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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Schliesman names editor</text>
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              <text>The Parkside&#13;
Ef fect ive next fal l&#13;
Schl i e sman named edi tor&#13;
The RANGER has a new&#13;
Editor-in-Chief. Her name is&#13;
Jane Schliesman.&#13;
The Advisory Board to the&#13;
RANGER recently considered&#13;
three applicants for Editor-in-&#13;
Chief. They were Schliesman,&#13;
Kathryn Wellner and Ken&#13;
Konkol. Applications were&#13;
written and submitted by April&#13;
13, and the interviews were held&#13;
April 17.&#13;
As Editor-in-Chief, Schliesman&#13;
has many goals for the&#13;
RANGER. She believes that the&#13;
Editorial Board of the RANGER&#13;
must take a strong stand on the&#13;
many real issues on this campus.&#13;
"Decisions are being made&#13;
which may or may not be in the&#13;
interests of this university in the&#13;
long run, and we must also worry&#13;
about the quality of education&#13;
being provided at present. The&#13;
RANGER Editorial Board should&#13;
research these questions and&#13;
come up with reasoned&#13;
arguments for or against&#13;
proposals," said Schliesman.&#13;
"For example," she added,&#13;
"questiors of faculty benefits&#13;
affect students, for they affect&#13;
the caliber of teaching we will&#13;
have; administrative decisions&#13;
on space utilization affect student&#13;
organizations; program&#13;
decisions (both educational and&#13;
entertainment) are affected by&#13;
budget decisions, and have an&#13;
effect on students in turn."&#13;
According to Schliesman, there&#13;
are many technical problems&#13;
facing the RANGER:&#13;
disorganization; lack of consistent,&#13;
coherent style; a&#13;
multitude of typographical errors&#13;
each week; and lack of&#13;
photographs, to list a few. More&#13;
frequent staff meetings will be&#13;
necessary, and a larger staff&#13;
would enable the RANGER to&#13;
solve many of its problems. "A&#13;
campaign for writers,&#13;
photographers, lay-out people, ad&#13;
salespeople, help, is needed," she&#13;
stated.&#13;
"I feel that people will come to&#13;
us once we are established as&#13;
more than a schlock rag, a tool of&#13;
the administration, a jive&#13;
publication. We have already&#13;
started to accomplish that," said&#13;
Schliesman.&#13;
Wedne s day, May 2, 1973&#13;
Vol . 1 No. 27&#13;
Photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Jane Schliesman&#13;
Parksiders aid handicapped&#13;
at a normal rate but could speed&#13;
the process for those using both&#13;
hands.&#13;
Another student, William&#13;
Liggett, a 29-year-old senior from&#13;
Kansasville, is developing&#13;
learning curves relating to rate&#13;
and efficiency of learning by the&#13;
handicapped in various tasks&#13;
which promise to be useful in the&#13;
Workshop's work evaluation and&#13;
training division, through which&#13;
all handicapped referrals&#13;
initially pass.&#13;
Liggett has special empathy&#13;
with the problems of the handicapped,&#13;
having once suffered&#13;
partial paralysis as the result of a&#13;
eonsttuction crane accident.&#13;
Shirland also has coordinated&#13;
formation of a managementconsulting&#13;
team of SMI students&#13;
who are studying the Curative&#13;
Workshop operation to identify&#13;
additional projects on which to&#13;
work.&#13;
Shirland became involved with&#13;
the Curative Workshop last&#13;
November after taking over cochairmanship&#13;
of the community&#13;
service committee of the&#13;
American Institute of Industrial&#13;
Engineers' Southeast Wisconsin&#13;
Chapter, which was seeking&#13;
volunteer projects in which their&#13;
members could become involved.&#13;
"That mix of experience is&#13;
exactly what our students are&#13;
getting both in the classroom and&#13;
at the Workshop," he said.&#13;
Finkler agrees. "We have&#13;
changing jobs and requirements&#13;
which expose students to a lot of&#13;
different kinds of problems," she&#13;
said. "We appreciate the help&#13;
from the Parkside people and&#13;
AIIE and feel our needs are&#13;
naturally geared to cooperative&#13;
programs of this kind."&#13;
In addition to student involvement&#13;
with the Workshop,&#13;
Shirland and another&#13;
management science professor,&#13;
Leroy Cougle, have applied for a&#13;
$10,000 federal research grant to&#13;
study and improve the evaluation&#13;
and training of the handicapped,&#13;
using the Racine facility as the&#13;
model.&#13;
The Racine Curative Workshop&#13;
currently serves about 70&#13;
physically and emotionally&#13;
handicapped persons in its&#13;
vocational division. It also has a&#13;
medical services division.&#13;
Design of a tool which enables workers with the use of&#13;
only one arm to assemble a vacuum cleaner fan is one of&#13;
the projects undertaken by Parkside management&#13;
science professor Larry Shirland (second from left) and&#13;
student Robert Unger (seated) of Kenosha at Racine's&#13;
Curative Workshop. Unger demonstrates one of the&#13;
devices using one arm, while William Liggett (right) of&#13;
Kansasville, a Parkside student who is conducting&#13;
learning studies at the Workshop, times him. Frances&#13;
Finkler, manager of the Workshop's vocational division,&#13;
observes the operation.&#13;
A Parkside professor and his&#13;
students are literally lending a&#13;
helping hand to handicapped&#13;
workers at Racine's Curative&#13;
Workshop.&#13;
Larry Shirland, assistant&#13;
professor of management science&#13;
in Parkside's School of Modern&#13;
Industry (SMI), and Robert&#13;
Unger, 20, a sophomore from&#13;
Kenosha, have designed devices&#13;
to enable workers with the use of&#13;
only one arm to assemble a small&#13;
fan used in a vacuum cleaner.&#13;
The fan assembly job is from&#13;
Amatek-Lamb Electric of&#13;
Caledonia, one of about 20 area&#13;
companies which at any given&#13;
time have jobs contracted to the&#13;
Curative Workshop.&#13;
The initial design, by Shirland,&#13;
worked well enough, enabling a&#13;
one-armed worker to tuck the&#13;
fan s six blades into the housing&#13;
one at a time. Unger, however,&#13;
felt he could improve upon&#13;
Shirland's effort and is completing&#13;
a tool which promises to&#13;
tuck in all six blades at the same&#13;
time.&#13;
Frances Finkler, manager of&#13;
the Workshop's vocational&#13;
division, said it appears Unger's&#13;
model not only will enable the&#13;
one-handed to assemble the units&#13;
Spain trip included added surpri s e&#13;
Beloit poe t&#13;
here Thursday&#13;
Beloit College English&#13;
professor and writer-in-residence&#13;
Chad Walsh will present free&#13;
public readings of his poetry on&#13;
Thursday (May 3) at Parkside&#13;
and at the Unitarian-Universalist&#13;
Church in Racine, which&#13;
arranged his local visit.&#13;
Walsh will read at a Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum session at 1:30&#13;
p.m. in the second floor library&#13;
lounge. His 8 p.m. program at the&#13;
church is titled "How Poems Get&#13;
Born" and will include a reading&#13;
of his poems and commentary on&#13;
their genesis.&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
A Capitol International DC 8&#13;
"stretch" delivered 98&#13;
Parksiders and 83 other charter&#13;
passengers to sunny Spain on the&#13;
Costa del Sol a week ago Sunday.&#13;
I was one of the passengers.&#13;
This is being written in the&#13;
hopes that it can make a Monday&#13;
morning deadline. As I zoom&#13;
along at 31,000 feet heading for&#13;
home, I know the trip is worthy of&#13;
coverage. It was a learning experience&#13;
that cannot be surpassed&#13;
by teaching in the&#13;
classroom.&#13;
Armed Guards&#13;
Immediately after landing at&#13;
the Malaga airport it became&#13;
obvious that there existed a&#13;
totally different social norm. As&#13;
we taxied toward our terminal,&#13;
passengers saw many members&#13;
of the Gaurdia Seville (dictator&#13;
Franco's army) lining the&#13;
perimeter of the airport with submachine&#13;
guns. They were smarly&#13;
uniformed, but the uniform&#13;
couldn't nullify the obtrusiveness&#13;
of the armed guard.&#13;
We were bussed from the&#13;
terminal to the customs building&#13;
and the guard became less&#13;
evident. The brown and grey hues&#13;
of the flat landscape were plain&#13;
colors for the sharp, green&#13;
uniforms to blend into.&#13;
Once we had walked off the jet&#13;
we were hit with the shock of time&#13;
disorientation and the awareness&#13;
that we were speaking the foreign&#13;
language and our only link with&#13;
the Spaniards was through our&#13;
guide or our own ingenuity.&#13;
Guides and Guards&#13;
All the guides spoke with a&#13;
heavy Spanish accent and it took&#13;
a couple of days before we could&#13;
make any amount of sense of&#13;
what they were saying.&#13;
Leaving the guides for a&#13;
moment our bus ride to the hotel,&#13;
some thirty miles away, was&#13;
scary in many respects. The most&#13;
apparent scare came with the bus&#13;
ride. People drive at maniacal&#13;
speeds in Spain, and the horn&#13;
seems to be their signal of right of&#13;
way. Even zipping along at that&#13;
speed hundreds of guards with&#13;
sub-machine guns were seen&#13;
lining the cliffs along the road to&#13;
the hotel. My impression was that&#13;
this was the way a dictatorship&#13;
was run. That, too, scared me.&#13;
My worries were arrested&#13;
when our guide talked about the&#13;
guards and the fact that Franco&#13;
was in the area. They were his&#13;
guard. The thing that made it all&#13;
worth it was when police sirens&#13;
started blasting. The bus came&#13;
quickly to the side of the road,&#13;
and President Franco sped by in&#13;
his limousine. It was an electrifying&#13;
moment that no one had&#13;
counted on. I had seen my first&#13;
benevolent dictator.&#13;
Continued on page 7&#13;
&gt; • *sV . . v , , , , v&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1973&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Jyril 14, 1973&#13;
To the Hit or:&#13;
alitor of What? Certaluly NOT of the Library&#13;
Learuiug Ceater.&#13;
Certaialy aot of higher educatloa.&#13;
Certalaly aot upliftiug educatloa.&#13;
It would take oaly the poorest caliber to 133IT each&#13;
a weird, crude, brash cartooa uader the guise of&#13;
learaiag or aaythiag else - for etudeats aad their&#13;
youager oaes uho hope to attead the Uairersity some day,&#13;
If this is the ead result of your learaiag - It is a&#13;
sad world we have.&#13;
WHY a ot put out some upliftiag high staadard cartoon?&#13;
This situatloa Is critical.&#13;
The lowest la brain matter put th&lt;s out aad those ia&#13;
charge should ceacor what is edited aad NOT meruit such&#13;
crap - aad that is all it is.&#13;
Wake up. We iatead to briag this up with the right&#13;
people. It is shameful aad so are you to permit it.&#13;
Stop this aad help the world iastead of further&#13;
fulaiag it for the youngsters who uust be confused&#13;
bythe "educated* oaes. This Is pitiful. 01 is it&#13;
Y0U1 persoaal portrait?&#13;
(Ooples)i To proper people.&#13;
A taxpayer/busiae sanaa.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
?T T0 « FflgDuT Rb£K CONCERT&#13;
THlStdteKCMD. feroue, UftVlNG.&#13;
To D RIVC THERE So me FRJ&amp;NDS&#13;
Awo X SmoKap flBour TWO&#13;
Our\CCS OP uOPC flHDDfiflN/K,&#13;
B Case, oF PNO&#13;
BOTTUS orbJtNi* ffiwzsrsgig0"*&#13;
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RLAWTNflj- X Cj f S3 TU3T GCTTIN^-&#13;
ofA * ^ ^ •*'&#13;
HI Tttft£U/UPo»jTH£.&#13;
FEOPLP. fk{ crqut fiT fl\F&#13;
cr^&#13;
. Rv Gary Huck\&#13;
Rep l y&#13;
Dear Taxpayer-Businessman:&#13;
We don't usually answer letters that are unsigned,&#13;
especially those that come postage due. But we thought&#13;
we could make an exception with this one.&#13;
The letter to the editor and the cartoons with comments&#13;
appearing on this page were sent together by a&#13;
nameless reader.&#13;
The cartoons are called "crap" and the reader feels&#13;
"those in charge should censor (sic) what is edited."&#13;
That seems to be a rather anti-Constitutional view of&#13;
freedom of the press.&#13;
The RANGER is a corporation, separate from the&#13;
university and only bound by state and" local laws. Our&#13;
advisor has never censored us and that is the way it&#13;
should be. The advisor serves only as a resource person&#13;
and would only attempt to stop us from printing&#13;
something if it were libelous.&#13;
These cartoons, along with any other cartoon we print,&#13;
are very simply the expression of the cartoonist's&#13;
thoughts. Doubtless you would have this cartoonist&#13;
silenced and put in his place. We feel the campus&#13;
community can take more than some candy-coated&#13;
picture of the world.&#13;
Most people on campus can recognize satire, which&#13;
the cartoons obviously are. They can see the humor in&#13;
the satire and usually catch the underlying meaning.&#13;
Evidently you didn't.&#13;
practice."&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View honorea&#13;
because To.&#13;
are worth a i,.&#13;
year6 bv' ispub'isheci weekly throughout the academic&#13;
Kenosha, Wise8 /isconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Learning rpntw t i I 0fflces are &gt;°cated at D-194 Li brary-&#13;
ThP P if"? ' TelePhone (414) 5 53-2295.&#13;
reflectedTn^nifir^no"86^ iSj-an •independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
^Lettersfto th"^T* " ^ °ffidal&#13;
less^yped^n^dou'^6^'^' ^usA!e'corrfined1 to MO^onis or&#13;
l^ters for lenc^ arff?lt 5fCe?' The editors reserv* the right to edit&#13;
address n hone nnmk j ! 1AI1 letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withheld upon re mies?'The'SV8tatU80r fac ulty rank' Names wil1 print any le tters editors reserve t he right to refuse to&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
M?NTA0GfNGCEHDfTORRUTd0VmLrtaU&#13;
NEWS EDfTORDl^hr;n°^eF;|en,eerrSen&#13;
SPOR I Df foRORKr'sanKocShhlieSman&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: K en Peslka&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER- F redV^^* WR ITERS: Ken Konkiol G e ci Lawrence Blaha, B ruce Rasmu's°sen aTeri?'^n!^ar,ilvn. Schubert' Jeannlne CARTOONISTS: Gary HuckBoho '' Ge°" Blaesinb Sipsma, Helmut Kah. Bill&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS K en Konfni n ^"' AmV Cun dari&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF FrM ? l^r 'De n n i SDo o n a n 'Gr«Syston&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva Lawr en«, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
0 1°* NATIONAL ADVERTISING »Y A'&#13;
y National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. y&#13;
360 Lexington Ave.. New YoeW. N »'. 10017 1&#13;
Wed./ May 2, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
We get letters THORN&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Next semester I plan to start or&#13;
try to start an informal rap group&#13;
dealing with sex roles and how&#13;
men relate to women and each&#13;
other. It will be a consciousnessraising&#13;
type group and each&#13;
member will be given six minutes&#13;
of undivided attention. All over&#13;
the country, men's liberation&#13;
groups are forming but haven't&#13;
received the media exposure of&#13;
women's groups. We will NOT be&#13;
a counter force to the feminist&#13;
movement but work side by side&#13;
to eradicate sex based myths,&#13;
habits and beliefs. This will break&#13;
down barriers between men and&#13;
women and the deep ones between&#13;
men and men, too.&#13;
Some psychologists feel that we&#13;
created the concepts of&#13;
"masculine" and "feminine" to&#13;
hide certain emotions and&#13;
thoughts we are afraid to&#13;
acknowledge. Also, this sex&#13;
gender division has political,&#13;
economic and psychological&#13;
implications which play havoc in&#13;
a society allegedly based on&#13;
equality and freedoms the Bill of&#13;
Rights spells out. Men's&#13;
imaginary supremacy over&#13;
women, like white "supremacy"&#13;
over black and Third World&#13;
peoples is a mass self-illusion&#13;
which I know will backfire on&#13;
men with a vengeance.&#13;
Anyone, women are welcome&#13;
too, who wishes to start a group&#13;
like this write to: 953 Wood Rd.&#13;
Apt. 112, Kenosha, Wis. 53140.&#13;
Please don't write after May 20th&#13;
as I am moving out.&#13;
I hope to see several people at&#13;
the first meeting because there is&#13;
a great need here for this kind of&#13;
group. That was evident by the&#13;
lack of interest for the Equal&#13;
Rights Amendment and its&#13;
meaning for both sexes.&#13;
Dave Myer&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Regarding the editorial in the&#13;
last issue of Editor's Notebook, I&#13;
have a possible solution. There is&#13;
a nonprofit organization in both&#13;
Racine, run by myself, Rita&#13;
Overberg-and Kenosha, run by&#13;
Lonnie Aulwes, called Youthpower.&#13;
Youthpower is an&#13;
organization sponsored by different&#13;
companies in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha. Its function is to help&#13;
young people, ages 16-21, find a&#13;
full or part-time job for the&#13;
summer.&#13;
Youthpower opens on June 4 at&#13;
the Junior Achievement&#13;
Building, 604 - 6th Street in&#13;
Racine and at the Kenosha Youth&#13;
Foundation, 720 - 59th PI. in&#13;
Kenosha. There will also be a&#13;
Youthpower Jamboree on June 2,&#13;
to sign up applicants. Watch the&#13;
respective papers for details.&#13;
Rita C. Overberg&#13;
Manager, Racine Youthpower&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Did you think politics was an&#13;
instrument to enlarge the conscience&#13;
and sensibility of man?&#13;
I'm pessimistic and depressed&#13;
over our social, economic, environmental&#13;
scene. You guessed&#13;
it. The Abbie Hoffmann of&#13;
capitalism is at it again! He has&#13;
just institutionalized "facts"&#13;
coated with middle class sentimentality&#13;
and the work ethic;&#13;
and the media will absorb it allmake&#13;
it all fashionable and innocuous.&#13;
Having begun to mold the&#13;
American adult in the Nixonian&#13;
image, the President has now&#13;
sprung out at the kids. To begin&#13;
with, he and his appointee, Mr.&#13;
Wrather of the Corporation for&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
THE R ANGES R ECEIVED&#13;
AN ANONYMOUS LETTER&#13;
(JRITTEN IN THE UCKST&#13;
OF TASTE. ACCUSING&#13;
MY CARTOONS OF BQNG&#13;
IN T HE WORST OF TASTE&#13;
THE LETTER MAUGNED&#13;
^irlcTz® f&amp;,Clous&#13;
FOR BEINGINSULTINIJIT&#13;
SEEMS TOME&#13;
TRECNLY D LFFERANCE&#13;
BETWEEN&#13;
His LETTER&#13;
AND MV&#13;
CARTOONS&#13;
IS THAT AFTER'&#13;
BEING- MALICIOUS)&#13;
CRITICAL, AMD INSULTING&#13;
I ALWAYS SIG-NMY&#13;
NAME!!!&#13;
f?S. THANKS For THE&#13;
NEW MATERIAL&#13;
(WHOEVER HOU ARE)&#13;
XXX C&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
Public Broadcasting, have&#13;
decided that "Zoom" is too much&#13;
fun and likely to give children the&#13;
ridiculous notion that life can be&#13;
enjoyable. To replace "oom" how&#13;
about a series of functional facts&#13;
based on Dickens Hard Times.&#13;
"Teach these boys and girls&#13;
nothing but Facts," said Mr.&#13;
Gradgrind. "Facts alone are&#13;
wanted in life. Nothing else will&#13;
ever be of service. This is the&#13;
principle on which I bring up my&#13;
own children. Stick to the facts."&#13;
With Mr. Wrather's and Mr.&#13;
Shakespeare's (U.S.I.A.)&#13;
cooperation, we may program a&#13;
generation of humorless&#13;
Gradgrinds. For "no little&#13;
Gradgrind had ever seen a face in&#13;
the moon. No little Gradgrind had&#13;
ever learnt the silly jingle&#13;
'Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how&#13;
I wonder what you are!' No little&#13;
Gradgrind had ever known&#13;
wonder on the subject, each&#13;
having at five years dissected the&#13;
Great Bear like a Professor&#13;
Owen."&#13;
Facts indeed, Mr. Nixon-why&#13;
not start with "Sticks and Bones"&#13;
and Julia Child and the French&#13;
soybeans and genuine American&#13;
organic D.E.S. bread, endorsed&#13;
by your axiom of inflationary&#13;
survival "just eat less," or pieces&#13;
with honor speeches etc. In any&#13;
case, if you have had it with the&#13;
antics of this dutiful, dictating,&#13;
deceitful idiot-write the P.B.S. to&#13;
save "Zoom," "Firing Line" or&#13;
what have you. Who knows,&#13;
maybe McCord will link Nixon&#13;
directly responsible for the&#13;
Watergate malfeasance and he&#13;
will end up in a cell next to&#13;
Clifford Irving. Wouldn't that&#13;
provide material for an interesting&#13;
factual series?! Norman&#13;
Mailer said we must bring&#13;
out the psychopath in us all if we&#13;
are to survive in an insane world.&#13;
At least this is one thing Nixon&#13;
has done for us.&#13;
Reprehensibly,&#13;
Stacy Postler&#13;
Racine Freshman&#13;
Food costs&#13;
reduced&#13;
on cam puses&#13;
The United Council of&#13;
University of Wisconsin Student&#13;
Governments today announced&#13;
that they were very pleased by&#13;
the action of the State Joint&#13;
Finance Committee in the&#13;
exemption of S tate Sales Tax for&#13;
students purchasing food in&#13;
dormitories on meal plans.&#13;
This action will save the&#13;
student about $20 per year in&#13;
meal costs. United Council&#13;
worked extnesively for this&#13;
revision.&#13;
Rod Nilsestuen, President of&#13;
the United Council, stated "We&#13;
feel that this is a long overdue&#13;
step. Previously, students were&#13;
the only residents of the State of&#13;
Wisconsin who paid sales tax on&#13;
meals served in their own&#13;
residences. We are very pleased&#13;
that this inequity has been&#13;
corrected."&#13;
Nilsestuen also said that the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee had&#13;
accepted the United Council&#13;
suggestion to handle the student&#13;
employment section of the budget&#13;
as a separate decision item in the&#13;
next biennial budget. This will&#13;
make it easier for the students to&#13;
calculate the exact amount of&#13;
employment aid. Previously&#13;
information concerning the&#13;
number of student jobs provided&#13;
in by the budget has not been&#13;
readily accessible.&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
As you know, the RANGER has been looking for a new editor as&#13;
announced in the last two issues. Well, we found one. Applications&#13;
were turned in by a number of people including a seventeen year old&#13;
teenie-bopper and a middle aged (according to some) muckraker.&#13;
Two meetings were held to narrow the field. At the first, contestants&#13;
were given a chance to air their views on how a paper should be run.&#13;
This was held on April 17. At this meeting a great many radical&#13;
proposals were brought forth, including such unheard of things as a&#13;
more representative editorial policy, more coverage of campus&#13;
events, and (get this), actually paying staff members who do exemplary&#13;
work.&#13;
At the second meeting, held two days later, the members of the&#13;
RANGER advisory board got together and finally selected Jane&#13;
Schliesman (formerly Feature Editor) as our new Editor-in-Chief, to&#13;
the congratulations of many and the relief of some.&#13;
OK gang, I admit it, I m not infallable, even though I sometimes&#13;
would like to be. I write this column the week before the paper comes&#13;
out, and though I might come pretty close in predictions I have made&#13;
m the past, this one struck a little wide of the mark. I wrote it three&#13;
weeks before this issue.&#13;
Oh, alright I was wrong. There was no second meeting on April 19&#13;
where the final decision was made, there was no need for one. The&#13;
advisory board made the decision the same day they interviewed the&#13;
candidates for the position. But, I was right, Jane Schliesman is still&#13;
the new editor.&#13;
I for one am wondering what our new editor will be like. After&#13;
having six different ones the past four years here, you'd think I'd be&#13;
used to the changes. But, you gotta remember, now I h ave to learn a&#13;
whole new system.&#13;
Jane definately has some strong opinions on topics which to me are&#13;
of not so much importance, and this could conceivably change some of&#13;
the content of this paper. While I believe I can assure you "the&#13;
Movement" will not be expanded and moved to page one, I honestly&#13;
don't know what to expect.&#13;
Speaking of suffragettes, I'd like to enlarge on a few things about the&#13;
female liberation movement. I think we have all been affected by this,&#13;
I know I have.&#13;
There used to be a time when I would actually open a door or give up&#13;
my seat on a bus for a member of what then was the "weaker" sex. I&#13;
have ceased to do that except as in cases of extreme need. Now I have&#13;
sort of a guideline to follow. If I wouldn't do it for a guy in similiar&#13;
circumstances, then to comply with the idea of equality, I'd better not&#13;
do it for a girl either.&#13;
Which brings us to the Wisconsin equal rights amendment and why&#13;
it failed.&#13;
I have a theory which seems to be supported by the facts. The equal&#13;
rights amendment failed because the women of this state voted&#13;
against it. That's right, I said the women defeated it.&#13;
After conducting an independent poll of some of the men around this&#13;
area, I found that better than 60 percent said they voted for the&#13;
amendment. If such a case is generally true, where did all those no&#13;
votes come from?&#13;
Women of voting age are more numerous than men in this state, so if&#13;
even the great majority of men voted no the women could still carry it&#13;
off by voting together. Obviously the women didn't vote together, and&#13;
instead voted against equal rights.&#13;
I v oted in favor of the bill, I felt it was about time I g ot some equal&#13;
rights. I'm all for woman coming down off her imagined pedistal to go&#13;
through life side by side with man.&#13;
Seems most women felt they had a good thing going without equal&#13;
rights. They're right. Just take a look at the law books in this state and&#13;
you will find that women are highly favored in the eyes of the law. The&#13;
men are the ones being discriminated against. .&#13;
Those office spaces in the library were struggled hard for. They&#13;
were finally won after a discussion with the president of the university&#13;
during his visit here. Another problem discussed was the question of&#13;
tenure. Seems that some students feel that some teachers who have it,&#13;
shouldn't. I guess some sort of test case is being worked up to find out&#13;
how to dispose of the problem.&#13;
Two performances have been put on lately that deserve some note.&#13;
One was the Wayne S. Aho performance on ESP which was sponsored&#13;
by the Student Government Association. Another was the UFO lecture&#13;
by Stanton Friedman put on by the PAB.&#13;
These were both unique in that neither one cost the students money.&#13;
Both Aho and Friedman were paid out of the gate receipts.&#13;
While Aho was sponsored as sort of a service to the students with a&#13;
small admission charge, not many Parkside students showed up. The&#13;
audience was made up mostly of members of the community. But this&#13;
time the community did not see a performance paid for by student&#13;
money, they paid for it themselves, with 58c off every head going to&#13;
Aho.&#13;
The I* riedman affair was well-attended as evidenced by the nearly&#13;
full bleachers. While there were not a great deal of advance tickets&#13;
sold, enough impulse buyers attended to make the show a financial&#13;
success.&#13;
Lm going to mention the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee again&#13;
shnnldn'fhp i TStS by s pe nd in8 student shouidn t be. I t hink most of us agree that its funds shomulodn ebye ,c aunt do ffi t&#13;
This does not necessarily mean it must cease to function. It can continue&#13;
its existence by putting on such shows as Aho and Friedman&#13;
were, shows for which the performers have no set fee but must rely on&#13;
their popularity for their income.&#13;
This is not to say L&amp;FA should restrict themselves to this type&#13;
^rfom«TwoKTreeS™ '° Pl" °" Sh°WS at Wh'Ch 1,16&#13;
4 THE PA RKSIDE R ANGER Wed. , May 2 , 1973&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gar y Jense n&#13;
Space Oddi ty&#13;
David Bowie&#13;
(LSP-4813)&#13;
David Bowie sure tried his hardest to become freaky. He chopped off&#13;
his hair, dyed it carrot orange, and changed his name to Ziggy Stardust.&#13;
Previously he had publicly worn a dress and openly admitted to&#13;
being gay. Ziggy Stardust and his Spiders from Mars are now&#13;
receiving a ridiculous amount of publicity for such mediocre talent&#13;
compare David to another pervert, someone like Mick Jagger. Mick&#13;
as the ability to cast male or female roles in their strongest sense and&#13;
various shades of both - the ultimate in bisexualism. David Bowie&#13;
remains a simple ordinary transvestite. Fag lovers need not feel too&#13;
proud of Bowie.&#13;
SPACE ODDITY is a Bowie re-issue containing some old stuff&#13;
dating as far back as 1969. It is a record of David Bowie as a folk singer&#13;
often with considerable orchestral accompanyment.&#13;
"Space Oddity" opens this collection as being the reason for this&#13;
album. Here David comes off as a freaked-out Bee Gee stranded in&#13;
outer space with a catchy tune. Several musical transitions make it&#13;
somewhat psychic.&#13;
David has a spot as a hard rocker with "Unwashed and Somewhat&#13;
Slightly Dazed." Upon his announcing "I'm a phallus in pigtails" the&#13;
song changes from its folky beginning to a chugging rhythm rocker.&#13;
"Cygnet Committee" is a long drawn out thing but inspite of this it&#13;
somehow manages to be one of the most emotion stirring cuts. It&#13;
emerges a while after the start into a preacher drone characteristic&#13;
Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone." For this number, reading the&#13;
lyric sheet along with it is very helpful. Bowie has tried so hard to&#13;
make wierd lyrics but these are his most intriguing on the record.&#13;
These words are a critical, sympathetic, and confused look at the&#13;
history of the hippie culture.&#13;
The rest is mostly stuff sounding like Cat Stevens on acid, some&#13;
sounding wretched enough to make one puke. "The Wild Eyed Boy&#13;
From Freecloud" could be David's Broadway production. One of his&#13;
folk ballads is about an old lady shoplifter who consoles herself with&#13;
"God Knows I'm Good."&#13;
The last slot is reserved for the "Memory of a Free Free Festival."&#13;
It drags on for several minutes with a funeral organ and David&#13;
reciting a tribute. Then it becomes a growing repetitive chorus in the&#13;
"Hey Jude" fashion but seems grossly inferior by comparison.&#13;
at this point in this ocean of ambivalence I gaze at the David Bowie&#13;
"thinker" photo that is the background for the lyric sheet and say, yes&#13;
David you do have talent, even Truman Capote says so.&#13;
(Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
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What Wed., May 2, 1973 THE PARKS I D E RANGER 5&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee of the Parkside&#13;
otudent Government Association&#13;
is in the process of distributing&#13;
their teaching evaluation forms&#13;
to iaculty members. Those&#13;
faculty who have not as yet&#13;
contacted the committee are&#13;
asked to do so through the PSGA&#13;
offices D193 LLC so that the&#13;
proper number of computer&#13;
evaluation forms may be&#13;
prepared.&#13;
A new feature of the RANGER&#13;
will be a column of original&#13;
poetry. This feature will appear&#13;
in the last issue of the RANGER,&#13;
and continue next year. Anyone&#13;
with poetry to submit should&#13;
come down to the RANGER&#13;
office, LLC D194, at least one&#13;
week before the item is to be&#13;
printed. •&#13;
The Racine Community&#13;
concert Association will conduct&#13;
its annual membership campaign&#13;
starting May 21st. This years&#13;
concerts in Racine will include;&#13;
Bridgadoon, The Warsaw&#13;
Philharmonic Orchestra, and a&#13;
singing group called Songs by&#13;
Six, conducted by Robert&#13;
DeCormier. Three or four concerts&#13;
are also planned in&#13;
Kenosha. The cost for students is&#13;
$5.00 and it includes admission to&#13;
all of the concerts. Campaign&#13;
headquarters is located at the&#13;
Racine YMCA with phone calls&#13;
taken at 634-7953.&#13;
The Earth Science Department&#13;
will hold an "end of the&#13;
semester" picnic at the home of&#13;
Dave Krogh on Sunday, May 20&#13;
for all Earth Science students&#13;
and faculty. Besides celebrating&#13;
"the end," the picnic strives to&#13;
build student-faculty relations.&#13;
Special features include the&#13;
performance of a faculty skit and&#13;
enning&#13;
the presentation of characteristic&#13;
"gifts" to the faculty.&#13;
For more information or&#13;
reservations, E.S. students and&#13;
faculty may go to the Earth&#13;
Science lab, GR116.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present a concert featuring&#13;
Bob Rohan and the Country&#13;
Band Sunday at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Admission will be general public&#13;
$1 a nd Parkside Students 75c.&#13;
Mr. Bruce Burgy, General&#13;
Plant Manager for the&#13;
Dynamatic Industrial Drives&#13;
Division of Eaton Corporation in&#13;
Kenosha will present "Business,&#13;
People, and Profits" Wednesday&#13;
Night, May 2 in 221 Greenquist&#13;
Hall from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
uMlcH one of THESE 6bg RoUasl&#13;
Cflemt mwoezs tfe A boojl O F&#13;
fftRttapes ceeAM O F onton&#13;
SooP?'&#13;
Theatre nearing complet ion&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Parkside's new theatre,&#13;
located in the Communications-&#13;
Arts Building, is scheduled to be&#13;
finished June l. Lighting and&#13;
other equipment will hopefully be&#13;
installed soon after.&#13;
The theatre is of a conventional&#13;
design and can be used for many&#13;
purposes. One of its special&#13;
features includes an elevator&#13;
platform to the front of the stage&#13;
which can be lowered to an orchestra&#13;
pit or raised as a 16-foot&#13;
projection of the stage. A very&#13;
sophisticated system of lighting&#13;
will also be used. It can be&#13;
o p e r a t e d m a n u a l l y ,&#13;
automatically by use of a tape, or&#13;
by a combination of the two&#13;
methods. The walls are accoustically&#13;
designed with wood&#13;
slats backed by a metal speaker&#13;
grill. Sound thereby travels&#13;
through the grill to the wall&#13;
behind and is then reflected. Don&#13;
Rintz, assistant professor of&#13;
Communications, said he hoped&#13;
this arrangement would make&#13;
the theatre tuneable to the&#13;
various activities presented. He&#13;
cited the possibility of installing&#13;
different materials behind the&#13;
grill, depending on whether a&#13;
musical or speech-related performance&#13;
was being given.&#13;
Another facet of the theatre&#13;
which makes it even more -ver-&#13;
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satile is the handling of the&#13;
balcony space. The main floor&#13;
seats approximately 500 with an&#13;
additional 100 i n each of the two&#13;
balconies. Current planning calls&#13;
for sectioning off the balconies&#13;
into two separate lecture halls.&#13;
The sectioning should be done in&#13;
such a way that when closed, the&#13;
balconies will be invisible and&#13;
inaudible from the main floor,&#13;
and when open, appear to be an&#13;
integral part of the theatre. Since&#13;
about half of all the seats will&#13;
have hide-away desk tops, the&#13;
theatre may be transformed into&#13;
three lecture halls capable of&#13;
operating simultaneously.&#13;
When asked who would be able&#13;
to use the theatre, Rintz said it&#13;
would be available to all parts of&#13;
the university, e.g., visiting&#13;
lecturers, music events and, of&#13;
course, theatre productions, as&#13;
well as for class lectures. He also&#13;
said a Parkside Community&#13;
Theatre group was being formed,&#13;
which would be open to all&#13;
university students interested in&#13;
the various aspects of theatre, as&#13;
well as people from the community.&#13;
They plan two productions&#13;
next year, one in November,&#13;
to be directed by Rintz, and&#13;
another in March by Richard&#13;
Carrington.&#13;
Planning for the theatre was&#13;
done by an advisory committee in&#13;
1970. Our theatre is basea on the&#13;
theatre at Rockford College.&#13;
Rintz said, "They spent as much&#13;
on their theatre as we spent on&#13;
the whole Comm-Arts Building.&#13;
For the money, we're getting a&#13;
tremendous plan."&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 19 7 3&#13;
Anni v e r s a ry Fr i day&#13;
Kent State students remembered&#13;
Sadkers&#13;
to keynote&#13;
conventions&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
This Friday, May 4, marks the&#13;
third anniversary since the&#13;
deaths of four Kent State students&#13;
at the hands of the Ohio National&#13;
Guard. Being three years since&#13;
that fateful week, when&#13;
demonstrations over the United&#13;
States' invasion of Cambodia and&#13;
the shootings at Kent State&#13;
brought almost all of the major&#13;
colleges to a standstill, makes&#13;
now a good time to look back and&#13;
recount what had happened.&#13;
In May of 1970, demonstrations&#13;
were being held all across the&#13;
country denouncing President&#13;
Nixon's decision to expand the&#13;
war into Cambodia. At Kent State&#13;
the National Guard had been&#13;
called in and martial law&#13;
declared, (with all demonstrations&#13;
being banned) following&#13;
three days of violent demonstrations&#13;
which had included the&#13;
burning down of the Army ROTC&#13;
building. At noon on May 4, a&#13;
demonstration was held on the&#13;
campus commons, only a few&#13;
hundred students were involved&#13;
but the crowd swelled as many&#13;
students were taking their lunch&#13;
break and going to and from&#13;
classes.&#13;
A National Guard jeep drove&#13;
onto the commons and an officer&#13;
ordered the crowd to disperse.&#13;
Then several canisters of tear&#13;
gas were fired, and a platoon of&#13;
guardsmen, armed with loaded&#13;
M-l rifles and gas equipment,&#13;
moved across the green chasing&#13;
the main body of protesters. As&#13;
the guard marched from one end&#13;
of the commons to a practice field&#13;
and back, the crowd never did&#13;
disperse but ended up following&#13;
the guard while hurling rocks and&#13;
insults at them. Many of the&#13;
students, already angered by the&#13;
guards' presence on campus,&#13;
acted as if they were watching a&#13;
show by standing around and&#13;
cheering as the tear gas canisters&#13;
were being tossed back and forth.&#13;
The guardsmen then began&#13;
marching back up a small hill at&#13;
one end of the commons with&#13;
their backs to the students. When&#13;
they reached the crest of the hill&#13;
they suddenly turned, formed a&#13;
skirmish line, and without&#13;
warning, opened fire on the&#13;
students. Many students took&#13;
cover while others remained&#13;
standing in disbelief, thinking&#13;
they were firing blanks, until&#13;
they saw other students lying on&#13;
the ground bleeding.&#13;
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In all, 13 students were hit; four&#13;
of them, Allison Krause, Sandra&#13;
Lee Sheuer, Jeffery Glenn Miller&#13;
and William K. Scroeder, were&#13;
killed by guardsmen's bullets.&#13;
Why did the guardsmen shoot?&#13;
The initial report was that they&#13;
were returning sniper fire, but&#13;
they then had to admit that there&#13;
was no evidence to support this&#13;
claim. Other reasons were that&#13;
the students had surrounded the&#13;
guard and were closing in on&#13;
them, so that they were in fear of&#13;
their lives. A grand jury report&#13;
exonerated the guard on those&#13;
grounds, but a later FBI report&#13;
showed with pictures that the&#13;
guardsmen were not surrounded.&#13;
They could have easily kept on&#13;
marching in the same direction;&#13;
they found that the students were&#13;
not any closer than some 50 yards&#13;
away at the time of the shooting.&#13;
Other guardsmen, when&#13;
questioned, did not specifically&#13;
say that they felt their lives were&#13;
in danger but merely started&#13;
firing when others did because&#13;
they assumed an order to fire had&#13;
been given.&#13;
A private study released over a&#13;
year after the shootings went so&#13;
far as to say that certain guardsmen&#13;
had planned in advance to&#13;
shoot and had even picked out&#13;
specific students to shoot.&#13;
The President's Commission on&#13;
Campus Unrest probably summed&#13;
up the events best by saying,&#13;
"The actions of some students&#13;
were violent and criminal and&#13;
those of some others were&#13;
dangerous, reckless and&#13;
irresponsible. The indiscriminate&#13;
firing of rifles into a crowd of&#13;
students and the deaths that&#13;
followed were unnecessary,&#13;
unwarranted, and inexcusable."&#13;
If factions on both sides could be&#13;
held responsible, then why was&#13;
no official action taken?&#13;
A Portage County (Ohio) grand&#13;
jury exonerated the guardsmen,&#13;
indicting 25 students, nonstudents&#13;
and a Kent State professor on&#13;
criminal charges. There can be&#13;
no denying that some of the&#13;
students were looking for a&#13;
confrontation, to be beat up and&#13;
arrested. But why was no action&#13;
taken against the guardsmen who&#13;
fired into a crowd which included&#13;
many innocent bystanders?&#13;
Not until the parents of the&#13;
dead students, along with the&#13;
ACLU, attempted to sue the state&#13;
of Ohio for negligence and&#13;
wanton misconduct for sending&#13;
armed National Guardsmen on&#13;
campus was any action taken&#13;
against the guard. The students'&#13;
cases were dismissed when it was&#13;
found to be nearly impossible to&#13;
prosecute them. The case against&#13;
the state of Ohio was dropped&#13;
when a federal court decided that&#13;
the state could not be held&#13;
responsible for the guardsmen's&#13;
actions.&#13;
The saddest part of the whole&#13;
tragedy is the attitude of some of&#13;
the American people who said&#13;
that, "they (the students)&#13;
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HOURS: DAILY '• 1 A. M . TO IT P . M .&#13;
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KEN SCHULTZ BUICK-0PEI&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
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GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
deserved what they got," and&#13;
"they should have shot more of&#13;
them." It's strange how those&#13;
killed at the Boston Massacre in&#13;
1770 under somewhat the same&#13;
circumstances are called&#13;
patriots, but the students with&#13;
different political beliefs are&#13;
labeled bums.&#13;
Now, three years later, with the&#13;
Vietnam war over, we can look&#13;
back and ask if anything came&#13;
out of the events on May 4. One&#13;
thing for certain was that it kept&#13;
the war on everyone's mind and&#13;
possibly helped push towards&#13;
being even more determined to&#13;
end it. The pointless deaths of the&#13;
four Kent State students gave an&#13;
example of just how pointless the&#13;
deaths of American soldiers in&#13;
Vietnam were. It also brought a&#13;
further awareness to whites what&#13;
the blacks had to face when their&#13;
sons and daughters can be shot&#13;
down and there's nothing they&#13;
can do about it.&#13;
Two members of Parkside&#13;
education faculty who are&#13;
authorities on sexism in&#13;
education will keynote state&#13;
education conventions in Florida&#13;
and Arkansas during May.&#13;
Myra and David Sadker will&#13;
give a joint keynote address at&#13;
the Florida Education&#13;
Association convention, which&#13;
has sexism in the schools as its&#13;
theme, on May 11 in Tallahassee&#13;
and Myra Sadker will keynote the&#13;
Arkansas State Education&#13;
Convention on the same theme&#13;
May 4 i n Little Rock.&#13;
She is co-author, with former&#13;
Newsweek writer Nancy Frazier,&#13;
of a new book, "Sexism in School&#13;
and Society", just published by&#13;
Harper and Rowe and was one of&#13;
eight education writers invited by&#13;
the National Association of&#13;
Elementary School Principals to&#13;
participate in a "Meet the&#13;
Author" program introducing&#13;
significant new books in&#13;
education at the association's&#13;
convention in Detroit on April 15.&#13;
UNCONSTRUCTED BLAZERS&#13;
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t r i d aA &amp; Saturday&#13;
THE CHELSEAS&#13;
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CHICKEN&#13;
W MO J O' S S ERVE D A LL T HE T IME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers&#13;
Wed. / May 7 , 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Meetings held for H.S. s tudent&#13;
Students in an atmospheric science course a oart of&#13;
the environmental concentration within the Earth&#13;
Science major at Parkside, prepare to launch a helium&#13;
filled balloon, above, to measure vertical distribution of&#13;
wind direction and speed, which change at different&#13;
heights Raw data recorded by students using a&#13;
theodolite, which incorporates a telescope mounted on a&#13;
tripod, is fed into a computer program which&#13;
automatically converts the data into wind directions and&#13;
speeds. The balloon is visible up to about 15,000 feet on a&#13;
clear day. Winds aloft are important in determining how&#13;
air pollution will disperse on a given day, according to&#13;
meteorologist Henry Cole, assistant professor of earth&#13;
science, who teaches the course. Conditions for pollution&#13;
dispersion are worst when deep layers of low wind&#13;
speeds exist, Cole said. Students shown are, left to riqht-&#13;
Jeff Koleske, 1705 Edgewood Ave., Racine; Ken Rizzo,&#13;
4603 - 23rd Ave., Kenosha; Bruce Bendel, 53 Jewell St.'&#13;
Williams Bay; and Wayne Valukas, 2904 Mt. Pleasant&#13;
St., Racine.&#13;
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiuiiiiiiimiiimiiimiiiiiiimimimiiiimiimmiiiiimmiiimiiiimmiiii&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
T h e S e m e s t e r ' s L a s t D a n c e&#13;
Featuring&#13;
SAT., MAY 5th&#13;
9:00 - 1:00 a.m.&#13;
Adm: $1.00 Parkside c+llHon+&#13;
c. Student&#13;
Students Activities&#13;
$1.50 Guests Bldg.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wise. I.D.'s required. Illlllllllllll|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||j|||||||||,||||„||m||||q||||||||m|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||&#13;
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Drop Off Service&#13;
WE&#13;
Wash - Dry - Fold 20f&#13;
Lb.&#13;
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MINIMUM&#13;
Lincoln Village Laundromat&#13;
Open 8 a.m. to8p.m.&#13;
Fourteenth Avenue Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Information meetings for high&#13;
school students considering&#13;
careers in education and in&#13;
engineering science and business&#13;
management, their parents and&#13;
high school counselors have been&#13;
scheduled at Parkside. The&#13;
meetings also are open to&#13;
prospective transfer students and&#13;
part-time adult students. No&#13;
registration is required for either&#13;
session.&#13;
The session for students interested&#13;
in engineering and&#13;
business will be held on Wednesday,&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in Room 101&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Both faculty members and&#13;
students from Parkside's&#13;
engineering science and&#13;
management science (business)&#13;
divisions will be available to&#13;
answer questions dealing with&#13;
the functional areas involved in&#13;
the two majors, requirements for&#13;
employment at the entry level of&#13;
industry, academic requirements&#13;
for the majors and the job outlook&#13;
in the two fields. William Moy,&#13;
dean of the School of Modern&#13;
Industry, will present the introduction.&#13;
The session for students interested&#13;
in elementary, secondary&#13;
of special education will be&#13;
held Wednesday, May 16, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in Room D-134 of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
Faculty and students from the&#13;
division of education will conduct&#13;
the session and will answer&#13;
questions about the program,&#13;
requirements for educational&#13;
certification and the job outlook&#13;
in education. Professor Paul&#13;
Kleine, chairman of the&#13;
education division, will give the&#13;
introduction.&#13;
Charles F. Kugel, Director of&#13;
School and Campus Relations at&#13;
Parkside, said that both&#13;
programs are designed to&#13;
Spain t ri p&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
The Sights&#13;
That whirlwind run- from the&#13;
airport to the hotel gave us only a&#13;
glimpse of the sights that were to&#13;
be seen.&#13;
The terrain is mostly hilly and&#13;
mountainous. Starting from the&#13;
beautiful beaches of the Costa del&#13;
Sol there is a contrast of the&#13;
beautifully clean, clear water&#13;
and the clean brown sands.&#13;
Flowering plants and palms&#13;
abound. Delicate wild flowers&#13;
and tuberous, succulent plants&#13;
line the costal area.&#13;
High terraces are spotted with&#13;
beautiful white bungaloes. The&#13;
bungaloes are the exception to&#13;
the rule.&#13;
Immediately along the coast&#13;
are modern high rise apartments&#13;
and hotels. We stayed at one of&#13;
the seventeen Sofico hotels. Our&#13;
particular complex as callled Los&#13;
Aolympos.&#13;
The hotel structures have not&#13;
yet ruined the natural beauty of&#13;
the Costa del Sol, but with the&#13;
great amount of construction&#13;
going on, it shouldn't take long&#13;
before the now pleasant coast is a&#13;
bit too commercialized. With&#13;
some planning it can be beautiful&#13;
for a long time.&#13;
meos&#13;
PIZZA mem&#13;
Chicken &amp; I talian Sa usage B ombers&#13;
Fret Delivery to Pa rkside Vi llage&#13;
5021 30th Avenue Phone 657-5191&#13;
provide general information&#13;
about the three professional&#13;
areas as well as specific information&#13;
about Parkside&#13;
programs in management&#13;
science, applied science and&#13;
technology and education.&#13;
The coast is described here&#13;
only in part and there are still the&#13;
grey, granite wall mountains&#13;
covered with olive and almond&#13;
trees. There are the cities with&#13;
their pesty shoe shine men,&#13;
beautiful churches, and impoverished&#13;
areas.&#13;
We're just about to touch down&#13;
at O'Hare so I must stop. Next&#13;
week I will try to wrap up what&#13;
was a very successful trip to&#13;
Spain.&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
number of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
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IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Member o&lt; Federal Bewve System&#13;
Member Federal Depot*! Insurance Corp&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1 9 7 3&#13;
Sciences offer&#13;
environmental&#13;
concentrat ion&#13;
Parkside students are&#13;
preparing themselves for&#13;
specialized training in environmental&#13;
science and&#13;
resource management through&#13;
an "environmental concentration"&#13;
of courses within&#13;
UW-P's interdisciplinary earth&#13;
science major.&#13;
This environmental option is&#13;
built around a common core of&#13;
earth science courses but allows&#13;
individual students maximum&#13;
flexibility in selecting environmentally-&#13;
related courses&#13;
reflecting the student's particular&#13;
area of interest.&#13;
A student choosing the environmental&#13;
concentration would&#13;
take 11 required credits, including&#13;
"Man and his Physical&#13;
Environment," and, with the help&#13;
of faculty advisers, select the&#13;
remaining 29 credits required for&#13;
the major from environmentallyrelated&#13;
courses.&#13;
In addition to "Man and his&#13;
Physical Environment," these&#13;
courses include "Environmental&#13;
Geology," "Energy and the&#13;
Environment," "Water and the&#13;
Environment," "Hydrogeology,"&#13;
"Oceanography," "Atmospheric&#13;
Science (Meteorology)," and&#13;
"Problems in Atmospheric&#13;
Pollution."&#13;
Students in the environmental&#13;
concentration also are encouraged&#13;
to get a strong&#13;
background in basic science and&#13;
math and to acquire basic&#13;
research, field and instrumental&#13;
skills in such areas as computer&#13;
science.&#13;
One of the special strengths of&#13;
the program is an emphasis on&#13;
encouraging independent investigations&#13;
by students as well&#13;
as opportunities for interaction&#13;
with faculty members on a&#13;
research level, according to&#13;
professors Henry S. Cole and Lon&#13;
C. Ruedisili, faculty advisors for&#13;
the program.&#13;
In addition to preparing&#13;
students for specialized graduate&#13;
and technical training in environmental&#13;
fields, the program&#13;
develops an understanding of&#13;
man's physical environment&#13;
which is essential to the proper&#13;
shaping of a modern, industrial&#13;
society," Cole said. -Focus on the&#13;
unique problems of such a society&#13;
is the special educational mission&#13;
of Parkside.&#13;
Among student-faculty&#13;
research projects currently&#13;
underway are a comprehensive&#13;
study of the Pike River waterway,&#13;
pinpointing possible&#13;
pollution sources and assessing&#13;
methods of eliminating them; an&#13;
examination of Lake Michigan&#13;
shoreline problems including soil&#13;
erosion, high water levels and&#13;
water pollution in Racine's&#13;
Southside Revitalization area;&#13;
and a study of the effect of Lake&#13;
Michigan on air pollution in the&#13;
heavily industrialized Kenosha-&#13;
Racine-Milwaukee area.&#13;
Detailed information on the&#13;
environmental concentration is&#13;
available from the Division of&#13;
Science office at Parkside.&#13;
Good for 2 Free Dry Cycles&#13;
with any wash load&#13;
ijand an Extra Free Punch On Your Dividend Card&#13;
j-JJ with an 8-pound Load of Dry Cleaning&#13;
NORGE VILLAGE 7513 - 45th Ave., Kenosha&#13;
ISTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 Ohio St., Racine&#13;
RAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 Rapids Dr., Racinel&#13;
One Coupon Per Week Per Customer&#13;
Expires Sept, 5,1973&#13;
NAME &amp; ADDRESS&#13;
50c C OUPON.&#13;
Would you like&#13;
to spend a year&#13;
in Copenhagen ?&#13;
The Univ e r s i t y of Wisconsin&#13;
Copenhage n Center o f f e r s cour s e s i n :&#13;
e d u c a t i o n&#13;
pol i t i c a l s c ienc e&#13;
h i s to ry&#13;
Eng1ish&#13;
a r t&#13;
psychology&#13;
geography&#13;
s o c iology&#13;
economi c s&#13;
For ad d i t i o n a l informa t i o n wr i t e :&#13;
Dr. Wi11i a m Ro mos e r&#13;
Dir e c t o r of Copenhage n S t u d i e s&#13;
Univ e r s i t y of Wisconsin - River Fal l s&#13;
River Fal l s , Wisconsin 5^02 2&#13;
p r e f e r e n c e given to j u n i o r s and s e n i o r s&#13;
%&#13;
Facul ty edi t&#13;
book&#13;
R. W. Gatterdam and K. W.&#13;
Weston, mathematics professors&#13;
at Parkside, are co-editors of a&#13;
book on the proceedings of an&#13;
international mathematics&#13;
conference which was held last&#13;
June at Wingspread, cosponsored&#13;
by UW-P and the&#13;
Johnson Foundation. Gatterdam&#13;
and Weston were co-chairmen of&#13;
the conference.&#13;
The 188-page book, "Conference&#13;
on Group Theory," has&#13;
just been published by Springer-&#13;
Verlog (Berlin-Heidelberg-New&#13;
York) as part of a series entitled&#13;
"LectureNotesin&#13;
Mathematics," dealing with new&#13;
developments in mathematical&#13;
teaching and research.&#13;
The book contains 22 papers&#13;
presented at the conference by&#13;
mathematicians from the United&#13;
States, Canada and England,&#13;
including four papers by&#13;
Parkside professors Nelo D.&#13;
Allan, Franklin Lowenthal,&#13;
Ricardo B. Quintana Jr., and&#13;
Gatterdam.&#13;
Holidays mean the most when&#13;
you're celebrating what you've&#13;
found yourself.&#13;
—Rod McKuen&#13;
ADVENTURE CANOE TRAILS&#13;
Outfitters tor Quetico Park&#13;
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IN RACINE MEMORIAL HALL Tonight&#13;
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America Theatre&#13;
Productions&#13;
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HO TRESPASSING&#13;
Petrifying Wed., May 2, 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER »&#13;
I have an appointment with spring. She come* tn •&#13;
me, and I go forth an hour or two earlier than usual W,ndow to wake&#13;
-Henry David Thoreau&#13;
To appreciate the natural&#13;
world requires no schooling in&#13;
biology or zoology; only sensitivity.&#13;
Nor is it enough to notice&#13;
nature casually.&#13;
The meaning of a tiny spruce&#13;
seedling, pushing its way towards&#13;
a glorious sun, is found in the&#13;
observer's introspection and&#13;
contemplation of life, of others, of&#13;
one's self.&#13;
Knowledge has its place. We&#13;
are responsible for needless&#13;
litter, garbage, pollution,&#13;
bombing and destruction of the&#13;
natural world. Upon a sensitive,&#13;
caring knowledge of the effects&#13;
rests our hope for the continuance&#13;
of the universe.&#13;
— Debra Friedell&#13;
(Parkside student)&#13;
Ranger photos by Debra Friedell&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1973&#13;
Scientis t theorizes&#13;
Fr iedman speaks on UFO's&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
Tuesday, April 17 was a night of&#13;
genuine interest for all the space&#13;
minded in the Kenosha area.&#13;
Stanton T. Friedman unfolded a&#13;
convincing argument supporting&#13;
the existence of UFOs at&#13;
Parkside's P.E. building.&#13;
Friedman's attitude was not the&#13;
I-am-a-believer one which was&#13;
characteristic of Wayne S. Aho&#13;
for his lecture on E.S.P., but&#13;
rather was an attitude of, I-as-anintelligent&#13;
- scientist - can - not -&#13;
help - but - realize - the - obvious -&#13;
truth - implied - by - the - data.&#13;
Friedman broke down UFO&#13;
sightings into three categories.&#13;
The first are IFOs or those&#13;
sightings which are identified as&#13;
earth-oriented vessels after&#13;
further investigation. The second&#13;
category are those sightings&#13;
which have insufficient information&#13;
to be placed in one of&#13;
the other categories. The third is&#13;
competent reports that remain&#13;
unidentified after thorough investigation-&#13;
the real UFOs.&#13;
Friedman proceeded to interpet&#13;
data, while visually aiding&#13;
the audience with charts&#13;
projected on the screen. He&#13;
pointed out that the better the&#13;
quality of the report the more&#13;
likely it is to be classified as&#13;
UFO. Most UFO reports are&#13;
made by respectable, welleducated&#13;
citizens who have observed&#13;
the phenomena for sufficient&#13;
lengths of time under good&#13;
viewing conditions. He also&#13;
knocked the Condon Report and&#13;
re-evaluated the data produced&#13;
by that study.&#13;
None of the educated nonbeliever&#13;
arguments hold together&#13;
under careful scrutiny. There are&#13;
excellent UFO pictures showing&#13;
no evidence of fakery, some of&#13;
which Friedman had projected&#13;
on the screen. UFOs have been&#13;
reported scientists, astronomers,&#13;
pilots, policemen, orbiting&#13;
astronauts, and control tower&#13;
operators. Observations have&#13;
been made in cities and in the&#13;
country, at night and during the&#13;
day, on the ground as well as the&#13;
air. Many observations last for&#13;
more than 30 minutes and there&#13;
have been many multiple witness&#13;
reports and also simultaneous&#13;
radar-visual reports. Consider&#13;
these high-quality reports along&#13;
with the fact that there are&#13;
published scientific studies which&#13;
show that round trips of 50 years&#13;
between the earth and nearby&#13;
stars are possible with man's&#13;
present knowledge. It makes&#13;
UFO visitations seem very&#13;
possible since it is all too likely&#13;
that more advanced civilizations&#13;
do exist somewhere.&#13;
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It is believed by Friedman that&#13;
the earth is being visited by intelligently&#13;
controlled vehicles&#13;
whose origin is not from earth.&#13;
The reason for his belief is the&#13;
design and behavior of UFO's.&#13;
They are round, symetric craft of&#13;
two basic designs. The larger&#13;
number are disc shaped,&#13;
metallic, often with&#13;
protuberances resembling antennae.&#13;
A smaller number of&#13;
craft are larger and cigar shaped&#13;
which causes some fantasizing of&#13;
"Mother Ships." Their&#13;
maneuverability enables them to&#13;
hover, fly vertically and&#13;
horizontally at very high speeds,&#13;
and to make sharp right angle&#13;
turns. They are usually silent.&#13;
Because of the nature of the&#13;
preceeding UFO data, Friedman&#13;
prefers to call them EEMs, or&#13;
Earth Excursion Modules.&#13;
Naturally, if UFOs do exist&#13;
there must be a reason for the&#13;
neglect of scientific investigation.&#13;
Friedman gave fi"e.&#13;
Ignorance is an important factor&#13;
- most scientists have not studied&#13;
the data. The "Laughter Curtain"&#13;
is a serious restrainer, as&#13;
about 10 percent of the scientists&#13;
at a recent convention had observed&#13;
UFOs but only .04 percent&#13;
of t hem reported. Most admitted&#13;
the reason for their failure to&#13;
report was the fear of ridicule.&#13;
There is an ego complex because&#13;
believing in UFOs destroys the&#13;
human superiority image. Also&#13;
there is the unwillingness to&#13;
adapt technological beliefs and to&#13;
realize that different physics are&#13;
possible.&#13;
As Friedman concluded his&#13;
lecture he asked for a showing of&#13;
hands from the audience. 45&#13;
hands answered to seeing UFOs&#13;
and only 2 answered to reporting&#13;
them. The space age has arrived&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
The Left Handed&#13;
Gun to show Friday&#13;
The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
show THE LEFT HANDED&#13;
GUN, Arthur Penn's 1958 f ilm in&#13;
which he portrays Billy the Kid&#13;
as a tormented adolescent whose&#13;
inability to accept the compromises&#13;
and inadequacies of the&#13;
law leads to a life of violence.&#13;
When his kindly employer is&#13;
murdered, Billy (Paul Newman)&#13;
vows to avenge his death. Billy's&#13;
compulsive pursuit drags a trail&#13;
of violence through the lives of&#13;
his few close friends. Hunted&#13;
down by law officers from all&#13;
parts of the West, he realizes that&#13;
he has nowhere left to turn. When&#13;
he is confronted by Sheriff Pat&#13;
Garrett (John Dehner), his&#13;
former friend, Billy draws from&#13;
an empty holster and Pat shoots&#13;
him.&#13;
THE LEFT HANDED GUN,&#13;
Uncle Bob's comics&#13;
like nearly all of Penn's films&#13;
(BONNIE AND CLYDE, THE&#13;
CHASE, LITTLE BIG MAN),&#13;
features an intensely emotional&#13;
performance by the lead and a&#13;
somber, brooding atmosphere.&#13;
Billy has no doubt about the&#13;
mission which he adopts at the&#13;
opening of the film; by the end, it&#13;
has turned into a self-destructive&#13;
course, which Billy is unable to&#13;
control or understand.&#13;
Shown with feature will be the&#13;
Chaplin classic, THE IMMIGRANT.&#13;
As a passenger en&#13;
route to America, Charlie&#13;
befriends a lonely girl and her&#13;
mother. Ashore he is involved in&#13;
one of the funniest restaurant&#13;
scenes ever filmed.&#13;
The films will be shown Friday,&#13;
May 4 at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
103. Admission is 60 cents.&#13;
by Bob Rohan&#13;
W0M6MS LIB MeetlNGS!.'&#13;
WOMEN&amp; LIB SALLYS"&#13;
wOMgN's LI 8 cLfteses!!!&#13;
Wed . , May 2, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
Golfers win first&#13;
had the medalist in Tim Schwob&#13;
(70) while Parkside and 394 and&#13;
UW-Milwaukee 397.&#13;
Leissner was Parkside's top&#13;
finisher, two strokes off the&#13;
winner's pace, with a 74, while&#13;
Jim Vakos had a 76 and John&#13;
Lehmann a 78. Dave Fox carded&#13;
an 82 while Pete Nevins shot an 85&#13;
to round out the Hanger scoring.&#13;
Next action for the golfers is&#13;
scheduled for today at DeKalb,&#13;
111., against Northern Illinois.'&#13;
The Rangers will compete this&#13;
weekend in the NAIA District 14&#13;
tourney at Green Lake. Parkside&#13;
was second last year to UWLaCrosse&#13;
but Stephens figures&#13;
the Rangers have enough&#13;
firepower to overtake UW-L this&#13;
time and make a strong bid for&#13;
the title.&#13;
Parkside's golfers, before&#13;
heading south over spring break&#13;
at their own expense for a week of&#13;
golf and fun in the sum, took on&#13;
some northern opponents in the&#13;
cold environs of Petrifying&#13;
Springs and came out with a first&#13;
and a second in two multi-team&#13;
matches.&#13;
The Rangers totaled 382 f or 18&#13;
holes in dropping Loyola (423)&#13;
and Lake Forest (426) April 19 at&#13;
Pets as Dan Leissner fired a 71&#13;
for medalist honors. Tom Bothe&#13;
carded a 79 for Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens' linksmen while Don&#13;
Fox and A1 P avonka added 77's&#13;
and Dave Fox came in with an 83.&#13;
Parkside opened the season&#13;
April 17 at Pets by beating UWMilwaukee&#13;
and losing to tough&#13;
Northern Illinois in a triangular&#13;
match. Northern totaled 371 and&#13;
Parkside co-eds f inish&#13;
high in Judo National s&#13;
Parkside juniors, Nancy&#13;
Konecny and Jackie Blaha,&#13;
returned from the National AAU&#13;
Judo championships held on the&#13;
Georgia Tech campus in Atlanta&#13;
with a fifth place finish in&#13;
Katame-No-Kata.&#13;
This is one of the highest&#13;
finishes ever by Wisconsin Judo&#13;
athletes in the prestigious AAU&#13;
championships and certainly in&#13;
women's competition.&#13;
Ms. Konecny and Blaha earned&#13;
the right to compete in the&#13;
Nationals with a secone place&#13;
finish in the state championships.&#13;
They did gain revenge over the&#13;
winning team since the Wisconsin&#13;
champions placed sixteenth in&#13;
the nationals.&#13;
Ron Hansen, Parkside's judo&#13;
instructor, started both these&#13;
girls in judo. Until they started&#13;
competing for the Parkside judo&#13;
club they competed for the Shu-&#13;
Shin-Kan, a Racine YWCA team.&#13;
Ms. Konecny, a brown belt, is a&#13;
graduate of Racine Horlick and&#13;
has been competing in judo for&#13;
4V2 years while her counterpart,&#13;
Ms. Blaha, has been in the sport&#13;
for three years and is a graduate&#13;
of St. Catherine's High School.&#13;
Both of them are majoring in&#13;
Sociology and Psychology with&#13;
plans on going into Police&#13;
Science.&#13;
Eugene Dee, this year's&#13;
Parkside's Invitational Grand&#13;
Champion from Milwaukee,&#13;
pulled one of the major upsets in&#13;
the tournament by finishing&#13;
second in the 176 pound championships.&#13;
. .Women's Judo Champs Jackie&#13;
Blaha (left) and Nancy Konecny&#13;
(right)&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
TERM PAPERS papers neatly typed. 50&#13;
cents per page. Call for and deliver. J.&#13;
Konke, 694-2776 after 5:30.&#13;
AFRO dance classes: YWCA 8th 8&lt; C ollege&#13;
Ave. Racine instructor Betty Briggs call 633-&#13;
3503 A. Dowman Starting 4-11-73&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
.2667.&#13;
1970 Maverick 6-stick, red, Ex. cond.,&#13;
economical, dependable, new tires, must sell&#13;
632 3385.&#13;
BARMAIDS WANTED -Kazaches Turtle&#13;
Club. Apply at 1801 50th St. after 3 p.m.&#13;
YWCA Forum "A Look at Prepared&#13;
Chikldbirth" Thursday May 17, 1973 - 7:30&#13;
p.m. 8th and College Avenues, Racine. $1.00&#13;
per person admission.&#13;
At the Parkside Intramural&#13;
Wrestling Championships held&#13;
April 18, the Track Team took&#13;
first with 17 points, Sigma Pi was&#13;
second with 13, and the Wrestling&#13;
Class came in third with 9.&#13;
In the championship matches,&#13;
John Savaglio, 126 pounds,&#13;
pinned Craig Campbell; Mike&#13;
Kopczinski, 134, pinned Mike&#13;
Wickware; Chuck Dettmen; 142,&#13;
pinned Everret Hyde; Paul&#13;
Weyrauch, 150, pinned Zoan&#13;
Kulinski; Tim Martinson, 158,&#13;
decisioned Mike Grabot 7-6; John&#13;
Peterson, 167, pinned Rick&#13;
Barnhart; Tom Peterson, 190,&#13;
pinned Gary Meyers; and Ed&#13;
Hopkins, heavyweight, pinned&#13;
Mark Madsen.&#13;
Tim Martinson was voted the&#13;
outstanding wrestler of the&#13;
tournament, as he had a first&#13;
period pin and an exciting 7-6 win&#13;
in the finals.&#13;
All-American Bill West made&#13;
the award presentations.&#13;
Parkside will have its first&#13;
Soccer Club Tournament&#13;
Saturday. Eight schools will send&#13;
teams: UW-Whitewater, UWMilwaukee,&#13;
Northwestern&#13;
University, Lewis College,&#13;
Trinity College, Milton College,&#13;
Carthage College, and Parkside.&#13;
There will be play in two&#13;
divisions of four teams. Each&#13;
team will play all the teams in the&#13;
division round-robin fashion. The&#13;
winner in each division will play&#13;
second place of the opposite&#13;
division, and the winners will&#13;
then play for the trophies.&#13;
Division one consists of&#13;
Parkside, UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
Northwestern and Milton, and&#13;
division two is Carthage, Trinity,&#13;
UW-Whitewater and Lewis.&#13;
The schedule of play will be&#13;
Parkside vs. Milwaukee on field&#13;
one at 11 a.m. and Carthage vs.&#13;
Trinity on field two. At 11:45 it&#13;
will be Milwaukee vs. Northwestern&#13;
on field one, and&#13;
Trinity vs. Whitewater on field&#13;
two. 12:30 p.m. will see Parkside&#13;
vs. Milton on field one, with&#13;
Carthage and Lewis battling it&#13;
out on field two. 1:15 p.m. on field&#13;
one will be Whitewater vs. Lewis,&#13;
and on field two will be Northwestern&#13;
vs. Milton. Carthage&#13;
will play Whitewater on field one,&#13;
and Parkside Northwestern at 2&#13;
p.m. Field one will have Trinity&#13;
and Lewis at 2:45 p.m. and field&#13;
two will have Milwaukee and&#13;
Milton. The play-offs will begin at&#13;
3:45 p.m., and the trophies will be&#13;
presented at 5:15 p.m.&#13;
Anyone interested in helping as&#13;
linesmen and time keepers at the&#13;
Parkside Soccer Club's tournament&#13;
Sunday contact Coach&#13;
Henderson at ex. 2311.&#13;
The Annual Varsity Club Picnic&#13;
will be held Sunday from 2 p.m. to&#13;
7 p.m. at Petrifying Springs&#13;
Park. Varsity Club members will&#13;
be admitted free and all others&#13;
$1.&#13;
The Parkside netters whipped&#13;
Milton College 6-3 April 18.&#13;
Singles number one Rick&#13;
Bedore, Parkside, defeated&#13;
Bruce Lindsay, Milton, 8-6 and 7-&#13;
5. Number two Gary Christensen,&#13;
Parkside, defeated Sam Skaggs,&#13;
Milton, 4-6, 6-4 a nd 6-2. Number&#13;
three Dave Herchen, Parkside,&#13;
lost to Kurt Aufderhaar, Milton,&#13;
9-7 and 6-4. Number four Mark&#13;
Haase, Parkside, defeated A1&#13;
Lemke, Milton, 6-0 and 6-4.&#13;
Number five Todd Nelson,&#13;
Parkside, defeated Scott Sawicki,&#13;
Milton, 6-1 and 6-4; and number&#13;
six Cal Jensen, Parkside,&#13;
defeated Dave Bilgo, Milton, 6-1&#13;
and 6-0.&#13;
Doubles number one Bedroe-&#13;
Andy Petersen lost to Lindsay-&#13;
Skaggs 1-6, 13-11 and 15-13.&#13;
Number two Herchen-&#13;
Christensen defeated Aufderhaar-&#13;
Sawicki 6-1, 6-1; and&#13;
number three Nelson-Jensen lost&#13;
to Lemke-Bilgo 6-4, 4-6 and 7-5.&#13;
Maplecrest Country Club will&#13;
be the host of the Winter-Spring&#13;
Sports Banquet this year on May&#13;
9. All the atheletes from the past&#13;
season will be honored at this&#13;
time for their achievements and&#13;
participation.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
ju 2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
W ITALIAN F OOD A SPECIALTY&#13;
^SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
Expired DRINKS A VAILABLE F ROM THE B AR&#13;
May 9, 1973 5 0' OFF ANY&#13;
&lt; 50*&#13;
lee? Sub 1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Th u r s d a y 1 1 - 8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER iy&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches!&#13;
Foosb a l l 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Condi t ioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Col d Si x Packs To Go&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCT.CKF.n FOR $&#13;
DATESfS) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
apprfqs BATE&#13;
r iTY PHONE NO .&#13;
On e word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication.&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1973&#13;
Rosa repeats as Drake Marathon champ&#13;
Lucian Rosa, Parkside's star distanceman, won his second straight&#13;
Drake Relays marathon championship Saturday in Des Moines, when&#13;
he covered the 26 mile, 385 yard route through Iowa's capitol city in 2&#13;
hrs., 25 min., 18.4 sec.&#13;
He had set the record for the event in 1972 when he clocked 2:22:13.&#13;
For Rosa, it was also a national title. The U.S. Track and Field&#13;
Federation (USTFF) recognizes the race as its national championship&#13;
event.&#13;
The race was different from last year in that Rosa held back longer&#13;
and did not move into the lead for good until the 21 mile mark. But&#13;
although he held only a 100 foot lead over Tony Brien of Marymount&#13;
(Iowa) College at that time, he expanded that through the last five&#13;
miles and won by nearly two minutes as Brien was timed in 2:27:03.4.&#13;
"The race seemed easier to me than last year and was a lot more&#13;
fun," Rosa said. "Last year I took the lead at the eight mile mark and&#13;
ran alone for the rest of the race. This year I ran with a group of about&#13;
six or seven other guys and until I took the lead at the 21 mile mark, we&#13;
talked a lot to pass the time.&#13;
"This was a nice workout for me," he added. "I was never worried&#13;
about the outcome. I like this course a lot because of the hills. I'm&#13;
probably best suited for the marathon because I never get cramps.&#13;
"I knew my time was much slower than last year when I was told at&#13;
the 20 mile mark that my time was 1:57. That was time at the 22 mile&#13;
mark last year."&#13;
..National Champ Lucien Rosa&#13;
Rangers dedicate new track&#13;
Parkside's own Lucien Rosa has won the Drake Marathon for the&#13;
second year in a row.&#13;
The Parkside track team made&#13;
its debut on the new outdoor track&#13;
here an auspicious one as the&#13;
Rangers grabbed seven first&#13;
places in the Parkside Open Meet&#13;
held here Friday, April 20.&#13;
Lucien Rosa led the way for&#13;
Parkside, taking first in the three&#13;
mile in 14:38 and top honors in the&#13;
six mile in 30:08.0. But the&#13;
Rangers had other stars as well.&#13;
Dennis Biel clocked 1:57.9 to&#13;
win the 880 yard run while Chuck&#13;
Dettman grabbed a win on the&#13;
3000-meter steeplechase in 9:41.9.&#13;
Cornelius Gordon took honors in&#13;
the 440 in 50.1 and ran the third&#13;
leg on Parkside's winning mile&#13;
relay team with Herb DeGroot,&#13;
Raul Medina and Biel. The&#13;
Rangers' 3:35.4 set a varsity&#13;
record.&#13;
Also winning for Parkside was&#13;
Keith Merritt, with a 44-5V4 triple&#13;
' jump effort. Donn Cooper of the&#13;
Parkside track club won the&#13;
decathlon with 6,070 points,&#13;
highlighted by a 14-3 pole vault.&#13;
Merritt finished second with 6,057&#13;
points.&#13;
Other placers for Parkside&#13;
included Tim, Martinson, fifth in&#13;
the pole vault; Mike Kopczynski,&#13;
second in the long jump; Medina,'&#13;
fourth in the 880 and third in the&#13;
long jump; DeGroot, third in the&#13;
440 and sixth in the 220; and the&#13;
440 y ard relay team, second.&#13;
The meet was the first ever&#13;
held on Parkside's new Chevron&#13;
track, which is only the third of&#13;
its kind in the world. All winning&#13;
efforts automatically became&#13;
track records. Another open meet&#13;
is scheduled for Tuesday (May&#13;
AMERICAN FURNITURE. By&#13;
Helen Comstock. 700 Illus. in&#13;
color &amp; monochrome. Complete&#13;
guide to 17th, 18th and early 19th&#13;
century styles - Jacobean,&#13;
Chippendale, Early Victorian,&#13;
etc., incl. historical backgrounds,&#13;
craftsmen, the regional&#13;
characteristics of New England,&#13;
the South, etc. 8'/2 x ll'/4. Orig.&#13;
Pub, at $17.50. New, complete ed.&#13;
only $5.95&#13;
THE JOY OF EATING&#13;
NATURAL FOODS TIIE&#13;
COMPLETE ORGANIC COOKBOOK.&#13;
New approach to good&#13;
eating for health-conscious&#13;
Americans incl. more than 2,000&#13;
recipes for garden-fresh&#13;
vegetables, luscious home-baked&#13;
breads, raw food menus, etc.&#13;
Pub. at $6.50. Only $1.98&#13;
HAMMOND GIANT WALL MAP&#13;
PACKAGE. Beautiful, accurate&#13;
map of the world and map of&#13;
U.S.A each 3 ft. by 4 ft. prepared&#13;
by outstanding cartographers, in&#13;
magnificient colors with easy-toread&#13;
type. Pub. at $2.00. Only&#13;
$1.00.&#13;
SUCCESSFUL WINE MAKING&#13;
AT HOME, by H E. Bravery, an&#13;
internationally famous wine&#13;
expert tells how to make hundreds&#13;
of delicious wines for less&#13;
than 25 per bottle incl. Fresh fruit&#13;
wines, flower wines, grain wines,&#13;
root wines, dried herb wines and&#13;
liqueurs. Orig. Pub. at $3.50.&#13;
New, complete ed. only $1.00.&#13;
SELECTED TITLES — LIMI T E D QUANTI T I E S&#13;
THE LORE OF SHIPS, by Tre&#13;
Tryckare. Over 1500 illus.,&#13;
hundreds of vivid color.&#13;
Magnificent volume explains and&#13;
illustrates every component of&#13;
every kind of ship - primitive&#13;
dugouts, sailing ships, liners,&#13;
nuclear warships, etc. ll'A x IIV4.&#13;
Pub. at $27.00 ONLY $9.95.&#13;
PICASSO AND THE CUBISTS. 76&#13;
illus. incl. 60 plates in splendid&#13;
full color. Stunning panorama of&#13;
cubist art Picasso, braque,&#13;
Leger, Delaunay, etc., plus vivid&#13;
text. 9n.i x 12. Reduced to only&#13;
$2.69.&#13;
|•• '/'"•ft.ivW&#13;
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THE COLLECTING OF GUNS.&#13;
Ed. by James E. Serven. Hundreds&#13;
of photos &amp; drawings. A&#13;
fascinating biography of guns,&#13;
describing and picturing many&#13;
types in all categories with much&#13;
information on use, collecting,&#13;
history, care, repair, etc. 8'2 x 11 .&#13;
Orig. Pub. at $24.95 New, complete&#13;
ed. only $5.95&#13;
A HISTORY OF ART, FROM&#13;
PREHISTORIC' TIMES TO THE&#13;
PRESENT, by Germain Bazin.&#13;
with 668 illus. in monochrome and&#13;
full color. Man's achievements in&#13;
painting and architecture from&#13;
the cave paintings of&#13;
paleolithic age to the present in&#13;
concise authoritative detail with&#13;
a wealth of pictures from public&#13;
and private collections. Orig.&#13;
Pub, at $9.00 New, complete ed.,&#13;
only $3.95&#13;
THE NEW LAROUSSE ENCYCLOPEDIA&#13;
OF THE EARTH.&#13;
by L. Bertin. 532 illus., 32 in vivid&#13;
full color. Huge comprehensive&#13;
account of the physical&#13;
phenomena that make up man's&#13;
environment formation of seas,&#13;
glaciers and mountains, the&#13;
nature of volcanos and earthquakes.&#13;
climate, etc. over 400&#13;
pages. 8'2 x 11. Import special&#13;
only $9.95.&#13;
THE COMPACT BOOK OF FISH&#13;
AND GAME COOKERY, by L.&#13;
Carver. The fine art of cooking&#13;
birds, game and fish outdoors&#13;
and in the home kitchen with&#13;
easy-to-follow recipes including&#13;
those for vegetables and tips on&#13;
herbs, spices, sauces, sauces and&#13;
wines. Only $1.00&#13;
GRANNIE'S REMEDIES, ed. by&#13;
Mai Thomas. Illus. with&#13;
drawings. Unusual collection of&#13;
remedies for all kinds of ailments&#13;
based on experience of one&#13;
grandmother known for her&#13;
miraculous cures. Orig. Pub. at&#13;
$4.95 New. complete ed. only&#13;
$1.00.&#13;
ROCK GARDENING, bv H.L.&#13;
Foster. Illus. by L.L. Foster.&#13;
Complete guide to growing&#13;
alpines and other wildflowers in&#13;
the American garden incl.&#13;
detailed instructions covering&#13;
nearly every type of terrain.&#13;
Orig. Pub. at $7.00 New. complete&#13;
ed. onlv $1.98&#13;
WINSLOW HOMER WATER-&#13;
(OLORS. by D.F. Hoopes.&#13;
Handsomely illus. with 32 fullpage&#13;
color reporductions. A&#13;
distinguished collection of the&#13;
work of America's most popular&#13;
and influential watercolorist,&#13;
incl. the background and&#13;
development of the artist's&#13;
methods, a brief appreciation&#13;
and chronology of the artist's&#13;
work. 10'1 x 11. Pub at $17.50&#13;
Only $9.95.&#13;
SALE STARTS WED. MAY 2 ENDS FRI . MAY 1 1</text>
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              <text>12th issue *"*•******"** 12 pages •&#13;
PAB sponsors Derby Day lodging&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
A big bash is coming up soon in&#13;
Kentucky - May 5 is "Derby&#13;
Day," and Parkside Activities&#13;
Board is sponsoring a Kentucky&#13;
Derby Weekend Special.&#13;
For the 98th running of the&#13;
Kentucky Derby last year, over&#13;
130,000 people crowded historic&#13;
Churchill Downs in Louisville.&#13;
Many thousands of them were&#13;
students who saw the Derby as&#13;
the ideal and quite unique climax&#13;
to a fun and care-free weekend&#13;
(sometimes called the "Mardi&#13;
Gras" of Kentucky). Since the&#13;
University of Louisville is located&#13;
only about a quartermile from&#13;
Churchill Downs, out-of-state&#13;
students have traditionally&#13;
sought economical refuge at this&#13;
campus.&#13;
Last May, the University of&#13;
Louisville Union for Student&#13;
Activity realized a need to&#13;
provide something beyond overcrowded&#13;
Greek houses, residence&#13;
halls, lawns, shrubbery, fountains&#13;
and halls of ivy to lodge in&#13;
or upon. It opened the doors of the&#13;
"Red Barn," a university rock&#13;
theater converted from a&#13;
nineteenth century tank factory.&#13;
The Red Barn provided a rather&#13;
unique but quite suitable place&#13;
for several hundred bedrolls.&#13;
Shower facilities were arranged&#13;
with a gymnasium and a&#13;
residence hall close by. Each&#13;
student registering in the Red&#13;
Barn paid a nominal fee of $1 per&#13;
night and received an "Official&#13;
Crash Pass" and information on&#13;
Derby Weekend.&#13;
This year it's all happening&#13;
again. Parkside Activities Board&#13;
has a special package deal for the&#13;
weekend: $5 for infield ticket at&#13;
the Derby, $2.50 advance ticket&#13;
for Derby's Friday night concert&#13;
with Dr. Hook and the Medicine&#13;
Show and the Brownsville Station&#13;
(tickets will be $4 at the door),&#13;
and $1 a night for lodging on the&#13;
Louisville campus. Coffee and&#13;
donuts and a shower are included&#13;
in the $1 fee; students must&#13;
supply their own sleeping bags.&#13;
They will be staying with&#13;
students from many other parts&#13;
of the country.&#13;
It is possible to buy just part of&#13;
the package as well as all of it.&#13;
Students must supply their own&#13;
transportation, but travel information&#13;
is available at Student&#13;
Activities Office, LLC D 197.&#13;
People can sign up for tickets at&#13;
the same place, but should do so&#13;
soon to secure them.&#13;
Aho to speak on&#13;
ESP Friday&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday April 4, 1973 Vol. 1 No. 24&#13;
Amin discovers new worm specie&#13;
To the untrained eye, Parksidei&#13;
isn't much to look at.&#13;
But to its discoverer, the small&#13;
parasitic spiney-headed wormits&#13;
proboscis or snout covered by&#13;
neat rows of thorn-like hooks-is a&#13;
thing of beauty and a scholarly&#13;
joy forever: a new biological&#13;
species.&#13;
The organism, formally entered&#13;
in scientific literature as&#13;
"Acanthocephalus parksidei," is&#13;
named Parkside by its&#13;
discoverer, Egyptian-born Omar&#13;
M. Amin, an assistant professor&#13;
of life science.&#13;
Academic tradition gives the&#13;
discoverer of a new species the&#13;
right to name it, Amin said- "for&#13;
anyone or anything he wants to,&#13;
but generally the name chosen&#13;
should add something to the&#13;
descritpion of the organism."&#13;
And since the discovery of a&#13;
new species is a relatively rare&#13;
event, the christening deserves&#13;
some careful deliberation.&#13;
Amin has two reasons for&#13;
naming his find "parksidei."&#13;
"The name reflects both the&#13;
fact that it was discovered at&#13;
Parkside-in fish from the Pike&#13;
River which flows through the&#13;
northwest corner of the campusand&#13;
Parkside's institutional&#13;
commitment to the ecology of the&#13;
area," Amin said.&#13;
Parksidei is the third distinct&#13;
species of the genus Acanthocephalus&#13;
discovered in North&#13;
America. It is distinguished from&#13;
the other two species principally&#13;
by being smaller (parksidei&#13;
females are an average of 4.3&#13;
millimeters long and males an&#13;
average of 1.9 millimeters) and&#13;
by having fewer rows of hooks&#13;
and fewer hooks per row on its&#13;
tubular proboscis.&#13;
Thus far, parksidei has been&#13;
found in the intestines of creek&#13;
chubs and white suckers, both&#13;
fish native to the Pike River and&#13;
other southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
waterways.&#13;
Further studies will be&#13;
necessary to determine the effect&#13;
Omar Amin&#13;
of the parasite's presence on its&#13;
fish-hosts and to document its life&#13;
cycle, which involves an intermediate&#13;
host, probably an&#13;
arthropod, Amin said.&#13;
Amin points out that&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin is virgin&#13;
territory for the study of fish&#13;
parasites-one of his major&#13;
research interests and the subject&#13;
of his Ph. D. dissertation at&#13;
Arizona State University.&#13;
Although Wisconsin's fish have&#13;
been the subject of numerous&#13;
studies-both by academics and&#13;
by anglers-most of the work has&#13;
been done in the North, Amin&#13;
said.&#13;
The Southeast also is prime&#13;
territory for pursuit of Amin's&#13;
other major research interestarthropod-&#13;
borne diseases. Arthropods&#13;
are a broad group of&#13;
organisms with jointed legs and&#13;
segmented bodies including&#13;
spiders, mites, ticks, centipedes,&#13;
crayfish and similar crustaceans&#13;
and insects.&#13;
Amin currently is engaged in&#13;
the first systematic study of such&#13;
organisms in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
His interest in arthropods and,&#13;
their public health implications&#13;
dates to work in his native Egypt&#13;
with the Department of Medical&#13;
Zoology of the U.S. Naval&#13;
Medical Research Unit and to his&#13;
subsequent studies on ticks as a&#13;
post-doctoral research associate&#13;
at Old Dominion University in&#13;
Virginia and a visiting fellow at&#13;
the National Center for Disease&#13;
Control in Atlanta, Ga.&#13;
Now, his work on both fish&#13;
parasites and arthropod disease&#13;
carriers is centered on the&#13;
woodlands, fields and streams of&#13;
the 700-acre Parkside campus,&#13;
which Amin describes as "a&#13;
natural laboratory" for his&#13;
studies.&#13;
"I can go out the back door and&#13;
start collecting specimens," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Actually, the process is considerably&#13;
more systematic. Amin&#13;
has mapped the northwest area&#13;
of the campus bisected by the&#13;
river into a grid pattern for&#13;
identification of the precise&#13;
source of his specimens.&#13;
fle can sometimes be spottedthrough&#13;
the early-morning mists&#13;
checking his live-traps to collect&#13;
the ticks, mites, insects, etc.,&#13;
which have gathered on small&#13;
mammals such as rabbits and&#13;
chipmunks which are placed in&#13;
the traps.&#13;
Summers find him "giving my&#13;
arms to science" to determine&#13;
which varieties of mosquitoes&#13;
bite humans-and therefore may&#13;
transmit disease from lower&#13;
animals to man. (If you thought&#13;
all mosquitoes bite humans, it&#13;
only seems that way.)&#13;
Specimens are then brought&#13;
back to the laboratory for study.&#13;
Is it worth it?&#13;
Yes, says Amin. There's&#13;
always at least an outside&#13;
chance-especially in a&#13;
geographic area only recently&#13;
subjected to scientific study-that&#13;
another new species may be&#13;
awaiting discovery on the stage&#13;
of the microscope.&#13;
Of no less importance, is the&#13;
exploration of the ecological&#13;
interactions between parasites&#13;
and their hosts including man,&#13;
Amin added.&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
Wayne S. Aho, Founder and&#13;
President of The New Age&#13;
Foundation Inc., which has&#13;
charters nationwide and abroad,&#13;
will appear here Friday, April 6 to&#13;
speak on extrasensory perception.&#13;
"Major," Aho, who prefers the&#13;
title INNERsensory perception,&#13;
has traveled over a million miles&#13;
as a lecturer on ESP and the Age&#13;
of Aquarious, among other&#13;
topics.&#13;
The theme of his talk includes a&#13;
higher understanding for the&#13;
world with principles proven&#13;
through throughout the ages. He&#13;
feels that our nation and the&#13;
world is in great crisis and that&#13;
there must be a blending of true&#13;
science with the best of religion to&#13;
bring forth a golden age upon the&#13;
planet. "Where there is no vision,&#13;
the people perish."&#13;
The Major has been a speaker&#13;
at some forty space conventions&#13;
and has served as Master of&#13;
Ceremonies at many. At the first&#13;
annual Aquarian Age Conference&#13;
held in Hawaii in 1972 he was a&#13;
featured speaker.&#13;
Aho has appeared on television&#13;
and radio programs throughout&#13;
the country and has garnered&#13;
favorable reviews from colleges&#13;
throughout the country, The&#13;
University of Minnesota and&#13;
Hawaii, to name two.&#13;
The tallents he demonstrated&#13;
for a group at the Minnesota&#13;
Scoeity for Parapsychological&#13;
Research excited the students'&#13;
interest because of his conviction&#13;
Lake Alert&#13;
Wayne S. Aho&#13;
that all bf us have these tallents&#13;
in some degree.&#13;
Psychologists have made th&#13;
statement that man uses only 5&#13;
percent of the capacity of his&#13;
mind. Major Aho goes further to&#13;
say that man's capacity could be&#13;
increased 2500 times if he should&#13;
realise his potential.&#13;
The presentation, which is&#13;
being sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association,&#13;
is scheduled for 8 p.m. in Tallent&#13;
Hall. Admission at the door will&#13;
be 75 cents for students with IDs&#13;
and $1 for general admission. The&#13;
reason for the low price being a&#13;
hope to attract a greater&#13;
proportion of students for a fine&#13;
arts-lecture type performance.&#13;
Scientists discuss reactor&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
There were three major issues&#13;
discussed at the Lake Michigan&#13;
Alert Conference held recently at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The dominant issue, with two&#13;
speakers devoted to it, was&#13;
nuclear power plants. Henry S.&#13;
CCole, assistant professor of&#13;
earth science at Parkside participated&#13;
in the conference and he&#13;
believes that the problems of&#13;
nuclear power plants are the&#13;
most important.&#13;
This article, the first of a three&#13;
part series, will cover the&#13;
problem of nuclear power plants.&#13;
Power Plant Safety&#13;
Speaking to the conference on&#13;
nuclear power plant safety was&#13;
James J. MacKenzie, who has a&#13;
Ph. D. in nuclear physics and is&#13;
chairman of the Union of Concerned&#13;
Scientists.&#13;
MacKenzie pointed out in his&#13;
speech that the Atomic Energy&#13;
Commission (AEC) has been lax&#13;
in its testing of nuclear power&#13;
plant safety systems, yet has still&#13;
pushed the use of these plants in&#13;
spite of the dangers inherent in&#13;
their operation.&#13;
The dangers being referred to&#13;
are those of accidents which&#13;
release radioactivity into the&#13;
environment. There are a&#13;
number of ways for this to&#13;
happen, but the accident which&#13;
was described in the most detail&#13;
to the conference was a loss of&#13;
coolant accident (LOCAL These&#13;
accidents are the most serious&#13;
which can occur in a nuclear&#13;
reactor according to the AEC.&#13;
Nuclear reactors must constantly&#13;
be cooled in order to keep&#13;
the power producing reaction&#13;
under control. If the coolant&#13;
supply is interrupted for any&#13;
reason, the temperature in the&#13;
reactor begins to rise.&#13;
Emergency Systems&#13;
The fuel which is used in light&#13;
water nuclear reactors is&#13;
uranium. In order for this fuel to&#13;
be usable, it must be encased i n a&#13;
material called Zircaloy, which&#13;
melts at 1850 degrees Centigrade.&#13;
This temperature can be reached&#13;
within about one minute if the&#13;
Emergency Core Cooking System&#13;
(ECCS) does not begin to cool the&#13;
reactor. No full-scale LOCA has&#13;
occurred to date, but the&#13;
possibility of such an accident is&#13;
one in 1,000.&#13;
When an extreme enough&#13;
temperature is reached dueto an&#13;
LOAC, radioactivity can be&#13;
released in a number of ways.&#13;
The pipes and even the reactor&#13;
itself can be ruptured by steam&#13;
and hydrogen explosions. The&#13;
dispersal of radioactivity would&#13;
depend on wind direction and&#13;
velocity, but could be up to 100&#13;
miles. Eventually, the fuel core&#13;
itself would melt down and go&#13;
into the earth in the direction of&#13;
China (This is referred to as a&#13;
"MELTDOWN" OR "China&#13;
accident").&#13;
Continued on page 7&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 4, 1973&#13;
THORN&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
We 've built a strong&#13;
foundation&#13;
There have been comments that in t he course of the&#13;
year the Ranger hasn't taken the firm editorial&#13;
initiative it should have to effectively bring change to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
This is probably a true generalization. We have found&#13;
ourselves so engrossed in producing a strong and&#13;
respectable paper that we seldom had the time to get&#13;
into str1 ng editorial writing. But we have attained one&#13;
goal.&#13;
The goal we have reached is that of reasonable&#13;
believability and strong financial positioning. We know&#13;
we are well read because of the substantial increase in&#13;
business of our advertisers. Most organizations on&#13;
campus use the Ranger to reach the Parkside populace&#13;
and most have found it effective. Our reporting has been&#13;
as objective as possible and we feel our readership&#13;
recognizes that.&#13;
Financially we are also doing well. We have managed&#13;
to buy some equipment, pay our printing bills and allot&#13;
meager salaries to the editorial staff. Our outstanding&#13;
debt is the old Newscope Corporation's debt which we&#13;
took over. We will be paying that debt off in installments&#13;
for a number of years.&#13;
Most importantly, we will be in the black at the end of&#13;
the year and this 12-page issue of t he Ranger marks an&#13;
all-time high in ad sales in the community and service to&#13;
the school. *o".W;A.; .... ...... ... . {:&#13;
We have built a strong foundation for journalists of the&#13;
future. We only hope the success which we achieved this&#13;
year will be continued by more new staff members and&#13;
their contributions.&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
First to get rid of old business concerning the Jose Greco performance,&#13;
I must reply to Miss S. Mikaelian's letter in last week's&#13;
issue:&#13;
I am certain that if I had been at the performance, I would have&#13;
enjoyed it. For the $4,500 it cost, it should have been good. However,&#13;
prior commitments with the Naval Reserve have my Tuesday&#13;
evenings pretty well tied up for the next 23 years.&#13;
I have never stated that any performance put on by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board was not worthwhile-from a cultural standpoint. I&#13;
must state again, since you seemed to have missed it, that all&#13;
programs put on by the PAB should at least attract enough response to&#13;
break even financially. This one was a very long way from doing that.&#13;
Please read what you are complaining about more carefully. And&#13;
please stop trying to put words in my mouth, the foot is in yours.&#13;
In relation to the Haack-telegram incident mentioned last week, a&#13;
motion was introduced at the last Student Senate meeting which would&#13;
prevent any member of the senate or officer of the senate from signing&#13;
the name of the Parkside Student Government Association or the&#13;
Student Senate to any political correspondence which did not directly&#13;
concern the University of Wisconsin. The motion was defeated by a&#13;
large majority.&#13;
This is the last chance faculty have to reserve Stanton Friedman's&#13;
time for Tuesday, April 17. Interested groups should contact the Activities&#13;
Office. Do it now!&#13;
Tickets are now on sale for the Friedman performance. Cost is $1.00&#13;
for students and $1.50 for general admission. Besides being available&#13;
at the Activities Office, tickets can be found at Cook-Gere in Racine&#13;
and Bidinger's in Kenosha.&#13;
I have mentioned that I totally support bringing in entertainment for&#13;
the students which would not lose money from the student segregated&#13;
fee. I think most students agree with this. Another such program is the&#13;
Wayne S. Sho presentation on extrasensory perception which is being&#13;
presented this Friday.&#13;
Like the Stanton Friedman performance, "Major" Aho is being paid&#13;
through a percentage of the gate, and any profits could be plowed back&#13;
into programs benefiting students at Parkside. If enough participation&#13;
is shown in both the Aho and Friedman programs, this type of&#13;
arrangment might be looked on favorably and agreed to by other&#13;
performers appearing here.&#13;
In case you've missed other notices about the performance, Major&#13;
Aho will be appearing at Tallent Hall this Friday, April 6 at 8 p.m.&#13;
There will be no advance ticket sales. Admission at the door will be 75&#13;
cents for students with I.D. cards and $1 general admission. At those&#13;
prices how can you go wrong?&#13;
At the rate of $1.65 an hour, it would cost $2,376 to keep the lower&#13;
level doors of the library open from 8 to 5 sixteen weeks of each&#13;
semester during both the fall and spring semesters. That's $2,376 total.&#13;
I know it sounds like a lot of money, but experiences so far seem to&#13;
prove it would be worth it.&#13;
A near riot resulted last Wednesday at the Activities Building&#13;
performance of Tony, Jumbo and Gary. It seems that when somebody&#13;
tried to close the performance down at 11 p.m., the enthusiastic crowd&#13;
didn t want to leave until the management agreed to an encore Some&#13;
