13;
With his confidence, determination and&#13;
great knowledge about the game, it is&#13;
more than likely that the 6-11 center from&#13;
Racine will live up to his All-American&#13;
ratings.&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
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ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS q.qq p.m—12:00&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCM3ERS&#13;
5021 - aotti Avenue Kenosha 657-6191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
310 Green toy Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
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^ump&#13;
Save&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
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ay/ 5617 «tti Ave.&#13;
It does make * difference where you shopf&#13;
10% Discount to students and Faculty with |.q&#13;
| SILVERWARE&#13;
Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Heed A Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
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SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
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DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash A Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
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PENNZOIL&#13;
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AFSCON.O. 10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c por quart&#13;
34c par quart&#13;
$1.39 par gallon&#13;
47c par can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prlctson Oil Flltars,&#13;
Air Flltars, Tuna Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Itemj Sub|actto 4 Por Cant Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE &#13;
Pages NEWSCOPE November 28,1971&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#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;
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 blowe r&#13;
light weight (less tha n io lbs.)&#13;
rugged, non-clogging, eas y&#13;
starting, completely portab le.&#13;
Great fo r small ar eas or dig ging&#13;
a ca r out o f a sno wbank.&#13;
Reasonably pr iced at $ 109-00-&#13;
with purchase of a ny&#13;
stereo system&#13;
Three v olume story&#13;
of Christmas and a&#13;
Christmas record album&#13;
R.C. Service&#13;
Ron Casperson-owner&#13;
1240 N. Main Street&#13;
Racine Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
featuring Admiral Mastercare Warranty&#13;
• A dm i r a l M a s t e r c a re w a " a n t y ; j ^ i s war ran ty c o ver s t he ent ire&#13;
pro d u ct, no cha rge w i l l be mad e for par ts o r labor on rep lac e-,&#13;
m e nt of d efe cti ve p a rts , war ran ty goo d a t A dm i r a l d e ale rs&#13;
throughout the ij&#13;
Newscope Classifieds are free to the&#13;
students, staff and faculty of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Deadline for classifieds is Thursday&#13;
prior to the week of publication and&#13;
will be run three weeks consecutively&#13;
or until cancelled by the&#13;
advertiser.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
WANTED&#13;
COUNTER GIRL — Must be able to&#13;
work Friday noon hours and nights&#13;
and weekends — apply in person&#13;
Monday or Tuesday after 4, Sandy's&#13;
Drive-In.&#13;
1 or 2 female roommates to share&#13;
apartment during 2nd semester.&#13;
Call 632-1691 b etween 1 and 5 p.m.&#13;
Ask Tbr Gretchen.&#13;
RIDE from 65th street &amp; Sheridan&#13;
road to Parkside 5 days per week at&#13;
7:30a.m. or earlier and ride back at&#13;
4:30 p.m. or later. Will pay well for&#13;
dependability. Call 654-2502 after 5&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
LOST - brown leather wallet with&#13;
sun engraved. Any knowledge&#13;
pertaining to its whereabouts&#13;
contact Newscope. Keep the money&#13;
but please return the identification.&#13;
{finite&#13;
Sax Players needed for 12 piece&#13;
orchestra. Make money,'have fun.&#13;
Call 654-5777 or 857-2780.&#13;
Piano teacher needs students - a ny&#13;
age. Call 654-5777.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOLK GUITARS — Western guitar&#13;
with Rosewood body, $28, Folk&#13;
guitar $14. Call 658-2932 after 4 p.m.&#13;
FOLD GUITAR — with case $15,&#13;
complete set children's Golden Book&#13;
Encyclopedias in perfect condition&#13;
$10. Call 553-2403 before 5 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
&#13;
Se/witUf Ute fyine&amp;t&#13;
Piyy* &amp; 9talian rf-oodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
10% STUDENT&#13;
DISCOUNT&#13;
GOOD&#13;
UNTIL&#13;
CHRISTMAS FINERY&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
The latest styles&#13;
and accessories&#13;
including After&#13;
Six are at&#13;
GINOS&#13;
SPORTSWEAR&#13;
2212-60 street&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
Gals: Dress up for the Holidays in a&#13;
1933 brown crepe; long bloused&#13;
velvet sleeves; separate sleeveless&#13;
jacket. Worn 3 times. Call 657-7223.&#13;
1 pair of men's ski boots (laced), size&#13;
10 for $8. Call Info. Cn»r., ext. 2345.&#13;
Cold Heart Warmer - size 14,&#13;
muskrat fur jacket $50. Call 652-6754.&#13;
Typewriter - Remington portable,&#13;
with case. $35. Call 654-0272 from 9-5,&#13;
or 652-2788 after 5.&#13;
INFORMATION FILE — for&#13;
browsing at a table in the Information&#13;
Center, Tallent Hall,&#13;
room 201.&#13;
HEY KIDS! Need your term papers&#13;
typed? Call Tee Rafferty, 654-3094.&#13;
FOR SALE — Pentron reel type tape&#13;
recorder, 1200 ft. capacity, portable&#13;
with tapes, empty reels and accessories.&#13;
$20. Call 654-4982.&#13;
HOUSE - re nt free for neat mature&#13;
female. Call 552-8835 a fter 4 p.m.,&#13;
Kris.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1968 PONTIAC GTO — 2 dr, low&#13;
mileage, solid dark blue with tinted&#13;
windows, five-spoke wheels with&#13;
mag rims with red inserts, interior&#13;
dark, rawhide wheel cover, 10,000&#13;
rpm sun tach. Any reasonable price&#13;
accepted. Must sell fast, going to&#13;
Canada. Call 634-2316, ask for Allan.&#13;
1966 CHEVY II — Wagon, standard,&#13;
radio, good condition, $650 including&#13;
snow tires. Call 552-8956 evenings or&#13;
weekends.&#13;
PONTIAC FIREBIRD 1967 — Like&#13;
new condition, 326 engine, new paint,&#13;
mag wheels. 694-2075.&#13;
1976 Ambassador, 4-door, 232 engine,&#13;
automatic — good condition. $795,&#13;
call 551-9556 after 5 p.m., 1814 - 18 th&#13;
Ave.&#13;
1963 Rambler 4 dr. Good engine,&#13;
good paing, $165 o r offer. Call 632-&#13;
5779 or 553-2423.&#13;
1064 BE LAIR CHEV^f — White 4 dr.,&#13;
$150, in good condition. 554-7719, 4532&#13;
Ridge Crest Drive.&#13;
1965 F-85 OLDSMOBILE — V8,&#13;
auto., pwr steering, 4 dr sedan, very&#13;
good cond. no ru$t. One owner, 54,000&#13;
mi. NF green - $700. Call 654-3937.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1964 Chrysler Newport,&#13;
dependable. Call 639-0379.&#13;
FOR SALE 1966 Triumph 650 T.T.&#13;
Runs great, but needs little work.&#13;
$500 or best offer. Call 552-8987.&#13;
1967 Cougar, 3 speed on floor, 289&#13;
eng. Clean interior, 4 new tires, 2&#13;
owner. Call 654-0272 from 9-5, or 652-&#13;
2788 a fter 5.&#13;
JUGUAR - 1966 XKE coupe. Very&#13;
good mechanically &amp; structurally,&#13;
best offer over $1950. Contact Prof.&#13;
Beyer evenings at ext. 53 on Racine&#13;
Campus.&#13;
FOR SALE - '65 Plymouth 426&#13;
automatic, 2 dr. hardtop, bucket&#13;
seats, mags. Must sell. $800. Call 654-&#13;
7346 after 4:30. </text>
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              <text>by &#13;
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en &#13;
B.A&#13;
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ar &#13;
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sth&#13;
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) &#13;
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              <text>The University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
JUVICOVI&#13;
Volume 5 Number 15 December 13,1971 'Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold&#13;
If you'd have written a&#13;
story, it would have been&#13;
here.&#13;
Join the Newscope staff.&#13;
Fire In&#13;
Com-Arts&#13;
Building&#13;
Under&#13;
Investigation o&#13;
ir&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
CD&#13;
Christmas party for&#13;
underprivilged needs spirit&#13;
Santa Claus (Jim Greco) is comin' to town! Actually,&#13;
he's coming to Parkside on Saturday, December 18. That's&#13;
when he'll be bringing Christmas cheer to underprivileged&#13;
children from the surrounding communities. There are going&#13;
to be games, cartoons, prizes, soda, food and presents. The&#13;
party is being held in the Student Activities Building from&#13;
1:30 to 4:30. Cooperating on this activity will be Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises, the Parkside Activities Board, and the Student&#13;
Union Committee. Interested students and organizations are&#13;
invited to help and their assistance would be deeply appreciated.&#13;
Contact either the Student Activities Office or the&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
the special magic of&#13;
CHRISTMAS!&#13;
by Larry Jones, Campus Editor&#13;
A fire did minor damage to the new communication-arts&#13;
building last Wednesday night.&#13;
As of Thursday afternoon, the Somers Fire&#13;
Department had not yet completed its investigation&#13;
of the blaze, and so would not release&#13;
any information about it. Nowever, Newscope was&#13;
able to obtain the following information in a short&#13;
interview with UWP chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie:&#13;
The fire was "in a very limited basement&#13;
section of the new communication-arts building,&#13;
close to where the connector will be between the&#13;
library-learning center and the corn-arts building.&#13;
The fire occurred in an area where evidently the&#13;
construction people were carrying on some&#13;
warming activity — they were evidently warming&#13;
wooden forms in which concrete was going to be&#13;
poured Thursday. I heard they had some electric&#13;
lights going down there . . . whether they could&#13;
generate enough heat to warm these forms I &lt;don't&#13;
know. The specific cause of the blaze is still being&#13;
looked into.&#13;
"Evidently it did burn quite fiercely in this&#13;
limited area; maybe as much as an hour, and did&#13;
burn some of the wooden forms and did heat up&#13;
some of the steel reinforcing rods in the area to the&#13;
extent that they bent and will have to be replaced.&#13;
There was no major damage to the structure, and&#13;
it is not the University's responsibility; that is, it is&#13;
still the contractor's building and his responsibility&#13;
to take care of it."&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie also stated that no dollar&#13;
estimate of damage had yet been made, and that,&#13;
to his knowledge, there was no suspicion of arson.&#13;
Deputies reported that the Sommers Fire&#13;
Department responded to the call at about 11:30&#13;
p.m., but had trouble getting to the fire site&#13;
because of ankle deep mud. The fire was first&#13;
noticed by a student or faculty member who was in&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the time.&#13;
The building is under construction by the&#13;
Korndoerfer Construction Company of Racine and&#13;
is due for completion next year. It is believed,&#13;
according to Wyllie, that construction of the&#13;
building will not be hampered very much by the&#13;
fire, which is under investigation by an insurance&#13;
firm, university officials and the Sheriff's&#13;
.Department.&#13;
The D eath Of A University-another volley&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
The University of Wisconsin,&#13;
as we knew it, is dead. It died&#13;
the day Governor Patrick&#13;
Lucey signed into law the&#13;
merger which combined the two&#13;
university systems into one.&#13;
The old way is gone and we now&#13;
• have a giant conglomerate&#13;
University of Wisconsin consisting&#13;
of 13 campuses spread&#13;
over the state from Superior to&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Each of these 13 campuses&#13;
bears the name University of&#13;
Wisconsin, but while they may&#13;
be united in name they have a&#13;
long way to go to be united in&#13;
spirit. This separation is due to&#13;
the uniqueness of the situation.&#13;
The schools from each of the old&#13;
systems were run differently&#13;
and there will be difficulties&#13;
involved in getting things to run&#13;
smoothly.&#13;
The final form of the new&#13;
University of Wisconsin is not&#13;
decided, nor will it be, at least&#13;
until January, 1973. That is how&#13;
long the Merger Implementation&#13;
Committee plans&#13;
to be working on the problem.&#13;
This committee, which consists&#13;
of 17 members including the&#13;
chairmen of the Joint Finance&#13;
Committee and the chairmen of&#13;
the Joint Education Committee,&#13;
has a big job ahead of them.&#13;
They are the ones who must find&#13;
the best way of facilitating the&#13;
merger and may decide&#13;
anything from leaving the&#13;
merger as a merger in name&#13;
only or to go all the way and&#13;
have every campus treated the&#13;
same, or anything in between.&#13;
According to George&#13;
Molinaro, Chairman of the&#13;
Assembly Finance Committee,&#13;
the only really big thing the&#13;
Merger Implementation&#13;
Committee has done is to&#13;
eliminate the Coordinating&#13;
Council on Higher Education,&#13;
which was found to be unnecessary&#13;
due to the new&#13;
combined central administration.&#13;
&#13;
As far as Parkside is concerned,&#13;
Molinaro thinks we did&#13;
fairly weH. We got more than&#13;
others did. Whether we would&#13;
have gotten still more under the&#13;
old system is another question.&#13;
Where we really did well was&#13;
in our building program — not a&#13;
thing has been cut. How much&#13;
did we get? Originally it was&#13;
requested that Parkside receive&#13;
an additional $3,066,000 over the&#13;
1969-71 biennium for the 1971-73&#13;
biennium. This addition was cut&#13;
to $1,300,000 or less than half.&#13;
Because of the shortfall in&#13;
expected enrollment, Parkside&#13;
lost an additional $288,000 and&#13;
the forced savings because of&#13;
the budget delay and the Nixon&#13;
economic freeze cost an additional&#13;
$180,000. The budget&#13;
delay wriught havoc with more&#13;
than University funds. All state&#13;
employees who would have&#13;
received pay increases after&#13;
July 1, were denied those increases&#13;
till the budget was&#13;
passed. That would have been&#13;
fine —- everyone would have&#13;
gotten those raises retroactively&#13;
as soon as the budget was&#13;
passed. But along came the&#13;
price freeze and no one could&#13;
get a raise and the budget&#13;
passed without any of those&#13;
included. So nobody got&#13;
anything in back pay and no&#13;
increases were granted until&#13;
after the freeze expired.&#13;
Parkside will lose additional&#13;
funds due to the change in the&#13;
level of funding. It used to be&#13;
that Parkside was funded on&#13;
level one, freshman and&#13;
sophomore, and level two,&#13;
junior and serior per credit hour&#13;
regardless of the curriculum.&#13;
Now we are funded still on&#13;
levels one and two but these are&#13;
further broken down into four&#13;
major disciplinary fields.&#13;
Which means we now get less&#13;
for each literature major than&#13;
we do for each physics major —&#13;
watchifor increased accent on&#13;
the sciences witl all those&#13;
specialized facility&#13;
There was a bright side to the&#13;
personnel problem, as none of&#13;
the mentioned layoffs came&#13;
about, and Parkside will be able&#13;
to recruit additional instructional&#13;
personnel for next&#13;
fall. The personnel office is&#13;
already hiring additional&#13;
clerical help.&#13;
The big bite came in those&#13;
decision items which were not&#13;
restored. These included the&#13;
fundting of two new majors and&#13;
others which were enumerated&#13;
in the March 15 issue. However,&#13;
there will be an expansion in the&#13;
administrative and institutional&#13;
computing facilities. The near&#13;
future should see almost every&#13;
department on campus making&#13;
use of the machine.&#13;
Breakdown of Parkside&#13;
budget:&#13;
60 per cent, Institutional costs&#13;
10 per cent, Physical Plant&#13;
10 per cent, Library&#13;
7 per cent, general services&#13;
3 per cent, miscellaneous &#13;
Page 2 XEWSCOPE December 13, 1971&#13;
An All N ew Concept&#13;
In Self Service Shoe Stores&#13;
The Shoe S top A nnex&#13;
three doors down from&#13;
The Shoe Stop (400 main st.)&#13;
racine&#13;
Grand Opening&#13;
Thurs. Dec. 16th&#13;
Famous Brand Shoes,&#13;
Values To $25.00&#13;
Reduced To $l4.90-$11.90-$9.90.&#13;
Also Reduced , Famous&#13;
Children's Jumping Jack's Shoes.&#13;
The Shoe S top A nnex&#13;
three doors down from&#13;
The Shoe Stop (400 main st.)&#13;
racine&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
I T 'S S C R U M P T I O U S&#13;
80c&#13;
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;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
— THE RANCH&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
My story can be called an&#13;
Exercise in Futility or Whoever&#13;
Reads the Legal Notices?&#13;
On September 29, October 6&#13;
and October 13 of 1960 the Legal&#13;
Notice of the Kenosha News told&#13;
of a petition to rezone an area ot&#13;
Kenosha county from&#13;
residential to industrial. The&#13;
public hearing was held October&#13;
14, 1960. Somers township approved&#13;
the petition of a certain&#13;
Mr. Infusino to use 12.7 acres of&#13;
land on 30 Ave. just south of&#13;
Lichter Rd. to build an incinerator&#13;
for the burning of&#13;
salvage. None of the neighbors&#13;
were there to object. Thus, very&#13;
quickly and easily, Mr Infusino's&#13;
parcel of land was&#13;
rezoned.&#13;
It was not until the neighbors&#13;
saw what was being built that&#13;
they complained. The complicated&#13;
legal terminology in&#13;
the Legal Notices had not&#13;
conveyed to them that their&#13;
neighborhood was in for a&#13;
drastic change. And now it&#13;
seemed too late.&#13;
Complaints directed to&#13;
Kenosha's city hall were turned&#13;
away. K. T. Incinerator is not in&#13;
the city, they were told. Somers&#13;
tells the poor neighbors to be&#13;
patient; it all takes time.&#13;
A complaint that the teepee&#13;
(as the ugly structure was&#13;
nicknamed) was too high for&#13;
current regulations led to an&#13;
amendment of that regulation.&#13;
Meanwhile, the neighbors&#13;
have to contend with an ugly&#13;
and dangerous eyesore. Trucks&#13;
haul garbage from American&#13;
Motors. The garbage is piled&#13;
high. What if a strong wind&#13;
.?&#13;
Th§ screening at the top of the&#13;
teepee is broken down; large&#13;
chunks of half-burned paper&#13;
and wood have been found in the&#13;
neighbors' yards. Patc&#13;
£*°&#13;
burned ground were pointed out&#13;
to me. When, they asked, would&#13;
such a spark land on a roof or&#13;
agrove of trees and catch on&#13;
fire?&#13;
The garbage that decorates&#13;
Infusion's property f&#13;
ttracts&#13;
rats There is the smell, smoke&#13;
and soot that plagues them&#13;
night and day.&#13;
The people want help, but no&#13;
one wants to help. They have&#13;
been fighting the incinerator&#13;
since it was built. They are still&#13;
fighting. Their shouts have&#13;
easily been drowned out,&#13;
quieted and ignored, but still&#13;
they shout. What they lack are&#13;
the numbers. They need more&#13;
people to shout with them.&#13;
Aren't you getting a little sick of&#13;
seeing and smelling that mess&#13;
on your way to Greenquist?&#13;
Only until Mr. Infusino takes&#13;
his teepee and goes home&#13;
will those neighbors be able to&#13;
rest easy.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Diane Haney&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Finally, there may be some&#13;
coherence to the bulletin boards&#13;
around Parkside. The Student&#13;
Activities Office has completed&#13;
a study of the boards and has&#13;
come up with a solution. The&#13;
boards will be labeled as to the&#13;
size and type of what will be&#13;
allowed to be posted.&#13;
These regulations will affect&#13;
all boards except those&#13;
specifically reserved for&#13;
University departments.&#13;
The signs divide the boards&#13;
into three categories. First will&#13;
be the Campus Events Bulletin&#13;
Boards, for announcement of&#13;
approved campus activities and&#13;
events. Size of posters on this&#13;
board will be limited to 14 x 22&#13;
inches.&#13;
The next group will be the&#13;
Student Bulletin Boards. These&#13;
are to be used for personal&#13;
motes, for sale items, or student&#13;
notes of interest. Size of items&#13;
on this board will be limited to 3&#13;
x 5 inch announcements.&#13;
The final group will be boards&#13;
saying Rides And Riders&#13;
Wanted. These will be used for&#13;
the one specific purpose, announcements&#13;
again limited to 3&#13;
x 5 inches.&#13;
The Activities Office hopes&#13;
that this will end some of the&#13;
confustion over the present&#13;
bulletin boards at Parkside.&#13;
People using the boards are&#13;
asked to keep them as neat as&#13;
possible.&#13;
The Student Activities Office&#13;
will implement this process on&#13;
all the campuses. However, to&#13;
make this procedure work, it&#13;
will require the people using the&#13;
board to cooperate with the&#13;
standards set. If anyone has any&#13;
questions or would like further&#13;
information regarding bulletin&#13;
board policies, they are asked to&#13;
contact the Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is just to inform you that&#13;
the sketch purported to be that&#13;
of "James Koloen", as&#13;
published in last week's issue's&#13;
bar review, (which, by the way,&#13;
I thought was mighty boss and&#13;
right on) is indeed the face of an&#13;
imposter. Upon closer&#13;
examination of the picture,&#13;
anyone who is reasonably well&#13;
acquainted with the ace&#13;
reviewer, will discover that it is&#13;
in fact the portrait of the&#13;
scurrilous, archcartoonloony,&#13;
Jerry "the ageless wonder"&#13;
Socha, as drawn by the ace&#13;
cartoon reviewer "James&#13;
Koloen".&#13;
Don't believe everything you&#13;
see, huh Warren?&#13;
Keep on bulkin'&#13;
Jim Sucha&#13;
Why in the hell can't you illiterates learn even how to spell?&#13;
Disgusted&#13;
Picky, Picky, Ed.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racine&#13;
3309 Washington Avo.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
Mcmi|&#13;
Ctotnuu&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phono 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Campus Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Fine Arts Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Circulation Manager&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Warren Nedry&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Larry Jones&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
James Casper&#13;
Rick Pazera.&#13;
Fred Noer,Jr.&#13;
John Beck&#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;
University. Free copies are available upon request.&#13;
Th, ,&#13;
e&#13;
.&#13;
ne ,or 3,1 manuscripts submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. the&#13;
nursday prior to publication and must be typed double-spaced. Deadline for&#13;
^&#13;
ra&#13;
.&#13;
PhS iS the SaturdaV Prior to publication. Unsolicited manuscripts&#13;
d photographs may be reclaimed within 30 days after the date of subn^c&#13;
0&#13;
"' .&#13;
r Which they wi&#13;
" bec&#13;
°me the property of Newscope Ltd. The&#13;
»Prn..&#13;
0Pe °. A" ,S ,oca,ed the Student Organizations building, Intersection&#13;
Of Highway A and Wood Road. &#13;
December i:t. 1971 NKWSCOPK Page :i&#13;
Myra Sadker, an assistant professor of education at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and author of a forthcoming book&#13;
on discrimination against women in U.S. schools, displays pages&#13;
from a book which, she says, illustrates her contention that girls&#13;
are subtly forced into stereotyped career choices in the education&#13;
process. Captions on the illustrations in the book read "Boys are&#13;
doctors." and "Girls are nurses."&#13;
Myra Sadker&#13;
r Sex ism In The School'&#13;
Liberating little girls from&#13;
"sexist" school curriculums is&#13;
the goal of a forthcoming book&#13;
by Myra Sadker, an assistant&#13;
professor of education at the&#13;
University of WiscgnsinParkside&#13;
and mother of a yearand-a-half-old&#13;
daughter.&#13;
The book, tentatively titled&#13;
"Sexism in the Schools: The&#13;
Hidden Curriculum", is to be&#13;
issued for the fall market by&#13;
Harper and Row Publishers,&#13;
Inc., of New York.&#13;
In it, Mrs. Sadker traces&#13;
discrimination against women&#13;
in education from kindergarten&#13;
through college and beyond and&#13;
makes a strong plea for change.&#13;
"We can no longer afford to&#13;
waste the talents of over half of&#13;
our population," says Mrs.&#13;
Sadker, who received her&#13;
doctoral degree in education&#13;
from the Universpty of&#13;
Massachusetts.&#13;
"Discriminatory practices in&#13;
schools are creating built-in&#13;
economic discrimination&#13;
reflected in eventual career&#13;
limitation and salary differentials&#13;
for women."&#13;
Mrs. Sadker opens her indictment&#13;
with basic readers&#13;
used in the early elementary&#13;
grades. They "subtly&#13;
discriminate" in providing role&#13;
models for children, she says.&#13;
"These books use two to four&#13;
times as many stories about&#13;
boys as about girls; there are&#13;
more pictures of boys; and girls&#13;
are relegated to passive, observer&#13;
roles in the stories,"&#13;
Mrs. Sadker says. One particularly&#13;
flagrant example of&#13;
such books cited by Mrs.&#13;
Sadker, "I'm Glad I'm a Boy —&#13;
I'm Glad I'm a Girl" by&#13;
Whitney Darrow (Simon and&#13;
Schuster, 1970), consists of&#13;
facing pages picturing boys and&#13;
girls with such captions as&#13;
"Boys are policemen. Girls are&#13;
metermaids." "Boys are pilots.&#13;
Girls are stewardesses". "Boys&#13;
are presidents. Girls are first&#13;
ladies". "Boys invent things.&#13;
Girls use what boys invent",&#13;
and "Boys fix things. Girls need&#13;
things fixed".&#13;
All this can be unfair to boys&#13;
as well as girls, Mrs. Sadker&#13;
concedes. "The aggressive girl&#13;
is labeled a 'tomboy' while the&#13;
sensitive boy is labeled a 'sissy'&#13;
— both suffer as a result of&#13;
artificial role limitation."&#13;
Reading tests are not the orily&#13;
offenders, however. Women&#13;
come off even worse in most&#13;
history books, Mrs. Sadker&#13;
says. They are virtually&#13;
ignored.&#13;
"A survey of 12 o f the most&#13;
commonly used high school&#13;
history texts show definite bias&#13;
against women. One text&#13;
devotes only two lines to the&#13;
women's sufferage movement.&#13;
Another devotes a paragraph to&#13;
it," she points out. "Students&#13;
frequently do not realize that&#13;
there is a selection process&#13;
involved in the material&#13;
presented. Girls simply find no&#13;
role models in our history&#13;
books."&#13;
By the time girls are in junior&#13;
high school or high school, the&#13;
"subtle" discrimination of text&#13;
books is augmented by more&#13;
overt forms of sex bias.&#13;
"Counselors sometimes do&#13;
not encourage capable girls to&#13;
be doctors or lawyers." she&#13;
asserts. "They encourage girls&#13;
to be nurses and clerical&#13;
workers — traditional roles&#13;
where they may be undertrained&#13;
and under-paid for the&#13;
level of their ability."&#13;
To this is added social and&#13;
peer group pressures for girls to&#13;
"play dumb", Mrs. Sadker&#13;
says.&#13;
"Studies show that patterns of&#13;
underachievement for boys who&#13;
do not reach their full potential&#13;
in school began in the&#13;
elementary grades. These&#13;
patterns frequently begin for&#13;
girls in junior high school as&#13;
they 'learn their place' and&#13;
come to accept female role&#13;
limitations. Other studies show&#13;
that girls' IQ scorew decline&#13;
during adolesence, probably&#13;
because of a lack of motivation.&#13;
Girls are not rewarded for&#13;
academic achievement."&#13;
Mrs. Sadker makes clear she&#13;
is not "knocking" careers&#13;
which are traditionally&#13;
regarded as women's, so olng as&#13;
women choose them freely&#13;
rather than accept them as&#13;
"second choices'Mn an attempt&#13;
to conform with social&#13;
stereotypes.&#13;
Mrs. Sadker also cites two&#13;
common forms of "economic"&#13;
discrimination against girls in&#13;
secondary education.&#13;
Frequently boys take&#13;
mechanical or "shop" courses&#13;
where they develop potentially&#13;
marketable skills, while girls&#13;
take home economics courses&#13;
unlikely to bring them any&#13;
future economic return, she&#13;
says.&#13;
Another form of economic&#13;
discrimination comes in terms&#13;
of facilities and staffing,&#13;
especially in such areas as&#13;
school athletics, she says.&#13;
At the college and university&#13;
level bias against women also&#13;
exists, Mrs. Sadker says, in the&#13;
areas of admissions ("studies&#13;
indicate that if a school must&#13;
choose between a man and a&#13;
woman of equal ability, they&#13;
will amost invariably choose&#13;
the man") and career choices&#13;
("many professional and&#13;
graduate schools still have&#13;
'quota' systems for admitting&#13;
women").&#13;
And the woman who does get&#13;
a college degree will find that it&#13;
a sort of "discount diploma",&#13;
Mrs. Sadker points out. "A&#13;
woman with a B.A. degree can&#13;
expect to earn the same salary&#13;
as a man with a sixth grade&#13;
education. Fewer than one per&#13;
cent of working women earn&#13;
more than $10,000 a yaar while&#13;
the figure for the male&#13;
population is 20 t imes higher."&#13;
"The goal of education is to&#13;
allow each individual to develop&#13;
that person's greatest potential,&#13;
but education is actually&#13;
limiting women in the&#13;
development of their potential,"&#13;
Mrs. Sadker emphasizes.&#13;
How to change all that?&#13;
Mrs. Sadker hopes her book&#13;
will help by making parents,&#13;
teachers, school administrators&#13;
and publishers aware of sexism&#13;
in the schools. By getting the&#13;
"hidden curriculum" out in the&#13;
open, she hopes to have a part in&#13;
getting rid of it.&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
Holm - Accutron&#13;
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Bui ova - Movado&#13;
Caravelle - Timax&#13;
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10% Discount to students and Faculty with i'.q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
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Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
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Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
9a.m.—4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
a bottle or&#13;
a glass&#13;
_c and&#13;
O a steak sandwich or&#13;
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;
NORTHWEST CORNE R OF HIGHWAYS 1-9 4 AND 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Availab le f or fraternity or s oro rity part ies &#13;
Page 4 NEYVSCOPE December 13,1971 CAMPUS&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
"Whenever I get to feel this way .&#13;
hard to find new words to say.&#13;
I think about the bad old days,&#13;
we used to know —&#13;
Nights of winter turn me cold&#13;
fear of dieing, getting old.&#13;
We ran the race,&#13;
the race was won:&#13;
by running slowly."&#13;
Ian Anderson&#13;
Two college-aged girls were looking at&#13;
greeting cards in a downtown gift-card store. As&#13;
one girl would pluck a card from the rack, glance&#13;
at the cover and read the verse within, the other&#13;
girl would hand her friend another card adding,&#13;
"This one is really beautiful," or "This one's&#13;
cute."&#13;
and every available space which greets the eye is&#13;
painted. There is a spontanious festival of color&#13;
within this place. The walls feature: an egg&#13;
hanging over a beer, an open refrigerator, a&#13;
clown, a cop, a cat on a bookcase, wild animals&#13;
resting, a seashore, W. C. Fields playing cards,&#13;
and a country road leading into the pay telephone.&#13;
I sat on a stool under the watchful eye of W. C.&#13;
Fields, who has been studying the same hand of&#13;
cards since he was immortalized in poster form&#13;
some years back. Since he had obviously been on&#13;
the wall longer than I had been sitting in the&#13;
restaurant, I figured he wguld be a good one to ask&#13;
what to order.&#13;
The man with the bulb nose suggested a&#13;
cheeseburger and coffee, through magic found&#13;
only at Bob's Keno Kofeee Pot. I began to feel my&#13;
bad mood dissolve as I talked with the waitress.&#13;
CM®&#13;
UJ&#13;
The girls had looked over a display of&#13;
Christmas cards when they found themselves in a&#13;
section of cards that narked no holiday or event.&#13;
Beautiful flaming sunsets, mellow yellow&#13;
sunrises, violets, roses, daisies, lines by Keats,&#13;
Shakespeare, couples walking along beaches, in&#13;
forests, in the rain, and in fields of clover. For fifty&#13;
or seventy-five cents, either girl could lose herself&#13;
in any one of the photographs on the cards. The&#13;
beautiful scenes on the seventy-five cent ones&#13;
were covered with heavy plastic, in case someone&#13;
wanted to get lost in the scene often enough to risk&#13;
getting fingerprints or smudges on the picture.&#13;
The girl with a white knitted hat picked up a&#13;
card featuring a scene that could have been&#13;
Simmons Island. "The sea has its treasure of&#13;
p e a r l s , t h e s h o r e i t s c r y s t a l s a n d s , a n d I ... I&#13;
have you." She read it and appeared to gaze&#13;
across the store in a romantic fantasy.&#13;
Not being in a receptive mood to this form of&#13;
"honesty", I left the card shop. I walked north&#13;
from the downtown area, in a very depressed&#13;
mood.&#13;
I seem to experience times when the sad lyrics&#13;
from every song created to make you feel lonely,&#13;
come to mind. It is at this time that I realize the&#13;
race I am in does involve rats. I usually suspend&#13;
whatever I am doing, buy the morning paper, and&#13;
take a long walk.&#13;
On this specific morning, I walked with the&#13;
Sun-Times under my arm, until I found myself one&#13;
block beyond Harbor West, in front of a curious&#13;
restaurant called Bob's Keno Kgffee Pot.&#13;
The interior of this place is unique. Each wall&#13;
Her name was Mickey. She had gone to school&#13;
in Madison, gotten married, dropped out, and was&#13;
thinking about going to Parksije. I had a second&#13;
semester timetable of scheduled classes with me.&#13;
She glanced through it and talked with me. Her&#13;
face reflected a type of honesty that could never be&#13;
found in a card shop for seventy-five cents a&#13;
throw. T .. , ..&#13;
When I tasted the cheeseburger, I realized it&#13;
was very good (it cost 45 cents). I highly recommend&#13;
it, as it was the best cheeseburger I had&#13;
eaten in some time. The coffee was also very good,&#13;
not old, too weak or too strong.&#13;
The food was so good on this visit that I&#13;
returned two other times in the next few days. I&#13;
ate breakfast (French toast, 60 cents) and dinner&#13;
(roast beef, applesauce, a vegetable, bread and&#13;
butter and soup, a dollar fifty). The cycle of meals&#13;
convinced me Bob's Keno Koffee Pot is a reliable&#13;
place to get good food. For a restaurant of this&#13;
type, there aren't many in the area that are better.&#13;
After the last bite of cheeseburger was long&#13;
gone, my coffee cup refilled and emptied, I&#13;
decided to be on my way. W. C. Fields had still not&#13;
played a card, while Mickey talked to another&#13;
waitress on duty as a mid-afternoon lull hit the&#13;
restaurant.&#13;
As I walked across the bridge to Simmons&#13;
Island, I watched the seagulls float and swoop,&#13;
remembering the same scene had been on one of&#13;
those cards. I thought of Mickey the waitress, and&#13;
hoped I would never see her face on a card with&#13;
lines by Keats across her forehead, covered with&#13;
plastic for seventy-five cents.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 14&#13;
Meeting: Student Senate, 4&#13;
p.m., Greenquist Hall, Room&#13;
101.&#13;
Poetry Reading: Sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Poetry Forum.&#13;
7:30 tp 8:30. Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Room D-101.&#13;
Meeting: Students International&#13;
Meditation Society.&#13;
Racine Campus, Room 105, 7 to&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
M e e t i n g : Music Educators&#13;
N a t i o n a l C o n f e r e n c e ,&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room D-131,&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 15&#13;
Film: Intercollegiate Film&#13;
Council will sponsor showing of&#13;
Kurasawa's "Rashomon" at 7&#13;
pm at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theatre. Free tickets available&#13;
at the Tallent Hall Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
Last day of Classes: Final&#13;
exams Dec. 16-23.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 17&#13;
Hockey: Rangers vs. Chicago&#13;
State College at Wilson Park&#13;
Recreation Center, Milwaukee,&#13;
9 p.m. Tickets available at the&#13;
Athletic Office.&#13;
Gymnastics: Rangers vs. UWEau&#13;
Claire at Eau Claire.&#13;
Regents: Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
will meet at Van Hise Hall, UWMadison.&#13;
&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 18&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs.&#13;
Northern Michigan at Memorial&#13;
HallK Racine, 8 p.m.&#13;
Gymnastics: Rangers vs. UWStout&#13;
and UW-Eau Claire at&#13;
Menomonee.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 21&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs.&#13;
Purdue-North Central at&#13;
Westville, Ind., 8 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 24&#13;
Winter Recess: Holiday&#13;
through Jan. 8.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 30&#13;
Basketball: Rangers at UWGreen&#13;
Bay Classic, Green Bay.&#13;
Wrestling: Rangers at&#13;
M i d l a n d s T o u r n a m e n t,&#13;
LaGrange, 111.&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS&#13;
January 4-14&#13;
Ski the Alps: (late sign-up&#13;
accepted this week) 10 days for&#13;
$264 plus tax. Includes air and&#13;
ground transportation, lodging&#13;
and overnight stops in Geneva&#13;
and Paris. Open to University of&#13;
Wisconsin students and personnel&#13;
only. For details contact&#13;
Bill Neibuhr, Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 213, Tallent Hall.&#13;
MO&#13;
Impulses, without the sweat&#13;
dripping from a forehead,&#13;
glistening in biological&#13;
anguisheets that ripple and&#13;
splash to a strained neck, then&#13;
rivers of the stuff down and&#13;
around the pectorals still&#13;
glistening onto the heaving&#13;
diaphram. The hands are gone&#13;
too, their search for string or&#13;
valve hampered by the same&#13;
poistness of pungent salt that&#13;
ages wood and darkens metal.&#13;
Music has always been&#13;
unquestionably made of souls&#13;
and love and sadness and pain&#13;
and . . .&#13;
The Moog came to Parkside,&#13;
operated by Chris Swanson,&#13;
whose genius is without saying&#13;
and whose machine is nearly&#13;
without playing. He constructed&#13;
nearly every aspect of the&#13;
music and the Moog and&#13;
elect ronic ally simulated&#13;
familiars like The Blood, Sweat&#13;
and Tears' "Spinning Wheel"&#13;
and Beatles' "Hey Jude".&#13;
Bach's Aria D buzzed perfectly&#13;
only to be surpassed by Mr.&#13;
Swanson's original works,&#13;
"Snow", which spooned us a&#13;
modern jazz work showing a&#13;
many leveled understanding of&#13;
the mechanism and its&#13;
possibilities and "Here Comes&#13;
Monday", which integrated 17&#13;
Title: CRUISING SPEED&#13;
Author: Willpam F. Buckley, Jr.&#13;
Publisher: G. P. Putnam's Sons&#13;
($6.95)&#13;
It has taken me three dyas to write&#13;
this first sentence. After staring at the&#13;
typewriter for four hours Wednesday&#13;
night, I decided, quite without a&#13;
palpable reason, to quit smoking and&#13;
begin the review with cleaner lungs on&#13;
the next day. When I woke up Thursday,&#13;
I'd yet to take another toke off a&#13;
tobacco cigarette, of which I was proud.&#13;
But, as the day wore on, I discovered to&#13;
my dismay that I'd contracted a vicious&#13;
cold over the night. I finished off&#13;
Thursday by staring at my typewriter,&#13;
not smoking, and wiping my runny&#13;
nose. Today I began the review without&#13;
mentioning the title of the book in the&#13;
first paragraph, my original stumbling&#13;
block of the past two days; it has&#13;
something to do with style.&#13;
Cruising Speed is a 250 page&#13;
"documentary" concerning one week&#13;
in the life of the~ e ditor of "National&#13;
Review", moderator of "Firing Line",&#13;
and much in demand conservative&#13;
speaker, William F. Buckley, Jr. A&#13;
typical week includes work on his&#13;
magazine, taping a "Firing Line"&#13;
show, making a few speeches, accepting&#13;
and rejecting offers for future&#13;
*&#13;
oratory, eating, and drinking. His one&#13;
week "documentary", in truth, covers&#13;
much more than a week in the life of&#13;
America's foremost conservative. In&#13;
the typical Buckley manner, the author&#13;
indulges in countless asides, remembering&#13;
and analysing past debates,&#13;
looking at his own student years,&#13;
remembering advice he'd gotten from&#13;
people he's respected, talking about his&#13;
dogs and the many people who write to&#13;
him, revealing anecdotes and just plain&#13;
getting off the subject at hand.&#13;
One discovers many hitherto&#13;
unknown facets and foibles of the&#13;
seemingly unflappable conservative.&#13;
One has to respect the dedication he&#13;
exhibits in providing a forum for&#13;
responsible conservative opinion, by&#13;
publishing the "National Review",&#13;
which, moneywise, one discovers is a&#13;
l o s i ng p r o p o si t i o n. B u c k ley 7 c h a r g es fat&#13;
fees for speeches because the $12.00&#13;
subscription fee to the Mag is $8.00&#13;
short of its publication costs. One has to&#13;
admir e tha t k i nd o f d e d i c a t i o n , eve n i f ,&#13;
or perhaps especially because, it is&#13;
directed toward a Quixotic myopic&#13;
vision of how the world should be. The&#13;
conservative never expects to win.&#13;
There is a fatalism in his views that&#13;
anticipates failure but it is a fatalism&#13;
that asks the question, so, what?&#13;
As one reads Cruising Speed, one&#13;
retains respect for the author's wit, and&#13;
also for his straightforward honesty; he&#13;
ain't puttin' nobody on. For instance, he&#13;
almost crassly admits to a laziness in&#13;
relation to his speeches, by revealing&#13;
that for every speech he has made, he&#13;
has relied on one of three prepared&#13;
texts that were written years ago. We&#13;
learn why he is always seen carrying a&#13;
pen and pad of paper while appeal ing&#13;
on "Firing Line". It's because he had&#13;
f a l l en into the pat ter n w h i c h wont&#13;
allow him to think clearly without the&#13;
two items in his grasp. We also learn&#13;
some of Mr. Buckley's medical&#13;
problems; for instance, he is&#13;
prescribed to retalins (a type of speed)&#13;
to compensate for a low blood pressure.&#13;
One pecadillo I respect is his healthy&#13;
attitude toward booze; it's getting so&#13;
half the books I read are tributes to&#13;
alcohol.&#13;
Though most of this "documentary&#13;
is devoted to aspects of his workweek,&#13;
B u c k ley doe s p r e s e n t the rea der w i th a&#13;
lengthy formal argument concerning&#13;
the left vs. the conservative; comparing&#13;
the two points of view in sucn&#13;
areas as repression, the possible loss o&#13;
public sanction in the political arena,&#13;
the absolute vs. relative stances toward&#13;
the interpretation of the Constitution,&#13;
and more. ,&#13;
Bucklev's stvle of writing often leads &#13;
December 13, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page",&#13;
&gt;OG&#13;
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1.&#13;
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5,&#13;
1,&#13;
&gt;g&#13;
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a&#13;
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ts •&#13;
es?-&#13;
:&#13;
.&#13;
17&#13;
taped tracks. Swanson played&#13;
much of the melody on an&#13;
electronic organ with 12 tones to&#13;
the octave and a "ribbon controller"&#13;
that varied pitch in line&#13;
with the Moog's wavering pitch&#13;
changes.&#13;
In brief explanatory pauses&#13;
he told of how the Moog composition&#13;
is like oil painting in&#13;
that color is equal to sound, the&#13;
composer choosing the color&#13;
key rather than audio musical&#13;
keys.&#13;
Interest generated by the&#13;
Moog was impressive with&#13;
about 700 switched on people&#13;
showing up, standing room&#13;
only.&#13;
The effect of all those modern&#13;
Americans in that cyclopean&#13;
Greenquist towering into the&#13;
night, a musterious music&#13;
emitting from one man and his&#13;
machine was a little strange.&#13;
Listening to the composer's&#13;
""Time Remembering", a mysto&#13;
jazz-rock piece, I looked out into&#13;
the night with all of those&#13;
futuristic looking floodlights&#13;
beaming the way to streamlined&#13;
Tallent Hall half expecting . . .&#13;
half expecting . . . half expect&#13;
. . . half expec . . . f expect&#13;
. . . zzzz.&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
to the reader's confustion, he begins&#13;
what turns out to be a paragraph-size&#13;
sentence, with one specific subject,&#13;
suddenly jumps to something entirely&#13;
different, maybe makes another jump,&#13;
and then ends the sentence. At first I&#13;
thought (perish the thought) that it was&#13;
some incapacity on my part which&#13;
provided a block to understanding what&#13;
Buckley was saying, But, I reasoned,&#13;
even though I may be stupid some of the&#13;
time, I ain't that stupid most of the&#13;
time, and the confustion was apparent&#13;
most of the time. This confustion in&#13;
following Buckley's reasoning and&#13;
prose is, 1 think, caused by time jumpes&#13;
in a given sentence; Buckley tends&#13;
toward tangential reminiscences which&#13;
are catalyzed by the subject of a given&#13;
sentence; often he leaves the original&#13;
subject and never comes back to it,&#13;
leaving the reader up in the air.&#13;
All in all, Willy ain't such a bad guy&#13;
after all, and I think quite a few of the&#13;
more openminded leftists who read&#13;
(ruising Speed will discover this, just&#13;
as I did.&#13;
What else can I say about a book that&#13;
caused me to quit smoking and catCh a&#13;
cold before I could review it? Or was&#13;
that the typewriter?&#13;
Courtesy of the Book Mart, 622 - 59th&#13;
Street, Kenosha.&#13;
The Parkside activities board&#13;
will sponsor three dances over&#13;
the holidays:&#13;
Dec. 23 — Th ursday from 9-1&#13;
a.m. (the last day of finals)&#13;
Jan. 5 — We dnesday from 9-1&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Jan. 13 — Thursday from 9-1&#13;
a.m. (the last day of&#13;
registration).&#13;
iFor the man...&#13;
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English&#13;
Leather&#13;
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Sterling&#13;
-Grand&#13;
Marque&#13;
-Old Spice&#13;
-Canoe&#13;
-Trouble&#13;
-Nine Flags&#13;
For the&#13;
woman...&#13;
-My Sin&#13;
-Intimate&#13;
-Tigress&#13;
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-Lemon Mist&#13;
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Just north of&#13;
Washington Rd.&#13;
kenosha&#13;
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Hours&#13;
9:00a.m.-9:30p.m.&#13;
Sunday&#13;
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A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION&#13;
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And get us a Personal Loan? We'll provide money for&#13;
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discuss your problem with our&#13;
Personal Loan Officer.&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF&#13;
0* S/&#13;
Service Center&#13;
245 T allent Hall&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Doris Lantz,&#13;
Representative&#13;
CREDIT UNION&#13;
Home Office&#13;
25A A. W. Peterson Bldg.&#13;
750 U niversity Ave.&#13;
Madison Wis. 53706 &#13;
Page« NEWSt'OPE December 13, 1971&#13;
Se/utitUf the fyinedt&#13;
Piffl* &amp; Station, tf-oodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 653-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR. DINING ROOM&#13;
SIOGtmh Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Vt Block South of Kanosha-Racino County Una&#13;
SPump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE I&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash A Carry&#13;
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PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c par quart&#13;
34c par quart&#13;
SI.39 par gallon&#13;
47c par can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prlcason Oil Filtars,&#13;
Air Filtars, Tuna Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Itemj Subject to 4 Par Cant Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
Swimming Pools For Parkside?&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Those of you who attend&#13;
classes at Greenquist Hall&#13;
probably have noticed those two&#13;
holes in the ground, one behind&#13;
the Library Learning Center&#13;
and one on the north side of&#13;
Greenquist at the end of the old&#13;
access road. Those two mudsided&#13;
swimming pools are to&#13;
become the Communication&#13;
Arts Building and Classroom&#13;
Buildin.g&#13;
The Communications Arts&#13;
Building, which is under construction&#13;
behind the Library&#13;
Learning Center, will bring&#13;
University fine arts under one&#13;
roof. Classified as an instructional&#13;
laboratory and&#13;
classroom building, the facility&#13;
will consist of multidisciplinary&#13;
classrooms and&#13;
l e c t u r e r o o m .s&#13;
More than just classrooms,&#13;
the building will have&#13;
specialsed spaces for music,&#13;
art, speech and foreign&#13;
language labs. Also included&#13;
will be a special laboratory for&#13;
audio visual work and an institutional&#13;
data processing&#13;
facility.&#13;
The main feature of the CornArts&#13;
building is a 750 seat&#13;
capacity theater which will&#13;
have at its focal point a stage&#13;
fronted by a portion that can be&#13;
raised and lowered to serve a&#13;
variety of functions. The&#13;
theater itself can be divided into&#13;
three areas, two 125 seat&#13;
balcony sections can be closed&#13;
off to serve as lexture rooms.&#13;
The main theater which contains&#13;
projection facilities, seats&#13;
500.&#13;
The building, started last&#13;
month, will be completed in&#13;
January of 1973 with the&#13;
possibility of having the&#13;
classroom portion done in time&#13;
for the fall semester next year.&#13;
It will be the smallest&#13;
educational facility in campus&#13;
at 104,500 square feet.&#13;
The cost for Coin-Arts is&#13;
$4,220,000, broken down as&#13;
follows: General Contractor&#13;
$2,277,500, Plumbing $130,702,&#13;
Heating and Ventilation&#13;
$564,741, electric $584,868,&#13;
Elevator $22,954, Stage Lift&#13;
$30,951, Testing and Balances&#13;
$11,474, total $3,628,763, plus site&#13;
development, fees, contingency,&#13;
$4,220,000 total.&#13;
The facility that now exists&#13;
only as an H-shaped hole in the&#13;
ground north of Greenquist Hall&#13;
will become the Classroom&#13;
Building. Construction has been&#13;
held up because of problems in&#13;
clearing the paperwork.&#13;
The building, scheduled for&#13;
completion in the summer of&#13;
1973, will, besides classroom&#13;
space, contain laboratories for&#13;
c o m m e r c e, g e o g r a p h y,&#13;
Table Tennis&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Sponsored&#13;
Of special interest to the table tennis players on campus,&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board will sponsor a men's and&#13;
women's singles table tennis tournament to be held January&#13;
19 through February 2.&#13;
The tournament, held in conjunction with the Association&#13;
of College Unions-International, will determine Parkside's&#13;
representatives to the regional playoffs in Oshkosh on&#13;
February 17, 18 and 19. The two singles campus winners, in&#13;
both the men's and women's divisions, will participate in the&#13;
regionals as doubles teams.&#13;
Trophies will be awarded to local winners and the&#13;
tournament is open to all Parkside students. Registration&#13;
blanks and further information are available in the Student&#13;
Activities Office, Room 217, Tallent Hall. The forms, along&#13;
with a $1.00 entry fee, must be returned to the Student Activities&#13;
Office by December 15.&#13;
meteorology, psychology and&#13;
anthropology. Also included will&#13;
be lab rooms containing terminals&#13;
to the Institutional Data&#13;
Processing Center in the CornArts&#13;
Building.&#13;
The Classroom Building will&#13;
have an area of 126,000 square&#13;
feet and will be completed at a&#13;
cost of $4,093,420, broken down&#13;
as follows: General Contractor&#13;
$2,364,700, Plumbing $130,702,&#13;
Heating and Ventilation&#13;
$542,550, electric $281,413,&#13;
TElevator $29,626, Testing and&#13;
Balancing $4,480, total&#13;
$3,352,734, plus site development,&#13;
fees, contingency,&#13;
$4,093,420 tota.&#13;
The sites for the Corn-Arts&#13;
and Classroom buildings are&#13;
already being developed;&#13;
h o w e v e r, c o n s t r u c tio n&#13;
programs for the 1971-73&#13;
biennium include the Student&#13;
Union and Physical Plant.&#13;
The Union will have 90,000&#13;
square feet of floor space and&#13;
cost three and a half million&#13;
dollars. Due to the lack of&#13;
forward planning money,&#13;
nothing has yet been done on it.&#13;
Next month will see the&#13;
beginning work on design,&#13;
which will take about a year&#13;
until approved. Construction&#13;
should begin in January, 1973,&#13;
and be completed in late fall of&#13;
1974.&#13;
Lanny Davis to&#13;
speak&#13;
The National Youth Coordinator&#13;
of the Muskie Campaign,&#13;
Lanny Davis, will speak&#13;
here Wednesday, Dec. 15.&#13;
A one-time "McCarthyite",&#13;
the Yale law graduate is&#13;
massing youth support behind&#13;
Muskie. Davis has supported&#13;
many so-called "peace candidates"&#13;
in the past and is&#13;
willing to explain why he now&#13;
supports Senator Muskie.&#13;
The Davis lecture, sponsored&#13;
by the UW-P Young Democrats,&#13;
is scheduled from 11:30 a.m. to&#13;
12:30 p.m. in room 108 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Davis will answer any opposing&#13;
questions.&#13;
JP1&#13;
*0* * "&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
9" - 12" - 14" - 16" (&#13;
ALSO &amp;&#13;
In Four Sites&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKIN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SI A FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU KING Wf BRING657-9843&#13;
or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
DL VJLj Supper CU&#13;
1700 Sheridan RdKENOSHA,&#13;
WISCONSIN&#13;
5^&#13;
SV&#13;
,j£&gt; &lt;j^. o&amp;s 1# '.&lt;£•&#13;
V°xe&gt;V /V'W ^&#13;
&lt;$&gt; Q&lt;^&#13;
vv*&#13;
AV O&amp;&#13;
c5*&#13;
v&#13;
e &#13;
Johnson on comm.&#13;
chairman of a committee to provide research and&#13;
background information on faculty government aspects of&#13;
the recent merger of UW and State University systemV&#13;
The committee chaired by Johnson is one of 16 covering&#13;
various aspects of the merger which will report to the faculty&#13;
representative on the Merger Implementation Study Committee&#13;
appointed last month by Gov. Patrick Lucey The 16&#13;
committees were set up by the University Faculty Council of&#13;
the former UW units.&#13;
Timetables available&#13;
Timetables listing both daytime and evening classes for&#13;
second semester at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
now are available at the Wood Road, Racine and Kenosha&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Because of implementation of a new calendar for the&#13;
academic year, second semester registration will start&#13;
earlier this year — on Jan. 11 in Greenquist Hall — immediately&#13;
after the winter recess. Second semester instruction&#13;
begins Jan. 17 and ends with completion of final&#13;
exams on May 20.&#13;
The timetable lists 355 separate courses in 29 different&#13;
academic fields and includes complete registration information.&#13;
&#13;
In addition to the timetable, the newly published 1971-73&#13;
Parkside catalogue also is now available. Both may be&#13;
obtained at the library and information center in Tallent&#13;
Hall on the Wood Road campus and in the main offices at&#13;
the Kenosha and Racine campuses.&#13;
SGA ag enda&#13;
DECEMBER 14 —Room 101—4:00P.M.&#13;
1. Additional SGA responsibilities&#13;
2. Establish committee chairmen.&#13;
3. Introduction of special projects number one and two.&#13;
4. Discussion of instructor evaluation. (COP report)&#13;
5. Discussion of SGA credit.&#13;
6. Discussion of CCC.&#13;
December 13.1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
/X f o r&#13;
/THE BEST&#13;
1 Ui \ J ) D o u t le Chees &lt; s u r q e r . ' 1 ^&#13;
; * J+ H 5 * S i f K v t&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Newscope Classifieds are free to the&#13;
students, staff and faculty of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Deadline for classifieds is Thursday&#13;
prior to the week of publication and&#13;
will be run three weeks consecutively&#13;
or until cancelled by the&#13;
advertiser.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
COUNTER GIRL — Must be able to&#13;
work Friday noon hours and nights&#13;
and weekends — apply in person&#13;
Monday or Tuesday after 4, Sandy's&#13;
Drive-In.&#13;
WAN TED : P iano teacher in Union&#13;
Grove area to take 7 students. Call&#13;
554-8269.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WAN TED : One girl to share 2&#13;
bedroom apartment with 2 other&#13;
girls. Centrally located. $13.50 per&#13;
week per person including utilities.&#13;
Call 654-2741 a ny weeknight after 5&#13;
and ask for Rose or Peggy.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Mosrite Acco.ustic-electrical guitar,&#13;
with plush case. Originally $500&#13;
value, like new, will sacrifice. Call&#13;
694-6168.&#13;
FOR S A L E : 2 Remington&#13;
Typewriters. 1 Mark II manual&#13;
portable. Excellent condition. $7 5. 1&#13;
Model 700 electric portable, $90. Call&#13;
633-4442.&#13;
WATER BED S - All sizes. Five&#13;
year guarantee. $25.00. Call Mike at&#13;
654-5402.&#13;
W A S H E R - D R Y E R : Frigidaire&#13;
Skinny-Minny one piece com&#13;
bination. Never used — couldn't get&#13;
220 w t line. Paid $469. Will sell for&#13;
$400 or best offer. Call 654-5777.&#13;
HEY KIDS! Need your term papers&#13;
typed? Call Dee Rafferty, 654-3094.&#13;
SUMM ER IN EUR OPE : Chicago&#13;
London-Chicago. June 7 to Aug. 23,&#13;
$239. Other flights leave weekly&#13;
from New York and Chicago. International&#13;
Student ID Cards issued.&#13;
Also IntraEuropean Flights. Flight&#13;
Center, Box 70, UW Union South, 227&#13;
N. Randall Ave., Madison, Wl 53715.&#13;
Telephone (608) 263-3131.&#13;
FOR SALE — Pentron reel typ?tape&#13;
recorder, 1200 ft. capacity, portable&#13;
with tapes, empty reels and accessories.&#13;
$20. Call 654-4982.&#13;
F R EE — GI V E AWAY —Kittens 3&#13;
mixed black and white, 2 all black.&#13;
Please call 633-3260 a fter 5:30.&#13;
FOR S A L E : Water Ski Sloum&#13;
Thompson Tunnel Concave, like&#13;
new, $45. Call Bob, 658-4048 a fter 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
IF YOU LOVE ANIMALS DON'T&#13;
EAT THEM. For free information or&#13;
for ways you can help, write&#13;
American Vegetarians, Box 5424,&#13;
Akron, Ohio 44313. (Our group has no&#13;
paid employees.)&#13;
Have your baby when you want to.&#13;
Visit our Planned Parenthood Clinic,&#13;
Planned Parenthood of Kenosha,&#13;
Inc., Kenosha Memorial Hospital,&#13;
Outpatient Entrance, Thursdays, 7&#13;
p.m. No one turned away for lack of&#13;
money. For appointment call 657-&#13;
6211.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1976 Ambassador, 4 door, 232 engine,&#13;
automatic — good condition. $795,&#13;
call 551-9556 after 5 p.m., 1814 18th&#13;
Ave.&#13;
1963 Rambler 4 dr. Good engine,&#13;
good paing, $165 o r offer. Call 632-&#13;
5779 or 553 2423.&#13;
1963 Rambler American Station&#13;
Wagon. Runs good, but needs&#13;
muffler. $35.00. Call 654 8 998. As k for&#13;
Maggie or leave message.&#13;
1968 Mustang Cobra, Green, 428&#13;
automatic. Must sell. $1,250 or best&#13;
offer. Call 654-8574 a fter 6 p.m.&#13;
1966 Volskwagen, excellent con&#13;
dition, new brakes, new muffler and&#13;
exhaust system, white with red&#13;
interior. Letting it go for a good&#13;
price. Call 654-3028.&#13;
1963 Mercury Meteor. 4 dr, 260&#13;
engine, automatic. Runs good, body&#13;
good. $200or best offer. 761-1653 (oak&#13;
Creek), Larry, or Newscope office.&#13;
Fan "56" Chevy. Green. 6 cyl., Auto.&#13;
$60. Call Dave, 633-6740.&#13;
Fan "61" Corvair. Green in color.&#13;
Engine has 44,000. Body bad. $30.&#13;
Call Bruce, 633-6740.&#13;
FOR SALE: 1063 Chevy Impala 2 dr&#13;
Hardtop Black, 327 hp Automatic.&#13;
Runs good. Body in perfect shape.&#13;
$450. Aks Bill 632-4686.&#13;
1946 VW. Bright yellow. Excellent&#13;
condition. Must sell. 633 4442. Best&#13;
offer. &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE December 13,1971&#13;
Icemen Shoot For F ifth Win&#13;
UW-Parkside's hockey club will shoot for its fifth straight win&#13;
Saturday night at Green Bay's Brown County Arena against St.&#13;
Norbert College. Game time is 10:30 p.m.&#13;
The Rangers beat Illinois State 5-3 and Triton College 4-3 in&#13;
action last weekend in Milwaukee. Goalie Rich Orchevsky, helped&#13;
by good defensive work by Terry P'latly, Ron Eiffler and brothers&#13;
Rich and Joe Rosko, is currently sporting a 1.29 goals against&#13;
average.&#13;
"Defense has been the key to our winning streak," club&#13;
president Tom Krimmel said. "In the last game, Triton had only 11&#13;
shots on goal to our 37."&#13;
Mike Broderick leads the team in scoring with 13 points on nine&#13;
goals and four assists while Krimmel is second with four goals and&#13;
lour assists for eight points.&#13;
Next home game for the Ranger is Friday, Dec. 17, at 9 p.m. in&#13;
Milwaukee agapnst Chicago State.&#13;
Wrestlers In Dual Meet Saturday&#13;
AlVarez Named&#13;
All-American&#13;
by Jim Casper, Sports Editor&#13;
Rudy Alvarez, the former Racine Horlick prep star, won AllAmerican&#13;
honors in cross country this season. He also set a school&#13;
record in the North Central Marathon run at Naperville, Illinois.&#13;
This is Alvarez's first attempt at that race and his coach, Bob&#13;
Lawson, termed it, "A good first effort."&#13;
Alvarez's run broke the record set by Mike DeWitt of 2.56:6 in&#13;
the 1970 Boston Marathon.&#13;
UW-Parkside's wrestling&#13;
team will close out its preChristmas&#13;
action Saturday at&#13;
Bullen Junior High in Kenosha&#13;
as it hosts Northern Michigan&#13;
and Marquette in a double dual&#13;
meet.&#13;
The Rangers will meet&#13;
Northern at 1 p.m. and the&#13;
Warriors ar 4 p.m. with a&#13;
Marquette-NMU contest slated&#13;
for 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Parkside Coach will probably&#13;
go with the same lineup he has&#13;
used through the Rangers' first&#13;
three meets, with Ken Martin, a&#13;
16-4 winner in the Rangers' 30-15&#13;
dual loss at Oshkosh, heading&#13;
the liast at 134 pounds.&#13;
Frank Velasquez at 118, Jeff&#13;
Jenkins at 150 and Mark Barnhill&#13;
at 190, Parkside's other&#13;
winners at Oshkosh, will be&#13;
counted on heavily Saturday as&#13;
the Rangers look for their first&#13;
dual win of the year.&#13;
Dave Langeland, who drew at&#13;
Oshkosh, will go again at&#13;
heavyweight, while Rick&#13;
Mauldin at 126 and Tom Beyer&#13;
at 167, both of whom failed to&#13;
make weight and forfeited at&#13;
UW-O, are looking to get back&#13;
on the winning track.&#13;
Rick Shoeffler, the 177-&#13;
pounder who's been a strong&#13;
point for Parkside, lost at&#13;
Oshkosh when forced to stop&#13;
because of injury but should be&#13;
ready for Saturday's matches.&#13;
Also entered for the Rangers&#13;
are Kyle Barnes at 142 and Ron&#13;
Atiams at 158.&#13;
The Rangers' next competition&#13;
will come Dec. 29-30 in&#13;
the prestigious Midlands&#13;
Tournament at LaGrange, 111.,&#13;
which annually attracts the top&#13;
collegiate wrestlers from&#13;
throughout the nation.&#13;
Ranger Grapplers&#13;
Lose To Oshkosh&#13;
UW-Oshkosh scored a 30-15 victory over the Ranger grapplers&#13;
in a match at Oshkosh.&#13;
Two Rangers failed to make weight and another defaulted due&#13;
to an injury, helping contribute to the Oshkosh victory.&#13;
Ranger winners were Frank Valesquez, 118, Ken Martin 134,&#13;
Jeff Jenkins 150, and Mark Barnhill-130, all by decision.&#13;
Dave Langeland wrestled to a draw in the heavyweight class.&#13;
Ranger Wrestlers Score First Win&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
After suffering a 68-45 setback&#13;
at Western Michigan and an 82-&#13;
60 defeat at home against&#13;
Wayne State, the Rangers came&#13;
home to Memorial Hall to cope&#13;
their initial win of the young&#13;
Hockey C lub Gets 3 rd, 4th Victories&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside hockey club&#13;
notched its fourth victory in a&#13;
row, defeating Triton College 4-&#13;
3. On the previous night the&#13;
Rangers had defeated Illinois&#13;
State University by a 5-3 score.&#13;
In the victory Friday night&#13;
the Rangers had to make a&#13;
comeback after ISU opened the&#13;
scoring. Mike Broderick of the&#13;
Rangers evened the score with&#13;
a goal. He was assisted by Marc&#13;
Tutlewski. Bill Westerlund then&#13;
put the Rangers in the lead by&#13;
ripping home a beautiful pass&#13;
from Terry Flatley.&#13;
Tom Krimmel closed out the&#13;
first period scoring. In the&#13;
second period the teams traded&#13;
toals. Gordie Bradshaw of the&#13;
Rangers came up with his&#13;
team's fourth goal. Passes from&#13;
Bill Westerlund and Dave&#13;
Bradshaw helped him get his&#13;
goal.&#13;
