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              <text>unl'versityof Wisconsin~Parkside will tral.·n th .&#13;
... elf various skills&#13;
..... American Peace Corps volunteers In "w '&#13;
*"&#13;
~on' (or tWlryear coaching stints in the educato~;~ ~t to make international physical&#13;
~. .. outlining t~ coaches ~t of them," Sorsby said ..&#13;
r-:rtrainingprogram at Parkside, which will be people wh hP~ogram. They're all highly Quallf,ed&#13;
Tbe ted by Bitt Sorsby of Washmgton, D.C., will dards us; t a to .pass some extremely high stan-&#13;
~ I I and run for four and one-half weeks adulte? get 10 the program. All are college&#13;
~N~v. 5. Soon after, the trainee coaches will lhmk we;IW~th degrees ID physical education so we&#13;
UnitedStates for eight to ten more weeks of "And that sending our best people."&#13;
IIOlf1be and cross·cultural training 10 the Philip- high QU lit IS the main reason we're asking for&#13;
......~ore they are assigned to various provinces. secreta: 1 Yo~OaChes."~~~io de Borja, execuuve&#13;
........ coachingteam will have the responsibility of Federatra ha the. ~,hil,ppme Amateur Athletic&#13;
._ n, s said. We can't afford to fall in this&#13;
Parks.ide 10 Train. Peace Corps Coaches&#13;
.,tlIC with Fihpmo coaches and athletes 10 program"&#13;
.-idiol! a totalphysical education, sport and fitness The t . .&#13;
~-for the island republic. The major sport in Philipp' rammg program and eventual service 10 the&#13;
;'.~am is track and field, with emphasis also team ~~es hare oUigrowths of the Parkside coaching&#13;
.....d. (11 basketball, baseball," gymnastics, swim- Tom' Ros: diw~s o~m~d by uw·p ,athletic drrectcr ~:_A tennis Presid n c ! W 0 IS also adviser on s.por.t to&#13;
.... ION • eSI ent Ferdinand Marcos f the Phili&#13;
According to the Peace Corps contract the Be f th 0 ppmes.&#13;
-'-'-" will work closely with Parkside athletic in ~~~e~osaendisuchcessdofdtheBoParksidecoaching team&#13;
_-- ti taff be I . f ,c an e rja were able to begin .pI1YSicaleduca on s mem rs, earnmg rom here what should lead t be&#13;
...... d aiding them when possibie. in the Phili mes thePeacr Iter things lor sports&#13;
~ith track the most important sport in the the work o~pthe O~~ginal:~~orps coaches take up&#13;
noai&gt;8 program,UW·p track coach Bob Lawson, a The American coach will be . kin&#13;
_of Philippinecoaching and teaching with the coaching and clinic I el with FT . wcr g on a&#13;
_ Parb. ide coaching team, will emphasize the athletes and will be Seekev&#13;
m' Wigt . I 'pmo thcoafchesanold .. .. P tt d t ck' th d 0 Improve e &gt;!ness&#13;
....,can .Tra~ng .a ern. an ra In eory an the youth in the nation and select those 'A;th potenual&#13;
~ lD his sessI~ns WIth the volunteers. Other for specialized athletic training.&#13;
_ 00 they. PkaGrksdfldestadifft- Steve StePhKens, Another major part of the volunteers' programs.&#13;
'-11; IC o. rey, s ance runmng; . en as it was during the stay of the Parkslde coactung&#13;
lIJlrtI'Une!. base~all,.Dave Do~ldson. gymnas~cs; team, will be physical fitness testing with some nlDe&#13;
G81lIartiny, swunrnmg; and Dick Frecka, tennis - •&#13;
wi&#13;
1*1&#13;
COII'dinateactivities in their specialized areas.&#13;
members of the staff will also contribute with&#13;
F R E E&#13;
University of Wisronsin - Parkside&#13;
•••••••&#13;
VOLUME5 NUMBER t&#13;
President Weaver Greets Students&#13;
audience, stated that the park was bemg used b)&#13;
by Marc Eisen "undesirable elements." He saId squad cars bad&#13;
of the Newscope stall been pelted and that at one time barricades ere .!.seemsthat if Kenosha's leens are to do any d&#13;
~ smoking, wme drinking or love makIng on put across the rOO . red. ted&#13;
SUn, on's Island they'll have'to do it before to "It calls for action," be empbasl He no&#13;
o clock that the original ordinance bad been passed&#13;
Will at night because that is when city parks many years ago, and was inte&lt;&gt;dedto all....&#13;
nus' be closed to loiters ff hot mer rughlS people to cool 0 on sum .&#13;
appears to be the situation facing the "People do not flock to the beaches like th,,?&#13;
~ long hairs who frequent the park as the used to do. They have air condItioners .-,&#13;
to Commission voted unanimously last week Nedweski explainedend&#13;
the long standing poII~ic:y~W~hi~'c~h~k~ep~t~Ia~k~e~ ~~~~':~:::::---;:-:-----:;--;-:;-::-=-::;:-"'::'---l&#13;
Curfew Looms Over Simmon's Island&#13;
To !be Students and Faculty of&#13;
Ibe University:&#13;
ltisa great pleasure.for me to&#13;
"'me you' to the 1971-72&#13;
lr8demicyear.&#13;
'or some of you, this will be a&#13;
.. and demanding experience&#13;
• you become acquainted with&#13;
IIltcampus, the community and&#13;
WIth yoor responsibilities as&#13;
~bers of the faculty and&#13;
I1IIdontbndy.For most of you, it&#13;
11 I continuation of the&#13;
~esses of teaching and&#13;
8ming in a familiar, exciting&#13;
lI....phere.&#13;
But there may be some differences&#13;
this year, In~&#13;
UlWeniences - even some&#13;
hardships - may confront us.&#13;
The lack of an established&#13;
budget has made planning&#13;
difficult in every department&#13;
and program. The pay and price&#13;
freeze was a double-edged&#13;
sword: it enabled us to hold the&#13;
line on fees and tuitions for the&#13;
periro of the current freeze, but&#13;
it also was a cruel blow to the&#13;
academic stalf, taking away&#13;
almost twc:rmillion dollars in&#13;
much deserved salary and&#13;
retirement funding ad·&#13;
justments. And in those areas&#13;
where the University must&#13;
support" its operations from&#13;
earnings, salary adjustments&#13;
made before the freeze combined&#13;
with hol&lt;j.(he-hne pnce&#13;
cannot help but cause senous&#13;
financial problem&#13;
As a consequence. lbere rnay&#13;
well be more "closed" ~&#13;
and sections, longer ""a,ting&#13;
lines for varIOUS en'lces&#13;
Nonetheless, we hope thaI the&#13;
Universit)' communll) can&#13;
draw together 10 the faef" of&#13;
these difficultues and roo\&#13;
forward in united effort to&#13;
enhance the In true lion.'&#13;
program and ,n keepll'll&#13;
outstandlOg academiC In~&#13;
stitution a stimulating and&#13;
intellectually exclung place to&#13;
learn and to leach.&#13;
JohnC. Wee' r&#13;
Pre ldent&#13;
Doug laFollette's&#13;
Book Re i ed&#13;
e pa e 4&#13;
Ibore ks The only opposition to the proposed ord1naDCe&#13;
dooinpar open all night, to establish a uniform was voiced by AId. Alvin Hoffman, a member of&#13;
Theg hour oliO p.m. for all city parks.. the audience. "What's going to happen to these&#13;
the P fullCitycouncil is expected to conc4r WIth children whe&lt;&gt;we cJose the parks'" be asked&#13;
Theark CommiSSion action. "Is this going to cause them to go a.....y. to&#13;
Jl'o Park. Commission action came on ~ disappear?"&#13;
1IttoPDsed. ordinance by Ald. Richard Sepanslu He said only a minority of them cause trouble&#13;
""IdCO~plalned tbe noise disturbed the. ar.ea fle suggested as an alternative that poIlce&#13;
&lt;5cat~tssleep. The_Director ot Parks, 10 n- surveillance continue, and appeals be made 10&#13;
doJn IIlg his SUpport .of the ordinace, noted the the Ch.ildren to start policing themselves&#13;
the age and vandalism which has occurred in "The easy way out is to close the park," be&#13;
•• park,&#13;
0( :'.e Wantthe tools to enio"ce the laws," Cluef sai;~ told the Commission be bad ridden with a&#13;
lie licellosman said in favor of the ordinace. squad car to check the situation out, and bad&#13;
~d the youths who go to the park go there to found the youths rather orderly.&#13;
You Wine and take pot. "They give it to Ald. Bilotti asked Chief Bosman that if a&#13;
l!v~~:.;ers, especially young girls," he h band and wife and their children were at the&#13;
The usk looking at the lake and it was after to&#13;
"be Chieftold of his vacation to Boulder, Colo., ~~ock,would they be "'"""ted'&#13;
COn&gt; ~ he was told by residents that hippies had Bosman said no. . II:etely taken over their parks. . . MicJ&gt;ae1Fischer, a City aUorney. corrected&#13;
'""Wdsaid some students at our local univers&gt;ues Bosman "In all deference to the ChIef, if&#13;
o\l hke to do the same thing. sameo"; is just on a blanket looking at the lake ___ ..d~._P_eler Nedweski, speaking from ~the~ ::::~";;" "&#13;
ConsplCUooW . a I from&#13;
medU'll ere an) of !he )&#13;
affected b) tbe anilll8nee&#13;
tln~ a leader of the&#13;
man. a f&lt;Kmderof the K&#13;
a f.... da)... after the m&#13;
Dorfman readily admi there do&#13;
goU'll on at tmmon'S Island. .. ne &lt;In I&#13;
underage kIds. ..,me balling. and rna) be a&#13;
alderman cbal'led. clothes h 011 the&#13;
7;30 10 the morn to dry.&#13;
He saId the Coahtion "'8$ formed n .....ponse&#13;
to tbe ba.ssling by the cops "11' Ume to do&#13;
somellung "hen you' re pushed around Vi e'",&#13;
tired of nmnU'll O\'er)·time som tells 10 mo'&#13;
Lots 01 people say 'ThIS IS Kenosha 11 too&#13;
fucked up to change' It's not. You don'l ha'e to&#13;
go dUo. 'ew York to be a revolullonaF) "&#13;
Most 01 the kids ....·bogo to Slmmoo's 1sla.nd are&#13;
lugh school k'ds. he said - "moslly people tryu~&#13;
to meel other people." Most feel fa"oratile to th&#13;
tContinued on Page 8)&#13;
at&#13;
1'bt university of Wisconsin-Parksi~e will tra!n their various skills&#13;
American Peace Corps vo unteers m "We're out .&#13;
ra251i.011 • for two-year coaching stints in the educators and tcho make mternat1onal pti) 1 coa es out of them · · b&#13;
es outlining the program "Th • · ors y said m&#13;
:ning program at Parkside, which will be people who had t · ey re all high!) qu hf,&#13;
nier; by Bill Sorsby of Washington, D.C., will &lt;lards just to_ ge; fua~esoprrn:greaxmtre_ rnAlell;ahri co 1&#13;
t n- t. 1 and run for four an~ one-half weeks grad t&#13;
OC ·ov. s. soon after, the trainee coaches will th'nk ua es with degrees in physical education&#13;
·united states for eight t_o ~en ~ore wee~ of 1 .. :i~1:~ f:nding o~ be t peopl~."&#13;
tttbe and cross-cultural traming in the Philip- high qualit ~e .~am reason we ~e I f r&#13;
geore they are assigned to various provinces. secretary Y0~ 0 ~~ es, ~~s~10 de B Ja, e h&#13;
bef coaching team will have the responsibility of Federation has .d.~'hWihppme Amateur th 1&#13;
Ttit • sai e can't afford to fail in tht&#13;
Parkside to Train Peace Corps Coaches&#13;
with Filipino coachE:5 an~ athlet~ in program."&#13;
~ a total physical education, sport and fitness The tr"·ni'ng d · d bl' Th · · .., program an eventual n ce int ~ for the islan rep~ ic. . e maJor s~rt in Philippines are outgrowths of the Par ide .&#13;
program is track and field,_ with em~has1s ~lso team, which was formed by UW-P athletic director&#13;
...-i on basketball, baseball, gymnastics, swim- Tom Rosandich wh · 1 d . ,,...- . . , o 1s a so a ,, r on to&#13;
111d tennis. President Ferdinand farcos of th Philipp"&#13;
AcCOf"ding to the Peace ~orps co~tract, t~e Because of the success of the Parkside coachin&#13;
will wor~ closely with Parkside_ athletic in 1971, Rosandich and de Borja er able to in&#13;
adpb) ica! ~cation staff mem~rs, learning from ~ere what should lead to even better thm for port&#13;
111d aiding them whe? possible. . m the Philippines as the Peace Corp coach ta up&#13;
ilh track the most important sport m the the work of the original team.&#13;
irogr~m,_ UW-P tr~ck coach Bo~ La"'.son, a The American coaches will be wor&#13;
.wan of Phihppme _coaching and_ teaching ~1th the coaching and clinic level \\-lth Filipino coach&#13;
Parkside_ c_oaching team, will e~phas1ze the athletes and will be seeking to impro,e the fitn&#13;
Amen(lll Trairung Pattern and track m theory and the youth in the nation and select those ·1th&#13;
lldmiqUe in his sessi~ns with the volunteers. Other for specialized athletic training.&#13;
oo the_ Parkside sta~f - Steve ~tephens, Another major part of the volunteers' pr&#13;
flaketball: Vick Godfrey, distance runnmg; ~en as it was during the stay of the Par 1 e&#13;
(kbruner, base~;_Dave Do~ldson, gymnas~cs; team, will be physical fitness te ting ~itb&#13;
Gaallartiny, sw1mrmng; and Dick Frecka, tennis -&#13;
members of the staff will also contribute with coordinate activities in their specialized areas. F R E E&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
If/---- \'OLUME 5 NUMBER 1 0 JP&#13;
President Weaver Greets Students&#13;
To the Students and Faculty of&#13;
tbt University:&#13;
hardships - may confront us.&#13;
I a great pleasure for me to&#13;
welcome you to the 1971-72&#13;
academic year.&#13;
For some of you, this will be a&#13;
and demanding experience&#13;
• you become acquainted with&#13;
tbtrampus, the community and&#13;
th yrur responsibilities as&#13;
members of the faculty and&#13;
bldent body. For most of you, it&#13;
a continuation of the&#13;
proce ses of teaching and&#13;
ming in a familiar, exciting&#13;
mosphere.&#13;
But there may be some diff&#13;
rence this year. In-&#13;
\eJuences - even some&#13;
The lack of an established&#13;
budget has made plannin&#13;
difficult in every department&#13;
and program. The pay and price&#13;
freeze was a double-edged&#13;
sword: it enabled us to hold the&#13;
line on fees and tuitions for the&#13;
period of the current freeze, but&#13;
it also was a cruel blow to the&#13;
academic staff, taking away&#13;
almost two-million dollars in&#13;
much deserved salary and&#13;
retirement funding adjustments.&#13;
And in those area&#13;
where the University mu t&#13;
support its operati~s from&#13;
earnings, salary adJustments&#13;
made before the freeze comaudience,&#13;
t.ated that the park&#13;
by Marc E\sen "undesirable elements." H . d&#13;
of lhe Newscope staff been pelted and that at on lim&#13;
It ms that if Kenosha's teens are to do any put across the road.&#13;
!11oking, wine drinking, or love making on "It call for action," he emph 1&#13;
, on Island they'll have to do it before 10 that the original ordinanc _had&#13;
0 dock at night because that is when city parks many years ago, and a m&#13;
II~ closed to loiters. people to cool off on ho ummbeiriches&#13;
'llus appears to be the situation facing the "People do not flock to th&#13;
~ long hairs who frequent the park as the used to do. They have a r cond1Uo&#13;
Commission voted unanimously last week Nedweski explained.&#13;
lo end the long _standing poll~k~y:_:w:ru~·~c~h~k=e~pt~la~k:e ____ :'.'.::=::-=::=~---;:--:-------;~~7.=:-=i----1 I Curfew Looms Over Simmon l land&#13;
The only oppo ition to the proposed o&#13;
was voiced by Ald Alvin Hoffman. a mem&#13;
the audience. "What's going to ha~~ to&#13;
children when we close the park .&#13;
~ parks open all night, to establish a uniform&#13;
g hour of.lo p.m. for all city parks.&#13;
The full city council is expected to conc4I" with&#13;
Park Commission action.&#13;
Jr 'lne Park Commission action came on a&#13;
~sed. or~nance by Ald. Richard Sepanski&#13;
t!s' COmplamed the noise disturbed the area 15c id~t·s _sleep. The Director o~ Parks, in i,-&#13;
~hng his support of the ordinace, noted ~e&#13;
~ age and vandalism which has occurred m&#13;
J)ark.&#13;
01''W~want the tools to enfo!"ce the Jaws," Cluef&#13;
ffePo~ice Bosman said in favor of the ordinace.&#13;
~~id ~e youths who go to the park go there to&#13;
'J wine and take pot. "They give it to&#13;
~ng1&#13;