have blamed poor planning in the affair and others wonder where any&#13;
fault would he. J&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
The Ranger staff has wanted to go to a 12-page paper for a long time&#13;
because ads were really cramping us for space. This 12-page edition&#13;
was possible because our ad manager has been doing a superior job&#13;
and marks the beginning of a better Ranger-in quality and quantity.&#13;
We hope to have more 12-page editions in these last few weeks and I&#13;
hope they are enjoyed.&#13;
I hadn't allowed a 12-page paper earlier in the year because we&#13;
didn't quite have enough ad revenue to support it. Now we have passed&#13;
the dollar amount needed to pay for a larger paper with all its&#13;
overhead. As long as we continue to pull in the ad revenue necessary to&#13;
pay for 12-page papers, we will continue to produce them. We are&#13;
reasonably certain, judging from the amount of holdover copy each&#13;
week, that we can successfully produce interesting and important&#13;
copy for our readership in the 12-pager.&#13;
We will be able to change our inside format because of increased&#13;
flexibility. I hope the poets, creative writers, artists and other craftsmen&#13;
take advantage of the opportunity to publish their work.&#13;
I feel we will be able to more successfully cover all the events which&#13;
concern our campus with more thoroughness and, I hope, in a manner&#13;
which is pleasing to our readership.&#13;
Applications for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1973-74 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight hours per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Each candidate is asked&#13;
to submit details of his&#13;
journalistic experience&#13;
and a statement of his&#13;
plans for the RANGER to&#13;
Don Kopriva, Adviser to&#13;
Student Publications, by&#13;
Friday, April 13, at D-194&#13;
LLC.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates&#13;
Tuesday, April 17, and&#13;
announce its selection&#13;
before spring break.&#13;
ic Th e Parkside-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library-&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subiect of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
wfthhPiH0nenUm aPd siudent status or tacultyrank' Names will&#13;
prim any letters. rCSerVe the right t0 refuse&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
WRITER:,: Ken KonkioL Gary Jensen, Marilyn Schubert, Jeannine Sipsma, Helmut Kah mil&#13;
Blaha, Bruce Rasmussen, Terri Gogola, Geotf Blaesing Helmut Kah, Bill&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Gary Huck, Bob Rohan, Amy Cundarijim Vukos&#13;
R™™RAPHERS: Ken Konkol&lt; Bi" Noll, Dennis Doonan, GraaSyston&#13;
STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva f,, ^REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. y&#13;
360 Lexington Av«., Ntw York, N. »\ 10017 I&#13;
Wed. , April 4, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Tutorial service growing&#13;
After eight weeks of operation&#13;
the Parkside tutorial service has&#13;
raised the number of students&#13;
being tutored from three per&#13;
week in the first week to 71 per&#13;
week.&#13;
The program offers tutorial&#13;
help to students in all the basic&#13;
academic areas.&#13;
According to Isom Fearn,&#13;
counselor, a goal or limit has not&#13;
been set on the eventual number&#13;
of students tutored. He said the&#13;
facility and number of rooms will&#13;
be the limiting factor. The service&#13;
is presently located in&#13;
Tallent Hall offices.&#13;
"We may extend ourselves to&#13;
evenings and weekends if the&#13;
need warrants, Fearn said.&#13;
He also said faculty have been&#13;
very good in that they have&#13;
referred people to the service.&#13;
For more information contact&#13;
Fearn in room 280 at Tallent Hall.&#13;
Trio ex pands&#13;
Local group proves professionalism&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
All from the Racine are they&#13;
are; Chris. Inloes (Jumbo), 20,&#13;
Tony Bresette, 21, Gary Wolk, 20,&#13;
Michael Harmon, 21, and&#13;
sometimes Tommy Fell, 22.&#13;
Jumbo plays acoustic and&#13;
electric guitar plus harmonica.&#13;
Tony plays acoustic and electric&#13;
guitar and congas. Garry plays&#13;
piano, acoustic and electric&#13;
guitar, flute, and mandolin.&#13;
Michael plays bass and Tommy&#13;
is the occasional drummer.&#13;
Vocals are supplied by Tony,&#13;
Jumbo, and Garry.&#13;
It all began in March of 1972&#13;
when Tony Bresette and Chris&#13;
Inloes (Jumbo) got together for&#13;
the first time. Thanks to encouragement&#13;
from Tony Totero,&#13;
coordinator of Student&#13;
Programming, and Bill Niebuhr,&#13;
coordinator of S tudent Life Tony&#13;
and Jumbo kept playing and&#13;
joined with Gary Wolk in Sept.&#13;
Michael Harmon assimilated&#13;
with the group in Dec., when they&#13;
also added the electric act. About&#13;
a month ago Tommy Fell joined&#13;
as a part time drummer.&#13;
The main influences of the&#13;
Tony, Jumbo, and Garry sound&#13;
are Crosby, Stills, Nash and&#13;
Young. Besides performing the&#13;
songs of their favorites they also&#13;
do a considerable amount of&#13;
Jethro Tull and any occassional&#13;
other song that fits their style.&#13;
The group has perfected a style&#13;
and they choose material acceptable&#13;
it.&#13;
In addition to this, the boys&#13;
have recently began writing their&#13;
own material. Although they&#13;
haven't done it as ofyet, they now&#13;
have cumulated enough original&#13;
substance to sustain a whole&#13;
show. Tony has written "In My&#13;
Dreams," "Waterman," and&#13;
"But Don't I Know You."&#13;
"California" is a composition by&#13;
Garry; and Jumbo wrote the&#13;
lyrics for "Shining Horses" that&#13;
are set to a melody by John&#13;
Dorsey.&#13;
The band concentrates on the&#13;
type of music in which vocals and&#13;
vocal harmonies are the major&#13;
accent. "We try to convey our&#13;
own feelings through music so&#13;
toher people may interpet them&#13;
as we do," said Jumbo.&#13;
"We find it very hard to produce&#13;
polished vocals without constant&#13;
practice"'&#13;
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Tony, Jumbo, and Garry&#13;
usually play at college concerts&#13;
and coffee houses. They are&#13;
available as an alternate&#13;
acoustic-electric set, or as either&#13;
only acoustic or only electric.&#13;
They are usually the featured act&#13;
and prices range from $150 to $500&#13;
a concert. Profits are usually&#13;
higher for them when they are a&#13;
back-up band&#13;
They are happy about the way&#13;
performances are being received&#13;
and are especially pleased with&#13;
Parkside support. Jumbo expressed&#13;
a desire to record with&#13;
the group someday, but felt that&#13;
this is a remote possibility as of&#13;
make some sort of career out of&#13;
music.&#13;
Wednesday, March 28, they put&#13;
on a free concert at 9 p.m. at the&#13;
Student Activities Building. They&#13;
sounded exceptionally fine, as&#13;
usual, and left the audience of&#13;
about 200+ a hair's width from&#13;
ecstasy. There was also "Ohio,"&#13;
which always produces their best&#13;
crowd reaction. For an encore&#13;
they presented three by Jethro&#13;
Tull: "Thick. As a Brick,"&#13;
"Locomotive Breath" and&#13;
"Windup."&#13;
Parkside students should feel&#13;
honored by the free concert&#13;
because Tony, Jumbo, and Garry&#13;
are worth a hell of a lot more.&#13;
the&#13;
Movement&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movement" is a regular feature in RANGER to&#13;
deal with women's concerns at Parkside and in society in general.&#13;
Guest writers are invited. This week's article comes from the&#13;
University News and Publications Service in Madison.&#13;
WOMEN CREATE "DO-IT-YOURSELF," ALTERNATIVE&#13;
FEMINIST MEDIA&#13;
Wohien in communications are "underutilized, underpaid, underrepresented,&#13;
underestimated, undercover, unreported, excluded from&#13;
decision-making, from the significant events, the prestigious old boys'&#13;
clubs, and from the monetary and other rewards of the profession "&#13;
according to Prof. Kathryn F. Clarenbach of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison.&#13;
But rather than bemoaning the problems that do exist, women are&#13;
taking stock of solutions already available and those in the offing.&#13;
These solutions, Ms. Clarenbach says, loosely fall into "three&#13;
avenues," or categories media women are utilizing to avoid being "a&#13;
winter rerun of the story of women everywhere else in American&#13;
society."&#13;
"Women everywhere else" is a topic on which she is thoroughly&#13;
knowledgeable through her extensive activities within the women's&#13;
movement. Besides being a professor of political science, she is a&#13;
specialist in women's education within University Extension,&#13;
chairperson of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women'&#13;
arid a founder of the National Organization of Women (NOW).&#13;
NOW and a multitude of women's groups around the country&#13;
strongly support the alternative feminist press Ms. Clarenbach lists as&#13;
one answer to the exclusion of women from communications, both as&#13;
participants and as subjects. This condition, she says, "deprives 53&#13;
percent of our population from the right to be represented, to speak for&#13;
themselves, and not to be spoken for by others."&#13;
The feminist "do-it-yourself" press, on the other hand, issues its own&#13;
pressreleases, has its own information Clearinghouse (KNOW, Inc.)&#13;
its own publisher (The Feminist Press, Washington D.C.), and its own&#13;
wide range of periodicals and newsletters, national and local, from&#13;
Ms. to Madison's own Whole Woman. This self-sufficiency lends to the&#13;
movement the opportunities to raise the most crucial issues, provides&#13;
• outlets for talent, arid creates the network of information "essential to&#13;
any social movement."&#13;
Within the traditional establishment press-the second avenue of&#13;
women in communications, believes Ms. Clarenbach-the "heroic&#13;
Boswells" of journalism have persuaded their papers to publish&#13;
feminist material and helped to make things happen rather than just&#13;
waited to report them.&#13;
The third avenue lies in the unlimited possibilities of communications&#13;
women's own inventiveness. Among the examples she&#13;
cites are the Feminist Theater in Washington where women handle all&#13;
the technical jobs, from carpentry and set design on up; similar&#13;
examples in film, radio and publishing; and the new presence of&#13;
women in the political sphere. Here politicians like Bella Abzug and&#13;
Shirley Chjsholm are exchanging roles with communicators like&#13;
Gloria Steinem.&#13;
American society may persist in asking what the female of the&#13;
species has to say that anyone wants to hear, says Ms. Clarenbach, but&#13;
women in communications now know their alternatives and are&#13;
pursuing them.&#13;
We get letters • • •&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Ken Konkol asks, in his column&#13;
THORN, issue of Feb. 28, why the&#13;
lower level doors to the Library&#13;
cannot be kept open longer hours-&#13;
-at the very least, he suggests,&#13;
from eight to five.&#13;
The answer is economy. To&#13;
keep a door open, there must be&#13;
someone at the door to function&#13;
as an exit guard. We figure that&#13;
.to staff one station full time&#13;
amounts to $8-9,000 a year: a&#13;
costly operation especially since&#13;
the exit guard cannot do other&#13;
kinds of productive work.&#13;
At the beginning of the year, we&#13;
closed the lower level door&#13;
completely. This, it soon became&#13;
evident, was inconvenient. Then&#13;
we recalculated, found that the&#13;
busy hours were nine to four; and&#13;
so we compromised on these.&#13;
That the lower doors should be&#13;
shut at all is undesirable. But&#13;
we'd rather put exit guard money&#13;
into cataloging staff, so we can&#13;
get the books on the shelves&#13;
quickly; into reference staff, so&#13;
we can have professional help&#13;
available as much as possible for&#13;
the confused patron; and into&#13;
ti rj l instructional staff, so we can give By Gary Huck classes in library use.&#13;
Economics is the allocation of.&#13;
scarce resources. You can never&#13;
do everything. We thought thisallocation&#13;
of funds made sense.&#13;
Philip M. Burnett&#13;
Director of Libraries&#13;
To Parkside Student Body:&#13;
I want to thank you for communicating&#13;
your concern about&#13;
the situation at Wounded Knee&#13;
and about Indian affairs.&#13;
You may be sure that your&#13;
views are appreciated and have&#13;
been carefully noted.&#13;
I am enclosing a statement by&#13;
Secretary of the Interior Rogers&#13;
C B. Morton which I am sure you&#13;
will find of interest.&#13;
Marvin Franklin&#13;
Asst. to the Secretary&#13;
For Indian Affairs&#13;
Editor's Note: PSGA President&#13;
Tom Haack sent a message&#13;
expressing concern about the&#13;
treatment of Indians and the&#13;
situation at Wounded Knee. The&#13;
statement by Secretary oft the&#13;
Interior referred to in the above&#13;
letter is on file in the Student&#13;
Government office and is&#13;
available for scrutiny.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I was sitting down at the&#13;
student government office&#13;
reading a book and a student&#13;
came in with an unusual request.&#13;
He wanted to know if we could put&#13;
the Parkside flag at half mast. I&#13;
asked him why and he told me a&#13;
girl in one of h is classes had died&#13;
of cancer. He further told me that&#13;
he went to see Asst. Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn about the flag.&#13;
The student only knew her&#13;
name and that she died. But&#13;
because he cared he wanted to do&#13;
more to show his concern than&#13;
just a thought. So when you see&#13;
the flag at half-mast stop and&#13;
think about caring. The Student&#13;
Government and the students ol&#13;
Parkside offer our deepest&#13;
sympathy to the family of Mary&#13;
T. Jenn, a freshman from&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Patrick McDevitl&#13;
Senator, PSGA&#13;
4 THE PARKSI DE RANGER Wed./ Ap r i l A , 1 9 7 3&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
New dorm-living concept conceived&#13;
COSMIC WHEELS&#13;
Donavan&#13;
Epic (KE 32156)&#13;
curreTmus^Thpln^ defin*ely established within the realm of&#13;
an esoteric^nahiTp hnf nf mUS1C bandS 3nd their Products are still of&#13;
demand Pink Sn i AT are*l&amp;\8 indicating a growing consumer&#13;
^JfPinJ F1fyd and Amon Duul maintain a steady appeal while&#13;
S"!: :8 NGW f°rCeS SUCh as ui-cnestra are emerging within this scene. Mahavishnu&#13;
he reason that this phenomena exists is quite interesting Once&#13;
upon a time there was a bunch of kids who grew up reading Captain&#13;
in thdrifte^dollarneand °f fiCti°n COmiC b°°ks- Then'&#13;
f ? . Ce'they turned onto Timothy Leary's philosophy&#13;
furtheSitr tab'e quantities 01 **D. Now these minds seek&#13;
fnrlu f in a more natural (?) form. Hence, the blame&#13;
for all of us crazies rests in the hands of the creators of Spider Man.&#13;
^beii°talamaSS °ff?ese mind-expanders are in sharp contrast to the&#13;
Svp ft audience of toe strictly metal music makers. The star seekers&#13;
rtaltt frt teamt ?°nSC!SuS and unconscious. but they still confront&#13;
reality from time to time. The only reality for a downer freak is death&#13;
Aicordmg to Greg Shaw of PRM (Phonograph Record Magazine)&#13;
space music breaks down into two categories-space rock and cosmic&#13;
music Space rock is music left in its original pattern with a new&#13;
element added. This element is usually a synthesiser or a weird&#13;
sounding organ. Against this is cosmic music which is derived from&#13;
various sources. Hawkwind is an example of space rock while Pink&#13;
t&gt;^ u Mahavishnu Orchestra are representative of cosmic music.&#13;
I d have to go along with this breakdown but not with Shaw's appraisal&#13;
of each. He claims space rock is better because it is more&#13;
commercial More commercial it may be but space rock, in his&#13;
definition (which he received from Ohr music), is not superior to&#13;
cosmic music. Cross-breeding always creates healthier offspring I&#13;
ma!"tai" that "sPace Odyssey" by the Byrds is a fantastic composition&#13;
for the very same reasons Shaw says it fails. Hawkwind as of&#13;
yet maintains the power to create imaginative effects and liberate&#13;
minds. This is accomplished by repetitive, simple guitar, bass and&#13;
drum playing that develop into climaxes, all the while submerged in a&#13;
sea of synthesiser effects. Hawkwind is sensational now and I cherish&#13;
their present products. But, in time, if they are held rigidly within&#13;
these limits, they will become boring, suffocating from lack of fresh&#13;
air.&#13;
Donavan should offer additional proof of the superiority of cosmic&#13;
music. He got everyone smoking banana peels a few years back and&#13;
following this he turned many onto meditation. Since everything&#13;
changed, today nothing is as unhip as that passive flower child. He was&#13;
left to thrill the hearts of 14-year-old girls.&#13;
When I first encountered COSMIC WHEELS, I had in mind a strict&#13;
folk singer type. But, being enticed by its cosmic cover and thinking of&#13;
"Hurdy Gurdy Man" at the time, my curiosity got the best of me.&#13;
The package material is black and white but somehow evokes color&#13;
The inside of the open-up jacket contains a sketch of some fantasyland&#13;
with the invitation to get out your crayons and color it.&#13;
The music is ecletic and produces a most unique form of cosmic&#13;
vibrations. "Cosmic Wheels" has Donavan strumming an acoustic&#13;
guitar while singing with a mysterious and appealing voice. This is set&#13;
to a good beat, with a violin added. High-pitched choir voices are like&#13;
ghosts approaching from the background. The total effect is teasingly&#13;
scary.&#13;
"Earth Sign Man" is a blues done in an outer space fashion. It has a&#13;
break with a lead guitar and a sax, that depicts movement in the Milky&#13;
Way. The sax is played by Bobby Keyes.&#13;
Donavan introduces "Sleep" with a high-reaching voice that settles&#13;
into his usual one. Bobby Keyes is in here again, along with some&#13;
metal guitar chords. Donavan trails off a couple lines with his&#13;
quivering voice style that sends chills up your spine.&#13;
The only sore spot on side one is "Maria Magenta," with its accordian&#13;
that makes it sound like the Lawrence Welk rock show.&#13;
Perhaps the most sensational cut is "Wild Witch Lady." Built upon a&#13;
simple go-go guitar riff, it also features more soprano-apparition&#13;
voices. Donavan sing-screams the chorus lines as if he was an affected&#13;
teenage Lucifer. There also is his quivering vocals that follow the end&#13;
of some lines. "...Lady" would be the best bet for a single release from&#13;
the album.&#13;
"The Music Makers" is a rocker that has funky-soul roots. A guitar&#13;
reminiscent of the early Kinks is also a part of it. It develops into a&#13;
rock chant at the end.&#13;
The sensational substance gives way at this point. "The Intergalactic&#13;
Laxative" is a Scottish folk song about the problems of&#13;
human waste in outer space. Humor is the only adhering quality.&#13;
"I Like You" is Donavan as his most sentimental, love-singing&#13;
person. It is either very touching or very irritating, depending on your&#13;
mood.&#13;
The remainder is reserved for "Only the Blues" and "Appearances."&#13;
"Only the Blues" is a country-type number and "Appearances"&#13;
is another super-tender piece.&#13;
COSMIC WHEELS IS Donavan's attempt to get back into the pop&#13;
scene by entering the space race. While a little more than half of the&#13;
material would probably be favored by the general pop audience, this&#13;
larger portion contains some of the most outstanding space music.&#13;
What is needed is a little publicity and the release of a single from this&#13;
disc. When this happens Donavan may again become a guru of modern&#13;
youth.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tapes and Records)&#13;
MADISON - A new concept in&#13;
dormitory living at UW-Madison&#13;
may go a long way toward&#13;
alleviating study problems as&#13;
well as closing the gap between&#13;
social and academic aspects of&#13;
student life.&#13;
Beginning next August, Gilman&#13;
House, an 80-student unit of&#13;
Kronshage Halls, located on the&#13;
shore of Lake Mendota, will be&#13;
reserved exclusively for&#13;
engineering and nursing&#13;
students.&#13;
"It is unusual in present dor-&#13;
Republican results&#13;
mitory practice to have students&#13;
with a common academic interest&#13;
together," says College of&#13;
Engineering Associate Dean&#13;
Fred 0. Leidel.&#13;
The Gilman House situation, he&#13;
explains, will encourage a concentration&#13;
of nursing and&#13;
engineering students (particularly&#13;
now, since men are now&#13;
entering the nursing field and&#13;
women are going into&#13;
engineering). These students, in&#13;
other housing, have had little&#13;
opportunity for contact with&#13;
those in their own fields.&#13;
With the new concentration,&#13;
Leidel says, "it will be convenient&#13;
for faculty members and&#13;
student groups to make themselves&#13;
available for advising and&#13;
information, and for providing&#13;
tutoring services and guest&#13;
speakers."&#13;
Gilman House, which is being&#13;
co-sponsored by the College of&#13;
Engineering and the UW Division&#13;
of Residence Halls, with the&#13;
cooperation of the School of&#13;
Nursing, joins a variety of other&#13;
coeducational dormitories which&#13;
already exist on the Madison&#13;
campus.&#13;
Convention starts process&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
For the average voter, political&#13;
activity probably begins and ends&#13;
with the election. For those active&#13;
in party politics, however,&#13;
this could not be further from the&#13;
truth. The election is the climax&#13;
of months of campaign activities,&#13;
primaries, fund-raising events,&#13;
and especially at this time of&#13;
year, party conventions.&#13;
Parkside is represented at the&#13;
state conventions of two&#13;
Republican groups this month,&#13;
the Wisconsin College&#13;
Republicans and the Wisconsin&#13;
Federation of Young&#13;
R e p u b l i c a n s . C o l l e g e&#13;
Republicans consists of a number&#13;
of c olleges who broke away from&#13;
Young Republicans several years&#13;
ago. Their convention took place&#13;
March 16-18 in Wausau. Young&#13;
Republicans consists of people&#13;
from the ages 14-35, including&#13;
some colleges who chose not to&#13;
leave the federation. This convention&#13;
was held last weekend in&#13;
Brookfield with the theme&#13;
"MiGovern Down and Lucey to&#13;
Go."&#13;
A typical convention includes&#13;
district caucuses, meetings of&#13;
committees such as resolutions,&#13;
constitution, rules and credentials,&#13;
election of officers, awards&#13;
banquets and, of course, parties!&#13;
The caucuses and most of the&#13;
committee reports deal with&#13;
internal workings of the&#13;
organization. The resolutions,&#13;
however, may be of more&#13;
widespread interest. Young&#13;
Republican resolutions were not&#13;
available at the time of this&#13;
printing. College Republicans&#13;
considered over 50 resolutions,&#13;
the more notable among them&#13;
involved the following:&#13;
Reinstitution of the death&#13;
penalty as outlined by President&#13;
Nixon - Pass&#13;
Opposition to the Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment - Pass&#13;
Legalization of marijuana -&#13;
Defeat&#13;
Recommend immediate&#13;
prosecution of lawbreakers occupying&#13;
Wounded Knee, South&#13;
Dakota, and condemnation of&#13;
Attorney General Kliendienst for&#13;
his poor handling of the situation -&#13;
Pass&#13;
No unconditional amnesty -&#13;
Pass&#13;
Opposition to abortion except in&#13;
cases of harm to mother - Pass&#13;
Open contraceptive policy -&#13;
Pass&#13;
Commendation of President&#13;
Nixon and Henry Kissinger on&#13;
their handling of the war in&#13;
Vietnam - Pass&#13;
Retention of tenure system -&#13;
Defeat&#13;
Among those elected to College&#13;
Republican offices were&#13;
sophomores Ross Workman and&#13;
Caesar Geiger as Southeastern&#13;
Area Coordinator and Deputy&#13;
Coordinator, respectively. Kathj&#13;
Stokley Matz of UW-Superior was&#13;
elected Chairman.&#13;
Parkside delegates to the&#13;
Young Republican convention&#13;
included seniors Ken Axelson and&#13;
Alan Bryner. Official election&#13;
results were not available&#13;
However, Muriel Coleman ol&#13;
Madison was running unopposed&#13;
for Chairman as was freshman&#13;
Marilyn Schubert foi&#13;
Southeastern Area College&#13;
Coordinator.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
QMiat'. 2&#13;
cA/ew&#13;
Qussycat ?&#13;
Wednesday, April 9&#13;
Gr. 103 - 2:00 &amp; 8:00 p.m.&#13;
50 cents admission&#13;
2nd National (formerly Shakey's) Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
UVE BiTEBTMIK? I BANOING&#13;
River City&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'LUNCH ZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-Ji&#13;
11:30-1:30&#13;
lon.-Fri. Sat. &amp; Si&#13;
*159 $189&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
20 KINDS SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'FISH FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed.&amp;Fri. j«gg&#13;
from 5 p.m. I&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
W MO-JO'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers&#13;
Wed. , Apri l 4, 1973 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
Film Society presents&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENNING 'Woman in the Dunes&#13;
Approximately 200 nomination&#13;
papers have been turned in for&#13;
Parkside's outstanding teacher&#13;
awards. The awards committee&#13;
urges all students who think they&#13;
have an outstanding teacher to&#13;
write a nomination paper and file&#13;
it with that committee. •&#13;
"How Body Language Talks"&#13;
will be offered by the UWExtension&#13;
on the Wood Road&#13;
campus Wednesday, May 2 and 9&#13;
from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
Gestures, postures, facial&#13;
expressions and other forms of&#13;
nonverbal communicationusually&#13;
unconscious--can&#13;
enhance or change the meaning&#13;
of what you are saying. This is&#13;
known as body language. The&#13;
course will help you to become&#13;
aware of body language as you&#13;
and others use it to express attitudes&#13;
and emotions.&#13;
The instructor will be Scott&#13;
Baudhuin, assistant professor of&#13;
communication.&#13;
Fees for the course are $4.50, $7&#13;
for a married couple.&#13;
Registration deadline is April 25.&#13;
For further information phone&#13;
553-2312. •&#13;
The Parkside Vets Club will&#13;
sponsor a dance Thursday, April&#13;
19 from 9 p.m. to l a.m in the&#13;
Student Activities Building. The&#13;
band will be Blood Money and&#13;
admission will be $i 50&#13;
Wisconsin and Parkside I D's&#13;
required.&#13;
Applications for the $200&#13;
Scholarship offered by the&#13;
Business and Professional&#13;
Women's Club of Kenosha are&#13;
available in the Kenosha Campus&#13;
Student Services Office (Room&#13;
135). To be considered, applicants&#13;
must be single female&#13;
residents of Kenosha County who&#13;
are in their sophomore or junior&#13;
year of college and plan to continue&#13;
their studies. Students from&#13;
any major field of study are&#13;
eligible to apply. Deadline for&#13;
returning applications is Friday,&#13;
April 13.&#13;
The Parkside Vets Club will&#13;
meet Sunday, April 8 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Student Activities Building.&#13;
There will be a nomination of&#13;
officers and Bill Kemp, Outreach&#13;
counselor for the Vets Administration&#13;
Regional Office, will&#13;
speak.&#13;
Beta Lambda chapter of Alpha&#13;
Kappa Lambda fraternity here at&#13;
Parkside is proud to announce&#13;
the acceptance of three new&#13;
members. They are: Jim Filipek,&#13;
Mark Holler and Chuck Stephen.&#13;
A second pledge class this&#13;
semester will begin this week. If&#13;
interested, contact George Kis&#13;
(632-4742) or Jim Gaastra (634-&#13;
6461) or any member at large.&#13;
Extension offers course&#13;
on Latin America&#13;
A look at the complex and&#13;
fascinating continent of Latin&#13;
America will be taken in a class&#13;
offered by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Extension.&#13;
Prof. Jose Ortega, instructor&#13;
for the class, calls Latin America&#13;
an almost unknown continent,&#13;
where everything is immense.&#13;
Prof. Ortega has traveled, lectured&#13;
and published materials on&#13;
Latin American countries, and is&#13;
a Parkside faculty member. He&#13;
will cover the land and the&#13;
people, the economy; institutions:&#13;
church, army,&#13;
oligarchy; the culture;&#13;
revolutions, coups and&#13;
guerrillas; and Latin America's&#13;
relationship to the world.&#13;
The class will meet on the&#13;
Kenosha Campus, 3700&#13;
Washington Road, on five&#13;
Wednesdays beginning April 4, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. Registrations are being&#13;
taken by University Extension at&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
meos&#13;
PIZZA HITCH BN&#13;
Chicken &amp; It alian Sa usage Bombers&#13;
Free Delivery t o P arkside V illage&#13;
SOU SOth Anna* Phone 6S7-S191&#13;
Friday&#13;
Safety and Security will again&#13;
offer a state certified defensive&#13;
driving course Saturday, April 7&#13;
from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Room 101. To register&#13;
call Safety and Security at Ext&#13;
2455.&#13;
How to get to Europe, how to&#13;
get around when there, and what&#13;
and how to see it will be discussed&#13;
in a University Extension class&#13;
entitled "Prelude to European&#13;
Travel."&#13;
Dennis Dean, an instructor&#13;
from the Parkside faculty, has&#13;
spent some time on the continent&#13;
and is an experienced traveler.&#13;
His emphasis will be thoroughly&#13;
practical, balancing comfort and&#13;
convenience on one hand against&#13;
expense on the other. Class&#13;
participants will learn how to get&#13;
the most for their money and how&#13;
to get the most out of every day.&#13;
The class will meet for six&#13;
Tuesdays beginning April 3, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on the Wood Road&#13;
Campus. For registration information&#13;
contact University&#13;
Extension, 553-2312.&#13;
What's New Pussycat? will be&#13;
shown by the Activities Board on&#13;
Monday, April 9, at 2 p.m. and 8&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist 103. The film&#13;
stars Peter Sellers, Woody Allen&#13;
and Ursula Andress. Studentfaculty-&#13;
staff admission is 50&#13;
cents.&#13;
Woman in the Dunes, a 1964&#13;
Japanese film about a man and&#13;
woman trapped at the bottom of a&#13;
sand dune, will be shown Friday&#13;
April 6 at 7:30 by the Parkside&#13;
Film Society, in Greenquist 103&#13;
New York Times film critic&#13;
Bosley Crowther describes it as a&#13;
"strangely poetic drama" which&#13;
encompasses "a disturbing&#13;
allegory of the fate of man in the&#13;
world-a strong expression of the&#13;
enslavement of the spirit by all&#13;
the demands of environment."&#13;
Named Best Japanese Film of&#13;
1964, it is also a Cannes Film&#13;
r estival award winner, New&#13;
York Film Festival sellout, and&#13;
Montreal Film Festival award&#13;
winner.&#13;
The short, Gerald McBoing&#13;
Boing, a 1950 Academy Award&#13;
winner narrated in rhyme, will&#13;
also be shown. Admission is 60&#13;
cents.&#13;
Forum benifit planned&#13;
A "Two-Bit Poetry Forum"&#13;
will be staged as a benefit for the&#13;
Harlow B. Mills Scholarship&#13;
Fund from noon to 1:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday in the Whiteskellar by&#13;
the Parkside Poetry Forum.&#13;
Minimum donation is two bits&#13;
(what else?).&#13;
Faculty members participating&#13;
in the forum will include&#13;
Stella Gray and Richard&#13;
Carrington presenting an Emily&#13;
Dickinson dialog, John Van&#13;
Willigen reading Tagore, Susan&#13;
Craig reading e.e. cummings,&#13;
Norbert Isenberg reading&#13;
Schiller and Whitman, Carole&#13;
Vopat reading several modern&#13;
woman poets, and Andrew&#13;
McLean reading John Donne and&#13;
Giuseppe Ungaretti.&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
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The Mills Scholarship Fund&#13;
was established in memory of the&#13;
late UW-P professor of life&#13;
science, poet and humanist, who&#13;
was the first acting chairman of&#13;
the College of Science and&#13;
Society.&#13;
I&#13;
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account soon at&#13;
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Member Federal Deposit insurance Corp&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine&#13;
6 T H E P a r k s ,DE RANGER Wed., Ap r i l 4, 1 9 7 3&#13;
Correspondent Childs&#13;
to speak at Madison&#13;
in May&#13;
MADISON - Marquis W.&#13;
Childs, Washington correspondent&#13;
for the St. Louis Post-&#13;
Dispatch, will be the headline&#13;
speaker when the UW-Madison&#13;
School of Journalism and Mass&#13;
Communication dedicates its&#13;
JT_of Vilas Communication&#13;
Hall May 11.&#13;
An all-day program will pay&#13;
tribute to the school's former&#13;
directors, Willard G. Bleyer,&#13;
Grant M. Hyde, and Ralph o!&#13;
Nafziger; offer seminars on&#13;
Government and the Press" and&#13;
"Advertising and Consumerism";&#13;
include dedication&#13;
of a journalism court honoring A.&#13;
Matt Werner, Sheboygan, former&#13;
UW regent; feature presentation&#13;
of special awards to&#13;
distinguished alumni and tours of&#13;
the new facility.&#13;
Friends and alumni of the&#13;
school are invited to attend.&#13;
The array of participants will&#13;
include:&#13;
Madison campus Chancellor&#13;
Edwin Young; Don Davies,&#13;
Madison, president of the&#13;
school's alumni association; Don&#13;
Anderson, former publisher of&#13;
the Wisconsin State Journal,&#13;
Madison; Prof. Harold L. Nelson,&#13;
director of the school; Carl&#13;
Steiger, Oshkosh, former UW&#13;
regent; Helen Matheson Rupp of&#13;
the Wisconsin State Journal;&#13;
Courtland R. Conlee, retired vicepresident&#13;
of the Milwaukee&#13;
Journal; and Robert Wright,&#13;
Montello, vice-president of the&#13;
Wisconsin Press Association.&#13;
A mosaic, "Freedom of&#13;
Communication," by Prof.&#13;
James S. Watrous of the campus&#13;
art history department, will be&#13;
unveiled, and the University&#13;
Singers will present a concert.&#13;
Two years in the building, Vilas&#13;
Communication Hall was opened&#13;
last fall for use by the school,&#13;
communication arts department,&#13;
WHA and WHA-TV, the Compass&#13;
Theatre, and the Daily Cardinal.&#13;
Other dedication programs are&#13;
being planned by these groups.&#13;
The $10.7 million six-story&#13;
structure, located in the heart of&#13;
the campus, contains&#13;
classrooms, research facilities,&#13;
theaters, laboratories, studios,&#13;
seminar rooms, rehearsal areas,&#13;
production units, and maintenance,&#13;
repair and storage&#13;
areas.&#13;
The school is the oldest continuing&#13;
journalism education&#13;
program at an American&#13;
university. It was founded in 1905.&#13;
An authority on&#13;
mathematics curriculum&#13;
development, Prof. Wade&#13;
Ellis, visited UW-Parkside&#13;
Thursday and Friday as a&#13;
part of the Mathematics&#13;
Association of America&#13;
V i s i t i n g L e c t u r e r s&#13;
Program. His schedule&#13;
included a lecture for area&#13;
secondary and college&#13;
level math teachers as&#13;
well as talks in UW-P&#13;
classes . Shown at the&#13;
lecture, above, are left to&#13;
right: Denise Kolmos, a&#13;
senior at St. Joseph's High&#13;
School, Kenosha; Donald&#13;
Piele of the Parkside math&#13;
faculty; Dr. Wade; Sister&#13;
C e c e l i a H u d e c , math&#13;
teacher at St. Joseph's;&#13;
and Esther Klemp, math&#13;
teacher at Washington&#13;
Junior High School,&#13;
Racine. Dr. Wade is dean&#13;
of t he graduate school at&#13;
the University of&#13;
Michigan. He has conducted&#13;
seminars for math&#13;
teachers throughout the&#13;
U.S. an d in India, France&#13;
and Peru.&#13;
Conflict Center sees work ahead&#13;
MADISON — T he Center for&#13;
Conflict Resolution at Madison&#13;
believes peace is a way of living,&#13;
not just the absence of war.&#13;
"Although war in Vietnam is&#13;
over, we still have to study ways&#13;
of living so other wars don't&#13;
break out," explains Robert&#13;
Mishacoff, a conscientious objector&#13;
doing alternative military&#13;
service at the Center.&#13;
The Center conducts&#13;
workshops for church and civic&#13;
groups attempting to resolve&#13;
conflicts ranging from interpersonal&#13;
to international. It&#13;
also operates a research&#13;
program providing background&#13;
in the art of conflict resolutionteaching&#13;
people not to be afraid of&#13;
conflict.&#13;
Founded in 1970 as "a peace&#13;
education project," the Center&#13;
now has 14 active workers.&#13;
"We haven't been particularly&#13;
active in the role of mediator.&#13;
Our role is mostly educational so&#13;
people can more successfully&#13;
resolve their own problems,"&#13;
Mishacoff says.&#13;
A chance for real conflict&#13;
resolution came recently when&#13;
three Center members were sent&#13;
by the National Council of&#13;
Churches to be non-violent observers&#13;
at the confrofitation at&#13;
Wounded Knee, South Dakota.&#13;
A unique opportunity to spend&#13;
four weeks in New York City&#13;
studying the United Nations&#13;
through regular UWM credit&#13;
courses, attendance at U.N.&#13;
sessions and meetings with&#13;
delegation and secretariat&#13;
personnel, is being offered to&#13;
undergraduates of eleven participating&#13;
universities of The&#13;
University of Wisconsin system,&#13;
as part of a six weeks, 6-credit&#13;
course. The first two weeks of the&#13;
course will be held on the UWM&#13;
Mishacoff notes the Dayton,&#13;
Ohio police force now has officers&#13;
trained in non-violent conflict&#13;
resolution. The Center is working&#13;
on making inroads in this area in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
The Center is funded through&#13;
private sources, grants from&#13;
companies and private&#13;
U. N.&#13;
campus in preparatory study.&#13;
Each student will enroll in two&#13;
3-credit courses focusing upon&#13;
the U.N. and international&#13;
organization. While in New York&#13;
City, the participants will live in&#13;
dormitories of the New York&#13;
University Medical Center,&#13;
within walking distance of the&#13;
U.N. Expenses are based upon&#13;
regular UWM summer tuition&#13;
and dormitory costs. Admission&#13;
is open to legal residents of&#13;
Wisconsin who will be&#13;
.sophomores, juniors or seniors by&#13;
donations, with the University&#13;
providing only office space.&#13;
Both the Center and the&#13;
University agree the University&#13;
shouldn't provide financial&#13;
support.&#13;
"Although our funding is very&#13;
inadequate...several people work&#13;
here full time and we are unable&#13;
study&#13;
the summer of 1973 at one of the&#13;
participating institutions.&#13;
Candidates should have a substantial&#13;
number of college credits&#13;
in history and social studies, a&#13;
basic course in political science&#13;
(preferably international&#13;
relations), and a grade point&#13;
average of 2.50 or above (between&#13;
B and C).&#13;
Descriptive booklets and application&#13;
blanks are available&#13;
from the Office of the Dean,&#13;
College of Science and Society^&#13;
Greenouist 345.&#13;
to pay them very much...I don't&#13;
think we would look for&#13;
University funding. We wouldn't&#13;
want to be tied down," Mishacoff&#13;
contends.&#13;
Madison Chancellor Edwin&#13;
Young agrees:&#13;
"The Center for Conflict&#13;
Resolution is better as an&#13;
alternative institution. One of the&#13;
Center's values is that it is not&#13;
associated with the University. It&#13;
has greater credibility because of&#13;
it."&#13;
The Center would like to work&#13;
with the University, however, in&#13;
creating an academic program in&#13;
conflict or "peace" studies. One&#13;
course—Conflict in American&#13;
Society-exists, taught voluntarily&#13;
by sociology Prof. Joseph&#13;
W. Elder. A Center founder,&#13;
James M. Struve, is the volunteer&#13;
teaching assistant.&#13;
Elder is hopeful a major can be&#13;
created in conflict resolution.&#13;
"We see beginnings of careers&#13;
in conflict resolution. Marriage&#13;
counselors are just one example&#13;
of this."&#13;
CARL'S P IZZA&#13;
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In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
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CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING ... WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
5140 6th AVE&#13;
UNCONS TR UCTED&#13;
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SHRINK SWEATERS&#13;
FOR GALS-LOW RISE JEANS&#13;
AND MONSTER BELLS&#13;
308 6th. St. DOWNTOWN RACINE&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
Sauced&#13;
An Illustrated Lecture&#13;
/heft*1&#13;
4'-""'STANTON I.&#13;
FRIEDMAN Tues. - April 17&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Adm: $1.00&#13;
Tickets Available: Info Center&#13;
EWv9v\U&#13;
Credit offered for&#13;
Wed., April 4, 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
"Do we really need all that power? y y&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Safety Record&#13;
MacKenzie explained that&#13;
while the safety record of the 30&#13;
currently operating plants&#13;
sounds good, it really isn't. The&#13;
power companies claim no accidents&#13;
in about 150 years of&#13;
reactor experience. This sounds&#13;
nice, but as MacKenzie explained&#13;
it, the meaning changed.&#13;
One year of reactor experience&#13;
is defined as having one reactor&#13;
in operation for one year. Having&#13;
one reactor in operation for two&#13;
years yields two years of reactor&#13;
experience, but so does having&#13;
two reactors in operation for one&#13;
year. With our present number of&#13;
reactors, some of which have&#13;
been operating for several years,&#13;
we have about 150 years of experience&#13;
according to this&#13;
definition.&#13;
If t he AEC has its way and the&#13;
United States has 60 percent of i ts&#13;
energy supplied by nuclear&#13;
reactors, we will have to have at&#13;
least 1,000 reactors by the year&#13;
2000. That means one accident&#13;
per year.&#13;
Safety System Testing&#13;
It seems that all this wouldn't&#13;
be so bad if the AEC was trying to&#13;
test and improve the safety&#13;
systems in our present and future&#13;
reactors. But MacKenzie pointed&#13;
out that very few tests have&#13;
actually been done. There was a&#13;
series of tests using computers&#13;
and theoretical stiuations. When&#13;
Viet Vet&#13;
conference&#13;
slated&#13;
MADISON -- A statewide&#13;
conference for Vietnam-era&#13;
vetera s is slated Thursday on the&#13;
UW-Madison campus.&#13;
Sponsored by the Madison&#13;
campus Vets for Vets group, the&#13;
all-day conference is titled&#13;
"Where to Now?" Focus will be&#13;
on the lack of use of the G.I. Bill&#13;
in Wisconsin, veterans' employment&#13;
problems, and&#13;
psychological disorders of&#13;
veterans, according to coordinator&#13;
Steve Harrison,&#13;
discharged from the U.S.&#13;
Marines this January.&#13;
Harrison emphasized that&#13;
anyone interested in the&#13;
problems of veterans is welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Speakers include UW system&#13;
Executive Vice-President Donald&#13;
E. Percy and Wayne D. Horner,&#13;
active in Vets for Vets. Sessions&#13;
are scheduled for the Wisconsin&#13;
Union beginning at 8 a.m.&#13;
Vets for Vets was founded on&#13;
this campus last fall to aid&#13;
returning Vietnam-era veterans.&#13;
the hypothetical LOAC were run&#13;
through the computer, the ECCS&#13;
all functioned. However, in one&#13;
test the only one of its kind, a&#13;
real LOAC was created in a&#13;
model reactor, the core of which&#13;
was heated by electricity. When&#13;
the primary cooling system&#13;
failed, the ECCS began to work,&#13;
but the extreme temperature in&#13;
the core caused the water to turn&#13;
to steam and immediately force&#13;
its way out. The result was a&#13;
failure of the ECCS.&#13;
Test Failures&#13;
These test failures led to AEC&#13;
hearings on whether ECCS&#13;
design criteria are adequate.&#13;
Although the hearings will not be&#13;
completed until sometime this&#13;
year, the AEC has continued to&#13;
license nuclear plants to operate&#13;
with the old ECCS design, and to&#13;
issue construction pursuits for&#13;
new ones.&#13;
The next speaker, Dr. John W.&#13;
Gofman, who has a Ph. D. in&#13;
Nuclear Physical Chemistry and&#13;
is the former AEC scientist,&#13;
discussed the physiological&#13;
impact of nuclear accidents.&#13;
Gofman also, discussed the fact&#13;
that the nation is being presented&#13;
with an even greater danger with&#13;
the development erf the Breeder&#13;
reactor. This reactor actually&#13;
creates more fuel in its reaction.&#13;
This fuel is Plutonium 239, an&#13;
extremely toxic substance. To&#13;
give an idea of how toxic this&#13;
element is, Gofman quoted some&#13;
statistics on its ability to cause&#13;
lung cancer. Gofman stated that&#13;
one pound of Pu-239 could cause&#13;
nine billion cases of lung cancer.&#13;
The AEC proposes to ship this&#13;
material in trucks on the nation's&#13;
highways&#13;
hi addition to the shipping of&#13;
radioactive materials, there is&#13;
also the problem of storing the&#13;
nuclear waste created by the&#13;
plants.&#13;
Current storage is not perfect,&#13;
as the radioactive waste is placed&#13;
in stainless steel containers&#13;
which must be replaced&#13;
periodically because they leak.&#13;
Moratorium&#13;
Gofman's answer to all this&#13;
was to stop. He asked why the&#13;
U.S. should continue to endanger&#13;
the environment and build cancer&#13;
into the lives of future&#13;
generations. Gofman strongly&#13;
believes that there should be an&#13;
indefinite moratorium on nuclear&#13;
reactors. There are other&#13;
possible sources for power, such&#13;
as the unlimited supply of solar&#13;
Artist Concert Series&#13;
to conclude Sunday&#13;
Pianist Marylene Dosse will&#13;
present the final program in the&#13;
University Artists Concert Series&#13;
at Parkside at 3 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
April 8, in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Ms. Dosse will play an all-&#13;
Saint-Saens program. In April,&#13;
she will begin recording the&#13;
complete works of Saint-Saens&#13;
for Vox records in New York.&#13;
Her Saint-Saens program at&#13;
Parkside will consist of Suite, Op.&#13;
90; Souvenir d'ltalie, Op. 80;&#13;
Minuet and Valse, Op. 56; Three&#13;
Etudes, Op. Ill, No. 2, 1, 6; Six&#13;
Bagatelles, Op. 3; Two Valses,&#13;
Op. 104 and 110; and Theme&#13;
Varie, Op. 97.&#13;
Ms. Dosse has in the past few&#13;
years been artist-in-residence for&#13;
UW-Whitewater and the UW&#13;
Center System.&#13;
French-born, she graduated&#13;
from the Paris Conservatory with&#13;
highest awards both in piano and&#13;
chamber music. She won first&#13;
place in the Salzburg, Austria,&#13;
piano contest in 1962 and the&#13;
French Ministry of Culture&#13;
granted her a special scholarship&#13;
to continue her Salzburg studies&#13;
for the following year.&#13;
Participating in the masters&#13;
class of Alfred Brendel, Joerg&#13;
Demus and Paul Badura-Skoda,&#13;
she was unanimously awarded&#13;
their scholarship and subsequently&#13;
engaged to perform at&#13;
the renowned Salzburg Festival.&#13;
She was a winner in the Casella&#13;
International Piano Competition&#13;
of 1965 in Naples and in the 1968&#13;
Vilas Competition in Madison.&#13;
She has performed throughout&#13;
Europe, North Africa and South&#13;
America and was selected to give&#13;
four concert tours in her&#13;
homeland for the Jeunesses&#13;
Musicales de France.&#13;
Tickets for her concert will be&#13;
available at the door. General&#13;
admission is $2; admission for&#13;
Parkside students, staff and&#13;
immediate families is $1;&#13;
children 12 and under are admitted&#13;
free.&#13;
A concert by the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony at Parkside,&#13;
originally planned for May 10,&#13;
has been rescheduled for Sept. 11.&#13;
8 Lbs.&#13;
Dry&#13;
Cleaned&#13;
only&#13;
$2Oo o&#13;
Professionally Cleaned and Pressed&#13;
P A N T S . . . 8 9 c&#13;
SPORT COATS 89c&#13;
SKIRTS ... 89c&#13;
SWEATERS . 89c&#13;
DRESSES . . 1.78&#13;
SUITS . . . 1.78&#13;
Lincoln Village Laundromat&#13;
Open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
6814 Fourteenth Avenue KenoshajJWis&#13;
TNE RANCH&#13;
Restaurants&#13;
Ranch C reated&#13;
Sandwiches &amp;&#13;
Charcoal Steaks&#13;
North &amp; South S heridan R d&#13;
power. Even though such a powei&#13;
source couldn't be utilized immediately,&#13;
Gofman stated that is&#13;
only dueto the fact that so much&#13;
talent, money and time has been&#13;
spent on nuclear power. Switch&#13;
all of that talent and money to&#13;
researching the other possible&#13;
power sources, he said, and&#13;
something could be developed.&#13;
Fuel Comsumption&#13;
Finally, Cole has presented&#13;
some statistics on the fact that&#13;
the AEC is misleading people&#13;
about the percentage of power&#13;
which will be supplied by nuclear&#13;
reactors and fossil fuel by burning&#13;
plants.&#13;
According to the AEC, the total&#13;
energy consumption of the U.S.&#13;
will double by the year 2000. The&#13;
comsumption of electricity will&#13;
go up five times. So even if&#13;
atomic power supplies 60 percent&#13;
of the electric power, 40 percent&#13;
will still be generated by means&#13;
of fossil fuels. According to Cole,&#13;
this will be more than is currently&#13;
being generated by fossil fuel.&#13;
Obviously, with supplies of&#13;
fossil fuels running low, other&#13;
sources of energy must be found.&#13;
Cole thinks people must also&#13;
begin asking questions. The&#13;
burden of proof rests with the&#13;
AEC as to whether or not nuclear&#13;
power is worth the risks. If it&#13;
isn't, then the effort would have&#13;
to be made to find new sources of&#13;
• power.&#13;
What To Do&#13;
Also present in the questions&#13;
are being and will be asked, is&#13;
that of "Do we really need all that&#13;
power?" Must the consumption&#13;
of fuel and electricity be so&#13;
phenomenal, Cole asked. If the&#13;
citizens of this country want to do&#13;
something about this problem, a&#13;
start could be to reduce our&#13;
demands of electricity, Cole said,&#13;
lights burning all day in empty&#13;
rooms and doing small tasks by&#13;
hand instead of using the myriad&#13;
of e lectric gadgets found in most&#13;
homes.&#13;
Next week - The Federal Water&#13;
Pollution Control Act of 1972.&#13;
rassyium&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHIHTZ 6UICK-0PEI&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-5514&#13;
*2,373°°&#13;
1973 OREL&#13;
1900&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
f T H E , ? , t A P aR A N G E R w e d . / A p r i l 4, 1 9 73&#13;
Essay Qn "Mother Russia"&#13;
Education regimented in Russia&#13;
Editor's note: Parkside history student Arthur&#13;
uhl was in Russia recently and has submitted this&#13;
report of his impressions concerning education&#13;
there.&#13;
By Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
Several have asked me, "What did you learn&#13;
about education in Russia?" I'll tell you. But I&#13;
haven't time to be less than candid. So here goes&#13;
Like everything else in Russia, education is&#13;
regimented and run by the state. Not counting preschool&#13;
age kids, one-third of the population of&#13;
Russia, 247 million people, is in school one wav or&#13;
another. 3&#13;
The "universities" are for science. The "institutes"&#13;
are the trade and technical schools. When&#13;
you graduate you get a "certificate." A certificate&#13;
trom an institute has the same face value as one&#13;
from a university.&#13;
There are no degrees like B.A. or M.A. There are&#13;
doctoral degrees but they are for M.D.'s, some&#13;
scientists and the super-smart. Incidentally we&#13;
were told that 60 percent of all of the doctors of&#13;
medicine in the world are Russians and 80 percent&#13;
of them are women.&#13;
Education is free in Russia, all along the line.&#13;
College level students are given "stipends" according&#13;
to grades. A student with five A's gets 40&#13;
rubles a month. One with four A's and one B will get&#13;
36. A ruble is worth $1.20. Thre rubles a month goes&#13;
for room and board in a dorm. The rest is for routine&#13;
needs. The lower the grades, the lower the stipend,&#13;
so slow learners have tough going.&#13;
Students needn't concern themselves about&#13;
placement when they graduate. The jobs are all&#13;
categorized and everyone writes a competitive&#13;
exam for the jobs to be filled. Competition to get&#13;
ahead is brutal. A slightly higher grade might mean&#13;
sharing a bathroom in one's apartment with fewer&#13;
people. They will be told where they are to work.&#13;
There is no unemployment in Russia.&#13;
Society is very stratified in the U.S.S.R. One's&#13;
measure of success is determined by his value to the&#13;
state. Parents are held strictly responsible for their&#13;
children's behavior until they are 18 and-or still in&#13;
school. Goof off and parents and child will all be on&#13;
the carpet before a jury of their peers. For a student&#13;
to try to tell the school administrators how to run&#13;
things is unheard of. And the campus paper is a big&#13;
bulletin board for faculty use.&#13;
If a student does poorly on a final exam, he is&#13;
offered the chance to take the last semester all over&#13;
again, and his stipend will be greatly reduced. Then&#13;
he is given one more chance to take the exam and if&#13;
he flunks a second time he is moved down...and&#13;
down...until he reaches an area which is compatible&#13;
with his zeal and intelligence. And that will be his&#13;
niche until he works himself out of it-up or down.&#13;
But he will never be unemployed.&#13;
The Moscow University&#13;
I stood one morning on the wide plaza approach to&#13;
Moscow University in Lenin Hills. What a layout!&#13;
32,000 s tudents...14 faculties...and the top of their&#13;
main building was obscured by clouds the day I was&#13;
there.&#13;
The men going in and out of the building looked&#13;
like young business and professional men. You&#13;
could easily tell the men from the women. The&#13;
women wore skirts, were well-groomed and looked&#13;
sharp. There was no mingling of men and women.&#13;
Evidently there is no time for socializing on campus,&#13;
and the women are tough competitors here.&#13;
Students Are&#13;
Their Own Custodians&#13;
We walked inside. There was a lot of traffic,&#13;
several lounges, and not an empty can or paper cup&#13;
was to be seen. Tanya, our tour guide (a graduate of&#13;
a language institute), told us that the students were&#13;
responsible for the care and condition of "their"&#13;
building. There are no custodians going around&#13;
picking up after them. Anyone seen littering would&#13;
be pointed out on the spot and wind up policing the&#13;
campus for a week.&#13;
"Heroes" are recognized on campus and offnationwide,&#13;
in fact. Who are their heroes? They are&#13;
the students with superior grades, workers who&#13;
exceed high goals, scientists and artists. The&#13;
"Order of Lenin" is their highest accolade.&#13;
Wouldn't Want To&#13;
Live By Their Rules&#13;
I sure wouldn't wlike to live by some of their&#13;
ground rules but Russia is their country" and they&#13;
think that the world is their oyster. They (the dozen&#13;
or so students I met who could speak some English)&#13;
assume without argument that eventually&#13;
everything will be done their way. That is their idea&#13;
of peaceful coexistence. In the meantime anything&#13;
not being done according to their rules is up for&#13;
grabs.&#13;
They are striving for their goals very openly and&#13;
are using all of the sophisticated tools of our free&#13;
enterprise system to make their system of&#13;
socialism work. The draft of warm air you feel&#13;
behind your ears is probably caused by Tanya and&#13;
Boris breathing down your neck. While smiling at&#13;
you they will try to knock your block off&#13;
academically if given half a chance. They covet&#13;
much of what we take for granted. They are out to&#13;
produce what they expect will eventually be the best&#13;
educated society in the world-all dedicated to the&#13;
proposition that their country comes before self. To&#13;
them, no sacrifice is too great to gain that goal.&#13;
Upturn seen&#13;
in journalism&#13;
vocations&#13;
MADISON - Job-seeking UWMadison&#13;
journalism graduates&#13;
this spring are finding prospects&#13;
considerably brighter than did&#13;
last year's class.&#13;
Notices of job openings are up&#13;
10 percent over last year at the&#13;
School of Journalism and Mass&#13;
Communication's placement&#13;
office.&#13;
Radio-TV news, public&#13;
relations and newspapers offer&#13;
the most openings, according to&#13;
Prof. Lester L. Hawkes, the&#13;
school's assistant director. And&#13;
although newspaper hiring isn't&#13;
up as much as hiring in other&#13;
fields of communication, Hawkes&#13;
expects an upturn in the&#13;
availability of newspaper jobs in&#13;
the next six months.&#13;
During periods of recession,&#13;
Hawkes noted, "Newspapers&#13;
delay filling vacant positions.&#13;
Attrition and retirement take a&#13;
number of individuals during this&#13;
period, and the time is coming&#13;
when people will be needed to fill&#13;
the vacancies."&#13;
Fears of scarcity in the job&#13;
market may be driving more&#13;
journalism students into&#13;
graduate school, Hawkes said.&#13;
"People with master's degrees,&#13;
of course, are in much more&#13;
demand."&#13;
Thirty of the 31 students to&#13;
receive a masters degree last&#13;
year from the UW-Madison&#13;
moved directly into jobs in&#13;
communication with no&#13;
problems, Hawkes pointed out.&#13;
Corporate internal publications&#13;
are the largest recruiters at the&#13;
present time. State and federal&#13;
information positions are also&#13;
attracting a lot of our&#13;
graduates," Hawkes added.&#13;
I UJA.riV "?oo "Vo Go "to .. . .&#13;
ONE Suj§£tT&gt;RLArn&#13;
folSCfmnt Rrr r.gfk&#13;
II //&#13;
(2&#13;
,y&#13;
foA #)£ -finest I/? Pipes .. .&#13;
C.Jtps - -fay- •BaLP/iEmRpsS --m Prors-i^KeRrs- —r .a»Rc-&#13;
MGESt&#13;
LI AjjJte* CoWCS X&#13;
The Ranger asks-—&#13;
What is your opinion of Women's Liberation'&#13;
Wed . , April 4, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
Frank Locante, Senior, Kenosha&#13;
"If they want women's lib let&#13;
them have it. I don't think&#13;
everybody wants it; I think it's a&#13;
selected few. I don't know why&#13;
they want it. It's only a selected&#13;
few that want women's lib. Let&#13;
them be liberated if t hey want to&#13;
be."&#13;
S"? ,Lora» Freshman' Kenosha&#13;
"I'm for it to a certain extent,&#13;
and I think that I don't want to&#13;
become an equal to man. But&#13;
women should have equal rights&#13;
as the men, but I don't want&#13;
them. Like I don't want to get&#13;
drafted."&#13;
Rick Barnhart, Junior, Waterford&#13;
"I'm for it to a certain extent,&#13;
like equal pay and equal rights.&#13;
But I'm against strong women's&#13;
lib like, say you open a door for a&#13;
girl and she slams the door back&#13;
in your face or something, I'm&#13;
against that."&#13;
Kathy Cooper, Staff, Computer&#13;
Center "It's OK; just don't go to&#13;
far with it that's all. We need it&#13;
but we still need the men's ability&#13;
for morale boost, I guess."&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2 573 58th St . a t 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COU RT MILWAUKEE&#13;
P. A.B.&#13;
p r e s entSs PRING FOLK&#13;
'//FESTIVAL Grahm&#13;
Dave Castaneda, Freshman,&#13;
acine&#13;
"I have no opinion on women's&#13;
lib, if they feel they're not&#13;
liberated that's their problem. I&#13;
don't know; just leave them&#13;
alone."&#13;
&lt;S Lindgren&#13;
Mi ke Gregor y&#13;
Tom Rosplock&#13;
Bob Rohan&#13;
Dave Duffeck&#13;
Mone y Price&#13;
SUN.&#13;
APRIL 8&#13;
[m 2-7 p.m.&#13;
Free&#13;
Admi s si on&#13;
"St d . Ac t . Bldg.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
. &lt;&lt;,&#13;
your $1&#13;
per d ay lodging includes&#13;
• coffee, donuts&#13;
• shower&#13;
THE&#13;
KENTUCKY DERBY&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
MAY 4-6&#13;
$5.00 for Derby Ticket&#13;
$2.50 pre-Derby Concert&#13;
advance sale ticket&#13;
($4.00 at the door)&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant&#13;
Dean of S tudents&#13;
"My opinion is that it has some&#13;
value on campus, but that it has&#13;
to be treated justly so that the&#13;
women get fair treatment as well&#13;
as the men."&#13;
bring own sleeping bag&#13;
MUST SUPPLY OWN TRANSPORTATION - TRAVEL&#13;
INFORMATION AND SIGN-UP AT STU. ACT. OFFICE -&#13;
LLC-D-197.&#13;
Candy Bieneman, Freshman,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"I really agree with the idea,&#13;
but I don't agree with a lot of t he&#13;
way they go about doing it. Like I&#13;
don't think they should push it on&#13;
people and I think they're kind of&#13;
going to the other extreme.&#13;
They're trying to push it on&#13;
people, and a lot needs to be&#13;
changed. You're going to have to&#13;
change the way people think,&#13;
you're going to have to change&#13;
society and that's going to take a&#13;
long time. I think it should have&#13;
happened a long time ago."&#13;
Jim Simmons, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"I really can't say. I like what&#13;
they're doing though."&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
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10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed . , April 4, 1973&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER Baseball opens today&#13;
' Sports&#13;
Rangers strong in Track&#13;
by Helmut Kali&#13;
Parkside has had "a very good&#13;
year so far in track," according&#13;
to head coach Bob Lawson. The&#13;
quality of our trackmen is high,&#13;
but Lawson would like to see&#13;
more students out for track&#13;
ents out for track. '&#13;
Most meets have been&#13;
multiple-team meets (eight to&#13;
twenty teams) with the Rangers&#13;
placing in the top 25 percent.&#13;
Lucien Rosa and Dennis Biel&#13;
started out theyear as All-&#13;
America and have kept a good&#13;
record. Another outstanding&#13;
performer was Keith Merritt,&#13;
who has been setting records in&#13;
the pole vault and triple jump.&#13;
Merritt "should soon be ready&#13;
for national competition in the&#13;
triple jump and the decathlon,"&#13;
says Lawson. The decathlon&#13;
consists of ten events; the 100&#13;
meter, long jump, high jump,&#13;
shot put, 400 meter, lio meter&#13;
hurdle, discus, pole vault&#13;
javelin, and 1,500 meter.&#13;
Chuck Dettman has had a good&#13;
year running the half mile.&#13;
"Two freshmen with a good&#13;
future at Parkside are Herb&#13;
DeGroot annd Cornelius Gordon,&#13;
both of Racine, and both 440 men.&#13;
Also having good potential is&#13;
Mike Kopczynski, a long jump&#13;
sprinter.&#13;
The next meet for the Ranger&#13;
trackmen will be the United&#13;
States Track and Field&#13;
Federation (USTFF) State Indoor&#13;
Championships April7 at&#13;
Madison. On the same day,&#13;
Merritt and Dom Cooper will be&#13;
competing in the decathlon and&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Bob Lawson&#13;
A Parkside decathlon, and&#13;
wMh ™S open events&#13;
will be held May 7 and 8. The first&#13;
ou^oorjneet on the new track&#13;
will be held to deticate the track&#13;
•April 19 and 20.&#13;
Lawson's main goal right now&#13;
is to get Rosa ready to defend his&#13;
national marathon record at the&#13;
JS^URelays' which are the&#13;
USTFF National Championships&#13;
held at Drake University in Des&#13;
Moines, Iowa. John Ammerman&#13;
«s also training to run at Drake&#13;
Rosa took top honors in the Drake&#13;
marathon last year, and Gary&#13;
Lance, a former ParksiriW&#13;
student took tenth. de&#13;
The Parkside Rangers baseball&#13;
club opens up its season, today,&#13;
with a single game against the&#13;
College of Racine. Game time is 1&#13;
p.m. at the UW-P baseball field.&#13;
College of Racine, something of&#13;
a fledging in baseball in recent&#13;
years, has yet to beat the&#13;
Rangers since Ken (Red)&#13;
Oberbruner has coached and&#13;
squad.&#13;
"We haven't lost to them yet,&#13;
and I don't plan on starting this&#13;
year," Oberbruner said.&#13;
C of R (Dominican) lost four&#13;
games to Parkside iast year with&#13;
only one game being decided by&#13;
one run. C of R is led by second&#13;
baseman Ed Granitz, last year's&#13;
most valuable player, and third&#13;
baseman Larry Haskins.&#13;
The Rangers are coming off a&#13;
6-4 record. They had 14 games&#13;
washed out a year ago. This&#13;
year's team will attempt to play&#13;
17 games if the weather will&#13;
oblige. Wisconsin - Madison tried&#13;
to get a early start this year but&#13;
was rained out last Saturday.&#13;
Oberbruner indicated his&#13;
pitching is below last year's with&#13;
only two returning lettermen in&#13;
sophomores Dale Phillips and&#13;
lefty Bob Kosters. Phillips will be&#13;
tried more at first base this year.&#13;
He has hopes that several&#13;
promising newcomers, Kim&#13;
Singleton, Jeff Sexton and Nick&#13;
Ziomek, will be able to help carry&#13;
the pitching load. The Rangers&#13;
will play eight doubleheaders this&#13;
year and good pitching is a must&#13;
for success.&#13;
Oberbruner said that this&#13;
year's team has better over-all&#13;
balance than a year ago, which&#13;
should help any shortcomings the&#13;
pitching may have.&#13;
His infield is set with lettermen&#13;
Tom Gedemer at third (he hit .275&#13;
a year ago), Ron Schmidt at&#13;
second (.300), and either Phillips&#13;
(.255) o r Jim Mohrbacher (.225)&#13;
at first. Oberbruner noted the&#13;
team has two good prospects in&#13;
An important announcement to every&#13;
student in the health professions:&#13;
NEW SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
ARE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.&#13;
THEY COVER TUITION AND&#13;
RELATED COSTS AND PROVIDE AN&#13;
ANNUAL INCOME OF $5,300 AS WELL.&#13;
If a,, steady salary of $400 a&#13;
month and paid-up tuition&#13;
will help you continue your&#13;
professional training, the&#13;
scholarships just made poss&#13;
i b l e by t h e U n i fo r m e d&#13;
Services Health Professions&#13;
Revitalization Act of 1972&#13;
deserve your close attention.&#13;
Because if you are now in a&#13;
medical, osteopathic, dental,&#13;
veterinary, podiatry, or optometry&#13;
school, or are working&#13;
toward a PhD in Clinical&#13;
Psychology, you may qualify.&#13;
We make it eakjj tor you to&#13;
complete your xtudie.k. You're&#13;
commissioned as an officer as&#13;
soon as you enter the program,&#13;
but remain in student&#13;
status until graduation. And,&#13;
during each year you will be&#13;
on active duty (with extra&#13;
pay) for 45 days. Naturally,&#13;
if your academic schedule&#13;
requires that you remain on&#13;
campus, you stay on campus&#13;
-and still receive your active&#13;
duty pay.&#13;
Active duty requirements&#13;
are fair. Basically, you serve&#13;
one year as a commissioned&#13;
officer for each year you've&#13;
participated in the program,&#13;
with a two year minimum.&#13;
You may apply for a scholarship&#13;
with either the Army,&#13;
Navy or Air Force, and know&#13;
that upon entering active&#13;
d u t y y o u ' l l h a v e r a n k a n d&#13;
duties in keeping with your&#13;
professional training.&#13;
The life's work you've chosen&#13;
for yourself requires long,&#13;
hard, expensive training.&#13;
Now we are in a position to&#13;
give you some help. Mail in&#13;
the coupon at your earliest&#13;
convenience for more detailed&#13;
information.&#13;
&lt; Scholarship:&#13;
Mux A&#13;
J'niv'vrsal City. Texas 7H14S&#13;
I desire information for&#13;
C-CN-43&#13;
El&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
n« |&#13;
Army n Navy J~| Air K.irce&#13;
MdliralyOstonpathic H Dental&#13;
V.'Urinary • I'o.liatry*&#13;
Other ( I'lease specify )&#13;
N&#13;
S.ic. S.'i* " ,&#13;
i please print 1&#13;
A.I.I.&#13;
file&#13;
T.. itia.h.ate&#13;
ISi-hoiill&#13;
' Month 1 ( Year) (DeimO&#13;
1 Month 1 (Day) (Year)&#13;
* y n,it a v uilahlt' in Ail- K.ircc I'l-onrcm.&#13;
BASEBALL SCHEDULE&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Spring 1973&#13;
April 4, Wed. - Dominican - Away (2) l';00&#13;
April 11, Wed. - D ominican - Home (2) 1:00&#13;
April 14, Sat. • UW-Whitewater - H ome (2) 1$:00&#13;
April 16, Mon. - S t. Norbert - Home (2) 12:00&#13;
April 19, Thurs. • Northland - Home (2) 1:00&#13;
April 30, Mon. - UW-Madison (JV's) - Away (2) 1:00&#13;
May 4, Fri. - Waukesha Tech - Away (2) 1:00&#13;
May 6, Sun. - UW-Madison (JV's) - Home (2) 12:00&#13;
May 8, Tues. - Milw. Tech (MATIC) -Away (2) 1:00&#13;
May 10, Thurs. - Milw. Tech (MATC) - Home (2) 1:00&#13;
All home games will be played at UW-P baseball field located on campus.&#13;
freshmen Dave Marino and Pete&#13;
Putra for the open shortstop&#13;
position.&#13;
In the outfield, where no one&#13;
has hit consistently this spring,&#13;
the battle ranges between lettermen&#13;
Scott Nelson (.260), Jeff&#13;
Koleske (.290) and freshmen Jeff&#13;
Hamon, Bill Blaha, Mike Cook&#13;
and several other players.&#13;
Oberbruner indicated, "The&#13;
name of t he game in college ball&#13;
is hitting and whoever hits will&#13;
play."&#13;
Oberbruner said his strongest&#13;
position, at this moment, would&#13;
have to be at catcher, where Tim&#13;
Elston and freshman Andy Vacca&#13;
are battling for the starting nod.&#13;
Oberbruner explained that he&#13;
felt the last three weeks have&#13;
been the best weather he has had&#13;
for practices since he became the&#13;
coach. He said the club has a&#13;
good chance to win a "goodly&#13;
number of games" with the&#13;
team's better over-all depth.&#13;
The schedule is in the Rangers'&#13;
favor with the first seven games&#13;
to be played here and only six&#13;
games to be played on the road&#13;
all season.&#13;
Oberbruner feels the stiffest&#13;
opposition this year, will come&#13;
from Whitewater in a&#13;
doubleheader Saturday, April 14&#13;
and then from St. Norbert the&#13;
following Monday plus the pair of&#13;
doubleheaders against the UWMadison-&#13;
JV's.&#13;
Ruggers win 1st&#13;
game of the season&#13;
On April l the Parkside ruggers&#13;
traveled to Purdue - North&#13;
Central in Indiana and there&#13;
picked up their first victory of the&#13;
young season by the score of 20-8.&#13;
Scoring honors go to Keith&#13;
Bosman who scored twice including&#13;
picking up a misplayed&#13;
Purdue ball and racing 80 yards&#13;
for the second of his scores. Other&#13;
tries for Parkside came on runs&#13;
by John Ble§hka and John van&#13;
Vleet. Two of the scores were&#13;
converted, one by Keith Bosman&#13;
and the other by Eric Olson. Two&#13;
tries were scored for Purdue. The&#13;
next game will be played April 7&#13;
at Northwestern.&#13;
IVEEAT&#13;
I N T HE C OMFORT&#13;
OF Y OUR C AR&#13;
"""X &gt;&#13;
• PAPA B URGER . MAMA B URGER&#13;
• TEEN B URGER . BABY B URGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
FREE GALLON OF ROOT BEER WITH $5.00 ORDER&#13;
Vi MILE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER D RIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Tennis faces tough schedule&#13;
by B.D. RASMUSSEN&#13;
RECREATION A L HOURS&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday 8. Wednesday&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday.. All extra-curricular play will&#13;
be restricted to times that the&#13;
varsity tennis and gym classes&#13;
will not be using the courts.&#13;
The rules governing play are:&#13;
two, three, or four players must&#13;
occupy the courts: courts may be&#13;
reserved two days in advance;&#13;
and the reservation must include&#13;
the first and last names of the&#13;
participants. Reservations for&#13;
courts one and six may be made&#13;
in person or by phone, but&#13;
reservations for other courts&#13;
must be made in person, and&#13;
players may reserve the courts&#13;
for only one time per day. A ten&#13;
minute "grace period" will apply&#13;
to each court. Any court not&#13;
reserved is open for free play and&#13;
during "prime time" doubles&#13;
players will receive priority.&#13;
Players are not permitted to&#13;
wear street shoes on the court.&#13;
Reservations are to be made at&#13;
the issue desk in the PE Building.&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
30 (2 courts open)&#13;
: 00 (1 court open)&#13;
(restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
8:00a.m.-10:00&#13;
from 10:30-12:00for cle&#13;
except Tuesday &amp; Thursday closed&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday..&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL&#13;
PLAY-OFFS&#13;
Starting Sunday, Spril 8&#13;
6:30 p.m. Olympians vs. Mercury&#13;
Comets&#13;
Herblius Superblius vs. Rebels&#13;
7:30 p.m. Flash vs. Deke's Boys&#13;
Sheeters vs. Bold Ones&#13;
8:30 p.m. Semi-Finals&#13;
Dick Frecka&#13;
With spring sports beginning to&#13;
occupy more of the students time,&#13;
a reservation system has been&#13;
started for the courts just east of&#13;
the PE Building, according to&#13;
tennis coach Dick Frecka. fillip Finals and Consolation Finals&#13;
will be played Wednesday, April&#13;
11. Times will be announced&#13;
later. The&#13;
Mat Maids^ present&#13;
CL Dance&#13;
The Starboys&#13;
SATURDAY APRIL 17&#13;
. 9p.m. -1 a.m.&#13;
$D° ^&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
April l&#13;
North Court - volleyball&#13;
reserved Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
2:00-4:30. Rest of building open.&#13;
April 8&#13;
CYO Swim Meet 1:00-4:30. Pool&#13;
closed until 5:00; rest of building&#13;
open.&#13;
Joe Biebel and John Tank&#13;
traveled to the Martini-Rossi&#13;
world invitational fencing meet&#13;
in New York City the weekend of&#13;
March 24, and when they came&#13;
back, a few more people knew&#13;
where Parkside was.&#13;
Tank made his way to the&#13;
second round before being&#13;
defeated, but it was Biebel that&#13;
caught the most attention as he&#13;
battled his way to the semi-finals&#13;
before submitting defeat. One of&#13;
Biebel's victims along the way&#13;
was Dr. Jeno Kamuti, of&#13;
Hungary, who was the silver&#13;
medal winner in the Olympics at&#13;
Munich last year.&#13;
Wauwatosa, Wis. where they both&#13;
studied under the same coach&#13;
and many times battled each&#13;
April 14&#13;
Don Jacoby concert at 8:00&#13;
building closes at 5:00.&#13;
3l^^^(Parksideand Wis. I.D.'srequired)&#13;
•w Student Activities Building ^ April 15&#13;
Band concert - UWP concert&#13;
band at 8:00; building closes at&#13;
6:00.&#13;
April 17 CLASSIFIED&#13;
Friedman at 8:00; building closes&#13;
at 5:30.&#13;
Tj—'/ Good for 2 Free Dry Cycles (-&#13;
with any wash load&#13;
T^^aaand an Extra Free Punch On Your Dividend Cardffi&#13;
Sx&gt;w/y with an 8-pound Load of Dry Cleaning \2E5&gt;{&#13;
jfflqffi~NORGE VILLAGE 7513 - 45th Ave., Kenosha^®"^&#13;
9/A®?i$-tWi ESTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 Ohio St., Racine j&#13;
*4mRAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 R apids Dr., Racind&#13;
One Coupon Per Week Per Customer \&#13;
Expires Sept. 5,1973&#13;
FOR RENT: One bedroom furnished&#13;
apartment near Parkside. Utilities and heat&#13;
included, S130. 654-7341&#13;
1972 Kustom 500 Amp. Excellent condition.&#13;
List $1700. $950 or best offer. Call 633-6191&#13;
after 5.&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
1969 Camaro economical, 3-speed, Orange,&#13;
black vinyl top. $1295.00, 694-6277. Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11-8&#13;
For Sale: 1970 Camaro Rally Sport, 21,000&#13;
miles, snow tires included. Call Parkside&#13;
extension 2360.&#13;
NAME 8. ADDRESS&#13;
Termpapers Typed&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches 0150 after 5 p.m.&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
contact Kris Wright 632&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
CLASSIFIED AD VERTISING O RDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number pf words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
NAME it to run. A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
PHONE NO .&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
— IN RACINE&#13;
LATHROP AND 21st ( ALMOST)&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication,&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule ^ *1,73 ™E PARKS'DE RANGER"&#13;
12 ™E PARKS,DE "ANGER Wed., Apri! 4, ,973&#13;
/&#13;
V *&#13;
&lt;$v&#13;
ABC . Atlantic • MGM . Nonesuch . Cadet . Blue Note . Pacific&#13;
Jan . Reprise . Warner Brothers . Elektra . Columbia . Immediate&#13;
• Angel • Turnabout • Vanguard • Sta* • Atco • Gordy • Mace •&#13;
DISTRIBUTORS OVERSTOCK SALE!&#13;
HUNDREDS O F L ABELS &amp; ARTISTS INCLUDING&#13;
Everest . Blue Note . Music Guild . Westminster . Command .&#13;
RCA . Chess . Verve . World Pacific . Ounhill . Westminster Gold .&#13;
Impulse • and many others.&#13;
Thelonius Monk . Cream . B. J. Thomas . Mamas &amp; Papas . John&#13;
Mayall . Laurindo Almeida . Sabicas . Eric Clapton . Joan Baei .&#13;
Aretha Franklin . Odetto . John Coltrane . Louis Armstrong . Fifth&#13;
Dimension • Bee Gees • Pittsburgh Symphony • Dionne Warwick •&#13;
Ramsey Lewis • London Symphony • Julian Bream • Wes Montgomery&#13;
• New York Pro Musica . Tim Buckley . William Steinberg . Josef&#13;
Krips • Eddie Harris . Tom Paxton • and many others.&#13;
It NOW O NLY I.9o Schwann&#13;
Cat. List&#13;
4.98 to 6.98&#13;
J4ZZ&#13;
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED! NO DEALERS PLEASE!&#13;
SCORE AGAIN!! CLASSICAL BOX SET VALUES&#13;
WHILE THEY LAST! HURRY IN TODAY FOR BEST SELECTION&#13;
»VSTRAVINSKY&#13;
HIS FINEST MUSIC&#13;
4 Record Set f&#13;
Value to $24.00 Q&#13;
$&#13;
mn i \u&gt;t n\n&#13;
f t&#13;
BRUCKNER —&#13;
SYMPHONY NO. 7&#13;
2 Record Set m ••&#13;
Value to SI 0.00 / '&#13;
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR&#13;
5 Record Set&#13;
Value to S25.00 L *f8&#13;
TCHAIKOVSKY&#13;
HIS FINEST MUSIC&#13;
3 Record Set only • ol&#13;
Value to SI 8.00 5&#13;
JULIAN BREAM&#13;
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR&#13;
3 Record Set&#13;
Value to $15.00 4 TB&#13;
* vS»-X\&amp;.&#13;
&lt; Xv» xv.-X -y&#13;
; VXv\vV&gt;'oo^ &gt;-X- : y,&#13;
: :Uo&gt; »x«w&#13;
VX4 X.-X&#13;
&lt; .\c&lt;vv.&#13;
*mv%&#13;
AN ANTHOLOGY&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
5 Record Set&#13;
Value to $25.00&#13;
OF&#13;
AaAnthaiotcyttiYt&amp;t Music&#13;
SALE STARTS WED., T ODAY AND ENDS APRIL 18&#13;
BEETHOVEN SYMPHONI&#13;
8 Record Set only _ ,&#13;
Value to $44.50 9&#13;
THE BEST OF THE BLUES&#13;
3 Record Sat&#13;
Value to $18.00 £ .f 8&#13;
JOHANN STRAUSS&#13;
3 Record Set only _&#13;
Value to $18.00 4&#13;
HW1</text>
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              <text>HHH Campaigns for McGovern</text>
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              <text>These three University of Wisconsin-Parkside students are now in&#13;
Europe on student teaching assignments: left to right, Kathy&#13;
Williamson of Kenosha; Bill Zapencki, Kenosha; and Jacquie Braun&#13;
of Racine. Seniors in Parkside's Division of Education, they are the&#13;
first UW-P students to participate in the overseas teacher training&#13;
program.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Parking Committee dissolves;&#13;
Racine buses run til Friday&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
Las week's meeting of the&#13;
Parking and Transportation&#13;
Committee revealed that&#13;
Wisconsin Coach service from&#13;
Racine will continue until next&#13;
Friday and that the committee's&#13;
lack of power has resulted in its&#13;
move to dissolve.&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
Assistant Dean of Students said,&#13;
"In a meeting with Wisconsin&#13;
Coach on October 10, they said&#13;
they had looked at their books&#13;
and wanted to discontinue service&#13;
because they were showing a&#13;
loss. At that time they said they'd&#13;
continue service until Oct. 20; in&#13;
subsequent talks they indicated&#13;
they would extend service to Oct.&#13;
27."&#13;
Immediately after the Oct. 10&#13;
meeting, talks began between the&#13;
Business Department and&#13;
several transportation concerns.&#13;
Among them were the Kenosha&#13;
Transit Authority, Flash of&#13;
Racine and the Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute bus service.&#13;
The progress of these talks&#13;
were not fully discussed but there&#13;
were indications that each&#13;
concern would have some&#13;
problem providing the service at&#13;
this time.&#13;
Subsidy of Wisconsin Coach by&#13;
the university was discussed but&#13;
Erwin Zuelke, Director of&#13;
Business Affacs said there is no&#13;
legal way Parkside can subsidize&#13;
Wisconsin Coach. He said&#13;
however, student support funds,&#13;
such as Student Government&#13;
money alloted by the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee, could be&#13;
used if the student organization&#13;
did it of their own volition.&#13;
When the committee exhausted&#13;
the Racine busing issue,&#13;
Professor Leon Applebaum,&#13;
economics, made a motion to&#13;
dissolve the committee and&#13;
suggested that the Campus&#13;
Planning committee be allowed&#13;
to assume activities thereof. The&#13;
motion was seconded by&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Brockman&#13;
and was passed unanimously.&#13;
Committee Chairman,&#13;
Professor Harry Lantz, music,&#13;
said, "We've been whipping boy&#13;
for many problems."&#13;
Members were concerned that&#13;
they met to discuss problems but&#13;
were pwoerless to affect change.&#13;
It was suggested that Campus&#13;
Planning will have a greater&#13;
chance at action.&#13;
VOTE!&#13;
Wednesday, October 25, 1972&#13;
| RANGER Straw Poll&#13;
| Nov. 2-3&#13;
illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIH&#13;
HHH campaigns for McGovern&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
Originally Sen. Hubert H.&#13;
Humphrey (D Minn.) had been&#13;
scheduled to land at the airport at&#13;
7:30 p.m. but was delayed in take&#13;
off from his fourth meeting of the&#13;
day. Hence he didn't land at Gate&#13;
7 of Mitchell field till 8:07.&#13;
Some of the comments before&#13;
the press conference were better&#13;
than the conference itself. Joe&#13;
Spehart, driver of the McGovern&#13;
campaign bus (which had&#13;
previously been the Humphrey&#13;
campaign bus) mentioned the&#13;
research done by a 1948&#13;
California Congressional candidate.&#13;
&#13;
"This man spent 24 years in&#13;
researching the speeches of&#13;
Richard Nixon and determined a&#13;
foolproof method to tell when&#13;
Nixon was lying.&#13;
"If he pulls his ear, he's telling&#13;
the truth. If h e straightens his tie,&#13;
he's telling the truth. If he rubs&#13;
his hands, he's telling the truth.&#13;
But watch out. If he opens his&#13;
mouth and starts talking ~ that's&#13;
a lie."&#13;
The senator entered the press&#13;
conference and was told he would&#13;
have to hurry to get to the union&#13;
rally at the Red Carpet Expo&#13;
Center at 8:30 p.m. But the&#13;
senator said he "would eat first."&#13;
He hadn't eaten since 7 a.m.&#13;
The press conference got under&#13;
way with Humphrey fielding a&#13;
question in regard to the&#13;
Democrats for Nixon ad on TV&#13;
which refers to his criticizing&#13;
George McGovern's defense&#13;
program. He explained that the&#13;
things said in the Democrats for&#13;
Nixon ads were no longer true,&#13;
that positions had changed on&#13;
these issues and that McGovern&#13;
had changed his stand.&#13;
In referring to President&#13;
Nixon, Humphrey referred to his&#13;
(Nixon's) recent veto of a natural&#13;
resources act, his stand against&#13;
education bills, against veterans'&#13;
bills, public service money, his&#13;
cutback in programs for the poor,&#13;
and the fact that Nixon was&#13;
against the labor movement.&#13;
In closing he said, "This&#13;
country can't take four more&#13;
years of Richard Nixon, a Nixon&#13;
who has wage controls on&#13;
workers and no salary controls on&#13;
corporate executives."&#13;
Humphrey then mentioned the&#13;
present electoral system in which&#13;
a win in twelve key statesqould&#13;
win the election. He seemed&#13;
confident that McGovern would&#13;
win California, Nixon's home&#13;
state.&#13;
When questioned by this&#13;
reporter about the Democrats for&#13;
Nixon Committee, the Senator&#13;
said that he wasn't in favor of&#13;
them, that he didn't think it would&#13;
help to drum Connally out of the&#13;
Democratic Party and that he&#13;
had received no specific information&#13;
as to Republican&#13;
campaign contributions paying&#13;
for the Democrats for Nixon&#13;
commercials. He concluded that&#13;
Nixon would not be president now&#13;
if some good Democrats had used&#13;
their heads in voting in 1968.&#13;
Upon completion of the press&#13;
conference, Humphrey adjourned&#13;
to room 411 in the Red&#13;
Carpet Inn where he had dinner.&#13;
Here, or at the airport, security&#13;
arrangements were not&#13;
especially evident. In fact, the&#13;
only security officer seen all&#13;
night was the officer posted inside&#13;
the bathroom in the Expo&#13;
Center.&#13;
While waiting for the senator to&#13;
arrive at the Expo Center, those&#13;
in attendance were treated to&#13;
such rousing songs as the&#13;
McGovern Labor Rally Song,&#13;
Solidarity Forever and You Are&#13;
My Sunshine.&#13;
One of the main speakers was&#13;
union leader Emil Mazey, who&#13;
mentioned that Nixon had&#13;
created a bigger deficit in the&#13;
budget than had been created by&#13;
presidents in the previous 18&#13;
years.&#13;
He added, "Nixon is the best&#13;
president money can buy ... This&#13;
is not 1952 where Nixon has an&#13;
$18,000 slush fund given him by&#13;
California big business... but 1972&#13;
where he now has a twenty&#13;
million dollar slush fund donated&#13;
to his campaign by large corporations."&#13;
&#13;
Mazey then lauded Humphrey&#13;
as a friend of the working man,,&#13;
referring to his 1948 election to&#13;
senate and his work for the repeal&#13;
of the Taft-Hartley Act.&#13;
The big moment of the night&#13;
arrived as Humphrey entered the&#13;
hall. It took five minutes to get&#13;
the paraders to finally sit down.&#13;
This reporter observed the&#13;
senator's speech from a distance&#13;
of about nine feet in the press&#13;
box.&#13;
After the crowd quieted&#13;
Humphrey remarked on the&#13;
introduction: "That was an introduction&#13;
my father would have&#13;
liked and which my mother&#13;
wouldn't believe."&#13;
He remarked about the trouble&#13;
the chief executive has to go&#13;
through: "If McGovern wins he'll&#13;
have ty trouble, but if N ixon wins&#13;
you'll have the trouble - and&#13;
don't you forget it!"&#13;
In speaking on the economic&#13;
situation -- "If you expect to work&#13;
for the money you have to live on,&#13;
you can't afford Richard Nixon."&#13;
He then made remarks about&#13;
the Nixon-Congress battle on who&#13;
was going to control the purse&#13;
strings of the country, the&#13;
President or the elected&#13;
representatives of the people. He&#13;
remarked about the things Nixon&#13;
was taking credit for which were&#13;
being done by Congress.&#13;
"Five-and-one-half billion has&#13;
been taken out of d efense to help&#13;
old folks and kids. Congress&#13;
approved a 20 percent increase in&#13;
social security. Nixon wanted&#13;
five percent. But he took credit&#13;
for it. Then he blames Congress&#13;
for inflation -- this fellow's hard&#13;
to hit."&#13;
"Nixon says the economy is&#13;
improving. When my wife says&#13;
prices are going up I ask her who&#13;
am I to believe, you or the&#13;
president? I've spent 36 years&#13;
with Muriel and loved it, but four&#13;
years of Nixon is too much for&#13;
me. If you don't like my man&#13;
McGovern, vote for him, just to&#13;
get even with Nixon."&#13;
Humphrey then pointed to&#13;
Nixon's record-setting pace:&#13;
"Let's just look at Nixon's&#13;
record. We have the highest&#13;
unemployment in ten years. The&#13;
highest inflation in two decades.&#13;
The highest budget deficit in&#13;
eight decades and the highest&#13;
intejst rates in 100 years ... If we&#13;
had pulled ourselves together&#13;
four years ago he wouldn't be in&#13;
the White House.&#13;
The senatorhen remarked on&#13;
his association with George&#13;
McGovern, stating that it was he&#13;
who persuaded him to run for&#13;
Senate.&#13;
"When George McGovern&#13;
came to Washington, I helped&#13;
him find his house. We lived right&#13;
next eoor to each other, just&#13;
acorss the district line."&#13;
"When the McGovern family&#13;
entertained they used to borrow&#13;
our dishes. I want him to get&#13;
elected president so I can get my&#13;
dishes back."&#13;
"When our children outgrew&#13;
their bunk beds, we gave them to&#13;
the McGoverns. We also let them&#13;
have our old dining room set and&#13;
gave our old nickelodeon to the&#13;
McGovern kids. When he gets&#13;
elected I'm sure I'll get the thing&#13;
back."&#13;
In conclusion Humphrey said,&#13;
"Richard Nixon says you've&#13;
never had it so good. Remember&#13;
that when you get your tax bill.&#13;
Remember that when you have to&#13;
eat beans and franks instead of&#13;
steak. Remember that when you&#13;
find the dollar is worth 20 cents&#13;
less than it was four years ago.&#13;
Remember when wages are&#13;
frozen while profits increase,&#13;
you've never had it so good." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 25, 1972&#13;
Crossings hazardous&#13;
As Parkside has grown, and as it will continue to&#13;
grow, the advent of added roads and thicker vehicular&#13;
traffic has complicated the always present problem of&#13;
campus safety. Although the major responsibility&#13;
inherently lies with the pedestrians and vehicle&#13;
operators themselves, there are some feasible safety&#13;
measures which deserve checking into.&#13;
A sore traffic area on the north side of the campus is&#13;
the intersection of Hwy. A and Wood Road. Eastbound&#13;
traffic on A is poorly visible to northbound traffic on&#13;
Wood Road. The speed limit of 65 on Hwy. A could be&#13;
reduced to 45 and a four-way stop instituted at the intersection&#13;
to provide a far safer area.&#13;
An area where traffic is a hazard to pedestrian travel&#13;
is the crossing of Wood Road. Although it is a posted&#13;
school crossing zone and caution lights are continually&#13;
flashing, much traffic is still speeding through the area&#13;
as if on the way to a fire. Perhaps "rumble strips"&#13;
(ridges in the road as those on highway 50 as you approach&#13;
1-94) may be a helpful suggestion.&#13;
As was stated above, primary responsibility for safety&#13;
lies with the pedestrian himself. Care in crossing any&#13;
road goes without saying; but too many people have&#13;
little reaard for the fact that fast-moving traffic very&#13;
often is not paying attention as it should be.&#13;
The Tallent and Greenquist bus stops also present&#13;
problems. Passengers should proceed to cross streets&#13;
from the rear of the bus. It is much easier to watch for&#13;
traffic and much safer. Let's all work together to&#13;
provide for a safer campus. A death or serious injury is&#13;
a poor price to pay for correctable mistakes.&#13;
Each vote counts&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
In approximately two weeks millions of&#13;
Americans will go to the polls and vote for a&#13;
President, many other officers and some&#13;
referendums. This column is dedicated to those who&#13;
may not.&#13;
"To vote or not to vote" is not a question ; it is a&#13;
cop-out. Now that eighteen-year-olds have the vote,&#13;
most all people on campus have the right. An&#13;
estimated 25 million became eligible with the new&#13;
law and considering elections of the past couple of&#13;
decades, it^jvould take only a fraction of the new&#13;
voters to swing an election.&#13;
In 1968, Humphrey lost by approximately 150,000&#13;
votes. Kennedy won by much less than that.&#13;
The point is that each individual vote counts for&#13;
something, now more than ever.&#13;
Should it be said, "The kids were given the vote to&#13;
keep them quiet"? I think not.&#13;
The youth vote in America had a lot to say about&#13;
the present candidates for President. Youth effort&#13;
in campaigning had, and has now, more than ever,&#13;
made presence and usefulness obvious.&#13;
The next several weeks and, eventually, Nov. 7&#13;
will reveal whether active, politicking youth has&#13;
followed through on its new opportunity.&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINION S&#13;
¥ The ParksideThe&#13;
Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located at D-194 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRITERS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch,&#13;
Kathy Wellner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma, Shawn Clements, Dale&#13;
Martin, Tom Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Dave Reyher.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
By this time or shortly in the future, the doors to the&#13;
lower level of the library are open. In a letter&#13;
received from Philip Burnett, Library Director, it&#13;
was explained that the inconvenience of having only&#13;
one door affects everyone, including Library staff.&#13;
The lower door will now be open from about 9 a.m.&#13;
to 3 p.m. on a trial basis.&#13;
If the door stays open, it s i up to those who make use&#13;
of it. If traffic does not warrant it, it will close. If&#13;
people try to bring food in from the nearby food&#13;
service area, it will be closed. To facilitate use, the&#13;
reserve book section will be moved to the circulation&#13;
desk.&#13;
The front page story last week about the governor's&#13;
visit had the Chancellor explain that students&#13;
decided to have Mailer come here. The Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee was responsible for Mailer's&#13;
visit. This committee is made up of eight faculty&#13;
chosen by the Assistant Chancellor and only four(!)&#13;
students.&#13;
If the Chancellor can say that one-tenth of 1 percent&#13;
of the students were responsible for wasting $2,200&#13;
of student money, I wonder what bit of misinformation&#13;
is coming out next.&#13;
For those of you who have friends who can't read,&#13;
please mention it to them that those signs posted&#13;
around the food service area mean that no one is to&#13;
be occupying space in that area from 11 to 1 unless&#13;
they are eating!&#13;
For those of you who attend class in Kenosha, notice&#13;
those cars parked on the left side of the drive facing&#13;
the school. This practice is illegal, stupid and&#13;
dangerous as evidenced by the head-on I nearly had&#13;
with one of these clowns pulling in across my front&#13;
bumper as I was leaving the lot last week. How&#13;
about it, security? Bust these fools and cease this&#13;
practice.&#13;
Canteen has a man on full time filling its machines&#13;
on campus. He has to hustle to keep the machines&#13;
full. This is where a good part of the excess profit&#13;
Canteen makes goes. Is there a cheaper way?&#13;
For people who must spend any time at all in the&#13;
Library, the static electricity phenomena is a real&#13;
problem. It is disconcerting to be electrified every&#13;
time you touch something. Who is the person&#13;
responsible for not correcting this before it became&#13;
a difficulty? Also, non-static carpeting should have&#13;
been installed in the first place.&#13;
THORN&#13;
I've been wondering what that third flagpole is for -&#13;
any ideas?&#13;
Anyone who desires to assist in distinguished&#13;
teacher award procedures, please contact me. If we&#13;
can get enough people together, maybe we can get it&#13;
done right this year.&#13;
What happened to all those politically minded&#13;
students who are continually holding those rallies&#13;
on campus? For two weeks now I have been mentioning&#13;
our big political issue coming out Nov. l and&#13;
not a single person has brought anything to this&#13;
office. If anybody supports any candidate or is&#13;
against any candidate and thinks his opinion is&#13;
worth as much as mine, get your copy to us by Oct&#13;
26 (t hat's Thursday, gang).&#13;
I suggest the university investigate the trimester&#13;
program, in which the summer session will be&#13;
lengthened to four months and in which the spring&#13;
semester will end in April. By looking at a calendar&#13;
you can see it can be done with no rout ble at al.&#13;
Bus petitions are circulating fast and furious. What&#13;
good are they if there is no money to enact them?&#13;
Last day to drop a class is this Friday!&#13;
Why can't offices on campus stay open during the&#13;
noon hour? People staffing these could eat&#13;
separately and thus promote efficiency, and it&#13;
would be a convenience to students who are only&#13;
free at that time.&#13;
Who was the person who scheduled the pool to be&#13;
closed from 1:30 to 5:30 every day? This is the&#13;
prime time when it should be open, when people are&#13;
finished with their morning classes and would like&#13;
something to refresh them after a hard day. Any&#13;
activities scheduled during this time could easily&#13;
have been re-scheduled.&#13;
Some people have taken us up on the 10 percent&#13;
commission for selling ads, as evidenced by the&#13;
increased amount in this issue. We could use a lot&#13;
more. If we can get three pages every week, we can&#13;
go to twelve pages. It isn't that hard, but we need&#13;
the bodies.&#13;
?&#13;
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 ?&#13;
To Chancellor Wyllie:&#13;
During enrollment time the&#13;
school advertised that there&#13;
would be bus service from Racine&#13;
to Greenquist and back.&#13;
Believing this, like others, I&#13;
enrolled, paid my tuition, bought&#13;