Mike Broderick then scored&#13;
his second goal of the night.&#13;
Broderick was assisted by&#13;
Tom Krimmel. In the third&#13;
period defense played the&#13;
primary role as the teams&#13;
played a scoreless period.&#13;
In the 4-3 victory over Triton&#13;
College, Krimmel opened the&#13;
scoring at 4:04 of the first&#13;
period, the only assist going to&#13;
Mike Broderick. Triton then&#13;
scored the next three goals to&#13;
build up a substantial 3-1 advantage.&#13;
&#13;
The Rangers started their&#13;
comeback in the second period&#13;
with Tom Krimmel's second&#13;
goal of the game. He was&#13;
assisted by Rich Rosko and&#13;
Terry Flatley.&#13;
A wild, free-swinging fistfight&#13;
between Gordie Bradshaw of&#13;
the Tangers and Ed Provanzano&#13;
of Triton marred the second&#13;
period. Referee Bob Berry&#13;
banished both players with&#13;
game misconducts.&#13;
Broderick tied the game with&#13;
an unassisted goal at 1:57 of the&#13;
third period. Dave Tilley picked&#13;
a timely moment for his first&#13;
goal of the season as he fired the&#13;
winning score at 10:18 of the&#13;
final stanza. Dave Bradshaw&#13;
and Bill Westerlund collected&#13;
the assists.&#13;
It appears to be a year of&#13;
operation turnabout for the&#13;
hockey squad which is only in&#13;
its second season.&#13;
campaign by routing Lake&#13;
Forest College 93-63.&#13;
Parkside was very convincing&#13;
in this first home contest as they&#13;
rolled to an early 23-11 lwad,&#13;
stretching it to 44-26 at the half.&#13;
By that time it was quite&#13;
apparent that the visitors would&#13;
not have the ability to make a&#13;
strong comeback.&#13;
Ted Rogers, a freshman, was&#13;
especially impressive in the&#13;
first half as he totaled 11 points.&#13;
He ended up with 18 for the&#13;
game.&#13;
Another freshman, Tom&#13;
Heller, led the Ranger offensive&#13;
production for the night with 20&#13;
points. He had been the high&#13;
scorer coming into this game&#13;
and of course continued in that&#13;
position.&#13;
Freshman Chuck Chambliss,&#13;
a former star at Racine Park,&#13;
scored 15 points along with&#13;
giving a fine overall floor&#13;
Otto Bauer, UW-Parkside Vice Chancellor, meets&#13;
Parkside's Ranger Bear, who may be seen wandering around&#13;
GRIN AND BEAR IT campus these weeks stirring up enthusiasm for Parkside's&#13;
athletic teams. Looking on is Cheerleader Pam Engdahl.&#13;
performance.&#13;
Parkside Coach Steve Setphens&#13;
was pleased with the win&#13;
and the score. "The kids gained&#13;
confidence that they needed,"&#13;
he said. "The first win is an&#13;
important one."&#13;
Although Stephens was&#13;
clearly satisfied with the victory,&#13;
he sounded some words of&#13;
caution: "We did not do&#13;
everything well. Our defense&#13;
was fair, but not real good."&#13;
Chambliss, a key factor in the&#13;
win, echoed words similar to&#13;
what Stephens said.&#13;
"I think it was great to win a&#13;
game, but we should commit&#13;
ourselves more in practice and&#13;
we could bring out more of our&#13;
ability," said Chambliss.&#13;
"This is a young club with a&#13;
lot of potential," he added, "but&#13;
it has to develop yet."&#13;
After suffering two defeats by&#13;
rather one sided margins how&#13;
could the Rangers post a 30&#13;
point triumph?&#13;
Chambliss commented on&#13;
this. This does not mean that the&#13;
team has improved that much&#13;
in the last few days, he implied.&#13;
"The other games were against&#13;
major college schools — this&#13;
one was against lesser competition,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
"Later in the season we would&#13;
. play better against Wayne State&#13;
and Western Michigan. We are&#13;
a team on the come," concluded&#13;
Chambliss.&#13;
Parkside scored on 38 of 61&#13;
shots for a lofty 62 per cent&#13;
shooting average, while Lake&#13;
Forest hit 23 of 57 for 43 per&#13;
cent. The Rangers also&#13;
outrebounded the undermanned&#13;
Foresters by a wide margin as&#13;
Heller led the Ranters with ten&#13;
boards, while Ed VanTine&#13;
cleared nine.&#13;
With an entirely different&#13;
starting lineup from last year's&#13;
edition, the Ranger squad will&#13;
lose quite a few games, but they&#13;
should show marked improvement&#13;
throughout the&#13;
season.&#13;
Hopefully, a number of victories&#13;
will come during this&#13;
improvevent stage.&#13;
Pl e a se H e l p Gi v e&#13;
A C h r i s t m a s P a r t y&#13;
F o r U n d e r p ri v i l a g ed C h i I d r e n&#13;
O r g a niz ati o n s a n d ind ivi dua ls are&#13;
inv ite d to si g n up a t the S t u d e n t&#13;
A c tiv iti es B l dg. or Office .&#13;
P a rty will be h e ld D e c. 18 1:30-4:30&#13;
Please Help&#13;
T rop hie s!&#13;
B i lli ard s &amp; T a b l e T e n n i s&#13;
Parkside Activitie s Board&#13;
TOU RNA MEN TS Pr esents&#13;
Entry f e e s : Holiday Activity&#13;
B i lli a r ds $ 1 . 5 0&#13;
T a b le T e n n i s $ 1 . 0 0 Schedule&#13;
Sign up d e a d l i ne&#13;
j a n u a ry 1 7&#13;
T h u r s. D e c. 2 3 9 - 1 a . m.&#13;
Wed. J a n . 5 9 - 1 a .m.&#13;
R e gis tra tio n b l a n ks a v a i l&#13;
T h u r s. J a n . 1 3 9 - 1 a.m.&#13;
a b le a t S t. Act . Bld g. or Stu d e nt Acti vity B ui Iding Admiss ion C h a r g e&#13;
Rm. 2 17 T a l l e n t. R e tur n P a r k s i de a n d Wi sco nsi n'l .D. req uir ed&#13;
to Rm. 217. </text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="38">
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Dearborn Assumes New Position</text>
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              <text>"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Volume 5 Number 2 September 13,1971&#13;
Dearborn Assumes New Position&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn was named Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside in a change of status&#13;
action approved Friday by the UW Board^ of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Dearborn has served as Dean of Students since&#13;
UW-Parkside obtained its first students by&#13;
assuming administrative control of the former&#13;
two-year UW Centers in Kenosha and Racine in&#13;
July, 1968. The following year UW-P opened its&#13;
new campus between the two cities.&#13;
As an Assistant Cahncellor, Dearborn will&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn, the newly appointed&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Student Services at&#13;
Parkside. Dearborn also will continue in his&#13;
present position of Dean of Students.&#13;
assume new and expanded responsibilities in the&#13;
area of student services. The directors of Admissions,&#13;
Auxiliary Enterprises, Financial Aids,&#13;
School and Campus Relations, as well es the&#13;
Registrar, will report directly to him. Dearborn&#13;
will continue to assume the responsibilities of the&#13;
Dean of Students position.&#13;
As UW-P's first Dean of Students, Dearborn&#13;
successfully directed development of a student&#13;
affairs program for what has been the state's&#13;
fastest growing campus each of its first three&#13;
years. Despite a start-up situation where&#13;
physical facilities do not keep pace with growing&#13;
enrollment, UW-Parkside has fashioned a&#13;
program of student activities which is attracting&#13;
increasing attention from more mature campuses.&#13;
&#13;
Dearborn's experience spans both private and&#13;
public higher education, secondary education,&#13;
and private industry. Before coming to UWParkside,&#13;
he earned a reputation as an&#13;
imaginative and energetic administrator at the&#13;
UW Center System's Waukesha County Campus,&#13;
where he was Assistant Dean and Director of&#13;
Student Affairs from 1966 to 1968. Before that he&#13;
served for a year as Dean of S tudent Affairs at&#13;
Milton College, where he had received his undergraduate&#13;
degree in 1949.&#13;
Dearborn left private industry in 1961 to&#13;
become Director of Student Activities for the&#13;
West Bend public schools. During 1963-64 he was&#13;
Guidance Director and taught at Random Lake&#13;
high school, then joined the UW Extension&#13;
Division at Madison as a counselor for one year&#13;
before accepting the Milton post.&#13;
Dearborn was born in Janesville, and attended&#13;
high school in Wisconsin Dells. He earned his&#13;
Master's degree in Counseling from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, where he is a doctoral&#13;
candidate in Higher Education Administration.&#13;
He is married to the former Edna Loofboro, of&#13;
Reedsburg, and is the father of tw o sons, Daniel,&#13;
23, a senior at UW-P currently on active duty&#13;
with the Army Reserve, and David, 17. The&#13;
Dearborns reside in Racine.&#13;
— Newscope In terview&#13;
Sonny &amp; Cher page ^&#13;
&lt;&#13;
X&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
It)&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
ir&#13;
tr&#13;
tu&#13;
Parkside Village&#13;
Nears Completion&#13;
by Larry Jones&#13;
of th e Newscope staff&#13;
Parkside Village is nearing&#13;
completion ... at last.&#13;
All students who have already&#13;
signed leases to live in the new&#13;
student apartment complex,&#13;
located just south of Tallent&#13;
Hall on the east side of Wood&#13;
Road, will be in their completed&#13;
apartments by the end of&#13;
September, according to Mrs.&#13;
Sharyn Ribecky, the owners&#13;
representative in charge of&#13;
rentals.&#13;
As of now, Global Business&#13;
and Residential Centers, Inc.,&#13;
owner of the complex, is&#13;
providing free housing for more&#13;
than 24 students at the Holiday&#13;
Inn, and for ten students in&#13;
partially completed units at the&#13;
site. These include students&#13;
from California, Illinois, and all&#13;
areas of Wisconsin. In addition,&#13;
Mrs. Ribecky said that many&#13;
students are continuing to&#13;
commute until their places are&#13;
ready.&#13;
The Village, which will&#13;
contain 66 units for single&#13;
students and 22 for married&#13;
students and faculty (each&#13;
capable of housing at least four&#13;
people), was supposed to be&#13;
ready for occupancy by September&#13;
1st. However, the&#13;
project has been plagued from&#13;
its outset by numerous setbacks.&#13;
&#13;
According to Ribecky, Global&#13;
began negotiations for the&#13;
purchase of the land early in the&#13;
year, with May 1st as the target&#13;
date for the start of con-&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
After a hundred years of q uantitative&#13;
values, of measuring by number, of&#13;
turning schools into assembly lines, the&#13;
old agrarian values of i ndividual worth&#13;
and independence are returning to the&#13;
American scene. Typified by sensitivity&#13;
groups and other personal encounter&#13;
experiences it is becoming more and&#13;
more aparent that the virtue of conformity&#13;
and regimentation may not be&#13;
Art&#13;
the best way to acculturate children&#13;
into the society.&#13;
One chink in this wall of conformity&#13;
called education is the Creative Art&#13;
Workshop in Kenosha. Set up and&#13;
operated by Mrs. Suellyn Scoon and&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth Diamon, they teach art&#13;
with an eye on the overall personality&#13;
development of the child. It is one of the&#13;
goals of the American education&#13;
system, but one that is met only coincidentally.&#13;
There are simply too many&#13;
students, spending too little time, with&#13;
too few teachers to really be affected in&#13;
a positive way by art education.&#13;
As opposed to the inadequacies of the&#13;
school system, the workshop depends&#13;
on a close relationship with the child in&#13;
order to insure each one the optimum&#13;
attention while focusing on developing&#13;
each child's individual creative&#13;
potential for self-expression..&#13;
"The way the public school systems&#13;
are handling art, the child's innate&#13;
creativity, which every child has no&#13;
matter what the circumstances ... the&#13;
essence of that creativity is fairly well&#13;
destroyed by the time he gets into the&#13;
third grade, because, in the public&#13;
schools conformity is stressed — you&#13;
must do exactly as the other thirty kids&#13;
in the class, otherwise, it's no good."&#13;
Mrs. Diamon said.&#13;
The workshop, which began during&#13;
the summer with four classes of fifteen&#13;
children between the ages of five and&#13;
fifteen, grew out of the women's mutual&#13;
interest in art and art education. Both&#13;
are art students at Parkside, each has&#13;
taught art in the past, and spurred on&#13;
by the development of Harbor West,&#13;
they felt that there was a need for an&#13;
alternative to what they regard as&#13;
programs destructive to children.&#13;
They blamed the problems of the&#13;
public schools on economics and the&#13;
sheer volume of children that attend&#13;
classes. There is a shortage of&#13;
materials and one teacher assigned to&#13;
all the grades in two elementary&#13;
schools, making any real personal&#13;
attention remote at best. "I talked with&#13;
some of the teachers," Mrs. Scoon&#13;
said, "and they said that they never&#13;
learn any of the children's names."&#13;
The fundamental philosophical&#13;
difference between the workshop and&#13;
the schools is basic, and therefore&#13;
difficult to change.&#13;
"You could do the same thing with&#13;
the basic tenents of the art education&#13;
program as it is now if you change your&#13;
life style and your thinking style to the&#13;
point where it is the child who is important&#13;
rather than the product he's&#13;
going to turn out at the end of a given&#13;
period of time," Mrs. Diamon explained.&#13;
&#13;
In practice the workshop offers the&#13;
child more freedom of expression and a&#13;
greater variety of media to work with.&#13;
But the freedom they give the child is&#13;
not the chaos you might expect.&#13;
"In a structured class the teacher&#13;
tells the children that there is a right&#13;
way and a wrong way," Mrs. Diamon&#13;
noted. "We tell them 'there's your way,&#13;
but be ready to defend it and- tell us&#13;
why.' They are especially attracted by&#13;
the idea that a tree does'not necessarily&#13;
have to look like a tree, it can be the&#13;
idea of a tree or the way they feel when&#13;
they see it."&#13;
The summer classes were held&#13;
outdoors at Marytown on Kenosha's&#13;
southwest side with more than one&#13;
purpose in mind. Both women were&#13;
interested more in increasing the&#13;
child's powers of observation and&#13;
understanding then in developing artists.&#13;
"One of our goals is to get the&#13;
children to critique themselves. They&#13;
have to relate verbally to what they do,&#13;
to be able to defend what they do," Mrs.&#13;
Scoon explained. "In the public school I&#13;
think they're told that this is what you&#13;
do; in our school we sit around and talk&#13;
about what they do."&#13;
The classes were divided into two&#13;
parts; four weeks were devoted to work&#13;
with two dimensional media, drawing&#13;
and painting, and four weeks were&#13;
spent on three dimensional work such&#13;
as scuplture. "We had five year olds&#13;
doing stone and metal sculpture, media&#13;
they've never used before, and this in&#13;
itself excited them," she said.&#13;
"That's one of the fallacies of the&#13;
public ^school program," Mrs. Diamon&#13;
observed. "Children do not have to be a&#13;
specified age to do a specific project.&#13;
Obviously a five year old's motor&#13;
control is not going to be as great as a&#13;
fifteen year old's, but he is less conditioned&#13;
as to what he should and should&#13;
not do than the fifteen year old, so he&#13;
may be tremendously more expressive&#13;
in what he does."&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
Workshop Promotes C reativity &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE September 13,1971&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will help any woman regardless&#13;
of race, religion, age or financial&#13;
st atus. We do not moralize, but&#13;
merely help women obtain qualified&#13;
Doctors for abortions, if this is&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early abortion is mor e&#13;
simple and less costly, and can be&#13;
performed on an out patient ba sis.&#13;
3*12 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Assistance of Chicago 1&#13;
8 AM-10 PM—7 DAYS&#13;
A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION&#13;
E3&#13;
Get Ac qu ai nt ed Offe r&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SHELL&#13;
W A SHI NGT ON R O AD&#13;
&amp; 3 0 TH A V E.&#13;
6 5 4 - 9 9 6 8&#13;
ON THE JOB — On hand for the beginning of classes this week&#13;
were The University of Wisconsin-Parkside's two new top administrators,&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Otto F. Bauer (center) and Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society Eugene L. Norwood (right), shown&#13;
discussing UW-P's academic plan with Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie.&#13;
Bauer came to Parkside from Bowling Green (Ohio) State University&#13;
where he was Assistant Vice President of Student Affairs. Norwood&#13;
was Acting Dean of UW-Milwaukee's Graduate School.&#13;
Bus Schedule Posted&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
*21*3 SIXTH STREET RACINE&#13;
-&#13;
r&#13;
^w&#13;
Intercity Bus Schedule&#13;
1971-72&#13;
7:25 a.m. - Leaves Racine •&#13;
Arrives Kenosha 7:55 a.m.&#13;
7:30 a.m. - Leaves Kenosha •&#13;
Arrives Racine 7:55 a.m.&#13;
• Bus will make a stop at the&#13;
Tallent Hall Parking Lot&#13;
8:00 a.m. - Bus Leaves Racine&#13;
Arrives Tallent - 8:30 a.m.&#13;
8:22 a.m. to Greenquist&#13;
8:25 a.m. to Tallent&#13;
8:30 a.m. to Kenosha&#13;
8:00 a.m. - Bus Leaves Kenosha&#13;
Arrives Tallent - 8 :15 a.h.&#13;
8:20 a.m. to Greenquist&#13;
8:25 a.m. to Tallent&#13;
PIZZAf&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 p.m.—12::00 a.m.&#13;
5021 - 30th Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
X *&#13;
==&#13;
KE NOS HA - R A C I N E&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
LETTER TO THE EDITOR&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Please permit me to expres&#13;
mv deepest thanks to the&#13;
PARKSIDE FAMILY, the&#13;
Chancellor, Administration&#13;
Faculty, Staff, Nurse, and&#13;
Students for their kindness and&#13;
help to me through heart&#13;
surgery. To the Blood Donors&#13;
those who wrote letters and&#13;
cards, called, sent flowers and&#13;
telegrams, to those who so&#13;
kindly helped me before and&#13;
after surgery, I express my&#13;
sincerest thanks. With the help&#13;
and prayers of all, I feel that I&#13;
was able to come through.&#13;
Thank you very much.&#13;
Prof. M. deC. Nachlas, Ph.D.&#13;
Shirer Named New Director&#13;
Of Public Information&#13;
Walter Shirer was named&#13;
Director of Public Information&#13;
and Publication at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
in a change of status&#13;
action approved Friday by the&#13;
UW Board of Regents.&#13;
Shirer replaces Bruce&#13;
Weston, who has accepted a&#13;
position as Associate Director&#13;
of Development at Stephens&#13;
College, Columbia, Mo.&#13;
Shirer, 33, has been a&#13;
specialist in the UW-P public&#13;
information and publications&#13;
office since the new university&#13;
opened in 1968. He has been with&#13;
the University six years, having&#13;
joined the UW Center System in&#13;
1965 as public information&#13;
coordinator at the former twoyear&#13;
Kenosha Center and&#13;
journalism instructor at both&#13;
the Kenosha and Racine Centers.&#13;
&#13;
After taking his undergraduate&#13;
degree in journalism&#13;
at UW-Madison, SHirer&#13;
worked three years on the&#13;
Waukesha Daily Freeman. He&#13;
left an editorship on the Daily&#13;
Freeman to take graduate work&#13;
in journalism and public&#13;
relations at the Madison&#13;
campus before joining the&#13;
Center System in 1965. At&#13;
Madison, he worked in editorial&#13;
capacities for UW News Service&#13;
and University Extension.&#13;
Shirer is a native of Middletown,&#13;
Ohio, attended high&#13;
school in Green Bay, and served&#13;
three years military service in&#13;
army intelligence. He is single&#13;
and resides in Kenosha.&#13;
8:30 a.m. to Racine&#13;
The above schedule is&#13;
repeated every hour on the hour&#13;
through 10:10 p.m.; the last bus&#13;
departing for Racine and&#13;
Kenosha at 10:10 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Thursday. On Friday,&#13;
the last bus departs for Racine&#13;
and Kenosha at 5:30 p.m.&#13;
During the hours 7:30 a.m. to&#13;
10:30 p.m. there will be continuous&#13;
shuttle bus service&#13;
between the east Parking Lot&#13;
and Greenquist with a stop at&#13;
the Tallent Hall Bus Shelter. •&#13;
This bus schedule is effective&#13;
Sept. 7, 1971.&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 14&#13;
Film - Parkside Film Society&#13;
presents Charlie Chaplain in&#13;
"The Gold Rush". Also&#13;
Laurel and Hardy and Harold&#13;
Lloyd shorts. 8 p.m. in 103&#13;
Greenquist. Adm. 50c.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 17&#13;
Dance- Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
Fraternity sponsors a dance&#13;
at Activities Building, . 9-1&#13;
a.m. Adm. charge. Parkside&#13;
and Wisconsin ID required.&#13;
NEWSCOPE proudly announces the appointment of&#13;
Jerry Socha to the position of p hotography editor. Mr. Socha&#13;
has previous experience on The Committee where he held a&#13;
similar position. At this point his work consists mainly of&#13;
photos taken with a Brownie Number Four, a Polaroid&#13;
Swinger, or those slick four-for-a-dollar photo machines.&#13;
Newscope looks forward to a long and rewarding association&#13;
with Jerry.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor JohnKoloen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Copy Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Jerry Socha&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, James&#13;
Casper, Marc Eisen, Jim&#13;
Koloen, Ken Konkol&#13;
Contributing Staff&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Mike Starr&#13;
Photography&#13;
Darren Borger, Ricky Pazera&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Becky Ecklund, Denise&#13;
Anastasia, Roberta Williams&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
Connie Ktnsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed&#13;
by students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside .published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
operation of Newscope. 5,000&#13;
copies are printed and mailed&#13;
free to the students of the&#13;
University and 1,000 additional&#13;
free copies are distributed&#13;
throughout the Kenosha and&#13;
Racine communities. Free&#13;
copies are available upon&#13;
request.&#13;
It's the®-&#13;
real thing&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Trade mark® &#13;
September 13,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
Sonny and Cher Bono have their own television show. In the entertainment&#13;
field, this achievement reflects years of building and performing.&#13;
Newscope traveled to the Lake Geneva Playboy Club to talk&#13;
with Sonny and Cher about their careers, experiences, and opinions.&#13;
On the second night of their two week appearance, Warren Nedry,&#13;
Jim Madura and Paul Lomartire interviewed the couple.&#13;
Here is that interview.&#13;
NS: Your concert approach to your songs and the material you wrote&#13;
about was youth oriented, and you had this philosophy that came out in&#13;
your movie, "Chastity". I am interested in the transition to your appeal&#13;
to audiences. How you changed audiences.&#13;
Sonny: It gets a little political, and the point of that was that at a certain&#13;
time I saw what I thought was a splitting of two societies, a youth society&#13;
and an older one. The transition acted as a preventative, let's put it that&#13;
way, that's the reason. We try to bridge whatever was there, that's so we&#13;
didn't run to a segregated audience by age.&#13;
NS: Do you think now, with your present approach that you are reaching&#13;
the youth or ignoring or neglecting them?&#13;
Sonny: I don't know, after awhile you get as political as you can. Now&#13;
everyone is very, very political, We probably have gotten a little quieter&#13;
but it's a matter of not getting SQ bo istrous, because everyone now has&#13;
become boistrous, and you're just one of millions. Whereas back in '65&#13;
nobody was saying anything. I think that Dylan said it all, and at this&#13;
point we're redundant. Now it's action instead of saying it anymore.&#13;
NS: Take Dylan for instance. He was that way in '65, and then he sort of&#13;
leaned the other way, and now he's beginning to go back to his old style&#13;
with public appearances and his style.&#13;
Sonny: You get so rejected by the&#13;
establishment and the public in&#13;
general, that you just get gired, say&#13;
'Christ I'm not getting through, I've&#13;
said it, I've said I've said it' and that's&#13;
all you can do is say I've said it. Then&#13;
you feel that it's time to do what I'm&#13;
gonna do. I went to the Chicago Convention&#13;
in '68, and there was a thing in&#13;
there that said 'we will institute a youth&#13;
commission between the ages of 18 and&#13;
26,' and that's mine. You do it, and you&#13;
do it, and you do it, and finally just say&#13;
it's time to cool it.&#13;
NS: Are you and Cher in any way involved&#13;
in any promotions against&#13;
drugs. A few years ago, underground&#13;
stations carried anti-drug ads with&#13;
excerpts by yourself.&#13;
Sonny: No, no, if I could give anyone&#13;
advice, I'd say pass on drugs, not on a&#13;
moral standpoint, but from an existing&#13;
standpoint. If you use drugs alot, like I&#13;
did, I think it got to become a crutch for&#13;
me, and I think it will for other people.&#13;
It puts a soft lens on everything, and&#13;
that's the danger you have to watch out&#13;
for with drugs. If young kids, 14, get&#13;
onto drugs it gets to be a real&#13;
something to lean on.&#13;
NS: Does that include grass?&#13;
Sonny: Yea, again, if people can handle&#13;
anything, then God bless them, if they&#13;
can handle it. But young kids at 14 can't&#13;
handle the world right now so when they go to grass at 14 or 13 what I say&#13;
to them is watch what you're doin', you're putting a soft lens on what's out&#13;
there, and that tends to make everything out there a little more pleasant.&#13;
The world is real, that's all I'm tryin' to say. It's real and cold and&#13;
businesslike, money, and its' everything that everybody doesn't want it to&#13;
be but that's what it is.&#13;
NS: Before you made it did you try to escape it?&#13;
Sonny: At one point I did, when I was usin' drugs heavy.NS: About the&#13;
movie again, I saw you on one of the talk shows right before you got it&#13;
organized — and you said you were having some trouble getting anyong&#13;
to promote it.&#13;
Sonny: Everybody.&#13;
NS: Yeah, after the movie came out there was almost no Sonny and Cher&#13;
heard of for a year or two.&#13;
Sonny: Almost wiped out our career.&#13;
NS: Yeah . . . what effect say did that treatment have on your outlook on&#13;
what you wanted to do and how you wanted to do it?&#13;
Sonny: It made me aware that the world is very real, very very real, and&#13;
deal with it on real terms. Don't try to deal with it on any other terms than&#13;
the fact that it's real and somebody else is going to come along and other&#13;
things are going to happen and that one person in this world is just not&#13;
that important, or two people and if you know that you'll come back.&#13;
NS: So what did you do personally to reorient yourself?&#13;
Sonny: I changed my whole philosophy from sometimes negative attitude&#13;
to a positive, I mean if I saw something that exists and it was ugly, well&#13;
then I know something ugly is there and what can you make good out of&#13;
something ugly, and you can. If you see poverty, if you see something you&#13;
can do something good about it if you want to. So you just put a positive on&#13;
everything, which I wasn't doing before.&#13;
NS: Were you disappointed with your first movie?&#13;
Sonny: No, I was disappointed in that it wasn't what I wanted it to be. that&#13;
Interview&#13;
was an interesting thing because after we made all our bread I took&#13;
our bread and we were broke again, and made a movie and then it was all&#13;
in tin cans of film and we were broke, and she was pregnant and if you&#13;
don't sell the movie you're finished your career was through so I got&#13;
pretty scared, but I sold it. So again, you said did the establishment help&#13;
you, yeah, they bought the movie, they saved my ass, otherwise we would&#13;
have been down and out.&#13;
I'm not disappointed because I did it, at least I did it, it's like you guys&#13;
running your paper, you're doing it and it's not under the best of circumstances&#13;
at all, but you're doing it and that's what people make it. If&#13;
you can hang in there, that's all I can tell people to do.&#13;
NS: Did you get any help from people who were already established?&#13;
Sonny: No. . . well— wait, yes and no, you know. Record companies and&#13;
establishments, so yea — th ey help you, but you got to prove yourself.&#13;
Unless you're worth money you're not worth anything. So you have to&#13;
make yourself valuable in some form. You have to make yourself worth&#13;
some dollars. I mean if p eople knew that you were right and they would&#13;
sell papers because you were right (Cher: No, it's one of my dirty&#13;
diamonds.) then you'd be worth something. And that's the whole name of&#13;
the "game.&#13;
NS: Do you plan to do any more, say in the movie field, records, popular&#13;
k i n d o f . . . .&#13;
Sonny: I don't know, I don't know.&#13;
NS: Maybe.&#13;
Sonny: I don't know.&#13;
NS: Your nightclub act and your show are quite similar; you developed&#13;
your nightclub act first?&#13;
Sonny: The first show was our nightclub&#13;
act, from then on the writers took&#13;
over but they used that as a format to&#13;
write.&#13;
NS: Do you try to capture the intimacy&#13;
of a club act in your show?&#13;
Sonny: No, we just perform. If you&#13;
become a producer and a performer at&#13;
that high of a level, at a certain point&#13;
you've got to go with the people who are&#13;
the creative end of the show and they&#13;
just tell you what to do and you do it&#13;
and then you keep your fingers.crossed&#13;
and you either get the numbers or you&#13;
don't. If you get the numbers you're on&#13;
the air and if you don't you're off. It's&#13;
that simple, it's cold if yo u want to call&#13;
it that. It's a very cold, real world.&#13;
NS: I guess that's the attitude that any&#13;
outlook you have now you're going to&#13;
base your future on, let's say.&#13;
Sonny: I'm going to face it on the fact&#13;
that is real, yeah, it's positively real.&#13;
I've been exposed to too much not to&#13;
know; I've been down, I've been on the&#13;
bottom and stepped on and so far no&#13;
one's invented a word to soften it up&#13;
yet.&#13;
NS: Does that mean that you won't try&#13;
anything that hasn't been done before,&#13;
say looking at things that are real and&#13;
Sonny: We've tried everything, no, I&#13;
think the show itself is a breakthrough,&#13;
I mean we're the first long hairs to get&#13;
a show, and comparatively speaking,&#13;
the network thinks they're going crazy&#13;
by letting us go through. It took seven&#13;
years to get them to give us a shot and&#13;
that was without going completely their way, without them saying, cut&#13;
your hiar, blah-blah-blah-blah. This is on our terms, you know.&#13;
That took seven years, the point is you gotta bend, but don't let them&#13;
break you.&#13;
NS: You said you're the first long hairs, you may be long hairs physically,&#13;
but the appeal of yo ur show isn't to say to "longhairs".&#13;
Sonny: That won't happen for five yours, before they'll put on a show on&#13;
to longhairs, the network dictates that. You won't see that for five years.&#13;
NS: Do they put any kind of limitations on you?&#13;
Sonny: Oh sure, oh yeah, og God. There's a censor there that's there&#13;
every second, watches everything we play, so every word you say can be&#13;
censored, so you try to slip as many things by as you can.&#13;
NS: Then you work around that rather than against it.&#13;
Sonny: If you buck it head on they'll just slice it off, I mean if you go&#13;
straight on with the guy he'll say no and there's no argument, that's the&#13;
point, there's no argument. He'll say either do it or don't do it, you know,&#13;
it happened to Tommy and Dicky, and they had a successful show, and&#13;
there was no argument.&#13;
NS: How can that kind of a tmosphere be conducive to anything creative&#13;
then?&#13;
Sonny: Well, you have to bend, I don't think you have to conform completely.&#13;
If you don't bend I don't think you can expand yourself, you know.&#13;
I don't know what you consider non conformity?&#13;
NS: Probably pretty much not having to do what you don't want to do.&#13;
Sonny: Well, I'm doing what I want to do, for a living — pr etty much on&#13;
my terms.&#13;
NS: Changing the subject, Cher, I was wondering after watching your&#13;
nightclub act if you've telt any similarity to any of the stars from the&#13;
generation before you, and has anyone ever compared you to any of t hose&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
Two B ands F or The Price O f O ne(plus a ]A) Sept. 25th &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE September 13,1971&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Titlg: Sexual Politics&#13;
Author: Kate Millett&#13;
Publisher: Doubleday &amp; Company Inc.&#13;
($7.95)&#13;
First off: The complex arguments&#13;
presented in Sexual Politics, the&#13;
hypotheses and propositions (perhaps a&#13;
poor word) are best left for discussion in&#13;
an atmosphere conducive to public&#13;
drunkenness. Particularly the literary&#13;
sections of her treatise does n ot lead us&#13;
unto objectivity. As a review is not a bar I&#13;
shall keep this all very simple and as&#13;
objective as my male mind will allow me.&#13;
Second off: Read Prisoner of Sex by&#13;
Norman Mailer, too.&#13;
Sexual Politics is a lengthy analysis of,&#13;
what else, but sexual politics defined as an&#13;
"ancient and universal scheme of the&#13;
domination of one birth group by another&#13;
— the scheme that prevails in the area of&#13;
sek." Kate Millett's treatise involves&#13;
psychology, history, anthropology and&#13;
sociology, but it hinges on literature,&#13;
especially the works of D. H. Lawrence,&#13;
Henry Miller, Jean Genet and Norman&#13;
Mailer.&#13;
This book is not a lot of fun to read, it&#13;
drags in many places, it is often redundant,&#13;
in short it is slow reading, and&#13;
because it is a serious essay it deserves no&#13;
less than the reader's undivided attention.&#13;
It took me over a week to crawl through&#13;
Sexual Politics' 380+ pages, then again&#13;
I'm not what you might call indivisible.&#13;
The first sections of the book are devoted&#13;
to an historical analysis of what we have&#13;
come to call the Woman's Lib Movement.&#13;
It covers the early suffragette days in the&#13;
1800's and winds up in the present. No one&#13;
can deny that the history of women in&#13;
political, legal and ecohomic areas was&#13;
less than a form of servitude. Millett&#13;
brings Engels, Freud, Mills, Bachofen, et&#13;
al, in short, male sociologists,&#13;
philosophers, psychologists into the&#13;
spotlight. She condemns and praises them&#13;
selectively; where they agree with her&#13;
then by golly they're right, when it's not&#13;
so, well . . .&#13;
Anthropological conundrums are&#13;
presented: Which came first, patriarchal&#13;
or another form of societal structure? Who&#13;
knows? If patriarchy is not the original&#13;
structure, then it may just be a stage in&#13;
societal development, possibly matriarchy&#13;
is next in line. Yeah, maybe. In her historical-psychological-anthropological&#13;
&#13;
analysis, we are left with no real answers.&#13;
We do gain many valuable insignts (few of&#13;
which we can remember) into the complex&#13;
problems and questions of sexual politics,&#13;
but no answers. Like I say, we get a lot of&#13;
something, but something do also drag.&#13;
Now, dum de dum dum (arpettio,&#13;
please) Lawrence, Mailer, Miller, Genet.&#13;
A different viewpoint; wipe the slate&#13;
clean, burn the other literary essays, let us&#13;
now learn the real reasons the four&#13;
novelists portray women as they do. And&#13;
she does it, too. They are the four of them&#13;
BOOK&#13;
sexual cripples; Mailer perverted to an&#13;
unimaginable extreme, unimaginable&#13;
until I read what Katie has to say about the&#13;
old boy. She succeeds but there's a trick,&#13;
selectivity. One can take selected&#13;
passages from any writer, put them in a&#13;
single essay and make them into anything&#13;
your first premise calls for. Don't prove a&#13;
thing. I'm not saying that Miller and&#13;
Mailer don't in many ways degrade the&#13;
female, what I am saying is that they're&#13;
not necessarily fanatics, what I am saying&#13;
is that everything a novelist writes is not&#13;
necessarily true, does not necessarily&#13;
reflect themselves. Miller and Mailer have&#13;
their extremes because they're writing is&#13;
of an explosive, living in the moment&#13;
genre. They don't pull punches (a&#13;
Mailerism), they're writers, they're&#13;
conscious of their art. When Mailer wrote&#13;
Stephen Rojack's story in The American&#13;
Dream he wasn't writing stream of consciousness&#13;
about himself, he was thinking&#13;
about what he was writing. Kate won't&#13;
accept that, Rojack is Mailer. I wonder if&#13;
Rojack writes as well as Normy. The&#13;
problem is that she talks more about the&#13;
authors than she does of their works. What&#13;
does that lead us into? It leads us into&#13;
nothing.&#13;
By condemning this century's or any&#13;
century's most explosive literature simply&#13;
because of its grounding in sexual politics,&#13;
Kate's ideal alternative would seem to be&#13;
an insipid novel, a sexless politics. Let the&#13;
battle begin.&#13;
I recommend this book for two reasons:&#13;
It does give us many insights into the&#13;
problem of sexual politics, also it is a valie&#13;
treatise in the literature of the Woman's&#13;
Lib Movement. I must, however, warn you&#13;
not to take her analysis of the four&#13;
novelists too seriously, balance it out by&#13;
reading their works for yourself. I aslo&#13;
suppose it depends upon which side of the&#13;
vence you're on.&#13;
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Tickets are now on sale for the Kenosha concert&#13;
by John Denver, popular stage and recording artist,&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside student activities&#13;
office announced.&#13;
Denver's concert will be held in Kenosha&#13;
Tremper high school auditorium Oct. 2 at 8 p .m.,&#13;
sponsored by UW-P. All tickets are $3.50, are&#13;
reserved, and will be sold on a first come - first serve&#13;
basis. Tickets are available at the UW-P student&#13;
activities office in Tallent Hall on the Wood Road&#13;
campus, at Bidinger's House of Music in Kenosha and&#13;
at Cook-Gere Records in Racine.&#13;
Denver currently has the number one selling&#13;
song in the country, "Take Me Home, Country&#13;
Roads", which has sold over one million copies. His&#13;
current popularity also stems from his latest album,&#13;
"Poems, Prayers and Promises", which is among the&#13;
top selling albums and includes his hit single.&#13;
Denver has been a popular and regular guest on&#13;
Merv Griffin and Johnny Carson television shows&#13;
recently, as well as being featured on an NBC network&#13;
musical special.&#13;
Although Denver has only recently emerged as a&#13;
name performer in his own right, he has enjoyed&#13;
considerable success as a singer, guitarist and&#13;
composer for a number of years. He originally tried&#13;
his luck in show business while a college student at&#13;
Texas Tech, but he got his big break on a trip to Los&#13;
Angeles. There he auditioned for and was hired on the&#13;
spot by folk music impresario Randy Sparks, creator&#13;
of The New Christy Minstrels. He worked for Sparks&#13;
for over a year.&#13;
In 1965 Denver was selected from over 250 a pplicants&#13;
to fill the spot of Chad Mitchell of the then&#13;
extremely popular Chad Mitchell Trio. He led that&#13;
group for nearly four years before making the&#13;
decision to strike out on his own as a solo performer in&#13;
1969. He was immediately signed by RCA records and&#13;
has cut four albums since then.&#13;
Denver is a musician of unusual versatility. He&#13;
has written hit songs for many other performers and&#13;
groups, including his most famous, "Leaving On a Jet&#13;
Plane", for Peter, Paul and Mary. As a folk and 12-&#13;
string guitarist, Denver is considered to be one of the&#13;
best on today's scene.&#13;
Of his work as a performer, Denver has said, "1&#13;
don't want to entertain people, I want to touch them."&#13;
His concerts reflect that philosophy. He uses the first&#13;
portion of the show to get acquainted with the&#13;
audience and the second part — "somewhat heavier"&#13;
— to make what he calls "definite statements".&#13;
He claims he will not perform a song — his own or&#13;
that of anyone else — merely because it has a&#13;
pleasant melody or has become popular. "A gong&#13;
must have meaning to me as an individual before I&#13;
can hope to give it meaning to others," he says.&#13;
Denver's appearance is the first popular concert&#13;
of the 1971-72 schoo l year sponsored by the UW-P&#13;
student activities office. Others will be announced&#13;
later in the year.&#13;
Coming Soon! Newscope&#13;
Joerndt &amp; Ve ntura?&#13;
I M I * * ' ' l I A H C t . C I N T I I&#13;
K E N O jfflA, W I S C O N SIN&#13;
618 - 55th STR E ET R H O N E 454-355? &#13;
CAN TELL BY YOUR OUT FIT.. ..&#13;
LONESOME COWBOYS&#13;
Viva&#13;
Taylor Mead&#13;
Eric Emerson&#13;
Tom Hompertz&#13;
Joe D'Alessandro&#13;
Julian Burroughs&#13;
Louis Waldron&#13;
Direction, Script and Photography&#13;
by Andy Warhol&#13;
FLESH&#13;
Joe D'Alessandro&#13;
Insane, Obscene, Disgusting, Genius,&#13;
Revolutionary, Revolting, Addicted to addiction.&#13;
Mr. Warhol you are al of these things. These titles&#13;
are given, too, as easily to New York City, Mr.&#13;
Warhol, and you do each other justice. You are a&#13;
city dweller in every sense and the city dwells in&#13;
you. In your compartmented world you have&#13;
turned in upon yourself, feeling and fondling as&#13;
you go inward toward center. Soon to find what&#13;
those of us who have room to breathe seldom find,&#13;
the thin line between need and want. In this, Mr.&#13;
Warhol, I am only a stranger looking in.&#13;
My agrarian eyes fell upon two cases of improvisational&#13;
Warhol. The first film was an&#13;
outrageous spoof on wild west film treatments that&#13;
provoked the famed Variety to go so far as to call&#13;
it Warhol's best. It would seem that each of the&#13;
actors were given a general story line about an&#13;
Arizona town where Viva and her male nurse are&#13;
'hold up'. Four lonesome homosexual brothers&#13;
come into town and meet the two; this is where the&#13;
mostly nonsensical plot begins to develop. The&#13;
spoof is replete with advertising which sums up&#13;
Warhol's approach . . . "Now comes Lonesome&#13;
Cowboys. In the great tradition of the American&#13;
Western, filmed entirely on location in Arizona&#13;
with an all-star cast, inspired by the immortal&#13;
legend of Romeo and Juliet, only the camera of&#13;
Andy Warhol could bring to the screen the true&#13;
story of what it was like to live the life of a cowboy&#13;
in the Old West. A story of man among men and&#13;
the woman who tried to interfere."&#13;
The real comedy of the film lies in the city-wise&#13;
approach of the actors in this totally Western&#13;
place. In one scene Eric Emerson shows Joe&#13;
D'Alessandro ballet technique and directs him in&#13;
grooming habits while they both lean up against a&#13;
hitching post, horses gnawing on their bits and all.&#13;
This film was certainly meant to be comical and&#13;
I doubt much more could have been done with t. i It&#13;
seemed that everyone was too stoned to really&#13;
make it into an epic.&#13;
The second film struck the friends I saw it with&#13;
as asmost documentary in nature, I tended to&#13;
agree, while the first contained spontaneous&#13;
conflict Flesh had little or none. The photography&#13;
wasn't as spotty and portrayed a greater feel of&#13;
setting mood.&#13;
Warhol's camera follows D'Alessandro through&#13;
his daily encounters on the street relying heavily&#13;
on the actor's face as narrative. The vanishing&#13;
point is well outside of the film as the camera is&#13;
held steady without any of the action matching&#13;
movements that were a constant throughout&#13;
Cowboys . . . resulting in a participant kind of&#13;
psychological vanishing point.&#13;
In both films Warhol employs film cutting to&#13;
heighten action and break up time lags. He leaves&#13;
a two or three frame runner hole that provokes a&#13;
stickman like jauntiness, after awhile it becomes&#13;
very tiresome.&#13;
Joe D'Alessandro is introduced as Warhol's&#13;
superstar. He hustles his body to other men to&#13;
support his wife and child. Each of the business&#13;
transactions are presented as commonplace but&#13;
audience reaction in this area would almost make&#13;
one think that this activity never took place. The&#13;
sound of laughter presided over parts of the film&#13;
that were meant to be interpreted as real.&#13;
Sitting through two Warhol films in one night is&#13;
about as much as an yone can take. They break&#13;
barriers that were new frontier a couple of years&#13;
ago when they were made, but now that they have&#13;
aged a little and the audience has been hardened&#13;
(or softened) by less creative endeavors at The&#13;
Stewardesses and I am Curious Yellow we are&#13;
given a second look at the motivation involved in&#13;
turning out these expositions. We wonder for a&#13;
moment if the child-like acting in Cowboys was&#13;
representative of raw creation or raw frustration,&#13;
film seeming more like a primal scream than a&#13;
media for expression. I do not wish to stifle with&#13;
criticism something that I am not really qualified&#13;
to judge for I am not New York or Warhol. . . only&#13;
a stranger looking in.&#13;
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PageS NEWSCOPE September 13,1971&#13;
We Made A Name F or O urselves" C laims Soccer C oach&#13;
Despite the myriad troubles&#13;
surrounding the recent Pan&#13;
American Games, UWParkside&#13;
assistant soccer coach&#13;
John Bocwinski credited the&#13;
host country with putting on a&#13;
good show.&#13;
12 can be equal to most and can&#13;
play with them."&#13;
The U.S. played a completely&#13;
defensive game against&#13;
Argentina, Bocwinski said, and&#13;
the Argentines completely&#13;
outplayed the Yanks the first&#13;
time they met, winning 3-0.&#13;
But the second time around&#13;
the Americans were ready for&#13;
the kind of soccer Argentina&#13;
was playing and held the South&#13;
Americans to a scoreless first&#13;
half. That tie held up until the&#13;
Argentines scored with ten&#13;
minutes left in the game.&#13;
Bocwinski said the&#13;
Americans had no problems&#13;
with the Cubans, although&#13;
reports from Columbia indicated&#13;
numerous CubanAmerican&#13;
troubles involving&#13;
other sports.&#13;
"We played a hard, clean&#13;
game against the Cubans,"&#13;
Bocwinski remembered, "and&#13;
we made friends with many of&#13;
the Cuban players.&#13;
"They asked us about the&#13;
United States, but every time&#13;
we'd ask questions about how&#13;
things were in Cuba they'd&#13;
change the subject."&#13;
Bocwinski said the crowds&#13;
ranged from the appreciative to&#13;
the hostile, with the fans booing&#13;
the United States in its first&#13;
game with Argentina, but ne&#13;
noted philosophically that the&#13;
crowds had even booed their&#13;
own countrymen. In the second&#13;
U.S.-Argentina encounter,&#13;
however, the fans cheered the&#13;
Americans, because a win by&#13;
them would have given&#13;
Columbia the gold medal.&#13;
Before the game with Haiti,&#13;
Bocwinski remembered with a&#13;
chuckle, the U.S. coach bought&#13;
eight soccer balls which the&#13;
U.S. players then kicked into&#13;
the stands for the fans, who&#13;
were then "pacified" and&#13;
cheered lustily for the U.S.&#13;
Bocwinski is still looking&#13;
forward to one more game, and&#13;
it'll easily be the biggest one for&#13;
the young American team. The&#13;
Yanks will face El Salvador,&#13;
whom they defeated 1-1 in an&#13;
earlier game in Miami, to&#13;
decide the last Western&#13;
Hemisphere team that will go to&#13;
the Olympic Games in Munich&#13;
next summer.&#13;
"We've got to give Columbia&#13;
a lot of credit," Bocwinski said&#13;
on his return from the&#13;
quadrennial pre-Olympic encounter&#13;
for nations in the&#13;
Western Hemisphere. "It's a&#13;
poor country and the weather&#13;
conditions there made for the&#13;
worst winter they've had.&#13;
John Bocwinski, assistant&#13;
soccer coach. The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
"They always were afraid of&#13;
kidnapings, especially when the&#13;
Cubans defected, and police&#13;
were always around." Intramurals Begin Bocwinski played on the U.S.&#13;
soccer team, which posted a 2-6-&#13;
1 mark and sixth place finish in&#13;
the Pan Am games and a 6-5-5&#13;
mark in all games played,&#13;
which included an elimination&#13;
tournament to select the teams&#13;
which will go to Munich in 1972&#13;
for the Olympic Games.&#13;
famous for&#13;
Parkside's intramural&#13;
program goes into full swing&#13;
this week, with touch football&#13;
teams starting play during the&#13;
noon hour.&#13;
Jim Koch at Kenosha and&#13;
Dave Donaldson at Racine will&#13;
coordinate the program. Entries&#13;
may be given to them at&#13;
any time.&#13;
Dominican, KTI and possibly&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
All men and women interested&#13;
in competitive skiing&#13;
should attend the 7:30 p.m. ski&#13;
class Monday nights in&#13;
Greenquist D-127 or contact Vic&#13;
Godfrey at 553-2310.&#13;
All men interested in rugby&#13;
contact Coach Godfrey. The&#13;
first game will be Oct. 9 at the&#13;
Octoberfest.&#13;
Signups for bowling are due at&#13;
this time, with leagues being&#13;
held Wednesday afternoons. See&#13;
Coach Koch in Kenosha or&#13;
Coach Donaldson in Racine for&#13;
more information.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
ALSO&#13;
. RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
. SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING Wf BRING"&#13;
"We made a name for ourselves&#13;
in Cali," Bocwinski&#13;
claimed. "Argentina beat us&#13;
only 1-0, a game we could have&#13;
won, and they were impressed&#13;
with how good we were.&#13;
"The whole problem for us is&#13;
that we don't have the depth of&#13;
the other teams, though our top&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
The women's powderpuff&#13;
football team has room for&#13;
more girls and will hold an&#13;
organizational meeting at 12:15&#13;
p.m. Wednesday in the Kenosha&#13;
wrestling-judo room. The&#13;
team's schedule includes&#13;
FOR AS LITTLE AS $180.00 PER SEMESTER&#13;
n~" ^&#13;
iff&#13;
•&#13;
DELUXE3 ROOMSUITE&#13;
$275 PER SEMESTER*&#13;
2 ROOMSUITE&#13;
$180 PER SEMESTER*&#13;
DUO BE DS&#13;
BUNK&#13;
DELUXE2 ROOMSU BED ITE&#13;
$218.25 PER SEMESTER * DOUBLE&#13;
DISINK&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
SINK KITCHENETTE&#13;
3 ROOMSUITE&#13;
$254.25 PER SEMESTER*&#13;
BUNK&#13;
B|D&#13;
BUNK&#13;
BED&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
SINK&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
SINK .&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
OWNER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN&#13;
DEVELOPER: GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp; RESIDENTIAL CENTERS&#13;
1744 N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN&#13;
OCCUPANCY SEPT. 1,1971 —CONTACT BILL PAGELOR DAN LEMBERG&#13;
AT PARKSIDE VILLAGE SITE OR CALL (414) 272-0460 COLLECT&#13;
^ 4 ST UDENTS PER SUITE — UNFURNISHED &#13;
Teach Skiing&#13;
Norwegian skier Tom&#13;
Fjermestad will teach the&#13;
popular ski classes at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
this fall, with an eye&#13;
toward competition for students&#13;
with the Parkside Ski Rangers&#13;
and an evehtual winter trip to&#13;
Europe under the auspices of&#13;
the Office of Student Activities.&#13;
Fjermestad, who has been&#13;
skiing since he was three years&#13;
old, has been a member of the&#13;
Norwegian national team and&#13;
has 15 years teaching, coaching&#13;
and training experience in the&#13;
sport, which is easily the most&#13;
popular of the club sports at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Aiding Fjermestad in the&#13;
coordination of the teaching and&#13;
coaching program is Vic&#13;
Godfrey, the director of intramurals&#13;
and club sports, who&#13;
will aid in conditioning training&#13;
and direct the club sport aspect.&#13;
Also deeply involved in&#13;
providing a total ski program is&#13;
Bill Neibuhr of the Student&#13;
Activities Office, who will&#13;
oversee the January trip to the&#13;
Alps, which last year saw a few&#13;
hundred students pack their&#13;
skis during the semester break.&#13;
Fjermestad will accompany&#13;
the expected large group on that&#13;
trip as an instructor, but the&#13;
present is his immediate concern.&#13;
He'll work each Monday&#13;
night with the beginning skiers&#13;
and each Thursday with the&#13;
racing team and real enthusiasts&#13;
of the sport who wish&#13;
to improve their techniques.&#13;
The emphasis in the early fall&#13;
will be placed on conditioning,&#13;
for which Godfrey is responsible,&#13;
but classroom sessions&#13;
will also be held in D-127&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the UW-P&#13;
campus so Fjermestad can&#13;
point out the all-important&#13;
technical aspects of the sport.&#13;
The students will head to&#13;
Wilmot when the snow comes&#13;
and at this time the emphasis&#13;
will be switched from getting in&#13;
shape to maintaining that&#13;
conditioning and tightening up&#13;
on style and technique.&#13;
Special buttons admitting persons to the Oct. 8-9 Octoberfest&#13;
celebration at Parkside are now on sale for $.50 at the Office of&#13;
Athletics and through the sponsoring German Club and the Varsity&#13;
Club.&#13;
The buttons, which are similar to the "smile" buttons now&#13;
sweeping the nation, will admit the bearers (or wearers) to all Octoberfest&#13;
activities, which include a German style celebration, a&#13;
rugby match, soccer games and other events. It will also be good for&#13;
half-price admission to the Saturday night Octoberfest dance.&#13;
All men interested in joining the Parkside Rugby Club contact Bob&#13;
Wingate at 694-2487 or Vic Godfrey at 553-2310.&#13;
There will be a meeting of t he Shooting Club at 8 p.m. Wednesday&#13;
at the Kenosha Campus. Chris Murphy will speak on "Handgun&#13;
Marksmanship".&#13;
Parkside offers a wide variety of women's sports and all women&#13;
are encouraged to participate in any of the seven.&#13;
Tennis has already started and will run until late November, with&#13;
Coach Dick Frecka coordinating the program with Miss Barbara Jo&#13;
Morris. Both volleyball and gymnastics will be handled by Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny and Miss Morris and will run until December.&#13;
Cross Country and Track will operate under Russ Coley, with&#13;
track coaches Bob Lawson and Vic Godfrey doing much of the&#13;
coaching.&#13;
Fencing, with Coach Martiny in charge, and golf, with Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens coordinating, are also open to women.&#13;
All women interested in a sport are urged to contact the respective&#13;
coach or Miss Morris at the Office of Athletics, 553-2245.&#13;
W.IMWWiril&#13;
j4ou&amp;e of Tlutrition&#13;
NATURAL COSMETICS&#13;
NATURAL GRAINS&amp;CEREALS&#13;
UNSULPHURATED FRUITS&#13;
HEALTH FOODS&#13;
6 2 2 1 • 22 N D A V E N U E K E N O S H A P H O N E 65 2 - 4 7 8 7&#13;
"Here's To Your Good Health&#13;
i&#13;
September 13,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
A Modern Love Story&#13;
Parkside's new skiing instructor, Norwegian Tom Fjermstad&#13;
(left), examines two of the implements of his trade with UW-P intramural&#13;
and club sport director Vic Godfrey, who will aid in the&#13;
course, and Bill Niebuhr of the Student Activities Office, who will&#13;
coordinate a winter trip to the Alps.&#13;
Fermestad To&#13;
A love story that bridges an ocean is uncommon&#13;
enough, but when it involves an American Peace&#13;
Corps coach and a Thai basketball-soccer player, you&#13;
know that both of them must be pretty special people.&#13;
But it would take a pretty special person like&#13;
Kirby Nichols, a Whitewater State produce who&#13;
coached at Watertown high school, to save his&#13;
meager Peace Corps earnings for the day he could&#13;
bring Prakong Phanturat to college in America. Or to&#13;
re-enlist in the Peace Corps after his first two-year&#13;
tour was up because he so much wanted to help the&#13;
people of Southeast Asia.&#13;
You don't have to tell Prakong, or Ray, as he&#13;
prefers to be called, all that, because he knows&#13;
Nichols is someone special.&#13;
And he's begun to think that the first people he&#13;
met from Parkside, at the Asian Games last year, are&#13;
about the same. Athletic director Tom Rosandich and&#13;
track coach Bob Lawson have helped him a lot, Ray&#13;
says, but the man who is helping him the most right&#13;
now is Steve Stephens. It just might be the beginning&#13;
of another beautiful friendship.&#13;
Stephens, the basketball coach at UW-P, has&#13;
taken up with Ray where Nichols left off. He's taken&#13;
him into his home and is so taken with the young man&#13;
that he's considering remodeling his home to better&#13;
accommodate Ray for as long as he's here.&#13;
Ray figures he's stumbled into one big happy&#13;
1&#13;
family, because all involved with him know each&#13;
other. Lawson and Rosandich met Nichols a number&#13;
of years ago at Olympia Sport Village in northern&#13;
Wisconsin and it was this association that led Nichols&#13;
to recommend Parkside to Phanturat and Ray to the&#13;
Parkside coaches.&#13;
He's been accepted by all as one of the Stephens&#13;
family and cannot feel out of place because the coach&#13;
treats him, Ray says, "just like his own son."&#13;
And when the hard-court season rolls around,&#13;
he'll be treating Ray like one of his players, because&#13;
Ray is no poor performer with a basketball, since he&#13;
was a member of Thailand's national team and&#13;
gained game experience as a guard in both the Sixth&#13;
Asian Games in his home city of Bangkok last&#13;
December and in the Southeast Asia Peninsula&#13;
Games.&#13;
But before basketball, he'll compete in soccer,&#13;
and rest assured, he's no less accomplished in that&#13;
sport, with playing time to his credit at both the&#13;
center and forward slots on the Bangkok Bank Sport&#13;
Club.&#13;
Ray's been here two weeks and has adjusted&#13;
rather well to the fast cars and contemporary music.&#13;
He probably hasn't yet seen the movie "Love Story"&#13;
but it might remind him of a dedicated friend an&#13;
ocean aw^y who gave him the chance to come to&#13;
America.&#13;
Octoberfest T o Feature R ugby M atch&#13;
One of the highlights of the&#13;
upcoming Octoberfest will be&#13;
the rugby match between UWParkside&#13;
and the Milwaukee&#13;
Rugby Club, to be held at 1 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 9, before the&#13;
championship game of the&#13;
Parkside Invitational Soccer&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
But for those who don't know&#13;
what rugby is or have seen it&#13;
and don't understand its rules, a&#13;
little education might be in&#13;
order.&#13;
Rugby can most simply be&#13;
described as football without&#13;
pads. But it is really more than&#13;
that. It is the most physical of&#13;
all contact sports - an d oftentimes&#13;
the excitable crowds&#13;
have to be restrained from&#13;
entering the playing area.&#13;
Yet there is also a sense of&#13;
sportsmanship which is unique.&#13;
One of the most important&#13;
unwritten rules calls for a party&#13;
sponsored by the host club after&#13;
the match. Rugby is hard hitting&#13;
and most competitive but&#13;
each player has a high regard&#13;
for every other and for personal&#13;
sportsmanship.&#13;
Each team is represented by&#13;
15 men with one additional man&#13;
to act as line judge. No substitutions&#13;
are allowed during&#13;
the game except because of&#13;
injuries during the first five&#13;
minutes of play.&#13;
Only the one official can call&#13;
timeouts, and then only at the&#13;
request of the captain and&#13;
because of injury. Each half is&#13;
usually 30 to 40 minutes long&#13;
with a five minute breather in&#13;
between. There are no forward&#13;
passes but the ball may be&#13;
carried or kicked forward. In&#13;
kicking, only the man who&#13;
kicked the ball or his teammates&#13;
who were behind him&#13;
when he kicked may play the&#13;
ball. There is no blocking and&#13;
anyone who is on the ground&#13;
cannot be in possession of the&#13;
ball.&#13;
A try, similar to football's&#13;
touchdown, is worth three&#13;
points when the ball is downed&#13;
across the opponent's goal line.&#13;
Two points may be added by the&#13;
successful conversion attempt.&#13;
Three points may also be&#13;
scored by the drop kick from&#13;
anywhere on the field that splits&#13;
the up-rights or by a penalty&#13;
kick.&#13;
There are only two set plays,&#13;
the line-cut and the set scrum.&#13;
The line-cut occurs when the&#13;
ball is kicked, carried or thrown&#13;
out of bounds, "touch" by a&#13;
player. The opposing team&#13;
throws the ball and play&#13;
progresses from there.&#13;
A set scrum is awarded to one&#13;
team for a minor infraction of&#13;
the rules by the other. The first&#13;
three men of the scrum lock&#13;
arms and meet the opposing&#13;
team with their shoulders. The&#13;
remaining five forwards bind on&#13;
them, giving support and&#13;
helping push. Hands may not&#13;
touch the ball until it leaves the&#13;
scrum.&#13;
So now you're an expert on&#13;
rugby. Well, maybe not, but it's&#13;
going to be quite a show at the&#13;
Octoberfest, and rugby will be&#13;
an exciting part of it.&#13;
Wed. Sept. 22&#13;
at&#13;
Magus Productions presents&#13;
BLUES NIGHT&#13;
featuring&#13;
MUDDY WATERS&#13;
also Case High School Fieldho e&#13;
JOHNNY YOUNG BLUES BAND Racine&#13;
Tickets available at:&#13;
Earth Works -Racine 8:00-12:30&#13;
The Daisy -Kenosha-Racine&#13;
Bidingers-Kenosha-Waukeegan&#13;
J&amp;J'sTape Center -Kenosha-Racine-Bulington &#13;
P{&gt;ge8 NEWSCOPE September 13,1971&#13;
Parkside Village&#13;
Three visiting faculty&#13;
members from abroad are&#13;
adding a special cosmopolitan&#13;
atmosphere to the campus of&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
this year and&#13;
Parkside is reciprocating by&#13;
students at the Cheltenham&#13;
College of Art and Design,&#13;
Gloucestershire, England.&#13;
Jansky, who has had several&#13;
recent one-man shows of his&#13;
polyester impregnated&#13;
fiberglass sculptures, will be a&#13;
has taught at DePaul University,&#13;
the University of Notre&#13;
Dame and Universidad&#13;
Javeriana in Bogota, Columbia,&#13;
and comes to Parkside from&#13;
Universidad Nacional de&#13;
Columbia in Bogota.&#13;
Cosmopolitans I nvade U WP&#13;
sending one of its own faculty&#13;
members to teach at an English&#13;
college.&#13;
The three guests are Martin&#13;
Seymour-Smith, a visiting&#13;
professor of English from&#13;
England; Nelo Da Silva Allan,&#13;
visiting associate professor of&#13;
mathematics from Columbia,&#13;
South America; and David John&#13;
Noble, visiting associate&#13;
professor of art from England.&#13;
The Parkside professor is&#13;
Rollin Jansky, associate&#13;
professor of art, who will exchange&#13;
posts with Noble for the&#13;
year, with Noble teaching&#13;
Jansky's students here and&#13;
Jansky instructing Noble's&#13;
senior lecturer in scuplture at&#13;
the English institution.&#13;
Noble, who received his&#13;
training at the Portsmouth&#13;
College of Art and the Royal&#13;
College of Art in London, has&#13;
received a number of awards&#13;
for his sculpture including the&#13;
Sainsbury Award, a national&#13;
award given annually. He also&#13;
was a finalist for the Prix de&#13;
Rome and is represented by&#13;
works in a number of public and&#13;
private collections.&#13;
A native of Brazil, Allan&#13;
received his undergraduate&#13;
degree at the University of&#13;
Brazil and his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
the University of Chicago. He&#13;
Seymour-Smith, who received&#13;
his graduate degree at Oxford&#13;
University, is a free lance&#13;
academic writer, poet and&#13;
literary critic, contributing to&#13;
such English periodicals as&#13;
Encounter, Spectator and the&#13;
Times Literary Supplement.&#13;
His most recent works are&#13;
Poets Through Their Letters&#13;
(vol. 1), published in 1969, and&#13;
Guide to Modern World&#13;
Literature, to be published in&#13;
1972.&#13;
He has taught at a number of&#13;
major British institutions and is&#13;
teaching courses in modern&#13;
poetry and English literature&#13;
this semester at Parkside.&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
struction. An agreement on the&#13;
purchase was not reached with&#13;
the owner, George Feest of&#13;
Kenosha, until the end of May.&#13;
By that time several small&#13;
contractors had decided not to&#13;
undertake the project because&#13;
they felt they would not be able&#13;
to meet the deadline.&#13;
When construction did finally&#13;
begin in the first week of June,&#13;
the crews sent in were not large&#13;
enough to make the rapid&#13;
progress needed. "We found&#13;
ourselves seeking additional&#13;
personnel and crews —&#13;
professional people — union&#13;
people, such as carpenters, to&#13;
do the work — to give us the&#13;
shells, so that our specialties&#13;
people, like plumbing and&#13;
heating could get inside these&#13;
units," Mrs. Ribecky said.&#13;
She added that a final touch&#13;
was a recent carpenters' strike&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
At firs they were worried&#13;