sters, especially young girls," he&#13;
•nea ed.&#13;
~e Chief told of his vacation to Boulder, Colo.,&#13;
CX1rnre he was told by residents that hippies had&#13;
ple~ely taken over their parks.&#13;
..,!~d~d some students at our local universities&#13;
hke to do the same thing.&#13;
A.Id. Peter Nedweski, speaking from the&#13;
"Is this going to cause them to go&#13;
disappear'?" He said only a minonty oC the~ ca&#13;
He suggested a an alternative&#13;
surveillance continue, and appeal m&#13;
the children to start ~cing themseh .,&#13;
"The easy way out 1s to close the par ,&#13;
sai~- told the Commission he had ridden rith&#13;
squ:d car to check the situatioo ou and had&#13;
found the youths rather ~erh · Aid. Bilotti a ed Chi~ a_osrnan that 1f a&#13;
husband and wife and tbe1t children ere a the&#13;
k looking at the Jake and 1t -..;a aft 10&#13;
~:iock, would they be arrested7&#13;
Bosman said no. Michael Fischer, a city attorney, c0r!' t~&#13;
Bo "In all deference to the Oud, if&#13;
sman, _._ · t the la e someone is just on a bla, ... et ing a &#13;
SEWSCOPE Srptembft'S.It71&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
Pomogroplly I ...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Ever)' decade or so,&#13;
sometime even more&#13;
frequently, the United tates&#13;
Supreme Court lnes to draw a&#13;
national line on what is legally&#13;
acceptable and unacceptable. It&#13;
ha never yet ucceeded in&#13;
dra-'lng a permanently&#13;
IIsfactor)' line. No problem&#13;
ha been In court and tested as&#13;
much 85 the issue of poroolP'aphy&#13;
Way back in t~7&#13;
Justice Brennan said, "All&#13;
ide d ahne in pornograplly,&#13;
ha the full prolecllon of the&#13;
uarant of the free speech&#13;
prov\$lons of ,he United States&#13;
C nstjtunon' First Amendm&#13;
nt" To top this off,&#13;
Pre .dent 'ixon had ConlP'ess&#13;
appomt an eighteen man&#13;
comml Ion to make a scientific&#13;
IUdy 01 pornography WeU,&#13;
alttT three years lime, and an&#13;
pend, lure of tWO million&#13;
dollars of our tax money, the&#13;
rtSUlls of the commission were:&#13;
pornography was harmless, and&#13;
their only recommendations,&#13;
keep It away (rom mmors and&#13;
WlW1UlOgadults&#13;
A quote from heUy Winters&#13;
loae 46), "I think nudity is&#13;
ahamelul and disgusling; but if&#13;
I w 22 years old, I'd say it&#13;
.'.&#13;
.~&#13;
WOUld be artishc, tasteful,&#13;
patriotic and a progressive&#13;
religious experience."&#13;
Ilbink her quote hits some of&#13;
Racine's aldermen to a tee.&#13;
They're too old and one sided to&#13;
make any decisioos for me OIl&#13;
pornography. If Presidenl&#13;
Nixon's commission, made up&#13;
of well qualified personnel,&#13;
already spent two million&#13;
doUars and three years time&#13;
studying this issue, I believe&#13;
that their findings are good&#13;
enough for me. So my opinion 011&#13;
the whole issue is: the city&#13;
councils of Racine and Kenosha&#13;
should leave the go go bars and&#13;
movie houses alone. and go on&#13;
to more important subjects, like&#13;
for example, the court leniency&#13;
on dope pushers, or anything&#13;
else they see fit, but they&#13;
shouldn't try to make any of my&#13;
moral decisions for me.&#13;
U Ald. Frank Barry of Racine&#13;
feels so strongly against this&#13;
entertainment, he should tell&#13;
the people of his own ward that&#13;
he won't allow them to&#13;
patronize these places. Just&#13;
leave me alone, Mr. Barry.&#13;
Thank you anyways.&#13;
Ibelieve that the President's&#13;
commission bas. by all means,&#13;
the right solution, and it's also&#13;
my opinion that the members of&#13;
A relver is a con artist.&#13;
A reiver is a rascal. .&#13;
Steve McQueen in&#13;
tThe Reivers'&#13;
Fri. Sept. 10 8:00 p.m.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE&#13;
75&lt; WITH PARKSIDE AND WISCONSIN I 0 AOM&#13;
'" P ""'K SlOE .TUOI[NT ACTlv'T'E. FEATURE FILM&#13;
his committee "are a heck of alot&#13;
more "qualified" than you or&#13;
any local aldermen to make ,3&#13;
decision like this. Now thts&#13;
brings us back to lh~ very&#13;
beginning; if you object to&#13;
nudity, just stay' way. It's up to&#13;
the people and the people only,&#13;
to say when this entertainment&#13;
will stop, and that will be when&#13;
they stop patronizing these&#13;
establishments.&#13;
Charline Kuipuo&#13;
5000 Graceland Blvd.&#13;
Racine, Wis. 53406&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I thought the interview with&#13;
Racine's Mayor Kenneth Huck&#13;
was great. There are a few&#13;
comments that I would like to&#13;
make. There are alot I could&#13;
make, but I'll only mention a&#13;
few.&#13;
I couldn't agree with the&#13;
Mayor more, when he said,&#13;
"Racine needs full time&#13;
aldermen." Il's true Racine has&#13;
eighteen part time aldermen,&#13;
and out of the eighteen I personally&#13;
don't think the majority&#13;
of them are qualified either.&#13;
You take some and I bet you'll&#13;
find that they never even&#13;
finished high school, and others&#13;
that don't know the first thing&#13;
about law. Now if Racine would&#13;
TO&#13;
have six or seven full time&#13;
aldermen; First we could set&#13;
some sort of qualifications,&#13;
they'd have to meet. Then by&#13;
cutting down the number of&#13;
aldermen, we could offer a&#13;
more attractive wage, with the&#13;
full time duties, that the job&#13;
calls for. Now, by having this&#13;
attractive wage increase, I'm&#13;
sure more qualified people&#13;
would consider the job. After&#13;
all, you need more than some&#13;
factory workers or cement&#13;
workers to run the city.&#13;
Ialso agree with the Mayor on&#13;
most points he made on the&#13;
topless and X-rated movies&#13;
controversy. I don't think it's&#13;
right that an X-rated movie&#13;
should be shown at an outdoor&#13;
either. The President's Committee&#13;
on Pornography points&#13;
out that pornography is harmless&#13;
to adults, and keep it&#13;
away from children and unwilling&#13;
adults. So I see no&#13;
reason what so ever the&#13;
slightest point Racine is trying&#13;
to do by closing these places. If&#13;
some Puritan alderman&#13;
(Barry) are going on and on, I&#13;
think you should put a stop to&#13;
them, and put them in their&#13;
place as mayor. The Constitution&#13;
protects these places,&#13;
and the people who patronize&#13;
them. As far as th&#13;
advertising topless'" ~&#13;
tomless, is wrong I iIlcI bet&#13;
these places have ;ig ~ II&#13;
the public what enlellS&#13;
~&#13;
IS being offered. By ~&#13;
think they can serve ....&#13;
purposes. One, by ~ "-&#13;
everyone know it's • eu':'l&#13;
entertainment, is enn~&#13;
vertising. I'm sure --..........&#13;
know, two, no one sh':/:"&#13;
these places in the first be&#13;
that object to them ,,-_1IIct&#13;
the warning signs 'So~'&#13;
1&#13;
. . 111-&#13;
c usron of the nudity'. -&#13;
don't think any fuss sb:'&#13;
made.&#13;
Iwould like to ask !be&#13;
this, how can anybody iudBo""-&#13;
mores of any commlllity! lit&#13;
because a few PUri~ .::&#13;
men led by Ald. FI'8ItIt _&#13;
be the voice of !be-"&#13;
community' The ....&#13;
these establishments ~ •&#13;
this type of entertal.'::&#13;
wouldn't be in busineoI..&#13;
one patronized them, ...:&#13;
they. As long as P"'IIle&#13;
patronize these places. .... fa,&#13;
would say there Is a _&#13;
morality standard, IIId " ..&#13;
large crowds these pIaceo ....&#13;
I'd say some people do ..&#13;
No local judge could .... _&#13;
to a fair decision, wilh ..&#13;
Test Dates for National&#13;
Teacher Examination Announced&#13;
College seniors preparing to&#13;
teach school may take the&#13;
National Teacher&#13;
Examinations on any of the four&#13;
different test dates announced&#13;
today by Educational Testing&#13;
Service, a nonprofit,&#13;
educational organization which&#13;
'prepares and administers this&#13;
testing program.&#13;
New dates for the testing of&#13;
prospective teachers are:&#13;
Nov. 13, 1971, and Jan. 29,&#13;
April 8, and July 15, 1972. The&#13;
tests will be given at nearly 500&#13;
locations throughout the United&#13;
Slates, ETS said.&#13;
Results of the National&#13;
Teacher Examinations are used&#13;
by many large school districts&#13;
as one of several factors in the&#13;
selection of new teachers and by&#13;
several states for certification&#13;
or licensing of teachers. Some&#13;
...•. .;-: .-:w;.:...:.;.•.•....•:::t::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::;::::::::::::::::::;:o:-:::;::::~;:.";:.-;;.~-=--==:;:;:o:&gt;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::::&#13;
!I;&#13;
~ 1..&#13;
..' ::::&#13;
~ N&#13;
I ~':;';~':::a;,=;;;u:;::;t' !.I.I&#13;
~) KENOSHA-RACINE"&#13;
.;. ....;.•. ':.:.:.:.:-:.; .. :.:.:::.:::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::;:::;:::;:::::::.:.:.:.;.:.:-:.;:::;.::::;:;:;:;:::;:::::;::;:::::.::;&#13;
~.&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
Correction&#13;
The front page photograph&#13;
appearing in Newscope's&#13;
registration issue was not taken&#13;
by Neil Haglov as indicated but&#13;
by John Valaske Directo~ ofSummer&#13;
Session and Extended&#13;
day program. The photograph&#13;
was taken in 1966 and somehow&#13;
crept into Newscope files. (ed,&#13;
the photo was nat a picture of&#13;
Tallent Hall as we suspected but&#13;
of the Kenosha campus ...&#13;
Tallent Hall still a weeded field&#13;
at the time the picture was&#13;
taken.)&#13;
EVERY WOMAN&#13;
HAS A OfOICE&#13;
* Free pregnancy testing&#13;
* Free, Confidential&#13;
Counceling and Referral&#13;
• safe, Legal Abort;."&#13;
312-774-6911&#13;
312-775-2685&#13;
CHOICE, INqlRPORA TED&#13;
a nonprofi t 5ervi ce&#13;
for WOmen&#13;
colleges also require all seniors&#13;
preparing to teach to take the&#13;
examinations. The school&#13;
systems and state departments&#13;
of education which use the&#13;
examination results are listed&#13;
in an NTE leaflet entitled Seo.oe&#13;
Usel's which may be obtained&#13;
by writing to ETS.&#13;
On each f~ll day of testing,&#13;
prospective teachers may take&#13;
the Common Examinations&#13;
which measure their&#13;
professional preparation and&#13;
general educationa'i&#13;
background and a Teaching&#13;
Area Examination which&#13;
mearures their mastery of the&#13;
subject they expect to teach.&#13;
Prospective teacben ....&#13;
contact the school ~ ..&#13;
which they seek e~&#13;
or their colleges, lor ....&#13;
advice on which exammetfee&#13;
to take and on wbich dllsa.,&#13;
should be taken .&#13;
The Bulletin '" Ia~&#13;
for Candidates contaiDIa III.,&#13;
test centers, and idfonIIdII&#13;
about the examinatiOlll,_&#13;
as a Registration Form. Capils&#13;
may be obtained lrmI ....&#13;
placement officers, acboeI&#13;
personnel departmeatl •&#13;
directly from Natiooal""'"&#13;
Examinations, BOl til&#13;
Educational Testing Slr\'il!.&#13;
Princeton, New JettI!f ..&#13;
=CAMPUS EVENTS=&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 7:&#13;
Classes begin. Start of the&#13;
first semester.&#13;
FRIDAY. SEPT. 10:&#13;
Regents Meeting - The UW&#13;
Board of Regents will meet in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Feature Film. "The Rievers"&#13;
8:00 p.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Admission 75c.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wisconsin J.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDA Y, SEPT. It:&#13;
Tea - Parkside University&#13;
League presents a tea for all&#13;
Parkside women - staff&#13;
members or wives of staI •&#13;
2:30 p.m. in G...,.".p.lllll&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
Nighclub. "Gregory9:00&#13;
to 1:00 a.m. Studlll&#13;
tivities Building. A~&#13;
$1.50. Parkside&amp;&lt; W~&#13;
required.&#13;
+ SPECIAL EVENtS&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT.!&#13;
Concert. "John IJeD'lI'" III&#13;
p.m. Kenosha '1'reIJII*AdIlI'i!'&#13;
School Auditorium.&#13;
$3.50. Tickets avaiJallle ...&#13;
Student Activities ()fliCI.&#13;
206, Tallent Hall.&#13;
,:;,g,-; mi' ,&#13;
Newscope&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
New's Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
WRITING STAFF&#13;
Darrell Borger, Bob Borchardt,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen, Bill&#13;
Sorensen, Ken Konkol&#13;
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Janet Sabol&#13;
Mike Starr&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
BarbScolt&#13;
•&#13;
Business ~ ==&#13;
NewSCOpe is .. ~&#13;
student newspaper v~&#13;
students of -nWisconsin.Pa~&#13;
~&#13;
weekly excep! .--. ~&#13;
periods. Studelll&#13;
.., '"&#13;
verlising fundi': ,..~&#13;
source of rev ~ lIl:,j&#13;
operation of II..-Jill po&#13;
copies are IJI~ "&#13;
dislributed ~b~ ~&#13;
Kenosha an .. ur:;.&#13;
munities .. weD a:..&#13;
sity. Free~&#13;
upon~-&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
wouJd be arti he, tasteful,&#13;
patriotic and a progressive&#13;
religious experience.''&#13;
I think her quote hits some of&#13;
Ra ine' aldermen to a tee.&#13;
Th •lre too old and one ided to&#13;
m ·e any decisions for me on&#13;
pornography. If President&#13;
'i: on' commi ion, made up&#13;
ell qualified personnel,&#13;
)ready pent two million&#13;
dollars and three years time&#13;
tudying this i ue, I believe&#13;
that their findings are good&#13;
enough for me. So my opinion on&#13;
the whole i ue i : the city&#13;
council of Racine and Kenosha&#13;
should I ve the go go bars and&#13;
movie ho alone, and go on&#13;
to mor import.ant ubjects, like&#13;
for example, the court leniency&#13;
on dope pu:sher , or anything&#13;
el th y fit, but they&#13;
shouldn't try to make any of my&#13;
moral deci ·ion for me.&#13;
If Aid. Frank Barry of Racine&#13;
f l · so ·trongly against this&#13;
entertainment, he should tell&#13;
the people of his own ward that&#13;
he won't allow them to&#13;
patronize the e places. Just&#13;
leave me alone, tr. Barry.&#13;
Thank you anyways.&#13;
I believe that the President's&#13;
commission has, by all means,&#13;
the right solution, and it's also&#13;
my opinion that the members of&#13;
his committee·are a heck of alot&#13;
more " qualified" than you or&#13;
anv local aldermen to make a&#13;
deci ion like this. Now this&#13;
brings us back to the very&#13;
beginning ; if you obJect to&#13;
nudity , just stay way. It's up to&#13;
the people and the people only,&#13;
to say when this entertainment&#13;
will stop, and that will be when&#13;
they stop patronizing these&#13;
establishments.&#13;
Charline Kuipuo&#13;
5000 Graceland Blvd.&#13;
Racine, Wis. 53406&#13;
To the Editor: I thought the interview with&#13;
Racine 's l\Iayor Kenneth Huck&#13;
wa great There are a few&#13;
comments that I would like lo&#13;
make. There are alot I could&#13;
make, but I'll only mention a&#13;
few.&#13;
I couldn't agree with the&#13;
:\Iayor more, when he said,&#13;
" Racine needs full time&#13;
aldermen." It's true Racine has&#13;
eighteen part time aldermen,&#13;
and out of the eighteen I personally&#13;
don't think the majority&#13;
of them are qualified either.&#13;
You take some and I bet you'll&#13;
find that they never even&#13;
finished high school, and others&#13;
that don't know the first thing&#13;
about law. ow if Racine would&#13;
TO&#13;
have six or seven full time&#13;
aldermen; First we could set&#13;
some sort of qualifications,&#13;