books, attended classes and&#13;
studied, fully thinking I would be&#13;
able to complete the semester.&#13;
Now the school, under your administration,&#13;
has stated that this&#13;
bus service may be discontinued&#13;
at any time.&#13;
You encouraged people to&#13;
enroll believing that this bus&#13;
service would be provided; now&#13;
you feel you can walk out on this&#13;
promise and leave people&#13;
stranded. This kind of deception&#13;
indicates irresponsibility, at the&#13;
least, and possibly fraud.&#13;
Furthermore, your administration&#13;
recently stated that&#13;
theUW system had liberalized its&#13;
admission policy which would&#13;
allow minority people to enroll.&#13;
However, if you allow the bus&#13;
service to be discontinued, you&#13;
have, in effect, prevented many&#13;
of the minority people from&#13;
enrolling because they won't&#13;
have any way of getting to school&#13;
since they cannot afford to buy a&#13;
car. Thus, while the university&#13;
opens one door, it closes another.&#13;
From an economic standpoint,&#13;
you will be penalizing the people&#13;
who can afford it least. Many&#13;
students who were taking the bus&#13;
back at the end of the day were on&#13;
their way to work and without&#13;
this service they will be forced to&#13;
give up their jobs because they&#13;
can't get to work on time without&#13;
a decent bus service.&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
for&#13;
enI&#13;
believe, as many others do,&#13;
that you should be held responsible&#13;
for the situation you have&#13;
created. When this school was in&#13;
the planning stage, surely it must&#13;
have occurred to you that some&#13;
type of transportation would be&#13;
needed because of its location. It&#13;
is unreasonable to expect every&#13;
student to own a car&#13;
economic, as well as&#13;
vironmental, reasons.&#13;
As I understand it, the position&#13;
of the school is that (l) the&#13;
University cannot afford to&#13;
provide this service and (2) it is&#13;
prohibited from providing it since&#13;
all transportation is supposed to&#13;
be financed without UW money.&#13;
However, the University could&#13;
afford expensive lounges and&#13;
aesthetic considerations.&#13;
Granted, these are very nice and&#13;
desirable, but surely the ability to&#13;
get to school must be just as&#13;
important. Now as far as the UW&#13;
refusal to subsidize bus service I&#13;
believe, because of the unusual&#13;
location and the fact that you&#13;
encouraged people to enroll&#13;
depending on this service, the&#13;
ruling can be brought to court if&#13;
necessary and reversed because&#13;
of the unusual circumstances.&#13;
If you cannot correct this&#13;
problem, I think you'd better be&#13;
prepared to face a civil suit.&#13;
Kathy Schulz&#13;
Racine junior&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Friday, Oct. 13, I lost the&#13;
little respect I had for the&#13;
security guards here on the&#13;
Parkside campus. About noon, I&#13;
noticed a security guard parked&#13;
in a car by the new flag poles on&#13;
campus. I know he was parked&#13;
there for over an hour. I believe&#13;
that this is a big waste if we are&#13;
going to pay a person to sit there&#13;
and watch people walking for no&#13;
real reason.&#13;
Later in the day, I tried to get&#13;
into the Library-Learning&#13;
Center. I came from the Physical&#13;
Education building about 5:25&#13;
only to find that the building was&#13;
locked. In it was a security guard&#13;
looking at me shaking his head. I&#13;
motioned that I wanted to get in,&#13;
but he held up five fingers and&#13;
shook his head again.&#13;
I know the building is supposed&#13;
to be open to 6 p .m. on Friday.&#13;
The buses run to 6:15 only&#13;
because the buildings are open to&#13;
6 p.m.&#13;
I know that Friday was the first&#13;
day a security guard was&#13;
stationed in the building but&#13;
that's no excuse for locking&#13;
people out an hour early.&#13;
I think this shows some&#13;
ignorance on the part of these so&#13;
called "security guards."&#13;
David Zuehlke&#13;
Racine Sophomore &#13;
Wed., Oct. 25/ 197 2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Vets irate over lack of benefits 658 HELP&#13;
Switchboard&#13;
"We're getting screwed!"&#13;
That was the opening&#13;
statement when RANGER asked&#13;
Chuck St. Pierre, leader of the&#13;
Parkside Vets' Club, why their&#13;
group existed.&#13;
The "screw" St. Pierre&#13;
referred to is the lack of&#13;
veteran's benefits. "We now get&#13;
$175 per month. At the end of&#13;
World War two vets got free&#13;
tuition and books and $170 per&#13;
month. And that's a difference of&#13;
almost 30 years," St. Pierre said.&#13;
His comments were heartily&#13;
approved by the 20 or so members&#13;
in attendance at the&#13;
meeting. There were no war&#13;
stories told RANGER during or&#13;
after the meeting. There was&#13;
plenty of discussion about&#13;
veteran's benefits, however.&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
It has recently come to my&#13;
attention that it is not possible for&#13;
students or faculty members to&#13;
cash a check on this campus. This&#13;
is a ridiculous and very inconvenient&#13;
policy that I feel&#13;
should be amended.&#13;
Most colleges and universities&#13;
have check cashing privileges for&#13;
students and faculty during&#13;
regular business hours. By&#13;
presenting a current ID card and&#13;
the check (generally for under&#13;
$25), a student can cash his&#13;
check. Since many students are&#13;
now attending Parkside whose&#13;
homes are not in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, I feel that someplace at&#13;
the University should cash our&#13;
checks. This is not a terribly&#13;
time-consuming practice. Actually,&#13;
I see no reason why the&#13;
Bursar's office could not handle&#13;
this without much difficulty.&#13;
Even at other campuses on our&#13;
own system such services are&#13;
available. At UW-Madison,&#13;
checks can be cashed at the&#13;
Bursar's office and at the student&#13;
union. At UW-Milwaukee, this&#13;
service is available for faculty&#13;
members at the Bursar's office&#13;
and for students at the bookstore&#13;
and student union. Many of the&#13;
other campuses on our system&#13;
offer the same service, but the&#13;
examples are too numerous to&#13;
repeat here. Perhaps students&#13;
who need check cashing&#13;
privileges should make their&#13;
need known to administration&#13;
representatives and something&#13;
can be done to change the state of&#13;
things!&#13;
Eric Cushman Moore&#13;
There was also discussion&#13;
about the Day Care center, which&#13;
the Vets' Club is helping out by&#13;
building shelves. POW bracelets&#13;
were discussed, and the general&#13;
membership was in favor of&#13;
ordering a supply, to be sold at&#13;
cost around the campus.&#13;
The veterans are planning a&#13;
trip to Madison, coordinated with&#13;
other veterans groups, to demand&#13;
that Gov. Lucey take a firm stand&#13;
on benefits. What type of&#13;
demonstration or confrontation&#13;
this will be is still up in the air;&#13;
according to one member.&#13;
"Our biggest problem," St.&#13;
Pierre said, "is getting members.&#13;
At least a guy could show up&#13;
for a few free beers. Then maybe&#13;
he'd get the idea that we are&#13;
worth joining."&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Sunday, Oct. 15, was our&#13;
open house. Hundreds of people&#13;
came - many looking resplendent&#13;
in their white shirts, ties,&#13;
jewelry and elegant knit suits.&#13;
Shiny shoes scuffled across&#13;
spotless floors. They admired our&#13;
growth, stood awestruck at the&#13;
huge factory-like buildings, and&#13;
they just adored the plush furniture&#13;
and all the modern, expensive&#13;
conveniences and&#13;
sophisticated equipment which&#13;
make an office run.&#13;
Clean and spotless shuttle&#13;
buses guided the tourists to a&#13;
fantasy world of bright, affluent&#13;
men's dreams. And yet to come is&#13;
the big water fountain to be in&#13;
front of Tallent Hall to add a&#13;
touch of Disneyland. But why&#13;
should wealthy white socialites,&#13;
parents of students and townspeople&#13;
be the only ones to visit&#13;
us and our image?&#13;
I feel that a great treat for so&#13;
many poor inner city children&#13;
and youths would be a guided&#13;
tour of the campus. We could&#13;
drive buses into Racine's and&#13;
Kenosha's ghettos and pick up&#13;
the folks for a look at the liberal&#13;
intellectual community. Our&#13;
Chancellor would be proud to tell&#13;
the starving welfare recipients&#13;
and black brothers and sisters&#13;
that this truly is a great country&#13;
with abundant opportunities for&#13;
all. And won't they be impressed?&#13;
We really are involved&#13;
in the community and the betterment&#13;
of society.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie - a man&#13;
among men and champion of&#13;
decency and the American Way.&#13;
He's also a champion at keeping&#13;
The next meeting is set for Oct.&#13;
29, at 7 p.m., in the Student Activities&#13;
Building. A gathering at 1&#13;
p.m. in the S.A.b. is also planned,&#13;
to get ready for a touch football&#13;
game the club is planning on&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
"The main thing we need&#13;
emphasized," a member said, "is&#13;
that we aren't a bunch of jocks&#13;
sitting around swapping war&#13;
stories and getting drunk. We're&#13;
together because we're concerned&#13;
about the raw deal that&#13;
vets are getting, especially in&#13;
Wisconsin. We're concerned that&#13;
Gov. Lucey has yet to take a firm,&#13;
public stand on the issue of&#13;
veterans' benefits. And we're&#13;
concerned because most of us are&#13;
older than the average student,&#13;
are paying taxes and have&#13;
families to support as well as&#13;
school to attned."&#13;
the black student population&#13;
down and, from what I heard,&#13;
limiting funds for them, too. But&#13;
why now? Now that the buildings,&#13;
all that's in them, and water&#13;
fountain with paved and repaved&#13;
roads are paid for, or will be, we&#13;
just don't have money for&#13;
frivolous use, do we?&#13;
David Myer&#13;
sophomore&#13;
P.S. Hey, Champ, how about&#13;
being sure that all female employees&#13;
here get the same pay as&#13;
males doing the same work?&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Your editorial concerning&#13;
health care is well advised. Ms.&#13;
Isenberg does an excellent job&#13;
and is to be commended for&#13;
same. However, as you point out,&#13;
"She is not a doctor." It seems&#13;
that some arrangement might be&#13;
made for a free clinic for&#13;
students. I heartily endorse such&#13;
an idea and recommend we make&#13;
it more than just an idea soon.&#13;
Mrs. Reuben Gorsky&#13;
Racine&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
128-page, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
quality research papers. Enclose&#13;
$1.00 to cover posta ge and ha ndling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 6LENR0CK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(213)477-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
on&#13;
By Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
The RANGER went to Switchboard,&#13;
Kenosha's call-in&#13;
service, and talked to two&#13;
operators who were working that&#13;
night.&#13;
On entering, there is a flight of&#13;
stairs. At the top is a sign that&#13;
says, "People helping people - a&#13;
life-time opportunity."&#13;
Switchboard has several different&#13;
rooms. There's one for&#13;
personal counseling. Another&#13;
room has a parachute fastened to&#13;
the ceiling, a TV for when things&#13;
get slow, and writings on the wall&#13;
like "Who do Switchboard people&#13;
call?" and "If they've got the&#13;
dime, we've got the time." This is&#13;
also where the three telephone&#13;
lines are located.&#13;
Switchboard has been in&#13;
existence since 1970 and handles&#13;
any type of problem calls. There&#13;
are 16 people who work there.&#13;
There are at least two people&#13;
working each night from 6 p.m. to&#13;
midnight on weekdays, and 6&#13;
p.m. to 3 a.m. on weekends.&#13;
It is supported mainly by&#13;
Kenosha Drug Abuse. There have&#13;
also been fund-raising campaigns&#13;
such as a basketball game with&#13;
Playboy Bunnies and Hares as&#13;
cheerleaders which was held on&#13;
Oct. 17.&#13;
Switchboard also performs&#13;
other services besides counseling&#13;
on the phone. A person can call&#13;
and make an appointment to&#13;
come down and get professional&#13;
counseling. There are booklets&#13;
near the counseling room which&#13;
contain information on drugs,&#13;
birth control, alcoholism apd VD.&#13;
If there is a caller whom ISwitchboard&#13;
cannot help, they have a&#13;
file of other agencies to which&#13;
they can refer him. There are&#13;
duty&#13;
also speakers who will go out and&#13;
talk with groups.&#13;
The people who work on the&#13;
lines have to go through a&#13;
training program. This is taught&#13;
mostly by old members of&#13;
Switchboard. The program lasts&#13;
for two weeks with meetings&#13;
twice a week.&#13;
S w itc h b o a rd r e c e i v es&#13;
anywhere from 200 to 600 calls a&#13;
month. Some things people call&#13;
about are answers to math&#13;
problems, how to tell your&#13;
boyfriend he has bad breath, how&#13;
many squares there are on a&#13;
checker board, and what time&#13;
Creature Features is on.&#13;
"There are times when you&#13;
wonder how serious some of the&#13;
callers are," one of the operators&#13;
said, "when you hear people&#13;
laughing in the background."&#13;
There are also a number of very&#13;
serious calls. One time someone&#13;
called who was going to commit&#13;
suicide and the operator talked to&#13;
the person for six hours.&#13;
One operator said that they are&#13;
"sort of a last resort for people&#13;
who can't talk to their friends&#13;
about their problems." Switchboard&#13;
does what it can. If&#13;
Switchboard gets something they&#13;
don't know about, they admit it&#13;
and refer the caller to someone&#13;
else. They try to get the person to&#13;
think logically and then give&#13;
them alternatives, instead of&#13;
advice.&#13;
Switchboard would like to have&#13;
a regular drop-in center and a&#13;
foster home where run-aways&#13;
can temporarily be housed. Right&#13;
now its policy restricts people&#13;
from coming to their office except&#13;
by appointment. If a runaway,&#13;
comes in,, they don't have&#13;
anywhere for him to stay.&#13;
If you need someone to talk to,&#13;
call 658-HELP.&#13;
giefert/Assembly&#13;
One of the most qualified young&#13;
men running for office anywhere&#13;
DEMOCRAT-63rd&#13;
PAID ADVERTISEMENT: A utk. Pi. f*r ky CitiiMS Ur Scfwt CMimittM. R. WitSami"&#13;
3943 Ro4n«y Liin, R«&lt;int, Ttmi.&#13;
Carthage C ollege Activities B eard Presents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
Saturday&#13;
October 2 8&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Carthage&#13;
Fieldhouse&#13;
Q gjW| |jWij| p Also Don C ooper&#13;
SWEAT-.&#13;
Tickets s5 &amp; $4 TEARS&#13;
ON SALE Carthage C ollege C enter O ffice&#13;
Bidingers M usic (Downtown K enosha) C ook-Gene (Racine)&#13;
Free beer controversy&#13;
Bartenders claim "meddling V&#13;
Bartenders in the Student&#13;
Activities Building complained&#13;
last week that they are victims of&#13;
"unfair beaurocratic meddling,"&#13;
as at least two of them were&#13;
threatened with firing.&#13;
The changes were made by two&#13;
bartenders (who asked that they&#13;
not be identified) in a chance&#13;
meeting with this reporter.&#13;
The bartenders alledged that&#13;
they were being "spied upon" by&#13;
the administration, who accused&#13;
them of giving away free beer to&#13;
friends. They also charged that&#13;
William R. Niebuhr, coordinator&#13;
of Student life, refused to talk to&#13;
them as a group, is never in the&#13;
S.A.B., and refused to disclose his&#13;
sources of information. They also&#13;
stated that faculty and staff&#13;
receive more free beer than&#13;
anyone.&#13;
Niebuhr confirmed that two of&#13;
the men had been spoken to&#13;
regarding the dispersal of free&#13;
beer. He also admitted that some&#13;
faculty members were asked to&#13;
"keep on eye on the bar" during a&#13;
recent event.&#13;
He denied, however, that&#13;
faculty and staff received more&#13;
free beer than anyone.&#13;
"This was the practice before&#13;
this school year, but since then&#13;
we've decided that no one, not&#13;
even the Chancellor, gets free&#13;
beer," Niebuhr said.&#13;
Niebuhr also said that "the&#13;
attitude of the bartenders is also&#13;
a consideration."&#13;
Talks with students in the&#13;
S.A.B. revealed that friends of&#13;
the bartenders do get free beer.&#13;
However, it seems' that some&#13;
staff members are also sipping&#13;
free suds.&#13;
In a related incident, several of&#13;
the bartenders complained about&#13;
the pizza being offered. (The&#13;
supplier was changed this year).&#13;
In commenting on this,&#13;
Niebuhr said that the first consideration&#13;
had to be expense. He&#13;
said, any complaints about the&#13;
pizza can be handled through use&#13;
of the suggestion box.&#13;
"DeRango's will make that pizza&#13;
to our specifications. They'll&#13;
change it anyway we want it&#13;
changed. If people have complaints,&#13;
let them suggest the&#13;
changes needed."&#13;
Niebuhr added that the&#13;
decision as to where the pizza will&#13;
be purchased is a business one,&#13;
not one "about which the bartenders&#13;
should be concerned."&#13;
• •• and more letters &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., O ct. 25, 1 9 72&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
Open House&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount P rices!&#13;
5707 - Sixth Axe.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
"WI f t ashington Square&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Radge&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Photo by Craig Roberts &#13;
Young Republicans active&#13;
Two previously unheard of&#13;
groups have been formed on the&#13;
Parkside campus, namely the&#13;
Parkside Young Republicans and&#13;
Young Voters for the President.&#13;
Joint meetings have been held,&#13;
but each group is a separete&#13;
entity with separate goals.&#13;
Young Voters for the&#13;
President, as a nation-wide&#13;
organization, is nonpartisan and&#13;
includes Democrats and Independents&#13;
as well as&#13;
Republicans. According to Ross&#13;
Workman, who organized the&#13;
Parkside chapter, the main goal&#13;
of Yo ung Voters is the re-election&#13;
of President Nixon and therefore,&#13;
it does not become involved in&#13;
any other races.&#13;
Here at Parkside, as at other&#13;
campuses across the nation, a&#13;
major emphasis has been to&#13;
dispel the notion that college&#13;
students overwhelmingly support&#13;
Sen. George McGovern. Some of&#13;
the activities sponsored by this&#13;
Information&#13;
available&#13;
on fellowship&#13;
Each year the National&#13;
Research Council advises the&#13;
National Science Foundation in&#13;
the selection of candidates for the&#13;
Foundation's program of&#13;
Graduate Fellowships. Panels of&#13;
prominent scientists are appointed&#13;
by the National Research&#13;
Council to recommend candidates&#13;
to the Foundation after a&#13;
careful review of each applicant's&#13;
qualifications. In 1972,&#13;
of.a total of 5,647 a pplicants to the&#13;
program, 998 candidates were&#13;
selected for awards.&#13;
Applicants to the NSF&#13;
Graduate Fellowship Program&#13;
must be beginning graduate&#13;
students by the Fall of 1973, or&#13;
must have completed not more&#13;
than one calendar year of fulltime&#13;
or part-time graduate study&#13;
by the Fall of 1973. Subject to the&#13;
availability of funds, new&#13;
fellowships awarded in the&#13;
Spring of 1973 will be for periods&#13;
of three years, the second and&#13;
third years contingent on certification&#13;
to the Foundation by&#13;
the fellowship institution of the&#13;
sstudent's satisfactory progress&#13;
toward an advanced degree in the&#13;
sciences.&#13;
Further information and&#13;
preliminary application forms&#13;
may be secured from the College&#13;
Office, Greenquist 345.&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 5 52-8355&#13;
• PAPA B URGER • MAMA BU RGER&#13;
• TEEN B URGER . BABY BU RGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD YOUR OR DER W ill BE RE ADY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken • Fish&#13;
jnd Shrimp&#13;
fREt GALLON OE ROO T BEE R WITH SS 00 ORDER&#13;
MILE NORTH Of&#13;
MIDCITY THEAT ER&#13;
ON SHERI DAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT B EER D RIVE-IN&#13;
Shcndjn Rd Hy 11 North&#13;
Ken osha&#13;
HOURS DAILY H AM TO II TM&#13;
SUMMER MONTHS&#13;
II A M TO MIDNIGHT&#13;
•AA A A *&#13;
group have been a bumpershekermg&#13;
drive in both Racine&#13;
and Kenosha, attendance at a&#13;
Young Voter rock concert in&#13;
Milwaukee and a survey of&#13;
Parkside students, which is&#13;
currently being undertaken.&#13;
Activity is expected to increase&#13;
dramatically as the election&#13;
approaches, and several&#13;
speakers will be brought in&#13;
Young Republicans also&#13;
supports the president but, in&#13;
addition, is actively involved in&#13;
the congressional, state and local&#13;
races. Each member is encouraged&#13;
to work with one or&#13;
more candidates they are&#13;
especially interested in. In this&#13;
way the activities of the YRs&#13;
have been many and varied.&#13;
Some members have worked&#13;
for Tom Mortenson in Racine,&#13;
others working with the Kenosha&#13;
Young Republicans have worked&#13;
on the Robert Baker and Arnold&#13;
Esser campaigns. A major upcoming&#13;
activity for this group is&#13;
the "Meet the Candidates"&#13;
dessert, in which they will be able&#13;
to meet the congressional, state&#13;
and local Republican candidates&#13;
as well as officers of the&#13;
Wisconsin Federation of Young&#13;
Republicans.&#13;
In the near future, they will be&#13;
boarding the WFYR campaign&#13;
bus to stump for their candidates.&#13;
The regular meeting time for&#13;
both clubs is on Fridays from&#13;
11:30a.m. until 1 p.m. in Room D174&#13;
L LC.&#13;
Career Counseling Center&#13;
The Career Counseling and&#13;
Information Center is a place&#13;
where students can drop in and&#13;
browse through materials on&#13;
careers or talk to Barb Larson&#13;
career counselor.&#13;
The center contains material&#13;
on career trends, what different&#13;
jobs you can get into with a&#13;
certain major, many job titles&#13;
and definitions, and different&#13;
degrees you can get in your&#13;
major at certain colleges. According&#13;
to Mrs. Larson, if there is&#13;
information you would like that&#13;
the center doesn't have, they will&#13;
try to find it for you.&#13;
She went on to say that tests&#13;
are available to help focus on a&#13;
person's particular interests. The&#13;
test helps the student to learn&#13;
more about himself and isolate&#13;
his interests, in order to concentrate&#13;
on going into a certain&#13;
line of work. This will aid him in&#13;
choosing his classes.&#13;
Mrs. Larson also remarked&#13;
that picking a career is not a onetime&#13;
process, but continues on&#13;
through your entire life.&#13;
The Career Counseling and&#13;
Information Center is located in&#13;
Tallent Hall, Room 284. If you&#13;
wish to make an appointment,&#13;
call Barb Larson, 553-2122.&#13;
UW P Winter Break&#13;
rams&#13;
Jan 5-14&#13;
1497&#13;
ttP TODAY OVERHAlf FILLED!&#13;
Sielert/Assembly&#13;
He realizes Vietname era&#13;
veterans need State educational aids.&#13;
DEMOCRAT-63rd&#13;
PAID A DVERTISEMENT: Auth. a nd Pd. for by Citiz ens for Siofer t Committee R Willoms,&#13;
3043 Rodney L ena, Rocine , Trees.&#13;
Wed./ Oct. 25/ 197 2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
! llll'jlllllllllllllllllllllltlttmilHHIIMMIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMtlltMIIMIIIIIIMIIIIinillllllllimillin^&#13;
~ s&#13;
1 Walking down the steps&#13;
swirling curving and winding down&#13;
My mind is wandering all around.&#13;
It grows dizzy from massive shapes&#13;
I am gazing at the soul of amerikan education&#13;
Those massive shapes stab&#13;
the hearts of artists bleed&#13;
jagged points blind me&#13;
My fate; to drown in this sureal sea&#13;
The glass shows the real art&#13;
rocks and trees&#13;
Man's mind is marred he looks for freedom&#13;
he looks out onto charred stumps&#13;
I know it will not be found this way&#13;
this wild child will never be free&#13;
look at its poverty what is it really worth?&#13;
E&#13;
E&#13;
i =&#13;
E&#13;
1 3 =&#13;
power prestige&#13;
education please&#13;
3llllHHIIIllHIIHHIIHHIHHHmiHlllllHHIIIHII|||Hlllimillllllllllllllllllnilllllllliiiiiiiiiiimiii&#13;
THE PARK SIDE&#13;
RANGER will no w accept&#13;
classifi ed adve rtising.&#13;
Cost per insertion for each&#13;
ad of 20 words or less is 50&#13;
cents, payable at the time&#13;
you turn in your ad copy at&#13;
the RANGER office, D-194&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
Deadline for all such ads is&#13;
THURSDAY NOON before&#13;
the followingwednesday&#13;
publication. No ads can be&#13;
accept ed pay this time.&#13;
The adver tising manage r&#13;
reserves the right to refuse&#13;
any ad which may be&#13;
libelous or is in violation of&#13;
any and all civil rights&#13;
acts.&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Winter Break&#13;
Travel Program&#13;
to&#13;
Non Skiers:&#13;
nd&#13;
Motor option&#13;
For Information Contact&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC-D-197&#13;
lit&#13;
SHAKE y S PA?*A»&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"&#13;
at Shakey'sin Racine.&#13;
$1 a pit cher for Pabst&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
Lath rop &amp; 21st (almost)&#13;
Racine, Wise. 5 3 4 0 6&#13;
Pho ne: 633-63 07&#13;
^IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||l|||||||||mm|||||,||||,||||||,|||||||m||||||||||||m||mii|m|||m|||||m|||m|||||m|||||m|||||||||||||||||||||||||&#13;
MONDAY "College Night"&#13;
BEER — BEER&#13;
Large Glass 15c Large Pitcher 99c&#13;
TUESDAY thru THURSDAY&#13;
Com Charge ( NOT one dollar)&#13;
Only $0*&#13;
I REMEMBER!!&#13;
| When the bell rings bar drinks are only 35*&#13;
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
6 N ights a Week&#13;
1Where Hie action is"&#13;
6 Packs To Go&#13;
Miller 99c Bud $1&#13;
30 Schlitz $1&#13;
30&#13;
nS&#13;
1&#13;
Station&#13;
WE CATER TO YOU&#13;
2707 63 St. |&#13;
1 P°0&#13;
' Tables &amp; Dart Games I&#13;
rtY&amp;£\ i i i ti i^&gt; ui rr« i?|B&#13;
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimmmmiiiiimiiiiiiiiii miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiimmimil &#13;
6 THE PARKSI DE RANGER W e d., Oct. 25, 1 9 7 2&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
A class to help writers polish&#13;
their professionalism and&#13;
heighten their insights into new&#13;
article ideas, more vivid writing&#13;
and ever-changing markets is&#13;
offered by University Extension&#13;
beginning Oct. 25.&#13;
Both practicing writers and&#13;
beginners will find help in the&#13;
class, "Got Writer's Cramp?"&#13;
The experienced writer who has&#13;
hit a snag will gain inspiration;&#13;
neophytes can quickly pick up&#13;
important basics by association&#13;
with more advanced writers.&#13;
The instructor will be Bill&#13;
Nelson, newspaperman,&#13;
magazine freelancer and writing&#13;
instructor.&#13;
The class will meet on 8&#13;
Wednesdays, at 7:30 p.m., at&#13;
Starbuck Jr. High School,&#13;
Racine. Contact University&#13;
Extension at UW-Parkside for&#13;
registration information, phone&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
The Hawaii Trip is over half&#13;
filled, according to William R.&#13;
Niebuhr, coordinator of Student&#13;
Life. The nine-day trip will be&#13;
from Jan. 5-14 and costs $274 plus&#13;
$20 tax and service. Interested&#13;
travelers are advised to register&#13;
in the Student Activities Office,&#13;
LLC Rm. D-197, as soon as&#13;
possible.&#13;
John Mack, consultant to&#13;
higher education of the Wisconsin&#13;
Education Association, will&#13;
speak to James E. McKeouwn's&#13;
classes in urbanism and urbanization&#13;
Nov. 8, 6-7:15 p.m., in&#13;
Room D-lll, Gr.&#13;
There will be a draft seminar&#13;
on Wednesday, Oct. 25, at 2:30 in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 231.&#13;
According to Steve Bangert,&#13;
counselor, this will be an informal&#13;
question-and-answer&#13;
session. Some of the topics&#13;
covered will be basic laws on the&#13;
draft, how the lottery works,&#13;
what deferments still stand,&#13;
medical standards, legal&#13;
statements of a conscientious&#13;
objector, and the different&#13;
branches of the service.&#13;
If you want help on an individual&#13;
basis, contact Steve&#13;
Bangert at the Kenosha campus,&#13;
Room 135, e xt. 42.&#13;
Harry Lantz, associate&#13;
professor of music at The&#13;
University of WiscorisinParkside,&#13;
has been invited to&#13;
serve as clinician and conductor&#13;
of the Ohio Regional All-State&#13;
Orchestra Oct. 28 and 29 in&#13;
Cincinnati. Lantz will conduct the&#13;
orchestra, sponsored by the Ohio&#13;
Music Education Association in&#13;
concert before the state music&#13;
group, at its annual meeting.&#13;
RAG TIME RANGERS announce&#13;
their second official club&#13;
meeting. It will be held in the&#13;
S.A.B. Oct. 29 (Sun.), promptly at&#13;
1 p.m. Fashion show, bike hike,&#13;
ski trips to Whitecap and Aspen,&#13;
Colo., will be discussed and&#13;
planned. Bring your friends.&#13;
Interested students are urged to&#13;
come and find out what we have&#13;
to offer. See you there!&#13;
mm&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken ft Italian Sausage B ombers&#13;
Fru Delivery it Parkslde Vi llage&#13;
5021 30th Annua Phone 6 57-5191&#13;
Cham-Tap-Bar&#13;
2511 Dur and&#13;
^ Racine, Wis.&#13;
(Shampagne on Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches G&#13;
and Pizza C© O&#13;
SSefert/ Assembly&#13;
We need a student&#13;
in the State Legislature&#13;
DEMOCRAT-63rd&#13;
PAID ADVERTISEMENT: A uth. end Pd. ler by Citizens far Siafart Cemmitlaa. R. WiL&#13;
fiems* 3043 Rednay lint, Racine, Treat.&#13;
The Parkside swim club is in&#13;
need of members. Members have&#13;
the opportunity of participating&#13;
in competitive swimming in a&#13;
club atmosphere. No experience&#13;
is necessary. Training will be&#13;
provided if desired. Applications&#13;
are taken at the pool daily, from&#13;
3:30 to 5:30.&#13;
Mohamed S. El-Hennawi, 31,&#13;
has been appointed an assistant&#13;
professor of management science&#13;
in the School of Modern Industry&#13;
at The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
effective in January.&#13;
His fields of specialization include&#13;
corporation finance, money&#13;
and banking and monetary&#13;
theory and policy.&#13;
El-Hennawi presently is on the&#13;
faculty of the University of&#13;
Illinois where he is completing&#13;
work for his Ph.D. degree. He&#13;
previously has taught at&#13;
Alexandria University in his&#13;
native Egypt and at Washington&#13;
University in St. Louis and at St.&#13;
Louis University. El-Hennawi&#13;
also has experience with private&#13;
business both in Egypt and the&#13;
U.S.&#13;
Attention: Christian Scientists,&#13;
or student and faculty members&#13;
interested in studying Christian&#13;
Science.&#13;
Special organizational&#13;
meeting. Please contact Rich&#13;
Myers at 634-1202.&#13;
We are looking for a facultystaff&#13;
member interested in&#13;
Christian Science to act as advisor.&#13;
Phone 634-1202.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present Big Jake on Nov. 3,&#13;
as part of their continuing feature&#13;
film series.&#13;
The movie stars John Wayne&#13;
and Richard Boone. John Wayne&#13;
portrays Big Jake McCaudels&#13;
who has his grandson kidnapped&#13;
by outlaws led by Richard Boone.&#13;
Hearing of it, Big Jake sets out to&#13;
find his grandson, and in the&#13;
process there is some pretty&#13;
typical John Wayne action.&#13;
The movie will be shown at the&#13;
activities building at 8 p.m., and&#13;
the admission price is 75 cents.&#13;
Your Wisconsin and Parkside IDs&#13;
are required.&#13;
The Whiteskellar will present&#13;
Grant Anderson and John&#13;
Graham Thursday at 1 p.m. Both&#13;
are guitarists and folk singers,&#13;
with Graham playing a twelvestring&#13;
guitar.&#13;
A print titled "A Gothic Tale&#13;
(Death in Milano)" by Moishe&#13;
Smith, visiting professor of art at&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
has been purchased by&#13;
the United States Information&#13;
Agency and is currently being&#13;
exhibited with a group of&#13;
American prints in various&#13;
Australian museums.&#13;
The print also is included in a&#13;
traveling show at various U.S.&#13;
museums sponsored by the&#13;
American Federation of Arts.&#13;
Smith, a Chicago native,&#13;
worked in Rapallo, Italy, immediately&#13;
before coming to&#13;
Parkside this fall. He previously&#13;
taught at several Midwestern&#13;
universities including UWMadison.&#13;
His work has been&#13;
featured in one-man shows in&#13;
Europe and the U.S. and is in a&#13;
number of permanent collections.&#13;
&#13;
The RAG TIME RANGERS&#13;
present the second annual&#13;
THINK SNOW dance this&#13;
Saturday evening, Oct. 28. It will&#13;
be held in the Student Activities&#13;
Building from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.&#13;
The performing band comes to&#13;
us direct from Iowa. Their name&#13;
is White Cross and they're one of&#13;
Iowa's top dance bands. The band&#13;
consists of seven excellent&#13;
musicians who play rhythm,&#13;
blues, rock 'n' roll and jazz.&#13;
Admission is $1.50, club&#13;
members 75 cents. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin IDs are required.&#13;
:&#13;
Parkside Educators&#13;
for&#13;
McGovern&#13;
The coming election offers a crucial decision. The next President must shape policy which will take&#13;
us through some of the critical years of this half of th e twentieth century. Because we are convinced&#13;
that he can best provide the leadership and policies so deeply needed, we endorse Senator George&#13;
McGovern as our choice for President.&#13;
David R. Beach Myra Sadker&#13;
Frederick A. Becker Ann E. Harbeson Michael T. Marron Marilyn Scamman&#13;
Emmett Bedford John Harbeson Andrew M. McLean Frank G. Schliesmann&#13;
i&#13;
Gabriella S. Bonn Teresa Harris M. Brian McMahon Robert W. Schrader&#13;
John D. Buenker John R. Henderson James S. Mehoke James Shea&#13;
Nicholas Burckel Kenneth Herrick Marion J. Mochon Alan R. Shucard&#13;
Philip M. Burnett Harold W. Heser Robert J. Moore Aaron Snyder&#13;
John Campbell Peter S. Hoff Robert w. Moore Harold Stern&#13;
Robert A. Canary Michael Holmes Frank Mueller Bruce Stiehm&#13;
Henry S. Cole Kenneth Holsten Thomas E. Mueller Carla J. Stoffle&#13;
James Dean Rollin Jansky William J. Murin Richard Stoffle 3&#13;
Frank N. Egerton Mary Helgren Johnson Morton Nachlas David Streeter&#13;
John Elmore Thomas D. Knight Michael O'Rourke Richard Teschner&#13;
Walter W. Feldt Charles Kugel Virginia Parsons Douglas Thompson&#13;
3&#13;
Eric Forrest David Kuhn Don T. Piele John Van Willigen&#13;
Shirley Fraser Donald D. Kummings Michael D. Reid Carole Gottlieb Vopat %&#13;
4&#13;
Ronald W. Gatterdam Douglas LaFollette Don Rintz Alan Wallace&#13;
Ronald Gottesman James Liddy Richard Rosenberg Robert D. Wrinkle&#13;
Ben Greenebaum Carl Lindner David Sadker Heh-Hsiang Yuan&#13;
ll=*=&#13;
• " ' - - - •&#13;
This list of names represents the results of a rather informal poll. The absence of a name does not&#13;
necessarily imply either lack of support for McGovern or enthusiasm for the opposing ticket.&#13;
(Authorized and paid for by Parkside Educators for McGovern: H. Cole, F. Egerton, W. Johnson, and A. Snyder, Coordinators.)&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
Friday, Nov. 10-8:00 p.m. - Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
• America's Most Famous Defense Attorney&#13;
• Best-Selling Author • Lecturer&#13;
speaking on "The Defense Never Rests"&#13;
F. LEE BAILEY&#13;
General Admission - *1.50&#13;
Parkside Students &amp; Staff - *1.00&#13;
Tickets Available: UW-P Information Office - Room 201 - Talent Hal &#13;
Wed., Oct. 25, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Gymnasts' goal is participation USTFF cross country&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Parkside's got a gymnastics&#13;
team! A good one, too.&#13;
Last year Parkside's women's&#13;
gymnastics team, in its first year&#13;
of competition, won every dual&#13;
meet, and all six girls qualified&#13;
for state. This year the team is&#13;
bigger with members of last&#13;
year's team plus a number of&#13;
experienced gymnasts and&#13;
beginners.&#13;
At the beginner level are&#13;
Debbie Lienau, Cindy Squire,&#13;
Sharon Lindstrom, Toni Marini,&#13;
and Bonnie Sparks. The intermediate&#13;
girls are July&#13;
Weidner, Debbie Roseth, Liz&#13;
Stellberg, Paris Wohlust, and&#13;
Karen Sivley. Jacki Levonian,&#13;
Kim Simonsen and team captain&#13;
Kathy Kramer compete at the&#13;
advanced level. All members of&#13;
the team compete in all around,&#13;
which consists of floor exercise,&#13;
balance beam, uneven bars, and&#13;
vaulting.&#13;
The team is improving on all&#13;
levels according to Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny, who started Women's&#13;
gymnastics at Parkside when he&#13;
arrived last fall.&#13;
Two of the girls, Jacki&#13;
Levonian, and Kim Simonsen,&#13;
are working on the national level&#13;
for the United States Gymnastics&#13;
Federation.&#13;
If one speaks to the members of&#13;
a gymnastics team, it soon&#13;
becomes apparent that it is very&#13;
much an individual sport. There&#13;
is rarely unilateral agreement on&#13;
anything, be it the advantages of&#13;
long legs or which event is most&#13;
difficult. One of the few things&#13;
which was generally agreed upon&#13;
was that gymnastics can be&#13;
frustrating at times, especially&#13;
when a judge seems to be against&#13;
one. Most of the girls felt that the&#13;
absolute power of the judges&#13;
wasn't quite fair, because different&#13;
judges have different&#13;
preferences in style. If one's style&#13;
doesn't suit the judge, too bad.&#13;
Also agreed on was that work for&#13;
self improvement results in team&#13;
improvement.&#13;
Butterflies and shakes are only&#13;
a couple of the many individual&#13;
reactions to meets. One girl felt&#13;
that the worst possible feeling is&#13;
the one she gets as she stands&#13;
waiting for the judge's nod to&#13;
A«&#13;
g,n&#13;
' The §&#13;
reatest feeling?&#13;
Afterward, in the shower when&#13;
it's all over, and one feels one has&#13;
done their best.&#13;
A firm belief in her ability to fly&#13;
is one girl's formula for success&#13;
in vaulting.&#13;
"You've got to have the right&#13;
mental attitude. Think that&#13;
you're weightless. I think to&#13;
myself just before I start that I'm&#13;
gonna fly," she said.&#13;
kor a while there was a great&#13;
debate on the advantages of size&#13;
It seemed that the taller girls&#13;
viewed being short as an advantage,&#13;
and the short girls&#13;
considered long legs to be the&#13;
most valuable asset. Finally, one&#13;
of them decided that what one&#13;
does with one's size is most&#13;
important. Good carriage and&#13;
grace come across well no matter&#13;
what a person's size. The&#13;
women's gymnastics season runs&#13;
from September to the first week&#13;
of December, and is followed&#13;
immediately by the men's season&#13;
which runs until April.&#13;
This is the first year that&#13;
Parkside has had a full men's&#13;
gymnastics team. The members&#13;
of the team and their events are&#13;
as follows: Steve Sladky, Brian&#13;
Petschow, Tim Petro, Mike&#13;
Miller, Brad Grunewald, and Jim&#13;
Magruder, competing in all&#13;
around. The rest of the team&#13;
•consists of Kevin O'Neil; rings,&#13;
parallel bars, side horse, and&#13;
high bar, Jerry Konecny; side&#13;
horse, rings, and high bar, Greg&#13;
Dewitz; vaulting and floor&#13;
exercise, Jesus Torres; high bar,&#13;
and Mark Jossart; floor exercise.&#13;
According to Martiny, the&#13;
philosophy of gymnastics at an&#13;
educational institution is to teach&#13;
students to achieve a goal&#13;
through participation. The goal of&#13;
the Parkside gymnastics team is&#13;
participation. Whether or not&#13;
they win is not as important as&#13;
whether or not they work hard&#13;
and do their best.&#13;
Grunewald says tnat he gets&#13;
nervous the night before a meet,&#13;
but not when he is out doing his&#13;
routine.&#13;
The men agreed that gymnastics&#13;
is one of the hardest&#13;
sports. Some of their comments&#13;
on the nature of g ymnastics were&#13;
interesting, if not amusing.&#13;
"You have to approach it with&#13;
reckless abandon."&#13;
"It's really a mind over matter&#13;
sports."&#13;
"You've got to feel self concious."&#13;
&#13;
"Workouts go in cycles. You&#13;
start out looking forward to it,&#13;
after a while you can't stand it,&#13;
and then it gets better again.&#13;
The team is looking forward to&#13;
the big meets when it gets to&#13;
travel and maybe pick up a few&#13;
trophies.&#13;
One hazard of gymnastics, like&#13;
all sports, is injuries. There have&#13;
been several of these because of&#13;
to the lack of spotting equipment.&#13;
Hopefully this situation will not&#13;
continue.&#13;
The whole team thinks it's&#13;
great when people come to watch&#13;
the meets, especially girls.&#13;
Powder Puffs&#13;
still undefeated&#13;
Parkside's Powder Puff&#13;
Football Team remained undefeated&#13;
with a resounding 19-0&#13;
Columbus Day victory over GTI.&#13;
This was the second victory of the&#13;
season for the girls. Parkside had&#13;
a very balanced attack with four&#13;
girls getting into the scoring&#13;
column. The first score came&#13;
when Nancy Thomson connected&#13;
on a 38-yard bomb pass to Barb&#13;
Piasecki. In the second half the&#13;
girls kept the pressure on GTI as&#13;
Dita Hunter intercepted a GIT&#13;
pass and pranced 65 yards for the&#13;
score. The final score of the game&#13;
came as Paula Vanchem&#13;
returned to punt for 40 yards and&#13;
a touchdown.&#13;
The next game of the season&#13;
has the girls matched up with&#13;
Dominican College Oct. 29.&#13;
Harriers dump Marquette&#13;
Jim McKadden&#13;
The Ranger Cross country&#13;
team had its best team meet&#13;
against Marquette Oct. 17 winning&#13;
17-44. Coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
said that "if the fourth to seventh&#13;
place runners keep running the&#13;
way they are we should be in the&#13;
top three in the NAIA District 14&#13;
and have a chance for the&#13;
Nationals." The District 14 meet&#13;
is at Eau Claire on Nov. 11 and&#13;
the nationals are Nov. 18 at&#13;
Kansas City. Mo.&#13;
Lucian Rosa finished in the top&#13;
spot again for the Rangers with a&#13;
time of 2 6:25. He was followed by&#13;
Dennis Biel in 26:38 and Jim&#13;
McFadden in 26:50. The course&#13;
record in the five mile race is&#13;
25:30 by Garry Bentley of South&#13;
Dakota State. Keith Merritt&#13;
finished sixth, Ned Kessenich&#13;
seventh. Sid Hyde eighth, Everett&#13;
Hyde ninth, and John Ammeran&#13;
fourteenth.&#13;
Parkside's dual record is now&#13;
3-1.&#13;
WHITESKEUAR&#13;
(north lounge&#13;
**. Greenquist H all)&#13;
v»Vf.&#13;
THURS., OCT. 26&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Major employers throughout the&#13;
U.S. (private &amp; government) are&#13;
seeking qualified college men and&#13;
women for career positions with&#13;
top pay and outstanding benefits.&#13;
Excellent opportunities exist in&#13;
many areas. For FREE information&#13;
on student assistance and&#13;
placement program send selfaddressed&#13;
STAMPED envelope to&#13;
National Placement Registry,&#13;
Data-Tech Services, 1001 East&#13;
Idaho St., Kalispell, MT 59901.&#13;
ihi^im i Qfru&#13;
v&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
25 Gorgeous D ancing Girls&#13;
(appearing o n our s tage w eekly)&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
424 Lake A ve.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night Dancers W anted&#13;
This season the Ranger cross&#13;
country team will be hosting the&#13;
United States Track and Field&#13;
F e d e r a t i on Mk- Am e r i c a&#13;
Championship. The meet will be&#13;
held on Oct. 28 beginning at 10&#13;
a.m. The Western Championships&#13;
were held last Saturday&#13;
at Fresno State University. The&#13;
Eastern Championships are also&#13;
going to be held Oct. 28 at Pennsylvania&#13;
State University. The&#13;
National Championships are to&#13;
be held at Northern Texas State,&#13;
Nov. 22.&#13;
The favorites are University of&#13;
Chicago Track Club, Northwestern&#13;
University, and the&#13;
Western Michigan team. There&#13;
will also be a competition for&#13;
veterans, runners over 30, and&#13;
masters, for runners over 40. The&#13;
course for the veterans and&#13;
masters will be three miles, while&#13;
the course for the college teams&#13;
will be five miles.&#13;
The Women's USTFF MidAmerican&#13;
C h ampionsh ips are&#13;
also to be held Oct. 28 here at&#13;
Parkside. The competition begins&#13;
at 10 a.m. The men will follow as&#13;
soon as the women are finished.&#13;
The favorite for the women is the&#13;
Ozark Track Club. They will race&#13;
on a two-mile course. The open&#13;
competition will be run on a&#13;
10,000 meter course&#13;
Booters lose 3-1&#13;
The UW-P booters lost 3-1 to&#13;
Marquette in a sloppy quagmire&#13;
nere last Saturday, dropping&#13;
their record to 2-6-1.&#13;
The first half went well with&#13;
Parkside leading 1-0, but the&#13;
second half turned into a different&#13;
ball game when Marquette&#13;
scored three goals.&#13;
According to Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson, Marquette's second&#13;
goal was literally given to them&#13;
due to a mistake by Parkside.&#13;
During the last few minutes&#13;
Women&#13;
gymnasts&#13;
sweep&#13;
The women's gymnastics team&#13;
did well in its second meet of the&#13;
year, beating Carroll College of&#13;
Waukesha Saturday afternoon in&#13;
all three classes. The scoring&#13;
went as follows:&#13;
Beginner Parkside - 41.00&#13;
Carroll-27.55&#13;
Intermediate Parkside-47.10&#13;
Carroll-00.00&#13;
Advan ced Parkside-54.10&#13;
Carroll-00.00&#13;
The next meet for the gymnasts&#13;
will be Oct. 28 at Whitewater.&#13;
Marquette made its third and&#13;
final goal on a penalty kick.&#13;
"The game was very disappointing,&#13;
as I believe we were the&#13;
better team," Hendersen said.&#13;
"On paper the shots and goal&#13;
saves were even, but after that&#13;
second goal, we just died," he&#13;
added.&#13;
The Rangers will have this&#13;
weekend off before traveling to&#13;
Charleston, 111., n ext Wednesday&#13;
for a contest against rugged&#13;
Eastern Illinois. Parkside will&#13;
close regular season play the&#13;
following Saturday when it meets&#13;
UW-Green Bay here.&#13;
Swimming meet here&#13;
The Parkside swim team is&#13;
having its first home meet this&#13;
coming Tuesday, Oct. 31 at 6 p.m.&#13;
CHAMPION TERMPAPERS&#13;
636 Beacon St. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston, Mass. 02215&#13;
617-536-9700&#13;
Research material for Termpapers,&#13;
Reports, Theses, etc. LOWEST PRICES.&#13;
QUICK SERVICE. For information,&#13;
please write or call.&#13;
HALE HITCH So says V ie VA ~ * Honk Kifdiaa&#13;
DID VOL KNOW ^1&#13;
YOU CAN ATTEND A FOREIGN&#13;
UNIVERSITY UNDER THE G.L BILL?"&#13;
For information, contact the Veterans Administration&#13;
y&#13;
m&#13;
Q&#13;
0&#13;
to&#13;
IR&#13;
• BEER • SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENI ENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.&#13;
CALL&#13;
632-1565&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC.&#13;
OKNiir&#13;
jfraim&#13;
ROOKS&#13;
W&#13;
If yo u&#13;
prefer&#13;
use our&#13;
Rear&#13;
Entrance&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY&#13;
On Our Screen&#13;
"Vice-Hustlers"&#13;
plus&#13;
"Sweet Lips"&#13;
New Selections of Adult Books Arriving&#13;
Daily! Theatre Open Noon 'til&#13;
Midnite. Book Storo Open 11 a.m.&#13;
'til Midnite.&#13;
18 Years and Over Only!&#13;
OPEN TODAY&#13;
6:00 - 12:00 Mid.&#13;
410 MAIN STREET • DOWNTOWN &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 25, 1972&#13;
Club sports HOW in action Womens tennis squad wins again&#13;
SWIMMING&#13;
Swim coach Barb Morris has&#13;
just released the 1972-73 Ranger&#13;
swim schedule for both the men&#13;
and women. The women open up&#13;
Oct. 31 at 6 p.m. with UWOshkosh.&#13;
This will be the first&#13;
swim meet in the new Physical&#13;
Education building.&#13;
Five days later, on Nov. 4, the&#13;
women will be hosting an invitational&#13;
in the home pool. The&#13;
men open their season at the&#13;
Ripon Relays on Dec. 2 to be&#13;
followed by meets on Dec. 9 with&#13;
Carroll College and Dec. 15 with&#13;
UW-Whitewater. Both meet? are&#13;
at home.&#13;
The men will start the new&#13;
semester by journeying to&#13;
Chicago to meet Loyola on Jan.&#13;
13. Both teams will be meeting&#13;
Lake Forest in the local pool on&#13;
Jan. 20 before going to Chicago&#13;
State on Jan. 29. The final home&#13;
meet for the men will feature the&#13;
University of Chicago on Feb. 7.&#13;
The women will bow out, Feb.&#13;
10 at DeKalb, 111., w ith Northern&#13;
Illinois and the men will finish up&#13;
Feb. 21 at Carroll College.&#13;
JUDOCLUB&#13;
The Parkside Judo Club&#13;
practices every Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday evenings at 9 p.m. with&#13;
3rd degree Black Belt Ron&#13;
Hansen. The club has already&#13;
participated in two tournaments&#13;
with club president Helmut Kah&#13;
bringing home the first place&#13;
trophy in the White-Brown Belt&#13;
light weight class in Chicago&#13;
recently.&#13;
SKIING&#13;
The R Time Rangers under&#13;
president Bill Jaecks have been&#13;
very busy preparing for the&#13;
coming Ski season. The club is&#13;
sponsoring a dance Oct. 28 to&#13;
follow a Road Rally they recently&#13;
sponsored.&#13;
Several members of the racing&#13;
team are planning on attending a&#13;
pre-season racing camp to be&#13;
held in early December at Mt.&#13;
Telemark. A plane load of the&#13;
club is planning on visiting&#13;
Colorado over the semester&#13;
break for a ski trip sponsored by&#13;
the Midwest Collegiate Ski&#13;
Association.&#13;
TABLE TENNIS&#13;
Dr. Omar Amin is looking for&#13;
table tennis enthusiasts who&#13;
I ABORTIONS&#13;
: FREE Referral to N .Y.Clin&#13;
i 12 weeks o r le ss&#13;
: Total c ost&#13;
i $ 150&#13;
CALL&#13;
i CONTROLLED&#13;
: PARENTHOO&#13;
J (a non-profit organization&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
I DAVID STOTT BLDG.&#13;
j (313) 9 64-0530&#13;
would like to practice as a team&#13;
on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons&#13;
at the Physical&#13;
Education building. The club&#13;
would like to play other colleges&#13;
on a dual meet basis.&#13;
HOCKEY&#13;
Parkside's very successful&#13;
hockey club will be in action&#13;
early this fall. The Rangers have&#13;
been invited by the Milwaukee&#13;
Admirals to play a exhibition&#13;
game with the Marquette&#13;
Warrors on Nov. 7 at the&#13;
Milwaukee Arena at 6:45 p.m.&#13;
prior to the Admirals-Green Bay&#13;
Bobcats game. Tickets are $1.50.&#13;
More information will appear&#13;
later.&#13;
RUGBY&#13;
The Ranger Ruggers recently&#13;
dropped a 30-12 match to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Rugby&#13;
Club. The Rangers have made&#13;
constant progress this season and&#13;
are finally shaping up as a team&#13;
to reckon with.&#13;
The last home match of the&#13;
season will be held Sunday, Nov.&#13;
5 at Lakefront Stadium in&#13;
Kenosha. The game is being&#13;
sponsored by the Kenosha Lions.&#13;
Tickets will be on sale shortly.&#13;
The Lions are making this an all&#13;
out push to fill the stadium and&#13;
make this an annual event. The&#13;
Rangers' opponents will be the&#13;
Warriors of Marquette.&#13;
The women's tennis team&#13;
played at Oshkosh Oct. 19,&#13;
winning the meet 3-2, conference&#13;
scoring.&#13;
The number one player, Pat&#13;
Kekic, took first in singles with a&#13;
pro set score of 8-3. Pat and Sue&#13;
Graf took first in doubles with an&#13;
8-2, while Kay Becker and Eileen&#13;
Reilly took second with 8-6.&#13;
Normally a set is six games,&#13;
but one may play a pro set with&#13;
eight, ten or twelve games. The&#13;
first player to reach eight games&#13;
in an eight game pro set wins&#13;
provided they have a margin to&#13;
two games.&#13;
Coming up this weekend is the&#13;
W.W.I.A.C. State meet at&#13;
Oshkosh. The meet will begin at&#13;
5:30 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m.&#13;
Saturday. Schools participating&#13;
in the meet are Carthage,&#13;
Whitewater, La Crosse, Stevens&#13;
Point, Oshkosh and Parkside.&#13;
Representing Parkside in&#13;
doubles will be Pat Kekic and Sue&#13;
Graf; number one position, and&#13;
Kay Becker and Nicolet De Rose;&#13;
number two Doubles will be&#13;
played Friday evening.&#13;
IM Football&#13;
In the IM Touch Football&#13;
League, the cream is rising to the&#13;
top as last year's University&#13;
Champions, the Schooners, have&#13;
sole possession of first place with&#13;
a perfect 4-0 record.&#13;
STANDINGS&#13;
Schooners 4-0&#13;
Pink Fascists 4-1&#13;
Trout 2-3&#13;
Football Team 1-4&#13;
BOSS 14&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
?|&#13;
ov&#13;
-&#13;
1 Eastern Illinois at Charleston&#13;
ov&#13;
-&#13;
4 UW-Green Bay at Parkside&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
28 USTFF Mid-American Championship at Parkside&#13;
Nov&#13;
-&#13;
3 Loras at Parkside&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
0ct&#13;
-&#13;
28 USTFF National Women's Championships at Parkside&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
Nov&#13;
-&#13;
4 Parkside Invitational at Parkside&#13;
Women's Gymnastics&#13;
0ct&#13;
-&#13;
28 Whitewater Invitational at Whitewater&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Nov&#13;
-&#13;
10-11 State Meet at Oshkosh&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Jobs Are Available. . . !&#13;
For FREE information&#13;
on student assistance and&#13;
placement program send&#13;
self-addressed STAMPED&#13;
envelope to the National&#13;
Placement Registry, 1001&#13;
East Idaho St., Kalispell,&#13;
MT 59901&#13;
- NO GIMMICKS -&#13;
The dearest choice for a generation&#13;
A/T„n ». , r, So McGovern can't win, eh?&#13;
Where have you heard that before?&#13;
In the primaries last Spring,&#13;
that's where.&#13;
But you fooled the political&#13;
experts and rewrote the history&#13;
books. You provided the manpower&#13;
and womanpower for the largest,&#13;
smoothest, toughest vote-canvassing&#13;
operation this country had&#13;
ever seen.&#13;
Now it's time to do it again.&#13;
And the job this Fall is even more&#13;
important. For the choice between&#13;
Nixon and McGovern is the clearest&#13;
choice voters have had for a&#13;
generation.&#13;
McGovern has opposed the&#13;
bombing of Indochina, while&#13;
Nixon has been inflicting the explosive&#13;
equivalent of 7 Hiroshima&#13;
atom bombs a month on that already&#13;
devastated area.&#13;
Nixon believes in putting people&#13;
out of work in order to hold&#13;
down prices. His policies have put&#13;
2 million more people out of work.&#13;
McGovern believes that there&#13;
should be a job for everyone who&#13;
wants to work, with the U.S. Government&#13;
itself as the employer of&#13;
last resort.&#13;
Nixon started his campaign&#13;
with $10 million in secret money.&#13;
McGovern's campaign is financed&#13;
almost entirely by contributions&#13;
of $5 to $25 from the people.&#13;
Nixon has nominated conservatives&#13;
and mediocrities to the&#13;
United States Supreme Court.&#13;
One or two more Nixon appointments&#13;
if he is re-elected, and you'll&#13;
live with a heavy-handed Nixon&#13;
court for the rest of your life.&#13;
McGovern has pledged to appoint&#13;
a woman and members of racial&#13;
and ethnic minorities, and will appoint&#13;
highly qualified liberals.&#13;
Ralph Nader says the Nixon&#13;
Administration is "the most corrupt&#13;
in our history." The late&#13;
Robert Kennedy called George&#13;
McGovern "the most decent man&#13;
in the Senate."&#13;
McGovern wants the millionaires&#13;
and the large corporations to&#13;
start paying their fair share of&#13;
taxes. Nixon wants to maintain&#13;
the status quo.&#13;
Get an absentee ballot if you&#13;
need one. Get some money together&#13;
to help us make get-outthe-vote&#13;
phone calls. And get together&#13;
with your local McGovern&#13;
Committee to find out how you&#13;
can help.&#13;
You started this campaign. It's&#13;
up to you to finish it.&#13;
r&#13;
Send money while there's still time!&#13;
Help us buy get-out-the-vote phone calls.&#13;
Age of McGovern Box 100, A-M, Washington, D.C. 20005&#13;
contribution™"' '° he&#13;
'&#13;
P 8et&#13;
°&#13;
Ut the VOte f&#13;
°&#13;
r Gwrge McG°wrn. Enclosed is my&#13;
• $5 to pay for 50 phone calls to voters • $25 to pay for 250 phone calls to voters&#13;
• $10 to pay for 100 phone calls to voters • (whatever you can give)&#13;
The Age of McGovern&#13;
Dedicated to raising $1 million&#13;
for a nationwide get-out-the-vote drive&#13;
Name.&#13;
Address..&#13;
City_ —State. -Zip_&#13;
thtfnew fxtfitica"c^nthbubons'a'cC f&#13;
°"&#13;
OWing informati&#13;
°" is *'*&gt; "«ded for rec ord purp oses only un der&#13;
Occupation Name of Company City &amp; Still&#13;
Authorized and paid f or by Age of M cGovern Campaign Committee • 201 East 42nd Street </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 5, October 25, 1972</text>
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              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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              <elementText elementTextId="63895">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>associate dean jewel echelbarger</name>
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        <name>george mcgovern</name>
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        <name>harry lantz</name>
      </tag>
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        <name>ken konkol</name>
      </tag>
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        <name>richard nixon</name>
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              <text>Who's he?  It's the gov!</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89907">
              <text>The Parkside _&#13;
RANGE dn day,O lob r 18, 1972&#13;
Gov. Patrick Lucey&#13;
Bus service from- Racine&#13;
may end Friday&#13;
By Shawn Clements&#13;
As or Oct. 20, there may be no&#13;
more bus service between Racine&#13;
and the Parkside campus. This&#13;
will leave some 100 students&#13;
without transportation and&#13;
conceivably add to the already&#13;
overcrowded parking lots.&#13;
According to Stan Altenbern,&#13;
president of Wisconsin Coach&#13;
L.ines, the service is being&#13;
discontinued because of lack of&#13;
Use. Altenbern said that a&#13;
minimum of 180 one-way trips&#13;
must be made per day for the&#13;
companyto break even, and 230&#13;
to 250 for the line to make a&#13;
decent profit.&#13;
The announcement came&#13;
following a Public Service&#13;
C~mmission hearing on Oct. 10.&#13;
Wisconsin Coach had originally&#13;
requested a permanent permit to&#13;
operate the line, though this was&#13;
changed to a temporary permit&#13;
request (which was approved)&#13;
after the company discovered the&#13;
loss of revenue. A schedule&#13;
change, which went into effect on&#13;
Oct. 9, has had little effect as yet,&#13;
according to Altenbern, on&#13;
revenues,&#13;
d Jewel Echelbarger, assistant&#13;
ean for student affairs said that&#13;
"f '&#13;
eelers" have gone out to Flash&#13;
of R ' FI acme and Kenosha Transit.&#13;
d' ash,. however, is already&#13;
f ISCUssmg discontinuing service&#13;
t~r Racine. A public hearing on&#13;
1, at request has been set for NoV,&#13;
d&#13;
' Ms, Echelbarger also said that&#13;
ISC ' G USSlons are underway with&#13;
trateway Tech" which already&#13;
t&#13;
ansports students from Racine&#13;
o Ke h ' and nos a, to possibly expand&#13;
transport Parkside students&#13;
as well,&#13;
"The main thing we need is&#13;
more interest in using the buses,"&#13;
Ms. Echelbarger commented.&#13;
"Without increased revenue, who&#13;
can blame Wisconsin Coach for&#13;
wanting to discontinue. Where&#13;
are all the students concerned&#13;
with ecology?"&#13;
A caB to Racine Mayor Kenneth&#13;
Huck's office produced a&#13;
"no comment" and a "The&#13;
Mayor is busy and cannot speak&#13;
with you."&#13;
Car pool, anyone?&#13;
Who's he?&#13;
BY SHAWN CLEMENTS&#13;
"Who's that guy? wbere's he&#13;
from?" Th .- ose were typical&#13;
questions asked by Parkside&#13;
students last Tuesday as&#13;
Governor Patrick Lucey loured&#13;
the campus with Doug&#13;
LaFo~ette, assistant professor of&#13;
chemistry and Democratic&#13;
candidate for the State Senate&#13;
from Kenosha&#13;
Lucey arrived on the Keoosha&#13;
Campus at 2 p.m. and was&#13;
greeted by LaFollette and Henry&#13;
Cole, professor of science, After a&#13;
few brief formalities, they were&#13;
off to see what the city of&#13;
Kenosha is doing 'With its sewage&#13;
these days,&#13;
LaFollette, a well-known&#13;
ecologist, led the governor on a&#13;
tour of two "holding ponds"&#13;
where the sewage is dwnped. The&#13;
unfortunate part of dumping the&#13;
sewage in this manner is that the&#13;
holding ponds lie in a flood plain -&#13;
when the rains come, the raw,&#13;
untreated sewage goes&#13;
everywhere. Lucey promised to&#13;
look into the matter.&#13;
The entourage (the governor&#13;
and LaFollette in the governor's&#13;
limousine, with two carloads of&#13;
news paople Iollowingj arrived at&#13;
Tallent Hall at 2:45 p.m., only to&#13;
find that parking was nonexistent.&#13;
It's somewhat strange&#13;
to see the governor's chauffeur&#13;
looking in vain for a parking spot&#13;
Parking was finally located,&#13;
though, and the group boarded a&#13;
shuttle bus (which almost lett&#13;
without the governor) (or&#13;
Greenquist Hall. The governor&#13;
said that he was pleased with the&#13;
idea of a shuttle bus, but also&#13;
agreed with LaFollette that $1 for&#13;
a round·trip from Racine was&#13;
entirely too steep, and indeed&#13;
contributed to the OVeI"CON"'SlDg&#13;
of the existing lots - not 10&#13;
mention the added pollution.&#13;
Lucey and Doug LaFollette&#13;
were met by Bruce Schroeder.&#13;
who was recently appointed&#13;
District Attorney for Kenosha by&#13;
It's the gov!&#13;
lAIcey and "ho IS roll/llog for&#13;
elec-tion In rovember A lMrt':&#13;
to meet Luc~' "as O1&amp;rl Huck.&#13;
Democratic cendrdare for the&#13;
late mbly&#13;
As the governor entered&#13;
Greenqcasr. sUlTOUnded by nov.&#13;
people, the reacuon w.&#13;
C1mos,ty, mostly. and. glimmer&#13;
here and there 0( recogruhon -&#13;
mostly recogruhon 0( LaFoll tt ,&#13;
oot Lucey,&#13;
Locey greeted the luden&#13;
warmly, and the reaclJon of me t&#13;
was plea arable, If a bit nervous&#13;
ophomore teve Brinkman&#13;
summed up much 0( the tudents'&#13;
sentiment "hen he commented,&#13;
"1I's good that he came here to&#13;
meet the luden , instead of&#13;
haVl~ the tudents ha'1ng to go&#13;
to him"&#13;
Chanc&lt;!lIor \ly'lhe greeted th&#13;
governor and LaFolieUe ID&#13;
Greenqwsl The two Lalked hk&#13;
old fnends for • fev. moments,&#13;
and \lyllte pomted out the construction&#13;
under "ay .nd offered&#13;
several comments regard,~ It&#13;
The governor '8 qwle tnteeested&#13;
m the type 0( bu,ld,og&#13;
bere, especially ".th the emphasis&#13;
on "hvrng bulldlog:'&#13;
rather lhan tradtucaal, tod&#13;
architecture Ever-ywher the&#13;
governor ....enl here, he saw&#13;
evidence 01 this concept. a&#13;
studen louoged on n-. .nd&#13;
the "hot do "e-eryv.here&#13;
A tour 0( lhe hbr.ry prov.ded •&#13;
chance for the gov morlO the&#13;
"krofiche readers Ttl book&#13;
provided for lhe demonstr.uon&#13;
....as a volume by Robert 1&#13;
"Ftghung Bob" La Folielle, Iale&#13;
governor of Wi con In Phil&#13;
Burnell, dlrector 0( lhe hbrary,&#13;
po,nted out to budget-mInded&#13;
lAIcey that the hooI obta.tned&#13;
20, volum ,n the 'licrofl e&#13;
collection for S20, The sam&#13;
collechon 10 th orlllnll,&#13;
assummg lhe boo .. rf' 'en&#13;
available .....ould run len to fift&#13;
umes \hal pnce, and tak 1&#13;
um&#13;
p&#13;
Th 8O\emor&#13;
01 11I'O" th pi&#13;
th&#13;
m&#13;
Austerity slows building program here&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
Things have been happening&#13;
around campus in the ~on·&#13;
strucHon department. Besides&#13;
the major projects of Communication&#13;
Arts and Classr&#13;
.&#13;
oom&#13;
buildings various other projects&#13;
are being' undertaken in the area&#13;
of sight development. Among&#13;
these are bus shelters and&#13;
sidewalks,&#13;
The shelters. which will .have&#13;
the appearance of interlmk~&#13;
hexagons roughly 13 x 30 feet, Will&#13;
have seating capacities for about&#13;
30 persons. Unfortunately: only&#13;
'II be constructed In the&#13;
one WI h f r&#13;
, diate future -- at tea&#13;
1mme d also unk'ng&#13;
lot an par I ,; will be unheated,&#13;
fortunately, I b ' g laid&#13;
The walks presently em ba k&#13;
between the segments 0,£ t!t.e&#13;
c&#13;
the responslblhty of&#13;
lot are . the planning&#13;
someone 10&#13;
department in, Mad,son The&#13;
long-range plan I to have sealing&#13;
areas and landscapmg In the&#13;
areas around the parking lolS to&#13;
improve the aesthetic situation&#13;
A decorative circular .....alk 15&#13;
being constructed In front of&#13;
Tallent Hall The center of the&#13;
entry circle is an area which may&#13;
some day contain a fountam. but&#13;
no money exists for such a&#13;
project at this time. The&#13;
decorative brick walkway Will&#13;
match the brick pavers to be used&#13;
elsewhere on campus&#13;
Upon completion of the&#13;
Communication Arts, _and&#13;
Classroom building . additional&#13;
walks and terraced areas will be&#13;
provided south and west of the&#13;
Library, west of the Classroom&#13;
building and south of lhe CommArts&#13;
building, ,&#13;
In talking to James GalbraIth,&#13;
head of Planning and Con·&#13;
s!ruction, RA 'GER learned thaI&#13;
of the two major bUilding&#13;
pro ts req led for th 197HS&#13;
bteMlum, only th ... " bulldl&#13;
for the h lof 100 rn In tr)'&#13;
hod appro,ed by th Board&#13;
0( Regt'll The addluon to th&#13;
Ph) Ed bulld,ng " drIlled ",'en&#13;
thou$ the pr t faclhty f.1&#13;
short 0( Rt'I(enl gwdchn&#13;
Becau'e of the go\'ern r'&#13;
aust nty pr&lt;JiRram. only ual&#13;
buIldIng' ",II be appro,ed for&#13;
con troctlon In lh n 'lCt bien·&#13;
mum It I hoped thaI th • \I&#13;
buildIng "II' be one of thoI.e&#13;
con~ld",ed nual&#13;
In nf'\\ lng th present tate or&#13;
the campu', GalbraIth I proud&#13;
and pleased ".th the results of&#13;
Lhe ....ock but '" Ishe' th faeihtl&#13;
could be compleled sooner&#13;
The CommuOicallon Art&#13;
bulldmg" a or.g",ally' scheduled&#13;
for compleUon m January, 1973,&#13;
but ra",s have detayed the early&#13;
constnJcllon Korndorfer eonstruchon&#13;
is trying hard to have at&#13;
least the cia room portion of the GOVT. rJ ~s.&#13;
OCT 1 1972&#13;
UW-Parksida LlbralJ&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
-----------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
"' ..&#13;
ii&#13;
0&#13;
z&#13;
.;&#13;
"-&#13;
,.&#13;
D&#13;
Gov. Patrick Lucey&#13;
Bus service from-Racine&#13;
may end Friday&#13;
By Shawn Clements&#13;
As of Oct. 20, there may be no&#13;
more bus service between Racine&#13;
and the Parkside campus. This&#13;
will leave some 100 students&#13;
without transportation and&#13;
conceivably add to the already&#13;
overcrowded parking lots.&#13;
"The main thing we need is&#13;
more interest in using the buses,"&#13;
Ms. Echelbarger commented.&#13;
"Without increased revenue, who&#13;
can blame Wisconsin Coach for&#13;
wanting to discontinue. Where&#13;
are all the students concerned&#13;
with ecology?"&#13;
A call to Racine Mayor Kenneth&#13;
Huck's office produced a&#13;
"no comment" and a "The&#13;
Mayor is busy and cannot speak&#13;
with you."&#13;
Car pool, anyone?&#13;
Who's he?&#13;
According to Stan Altenbern,&#13;
president of Wisconsin Coach&#13;
Unes, the service is being&#13;
discontinued because of lack of&#13;
u e. Altenbern said that a&#13;
minimum of 180 one-way trips&#13;
must be made per day for the&#13;
company to break even and 230&#13;
lo 250 for the line to 'make a decent profit. Austerity slows buildin&#13;
The announcement came&#13;
following a Public Service&#13;
C~mmission hearing on Oct. 10.&#13;
Wisconsin Coach had originally&#13;
requested a permanent permit to&#13;
Operate the line, though this was&#13;
changed to a temporary permit&#13;
request (which was approved)&#13;
after the company discovered the&#13;
loss of revenue. A schedule&#13;
change, which went into effect on&#13;
Oct. 9, has had little effect as yet,&#13;
according to Altenbern, on&#13;
revenues.&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger assistant&#13;
~?n for student affair's, said that&#13;
eelers" have gone out to Flash&#13;
of Ra · Fl cme and Kenosha Transit.&#13;
dash ,. however, is already&#13;
f&#13;
I cussing discontinuing service&#13;
t~r Racine. A public hearing on&#13;
l. at request has been set for Nov.&#13;
d&#13;
. Ms. Echelbarger also said that I CU . G ss1ons are underway with&#13;
1&#13;
/leway Tech., which already&#13;
1 ansports students from Racine&#13;
a~lenosha, to possibly expand&#13;
a transport Parkside students&#13;
S We]].&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
Things have been happening improv&#13;
around campus in the ~onstruction&#13;
department. Besides&#13;
the major projects of Communication&#13;
Arts and Clas r_oom&#13;
buildings various other proJects&#13;
are being' undertaken in the area&#13;
of sight development. Among&#13;
these are bus shelters and&#13;
sidewalks. . . , The shelters, which will _ha~e&#13;
the appearance of interlink~&#13;
hexagons roughly 13 x 30 feet, wll&#13;
have seating capacities for about&#13;
30 persons. Unfortunately_, only&#13;
one will be constructed m re&#13;
immediate future -- at the ar&#13;
k. g lot and also unpar&#13;
m . . b heated&#13;
fortunately , it will e un_ I ·ci&#13;
The walks presently bemg a1k&#13;
th egments of the bac&#13;
between es "bTty of&#13;
lot are the respons1 I I .&#13;
in the planning someone&#13;
d11&#13;
It' th&#13;
h r&#13;
0 &#13;
2THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
We need those buses&#13;
Wisconsin Coach is considering discontinuing bus&#13;
service from Racine to our campus. This must not&#13;
happen.&#13;
Many of our students from Racine rely on this service&#13;
and would be greatly inconvenienced.&#13;
p rt of the problem lies In the amount of students who&#13;
use the service. Wisconsin Coach feels if cannot operate&#13;
profitably with the present passenger usage. This&#13;
editorial makes an appeal to students, faculty, and staff&#13;
from R cin who could lust as soon use the service as&#13;
not. Ev n though it is the view of this paper that the cost&#13;
of the service is too high, at this point it is better than no&#13;
rvlce lit all.&#13;
re Important, we are making an appeal to&#13;
Wisconsin Coach to continue service in the hope fhat&#13;
mar stud nts, faculty, and staff will begin to use Coach&#13;
buses regularly. We feel this service will be mutually&#13;
profit ble for both Wisconsin Coach and passengers.&#13;
Editorial research&#13;
We re Iit is our responsibility fo alert our audience to&#13;
th possible trouble which may arise from the use of the&#13;
product of one of our advertisers, Research Unlimited.&#13;
The company sells research papers by mail order&#13;
:i:at logue.&#13;
First, plagiarism is illegal. Second, the state's attorney&#13;
has been clamping down on suspected users of&#13;
the service.&#13;
If it Is found that the paper was indeed used as&#13;
background material, no adion can be taken. If there is&#13;
a case of plagiarism, the student user will very likely&#13;
find himself expelled from school.&#13;
The function of Research Unlimited is very legal, but&#13;
the service's misuse can be Illegal.&#13;
Chess, anyone?&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
1 ~ poant In Parkside's&#13;
hislory II IS necessary to a one&#13;
v I)' Importanl qu bon - shall&#13;
th l.LC food Ice rea at·&#13;
tempt to chi Its OIiglOaI goal&#13;
_ to a· a cafetena for&#13;
tu n • fa ulty, and taU - or&#13;
11\' In lO one (W' another of the&#13;
CUrT'tflt trends wtuch ppear 10&#13;
rapIdly be monopollZlng II~&#13;
1/ .• opl 10 keep II a cereteete.&#13;
th all d us who wander around&#13;
I nc.~ tray m one hand and&#13;
boob or attache case in lhe other&#13;
ould uddenly flOd thai there is&#13;
Ind a place to II. You may&#13;
ha. 10 ~ rrang someone else's&#13;
rb&lt;o&amp; ,but tI a I you ' .. got a&#13;
I How ·er, ther&lt;! a~ other&#13;
llern8It'· to eabng lunch. and&#13;
to lin Ith lis polley of ",porting&#13;
II .d . RAl'iGER wishes to&#13;
make you aware or these&#13;
l\&gt;lhlt&#13;
flt"t. th rea could be con·&#13;
, rted to a ludy hall In the&#13;
Ir d.lton I n thiS o\lld&#13;
reqwre pla.,n aU the tables end&#13;
to end to row • With chain only&#13;
alo~ one Id to pre.enl \10'&#13;
n f) con\'ersation. But&#13;
lnno'" tlHO Park ide students&#13;
, decIded that ludYI~ is&#13;
much mQre eUeclively done&#13;
m. I loud no and confUSIon.&#13;
Theref_ the fUl'1\llure could&#13;
rema.n .t IS, and perhaps a&#13;
rock band could be hired to play&#13;
In 'alO Place to provide ad·&#13;
ebltonal "OUnd bmulllS.&#13;
nd allemalt,.., IS to make&#13;
It InlO • C 100 ard sharks&#13;
bound- 'n lhe lacsurule red&#13;
I alh r . eals. They could&#13;
probably conVInce the ludenl&#13;
b .. b 0I1t to layout money&#13;
for red , Iv I openes from&#13;
lin 10floor 10 enclose the a rea&#13;
m k .t mor .nbmate hag&#13;
lin ould be mce, too,&#13;
Itho h not necessary nghl&#13;
"Y .a r and other k.nds of&#13;
"ould hso c:ontrl1l11le to&#13;
the atmosphere. The food service&#13;
counter could be converted to a&#13;
bar. and the pictures in the&#13;
veeding machines changed from&#13;
soda cans to apples, oranges and&#13;
lemons. Jackpot! You could play&#13;
pok.er fo.- "as" with your profs,&#13;
roU dice lor pass or fail, and spin&#13;
the roulette wheel 01 term paper&#13;
topics. You might even win the&#13;
compleled paper.&#13;
A tbird major trend in&#13;
utilization of this area is as a&#13;
game room, specifically for&#13;
chess. One can visualize it now:&#13;
Daleline - Kenosha - World&#13;
Cbess Cbampion Bobby Fischer&#13;
am.ed today al the campus of&#13;
UW·Parkside for his match with&#13;
challe~er Queenie Bishop. Is.&#13;
Bishop. a Parkside student, had&#13;
requested thai the match be held&#13;
in the university's Chess Place&#13;
because d the proximity of soda&#13;
mactunes and rest rooms.&#13;
"I drink a lot when I'm Ilnder&#13;
pre 1lCO." Ms. Bishop is quoled&#13;
as saying. H()\\'ever. Mr. Fischer,&#13;
upon his am.a!, glanced al the&#13;
buildl~ ,,;th scorn and ",fused&#13;
to play until a cafeteria was&#13;
constructed ",;thin easy walking&#13;
distance.&#13;
So there you have it, Parkside.&#13;
The l.LC Cafeteria stands jt the&#13;
er roads. Which direcbon il&#13;
wtll take depends on You. U you&#13;
~ishto gh'e in to your stomachs,&#13;
please have a little consideration&#13;
for the other stomachs on&#13;
campus, too. Between the hours&#13;
0111 and 2 you a", mosl likely 10&#13;
see hunger-crazed students&#13;
desperately seeking a place 10&#13;
rest thew lra)'S During this lime&#13;
try ludying lO the Iibr&amp;!)' (we&#13;
realize It'S quiet, but one has to&#13;
adapt locertaln inconveniences).&#13;
There are also lounge areas&#13;
throughoul the building for&#13;
lud)'ing. or playing chess, poker,&#13;
old maid. or whatever. Let's give&#13;
the original plan for a cafelena a&#13;
(alf trial.&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
Pencil sharpeners mentioned last week have&#13;
arrived. ow all we need is someone to install them.&#13;
I hope they'll lind the time.&#13;
Tentative schedules have been made out for classes&#13;
next semester. U the division heads would release&#13;
these to the students. they could receive immed~ate&#13;
leedhack on how to resol ve any coollicts that might&#13;
have occurred in having required courses occurrl~&#13;
stmultanecusly: something which has happened m&#13;
the past&#13;
We could sure use some enclosed and heated bus&#13;
shelters before the snow flies. The way things stand&#13;
oow, we're not going to get them.&#13;
With the money squeeze on, it's interesting to note&#13;
that we do have funds to install that unnecessary&#13;
piece of walk in front of Tallent H 11.Also, laying&#13;
those walks to lear up that beautiful piece of lawn in&#13;
the center of the back parking lot is stupid. People&#13;
gomg to and from the buses are going to travel in a&#13;
straight line across the grass.&#13;
It is amazing to me that certain students at this&#13;
university have not progressed beyond the maturity&#13;
oC the average kindergarten student. Irefer to those&#13;
morons who carved their initials in the concrete in&#13;
front of Tallent Hall. This is pure vandalism and I&#13;
hope those responsible are caught and expelled.&#13;
There are still not enough buses in service to handle&#13;
the crowds during the morning rush periods.&#13;
Drivers are taking on passengers at the near lot&#13;
before going to the far lot with the result that the&#13;
buses are Cull before they reach there. This practice&#13;
should cease.&#13;
I'm reasonably certain that if enough people&#13;
requested it, the lower level entrance to the Library&#13;
could be opened. There is t?O mU~h time wasted in&#13;
getting to the one entrance 10 service at the present&#13;
time.&#13;
I think it is about time that the Distinguished&#13;
Teacher Award nominations be put back into th&#13;
hands of the only people qualified to jUdg:&#13;
distingUIshed teaching - the students themselves&#13;
The method us~~ the past tw~ years does not work:&#13;
There is InSUffiCient student input for results to be&#13;
analyzed.&#13;
Last time the .4,~+ students at this school submitted&#13;
some~llng lIke ~O?recoI?mendations. Hence&#13;
this method Judges writing ability of students, not&#13;
quality of instruction. The Student Senate Teacher&#13;
Evaluation Forms could easily be made mandatory&#13;
in all divisions and used in such an evaluation.&#13;
Time is running out for those of you who would like&#13;
to get in on the great Nixon-McGovern cutdown in&#13;
the Nov. 1 issue. Anything you would like to see&#13;
mentioned for or against either side should be in OUr&#13;
office by Oct, 21. I shall be taking the anti-Nixon&#13;
point of view; another staff member is pro-Nixon&#13;
We need some anti and prO-McGovern input t~&#13;
round out the discussion.&#13;
How about setting the clocks on campus to&#13;
correspond to time in the rest of the world? Seems&#13;
things around here happen three minutes later than&#13;
other places.&#13;
1 wasn't kidding when I mentioned before that we&#13;
need people to solicit ads for the paper. The more&#13;
we get, the better we can run in not having the&#13;
financial burden hanging over.&#13;
There is going to be a staff meeting this Thursday at&#13;
8 p.m. in the office, D·194 LLC. Monday nights we&#13;
have a newspaper layout session. Everyone is invited&#13;
to attend,&#13;
We get letfers.i,&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I would like to summarize the&#13;
status of the parking petition&#13;
which I circulated, and to&#13;
respond to Phil Burnett's letter.&#13;
Phil sent me the original copy of&#13;
the letter and I, in turn, submitted&#13;
it to the University&#13;
Committee when I appeared.&#13;
before them. The petition which&#13;
you published was a part of a&#13;
letter which presented an&#13;
argument which did not appear in&#13;
the Ranger.&#13;
My argument was that poor bus&#13;
service caused faculty and slalf&#13;
to spend between 6 and 8 bours&#13;
per week riding the bus, thus&#13;
reducing the work output of many&#13;
persons. I suggested that a&#13;
remedy Jay in a temporary andor&#13;
'permanent starr·faculty&#13;
parking lot on the west side of&#13;
Wood Road. Ialso suggested that&#13;
the shuttle service needed some&#13;
attention. I think mosl of us&#13;
would agree that the bus service&#13;
has improved substantially.&#13;
Many comments and&#13;
suggestions were returned with&#13;
the parking petition. I sum·&#13;
marized these for the members of&#13;
the University Committee&#13;
suggesled thai they be gi.. ~&#13;
further sludy by the appropriate&#13;
committee, and requested that&#13;
the committee take a position&#13;
sUP.p?rting the sense of the&#13;
pe,tition. The University Comffi1lt.E:e&#13;
took such a position&#13;
unarumously; they forwarded the&#13;
matter. to the Campus Planning&#13;
Com~llltu:e. I believe that the&#13;
park10g Situation is under review&#13;
at this time.&#13;
Personally, I am all for non.&#13;
segregaled parking lots as long&#13;
as lhey fllOCt.on efficiently I&#13;
ho~. we're on the road tow~rd&#13;
erCIClency.&#13;
Marion Mochon&#13;
Anthropology&#13;
esteem. Which garbage can was&#13;
all that work thrown into?&#13;
Hats off to Jewel Echelbarger.&#13;
She agreed that the busing&#13;
situation wasn't right, yet she&#13;
signed the letter which told&#13;
students that school would now&#13;
cost them 18 dollars a month&#13;
more just to get there (daily ride&#13;
to and from campus). She has&#13;
now placed her name on an ad&#13;
which says "service will be&#13;
discontinued" if more riders&#13;
don;t ride the daily robber. To&#13;
Jewel I say, may you ride a&#13;
bicycle to campus in the middle&#13;
of January. Some of us will have&#13;
to.&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In its first issue in its short&#13;
existence, the Parkside Ranger&#13;
editorialized on the busing&#13;
situation for students commuting&#13;
from Racine to Campus. Three&#13;
weeks later the situation has&#13;
changed. It's GOTTEN WORSE!&#13;
Now for ithe same ridiculously&#13;
high fee there are considerably&#13;
less trips per day. And to top thai,&#13;
there is a threa t of discontinued&#13;
service.&#13;
I would like 10 thank the administration&#13;
at Parkside and the&#13;
Wisconsin Coach Lines for taking&#13;
such a dramatic action. It's good&#13;
to know that student surveys and&#13;
editorials are held in such high ~If:.The Parksidlee------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
-&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is publ ished weekly throughout&#13;
the academ ic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Oftices are located at D-194 Library.Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are nof&#13;
nwecessarily the official view of the University of&#13;
Isconsin· Parkside.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRIT . Koch, Kathy W II ERS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing, Kns ~&#13;
Martin; ner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma, Shawn Clements, Da&#13;
, am Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Dave R~yher,&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken P";tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
,&#13;
N ,J..EP1lESENTED ~J.. NATIONAL ADVER.TISIN~ BY&#13;
49&#13;
anonal EducatIOnal Advertising ServIces, InC. i&#13;
360 Lexington Ave.• New York. N, Y. 10017 ~&#13;
'THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972 EDITORIALS/ 0 PINION s&#13;
n.&#13;
need those buses&#13;
considering discontinuing bus&#13;
o our campus. This must not&#13;
ny of ours uden s from Racine rely on this service&#13;
ould greatly inconvenienced.&#13;
problem lies · n the amount of students who&#13;
le . i consln Coach feels it cannot operate&#13;
t h present passenger usage. This&#13;
n ppe I o students, faculty, and staff&#13;
ho could f ust as soon use he service as&#13;
h It I l of this paper that the cost&#13;
too high, t this point It ls better than no&#13;
Import nt, e re ma ng an appeal to&#13;
o Co ch to continue service In the hope that&#13;
n , f culty, nd staff ill begin to use Coach&#13;
ul rly. feet this service ill be mutually&#13;
or both n Coach and passengers.&#13;
earch&#13;
pons bllity to alert our audience to&#13;
roubl hlch may arise from the use of the&#13;
our d rt1sers, Research Unlimited.&#13;
II rch papers by mail order&#13;
Is llleg I. Second, the state's atdo&#13;
n on suspected users of&#13;
'&#13;
anyone?&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
THORN I'm reasonably certain that if enough people&#13;
requested it, the lower level entrance to the Library&#13;
could be opened. There is t?O mu~h time wasted in&#13;
getting to the one entrance m service at the present&#13;
time.&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
p ncil harpeners mentioned last week have&#13;
rrived .• ow all we need is omeone to install them.&#13;
I think it is about time that the Distinguished&#13;
Teacher Award nominations be put back into the&#13;
hands of the onl! people qualified to judge&#13;
distinguished teaching - the students themselves&#13;
Toe method used the past two years does not work·&#13;
There is insufficient student input for results to ~&#13;
analyzed.&#13;
I hope th y'II find the time.&#13;
Tentative chedule have been made out for classes&#13;
ne. t eme ter. If the division heads would rel~se&#13;
th · to th tud nts, they could receive immed!ate&#13;
r dback on how tor olve any conflicts that might&#13;
have occurred in ha,ing required courses occurri~g&#13;
imultan ·ly; something which has happened m&#13;
Last time the 4,000+ students at this school submitted&#13;
some~ing like ~o? recoi:n_mendations. Hence&#13;
this method Judges wntmg ab1hty of students not&#13;
quality of instruction. The Student Senate Tea~her&#13;
Evalu~ti~~ Forms coul~ easily be made mandatory&#13;
in all div1s1ons and used m such an evaluation.&#13;
th pa ·t.&#13;
\ e could ur u e ome enclosed and heated bus&#13;
.-hell befor th now flies. The way things stand&#13;
no\\. w re not going to get them. Time is running out for those of you who would like&#13;
to get in on the great Nixon-McGovern cutdown in&#13;
the Nov. 1 issue. Anything you would like to see&#13;
mentioned for or against either side should be in our&#13;
office by Oct. 21. I shall be taking the anti- ixon&#13;
point of view; another staff member is pro-Nixon&#13;
We need some anti and pro-McGovern input to&#13;
round out the discussion.&#13;
With th mone. squ eze on, it's interesting to note&#13;
that w do hav funds to in tall that unnecessary&#13;
piec o( \ alk in front of Tallent H ll. Also, laying&#13;
t \\alk to tear up that beautiful piece of lawn m&#13;
th c nt r or the back parking lot i stupid. People&#13;
oing to and from the buse are going to travel in a&#13;
trai ht line acr the gra .&#13;
It i amazing to me that certain students at this&#13;
umv ·1ty hav not progre ed beyond the maturity&#13;
o th a,·erage kindergarten student. I refer to those&#13;
moron, \hO carved their initials in the concrete in&#13;
front of Tallent Hall. Thi i pure vandalism and I&#13;
hope tho e r pon ible are caught and expelled.&#13;
How about setting the clocks on campus to&#13;
correspond to time in the rest of the world? Seem&#13;
things around here happen three minutes later than&#13;
other places.&#13;
I wasn't kidding when I mentioned before that we&#13;
need people to solicit ads for the paper. The more&#13;
we get, the better we can run in not having the&#13;
financial burden hanging over. There are till not enough buses in service to handle&#13;
the crowds during the morning rush periods.&#13;
Drl\'ers are taking on pas engers at the near lot&#13;
before going to the far lot with the result that the&#13;
bu ·es are full before they reach there. This practice&#13;
There is going to be a staff meeting this Thursday al&#13;
8 p.m. in the office, D-194 LLC. Monday nights we&#13;
have a newspape.- layout session. Everyone is invited&#13;
to attend. hould cea e.&#13;
We get lefters~.-~·-··--"&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I would like to summarize the&#13;
tatus of the parking petition&#13;
which I circulated, and to&#13;
respond to Phil Burnett's letter.&#13;
Phil ent me the original copy of&#13;
the letter and I, in turn, submitted&#13;
it to the University&#13;
C-Ommittee when I appeared&#13;
before them. The petition which&#13;
you published was a part of a letter which presented an&#13;
argument which did not appear in&#13;
the Ranger.&#13;
• 1 · argument was that poor bus&#13;
sen;ce caused faculty and staff&#13;
to pend between 6 and 8 hours&#13;
per week riding the bus, thus&#13;
reducing the work output of many&#13;
persons. I suggested that a&#13;
remed lay in a temporary andor&#13;
_Permanent staff-faculty&#13;
parking lot on the west side of&#13;
Wood Road. I also suggested that&#13;
the shuttle ervice needed some&#13;
attention. I think most of us&#13;
would agree that the bus service&#13;
ha improved substantially.&#13;
• lany comments and&#13;
suggestions were returned with&#13;
the parking petition. I summarized&#13;
these for the members of&#13;
the ni versity Committee&#13;
uggested that they be give~&#13;
further study by the appropriate&#13;
committee, and requested that&#13;
the committee take a position&#13;
up_P?rting the sense of the&#13;
pe_tition. The University Comm1tt.E:e&#13;
took such a position&#13;
unarumously; they forwarded the&#13;
matte~ to the Campus Planning&#13;
Com~mt~. I_ believe that the&#13;
parkmg situation is under review&#13;
at this time.&#13;
Personally, I am all for nonegregated&#13;
pa~king lots as long&#13;
as they• function efficiently. I&#13;
hoi_ie_ we re on the road toward&#13;
efficiency.&#13;
Marion Mochon&#13;
Anthropology&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In its first issue in its short&#13;
existence, the Parkside Ranger&#13;
editorialized on the busing&#13;
situation for students commuting&#13;
from Racine to Campus. Three&#13;
weeks later the situation has&#13;
changed. It's GOTIEN WORSE!&#13;
Now for ·the same ridiculously&#13;
high fee there are considerably&#13;
less trips per day. And to top that,&#13;
there is a threat of discontinued&#13;
service.&#13;
I would like to thank the administration&#13;
at Parkside and the&#13;
Wisconsin Coach Lines for taking&#13;
such a dramatic action. It's good&#13;
to know that student surveys and&#13;
editorials are held in such high&#13;
esteem. Which garbage can wa&#13;
all that work thrown into?&#13;
Hats off to Jewel Echelbarger.&#13;
She agreed that the busing&#13;
situation wasn't right, yet she&#13;
signed the letter which told&#13;
students that school would now&#13;
cost them 18 dollars a month&#13;
more just to get there (daily ride&#13;
to and from campus). She has&#13;
now placed her name on an ad&#13;
which says "service will be&#13;
discontinued" if more riders&#13;
don't ride the daily robber. To&#13;
Jewel I say, may you ride a&#13;
bicycle to campus in the middle&#13;
of January. Some of us will have&#13;
to.&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
~Jr.. The PmkskJe -&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located ~t D-1 94 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553.2295.&#13;
~h~ Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
ne_cessa~ily the official view of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRITE · Kach, Kathy Well RS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing, Kns ale&#13;
M t· T ner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma Shawn Clements, D&#13;
ar m, om Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, D~ve Reyher.&#13;
=~OTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts . SI NESS MANAGER· Ken Pe~tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: i-'red Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
7;--:------------___-.:&#13;
• . N ,llEPRESENTED FOil NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY t T ational Educational Advertising Services, Inc. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 ___...., &#13;
Officer Candidates&#13;
ld promise you the world,&#13;
I cau&#13;
ee&#13;
eleeted give you nothing&#13;
andon n The reason for such a&#13;
in retur. . due to the&#13;
ment IS&#13;
stateurance of the. attitudes and&#13;
un~:s of the elected senators;&#13;
bell president of the student&#13;
for a~ent I am responsible to&#13;
govet&#13;
te and call meetings of the&#13;
IIlStl ttl The voting which will&#13;
sena eiace on specific issues is&#13;
~~d~ by all senators and not hy&#13;
the president alone. .&#13;
If any candidate for the office&#13;
f resident IS making such&#13;
o Pises he cannot be conpr:~eddompetent&#13;
for the ollice&#13;
~:ause of his lack of knowledge&#13;
of the. student government&#13;
proceedings.&#13;
Your next President,&#13;
Thomas E. Haack&#13;
Shawn Clements&#13;
for Vice-President&#13;
The reasons I am seeking officership&#13;
as vice-president of&#13;
student government are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
1. Student government should&#13;
represent student ideals and&#13;
wishes. This has not been so in&#13;
the past.&#13;
2. Students have no voice in the&#13;
administration of policies at&#13;
Parkside. This should be changed&#13;
now.&#13;
3. The so-called student union,&#13;
lhougha temporary one, should&#13;
be made more realistic now.&#13;
4. Asa senior at this institution,&#13;
Ihave seen student governments&#13;
corne and go, and I think it is&#13;
about time the student government&#13;
did something to earn the&#13;
respect of the students and administration&#13;
as welL&#13;
The most important task to be&#13;
endeavored by student government&#13;
is to establish a "student&#13;
voice" in the function of&#13;
Parkside. We tried advocation in&#13;
the past, let's give application a&#13;
chance. Let's take a look at some&#13;
stUdent government action. It's&#13;
about time Parkside matured.&#13;
JOE HARRIS&#13;
Candidate for Vice-President&#13;
Student Government&#13;
u.T III THf {OHfORT Of YOUI CAR&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
:1 (~&gt;:1',\, f\ ~RltrJ THE&#13;
~ • ~ BURliER&#13;
'11.\'\-''-' IAHIL'&#13;
~-&gt;-'&#13;
• PiPA BUR6ER • HAMA BURGER&#13;
• TUM BUlin • BABY BURiER&#13;
CARR'( -OUTS&#13;
tA" 'Hloo 'OUO 000[0 """ .. "00'&#13;
T"h' 01 Cb,&lt;~••• rllh&#13;
,.dSb" .. " .'&#13;
"11 G'lLOH 0' OOOT 1110"'ITH ,~(J.Q 000'0&#13;
.. "'"' _OOIH 0'&#13;
""OC'" THUlil&#13;
0_ IH'O'Do_ OOAO&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN&#13;
She,,~.n Rd H, 12 No''"&#13;
Keno,ho&#13;
HOCOI D'"'''''''' TO"'" 'U""," "O",'HI&#13;
" ." '0 ""O""GH'&#13;
The reasons I am r .&#13;
again for a position in ps~nmg&#13;
as follows: are&#13;
1. I believe there is a need&#13;
student counselling servt for a f rvrca made&#13;
up 0 stUdents who are willin to&#13;
help counsel stUdents above ~nd&#13;
beyon~ academIC counselling&#13;
Parks.Ide. is a growing and&#13;
changmg mstitution.&#13;
2. Last semester PSGA p t&#13;
. togeth~r a student-teach~r&#13;
.evaluation, I would like to see this&#13;
be ~evised to a more permanent&#13;
project, The basic form and ideas&#13;
are ther~, but with a little more&#13;
work . ~IS form could be very&#13;
benef~clal in student program&#13;
planmng. It might also have&#13;
son:: influence on faculty&#13;
posittons.&#13;
3. eee is one of the most imp~rtant&#13;
and influential committees&#13;
on campus. I believe the&#13;
~tudents can benefit much more&#13;
If the eee were more active in&#13;
the campus concern situation.&#13;
4. Revision of the PSGA constitution.&#13;
I know there is need for&#13;
revision of the constitution. Bylaws&#13;
are needed. The constitution&#13;
is too generaL&#13;
Parkside needs student in·&#13;
volvement. As Parkside gets&#13;
larger, the students should have a&#13;
larger coice in University&#13;
governance. We have a good start&#13;
- let's keep going. If you can't&#13;
run for election in the g\lvern·&#13;
ment, please vote in the PSGA&#13;
elections.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
Acting President&#13;
PLATFORM&#13;
1. Assure student government&#13;
to be a viable and powerful force&#13;
to guarantee students "that what&#13;
they see is what they get."&#13;
2. fnstitute a sense of loyalty&#13;
among the Administration,&#13;
faculty, and student body.&#13;
3. Stamp out apathy of students&#13;
towards their government.&#13;
4. Promote the general welfare&#13;
of all students regardless of race,&#13;
color, creed, national origin, or&#13;
social status.&#13;
5. Reassert belief in a supreme&#13;
being and the dignity of all&#13;
peoples under one God.&#13;
6. Pledge to support the student&#13;
body and uphold the rights of all&#13;
students in all matters under the&#13;
law. d '11&#13;
7 Condemn drug abuse an WI&#13;
vig~rously oppose the ille~al&#13;
distribution and use of narcotics&#13;
and dangerous drugs on the&#13;
campus. .&#13;
8. Deplore the pollutIOn of our&#13;
environment and oppose any&#13;
attempt to install any system thaI&#13;
will add to our present air, water,&#13;
or other pollution on the campus.&#13;
Frederick Lawrence&#13;
Candidate for Vice--Pres.&#13;
..~**~*****&#13;
TOM WEISS&#13;
What is Parks ide Student&#13;
Government missing?&#13;
The students oE Parkside need&#13;
a viable government structure&#13;
which has the power to affect&#13;
change and create full implementation&#13;
of student ideas and&#13;
resources.&#13;
Advocation and applicatioo are&#13;
two different things. What&#13;
students say tbey wanl and need&#13;
is one lbing, being able 10 bring&#13;
~ese wants and needs to reality&#13;
IS another.&#13;
In order to have needed&#13;
changes at Parkside, we must&#13;
initiate vehicles which can bring&#13;
such change about. These&#13;
vehicles must be created in the&#13;
form of:&#13;
1. A student court and jury.&#13;
Here students and faculty work&#13;
together to decide; for example,&#13;
the validity of tickets received by&#13;
students, the validity of&#13;
disciplinary action initiated by&#13;
the University against a student~&#13;
the validity of all types oE fines&#13;
levied upon students, and the&#13;
resolution of other student -&#13;
University conflicts.&#13;
2. More powerful student&#13;
committees and boards. Here .....e&#13;
make decisions needed in the&#13;
