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University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
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Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
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Issue
Volume 1, issue 27
Headline
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Schliesman names editor
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UWPAC124 Ranger News
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The Parkside
Ef fect ive next fal l
Schl i e sman named edi tor
The RANGER has a new
Editor-in-Chief. Her name is
Jane Schliesman.
The Advisory Board to the
RANGER recently considered
three applicants for Editor-in-
Chief. They were Schliesman,
Kathryn Wellner and Ken
Konkol. Applications were
written and submitted by April
13, and the interviews were held
April 17.
As Editor-in-Chief, Schliesman
has many goals for the
RANGER. She believes that the
Editorial Board of the RANGER
must take a strong stand on the
many real issues on this campus.
"Decisions are being made
which may or may not be in the
interests of this university in the
long run, and we must also worry
about the quality of education
being provided at present. The
RANGER Editorial Board should
research these questions and
come up with reasoned
arguments for or against
proposals," said Schliesman.
"For example," she added,
"questiors of faculty benefits
affect students, for they affect
the caliber of teaching we will
have; administrative decisions
on space utilization affect student
organizations; program
decisions (both educational and
entertainment) are affected by
budget decisions, and have an
effect on students in turn."
According to Schliesman, there
are many technical problems
facing the RANGER:
disorganization; lack of consistent,
coherent style; a
multitude of typographical errors
each week; and lack of
photographs, to list a few. More
frequent staff meetings will be
necessary, and a larger staff
would enable the RANGER to
solve many of its problems. "A
campaign for writers,
photographers, lay-out people, ad
salespeople, help, is needed," she
stated.
"I feel that people will come to
us once we are established as
more than a schlock rag, a tool of
the administration, a jive
publication. We have already
started to accomplish that," said
Schliesman.
Wedne s day, May 2, 1973
Vol . 1 No. 27
Photo by Debra Friedell
Jane Schliesman
Parksiders aid handicapped
at a normal rate but could speed
the process for those using both
hands.
Another student, William
Liggett, a 29-year-old senior from
Kansasville, is developing
learning curves relating to rate
and efficiency of learning by the
handicapped in various tasks
which promise to be useful in the
Workshop's work evaluation and
training division, through which
all handicapped referrals
initially pass.
Liggett has special empathy
with the problems of the handicapped,
having once suffered
partial paralysis as the result of a
eonsttuction crane accident.
Shirland also has coordinated
formation of a managementconsulting
team of SMI students
who are studying the Curative
Workshop operation to identify
additional projects on which to
work.
Shirland became involved with
the Curative Workshop last
November after taking over cochairmanship
of the community
service committee of the
American Institute of Industrial
Engineers' Southeast Wisconsin
Chapter, which was seeking
volunteer projects in which their
members could become involved.
"That mix of experience is
exactly what our students are
getting both in the classroom and
at the Workshop," he said.
Finkler agrees. "We have
changing jobs and requirements
which expose students to a lot of
different kinds of problems," she
said. "We appreciate the help
from the Parkside people and
AIIE and feel our needs are
naturally geared to cooperative
programs of this kind."
In addition to student involvement
with the Workshop,
Shirland and another
management science professor,
Leroy Cougle, have applied for a
$10,000 federal research grant to
study and improve the evaluation
and training of the handicapped,
using the Racine facility as the
model.
The Racine Curative Workshop
currently serves about 70
physically and emotionally
handicapped persons in its
vocational division. It also has a
medical services division.
Design of a tool which enables workers with the use of
only one arm to assemble a vacuum cleaner fan is one of
the projects undertaken by Parkside management
science professor Larry Shirland (second from left) and
student Robert Unger (seated) of Kenosha at Racine's
Curative Workshop. Unger demonstrates one of the
devices using one arm, while William Liggett (right) of
Kansasville, a Parkside student who is conducting
learning studies at the Workshop, times him. Frances
Finkler, manager of the Workshop's vocational division,
observes the operation.
A Parkside professor and his
students are literally lending a
helping hand to handicapped
workers at Racine's Curative
Workshop.
Larry Shirland, assistant
professor of management science
in Parkside's School of Modern
Industry (SMI), and Robert
Unger, 20, a sophomore from
Kenosha, have designed devices
to enable workers with the use of
only one arm to assemble a small
fan used in a vacuum cleaner.
The fan assembly job is from
Amatek-Lamb Electric of
Caledonia, one of about 20 area
companies which at any given
time have jobs contracted to the
Curative Workshop.
The initial design, by Shirland,
worked well enough, enabling a
one-armed worker to tuck the
fan s six blades into the housing
one at a time. Unger, however,
felt he could improve upon
Shirland's effort and is completing
a tool which promises to
tuck in all six blades at the same
time.
Frances Finkler, manager of
the Workshop's vocational
division, said it appears Unger's
model not only will enable the
one-handed to assemble the units
Spain trip included added surpri s e
Beloit poe t
here Thursday
Beloit College English
professor and writer-in-residence
Chad Walsh will present free
public readings of his poetry on
Thursday (May 3) at Parkside
and at the Unitarian-Universalist
Church in Racine, which
arranged his local visit.
Walsh will read at a Parkside
Poetry Forum session at 1:30
p.m. in the second floor library
lounge. His 8 p.m. program at the
church is titled "How Poems Get
Born" and will include a reading
of his poems and commentary on
their genesis.
by Rudy Lienau
A Capitol International DC 8
"stretch" delivered 98
Parksiders and 83 other charter
passengers to sunny Spain on the
Costa del Sol a week ago Sunday.
I was one of the passengers.
This is being written in the
hopes that it can make a Monday
morning deadline. As I zoom
along at 31,000 feet heading for
home, I know the trip is worthy of
coverage. It was a learning experience
that cannot be surpassed
by teaching in the
classroom.
Armed Guards
Immediately after landing at
the Malaga airport it became
obvious that there existed a
totally different social norm. As
we taxied toward our terminal,
passengers saw many members
of the Gaurdia Seville (dictator
Franco's army) lining the
perimeter of the airport with submachine
guns. They were smarly
uniformed, but the uniform
couldn't nullify the obtrusiveness
of the armed guard.
We were bussed from the
terminal to the customs building
and the guard became less
evident. The brown and grey hues
of the flat landscape were plain
colors for the sharp, green
uniforms to blend into.
Once we had walked off the jet
we were hit with the shock of time
disorientation and the awareness
that we were speaking the foreign
language and our only link with
the Spaniards was through our
guide or our own ingenuity.
Guides and Guards
All the guides spoke with a
heavy Spanish accent and it took
a couple of days before we could
make any amount of sense of
what they were saying.
Leaving the guides for a
moment our bus ride to the hotel,
some thirty miles away, was
scary in many respects. The most
apparent scare came with the bus
ride. People drive at maniacal
speeds in Spain, and the horn
seems to be their signal of right of
way. Even zipping along at that
speed hundreds of guards with
sub-machine guns were seen
lining the cliffs along the road to
the hotel. My impression was that
this was the way a dictatorship
was run. That, too, scared me.
My worries were arrested
when our guide talked about the
guards and the fact that Franco
was in the area. They were his
guard. The thing that made it all
worth it was when police sirens
started blasting. The bus came
quickly to the side of the road,
and President Franco sped by in
his limousine. It was an electrifying
moment that no one had
counted on. I had seen my first
benevolent dictator.
Continued on page 7
> • *sV . . v , , , , v
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1973
Editorial/Opinion
Jyril 14, 1973
To the Hit or:
alitor of What? Certaluly NOT of the Library
Learuiug Ceater.
Certaialy aot of higher educatloa.
Certalaly aot upliftiug educatloa.
It would take oaly the poorest caliber to 133IT each
a weird, crude, brash cartooa uader the guise of
learaiag or aaythiag else - for etudeats aad their
youager oaes uho hope to attead the Uairersity some day,
If this is the ead result of your learaiag - It is a
sad world we have.
WHY a ot put out some upliftiag high staadard cartoon?
This situatloa Is critical.
The lowest la brain matter put th<s out aad those ia
charge should ceacor what is edited aad NOT meruit such
crap - aad that is all it is.
Wake up. We iatead to briag this up with the right
people. It is shameful aad so are you to permit it.
Stop this aad help the world iastead of further
fulaiag it for the youngsters who uust be confused
bythe "educated* oaes. This Is pitiful. 01 is it
Y0U1 persoaal portrait?
(Ooples)i To proper people.
A taxpayer/busiae sanaa.
Cartoonist's Eye View
?T T0 « FflgDuT Rb£K CONCERT
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. Rv Gary Huck\
Rep l y
Dear Taxpayer-Businessman:
We don't usually answer letters that are unsigned,
especially those that come postage due. But we thought
we could make an exception with this one.
The letter to the editor and the cartoons with comments
appearing on this page were sent together by a
nameless reader.
The cartoons are called "crap" and the reader feels
"those in charge should censor (sic) what is edited."
That seems to be a rather anti-Constitutional view of
freedom of the press.
The RANGER is a corporation, separate from the
university and only bound by state and" local laws. Our
advisor has never censored us and that is the way it
should be. The advisor serves only as a resource person
and would only attempt to stop us from printing
something if it were libelous.
These cartoons, along with any other cartoon we print,
are very simply the expression of the cartoonist's
thoughts. Doubtless you would have this cartoonist
silenced and put in his place. We feel the campus
community can take more than some candy-coated
picture of the world.
Most people on campus can recognize satire, which
the cartoons obviously are. They can see the humor in
the satire and usually catch the underlying meaning.
Evidently you didn't.
practice."
Cartoonist's Eye View honorea
because To.
are worth a i,.
year6 bv' ispub'isheci weekly throughout the academic
Kenosha, Wise8 /isconsin-Parkside,
Learning rpntw t i I 0fflces are >°cated at D-194 Li brary-
ThP P if"? ' TelePhone (414) 5 53-2295.
reflectedTn^nifir^no"86^ iSj-an •independent newspaper. Opinions
^Lettersfto th"^T* " ^ °ffidal
less^yped^n^dou'^6^'^' ^usA!e'corrfined1 to MO^onis or
l^ters for lenc^ arff?lt 5fCe?' The editors reserv* the right to edit
address n hone nnmk j ! 1AI1 letters must be signed and include
be withheld upon re mies?'The'SV8tatU80r fac ulty rank' Names wil1 print any le tters editors reserve t he right to refuse to
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.