about mixing older youths with&#13;
young children in the same&#13;
classes but learned that "the&#13;
young ones taught the older&#13;
children spontaneity and the&#13;
older ones taught the young&#13;
ones perseverence."&#13;
Elaborating further Mrs.&#13;
Diamon said that "the younger&#13;
kids are unleashing, and the&#13;
older kids are relearning what&#13;
the creative experience is . . .&#13;
that they are not a bunch of&#13;
little automatons that are&#13;
cranked up in the morning and&#13;
to turn out thirty things all&#13;
alike."&#13;
As with any educational&#13;
1969 Honda 175cc Scrambler. Ex.&#13;
cond. $425. Includes 2 helmets. Call&#13;
Ed, 639-4940.&#13;
1962 Buick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
634-4445 or 633-2791.&#13;
1958 Ramb. American. Dependable,&#13;
rustic, and cheap. $35 . 3209 - 2 8th St.&#13;
1960 Ramb. American. Dependable.&#13;
$70. 3209 - 28th St., Kenosha.&#13;
1970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr., Hardtop,&#13;
V-8, Automatic, power steering,&#13;
634-4606.&#13;
1969 Charger RT • 440 Mag., 4 sp.,&#13;
mags.seeor call Al after 6 p.m., 658-&#13;
3654 , 5110 - 23rd Ave.&#13;
1968 Opel Kadet, 1966 Corvair, Both&#13;
good cond. Call Harris, 55-843-2361&#13;
67 Ambassador 4 dr. sedan, auto., 6&#13;
cyl. Trans recently overhauled $775.&#13;
Call 553-2345.&#13;
68 Plymouth Roadrunner 383. Gold&#13;
with Black vinyl top. Ex. cond. 554-&#13;
8757.&#13;
1971 TRAVEL TRAILER — 15 Ft&#13;
Light - Very easy to tow - Built in&#13;
Surge brakes - Used only three&#13;
weeks - Must sell - Going to school,&#13;
5122 45th St - Ph. 652-3084.&#13;
in the area which stopped&#13;
construction completely for a&#13;
full week. "A week's stoppage&#13;
of work, when you include all&#13;
the other people who rely on the&#13;
carpenters finishing their work,&#13;
sets you back much more than&#13;
just those days during which the&#13;
strike exists," she said.&#13;
It might be expected that&#13;
some students would be getting&#13;
a bit upset with the delay, but,&#13;
according to Mrs. Ribecky,&#13;
there are sdme very patient&#13;
people attending Parkside this&#13;
year: "Students are being&#13;
fantastic. They are not&#13;
pressuring us. They can see the&#13;
contractors working like dogs&#13;
around here and they understand&#13;
the things that happen&#13;
to cause this delay. They're&#13;
living willingly with discomforts,&#13;
but, of course, at no cost,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
program the parents of the child&#13;
must take an active interest in&#13;
their child's work in order to&#13;
maintain the consistency of&#13;
perspective that they gain while&#13;
in class. Many times parents&#13;
are simply not interested in&#13;
their children's education and&#13;
when what is learned in class is&#13;
ignored at home the child may&#13;
feel that his time was wasted.&#13;
"At first when we talked with&#13;
the parents they were&#13;
remarkably like the children;&#13;
hesitant, reluctant to participate;&#13;
they didn't want to&#13;
intrude, so we kind of rubbed&#13;
their noses in it, really. If they&#13;
didn't understand something&#13;
the child had done we sat them&#13;
1967 Austin-Healey 3000, After 5 p.m.&#13;
539-2407 (Burlington).&#13;
1968 Ford Torino 302-V8. Low mil.&#13;
Automatic, power steering, Radio,&#13;
Heater, 652-7745, see at 5234 - 44th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impaia Super Sport 327, After&#13;
4:30 p.m., 3022 - 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 R5, 1971, Exc. Cond.&#13;
654-5724, Eve.&#13;
650 Triumph T.T. rebuilt engine,&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
helmets, $800.00or best offer. See at&#13;
5723 - 40th Ave.&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs some clutch work, $250.00.&#13;
634-0871.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3suitcases, very good cond. $25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
For a Good night's sleep —&#13;
Waterbeds. 3701 - 60th street. Call&#13;
654-9447.&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us an&#13;
offer. Call 654-4862.&#13;
down and let the child explain&#13;
what he had done.&#13;
"At first the parents tended to&#13;
judge the work of their child&#13;
comparatively with the work of&#13;
other children but once they had&#13;
been exposed to the class and its&#13;
priority of the child over his&#13;
product, they took a genuine&#13;
interest in their children."&#13;
Mrs. Diamon reported that no&#13;
students dropped out of the&#13;
workshop all summer and that a&#13;
number enrolled for the fall&#13;
classes. The women plan to&#13;
offer six classes each week with&#13;
the first class to begin in early&#13;
October. The classes will be*&#13;
moved to the Women's Club&#13;
during the cold season but they&#13;
don't expect the confines of the&#13;
building to inhibit their approach.&#13;
&#13;
"Sears" Portably typewriter. Good&#13;
condition. Comes with carrying&#13;
case. Will sell for $30.00. Call 637-&#13;
6445.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3836.&#13;
Public Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check&#13;
ours first high quality — 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Slide Rule $10.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis — Mens, including poles and&#13;
boots. 553-2245.&#13;
Toaster $5.00, Steam Iron $5.00. Call&#13;
553-2345.&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and woods,&#13;
$346 new will sell for $245.&#13;
Legalize Marijuana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. 50c donation. Be at Student&#13;
Activities Building Wed.&#13;
Stereo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
amplifier, turntable, 2 speakers&#13;
Moving, must sell. $50. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
BROWSE — Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, Wis.&#13;
Sonny &amp; Cher&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
stars?&#13;
Cher: I don't know, I dig stars of&#13;
that era, but, as a matter of&#13;
fact, I'm more star-like than&#13;
people are today. I really dig&#13;
the idea of stars. The other day&#13;
somebody said Heddy Lamarr.&#13;
We were doing one of the things&#13;
and somebody said, "You&#13;
remind me of Hedy Lamarr."&#13;
NS: If you had a choice between&#13;
any woman of that era, any of&#13;
the stars, who would you most&#13;
like to be like?&#13;
Cher: Oh wow, let me see. I&#13;
think Garbo, I like her alot. We&#13;
watched her on TV the other&#13;
night. It was really groovy.&#13;
NS: Then is there any formula&#13;
to your stage personality?&#13;
Cher: You go with what you've&#13;
got and if that's what you are,&#13;
you are. Like some people say&#13;
you try to be sexy, it doesn't&#13;
work. You just have to be what&#13;
you are, you know. There are&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75 - 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 654-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire 8. rim $1, File&#13;
boxes $1 8. $1.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
Disp. Call 511-7161 aft. 4 p.m.&#13;
2 Bedroom House, Parkside area,&#13;
Liv. R., Dining Room comb.,&#13;
Fireplace, over one acre land, 552-&#13;
9012.&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
winemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums. 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money — Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED — Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen — Good condition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, 551-9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week, 7:45-4:30. Call 553-2415.&#13;
some women that are really&#13;
sexy in all kinds of different&#13;
ways. I think it's taste: what&#13;
you think is sexy maybe this&#13;
guy over there wouldn't think.&#13;
NS: Are you in any sort of&#13;
women's liberation of any kind?&#13;
Cher: No. I can understand the&#13;
idea of it, but I think that the&#13;
people are going on about it all&#13;
wrong. I think women should&#13;
get paid the right amoung, and&#13;
all that, but the only people I&#13;
ever see are a bunch of really&#13;
dog women,. you know, that&#13;
couldn't get a guy if they&#13;
wanted one. I think they should&#13;
get better representation than&#13;
they've got.&#13;
NS: We've kept you here pretty&#13;
long already, one final question&#13;
to wind-up the interview. When&#13;
you both were really down,&#13;
financially and otherwise, what&#13;
brought up from there to where&#13;
you are today?&#13;
Sonny: She did. A relationship.&#13;
Cher: It was definitely our&#13;
relationship.&#13;
and book money. Dancing &amp;&#13;
Waitress work. If nudity offends&#13;
you, do not apply. Call 652-20031 or&#13;
stop at 4426 - S heridan Road.&#13;
WANTED — Two attractive, openminded&#13;
female students to share&#13;
small apartment with two male&#13;
students. Apt. 1 block from Racine&#13;
campus. For further information&#13;
write to: Peter Noll, Apt. 3,1111 Wis.&#13;
Ave., Racine, Wis.&#13;
FREE Kittens: 6 weeks old, litter&#13;
trained. Good with children. Male&#13;
and female, assorted colors. Call&#13;
Sharon, Ext. 20, Racine Main Hall&#13;
201, or 634-6215 after 5 p.m.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
FOR RENT — Modern office space.&#13;
Carpeted and air conditioned. $50.00&#13;
per mo. Utilities included. Call Tony&#13;
at 652-3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
LOST &amp; FOUND&#13;
Prescription Glasses; Car keys; A&#13;
wedding ring. At the information&#13;
center, 2nd floor, Tallent Hall.&#13;
newscope&#13;
classifieds&#13;
use 'em free&#13;
Workshop Promotes Creativity&#13;
Patronize Newscope Advertizers&#13;
NEWSCOPE presents (/)&#13;
Q&#13;
Sat. Sept. 25&#13;
QQ 7:00-1:00&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
adm. $1.25&#13;
+P-side&amp;State I.D.'s&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
o £&#13;
Otis Plum&#13;
and&#13;
Starboys&#13;
(formerly Bulldog Harry) </text>
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            <name>Title</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63420">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 2, September 13, 1971</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63421">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <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="63422">
                <text>1971-09-13</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="63425">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63426">
                <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="63427">
                <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="63428">
                <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="63429">
                <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="63430">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
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    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="156">
        <name>assistant chancellor allen dearborn</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="157">
        <name>dean of students</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="159">
        <name>john koloen</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="158">
        <name>parkside village</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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    <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="63435">
              <text>Volume 5, 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="63436">
              <text>To or To Not a Student Government</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63443">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89877">
              <text>ByKen Konkol of the Newscope slall eel'&#13;
1bursday, the 16th of September, at 7:30 p.m, m AIDg·&#13;
. \lOOm101 Greenquist, Parkside witnessed the report from the Student Union Commi -.te ba recb&gt;ed Ita m_benbIp from 21 to 15.&#13;
;::"tmeeting of the Student Senate in four months. -;'85 mos~~ a bitch about enlon:ed subservi ttee bullhooe mteon are pulllnll .... a vahanl ltnIIIIe&#13;
Problems were encountered with notification e admlDlSlration, relegating it to useI= to give students a voice at Parblde&#13;
of mem""rs because cards, which were supposed Gary DaVISspoke eloquenUy for 45 . Ill' '!be StudenI Senate - your help Two the plans of Academic Policies to getn;,u:,o:: on future meetinp have been scheduled al a ume Too r T N 00 which IS hoped will gel better ,&lt;IIeral udenl&#13;
o ot a StUdent Government&#13;
to be mailed the week before, did not reach&#13;
senators till the day of the meeting.&#13;
By some marvelous coincidence a quorum&#13;
was established at 7:51 and the meeting came to&#13;
disorder. . . .&#13;
The first official order of business was the&#13;
resibnation, in writing, of Walter Ulbrights who&#13;
stated the convention was illegal according to the&#13;
senate constitution which called for meeting&#13;
during the summer.&#13;
It was decided more or less by assent among&#13;
the rest of the senators, no vote taken, to suspend&#13;
the constitution retroactively since the last&#13;
Along.about the time the election committee&#13;
reported It was discovered that the senate had&#13;
resigned itself out of a quorum aod the eetin&#13;
broke up. m g&#13;
So, after only five months of operation the&#13;
power for control of Student Affairs, a rip-off o[ the&#13;
University in general, proposals [or the expansioo&#13;
of the mdependent studies program to civic alfairs&#13;
;and the estabtishment of a proposed day care&#13;
,center. In conclusion he gave his oral resignation&#13;
'to the remainder of the senate which was accepted.&#13;
attendance.&#13;
The Gnevance and C1eammg Ho... Com&#13;
mittee will list&lt;ll to and d1scusa ludMI eemplaints&#13;
and problmu with th ~ o[ unn&#13;
results. The committee will meet on Thuraday,&#13;
September 23. al 4: pm ID .-n 103,&#13;
Greenquisl. n.e enure st.udtnt body and anyone&#13;
else is invited to euend,&#13;
The senate will hold a general m IDll on&#13;
Monday, 8epI. 27, at.: pm ID Gr=lqulSl 10\&#13;
Once again, the)'d like to pac thp lecture hall&#13;
Prove Parkside IS nol apathetic to I o""n c r&#13;
- come!&#13;
FREE "Journalismis Literature in a Hurry" -Matthew Arnold University of W isamsin • Parkside&#13;
•••••••&#13;
volume 5 ,Number 3 September 20, 1971&#13;
(Pioneer' Conditions Braved by Parks ide Villagers&#13;
Norwood Interested it) Results&#13;
By Warren Nedry. Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Although Parkside Village is nearing&#13;
CGIIIpletion,the present living conditions&#13;
vary (rom near complete to primitive. Units&#13;
slated to house (rom two to four students are&#13;
JftSeIItly the home for up to ten.&#13;
Adding to the "pioneer" atmosphere at&#13;
Parkside Village is the lack of running&#13;
waler, electricity and telephones. Part of&#13;
IIIiI primitive atmosphere has been normalized&#13;
during the past week, but there&#13;
NIIlSinunits without what most of us term&#13;
"Iecessities". All endure the noise and the&#13;
~us journeys through the 7 - 4:30&#13;
_!ruction world.&#13;
These conditions were brought about by&#13;
lIbat Mr. Emil Avendroth, President of&#13;
Global Construction Company, general&#13;
~ctor for Parks ide Village, termed "the&#13;
liIlJt labor market in the Kenosha-Racine area': and "the inability of suppliers to meet&#13;
JI'OlDised deadlines". Adding to the delay&#13;
... a Week-long, njid·summer. labor strike.&#13;
Asked if it was true that some tenants&#13;
IIIdtouse the bathtub as their .only source of&#13;
IUIIning water - for washing dishes,&#13;
~~, brushing teeth, etc. - Avendroth&#13;
:; 'This is true if they use the facilities in&#13;
IIlen apar~ent, but there are other apartIs,&#13;
bousmg by the same sex, within the&#13;
complex that have facilities and&#13;
IlTangements could be made to use them if&#13;
~ desired to. It's an inconvenience, but at&#13;
~me time we're not charging for that&#13;
vemence. We will not make it in-&#13;
-enient for any student. He can have&#13;
by lIlarc Elsen.&#13;
Sa althe Newscope stan&#13;
YIDg.that he had no&#13;
~'Ved notions of how&#13;
!lIg..:,de should develop,&#13;
IIIthe Norwood,the new Dean&#13;
~ College o[ Scien~e and&#13;
IInieW' slaled m a brIef in·&#13;
lIilb fa that he would first meet&#13;
1IIIkin cully members hefore&#13;
"y g POlicydecisions OU .&#13;
loot;" I can't really work eflllII'&#13;
? unless you have met&#13;
IlIeir SCuItyand have learned&#13;
'OOd&#13;
="&#13;
and plans," Norb\I&#13;
.&#13;
liked~ntly,. the Dean has&#13;
10leI u DlV1s~onalChairman&#13;
1II1bu.,P a serIes of meetings&#13;
"I [acuity.&#13;
liat.n ~~d come to these to&#13;
!lis' o&lt;woodsaid&#13;
4iffer~~ents were markedly&#13;
....'_ n from the initial -neDts of hi • ~ M . S pred~cessor ..&#13;
-, 'Nh acKlOney. MacKin-&#13;
...;. owns appointed to the&#13;
~ PDoltIonlast year at this&#13;
~r"responsible for the&#13;
lostant Greatness"&#13;
what he wants and we will pay for it on this&#13;
temporary basis."&#13;
.Tenants have the choice of living at a&#13;
motel or at the Parkside Village site. If they&#13;
choose a motel they are required to pay rent&#13;
on their uncompleted apartment to help&#13;
defer the added cost of the motel. At&#13;
Parkside Village they are required to pay for&#13;
the space used unless they are in groups of&#13;
eight or more.&#13;
Although all tenants were told Sept. 1&#13;
was the completion date, Avendroth said it&#13;
would be difficult for a tenant to break his&#13;
lease. The lease requires Global to&#13;
demonstrate a best effort to complete on&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Commenting on the possibility of fire or&#13;
health code violations, Avendroth said there&#13;
were no code violations as far as the living&#13;
conditions were concerned and stressed the&#13;
temporary nature of the conditiDns. Present&#13;
conditions require living in and around&#13;
construction life: noisy machines, miles of&#13;
cords lumber piles, refuse piles and open&#13;
fires. 'In some of the complexes fire extinguishers&#13;
are not evident. No telephones&#13;
are available as of yet.&#13;
"We will have sulficient aparbnents for&#13;
all students who bave registered with us,"&#13;
Avendroth said. "They will all be with their&#13;
permanent group, perbaps not in their&#13;
leased apartment, by the end of next week&#13;
(Sept. 25)." At this time apprOJomate1y.60&#13;
people have leased apartments at Parks.de&#13;
t continued on Page 8)&#13;
that led to the attempted&#13;
purging of 27 faculty members.&#13;
When popular resistance. to&#13;
the purge made it imposs.ble&#13;
for it to be· carried out,&#13;
MacKinney, along with. Vice&#13;
Chancellor Harris, resIgned.&#13;
Norwood as Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and SocIety&#13;
will have the Chairmen of the&#13;
Science, Social Scien~e,&#13;
Humanities and EducatIon&#13;
divisions report to him.&#13;
He will be the eollege's&#13;
principal educational and administrative&#13;
officer, and will be&#13;
responsible for staff and&#13;
program development,&#13;
program review, and budget.&#13;
Because of responsibilities. at&#13;
UW-M where he was the acting&#13;
Dean ~f tbe Graduate School,&#13;
Norwood will only be at&#13;
Parkside part time till October&#13;
15. He will he spending three&#13;
days a week at Parkside and&#13;
two at UW-M lill tben.&#13;
Norwood said he had no&#13;
priority poticies he would like to&#13;
see instituted. "It'd be mappropriate&#13;
to commenL It would&#13;
appear I had come With&#13;
preconceived ideas. I'd rather&#13;
talk to tbe faculty and students&#13;
firsl .&#13;
"One thing 1 have learned IS&#13;
that each instilution is different/'&#13;
he said la~1 ".an~ if&#13;
anyone comes into an mstitutioo&#13;
with preconceived notions of&#13;
what to do Wlthout first&#13;
checking with the laculty and&#13;
students, he's going to find&#13;
himself in difficulhes.&#13;
"One uses tbese sour&lt;:e'l...of&#13;
ideas Of he said. "One's job then&#13;
is to' sort out those ideas ~l&#13;
can be instituted, and to expand&#13;
.",.-&#13;
.---&#13;
JERRY SOCHA&#13;
Next Week&#13;
an Interview with&#13;
Muddy Waters&#13;
Iruclur "Good ,d a nOI&#13;
unplemented are 1&#13;
expiaIDed&#13;
"Th place hi to dev op'&#13;
own mold," be e.mph'~lted&#13;
Ialer "II's unique. II can't flI&#13;
already eXlSUn&amp;molds."&#13;
"We're nol 01Dg to sel nul&#13;
With the preconceved nollon of&#13;
being the Harvard of the Pike&#13;
iIlver," he added dryly&#13;
Norwood said be favored a&#13;
strong undergraduate program&#13;
He observed Uus IS a University&#13;
of WisconsIn institutional goal,&#13;
noling President Weaver's&#13;
recenl rea£fll'll\ation of this&#13;
before the JOlnl Finance&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The failure of the stale&#13;
legislature 10 pas$ a budgel has&#13;
hurt the University, par·&#13;
ticularly in recruiting, he said&#13;
Critical teachi~ positions will&#13;
be fll1ed fI1'SL&#13;
What are some of pen.onal&#13;
values? "I have the ,dea people&#13;
come before programs. I'm&#13;
suspicious of rhetoric - I'm&#13;
more interested in results."&#13;
.J IE: fl "'v sOC:".&#13;
DEAN £:U(O.£NE NORWOOD&#13;
those policies that have ""orIted&#13;
in the past.&#13;
'''Ibis does nol mean 1will nol&#13;
he making judgments," he&#13;
noled.&#13;
He sees part of his job as&#13;
making more effective the&#13;
Colle e administrative&#13;
By Ken Konkol of the Newscope staff&#13;
'lbursday, the 16th of September, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
. RoOm 101 Greenquist, Parkside witnessed the&#13;
first meeting of the Student Senate in four months.&#13;
Problems were encountered with notification&#13;
of members because cards, which were supposed&#13;
meeting.&#13;
was A report f~m the Student Union Committee&#13;
the =~~ a bit~ about enforced subservience to&#13;
G uustr~tion, relegating it to uselessness&#13;
th ary Davis spoke eloquently for 45 minutes ~ e plans of Academic Policies to get a hold on ·hich .&#13;
ToorToNot s a tudant Govarnm&#13;
to be mailed the week before, did not reach&#13;
senators till the day of the meeting.&#13;
By some marvelous coincidence a quorum&#13;
was established at 7:51 and the meeting came to&#13;
disorder.&#13;
'lbe first official order of business was the&#13;
resibnation, in writing, of Walter Ulbrights who&#13;
stated the convention was illegal according to the&#13;
senate constitution which called for meeting&#13;
during the summer.&#13;
It was decided more or less by assent among&#13;
the rest of the senators, no vote taken, to suspend&#13;
the constitution retroactively since the last&#13;
Along_ about the time the election committee&#13;
re~rted _it was discovered that the senate had&#13;
resigned itself out of a quorum and the tin&#13;
broke up. mee g&#13;
So, after only five months of operation the&#13;
po~er f~r c?ntrol of Student Affairs, 8 rip-off of the&#13;
Uruv~s1ty m general, proposals for the expansion&#13;
of the mdependent studies program to civic affairs&#13;
. and the establish~ent of a proposed day care&#13;
center. In conclusion he gave his oral res1gnation&#13;
to the remainder of the senate which "a ac- cepted.&#13;
"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" - Matthew Arnold University o j W isrons in - Parkside&#13;
••••••• VqJume 5 _Number 3 September 20, 1971&#13;
nt&#13;
FREE&#13;
'Pioneer' Conditions Braved by Parksid Villag r&#13;
By Warren Nedry, Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Although Parkside Village is nearing&#13;
completion, the present living conditions&#13;
,-ary from near complete to primitive. Units&#13;
slated to house from two to four students are&#13;
presently the home for up to ten.&#13;
Adding to the "pioneer" atmosphere at&#13;
Parkside Village is th~ lack of running&#13;
waler, electricity and telephones. Part of&#13;
this primitive atmosphere has been normalized&#13;
during the past week, but there&#13;
remain units without what most of us term&#13;
'necessities". All endure the noise and the&#13;
d.ingerous journeys through the 7 - 4:30&#13;
COIL5truction world.&#13;
These conditions were brought about by&#13;
what Mr. Emil Avendroth, President of&#13;
Global Construction Company, general&#13;
contractor for Parkside Village, termed "the&#13;
tight labor market in the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
area•: and "the inability of suppliers to meet&#13;
pronused deadlines". Adding to the delay&#13;
1-a a week-long, mid-summer. labor strike.&#13;
Asked if it was true that some tenants&#13;
bad l? use the bathtub as their .only source of&#13;
runn~ng water - for washing dishes,&#13;
Shaving, brushing teeth, etc. - Avendroth&#13;
Iii~, "This is true if they use the facilities in&#13;
their aparbnent, but there are other apartlllents,&#13;
housing by the same sex, within the&#13;
complex that have facilities and&#13;
~nge~ents could be made to use them if&#13;
~Y desir~ to. It's an inconvenience, but at&#13;
lnco sam~ time we're not charging for that&#13;
nvenience. We will not make it inconvenient&#13;
for any student. He can have&#13;
what he wants and we will pay for it on this&#13;
temporary basis."&#13;
Tenants have the choice of living at a&#13;
motel or at the Parkside Village site. U they&#13;
choose a motel they are required to pay rent&#13;
on their uncompleted apartment to help&#13;
defer the added cost of the motel. At&#13;
Parkside Village they are required to pay for&#13;
the space used unless they are in groups of&#13;
eight or more.&#13;
Although all tenants were told Sept. 1&#13;
was the completion date, Avendroth said it&#13;
would be difficult for a tenant to break h.&#13;
lease. The lease requires Global to&#13;
demonstrate a best effort to complete on&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Commenting on the possibility of fire or&#13;
health code violations, Avendroth said there&#13;
were no code violations as far as the living&#13;
conditions were concerned and stre sed the&#13;
temporary nature of the conditions. Present&#13;
conditions require living in and around&#13;
construction life: noisy machines, miles of&#13;
cords lumber piles, refuse piles and open&#13;
fires. ' In some of the complexes fire extinguishers&#13;
are not evident. No telephones&#13;
are available as of yet.&#13;
"We will have sufficient apartments for&#13;
all students who have registered w_ith us,."&#13;
Avendroth said. "They will all be \\-~th the~r&#13;
permanent group, perhaps not m their&#13;
leased apartment, by the end of _next week&#13;
(Sept. 25)." At this time approximately_ 60&#13;
people have leased apartments at Parkside&#13;
(COntmued on Page 8)&#13;
J Y OCHA&#13;
ext We&#13;
an Interview wit&#13;
Muddy Waters&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
Sa "! the Newscope staff&#13;
Ytng that he had no&#13;
~_ceived notions of how&#13;
Eug side should develop&#13;
Ii lhene Norwood, the new Dea~&#13;
Soci e College of Science and&#13;
~~ty, stated in a brief inlnthlew&#13;
that he would first meet&#13;
lllak~acu}~ members before&#13;
Norwood Interested in Results&#13;
"Y ~ policy decisions.&#13;
!etti I can't really work efYvur&#13;
v; Y Unless you have met&#13;
their acuity and have learned&#13;
'°OCd :t and plans," Nor- Su . ~uen_tl~,. the Dean has&#13;
to set u e Divis~onal Chairman&#13;
lrith u/ r a senes of meetings ,.1 acuity&#13;
len~~d co~e to these to&#13;
His 0rwood said&#13;
d1rrer::~ents were markedly&#13;
Ila tern from the initial&#13;
~re~ of ~s predecessor' . lley, Wh acKmney. MacKinlline&#13;
O .~as appointed to the&#13;
IIine, J&gt;Ositton last year at this&#13;
Policy :;s,{esponsible for the&#13;
nstant Greatness"&#13;
that led to the attempted&#13;
purging of '%7 faculty members.&#13;
When popular resistance_ to&#13;
the purge made it impossible&#13;
for it to be carri_ed o~t,&#13;
MacKinney, along with. Vice&#13;
Chancellor Harris, resigned.&#13;
Norwood as Dean of . the&#13;
College of Science and SOCiety&#13;
will have the Chairmen _of the&#13;
Science, Social Scien~e,&#13;
Humanities and Education&#13;
divisions report to him.&#13;
He will be the College's&#13;
principal educati_onal and: administrative&#13;
officer, and will~&#13;
responsible for staff an program development,&#13;
program review, and budget.&#13;
Because of responsibilities_ at&#13;
UW-M where he was the acting&#13;
Dean ~f the Graduate School,&#13;
Norwood will only be at&#13;
Parkside part time till October&#13;
15 He will be spending three&#13;
&amp;ys a week at Parkside and&#13;
two at UW-M till then.&#13;
Norwood said he had no&#13;
priority policies he would ~e to see instituted. "It'd be mappropriate&#13;
to commenl It w°':11d&#13;
appear I had come with&#13;
preconceived ideas. I'd rather&#13;
talk to the faculty and students&#13;
first . ··One thing I have learned IS&#13;
that each institution is different,"&#13;
he said. la~, "_an~ if&#13;
anyone comes into an mstitution&#13;
with preconceived notions_ of&#13;
what to do without first&#13;
checking with the faculty and&#13;
students, he's go!ng to find&#13;
himself in difficulties.&#13;
"One uses these ~..of&#13;
ideas " he said. "One's job then&#13;
is to 'sort out those ideas ~t&#13;
can be insti~ted, and to expand&#13;
J£1'RY SOC'H4&#13;
CEA £UG£ £ ORWOOO&#13;
those policies that ha,· " ed&#13;
in the past.&#13;
"This does not mean I 11 not&#13;
be malting judgments," he&#13;
noted.&#13;
He sees part of his job a&#13;
making more effective the&#13;
Colle e administrative &#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
Pa,e2&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Certain members of the so&#13;
called left wing 01 the Student&#13;
Government are apparently&#13;
trying to sell out the student&#13;
body 01 Parkside to the Administration&#13;
They have&#13;
decided that alter rambling&#13;
around on extraneous issues&#13;
and causing the student&#13;
government to accomplish&#13;
little. that they must exemplily&#13;
their ideal, the administration&#13;
even further They hav~&#13;
deerded to resign m protest&#13;
because they cannot dissolve&#13;
the student government.&#13;
They are Irustrated by the&#13;
fact that no one wilt bow down to&#13;
them, since they are the only&#13;
true god in the university.&#13;
They are attempting to turn&#13;
the students' means of making a&#13;
mark in the uruversity into a&#13;
lal .club of im potence and&#13;
al 0 provide the administration&#13;
WIthan excuse lor not giving the&#13;
students thear due TIghts and&#13;
prmleges&#13;
Gary Adelsen,&#13;
tudent Senate Member&#13;
september %ti. Itt! .&#13;
Ed. Note: This letter was senl&#13;
to NEWSCOPE last week&#13;
shortly after the situation at&#13;
Parkside Village came to our&#13;
attention. It proved to be interesting&#13;
reading material.l&#13;
It has been brought to my&#13;
attention that there is a feeling&#13;
among certain students that&#13;
Parkside is not interested in&#13;
protecting the needs and interests&#13;
of those students who&#13;
are housed 0(( campus. In these&#13;
days when anti-establishmenl&#13;
attitudes run so rampant&#13;
throughout society, it is easy lor&#13;
those who wish to capitalize on&#13;
any situation to feed the flames&#13;
by making accusations against&#13;
those who are responsible for&#13;
administering programs.&#13;
In the August 16, 1971,issue 01&#13;
EWSCOPE there was a&#13;
lengthy article on the ellorts&#13;
made by the campus to secure&#13;
student housing. Since that time&#13;
Parkside Village has begun to&#13;
house a number of students who&#13;
have had to live under rather&#13;
trying conditions due to the lack&#13;
KENOSHA-RACINE&#13;
Complete&#13;
Poster&#13;
Gallery&#13;
also 'Love' and 'Soft Touch' greeting cards&#13;
PARK DRUGS&#13;
Just north of washIngton ROodon .,-... A . h ~~.... venue In K enos a&#13;
10% OCsco...t-lT Wln-l PARKSICE CAR'Tl-lAGE: OR . KTI 1.0.&#13;
01 completed lacilities. We have&#13;
always made it clear that the&#13;
relationship 01 the student&#13;
tenant and the private landlord&#13;
is a contractual relationship in&#13;
which the University is not a&#13;
party. We are, however, concerned&#13;
when students are living&#13;
under difficult circumstances&#13;
and therefore in cooperation&#13;
with the management 01&#13;
Parkside Village have begun&#13;
steps to mutually investigate&#13;
the problems that exist. Miss&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger 01 this office&#13;
along with the Student&#13;
Government President, the&#13;
editor 01 the NEWSCQPE and&#13;
Mr. Agendroth 01 ParksidSe&#13;
Village were able to discuss this&#13;
matter on Thursday, September&#13;
t6, t97t, and it is anticipated .&#13;
that out 01 this meeting&#13;
progress was made both in&#13;
execution and understanding.&#13;
Furthermore, Miss&#13;
Echelbarger has attempted to&#13;
contact as many 01 the student&#13;
residents as possible and it is&#13;
her feeling that although the&#13;
conditions may be somewhat&#13;
dillicult, those directly involved&#13;
are bearing up quite well and&#13;
displaying a relreshing sense 01&#13;
humor and a ce~tain esprit de&#13;
corps.&#13;
Iassure you that we are going&#13;
to maintain contact with this&#13;
specific situation as with any&#13;
others that may arise. Personally,&#13;
I feel that the construction&#13;
of student housing&#13;
must be considered as an asset&#13;
to the campus. It is my hoep&#13;
that you will join with us in'&#13;
encouraging lurther growth 01&#13;
this nature and the attraction of&#13;
more students to our campus. If&#13;
any student would like to&#13;
discusS this matter lurther with&#13;
the parties concerned, Isuggest&#13;
that the Ollice 01 Student&#13;
Services be contacted at the&#13;
earliest moment.&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Ass't Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Ford Foundation is&#13;
pleased to announce the continuation&#13;
of the following&#13;
programs for the 1972-1973&#13;
year:&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
American Indian ~"'Sbi", for&#13;
Doctoral Fell tude.iI&#13;
Black StUdents o"'sbi", for&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
M&#13;
. o....hi eXlcan America Ips br&#13;
Rican Students n alll\ Pu,,\&#13;
These .Iell~shi&#13;
are lor stUdents w~~&#13;
undertaken any ba....&#13;
prolessional stu:aduatt" Wish to pursue the Pt, iIId '10&#13;
enter careers .. D·IId"&#13;
ed ti In hi.- uca ion. Each .....&#13;
support lull-lime .~&#13;
five years conlin 1~lh&#13;
Fellow's SatiSlac~: IIJIOn '"&#13;
toward the Pb.D. IIvtIlI&#13;
InstrUCtions and&#13;
lorms may be ob",a~&#13;
The Ford Foundati IIIed rr..&#13;
43rd Street, N.... ~ 311 "-&#13;
York 10017.AppIicati0It. ""&#13;
three program. ....rur&#13;
complete. by Jan muat It&#13;
We will be h uary 10, l1li.&#13;
additional inl:~:a~ ~&#13;
request. IOn "Plo&#13;
Patricia A.Baduna"&#13;
DoctoralF~&#13;
SPECIAL EVENlll&#13;
SATURDAY.OCT,Z&#13;
Concert - John Den&#13;
p.m. KenoshaTrem: .-&#13;
School Auditorium. ~&#13;
mISSIOn 83.5(). TtcQq&#13;
available at tbe Studoa&#13;
Activities Office R.a ..&#13;
Tallent Hall. '&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.'&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.'&#13;
Octoberle.t - Weel:ead ~&#13;
atWelic and soclaI .-&#13;
CompetitioninClOII01oaItJ&#13;
Soccer, Golf, T ..&#13;
and Sailing. Alao, ..&#13;
brats at soccer .&#13;
Saturday alterDOOl ...&#13;
dances at !be SludIIII ,.&#13;
tivilies Building FridIJ ..&#13;
Saturday nigbts.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
WSU-Whitewater at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22&#13;
Recital - Harpsichord and&#13;
cello recital by Frances&#13;
Bedford and Harry Lantz,&#13;
UW-P music laculty, in 103&#13;
Greenquist, 8 p.m. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 2.&#13;
Film Feature film&#13;
:'Rosemary's Baby" at S p.m.&#13;
10 the Activities Building.&#13;
Adm. 75c.&#13;
SATURDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
Dance Sponsored by&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Activities&#13;
Building. 9-1 a.m. Adm.&#13;
charg~ __._&#13;
Get Acquointed Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change.&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAO&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVe.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658.2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
CAPITOl COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
~&#13;
Editorial Stall&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomarlire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Copy Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Jerry Socha&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
VALEO'S· .~&#13;
IZ&#13;
AND ITAU AN SAUSAGE: El::Ivf3ER5' -'&#13;
5lI2l-lltlt Ay... e Kenoslll &amp;&amp;J-III&#13;
Open 6 days 0 week from 4 p.m., closeel ~&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
North Central- at UW-P .. 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Soccer - UW-P vs. Wisconsin&#13;
Junior All-Stars at UW-P.&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 26&#13;
Concert- Milwaukee Fine Arts&#13;
Quartet sponsored by the&#13;
University Artists Concert&#13;
Series. 4 p.m., 103Greenquisl.&#13;
Adm. $1.00, students $.50,&#13;
children 12 and under free.&#13;
Film- "The Shop on Main&#13;
Street" sponsored by In·&#13;
tercollegiate Film Council. 7&#13;
p.m. Golden Ronde11e&#13;
Theatre, 16th &amp; Howe&#13;
Racine. Limited number of&#13;
tickets available at the Information&#13;
Center, second&#13;
floor. Tallent Hall.&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
.Bob Borchardt, James&#13;
Ca~per, Marc EiseQ, Kelly&#13;
Infusino, Jim Koloen Ken&#13;
Konkol '&#13;
Contributing Staff&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Mike Starr&#13;
Photography&#13;
Darrell Borger, Ricky Pazera&#13;
Production staff&#13;
Becky Ecklund Denise&#13;
Anastasia, Roberta' Williams&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
Connie Kinsella,Dave'"&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones&#13;
Editorial ..&#13;
Business ..&#13;
Newscope is an ~&#13;
student newspaper .......&#13;
by students 01theUai~&#13;
Wisconsin-Parksido&#13;
weekly except duriIC~&#13;
periods. Student oIliafIlI'.&#13;
vertising Ioods .... till til&#13;
source 01 revenue ltr :-&#13;
ope~ation 01 N~~ ..&#13;
copIes are P'~ II&#13;
distributed tbro..--"&#13;
Kenosha and Badat&#13;
mwlities 'as weD • ~::&#13;
sitv. F..... capiea are&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Page2 ''EWSCOPE, eptember2011971'&#13;
LETT-ERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
G ry del 0 n,&#13;
tu nt nate ~tember&#13;
Ed. Note: This letter was sent&#13;
to 'EWSCOPE last week&#13;
shortly after the situation at&#13;
Parkside Village came to our&#13;
attention. It proved to be interesting&#13;
reading material.)&#13;
It has been brought to my&#13;
attention that there is a feeling&#13;
among certain students that&#13;
Park. ide is not interested in&#13;
protecting the needs and interests&#13;
of those students who&#13;
are hou ed off campus. In these&#13;
day when anti-establishment&#13;
attitudes run so rampant&#13;
throughout society, it is easy for&#13;
those who wish to capitalize on&#13;
any situation to feed the names&#13;
by making accusations against&#13;
tho::;e who are responsible for&#13;
administering programs.&#13;
In the August 16, 1971, issue of&#13;
'EWSCOPE there was a&#13;
lengthy article on the efforts&#13;
made by the campus to secure&#13;
tudent housing Since that time&#13;
Park ide Village has begun to&#13;
house a number of students who&#13;
have had to live under rather&#13;
trying conditions due to the lack&#13;
Complete&#13;
Poster&#13;
Gallery&#13;
al o 'Love' and 'Soft Touch' greeting cards&#13;
PARK DRUGS&#13;
Just n&lt;&gt;fth of woshington Rood 00 """'..l A . ,/.f.'"" venue in K enosho&#13;
1'"- DISCXl.NTWITH P~ICE CAc-n_, ' rs I nAGE OR KTI 1.0 .&#13;
of completed facilities. We have&#13;
always made it clear that the&#13;
relationship of the student&#13;
tenant and the private landlord&#13;
is a contractual relationship in&#13;
which the University is not a&#13;
party. We are, however, concerned&#13;
when students are living&#13;
under difficult circumstances&#13;
and therefore in cooperation&#13;
with the management of&#13;
Parkside Village have begun&#13;
steps to mutually investigate&#13;
the problems that exist. Miss&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger of this office&#13;
along with the Student&#13;
Government President, the&#13;
editor of the NEWSCOPE and&#13;
Mr. Agendroth of Parksid8e&#13;
Village were able to discuss this&#13;
matter on Thursday, September&#13;
16, 1971, and it is anticipated .&#13;
that out of this meeting&#13;
progress was made both in&#13;
execution and understanding.&#13;
Furthermore, Miss&#13;
Echelbarger has attempted to&#13;
contact as many of the student&#13;
residents as possible and it is&#13;
her feeling that although the&#13;
conditions may be somewhat&#13;
difficult, those directly involved&#13;
are bearing up quite well and&#13;
displaying a refreshing sense of&#13;
humor and a ce~tain esprit de&#13;
corps. I assure you that we are going&#13;
to maintain contact with this&#13;
specific situation as with any&#13;
others that may arise. Personally,&#13;
I feel that the construction&#13;
of student housing&#13;
must be considered as an asset&#13;
to the campus. It is my hoep&#13;
that you will join with us in&#13;
encouraging further growth of&#13;
this nature and the attraction of&#13;
more students to our campus. If&#13;
any student would like to&#13;
discuss this matter further with&#13;
the parties concerned, I suggest&#13;
that the Office of Student&#13;
Services be contacted at the&#13;
earliest moment.&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Ass' t Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Ford Foundation is&#13;
pleased to announce the continuation&#13;
of the following&#13;
programs for the 1972-1973&#13;
year:&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
American Indian ;7ships r&#13;
Doctoral Fel Udents&#13;
Black Students lowship f&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
Mexican Ameri owship&#13;
Rican Students can anr1&#13;
These . fello~shi&#13;
are for students ~ pr&#13;
undertaken any w O have&#13;
p~ofessional studf aduate&#13;
wish to pursue the Ph and&#13;
enter careers .. D. an! lei&#13;
education. Each in h&#13;
s.upport full-time si~~&amp;rarn&#13;
five years contingeni fct le&#13;
Fellow's satisfacto UP0n&#13;
toward the Ph.D.ry&#13;
Instructions and&#13;
forms may be obta~PPli&#13;
The Ford Foundar mec1 ~ 43rd Street N 10n, 320&#13;
York 10017 'Apel~ York,&#13;
th · P 1cations r ree programs or&#13;
complete.by Janu rnu t&#13;
We will be ha ary 10, I&#13;
additional infof PY to Pro.&#13;
request. rnation&#13;
Patricia A. Bac!unar.:&#13;
Doctoral Feu011&#13;
_CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
WSU-Whitewater at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22&#13;
Recital - Harpsichord and&#13;
cello recital by Frances&#13;
Bedford and Harry Lantz,&#13;
UW-P music faculty, in 103&#13;
Greenquist, 8 p.m. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
Film Feature film&#13;
'.'Rosemary's Baby" at 8 p.m.&#13;
m the Activities Building.&#13;
Adm. 75c.&#13;
SATURDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
Dance Sponsored by&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Activities&#13;
Building. 9-1 a.m. Adm.&#13;
charg~ ---&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change,&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH Ave..&#13;
654-9968&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
5~th St. a_t. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT&#13;
MILWAUKEE ,&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
North Central at UW-P. 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Soccer - UW-P vs. Wisconsin&#13;
Junior All-Stars at UW-P.&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 26&#13;
Concert- Milwaukee Fine Arts&#13;
Quartet sponsored by the&#13;
University Artists Concert&#13;
Series. 4 p.m., 103 Greenquist.&#13;
Adm. $1.00, students $.50,&#13;
children 12 and under free.&#13;
Film- "The Shop on Main&#13;
Street" sponsored by Intercollegiate&#13;
Film Council. 7&#13;
p.m. Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theatre, 16th &amp; Howe,&#13;
Racine. Limited number of&#13;
tickets available at · the Information&#13;
Center second&#13;
floor. T~llent Hall. '&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
F~ature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fme Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
. Copy Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Pho~o Editor Jerry Socha&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
. Bob Borchardt, James&#13;
Ca~per, Marc Eisen, Kelly&#13;
Infusino, Jim Koloen Ken&#13;
Konkol '&#13;
Contributing Staff&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Mike Starr&#13;
Photography&#13;
Darrell Borger, Ricky Pazera&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Becky Ecklund Denise&#13;
Anastasia, Roberta' Williams&#13;
SPECIAL EVE~TS&#13;
SA TURD A y, OCT. z&#13;
Concert - John De nver g&#13;
p.m. Kenosha Tremper' JU&#13;
S~ho?l Auditorium. A&#13;
m1s~1on $3.50. Tic&#13;
avB:il~?le at the Stud&#13;
Activities Office, Room&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.8&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 9&#13;
Octobe~fest _ Weekend rJ&#13;
. athletic and social e~&#13;
Competition in Cross Coun&#13;
Soccer, Golf, Tennis, R&#13;
and Sailing. Also, beer&#13;
brats at soccer game&#13;
Saturday afternoon 1&#13;
dances at the Student At,&#13;
tivities Building Friday&#13;
Saturday nights.&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Da\'e ·&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Newscope is an ind&#13;
student newspaper co&#13;
by students of the Uni1t&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
weekly except during&#13;
periods. Student obl!med&#13;
vertising funds are !ht&#13;
source of revenue for&#13;
operation of Newscope '&#13;
copies are printed&#13;
distributed throughovl&#13;
Kenosha and Racine&#13;
munities as well as the t&#13;
sitv. Frer copies art 1&#13;
upon request.&#13;
VALEO'S . ~ {;&#13;
O&lt;EN 01NNERS·-""'"·" ...... ioo p.m.-tz:•&#13;
AND ITA\ . .JAN SAUSA.GE EDv13ERS,.&#13;
5021- IJth AVellle K•sba &amp;51-61,91&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mo¢&lt;rf5 &#13;
•&#13;
In Being, Busted&#13;
,.lbe Newscopestall&#13;
BYgen Konkol&#13;
ent complaint of past&#13;
•&#13;
A freq1l has been the abun-&#13;
"",est"fparking tickets given&#13;
doJlC" 0 our efficient Campus&#13;
.. I bYty Patrol. .&#13;
socun may feel that the force&#13;
Some I' a little over-zea o~s In&#13;
~ II' g violations, but the ~ In . . b . ,,- I is only doing Its JO In&#13;
J'~ding additional .revenue&#13;
~ theuw-system.&#13;
The person who gets busted&#13;
Ita violationha~ only himself&#13;
_ blame since It IS patently&#13;
rtS'J to avoid the fine.&#13;
IDthe past there was the&#13;
... eIy excuse of a lack of&#13;
~ space but since the&#13;
"",truetionof'the east parking&#13;
Illt thiS excused~sn' t carry as&#13;
""b weightas It used to.&#13;
SoParking areas are clearly ..;ned though, according to&#13;
!gt D. W.Krogh of the security&#13;
ItCf there has been troubie&#13;
lIith~me students ripping off&#13;
IIItsigns.But the lack of one of&#13;
tbo6e signs is no excuse. If you&#13;
park where you shouldn't, you'll&#13;
get.3 ticket, SIgns or no signs.&#13;
TIckets vary in cost&#13;
proportionally to the&#13;
seriousness of the offense. The&#13;
least you can get hit for is three&#13;
bucks for parking without a&#13;
perm~t or with an improper&#13;
permit.&#13;
Overtime parking, parking on&#13;
law?s. or "improper parking in&#13;
designated areas" will also get&#13;
you three. Stiffer fines include&#13;
five dollars for parking in a No&#13;
Parking area and ten dollars for&#13;
being on a sidewalk.&#13;
If you commit a violation that&#13;
is not covered above there is&#13;
also a blank space on the ticket&#13;
that can De filled in to cover any&#13;
contingency.&#13;
If you ignore a ticket it won't&#13;
go away. After five days the fine&#13;
doubles, after forty days you get&#13;
a warning letter, and at the end&#13;
of sixty days you get hauled to&#13;
the D.A. and he doesn't see&#13;
anyone for less than twenty&#13;
doliars.&#13;
A first offense could set you&#13;
hack forty dollar-s if not paid&#13;
promptly and a second will cost&#13;
you anywhere from fifty to onehundred&#13;
dollars!&#13;
If .you wish to appeal a&#13;
parking ticket you can do so&#13;
However, this must be do~&#13;
within five days by completing&#13;
a f~rm available at the Bursar's&#13;
o~ftce. There is no appeal after&#13;
flv~ days, From past exper~ence,&#13;
appeals are usually&#13;
demed.&#13;
During the first two weeks of&#13;
c~asses warning tickets were&#13;
given out. 4C9were distributed&#13;
as of the 16th. Starting this week&#13;
things will begin in earnest&#13;
Don't risk a ticket on the offchance&#13;
you may get away with&#13;
it. The Security Patrol has three&#13;
shifts that work around the&#13;
clock: They don't enjoy giving&#13;
out tickets but it makes them&#13;
mad when you break the law.&#13;
Students are not the only people&#13;
?eing socked, either. Sgt. Krogh&#13;
intends to see all violators -&#13;
faculty, construction workers&#13;
and visitors - busted alike.&#13;
Baroque Players Debut this Week&#13;
TheBaroque Players of the&#13;
l:Diversity of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will present a series of&#13;
tbree programs in the RacineKenosha&#13;
area beginning Sunday.&#13;
'M1e newly-formed group was&#13;
II'ganized by cellist" Harry&#13;
lAot, and harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford, both members&#13;
01 the music faculty at&#13;
PlrUide.They plan to invite&#13;
tIriIIIs guestartists to perform&#13;
..Ill them from time to time,&#13;
Guestartist for the initial&#13;
_rts will be flutist Frank&#13;
!lIIlho1z.&#13;
'\'be group played Sunday at&#13;
IIIe DominicanCollege Theater&#13;
lIaldayat tbe Carthage Colleg~&#13;
.... Room and wili Play&#13;
Wedoesday, Sept. 22, at&#13;
Parkside in Room 103&#13;
GreenquistHall to the Wond&#13;
Road Campus. Ali perbmances&#13;
are at 8 p.m. and are&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Suetbol"the guest artist, is&#13;
• matnnnental music teacher&#13;
~~ Racine Unified' School&#13;
..... m and has Iaught at&#13;
~western University. He&#13;
*'ied nute in New York with&#13;
8Im~ Ba:ron and is currently&#13;
~g WithIsrael Borouchoff&#13;
UW-MIIwaukee.He is a ;ember of the Racine and&#13;
lukeSha Symphony Or- :::a' and has appeared with&#13;
Lan...... ha Symphony.&#13;
at tz,. as associate professor&#13;
DlU;SIC at UW-P, is an in-&#13;
::::'OOSIlY.known cellist and&#13;
...... tor. A Widely-acclaimed&#13;
Ippea oand adjudicator, heh~s&#13;
Witb red ~sa performing artist&#13;
IiIooiesma]OrAmerican sym8lIdl&#13;
under the batons of&#13;
renOWnedconductors as&#13;
...&#13;
Leopoid Stokowski, Bruno&#13;
Walter, Dimitri Mitropolus, Sir&#13;
Thomas Beecham and Leonard&#13;
Bernstein. He founded the&#13;
Houston All-City Orchestra&#13;
which he conducted on a tour of&#13;
Europe in 1965 and of Mexico in&#13;
1967. He previously taught at&#13;
the University of Houston.&#13;
Mrs. Bedford taught harpsichord&#13;
and piano at Southern&#13;
Illinois University before&#13;
coming to Parkside where she is&#13;
an assistant professor of music.&#13;
She has studied with harpsichordists&#13;
Wesley K. Morgan&#13;
and Robert Conant and has&#13;
given a number of lecturerecitals.&#13;
She is soloist for the&#13;
harpsichord selections on two&#13;
recordings of Renaissance&#13;
music recorded as part of the&#13;
Historical Anthology of Music&#13;
published by Ihe Harvard&#13;
University Press. She will&#13;
perform on a two-manual&#13;
Flemish instrument copied&#13;
after a 1643 Ruckers harpsichord.&#13;
The program for the concerts&#13;
will include two trios, Bach's&#13;
Sonata for Flute and Continuo&#13;
and Handel's Sonata Vll for&#13;
Flute and Figured bass. Mrs.&#13;
Bedford and Suetholz will&#13;
perform Bach's Sonata Il for&#13;
CIavier and Flute and she and&#13;
Lantz will play Bach's Sonata I&#13;
for Clavier and Viola da gamba.&#13;
Mrs. Bedford will play two&#13;
harpsichord solos, The WellTempered&#13;
Clavier by Bach and&#13;
Le Tic-Tac-Choc au les&#13;
Maillotins by Couperin.&#13;
Sickle Cell Clinic Held&#13;
Sopt.m ..... zt • .,,, PE&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
GIVE US YOUR GRIPESI&#13;
Ifsthe&#13;
realthing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
.~&#13;
PaltJ&#13;
The first mass testing in Kenosha for Sickle Cell Anemia traits&#13;
was held Sunday, Sept. 19, at the Second Baptist Church, 3925- 32nd&#13;
Ave., from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. .&#13;
The tesing program, involving the taking of blood samples, IS&#13;
being sponsored by the Kenosha bra~ch of NAACP, With the&#13;
cooperation of the University of Wlsconsm-Parkslde and Sl.&#13;
Catherine's hospital. .&#13;
Samples were taken by lab tectmicians from the ~OSpl.lal.Dr. S. P&#13;
Datta, a geneticist who is an associate professor of hfe scl.ence at w-&#13;
, Parkside will perform the analysis at the UW-P laboratones.&#13;
The Parkside professor and his assistants have ~form~ so~e&#13;
400 such analyses during the past summer while wor.kmg _Ill&#13;
cooperation with tbe Racine NAACP branch and the Racme City&#13;
Health Department. .&#13;
Under the analysis used at UW-P, traits of other types of blood cell&#13;
disorders in addition to Sickle Cell can be detected.&#13;
.u.: 01 ni«:&#13;
AWRAL COSMETICS&#13;
NAWRAL GRAlNS&amp;CEREALS&#13;
UNSULPHURATED FRUIT.&#13;
HEALTH FOOD&#13;
6221· 22"'0 AV£t\tu£ KENOSHA PHON 52·41ti'&#13;
Grievance and&#13;
Clearing House&#13;
Committee&#13;
lIleetsthis thursday&#13;
Sept.25 at 4p.m. in room 103 Greenquist.&#13;
.111students Me invited to participate.&#13;
"Here's To Your Good Health"&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tue da and Thur da&#13;
I&#13;
9a.m.-4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
.0 a glass&#13;
....c: and&#13;
U a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
..&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER Of HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND so&#13;
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Available 'or ftlt.lnlty Of SOloClly partles&#13;
Student Senate&#13;
will meet monday&#13;
Sept. 27 at 4p. m. in Greenquist 101.&#13;
AU studmts are requestuJ to attnld .&#13;
Interested O1IkJolters welcome.&#13;
In Being Busted&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
ol the Newscope staff&#13;
uent complaint of past&#13;
A fr~ has been the abun-&#13;
¢1\est I parking tickets given&#13;
ceb O our efficient Campus t y ~-,rity Patrol. ;:c•- may feel that the force&#13;
rne 1 . a little ov~r-zea ous m&#13;
ttin&amp; violations,_ bu_t t~e&#13;
Po I is only doing its Job m&#13;
patrJdin&amp; additional revenue&#13;
P'° the uw-system.&#13;
fi:tTbe person who gets ?usted&#13;
violation has only himself&#13;
fclb&amp;Jame since it is patently to f. r to avoid the me. ~ the past there was the&#13;
rtadv excuse of a lac_k of&#13;
partlng space, but since the&#13;
coostruction of the east parking&#13;
Joi this excuse doesn't carry as uch weight as it used to.&#13;
·o Parking areas are clearly&#13;
~ked though, according . to&#13;
D. W. Krogh of the security&#13;
llrte, there has been trouble&#13;
th ome students ripping off&#13;
igns. But the lack of one of&#13;
signs is no excuse. H you&#13;
park w~ere yo':1 shouldn't, you'll&#13;
get _a ticket, signs or no signs.&#13;
T1cke!s vary in cost&#13;
pr~portionally to the&#13;
seriousness of the offense. The&#13;
least you can get hit for is three&#13;
bucks for parking without a&#13;
perm~t or with an improper&#13;
permit.&#13;
Overtime parking, parking on&#13;
law~s, or "improper parking in&#13;
designated areas" will also get&#13;
you three. Stiffer fines include&#13;
five dollars for parking in a No&#13;
Parking area and ten dollars for&#13;
being on a sidewalk.&#13;
H you commit a violation that&#13;
is not covered above there is&#13;
also a blank space on the ticket&#13;
that canoe filled in to cover any&#13;
contingency.&#13;
If you ignore a ticket it won't&#13;
go away. After five days the fine&#13;
doubles, after forty days you get&#13;
a warning letter, and at the end&#13;
of sixty days you get hauled to&#13;
the D.A. and he doesn't see&#13;
anyone for less than twenty&#13;
dollars.&#13;
A first off(lnse could set you&#13;
back forty dollars if not paid&#13;
promptly and a second will co.st&#13;
you anywhere from fifty to one- hundred dollars!&#13;
If . you wish to appeal a&#13;
parking ticket you can do so&#13;
H?w~ver, this must be do~&#13;
w1thm five days by completing&#13;
a f~rm available at the Bursar'&#13;
o~f1ce. There is no appeal after&#13;
f1v: days. From past e -&#13;
per~ence, appeals are u ually&#13;
derued.&#13;
During the first two we s of&#13;
c~asses warning tickets were&#13;
given out. 409 were distributed&#13;
as_ of the 16th. Starting this week&#13;
thmgs will begin in earnest.&#13;
Don't risk a ticket on the off-&#13;
~ance you may get away with&#13;
it. The Security Patrol has three&#13;
shifts that work around the&#13;
clock: They don't enjoy giving&#13;
out tickets but it makes them&#13;
mad when you break the law.&#13;
Sh:1dents are not the only people&#13;
~mg socked, either. Sgt Krogh&#13;
mtends to see all violators -&#13;
faculty, construction workers&#13;
and visitors - busted alike.&#13;
Baroque Players Debut this Week&#13;
The Baroque Players of the&#13;
~mversity of WisconsinPark&#13;
ide will present a series of&#13;
ee programs in the RacineKenosha&#13;
area beginning Suny.&#13;
&#13;
The newly-formed group was&#13;
organized by cellist' Harry&#13;
Lantz and harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford, both m'emof&#13;
the music faculty at&#13;
Parkside. They plan to invite&#13;
YVIOUS guest artists to perform&#13;
th them from time to time.&#13;
Guest artist for the initial&#13;
Clllleerts will be flutist Frank&#13;
~lz.&#13;
The group played Sunday at&#13;
lbe Dominican College Theater,&#13;
ooday at the Carthage College&#13;
e Room and will Play&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 22, at&#13;
Park ide in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall tn the Wood&#13;
Road Campus. All performances&#13;
are at 8 p.m. and are&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
etholz, the guest artist, is&#13;
• lllStnunental music teacher&#13;
the Racine Unified· School&#13;
m and has taught at&#13;
Ncirthwestern University. He&#13;
lllldied flute in New York with&#13;
u~I Barron and is currently&#13;
ltludy1ng with Israel Borouchoff&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. He is a ;""her of the Racine and&#13;
allkesha Symphony Orlbe&#13;
lras and has appeared with&#13;
La Kenosha Symphony.&#13;
GI ntz, as associate professor&#13;
m~ic at UW-P, is an in-&#13;
~tionally-known cellist and&#13;
=:tor. A widely-acclaimed&#13;
lppea n and adjudicator, he has&#13;
th red ~s a performing artist&#13;
~ · lllaJor American symh&#13;
ies under the batons of&#13;
renowned conductors as&#13;
Leopold Stokowski, Bruno&#13;
Walter, Dimitri Mitropolus, Sir&#13;
Thomas Beecham and Leonard&#13;
Bernstein. He founded the&#13;
Houston All-City Orchestra&#13;
which he conducted on a tour of&#13;
Europe in 1965 and of Mexico in&#13;
1967. He previously taught at&#13;
the University of Houston.&#13;
Mrs. Bedford taught harpsichord&#13;
and piano at Southern&#13;
Illinois University before&#13;
coming to Parkside where she is&#13;
an assistant professor of music.&#13;
She has studied with harpsichordists&#13;
Wesley K. Morgan&#13;
and Robert Conant and has&#13;
given a nwnber of lecturerecitals.&#13;
She is soloist for the&#13;
harpsichord selections on two&#13;
recordings of Renaissance&#13;
music recorded as part of the&#13;
Historical l\nthology of . lusic&#13;
published by the Harvard&#13;
University Pres . She will&#13;
perform on a two-manual&#13;
Flemish instrument copied&#13;
after a 1643 Ruckers harpsichord.&#13;
&#13;
The program for the concert&#13;
will include two trios, Bach·&#13;
Sonata for Flute and Continuo&#13;
and Handel's Sonata VII for&#13;
Flute and Figured bass. . lrs.&#13;
Bedford and Suetholz will&#13;
perform Bach's Sonata II for&#13;
Clavier and Flute and he and&#13;
Lantz will play Bach's Sonata I&#13;
for Clavier and Viola da gamba .&#13;
Mrs. Bedford ·will play two&#13;
harpsichord solos, The WellTempered&#13;
Clavier by Bach and&#13;
Le Tic-Tac-Choe ou le&#13;
Maillotins by Couperin.&#13;
Sickle Cell Clinic Held&#13;
The first mass testing in Kenosha for Sickle Cell Anemia trai&#13;
was held Sunday, Sept. 19, at the Second Baptist Church, ;:-5 - 32nd&#13;
Ave., from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
The tesing program, involving the taking of blood amp! , i&#13;
being sponsored by the Kenosha bra~ch o_f AAC_P, \\1th th&#13;
cooperation of the University of W1sconsm-Park:1d and&#13;
Catherine's hospital. . Samples were taken by lab technicians from the ~o:;p1.tal. Dr. . P.&#13;
Datta, a geneticist who is an associate professor of hfe sc1_ence at&#13;
• Parkside, will perform the analysis at th~ UW-P laboratories.&#13;
The Parkside professor and his assistants have ~form~ o~&#13;
400 such analyses during the past summer while wor 1 . m&#13;
cooperation with the Racine NAACP branch and the Racme Cit)&#13;
Health Department. . . Under the analysis used at UW-P, traits of other type of blood cell&#13;
disorders in addition to Sickle Cell can be detected.&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
Grievance and&#13;
Clearing House&#13;
Committee&#13;
tneets this thursday&#13;
Sept. 25 at 4p.m. in room 103 Greenquist.&#13;
'1// student · · __ J • • -s are tnvtttJU to parltctpate.&#13;
GIVE US YOUR GRIPfil!&#13;
Ifs the&#13;
real thing. Coke.&#13;
,,_&#13;
!I&#13;
A&#13;
ATURAL GRA&#13;
'S LPH RAT. ·D FR&#13;
HEALTH OD&#13;
622 • 22._D A E J E O HA&#13;
Q)&#13;
u&#13;
·-&#13;
0&#13;
-C&#13;
"Here's To Your Good H I h"&#13;
.m.&#13;
a sch ner or&#13;
a ttle or&#13;
a glass&#13;
nd&#13;
u a steak sand h or&#13;
a brat ur t or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
nd&#13;
trench rie r&#13;
p tato sal d&#13;
$1.1&#13;
The Brat So&#13;
'Th Brat i uh it t'&#13;
ORTH EST CO ER 0 IC A ,_ 4 A&#13;
open 9 .m.-12 p.m.&#13;
A 1llable 101 fr• I I or sororlt p rt&#13;
.. , ,&#13;
D 0&#13;
Student Senate&#13;
will m et m nda&#13;
Sept. 27 at 4p. m. in Greenqui t 101.&#13;
ALL students art requested to attend.&#13;
Interesud onloolters welcome. &#13;
Page. NEWSCOPE Septe .. ber N. Ifll •&#13;
Recycle this Newspaper&#13;
HIGH&#13;
RIBBING&#13;
THE RIBBED KNIT SHIRT.&#13;
Zipped high. Ribbed thick&#13;
and thin. A great casual&#13;
look that's very Fall'71-&#13;
very definitely Gear Box".&#13;
Brown or navy 100%&#13;
polyester knit. S·M·L.&#13;
$9&#13;
Richman BROTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
FRIDAY SEPT 24 e:o.oPM&#13;
ACTIVITIES e-UILDING&#13;
ADMISSION $.75&#13;
'lIwp'ond Wisconsin I.D ..&#13;
pollution&#13;
is also a&#13;
statB 01&#13;
mind.&#13;
We hear a lot about&#13;
pollution of air and water.&#13;
But what about mental&#13;
pollution? Could it affect&#13;
the environment we&#13;
live in?&#13;
Perhaps the answer to&#13;
dirty rivers and smoggy&#13;
air is purer thinking ...&#13;
more spiritual thinking&#13;
that eliminates the greed&#13;
and self-will that cloud&#13;
our thoughts.&#13;
To learn more about&#13;
fighting mental pollution,&#13;
come hear a talk by&#13;
Grace Bemis Curtis, a&#13;
teacher and practitioner&#13;
of Christian Science,&#13;
called "Let's Choose&#13;
Heaven Here."&#13;
CIlistian SOO1ce lecture&#13;
sp.rn. Monday sept. 27th'&#13;
The First Church of Christ, Scientist&#13;
9th and college g aclne ;&#13;
free par1l.ing and child care provided&#13;
~vldence by tne stale, The young man&#13;
toe crime read the book in question sho~ a(&#13;
he was to have committed the act. TheY beIort&#13;
blamed for psychologically inflaming ::.&#13;
action. Through the long overdramalizatiaa 10&#13;
simple counter and attack that plague the a(&#13;
scenes we can see that the boy is innocent OMIt&#13;
already know that he is impotent and thai .. "&#13;
. his college friends did it. DIll! a(&#13;
The court scenes are tiring and&#13;
overplaying simple feats of logic, but~&#13;
that set off the courtroom action are evfll ......&#13;
Superficiality dominates as we see .....&#13;
Corvettes and .'out of sight' clothing loaded~&#13;
the screen as If for advertising purposes ..&#13;
. The sensuality as art vs. pomogr~&#13;
pornography issue is insulted consistenUyby:&#13;
very methods used in the film. Quick, cbeop .....&#13;
ups of over·mammaried, highly cosmet'&#13;
were shown every two minutes or so asin;'~&#13;
to show hos "liberal" society had become.~&#13;
impression that one received is slighUydUf.:'&#13;
The treatment appeared much like a IIkio,&#13;
Spill~ne dream world with women subjegalod.&#13;
plastic clothes awaiting the time whenthey 'OIIlIId&#13;
.be allowed to be undressed and taken.&#13;
In the end the book is saved and P"'IMIIs1llr&#13;
the accused boy is good. Yvonne DeCarloillolIlII&#13;
to be the real author of the book and J. J. Jldwar&#13;
merely a pen name. Everyone lives happier etII&#13;
after.&#13;
Seldom is it that I do not enjoy re~ I&#13;
film. While many of the pictures I have _ caaId&#13;
have been improved in ways that are as obYiaaItI&#13;
many other viewers; but there is alW8)'l ~&#13;
enough to sit and watch until the filmwas flDiIIlel&#13;
This film is an example of hypocritical..&#13;
sorship of pornography for political eodI.&#13;
WDliams.-&#13;
PROBLEMS OF A PERFECT WORLD&#13;
THE SEVEN MINUTES Mike Barrett Wayne Maunder&#13;
Maggie Marianne McAndrew&#13;
Elmo Duncan Philip Carey&#13;
Luther Yerkes Jay C. Fhppen&#13;
Faye Osborn Edy WIlhams&#13;
Produced and Directed by Russ Meyer&#13;
with Yvonne DeCarlo as Constance cu~berl~nd&#13;
Russ Meyer takes the E out of Eros III a .fIlm&#13;
that attempts to render hypocritical censorship of&#13;
pornography for political ends. It is the first time&#13;
that Meyer has worked with a recogmzed hterary.&#13;
work. Previously he has turned out $100,000and&#13;