proper operation of the Union and&#13;
related student activities&#13;
3. The creation or proper lines&#13;
of communication bet~een the&#13;
student government and the&#13;
university. Here wvre "'ill enable&#13;
the realization of equitable&#13;
decisions and solutions to all&#13;
student related problems as&#13;
OPIX&gt;sedto decisions favoring the&#13;
interests of the administration&#13;
and of the parties sympathetic 10&#13;
the University power structure&#13;
-Bruce Volpmtesta, Joe ltams,&#13;
and 1 will make such vehicles a&#13;
Pa rkside reality.&#13;
CHAMPIOS TER\tPAPERS&#13;
636 ~acon t. C'o. 505)&#13;
Boston. Mas. 0'2'215&#13;
61 j .536-9700&#13;
Research m..'tt"ll. teor T~&#13;
R~rs. The'Soft.~lC l.owEST PRICES&#13;
QUICK SERViCE For "'~'-'&#13;
pl~ll~ wt,t~ or cell.&#13;
Wed .• Oct. 18. 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Senate ..*......*****&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz,&#13;
Ta e a tiP from Hot Horse Herbie "do no on&#13;
hundred percent a sucker' Ch ,lout ..&#13;
Ken Konkol&#13;
Student Go~ermnenl ha !&gt;em&#13;
havmgalotoftroUbieth t twe&#13;
years at Par Ide "Mus&#13;
pnmanJy been due to th quahty&#13;
of person that has been elected 10&#13;
ofIice. Then bas been a great&#13;
deal or problem in e-en reach!&#13;
a quorum m order 10 hold a&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Student Gccernment cannot&#13;
begin to operate efle&lt;:tJ,e1y unul&#13;
the present con utuucn IS&#13;
replaced by a oriulble one. Abo&#13;
\"Oters must carefully consider&#13;
the type of persoe they \'01 for.&#13;
In the po I, bl of peopl ha'e&#13;
been ~oled In that caMOt "orIt&#13;
ellect"..,lj· ,,·,th others&#13;
I "00'1 go uuc greal deta.,1 00&#13;
my quahficallons for office •I&#13;
people "bo 1m me at all kn...&#13;
how Ithmk I ha' e been "" the&#13;
udent Senate lnee Ib for·&#13;
mal100 and ha~e 'lA.T1Uenfor the&#13;
campus new paper for the pasl&#13;
three ·... rs \\'h&lt;n sam thmg&#13;
bothers me. 1 lend 10exp mj&#13;
oplt'Uon on It, "'hether ~t lO •&#13;
campus. adrmnL ..trator. • I I&#13;
leglalor or th go-ernor&#13;
As a TIler for the paper. I I&#13;
mlo a lot of Lhn~5 1 know .. hat&#13;
makes thIS campus Uelt, and I&#13;
shall keep I&lt;)"ng to bnn th&#13;
sludenl 1010his nglllful pia 00&#13;
campus. not let h,m be shO\'ed&#13;
Ide and ne ected.&#13;
Weare hound 10lose sam good&#13;
quahlY people 10th nale.n th&#13;
presidential race lnc~ only on&#13;
pe.-, can be elected to th&#13;
olh"" _lore can be accomplished&#13;
'IA.,l.hm the Senate than Without It&#13;
ThaI I "h} 1 run for the pool 01&#13;
senator HO'IA.ever. anyone that&#13;
feels the urg rna) ....Tlle me In for&#13;
president&#13;
Oct. 23-25&#13;
*****************&#13;
,..Student Governm nt ,..&#13;
~Elections&#13;
,.. ~&#13;
~GET OUT &amp; VOTE ~ I 7rJii~.&#13;
~***** ..*...***..***~Li::&#13;
ERIC CUSHMAN MOORE&#13;
" t pSS ...&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
..&#13;
..._---- -- --_.....-&#13;
_1.-__ -- _ .....,- --- -_......._._ ..&#13;
...-..._-- -&#13;
Damon Runyon once wrote. "The race&#13;
-------- -- IS not alway. 10 the SWltt&#13;
Of the banle 411w,ysto the it,.on&amp;- but It'S' &amp;ood way to be ..&#13;
JOURNAUSM IS A GOOD WAYTO BET&#13;
%ANGER&#13;
Officer Candidates ed ., Oct. 11, 972 TH PARKSIO RA G R&#13;
1 could promise _you the wo~ld, .... ******** Senate&#13;
d once elected give you nothmg&#13;
an turn The reason for such a ·n re · 1 tement is due to the&#13;
st~ssurance of the. attitudes and&#13;
unrefs of the elected senators;&#13;
ror I as president Of the S~Udent&#13;
vernrnent I am responsible to&#13;
~o titute and call meetings of the&#13;
insnate. The voting which will&#13;
:ke place on specific issues is&#13;
decided by all senators and not by&#13;
the president alone.&#13;
If any candi~ate for ~he office&#13;
of president 1s makmg such&#13;
mises, he cannot be con-&#13;
~ered competent for the office&#13;
t,ecause of his lack of knowledge&#13;
of the student government&#13;
proceedings. Your next President,&#13;
Thomas E. Haack&#13;
Shawn Clements&#13;
for Vice-President&#13;
The reasons I am seeking officership&#13;
as vice-president of&#13;
student government are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
1. Student government should&#13;
represent student ideals and&#13;
wishes. This has not been so in&#13;
the past.&#13;
2. Students have no voice in the&#13;
administration of policies at&#13;
Parkside. This should be changed&#13;
now.&#13;
3. The so-called student union&#13;
though a temporary one, should&#13;
be made more realistic now.&#13;
4. As a senior at this institution&#13;
I have seen student governmen~&#13;
come and go, and I think it is&#13;
about time the student government&#13;
did something to earn the&#13;
respect of the students and administration&#13;
as well.&#13;
The most important task to be&#13;
endea~ored by student government&#13;
1s to establish a "student&#13;
voice" in the function of&#13;
Parkside. We tried advocation in&#13;
the past, let's give application a&#13;
chance. Let's take a look at some&#13;
student government action. It's&#13;
about time Parkside matured.&#13;
JOE HARRIS&#13;
Candidate for Vice-President&#13;
Student Government&#13;
• lll ll IHI COMFORT Of YOUI CAR&#13;
i&#13;
: (1: ~\\ ~vfi"&#13;
' /,. ~ BURGER&#13;
~ -- FAMILY&#13;
• PAPA BURGER • MAMA BURGER&#13;
• TUN 8UR61R • BUY IUR6lR&#13;
CARRY-OUTS CALL AHU D 'l'OUfl ~I.OU Will I( l(AD,&#13;
-'"d Shr,mp •·&#13;
HJt CALLON Of 1.00l 1((1 WITH 5,- 00 01.0U&#13;
: .._,u NOUH or MIOCITY TH(Al(I&#13;
ON \HUIOA N flOAO&#13;
[ 552-8404 j&#13;
A &amp;. W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN Sh..,,d~" ltd Hv ]2 Norrh&#13;
Kenosha HOll\ 0.\tll II .\ ._. TO 11 r r.1&#13;
\IJ.., ... U. "40HTH\&#13;
I I A Y TO MIOMIGHT&#13;
The reasons I · am r · agam for a position . unnmg&#13;
as follows: m PSGA are&#13;
1. I believe there is a&#13;
student counsellin n_eed for a&#13;
up of students wh! !~rv1~e ~ade&#13;
help counsel students e :lbng to&#13;
beyond academi a ve and&#13;
TOM WEISS Ken Konkol ERIC CUSH N MOOR&#13;
Parkside is c co~nselling. h . . a growmg a d&#13;
c angmg mstituti n 2 La on. · st semest . together a st e~ PSGA put&#13;
evaluation. I woul~li:;t-teach~r&#13;
be revised to to see this&#13;
project The b a ~ore permanent . as1c form and idea&#13;
:-o:t:~· bfut with a little mor! . . is orm could be ve&#13;
benef1c1al in student ry&#13;
planning. It might 1Program . a so have&#13;
son:i~ mfluence on facult&#13;
positions. Y&#13;
3. CCC is one of the most imp~rtant&#13;
and influential committees&#13;
on campus. I believe the&#13;
students can benefit much&#13;
·r th more I e CCC were more active in&#13;
the campus concern situation&#13;
4. Revision of the PSGA · ftu. cons&#13;
J . t~on. I know there is need for&#13;
rev1s1on of the constitution. By-&#13;
!aws are needed. The constitution&#13;
1s too general.&#13;
Parkside needs student involvement.&#13;
As Parkside gets&#13;
larger, the students should have a&#13;
larger coice in University&#13;
governance. We have a good start&#13;
-- let's keep going. If you can't&#13;
run for election in the g.:ivernment,&#13;
please vote in the PSGA&#13;
elections.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
Acting President&#13;
PLATFORM&#13;
1. Assure student government&#13;
to be a viable and powerful force&#13;
to guarantee students "that what&#13;
they see is what they get."&#13;
2. Institute a sense of loyalty&#13;
among the Administration,&#13;
faculty, and student body.&#13;
3. Stamp out apathy of students&#13;
towards their government.&#13;
4. Promote the general welfare&#13;
of all students regardless of race,&#13;
color, creed, national origin, or&#13;
social status. 5. Reassert belief in a supreme&#13;
being and the dignity of all&#13;
peoples under one God. 6. Pledge to support the student&#13;
body and uphold the rights of all&#13;
students in all matters under the&#13;
law.&#13;
7. Condemn drug abuse and will&#13;
vigorously oppose the iIJe~al&#13;
distribution and use of narcotics&#13;
and dangerous drugs on the&#13;
campus.&#13;
8. Deplore the pollution of our&#13;
environment and oppose any&#13;
attempt to install any system that&#13;
will add to our present air, water.&#13;
or other pollution on the campu Frederick Lawren e&#13;
Candidate for ice-Pre .&#13;
Sun., Oct. 22&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Admission 75c&#13;
Parkside and Wis. 1.0. req1ired&#13;
tud nt&#13;
1de need&#13;
tructure&#13;
to affect&#13;
Let me disclo e to you&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
Da&#13;
Of"&#13;
•••&#13;
kid!&#13;
if TO BET &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972&#13;
Parkside Potpourri&#13;
A&#13;
The Hawaiian trip is over half-filled. Interested&#13;
students are urged to act now and reserve a spot on this&#13;
great tour.&#13;
B&#13;
Nancy Michals. Oktoberfest Queen&#13;
c&#13;
Phy Ed meets modern design&#13;
D&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie in his "Penthouse"&#13;
E&#13;
Gov. Patrick Lucey and candidate Doug La Follette tour&#13;
campus.&#13;
B&#13;
Photos by Pat owak &amp; Craig Roberts&#13;
D&#13;
E&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972&#13;
Parkside Potpourri&#13;
The Hawaiian trip is over half-filled. Interested&#13;
students are urged to act now and reserve a spot on this&#13;
great tour.&#13;
B&#13;
N ncy Michals, Oktoberfest Queen&#13;
Phy Ed meets modern design&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie in his "Penthouse"&#13;
Gov. P trick Lucey and candidate Doug La Follette tour&#13;
c mpus.&#13;
B&#13;
Ph to by Pat owak &amp; Craig Robert&#13;
C&#13;
E&#13;
D &#13;
VIEWPOINT&#13;
;,..;---&#13;
By Shawn Clements&#13;
,,L Wed., Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
et me finish my beer"&#13;
. Professor Douglas La Follette led Gov Pat&#13;
smce id lTd .&#13;
roundParksl east ues ay, and since he's&#13;
LuceYl~professor I've heard of running for office&#13;
th~onear (excepting Dr. McGovern), I decided to&#13;
thl~~nto what make~ a political campaign.&#13;
100 Follette is runnmg for the State Senate from&#13;
La ha His Republican opponent is George W&#13;
~~~:so~.In the interest of fairness, I attempted t~&#13;
tact Anderson so I could get a look at his camCO"gnoperation.&#13;
This attempt was met by a brick&#13;
~;Ilof silence and "Don't call us, we'll call you's."&#13;
SO this is, admittedly, somewhat one-sided.&#13;
La Follette is assistant professor of chemistry at&#13;
Parkside. He's better known, though, as an&#13;
ecologist.&#13;
When one first. meet:' . La Follette, it can be&#13;
d"concerting. while waiting for the governor, we I:ot to La Follette's office at Kenosha. One&#13;
Weporterasked if he could turn on a light. "Do you&#13;
~ave something you want to read?" La Follette&#13;
asked. "If so, go ahead. If not, it's a waste of&#13;
etectricity. The sunlight's adequate." A quick check&#13;
revealed that La Follette has always done this __&#13;
reserving artificial lighting for times when it's&#13;
necessary.&#13;
La Follette's "campaign headquarters" are in his&#13;
home.One of the first things that struck me was the&#13;
business-like atmosphere of the place. Everywhere&#13;
it's an office ·th·&#13;
literature piled :~ thies, press statements and&#13;
though. u . All very neat and orderly.&#13;
"I believe in the 'Poi t ' . .&#13;
explains. "Every thin n~, pnnclple~" La Follette&#13;
to Point A, where it1:lon~~ ~one being used goes&#13;
The La Follette cam: .&#13;
examples of this d . patgn IS replete with&#13;
terized b th or. erliness. I heard it characscientificYc~mpaerig~ltll,clans&#13;
as "one of the rna t&#13;
J asked ve ever seen."&#13;
. La Follette what the main pomt 01 hi&#13;
campaign was. "I'm fed . - - .&#13;
elitist politics" he repl"ed AsuPWith politicians. and&#13;
. ' . an example of thi he&#13;
~mt.ed to a "free beer" event held last Tuesday&#13;
dvem~g, whe~e people were asked to chip in a $1&#13;
onation. ~unous, I attended the get-together&#13;
Affter dutIfully paying my one doUar. and geul~&#13;
~y ;ee beer, I talked to the people there. One girl&#13;
ad~ t any money. Her donation of 16 cents was&#13;
~onsl?ered good enough, however. (Can )'( J&#13;
,mag me that happening ata thousand-&lt;lollar-a-plate&#13;
dinner? )&#13;
~fter the gathering got underv.'ay, the political&#13;
speeches started. Surprisingly, they did not drag on&#13;
and on. Gov. Lucey said a few won:ls, as did La&#13;
Follette -- and then it was back to the beer drinking.&#13;
tan~ union pt'&lt;JpI " ~ In IU(!ndal'k't At thf'&#13;
~Uwnn • ,.hlch II lIy ga\ m _ to&#13;
about oom,tlung I'd In ""pi 01.- I&#13;
an ad dire tl'd 10 pl~ of m n n I&#13;
attacklllll La Foll \I&#13;
IlA. GEIl "II hal lour ",,"uon 01 tad'"&#13;
l \II .1 m r: "11' typoc I RepubllClln m r&#13;
tacuc ••&#13;
R..\. 'Gl-:R .. ml't ~ou both&#13;
Follelt '. tl'd. '00'111 lour JOb&#13;
!'hut dO\' n \menc n toto ....&#13;
l II ., mber •. '0 H "auIdn't do lhal nd&#13;
he' lor th "orI&lt;t'J' That hy I'm An&#13;
derson' nO! 110' lor th corporatJ n.• nd h •&#13;
b 109 lhe ,",ark rs"&#13;
RA.· ER "An) ""'or camm&#13;
l."AII '.""ber'··Y.ah Let m&#13;
Good poinl. I thou I I&#13;
dnn Ing. and my lOur&#13;
OnOthlng. that La Folleti. Oln lorh,m .. h&#13;
corps 0( \lIork .,,, n man mort:' h&#13;
though "That's the pn I pul t poilU&#13;
Th La Follette c.mpalgn.' I th c&#13;
man)' thJ.s:) r. II unde.r·n n&#13;
agam "Ilhmanyolh campal .It' lh A.&#13;
the VOIWlleOf W,thout th."", th lutW'O&#13;
nalOr from Kcnooh. "auld ,n IOn')'&#13;
,ndeed&#13;
MediaFair slated&#13;
OSHKOSH -- Radio-TV-film&#13;
students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Oshkosh are bringing&#13;
several outstanding radio, TV&#13;
and movie personalities to the&#13;
campus for their first "Media&#13;
Fair 72" Nov. 13 to 17.&#13;
Among those scheduled to give&#13;
talks are Paul Duke of the NBC&#13;
News Washington bureau, CBS&#13;
sportscaster Haywood Hale&#13;
Broun and "Oscar" winning&#13;
screenplay writer Dalton&#13;
Trumbo.&#13;
Programs will be held during&#13;
the day and evening on each of&#13;
the five days for the Media Fair&#13;
which is being funded by the&#13;
Oshkosh Student Association&#13;
Speakers Series and coordinated&#13;
by the radio-TV-film section of&#13;
the speech department, Alpha&#13;
Epsilon Rho chapter at the&#13;
university and the Reeve Union&#13;
fine arts committee.&#13;
All sessions will be open to the&#13;
public without charge.&#13;
Paul Duke will speak on the&#13;
1972 Presidential campaign.&#13;
Dalton Trumbo will have an&#13;
opendiscussion on the Hollywood&#13;
scene and writing for the movies&#13;
on Tuesday evening, Nov. 14.&#13;
Trumbo won the 1971 Cannes&#13;
International Film Festival&#13;
Award for "Johnny Got His&#13;
r..AB·O·RT·ioNS····&#13;
~FREERelerral to N.Y. Clinic.&#13;
12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
$150&#13;
CALL&#13;
CONTROLLED&#13;
:PARENTHOOD&#13;
(a non. profit organiL.ation)&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
DAVID STOTT BLDG.&#13;
. (313) 964-0530 .............................&#13;
Jobs Are Available ... !&#13;
For FREE information&#13;
on stUdent assistance and&#13;
placem~n t program send&#13;
self-addressed STAMPED&#13;
envelope to the National&#13;
Placement Registry, 100 I&#13;
~TstIdaho St., Kalispell.&#13;
"1 59901&#13;
- NO GIMMICKS _&#13;
Gun," of which he was the writer,&#13;
director and producer. He also&#13;
received an "Oscar" for one of&#13;
his movie screenplays.&#13;
"Communications by Lasers,"&#13;
subject of a talk and threedimensional&#13;
photography&#13;
demonstration, will show how&#13;
laser beams can be used to&#13;
transmit telephone conversations,&#13;
TV programs and&#13;
communications data.&#13;
Cable television, the effects of&#13;
cable television on today's&#13;
commercial broadcasting and&#13;
regulation of cable television will&#13;
be discussed.&#13;
International television is the&#13;
subject of the talk to be given by&#13;
Colin Campbell, vice president of&#13;
ABC Films and director for its&#13;
international sales. There will&#13;
also be a 12-hour "Film Grab&#13;
Bag," consisting of a mixtur~ of&#13;
silent films, early sound mOVies,&#13;
comedies, dramas and European&#13;
movies.&#13;
t II La&#13;
.... h,·11&#13;
lJ""&#13;
Illu h my&#13;
umed my&#13;
Lady, are you terrorized?&#13;
Does a woman have to go&#13;
through life terrorized and&#13;
befuddled by a machine - namel)'&#13;
her own car? The Parkside&#13;
Women's caucus doesn'ttlunk so&#13;
and is taking steps to reverse this&#13;
cultural stereotype. Parkside&#13;
Women's Caucus is offering a Car&#13;
Clinic for all Parkside ~omen&#13;
students, faculty and staff who&#13;
would like to be able to tell a Ian&#13;
belt from a fuel pump.&#13;
The Car Clinic will be held&#13;
Sunday. Oct. 22. al 1 p.m. on the&#13;
north Side of the bus shelter III th&#13;
far east parking lot of the main&#13;
(Wood Road) campus (Bad&#13;
weather date will be announced&#13;
by posted nyers.)&#13;
Women are encouraged to&#13;
come dressed in grubbies and&#13;
should be prepared to "ark either&#13;
on their own car or on someone&#13;
else's. Procedures such as&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
PIZZA tnCHEN&#13;
Chiclced &amp; ltaliln Sluug. Bolllhers&#13;
free Deliveryto Perksl., Villi"&#13;
,,,,,,, 6S1-S''''&#13;
checking oil and changmg a tire&#13;
"III be demonstratl'd&#13;
Regular Parkslde Women's&#13;
.... h d on&#13;
.t 7':10 p m&#13;
Ca ...&#13;
II l'd&#13;
lOLL&#13;
m&#13;
y ,&#13;
0·174&#13;
n&#13;
run&#13;
HITESKELLAR&#13;
\. (north lounle&#13;
\'\ Greenquist Halll&#13;
\.;V~TA'''' E"'~ '1M'&#13;
1 '.11. Thrsday. Oct. 19&#13;
1 mberrOI&#13;
i it Our&#13;
IER BR&#13;
at&#13;
135022nd A enue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
H&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
.." " " ". " " ",&#13;
Cham- Tap-Bar&#13;
25' r Durand&#13;
Racine. Wls,&#13;
edh~gne on Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches 0&#13;
............................. and Pizza ,.".,, cXJ, 0:.&#13;
J!JEWPOINT&#13;
~&#13;
'' L Wed., Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKSID&#13;
et Ille finish my be&#13;
R G RS&#13;
By Shawn Clements r' . e professor Douglas La Follette led Gov Pat&#13;
sine ·d l t T · around Parks1 e as uesday, and since he's&#13;
Lucey I' h d f · Jy professor ve ear o runnmg for office&#13;
thf/;ear (excepting Dr. M:&lt;?overn), I decided to&#13;
~k into what make~ a political campaign.&#13;
La Follette is runm~g for the State Senate from&#13;
OSha. His Republican opponent is George w&#13;
!{en · t t ff · · Anderson. In them eres o a1rness, I attempted to&#13;
contact Ande.rson s~ I could get a look at his cam-&#13;
·gn operation. This attempt was met by a brick ~;ll of silence and "Don't call us, we'll call you's.,,&#13;
So this is, adi:iiitte~ly, somewhat one-sided.&#13;
La Follette 1s assistant professor of chemistry at&#13;
Parkside. He's better known, though, as an&#13;
ecologist.&#13;
When one first. mee~ . La Follette, it can be&#13;
disconcerting. While wa1tmg for the governor we&#13;
went to La Follette's office at Kenosha. 'one&#13;
reporter asked if he could turn on a light. "Do you&#13;
have something you want to read?" La Follette&#13;
asked. "If so, go ahead. If not, it's a waste of&#13;
electricity. The sunlight's adequate." A quick check&#13;
revealed that La Follette has always done this __&#13;
reserving artificial lighting for times when it's&#13;
necessary.&#13;
La Follette's "campaign headquarters" are in his&#13;
home. One of the first things that struck me was the&#13;
business-like atmosphere of the place. Everywhere&#13;
Media Fair slated •&#13;
OSHKOSH -- Radio-TV-film&#13;
students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Oshkosh are bringing&#13;
several outstanding radio, TV&#13;
and movie personalities to the&#13;
campus for their first "Media&#13;
Fair 72" Nov. 13 to 17.&#13;
Gun," of which he was the writer,&#13;
director and producer. He also&#13;
received an "Oscar" for one of&#13;
his movie screenplays.&#13;
Lady, are you terrori ?&#13;
•&#13;
Among those scheduled to give&#13;
talks are Paul Duke of the NBC&#13;
News Washington bureau, CBS&#13;
sportscaster Haywood Hale&#13;
Broun and "Oscar" winning&#13;
screenplay writer Dalton&#13;
Trumbo.&#13;
Programs will be held during&#13;
the day and evening on each of&#13;
the five days for the Media Fair&#13;
which is being funded by the&#13;
Oshkosh Student Association&#13;
Speakers Series and coordinated&#13;
by the radio-TV-film section of&#13;
the speech department, Alpha&#13;
Epsilon Rho chapter at the&#13;
university and the Reeve Union&#13;
fine arts committee.&#13;
All sessions will be open to the&#13;
public without charge.&#13;
Paul Duke will speak on the&#13;
1972 Presidential campaign.&#13;
Dalton Trumbo will have an&#13;
open discussion on the Hollywood&#13;
scene and writing for the movies&#13;
on Tuesday evening, Nov. 14.&#13;
Trumbo won the 1971 Cannes&#13;
International Film Festival&#13;
Award for "Johnny Got His&#13;
:··· .......................... . l ABORTIONS&#13;
l FREE Referral to N.Y. Clinic.&#13;
1 12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
$150&#13;
CALL&#13;
CONTROLLED&#13;
PARENTHOOD&#13;
(a non.profit organilation)&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
DAVID STOTT BLDG.&#13;
. (313) 964-0530 :&#13;
·····························•&#13;
Jobs Are Available ... !&#13;
For FREE information&#13;
on student assistance and&#13;
placeJ:Trent program send&#13;
self-addressed ST AMPED&#13;
envelope to the National&#13;
Placement Registry, 1001&#13;
~ st Idaho St., Kalispell, " 1T 59901&#13;
- NO GIMMICKS -&#13;
" Communications by Lasers,"&#13;
subject of a talk and threedi&#13;
men siona l photogra phy&#13;
demonstration, will show how&#13;
laser beams can be used to&#13;
transmit telephone conversations,&#13;
TV programs and&#13;
communications data.&#13;
Cable television, the effects of&#13;
cable television on today's&#13;
commercial broadcasting and&#13;
regula tion of cable television will&#13;
be discussed.&#13;
International television is the&#13;
subject of the talk to be given by&#13;
Colin Campbell, vice president of&#13;
ABC Films and director for its&#13;
international sales. There will&#13;
also be a 12-hour "Film Grab&#13;
Bag," consisting of a mixtur~ of&#13;
silent films, early sound movies,&#13;
comedies, dramas and European&#13;
movies.&#13;
Does a woman ha\·e to o&#13;
through life terrorized and&#13;
befuddled by a machine - name \&#13;
her own car" The Par · 1d°&#13;
Women' Caucus doesn' thin· o&#13;
and is taking tep- tor \er th&#13;
cultural tereotype. Par td&#13;
\\.'omen· Caucu i offenn a r&#13;
Clinic for all Par ide ,omen&#13;
student . faculty and taff ho&#13;
would like to be able to tell a fan&#13;
belt from a fuel pump&#13;
The Car Clinic "111 be h ld&#13;
unday. Oct. 22. at 1 pm on th&#13;
north 1de of the b h r far ea t parkin lot of the m m&#13;
(\\'ood Road) campu B d&#13;
weather date will be nnoun&#13;
by po ted Oyer.,.)&#13;
Women are encour&#13;
come dr ed m grubb1&#13;
hould be prepared to&#13;
on their O\\ n car or on&#13;
el e' Procedure&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bo111lters&#13;
Free Del~ery to Parksi•• Yill•t•&#13;
1011 JOI/, At1n•1 ,,,., 6l1-lf'1&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
1&#13;
hon&#13;
F T&#13;
a ional Bank&#13;
of eno h&#13;
......................................................... -..... . . ~-- . Cham-Tap-Bar&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis. .&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
ap&#13;
Ham Sandw ·ches 0&#13;
and Pizza O . ................................................................ &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
~ K nosba School 808M! is&#13;
I 109for ..·olunteen to work in&#13;
!he 'allOnal Rlght to Read&#13;
Program Th1S would entail&#13;
work,ng w,lh lourth and liIlh&#13;
grade el mentary tudents appro&#13;
trn lely two hours per week.&#13;
For more ,nformation contact&#13;
Dr Vlrglnla HawkUlS, reading&#13;
con ul tant , Keno ha Public&#13;
hool •01653- 2371. extension 61,&#13;
01' Education OWl Ion Gree:nquist&#13;
318. $53-2lt10&#13;
•&#13;
Pltk ,d Iud nt Actlvitie&#13;
Board 10,11 P nt "B,g Jake"&#13;
3 part 01 Its conlInulng&#13;
I ture Iilm ser,&#13;
1'hf; rnO"1 lars John Wayne&#13;
nd R.chard Boon In lh Iilm&#13;
J hn wayne play·· BIg Jake&#13;
" andel. who ha h.. grandson&#13;
ludn pped by a band 01 outlaw&#13;
I by R. hard B ne Haring 01 '1. 8. Jak ts cut to lind hi&#13;
ran n nd ,n the p there&#13;
pretty Iypocal John&#13;
\'")"n cllon&#13;
Th mo" ,,111 be hewn at 8&#13;
pm nd the adml ·.00 pnce IS 7S&#13;
c nt YOUf WI conSln and&#13;
P rk ,de lOS are required&#13;
•&#13;
I) rk.ldt tudents (or&#13;
I ,o,·em and lhe ne,,·ly lormed&#13;
r"Jark. Ide Educators for&#13;
"teO I.ern are sponsonng a&#13;
Te h·lnlorMcCovemlobeheld&#13;
ot the Library-Learning Center&#13;
from 11'30 a m to 1'30 p.m.&#13;
wednesday, OCt 2S During lhis&#13;
two-hour period various memrs&#13;
of lhe laculty and starr. as&#13;
" II as m mbers 01 lhe tudent&#13;
body, ".11 peak on behalf of lhe&#13;
\1 ~f'rn~ nver ticKet.&#13;
Present plans also call lor the&#13;
appearance of a Democrat of&#13;
!'.Om national stature.&#13;
•&#13;
,x instrumental music&#13;
tudents at The University 01&#13;
WI5COI"lIn-Parkside will pl'esent&#13;
a lree pubhc concert atS p.m. on&#13;
Thursday lOcI. 19) in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room&#13;
A Parkside poetry Forum will&#13;
be held on OCI. 30 in the Ubrary'&#13;
Learning Center at 8 p.m.&#13;
Featured will be James Chapsom,&#13;
who has written with&#13;
Parkside resident poet James&#13;
Uddy. Also leatured will be a&#13;
student who writes in English as&#13;
well as in Spanish, Daniel&#13;
Ramerez.&#13;
The readings will take place in&#13;
the second Ooor lounge, which is&#13;
located behind the rare book&#13;
room.&#13;
•&#13;
The Whiteskellar Colfee House&#13;
will present live on stage local&#13;
talent, Dave Rogers. Rogers will&#13;
appear Thursday. OCt. 19, at I&#13;
p.m. He is a Parkside student and&#13;
his act will cover a variety of&#13;
music ranging from blues to folk&#13;
rock Wluteskellar is open (rom 1&#13;
1I1I 3 pm&#13;
•&#13;
Parkside Young Republicans&#13;
.and Young Voters for the&#13;
President will be holding a joint&#13;
meeting Friday, Oct. 20, from&#13;
l1:30a.m. to 1 p.m. in room 0~174&#13;
LLC. ew campaign strategy&#13;
will be discussed.&#13;
The Hawaii Trip is over hall&#13;
•&#13;
lilled. according 10Bill iebohr,&#13;
coordinator of Student Life.&#13;
The nine-day trip will last from&#13;
Jan 5 to 14and costs $Z74 plus $20&#13;
lax and service.&#13;
Interested travelers are ad·&#13;
vised to register in the Student&#13;
Activities Ollice. LLC Hm. 0-197,&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
•&#13;
Vilas Master String Quartet will&#13;
open the 1972-73 University Artists&#13;
Concert series at UWParkside&#13;
with a program at 3&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, OCt. 22, in Room&#13;
103Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Tiekets will be available at lhe&#13;
door. General admission is $2;&#13;
admission for Parkside students&#13;
and staff and lheir immediate&#13;
lamilies is $1 (children 12 and&#13;
under are admitted Cree).&#13;
President John C. Weaver has&#13;
scheduled business trips to all 13&#13;
Wliversities in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system before the end&#13;
of the year.&#13;
He will be accompanied by a&#13;
lew members 01bis stafl on each&#13;
tri&#13;
~'eaver and his staff will visit&#13;
the Parkside campus on Monday,&#13;
Nov. 20.&#13;
Students for McGovern&#13;
•&#13;
will&#13;
hold a meeting in LLC 0-174 on&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 19, Irom 2 to 4&#13;
p.m. All students and faculty are&#13;
invited. This will be an important&#13;
strategy meeting, as well as a&#13;
coordinating effort with other&#13;
area McGovern offices.&#13;
"Recipe for Making&#13;
•&#13;
a Moon"&#13;
will be the topic of a free public&#13;
lecture by Dr. Larry A. Haskin,&#13;
professor of chemistry at !he&#13;
University of Wisconsin·Madlson&#13;
and 1970 ASA award winner for&#13;
his work with lunar rock samples,&#13;
at a: 15 p.rn. on Friday (OCI.&#13;
20) in Tallent Hall at The&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
The Philanthropist Club, a&#13;
•&#13;
social organization that has been&#13;
operating lor the last three&#13;
semesters, will hold a Casino&#13;
Night this saturday. It will be&#13;
held in the Student Activities&#13;
Building Irom 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.&#13;
"The Existential World of&#13;
•&#13;
Norman Mailer" is a course&#13;
being offered by the university&#13;
extension. The class will run for&#13;
five consecutive Tuesdays&#13;
beginning Oct. 17. Taught by&#13;
Walter Graffin. asst. professor 01&#13;
English, the class will be concerned&#13;
with the concepts that&#13;
unite Mailer's writings and his&#13;
life which emphasize his feelings&#13;
on action, power and sex. The&#13;
cost will be $11 or $16 for a&#13;
married couple, and registration&#13;
forms are available in Room 206&#13;
Talent Hall, the UW-P extension&#13;
office. Registration must be&#13;
completed before Oct. 10. For&#13;
further information, call 553-2312.&#13;
Poetry Corner&#13;
SPIRIT&#13;
Espirit de Corp .,. Soul ... Heart ... Ad Infinitum&#13;
Who cares Nation ... Church ... Society ... Ad Absurdum&#13;
Why Give .. ' a .'. damn .,. Ad Nauseatum&#13;
._ Barry E. Jones&#13;
War and Peace&#13;
'Great White&#13;
Hope' here&#13;
"CASINO NICHT"&#13;
ORIIIIUlIO&#13;
OAMIUIIO&#13;
BAR MAIDS&#13;
ROULmES&#13;
DiCE OAMES&#13;
CIIUCK-A-LUO&#13;
POKER TABLES&#13;
Good .. , bad ... infinite; indifferent&#13;
SO&#13;
ugly ... beautiful ... WHICH&#13;
WAR is Peace?&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents the movie, "The Great&#13;
White Hope," in the Student&#13;
Activities Building on Friday,&#13;
Oct. 20, and on Sunday, oct. 23.&#13;
The movie is based on the true&#13;
story of Jack Johnson, the first&#13;
black heavy·weight boxing&#13;
champ in the United States, and&#13;
his struggle to keep his crown.&#13;
The story stars James Earl&#13;
Johnson and Jane Alexander. For&#13;
her performance in the movie&#13;
Miss Alexander received the&#13;
academy award nomination.&#13;
As the long running hit on the&#13;
New York stage, the play&#13;
received the pulitzer Prize, the&#13;
New York Critics Award, and the&#13;
Tony Award.&#13;
Showings wilL_be at. S p.m.&#13;
Friday - and 7~30 ·p.m.' Sunday.&#13;
Admission is 75 cents on both&#13;
nights and Parkside and state&#13;
IDs are required.&#13;
F. Lee Bailey&#13;
to lecture&#13;
at UW-p&#13;
The Student Activities office&#13;
has announced that the famous&#13;
criminal lawyer, F. Lee Bailey,&#13;
will lecture here Nov. 10 at 8 p.m.&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
building.&#13;
Mr. Tony Totero, coordinator&#13;
of Student Services, said, "He&#13;
rose to fame with the Sam&#13;
Shephard murder trial. ... He&#13;
defended the Boston Strangler,&#13;
William Calley and is presently&#13;
representing former Governorof&#13;
Illinois and Judge Otto Kerner.&#13;
Tickets will go on sale on OCt&#13;
23 at the information office,Rm&#13;
201 Tallent Hall, and al&#13;
Bidingers, Kook-Geer Records&#13;
and J.J Records and Tapel off&#13;
campus.&#13;
Admission prices are $1 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff, and&#13;
$1.50 for general admission.&#13;
BUCK JACK&#13;
CRAP TABLES&#13;
FORTUNE WHEEl&#13;
GAMES&#13;
lET'S MAKE A DEAL&#13;
TO TELL THE TRUTH&#13;
P-RIZES &amp; SURPRISES&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
{appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
631-8461&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
itA BIG AUCTION IN THE END"&#13;
SATURD ~, OCTOBER 21 9 P.M. 1 AaM.&#13;
All inion ~1ts (illcl.des ~SOQDO Oalllhiint Money)&#13;
StN«"e AdUidie. 'C,.tUtC9 p~ &amp; 1Q~, 1.7:&gt;, ~e4&#13;
Dancers Wanted&#13;
U lJJ[ijJ CDCiJ CiJ(g ill&#13;
PSGAPresident&#13;
§CDCiJ(l!JGJ (B[bl3 OOC3GJU0&#13;
Vice President&#13;
iJiJ (jJGJ GJlLrn[3§U UC(Bm13Vfr&#13;
Au. &amp; Pd. for by Haack &amp; Clements Comm., J. petwe ChrJP'&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972&#13;
T&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
HATS HAPPE ING&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Hawa11 Trip i over half&#13;
filled, rdm to Bill , 'iebuhr,&#13;
rdmator of tudent Llfe. Th nine-&lt;la) trip will la t from&#13;
Jan 5 to 14 and cost $Z14 plu $20&#13;
ta and rvic .&#13;
lnt •r ted travelers are ad-&#13;
,i. d to regi ter in the tudent&#13;
ct1v ill ffice, LLC Rm. D-197,&#13;
a . oon a possible.&#13;
The niversity • or Wisconsin&#13;
Vilas faster String Quartet will&#13;
open the 1972-73 niversity Arti&#13;
Concert eries at UWPark&#13;
1de with a program at 3&#13;
p.m. on unday, Oct. 22 , in Room&#13;
103 Greenqui t Hall.&#13;
Ticket Y.ill be available at the&#13;
door. General admission is $2 ;&#13;
admi ion for Parkside students&#13;
and taff and their immediate&#13;
rt famili i $1 (children 12 and&#13;
\D'lder are admitted Cree).&#13;
President John C. Weaver has&#13;
eduled bu ine trips to all 13&#13;
wuversities in the niversit of&#13;
Wisconsin } tern before the end&#13;
of the ·ear. He will be accompanied by a&#13;
f , members or his staff on each&#13;
tri ~;eaver and his tarr will visit&#13;
th Parkside campu on Monday,&#13;
'o • 20.&#13;
•&#13;
.. R ipe for faking a foon "&#13;
will be the topic of a free public&#13;
I tur by Dr. Larry A. Haskin,&#13;
prof · r of chemistry at The&#13;
'niv ity of Wi consin-Madison&#13;
and 1970 ASA award winner for&#13;
hi work with lunar rock sampl&#13;
, at 8: 15 p.m. on Friday (Oct.&#13;
20) in Tallent Hall at The&#13;
niver it of WisconsinPark&#13;
ide.&#13;
The Philanthropist • Club, a&#13;
ocial organization that has been&#13;
operating for the last three&#13;
emesters, will hold a Casino&#13;
ight this Saturday. It will be&#13;
held in the Student Activities&#13;
Building from 9 p.m. to 1 a .m.&#13;
" The Existential • World of&#13;
orman Mailer" is a course&#13;
being offered by the university&#13;
extension. The class will run for&#13;
five consecutive Tuesdays&#13;
beginning Oct. 17. Taught by&#13;
Walter Graffin, asst. professor of&#13;
English, the class will be concerned&#13;
with the concepts that&#13;
unite Mailer's writings and his&#13;
life which emphasize his feelings&#13;
on action, power and sex. The&#13;
cost will be $11 or $16 for a&#13;
married couple, and registration&#13;
forms are available in Room 206&#13;
Talent Hall, the UW-P extension&#13;
office. Registration must be&#13;
completed before Oct. 10. For&#13;
further information, call 553-2312.&#13;
"CASINO NIGHT''&#13;
DRI KINI&#13;
A IUNO&#13;
BAR AIDS&#13;
ROUlfflES&#13;
DICE IA ES&#13;
BLACK JACK&#13;
CRAP TABLES&#13;
FORTUNE WHEEL&#13;
GAMES&#13;
C CK-A-LUO&#13;
LET'S MAKE A DEAL&#13;
TO TELL THE TRUTH&#13;
POKER TABLES PRIZES &amp; SURPRISES&#13;
11A BIC AUCTION IN THE END"&#13;
ATURD i, OCTOBER 21 9 P.M. 1 A.M.&#13;
Poetry Corner&#13;
__ Barry E. Jones&#13;
SPIRIT&#13;
Espirit de Corp ... Soul ... Heart ... Ad Infinitum&#13;
Who cares d&#13;
ation ... Church ... Society ... Ad Absur um&#13;
Why&#13;
Give ... a ... damn ... Ad Nauseatum&#13;
War and Peace&#13;
Good ... bad ... infinite; indifferent&#13;
0&#13;
ugly ... beautiful ... WHICH&#13;
WAR is Peace?&#13;
'Great White&#13;
Hope' here&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents the movie, "The Great&#13;
White Hope," in the Student&#13;
Activities Building on Friday,&#13;
Oct. 20, and on Sunday, Oct. 23.&#13;
The movie is based on the true&#13;
story of Jack Johnson, the first&#13;
black heavy-weight boxing&#13;
champ in the United States, and&#13;
his struggle to keep his crown.&#13;
The story stars James Earl&#13;
Johnson and Jane Alexander. For&#13;
her performance in the movie&#13;
Miss Alexander received the&#13;
academy award nomination.&#13;
As the long running hit on the&#13;
New York stage, the play&#13;
received the Pulitzer Prize, the&#13;
New York Critics Award, and the&#13;
Tony Award. Showings will be at 8 p.m.&#13;
Friday and 7:30 p.m. Sunday.&#13;
Admission is 75 cents on both&#13;
nights and Parkside and state&#13;
IDs are required.&#13;
F. Lee Bailey&#13;
to lecture&#13;
at UW-P&#13;
The Student Activities office&#13;
has announced that the famou&#13;
criminal lawyer, F. Lee Bail y,&#13;
will lecture here Nov. JO at 8 p.m&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
building.&#13;
Mr. Tony Totero, coordinator&#13;
of Student Services, said, "H&#13;
rose to fame with the m&#13;
Shephard murder trial. .. H&#13;
defended the Boston Strangler,&#13;
William Calley and is presenUy&#13;
representing former Governor or&#13;
Illinois and Judge Otto Kerner&#13;
Tickets will go on sale on Oct&#13;
23 at the information office, Rm&#13;
201 Tallent Hall, and at&#13;
Bidingers, Kook-Geer Records&#13;
and J-J Records and Tape&amp; cif&#13;
campus.&#13;
Admission prices are $1 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff, and&#13;
$1.50 for general admission.&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
(appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
U IJJ 00 [IJ(D (D(B (]&#13;
PSGA President&#13;
§aJaJWGJ CBCb~OOll'D'Ue&#13;
Vice President&#13;
/HJ GJru mCILr~§U uuCBm£3'i1cc&#13;
Au. &amp; Pd, for by Haack &amp; Clements Comm,, J. Petzke ChrJll• &#13;
ON THE WEEKEND&#13;
Penalty kick&#13;
The 17th Annual Notre Dame&#13;
Cross Country Invitational saw&#13;
t~o new records set Friday. The&#13;
first came Irom Mike Slack 01&#13;
North Dakota State who won the&#13;
l~dlvldual title in 23:44.2 over the&#13;
fIve mile course, besting Olympic&#13;
gold medalist Dave Wottle's old&#13;
':l~rk. Parkside's Lucian Rosa&#13;
fImshed 15th in 24:16 for a&#13;
Parkside record and beat Dave&#13;
Antagnoli 01 Edinboro State, the&#13;
defending NAJA champ, in the&#13;
process.&#13;
Bowling Green won the team&#13;
title with 81 points in the ~leam&#13;
field followed in the lop five by&#13;
Eastern Michigan, Ball Slate.&#13;
Southern Illinois and Michigan.&#13;
The Rangers grabbed 24th.&#13;
Dennis Biel was Parkside's&#13;
second man at 59th while 'ed&#13;
Kessenich linished in t7Oth,Keith&#13;
Merritt in 183rd and Sid Hyde in&#13;
217lh.&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey called it the&#13;
Rangers' toughest meet of the&#13;
year.&#13;
Next home meet for Parkside is&#13;
. at noon, Oct. 28, when the&#13;
Rangers host tbe Third Annual&#13;
USTFF Mid American Championships.&#13;
The Rangers did well in their&#13;
last goll match 01 the season&#13;
placing filth 01 IS. The lirst place&#13;
team, UW-Madison. won with a&#13;
score of 320, followed by Northern&#13;
Illinois University learn one at&#13;
323, Northern illinois University&#13;
team two at 324, Uw-Le Crosse at&#13;
326, Parkside at 328, UW·&#13;
Whitewater and University of&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis at 329.&#13;
Medalists in the match Chuck&#13;
Voy, UW·Oshkosh, at 76. Pete&#13;
Nevins, UW-Parkside and Marl)'&#13;
Joyce, orthern Illinois tied fOl'&#13;
second with 77; Mike Soli Northern&#13;
Illinois, had a 78. Nevins&#13;
lost the second place trophy in a&#13;
. play off against ~\artyJoyce.&#13;
The Parkside team scores were&#13;
as follows; Pete Nevins, 77~ Tom&#13;
Bothe, 83; Dave Fox and Jim&#13;
Vakos 840 Rick Willemas, 89.&#13;
The 'next time the golfers will&#13;
see action is in the spring. 1&#13;
Carthage College Activities Board Presents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
: .&#13;
• Parkside :&#13;
• A • CI' " rvitres B d • oar .•&#13;
•&#13;
• Sponsors •&#13;
•&#13;
: a bus Irip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: VS, : Tickets s5 &amp; S4&#13;
: OHIO STATE : College Center Office&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME : ON SALE Carthage K noshal Cook-Gene (Racine)&#13;
: Saturday. October 28 .1~B~id:in:ge:r~s~M~US~iC~(D:o:w:nt~ow~n~e... ... ....•.....••••. ~&#13;
Carthage&#13;
Fieldhouse B L0 0 D Also Don Cooper&#13;
sWEATAND&#13;
TEARS&#13;
J&#13;
Before a recent meet, Coach Godfrey gives some&#13;
advice to his harriers. In the Notre Dame Invitational&#13;
this weekend, the harriers placed ..&#13;
14th. Lucian Rosa finished in 15th place. The&#13;
harriers next meet at home for the USTFF MidAmerica&#13;
Championship on the 28th.&#13;
Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
I&#13;
At a recent match an&#13;
unidentified Ranger&#13;
boots the ball. Last&#13;
weekend they booted&#13;
the ball enough for a&#13;
2-1 win in overtime&#13;
OVer LW-Platteville.&#13;
Saturday&#13;
October 28&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
,&#13;
j&#13;
!&#13;
BUSING PROBLEMS?&#13;
Riders needed to Racine&#13;
or service will be disconti&#13;
nued , Tell your&#13;
fri ends to ri de the bus.&#13;
Schedules ovai loble at&#13;
UW-p Information Office&#13;
or call Jewel Echelborger&#13;
ot 553-2342.&#13;
Wed" Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
•&#13;
unn for boot r&#13;
.1Ike ,'edel OVIC put In both 01&#13;
Parkside's goals ler the soec ... ,&#13;
teams second '41n of the ear.&#13;
beallng -Plauevill t-I The&#13;
wmmng goal ler tbe Rang&#13;
came on a penalty kick earl In&#13;
the first overtime penod&#13;
The Rangers &lt;Iommated lb&#13;
first half but JUSt couldn't find th&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
October 2\&#13;
ovember 1&#13;
tarqu&#13;
IU. Il&#13;
at P'anL"""&#13;
Ea rl lAln, 1\1&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
October 17&#13;
October:!ll&#13;
I.rqu&#13;
mpoo&#13;
at P&#13;
'p, Pol&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
October:!ll lSTn· .aue Illomen' C1uImpoo Ip,P.&#13;
Women~5 Gymnastics&#13;
October :!ll t Whit .t....&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
October 18 t Par de&#13;
:'olonday night is&#13;
"Ye Old uds ipping : II ..&#13;
at hakey' In R in,&#13;
sr a pi tcher for Pobst&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
l th,op 21&gt;t I Imo,tl&#13;
R "'" W. 5 40&#13;
Phone 633 307&#13;
-'1-&lt;1'-'" __01 ·· _ ...&#13;
..,..- -_.&#13;
OC . 18-24, 1972&#13;
Adulta-$l.50&#13;
_RICH LITTLE-HERB VOLAND&#13;
Rd,&#13;
Wed ., Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKS ID&#13;
Q,N THE WEEKE D&#13;
Penalty ki&#13;
The 17th Annual 'otre Dame&#13;
Cross Country Invitational w&#13;
t~o new records set Frida v Th&#13;
first came from like la or&#13;
~o~~ Dakota State who ·on th&#13;
1~d1v1dual title in 23: 44 _2 ov r th&#13;
five mile course, besting lympic&#13;
gold medalist Dave Wottte· old&#13;
~~k. Parkside's Lucian Rosa&#13;
finished 15th in 24:16 for a&#13;
Parkside record and beat Dave&#13;
Antagnoli of Edinboro ate the&#13;
defending NAIA champ m' th&#13;
process.&#13;
Bowling Green won the team&#13;
title with 81 points in the 30-team&#13;
field followed in the top five b_·&#13;
Eastern iichigan, Ball ate,&#13;
Southern Illinois and . lichi an.&#13;
The Ranger grabbed 24th .&#13;
Dennis Biel was Par ide".&#13;
second man at 5 th ·hile . 'ed&#13;
Kessenich finished in liOth. Keith&#13;
Merritt in 183rd and id Hvde n 217th. .&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrev called it the&#13;
Rangers' toughest· meet o the&#13;
year.&#13;
ext home meet for Par· id i&#13;
· at noon, Oct. 28. when the&#13;
Rangers host the Third Annual&#13;
USTFF 1id American Championships.&#13;
&#13;
Before a recent meet, Coach Godfrey gives some&#13;
advice to his harriers. In the Notre Dame Invitational&#13;
this weekend, the harriers placed ..&#13;
24th. Lucian Rosa finished in 15th place . The&#13;
harriers next meet at home for the USTFF MidAmerica&#13;
Championship on the 28th.&#13;
The Rangers did Y.ell m their&#13;
last golf match of the sea on&#13;
placing fifth of 15. Th fi t pl e&#13;
team, UW- tadison, Y.OO 1th a&#13;
score of 320, follow d b. , 'orthern&#13;
Illinois University team one a·&#13;
323, 'orthern Illinoi 'mv 1·:&#13;
team two at 324. \'-LaCro. _&#13;
326. Parkside at 328&#13;
Whitewater and Univers1t_&#13;
At a recent match an&#13;
unidentified Ranger&#13;
boots the bal 1. Last&#13;
Weekend they booted&#13;
the ball enough for a&#13;
2-1 win in overt ime&#13;
over LW-Platteville.&#13;
Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
!&#13;
Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
1issouri t. LoUJ at 329.&#13;
1edalists in the match Ch&#13;
Voy, ~-Oshkosh. at i6 P te&#13;
evins, ,\\'-Par ide and . art)&#13;
Joyce, 'orthern Illino1 lied f&#13;
second -....;th n: . like Ii , 'orthern&#13;
Illinois, had a 78 ·e,ins&#13;
lost the second place troph) m a&#13;
play off qgain t • larty Jo)&#13;
The Parkside team score re&#13;
as follow : Pete. 'evms ;-;· Tom&#13;
Bothe, 83: Dave Fo. and Jim&#13;
Vakos, 840 Rick Will ma ,&#13;
The next time the olf 111&#13;
see action i in the pr1 .&#13;
BUSING PROBLEMS?&#13;
Riders needed to Racine&#13;
or service will be discontinued.&#13;
Tel I your&#13;
friends to ride the bus.&#13;
Schedules avai I able at&#13;
LJW-P Information Of -&#13;
ice or call Je el Echelberger&#13;
at 553-2342.&#13;
Carthage College Activities Board Presents&#13;
Saturday&#13;
October 28&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Carthage&#13;
Fieldhouse&#13;
In Concert&#13;
BLOOD Also Don Cooper&#13;
SWEATAND&#13;
Tickets $5 &amp; $4 TEARS&#13;
arthage College Center Office . ON SALE C K nosha) cook-Gene (Racine) Bidingers Music (Downtown e&#13;
• fi r 0&#13;
C ED&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
Women's Gymnastics&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
I&#13;
RANG R 7&#13;
r &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., oct. 18.1972&#13;
SwIm Club.&#13;
coach Barb&#13;
Third Row:&#13;
front rOW (1 to r): Barb Kupper. Torn Bergo. Nancy Michals,&#13;
MorrIs. Second Row: Richard Harnrn.John Heigl, Rich Glover.&#13;
Dale MartIn, Pat HIll, Torn Hughes, Shirley Moore.&#13;
wim Club&#13;
According to club president Tom&#13;
Berge, the difficulty 01 a workout&#13;
can easily be told (rom the&#13;
redness of the swimmers' eyes.&#13;
"The main thing now is for&#13;
individuaJs to work on their&#13;
strokes and cut down their&#13;
times," said Coach Barbra Jo&#13;
Morris.&#13;
HWe need specialists, divers,&#13;
and just people who are willing to&#13;
compete. Even if they've never&#13;
competed before, they shouldn't&#13;
be discouraged Irom coming&#13;
because they're inexperienced.&#13;
There are quite a few members of&#13;
the club who never competed&#13;
before," she added.&#13;
Even though the workouts get&#13;
toegh, there is still that club&#13;
atmosphere. It isn't quite like&#13;
being on a varsity team where&#13;
one must show up for practice&#13;
every day. This way even the&#13;
people who don't have a lot 01&#13;
time to practice can still participate.&#13;
The club is currently in the oneyear&#13;
probation period required of&#13;
all sports before they become&#13;
varsity. For both the men and the&#13;
women, going varsity next year&#13;
is primarily a matter of money,&#13;
Photo by Craig Roberts&#13;
Working on strokes&#13;
Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
Curses! Foiled by an axle&#13;
An oversize tricycle&#13;
"built for eight" was&#13;
the entry by the ad&#13;
hoc Red Baron relay&#13;
team for the fourth&#13;
annua I I IT "Spr Ing&#13;
Thing~' The team finished&#13;
on the bottom&#13;
due to a broken axle.&#13;
pictured are Dave Reyher&#13;
and Marty Gregory.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
12S-page, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
Quality research papers. Enclose&#13;
$1.00 to cover postage and handling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 80024&#13;
(213)477·8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
YOUNG DRIVERS WEl(OMf&#13;
INSURANCE FOR&#13;
AUTOS· CYCLES - SCOOTERS&#13;
All forms Of Insurance&#13;
Professional Ser¥ice&#13;
With The Better Co's&#13;
Fire - Life - Hospital - Bolt~&#13;
Package Policies&#13;
DIAL %&#13;
~-36Ofl ,.,/ .". ~ ~/·"""·{I.J"'.! ..-..(;:j .....&#13;
J. R. MULICH&#13;
CARL H. JEHSEI'l&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
.. troke it!" 0, thi i not an&#13;
obscene proposition, but it could&#13;
well be the motto 01 the Parks ide&#13;
wrm Club.&#13;
On paper the club numbers 45,&#13;
but due to class schedule and&#13;
work conflicts. not everyone&#13;
shows up for practice at the same&#13;
time. I lucked out. The day I&#13;
chose for my interview turned out&#13;
to be the lowest turnout yet.&#13;
Practice is held every day lrom&#13;
3,30 to 5,30 p.m. during which&#13;
time the swimmers indulge in the&#13;
numerous delights of learning&#13;
nip turns, practicing flip turns.&#13;
and teaching other people flip&#13;
turns. Arter watching an hour's&#13;
worth 01 flip turns Irom the&#13;
relative salety of a starting&#13;
block, I am now able to&#13;
di tinguish a good Ilip turn Irom&#13;
• had flip turn. This is not&#13;
because I know what a good or a&#13;
had flip turn looks like, but&#13;
because I soon distovered that I&#13;
didn't get splashed if the turn was&#13;
properly executed.&#13;
In addition to nip turns, they&#13;
have been known to do a little&#13;
swimming, something on the&#13;
order 01 two to three miles a day.&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART nME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
according to Coach Morris.&#13;
There are advantages to being&#13;
a club rather than a varsity sport,&#13;
one of them being that there is a&#13;
wider range of appeal in a club&#13;
than in going out for a team.&#13;
Even if swimming becomes&#13;
varsity next year, Coach Morris&#13;
expressed her hope of there being&#13;
a Swim for Fun Club. This would&#13;
provide a place for those people&#13;
who aren't necessarily interested&#13;
in going out for the team.&#13;
The men's season doesn't&#13;
actually start until November,&#13;
and it runs until March. During&#13;
that time they will have swim&#13;
meets against Whitewater,&#13;
Carroll, Ripon and many nonconference&#13;
schools from the&#13;
Chicago area. The women's&#13;
season should be over by&#13;
Thanksgiving, but will be extended&#13;
into March so that the&#13;
girls can swim against Illinois&#13;
schools.&#13;
Pat Hill, the club's best hack&#13;
stroker, took 2nd in the W-yd.&#13;
back stroke in a recent meet,&#13;
while Julie Surendonk took znd in&#13;
the l00--yd. breast stroke. Their&#13;
next meet win be this Saturday at&#13;
Oshkosh.&#13;
5520 6th AVE.&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Parkside&#13;
\&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT. 23&#13;
,&#13;
-,&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC. sponsored by Parkside ActivitiesBoard&#13;
/'..----...-~-,----....-..... .........•............&#13;
We ~oareiDoii~huilg~1&#13;
• BEER. SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS. WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES- GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
()PEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.&#13;
CALL ---'----&#13;
632-1565&#13;
10% commission&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 20&#13;
-&gt; OJ " )&#13;
Entry Fee 50~&#13;
Appl y now - Student ActivitiesOffice&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?&#13;
STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFIC[_)&#13;
0-194 LLC or telephone 553-229~&#13;
.--......--.....--.....--....-..-..-..-.- - - .. - "...--..&#13;
~ ~ ----- -...._--~~&#13;
8 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972&#13;
Swim Club,&#13;
Coach 8 rb&#13;
Third Row:&#13;
front row (l tor): Barb Kupper, Tom Bergo, Nancy Michals,&#13;
Morris. Second Row: Richard HalTITl, John Heigl, Rich Glover·&#13;
Dale Martin, Pat Hill, Tom Hughes, Shirley Moore.&#13;
Pt,oto by Cra ig Roberts&#13;
lub&#13;
Working on strokes&#13;
it!'' 'o, thi.- i · not an&#13;
vu.::, .. .,.,._ pro 1tion, but it could&#13;
the m lto of th Park id&#13;
tub.&#13;
r th club numbers 45,&#13;
but du to cla: chedule and&#13;
work conflict . not everyone ·how · up for practice at the same&#13;
tim . I lucked out. The day I&#13;
h for my intervie'ilo' turned out&#13;
to th low t turnout yet.&#13;
Pr ctic i h Id every day from&#13;
3: lo 5:30 p.m. during which&#13;
tim th ·imm indulge in the&#13;
num ro a d lights of learning&#13;
nip turn . practicing flip turns, nd leaching other people flip&#13;
turns. Aft r watching an hour's&#13;
""orth or mp turns from the r I tive safety of a tarting&#13;
lock, 1 am now able to&#13;
· t1nguish a good flip turn from&#13;
bad flip turn. This is not a I know what a good or a&#13;
d flip turn looks like, but&#13;
ause I n distovered that I&#13;
didn'tg t pl hediftheturnwas&#13;
properly e uted. In ddition to flip turns, they&#13;
have been known to do a little&#13;
wimming, mething on the&#13;
ord r ol two to three miles a day.&#13;
Coll191 Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
Accordin to club president Torn&#13;
Bergo, th difficulty of a workout&#13;
can ily be told from the&#13;
redne of the wimrners' eyes.&#13;
"Th main thing now is for&#13;
individual to work on their&#13;
troke and cut down their&#13;
times," said Coach Barbra Jo&#13;
lorris. "We need specialists, divers,&#13;
and ju t people who are willing to&#13;
compete. Even if they've never&#13;
competed before, they shouldn't&#13;
be discouraged from coming&#13;
because they're inexperienced. There are quite a few members of&#13;
the club who never competed&#13;
before, ' he added. Even though the workouts get&#13;
tough, there is still that club&#13;
atmosphere. It isn't quite like&#13;
being on a varsity team where&#13;
one must show up for practice&#13;
every day. This way even the&#13;
people who don't have a lot of&#13;
time to practice can still participate.&#13;
&#13;
The club is currently in the oneyear&#13;
probation period required of&#13;
all sports before they become&#13;
varsity. For both the men and the&#13;
women, going varsity next year&#13;
is primarily a matter of money,&#13;
according to Coach Jorris. There are advantages to being a club rather than a varsity sport,&#13;
one of them being that there is a&#13;
wider range of appeal in a club&#13;
than in going out for a team.&#13;
Even if swimming becomes&#13;
varsity next year, Coach Morris&#13;
expressed her hope of there being&#13;
a Swim for Fun Club. This would&#13;
provide a place for those people&#13;
who aren't necessarily interested&#13;
in going out for the team. The men's season doesn't&#13;
actually start until November,&#13;
and it runs until March. During&#13;
that time they will have swim&#13;
meets against Whitewater,&#13;
Carroll, Ripon and many nonconference&#13;
schools from the&#13;
Chicago area . The women's&#13;
season should be over by&#13;
Thanksgiving, but will be extended&#13;
into March so that the&#13;
girls can swim against Illinois&#13;
schools.&#13;
Pat Hill, the club's best back&#13;
stroker, took 2nd in the 50-yd.&#13;
back stroke in a recent meet,&#13;
while Julie Surendonk took 2nd in&#13;
the 100-yd. breast stroke. Their&#13;
next meet will be this Saturday at&#13;
Oshkosh.&#13;
•BEER• SODA&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
Q&#13;
u&#13;
0&#13;
R&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
~PE N DAILY 9A. M. - 9 P. M.&#13;
SUN DAY TIL 8 P.M.&#13;
CALL --------,&#13;
632-1565&#13;
Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
Curses! Foiled by an axle&#13;
An ove rs ize tricycle 11built for ei ght " was&#13;
the entry by the ad&#13;
hoc Red Baron relay&#13;
t eam for the fourth&#13;
annua 1 I IT 11S pr i ng&#13;
Thing!' The team finished&#13;
on the bottom&#13;
due t o a broken axle .&#13;
Pictured are Dave Reyhe&#13;
r and Marty Gregory.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date, 128-page, mail orde r catalog of 2,300&#13;
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••••••••••••••••••••• Parkside&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT. 23&#13;
' ' \&#13;
\&#13;
·,&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 20&#13;
/ -Q;,&#13;
/ ./&#13;
·Entry Fee 50'&#13;
Apply now - Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC. sponsored by Parkside Acti vities Board&#13;
I ••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
We need people whoare'mmiij=buiigry!~1&#13;
) ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?&#13;
10 % commission STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFICE_</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 4, October 18, 1972</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>ken konkol</name>
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              <text>How many $ needed to run Parkside</text>
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              <text>The. University of \\'iscol'61n.&#13;
Parkslde Activities Board has&#13;
annou~ed the appearance of the&#13;
St. Louis Jazz Quartet in concert&#13;
at 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 14,10 the&#13;
Bradford High chool&#13;
auditorium.&#13;
The Quartet has been billed a&#13;
one of the most exciting contemp?rary&#13;
jazz. groups In&#13;
America Their program runs the&#13;
gamut from jazz to blues to&#13;
ballads A review of their perfo.rmance&#13;
at the Missi ippt&#13;
RIVer Festival in the t. LotH&#13;
Post-Dispatch read, 'The&#13;
Quartet thrilled the audience&#13;
with their fine program rang10g&#13;
from gospel soul music to fun .&#13;
jazz. Their singing was versatile,&#13;
controlled, and emotionall)&#13;
sincere. They brought dov. n the&#13;
house with their hand-elapp1Og,&#13;
foot-stomping spiritual. Let It Be&#13;
Their show is fresh. exciting, and&#13;
clearly imaginallve.··&#13;
The group has extended an&#13;
invitation to an)' intere ted&#13;
member of the audience to la\&#13;
and talk after the concert. The\&#13;
will be glad to answer an;·&#13;
questions you might have.&#13;
Tickets may be purchased at&#13;
the UW-Parkside Information&#13;
Office. Room 201 Tallent Hall&#13;
Reserved seat tickets are $2.50.&#13;
students and staff with Parksrde&#13;
ill are $l.5O.&#13;
St. Lo ui&#13;
Jazz Q&#13;
here Satur&#13;
For Once In. I til&#13;
FlOe and t eUo,,"&#13;
On Green DOllllln Street&#13;
methm mpl&#13;
Free-Again&#13;
I'nul us Ttme&#13;
Somebody'. Knockong&#13;
Walk HIm l:p&#13;
TheParkside--------&#13;
GE do da&#13;
a&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
lob r 11 1 72&#13;
How many $ needed to run Parkside&#13;
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown 1972-73&#13;
Union Reserve. . . '38.50&#13;
Lecture &amp; Fine Arts .. 2.00&#13;
Student Health . .. 2.00&#13;
Transpcrtation &amp; Parking ..............•..... 18.00&#13;
Athletics... . ... . ..... . . .9.00&#13;
Ill~aln"rals. ....•..... . 8.00&#13;
Student Activities 8.50&#13;
Student Group Support.. . 2.00&#13;
$88.00&#13;
Summer Sesston (Union Reserve) .. "$22.00&#13;
Apathy will help Nixon:&#13;
McGovern aide&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
. 'Skip" Roberts, Deputy&#13;
DIrector of Congressional Liaison&#13;
~orthe McGovern campaign, was&#13;
In Wisconsin last week addressing&#13;
various groups for the&#13;
Senator.&#13;
Roberts. former Director of the&#13;
Viet Nam Veterans Against the&#13;
War. and now on leave as&#13;
Director of the Labor-University&#13;
Alliance. addressed groups at&#13;
~O~i~ican College and the&#13;
l ",lanan Universalist Church in&#13;
HaCine, as well as a press conference&#13;
at the Racine McGovern&#13;
office. (A meeting was scheduled&#13;
at Parkside, but never&#13;
materialized due to the apathy of&#13;
the So-called "organizers" a&#13;
Spokesman for the R~cine&#13;
MCGovern office said.)&#13;
R Referring to this apathy,&#13;
oberts attacked the general&#13;
apathy of the tB-24-year-old&#13;
vot ers, long considered a&#13;
stronghold of the McGovern&#13;
camp.&#13;
. ')'10st 18'24~year-old \ oters are&#13;
~e~thetic." said Roberts.&#13;
{'Y"'E' '0 longer {'C'ncerced&#13;
about the war, and the economic,S&#13;
of the country usually doesn. t&#13;
affect them. They are once again&#13;
becoming the isolationist 10-&#13;
telligentia clique that th_ey&#13;
seemed to be in the early 19;,05&#13;
and 60s."&#13;
Roberts cited a recent New&#13;
York Times poll which showed&#13;
that 55 percent of those 10-&#13;
terviewed had not decided t~at&#13;
they would actually vote: despite&#13;
their preference In the&#13;
Presidential race. .&#13;
·'It is this apathy which ma~&#13;
d f at George 1\lcGovern ..&#13;
R~beerts said, "and it .is thiS&#13;
apathy that Richard Nixon IS&#13;
counting on."&#13;
Open House&#13;
Th University of Wisconsi~-&#13;
e ht"twIIi Parkside announced t a I Oct&#13;
hold an open house Sunday. . .&#13;
15 from noon till 5 p.m. ViSItors&#13;
. t 'ty to tour ··n have an oppor unt&#13;
\\I . II s well as the&#13;
GreenqUist Ha . a . g Center&#13;
L·b y_Learmn new I rar . 1 Education&#13;
and the new Physlca&#13;
-uidmg.&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
How much does it cost to run 8&#13;
university? This IS a question&#13;
many of you have probably asked&#13;
yourselves but never bothered to&#13;
find out In order to answer thiS&#13;
question. RA:XGER interviewed&#13;
Erwin F Zuehlke. DIrector 01 the&#13;
Business Office&#13;
The thmg \\,hich concerns mo (&#13;
students on a day-to-dey ba IS I&#13;
the transportation and parking&#13;
This segment of finance takes up&#13;
a good part of the egregated ree&#13;
It was Originally anticipated that&#13;
Parks Ide " ould have sn-lOO rrom&#13;
student receipts and facult)&#13;
permits and an ackhtlonal $13.&#13;
subsid) through tate funds lor a&#13;
total T&amp;P budget or over .000&#13;
Park ide IS not geumg S77,000&#13;
from tudent and raC'ult~&#13;
receipts. the real figure IS closer&#13;
to $10.000, And the university I&#13;
paying out more than the crigmal&#13;
$70.000 \\ hrch "a allocated for&#13;
buses, This cuts IOta the&#13;
Intended to be set aside for nev.&#13;
parking Iactliue .&#13;
Of the $70.000 oflglnall~ IO~&#13;
tended for buSing. 543.600 \I, as for&#13;
the two huttles. $18.600 for the&#13;
Kenosha mterclty bu and $7.800&#13;
for the summer se 1011, ..\ddluoo&#13;
of the additional shuttle IS costing&#13;
us another $9.000. Coupled ",th&#13;
the $7.000 loss m re\'enue. It&#13;
means the parking reserve I cut&#13;
to $1.000.&#13;
There is a question on ho\\, to&#13;
gain rC\'enue, perhaps "e lA'ould&#13;
have to charge additional&#13;
parking fees. Instead or the&#13;
present $90.000 a year. we could&#13;
use 5120,000 a year in order to&#13;
maintain the reserve and bwld&#13;
new lots.&#13;
Even then Parks ide "ou!d have&#13;
no facilities to mamtam them&#13;
There would even be a problem&#13;
with &gt;corage ~ilIl~'I'.·'lf )'&#13;
need three :;:huM~l\m ~nt&#13;
()"T ~ 2 1972 voJ -&#13;
ERWI ZUEHl E&#13;
Dunn th r gular chool&#13;
. Ion bu t amOUR to&#13;
a " The. hull I run on&#13;
I.,bror boo"" and the Ph) 'cal&#13;
Educo;,on Bwld,ng must k p&#13;
th "e sa me boo lor the purpo&#13;
0/ ""Pong addlllonal e,,,,"&#13;
do"n&#13;
Because 0/ the lac of rund&gt; It&#13;
d&lt;Je,. nOlloo Iokel) that Ice to&#13;
Racn~ \I, III rei tated In (act&#13;
\\ l~ln Coach Litle rna)tv n&#13;
curtail !'Orne QlWr8uon If Lh )'&#13;
don"t get more """In On the&#13;
other hand. e mIght be abl lo&#13;
extend en Ice to Kenosha&#13;
Zuehlke ,,"ould like to see more&#13;
~tuden rei) on car is and&#13;
lnterclt,,· buses to allevlale the&#13;
parklllg Ituatloo&#13;
Par Side need additional&#13;
capital to bu) our own buses.&#13;
bu " and '''0 for candb) AI a&#13;
cost or $25. for a Twin Coach&#13;
L P gas model ",th capacIty of&#13;
31 and 3.000 for some OJ·&#13;
pa sen~er model&gt; the oroglOal&#13;
• L&#13;
J zz&#13;
h&#13;
The Parkside,--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
How many$ needed tor __ __&#13;
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown 1972-73&#13;
l 'nion Reserve .... . .. . ..... . . . .. .. .. .. . ..... $38.50&#13;
I .ecture &amp; Fine Arts ... . . . . .. .......... . ....... 2.00&#13;
Student Health .. ... ... .. .. ..... .. . .......... .. 2.00&#13;
Transportation &amp; Parking . . . .. . . ..... . ....... 18.00&#13;
\thletics ................ ... . . .. . ............ . . 9.00&#13;
Intra murals . ........ ... .. .. ............. .. ... 8.00&#13;
Stud!'nt Activities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 8.50&#13;
~tudrnt Group Support .. . . .... . ..... . ........ 2.00&#13;
$88.00&#13;
Sumnwr Spssion (Union Reserve) . ... .. ...... $22.00&#13;
Apathy will help Nixon:&#13;
McGovern aide&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
Skip" Roberts, Deputy&#13;
Director of Congressional Liaison&#13;
for the McGovern campaign, was&#13;
in Wisconsin last week adc)re&#13;
ing various groups for the&#13;
enator.&#13;
Hoberts. former Director of the&#13;
Viet Nam Veterans Against the&#13;
War. and now on leave as&#13;
Director of the Labor-University&#13;
Alhance, addressed groups at&#13;
Dominican College and the&#13;
l rutarian Universalist Church in&#13;
Hacme , as well as a press conference&#13;
at the Racine McGovern&#13;
office IA meeting was scheduled&#13;
at Parkside, but never&#13;
materialized due to the apathy of the so-called "organizers," a&#13;
· Pokes man for the Racine&#13;
!\JcGovern office said.)&#13;
Referring to this apathy ,&#13;
Roberts attacked the general&#13;
apathy of the 18-24-year-old \Ol ers, long considered a ·tr&#13;
· onghold of the McGovern t'amp&#13;
. ':\lost 18-24-year-otd , oters are&#13;
~~? thetic ," aid Ro be r s&#13;
" 'r p .,o lor.ger re- cen-Ec!&#13;
about the war. and the economics&#13;
of the country usually doesn't&#13;
affect them. They are one~ ag~m&#13;
becoming the isolat1on1 t 111 -&#13;
te II igen ti a clique that th_ey&#13;
seemed to be in the early 19;,0&#13;
and 60s." • ·ew Roberts cited a recent&#13;
York Times poll which hO\\ed&#13;
that 55 percent of those interviewed&#13;
had not decided that&#13;
they would actually vote, de p1te&#13;
their preference in the&#13;
Presidential race. . . "It is this apathy which ma~.&#13;
defeat George l\IcGo~e rn ._&#13;
Roberts said . "and it I th1&#13;
apathy that Richard 'ixon I&#13;
counting on ."&#13;
Open House&#13;
Th University of Wisc_ons1~- e ed that 1t will Parkside announc . Oct&#13;
hold an open house Sunday_. . .&#13;
15 from noon till 5 P·1!1· V1s1tors&#13;
will have an opportunit)l.l to t~~~ . t Hall as we a Greenqu1s · . g Center L' brary-Learnm new 1 . 1 Education and the new Phys1ca&#13;
1(1 Illa"&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
0 972&#13;
n&#13;
•&#13;
ar &#13;
1 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed .• Oct. 11. 1971&#13;
ED TORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
new attitude&#13;
A new attlluOe seems to preval among many students&#13;
10 Ih e~lenl that they are willingtoparlicipate.&#13;
en Ihls paper first came out. it was weak. Now it&#13;
h S il larg staff of people with many interests. Some&#13;
c m 10 write, some are photographers. some wanted to&#13;
slid nd ome came down and just said they wanted&#13;
to h Ip&#13;
Th e people are forming something new and good. A&#13;
rvice 10 school and peers. the paper was created by&#13;
Ih m.&#13;
ow thai we are a going concern. we welcome all to&#13;
come 10 the ollice and loin us. There is greater strength&#13;
In grea ter numbers.&#13;
Id s 'or stor ies are always appreciated. The Ranger&#13;
will Iways seek to service this campus to the fullest of&#13;
Its journallsllc capabllllles.&#13;
It can be done....&#13;
The question of whether it would be possible to move&#13;
large amounts of people from the Phisical Education&#13;
Building has been answered. II can be done.&#13;
The Norman Mailer lecture was the test case. Appro~imalely&#13;
BOO people atfended. Seven buses were used&#13;
to bring people to the Athlelic Building from the parking&#13;
lot and a caravan of fourleen buses were stationed to&#13;
bring them back.&#13;
The reasoning behind the fourteen buses on the return&#13;
trip Is that at the end of a presentation. it is expected&#13;
Ihat everyone will run for a bus at the same lime. The&#13;
Mailer presentation was an exception with many of the&#13;
people filing out before Mailer was finished.&#13;
Even though people did not stream out of the building.&#13;
IIwas apparent that this method of transportation would&#13;
be adequate.&#13;
Access to Ihe parking lot was found to be the real&#13;
problem. Perhaps, in the future. more security ollicers&#13;
iII be provided so that some may assist in traffic&#13;
direcllon.&#13;
But ...&#13;
It must be realized that expanded use of the Physical&#13;
Educallon Building and the usage of the theatre portion&#13;
of the new Communication Arts Building in the spring&#13;
wi II require a new parking system.&#13;
The administration has recognized the parking&#13;
problem and has demonostrated its concern by asking&#13;
for a study to recommend placement of a new parking&#13;
facility. But fhls study will be considering the overall&#13;
parking problem and will not deal specifically with the&#13;
problems which will develop in the event of massive&#13;
crowds&#13;
On st.rn te shows the cost of moving 3.000 people to&#13;
nd trom the PhYSical Education Building would be&#13;
ppro Imil el 5500 Assuming ten buses were used. it IS&#13;
C cv ted ha the last audience member would leave&#13;
build ng pproxlma ely two and one na If hours afteconclus&#13;
on a the event&#13;
I h es lma s Me correct. and no one has thus far&#13;
prov n a her lse, he Ranger strongly urges that any&#13;
tu ure par ong area to be placed to facilitate the ex&#13;
pand d use of the PhYSical Education Bu'lding and the&#13;
v lual u of lhe new theatre.&#13;
The Ranger also recognizes that any future parking or&#13;
Ir nsportation must be funded by means other than&#13;
those presently available. We suggest that funds be&#13;
cotlected by some Iype of user fee which will be fair and&#13;
equitable to the total campus community: students.&#13;
'acuity and sfaff alike.&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
It seems we paid Norman Mailer $3175 for his appearance&#13;
here. That is a hell of a lot of money to&#13;
spend to hear him read his book. ItfIgures he should&#13;
have paid us to let him promote It Instead. ~or ~at&#13;
amount we could have bought 400 COpies of It. Eight&#13;
hundred people attended the lecture and 5900 was&#13;
collected at the door. It wasn't worth $2200 to have&#13;
lum autograph those library books. While th.e&#13;
following discussions were interestmg, they weren t&#13;
that interesting&#13;
Last Thursday and Friday someone dragged t~ee&#13;
sets of those steel filing shelves out int~ the re3:1nat&#13;
the library loading dock. After an overnight so~ourn&#13;
they were nice and rusty. Even af.ter higher&#13;
authority was consulted, they remained there&#13;
another four bours. Seems whoever orders the&#13;
furnishings has money to throwaway.&#13;
Two years ago one of the under-directors in the&#13;
finanCe office promised to install pencil sharpeners&#13;
In Greenquist Hall. Student Government finally had&#13;
to install a couple on its own. We could use some&#13;
more - and in the library. How about the clock for&#13;
Greenquist concourse - and another for Main&#13;
Place')&#13;
Certain campus police have been making rounds&#13;
through. the buildings during prime class ti:nes in&#13;
full uniforms with their guns hanging out. This does&#13;
tend to antagonize certain types of people, but it is&#13;
onJy temporary until the new blazers arrive. It&#13;
seems the old ones "wore ouL"&#13;
A lot. of students are still waiting on their grants&#13;
from the state. For those who needed the money&#13;
more than for just tuition, for which payment has&#13;
been delayed; until the money arrives they can&#13;
always go on welfare and blame the governor who is&#13;
trying to save the state money. Il's ridiculous when&#13;
you realize that these are just loans and the money&#13;
will be paid back.&#13;
You should be happy to learn that they are finally&#13;
putting labels on the lavatory doors. It is frustrating&#13;
to not know which is which, and trial and error could&#13;
be embarrassing. The writing on the walls at the&#13;
entrances to the locker rooms is so large that many&#13;
people don't notice it. A few have had interesting&#13;
experiences on entering the wrong one.&#13;
Student Government elections are in just three&#13;
weeks. They can't afford to pay the cost of handbill&#13;
printing for candidates. But anyone interested can&#13;
get their own for a cost of $1.35 for the first 50 and&#13;
$.35 for each additional 50 at Printing and&#13;
Duplicating in the Modulux Building.&#13;
Speaking of elections, it doesn't look like many will&#13;
run for the Student Union Committee. There isn't&#13;
much point in trying to get this area under student&#13;
advisement until the Parkside Activities Board is&#13;
abolished.&#13;
We get&#13;
letters ...&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
\\ e demand to be heard' sex&#13;
discrrrmnauon has gone far&#13;
enough at good ole Parkside ' We&#13;
are making reference to a&#13;
definite ne-cessity in the men s&#13;
locker room. \\ e realize that as a&#13;
rule. women do have more hair&#13;
however. some of us hav~&#13;
progressed from the Age of&#13;
Cre\l,cut to the Age at Aquaflus&#13;
and ~es. after many years, we.&#13;
too. have split ends. Halr does not&#13;
·eem to dryas quickly as It did 10&#13;
the Age of Crewcut. The point is&#13;
that women have hair dryers in&#13;
their locker room and as the&#13;
temperature drops and wet hair&#13;
freezes. and we would pretty&#13;
please like a hair dryer or two.&#13;
Two Wet Heads&#13;
A few of the present Student Senate have made&#13;
some remarks on the supposed mishandling of the&#13;
monetary Teacher of the Year awards. Seems that&#13;
even though there are an equal number of students&#13;
on the committee, these are hand picked and have&#13;
nothing to say about the method used In selection.&#13;
Just looking at the poor turnout last year shows thrs&#13;
has to change.&#13;
$10 a month is an awful lot of money to pay for a&#13;
telephone on campus.&#13;
Be careful if you answer that ad for research&#13;
materials. If you're caught submitting a paper not&#13;
your own, it could mean expulsion. A few people&#13;
here have already learned the hard way that&#13;
plagiarism doesn't pay. Use this service only for&#13;
research!&#13;
If you have a file cabinet in your office, there are&#13;
probably a lot of people with a key to it S-IOOseems&#13;
to be a prevalent lock on these.&#13;
A couple of staff members are considering an article&#13;
in the Nov, 1 issue on the national political&#13;
candidates. If you have anything you'd like to&#13;
mention -- pro or con .. drops us a line by OCt.21.&#13;
That library of ours is not only big, it's impressive.&#13;
In talking to Ken Herrick, Ilearned that the library&#13;
has 180,000 volumes including bound periodicals.&#13;
There are half a million cards in the card catalog,&#13;
and it is staffed by 90 people, including GO part-lime&#13;
students, and 30 Civil Service and academic personnel&#13;
including 13 professional librarians.&#13;
If you're waiting for the Student-Staff directory to&#13;
come out, you'll have to wait a little longer - till the&#13;
beginning of November.&#13;
The Archives is looking for copies from the back&#13;
issues of the previous student newspapers, The old&#13;
copy files from COLLEGIAN and NEWSCOPE&#13;
were deleted to nothing. If you have some eariy&#13;
issues that you forgot to throw out, take them to the&#13;
Archives or bring them to the newspaper office,&#13;
Touring below floors in the library can be an ex·&#13;
perience. There are a couple of rooms down there&#13;
which are nearly empty and together are about as&#13;
big as the Tallent Hall parking lot.&#13;
If you have something bothering you or a newsitem&#13;
too small to stretch into a full story, write and iet us&#13;
know about them. A black border around an article&#13;
sure attracts readers.&#13;
If you find yourself short of money, a good wayto&#13;
get hold of some is to solicit ads for the RANGER.&#13;
We pay 10 percent commission and a telephone can&#13;
do most of your work for you. Stop on by D-I94and&#13;
find out about it.&#13;
If you're one of those glory hounds who might like&#13;
the idea of seeing your name in print, why not let us&#13;
know about it. The pay isn't too great, but you getto&#13;
meet a lot of interesting people.&#13;
!"Jf:.The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parks ide Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Kenosha. Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located at 0-194 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessarily the officiai view of the University 0'&#13;
W,sconsin- Perkside.&#13;
EDITORS '-\:&gt;:0 WRITERS, Rudv Lienau Geoff Blaesmg. Kns Ko('h.&#13;
~Iath~ \\'ellner, Ken Konkol. Jea~nine Sip'sma Shawn Clements. Dalr&#13;
1\ artm T p ,&#13;
, om etersen, Marilyn Schubert. Dave Reyher&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pe;tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
-"~·---:.R-E-PR-E-S-EN":"TE-D"':"fO-R-N-A-T-'O-N-AL-A-O-V-ER-T-1-SI-N-G-.-Y---1 T National Educational Advertising Services,lnc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y, 10017 -&#13;
'2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
But ...&#13;
R LS/ OPI&#13;
itu&#13;
t ing ne and good. A&#13;
as crea ed by&#13;
done ....&#13;
parking lo as found to be the real&#13;
ps, In the future, more security officers&#13;
d so ha some may assist in traffic&#13;
I mu b r allzed that expanded use of the Physical&#13;
on Building and the usage of the theatre portion&#13;
Communic tlon Ar s Building in the spring&#13;
uir n par Ing system.&#13;
dmini r on has recognized the parking&#13;
nd d monostrated its concern by asking&#13;
commend placement of a ne parking&#13;
udy Ill be considering he overall&#13;
nd ill no deal specifically with the&#13;
1ll d v lop in e e en of massive&#13;
IO s&#13;
THORN&#13;
Sy Konkol&#13;
Tu o , ars ago one of the under-directors m the&#13;
finance offic promi ed to in tall pencil harpeners&#13;
in G nqw t Hall tudent Go ernment finally had&#13;
to in tall a couple on it own. \! e could use some&#13;
more - and in the librarv. How about the clock for&#13;
G qw t concourse :.. and another for Main&#13;
Place"&#13;
ertam camp police ha e been making rounds&#13;
through the building during prime class times in&#13;
full uniform "'1th their gun hanging out. This does&#13;
tend to antagoruze certain types of people, but it is&#13;
only temporary until the new blazers arrive. It&#13;
eems the old ones "wore out •·&#13;
lot of tud nt are till waiting on their grants&#13;
from the tale. For th e who needed the money&#13;
more than for just tuition, for which payment has&#13;
been d layed: until the money arrives they can&#13;
alway go on welfare and blame the governor who is&#13;
trying to save the tale money. It's ridiculous when&#13;
you realize that these are ju t loan and the money&#13;
will be paid back.&#13;
You hould be happy to learn that they are finally&#13;
putting labels on the lavator doors. It is frustrating&#13;
to not know"' h1ch is which, and trial and error could&#13;
be embarra ing. The writing on the walls at the&#13;
entrances to the locker rooms is so large that many&#13;
people don't notice it. A few have had interesting&#13;
experiences on entering the wrong one.&#13;
udent Government elections are in just three&#13;
. They can't afford to pay the cost of handbill&#13;
pnnting for candidates. But anyone interested can&#13;
et their own for a cost of $1.35 for the first 50 and&#13;
. 35 for each additional 50 at Printing and&#13;
Duplicating in the :l.odulux Building.&#13;
peaking of elections, it doesn't look like many will&#13;
run for the tudent nion Committee. There isn't&#13;
much point m trying to get this area under student&#13;
advisement until the Parkside Activities Board is&#13;
aboh hed.&#13;
A re ..... of the present Student enate have made&#13;
·ome remarks on the supposed m1shandlmg of lhe&#13;
monetary Teacher of the Year awards. eems that&#13;
even though there are an equal number of Ludent.,&#13;
on the committee. these are hand picked and hav&#13;
nothing to say about the method used m select10&#13;
Just looking at the poor turnout la t year how lh1.&#13;
has to change.&#13;
10 a month is an awful lot of money to pay for&#13;
telephone on campus.&#13;
Be careful if you answer that ad for re earch&#13;
materials. If you're caught submitting a pap r not&#13;
your own, it could mean expulsion. A few people&#13;
here have already learned the hard way that&#13;
plagiarism doesn't pay . Use this service only for&#13;
research!&#13;
If you have a file cabinet in your office, there are&#13;
probably a lot of people with a key to it. S-100 eem&#13;
to be a prevalent lock on these.&#13;
A couple of staff members are considering an article&#13;
in the Nov. 1 issue on the national political&#13;
candidates. If you have anything you'd like Lo&#13;
mention -- pro or con -- drops us a line by Oct. 21.&#13;
That library of ours is not only big, it's impressive.&#13;
In talking to Ken Herrick, I learned that the library&#13;
has 180,000 volumes including bound periodicals&#13;
There are half a million cards in the card catalog,&#13;
and it is staffed by 90 people, including 60 part-time&#13;
students, and 30 Civil Service and academic personnel&#13;
including 13 professional librarians.&#13;
If you're waiting for the Student-Staff directory to&#13;
come out, you'll have to wait a little longer -- till the&#13;
beginning of November.&#13;
The Archives is looking for copies from the back&#13;
issues of the previous student newspapers. The old&#13;
copy files from COLLEGIAN and NEWSCOPE&#13;
were deleted to nothing. If you have some early&#13;
issues that you forgot to throw out, take them to the&#13;
Archives or bring them to the newspaper office.&#13;
Touring below floors in the library can be an experience.&#13;
There are a couple of rooms down there&#13;
which are nearly empty and together are about as&#13;
big as the Tallent Hall parking lot.&#13;
If you have something bothering you or a news item&#13;
too small to stretch into a full story, write and !el us&#13;
know about them. A black border around an article&#13;
sure attracts readers .&#13;
If you find yourself short of money, a good way to&#13;
get hold of some is to solicit ads for the RANGER .&#13;
We pay 10 percent commission and a telephone can&#13;
do most of your work for you. Stop on by D-194 and&#13;
find out about it.&#13;
If you're one of those glory hounds who might like&#13;
the idea of seeing your name in print, why not let us&#13;
know about it. The pay isn't too great, but you get Lo&#13;
meet a lot of interesting people.&#13;
We get&#13;
letters ...&#13;
\,fr.. The ParkskJe -&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin .&#13;
Offices are located at D-194 Libr ary-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553_2295_&#13;
~he Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are no&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University or&#13;
W sco'1sin- Parkside&#13;
f.:DITORS \ D \\HITERS: Hudv L1enau Geoff Blaesmg Km Koch&#13;
Kath \\ 11 • , · · • I&gt; le ·. c mr Ken Konkol, Jeannme Sip ·ma Shawn Clement:,. a '.\lartm To p · · · m etersen. Marilyn Schubert Dave Reyhe1&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pe;tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: F red Lawrence ADVISOR : Don Kopriva&#13;
w· ,llEPR.ESENTED FOR. NATIONAL ADVER.TISING BY I National Educational Advertising Services, Inc,&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 &#13;
Wed .• Oct. 11, 1972 THE PARKS IDE RANGER 3&#13;
poet James Liddy&#13;
return's to Parkside&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy has returned to Th&#13;
University of "':isconsin-Parkside campus for the&#13;
1972-73 academic year as a visiting professor ef&#13;
EnglIs'h .&#13;
0&#13;
Liddy, who has held facu~ty posts at San Francisco&#13;
State College, St~te Umversity of New York at&#13;
Bingham~on, l!mverslty C?llege DUblin, Lewis and&#13;
Clark University and Denison University, spent a&#13;
week as a guest lecturer at Parkside in March 1971&#13;
Liddy is the author of five books of poetry. Hi~&#13;
poems have appeared in "The Dolmen Review of&#13;
Irish Writing," The New York Times' "Today"&#13;
"The Kil~enn.y Magazine," The Irish Press a~d&#13;
other publications, and have been reprinted in "The&#13;
Penguin Book of Irish Verse," "New Poets of&#13;
Ireland" and "Drumbook."&#13;
He has presented poetry readings at The San&#13;
Francisco ~oetry Corner, t~e International Poetry&#13;
Forum of Pittsburgh, The Irish Embassy in London&#13;
and at a number of colleges and universities in&#13;
Ireland and the U.S.&#13;
Liddy received his bachelor's and master's&#13;
degrees at University College Dublin and barrister&#13;
at law at Kings Inns Dublin.&#13;
BLUE HOUSE&#13;
PREFERABLY CHINESE&#13;
Wearing the masks of dead poets&#13;
They crave the butterfly immortality of circulation:&#13;
The dinginess of their methods hurts me.&#13;
I would not like to waste my tiny legacy of energy&#13;
Seeing the letters of my name headlined&#13;
And my nervous photograph printed&#13;
(I have not the temperament for politics&gt;.&#13;
It fatigues me a lot to contemplate the industry&#13;
Of those who do not hear life's message&#13;
Of eternal unimportance.&#13;
The poet should be a gentleman&#13;
Preferably Chinese:&#13;
I would prefer to retire to riverbanks and walks&#13;
Asking with a prayer through the senses&#13;
To be released from Effort&#13;
Finding gay and courageous friends&#13;
And being generous with time which we call love.&#13;
- James Liddy&#13;
•••••••••••&#13;
By Tom Petersen&#13;
Not knowing exactly what tYJ&gt;E:of artic,le I was&#13;
going to do, I set out in pursuit of mformah?n about&#13;
our poet in residence, James Liddy, My fIrst stop&#13;
was Stella Grey's office, and she suggested that I&#13;
speak to Dr. Liddy himself. Next Iwas at the LLC&#13;
where his office is located and, fmdmg myself on ~e&#13;
second floor, realized 1 had forg~tten his off~ce&#13;
number Back to the main desk. WhIle I was askmg&#13;
for the I~ation of his office, the librarian informed&#13;
me that Dr, Liddy was standing beside me: What&#13;
follows is sort of an impromptu interview, WIth Dr.&#13;
Liddy and me making up the questions as we went&#13;
.. l' t" I wasn't sure along. Being a "rookIe Journa IS , , w he&#13;
where to begin, so I started off by asking ho&#13;
came to Parkside. . .&#13;
LIDDY: I always go to a good school that inVites&#13;
me to be their poet in residence. . e&#13;
RANGER: What do you think of Parkslde. th&#13;
school and the students'? . 'te&#13;
LIDDY: As to the buildings, the LLC. IS ~~re&#13;
beautiful enough space to dream or, If Y&#13;
• . A to the students, recreational to speculate m. s b t th y&#13;
American kids are the nicest in the world, U he&#13;
f t· of the teac er, aren't always awake. The unc Ion k&#13;
specifically of the writer, is to keep them a;a .~&#13;
The life at Parkside seems to start slowly bu WI d&#13;
winter coming it will probably become :ar~al~n a&#13;
lively, I notice about the students that t ~y from&#13;
lot which is probably explained by commg&#13;
, . . Wch Norman such a nice place as Wlsconsm, Wit&#13;
"the p easan Mailer referred to last Sunday as&#13;
country north of Chicago." lawyer'&#13;
RANGER: You said you were once a ,&#13;
were you also writing then'? . ba k with my&#13;
LIDDY' Yes and now lookmg c, " . t the expense awful Irish guilt, perhaps sometImes a&#13;
of my clients. h did you&#13;
RANGER: From lawyer to teacher -- w y&#13;
make lhe change? " d own in a&#13;
LIDDY: Well, one morning In wig ~n ,g the' high&#13;
Probate molion before Justice Dawltt 10 ore than&#13;
court, I thought: I ar:n io:portant, I.h~~ek~ut, I will&#13;
the people in this affidaVIt. If I don.t the Dublin&#13;
be only a lawyer. Then I looked ou; ;Omight.l The&#13;
sky. II won't say I heard VOIces, bu d So I&#13;
d&#13;
k the real wor s. message was, go away an see told to get at&#13;
was chosen, and by that I mean I w~s, adequate&#13;
the hard work necessary for wTltmg&#13;
Poet Janes Liddy (left) ond Parkside's Herb ubly.&#13;
poems in book sequence. I behev the boo IS th&#13;
basisofpoelr)·. not the mdivtdual poem SolO earn a&#13;
living, while mvolved In the truggle (or boo ,I&#13;
turned to teaching.&#13;
RA."GER· Asa poet. h"" do)ou r IIOU benetlt&#13;
(rom your teaching'!&#13;
LIDDY' There is a contro\"eTS) a 10 ""bether&#13;
poets benefit from teaching Jolin Berryman IQ h&#13;
Paris Re-\ iew interview said thai poets get noth~&#13;
from creative wrtung I don't necessarily agree&#13;
with this. One doesn't ....mte poems JUSt (or oneself&#13;
one \\ rites for the commwlIc} of dead poets and&#13;
those to come, I notice In my wnung cia thai&#13;
there are alway one or two poets I can reall) help.&#13;
the others get caught up ",th the excitement. and&#13;
their writing gets better. tn my v.TlU~ da I&#13;
usually end up forgetling ml II&#13;
RANGER· I noticed tha, lOU have a COPI 0( th&#13;
Playboy interview ..nth Bernadette Devlin What&#13;
are yoer feeling or the Iwauon LO'reland"&#13;
LIDDY, Ac'uall)' I'm ha\"lng a groop In my cia&#13;
study this interview They haven't reponed ~et.but&#13;
my vie .....is clear, Bernadette 15 a herome-. a Joan of&#13;
Arc for the mrocntv In •·orth~ Ireland I upport&#13;
the official I RA more than the PI'O\' lonall R 1\ •&#13;
but I go along Withmost O("hat both "In do The&#13;
cause is for the unity of ireland, the- sameAbraham&#13;
Lincoln's cause In the O\·iJ war here&#13;
Americans seem to forget thai they ov.e- their&#13;
country to fighting KIng George In In6 I also&#13;
believe in the SOClaJ In.tggle (or a beuer e. i.tenee&#13;
in all Ireland&#13;
RANGER· Have you e'er had an)&#13;
periences "Ith the \'1olence that has&#13;
Ireland?&#13;
LIDDY' . 'one dIr"'~1 There ISn·' much actl\ .t)&#13;
where I live. I do bu) the matenal lht I R A&#13;
distributes, and I otherv.'ise contnbule But II' an&#13;
emotIOnal thing basically: )ou·d be surpnsed h""&#13;
many people in Ireland don't e\'en M\'e that&#13;
RANGER, Gelling back 1O lour wnling. do)ou&#13;
ever do work for magaun .,&#13;
LIDDY Yes.laJ"a) ha"e had the urge 1Oedit I&#13;
did \re-na 10 Ireland and 1"10\11 I ha\f" • n&#13;
magazme there. The Plei d ,&#13;
RA. ·GER Ho" do IOU f",,1 about lour poetr).&#13;
what are you tr)'lng toexpre In .)our TltJ"8"&#13;
LIDDY IbelI",e ml poelT)'I "hal poetr)&#13;
00- a relIgiOUSart , ot lhal poets are qwt pn&#13;
but the\ are sen'an Thf!" UN\ 1 Cull of&#13;
messages The poet' bu. In I. to walt fer them&#13;
and decode them Tlu. is ne, r fully Ie. "&#13;
do not qulLekno" "hal IShappenln In m) poelT) I&#13;
locate places and ex nen "'Nch contain t&#13;
inviSible- re\'elatIOfb. but hk am nina n Job In a&#13;
\Ioarehouse.1 am not urewhere t\er)thl or&#13;
even came (rom Ido nO\lo m~ poem art' not JU t&#13;
m~ busm nor the audience'.&#13;
rsonal e&#13;
ep throo&#13;
BENEFIT ROCK CONCERT ................. FOR .&#13;
GEORGE McGOVERN .......................&#13;
October 13, 1972&#13;
Racine Labor Center 7 P.M,&#13;
2300 Layard Ave. 'til Midnight&#13;
5 solid hours of&#13;
Country Jf.. Old Rock .. Now Rock&#13;
Donation: sl at door&#13;
J 08 OPPORTU ITY&#13;
String r needed for&#13;
W ZN- Z8 to r port&#13;
by 6 a.m. Mon.-Sat.&#13;
on enesha poll ee , Iir&#13;
&amp;. sheri ff. Poy on hourly&#13;
bosis. Must be rellabl&#13;
Call Fronk Falduta at&#13;
658-2055 before II a.m.&#13;
CHECKIM;&#13;
IS&#13;
AT fllST ullom&#13;
Of IACIIE&#13;
• II .ili.l.&#13;
~ilmerI~llrd&#13;
• Mo Ii.it 10 th&#13;
1I.~tr.f eheks&#13;
'01 writl&#13;
AT FIIST Ullom&#13;
OF UCIME&#13;
AT FIIST UTIOUL&#13;
OF UCIME&#13;
Opu ,au free checkilr&#13;
iCCOIAt SOOI it&#13;
First ational Bank&#13;
a.nd. Trust Company of Racl.n&#13;
---- -'- --&#13;
500WISCOISil hi. belli&#13;
ed., Oct. I , 72 TH PARK ID RA G&#13;
Poet James Liddy&#13;
return·s to Parkside&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy has ret&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside urned to The&#13;
1972-73 academic year as a visit' campus for the&#13;
English. mg professor of&#13;
Liddy, who has held faculty st&#13;
cisco State College, State Univer~t st~ San FranBinghamton,&#13;
University College Dy ir ew Y?rk at&#13;
Clark University and Denison Uru_u 10., Lewis and vers1ty sp t week as a guest lecturer at Parksid . M ' en a Liddy is the author of five boo/ 10f arch, 1971.&#13;
poems have appeared in "The D ~ o poetrt His&#13;
Irish Writing," The New York ~-men, ~.ev1ew of&#13;
"The Kilkenny Magazine " The ;n_ies Today,"&#13;
other publications, and ha~e been r ns~ Press and . eprmted in "Th&#13;
Pengum Book of Irish Verse" "N e Ireland" and "Drum book." ' ew Poets of&#13;
He has presented poetry readi&#13;
Francisco Poetry Corner the lnte ngs/t The San&#13;
Forum of Pittsburgh, Th~ Irish E;~:s~on_al Poetry&#13;
and at a number of colleges and .YID ~nd~n&#13;
Ireland and the U.S. uruvers1bes ID&#13;
Liddy received his bachelor's d&#13;
degrees at University College Dublina;nd ;:ias~er's at law at Kings Inns Dublin. arnster&#13;
BLUE HOUSE&#13;
PREFERABL y CHINESE&#13;
Wearing the masks of dead poets&#13;
They ~ra~e the butterfly immortality of circulation.&#13;
The d1Dg1Dess of their methods hurts ·&#13;
I w~uld not like to waste my tiny Jega;e~f ener Seemg the letters of my name headlined gy&#13;
And my nervous photograph printed&#13;
(I ha_ve not the temperament for politics).&#13;
It fatigues me a lot to contemplate the industry&#13;
Of those who do not hear life's message&#13;
Of eternal unimportance.&#13;
The poet should be a gentleman&#13;
Preferably Chinese:&#13;
I wo_uld pr:efer to retire to riverbanks and walks&#13;
Askmg with a prayer through the senses&#13;
To be released from Effort&#13;
Finding gay and courageous friends&#13;
And being generous with time which we call love.&#13;
-- James Liddy&#13;
•••••••••••&#13;
By Tom Petersen&#13;
ot knowing exactly what type of article I was&#13;
going to do, I set out in pursuit of information about&#13;
our poet in residence, James Liddy. My first stop&#13;
was Stella Grey's office, and she suggested that I&#13;
speak to Dr. Liddy himself. Next I was at the LLC&#13;
where his office is located and, finding myself on the&#13;
second floor, realized I had forgotten his office&#13;
number. Back to the main desk. While I was asking&#13;
for the location of his office, the librarian informed&#13;
me that Dr. Liddy was standing beside me. What&#13;
follows is sort of an impromptu interview, with Dr.&#13;
Liddy and me making up the questions as we went&#13;
along. Being a "rookie journalist," I wasn't sure&#13;
where to begin, so I started off by asking how he&#13;
came to Parkside. LIDDY: I always go to a good school that invites&#13;
me to be their poet in residence. RANGER: What do you think of Parkside, the&#13;
school and the students?&#13;
LIDDY: As to the buildings, the LLC is quite&#13;
beautiful, enough space to dream or, if you're&#13;
recreational, to speculate in. As to the students,&#13;
American kids are the nicest in the world, but they&#13;
aren't always awake. The function of the teacher,&#13;
specifically of the writer, is to keep them awake.&#13;
The life at Parkside seems to start slowly but with&#13;
winter coming it will probably become warm and&#13;
lively. I notice about the students that they talk a&#13;
lot, which is probably explained by coming from&#13;
such a nice place as Wisconsin, which orman Mailer referred to last Sunday as "the pleasant&#13;
country north of Chicago."&#13;
RANGER: You said you were once a lawyer:&#13;
were you also writing then?&#13;
LIDDY : Yes, and now looking back, with my&#13;
awful Irish guilt, perhaps sometimes at the expen e&#13;
of my clients. RANGER: From lawyer to teacher -- why did you&#13;
make the change? . LIDDY: Well, one morning in wig and gown, 1~ a&#13;
Probate motion before Justice Dawitt in the high&#13;
court, I thought: I am important, I have more th~n&#13;
the people in this affidavit. If I don'.t look out. I will&#13;
be only a lawyer. Then I looked out to 1!1e Dublin&#13;
sky. (l won't say I heard voices, but I m1ghU The&#13;
message was, go away and seek the real words. So I&#13;
was chosen, and by that I mean I was told to get at&#13;
the hard work necessary for writing adequate&#13;
Poet JCJTies Liddy (left) and Par&#13;
BENEFIT ROCK CONCERT ...................... FOR • •&#13;
GEORGE McGOVERN .................&#13;
October 13, 1972&#13;
Racine Labor Center 7 P.&#13;
2300 Layard Ave. til idnight&#13;
5 solid hours of&#13;
Country ~ Old Rock • o&#13;
Donation: s1 at door&#13;
Au P&lt;I !or&#13;
Rock&#13;
AL&#13;
•&#13;
1rd&#13;
• I II tt t t I&#13;
• er 1f c tc s&#13;
J I rift&#13;
CHECKI G&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST TIO AL&#13;
OF ACI E&#13;
0 e yo r free c ec i&#13;
acco t so at &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
New buildings on display at Open House&#13;
The new buildings on The&#13;
Umv nit)" of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
campu will be on public display&#13;
for tbe lirst lime durmg a public&#13;
Open House unday. Oct IS,&#13;
from noon to 5 p m&#13;
Thou nd of vi uors are expected&#13;
to tour the 700·acre&#13;
mpu. with major attention&#13;
tocu mg on the three new&#13;
hulldll'lt. the rna rve LibraryLe&#13;
mlng enter. with Its muchd1SCU..&#13;
d lain Place. the&#13;
Ph)' ical Education Buildmg.&#13;
nd the H bng hilhng Plant,&#13;
lh eentr tiled campu utilities&#13;
lit triblltion center&#13;
Other campus bUlldongs also&#13;
will b open. including&#13;
r nqUl t and Tall nt Halls,&#13;
which opened on fall of 1969, and&#13;
the envmes BUlldmR which 1&#13;
the 1 mporary campus union .&#13;
Th hrst Wop pen Hou e, on&#13;
. prtn of 1970 horUy arter the&#13;
new mpus opened. attracted&#13;
ohout 5. persons d pue an allday&#13;
ra rn Another 2.500 a tte~ed&#13;
th econd the follow lng pnng&#13;
I pla)' and exhrbiuons will be&#13;
f.. tured In all bUlldlOgs, meluding&#13;
computer demontrau&#13;
,lab lit pia" and art&#13;
exhibIts In reenqui tHall,&#13;
p erat mtm-tour s. demonlraUon&#13;
of the latest m learnong&#13;
m tenal and equIpment. and&#13;
_ lit pia 10 the Library'&#13;
Learning Center. and demon·&#13;
tratlons of various sports,&#13;
recreational activities, special&#13;
equipment and even a Pep Band&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
BulldlOg&#13;
In addition. the Parkside&#13;
Baroque Players will present&#13;