they'd have to meet. Then by&#13;
cutting down the :1umber of&#13;
aldermen, we could offer a&#13;
more attractive wage, with the&#13;
full time duties, that the job&#13;
calls for. Now, by having this&#13;
attractive wage increase, I'm&#13;
sure more qualified people&#13;
would consider the job. After&#13;
all, you need more than some&#13;
factory workers or cement&#13;
workers to run the city.&#13;
I also agree with the Mayor on&#13;
most points he made on the&#13;
topless and X-rated movies&#13;
controversy. I don't think it's&#13;
right that an X-rated movie&#13;
should be shown at an outdoor&#13;
either. The President's Committee&#13;
on Pornography points&#13;
out that pornography is harmless&#13;
to adults, and keep it&#13;
away from children and unwilling&#13;
adults. So I see no&#13;
reason what so ever the&#13;
slightest point Racine is trying&#13;
to do by closing these places. If&#13;
some Puritan alderman&#13;
(Barry) are going on and on, I&#13;
think you should put a stop to&#13;
them, and put them in their&#13;
place as mayor. The Constitution&#13;
protects these places,&#13;
and the people who patronize&#13;
them. As far as th .&#13;
advertising topless ese lia&#13;
tomless, is wrong I and&#13;
these places have si behe\e&#13;
the public what en'ns \\'a&#13;
is ?eing offered. By t~~~1&#13;
thmk they can serve 1&#13;
purposes. One, by ~&#13;
everyone know it's .,eh&#13;
entertainment, is e a&#13;
t. . non .. ~&#13;
ver 1smg. I'm sure P -'"f&gt;'l&#13;
kn t eopte ow, wo, no one should&#13;
these places in the f be&#13;
that obje~t to them, ~~ the warnmg signs. S . 1 . ~ m c us1on of the nudity&#13;
don't think any fuss htSsue I&#13;
made. ~d&#13;
I would like to ask the la&#13;
this, how can anybody Ju •&#13;
mores of any communit .,&#13;
because a few Puritan) 8 J&#13;
men led by Ald. Frank &amp;.!&#13;
be the voice of the&#13;
community? The peopl&#13;
these establishments that e 111&#13;
this type of entertain&#13;
wouldn't be in busin ~ one patronized them •&#13;
they. ~s long as peofi&#13;
patromze these place&#13;
would say there is 3'&#13;
morality standard, and bv&#13;
large crowds these places •&#13;
I'd say some people do want&#13;
No local judge could ever&#13;
to a fair decision, \\ith&#13;
: -- ... . ...... t.;· •••••••• • • '1111 _ ... .. -.-.:-:; •• •••• • ·:·: .... ..... ·:·::-· &lt;. ····-:-~-:-:•.•.::. .... : : •• :::: • : •· .... &gt; •• · .•.• · .. . Test Dates for National&#13;
..&#13;
::; PEPSl·COLA :i&#13;
l&#13;
~f&#13;
;::&#13;
,.&#13;
!•:• f JFe wi h the P,,rkside students .. ,&#13;
t " ht1ppy ,ind successful year. =:=:&#13;
~): KENOSHA-RACINE ii/· • :•:•:•:•:•: :-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-::::~:=:::::;::::::::::,::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~:::::·:::-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:;:,:-:~:-:;:::::::::::::::::::::::~=l&#13;
A reiver is a con artist.&#13;
A reiver is a rascal. ..&#13;
Steve McQueen in&#13;
'The Reivers'&#13;
Fri. Sept. 10 8:00 p.m.&#13;
STU DE T ACT IVITI ES OFF ICE&#13;
A O 7 1TH P AR SIDE A O l'I I SCO S I 1 0&#13;
4 P AR S I D I U D • T A C TI I T IES F" EATURE F"ILM&#13;
College seniors preparing to&#13;
teach school may take the&#13;
ational Teacher&#13;
Examinations on any of the four&#13;
different test dates announced&#13;
today by Educational Testing&#13;
Service, a nonprofit,&#13;
educational organization which&#13;
·prepares and administers this&#13;
testing program.&#13;
New dates for the testing of&#13;
prospec tive teachers are :&#13;
ov. 13, 1971 , and Jan. 29,&#13;
April 8, and July 15, 1972. The&#13;
tests will be given at nearly 500&#13;
locations throughout the United&#13;
States, ETS said.&#13;
Results of the National&#13;
Teacher Examinations are used&#13;
by many large school districts&#13;
as one of several factors in the&#13;
selection of new teachers and by&#13;
several states for certification&#13;
or licensing of teachers. Some&#13;
Correction&#13;
The front page photograph&#13;
appearing in Newscope's&#13;
registration issue was not taken&#13;
by Neil Haglov as indicated, but&#13;
by John Valaske Director of&#13;
Summer Session and Extended&#13;
day program. The photograph&#13;
was taken in 1966 and somehow&#13;
crept into Newscope files. (ed.&#13;
the photo was not a picture of&#13;
Tallent Hall as we suspected but&#13;
of the Kenosha campus . . .&#13;
Tallent Hall still a weeded field&#13;
at the time the picture was taken.) - .&#13;
EVERY WOMAN&#13;
HAS A CHOICE&#13;
* Free pregnancy testing&#13;
* Free, Confidential&#13;
Counceling and Referral&#13;
* safe, Legal Abortion&#13;
312-774-6911&#13;
312-775-2685&#13;
CHOICE, IN CORPORA TED&#13;
0 nonprofit Service&#13;
far women&#13;
- --&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Teacher Examination Announced&#13;
colleges also require all seniors&#13;
preparing to teach to take the&#13;
examinations. The school&#13;
systems and state departments&#13;
of education which use the&#13;
examination results are listed&#13;
in an NTE leaflet entitled Score&#13;
Users which may be obtained&#13;
by writing to ETS.&#13;
On each full day of testing,&#13;
prospective teachers may take&#13;
the Common Examinations&#13;
which measure their&#13;
professional preparation and&#13;
general educational&#13;
background and a Teaching&#13;
Area Examination which&#13;
mearures their mastery of the&#13;
subject they expect to teach.&#13;
Prospective teachers&#13;
contact the school sys&#13;
which they seek emp)o)m&#13;
or their colleges, for&#13;
advice on which examma&#13;
to take and on which da&#13;
should be taken.&#13;
The Bulletin or Informal&#13;
for Candidates contains a I d&#13;
test centers, and informa&#13;
about the examination ,&#13;
as a Registration Form. Co&#13;
may be obtained from col&#13;
placement officer&#13;
personnel department&#13;
directly from National T&#13;
Examinations, Box II&#13;
Educational Testing Sen&#13;
Princeton, New Jerse)&#13;
=CAMPUS EVENTS=&#13;
TUESDAY! SEPT. 7:&#13;
Classes begin. Start of the&#13;
first semester.&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 10:&#13;
Regents Meeting - The UW&#13;
Board of Regents will meet in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Feature Film. "The Rievers"&#13;
8:00 p.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Admission 75c.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wisconsin I.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY. SEPT. 11 :&#13;
Tea - Parkside University&#13;
League ·presents a tea for all&#13;
Parkside women staff&#13;
members or wives of ta.ff&#13;
2:30 p.m. in Greenqu!St&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
Nighclub. "Gregory J&#13;
9:00 to 1:00 a.m. tudenl&#13;
tivities Building. Ad&#13;
$1.50. Parkside&amp; Wis&#13;
required.&#13;
+ SPECIAL E\'E&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT.? I&#13;
Concert. ''John Denier&#13;
p.m. Kenosha Tremper&#13;
School Auditorium A&#13;
$3.50. Tickets available•&#13;
Student Activities office&#13;
206, Tallent Hall.&#13;
,:;83f:Q.~ mo:: s:srfo: mmruw::r&#13;
Newscape (I -&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
WRITING STAFF&#13;
Darrell Borger, Bob Borchardt,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen Bill&#13;
Sorensen, Ken Konkol '&#13;
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS&#13;
M!ke Stevesand, Janet Sabol&#13;
Mike Starr&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella Dave Kraus,&#13;
Barb Scott '&#13;
PHONES 553·&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business ~&#13;
Newscope is an ~&#13;
student newspaper J:&#13;
students of T~&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkstde.ng 1-,cJ&#13;
weekly except dun obfJintd&#13;
periods. Student o,t&#13;
vertising funds art (c,&#13;
source of reve~ '&#13;
operation of Ne rinttd&#13;
copies are P dbolll . . d thrOU11. d1str1bute d Rac1nt&#13;
Kenosha_ an as !ht t:&#13;
munities as w~ll art a&#13;
sity. Free eop,es&#13;
upon request. &#13;
IEDITOR&#13;
. g down his neck.&#13;
~Itl';::;MISE" is the most&#13;
IICO t wordin government.&#13;
~I"'r:.e&lt;tto the topless signs&#13;
UyOU ladvertising by these&#13;
ond the a be you could come&#13;
JiI"'" ~ee~ent. I'm sure they&#13;
wand~eetyou half way, by&#13;
""" . g their sings, and you&#13;
""OV~now,they might even&#13;
~~ to cover up more. I&#13;
,gr&lt;f e a fair and open minded&#13;
L&lt;li'" howdmeet with these&#13;
Jllill S buthaving Ald. Frank&#13;
QIl1l"'head the License Comsarr~isa&#13;
disaster. Maybe it's&#13;
!Dl t limeyou, the Mayor of&#13;
~~ step in, and comIlaCJlI"l&#13;
I"mise ... Richard(Buddy)Missureli&#13;
10 the Editor:&#13;
~ereotype - figuratively to&#13;
fiX firmlyor unalterably&#13;
stereotype.in newspaper&#13;
iancecan mean me pourmg&#13;
~eadintoa mold. Out of this&#13;
JDIIidthe roiling presses gl~e&#13;
!he worldand Image ad 10-&#13;
finitum· Rube tei Soitfoliowsthat a u ns em&#13;
~uredinto a mold should&#13;
jtOOuce a "fine corned beef&#13;
ondwich."Soit is with a black&#13;
chiid - !xIrn- that he should&#13;
i1averhythm.Soit is with racist&#13;
~eories- being a theory it&#13;
categorizes.&#13;
Ruby's makes a "fine corned&#13;
beef sandwish"! Relative to&#13;
Howard Johnson's perha&#13;
Ruby's makes a fine cor~~&#13;
beef sandwich.&#13;
No Jew, in his right mind&#13;
would admit or attest th t&#13;
Ruby's has a fine corned ~&#13;
sandwich. The corned b f&#13;
d&#13;
. h . ee san WIC IS rarely ordered at&#13;
Ruby:s by Jews. They know&#13;
what ISserved is simulated. The&#13;
bread is not Jewish Rye&#13;
(remember this is roughly onehalf&#13;
of the sandwish) , The bread&#13;
IS a soft mush wrapped in&#13;
cellophane. The relationship of&#13;
this bread to the rich, peasant&#13;
born, r~l ~ye bread can .only be&#13;
in the Similar five letters of the&#13;
word.&#13;
The corned beef comes to the&#13;
customers (Jew or Gentile)&#13;
thinly shredded, stringy and&#13;
greasy. This is not the issue&#13;
however l because corned beef i~&#13;
not the issue.&#13;
The issue is that the middle&#13;
ages mentality that abounds.&#13;
Not the middles ages of a man's&#13;
lifteime but the middle ages of&#13;
man's span since the birth of&#13;
Christ. The same middle ages&#13;
that had normal men stoning&#13;
the walls of the Ghetto and&#13;
looking upon Jews as outsiders.&#13;
.Seplember6,1971 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Bigots· be 15 t name tod&#13;
they are not begotted ay and&#13;
Today ( lgh . p.m ) ri t now, exactly 3&#13;
H . . the coloration is&#13;
umamsm (Mister Dev&#13;
pr out and&#13;
oven member of tbe I&#13;
HEOn capital letters If ~ft).&#13;
capital letters it . . . ID&#13;
he HE SPEAKS IS an ordmary&#13;
S . . ALL OF GODC&#13;
CHOSEN CHILDREN LOVE&#13;
O~~~D :EEF. SIMULATED&#13;
RIDES· HE MIDDLE AGES&#13;
EVERYTHINgNiN A ~g~;-&#13;
RIDE ON RACISTS .&#13;
The last paragr~ph of the&#13;
arhcle. will ~ve a trip to ZION&#13;
that IS If your desire is to see the&#13;
Passl~n Play: precisely the&#13;
CruclfICaho? DER PAUL is&#13;
cruc~fled. HISspirit is crucified.&#13;
H~ IS martyred. He cannot&#13;
bring himself to help the kid&#13;
With the bicycle. What a way to&#13;
go. Go out like a hero every time&#13;
- (You can always tell the ones&#13;
who love and relish the cornbeef.&#13;
They have the Star of&#13;
David Armbands.)&#13;
Fred Hafkin&#13;
Letter Policy - Letters to the&#13;
.Editor should be double-spaced&#13;
typed, and should not exceed 400&#13;
words. Letters must be signed .&#13;
by lhe writer, but names will be&#13;
wi thheld upon request.&#13;
North-South Exchange Program&#13;
Information concerning the&#13;
Sorti&gt;SouthStudent Exchange&#13;
Programis currently available&#13;
from theStudentAffairs office&#13;
at the Kenosha campus.&#13;
Studenlsinterested in the&#13;
JI'l'Ilamare urged by its&#13;
Parkside coordinator, 1som&#13;
Fearn, to contact him at extensiO\l42K,&#13;
or at his office&#13;
room135 Kenosha. '&#13;
The program, in its sixth&#13;
~, exchanges University of&#13;
WISconsin students with&#13;
sludentsfrom three southern&#13;
S~o Universities during the&#13;
~nng semester. They are&#13;
orth Carolina A &amp; T State&#13;
UOIversity,North Carolina&#13;
~~al University, and Texas&#13;
'them University&#13;
Oli Due to the la~k of dor-&#13;
.,:.es at Parkside, the black&#13;
l!adi go.students are sent to&#13;
SOnIUsteaduf here I'Th .&#13;
~ e program requires a&#13;
said ~ItyP; of person," Fearn&#13;
Uiat'halleakmg uf the problems&#13;
iD the vearIsen in the program&#13;
1'ar' pasl few years (last&#13;
s exchang IlW.Plefth. e student from&#13;
... Weeks ISf&#13;
exchange school a&#13;
"The a ter arriving).&#13;
des· program is not&#13;
~~,to~ntegrate' lhe black&#13;
, earn emphasized ,&#13;
"but simply to expose the&#13;
student to black culture. He&#13;
can't go down there thinking he&#13;
is going to save the black&#13;
people."&#13;
"I don't want to paint an&#13;
overly rosy picture," he said.&#13;
II A person should- weigh in his&#13;
own mind what he wants to get&#13;
out of it."&#13;
Changes in the program&#13;
from last year include a longer&#13;
and more thorough screening&#13;
process of applicants (exchange&#13;
students from past years playa&#13;
key role in this), making it&#13;
better known to counsellors on&#13;
the black campuses that there&#13;
,.&#13;
~&#13;
..~.&#13;
ri&#13;
213 SiXTH STREET RACIN E&#13;
rQ&#13;
Qllce&#13;
Sf:ohsor ed b y&#13;
Newscope&#13;
S~ftetrJbQ.r 2St!J&#13;
are exchange students there.&#13;
Fearn noted that to insulate&#13;
the student too much from the&#13;
prohlems would only defeat the&#13;
purpose of the program - to&#13;
expose students to a black&#13;
culture on a first hand basis.&#13;
He said it's like the&#13;
situation of a black student in an&#13;
all white university. Some&#13;
people just aren't going to like&#13;
him because of his color.&#13;
Fearn said the key to the&#13;
program is that it's a learning&#13;
experience, and that if a person&#13;
realizes that he should give&#13;
serious consideration to taking&#13;
part in it.&#13;
Compact Stereo Phono System-model 9280. Put&#13;
together by Magnavox (the{ve been making great&#13;
sounds for over 60 years). This gem offers you a lot for&#13;
your money. Like 60 Watts EIA music power, an automatic&#13;
4-speed Micro Changer, and two 6" speakers.&#13;
Even a protective dust cover and jack for optional&#13;
headphone. Check out all its features. It's just one of&#13;
many in the Magnavox line of value-packed roommates-for&#13;
home or away. Component&#13;
systems and accessories,&#13;
radios, tape recorders /players,&#13;
S9995&#13;
portable TV and stereo.&#13;
famouS fOl MagftClV"O~&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I&#13;
'In Four§ius ,.. 12" - ••" • ,,"&#13;
AU&lt;&gt;&#13;
• .'IS • srAGHt'aTi • CHICKIN&#13;
t GMOCCHI. RAVIOLI· LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA fOOD • SANDWICHU&#13;
CAIlV.oUTS • DELlVEI\&#13;
"yOU liNG ••• WI. 'p1~&#13;
657.9843 or ..658-4922&#13;
Joernd/ &amp; Yen/Ullli&#13;
tHI' A"lIAIIIlCI. CIf"I •&#13;
ICENOI'H.A:. WISCONSIN&#13;
'U.55lh STREET&#13;
Patronile Newscope Advertisers - ,,~~&#13;
Page 3&#13;
a:&#13;
ur&#13;
o&#13;
a:&#13;
o&#13;
m&#13;
.J&#13;
.J&#13;
W&#13;
a:&#13;
a:&#13;
-c&#13;
o&#13;
&amp;DITOR&#13;
king down his neck.&#13;