under sexploitive films that would have to be.&#13;
considered better fare than this current flick.&#13;
Recently the American dream film, Beyond the&#13;
Valley of the Dolls, was also layed waste by this&#13;
director's hand.&#13;
Irving Wallace, the author who wrote The&#13;
Seven Minutes has had two other films adapted for&#13;
the screen, The Chapman Report and The Prize.&#13;
He is also a former resident of Kenosha ... where&#13;
it seems he wrote for the Bradford High&#13;
newspaper and doubled as quite a tennis freak. He&#13;
eventually left for Madison to attend the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, where, if this film is any&#13;
example of his authorship, he could have experienced&#13;
more and imagined less. Albeit, the&#13;
rook has appeared on the best seller lists since its&#13;
release in September of 1969. All words spelled&#13;
correctly and the proper writing techniques applied.The&#13;
story ... An ideal New York publisher&#13;
contacts an ideal young lawyer so that he may&#13;
defend a novel called The Seven Minutes by the&#13;
fictional J. J. Jadway. A small bookstore and its&#13;
owner have been summoned for its sape and our&#13;
hero comes to the rescue.&#13;
An incidental rape is applied to the case as&#13;
Wed. Sept. ~2&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
CD&#13;
It&#13;
Magus Productions presents&#13;
BLUES NIGHT&#13;
MUDDY WATERS at&#13;
also Case High School Fiel&lt;JbollS'&#13;
JOHNNY YOUNG BLUES BAND Racine&#13;
Tickets available at:&#13;
E h 8:00-12:&#13;
30&#13;
art Works -Racine&#13;
The Daisy -Kenosha-Racine&#13;
Bidingers-Kenosh~-W aukee8an&#13;
J&amp;J'sT ape Center -Kenosha-Racine-Bulington&#13;
featuring&#13;
Pagt NEWSCOPE&#13;
Recycle th is&#13;
VERY DEFI NITELY&#13;
GEAR BOX&#13;
THE RIBBED KNIT SHIRT.&#13;
Zipped high. Ribbed thick&#13;
and thin. A great ca sual&#13;
look that's very Fall '71 -&#13;
very definitely Gear Box•.&#13;
Brown or navy 100 %&#13;
polyester kni t. S-M-l.&#13;
$9&#13;
Richman&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
eptember ZO, 1971 •&#13;
ewspaper&#13;
JohnCassavetes&#13;
FRI DA Y SEPT 24 8 : 00P M&#13;
ACTI V I T I ES e ·u1LDING&#13;
A DM I SS I ON$ 75&#13;
uwp·and Wisconsin t .D.&#13;
pollution&#13;
is also a&#13;
state of&#13;
mind.&#13;
We hear a lot about&#13;
pollution of air and water.&#13;
But what about mental&#13;
pollution? Could it affect&#13;
the environment we&#13;
live in?&#13;
Perhaps the answer to&#13;
dirty rivers and smoggy&#13;
air is purer thinking ...&#13;
more spiritual thinking&#13;
that eliminates the greed&#13;
and self-will that cloud&#13;
our thoughts.&#13;
To learn more about&#13;
fighting mental pollution,&#13;
come hear a talk by&#13;
Grace Bemis Curtis, a&#13;
teacher and practitioner&#13;
of Christian Science,&#13;
called " Let's Choose&#13;
Heaven Here."&#13;
Christian Science lecture&#13;
SP,m. MOnday 5_ept. 27th·&#13;
The First Church of Christ, Scientist&#13;
9th and college Racine -&#13;
Free parking and child care provided&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
PROBLEMS uF A PERFECT WORLD&#13;
TIIE SEVEN MINUTES&#13;
Mike Barrett Wayne Maunder&#13;
Maggie Marianne McAndrew&#13;
Elmo Duncan Philip Carey&#13;
Y k Jay C. Flippen&#13;
Luther er es d w·Ir&#13;
Faye Osborn E y l iams&#13;
Produced and Directed by Russ Meyer&#13;
with Yvonne DeCarlo as Constance Cu~berl~d&#13;
Russ Meyer takes the E out of Eros m a _film&#13;
that attempts to render hypocritical cens?rship of&#13;
pornography for political ends. It is t.J:ie fir~t time _&#13;
that Meyer has worked with a recognized literary,&#13;
work. Previously he has turned out $100,000 and&#13;
W1der sexploitive films that would have to _ be.&#13;
considered better fare than this current fbck.&#13;
Recently the American dream film, Beyond the&#13;
Valley of the Dolls, was also layed waste by this&#13;
director's hand. Irving Wallace, the author who wrote The&#13;
Seven Minutes has had two other films adapted for&#13;
the screen, The Chapman Report and The Prize.&#13;
He is also a former resident of Kenosha . . . where&#13;
it seems he wrote for the Bradford High&#13;
newspaper and doubled as quite a tennis freak. He&#13;
eventually left for Madison to attend the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, where, if this film is any&#13;
example of his authorship, he could have ex·&#13;
perienced more and imagined less. Albeit, the&#13;
book has appeared on the best seller lists since its&#13;
release in September of 1969. All words spelled&#13;
correctly and the proper writing techniques applied.&#13;
&#13;
The story . . . An ideal New York publisher&#13;
contacts an ideal yoW1g lawyer so that he may&#13;
defend a novel called The Seven Minutes by the&#13;
fictional J. J. Jadway. A small bookstore and its&#13;
owner have been summoned for its sape and our&#13;
hero comes to the rescue.&#13;
An incidental rape is applied to the case as&#13;
t!Vidence by tne state. The young man&#13;
the crime read the book in question sho a~CUst!d ~ he was to have committed the act. T~e Y ~fore&#13;
blamed for psychologically inflaming ;.&#13;
0rk IS&#13;
action. Through the long overdramaliza un&#13;
simple counter and attack that plague th ti~ ~ scenes we can see that_th~ boy is innocent~ co&#13;
already know that he 1s impotent and th t · . his college friends did it. a 011e ~&#13;
The court scenes are tiring and un .&#13;
overplaying simple feats of logic, but th:eah&#13;
that set off the courtroom action are even ~ Superficiality dominates as we see worse&#13;
Corvettes and _'out of sight' clothing load~OO\'t)&#13;
the screen as 1£ for advertising purposes &lt;XI&#13;
The sens~ality. a~ art vs. pornogr~IXl&#13;
pornography issue 1s insulted consistently b ~ 11&#13;
very methods used in t~e film. Quick, cheap t,&#13;
ups of over-mammaned, highly cosmetic&#13;
were shown every two minutes or so as in atte&#13;
!o show. hos "liberal" s~ciety had become ?&#13;
1mpress1on that one received is slightly differ&#13;
Th~ treatment appeare_d much like a Mi&#13;
Sp1ll~ne dream wo~l_d with women subjegated&#13;
plastic clothes awaiting the time when thev wow · be allowed to be undressed and taken. ·&#13;
In the end the book is saved and prognosi for&#13;
the accused boy is good. Yvonne Decarlo is ro&#13;
to be the real author of the book and J. J. Jadlla&#13;
merely a pen name. Everyone lives happier e •&#13;
after.&#13;
Seldom is it that I do not enjoy re\ie\1'"1 a&#13;
film. While many of the pictures I have seen could&#13;
have been improved in ways that are as obvio115&#13;
many other viewers; but there is always reasoo&#13;
enough to sit and watch until the film was finished.&#13;
This film is an example of hypocritical censorship&#13;
of pornography for political ends.&#13;
William So!'e115e1&#13;
~ Jf· The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
~&#13;
PRESEHTS .. . . IN CONCERT&#13;
JOHN DENVER&#13;
'TAKE ME HOME COUNTRY ROADS'&#13;
SAT. OCT. 2 . 8:00 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA TREMPER AUD.&#13;
RES. SEAT TICKETS $3-50&#13;
AVAILABLE:&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
Magus Productions presents&#13;
BLUES NIGHT&#13;
featuring Wed. Sept. 22&#13;
MUDDY WATERS at&#13;
also Case High School FieidhoU&#13;
JOHNNY YOUNG BLUES BAND Racine&#13;
Tickets available at_:&#13;
E h 8:00-12:30&#13;
art Works -Racine&#13;
The Daisy -Kenosha-Racine&#13;
Bidingers-Kenosh~-W aukee$an&#13;
]&amp; J'sT ape Center -Kenosha-Racine-Bulington &#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
If OIYs with the Enemy&#13;
,...: . lIichlrd oudman&#13;
ttP'6. . Liverighl ($5.95).&#13;
~r. ith the Enemy IS one of&#13;
• p.y' w I occasionally pick out&#13;
".. bOQI&lt;sboOk- i'd ordered hadn't&#13;
•..,1&gt; Ule :I • •&#13;
~a-:ved eenie, meeme, ml~~, a&#13;
ttl am . h moment's [ndeciston.&#13;
""r of tc:ntributing, if not the&#13;
"olher f tor was the length of 40&#13;
~ ac 181 pages which proved to&#13;
s a mere&#13;
pay,. k reading.&#13;
qUJ~ urnalism, old journalism as&#13;
,0\11 JO to the new, where words have&#13;
~ definitions, nuance and&#13;
,ho ..ary buried deep beneath the&#13;
""boIl~ the facts, stright dope: no&#13;
fo&lt;Il..g&#13;
concrete writing. And JourlIIIs!U\s&#13;
what 40 Days is all about.&#13;
~.n is writing an extended Tartickle&#13;
~behind the scenes look at riC Y&#13;
~senemy, be tells a 40 day story of&#13;
.. ever lovin A:latIcS, them&#13;
olutionists what the l\;10ngols,&#13;
rtf French, and Americans so&#13;
:C:'left unbeaten. Can't impede&#13;
........ noway. '~d Dudman is the Washington&#13;
... uchief of the St. Louis Dispatch,&#13;
lIlI! two other "internatIOnal Jour-&#13;
~"Hblundered into no man's land&#13;
_ if tb8t term can be borrowed from&#13;
te(jd conventional wars, where battle&#13;
..... were weB-defined, combatants&#13;
_ wore uniforms, and where most&#13;
,..... couldagree on who were friends&#13;
lI!.bo were enemies." The date of the&#13;
tree joUrnalists' capture was May 7,&#13;
IfIl six days after Nixon's an-&#13;
_menl of the Cambodian inBy&#13;
BobBorchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
t1lAH HEEP - "LOOK AT&#13;
YOIJRSELF"&#13;
IItmIry SRM 1 614&#13;
IIIl Hensley - Organ, Piano,&#13;
Gtitar, Accoustical Guitar&#13;
IIId Vocals&#13;
M Box - Lead Guitar, AcI'QIlical&#13;
Guitar&#13;
~ Byron - Lead Vocal&#13;
PIlI Newson - Bass&#13;
IIiIClerk - Druns&#13;
lodIering through John&#13;
Donor'. album last .week wa~&#13;
• aperience somewhat akin&#13;
-cursion.&#13;
At first suspected of being CIA&#13;
ag~nts, the three reporters feared for&#13;
their h~es as they were led blindfolded&#13;
deeper mto the Cambodian junble, after&#13;
40 days tbey were cleared as journalists&#13;
.and sent back to their friends. Between&#13;
day number one and day number forty&#13;
they were given the opportunity to&#13;
Observ~ the "enemy" first hand, liVing&#13;
Sop/ ........ zt. Ii'll PaIrS&#13;
strategy was to bomb the hell out d the&#13;
countrySide. Hai, the North Vietnamese&#13;
revolutionary who was delegated the&#13;
responsibilily for the safety olthe three&#13;
suspected CIA agents, said that the&#13;
Americans go where they want, "We&#13;
just stay out of their way_" They drop&#13;
many bombs and hit oothing, "hen the)'&#13;
do hit something, they are of ....&#13;
peasant houses.&#13;
with tbem, ealing with them, telling&#13;
each other about their pasts and finally&#13;
coming to laugh together.&#13;
And so while we students closed the&#13;
campuses down and Kent State.became&#13;
a symbol of our national confusion&#13;
Dudman and two younger journalis~&#13;
were captives of the "enemy", liVing&#13;
off the land, and keeping their sarongs&#13;
over their heads so as not to aroUse the&#13;
wrath of peasants whose families had&#13;
been torn apart by Nixon's B52's and&#13;
helicopter gunsbips.&#13;
And what was the inside view of the&#13;
Cambodian incursion? It basically&#13;
consists of fleeing the B52s, the gunships,&#13;
watcbing the flares reflecting off&#13;
rice paddies at night, listening for reCOD&#13;
planes, and passing many boring hours&#13;
by exercising, playing chess with a&#13;
hand made set and answering interrogators'&#13;
questionsj what are you&#13;
doing here, who are you. The American&#13;
album, that's exactly what tbey&#13;
do.&#13;
Heep's sound is built basically&#13;
. around the simultaneous guitar&#13;
work of Mick Box and !Cen&#13;
Hensely, wbo if they badn't&#13;
before, have proven their worth&#13;
on both electric and sensitive&#13;
accoustic guitar. They combine&#13;
to lay a concrete background,&#13;
perfectly setting up anything&#13;
that leaves the melody for a ride&#13;
of its own, while whoever it is or&#13;
the moog takes some very interesting&#13;
~rips. He seems to be&#13;
able to use it as an instrument&#13;
The point is made that Nixon's claim&#13;
that Lon 'ol's government \loa&#13;
popularly supported is a lie. Who fed&#13;
the guerillas, the people: who sheltered&#13;
them, the people; "ho paId for the food,&#13;
the guerillas. Dodman makes one thing&#13;
perfectly clear; the guerillas are the&#13;
people's chosen aIl,es, and that unltke&#13;
the ARVN the guerillas are careful oot&#13;
to alienate the pesants.&#13;
Another ioteresting poinlbroughl out&#13;
in the book is the Viet Gong aod ,-orth&#13;
Vietnamese personal opinion that the&#13;
Cambodian Liberation Front could 001&#13;
have put up any kind of battle agalDSl&#13;
the Americans and the AR\'N with thelr&#13;
help. Hai sllys thai the Cambodians&#13;
have not been lighting for 25 years, they&#13;
have much to learn. One of the lIungs&#13;
they must learn, according to Hal,&#13;
the fact that there are good and bad&#13;
Americans, and lbat the American&#13;
government is not the same as the&#13;
Amenan people On the finl day of&#13;
thetr aptiVlly the JOumali to' apton&#13;
had to sa" e lbtm from purnw&#13;
'meBed to death by a!Cry cambodian&#13;
peasants who sur,,,ed the B52 r cis&#13;
Dudman "as trnpr ed by&#13;
guerilla d ree of cernmnm&#13;
their respect for their aU.&#13;
pelbants II" l!leir country&#13;
ere flghling for lhe AR •&#13;
ran ack d Cambod an boo&#13;
guerillas paId for the r pli&#13;
respeered the pma yof lhelf h&#13;
The lory of th r captor captl, tty&#13;
and e\ ent ua I me r &lt;Is much Ii&#13;
Iicuoo. thll~S "or out rl U)- and&#13;
the human capaCl'y for com on.&#13;
understanding and Crlendsl'llp "'. sho,.,. to be shanod t'qually among&#13;
aptor and apt"e alike E ry1lod)&#13;
a good guy It' th od5Ollltday ""'III&#13;
meet again under dlff~n1 ha pler'&#13;
Clf'OJms~nces roulln&#13;
.... Da) 'MIlch lh~ f:nem) ..an In-&#13;
...... ting bit of)OUnUl m, II by no&#13;
meam. preotenIJow. 10 • nor ~t&#13;
c:realJve Dudm-an is no .1 tl or&#13;
Wolfe he IS 52 un old, I ear&#13;
JOUrnall l "ho f"lally got the P h&#13;
was wa11Jng for Th \-an n&#13;
di\"lduals In\'oh:ed are ad qUill I)&#13;
rsonahzed I h l!lelr .dI •".&#13;
eraci . the "plot' c 01&gt; nawrally&#13;
and aU 10 all ould mak good m t for&#13;
a no,e1 Perhapo "'hat mll5t d P'&#13;
pomtmgabout I boc*: or rather ~ at&#13;
Iea,e. one unaffected, I&gt; lhe f&#13;
that thl&gt; .xaclly h t '" e&#13;
Keep the ",on! enemy In qu&#13;
au:rLt-)' r lhto 8 ,. rl. f.:! ..&#13;
tree{. I\.env ha.&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWN"f.QWN KENOSHA&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Get Together&#13;
Save4~&#13;
on Kosmetics&#13;
Exciting and&#13;
Glamorus&#13;
516 \lollulllt'llt quar&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Poor Boy BOOTS&#13;
5i••• 711-12&#13;
Poloton and Mushroom&#13;
Bulled Suck, olural&#13;
Crepe oUI-sol.&#13;
Career opportunity&#13;
Unlimited earning&#13;
potential&#13;
Flexible working&#13;
schedule&#13;
MEETING&#13;
thursday sept 23&#13;
room 110 gre.nquilt&#13;
lo_am-tPm&#13;
contact Mr. Teub.rt It&#13;
stud.nt emplOyment&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Interplanetary&#13;
Inc.&#13;
'Kosmetics for.&#13;
communities&#13;
of the future'&#13;
Musie Committee presents&#13;
CHARLIE MU.§§ELWHITE&#13;
BLUES BAND&#13;
also appearing Spri1rgbackJames&#13;
SEPTEMBER 22 1:30 PM&#13;
WM UNICN BALLROOM&#13;
Tickenlillie SfUdent Alhirs oftu:e, plln Hall&#13;
- daoo1ng a quart of maple and not a novelty. David Byron&#13;
~. Since modern medicine on vocals is stylistically&#13;
'" to devise the mental predictabie, adopting a choppy&#13;
~rt of the stomach Bee Gee's vibrato, but that can&#13;
~Ille is left to his own be overlooked for its overall&#13;
;;;;;:" to alleviate the at- effect. He's in tune, in time, and&#13;
'II . Fortunately the cure adequately covers the spect:~m&#13;
-....,hund in a double-shot of from all out hollers to sensitive&#13;
iii;""'bylabeled Mercury SRM ballads. Newton (bass) and&#13;
.... the makers of Uriah Clark (drums) do nothing to&#13;
.... gUarant,.d to remedy the stand out, but quite a few people&#13;
~ and physical distress will argue that it's preCIsely thiS&#13;
Sebb ,ton by too much Denver characteristic that marks a&#13;
Ieid ~nl or Teresa Brewer: good rhythm section. .&#13;
I,"lthout prescription. Dissecting the album song by&#13;
'- IS &amp;ratified in more ways song wouldn't serve much&#13;
'Uor~e to ,hear, Heep's latest purpose, since they're all good&#13;
~. Whlie It might be and all basically the same;, But&#13;
IIbo IZing to say that one the high point has to be One&#13;
~ro~es a trend, it July Morning", the one tun~&#13;
DlO&lt;!Jess '"stills bope in tbe the group' seems to really credit&#13;
~ ate future of rock on the liner notes. If they woul?&#13;
lbono,; g. In a time of sac- bave shaved a bit off the end It&#13;
~phOnIes, the record is would have been improved, but&#13;
"" h bul prelentious. In it still is a credit to the gro.up&#13;
lilt. thonest Simplicity they botb as writers and lOW&#13;
bow • Complicated problem strumentalists. . I&#13;
lIod to write and perform All in all, Uriah Heep ;.'I&#13;
s&#13;
'iIh ~USIC. Utilizing charts remind you happily of the Y&#13;
~I,~he notes of tbe "in- hefore the onslought of the ham&#13;
It Put glro,ups,they are free groups a time when four or hve&#13;
~. . Wlce as much 'at the very least, ~"'neted men, ld t IIid lor I energy behind it adequately amplified, cOO ge&#13;
he entire stretch of the u on sta e and raise helL 1&#13;
Two Bands F~r The Price Of One(plus a ~) Sept. 25th&#13;
52S&#13;
(eDaeap)&#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
40 Days with the Enemy&#13;
~ : . Richard Dudman&#13;
of . Liveright ($5.95).&#13;
,-bJlSher, 'th the Enemy 1s one of&#13;
It oays w\ occasionally pick out&#13;
t,o0kS bo&lt;&gt;'·~ i'd ordered hadn't ,.,p the "" . . """.ved eenie, meeru~, m1~~' a t arri , h moment's mdec1s1on .&#13;
r of t :ntributing, if not the&#13;
A other r~ctor was the length of 40&#13;
181 pages which proved to&#13;
a mere&#13;
Y • k reading.&#13;
q111: urnalism, old journalism as&#13;
AA JO to the new, where words have&#13;
,ed definitions, nuance and uon_a ry buried deep beneath the&#13;
~ 1&#13;
: the facts, stright dope! no&#13;
, -~ concrete writing. And Jour-&#13;
'. what 4o Days is all about. · IS ed til . 5 writing an extend ar c e&#13;
~ ~nd the scenes look at Tricky&#13;
, enemy, he tells a ~o ~ay story of&#13;
ever lovin A~iatlcs, them&#13;
olutionists what the ~ongols,&#13;
If' ese French, and Americans so&#13;
i'3-\1y 'left unbeaten. Can't impede&#13;
55 no way.&#13;
Ri(hard Dudman is the Washington&#13;
u chief of the St. Loui~ Disp~tch,&#13;
and two other "international Jour-&#13;
" "blundered into no man's land&#13;
_ that term can be borrowed from&#13;
old conventional wars, where battle&#13;
were well-defined, combatants&#13;
'v wore uniforms, and where most&#13;
· could agree on who were friends&#13;
ho were enemies." The date of the&#13;
JOurnalists' capture was May 7,&#13;
ix days after Nixon's anment&#13;
of the Cambodian in-&#13;
-cursion.&#13;
At first suspected of being CIA&#13;
ag~n~, the three reporters feared for&#13;
their h~es as they were led blindfolded&#13;
deeper into the Cambodian junble after&#13;
40 days they were cleared as jour~alists&#13;
.and sent back to their friends. Between&#13;
day number one and day number forty&#13;
they were given the opportunity to&#13;
observe the "enemy" first hand, living&#13;
with them, eating with them, telling&#13;
each other about their pasts and finally&#13;
coming to laugh together .&#13;
And so while we students closed the&#13;
campuses down and Kent State.became&#13;
a symbol of our national confusion&#13;
Dudman and two younger journalis~&#13;
were captives of the "enemy", living&#13;
off the land, and keeping their sarongs&#13;
over their heads so as not to arouse the&#13;
wrath of peasants whose families had&#13;
been torn apart by Nixon's B52's and&#13;
helicopter gunships.&#13;
And what was the inside view of the&#13;
Cambodian incursion? It basically&#13;
consists of fleeing the B52s, the gunships,&#13;
watching the flares reflecting off&#13;
rice paddies at night, listening for recon&#13;
planes, and passing many boring hours&#13;
by exercising, playing chess with a&#13;
hand made set and answering interrogators'&#13;
questions; what are you&#13;
doing here, who are you. The American&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
album, that's exactly what they&#13;
do.&#13;
Heep's sound is built basically l 1\11 HEEP - "LOOK AT&#13;
Yorn ELF"&#13;
ury SRM 1 614&#13;
Hensley - Organ, Piano,&#13;
G tar, Accoustical Guitar&#13;
and Vocals&#13;
. around the simultaneous guitar&#13;
work of Mick Box and l:{en&#13;
Hensely, who if they hadn_' t&#13;
before, have proven their worth&#13;
on both electric and sensitive&#13;
accoustic guitar. They combine&#13;
to lay a concrete background,&#13;
perfectly setting up anything&#13;
that leaves the melody for a ride&#13;
of its own, while whoever it is or&#13;
the moog takes some very interesting&#13;
trips. He seems to be&#13;
able to use it as an instrument&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes&#13;
Box - Lead Guitar, Actical&#13;
Guitar&#13;
vid Byron - Lead Vocal&#13;
Pl Newson - Bass&#13;
Clark - Druns&#13;
ering through John&#13;
~ r's albwn last week was&#13;
experience some:.Vhat aki~&#13;
'- downing a quart of maple&#13;
· Since modern medicine&#13;
Yet to devise the mental&#13;
lerpart of the stomach , one is left to his own&#13;
ces to alleviate the af.&#13;
te. Fortunately the cure&#13;
found in a double-shot of&#13;
1 e labeled Mercury SRM&#13;
4 by the makers of Uriah&#13;
' guarant:!ed to remedy the&#13;
lal and physical distress&#13;
ti I on by too much Denver,&#13;
v.·an. or Teresa Brewer. 1thoul prescription.&#13;
gratified in rnore ways&#13;
for~e lo _hear Heep's latest&#13;
~-~hile it might be&#13;
tung to say that one&#13;
Ill Proves a trend it&#13;
llledeless instills hope~ the&#13;
~ate future of rock&#13;
· g. In a time of sac-&#13;
. phonies, the record is&#13;
~ but ~retentious. In e lh onest simplicity they&#13;
e complicated problem lo w ·t . n e and perform rnus1c ut·1· . hau ' l 1z1ng charts&#13;
lual}he notes of the "inPut&#13;
gr~ps, they are free&#13;
tr- twice as much ~ ror '~led energy behind it&#13;
he entire stretch of the&#13;
and not a novelty. David Byron&#13;
on vocals is stylistically&#13;
predictable, adopting a choppy&#13;
Bee Gee's vibrato, but that can&#13;
be overlooked for its overall&#13;
effect. He's in tune, in time, and&#13;
adequately covers the spec~~m&#13;
from all out hollers to sensitive&#13;
ballads. Newton (bass) and&#13;
Clark ( drums) do nothing to&#13;
stand out, but quite a fe_w peop~e&#13;
will argue that it's precisely this&#13;
characteristic that marks a&#13;
good rhythm section. .&#13;
Dissecting the album song by&#13;
song wouldn't serve much&#13;
purpose, since they're all good&#13;
and all basically the same;, But&#13;
the high point has to be One&#13;
July Morning" ' the one tune&#13;
the group· seems to really credit&#13;
on the liner notes. If they wot-~&#13;
have shaved a bit off the en I&#13;
would have been improved, but&#13;
it still is a credit to the gr~up&#13;
both as writers and instrumentalists.&#13;
ill&#13;
All in all, Uriah Heep w s&#13;
remind you happily of the day&#13;
before the onslaught of the h~m&#13;
groups a time when four or five , at the very least,&#13;
:a~~ately amplified, could get&#13;
u on sta e and raise hell.&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
D Ol'iNT-OWN KENOSHA&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Get Together&#13;
Save 4&lt;1'/o&#13;
on Kosmetics&#13;
Exciting and&#13;
G/amoros&#13;
Career opportunity&#13;
Un/imitrd eanzing&#13;
potential&#13;
Flexible working&#13;
schedule&#13;
MEETING&#13;
thursday sept 23&#13;
room 110 greenquist&#13;
1 o-am-apm&#13;
contact M'· Teubert at&#13;
student employment&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Interplanetary&#13;
Inc.&#13;
'Kosmetics for .&#13;
communities&#13;
of the future'&#13;
Poor oy&#13;
SitH 1 •l2 Polo an and&#13;
Bu f d Bue&#13;
Crep ou -,o&#13;
Music Committee pr&#13;
CHARLI&#13;
LUE&#13;
(c&#13;
A&#13;
al o appearing 1Jringba&#13;
SEPTEMBER 22 7:3&#13;
WM UNION ALL&#13;
Of&#13;
Jam&#13;
A rs Ofti ce rail ent H I&#13;
Two Bands For The Price Of One(plus a ¼) Sept. 25th &#13;
Pale&amp; NEWSCOPE Seplember 20,1971&#13;
I I&#13;
All John Denver Albums&#13;
list price SS.98&#13;
our price S4.97&#13;
Available at&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE&#13;
ADVERTISERS&#13;
the&#13;
roommate&#13;
that turns&#13;
you on.&#13;
Simulated TV Picture&#13;
Slim-aod-trim Portable TV-model 5003. Photosharp&#13;
9" diagonal measure pictures. Great extra-value&#13;
leatures. Like up-front secondary controls, pre-set VH F&#13;
fine tUning. jack for optional earphone. Even a removable&#13;
sun shield lorglare-Iree viewing in brightly lighted&#13;
or sun-filled rooms. Telescoping antenna and carrying&#13;
handle give true portability. It's just one 01 many in the&#13;
Magnavox line of value-packed roommates-for home&#13;
or away. Component systems and S89&#13;
accessories.radios. tape recorder~ / 95&#13;
players. portable TV and stereo.&#13;
lWIagnav"o~&#13;
Joerndt &amp; Ventura Inc.&#13;
Downtown 'Kenosha 654·3559&#13;
thus far.&#13;
"He gives us maturity and I&#13;
Lawson said. "It's more leadership ~ ..&#13;
now but later on he'll be more vOC8\ ,&#13;
"The guys on the team respect hbn&#13;
for what he's done but also for the lJ"rsoa'*- 00Ij&#13;
What he's done is nothing short of . be il&#13;
His best for 5,000 meters is 14:10.2, "'IUal~\lreooiv,&#13;
mile in the mid 13:30~and on a par With • u...&#13;
notch collegIans. His 29:55.6 for 10000IIlost ~&#13;
came in the Asian Games and ranks hun ~&#13;
NAIA's best at that distance. And aU tha'Oilblllo&#13;
while running barefoot. t be did&#13;
But the marathon is to he his&#13;
although he's never run the 26 D1ileev:- IIId&#13;
grind, Rosa is confident. I ~&#13;
. "I'm here to prepare for the 01 '"&#13;
said. "1 think Coach Lawson can help~ _&#13;
for the marathon. I'm just trying todom.~&#13;
him." ,-.,&#13;
Rosa Paces Harriers&#13;
----....., Soccer Team Inexperienc&#13;
The Ranger's soccer game&#13;
scheduled for last Saturday was&#13;
cancelled, but Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny was not too disappointed&#13;
because four of his&#13;
players were injured.&#13;
The first game now wili be&#13;
Saturday at home against the&#13;
Wisconsin Junior All Stars, a&#13;
team which should prove quite&#13;
(ormidable.&#13;
I\l~wscope talked to Martiny&#13;
at a practice session and asked&#13;
him how practices have been so&#13;
far: "They have been good&#13;
except that there have been so&#13;
many injuries," he said.&#13;
Martiny also expressed the&#13;
Special buttons ad~ilting persons to the Oct. 6-9 ~&#13;
celebration at Parkside· are now on sale for $.50at the O8IlIaa AtWetics and through the sponsoring German ~~uba~ VlIIIIl7 •&#13;
The bultons, which are similar to the smile ~&#13;
sweeping the nation, wili admit the bearers (or wear::1iII.&#13;
toberfest activities, which include a German style wiD .. 1t&#13;
rugby match, soccer games and other events. The buttllDS ....&#13;
good for $.50 off the $1.50admission to the Saturday mght.....&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
, .d oss country prospects&#13;
IfWisconsin-parksl. e cr what one runner has&#13;
are charted on the baSIS 0 oin to be big winners&#13;
done, then tbe Rangers adreg m ~ili start to unfold&#13;
and the j-aallzation of a rea&#13;
for Lucian Ro~a. h been the number one&#13;
Ceylon native Rosa as k Is thus far and&#13;
gh all UW-P wor ou . k man throu 'letting up on the qurc&#13;
shows no sign that hh~11 ::e team leader in his first&#13;
pacethathasmade irn&#13;
season. di . utive distance phenom, a&#13;
And for the mm. d with competition -&#13;
dream that he hO':at~ ~~ the marathon at the&#13;
and posSibly a m t year might just be&#13;
Munich OlympICS nex&#13;
beginning'&#13;
thl uc director Tom Rosandich and&#13;
But a e I h Bob Lawson knew&#13;
track and crOSScountry ~oac t December when&#13;
all these things were possible las . . lng Rosaexpressed interest in parksld~ :;;e~::r~ Asian Games titles at 5,000 and 1 , ch bout ibe&#13;
"We talked with him and his C08k&#13;
'&#13;
d&#13;
a Lawson&#13;
. ilit f coming to Par SI e, possibi 1 Y 0 d th gh on it when we got&#13;
recalled. "Tom followe r~~&#13;
back and nOWRosa's here. . Rosa&#13;
The Ceylonese were anxious to have. f&#13;
attend school in the United States to tram. 0:&#13;
Munich, but Rosa, a b.usiness ~~n:~e:oe~~ ~~~Ot~&#13;
is here for the educatIOn as we a .&#13;
return to business in Ceylon when his college days&#13;
are done. hi nd what&#13;
But the big thing going for im, a&#13;
. ts trai Ing and both brought him to Parkside, IS rami, .,&#13;
Rosa and the University seem to be benefIttmg&#13;
famous&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - ,12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
_ RIBS _ SPAGHOTI - CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI _ RAViOLI - LA SAGNA&#13;
_SEA FOOD - SANDWICHES&#13;
CARlY -OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU IUHG ... WE BRING"&#13;
657·9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
And his best may be good enough10...&#13;
anything he runs in, Lawson said, allhoup..&#13;
cedin,g that hili running may causesome~&#13;
for Rosa. --&#13;
"He's never run cross country before&#13;
never run on hills," Lawson pointed 0Il~-&#13;
small (5-6, 101 lbs.) and needs a lot .............&#13;
strength." •&#13;
One thing he doesn't need work 00 ia '"-&#13;
ship .. He's found plenty of that, esJM!CiaIIJ"-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Joanis of Kl!IIOIba,&#13;
. have taken him into their home for his time:&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
need for conditioolng1DlI1II&#13;
practices so far havesened&#13;
help in this vital area.&#13;
In previeWing the IIpIlllIIioa&#13;
season Martiny predieta •&#13;
miracles. "This is II ..&#13;
perienced team IryiDg to .-&#13;
experience," he said.&#13;
Martiny termed the ....&#13;
very tough Withauch .&#13;
UW-Green Bay, OhIo ...&#13;
Notre Dame and Quiaq II II&#13;
faced. On October I VI&#13;
Madison will be played ...&#13;
In looking at the IIdIIdaII&#13;
appears that much 01tile •&#13;
perienee that thele8mIO"'"&#13;
needs will be gaIneII _&#13;
defeats.&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
Recycle this Paper&#13;
-&#13;
are you offended by nudltr'&#13;
if not, stop in.&#13;
Complete selection&#13;
dise of con~emporary adult mercbafl&#13;
SPEf'AL&#13;
The Adult. Bookstore jne&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Rae ~&#13;
15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D._&#13;
r ge ~E\\' OPE eptember .o. 1971&#13;
I I&#13;
All John Denver Albums&#13;
list price ss. 98&#13;
our price s4_ 97&#13;
Available at&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE&#13;
ADVERTISERS&#13;
the&#13;
roommate&#13;
that turns&#13;
you on.&#13;
S,mulared TV P,crure&#13;
Slim-and-trim Portable TV-model 5003. Photoharp&#13;
9• diagonal measure pictures. Great extra-value&#13;
f atures. Li e up-front secondary controls, pre-set VHF&#13;
fine tuning, jack for optional earphone. Even a removable&#13;
sun shield for glare-free viewing in brightly lighted&#13;
or sun-filled rooms. Telescoping antenna and carrying&#13;
handle give true portability. It's just one of many in the&#13;
Magnavox hne of value-packed roommates-for home&#13;
or away. Component systems and S8995&#13;
accessories. radios, tape recorders/&#13;
players, portable TV and stereo.&#13;
M e1gnc:l'-'c»~&#13;
Joerndt &amp; Ventura Inc.&#13;
Downtown ·Kenosha 654-3559&#13;
Rosa Paces Harriers . d s country prospects lfWisconsin-Parksi_ ecr:hat one runner has&#13;
are charted on the basis o oin to be big winners&#13;
done, then t~ ~ngerfs a~\~m !m start to unfold&#13;
and the reahzation o a r&#13;
for Lucian Ro~a. h been the number one Ceylon native Rosap as kouts thus far and&#13;
man through all ~- w;:tting up on the quick&#13;
shows no sign that hh~ 11 ~~ team leader in his first&#13;
'pace that has made im&#13;
season. th di ·nutive distance phenom, a And for e mi . end with competition -&#13;
dream th:3t he ho~alwill in the marathon at the&#13;
and possibly a ~ t year might just be&#13;
Munich Olympics nex&#13;
beginning.th} tic director Tom Rosandich and&#13;
But a e coach Bob Lawson knew&#13;
track and ~ross country sible last December when&#13;
all these thmgs ~ere P~. Parkside after winning&#13;
Rosa expressed mteres m O 000 meters&#13;
Asian Games titles at 5,000 an? 1 ' h about the&#13;
"We talked with him and his coac . p ksi·de Lawson ·bTt of commg to ar '&#13;
poss11led1 ir'Tom followed through on it when we got reca . ,, back and now Rosa's here. R&#13;
The Ceylonese were anxious to have. fa&#13;
attend school in the United States to tram . or&#13;
Munich but Rosa, a business mana~em~~ f:~of~&#13;
is here for the education as well an_ wo i&#13;
return to business in Ceylon when his college days&#13;
are done. h. d what But the big thing going for . ~m, an&#13;
brought him to Parkside, is trammg, and. 1&gt;?th&#13;
Rosa and the University seem to be beneflttmg&#13;
thus far .&#13;
"He gives us maturity and 1&#13;
Lawson said. "It's more leadership ~del'Ship ~&#13;
now but later on he'll be more vocal exa.n: '&#13;
"The guys on the team respect hi&#13;
for what he's done but also for the pe~ not )&#13;
What he's done is nothing short of. n he . His b~st for 5,~ meters is 14: 10.2, equ~~~ · mile m the mid 13: 30s and on a par With a&#13;
notch collegians. His 29:55.6 for 10 000 m~t ltf. came in the Asian Games and ranks hi I;!&#13;
NAIA's best at that distance. And all : With&#13;
while running barefoot. . at he&#13;
But the marathon is to be his eve&#13;
although he's never run the 26 mile ::· grind, Rosa is confident. ' )&#13;
"I'm here to prepare for the Olym .&#13;
said. "I think Coach Lawsoa can help m~lC&amp;,"&#13;
for the marathon. I'm just trying to do my~&#13;
hi m. " -&#13;
And his best may be good enough to ,&#13;
anything he runs in, Lawson said alth~&#13;
ceding that hill running may cause ~ome obi&#13;
for Rosa. pr&#13;
"He's never run cross country before nd&#13;
never run on hills," Lawson pointed oo.ta ..&#13;
small (5-6, 101 lbs.) and needs a lot of ~onllt&#13;
strength."&#13;
One thing he doesn't need work on is In&#13;
ship. He's found plenty of that, especially&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Joanis of Kenosha,&#13;
have taken him into their home for his time&#13;
~~~tQl&lt;f·Soccer Team Inexperience~&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S P_IZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHO,TI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARILY-OUTS - DELIVERY "YOU RING ... WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The Ranger's soccer game&#13;
scheduled for last Saturday was&#13;
cancelled, but Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny was not too disappointed&#13;
because four of his&#13;
players were injured.&#13;
The first game now will be&#13;
Saturday at home against the&#13;
Wisconsin Junior All Stars, a&#13;
team which should prove quite&#13;
formidable.&#13;
J'\jewscope talked to Martiny&#13;
at a practice session and asked&#13;
him how practices have been so&#13;
far: "They have been good&#13;
except that there have been so&#13;
many injuries," he said.&#13;
Martiny also expressed the&#13;
need for conditioning and&#13;
practices so far have sened&#13;
help in this vital area&#13;
In previewing the u&#13;
season Martiny predicts&#13;
miracles. "This is an&#13;
perienced team trying to&#13;
experience," he said.&#13;
Martiny termed the sch&#13;
very tough with such scoools&#13;
UW-Green Bay, Ohio la&#13;
Notre Dame and Quincy to&#13;
faced. On October 2 I:&#13;
Madison will be played also&#13;
In looking at the schedule&#13;
appears that much of the ei&#13;
perience that the teamso\t&#13;
needs will be gained&#13;
defeats.&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
Special buttons ad~itting persons to the Oct. 8-9 October! i&#13;
celebration at Parkside-are now on sale for $.50 at the Offi&#13;
_Athletics and through the sponsoring German ~!ub _a~~ Varstt)&#13;
The buttons, which are similar to the smile butt~&#13;
sweeping the nation, will admit the bearers (or wearers) to&#13;
toberfest activities which include a German style cele~&#13;
rugby match socce~ games and other events. The buttons \I a&#13;
good for $.50 ~ff the $1.50 admission to the Saturday night danceai&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Recycle this Paper&#13;
are you offended by nudity'I&#13;
ii not, stop in.&#13;
di Complete selection of con~emporary adult merchan&#13;
SPECIAL 15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore . Racu1e 406 Main Street Downtown &#13;
-&#13;
r&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
Meets&#13;
Parkside's Hockey Club&#13;
begins practice at 10: 15 p&#13;
~esday at Wilson park-%&#13;
MIlwaukee. All students&#13;
invited to attend practice&#13;
contact !om Krimmel at 552.&#13;
=~&#13;
8634 or VIC Godfrey at 553-2310 if&#13;
mter~ted in joining.&#13;
ThIrty-five students have&#13;
alre~dy joined the club and are&#13;
lookmg forward to the first&#13;
game N.ov. 6 against Harper&#13;
College In Joliet, Ill. The first&#13;
home game is slated for Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 14, against&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
All home games are played at&#13;
WIlson Park, 4001 S. 20th St&#13;
Milwaukee.'&#13;
Ocloberfest Golf Tourna ment Pia nned&#13;
I....and golf, normally _I 01 as sports for the&#13;
. e have found their&#13;
~p~kside in this fall's&#13;
~"I activities.&#13;
!IJl1I3!1lentswill be held&#13;
..., u"se days in each sport&#13;
II' ~CIIlty,staff and students,&#13;
.. men and women.&#13;
A studenttennis tournam~nt&#13;
be held at the Pershing&#13;
rwt courts in Racine Friday,&#13;
Iktllrom 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
II'ltUdents.&#13;
I faculty·sUlff tournament&#13;
foUowduring the same time&#13;
I""'! Saturday. Only singles&#13;
IIpannedbut doubles will be&#13;
)llyol d time permits. Contact&#13;
b£i Freeka in Racme or VIC&#13;
Godfreyat the Office of.&#13;
lIIIotics, phone 553-2310, for&#13;
--lr&gt;lflooroament will be held&#13;
ana that week. Eighteen&#13;
.... are to be played at the&#13;
Pllrilying Springs Course&#13;
IIIInon Friday, Oct. 1, and&#13;
rnday, Oct. 8. Scores must be&#13;
.m to by a partner and&#13;
InId 10 by 4 p.m. Friday.&#13;
Golfers must sign up for&#13;
flights before playing. The&#13;
flights are "A", for male&#13;
students under 99; "B", for&#13;
male students over 90; "C", for&#13;
female students; "D", for&#13;
faculty-staff men under 90;&#13;
"E", for faculty-staff men over&#13;
90; "F", for faculty-staff&#13;
women. Contact Vic Godfrey or&#13;
Steve Stephens at Athletics for&#13;
details.&#13;
Other intramural activities&#13;
include archery competition on&#13;
Friday and a sailing regatta&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The Parkside Rugby Club will&#13;
play Lincoln Park at 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 26. Lincoln Park&#13;
started rugby in 1969 as a&#13;
member of the Mid-American&#13;
Rugby Football Union.&#13;
All those interested in joining&#13;
the Parkside club contact Vic&#13;
Godfrey at 553-2310 or assembie&#13;
at the athletics fleld at 4:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday or&#13;
Thursday or 2 p.m. Sunday. The&#13;
team will play the Milwaukee&#13;
Rugby Club at 1 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
Oct. 9.&#13;
------ schedule _•••• -&#13;
ldabafest golf tournament&#13;
F.. men and women&#13;
hculty, staff, students&#13;
\I holes to be played at&#13;
Petn!ymgSpringsfrom Friday,&#13;
I. through Friday, Oct. 8.&#13;
IlIdine£orreporting scores is&#13;
Fnday, Oct. 8, at 4 p.m. Scores&#13;
:- be attested to by a part-&#13;
~ Sign'up in advance in-&#13;
~ night. Call Vic Godfrey&#13;
at 553-2310 for more information.&#13;
Flights:&#13;
A - male students under 90&#13;
B - male students over 90&#13;
C - female students&#13;
D _ faculty-staff men under&#13;
90&#13;
E _ faculty-staff men over 90&#13;
F - faculty-staff women&#13;
Turn scorecards in by 4 p.m.&#13;
frid.ay! ! ! !&#13;
.",pl&#13;
Remember&#13;
Octoberfest&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658·3131&#13;
LIQUOR' STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Hill Kruel1er's&#13;
Jlowers&#13;
3113 WASHINGTON AVENUE:&#13;
R....CINE. WISCONSIN 5'.05&#13;
...-1 NEED HELPIII&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TillE&#13;
525 GUIUI.d Itl ... ry 100 .... 1.'"&#13;
y.. stl«&#13;
All ,"taC' 'I.,a,~&#13;
S"~sIam,d, SlIf_"~lessd IInl.,.&#13;
pllS 51 f.1 IIclstnllll ud ba ~-&#13;
linc I.&#13;
AllEN KING CORPORATIO&#13;
P.O, BOX &amp;525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212&#13;
~e\\O&#13;
w~would lik. 1o&#13;
invit you to see ~TH:~~~1&#13;
1 Pants I&#13;
I P I&#13;
I anly I&#13;
I H I&#13;
lose I&#13;
IR'fSI99 I&#13;
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I I I s .tI ...&#13;
I oil t •• 0 .p ,&#13;
IL liP ...... '&#13;
IE' 9-16 - I I&#13;
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w....&#13;
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5,,-+.. ,. J,""l'&#13;
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All 11tm~ Sublecl 10' Per &lt;:en Sol.. Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - S.AVE&#13;
Ii"&#13;
ijctoberfest Golf Tournament Pia nned&#13;
. and golf, normally&#13;
t of as sports for the&#13;
e have found their&#13;
at p~kside in this fall's&#13;
est activities.&#13;
tllfllaments will be held&#13;
tl~se days in each sport&#13;
tr farulty, staff and students,&#13;
men and women.&#13;
udenl tennis tournament&#13;
be held at the Pershing&#13;
coorts in Racine Friday,&#13;
a,from9a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
ents.&#13;
faculty-staff tournament&#13;
Uow during the same time&#13;
Saturday. Only singles&#13;
panned but doubles will be&#13;
if time permits. Contact&#13;
· Frecka in Racine or Vic&#13;
rey at the Office of .&#13;
, phone 553-2310, for&#13;
If tournament will be held&#13;
that week. Eighteen&#13;
are to be played at the&#13;
1f)'lng Springs Course&#13;
n Friday, Oct. 1, and&#13;
y, Oct. 8. Scores must be&#13;
ed to by a partner and&#13;
m by 4 p.m. Friday.&#13;
Golfers must sign up for&#13;
flights before playing. The&#13;
flights are "A", for male&#13;
students under 99; "B", for&#13;
male students over 90; "C", for&#13;
female students; "D", for&#13;
faculty-staff men under 90;&#13;
"E", for faculty-staff men over&#13;
90; "F", for faculty-staff&#13;
women. Contact Vic Godfrey or&#13;
Steve Stephens at Athletics for&#13;
details.&#13;
Other intramural activities&#13;
include archery competition on&#13;
Friday and a sailing regatta&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The Parkside Rugby Club will&#13;
play Lincoln Park at 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 26. Lincoln Park&#13;
started rugby in 1969 as a&#13;
member of the Mid-American&#13;
Rugby Football Union.&#13;
All those interested in joining&#13;
the Parkside club contact Vic&#13;
Godfrey at 553-2310 or assemble&#13;
at the athletics field at 4: 30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday or&#13;
Thursday or 2 p.m. Sunday. The&#13;
team will play the Milwaukee&#13;
Rugby Club at 1 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
Oct. 9.&#13;
•••••• schedule -····&#13;
est golf tournament&#13;
men and women&#13;
It,. staff, students&#13;
hole· to be played at&#13;
U)mgSprings from Friday,&#13;
1, through Friday, Oct. s. ne for reporting scores is&#13;
'1, Oct. 8, at 4 p.m. Scores&#13;
be attested to by a part-&#13;
\ ·ign up in advance inflight.&#13;
Call Vic Godfrey&#13;
at 553-2310 for more information.&#13;
&#13;
Flights:&#13;
A - male students under 90&#13;
B - male students over 90&#13;
C - female students&#13;
D - faculty-staff men under&#13;
90&#13;
E - faculty-staff men over 90&#13;
F - faculty-staff women&#13;
Turn scorecards in by 4 p.m.&#13;
Frid_ay! ! ! !&#13;
r&#13;
1 CW SC OPE rre~._11ts&#13;
TWO BANDS&#13;
I&#13;
'(---&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
Meets&#13;
P~rkside's Hockey Club&#13;
begins practice at 10: 15 p.m.&#13;
~~day at Wilson Park in&#13;
. I _waukee. All students are&#13;
invited to attend practice and&#13;
contact !om Krimmel at 552.&#13;
~ 4 or Vic ~odfrey at 553-2310 if&#13;
inter~ted in joining.&#13;
Thirty-five students ha&#13;
alre~dy joined the club and a~&#13;
looking forward to the fir&#13;
game N_ov. 6 against Harper&#13;
College m Joliet, Ill. Tbe firs&#13;
home game is lated for unday,&#13;
Nov. 14, again t&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
All home games are plaved at&#13;
Wilson Park 4001 s 20th 1&#13;
Milwaukee. ' '&#13;
, I 11&#13;
Remember&#13;
October e&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658·3131&#13;
LIQUOR° STORE, SAR, DI I G OOM&#13;
Rill Krueger's&#13;
1/owcrs&#13;
3113 WASHINGTON AVE VE&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN !1340&#13;
PHON~· 637-94591&#13;
s "'"'t,.. ,,. Jo. 1,&#13;
S&lt;f+i:f"Y\hU 25-&#13;
B~ -1M&lt;&#13;
"'+ 0t~~ -~ct- tlJ,-&#13;
p_ riJ ~ W:s,J: D's r"tj•&#13;
.---1&#13;
SERVE YOU&#13;
ROYAL RI 0&#13;
QUA ER S A E&#13;
PE ZOil&#13;
AFSCO .0.&#13;
ED&#13;
Fl&#13;
LS&#13;
Q . ,0 . JO I&#13;
PER A E T TYPE A fl.FREEZE S1&#13;
12oz. HEAVY DUTY BRA E FLUID&#13;
d carry Prices on&#13;
Air FIi rs, T e I ,,&#13;
A 11 J Sub K 0~ Ce&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
1 &#13;
....e. sr."'" 21. 1171&#13;
RANCH'S IANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
80c ~r.., HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
~ BIG TOP Creamy hat fudge ave&lt;&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream ond&#13;
fresh strawberries. whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry&#13;
75c&#13;
70c&#13;
SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD'&#13;
~ORTH 331' SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
The Dime Beerl&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
\&#13;
A II 10 oz muas of beer&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
LUNCHEON SPECIAL \&#13;
Mon_Frl&#13;
A II vou e en e at&#13;
$ 99&#13;
Flut 1001.. beer&#13;
$.01 per oz.&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN' KENOSHA&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
For '-.e - '63 v.«. $275.00. 350f&#13;
w .... 1ngton Ro.s. Kenolha.&#13;
,.., 0....,. (01\'.. wry good ",echo&#13;
__...... cyl .•• uto. pwr ..... Ing&#13;
SUD·ull "'-JAl2.&#13;
1Mt HilIftCII; 17SCe SCtambl.... Ex.&#13;
c:on4. SGS. Includn 2 helmets. CAli Ed. 639""".&#13;
1M2 Wc": 2 dr h.,.dtop, 1250. call&#13;
~ or 6J3..2791.&#13;
lflI RIlmb. American. ~.b1.-&#13;
rustle. anel cheep.~. J209 -lIrTh St.&#13;
196G Ramb. Amerle-n. Dependebte.&#13;
170. 1209 . 21th SI.• KenoMl.&#13;
\970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr .. H.a·&#13;
toP. V -I, Automatic. power stHt"lng.&#13;
.,.......&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
Quality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SK IRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
tfUNDREDS OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S Stt1ARTWEAR&#13;
3120 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
V illage Pioneers&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
V"illage.&#13;
"We're trying to make a complex here&#13;
that's going to be oriented for students .. he&#13;
continued. '&#13;
"We are looking forward to putting a h'&#13;
lake on this property. We will also ha~&#13;
swimming pools and tennis courts. We're 0 t&#13;
here to build just one complex. we're here ~&#13;
build 1,000 units.&#13;
"We're trying to bring the student into&#13;
an area where he .can get. acquainted and&#13;
have the type of living that ID our estimation&#13;
wiU create men and women of good caliber ..&#13;
Is Parkside Village creating men ~&#13;
women of good caliber? You'd have to ask&#13;
the Parkside Vil1age Pioneers.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Raci['le ,/&#13;
1C:;' . . .&#13;
.3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633·35~&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
" ~- 213 SixTH STREET RACINE&#13;
....,&#13;
Hustl •• brut. this season ... heavy. handsome&#13;
IKKIhurly-burly on • sensational wood-y heel.&#13;
Pure big-heert8d fun i. O.rk Brown antiqued&#13;
.. ether uppen. and Peanut Brown smooth, $iB&#13;
Boughf and sold&#13;
(we buy and $ell)&#13;
A little out of "WIy,&#13;
but ..... .,&#13;
MCFarland, AIt, aiiii&#13;
7904 WASHINOTO;-&#13;
AVENUE RACial&#13;
BY TH E UNDU'AII&#13;
Open Daily 9:30 a.m.·5:30 p.m.&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday 'til 9 p.m.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week. 7: 45-4:30. Call 5£)-2415.&#13;
connie·&#13;
1963 Buick For SIlIe - .. barrel 4A2'&#13;
11"IO. In GOOd cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floOr. 8odYJDgoocI condo For sale A.t&#13;
WO. ALSO&#13;
"bWreI QI.... cwb Md bottom piece&#13;
tor only 13Q.OOt.ke It. Call 633-07U 7&#13;
10 p.m. Redne.&#13;
----&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc&#13;
Ntotorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing. Phon.e 654·8710 - or&#13;
Newscopeoffice. Leave messagefor&#13;
Rick Pazera..&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
- PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling piUSthe right. Phone 1-&#13;
. 352·4050_&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
1967 Austln·Healey 3CIOO, Aft .. sp.m&#13;
539-2«)7 (Burlington).&#13;
..... Ford Torino 3U1·VB. LOw mil.&#13;
Automatic. power steering. Radio,&#13;
Heater, 652-n.-s, see at 5234 - ~&#13;
Ave. 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
650 Triumph T_T. rebuilt enqlne,&#13;
lace paint on frame and talk, 2&#13;
hefmets. S8OO.00orbest offer. See at&#13;
5723 - 40th Ave.&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs some clutch 'NOrk, $250.00.&#13;
MA·Dlf71.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3suitcases, very good condo$25.Call&#13;
654-27Q.t.&#13;
For II Good night's sleep -&#13;
Wa;ftrbeds. 3701. 60th street. Cail&#13;
654-940_&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us ar&#13;
offer. call 654-462.&#13;
Otlcago - casette tape fo trade for&#13;
'NOrklng tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Cali 633-3836.&#13;
PubliC Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
SUde Rule $10.00. Cail 553-2345.&#13;
Skis Mens. including poles and&#13;
boots. 553-22A5.&#13;
~;~.$5.ao,Steam Iron $5.00. Cail&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and WOOds&#13;
1346 new will sell for $2"5. '&#13;
Legalize Marlj uana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. SOc. donation. Be at Student&#13;
Activities BUilding Wed. .&#13;
Stereo CompOnentSystem 60 watt&#13;
amPlifier, t ....nta~le. 2 ~PNkerS&#13;
Nevlng, must seU.$50. Ph. 6S2-OO79~&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book 9'l&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva. ";I~:&#13;
- =-&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
winemaklng. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and can.etope and plums. 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632·3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
VOlkswagen - Good conaltlon and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses. call Kurt, 551.9429.&#13;
LU&#13;
Septem~r Z , 1911&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT ' S SCR U MPTIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
er om, 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
911 SHE IOA ROAD SOUTH 7500 SH E RI DA ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Mon-Fri&#13;
11 ou can at&#13;
S ·99&#13;
t 10oz. b&#13;
s .Ol pe r oz.&#13;
WEDNE SDAY NIGHT&#13;
I&#13;
A ll 10 oz mu es of beer&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
O N 30 TH A V ENUE IN' KENOSHA&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
ouality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SKIRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
HUNDREDS Of BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWEAR&#13;
3120 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Village Pioneers&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Village. "We're trying to make a complex here&#13;
that's going to be oriented for students " he&#13;
continued. '&#13;
"We are looking forward to putting ab.&#13;
lake o~ this property. ~e will also ha~!&#13;
swimmmg pools and tenms courts. We're n t&#13;
here to build j~t one complex, we're here~&#13;
build 1,000 umts.&#13;
"We're trying to bring the student into&#13;
an area where h_e _can get_ acquainted and&#13;
have the type of hvmg that m our estimation&#13;
will create men and women of good caliber ,,&#13;
Is Parkside Village creating men a~d&#13;
women of good caliber? You'd have to ask&#13;
the Parkside Village Pioneers.&#13;
sought and sold&#13;
(We buy and sell)&#13;
·A little out of 1ht ... but wott1i '&#13;
7904 WASHING;;&#13;
AVENUE RAC~ E&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
Open Daily 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday 'til 9 p.m.&#13;
Hustle a brute this season ... heavy, handsome&#13;
and hurly-burly on a sensational wood-y heel.&#13;
Pure big-hearted fun in Dark Brown antiqued&#13;
leather uppers, and Peanut Brown smooth, $18&#13;
conn1e· DOWNTOWN&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
For Salt - '6.l v.w. $275.00. 3509&#13;
W-.n ngton Ro.i. Kenosh•.&#13;
1961 Cht'{, cori.O .. very good mech . "1•pe. 6 cyl., •uto. pwr st..,.lng&#13;
S150 • U II 159 2'12.&#13;
lttt Hl:lnct. 175cc Scr•mbltf". Ex&#13;
cond , IQS, k\cludn 2 helm.ts. c.11&#13;
Ed , 639 .'9«),&#13;
1"1 841 ck 2 dr h•rdtop, $250. C.11&#13;
6l4'4C5 or 6.33 2791,&#13;
R mb Amer I~. Depen°dabl• .&#13;
r Ile. 1na cl\tlC). w:.. J209 • am St.&#13;
196.l Buick For Sale - 4 barrel .u2&#13;
.,g. In oood cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floor . Body Jn gooc1 cond. For Sale At&#13;
$250. ALSO&#13;
4 barrel Chev. cwb 11nd bottom piece&#13;
tor only $30.00 t•tw It. ca11 633-0784 1&#13;
10 p.m. Racine.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing . Phone 654-8770 . or&#13;
Newscope office. Leave message tor&#13;
Rick Pazera.&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
. PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling plus the right. Phone 1-&#13;
. 352-4050.&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
1967 Austin-Healey 3000, After !Ii p.m&#13;
539-2407 (&amp;wllngton).&#13;
1968 Ford Torino JU2-V8. Low mll.&#13;
Automatic, power sreerlng, RadiO, Heater-, 652-n45, see at 5234 . "4th&#13;
Ave. 6;00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impala Super- Sport 327, After&#13;
-4 :30 p.m., 3022 . 23rd Ave.&#13;
Y• maha 350 RS, 1971, Exe. C.Ond. 6S4-572-4, Eve.&#13;
6M Triumph T.T. rebuilt eoqine,&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
helmets, S800.00 or best offer. See at&#13;
5723 . -40th Ave.&#13;
Honda " 150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
eeds some clutch W'Ork, $250.00. 63-4-087 1.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FORSALE&#13;
3 suitcases, very good cond. $25. Call&#13;
65,4. 270-4.&#13;
For II Good night's sleep - Water beds. 3701 • 60th street. Call&#13;
654-94'7.&#13;
Hand Painted mil k cans. Make us er off er. Call 654-4862.&#13;
Ollcago - casette tape to trade tor&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc. Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Cell 633-3836.&#13;
Public Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Oleck&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Sllde Rule Sl0.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis - Mens, incluellng poles and&#13;
boots. 553-2245.&#13;
Toaster '5.00, Steam Iron $5 oo Call&#13;
553-2345. ' '&#13;
Golt Clubs Full set irons and woods&#13;
S346 new will sell for S2-45. '&#13;
Legalize MarlJ uana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. 50c donation . Be at Student&#13;
Activities Building Wed. ·&#13;
Stereo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
ll(llPllfier, turntable, 2 speakers&#13;
Moving, must sell. SSO. Ph . 6S2-0079:&#13;
BROWSE - Breaclloat Book Sh&#13;
~1 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, ,,:i~'.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75. 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
Shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 654-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire &amp; rim S1, File&#13;
boxes Sl &amp; S1.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
C.Olt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
Disp. Call 5J1-7161 aft. -4 p,m.&#13;
2 Bedroom House, Parks,oe area,&#13;
Liv . R., Dining Room· .comb.,&#13;
Fftplace,' over one acre land, 552- 901-2. ·&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and_&#13;
winemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums. 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-378S or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen - Good conaltion and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, 551-9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week, 7:45-4:30. Call _553-241S.&#13;
HELP WANTE0-2Sp9\&#13;
pl ayers work in PIZZI 1M&#13;
551-8906 or stop In and•• </text>
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    <elementSetContainer>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63432">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 3, September 20, 1971</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63434">
                <text>1971-09-20</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63437">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63438">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63439">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63440">
                <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="63441">
                <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="63442">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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    <tagContainer>
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        <name>dean eugene norwood</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="163">
        <name>ken konkol</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="158">
        <name>parkside village</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="164">
        <name>student government</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
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              <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>
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          </elementContainer>
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    <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="63447">
              <text>Volume 5, 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="63448">
              <text>Smoke-In Staged in Madison</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <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="89878">
              <text>,..&#13;
"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" -Matthe A Ilnner 1/' ,I W' .&#13;
. W rnold S y OJ tscom m ' Parksidt&#13;
"J".~,"GP.&#13;
Smoke-ion Staged •&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
ManagingEdilor&#13;
[,aStSaturday the YIPPIES&#13;
Id a marijuana smoke~m In&#13;
~OI1's Brittingham Park.&#13;
ijl2llded by several hundred&#13;
_Ie, a noonrally at the park&#13;
~ a march up Main&#13;
tUt"llothe capitol building in&#13;
lIlPP"'lof the legalization of&#13;
IDIrijUo1l'\3.&#13;
and catch-phrases that were&#13;
immediately snatched up and&#13;
echoed by the enthusiastic&#13;
audience.&#13;
At the' park, though several&#13;
squads of police stood nearby&#13;
?undreds of joints were smoked&#13;
In a large open shelter while&#13;
Beal entertained the crowd with&#13;
pro-marijuana songs accompanied&#13;
by a tambourine and&#13;
"This is the first time a stoned mob has seized the Straight&#13;
l'Jpllol."&#13;
IIIed as the Dana Beal Prona,&#13;
Anti-Heroin March,&#13;
.... as the herald of yet&#13;
~issue inradical politics.&#13;
l1li, whowas recently busted&#13;
bJ the Madison police while&#13;
lilcb-hiltingfornpossession of&#13;
ImraI pounds of grass, has&#13;
... been aclive in the drive for&#13;
It legalizationof marijuana.&#13;
lIIIIiIm KunsUer is handling&#13;
l1li'. case while a number of&#13;
III known radicals, Abbie&#13;
8IIIman for ODe. are aiding the&#13;
~_Ibrough fund raising ac-&#13;
-.- to defer legal fees.&#13;
lIII8eaIspolteat the Brittingham&#13;
y and at the Capitol&#13;
~og his light monologue&#13;
I&lt;ollageof slogans, chants&#13;
his own accoustic guitar. Unlike&#13;
most radical gatherings the&#13;
rally proceeded in a facile vein&#13;
partly because Beal was more&#13;
an entertainer than a&#13;
provocateur, and partly&#13;
because the police remained at&#13;
a discreet distance from the&#13;
illegalities, threatening as HIe&#13;
overcast September sky. The&#13;
organizers of the rally-march&#13;
had obtained permits from the&#13;
Madison city council and the&#13;
police were present to insure&#13;
that the park was not abused.&#13;
No attempt was made to bust&#13;
anyone though Inspector&#13;
Thomas, in charge of the police&#13;
contingent, and two assistants&#13;
circled the shelter numerous&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
Parks' of the Newscope staff&#13;
Ot~ aa'de has a new Vice Chancellor,&#13;
Bowl' uer, Bauer, 39, comes from&#13;
... logGreen State University where .. Was theAss' ,&#13;
Student "stant Vice President for&#13;
JIOot AffairS.He began his Parkside&#13;
, OnSeptember I&#13;
His duti .-&#13;
....... es are 10 the academic&#13;
10 v.,,' buthe will also represent UW-P&#13;
PIr1s ;05 slate agencies and to toebr&#13;
IiIn are the University, RepOrting to&#13;
Science the Deans of the College 01&#13;
IlocIern and Society, and the School of&#13;
dep.rtznIndustry, as are several other&#13;
ents of the University.&#13;
Ianan't· cltscribed'" ervlew with Newscope, he&#13;
)llIloa his POSitionas "a Iantastic&#13;
_L. . ceept" PresenUy he said he is .......It.ffiatingh' , ,&#13;
Ilbijities . IIDself to his responIllo&#13;
IllStitand ISbecoming familiar witll&#13;
Ir&gt;d the ~tional structure of Parkside&#13;
Bauer n.lv~rslty of Wisconsin.&#13;
be ""cep~d m accepting tlle position&#13;
IncIu.triaJe the. IDStitutional goal of an&#13;
.... _&gt; MISSIon.To achieve this he&#13;
.....~out "w '&#13;
--... , e need to do some real&#13;
-~. '" the Sc ~.. bool of Modern In-&#13;
~ e~plained that while the&#13;
"ll ~~g Science Division was quite&#13;
Ibe..... llped, httle development in&#13;
~ ~ of Management Science and&#13;
". dcn,;"'°IllICShas occurred. IoIIw OUr ~ how we could possibly&#13;
..... ~'on If we do not give&#13;
to Management Science&#13;
Bauer Stresses Criticism as&#13;
Aspect of Academic Life&#13;
and Labor Economics," he said.&#13;
Part of the problem is, he said, "You&#13;
shouidn't really staff the School of&#13;
Modern Industry in the absence of a&#13;
Dean. or in the absence of the&#13;
Divisional Chairmen. Because these&#13;
men when they are appointed. a~e&#13;
going to want to have some impact m&#13;
their areas." .&#13;
Asked his views on "teaching versUS&#13;
research", he replied, 'I~e research&#13;
function is just as crucl-al as the&#13;
teaching function. How you go about&#13;
defining research Is important. I prefer&#13;
to 1define research in its broade~t&#13;
possible way, An instructor engageshm&#13;
the kind of research that Improv.es is&#13;
teaching. He erigages in the kmd of&#13;
research that seeks new data.&#13;
"People like to _ say unless you&#13;
publish you're not playing the g:,:&#13;
right" 'he continued. "I don't buy a .&#13;
Facuity members have more ways of&#13;
. ling with one another than&#13;
commumca&#13;
through journals.". at&#13;
He mentioned reading papers&#13;
conventions and holding semmars&#13;
among the faculty, . th in&#13;
"Ideally a professor is active bo .&#13;
teaching ~nd research. In practice,&#13;
you're going to find some peopl~ do one&#13;
function better than tbe other, Bauer&#13;
Madison&#13;
;n&#13;
o&#13;
x&#13;
11&#13;
»&#13;
N&#13;
'";n&#13;
»&#13;
times while the smoking was&#13;
laking place.&#13;
At first sigbt of the police&#13;
there. was some hesitancy at&#13;
smoking the grass for fear of&#13;
arrest, and it wasn't until the&#13;
people crowded into the shelter&#13;
that the smoke-in began&#13;
Relatively assured that the&#13;
police wanted to avoid confrontation,&#13;
as evidenced by the&#13;
mcenspicuousness of their clubs&#13;
(concealed benea th their pant&#13;
legs), many of the people lit&#13;
their joints as other&#13;
"samaritans" tossed out&#13;
handiuls to those who had come&#13;
empty-handed.&#13;
In contract to the stark reality&#13;
of the legal consequences of&#13;
smoking marijuana, the entire&#13;
event, though political, in&#13;
essence evolved in the freewheeling&#13;
style of counter&#13;
culture happenings. The only&#13;
moments of apprehension occurred&#13;
as the police initially&#13;
marched into the park and then&#13;
later, as the marchers broke&#13;
into a run across the capitol&#13;
lawn. Several times an individual&#13;
hurled obscenities at&#13;
the police but was drowned out&#13;
by the silence tha t greeted&#13;
him, teslifying to the peaceful&#13;
nature of the majority of&#13;
demonstrators.&#13;
Besides introducing slogans&#13;
and chants such as "I smoke&#13;
pot, and I like it a lot". and&#13;
leading the audience in an&#13;
irreverent rendition of the "Star&#13;
Spangled Marijuana ... ". he&#13;
predicted that "somedsy m&#13;
Washington, D.C., a president&#13;
will say, 'I legalize&#13;
marijuana', "&#13;
He dwelled little on any&#13;
particular point as it was covious&#13;
from the beginning tllat&#13;
his audience needed little&#13;
persuasion to take up the cause,&#13;
though he emphasized the antiheroin&#13;
nature of the gathermg&#13;
and warned that "heroin kills".&#13;
--&#13;
FREE&#13;
,Merger Eff ct&#13;
UWPCouldB&#13;
On&#13;
vere&#13;
hy Warren _'edry&#13;
Editor-in-Chi t&#13;
Chancellor Irvin WyUle&#13;
thinks the merger of the&#13;
with tlhe W U system "could&#13;
have a severe impact on tlhe&#13;
operations at Parksld "&#13;
He laId .' ewscope "The&#13;
governor tied mer er to the&#13;
budget and the bud et i at&#13;
distinctly lower fundIng&#13;
levels than we anticipated ••&#13;
tate enroUment fundlllg-110&#13;
universities I i based on an&#13;
average allotment per&#13;
student. TradJtIOnally rw&#13;