concerts at 1'30 p.m and 3 p.m.&#13;
in Greenquist Hall auditorium&#13;
103&#13;
A special service for parents&#13;
will be a "Kiddie Korral" child&#13;
care center in Tallent Hall for&#13;
live year olds and up, featuring&#13;
cartoon rtIms and ref"'5hments&#13;
to entertain the children who do&#13;
not care to accompany their&#13;
parents through the huildings.&#13;
Vi itors also will be able to see&#13;
two other major buildings well&#13;
along in construction: the&#13;
Communication Arts Building,&#13;
!cheduled for occupancy In early&#13;
pring 1973~ and a Classroom&#13;
Building, scheduled for completion&#13;
next September.&#13;
If-guiding tour Oyers wtll&#13;
uggest routes and activities and&#13;
provide special information on&#13;
the campus and its facilities.&#13;
They will be available at the&#13;
starting POints in the parking lots&#13;
and at information stops.&#13;
Parking will be in TaUent&#13;
Hall'. two parking lots. with&#13;
continuou shuttle bus service&#13;
from there around the loop road&#13;
~ hich encircles the central&#13;
academic rea ufficient buses&#13;
w,lI be on dul)' SO that one wtll&#13;
always be In sight and waits&#13;
should not exceed two or three&#13;
minutes Walking distances from&#13;
the lots to the main building area&#13;
range from one-third of a mile to&#13;
a mile. Mulllple buses will begin&#13;
nmnllll at 11'45 a m&#13;
S. says th VA...&#13;
'SHC)R£. Not ...:7rIFY n-( VA&#13;
OF "'ClAE E'N ADORESS&#13;
WIo\&amp;J "lO' LANOS.-:;"'&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
I I/JrI'_to&#13;
,&#13;
,.----. .. _"'A .....&#13;
,-IJDI "-_-,._"'-~ /'I'll -.__,._1; ...&#13;
Building projects and site&#13;
developrnent work totaling&#13;
nearly $30 million has been&#13;
completed or is nearing cornplelion&#13;
on the W·P campus&#13;
mce It opened to its first&#13;
students in eptember 1969. An&#13;
additional $6 million In projects,&#13;
IOcluding a permanent Campus&#13;
Umon and a Ph) ical Plant&#13;
facility, have been funded and&#13;
are in design and planning&#13;
tages. The UW ystem Board of&#13;
Regents recently recommended&#13;
a $3.1 million School of Modem&#13;
Industry Building for Parks ide&#13;
during the 1973-75 biennium.&#13;
Uw-Parkside is located in&#13;
northern Keno ha County adjacent&#13;
to Petrifying Springs Park&#13;
between Kenosha and Racme.&#13;
bordered on the west by Hwy. 31.&#13;
on the north and south by county&#13;
roads A and E and On the east by&#13;
Wood Rd. (30th Ave.). County E&#13;
exits from Interstate 94. TaUent&#13;
Hall parking lots are entered&#13;
(rom Wood Rd. and County A.&#13;
Workshop&#13;
planned&#13;
A study skills workshop will be&#13;
conducted (or students at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Oct. 16, 18,23.25 and Nov. 1 by the&#13;
tudent Counseling Services&#13;
staff. Workshop sessions will be&#13;
In Room D-I89 of the LibraryLearning&#13;
Center.&#13;
The sessions open to all&#13;
Parkside students. will cover&#13;
topics including note-taking.&#13;
preparation of themes and&#13;
research papers, reading and&#13;
taking exammations.&#13;
The workshop sessions are&#13;
patterned after a successful&#13;
study skills "pilot" program held&#13;
last summer&#13;
CIa)' Barnard of the Student&#13;
Counseling staff sa ',~ October&#13;
was chosen for tiie ~'5ions&#13;
because most students wiH have&#13;
completed six-week&#13;
examinations and wiH be able to&#13;
determine whether they need.&#13;
help with study sl&lt;iJls.&#13;
Marines interview here&#13;
MILWA KEE- The Mari~e&#13;
Corps Officer sel~tion T~am ~i1l&#13;
visit The University of wlscons~nParkside&#13;
Oct. 11 and 12 to l~-&#13;
terview students interested m&#13;
becoming commissioned officer.s.&#13;
The Officer Selection Team WIll&#13;
be located m the Student Activities&#13;
Building to provide .information&#13;
pertaining to ~ar1ne&#13;
Officer Programs, according to&#13;
Capt. D. M. BU~koveetz, the&#13;
Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Officer.&#13;
The Marine Corps offers&#13;
programs leading to. a commission&#13;
as a 2nd Lieutenant.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
: Parkside :&#13;
: Activities Board :&#13;
: sponsors :&#13;
: a bus trip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • VS. •&#13;
•&#13;
: OHIO STATE :&#13;
•&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME :&#13;
• Saturday, October 28 •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• $10 (Includes Bus. •&#13;
• Continental Breakfast, •&#13;
: $6 Game Ticket) :&#13;
• •&#13;
••&#13;
TICKETS IYAILABlE&#13;
••&#13;
: INFORMATION OffiCE :&#13;
• '202 TALLENT HALL • ••••••••••••••••&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
These programs are open to&#13;
undergraduates as well as&#13;
graduating seniors. To be&#13;
eligible, students must have a&#13;
"C" or better average. pass a&#13;
written examination, be&#13;
physically qualified and have the&#13;
leadership potential required of a&#13;
Marine Officer.&#13;
Aviation Officer Programs are&#13;
open to highly qualified students,&#13;
Woman Officer Programs are&#13;
available to junior and senior&#13;
women.&#13;
Regents&#13;
accept grant&#13;
MADISON .. Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system&#13;
Friday accepted a federal grant&#13;
of $5,493 in support of the Law&#13;
Enforcement EducatIon&#13;
Program (LEEP) at UW·&#13;
Parkside. The funds are part of&#13;
the $7,800 approved by the U.S&#13;
Department of Justice for the&#13;
first semester LEEP program at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
LEEP grants pay tuition for&#13;
local law enforcement officers&#13;
who wish to further their&#13;
education in job-related courses&#13;
while pursuing their careers.&#13;
VISIT&#13;
THE DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
CAMPUS CLOTHES.••... .FOR MEN&#13;
Try Us..•..••••..••• .You'lI Like Us!!!&#13;
STUDENT 10% DISCOUNT&#13;
This special discount is offered to Park-side students on all Bell's, regular&#13;
priced merchandise. Coupon must be presented al time of sale with I.D&#13;
BELL'S DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
offer expires Nov. 3D, 1972&#13;
~&#13;
come in and browse ...&#13;
CLOTHING BELL HOUSE&#13;
Downtown I Kenosha&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET !'If:. The P"'k&amp;ide_~ __&#13;
RANGER&#13;
" t pSS ...&#13;
hey kid! I&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
I hear it most reliably from a pal, Waldo Winchester, who is a scrite lor a local d~j~1&#13;
sheet. Well, Waldo says there are yards of opportunities for guys and dolls on~agcllance&#13;
over tile country. He says tllere is a real hot future In the newspaper racket a Id&#13;
to make some decent scratch, wllile maybe puttmg Ihe arm on some of the Ills of 0 k a\\'&#13;
terra tirma. With a high-class monicker like Waldo you can not help but have tile real n&#13;
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one·&#13;
hundred percent a sucker' Check it out."&#13;
T~@obo.'e R'H'lvone"" 100.. ly ".",I",od, mean,&#13;
'he "me ~a, no.e, he." he"o, '~an now '0 get&#13;
,"to an .. «ling c.,ce, H'llou,nol"m&#13;
Fo, I, •• ",Io,ma"on abou, lou,nal"n' &lt;a,.e,', 3n&lt;l&#13;
",hola,'h,p" w", •• o T~e New,c.po, F,,,,&lt;l. P 0&#13;
Bo. 300, Pnnce,on. New Je, .. y 08540 Also&#13;
Contac, yom locol new,pop." and yo", ,ehool&#13;
new,pope, odVl'•• ,&#13;
the swift Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to t"&#13;
or the battle always to the strong _ but it's a good way to be .&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
ew buildings on display at Open House&#13;
Marines interview here&#13;
Regents&#13;
accept grant&#13;
MADISON -- Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system&#13;
Friday accepted a federal grant&#13;
of $5,493 in support of the Law&#13;
Enforcement Education&#13;
Program (LEEP &gt; at WParkside.&#13;
The funds are part of&#13;
the $7,800 approved by the U.&#13;
Department of Justice for the&#13;
first semester LEEP program at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
ork hop&#13;
planned&#13;
A ·tudy kills wor k hop will be&#13;
conducted for tudents at The&#13;
niver ity of Wi consin-Parkside&#13;
t 16. 18, 23. 25 and ov. 1 by the&#13;
tudent Coun ehng ervices&#13;
tare Workshop es ions will be&#13;
in Room D-189 of the LibraryLearning&#13;
Cen er.&#13;
The e io open to all&#13;
Park ide tudents. will cover&#13;
topic includ ing note-taking,&#13;
prepara tion of theme and&#13;
r earch papers, reading and&#13;
taking examination&#13;
Th workshop se ion are&#13;
patte rned a fter a uccessful&#13;
tud) kill • pilot" program held&#13;
I t 1mm r&#13;
ay Barnard of the tudent&#13;
oun ling taff · ctober&#13;
\ a cho en for ,.. ior&#13;
because most tudents ha\'e&#13;
co mpleted ix eek&#13;
examina tion and will be able to&#13;
determine whether they need&#13;
help with tud) kills&#13;
11 w \ 'KEE- The 'Iarine&#13;
Corp fficer Selection T~am v.:m&#13;
vi it The ·niver ity of Wt cons~nPark&#13;
ide Oct. 11 and 12 to L~-&#13;
ter\'iey, tudent intere led ID&#13;
becoming commis ioned officer_s&#13;
The Officer Selection Team will&#13;
be located ID the Student Activities&#13;
Building to provide _informa&#13;
tion pertaining to Manne&#13;
Officer Programs, according to&#13;
Capt. D. i. Buckoveetz, ~ e&#13;
1arine Corps Officer election&#13;
om er.&#13;
The Marine Corps offers&#13;
program leading to . a commi&#13;
ion as a 2nd Lieutenant.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
: Parkside :&#13;
: Activities Board :&#13;
: sponsors :&#13;
: a bus trip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• • • •&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • vs. • •&#13;
• •&#13;
: OHIO STATE :&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME :&#13;
• Saturday, October 28 •&#13;
• • • • • $10 (Includes Bus •&#13;
• Continental Breakfast, •&#13;
: $6 Game Ticket) :&#13;
• • •&#13;
e TICKETS AVAILABLE •&#13;
e&#13;
: INFOR ATION OFFICE :&#13;
e 202 TALLENT HALL e&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
:\Iember F.D.I.C.&#13;
These programs are open to&#13;
undergraduates as well as&#13;
graduating seniors. To be&#13;
eligible, students must have a&#13;
"C" or better average, pass a&#13;
written examination, be&#13;
physically qualifi~d and ~ave the&#13;
leadership potential reqwred of a&#13;
Marine Officer.&#13;
Aviation Officer Programs are&#13;
open to highly qualified students.&#13;
Woman Officer Programs are&#13;
available to junior and senior&#13;
women.&#13;
LEEP grants pay tuition for&#13;
local Jaw enforcement officer&#13;
who wish to further their&#13;
education in job-related courses&#13;
while pursuing their careers&#13;
v~~l DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
CAMPUS CLOTHES ....... FOR MEN&#13;
Try Us ............... You'll Like Us!!!&#13;
STUDENT 10 % DISCOUNT This spec ia l d iscount i s offered to Par kside students on all Bell 's, regular&#13;
priced merchandise. Coupon must be presented at lime of sa le w ith 1. 0&#13;
BELL 'S DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
offer expires Nov. 30, 1972&#13;
come in and browse ...&#13;
CLOTHING BELL HOUSE&#13;
Downtown / Kenosha&#13;
'' pss t ...&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
I hear it most reliably from a pal, Waldo Winchester, who is a scribe for a loc al dail~I&#13;
sheet. Well, Waldo says there are yards of opportunities for guys and dol ls on rags a ce&#13;
over the country. He says there is a real hot future in the newspaper racket - a th~~&#13;
to make some decent scratch, while maybe putting the arm on some of the ills of : kn•~&#13;
terra firma. With a high-class monicker like Waldo you can not help but have th e rea&#13;
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one·&#13;
hundred percent a sucker! Check it out."&#13;
The above Runyonese, loo sely transla ted . means&#13;
the t,me has never been betlet than n ow to get&#13;
mto an exc,1In9 career in Iournal1sm&#13;
For free m1 o rmat,on about J0urnahsm ca, eers and&#13;
scholarships, write to The Newspaper Fund. P 0&#13;
Bo1t 300, Princeton. New Jersey 08540 Also&#13;
contact your local newspaper and your school&#13;
newspaper advise,&#13;
the swift Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to t ,,&#13;
or the battle always to the strong- but it's a good way to be ·&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET&#13;
t~Ak,..,N __ G_ E_ R_ &#13;
. '. ,&#13;
, ,&#13;
North -South Exchange I&#13;
panned&#13;
BYJeannjne Sip sma&#13;
J Croxford is a student from&#13;
pa;;side who participated in the&#13;
North.South Exchange Program.&#13;
This program ~llow~d him to&#13;
tt nd a prirnari ly black&#13;
a u~hern University, North&#13;
~~rolina Central University, for&#13;
the second semester of the 1968·69&#13;
school year.&#13;
As to how he felt on the first&#13;
day, he said it was kind of strange&#13;
and that the ten students from&#13;
Wisconsin sort of stuck together.&#13;
"To begin with, there is a&#13;
definite color distinction and you&#13;
reel kind of lost and out of place,&#13;
but once you get to know people,&#13;
youfeel more at home," Croxford&#13;
said&#13;
He said some people are very&#13;
friendly, others don't care if&#13;
vou're there or not and the black&#13;
militants usually just left him&#13;
alone&#13;
Most of his friends were not&#13;
other exchange students; he said&#13;
he hardly saw them at all. He had&#13;
met a lot of his friends in a play&#13;
he was in.&#13;
"It was a good experience. You&#13;
learn what life is like in a&#13;
minority. Most white people don't&#13;
get the chance. You run into&#13;
situations you read about blacks&#13;
getting into."&#13;
Part of the purpose of this&#13;
program is to experience difrerent&#13;
cultural and social&#13;
situations. Croxford said that&#13;
there were differences in the&#13;
kinds of music, ways of dancing,&#13;
verbal expressions, and some of&#13;
the foods in the cafeteria; there&#13;
were also a lot of courses in black&#13;
culture&#13;
"1 noticed that the people&#13;
seemed to be better dressed."&#13;
Croxford said. "It wax not uncommon&#13;
to see a guy Tn" a sports&#13;
jacket&#13;
He said he'd go back if given&#13;
the chance, but the program only&#13;
allows one to go down for a&#13;
semester without paying Qut-ofstate&#13;
tuition.&#13;
"You have to go there with an&#13;
open mind, knowing it isn't going&#13;
to be all good or all bad. It's the&#13;
same as anywhere else; you meet&#13;
some people you don't get along&#13;
with and some who have the&#13;
same interests," Croscord said.&#13;
"~fter Iwas there for a while, I&#13;
didn't think of people as being&#13;
?lack or white anymore; they're&#13;
Just your friends and there's no&#13;
color distinction."&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
The academic year 1972-73 i&#13;
the erghth year of the U. . s&#13;
f W&#13;
· mversIty&#13;
o ISconsin's one-semester&#13;
student exchange program with a&#13;
black university Thi&#13;
offers th '. IS program&#13;
. . e Umversity of&#13;
WIsconSin students&#13;
t&#13;
. an oppor&#13;
unity to grow in th .&#13;
d&#13;
err unerstanding&#13;
of Amerl'ca .&#13;
tit ti n inS&#13;
I U IOns and society b&#13;
tici . Y par- icipating for a semester in a&#13;
totally different ac aderm&#13;
cultural and social life style th&#13;
lC&#13;
,&#13;
that of their own experience a~~&#13;
background The&#13;
. program&#13;
stresses the differences which the&#13;
exchange student WI' II .Incur&#13;
becau~e we live in a complex and&#13;
changing society in which differences&#13;
among people -- racial&#13;
geographic, religious and&#13;
economic -- are real and&#13;
unavoidable. By realizing this&#13;
through experience, the student&#13;
can become more aware of the&#13;
why as well as what the problems&#13;
and is.sues are in America today.&#13;
Sprmg semester, Wisconsin&#13;
students will attend North&#13;
Carolina Central University It is&#13;
located in the circle of ac~demic&#13;
institutions which include Duke&#13;
University in Durham and the&#13;
University of North Carolina in&#13;
neighboring Chapel Hill. Textiles&#13;
and tobacco industries are also&#13;
predominant in the Durham&#13;
area, and the weather is mild.&#13;
The population of Durham was&#13;
95,438 in the 1970 census&#13;
Exchange students follow a&#13;
course program similar to one&#13;
they would follow at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Tl1j.s does not e.xclude&#13;
taking courses for which there&#13;
are no direct equivalents at&#13;
Wisconsin, but which would be of&#13;
special value to take at the exchange&#13;
school. It is the student's&#13;
responsibility to consult the&#13;
Office of Admissions on the&#13;
transferability of any courses&#13;
they may take. They should also&#13;
consult academic advisors in&#13;
their college or major. To date&#13;
there has bee&#13;
ficult n no major die-&#13;
. Y regardlOg transfer of&#13;
credits. StUdents .'11 w recewe&#13;
~ansfer credits for work taken at&#13;
e exchange University. not&#13;
grades. Participation In the&#13;
program will be noted 00 the&#13;
student's uw transcript.&#13;
Applicants who will be fresh.&#13;
m:~ during participation are not&#13;
elIgible. Students who will be&#13;
Jumo.rs during participation Will&#13;
tM: given priority. tuoents ho&#13;
w~ll.be seniors are oot normauv&#13;
ehglble. In order to a ist \!lith&#13;
program activities participanls&#13;
should be at Wi eonsin for at&#13;
l~a.st a year follo""ing par&#13;
t1clpation in the program&#13;
Moreover. the Uni\'er It)· of&#13;
Wisconsin requires that a tude:nt&#13;
must earn his la l 30 crechts jn&#13;
residence to receive a Wisconsin&#13;
degree. An applicant shoold ha\'e&#13;
a cumulative CPA of 2.5 through&#13;
last semester. Progress in tho&#13;
semester's classes will also be&#13;
evaluated. There are some ex·&#13;
ceptions.&#13;
There is a n agreement by&#13;
North Carolina Central and&#13;
University of Wisconsin Sj tern&#13;
campuses (except Madison~ that&#13;
exchange students are permitted&#13;
to pay Wisconsin tuition on thesr&#13;
Wisconsin campus before the\&#13;
leave for "CCl: Thu tbey \\ould&#13;
avoid paymg Xorth Carolina outof·state&#13;
tuition at ,'CCC&#13;
Students will pay room and&#13;
board and other expenses at&#13;
NCCU. The offiCial room and&#13;
board costs per semesler are&#13;
s-I2Q&#13;
AccordlOg to 150m Fern, 10&#13;
terested students must pick up an&#13;
application at his office and ha\'e&#13;
it and related form turned 10 b\&#13;
Nov. 3. They ",Ill then be uiterviewed&#13;
between ,,·o\: 6 and&#13;
10V. 10 and nolificatlon of&#13;
selection will be made by ..'0\ 20&#13;
There will be an orientalJOO held&#13;
in Madison 10 early December&#13;
and the students wiU leave for&#13;
North Carolina Central&#13;
University around Jan. 5. 1973&#13;
: .&#13;
Cham- Tap-Bar&#13;
Wed., Oct. 11, 1971 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
Sorry. hoa&#13;
"Leave your empty&#13;
cigarette pack&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
A large. orange. IIll lh bUcIt&#13;
lenermg Implores toom and&#13;
facult) to "le3\ yoor em"t&#13;
Cleareue paclt " rn ord .... thai •&#13;
"httle rI" In a • hi .. au f;&#13;
ho pitaI" m.y ha\ free&#13;
hour m an Iron lu&#13;
In tront 0( the gn 011. table&#13;
are some •. empt) pIIc of&#13;
crgareue. ~ haun o( lIt lor.&#13;
chtld"&#13;
rT) 0&#13;
Tbe si n In the caJ"etrna on&#13;
the K ha campllS Jud I&#13;
lrom the .... mb&lt;r 0( ern ) pa&#13;
0/ are Ie th m&#13;
riTectl\ nfortunatlth t I&#13;
a cruel ,thou ~po no&#13;
tenuonalh so hoa&#13;
Achee' '" Ith Lh mat.n ofh at&#13;
Kenosha ~ .. Ied no OM&#13;
knev. the anglO 0( the I nit"""&#13;
been compl"'necI about I.....&#13;
•~eone.·· a td&#13;
lIer efforts to lind the niaker 01&#13;
th ., n prG\ed frultl Th&#13;
reporter' ellorb did .....&#13;
Call to t,I""au ·.r~a&#13;
ho--pltal prG\'ed Jll.! a lut I&#13;
There.po ra edlrom "\Ie&#13;
ha\ e no one ~ an an Iron lu&#13;
to'"Tha' the old .1., j e.n&#13;
the .. arid ••&#13;
"&#13;
10 % commission&#13;
BUSI G PROBLEMS?&#13;
Rider. n eded to Rocin&#13;
or service ",ill be discontinued.&#13;
T II your&#13;
fri end. to ride the bu.,&#13;
Schedule. ovo; loble 01&#13;
lJW -p InfonTlol ion Office&#13;
or coli JeNel Ech 1-&#13;
borger ot 553-2342.&#13;
Special&#13;
Sx7 COLOR E LAR E.IE. iT&#13;
OC70BER I ' 0 'OVE. IBER I I&#13;
~~~~------------&#13;
Pukside AcliYities Board prm Is&#13;
P to and t\f'\&#13;
Elm\\ood PtW&#13;
381 Durand PI .....&#13;
SsHSII&#13;
•&#13;
D&#13;
G offr&#13;
fUllfil! lbe&#13;
on r Band&#13;
Fri., Oct. 13 9:00 p.m,&#13;
Student Activities Bldg,&#13;
dm. P&#13;
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?&#13;
STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFICE&#13;
0-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295&#13;
251 I Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
d"gne onTap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches 0&#13;
:&#13;
. and Pizza :J:)0.&#13;
/~.-..~.-.. ---------~-_.;"&#13;
) § We need people who are money-hungry!&#13;
)&#13;
)&#13;
' (&#13;
ed., Oct. 11, 972 THE PARKSIDE RA G R&#13;
North-South Exchange Panned 1&#13;
BY Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
J Croxford is a student from&#13;
Pa~:side who participated in the&#13;
North-South Exchange Program.&#13;
Th's program allowed him to&#13;
tiend a primarily black&#13;
\uthern Univers~ty, . North&#13;
Carolina Central Uruvers1ty, for&#13;
the second semester of the 1968-69&#13;
chool year. A to how he fel~ on the first&#13;
day, he said it was kind of strange&#13;
and that the ten students from&#13;
Wisconsin sort of stuck together.&#13;
·'To begin with, there is a&#13;
definite color distinction and you&#13;
reel kind of lost and out of place,&#13;
but once you get to know people,&#13;
vou feel more at home," Croxford&#13;
said&#13;
He said some people are very&#13;
friendl), others don't care if&#13;
l'ou're there or not and the black&#13;
militants usually just left him&#13;
alone&#13;
Most of his friends were not&#13;
other exchange students; he said&#13;
he hardly saw them at all. He had&#13;
met a lot of his friends in a play&#13;
he was in.&#13;
"It was a good experience. You&#13;
learn what life is like in a&#13;
minority. Most white people don't&#13;
get the chance. You run into&#13;
ituations you read about blacks&#13;
getting mto."&#13;
Th~ academic yelir 1972-73 . the eighth year of th U . . is&#13;
f . e mvers1ty 0 Wisconsin's one-semester&#13;
student e~change program with a&#13;
black umversity Th'&#13;
offers th . . is program . . e Umversity of&#13;
W1sconsm students&#13;
portunity to grow in tha~ op- d . e1r un- :;s:_andmg of American inst·&#13;
I. u i~ns and society by par1c1patmg&#13;
for a semest . er m a totally different academ.&#13;
cultural and social life style th;~&#13;
that of their own experience and&#13;
background The p · rogram&#13;
stresses the differences which the&#13;
exchange student w1·11 mcur .&#13;
becau~e we live in a complex and&#13;
changmg society in which differences&#13;
among people -- racial&#13;
geographic, religious and&#13;
economic -- are real and&#13;
unavoidable. By realizing this&#13;
through experience, the student&#13;
can become more aware of the&#13;
why as well as what the problem&#13;
and is_sues are in America today em ter·&#13;
evaluated&#13;
ceptions&#13;
There 1&#13;
rr •&#13;
'Lea ur&#13;
• Cl ar&#13;
Part of the purpose of this&#13;
program is to experience different&#13;
cultural and social&#13;
1tuations. Croxford said that&#13;
there were differences in the&#13;
kinds of music, ways of dancing,&#13;
verbal expressions, and some of&#13;
the foods in the cafeteria; there&#13;
were also a lot of courses in black&#13;
culture&#13;
Spring semester, Wiscon m&#13;
students will attend :-.orth&#13;
Carolina Central Universitv It i&#13;
located in the circle ot ac~dem1c&#13;
institutions which include Duke&#13;
University in Durham and the&#13;
University of North Carolina in&#13;
neighboring Chapel Hill Textile&#13;
and tobacco industries are also&#13;
predominant in the Durham&#13;
area, and the weather i mild&#13;
The population of Durham wa&#13;
95,438 in the 1970 census&#13;
Exchange students follow a&#13;
course program similar to one&#13;
they would follow at the&#13;
University of Wi con inParkside.&#13;
This does not e: elude&#13;
taking courses for which there&#13;
are no direct equivalent at&#13;
Wisconsin, but which would be of&#13;
special value to take at the exchange&#13;
school. It is the tudent&#13;
responsibility to con ult the&#13;
Office of Admi ions on the&#13;
transferability of any course&#13;
they may take. They hould al o&#13;
consult academic advi or in&#13;
their college or major To date&#13;
Specia&#13;
'·I noticed that the people&#13;
seemed to be better dressed "&#13;
Croxford aid "It wax not uncommon&#13;
to see a guy in a sports&#13;
jacke&#13;
He said he'd go back if given&#13;
the chance, but the program only&#13;
allows one to go down for a&#13;
emester without paying out-oftate&#13;
tuition.&#13;
"You have to go there with an&#13;
open mind, knowing it isn't going&#13;
to be all good or all bad. It's the&#13;
same as anywhere else; you meet&#13;
ome people you don't get along&#13;
with and some who have the&#13;
·ame interests," Croscord said.&#13;
"After I was there for a while, I&#13;
didn't think of people as being&#13;
black or white anymore; they're&#13;
JU t your friends and there's no&#13;
color distinction ."&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
:······························································&#13;
.&#13;
Cham-Tap-Bar =&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
:&#13;
Ham Sandwiches O&#13;
. and Pizza O ; : •.•.••••••••...••••••.••.•.•.•....................•...........•&#13;
Our&#13;
Fri. Oct. 13&#13;
Studen&#13;
I~.,.-....,..-...~~,,,,,,--..._,...-.... ,,..-......,_,,...---....&#13;
) ll We need people who are money-hungry!&#13;
)&#13;
) RE 0 ER 0&#13;
'&#13;
7&#13;
•&#13;
10 % commission STOP BY THE PAR SIDE RANGE OFFICE&#13;
D-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING P.E. Bldg. underused Mother Nature's organ&#13;
gardening food supply _ Will~&#13;
foods -- will. be discussed and&#13;
collected during a University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Extension COUfS&#13;
"Edible Wild Plants," e,&#13;
Three lectures will be held 0&#13;
Thursdays, beginning Oct. 1;&#13;
7:30 p.m., on the UW-Parksid~&#13;
Wood Road Campus; and thre&#13;
field trips on Saturdays, 8 a.rn te&#13;
noon. . 0&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewi&#13;
professor of life science at ~~.&#13;
~ark~idfe, will&#13;
t&#13;
,instruct the class'&#13;
or&#13;
t&#13;
l~ 0lrma IOn on field trip&#13;
rna er-ta 5 and registrar&#13;
ta t Universit IOn can c mv~rsl y Extension 553:&#13;
2312. There IS a special reduced&#13;
student fee of $5.00.&#13;
An organizational meeting for&#13;
all students and faculty interested&#13;
in studying Christian&#13;
Science is being planned. The&#13;
group is looking for a faculty or&#13;
staff member as an advisor to the&#13;
group. For more information,&#13;
contact Rich Meyers at 634-1202.&#13;
"It's Wbat's Happening" will&#13;
be a regular feature or The&#13;
Parkside Ranger. All clubs and&#13;
organizations are urged to&#13;
submit notices about meetings.&#13;
rallies. etc. in person at the&#13;
Parkside Ranger office, D-IM&#13;
LLC. We ask that these be in our&#13;
oUice one week before the issue&#13;
(Wednesday for the next Wednesday's&#13;
issue). None will be&#13;
accepted over the phone.&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
•&#13;
will be holding elections from&#13;
Oct. 23-25. The deadline lor the&#13;
completion of petitions is 10 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 16. The deadline for platforms&#13;
is Oct. 11 and otficer&#13;
candidates are asked to appear&#13;
for pictures on Oct. 10 from 10 -12&#13;
noon at l..LC0-194. Petitions may&#13;
be picked up at the PSGA office&#13;
LLC 0.193, the main desk in the&#13;
library, the information desk in&#13;
the LLC, or at the student services&#13;
office on the Kenosha&#13;
campus, K-l35. Volunteers are&#13;
needed to work at the polls. You&#13;
can sign up at the SG office, LLC&#13;
D-193.&#13;
By Shawn R_ Clements&#13;
II' a beauhlul, n,'" Olympic size pool Adjoining the pool are very&#13;
Ole . modem. male and female locker rooms. At one end of the&#13;
T) tal-clear pool are diving hoards of obvious quality. Idyllic, isn't it?&#13;
The onl) probl m With the scene i a lack of the most important&#13;
commodlt) - people Aecordmg to sst. to the Athletic Director Loren&#13;
lIem "The enure buildmg. e pecially the pool. is gro Iy uoderused."&#13;
Th r "' lor thl. underuse are quite unclear. Lack of knowledge?&#13;
If lOU re readmg thl ,that no longer applies. (Fees and schedules at&#13;
end 01 rncle r&#13;
Th lO'mn tum 1 adding two electrically operated curtains which.&#13;
htn 10" red ~ III divide the gym mto three sections, thus making&#13;
m re roodm for el a well as general u e. The sauna, too, will soon&#13;
r ,&#13;
Th ee I me m ntion about the lact that the Physical Education&#13;
b'Jlldlng "III have to be elf ustaming in the near future. Hein's&#13;
r pun to qu . hon about tin was that lillie, if anything, is known&#13;
bout that Idea Thu ,any peculation about the possible eflect of&#13;
uch • mev on fe IS pure conjecture.&#13;
IIIth II the laClhtl available in this million-dollar building. nonus&#13;
b) tUdent, faculty and staff IS incomprehensible, especially&#13;
conSldermR th t I for equivalent facilities would run $150 on the&#13;
PJ he morkl't "Eve-f)'one kept crying for a swimming pool .. Hein&#13;
ld "No\lt It's here U Il!" '&#13;
f e. h dul Includes&#13;
$1.50 mo. U Shirt, shorts, towel, swimsuit, aU laundering&#13;
The WhiteskeJlar Coffee House&#13;
•&#13;
will be holding auditions on&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 18, for upcoming&#13;
acts this fall. They will&#13;
begin at 1 p.m. and continue until&#13;
they are all heard, Some twenty&#13;
acts are expected to audition.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
A Republican "Meet the&#13;
Candidates" Dessert will be held&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct, 12, at&#13;
the Kenosha VFW. GOP candidates&#13;
for state and local offices,&#13;
as well as tst District&#13;
Congressional candidate Merrill&#13;
Stalbaurn, will be present at the&#13;
affair, spmsored by the Kenosha&#13;
County Young Republicans, with&#13;
which the Parkside Young&#13;
Republicans are affiliated. For&#13;
more information, phone Marilyn&#13;
Schubert at 658-8954.&#13;
Audit.ions for the 1972&#13;
production of cardiac capers has&#13;
been .set for Oct. 10 in the 51.&#13;
Mary s Hospital cafeteria at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
. The show is open to anyone&#13;
IOterested and includes a varlet&#13;
f&#13;
.. da Y o SlOglOg, ncing, and some&#13;
drama. Anyone who auditions'&#13;
~heshow is used in some aspect ~~&#13;
It.&#13;
($2 01 thl Lock, locker, towel&#13;
I. r fundabl&#13;
The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
•&#13;
present the feature film,&#13;
"Loneliness of the Long Distance&#13;
Runner," and a short, "The&#13;
Wall," at 7:30 p.m. today (Oct.&#13;
11) in Greenquist Hall. Donation&#13;
is 60 cents .&#13;
Towel&#13;
wimsUit. per usage&#13;
Paddle ball or handball (player keeps ball)&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
liED LE&#13;
The Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
•&#13;
will meet today at 7:30 p.m. in D174LLC&#13;
to discuss the remainder&#13;
of ~e Gloria Steinem tape and&#13;
attitudes and opinions about it.&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Pool National Varsity Club&#13;
Mon - Fn, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m&#13;
Mon - Thurs, 5:30 p.m. to to p.m.&#13;
Sal., 10 a m to 5 p.m.&#13;
Sun, 1-30 p.m. to 10 p.m.&#13;
•&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha ,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
• BEER. SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS. WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P M&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M. • •&#13;
CALL&#13;
632-1565&#13;
.". s.M.i.&#13;
UVE·OM&#13;
Cymna lum&#13;
Mon • Thurs, 7,45 a m.&#13;
to to p m.&#13;
f'rl .. 7:45 am to 6 p.m.&#13;
t , 9 am (0 5 p.m.&#13;
Sun, 1,30 pm. to 10 p.m.&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
RACINE 553·2150&#13;
rEACH~R&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
~&#13;
The House of&#13;
fIne Diamond.s 2909 DURAND AVE_ RACINE, wise.&#13;
1----------------------- I -------1&#13;
!GINO'S TAILORS!&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I Clothes for the Young Man I&#13;
I Large Selection of Doubleknit Slacks and Sportcoats :&#13;
I Alterations and Styling I&#13;
I 10 pet. off with Parkside I.D. I&#13;
! 2212 60th Street 654-0774 I&#13;
,_____________ I __________ 1&#13;
ramou Brand Watches&#13;
Ring - Jewelry- GUts&#13;
Repairs THE&#13;
EST ABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
UT (Itfttl • ,. w:&#13;
. ,"!.-a . N.I4A. ..,.&#13;
_ ,UIt-.a&#13;
CAIRY-OU1S&#13;
....-_...~.......&#13;
,.... a....- ,... _ .._--,.." ...- -'_ .. ...... _.ra&#13;
,....-&#13;
... ... I'" -'-&#13;
...l'O_&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
RESEARCH MATlRIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
SInd IOf y r dtsctiphve, UIl-to-dale&#13;
121pIIp, lUll Oldertltliol of 2 300&#13;
QUlllty ft3urch papers helln&#13;
$1 oaI. co'" ,utal. 1M ~H1101.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLlMIT£D&#13;
519 Gl£HROCK m., SUIT£ 203&#13;
lOS AHGEUS, CALIF. !10024&#13;
(213) 411-S414 • m·S4!l3&#13;
''We Mid • loul salesmln"&#13;
A mateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night Jim FlIlpK. 116-.4152, Racine&#13;
1S..c&#13;
...... Steve Httgeno .............d $1.. KlMOSha W', 531 w. 654-7297, KenoSha&#13;
• I. «I, 654.5139&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANG ER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
P. ld . underused IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
•&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
"It' \ llal' Happening" will&#13;
~ a re ular feature of The&#13;
P rk ide Ranger. II club and&#13;
rganization are urged to&#13;
ubmit notic about meeting ,&#13;
rallie , etc . in pe on at the&#13;
the pool are ve~&#13;
Park id Ranger orri e, D-l!M&#13;
LL . We a k that the e be in our&#13;
ffi e one week b fore the i ue&#13;
!\\edn day for the ne t Wed·&#13;
n da) • i u ) .• 'one will be&#13;
ace pt d ov r the phone.&#13;
Par ide tudent • Government&#13;
ill be holding elections from&#13;
Oct. 23-25. The deadline for the&#13;
completion of petition i 10 a.m.&#13;
r, to&#13;
t. 16. The deadline for plat·&#13;
form i Oct. 11 and officer&#13;
candidat are a ked to appear&#13;
for pictures on Oct. 10 from 10 -12&#13;
noon at LLC D-194. Petitions may&#13;
be picked up at the PSGA office&#13;
LLC D-193, the main desk in the&#13;
library. the information desk in&#13;
the LLC, or at the tudent ser-&#13;
\ic office on the Kenosha&#13;
campu , K-135. Volunteers are&#13;
needed to work at the polls. You&#13;
can ign up at the SG office, LLC&#13;
D-193.&#13;
•&#13;
T The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
\\ 1m u,t. per e&#13;
present the feature film ,&#13;
"Loneliness or the Long Distance&#13;
Runner, ' and a short, "The&#13;
Wall," at 7:30 p.m. today (Oct.&#13;
11) in Greenquist Hall. Donation&#13;
is 60 cents .&#13;
11 or h nd I &lt; play r keeps ball)&#13;
· Ht.I Lf.&#13;
m. to 1: p.m&#13;
• S: p.m. to 10 p.m.&#13;
m to s p.m.&#13;
pm. to 10 p.m.&#13;
, 7: 5 .m.&#13;
f 'ne Diamonds&#13;
m BrandW tch&#13;
in - J 'Atll') -GU&#13;
R lr -&#13;
-z.s.....&#13;
IIE-11&#13;
L&#13;
The Parkside W• omen's Caucus&#13;
will meet today at 7: 30 p.m. in D·&#13;
174 LLC to discuss the remainder&#13;
or the Gloria Steinem tape and&#13;
attitudes and opinions about it.&#13;
•BEER• SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
I CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
Q OPE N DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
u&#13;
I&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.&#13;
0&#13;
CALL&#13;
I 632-1565 R&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC.&#13;
------------------------------&#13;
GINO'S TAILORS&#13;
Clothes for the Young Man&#13;
Large Selection of Doubleknit Slacks and Sportcoats&#13;
Alterations and Styl ing&#13;
10 pct. off with Parkside I.D.&#13;
2212 60th Street 654-0774&#13;
' I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I ______________________________ !&#13;
RESEARCH MAffRIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
... .&#13;
NML&#13;
lit( OISIC'\iS&#13;
IOR "01VIOU4l ~&#13;
• 116 '152. Rac,ne&#13;
2S1.5 6Jr Steve Hagenow 654 d St., Kenosha, Wis. 531&lt;10, 654-5739 ' -7297, Kenosha&#13;
An organizational meeting for&#13;
all students and faculty interested&#13;
in studying Christian&#13;
Science is being planned. The&#13;
group is looking for a faculty or&#13;
taff member as an advisor to the&#13;
group. For more information,&#13;
contact Rich Meyers at 634-1202.&#13;
The Whiteskellar • Coffee House&#13;
will be holding auditions on&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 18, for upcoming&#13;
acts this fall. They will&#13;
begin at l p.m. and continue until&#13;
they are all heard. Some twenty&#13;
acts are expected to audition.&#13;
•&#13;
A Republican "Meet the&#13;
Candidates" Dessert will be held&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 12, at&#13;
the Kenosha VFW. GOP candidates&#13;
for state and local offices,&#13;
as well as 1st District&#13;
Congressional candidate Merrill&#13;
Stalbaurn, will be present at the&#13;
affair, sponsored by the Kenosha&#13;
County Young Republicans, with&#13;
which the Parkside Young&#13;
Republicans are affiliated. For&#13;
more information, phone Marilyn&#13;
Schubert at 658-8954.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mother Nature's organi&#13;
gardening food supply _ wil~&#13;
foods - will_ be discussed and&#13;
co~ected_ durmg a University of&#13;
W1sconsm-Extension course "Edible Wild Plants." '&#13;
Three lectures will be held 0&#13;
Thursdays, beginning Oct. 1:&#13;
7:30 p.m., on the UW-Parksid '&#13;
Wood Road Campus; and thr&#13;
field trips on Saturdays, s a.m. t&#13;
noon. 0&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewi&#13;
professor of life science at c;,&#13;
Parkside, will instruct the cl ·&#13;
For information on field ~ -&#13;
materials and registrat· lp ta tu . . ion con c mv~rs1ty Extension 553:&#13;
2312. There 1s a special reduced&#13;
student fee of $5.00.&#13;
•&#13;
Audit_ions for the 1972&#13;
production of cardiac capers ha&#13;
been ,set for_ Oct. 10 in the l.&#13;
Mary s Hospital cafeteria at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The show is open to anyon&#13;
interested and includes a varlet&#13;
f . . d y o smgmg, ancing, and some&#13;
drama. Anyone who auditions . th h . ed' lO . e s ow 1s us m some aspect of&#13;
It.&#13;
•&#13;
443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha ,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
THE&#13;
ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur C1Jntest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night &#13;
-&#13;
0",&#13;
"&#13;
Membersof the UW-Parkside women's tennis team t k&#13;
e&#13;
for a photo. with Coach Dick Frecka Pictur da(le)a mement from practice to&#13;
pos • e -r are Sue ./II de' Squire, Kay Becker, Sue Gra f and Frecka. Pat K k' h anggaar, ind&#13;
I h R e rc , t e squad's N I layer .vho ed t e anger women to a first place f' , h' I o . P , InIS rn ast .veek's O&lt;t be&#13;
f&#13;
st Tennis Tournament, IS not pictured. 0 re&#13;
, Photo by Crarg Robert&#13;
"Yon ve got to he optimistic"&#13;
I'I;EI:: L.\:\CE WRlTI:"G&#13;
SERVtCES Report writing,&#13;
speech writing, commercial&#13;
cOPY-editing. editing and ~rlOg done in my home.&#13;
ease call 639-7378&#13;
eVenings.&#13;
WithOll,t hurting your feelings,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Pat enjoys playing on the team,&#13;
and says she loves competition.&#13;
She doesn't mind strange courts&#13;
and likes to play away from home&#13;
because "we have a lot of fun on&#13;
the trips."&#13;
Sue Wanggard doesn't dislike&#13;
playing away meets because the&#13;
courts are strange, but because&#13;
the people are strange, so she&#13;
likes to play at home better.&#13;
"It really helps to have&#13;
somebody there to watch you,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Sue enjoys playing on hot,&#13;
sunny days, but her favorite&#13;
conditions are cloudy and cool.&#13;
"With the sun coming out when&#13;
it's to my advantage," she added.&#13;
Sue says the wind doesn't&#13;
bother her, but after a couple of&#13;
wild shots cries 01 "BI"" , Wind "&#13;
echoed arouod the courts&#13;
Practice is held every weekdav&#13;
from about 3 to 5 p.m. and ~&#13;
Fridays it can last all afternoon&#13;
Along with practice&#13;
developing a good attitude IS oi&#13;
great imporlance&#13;
"Yoo've got to be opium tic,&#13;
concentrate and try to do "hat&#13;
the coach tells yeo." said ue&#13;
Wanggard.&#13;
During a practice doubles&#13;
match, Frecka continuously&#13;
encouraged and cnucued hJ&#13;
players.&#13;
At one point, when there&#13;
seemed to be more critieism&#13;
flying around than tennis balls,&#13;
he turned and said \l, ith a mile,&#13;
"I can't let these girls thi&#13;
they're too good, because then&#13;
they can beat anybody:"&#13;
Soccer&#13;
oct. 14.&#13;
Oct. 21 ..&#13;
Cross&#13;
Oct. 13&#13;
Oct. t7 .&#13;
Country&#13;
. Notre Dame Invitational at Bend, Inc&#13;
Ma rquene at Parts'de&#13;
Golf&#13;
Oct. 14 .&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
Oct. 14&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Oct. 18&#13;
UW-Plalle..,Ue at Pari&lt; Id&#13;
Marquette at Parks,de&#13;
U\\'-Mad,son at ~Iadlson&#13;
Oshkosh tnvltational at Oshkosh&#13;
W-oshkosh at Par ,de&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine,&#13;
$1 a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
American State Bankt&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
Phone 658-2582&#13;
3928 60th St.&#13;
Wed" OCt. 11, 1972 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 7&#13;
ByKathrynWellner&#13;
Good exercise and fun aren't&#13;
the only things Pat Keltic, Sue&#13;
Wanggardand Sue Graf get out of&#13;
tennis.&#13;
The girls, respectively the top&#13;
three members of the women's&#13;
tennisteam, each have their own&#13;
unique reasons for playing.&#13;
After being injured as a&#13;
gymnast, Sue Wannggard took up&#13;
playing tennis and running cross&#13;
«entry. She says she does it&#13;
mostly for her own personal&#13;
enjoyment.&#13;
"Il changed my personality,&#13;
100. I keep more to myself now; I&#13;
don't let my emotions show as&#13;
much anymore," said Sue. "One&#13;
thinga sport like this teaches you&#13;
is patience," she added.&#13;
Sue Graf, a senior, gets a&#13;
feeling of accomplishment,&#13;
especially when she wins.&#13;
"When -I win-E really-feel-Iike-c--v-.&#13;
work&#13;
I've done something, like all the&#13;
and practice have paid off,"&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
she said. "But when Ilose I feel&#13;
very upset with myself, and&#13;
depressed. "&#13;
Sueseemed very positive about&#13;
the effect tennis has had on her&#13;
personality.&#13;
"Oh, yes!" she exclaimed,&#13;
"especially the ups and downs."&#13;
Nobodylikes to lose. Pat Kekic&#13;
describes the way she feels&#13;
before a match as "the worst&#13;
possiblebutterflies" and she says&#13;
that she doesn't settle down until&#13;
aller she starts playing.&#13;
"Coach (Dick) Frecka always&#13;
makes us relax with his snide&#13;
httle jokes," she said, smiling.&#13;
Winning, on the other hand, is&#13;
always exciting, • 'especially&#13;
when your coach is there or if it's&#13;
the match you need to win the&#13;
meet."&#13;
According to Pat, playing&#13;
lenms taught her to be both a&#13;
g~ Winner and a good loser. She&#13;
beheves that it's good for people&#13;
to learn good sportsmanship and&#13;
courtesy.&#13;
"It has helped me to learn how&#13;
to get along with people" she&#13;
~aid. '&#13;
Pat has had the advantage of&#13;
living across the street from&#13;
some tennis courts and she&#13;
slarted playing when she was&#13;
thirteen.&#13;
"The best time for kids to start&#13;
Isv,;hen they're nine or len," said&#13;
Pat.&#13;
She never had lessons until she&#13;
played for the team. so all of&#13;
oach Frecka's advi&lt;.:e has been&#13;
e1tome.&#13;
·Ht·s good at giving criticism&#13;
MemMr" F' 0 I C&#13;
Harrier' b&#13;
La t TIl sda)" the Ranger&#13;
hamers .. ent (0 t ..hi a&#13;
and came bo "'10 qwte&#13;
ha~ Coach \',c GodIf'O) ,d&#13;
"n. IS the that.. ha.&#13;
be.,on them 10 the lour }..&#13;
thal e ',"eo been • am them&#13;
n,., top five .",..,.,... ran a&#13;
team for th rlrst ume th ) r&#13;
If this eeps '" d a&#13;
coote~ lor the . AlA DlSlnct&#13;
O1amplOnSh,p .,&#13;
TIC&#13;
l;&#13;
Rm&#13;
DE IS 81El&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
In t&#13;
\aUa e&#13;
Information It&#13;
I, TaUonl Hall&#13;
,&#13;
M mbers o f the UW-Parkside women's tennis team tak • •&#13;
e . h C h D· k F e a memen ro practice o for a photo. wit oac 1c recka. Pictured (I-) S&#13;
pose S r are ue anggaard Cind S U·,re Kay Becke r, ue Graf and Frecka Pat Kek· th 1 '&#13;
q ' • 1 c, e squad s O I layer who led the Ranger women to a first place finish in I t k' Ok. be&#13;
p • • as ee s to r- fe st Tennis Tournament, 1s not pictured. Pho&#13;
O&#13;
b\ Cr&#13;
1&#13;
R&#13;
"You've got to he optimi~tic&#13;
BY Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Good exercise and fun. aren't&#13;
the only things Pat Kekic, Sue&#13;
wanggard and Sue Graf get out of&#13;
tennis. . The girls, respectively the top&#13;
three members of the women's&#13;
tennis team, each have their own&#13;
unique reasons for playing.&#13;
After being injured as a&#13;
gymnast, Sue Wannggar? took up&#13;
playing tennis and runnmg cross&#13;
country. She says she does it&#13;
mostly for her own personal&#13;
enjoyment.&#13;
"It changed my personality,&#13;
too. I keep more to myself now; I&#13;
don't let my emotions show as&#13;
much anymore," said Sue. "One&#13;
thing a sport like this teaches you&#13;
i patience," she added.&#13;
Sue Graf, a senior, gets a&#13;
feeling of accomplishment,&#13;
especially when she wins.&#13;
"When I win I really reel Hke&#13;
I've done something, like all the&#13;
work and practice have paid off,"&#13;
he said. "But when I lose I feel&#13;
very upset with myself, and&#13;
depressed."&#13;
Sue seemed very positive about&#13;
the effect tennis has had on her&#13;
personality.&#13;
"Oh, yes!" she exclaimed,&#13;
"especially the ups and downs."&#13;
obody likes to lose. Pat Kekic&#13;
describes the way she feels&#13;
before a match as "the worst&#13;
po ible butterflies" and she says&#13;
that she doesn't settle down until&#13;
after she starts playing.&#13;
"Coach (Dick) Frecka always&#13;
makes us relax with his snide&#13;
little jokes, " she said, smiling.&#13;
Winning, on the other hand, is&#13;
always exciting, "especially&#13;
when your coach is there or if it's&#13;
the match you need to win the&#13;
meet."&#13;
According to Pat, playing&#13;
tenni taught her to be both a&#13;
00d winner and a good loser. She&#13;
believes that it's good for people&#13;
lo learn good sportsmanship and courte y.&#13;
"It ha helped me to learn how&#13;
to ,:et along with people," she&#13;
Pat has had the advantage of&#13;
hvmg across the street from&#13;
ome tennis courts and she&#13;
tarted planng when she was th1rte •n. ·&#13;
"Th' best tune for kids to start&#13;
'p h n the, 're nine or ten, .. said&#13;
at&#13;
1 h n '\ r had lesson· until he&#13;
P ed for the team. so all of&#13;
th fr• ka ad, ice ha. be&#13;
lcom •&#13;
H&#13;
• Hl:i-; L \, (T WRITl'.I.G&#13;
•~H\'t( Es Report writing.&#13;
Jleech \\Tiling. commercial&#13;
copy-edtt1ng. editmg and&#13;
~Ping done in my home .&#13;
lea e call 639-7378 evening&#13;
without hurting your feelings,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Pat enjoys playing on the team,&#13;
and says she loves competition.&#13;
She doesn't mind strange courts&#13;
and likes to play away from home&#13;
because "we have a lot of fun on the trips."&#13;
Sue Wanggard doesn't dislike&#13;
playing away meets because the&#13;
courts are strange, but because&#13;
the people are strange, so she&#13;
likes to play at home better.&#13;
"It really helps to have&#13;
somebody there to watch you,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Sue enjoys playing on hot,&#13;
sunny days, but her favorite&#13;
conditions are cloudy and cool.&#13;
"With the sun coming out when&#13;
it's to my advantage," she added.&#13;
Sue says the wind doesn't&#13;
bother her, but after a couple of&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
oct. 14 . ... ... ........................ .&#13;
Oct. 21 ..... . ......... . ....... .&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Oct. 13 ......... ... ...... .&#13;
Oct. 17 ................... .&#13;
Golf&#13;
Oct. 14 ...... ......... ..&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
Oct. 14 ......... ·&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Oct. 18 .. . .... · · · · ·&#13;
Monday night i&#13;
"Ye Old ud ipping , 'ite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$I a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light&#13;
American&#13;
Free Checking Ac o its&#13;
for College tud nts&#13;
Phone 65 --5&#13;
3928 60th St. D C&#13;
., Oct. 11, 1 72 TH PA ID G 7&#13;
OE IS l&#13;
Harr· r I&#13;
• Tl &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed .• Oct. 11,1972&#13;
Intramural&#13;
Th I 1 Touch Football season&#13;
I. und r ....8) with three undeleat&#13;
d learns teadmg the way.&#13;
La l year's university chamPiOns.the&#13;
hoon rs, got off 10 a&#13;
good tart WIIb a 21-t~ vic tory&#13;
over B A new learn is out in&#13;
ront In the wm column, however,&#13;
lhe Trout porI a 2-1)record.&#13;
er e led 1»' their flashy&#13;
runner Dean MatlOson. The other&#13;
undefeated team is the Pink&#13;
FascI Is They combined the pinpolOlpasslOg&#13;
or Jack Swaru with&#13;
the hawk·l1ke delense 01 Fred&#13;
Z1 vers ror a 1!HlVlCtory over the&#13;
FOOIballTeam&#13;
andlng&#13;
Trout&#13;
hnon rs&#13;
Pink F ,IS&#13;
FOOIballTeam&#13;
BO&#13;
TwO Park Ide I Bowling&#13;
Leagues are forming that&#13;
tudent can Ign up for now.&#13;
Th Itrat league i being held at&#13;
endan Lan 10 Kenosha It&#13;
will be held every Monday at 9: 15&#13;
pm The OIld league WIll be&#13;
beld at uri Lanes, also in&#13;
Kenosha It "ill be held every&#13;
f'nday at 4 30 p.m.&#13;
Anyone Interested in joimng&#13;
elth r 01 th. leagues should&#13;
'Ill' up,.," at the P E Buildlng.&#13;
crt am lose&#13;
The Park Idt soccer team&#13;
wed liS rourlh game 01 the&#13;
son la I .....ednesday !Ught to&#13;
th !uka. or C'lucago Circle&#13;
Coli e,:l-2 It as a game 01&#13;
rgument and controversial&#13;
all • "hlch showed in the&#13;
lahst!c Par Ide commiUed 30&#13;
louis 10 Ollcago Circle's 37.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Jobs re Available ... !&#13;
For FREE inIonnation&#13;
on ludenc istance and&#13;
pia _nt program send&#13;
If-addressed STAMPED&#13;
envelope 10 the ational&#13;
Placemen I Regi Iry. 1001&#13;
I ldal10 St.. Kalispell.&#13;
MT S9901&#13;
o ,1\1\11&#13;
Porkside soccer coach Hal Henderson gives his team&#13;
some advice before recent game. The Porkside booters, fresh from&#13;
their first win of the season against UW-Milwaukee, "ill face UWPlatteville&#13;
here Saturday afternoon&#13;
o THE WEEKE D&#13;
Rooters win lst game&#13;
2·0&#13;
I ·0&#13;
1-0&#13;
0·2&#13;
0-2&#13;
The Uw-Parkslde soccer team&#13;
got its first win saturday in the&#13;
consolation game of the&#13;
Oktoberfest Soccer Tournament&#13;
as lhe Rangers dumped UW1i1waukee&#13;
&amp;2.&#13;
Parkside had losl Friday to&#13;
otre Dame, 3-1,but the Rangers&#13;
rallied saturday and posted their&#13;
highest goal total of the year.&#13;
Rick Lechusz, Mike Jenrette,&#13;
Mike Nedeljkovic and Wayne&#13;
Shisler each scored one goal for&#13;
Parkside while Ray Phanturat&#13;
had two. Parkside held a 2-1)&#13;
halftime lead and a 4-2 lead with&#13;
13minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
exploded lor two goals in the final&#13;
13minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
exploded lor two goals in tbe final&#13;
13 minutes to put the game on ice.&#13;
Parkside is now 1·5--1on the&#13;
sea on and will face UWPlatteville&#13;
here Saturday aftemoon.&#13;
•&#13;
The Parkside cross country&#13;
team came up with one of its&#13;
better performances here&#13;
Saturday as it claimed a strong&#13;
third In the first annual&#13;
Oktoberfest Invitational.&#13;
Lucian Rosam, the sophomore&#13;
from Ceylon. tasted defeat lor the&#13;
first time this year but the loss&#13;
came against South Dakota&#13;
tate's Garry Bentley. a&#13;
delending NCAACoilege Division&#13;
1500-meter champ.&#13;
Bentley clocked 25:30 for the&#13;
rugged five mile route while Rosa&#13;
"as close behind al 25:37. Dan&#13;
Sols\ig or leam champ SDSU&#13;
grabbed third while all·American&#13;
Jim Drews of LaCrosse was&#13;
PIZZA KnCHEN&#13;
fourth and Parkstde s Dennis&#13;
Biel a strong fifth.&#13;
Other Ranger placers included&#13;
junior Jim McFadden in tenth,&#13;
freshman Sid Hyde in 24th. and&#13;
junior Keith Merritt in 25th.&#13;
Parkside will travel to the&#13;
otre Dame Invitational at South&#13;
Bend Friday. The meet attracts&#13;
most Midwestern teams and&#13;
should be a good test lor the&#13;
young Ranger team.&#13;
•&#13;
First place honors in the&#13;
Second Annual Oktoberlesl Gall&#13;
Tournament Saturday went to&#13;
orthern Illinois while UW·&#13;
Madison grabbed second and&#13;
Parkside was a strong third in the&#13;
is-note tourney at Petrifying&#13;
Springs.&#13;
Medalist honors went to Rick&#13;
Willems, of Parkside; Rick&#13;
Garcia of Northern Illinois&#13;
placed second; Steve Larsen,&#13;
also Irom Northern, placed third;&#13;
Phil Lohr from UW-Madison&#13;
finished fourth and Tom Bothe of&#13;
Parkside copped fifth.&#13;
Parkside's women's tennis&#13;
•&#13;
team placed first in the&#13;
Oktoberfest Tournament here&#13;
last Wednesday. The Rangers&#13;
had a score of 12. Whitewater&#13;
placed second with 10, Carthage&#13;
was third with 8 and Lawrence&#13;
finished last with no points.&#13;
Rangers Pat Kekic, Sue&#13;
Wanggard and Nicolet DeRose&#13;
all won their matches.&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bombers&#13;
Free Delifery to Parkside Village&#13;
son ItH11.... , ''',n, 6S1-S'"&#13;
Photo by Pal Nowak&#13;
---------- Jonathan Livingston&#13;
Seagull&#13;
Last Whole Earth Catalog&#13;
Politics of Heroin in S.E, Asia&#13;
The Prophet&#13;
Woodstock Craftsman's&#13;
Manual&#13;
Massage Book&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
Having trouble locating these books? Well, search no&#13;
further than Martha Merrill's Bookstore. See us for&#13;
what's new in books - bestsellers, art, chess, novels,&#13;
reference works, crafts specialties, ad infinitum.&#13;
Look over our large selection of hard covers and&#13;
paperbacks - and take advantage of our fast special&#13;
order service.&#13;
M~N\~~ rs~t(Yta.J&#13;
~.Jw. f{(lJ;iA'&amp; •&#13;
GI4-59t.hsr. 312-(;"""'$'1',.&#13;
6S8-3bf;?- 632-5195' ••&#13;
---_---•.&#13;
-------&#13;
...&#13;
--&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Parkside&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT 16&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 13&#13;
//-01&#13;
'Entry Fee 501&#13;
Apply now - Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Activities Board&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
ntramural&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
2-0&#13;
1 • O&#13;
1 -0&#13;
O·&#13;
0-2&#13;
Parkside soccer coach Hal Henderson gives his team&#13;
some advice before recent gane. The Parkside booters, fresh from&#13;
their first win of the season against UW-Milwaukee, will face UWPlatteville&#13;
here Saturday afternoon Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
D&#13;
Booter win lst game&#13;
Th \\'-Par 1de socc r team&#13;
first wm turdav in the&#13;
on olation game or the&#13;
to rfest Soccer Tournament&#13;
the Rangers dumped UWt1lwaukee&#13;
6-2.&#13;
Park ide had lo.st Friday to&#13;
, ·otr Dame, 3·1. but the Rangers&#13;
rall1t-d . turday and posted their&#13;
highest oal total of the ) ear.&#13;
Rick Lechusz, fike Jenrette,&#13;
hke . 'edeljkovic and Wayne&#13;
i ler each cored one goal for&#13;
Park 1de while Ray Phanturat&#13;
had two. Park ide held a 2--0&#13;
lftime lead and a 4-2 lead with&#13;
13 minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
ploded for two goals in the final&#13;
13 minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
ploded for two goal in the final&#13;
13 minutes to put the game on ice.&#13;
P rk ide i now 1·5-1 on the&#13;
on and will face \ ·&#13;
11 t ev11le here Saturday af-&#13;
• country&#13;
fourth and Parkside s Dennis&#13;
Biel a trong fifth.&#13;
Other Ranger placers included&#13;
Junior Jim tcFadden in tenth,&#13;
freshman Sid Hyde in 24th, and&#13;
junior Keith Merritt in 25th.&#13;
Parkside will travel to the&#13;
. ·otre Dame Invitational at South&#13;
Bend Friday. The meet attracts&#13;
mo.st fidwestern teams and&#13;
should be a good test for the&#13;
oung Ranger team.&#13;
•&#13;
First place honors in the&#13;
Second Annual Oktoberfest Golf&#13;
Tournament Saturday went to&#13;
, orthern Illinois while UWIadison&#13;
grabbed second and&#13;
Parkside was a trong third in the&#13;
HI-hole tourney at Petrifying&#13;
prings.&#13;
tedalist honors went to Rick&#13;
Willems, of Parkside; Rick&#13;
Garcia of Northern Illinois&#13;
placed second; Steve Larsen,&#13;
also from Northern, placed third;&#13;
Phil Lohr from UW-Madison&#13;
finished fourth and Tom Bothe of&#13;
Parkside copped fifth.&#13;
• Parkside's women's tennis&#13;
team placed first in the&#13;
Oktoberfest Tournament here&#13;
last Wednesday. The Rangers&#13;
had a score of 12. Whitewater&#13;
placed second with 10, Carthage&#13;
was third with 8 and Lawrence&#13;
finished last with no points.&#13;
Rangers Pat Kekic, Sue&#13;
Wanggard and Nicolet DeRose&#13;
all won their matches.&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Clllebn &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers&#13;
Frtt Delivery to Parkside Village&#13;
son 1°" ., •• , ,,,,n, 6S1-St9t&#13;
----------&#13;
Jonathan Livingston&#13;
Seagull&#13;
Last Whole Earth Catalog&#13;
Politics of Heroin in S.E. Asia&#13;
The Prophet&#13;
Woodstock Cr aftsm an 's&#13;
Manual&#13;
Massage Book&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
Having trouble locating these books? Well, search no&#13;
further than Martha Merrill's Bookstore. See us for&#13;
what's new in books - bestsellers, art, chess, novels,&#13;
reference works, crafts specialties, ad infinitum.&#13;
Look over our large selection of hard covers and&#13;
paperbacks - and take advantage of our fast special&#13;
order service.&#13;
G14-59~St;&#13;
658-3b !;"2-&#13;
f{_ru;U'ZIJ., •&#13;
312.- 6-¼ 5-t, -&#13;
632-5195' -·&#13;
---&#13;
-------~-- -----·&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••• Parkside&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT 16&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 13 / / -o, ·t ·ntry Fee so~&#13;
Appl Y no w - Student Ac tivities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Activities Board&#13;
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              <text>Graffin recieves Kiekhofer Award</text>
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              <text>Graff in receives&#13;
Kiekhofer award&#13;
Walter R. Graffin, 35, an&#13;
assistant professor of English at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside, is among young&#13;
faculty members chosen from&#13;
throughout the UW System to&#13;
receive the 1972 Kiekhofer&#13;
awards of $1,000 each for&#13;
superior classroom performance.&#13;
Graffin received the award&#13;
Friday evening at a dinner&#13;
attended by members of the&#13;
Parkside humanities division,&#13;
which recommended Graffin&#13;
for the honor, the campus&#13;
teaching award committee,&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie and&#13;
other colleagues. Final selection&#13;
of recipients is made by an&#13;
all-UW System committee.&#13;
Graffin is the second&#13;
Parkside faculty members to&#13;
receive one of the outstanding&#13;
young teacher awards since the&#13;
program, which began at the&#13;
Madison campus in 1953, was&#13;
extended in 1970 to all campuses&#13;
of the university. Morris W.&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside free&#13;
Volume 6 Number 16 May 1, 1972&#13;
last sga meeting of semester&#13;
Loumos steps down from Meeting&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The April 25th meeting of the&#13;
Parkside Student Senate saw a&#13;
diversity of items on the&#13;
agenda.&#13;
Motions made by Nancy&#13;
Robinson, corresponding&#13;
secretary, after a presentation&#13;
by Jim Twist on the WPS&#13;
Medical Insurance which would&#13;
be made available to students&#13;
during the next academic year.&#13;
Though this insurance, at a cost&#13;
of $87 per 12 month year, is&#13;
more than previously paid for&#13;
medical insurance, the increased&#13;
benefits far outweigh&#13;
the cost.&#13;
Included in the health&#13;
package are surgical,&#13;
diagnostic, and maternity&#13;
benefits. The policy is available&#13;
to students with carrying six&#13;
credits or more.&#13;
The motion: "That the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association participate in the&#13;
Wisconsin Physicians Service&#13;
student health insurance&#13;
program sponsored by the&#13;
United Council of University of&#13;
Wisconsin Student Governments."&#13;
passed unanimously&#13;
when quorum was established.&#13;
A second motion, "That a&#13;
coordinator be elected to&#13;
represent the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association in all&#13;
matters regarding the student&#13;
health insurance problem,",&#13;
also passed unanimously and&#13;
Jim Twist was elected to fill the&#13;
post.&#13;
A final motion: "That a&#13;
representative(s) be elected to&#13;
officially represent the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association at the United&#13;
Council Winter and Spring&#13;
General assemblies at Stout&#13;
State University in Menominee&#13;
on May 5, 6, and 7.&#13;
1). That these representatives&#13;
be given full authority in terms&#13;
of voting powers to represent&#13;
the Student Government&#13;
Association on any matters that&#13;
call for a decision at the general&#13;
assemblies.&#13;
2). That travel, lodging, and&#13;
meals be paid for by the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association by means that are&#13;
availablel"&#13;
The motion passed 13-0-1 and&#13;
Jim Twist and Elaine Birch&#13;
were voted to attend the conference.&#13;
In commenting on the PSGA&#13;
sponsored Symposium, Dean&#13;
Loumos expressed his disappointment&#13;
in the way the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
was handling approval of funds,&#13;
and objected to the president&#13;
referring the matter to committee.&#13;
President Loumos further&#13;
expressed his feeling on the&#13;
matter when he turned the&#13;
meeting over to Jim Twist&#13;
saying he had had it. He also&#13;
stated that Bruce Volpintesta,&#13;
who was not present, had also&#13;
"had it." Danny Trotter,&#13;
treasurer, who ran for office on&#13;
the same ticket as Loumos and&#13;
Volpintesta, must also have had&#13;
it since he also was not present.&#13;
Upon taking over the&#13;
meeting, Jim Twist, with&#13;
Elaine Birch, clarified the&#13;
symposium plans. It was&#13;
generally agreed that the&#13;
Symposium committee try to&#13;
save as much of the planned&#13;
program as pos sible instead of&#13;
forgetting the whole thing which&#13;
had been suggested by&#13;
President Loumos.&#13;
The preceeding action took&#13;
place without a quorum,&#13;
quorum being established at&#13;
5:15 with the arrival of Mike&#13;
Lofton who had not been informed&#13;
of the meeting until&#13;
called when it was evident a&#13;
quorum was not present.&#13;
Upon establishing a quorum,&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
•»..&#13;
PARKSIDE CHILD CARE CENTER&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center will offer a special summer&#13;
session to begin June 19th. Registration will be held at the center&#13;
ST n,a n?: T }.P\m each day the week of May 8th through the&#13;
12th and will be limited to children up to age 5. The Center will be&#13;
open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., during the summer&#13;
session. For further information you may call Kenosha 658-3888 or&#13;
Racine 633-2931.&#13;
CAMPUS UNION BUILDING&#13;
f Thf £fmpus Union Building Committee has recently been&#13;
formed. The following members of the faculty, staff, and student&#13;
body form the committee: Student representatives include James&#13;
Lroxtord, John J. Grimes, and Patrick Moran; Staff, William&#13;
, ?r'AEJWin ?UeWke' and Philip Burnett! Faculty members&#13;
include Andrew McLean, John Murphy, and Barbara Jo Morris.&#13;
}he Co"1"1I"ee members welcome all suggestions by students,&#13;
taculty, and staff members in the planning of this vital building on&#13;
campus. &amp;&#13;
THIRTEEN DOLLARS A COUPLE&#13;
The annual Varsity Club Awards Banquet and Dinner-Dance&#13;
will be held Saturday, May 6, at the Kenosha Holiday Inn. All&#13;
students, faculty and staff are invited.&#13;
Cost for the complete program, which includes a social hour,&#13;
dinner and dance, is six-fifty per person or thirteen dollars a&#13;
couple.&#13;
Tickets may be purchased at the athletics office on Wood Road.&#13;
Call 553-2246 for information.&#13;
CAREER INTEREST GROUPS&#13;
Beginning the week of May 1 a group will be started for&#13;
students who would like to learn more about their career related&#13;
interests. If you would like to join such a group, please call 553-2121,&#13;
extension K42, as soon as possible . Tell the secretary your name,&#13;
phone number and what hours would be most convenient for you to&#13;
meet. If you have any questions, please cal lus at the same number.&#13;
CHICAGO BORN ITALIAN RESIDENT TO TEACH&#13;
A painter and printmaker of international stature, Moishe&#13;
Smith, has been named a visiting associate professor of art- at&#13;
Parkside effective next September. Chicago-born Smith presently&#13;
lives in Rapallo, Italy.&#13;
He previously taught at Southern Illinois University and Stout&#13;
State University (presently UW-Stout) and has been a visiting&#13;
faculty member at UW-Madison, Ohio State University, Utah State&#13;
University and the University of Iowa.&#13;
A PLANNED WEEK&#13;
This week will be Academic Planning Week at Parkside.&#13;
The program, organized by the Parkside student counseling&#13;
staff and faculty, is designed to assist students in p lanning summer&#13;
and fall academic schedules, selecting majors and determining&#13;
career choices.&#13;
Group academic advising sessions a re scheduled in various&#13;
academic fields throughout the week for students who have not yet&#13;
selected a major. Students who already have selected a major are&#13;
being encouraged to confer with the academic adviser assigned to&#13;
them during the week.&#13;
LITERATURE AND FILM&#13;
Literature and Film: "Narration, Montage and You" is the&#13;
topic for the next Parkside Humanities Seminar. Dr. Robert Self of&#13;
Northern Illinois University will lecture and show several short&#13;
films in Greenquist room 101, Friday, May 5th, at two-thirty.&#13;
Mr. Self has been teaching film for years and has been&#13;
especially interested in the possibilities for teaching in a comparative&#13;
approach to literature and film.&#13;
His presentation will vocus on the narrative and verbal aspects&#13;
of literature, the visual demands and implications of&#13;
cinematography, and the socio-cultural significance of the two&#13;
media. There is no charge; all students are welcome.&#13;
itt subsidiary opposed Strike becomes a Boycott of Canteen&#13;
Discussion takes plac e at&#13;
Monday s t r i k e meeting .&#13;
by Jim Kq lo^n, editor&#13;
What began as an attempt to&#13;
initiate a student strike,&#13;
developed into a free lunch&#13;
program in the Activities&#13;
Building. Originally, the&#13;
Concerned Students Coalition&#13;
had planned to strike in protest&#13;
of the War. However, as it&#13;
turned out, their efforts were&#13;
channeled into a protest of the&#13;
Canteen Company which&#13;
provides food services to the&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
During a Monday morning&#13;
Strike meeting in the Activities&#13;
Building, the plan for a free&#13;
lunch table was crystallized. It&#13;
was pointed out that the Canteen&#13;
Co. is owned by ITT, and as&#13;
such is implicated in the war&#13;
effort. Dean Loumos, SGA&#13;
President, said, "It's not&#13;
whether you boycott the&#13;
machine, it's that you know&#13;
they are owned by ITT."&#13;
The Monday morning planning&#13;
session was attended by&#13;
twenty students who agreed&#13;
with Loumos that "a true act of&#13;
anti-war sentiment would be to&#13;
boycott Canteen." Loumos&#13;
explained the boycott of Canteen&#13;
would represent a "constructive&#13;
action" as opposed to&#13;
a more dramatic strike.&#13;
Donations were gathered from&#13;
those attending the planning&#13;
session and by 12:15 a table had&#13;
been set up offering assorted&#13;
sandwiches and fruit.&#13;
Continuing through Wednesday,&#13;
the lunch table attracted&#13;
few faculty or students,&#13;
and though a few boycott&#13;
supporters stood up on tables to&#13;
explain the purpose of the free,&#13;
alternative lunch, few people&#13;
looked up.&#13;
Danny Trotter, an SGA officer&#13;
participating in the&#13;
boycott, said "though the&#13;
boycott may seem futile, it's a&#13;
start. You have to take some&#13;
kind of action, you just can't sit&#13;
around doing nothing." Few&#13;
people heeded his plea.&#13;
The al t e r n a t i ve lunch prograi&#13;
protestin g Canteen a nd |TT&#13;
May l, 1972 NEWS COPE Pag* 2&#13;
EpjtoRIAL&#13;
ran 'L'V revaa,ln9' and monotonously predictable conclusions&#13;
can be drawn from the first full week of Symposium activities&#13;
&amp;J^aCt'^,eS r" t0 dr3W Very sP®c!alizeTaudiences;&#13;
the people interested in Wednesday's Women's Caucus programs&#13;
nterested in Thursday's VICC VCISD. Radical Politics Seminar, and&#13;
intpr^ln"mb€a^0: ^ pe0p,e (faculty' staff' students) are&#13;
interested in anything. The average attendance figure for each&#13;
event presented during the week approached ten. Though some&#13;
succassfu,,y Presented than others, quality had&#13;
materialize' quanitltV of attendance. The audience just didn't&#13;
notth^n^Tw"6.!1?01 ubiquitous 9ray daV apathy; maybe it's&#13;
thl h °nuf kn0W where they're at' more "ke it's simply&#13;
factor'" att«ndan^?ere *" 9°' ^ •&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee recently rejected SGA's&#13;
proposal that the Revolutionary Youth Movement, and the&#13;
Wisconsin Alliance people who participated in the Radical Politics&#13;
Seminar, be paid a small gratuity for their efforts&#13;
The reason given: RYM and the Alliance represent "political"&#13;
groups and therefore cannot be paid for speaking on campus.&#13;
wh« lm 1 nter*sf 1 n9» and not entirely irrelevant, that Julian Bond,&#13;
nn m Q^f a-ne Student Union's Symposium program&#13;
n 5uW eCelve$2'000forhiseffortsfrom Lecture and Fine&#13;
^,'i ®°ndh.f'°f cou"e' a 9reater nationwide fame based on his&#13;
sn!!thf&gt;rn i u3 e 68 D®mocratic Convention, and in&#13;
southern politics. He is a public political figure; possibly the fact&#13;
«iomathiaP^eaHanCf*!S funded throu9h Lecture and Fine Arts has&#13;
something to do with this seeming incongruity.&#13;
Perhaps the rub is not just the word "politics" or "political"&#13;
bu the word "radical". Perhaps the difference befween radical&#13;
asfrfh,3 ,C°nVen,l0nal P°",iCS is ,he ,ac,or dictating the&#13;
distribution of money. Of course, there's nothing new here.&#13;
frl£0'S&#13;
Letters to the Editor Jff&#13;
PIZZA £&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PA RKSIDE VI LLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
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PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gal Ion&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prlctson Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kite, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Par Ont Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
Turk stops flood&#13;
April 25,1972&#13;
To th e Editor:&#13;
When Robert Flood, in his&#13;
missive to the Voice, showed us&#13;
that he had missed the message&#13;
in the movie, "The Godfather,"&#13;
I was sorry. But when your&#13;
reviewer seemed to have&#13;
missed it also, I felt obligated to&#13;
clear it up.&#13;
If you are going to discuss a&#13;
movie with any degree of intelligence,&#13;
it is suggested that&#13;
you see all of it first. The&#13;
message was in the very&#13;
beginning, with the little old&#13;
man who had determined to live&#13;
by the rules, by law and order,&#13;
and to stay clear of the dirty&#13;
hands of the Mafia. But the poor&#13;
fellow learned that justice does&#13;
not always prevail, and to right&#13;
a grievous wrong had been&#13;
forced to get help from the&#13;
Godfather.&#13;
The message is just as&#13;
relevant today — i.e . McCarthy&#13;
who couldn't get a peace&#13;
platform in '68, or his followers&#13;
who could not even speak&#13;
because their microphones&#13;
were turned off. We have all&#13;
learned that, though violence&#13;
isn't much of an answer,&#13;
seeking justice through&#13;
peaceful means doesn't do&#13;
much either.&#13;
And so we have the usual&#13;
problems that stay usual every&#13;
year . , . an administration&#13;
overstocked with expensive&#13;
administrators who run the&#13;
university for themselves and&#13;
not the students or faculty... a&#13;
school that will not support a&#13;
newspaper unless it is a rubber&#13;
stamp for their propaganda,&#13;
and on and on.&#13;
Sex was such a minor part of&#13;
the movie that I am a bit&#13;
amazed at # Mr. Flood's&#13;
anguished cries ... I don't&#13;
think he's ready for anything as&#13;
dull as "Love Story" either.&#13;
He'd better just stay home and&#13;
lock the doors. But I'm indebted&#13;
to Mr. Flood. "Sex is a sacred&#13;
act," he said. Surely does&#13;
relieve my mind, so that's what&#13;
those bells are that I keep&#13;
hearing!&#13;
I would suggest that perhaps&#13;
the "Godfather" . is popular&#13;
because the distraught citizens&#13;
who attempted to gain peace&#13;
through the regular channels&#13;
are at the movie looking for&#13;
other answers. We've tried to&#13;
get out of Vietnam and dispose&#13;
of local dictators with every&#13;
method short of that.&#13;
I realize that you are short of&#13;
copy, but do we have to put up&#13;
with such long letters, such as&#13;
last week's offering from some&#13;
fellow who never has had&#13;
anything to say, but keeps on&#13;
saying it. We'd all be ahead if&#13;
you would just leave the space&#13;
blank.&#13;
Mrs. Genevieve Turk&#13;
senator&#13;
answers&#13;
gruhl&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Last week saw another of&#13;
those infrequent and unmissed&#13;
missives by Art Gruhl generally&#13;
condemning our hard working&#13;
student senate as a bunch of&#13;
bureaucratic misfits.&#13;
I have a few things to say to&#13;
Mr. Gruel regarding , his instance&#13;
that the student senate is&#13;
unrepresentative since it was&#13;
elected by only 17 per cent of the&#13;
student body.&#13;
I say this to Mr. Gruhl: Your&#13;
Student Senate is the duly&#13;
elected body of the students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside and the fact that only&#13;
17 per cent of those students&#13;
voted only means that 83 per&#13;
cent of the students aren't worth&#13;
shit when it comes to expressing&#13;
a political preference. Did YOU&#13;
vote, Mr. Gruhn?&#13;
As to his comments about&#13;
paying taxes, that can only be&#13;
taken as a bunch of crud since&#13;
just about everyone does the&#13;
same be they hard working&#13;
businessmen like Mr. Gruhl or&#13;
outspoken short-haired radicals&#13;
like myself who are trying their&#13;
best to get an education.&#13;
I, unlike Mr. Gruhl, do not pay&#13;
my 'own' tuition. For this I&#13;
depend strictly upon scholarships&#13;
and $175 a month from a&#13;
grateful government paid me&#13;
through the Veteran's Administration.&#13;
I did have a job&#13;
once, but it interfered with my&#13;
academic planning. My only&#13;
'job' now is with the Naval&#13;
Reserve.&#13;
As to the entertainment Mr.&#13;
Gruhl derides so nicely:&#13;
Someone should inform Mr.&#13;
Gruhl that the money for such&#13;
entertainment is budgeted&#13;
through the State of Wisconsin&#13;
and given to the Activities&#13;
Board which must use it all up&#13;
or give it back.&#13;
The Activities Board is&#13;
strictly controlled by the Administration&#13;
of this University&#13;
even to the extent of having its&#13;
members appointed and then&#13;
denied even a vote on the&#13;
committee.&#13;
It's too bad Mr. Gruhl that&#13;
you are denied the opportunity&#13;
to express yourself to the PAB,&#13;
which should have been&#13;
disbanded long ago in favor of&#13;
the more representative and&#13;
duly elected Student Union&#13;
Committee of the Parkside&#13;
Student Senate. Your Student&#13;
Senate, Mr. Gruhl. If you have&#13;
any complaints on the way the&#13;
show is run bring them yourself&#13;
to the off office of YOUR Senate&#13;
and we will try to help you with&#13;
them.&#13;
Instead of crying to his&#13;
friendly recognised student&#13;
newspaper which is subsidized&#13;
by his friendly Student&#13;
Government Association of&#13;
which he is a member, Mr.&#13;
Gruhl could be useful to us on&#13;
some Student Senate committee&#13;
or other, thus putting that&#13;
vehemence of his into a constructive&#13;
channel.&#13;
So, Mr. Gruhl, come on down&#13;
and have a tale with your&#13;
representatives. Instead of&#13;
rapping Dean and the rest of t he&#13;
Senate in the paper, rap with&#13;
them in person. Though if you&#13;
want to dh so with me you will&#13;
have to do so before I depart on&#13;
the little journey I have coming&#13;
up on the orders of the U.S.&#13;
Navy. (Even student radicals&#13;
can have that little regarded&#13;
emotion of patriotism.)&#13;
Yours,&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol, Senator&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association&#13;
senior reflects&#13;
on uwp&#13;
To the Students,&#13;
I have been a student at&#13;
Parkside for four years now and&#13;
graduate next month and I feel&#13;
at least a little qualified to state&#13;
some experiences during my&#13;
time here and some opinions on&#13;
them I have been fortunate, or&#13;
equally unfortunate, to watch&#13;
Parkside grow in some areas&#13;
and conversely die in others, as&#13;
u has gone from a University&#13;
Extension to a University of&#13;
Wisconsin. Aside from just&#13;
being "around here" for four&#13;
years 1 have been on a number&#13;
of student committees, a&#13;
member of the Athletic Board&#13;
oMwo P?SitW°years' President&#13;
of two clubs, and have worked&#13;
AAtthhlewti c ^Dlethp armtmemebnetr. s of the&#13;
I have: gotten chased by two&#13;
Parkside cops all the way to&#13;
Racine because a friend and I&#13;
took a wrong road on campus&#13;
during a blizzard (even though&#13;
they tried to run us off the road&#13;
they failed to get us) . . . sden&#13;
three different sets of roads on&#13;
this campus and their accompanying&#13;
sets of pot holes&#13;
. . . Been thrown out of a dance&#13;
by Tony T. for still unknown&#13;
reasons . . . easily come to the&#13;
conclusion that Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
is full of sh-t . . . seen Wyllie&#13;
spend $5,000 on sod around&#13;
Tallent and Greenquist Halls&#13;
only to have it torn up less than&#13;
a year later (he refused to have&#13;
it used for a soccer field which&#13;
was needed at the time) .&#13;
seen some blonde woman&#13;
walking around the Student&#13;
Union for 3 years and never do a&#13;
goddamn thing except make&#13;
money off the students ....&#13;
been with a friend as the&#13;
Parkside cops towed away his&#13;
car during class because it&#13;
stalled on the side of the "road"&#13;
and then wanted him to pay&#13;
$41.00 to get it back . . . never&#13;
found Donald Gunderson in his&#13;
office (try the Library&#13;
newsstand) . . . had the "files"&#13;
pulled out on me and consequently&#13;
2 days later had a&#13;
parking ticket appeal, which I&#13;
submitted over four months&#13;
earlier, denieii . . . and the&#13;
terrible misfortune of having to&#13;
take a class with Harry Copipock&#13;
. . . wondered why the building&#13;
where the administration has&#13;
its offices is called Tallent when&#13;
they show so much lack of it&#13;
. . . and finally, I have been&#13;
falsely accused of fighting and&#13;
brawling in the Student Union&#13;
by some of the Administration.&#13;
I could go on but I think you&#13;
get the point I am trying to&#13;
make. That is, as a student at&#13;
Parkside you are going to be&#13;
faced with all kinds of shit from&#13;
the administration, faculty, and&#13;
cops. Don't get me wrong, I'm&#13;
not tearing down the school.&#13;
Parkside has great potential&#13;
and I want to see it developed,&#13;
but it's the things and the people&#13;
I mentioned and experienced&#13;
that are choking Parkside to&#13;
death. I have had good times at&#13;
Parkside, too, especially with&#13;
the Athletic Department and&#13;
S.G.A. and it is through these&#13;
and similar organizations I&#13;
suggest you work in to better,&#13;
Parkside. It's your school, not&#13;
the faculty's or the, administration's,&#13;
so make it the&#13;
way you want it to be. And then&#13;
in the future it will be a school&#13;
where you, as well as myself,&#13;
will be more proud to have&#13;
graduated from.&#13;
Peter J. Habetler, Jr.&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Jim Koloen, "Red" Widely, Paul&#13;
Lomartire, Brian Ross, Cleta&#13;
Skovronski, Bob Mainland, Mike&#13;
Kite, Gary Jensen, Wolfgang&#13;
Salewski, Mike Stevesand, Andrew&#13;
Schmelling, Ken Konkol, Kathy&#13;
Rasch, Tom Paradise&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
student* of thte University of&#13;
Wisconsm-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout Ihe&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
within 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located In the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road.&#13;
I*-***4*.***MUttVlMPMW******** "*»«r**•««*•*' AT A .*&lt;.*•»-» * * *&#13;
OUTER LIMITS&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents a REAL Road Rallye&#13;
"Head Your Car to the "&#13;
May 7&#13;
Registration at Noon — 1st Car Out l :00 PM&#13;
$5.00 Registration Fee — includes Driver and Navigator&#13;
Tallent Hall Parking Lot&#13;
After the competition and Dust Subsides&#13;
Relax at our party — Beer &amp; Food&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID required&#13;
Page 3 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
Radical Political Organizing&#13;
SGA Meeting by Jim Koioen, Editor&#13;
Thursday night's segment of&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Symposium, "Radical&#13;
Political Organizing" began&#13;
late, and was attended by few.&#13;
Paul Soglin, the Madison City&#13;
Councilman, did not speak. His&#13;
absence was explained by&#13;
PSGA President Dean Loumos&#13;
as due to a searies of events in&#13;
Madison that demanded his&#13;
presence.&#13;
Members of the Wisconsin&#13;
Alliance, a political party from&#13;
Madison, and representatives of&#13;
the Revolutionary Youth&#13;
Movement from Racine&#13;
outlined their philosophies and&#13;
programs.&#13;
Spokesmen for Wisconsin&#13;
Alliance explained their activities&#13;
in organizing workers&#13;
and farmers in the Madison&#13;
area. Representing various&#13;
committees in the Alliance, the&#13;
four Madisonites explained the&#13;
goals of the Alliance as a&#13;
"working people's party" which&#13;
assists in organizing people&#13;
from the "bottom up". One&#13;
speaker pointed out that the&#13;
union leadership "can be as&#13;
bureaucratic as management",&#13;
and thus not represent the true&#13;
feelings of the rank and file.&#13;
After briefly outlining the&#13;
history of the Alliance, which&#13;
was formed in 1968, two spokesnen&#13;
from RYM presented an&#13;
PENAL&#13;
Kicking off Symposium 1972,&#13;
the Cellblock Circus Players&#13;
performed a series of short skits&#13;
which one of the players&#13;
characterized as "examples of&#13;
the kind of humor that goes&#13;
over really well in the institutions."&#13;
The troupe performed&#13;
before an audience&#13;
whose size was to be seen as&#13;
characteristic of the week-long&#13;
Symposium activities; small&#13;
and specialized.&#13;
The four women and one man&#13;
who make up the Cellblock&#13;
Players presented six skits,&#13;
including "Pedro", a "pet&#13;
rock," with which the player&#13;
quickly knocked herself out;&#13;
"Hopscotch", about a cop who&#13;
attempts to bust some kids for&#13;
holding an illegal assembly on&#13;
the sidewalk; "Hey, Bill,"&#13;
about a man who discovers his&#13;
girl isn't "safe"; and "Factory&#13;
Song" sung to the tune of "I've&#13;
Urban League and SSSSSSSS&#13;
Project Acceptance&#13;
Women's&#13;
Day of Symposium&#13;
poetry and play readings&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Three people dedicated to&#13;
helping the needy in Racine met&#13;
Tuesday, April 25, at the&#13;
Whiteskellar. They presented&#13;
the facts of their presently&#13;
existing programs to an&#13;
audience of six or seven.&#13;
Ray Matthews, Associate&#13;
Director of the Racine Urban&#13;
League, was the first to speak..&#13;
He informed the meager&#13;
audience that the Racine Urban&#13;
League was part of a national&#13;
urban league. There are 106&#13;
local affiliates of their league in&#13;
46 cities. It is presently funded&#13;
by private citizens and the&#13;
Department of Labor. One of his&#13;
hopes, he said, is to get minority&#13;
groups into jobs as skilled&#13;
apprentices.&#13;
The Southside Revitalization&#13;
Organization was represented&#13;
by Terry Ludimon. The S.R.O.&#13;
recently began being funded by&#13;
the federal government. They&#13;
are presently occupied with the&#13;
rebuilding of Racine's south&#13;
side. Ludiomon also said they&#13;
hope to buy small industries for&#13;
the south side community. This&#13;
would provide jobs for the&#13;
people.&#13;
Jean Manley from Urban&#13;
Concern told about her experiences&#13;
working with ACenter,&#13;
the detention home, and&#13;
the city jail. This is all part of&#13;
"Project Acceptance," which&#13;
was formed to help prisoners fit&#13;
back into society. Urban&#13;
Concern is funded solely by&#13;
private donations and churches.&#13;
During his presentation,&#13;
Ludimon suggested that&#13;
students become directly involved;&#13;
paint a poor person's&#13;
house; clean a blind person's&#13;
house, he suggested.&#13;
Matthews said the Racine&#13;
Urban League can always use&#13;
new people since it is a membership&#13;
organization, supported&#13;
only by volunteers. Jean&#13;
mentioned that Father Williams&#13;
needs students in the research&#13;
area.&#13;
At the end there was a&#13;
question-answer period in&#13;
which students asked the group&#13;
various questions about the&#13;
progress of the aforementioned&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The poetry reading, held in&#13;
the Whiteshellar at 7:30 was&#13;
presented by Carol Vopat, an&#13;
English instructor. Included in&#13;
her selections were poems from&#13;
Sandra Hoffman, Denise&#13;
Levertov, Nikki Johavic, Ann&#13;
Sexton and Sylvia Plath.&#13;
Ms. Vopat provided a good&#13;
interpretation of the "Women's&#13;
poems," whose themse included&#13;
abortion, seduction, menstruaticn,&#13;
childbirth. The&#13;
general ambiance of the poems&#13;
was either celebration or&#13;
poignant sadness, a dejection&#13;
culminating in Plath's poetry of&#13;
tragedy and venom.&#13;
The audience at the poetry&#13;
reading outnumbered the&#13;
participant ten to one,&#13;
representing a 66 per cent&#13;
upswing in attendance over the&#13;
play readings.&#13;
analysis of the "system" in&#13;
historical terms. The RYM&#13;
member posited as an apriori&#13;
premise the statement that.&#13;
"America is the most racist&#13;
country in the history of the&#13;
world." He concluded that the&#13;
failure tp deal with racism has&#13;
historically prevented&#13;
meaningful change in the U.S.&#13;
Speaking briefly on what&#13;
radical politics means, the&#13;
RYM representative equated it&#13;
with change. The RYM speaker&#13;
later outlined the various&#13;
programs his organization has&#13;
initiated in Racine. Concentrating&#13;
on the Near North&#13;
Side, he explained, "We have&#13;
put together survival programs&#13;
for the oppressed and poor&#13;
people living in this area."&#13;
"Only by getting the community&#13;
together," he continued,&#13;
"can we survive."&#13;
The meeting ended with a&#13;
question and answer period.&#13;
INSTITUTIONS&#13;
been working on the Railroad"&#13;
with lyrics like "some one in the&#13;
factory is dying, hoping a fresh&#13;
wind blows."&#13;
The Cellblock Circus Players&#13;
has performed at the&#13;
Manhattan House of Detention&#13;
for Men, disaffectionately&#13;
nicknamed the "Tombs" by its&#13;
inmates, and at many state&#13;
penal institutions including&#13;
Green Bay, Waupun and the&#13;
Milwaukee House of Correction.&#13;
Following the presentation of&#13;
the skits, a discussion ensued&#13;
which included short presentations&#13;
by Jack Jude, a&#13;
representative of Project Acceptance,&#13;
and Jerry Gonzales, a&#13;
former convict and addict.&#13;
Jude explained the function of&#13;
Project Acceptance, characterizing&#13;
it as a vehicle for&#13;
community involvement with a&#13;
philosophy similar to the Big&#13;
Brother and Sister&#13;
organizations. The attitude of&#13;
the group, Jude said, leads to&#13;
the belief that "jail as a form of&#13;
rehabilitation is defunct,"&#13;
adding that the "institution&#13;
squelches the individual."&#13;
Gonzales drew the analogy of&#13;
prison as "a bug which goes in&#13;
one ear and eats his way&#13;
through to the other ear. On the&#13;
way it lays millions of eggs all&#13;
over the brain."&#13;
He told the audience that&#13;
when a person is released from&#13;
prison, he needs "a place to stay&#13;
for at least two months, clothes&#13;
and a minimum of $30 a week"&#13;
in order to readjust himself to&#13;
the world and find employment.&#13;
Currently, he explained, a&#13;
released prisoner is left&#13;
basically to his own resources,&#13;
and without the necessities as&#13;
he outlined, he is easily forced&#13;
back into crime.&#13;
As part of the "Women's&#13;
Day" activities of the SYMPOSIUM,&#13;
the Parkside&#13;
Women's Caucus produced both&#13;
a play reading and a poetry&#13;
reading. The play readings,&#13;
held in the Whiteskellar at 3:30,&#13;
featured Claire Booth Luce's&#13;
"Doll's House 1970" and Sylvia&#13;
Plath's "Three Women".&#13;
Ms. Luce's play, which unfortunately&#13;
is yawningly&#13;
didactic and evidences little&#13;
dramatic merit, was capably&#13;
read by Pam Nekich and'Ted&#13;
Paone. The tract involves a&#13;
dialogue between a couple&#13;
married for ten years, and&#13;
analyzes the reason behind the&#13;
wife deserting her husband in&#13;
order to become a human being.&#13;
Tough both participants&#13;
presented a good reading, little&#13;
could be done to compensate for&#13;
the play's lack of merit; the&#13;
dialogue, as written, has little&#13;
relationship to the way people&#13;
really speak: Propagandizing is&#13;
not necessarily an art form.&#13;
The final reading was from&#13;
Sylvia Plath's "Three Women,"&#13;
a poem for three voices. The&#13;
three women were presented by&#13;
Debby Friedell, Becky Ecklund&#13;
and Rebecca Cook, One voice&#13;
represented a mother about to&#13;
give a natural childbirth;&#13;
another echoed a woman about&#13;
to have a miscarriage following&#13;
a series of miscarraiges; and&#13;
the third voice was that of a&#13;
college girl about to have a child&#13;
which she plans to put up for&#13;
adoption.&#13;
Sylvia Plath, a poet who&#13;
committed suicide at the age of&#13;
30, afforded the readers with&#13;
decidedly poetic material, as&#13;
opposed to the staid didacticism&#13;
of the tractition Luce. The three&#13;
readers presented a good interpretation&#13;
of the material;&#13;
Rebecca Cooks' rendering&#13;
especially good.&#13;
The audience tied the participants&#13;
with six members&#13;
each.&#13;
May l, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 4&#13;
SGA meeting&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Ken Konkol made a motion that&#13;
the roll be taken for the purpose&#13;
of having it as part of the&#13;
minutes, something which had&#13;
not been previously made. The&#13;
motion passed.&#13;
Members present: Dean&#13;
Loumos, President, Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Recording Secretary,&#13;
Nancy Robinson, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary, Senators&#13;
Michael Baxter, Jerry Murphy,&#13;
Mike R. Harris, Elaine M.&#13;
Birch, Kenneth R. Konkol, Mike&#13;
Lofton, Mark Barnhill, Ken&#13;
Martin, James Twist, Dale&#13;
Martin, Jim Bielefeldt, and&#13;
Tom Taskonis, another late&#13;
arrival.&#13;
A motion on a request by&#13;
Z.P.G. for $100 for establishing&#13;
an information center on birth&#13;
control methods and contraceptive&#13;
devices with a future&#13;
outlook toward a V.D. clinic&#13;
passed 12-2.&#13;
A motion to reimburse&#13;
Carmen Nute of the Latino&#13;
Student Coalition for expenses&#13;
of $36.20 incurred while attending&#13;
two Latino oriented&#13;
conferences passed 10-3.&#13;
A motion to provide $200 for&#13;
fencing for the Day Care Center&#13;
passed by 9-4-2.&#13;
At this time a question arose&#13;
as to whether the Student&#13;
Organizations Account, which&#13;
had had $1,700 in it before the&#13;
Symposium planning which&#13;
would cost an estimated $1,200,&#13;
and other disbursements had&#13;
been made, now had any money&#13;
left in it at all. Since the&#13;
treasurer was unavailable, the&#13;
question remained unresolved.&#13;
Mike Lofton, Chairman of the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee,&#13;
spoke on the standardized&#13;
TEACHER EVALUATION&#13;
FORM prepared by that&#13;
committee consinsting of Lofton&#13;
and Senators Birch, Bielefeldt&#13;
and Konkol.&#13;
Though the meeting started&#13;
breaking up for 6:00 classes, the&#13;
committee got the go ahead to&#13;
disburse the form to faculty&#13;
members for consideration at&#13;
the May 2 Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Graffin receives award&#13;
(Continued from Page 1&#13;
Firebaugh, an associate&#13;
professor of physics at UW-P,&#13;
received one of the first four allcampus&#13;
awards in 1970.&#13;
The awards are named for&#13;
William Kiekhofer, late UW&#13;
professor of economics, and are&#13;
funded from a grant established&#13;
to perpetuate his teaching&#13;
ideals, candidates must be&#13;
under 36.&#13;
Graffin was graduated from&#13;
Milwaukee North Division High&#13;
School, received his B.S. and&#13;
M.A. degrees at UW-Madison,&#13;
did additional graduate work at&#13;
Indiana University and was&#13;
awarded his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1968, he taught for&#13;
three years at Northwestern&#13;
University.&#13;
His current teaching includes&#13;
a section devoted to&#13;
contemporary problems in&#13;
P a r k s i d e ' s i n n o v a t i v e&#13;
American language program,&#13;
an English course in contemporary&#13;
literature and a&#13;
humanities course titled&#13;
"Background of the Arts: 20th&#13;
Century," which he developed&#13;
with Peter Martin of the&#13;
English faculty.&#13;
Graffin also is chairman of&#13;
the American language&#13;
program committee and is&#13;
active as a lecturer for PREP&#13;
(Parkside Resource Enrichment&#13;
Professors), a project in&#13;
which faculty members act as&#13;
visiting lecturers in area high&#13;
schools.&#13;
He was among lecturers for&#13;
the recent Capsule College for&#13;
Women at UW-P and has spoken&#13;
on a variety of literary topics&#13;
before community groups.&#13;
He is co-editor of a volume of&#13;
contemporary readings for&#13;
college level English classes,&#13;
"Perspectives for the 70's,"&#13;
publiched by Dodd, Mead in&#13;
1971.&#13;
He was elected to Phi Beta&#13;
Kappa as an undergraduate and&#13;
is a member of the Modern&#13;
Language Association.&#13;
Last spring he was among&#13;
four UW-P professors cited for&#13;
honorable mention as&#13;
distinguished teachers at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
*S«rving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY CO MFORTABLE DININ C&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S'CABIN RO OM&#13;
FOR PRIVATE PA RTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
~ SENATOR PROXM|R£_&#13;
18 hour film&#13;
marathon at&#13;
vogue&#13;
On Saturday and Sunday,&#13;
May 6th and 7th, SGA will&#13;
present the penultimate activity&#13;
of Symposium 1972. An 18 hour&#13;
long film festival is planned to&#13;
begin at 6 PM Saturday at the&#13;
grave site of the Vogue Theater,&#13;
1820 - 52nd Street, Kenosha.&#13;
Admission is $1.00 and inexpensive&#13;
food and refreshments&#13;
will be served. Many surprises&#13;
are currently being planned to&#13;
keep people awake and alert as&#13;
the marathon film session runs&#13;
its 18 hour cinematic gamut of&#13;
underground, foreign, and old&#13;
classic flicks.&#13;
Included in the list of films to&#13;
be shown are such old standbys&#13;
as "Horse Feathers" starring&#13;
the inimitable Marx Brothers;&#13;
the Great Nose's "Hurry!&#13;
Hurry!" and "The Great&#13;
Chase"; Laurel and Hardy's&#13;
"Perfect Day", as well as&#13;
Chaplin's "Essanay" films. For&#13;
swashbuckling fans, Errol&#13;
Flynn's "Captain Blood" will be&#13;