1~ter5 ;ROMISE" is the most ,,co t word in government.&#13;
jJJ!J)Or:-ect to the topless signs&#13;
ayoUthe J advertising by these&#13;
and aybe you could come&#13;
?aces&#13;
, meement. I'm sure they&#13;
ioand~eet you half way, by&#13;
woul . g their sings, and you&#13;
reniovikn ow they might even ... vern , I "" . to cover up more. ~ee ea fair and open minded&#13;
celieV hould meet with these&#13;
man 5 but having Ald. Frank&#13;
l)\l'ller\ead the License Com-&#13;
~~; is a disaster. Maybe it's&#13;
Jlll t time you, the Mayor of&#13;
a!JOU • d ' Racine, step m, an comp-omise&#13;
. · · Richard (Buddy) Missureli&#13;
T the Editor: 0&#13;
stereotype _ figura tively to&#13;
/iX firmly or unalterably - Stereotype in newspaper&#13;
riance can mean the pourin:g&#13;
:lead into a mold. Out of ~1s&#13;
mold the rolling_ presses g1:-e&#13;
the world and image ad infinitum.&#13;
· . Soitfollows that a Rubenstein&#13;
!klured into a mold should&#13;
oduce a "fine corned beef&#13;
~dwich." So it is with a black&#13;
child_ bQrn - that he should&#13;
haverhythm. So it is with racist&#13;
lheories - being a theory it&#13;
categorizes.&#13;
Ruby's makes a " fine corned&#13;
beef sandwish" ! Relative to&#13;
Howard J ohnson's perha&#13;
Ruby's makes a fine cori~&#13;
beef sandwich.&#13;
No Jew, in his right mind&#13;
would admit or attest th t&#13;
Ruby's. has a fine corned be!f&#13;
sandwich. The corned b f&#13;
d . h. ee&#13;
san w1c 1s rarely ordered at&#13;
Ruby'.s by Jews. They know&#13;
what 1s s~rved is simulated. The&#13;
bread 1s not Jewish Rye&#13;
(remember this is roughly one-&#13;
~lf of the sandwish). The bread&#13;
1S a soft mush wrapped in&#13;
ce~ophane. The relationship of&#13;
this bread to the rich, peasant&#13;
~rn, r~l :Ye bread can only be&#13;
m the similar five letters of the&#13;
word.&#13;
The corned beef comes to the&#13;
cu_stomers (Jew or Gentile)&#13;
thmly shredded, stringy and&#13;
greasy. This is not the issue&#13;
however, because corned beef i~&#13;
not the issue.&#13;
The issue is that the middle&#13;
ages mentality that abounds.&#13;
Not the middles ages of a man's&#13;
lifteime but the middle ages of&#13;
man's span since the birth of&#13;
Christ. The same middle ages&#13;
that had normal men stoning&#13;
the walls of the Ghetto and&#13;
loo~ing upon Jews as outsiders.&#13;
Bigots is the name t&#13;
they are not begott oday and&#13;
Today ( ·gti ed.&#13;
p.m.) t~1 t now, exactly 3&#13;
H . e coloration is&#13;
umamsm &lt;Mister Devout and&#13;
proven member of h&#13;
~~i~!:-~'!L4!~&#13;
S CHOSEN CHILI}~ OF GODCORNE&#13;
REN LOVE&#13;
ORN D BEEF. SIMULATED&#13;
OT. THE MIDDLE AGES&#13;
RIDES ON p&#13;
EVERYTHING iN A Mgii RIDE ON RACISTS .&#13;
1:he last paragr~ph of the&#13;
artic_le_ will save a trip to ZION&#13;
that i_s if your desire is to see th~&#13;
Pass!~n ~lay: precisely the&#13;
Cru~1~1caho~. DER PAUL is&#13;
~uc~f1ed. His spirit is crucified. ~ is _martyred. He cannot&#13;
b~mg himself to help the kid&#13;
with the bicycle. What a way to&#13;
go. Go out like a hero everytime&#13;
- (You can always tell the ones&#13;
who love anq relish the cornbeef:&#13;
They have the Star of&#13;
David Armbands.)&#13;
FredHafkin&#13;
~etter Policy - Letters to the&#13;
..Editor should be double-spaced&#13;
typed, and should not exceed 400&#13;
words. Letters must be signed&#13;
by the writer, but names will be&#13;
withheld upon request.&#13;
September 6, 1971 NEWSCOPE Pagel&#13;
a:&#13;
w&#13;
C)&#13;
a:&#13;
0&#13;
ID&#13;
..J&#13;
..J&#13;
w&#13;
a:&#13;
a:&#13;
&lt;{&#13;
0&#13;
North-South Exchange Program&#13;
Information concerning the&#13;
North-South Student Exchange&#13;
Program is currently available&#13;
from the Student Affairs office&#13;
at the Kenosha campus.&#13;
Students interested in the&#13;
ir~gram are urged by its&#13;
Parkside coordinator, Isom&#13;
Fearn, to contact him at extension&#13;
42K, or at his office&#13;
room 135 Kenosha. '&#13;
The program, in its sixth&#13;
ye_ar, exchanges University of&#13;
Wisconsin students with&#13;
students from three southern&#13;
Ne~ro universities during the&#13;
spring semester. They are&#13;
No'.th Carolina A &amp; T State&#13;
~niversity, North Carolina&#13;
So ntral University, and Texas&#13;
uthern University.&#13;
· D~e to the lack of dormitories&#13;
at Parkside the black&#13;
exchange t d , Madi .&#13;
5 u ents are sent to&#13;
son instead of here&#13;
"Th · s . e program requires a&#13;
!t:1&#13;
tyP: of person," Fearn&#13;
~at'h peaki~g of the problems . ave arisen · th in th 10 e program&#13;
Year•: e:~t few years (last&#13;
UW-PJeft h_ange student from&#13;
few Weeks I~ exchange school a&#13;
"The a ter arrivin~).&#13;
designed t/rteogram is not&#13;
SCh-Oo!s,, ~n grate' the black&#13;
' earn emphasized I&#13;
"but simply to expose the&#13;
student to black culture. He&#13;
can't go down there thinking he&#13;
is going to save the black&#13;
people."&#13;
" I don't want to paint an&#13;
overly rosy picture," he said.&#13;
"A person should weigh in his&#13;
own mind what he wants to get&#13;
out of it. "&#13;
Changes in the program&#13;
from last year include a longer&#13;
and more thorough screening&#13;
process of applicants ( exchange&#13;
students from past years play a&#13;
key role in this), making it&#13;
better known to counsellors on&#13;
the black campuses that there&#13;
C1 Q/"\ce&#13;
Sf.Or,sor q_J !:, y&#13;
N ewscope&#13;
s~ptern bQ_r 25 t!J&#13;
are exchange students there.&#13;
Fearn noted that to insulate&#13;
the student too much from the&#13;
problems would only defeat the&#13;
purpose of the program - to&#13;
expose students to a black&#13;
culture on a first hand basis. He said it's like the&#13;
situation of a black student in an&#13;
all white university. Some&#13;
people just aren't going to like&#13;
him because of his color.&#13;
Fearn said the key to the&#13;
program is that it's a learning&#13;
experience, and that if a person&#13;
realizes that he should give&#13;
serious consideration to taking&#13;
part in it.&#13;
. famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
l&#13;
'In Four Sins 9" · ll" · 14" - 16"&#13;
AL5'1&#13;
. • RIIS • S,AGHE'Sl'I • CHICKIM&#13;
•1 GMOCCttl • RAVIOLI • LA SAGMA&#13;
• SEA FOOD o SAMDWICHIS&#13;
CAllYiOUTS • DELIVER\&#13;
"YOU RIHG .• · · W.l..Jal~&#13;
657-9843 or ··,.51-4922&#13;
Compact Stereo Phono System- model 9280 . Put&#13;
together by Magnavox (they've been making great&#13;
sounds for over 60 years) . This gem offers you a lot for&#13;
your money. Like 60 Watts EIA music power, an auto -&#13;
matic 4-speed Micro Changer, and two 6" speakers.&#13;
Even a protective dust cover and jack for optional&#13;
headphone. Check out all its features. It's just one of&#13;
many in the Magnavox line of value -packed roommates-for&#13;
home or away. Component&#13;
systems and accessories, sggss radios, tape recorders /players,&#13;
portable TV and stereo .&#13;
Me1gr1crw"O~&#13;
Joerndt &amp; Yentura~ THI• APP\IAtiCl • Clf'fll&#13;
KENOll'H~, WISCONSIM&#13;
,u-ssth STREET ~HONE '54-.3SS9&#13;
Patronize Newscope Advertisers \ &#13;
,'EWSCOPE&#13;
Tille Wisconsin urvtval Handbook&#13;
Author Doug LaFoilelle&#13;
Publisher" w isconste'e ~n\'iroDmental&#13;
Decade IS 9;1&#13;
b) Jim Koloen&#13;
of the :'&lt;le"scope stalr&#13;
In between reading Tropic of Caoc:er.&#13;
s.r,ual Polilics. and TM Age of Reason 10&#13;
nd behold "hat do Ifind 10 my dirty gas&#13;
pumpmg hands but a copy of the Wisconsin&#13;
Sun iul .bndbook. And b) w·hose hand&#13;
we uch Handbook concored" None other&#13;
than Doug LaFollette's chemistry teacher&#13;
t VWP. former aspirant to the first&#13;
dlstncl' congr ional seal, and overtime&#13;
ecol~1 I&#13;
I ldom concern myself with reviewing&#13;
an) th.ng. but hterature (good and bad).&#13;
ft r II my onl) area 01 even seeming&#13;
lorn fence: is literature 115 not strange&#13;
th n ",htn t teave my area of competence&#13;
to tr ad polluted waters" '01 so strange&#13;
me think Doug I my friend and his&#13;
prubl m I shared by all 01 us Hence. a&#13;
revre .. on the "I consin un h.t Hand·&#13;
.......&#13;
Th Hand I short. 125 pages .n·&#13;
rludlng tXleru.l\,e appendices, the style of&#13;
...nhn'(1 I rse and lralllcall)' underscores&#13;
'he urgency 01 the ecopollution tbeme. The&#13;
b"'" I dIVidedmto 13chaplers which deal&#13;
"lh pfC.hc a pfCl&gt;or pollution The lirst&#13;
two chapters are entitled "Air" and&#13;
..Wat..... respectively, the last two are&#13;
"Ecology in the Political Arena", and&#13;
"Courtroom Ecology", il's all quite&#13;
evolutionary. It begins wilb the basics and&#13;
ends with the complex realities 01 a&#13;
anylbing m.eaningful, it's all too abstract&#13;
The problem is billions of tons of garbage,&#13;
the trouble is simply that we are not individually&#13;
affected by a billion tons of&#13;
garbage. What it all means IS that every&#13;
person in the US is directly responsIble lor&#13;
civilization actually trying to kill itself via&#13;
asphyxiation, and it's a short road we have&#13;
to travel.&#13;
In a way the Wisconsin Survival Handbook&#13;
is much like the Boy Scout Handbook,&#13;
neither Handbood is revelatory, both are&#13;
concerned with survival, one in the&#13;
Wilderness and the other of the wilderness.&#13;
Insofar as the statistics quoted in the&#13;
Wisconsin Survival Handbook are con·&#13;
corned, we don't really learn too much, it's&#13;
interesting to read about quantities which&#13;
are measureabJe by the billions, un·&#13;
fortunately it leaves one unaffected When&#13;
you talk about !rillions 01 kilowatts or a&#13;
billion Ions 01 garbage you really don't say&#13;
~&#13;
[ Rise to face UN other day&#13;
•&#13;
7 pounds ol·pollutants each day, alter that&#13;
we can start talking about the other&#13;
pollutants such as industrial, agricultural,&#13;
thermal, etc., that's where statistics come&#13;
in and the meaning goes out.&#13;
Doug tells us we have 50 years to get our&#13;
shittngelber and recycle it, and before the&#13;
corpora te criminals reduce industrial&#13;
pollutants, the individual is going to have&#13;
to renounce the throwaway economy. We&#13;
must tighten our belts and use less,&#13;
perhaps use less is not the right term, it's&#13;
more like waste less, 50 years is a long&#13;
time in a relative sense, most of us will be&#13;
over the hill by Iben anyway, so what the&#13;
bell. Just remember who will live in that&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
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FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
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hell. Nobody.&#13;
The really valuable&#13;
Handbook are: 1) it a....... or&#13;
with. a statewida a:':""11 ~ IliI&#13;
exegesis of Ibe POllUtion': aa .. ';::&#13;
provides an extensive listble.n,IIIIdb&#13;
places, and relerenees :.tIII ~&#13;
utilized to channel our'~ CIt&#13;
wrath into. "political actio ~&#13;
If you read Ibis book D.&#13;
engage in some ecoactiVili8Ild detid,&#13;
best place to start is With ;:' ~ ~&#13;
Handbook. Western PrinH_~or&#13;
use recycled paper beca ...... ""'-&#13;
much. use k CIiIla lit&#13;
The ecological dilemllUl .&#13;
complex, the watcb fa.ciaI ••&#13;
. terdependence, interde;Ofd 11&#13;
finite world. If it comes to it I1deIItt 10 I&#13;
indicted in 50 years I~ 'II!"II&#13;
denied an appeal. If y~ucome ., III&#13;
beady eyed polluter in • dark"~I&#13;
night, .chances are you won'ter ...&#13;
slop him from choking you _ ....&#13;
karale, the polluter may jlllt be "-&#13;
image of yourself. • ....&#13;
Taken 'as a handbook, Doua u~&#13;
work IS good, it is a lIOOd-~&#13;
reference, it doesn't pr-.t It&#13;
analysis, it simply gives US ..&#13;
and followsup with sua...: .....&#13;
actions. Other than that it's lip •__..&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope starr&#13;
John Denver -&#13;
Poems, Prayers &amp; Promises&#13;
RCA LSP 4499&#13;
As far back as I can&#13;
remember, discretion has never&#13;
been one of my outslanding&#13;
virtues. In fact, my lack of it&#13;
has perhaps, become a personal&#13;
trademark. But then again, on&#13;
my plus side, I have always&#13;
excelled in .consistency.&#13;
musicianship is poar ..&#13;
po.rson attemp" -&#13;
Ib,s type, singinc... •&#13;
ballads, accomJlllded ...&#13;
his guitar, he hadbetlIr:'&#13;
enough, vocally ......&#13;
slrumenfally to corq Ifir&#13;
not haVing a blelInIII&#13;
arrangement to leu • I&#13;
might suffice to lIlY --_&#13;
Denver could do wtII to __&#13;
large orchestra bebIIId bill, III&#13;
Ibe closer they oouId _ ..&#13;
Whalever I do, good or bad. I&#13;
have a tendancy to go right on&#13;
doing it Adding the two&#13;
together, and with the un·&#13;
derstanding that John Denver&#13;
will soon be giving a concert at&#13;
P.U., a concert at which the&#13;
,Tallent Hall peopie would like to&#13;
see a large crowd. I take this&#13;
opportunity to say that Mr.&#13;
Denver's album sucks. After&#13;
severallistenings, I've come to&#13;
believe tha t he is a man of&#13;
limited talent, and that it was a&#13;
mistake on Ibe part of RCA to&#13;
record him in the first place.&#13;
"Poems, Prayers and&#13;
Promises" is the product of less&#13;
imagination than that credited&#13;
to a fig. Even under the most&#13;
conscientious examination one&#13;
might find it impossibl~ to&#13;
locate the slightest shred 01 a&#13;
Iresh: original idea. Lacking&#13;
c.onvlctlOn, taste, and particularly&#13;
variety, the album has&#13;
very lillie to ofler beyond in·&#13;
cesant mediocrity.&#13;
To criticize objectively, and&#13;
to be more specific, let me say&#13;
first, that Denver's&#13;
AND ITAUAN SAUSAGE B;M3ERS&#13;
5021- 30111AVllIII8 K.........&#13;
Open 6 days a week fram 4 p.m., closed """"*'"&#13;
drowning him ... t ........,&#13;
would be in direct pnptrIIIIbe&#13;
raising rl ... ....&#13;
quality. At tim.. be.-&#13;
mind an out rl llIII ..&#13;
Goldsboro, complell • I&#13;
disgusting Iltlle viInII ..&#13;
never failed to .. •&#13;
nauseouS. Sin8bC libtIIllf'l&#13;
need some might)' - fill&#13;
picking to sort rlblip".&#13;
but alas, his r III!&#13;
down.He_ ~&#13;
anylbing complicafld. .....&#13;
Ibe listener \ea8 ...&#13;
Nothing starUiJII,&#13;
-=&#13;
brigh~ just a ~&#13;
of mediocrity.&#13;
Perhaps what reeI1 tt:&#13;
me aboot this a!bUID ..&#13;
seems to re~ ..&#13;
James Taylor, Ib!.......&#13;
been adequale!1-&#13;
number 01 YOWlll-: ..&#13;
that aUthat's. J&#13;
and perform bit"-.&#13;
sing aboot a ~&#13;
mention CoIorBdo,.:&#13;
you're 80 ~ __ ..&#13;
back lH1 your U1C ....... , ,.&#13;
Sorry, but I just ell'&#13;
two chapters are entitled "Air" and "Water" respectively, the last tv..·o are&#13;
" Ecology in the Political Arena'', a_nd&#13;
"Courtroom Ecology", it's all quite&#13;
evolutionary. It begin with the basics and&#13;
ends ·ilh the complex realities of a&#13;
cinlization actually trying to kill itself via&#13;
lbph) 1alion, and it's a short road we have&#13;
to travel.&#13;
In a v.av the Wi consin Survival Hand-&#13;
• much like the Boy Scout Handbook,&#13;
neither Handbood is revelatory, both are&#13;
concerned with survival, one in the&#13;
wilderne · and the other of the wilderness. Ill! o!ar as the statistics quoted in the&#13;
\ 'i con in unival Handbook are concerned,&#13;
we don't really learn too much, it's&#13;