funding levels ha ve been&#13;
higher than those of the&#13;
W sy tern Under the&#13;
merger, fundlllg to all 1Ilstitutions&#13;
will he at the W&#13;
levels&#13;
"In addition to lower&#13;
funding levels," Wylhe said&#13;
"The budget failed to cover&#13;
rn &lt;:MJr&#13;
on&#13;
or&#13;
"~&#13;
N&#13;
~&#13;
;II&#13;
:..- ~&#13;
z&#13;
punished by&#13;
lila I ... ont&#13;
function," be t.ted&#13;
• Ian) pi hay lried to rrl"""&#13;
1M cnl fu liOn in ord« 10&#13;
t.be \8l1\'eI"'S.lt)' s (m I&#13;
conllnued "From my point f \&#13;
should flOdID "', to be C1 lin our&#13;
cntiel m"&#13;
Whol rol .nd&#13;
f.cuIly hay lD • I&#13;
feel et")' stt'O C'On&#13;
sult.llOIl I thm It 1.1 nd&#13;
crucial. and 1 tlllOk .. thoul 11 )ou'r&#13;
doomed to l.tlure&#13;
wtf I.ttempted to unpooe. policy.&#13;
the ... ,lIlUJon, II ould f.,!." he&#13;
·decI.red "It's nol tll. w.»ou ork&#13;
"l\jl people. It' not lhr "")' ) u get&#13;
commltmenl&#13;
"The only ... )' )'OU c.n &amp; I com'&#13;
ffiJlment IS to Iry lo"or .. ,th th 10&#13;
tlle produ t tluIt comes OUI I one th •&#13;
feel they ha,. had some say m&#13;
"The consulting pr IS nole y,"&#13;
he emphaslZed "It's very difficult&#13;
because )-ou don'l ftnd groupli that&#13;
&lt;:ometogetller aod say, 'OIl. yes, .... 11&#13;
want to do It tIus w.y.' It d sn't 'OI'k&#13;
thIS w.y.&#13;
"BuIll you work ..lth people, there's&#13;
a kind of consensus thai begllls to form&#13;
Hopefully, what beglOS to develop -&#13;
and ,f I don'l ach .. \'O tIus, I'U be ,'ery&#13;
dasappo,nted - IS mutual respect.&#13;
That's a tremendous key. You need to&#13;
de\'elop tlle confidence of the faculty&#13;
and ," be &lt;&gt;lDC:.111ded&#13;
said. "and if a man can do a really fme&#13;
job of teaching, be should be rewarded,&#13;
and U a man does a really fin. job in a&#13;
creative area be should be rewarded."&#13;
Bauer sees an extension upon the&#13;
three traditional aspects of academIc&#13;
life - teaching, research. and community&#13;
service "At the nsk of ha,ing&#13;
myself misunderstood, I personally&#13;
think there is a fourth function&#13;
criticism. "&#13;
He believes academicians should look&#13;
critically upon the unh'ersities&#13;
tllemselves. and upon SOClety&#13;
"I tllmk the university. in a larae&#13;
- "Journalism is Litera~re in a Hurry" -Matth A Un,·i- 11· , I W · .&#13;
ew rnold uS J o1 1sro1. 1n _ p "d,&#13;
· wn····"·p,Jll'&#13;
Smoke-i-n Staged • 1n Madison&#13;
b) John Koloen&#13;
\tanaging Editor&#13;
(.aSt Saturday the YIP1:l~S&#13;
8 marijuana smoke~m m&#13;
011 -5 Brittingham Park.&#13;
ed by several hundred&#13;
and catch-phrases that were&#13;
immediately snatched up and&#13;
echoed by the enthusiastic&#13;
audience.&#13;
times while the smoking w&#13;
taking place&#13;
At first sight of the pohce&#13;
there was some hesitancy at&#13;
smoking the grass for fear oi&#13;
arrest, and it wa n't until the&#13;
people crowded into the helter&#13;
that the smoke-in began.&#13;
Relatively assured that the&#13;
police wanted to avoid confronta&#13;
tion, as evidenced bv the&#13;
inconspicuousness of their clubs&#13;
(concealed beneath their panl&#13;
legs&gt;, many of the people ht&#13;
their joints a other&#13;
"samaritans " tos ed out&#13;
handfuls to tho e who had come empty-handed.&#13;
8 noon rally at the park&#13;
'ed a march up Main&#13;
1 to the capitol building in&#13;
l of the legalization of&#13;
At the· park, though several&#13;
squads of police stood nearby&#13;
hundreds of joints were smoke&lt;j&#13;
in a large open shelter while&#13;
Beal entertained the crowd with&#13;
pro-marijuana songs accompanied&#13;
by a tambourine and&#13;
lJ&#13;
n&#13;
;It&#13;
1l&#13;
&gt;&#13;
N&#13;
111&#13;
lJ&#13;
&gt;&#13;
"This i&#13;
C'lpitol."&#13;
the first time a stoned mob has seized the Straight&#13;
In contract to the tark reality&#13;
of the legal consequences oi&#13;
smoking marijuana, the entire&#13;
event, though political, in&#13;
essence evolved in the freewheeling&#13;
style of counter&#13;
culture happenings. The onl-.&#13;
moments of apprehen ion oc- curred as the police initiall&#13;
marched into the park and th n&#13;
later, as the marchers broke&#13;
into a run across the capitol&#13;
lawn. Several times an n·&#13;
dividual hurled o ceniti at&#13;
the police but wa drowned ou&#13;
by the silence that r ed&#13;
him, testifying to the pea ful&#13;
nature of the m j orit~ of&#13;
demonstrators.&#13;
his own accoustic gwtar. Unlike&#13;
most radical gatherings the&#13;
rally proceeded in a facile vein&#13;
partly because Beal was more&#13;
an entertainer than a&#13;
provocateur, and partly&#13;
because the police remained at&#13;
a discreet distance from the&#13;
illegalities, threatening as Hie&#13;
overcast September sky. The&#13;
organizers of the rally-march&#13;
had obtained permits from the&#13;
Madison city council and the&#13;
police were present to insure&#13;
that the park was not abused.&#13;
No attempt was made to bust&#13;
anyone though Inspector&#13;
Thomas, in charge of the police&#13;
contingent, and two assistants&#13;
circled the shelter numerou&#13;
Be ide introduoing lo&#13;
and chants uch ru ·•1 smo&#13;
pot, and I like it a lo ", nd&#13;
leading the audi ce in an&#13;
irreverent rendition of th ·• tar&#13;
pangled .1arijuana .. ."', he&#13;
predicted that " omedav n&#13;
Washington, D.C., a pr ident&#13;
will ·ay, ' I le hi&#13;
marijuana'."&#13;
He dwelled little on&#13;
particular point a it&#13;
vio from th be ·nni that&#13;
his audience n eded htll&#13;
per uasion to ta e up th&#13;
though he empha ized t anti·&#13;
heroin natur of th therin&#13;
and warned that "h m kt "&#13;
by Marc Ei en&#13;
Park . of the ·ew cope staff&#13;
Baide ha a new Vice Chancellor&#13;
u B ' . r. auer, 39, comes from&#13;
ng Green State University where&#13;
aa th Ass· ' udent Aff . 1 tant Vice President for&#13;
airs. He began his Parkside&#13;
on September l&#13;
duti : ere es are m the academic&#13;
van' but he will also represent UW-P&#13;
0&#13;
~us state agencies and to toehr&#13;
are lhe University. Reporting to&#13;
lhe Deans of the College of f1d Society, and the School of&#13;
rtm n&lt;lustry, as are several other&#13;
eots of the University.&#13;
,:t~ervie~ _with Newscope, he&#13;
to hi P&lt;&gt;S1tton as "a fantastic&#13;
~Pl". ;Presently, he said, he is&#13;
r g hunself to his respon-&#13;
!it:td 15 becoming familiar with&#13;
1.0nal structure of Parkside&#13;
Ba Uo_iversity of Wisconsin.&#13;
ac :a•d in _accepting the position&#13;
~et~he. mstitutional goal of an&#13;
ed ' 1ss1on. To achieve this he&#13;
out "W ' in the e need to do some real ." School or Modern Ine~pla&#13;
ined that while the&#13;
e~g Scien_ce Division was quite&#13;
areas °r· httJe development in&#13;
I.. E O Management Science and&#13;
'l don~;xioroics has occurred.&#13;
our se~ ~ow _we could possibly&#13;
~ 1. ion 1f we do not give&#13;
18 lo Man emen Science&#13;
Bauer Stresses Criticism&#13;
Aspect of Academic Lil&#13;
and Labor Economic , " he said .. , Part of the problem is, he said, You&#13;
shouldn't really staff the School of&#13;
Modern Industry in the ab ence of a&#13;
Dean or in the ab ence of the&#13;
Divisional Chairmen. Beca_use the· e men, when they are appo1~ted. a~e&#13;
going to want to have some impact m&#13;
their areas." • . Asked his views on "teaching versus&#13;
research"' he replied, "'l~e research&#13;
function is just as crucial as the&#13;
teac:,hing function. How you go about&#13;
defining research is important. I prefer&#13;
to define research in its broade. t&#13;
possible way. An instructor engages m&#13;
the kind of research that impco~e bi&#13;
teaching. He engages in the kind of&#13;
research that seeks new data. ·ou&#13;
"People like to say_ unless ~ e&#13;
publish you're not playmg the g::nt 'ght "'he continued. "I don't buy a .&#13;
~acuity members have more wa~ of · ting wt'th one another than&#13;
commumca&#13;
through journals." . at&#13;
He mentioned reading pa~&#13;
conventions and holding seminar&#13;
among the faculty. . . h in&#13;
"Ideally' a professor is active bot.&#13;
teaching and research. In pracuce.&#13;
you're going to find some peopl.~ do one&#13;
function better than the other. Bauer&#13;
0&#13;
..J&#13;
..J&#13;
~&#13;
0&#13;
..&#13;
&gt;&#13;
n&#13;
;JI,&#13;
;JI,&#13;
,.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
,.&#13;
z&#13;
E &#13;
Letters to the Editor Seplember27,1971 Page2 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Editorial tradition here at P&#13;
Iexpect to hear :ksid.l)&#13;
screams of theeu1(li~&#13;
Government conce Student&#13;
letter in future ~:ug thi,&#13;
'''Pos&#13;
"What's he doiu .&#13;
terment of StudJt for bet.&#13;
merit? How can We Gov~.&#13;
have an effective IlOssl~, ith h gov...._ ' WI. . sue 'a tOUlliUlri·~".~&#13;
minIstration hoverin an adHow&#13;
can we ever OV; over~!&#13;
apathy that strangles t~IIl·1he&#13;
campus mess?" Thest three.&#13;
be some of the questi shouJd&#13;
at me in the weeks t ODs u.r..,;&#13;
I caution you to l~kCOIlle, bot&#13;
selves in chang' to YOUr.&#13;
situations-after .Jug th...&#13;
to be elected, did~~asklll&#13;
Remember the oldline " You'&#13;
who live in glasS:eor;.&#13;
shouldn't throw stones!lJ °Use,&#13;
BestW'18bes&#13;
Ethelred theUlll'ead!&#13;
Twelve Officers Patrol Parkside&#13;
and come to another meeting of&#13;
the Student Senate. How can we&#13;
as students have any faith in a&#13;
Senate that refuses to honor its&#13;
election obligations to us? It is&#13;
simplest to say that the student&#13;
body is apathetic, as It lindoubtedly&#13;
is, but I fail to see&#13;
how this apathy can be overcome&#13;
by these games the Senate&#13;
has chosen to play. These are&#13;
"games", as they have completely&#13;
reduced the effectiveness&#13;
and integrity of the&#13;
Senate! (Since these are&#13;
"games", and the Student&#13;
senate is of such an exciting&#13;
nature, perhaps the Student&#13;
Government might print a&#13;
roster of the names of the&#13;
remaining Student Senators so&#13;
that the student body can cross&#13;
the names off that resign in&#13;
meetings to come! We might&#13;
call this "Musical senators",&#13;
letting the game become a real&#13;
To the E"tIitor:&#13;
It is with regret that Iread of&#13;
yet another Student Gove':!-&#13;
ment meeting (9-16-7\), III&#13;
which the reins of de!"ocracy&#13;
are pushed still further into the&#13;
hands of the Administration.&#13;
Perhaps democracy is too&#13;
strong a word. A better term&#13;
might be monotony. I am tired&#13;
of the dramatics that seem to be&#13;
such common occurrances at&#13;
our Student Senate Meetings&#13;
(Max Sennett might find them&#13;
more amusing"). It seems that&#13;
every time a student senator&#13;
resigns he is giving up his&#13;
responsibilities to tbe Administration,&#13;
while at the same&#13;
time reneging his duties to that&#13;
percentage of students who&#13;
voted for him.&#13;
Mr. Konkol. cballenges the&#13;
students of this University to&#13;
"Prove Parkside is not&#13;
apathetic to its own cancer" I&#13;
POT&#13;
"Marijuana has undesirable effects on the body. no matter "in&#13;
what form it is used. The user loses mental and sometimes physical&#13;
control of himself, and may commit violent crimes. Marijuana users&#13;
often become so devoted to the drug and Its effects that they lose lnterest&#13;
in any useful or lntelledual occupation. Probably one of the&#13;
greatest dangers of marl juana Is that persons who use it soon look for&#13;
stronger drugs. and often become addicted to heroin.'&#13;
This statement Is taken from the 1962edition of The World Book&#13;
Encyclopedia. Since 1962many studies and scientific experiments&#13;
have been performed to determine the ectue! effects of marijuana on&#13;
the user and to dispel the many myths connected with the drug. Local,&#13;
state and national governments, universities and private institutions&#13;
have contributed to the increasing stockpile of information but as yet&#13;
no concrete evidence has established that marijuana is a killer as&#13;
some people contend or that is Is a harmless drug that should be freely&#13;
marketed. It probably falls somewhere in between.&#13;
Recently, at a meeting of the Am~\can Chemical Society,&#13;
Biochemists Harris Rosenkrantz and Yugal Luthra reported evidence&#13;
of brain damage and even deaths In their experiments with rats injected&#13;
with a marijuana extract and THC (a synthetic form of&#13;
marijuana). But. they also stated that the smallest dose given to any&#13;
group of rats was 30 times that of the chronic marijuana smoker (SO&#13;
[otnts a day over a period of months). Thldy times the recommended&#13;
dosage of asprln would kill a person and there Is no doubt that the&#13;
same cverecse Of pure grain alcohol dally over a period of months&#13;
would cause a loss of Interest "tn any useful or Intellectual occupation".&#13;
Also. it might be added that before someone could abuse&#13;
either alcohol or marijuana to such an extent they would probably&#13;
pass out.&#13;
To say that heroin addicts started out using merttuene is just as&#13;
startling as saying that an alcoholic probably drank beer In high&#13;
school. L1kealco:"lOllsm,drug addiction Is caused by psychological and&#13;
emotional problems that are rooted Inside the individual rather than&#13;
any outside stimulus. Too often our society would rather focus on the&#13;
manifestation of a social problem than onthe problem itself.&#13;
The marijuana laws should be relaxed further If not taken off the&#13;
books entirely, if for no other reason than that it is impossible to&#13;
police. Mariiuana has already alienated too many youths from society&#13;
and has given them a false Impression of what is the true and&#13;
necessary job of the police. Laws can't be basedon what someonewho&#13;
is not an expert says they think might happen. They must be based on&#13;
fact and the facts concerning marijuana prove, so far, that marijuana,&#13;
like alcohol. or anything else, is harmful only when abused and when&#13;
usedproperly it can be a pleasant and useful drug.&#13;
and the Kenosha Sherifr'iffilo&#13;
which can be contactedin&#13;
o~ emergency, as in CI&amp;t&#13;
disturbance. Crowd&#13;
There is hope by Sgt. ~&#13;
to get a teletype machinewhich&#13;
would join us to the nalillllWid!&#13;
net, thus enabling an alnuIt&#13;
Immediate check on,uchlhinga&#13;
as weather, stolen cars 8lId&#13;
registration numbers on stolen&#13;
articles.&#13;
The largest probl.m 0'&#13;
campus bas heen 1DU'epOrt«I&#13;
theft - of things from Ca&gt;&#13;
struction tools to no parking&#13;
signs. There is seidolll any&#13;
trouble with students exceptfor&#13;
the occational one caught&#13;
sneaking into dances. But&#13;
parking tickets are what they&#13;
are most noted for. f{/ p&lt;IIJle&#13;
noted this by 1 p.m. Thursday.&#13;
police officers carry guns,&#13;
which are required by state law.&#13;
The guns will become less&#13;
conspicuous when the officers&#13;
adopt their new uniform blazers&#13;
in the near future.&#13;
Six police officers (the&#13;
recommended number was&#13;
twelve, with six security officers),&#13;
but there are plans to&#13;
add two more in the near future&#13;
to improve efficiency.&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Some call them pigs, but most&#13;
people call them campus cops.&#13;
They are responsible for the&#13;
maintaining of order on campus.&#13;
A group of twelve. men,&#13;
only four of whom are on duty at&#13;
anyone time, responsible for a&#13;
campus of hundreds of acres&#13;
with a population of nearly 5,000&#13;
(students, faculty, employees&#13;
and construction workers).&#13;
The patrol has two squad cars&#13;
to blanket three campuses. For&#13;
this reason the police work at&#13;
the Racine campus is handled&#13;
by the Racine city police while&#13;
the Kenosha Sheriff's office&#13;
might be better able to handle&#13;
an emergency at the Kenosha&#13;
campus. There is a reaio&#13;
hookup between the campus&#13;
They are divided into two&#13;
groups - six police officers and&#13;
five security officers, with a&#13;
newly-arrived Director of&#13;
Security, Ronald Brinkman, a&#13;
police specialist from the&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Criminal&#13;
Justice.&#13;
Of the twelve, only the six&#13;
Pat Nelson&#13;
FREE&#13;
popcorn with beer purchase&#13;
every tuesday 5-11 Is it&#13;
logical&#13;
to&#13;
believe&#13;
inGod?&#13;
Begining October 10 •&#13;
OPEN SUNDAY 12-6&#13;
Student Activities Bldg&#13;
Editorial Starr&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Manager Fred Noer,&#13;
Jr.&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, P.&#13;
McDermid, Barb Scott&#13;
Phones:'&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Newscope is au independoll&#13;
student newspaper coInpIolI&#13;
by students of the UniwrsilyIi&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside pubiisbed&#13;
weekly except du~ vllCllicli&#13;
periods. Student obtBioed 1&amp;&#13;
vertising funds are lbe ..&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
opera tion of Newseope· UII&#13;
copies are print.d aad&#13;
distributed throughout !be&#13;
Kenosha and Racine cOJll·&#13;
munities as well as tbt&#13;
University. Free ~ Ilf&#13;
available upon request&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Bor~hardt, James Casper,&#13;
~arc ~lsen, Kelly Infuslno,&#13;
Kim King, Jim Koloen Ken&#13;
Konkol, Bill Lane, Dale Martin,&#13;
Pat Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross&#13;
Jeff Scoville, Jerry Socha~ ,&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio Becky&#13;
Ecklund: Ken Ziman~:&#13;
Yes, but no newspaper&#13;
ad can convince you&#13;
of God's presence and&#13;
power.&#13;
What will convince you&#13;
is a radically new view&#13;
of God as Love itself. As&#13;
all in\elligence. As the&#13;
very Principle of your&#13;
being.&#13;
This scientifically-based&#13;
view of God healed&#13;
all types of disease 2000&#13;
years ago, and it is&#13;
healing many people&#13;
right now_&#13;
If you are searching for&#13;
_ new ideas about God,&#13;
you will enjoy reading&#13;
the current Bible Lesson&#13;
in our Reading Room.&#13;
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE&#13;
READING ROOM&#13;
bro"".e&#13;
stop&#13;
• newly arrriving books&#13;
• greeting cards&#13;
• gift items&#13;
• records&#13;
VAJ!O'S ~ =:Y&#13;
,'\NO ITALIAN SAUSAGE a:::M3ERS&#13;
51121-11111 AYIIIItK"- 151--&#13;
Open 6 days 0 week from 4 p.m., cfosed M'JI"iays&#13;
available at&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE 302 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE 633-7842&#13;
Pagez OPE eplember 27, 1971 Letters to the Editor Editorial&#13;
POT&#13;
"Marijuana has undesirable effeds on the body, no matter In&#13;
what form ii is used. The user loses mental and sometimes physical&#13;
control of himself, and may commit violent crimes. Marijuana users&#13;
often become so devoted tot e drug and Its effeds that they lose int&#13;
rest in any useful or intelledual occupation. Probably one of the&#13;
greatest dangers of marl juana ls that persons who use it soon look for&#13;
stronger drugs, and often become addicted to heroin."&#13;
This statement Is taken from the 1962 edition of The World Book&#13;
Encyclopedia. Since 1962 many studies and scientific experiments&#13;
have been performed to determine the adual effeds of marijuana on&#13;
the user and to dispel the many myths connected with the drug. Local,&#13;
state and national governments, universities and private institutions&#13;
have contributed to the increasing stockpile of Information but as yet&#13;
no concrete evidence has established that marijuana is a killer as&#13;
some people contend or that Is ls a harmless drug that should be freely&#13;
marketed. It probably falls somewhere In between.&#13;
Recently, at a meeting of the American Chemical Society,&#13;
Biochemists Harris Rosenkrantz and Yugal Luthra reported evidence&#13;
of brain damage and even deaths In their experiments with rats injected&#13;
with a marijuana extract and THC (a synthetic form of&#13;
m rijuana). But, they also stated that the smallest dose given to any&#13;
group of rats was JO times that of the chronic marijuana smoker (SO&#13;
joints a day over a period of months). Thirty times the recommended&#13;
dosage of asprln would kill a person and there Is no doubt that the&#13;
same ~verdose of pure gra n alcohol dally over a period of months&#13;
would cause a loss of interest "In any useful or Intellectual occupation".&#13;
Also, it might be added that before someone could abuse&#13;
either alcohol or marijuana to such an extent they would probably&#13;
pa s out.&#13;
To say that heroin addicts started out using marijuana is just as&#13;
startling as saying that an alcoholic probably drank beer in high&#13;
school . Like alco:,olism, drug addiction Is caused by psychological and&#13;
motional problems that are rooted Inside the Individual rather than&#13;
ny outside stimulus. Too often our society would rather focus on the&#13;
manifestation of a social problem than on the problem itself.&#13;
The marlluana laws should be relaxed further If not taken off the&#13;
books entirely, If for no other reason than that it is Impossible to&#13;
police Marijuana has already alienated too many youths from society&#13;
and has given them a false Impression of what is the true and&#13;
necessary job of the police. Laws can't be based on what someone who&#13;
is not an expert says they think might happen . They must be based on&#13;
f~ct and the facts concerning marijuana prove, so far, that marijuana,&#13;
like alcohol, or anything else, is harmful only when abused and when&#13;
used properly It can be a pleasant and useful drug.&#13;
Pat Nelson&#13;
F R EE&#13;
popcorn with beer purchase&#13;
every tuesday 5-11&#13;
Begining October 10&#13;
OPEN SUNDAY 12-6&#13;
Student Activities Bldg&#13;
•&#13;
browse&#13;
stop&#13;
newly arrriving rooks&#13;
• greeting cards&#13;
• gift items&#13;
• records&#13;
available at&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
To the E-ditor:&#13;
It is with regret that I read of&#13;
yet another Student Gover~-&#13;
ment meeting (9·16-71), m&#13;
which the reins of democracy&#13;
are pushed still further· into the&#13;
hands of the Administration.&#13;
Perhaps democracy is too&#13;
strong a word. A better term&#13;
might be monotony. I am tired&#13;
of the dramatics that seem to be&#13;
such common occurrances at&#13;
our Student Senate Meetings&#13;
(Max Sennett might find them&#13;
more amusing!). It seems that&#13;
every time a student senator&#13;
resigns he is giving up his&#13;
responsibilities to the Ad·&#13;
ministration, while at the same&#13;
time reneging his duties to that&#13;
percentage of students who&#13;
voted for him.&#13;
Mr. Konkol challenges the&#13;
students of this University to&#13;
"Prove Parkside is not&#13;
apathetic to its own cancer",&#13;
and come to another meeting of&#13;
the Student Senate. How can we&#13;
as students have any faith in a&#13;
Senate that refuses to honor its&#13;
election obligations to us? It is&#13;
simplest to say that the student&#13;
body is apathetic, as it l.mdoubtedly&#13;
is, but I fail to see&#13;
how this apathy can be overcome&#13;
by these games the Senate&#13;
has chosen to play. These are&#13;
"games", as they have completely&#13;
reduced the effectiveness&#13;
and integrity of the&#13;
Senate! (Since these are&#13;
"games", and the Student&#13;
Senate is of such an exciting&#13;
nature, perhaps the Student&#13;
Government might print a&#13;
roster of the names of the&#13;
remaining Student Senators so&#13;
that the student body can cross&#13;
the names off that resign in&#13;
meetings to come! We might&#13;
call this "Musical Senators",&#13;
letting the game become a real&#13;
tradition here at p&#13;
I expect to hear ar~ide•&#13;
screams of tb~e 1ndj8na&#13;
Government conce ~tuden1&#13;
letter in future ~n1ng !his&#13;
t1tscollt1&#13;
"What's be doin ·&#13;
terment of Stud~t for bet. ment? How can we Govern.&#13;
have an effective l&gt;Ossibfy ·th gove""- · w1_ . such ·a totalita : ... 11&#13;
m1rustration hoverin nan ad. How can we ever ov; over 11s,&#13;
apathy that strangles ~:me the&#13;
campus mess?" Tues/three,.&#13;
be some of the questi sli~&#13;
at me in the weeks toons ~ I caution you to lookcorne, bit&#13;
selves in changi to YoUt.&#13;
situations - after all ng these&#13;
to be elected, did~?'J&amp;sk~&#13;
Remember the old line .~ You'&#13;
who live in glass' :eo~&#13;
shouldn't throw stones!" 0USes&#13;
BestWithEthelred&#13;
the U~~&#13;
Twelve Officers Patrol Parkside&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Some call them pigs, but most&#13;
people call them campus cops.&#13;
They are responsible for the&#13;
maintaining of order on campus.&#13;
A group of twelve men,&#13;
only four of whom are on duty at&#13;
any one time, responsible for a&#13;
campus of hundreds of acres&#13;
with a population of nearly 5,000&#13;
(students, faculty, employees&#13;
and construction workers).&#13;
They are divided into two&#13;
groups - six police officers and&#13;
five security officers, with a&#13;
newly-arrived Director of&#13;
Security, Ronald Brinkman, a&#13;
police specialist from the&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Criminal&#13;
Justice.&#13;
Of the twelve, only the six&#13;
Is it&#13;
logical&#13;
to&#13;
believe&#13;
inGod?&#13;
Yes, but no newspaper&#13;
ad can convince you&#13;
of God's presence and&#13;
power.&#13;
What will convince you&#13;
is a radically new view&#13;
of God as Love itself. As&#13;
all in!elligence. As the&#13;
very Principle of your&#13;
being.&#13;
This scientifically-based&#13;
view of God healed&#13;
all types of disease 2000 ·&#13;
years ago, and it is&#13;
healing many people&#13;
right now.&#13;
If you are searching for&#13;
new ideas about God&#13;
you wiJl enjoy readin~&#13;
the current Bible Lesson&#13;
in our Reading Room.&#13;
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE&#13;
READING ROOM&#13;
302 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE 633-7842&#13;
police officers carry guns,&#13;
which are required by state law.&#13;
The guns will become less&#13;
conspicuous when the officers&#13;
adopt their new uniform blazers&#13;
in the near future.&#13;
Six police officers ( the&#13;
recommended number was&#13;
twelve, with six security officers),&#13;
but there are plans to&#13;
add two more in the near future&#13;
to improve efficiency.&#13;
The patrol has two squad cars&#13;
to blanket three campuses. For&#13;
this reason the police work at&#13;
the Racine campus is handled&#13;
by the Racine city police while&#13;
the Kenosha Sheriff's office&#13;
might be better able to handle&#13;
an emergency a t the Kenosha&#13;
campus. There is a reaio&#13;
hookup between the campus&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Manager Fred Noer&#13;
h. '&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Bor~hardt, James Casper,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Kelly Infusino&#13;
Kim King, Jim Koloen K~&#13;
Konkol, Bill Lane, Dale Martin,&#13;
Pat Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross&#13;
Jeff Scoville, Jerry Socha• '&#13;
Production Start&#13;
Denise Anastasio Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Ziman~.'&#13;
and the Kenosha Sherur 9f&#13;
which _can be contacted: cf¥:;,&#13;
of emergency as in lie&#13;
disturbance. ' Crowd&#13;
There is hope by Sgt ~&#13;
to get ~ t~letype mach~e Whidt&#13;
would Jorn us to the natiOOWide&#13;
?et, th~s enabling an almCII&#13;
1mmed1ate check on such things&#13;
as _weat~er, stolen cars and&#13;
reg_1stration numbers on stol&#13;
articles. en&#13;
The largest problem 0&#13;
campus has been Wll'eported&#13;
theft - of things from ~&#13;
s!-t"uction tools to no parking&#13;
signs. There is seldom am&#13;
trouble with students except fo~&#13;
the occational one caught&#13;
sneaking into dances. But&#13;
parking tickets are what they&#13;
are most noted for. 57 peoJ1e&#13;
noted this by 1 p.m. Thursda,&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, Barb Scott&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Newscope is an independenl&#13;
student newspaper coiopostd&#13;
by students of the University d.&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside pubiisbed&#13;
weekly except during vacab&lt;C&#13;
periods. Student obtainei •&#13;
vertising funds are the salt&#13;
source of revenue for !he&#13;
operation of Newscope. 6· copies are printed aod&#13;
distributed throughout !ht&#13;
Kenosha and Racine co!D·&#13;
munities as well 85 th&#13;
University. Free copies art&#13;
available upon request&#13;
VAffO"S C':)&#13;
PIZZA!"&#13;
ALSO G-!IO&lt;EN DINN~ :;c,:, .. :' ... .:. . • ;~ ,.111.-12.:• ....&#13;
,t\ND ITAUA"I SAUSAGE OCM3ERS&#13;
5021- 30th AYIIIII K• lfll 157-1191&#13;
Open 6 days o week from 4 p.m., closed /.+Of'days &#13;
f)llor'S N:;ay evening about&#13;
OIl Wedn NewSCope reporter&#13;
.-. p,,,,., hardt interrupted&#13;
..... Bore f'old's game ':":, .. 10 Morgan I .&#13;
11"""'. Y to ask for an m-&#13;
; ()Sln~o hlues artist was to&#13;
""~'. less than an hour --wIll,n .&#13;
,,_.~~a crowd of about 350 in&#13;
..... Case Field House.&#13;
IlJClne id h _ Morganfield SBI e&#13;
»r be haPPY to talk to the&#13;
o«Pd right after the hand&#13;
~~ed. The atmosphere&#13;
... rei ed and informal. The&#13;
... ,ax nowed from the first&#13;
~~ to an informal con-&#13;
~':, among the other band&#13;
~bers. McKinley&#13;
,e f',old and Bob Bor- IIorjan '&#13;
~i followSis an interview&#13;
fllh Muddy Waters.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
_po: Is it true that the&#13;
1116"'''' with you printed in&#13;
.... , Slone (September 16,&#13;
11'1' was two years old? .&#13;
lIIldJ' Walers: Yea, that m- .&#13;
_ was done right when I&#13;
"out ofthe hospital, I believe.&#13;
Howwould you gauge your&#13;
",055 today? Do ynu judge it&#13;
laOOC"Iiy?&#13;
lIIIdy Waters: Well, that's a&#13;
lid quesUon, hut today I'll&#13;
'l"'k the truth. I've played fnr&#13;
.. money for so many people&#13;
• my lifetime . . . now I'm&#13;
,amg old, Ineed the finances.&#13;
Illed that money in the bank.&#13;
: Howlong do you plan on&#13;
lIIym'!&#13;
.... y: I'm gonna go full steam&#13;
• blg as I can. After that I'll&#13;
"'''ldown. Butlong as I can go&#13;
l1li steam, I'm on my way, ya&#13;
....&#13;
: I'd like to ask you about&#13;
...... , You have a white harp&#13;
pal" in your group. You&#13;
OIIidn'tsay the hlues is a black&#13;
.,. wouldyou!&#13;
.... y: Naw, I've never said&#13;
.. in one of my interviews.&#13;
• blacks feel the blues and&#13;
lIoyblues. There's one thing I&#13;
always tell e.verybody I have an&#13;
Interview WIth, that the white&#13;
can play Just as good as&#13;
anybody in the blues, but the&#13;
one thing they lack is the vocals&#13;
That's down the blues line"&#13;
Otherwise they can play t~&#13;
blues as good as anyone else.&#13;
NS: Can you tell the difference&#13;
listening to a recrod whether&#13;
it's a black or a white artist?&#13;
Muddy: Sure I can teII the&#13;
NS: Who do you respect amon&#13;
the people in Your field' g&#13;
Muddy: I got a heck of ~ lot of&#13;
:;:sepct for a lot 01 the boys out&#13;
re ya know, if YOU're speakin'&#13;
of the old people in the field like&#13;
me. You got some good comln'&#13;
up ~ellas, White and black. You&#13;
can t leave out Paul Butterfield&#13;
You don'tleave out Junior We~&#13;
and BUddy Guy, all those&#13;
people.&#13;
L&#13;
en&#13;
"&#13;
"&#13;
'"n&#13;
o&#13;
&lt;&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
en&#13;
difference.&#13;
NS: How about playing a guitar&#13;
or harp?&#13;
Muddy: Yea, I can tell the&#13;
difference there, too. Especially&#13;
if they're playin' the same type&#13;
of blues we're playin'. It seems&#13;
like the whites put a little bit&#13;
more into it than the black&#13;
people, like notes. That takes&#13;
out a little of the feelin'.&#13;
NS: Do you think that you could&#13;
label 'an age of blues' or a&#13;
decade when the best of the&#13;
blues was played?&#13;
Muddy: When I was in&#13;
Mississippi, and wets sitlin' on&#13;
the Coca-Cola boxes pickin' the&#13;
guitar and blowin' a jazz horn.&#13;
That was anywhere from '31 on&#13;
up to the '40's.&#13;
NS: Is there any difference&#13;
Arn..e-r Lc...a.n&#13;
~ E.ct.""'-t&gt;.-....&amp;. __ WHEnS&#13;
• «(,d1J&#13;
RaCinG WHeeLS '\.'~.S:'l&#13;
~ II U!.~!~·I·............~~~,&#13;
Mike Davis Speed City&#13;
4807 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA, WiSCONSIN&#13;
GRAND OPENING&#13;
October first, second &amp; third&#13;
Your&#13;
Choice&#13;
HotDog&#13;
or&#13;
Corn Dog&#13;
or&#13;
Cheese Dog&#13;
and '&#13;
The Un cola&#13;
15t&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
on 22nd A avenue at 44th street in Kenosha&#13;
.Across from Holy Rosary&#13;
between the bl_ you lib ed&#13;
down there and the blues you&#13;
played m Oucago'&#13;
Muddy: f played the same blues&#13;
bere as I dJd at home&#13;
NS: Where do you tIunIt the&#13;
connection lies bet'N'tal ) our&#13;
bl.ues and let: s say Diuy&#13;
Glllespe's jazz, or P4u1 Butterfield's&#13;
blues and Olarhe&#13;
Bird's jan"&#13;
Mudd): Well, that questlOll IS&#13;
too hard for me to anav.er I&#13;
don't know what the dJfrOftl&gt;&lt;:e&#13;
would be or the conned"OIl&#13;
because I feel that way bef~&#13;
my time the blues was the root&#13;
of all of tJus that has gott""&#13;
started&#13;
N: So you being mvolved&#13;
dJrectIy in th,s would gl\&#13;
creedance to the fact that ).,1&#13;
and everytlung eI5e ,"\'oh the&#13;
blues&#13;
Muddy: Ifeel like that, yea&#13;
I\'S: Do )'OU tIunIt that performing&#13;
the blues WiU ev r&#13;
haclt to the early SlXlies. liJce&#13;
when you could go cto.." to&#13;
Cbicago to the Plug ,',cltel or&#13;
the Unicorn, all small clubs1&#13;
Muddy: It will probably go bac:l&lt;&#13;
to the clubs, 1 leellike .1 ,,'III go&#13;
haclt to the clubs We dIS some&#13;
clubs and it was good, 'cause It&#13;
Muddy Waters&#13;
was majjed packed and&#13;
everybody's up on thelJ' feet&#13;
givin' lIS some good dteu to&#13;
ahead. I'm defimtely a club&#13;
man, 'cause Ithulk m I small&#13;
club you can bear me better.&#13;
N : The money's got to be a lot&#13;
different between the clubs and&#13;
the big halls&#13;
Mudd : The mOlley can depe&gt;d&#13;
on the club. liJce • lISter Kell 's&#13;
or a small club. The best blues&#13;
club thougb was called B&#13;
John's up on Well , but&#13;
the)' "ent OUl 01 buaul and&#13;
they tore the place down. Th"" man,&#13;
it was Mother Blues then" ba&#13;
"ent to the Plug.·1 eI The)'&#13;
or&#13;
If&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesda and Thur da&#13;
I&#13;
~m,-4p,m,&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
. (5 a glass&#13;
-e: and&#13;
U a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGH AYS 1-9' AND so&#13;
open 9 a,m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Avallablt for Fllt,rAHy 01 Sorority parties&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISER_.S _&#13;
, ·ote: ~ nesday evening about&#13;
~ed Newscope reporter&#13;
p.rn., hardt interrupted&#13;
. ~o~c Iorganfield's g~e&#13;
lll e) to ask ror an m-&#13;
,J ~ . ;e blues artist was to&#13;
~· in Jess than an ho~r&#13;
crowd of about 350 m a ease Field House.&#13;
Ractne 'd h !.lorganfield sa1 e&#13;
r. be hllPPY to talk to the&#13;
r right after the hand&#13;
riru' bed. The atmosphere&#13;
rela~ed and informal. ~he&#13;
;ie',\' nowed from the first&#13;
• 5 to an informal contloo&#13;
among the other band&#13;
mbers, McKinley&#13;
er anfield, and Bob Bor1i&#13;
follows is an interview&#13;
1uddy Waters.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
pt: Is it true ~at t~&#13;
ie't\. with you printed m&#13;
ne (September 16,&#13;
wa two years old?&#13;
1 \\11trs: Yea, that in-&#13;
. • was done right when I&#13;
' of the hospital, I believe.&#13;
How would you gauge your&#13;
today? Do you judge it&#13;
'ally~&#13;
Waters: Well, that's a&#13;
question, but today I'll&#13;
the truth. I've played for&#13;
money for so many people&#13;
y lifetime . . . now I'm&#13;
old, 1 need the finances.&#13;
that money in the bank.&#13;
How Jong do you plan on&#13;
-&#13;
,: I'm gonna go full steam&#13;
as I can. After that I'll&#13;
0011.n. But long as I can go&#13;
am, I'm on my way, ya&#13;
~way~ tell e_verybody I have an&#13;
mterv1ew ~th, that the white&#13;
can play Just as good as&#13;
anybo~ in the blues, but the&#13;
one thing they Jack is the vocal&#13;
That's down the blues lines.&#13;
Otherwise they can play t~&#13;
blues as good as anyone else.&#13;
~S: ~n you tell the difference&#13;
~1~tenmg to a recrod whether&#13;
1l s a black or a white artist?&#13;
Muddy: Sure I can tell the&#13;
difference.&#13;
NS: How about playing a guitar&#13;
or harp?&#13;
Muddy: Yea, I can tell the&#13;
difference there, too. Especially&#13;
if they're playin' the same type&#13;
of blues we're playin'. It seems&#13;
like the whites put a little bit&#13;
more into it than the black&#13;
people, like notes. That takes&#13;
out a little of the reelin'.&#13;
Am..,e...r~&#13;
~ £.ctYA.,prn.e.M&#13;
MIIGNESU,IAACINGwttEll.S&#13;
NS: Who do you respect amon&#13;
the people in your field? g&#13;
Muddy: I got a heck of a lot o&#13;
::epct for a lot or the boy out&#13;
re ya know, if you're peakin'&#13;
of the old people in the field like me. You got some good c . ,&#13;
up fellas, white and black~1n&#13;
can't leave out Paul Butter'r1el~&#13;
You don'tleave outJuniC'lr Welli&#13;
and Buddy Guy, all tho e&#13;
people.&#13;
L&#13;
ll1&#13;
... _&#13;
(A&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&lt;&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
NS: Do you think that you could&#13;
label •an age of blu · or a&#13;
decade when the be t of the&#13;
blues was played?&#13;
Muddy: When I wa in&#13;
Mississippi, and we' ittin'&#13;
the Coca-Cola boxes pickin' the&#13;
guitar and blowin' a jazz horn.&#13;
That was anyv,bere from '31&#13;
up to the '40's.&#13;
· : ls there any differen&#13;
4807 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA ,&#13;
GRAND OPENING&#13;
October first, second &amp; third&#13;
I&#13;
Your&#13;
Choice&#13;
Hot Dog&#13;
or&#13;
Corn Dog&#13;
or&#13;
Cheese Dog and&#13;
TheUncola&#13;
15C&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
on 22nd A avenue at 44th street in Kenosha&#13;
. Across from Holy Rosary&#13;
(1)&#13;
u&#13;
0&#13;
-C&#13;
u&#13;
'-&#13;
:::&gt;&#13;
0&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
.m.&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
a r r&#13;
french frie&#13;
p alad&#13;
.1&#13;
ic&#13;
or&#13;
The Br&#13;
'Tht Brat is u/hn-t its at'&#13;
ORTH EST COR ER OF HIGH AYS 1-94 A O 50&#13;
ope 9 a.m.- 12 p.m.&#13;
AVlllablt for flltunll or sororlly p11t&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERT SERS &#13;
Pagt&gt;-I NI::WS(;QPE Seplember27,1971&#13;
****************&#13;
JIll! 11.ew ,Vogue Jlteuler&#13;
The Gateway To Harbor West&#13;
1820- 52ndStreet, Kenosha&#13;
THE NEW VOGUE THEATER is attempting&#13;
to bring to Kenoshaa new concept&#13;
in the world of films by presenting a wide&#13;
range of movies produced primarily outside&#13;
of the Hollywood studio. Our long range&#13;
schedule calls for classic, foreign, underground&#13;
and experimental movies. THE&#13;
NEW VOGUE THEATER will be open&#13;
every Friday, Saturday and Sunday night&#13;
offering two complete showings each&#13;
evening, beginning at approximately 7:30&#13;
and 9:45 P.M.&#13;
~&#13;
Grand opening,&#13;
Friday, October 1, Saturday, October 2, and&#13;
Sunday, October 3.&#13;
W.C. Fields Revival&#13;
feature:&#13;
shorts:&#13;
THE BANK DICK&#13;
THE BIG THUMB&#13;
CALIFORNIA BOUND&#13;
CIRCUS SLICKER&#13;
Admission S1.25at the door&#13;
S1.00in advance&#13;
Advance tickets may be purchased at any&#13;
art gallery in Harbor West or at the Student&#13;
Services Office at Carthage College.&#13;
Coming Attraction for October 8, 9 &amp; 10&#13;
feature: AN IMAL FARM&#13;
short: THE ADVENTURES OF A&#13;
NAKED BOY&#13;
****************&#13;
REVOLUTIONARY THEATRE&#13;
DIRECT fROM SAN QUENTINl 41' The Uni~.Of WlSConsin-Parkside&#13;
TBECAGE&#13;
by RICK CLUCHEY&#13;
"STRANGE AND WILD ..• I WOULD GO TO&#13;
PRISON FOR ITS RIGHT TO SAY WHAT IT&#13;
IS SAYING!' -ell'/. a.rn.... N.Y. Tim••&#13;
"HARROWING, FUNNY AND MOCKING.&#13;
IT'S QUITE A PLAY!" -Edwin Newmen. WNBe-TV&#13;
""M STILL REELING FROM ITS IMPACT.&#13;
GRim, TOUGH AND UITERLY ABSORBING."&#13;
-Emof")' Lewis, Th. Record&#13;
Thursday September 30 8:00p.m.&#13;
Kenosha Tremper Aucl;torium&#13;
le.ervec:l Seats '&#13;
Porluide Students $1.00 General Public $2.50&#13;
liclt.t. Avoilabl.: Stwd.", Acti.,.iti•• Offic.&#13;
loam 206, Tall."t Hall&#13;
YES, IT IS NOT&#13;
BILLY JACK Billy Jack&#13;
Tom Laughlin Jean Roberts&#13;
Delores Taylor "&#13;
SCreenplay by Frank and Teresa Christina&#13;
Direction by T. C. Franck&#13;
"Youth instinctively understands the .pre~ent&#13;
environment - the electric dr-ama; It lives&#13;
mythically and in depth. This is the r~ason for the&#13;
great alienation between generatlOn.&#13;
s. Wars,&#13;
revolutions and civil uprisings are m~erfac~s&#13;
within the new environments created by electr-ic&#13;
informational media'." It would seem to me that&#13;
the exploitation of interface probably never entered&#13;
the mind of Marshall Mcluhan when ~e&#13;
wrote this most interpretive phrase 10 The Me~la&#13;
is The Message circa 1967. The viewing of B~lly&#13;
Jack, an interfacial exploitive film, was .upsetting&#13;
in that it coolly insulted McLuhan and many-of the&#13;
new concepts that may be conn?ta~ed&#13;
revolutionary or denotated necessary. This film&#13;
aids in putting back in and on the breakfast .f~od&#13;
box all of the ideals it took so long to un-plasticIze&#13;
and recognize in a purist sense. It has also been&#13;
held over in the Racine-Kenosha area for three&#13;
weeks.&#13;
A Robin Hood hero is placed in an environment&#13;
of evil men, who, in their black-hatted&#13;
ignorance are trying to close down a "Free~om&#13;
School" that is producing fulfilled human beings&#13;
at no cost to The individual. While the concept of&#13;
having a school of this kind is beyond reproach it is&#13;
certainly questionable that the town folk would&#13;
ban the members of the place to enter their city&#13;
because they were "hippy freaks", making it&#13;
necessary for the violent war hero turned nonviolent,&#13;
green beret turned non-green beret to&#13;
battle half of the town in a none to non-violent&#13;
demonstration of green beret learned Hapkido&#13;
Karate. At this point we can see the aging side of&#13;
the interface, violence for violence sake, filmed as&#13;
a pleasurable sequence, not as a thought&#13;
provoking scene that would be persuasive in&#13;
another way_&#13;
We meet crazy Bernard in an earlier episode&#13;
of the film. His father wants him to shoot wild&#13;
horses for glue, but he is unable to. Now, I am not&#13;
sure if the director just ran out of conflict or&#13;
characters to use, but we suddenly find this&#13;
init8ally likeable fellow who is sensible enough not&#13;
to kill horses with his father pouring flour over one&#13;
or two of the Indian children who live at the school,&#13;
after which he rapes the directress. She looks&#13;
her assailant, and with the same fervor th lJpat&#13;
vows free love she exclaims, '1I'1I see you inat.she&#13;
for the rest of your life!" priSon&#13;
His final action is the killing-of Martin .&#13;
unassuming Indian boy who has been ac~a qllJet&#13;
balling the town deputy's daughter. From t~&#13;
of the film Martin is pushed, Punched, kicked&#13;
eventually mangled by four bullets in the hea~d&#13;
could not help but feel sorry for him' firsi/&#13;
because he was tortured. so; secondly a~d y&#13;
. ta b .hi uff . ,more impor n~l ~ause IS s ermg was played u&#13;
as less significant than the action taken in':&#13;
name. ... more. interface. Situations that let the&#13;
negative and positive SIde of an issue holdan equa}&#13;
position.&#13;
The film is laced with American [neli&#13;
sp~ritua!ism . and the now popular mys~&#13;
existential Will over reason, Which.may explain&#13;
some of the scenes where the attacking of anotbe&#13;
individual w~s mor~ important then the hwna~&#13;
factor of mte~actlOn. Ou~ hero attacking&#13;
desperately at his oponent, his face in a kindof&#13;
spastic turmoil, is finally diminished, in the light&#13;
of empirical ~bservation ~s he finally gives up .. ,&#13;
seeing two Sides of the interface coin.&#13;
He is eventually forced to avenge the life 01&#13;
poor Martin and stands an entire army of stale&#13;
troopers. He holds up in a church as thoughem.&#13;
battled at the Alamo; true to the Robin Hood&#13;
image even to the point where he is talked oul01&#13;
dying alone by his persuasive rapee, Jean.&#13;
While the film is a commercial successit is not&#13;
a very good cultural document but it had some&#13;
retrieving qualities in that it contained a coupleof&#13;
interesting improvisational comedy scenes that&#13;
made visual some of those great sitll8tiooa1&#13;
commentaries similar to those put out by Firesign&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Acting on the part of Delores Taylor was in·&#13;
triguing, in that she fits the definition Udifferent",&#13;
She is not a beauty in terms of Raquel Welch, but&#13;
she has a quiet strength that reflects more of&#13;
reality than the pseudo plastic image of the sex&#13;
queen. This is a woman I would enjoy seeingin a&#13;
role of more difficulty and demand.&#13;
This film probably did not have a very large&#13;
budget but we have seen amateur films lhat have&#13;
minute budgets that are much closer to brllliance&#13;
than this one. We should expect more.&#13;
WilliamSOr......&#13;
ALADDI&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
RaciCle&#13;
Your best music buys are at&#13;
Bidingers House&#13;
of Music&#13;
in Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Page -I :\EWS('OPE september2i, 1971&#13;
****************&#13;
he 1flew 1 ague 2 heuler&#13;
The Gateway To Harbor West&#13;
1820 - 52nd Street, Kenosha&#13;
THE NEW VOGUE THEATER is attempting&#13;
to bring to Kenosha a new concept&#13;
in the world of films by presenting a wide&#13;
range of movies produced primarily outside&#13;
of the Hollywood studio. Our long range&#13;
schedule calls for classic, foreign, underground&#13;
and experimenta l movies. T HE&#13;
NEW VOGUE THEATER will be open&#13;
every Friday, Saturday and Sunday night&#13;
offering two complete showings each&#13;
evening, beginning at approximately 7: 30&#13;
and 9: 45 P.M.&#13;
Grand Opening,&#13;
riday, October 1, Saturday, October 2, and&#13;
unday, October 3.&#13;
w.c. Fields Revival&#13;
feature:&#13;
shorts:&#13;
THE BANK DICK&#13;
THE BIG THUM B&#13;
CALIFORNIA BOUND&#13;
CIRCUS SLICKER&#13;
Admission S1.25 at the door&#13;
Sl.00 in advance&#13;
Advance tickets may be purchased at any&#13;
art gallery in Harbor West or at the Student&#13;
Services Office at Carthage College.&#13;
Coming Attraction for October a, 9 &amp; 10&#13;
feature: ANIMAL FARM&#13;
short: THE ADVENTURES OF A&#13;
NAKED BOY&#13;
****************&#13;
REVOLUTIONARY THEATRE&#13;
DIRECT fROM SAN QUENTINI&#13;
i.JJr The University of Wisconsin-Parkside -,, preae nh ...&#13;
THE CAGE&#13;
by RICK CLUCHEY&#13;
"STRANGE AND WILD ... I WOULD GO TO&#13;
PRISON FOR ITS RIGHT TO SAY WHAT IT&#13;
IS SAYING," - Clive Barnes, N.Y. Timn&#13;
"HARROWING, FUNNY AND MOCKING. IT'S QUITE A PLAY!" -Edwin Newman. WNBC-TV&#13;
" l'M STILL REELING FROM ITS IMPACT. GRlm, TOUGH AND UTTERLY ABSORB- ING.'' -Emory L-••. The Record&#13;
thuraday September 30 8:00p.m.&#13;
ICenoaho Tremper Aucfitorium&#13;
R•1erv•d Seots&#13;
Porliside Students S1.00 General Public S2.50&#13;
Ticke t• Availa'-le : Student Activitiea Office&#13;
l oo"' 206, Ta llent Holl&#13;
YES,ITIS NO T&#13;
BILLY JACK Billy Jack&#13;
Tom Laughlin Jean Roberts&#13;
Delore Taylor . . Screenplay by Frank and Teresa Christina&#13;
Direction by T. C. Franck " Youth instinctively understands the _pre~ent&#13;
environment - the electric drama; it hves&#13;
mythically and in depth. This is the r~ason for the&#13;
great alienation between generation_s. Wars,&#13;
revolutions and civil uprisings are m;erfac~s&#13;
within the new environments created by electric&#13;
informational media'." It would seem to me that&#13;
the exploitation of interface probably never entered&#13;
the mind of Marshall Mclu~an when ~e&#13;
wrote this most interpretive phrase m The M~1a&#13;
i The Message circa 1967. The viewing of B!IIY&#13;
Jack, an interfacial exploitive film, was upsetting&#13;
in that it coolly insulted McLuhan and many of the&#13;
new concepts that may be conn?ta~ed&#13;
revolutionary or denotated necessary. This film&#13;
aids in putting back in and on the breakfast _f~od&#13;
box all of the ideals it took so long to un-plastJc1ze&#13;
and recognize in a purist sense. It has also been&#13;
held over in the Racine-Kenosha area for three&#13;
weeks.&#13;
A Robin Hood hero is placed in an environment&#13;
of evil men, who, in their black-hatted&#13;
ignorance are trying to close down a "Freedom&#13;
School" that is producing fulfilled human beings&#13;
at no cost to 'the individual. While the concept of&#13;
having a school of this kind is beyond reproach it is&#13;
certainly questionable that the town folk would&#13;
ban the members of the place to enter their city&#13;
because they were "hippy freaks", making it&#13;
necessary for the violent war hero turned nonviolent,&#13;
green beret turned non-green beret to&#13;
battle half of the town in a none to non-violent&#13;
demonstration of green beret learned Hapkido&#13;
Karate. At this point we can see the aging side of&#13;
the interface, violence for violence sake, filmed as&#13;
a pleasurable sequence, not as a thought&#13;
provoking scene that would be persuasive in&#13;
another way.&#13;
We meet crazy Bernard in an earlier episode&#13;
of the film. His father wants him to shoot wild&#13;
horses for glue, but he is unable to. Now, I am not&#13;
sure if the director just ran out of conflict or&#13;
characters to use, but we suddenly find this&#13;
initSally likeable fellow who is sensible enough not&#13;
to kill horses with his father pouring flour over one&#13;
or two of the Indian children who live at the school,&#13;
after which he rapes the directress. She looks&#13;
her assailant, and with the same fervor lb llpat&#13;
vows free love she exclaims, "I'll see you in at _she&#13;
for the rest of your life!" Pr1SOn&#13;
His final action is the killing of Martin .&#13;
unassuming Indian boy: who has been ac~ a QUiet&#13;
balling the town deputy's daughter. From t~ of&#13;
of the film Martin is pushed, punched, kickeds art&#13;
eventually mangled by four bullets in the heaid&#13;
could not help but feel sorry for him· firsu 1&#13;
because he was tortured so; secondly a~d rn '&#13;
importan~, b~ause his suffering was played ore&#13;
as less s1gmflca~t than the. action taken i~&#13;
name . .. more interface. Situations that let the&#13;
neg~~ve and positive side of an issue hold an equa1&#13;
pos1t10n.&#13;
The film is laced with American Indi&#13;
spiritualism and the now popular mys~n&#13;
existential will over reason, which may explai~&#13;
some of the scenes where the attacking of another&#13;
individual w?s mor~ important then the human&#13;
factor of mte~act1on. Our hero attacking&#13;
desperately at his oponent, his face in a kind of&#13;
spastic turmoil, is finally diminished, in the light&#13;
of empirical observation as he finally gives up ..&#13;
seeing two sides of the interface coin. ·&#13;
He is eventually forced to avenge the life of&#13;
poor Martin and stands an entire army of state&#13;
troopers. He holds up in a church as though emba~tled&#13;
at the Alamo; true to the Robin Hood&#13;
image even to the point where he is talked out of&#13;
dying alone by his persuasive rapee, Jean.&#13;
While the film is a commercial success it is not&#13;
a very good cultural document but it had some&#13;
retr\eving qualities in that it contained a couple of&#13;
interesting improvisational comedy scenes that&#13;
made visual some of those great situational&#13;
commentaries similar to those put out by Firesign&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Acting on the part of Delores Taylor was in·&#13;
triguing, in that she fits the definition "different".&#13;
She is not a beauty in terms of Raquel Welch, but&#13;
she has a quiet strength that reflects more of&#13;
reality than the pseudo plastic image of the sex&#13;
queen. This is a woman I would enjoy seeing in a&#13;
role of more difficulty and demand.&#13;
This film probably did not have a very large&#13;
budget but we have seen amateur films that have&#13;
minute budgets that are much closer to brilliance&#13;
than this one. We should expect more.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Your best music buys are at&#13;
Bidingers House&#13;
of Music&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
l&#13;
ALADDI&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Rocioe&#13;
in Downtown Kenosha&#13;
~ IJf/ The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
-,;-" PRESENTS .. .. IN CONCERT&#13;
JOHN DENVER&#13;
'TA KE ME HOME COUN TR Y ROADS'&#13;
SAT. OCT. 2 8:00 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA TREMP ER AUD.&#13;
RES. SEAT TICKETS $3-50&#13;
AVAILABLE:&#13;
Student Activities Office &#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
. The Female Eunuch&#13;
Title. . Germaine Greer&#13;
AUthl~r·her· McGraw-Hili Book pub IS .&#13;
pany ($6.95)&#13;
com weeks ago I wrote a disap-&#13;
~?g review on Sexual Politics by&#13;
polntm . d.&#13;
Millett. The review was isap-&#13;
/(ale . di t t·&#13;
• 'ntf beCause or 10 n-ee proper Ion&#13;
1"'1011,... ·11 t d· th fact that Ml et was a rsapto.&#13;
Ie g writer; her style lacked&#13;
po,n In . Iiti d h idity and emotive qua lies, an ~r&#13;
lue enls concerned conundrums: In&#13;
:;;::Imallhoughher analysis may havesharp&#13;
her pen was dull.&#13;
beeI'l • ~ Greer is a 32 years old&#13;
Get~i~l~(with a PQ.D. mind you) ~nd&#13;
AUStraremale Eunuch is her fir-st&#13;
Tb;liShed book. In addition to this 350&#13;
Pu rreatise she has also written ar- :rfor 0' and recently for Esquire.&#13;
eS ites in a lucid, emotive style and&#13;
:: foesn't concern herself. with the&#13;
th opological-psychologlcal comanr&#13;
d·MiG p1exilieslhat Millett oes. ss reer&#13;
. ncerned with the actual dynamiCS&#13;
~ ~ved iD society's attitudes toward&#13;
mv en her propositions are presented&#13;
~cl~arIY, and she demonstratesher&#13;
qw elusions by utilizing apt and ObVIOUS&#13;
:teffijXlrary and historical example,s,&#13;
Men are not the enemy because, In&#13;
the case or the systematic de:gr~d~tion&#13;
01 womenby society, the vlchmlzers&#13;
are also the victims. If men hate&#13;
women because they are bitches, it is&#13;
Se-pt~mber2i. 19i1 the men who made them bitches. She&#13;
constantly underlines the circular&#13;
character or the "sex war", and states&#13;
that women cannot be liberated unless&#13;
me.n are also, until the present societal&#13;
athtu?es .concerning the ramily, sex,&#13;
Promtscuity, love and marriage are&#13;
seen for what they are, rnlsan.&#13;
turing or society and not wasung time&#13;
with anthropological theories. Even ir&#13;
matriarchy did precede matriarchy It&#13;
wouldn't change the present reality.&#13;
The woman must regain. perhaps&#13;
discover for the first ume. her real sell,&#13;
the self that has been condilloned OUIof&#13;
her since she was born tfeminity IS noL&#13;
assume the exual Jmtlatl\(" \loh\ dot&#13;
he have ·10 withstand .11 of th&#13;
pressurej Women must a ume&#13;
respon iblhty for themsetve -. a, Greer&#13;
says. ··UIe cunt must com mto II&#13;
own" The sexes musl fl. above th "Ir&#13;
conventional polarity, each mdividual&#13;
must develop a an mW\'ldual and&#13;
people mu t realize thaI so called&#13;
female and male traits are no mere&#13;
than arburarv convenuons. that If&#13;
there are any irea \\ e are all fr ak&#13;
The F.-mal" Eunuch I an un&#13;
pressive e a). mort." rmpres IU'&#13;
beC3USf! It doesn't overwbclm IMlt.&gt; d&#13;
it assimilates you Be Ide lund pro 1,.'&#13;
The F'ema le Eunuch I. hbttral1~&#13;
seasoned \\ uh quotb from 111torH,'al&#13;
figures ranglOg from J S 'hll to&#13;
Wilham Blake, from Valene lan~ 10&#13;
Mar) \...·011tonecraft, The \\orllttr IS not&#13;
loath to explam Ibmgs 10graphll' lerl11&#13;
. fore. ample. 'OA chloral or~a In "llh&#13;
a fuJI cunl 15 nI er (han 3 elnoral&#13;
orgasm With an empt) one" a~ far a. I&#13;
can tell, at tea f ,. U' an lOionnatl\ l"&#13;
ess3). II" • good book&#13;
"The Ume has rome \\ hen S()ltlt&#13;
women are read) to II I(.on, and (ht Ir&#13;
number I gro\\tng. H I tlrn(" 31"0 for&#13;
these \\omen 10 peak. ho\\("\er un&#13;
cerulinly. ho\\e\"er haltlngl)'" and for&#13;
th \\orJd to Ii ten."&#13;
What Will you do""&#13;
&lt;:OUrl~S) of lht Kook 'I..rt, Ii!! • .:i91h&#13;
Street. J\.fflo!)ha.&#13;
thromorphic. ThOUgh many of her&#13;
suggested alternatives to the present&#13;
norm may seem radical to some, her&#13;
lucid style cushions the effect" the most&#13;
radical alternatives seem paJata~le&#13;
because she presents both sides of the&#13;
sex war, and il will be both sides that&#13;
benefit by the restructuring of social&#13;
norms.&#13;
The misanthromorphic character of&#13;
contemporary sopal values cannot be&#13;
isolated from the family. motherhood.&#13;
education, the bringing up of children.&#13;
It makes little sense to argue over&#13;
whether matriarchy preceded&#13;
patriarchy (as Millette does) when the&#13;
real problem is right in fronl of you, the&#13;
real problem concerns the restruc.&#13;
necessarily ° temalel. Boy and Girl&#13;
children are victims or their mother's&#13;
frustration, she is a bitch to her&#13;
husband because she resents hi&#13;
comparalive rreedom, she doe n't&#13;
know how to escape her prison-home&#13;
because she w.as never allowed to&#13;
develop a questioning attitude toward&#13;
the problems or lire. she doesn't kno\\&#13;
what to do. she has been castrated he&#13;
has never lived.&#13;
Men have the responsibility for&#13;
bringing home the hashbop. for&#13;
presenting a "masculine" image. ror&#13;
initiating sex. Evidence points to lhe&#13;
fact that mep don't want aU of the&#13;
responsibility on their shoulders alone.&#13;
Nosirreee, why does Ole man have to&#13;
----Inside rTheCage'-----.,&#13;
The four harrowing days at The Dime ~eer!&#13;
New York's Attica bring into&#13;
,.un perspective the realiti~s of&#13;
aD inhumane and anxIOus&#13;
cmditioncommon' to many of&#13;
this country'spenal institutions.&#13;
Withforty men dead and a&#13;
growing determina tion to in·&#13;
formon the part of groups in&#13;
and out of these institutions no&#13;
bettertime than now exists to&#13;
have "The Cage" here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
On Sep!. 30 members of The&#13;
Cage Production Company, all&#13;
San Quentinparolees, will visit&#13;
IJIYchology,sociology and other&#13;
related courses to ra p on their&#13;
experiences in prisl:m.&#13;
~eslions wili be appreciated.&#13;
At 8:00 p,m. that same evening&#13;
aClor·playwright Rick&#13;
Ouchey's The Cage will be&#13;
!l"esenled at the Tremper High&#13;
School'sauditorium. Advance&#13;
•tickets are now on sale at&#13;
Student Affairs - Students&#13;
$1.00, General $2.50.&#13;
The play is allegorical in&#13;
nature and was the first written&#13;
by an inmate to be performed&#13;
behind prison walls. This year it&#13;
has toured over 40 campuses&#13;
including many Wiscor.sin&#13;
schools. bringing to Ihem ils&#13;
shocking and surreal portrayal&#13;
of man's confinement by the&#13;
very society that brings about&#13;
many of the situational conditions&#13;
inherent in the criminal&#13;
act.&#13;
Following the presentation&#13;
the actors will again put on the&#13;
mask of consultant and hold&#13;
another talk session concerning&#13;
their experiences and gladly&#13;
answer questions raised by the&#13;
audience.&#13;
From San Quentin to New&#13;
York the reviews have been&#13;
superlative, making Tuesday&#13;
evening's visilto Tremper High&#13;
a must for those who appreciate&#13;
good drama and for those who&#13;
would like to gain a greater&#13;
insighl into what really happen&#13;
behind bars.&#13;
LUNCHEON l&gt;PECIAL&#13;
Mon_Fli&#13;
All YOU can eat&#13;
S·gg&#13;
First 100z. beer&#13;
$.01 per oz.&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
All 10 oz mUls of bee.&#13;
a enee an ount.&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN KE""OSHA&#13;
....-1 NEED HELP!!!&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TIME&#13;
S25 Guarenleed for every 100 envelopes&#13;
you sluff&#13;
All poslage prepaid&#13;
send sramped, self-addressed envelope&#13;
plus Sl for registration and hand_&#13;
ling 10&#13;
ALLEN KING CORPORATION&#13;
P.O. BOX 6525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Bought and sold&#13;
(we buy and sell)&#13;
'A little out of the way,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
310 Green 8.ly Road. Kenosh •• WisconSin&#13;
l2 Block South of Kenosha, Rac,ne: Count"lllOt&#13;
tiPump&#13;
f6y $ave&#13;
MCFarland. Aulo sales&#13;
7904 WASH IN GTON&#13;
AVENUE RACINE.&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
1700 Sheridan R~.&#13;
KENOSHA,WISCONSIN&#13;
are you offended by nudity?&#13;
i. not, stop in.&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVEl&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W·20W·~W SOc per quart&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W·20W·~W 34(;per quart&#13;
15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
SPECIAL 47C per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on 011 Fillers.&#13;
Air Fillers. Tune Up Kits. Spark Plugs&#13;
All ileITISSublecllo 4 Per Cent Sal.s Tax&#13;
The Adult Bookstore .&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown RaCine&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
. The Female Eunuch&#13;
ntJe .. Germaine Greer&#13;
Auth1~\er· McGraw-Hill Book pub I '&#13;
-pany ($6.95) .,..,,.. weeks ago I wrote a disapTW?""&#13;
review on Sexual Politics by lllll•'b . d' • tillelt. The review was 1sapK~te&#13;
,.., b""ause or in direct proportion 10th&#13;
the 'b ract ""' that M ill e tt was d. a isap10.&#13;
t·ng writer; her style lacked polO I • )"t" d h idity and emotive qua i ies, an ~r )UC ents concerned conundrums; m um 1 . h rt although her ana ys1s may ave&#13;
sharp her pen was dull. n~ Greer is a 32 years old Gerrn_ain (with a Ph.D. mind you) and&#13;
traf:male Eunuch is her first 111bJished oook. In addition to this 350&#13;
?l treatise she has also written arplr&#13;
for Oz and recently for Esquire.&#13;
UC e rrites in a lucid, emotive style and&#13;
doe n't concern herself_ with the&#13;
antbropological-psycholog1~al compl&#13;
:alies that Millett does. Miss Gr~er&#13;
ncerned with the actual dynamics&#13;
~\'ed in society's attitudes toward&#13;
uw en her propositions are presented&#13;
: c]~arly, and she demonstrates_ her&#13;
C1l1 clusions by utilizing apt and obvious&#13;
:temporary and historical exampl~.&#13;
~en are not the enemy because, m · case o( the systematic d~gr~d~tion&#13;
of v.omen by society, the v1ct1m1zers&#13;
ar also the victims. If men hate&#13;
men because they are bitches, it is&#13;
the men who made them bitches. he&#13;
constantly underlines the circular&#13;
character of the "sex war", and tat es&#13;
that women cannot be liberated uni&#13;
me_n are aJso, until the present ocietal&#13;
attitu~es _concerning the family, sex.&#13;
promiscuity, love and marriage are&#13;
seen for what they are. misanthr~morphic.&#13;
Though many of her&#13;
suggested alternative to the pre ent&#13;
norm may seem radical to some, her&#13;
lucid style cushions the effect, the mo t&#13;
radical alternatives seem palatable&#13;
because she presents both sides of the&#13;
sex war, and it will be both ides that&#13;
benefit by the restructuring of social&#13;
norms.&#13;
The misanthromorphic character of&#13;
contemporary sopal values cannot be&#13;
isolated from the family, motherhood,&#13;
education, the bringing up of children.&#13;
It makes little sense to argue over&#13;
whether matriarchy preceded&#13;
patriarchy (as Millette does) when the&#13;
real problem is right in front of you, the&#13;
real problem concerns the restruc-&#13;
----Inside rThe Cage'----&#13;
The four harrowing days at&#13;
·ev. York's Attica bring into&#13;
grim perspective the realiti~s of&#13;
an inhumane and anxious&#13;
condition common· to many of&#13;
thi cowitry's penal institutions.&#13;
With forty men dead and a&#13;
gro ·ng determination to inform&#13;
on the part of groups in&#13;
and out of these institutions no&#13;
tter lime than now exists to&#13;
hne "The Cage" here at&#13;
Park ide.&#13;
On Sept. 30 members of The&#13;
Cage Production Company, all&#13;
n Quentin parolees, will visit&#13;
i-Ychology, sociology and other&#13;
related courses to rap on their&#13;
experiences in prison.&#13;
tlons will be appreciated.&#13;
8:00 p.m. that same evening&#13;
ctor-playwright Rick&#13;
au hey's The Cage will be&#13;
ll' nted at the Tremper High&#13;
hool's auditorium. Advance&#13;
, tickets are now on sale at&#13;
Student Affairs - Students&#13;
$1.00, GeneraJ $2.50.&#13;
The play is allegorical in&#13;
nature and was the first written&#13;
by an inmate to be performed&#13;
behind prison walls. This year it&#13;
has toured over 40 campuses&#13;
1700 Sheridan Rcj.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
including many Wi cor.. in&#13;
school , bringing to them it&#13;
shocking and urreal portrayal&#13;
of man's confinement by the ·&#13;
very society that bring about ,&#13;
many of the ituational conditions&#13;
inherent in the cnminal&#13;
act.&#13;
Following the presentation&#13;
the actors will again put on th&#13;
ma k of con ultant and hold&#13;
another talk se ion concerning&#13;
their experience and gladly&#13;
answer question raised b)' th '&#13;
audience.&#13;
From an u nttn to • · ·&#13;
York the re\ie\\ hai·e been&#13;
superlative, making Tue da)&#13;
evening's \'i it to Tremper High&#13;
a must for those who appreciate&#13;
good drama and for th . e who&#13;
would like to gain a greater&#13;
insight into what really happ n&#13;
behind bars.&#13;
William Sor n · n&#13;
sought and sold&#13;
(We buy and sell)&#13;
'A little out of the way,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
MCfarlands Auto sales&#13;
7904 WASHINGTON&#13;
AVENUE RACI E.&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