M?NTA0GfNGCEHDfTORRUTd0VmLrtaU
NEWS EDfTORDl^hr;n°^eF;|en,eerrSen
SPOR I Df foRORKr'sanKocShhlieSman
BUSINESS MANAGER: K en Peslka
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
PHOTOGRAPHERS K en Konfni n ^"' AmV Cun dari
ADVERTISING STAFF FrM ? l^r 'De n n i SDo o n a n 'Gr«Syston
ADVISER: Don Kopriva Lawr en«, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau
0 1°* NATIONAL ADVERTISING »Y A'
y National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. y
360 Lexington Ave.. New YoeW. N »'. 10017 1
Wed./ May 2, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3
We get letters THORN
To the Editor:
Next semester I plan to start or
try to start an informal rap group
dealing with sex roles and how
men relate to women and each
other. It will be a consciousnessraising
type group and each
member will be given six minutes
of undivided attention. All over
the country, men's liberation
groups are forming but haven't
received the media exposure of
women's groups. We will NOT be
a counter force to the feminist
movement but work side by side
to eradicate sex based myths,
habits and beliefs. This will break
down barriers between men and
women and the deep ones between
men and men, too.
Some psychologists feel that we
created the concepts of
"masculine" and "feminine" to
hide certain emotions and
thoughts we are afraid to
acknowledge. Also, this sex
gender division has political,
economic and psychological
implications which play havoc in
a society allegedly based on
equality and freedoms the Bill of
Rights spells out. Men's
imaginary supremacy over
women, like white "supremacy"
over black and Third World
peoples is a mass self-illusion
which I know will backfire on
men with a vengeance.
Anyone, women are welcome
too, who wishes to start a group
like this write to: 953 Wood Rd.
Apt. 112, Kenosha, Wis. 53140.
Please don't write after May 20th
as I am moving out.
I hope to see several people at
the first meeting because there is
a great need here for this kind of
group. That was evident by the
lack of interest for the Equal
Rights Amendment and its
meaning for both sexes.
Dave Myer
Kenosha
To the Editor:
Regarding the editorial in the
last issue of Editor's Notebook, I
have a possible solution. There is
a nonprofit organization in both
Racine, run by myself, Rita
Overberg-and Kenosha, run by
Lonnie Aulwes, called Youthpower.
Youthpower is an
organization sponsored by different
companies in Racine and
Kenosha. Its function is to help
young people, ages 16-21, find a
full or part-time job for the
summer.
Youthpower opens on June 4 at
the Junior Achievement
Building, 604 - 6th Street in
Racine and at the Kenosha Youth
Foundation, 720 - 59th PI. in
Kenosha. There will also be a
Youthpower Jamboree on June 2,
to sign up applicants. Watch the
respective papers for details.
Rita C. Overberg
Manager, Racine Youthpower
To the Editor:
Did you think politics was an
instrument to enlarge the conscience
and sensibility of man?
I'm pessimistic and depressed
over our social, economic, environmental
scene. You guessed
it. The Abbie Hoffmann of
capitalism is at it again! He has
just institutionalized "facts"
coated with middle class sentimentality
and the work ethic;
and the media will absorb it allmake
it all fashionable and innocuous.
Having begun to mold the
American adult in the Nixonian
image, the President has now
sprung out at the kids. To begin
with, he and his appointee, Mr.
Wrather of the Corporation for
Cartoonist's Eye View
THE R ANGES R ECEIVED
AN ANONYMOUS LETTER
(JRITTEN IN THE UCKST
OF TASTE. ACCUSING
MY CARTOONS OF BQNG
IN T HE WORST OF TASTE
THE LETTER MAUGNED
^irlcTz® f&,Clous
FOR BEINGINSULTINIJIT
SEEMS TOME
TRECNLY D LFFERANCE
BETWEEN
His LETTER
AND MV
CARTOONS
IS THAT AFTER'
BEING- MALICIOUS)
CRITICAL, AMD INSULTING
I ALWAYS SIG-NMY
NAME!!!
f?S. THANKS For THE
NEW MATERIAL
(WHOEVER HOU ARE)
XXX C
by Gary Huck
Public Broadcasting, have
decided that "Zoom" is too much
fun and likely to give children the
ridiculous notion that life can be
enjoyable. To replace "oom" how
about a series of functional facts
based on Dickens Hard Times.
"Teach these boys and girls
nothing but Facts," said Mr.
Gradgrind. "Facts alone are
wanted in life. Nothing else will
ever be of service. This is the
principle on which I bring up my
own children. Stick to the facts."
With Mr. Wrather's and Mr.
Shakespeare's (U.S.I.A.)
cooperation, we may program a
generation of humorless
Gradgrinds. For "no little
Gradgrind had ever seen a face in
the moon. No little Gradgrind had
ever learnt the silly jingle
'Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how
I wonder what you are!' No little
Gradgrind had ever known
wonder on the subject, each
having at five years dissected the
Great Bear like a Professor
Owen."
Facts indeed, Mr. Nixon-why
not start with "Sticks and Bones"
and Julia Child and the French
soybeans and genuine American
organic D.E.S. bread, endorsed
by your axiom of inflationary
survival "just eat less," or pieces
with honor speeches etc. In any
case, if you have had it with the
antics of this dutiful, dictating,
deceitful idiot-write the P.B.S. to
save "Zoom," "Firing Line" or
what have you. Who knows,
maybe McCord will link Nixon
directly responsible for the
Watergate malfeasance and he
will end up in a cell next to
Clifford Irving. Wouldn't that
provide material for an interesting
factual series?! Norman
Mailer said we must bring
out the psychopath in us all if we
are to survive in an insane world.
At least this is one thing Nixon
has done for us.
Reprehensibly,
Stacy Postler
Racine Freshman
Food costs
reduced
on cam puses
The United Council of
University of Wisconsin Student
Governments today announced
that they were very pleased by
the action of the State Joint
Finance Committee in the
exemption of S tate Sales Tax for
students purchasing food in
dormitories on meal plans.
This action will save the
student about $20 per year in
meal costs. United Council
worked extnesively for this
revision.
Rod Nilsestuen, President of
the United Council, stated "We
feel that this is a long overdue
step. Previously, students were
the only residents of the State of
Wisconsin who paid sales tax on
meals served in their own
residences. We are very pleased
that this inequity has been
corrected."
Nilsestuen also said that the
Joint Finance Committee had
accepted the United Council
suggestion to handle the student
employment section of the budget
as a separate decision item in the
next biennial budget. This will
make it easier for the students to
calculate the exact amount of
employment aid. Previously
information concerning the
number of student jobs provided
in by the budget has not been
readily accessible.
By Konkol
As you know, the RANGER has been looking for a new editor as
announced in the last two issues. Well, we found one. Applications
were turned in by a number of people including a seventeen year old
teenie-bopper and a middle aged (according to some) muckraker.
Two meetings were held to narrow the field. At the first, contestants
were given a chance to air their views on how a paper should be run.
This was held on April 17. At this meeting a great many radical
proposals were brought forth, including such unheard of things as a
more representative editorial policy, more coverage of campus
events, and (get this), actually paying staff members who do exemplary
work.
At the second meeting, held two days later, the members of the
RANGER advisory board got together and finally selected Jane
Schliesman (formerly Feature Editor) as our new Editor-in-Chief, to
the congratulations of many and the relief of some.
OK gang, I admit it, I m not infallable, even though I sometimes
would like to be. I write this column the week before the paper comes
out, and though I might come pretty close in predictions I have made
m the past, this one struck a little wide of the mark. I wrote it three
weeks before this issue.
Oh, alright I was wrong. There was no second meeting on April 19
where the final decision was made, there was no need for one. The
advisory board made the decision the same day they interviewed the
candidates for the position. But, I was right, Jane Schliesman is still
the new editor.
I for one am wondering what our new editor will be like. After
having six different ones the past four years here, you'd think I'd be
used to the changes. But, you gotta remember, now I h ave to learn a
whole new system.
Jane definately has some strong opinions on topics which to me are
of not so much importance, and this could conceivably change some of
the content of this paper. While I believe I can assure you "the
Movement" will not be expanded and moved to page one, I honestly
don't know what to expect.
Speaking of suffragettes, I'd like to enlarge on a few things about the
female liberation movement. I think we have all been affected by this,
I know I have.
There used to be a time when I would actually open a door or give up
my seat on a bus for a member of what then was the "weaker" sex. I
have ceased to do that except as in cases of extreme need. Now I have
sort of a guideline to follow. If I wouldn't do it for a guy in similiar
circumstances, then to comply with the idea of equality, I'd better not
do it for a girl either.
Which brings us to the Wisconsin equal rights amendment and why
it failed.
I have a theory which seems to be supported by the facts. The equal
rights amendment failed because the women of this state voted
against it. That's right, I said the women defeated it.
After conducting an independent poll of some of the men around this
area, I found that better than 60 percent said they voted for the
amendment. If such a case is generally true, where did all those no
votes come from?
Women of voting age are more numerous than men in this state, so if
even the great majority of men voted no the women could still carry it
off by voting together. Obviously the women didn't vote together, and
instead voted against equal rights.
I v oted in favor of the bill, I felt it was about time I g ot some equal
rights. I'm all for woman coming down off her imagined pedistal to go
through life side by side with man.
Seems most women felt they had a good thing going without equal
rights. They're right. Just take a look at the law books in this state and
you will find that women are highly favored in the eyes of the law. The
men are the ones being discriminated against. .
Those office spaces in the library were struggled hard for. They
were finally won after a discussion with the president of the university
during his visit here. Another problem discussed was the question of
tenure. Seems that some students feel that some teachers who have it,
shouldn't. I guess some sort of test case is being worked up to find out
how to dispose of the problem.
Two performances have been put on lately that deserve some note.
One was the Wayne S. Aho performance on ESP which was sponsored
by the Student Government Association. Another was the UFO lecture
by Stanton Friedman put on by the PAB.
These were both unique in that neither one cost the students money.
Both Aho and Friedman were paid out of the gate receipts.
While Aho was sponsored as sort of a service to the students with a
small admission charge, not many Parkside students showed up. The
audience was made up mostly of members of the community. But this
time the community did not see a performance paid for by student
money, they paid for it themselves, with 58c off every head going to
Aho.
The I* riedman affair was well-attended as evidenced by the nearly
full bleachers. While there were not a great deal of advance tickets
sold, enough impulse buyers attended to make the show a financial
success.
Lm going to mention the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee again
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
This does not necessarily mean it must cease to function. It can continue
its existence by putting on such shows as Aho and Friedman
were, shows for which the performers have no set fee but must rely on
their popularity for their income.