inter ting lo read about quantities which&#13;
are mea ureable by the billions, unfortunat&#13;
ly it leaves one unaffected. When&#13;
you talk about trillions of kilowatts or a&#13;
billion ton of garbage you really don't say&#13;
anything m_eaningful, it's all too abstract.&#13;
The problem is billions of tons of garba~e,&#13;
the trouble is simply that we are not mdividually&#13;
affected by a bi!lion tons of&#13;
garbage. What it all means is tha~ every&#13;
person in the US is directly responsible for&#13;
7 pounds of pollutants each day, after that&#13;
we can start talking about the other&#13;
pollutants such as industrial, agricultural,&#13;
th~rmal, etc., that's where statistics come&#13;
in and the meaning goes out.&#13;
Doug tells us we have 50 years to get our&#13;
shit together and recycle it, and before the&#13;
corporate criminals reduce industrial&#13;
pollutants, the individual is going to have&#13;
to renounce the throw away economy. We&#13;
must tighten our belts and use less,&#13;
perhaps use less is not the right term, it's&#13;
more like waste less. 50 years is a long&#13;
time in a relative sense, most of us will be&#13;
over the hill by then anyway, so what the&#13;
hell. Just remember who will live in that&#13;
hell. Nobody.&#13;
The really valuable&#13;
Handbook are: 1) it Presas!&gt;etts llf&#13;
with . a statewide as w:?ts the&#13;
exeg~is of the pollution· prohi as na&#13;
provides an extensive list' em, llld&#13;
places, and references 1: &lt;i&#13;
utilized to channel our w ch can&#13;
wrath into_ "political actio e~v&#13;
If you read th' boo · n . . lS kand&#13;
engage m some ecoactivif detidt&#13;
best place to start is with ~~· ~1'&#13;
Handbook. Western Printin Jllinter of&#13;
use recycled paper beca g. ref&#13;
much. USe 1t ~&#13;
The ecological dilemma fa . complex, the watch CUtg&#13;
. terdependence, interde word u&#13;
finite world. If it comes to ~~ndence&#13;
indicted in 50 years t 1 • We 11;n&#13;
denied an appeal. If y~u ::i KUilt)&#13;
beady eyed polluter in a d kUp . ht ar an-. rug , . chances are you won't (;1&#13;
stop him from choking YOU even a&#13;
~arate, the polluter may j~t ~ ifyflJ&#13;
image of yourself. 1&#13;
Tak~n as a handbook, Doug LaF&#13;
work is good, it is a good&#13;
refere~ce,_ it _doesn't present ~ analysis, 1t simply gives&#13;
and followsup with sugges~· an&#13;
actions. Other than that it's 1&#13;
: ~~&#13;
Patronize Our 1&#13;
Ad vertizers&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
John Denver -&#13;
Poems, Prayers &amp; Promises&#13;
RCA LSP 4499&#13;
As far back as I can&#13;
remember, discretion has never&#13;
been one of my outstanding&#13;
virtues. In fact, my lack of it&#13;
has perhaps, become a personal&#13;
trademark. But then again, on&#13;
my plus side, I have always&#13;
excelled in consistency.&#13;
musicianship is poor,&#13;
pe_rson attempts an albuin&#13;
th1S type, singing down _:&#13;
~lla~, accompanied crily&#13;
his guitar, he had better be&#13;
enough, vocally and&#13;
strumentally to compematt&#13;
not having a backg&#13;
ar~angement to lean Oil&#13;
might suffice to say that&#13;
Denver could do well to hi •&#13;
large orchestra behind him&#13;
the closer they could come&#13;
/::;;·~.~::~:.: .. ·~:;:r:=·::::···::w~:::~r:;:t.:.:.::.:.:.:.~.:.:.:.:.:.: .•. :.:.~.;.:·=-:·•·=~-=~•~:~=~.~.~;.~.~~=-=:=·=·=·=·=······::: ······~-&#13;
}1 Book Store Hours (all campusesH/J!&#13;
@ *&#13;
PANCAKE HOUSE&#13;
RHTAURANT&#13;
Sundal - Thursday&#13;
6 - Midnight&#13;
Friday - Saturday&#13;
6 - 3 A.M.&#13;
f:~ FIRST EEK OF CLASSES lfI&#13;
$EPT· 7 • 10 t:=:=&#13;
TUESDAY THRU THURSDAY&#13;
1:30 A.M.&#13;
TO 8:30 P:M.&#13;
FRID.AV&#13;
8:00 A.M., • 4:30 P.M,&#13;
AFTER FIRST WEEK&#13;
ONDAY TlfRU TlfUkSi.JAY&#13;
8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
6:30 ,,,m.-a:oo p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
uNiViS1rv ti&#13;
~hYi~I.J29:~"~SI P,R,E~M;S,I .. .. ..... ... .... ..... ......... ...... ................... :,••&#13;
~,,, The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
PRESENTS . ..• IN CONCERT ,&#13;
JOHN DENVER&#13;
'TAKE ME HOME COUNTRY ROADS'&#13;
SAT. ocr: 2 . 8:00 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA TREMPER AUD.&#13;
AES. SEAT TICKET~ $3-50&#13;
AVAILABLE:&#13;
THIS&#13;
- 3619 30 AVE . _&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
Get Acqua inted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change .&#13;
PARKSIDE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE .&#13;
654-9968&#13;
Whatever I do, good or bad, I&#13;
have a tendancy to go right on&#13;
doing it. Adding the two&#13;
together, and with the understanding&#13;
that John Denver&#13;
will soon be giving a concert at&#13;
P.U., a concert at which the&#13;
· Tallent Hall people would like to&#13;
see a large crowd, I take this&#13;
opportunity to say that Mr.&#13;
Denver's album sucks. After&#13;
several listenfngs, I've come to&#13;
believe that he is a man of&#13;
limited talent, and that it was a&#13;
mistake on the part of RCA to&#13;
record him in the first place.&#13;
"Poems, Prayers and&#13;
Promises" is the product of less&#13;
imagination than that credited&#13;
to a fig. Even under the most&#13;
conscientious examination one&#13;
might find it impossibl~ to&#13;
locate the slightest shred of a&#13;
fresh~ ~riginal idea. Lacking&#13;
c_onviction, taste, and particularly&#13;
variety, the album has&#13;
very little to offer beyond incesant&#13;
mediocrity.&#13;
To criticize objectively, and&#13;
t? be more specific, let me say&#13;
firSt, that Denver's&#13;
VAtEO#S ~&#13;
t-1z At&#13;
AND ITALJ~ SAUSAGE a:;tvf3ERS&#13;
5021-IJth Avellle K•slla 1&amp;7..Qll&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed MCJftdars &#13;
r&#13;
OUT OF THE CHARIOT AND INTO THE PYRE&#13;
11' ()nl,g. lIIan&#13;
II'" Heston .&#13;
1)1I Hestonproves on film&#13;
J!t.. arother last man. He&#13;
IiII be ~ a symbolically laden&#13;
,.ua~ Withthe finality of&#13;
dll"c teclm0logicalman, he&#13;
~ iUs wayto ~ funeral pyre&#13;
:;btlleremoantsof a matenal&#13;
,.Id gaspingits last fatahstic&#13;
1lIlb' plasticpen and sword .&#13;
~ toforma monument to&#13;
IIl!ri1derofmonuments ..&#13;
\be iJoageis complete 10 a&#13;
mystic way, with long-haIred&#13;
IiIe8S' ridden victims of the&#13;
""lb&lt;ei", revoltingagainst the&#13;
101 quite alone Heston&#13;
{Neville}:renaissance man&#13;
lkM:torarmy colonel, solid&#13;
_ .. : but not unfeeling.&#13;
nailbeings witha Sino-Soviet&#13;
far wbere microbiological&#13;
IlIplllS ·are used, destroying&#13;
..... ld'spopulaceexcept for """rum filledhero, and those&#13;
111&gt; are dying slowly. The,&#13;
Iiseased ones are confined to&#13;
~ aboutat night because&#13;
&lt;I their affected eyes compeling&#13;
theimagery. This is all&#13;
IialllD usin a none 100 subtle:&#13;
IlIsbback.&#13;
After successfully defending&#13;
iiipillboxapartment Neville is&#13;
IDed from his plague-ridden&#13;
lIjiors by an attractive Ne&lt;&gt;-'&#13;
Iiack gir~ clad in plastic bells,&#13;
lIII.nintenseJamesDean like&#13;
Ift-medstudent; both of whom&#13;
IiIe motorcyclesand talk their&#13;
lrandli jivewitb the aplomb of&#13;
aideal. Ifound,too; that these&#13;
IeIlItiful peoplewere doubling&#13;
• ilW'dians for a colony of&#13;
11IIIII cbildren, who, because of&#13;
[r=:==R=ec=,=cle==,h=is=p::::G::::pe=r==;-l&#13;
WHAT&#13;
DOESIT&#13;
TAKE&#13;
their youth have all been saved&#13;
for a time from the disease.&#13;
They retrieve Heston to save&#13;
themselves, for his blood can be&#13;
used to reproduce the serum&#13;
that could save the pitiful&#13;
remains of mankind. He "is&#13;
obliged and delighted 10 find&#13;
that he is not alone.&#13;
The immediate danger of&#13;
Richie's death (a colony&#13;
member) brings Neville to tbe&#13;
rescue. Work begins on a serum&#13;
and the aforementioned girl&#13;
with the .cliche, "If I were tbe&#13;
only boy in the world and you&#13;
were the only girl" t ringing&#13;
ironically true. Reference is&#13;
made again and again to&#13;
Neville's killing of the tertiary&#13;
cases as the now recovered.&#13;
young boy finally. makes an&#13;
attempt to save these wretched .&#13;
few, and in turn is killed by&#13;
them. In an action filled scene,&#13;
Neville finds the boy dead and&#13;
his woman a member of the&#13;
"family" (She has recently&#13;
become a tertiary case). Heston&#13;
is eventually killed by the head&#13;
of the "family" 1 leaving the&#13;
\&#13;
audience to wonder if&#13;
technological man is all that&#13;
bad, but giving food to the idea&#13;
that he is destined to be exiled&#13;
from the planet earth and&#13;
replaced by some less volitable&#13;
form.&#13;
The painstaking journey from&#13;
the beginning to the end of this&#13;
film lies more with the viewer&#13;
than with the film-maker. It is a&#13;
painstaking venture because we&#13;
must sort those things-that are&#13;
placed before our eyes in the&#13;
.narne of science fiction and&#13;
YOUR&#13;
ENEMY?&#13;
those things revealed to us as&#13;
cor!1Ysymbolism. While we are&#13;
trying to figure out how they&#13;
cleared the busy streets of L&#13;
An I . os&#13;
ge es 10 the name of Warner&#13;
,~rothers, we must also strain to&#13;
Ig~ore the .most c?mical long&#13;
. haired equivalents of present&#13;
day a~itators who are sadly&#13;
identified with a general&#13;
decadence and an incomplete&#13;
model of the dying philosophies&#13;
of the past.&#13;
S~mehow. the contemporary&#13;
audience Just doesn't jump&#13;
anymore when something leaps&#13;
.out of the dark. It might be nice&#13;
if we could learn to jump again&#13;
I' . .or at least turn around and&#13;
[see what's going down.&#13;
i This film is not one that&#13;
Ilea ves the audience in reflective&#13;
1 silence but the rough idenItification&#13;
available to those who&#13;
sometimes crave it is available&#13;
.in the form of the classic&#13;
Heston. It suffers from an&#13;
economic place in the world of&#13;
films and is maligned by tbe&#13;
.productivity of a market ... it&#13;
repeats. (Rating. - on a five&#13;
point scale - 2)&#13;
The Parkside Film Society&#13;
has come out with its 1971-72&#13;
schedule and among their listed&#13;
presentations there are some&#13;
worthy of special note.&#13;
The Hawks and The&#13;
Sparrows, Sept. 29&#13;
See You at Mao, Nov. 3&#13;
Wild Strawberries, Dec. 8&#13;
Nights of Cabiria, Feb. 23&#13;
Jules and Jim, March 7&#13;
Un Chien Andalou, March 29&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Sornething more than human love.&#13;
It talc oth es a more spiritual look at yourself and the&#13;
th er fellow.An understanding that you·both have&#13;
e same FathercMother, God. .&#13;
Ittalces aliz :&#13;
\' re ing that no man is your enemy.&#13;
re&#13;
°&#13;
Urrealenemy i~evil _ hate envy, irritation, venWh .. , ha ge. en these are overcome you find you&#13;
Venoenemy..&#13;
R~ .&#13;
and would'like to know God better, come In&#13;
read. Or borrow a book to read at home.&#13;
CItRIST '. IAN SCIENCE READING ROOM&#13;
302 Sixth Street Racine&#13;
Seplember6,1971 NEWSCOPE PageS&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
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si.eo WITH pARKSICE a, WISCCNSIN 1.0&#13;
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... I&#13;
~&#13;
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50-': OFF ~&#13;
~. I&#13;
Small Pizza .! I&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
NOON SPEQAl. I&#13;
Man_F'i 11:30-1 :.30 I&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
99¢ I&#13;
First beer IO¢ with parhide 1.0. I&#13;
PlZZAHUT I&#13;
® I&#13;
I&#13;
North on 30th Avenue in Kenosllu I&#13;
-------------------------~ 1.------&#13;
Welcome Back Students&#13;
I&#13;
one lNeek only&#13;
Sept.8-J7&#13;
10% STUDENT discount&#13;
on ALL stock with coupon&#13;
400 Main St.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
Racine specializing in Connie&#13;
and Jacquelin shoes ----,-----------------_.1&#13;
Corning!&#13;
This Saturday Sept. 11&#13;
'The Gregory James Group'&#13;
lwiSCoosin'S most popular and&#13;
exciting coIlece nightclub aUI9CUon'&#13;
one week only I&#13;
Sept. 8-17&#13;
10% STUDENT discount&#13;
OUT OF THE CHARIOT AND INTO THE PYRE on ALL stock with coupon&#13;
r,e omega Man&#13;
ltOII Heston . (\at Heston proves on film&#13;
Mf. . another last man. He&#13;
mat he is a symbolically laden&#13;
?lro::er. With the finality of ~ technological man, he&#13;
re~ his way to a funeral P)'.I"e&#13;
~the remnants of a mat~ri~l&#13;
id gasping its last fatahstic&#13;
:ath; plastic pen and sword&#13;
~ting to form a monument to&#13;
lbe·ooilder of monuments .. 1be image is complete m a&#13;
:stic way, with long-haired ~ ridden victims of the .. wooeJ", revolting against the&#13;
not quite alone Heston ,Neville): renaissance man .. doctor, army colonel, solid&#13;
citizen ... but not unfeeling. (tall beings with a Sino-Soviet&#13;
war where microbiological&#13;
wupo~ are used, destroying&#13;
lhe world's populace except for&#13;
oorserum filled hero, and those&#13;
woo are dying slowly. The, mseased ones are confined to&#13;
moving about at night because&#13;
ri their affected eyes comJieting&#13;
the imagery. This is all&#13;
!!alt to us in a none too subtle· llashback.&#13;
After successfully defending&#13;
bis pillbox apartment Neville is&#13;
saved from his plague-ridden&#13;
aptors by an attractive Neoliack&#13;
girl, clad in plastic bells,&#13;
and an intense James Dean like&#13;
ire-med student; both of whom&#13;
!Xie motorcycles and talk their&#13;
lrand of jive with the aplomb of&#13;
111 ideal. I found, toor that these&#13;
~utiful people were doubling&#13;
18 guardians for a colony of&#13;
SIDall children, who, because of&#13;
their youth have all been saved&#13;
for a time from the disease.&#13;
They retrieve Heston to save&#13;
themselves, for his blood can be&#13;
used to reproduce the serum&#13;
that could save the pitiful&#13;
remains of mankind. He -is&#13;
obliged and delighted to find&#13;
that he is not alone.&#13;
The immediate danger of&#13;
Richie's death (a colony&#13;
member) brings Neville to the&#13;
rescue. Work begins on a serum&#13;
and the aforementioned girl&#13;
with the ,cliche, "If I were the&#13;
only boy in the world and you&#13;
were the only girl", ringing&#13;
ironically true. Reference is&#13;
made again arrd again to&#13;
Neville's killing of the tertiary&#13;
cases as the now recovered&#13;
young boy finally makes an&#13;
attempt to save these wretched · few, and in turn is killed by&#13;
them. In an action filled scene,&#13;
Neville finds the boy dead and&#13;
his woman a member of the "family" (She has recently&#13;
become a tertiary case). Heston&#13;
is eventually killed by the head&#13;
of the " family", leaving the&#13;
jaudience to wonder if&#13;
technological man is all that&#13;
bad, but giving food to the idea&#13;
that.he is destined to be exiled&#13;
from the planet earth and&#13;
replaced by some less volitable&#13;
form. The painstaking journey from&#13;
the beginning to the end of this&#13;
film lies more with the viewer&#13;
than with the film-maker. It is a&#13;
painstaking venture because we&#13;
must sort those things that are&#13;
placed before our eyes in the&#13;
. name of science fiction and&#13;
[ Recycle this Paper&#13;