are you offended by nudity?&#13;
ii not, stop in.&#13;
C omplete adult merchandise selection of contemPorary&#13;
I&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
I&#13;
IS% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore . 406 Main Street Downtown Racme&#13;
LU&#13;
All ou can eat&#13;
S·H&#13;
IGH&#13;
firs 10oz. 0ee1&#13;
s .Ol p I oz&#13;
OSHA&#13;
.-1 EED HELP.!!&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---P RT Tl E $25 Guarenteed for every 100 envelo e&#13;
you stuff&#13;
All postage prepaid&#13;
send stamped, elf-addressed env lope&#13;
plus Sl for reg strat1on an h ndling&#13;
to&#13;
ALLE Kl G CORPOR TION&#13;
P.O. BOX 6525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PE 15212&#13;
ump&#13;
&amp; $av&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE Fl EST GASOLI&#13;
ANO SAVEi&#13;
ROYAL TRITO&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
lOW • 'ZOW - YJW&#13;
lOW - '10 W · YJW&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE A Tl-FREEZE&#13;
12oz. HEAVY OU Y BRAKE FLUID&#13;
SOc per qu r&#13;
J&lt;lc perquar&#13;
Sl.39per9alloo&#13;
A7c per c n&#13;
&lt;Ash and Carry Prices on OIi FIiters.&#13;
Air Fl ers, Tune Up Kits, Spar Plugs&#13;
All I enµ Subject o" Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE &#13;
P.,e' NEWSCOPE ficPfc.lpcr 21 1111 The Buildings of Athletics&#13;
~&#13;
YOU'LL LIKE I~&#13;
WHAT YOU FIND&#13;
and what you hear.&#13;
FM/AM Portable Radio-model 1221.&#13;
only 4%" H. offers 'performance far in excess&#13;
of its size and price. Telescoping FM&#13;
antenna. no drift FM /AFC. slide rule dial&#13;
and vernier tuning. Private-Iisterling earphone&#13;
plus batteries in- S1495 eluded. Only ...&#13;
JOERN NTURA&#13;
PHONE&#13;
654-3559&#13;
61R ,&gt;,1. ~ll1Hl keNO~HA WI~CONSIN&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff .&#13;
Among construction projects&#13;
currently underway on cam~us&#13;
is the building of the facility&#13;
which will centralize athletiC&#13;
,functions on campus. Instead of&#13;
23 different sites for home&#13;
games at various Racme ~d&#13;
Kenosha high schools, we will&#13;
have the one location which will&#13;
include athletic building and&#13;
fields. -&#13;
The building, which will have&#13;
48,000 square feet of floor space,&#13;
housea a 108 x 181 foot gym&#13;
included in which are three fullsize&#13;
42 x 96 foot basketball&#13;
courts. Also in the building is a&#13;
25 yard, eight-lane pool, official&#13;
AA competition size. There ~e&#13;
eight lanes instead of SIX,&#13;
requested by head coach Tom&#13;
Rosandich, to add increased&#13;
flexibility for simultaneous&#13;
laps, instruction an~ diving at&#13;
the 3 foot diving point,&#13;
Additional facilities include&#13;
two handball courts, a large&#13;
exercize room with universal&#13;
gym, combative room for&#13;
practice of judo and karate, a&#13;
conference room-press box&#13;
overlooking the gym, offices,&#13;
Jocker rooms, showers and a coed&#13;
sauna.&#13;
Because of the great diversity&#13;
of the facility it is possible to&#13;
have nine badminton games, six&#13;
volleyball games or six&#13;
basketball courts in operation&#13;
at once. Roll-away bleachers&#13;
covering one of the three&#13;
basketball courts will provide&#13;
seating for 2,500 spectators.&#13;
Roll-away, to allow better&#13;
utilization of space when not in&#13;
use.&#13;
Thanks to the generosity of a&#13;
local citizen, the athletic&#13;
department will nave a little&#13;
more to spend on equipment.&#13;
Mr. Aldo Madrigrano of the 7-&#13;
Up Bottling Company is&#13;
donating not one but two multipurpose&#13;
score boards, located in&#13;
opposite corners of the gymnasium.&#13;
A unique part of the training&#13;
room is a physical fitness&#13;
testing laboratory for&#13;
measuring cardiovascular&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
o&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Athletic Director Tom Rosandich, center, and James G&#13;
of Planning and Construction, right. at the site of the n~ ~1Itra1"&#13;
building. lhIet.&#13;
response oxygen intake, blood&#13;
pressure' and stress analysis.&#13;
When completed the building&#13;
will have the largest enclosed&#13;
area on campus, capable of&#13;
holding 4,500 for special functions.&#13;
The special tartar floor on&#13;
the basketball courts makes&#13;
maintenance easy.&#13;
Mr. Galbraith of Planning&#13;
and Construction estimates that&#13;
~e ~~:X;nc3~ul~i:;te~~e~a~~:&#13;
lots at Hallent Hall. This would&#13;
take 90 Joads of a 50 passenger&#13;
bus. Making a run every ten&#13;
minutes would necessitate 15&#13;
buses, each making six runs.&#13;
Chartering 15 buses for a two&#13;
hour concert could cost quite a&#13;
bit of money - which would be&#13;
added to the cost of the ticket.&#13;
But it is desired not to mess up&#13;
the ecology of the neighborhood&#13;
with parking lots.&#13;
Cost of the athletic bUll .&#13;
construction will be $1.8 ~&#13;
With an additional $376 000&#13;
on fornishing and 'mo SJlenI&#13;
equipmefit, . va bI,&#13;
Included in the albl .&#13;
building program ar. ~'&#13;
athletic fields. A huge '&#13;
bowl will enclose the v::"~&#13;
field, a % mile all-weather&#13;
track and SIX tennis COUrts In&#13;
all 100 acres of land Will' be&#13;
developed for intramural III¢&#13;
intercollegiate sport,&#13;
Seating at the howl Will be&#13;
informal - on the gra... The&#13;
SIdes nse one foot for eachthree&#13;
feet lian in a European.typo&#13;
arrangement.&#13;
The fields, which will CfOt&#13;
$92,000, are expected to be&#13;
completed in late spring,aboot&#13;
the same time as the buiJdiJlI,&#13;
which is now II'.! monthsahead&#13;
of schedule.&#13;
Pre-Law Club Will M••t&#13;
The Parkside Pre-Law Club will hold two organizational meet~&#13;
on Monday, October 4, and Tuesday, October 5. Both meetingswill&#13;
begin at 7:30 p.m. at Greenquist Hall in room D-ll!. Prospective&#13;
members and old members are urged te attend.&#13;
Possible speakers to be brought on campus will be discussed, "&#13;
well as the purpose and the 1971-72 project of the Pre-Law Club.JUDi"&#13;
and senior Pre-Law students will be present to answer any questims.&#13;
Anyone interested but unable to attend may call Tim Prostko a'&#13;
652-4142. (Kenosha) or Becky Ecklund at 554-7160 (Racine).&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
For Sale - '6.J V.W. $275.00. 3509&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha.&#13;
1961·Chev., 6 cvt., auto trens., pwr.&#13;
steering, very gOOd mecn. condo $150&#13;
- call 859·2..12.&#13;
1969 Honda 175cc Scrambler. Ex.&#13;
cond."$&lt;C25.includeS 2 helmets. Call&#13;
Ed, 639--'940.&#13;
1"2 hick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
6:U-U45 or 633·2791.&#13;
1951 Ramb. American. Dependable,&#13;
rustlc, and cheap. 135. 3209 - 28th St.&#13;
1940 Ramb. American. Dependable.&#13;
170. 3209 . 21th St .• KenOSha.&#13;
1970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr., Hardtop,&#13;
V-I, Automatic, power steering,&#13;
634·4606.&#13;
1969 Charger RT - 4CI Mag., 4 sp.,&#13;
mags,seeor call ~..., 6 p.m .• 658-&#13;
36Sot,5110 - 23rd Ave.&#13;
1968 Opel Ka~t, 1966 CorvaJr, Both&#13;
good condo Call Harris, \5-141.2361&#13;
67 Ambassador .. dr. sedan. auto., ~&#13;
cyl. Trans recently overhauled $775.&#13;
Call 553-2345.&#13;
68 Plymouth RoadrWtner 313. Gold&#13;
with Black vinyl top. Ex. condo 5Sot.&#13;
8751.&#13;
1'71 TRAVIL TRAILeR - 15 Ft&#13;
Ught . V..-y easy to tow - Buill In&#13;
Surge brakes - USed only ttlree&#13;
weeks - Must sell . Going to schOol,&#13;
5122 oiSlh St . Ph. 652-3014.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus Camper. Stove,&#13;
refrlg., and SO gal. gas tank., in.&#13;
cluded. First $150.00 takes all. call&#13;
632·55« aft..- 5:30.&#13;
FOR SALE 1967 NORTON 7SOcc&#13;
Notorcycle. engine rebuilt, specl.1&#13;
gearing. Phone 654·1770 - or&#13;
Newscope oHlce. LHve message tor&#13;
Rick Paz..- •.&#13;
1963 Buick For Sale - 4 barrel «:",&#13;
eng. In gOOd condo Autom. on the&#13;
floor. Body fn·gOOdcondo For Sale At&#13;
1250. ALSO&#13;
.. barrel Chev. carb and bottom piece&#13;
tor only $30.00 take it. Call 633-07847&#13;
10 p.m. Racine.&#13;
"Legalize Marijuana" Bumper&#13;
stickers 25c. NIoney goes to ACLu.&#13;
send large self addressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Art Dexter, P.O. 133,&#13;
Union Grove 53182.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling plus the right. Phone 1-&#13;
352-4050_&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
1967Austin-Healey 3000, After 5 p.m.&#13;
539·2407 (Burlington).&#13;
1068 Ford Torino 302-VtI. Low mil.&#13;
Automatic, power steering, Radio,&#13;
Heater, 652-n.45, see at 5234 - 44th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impala Super Sport 327, After&#13;
4:30 p.m., 3022 - 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 R5, 1971, Exc. Cond.&#13;
654·572", Eve.&#13;
650 Triumph T.T. rebuilt engine,&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
heiniets, $100.00 or best oHer. See at&#13;
5723 - 40th Ave.&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs SOme clutch woN&lt;., $250.00.&#13;
634-0871.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3 suitcases, very good condo $25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
·For a Good night's Sleep _&#13;
·Waterbeds. 3701 - 60th street. Can&#13;
.654-9....7.&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us an&#13;
cHer .-Call 654-4862.&#13;
Com. TOUdi Me. A new poetry book&#13;
by ~on SchUlZ and Larry RoaCh.&#13;
Available at all UWP Bookstores.&#13;
•&#13;
~OR SALE - Muskrat fur' jacket,&#13;
size 14. 25. Inches long. New lining.&#13;
SSG.OO.Anita. 652-6754.&#13;
.JUDO UNIFORMS. SIze3and SIIe 4,&#13;
10.00 each. call Kay at 694-6674.&#13;
Q,lcago - casette tape lo trade Jor&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3836.&#13;
PUblic Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Cleek&#13;
ours first high quelity - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Slide Rule $10.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis - Mens, Including poles and&#13;
boots. ~22A5.&#13;
TOIlS"'" 15.00. steam (roll $5.00. Call&#13;
55J.234S.&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set Irons and woods,&#13;
$3.t6 new will sell for 1245.&#13;
Legalize Marliuana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. 50c donation. Be at Student&#13;
Activities Building Wed.&#13;
St..-eo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
amplifier, turntable, 2 speakers.&#13;
Newlng, must sell. $50. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
aROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva. Wis.&#13;
aEWARE OF CAT MAN - He is a&#13;
"(arc&#13;
EngliSh Springer SpanielS, 6 weeks&#13;
old. AKC Good hunting and ·family&#13;
dog. 639·4593.12004 Cedar Creek St .•&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Explore ttle world of ESP whh&#13;
Norman Slater, Apt. by telephone&#13;
only. 6s.c-2375.&#13;
MEN - Your spare time is needed&#13;
by a boy 7 - 17 years old who doesn't&#13;
have a father. Can you provide an&#13;
example of good character and&#13;
citizenShip while shooting pool.&#13;
fiShing, skating, etc.? If SO call Big&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha, Inc. 694-6585.'&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION Introduc1ory Lecture-Tues.&#13;
Sept. 28, 8 p.m., rm 138,&#13;
Kenosha campus; Wed. Sept. 29, 8&#13;
p.m., rm 105, Racine Campus;&#13;
Thurs. Sept. 30, 4 &amp; 8 p.m., rm 100,&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75 - 14 Rim, Real'" end&#13;
Shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 LOg FM Ant. 654-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5. Show tire &amp; rim $1. File&#13;
boxes $1 &amp; $1.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
DiSp.· Cal} 5Jl-7161 aft. 4 p.m.&#13;
2 Bedroom.. House, Parkside area.&#13;
Liv. R., Dining Room ·.comb.,&#13;
Fireplace, over one acre land, '552-&#13;
9012. \&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
wlnemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and- plums; 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Gt&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805 .&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
VOlkswagen - Good condition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-)4,y.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will-share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, :S1-9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from west· Allis5&#13;
days a week, 7:45·..:30. Call.~li&#13;
HELP WANTED -2 Spll'lllhgu/l.&#13;
players work in PizZI H~.PhCI'lt&#13;
551-8906 or stop In and ask tor JDIln&#13;
Attractive girlS over 21. Elm tu1llClll&#13;
and book money. Danelnt l&#13;
Waitress work. If nudfty otrendI&#13;
you, do not apply. ClII 651_.'&#13;
or&#13;
stop at 4426 • SherJdan RoId.&#13;
WANTED - TIM)anr.dlvt, apII'Iminded&#13;
fem.le stuctentl 10 ::&#13;
small apartment with .. RIdJII&#13;
students. Apt. 1 blOCk ~-.-tIlIlI&#13;
campuS. For further """,P"'-"&#13;
write to: Peter Noll, APt·"nnAve.,&#13;
Racine. Wis.&#13;
FREE Kittens: 6 weeki okL:&#13;
trained. Good with chlld'tft. CIII&#13;
and female, assorted ex::; HIll&#13;
Sharon. Ext. 20. Racine&#13;
201. or 634-6215 after 5 p.m. _&#13;
FOR RENT _&#13;
FOR RENT-Mod«DofIkt;':i&#13;
Carpeted and.alr. ~~l fllllf&#13;
per mo. Utillt,es ,nd..--&#13;
at 652-39..5 or 654·7410. _&#13;
For Rent - 1 tJedrOOrn apt. ..-&#13;
633.4990.&#13;
LOST &amp; FOUND ___&#13;
. '" l1l'/I' ~ 'Prescription G1as~' In~&#13;
wedding ring. At T~~tflt t4111.&#13;
cen....::'e::r.::,2n d_t100r_~' -:":=__&#13;
- 5...... '&#13;
FOUND: Sunglas5ts~ .. ~&#13;
Jacket. Contect lost' 2nd f1....&#13;
Information c",tef.&#13;
Tallent Hall. ____&#13;
newscope&#13;
c1assifieds&#13;
are free&#13;
Page&amp; NEWSCOPE sntciubcc 21, ,,11&#13;
YOU'LL LIKE&#13;
WHAT YOU FIND&#13;
..&#13;
and what you hear.&#13;
~- . ' ...&#13;
11111111111111111111111: , 111111~ f;&#13;
FM /AM Portable Radio-model 1221,&#13;
only 4¾" H, offers performance far in excess&#13;
of its size and price. Telescoping FM&#13;
antenna, no drift FM /AFC, slide rule dial&#13;
and vernier tuning. Private-lister,ing earphone&#13;
plus batteries in- s14ss&#13;
eluded. Only ...&#13;
...... WHEELS&#13;
•&#13;
PHONE&#13;
65-C-3559&#13;
For Sale - ·~ v.w. S275.00. 3509&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha.&#13;
1963 Buick For Sale - 4 barrel ~&#13;
eng. In good cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floor. Body in good cond. For Sale At&#13;
S250. ALSO&#13;
4 barrel Chev. carb and bottom piece&#13;
for only $30.00 take It. Call 633-078-' 7 196l•Chev., 6 cyl., auto trans., pwr-.&#13;
steering, very good mech. cond. $150&#13;
- call &amp;59-2412.&#13;
lO p.m. Racine.&#13;
The Buildings of Athletics&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff .&#13;
Among construction proJects&#13;
currently underway on c~~us&#13;
is the building of the fac1h~y&#13;
which will centralize athletic&#13;
,functions on campus. Instead of&#13;
23 different sites fo~ home&#13;
games at various Racine ~d&#13;
Kenosha high schools, ~e w~l&#13;
have the one location which will&#13;
include athletic building and&#13;
fields. . The building, which will have&#13;
48,000 square feet of floor space,&#13;
housea a 108 x 181 foot gym&#13;
included in which are three fullsize&#13;
42 x 96 foot basketball&#13;
courts. Also in the building. i~ a&#13;
25 yard, eight-Jane pool, official&#13;
AA competition size. There ~e&#13;
eight Janes instead of six,&#13;
requested by head c~ch Tom&#13;
Rosandich, to add mcreased&#13;
flexibility for simultaneous&#13;
laps, instruction an~ diving at&#13;
the 3 foot diving pomt.&#13;
Additional facilities include&#13;
two handball courts, a large&#13;
exercize room with universal&#13;
gym, combative room for&#13;
practice of judo and karate, a&#13;
conference room-press box&#13;
overlooking the gym, offices,&#13;
locker rooms, showers and a coed&#13;
sauna.&#13;
Because of the great diversity&#13;
of the facility it is possible to&#13;
have nine badminton games, six&#13;
volleyball games or six&#13;
basketball courts in operation&#13;
at once. Roll-away bleachers&#13;
covering one of the three&#13;
basketball courts will provide&#13;
seating for 2,500 spectators.&#13;
Roll-away, to allow better&#13;
utilization of space when not in&#13;
use.&#13;
Thanks to the generosity of a&#13;
local citizen, the athletic&#13;
department will have a little&#13;
more to spend on equipment.&#13;
Mr. Aldo Madrigrano of the 7-&#13;
Up Bottling Company is&#13;
donating not one but two multipurpose&#13;
score boards, located in&#13;
opposite corners of the gymnasium.&#13;
&#13;
A unique part of the training&#13;
room is a physical fitness&#13;
testing laboratory for&#13;
measuring cardiovascular ft u u&#13;
"Legallze Marijuana" Bumper&#13;
slick«s 25c. Nv:Jney goes lo ACLu.&#13;
Send large self addressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Art Dexter, P.O. 133,&#13;
Union Grove 53182.&#13;
Athletic Director Tom Rosandich, center, and James G lbr.&#13;
of Planning and Construction, right, at the site of the new :th 11~&#13;
building. let 11:&#13;
response, oxygen intake, blo?rl&#13;
pressure and stress analysis.&#13;
When completed the building&#13;
will have the largest enclosed&#13;
area on campus, capable of&#13;
holding 4,500 for special functions.&#13;
The special tartar floor on&#13;
the basketball courts makes&#13;
maintenance easy.&#13;
Mr. Galbraith of PlanninE&#13;
and Construction estimates thal&#13;
all 4,500 could be bused down&#13;
the hill in 30 minutes to parking&#13;
lots at Hallent Hall. This would&#13;
take 90 loads of a 50 passenger&#13;
bus. Making a run every ten&#13;
minutes would necessitate 15&#13;
buses, each making six runs.&#13;
Chartering 15 buses for a two&#13;
hour concert could cost quite a&#13;
bit of money - which would be&#13;
added to the cost of the ticket.&#13;
But it is desired not to mess up&#13;
the ecology of the neighborhood&#13;
with parking lots.&#13;
Cost of the athletic bUiJ .&#13;
c~nstruction will be $1.S mil~&#13;
with an additional $376 000 ~&#13;
on fornishing and 'm spebnt equipmeit. ova le&#13;
Included in the alhl&#13;
building program are ~t&#13;
athletic fields. A huge gra e&#13;
bowl will enclose the va . fi Id rs1ty&#13;
e , a ¼_ mile all-weather&#13;
track and six tennis courts 1&#13;
all 100 a~res of land wm' ~&#13;
developed for intramural &amp;nd&#13;
intercollegiate sport.&#13;
Seating at the bowl will be&#13;
i~orm_al - on the gra s. ~&#13;
sides rise one foot for each~&#13;
feet 6an in a European-tvpe&#13;
arrangement. ·&#13;
The fields, which will ci.t&#13;
$92,000, are expected to be&#13;
completed in late spring, about&#13;
the same time as the building&#13;
which is now 11/2 months ahead&#13;
of schedule.&#13;
Pre-law Club Will Meet&#13;
The Parkside Pre-Law Club will hold two organizational meet·&#13;
on Monday, October 4, abd Tuesday, October 5. Both meetings will&#13;
begin at 7:30 p.m. at Greenquist Hall in r,oom D-111. Prospecure&#13;
members and old members are urged te attend.&#13;
Possible speakers to be brought on campus will be discu sed, as&#13;
well as the purpose and the 1971-72 project of the Pre·Law Chili. Juru&#13;
and senior Pre-Law students will be present to answer any questions.&#13;
Anyone interested but unable to attend may call Tim Prostko 11&#13;
652-4142 (Kenosha) or Becky Ecklund at 554-7160 (Racine&gt;.&#13;
u ••• n n n .....&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling plus the right. Phone 1·&#13;
352-4050.&#13;
u •&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Alli$!&#13;
days a week, 7: 45-4: 30. Call ~-1415&#13;
HELP WANTE0-2 Sp.,ish gu fl&#13;
players work in Pizza HUI. PtM,it&#13;
551-3906 or stop in and ask for Johll&#13;
1969 Honda 175cc Scrambler. Ex.&#13;
CCl\d.-M25. fflCIUdn 2 helmet,. &lt;:all&#13;
Ed, 639~40.&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Attractive .girls over 21. Eam tui ,on&#13;
and book money. Dancing '&#13;
Waitress work. If nudity offenll$&#13;
you, do not apply. Call 652-20031"&#13;
stop at «26 . Sheridan Rold.&#13;
!Hl 8ulck 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
634-.ut.S or 633-2791.&#13;
1951 Ramb. American. Dependable,&#13;
rustle, and cheap. S35. 32&lt;W . 28th St.&#13;
19d0 Ramb. American. Dependable.&#13;
170. 3209 - 28th St .• Kenosha.&#13;
1970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr., Hara.&#13;
oP, V-S, Automatic, power steering,&#13;
6344~.&#13;
1969 OilrliJer RT . 440 MlliJ,, 4 sp.,&#13;
mlllilS, ,eeor call Al t,ler 6 p.m., 658,&#13;
36SI, Sl 10 23rd Ave.&#13;
19611 Opet Kadel, 1966 Corvalr, Both&#13;
VOOd col\d. Call Harris, ~843,2361&#13;
67 AmbasslldOr o4 dr. sedan, auto., 6&#13;
cyl Trans recently ov«hauled $775.&#13;
Ca II 553 2345.&#13;
61 Plymouth Roadrunner 383. Gold&#13;
with Bleck vinyl top. Ex. cond. 554. 8757.&#13;
1,11 TltAVEL TRAILER - 15 Ft&#13;
L lilh1 • V«y HSY to tow · Built In&#13;
Slirge brakes . Used only three&#13;
weeks - Must s.ell . Going to ,chool,&#13;
5122 45th St · Ph. 652-JOM.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus camp«. Stove,&#13;
refrig., and 50 gel. gas tank, in- duded. First $750.00 takes 1111. c-,11&#13;
632-SSU aft rr S · 30.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc&#13;
Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing . Phone 6S4-1770 - or&#13;
N•wscope office. LNve message for&#13;
Rick Paz.-1.&#13;
1967 Austin-Healey 3000, After 5 p.m.&#13;
539-2-407 ( Burlington).&#13;
1068 Ford Torn'IO 302-Va. Low mil.&#13;
Automatic, power steering, Radio,&#13;
Heal«, 652-7745, see at 5234 . 44th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impala Sup« Sport 327, After&#13;
4;30 p.m., 3022 · 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 RS, 1'171, Exe. Cond.&#13;
654-5724, Eve.&#13;
650 Triumph T.T. rebuilt engine,&#13;
lace palnt on frame and tank, 2&#13;
hefmets, S800.00 or best offer. See al&#13;
5723 • 40th Ave. ·&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs some clutch ~. $250.00. 63-4-0871.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
lsuitcases, very good ccnd. S25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
,For II Good night's sleep -&#13;
-Waterbeds. 3701 . a&gt;th street. Call&#13;
,6/l4-94'7.&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Maq us an offer .• call 654-41162.&#13;
Come Toudl Me. A new poetry book&#13;
by Ron Schulz and Larry Roach&#13;
Available at au UWP Bookstores:&#13;
.. FOR SALE - Muskrat fur jacket&#13;
size 14, 25 inches long. N- lining'.&#13;
SS0.00. Anita, 652-675-4.&#13;
,JUDO UtUFORMS, Size 3 and site 4,&#13;
10.00 each. Call Kay at 694-6674.&#13;
Chicago . casette tape ½o trade Jor&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633·3836.&#13;
Publlc Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Slide Rule $10.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis - Mens, lnchJdlng poles and&#13;
bOots. 553-22A5.&#13;
Toaster 15.00, steam 1ro11 $5.00. Call&#13;
553-2345.&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and woods,&#13;
5346 new will sell for $245.&#13;
L•gallze Marijuana Bumper&#13;
Stlck•rs. 50c do,nalion. Be at Student&#13;
Activltles Bulldlng Wed. .&#13;
Stereo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
amplifier, h.rntable, 2 speek•rs.&#13;
Moving, must sell. $SO. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
. .&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lak• Geneva, Wis.&#13;
BEWARE OF CAT MAN - He is a Narc&#13;
EngliSh Springer Spaniels, 6 -eks&#13;
old. AKC Good hunting and ·family&#13;
dog. 639--4593, 1204 Cedar Creek St.,&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Explore the world Of ESP Wlth&#13;
Norman Slater, Apt. by telephone&#13;
only. 65"'-2375.&#13;
MEN - Your spare time is needed&#13;
by a boy 7 . 17 years old who doesn't&#13;
have a father. Can you provide an&#13;
example of good character and&#13;
citizenship wh ile shooting pool,&#13;
fiShing, skating, etc.? If so call Big&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha, Inc. 694-6585.·&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION Introductory Lecture-Tues.&#13;
Sept. 28, 8 p.m ., rm 138,&#13;
Kenosha campus; Wed. Sept. 29, 8&#13;
p.m., rm 105, Racine Campus;&#13;
Thurs. Sept. 30, 4 &amp; 8 p .m., rm 100,&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75 . 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
Shocks for '67·'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 65"'-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire &amp; rim $1 , FIie&#13;
boxes S1 &amp; $1.50, call 634,3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
Disp: Cal_l 5)1-7161 aft. 4 p.m .&#13;
2 BedroolTI., House, Parkside area,&#13;
Liv. R., Dining Room · .comb.,&#13;
Fireplace, over one acre land, 552· 9012.&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
wlnemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums; 6328&#13;
Wasnlngton Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Nloney - Bartend &amp; Gt&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633,3805 •&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen - Good condition and&#13;
not too expenslv•. J11n 69-4,34,-,.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, 5.51-9429.&#13;
WANT ED - Two attractive, QIIIII·&#13;
minded female students to Shift&#13;
small apartment with !WO flllll&#13;
s1udt'nls. Apt. 1 block from R':&#13;
campus. For further 1ntonri•&#13;
write to; Peter Noll, Apt. 3, 1111 W'i&#13;
Ave., Racine, Wis. _&#13;
k5 old I ttl' FREE Kittens: 6 wee. ',MIit&#13;
trained Good with ctuhren. . ssorted colon and female, II • e Maifl tll&#13;
Sharon, Ext. 20, Racin&#13;
201, or 634-6215 after 5 P~&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
--------=-=· FOR RENT - Mode~ offiCf s::-&#13;
Carpeted and air_ cond1:"~il ror. per mo. Utilities inciud ·&#13;
at 652-3945 or 654-74!0. ---&#13;
m apt, llacklf&#13;
For Rent - l bedroG&#13;
633,4990.&#13;
LOST&amp;FO~&#13;
------.-=car kf)'Si ~ · Prescription Gla5~ 5• 1 forll'a!iOI'&#13;
wedding ring. "\~~ell; Hall·&#13;
center, 2nd floor, •_ -&#13;
5.,,,,,,r&#13;
FOUND: 5ungli1SSfSf0111ddtPI•&#13;
Jacket. Contad IOSI &amp; 211d fl&#13;
Information center·&#13;
Ta~&#13;
newscope classifieds&#13;
are tree &#13;
,.rIlSlde Hosts Peace Corps&#13;
.Itlletic Training Program&#13;
. of ' he NewsCope starr I resmc •&#13;
~,IIY': athletiC stall. offered a warm """de 0 Borjas Fnday as he came to&#13;
ttif!Jf:' to Col.p&#13;
~ce Corps Athletic training&#13;
ell .lbe h~d at Parkside.&#13;
~ to be chosen to hold the program&#13;
p,rtside. W:e&#13;
colonel's words, its "expert&#13;
....-. of: lnd.ts ability to "deliver the goods".&#13;
~. ~ dopment in the Philippines had&#13;
"*,,c ~~ng World War II. Due to economic&#13;
Coosedlb:~ducational and Athletic systems&#13;
~, post-war years. In the latter portion&#13;
~ III coaches were named to go to the&#13;
.... five&#13;
andwork wotu our athletic prog~ams.&#13;
~ bes were Howard Auer, assistant&#13;
Ii'" ":ach at the University of Illinois;&#13;
~in. Idaho track coach; Bill McKuozle.&#13;
IllC lc team volleyball star and former&#13;
OI~P~e Denver Athletics; Fred Dennis,&#13;
...... nngschampionJind former All-American&#13;
;...oar -&#13;
NewscopeWins but Loses, Too&#13;
t Wednesday the In- ;ural Football League&#13;
ngameof the week focused&#13;
... gridiron battle between&#13;
~ and the House Apes.&#13;
1'lt Newseope team entered&#13;
game with only three&#13;
........ while tbe House Apes&#13;
lIIdoI a full compliment of&#13;
,~" '01'&#13;
gymnast from South II"&#13;
W'l ern ImOlS' and Richa d&#13;
I son, manager of th • r&#13;
Shakespere Company. e Archery division of&#13;
C&#13;
The program at Parkside is to train Peace&#13;
orps workers to work' lh '"&#13;
athletic directors and coa~~es TehPhilJppmes ~s&#13;
be' Oct . e program Will&#13;
At g:;: . I and last about four and a half weeks&#13;
e end of the program the trainess will be'&#13;
sworn In as Peace C k Ph T . orps war ers and sent to the&#13;
I ippines. They will be taught the culture of the&#13;
Philippines and the languages. The volunteers will&#13;
th,en be distributed around one country to work&#13;
With the programs,&#13;
One of the purposes for the program is to&#13;
prepare a team from the Philippines for the 1976&#13;
Olympic games.&#13;
Tom Bosandtch, the Athletic Director of&#13;
Parkside, has been a great Iielp in the planning f&#13;
th~program. He is, in the Colonel's words a "tr::e&#13;
Ir-iendcf the Philippines and the progra;"".&#13;
men with, substitutes on the&#13;
sidelines. NW team captain,&#13;
"Flash" Pazera, carrying a bit&#13;
of excess weight from the offseason,&#13;
played a standout&#13;
defensive game for which he&#13;
suffered a minor injury.&#13;
Assisted by "Knobnose" Nedry&#13;
and "Crash" Koloen, the House&#13;
HarriersTrounce Carthage&#13;
byW.F. Lane&#13;
\twSCope Sportswriter&#13;
III Tuesday. September 21,&#13;
Parks ide Cross-Country&#13;
Iw1 defeated three other&#13;
IlIo&gt;Is m a quadrangular meet&#13;
IJ1utewalerSta~eUniversity.&#13;
Partside nmner Lucian Rosa&#13;
iII!lod ft,st. followed in third&#13;
C1Ilck Detbnan. Jim MchIIIen&#13;
of Parkside finished&#13;
IIh with Rudy Alverez and&#13;
'.'ramural Schedule&#13;
_yo Sept. 21&#13;
r.Jocks vs. Newscope&#13;
....... y. Sept. 29&#13;
",. Schoonersvs. Mad Dogs&#13;
frWal. Oct. I&#13;
lbao Apes vs. Pink Racists -l.Oct. 4&#13;
Jocks vs. The Schooner&#13;
....... y. Oct. 6&#13;
PlDi racists vs. Newscop~&#13;
It'sthe~~&#13;
real thing.&#13;
~e.&#13;
-~&#13;
• Apes were hard pressed to&#13;
complete a pass.&#13;
Rounding out tbe Newscope&#13;
team were Dennis Serpe at QB,&#13;
Kieth Bosman. back; Wayne&#13;
Bosman, offensive safety; and&#13;
one unidentified freak who&#13;
works a t the union.&#13;
The House Apes, led by sucb&#13;
tail-less monkeys (Websters)&#13;
Mark Barbill, scored seven&#13;
points early in the game, but&#13;
faced with a small but inspired&#13;
Newscope defensive line, never&#13;
came close to raising their&#13;
score. Newscope's offense, led&#13;
by Serpe, utilized spectacularly&#13;
long passes and quick legs to&#13;
compile 13 points on two TD's&#13;
and one extra point.&#13;
For the record, the House&#13;
Apes were credited 't\ith a&#13;
victory by default as Newscope&#13;
used players from other learns&#13;
to fill the gaps in its non--existent&#13;
backfield.&#13;
Gary Lance in eighth and ninth&#13;
places, respectively.&#13;
Carthage came in second with&#13;
three men finishing-in the top&#13;
ten places. Stevens Point was&#13;
third. followed by Whitewater.&#13;
Team scores were Parkside 26,&#13;
Carthage 45, Stevens Point 66&#13;
and Whitewater 84.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson of&#13;
Parkside commented that for&#13;
the first meet the team ran well&#13;
and he is looking forward to an&#13;
excellent season. He said he&#13;
really did not expect to do that.&#13;
well against Carthage Slllce&#13;
they are a noted state and&#13;
national power .&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers Get Acquarnted Oller&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
Wi"' Oil &amp; Filrer Chance&#13;
PARKSIOE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAO&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE&#13;
650-9968&#13;
0,-0...., .....&#13;
...,. ,-&#13;
....,".. ,." .&#13;
,. "0"· ~o" ..&#13;
....... ...,_ ,_ c • ,.•• ~ ,&#13;
0_ ..... Il "" " c •&#13;
Col "runi de Borja 01 UI~ P.lu.hpp..... mlk_ \lhlt't&#13;
F'f:deralioo •• bo reeeeu \- ,t.f1I PI lICIt'10 .kna. pta. ,. UI"&#13;
upcoming Peace 0f"I"0 lra101.11&lt; pr'O(T'J;. • .. 1" 8«"Ja au'&#13;
Parkside Lnck coeclll BlU La_wa..... I 1t'UC'DlI"f'C'Ler'nom.&#13;
Rosandicb. origmalOr .f lAe' Pan.. Mlm&#13;
Remember&#13;
Octoberfest&#13;
lomOIH 101'&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I. fMlt 5«:"1 ,-. 11 U "&#13;
"&gt;0&#13;
• 111$ • 1'A.,,"o.t • (N~ .. tw&#13;
4t'tO(CMI ..... "'10'-' • lA \. ..&#13;
....... ,000 • ~DW·(..-O&#13;
cuu.oUTS • O£lIY(U&#13;
rOll IJ"" .. , U&#13;
657·9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
HOWL&#13;
BACK AT&#13;
WINTER&#13;
VERY DEfINlTEl Y&#13;
GEAR BOX·&#13;
. .&#13;
S40&#13;
Richman&#13;
."OTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
arkside Hosts Peace Corps&#13;
f' •tllletic Training P rogram&#13;
. of the Newscope staff&#13;
·r)IJ !"r~1~:uc staff_ offered a warm&#13;
par de 5 D sorjas Fnday as he came to&#13;
to C0\ e ce Corps Athletic training&#13;
~ ,the ~ at Parkside.&#13;
:n to be ~ chosen to hold the program ·c1e was d ·t " t . th colonel's wor s, 1 s exper&#13;
of. ind ·tseability to "deliver the goods". "an I Ph·1· · had . . lo ment in the 1 1ppmes&#13;
eu deveg P,,orld war II. Due to economic .• ...A durin ° - ~ Educational and Athletic systems&#13;
• es the t-war years. In the latter portion&#13;
1Jded in posches were named to go to the&#13;
fi,;e coa hl t· nd work wotu our at e 1c programs.&#13;
es aches were Howard ~uer, ass!s~nt&#13;
Ii coa ch at the University of Illmo1s;&#13;
co~daho track coach; Bill McKunzie,&#13;
~· team volleyball star and former&#13;
Ol};P~e Denver Athletics; Fred De~nis,&#13;
nngschampion;md former All-American&#13;
gymnast from Southern ur . . . Wilson mana er mois, and Richard&#13;
Sh k ' g of the Archery d1\'ision or a espere Company.&#13;
C The program at Parkside is to train Peace&#13;
orps workers to work in the Ph'l' thl ti di 1 1ppmes a a e c rectors and coaches Th be · 0c · e pro ram 1,1, IU&#13;
gm t. 1 and last about four and a half we .&#13;
At the . end of the program the trainess will .&#13;
sw?~" I~ as Peace Corps worker and ent to the&#13;
Ph!1!PP!nes. They will be taught the culture of t&#13;
Ph1hppm~ a~d the languages. The \'Olunteers "111&#13;
th_en be distributed around one country lo wor with the programs.&#13;
One of the purposes for the program i . td&#13;
prepar~ a team from the Philippines for the 19i&#13;
Olympic games.&#13;
T~m Rosandich, the Athletic Director of&#13;
Parkside, has been a great nelp in the planning of&#13;
th~ program. He is, in the Colonel's words, a 'true&#13;
friend of the Philippines and the program".&#13;
Newscope Wins but Loses, Too&#13;
Wednesday the Inal&#13;
Football League&#13;
me of the week focused&#13;
gridiron battle between&#13;
pe and the House Apes.&#13;
. ·t'*-scope team entered&#13;
ame with only three&#13;
while the House Apes&#13;
1 [ull compliment of&#13;
men with substitutes on the&#13;
sidelines. NW team captain,&#13;
"Flash" Pazera , carrying a bit&#13;
of excess weight from the off.&#13;
season, played a standout&#13;
defensive game for which be&#13;
suffered a minor injury.&#13;
Assisted by "Knobnose" Nedry&#13;
and "Crash" Koloen, the House&#13;
Harriers Trounce Carthage&#13;
b~ \\,. F. Lane&#13;
t'tl ~ope Sport writer&#13;
Tuesday, September 21,&#13;
Parkside Cross-Country&#13;
defeated three other&#13;
in a quadrangular meet&#13;
ewater State University.&#13;
Pli ide runner Lucian Rosa&#13;
fir l, followed in third&#13;
Dettman. Jim Mcof&#13;
Parkside finished&#13;
,:h Rudy Alverez and&#13;
•&#13;
Gary Lance in eighth and ninth&#13;
places, respectively.&#13;
Carthage came in second with&#13;
three men finishing in the top&#13;
ten places. Stevens Point was&#13;
third followed by Whitewater.&#13;
Tea~ scores were Parkside 26,&#13;
Carthage 45, Stevens Point 66&#13;
and Whitewater 84.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson of&#13;
Parkside commented that for&#13;
the first meet the team ran well&#13;
and he is looking forward to an&#13;
excellent season. He said he&#13;
really did not expect to do ~hat .&#13;
well against Carthage since&#13;
they are a noted state and&#13;
national power.&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
•&#13;
• Apes were hard pr ed to&#13;
complete a pass.&#13;
Rounding out the . ·~ pe&#13;
team were Dennis Serpe at QB, Kieth Bosman, back Wayne&#13;
Bosman, offensive safety; and&#13;
one unidentified freak who&#13;
works at the union.&#13;
The House Ape , led by uch&#13;
tail-less monke:&gt; &lt; Web ·ters&#13;
Mark Barhill, cored even&#13;
points early in the game, but&#13;
faced with a mall but in pired&#13;
Newscope defen ive line, ne\ r&#13;
came close to raUng ir&#13;
score. Newscope·s offat e, led&#13;
by Serpe, utilized pectacularl~&#13;
long passes and qui - legs to&#13;
compile 13 points on two TD'&#13;
and one extra point.&#13;
For the record. the Ho&#13;
Apes were credited \\i lh a&#13;
victory by default as e\\&#13;
used player from other m&#13;
to fill the gap in it · non-e.xi t n&#13;
backfield.&#13;
Get Acqua ,nted Oller&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Cba ce&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTO ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE .&#13;
654-996&#13;
. .,, ............... . ,. •• •O\ol • TOIi a.a e •• -·•~•&#13;
..... ., 11 •• c.•c•• ,..Tt•T ••••&#13;
OIi' ••• t 11t•• •••• o• e L • C• t&#13;
Remember&#13;
Oc oberfe&#13;
6S7-9843 o&#13;
658 972&#13;
Elm Pl z· &#13;
PageS NEWSCOPE seplember 27,1971&#13;
October Events&#13;
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2f&#13;
Film: "The Hawks and The&#13;
SparroW5", Pier Paolo Pasolln!.&#13;
Short: "Off-On". SCott Bartlett&#13;
FRIDAY1Oet.l&#13;
"Sutch Cassity". Adm. 7SCPerkside&#13;
&amp; Wis. 10 required&#13;
Cross Country: Minnesota. Drake·&#13;
OesMolnl!'$&#13;
Lat. Payment: $.50.00 Penalty· by&#13;
Friday, Oct. 1, 1911 (End of fourth&#13;
week)&#13;
",TURDAY. OCT.'&#13;
Cross Coun1ry: Platteville State&#13;
Invitational· Platteville&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.lD&#13;
Intercollegl.te Film Council&#13;
presents "'f", 7 p.m., Golden&#13;
Rondelle. Racine. Tickets available&#13;
at Information Center, Free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY,OCT. U&#13;
Concert: Mary O. Bradford&#13;
aUditorium Mltry Sauer pianist&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.1S&#13;
Film: "Where Eagles Dare", Adm.&#13;
7SC Parksldc! &amp; Wls 10 required&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 16&#13;
Crou Country: Northwestern.&#13;
Loyola - Evanston&#13;
TUESDAY, OCT. l'&#13;
Film: "see You At Mao". Jeen-Luc&#13;
Godwd Short: "Why"""" Creates",&#13;
saul Bass&#13;
WEDNESDAY. OCT. 20&#13;
Studfllt hOnors concert, I p.rn:.&#13;
Badger Room. Racine.&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.22&#13;
o.nce: Student Activities.&#13;
SATURDAY .OCT. 23&#13;
Concert: J.e. Super Star, case Field&#13;
House. Tickets at Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
Cross Country: Marquette, UI·&#13;
O'tlcavo Circle· Milwaukee.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 2t&#13;
Film: "Cool Hand luke", adm. 7St:&#13;
Parkslde and Wis. 10 required.&#13;
o.acllne to drop couru&#13;
SATURDAY. OCT. 30&#13;
Croll Country: loras - Dubuque&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.2&#13;
Concert: JOhn Denver •• e.m.,&#13;
Kenos"" Tremper high school&#13;
auditorium. Adm. 1:3.50. TlcMts&#13;
avall"ble at the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 206, Tallent Hall.&#13;
Cross Country: WU·Mllwaukee,&#13;
Beloit· Parkslde&#13;
SUNDAY ,OCT. J&#13;
P.rksl... sculptor Rollin Jansky&#13;
eXhibition ., Dominican College.&#13;
Racine and KenoSh. Alumni Picnic&#13;
&amp; Dance fOr Parkslde Faculty and&#13;
Administrative Staff. Student Ac·&#13;
tlvltles, begIns at 4:30&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT., OCT.' &amp;,&#13;
Odoberfest: WHkend of athletic&#13;
and social ....ents. Competition In&#13;
Cross Co\rltry, Soccer. Golf. Tennis.&#13;
Rugby and 5alllng. Also, beer and&#13;
br.ts .t soccer game on Saturday&#13;
afternoon and dances at the Student&#13;
Activities Building Friday and&#13;
saturday NigMS.&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
,..ORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOU'TH 7500 SHERIDAN R-OAO&#13;
SEAFOOD SPECIALTIES&#13;
RANCH'S FISH&#13;
DINN.ER $1.45&#13;
SEAfOOD PlATTER FRESH LAKE PERCH&#13;
Golden Fried ShrilllP and Fish Golden fried Lake.... eh&#13;
.. rved with Onion Rings, _ved with FrenchFriea&#13;
Conage Che... Sauce cole s1_andbreod&#13;
and Bread $1.85 $ 1.75&#13;
FRIED JUMBO&#13;
SHRIMP DINNER $1.75&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Merger Could Hurt Parkside&#13;
1) roductive programs, One advanta&#13;
(Continued from Page . I fern orary instructors merger syste:e&#13;
.Of tho&#13;
levels of ~unding and d~ma elim~nated, non-filling of rewording of the I ~s tho&#13;
of the ktnds of sta~, ~~ vacancies, shorter library will open tbe egislaliooJ&#13;
money we still n~. ed hours and beneral overall creating a gradua~oor . ~&#13;
characterIzed the owe~'A reductions. At this time it program at Parks' ,&#13;
fundin~ levels t ~s the cannot be determined which previous legislationIde. '!'be&#13;
potentIal threauw'~ nd areas will be most affected a four year SCboo~realeu&#13;
.quality" of the . ' ain_ because the budget figures Disadvantages are O!IIy,&#13;
saId,. A de~IOpmgecial are not yet available and the to raise the salariestbectl&amp;t&#13;
shtution IS u e~e:~t of levels of funding have not WSU professors to tbOf Ibt&#13;
pressures as ,~ been determmed. UW professors Ole ~&#13;
these changes. .&#13;
The merger calls for the&#13;
creation of a governing&#13;
board changing of the&#13;
names' of the institutions,&#13;
and. equal levels of funding.&#13;
No other changes are in the&#13;
merger as it . stands now.&#13;
Each system will be administered&#13;
separately, as&#13;
they exist now, until 1973.&#13;
During the next two years&#13;
a committee composed of&#13;
three regents from each&#13;
system and three citizens&#13;
will study the operations of&#13;
the two systems and&#13;
recommend the' legislation&#13;
needed to implement a fully&#13;
merged system beyond 1973.&#13;
Some possible effects of&#13;
the merger on Parkside are&#13;
larger classes, elimination&#13;
of those less attractive and&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes·&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
I Comejoin in the fun I&#13;
Grand Opening&#13;
Sept 30-0ct 1-0d 2&#13;
Robert Wayne School of Music&#13;
SS16-6th Avenue Kenosha&#13;
e Artists Performing r:W':":'O':""R-L--D:-:'S-lA-R-GEST--'&#13;
e Refreshments&#13;
e Free Gift for Everyone GUITAR ON DISPLAY&#13;
I ---------'9"'1 With These Coupons-T&#13;
- _&#13;
I Gui!~~8~t!ings Regal !ip I .Smile I e FENDER I Drumsticks I GUItar Straps&#13;
L ~ PRICE I ~ PRICE I ~ PRICE I&#13;
-----------------~--~---~-~--~~&#13;
Parking Reminder&#13;
Up to September 19thCampus&#13;
Safety has issued warning&#13;
tickets to illegally parked&#13;
vehicles. Beginning Monday,&#13;
September 20th, Parking&#13;
Citations will be issued to&#13;
illegally parked vehicles. From&#13;
October 1st on, citations also&#13;
will be issued to vehicles not&#13;
displaying the UW-Parkside&#13;
Parking Permit.&#13;
plications duri&#13;
registration processog u..&#13;
Faculty and Stall s~ tin&gt;o&#13;
received the material ha ..&#13;
camRus mail last "eek~&#13;
Hoc Faculty and L: .M&#13;
Term Classifiedperson:lled&#13;
receive the material "",-~&#13;
If you have not _~-'''Y '~",ved . structions on obta·. II&gt;&#13;
P k&#13;
· 10lna ar mg Permit st -e I&#13;
should contact the' Reg~d.. ~&#13;
Office and Faculty a':~'l&#13;
may obtain the infonnatll&#13;
from the Bw-sar'. OffICe lJoo&#13;
All students should have&#13;
received UW-Parks'ideParking&#13;
Regulations and Permit Ap-&#13;
-&#13;
ize Our Advertisers&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
Quality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
•&#13;
SK IRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
SANDS TUNIC TOPS&#13;
LARES H·tJNOREOS OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWEU&#13;
~ACINE 3120'I'IASHINGTON AYE&#13;
~ACINE&#13;
l&#13;
ro-------"- i Patron&#13;
io ·_&#13;
'I&#13;
213 SIXTH STREET&#13;
,"~7&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing'&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
ON SOUTH SHE-R.IDA.N ROAP IN KENOSHA 6SoC.. 0411&#13;
......&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
~&#13;
$eIWbuj U- ~&#13;
Pi/jIF1:. !J~~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSH':.,~~~&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, 011'011.-.&#13;
Page8 September 27, 1911&#13;
October Events&#13;
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2'&#13;
FIim : • 'The Hawks and The&#13;
Sparrows", P,er Paolo Pasollnl.&#13;
Short · " Off-On ". Scott Bartlett&#13;
FIUDAY,Oct. 1&#13;
" Butch Cus;ty" , Adm. 7Sc Parkside&#13;
&amp; Wis. ID required&#13;
Cross Country: Minnesota . Drake .&#13;
DttMolnes&#13;
Late Payment: sso.oo Pa,ally . by&#13;
Friday, Oct . 1, 1971 (End of fourth&#13;
week&gt;&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT . 2&#13;
Concert: JOhn Denver, 8 p.m.,&#13;
Kenosha Tremper h lOh school&#13;
auditorium. Adm. SJ.SO. Tickets&#13;
available 1t the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 206, Tallent Hall . Cross Country : WU -MIiwaukee,&#13;
Beloit • Parkside&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.3&#13;
Perks Cit sculptor Rollin Jansky&#13;
exhibition at Dominican College . Racine and Kenosha Alumni Plailc&#13;
&amp; O nee for Parkside Facully Ind&#13;
Administrative Stall, Student Ac ·&#13;
llvltles, beg in, et 4: JO&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT., OCT. I &amp; 9&#13;
Octoberfnt: Weekend of athletic .,d soclal events. Competition In&#13;
Cross Coi.ntry, Soccer, Goll, Tennis,&#13;
Rugby and Salllno . Also, beer end&#13;
brats at soccer oeme on Saturday&#13;
afternoon nd dances et the Student&#13;
Activities Bulldlng Friday and&#13;
S.turday Nights.&#13;
S,..TURDAY,OCT.9&#13;
Cross Country: Platteville State&#13;
Invitational . Platteville&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.10&#13;
lntercollegllle FIim Council&#13;
presents "If", 7 p .m ., Golden&#13;
Rondelle. Rac ine. Tickets available&#13;
al Information Center, Free .&#13;
WEDNESDAY,OCT. 13&#13;
Concert: Mary 0. Bradford&#13;
auditorium Mary Sauer pianist&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.15&#13;
FIim: "Where Eagles Dare". Adm.&#13;
7Sc Parkside a. Wis 10 required&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 1'&#13;
Cross Country: Northwestern,&#13;
Loyola Evanston&#13;
TUESDAY,OCT. 1'&#13;
Fllm: " See You At MMJ", Jean-Luc&#13;
Godard Short : "Why M1!lfl Creates",&#13;
Saul Bass&#13;
WEDNESOAY,OCT. 20&#13;
Stuel.nt hOnors concert, a ?·"'·:&#13;
Badger Room, Racine .&#13;
FIUDAY,OCT.22&#13;
Dance: Student Activities.&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.23&#13;
Concert: J.C. Super Star, case Fleld&#13;
House. Tickets at Student Activities&#13;
Office. Cross Country: Marquette, UI -&#13;
Chlcaoo Circle . MIiwaukee.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 2'&#13;
FIim: "Cool Hand Luke" , adm. 7Sc&#13;
P11rkside and Wis. 10 required.&#13;
De1clln• to drop course SATURDAY,OCT. 30&#13;
Cross Country: Loras · Dubuque&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
• I&#13;
~ORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7S00 SHERIDAN R-OAD&#13;
SEAFOOD SPECIAL TIES&#13;
RANCH1S FISH&#13;
DINNER $1.45&#13;
SEA FOOD PLATTER&#13;
FRIED JUMBO&#13;
SHRIMP DINNER $1. 75&#13;
FRESH LAKE PERCH&#13;
Golden Fried Shrimp and Fish Golden fried Lake Perch 1&#13;
Mrved with Onion Rings, served with French Fri••&#13;
Cottage Cheese Souce cole 1lawandbread&#13;
and Bread $1.85 $1.75&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Merger Could Hurt Parkside&#13;
&gt; productive programs, One advanta&#13;
&lt;Continued f_rom Page 1 . 1 tem orary instructors merger syste:e _of t&#13;
levels of funding an~fma elimYnated non-filling of rewording of the 1 ~s the&#13;
of the kinds. of ~ ,, ;re vacancies, 'shorter library will open the ~g•slatioa&#13;
money w~ still n 1 · d hours and beneral overall creating a graduate 00r ·&#13;
characterized the owe~~A reductions. At this time it program at Parks· ~ f undin~ levels as the cannot be determined which previous legislationtde. 'the&#13;
pote_ntial threaJw~? nd areas will be most affected a four year sch ?eateu&#13;
.qu~1ty" of the . ' ain- because the budget figures Disadvantages are 00 Only_&#13;
s~1d,. A_ dev~lopm~cial are not yet available and the to raise the saianeslhe cost&#13;
stitution is un ere: lt of levels of funding have not WSU professors to th or the&#13;
pressures as .~ r u been determined. UW professors. OSe of&#13;
these changes.&#13;
The merger calls for _the&#13;
creation of a govermng&#13;
board changing of the&#13;
names' of the institutions,&#13;
and equal levels of funding.&#13;
No other changes are in the&#13;
merger as it .stands now.&#13;
Each system will be administered&#13;
separately, as&#13;
they exist now, until 1973.&#13;
During the next two years&#13;
a committee composed of&#13;
three regents from each&#13;
system and three citizens&#13;
will study the operations of&#13;
the two systems and&#13;
recommend the· legislation&#13;
needed to implement a fully&#13;
merged system beyond 1973.&#13;
Some possible effects of&#13;
the merger on Parkside are&#13;
larger classes, elimination&#13;
of those less attractive and&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes·&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUK~E&#13;
Parking&#13;
Up to September 19th Campus&#13;
Safety has issued warning&#13;
tickets to illegally parked&#13;
vehicles. Beginning Monday,&#13;
September 20th, Parking&#13;
Citations will be issued to&#13;
illegally parked vehicles. From&#13;
October 1st on, citations also&#13;
will be issued to vehicles not&#13;
displaying the UW-Parkside&#13;
Parking Permit.&#13;
Reminder&#13;
pli~atrtio~s during reg1s atlon process Fu&#13;
Faculty and Staff sho ll ·&#13;
received the materialuld ha1&#13;
cam~us mail last wee\c~&#13;
Hoc Faculty and L' . . Ad&#13;
Term Classified Pers 'lll11td . . onn~ receive the material 1-.i&#13;
If you have not rec . rtly&#13;
structions on obta~'~ed inp&#13;
k . 1n1no&#13;
ar mg Permit st d° a&#13;
should contact the' R ~ en&#13;
All students should have Office and Faculty ::1.rar,&#13;
received UW-Parkside Parking may obtain the informai~&#13;
Regulations and Permit Ap- from the Bw-sar's Office. -&#13;
'&#13;
·------·-·•-••- 1•11 1111 RI R 111fflNIHNtNI _______ _&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
I&#13;
fl&#13;
O ua I I ty sportswear&#13;
tor women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SKIRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
213 SIXTH STREET RACINE&#13;
TlJ N IC TOPS&#13;
lftJNDREDS OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWUR&#13;
3120'\'/..ASHINGTON AVE&#13;
~q,,,.7 . ~ACINE&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
·swing at&#13;
She.ridan Lanes&#13;
ON SOUTH SHE-RIO AN ROAD IN KENOSHA 654-0411&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
r Come join in the fun I&#13;
Grand Opening&#13;
S.ept 30-Oct 1-Oct 2&#13;
Robert Wayne School of Music&#13;
5516-6th Avenue Kenosha&#13;
• Artists Performing r-W-OR_L_D-,S-LA-R-GEST--&#13;
• Refreshments&#13;
• Free Gift for Everyone GUITAR ON DISPLAY&#13;
1 ---------1 With These Coupons-T---------&#13;
1 Gui!~~e !t!ings I Regal !ip I Smile I&#13;
: • FENDER : Drumsticks I Guitar Straps· I&#13;
L_~2_!~!~~_J __ r~!~~~-J--~~!_!l!C~_l&#13;
s~ tJu,, ~u,at Pvno, 11 !I~ ~&#13;
658-3131 2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSH':_,r.. ROOM&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINI.-, </text>
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              <text>"Do those people exist in prison?</text>
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              <text>&#13;
'Do those people exist in prison?'&#13;
By Bill Sorensen&#13;
Fine-Arts Editor&#13;
"'l1lE CAGE" - Rick Cluchey&#13;
The audience was accused and&#13;
IIIeoced Thursday night when Barb1ft&#13;
Productions presented. The Cage;&#13;
alilegorical play that invited us all&#13;
au an inferno of penance that we&#13;
lIIped in writing, directing and&#13;
A place where humility is&#13;
upas poor replacement for the&#13;
01 men.&#13;
Plainly effective and sincere, with&#13;
I'I'fuI humnr, the play retained' its&#13;
.11I goalwith the rabid dialogue of&#13;
It enclosure, bordering on The&#13;
Ilorquis De Sade, and not to be&#13;
_ken for Gorilla Theatre. _&#13;
lilt Slatewas empty except for a&#13;
Ioptismaltoiletand a few blankets, and&#13;
.. presence of Iigbt that varied from&#13;
lIIzmc to bloodred. We are confronted&#13;
.... the Sounds of Prison and prepared&#13;
.. f) mWard. On our odyssey we meet&#13;
IIot&lt;het,a demerited man whose&#13;
""""""nia leads the games. The :=..exceeds brilliance in tbe bands of&#13;
Nechels. Doc is tbe Seeming&#13;
rr.c..lor, he hustles in and out of the&#13;
IIIk thaI surround him. The part is&#13;
::,redasreal by Donald Ross. Al is a ,iafStd homosexual,his self hatred is&#13;
..;:: through a biting dialogue of&#13;
""eelom" n~ellation that tested and&#13;
• plo theskJilsof Jack Clemons. Jive&#13;
"" yedby Gary Pettinger, he is the&#13;
~SOner I the matrix of the game,&#13;
r_ or hISyounggirlfriend. In reality,&#13;
-"I IS a . k&#13;
Illaxed a . qulC humored fellow,&#13;
"tr nd.n control but in the play ans! .' ,&#13;
~' ormation was complete in its&#13;
b7 H. Ie COnfusion.The guards, played&#13;
.... ~taEVerharl and Terry Joyce&#13;
11th H po-hke and in accordance&#13;
enry "B ghd d" t'Qrnmenl" . a a Everhart's Soaet ,,' Prasons are a microcosm of&#13;
li'I~r' t~e anger and situational&#13;
IIIl.alleY 0 function reflected on a&#13;
,,_ r SCale.&#13;
',", play' "'-lentb s general excellence was&#13;
"-1dent t&#13;
utreasons for this are not so&#13;
~I 0 the audience . . . Bruce&#13;
IItsl~,atchel)exemplifies this best&#13;
~.itttion cnme" was Conscientious&#13;
'-inerly&#13;
'ano~ out on appeal, he was&#13;
late, WhereS udent. at San Francisco&#13;
TVBroadc .he majored in Radio and&#13;
~ltlped asm~. In his senior year he&#13;
"lIoie.j at ~ mterest in drama' and&#13;
llft&gt;est.,. I e Untversity for ne'\fly a&#13;
""ed th~l~ 1967, he .became so in-&#13;
~inrad. dldn t flO1Shhis master's&#13;
""IlIO.ed'lhis loand ~e)evision.Later, he&#13;
..,.,. Jab' d'UrsUlt and studied at an&#13;
be rn~~anada, learning Mime. In&#13;
l\e Alar' Dan Caldwell and worked&#13;
~IY~~ Shakespeare festival.&#13;
~uerry :aaspired to films such a.s&#13;
tement and zabrisky&#13;
photographs by bill sqrnrsnr&#13;
NS: Do you think it would have helped&#13;
the situation at Attica if Rockefeller&#13;
had appeared as the prisoners&#13;
requested?&#13;
Bruce: Definitely. Just poor judgement&#13;
was used all around. Myself, being a&#13;
conscientious objector I really fell an&#13;
importance to the value of life .. , and&#13;
Idon't think that someone can respect&#13;
anyone else's life if he doesn't respect&#13;
his own first, and I really felt thaI&#13;
Rockefeller should have stepped in,&#13;
even if it was to lie, even if it was to say&#13;
'Ya, we're going to grant you guys&#13;
everything you want, .. you can have&#13;
it all," just to save those lives, but by&#13;
not doing so 40 or possibly more have&#13;
been lost.&#13;
NS: Do you think the demands made by&#13;
the prisoners were justified?&#13;
Bruce: I think just about everyone of&#13;
them were very just demands, because&#13;
conditions in prisons are really, really&#13;
brutal .. ,you're not a human being in&#13;
a prison, you're an animal. They just&#13;
wanted the people to realize this, that&#13;
they are human beings. If the purpose&#13;
for going to prison is rehabilitation well&#13;
then all over the country, prisons have&#13;
failed in their jobs miserably and this is&#13;
what the prisoners were trying to point&#13;
out.&#13;
NS: Do you think the militancy inside&#13;
the prisons is jus,tified? ,&#13;
Bruce: Well how else is anybody gomg&#13;
to find out about it? What else can you&#13;
do? Finally, you're driven to a point&#13;
where you are an animal, and that&#13;
people are playing games w'.~ you on&#13;
the inside, plus on the ~uts1?e 1t~ sort of&#13;
an out of sight out of mmd Situation, and&#13;
when it comes to that it is the only way&#13;
you can get anybodY to hear about it. It&#13;
was very unfortunate what happened at&#13;
Attica or at San Quentin, but, my God,&#13;
what's happening now throughout the&#13;
country as far as people ~m~ng&#13;
aware has been amazing and tt 1S~Olng&#13;
to help in the future. Again, speaking of&#13;
the militancy behind prison walls and&#13;
all' first of all, they weren't trying to&#13;
es~ape and I don't think it would have&#13;
been that brutal or that militant, as you&#13;
asked earlier, had Rockefeller stepped&#13;
in or had the warden granted them all&#13;
th'eir demands, at least showed so~e&#13;
respect not only life of prisonser but hfe&#13;
of their own men,&#13;
NS' Bobby Seale showed up for about&#13;
fiv~ minutes .. ' ?O you t~k ~at&#13;
token visit accomphshed anythmg.&#13;
II don'l because&#13;
Bruce' Oh no I rea Y , . " t ell done everything had been pret y wII d 't&#13;
when he got out there, I rea Y on&#13;
think it helped at all. the&#13;
NS: What, if anything, has changed&#13;
prisoners' attitudes, not~~ ~~ s::;&#13;
Quentin, Tombs and s;'1that changed&#13;
prisons .. ' What 1S I 'from&#13;
their attitudeS? Is it something&#13;
the outside, or is it somelhing more&#13;
from the inside!&#13;
Bruce: I would think it, right now, is&#13;
more from the inside because you·\"e&#13;
got younger, smarler guys going to&#13;
prison, for such reasons as being CO·s,&#13;
or getting busted for dope . . , and&#13;
these are some very intelligent guys&#13;
who are becoming politically aware.&#13;
Plus I'm sure the Black Panthen from&#13;
the inside are informing their brothen&#13;
or&gt; the inside what their rights are. [I'&#13;
starling to hit everybody and they're&#13;
starting to wake up to it now bec:ause&#13;
they're g&lt;!lling some good information&#13;
from people that not ooIy come in from&#13;
the outside, and are a breath of fresh&#13;
air and maybe have an insJgllt to whal's&#13;
happening, but people who are stil1 0Cl&#13;
the outside trying to help&#13;
NS: The press told us that it "as&#13;
basically because the guards " re&#13;
while, and a 101 of the prison&lt;n ,,~&#13;
black that the trouble basically arose,&#13;
BNee Ned&gt;.t. (H"""'-'l&#13;
then again, if your play you say .the&#13;
black and white thing is kind of lost, m a&#13;
general brotherhood&#13;
Bruce: Maybe it's coming to that noW,&#13;
but in the past it hasn't been that wa)' at&#13;
all. As a mailer of fact, one of the&#13;
biggest problems is the guards p1aymg&#13;
little games with the prisoaers under&#13;
the theory that you have to keep the&#13;
prisoners separated in order to get&#13;
them into bars, so they will go up to&#13;
black prisoners and say, 'You better&#13;
watch it man, those black guy-s have&#13;
some knives and they're out to get you&#13;
guys: and then go over to the black&#13;
prisoners and say there are some wasp;s&#13;
and Nat.i lovers over there \\-ilo don t&#13;
Ukeyou blacks at all. We don't want ynu&#13;
to get burt, we cIon't want any trouble,&#13;
so we're just telling ynu and you'd&#13;
beller look out. So immediately there is&#13;
Uus paranoia that e&lt;hnlC or raCIal&#13;
that k..". u aong. But they are&#13;
star'LU1g to w up to Ulot t .-&#13;
Ynu're noI go to rUldtoo much more&#13;
of Ulol t gOtn on an ,....,...,&#13;
_ ,Do nu think the guardo wiD be put&#13;
under mere stralD h&lt;l:.- of Attlea&#13;
now'&#13;
IIntce, Idon't think tbe). i'llU!db&lt;! able&#13;
not to be&#13;
: Irs ically penonal problem&#13;
WIth the guar&lt;Ia thou&amp;h bo't .t'&#13;
IIntce, I don't know hooo to or tha&#13;
not ha\ b&lt;l:n in a a'. priJan&#13;
my If,r, in a reder1ll prIaon I&#13;
don't think the guard&gt; that I&#13;
~lilicd or that ell u-ained_ nd&#13;
the) \ got Ibetr httle the) ha&#13;
to pl •• too It unlor1W&gt;8l bul th&#13;
Illa,n the urden 01 the pr\Jnn hu&#13;
a b job and he ~d&#13;
hule bll bet or he d&#13;
nut for who' for bun. h I&#13;
to la • blUe:mOM!ume LO rnl.Df:h&#13;
mplceand I'&#13;
ondhe-.t.H '.not.-II a&#13;
;-bars on&#13;
, Do ynu think thaI th I,m·&#13;
pro\: no" of It&#13;
Attica'&#13;
IIntce: W 1I.• t had&#13;
of th '.IIIpro\,&#13;
ha 'th&#13;
hale to that AlliC.&#13;
but unfortunat&lt;"l. It&#13;
Ie to up and&#13;
f quest Von ell&#13;
do're'- If th 0 th h&#13;
dk proll up, I,t&#13;
tbetter I eI f m&#13;
alter the audJen&#13;
and cd th.... q m&#13;
.... are or lbl , per cenl ollhem 0&#13;
nut. think. ut It for t 0 ~, nd&#13;
then go on about tMlr If th&#13;
,keeps happen "ru b&lt;! a 10 l'.IIIe&#13;
before there '. any reform at all&#13;
Hopefully ,t's gOlten to a poml no&#13;
where a lot of cong COl are om to&#13;
s1art looting lDto It a hltle better.&#13;
S : n.. play bali heal pretty e/fectl&#13;
though. hasn't 1tot&#13;
Bruce: Ob yes '.t bali. '.t' n awfully&#13;
effechve One questlon Ulor eel&#13;
IS 'Do tho peopl exist u&gt; pnson"&#13;
Uke the fnur pnsoners preoenled 0Cl the&#13;
s1age., Well, hell y they do. Yourc&#13;
guys th""'" 10 for the ru-st lime u&gt; th....&#13;
li\"es. l.hro~n m "..,th very hard core&#13;
guys; homosexuality. yes, .t nI'lS&#13;
rampant in Prisons, and there are&#13;
Hatchets, too, "no""" very crunmally&#13;
insane, wrapped up 10 theu- ""'" httle&#13;
games that they play and consequently&#13;
wonting eVer}1&gt;odY to join in.&#13;
In the end Hatchet lrills Jive and tells&#13;
us, the accused, that be has done our&#13;
will. In the writing and productiOClof&#13;
this play J hope that "n.. Cage" has&#13;
done our will.&#13;
By Bill Sorensen&#13;
Fine-Arls Editor&#13;
IE CAGE" - Rick Cluchey&#13;
The audience was accused and&#13;
ced Thursday night when BarbProductions&#13;
presented The Cage;&#13;
allegorical play that invited us all&#13;
ato an inferno of penance that we&#13;
ped in writing, directing and&#13;
g. A place where humility is&#13;
t&amp;red up as poor replacement for the&#13;
of men.&#13;
Plainly effective and sincere with&#13;
pa u1 humor, the play retain~· its&#13;
ial goal with the rabid dialogue of&#13;
enclosure, bordering on The&#13;
1 De Sade, and not to be&#13;
taken for Gorilla Theatre.&#13;
The late was empty except f~r a&#13;
ma! toilet and a few blankets and&#13;
iresence of light that varied from&#13;
g lo blood red. We are confronted&#13;
I~ Sounds of Prison and prepared&#13;
inward. On our odyssey we meet&#13;
tcbet, a demerited man whose&#13;
enia leads the games. The&#13;
rt ~~ds brilliance in the hands of&#13;
~echels. Doc is the Seeming&#13;
tor, he hustles in and out of the&#13;
lhat surround him. The part is&#13;
red as real by Donald Ross. Al is a&#13;
ered homosexual, his self hatred is&#13;
Yed l!1rough a biting dialogue of&#13;
edomic 0agellation that tested and&#13;
pla. lhe skills of Jack Clemons. Jive&#13;
)ed by Gary Pettinger he is the&#13;
Prisoner, the matrix of the game&#13;
r 0( his young girlfriend. In reality'&#13;
x~ a a . quick humored fellow'.&#13;
Iran r"d-tn c.ontrol, but in the play,&#13;
ormation was complete in its&#13;
IC COnf · l! usion. The guards, played&#13;
enryC Everhart and Terry Joyce esta""-l'k " rr I e and in accordance&#13;
nenry "B ghd d" ent ,. a a Everhart's&#13;
y" ' trrtsons are a microcosm of r ', e anger and situational&#13;
ler Y of function reflected on a SCa)e&#13;
The play' · nt b s general excellence was&#13;
nt tut reasons for this are not so&#13;
1 ( ~ the audience . . . Bruce&#13;
His .. :~~heti,exemplifies this best&#13;
lection ime was Conscientious&#13;
rly ·/0&#13;
~ out on appeal, he was&#13;
Whe s udent at San Francisco&#13;
'I'\' Broac1cre .he majored in Radio and&#13;
,t-_ , asmg. In his senior year he ~ an · d at the mt~rest in drama and er I university for nel\rly a&#13;
ed that~ 1&#13;
~ 7 he became so inee&#13;
in rad~ didn't finish his master's&#13;
'lied this 10 and ~elevision. Later, he&#13;
lab in Jurswt and studied at an&#13;
he rnet D anada, learning Mime. In&#13;
Marin an Caldwell and worked&#13;
llyheh Shak.espeare festival.&#13;
hiberry : aspired to films such a.s atement and Zabrisky&#13;
rDo those peo1nl · . .&#13;
r e exist in prison?&#13;
NS: Do you think it would have helped&#13;
the situation at Attica if Rockefeller&#13;
had appeared as the prisoners&#13;
requested?&#13;
Bruce: Definitely. Just poor judgement&#13;
was used all around. Myself, being a&#13;
conscientious objector I really fell an&#13;
importance to the value of life . . . and&#13;
I don't think that someone can respect&#13;
anyone else's life if he doesn't respect&#13;
his own first, and I really felt that&#13;
Rockefeller should have stepped in,&#13;
even if it was to lie, even if it was to say&#13;
'Ya, we're going to grant you guys&#13;
everything you want ... you can have&#13;
it all," just to save those lives, but by&#13;
not doing so 40 or possibly more have&#13;
been lost.&#13;
NS: Do you think the demands made by&#13;
the prisoners were justified?&#13;
Bruce: I think just about everyone of&#13;
them were very just demands, because&#13;
conditions in prisons are really, really&#13;
brutal ... you're not a human being in&#13;
a prison, you're an animal. They just&#13;
wanted the people to realize this, that&#13;
they are human beings. If the purpose&#13;
for going to prison is rehabilitation well&#13;
then all over the country, prisons have&#13;
failed in their jobs miserably and this is&#13;
what the prisoners were trying to point&#13;
out.&#13;
NS: Do you think the militancy inside&#13;
the prisons is justified? . Bruce: Well how else is anybody going&#13;
to find out about it? What else can you&#13;
do? Finally, you're driven to a point&#13;
where you are an animal . and that&#13;
people are playing gam~ w1.~ you on&#13;
the inside, plus on the ~uts1~e 1t ~ sort of&#13;
an out of sight out of mind s1tuabon, and&#13;
when it comes to that it is the only way&#13;
you can get anybody to hear about it. It&#13;
was very unfortunate what happened at&#13;
Attica or at San Quentin, but, my God,&#13;
what's happening now throughout ~e&#13;
country as far as people ~m~&#13;
aware has been amazing and it ,s ~o,ng&#13;
to help in the future. Again, speaking of&#13;
the militancy behind prison walls and&#13;
all· first of all, they weren't trying to&#13;
es~ape and I don't think it would have&#13;
been that brutal or that militant, as you&#13;
asked earlier, had Rockefeller stepped&#13;
in or had the warden granted them all&#13;
th~ir demands, at least showed soi:ie&#13;
respect not only life of prisonser but hfe&#13;
of their own men.&#13;
NS: Bobby Seale showed up f?rka~~~&#13;
five minutes . . · ~o you t~ ?&#13;
token visit accomplished anything·&#13;
Bruce . Oh no I really don't, because • ' ' 11 done everything had been pretty we , when he got out there, I really don t&#13;