This is not to say L&FA should restrict themselves to this type
^rfom«TwoKTreeS™ '° Pl" °" Sh°WS at Wh'Ch 1,16
4 THE PA RKSIDE R ANGER Wed. , May 2 , 1973
The Raven
By Gar y Jense n
Space Oddi ty
David Bowie
(LSP-4813)
David Bowie sure tried his hardest to become freaky. He chopped off
his hair, dyed it carrot orange, and changed his name to Ziggy Stardust.
Previously he had publicly worn a dress and openly admitted to
being gay. Ziggy Stardust and his Spiders from Mars are now
receiving a ridiculous amount of publicity for such mediocre talent
compare David to another pervert, someone like Mick Jagger. Mick
as the ability to cast male or female roles in their strongest sense and
various shades of both - the ultimate in bisexualism. David Bowie
remains a simple ordinary transvestite. Fag lovers need not feel too
proud of Bowie.
SPACE ODDITY is a Bowie re-issue containing some old stuff
dating as far back as 1969. It is a record of David Bowie as a folk singer
often with considerable orchestral accompanyment.
"Space Oddity" opens this collection as being the reason for this
album. Here David comes off as a freaked-out Bee Gee stranded in
outer space with a catchy tune. Several musical transitions make it
somewhat psychic.
David has a spot as a hard rocker with "Unwashed and Somewhat
Slightly Dazed." Upon his announcing "I'm a phallus in pigtails" the
song changes from its folky beginning to a chugging rhythm rocker.
"Cygnet Committee" is a long drawn out thing but inspite of this it
somehow manages to be one of the most emotion stirring cuts. It
emerges a while after the start into a preacher drone characteristic
Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone." For this number, reading the
lyric sheet along with it is very helpful. Bowie has tried so hard to
make wierd lyrics but these are his most intriguing on the record.
These words are a critical, sympathetic, and confused look at the
history of the hippie culture.
The rest is mostly stuff sounding like Cat Stevens on acid, some
sounding wretched enough to make one puke. "The Wild Eyed Boy
From Freecloud" could be David's Broadway production. One of his
folk ballads is about an old lady shoplifter who consoles herself with
"God Knows I'm Good."
The last slot is reserved for the "Memory of a Free Free Festival."
It drags on for several minutes with a funeral organ and David
reciting a tribute. Then it becomes a growing repetitive chorus in the
"Hey Jude" fashion but seems grossly inferior by comparison.
at this point in this ocean of ambivalence I gaze at the David Bowie
"thinker" photo that is the background for the lyric sheet and say, yes
David you do have talent, even Truman Capote says so.
(Record Courtesy of J&J Tape and Record Center)
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What Wed., May 2, 1973 THE PARKS I D E RANGER 5
The Academic Policies
Committee of the Parkside
otudent Government Association
is in the process of distributing
their teaching evaluation forms
to iaculty members. Those
faculty who have not as yet
contacted the committee are
asked to do so through the PSGA
offices D193 LLC so that the
proper number of computer
evaluation forms may be
prepared.
A new feature of the RANGER
will be a column of original
poetry. This feature will appear
in the last issue of the RANGER,
and continue next year. Anyone
with poetry to submit should
come down to the RANGER
office, LLC D194, at least one
week before the item is to be
printed. •
The Racine Community
concert Association will conduct
its annual membership campaign
starting May 21st. This years
concerts in Racine will include;
Bridgadoon, The Warsaw
Philharmonic Orchestra, and a
singing group called Songs by
Six, conducted by Robert
DeCormier. Three or four concerts
are also planned in
Kenosha. The cost for students is
$5.00 and it includes admission to
all of the concerts. Campaign
headquarters is located at the
Racine YMCA with phone calls
taken at 634-7953.
The Earth Science Department
will hold an "end of the
semester" picnic at the home of
Dave Krogh on Sunday, May 20
for all Earth Science students
and faculty. Besides celebrating
"the end," the picnic strives to
build student-faculty relations.
Special features include the
performance of a faculty skit and
enning
the presentation of characteristic
"gifts" to the faculty.
For more information or
reservations, E.S. students and
faculty may go to the Earth
Science lab, GR116.
The Parkside Activities Board
will present a concert featuring
Bob Rohan and the Country
Band Sunday at 8 p.m. in the
Student Activities Building.
Admission will be general public
$1 a nd Parkside Students 75c.
Mr. Bruce Burgy, General
Plant Manager for the
Dynamatic Industrial Drives
Division of Eaton Corporation in
Kenosha will present "Business,
People, and Profits" Wednesday
Night, May 2 in 221 Greenquist
Hall from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.
uMlcH one of THESE 6bg RoUasl
Cflemt mwoezs tfe A boojl O F
fftRttapes ceeAM O F onton
SooP?'
Theatre nearing complet ion
by Marilyn Schubert
Parkside's new theatre,
located in the Communications-
Arts Building, is scheduled to be
finished June l. Lighting and
other equipment will hopefully be
installed soon after.
The theatre is of a conventional
design and can be used for many
purposes. One of its special
features includes an elevator
platform to the front of the stage
which can be lowered to an orchestra
pit or raised as a 16-foot
projection of the stage. A very
sophisticated system of lighting
will also be used. It can be
o p e r a t e d m a n u a l l y ,
automatically by use of a tape, or
by a combination of the two
methods. The walls are accoustically
designed with wood
slats backed by a metal speaker
grill. Sound thereby travels
through the grill to the wall
behind and is then reflected. Don
Rintz, assistant professor of
Communications, said he hoped
this arrangement would make
the theatre tuneable to the
various activities presented. He
cited the possibility of installing
different materials behind the
grill, depending on whether a
musical or speech-related performance
was being given.
Another facet of the theatre
which makes it even more -ver-
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satile is the handling of the
balcony space. The main floor
seats approximately 500 with an
additional 100 i n each of the two
balconies. Current planning calls
for sectioning off the balconies
into two separate lecture halls.
The sectioning should be done in
such a way that when closed, the
balconies will be invisible and
inaudible from the main floor,
and when open, appear to be an
integral part of the theatre. Since
about half of all the seats will
have hide-away desk tops, the
theatre may be transformed into
three lecture halls capable of
operating simultaneously.
When asked who would be able
to use the theatre, Rintz said it
would be available to all parts of
the university, e.g., visiting
lecturers, music events and, of
course, theatre productions, as
well as for class lectures. He also
said a Parkside Community
Theatre group was being formed,
which would be open to all
university students interested in
the various aspects of theatre, as
well as people from the community.
They plan two productions
next year, one in November,
to be directed by Rintz, and
another in March by Richard
Carrington.
Planning for the theatre was
done by an advisory committee in
1970. Our theatre is basea on the
theatre at Rockford College.
Rintz said, "They spent as much
on their theatre as we spent on
the whole Comm-Arts Building.
For the money, we're getting a
tremendous plan."
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 19 7 3
Anni v e r s a ry Fr i day
Kent State students remembered
Sadkers
to keynote
conventions
by Tom Petersen
This Friday, May 4, marks the
third anniversary since the
deaths of four Kent State students
at the hands of the Ohio National
Guard. Being three years since
that fateful week, when
demonstrations over the United
States' invasion of Cambodia and
the shootings at Kent State
brought almost all of the major
colleges to a standstill, makes
now a good time to look back and
recount what had happened.
In May of 1970, demonstrations
were being held all across the
country denouncing President
Nixon's decision to expand the
war into Cambodia. At Kent State
the National Guard had been
called in and martial law
declared, (with all demonstrations
being banned) following
three days of violent demonstrations
which had included the
burning down of the Army ROTC
building. At noon on May 4, a
demonstration was held on the
campus commons, only a few
hundred students were involved
but the crowd swelled as many
students were taking their lunch
break and going to and from
classes.
A National Guard jeep drove
onto the commons and an officer
ordered the crowd to disperse.
Then several canisters of tear
gas were fired, and a platoon of
guardsmen, armed with loaded
M-l rifles and gas equipment,
moved across the green chasing
the main body of protesters. As
the guard marched from one end
of the commons to a practice field
and back, the crowd never did
disperse but ended up following
the guard while hurling rocks and
insults at them. Many of the
students, already angered by the
guards' presence on campus,
acted as if they were watching a
show by standing around and
cheering as the tear gas canisters
were being tossed back and forth.
The guardsmen then began
marching back up a small hill at
one end of the commons with
their backs to the students. When
they reached the crest of the hill
they suddenly turned, formed a
skirmish line, and without
warning, opened fire on the
students. Many students took
cover while others remained
standing in disbelief, thinking
they were firing blanks, until
they saw other students lying on
the ground bleeding.
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In all, 13 students were hit; four
of them, Allison Krause, Sandra
Lee Sheuer, Jeffery Glenn Miller
and William K. Scroeder, were
killed by guardsmen's bullets.
Why did the guardsmen shoot?
The initial report was that they
were returning sniper fire, but
they then had to admit that there
was no evidence to support this
claim. Other reasons were that
the students had surrounded the
guard and were closing in on
them, so that they were in fear of
their lives. A grand jury report
exonerated the guard on those
grounds, but a later FBI report
showed with pictures that the
guardsmen were not surrounded.
They could have easily kept on
marching in the same direction;
they found that the students were
not any closer than some 50 yards
away at the time of the shooting.
Other guardsmen, when
questioned, did not specifically
say that they felt their lives were
in danger but merely started
firing when others did because
they assumed an order to fire had
been given.
A private study released over a
year after the shootings went so
far as to say that certain guardsmen
had planned in advance to
shoot and had even picked out
specific students to shoot.
The President's Commission on
Campus Unrest probably summed
up the events best by saying,
"The actions of some students
were violent and criminal and
those of some others were
dangerous, reckless and
irresponsible. The indiscriminate
firing of rifles into a crowd of
students and the deaths that
followed were unnecessary,
unwarranted, and inexcusable."
If factions on both sides could be
held responsible, then why was
no official action taken?
A Portage County (Ohio) grand
jury exonerated the guardsmen,
indicting 25 students, nonstudents
and a Kent State professor on
criminal charges. There can be
no denying that some of the
students were looking for a
confrontation, to be beat up and
arrested. But why was no action
taken against the guardsmen who
fired into a crowd which included
many innocent bystanders?