WHAT&#13;
DOES IT&#13;
TAKE&#13;
YOUR&#13;
ENEMY?&#13;
Somethin g more than human love.&#13;
It tak Other es a more spiritual look at yourself and the&#13;
the fellow. An understanding that you both have&#13;
sam~ Father:.Mother, God.&#13;
lttak .. y es realizmg that no man is your enemy·&#13;
.... our real enemy i~ evil - hate envy, irritation, •1aven ,u... · '&#13;
ha ge. "uen these are overcome you find you&#13;
Veno enemy.&#13;
!~~ou Would· like to know God better, come in&#13;
read. Or borrow a book to read at home.&#13;
CJiRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM&#13;
302 Sixth Street Racine&#13;
those things revealed to us as&#13;
cor!ly symbolism. While we are&#13;
trying to figure out how they&#13;
cleared the busy streets of Los&#13;
Angeles in the name of Warner . ~rothers, we must also strain to&#13;
i~ore the _most c?mical long · haired eqmvalents of present&#13;
~Y ~~itators who are sadly&#13;
1dentif1ed with a general&#13;
decadence and an incomplete&#13;
model of the dying philosophies&#13;
of the past.&#13;
· S~mehow_ the contemporary&#13;
audience Just doesn't jump&#13;
anymore when something leaps · out of the dark. It might be nice&#13;
if we could learn to jump again&#13;
i. . . or at least turn around and&#13;
! see what's going down.&#13;
; This film is not one that&#13;
I l~aves the audience in reflective 1 silence but the rough iden- , tification available to those who&#13;
sometimes crave it is available&#13;
. in the form of the classic&#13;
Heston. It suffers from an&#13;
economic place in the world of&#13;
films and is maligned by the ,productivity of a market . . . it&#13;
repeats. (Rating - on a five&#13;
point scale - 2)&#13;
The Parkside Film Society&#13;
has come out with its 1971-72&#13;
schedule and among their listed&#13;
presentations there are some&#13;
worthy of special note.&#13;
The Hawks and The&#13;
Sparrows, Sept. 29&#13;
See You at Mao, Nov. 3&#13;
Wild Strawberries, Dec. 8&#13;
Nights of Cabiria, Feb. 23&#13;
Jules and Jim, March 7&#13;
Un Chien Andalou, March 29&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help? We w,H help any woman regardless&#13;
of race. rehg1on, age or t1nan c1al&#13;
status. We do nol moralize. bul&#13;
merely help women obtain qual1hed&#13;
Doctors for abor11ons. if !his 1s&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early aborhon 1s more&#13;
simple and less costly, and can be&#13;
performed on an out patient basis.&#13;
Call:&#13;
3·12 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
AHl1t1nce of Chicago&#13;
8 AM-10 PM-7 DAYS A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION&#13;
400 Main St.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
Racine specializing i'! Connie&#13;
and Jacquelin shoes&#13;
------------••••••••N•--•••••••N•••••--••N••----&#13;
Coming!&#13;
This Saturday Sept. 11&#13;
'The Gregory James Group'&#13;
•w{scoosin's most l)OPU]ar and&#13;
excitin colle ni&amp;fltclub I.tr. tion•&#13;
S11J[E\JT ACTtVITIES BJILDING&#13;
$1.S:iwrn, PAR&lt;SIDE 8: WISCCNStN 1.0.&#13;
S ecial For Students&#13;
a.---------&#13;
$1.00 OFF&#13;
Large Pizza&#13;
50$0FF&#13;
Small Pizza&#13;
NOON SPECIAL&#13;
Mon-Fri 11:30-1:_30&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
99¢&#13;
first beer 10¢ with parkside I.D.&#13;
PIZZA HUT®&#13;
North on J01n Avenoe in Kenos11u&#13;
I&#13;
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_________________________ I J &#13;
Pale I EWSCOPE Sep&amp;emberl. 1,.,1 African History Offered&#13;
A course in modem African&#13;
history taught by an expert in&#13;
the field will be offered for the&#13;
first time this Fall at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Caned "Africa Since 1880."&#13;
the three-credit course also&#13;
carries political science credit&#13;
and will be taught by John&#13;
Harbeson, assistant professor&#13;
of political science at UW-P.&#13;
Harbeson lived in Kenya from&#13;
1965 to 191&gt;7while doing field&#13;
research for his doctoral&#13;
disser"'tion. During that period&#13;
he also was a research fellow&#13;
and lecturer at the Institute for&#13;
Development Studies at&#13;
University College in Nairobi.&#13;
He is widely published in the&#13;
field and is nu~tin Swahili, one&#13;
of the principal languages of&#13;
East Africa.&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO.SPEClAL PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
, I l,ROU"'O 8FF.~ ,.RULED cOU!'o:TRY&#13;
o t'RF~CU CRUST HAM -,. CHEFSE. O~&#13;
BRFAD D~F~SFl&gt; WIIOLF WHfAT 8li~&#13;
\\ ITIt CRISP WITII lETTUCE&#13;
l F_TTUCF ASP OUR TO\tATO A '0"&#13;
SPFOA.I MILE '1A'tO,'A1SF.&#13;
80c .80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIl'l F Of( "'FR o- BlIRCFR C1lfF.SF.&#13;
t\ACO If rnILt-. T(",,\T( A'\O MAY&#13;
n .... I'\F /l rOAST 90c&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
The course Will&#13;
establishment f ~&#13;
control in Africa 0 ~&#13;
resistance to .~.&#13;
the estabJishm~ ...&#13;
lodependence. 01 ~&#13;
The course Will&#13;
the day. frOm 1Ileet .....&#13;
Tuesdays and 1l:1O-1i~&#13;
Greenquist Hall ~ :&#13;
Rd. campus. ~~~ 'toi&#13;
part-time studi~ _&#13;
Wednesday and II ~~&#13;
nights this week "..,s&#13;
Friday and d,:,::,:"'lIlelll,&#13;
week of classes - ..... IIle ..&#13;
7, all at GreenQl~ .....&#13;
sWEA Plans Campau!&#13;
i&#13;
r:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ The Student Wisconsin Education Association, SWEA (at Parkside is a new student organization on&#13;
campus this year. Currently there are approximately&#13;
25 chapters throughout the state with over 3,000&#13;
members.&#13;
A membership in the organization is unified with&#13;
the local Parkside chapter, the state WEA (Wisconsin&#13;
Education Association) and the NEA (National&#13;
Education Association).&#13;
A student benefits by joining the organization in&#13;
so far as he can receive a better understanding of the&#13;
field and future of education, through programs,&#13;
literature and conferences offered.&#13;
At the local level Parkside's Chapter will offer&#13;
programs once a month with various topics concerning&#13;
future educators, such as contracts and&#13;
negotiations, teaching positions - applying for, and&#13;
conducting your interview, student teaching, field&#13;
experiences and interning to name a few, At Parkside&#13;
there is also a desire to establish a legislative committee.&#13;
This committee would follow state and&#13;
national legislation affecting education and lobbying&#13;
for the best concerns of education.&#13;
From your unified membership with WEA you&#13;
receive a free ticket to the state teachers convention&#13;
in Milwaukee on November 4 and 5. Plus WEA's&#13;
"Wisconsin Journal of Education" ,a monthly journal&#13;
for educators and the WEA "News and Views", a&#13;
newspaper about the WEA, along with the SWEA&#13;
NORTH 3'3, 1 SH~flIQAN ROAO SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
Mus·ic:Committee presents&#13;
CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE&#13;
BLUES BAND&#13;
sz&#13;
(c:heap)&#13;
a/so appearing Springback James&#13;
SEPTEMBER 22 7:10 PM&#13;
WM UNION BALLROOM&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
The NEA part of your membershi&#13;
journal of the NEA "Today'. Ed Polltqlll&#13;
monthly magazine, "Impact" l;IC&amp;Uoa", lilt.&#13;
National Education Association ~ ~ tbe&#13;
membership. It is a release of even~ botiaa II'"&#13;
of 'the SNEA. and......&#13;
.... All 10 all the benefits add to&#13;
several newspapers, "Impact", ': con24~&#13;
programs about education, insurance:::- ....&#13;
conference. • t:IIIItII&#13;
Once you become a teacher to j ,&#13;
and your local, it would cost about':.0u:..~&#13;
your local. ,However. as a student •&#13;
above mentioned benefits for just 5 :.. NliIhI&#13;
Membership forms are availabl&#13;
office in Tallent Hall, or from Car~ It ..&#13;
Kentucky St., Racine, 634-5624,whowID0::-&#13;
to give you more information ..&#13;
The first meeting will be held in mld&#13;
at a date, time and place to be a!JnlJlJll:tlJl."'"&#13;
weekend camput and conference illlDod ...&#13;
first part of October. This will be held lip"&#13;
Wisconsin and is being sponsored by bolIl=....&#13;
Minnesota Education Association and lIte':::-&#13;
The WEA also offers a $100,000 UablUt)'&#13;
plan should you become involved in a .....--&#13;
from bodily injury or property ~ ~&#13;
bursement of attorney fees up to $1 000 and •&#13;
bond is also included. "&#13;
Tickets at 1be SfUdeIlI Affairs office, pUent Hall&#13;
='iii~~ARKSIDE VILLAGE APARTMENT&#13;
I,'~ij FOR AS LITTLE AS $180.00 PER SEMESTER&#13;
I, . II I&#13;
, lUI '...1.+ ' I&#13;
. ,'II II==I¥~&#13;
~&#13;
2 ROOMSUITE&#13;
$180PER SEMESTERo·&#13;
• (0&#13;
BUNK&#13;
BeD&#13;
3~OOMSUITE&#13;
$~.25 Pl:R SEMESTERo&#13;
ltJj]&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
OCCUPANCY SEPT. 1.1971- CONTACT BI ° • STUD AT PARKSIDE VILLAGE 51TE OR CA~~ iAGELOR DAN LEMBERG&#13;
ENTS PER 5UITE _ UNFURNISHED .U) 272·0.60 COLLECT&#13;
OWN . ER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC&#13;
MILWAUKEE WISCONSIN . ...&#13;
DEVELOPER' • E'~~ • GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp; RESIDENTIAL C '''~&#13;
17.. N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN&#13;
HE RANCH&#13;
)11 SH fi!QA ROAD SOUTH 7 500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
African History Ottered&#13;
A course in modern African&#13;
history taught by an expert in&#13;
the field will be offered for the&#13;
first time this Fall at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Called "Africa Since 1880,"&#13;
the three-credit course also&#13;
carries political science credit&#13;
and will be taught by John&#13;
Harbeson, assistant professor&#13;
of political science at UW-P.&#13;
Harbeson lived in Kenya from&#13;
1965 to 1967 while doing field&#13;
research for his doctoral&#13;
dissertation. During that period&#13;
he also was a research fellow&#13;
and lecturer at the Institute for&#13;
Development Studies at&#13;
University College in Nairobi.&#13;
He is widely published in the&#13;
field and is flu~t in Swahili, one·&#13;
of the principal languages of&#13;
East Africa.&#13;
The course w·u&#13;
establishment I r cover&#13;
control in Africa O Eur0pe&#13;
resistance to • rnove · col · q ~e establishmen~lllalisrn&#13;
independence. of Ar&#13;
The course Will&#13;
the day from rneet&#13;
Tuesdays and Th ll:ao.12&#13;
Greenquist Hali llf'Sda&#13;
Rd. campus. R on the I\'&#13;
part-time studen~f!tra!i~&#13;
~ednesday and be~&#13;
rughts this week d _'lnur&#13;
Friday and d~· uri~ tile&#13;
week of classes ~fnn ~ o&#13;
7, all at Greenquist Haa;f&#13;
SWEA Plans Campout&#13;
~.;-;.-;.";.";.";.";.-;.";.";.';.';.':.';.";.";.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.';.~';.';.~';ii';.';.';.';ii';.';';.i';i~J The Student Wisconsin Education Association, SWEA ( at Parkside is a new student organization on&#13;
campus this year. Currently there are approximately&#13;
25 chapters throughout the state with over 3,000&#13;
members.&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
The NEA part of your membersh'&#13;
journal of the NEA "Today's Ed 1&#13;
P ~ffers&#13;
monthly magazine, "Impact" ~cation'',&#13;
National Education Association ~o :. lhe&#13;
membership. It is a release of eve ~ ibutioo&#13;
of the SNEA. n and ha&#13;
Mus·ic Committee presents&#13;
CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE&#13;
BLUES BAND&#13;
sz&#13;
(cheap)&#13;
al o app ~ring Springback James&#13;
SEPTEMBER 22 7:30 PM&#13;
WM UNION BALLROOM&#13;
Tid&lt;ets at 1fle Sflment Affairs office, rallent Hall&#13;
A membership in the organization is unified with&#13;
the local Parkside chapter, the state WEA (Wisconsin&#13;
Education Association) and the NEA (National&#13;
Education Association).&#13;
A student benefits by joining the organization in&#13;
so far as he can receive a better understanding of th£&#13;
field and future of education, through programs,&#13;
literature and conferences offered.&#13;
At the local level Parkside's Chapter will offer&#13;
programs once a month with various topics concerning&#13;
future educators, such as contracts and&#13;
negotiations, teaching positions - applying for, and&#13;
conducting your interview, student teaching, field&#13;
experiences and interning to name a few. At Parkside&#13;
there is also a desire to establish a legislative committee.&#13;
This committee would follow state and&#13;
national legislation affecting education and lobbying&#13;
for the best concerns of education.&#13;
~rom your _ unified membership with WEA you&#13;
receive a free ticket to the state teachers convention&#13;
in Milwaukee on November 4 and 5. Plus WEA's&#13;
"Wisconsin Journal of Education" , a monthly journal&#13;
for educators and the WEA "News and Views" a&#13;
newspaper about the WEA, along with the SWEA&#13;
. .. . All in all the benefits add u t&#13;
several newspapers "Impact" t O 24 mag&#13;
programs about edu~ation ins~a convenuoo&#13;
conference. ' nee and a&#13;
Once you become a teacher to . .&#13;
and your local, it would cost aboul~1&#13;
~ th;~'EA,&#13;
your local. _However, as a student you~&#13;
above mentioned benefits for just 5 b rectn&#13;
. ME:mbership forms are availableu:S·&#13;
office m Tallent Hall, or from Carl G the&#13;
Kentucky St., Racine 634-5624 who -11 reeoe l&#13;
t . .' , w1aJso o give you more information&#13;
The first meeting will be held in .d&#13;
at a date, time and place to be ann~~ced lat&#13;
~eekend camput and conference is lined&#13;
first part of October. This will be h Id · up !or&#13;
W. . d" . e m H&#13;
~sconsm an 1s ~mg sponsored by both th&#13;
Minnesota Education Association and the~&#13;
The WEA also offers a $100,000 liability. :U&#13;
plan should you become involved in a suit&#13;
from bodily injury or property damage&#13;
burse~ent of _attorney fees up to $l,OOO and 8&#13;
bond 1s also included.&#13;
~::.-.11~ARKSIDE VILLAGE APARTMENTS&#13;
=-- '· FOR AS LITTLE AS $180.00 PER SEMESTER&#13;
~,1&#13;
'&#13;
il&#13;
OCCUPANCY SEPT 1 1971 CONT&#13;
ATPARl&lt;SIOE0&#13;
ViL - ACTBILLPAGELOROANL&#13;
• 'STUDENTS PER SUITE - u~~~~~::iEOOR CALL (414) 272-0460 COLL~~~ERG&#13;
OWNER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC&#13;
DEV MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN . ~5,I&#13;
ELOPER: GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp; RESIDENTIAL CENTE&#13;
1744 N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN &#13;
CroSS Country Outlook Good&#13;
. Jim Casper&#13;
b) scope staff&#13;
of the Newleus of returning&#13;
gnUC ".&#13;
~siron eral promIsmg&#13;
",..,.. pl~~l~~:r the hopes of&#13;
fttShrnen Lawson's cross&#13;
·"en Bob which will be&#13;
"",trY . lea~ughest schedule """g Its&#13;
fit! . from last year's&#13;
Return,JOglost one dual meet&#13;
:tllm wnlened the District 14&#13;
ptur ik JIldca ionship are Mi e&#13;
\t1A champ r and last year's&#13;
Nilt. a semo , . th Chuck ~. along Wl .&#13;
capla~ Tim McGilsky, Jtm&#13;
[l!ttnt, Gary' Lance, and "·&lt;adden,&#13;
"" itt all sophomores. th Merrl , t d&#13;
!II who are expec e ~h"'en .&#13;
r·.......·the team are Lucia,"&#13;
• belPRudy Alvarez, Den~ls&#13;
&amp;058, Dennis Carlson, Kim&#13;
lIel. Tom Williamson, fbitrnore,&#13;