shown.&#13;
Other, more contemporary&#13;
fare includes such peppery&#13;
classics as "Salt of the Earth";&#13;
the controversial "Pledge of&#13;
Allegiance"; "Brand X"&#13;
starring Taylor Mead, Ultra&#13;
Violet and Abbie Hoffman; and&#13;
"Right On".&#13;
Rounding out the list will be a&#13;
3-D flick entitled "Eyes of Hell'&#13;
the proletarian "Day of the&#13;
Painter", the revealing "Apple&#13;
Thieves", "Parque-Year of the&#13;
Tanks", the prosaic "La Vita -&#13;
Life in a Tin Can", "Spider&#13;
Elephant", "1001 Arabian&#13;
Nights" and "Dead of the&#13;
Night".&#13;
The film festival is open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
SYMPOSIUM 1972&#13;
A BON VOYAGE TO RACINE CAMPUS&#13;
On Friday, May 5, beginning about 5 PM, a "Going Away",&#13;
party will be held for and at the Racine campus. Featured at this&#13;
event will be three rock bands; "Canyon", "Speedy Cookin' " and&#13;
"Blood Money".&#13;
Weather permitting, the party planners hope to hold the party&#13;
outside, on the Racine Campus' patio, overlooking Lake Michigan.&#13;
Next year, the campus will become part of the Racine Technical&#13;
Institute.&#13;
THEATRE X&#13;
An • Exc iting theatrical revue of satire, improvisation and&#13;
experiment will be featured when UWP presents Milwaukee's&#13;
Theatre X. The ensemble company will present X Communication.&#13;
Curtain time is 8 PMat the Activities building on Tuesday, May 2.&#13;
Admission is free.&#13;
A collective touring ensemble, which has recently performed&#13;
before Kenosha audiences at Carthage College and the Vogue&#13;
Theater, Theatre X has won both popular and critical acclaim for&#13;
more than 175 performances in 60 locations since its founding two&#13;
years ago.&#13;
X COMMUNICATION is a collage of changing and growing,&#13;
short original pieces created by the Theatre X company members.&#13;
The program runs the theatrical gamut of co ntent and style, and&#13;
features spontaneous company improvisations utilizing situations&#13;
drawn from audience suggestions.&#13;
There will be only one performance.&#13;
Pre-Law Club: Sex Panel&#13;
As part of the Symposium&#13;
activities, the UWP Pre-Law&#13;
Club will sponsor a panel&#13;
discussion Wednesday, May 3,&#13;
at Greenquist 103. The topic will.&#13;
be "Should Private Sex Between&#13;
Concenting Adults be&#13;
Legalized?"&#13;
The discussion panel includes&#13;
Waukesha County District&#13;
Attorney Richard McConnell;&#13;
Racine Attorney Jay Schwartz;&#13;
Kenosha State&#13;
Assemblyman Eugene Dorff;&#13;
and the Rev. Gergory Spitz, a&#13;
Kenosha St. Joseph high school&#13;
teacher. Also sitting on the&#13;
panel will be a prostitute and a&#13;
homosexual.&#13;
District Attorney McConnell&#13;
recently gained notoriety for his&#13;
opposition to the controversial&#13;
sex education program sponsored&#13;
by the Unitarian Church.&#13;
Jay Schwartz is a well-known&#13;
Racine attorney who ran for&#13;
state attorney general a few&#13;
years ago.&#13;
The panel discussion in&#13;
Greenquist 103\vill begin at 7:30&#13;
PM. After the discussion an&#13;
informal social gathering&#13;
replete with refreshments will&#13;
be held in the Whiteskellar. All&#13;
UWP faculty, staff and students&#13;
are invited to attend and continue&#13;
discussion with panel&#13;
members on a one to one basis.&#13;
CLARIFICATION:&#13;
Last week's NEWSCOPE&#13;
included a story on the new bar&#13;
in the Activities Building. It was&#13;
mistakenly reported that two&#13;
upright coolers cost $2,900 each.&#13;
This should be amended to&#13;
approximately $2,200 for&#13;
everything, not as stated in&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Don't believe&#13;
everything you read.&#13;
. ^OMEGRAD SCHOOLS&#13;
ARE MORE CHALLENGING&#13;
THAN OTHERS. It's graduation day and&#13;
there you stand... diploma&#13;
in hand and future in doubt.&#13;
You could go on to graduate&#13;
school.Or you could look for&#13;
a job in today's ever-tightening&#13;
job market. Or,you could&#13;
put your education to work&#13;
immediately by applying for&#13;
the Air Force's OfficerTraining&#13;
School program.&#13;
Upon qualification,&#13;
you'll find yourself beginning&#13;
12 weeks of specialized&#13;
study designed to prepare&#13;
you for the challenge and&#13;
responsibilities of an officer's&#13;
commission. And, give you&#13;
the chance to go on to flight&#13;
school to earn those famous&#13;
silver wings as an Air Force&#13;
pilot or navigator.&#13;
OTS is your chance to&#13;
break away from the crowd&#13;
and be recognized. For all the&#13;
facts, mail in the coupon. Or,&#13;
call 800-631-1972 toll free:&#13;
Remember,with an Air&#13;
rorce future, the sky's no&#13;
imit. * In New Jersey call 800-962-2803.&#13;
TDfRHIAmRATEcR^?»U1TINGSERV1CE «•«!&#13;
Please send me more information on Air Force OTS. I&#13;
i Name.&#13;
. Address&#13;
j Date of Birth. I City&#13;
| State&#13;
-Sex.&#13;
-County.&#13;
| Date of Graduation —School.&#13;
j I understand there is no obligation. |&#13;
ij^dyo^jf in theAirFbrce.j&#13;
Awards To VanWilliganfO'Rourke Page 5 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
An anthropologist and an&#13;
engineer are the 1972 winners of&#13;
outstanding teaching awards of&#13;
$500 each at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. The&#13;
awards are'funded by a grant'&#13;
from the Standard Oil (Ind.)&#13;
Foundation and will be formally&#13;
presented at commencement&#13;
exercises on May 28.&#13;
The winners are John Van&#13;
Willigen, assistant professor of&#13;
anthropology, and Michael J.&#13;
O'Rourke, engineering science&#13;
instructor. Cited for honorable&#13;
mention as distinguished&#13;
teachers were LeRoy Cougle,&#13;
assistant professor of business&#13;
management, and Chong-maw&#13;
Chen, assistant professor of lif e&#13;
science.&#13;
They were selected by the&#13;
c ampu s f a c u l t y - s t u d e n t&#13;
teaching awards committee&#13;
chaired by Prof. Herbert Kubly&#13;
on the basis of nominations&#13;
submitted by students.&#13;
Van Willigen, 33, joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty in September,&#13;
1970, after teaching at the&#13;
University of Arizona, where he&#13;
also completed work for his&#13;
Ph.D.&#13;
John Van Willigen&#13;
As an anthropologist and as a&#13;
teacher, Van Willigen has interested&#13;
himself in the impact&#13;
of industrialization on the&#13;
problems of urban industrial&#13;
society, the area of stu dy which&#13;
constitutes Parkside's special&#13;
educational mission.&#13;
He presently is teaching two&#13;
courses in introductory anthropology&#13;
and a course in&#13;
culture and technological&#13;
change. He also was one of tw o&#13;
UW-P anthropologists who led a&#13;
study-field trip to Mexico&#13;
during the spring semester&#13;
break to study Mexican culture&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
DRUG TESTS AT CENTRAL STATE U.&#13;
(CPS) —Ohio's Central State University has begun mandatory&#13;
urinalysis with registration to weed out hard drug users, after two&#13;
drug-related shootings shook the campus several weeks ago.&#13;
Students at the predominantly black school requested the tests&#13;
and the regents approved, "to change CSU's reputation as a drug&#13;
haven in Ohio."&#13;
READER-OWNED PAPER IN IDAHO?&#13;
(CPS) — The Intermountain Observer in Boise, Idaho, is&#13;
selling shares to its readers in that state to raise $30,000 by th e end&#13;
of April.&#13;
The paper, written and printed on the University of Idaho&#13;
campus, hopes to buy its way out of a local broadcasting firm and&#13;
become a self-supporting journal of a dvocacy by 1973. It would be&#13;
the first totally reader-owned paper in the country.&#13;
MITCHELL SPEAKS OUT&#13;
(CPS) — "My dear, don't you realize that you can take a real&#13;
trip in marijuana. . . These stupid jerks who smoke the stuff don't&#13;
realize what they're getting themselves into. Now that we've&#13;
stopped the flow of the milder stuff in the United States, they're&#13;
going outside the country, and now the pushers are importing the&#13;
cannabis plant from other countries. The same kind of stuff the&#13;
opium smokers use. It's hashish, and you can really become addicted&#13;
to it." — for mer Attorney General John Mitchell to Kandy&#13;
Stroud, a reporter for Women's Wear Daily, at a cocktail party.&#13;
EAGLE FOUND SHOT&#13;
(CPS) — A mature golden eagle has been found shot to death in&#13;
Wyoming with a note tied to its legs with barbed wire. The note&#13;
read: "To the continued safety of the flocks of Wyoming, for he died&#13;
that the lambs may grow."&#13;
and history.&#13;
He has just been elected a&#13;
fellow of the American Anthropological&#13;
Association and is&#13;
also a member of Sigma Xi, the&#13;
Tibet Society and the&#13;
Association for Asian studies.&#13;
O'Rourke, 25, also came to&#13;
Parkside in fall, 1970, and&#13;
presently is teaching a course in&#13;
electromechanics, mechanical&#13;
vibrations and introducting to&#13;
computing mechanics in the&#13;
School of Modern Industry,&#13;
which implements Parkside's&#13;
industrial society mission.&#13;
O'Rourke also has been&#13;
selected as a participant in a&#13;
National Science Foundation&#13;
Summer Institute, on structural&#13;
design, an interaction program&#13;
between educators and practitioners,&#13;
to be held July 10&#13;
through August 4 at Illinois&#13;
Institute of Technology.&#13;
He received his M.S.C.E. and&#13;
Ph.D. degrees at Northwestern&#13;
University and brings to the&#13;
classroom experience from&#13;
both industrial and academic&#13;
posts.&#13;
He is a member of T au Beta&#13;
Phi, Chi Epsilon and the&#13;
Michael O'Rourke&#13;
American Society of Civil&#13;
Engineers.&#13;
Cougle teaches courses in&#13;
emp l o y e e e v a l u a t i o n ,&#13;
behavioral science and decision&#13;
making in the management&#13;
science division of th e School fo&#13;
Modern Industry, and is a&#13;
Loyola University Ph.D.&#13;
Chen, who is teaching&#13;
bioscience and plant&#13;
physiology, received his Ph.D.&#13;
at Kansas University and did&#13;
postdoctoral work at the&#13;
National Cancer Institute of&#13;
Canada and the Roche Institute&#13;
af M olecular Biology.&#13;
the tyinedt&#13;
Pigya &amp; O tatum Qoodd.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA In Four Sixes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16".&#13;
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• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
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FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE —1948 Ford, 6cyl. 2 door&#13;
in good cond. Call after 6 at 654-6485.&#13;
for this S450 value.&#13;
FOR SALE — '62 Comet, 6 cyl. $125.&#13;
Call 652-5904 or 654-3429.&#13;
FOR SALE —Guitar MARTIN D-18,&#13;
with deluxe hard shell case, $335"&#13;
firm, ph. 652.0295.&#13;
FOR SALE: White panne velvet&#13;
shawl with long white fringe. Never&#13;
worn. Shimmers like White gold. $25&#13;
new, will sell for $10. Ph. Cleta 654-&#13;
1927 o r 553 2496.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 VW, sunroof, good&#13;
cond. $1,145. Call 632 9669 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
P E Turntable. SHURE high track&#13;
cartridge. Call Ron. 657-6630.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 Triumph 500,&#13;
custom, best offer call 552-9068.&#13;
1970 Nova, 350 V-8, two barrel,&#13;
factory 3 speed on floor, power&#13;
steering and brakes, 32,000 miles,&#13;
new tires. Call 657-7105, 8 to 5:30 or&#13;
554-6470 after 6:30.&#13;
Splffy 1963 M6 Midget SPORTSCAR,&#13;
needs body work, truly THE&#13;
car of the future and yours for the&#13;
ridiculously low price of $150 cash,&#13;
contact Jim at 553-2496 or at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED - Writers, iournalists,&#13;
production staff and ad men to take&#13;
over a college newspaper. Must be&#13;
housebroken, learn while you earn&#13;
when you can. Ph. 553-2496 or 553-&#13;
2498. Ask for anybody or come in&#13;
person to the Newscope office,&#13;
corner of Wood Rd. and Hwy. A.&#13;
Gay Youth Coalition: Anyone interested,&#13;
or having any questions or&#13;
problems they would like to discuss,&#13;
please call 634-4470.&#13;
HOUSEWORK HELPER — early&#13;
June for about a week, pay open. Ph.&#13;
554-8517.&#13;
WANTED — a student volunteer to&#13;
be big brother to 11 year old cerebral&#13;
palsied boy. Call Wendy at 553-2121,&#13;
ext. 42.&#13;
JUST IN TIME FOR MOTHER'S&#13;
DAY — Ready for the Home,&#13;
weaned and litter trained, 8 weeks&#13;
old people orientated kittens. 1&#13;
Black 8, White Female - loo ks like a&#13;
panda bear; 1 Black 8. White male -&#13;
looks like Sylvester the Cat; 1 Gray&#13;
Tiger Stripe Male - big eyes and a&#13;
loud pur; 1 Brown Tiger Stripe Male&#13;
• the friendliest kitten. All come with&#13;
white boots, stomachs and faces.&#13;
Cost: only a little love. Call 633-8162&#13;
any time, but hurry.&#13;
Go Go Girls wanted', top wages.&#13;
Pussy Cat Lounge, 633-3805, Racine.&#13;
Babysitter and light house work,&#13;
afternoons and evenings, full or part&#13;
time. Please call 632-3785.&#13;
WANT TO TRADE Men's 21"&#13;
bicycle frame - Reynolds 531. With to&#13;
trade for larger, comparable frame -&#13;
would consider selling. Ph. 657-3046.&#13;
TYPING done. Experienced. Ph.&#13;
552 877.&#13;
ROMEMATE WANTED — Girl to&#13;
share apt. in June, a mile from the&#13;
Kenosha campus. 3 rooms. Ph. 652-&#13;
1486, between 12 - 2, 652-5904.&#13;
May l, 1972 NEWSCOPE Paget&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
HOLIDAY IN N AND&#13;
RUBY II&#13;
It took me a day and a half to&#13;
find Eating Out, and when I did,&#13;
I found him on some kinda' trip.&#13;
It seems that the dentist he&#13;
hadn't seen in six months told&#13;
him his teeth were fine, but he&#13;
was too fat.&#13;
Eating Out was depreseed, it&#13;
took a real sales pitch to get him&#13;
out to review double the normal&#13;
amount of restaurants. "C'mon,&#13;
man, we've got three places to&#13;
do before NEWSCOPE is a&#13;
thing of the past." '&#13;
Maggie was gathered up, and&#13;
the three of us slid into&#13;
Kenosha's melting pot of&#13;
prepared food.&#13;
The first stop on a Thursday&#13;
night, a little after nine, was the&#13;
local Holiday Inn. I had to&#13;
convince Eating Out that this&#13;
coast to coast, global Chain&#13;
didn't contribute directly to&#13;
"the Big Viet Squirmish", the&#13;
"Commie Caper". I told him it&#13;
didn't to my limited knowledge,&#13;
just don't drink a Coke.&#13;
The only reason I took the&#13;
entourage there was because a&#13;
former Parkside student and&#13;
Kenosha track superstar, Tom&#13;
Young, worked there.&#13;
The ex-student mans the night&#13;
kitchens, preparing items like&#13;
hamburger delights, Reuben&#13;
sandwiches, Norsman halibut&#13;
steak, T-Bones, Kansas City&#13;
Sirloins, lobster, frog legs . . .&#13;
and so on.&#13;
Word had gotten to the food&#13;
desk to the effect that ole Tom&#13;
was whippin' up some fine food.&#13;
So, by a three to nothing vote, it&#13;
was off to the Southport Room.&#13;
Eating Out and I each had a&#13;
steak sandwich (2.65) while&#13;
Maggie was drawn to a Rueben&#13;
sandwich (1.95) by the well&#13;
worded menu. The real test was&#13;
on the shoulders of the former&#13;
fleetfoot. As Eating Out put it,&#13;
"Can one successfully make the&#13;
transition from cinder to tile?"&#13;
He did, at least last Thursday&#13;
night. The steak sandwich&#13;
wasn't the usual scrawny,&#13;
grizzly, stringy piece of poorly&#13;
cooked meat. We each ate big,&#13;
juicy, cooked to perfection&#13;
steaks, plump, placed atop a&#13;
throne of toast.&#13;
Maggie decided the Rueben&#13;
was good enough to serve Al&#13;
Kooper, Norman Mailer,&#13;
Barbara Striesand, el Rico&#13;
Dorfman, Sandy Koufax, Bob&#13;
Dylan, Sammy Davis, or even&#13;
good enough to bury with Lenny&#13;
Bruce. A Rueben can't be given&#13;
a higher recommendation to my&#13;
way of thinking-writing.&#13;
PAB Presents&#13;
PARAMOUNT P ICTURES PRESENTS&#13;
Ali MacGraw-Ryan O'Neal&#13;
A HOWARD G.MINSKY- ARTHUR HILLER Production&#13;
John Marley &amp; Ray Milland ERO SEGAL ARTHUR HILLER&#13;
fcoduefetd bby* {f iflecruultivn#t PPrrrovd4u,c.re«ri MUu.s.i.c. Scored bk.*&#13;
HOWARD G.MINSKY D AVID GOLDEN FRANCIS LAI A PARAMOUNT M&#13;
I SOUNO TRACK At BUM AVAILABLE ON PARAMOUNT RECOUPS I [PPl&#13;
May 5, 8 PM 100 min.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Parkside 8. Wisconsin ID required&#13;
While eating and talking to&#13;
Tom, I found out Josie worked&#13;
there, one of the waitresses on&#13;
the Eating Out All Star Team,&#13;
and in the Eating Out Hall of&#13;
Fame. Josie Speed Queen, one&#13;
of the friendliest workers in the&#13;
frenzied, freaked-out food&#13;
world.&#13;
Tom Young and the other&#13;
night shift workers had won our&#13;
stomachs at the Holiday Inn,&#13;
and the three of us recommend&#13;
the food prepared by Tom, and I&#13;
suggest stopping by in the&#13;
morning to see Josie.&#13;
That was' it, we couldn't&#13;
return for a second visit to&#13;
really give the Inn a twice-over,&#13;
no time. With a staff of two&#13;
writers covering all the beats,&#13;
regular columns, and all else, I&#13;
had to hustle my associates&#13;
home for rest so we could take&#13;
on another deserving eatery.&#13;
On to Ruby II, at the site of&#13;
the defunct George Webb&#13;
franchise. The Ruby Brothers&#13;
have expanded to the west, they&#13;
run the all-night restaurant&#13;
painted purple on Roosevelt&#13;
Road. Kenosha night life never&#13;
had it so interesting.&#13;
Along with a sharp waitress&#13;
named Marie, we enjoyed&#13;
cheeseburgers, Damon Runyon&#13;
characters, and the jukebox.&#13;
The Ruby Boys, along with&#13;
their army of workers-nonworkers,&#13;
are always ready to&#13;
listen to any ideas concerning&#13;
the betterment of their&#13;
restaurants. They are unique&#13;
this way. Besides talking about&#13;
food. Jack Ruby will offer his&#13;
basketball analysis to anyone,&#13;
and I have not found him to be&#13;
wrong recently. He'll tell you&#13;
how. the Knicks will upset the&#13;
Lakers, just ask him.&#13;
They could serve dog food at&#13;
Ruby 11 and still rake it in when&#13;
the bars close. Those individuals&#13;
dining-out after&#13;
drinking-out will consume&#13;
anything under the guise of&#13;
food, ask Jim Koloen.&#13;
Ruby II is better than that. It&#13;
is an interesting place,&#13;
frequented by everything from&#13;
intellectuals to nomads to&#13;
moms and dads to detectives&#13;
(and they wouldn't put just&#13;
anything in their stomachs).&#13;
There is one thing the&#13;
management at Ruby II did that&#13;
deserves mention. They&#13;
removed the sign above the&#13;
door that read "Minimum to&#13;
Minors", which spelled out a&#13;
minimum time the second class&#13;
citizens could sit. The sign is&#13;
gone and minors are more than&#13;
welcomed. That's progress in&#13;
the restaurant business.&#13;
There was a creamer soured&#13;
on our table, and there may be&#13;
other odds and ends one could&#13;
fault, but the place is new, and it&#13;
is like a factory, three shifts,&#13;
busy usually, and just getting&#13;
routines set.&#13;
As Ken Kesey and the Merry&#13;
Pranksters would say, "flow&#13;
with it, just flow with it" and I&#13;
agree.&#13;
Next Week: The Last Supper&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's Newest Rock Bar&#13;
now open&#13;
the Establish&#13;
424 Lake Avenue, Racine&#13;
(formerly Counselor's II)&#13;
Live Entertainment Five Nights a Week&#13;
now featuring&#13;
Second Coming&#13;
formerly&#13;
Buddy and the Citations&#13;
by Bob Sieger&#13;
ONE YEAR:&#13;
COLIN BLUNSTONE&#13;
During the middle 60's, The&#13;
Zombies was one of many&#13;
groups to share the crowded&#13;
spotlight of rock stardom. They&#13;
were good, putting out such&#13;
early hits as "She's Not There"&#13;
and "Tell Ner No." They were a&#13;
strong group, both musically&#13;
and vocally and they really&#13;
knew how to rock. Shortly after&#13;
their last hit, "Time Of The&#13;
Season," the Zombies broke up.&#13;
Out of this breakup came&#13;
ARGENT, a new group led by&#13;
Rod Argent, a former Zombie.&#13;
Now, Colin Blunstone, a singer&#13;
for the Zombies, has decided to&#13;
re-enter the music business.&#13;
With the musical backing of&#13;
ARGENT, Blunstone has just&#13;
released his first solo album.&#13;
But something is missing.&#13;
Although he has his roots in&#13;
rock, Blunstone does nothing on&#13;
this album that comes close.&#13;
There is none of the power, none&#13;
of the drive that was inherent in&#13;
the Zombies. Instead what&#13;
Blunstone offers is ten love&#13;
songs, four of which he wrote.&#13;
Songs of love lost, love gained,&#13;
love far away.&#13;
- -^nse o&gt;&#13;
a un,fy of ba&#13;
monotony, 7^ r&#13;
^ts. are also&#13;
chelated and&#13;
arranged.&#13;
B'unstone's Vo&#13;
rename&#13;
h abl sound!&#13;
t\eJchln .iqhuaeb,i t wa struci&#13;
&lt;*rtain song,&#13;
beneficial. Howe-&#13;
9asps way&#13;
s,*» of the albu&#13;
suffer from too&#13;
^king them dry&#13;
0,1 the first cut or&#13;
only cut pn the&#13;
l&#13;
from the music desk&#13;
Buddy Rich is the Grand&#13;
Canyon among the&#13;
topographical features of the&#13;
drumming fraternity. Or he&#13;
could be Steve Canyon; larger&#13;
than life in spite of .weighing in&#13;
at 115 on a heavy day. The plain&#13;
fact is that he was born with&#13;
wings while the rest of us need&#13;
sticks to walk with.&#13;
Buddy Rich doesn't need&#13;
sticks to drum with. He can play&#13;
cleaner licks with his fingers&#13;
than most drummers can&#13;
manage with any number of&#13;
sticks, as he demonstrated&#13;
Saturday, April 22, at Bradford&#13;
Auditorium. His return&#13;
engagement drew probably all&#13;
the local hardcore swing fans, a&#13;
number of masochist fellow&#13;
drummers come for the sheer&#13;
sweet frustration of it, and,&#13;
befitting the glittering UWPARKSIDE&#13;
floating above the&#13;
stage, even a few students who&#13;
didn't belong to either category.&#13;
Noticing the I.F.O., Buddy&#13;
quipped, "That's a funny way to&#13;
spell 'Rich'."&#13;
Several such remarks plus&#13;
bored-casual attitude toward&#13;
the funny Wisconsin towns he&#13;
and his band were hitting led to&#13;
the conclusion that Buddy Rich&#13;
thinks highly of himself. The&#13;
buzz from the business bears&#13;
WO$HA this out, as Buddy has collected&#13;
a reputation as one of the Bad&#13;
Boys, hell to work with, hell to&#13;
Interview. Rumor has Frank&#13;
Sinatra throwing a full pjtChe,&#13;
of water at him for disrupt^&#13;
love songs with rimshots durinq&#13;
their mutual stint with Tommy&#13;
Dorsey. But the stature of the&#13;
man and his prodigous musical&#13;
genius make all other considerations&#13;
irrelevant, at least&#13;
to the audience.&#13;
Buddy fronts a streamlined&#13;
band these days, himself and a&#13;
bassist the sum total of the&#13;
rhythm section, the sole support&#13;
for four trumpets, three&#13;
trombines and four saxes. It&#13;
could easily get top heavy but&#13;
Buddy Rich is Buddy Rich and&#13;
the bassist, who looks like a&#13;
lizard with a ponytale and plays&#13;
with spider fingers, is his&#13;
match, eyes glued to Buddy's&#13;
ride cymbal, staying neck and&#13;
neck. The rest of the side men&#13;
are all first rate, many doubled&#13;
on several instruments, and two&#13;
of the sax men are genuinely&#13;
exciting in solo spots.&#13;
This really isn't a big band,&#13;
though. The arrangements,&#13;
while workmanlike and spiffy,&#13;
are rather elementary in terms&#13;
of tone color and shading,&#13;
tending toward flashy accents&#13;
and lots of fills, playing off the&#13;
«* • .&#13;
•T&gt;* V.&#13;
-v*:&#13;
zr ...&#13;
kX&#13;
.4 i'v.&#13;
jC&#13;
-aby&#13;
"Red" Widely of the&#13;
Newscope Sports staff&#13;
Yes, sports fans, finally&#13;
NEWSCOPE's ace in the hole,&#13;
par free, bar none, sportswriter&#13;
gets a chance to pitch the ole&#13;
ball. Yessir, this On the Nod&#13;
fella's average has been falling&#13;
lately, vat-aging he can't go the&#13;
distance anymore. After each&#13;
contest he's had to wrap his&#13;
head in ice packs; he's even&#13;
been whirl-pooling his tongue.&#13;
But the quarts are inevitably&#13;
creeping up on him.&#13;
Nothin' worked, so coach&#13;
benched him and gave me,&#13;
NEWSCOPE's first round draft&#13;
choice, a chance to bat and&#13;
pitch the ole ball.&#13;
Yessiree, I'm pitchin' the old&#13;
ball npw, yesirqe.&#13;
Dick's Olympic Super Bar (on&#13;
the corner of 24th Ave. and 52nd&#13;
St.) was my first batter of this&#13;
early season and, well, looks&#13;
like I gotta do some more warm&#13;
ups. Got a tripple off me on the&#13;
first pitch. Yessiree, I peppered&#13;
it in there and zowie, I was&#13;
knocked off the mound. But&#13;
coach says I deserve another&#13;
chance, so I'll probably be&#13;
starting when we play the&#13;
Activities Building next week.&#13;
Dick Stankus presents an&#13;
ever-smiling, chunky figure,&#13;
and manages a fine team with&#13;
such All-star material as ten&#13;
ounce tap Bud, Pabst, Hamm's&#13;
and Old Style for 15c; basic&#13;
mixed drinks for 35c; schooners&#13;
for 30c and Harvey Wallbangers&#13;
for a shockingly low 75c. I didn't&#13;
stay in the game long enough to&#13;
face a Wall banger, but Jack&#13;
Daniels and Gin Tonic did&#13;
plenty of damage; I was beaned&#13;
twice in a row. A NEWSCOPE&#13;
record.&#13;
The tavern features a formica&#13;
topped bar which is at least 50&#13;
feet long (you can't hit one out&#13;
ef the bar), tables and padded&#13;
chairs, a piano, and a small pool&#13;
table. Bob Stankus, who will&#13;
become manager of the bar in&#13;
May, took over for his father at&#13;
9 PM, and with him, the older&#13;
fans in the stands started filing&#13;
out, figgering the game was&#13;
already decided.&#13;
With mostly longhair types&#13;
sparsely occupying the box&#13;
seats at the bar, Bob piped- in&#13;
music from a stereo, featuring&#13;
albums by the Doors, Dylan and&#13;
Eric Burdon to name a few.&#13;
Fumblefingers Socha was&#13;
catching, and trying to call the&#13;
pitchers. Unfortunately/ he&#13;
wasn't speaking loudly enough,&#13;
which left the ordering of drinks&#13;
on my shoulders.&#13;
The softly lit/ "ewly&#13;
remodelled bar featured a&#13;
Martini and Manhattan mixing&#13;
device which resempled a four&#13;
^ cuts he is ac- drums and bass) Blunstone&#13;
igjy by Violins and comes close to a rock style. Yet&#13;
arranging of the he catches himself before he&#13;
st identical on all has a chance to&#13;
0 gives the returns to his&#13;
Page 7&#13;
sing out and&#13;
This '"c reiurna 10 nis nnoorrmmaall,, ' ssaaffee&#13;
&gt; of unity' but it is style. His vocal ethic seems to 1&#13;
' bKa^ddiylv arrantg ed bt e: ,D on't take chances and try&#13;
„ remaining four to please everyone.&#13;
Ho heavily or- —&#13;
ld equally overvocals&#13;
ar e high,&#13;
mediocre. He has&#13;
inding br eathy. If&#13;
was a refined&#13;
-uctured to fit a&#13;
It would be&#13;
lWever, Blunstone&#13;
jy through both&#13;
jbum. His vocals&#13;
oo much control,&#13;
dry and ordinary&#13;
With&#13;
groups&#13;
worse yet, going crazy on the&#13;
bar circuit, why does Colin&#13;
so many deserving&#13;
going unheard of or.&#13;
Blunstone rate an album? But&#13;
I'm letting my ideals show. I'm&#13;
forgetting that the music industry,&#13;
with all its politics and&#13;
petty bureauracracy, is a&#13;
business first and an artistic&#13;
medium second.&#13;
ONE YEAR: COLIN&#13;
BLUNSTONE is just a lot of&#13;
wasted acetate. It has no beat,&#13;
,t on side two (the the lyrics are trite, and the&#13;
the album with vocals ordinary. I give it a 25.&#13;
NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
fA&#13;
big brass sound like a drum&#13;
corps scaled for the stage.&#13;
Which figures because it is&#13;
Buddy's show.&#13;
But in context it's a great&#13;
show. Buddy pulls sounds from&#13;
his drums that qualify them as a&#13;
melodic instrument, filling the&#13;
holes with the perfect riffs,&#13;
nudging the beat in all the right&#13;
places. Every now and then an&#13;
arm will shoot out of the tangle&#13;
to flick a cymbal, always catching&#13;
the accents, and all&#13;
without benefit of a score.&#13;
Buddy shouts the numbers of&#13;
the songs like some cocky&#13;
quarterback setting off a flurry&#13;
of pages, but he doesn't have a&#13;
music stand.&#13;
And, of course. There were&#13;
only two extended drum solos&#13;
but Buddy did them right, arms&#13;
crossing, sticks blurred to a&#13;
solid sheet, rattling off the most&#13;
amazingly complex combinations&#13;
of obscure rudiments.&#13;
The finale had him moving from&#13;
the fastest cleanest most&#13;
purring single stroke roll in the&#13;
world on the rim of his snare to&#13;
several arm, shoulder and head&#13;
riffs.&#13;
It may be grandstanding, but&#13;
the man is a natural wonder&#13;
and should be seen at least once&#13;
in a l ifetime. r&#13;
^% pronged candelabra: Lot of&#13;
drinking geniuses running&#13;
around inventing all kinds of&#13;
labor saving machines for the&#13;
contemporary bartender.&#13;
One especially impressive&#13;
aspect of the Super Bar is its&#13;
orderliness; nothing was out of&#13;
place; the good stock of hard&#13;
spirits was lined up in single&#13;
file, chest out and bottletop&#13;
fight. On review night, the bar&#13;
was quiet, restful, almost&#13;
tranquil, though the seasonal&#13;
attendance figures are probably&#13;
quite high since Dick's , is&#13;
located near AMC. It's a shot&#13;
and a beer bar during the afternoon&#13;
when some elderly&#13;
sportsmen sit around the tables&#13;
playing cards, or while the&#13;
American Motors workers lift a&#13;
few during recess, hoping to&#13;
Place the boredom of fhe&#13;
Assembly line in the proper&#13;
amber perspective.&#13;
Prices are very reasonable,&#13;
indeed I wonder how they got&#13;
Harvey Walbanger and Gin&#13;
Tonic to play for only 75c and&#13;
40c respectively: The strike had&#13;
no effect on them. On&#13;
weeknights, Dick's provides the&#13;
patron with a quiet atmosphere,&#13;
color TV and albums to listen to.&#13;
Even the umpires are nice guys,&#13;
which just goes to show why&#13;
drinking is America's number&#13;
one a ll-season indoor sport.&#13;
By Andy Schmelling&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
After making a few last&#13;
minute arrangements Friday&#13;
afternoon, like calling for&#13;
tickets, picking up my young&#13;
lady, replenishing my stash,&#13;
buying a bottle, grabbing a bite&#13;
and filling my beast with petrol,&#13;
it was off into the sunset, 1-94&#13;
non-stop to Madison.&#13;
We reached our destination,&#13;
the Madison field house, about 8&#13;
p.m. or one hour after the start&#13;
of the show. Inside there were&#13;
gathered a sizeable number of&#13;
people but not the crowd scene&#13;
one might have expected at the&#13;
first major festival of the year.&#13;
As i t was, it was ideal. Anyone&#13;
who wanted to could work&#13;
himself to the front of the stage&#13;
without much difficulty, or if he&#13;
preferred there was ample&#13;
room in the bleachers to stretch&#13;
out and take a nap or just observe&#13;
the show from a reclining&#13;
position, which many people did&#13;
as the clock moved on past two.&#13;
Looking to the stage we saw&#13;
what appeared to be about a 40&#13;
year old, long haired man in an&#13;
orange jumpsuit telling dirty&#13;
jokes. As it turned out, it was&#13;
just Uncle Dirty, the M.C.,&#13;
doing his thing. He wasn't&#13;
having much success in the&#13;
audience reaction department,&#13;
and it soon became apparent&#13;
that the crowd had come for&#13;
music and would settle for&#13;
nothing less.&#13;
Then the spotlight swung to a&#13;
large bearded man with a&#13;
guitar whom Uncle Dirty introduced&#13;
as Dave Von Ronk.&#13;
Dave has been around for quite&#13;
a while but his talents have for&#13;
the most part been overlooked&#13;
except for people who have been&#13;
into folk. After a rolicking&#13;
rendition of "Candy Man", the&#13;
frustrated dopers lament, he&#13;
broke into a laugh and exclaimed&#13;
"Kenosha Blues". He&#13;
moved through the slow rhythmic&#13;
"Who Do I Love" and&#13;
blasted out another called "If&#13;
You Want to be A Hero Follow&#13;
Me". I remembered what Dylan&#13;
once said of him. "I'd always&#13;
known Risin' Sun but never&#13;
really knew it until I heard&#13;
Dave sing it." Called back after&#13;
"One Meatball" he delighted&#13;
the crowd with "Would You&#13;
Like to Swing on A Star".&#13;
Next up was McKendree&#13;
Spring, a relatively new group&#13;
whom I'd never had the&#13;
pleasure of hearing before.&#13;
They began with Neil Young's&#13;
"Down By The River". Their&#13;
three guitars and violin&#13;
produced such a full sound that&#13;
it was hard to believe they&#13;
didn't have a drummer. They&#13;
had a real ear-pleasing sound. A&#13;
violin solo of "God Bless&#13;
America" reminded me of&#13;
THE END&#13;
MAY 20,21&#13;
Hendrix's "National Anthem"&#13;
with fantastic feedback work&#13;
producing everything from the&#13;
sounds of a string quartet to&#13;
that of a diving jet bomber full&#13;
with blazing machine gun. I&#13;
hope to hear some more good&#13;
things from this group.&#13;
McKendree was as-hard as the&#13;
rock got Friday night with the&#13;
appearance of Ramblin' Jack&#13;
Elliot the sounds returned to the&#13;
acoustic traditional vein which&#13;
dominated the weekend.&#13;
Opening with "San Francisco&#13;
Bay Blues" he quickly moved&#13;
into a string of fine Dylan tunes&#13;
including "I Threw It All&#13;
Away", "Lay Lady Lay", and&#13;
"God On Our Side". He looks&#13;
remarkably like Dylan and&#13;
hearing him sing his songs was&#13;
almost disconcerting. He more&#13;
lhan did them justice though.&#13;
After Jack was the world&#13;
famous Earl Scruggs Review&#13;
show, in the spirit of the thing,&#13;
opened up with Dylan's "You&#13;
Ain't Going No Where". Their&#13;
reception was fantastic,&#13;
especially when they started&#13;
getting it on with some down&#13;
home square dance, the whole&#13;
place was jumping. At one&#13;
o'clock in the morning they&#13;
were just What the crowd&#13;
needed for a second wind.&#13;
Hearing Earl play "Orange&#13;
Blossom Special" on the banjo&#13;
was a real treat.&#13;
The first night was climaxed&#13;
with the fabulous Richie&#13;
Havens. Watching his play&#13;
guitar just blows my mind. His&#13;
hand just moved in a blur&#13;
across the front of his box.&#13;
Every song he sang brought on&#13;
an ovation. "Handsome&#13;
Johnny", "Freedom", "Here&#13;
Comes the Sun", and a couple&#13;
new songs I'd never heard&#13;
before. It was a fine end to a&#13;
great night. When the lights&#13;
came on it was alter 2:30 a.m.&#13;
and looking at Diane I knew it&#13;
was time to head for home. It&#13;
seemed like we'd been there a&#13;
week.&#13;
We missed Sorry Mutha's and&#13;
just caught the last part of&#13;
David Mississippi Queen Rea's&#13;
act. I decided to move up to the&#13;
stage and try to get a couple of&#13;
shots. My luck was with me,&#13;
just as I reached the stage&#13;
Beautiful Day came on, just as&#13;
they came on I came on, and the&#13;
next hour was almost to much&#13;
for me to believe. Anyone who&#13;
has ever seen them could understand&#13;
why. They sang a&#13;
couple of cuts off their first&#13;
album like "Hot Summer Day",&#13;
and "White Bird". I could have&#13;
sat and listened to them until&#13;
the cows came home. As far as I&#13;
was concerned they were the&#13;
high point of the weekend.&#13;
Country Joe followed&#13;
Beautiful Day with a sing-aiong&#13;
version of "We'll All Be Free&#13;
Some Day". If you know&#13;
anything about Country Joe,&#13;
and you know anything about&#13;
Madison, you can imagine what&#13;
his performance was like. It&#13;
was something like a family&#13;
reunion, brothers and sisters&#13;
together again for a while. He&#13;
told a story about his being&#13;
harrassed in Boston over the&#13;
"Fish Cheer" and then led the&#13;
crowd in a chorus of it that&#13;
shook the walls. "Give me an f .&#13;
. . Give me a U ... He played&#13;
four or five songs and ended up&#13;
with the house singing "Fixin to&#13;
Die Rag". No one wanted to let&#13;
him leave the stage.&#13;
Linda Ronstadt was up next.&#13;
She's one of the best looking&#13;
female performers I've ever&#13;
seen (The lady in Beautiful Day&#13;
was right up there too!) besides&#13;
being a fine singer and violin&#13;
player. She started out with "A&#13;
Whole Lot More of Jesus and a&#13;
Whole Less Rock and Roll" then&#13;
(I think I'm Going to Love You&#13;
For) "A Long Long Time" I'd&#13;
say her group's music was&#13;
country based although it had a&#13;
wide variety. Her lead player&#13;
who said he was from "Suthurn&#13;
Texus" picked and his way&#13;
through "a littl' song ah rote"&#13;
called "Mail Order Dog", and&#13;
then they jammed on some&#13;
country for a while.&#13;
By the time Kris Kristofferson&#13;
got on the stage we were&#13;
having trouble seeing it. Just&#13;
the same our audios were in fine&#13;
shape. He sang his current&#13;
release "Josie" and then made&#13;
a big hit with "Okie from&#13;
Muskogee". Then he asked&#13;
Linda Ronstadt to come up and&#13;
sing "Help Me Make It Through&#13;
The Night" with him. They&#13;
really sounded good together.&#13;
Muffy, a friend of mine from&#13;
Racine, agreed when I said they&#13;
sounded good and added, "And I&#13;
don't even like that song." After&#13;
that they brought Ramblin Jack&#13;
Elliot up and they all sang a&#13;
song of Jack's called "The&#13;
Tramp on the Street". For the&#13;
final number of the weekend&#13;
they called Leslie on stage and&#13;
the whole group sang "Me and&#13;
Bobby McGee". Ramblin Jack&#13;
had a yodel that would put the&#13;
Swiss to shame. It was really a&#13;
happy scene, everyone was&#13;
singing and laughing and just&#13;
carrying on. When the lights&#13;
finally came on it was apparent&#13;
that our friend with the sports&#13;
coat had done a miserable job. I&#13;
saw him as we left, sitting on a&#13;
bleacher with his head in his&#13;
hand.&#13;
Walking out into the warm&#13;
night air I had the feeling of&#13;
having taken part in something&#13;
beautiful, something to&#13;
remember for a long time to&#13;
come.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
T II I: l: I N l: K T II I N v*. S IN Ml'f IC&#13;
Downtown Kenosha -&#13;
LIVE&#13;
ENTERTAIN&#13;
MENT&#13;
Two Shows&#13;
featuring&#13;
Tom Rosplack&#13;
and the duo of&#13;
Terry Elliot&#13;
Don Mohr&#13;
May 3 + 4&#13;
Noon to 3 PM&#13;
The news&#13;
is Stretch!&#13;
VERY DEFINITELY&#13;
GEAR BOX®&#13;
Newest fashion on the&#13;
scene — Stretch Woven&#13;
Slacks! Great new fabric&#13;
look with a great, built-in&#13;
comfort factor. Stay-neat,&#13;
Dura-Press® blend in&#13;
flannels, twills and neat&#13;
geometries. Pick your favorite&#13;
color: grey, green,&#13;
navy. It. blue, tan, black.&#13;
Sizes 28-38.&#13;
Richman BROTHERS&#13;
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May 1, i?72 NEWSCOPE Page 8&#13;
Iil'lil'l'l'l'lil'l'lililililililililililililil.lililil.&#13;
Parkside Student Activities Board&#13;
Last Dance of the Year&#13;
(until the End)&#13;
9 PM — 1 AM&#13;
SURPRISE BAND!&#13;
$1.00 for students $1.25 for guests&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID required&#13;
I'I'I'I'IiI'IiIiIiIiIiTiT iTiTiTiTiTiTiTiT iTiTiT iTiTiTiTi&#13;
| Golfers vs. Roosevelt I&#13;
The UW-Parkside golf squad&#13;
went into action against&#13;
Roosevelt University Friday&#13;
with a 9-5 mark and Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens hopes that's a good&#13;
sign for the future.&#13;
And the future, in this case,&#13;
means Thursday through&#13;
Saturday because the Rangers&#13;
will be vying in the NAIA&#13;
District 14 tournament at Green&#13;
Lake, hoping to improve on&#13;
their ninth place finish of 1971.&#13;
Parkside dumped Carthage,&#13;
Loyola and Whitewater last&#13;
Tuesday to run their mark to 9-5&#13;
as freshmen Dave Fox and Pete&#13;
Nevins led the way over the par&#13;
Trackmen&#13;
E&gt;q&amp;s' Ko r r s e To Compete&#13;
^ 5r P®T"&#13;
The UW-Parkside trackmen&#13;
will compete Saturday at the&#13;
Northern Illinois Relays in&#13;
DeKalb.&#13;
The meet is becoming one of&#13;
the Midwest's toughest relay&#13;
battles as evidenced by the&#13;
entry of Drake University,&#13;
perennial Missouri Valley&#13;
Conference champion.&#13;
The Rangers will enter a full&#13;
squad in the meet and also in&#13;
next Tuesday's dual encounter&#13;
with UW-Whitewater on the&#13;
Warhawks' track.&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Gary Lance&#13;
competed in the marathon in&#13;
last weekend's Drake Relays at&#13;
Des Moines. For Rosa, the&#13;
Ceylonese Olympian, it was his&#13;
first big test over the 26 mile&#13;
route.&#13;
The Rangers also entered a&#13;
four mile relay team of Rosa,&#13;
sophomore Jim McFadden and&#13;
freshmen Dennis Biel and Rudy&#13;
Alvarez. That quartet, which&#13;
ran in the big race with all the&#13;
major colleges, schools, should&#13;
have ben pulled to a fast time,&#13;
hopefully under 17 minutes.&#13;
// yon arc unable to a/tend summer school, yon are invited to participate in . . .&#13;
A T E L E V I S E D C R E D I T S E M I N A R&#13;
The College ot Continuing Education, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
PSYCHOLOGY OF DRUG USE...AND ABUSE&#13;
a six week course - Summer, 1972&#13;
presented on the following stations:&#13;
WLUK-TV (ch 11) Green Bay, Wis. WREX-TV&#13;
WXOW-TV (ch 19) La Crosse, Wis. KDUB-TV&#13;
WKOW-TV (ch 27) Madison, Wis. WDSE-TV&#13;
WMVS-TV (ch 10) Milwaukee, Wis. KTCA-TV&#13;
WAOW-TV (ch 9) Wausau, Wis. WNMR-TV&#13;
(ch 13) Rockford, III.&#13;
(ch 40) Dubuque, Iowa&#13;
(ch 8) Duluth, Minn,&#13;
(ch 2) Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
Northern Michigan Univ.&#13;
TOPICS WILL INCLUDE: Is th e \1is( hiet in Drills or in People . . . Hist ory ol Drug Abuse . . . Drugs Commonly&#13;
Abused . Inerts ot Drug Abuse loneliness lose llum.in Development and Growth . . . Psycho-&#13;
Sor i.il ( onsider.itions . the Allein.itive So&lt; jety Drugs. Religion, and Mysticism . . . Crime Drugs.&#13;
\outh and law leathers, kids and Drugs ( ommunily Role in Drug Abuse . . . New Directions&#13;
YOU CAN ENROLL AS:&#13;
a "Special" undergraduate student&#13;
a "Special" graduate student&#13;
an undergraduate auditor&#13;
Earn i graduate or undergraduate credits&#13;
for a course outline, enrollment information, and viewing schedule, dip and mail&#13;
All c ourse&#13;
requirements&#13;
can be&#13;
completed&#13;
at home&#13;
without&#13;
campus&#13;
attendance&#13;
host professor&#13;
Robert lane, Ph.D.&#13;
N.ime- Te&#13;
Address.&#13;
City-&#13;
State. -Zip.&#13;
Televised Instruction&#13;
College of Continuing Education&#13;
Return to: University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
Oshkosh, Wisconsin 54901&#13;
71 course at Pets as with a 77&#13;
and 79 repsectively.&#13;
Mark Hjortness added a 79&#13;
and Tom Bothe an 80 while Jim&#13;
Vakos and Tom Feiner came up&#13;
with an 80 and 85 respectively to&#13;
round out the Parkside scoring.&#13;
The Rangers totaled 480 for&#13;
six men while Carthage had 487.&#13;
Whitewater 487 and Loyola of&#13;
Chicago 509. Medalist was Ed&#13;
Habacker of Loyola with a par&#13;
71.&#13;
Parkside will meet Lake&#13;
Forest and Dominican — teams&#13;
which it's already defeated —&#13;
and UW-Green Bay at 1 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday at Pets.&#13;
Road Rallye Results&#13;
On Sunday, April 23, Steve&#13;
Swan and his navigator Tom&#13;
Werbie won the second annual&#13;
Jimmy Clarke Road Railey.&#13;
Runner up trophy was given to&#13;
Kevin McKay and Jerry Socha.&#13;
John Zaring and Ron Gatterdam&#13;
received the Most&#13;
Distinguished Faculty Award.&#13;
Forty-six cars turned out for&#13;
thS event on a partly Sunny&#13;
afternoon, and it was a great&#13;
success for the Ragtime&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
The actual course, 67 miles&#13;
long, was created by Mary&#13;
Fettas and Chris Heckel, and&#13;
was basically designed for&#13;
Racine and Kenosha counties;&#13;
but a few people included side&#13;
tours to as far south as Antioch,&#13;
Illinois, as far west as&#13;
Burlington, and as far north as&#13;
the Seven Mile Fair. Many&#13;
people were thankful for Lake&#13;
Michigan's constant presence to&#13;
the east!&#13;
After the Rallye, a crowd of&#13;
more than ninety people enjoyed&#13;
food and beer at the&#13;
Brat's basement.&#13;
Netmen vie for volley&#13;
Interested in (check one) Graduate Credit- Undergraduate Credit- -. Undergraduate Audit-&#13;
The Ranger tennis squad will&#13;
face UW-Milwaukee Friday at&#13;
the Pershing Courts in Racine&#13;
in a rematch of one the&#13;
Parkside men dropped earlier&#13;
and Saturday the Rangers will&#13;
meet UW-Green Bay up north.&#13;
The Rangers, improving&#13;
weekly, notched their second&#13;
victory last week against an&#13;
experienced Milton unit in what&#13;
Parkside Coach Dick Frecka&#13;
called "our best meet of the&#13;
year."&#13;
Mike Safago, playing at No. 1&#13;
singles for the Rangers, beat&#13;
Brian Gibson of Milton 6-3, 6-2&#13;
while No. 2 man Dan Mieczkowski&#13;
won over Brad Barry 6-&#13;
3, 6-2.&#13;
Skip Jones, No. 3 man, won 6-&#13;
4, 4-6, 6-0 over Bruce Lindsley&#13;
while Dennis Halverson fought&#13;
an uphill battle at No. 4 against&#13;
Kurt Aufterhaar but won 1-6, 8-&#13;
6, 6-4.&#13;
Dave Herchen won over Sam&#13;
Skaggas at No. 5 by 6-1, 6-3&#13;
whild John Kangas topped&#13;
Corey Shea at No. 6 6-1, 6-3.&#13;
In doubles action, Safago and&#13;
Jones beat Gibson and Aufterhaar&#13;
6-2, 6-2 while Mieczkowski&#13;
and Halverson won 6-0,&#13;
6-0 over Barry and Lindsey.&#13;
Herchen teamed with Todd&#13;
Nelson at No. 3 doubles to win 6-&#13;
1, 6-2 over Skaggs and Shea.&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
KAMI&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
1 , lb G.ROUND BEEF&#13;
ON FRF.NCH CRUST&#13;
BR FAD DRF.SSFD&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LFTTHCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
GRILLED COUNTRY&#13;
HAM A CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLE WHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OF BURGER. CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISF. ON TOAST gfc&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
uvuT-n.nrLqft.-inf»i^i^^^^^, . . , nnritijuJ&#13;
ASNDH0UGH S0ME0NE FROM PARKSIDE WILL ATFrom&#13;
May 5th through June 11th, the Milwai.kpo R&#13;
Theater Company will present forty-four performanrP^T^P&#13;
Journey of the Fifth Horse", Ronald Ribman's thrfn !&#13;
compassionate portrait of human lonliness and unrrJ,?- "Ifi&#13;
The rhapsodical play MRT's final .ubscription^„72 oft'&#13;
season, will open Friday, May 5th, at eight p m in the T«HH ur u&#13;
Theater at the Performing Arts Center.&#13;
EROTIC FL ICS&#13;
The prize winning works of the recent New York Fvnt;,. R-.&#13;
Festival, an exhibition designed to encourage more creaUvP T&#13;
in sex cinema, will be presented at UWM's Bolton Hall l in&#13;
The films, part of a new UWM Union sponsored filmT •&#13;
be shown Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 4th 5th and 6th&#13;
Showtimes Thursday are at seven and nine-thirty p m and FHH*&#13;
and Saturday at seven, nine-thirty and eleven thirty o m&#13;
Admission for the public is two bucks, persons uder 18 can't get&#13;
in, and identification is required, so know who you are.&#13;
WHOSE GOVERNMENT IS THIS 9&#13;
Students on a number of US campuses have began a campaign&#13;
to turn the Nixon Administration around on its refusal to hold&#13;
public hearings on the issue of environmental impact of the&#13;
proposed trans-Alaska pipeline.&#13;
Working with the Alaska Action Committee, an organization of&#13;
econservatiomsts living in the vicinity of Washington D C these&#13;
students are distributing a pamphlet entitled "The Alaska PinelTne&#13;
Reading Lesson." The pamphlet deals with unanswereS quSns&#13;
and inconsistencies found in the government's pipeline imnacl&#13;
statements. r r&#13;
In spite of the imposing concern on the part of conservationists&#13;
ecologists, Congress members and students, the Nixon Ad'&#13;
ministration appears determined to bow to oil industry demands to&#13;
issue the pipeline permit (a permit for construction as early as Mav&#13;
4th for construction of the 789 mile, hot-oil pipeline)&#13;
Copies of "The Alaska Pipeline Reading Lesson" can be obtained&#13;
m quantity from the Alaska Action Committee 729 - lith&#13;
Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005. '&#13;
Page 9 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
OA/ +ht LAKE&#13;
•sPorts bar&#13;
: HWY 32.&#13;
/ &gt; / / \ Y pool ' FOO s BA L L.&#13;
^ BAR- SAA/D UL/CRBS .jP,&#13;
" package c,oot&gt;s .&#13;
(we l come A/ E w AbULTSJ)&#13;
\ . . s A / s t &gt; s 3 A A / t &gt; S — 3 * A / t &gt; S .&#13;
It's the&#13;
Creoakl eth. ing.&#13;
FLO'S&#13;
Home Cooking&#13;
HWY 31&amp;County Trunk E&#13;
L_&#13;
6AM-6PM Specials Daily&#13;
T h e SG A l i t e r a t u r e t a b l e w as r e ce n t l y s e t up i n&#13;
t h e A ct i v i t i e s B u i l d i n g . B e s i d e l i t e r a t ur e , i t&#13;
o f f e r s s t e l e p h o n e f o r s t u de n t us e .&#13;
Quiet City,&#13;
USA&#13;
(CPS) — If the city of Des&#13;
Plaines, Illinois, has its way,&#13;
that town will probably be the&#13;
quietest town in the country.&#13;
They've just passed an ordinance&#13;
that bans the following:&#13;
m "... crying, calling or&#13;
• o shouting, using a whistle, rattle,&#13;
* bell, gong, clapper, hammer,&#13;
ro drum, horn, hand organ,&#13;
jjj mechanically operated piano,&#13;
or other musical instrument,&#13;
wind instrument, mechanical&#13;
device, radio, phonograph,&#13;
sound amplifier or other similar&#13;
electronic devices so as to&#13;
destroy the peace of the neighborhood."&#13;
The nine page document,&#13;
passed unanimously by the&#13;
Council, also requires motors on&#13;
vehicles, except for buses, to be&#13;
shut off while idle.&#13;
The ordinance carries lines of&#13;
$15 - 300 for a first offense and a&#13;
jail term of up to six months for&#13;
additional offenses.&#13;
T h e n ew | £ f o o t l o n g ba r , r e c en t l y b u i l t i n&#13;
t h e Ac t i v i t i e s B u i l d i n g ; i t f e at u r e s a new&#13;
P a b s t t a p.&#13;
A t h i r d o f t h e au d i e n c e a t t he R ad i c a l&#13;
P o l i t i c a l O rg a n i z i n g s em i n a r l i s t e n s&#13;
i n t e n t l y t o t h e s e ve n s p e a k e r s .&#13;
ALRIKAS Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
3,L VJLluey SSu' p p e r CU&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan k«J.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
9Gunmb. B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
THE&#13;
UPSTAIRS&#13;
"Highest bar&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
| | |&#13;
WC&lt;4S. SUN./-6&#13;
12 O Z. &amp; QTTLE B EER&#13;
V- HIGH-BALLS 35 &lt;&#13;
L/ v e Bjusic —&#13;
Fri. +&#13;
ACROSS FROA T HE&#13;
LAKE THEATER&#13;
May 1,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 10&#13;
Page 11 NEWSCOPE May 1,1*72&#13;
*************rtWrt«)i»u&#13;
episuj sojoij j BJoy\ j&#13;
tqsueuaoqs (gjupfs (q otoqf&#13;
www;&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
oa&amp;e 3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
RHINELANDER&#13;
Pott R um — fifth S309&#13;
Dimitri Vodka—full quart $345&#13;
Five-Star Brandy f'M $335&#13;
Henri C Brandy—full quart—$3*'&#13;
Seagram's Gin Miwart — $439&#13;
Would your club or organization&#13;
like a&#13;
Wine Tasting&#13;
Contact Fred Cook, 637-4101 1&#13;
12PAK&#13;
CANS&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at Blueberry Cold Duck&#13;
Strawberry Cold Duck&#13;
Cold Turkey&#13;
Your complete home&#13;
wine making center.&#13;
Gold Seal Catawba&#13;
Wines&#13;
Phono 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
AAAIN OFF ICE:&#13;
•CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
QUARTS-&#13;
|</text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 16, May 1, 1972</text>
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                <text>English</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63778">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
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        <name>ken konkol</name>
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              <text>Fire in Com-Arts Building Under Investigation</text>
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              <text>The University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
JUVICOVI&#13;
Volume 5 Number 15 December 13,1971 'Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold&#13;
If you'd have written a&#13;
story, it would have been&#13;
here.&#13;
Join the Newscope staff.&#13;
Fire In&#13;
Com-Arts&#13;
Building&#13;
Under&#13;
Investigation o&#13;
ir&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
CD&#13;
Christmas party for&#13;
underprivilged needs spirit&#13;
Santa Claus (Jim Greco) is comin' to town! Actually,&#13;
he's coming to Parkside on Saturday, December 18. That's&#13;
when he'll be bringing Christmas cheer to underprivileged&#13;
children from the surrounding communities. There are going&#13;
to be games, cartoons, prizes, soda, food and presents. The&#13;
party is being held in the Student Activities Building from&#13;
1:30 to 4:30. Cooperating on this activity will be Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises, the Parkside Activities Board, and the Student&#13;
Union Committee. Interested students and organizations are&#13;
invited to help and their assistance would be deeply appreciated.&#13;
Contact either the Student Activities Office or the&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
the special magic of&#13;
CHRISTMAS!&#13;
by Larry Jones, Campus Editor&#13;
A fire did minor damage to the new communication-arts&#13;
building last Wednesday night.&#13;
As of Thursday afternoon, the Somers Fire&#13;
Department had not yet completed its investigation&#13;
of the blaze, and so would not release&#13;
any information about it. Nowever, Newscope was&#13;
able to obtain the following information in a short&#13;
interview with UWP chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie:&#13;
The fire was "in a very limited basement&#13;
section of the new communication-arts building,&#13;
close to where the connector will be between the&#13;
library-learning center and the corn-arts building.&#13;
The fire occurred in an area where evidently the&#13;
construction people were carrying on some&#13;
warming activity — they were evidently warming&#13;
wooden forms in which concrete was going to be&#13;
poured Thursday. I heard they had some electric&#13;
lights going down there . . . whether they could&#13;
generate enough heat to warm these forms I &lt;don't&#13;
know. The specific cause of the blaze is still being&#13;
looked into.&#13;
"Evidently it did burn quite fiercely in this&#13;
limited area; maybe as much as an hour, and did&#13;
burn some of the wooden forms and did heat up&#13;
some of the steel reinforcing rods in the area to the&#13;
extent that they bent and will have to be replaced.&#13;
There was no major damage to the structure, and&#13;
it is not the University's responsibility; that is, it is&#13;
still the contractor's building and his responsibility&#13;
to take care of it."&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie also stated that no dollar&#13;
estimate of damage had yet been made, and that,&#13;
to his knowledge, there was no suspicion of arson.&#13;
Deputies reported that the Sommers Fire&#13;
Department responded to the call at about 11:30&#13;
p.m., but had trouble getting to the fire site&#13;
because of ankle deep mud. The fire was first&#13;
noticed by a student or faculty member who was in&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the time.&#13;
The building is under construction by the&#13;
Korndoerfer Construction Company of Racine and&#13;
is due for completion next year. It is believed,&#13;
according to Wyllie, that construction of the&#13;
building will not be hampered very much by the&#13;
fire, which is under investigation by an insurance&#13;
firm, university officials and the Sheriff's&#13;
.Department.&#13;
The D eath Of A University-another volley&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
The University of Wisconsin,&#13;
as we knew it, is dead. It died&#13;
the day Governor Patrick&#13;
Lucey signed into law the&#13;
merger which combined the two&#13;
university systems into one.&#13;
The old way is gone and we now&#13;
• have a giant conglomerate&#13;
University of Wisconsin consisting&#13;
of 13 campuses spread&#13;
over the state from Superior to&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Each of these 13 campuses&#13;
bears the name University of&#13;
Wisconsin, but while they may&#13;
be united in name they have a&#13;
long way to go to be united in&#13;
spirit. This separation is due to&#13;
the uniqueness of the situation.&#13;
The schools from each of the old&#13;
systems were run differently&#13;
and there will be difficulties&#13;
involved in getting things to run&#13;
smoothly.&#13;
The final form of the new&#13;
University of Wisconsin is not&#13;
decided, nor will it be, at least&#13;
until January, 1973. That is how&#13;
long the Merger Implementation&#13;
Committee plans&#13;
to be working on the problem.&#13;
This committee, which consists&#13;
of 17 members including the&#13;
chairmen of the Joint Finance&#13;
Committee and the chairmen of&#13;
the Joint Education Committee,&#13;
has a big job ahead of them.&#13;
They are the ones who must find&#13;
the best way of facilitating the&#13;
merger and may decide&#13;
anything from leaving the&#13;
merger as a merger in name&#13;
only or to go all the way and&#13;
have every campus treated the&#13;
same, or anything in between.&#13;
According to George&#13;
Molinaro, Chairman of the&#13;
Assembly Finance Committee,&#13;
the only really big thing the&#13;
Merger Implementation&#13;
Committee has done is to&#13;
eliminate the Coordinating&#13;
Council on Higher Education,&#13;
which was found to be unnecessary&#13;
due to the new&#13;
combined central administration.&#13;
&#13;
As far as Parkside is concerned,&#13;
Molinaro thinks we did&#13;
fairly weH. We got more than&#13;
others did. Whether we would&#13;
have gotten still more under the&#13;
old system is another question.&#13;
Where we really did well was&#13;
in our building program — not a&#13;
thing has been cut. How much&#13;
did we get? Originally it was&#13;
requested that Parkside receive&#13;
an additional $3,066,000 over the&#13;
1969-71 biennium for the 1971-73&#13;
biennium. This addition was cut&#13;
to $1,300,000 or less than half.&#13;
Because of the shortfall in&#13;
expected enrollment, Parkside&#13;
lost an additional $288,000 and&#13;
the forced savings because of&#13;
the budget delay and the Nixon&#13;
economic freeze cost an additional&#13;
$180,000. The budget&#13;
delay wriught havoc with more&#13;
than University funds. All state&#13;
employees who would have&#13;
received pay increases after&#13;
July 1, were denied those increases&#13;
till the budget was&#13;
passed. That would have been&#13;
fine —- everyone would have&#13;
gotten those raises retroactively&#13;
as soon as the budget was&#13;
passed. But along came the&#13;
price freeze and no one could&#13;
get a raise and the budget&#13;
passed without any of those&#13;
included. So nobody got&#13;
anything in back pay and no&#13;
increases were granted until&#13;
after the freeze expired.&#13;
Parkside will lose additional&#13;
funds due to the change in the&#13;
level of funding. It used to be&#13;
that Parkside was funded on&#13;
level one, freshman and&#13;
sophomore, and level two,&#13;
junior and serior per credit hour&#13;
regardless of the curriculum.&#13;
Now we are funded still on&#13;
levels one and two but these are&#13;
further broken down into four&#13;
major disciplinary fields.&#13;
Which means we now get less&#13;
for each literature major than&#13;
we do for each physics major —&#13;
watchifor increased accent on&#13;
the sciences witl all those&#13;
specialized facility&#13;
There was a bright side to the&#13;
personnel problem, as none of&#13;
the mentioned layoffs came&#13;
about, and Parkside will be able&#13;
to recruit additional instructional&#13;
personnel for next&#13;
fall. The personnel office is&#13;
already hiring additional&#13;
clerical help.&#13;
The big bite came in those&#13;
decision items which were not&#13;
restored. These included the&#13;
fundting of two new majors and&#13;
others which were enumerated&#13;
in the March 15 issue. However,&#13;
there will be an expansion in the&#13;
administrative and institutional&#13;
computing facilities. The near&#13;
future should see almost every&#13;
department on campus making&#13;
use of the machine.&#13;
Breakdown of Parkside&#13;
budget:&#13;
60 per cent, Institutional costs&#13;
10 per cent, Physical Plant&#13;
10 per cent, Library&#13;
7 per cent, general services&#13;
3 per cent, miscellaneous &#13;
Page 2 XEWSCOPE December 13, 1971&#13;
An All N ew Concept&#13;
In Self Service Shoe Stores&#13;
The Shoe S top A nnex&#13;
three doors down from&#13;
The Shoe Stop (400 main st.)&#13;
racine&#13;
Grand Opening&#13;
Thurs. Dec. 16th&#13;
Famous Brand Shoes,&#13;
Values To $25.00&#13;
Reduced To $l4.90-$11.90-$9.90.&#13;
Also Reduced , Famous&#13;
Children's Jumping Jack's Shoes.&#13;
The Shoe S top A nnex&#13;
three doors down from&#13;
The Shoe Stop (400 main st.)&#13;
racine&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
I T 'S S C R U M P T I O U S&#13;
80c&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
BIG TOP Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
— THE RANCH&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
My story can be called an&#13;
Exercise in Futility or Whoever&#13;
Reads the Legal Notices?&#13;
On September 29, October 6&#13;
and October 13 of 1960 the Legal&#13;
Notice of the Kenosha News told&#13;
of a petition to rezone an area ot&#13;
Kenosha county from&#13;
residential to industrial. The&#13;
public hearing was held October&#13;
14, 1960. Somers township approved&#13;
the petition of a certain&#13;
Mr. Infusino to use 12.7 acres of&#13;
land on 30 Ave. just south of&#13;
Lichter Rd. to build an incinerator&#13;
for the burning of&#13;
salvage. None of the neighbors&#13;
were there to object. Thus, very&#13;
quickly and easily, Mr Infusino's&#13;
parcel of land was&#13;
rezoned.&#13;
It was not until the neighbors&#13;
saw what was being built that&#13;
they complained. The complicated&#13;
legal terminology in&#13;
the Legal Notices had not&#13;
conveyed to them that their&#13;
neighborhood was in for a&#13;
drastic change. And now it&#13;
seemed too late.&#13;
Complaints directed to&#13;
Kenosha's city hall were turned&#13;
away. K. T. Incinerator is not in&#13;
the city, they were told. Somers&#13;
tells the poor neighbors to be&#13;
patient; it all takes time.&#13;
A complaint that the teepee&#13;
(as the ugly structure was&#13;
nicknamed) was too high for&#13;
current regulations led to an&#13;
amendment of that regulation.&#13;
Meanwhile, the neighbors&#13;
have to contend with an ugly&#13;
and dangerous eyesore. Trucks&#13;
haul garbage from American&#13;
Motors. The garbage is piled&#13;
high. What if a strong wind&#13;
.?&#13;
Th§ screening at the top of the&#13;
teepee is broken down; large&#13;
chunks of half-burned paper&#13;
and wood have been found in the&#13;
neighbors' yards. Patc&#13;
£*°&#13;
burned ground were pointed out&#13;
to me. When, they asked, would&#13;
such a spark land on a roof or&#13;
agrove of trees and catch on&#13;
fire?&#13;
The garbage that decorates&#13;
Infusion's property f&#13;
ttracts&#13;
rats There is the smell, smoke&#13;
and soot that plagues them&#13;
night and day.&#13;
The people want help, but no&#13;
one wants to help. They have&#13;
been fighting the incinerator&#13;
since it was built. They are still&#13;
fighting. Their shouts have&#13;
easily been drowned out,&#13;
quieted and ignored, but still&#13;
they shout. What they lack are&#13;
the numbers. They need more&#13;
people to shout with them.&#13;
Aren't you getting a little sick of&#13;
seeing and smelling that mess&#13;
on your way to Greenquist?&#13;
Only until Mr. Infusino takes&#13;
his teepee and goes home&#13;
will those neighbors be able to&#13;
rest easy.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Diane Haney&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Finally, there may be some&#13;
coherence to the bulletin boards&#13;
around Parkside. The Student&#13;
Activities Office has completed&#13;
a study of the boards and has&#13;
come up with a solution. The&#13;
boards will be labeled as to the&#13;
size and type of what will be&#13;
allowed to be posted.&#13;
These regulations will affect&#13;
all boards except those&#13;
specifically reserved for&#13;
University departments.&#13;
The signs divide the boards&#13;
into three categories. First will&#13;
be the Campus Events Bulletin&#13;
Boards, for announcement of&#13;
approved campus activities and&#13;
events. Size of posters on this&#13;
board will be limited to 14 x 22&#13;
inches.&#13;
The next group will be the&#13;
Student Bulletin Boards. These&#13;
are to be used for personal&#13;
motes, for sale items, or student&#13;
notes of interest. Size of items&#13;
on this board will be limited to 3&#13;
x 5 inch announcements.&#13;
The final group will be boards&#13;
saying Rides And Riders&#13;
Wanted. These will be used for&#13;
the one specific purpose, announcements&#13;
again limited to 3&#13;
x 5 inches.&#13;
The Activities Office hopes&#13;
that this will end some of the&#13;
confustion over the present&#13;
bulletin boards at Parkside.&#13;
People using the boards are&#13;
asked to keep them as neat as&#13;
possible.&#13;
The Student Activities Office&#13;
will implement this process on&#13;
all the campuses. However, to&#13;
make this procedure work, it&#13;
will require the people using the&#13;
board to cooperate with the&#13;
standards set. If anyone has any&#13;
questions or would like further&#13;
information regarding bulletin&#13;
board policies, they are asked to&#13;
contact the Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is just to inform you that&#13;
the sketch purported to be that&#13;
of "James Koloen", as&#13;
published in last week's issue's&#13;
bar review, (which, by the way,&#13;
I thought was mighty boss and&#13;
right on) is indeed the face of an&#13;
imposter. Upon closer&#13;
examination of the picture,&#13;
anyone who is reasonably well&#13;
acquainted with the ace&#13;
reviewer, will discover that it is&#13;
in fact the portrait of the&#13;
scurrilous, archcartoonloony,&#13;
Jerry "the ageless wonder"&#13;
Socha, as drawn by the ace&#13;
cartoon reviewer "James&#13;
Koloen".&#13;
Don't believe everything you&#13;
see, huh Warren?&#13;
Keep on bulkin'&#13;
Jim Sucha&#13;
Why in the hell can't you illiterates learn even how to spell?&#13;
Disgusted&#13;
Picky, Picky, Ed.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racine&#13;
3309 Washington Avo.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
Mcmi|&#13;
Ctotnuu&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phono 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Campus Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Fine Arts Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Circulation Manager&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Warren Nedry&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Larry Jones&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
James Casper&#13;
Rick Pazera.&#13;
Fred Noer,Jr.&#13;
John Beck&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
.. Newscope is an independent student newspaper composed by students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside published weekly except during&#13;
vacation periods. Student obtained advertising funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the&#13;
University. Free copies are available upon request.&#13;
Th, ,&#13;
e&#13;
.&#13;
ne ,or 3,1 manuscripts submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. the&#13;
nursday prior to publication and must be typed double-spaced. Deadline for&#13;
^&#13;
ra&#13;
.&#13;
PhS iS the SaturdaV Prior to publication. Unsolicited manuscripts&#13;
d photographs may be reclaimed within 30 days after the date of subn^c&#13;
0&#13;
"' .&#13;
r Which they wi&#13;
" bec&#13;
°me the property of Newscope Ltd. The&#13;
»Prn..&#13;
0Pe °. A" ,S ,oca,ed the Student Organizations building, Intersection&#13;
Of Highway A and Wood Road. &#13;
December i:t. 1971 NKWSCOPK Page :i&#13;
Myra Sadker, an assistant professor of education at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and author of a forthcoming book&#13;
on discrimination against women in U.S. schools, displays pages&#13;
from a book which, she says, illustrates her contention that girls&#13;
are subtly forced into stereotyped career choices in the education&#13;
process. Captions on the illustrations in the book read "Boys are&#13;
doctors." and "Girls are nurses."&#13;
Myra Sadker&#13;
r Sex ism In The School'&#13;
Liberating little girls from&#13;
"sexist" school curriculums is&#13;
the goal of a forthcoming book&#13;
by Myra Sadker, an assistant&#13;
professor of education at the&#13;
University of WiscgnsinParkside&#13;
and mother of a yearand-a-half-old&#13;
daughter.&#13;
The book, tentatively titled&#13;
"Sexism in the Schools: The&#13;
Hidden Curriculum", is to be&#13;
issued for the fall market by&#13;
Harper and Row Publishers,&#13;
Inc., of New York.&#13;
In it, Mrs. Sadker traces&#13;
discrimination against women&#13;
in education from kindergarten&#13;
through college and beyond and&#13;
makes a strong plea for change.&#13;
"We can no longer afford to&#13;
waste the talents of over half of&#13;
our population," says Mrs.&#13;
Sadker, who received her&#13;
doctoral degree in education&#13;
from the Universpty of&#13;
Massachusetts.&#13;
"Discriminatory practices in&#13;
schools are creating built-in&#13;
economic discrimination&#13;
reflected in eventual career&#13;
limitation and salary differentials&#13;
for women."&#13;
Mrs. Sadker opens her indictment&#13;
with basic readers&#13;
used in the early elementary&#13;
grades. They "subtly&#13;
discriminate" in providing role&#13;
models for children, she says.&#13;
"These books use two to four&#13;
times as many stories about&#13;
boys as about girls; there are&#13;
more pictures of boys; and girls&#13;
are relegated to passive, observer&#13;
roles in the stories,"&#13;
Mrs. Sadker says. One particularly&#13;
flagrant example of&#13;
such books cited by Mrs.&#13;
Sadker, "I'm Glad I'm a Boy —&#13;
I'm Glad I'm a Girl" by&#13;
Whitney Darrow (Simon and&#13;
Schuster, 1970), consists of&#13;
facing pages picturing boys and&#13;
girls with such captions as&#13;
"Boys are policemen. Girls are&#13;
metermaids." "Boys are pilots.&#13;
Girls are stewardesses". "Boys&#13;
are presidents. Girls are first&#13;
ladies". "Boys invent things.&#13;
Girls use what boys invent",&#13;
and "Boys fix things. Girls need&#13;
things fixed".&#13;
All this can be unfair to boys&#13;
as well as girls, Mrs. Sadker&#13;
concedes. "The aggressive girl&#13;
is labeled a 'tomboy' while the&#13;
sensitive boy is labeled a 'sissy'&#13;
— both suffer as a result of&#13;
artificial role limitation."&#13;
Reading tests are not the orily&#13;
offenders, however. Women&#13;
come off even worse in most&#13;
history books, Mrs. Sadker&#13;
says. They are virtually&#13;
ignored.&#13;
"A survey of 12 o f the most&#13;
commonly used high school&#13;
history texts show definite bias&#13;
against women. One text&#13;
devotes only two lines to the&#13;
women's sufferage movement.&#13;
Another devotes a paragraph to&#13;
it," she points out. "Students&#13;
frequently do not realize that&#13;
there is a selection process&#13;
involved in the material&#13;
presented. Girls simply find no&#13;
role models in our history&#13;
books."&#13;
By the time girls are in junior&#13;
high school or high school, the&#13;
"subtle" discrimination of text&#13;
books is augmented by more&#13;
overt forms of sex bias.&#13;
"Counselors sometimes do&#13;
not encourage capable girls to&#13;
be doctors or lawyers." she&#13;
asserts. "They encourage girls&#13;
to be nurses and clerical&#13;
workers — traditional roles&#13;
where they may be undertrained&#13;
and under-paid for the&#13;
level of their ability."&#13;
To this is added social and&#13;
peer group pressures for girls to&#13;
"play dumb", Mrs. Sadker&#13;
says.&#13;
"Studies show that patterns of&#13;
underachievement for boys who&#13;
do not reach their full potential&#13;
in school began in the&#13;
elementary grades. These&#13;
patterns frequently begin for&#13;
girls in junior high school as&#13;
they 'learn their place' and&#13;
come to accept female role&#13;
limitations. Other studies show&#13;
that girls' IQ scorew decline&#13;
during adolesence, probably&#13;
because of a lack of motivation.&#13;
Girls are not rewarded for&#13;
academic achievement."&#13;
Mrs. Sadker makes clear she&#13;
is not "knocking" careers&#13;
which are traditionally&#13;
regarded as women's, so olng as&#13;
women choose them freely&#13;
rather than accept them as&#13;
"second choices'Mn an attempt&#13;
to conform with social&#13;
stereotypes.&#13;
Mrs. Sadker also cites two&#13;
common forms of "economic"&#13;
discrimination against girls in&#13;
secondary education.&#13;
Frequently boys take&#13;
mechanical or "shop" courses&#13;
where they develop potentially&#13;
marketable skills, while girls&#13;
take home economics courses&#13;
unlikely to bring them any&#13;
future economic return, she&#13;
says.&#13;
Another form of economic&#13;
discrimination comes in terms&#13;
of facilities and staffing,&#13;
especially in such areas as&#13;
school athletics, she says.&#13;
At the college and university&#13;
level bias against women also&#13;
exists, Mrs. Sadker says, in the&#13;
areas of admissions ("studies&#13;
indicate that if a school must&#13;
choose between a man and a&#13;
woman of equal ability, they&#13;
will amost invariably choose&#13;
the man") and career choices&#13;
("many professional and&#13;
graduate schools still have&#13;
'quota' systems for admitting&#13;
women").&#13;
And the woman who does get&#13;
a college degree will find that it&#13;
a sort of "discount diploma",&#13;
Mrs. Sadker points out. "A&#13;
woman with a B.A. degree can&#13;
expect to earn the same salary&#13;
as a man with a sixth grade&#13;
education. Fewer than one per&#13;
cent of working women earn&#13;
more than $10,000 a yaar while&#13;
the figure for the male&#13;
population is 20 t imes higher."&#13;
"The goal of education is to&#13;
allow each individual to develop&#13;
that person's greatest potential,&#13;
but education is actually&#13;
limiting women in the&#13;
development of their potential,"&#13;
Mrs. Sadker emphasizes.&#13;
How to change all that?&#13;
Mrs. Sadker hopes her book&#13;
will help by making parents,&#13;
teachers, school administrators&#13;
and publishers aware of sexism&#13;
in the schools. By getting the&#13;
"hidden curriculum" out in the&#13;
open, she hopes to have a part in&#13;
getting rid of it.&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
Holm - Accutron&#13;
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9a.m.—4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
a bottle or&#13;
a glass&#13;
_c and&#13;
O a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
q a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNE R OF HIGHWAYS 1-9 4 AND 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Availab le f or fraternity or s oro rity part ies &#13;
Page 4 NEYVSCOPE December 13,1971 CAMPUS&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
"Whenever I get to feel this way .&#13;
hard to find new words to say.&#13;
I think about the bad old days,&#13;
we used to know —&#13;
Nights of winter turn me cold&#13;
fear of dieing, getting old.&#13;
We ran the race,&#13;
the race was won:&#13;
by running slowly."&#13;
Ian Anderson&#13;
Two college-aged girls were looking at&#13;
greeting cards in a downtown gift-card store. As&#13;
one girl would pluck a card from the rack, glance&#13;
at the cover and read the verse within, the other&#13;
girl would hand her friend another card adding,&#13;
"This one is really beautiful," or "This one's&#13;
cute."&#13;
and every available space which greets the eye is&#13;
painted. There is a spontanious festival of color&#13;
within this place. The walls feature: an egg&#13;
hanging over a beer, an open refrigerator, a&#13;
clown, a cop, a cat on a bookcase, wild animals&#13;
resting, a seashore, W. C. Fields playing cards,&#13;
and a country road leading into the pay telephone.&#13;
I sat on a stool under the watchful eye of W. C.&#13;
Fields, who has been studying the same hand of&#13;
cards since he was immortalized in poster form&#13;
some years back. Since he had obviously been on&#13;
the wall longer than I had been sitting in the&#13;
restaurant, I figured he wguld be a good one to ask&#13;
what to order.&#13;
The man with the bulb nose suggested a&#13;
cheeseburger and coffee, through magic found&#13;
only at Bob's Keno Kofeee Pot. I began to feel my&#13;
bad mood dissolve as I talked with the waitress.&#13;
CM®&#13;
UJ&#13;
The girls had looked over a display of&#13;
Christmas cards when they found themselves in a&#13;
section of cards that narked no holiday or event.&#13;
Beautiful flaming sunsets, mellow yellow&#13;
sunrises, violets, roses, daisies, lines by Keats,&#13;
Shakespeare, couples walking along beaches, in&#13;
forests, in the rain, and in fields of clover. For fifty&#13;
or seventy-five cents, either girl could lose herself&#13;
in any one of the photographs on the cards. The&#13;
beautiful scenes on the seventy-five cent ones&#13;
were covered with heavy plastic, in case someone&#13;
wanted to get lost in the scene often enough to risk&#13;
getting fingerprints or smudges on the picture.&#13;
The girl with a white knitted hat picked up a&#13;
card featuring a scene that could have been&#13;
Simmons Island. "The sea has its treasure of&#13;
p e a r l s , t h e s h o r e i t s c r y s t a l s a n d s , a n d I ... I&#13;
have you." She read it and appeared to gaze&#13;
across the store in a romantic fantasy.&#13;
Not being in a receptive mood to this form of&#13;
"honesty", I left the card shop. I walked north&#13;
from the downtown area, in a very depressed&#13;
mood.&#13;
I seem to experience times when the sad lyrics&#13;
from every song created to make you feel lonely,&#13;
come to mind. It is at this time that I realize the&#13;
race I am in does involve rats. I usually suspend&#13;
whatever I am doing, buy the morning paper, and&#13;
take a long walk.&#13;
On this specific morning, I walked with the&#13;
Sun-Times under my arm, until I found myself one&#13;
block beyond Harbor West, in front of a curious&#13;
restaurant called Bob's Keno Kgffee Pot.&#13;
The interior of this place is unique. Each wall&#13;
Her name was Mickey. She had gone to school&#13;
in Madison, gotten married, dropped out, and was&#13;
thinking about going to Parksije. I had a second&#13;
semester timetable of scheduled classes with me.&#13;
She glanced through it and talked with me. Her&#13;
face reflected a type of honesty that could never be&#13;
found in a card shop for seventy-five cents a&#13;
throw. T .. , ..&#13;
When I tasted the cheeseburger, I realized it&#13;
was very good (it cost 45 cents). I highly recommend&#13;
it, as it was the best cheeseburger I had&#13;
eaten in some time. The coffee was also very good,&#13;
not old, too weak or too strong.&#13;
The food was so good on this visit that I&#13;
returned two other times in the next few days. I&#13;
ate breakfast (French toast, 60 cents) and dinner&#13;
(roast beef, applesauce, a vegetable, bread and&#13;
butter and soup, a dollar fifty). The cycle of meals&#13;
convinced me Bob's Keno Koffee Pot is a reliable&#13;
place to get good food. For a restaurant of this&#13;
type, there aren't many in the area that are better.&#13;
After the last bite of cheeseburger was long&#13;
gone, my coffee cup refilled and emptied, I&#13;
decided to be on my way. W. C. Fields had still not&#13;
played a card, while Mickey talked to another&#13;
waitress on duty as a mid-afternoon lull hit the&#13;
restaurant.&#13;
As I walked across the bridge to Simmons&#13;
Island, I watched the seagulls float and swoop,&#13;
remembering the same scene had been on one of&#13;
those cards. I thought of Mickey the waitress, and&#13;
hoped I would never see her face on a card with&#13;
lines by Keats across her forehead, covered with&#13;
plastic for seventy-five cents.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 14&#13;
Meeting: Student Senate, 4&#13;
p.m., Greenquist Hall, Room&#13;
101.&#13;
Poetry Reading: Sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Poetry Forum.&#13;
7:30 tp 8:30. Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Room D-101.&#13;
Meeting: Students International&#13;
Meditation Society.&#13;
Racine Campus, Room 105, 7 to&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
M e e t i n g : Music Educators&#13;
N a t i o n a l C o n f e r e n c e ,&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room D-131,&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 15&#13;
Film: Intercollegiate Film&#13;
Council will sponsor showing of&#13;
Kurasawa's "Rashomon" at 7&#13;
pm at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theatre. Free tickets available&#13;
at the Tallent Hall Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
Last day of Classes: Final&#13;
exams Dec. 16-23.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 17&#13;
Hockey: Rangers vs. Chicago&#13;
State College at Wilson Park&#13;
Recreation Center, Milwaukee,&#13;
9 p.m. Tickets available at the&#13;
Athletic Office.&#13;
Gymnastics: Rangers vs. UWEau&#13;
Claire at Eau Claire.&#13;
Regents: Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
will meet at Van Hise Hall, UWMadison.&#13;
&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 18&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs.&#13;
Northern Michigan at Memorial&#13;
HallK Racine, 8 p.m.&#13;
Gymnastics: Rangers vs. UWStout&#13;
and UW-Eau Claire at&#13;
Menomonee.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 21&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs.&#13;
Purdue-North Central at&#13;
Westville, Ind., 8 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 24&#13;
Winter Recess: Holiday&#13;
through Jan. 8.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 30&#13;
Basketball: Rangers at UWGreen&#13;
Bay Classic, Green Bay.&#13;
Wrestling: Rangers at&#13;
M i d l a n d s T o u r n a m e n t,&#13;
LaGrange, 111.&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS&#13;
January 4-14&#13;
Ski the Alps: (late sign-up&#13;
accepted this week) 10 days for&#13;
$264 plus tax. Includes air and&#13;
ground transportation, lodging&#13;
and overnight stops in Geneva&#13;
and Paris. Open to University of&#13;
Wisconsin students and personnel&#13;
only. For details contact&#13;
Bill Neibuhr, Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 213, Tallent Hall.&#13;
MO&#13;
Impulses, without the sweat&#13;
dripping from a forehead,&#13;
glistening in biological&#13;
anguisheets that ripple and&#13;
splash to a strained neck, then&#13;
rivers of the stuff down and&#13;
around the pectorals still&#13;
glistening onto the heaving&#13;
diaphram. The hands are gone&#13;
too, their search for string or&#13;
valve hampered by the same&#13;
poistness of pungent salt that&#13;
ages wood and darkens metal.&#13;
Music has always been&#13;
unquestionably made of souls&#13;
and love and sadness and pain&#13;
and . . .&#13;
The Moog came to Parkside,&#13;
operated by Chris Swanson,&#13;
whose genius is without saying&#13;
and whose machine is nearly&#13;
without playing. He constructed&#13;
nearly every aspect of the&#13;
music and the Moog and&#13;
elect ronic ally simulated&#13;
familiars like The Blood, Sweat&#13;
and Tears' "Spinning Wheel"&#13;
and Beatles' "Hey Jude".&#13;
Bach's Aria D buzzed perfectly&#13;
only to be surpassed by Mr.&#13;
Swanson's original works,&#13;
"Snow", which spooned us a&#13;
modern jazz work showing a&#13;
many leveled understanding of&#13;
the mechanism and its&#13;
possibilities and "Here Comes&#13;
Monday", which integrated 17&#13;
Title: CRUISING SPEED&#13;
Author: Willpam F. Buckley, Jr.&#13;
Publisher: G. P. Putnam's Sons&#13;
($6.95)&#13;
It has taken me three dyas to write&#13;
this first sentence. After staring at the&#13;
typewriter for four hours Wednesday&#13;
night, I decided, quite without a&#13;
palpable reason, to quit smoking and&#13;
begin the review with cleaner lungs on&#13;
the next day. When I woke up Thursday,&#13;
I'd yet to take another toke off a&#13;
tobacco cigarette, of which I was proud.&#13;
But, as the day wore on, I discovered to&#13;
my dismay that I'd contracted a vicious&#13;
cold over the night. I finished off&#13;
Thursday by staring at my typewriter,&#13;
not smoking, and wiping my runny&#13;
nose. Today I began the review without&#13;
mentioning the title of the book in the&#13;
first paragraph, my original stumbling&#13;
block of the past two days; it has&#13;
something to do with style.&#13;
Cruising Speed is a 250 page&#13;
"documentary" concerning one week&#13;
in the life of the~ e ditor of "National&#13;
Review", moderator of "Firing Line",&#13;
and much in demand conservative&#13;
speaker, William F. Buckley, Jr. A&#13;
typical week includes work on his&#13;
magazine, taping a "Firing Line"&#13;
show, making a few speeches, accepting&#13;
and rejecting offers for future&#13;
*&#13;
oratory, eating, and drinking. His one&#13;
week "documentary", in truth, covers&#13;
much more than a week in the life of&#13;
America's foremost conservative. In&#13;
the typical Buckley manner, the author&#13;
indulges in countless asides, remembering&#13;
and analysing past debates,&#13;
looking at his own student years,&#13;
remembering advice he'd gotten from&#13;
people he's respected, talking about his&#13;
dogs and the many people who write to&#13;
him, revealing anecdotes and just plain&#13;
getting off the subject at hand.&#13;
One discovers many hitherto&#13;
unknown facets and foibles of the&#13;
seemingly unflappable conservative.&#13;
One has to respect the dedication he&#13;
exhibits in providing a forum for&#13;
responsible conservative opinion, by&#13;
publishing the "National Review",&#13;
which, moneywise, one discovers is a&#13;
l o s i ng p r o p o si t i o n. B u c k ley 7 c h a r g es fat&#13;
fees for speeches because the $12.00&#13;
subscription fee to the Mag is $8.00&#13;
short of its publication costs. One has to&#13;
admir e tha t k i nd o f d e d i c a t i o n , eve n i f ,&#13;
or perhaps especially because, it is&#13;
directed toward a Quixotic myopic&#13;
vision of how the world should be. The&#13;
conservative never expects to win.&#13;
There is a fatalism in his views that&#13;
anticipates failure but it is a fatalism&#13;
that asks the question, so, what?&#13;
As one reads Cruising Speed, one&#13;
retains respect for the author's wit, and&#13;
also for his straightforward honesty; he&#13;
ain't puttin' nobody on. For instance, he&#13;
almost crassly admits to a laziness in&#13;
relation to his speeches, by revealing&#13;
that for every speech he has made, he&#13;
has relied on one of three prepared&#13;
texts that were written years ago. We&#13;
learn why he is always seen carrying a&#13;
pen and pad of paper while appeal ing&#13;
on "Firing Line". It's because he had&#13;
f a l l en into the pat ter n w h i c h wont&#13;
allow him to think clearly without the&#13;
two items in his grasp. We also learn&#13;
some of Mr. Buckley's medical&#13;
problems; for instance, he is&#13;
prescribed to retalins (a type of speed)&#13;
to compensate for a low blood pressure.&#13;
One pecadillo I respect is his healthy&#13;
attitude toward booze; it's getting so&#13;
half the books I read are tributes to&#13;
alcohol.&#13;
Though most of this "documentary&#13;
is devoted to aspects of his workweek,&#13;
B u c k ley doe s p r e s e n t the rea der w i th a&#13;
lengthy formal argument concerning&#13;
the left vs. the conservative; comparing&#13;
the two points of view in sucn&#13;
areas as repression, the possible loss o&#13;
public sanction in the political arena,&#13;
the absolute vs. relative stances toward&#13;
the interpretation of the Constitution,&#13;
and more. ,&#13;
Bucklev's stvle of writing often leads &#13;
December 13, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page",&#13;
&gt;OG&#13;
T&#13;
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ti i&#13;
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it .&#13;
1.&#13;
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Is&#13;
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5,&#13;
1,&#13;
&gt;g&#13;
iy&#13;
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id&#13;
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iy&#13;
s, •'&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
of j §&#13;
ts •&#13;
es?-&#13;
:&#13;
.&#13;
17&#13;
taped tracks. Swanson played&#13;
much of the melody on an&#13;
electronic organ with 12 tones to&#13;
the octave and a "ribbon controller"&#13;
that varied pitch in line&#13;
with the Moog's wavering pitch&#13;
changes.&#13;
In brief explanatory pauses&#13;
he told of how the Moog composition&#13;
is like oil painting in&#13;
that color is equal to sound, the&#13;
composer choosing the color&#13;
key rather than audio musical&#13;
keys.&#13;
Interest generated by the&#13;
Moog was impressive with&#13;
about 700 switched on people&#13;
showing up, standing room&#13;
only.&#13;
The effect of all those modern&#13;
Americans in that cyclopean&#13;
Greenquist towering into the&#13;
night, a musterious music&#13;
emitting from one man and his&#13;
machine was a little strange.&#13;
Listening to the composer's&#13;
""Time Remembering", a mysto&#13;
jazz-rock piece, I looked out into&#13;
the night with all of those&#13;
futuristic looking floodlights&#13;
beaming the way to streamlined&#13;
Tallent Hall half expecting . . .&#13;
half expecting . . . half expect&#13;
. . . half expec . . . f expect&#13;
. . . zzzz.&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
to the reader's confustion, he begins&#13;
what turns out to be a paragraph-size&#13;
sentence, with one specific subject,&#13;
suddenly jumps to something entirely&#13;
different, maybe makes another jump,&#13;
and then ends the sentence. At first I&#13;
thought (perish the thought) that it was&#13;
some incapacity on my part which&#13;
provided a block to understanding what&#13;
Buckley was saying, But, I reasoned,&#13;
even though I may be stupid some of the&#13;
time, I ain't that stupid most of the&#13;
time, and the confustion was apparent&#13;
most of the time. This confustion in&#13;
following Buckley's reasoning and&#13;
prose is, 1 think, caused by time jumpes&#13;
in a given sentence; Buckley tends&#13;
toward tangential reminiscences which&#13;
are catalyzed by the subject of a given&#13;
sentence; often he leaves the original&#13;
subject and never comes back to it,&#13;
leaving the reader up in the air.&#13;
All in all, Willy ain't such a bad guy&#13;
after all, and I think quite a few of the&#13;
more openminded leftists who read&#13;
(ruising Speed will discover this, just&#13;
as I did.&#13;
What else can I say about a book that&#13;
caused me to quit smoking and catCh a&#13;
cold before I could review it? Or was&#13;
that the typewriter?&#13;
Courtesy of the Book Mart, 622 - 59th&#13;
Street, Kenosha.&#13;
The Parkside activities board&#13;
will sponsor three dances over&#13;
the holidays:&#13;
Dec. 23 — Th ursday from 9-1&#13;
a.m. (the last day of finals)&#13;
Jan. 5 — We dnesday from 9-1&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Jan. 13 — Thursday from 9-1&#13;
a.m. (the last day of&#13;
registration).&#13;
iFor the man...&#13;
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English&#13;
Leather&#13;
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Sterling&#13;
-Grand&#13;
Marque&#13;
-Old Spice&#13;
-Canoe&#13;
-Trouble&#13;
-Nine Flags&#13;
For the&#13;
woman...&#13;
-My Sin&#13;
-Intimate&#13;
-Tigress&#13;
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Just north of&#13;
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kenosha&#13;
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Hours&#13;
9:00a.m.-9:30p.m.&#13;
Sunday&#13;
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discuss your problem with our&#13;
Personal Loan Officer.&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF&#13;
0* S/&#13;
Service Center&#13;
245 T allent Hall&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Doris Lantz,&#13;
Representative&#13;
CREDIT UNION&#13;
Home Office&#13;
25A A. W. Peterson Bldg.&#13;
750 U niversity Ave.&#13;
Madison Wis. 53706 &#13;
Page« NEWSt'OPE December 13, 1971&#13;
Se/utitUf the fyinedt&#13;
Piffl* &amp; Station, tf-oodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 653-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR. DINING ROOM&#13;
SIOGtmh Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Vt Block South of Kanosha-Racino County Una&#13;
SPump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE I&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash A Carry&#13;
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10W • 20W - SOW&#13;
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PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c par quart&#13;
34c par quart&#13;
SI.39 par gallon&#13;
47c par can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prlcason Oil Filtars,&#13;
Air Filtars, Tuna Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Itemj Subject to 4 Par Cant Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
Swimming Pools For Parkside?&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Those of you who attend&#13;
classes at Greenquist Hall&#13;
probably have noticed those two&#13;
holes in the ground, one behind&#13;
the Library Learning Center&#13;
and one on the north side of&#13;
Greenquist at the end of the old&#13;
access road. Those two mudsided&#13;
swimming pools are to&#13;
become the Communication&#13;
Arts Building and Classroom&#13;
Buildin.g&#13;
The Communications Arts&#13;
Building, which is under construction&#13;
behind the Library&#13;
Learning Center, will bring&#13;
University fine arts under one&#13;
roof. Classified as an instructional&#13;
laboratory and&#13;
classroom building, the facility&#13;
will consist of multidisciplinary&#13;
classrooms and&#13;
l e c t u r e r o o m .s&#13;
More than just classrooms,&#13;
the building will have&#13;
specialsed spaces for music,&#13;
art, speech and foreign&#13;
language labs. Also included&#13;
will be a special laboratory for&#13;
audio visual work and an institutional&#13;
data processing&#13;
facility.&#13;
The main feature of the CornArts&#13;
building is a 750 seat&#13;
capacity theater which will&#13;
have at its focal point a stage&#13;
fronted by a portion that can be&#13;
raised and lowered to serve a&#13;
variety of functions. The&#13;
theater itself can be divided into&#13;
three areas, two 125 seat&#13;
balcony sections can be closed&#13;
off to serve as lexture rooms.&#13;
The main theater which contains&#13;
projection facilities, seats&#13;
500.&#13;
The building, started last&#13;
month, will be completed in&#13;
January of 1973 with the&#13;
possibility of having the&#13;
classroom portion done in time&#13;
for the fall semester next year.&#13;
It will be the smallest&#13;
educational facility in campus&#13;
at 104,500 square feet.&#13;
The cost for Coin-Arts is&#13;
$4,220,000, broken down as&#13;
follows: General Contractor&#13;
$2,277,500, Plumbing $130,702,&#13;
Heating and Ventilation&#13;
$564,741, electric $584,868,&#13;
Elevator $22,954, Stage Lift&#13;
$30,951, Testing and Balances&#13;
$11,474, total $3,628,763, plus site&#13;
development, fees, contingency,&#13;
$4,220,000 total.&#13;
The facility that now exists&#13;
only as an H-shaped hole in the&#13;
ground north of Greenquist Hall&#13;
will become the Classroom&#13;
Building. Construction has been&#13;
held up because of problems in&#13;
clearing the paperwork.&#13;
The building, scheduled for&#13;
completion in the summer of&#13;
1973, will, besides classroom&#13;
space, contain laboratories for&#13;
c o m m e r c e, g e o g r a p h y,&#13;
Table Tennis&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Sponsored&#13;
Of special interest to the table tennis players on campus,&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board will sponsor a men's and&#13;
women's singles table tennis tournament to be held January&#13;
19 through February 2.&#13;
The tournament, held in conjunction with the Association&#13;
of College Unions-International, will determine Parkside's&#13;
representatives to the regional playoffs in Oshkosh on&#13;
February 17, 18 and 19. The two singles campus winners, in&#13;
both the men's and women's divisions, will participate in the&#13;
regionals as doubles teams.&#13;
Trophies will be awarded to local winners and the&#13;
tournament is open to all Parkside students. Registration&#13;
blanks and further information are available in the Student&#13;
Activities Office, Room 217, Tallent Hall. The forms, along&#13;
with a $1.00 entry fee, must be returned to the Student Activities&#13;
Office by December 15.&#13;
meteorology, psychology and&#13;
anthropology. Also included will&#13;
be lab rooms containing terminals&#13;
to the Institutional Data&#13;
Processing Center in the CornArts&#13;
Building.&#13;
The Classroom Building will&#13;
have an area of 126,000 square&#13;
feet and will be completed at a&#13;
cost of $4,093,420, broken down&#13;
as follows: General Contractor&#13;
$2,364,700, Plumbing $130,702,&#13;
Heating and Ventilation&#13;
$542,550, electric $281,413,&#13;
TElevator $29,626, Testing and&#13;
Balancing $4,480, total&#13;
$3,352,734, plus site development,&#13;
fees, contingency,&#13;
$4,093,420 tota.&#13;
The sites for the Corn-Arts&#13;
and Classroom buildings are&#13;
already being developed;&#13;
h o w e v e r, c o n s t r u c tio n&#13;
programs for the 1971-73&#13;
biennium include the Student&#13;