Not until the parents of the
dead students, along with the
ACLU, attempted to sue the state
of Ohio for negligence and
wanton misconduct for sending
armed National Guardsmen on
campus was any action taken
against the guard. The students'
cases were dismissed when it was
found to be nearly impossible to
prosecute them. The case against
the state of Ohio was dropped
when a federal court decided that
the state could not be held
responsible for the guardsmen's
actions.
The saddest part of the whole
tragedy is the attitude of some of
the American people who said
that, "they (the students)
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deserved what they got," and
"they should have shot more of
them." It's strange how those
killed at the Boston Massacre in
1770 under somewhat the same
circumstances are called
patriots, but the students with
different political beliefs are
labeled bums.
Now, three years later, with the
Vietnam war over, we can look
back and ask if anything came
out of the events on May 4. One
thing for certain was that it kept
the war on everyone's mind and
possibly helped push towards
being even more determined to
end it. The pointless deaths of the
four Kent State students gave an
example of just how pointless the
deaths of American soldiers in
Vietnam were. It also brought a
further awareness to whites what
the blacks had to face when their
sons and daughters can be shot
down and there's nothing they
can do about it.
Two members of Parkside
education faculty who are
authorities on sexism in
education will keynote state
education conventions in Florida
and Arkansas during May.
Myra and David Sadker will
give a joint keynote address at
the Florida Education
Association convention, which
has sexism in the schools as its
theme, on May 11 in Tallahassee
and Myra Sadker will keynote the
Arkansas State Education
Convention on the same theme
May 4 i n Little Rock.
She is co-author, with former
Newsweek writer Nancy Frazier,
of a new book, "Sexism in School
and Society", just published by
Harper and Rowe and was one of
eight education writers invited by
the National Association of
Elementary School Principals to
participate in a "Meet the
Author" program introducing
significant new books in
education at the association's
convention in Detroit on April 15.
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Wed. / May 7 , 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7
Meetings held for H.S. s tudent
Students in an atmospheric science course a oart of
the environmental concentration within the Earth
Science major at Parkside, prepare to launch a helium
filled balloon, above, to measure vertical distribution of
wind direction and speed, which change at different
heights Raw data recorded by students using a
theodolite, which incorporates a telescope mounted on a
tripod, is fed into a computer program which
automatically converts the data into wind directions and
speeds. The balloon is visible up to about 15,000 feet on a
clear day. Winds aloft are important in determining how
air pollution will disperse on a given day, according to
meteorologist Henry Cole, assistant professor of earth
science, who teaches the course. Conditions for pollution
dispersion are worst when deep layers of low wind
speeds exist, Cole said. Students shown are, left to riqht-
Jeff Koleske, 1705 Edgewood Ave., Racine; Ken Rizzo,
4603 - 23rd Ave., Kenosha; Bruce Bendel, 53 Jewell St.'
Williams Bay; and Wayne Valukas, 2904 Mt. Pleasant
St., Racine.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiuiiiiiiimiiimiiimiiiiiiimimimiiiimiimmiiiiimmiiimiiiimmiiii
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presents
T h e S e m e s t e r ' s L a s t D a n c e
Featuring
SAT., MAY 5th
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Adm: $1.00 Parkside c+llHon+
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Information meetings for high
school students considering
careers in education and in
engineering science and business
management, their parents and
high school counselors have been
scheduled at Parkside. The
meetings also are open to
prospective transfer students and
part-time adult students. No
registration is required for either
session.
The session for students interested
in engineering and
business will be held on Wednesday,
at 7:30 p.m. in Room 101
Greenquist Hall.
Both faculty members and
students from Parkside's
engineering science and
management science (business)
divisions will be available to
answer questions dealing with
the functional areas involved in
the two majors, requirements for
employment at the entry level of
industry, academic requirements
for the majors and the job outlook
in the two fields. William Moy,
dean of the School of Modern
Industry, will present the introduction.
The session for students interested
in elementary, secondary
of special education will be
held Wednesday, May 16, at 7:30
p.m. in Room D-134 of the
Library-Learning Center.
Faculty and students from the
division of education will conduct
the session and will answer
questions about the program,
requirements for educational
certification and the job outlook
in education. Professor Paul
Kleine, chairman of the
education division, will give the
introduction.
Charles F. Kugel, Director of
School and Campus Relations at
Parkside, said that both
programs are designed to
Spain t ri p
Continued from page 1
The Sights
That whirlwind run- from the
airport to the hotel gave us only a
glimpse of the sights that were to
be seen.
The terrain is mostly hilly and
mountainous. Starting from the
beautiful beaches of the Costa del
Sol there is a contrast of the
beautifully clean, clear water
and the clean brown sands.
Flowering plants and palms
abound. Delicate wild flowers
and tuberous, succulent plants
line the costal area.
High terraces are spotted with
beautiful white bungaloes. The
bungaloes are the exception to
the rule.
Immediately along the coast
are modern high rise apartments
and hotels. We stayed at one of
the seventeen Sofico hotels. Our
particular complex as callled Los
Aolympos.
The hotel structures have not
yet ruined the natural beauty of
the Costa del Sol, but with the
great amount of construction
going on, it shouldn't take long
before the now pleasant coast is a
bit too commercialized. With
some planning it can be beautiful
for a long time.
meos
PIZZA mem
Chicken & I talian Sa usage B ombers
Fret Delivery to Pa rkside Vi llage
5021 30th Avenue Phone 657-5191
provide general information
about the three professional
areas as well as specific information
about Parkside
programs in management
science, applied science and
technology and education.
The coast is described here
only in part and there are still the
grey, granite wall mountains
covered with olive and almond
trees. There are the cities with
their pesty shoe shine men,
beautiful churches, and impoverished
areas.
We're just about to touch down
at O'Hare so I must stop. Next
week I will try to wrap up what
was a very successful trip to
Spain.
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8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1 9 7 3
Sciences offer
environmental
concentrat ion
Parkside students are
preparing themselves for
specialized training in environmental
science and
resource management through
an "environmental concentration"
of courses within
UW-P's interdisciplinary earth
science major.
This environmental option is
built around a common core of
earth science courses but allows
individual students maximum
flexibility in selecting environmentally-
related courses
reflecting the student's particular
area of interest.
A student choosing the environmental
concentration would
take 11 required credits, including
"Man and his Physical
Environment," and, with the help
of faculty advisers, select the
remaining 29 credits required for
the major from environmentallyrelated
courses.
In addition to "Man and his
Physical Environment," these
courses include "Environmental
Geology," "Energy and the
Environment," "Water and the
Environment," "Hydrogeology,"
"Oceanography," "Atmospheric
Science (Meteorology)," and
"Problems in Atmospheric
Pollution."
Students in the environmental
concentration also are encouraged
to get a strong
background in basic science and
math and to acquire basic
research, field and instrumental
skills in such areas as computer
science.
One of the special strengths of
the program is an emphasis on
encouraging independent investigations
by students as well
as opportunities for interaction
with faculty members on a
research level, according to
professors Henry S. Cole and Lon
C. Ruedisili, faculty advisors for
the program.
In addition to preparing
students for specialized graduate
and technical training in environmental
fields, the program
develops an understanding of
man's physical environment
which is essential to the proper
shaping of a modern, industrial
society," Cole said. -Focus on the
unique problems of such a society
is the special educational mission
of Parkside.
Among student-faculty
research projects currently
underway are a comprehensive
study of the Pike River waterway,
pinpointing possible
pollution sources and assessing
methods of eliminating them; an
examination of Lake Michigan
shoreline problems including soil
erosion, high water levels and
water pollution in Racine's
Southside Revitalization area;
and a study of the effect of Lake
Michigan on air pollution in the
heavily industrialized Kenosha-
Racine-Milwaukee area.
Detailed information on the
environmental concentration is
available from the Division of
Science office at Parkside.
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Facul ty edi t
book
R. W. Gatterdam and K. W.
Weston, mathematics professors
at Parkside, are co-editors of a
book on the proceedings of an
international mathematics
conference which was held last
June at Wingspread, cosponsored
by UW-P and the
Johnson Foundation. Gatterdam
and Weston were co-chairmen of
the conference.
The 188-page book, "Conference
on Group Theory," has
just been published by Springer-
Verlog (Berlin-Heidelberg-New
York) as part of a series entitled
"LectureNotesin
Mathematics," dealing with new
developments in mathematical
teaching and research.
The book contains 22 papers
presented at the conference by
mathematicians from the United
States, Canada and England,
including four papers by
Parkside professors Nelo D.
Allan, Franklin Lowenthal,
Ricardo B. Quintana Jr., and
Gatterdam.
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—Rod McKuen
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GOLF COURSE
HO TRESPASSING
Petrifying Wed., May 2, 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER »
I have an appointment with spring. She come* tn •
me, and I go forth an hour or two earlier than usual W,ndow to wake
-Henry David Thoreau
To appreciate the natural
world requires no schooling in
biology or zoology; only sensitivity.
Nor is it enough to notice
nature casually.
The meaning of a tiny spruce
seedling, pushing its way towards
a glorious sun, is found in the
observer's introspection and
contemplation of life, of others, of
one's self.
Knowledge has its place. We
are responsible for needless
litter, garbage, pollution,
bombing and destruction of the
natural world. Upon a sensitive,
caring knowledge of the effects
rests our hope for the continuance
of the universe.
— Debra Friedell
(Parkside student)
Ranger photos by Debra Friedell
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1973
Scientis t theorizes
Fr iedman speaks on UFO's
by Gary Jensen
Tuesday, April 17 was a night of
genuine interest for all the space
minded in the Kenosha area.
Stanton T. Friedman unfolded a
convincing argument supporting
the existence of UFOs at
Parkside's P.E. building.
Friedman's attitude was not the
I-am-a-believer one which was
characteristic of Wayne S. Aho
for his lecture on E.S.P., but
rather was an attitude of, I-as-anintelligent
- scientist - can - not -
help - but - realize - the - obvious -
truth - implied - by - the - data.
Friedman broke down UFO
sightings into three categories.
The first are IFOs or those
sightings which are identified as
earth-oriented vessels after
further investigation. The second
category are those sightings
which have insufficient information
to be placed in one of
the other categories. The third is
competent reports that remain
unidentified after thorough investigation-
the real UFOs.
Friedman proceeded to interpet
data, while visually aiding
the audience with charts
projected on the screen. He
pointed out that the better the
quality of the report the more
likely it is to be classified as
UFO. Most UFO reports are
made by respectable, welleducated
citizens who have observed
the phenomena for sufficient
lengths of time under good
viewing conditions. He also
knocked the Condon Report and
re-evaluated the data produced
by that study.