-' Craig Govekar.&#13;
P' an outstanding&#13;
Rosa't from Ceylon, won the&#13;
,esJlOCnd 10000 meter races at&#13;
ilOOA~anGames in 1970. The&#13;
Ibt. star from Ceylon chose&#13;
=de despite having offers&#13;
WestGermany, the S~vlet&#13;
~ and Japan to continue&#13;
~OOling in their country.&#13;
Parkside Athletic Director&#13;
TIm Rosandich attended the&#13;
AiaD Games as part of his role&#13;
rI advisor to sports. for&#13;
PbilippinePresident Ferdinand&#13;
JIartoS. Coach Laws~n. ~as&#13;
.. as coach of the Philippine ""* team, a half year project&#13;
.. Parkside auspices which&#13;
OIled last December.&#13;
Ilosandichand Lawson talked&#13;
II RlEa and Ceylon officials&#13;
bgtheAsian Games and the&#13;
tI)' was cleared for Rosa to&#13;
_ to Parkside.&#13;
Aside from being so fast,&#13;
bas another distinguishing&#13;
cteristic - he runs&#13;
shoes. Whether or not&#13;
-m decide to wear shoes&#13;
be will be a man to watch&#13;
on the. cross country trails this&#13;
fall.&#13;
Alvarez, from Racine, was&#13;
the state high schOOl champ in&#13;
cross country, while Biel, from&#13;
Wausau, has run the mile in&#13;
4: 16.&#13;
While the team has many&#13;
gifted runners, it will still be&#13;
difficult to equal last year's&#13;
record because of the rigors of&#13;
this season's schedule.&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept. 21 - Whitewater,&#13;
Stevens Point, Carthage _&#13;
Whitewater,&#13;
Sept. 25 - North Central&#13;
College - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 1 - Minnesota. Drake_&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
Oct. 2 - UW.Milwaukee.&#13;
BelOIt - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 9 - Platteville State&#13;
Invitational - PlatteVille.&#13;
Oct. 16 - Northwestern&#13;
Loyola - Evanston&#13;
Oct. 23 - ~Iarquette, VI.&#13;
Chicago Circle - l\lilwaukee.&#13;
Oct. 30 - Loras - Dubuque&#13;
Nov. 6 - USTFF Mid&#13;
America Meet - Parkside&#13;
Nov. t3 - NAIA District 14 _&#13;
Eau Claire.&#13;
Nov. 20 - NAIA Championship&#13;
- Kansas City. Mo.&#13;
Soccer to Start&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Parkside openes its&#13;
challenging soccer schedule on&#13;
Sept. 11 when Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny's boosters will battle&#13;
amongst themselves in an intersquad&#13;
tussle.&#13;
The first outside competition&#13;
will bea week later with a home&#13;
game against Polonia.&#13;
Coach Martiny's team will&#13;
begin practice on Sept. 7, and he&#13;
must get a good look at the&#13;
squad before he can assess its&#13;
chances for success with the&#13;
difficult schedule that the team&#13;
faces .&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept. 11. - lntersquad&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sept. 18 - PoIonia&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sept. 25 - Wisconsin ·Junior&#13;
All-Stars - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 2 - University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
Parkside&#13;
_MEETINGS&#13;
1IlttR: Sept. 7 at tne Soccer field; 3 p.m.&#13;
COUNTRY:Sept. 8 at the athletic bleachers; 4 p.m.&#13;
1IILLEYBALL:Nov. 15 at the Racine UMCA; 3 p.m.&#13;
_N'S GYMNASTICS: Sept. 8, at Park H.S. Girls' Gym; 6 p.m.&#13;
-'~'SFENCING: Sept. 8, at Keno~ha Campus Basement; I p.m.&#13;
_N'S VOLLEYBALL: See Miss Morris at the Office of Athlel1cs&#13;
Wllbone553-2245.&#13;
Ilnmural f.ootball.....&#13;
All girls interested in being&#13;
cheerleaders or pom·pom girls&#13;
contact Miss Morris at the&#13;
Office of. Athletics, 553-2245.&#13;
Seasontickets to all Parkside home athletic events will be on&#13;
.. at registration.&#13;
Priced at $5 f.or both students and faCUlty, the price for faculty&#13;
IIdltaffWiU jump to $10, the general public fee, after regustratwn.&#13;
liD 1lte pass will admit the bearer to varsity athletic contests m&#13;
1J.,;~~rsltySports, including cross country, soccer, bask,etball,&#13;
~I gymnastics, indoor track, wrestling, golf, tenms and -.... track.&#13;
_For further !nf?rmation contact the, Office of Athletics, 553.&#13;
~1'~9BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
UOR STORE,BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Oct. 3 - Notre Dame _&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 8~9- Tournament with&#13;
Eastern Illinois, Quincy CoJlege&#13;
and Ohio State'- Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 13;"":"'" University of&#13;
Illinois-Circle Campus&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Oct. 16 - WSU-Platteville _&#13;
Platteville.&#13;
Oct. 21 Marquette&#13;
University - Milwaukee.&#13;
Oct. 23 - University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Green Bay - Green&#13;
Bay.&#13;
Oct. 20 - Southern Illinois&#13;
University - Away.&#13;
Nov. 3 - Lake Forest College&#13;
- Parkside,&#13;
Nov. 6 - Northern Illinois&#13;
University - Parkside.&#13;
Nov. 10 - Drake - Parkside.&#13;
Nov. 20 - NAJA National&#13;
Tournament - Kansas City.&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th 5t. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
HAVE A 6000 TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
e&#13;
Campi.'.&#13;
PO ••• r&#13;
Gallery&#13;
also 'Lol'e' and' oft Touch' gm:ting {tJ,.d.1&#13;
PARK DRUGS&#13;
e In K ''10&#13;
I to&#13;
STUDENT ALTIVITIES BLDG&#13;
R, POPCORN VENDING MACHINES,&#13;
FEATURING BEE , HOT LUNCH EVERY&#13;
GAMES, AND LOUNGE AR~UR"-&#13;
NOON HOUR MON-THUR 9 AM-tO PM&#13;
9 AM-l AM&#13;
FRIDAY pROGR,AMMED EVENTS ONLY SAT-SUN FOR&#13;
cross Country Outlook Good&#13;
Jim Casper b} ' wscope staff&#13;
of the Ne leus of returning g nuc . · g Ii ~tron several prom1sm&#13;
r, ers pl~s lster the hopes of&#13;
rnen ° Lawson's cross&#13;
oach Bob which will be&#13;
trY team ghest schedule ir.g its tou&#13;
,..er . from last year's&#13;
Return_rng 1 st one dual meet&#13;
(!I which~ the District 14&#13;
.a::d captur ionship are Mike&#13;
.\IA cham_p and last year's a senior, h k l)eltl, along with C u~ capiain, r· McGilsky, Jim an im d ~rn ' Gary . Lance, an --"adden,&#13;
ci- ·tt all sophomores. eilh Merri w' ho are expected tw·tunen ·&#13;
on the cross country trails this fall.&#13;
Alvarez, from Racine, was&#13;
the state high school champ in&#13;
cross country, while Biel, from&#13;
Wausau, has run the mile in&#13;
4: 16.&#13;
While the team has many&#13;
gifted runners, it will still be&#13;
difficult to equal last year's&#13;
record because of the rigors of&#13;
this season's schedule.&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept. . 21 - Whitewater,&#13;
Stevens Point, Carthage - Whitewater.&#13;
Sept. 25 - North Central&#13;
College - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 1 - Minne ota, Drake _ Des Moines.&#13;
Oc_t. 2 - l:W-l\Iilwaukee, Bel01t - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 9 - Platte\"ille ta ·e Invitational - Platte\·ille&#13;
Oct. 16 - ~orthwe tern, Loyola - Evanston .&#13;
Oct. 23 - Marquette, Uf.&#13;
Chicago Circle _ l\lilwaukee&#13;
Oct. 30 - Loras - Dubuque&#13;
Nov. 6 - t.:STFF :\lid&#13;
America Meet - Park ide.&#13;
Nov. 13 - NAIA District H -&#13;
Eau Claire.&#13;
Nov . 20 - ~AIA Championship&#13;
- Kansa City, :\lo.&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
ri• h team are Lucian ., help t de Alvarez, Dennis . Ru Y K , Dennis Carlson, im Biel, Tom Williamson, Soccer to Start&#13;
•&#13;
• li1!ltrnore,&#13;
g Govekar. Crru an outstanding&#13;
R~sac,t from Ceylon, won the&#13;
~-~nd lO,OOO meter races at&#13;
Asian . Games in 1970. The&#13;
uig star from Ceylon chose&#13;
=side despite having off~rs&#13;
West Germany, the S~v1et&#13;
and Japan to contmue&#13;
t. ~ooling in their country.&#13;
Parkside Athletic Director&#13;
Rosandich attended the&#13;
:n Games as part of his role&#13;
advisor to sports_ for&#13;
ftilippine President Ferdmand&#13;
l(arcos. Coach Lawson was&#13;
rllere as coach of the Philippine&#13;
1rack team, a half year proj~ct&#13;
er Parkside auspices which&#13;
mded last December. .&#13;
Rosandich and Lawson talked&#13;
IO Rosa and Ceylon officials&#13;
airing the Asian Games and the&#13;
was cleared for Rosa to&#13;
e to Parkside. .&#13;
·de from being so fast,&#13;
has another distinguishing&#13;
racteristic - he runs&#13;
litboot shoes. Whether or not&#13;
will decide to wear shoes&#13;
, he will be a man to watch&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Parkside openes its&#13;
challenging soccer schedule on&#13;
Sept. 11 when Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny's boosters will battle&#13;
amongst themselves in an intersquad&#13;
tussle.&#13;
The first outside competition&#13;
will be a week later with a home&#13;
game against Polonia.&#13;
Coach Martiny' s team will&#13;
begin practice on Sept. 7, and he&#13;
must get a good look at the&#13;
squad before he can assess its&#13;
chances for success with the&#13;
difficult schedule that th~ team&#13;
faces.&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept. 11 - Intersquad&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sept. 18 - Polonia&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sept. 25 - Wisconsin Junior&#13;
All-Stars - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 2 - University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
TEA.\! :'ttEETINGS&#13;
ER: Sept. 7 at the soccer field; 3 p.m.&#13;
·COUNTRY: Sept. 8 at the athletic bleachers; 4 p.m.&#13;
LLEYBALL: Nov. 15 at the Racine UMCA; 3 p.m.&#13;
IE~· GYMNASTICS: Sept. 8, at Park H.S. Girls' Gym; 6 p.m.&#13;
llES' FENCING: Sept. 8, at Kenosha Campus Ba~ement; 1 P-~-&#13;
IE~· VOLLEYBALL: See Miss Morris at the Office of Athletics phone 553-2245.&#13;
lllramural football .....&#13;
All girls interested in being&#13;
cheerleaders or porn-porn girls&#13;
contact Miss Morris at the&#13;
Office o( Athletics, 553-2245.&#13;
Season tickets to all Parkside home athletic events will be on at registration.&#13;
Pticect at $5 for both students and faculty, the price for fac~lty&#13;
tart Will jump to $10, the general public fee, after regustrat10~-&#13;
The pass will admit the bearer to varsity athletic conteSts m&#13;
. arsity sports, including cross country, soccer, bask_etball,&#13;
•J ng, &amp;Ymnastics, indoor track, wrestling, golf, tenms and "'OOr track&#13;
_F·or furth~r information contact the, Office of Athletics, 553·&#13;
~:~&#13;
9 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
UOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Oct. 3 - otre Dame - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 8-9 - Tournament with&#13;
Eastern Illinois, Quincy College&#13;
and Ohio State - Parkside.&#13;
Oct. 13,- - Universit) of&#13;
Illinois-Circle Campus&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Oct. 16 - WSU-Plattevllle - Pia tteville.&#13;
Oct. 21 Marquette&#13;
University - Milwaukee.&#13;
Oct. 23 - University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Green Bay - Green&#13;
Bay.&#13;
Oct. 20 - Southern Illinoi&#13;
University - Away.&#13;
Nov. 3 - Lake Forest College&#13;
- Parkside.&#13;
Nov. 6 - Northern Illinoi&#13;
University - Parkside.&#13;
Nov. 10 - Drake - Parkside.&#13;
Nov. 20 - NAIA Xational&#13;
Tournament - Kansas City.&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
-FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKE:E&#13;
APPLE A&#13;
Complet&#13;
Po ter&#13;
Gallery&#13;
also 'Lore' and t oft Tou 'J•&#13;
PARK DRUGS&#13;
J ust north of rashington Rood on 22nd&#13;
10 DI&#13;
DENT AC.'TJV/TIES BLDG&#13;
STU ORN VENDl'-'G MACHINES, FEATURING BEER, POPC , HOT LUNCH EVERY&#13;
GAMES, AND LOUNGE AR~URS&#13;
NOON HOUR MON-THUR 9 AM-10 PM&#13;
FRIDAY 9 .AM-1 AM E VE&#13;
FOR PROGR;:.'-1,MED SAT-SUN&#13;
;&#13;
nd&#13;
10 &#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
John&#13;
Denver&#13;
Coming&#13;
to Parkside&#13;
John Denver. popular smger and songwriter,&#13;
",III preoent a concert on Kenosha on October 2&#13;
pomored b)" the University of wtsccestnPark.&#13;
Ide tudent Activities Office. it was announ&#13;
d today.&#13;
Dem·.r ""II appear at Tremper high school&#13;
uduenum at 8 pm. Ticket outlets and inIorrnauen&#13;
w Ill be available by sept. l.&#13;
~twer currently ha the No.3 nit single in the&#13;
country, "Take Me Home Country Roads," and his&#13;
Ilbum '.p ms. Prayers and Promises" is among&#13;
lhe be I IIIng LPs&#13;
One 0( the most prolific and successful&#13;
songwriters on the popular music scene for&#13;
veral )'ears, Denver's hits Include "Leaving on a&#13;
Jet Plane" and many others. He also has a&#13;
reputation as being one of the better popular&#13;
guitarists.&#13;
Denver has emerged as a fulJ blown star in his&#13;
own right after becoming known originally as the&#13;
replacement for Chad Mitchell in the Chad Mitchell&#13;
Trio.&#13;
The appearance of Denver will~kick off u~-P's&#13;
1971-72 Student Activities Office popular concert&#13;
series. In its short history, UW-Parkside has&#13;
sponsored such popular greens as Chicago, Blood,&#13;
Sweat and Tears, The Fifth Dimension, The First&#13;
Edition, Your Father's Mustache, The New&#13;
Christy Minstrels and Pete Seeger.&#13;
Curfew&#13;
(Continued from Page)&#13;
Coalition, he said.&#13;
"We're loosley formed; there's no formal&#13;
membership. There are people who are&#13;
members who don't even know they're members,"&#13;
he asserted in the true spirit of Abbie and&#13;
Jerry.&#13;
Why didn't he plead his case before the Park&#13;
Commission? "We have no plans to work within&#13;
the system. Idon't think there's any way left to&#13;
work effectively within it. It's not really going to&#13;
help to speak ~to the council. You're better off&#13;
speaking to kids your own age," he answered.&#13;
If the ordinance is passed, what will be their&#13;
response? "Confrontation; or aUeast an attempt&#13;
at it". he said.&#13;
~&#13;
s~rrn~&#13;
~ Sept. 9 7 ~.tfv,&#13;
Poor Boy Boots F'~..''~""""." . \-.",.;, -; :"',~&#13;
..... - c;;N-'&gt;&#13;
'. • '-'&gt; "cit·,&#13;
Flore Jeans ' .&#13;
and Pants&#13;
from $8 to $14&#13;
Poloton ond Mushroom&#13;
Buffed Buck, Natural&#13;
Crepe out-sole&#13;
Si.os 7\\ ·12&#13;
516 Monument Square&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Student Health Insurante&#13;
All full-time students are reminded that they may enron .&#13;
Health Insurance Program offered by the University :lhe~&#13;
Parkside Student Gov~rnment Association throUgh BlueS&#13;
Surgical Care Blue Shield. Craoi iIll&#13;
Brochures and applications are available at the foU .&#13;
Business Office, Room 230, Tallent Hall, Phone ~,&#13;
Edith Isenberg, Campus Nurse, Room 332, Greenquist~&#13;
553-2366. •..... ""'-&#13;
Information Cenler, Room 201, Tallent Hall, Phone&#13;
The deadline for enrollment m the plan is Sept. 17 ,:-&#13;
previous date of Sept. 24. . ,&#13;
Chaplains on Campus&#13;
Father Gary Kees -.Rt. 4, Box 613, Kenosha, Wis.552_&#13;
Sister Catherine Gibbons - 5510 58th Ave" Ken05ba lin.&#13;
-&#13;
of self-understanding, development, and life orientatioo&#13;
Student Chaplains - offering and facilitating lP'OWth&#13;
'--&#13;
Ia~&#13;
the Gospel and solidified in group religious e&gt;&lt;perienee._II&#13;
Speci al Miss ion&#13;
Highlights Course Select.&#13;
The casual observer looking Science and Soci&#13;