Union and Physical Plant.&#13;
The Union will have 90,000&#13;
square feet of floor space and&#13;
cost three and a half million&#13;
dollars. Due to the lack of&#13;
forward planning money,&#13;
nothing has yet been done on it.&#13;
Next month will see the&#13;
beginning work on design,&#13;
which will take about a year&#13;
until approved. Construction&#13;
should begin in January, 1973,&#13;
and be completed in late fall of&#13;
1974.&#13;
Lanny Davis to&#13;
speak&#13;
The National Youth Coordinator&#13;
of the Muskie Campaign,&#13;
Lanny Davis, will speak&#13;
here Wednesday, Dec. 15.&#13;
A one-time "McCarthyite",&#13;
the Yale law graduate is&#13;
massing youth support behind&#13;
Muskie. Davis has supported&#13;
many so-called "peace candidates"&#13;
in the past and is&#13;
willing to explain why he now&#13;
supports Senator Muskie.&#13;
The Davis lecture, sponsored&#13;
by the UW-P Young Democrats,&#13;
is scheduled from 11:30 a.m. to&#13;
12:30 p.m. in room 108 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Davis will answer any opposing&#13;
questions.&#13;
JP1&#13;
*0* * "&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
9" - 12" - 14" - 16" (&#13;
ALSO &amp;&#13;
In Four Sites&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKIN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SI A FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU KING Wf BRING657-9843&#13;
or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
DL VJLj Supper CU&#13;
1700 Sheridan RdKENOSHA,&#13;
WISCONSIN&#13;
5^&#13;
SV&#13;
,j£&gt; &lt;j^. o&amp;s 1# '.&lt;£•&#13;
V°xe&gt;V /V'W ^&#13;
&lt;$&gt; Q&lt;^&#13;
vv*&#13;
AV O&amp;&#13;
c5*&#13;
v&#13;
e &#13;
Johnson on comm.&#13;
chairman of a committee to provide research and&#13;
background information on faculty government aspects of&#13;
the recent merger of UW and State University systemV&#13;
The committee chaired by Johnson is one of 16 covering&#13;
various aspects of the merger which will report to the faculty&#13;
representative on the Merger Implementation Study Committee&#13;
appointed last month by Gov. Patrick Lucey The 16&#13;
committees were set up by the University Faculty Council of&#13;
the former UW units.&#13;
Timetables available&#13;
Timetables listing both daytime and evening classes for&#13;
second semester at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
now are available at the Wood Road, Racine and Kenosha&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Because of implementation of a new calendar for the&#13;
academic year, second semester registration will start&#13;
earlier this year — on Jan. 11 in Greenquist Hall — immediately&#13;
after the winter recess. Second semester instruction&#13;
begins Jan. 17 and ends with completion of final&#13;
exams on May 20.&#13;
The timetable lists 355 separate courses in 29 different&#13;
academic fields and includes complete registration information.&#13;
&#13;
In addition to the timetable, the newly published 1971-73&#13;
Parkside catalogue also is now available. Both may be&#13;
obtained at the library and information center in Tallent&#13;
Hall on the Wood Road campus and in the main offices at&#13;
the Kenosha and Racine campuses.&#13;
SGA ag enda&#13;
DECEMBER 14 —Room 101—4:00P.M.&#13;
1. Additional SGA responsibilities&#13;
2. Establish committee chairmen.&#13;
3. Introduction of special projects number one and two.&#13;
4. Discussion of instructor evaluation. (COP report)&#13;
5. Discussion of SGA credit.&#13;
6. Discussion of CCC.&#13;
December 13.1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
/X f o r&#13;
/THE BEST&#13;
1 Ui \ J ) D o u t le Chees &lt; s u r q e r . ' 1 ^&#13;
; * J+ H 5 * S i f K v t&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Newscope Classifieds are free to the&#13;
students, staff and faculty of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Deadline for classifieds is Thursday&#13;
prior to the week of publication and&#13;
will be run three weeks consecutively&#13;
or until cancelled by the&#13;
advertiser.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
COUNTER GIRL — Must be able to&#13;
work Friday noon hours and nights&#13;
and weekends — apply in person&#13;
Monday or Tuesday after 4, Sandy's&#13;
Drive-In.&#13;
WAN TED : P iano teacher in Union&#13;
Grove area to take 7 students. Call&#13;
554-8269.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WAN TED : One girl to share 2&#13;
bedroom apartment with 2 other&#13;
girls. Centrally located. $13.50 per&#13;
week per person including utilities.&#13;
Call 654-2741 a ny weeknight after 5&#13;
and ask for Rose or Peggy.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Mosrite Acco.ustic-electrical guitar,&#13;
with plush case. Originally $500&#13;
value, like new, will sacrifice. Call&#13;
694-6168.&#13;
FOR S A L E : 2 Remington&#13;
Typewriters. 1 Mark II manual&#13;
portable. Excellent condition. $7 5. 1&#13;
Model 700 electric portable, $90. Call&#13;
633-4442.&#13;
WATER BED S - All sizes. Five&#13;
year guarantee. $25.00. Call Mike at&#13;
654-5402.&#13;
W A S H E R - D R Y E R : Frigidaire&#13;
Skinny-Minny one piece com&#13;
bination. Never used — couldn't get&#13;
220 w t line. Paid $469. Will sell for&#13;
$400 or best offer. Call 654-5777.&#13;
HEY KIDS! Need your term papers&#13;
typed? Call Dee Rafferty, 654-3094.&#13;
SUMM ER IN EUR OPE : Chicago&#13;
London-Chicago. June 7 to Aug. 23,&#13;
$239. Other flights leave weekly&#13;
from New York and Chicago. International&#13;
Student ID Cards issued.&#13;
Also IntraEuropean Flights. Flight&#13;
Center, Box 70, UW Union South, 227&#13;
N. Randall Ave., Madison, Wl 53715.&#13;
Telephone (608) 263-3131.&#13;
FOR SALE — Pentron reel typ?tape&#13;
recorder, 1200 ft. capacity, portable&#13;
with tapes, empty reels and accessories.&#13;
$20. Call 654-4982.&#13;
F R EE — GI V E AWAY —Kittens 3&#13;
mixed black and white, 2 all black.&#13;
Please call 633-3260 a fter 5:30.&#13;
FOR S A L E : Water Ski Sloum&#13;
Thompson Tunnel Concave, like&#13;
new, $45. Call Bob, 658-4048 a fter 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
IF YOU LOVE ANIMALS DON'T&#13;
EAT THEM. For free information or&#13;
for ways you can help, write&#13;
American Vegetarians, Box 5424,&#13;
Akron, Ohio 44313. (Our group has no&#13;
paid employees.)&#13;
Have your baby when you want to.&#13;
Visit our Planned Parenthood Clinic,&#13;
Planned Parenthood of Kenosha,&#13;
Inc., Kenosha Memorial Hospital,&#13;
Outpatient Entrance, Thursdays, 7&#13;
p.m. No one turned away for lack of&#13;
money. For appointment call 657-&#13;
6211.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1976 Ambassador, 4 door, 232 engine,&#13;
automatic — good condition. $795,&#13;
call 551-9556 after 5 p.m., 1814 18th&#13;
Ave.&#13;
1963 Rambler 4 dr. Good engine,&#13;
good paing, $165 o r offer. Call 632-&#13;
5779 or 553 2423.&#13;
1963 Rambler American Station&#13;
Wagon. Runs good, but needs&#13;
muffler. $35.00. Call 654 8 998. As k for&#13;
Maggie or leave message.&#13;
1968 Mustang Cobra, Green, 428&#13;
automatic. Must sell. $1,250 or best&#13;
offer. Call 654-8574 a fter 6 p.m.&#13;
1966 Volskwagen, excellent con&#13;
dition, new brakes, new muffler and&#13;
exhaust system, white with red&#13;
interior. Letting it go for a good&#13;
price. Call 654-3028.&#13;
1963 Mercury Meteor. 4 dr, 260&#13;
engine, automatic. Runs good, body&#13;
good. $200or best offer. 761-1653 (oak&#13;
Creek), Larry, or Newscope office.&#13;
Fan "56" Chevy. Green. 6 cyl., Auto.&#13;
$60. Call Dave, 633-6740.&#13;
Fan "61" Corvair. Green in color.&#13;
Engine has 44,000. Body bad. $30.&#13;
Call Bruce, 633-6740.&#13;
FOR SALE: 1063 Chevy Impala 2 dr&#13;
Hardtop Black, 327 hp Automatic.&#13;
Runs good. Body in perfect shape.&#13;
$450. Aks Bill 632-4686.&#13;
1946 VW. Bright yellow. Excellent&#13;
condition. Must sell. 633 4442. Best&#13;
offer. &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE December 13,1971&#13;
Icemen Shoot For F ifth Win&#13;
UW-Parkside's hockey club will shoot for its fifth straight win&#13;
Saturday night at Green Bay's Brown County Arena against St.&#13;
Norbert College. Game time is 10:30 p.m.&#13;
The Rangers beat Illinois State 5-3 and Triton College 4-3 in&#13;
action last weekend in Milwaukee. Goalie Rich Orchevsky, helped&#13;
by good defensive work by Terry P'latly, Ron Eiffler and brothers&#13;
Rich and Joe Rosko, is currently sporting a 1.29 goals against&#13;
average.&#13;
"Defense has been the key to our winning streak," club&#13;
president Tom Krimmel said. "In the last game, Triton had only 11&#13;
shots on goal to our 37."&#13;
Mike Broderick leads the team in scoring with 13 points on nine&#13;
goals and four assists while Krimmel is second with four goals and&#13;
lour assists for eight points.&#13;
Next home game for the Ranger is Friday, Dec. 17, at 9 p.m. in&#13;
Milwaukee agapnst Chicago State.&#13;
Wrestlers In Dual Meet Saturday&#13;
AlVarez Named&#13;
All-American&#13;
by Jim Casper, Sports Editor&#13;
Rudy Alvarez, the former Racine Horlick prep star, won AllAmerican&#13;
honors in cross country this season. He also set a school&#13;
record in the North Central Marathon run at Naperville, Illinois.&#13;
This is Alvarez's first attempt at that race and his coach, Bob&#13;
Lawson, termed it, "A good first effort."&#13;
Alvarez's run broke the record set by Mike DeWitt of 2.56:6 in&#13;
the 1970 Boston Marathon.&#13;
UW-Parkside's wrestling&#13;
team will close out its preChristmas&#13;
action Saturday at&#13;
Bullen Junior High in Kenosha&#13;
as it hosts Northern Michigan&#13;
and Marquette in a double dual&#13;
meet.&#13;
The Rangers will meet&#13;
Northern at 1 p.m. and the&#13;
Warriors ar 4 p.m. with a&#13;
Marquette-NMU contest slated&#13;
for 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Parkside Coach will probably&#13;
go with the same lineup he has&#13;
used through the Rangers' first&#13;
three meets, with Ken Martin, a&#13;
16-4 winner in the Rangers' 30-15&#13;
dual loss at Oshkosh, heading&#13;
the liast at 134 pounds.&#13;
Frank Velasquez at 118, Jeff&#13;
Jenkins at 150 and Mark Barnhill&#13;
at 190, Parkside's other&#13;
winners at Oshkosh, will be&#13;
counted on heavily Saturday as&#13;
the Rangers look for their first&#13;
dual win of the year.&#13;
Dave Langeland, who drew at&#13;
Oshkosh, will go again at&#13;
heavyweight, while Rick&#13;
Mauldin at 126 and Tom Beyer&#13;
at 167, both of whom failed to&#13;
make weight and forfeited at&#13;
UW-O, are looking to get back&#13;
on the winning track.&#13;
Rick Shoeffler, the 177-&#13;
pounder who's been a strong&#13;
point for Parkside, lost at&#13;
Oshkosh when forced to stop&#13;
because of injury but should be&#13;
ready for Saturday's matches.&#13;
Also entered for the Rangers&#13;
are Kyle Barnes at 142 and Ron&#13;
Atiams at 158.&#13;
The Rangers' next competition&#13;
will come Dec. 29-30 in&#13;
the prestigious Midlands&#13;
Tournament at LaGrange, 111.,&#13;
which annually attracts the top&#13;
collegiate wrestlers from&#13;
throughout the nation.&#13;
Ranger Grapplers&#13;
Lose To Oshkosh&#13;
UW-Oshkosh scored a 30-15 victory over the Ranger grapplers&#13;
in a match at Oshkosh.&#13;
Two Rangers failed to make weight and another defaulted due&#13;
to an injury, helping contribute to the Oshkosh victory.&#13;
Ranger winners were Frank Valesquez, 118, Ken Martin 134,&#13;
Jeff Jenkins 150, and Mark Barnhill-130, all by decision.&#13;
Dave Langeland wrestled to a draw in the heavyweight class.&#13;
Ranger Wrestlers Score First Win&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
After suffering a 68-45 setback&#13;
at Western Michigan and an 82-&#13;
60 defeat at home against&#13;
Wayne State, the Rangers came&#13;
home to Memorial Hall to cope&#13;
their initial win of the young&#13;
Hockey C lub Gets 3 rd, 4th Victories&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside hockey club&#13;
notched its fourth victory in a&#13;
row, defeating Triton College 4-&#13;
3. On the previous night the&#13;
Rangers had defeated Illinois&#13;
State University by a 5-3 score.&#13;
In the victory Friday night&#13;
the Rangers had to make a&#13;
comeback after ISU opened the&#13;
scoring. Mike Broderick of the&#13;
Rangers evened the score with&#13;
a goal. He was assisted by Marc&#13;
Tutlewski. Bill Westerlund then&#13;
put the Rangers in the lead by&#13;
ripping home a beautiful pass&#13;
from Terry Flatley.&#13;
Tom Krimmel closed out the&#13;
first period scoring. In the&#13;
second period the teams traded&#13;
toals. Gordie Bradshaw of the&#13;
Rangers came up with his&#13;
team's fourth goal. Passes from&#13;
Bill Westerlund and Dave&#13;
Bradshaw helped him get his&#13;
goal.&#13;
Mike Broderick then scored&#13;
his second goal of the night.&#13;
Broderick was assisted by&#13;
Tom Krimmel. In the third&#13;
period defense played the&#13;
primary role as the teams&#13;
played a scoreless period.&#13;
In the 4-3 victory over Triton&#13;
College, Krimmel opened the&#13;
scoring at 4:04 of the first&#13;
period, the only assist going to&#13;
Mike Broderick. Triton then&#13;
scored the next three goals to&#13;
build up a substantial 3-1 advantage.&#13;
&#13;
The Rangers started their&#13;
comeback in the second period&#13;
with Tom Krimmel's second&#13;
goal of the game. He was&#13;
assisted by Rich Rosko and&#13;
Terry Flatley.&#13;
A wild, free-swinging fistfight&#13;
between Gordie Bradshaw of&#13;
the Tangers and Ed Provanzano&#13;
of Triton marred the second&#13;
period. Referee Bob Berry&#13;
banished both players with&#13;
game misconducts.&#13;
Broderick tied the game with&#13;
an unassisted goal at 1:57 of the&#13;
third period. Dave Tilley picked&#13;
a timely moment for his first&#13;
goal of the season as he fired the&#13;
winning score at 10:18 of the&#13;
final stanza. Dave Bradshaw&#13;
and Bill Westerlund collected&#13;
the assists.&#13;
It appears to be a year of&#13;
operation turnabout for the&#13;
hockey squad which is only in&#13;
its second season.&#13;
campaign by routing Lake&#13;
Forest College 93-63.&#13;
Parkside was very convincing&#13;
in this first home contest as they&#13;
rolled to an early 23-11 lwad,&#13;
stretching it to 44-26 at the half.&#13;
By that time it was quite&#13;
apparent that the visitors would&#13;
not have the ability to make a&#13;
strong comeback.&#13;
Ted Rogers, a freshman, was&#13;
especially impressive in the&#13;
first half as he totaled 11 points.&#13;
He ended up with 18 for the&#13;
game.&#13;
Another freshman, Tom&#13;
Heller, led the Ranger offensive&#13;
production for the night with 20&#13;
points. He had been the high&#13;
scorer coming into this game&#13;
and of course continued in that&#13;
position.&#13;
Freshman Chuck Chambliss,&#13;
a former star at Racine Park,&#13;
scored 15 points along with&#13;
giving a fine overall floor&#13;
Otto Bauer, UW-Parkside Vice Chancellor, meets&#13;
Parkside's Ranger Bear, who may be seen wandering around&#13;
GRIN AND BEAR IT campus these weeks stirring up enthusiasm for Parkside's&#13;
athletic teams. Looking on is Cheerleader Pam Engdahl.&#13;
performance.&#13;
Parkside Coach Steve Setphens&#13;
was pleased with the win&#13;
and the score. "The kids gained&#13;
confidence that they needed,"&#13;
he said. "The first win is an&#13;
important one."&#13;
Although Stephens was&#13;
clearly satisfied with the victory,&#13;
he sounded some words of&#13;
caution: "We did not do&#13;
everything well. Our defense&#13;
was fair, but not real good."&#13;
Chambliss, a key factor in the&#13;
win, echoed words similar to&#13;
what Stephens said.&#13;
"I think it was great to win a&#13;
game, but we should commit&#13;
ourselves more in practice and&#13;
we could bring out more of our&#13;
ability," said Chambliss.&#13;
"This is a young club with a&#13;
lot of potential," he added, "but&#13;
it has to develop yet."&#13;
After suffering two defeats by&#13;
rather one sided margins how&#13;
could the Rangers post a 30&#13;
point triumph?&#13;
Chambliss commented on&#13;
this. This does not mean that the&#13;
team has improved that much&#13;
in the last few days, he implied.&#13;
"The other games were against&#13;
major college schools — this&#13;
one was against lesser competition,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
"Later in the season we would&#13;
. play better against Wayne State&#13;
and Western Michigan. We are&#13;
a team on the come," concluded&#13;
Chambliss.&#13;
Parkside scored on 38 of 61&#13;
shots for a lofty 62 per cent&#13;
shooting average, while Lake&#13;
Forest hit 23 of 57 for 43 per&#13;
cent. The Rangers also&#13;
outrebounded the undermanned&#13;
Foresters by a wide margin as&#13;
Heller led the Ranters with ten&#13;
boards, while Ed VanTine&#13;
cleared nine.&#13;
With an entirely different&#13;
starting lineup from last year's&#13;
edition, the Ranger squad will&#13;
lose quite a few games, but they&#13;
should show marked improvement&#13;
throughout the&#13;
season.&#13;
Hopefully, a number of victories&#13;
will come during this&#13;
improvevent stage.&#13;
Pl e a se H e l p Gi v e&#13;
A C h r i s t m a s P a r t y&#13;
F o r U n d e r p ri v i l a g ed C h i I d r e n&#13;
O r g a niz ati o n s a n d ind ivi dua ls are&#13;
inv ite d to si g n up a t the S t u d e n t&#13;
A c tiv iti es B l dg. or Office .&#13;
P a rty will be h e ld D e c. 18 1:30-4:30&#13;
Please Help&#13;
T rop hie s!&#13;
B i lli ard s &amp; T a b l e T e n n i s&#13;
Parkside Activitie s Board&#13;
TOU RNA MEN TS Pr esents&#13;
Entry f e e s : Holiday Activity&#13;
B i lli a r ds $ 1 . 5 0&#13;
T a b le T e n n i s $ 1 . 0 0 Schedule&#13;
Sign up d e a d l i ne&#13;
j a n u a ry 1 7&#13;
T h u r s. D e c. 2 3 9 - 1 a . m.&#13;
Wed. J a n . 5 9 - 1 a .m.&#13;
R e gis tra tio n b l a n ks a v a i l&#13;
T h u r s. J a n . 1 3 9 - 1 a.m.&#13;
a b le a t S t. Act . Bld g. or Stu d e nt Acti vity B ui Iding Admiss ion C h a r g e&#13;
Rm. 2 17 T a l l e n t. R e tur n P a r k s i de a n d Wi sco nsi n'l .D. req uir ed&#13;
to Rm. 217. </text>
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              <text>Volume 5, issue 13</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>Loumos Wins SGA Presidency</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="95">
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            <elementText elementTextId="63563">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89886">
              <text>"Journalism it Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold U"»*rsity of WisCOmi* • Parkside&#13;
VXWfCOVS&#13;
Volume 5 Number 13 November 29,1971&#13;
Loumos Wins SGA Presidency ir*&#13;
by Ken Konkol of the Newscope staff&#13;
In an election that saw only 17 per cent of the&#13;
student body casting votes the Concerned Students&#13;
Coalition scored a solid victory by capturing three of&#13;
the top offices from more moderate candidates. Amid&#13;
rumors of alleged ballot box stuffing (see guest&#13;
editorial), Dean Loumos won the presidency over&#13;
Dennis Cashion by 29 v otes while his running mate,&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta, easily defeated his nearest&#13;
challenger, Frank Chiapetta. Rounding out the CSC&#13;
victory, Canny Trotter pulled 458 votes in winning the&#13;
treasurer's office.&#13;
Jeanette Dremel ran uncontested for recording&#13;
secretary and received 498 votes, tops for any of the&#13;
candidates. Don Kosher ran away with the&#13;
corresponding secretary's contest, but received a&#13;
total of only 129 votes.&#13;
In the race for President Warren McGillvrey&#13;
received 122 votes as a write-in candidate and may&#13;
have played a significant role in Cashion's defeat.&#13;
McGillvrey, a conservative, took votes that most&#13;
likely would have gone to Cashion as a moderate.&#13;
For the Student Union Committee, Bob Wingate&#13;
received 381 votes, far above second place Pat Waite&#13;
who received 31. Rounding out the committee are&#13;
Jerry Ruffalo, 24; Mike Pobar, 15; and Kurt&#13;
Sahakian, 8.&#13;
The 14 people who were on the ballot for the office&#13;
of Senator came in the top 14 positions for the office.&#13;
In addition, successful write-in campaigns were&#13;
waged by Jim DeBerge, Ken Martin and Mark&#13;
Barnhill who edged out John Hanzlik by one vote for&#13;
the 17th position.&#13;
Election results:&#13;
President, Dean Loumos 273, Dennis Cashion 244,&#13;
Warren McGillvrey 122, Tony Kombol 59.&#13;
Vice President, Bruce Volpintesta 263, Frank&#13;
Chiapetta 202, C. S. O'Brian 95, Ed Vantine 88.&#13;
Treasurer, Danny Trotter 458.&#13;
Recording Secretary, Jeanette Dremel 498.&#13;
Corresponding Secretary, Don Koser 128, Dave&#13;
Walden 15.&#13;
Senators, Elaine Birch 289, Dale Martin 243,&#13;
Carol Kubinski 233, Ken Konkol 226, Mike Lofton 224,&#13;
Jerry Murphy 221, Tom Taskonis 207, Mike Baxter&#13;
195, James Twist 190, Dave Kerner 155, Norman&#13;
Pietras 142, John Grimes 127, Dan Voisin 111, James&#13;
Bielefeldt 97, Jim DeBarge 70, Ken Martin 47, Mark&#13;
Barnhill 44.&#13;
Student Union Committee, Bob Wingate 381, Pat&#13;
Waite 31, Jerry Ruffalo 24, Mike Pobar 15, Kurt&#13;
Sahakian 8.&#13;
First&#13;
Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Meeting&#13;
THURSDAY AT 3:30 IN EI THER&#13;
101 OR 103 GREENQUIST HALL&#13;
AGENDA:&#13;
A. "STATE OF THE SCHOOL ADDRESS&#13;
1. RESPONSIBILITY OF STUDENT&#13;
GOVERNMENT OFFICIERS&#13;
2. BUDGET OUTLINE&#13;
3. EXPLANATION OF STANDING&#13;
COMMITTEES&#13;
4. INTRODUCTION OF PROJECTS&#13;
5. OUTLINE OF COMMITTEES&#13;
6. STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE November 27,1971&#13;
Letter To T he E ditor&#13;
During the recent student government elections it&#13;
seemed that the classical Parkside student apathy&#13;
was replaced as a chief source of concern for conscientious&#13;
students by Student Affairs' mishandling of&#13;
the election. Since the current student constitution&#13;
contains no definitive or explanatory election laws,&#13;
local regulations were supposedly in force (i.e.&#13;
Wisconsin State Statutes). However, I observed&#13;
violations as well as unethical practices which I feel&#13;
are worth considering.&#13;
First, the displaying on the balloting tables in&#13;
Kenosha and Greenquist of the list of organized&#13;
government write-in candidates was a violation of&#13;
election ethics. Even though the Athletic Department&#13;
prodded, candidates entered the race on the first day&#13;
of voting, this affords them no excuse to receive&#13;
preferred treatment. Similarly then, all candidates&#13;
should have had their campaign literature on the&#13;
balloting tables too; but they didn't, so the organized&#13;
student government candidates shouldn't have had&#13;
theirs. Interestingly, this was in direct violation of a&#13;
typewritten law taped on all balloting tables which&#13;
stated there should be no soliciting (powters, campaign&#13;
literature, etc.) within 50 yards of the polling&#13;
place. A rule that was obviously not enforced.&#13;
Another violation was in campaign literature&#13;
found at all three campuses which violates Chapter&#13;
12, Section 16 of the Wisconsin State Statutes. This law&#13;
prohibits the issuing or circulating of campaign&#13;
literature, that fails to provide the name of the author&#13;
and the candidate in whose behalf this literature was&#13;
published and circulated. The literature in question&#13;
carried the title "Vote for Violence?!!" and was a&#13;
general rip off of the C.S.C. candidates, especially&#13;
Dean Loumos. Even though I didn't vote for him and&#13;
other C.S.C. candidates, I raise the issue. Why? For&#13;
the reason of one anonymous charge deserves&#13;
another and another and another, etc. until charges,&#13;
denials, propaganda and B.S. are hurled about&#13;
irresponsibly causing the meaningless campaign and&#13;
more important confused and apathetic voters.&#13;
These flyers should have been picked up immediately&#13;
by the Student Affairs. However, they were&#13;
not. Interestingly enough, posters were taken down&#13;
earlier in the semester because they violated the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Code Book size for posters;&#13;
yet campaign literature issued during the election, in&#13;
violation of the Wisconsin State Statutes, was left&#13;
untouched.&#13;
Concerning the polling station attendents, while&#13;
they did not violate any laws to my knowledge, there&#13;
is considerable room for improvement. Since they&#13;
were getting paid by the hour for doing a job, I feel the&#13;
job didn't include talking to girlfriends or doing&#13;
homework while curiously passing and glancing&#13;
students walked by. I would suggest the job they&#13;
should get paid for is attending the polling station and&#13;
attracting passing students to vote, and if not,&#13;
reminding them that they should vote.&#13;
For the above reasons among others, it appears&#13;
that Student Affairs did a poor job in handling and&#13;
assuring the fairness of the campaign.&#13;
I am not out to indict anyone, but help Parkside&#13;
be the great university it deserves to be. This can only&#13;
come about by a vigorous and effective student&#13;
government, which is the result of a well managed&#13;
and fair election.&#13;
Timothy W. Prostko,&#13;
President, Pre-Law Club&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
November 15 was one day in&#13;
the life of a generally reserved&#13;
Parkside student. This student&#13;
was relatively depressed on this&#13;
particular day. He decided to&#13;
have a few beers. Well, one led&#13;
to another and he became intoxicated.&#13;
While under this&#13;
intoxication, he said words that&#13;
he had not offended any individuals.&#13;
The powef of alcohol&#13;
can be somewhat, controlled.&#13;
The student was entirely nonviolent.&#13;
He was asked to leave&#13;
by a few fellow students, he&#13;
refused. "I haven't done&#13;
anything wrong."&#13;
This young man was left alone&#13;
for a while, then a security&#13;
officer was summoned to the&#13;
scene of this senseless interaction&#13;
of students in the&#13;
Activity Building. The officer&#13;
was asking questions and informed&#13;
the student that a&#13;
complaint was reported. The&#13;
officer was asked what the&#13;
150 Protest&#13;
Draft Clause&#13;
Madison, Wis. (CPS) — Three&#13;
persons were arrested Thursday&#13;
as more than 150&#13;
demonstrators surrounded the&#13;
bus which was to take 20 men to&#13;
Milwaukee for draft physicals&#13;
or induction.&#13;
The demonstration, organized&#13;
by the Madison Area Draft&#13;
Reistances, was to protest&#13;
against what the group considered&#13;
to be illegal induction&#13;
orders. Citing a November 10&#13;
decision by a California federal&#13;
court which issued a restraining&#13;
order prohibiting induction of a&#13;
man against his will within 90&#13;
days of the signing of the draft&#13;
law. The 90 d ays will be up on&#13;
December 28.&#13;
Federal Judge Robert J.&#13;
Kelleher said last week that the&#13;
argument of 23-year-old Karl S.&#13;
Bohn of Santa Barbara "seems&#13;
to present a case of national&#13;
importance."&#13;
Bohn's case is based on a&#13;
draft law section that reads:&#13;
"No person shall be inducted or&#13;
ordered into active service&#13;
without his consent under this&#13;
title within 90 days after the&#13;
date of its enactment."&#13;
The clause was part of the&#13;
1948 revival of the World War II&#13;
draft law, and the 90 day&#13;
moratorium apparently was&#13;
intended to give the Selective&#13;
Service time to set up its&#13;
operation again.&#13;
The 60 days injunction only&#13;
affects Bohn, however,&#13;
although other cases presenting&#13;
the same point as Bohn's have&#13;
been filed in California.&#13;
U.S. Attorney Alan Peryam,&#13;
representing the government,&#13;
told the judge the case would&#13;
affect 10,000 men facing induction&#13;
in the next two months.&#13;
nature of the complaint was. I&#13;
don't know I'm just following&#13;
orders." I asked the officer his&#13;
name, he gave it to me and&#13;
made a phone call. I then made&#13;
a phone call to Mr. Martinez to&#13;
find out the nature of the&#13;
complaint. While I was on the&#13;
phone a well-dressed security&#13;
officer came in and then there&#13;
was two. They took the student&#13;
into the utility room and locked&#13;
the door. After 15 minutes of&#13;
interogation, the student would&#13;
confess nothing and was let go.&#13;
The well dressed security officer&#13;
was asked his name and&#13;
replied, "I don't have to give&#13;
you my name." Then Mr. Noname&#13;
left and Gary had another&#13;
beer.&#13;
MORAL: If you get intoxicated&#13;
in the Act. Bldg., don't&#13;
open your mouth, you might get&#13;
locked up .... in the utility&#13;
room.&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
Conference to Organize&#13;
New Voters&#13;
(CPS) — Over one hundred&#13;
student body presidents from&#13;
colleges and universities across&#13;
America joined with the&#13;
Association of Student&#13;
Governments this week in&#13;
calling for an Emergency&#13;
Conference for New Voters to&#13;
organize students as voting&#13;
delegates to the nationwide&#13;
party nominating conventions&#13;
in 1972.&#13;
The Emergency Conference&#13;
is slated for December 3,4 and 5&#13;
at Loyola University in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
"The events of the past month&#13;
clearly indicate that neither of&#13;
the two major political parties&#13;
welcome the young, leaning&#13;
voters as fully-enfranchised&#13;
participants in the parties,"&#13;
said Duane Drapter, President&#13;
of ASG and Chairman of the&#13;
steering committee for the&#13;
Emergency Conference.&#13;
"These events create a crisis&#13;
situation for the millions of&#13;
young people who wish to effect&#13;
constructive change through&#13;
existing institutions. Unless we&#13;
begin the task immediately of&#13;
organizing students within the&#13;
party processes, we will find&#13;
ourselves totally excluded from&#13;
the delegate selections and the&#13;
Presidential nominating&#13;
procedures, thus effectively&#13;
disenfranchised despite the 26th&#13;
amendment. The events&#13;
Drapter referred to were the&#13;
Democratic Committee's&#13;
selection of Patricia Harris as&#13;
temporary chairman of the&#13;
credentials committee over&#13;
liberal Senator Harold Hughes&#13;
Iowa), who had been viewed by&#13;
many as the key to enforcement&#13;
of the McGovern Commission&#13;
reforms at the Democratic&#13;
convention in Miami.&#13;
On the Republican side,&#13;
pressure from high echelon&#13;
Republican officials to thwart&#13;
Congressman Pat McCloskey's&#13;
(R-Cal) challenge to President&#13;
Nixon in the primaries has&#13;
caused serious financial&#13;
problems for McCloskey's&#13;
campaign, and could essentially&#13;
eliminate him as an alternate&#13;
candidate.&#13;
"It is imperative that the&#13;
twenty-five million 18-24 year&#13;
olds in the country are aware of&#13;
the mockery that both&#13;
Democratic and Republican&#13;
party officials are making of the&#13;
reform movements in the&#13;
parties," continued Draper.&#13;
The Emergency Conference&#13;
for New Voters is the last&#13;
national gathering of students&#13;
before the delegate selection&#13;
process begins, which in some&#13;
states is as early as February.&#13;
The conference at Loyola will&#13;
include a number of workshops,&#13;
seminars, and panels to discuss&#13;
voter registration and political&#13;
organization.&#13;
50* OFF&#13;
LARGE PIZZA&#13;
(with coupon)&#13;
10 oz. BEER 15 *&#13;
PITCHER 75*&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Campus Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Sports Editor James Casper&#13;
Photo Editor Rick Pazera&#13;
Circulation Manager Fred Noer,Jr.&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent student newspaper composed by students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside published weekly except during&#13;
vacation periods. Student obtained advertising funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the&#13;
University. Free copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. the&#13;
Thursday prior to publication and must be typed double-spaced. Deadline for&#13;
photographs is the Saturday prior to publication. Unsolicited manuscripts&#13;
and photographs may be reclaimed within 30 days after the date of submission,&#13;
after which they will become the property of Newscope Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the Student Organizations building, Intersection&#13;
of Highway A and Wood Road.&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
on wood road just south of parkside &#13;
November 21), 1971 NEWSC'OPE Page:)&#13;
PART II&#13;
TERROR IN THE PARK&#13;
by Alexous Doo Dah&#13;
This, which you are about to read, is&#13;
the continuing story of Crobait&#13;
Cavanaugh vs. the world. A story about&#13;
the man who shot from behind, at the&#13;
behind, and which is so elegantly&#13;
covered by a crack ace Newscope&#13;
crimestopper team. As you recall, last&#13;
week the Police Chief revealed the&#13;
hidden identity of the mad sniper who&#13;
had been terrorizing K-town. He is none&#13;
other than Crowbait! The feared, the&#13;
dreaded, the drunken dope crazed halfbreed.&#13;
And now let us return to that&#13;
fateful interview with the Chief.&#13;
Newscope: Bit the big toe off his&#13;
gramma and spit it out in the street did&#13;
he? Must have tasted awful. I can't&#13;
think of any other reason to spit&#13;
something like that out.&#13;
Chief: That's neither here nor their Doo&#13;
vh hand of the man must be felt again.&#13;
It's almost noon and the topless oottomless&#13;
joints will be opening. I hear&#13;
there's a new dancer on 52nd and I think&#13;
I'll go "investigate" her lewd and&#13;
liscentious dancing.&#13;
Newscope: If it offends you, why do ya&#13;
done?&#13;
Me: He's Crobait Cavanaugh, a&#13;
drunken dope crazed half breed who&#13;
escaped from Waupun two weeks ago.&#13;
He used to live in K-town but got sent up&#13;
for biting his gramma. Since he&#13;
escaped, he's already shot four old&#13;
ladies in the ass with a B.B. gun. The&#13;
police say he has this thing about 'em.&#13;
Editor: I'm aghast. Play me the tape.&#13;
The tape was played ... bit her bit toe&#13;
off and spit it put huh. Must have tasted&#13;
awful.&#13;
Me: That's neither here nor there&#13;
White.&#13;
Editor: Shuttup Doo Dah and keep a&#13;
proper perspective. What I'd like you to&#13;
do now is take the mobil&#13;
Newscopemobil for a few days. Keep&#13;
the police radio tuned in at ALL times&#13;
and next time this Crowbait character&#13;
causes a ruckus, I want you to be there.&#13;
Take Vincent Makroleah, the ace&#13;
camera whizz with you, and don't fuck&#13;
it up! Got it?&#13;
As Vince and I drove into the sunset&#13;
looking for criminals, we heard Perry&#13;
turn up his radio, "There's a hole in my&#13;
bucket, Dear Lisa, dear Lisa . . ."&#13;
"You know Vince," I said, "That song&#13;
Vince, by this time, looked yellow in&#13;
the face and his cheeks were puffed out,&#13;
like he had a mouthful of liquid. When I&#13;
tol&#13;
hime the good news he started flopping&#13;
around on the floor going "uggghhaaa,&#13;
uuggghhhaaa . . ." to voice his approval,&#13;
I presume. He seemed to have a&#13;
lot of internal pressure.&#13;
P-Springs, when we arrived, looked&#13;
like another Democratic Convention.&#13;
There were cops everywhere. Every&#13;
parking lot was full of squads, the roads&#13;
were lined with the boys in blue, and the&#13;
sky was filled with copters chopping&#13;
around. They were even scooting&#13;
around on the golf course mounted on&#13;
Honda 50's and tricycles. One particularly&#13;
burly looking cop jumped off&#13;
his trike as we passed and maced a&#13;
squirrel. He claimed he was ". . . just&#13;
getting warmed up."&#13;
We finally found the center of activity&#13;
over by a bridge. There was a banner&#13;
stretched between two squads which&#13;
read "Hdqtrs. — Police Chief," and&#13;
beneath that banner he sat. Surrounded&#13;
by parolee's waving ostrich feather&#13;
fans, he was sitting at his portable&#13;
throne screaming obscenities into a&#13;
He steered (he squad right toward the&#13;
Chief's portable throne sending us and&#13;
the fan bearer's currying for cover. He&#13;
ran over the bush Vincent was so&#13;
diligently relieving himself on narrowly&#13;
missing Vincent's privates and&#13;
smacked square into the bridge. The&#13;
squad was sunk up to the whidshield&#13;
with bridge but before anyone could&#13;
move, Crowbait crawled from the now&#13;
burning wreck and did a one and a half&#13;
gainer into the murkee depths of PSprings,&#13;
off the roof of the car.&#13;
There was a stunned silence and then,&#13;
one by one the cops began taking their&#13;
helmets off and putting their hands&#13;
over their hearts.&#13;
Newscope: Catch 'em Chief! He's&#13;
swimming away. And whats this with&#13;
the helmets. You gonna play the&#13;
national anthem?&#13;
Chief: God have mercy on him son. He&#13;
won't live two seconds in that polluted&#13;
spring. What a way to go, even for a guy&#13;
like that. I doubt if we'll ever even find&#13;
his body.&#13;
Vince and I walked slowly back to the&#13;
van. A proper ending. Once again&#13;
proving crime doesn't pay. But we had&#13;
a story.&#13;
The Reign Of Crowbait Cavanaugh&#13;
gotta go Chief?&#13;
Chief: For the sake of public decency&#13;
and all that is good and pure, besides, I&#13;
wanna see it. But that's off the record,&#13;
Doo Dah. Whew, just the thought of that&#13;
juicy little ...&#13;
Newscope: Excuse me. Thank you&#13;
chief and you can count on my&#13;
discretion of course. Good luck with&#13;
your lewd, liscentious, and immoral&#13;
investigations, but most of all I hope&#13;
you get that little fart Cavanaugh.&#13;
99 parking tickets later at the&#13;
Newscope office . . .&#13;
Me: Well Perry, I got the interview. All&#13;
on this. I patted my taperecorder.&#13;
Editor: Great Ceasers Ghost, Alexous!&#13;
Don't call me Perry. Mr. White to you.&#13;
Me: Sho'nuff boss. Ah, boss, do you&#13;
think that if a reporter while out on&#13;
assignment ... I mean if he got 99&#13;
parking tickets while on the job, would&#13;
the paper — ah — help him out? A little?&#13;
&#13;
Editor: Hell NO! We're one of the most&#13;
underpaid, underrated orgainizations&#13;
in the entire world. No! No! No! and NO&#13;
again. We can't and won't afford it. The&#13;
facts Alexous. Who is this mad sniper?&#13;
Where'd he come from and what's he&#13;
Perry's playing is a little symbolic."&#13;
But Vince was so wrapped up in&#13;
flashing flashbulbs in his face that he&#13;
didn't answer. For two days, and I&#13;
mean two days, 48 h ours at least, we&#13;
drove and drove and drove, just waiting&#13;
for that elusive clue into the&#13;
whereabouts of the devil, C.&#13;
Cavanaugh. Vince and I by this time&#13;
were eating uppers like M &amp; M's and&#13;
the tension was mounting. He kept&#13;
saying "Alexous, for Peter's sake, you&#13;
have to stop driving just for a minute.&#13;
Please? Please! I have to go to the john.&#13;
It's been two days now."&#13;
"Vince," I'd say, "Hold it just a little&#13;
bit longer. This is for God and country&#13;
and we ain't getting paid to piss on&#13;
some poor bushes." He'd just burst into&#13;
tears and start popping flashbulbs in&#13;
his face. But I had to hand it to him. He&#13;
held it like a man.&#13;
On the third morning the report we'd&#13;
been waiting for came over the police&#13;
radio. "Squads 1 thru 2,460 report to PSprings.&#13;
We've got a 10,478 out there.&#13;
Approach with caution." 10,478 in police&#13;
code means 'armed lunatic sniper'.&#13;
Crowbait Cavanaugh at last! We'd&#13;
found him!&#13;
walky talky. We pulled the van up&#13;
nearby and Vince went crawling full&#13;
speed ahead into the nearest bushes.&#13;
The sound of rushing water, not unlike&#13;
Niagara falls, was neard.&#13;
Newscope: Howdy Chief. Remember&#13;
me? Looks like you got him huh.&#13;
Chief: Whattsa matter with your&#13;
buddy? Can't he walk?&#13;
Newscope: He had to go bad. Sir.&#13;
Chief: Oh. Wanna see me scare this&#13;
cold blooded bastard half to death? We&#13;
got him trapped on that hill over there.&#13;
He raised his megaphone, "alio, alio,&#13;
alio, gyou are wanted for shooting ole&#13;
ladies in the ass and cuttin off peeples&#13;
heds and also for braking some windows&#13;
in the state penitentary. Giv up&#13;
Cavanaugh. You haven't got a prayer."&#13;
Cavanaugh: (from the top of the hill&#13;
"False accustaion's you Motha's. I&#13;
didn't break nobody's window's up and&#13;
I didn't cut nobody's head off either."&#13;
With that a police siren started at the&#13;
top of the hill and squad 99 came&#13;
crashing down thru the underbrush&#13;
with Cavanaugh at the wheel. The siren&#13;
was still going but an ancient Souix war&#13;
cry could be heard over it.&#13;
"WaHOOOOOOOOO."&#13;
As we drove away, Vince saw a&#13;
hitchhiker up the rode a ways. He said,&#13;
"Lets pick the poor guy up." We had an&#13;
arguement over company policy&#13;
concerning riders but I let Vince win.&#13;
He'd had a rough last few days with his&#13;
bladder. We pulled over and the&#13;
stranger stepped into the van.&#13;
Newscope: Whew. Man we could smell&#13;
your body a mile away!&#13;
Hiker: A mile away?&#13;
Newscope: A mile away.&#13;
Hiker: Well, it's not my fault. That park&#13;
oughta be named Pee-Atrofied Springs.&#13;
Don't ever try swimming in that creek.&#13;
Newscope: Yep — We're famous&#13;
newsmen out gatherin news about a&#13;
condemned dope crazed criminal indian.&#13;
God arrest his soul.&#13;
Hiker: (click) I am he brotha, and this&#13;
here armament that I just cocked is my&#13;
pistol. Drive on my friend and we'll&#13;
keep it peaceful. Crowbail Cavanaugh&#13;
at your service.&#13;
Newscope: Shriek, SCREEEECH . . .&#13;
YAAAAAAHHHHH . . . Hail Mary full&#13;
of . . .&#13;
What will happen to Vincent and&#13;
Alexous? There's only one way to find&#13;
out. Stay tuned next week for Part III.&#13;
Terror in a Van.&#13;
Sell your stuff with&#13;
Newscope classifieds&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Siici 9" - 12" - 14" - 1 6"&#13;
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• HISS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
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• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
-YOU KING Wf BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
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SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
1&#13;
9a.m.—4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
d) a bottle or&#13;
'5 a g&#13;
lass&#13;
_ &lt;- and&#13;
O a s teak sandwich or&#13;
u. a bratwurst or&#13;
O a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
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potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NOR THW EST C O R N ER O F HIGHWAY S 1-94 A N D 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.— 12 p.m.&#13;
Availabl e fo r F r a t e r n i t y o r s o r o r i ty p a rtie s &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE November 29,1971&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
COURT UPHOLDS SEX EQUALITY IN JOBS&#13;
Washington, D.C. (CPS) — The Supreme Court has let stand two&#13;
major rulings by lower courts involving charges of job discrimination&#13;
because of sex. In one case, domestic airlines were told they must give&#13;
men, as well as women, the opportunity to work as flight attendants.&#13;
In the other, a woman was upheld in her contention that she was&#13;
denied her equal rights by being forced to retire from her brewery job&#13;
at age 62 when men at the same plant were allowed to work until they&#13;
were 65.&#13;
AFL-CIO OPPOSES REHNQUIST&#13;
Washington, D.C. (CPS) — AFL-CIO Legislative Director Andrew&#13;
.J. Biemillio branded Supreme Court nominee William H. Rehnquist a&#13;
"right-wing zealot" before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week.&#13;
He has advocated "unbridled executive power," Biemillio said,&#13;
and defended unregulated wiretapping. The labor organization joined&#13;
civil rights and civil liberties groups in opposing the Assistant Attorney&#13;
General's confirmation.&#13;
PENTAGON SUPPRESSES RAND CORP STUDY&#13;
(CPS) — The Pentagon is suppressing a Rand Corp. study on the&#13;
indoctrination and tactics of the National Liberation Front, the West&#13;
German news magazine Der Spiegel said. The 281-page study, based&#13;
on interviews with NLF deserters, concluded that battlefield successes&#13;
of the movement resulted from high ediological motivation and&#13;
implied that the policy of "Vietnamizing" the war was futile.&#13;
The U.S. government's doctrine is that terror tactics are&#13;
responsible for enemy battlefield success, Der Speigel said.&#13;
the 1971-73 edition of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Catalogue is now available. Students may pick up copies at the&#13;
Information Center and the Library in Tallent Hall on the main&#13;
campus and at the main offices of the Kenosha and Racine campuses.&#13;
&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS&#13;
Hear a Moog Synthesizer Dec. 7&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
, lb (.ROUND BEEl"&#13;
ON IRENCH CRUST&#13;
BREAD DRESSED&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LETTUCE AND OUR&#13;
SPF.CIAI. SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
GRILLED COUNTRY&#13;
HAM fi CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLE WHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE.&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
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RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OK BURGER CHEESEBACON&#13;
LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISE ON TOAST 9Qc&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
N O R T H 3311 SH E RID AN R O AD S O U T H 7 500 S HE R I D AN R O AD&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
N|K Round Trip Jot.. .&#13;
NjR Ground T rmrtari .&#13;
Sewn Nights&#13;
Overnight thght from your city via d regularly scheduled Air France flight to&#13;
PARIS with dn immediate connecting Might to GENEVA. SWITZERLAND. Your&#13;
overseas High! will include complimentsy meals and beverages&#13;
Transportation IrOin and to GENEVA via deluxe bust's.&#13;
The tifst through the seventh day in COURCHEVEL. FRANCE, the most m odern&#13;
and extensively developed s ki atea m EUROPE situated at 6. I0f» feet in theuentei&#13;
ol a vast d omain ol snowtields Abundant s now, temaikable sunshine record. runs&#13;
from beginner's to e*pert's with intermediate runs from lop to bottom COURCHEVEL&#13;
was developed by Fmile Allais. French Olympic champion 2 big cabin&#13;
cableways. 6 gondolas, 36 ski and clvau lilts. 30,000 ascents pei hour. I ski lump,&#13;
35 marked runs including EUROPE'S lasiest Olympic run. ski school. 200 inslruc&#13;
to»s. a 50 man maintenance and ies«:ue team. 2 skating nnks. and 1t&gt; discotheques&#13;
Lessons-$13 00 lor 12 2 Ihhh lessons, rental-skis and poles $2 00 per day&#13;
(appro*)&#13;
Lodging Your lodging in the ski area will be in modern new apartments and chalets all with&#13;
bath, kitchenette, balcony and individual beds&#13;
jjfl Reee end Party On the seventh day there will be a giant slalom race lot yotu group with an awards&#13;
party in Hie evening complete with wine, pii/es and trophies&#13;
3Iff. Eighth Night In GENEVA with thine great options Tor that day&#13;
z-tn Con tinue skiing in COURCHEVEL and that alter noon depart lor your over&#13;
^ night in GENEVA&#13;
®Ski m a different area suc h as LA PLAGNE and then go to GENEVA lor the&#13;
night&#13;
Depart in the morning lor GENEVA where you will have the day lor shopping&#13;
^ and sightseeing Overnight in GENEVA in a good category hotel&#13;
jfC Ninth Ni*it . . . , In PARIS. In the morning you will depart lor PARIS where you will have time 10&#13;
shop and spend the evening on the town. Overnight in a good calegoiy hotel Tlie&#13;
next morning you will catch your Air France Might home&#13;
jflfk Guides Multilingual guides will meet you' group upon your arrival HI EUROPE and will l&gt;e&#13;
available to assist you at all times until departure&#13;
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:&#13;
Mr. William Niabuhr. Coordinator&#13;
Student Actrvitiat&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parksida&#13;
Kenosh. Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: (414) 55*2726&#13;
lODays&#13;
Only $264.&#13;
Plus $20.00 Tax and S*v»ct&#13;
Dqvm C1ue&lt;Kia January 4&#13;
Return Che ,iim January 14&#13;
The electronic music of the&#13;
Moog Synthesizer will be&#13;
featured in a free public concert&#13;
by Chris Swansen, a young&#13;
performer-composer, at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Tuesday, Dec. 7, at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wood Road campus in&#13;
the Greenquist Hall concourse.&#13;
The program is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee.&#13;
Swansen's program will include&#13;
a short introduction to the&#13;
synthesizer followed by a varied&#13;
selection of works by J. S. Bach,&#13;
Paul McCartney, Simon and&#13;
Garfunkle and Blood, Sweat and&#13;
Tears. The final portion of the&#13;
program will include a group of&#13;
compositions by Swansen, who&#13;
was named a composer in&#13;
residence and director of the&#13;
experimental music studio of R.&#13;
A. Moog, Inc., manufacturers of&#13;
the synthesizer, in 1968.&#13;
"All the pieces are presented&#13;
as a solo synthesizer performance&#13;
on top of prepared&#13;
tape which holds the additional&#13;
ten to 25 sy nthesized lines, the&#13;
total of which form the finished&#13;
composition," Swansen points&#13;
out. He will explain various&#13;
works in the program during&#13;
the performance.&#13;
Swansen, 32, received his&#13;
music degree from Dartmouth&#13;
College and played piano,&#13;
trombone, trumpet and a&#13;
number of other instruments&#13;
before turning to electronic&#13;
music. He studied composition&#13;
and orchestration with Herb&#13;
Pomeroy, Gunther Schuller,&#13;
Aaron Copland and Yannis&#13;
X e n a k i s; p e r f o r m ed&#13;
professionally with Phil Woods,&#13;
Gary Burton, Steve Marcus,&#13;
Stan Kenton and Maynard&#13;
Ferguson; and fulfilled commissions&#13;
for Canadian&#13;
Broadcasting Corporation,&#13;
Westdeutsch Rundfunk, the&#13;
N a tio nal E d uca tio nal&#13;
Television Network, Stan Getz,&#13;
The Winemaking&#13;
&#13;
Season&#13;
|is Here... &gt;1&#13;
fe and we've got |&#13;
§ «•&gt;)*•• f.r J&#13;
| beginners or experts |&#13;
I st S PECIAL PRICES.&#13;
Burton and Marcus.&#13;
A graduate of Shorewood&#13;
High School, Milwaukee,&#13;
Swansen is the son of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. T. L. Swansen of Rt. 2,&#13;
East Troy. Mrs. Swansen is a&#13;
cellist with the Kenosha&#13;
Symphony Orchestra.&#13;
Says young Swansen: "My&#13;
music derives from as many&#13;
sources as I can find and use&#13;
electronically. The music is not&#13;
limited by the instrument as&#13;
almost any conceivable sound&#13;
or tone color is possible on the&#13;
synthesizer. Almost every style&#13;
of composition and orchestration&#13;
is used at one time&#13;
or another, with an overall&#13;
freedom given to rhymic and&#13;
harmonic structures of the total&#13;
structure. Jazz, rock, folk&#13;
music of many parts of the&#13;
world, Indian scales and intervals,&#13;
classical and romantic&#13;
western forms and harmonies,&#13;
serial techniques, and Grecian,&#13;
Arabic and Chinese intervalic&#13;
systems, as well as pure&#13;
electronically derived forms&#13;
and patterns all enter into my&#13;
compositions."&#13;
Art Exhibition and Sale&#13;
The art discipline at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will sponsor an&#13;
exhibition and sale of original&#13;
graphic art by contemporary&#13;
and old master artists arranged&#13;
by the Ferdinand Roten&#13;
Galleries of Baltimore on&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3, from 10 a.m. to 4&#13;
p.m. in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse on the Wood Road&#13;
campus.&#13;
Included in the exhibition will&#13;
be over 1,000 o riginal etchings,&#13;
lithographs, and woodcuts by&#13;
artists such as Picasso,&#13;
Chagall, Miro, Dali, Goya,&#13;
Renoir, Kollwitz, and many&#13;
others including contemporary&#13;
American, European and&#13;
Japanese printmakers. Prices&#13;
start at $5.00 with the majority&#13;
priced under $100.&#13;
A representative of the Roten&#13;
Galleries will be present at the&#13;
exhibition to answer any&#13;
questions regarding graphic art&#13;
and printmaking.&#13;
Established in 1932, Roten&#13;
Galleries has one of the largest&#13;
collections of graphic art in the&#13;
country and specializes in&#13;
arranging exhibition sales of&#13;
original graphic art at colleges,&#13;
museums, and art centers&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
Through its one day&#13;
exhibition and sale program,&#13;
the Gallery serves ad an extension&#13;
to art education&#13;
programs by providing students&#13;
and other interested groups&#13;
with an opportunity to view a&#13;
variety of fine graphics. Last&#13;
year, Roten representatives&#13;
visited more than 1,000 sch ools&#13;
and organizations holding&#13;
events. In addition, the Gallery&#13;
sent more than 400 special&#13;
exhibitions to art centers,&#13;
museums and universities all&#13;
over the country.&#13;
Vila&#13;
To Perform&#13;
Spanish pianist Carmen Vila,&#13;
artist-in-residence at the&#13;
University of WisconqinParkside,&#13;
will present a&#13;
University Artist Series Concert&#13;
at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 5, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall at Parkside's&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
Miss Vila, presently in her&#13;
fourth year as resident artist at&#13;
Parkside, is an internationallyknown&#13;
concert pianist and has&#13;
appeared with major orchestras&#13;
and in recital&#13;
throughout Europe, the Middle&#13;
East and South America. She&#13;
also made a Carnegie Hall&#13;
appearance last winter in the&#13;
Juenesses Musicales Internationale&#13;
Artists Series.&#13;
Her performance Sunday will&#13;
precede a series of continental&#13;
concert dates during the holiday&#13;
break at the end of the current&#13;
semester.&#13;
Among them: A TV&#13;
production in Madrid, t\fco&#13;
concerts with the Valencia&#13;
(Spain) Philharmonic Orchestra,&#13;
a radio production in&#13;
Switzerland, two concerts with&#13;
the Barcelona (spain) Orchestra,&#13;
a recording session in&#13;
Madrid and recitals in Vienna,&#13;
Innsbruck and Wells, Austria.&#13;
s, You can make wines like fw)&#13;
[y. those you b uy at a fraction 1^1&#13;
&amp; of the cost the y ear around. i,&#13;
".jj&#13;
•ji It's simple, fun a nd fascin- 1$&#13;
M ating. Send for FR EE illus- l .&#13;
tfl trated catalo g of wine mak- j!,"&#13;
.(( ing equipmentand supplies.&#13;
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8007 DOUGLAS AVENUE&#13;
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RACINE, WISCONSIN 53402&#13;
OPEN 8-5 Weekdays,&#13;
10-5 Saturdays, 12-5 Sundays &#13;
November 29,1971 NEWSCOPE Page5&#13;
The camera jerks back and forth with the&#13;
sound of intermittent footsteps and heavy&#13;
machinery mixed, blaspheming the sound of wind.&#13;
It is cold and the camera stops for a moment and&#13;
turns slowly from the concrete grays and browns&#13;
of loo ming Greenquist, its surrounding bare trees&#13;
made small by its size. A dirty sky blue bus&#13;
rumbles by ... a serious longhaired driver and&#13;
serious passengers seriously intent upon their&#13;
destinations are interrupted briefly by this slight&#13;
and look up to see the camera watch.&#13;
The walk continues along the asphalt trail,&#13;
over the boardwalk lifting the lens to the frigid&#13;
glass doors of the box ahead; they open and the&#13;
lens begins to fog. The obscure photographer&#13;
cleans it as if his own eye.&#13;
Flat angular-sharp the restless knife edges of&#13;
pragmatic, static architecture greet the ground&#13;
eye of the camera ... it walks on to look at faces.&#13;
Sitting on one of the burnt orange couches is a&#13;
girl. She is reading something and does not notice&#13;
the intruder. Her eyes dart from the book, blue&#13;
and lean they tell her story with a frown. A&#13;
seeming friend approaches and a smile parts her&#13;
lips. The change of expression is quick and&#13;
machined. They begin to talk with furtive gestures&#13;
for punctuation. The camera moves on.&#13;
Standing, looking through a window twice his&#13;
size is another. A green canvas knapsack law near&#13;
the feet dusty and bulging. Blue wash denimus&#13;
bleached by the sun clothe a rested frame with&#13;
dark hair tangled, the other turns, a face calm and&#13;
unaffected by falseness looks into the lens. A time&#13;
passes before interpretable expression lights the&#13;
geography of the other's face. A smile shows . . .&#13;
amusement and recognition. The camera has&#13;
found a friend.&#13;
Midnight: While I write this to you WRKR —&#13;
the voice of the people, is really talking to me like&#13;
few radio stations ever have. A cold cup of coffee&#13;
nearby. Debby asleep in our bed lonesome warm. I&#13;
should be lying beside her, but as usual there is&#13;
work to be done.&#13;
It isn't really the kind of wo rk that is assigned&#13;
to me or provoked from me, but instead a kind that&#13;
evolves from the quiet anguish of questioning;&#13;
penance for feigning an image to or at someone. I&#13;
could be confessing my dying ego to all who find&#13;
this column a little cryptic or overly critical, but&#13;
truer, I am probably only feeding the damn thing&#13;
again with self-serving scraps of romantic&#13;
bullshit. All I know is that others sing, some talk,&#13;
and I write this column for me and you.&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Orson Wells&#13;
UJ&#13;
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'Citizen Kane'&#13;
M l f l M I I I I I I&#13;
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1820-52ND STREET KENOSHA&#13;
Hurdy Gurdy Donovan Mellow&#13;
by Dale Martin&#13;
of th e Newscope staff&#13;
We sat down at 7:14 p.m. after&#13;
a long hectic journey to McCormick&#13;
Place, through bottleneck&#13;
traffic that went on for&#13;
five miles. At 7:15 p.m., before&#13;
we even had our coats off,&#13;
Donovan walked on the stage.&#13;
He wore white loose fitting&#13;
bells, his curly hair longish but&#13;
not really long compared to&#13;
today's standards. A smile upon&#13;
his face and a guitar in his hand.&#13;
The stage contained a small&#13;
square platform. On it, three&#13;
mikes. One for Donovan's&#13;
vocals, one for his guitar and&#13;
one for the flute player who was&#13;
to come on later.&#13;
Without uttering a word&#13;
Donovan sat cross-legged,&#13;
Indian style, very relaxed. He&#13;
sang "Jenifer Juniper" and&#13;
sang it as one being only,&#13;
Donovan. The guitar became a&#13;
part of him as he strummed the&#13;
cords that have made him a&#13;
legend at 25. He then sang "I&#13;
May as Well Try to Catch the&#13;
Wind".&#13;
The drows had already&#13;
become enchanted and dazed.&#13;
The audience well behaved,&#13;
very little pot is going around,&#13;
you can smell it for a short time&#13;
at the beginning of the concert.&#13;
The party next to me had a&#13;
bottle of wine. They laughed&#13;
and talked through much of the&#13;
show, because they were&#13;
bombed out of their heads. I did&#13;
not even notice them for I had&#13;
tuned Donovan in and them out.&#13;
"So hello, how are you. This&#13;
was a couple of old sorta songs,&#13;
a few years old. This is a new&#13;
one and it's called "A Shape in&#13;
the Sky", says Donovan in his&#13;
Scottish accent. He starts to&#13;
play and decides his guitar is&#13;
out of tune and wordlessly takes&#13;
a few seconds out to tune it.&#13;
"There's a shape in the sky&#13;
and it's beckoning me." The&#13;
song turns out to be a fast&#13;
moving song, sung in a very gay&#13;
fashion. The song although sung&#13;
fast and gay was packed with a&#13;
lot of deep down philosophy.&#13;
One must listen closely or he&#13;
will be traicked by the song's&#13;
gayety. Without pause Donovan&#13;
goes into "Twas then when the&#13;
Hurdy Gurdy man comes&#13;
singing songs of love." Donovan&#13;
needs no reverb to make his&#13;
voice echo. "Hurdy Gurdy,&#13;
Hurdy Gurdy, Hurdy Gurdy is&#13;
sad." The growd goes wild.&#13;
"Down through all eternity the&#13;
crying of humanity".&#13;
"The next song," explains&#13;
Donovan, "is another new one&#13;
and it's called the orginary&#13;
family. The family which we all&#13;
belong to."&#13;
"My father cut his toe off in&#13;
rotary lawnmower . . . We're&#13;
just an ordinary family with the&#13;
ordinary calamities." The song&#13;
is easy and relaxing and is&#13;
about a family that has more&#13;
than its share of calamities.&#13;
Paul Horn was introduced&#13;
and came on stage wearing&#13;
white Nehru type clothing. Horn&#13;
plays the flue and the sax. He&#13;
has recorded 15 albums, the last&#13;
called Concert Ensemble in&#13;
which he mixes rock, classical&#13;
tracks and jazz.&#13;
Horn assisted Donovan for&#13;
most of the remaining numbers.&#13;
In the second set violinist Peter&#13;
Mark joined Horn and Donovan.&#13;
On the slower numbers Mark's&#13;
viola and Donovan's voice often&#13;
vibrated on the same note. The&#13;
effect is very pleasing.&#13;
Donovan took a ten minute&#13;
break for a cup of tea. He told us&#13;
the second set would be longer.&#13;
In all, Donovan played for two&#13;
full hours. He had another&#13;
concert to perform at 10:00 to&#13;
complete Thanksgiving eve.&#13;
The audience did not get into&#13;
it the way Donovan is accustomed.&#13;
We did actually, but&#13;
were too subdued to show it at&#13;
first. Donovan blamed it on&#13;
himself and said he wished he&#13;
had seen the stage set up ahead&#13;
of time. He said that he would&#13;
have had them build a platform&#13;
out into the audience. He said he&#13;
felt as if he were up on the stage&#13;
and that he was singing in a&#13;
room by himself. Donovan said&#13;
with a smile that he would try&#13;
not to let it get him down.&#13;
Many of the tongs towards the&#13;
end of the concert strived to get&#13;
the audience involved. Donovan&#13;
tried to get the audience into the&#13;
music with a song called&#13;
"Happiness Runs". The&#13;
number has a part for the men,&#13;
a part for the women and a part&#13;
for himself. We all broke down&#13;
and became totally apart of&#13;
hime with "Mellow Yellow".&#13;
Donovan wants to be close to&#13;
the audience and they can feel&#13;
it. "We surely have come a long&#13;
way, haven't we( We get near to&#13;
one another. People put what&#13;
they call popstars — they put&#13;
them in another place. Or&#13;
perhaps we feel in another&#13;
place, but I feel it getting nearer&#13;
and nearer. A record is very&#13;
nice to hear . . . but it's better&#13;
to feel the music going out and&#13;
going in around all of us, all us&#13;
feeling together."&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
"n we st&#13;
Rac ine&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
%e VJley Supper CLl&#13;
1700 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
Racine Theatre Guild&#13;
presents&#13;
OPENS&#13;
NOV. 19&#13;
601 High St.&#13;
SUMMERTREE 6334218&#13;
k fta rnlWCWBl&#13;
When a well-meaning father tells his son to "be a man", does he&#13;
mean HIS kind of man, or the son's?&#13;
Performance Dates:&#13;
Nov. 19,20, 21,26,27, 28, Dec. 3,4, 5&#13;
Two Performances Dec. 4, 5:15 &amp; 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Curtain:&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 8:15; Sun. 7:30&#13;
Seats:&#13;
$2.50 Students $1.25 Fri. &amp; Su n.&#13;
Ken Dan by Si/kscreens .\ew GalJory One&#13;
503Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wis &#13;
Page 6 NKWSCOPE November 29,1971&#13;
Sports test&#13;
m i k e&#13;
d a v is&#13;
spe ed&#13;
c i t y&#13;
A o9X o°* '&lt;*\&#13;
-x*- d Fjf&#13;
o&#13;
N \&gt;° ^e. &gt;csN A' &lt;,* xr&#13;
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Students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside are raising&#13;
money for a scholarship fund&#13;
and electing a queen for UW-P's&#13;
"Sportsfest" at the same time.&#13;
Nine coeds, sponsored by&#13;
athletic groups at UW-P, are in&#13;
the running for queen of&#13;
Sportsfest to be held Dec. 1-4,&#13;
with the winner being determined&#13;
by how much money&#13;
their sponsors raise for the&#13;
Harlow B. Mills Scholarship&#13;
Fund.&#13;
The late Professor Mills, an&#13;
internationally-known entomologist&#13;
who died last April,&#13;
was a full professor at UW-P&#13;
and acting dean of the College of&#13;
Science and Society during late&#13;
1969 and early 1970. Through&#13;
individual contributions and&#13;
bene fit stu den t-f acu lty&#13;
basketball games, nearly $1,000&#13;
has been raised for the&#13;
scholarship fund established in&#13;
his name shortly after his&#13;
death.&#13;
Students are taking their&#13;
campaigns into the cities of&#13;
Kenosha and Racine as well as&#13;
on campus this week and will&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will h elp any w o m a n reg ard les s&#13;
ol rac e, religion, a g e or linan cial&#13;
sta tus . W e do n o t mora lize, but&#13;
mer ely h e lp w o m e n o bta in qualifi ed&#13;
D o cto rs for abo rtio ns, if this is&#13;
w h at they des ire . P l eas e do not&#13;
dela y, an earl y abor tion is m o re&#13;
sim ple a n d les s c o stly, a n d c a n b e&#13;
per for med on an o u t pati ent bas is.&#13;
r 312 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Assistance of Chicago 1&#13;
8 AM-10 P M—7 DAYS&#13;
A NON -PRO FIT ORGA NIZA TION&#13;
Pop art&#13;
By Joseph Schlitz&#13;
Candidates for queen of UW-Parkside's Sportsfest, which&#13;
ushers in the winter sports season Dec. 1-4 are (back row, from&#13;
left) Debbie LaJeunesse, 2308 - 25th Ave., Kenosha, sophomore,&#13;
sponsored by the ski club; Cathy Momper, 11198 G reen Bay Rd.,&#13;
Kenosha, sophomore, equestrian club; and Carol Busch, 7903&#13;
Pershing Blvd., Kenosha, freshman, fencers; (front row, from left)&#13;
Debbie Goudreau, 3529 V ictory Lane, Racine, freshman, hockey&#13;
club; Robin Strangberg, 6406 - 29th- Ave., Kenosha, junior,&#13;
basketball; Mary Fonk, 6511 - 42nd Ave., Kenosha, junior,&#13;
wrestlers; Liz Stellberg, 3055 Ruby Ave., Racine, freshman, tennis;&#13;
and Bonnie Eppers, Rt. 1, Kansasville, senior, judo club. Not&#13;
pictured is Barbara Lundskow, 7929 - 15th Ave., Kenosha,&#13;
sophomore, cross country and track.&#13;
For Mills S cholarship Fund&#13;
set up polling, or contribution,&#13;
places at the main UW-P&#13;
campus and the urban campuses&#13;
in Kenosha and Racine&#13;
next week.&#13;
The candidate who raises the&#13;
most money will be crowned&#13;
queen just before the wrestling&#13;
match between UW-P and&#13;
Northwestern University which&#13;
will kick off Sportsfest Dec. 1.&#13;
The meet will begin at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Kenosha Trempere high school&#13;
with the corwning and&#13;
presentation of court at 7:45.&#13;
Other athletic events over&#13;
which the queen and her court&#13;
will reign are a fenching match&#13;
between UW-P, UW-Madison&#13;
and the University of Chicago&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3, at 6 p.m. at&#13;
Racine Case high school&#13;
fieldhouse; a judo match between&#13;
UW-P and Marquette&#13;
University Saturday afternoon,&#13;
Dec. 4, at 1:30 at Racine Park&#13;
high school fieldhouse; a&#13;
gymnastics meet between UWP&#13;
and Northern Illinois&#13;
University Saturday at 4 p.m. at&#13;
Park; and the home opener&#13;
basketball game Saturday night&#13;
between UW-P and Wayne State&#13;
University at 8 p.m. at Case&#13;
fieldhouse. Sportsfest annually&#13;
opens the winter sports season&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
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JM.OC or DOW Balance due by 30 dan prior to departo,.&#13;
For spoliation Mt r evtric ixk. &#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
College basketball fans in this area&#13;
should have a satisfying winter following&#13;
the progress of the Marquette Warriors,&#13;
who last year ranked number two in the&#13;
nation, running a 26-0 regular season&#13;
record only to be upset by Ohio Stafe 60-59&#13;
in the NCAA Tournament.&#13;
Adding a local angle again this year to&#13;
the Marquette team will be center Jim&#13;
Chones from Racine. Chones, a strong,&#13;
agile performer, is rated as an AilAmerican&#13;
this year by knowledgeable&#13;
basketball sources.&#13;
One of the most highly sought after&#13;
players while in high school, Chones&#13;
proved that the scouts were right by&#13;
having an excellent sophomore season. He&#13;
should be even better this year.&#13;
Newscope talked to Jim about prospects&#13;
for the new season.&#13;
Maruqette last year finished with a 28-1&#13;
record including tournament play. With&#13;
the loss of two regulars, Gary Brell and&#13;
All-American Dean Meminger, it clearly&#13;
leaves gaps on the team.&#13;
Newscope asked Chones whether or not&#13;
these openings can be filled, and how this&#13;
year's' team will compare with the&#13;
previous one.&#13;
Chones: "We have a lot more ability than&#13;
we have ever had."&#13;
Newscope: Even more than last year?&#13;
Chones: "Very easily. It's hard for people&#13;
who don't know basketball to imagine that&#13;
we have more ability, but Bob Lackey is a&#13;
better ballplayer than he showed last year,&#13;
and I am a better ballplayer than what I&#13;
showed, but when you have a Dean&#13;
Meminger you sort of take a back seat&#13;
while everybody is watching Dean. This&#13;
year we won't have the great ball handler&#13;
so that means everybody else will have to&#13;
do a little bit more, and as a result I think&#13;
you will see more individual talent. Instead&#13;
of going to Dean for the pressure&#13;
basket, I'll be getting the ball or Bob will&#13;
be getting it."&#13;
Newscope: Among the new players who&#13;
really impresses you?&#13;
Chones: "We've got a great sophomore in&#13;
Larry McNeil who I think is probably the&#13;
greatest forward in college right now. He&#13;
is a lot like Ken Durrett, wiry and strong.&#13;
We call him Connie Hawkins."&#13;
Newscope: You say there is more overall&#13;
talent this year, but how do you think the&#13;
team will react in tight games without the&#13;
leadership of Dean Meminger?&#13;
Chones: "I think we'll survive. We'll have&#13;
to become more of a team. We can't just&#13;
rely on one person, we'll have to rely on&#13;
each other, and this in itself will bring us&#13;
togehter. People said the same thing when&#13;
Marquette lost George Thompson.&#13;
"You have to remember that Marquette&#13;
doesn't have just good ballpalerys, they&#13;
have ballplayers that would be stars if they&#13;
went to other schools.&#13;
'We just don't have adequate ballplayers&#13;
November 29,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
s Jim Chones&#13;
Foresees Good Year&#13;
anymore, like a Gary Brell who was just&#13;
supposed to play defense and get the&#13;
scraps. Now we have players like McNeil&#13;
who can get the scraps, rebound, shoot,&#13;
dribble and handle all other phases of the&#13;
game. This is the kind of players&#13;
Marquette is recruiting. This is a new kind&#13;
of ball team."&#13;
Newscope: What about UCLA?&#13;
Chones: "They had a good freshman team&#13;
but they played an easy schedule. I don't&#13;
know. I've heard a lot about (Bill) Walton,&#13;
I hear he is a pretty good rebounder. I&#13;
don't like to comment on individual&#13;
players, as far as teams go, I don't really&#13;
know. Mr. Wooden is a great coach, and&#13;
somehow they will come through with a&#13;
decent record."&#13;
"If I were a sportswriter I think I would&#13;
rate them number one just on prestige&#13;
alone. They should be number one until&#13;
somebody knocks them off."&#13;
Newscope: What about the Big 10 this&#13;
year?&#13;
Chones: "I think Michigan is going to take&#13;
it. I don't think Ohio State can beat&#13;
Michigan this year. I heard that (Ken)&#13;
Brady, their 6-9 center, got hurt and if they&#13;
lose him they can almost forget it."&#13;
"Ohio State has a good coach and good&#13;
ballplayers so they could win again."&#13;
Newscope: Would you like to get another&#13;
crack at Ohio State?&#13;
Jim Chones&#13;
Chones: "I don't know. I don't believe they&#13;
will go that far this year. Witte played with&#13;
us this summer in the Pan-American&#13;
Games and he didn't get in that much&#13;
because he is not that mobile of a center,&#13;
but he does what he is supposed to do for&#13;
their type of game. But I can't see them&#13;
going any father because they lost a great&#13;
player in (Jim) Cleamons, and there will&#13;
be some adjustments made, but these are&#13;
great players, not just adequate ones, and&#13;
I think they will have another good team&#13;
and I hope they will go as far as they can so&#13;
we can get another chance at them."&#13;
Newscope: How about your own style of&#13;
play? Will it be changing this year? Will&#13;
they be relying more on you?&#13;
Chones: "I don't know, like I've changed&#13;
my whole game. If you haven't seen me&#13;
play yet this year then you will see that my&#13;
whole game has changed. In the past I&#13;
never had a game, I just played, never&#13;
having something that was steady all the&#13;
time."&#13;
"People sometimes say, 'he is not&#13;
playing his game,' but you couldn't say&#13;
that last year about me because I didn't&#13;
have a game. Now I have developed a&#13;
game by hard work and playing a lot this&#13;
summer."&#13;
"I just want people to see us play&#13;
because they will see an altogether different&#13;
team. Many are skeptical because&#13;
we depended so much on Dean, but I think&#13;
that we will have a better team. I really&#13;
believe this, and the practices have proven&#13;
it. Coach is letting us out early because&#13;
he's been thinking we are peaking too soon.&#13;
We have been really looking good, really&#13;
great."&#13;
Newscope: Who will fill the position that&#13;
Meminger vacated?&#13;
Chones: "It would have been George&#13;
Frazier but he is hur.t right now. but he&#13;
should be back by December 1st. I don't&#13;
know if he will be starting by then. Marcus&#13;
Washington and Randy Wade have been&#13;
looking very good and are battling for the&#13;
job right now."&#13;
Newscope: The schedule this year looks&#13;
much tougher with Jacksonville, South&#13;
Carolina, and Michigan among the tougher&#13;
opponents on it. What do you think about&#13;
it?&#13;
Chones: "Well, I think it has to be tougher&#13;
for the type of ballplayers we have. If&#13;
anything hurt us last year I think it might&#13;
have been those last seven games because&#13;
they weren't that hard and we found it&#13;
difficult to get up for them, and therefore&#13;
weren't prepared to go into tournament&#13;
play."&#13;
"This year, with the tougher schedule,&#13;
we will be better prepared for the strong&#13;
teams."&#13;
Newscope: Does the high national ranking&#13;
make opponents tougher than they normally&#13;
would be9&#13;
Chones: "When you are rated number one&#13;
or two. everybody is out to get you. Every&#13;
game will be tough It's been said so many&#13;
times that people don't really believe it. If&#13;
a Loyola or a South Carolina can beat a&#13;
Marquette, that makes their whole&#13;
seasons. With coach's (A1 McGuire)&#13;
arrogance it makes other teams want to&#13;
beat us all the more so that just adds to it."&#13;
Newscope: What about games against&#13;
highly rated teams? Will they be great&#13;
obstacles?&#13;
Chones: "You seem to be underestimating&#13;
us. We have a good team and I'm not&#13;
worried about anybody. I feel that if we go&#13;
out and play hard against anybody we will&#13;
beat them. You can't judge these teams by&#13;
the way they performed in the past. Some&#13;
of them aren't as good as last year. I don't&#13;
think that Notre Dame and Jacksonville&#13;
are as good as they were last year."&#13;
* "But they are still good enough, and it&#13;
will make their seasons just to beat&#13;
Marquette. We won't play their game, we&#13;
will just play the way we are accustomed&#13;
to, and if we play our best I think we'll do&#13;
all right."&#13;
Newscope: What teams will be toughest&#13;
overall?&#13;
Chones: "Memphis State I know will be&#13;
tought because they are rated well in the&#13;
Missouri Valley Conference. Minnesota&#13;
will be very good. South Carolina will be&#13;
very tough at Stouh Carolina. Jacksonville&#13;
will be tough, and New Mexico State will&#13;
be difficult on the road."&#13;
Newscope: Does the long winning streak at&#13;
the Milwaukee Arena add any pressure?&#13;
(more than 50 consecutive home victories)&#13;
Chones: "I've never thought about the&#13;
victories. I just play. I've heard people&#13;
talking about this streak, but I never think&#13;
about it while playing. That's no added&#13;
pressure to me."&#13;
Newscope: Who do you think will end up as&#13;
NCAA champions?&#13;
Chones: "You can't say. The season hasn't&#13;
even started yet. You can get a better idea&#13;
when you see the teams play. You can see&#13;
how Marquette is doing, how UCLA is&#13;
doing, and go by scores and judge from&#13;
there. That is a very hard thing to predict'&#13;
+ + +&#13;
One thing that can be predicted is that&#13;
Marquette will be fighting for the top spot.&#13;
It seems clear that this team will be among&#13;
the best, and possibly the best in the&#13;
country.&#13;
As far as Jim Chones is concerned, he&#13;
proved last year that he can withstand&#13;
pressure. He feels that he has improved&#13;
much over last season and that is&#13;
frightening news for Marquette opponents.&#13;
With his confidence, determination and&#13;
great knowledge about the game, it is&#13;
more than likely that the 6-11 center from&#13;
Racine will live up to his All-American&#13;
ratings.&#13;
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SAVE — SAVE — SAVE &#13;
Pages NEWSCOPE November 28,1971&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
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SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
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REGULAR PRICE $399.00&#13;
OR&#13;
WITH PURCHASE OF ANYTHING&#13;
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STEREO CONSOLE $99.00&#13;
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Reasonably pr iced at $ 109-00-&#13;
with purchase of a ny&#13;
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of Christmas and a&#13;
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Newscope Classifieds are free to the&#13;
students, staff and faculty of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Deadline for classifieds is Thursday&#13;
prior to the week of publication and&#13;
will be run three weeks consecutively&#13;
or until cancelled by the&#13;
advertiser.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
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COUNTER GIRL — Must be able to&#13;
work Friday noon hours and nights&#13;
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Call 632-1691 b etween 1 and 5 p.m.&#13;
Ask Tbr Gretchen.&#13;
RIDE from 65th street &amp; Sheridan&#13;
road to Parkside 5 days per week at&#13;
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dependability. Call 654-2502 after 5&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
LOST - brown leather wallet with&#13;
sun engraved. Any knowledge&#13;
pertaining to its whereabouts&#13;
contact Newscope. Keep the money&#13;
but please return the identification.&#13;
{finite&#13;
Sax Players needed for 12 piece&#13;
orchestra. Make money,'have fun.&#13;
Call 654-5777 or 857-2780.&#13;
Piano teacher needs students - a ny&#13;
age. Call 654-5777.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOLK GUITARS — Western guitar&#13;
with Rosewood body, $28, Folk&#13;
guitar $14. Call 658-2932 after 4 p.m.&#13;
FOLD GUITAR — with case $15,&#13;
complete set children's Golden Book&#13;
Encyclopedias in perfect condition&#13;
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Gals: Dress up for the Holidays in a&#13;
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jacket. Worn 3 times. Call 657-7223.&#13;
1 pair of men's ski boots (laced), size&#13;
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Cold Heart Warmer - size 14,&#13;
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Typewriter - Remington portable,&#13;
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INFORMATION FILE — for&#13;
browsing at a table in the Information&#13;
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recorder, 1200 ft. capacity, portable&#13;
with tapes, empty reels and accessories.&#13;
$20. Call 654-4982.&#13;
HOUSE - re nt free for neat mature&#13;
female. Call 552-8835 a fter 4 p.m.,&#13;
Kris.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1968 PONTIAC GTO — 2 dr, low&#13;
mileage, solid dark blue with tinted&#13;
windows, five-spoke wheels with&#13;
mag rims with red inserts, interior&#13;
dark, rawhide wheel cover, 10,000&#13;
rpm sun tach. Any reasonable price&#13;
accepted. Must sell fast, going to&#13;
Canada. Call 634-2316, ask for Allan.&#13;
1966 CHEVY II — Wagon, standard,&#13;
radio, good condition, $650 including&#13;
snow tires. Call 552-8956 evenings or&#13;
weekends.&#13;
PONTIAC FIREBIRD 1967 — Like&#13;
new condition, 326 engine, new paint,&#13;
mag wheels. 694-2075.&#13;
1976 Ambassador, 4-door, 232 engine,&#13;
automatic — good condition. $795,&#13;
call 551-9556 after 5 p.m., 1814 - 18 th&#13;
Ave.&#13;
1963 Rambler 4 dr. Good engine,&#13;
good paing, $165 o r offer. Call 632-&#13;
5779 or 553-2423.&#13;
1064 BE LAIR CHEV^f — White 4 dr.,&#13;
$150, in good condition. 554-7719, 4532&#13;
Ridge Crest Drive.&#13;
1965 F-85 OLDSMOBILE — V8,&#13;
auto., pwr steering, 4 dr sedan, very&#13;
good cond. no ru$t. One owner, 54,000&#13;
mi. NF green - $700. Call 654-3937.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1964 Chrysler Newport,&#13;
dependable. Call 639-0379.&#13;
FOR SALE 1966 Triumph 650 T.T.&#13;
Runs great, but needs little work.&#13;
$500 or best offer. Call 552-8987.&#13;
1967 Cougar, 3 speed on floor, 289&#13;
eng. Clean interior, 4 new tires, 2&#13;
owner. Call 654-0272 from 9-5, or 652-&#13;
2788 a fter 5.&#13;
JUGUAR - 1966 XKE coupe. Very&#13;
good mechanically &amp; structurally,&#13;
best offer over $1950. Contact Prof.&#13;
Beyer evenings at ext. 53 on Racine&#13;
Campus.&#13;
FOR SALE - '65 Plymouth 426&#13;
automatic, 2 dr. hardtop, bucket&#13;
seats, mags. Must sell. $800. Call 654-&#13;
7346 after 4:30. </text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>To or To Not a Student Government</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89877">
              <text>ByKen Konkol of the Newscope slall eel'&#13;
1bursday, the 16th of September, at 7:30 p.m, m AIDg·&#13;
. \lOOm101 Greenquist, Parkside witnessed the report from the Student Union Commi -.te ba recb&gt;ed Ita m_benbIp from 21 to 15.&#13;
;::"tmeeting of the Student Senate in four months. -;'85 mos~~ a bitch about enlon:ed subservi ttee bullhooe mteon are pulllnll .... a vahanl ltnIIIIe&#13;
Problems were encountered with notification e admlDlSlration, relegating it to useI= to give students a voice at Parblde&#13;
of mem""rs because cards, which were supposed Gary DaVISspoke eloquenUy for 45 . Ill' '!be StudenI Senate - your help Two the plans of Academic Policies to getn;,u:,o:: on future meetinp have been scheduled al a ume Too r T N 00 which IS hoped will gel better ,&lt;IIeral udenl&#13;
o ot a StUdent Government&#13;
to be mailed the week before, did not reach&#13;
senators till the day of the meeting.&#13;
By some marvelous coincidence a quorum&#13;
was established at 7:51 and the meeting came to&#13;
disorder. . . .&#13;
The first official order of business was the&#13;
resibnation, in writing, of Walter Ulbrights who&#13;
stated the convention was illegal according to the&#13;
senate constitution which called for meeting&#13;
during the summer.&#13;
It was decided more or less by assent among&#13;
the rest of the senators, no vote taken, to suspend&#13;
the constitution retroactively since the last&#13;
Along.about the time the election committee&#13;
reported It was discovered that the senate had&#13;
resigned itself out of a quorum aod the eetin&#13;
broke up. m g&#13;
So, after only five months of operation the&#13;
power for control of Student Affairs, a rip-off o[ the&#13;
University in general, proposals [or the expansioo&#13;
of the mdependent studies program to civic alfairs&#13;
;and the estabtishment of a proposed day care&#13;
,center. In conclusion he gave his oral resignation&#13;
'to the remainder of the senate which was accepted.&#13;
attendance.&#13;
The Gnevance and C1eammg Ho... Com&#13;
mittee will list&lt;ll to and d1scusa ludMI eemplaints&#13;
and problmu with th ~ o[ unn&#13;
results. The committee will meet on Thuraday,&#13;
September 23. al 4: pm ID .-n 103,&#13;
Greenquisl. n.e enure st.udtnt body and anyone&#13;
else is invited to euend,&#13;
The senate will hold a general m IDll on&#13;
Monday, 8epI. 27, at.: pm ID Gr=lqulSl 10\&#13;
Once again, the)'d like to pac thp lecture hall&#13;
Prove Parkside IS nol apathetic to I o""n c r&#13;
- come!&#13;
FREE "Journalismis Literature in a Hurry" -Matthew Arnold University of W isamsin • Parkside&#13;
•••••••&#13;
volume 5 ,Number 3 September 20, 1971&#13;
(Pioneer' Conditions Braved by Parks ide Villagers&#13;
Norwood Interested it) Results&#13;
By Warren Nedry. Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Although Parkside Village is nearing&#13;
CGIIIpletion,the present living conditions&#13;
vary (rom near complete to primitive. Units&#13;
slated to house (rom two to four students are&#13;
JftSeIItly the home for up to ten.&#13;
Adding to the "pioneer" atmosphere at&#13;
Parkside Village is the lack of running&#13;
waler, electricity and telephones. Part of&#13;
IIIiI primitive atmosphere has been normalized&#13;
during the past week, but there&#13;
NIIlSinunits without what most of us term&#13;
"Iecessities". All endure the noise and the&#13;
~us journeys through the 7 - 4:30&#13;
_!ruction world.&#13;
These conditions were brought about by&#13;
lIbat Mr. Emil Avendroth, President of&#13;
Global Construction Company, general&#13;
~ctor for Parks ide Village, termed "the&#13;
liIlJt labor market in the Kenosha-Racine area': and "the inability of suppliers to meet&#13;
JI'OlDised deadlines". Adding to the delay&#13;
... a Week-long, njid·summer. labor strike.&#13;
Asked if it was true that some tenants&#13;
IIIdtouse the bathtub as their .only source of&#13;
IUIIning water - for washing dishes,&#13;
~~, brushing teeth, etc. - Avendroth&#13;
:; 'This is true if they use the facilities in&#13;
IIlen apar~ent, but there are other apartIs,&#13;
bousmg by the same sex, within the&#13;
complex that have facilities and&#13;
IlTangements could be made to use them if&#13;
~ desired to. It's an inconvenience, but at&#13;
~me time we're not charging for that&#13;
vemence. We will not make it in-&#13;
-enient for any student. He can have&#13;
by lIlarc Elsen.&#13;
Sa althe Newscope stan&#13;
YIDg.that he had no&#13;
~'Ved notions of how&#13;
!lIg..:,de should develop,&#13;
IIIthe Norwood,the new Dean&#13;
~ College o[ Scien~e and&#13;
IInieW' slaled m a brIef in·&#13;
lIilb fa that he would first meet&#13;
1IIIkin cully members hefore&#13;
"y g POlicydecisions OU .&#13;
loot;" I can't really work eflllII'&#13;
? unless you have met&#13;
IlIeir SCuItyand have learned&#13;
'OOd&#13;
="&#13;
and plans," Norb\I&#13;
.&#13;
liked~ntly,. the Dean has&#13;
10leI u DlV1s~onalChairman&#13;
1II1bu.,P a serIes of meetings&#13;
"I [acuity.&#13;
liat.n ~~d come to these to&#13;
!lis' o&lt;woodsaid&#13;
4iffer~~ents were markedly&#13;
....'_ n from the initial -neDts of hi • ~ M . S pred~cessor ..&#13;
-, 'Nh acKlOney. MacKin-&#13;
...;. owns appointed to the&#13;
~ PDoltIonlast year at this&#13;
~r"responsible for the&#13;
lostant Greatness"&#13;
what he wants and we will pay for it on this&#13;
temporary basis."&#13;
.Tenants have the choice of living at a&#13;
motel or at the Parkside Village site. If they&#13;
choose a motel they are required to pay rent&#13;
on their uncompleted apartment to help&#13;
defer the added cost of the motel. At&#13;
Parkside Village they are required to pay for&#13;
the space used unless they are in groups of&#13;
eight or more.&#13;
Although all tenants were told Sept. 1&#13;
was the completion date, Avendroth said it&#13;
would be difficult for a tenant to break his&#13;
lease. The lease requires Global to&#13;
demonstrate a best effort to complete on&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Commenting on the possibility of fire or&#13;
health code violations, Avendroth said there&#13;
were no code violations as far as the living&#13;
conditions were concerned and stressed the&#13;
temporary nature of the conditiDns. Present&#13;
conditions require living in and around&#13;
construction life: noisy machines, miles of&#13;
cords lumber piles, refuse piles and open&#13;
fires. 'In some of the complexes fire extinguishers&#13;
are not evident. No telephones&#13;
are available as of yet.&#13;
"We will have sulficient aparbnents for&#13;
all students who bave registered with us,"&#13;
Avendroth said. "They will all be with their&#13;
permanent group, perbaps not in their&#13;
leased apartment, by the end of next week&#13;
(Sept. 25)." At this time apprOJomate1y.60&#13;
people have leased apartments at Parks.de&#13;
t continued on Page 8)&#13;
that led to the attempted&#13;
purging of 27 faculty members.&#13;
When popular resistance. to&#13;
the purge made it imposs.ble&#13;
for it to be· carried out,&#13;
MacKinney, along with. Vice&#13;
Chancellor Harris, resIgned.&#13;
Norwood as Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and SocIety&#13;
will have the Chairmen of the&#13;
Science, Social Scien~e,&#13;
Humanities and EducatIon&#13;
divisions report to him.&#13;
He will be the eollege's&#13;
principal educational and administrative&#13;
officer, and will be&#13;
responsible for staff and&#13;
program development,&#13;
program review, and budget.&#13;
Because of responsibilities. at&#13;
UW-M where he was the acting&#13;
Dean ~f tbe Graduate School,&#13;
Norwood will only be at&#13;
Parkside part time till October&#13;
15. He will he spending three&#13;
days a week at Parkside and&#13;
two at UW-M lill tben.&#13;
Norwood said he had no&#13;
priority poticies he would like to&#13;
see instituted. "It'd be mappropriate&#13;
to commenL It would&#13;
appear I had come With&#13;
preconceived ideas. I'd rather&#13;
talk to tbe faculty and students&#13;
firsl .&#13;
"One thing 1 have learned IS&#13;
that each instilution is different/'&#13;
he said la~1 ".an~ if&#13;
anyone comes into an mstitutioo&#13;
with preconceived notions of&#13;
what to do Wlthout first&#13;
checking with the laculty and&#13;
students, he's going to find&#13;
himself in difficulhes.&#13;
"One uses tbese sour&lt;:e'l...of&#13;
ideas Of he said. "One's job then&#13;
is to' sort out those ideas ~l&#13;
can be instituted, and to expand&#13;
.",.-&#13;
.---&#13;
JERRY SOCHA&#13;
Next Week&#13;
an Interview with&#13;
Muddy Waters&#13;
Iruclur "Good ,d a nOI&#13;
unplemented are 1&#13;
expiaIDed&#13;
"Th place hi to dev op'&#13;
own mold," be e.mph'~lted&#13;
Ialer "II's unique. II can't flI&#13;
already eXlSUn&amp;molds."&#13;
"We're nol 01Dg to sel nul&#13;
With the preconceved nollon of&#13;
being the Harvard of the Pike&#13;
iIlver," he added dryly&#13;
Norwood said be favored a&#13;
strong undergraduate program&#13;
He observed Uus IS a University&#13;
of WisconsIn institutional goal,&#13;
noling President Weaver's&#13;
recenl rea£fll'll\ation of this&#13;
before the JOlnl Finance&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The failure of the stale&#13;
legislature 10 pas$ a budgel has&#13;
hurt the University, par·&#13;
ticularly in recruiting, he said&#13;
Critical teachi~ positions will&#13;
be fll1ed fI1'SL&#13;
What are some of pen.onal&#13;
values? "I have the ,dea people&#13;
come before programs. I'm&#13;
suspicious of rhetoric - I'm&#13;
more interested in results."&#13;
.J IE: fl "'v sOC:".&#13;
DEAN £:U(O.£NE NORWOOD&#13;
those policies that have ""orIted&#13;
in the past.&#13;
'''Ibis does nol mean 1will nol&#13;
he making judgments," he&#13;
noled.&#13;
He sees part of his job as&#13;
making more effective the&#13;
Colle e administrative&#13;
By Ken Konkol of the Newscope staff&#13;
'lbursday, the 16th of September, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
. RoOm 101 Greenquist, Parkside witnessed the&#13;
first meeting of the Student Senate in four months.&#13;
Problems were encountered with notification&#13;
of members because cards, which were supposed&#13;
meeting.&#13;
was A report f~m the Student Union Committee&#13;
the =~~ a bit~ about enforced subservience to&#13;
G uustr~tion, relegating it to uselessness&#13;
th ary Davis spoke eloquently for 45 minutes ~ e plans of Academic Policies to get a hold on ·hich .&#13;
ToorToNot s a tudant Govarnm&#13;
to be mailed the week before, did not reach&#13;
senators till the day of the meeting.&#13;
By some marvelous coincidence a quorum&#13;
was established at 7:51 and the meeting came to&#13;
disorder.&#13;
'lbe first official order of business was the&#13;
resibnation, in writing, of Walter Ulbrights who&#13;
stated the convention was illegal according to the&#13;
senate constitution which called for meeting&#13;
during the summer.&#13;
It was decided more or less by assent among&#13;
the rest of the senators, no vote taken, to suspend&#13;
the constitution retroactively since the last&#13;
Along_ about the time the election committee&#13;
re~rted _it was discovered that the senate had&#13;
resigned itself out of a quorum and the tin&#13;
broke up. mee g&#13;
So, after only five months of operation the&#13;
po~er f~r c?ntrol of Student Affairs, 8 rip-off of the&#13;
Uruv~s1ty m general, proposals for the expansion&#13;
of the mdependent studies program to civic affairs&#13;
. and the establish~ent of a proposed day care&#13;
center. In conclusion he gave his oral res1gnation&#13;
to the remainder of the senate which "a ac- cepted.&#13;
"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" - Matthew Arnold University o j W isrons in - Parkside&#13;
••••••• VqJume 5 _Number 3 September 20, 1971&#13;
nt&#13;
FREE&#13;
'Pioneer' Conditions Braved by Parksid Villag r&#13;
By Warren Nedry, Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Although Parkside Village is nearing&#13;
completion, the present living conditions&#13;
,-ary from near complete to primitive. Units&#13;
slated to house from two to four students are&#13;
presently the home for up to ten.&#13;
Adding to the "pioneer" atmosphere at&#13;
Parkside Village is th~ lack of running&#13;
waler, electricity and telephones. Part of&#13;
this primitive atmosphere has been normalized&#13;
during the past week, but there&#13;
remain units without what most of us term&#13;
'necessities". All endure the noise and the&#13;
d.ingerous journeys through the 7 - 4:30&#13;
COIL5truction world.&#13;
These conditions were brought about by&#13;
what Mr. Emil Avendroth, President of&#13;
Global Construction Company, general&#13;
contractor for Parkside Village, termed "the&#13;
tight labor market in the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
area•: and "the inability of suppliers to meet&#13;
pronused deadlines". Adding to the delay&#13;
1-a a week-long, mid-summer. labor strike.&#13;
Asked if it was true that some tenants&#13;
bad l? use the bathtub as their .only source of&#13;
runn~ng water - for washing dishes,&#13;
Shaving, brushing teeth, etc. - Avendroth&#13;
Iii~, "This is true if they use the facilities in&#13;
their aparbnent, but there are other apartlllents,&#13;
housing by the same sex, within the&#13;
complex that have facilities and&#13;
~nge~ents could be made to use them if&#13;
~Y desir~ to. It's an inconvenience, but at&#13;
lnco sam~ time we're not charging for that&#13;
nvenience. We will not make it inconvenient&#13;
for any student. He can have&#13;
what he wants and we will pay for it on this&#13;
temporary basis."&#13;
Tenants have the choice of living at a&#13;
motel or at the Parkside Village site. U they&#13;
choose a motel they are required to pay rent&#13;
on their uncompleted apartment to help&#13;
defer the added cost of the motel. At&#13;
Parkside Village they are required to pay for&#13;
the space used unless they are in groups of&#13;
eight or more.&#13;
Although all tenants were told Sept. 1&#13;
was the completion date, Avendroth said it&#13;
would be difficult for a tenant to break h.&#13;
lease. The lease requires Global to&#13;
demonstrate a best effort to complete on&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Commenting on the possibility of fire or&#13;
health code violations, Avendroth said there&#13;
were no code violations as far as the living&#13;
conditions were concerned and stre sed the&#13;
temporary nature of the conditions. Present&#13;
conditions require living in and around&#13;
construction life: noisy machines, miles of&#13;
cords lumber piles, refuse piles and open&#13;
fires. ' In some of the complexes fire extinguishers&#13;
are not evident. No telephones&#13;
are available as of yet.&#13;
"We will have sufficient apartments for&#13;
all students who have registered w_ith us,."&#13;
Avendroth said. "They will all be \\-~th the~r&#13;
permanent group, perhaps not m their&#13;
leased apartment, by the end of _next week&#13;
(Sept. 25)." At this time approximately_ 60&#13;
people have leased apartments at Parkside&#13;
(COntmued on Page 8)&#13;
J Y OCHA&#13;
ext We&#13;
an Interview wit&#13;
Muddy Waters&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
Sa "! the Newscope staff&#13;
Ytng that he had no&#13;
~_ceived notions of how&#13;
Eug side should develop&#13;
Ii lhene Norwood, the new Dea~&#13;
Soci e College of Science and&#13;
~~ty, stated in a brief inlnthlew&#13;
that he would first meet&#13;
lllak~acu}~ members before&#13;
Norwood Interested in Results&#13;
"Y ~ policy decisions.&#13;