None of the educated nonbeliever
arguments hold together
under careful scrutiny. There are
excellent UFO pictures showing
no evidence of fakery, some of
which Friedman had projected
on the screen. UFOs have been
reported scientists, astronomers,
pilots, policemen, orbiting
astronauts, and control tower
operators. Observations have
been made in cities and in the
country, at night and during the
day, on the ground as well as the
air. Many observations last for
more than 30 minutes and there
have been many multiple witness
reports and also simultaneous
radar-visual reports. Consider
these high-quality reports along
with the fact that there are
published scientific studies which
show that round trips of 50 years
between the earth and nearby
stars are possible with man's
present knowledge. It makes
UFO visitations seem very
possible since it is all too likely
that more advanced civilizations
do exist somewhere.
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It is believed by Friedman that
the earth is being visited by intelligently
controlled vehicles
whose origin is not from earth.
The reason for his belief is the
design and behavior of UFO's.
They are round, symetric craft of
two basic designs. The larger
number are disc shaped,
metallic, often with
protuberances resembling antennae.
A smaller number of
craft are larger and cigar shaped
which causes some fantasizing of
"Mother Ships." Their
maneuverability enables them to
hover, fly vertically and
horizontally at very high speeds,
and to make sharp right angle
turns. They are usually silent.
Because of the nature of the
preceeding UFO data, Friedman
prefers to call them EEMs, or
Earth Excursion Modules.
Naturally, if UFOs do exist
there must be a reason for the
neglect of scientific investigation.
Friedman gave fi"e.
Ignorance is an important factor
- most scientists have not studied
the data. The "Laughter Curtain"
is a serious restrainer, as
about 10 percent of the scientists
at a recent convention had observed
UFOs but only .04 percent
of t hem reported. Most admitted
the reason for their failure to
report was the fear of ridicule.
There is an ego complex because
believing in UFOs destroys the
human superiority image. Also
there is the unwillingness to
adapt technological beliefs and to
realize that different physics are
possible.
As Friedman concluded his
lecture he asked for a showing of
hands from the audience. 45
hands answered to seeing UFOs
and only 2 answered to reporting
them. The space age has arrived
at Parkside.
The Left Handed
Gun to show Friday
The Parkside Film Society will
show THE LEFT HANDED
GUN, Arthur Penn's 1958 f ilm in
which he portrays Billy the Kid
as a tormented adolescent whose
inability to accept the compromises
and inadequacies of the
law leads to a life of violence.
When his kindly employer is
murdered, Billy (Paul Newman)
vows to avenge his death. Billy's
compulsive pursuit drags a trail
of violence through the lives of
his few close friends. Hunted
down by law officers from all
parts of the West, he realizes that
he has nowhere left to turn. When
he is confronted by Sheriff Pat
Garrett (John Dehner), his
former friend, Billy draws from
an empty holster and Pat shoots
him.
THE LEFT HANDED GUN,
Uncle Bob's comics
like nearly all of Penn's films
(BONNIE AND CLYDE, THE
CHASE, LITTLE BIG MAN),
features an intensely emotional
performance by the lead and a
somber, brooding atmosphere.
Billy has no doubt about the
mission which he adopts at the
opening of the film; by the end, it
has turned into a self-destructive
course, which Billy is unable to
control or understand.
Shown with feature will be the
Chaplin classic, THE IMMIGRANT.
As a passenger en
route to America, Charlie
befriends a lonely girl and her
mother. Ashore he is involved in
one of the funniest restaurant
scenes ever filmed.
The films will be shown Friday,
May 4 at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist
103. Admission is 60 cents.
by Bob Rohan
W0M6MS LIB MeetlNGS!.'
WOMEN& LIB SALLYS"
wOMgN's LI 8 cLfteses!!!
Wed . , May 2, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11
The Parkside-
RANGER
Sports
Golfers win first
had the medalist in Tim Schwob
(70) while Parkside and 394 and
UW-Milwaukee 397.
Leissner was Parkside's top
finisher, two strokes off the
winner's pace, with a 74, while
Jim Vakos had a 76 and John
Lehmann a 78. Dave Fox carded
an 82 while Pete Nevins shot an 85
to round out the Hanger scoring.
Next action for the golfers is
scheduled for today at DeKalb,
111., against Northern Illinois.'
The Rangers will compete this
weekend in the NAIA District 14
tourney at Green Lake. Parkside
was second last year to UWLaCrosse
but Stephens figures
the Rangers have enough
firepower to overtake UW-L this
time and make a strong bid for
the title.
Parkside's golfers, before
heading south over spring break
at their own expense for a week of
golf and fun in the sum, took on
some northern opponents in the
cold environs of Petrifying
Springs and came out with a first
and a second in two multi-team
matches.
The Rangers totaled 382 f or 18
holes in dropping Loyola (423)
and Lake Forest (426) April 19 at
Pets as Dan Leissner fired a 71
for medalist honors. Tom Bothe
carded a 79 for Coach Steve
Stephens' linksmen while Don
Fox and A1 P avonka added 77's
and Dave Fox came in with an 83.
Parkside opened the season
April 17 at Pets by beating UWMilwaukee
and losing to tough
Northern Illinois in a triangular
match. Northern totaled 371 and
Parkside co-eds f inish
high in Judo National s
Parkside juniors, Nancy
Konecny and Jackie Blaha,
returned from the National AAU
Judo championships held on the
Georgia Tech campus in Atlanta
with a fifth place finish in
Katame-No-Kata.
This is one of the highest
finishes ever by Wisconsin Judo
athletes in the prestigious AAU
championships and certainly in
women's competition.
Ms. Konecny and Blaha earned
the right to compete in the
Nationals with a secone place
finish in the state championships.
They did gain revenge over the
winning team since the Wisconsin
champions placed sixteenth in
the nationals.
Ron Hansen, Parkside's judo
instructor, started both these
girls in judo. Until they started
competing for the Parkside judo
club they competed for the Shu-
Shin-Kan, a Racine YWCA team.
Ms. Konecny, a brown belt, is a
graduate of Racine Horlick and
has been competing in judo for
4V2 years while her counterpart,
Ms. Blaha, has been in the sport
for three years and is a graduate
of St. Catherine's High School.
Both of them are majoring in
Sociology and Psychology with
plans on going into Police
Science.
Eugene Dee, this year's
Parkside's Invitational Grand
Champion from Milwaukee,
pulled one of the major upsets in
the tournament by finishing
second in the 176 pound championships.
. .Women's Judo Champs Jackie
Blaha (left) and Nancy Konecny
(right)
College Educations Start at
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE
SPORTS SHORTS
CLASSIFIED
TERM PAPERS papers neatly typed. 50
cents per page. Call for and deliver. J.
Konke, 694-2776 after 5:30.
AFRO dance classes: YWCA 8th 8< C ollege
Ave. Racine instructor Betty Briggs call 633-
3503 A. Dowman Starting 4-11-73
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-
.2667.
1970 Maverick 6-stick, red, Ex. cond.,
economical, dependable, new tires, must sell
632 3385.
BARMAIDS WANTED -Kazaches Turtle
Club. Apply at 1801 50th St. after 3 p.m.
YWCA Forum "A Look at Prepared
Chikldbirth" Thursday May 17, 1973 - 7:30
p.m. 8th and College Avenues, Racine. $1.00
per person admission.
At the Parkside Intramural
Wrestling Championships held
April 18, the Track Team took
first with 17 points, Sigma Pi was
second with 13, and the Wrestling
Class came in third with 9.
In the championship matches,
John Savaglio, 126 pounds,
pinned Craig Campbell; Mike
Kopczinski, 134, pinned Mike
Wickware; Chuck Dettmen; 142,
pinned Everret Hyde; Paul
Weyrauch, 150, pinned Zoan
Kulinski; Tim Martinson, 158,
decisioned Mike Grabot 7-6; John
Peterson, 167, pinned Rick
Barnhart; Tom Peterson, 190,
pinned Gary Meyers; and Ed
Hopkins, heavyweight, pinned
Mark Madsen.
Tim Martinson was voted the
outstanding wrestler of the
tournament, as he had a first
period pin and an exciting 7-6 win
in the finals.
All-American Bill West made
the award presentations.
Parkside will have its first
Soccer Club Tournament
Saturday. Eight schools will send
teams: UW-Whitewater, UWMilwaukee,
Northwestern
University, Lewis College,
Trinity College, Milton College,
Carthage College, and Parkside.
There will be play in two
divisions of four teams. Each
team will play all the teams in the
division round-robin fashion. The
winner in each division will play
second place of the opposite
division, and the winners will
then play for the trophies.
Division one consists of
Parkside, UW-Milwaukee,
Northwestern and Milton, and
division two is Carthage, Trinity,
UW-Whitewater and Lewis.
The schedule of play will be
Parkside vs. Milwaukee on field
one at 11 a.m. and Carthage vs.
Trinity on field two. At 11:45 it
will be Milwaukee vs. Northwestern
on field one, and
Trinity vs. Whitewater on field
two. 12:30 p.m. will see Parkside
vs. Milton on field one, with
Carthage and Lewis battling it
out on field two. 1:15 p.m. on field
one will be Whitewater vs. Lewis,
and on field two will be Northwestern
vs. Milton. Carthage
will play Whitewater on field one,
and Parkside Northwestern at 2
p.m. Field one will have Trinity
and Lewis at 2:45 p.m. and field
two will have Milwaukee and
Milton. The play-offs will begin at
3:45 p.m., and the trophies will be
presented at 5:15 p.m.
Anyone interested in helping as
linesmen and time keepers at the
Parkside Soccer Club's tournament
Sunday contact Coach
Henderson at ex. 2311.
The Annual Varsity Club Picnic
will be held Sunday from 2 p.m. to
7 p.m. at Petrifying Springs
Park. Varsity Club members will
be admitted free and all others
$1.
The Parkside netters whipped
Milton College 6-3 April 18.
Singles number one Rick
Bedore, Parkside, defeated
Bruce Lindsay, Milton, 8-6 and 7-
5. Number two Gary Christensen,
Parkside, defeated Sam Skaggs,
Milton, 4-6, 6-4 a nd 6-2. Number
three Dave Herchen, Parkside,
lost to Kurt Aufderhaar, Milton,
9-7 and 6-4. Number four Mark
Haase, Parkside, defeated A1
Lemke, Milton, 6-0 and 6-4.