over a .univ~rsity of Wisconsin- This faU, for ~-a..&#13;
Parkstde timetable for fall evening cour~&#13;
classes finds, in addition to temporary AmericU. 'c.&#13;
famiHa~ s~unding. c.our~es, and "Urbanism lid&#13;
terms like It~dustr18.hzatlOn, banization" arebeiac-..&#13;
!Doder~ A~eflcan society, ~nd sociology, asweDaa.&#13;
urbanization reoccurr mg course in IIb:=&#13;
regardless of the field of study. Psychology."&#13;
That's by design, because UPP's&#13;
special educational mission&#13;
is to give attention to the unique&#13;
problems of a modern, industrtal,'&#13;
urban.society.&#13;
. Parkside's special mission is&#13;
highlighted in the School .of&#13;
Modern Industry which this fall&#13;
offers some 70 courses during&#13;
the day and evening in such&#13;
fields as engineering science,&#13;
computing, business&#13;
manageme~t~. managemeItt&#13;
science, labor "economics arid&#13;
directly related courses in&#13;
economics.&#13;
But in addition to courses in&#13;
the School of Modern Industry,&#13;
(ncreasing attention is being&#13;
focused '-!n UW-P's special&#13;
mi.ssion in the social sciences,&#13;
sCiences and humanities&#13;
divisions within the College of&#13;
During the day 8ludIIII.,&#13;
choose from sucIl cu.lIII.&#13;
"Problems or .-.&#13;
~erican Soeiety" ...&#13;
science elective'&#13;
dustrializatioo or tbi&#13;
World" forhistGry........&#13;
credit; "Emer....,&#13;
Metropolitian ADNrIta ••&#13;
history course; uC .....&#13;
Transportatioo" ~ •&#13;
contemporary uped i&#13;
field; "Heredity,&#13;
and Society" for&#13;
and a nlDDber111&#13;
courses bearing&#13;
modern man and ...&#13;
vironment.&#13;
Registration for aD lJP.p!ll&#13;
classes continueslhll"_&#13;
during the first weet el__&#13;
beginning Tuesday, l!epl. 7&#13;
Ifsthe&#13;
real,thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
• ®&#13;
...&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS 1961Austin-He-aley 3000, After 5 p.m.&#13;
539·2407 (Burlington).&#13;
1961 Ford Torino J02·V8. Low mil.&#13;
Automatic, pow.,.- steering. Radio,&#13;
Heat •• 652-n..s. see at 5234 - 44th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
"Sens" Porta~IY typewriter. Good&#13;
condition. Comes with carrying&#13;
case. Will sell for SJO.DO. Call 637.&#13;
......&#13;
lNt HonOI 17Jcc SC'.."bI.... Ell:.&#13;
c:onct, IGS. tnclUCln 2 helmets. (All&#13;
Ed. Qt.." ...&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3136.&#13;
... "ell 2 cit' " ... cnop. 1250. c.ll&#13;
aa..-.....s or t.U-m 1. 1967 Impala Super Sport 327, After&#13;
4:30 p.m., 3022 • 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 R5, 1971, Exc. Cond.&#13;
6S4-sn4, Eve.&#13;
Public Wholesale CIMners. 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. low Prices. Check&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
..,. "'mb, Arn ... lc.,. o.p.ndllbl.,&#13;
NStIC. Met ch~ •. W. 320t • 21th Sf_&#13;
1M 'Iamb. Am ... lc-.. DillHncr.bl •.&#13;
110 3* 2tIf'l St., Kenosh,.&#13;
Slide Rule $10.00. Cell 553-23045_&#13;
Skis - Mens. InClUding poles and&#13;
boots. 553-22A5.&#13;
Toa,,., IUIO.Steem Iron IS 00 Call 553-2345. . .&#13;
6SO TriumPh T.T. rebUilt engine.&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
helmets, UOO.OOor best offer. See at&#13;
"10 Pontlk Temp*sf, 2 dr., H.. G- 5723 - .MJth Ave.&#13;
toP. VI. Automatic. power ...... 1_ 6106-..... ....&#13;
1M ~ .... 'IT ... ~., 4 sp .•&#13;
m .... 1ft or c.lI AI eft., 6 p.m .• 651-&#13;
,..,.. S110 • 23rd Ave.&#13;
.... Opet KecMt, 1'" CoN'lr, 80th&#13;
000d &lt;oM eatl ...... '1. SS-IA3-2361&#13;
61 Amba-.dOr 4 dr. Mhn. 1UtO •••&#13;
cyl. T' .... recently ovwh..,led sns&#13;
call s,u2)U. .&#13;
• "'Y1"IOUttl .oecIr...."., 313. Gold&#13;
-'th 81-.::k ""'inyl 109. Ex c-''' ....~ 1757 ' ........ ~&#13;
Honda "1$0" M) per cent restored.&#13;
~ !lOme dutch work, $250.1XI.&#13;
-,.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and WOOds&#13;
$3.i6 new will setl tor $245. •&#13;
Legalize Marijuana Bumper.&#13;
Stickers. 5Oc: donation. Be at StUdent&#13;
Activities Building Wed. ~~~Sfl, very good condo '25. Call&#13;
For I Good night's Sleep _&#13;
w..... beds. 3701 - 60th street Call&#13;
650&amp;-9"7. .&#13;
Hand Painted milk Clns. Make us an&#13;
oft... cell 6$4.4162.&#13;
Stereo Component Sv.stem. 60 watt&#13;
-mPiifl.... h .. nta~le •• 2 spukers.&#13;
Moving, must seli. S50. Ph. 652.(1079.&#13;
BIilOWSE - ereaclloaf Book Sh&#13;
261 Broad Sfreet. Lake G.,evl, ~::&#13;
Wet SUit SS, Show tire &amp; rim $1. File&#13;
boxes $1 &amp; $1.50. call 634·3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab. 3 mo_ old. Good&#13;
DiSp. Call 511-7161 aft. 4 p.m.&#13;
2 Bedroom House. Parksldl! area.&#13;
Llv. R., DIning Room comb.,&#13;
Fireplace. over one acre ~and, 552-&#13;
9012.&#13;
Home grown TOMATOES. Concord&#13;
Grapes for eating or wine making.&#13;
6328 WaSh. Ave .• 633-3836.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
- Go Dance. 632·3785 or 633-3805 .&#13;
WANTED - Rambler Amerlcl!ln or&#13;
Vol kswagen - Good condition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694.1419.&#13;
Apt_ wanted. male junior will Share&#13;
expenses. call Kurt, 551.9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week, 7:45--4:30. Can $33-2415.&#13;
FORR&amp;NT-- .... '::&#13;
carpeted .,d air....._' .. :-&#13;
per mo. UtfUtiei trtd&#13;
at 652-3945 or .".. __&#13;
APARTMENT'0lI~.&#13;
MadIson. 3glrl.nIId 1 ~&#13;
modem,lUml"'OIl:-", ... "&#13;
.,d Bridge."" JItIf'o&#13;
person. Cali 635-21st. :.-.-'&#13;
LOsT • pOUlIlI_&#13;
--=:::.:.--;:: ....&#13;
PrescriptIOn 01_' c:,.;"..,&#13;
_ding ring.N':"' __&#13;
center. 2nd fIOOI". :..."....0"'&#13;
newscope&#13;
dassif.edt&#13;
are tree&#13;
plember&amp;, 19il&#13;
Student Health Insurance&#13;
John&#13;
All full-time students are reminded that they may enroll. Health Insurance Program offered by the University in thes&#13;
Parkside Student Gov~rnment Association through Bl~~ Wi&#13;
Surgical Care Blue Shield. CtOSg&#13;
Denver&#13;
Brochures and applications are available at the foll . Business Office, Room 230, Tallent Hall, Phone 55;~ing o&#13;
Edith Isenberg, Campus Nurse, Room 332, Greenquist ~ -&#13;
553-2366. U, Information Center, Room 201, Tallent Hall Phon&#13;
Coming&#13;
to Parkside&#13;
The deadline for enrollment in the plan is Sept. 17 ~5?3-2.14s previous date of Sept. 24. · l!c&#13;
~&#13;
StaU, ~&#13;
Jfw,,uJat S ¥ · 9 7 P' · nv.&#13;
Jet Plane" and many others. He also has a&#13;
reputatiqn as being one of the better popular&#13;
guitarists. Denver has emerged as a full blown star in his&#13;
own right after becoming known originally as the&#13;
replacement for Chad Mitchell in the Chad Mitchell&#13;
Trio.&#13;
The appearance of Denver will.kick off ~-P's&#13;
1971-72 Student Activities Office popular concert series In its short history, UW-Parkside has&#13;
sponsored such popular ~rouos as Chica~o. Blood, weal and Tears, The Fifth Dimension, The First&#13;
Edition, Your Father's Mustache, The New&#13;
Christy Minstrels and Pete Seeger.&#13;
C,Urfew&#13;
&lt; Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Coalition, he said.&#13;
"We're loosley formed; there's no formal&#13;
membership. There are people who are members who don't even know they're members,"&#13;
he asserted in the true spirit of Abbie and&#13;
Jerry.&#13;
Why didn't he plead his case before the Park&#13;
Commission'? "We have no plans to work within&#13;
the system. I don't think there's any way left to&#13;
work effectively within it. It's not really going to help to speak ·to the council. You're better off&#13;
speaking to kids your own age," he answered. If the ordinance is passed, what will be their&#13;
response'? "Confrontation; or atleast an attempt&#13;
at it", he said.&#13;
Poor Boy Boots F -;, ~· _&#13;
. , ~ \.: ,;, . f''. :'..&#13;
. ;&#13;
;-c•-~ %$~ , ' ,, · aclt ;&#13;
Poloton and Mushroom&#13;
Buffed Buck. Natural&#13;
Crepe out-sole&#13;
Sixes 7½-12&#13;
Flare Jeans·&#13;
and Pants&#13;
from sa to s 14&#13;
516 Monument Square&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Chaplains on Campus&#13;
Fat.her Gary ~ees -_Rt. 4, Box 613, Kenosha, Wis. 552- Sister Catherine Gibbons - 5510 58th Ave., Kenosh u .. 4438 a, n1&amp;,&#13;
Student Chapl~ns - offering and facilitating growth .&#13;
of self-understan~g_, ~ev~lopment, and _life orientation inlll_t&#13;
the Gospel and sohdihed in group religious experien,. li&amp;btt1 -.e.&#13;
Special Mission&#13;
Highlights Course Select•&#13;
The casual observer looking&#13;
over a University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
timetable for fall&#13;
classes finds, in addition to&#13;
familiar sounding courses,&#13;
terms like industrialization,&#13;
modern American society, and&#13;
urbanization reoccurring&#13;
regardless of the field of study. Thafs by design, because UPP's&#13;
special educational mission&#13;
is to give attention to the unique&#13;
problems of a modern, in·&#13;
dustrial; urban,.$ociety.&#13;
. Parkside's special mission is&#13;
highlighted in · the School · of&#13;
Modern Industry which this fall&#13;
offers some 70 courses during&#13;
the day and evening in such&#13;
fields as engineering science,&#13;
computing, business&#13;
managemeJ½t,, managemeqt&#13;
science, labor· economics arid&#13;
directly related courses in&#13;
economics.&#13;
But in addition to courses in&#13;
~e School of Modern Industry, increasing attention is being&#13;
focused on UW-P's special&#13;
mi_ssion in the social sciences,&#13;
sciences and humanities&#13;
divisions within the College of&#13;
Ifs the&#13;
real thing. Coke.&#13;
jj®&#13;
...&#13;
Science and Society&#13;
Thi~ fall, for example,&#13;
evening courses ,&#13;
temporary Americ~&#13;
and_ ''.U~~anism and l&#13;
ba~1zation are being offend&#13;
sociology, as well as an&#13;
course in "lnd11$&#13;
Psychology."&#13;
During the day students&#13;
choose from such courtes&#13;
"Problems of M •&#13;
American Society" as a&#13;
science elective·&#13;
dustrialization of ~ World" for history or economlcl&#13;
credit; "Emergence ti&#13;
Metropolitian America" • 1&#13;
history course; "Georgraphy el&#13;
Transportation" fOCUSUI oa a&#13;
contemporary aspect of&#13;
field; "Heredity, Popula&#13;
and Society" for science cndl&#13;
and a number of ecoqlr.al&#13;
courses bearing directly&#13;
modern man and his t&#13;
vironment.&#13;
Registration for all UP·P&#13;
classes continues this week&#13;
during the first week of&#13;
beginning Tuesday, Seit. 7&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
ff9 Honda 175cc Scumblw. Ex.&#13;
cond. 1-'2' Includes 2 helmets. C.11&#13;
Ed, 6lt 49«1,&#13;
1'62 .. ell 2 dr hardtop, S250. C.11&#13;
6344445 or '31-2791.&#13;
1951 Aamb Amerlc n 0epe,'ldable,&#13;
rvs!lc, and ch,!lllP· $35 . 3209 • 211h st.&#13;
IHO Aamb. AmerlCM1, ~dable.&#13;
S70 3209 • 2•h St., Kenosha .&#13;
1970 Pont ac Temp.st, 2 dr., Hard- top, v .1, Automatic, Po- steering '3,4606. '&#13;
19 .. Ch(M'ger AT · 4.«I Mag., 4 Sp., fflaQS,SNOI' II AJ attw 6 p.m .• 658.&#13;
, :SllO • 23rd Aw&#13;
• ., Amt&gt;aul!ldOr ' dr. MO..--, AUto,, 6&#13;
CVI. Trans rec tly over auled 177S&#13;
C.11 :ssl-2~5. '&#13;
1967 Austin,Healey 3000, Atter 5 p.m. 539-2«17 (Burlington).&#13;
1968 Ford Torino 302-V8, Low mll.&#13;
Automatic, power steering, Radio, Heater, 652-n.S, see at 523-4 • 4'th&#13;
Ave. 6:00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 lmp11111 Super Sport 327, Atter&#13;
4:30 p.m ., 3022 . 23rd Ave.&#13;
Yamaha 350 RS, 1971, Exe. Cond. 654-sn,, Eve.&#13;
6SO Triumph T.T. rebuilt engine,&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
helmets, S800.00or best o~r. See at&#13;
5723 • ,0th Ave.&#13;
Honda "1S0" IO per cent restored. Nffds some clutch work, $250.00 634-0171. .&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FORSALE&#13;
3-uitcases, very good cond. $2S Call 654-2704. .&#13;
For a Good night's sleep _&#13;
Waterb«ls. 3701 . 60th street Call 6S4 9447. '&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us a otter. Call 654-462. n&#13;
"Sears" Porta~ly typewriter. Good&#13;
condition. Comes with carrying&#13;
case. Will sell for $30.00. Call 637-&#13;
6445.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3836.&#13;
Public Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check ours first high quality _ 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Sllde Rule $10.00. Call 553.2345_&#13;
Skis - Mens, including poles and&#13;
boots. 553-2245.&#13;
Toaster 15.00, Steam Iron $5 oo Call 553-23'5. . .&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and woocts&#13;
S3'6 new will sell for S245. '&#13;
Legalize Marlluana Bumper, Stickers. 50c donation . Be at Student Activities Building Wed.&#13;
Steno Component System. 60 watt ll(T!Pllfler, turntable,_ 2 speakers.&#13;
Moving, must sell. $50. Ph. 652-0079.&#13;
BROWSE - Breactloaf Book Sh 261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, ,:i~'.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75 . 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 65'-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire &amp; rim Sl, File&#13;
boxes Sl &amp; Sl.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
Colt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
Disp. Call 511 -7161 aft. 4 p.m.&#13;
2 Bedroom House, Parkside area, Liv. R., Dining Room comb.,&#13;
Fireplace, over one acre ~and, 552-&#13;
9012.&#13;
Home grown TOMATOES, Concord&#13;
Grapes for eating or wine making.&#13;
6328 Wash. Ave., 633-3836.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go - Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or Volkswagen - Good condition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3'19.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male iunior will share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, 551.9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week, 7: .S-4:30. Call S33-2'15.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
----------&#13;
Carpeted&#13;
FOR RE NT - Mod«1I olflC1 ~ and eir condlt~&#13;
per mo. Utllltles included&#13;
at 652-394S or 6SA-7410:.__--&#13;
__,-- _llil '&#13;
APARTMENT FO• •&#13;
Madison, 3 glrls need l lCI&#13;
modem, furnished apt; ,,. "&#13;
and Brlctoe, S6100 Jo'fC'&#13;
pe~&#13;
~ :ies· Cit.,,. Prescription Gla5 ' .. t,Jlfftl- . Al th• ~·&#13;
c~&#13;
wedding ring. rauant&#13;
newscope&#13;
classifieds&#13;
are fret </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 1, September 6, 1971</text>
              </elementText>
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63407">
                <text>1971-09-06</text>
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                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63413">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63414">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
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          <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>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63415">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>bob lawson</name>
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      <tag tagId="153">
        <name>marc eisen</name>
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        <name>peace corps</name>
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