think it helped at all.&#13;
NS: What, if anything, has ~hanged the&#13;
prisoners' attitudesd ~0&#13;
~J~: ~~t s:i;&#13;
Quentin, Tombs an. .~ that 'changed&#13;
prisons What is 1&#13;
their attit~des? Is it something from&#13;
photo raph b bill&#13;
then again, if your play you&#13;
black and white thin is kind I&#13;
general broth~~ood . , Bruce: taybe 1t s coming to tha no ,&#13;
but in the past it hasn been that ;-a~ at&#13;
all. As a matter of fact, one of th&#13;
biggest problem is the guards pla)&#13;
little games ith the prisoner under&#13;
the theory that you ha\'e to eep th&#13;
prisoners separated in order to e&#13;
them into bars. so they ill go up to&#13;
black prisoners and sa:, , You better&#13;
watch it man. those bla gtry ha · some knives and the) 're out to et ·ou&#13;
guys,' and then go o\'er to the bla&#13;
prisoners and say there are some ·~&#13;
and azj lo\'ers over there who doo' t&#13;
like you blacks at all. ·e don't ant you&#13;
to get hurt, we don't want any trouble,&#13;
so we're just telling :,ou and you'd&#13;
better loo ou . So immediate! • there · &#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
taken a chance, lately, of right. But our Gove&#13;
counting "heads" reliable making its second wrnrnent is&#13;
sources estimate the figure first ~as PrO-hibi~~ng,The&#13;
between 27,000,000 and second IS the New Prohibn&#13;
,.the&#13;
34000000 as of 1971. Potheads Marihuana, 'hooou'tnu:nber&#13;
blacks, chicanos or "Santdl YOU've bee .&#13;
Indians. And They're still op- much too long." Sly : ~tting&#13;
pressed! Family Stone meant An lhe&#13;
"Scientific results say that and they meant mer""&#13;
marihuana can cause brain !,arkside. Students You, too,&#13;
damage in rats." Provided Involved by talking t' '. get&#13;
these same rats blow 40 joints a Talk to old penple 0rPe&lt;lPl e.&#13;
day. High dosages of any young people. Talk t~w:lk to&#13;
substance may be harmful to Talk to clergy. Write Irk.rs.&#13;
the body. High dosages of Just don't sit. Becaus.'ll.rs.&#13;
sugar, for example, is quite want you to crawl. They&#13;
harmful to the body. Union GroveCom .&#13;
One other argument against To Legalize Ma ~'tlee&#13;
legalization is floating around. Arthurr ~ llana&#13;
"Two' wrongs _don't make a chaiell:ter&#13;
,&#13;
right." These peopl~ are For. information about,,"an&#13;
suggesting that mar-ihuana committee write: Art DexOUr&#13;
coupled with alcohol are both P.O. Box 133, Union G le',&#13;
wrong. These people may be 53182. mv.&#13;
Page2 :\E\\'SCOPE October -1,1971&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
The following are falasies and&#13;
the Union Grove Committee to&#13;
Legalize Marihuana would like&#13;
to expose them:&#13;
"Marihuana leads on to&#13;
harder drubs (heroin)." One&#13;
can safely assume most pot&#13;
smokers drink alcohoL So we&#13;
can say alcohol leads on to&#13;
marihuana and marihuana&#13;
leads on to harder drugs&#13;
(heroin). So if one drinks booze&#13;
he probably shoots smack: This&#13;
is all quite foolish.&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
ON SOUTH SHERIDA N ROA.D IN KENOSHA 654-0411&#13;
"Marihuana is only smoked&#13;
by drug addicts, hippies and&#13;
wild-eyed jazz musicians."&#13;
Based on U.S. Government&#13;
estimates there were 20,000,000&#13;
Americans that smoked pot at&#13;
least once, but this was in 1967.&#13;
•&#13;
Though the Government hasn't&#13;
.....,;'." "-&#13;
r~r-., HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
'--/ BIG TOP Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae laoded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strcwberrles, whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry 70e&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
aOC&#13;
Senate Meeting Fails&#13;
President. Guests included&#13;
Terry Tobias, Cathy Gibbons&#13;
(Chaplain on campus),&#13;
Joyce Butera, Dawn&#13;
Christensen, Chuck Perroni,&#13;
Jack Kacarian and Dave&#13;
Kerner.&#13;
Since there was no&#13;
quorum and since a quorum&#13;
could. not be gathered, the&#13;
meeting was immediate!&#13;
adjourned. Y&#13;
Next attempt at a Student&#13;
Government will be&#13;
Thursday, October j, at 1:311&#13;
p.m. in room 101.&#13;
Reported by Jeanette&#13;
Dremel, Senator.&#13;
The meeting had been&#13;
called for 4:00 p.m. The&#13;
meeting was called to order&#13;
at 5:00 p.m. Those in attendance&#13;
were: Tom&#13;
Meyers, Jeanette Dremel,&#13;
Ken Konkol, Mike&#13;
Mayesheba, Dean Loumos&#13;
(Senators) and Tim Eaker,&#13;
7Sc&#13;
SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD,' NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin CAMPUS EVENTS 'Pu"m~p&lt;""''''"'&#13;
&amp; $ave&#13;
Parkside gymnasts.&#13;
Polka Party: A polka party.&#13;
dance will be held at theathie"&#13;
office parking lot beginningal&#13;
4:40 p.m.&#13;
Dance: A dance with livemusic&#13;
will be held at the Activities&#13;
Building begmning at 9 a.m.&#13;
Adm. Cbg. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin ID required.&#13;
Cross Country: PlattevilleState&#13;
Invitational . Platteville,&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.10&#13;
Film: Intercollegiate Film&#13;
Council will sponsor showingof&#13;
the film "If' at 7 p.m. at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater,&#13;
Racine. Tickets availableat the&#13;
Information Center, Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
at 8 a.m. at the Pershing Courts,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Golf: Varsity golf tournament&#13;
will be held at 9· a.m. at&#13;
Petrifying Springs course.&#13;
Soccer: Parkside Invitational:&#13;
losers of Friday's games meet&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. at the athletic&#13;
field.&#13;
Fencing: Parkside fencers&#13;
meet Shorewood Fencing Club'&#13;
at noon at the athletic field.&#13;
Rugby: UW-P vs. UW-Madison&#13;
at I p.m. at the athletic field.&#13;
Equestrians: An equestrian&#13;
demonstration will be held at&#13;
2:30 p.m. at the athletic field.&#13;
Soccer: Invitational finals:&#13;
Friday winners meet at 3 p.m.&#13;
Half-time demonstration by&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT. 7&#13;
Documentary Film: The film,&#13;
"The Canaris Affair", will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in Room 101&#13;
Greenquist Hall under sponsorship&#13;
of the German Club.&#13;
Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 8&#13;
Regents Meeting: The UW&#13;
Board of Regents will meet at&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
Oktoberfest Activities&#13;
Soccer: Parkside :Invitational&#13;
Tournament, Ohio State vs.&#13;
Eastern Illinois, 10:30 a.m.,&#13;
athletic field.&#13;
Tennis: Intramural tennis&#13;
tournament finals, Pershing&#13;
Courts, Racine, morning.&#13;
GoU: Intramural golf tournament&#13;
finals, Petrifying&#13;
Springs Course, morning.&#13;
Archery: Archery competition,&#13;
1 to 2: 30 p.m., athletic field.&#13;
Soccer: Parkside Invitational,&#13;
UW-P vs. Quincy College,&#13;
Athletic Field, 3 p.m.&#13;
Polka Party: A polka partydance&#13;
will be held from 4:30 to&#13;
8:30 p.m. at the athletic office&#13;
parking lot. (The activities&#13;
building also will be open.)&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 9&#13;
Oktoberfest Activities&#13;
Regatta: UW-P sailing regatta&#13;
will be held at 8 a.m. at the&#13;
Kenosha Yacht Club.&#13;
Tennis: Faculty-staff tennis&#13;
tournament finals will be held&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLiNE&#13;
ANO SAV'E!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
IOW·20W·30W . SOcper quart ewscope ,&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus,Pal&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDermid,&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Businsss Manager John Beck&#13;
AFsCON.O. IOW·20W·30W 34&lt;:per quart&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI·FREEZE $1.39 per gallon&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID 47c per can&#13;
. Newscope is an ind&lt;pel!de~&#13;
student newspaper com",~&#13;
by students of the Universi~&#13;
Wisconsin-ParkSlde pub .&#13;
weekly except duringv~al::&#13;
periods. Student obtalD sole&#13;
vertising funds are lite ~.&#13;
sourc~ of reNenue for6.(01&#13;
operation of New~cO~'aDd&#13;
copies are pnnte the&#13;
distributed tbroughOut&#13;
.~. . e CIIU' Kenosha and Rac,n ~.&#13;
munities as well ~s are&#13;
University. Free cop'"&#13;
available upon request.&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on 011 Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
f'1l Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, James Casper,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Kelly Infusino,&#13;
KIm King, Jim Koloen, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Dale Martin, Pat&#13;
Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross, Jeff&#13;
Scoville, Jerry Socha&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Zimany&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
october sale&#13;
REGULAR S162.50&#13;
OCTOBER PRICE S137.50&#13;
----------&#13;
Custom toilored suits&#13;
l!AtEO'S c:Y&#13;
A~·~·I~~gl~~;~;:; ';;·p.m,_ll:IO·'"&#13;
/""0 ITALIAN SAUSAGE Env8ERS&#13;
51121- 30111AVetI!e KenoshJ &amp;51.Q11&#13;
Open 6 doy, a week from 4 p.m., closed Monday'&#13;
All styles to choose&#13;
from in 17&#13;
different colors&#13;
Gino's Tailor Shop&#13;
and Sportswear&#13;
2212-60th street in Kenosha&#13;
'We give the personal touch'&#13;
complete line&#13;
of menswear&#13;
We do all types of alterations and repairs&#13;
Page2 ;\;E\\'SCOPE October -1, 1!)71 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
taken a chance, lately, of right. But our Gove&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
0 N SOU TH SHER ID A N RO A D IN KE NOSH A 6 5 4 - 04 1 1&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
The following are falasies and&#13;
the Union Grove Committee to&#13;
Legalize Marihuana would like&#13;
to expose them:&#13;
"Marihuana leads on to&#13;
harder drubs (heroin)." One&#13;
can safely assume most pot&#13;
smokers drink alcohol. So we&#13;
can say alcohol leads on to&#13;
marihuana and marihuana&#13;
leads on to harder drugs&#13;
(heroin). So if one drinks booze&#13;
he probably shoots smack: This&#13;
is all quite foolish.&#13;
"Marihuana is only smoked&#13;
by drug addicts, hippies and&#13;
wild-eyed jazz musicians.''&#13;
Based on U.S. Government&#13;
estimates there were 20,000,000&#13;
Americans that smoked pot at&#13;
least once, but this was in 1967.&#13;
Though the Government hasn't&#13;
counting "heads" reliable making its second wrnrnent is&#13;
sources estimate the figure first was Prohib{ong, The&#13;
between 27,000,000 and seco?d is the New Pr~~fb~'. the&#13;
34 ooo ooo as of 1971. Potheads Manhuana. 1hon-.&#13;
o~tnu~ber blacks, chicanes or "Santd! You've be .&#13;
Indians. And They're still op- muc~ too long." 81/:nsitting&#13;
pressed! Family Stone meant A d ~he&#13;
"Scientific results say that and they meant rnerica&#13;
marihuana can cause brain ~arkside. Students You, loo,&#13;
damage in rats." Provided involved by talking t · · · get&#13;
these same rats blow 40 joints a Talk to old people O leopJe.&#13;
day. High dosages of any young people. Talk t~ w:lk to&#13;
substance may be harmful to Talk to cler.gy. Write I rkers.&#13;
the body. High dosages of Just don't sit. Becaus/tters.&#13;
sugar, for example, is quite want you to crawl. They&#13;
harmful to the body. Union Grove Com . One other argument against To Legalize Ma .~1ttee&#13;
legalization is floating around. Arthurr ~ uana&#13;
"Two wrongs don't make a Ch .exter,&#13;
right.'' These peopl~ are For. information abo~tnan&#13;
suggesting that marihuana committee write: Art Dex~ur&#13;
coupled with alcohol are both P.O. Box 133, Union Gr er, wrong. These people may be 53182. ove&#13;
Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
TOP Senate Meeting Fails&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry 70c '&#13;
75c&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7S00 SHERIDAN ROADt'&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
The meeting had been&#13;
called for 4:00 p.m. The&#13;
meeting was called to order&#13;
at 5:00 p.m. Those in attendance&#13;
were: Tom&#13;
Meyers, Jeanette Dremel,&#13;
Ken Konkol, Mike&#13;
Mayesheba, Dean Loumos&#13;
(Senators) and Tim Eaker,&#13;
President. Guests included&#13;
Terry Tobias, Cathy Gibbons&#13;
(Chaplain on campus),&#13;
Joyce Butera, Dawn&#13;
Christensen, Chuck Perroni,&#13;
Jack Kacarian and Dave&#13;
Kerner.&#13;
Since there was no&#13;
quorum and since a quorum&#13;
could_ not be gathered, the&#13;
m~etmg was immediate!&#13;
ad3ourned. Y&#13;
Next attempt at a Student&#13;
Government will be&#13;
Thur~day, October 7, at 7 :3o&#13;
p.m_ m room 101.&#13;
Reported by Jeanette&#13;
Dremel, Senator.&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Fp Li'" iri"•pC·""'Y Lio,&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
&amp; $ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON .O.&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
lOW - 20W - 30W&#13;
1 OW - 20 W - 30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12oz. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
S1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
.f'-11 Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT. 7&#13;
Documentary Film: The film,&#13;
"The Canaris Affair". will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in Room 101&#13;
Greenquist Hall under sponsorship&#13;
of the German Club.&#13;
Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 8&#13;
Regents Meeting: The UW&#13;
Board of Regents will meet at&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
Oktoberfest Activities&#13;
Soccer: Parkside Invitational&#13;
Tournament, Ohio State vs.&#13;
Eastern Illinois, 10:30 a.m.,&#13;
athletic field.&#13;
Tennis: Intramural tennis&#13;
tournament finals, Pershing&#13;
Courts, Racine, morning.&#13;
Golf: Intramural golf tournament&#13;
finals, Petrifying&#13;
Springs Course, morning.&#13;
Archery: Archery competition,&#13;
1 to 2:30 p.m., athletic field.&#13;
Soccer: Parkside Invitational&#13;
UW-P vs. Quincy College:&#13;
Athletic Field, 3 p.m.&#13;
Polka Party: A polka partydance&#13;
will be held from 4: 30 to&#13;
8:30 p.m. at the athletic office&#13;
parking lot. (The activities&#13;
building also will be open.)&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 9&#13;
Oktoberfest Activities&#13;
Regatta: UW-P sailing regatta&#13;
.will be held at 8 a.m. at the&#13;
Kenosha Yacht Club.&#13;
Tennis: Faculty-staff tennis&#13;
tournament finals will be held&#13;
october sale&#13;
Custom tailored suits REGULAR S162.SO&#13;
OCTOBER PRICE s137 .SO&#13;
Gino'.s Tailor Shop&#13;
and Sportswear&#13;
All styles to choose&#13;
from in 17&#13;
different colors&#13;
2212-60th street in Kenosha complete line&#13;
'We give the personal touch' of menswear&#13;
We do all types ol alterations and repairs&#13;
at 8 a.m. at the Pershing Courts,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Golf: Varsity golf tournament&#13;
will be held at 9 a.m. at&#13;
Petrifying Springs course.&#13;
Soccer: Parkside Invitational:&#13;
losers of Friday's games meet&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. at the athletic&#13;
field.&#13;
Fencing: Parkside fencers&#13;
meet Shorewood Fencing Club&#13;
at noon at the athletic field.&#13;
Rugby: UW-P vs. UW-Madison&#13;
at 1 p.m. at the athletic field.&#13;
Equestrians: An equestrian&#13;
demonstration will be held at&#13;
2:30 p.m. at the athletic field.&#13;
Soccer: Invitational finals:&#13;
Friday winners meet at 3 p.m.&#13;
Half-time demonstration by&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor · Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Mgr. Fred Noer, Jr.&#13;
Businsss Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
Bob Borchardt, James Casper,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Kelly Infusino,&#13;
Kim King, Jim Koloen, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Dale Martin, Pat&#13;
Nelson, Janice Wilde&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Jack Kazarian, Brian Ross, Jeff&#13;
Scoville, Jerry Socha&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Denise Anastasio&#13;
Ecklund, Ken Zimany&#13;
Becky&#13;
Parksiqe gymnasts.&#13;
Polka Party: A polka party.&#13;
dance will be held at the athletic&#13;
office parking lot beginning at&#13;
4:40 p.m.&#13;
Dance: A dance with live music&#13;
will be held at the Activities&#13;
Building beginning at 9 a.m.&#13;
Adm. Chg. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin ID required.&#13;
Cross Country: Platteville State&#13;
Invitational - Platt~ville.&#13;
SUNDAY, OCT. IO&#13;
Film: Intercollegiate Film&#13;
Council will sponsor showing of&#13;
the film "If" at 7 p.m. at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater,&#13;
Racine. Tickets available at the&#13;
Information Center, Tallenl&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
John Grey, Dave Kraus, Pat&#13;
McDermid, T. D. McDermid,&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-24~&#13;
553-2498&#13;
· Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newsp!lper com\J°sed&#13;
by students of the Univers!ty ~ Wisconsin-Parkside publist 011&#13;
weekly except during .v:a ~dperiods.&#13;
Student obtaID sole&#13;
vertising funds are the (he&#13;
sourc~ of revenue for G.!K'l&#13;
operation of Newscope. d · ted an copies are prin the&#13;
distributed throughout 001• · e C Kenosha and Racin !he&#13;
munities as well as are&#13;
University. Free copies&#13;
available upon request.&#13;
VA LE O'S . -----·---,-c,-----&#13;
(!'IZZAb&#13;
j,('f&lt;SIJ§~RY&#13;
Aun 0-il&lt;XEN o1~N~RS:::: ' ,:oo p.m.-12:00 •·111,&#13;
/\,'\JD ITALIAN SAUSAGE e::;tv13ERS&#13;
5021- llfh Ave111e K•sha &amp;57-6191&#13;
Open 6 days o week from 4 p.m., closed Mond&lt;J'/5 &#13;
Day Care Center for P-side _~Oc;;;;';lober;;;~"";;;;;;' ~~;;,;Pf::;;:;;;;:;;:=;I"f';;,3&#13;
is hoped the rates can be set&#13;
strictly on the basis of what the&#13;
mothers can afford, the&#13;
minimal needs of the center&#13;
along with demand, "If the&#13;
demand is not great for the&#13;
service, the rate would obviously&#13;
have to be higher than if&#13;
the demand is great," Kugel&#13;
said.&#13;
The questionnaire, which&#13;
should be in the mail soon, can&#13;
C&#13;
ampus Editor Jones, .&#13;
~LJf'Y t'onnaire is being&#13;
~ qUesI arried Parkslde&#13;
,ell to all ~ncerning the&#13;
'od'!''' t of Day·Care&#13;
~tJbliShmenthe main cam-&#13;
~bes near •&#13;
,.. uestionnaire was&#13;
flie '\, Charles Kugel,&#13;
~red tbe UWP Gifted&#13;
",d of Program According&#13;
;IlIle!'~the progr~m would be&#13;
Kugel, ru and unaf-&#13;
-'Iv non-pro', '&#13;
""'"' 'th the Umvers,ty,&#13;
Jed Wlmplywith strict state&#13;
Toco s one full time&#13;
... ,I,1IOn , d h t&#13;
••, ed director waul ave a&#13;
~ Otherhelp would be on&#13;
teer basis - probably I"un and students in the&#13;
~hO would be. willing to&#13;
lei their time and services&#13;
... te id effort,he Sal '&#13;
~Ihough no charges have&#13;
If( beenset for the services, It&#13;
be returned to all three UWP&#13;
hbr~nes. marked boxes at the&#13;
Racme and Kenosha campuses&#13;
or to Kugel's office, GR 201. '&#13;
Organizational meetings&#13;
are being planned for the near&#13;
future and will be publicized,&#13;
The student organizers of the&#13;
c~nter would appreciate those&#13;
WIth a need for the service&#13;
filling out the questionnaire and&#13;
returning it as Soon as possible.&#13;
3322 SHERIONJ RO/lD KENOSHA&#13;
..... 1&lt;:1&lt;:1&lt;:Ie te Ie lit It It Ie It It I I&#13;
.....&#13;
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Sickle Cell March Oct. 8 ...... by Bill Sorensen, Fine-Arts Editor&#13;
. On.Oct. 9at 8:~ a.m. a marc~ will take place from Pershing Park&#13;
In Racine to Case HIgh School.lt 1S a desperate 15minute walk against&#13;
a kille~ ~nd disab~e~ ~hat can. be treated but not cured. Commonly&#13;
called .SIckle Cell It IS genetically transmitted causing a low con.&#13;
centration of blood oxygen that results in an anemic condition that&#13;
~ay cause d~th. More often the disease hangs on making the victim&#13;
suffer, som.ehmes. consta~tl~, until life is more misery than living. It is&#13;
a unique disease m that It IS almost exclusively a disabler of Black&#13;
people.&#13;
The Rev. James Sanders, College student, father, and Pastor of&#13;
the Mount Olive Baptist Church, is the chairman of the march and the&#13;
Racine Sickle Cell Foundation. The Foundation will need marchers&#13;
who will get private business to sponsor their trek on a 'per mile&#13;
walked' basis, Money will go 10 families that are plagued by this&#13;
problem and will take on many forms in helping them.&#13;
Not long ago Jimmy, Rev. Sanders' son, died from complications&#13;
brought about by the sickle cell. So that this kind of thing can at least&#13;
be delayed and maybe stopped someday, come and walk on Oct. 9, and&#13;
if you are a businessman, help someone walk.&#13;
Participant-Sponsor entry sheets can be picked up at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
......&#13;
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Sale ...... ...&#13;
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~perS8rComing ......&#13;
......&#13;
l1Ie original production of&#13;
Je$U5 Christ,'Superstar" will&#13;
""'"' in Racine Oct. 23 for two&#13;
!Ill) staged performances, the&#13;
t1yersity of wtsconstnParkside&#13;
has announced; .&#13;
1be Racine production IS&#13;
.... the direction of the&#13;
ilIbert Stigwood Group. Ltd"&#13;
• Englishoriginating campaay&#13;
and the only company&#13;
IIowed to perform the' complrtf&#13;
verionsor advertise the&#13;
~ "Jesus Christ, Superstar".&#13;
'[be production appearing in&#13;
llIl:me will open later this fall&#13;
II Broadway, Its local ap·&#13;
"",nee will be held at Racine&#13;
r.high school and feature a&#13;
CIIl or about SO, in addition to&#13;
,.. mestration. It is being&#13;
_red ~y UW·Par~side in&#13;
lIIO&lt;ialion with Carthage&#13;
CIIlege.&#13;
l'W·Parkside Student Ac·&#13;
DnbeS Office spokesmen said&#13;
ot prices and outlets would&#13;
amounced in about a week,&#13;
-.I urged the public to await&#13;
IIrtber ticket announcements&#13;
nlller Ihan calling the&#13;
IIItersity for information ..,h~nol yel available, Two&#13;
~ performances will be&#13;
WdatCase,tentatively set for&#13;
aod 10 p,m,&#13;
......&#13;
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"" .... .......... -"&#13;
....-e&#13;
""'"&#13;
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""&#13;
WRKR Begins Stereo Programming&#13;
WRKR (FMJ will begin broadcasting in stereo Monday, OCtober&#13;
4th. That annOWlcement came recently from Richard F. PalmqUIst&#13;
President and General Manager of WRKR. He said: "This step. we&#13;
fell, will greatly enhance our sOWld and provide a total serVice to&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin listeners."&#13;
The station signed on the air as WRKR Det:ember 1st, 1970, and&#13;
operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week, progr~mming Top 40 and&#13;
progressive rock music aimed at a young adult a~dience. • af.&#13;
Special ceremonies are planned at th~ s~atIon late Mo~day&#13;
ternaan to mark the official start of the statIon 5stereo operation.&#13;
8 FOR O.&#13;
PLUS A PENNY&#13;
...&#13;
......&#13;
...&#13;
......&#13;
......&#13;
...... "&#13;
Park Drugs -...... ...&#13;
~&#13;
Rise to face UN other day&#13;
011 22nd onmu&#13;
just north oj Wa, hinf!.to71Road&#13;
...... ...&#13;
......&#13;
...... "&#13;
Open 9a.m.-9:30p.m .&#13;
Sunday 8:30a.m.-2p.m.&#13;
Sale ends October 10th&#13;
1 It 1 Ie I I I I 1 Ie I Ie 1&#13;
.....&#13;
....&#13;
.....&#13;
....&#13;
......&#13;
....&#13;
......&#13;
-A&#13;
......&#13;
....&#13;
......&#13;
"&#13;
LADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
" Welt&#13;
RacinllJ&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
Hoffman's •&#13;
ich e er pIzza&#13;
1 c pic her f beer 2&#13;
DOWN.!OWN KENOSHA r&#13;
We deliver to Parkside&#13;
and Carthage&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
4615-7ch a enue&#13;
'next door to the Windjammer'&#13;
Remember-We're open mcndays&#13;
phone 654-7111&#13;
open 5-12&#13;
closed sundays&#13;
Campus Editor&#13;
r)· Jones, · · being L'f . na ire 1s&#13;
ques1100 ·ect Parkside 11 marri&#13;
to a concerning the&#13;
eots t of Day-Care · bmen , bh the main camue·&#13;
near .&#13;
uestionnaire was&#13;
fbe h Charles Kugel,&#13;
red th UWP Gifted&#13;
d of Pr~ram. According&#13;
ts he rogram would be&#13;
el, t p r·t and unaf- non-pro' . 'th the University. ted v., ly with strict state&#13;
To ~mp one full time&#13;
at1ons, d h t&#13;
ed director woul ave o 1 Other help would be on&#13;
· basis - probably unteer . th nd students m e&#13;
h/ would be -willin~ to&#13;
their time and services&#13;
te 'd effort, he sa1 .&#13;
Although no charge~ ha".e&#13;
been set for the serVIces, 1t&#13;
~uperstar Coming&#13;
original production of&#13;
Christ, ·superstar" will&#13;
in Racine Oct. 23 for two&#13;
aged performa_nces, ~he&#13;
er ity of W1sconsm-&#13;
.de has announced.&#13;
Racine production is&#13;
the direction of the&#13;
Stigwood Group, Ltd.,&#13;
English originating corny&#13;
and the only company&#13;
-:red to perform the comwrions&#13;
or advertise the&#13;
"Jesus Christ, Superstar".&#13;
The production appearing in&#13;
will open later this fall&#13;
Broadway. Its local apnce&#13;
will be held at Racine&#13;
high school and feature a&#13;
of about 50, in addition to&#13;
orchestration. It is being&#13;
red lly UW-Par)cside in&#13;
1ation with Carthage&#13;
·Parkside Student AcOffice&#13;
spokesmen said&#13;
prices and outlets would&#13;
1llllounced in about a week,&#13;
urged the public to await&#13;
er ticket announcements&#13;
r than calling the&#13;
ersity for information&#13;
h IS not yet available. Two&#13;
performances will be&#13;
at Case, tentatively set for&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
is hoped the rates can be set&#13;
strictly on the basis of what the&#13;
mothers can afford, the&#13;
minimal needs of the center&#13;
along with demand. "If the&#13;
demand is not great for the&#13;
service, the rate would obviously&#13;
have to be higher than if&#13;
the demand is great," Kugel&#13;
said.&#13;
The questionnaire, which&#13;
should be in the mail soon, can&#13;
~ re~urned to all three WP&#13;
hbr~nes, marked boxes at the&#13;
Racme and ;Kenosha campuse ,&#13;
or to Kugel s office, GR 201.&#13;
Organizational meeting are being planned for the near&#13;
future and will be publicized&#13;
The student organizers of the&#13;
c~nter would appreciate th e&#13;
with a need for the ervice&#13;
filling out the questionnaire and&#13;
returning it as soon as po ible.&#13;
Sickle Cell March Oct. 8&#13;
by Bill Sorensen, Fine-Arts Editor&#13;
. On_ Oct. 9 at8:~ a.m. a mare~ will take place from Per hing Par·&#13;
m Racme to Case High School. It 1s a desperate 15 minute \\a]k agam t&#13;
a killer and disabler that can be treated but not cured. Commonlv&#13;
called '_Sickle Cell' it is genetically transmitted causing a lov. concentration&#13;
of blood oxygen that results in an anemic condition that&#13;
may cause d~ath. More often the disease hangs on making the victim&#13;
suff~r, so~ehmes_ consta~tl~, until life is more misery than living. It i&#13;
a umque disease m that 1t 1s almost exclusively a disabler of Blac · people.&#13;
The Rev. James Sanders, College student, father, and Pa tor of&#13;
the Mount Olive Baptist Church, is the chairman of the march and the&#13;
Racine Sickle Cell Foundation. The Foundation will need marche .&#13;
who will get private business to sponsor their trek on a 'per mile&#13;
walked' basis. Money will go to families that are plagued by th1&#13;
problem and will take on many forms in helping them.&#13;
Not long ago Jimmy, Rev. Sanders' son, died from complicatio -&#13;
brought about by the sickle cell. So that this kind of thing can at lea t&#13;
be delayed and maybe stopped someday, come and walk on Oct. 9, and&#13;
if you are a businessman, help someone walk.&#13;
Participant-Sponsor entry sheets can be picked up at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
WRKR Begins Stereo Programming&#13;
WRKR (FM) will begin broadcasting in stereo londay, Octo~&#13;
4th That announcement came recently from Richard F. Palmqu1&#13;
Pr~sident and General Manager of WRKR. He said: "Thi te?, w&#13;
fell, will greatly enhance our sound and provide a total erv1ce to&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin listeners."&#13;
The station signed on the air as WRKR Deeember_ 1 t, 1970, and&#13;
operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week, progr~mmmg Top and&#13;
progressive rock music aimed at a young adult a~dience. d af. s ecial ceremonies are planned at the station late . 1o!1 3)&#13;
terioon to mark the official start of the station's stereo operallon.&#13;
Rise to face UN other day&#13;
- It l&#13;
-A.&#13;
-&#13;
--A&#13;
--A&#13;
-&#13;
~&#13;
--A&#13;
--A&#13;
--A&#13;
--A&#13;
-&#13;
-~&#13;
_o&#13;
_z&#13;
-z&#13;
-o&#13;
-A&#13;
~ ... - ....&#13;
l l&#13;
Sae&#13;
-A -c&#13;
~ "' . t) FOR O ·&#13;
._&#13;
PLUS A PENNY -&#13;
--A&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
Pa ug&#13;
011&#13;
JU 11 ,:th of t hi 1 I 11 R 1d&#13;
Open 9a.m.-9:30p.m.&#13;
Sunday 8:30a.m.-2p.m.&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
- ...... Sale ends October 10th - - l 1 l l 1 l I l l l -&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes&#13;
Grand Open· g&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWN,!OWN KENOSHA&#13;
••&#13;
phone 654-7111&#13;
open 5-12&#13;
closed sundays&#13;
0 .,&#13;
/beer .&#13;
I()&#13;
l t pit her&#13;
We deliver to Parkside&#13;
and Carthage&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
'61 --7rh a enuc&#13;
'ne.'1:I door to th 'i11djamm ,.·&#13;
Remember-We're open m~ndays &#13;
Page4 NEWSCOPE O&lt;tober 4.1911&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Title: The New Centurions&#13;
Author: Joseph Wambaugh&#13;
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company&#13;
($6.95)&#13;
On the book jacket the publisher says&#13;
"The New Centurions: a novel about&#13;
policemen by a policeman. Tough, but&#13;
compassionate, it'll make you understand&#13;
- perhaps lor the first timewhatit's&#13;
really like to be a cop." Joseph&#13;
Wambaugh, boy author, should arrest&#13;
the publisher for false advertising and&#13;
then, as a gesture of good will, swallow&#13;
his typewriter. Open wide, Joey.&#13;
The New Centurions is an L. A.&#13;
policeman's first novel and hopefully&#13;
his last, for several reasons: 1) his first&#13;
novel is 376 pages too long; 2) I don't&#13;
think it's right for copszo moonlight; 3)&#13;
the writing is bland, effete, anticreative,&#13;
authoritarian, and overall&#13;
smacks of Reader's Digest. Incidentally,&#13;
TNC has been on the vest&#13;
seller list for quite a while, and as is&#13;
characteristic of most members of that&#13;
select group, it is a multimucho bad&#13;
novel. TNC lits perfectly.&#13;
But there is a story. In alternating&#13;
chapters, Wambaugh portrays the first&#13;
five police years of Serge Duran, "a&#13;
tough, competent Mexican-American&#13;
and ex-Marine who learns everything&#13;
fast - except how to forget his Mexican&#13;
blood; Gus Plebesly, a little man with&#13;
the lace 01 a baby, the speed 01 an&#13;
antelope, and a panicky lear of&#13;
1violence; and Roy Fehler, a college&#13;
man with ideas like a social worker,&#13;
who discovers - too late - that you can&#13;
new centurions from rookie to right&#13;
wing senility. Wambaugh didn't know&#13;
when to stop, I hope he does now. The&#13;
three cops advance from the radio. car&#13;
to vice squad, to juvenile to alcohol~sm,&#13;
divorce, unself discovery, marrIage&#13;
and the lamily.&#13;
\&#13;
get killed that way." Serge, Gus and&#13;
Roy ate the (ta-daa) new centurions.&#13;
The new centurions meet many interesting&#13;
people: pimps, whores,&#13;
niggers, child beaters, father rapers,&#13;
snipers, "fruits", lemons and limes,&#13;
burglars, looters, juvenile delinquents,&#13;
wives who divorce them, all in all just&#13;
plain down home people. What Joyce&#13;
did lor the Stephen Dedalus' 01 the&#13;
world in Portrait of the Artist, warnbaugh&#13;
does lor the PO-lice. Both&#13;
authors are concerned with a&#13;
maturation theme: Joyce's Dedalus&#13;
Irom baby to young man; Wambaugh's&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
I&#13;
9a.m.-4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
.0 a glass&#13;
-c and&#13;
U a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french. fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The cops in TNC are familiar, we've&#13;
seen them in B, C, C-and D grade&#13;
movies, they think basically on parallel&#13;
levels, humanity loses its layer of the&#13;
humane, people become bastards, the&#13;
young liberal Joe Fehler turns to the&#13;
right, they see people when no one else&#13;
ever sees them and what they see&#13;
disgusts them. The job requires better&#13;
men, stronger men. This is the only&#13;
point the novel brings out which is&#13;
worth any mention. Wambaugh does&#13;
this in secrecy. Like the Bible, TNC is&#13;
amenable to interpretation.&#13;
The cops are as corrups as the&#13;
"criminals", the only catch is that the&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will help, any woman regardless&#13;
01 race, religion, age or Imancial&#13;
slatus. We do nol moralize, but&#13;
merely help women obtain qualihed&#13;
Doctors lor aborllons. II this IS&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early abortion is more&#13;
simple and less costly, and can be&#13;
perlormed on an oul patient basis.&#13;
Call:&#13;
312 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Asliliance of Chic.go&#13;
8 AM-tO PM-7 DAYS&#13;
A NON·PROFIT ORGANIZATION&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658·2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MllWAUnE&#13;
are you ollended by nudity?&#13;
it not, stop in.&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise&#13;
SPECIAL 15%OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student 1.0.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine&#13;
cops "know what good and .&#13;
that they have a speciallaiow:11 are,"&#13;
no one else has. Wambaugh dgethat&#13;
with a straight lace. The corru,ay&#13;
, this&#13;
the centurions comes out ptnessof&#13;
lines as "~et's go over to theWlth SUCh&#13;
bust a lew fruits, we baven't g:rk and&#13;
in a few days." Another pee d&#13;
ne that&#13;
we did just that (staying str~~llllo: "If&#13;
the law and department re r WIthin&#13;
we wouldn't convice one ~ ahons),&#13;
week. The goddamn streets shole a&#13;
, sale even lor us." You get towouldn'tbe&#13;
just who the centurions are Wondering&#13;
and what they are protecting ~~tecthJg&#13;
Any\Vay the novel culminate:i~olll.&#13;
Watts riot, the world Iragmenlin . the&#13;
lace 01 the centurions, writhin ~In the&#13;
lile kicking the ass 01 order g~ aOSOI&#13;
one thing that the centuri~ C os the&#13;
cope with, their first prem~s cannot&#13;
1&#13;
·1 II· n ISe or th I esy ogrsm a alse one' life . e&#13;
Th . ,IS order&#13;
e Watts mferno done th .&#13;
centurions become chu~m e three&#13;
ahead lor two weddings, lea~' t~lan&#13;
to know each other when Sudd~1 get&#13;
IS shot dead 10 a routine lamily Y Joe&#13;
call. A real tearjerker. quarrel&#13;
The world is ready lor a novel bo&#13;
policemen, it just ain't ready lorJ a ut&#13;
Wambaugh. oseJil&#13;
The New Centurions cour~sy of the&#13;
Bookmart, 622 - 59th Street Ke b ' nos a.&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Velvet Underground - Loaded&#13;
Cotillion SD 9034&#13;
Doug Yule - Organ, Piano,&#13;
Bass, Drums, Lead Guitar,&#13;
Acoustic Guitar, Vocals,&#13;
Lyrics and Song Composition&#13;
Sterling Morrison - Lead and&#13;
Rhythm Guitars, Song&#13;
Composition&#13;
. Lou Reed - Rhythm Guitar,&#13;
Piano, Vocals, Lyrics and&#13;
Song Composition&#13;
Moe Tucker. - Drums&#13;
elementary logic.&#13;
Premis: I thought the fmal&#13;
scene 10 Macbeth had a certain&#13;
humorous value.&#13;
Therefore: "Loaded" is a&#13;
good album even taken at race&#13;
value.&#13;
Velvet Underground has&#13;
always had strong roots inNew&#13;
York, apparent on this albumas&#13;
m.uch as on the previous.&#13;
DIrect, unpretentious and&#13;
uncomplicated, they could&#13;
never be accused of intellectualizing&#13;
music for the&#13;
The most dillicult part 01&#13;
writing a review is getting&#13;
started, and this haunting&#13;
feeling I've got is making it&#13;
twice as hard as usual. I suppose&#13;
it's just an occupational&#13;
hazard, but it's albums like&#13;
these that cause a reviewer to&#13;
think twice belore putting a&#13;
word down on paper. To pride&#13;
myself I could call it&#13;
professional caution, but what it&#13;
boils down to is an old lashioned&#13;
lear 01 placing one's foot&#13;
squarely in one's mouth.&#13;
"Loaded", lika a Zappa&#13;
recording, is an enigma. It&#13;
seems to straddle a fine line&#13;
between seriously good music&#13;
and a remarkable put on with&#13;
only the band knowing where it&#13;
really is. Saying that I like it&#13;
just lor what it is therelore, -&#13;
could put me in the dubious&#13;
position of a man .burstmg into&#13;
uproarious laughter during the&#13;
death scene 01 Macbeth, interpreting&#13;
it as a Keystone Cop&#13;
routine. It becomes apparent to&#13;
me now that the .only way to&#13;
decide where to stand (present&#13;
fmances find me without a coin&#13;
to flip) is to use some&#13;
...-1 NEED HELP!!!&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TIME&#13;
$25 Guarenteed for every 100 envelopes&#13;
you stuff .,&#13;
All postage prepaid&#13;
send stamped, self_addressed envelope&#13;
plus $1 for registration and handling&#13;
to&#13;
ALLEN KING CORPORATION&#13;
P.O. BOX &amp;525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212&#13;
sake 01 sanctimony. In lact,the&#13;
major part 01 the album is&#13;
based on one key and four&#13;
chords.&#13;
Iinvoke the time-honoredUSo&#13;
what! "&#13;
Ilit should ever cometo the&#13;
time when music is ratedon the&#13;
number of notes rather than&#13;
what the notes do, it'll be a sad&#13;
state of affairs for musiciansin&#13;
all fields. No, lor musical&#13;
content, the Undergroundgets&#13;
an A. It's a pleasure to just.t&#13;
back and listen withoutbavill!&#13;
your senses stretched, or suffer&#13;
through someone trYingto.&#13;
Velvet Underground, Youseg~&#13;
class. t sake, For argumen s he&#13;
someone might point out t&#13;
similarity between the U~&#13;
derground sound and aleWt~to&#13;
and true groups. It's bard1M&gt; .&#13;
think 01 the Stones a?dDY::'&#13;
, a lew spots but agalO,,0 I&#13;
Ilike the Stones, I lik~.~;:&#13;
and lor a long time I've I for&#13;
Velvet Undergro~nd.,~nd~ed".&#13;
whatever it is, I like ~ what&#13;
Ilyou're not worned a.&#13;
they might say, pick It up·&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Available fOI e t ate tnl ty 01 sorority parties&#13;
Page4 NEWSCOPE&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Title : The New Centurions&#13;
Author: Joseph Wambaugh&#13;
Publisher: Little, Brown and Com- pany ($6.95 )&#13;
On the book jacket the publisher says&#13;
"The New Centurions: a novel about&#13;
policemen by a policeman. Tough, but&#13;
compassionate, it'll make you understand&#13;
- perhaps for the first time -&#13;
what it's really like to be a cop." Joseph&#13;
Wambaugh, boy author, should arrest&#13;
the publisher for false advertising and&#13;
then, as a gesture of good will, swallow&#13;
his typewriter. Open wide, Joey.&#13;
The New Centurions is an L. A.&#13;
policeman's first novel and hopefully&#13;
his last, for several reasons: 1) his first&#13;
novel is 376 pages too long ; 2) I don't&#13;
think it's right for cops to moonlight; 3 )&#13;
the writing is bland, effete, anticreative,&#13;
authoritarian, and overaJ]&#13;
smacks of Reader's Digest. Incidentally,&#13;
TNC has been on the vest&#13;
seller list for quite a while, and as is&#13;
characteristic of most members of that&#13;
select group, it is a multimucho bad&#13;
novel. TNC fits perfectly.&#13;
But there is a story. In alternating&#13;
chapters, Wambaugh portrays the first&#13;
five police years of Serge Duran, "a&#13;
tough, competent Mexican-American&#13;
and ex-Marine who learns everything&#13;
October 4, 1971&#13;
fast- except how to forget his Mexican&#13;
blood; Gus Plebesly, a little man with&#13;
the face of a baby, the speed of an&#13;
antelope, and a panicky fear of 1 violence; and Roy Fehler, a college&#13;
man with ideas like a social worker,&#13;
who discovers - too late - that you can&#13;
get killed that way." Serge, Gus and&#13;
Roy ac,e the (ta-daa) new centurions.&#13;
The new centurions meet many interesting&#13;
people : pimps, whores,&#13;
niggers, child beaters, father rapers,&#13;
snipers, "fruits" , lemons and limes,&#13;
burglars, looters, juvenile delinquents,&#13;
wives who divorce them, all in all just&#13;
plain down home people. What Joyce&#13;
did for the Stephen Dedalus' of the&#13;
world in Portrait of the Artist, Wambaugh&#13;
does for the PO-lice. Both&#13;
authors are concerned with a&#13;
maturation theme: Joyce's Dedalus&#13;
from baby to young man ; Wambaugh's&#13;
new centurions from rookie to right&#13;
wing senility. Wambaugh didn't know&#13;
when to stop I hope he does now. The&#13;
three cops advance from the radio_ car&#13;
to vice squad, to juvenile to alcohol~sm,&#13;
divorce, unself discovery, marriage&#13;
and the family.&#13;
The cops in TNC are familiar, we've&#13;
seen them in B, C, C-and D grade&#13;
movies, they think basically on parallel&#13;
levels, humanity loses its layer of the&#13;
humane, people become bastards, the&#13;
young liberal Joe Fehler turns to the&#13;
right, they see people when no one else&#13;
ever sees them and what they see&#13;
disgusts them. The job requires better&#13;
men, stronger men. This is the only&#13;
point the novel brings out which is&#13;
worth any mention. Wambaugh does&#13;
this in secrecy. Like the Bible, TNC is&#13;
amenable to interpretation.&#13;
The cops are as corrups as the&#13;
"criminals", the only catch is that the&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
cops "know what good and .&#13;
that they have a special knowt11 are:•&#13;
no one else has. Wamba h edgethat&#13;
with a straight face. The c'!rusays this&#13;
the centurions comes out ptness of&#13;
lines as "Let's go over to thewit~ such&#13;
bust a few fruits, we haven't S: k anct&#13;
in a few days." Another pee d_ne that&#13;
did . t th ca illo· "I&#13;
we JUS at (staying strict! : f&#13;
the law and department re r ~1thin&#13;
we wouldn't convice one gu ations),&#13;
. week. The goddamn streets w:ssho~e a&#13;
safe even for us." You get to Uldn t be&#13;
just who the centurions are wondering&#13;
and what they are protecting pritecting&#13;
Anyway the novel culmina~ 0 _frorn.&#13;
Watts riot, the world fragmenti~ 1&#13;
.n the&#13;
face of the centurions, writhing tin the&#13;
life kicking the ass of order ~ aos of&#13;
one thing that the centuri~ c aos the&#13;
cope with, their first prem~s cannot&#13;
l'f 11 . r. ise of th 1 esy og1sm a 1hlse one· li'fe · e&#13;
Th . , 1s orde e Watts mferno done th r. centurions become chu~m e three&#13;
ahead for two weddings, learru~' t~lan&#13;
to know each other when suddegl get&#13;
is shot dead in a routine family n Y Joe&#13;
call. A real tearjerker. quarrel&#13;
1:he worl~ i~ ready for a novel abo&#13;
policemen, 1t Just ain't ready for J ut&#13;
Wambaugh. oseph&#13;
The New Centurions court~sy of th&#13;
Bookmart, 622 - 59th Street Ke h e , nos a.&#13;
elementary logic.&#13;
SPECIAL Pregnant?&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Velvet Underground - Loaded&#13;
Cotillion · SD 9034&#13;
Premis: I thought· the fm 1&#13;
scene in Macbeth had a certa~&#13;
humorous value.&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
I 9a.m.-4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
·o a glass&#13;
-e and&#13;
u a steak sandwich&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
f rench fries&#13;
potato salad&#13;
or&#13;
$1.15&#13;
or&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER OF HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
AVaitable for Fraternity or sorority parties&#13;
Need Help? We will help any woman regardless&#13;
of race. religion, age or financial&#13;
status. We do not moralize, but&#13;
merely help women obtain qualified&#13;
Doctors for abortions, if this is&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early abortion is more&#13;
simple and less costly, and can be&#13;
performed on an out patient basis.&#13;
Call:&#13;
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MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
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are you offended by nudity?&#13;
ii not, stop in.&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise&#13;
SPECIAL 15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore·&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine&#13;
Doug Yule - Organ, Piano,&#13;
Bass, Drums, Lead Guitar,&#13;
Acoustic Guitar, Vocals,&#13;
Lyrics and Song Composition&#13;
Sterling Morrison - Lead and&#13;
Rhythm Guitars, Song&#13;
Composition&#13;
.. Lou Reed - Rhythm Guitar,&#13;
Piano, Vocals, Lyrics and&#13;
Song Composition&#13;
Moe Tucker - Drums&#13;
The most difficult part of&#13;
writing a review is getting&#13;
started, and this haunting&#13;
feeling I've got is making it&#13;
twice as hard as usual. I suppose&#13;
it's just an occupational&#13;
hazard, but it's albums like&#13;
these that cause a reviewer to&#13;
think twice before putting a&#13;
word down on paper. To pride&#13;
myself I could call it&#13;
professional caution, but what it&#13;
boils down to is an old fashioned&#13;
fear of placing one's foot&#13;
squarely in one's mouth.&#13;
"Loaded", lika a Zappa&#13;
recording, is an enigma. It&#13;
seems to straddle a fine line&#13;
between seriously good music&#13;
and a remarkable put on with&#13;
only the band knowing where it&#13;
really is. Saying that I like it&#13;
just for what it is therefore, -&#13;
could put me in the dubious&#13;
position of a man .bursting into&#13;
uproarious laughter during the&#13;
death scene of Macbeth interpreting&#13;
it as a Keyston~ Cop&#13;
routine. It becomes apparent to&#13;
me now that the only way to&#13;
decide where to stand (present&#13;
finances find me without a coin&#13;
to flip) is to use some&#13;
Therefore: "Loaded" is a&#13;
good album even taken at face&#13;
value.&#13;
Velvet Underground has&#13;
always had strong roots in New&#13;
York, apparent on this album as&#13;
m_uch as on the previous.&#13;
Direct, unpretentious and&#13;
uncomplicated, they could&#13;
never be accused of intellectualizing&#13;
music for the&#13;
sake of sanctimony. In fact, the&#13;
major part of the album is&#13;
based on one key and four&#13;
chords. I invoke the time-honored "So&#13;
what!"&#13;
If it should ever come to the&#13;
time when music is rated on the&#13;
number of notes rather than&#13;
what the notes do, it'll be a sad&#13;
state of affairs for musicians in&#13;
all fields. No, for musical&#13;
content the Underground gets&#13;
an A. It's a pleasure to just.sit&#13;
back and listen without having&#13;
your senses stretched, or suffer&#13;
through someone trying to.&#13;
Velvet Underground, Youse got&#13;
class.&#13;
For arguments sake,&#13;
someone might point out the&#13;
similarity between the ~;&#13;
derground sound and a few tn 1&#13;
and true groups. It's hard not -~&#13;
think of the Stones and Dylanh 1&#13;
t · sow a· a few spots but again, 1 • l'k oyan, I like the Stones, I 1 \ed the&#13;
and for a long time I've hd so for&#13;
Velvet Undergro~nd· .~n aded"·&#13;
whatever it is, I l~ke ~t what&#13;
Ifyou'renotworr1eda_ u they might say, pick ,t ~-&#13;
~1 NEED HELP!!!&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TIME&#13;
$25 GUarenteed for every 100 envelopes&#13;
you stuff&#13;
All postage prepaid send stamped, self-addressed envelope&#13;
plus $1 for registration and handling&#13;
to&#13;
ALLEN KING CORPORATION&#13;
P.O. BOX 6525&#13;
' PITTSBURG, PENN 15212 &#13;
October4.'''' . 'El\'SCOPE&#13;
OKTOBERFEST&#13;
Friday • Saturday&#13;
SOCCER 10:30 A, " 3 P.M.&#13;
RUGBY 1 P.M. SATURDAY&#13;
DANC ING 4: 30 P.M, FR I. &amp; SAT.&#13;
MUSIC FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
BEER FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
BRATS FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
SAUERKRAUT FR I. &amp; SAT.&#13;
POPCORN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
SOFT DRINKS FRI. &amp; SAT.&#13;
FENCING NOON SATURDAY&#13;
GYMNASTICS SATURDAY&#13;
SAllING 8 A.M. SATURDAY&#13;
GOLF ALL WEEK; SATURDAY&#13;
TENNIS FRIDAY, SATURDAY&#13;
ARCHERY FR IDAY&#13;
CONTESTS!!! SATURDAY&#13;
PLUS A SATURDAY NITE DANCE--9 P.M.&#13;
AT THE STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG.&#13;
51 iHIZA&#13;
near athletic bldg&#13;
on wood rd&#13;
October"· 1 , 1&#13;
OKTOBERFEST&#13;
Friday - Saturday&#13;
rr:sn&#13;
near t 1&#13;
le1· c Id&#13;
on wood 1rd&#13;
SOCCER 10: 30 • • I 3 P , •&#13;
RUGBY 1 P, • S TURDAY&#13;
DA CI G 4: 30 P. • FR 1. S r,&#13;
USIC FRIDAY &amp; s TURDAY&#13;
BEER FRID y s TUR y&#13;
BRATS FRIDAY &amp; SATURD y&#13;
SAUERKRAUT FR I s T,&#13;
POPCOR FRIDAY&#13;
SOFT ORI KS FRl I&#13;
FE Cl G 00 SATURDAY&#13;
GY ASTICS SATURDAY&#13;
SAIL! G 8 A, . SATURDAY&#13;
GOLF ALL EEK; SATURDAY&#13;
TENtlS FRIDAY, SATURDAY&#13;
ARCHERY FRIDAY&#13;
corTESTS! ! ! SATURDAY&#13;
PLUS A SATURDAY NITE DANCE--9 P,M, AT THE STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG, &#13;
Pago6 NEWSCOPE&#13;
.f'&#13;
OCtober 4.19'11&#13;
Oktoberfest Commemorates&#13;
German King's Marriage&#13;
As Parkside begins its first&#13;
Oktoberrest, perhaps it's appropriate&#13;
to look at Germany.&#13;
where it all started, and see-just&#13;
what Dktoberfest means and&#13;
encompasses.&#13;
In Germany, the Oktoberfest .&#13;
is known as the world's biggest&#13;
beer bust, and the tapping of the&#13;
first keg is the ceremony which&#13;
opens the Bavarian festival.&#13;
The annual celebration&#13;
commemorates the marriage of&#13;
King Ludwig I of Bavaria in&#13;
1810 and usually draws about&#13;
five million visitors to Munich&#13;
for its 16·day TWl.&#13;
Festival attractions include&#13;
circus performers and carnival&#13;
rides but the attraction, or&#13;
commodity, that packs 'em in,&#13;
wbether they he tourists or&#13;
natives. is the beer.&#13;
And there's a lot of it - over a&#13;
million gallons, in huge tents set&#13;
up by Munich's breweries.&#13;
Priced at 88 cents per quart, the&#13;
special brew is served up inI"&#13;
earthenware mugs to the sound&#13;
oj blaring brass bands.&#13;
Oktoherfest organizers also&#13;
expect visitors to conswne half&#13;
a million roasted chickens and&#13;
800,000pairs of pork wurst.&#13;
At Parkside, Oktoberlest is on&#13;
a somewhat smaller scale, but&#13;
that won't rob it of any of its&#13;
splendor. Music, dancing and&#13;
the complete line of Germanstyle&#13;
refreshments will be&#13;
featured along with the"&#13;
traditional athletic events&#13;
which reflect the glory of next&#13;
year's Olympic Games in the&#13;
Bavarian capitol.&#13;
The parking lot near the&#13;
Olfice of Athletics will become&#13;
the dance "platz" and the&#13;
singers will be ~German in&#13;
costume and song. Oktoberfest,&#13;
at Parkside, while it doesn't&#13;
celebrate a king's marriage,&#13;
may be just as important for the"&#13;
university.&#13;
Fencer to Coach for Army&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier, the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
athlete of the year in&#13;
1968-69, will become an&#13;
assistant fencing coach at the.&#13;
U.S. Military Academy upon&#13;
completion of basic training.&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier, a 1967&#13;
Kenosha Tremper graduate.&#13;
placed 11th nationally in foil in&#13;
1970while under the direction of&#13;
UW-P fencing master ,Loran&#13;
Hein. Last season he finished&#13;
third in the Chicagoland Open,&#13;
the second largest meet in the&#13;
nation.&#13;
•'The prime reason he wanted&#13;
and sought the position," Hein&#13;
explained, "is that Keith saw&#13;
the opportunity to have a steady&#13;
diet of fencing "between now and&#13;
next June.&#13;
"He hopes to make the U.S.&#13;
Olympic, team," Hein noted.&#13;
"This is a tremendous opportunity&#13;
for him.: With his&#13;
persistence, who knows?"&#13;
That same persistence was&#13;
enough to earn Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
an "A"&#13;
classification, . similar to the&#13;
black belt of judo, after only one&#13;
and one-half years or fencing. It&#13;
made him one of the top&#13;
collegians in the Midwest. It&#13;
brought him two Wisconsin&#13;
State foil championships.&#13;
And it prompted comment,&#13;
Hein recalled, that after such a&#13;
short time as a fencer, Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
had "reached the&#13;
height of fencing".&#13;
Oktoberfest Parkside Style&#13;
Oktoberfest, Parkside-style, is just about&#13;
here.&#13;
Activities begin Friday morning at the&#13;
Parkside athletic area with the start or the&#13;
Parkside Invitational Soccer Tournament, pitting&#13;
NAIA power Eastern Illinois against a strong Ohio&#13;
State club Irorn the Big Ten.&#13;
But a lot has actually started even before&#13;
then; the intramural golf tournament, with six&#13;
flights ror men and women raculty and stafr&#13;
members and students began last Friday. The&#13;
intramural tennis tournament starts early Friday&#13;
morning at the Pershing Courts in Racine.&#13;
Archery competition will lead orr the afternoon&#13;
segment or the lirst day, rollowed by the&#13;
second soccer match of the day, this one with host&#13;
parkside racing the always strong team rrom&#13;
Quicny (Ill.) College.&#13;
Highlighting the arternoon and early evening&#13;
will be the Oktoherfest Polka Party taking place&#13;
on the OUice of Athletics parking lot and&#13;
surroundcng area. Parkside students, raculty and&#13;
starr members and their guests may enter the&#13;
"beer garden" to purchase beer, brats and other&#13;
rerreshments. Admission to this area will be by&#13;
special "Oktoherlest" button, which features the&#13;
famed smiling race and may he purchased rrom&#13;
German Club or Varsity Club members.&#13;
There will he no letup on Saturday; the activity&#13;
will increase, w.ith a wide v.ariety of intramural&#13;
orrerings, spectator sports and social&#13;
get-togethers.&#13;
- Intramural activities include a sailing regatta&#13;
for experienced sailors in penguin boats at 8 a.m.&#13;
at the Kenosha Yacht Club, and faculty tennis&#13;
tournament finals at the Pershing Courts in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Soccer will again be in full swing, with the&#13;
losers from Friday playing a consolation match at&#13;
10:30 a.m. and the winners playing ror the&#13;
championship at 3 p.m.&#13;
Before soccer gets underway in the afternoon&#13;
fans who like football may thrill to a new form 01&#13;
gridiron madness in rugby. Rougher than football,&#13;
reqwrmg more skill and coordination than almost&#13;
any. other sport, rugby is a grand old game now&#13;
reVItalized by many of the nation's colleges. The&#13;
match here ~ll pit Parkside Rugby Club against&#13;
the Wlsconsm (Madison) Rugby Club.&#13;
An~ ~here'l1 be demonstrations as well - in&#13;
horse rIding and gymanstics - to follow the noon&#13;
rencm~ competition with the Shorewood Club. The&#13;
Parkslde EquestrIan Club will perform at 2: 30&#13;
p.m. WIth Parkside gymnasts demonstratin&#13;
varIOUSskills during the halftime of the afternoo~&#13;
soccer game.&#13;
At the conclusion of the championship lilt&#13;
~wa~ds WIll be presented for all intramural ac:&#13;
lIvllIes and then the polka party will get into full&#13;
SWI~, WIththe beer garden opening and dancing,&#13;
mUSIc, refreshments and special contests slated&#13;
At 9 p.m. there ~Il he a dance at the Studeni&#13;
ActIVIties Building to close out Parkside's f' t Oktoherfest. Irs&#13;
Oktoberfest&#13;
Schedule&#13;
FRIDAY. OCTOBER 8&#13;
\&#13;
.lI'ennis Tournament, Pershing Courts, Racine (Co&#13;
Intramura • .' f . forman nlac Coach Dick Frecka 10 Racpm~ .~r. 10 ~r~a ion.) I&#13;
Intramural Golf Tournament, e ri ymg prmgs Golf Course, n .&#13;
P&#13;
rogress. (Contact Coach Steve Stephens at the Olliee of Alb1OWet.~&#13;
for informa Ion. ti ) .. I I"&#13;
. 0 _ Soccer. Parkside Invitational Tournament. Oh'&#13;
to.3 a;~stern Illinois. Parkside athletic field. InStat,&#13;
vs. _ Archery Competition. Near athletic field.&#13;
1 p.m. _ Soccer. Parkside Invitational Tournam~nt. Parks'd&#13;
3 p.m. ks d thl t' fi Id I e vs Quincy College. Par i e a e ic Ie.. .&#13;
4:30-8:30 p.m. - Oktoberfest Polka Party - musI~, dancing,refr&#13;
ments for Parkside students, faculty and their guests. Parks~&#13;
athletic area and pa:~ng lo.t. .. de&#13;
9 p.m. _ Student ActiVities Building open.&#13;
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9&#13;
8 a.m. - Sailing Regatta. InttraCmurhal&#13;
V&#13;
'StGodfudents,faculty, stalf&#13;
Kenosha Yacht Club. (Contac oac IC rey at the Officeoi&#13;
Athletics for information,) .&#13;
8 a.m. _ Tennis. Faculty tenms tournament flnals. Pershing Courts&#13;
Racine.' ,&#13;
9 a.m. - Gall. Varsity golf tournament. Faculty-staff tournament&#13;
Petrifying Springs GOlfrCo~nfSe.(cot~tact) Coach Steve Stephens at&#13;
the Office of Athletics or 1 orma Ion.&#13;
10:30 a.m. - Soccer. Parkside Invitational Soccer Tournament. Third&#13;
place game between Friday losers. Parkside athletic field.&#13;
Noon _ Fencing Competition.Parkslde vs. Shorewood Club.Parkside&#13;
athletic area.&#13;
I p.m. _ Rugby Match. Parkside vs. Wisconsin Rugby Club.Parkside&#13;
athletic Held.&#13;
2:30 p.m. - Equestria," Demonstration. Parkside Equestrian Club.&#13;
Parkside athletic area.&#13;
3:00 p.m. - Soccer. Parkside Invitational Tournament. Championship&#13;
game between Friday winners.&#13;
4:30 p.m. - Awards Presentation.&#13;
4:30 _ 8:30 p.m. - Polka Party. Special contests. Parkside athletic&#13;
area and parking lot. Dancing, music, refreshments. FOi Parkside&#13;
" students, faculty and their guests.&#13;
9 p.m. - Dance. Student Activities Building.&#13;
In case of inclement weather all post-game activities will be&#13;
moved into the Student Activities Building.&#13;
touche! lilt&#13;
. . wiUbeo.'o&#13;
. Fen.cing competition with the Shorewood. !?ub lb lb' ;..JP'"&#13;
"high pomts of the Oktoherfest athletic actiVItieS, wi .•&#13;
scheduled to begin clashing at noon Saturday. "Lo"~&#13;
UW-Parkside Coach Loran Hein, once dubbed the ear.&#13;
rencing". has managed to put together good teams.everJ.~ 8.. ::&#13;
This one promises to be no exception, witb bas bed' If&#13;
Kenosha senior. expected to lead the team. which nd Io~oOil&#13;
su~ce.ssful against Big Ten opponents in the past. a 1911.&#13;
IlhnOis and Michigan State of that major conference III&#13;
Remember I. ,&#13;
. OctoberteS&#13;
Page&amp; NEWSCOPE&#13;
Oktoberfest Commemorates&#13;
German King's Marriage&#13;
As Parkside begins its first&#13;
Oktoberfest, perhaps it's appropriate&#13;
to look at Germany,&#13;
where it all started, and see just&#13;
what Oktoberfest means and&#13;
en com passes.&#13;
In Germany, the Oktoberfest.&#13;
is known as the world's biggest&#13;
beer bust, and the tapping of the&#13;
first keg is the ceremony which&#13;
opens the Bavarian festival.&#13;
the complete line of Germansty&#13;
le refreshments will be&#13;
featured along with the·&#13;
traditional athletic events&#13;
which reflect the glory of next&#13;
year's Olympic Games in the&#13;
Bavarian capitol.&#13;
Office of Athletics will become&#13;
the dance "platz" and the&#13;
singers will be • German in&#13;
costume and song. Oktoberfest&#13;
at Parkside, while it doesn't&#13;
celebrate a king's marriage,&#13;
may be just as important for the&#13;
The parking wiiversity. lot near the&#13;
The annual celebration&#13;
commemorates the marriage of&#13;
King Ludwig I of Bavaria in&#13;
1810 and usually draws about&#13;
five million visitors to Munich&#13;
for its 16-day rwi.&#13;
Fencer to Coach for Army&#13;
Festival attractions include&#13;
circus performers and carnival&#13;
rides but the attraction, or&#13;
commodity, that packs 'em in,&#13;
whether they be tourists or&#13;
natives, is the beer.&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier, the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
athlete of the year in&#13;
1968-69, will become an&#13;
assistant fencing coach at the.&#13;
U.S. Military Academy upon&#13;
completion of basic training.&#13;
next June. "He hopes to make the U.S.&#13;
Olympic. team," Hein noted.&#13;
"This is a tremendous opportunity&#13;
for him. · With his&#13;
persistence, who knows?"&#13;
And there's a lot of it - over a&#13;
million gallons, in huge tents set&#13;
up by Munich's breweries.&#13;
Priced at 88 cents per quart, the&#13;
special brew is served up in'&#13;
earthenware mugs to the sowid&#13;
of. blaring brass bands.&#13;
Oktoberfest organizers also&#13;
expect visitors to consume half&#13;
a million roasted chickens and&#13;
800,000 pairs of pork wurst.&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier, a 1967&#13;
Kenosha Tremper graduate,&#13;
placed 11th nationally in foil in&#13;
1970 while wider the direction of&#13;
UW-P fencing master Loran ·&#13;
Hein. Last season he finished&#13;
third in the Chicagoland Open,&#13;
the second largest meet in the&#13;
nation.&#13;
That same persistence was&#13;
enough to earn Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
an "A"&#13;
classification, . similar to the&#13;
black belt of judo, after only one&#13;
and one-half years of fencing. It&#13;
made him one of the top&#13;
collegians in the Midwest. It&#13;
brought him two Wisconsin&#13;
State foil championships.&#13;
At Parkside, Oktoberfest is on&#13;
a somewhat smaller scale, but&#13;
that won't rob it of any of its&#13;
splendor. Music, dancing and&#13;
"The prime reason he wanted&#13;
and sought the position," Hein&#13;
explained, "is that Keith saw&#13;
the opwrtwiity to have a steady&#13;
diet of fencing between now and&#13;
And it prompted comment,&#13;
Hein recalled, that after such a&#13;
short time as a fencer, Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
had "reached the&#13;
height of fencing".&#13;
Oktoberfest Parkside Style&#13;
Oktoberfest, Parkside-style, is just about&#13;
here.&#13;
Activities begin Friday morning at the&#13;
Parkside athletic area with the start of the&#13;
Parkside Invitational Soccer Tournament, pitting&#13;
NAIA power Eastern Illinois against a strong Ohio ·&#13;
State club from the Big Ten.&#13;
But a lot has actually started even before&#13;
then ; the intramural golf tournament, with six&#13;
flights for men and women faculty and staff&#13;
members and students began last Friday. The&#13;
intramural tennis tournament starts early Friday&#13;
morning at the Pershing Courts in Racine.&#13;
Archery competition will lead off the afternoon&#13;
segment of the first day, followed by the&#13;
second soccer match of the day, this one with host&#13;
parkside facing the always strong team from&#13;
Quicny (Ill.) College.&#13;
Highlighting the afternoon and early evening&#13;
will be the Oktoberfest Polka Party taking place&#13;
on the Office of Athletics parking lot and&#13;
surrowidcng area. Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff members and their guests may enter the&#13;
"beer garden" to purchase beer, brats and other&#13;
refreshments. Admission to this area will be by&#13;
special "Oktoberfest" button, which features the&#13;
famed smiling face and may be purchased from&#13;
German Club or Varsity Club members.&#13;
There will be no letup on Saturday; the activity&#13;
will increase, with a wide v.ariety of intramural&#13;
offerings, spectator sports and social&#13;
get-togethers.&#13;
Intramural activities include a sailing regatta&#13;
for experienced sailors in penguin boats at 8 a.m.&#13;
at the Kenosha Yacht Club, and faculty tennis&#13;
tournament finals at the Pershing Courts in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Soccer will again be in full swing, with the&#13;
losers from Friday playing a consolation match at&#13;
10:30 a.m. and the winners playing for the&#13;
championship at 3 p.m.&#13;
Before soccer gets underway in the afternoon&#13;
fans who like football may thrill to a new form of&#13;
gridiron madness in rugby. Rougher than football&#13;
requiring more skill and coordination than almost&#13;
any_ ot~er sport, rugby is a grand old game now&#13;
rev1tahzed by many of the nation's colleges. The&#13;
match_ here will pit Parkside Rugby Club against&#13;
the Wisconsin (Madison) Rugby Club.&#13;
An~ ~here'll be demonstrations as well - in&#13;
hors~ r1dmg and gymanstics - to follow the noon&#13;
fencm~ competiti~n with the Shorewood Club. The&#13;
Parkside Equestrian Club will perform at 2·30&#13;
P-~- wi~ Par~side gymnasts demonstrati0&#13;
ng&#13;
various skills durmg the halftime of the afternoon&#13;
soccer game.&#13;
At th~ conclusion of the championship tilt&#13;
3:w:1:ds will be presented for all intramural ac~&#13;
hv!hes a~d then the polka party will get into full&#13;
swm_g, with the beer garden opening and dancing&#13;
music, refreshments and special contests slated'&#13;
_A~? p.m .. there will be a dance at the Student&#13;
Achv1hes Building to close out Parkside' f' t&#13;
Oktoberfest. . s 1rs&#13;
Oktoberfest&#13;
Schedule&#13;
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8&#13;
1 !fennis Tournament, Pershing Courts, Racine (Co&#13;
IntrcamuhraDi'ck Frecka in Racine for information.) · ntact&#13;
oac P t · f · S · G&#13;
1 t ural Golf Tournament, e ri ymg prmgs olf Course&#13;
n r;r~gress. (C?ntact Coach Steve Stephens at the Office of A~~;i~&#13;
for information.) . . . , .30 _ Soccer. Parkside Inv1tabonal Tournament. Oh' 8&#13;
16· a.m. ks'd thl f f Id 10 tat Eastern Illinois. Par I e a e 1c 1e . e&#13;
vs. _ Archery Competition. Near athletic field.&#13;
1 p.m. 'd I ·t t· al T _ Soccer. Parks1 e nvi a 10n ournam~nt. Parks'd&#13;
3 PQtrincy College. Parkside athletic field. . 1 e vs.&#13;
4.30 _ 8:30 p.m. -Oktoberfest Polka Party - music, dancing, refr&#13;