Number five Todd Nelson,
Parkside, defeated Scott Sawicki,
Milton, 6-1 and 6-4; and number
six Cal Jensen, Parkside,
defeated Dave Bilgo, Milton, 6-1
and 6-0.
Doubles number one Bedroe-
Andy Petersen lost to Lindsay-
Skaggs 1-6, 13-11 and 15-13.
Number two Herchen-
Christensen defeated Aufderhaar-
Sawicki 6-1, 6-1; and
number three Nelson-Jensen lost
to Lemke-Bilgo 6-4, 4-6 and 7-5.
Maplecrest Country Club will
be the host of the Winter-Spring
Sports Banquet this year on May
9. All the atheletes from the past
season will be honored at this
time for their achievements and
participation.
I
I
I
I
Alfredo's Restaurant
ju 2827 63rd St., Kenosha
W ITALIAN F OOD A SPECIALTY
^SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA
Expired DRINKS A VAILABLE F ROM THE B AR
May 9, 1973 5 0' OFF ANY
< 50*
lee? Sub 1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421
i
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•
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Special
Monday thru
Th u r s d a y 1 1 - 8
TAP
BEER iy
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches!
Foosb a l l 2 Pool Tables
Air Condi t ioning Pinball Machine
Col d Si x Packs To Go
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM
Classified Advertising Rate
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.
Payable in advance by check or cash to:
The Parkside Ranger
Business Office
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside
Kenosha, Wis. 53140
NAME
CHECK ENCT.CKF.n FOR $
DATESfS) TO RUN
To find your cost, multiply the
number of words times 5
cents. Multiply that total by
the number of issues you want
it to run.
apprfqs BATE
r iTY PHONE NO .
On e word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing
Ads must be submitted one week before publication.
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1973
Rosa repeats as Drake Marathon champ
Lucian Rosa, Parkside's star distanceman, won his second straight
Drake Relays marathon championship Saturday in Des Moines, when
he covered the 26 mile, 385 yard route through Iowa's capitol city in 2
hrs., 25 min., 18.4 sec.
He had set the record for the event in 1972 when he clocked 2:22:13.
For Rosa, it was also a national title. The U.S. Track and Field
Federation (USTFF) recognizes the race as its national championship
event.
The race was different from last year in that Rosa held back longer
and did not move into the lead for good until the 21 mile mark. But
although he held only a 100 foot lead over Tony Brien of Marymount
(Iowa) College at that time, he expanded that through the last five
miles and won by nearly two minutes as Brien was timed in 2:27:03.4.
"The race seemed easier to me than last year and was a lot more
fun," Rosa said. "Last year I took the lead at the eight mile mark and
ran alone for the rest of the race. This year I ran with a group of about
six or seven other guys and until I took the lead at the 21 mile mark, we
talked a lot to pass the time.
"This was a nice workout for me," he added. "I was never worried
about the outcome. I like this course a lot because of the hills. I'm
probably best suited for the marathon because I never get cramps.
"I knew my time was much slower than last year when I was told at
the 20 mile mark that my time was 1:57. That was time at the 22 mile
mark last year."
..National Champ Lucien Rosa
Rangers dedicate new track
Parkside's own Lucien Rosa has won the Drake Marathon for the
second year in a row.
The Parkside track team made
its debut on the new outdoor track
here an auspicious one as the
Rangers grabbed seven first
places in the Parkside Open Meet
held here Friday, April 20.
Lucien Rosa led the way for
Parkside, taking first in the three
mile in 14:38 and top honors in the
six mile in 30:08.0. But the
Rangers had other stars as well.
Dennis Biel clocked 1:57.9 to
win the 880 yard run while Chuck
Dettman grabbed a win on the
3000-meter steeplechase in 9:41.9.
Cornelius Gordon took honors in
the 440 in 50.1 and ran the third
leg on Parkside's winning mile
relay team with Herb DeGroot,
Raul Medina and Biel. The
Rangers' 3:35.4 set a varsity
record.
Also winning for Parkside was
Keith Merritt, with a 44-5V4 triple
' jump effort. Donn Cooper of the
Parkside track club won the
decathlon with 6,070 points,
highlighted by a 14-3 pole vault.
Merritt finished second with 6,057
points.
Other placers for Parkside
included Tim, Martinson, fifth in
the pole vault; Mike Kopczynski,
second in the long jump; Medina,'
fourth in the 880 and third in the
long jump; DeGroot, third in the
440 and sixth in the 220; and the
440 y ard relay team, second.
The meet was the first ever
held on Parkside's new Chevron
track, which is only the third of
its kind in the world. All winning
efforts automatically became
track records. Another open meet
is scheduled for Tuesday (May
AMERICAN FURNITURE. By
Helen Comstock. 700 Illus. in
color & monochrome. Complete
guide to 17th, 18th and early 19th
century styles - Jacobean,
Chippendale, Early Victorian,
etc., incl. historical backgrounds,
craftsmen, the regional
characteristics of New England,
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Pub, at $17.50. New, complete ed.
only $5.95
THE JOY OF EATING
NATURAL FOODS TIIE
COMPLETE ORGANIC COOKBOOK.
New approach to good
eating for health-conscious
Americans incl. more than 2,000
recipes for garden-fresh
vegetables, luscious home-baked
breads, raw food menus, etc.
Pub. at $6.50. Only $1.98
HAMMOND GIANT WALL MAP
PACKAGE. Beautiful, accurate
map of the world and map of
U.S.A each 3 ft. by 4 ft. prepared
by outstanding cartographers, in
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type. Pub. at $2.00. Only
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SUCCESSFUL WINE MAKING
AT HOME, by H E. Bravery, an
internationally famous wine
expert tells how to make hundreds
of delicious wines for less
than 25 per bottle incl. Fresh fruit
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root wines, dried herb wines and
liqueurs. Orig. Pub. at $3.50.
New, complete ed. only $1.00.
SELECTED TITLES — LIMI T E D QUANTI T I E S
THE LORE OF SHIPS, by Tre
Tryckare. Over 1500 illus.,
hundreds of vivid color.
Magnificent volume explains and
illustrates every component of
every kind of ship - primitive
dugouts, sailing ships, liners,
nuclear warships, etc. ll'A x IIV4.
Pub. at $27.00 ONLY $9.95.
PICASSO AND THE CUBISTS. 76
illus. incl. 60 plates in splendid
full color. Stunning panorama of
cubist art Picasso, braque,
Leger, Delaunay, etc., plus vivid
text. 9n.i x 12. Reduced to only
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THE COLLECTING OF GUNS.
Ed. by James E. Serven. Hundreds
of photos & drawings. A
fascinating biography of guns,
describing and picturing many
types in all categories with much
information on use, collecting,
history, care, repair, etc. 8'2 x 11 .
Orig. Pub. at $24.95 New, complete
ed. only $5.95
A HISTORY OF ART, FROM
PREHISTORIC' TIMES TO THE
PRESENT, by Germain Bazin.
with 668 illus. in monochrome and
full color. Man's achievements in
painting and architecture from
the cave paintings of
paleolithic age to the present in
concise authoritative detail with
a wealth of pictures from public
and private collections. Orig.
Pub, at $9.00 New, complete ed.,
only $3.95
THE NEW LAROUSSE ENCYCLOPEDIA
OF THE EARTH.
by L. Bertin. 532 illus., 32 in vivid
full color. Huge comprehensive
account of the physical
phenomena that make up man's
environment formation of seas,
glaciers and mountains, the
nature of volcanos and earthquakes.
climate, etc. over 400
pages. 8'2 x 11. Import special
only $9.95.
THE COMPACT BOOK OF FISH
AND GAME COOKERY, by L.
Carver. The fine art of cooking
birds, game and fish outdoors
and in the home kitchen with
easy-to-follow recipes including
those for vegetables and tips on
herbs, spices, sauces, sauces and
wines. Only $1.00
GRANNIE'S REMEDIES, ed. by
Mai Thomas. Illus. with
drawings. Unusual collection of
remedies for all kinds of ailments
based on experience of one
grandmother known for her
miraculous cures. Orig. Pub. at
$4.95 New. complete ed. only
$1.00.
ROCK GARDENING, bv H.L.
Foster. Illus. by L.L. Foster.
Complete guide to growing
alpines and other wildflowers in
the American garden incl.
detailed instructions covering
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Orig. Pub. at $7.00 New. complete
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WINSLOW HOMER WATER-
(OLORS. by D.F. Hoopes.
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SALE STARTS WED. MAY 2 ENDS FRI . MAY 1 1
Dublin Core
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Title
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The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 27, May 2, 1973
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1973-05-02
Subject
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College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
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Newspaper
Language
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English
Coverage
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Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
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University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
curative workshop
jane schliesman
kathryn wellner
ken konkol
leroy cougle
ranger editorial board
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/8b27280ea38ba10e45739e311925fc4b.pdf
69d6b0dc415d5e3341b5576d51fdb457
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 1, issue 24
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Amin discovers new worm specie
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
12th issue *"*•******"** 12 pages •
PAB sponsors Derby Day lodging
by Jane Schliesman
A big bash is coming up soon in
Kentucky - May 5 is "Derby
Day," and Parkside Activities
Board is sponsoring a Kentucky
Derby Weekend Special.
For the 98th running of the
Kentucky Derby last year, over
130,000 people crowded historic
Churchill Downs in Louisville.
Many thousands of them were
students who saw the Derby as
the ideal and quite unique climax
to a fun and care-free weekend
(sometimes called the "Mardi
Gras" of Kentucky). Since the
University of Louisville is located
only about a quartermile from
Churchill Downs, out-of-state
students have traditionally
sought economical refuge at this
campus.
Last May, the University of
Louisville Union for Student
Activity realized a need to
provide something beyond overcrowded
Greek houses, residence
halls, lawns, shrubbery, fountains
and halls of ivy to lodge in
or upon. It opened the doors of the
"Red Barn," a university rock
theater converted from a
nineteenth century tank factory.
The Red Barn provided a rather
unique but quite suitable place
for several hundred bedrolls.
Shower facilities were arranged
with a gymnasium and a
residence hall close by. Each
student registering in the Red
Barn paid a nominal fee of $1 per
night and received an "Official
Crash Pass" and information on
Derby Weekend.
This year it's all happening
again. Parkside Activities Board
has a special package deal for the
weekend: $5 for infield ticket at
the Derby, $2.50 advance ticket
for Derby's Friday night concert
with Dr. Hook and the Medicine
Show and the Brownsville Station
(tickets will be $4 at the door),
and $1 a night for lodging on the
Louisville campus. Coffee and
donuts and a shower are included
in the $1 fee; students must
supply their own sleeping bags.