!etti I can't really work efYvur&#13;
v; Y Unless you have met&#13;
their acuity and have learned&#13;
'°OCd :t and plans," Nor- Su . ~uen_tl~,. the Dean has&#13;
to set u e Divis~onal Chairman&#13;
lrith u/ r a senes of meetings ,.1 acuity&#13;
len~~d co~e to these to&#13;
His 0rwood said&#13;
d1rrer::~ents were markedly&#13;
Ila tern from the initial&#13;
~re~ of ~s predecessor' . lley, Wh acKmney. MacKinlline&#13;
O .~as appointed to the&#13;
IIine, J&gt;Ositton last year at this&#13;
Policy :;s,{esponsible for the&#13;
nstant Greatness"&#13;
that led to the attempted&#13;
purging of '%7 faculty members.&#13;
When popular resistance_ to&#13;
the purge made it impossible&#13;
for it to be carri_ed o~t,&#13;
MacKinney, along with. Vice&#13;
Chancellor Harris, resigned.&#13;
Norwood as Dean of . the&#13;
College of Science and SOCiety&#13;
will have the Chairmen _of the&#13;
Science, Social Scien~e,&#13;
Humanities and Education&#13;
divisions report to him.&#13;
He will be the College's&#13;
principal educati_onal and: administrative&#13;
officer, and will~&#13;
responsible for staff an program development,&#13;
program review, and budget.&#13;
Because of responsibilities_ at&#13;
UW-M where he was the acting&#13;
Dean ~f the Graduate School,&#13;
Norwood will only be at&#13;
Parkside part time till October&#13;
15 He will be spending three&#13;
&amp;ys a week at Parkside and&#13;
two at UW-M till then.&#13;
Norwood said he had no&#13;
priority policies he would ~e to see instituted. "It'd be mappropriate&#13;
to commenl It w°':11d&#13;
appear I had come with&#13;
preconceived ideas. I'd rather&#13;
talk to the faculty and students&#13;
first . ··One thing I have learned IS&#13;
that each institution is different,"&#13;
he said. la~, "_an~ if&#13;
anyone comes into an mstitution&#13;
with preconceived notions_ of&#13;
what to do without first&#13;
checking with the faculty and&#13;
students, he's go!ng to find&#13;
himself in difficulties.&#13;
"One uses these ~..of&#13;
ideas " he said. "One's job then&#13;
is to 'sort out those ideas ~t&#13;
can be insti~ted, and to expand&#13;
J£1'RY SOC'H4&#13;
CEA £UG£ £ ORWOOO&#13;
those policies that ha,· " ed&#13;
in the past.&#13;
"This does not mean I 11 not&#13;
be malting judgments," he&#13;
noted.&#13;
He sees part of his job a&#13;
making more effective the&#13;
Colle e administrative &#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
Pa,e2&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Certain members of the so&#13;
called left wing 01 the Student&#13;
Government are apparently&#13;
trying to sell out the student&#13;
body 01 Parkside to the Administration&#13;
They have&#13;
decided that alter rambling&#13;
around on extraneous issues&#13;
and causing the student&#13;
government to accomplish&#13;
little. that they must exemplily&#13;
their ideal, the administration&#13;
even further They hav~&#13;
deerded to resign m protest&#13;
because they cannot dissolve&#13;
the student government.&#13;
They are Irustrated by the&#13;
fact that no one wilt bow down to&#13;
them, since they are the only&#13;
true god in the university.&#13;
They are attempting to turn&#13;
the students' means of making a&#13;
mark in the uruversity into a&#13;
lal .club of im potence and&#13;
al 0 provide the administration&#13;
WIthan excuse lor not giving the&#13;
students thear due TIghts and&#13;
prmleges&#13;
Gary Adelsen,&#13;
tudent Senate Member&#13;
september %ti. Itt! .&#13;
Ed. Note: This letter was senl&#13;
to NEWSCOPE last week&#13;
shortly after the situation at&#13;
Parkside Village came to our&#13;
attention. It proved to be interesting&#13;
reading material.l&#13;
It has been brought to my&#13;
attention that there is a feeling&#13;
among certain students that&#13;
Parkside is not interested in&#13;
protecting the needs and interests&#13;
of those students who&#13;
are housed 0(( campus. In these&#13;
days when anti-establishmenl&#13;
attitudes run so rampant&#13;
throughout society, it is easy lor&#13;
those who wish to capitalize on&#13;
any situation to feed the flames&#13;
by making accusations against&#13;
those who are responsible for&#13;
administering programs.&#13;
In the August 16, 1971,issue 01&#13;
EWSCOPE there was a&#13;
lengthy article on the ellorts&#13;
made by the campus to secure&#13;
student housing. Since that time&#13;
Parkside Village has begun to&#13;
house a number of students who&#13;
have had to live under rather&#13;
trying conditions due to the lack&#13;
KENOSHA-RACINE&#13;
Complete&#13;
Poster&#13;
Gallery&#13;
also 'Love' and 'Soft Touch' greeting cards&#13;
PARK DRUGS&#13;
Just north of washIngton ROodon .,-... A . h ~~.... venue In K enos a&#13;
10% OCsco...t-lT Wln-l PARKSICE CAR'Tl-lAGE: OR . KTI 1.0.&#13;
01 completed lacilities. We have&#13;
always made it clear that the&#13;
relationship 01 the student&#13;
tenant and the private landlord&#13;
is a contractual relationship in&#13;
which the University is not a&#13;
party. We are, however, concerned&#13;
when students are living&#13;
under difficult circumstances&#13;
and therefore in cooperation&#13;
with the management 01&#13;
Parkside Village have begun&#13;
steps to mutually investigate&#13;
the problems that exist. Miss&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger 01 this office&#13;
along with the Student&#13;
Government President, the&#13;
editor 01 the NEWSCQPE and&#13;
Mr. Agendroth 01 ParksidSe&#13;
Village were able to discuss this&#13;
matter on Thursday, September&#13;
t6, t97t, and it is anticipated .&#13;
that out 01 this meeting&#13;
progress was made both in&#13;
execution and understanding.&#13;
Furthermore, Miss&#13;
Echelbarger has attempted to&#13;
contact as many 01 the student&#13;
residents as possible and it is&#13;
her feeling that although the&#13;
conditions may be somewhat&#13;
dillicult, those directly involved&#13;
are bearing up quite well and&#13;
displaying a relreshing sense 01&#13;
humor and a ce~tain esprit de&#13;
corps.&#13;
Iassure you that we are going&#13;
to maintain contact with this&#13;
specific situation as with any&#13;
others that may arise. Personally,&#13;
I feel that the construction&#13;
of student housing&#13;
must be considered as an asset&#13;
to the campus. It is my hoep&#13;
that you will join with us in'&#13;
encouraging lurther growth 01&#13;
this nature and the attraction of&#13;
more students to our campus. If&#13;
any student would like to&#13;
discusS this matter lurther with&#13;
the parties concerned, Isuggest&#13;
that the Ollice 01 Student&#13;
Services be contacted at the&#13;
earliest moment.&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Ass't Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Ford Foundation is&#13;
pleased to announce the continuation&#13;
of the following&#13;
programs for the 1972-1973&#13;
year:&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
American Indian ~"'Sbi", for&#13;
Doctoral Fell tude.iI&#13;
Black StUdents o"'sbi", for&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
M&#13;
. o....hi eXlcan America Ips br&#13;
Rican Students n alll\ Pu,,\&#13;
These .Iell~shi&#13;
are lor stUdents w~~&#13;
undertaken any ba....&#13;
prolessional stu:aduatt" Wish to pursue the Pt, iIId '10&#13;
enter careers .. D·IId"&#13;
ed ti In hi.- uca ion. Each .....&#13;
support lull-lime .~&#13;
five years conlin 1~lh&#13;
Fellow's SatiSlac~: IIJIOn '"&#13;
toward the Pb.D. IIvtIlI&#13;
InstrUCtions and&#13;
lorms may be ob",a~&#13;
The Ford Foundati IIIed rr..&#13;
43rd Street, N.... ~ 311 "-&#13;
York 10017.AppIicati0It. ""&#13;
three program. ....rur&#13;
complete. by Jan muat It&#13;
We will be h uary 10, l1li.&#13;
additional inl:~:a~ ~&#13;
request. IOn "Plo&#13;
Patricia A.Baduna"&#13;
DoctoralF~&#13;
SPECIAL EVENlll&#13;
SATURDAY.OCT,Z&#13;
Concert - John Den&#13;
p.m. KenoshaTrem: .-&#13;
School Auditorium. ~&#13;
mISSIOn 83.5(). TtcQq&#13;
available at tbe Studoa&#13;
Activities Office R.a ..&#13;
Tallent Hall. '&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.'&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.'&#13;
Octoberle.t - Weel:ead ~&#13;
atWelic and soclaI .-&#13;
CompetitioninClOII01oaItJ&#13;
Soccer, Golf, T ..&#13;
and Sailing. Alao, ..&#13;
brats at soccer .&#13;
Saturday alterDOOl ...&#13;
dances at !be SludIIII ,.&#13;
tivilies Building FridIJ ..&#13;
Saturday nigbts.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
WSU-Whitewater at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22&#13;
Recital - Harpsichord and&#13;
cello recital by Frances&#13;
Bedford and Harry Lantz,&#13;
UW-P music laculty, in 103&#13;
Greenquist, 8 p.m. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 2.&#13;
Film Feature film&#13;
:'Rosemary's Baby" at S p.m.&#13;
10 the Activities Building.&#13;
Adm. 75c.&#13;
SATURDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
Dance Sponsored by&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Activities&#13;
Building. 9-1 a.m. Adm.&#13;
charg~ __._&#13;
Get Acquointed Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change.&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAO&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVe.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658.2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE,&#13;
CAPITOl COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
~&#13;
Editorial Stall&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomarlire&#13;
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
Copy Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Photo Editor Jerry Socha&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
VALEO'S· .~&#13;
IZ&#13;
AND ITAU AN SAUSAGE: El::Ivf3ER5' -'&#13;
5lI2l-lltlt Ay... e Kenoslll &amp;&amp;J-III&#13;
Open 6 days 0 week from 4 p.m., closeel ~&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
North Central- at UW-P .. 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Soccer - UW-P vs. Wisconsin&#13;
Junior All-Stars at UW-P.&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 26&#13;
Concert- Milwaukee Fine Arts&#13;
Quartet sponsored by the&#13;
University Artists Concert&#13;
Series. 4 p.m., 103Greenquisl.&#13;
Adm. $1.00, students $.50,&#13;
children 12 and under free.&#13;
Film- "The Shop on Main&#13;
Street" sponsored by In·&#13;
tercollegiate Film Council. 7&#13;
p.m. Golden Ronde11e&#13;
Theatre, 16th &amp; Howe&#13;
Racine. Limited number of&#13;
tickets available at the Information&#13;
Center, second&#13;
floor. Tallent Hall.&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
.Bob Borchardt, James&#13;
Ca~per, Marc EiseQ, Kelly&#13;
Infusino, Jim Koloen Ken&#13;
Konkol '&#13;
Contributing Staff&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Mike Starr&#13;
Photography&#13;
Darrell Borger, Ricky Pazera&#13;
Production staff&#13;
Becky Ecklund Denise&#13;
Anastasia, Roberta' Williams&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
Connie Kinsella,Dave'"&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones&#13;
Editorial ..&#13;
Business ..&#13;
Newscope is an ~&#13;
student newspaper .......&#13;
by students 01theUai~&#13;
Wisconsin-Parksido&#13;
weekly except duriIC~&#13;
periods. Student oIliafIlI'.&#13;
vertising Ioods .... till til&#13;
source 01 revenue ltr :-&#13;
ope~ation 01 N~~ ..&#13;
copIes are P'~ II&#13;
distributed tbro..--"&#13;
Kenosha and Badat&#13;
mwlities 'as weD • ~::&#13;
sitv. F..... capiea are&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Page2 ''EWSCOPE, eptember2011971'&#13;
LETT-ERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
G ry del 0 n,&#13;
tu nt nate ~tember&#13;
Ed. Note: This letter was sent&#13;
to 'EWSCOPE last week&#13;
shortly after the situation at&#13;
Parkside Village came to our&#13;
attention. It proved to be interesting&#13;
reading material.)&#13;
It has been brought to my&#13;
attention that there is a feeling&#13;
among certain students that&#13;
Park. ide is not interested in&#13;
protecting the needs and interests&#13;
of those students who&#13;
are hou ed off campus. In these&#13;
day when anti-establishment&#13;
attitudes run so rampant&#13;
throughout society, it is easy for&#13;
those who wish to capitalize on&#13;
any situation to feed the names&#13;
by making accusations against&#13;
tho::;e who are responsible for&#13;
administering programs.&#13;
In the August 16, 1971, issue of&#13;
'EWSCOPE there was a&#13;
lengthy article on the efforts&#13;
made by the campus to secure&#13;
tudent housing Since that time&#13;
Park ide Village has begun to&#13;
house a number of students who&#13;
have had to live under rather&#13;
trying conditions due to the lack&#13;
Complete&#13;
Poster&#13;
Gallery&#13;
al o 'Love' and 'Soft Touch' greeting cards&#13;
PARK DRUGS&#13;
Just n&lt;&gt;fth of woshington Rood 00 """'..l A . ,/.f.'"" venue in K enosho&#13;
1'"- DISCXl.NTWITH P~ICE CAc-n_, ' rs I nAGE OR KTI 1.0 .&#13;
of completed facilities. We have&#13;
always made it clear that the&#13;
relationship of the student&#13;
tenant and the private landlord&#13;
is a contractual relationship in&#13;
which the University is not a&#13;
party. We are, however, concerned&#13;
when students are living&#13;
under difficult circumstances&#13;
and therefore in cooperation&#13;
with the management of&#13;
Parkside Village have begun&#13;
steps to mutually investigate&#13;
the problems that exist. Miss&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger of this office&#13;
along with the Student&#13;
Government President, the&#13;
editor of the NEWSCOPE and&#13;
Mr. Agendroth of Parksid8e&#13;
Village were able to discuss this&#13;
matter on Thursday, September&#13;
16, 1971, and it is anticipated .&#13;
that out of this meeting&#13;
progress was made both in&#13;
execution and understanding.&#13;
Furthermore, Miss&#13;
Echelbarger has attempted to&#13;
contact as many of the student&#13;
residents as possible and it is&#13;
her feeling that although the&#13;
conditions may be somewhat&#13;
difficult, those directly involved&#13;
are bearing up quite well and&#13;
displaying a refreshing sense of&#13;
humor and a ce~tain esprit de&#13;
corps. I assure you that we are going&#13;
to maintain contact with this&#13;
specific situation as with any&#13;
others that may arise. Personally,&#13;
I feel that the construction&#13;
of student housing&#13;
must be considered as an asset&#13;
to the campus. It is my hoep&#13;
that you will join with us in&#13;
encouraging further growth of&#13;
this nature and the attraction of&#13;
more students to our campus. If&#13;
any student would like to&#13;
discuss this matter further with&#13;
the parties concerned, I suggest&#13;
that the Office of Student&#13;
Services be contacted at the&#13;
earliest moment.&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Ass' t Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Ford Foundation is&#13;
pleased to announce the continuation&#13;
of the following&#13;
programs for the 1972-1973&#13;
year:&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
American Indian ;7ships r&#13;
Doctoral Fel Udents&#13;
Black Students lowship f&#13;
Doctoral Fell&#13;
Mexican Ameri owship&#13;
Rican Students can anr1&#13;
These . fello~shi&#13;
are for students ~ pr&#13;
undertaken any w O have&#13;
p~ofessional studf aduate&#13;
wish to pursue the Ph and&#13;
enter careers .. D. an! lei&#13;
education. Each in h&#13;
s.upport full-time si~~&amp;rarn&#13;
five years contingeni fct le&#13;
Fellow's satisfacto UP0n&#13;
toward the Ph.D.ry&#13;
Instructions and&#13;
forms may be obta~PPli&#13;
The Ford Foundar mec1 ~ 43rd Street N 10n, 320&#13;
York 10017 'Apel~ York,&#13;
th · P 1cations r ree programs or&#13;
complete.by Janu rnu t&#13;
We will be ha ary 10, I&#13;
additional infof PY to Pro.&#13;
request. rnation&#13;
Patricia A. Bac!unar.:&#13;
Doctoral Feu011&#13;
_CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
WSU-Whitewater at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22&#13;
Recital - Harpsichord and&#13;
cello recital by Frances&#13;
Bedford and Harry Lantz,&#13;
UW-P music faculty, in 103&#13;
Greenquist, 8 p.m. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
Film Feature film&#13;
'.'Rosemary's Baby" at 8 p.m.&#13;
m the Activities Building.&#13;
Adm. 75c.&#13;
SATURDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
Dance Sponsored by&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Activities&#13;
Building. 9-1 a.m. Adm.&#13;
charg~ ---&#13;
Get Acquainted Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil &amp; Filter Change,&#13;
PARKSIDE SH ELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH Ave..&#13;
654-9968&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
5~th St. a_t. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT&#13;
MILWAUKEE ,&#13;
Cross Country - UW-P vs.&#13;
North Central at UW-P. 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Soccer - UW-P vs. Wisconsin&#13;
Junior All-Stars at UW-P.&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 26&#13;
Concert- Milwaukee Fine Arts&#13;
Quartet sponsored by the&#13;
University Artists Concert&#13;
Series. 4 p.m., 103 Greenquist.&#13;
Adm. $1.00, students $.50,&#13;
children 12 and under free.&#13;
Film- "The Shop on Main&#13;
Street" sponsored by Intercollegiate&#13;
Film Council. 7&#13;
p.m. Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theatre, 16th &amp; Howe,&#13;
Racine. Limited number of&#13;
tickets available at · the Information&#13;
Center second&#13;
floor. T~llent Hall. '&#13;
Editorial Staff&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
F~ature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fme Arts Editor Bill Sorensen&#13;
. Copy Editor Larry Jones&#13;
Pho~o Editor Jerry Socha&#13;
Business Manager John Beck&#13;
Writing Staff&#13;
. Bob Borchardt, James&#13;
Ca~per, Marc Eisen, Kelly&#13;
Infusino, Jim Koloen Ken&#13;
Konkol '&#13;
Contributing Staff&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Mike Starr&#13;
Photography&#13;
Darrell Borger, Ricky Pazera&#13;
Production Staff&#13;
Becky Ecklund Denise&#13;
Anastasia, Roberta' Williams&#13;
SPECIAL EVE~TS&#13;
SA TURD A y, OCT. z&#13;
Concert - John De nver g&#13;
p.m. Kenosha Tremper' JU&#13;
S~ho?l Auditorium. A&#13;
m1s~1on $3.50. Tic&#13;
avB:il~?le at the Stud&#13;
Activities Office, Room&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.8&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 9&#13;
Octobe~fest _ Weekend rJ&#13;
. athletic and social e~&#13;
Competition in Cross Coun&#13;
Soccer, Golf, Tennis, R&#13;
and Sailing. Also, beer&#13;
brats at soccer game&#13;
Saturday afternoon 1&#13;
dances at the Student At,&#13;
tivities Building Friday&#13;
Saturday nights.&#13;
Business Staff&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Da\'e ·&#13;
Barb Scott&#13;
Phones&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Newscope is an ind&#13;
student newspaper co&#13;
by students of the Uni1t&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
weekly except during&#13;
periods. Student obl!med&#13;
vertising funds are !ht&#13;
source of revenue for&#13;
operation of Newscope '&#13;
copies are printed&#13;
distributed throughovl&#13;
Kenosha and Racine&#13;
munities as well as the t&#13;
sitv. Frer copies art 1&#13;
upon request.&#13;
VALEO'S . ~ {;&#13;
O&lt;EN 01NNERS·-""'"·" ...... ioo p.m.-tz:•&#13;
AND ITA\ . .JAN SAUSA.GE EDv13ERS,.&#13;
5021- IJth AVellle K•sba &amp;51-61,91&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mo¢&lt;rf5 &#13;
•&#13;
In Being, Busted&#13;
,.lbe Newscopestall&#13;
BYgen Konkol&#13;
ent complaint of past&#13;
•&#13;
A freq1l has been the abun-&#13;
"",est"fparking tickets given&#13;
doJlC" 0 our efficient Campus&#13;
.. I bYty Patrol. .&#13;
socun may feel that the force&#13;
Some I' a little over-zea o~s In&#13;
~ II' g violations, but the ~ In . . b . ,,- I is only doing Its JO In&#13;
J'~ding additional .revenue&#13;
~ theuw-system.&#13;
The person who gets busted&#13;
Ita violationha~ only himself&#13;
_ blame since It IS patently&#13;
rtS'J to avoid the fine.&#13;
IDthe past there was the&#13;
... eIy excuse of a lack of&#13;
~ space but since the&#13;
"",truetionof'the east parking&#13;
Illt thiS excused~sn' t carry as&#13;
""b weightas It used to.&#13;
SoParking areas are clearly ..;ned though, according to&#13;
!gt D. W.Krogh of the security&#13;
ItCf there has been troubie&#13;
lIith~me students ripping off&#13;
IIItsigns.But the lack of one of&#13;
tbo6e signs is no excuse. If you&#13;
park where you shouldn't, you'll&#13;
get.3 ticket, SIgns or no signs.&#13;
TIckets vary in cost&#13;
proportionally to the&#13;
seriousness of the offense. The&#13;
least you can get hit for is three&#13;
bucks for parking without a&#13;
perm~t or with an improper&#13;
permit.&#13;
Overtime parking, parking on&#13;
law?s. or "improper parking in&#13;
designated areas" will also get&#13;
you three. Stiffer fines include&#13;
five dollars for parking in a No&#13;
Parking area and ten dollars for&#13;
being on a sidewalk.&#13;
If you commit a violation that&#13;
is not covered above there is&#13;
also a blank space on the ticket&#13;
that can De filled in to cover any&#13;
contingency.&#13;
If you ignore a ticket it won't&#13;
go away. After five days the fine&#13;
doubles, after forty days you get&#13;
a warning letter, and at the end&#13;
of sixty days you get hauled to&#13;
the D.A. and he doesn't see&#13;
anyone for less than twenty&#13;
doliars.&#13;
A first offense could set you&#13;
hack forty dollar-s if not paid&#13;
promptly and a second will cost&#13;
you anywhere from fifty to onehundred&#13;
dollars!&#13;
If .you wish to appeal a&#13;
parking ticket you can do so&#13;
However, this must be do~&#13;
within five days by completing&#13;
a f~rm available at the Bursar's&#13;
o~ftce. There is no appeal after&#13;
flv~ days, From past exper~ence,&#13;
appeals are usually&#13;
demed.&#13;
During the first two weeks of&#13;
c~asses warning tickets were&#13;
given out. 4C9were distributed&#13;
as of the 16th. Starting this week&#13;
things will begin in earnest&#13;
Don't risk a ticket on the offchance&#13;
you may get away with&#13;
it. The Security Patrol has three&#13;
shifts that work around the&#13;
clock: They don't enjoy giving&#13;
out tickets but it makes them&#13;
mad when you break the law.&#13;
Students are not the only people&#13;
?eing socked, either. Sgt. Krogh&#13;
intends to see all violators -&#13;
faculty, construction workers&#13;
and visitors - busted alike.&#13;
Baroque Players Debut this Week&#13;
TheBaroque Players of the&#13;
l:Diversity of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will present a series of&#13;
tbree programs in the RacineKenosha&#13;
area beginning Sunday.&#13;
'M1e newly-formed group was&#13;
II'ganized by cellist" Harry&#13;
lAot, and harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford, both members&#13;
01 the music faculty at&#13;
PlrUide.They plan to invite&#13;
tIriIIIs guestartists to perform&#13;
..Ill them from time to time,&#13;
Guestartist for the initial&#13;
_rts will be flutist Frank&#13;
!lIIlho1z.&#13;
'\'be group played Sunday at&#13;
IIIe DominicanCollege Theater&#13;
lIaldayat tbe Carthage Colleg~&#13;
.... Room and wili Play&#13;
Wedoesday, Sept. 22, at&#13;
Parkside in Room 103&#13;
GreenquistHall to the Wond&#13;
Road Campus. Ali perbmances&#13;
are at 8 p.m. and are&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Suetbol"the guest artist, is&#13;
• matnnnental music teacher&#13;
~~ Racine Unified' School&#13;
..... m and has Iaught at&#13;
~western University. He&#13;
*'ied nute in New York with&#13;
8Im~ Ba:ron and is currently&#13;
~g WithIsrael Borouchoff&#13;
UW-MIIwaukee.He is a ;ember of the Racine and&#13;
lukeSha Symphony Or- :::a' and has appeared with&#13;
Lan...... ha Symphony.&#13;
at tz,. as associate professor&#13;
DlU;SIC at UW-P, is an in-&#13;
::::'OOSIlY.known cellist and&#13;
...... tor. A Widely-acclaimed&#13;
Ippea oand adjudicator, heh~s&#13;
Witb red ~sa performing artist&#13;
IiIooiesma]OrAmerican sym8lIdl&#13;
under the batons of&#13;
renOWnedconductors as&#13;
...&#13;
Leopoid Stokowski, Bruno&#13;
Walter, Dimitri Mitropolus, Sir&#13;
Thomas Beecham and Leonard&#13;
Bernstein. He founded the&#13;
Houston All-City Orchestra&#13;
which he conducted on a tour of&#13;
Europe in 1965 and of Mexico in&#13;
1967. He previously taught at&#13;
the University of Houston.&#13;
Mrs. Bedford taught harpsichord&#13;
and piano at Southern&#13;
Illinois University before&#13;
coming to Parkside where she is&#13;
an assistant professor of music.&#13;
She has studied with harpsichordists&#13;
Wesley K. Morgan&#13;
and Robert Conant and has&#13;
given a number of lecturerecitals.&#13;
She is soloist for the&#13;
harpsichord selections on two&#13;
recordings of Renaissance&#13;
music recorded as part of the&#13;
Historical Anthology of Music&#13;
published by Ihe Harvard&#13;
University Press. She will&#13;
perform on a two-manual&#13;
Flemish instrument copied&#13;
after a 1643 Ruckers harpsichord.&#13;
The program for the concerts&#13;
will include two trios, Bach's&#13;
Sonata for Flute and Continuo&#13;
and Handel's Sonata Vll for&#13;
Flute and Figured bass. Mrs.&#13;
Bedford and Suetholz will&#13;
perform Bach's Sonata Il for&#13;
CIavier and Flute and she and&#13;
Lantz will play Bach's Sonata I&#13;
for Clavier and Viola da gamba.&#13;
Mrs. Bedford will play two&#13;
harpsichord solos, The WellTempered&#13;
Clavier by Bach and&#13;
Le Tic-Tac-Choc au les&#13;
Maillotins by Couperin.&#13;
Sickle Cell Clinic Held&#13;
Sopt.m ..... zt • .,,, PE&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
GIVE US YOUR GRIPESI&#13;
Ifsthe&#13;
realthing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
.~&#13;
PaltJ&#13;
The first mass testing in Kenosha for Sickle Cell Anemia traits&#13;
was held Sunday, Sept. 19, at the Second Baptist Church, 3925- 32nd&#13;
Ave., from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. .&#13;
The tesing program, involving the taking of blood samples, IS&#13;
being sponsored by the Kenosha bra~ch of NAACP, With the&#13;
cooperation of the University of Wlsconsm-Parkslde and Sl.&#13;
Catherine's hospital. .&#13;
Samples were taken by lab tectmicians from the ~OSpl.lal.Dr. S. P&#13;
Datta, a geneticist who is an associate professor of hfe scl.ence at w-&#13;
, Parkside will perform the analysis at the UW-P laboratones.&#13;
The Parkside professor and his assistants have ~form~ so~e&#13;
400 such analyses during the past summer while wor.kmg _Ill&#13;
cooperation with tbe Racine NAACP branch and the Racme City&#13;
Health Department. .&#13;
Under the analysis used at UW-P, traits of other types of blood cell&#13;
disorders in addition to Sickle Cell can be detected.&#13;
.u.: 01 ni«:&#13;
AWRAL COSMETICS&#13;
NAWRAL GRAlNS&amp;CEREALS&#13;
UNSULPHURATED FRUIT.&#13;
HEALTH FOOD&#13;
6221· 22"'0 AV£t\tu£ KENOSHA PHON 52·41ti'&#13;
Grievance and&#13;
Clearing House&#13;
Committee&#13;
lIleetsthis thursday&#13;
Sept.25 at 4p.m. in room 103 Greenquist.&#13;
.111students Me invited to participate.&#13;
"Here's To Your Good Health"&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tue da and Thur da&#13;
I&#13;
9a.m.-4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
~ a bottle or&#13;
.0 a glass&#13;
....c: and&#13;
U a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
..&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNER Of HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND so&#13;
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Available 'or ftlt.lnlty Of SOloClly partles&#13;
Student Senate&#13;
will meet monday&#13;
Sept. 27 at 4p. m. in Greenquist 101.&#13;
AU studmts are requestuJ to attnld .&#13;
Interested O1IkJolters welcome.&#13;
In Being Busted&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
ol the Newscope staff&#13;
uent complaint of past&#13;
A fr~ has been the abun-&#13;
¢1\est I parking tickets given&#13;
ceb O our efficient Campus t y ~-,rity Patrol. ;:c•- may feel that the force&#13;
rne 1 . a little ov~r-zea ous m&#13;
ttin&amp; violations,_ bu_t t~e&#13;
Po I is only doing its Job m&#13;
patrJdin&amp; additional revenue&#13;
P'° the uw-system.&#13;
fi:tTbe person who gets ?usted&#13;
violation has only himself&#13;
fclb&amp;Jame since it is patently to f. r to avoid the me. ~ the past there was the&#13;
rtadv excuse of a lac_k of&#13;
partlng space, but since the&#13;
coostruction of the east parking&#13;
Joi this excuse doesn't carry as uch weight as it used to.&#13;
·o Parking areas are clearly&#13;
~ked though, according . to&#13;
D. W. Krogh of the security&#13;
llrte, there has been trouble&#13;
th ome students ripping off&#13;
igns. But the lack of one of&#13;
signs is no excuse. H you&#13;
park w~ere yo':1 shouldn't, you'll&#13;
get _a ticket, signs or no signs.&#13;
T1cke!s vary in cost&#13;
pr~portionally to the&#13;
seriousness of the offense. The&#13;
least you can get hit for is three&#13;
bucks for parking without a&#13;
perm~t or with an improper&#13;
permit.&#13;
Overtime parking, parking on&#13;
law~s, or "improper parking in&#13;
designated areas" will also get&#13;
you three. Stiffer fines include&#13;
five dollars for parking in a No&#13;
Parking area and ten dollars for&#13;
being on a sidewalk.&#13;
H you commit a violation that&#13;
is not covered above there is&#13;
also a blank space on the ticket&#13;
that canoe filled in to cover any&#13;
contingency.&#13;
If you ignore a ticket it won't&#13;
go away. After five days the fine&#13;
doubles, after forty days you get&#13;
a warning letter, and at the end&#13;
of sixty days you get hauled to&#13;
the D.A. and he doesn't see&#13;
anyone for less than twenty&#13;
dollars.&#13;
A first off(lnse could set you&#13;
back forty dollars if not paid&#13;
promptly and a second will co.st&#13;
you anywhere from fifty to one- hundred dollars!&#13;
If . you wish to appeal a&#13;
parking ticket you can do so&#13;
H?w~ver, this must be do~&#13;
w1thm five days by completing&#13;
a f~rm available at the Bursar'&#13;
o~f1ce. There is no appeal after&#13;
f1v: days. From past e -&#13;
per~ence, appeals are u ually&#13;
derued.&#13;
During the first two we s of&#13;
c~asses warning tickets were&#13;
given out. 409 were distributed&#13;
as_ of the 16th. Starting this week&#13;
thmgs will begin in earnest.&#13;
Don't risk a ticket on the off-&#13;
~ance you may get away with&#13;
it. The Security Patrol has three&#13;
shifts that work around the&#13;
clock: They don't enjoy giving&#13;
out tickets but it makes them&#13;
mad when you break the law.&#13;
Sh:1dents are not the only people&#13;
~mg socked, either. Sgt Krogh&#13;
mtends to see all violators -&#13;
faculty, construction workers&#13;
and visitors - busted alike.&#13;
Baroque Players Debut this Week&#13;
The Baroque Players of the&#13;
~mversity of WisconsinPark&#13;
ide will present a series of&#13;
ee programs in the RacineKenosha&#13;
area beginning Suny.&#13;
&#13;
The newly-formed group was&#13;
organized by cellist' Harry&#13;
Lantz and harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford, both m'emof&#13;
the music faculty at&#13;
Parkside. They plan to invite&#13;
YVIOUS guest artists to perform&#13;
th them from time to time.&#13;
Guest artist for the initial&#13;
Clllleerts will be flutist Frank&#13;
~lz.&#13;
The group played Sunday at&#13;
lbe Dominican College Theater,&#13;
ooday at the Carthage College&#13;
e Room and will Play&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 22, at&#13;
Park ide in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall tn the Wood&#13;
Road Campus. All performances&#13;
are at 8 p.m. and are&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
etholz, the guest artist, is&#13;
• lllStnunental music teacher&#13;
the Racine Unified· School&#13;
m and has taught at&#13;
Ncirthwestern University. He&#13;
lllldied flute in New York with&#13;
u~I Barron and is currently&#13;
ltludy1ng with Israel Borouchoff&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. He is a ;""her of the Racine and&#13;
allkesha Symphony Orlbe&#13;
lras and has appeared with&#13;
La Kenosha Symphony.&#13;
GI ntz, as associate professor&#13;
m~ic at UW-P, is an in-&#13;
~tionally-known cellist and&#13;
=:tor. A widely-acclaimed&#13;
lppea n and adjudicator, he has&#13;
th red ~s a performing artist&#13;
~ · lllaJor American symh&#13;
ies under the batons of&#13;
renowned conductors as&#13;
Leopold Stokowski, Bruno&#13;
Walter, Dimitri Mitropolus, Sir&#13;
Thomas Beecham and Leonard&#13;
Bernstein. He founded the&#13;
Houston All-City Orchestra&#13;
which he conducted on a tour of&#13;
Europe in 1965 and of Mexico in&#13;
1967. He previously taught at&#13;
the University of Houston.&#13;
Mrs. Bedford taught harpsichord&#13;
and piano at Southern&#13;
Illinois University before&#13;
coming to Parkside where she is&#13;
an assistant professor of music.&#13;
She has studied with harpsichordists&#13;
Wesley K. Morgan&#13;
and Robert Conant and has&#13;
given a nwnber of lecturerecitals.&#13;
She is soloist for the&#13;
harpsichord selections on two&#13;
recordings of Renaissance&#13;
music recorded as part of the&#13;
Historical l\nthology of . lusic&#13;
published by the Harvard&#13;
University Pres . She will&#13;
perform on a two-manual&#13;
Flemish instrument copied&#13;
after a 1643 Ruckers harpsichord.&#13;
&#13;
The program for the concert&#13;
will include two trios, Bach·&#13;
Sonata for Flute and Continuo&#13;
and Handel's Sonata VII for&#13;
Flute and Figured bass. . lrs.&#13;
Bedford and Suetholz will&#13;
perform Bach's Sonata II for&#13;
Clavier and Flute and he and&#13;
Lantz will play Bach's Sonata I&#13;
for Clavier and Viola da gamba .&#13;
Mrs. Bedford ·will play two&#13;
harpsichord solos, The WellTempered&#13;
Clavier by Bach and&#13;
Le Tic-Tac-Choe ou le&#13;
Maillotins by Couperin.&#13;
Sickle Cell Clinic Held&#13;
The first mass testing in Kenosha for Sickle Cell Anemia trai&#13;
was held Sunday, Sept. 19, at the Second Baptist Church, ;:-5 - 32nd&#13;
Ave., from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
The tesing program, involving the taking of blood amp! , i&#13;
being sponsored by the Kenosha bra~ch o_f AAC_P, \\1th th&#13;
cooperation of the University of W1sconsm-Park:1d and&#13;
Catherine's hospital. . Samples were taken by lab technicians from the ~o:;p1.tal. Dr. . P.&#13;
Datta, a geneticist who is an associate professor of hfe sc1_ence at&#13;
• Parkside, will perform the analysis at th~ UW-P laboratories.&#13;
The Parkside professor and his assistants have ~form~ o~&#13;
400 such analyses during the past summer while wor 1 . m&#13;
cooperation with the Racine NAACP branch and the Racme Cit)&#13;
Health Department. . . Under the analysis used at UW-P, traits of other type of blood cell&#13;
disorders in addition to Sickle Cell can be detected.&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
Grievance and&#13;
Clearing House&#13;
Committee&#13;
tneets this thursday&#13;
Sept. 25 at 4p.m. in room 103 Greenquist.&#13;
'1// student · · __ J • • -s are tnvtttJU to parltctpate.&#13;
GIVE US YOUR GRIPfil!&#13;
Ifs the&#13;
real thing. Coke.&#13;
,,_&#13;
!I&#13;
A&#13;
ATURAL GRA&#13;
'S LPH RAT. ·D FR&#13;
HEALTH OD&#13;
622 • 22._D A E J E O HA&#13;
Q)&#13;
u&#13;
·-&#13;
0&#13;
-C&#13;
"Here's To Your Good H I h"&#13;
.m.&#13;
a sch ner or&#13;
a ttle or&#13;
a glass&#13;
nd&#13;
u a steak sand h or&#13;
a brat ur t or&#13;
a beefburger&#13;
nd&#13;
trench rie r&#13;
p tato sal d&#13;
$1.1&#13;
The Brat So&#13;
'Th Brat i uh it t'&#13;
ORTH EST CO ER 0 IC A ,_ 4 A&#13;
open 9 .m.-12 p.m.&#13;
A 1llable 101 fr• I I or sororlt p rt&#13;
.. , ,&#13;
D 0&#13;
Student Senate&#13;
will m et m nda&#13;
Sept. 27 at 4p. m. in Greenqui t 101.&#13;
ALL students art requested to attend.&#13;
Interesud onloolters welcome. &#13;
Page. NEWSCOPE Septe .. ber N. Ifll •&#13;
Recycle this Newspaper&#13;
HIGH&#13;
RIBBING&#13;
THE RIBBED KNIT SHIRT.&#13;
Zipped high. Ribbed thick&#13;
and thin. A great casual&#13;
look that's very Fall'71-&#13;
very definitely Gear Box".&#13;
Brown or navy 100%&#13;
polyester knit. S·M·L.&#13;
$9&#13;
Richman BROTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
FRIDAY SEPT 24 e:o.oPM&#13;
ACTIVITIES e-UILDING&#13;
ADMISSION $.75&#13;
'lIwp'ond Wisconsin I.D ..&#13;
pollution&#13;
is also a&#13;
statB 01&#13;
mind.&#13;
We hear a lot about&#13;
pollution of air and water.&#13;
But what about mental&#13;
pollution? Could it affect&#13;
the environment we&#13;
live in?&#13;
Perhaps the answer to&#13;
dirty rivers and smoggy&#13;
air is purer thinking ...&#13;
more spiritual thinking&#13;
that eliminates the greed&#13;
and self-will that cloud&#13;
our thoughts.&#13;
To learn more about&#13;
fighting mental pollution,&#13;
come hear a talk by&#13;
Grace Bemis Curtis, a&#13;
teacher and practitioner&#13;
of Christian Science,&#13;
called "Let's Choose&#13;
Heaven Here."&#13;
CIlistian SOO1ce lecture&#13;
sp.rn. Monday sept. 27th'&#13;
The First Church of Christ, Scientist&#13;
9th and college g aclne ;&#13;
free par1l.ing and child care provided&#13;
~vldence by tne stale, The young man&#13;
toe crime read the book in question sho~ a(&#13;
he was to have committed the act. TheY beIort&#13;
blamed for psychologically inflaming ::.&#13;
action. Through the long overdramalizatiaa 10&#13;
simple counter and attack that plague the a(&#13;
scenes we can see that the boy is innocent OMIt&#13;
already know that he is impotent and thai .. "&#13;
. his college friends did it. DIll! a(&#13;
The court scenes are tiring and&#13;
overplaying simple feats of logic, but~&#13;
that set off the courtroom action are evfll ......&#13;
Superficiality dominates as we see .....&#13;
Corvettes and .'out of sight' clothing loaded~&#13;
the screen as If for advertising purposes ..&#13;
. The sensuality as art vs. pomogr~&#13;
pornography issue is insulted consistenUyby:&#13;
very methods used in the film. Quick, cbeop .....&#13;
ups of over·mammaried, highly cosmet'&#13;
were shown every two minutes or so asin;'~&#13;
to show hos "liberal" society had become.~&#13;
impression that one received is slighUydUf.:'&#13;
The treatment appeared much like a IIkio,&#13;
Spill~ne dream world with women subjegalod.&#13;
plastic clothes awaiting the time whenthey 'OIIlIId&#13;
.be allowed to be undressed and taken.&#13;
In the end the book is saved and P"'IMIIs1llr&#13;
the accused boy is good. Yvonne DeCarloillolIlII&#13;
to be the real author of the book and J. J. Jldwar&#13;
merely a pen name. Everyone lives happier etII&#13;
after.&#13;
Seldom is it that I do not enjoy re~ I&#13;
film. While many of the pictures I have _ caaId&#13;
have been improved in ways that are as obYiaaItI&#13;
many other viewers; but there is alW8)'l ~&#13;
enough to sit and watch until the filmwas flDiIIlel&#13;
This film is an example of hypocritical..&#13;
sorship of pornography for political eodI.&#13;
WDliams.-&#13;
PROBLEMS OF A PERFECT WORLD&#13;
THE SEVEN MINUTES Mike Barrett Wayne Maunder&#13;
Maggie Marianne McAndrew&#13;
Elmo Duncan Philip Carey&#13;
Luther Yerkes Jay C. Fhppen&#13;
Faye Osborn Edy WIlhams&#13;
Produced and Directed by Russ Meyer&#13;
with Yvonne DeCarlo as Constance cu~berl~nd&#13;
Russ Meyer takes the E out of Eros III a .fIlm&#13;
that attempts to render hypocritical censorship of&#13;
pornography for political ends. It is the first time&#13;
that Meyer has worked with a recogmzed hterary.&#13;
work. Previously he has turned out $100,000and&#13;
under sexploitive films that would have to be.&#13;
considered better fare than this current flick.&#13;
Recently the American dream film, Beyond the&#13;
Valley of the Dolls, was also layed waste by this&#13;
director's hand.&#13;
Irving Wallace, the author who wrote The&#13;
Seven Minutes has had two other films adapted for&#13;
the screen, The Chapman Report and The Prize.&#13;
He is also a former resident of Kenosha ... where&#13;
it seems he wrote for the Bradford High&#13;
newspaper and doubled as quite a tennis freak. He&#13;
eventually left for Madison to attend the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, where, if this film is any&#13;
example of his authorship, he could have experienced&#13;
more and imagined less. Albeit, the&#13;
rook has appeared on the best seller lists since its&#13;
release in September of 1969. All words spelled&#13;
correctly and the proper writing techniques applied.The&#13;
story ... An ideal New York publisher&#13;
contacts an ideal young lawyer so that he may&#13;
defend a novel called The Seven Minutes by the&#13;
fictional J. J. Jadway. A small bookstore and its&#13;
owner have been summoned for its sape and our&#13;
hero comes to the rescue.&#13;
An incidental rape is applied to the case as&#13;
Wed. Sept. ~2&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
CD&#13;
It&#13;
Magus Productions presents&#13;
BLUES NIGHT&#13;
MUDDY WATERS at&#13;
also Case High School Fiel&lt;JbollS'&#13;
JOHNNY YOUNG BLUES BAND Racine&#13;
Tickets available at:&#13;
E h 8:00-12:&#13;
30&#13;
art Works -Racine&#13;
The Daisy -Kenosha-Racine&#13;
Bidingers-Kenosh~-W aukee8an&#13;
J&amp;J'sT ape Center -Kenosha-Racine-Bulington&#13;
featuring&#13;
Pagt NEWSCOPE&#13;
Recycle th is&#13;
VERY DEFI NITELY&#13;
GEAR BOX&#13;
THE RIBBED KNIT SHIRT.&#13;
Zipped high. Ribbed thick&#13;
and thin. A great ca sual&#13;
look that's very Fall '71 -&#13;
very definitely Gear Box•.&#13;
Brown or navy 100 %&#13;
polyester kni t. S-M-l.&#13;
$9&#13;
Richman&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
eptember ZO, 1971 •&#13;
ewspaper&#13;
JohnCassavetes&#13;
FRI DA Y SEPT 24 8 : 00P M&#13;
ACTI V I T I ES e ·u1LDING&#13;
A DM I SS I ON$ 75&#13;
uwp·and Wisconsin t .D.&#13;
pollution&#13;
is also a&#13;
state of&#13;
mind.&#13;
We hear a lot about&#13;
pollution of air and water.&#13;
But what about mental&#13;
pollution? Could it affect&#13;
the environment we&#13;
live in?&#13;
Perhaps the answer to&#13;
dirty rivers and smoggy&#13;
air is purer thinking ...&#13;
more spiritual thinking&#13;
that eliminates the greed&#13;
and self-will that cloud&#13;
our thoughts.&#13;
To learn more about&#13;
fighting mental pollution,&#13;
come hear a talk by&#13;
Grace Bemis Curtis, a&#13;
teacher and practitioner&#13;
of Christian Science,&#13;
called " Let's Choose&#13;
Heaven Here."&#13;
Christian Science lecture&#13;
SP,m. MOnday 5_ept. 27th·&#13;
The First Church of Christ, Scientist&#13;
9th and college Racine -&#13;
Free parking and child care provided&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
PROBLEMS uF A PERFECT WORLD&#13;
TIIE SEVEN MINUTES&#13;
Mike Barrett Wayne Maunder&#13;
Maggie Marianne McAndrew&#13;
Elmo Duncan Philip Carey&#13;
Y k Jay C. Flippen&#13;
Luther er es d w·Ir&#13;
Faye Osborn E y l iams&#13;
Produced and Directed by Russ Meyer&#13;
with Yvonne DeCarlo as Constance Cu~berl~d&#13;
Russ Meyer takes the E out of Eros m a _film&#13;
that attempts to render hypocritical cens?rship of&#13;
pornography for political ends. It is t.J:ie fir~t time _&#13;
that Meyer has worked with a recognized literary,&#13;
work. Previously he has turned out $100,000 and&#13;
W1der sexploitive films that would have to _ be.&#13;
considered better fare than this current fbck.&#13;
Recently the American dream film, Beyond the&#13;
Valley of the Dolls, was also layed waste by this&#13;
director's hand. Irving Wallace, the author who wrote The&#13;
Seven Minutes has had two other films adapted for&#13;
the screen, The Chapman Report and The Prize.&#13;
He is also a former resident of Kenosha . . . where&#13;
it seems he wrote for the Bradford High&#13;
newspaper and doubled as quite a tennis freak. He&#13;
eventually left for Madison to attend the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, where, if this film is any&#13;
example of his authorship, he could have ex·&#13;
perienced more and imagined less. Albeit, the&#13;
book has appeared on the best seller lists since its&#13;
release in September of 1969. All words spelled&#13;
correctly and the proper writing techniques applied.&#13;
&#13;
The story . . . An ideal New York publisher&#13;
contacts an ideal yoW1g lawyer so that he may&#13;
defend a novel called The Seven Minutes by the&#13;
fictional J. J. Jadway. A small bookstore and its&#13;
owner have been summoned for its sape and our&#13;
hero comes to the rescue.&#13;
An incidental rape is applied to the case as&#13;
t!Vidence by tne state. The young man&#13;
the crime read the book in question sho a~CUst!d ~ he was to have committed the act. T~e Y ~fore&#13;
blamed for psychologically inflaming ;.&#13;
0rk IS&#13;
action. Through the long overdramaliza un&#13;
simple counter and attack that plague th ti~ ~ scenes we can see that_th~ boy is innocent~ co&#13;
already know that he 1s impotent and th t · . his college friends did it. a 011e ~&#13;
The court scenes are tiring and un .&#13;
overplaying simple feats of logic, but th:eah&#13;
that set off the courtroom action are even ~ Superficiality dominates as we see worse&#13;
Corvettes and _'out of sight' clothing load~OO\'t)&#13;
the screen as 1£ for advertising purposes &lt;XI&#13;
The sens~ality. a~ art vs. pornogr~IXl&#13;
pornography issue 1s insulted consistently b ~ 11&#13;
very methods used in t~e film. Quick, cheap t,&#13;
ups of over-mammaned, highly cosmetic&#13;
were shown every two minutes or so as in atte&#13;
!o show. hos "liberal" s~ciety had become ?&#13;
1mpress1on that one received is slightly differ&#13;
Th~ treatment appeare_d much like a Mi&#13;
Sp1ll~ne dream wo~l_d with women subjegated&#13;
plastic clothes awaiting the time when thev wow · be allowed to be undressed and taken. ·&#13;
In the end the book is saved and prognosi for&#13;
the accused boy is good. Yvonne Decarlo is ro&#13;
to be the real author of the book and J. J. Jadlla&#13;
merely a pen name. Everyone lives happier e •&#13;
after.&#13;
Seldom is it that I do not enjoy re\ie\1'"1 a&#13;
film. While many of the pictures I have seen could&#13;
have been improved in ways that are as obvio115&#13;
many other viewers; but there is always reasoo&#13;
enough to sit and watch until the film was finished.&#13;
This film is an example of hypocritical censorship&#13;
of pornography for political ends.&#13;
William So!'e115e1&#13;
~ Jf· The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
~&#13;
PRESEHTS .. . . IN CONCERT&#13;
JOHN DENVER&#13;
'TAKE ME HOME COUNTRY ROADS'&#13;
SAT. OCT. 2 . 8:00 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA TREMPER AUD.&#13;
RES. SEAT TICKETS $3-50&#13;
AVAILABLE:&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
Magus Productions presents&#13;
BLUES NIGHT&#13;
featuring Wed. Sept. 22&#13;
MUDDY WATERS at&#13;
also Case High School FieidhoU&#13;
JOHNNY YOUNG BLUES BAND Racine&#13;
Tickets available at_:&#13;
E h 8:00-12:30&#13;
art Works -Racine&#13;
The Daisy -Kenosha-Racine&#13;
Bidingers-Kenosh~-W aukee$an&#13;
]&amp; J'sT ape Center -Kenosha-Racine-Bulington &#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
If OIYs with the Enemy&#13;
,...: . lIichlrd oudman&#13;
ttP'6. . Liverighl ($5.95).&#13;
~r. ith the Enemy IS one of&#13;
• p.y' w I occasionally pick out&#13;
".. bOQI&lt;sboOk- i'd ordered hadn't&#13;
•..,1&gt; Ule :I • •&#13;
~a-:ved eenie, meeme, ml~~, a&#13;
ttl am . h moment's [ndeciston.&#13;
""r of tc:ntributing, if not the&#13;
"olher f tor was the length of 40&#13;
~ ac 181 pages which proved to&#13;
s a mere&#13;
pay,. k reading.&#13;
qUJ~ urnalism, old journalism as&#13;
,0\11 JO to the new, where words have&#13;
~ definitions, nuance and&#13;
,ho ..ary buried deep beneath the&#13;
""boIl~ the facts, stright dope: no&#13;
fo&lt;Il..g&#13;
concrete writing. And JourlIIIs!U\s&#13;
what 40 Days is all about.&#13;
~.n is writing an extended Tartickle&#13;
~behind the scenes look at riC Y&#13;
~senemy, be tells a 40 day story of&#13;
.. ever lovin A:latIcS, them&#13;
olutionists what the l\;10ngols,&#13;
rtf French, and Americans so&#13;
:C:'left unbeaten. Can't impede&#13;
........ noway. '~d Dudman is the Washington&#13;
... uchief of the St. Louis Dispatch,&#13;
lIlI! two other "internatIOnal Jour-&#13;
~"Hblundered into no man's land&#13;
_ if tb8t term can be borrowed from&#13;
te(jd conventional wars, where battle&#13;
..... were weB-defined, combatants&#13;
_ wore uniforms, and where most&#13;
,..... couldagree on who were friends&#13;
lI!.bo were enemies." The date of the&#13;
tree joUrnalists' capture was May 7,&#13;
IfIl six days after Nixon's an-&#13;
_menl of the Cambodian inBy&#13;
BobBorchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
t1lAH HEEP - "LOOK AT&#13;
YOIJRSELF"&#13;
IItmIry SRM 1 614&#13;
IIIl Hensley - Organ, Piano,&#13;
Gtitar, Accoustical Guitar&#13;
IIId Vocals&#13;
M Box - Lead Guitar, AcI'QIlical&#13;
Guitar&#13;
~ Byron - Lead Vocal&#13;
PIlI Newson - Bass&#13;
IIiIClerk - Druns&#13;
lodIering through John&#13;
Donor'. album last .week wa~&#13;
• aperience somewhat akin&#13;
-cursion.&#13;
At first suspected of being CIA&#13;
ag~nts, the three reporters feared for&#13;
their h~es as they were led blindfolded&#13;
deeper mto the Cambodian junble, after&#13;
40 days tbey were cleared as journalists&#13;
.and sent back to their friends. Between&#13;
day number one and day number forty&#13;
they were given the opportunity to&#13;
Observ~ the "enemy" first hand, liVing&#13;
Sop/ ........ zt. Ii'll PaIrS&#13;
strategy was to bomb the hell out d the&#13;
countrySide. Hai, the North Vietnamese&#13;
revolutionary who was delegated the&#13;
responsibilily for the safety olthe three&#13;
suspected CIA agents, said that the&#13;
Americans go where they want, "We&#13;
just stay out of their way_" They drop&#13;
many bombs and hit oothing, "hen the)'&#13;
do hit something, they are of ....&#13;
peasant houses.&#13;
with tbem, ealing with them, telling&#13;
each other about their pasts and finally&#13;
coming to laugh together.&#13;
And so while we students closed the&#13;
campuses down and Kent State.became&#13;
a symbol of our national confusion&#13;
Dudman and two younger journalis~&#13;
were captives of the "enemy", liVing&#13;
off the land, and keeping their sarongs&#13;
over their heads so as not to aroUse the&#13;
wrath of peasants whose families had&#13;
been torn apart by Nixon's B52's and&#13;
helicopter gunsbips.&#13;
And what was the inside view of the&#13;
Cambodian incursion? It basically&#13;
consists of fleeing the B52s, the gunships,&#13;
watcbing the flares reflecting off&#13;
rice paddies at night, listening for reCOD&#13;
planes, and passing many boring hours&#13;
by exercising, playing chess with a&#13;
hand made set and answering interrogators'&#13;
questionsj what are you&#13;
doing here, who are you. The American&#13;
album, that's exactly what tbey&#13;
do.&#13;
Heep's sound is built basically&#13;
. around the simultaneous guitar&#13;
work of Mick Box and !Cen&#13;
Hensely, wbo if they badn't&#13;
before, have proven their worth&#13;
on both electric and sensitive&#13;
accoustic guitar. They combine&#13;
to lay a concrete background,&#13;
perfectly setting up anything&#13;
that leaves the melody for a ride&#13;
of its own, while whoever it is or&#13;
the moog takes some very interesting&#13;
~rips. He seems to be&#13;
able to use it as an instrument&#13;
The point is made that Nixon's claim&#13;
that Lon 'ol's government \loa&#13;
popularly supported is a lie. Who fed&#13;
the guerillas, the people: who sheltered&#13;
them, the people; "ho paId for the food,&#13;
the guerillas. Dodman makes one thing&#13;
perfectly clear; the guerillas are the&#13;
people's chosen aIl,es, and that unltke&#13;
the ARVN the guerillas are careful oot&#13;
to alienate the pesants.&#13;
Another ioteresting poinlbroughl out&#13;
in the book is the Viet Gong aod ,-orth&#13;
Vietnamese personal opinion that the&#13;
Cambodian Liberation Front could 001&#13;
have put up any kind of battle agalDSl&#13;
the Americans and the AR\'N with thelr&#13;
help. Hai sllys thai the Cambodians&#13;
have not been lighting for 25 years, they&#13;
have much to learn. One of the lIungs&#13;
they must learn, according to Hal,&#13;
the fact that there are good and bad&#13;
Americans, and lbat the American&#13;
government is not the same as the&#13;
Amenan people On the finl day of&#13;
thetr aptiVlly the JOumali to' apton&#13;
had to sa" e lbtm from purnw&#13;
'meBed to death by a!Cry cambodian&#13;
peasants who sur,,,ed the B52 r cis&#13;
Dudman "as trnpr ed by&#13;
guerilla d ree of cernmnm&#13;
their respect for their aU.&#13;
pelbants II" l!leir country&#13;
ere flghling for lhe AR •&#13;
ran ack d Cambod an boo&#13;
guerillas paId for the r pli&#13;
respeered the pma yof lhelf h&#13;
The lory of th r captor captl, tty&#13;
and e\ ent ua I me r &lt;Is much Ii&#13;
Iicuoo. thll~S "or out rl U)- and&#13;
the human capaCl'y for com on.&#13;
understanding and Crlendsl'llp "'. sho,.,. to be shanod t'qually among&#13;
aptor and apt"e alike E ry1lod)&#13;
a good guy It' th od5Ollltday ""'III&#13;
meet again under dlff~n1 ha pler'&#13;
Clf'OJms~nces roulln&#13;
.... Da) 'MIlch lh~ f:nem) ..an In-&#13;
...... ting bit of)OUnUl m, II by no&#13;
meam. preotenIJow. 10 • nor ~t&#13;
c:realJve Dudm-an is no .1 tl or&#13;
Wolfe he IS 52 un old, I ear&#13;
JOUrnall l "ho f"lally got the P h&#13;
was wa11Jng for Th \-an n&#13;
di\"lduals In\'oh:ed are ad qUill I)&#13;
rsonahzed I h l!lelr .dI •".&#13;
eraci . the "plot' c 01&gt; nawrally&#13;
and aU 10 all ould mak good m t for&#13;
a no,e1 Perhapo "'hat mll5t d P'&#13;
pomtmgabout I boc*: or rather ~ at&#13;
Iea,e. one unaffected, I&gt; lhe f&#13;
that thl&gt; .xaclly h t '" e&#13;
Keep the ",on! enemy In qu&#13;
au:rLt-)' r lhto 8 ,. rl. f.:! ..&#13;
tree{. I\.env ha.&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
DOWN"f.QWN KENOSHA&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Get Together&#13;
Save4~&#13;
on Kosmetics&#13;
Exciting and&#13;
Glamorus&#13;
516 \lollulllt'llt quar&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Poor Boy BOOTS&#13;
5i••• 711-12&#13;
Poloton and Mushroom&#13;
Bulled Suck, olural&#13;
Crepe oUI-sol.&#13;
Career opportunity&#13;
Unlimited earning&#13;
potential&#13;
Flexible working&#13;
schedule&#13;
MEETING&#13;
thursday sept 23&#13;
room 110 gre.nquilt&#13;
lo_am-tPm&#13;
contact Mr. Teub.rt It&#13;
stud.nt emplOyment&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Interplanetary&#13;
Inc.&#13;
'Kosmetics for.&#13;
communities&#13;
of the future'&#13;
Musie Committee presents&#13;
CHARLIE MU.§§ELWHITE&#13;
BLUES BAND&#13;
also appearing Spri1rgbackJames&#13;
SEPTEMBER 22 1:30 PM&#13;
WM UNICN BALLROOM&#13;
Tickenlillie SfUdent Alhirs oftu:e, plln Hall&#13;
- daoo1ng a quart of maple and not a novelty. David Byron&#13;
~. Since modern medicine on vocals is stylistically&#13;
'" to devise the mental predictabie, adopting a choppy&#13;
~rt of the stomach Bee Gee's vibrato, but that can&#13;
~Ille is left to his own be overlooked for its overall&#13;
;;;;;:" to alleviate the at- effect. He's in tune, in time, and&#13;
'II . Fortunately the cure adequately covers the spect:~m&#13;
-....,hund in a double-shot of from all out hollers to sensitive&#13;
iii;""'bylabeled Mercury SRM ballads. Newton (bass) and&#13;
.... the makers of Uriah Clark (drums) do nothing to&#13;
.... gUarant,.d to remedy the stand out, but quite a few people&#13;
~ and physical distress will argue that it's preCIsely thiS&#13;
Sebb ,ton by too much Denver characteristic that marks a&#13;
Ieid ~nl or Teresa Brewer: good rhythm section. .&#13;
I,"lthout prescription. Dissecting the album song by&#13;
'- IS &amp;ratified in more ways song wouldn't serve much&#13;
'Uor~e to ,hear, Heep's latest purpose, since they're all good&#13;
~. Whlie It might be and all basically the same;, But&#13;
IIbo IZing to say that one the high point has to be One&#13;
~ro~es a trend, it July Morning", the one tun~&#13;
DlO&lt;!Jess '"stills bope in tbe the group' seems to really credit&#13;
~ ate future of rock on the liner notes. If they woul?&#13;
lbono,; g. In a time of sac- bave shaved a bit off the end It&#13;
~phOnIes, the record is would have been improved, but&#13;
"" h bul prelentious. In it still is a credit to the gro.up&#13;
lilt. thonest Simplicity they botb as writers and lOW&#13;
bow • Complicated problem strumentalists. . I&#13;
lIod to write and perform All in all, Uriah Heep ;.'I&#13;
s&#13;
'iIh ~USIC. Utilizing charts remind you happily of the Y&#13;
~I,~he notes of tbe "in- hefore the onslought of the ham&#13;
It Put glro,ups,they are free groups a time when four or hve&#13;
~. . Wlce as much 'at the very least, ~"'neted men, ld t IIid lor I energy behind it adequately amplified, cOO ge&#13;
he entire stretch of the u on sta e and raise helL 1&#13;
Two Bands F~r The Price Of One(plus a ~) Sept. 25th&#13;
52S&#13;
(eDaeap)&#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
40 Days with the Enemy&#13;
~ : . Richard Dudman&#13;
of . Liveright ($5.95).&#13;
,-bJlSher, 'th the Enemy 1s one of&#13;
It oays w\ occasionally pick out&#13;
t,o0kS bo&lt;&gt;'·~ i'd ordered hadn't ,.,p the "" . . """.ved eenie, meeru~, m1~~' a t arri , h moment's mdec1s1on .&#13;
r of t :ntributing, if not the&#13;
A other r~ctor was the length of 40&#13;
181 pages which proved to&#13;
a mere&#13;
Y • k reading.&#13;
q111: urnalism, old journalism as&#13;
AA JO to the new, where words have&#13;
,ed definitions, nuance and uon_a ry buried deep beneath the&#13;
~ 1&#13;
: the facts, stright dope! no&#13;
, -~ concrete writing. And Jour-&#13;
'. what 4o Days is all about. · IS ed til . 5 writing an extend ar c e&#13;
~ ~nd the scenes look at Tricky&#13;
, enemy, he tells a ~o ~ay story of&#13;
ever lovin A~iatlcs, them&#13;
olutionists what the ~ongols,&#13;
If' ese French, and Americans so&#13;
i'3-\1y 'left unbeaten. Can't impede&#13;
55 no way.&#13;
Ri(hard Dudman is the Washington&#13;
u chief of the St. Loui~ Disp~tch,&#13;
and two other "international Jour-&#13;
" "blundered into no man's land&#13;
_ that term can be borrowed from&#13;
old conventional wars, where battle&#13;
were well-defined, combatants&#13;
'v wore uniforms, and where most&#13;
· could agree on who were friends&#13;
ho were enemies." The date of the&#13;
JOurnalists' capture was May 7,&#13;
ix days after Nixon's anment&#13;
of the Cambodian in-&#13;
-cursion.&#13;
At first suspected of being CIA&#13;
ag~n~, the three reporters feared for&#13;
their h~es as they were led blindfolded&#13;
deeper into the Cambodian junble after&#13;
40 days they were cleared as jour~alists&#13;
.and sent back to their friends. Between&#13;
day number one and day number forty&#13;
they were given the opportunity to&#13;
observe the "enemy" first hand, living&#13;
with them, eating with them, telling&#13;
each other about their pasts and finally&#13;
coming to laugh together .&#13;
And so while we students closed the&#13;
campuses down and Kent State.became&#13;
a symbol of our national confusion&#13;
Dudman and two younger journalis~&#13;
were captives of the "enemy", living&#13;
off the land, and keeping their sarongs&#13;
over their heads so as not to arouse the&#13;
wrath of peasants whose families had&#13;
been torn apart by Nixon's B52's and&#13;
helicopter gunships.&#13;
And what was the inside view of the&#13;
Cambodian incursion? It basically&#13;
consists of fleeing the B52s, the gunships,&#13;
watching the flares reflecting off&#13;
rice paddies at night, listening for recon&#13;
planes, and passing many boring hours&#13;
by exercising, playing chess with a&#13;
hand made set and answering interrogators'&#13;
questions; what are you&#13;
doing here, who are you. The American&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
album, that's exactly what they&#13;
do.&#13;
Heep's sound is built basically l 1\11 HEEP - "LOOK AT&#13;
Yorn ELF"&#13;
ury SRM 1 614&#13;
Hensley - Organ, Piano,&#13;
G tar, Accoustical Guitar&#13;
and Vocals&#13;
. around the simultaneous guitar&#13;
work of Mick Box and l:{en&#13;
Hensely, who if they hadn_' t&#13;
before, have proven their worth&#13;
on both electric and sensitive&#13;
accoustic guitar. They combine&#13;
to lay a concrete background,&#13;
perfectly setting up anything&#13;
that leaves the melody for a ride&#13;
of its own, while whoever it is or&#13;
the moog takes some very interesting&#13;
trips. He seems to be&#13;
able to use it as an instrument&#13;
Discount Prices on&#13;
Records and Tapes&#13;
Box - Lead Guitar, Actical&#13;
Guitar&#13;
vid Byron - Lead Vocal&#13;
Pl Newson - Bass&#13;
Clark - Druns&#13;
ering through John&#13;
~ r's albwn last week was&#13;
experience some:.Vhat aki~&#13;
'- downing a quart of maple&#13;
· Since modern medicine&#13;
Yet to devise the mental&#13;
lerpart of the stomach , one is left to his own&#13;
ces to alleviate the af.&#13;
te. Fortunately the cure&#13;
found in a double-shot of&#13;
1 e labeled Mercury SRM&#13;
4 by the makers of Uriah&#13;
' guarant:!ed to remedy the&#13;
lal and physical distress&#13;
ti I on by too much Denver,&#13;
v.·an. or Teresa Brewer. 1thoul prescription.&#13;
gratified in rnore ways&#13;
for~e lo _hear Heep's latest&#13;
~-~hile it might be&#13;
tung to say that one&#13;
Ill Proves a trend it&#13;
llledeless instills hope~ the&#13;
~ate future of rock&#13;
· g. In a time of sac-&#13;
. phonies, the record is&#13;
~ but ~retentious. In e lh onest simplicity they&#13;
e complicated problem lo w ·t . n e and perform rnus1c ut·1· . hau ' l 1z1ng charts&#13;
lual}he notes of the "inPut&#13;
gr~ps, they are free&#13;
tr- twice as much ~ ror '~led energy behind it&#13;
he entire stretch of the&#13;
and not a novelty. David Byron&#13;
on vocals is stylistically&#13;
predictable, adopting a choppy&#13;
Bee Gee's vibrato, but that can&#13;
be overlooked for its overall&#13;
effect. He's in tune, in time, and&#13;
adequately covers the spec~~m&#13;
from all out hollers to sensitive&#13;
ballads. Newton (bass) and&#13;
Clark ( drums) do nothing to&#13;
stand out, but quite a fe_w peop~e&#13;
will argue that it's precisely this&#13;
characteristic that marks a&#13;
good rhythm section. .&#13;
Dissecting the album song by&#13;
song wouldn't serve much&#13;
purpose, since they're all good&#13;
and all basically the same;, But&#13;
the high point has to be One&#13;
July Morning" ' the one tune&#13;
the group· seems to really credit&#13;
on the liner notes. If they wot-~&#13;
have shaved a bit off the en I&#13;
would have been improved, but&#13;
it still is a credit to the gr~up&#13;
both as writers and instrumentalists.&#13;
ill&#13;
All in all, Uriah Heep w s&#13;
remind you happily of the day&#13;
before the onslaught of the h~m&#13;
groups a time when four or five , at the very least,&#13;
:a~~ately amplified, could get&#13;
u on sta e and raise hell.&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
D Ol'iNT-OWN KENOSHA&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Get Together&#13;
Save 4&lt;1'/o&#13;
on Kosmetics&#13;
Exciting and&#13;
G/amoros&#13;
Career opportunity&#13;
Un/imitrd eanzing&#13;
potential&#13;
Flexible working&#13;
schedule&#13;
MEETING&#13;
thursday sept 23&#13;
room 110 greenquist&#13;
1 o-am-apm&#13;
contact M'· Teubert at&#13;
student employment&#13;
KOSCOT&#13;
Interplanetary&#13;
Inc.&#13;
'Kosmetics for .&#13;
communities&#13;
of the future'&#13;
Poor oy&#13;
SitH 1 •l2 Polo an and&#13;
Bu f d Bue&#13;
Crep ou -,o&#13;
Music Committee pr&#13;
CHARLI&#13;
LUE&#13;
(c&#13;
A&#13;
al o appearing 1Jringba&#13;
SEPTEMBER 22 7:3&#13;
WM UNION ALL&#13;
Of&#13;
Jam&#13;
A rs Ofti ce rail ent H I&#13;
Two Bands For The Price Of One(plus a ¼) Sept. 25th &#13;
Pale&amp; NEWSCOPE Seplember 20,1971&#13;
I I&#13;
All John Denver Albums&#13;
list price SS.98&#13;
our price S4.97&#13;
Available at&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE&#13;
ADVERTISERS&#13;
the&#13;
roommate&#13;
that turns&#13;
you on.&#13;
Simulated TV Picture&#13;
Slim-aod-trim Portable TV-model 5003. Photosharp&#13;
9" diagonal measure pictures. Great extra-value&#13;
leatures. Like up-front secondary controls, pre-set VH F&#13;
fine tUning. jack for optional earphone. Even a removable&#13;
sun shield lorglare-Iree viewing in brightly lighted&#13;
or sun-filled rooms. Telescoping antenna and carrying&#13;
handle give true portability. It's just one 01 many in the&#13;
Magnavox line of value-packed roommates-for home&#13;
or away. Component systems and S89&#13;
accessories.radios. tape recorder~ / 95&#13;
players. portable TV and stereo.&#13;
lWIagnav"o~&#13;
Joerndt &amp; Ventura Inc.&#13;
Downtown 'Kenosha 654·3559&#13;
thus far.&#13;
"He gives us maturity and I&#13;
Lawson said. "It's more leadership ~ ..&#13;
now but later on he'll be more vOC8\ ,&#13;
"The guys on the team respect hbn&#13;
for what he's done but also for the lJ"rsoa'*- 00Ij&#13;
What he's done is nothing short of . be il&#13;
His best for 5,000 meters is 14:10.2, "'IUal~\lreooiv,&#13;
mile in the mid 13:30~and on a par With • u...&#13;
notch collegIans. His 29:55.6 for 10000IIlost ~&#13;
came in the Asian Games and ranks hun ~&#13;
NAIA's best at that distance. And aU tha'Oilblllo&#13;
while running barefoot. t be did&#13;
But the marathon is to he his&#13;
although he's never run the 26 D1ileev:- IIId&#13;
grind, Rosa is confident. I ~&#13;
. "I'm here to prepare for the 01 '"&#13;
said. "1 think Coach Lawson can help~ _&#13;
for the marathon. I'm just trying todom.~&#13;
him." ,-.,&#13;
Rosa Paces Harriers&#13;
----....., Soccer Team Inexperienc&#13;
The Ranger's soccer game&#13;
scheduled for last Saturday was&#13;
cancelled, but Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny was not too disappointed&#13;
because four of his&#13;
players were injured.&#13;
The first game now wili be&#13;
Saturday at home against the&#13;
Wisconsin Junior All Stars, a&#13;
team which should prove quite&#13;
(ormidable.&#13;
I\l~wscope talked to Martiny&#13;
at a practice session and asked&#13;
him how practices have been so&#13;
far: "They have been good&#13;
except that there have been so&#13;
many injuries," he said.&#13;
Martiny also expressed the&#13;
Special buttons ad~ilting persons to the Oct. 6-9 ~&#13;
celebration at Parkside· are now on sale for $.50at the O8IlIaa AtWetics and through the sponsoring German ~~uba~ VlIIIIl7 •&#13;
The bultons, which are similar to the smile ~&#13;
sweeping the nation, wili admit the bearers (or wear::1iII.&#13;
toberfest activities, which include a German style wiD .. 1t&#13;
rugby match, soccer games and other events. The buttllDS ....&#13;
good for $.50 off the $1.50admission to the Saturday mght.....&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
, .d oss country prospects&#13;
IfWisconsin-parksl. e cr what one runner has&#13;
are charted on the baSIS 0 oin to be big winners&#13;
done, then tbe Rangers adreg m ~ili start to unfold&#13;
and the j-aallzation of a rea&#13;
for Lucian Ro~a. h been the number one&#13;
Ceylon native Rosa as k Is thus far and&#13;
gh all UW-P wor ou . k man throu 'letting up on the qurc&#13;
shows no sign that hh~11 ::e team leader in his first&#13;
pacethathasmade irn&#13;
season. di . utive distance phenom, a&#13;
And for the mm. d with competition -&#13;
dream that he hO':at~ ~~ the marathon at the&#13;
and posSibly a m t year might just be&#13;
Munich OlympICS nex&#13;
beginning'&#13;
thl uc director Tom Rosandich and&#13;
But a e I h Bob Lawson knew&#13;
track and crOSScountry ~oac t December when&#13;
all these things were possible las . . lng Rosaexpressed interest in parksld~ :;;e~::r~ Asian Games titles at 5,000 and 1 , ch bout ibe&#13;
"We talked with him and his C08k&#13;
'&#13;
d&#13;
a Lawson&#13;
. ilit f coming to Par SI e, possibi 1 Y 0 d th gh on it when we got&#13;
recalled. "Tom followe r~~&#13;
back and nOWRosa's here. . Rosa&#13;
The Ceylonese were anxious to have. f&#13;
attend school in the United States to tram. 0:&#13;
Munich, but Rosa, a b.usiness ~~n:~e:oe~~ ~~~Ot~&#13;
is here for the educatIOn as we a .&#13;
return to business in Ceylon when his college days&#13;
are done. hi nd what&#13;
But the big thing going for im, a&#13;
. ts trai Ing and both brought him to Parkside, IS rami, .,&#13;
Rosa and the University seem to be benefIttmg&#13;
famous&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - ,12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
_ RIBS _ SPAGHOTI - CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI _ RAViOLI - LA SAGNA&#13;
_SEA FOOD - SANDWICHES&#13;
CARlY -OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU IUHG ... WE BRING"&#13;
657·9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
And his best may be good enough10...&#13;
anything he runs in, Lawson said, allhoup..&#13;
cedin,g that hili running may causesome~&#13;
for Rosa. --&#13;
"He's never run cross country before&#13;
never run on hills," Lawson pointed 0Il~-&#13;
small (5-6, 101 lbs.) and needs a lot .............&#13;
strength." •&#13;
One thing he doesn't need work 00 ia '"-&#13;
ship .. He's found plenty of that, esJM!CiaIIJ"-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Joanis of Kl!IIOIba,&#13;
. have taken him into their home for his time:&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
need for conditioolng1DlI1II&#13;
practices so far havesened&#13;
help in this vital area.&#13;
In previeWing the IIpIlllIIioa&#13;
season Martiny predieta •&#13;
miracles. "This is II ..&#13;
perienced team IryiDg to .-&#13;
experience," he said.&#13;
Martiny termed the ....&#13;
very tough Withauch .&#13;
UW-Green Bay, OhIo ...&#13;
Notre Dame and Quiaq II II&#13;
faced. On October I VI&#13;
Madison will be played ...&#13;
In looking at the IIdIIdaII&#13;
appears that much 01tile •&#13;
perienee that thele8mIO"'"&#13;
needs will be gaIneII _&#13;
defeats.&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
Recycle this Paper&#13;
-&#13;
are you offended by nudltr'&#13;
if not, stop in.&#13;
Complete selection&#13;
dise of con~emporary adult mercbafl&#13;
SPEf'AL&#13;
The Adult. Bookstore jne&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Rae ~&#13;
15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D._&#13;
r ge ~E\\' OPE eptember .o. 1971&#13;
I I&#13;
All John Denver Albums&#13;
list price ss. 98&#13;
our price s4_ 97&#13;
Available at&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE&#13;
ADVERTISERS&#13;
the&#13;
roommate&#13;
that turns&#13;
you on.&#13;
S,mulared TV P,crure&#13;
Slim-and-trim Portable TV-model 5003. Photoharp&#13;
9• diagonal measure pictures. Great extra-value&#13;
f atures. Li e up-front secondary controls, pre-set VHF&#13;
fine tuning, jack for optional earphone. Even a removable&#13;
sun shield for glare-free viewing in brightly lighted&#13;
or sun-filled rooms. Telescoping antenna and carrying&#13;
handle give true portability. It's just one of many in the&#13;
Magnavox hne of value-packed roommates-for home&#13;
or away. Component systems and S8995&#13;
accessories. radios, tape recorders/&#13;
players, portable TV and stereo.&#13;
M e1gnc:l'-'c»~&#13;
Joerndt &amp; Ventura Inc.&#13;
Downtown ·Kenosha 654-3559&#13;
Rosa Paces Harriers . d s country prospects lfWisconsin-Parksi_ ecr:hat one runner has&#13;
are charted on the basis o oin to be big winners&#13;
done, then t~ ~ngerfs a~\~m !m start to unfold&#13;
and the reahzation o a r&#13;
for Lucian Ro~a. h been the number one Ceylon native Rosap as kouts thus far and&#13;
man through all ~- w;:tting up on the quick&#13;
shows no sign that hh~ 11 ~~ team leader in his first&#13;
'pace that has made im&#13;
season. th di ·nutive distance phenom, a And for e mi . end with competition -&#13;
dream th:3t he ho~alwill in the marathon at the&#13;
and possibly a ~ t year might just be&#13;
Munich Olympics nex&#13;
beginning.th} tic director Tom Rosandich and&#13;
But a e coach Bob Lawson knew&#13;
track and ~ross country sible last December when&#13;
all these thmgs ~ere P~. Parkside after winning&#13;
Rosa expressed mteres m O 000 meters&#13;
Asian Games titles at 5,000 an? 1 ' h about the&#13;
"We talked with him and his coac . p ksi·de Lawson ·bTt of commg to ar '&#13;
poss11led1 ir'Tom followed through on it when we got reca . ,, back and now Rosa's here. R&#13;
The Ceylonese were anxious to have. fa&#13;
attend school in the United States to tram . or&#13;
Munich but Rosa, a business mana~em~~ f:~of~&#13;
is here for the education as well an_ wo i&#13;
return to business in Ceylon when his college days&#13;
are done. h. d what But the big thing going for . ~m, an&#13;
brought him to Parkside, is trammg, and. 1&gt;?th&#13;
Rosa and the University seem to be beneflttmg&#13;
thus far .&#13;
"He gives us maturity and 1&#13;
Lawson said. "It's more leadership ~del'Ship ~&#13;
now but later on he'll be more vocal exa.n: '&#13;
"The guys on the team respect hi&#13;
for what he's done but also for the pe~ not )&#13;
What he's done is nothing short of. n he . His b~st for 5,~ meters is 14: 10.2, equ~~~ · mile m the mid 13: 30s and on a par With a&#13;
notch collegians. His 29:55.6 for 10 000 m~t ltf. came in the Asian Games and ranks hi I;!&#13;
NAIA's best at that distance. And all : With&#13;
while running barefoot. . at he&#13;
But the marathon is to be his eve&#13;
although he's never run the 26 mile ::· grind, Rosa is confident. ' )&#13;
"I'm here to prepare for the Olym .&#13;
said. "I think Coach Lawsoa can help m~lC&amp;,"&#13;
for the marathon. I'm just trying to do my~&#13;
hi m. " -&#13;
And his best may be good enough to ,&#13;
anything he runs in, Lawson said alth~&#13;
ceding that hill running may cause ~ome obi&#13;
for Rosa. pr&#13;
"He's never run cross country before nd&#13;
never run on hills," Lawson pointed oo.ta ..&#13;
small (5-6, 101 lbs.) and needs a lot of ~onllt&#13;
strength."&#13;
One thing he doesn't need work on is In&#13;
ship. He's found plenty of that, especially&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Joanis of Kenosha,&#13;
have taken him into their home for his time&#13;
~~~tQl&lt;f·Soccer Team Inexperience~&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S P_IZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHO,TI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARILY-OUTS - DELIVERY "YOU RING ... WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The Ranger's soccer game&#13;
scheduled for last Saturday was&#13;
cancelled, but Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny was not too disappointed&#13;
because four of his&#13;
players were injured.&#13;
The first game now will be&#13;
Saturday at home against the&#13;
Wisconsin Junior All Stars, a&#13;
team which should prove quite&#13;
formidable.&#13;
J'\jewscope talked to Martiny&#13;
at a practice session and asked&#13;
him how practices have been so&#13;
far: "They have been good&#13;
except that there have been so&#13;
many injuries," he said.&#13;
Martiny also expressed the&#13;
need for conditioning and&#13;
practices so far have sened&#13;
help in this vital area&#13;
In previewing the u&#13;
season Martiny predicts&#13;
miracles. "This is an&#13;
perienced team trying to&#13;
experience," he said.&#13;
Martiny termed the sch&#13;
very tough with such scoools&#13;
UW-Green Bay, Ohio la&#13;
Notre Dame and Quincy to&#13;
faced. On October 2 I:&#13;
Madison will be played also&#13;
In looking at the schedule&#13;
appears that much of the ei&#13;
perience that the teamso\t&#13;
needs will be gained&#13;
defeats.&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
Special buttons ad~itting persons to the Oct. 8-9 October! i&#13;
celebration at Parkside-are now on sale for $.50 at the Offi&#13;
_Athletics and through the sponsoring German ~!ub _a~~ Varstt)&#13;
The buttons, which are similar to the smile butt~&#13;
sweeping the nation, will admit the bearers (or wearers) to&#13;
toberfest activities which include a German style cele~&#13;
rugby match socce~ games and other events. The buttons \I a&#13;
good for $.50 ~ff the $1.50 admission to the Saturday night danceai&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Recycle this Paper&#13;
are you offended by nudity'I&#13;
ii not, stop in.&#13;
di Complete selection of con~emporary adult merchan&#13;
SPECIAL 15% OFF all purchases&#13;
with any student I.D.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore . Racu1e 406 Main Street Downtown &#13;
-&#13;
r&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
Meets&#13;
Parkside's Hockey Club&#13;
begins practice at 10: 15 p&#13;
~esday at Wilson park-%&#13;
MIlwaukee. All students&#13;
invited to attend practice&#13;
contact !om Krimmel at 552.&#13;
=~&#13;
8634 or VIC Godfrey at 553-2310 if&#13;
mter~ted in joining.&#13;
ThIrty-five students have&#13;
alre~dy joined the club and are&#13;
lookmg forward to the first&#13;
game N.ov. 6 against Harper&#13;
College In Joliet, Ill. The first&#13;
home game is slated for Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 14, against&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
All home games are played at&#13;
WIlson Park, 4001 S. 20th St&#13;
Milwaukee.'&#13;
Ocloberfest Golf Tourna ment Pia nned&#13;
I....and golf, normally _I 01 as sports for the&#13;
. e have found their&#13;
~p~kside in this fall's&#13;
~"I activities.&#13;
!IJl1I3!1lentswill be held&#13;
..., u"se days in each sport&#13;
II' ~CIIlty,staff and students,&#13;
.. men and women.&#13;
A studenttennis tournam~nt&#13;
be held at the Pershing&#13;
rwt courts in Racine Friday,&#13;
Iktllrom 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
II'ltUdents.&#13;
I faculty·sUlff tournament&#13;
foUowduring the same time&#13;
I""'! Saturday. Only singles&#13;
IIpannedbut doubles will be&#13;
)llyol d time permits. Contact&#13;
b£i Freeka in Racme or VIC&#13;
Godfreyat the Office of.&#13;
lIIIotics, phone 553-2310, for&#13;
--lr&gt;lflooroament will be held&#13;
ana that week. Eighteen&#13;
.... are to be played at the&#13;
Pllrilying Springs Course&#13;
IIIInon Friday, Oct. 1, and&#13;
rnday, Oct. 8. Scores must be&#13;
.m to by a partner and&#13;
InId 10 by 4 p.m. Friday.&#13;
Golfers must sign up for&#13;
flights before playing. The&#13;
flights are "A", for male&#13;
students under 99; "B", for&#13;
male students over 90; "C", for&#13;
female students; "D", for&#13;
faculty-staff men under 90;&#13;
"E", for faculty-staff men over&#13;
90; "F", for faculty-staff&#13;
women. Contact Vic Godfrey or&#13;
Steve Stephens at Athletics for&#13;
details.&#13;
Other intramural activities&#13;
include archery competition on&#13;
Friday and a sailing regatta&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The Parkside Rugby Club will&#13;
play Lincoln Park at 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 26. Lincoln Park&#13;
started rugby in 1969 as a&#13;
member of the Mid-American&#13;
Rugby Football Union.&#13;
All those interested in joining&#13;
the Parkside club contact Vic&#13;
Godfrey at 553-2310 or assembie&#13;
at the athletics fleld at 4:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday or&#13;
Thursday or 2 p.m. Sunday. The&#13;
team will play the Milwaukee&#13;
Rugby Club at 1 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
Oct. 9.&#13;
------ schedule _•••• -&#13;
ldabafest golf tournament&#13;
F.. men and women&#13;
hculty, staff, students&#13;
\I holes to be played at&#13;
Petn!ymgSpringsfrom Friday,&#13;
I. through Friday, Oct. 8.&#13;
IlIdine£orreporting scores is&#13;
Fnday, Oct. 8, at 4 p.m. Scores&#13;
:- be attested to by a part-&#13;
~ Sign'up in advance in-&#13;
~ night. Call Vic Godfrey&#13;
at 553-2310 for more information.&#13;
Flights:&#13;
A - male students under 90&#13;
B - male students over 90&#13;
C - female students&#13;
D _ faculty-staff men under&#13;
90&#13;
E _ faculty-staff men over 90&#13;
F - faculty-staff women&#13;
Turn scorecards in by 4 p.m.&#13;
frid.ay! ! ! !&#13;
.",pl&#13;
Remember&#13;
Octoberfest&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658·3131&#13;
LIQUOR' STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Hill Kruel1er's&#13;
Jlowers&#13;
3113 WASHINGTON AVENUE:&#13;
R....CINE. WISCONSIN 5'.05&#13;
...-1 NEED HELPIII&#13;
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TillE&#13;
525 GUIUI.d Itl ... ry 100 .... 1.'"&#13;
y.. stl«&#13;
All ,"taC' 'I.,a,~&#13;
S"~sIam,d, SlIf_"~lessd IInl.,.&#13;
pllS 51 f.1 IIclstnllll ud ba ~-&#13;
linc I.&#13;
AllEN KING CORPORATIO&#13;
P.O, BOX &amp;525&#13;
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212&#13;
~e\\O&#13;
w~would lik. 1o&#13;
invit you to see ~TH:~~~1&#13;
1 Pants I&#13;
I P I&#13;
I anly I&#13;
I H I&#13;
lose I&#13;
IR'fSI99 I&#13;
I o· I' I&#13;
1.llocool&#13;
I I I s .tI ...&#13;
I oil t •• 0 .p ,&#13;
IL liP ...... '&#13;
IE' 9-16 - I I&#13;
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Heads &amp; Threads&#13;
.I") ...,.••&#13;
w....&#13;
Opt ""''''' ... f ••&#13;
, n 1 .. -Ml ...&#13;
(&#13;
[IJS COPE prHuts&#13;
TWO BANDS&#13;
I&#13;
-r----&#13;
5,,-+.. ,. J,""l'&#13;
5 &lt;f +C ~ b.r 2.5~&#13;
8f..!:o-1~&#13;
...+ 6'+~~.""J /'IJ,-&#13;
P- r;d '" W:S,J:·D.'f I"e~.&#13;
l'OGrMnBoyRoo4,K ., KO 'Pu'm--'--"&#13;
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SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
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PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
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. Cas/lon4 Corry fltlctson on Flit.,..,&#13;
Air Fllltrs. Tun. Up Is, $pork Plugs&#13;
All 11tm~ Sublecl 10' Per &lt;:en Sol.. Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - S.AVE&#13;
Ii"&#13;
ijctoberfest Golf Tournament Pia nned&#13;
. and golf, normally&#13;
t of as sports for the&#13;
e have found their&#13;
at p~kside in this fall's&#13;
est activities.&#13;
tllfllaments will be held&#13;
tl~se days in each sport&#13;
tr farulty, staff and students,&#13;
men and women.&#13;
udenl tennis tournament&#13;
be held at the Pershing&#13;
coorts in Racine Friday,&#13;
a,from9a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
ents.&#13;
faculty-staff tournament&#13;
Uow during the same time&#13;
Saturday. Only singles&#13;
panned but doubles will be&#13;
if time permits. Contact&#13;
· Frecka in Racine or Vic&#13;
rey at the Office of .&#13;
, phone 553-2310, for&#13;
If tournament will be held&#13;
that week. Eighteen&#13;
are to be played at the&#13;
1f)'lng Springs Course&#13;
n Friday, Oct. 1, and&#13;
y, Oct. 8. Scores must be&#13;
ed to by a partner and&#13;
m by 4 p.m. Friday.&#13;
Golfers must sign up for&#13;
flights before playing. The&#13;
flights are "A", for male&#13;
students under 99; "B", for&#13;
male students over 90; "C", for&#13;
female students; "D", for&#13;
faculty-staff men under 90;&#13;
"E", for faculty-staff men over&#13;
90; "F", for faculty-staff&#13;
women. Contact Vic Godfrey or&#13;
Steve Stephens at Athletics for&#13;
details.&#13;
Other intramural activities&#13;
include archery competition on&#13;
Friday and a sailing regatta&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The Parkside Rugby Club will&#13;
play Lincoln Park at 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 26. Lincoln Park&#13;
started rugby in 1969 as a&#13;
member of the Mid-American&#13;
Rugby Football Union.&#13;
All those interested in joining&#13;
the Parkside club contact Vic&#13;
Godfrey at 553-2310 or assemble&#13;
at the athletics field at 4: 30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday or&#13;
Thursday or 2 p.m. Sunday. The&#13;
team will play the Milwaukee&#13;
Rugby Club at 1 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
Oct. 9.&#13;
•••••• schedule -····&#13;
est golf tournament&#13;
men and women&#13;
It,. staff, students&#13;
hole· to be played at&#13;
U)mgSprings from Friday,&#13;
1, through Friday, Oct. s. ne for reporting scores is&#13;
'1, Oct. 8, at 4 p.m. Scores&#13;
be attested to by a part-&#13;
\ ·ign up in advance inflight.&#13;
Call Vic Godfrey&#13;
at 553-2310 for more information.&#13;
&#13;
Flights:&#13;
A - male students under 90&#13;
B - male students over 90&#13;
C - female students&#13;
D - faculty-staff men under&#13;
90&#13;
E - faculty-staff men over 90&#13;
F - faculty-staff women&#13;
Turn scorecards in by 4 p.m.&#13;
Frid_ay! ! ! !&#13;
r&#13;
1 CW SC OPE rre~._11ts&#13;
TWO BANDS&#13;
I&#13;
'(---&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
Meets&#13;
P~rkside's Hockey Club&#13;
begins practice at 10: 15 p.m.&#13;
~~day at Wilson Park in&#13;
. I _waukee. All students are&#13;
invited to attend practice and&#13;
contact !om Krimmel at 552.&#13;
~ 4 or Vic ~odfrey at 553-2310 if&#13;
inter~ted in joining.&#13;
Thirty-five students ha&#13;
alre~dy joined the club and a~&#13;
looking forward to the fir&#13;
game N_ov. 6 against Harper&#13;
College m Joliet, Ill. Tbe firs&#13;
home game is lated for unday,&#13;
Nov. 14, again t&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
All home games are plaved at&#13;
Wilson Park 4001 s 20th 1&#13;
Milwaukee. ' '&#13;
, I 11&#13;
Remember&#13;
October e&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658·3131&#13;
LIQUOR° STORE, SAR, DI I G OOM&#13;
Rill Krueger's&#13;
1/owcrs&#13;
3113 WASHINGTON AVE VE&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN !1340&#13;
PHON~· 637-94591&#13;
s "'"'t,.. ,,. Jo. 1,&#13;
S&lt;f+i:f"Y\hU 25-&#13;
B~ -1M&lt;&#13;
"'+ 0t~~ -~ct- tlJ,-&#13;
p_ riJ ~ W:s,J: D's r"tj•&#13;
.---1&#13;
SERVE YOU&#13;
ROYAL RI 0&#13;
QUA ER S A E&#13;
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AFSCO .0.&#13;
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LS&#13;
Q . ,0 . JO I&#13;
PER A E T TYPE A fl.FREEZE S1&#13;
12oz. HEAVY DUTY BRA E FLUID&#13;
d carry Prices on&#13;
Air FIi rs, T e I ,,&#13;
A 11 J Sub K 0~ Ce&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
1 &#13;
....e. sr."'" 21. 1171&#13;
RANCH'S IANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
80c ~r.., HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
~ BIG TOP Creamy hat fudge ave&lt;&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream ond&#13;
fresh strawberries. whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry&#13;
75c&#13;
70c&#13;
SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD'&#13;
~ORTH 331' SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
The Dime Beerl&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
\&#13;
A II 10 oz muas of beer&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
LUNCHEON SPECIAL \&#13;
Mon_Frl&#13;
A II vou e en e at&#13;
$ 99&#13;
Flut 1001.. beer&#13;
$.01 per oz.&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN' KENOSHA&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
For '-.e - '63 v.«. $275.00. 350f&#13;
w .... 1ngton Ro.s. Kenolha.&#13;
,.., 0....,. (01\'.. wry good ",echo&#13;
__...... cyl .•• uto. pwr ..... Ing&#13;
SUD·ull "'-JAl2.&#13;
1Mt HilIftCII; 17SCe SCtambl.... Ex.&#13;
c:on4. SGS. Includn 2 helmets. CAli Ed. 639""".&#13;
1M2 Wc": 2 dr h.,.dtop, 1250. call&#13;
~ or 6J3..2791.&#13;
lflI RIlmb. American. ~.b1.-&#13;
rustle. anel cheep.~. J209 -lIrTh St.&#13;
196G Ramb. Amerle-n. Dependebte.&#13;
170. 1209 . 21th SI.• KenoMl.&#13;
\970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr .. H.a·&#13;
toP. V -I, Automatic. power stHt"lng.&#13;
.,.......&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
Quality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SK IRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
tfUNDREDS OF BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S Stt1ARTWEAR&#13;
3120 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
V illage Pioneers&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
V"illage.&#13;
"We're trying to make a complex here&#13;
that's going to be oriented for students .. he&#13;
continued. '&#13;
"We are looking forward to putting a h'&#13;
lake on this property. We will also ha~&#13;
swimming pools and tennis courts. We're 0 t&#13;
here to build just one complex. we're here ~&#13;
build 1,000 units.&#13;
"We're trying to bring the student into&#13;
an area where he .can get. acquainted and&#13;
have the type of living that ID our estimation&#13;
wiU create men and women of good caliber ..&#13;
Is Parkside Village creating men ~&#13;
women of good caliber? You'd have to ask&#13;
the Parkside Vil1age Pioneers.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Raci['le ,/&#13;
1C:;' . . .&#13;
.3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633·35~&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
" ~- 213 SixTH STREET RACINE&#13;
....,&#13;
Hustl •• brut. this season ... heavy. handsome&#13;
IKKIhurly-burly on • sensational wood-y heel.&#13;
Pure big-heert8d fun i. O.rk Brown antiqued&#13;
.. ether uppen. and Peanut Brown smooth, $iB&#13;
Boughf and sold&#13;
(we buy and $ell)&#13;
A little out of "WIy,&#13;
but ..... .,&#13;
MCFarland, AIt, aiiii&#13;
7904 WASHINOTO;-&#13;
AVENUE RACial&#13;
BY TH E UNDU'AII&#13;
Open Daily 9:30 a.m.·5:30 p.m.&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday 'til 9 p.m.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week. 7: 45-4:30. Call 5£)-2415.&#13;
connie·&#13;
1963 Buick For SIlIe - .. barrel 4A2'&#13;
11"IO. In GOOd cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floOr. 8odYJDgoocI condo For sale A.t&#13;
WO. ALSO&#13;
"bWreI QI.... cwb Md bottom piece&#13;
tor only 13Q.OOt.ke It. Call 633-07U 7&#13;
10 p.m. Redne.&#13;
----&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc&#13;
Ntotorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing. Phon.e 654·8710 - or&#13;
Newscopeoffice. Leave messagefor&#13;
Rick Pazera..&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
- PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling piUSthe right. Phone 1-&#13;
. 352·4050_&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
1967 Austln·Healey 3CIOO, Aft .. sp.m&#13;
539-2«)7 (Burlington).&#13;
..... Ford Torino 3U1·VB. LOw mil.&#13;
Automatic. power steering. Radio,&#13;
Heater, 652-n.-s, see at 5234 - ~&#13;
Ave. 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
650 Triumph T_T. rebuilt enqlne,&#13;
lace paint on frame and talk, 2&#13;
hefmets. S8OO.00orbest offer. See at&#13;
5723 - 40th Ave.&#13;
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
Needs some clutch 'NOrk, $250.00.&#13;
MA·Dlf71.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3suitcases, very good condo$25.Call&#13;
654-27Q.t.&#13;
For II Good night's sleep -&#13;
Wa;ftrbeds. 3701. 60th street. Cail&#13;
654-940_&#13;
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us ar&#13;
offer. call 654-462.&#13;
Otlcago - casette tape fo trade for&#13;
'NOrklng tape Doors, Byrds, etc.&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Cali 633-3836.&#13;
PubliC Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
SUde Rule $10.00. Cail 553-2345.&#13;
Skis Mens. including poles and&#13;
boots. 553-22A5.&#13;
~;~.$5.ao,Steam Iron $5.00. Cail&#13;
Golf Clubs Full set irons and WOOds&#13;
1346 new will sell for $2"5. '&#13;
Legalize Marlj uana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. SOc. donation. Be at Student&#13;
Activities BUilding Wed. .&#13;
Stereo CompOnentSystem 60 watt&#13;
amPlifier, t ....nta~le. 2 ~PNkerS&#13;
Nevlng, must seU.$50. Ph. 6S2-OO79~&#13;
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book 9'l&#13;
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva. ";I~:&#13;
- =-&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and&#13;
winemaklng. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and can.etope and plums. 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632·3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
VOlkswagen - Good conaltlon and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses. call Kurt, 551.9429.&#13;
LU&#13;
Septem~r Z , 1911&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT ' S SCR U MPTIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
er om, 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
911 SHE IOA ROAD SOUTH 7500 SH E RI DA ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Mon-Fri&#13;
11 ou can at&#13;
S ·99&#13;
t 10oz. b&#13;
s .Ol pe r oz.&#13;
WEDNE SDAY NIGHT&#13;
I&#13;
A ll 10 oz mu es of beer&#13;
a pence an ounce&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
O N 30 TH A V ENUE IN' KENOSHA&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
ouality sportswear&#13;
for women&#13;
SLACKS&#13;
SKIRTS&#13;
VESTS&#13;
TUNIC TOPS&#13;
HUNDREDS Of BLOUSES&#13;
ANN'S SMARTWEAR&#13;
3120 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Village Pioneers&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Village. "We're trying to make a complex here&#13;
that's going to be oriented for students " he&#13;
continued. '&#13;
"We are looking forward to putting ab.&#13;
lake o~ this property. ~e will also ha~!&#13;
swimmmg pools and tenms courts. We're n t&#13;
here to build j~t one complex, we're here~&#13;
build 1,000 umts.&#13;
"We're trying to bring the student into&#13;
an area where h_e _can get_ acquainted and&#13;
have the type of hvmg that m our estimation&#13;
will create men and women of good caliber ,,&#13;
Is Parkside Village creating men a~d&#13;
women of good caliber? You'd have to ask&#13;
the Parkside Village Pioneers.&#13;
sought and sold&#13;
(We buy and sell)&#13;
·A little out of 1ht ... but wott1i '&#13;
7904 WASHING;;&#13;
AVENUE RAC~ E&#13;
BY THE UNDERPASS&#13;
Open Daily 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday 'til 9 p.m.&#13;
Hustle a brute this season ... heavy, handsome&#13;
and hurly-burly on a sensational wood-y heel.&#13;
Pure big-hearted fun in Dark Brown antiqued&#13;
leather uppers, and Peanut Brown smooth, $18&#13;
conn1e· DOWNTOWN&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
For Salt - '6.l v.w. $275.00. 3509&#13;
W-.n ngton Ro.i. Kenosh•.&#13;
1961 Cht'{, cori.O .. very good mech . "1•pe. 6 cyl., •uto. pwr st..,.lng&#13;
S150 • U II 159 2'12.&#13;
lttt Hl:lnct. 175cc Scr•mbltf". Ex&#13;
cond , IQS, k\cludn 2 helm.ts. c.11&#13;
Ed , 639 .'9«),&#13;
1"1 841 ck 2 dr h•rdtop, $250. C.11&#13;
6l4'4C5 or 6.33 2791,&#13;
R mb Amer I~. Depen°dabl• .&#13;
r Ile. 1na cl\tlC). w:.. J209 • am St.&#13;
196.l Buick For Sale - 4 barrel .u2&#13;
.,g. In oood cond. Autom. on the&#13;
floor . Body Jn gooc1 cond. For Sale At&#13;
$250. ALSO&#13;
4 barrel Chev. cwb 11nd bottom piece&#13;
tor only $30.00 t•tw It. ca11 633-0784 1&#13;
10 p.m. Racine.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special&#13;
gearing . Phone 654-8770 . or&#13;
Newscope office. Leave message tor&#13;
Rick Pazera.&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
. PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy&#13;
consultation service. Free local&#13;
counseling plus the right. Phone 1-&#13;
. 352-4050.&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
1967 Austin-Healey 3000, After !Ii p.m&#13;
539-2407 (&amp;wllngton).&#13;
1968 Ford Torino JU2-V8. Low mll.&#13;
Automatic, power sreerlng, RadiO, Heater-, 652-n45, see at 5234 . "4th&#13;
Ave. 6;00 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
1967 Impala Super- Sport 327, After&#13;
-4 :30 p.m., 3022 . 23rd Ave.&#13;
Y• maha 350 RS, 1971, Exe. C.Ond. 6S4-572-4, Eve.&#13;
6M Triumph T.T. rebuilt eoqine,&#13;
lace paint on frame and tank, 2&#13;
helmets, S800.00 or best offer. See at&#13;
5723 . -40th Ave.&#13;
Honda " 150" 80 per cent restored.&#13;
eeds some clutch W'Ork, $250.00. 63-4-087 1.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FORSALE&#13;
3 suitcases, very good cond. $25. Call&#13;
65,4. 270-4.&#13;
For II Good night's sleep - Water beds. 3701 • 60th street. Call&#13;
654-94'7.&#13;
Hand Painted mil k cans. Make us er off er. Call 654-4862.&#13;
Ollcago - casette tape to trade tor&#13;
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc. Newscope office.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Cell 633-3836.&#13;
Public Wholesale Cleaners, 3602&#13;
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Oleck&#13;
ours first high quality - 1 day&#13;
service.&#13;
Sllde Rule Sl0.00. Call 553-2345.&#13;
Skis - Mens, incluellng poles and&#13;
boots. 553-2245.&#13;
Toaster '5.00, Steam Iron $5 oo Call&#13;
553-2345. ' '&#13;
Golt Clubs Full set irons and woods&#13;
S346 new will sell for S2-45. '&#13;
Legalize MarlJ uana Bumper&#13;
Stickers. 50c donation . Be at Student&#13;
Activities Building Wed. ·&#13;
Stereo Component System. 60 watt&#13;
ll(llPllfier, turntable, 2 speakers&#13;
Moving, must sell. SSO. Ph . 6S2-0079:&#13;
BROWSE - Breaclloat Book Sh&#13;
~1 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, ,,:i~'.&#13;
2 Snow Tires, 7.75. 14 Rim, Rear end&#13;
Shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber&#13;
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 654-7312.&#13;
Wet Suit $5, Show tire &amp; rim S1, File&#13;
boxes Sl &amp; S1.50, call 634-3757.&#13;
C.Olt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good&#13;
Disp. Call 5J1-7161 aft. -4 p,m.&#13;
2 Bedroom House, Parks,oe area,&#13;
Liv . R., Dining Room· .comb.,&#13;
Fftplace,' over one acre land, 552- 901-2. ·&#13;
Concord grapes for eating and_&#13;
winemaking. Home grown tomatoes&#13;
and cantelope and plums. 6328&#13;
Washington Ave. 633-3836&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Earn Extra Money - Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-378S or 633-3805.&#13;
WANTED - Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen - Good conaltion and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.&#13;
Apt. wanted, male junior will share&#13;
expenses, call Kurt, 551-9429.&#13;
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5&#13;
days a week, 7:45-4:30. Call _553-241S.&#13;
HELP WANTE0-2Sp9\&#13;
pl ayers work in PIZZI 1M&#13;
551-8906 or stop In and•• </text>
            </elementText>
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    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63432">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 3, September 20, 1971</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63433">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63434">
                <text>1971-09-20</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63437">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63438">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63439">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63440">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63441">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63442">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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        <name>dean eugene norwood</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="163">
        <name>ken konkol</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="158">
        <name>parkside village</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="164">
        <name>student government</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
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