· ments for Parkside students, faculty and their guests. Parks~-&#13;
athletic area and parking lot. e&#13;
9 p.m. _ Student Activities Building open.&#13;
SATURDAY,OCTOBER9&#13;
8 a.m. _ Sailing Regatta. Intramural. . Students, faculty, starr&#13;
Kenosha Yac~t Club. &lt;_Contact Coach Vic Godfrey at the Office oi&#13;
Athletics for mformabon.). .&#13;
8 a.m. _ Tennis. Faculty tenms tournament fmals. Pershing Courts&#13;
Racine. '&#13;
9 a.m. _ Golf. Varsity golf tournament. Faculty-staff tournamenL&#13;
Petrifying Springs &lt;?olf Co~se. (Co~tact Coach Steve Stephens at&#13;
the Office of Athletics for mformahon.)&#13;
io:30 a.m. _ Soccer. Parksi?e Invitational Soc~er Tournament. Third&#13;
place game between_ 1:riday los~rs. Parkside athletic field.&#13;
Noon_ Fencing Competition. Parkside vs. Shorewood Club. Parkside&#13;
athletic area.&#13;
1 p.m. _ Rugby Match. Parkside vs. Wisconsin Rugby Club. Parkside&#13;
athletic field.&#13;
2:30 p.m. _ Equestrian Demonstration. Parkside Equestrian Club.&#13;
Parkside athletic area.&#13;
3: oo p.m. - Soccer. Parkside Invitational Tournament. Championship&#13;
game between Friday winners.&#13;
4:30 p.m. - Awards Presentation.&#13;
4:30 _ 8:30 p.m. - Polka Party. Special contests. Parkside athletic&#13;
area and parking lot. Dancing, music, refreshments. For Parkside&#13;
. students faculty and their guests.&#13;
9 p.m. - D~nce. Student Activities Building.&#13;
In case of inclement weather all post-game activities will be&#13;
moved into the Student Activities Buildlng.&#13;
touchel ,~ . . 'UbeoneO&#13;
Fencing competition with the Shorewood Club WI the we•Po"&#13;
high points of the Oktoberfest athletic activities, witb .,&#13;
scheduled to begin clashing at noon Saturday. 111,oJJlblrdi&#13;
UW-Parkside Coach Loran Hein, once dubbed the year,&#13;
fencing", has managed to put together good teams_eve7ohn flaJI';!&#13;
This one promises to be no exception, wi~b has l,etll 11&#13;
Kenosha senior, expected to lead the team, which d tosl onlY&#13;
su~c«:ssful against Big Ten opponents in the past. 8~971.&#13;
Illm01s and Michigan State of that major conference 10 &#13;
Pa , 0._ •.•".&#13;
Oktoberfest Big&#13;
on Intramurals&#13;
RUGBY . A Lesso&#13;
Violence, Sports a s ip&#13;
Rugby can be mosl pi&#13;
described as lootball ,lho&lt;a&#13;
pads. But it IS ruIly more \ban&#13;
that. It IS tile maot p/l) I of&#13;
aD contact r13&#13;
Yet there is aloo a .... of&#13;
spnrtsrnanslup ch IS uruque&#13;
One 01 the most wumpntUnI&#13;
unntten rules eaus lor a part)&#13;
spnnsored b the haol chm .Iter&#13;
the match. Rug!&gt;· hard Iut·&#13;
ling and most competlll,., but&#13;
each pIa) r bas a h rd&#13;
lor e'ier)' _ and for penonal&#13;
spnrlsmanship.&#13;
Each team IS ~n1ed b&#13;
ISmen with ooe addlIJonal man&#13;
to act as hne judge .·0 substitutions&#13;
are a"""ed chn&#13;
thegamee of&#13;
IIlJ"'es &lt;lurq the ftrSl I.&#13;
rmoutes of pla On! the one&#13;
offietal can caD tim Each&#13;
haJJ IS usually 30 to m&#13;
long.&#13;
PoIIllS)'5tem: Spain -a ttY&#13;
_ p1a=g ball on p-ound 0&#13;
npp&gt;nenl's pl 2 poon -&#13;
" COO\'ers,H)ft - extra&#13;
added after a ttY a place&#13;
IS taken anY"tlere 011the hold&#13;
011a tine parallel to the sidehnt&#13;
!rom the poont here the baD&#13;
..... placed on the gr-o&lt;I&gt;d • S&#13;
pnlllts - a drop kJdt - I",",&#13;
Paul&#13;
Car&#13;
Troll&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
UniVersityI . . h "III&lt;d "Roo 0 Wlsconsin-Parkside wrestling coach Jim xoc was&#13;
~ kie Coach 01 the Year" for 1970 by Amateur Wreslling&#13;
first~Parkside Invitational Soccer Tournament will highlight the&#13;
~ual Oktobertest celebration at the University of Wisconstn&#13;
-&#13;
campus Oct. 8-9.&#13;
Univern .•eht&#13;
"oj COach I Y orWisconsin.Par-kside track coach Bob Lawson 13......&#13;
"""her o~ track Ior.seven months in the Philippines last year as a&#13;
the Parkside coaching team.&#13;
Ullivern Ilc:bis the I y or Wisconsin-Parkside athletic director Tom Ro~·&#13;
.\lbielics secretary or the National Association or IntercollegIate&#13;
sports chiefs' committee.&#13;
UIliVersi . dseO ~ ty of Wisconsin-Parkside bas~dball star Mike Ma&#13;
~ r"'turned to Kenosha arter • four nation baSkelballlltour&#13;
-...: OUr European nations with a collection of MIdwest co ege&#13;
YOU'1i_ girl. lik. the..... d _ -- at "'i. __ ....t. oI&lt;tobeIf .. ,. The uw-f'al\t.id. ......eacIer ...... P""'1"'" girl. will be 01'1 hand 10 eM« 01'1 the Rongen i.the _COf tou_ ~ i.~ olla'-'· rv&lt;Pf __ ••• , \JlHolDdi ......&#13;
0c .... ,.1,i1&#13;
0 0&#13;
on I&#13;
UW-Parkside's sailors extraordinaire l(enosha 1·uniors M"k p ba , ' e o r and Jerry Ruffol&#13;
show (ieza Martiny's sailing class how it's done during a ti . o,&#13;
oslta yacht Club. prac ce session at the KenRUGBY&#13;
-&#13;
Violence,&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
U111Yersity of w· . "Rook· isconsm-Parkside wrestling coach Jim Koch was . ie Coach of the Year" for 1970 by Amatelll" Wrestling&#13;
'!be Park.,ide In ·tat· · · w· ht th&#13;
11\nua] Ok VI 10nal Soccer ToW"Dament will h1g . 1g . e ~ earn toberfest celebration at the University of W1sconsm- pus Oct. 8-9.&#13;
lJ .... lllYersity of w· - ugh ._ COachect isconsin-Parkside track coach Bob Lawson ta t&#13;
her of thtrack, for seven months in the Philippines last year as a&#13;
e Parkside coaching team.&#13;
lJniYersit . h IS the Y of Wisconsin-Parkside athletic director Tom Ro~-&#13;
tica spo~eta!Y ?' the National Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
chiefs committee.&#13;
u-\'ersit . . ~ ~of WISConsin-Parkside bas~dball star Mike Madsen&#13;
.:--. foUr E ed to Kenosha after 2 four nation basketball tour&#13;
uropean nations with a collection of Midwest college&#13;
you•II ... girls like se and aawy - at&#13;
cheerleaders and flO"'"PO" girls will be on t.ld tD&#13;
and In so--, aftanoon's ,uf/:1, v-,e uguinst uw....,..11111&#13;
7 &#13;
PageS NEWSCOPE October 4,1971&#13;
Soccer Highlights Oktoberfest Sports&#13;
Jaehne,Tom&#13;
Jenrette, Mike&#13;
Kiefer, Wolf Dieter&#13;
Kilps, Rick&#13;
Lechusz, Rick&#13;
Markovic, Stan&#13;
Martinson, Tim&#13;
Nassauer t Kurt&#13;
Orr, Joe&#13;
J&gt;hanturat,Ftay I&#13;
Schneider, Dietmar&#13;
Thomsen, Tom&#13;
- Wentzell, Dave&#13;
Weyrauch, Paul&#13;
with Quincy ·should be a tough&#13;
test for the Rangers. . "We're young, inexperienced&#13;
and building for the future,"&#13;
UW-Parkside soccer coach&#13;
Geza Martiny says.&#13;
Martiny is optimistic about&#13;
the future of the soccer&#13;
program at Parkside,' which&#13;
will face a big test this weekend&#13;
in the first Parkside Invitational&#13;
Tournament in&#13;
conjunction wi th the&#13;
Oktoberfest activities.&#13;
"We're just working on&#13;
fundamentals and trying to play&#13;
game by game," Martiny&#13;
pointed out.&#13;
His big gun, Joe Orr, an allMidwest&#13;
pick at halfback in&#13;
1970,is perhaps the key, but no&#13;
less important is the teamwork&#13;
needed to produce a winner.&#13;
Parkside showed that&#13;
teamwork in its first game&#13;
against the Wisconsin All Stars,&#13;
controlling the ball and keeping&#13;
it in the All Starz' zone. But the&#13;
Rangers were unable to score&#13;
until the fourth period and had&#13;
already given up three goals to&#13;
put the game nearly on ice for&#13;
the Stars.&#13;
Two freshmen from&#13;
Milwaukee - Rick Kilps and&#13;
Rick Lechusz - are expected to&#13;
be key performers in this third&#13;
season of soccer at Parkside.&#13;
They, with some older, more&#13;
experienced hands, hopefully&#13;
will help UW·P improve on its 4·&#13;
6·1 mark of 1970.&#13;
The teams here this weekend&#13;
are Ohio State of Big Ten,&#13;
Eastern Illinois and powerful&#13;
Quincy College. The first game&#13;
Ilw&#13;
1\1&#13;
CF1l&#13;
LW&#13;
CF&#13;
LIiB&#13;
ilFa&#13;
IlW&#13;
IlI1B&#13;
LI&#13;
ilFa&#13;
G&#13;
IlW&#13;
G&#13;
U'they pass that one and upset&#13;
Quincy, they'll face the winner&#13;
of Friday morning's Ohio StateEastern&#13;
Illinois game for the&#13;
championship at 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
UW.p 1971 Roster&#13;
Andacht, Chris&#13;
Bi1lings, Charles&#13;
Brieske, Elliott&#13;
Hopkins-Matt&#13;
LW&#13;
LFB&#13;
LFB&#13;
.RW'&#13;
&lt;&#13;
II:&#13;
III&#13;
N fu&#13;
&lt;&#13;
Q.'&#13;
U"&#13;
II:&#13;
....&#13;
Gymnasts Start Practice&#13;
at Park H.S.&#13;
The Parkside gymnastics&#13;
learn is preparing for its second&#13;
season under new head coach&#13;
Dave Donaldson and will&#13;
demonstrate various tricks at&#13;
halftime of Saturday afternoon's&#13;
soccer championship&#13;
game.&#13;
Warren McGillivray and Don&#13;
Boswein are back from last&#13;
year's squad, which placed&#13;
Sixth in the NAJA in Parkside's&#13;
first year of competition.&#13;
New squad members&#13;
'presently working out with the&#13;
team at Park high school in&#13;
flacine are Carl Greene, Devin&#13;
O'Neal, Mike Monti, Wayne&#13;
DuQuoine and Kelly Carney.&#13;
It's rather early for predictions,&#13;
but the team appears well&#13;
balanced and able to cover all&#13;
even~. The first competitive&#13;
test will be the Midwest Open in&#13;
November.&#13;
Harriers at Platteville&#13;
UW·Parkside's cross country&#13;
team will compete in the tough&#13;
Platteville Invitational&#13;
Saturday over a five mile&#13;
course.&#13;
difficult we compete in all&#13;
year". .&#13;
"It's a rugges course," he&#13;
noted, "and it always seems to&#13;
give us trouble. But all the good&#13;
colleges in the area will be there&#13;
and it's a good opportunity for&#13;
US."&#13;
Barefoot freshman Lucian&#13;
Rosa is currently running as the&#13;
number one man on the&#13;
Parkside squad, with&#13;
sophomores Chuck Dettman&#13;
and Jim McFadden close&#13;
behind.&#13;
"We're progressing normally&#13;
for a young team," Lawson&#13;
said. "Nearly everyone improved&#13;
from the first meet- 'to&#13;
the second."&#13;
Others battling for top spots&#13;
include freshman Rudy&#13;
Alvarez, sophomore Gary&#13;
Lance, freshman Dennis Biel&#13;
senior Mike DeWitt, sophomor~&#13;
Keith Merritt and freshmen Bill&#13;
Carlson and Kim Whitmore.&#13;
The Rangers will head for&#13;
Platteville again Oct. 16to face&#13;
the WSU school in a dual affair.&#13;
Gymnast Warren McGillivray Other top teams competing&#13;
WIth the Rangers include&#13;
Mankato (Minn.) State, Carthage,&#13;
"Platteville State and&#13;
Loras,&#13;
UW-P Coach Bob Lawson&#13;
called the meet "one of the most&#13;
Anyone interested in joining&#13;
the squad should contact Coach&#13;
Donaldson in Racine or meet&#13;
him at practice at Park high&#13;
from 6 to 7 p.m.&#13;
Coach Bob L.... en&#13;
Parkside '200'&#13;
Maybe you've heard of Parkside 200.Maybe you haven't.&#13;
But they don't necessarily expect to be heard or seen.&#13;
I;S members love intercollegiate athletics, and want to helpo,ut&#13;
That s all that's needed': For $100a year they can join the organization&#13;
and help support UW-P athletics. . .&#13;
B~sically, the members are local men who have seen ~&#13;
Parkside's Olympic and lifetime sports programs somethingt/I8&#13;
t&#13;
s&#13;
desperately needed and can be of vital importance to this area,&#13;
perhaps more in the future than at the present time, but important&#13;
nonetheless .&#13;
. In return for their contributions they receive membershiP cards&#13;
which admit them to Parkside home athletic contests, a pin, a car&#13;
decal and a monthly newsletter. '&#13;
They are invited to all special activities, such as the okloberi~&#13;
an? varIOUS ~embers are taking part in the golf tournament;er'&#13;
gomg on and 10 the tennis tournament to be run off Saturday at&#13;
shing Courts in Racine.&#13;
Some of them do special, unasked-for things- ;ng&#13;
Ken Joarus of Kenosha has taken Parkside freshman ru;ev'&#13;
~~nsatIon Lucian Rosa into his home and basketball coachSOCCerephens,&#13;
also a 200 member has done the same with IJ8S&#13;
basketball player Ray Phantur~t of Thailand: Aida Madrigran&#13;
o&#13;
'cal&#13;
ed&#13;
donateda $4,000 scoreboard for the new athletics and pbYS'&#13;
ucatIon building. . .' fred s.&#13;
Des The Board of Directors for the organizatIon lOcludes:t.tQSk8,&#13;
Bo Imo~e, Richard Ellison, Dam Tirabassi, Jr., Chester e past.&#13;
b White and Irving Silver. It meets monthly 10 dis~ th&#13;
present, but most especially, the future of Parksideathlet'CS.&#13;
U's rugby, and the fi "&#13;
citing. It will be an 1m ertant action IS what makes the game exwith&#13;
the Parkside RU~bY Cluta~~Of,lhe big O~toberfest weekend,&#13;
Rugby Club at I p.m. Satu d hstmg th~ Wisconsin (Madison)&#13;
r ay on t e Parksfde athletic field. Help' ,&#13;
p~e .Xniversity of Wisconsin-&#13;
"H t"' e Rugby Club has a&#13;
e P Wanted" sign. posted.&#13;
Th.e team is without a coach&#13;
and rs looking for someone who&#13;
has coached or played rugb .&#13;
the past to guide it throuJ', ~&#13;
schedule that includes the UWMadison,.&#13;
Milwaukee School of&#13;
E"!lmeermg, Illinois Valley and&#13;
University of Iowa clubs&#13;
Games are generally played \&#13;
on Sundays but the next home&#13;
encounter, against the Madison&#13;
club, will be part of Parkside's&#13;
Oktoberfest activities and will&#13;
~ played at 1 p.m. Saturday Wanted&#13;
1. 9. '&#13;
Anyon~ who might be interested&#13;
10 coaching is asked to&#13;
call'Coach V' Go UW P ksi IC dfrey at the - ar SIde Office f&#13;
AtWetics, phone 414-553-231~.&#13;
Pages NEWSCOPE October 4, 1971&#13;
Soccer Highlights Oktoberfest Sports . with Quincy should be a tough Jaehne, To~&#13;
...... ...-a ,,, «P0.i.rnr -&#13;
Gymnasts Start Practice&#13;
The Parkside gymnastics&#13;
team is preparing for its second&#13;
season under new head coach&#13;
Dave Donaldson and will&#13;
demonstrate various tricks at&#13;
halftime of Saturday afternoon's&#13;
soccer championship&#13;
game.&#13;
at Park H.S.&#13;
"We're young, inexperienc~&#13;
and building for the future,&#13;
UW-Parkside soccer coach&#13;
Geza Martiny says. Martiny is optimistic about&#13;
the future of the soc~er&#13;
program at Parksi.de, · which&#13;
will face a big test this weekend&#13;
in the first Parkside Invitational&#13;
Tournament in&#13;
conjunction with the&#13;
Oktoberfest activities.&#13;
"We're just working on&#13;
fundamentals and trying to play&#13;
game by game," Martiny&#13;
pointed out.&#13;
His big gun, Joe Orr, an a~lMidwest&#13;
pick at halfback m&#13;
1970, is perhaps the ~y, but no&#13;
less important is the teamwork&#13;
needed to produce a winner.&#13;
Parkside showed that&#13;
teamwork in its first game&#13;
against the Wisconsin All s1a:rs,&#13;
controlling the ball and keepmg&#13;
it in the All Starz' zone. But the&#13;
Rangers were unable to score&#13;
until the fourth period and had&#13;
already given up three goals to&#13;
put the game nearly on ice for&#13;
the Stars.&#13;
Two freshmen from&#13;
Milwaukee - Rick Kilps and&#13;
Rick Lechusz - are expected to&#13;
be key performers in this third&#13;
season of soccer at Parkside.&#13;
They, with some older, more&#13;
experienced hands, hopefully&#13;
will help UW-P improve on its 4-&#13;
6-1 mark of 1970.&#13;
The teams here this weekend&#13;
are Ohio State of Big Ten,&#13;
Eastern Illinois and powerful&#13;
Quincy College. The first game&#13;
t f th Rangers. Jenrette, Mike&#13;
tes or e Kiefer, Wolf Dieter&#13;
If they pass that one and ~pset&#13;
Quincy, they'll face th~ wmner&#13;
of Friday morning's Ohio State -&#13;
Eastern Illinois game for the&#13;
championship at 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
UW-P 1971 Roster&#13;
,\Jldacht, Chris&#13;
Billings, Charles&#13;
Brieske, Elliott&#13;
Hopkins_, Matt&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
0::&#13;
I.LI&#13;
N&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
n.&#13;
)£&#13;
u&#13;
-&#13;
0::&#13;
-\&#13;
• •1: ....&#13;
LW&#13;
LFB&#13;
LFB&#13;
RW,&#13;
Kilps, Rick&#13;
Lechusz, Rick&#13;
Markovic, Stan&#13;
Martinson, Tim&#13;
Nassauer, Kurt&#13;
Orr,Joe&#13;
Phanturat, Ray&#13;
Schneider, Dietmar&#13;
Thomsen, Tom&#13;
- Wentzell, Dave&#13;
Weyrauch, Paul&#13;
RW.&#13;
Rt&#13;
CFa&#13;
L\V&#13;
CF&#13;
LllB&#13;
ll.Fa&#13;
RW&#13;
RIIB&#13;
Lt&#13;
RFB&#13;
G&#13;
RW&#13;
G&#13;
Warren McGillivray and Don&#13;
Boswein are back from last&#13;
year's squad, which placed&#13;
sixth in the NAIA in Parkside's&#13;
first year of competition.&#13;
Harriers at Platteville&#13;
New squad members&#13;
presently working out with the&#13;
team at Park high school in&#13;
Racine are Carl Greene, Devin&#13;
O'Neal, Mike Monti, Wayne&#13;
DuQuoine and Kelly Carney.&#13;
It's rather early for predictions,&#13;
but the team appears well&#13;
balanced and able to cover all&#13;
events. The first competitive&#13;
test will be the Midwest Open in&#13;
November.&#13;
Help&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Gymnast warren McGillivray&#13;
Anyone interested in joining&#13;
the squad should contact Coach&#13;
Donaldson in Racine or meet&#13;
him at practice at Park high&#13;
from 6 to 7 p.m.&#13;
UW-Parkside's cross country&#13;
team will compete in the tough&#13;
Platt eville In vi t ati onal&#13;
Saturday over a five mile&#13;
course.&#13;
Other top teams competing&#13;
with the Rangers include&#13;
Mankato (Minn.) State, Carthage,&#13;
Platteville State and&#13;
Loras.&#13;
UW-P Coach Bob Lawson&#13;
called the meet "one of the most&#13;
.. It's ru~by, and the fierce action is what makes the game exci~mg.&#13;
It will ~ an important part of the big Oktoberfest weekend,&#13;
with the Parkside Rugby Club hosting the Wisconsin (Madison)&#13;
Rugby Club at 1 p.m. Saturday on the Parkside athletic field.&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Rugby Club has a&#13;
"Help Wanted" sign. posted.&#13;
The team is without a coach&#13;
and is looking for someone who&#13;
has coached or played rugby in&#13;
the past to guide it through a&#13;
schedule that includes the UWMadison,&#13;
Milwaukee School of&#13;
Engineering, Illinois Valley and&#13;
University of Iowa clubs. \&#13;
Games are generally played&#13;
on Sundays but the next ·home&#13;
encounter, against the Madison&#13;
club, will be part of Parkside's&#13;
Oktoberfest activities and will&#13;
be played at 1 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
Oct. 9.&#13;
Anyone who might be interested&#13;
in coaching is asked to&#13;
call Coach Vic Godfrey at the&#13;
UW-Parkside Office of&#13;
Athletics, phone 414-553-2310.&#13;
difficult we compete in all&#13;
year".&#13;
"It's a rugges course," he&#13;
noted, " and it always seems to&#13;
give us trouble. But all the good&#13;
colleges in the area will be there&#13;
and it's.. a good opportunity for&#13;
us."&#13;
Barefoot freshman Lucian&#13;
Rosa is currently running as the&#13;
number one man on the&#13;
Parkside squad, with&#13;
sophomores Chuck Dettman&#13;
and Jim McFadden close&#13;
behind.&#13;
"We're progressing normally&#13;
for a young team," Lawson&#13;
said. "Nearly everyone improved&#13;
from the first meet-to&#13;
the second."&#13;
Others battling for top spots&#13;
include freshman Rudy&#13;
Alvarez, sophomore Gary&#13;
Lance, freshman Dennis Biel,&#13;
senior Mike DeWitt, sophomore&#13;
Keith Merritt and freshmen Bill&#13;
Carlson and Kim Whitmore.&#13;
The Rangers will head for&#13;
Platteville again Oct. 16 to face&#13;
the WSU school in a dual affair.&#13;
Co~ch Bob Lawson&#13;
Parkside '200'&#13;
Maybe you've heard of Parkside 200. Maybe you haven't.&#13;
But they don't necessarily expect to be heard or seen. h 1 out.&#13;
Its members love intercollegiate athletics and want to ~ifation&#13;
That's all that's needed For $100 a year they can join the org&#13;
and help support UW-P athletics. seen in&#13;
Basically, the members are local men who ha:n that is&#13;
Parkside's Olympic and lifetime sports programs som~t Js area,&#13;
desperately needed and can be of vital import_ance 0t important&#13;
perhaps more in the future than at the present time, bu&#13;
nonetheless. . . shiP cards&#13;
In return for their contributions they receive member in a car&#13;
which admit them to Parkside home athletic contests, a P '&#13;
decal and a monthly newsletter. Oktoberfest,&#13;
The~ are invited to all spec~al activi~ies, such as lhe nament now&#13;
an? various members are takmg part m the golf tour day at per·&#13;
gomg on and in the tennis tournament to be run off Satur&#13;
shing Courts in Racine.&#13;
Some of them do special, unasked-for thi~gs. man running&#13;
Ken Joanis of Kenosha has taken Parkside fres~ oach sieve&#13;
sensation Lucian Rosa into his home and basketbal ;ith soecer·&#13;
Stephens, also a 200 member, has done the same drigrano bas&#13;
basketball player Ray Phanturat of Thailand: Aid~ Ma and physical&#13;
donated a $4,000 scoreboard for the new athletics&#13;
education building. . . . Iudes Alfred 5· The Board of Directors for the orgam~ation me ter MatoskB•&#13;
DeSimone, Richard Ellison, Dom Tirabassi, Jr., C:~uss the pas~&#13;
Bob White and Irving Silver. It meets monthlr to 1fetics.&#13;
present, but most especially, the future of Parkside alh &#13;
CRY UNCLE&#13;
rs - Allen Garfield&#13;
jol' Mast' people who brought us "JOE" fool&#13;
111' same&#13;
n&#13;
more with Cry Uncle, a film that&#13;
''''\~'classic image of the detective. Mike&#13;
fIIb wouldeven laugh at some of the nearly&#13;
iIIlO"'erearlyslapstick humor that is thrown at&#13;
~~ence like a pie of another kind. Sex,&#13;
I 't be perverse or plain, was the meat that&#13;
:: }tlmtogether as the viewer sinks into an&#13;
jIIIfd 'skin nick' world where avery one seems to&#13;
fOl1ottenwhere they put their clothes. -:"ethin&amp; may be wrong with me, but after&#13;
_twenty minutes of this ~exual bomba.r~ent&#13;
film became boring. I decided I was a victim of&#13;
,..,o.aunt&#13;
" a premature hardening of the ar-&#13;
_ simil~ to that found in cases ~f senil~ty.&#13;
11* twentyminutes took all the boyish behmd&#13;
.. borIl PlayhoyMagazine fun out of sex, and&#13;
_ the humorwas sometimes a little slow in&#13;
~ all of the grunting an~ groaning seemed&#13;
iDtermissionrather than intercourse.&#13;
ltiinkJohnBarth in his floating opera sums up&#13;
.. bout30words what it took the film nearly an&#13;
... and ahallto get across ... And then I looked in&#13;
mirror on my dresser, beside us - an&#13;
8DUillly largemirror that gave back our images&#13;
0&lt; .......... 1011 r. rt&#13;
~&#13;
PEPSI·COLA&#13;
~&#13;
full-length and life size - and ther&#13;
Betty Ju~e's face buried in the PillOw~:: g:~~y&#13;
as a Whippet and braying like an ass it was&#13;
mar~elo~!y funny; Iexploded with laughter 1&#13;
Nothmg IS mtrinsicaIly funny to be sure, but ;~ ,;,~&#13;
nothl,ng IS SO consistently, profoundly earth&#13;
sha~mgly funny as we animals in the' act or&#13;
mating."&#13;
The story consists of a millionaire's desire to kill&#13;
seve,ral p~ple ,who were involved in a group sex&#13;
film,mg With him, The real image of Hedonism&#13;
getting soft. He pays a million dollars to a tall&#13;
gaunt blonde sleep-in girl to get rid of aU of them.&#13;
Our pudgy. ov.er.weight private iey is employed as&#13;
a method to fmd them so the girl can knock them&#13;
off. the detective is unaware of the killings until&#13;
tile, en? where he solves the crime and lets the&#13;
pohce In on what is going on, The title of the film is&#13;
derived from the detective's relationship with hiw&#13;
nephew who constantly follows him about, getting&#13;
baIled by the gaunt blonde and acting innocent.&#13;
A couple of funny scenes and long inactive parts&#13;
made the film just passable. I expected a little&#13;
more than what I got.&#13;
.e Bill Sorensen.&#13;
PATRON,ZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
Popcorn&#13;
Tuesdays&#13;
5-11&#13;
FREE&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
II' Oil&amp; Filter Change&#13;
PlRKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
6S4-9968&#13;
The Dime Beer!&#13;
!!INCHEDN SPECIAL I&#13;
MOn_Fr!&#13;
All 'tou can eat&#13;
$·99&#13;
,hst 100l, beer&#13;
$.01 pe r oz.&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN" .KENOSHA&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
-&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
'" foil' SiZe'S , ... 1'- - I..... 16"&#13;
• ,5O&#13;
•• 115 • 5,.GH(J.11 • CHICIOt&#13;
GHOCCHI ..... vrcu • LA 5.C .....&#13;
• 'o(A fOOD. SAt&lt;lOW1CH1.5&#13;
CAllY -OUTS - D£lIVUY&#13;
"YOU .tHG ,." .alHe'"'&#13;
657.9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
brovvse&#13;
stop&#13;
• newly arrriving books&#13;
• greeting cards&#13;
• gift items&#13;
• records&#13;
available at&#13;
THE U IVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
****************&#13;
f:Grand Opening=]&#13;
Friday. October 1.Saturday. October 2. and&#13;
Sunday. October 3.&#13;
w.e. Fields Revlvl!Il&#13;
ew . ague . hpnlH&#13;
* * * * * * * * *-** * * * * *&#13;
The ~teway To Harbor West&#13;
18'20-Slnd Street. Kenosha&#13;
THE NEW VOGUE THEATER Is at&#13;
tempting to bring to Kenoshaa new concept&#13;
In the world of films by presenting a Wide&#13;
range of movies produced promarlly outside&#13;
of the Hollywood studio, Our long rang&#13;
schedule calls tor class c. toreign. un&#13;
derground and experimental movi s. THE&#13;
NEW VOGUE THEATER will be open&#13;
every Friday. Saturday and Sunday nIght&#13;
offering two complete showings ach&#13;
evening. beginning at approximately 7:30&#13;
and 9:4SP.M.&#13;
feature:&#13;
shorts:&#13;
THE BANK DICK&#13;
THE BIG THUMB&#13;
CALIFORNIA BOUND&#13;
CIRCUS SLICKER&#13;
ST ACT BLDG&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
\&#13;
All 10 oZ mUIS of beer&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
Admission $1.25at the door&#13;
$1.00in advance&#13;
Advance tickets may be purchased at any&#13;
art gallery in Harbor West or at the Student&#13;
services Office at Carthage College.&#13;
Coming Attraction for October 8. 9 &amp; 10&#13;
feature: ANIMAL FARM&#13;
short: THE ADVENTURES OF A&#13;
NAKED BOY&#13;
rs _ Allen Garfield&#13;
taste people who brought us "JOE" fool&#13;
.same 1 f"l h . more with Cry Unc e, a 1 m t at&#13;
• 1&#13;
;e:1assic image of the detective. Mike&#13;
er would even laugh at some of the nearly&#13;
. nearly slapstick humor that is t_hrown at&#13;
tdi ce like a pie of another kind. Sex,&#13;
a : be perverse or plain? was t~e me_at that&#13;
the film together as the viewer smks mto an&#13;
, kin flick' world where averyone seems to&#13;
f .-gotten where they put their clothes.&#13;
~thing may be wro~g with me, but after&#13;
twenty minutes of this ~exual bomba_r~ent&#13;
film became boring. I decided I was a victim of&#13;
erf]aunt" a premature hardening of the arsimil~&#13;
to that found in cases ~f senil~ty.&#13;
twenty minutes took all the boyish behind&#13;
barn Playboy Magazine fun out of sex, and&#13;
tbe humor was sometimes a little slow in&#13;
all of the grunting and groaning seemed&#13;
termission rather than intercl)urse.&#13;
I John Barth in his floating opera sums up&#13;
bout 30 words what it took the film nearly an&#13;
and a half to get across. "And then I looked in&#13;
rrurror on my dresser, beside us - an&#13;
Uy large mirror that gave back our images&#13;
full-length and life size - and th&#13;
B tty J , ere we ·ere· e u~e s face buried in the pillow; mega I· .&#13;
as a whippet af!.d braying like an a , it v.a·&#13;
mar~elo~ly funny; I exploded with laughter&#13;
Not~mg 1~ intrinsically funny to be sure, but i~ ~~ noth1_ng is so consistently, profoundly, earth&#13;
sha~mgly funny as we animals in the act of&#13;
matmg."&#13;
The story consists of a millionaire's desire to ill&#13;
sev~ral ~pie _who were involved in a group se&#13;
film_mg with him. The real image of Hedoni m&#13;
getting soft. He pays a million dollars to a tall&#13;
gaunt blonde sleep-in girl to get rid of all of them.&#13;
Our pudgy, o"'.er·weight private iey is employed a&#13;
a method to fmd them so the girl can knock them&#13;
off, the detective is uraware of the killings until&#13;
the end, where he solves the crime and le the&#13;
police in on what is going on. The title of the film i&#13;
derived from the detective's relationship v.ith h1v.&#13;
nephew who constantly follows him about, gettin,&#13;
balled by the gaunt blonde and actin,g innocent.&#13;
A couple of funny scenes and long inactive part&#13;
made the film just passable. I expected a little&#13;
more than what I got.&#13;
.• Bill Soren en.&#13;
PATRONJZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
illl Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
FREE&#13;
Popcorn&#13;
Tuesdays&#13;
5-11&#13;
ST ACT BLDG&#13;
The Dime Beerl&#13;
--!!,NCHEON SPECIAL&#13;
t,ton-Fri&#13;
411 vou can eat&#13;
$-99&#13;
111 t 10oz. beer&#13;
$.01 per oz.&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
I&#13;
All 10 oz mues of beer&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30 TH AVE N U E IN· -KENO SH A&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
famous&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I• Four Siu, 9• · 12· · 1,~ · Ir&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIIS • srAGHOTI • CHICl(H&#13;
GHOCCHI • a.-VIOLI • LA SAGHA&#13;
• ~IA fOOD • SAHDWICHlS&#13;
CAUY-OUTS - DELIVUY&#13;
"YOU I/HG v,,r HIHC&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
6S8-4922&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
• ne arrn 1n&#13;
• greeti cards&#13;
gift i tern&#13;
ail {&#13;
THE I E S, Y&#13;
BOOKSTOI&#13;
**&#13;
Grand Op n&#13;
r day, 0c o r 1, urd y, 0c o&#13;
unday, 0c r 3.&#13;
W.C. F Id&#13;
eature:&#13;
shorts:&#13;
Admission Sl.25 a door&#13;
Sl.00 In advance&#13;
D&#13;
Advance tic ets may be purchased a any&#13;
art gallery in Harbor es o at Stud nt&#13;
Serv ces Office at Carthage Colleg •&#13;
Com ng Attraction for October 8, 9 &amp; 10&#13;
feature: A IMAL FARM&#13;
short: THE AOVE TURES OF A&#13;
AKEO BOY&#13;
* * * * * * * * * '* * * * * * * &#13;
Page 10 NIi:WSCOPE October 4, 1971&#13;
Constitutional Referendum Planned&#13;
As exciting as tomorrow&#13;
in design Model. 1778"ideal anywhere,&#13;
is just one of many value packed Magnavox entertainment&#13;
values for home or away. It has FM jAFC, slide&#13;
rule dial and illuminated flip digital clock, tone control&#13;
and slide controls, built-in antennas, wake-ta-music&#13;
and wake-to-alarm controls, plus a slumber switch.&#13;
It even has an AM /PM 24-hotH&#13;
alarm set. Low profile styling, $3995&#13;
too. See it and hear it today.&#13;
JOERN NTURA&#13;
PHONE'&#13;
654-3559&#13;
A constitutional Referendum&#13;
is planned for Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday, october 19th and&#13;
zoui. This referendum is&#13;
proposed to amend the present&#13;
constitution in areas which have&#13;
been difficult to operate under&#13;
_ committee organization and&#13;
quorum problems to name two.&#13;
Persons inherested in being&#13;
on the committee to draw up&#13;
amendments should contact the&#13;
student government office,&#13;
extension 2244. At least four&#13;
meetings will be held to construct&#13;
said amendments. These&#13;
meetings will be held Tuesday,&#13;
OCtober sth, at 4: 30 p.m. in the&#13;
student government building,&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 7 at 10:llOa.m. in&#13;
the Greenquist concourse,&#13;
Monday, October 11 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Kenosha lounge, and&#13;
Wednesday, October 13, at 1:30&#13;
p.m. in the Greenquist lounge.&#13;
Other meetings may be&#13;
scheduled at the convenience of&#13;
those persons who with to be on&#13;
the committee.&#13;
Copies of proposed amendments&#13;
will be printed Thursday,&#13;
Oct 14tlr. To comply with the&#13;
present constitution it shall be&#13;
necessary for ten per cent of the&#13;
student body to approve said&#13;
amendments by written&#13;
petition. Such petitions shall be&#13;
circulated on Friday, October&#13;
15.&#13;
People to man polling places&#13;
shall have a general meeting on&#13;
Monday, Oct. 1&amp;,at a time and&#13;
place to be 'announced.&#13;
The referendum will be held&#13;
on all three campuses, Oct. 19th&#13;
and 20th. If an amendment has&#13;
the approval of a majority of the&#13;
votes cast t~e amendment shall&#13;
pass. If there exists a case of&#13;
alternate subsections to an&#13;
amendment, the subsections&#13;
receiving the plurality of votes&#13;
will be adopted, provided that&#13;
the amendment itself is passed&#13;
with a majority.&#13;
Results of the constitutional&#13;
referendum will be tabulated by&#13;
4 p.rn. Thursday, Oct. 21. The&#13;
new constitution will be sent to&#13;
Newscope for publication and to&#13;
the printer for duplication. All&#13;
students will receive copies of&#13;
the constitution by Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 27.&#13;
Because of the necessity of&#13;
holding the constitutional&#13;
referendum prior to the general&#13;
elections, the general elections&#13;
will be moved back one&#13;
the second week in N week,to&#13;
since senators and o\re~ber,&#13;
might be elected und ofhcers&#13;
constitution. er a new&#13;
On Oct. 25, candidat&#13;
office may pick up n .es for&#13;
petitions at th omInation&#13;
government bUi~' studenl&#13;
candidates must ~ng. All&#13;
petitions signed by 25v~ the~&#13;
Petitions must be turn~ ~dents.&#13;
p.m. Friday, Oct. 29. Inby4&#13;
Upon presentation of&#13;
nom ina ting petition their&#13;
didates may start th~' can·&#13;
. elf cam&#13;
paigns. Each candid ..&#13;
engiUed to 10 poster boa:;:: IS&#13;
1,000 printed leaflets. and&#13;
General election date&#13;
ject to change with outes subConstitutional&#13;
Referend olDeof U1n.&#13;
Exam Prep Sessions&#13;
On Monday, October rtth, the&#13;
Student Counseling Service of&#13;
the Office of Student Affairs is&#13;
offering three fifty minute \&#13;
sessions designed to' help&#13;
students prepare for six weeks&#13;
exams. The sessions are open to&#13;
all those who' face university&#13;
exams for the first time as well&#13;
as to those who feel they would&#13;
like to brush up on their study&#13;
and exam taking skills.&#13;
Members of the faculty,&#13;
several honors students.iand the&#13;
counseling staff will be on hand&#13;
to discuss such things as how to&#13;
study for examinations, the&#13;
differences in preparation for&#13;
an essay exam as opposed to an&#13;
objective exam, how to write an&#13;
exam, etc. Study tip sheets will&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS 1962 RAMBLER - Automatic&#13;
good condition, best offer. 654:&#13;
2665. 1963Buick For Sale - 4 barrel 442&#13;
eng. in good condo Autom. on the&#13;
floor. Body in good condoFor SaleAt&#13;
S2SO. ALSO&#13;
4barrel Chev. carb and bottom piece&#13;
for only SJO.OOtakeit. Call 633·07847&#13;
·10 p.m. Racine.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
2SnowTires, 7.75·14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
~ocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
H.tch, 8 ~og FM Ant. 654·7312.&#13;
Wet SUitSS, Showtire &amp; rim $1, File&#13;
boxes $1 &amp; $1.50,call 634·3757.&#13;
For Sale - '63 V.W. $275.00.3509&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha.&#13;
1961~hev., 6 cvr.. eutc trans., pwr.&#13;
steering, very goOdmech. condoSlSO&#13;
- call 859·2412.&#13;
FOLK GUITARS: From $12.&#13;
Call 6511·2832after 4 p.m. 1971 TRAVEL TRAILER - 15 Ft&#13;
light - Very easy to 'ow - Bum in&#13;
Surge brakes Used only three&#13;
weeks - Must sell· Going to schOOl,&#13;
512245th St . Ph. 652-3084. ~ Bedroom Home, 1112bath, builtlOS,&#13;
see thrOUgh fire-place, 21/2&#13;
car ~ttached garage, 1;2 acre lot,&#13;
1 mile from Parkside - asking&#13;
$34,900by owner. 552-8183·.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus Camper, Stove,&#13;
refrig., and SO gal. gas tank, included.&#13;
First $750.00takes all. Call&#13;
632·5544after 5:30.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967NORTON 750cc&#13;
Mo'orcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing. Phone 65...·8770 - or&#13;
Newscopeoffice. leave messagefor&#13;
Rick Pazera.&#13;
LINED, EMBROIDERED&#13;
SHEEP SKIN COAT- Woman's&#13;
- 654-3170.&#13;
ComeTouChMe. A new poetry book&#13;
by ~on Schulz and Larry Roach&#13;
Available at all UWP Bookstores:&#13;
FOR SALE - Muskrat fur lacket&#13;
size 14. 25.inches long. New lining:&#13;
550.00.Anita, 652·675....&#13;
JUDO UNiFORMS. Size3and size 4,&#13;
10.00each. Call Kay at 694-.6674.&#13;
'71 Ford Maverick: 6 cyl., stick.&#13;
3,200 miles. $2,700 or best offer&#13;
over $2,650.ALSO: Vox 12 string&#13;
folk electric guitar - once&#13;
belonged to Neil Diamond -&#13;
$525. Inquire 1602 A, 61st St.,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Mike Davis Speed City&#13;
4607 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
,&#13;
·"~egaliZe Mariiuana" Bumper&#13;
-ettckees 25c. Money goes to AClu.&#13;
send large self -edcressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Art Dexter, P.O. 133,&#13;
Union Grove 53182.&#13;
Couch - fold out bed and gas&#13;
stove. Call 637-1556.&#13;
FILM MAKERS.- need help&#13;
making your film for class? A&#13;
s~asoned film maker is at your&#13;
disp~sal at no money cost. For&#13;
detaIls, call Jerry, 654-51&amp;8,&#13;
between 10 a.m. and 12 a.m.&#13;
INDICATIONS (a literary&#13;
ma~azine) needs poems, short&#13;
stones, plays and what have&#13;
you: Drop your literary work off&#13;
at Newscope office,&#13;
LudWig Drum Set - Blue ___&#13;
sparkle 3 piece with cymbols, hihat,&#13;
etc. Was $424, asking $250.&#13;
A-I. Phone 554-9174.&#13;
FOR SALE - Lovely Lenox&#13;
chma ..Starlight pattern. Service&#13;
for SIX (almost). Cost $240.&#13;
Sacnflce of $95. 543-3149.&#13;
FREE! Who will adopt a timid&#13;
senSItIve shelty (toy colliel. On~&#13;
ye~r old male who needs&#13;
patience and love for tra' .&#13;
543.3149. mmg.&#13;
EngliSh Springer scenrets. 6 weeks&#13;
old. AKC Good hunting and family&#13;
dog.,639-4593,1204Cedar Creek sr.,&#13;
Raclne, wis.&#13;
Explore the world of ESP whh&#13;
Norman Slater, Ap,. by telephone&#13;
only. 654-2375.&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261Broad Street, lake Geneva, Wis.&#13;
Chicago - casette tape to trade for&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
winemaking_ Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums. 6328&#13;
WaShington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785or 633-3805.&#13;
HELP WANTED - 2 Spanish guitar&#13;
players work in Pizza Hut. Phone&#13;
551-8906or stop in and ask for John.&#13;
Attractive girls over 21. Earn tuition&#13;
an~ book money. Dl!Incing &amp;&#13;
,Waitress work. If nudity offends&#13;
yOu, do not apply. Call 652-20031or&#13;
stop a~ 4426 - Sheridan Road.&#13;
W~N.TED TIM) l!Ittractive, openminded&#13;
female s'udents to share&#13;
small apartment with two male&#13;
stUdents. Apt. 1 block from Racine&#13;
campus. For further information&#13;
write to: Peter NOli, Apt. 3, 1111Wis&#13;
Ave., Racine, Wis. .&#13;
be handed out and time will be&#13;
o~en ~or questions and&#13;
diSCUSSIOn. A student ID&#13;
request individual help fay&#13;
d&#13;
. or&#13;
ea mg and study skills&#13;
following these sessions ifhe&#13;
desires. ,so&#13;
. AI! three sessions will be held&#13;
on Monday, October 11th Tbe&#13;
first session is in room lOs on&#13;
the Racine Campus frOID 12&#13;
noon to 12:50 p.m. FollOWing&#13;
this the session at Greenquist&#13;
WIll be held from 1:30 p.m. to&#13;
2:20 p.m. in room 103and onthe&#13;
Kenosha campus, a sessionwill&#13;
be offered in room 103from3&#13;
p.m. to 3:50 p.m.&#13;
Registration for these&#13;
sessions is encouraged in order&#13;
to insure space, however&#13;
students may drop in if they&#13;
Wish. Students may register for&#13;
the sessions by calling tbe&#13;
Kenosha Student Affairs Office&#13;
(553-2121,extension 43).&#13;
I ,&#13;
Musicians&#13;
Needed&#13;
The Parkside concert bandis&#13;
in need of qualified musicians&#13;
for the current schoolyear. All&#13;
instrwnents can be used, but&#13;
there is a special needfor reed&#13;
players and percussionists.Any&#13;
.interested musicians should&#13;
contact Mr. Stiner through bis&#13;
Kenosha office. (l\Iusic major&#13;
not required.)&#13;
WANTED: Male student to&#13;
share one bedroom, furnished&#13;
apartment at 1327HoweSt.,R·&#13;
cine. $10 per week. Contact&#13;
Robin - 6344775.&#13;
-------:-&#13;
MEN '- Your seare time ISJI~&#13;
by a boy 7 - 17 yearsoldwhO ~an&#13;
have a father. Can yOUprovide&#13;
and&#13;
example of good character I,&#13;
citizenship while shootIngr'Bi9&#13;
fishing, skating, etc.t If so ~~_.&#13;
Brothers of Kenosha,InC.___&#13;
FREE Kittens: 6 weekSOld,~:&#13;
trained. Good with children. call&#13;
and female, assort~ COMIO~~Hall&#13;
Sharon, Ext. 20, Racme a&#13;
.201,or 634-6215after 5 p.m~&#13;
FOR RENT ---------.tRlIclne&#13;
For Rent - 1 bedroom ap .&#13;
633·4990.&#13;
lOST &amp; FOUN~&#13;
swelter',&#13;
FOUND: SunglaSSes, nddepl.,&#13;
Jacket. Contad lost &amp; f~~d !lOO'&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
Tallent Hall. ____&#13;
\aI.t panehO&#13;
LOST: 1 navy blue .I J,Oun8'&#13;
in vicinity of GreenqU1't1&#13;
wendY,&#13;
about Sept. 20. ContaC&#13;
654-1593. ___&#13;
PER'ON~ ___ --:-:::: ,VI ,,119\&#13;
PROBLEM PRE~NANFree !OC~.&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
. service. :...."'" consu ta Ion right. t"f"" ..&#13;
counseling piUSthe&#13;
35~&#13;
Pagel0 Nli:WSCOPE October 4, 1971&#13;
As exciting as tomorrow&#13;
in design Model 1778, .ideal anywhere,&#13;
is just one of many value packed Magnavox entertainment&#13;
values for home or away . It has FM/ AFC, slide&#13;
rule dial and illuminated flip digital clock, tone control&#13;
and slide controls, built-in antennas, wake-to -music&#13;
and wake -to -alarm controls, plus a slumber switch.&#13;
It even has an AM /PM 24-hour&#13;
alarm set . Low profile styling, s399s&#13;
too . See it and hear it today .&#13;
JOERN&#13;
APPUANC£&#13;
CENTER&#13;
NTURA&#13;
PHONE'&#13;
654-3559&#13;
Constitutional Referendum Planned&#13;
votes cast t~e amendment shall&#13;
pass. If there exists a case of&#13;
alternate subsections to an&#13;
amendment, the subsections&#13;
receiving the plurality of votes&#13;
will be adopted, provided that&#13;
the amendment itself is passed&#13;
with a majority.&#13;
will be moved back on A Constitutional Referendum&#13;
is planned for Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday, October 19th a~d&#13;
20th. This referendum 1s&#13;
proposed to amend the present&#13;
constitution in areas which have&#13;
been difficult to operate under&#13;
- committee organization and&#13;
quorum problems to name two. Results of the constitutional&#13;
referendum will be tabulated by&#13;
4 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 21. The.&#13;
new constitution will be sent to&#13;
Newscope for publication and to&#13;
the printer for duplication. All&#13;
students will receive copies of&#13;
the constitution by Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 27.&#13;
Because of the necessity of&#13;
holding the constitutional&#13;
referendum prior to the general&#13;
elections, the general elections&#13;
the second week in Ne Week, to · ovembe smce senators and . r,&#13;
might be elected und officers&#13;
constitution. er a new&#13;
&lt;?n Oct. 25, candida&#13;
office may pick up n t_es for&#13;
petitions at the omination&#13;
government buildi student&#13;
candidates must hang. All&#13;
petitions signed by 25 v~ their&#13;
Petitions must be turn~ ~dents.&#13;
p.m. Friday, Oct. 29. Inby4&#13;
Upon presentation of&#13;
nominating petition their&#13;
didates may start th~· can. . e1r earn pa1gns. Each candida . · engitled to 10 poster boa Je is&#13;
1,000 printed leaflets. r s and&#13;
General election dat&#13;
ject to change with ou;s subConstitutional&#13;
Referend ome of um.&#13;
Persons inherested in being&#13;
on the committee to draw up&#13;
amendments should contact the&#13;
student government office,&#13;
extension 2244. At least four&#13;
meetings will be held to construct&#13;
said amendments. These&#13;
meetings will be held Tuesday,&#13;
October 5th, at 4:30 p.m. in the&#13;
student government building,&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 7 at 10:00 a.m. in&#13;
the Greenquist concourse,&#13;
Monday, October 11 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Kenosha lounge, and&#13;
Wednesday, October 13, at 1:30&#13;
p.m. in the Greenquist lounge.&#13;
Other meetings may be&#13;
scheduled at the convenience of&#13;
those persons who with to be on&#13;
the committee.&#13;
Exam Prep Sessions&#13;
Copies of proposed amendments&#13;
will be printed Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 14th. To coml)ly with the&#13;
present constitution it shall be&#13;
necessary for ten per cent of the&#13;
student body to approve said&#13;
amendments by written&#13;
petition. Such petitions shall be&#13;
circulated on Friday, October&#13;
15.&#13;
People to man polling places&#13;
shall have a general meeting on&#13;
Monday, Oct. is., at a time and&#13;
place to be announced.&#13;
The referendum will be held&#13;
on all three campuses, Oct. 19th&#13;
and 20th. If an amendment has&#13;
the approval of a majority of the&#13;
On Monday, October 11th, the&#13;
Student Counseling Service of&#13;
the Office of Student Affairs is&#13;
offering three fifty minute'&#13;
sessions designed to help&#13;
students prepare for six weeks&#13;
exams. The sessions are open to&#13;
all those who face university&#13;
exams for the first time as well&#13;
as to those who feel they would&#13;
like to brush up on their study&#13;
and exam taking skills.&#13;
Members of the faculty,&#13;
several honors students,.and the&#13;
counseling staff will be on hand&#13;
to discuss such things as how to&#13;
study for examinations, the&#13;
differences in preparation for&#13;
an essay exam as opposed to an&#13;
objective exam, how to write an&#13;
exam, etc. Study tip sheets will&#13;
Mike Davis Speed City&#13;
4807 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
be handed out and time will be&#13;
oren ~or questions and&#13;
d1scuss10n. A student&#13;
t . d' , may red1;1es m 1v1dual help for&#13;
ea m~ and study skills&#13;
followmg these sessions if he&#13;
desires. ' 80&#13;
Al! three sessions will be held&#13;
~n Monday, October 11th. Th&#13;
first session is in room 105 0 e&#13;
the Racine Campus from 1~&#13;
noon to 12:50 p.m. Following&#13;
this the session at Greenquist&#13;
will be h~ld from 1:30 p.m. to&#13;
2:20 p.m. m room 103 and on the&#13;
Kenosha campus, a session will&#13;
be offered in room 103 from 3&#13;
p.m. to 3:50 p.m.&#13;
Registration for these&#13;
sessions is encouraged in order&#13;
to insure space, however&#13;
students may drop in if they&#13;
wish. Students may register for&#13;
the sessions by calling the&#13;
Kenosha Student Affairs Office&#13;
(553-2121, extension 43).&#13;
Musicians&#13;
Needed&#13;
The Parkside concert band is&#13;
in need of qualified musicians&#13;
for the current school year. All&#13;
instruments can be used, but&#13;
there is a special need· for reed&#13;
players and percussionists. Any&#13;
· interested musicians should&#13;
contact Mr. Stiner through his&#13;
Kenosha office. (Music major&#13;
not required.)&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1963 Buick For Sale - 4 barrel 442&#13;
eng . in good cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floor . Body in good cond . For Sale At&#13;
$250. ALSO&#13;
4 barrel Chev. carb and bottom piece&#13;
for only $30.00 take it. Call 633-0784 7&#13;
· 10 p.m. Racine.&#13;
For Sale - '63 v.w. $275.00. 3509&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha.&#13;
1961 ~hev., 6 cyl., auto trans., pwr.&#13;
steering, very good mech. cond. 5150&#13;
- call 859-2412.&#13;
1971 TRAVEL TRAILER - 15 Ft&#13;
Light · Very easy to tow . Built in&#13;
Surge brakes · Used only three&#13;
weeks · Must sell . Going to school,&#13;
5122 45th St . Ph. 652-3084.&#13;
1961 Chevy Bus Camper . Stove,&#13;
refrig ., and 50 gal. gas tank, in -&#13;
cluded. First $750.00 takes all. Call&#13;
632-5544 after 5:30.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc&#13;
Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gear Ing . Phone 654-8770 . or&#13;
Newscope office. Leave message for&#13;
Rick Pazera .&#13;
'71 Ford Maverick: 6 cyl. , stick.&#13;
3,200 miles. $2,700 or best offer&#13;
over $2,650. ALSO: Vox 12 string&#13;
folk electric guitar - once&#13;
belonged to Neil Diamond -&#13;
$525. Inquire 1602 A, 61st St.,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
1962 RAMBLER - Automatic&#13;
good condition, best offer. 654~&#13;
2665.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FORSALE&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75. 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
Sh_ocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 ~og FM Ant. 654.7312 _&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire &amp; rim $1, File&#13;
boxes $l &amp; Sl.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
FOLK GUITARS: From $12.&#13;
Call 658-2832 after 4 p.m.&#13;
~ Bedroom Home, 1 ½ bath, builtms,&#13;
see through fire-place, 2112&#13;
car ~ttached garage, 'rl acre lot,&#13;
1 mlle from Parkside _ asking&#13;
$34,900 by owner. 552-8183.&#13;
LINED, EMBROIDERED&#13;
SHEEP SKIN COAT- Woman's - 654-3170.&#13;
Come Touch Me. A new poetry book&#13;
by Ron Schulz and Larry Roach&#13;
Available at all UWP Bookstores:&#13;
FOR SALE - Muskrat fur jacket&#13;
size 14. 25_ inches long. New lining'.&#13;
SS0.00. Anita, 652-6754.&#13;
JUDO UNiFORMS, Size 3 and size 4,&#13;
10.00 each. Call Kay at 694-6674.&#13;
"Legalize Marijuana" Bumper&#13;
stickers 25c. Money goes to ACLu.&#13;
Send large self addressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Art Dexter, P.O. 133,&#13;
Union Grove 53182.&#13;
Couch - fold out bed and gas&#13;
stove. Call 637-1556.&#13;
FIL~ MAKERS - need help&#13;
makmg your film for class? A&#13;
s~asoned film maker is at your&#13;
disposal at no money cost. For&#13;
details, call Jerry, 654_5188&#13;
between 10 a.m. and l2 a.m. '&#13;
INDICATIONS (a literary&#13;
ma~azine) needs poems, short&#13;
stones, plays and what have&#13;
you. Drop your literary work off&#13;
at Newscope office.&#13;
Ludwig Drum Set - Bluesparkle&#13;
3 piece with cymbols, hihat,&#13;
etc. Was $424, asking $250.&#13;
A-1. Phone 554-9174.&#13;
F~R SALE - Lovely Lenox&#13;
chma._ Starlight pattern. Service&#13;
for .s~x (almost). Cost $240.&#13;
Sacrifice of $95. 543-3149.&#13;
FRE:~ ! Who will adopt a timid,&#13;
sensitive shelty (toy collie). One&#13;
ye~r old male who needs&#13;
pahence and love for training 543-3149. ·&#13;
EngliSh Springer Spaniels, 6 weeks&#13;
old. AKC Good hunting and family&#13;
dog·. 639-4593, 1204 Cedar Creek St.,&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Explore the world of ESP w°Jth&#13;
Norman Slater, Apt. by telephone&#13;
only. 654-2375.&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book Shop,&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, Wis.&#13;
Chicago · casette tape to trade for&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
winemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums. 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
HELP WANTED - 2 Spanish guitar&#13;
players work in Pizza Hut . Phone&#13;
551-8906 or stop in and ask for John.&#13;
Attractive girls over 21. Earn tuition&#13;
an~ book money. Dancing &amp;&#13;
Waitress work. If nudity offends&#13;
You, do not apply. Call 652-20031 or&#13;
stop at 4426 . Sheridan Road.&#13;
W:A,NTED - Two attractive, openminded&#13;
female students to share&#13;
small apartment with two male&#13;
students. Apt. 1 block from Racine&#13;
ca'!'pus. For further information&#13;
write to: P_eter Noll, Apt. 3, 1111 Wis&#13;
Ave., Racine, Wis. ·&#13;
WANTED: Male student to&#13;
share one bedroom, furnished&#13;
apartment at 1327 Howe St., R·&#13;
cine. $10 per week. Contact&#13;
Robin - 634-4775.&#13;
MEN·- Your spare time ls.need~&#13;
by a boy 7 . 17 years old whO ~oes~"&#13;
have a fat her. Can you provideaod&#13;
example of good character 1&#13;
citizenship while shooting r:i~&#13;
fishing, skating, etc.? If 50 '~-6S8lBrothers&#13;
of Kenosha, Inc. 6&#13;
----------- FREE! Kittens: 6 wee~s old,:~&#13;
trained. Good with children~ call&#13;
and female, assorte~ CDMI0\~ Hail&#13;
Sharon, Ext. 20, Racine a&#13;
201, or 634-6215 after 5 P.::--&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
--------&#13;
---&#13;
1 Racloe&#13;
For Rent - 1 bedroom ap .&#13;
633&#13;
~&#13;
-4990.&#13;
sweater, FOUND: Sunglasses, d dept.,&#13;
Jacket. Contact lost &amp; 102&#13;
~d 1Ioor&#13;
T~&#13;
Information center.&#13;
kn't paochO LOST: 1 navy blue .1 1,-0uoge&#13;
in vicinity of Greenqlllstt weodY,&#13;
~&#13;
about Sept. 20. Contac&#13;
PERSONA~&#13;
----.:;.cv? c1er9i&#13;
PROBLEM pRE~NA Free '°'~- consultation servic~lght, f'llone&#13;
counseling plus the&#13;
35~ &#13;
No Break for You ng Harr ie rs _!!!:.!!!Oclobor~~~,197L.-I--'~. E\\~'ltl=I'f._-..:..:I·~I.:-1&#13;
r of the Newscope staff&#13;
b)' jim Caspe&#13;
t to find out Iwhere and are able to close the gaps&#13;
"We wdand where qur goals between our number one and&#13;
tan an "b f· \lit s. eweareayoung team. num er lye men Ithink we can&#13;
areSlnCascross country coa~h run with, mos,t of the small&#13;
TbalW n speaking about his schools In this part of the&#13;
BobLa~SOtotheir meet against country. Because we are very&#13;
teamprior and Drake last inexperienced, that is our&#13;
)llnne,s~tDesMoines. .goal:" he said.&#13;
f'rtd~ and Minnesota are Wlth the squad comprised&#13;
Dr ~al powers in the almost completely' of unperenn&#13;
!. Vaney and Big Ten derc1assmen the inexperience&#13;
)!1SSO:~cesrespectively. can have a negative effect.&#13;
cU!fe&#13;
. good to throw them Lawson elaborated on this'&#13;
"II 15 . "Th t h t thi .&#13;
. t the wolves once In e aug es mg for these&#13;
agalun5" said Lawson. after kids is to adjust from the one&#13;
lOt e, . t&#13;
rigoroUS ass1gnm en&#13;
~:sonhopeS to come home&#13;
and beat a few teams.&#13;
SaturdaYthe Rangers had an&#13;
rtunity for that a thorne :'inS.l UW·Milwaukee, Beloit&#13;
and RIpon. .&#13;
Though the schedule IS _t Lawson remams undauntedabout&#13;
facing it. He is&#13;
realistic about .hi~ team's&#13;
_cos and is satisfied so far.&#13;
"We have made good&#13;
JI'Oil'ess and are right ~n&#13;
id1edule as far as the team IS&#13;
cmcemed.Winning or losing&#13;
IDes not always indicate. hos&#13;
wblleam is doing," he added.&#13;
"U we continue progressing&#13;
byLarry Jones&#13;
CampusEditor and Right&#13;
Tackle&#13;
'The mighty Newscope intramural&#13;
football team is still&#13;
lIldefeated, hut has yet to win a&#13;
game.&#13;
For the second week in a row,&#13;
NewKope gridders were forced&#13;
10 lorfeit due to a lack of the&#13;
nquired seven men. Monday's&#13;
gamecaught the majority of the&#13;
ItaII (and team) at the printer&#13;
plIttIng together Monday's&#13;
181'" - thus accounting for the&#13;
ICcuteman-power shortage.&#13;
Anyway,three stalwart staff-&#13;
~d members did make it&#13;
lllto the field with their heads&#13;
heldhigh. When the forfeit was&#13;
announced, they gamely&#13;
cballenged this week's victims,&#13;
"TheJocks" , to lend them a few&#13;
men and carryon.&#13;
With team captain Ricky&#13;
"F1ash" Pazera .holding down&#13;
the left side of the line, Dave&#13;
"Dead-Eye" Kraus centering&#13;
the ball and cleaning out the&#13;
mIddle,Larry "Lightnin' Bolt"&#13;
~nes wiping out (and being&#13;
"'ped out by) the right sde of&#13;
the hne, and several unidenIlfjed&#13;
Jocks handling the run·&#13;
nang, passing, catching, the&#13;
makeshift Newscope team&#13;
toppledthe parent club 13·6.&#13;
Brilliant defensive play by the&#13;
reg~ars,including a touchdown&#13;
setting up interception by&#13;
Pazera, kept the Jocks from&#13;
gaming any significant yar-&#13;
~ge. The lone touchdown was&#13;
YIelded on a busted play in&#13;
Buy Indications&#13;
SO¢&#13;
at the Bookstore&#13;
Quality Sportswear&#13;
for worn en&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SK IRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
"UNOREDS OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWEAR&#13;
3120 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
...... R A C IN E&#13;
and a half and two mile races in&#13;
hi~h school to the five and six&#13;
mile runs in college."&#13;
"This is a completely different&#13;
world:' said Lawson.&#13;
"These kids are short distance&#13;
'runners. like miters and half&#13;
miters. and now they are&#13;
competing in the world of&#13;
distance running which takes a&#13;
different type of athlete. so in&#13;
this respect these kids have&#13;
made a good adjustment. explained&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
q:).idi rtJ/MU~~&#13;
... Downtown Kt1IO ba ----. " "&#13;
, ..&#13;
Newscope Defaults&#13;
Cagers Train for Future&#13;
by Jim Casper of the Ncwseupc SI;lrr&#13;
If Parksides cagers appear to have a little extra hustle on tlu-nfast&#13;
breaks this winter and are able to get back quickly on 0PPOlll'Ilt'S&#13;
breaks, perhaps some of the quickness can be attributed 10a nUlIllll1-!.&#13;
program instituted by Coach Steve Stevens.&#13;
Prospective players run every weekday near the soccer field (or&#13;
15minutes - a figure soon to be increased to 30 minutes.&#13;
. On Mondays; Wednesdays and Fridays the team does weightlifttng&#13;
at the Athletic barn. Thursday is the busiest day as the men do the&#13;
regular running, springs and a timed half mile.&#13;
When asked 'if this was done in the past, Stevens replied, "This is&#13;
the first year that we have really had the facilities for this." Stevens&#13;
sees. the program as being helpful in improving a player's quickness&#13;
and overall physical shape, along with aiding in developing team&#13;
unity.&#13;
which the entire Newscope&#13;
team thought the Jock halfback&#13;
had been downed after a short&#13;
pass ~ which he hadn't. He&#13;
waved from the endzone as NS&#13;
watched in disgust.&#13;
On offense, two touchdown&#13;
passes - one long, one short,&#13;
and an extra point, wrapped up&#13;
the second straight victory for&#13;
still winless Newscope gridders.&#13;
In other, less spectacular&#13;
action, a touchdown pass from&#13;
QB Dennis Serpe to Tom&#13;
Thompson and a TD run up the&#13;
middle by a back named&#13;
Chapman left the "Schooners"&#13;
to a 13-0 win over the "Mad&#13;
Dogs". ,&#13;
. Intramural Schedule&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 6&#13;
Pink Facists vs. Newscope&#13;
Friday. Oct. 15&#13;
Newscope vs. Mad Dogs&#13;
Friday. Oct. 22&#13;
Newscope vs. The Schooners&#13;
'i&#13;
213 SIXTH STREET RACINE -""',&#13;
-------------------~&#13;
FREE&#13;
Root Beer&#13;
Good for on&#13;
free root be r&#13;
with any pur&#13;
---Coupon good on an&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
date--J&#13;
h&#13;
Come in and bring the family&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
Opt1l 0/1 .lear round&#13;
on 22nd a cnuc&#13;
at 44th place in Keno ha&#13;
We hale a I'ariet) oj food&#13;
at reasOIUlbleprice.&#13;
Bought and sold -------,&#13;
(we buy an" sell)&#13;
-A little out of the way,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
MCFarlands Auto sales&#13;
7904 WASHINGTON&#13;
AVENUE RACINE.&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Tr1Ide.m-rk@&#13;
•&#13;
--&#13;
g~ tJ,s ~ilfe4t&#13;
Pvno-' g !J141wt- ~&#13;
KENOSHA 658·3131&#13;
2129 BIRCH ROE·BAR DINING ROOM&#13;
LIQUOR STOR, '&#13;
o,... ..... t ~ ...&#13;
...-,.'"""-' -&#13;
PUT ON YOUR GLAD RAGS&#13;
TAP YOUR TOES AND BE ......PPY&#13;
PURE FUN IN CREPE p...TE T upp AS&#13;
OF APPLE REO N"'VY OR BL. ...CK SI&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
bI Jim Casper&#13;
: want to find out where and are able to close the gaps&#13;
•·\\e d d where QUr goals between our number one and&#13;
,-e tan a; are a young team." number five men I think we can&#13;
and a half and two mile race· m&#13;
high school to the five and :ix&#13;
mile runs in college ... are since w ross country coach run with most of the small&#13;
11iat was ~ speaking about his schools in this part of the&#13;
sob La~5\ 0 their meet against country. Because we are very&#13;
arnprtotr and Drake last inexperienced, that is our&#13;
"This i a complete)\' different&#13;
world." aid Law on.&#13;
"These kids are short di tance ,, nneso a 1 " h · d ,u1• , at Des Moines. goa : e sa1 .&#13;
frida) and Minnesota are With the squad comprised -runners, like miler and half&#13;
milers, and now they are&#13;
competing in the wo;ld of&#13;
distance running which takt- · a&#13;
different type of athlete. o in&#13;
this respect the e kids h ,·e&#13;
made a good adju tment. t':&gt;.·&#13;
plained Lawson&#13;
Drak~ 1 powers in the almost completely· of unperenni_a&#13;
Valley and Big Ten derc1assmen the inexperience ssoun . 1 h t· ences respecllve y. can ave a nega 1ve effect.&#13;
conrer. good to throw them Lawson elaborated on this:&#13;
"(t t the wolves once in "The toughest thing for these&#13;
31ilns " said Lawson. after kids is to adjust from the one h e. . t&#13;
al rigorous ass1gnmen th hopes to come home l.,a\l'SOn d beat a few teams.&#13;
Saturday the Rangers had an&#13;
rtunity for that at hom_e&#13;
op:nst UW-Milwaukee, Beloit&#13;
and Ripon. . Though the sche~ule 1s&#13;
1DUght, Lawson rem~ms u~-&#13;
dlunted about facing 1t. He 1s&#13;
ealistic about his team's&#13;
~ances and is satisfied so far.&#13;
"We have made good&#13;
irogress and are right ~n&#13;
schedule as far as the tealll: 1s&#13;
concerned. Winning or losmg&#13;
ooes not always indicate hos&#13;
ht team is doing," he added.&#13;
"ll we continue progressing&#13;
Cagers Train for Future&#13;
by Jim Casper of the :'\e\\!.CO()(' ,tafl&#13;
If Parkside's cagers appear to have a little extra hu. t It- on tht•rr&#13;
fast breaks this winter and are able to get back quickly on opporwn1 ·:--&#13;
breaks, perhaps some of the quK:kness can be attributed to a nm11111,.:&#13;
program instituted by Coach Steve Stevens.&#13;
Prospective players run every weekday near the soccer li&lt;'ld for&#13;
15 minute!;- a figure soon to be increased to 30 minute .&#13;
On Mondays, Wednesdays and Frid_ays the team does ,,eighlJif.&#13;
ting at the Athletic barn. Thursday is the busiest dav as the men do the&#13;
regular running, springs and a timed half mile. -&#13;
When asked if this was done in the past, Stevens replied, "Thi i ·&#13;
the first year that we have really had the facilities for this... teven ·&#13;
sees. the program as being helpful in improving a player's quickn&#13;
and overall physical shape, along with aiding in developing team&#13;
unity.&#13;
New scope Defaults&#13;
by Larry Jones&#13;
Campus Editor and Right&#13;
Tackle&#13;
The mighty Newscope intramural&#13;
football team is still&#13;
l.lldefeated, but has yet to win a&#13;
game.&#13;
For the second week in a row,&#13;
t'A cope gridders were forced&#13;
to forfeit due to a lack of the&#13;
required seven men. Monday's&#13;
ame caught the majority of the&#13;
staff (and team) at the printer&#13;
putting together Monday's&#13;
paper - thus accounting for the&#13;
accute man-power shortage.&#13;
Anyway, three stalwart staffsquad&#13;
members did make it&#13;
onto the field with their heads&#13;
held high. When the forfeit was&#13;
announced, they gamely&#13;
challenged this week's victims,&#13;
"The Jocks", to lend them a few&#13;
men and carry on.&#13;
With team captain Ricky&#13;
'f1ash" Pazera holding down&#13;
the left side of the line Dave&#13;
"D ' ead-Eye" Kraus centering&#13;
~ ball and cleaning out the&#13;
middle, Larry "Lightnin' Bolt"&#13;
~~nes wiping out (and being&#13;
ped out by) the right si'.le of&#13;
the line, and several unidenli!ied&#13;
Jocks handling the running,&#13;
passing, catching, the&#13;
makeshift Newscope team&#13;
toppled the parent club 13-6.&#13;
Brilliant defensive play by the&#13;
regulars, including a touchdown&#13;
etting up interception by&#13;
Pa_zera, kept the Jocks from&#13;
gaming any significant yar-&#13;
~ge. The lone touchdown was&#13;
Yielded on a busted play in&#13;
Buy Indications&#13;
50¢&#13;
at the Bookstore&#13;
Quality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SKIRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
fiUNo~EDs OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN•s SMARTWEAR&#13;
l I 2 O YI -A S H IN G T O N A V E&#13;
RACINE&#13;
which the entire N ewscope&#13;
team thought the Jock halfback&#13;
had been downed after a short&#13;
pass - which he hadn't. He&#13;
waved from the endzone as NS&#13;
watched in disgust.&#13;
On offense, two touchdown&#13;
passes - one long, one short,&#13;
and an extra point, wrapped up&#13;
the second straight victory for&#13;
still winless Newscope gridders.&#13;
In other, less spectacular&#13;
action, a touchdown pass from&#13;
QB Dennis Serpe to Tom&#13;
Thompson and a TD run up the&#13;
middle by a back named&#13;
Chapman left the "Schooners"&#13;
to a 13-0 win over the "Mad&#13;
Dogs". ,&#13;
. Intramural Schedule&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 6&#13;
Pink Facists vs. Newscope&#13;
Friday, Oct. 15&#13;
Newscope vs. Mad Dogs&#13;
Friday, Oct. 22&#13;
Newscope vs. The Schooners&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing. Coke.&#13;
Trade-mark@&#13;
II&#13;
...&#13;
8ought and sold&#13;
(We buy and sell)&#13;
'A little out of tne woy,&#13;
but worth it'&#13;
MCfartands Auto sates&#13;
7904 WASHINGTON&#13;
AVENUE RACINE .&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
s~ th q.uu,,,a Piff'i' c. Jl.t;J.ia,,- tJJ,"""-4,&#13;
KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
2129 BIRCH RO. BAR DINING ROOM&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, ,&#13;
II I I I I&#13;
._ _____ Dou 11tow11 Kt 10 ha------&#13;
:---FREE----:-----1&#13;
I I&#13;
! Root Beer i&#13;
I I&#13;
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I___ up n g&lt; d &gt;n an ' datc--J&#13;
Come in and brin th a,n il ,&#13;
Albee's Drive In&#13;
Op 1 all_ w,· rou11d&#13;
n _2n&#13;
"ch I 1 cc in ,. h. at eno&#13;
Jr hn a t'ut·i I of jfJ d ..&#13;
al , at. 011 1bl pri&#13;
PUT O YOUR GLAD AG&#13;
AP YOU 0 S 0 HA&#13;
PURE FU C P A&#13;
OF APPL RED A Y 0 &#13;
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611 PEGGER® JEANS&#13;
Button front, no back pockets, flared. Great fit for guys and gals.&#13;
$9.00-$12.00 a pair. ·&#13;
Available in alZ-sizes and colors at ,&#13;
Crystal's Men's and Young Me'n's Shop&#13;
\ · in downtown Kenosha \&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
______ ,,_&#13;
Volume 5 Number 5 October 4, 1971 ,&#13;
FREE&#13;
Special&#13;
Oktoberfest&#13;
Section&#13;
CAGE Interview </text>
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