They will be staying with
students from many other parts
of the country.
It is possible to buy just part of
the package as well as all of it.
Students must supply their own
transportation, but travel information
is available at Student
Activities Office, LLC D 197.
People can sign up for tickets at
the same place, but should do so
soon to secure them.
Aho to speak on
ESP Friday
The Parkside
Wednesday April 4, 1973 Vol. 1 No. 24
Amin discovers new worm specie
To the untrained eye, Parksidei
isn't much to look at.
But to its discoverer, the small
parasitic spiney-headed wormits
proboscis or snout covered by
neat rows of thorn-like hooks-is a
thing of beauty and a scholarly
joy forever: a new biological
species.
The organism, formally entered
in scientific literature as
"Acanthocephalus parksidei," is
named Parkside by its
discoverer, Egyptian-born Omar
M. Amin, an assistant professor
of life science.
Academic tradition gives the
discoverer of a new species the
right to name it, Amin said- "for
anyone or anything he wants to,
but generally the name chosen
should add something to the
descritpion of the organism."
And since the discovery of a
new species is a relatively rare
event, the christening deserves
some careful deliberation.
Amin has two reasons for
naming his find "parksidei."
"The name reflects both the
fact that it was discovered at
Parkside-in fish from the Pike
River which flows through the
northwest corner of the campusand
Parkside's institutional
commitment to the ecology of the
area," Amin said.
Parksidei is the third distinct
species of the genus Acanthocephalus
discovered in North
America. It is distinguished from
the other two species principally
by being smaller (parksidei
females are an average of 4.3
millimeters long and males an
average of 1.9 millimeters) and
by having fewer rows of hooks
and fewer hooks per row on its
tubular proboscis.
Thus far, parksidei has been
found in the intestines of creek
chubs and white suckers, both
fish native to the Pike River and
other southeastern Wisconsin
waterways.
Further studies will be
necessary to determine the effect
Omar Amin
of the parasite's presence on its
fish-hosts and to document its life
cycle, which involves an intermediate
host, probably an
arthropod, Amin said.
Amin points out that
southeastern Wisconsin is virgin
territory for the study of fish
parasites-one of his major
research interests and the subject
of his Ph. D. dissertation at
Arizona State University.
Although Wisconsin's fish have
been the subject of numerous
studies-both by academics and
by anglers-most of the work has
been done in the North, Amin
said.
The Southeast also is prime
territory for pursuit of Amin's
other major research interestarthropod-
borne diseases. Arthropods
are a broad group of
organisms with jointed legs and
segmented bodies including
spiders, mites, ticks, centipedes,
crayfish and similar crustaceans
and insects.
Amin currently is engaged in
the first systematic study of such
organisms in southeastern
Wisconsin.
His interest in arthropods and,
their public health implications
dates to work in his native Egypt
with the Department of Medical
Zoology of the U.S. Naval
Medical Research Unit and to his
subsequent studies on ticks as a
post-doctoral research associate
at Old Dominion University in
Virginia and a visiting fellow at
the National Center for Disease
Control in Atlanta, Ga.
Now, his work on both fish
parasites and arthropod disease
carriers is centered on the
woodlands, fields and streams of
the 700-acre Parkside campus,
which Amin describes as "a
natural laboratory" for his
studies.
"I can go out the back door and
start collecting specimens," he
said.
Actually, the process is considerably
more systematic. Amin
has mapped the northwest area
of the campus bisected by the
river into a grid pattern for
identification of the precise
source of his specimens.
fle can sometimes be spottedthrough
the early-morning mists
checking his live-traps to collect
the ticks, mites, insects, etc.,
which have gathered on small
mammals such as rabbits and
chipmunks which are placed in
the traps.
Summers find him "giving my
arms to science" to determine
which varieties of mosquitoes
bite humans-and therefore may
transmit disease from lower
animals to man. (If you thought
all mosquitoes bite humans, it
only seems that way.)
Specimens are then brought
back to the laboratory for study.
Is it worth it?
Yes, says Amin. There's
always at least an outside
chance-especially in a
geographic area only recently
subjected to scientific study-that
another new species may be
awaiting discovery on the stage
of the microscope.
Of no less importance, is the
exploration of the ecological
interactions between parasites
and their hosts including man,
Amin added.
by Ken Konkol
Wayne S. Aho, Founder and
President of The New Age
Foundation Inc., which has
charters nationwide and abroad,
will appear here Friday, April 6 to
speak on extrasensory perception.
"Major," Aho, who prefers the
title INNERsensory perception,
has traveled over a million miles
as a lecturer on ESP and the Age
of Aquarious, among other
topics.
The theme of his talk includes a
higher understanding for the
world with principles proven
through throughout the ages. He
feels that our nation and the
world is in great crisis and that
there must be a blending of true
science with the best of religion to
bring forth a golden age upon the
planet. "Where there is no vision,
the people perish."
The Major has been a speaker
at some forty space conventions
and has served as Master of
Ceremonies at many. At the first
annual Aquarian Age Conference
held in Hawaii in 1972 he was a
featured speaker.
Aho has appeared on television
and radio programs throughout
the country and has garnered
favorable reviews from colleges
throughout the country, The
University of Minnesota and
Hawaii, to name two.
The tallents he demonstrated
for a group at the Minnesota
Scoeity for Parapsychological
Research excited the students'
interest because of his conviction
Lake Alert
Wayne S. Aho
that all bf us have these tallents
in some degree.
Psychologists have made th
statement that man uses only 5
percent of the capacity of his
mind. Major Aho goes further to
say that man's capacity could be
increased 2500 times if he should
realise his potential.
The presentation, which is
being sponsored by the Parkside
Student Government Association,
is scheduled for 8 p.m. in Tallent
Hall. Admission at the door will
be 75 cents for students with IDs
and $1 for general admission. The
reason for the low price being a
hope to attract a greater
proportion of students for a fine
arts-lecture type performance.
Scientists discuss reactor
by Kathryn Wellner
There were three major issues
discussed at the Lake Michigan
Alert Conference held recently at
Parkside.
The dominant issue, with two
speakers devoted to it, was
nuclear power plants. Henry S.
CCole, assistant professor of
earth science at Parkside participated
in the conference and he
believes that the problems of
nuclear power plants are the
most important.
This article, the first of a three
part series, will cover the
problem of nuclear power plants.
Power Plant Safety
Speaking to the conference on
nuclear power plant safety was
James J. MacKenzie, who has a
Ph. D. in nuclear physics and is
chairman of the Union of Concerned
Scientists.
MacKenzie pointed out in his
speech that the Atomic Energy
Commission (AEC) has been lax
in its testing of nuclear power
plant safety systems, yet has still
pushed the use of these plants in
spite of the dangers inherent in
their operation.
The dangers being referred to
are those of accidents which
release radioactivity into the
environment. There are a
number of ways for this to
happen, but the accident which
was described in the most detail
to the conference was a loss of
coolant accident (LOCAL These
accidents are the most serious
which can occur in a nuclear
reactor according to the AEC.
Nuclear reactors must constantly
be cooled in order to keep
the power producing reaction
under control. If the coolant
supply is interrupted for any
reason, the temperature in the
reactor begins to rise.
Emergency Systems
The fuel which is used in light
water nuclear reactors is
uranium. In order for this fuel to
be usable, it must be encased i n a
material called Zircaloy, which
melts at 1850 degrees Centigrade.
This temperature can be reached
within about one minute if the
Emergency Core Cooking System
(ECCS) does not begin to cool the
reactor. No full-scale LOCA has
occurred to date, but the
possibility of such an accident is
one in 1,000.
When an extreme enough
temperature is reached dueto an
LOAC, radioactivity can be
released in a number of ways.
The pipes and even the reactor
itself can be ruptured by steam
and hydrogen explosions. The
dispersal of radioactivity would
depend on wind direction and
velocity, but could be up to 100
miles. Eventually, the fuel core
itself would melt down and go
into the earth in the direction of
China (This is referred to as a
"MELTDOWN" OR "China
accident").
Continued on page 7
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 4, 1973
THORN
Editorial/Opinion
We 've built a strong
foundation
There have been comments that in t he course of the
year the Ranger hasn't taken the firm editorial
initiative it should have to effectively bring change to
Parkside.
This is probably a true generalization. We have found
ourselves so engrossed in producing a strong and
respectable paper that we seldom had the time to get
into str1 ng editorial writing. But we have attained one
goal.
The goal we have reached is that of reasonable
believability and strong financial positioning. We know
we are well read because of the substantial increase in
business of our advertisers. Most organizations on
campus use the Ranger to reach the Parkside populace
and most have found it effective. Our reporting has been
as objective as possible and we feel our readership
recognizes that.
Financially we are also doing well. We have managed
to buy some equipment, pay our printing bills and allot
meager salaries to the editorial staff. Our outstanding
debt is the old Newscope Corporation's debt which we
took over. We will be paying that debt off in installments
for a number of years.
Most importantly, we will be in the black at the end of
the year and this 12-page issue of t he Ranger marks an
all-time high in ad sales in the community and service to
the school. *o".W;A.; .... ...... ... . {:
We have built a strong foundation for journalists of the
future. We only hope the success which we achieved this
year will be continued by more new staff members and
their contributions.
EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK
By Konkol
First to get rid of old business concerning the Jose Greco performance,
I must reply to Miss S. Mikaelian's letter in last week's
issue:
I am certain that if I had been at the performance, I would have
enjoyed it. For the $4,500 it cost, it should have been good. However,
prior commitments with the Naval Reserve have my Tuesday
evenings pretty well tied up for the next 23 years.
I have never stated that any performance put on by the Parkside
Activities Board was not worthwhile-from a cultural standpoint. I
must state again, since you seemed to have missed it, that all
programs put on by the PAB should at least attract enough response to
break even financially. This one was a very long way from doing that.
Please read what you are complaining about more carefully. And
please stop trying to put words in my mouth, the foot is in yours.
In relation to the Haack-telegram incident mentioned last week, a
motion was introduced at the last Student Senate meeting which would
prevent any member of the senate or officer of the senate from signing
the name of the Parkside Student Government Association or the
Student Senate to any political correspondence which did not directly
concern the University of Wisconsin. The motion was defeated by a
large majority.
This is the last chance faculty have to reserve Stanton Friedman's
time for Tuesday, April 17. Interested groups should contact the Activities
Office. Do it now!
Tickets are now on sale for the Friedman performance. Cost is $1.00
for students and $1.50 for general admission. Besides being available
at the Activities Office, tickets can be found at Cook-Gere in Racine
and Bidinger's in Kenosha.
I have mentioned that I totally support bringing in entertainment for
the students which would not lose money from the student segregated
fee. I think most students agree with this. Another such program is the
Wayne S. Sho presentation on extrasensory perception which is being
presented this Friday.
Like the Stanton Friedman performance, "Major" Aho is being paid
through a percentage of the gate, and any profits could be plowed back
into programs benefiting students at Parkside. If enough participation
is shown in both the Aho and Friedman programs, this type of
arrangment might be looked on favorably and agreed to by other
performers appearing here.
In case you've missed other notices about the performance, Major
Aho will be appearing at Tallent Hall this Friday, April 6 at 8 p.m.
There will be no advance ticket sales. Admission at the door will be 75
cents for students with I.D. cards and $1 general admission. At those
prices how can you go wrong?
At the rate of $1.65 an hour, it would cost $2,376 to keep the lower
level doors of the library open from 8 to 5 sixteen weeks of each
semester during both the fall and spring semesters. That's $2,376 total.
I know it sounds like a lot of money, but experiences so far seem to
prove it would be worth it.
A near riot resulted last Wednesday at the Activities Building
performance of Tony, Jumbo and Gary. It seems that when somebody
tried to close the performance down at 11 p.m., the enthusiastic crowd
didn t want to leave until the management agreed to an encore Some
have blamed poor planning in the affair and others wonder where any
fault would he. J
by Rudy Lienau
The Ranger staff has wanted to go to a 12-page paper for a long time
because ads were really cramping us for space. This 12-page edition
was possible because our ad manager has been doing a superior job
and marks the beginning of a better Ranger-in quality and quantity.
We hope to have more 12-page editions in these last few weeks and I
hope they are enjoyed.
I hadn't allowed a 12-page paper earlier in the year because we
didn't quite have enough ad revenue to support it. Now we have passed
the dollar amount needed to pay for a larger paper with all its
overhead. As long as we continue to pull in the ad revenue necessary to
pay for 12-page papers, we will continue to produce them. We are
reasonably certain, judging from the amount of holdover copy each
week, that we can successfully produce interesting and important
copy for our readership in the 12-pager.
We will be able to change our inside format because of increased
flexibility. I hope the poets, creative writers, artists and other craftsmen
take advantage of the opportunity to publish their work.
I feel we will be able to more successfully cover all the events which
concern our campus with more thoroughness and, I hope, in a manner
which is pleasing to our readership.
Applications for the
position of editor-in-chief
for the 1973-74 RANGER
are now being accepted by
the newspaper's advisory
board.
All Parkside students
who will be carrying at
least eight hours per
semester are eligible to
apply for the position,
which is made on a September
to May basis.
Each candidate is asked
to submit details of his
journalistic experience
and a statement of his
plans for the RANGER to
Don Kopriva, Adviser to
Student Publications, by
Friday, April 13, at D-194
LLC.
The advisory board will
interview candidates
Tuesday, April 17, and
announce its selection
before spring break.
ic Th e Parkside-
RANGER
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library-
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subiect of
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include
wfthhPiH0nenUm aPd siudent status or tacultyrank' Names will
prim any letters. rCSerVe the right t0 refuse
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence
WRITER:,: Ken KonkioL Gary Jensen, Marilyn Schubert, Jeannine Sipsma, Helmut Kah mil
Blaha, Bruce Rasmussen, Terri Gogola, Geotf Blaesing Helmut Kah, Bill
CARTOONISTS: Gary Huck, Bob Rohan, Amy Cundarijim Vukos
R™™RAPHERS: Ken Konkol< Bi" Noll, Dennis Doonan, GraaSyston
STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau
ADVISER: Don Kopriva f,, ^REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. y
360 Lexington Av«., Ntw York, N. »\ 10017 I
Wed. , April 4, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3
Tutorial service growing
After eight weeks of operation
the Parkside tutorial service has
raised the number of students
being tutored from three per
week in the first week to 71 per
week.
The program offers tutorial
help to students in all the basic
academic areas.
According to Isom Fearn,
counselor, a goal or limit has not
been set on the eventual number
of students tutored. He said the
facility and number of rooms will
be the limiting factor. The service
is presently located in
Tallent Hall offices.
"We may extend ourselves to
evenings and weekends if the
need warrants, Fearn said.
He also said faculty have been
very good in that they have
referred people to the service.
For more information contact
Fearn in room 280 at Tallent Hall.
Trio ex pands
Local group proves professionalism
by Gary Jensen
All from the Racine are they
are; Chris. Inloes (Jumbo), 20,
Tony Bresette, 21, Gary Wolk, 20,
Michael Harmon, 21, and
sometimes Tommy Fell, 22.
Jumbo plays acoustic and
electric guitar plus harmonica.
Tony plays acoustic and electric
guitar and congas. Garry plays
piano, acoustic and electric
guitar, flute, and mandolin.
Michael plays bass and Tommy
is the occasional drummer.
Vocals are supplied by Tony,
Jumbo, and Garry.
It all began in March of 1972
when Tony Bresette and Chris
Inloes (Jumbo) got together for
the first time. Thanks to encouragement
from Tony Totero,
coordinator of Student
Programming, and Bill Niebuhr,
coordinator of S tudent Life Tony
and Jumbo kept playing and
joined with Gary Wolk in Sept.
Michael Harmon assimilated
with the group in Dec., when they
also added the electric act. About
a month ago Tommy Fell joined
as a part time drummer.
The main influences of the
Tony, Jumbo, and Garry sound
are Crosby, Stills, Nash and
Young. Besides performing the
songs of their favorites they also
do a considerable amount of
Jethro Tull and any occassional
other song that fits their style.
The group has perfected a style
and they choose material acceptable
it.
In addition to this, the boys
have recently began writing their
own material. Although they
haven't done it as ofyet, they now
have cumulated enough original
substance to sustain a whole
show. Tony has written "In My
Dreams," "Waterman," and
"But Don't I Know You."
"California" is a composition by
Garry; and Jumbo wrote the
lyrics for "Shining Horses" that
are set to a melody by John
Dorsey.
The band concentrates on the
type of music in which vocals and
vocal harmonies are the major
accent. "We try to convey our
own feelings through music so
toher people may interpet them
as we do," said Jumbo.
"We find it very hard to produce
polished vocals without constant
practice"'
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Tony, Jumbo, and Garry
usually play at college concerts
and coffee houses. They are
available as an alternate
acoustic-electric set, or as either
only acoustic or only electric.
They are usually the featured act
and prices range from $150 to $500
a concert. Profits are usually
higher for them when they are a
back-up band
They are happy about the way
performances are being received
and are especially pleased with
Parkside support. Jumbo expressed
a desire to record with
the group someday, but felt that
this is a remote possibility as of
make some sort of career out of
music.
Wednesday, March 28, they put
on a free concert at 9 p.m. at the
Student Activities Building. They
sounded exceptionally fine, as
usual, and left the audience of
about 200+ a hair's width from
ecstasy. There was also "Ohio,"
which always produces their best
crowd reaction. For an encore
they presented three by Jethro
Tull: "Thick. As a Brick,"
"Locomotive Breath" and
"Windup."
Parkside students should feel
honored by the free concert
because Tony, Jumbo, and Garry
are worth a hell of a lot more.
the
Movement
Editor's note: "The Movement" is a regular feature in RANGER to
deal with women's concerns at Parkside and in society in general.
Guest writers are invited. This week's article comes from the
University News and Publications Service in Madison.
WOMEN CREATE "DO-IT-YOURSELF," ALTERNATIVE
FEMINIST MEDIA
Wohien in communications are "underutilized, underpaid, underrepresented,
underestimated, undercover, unreported, excluded from
decision-making, from the significant events, the prestigious old boys'
clubs, and from the monetary and other rewards of the profession "
according to Prof. Kathryn F. Clarenbach of the University of
Wisconsin-Madison.
But rather than bemoaning the problems that do exist, women are
taking stock of solutions already available and those in the offing.
These solutions, Ms. Clarenbach says, loosely fall into "three
avenues," or categories media women are utilizing to avoid being "a
winter rerun of the story of women everywhere else in American
society."
"Women everywhere else" is a topic on which she is thoroughly
knowledgeable through her extensive activities within the women's
movement. Besides being a professor of political science, she is a
specialist in women's education within University Extension,
chairperson of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women'
arid a founder of the National Organization of Women (NOW).
NOW and a multitude of women's groups around the country
strongly support the alternative feminist press Ms. Clarenbach lists as
one answer to the exclusion of women from communications, both as
participants and as subjects. This condition, she says, "deprives 53
percent of our population from the right to be represented, to speak for
themselves, and not to be spoken for by others."
The feminist "do-it-yourself" press, on the other hand, issues its own
pressreleases, has its own information Clearinghouse (KNOW, Inc.)
its own publisher (The Feminist Press, Washington D.C.), and its own
wide range of periodicals and newsletters, national and local, from
Ms. to Madison's own Whole Woman. This self-sufficiency lends to the
movement the opportunities to raise the most crucial issues, provides
• outlets for talent, arid creates the network of information "essential to
any social movement."
Within the traditional establishment press-the second avenue of
women in communications, believes Ms. Clarenbach-the "heroic
Boswells" of journalism have persuaded their papers to publish
feminist material and helped to make things happen rather than just
waited to report them.
The third avenue lies in the unlimited possibilities of communications
women's own inventiveness. Among the examples she
cites are the Feminist Theater in Washington where women handle all
the technical jobs, from carpentry and set design on up; similar
examples in film, radio and publishing; and the new presence of
women in the political sphere. Here politicians like Bella Abzug and
Shirley Chjsholm are exchanging roles with communicators like
Gloria Steinem.
American society may persist in asking what the female of the
species has to say that anyone wants to hear, says Ms. Clarenbach, but
women in communications now know their alternatives and are
pursuing them.
We get letters • • •
To the Editor:
Ken Konkol asks, in his column
THORN, issue of Feb. 28, why the
lower level doors to the Library
cannot be kept open longer hours-
-at the very least, he suggests,
from eight to five.
The answer is economy. To
keep a door open, there must be
someone at the door to function
as an exit guard. We figure that
.to staff one station full time
amounts to $8-9,000 a year: a
costly operation especially since
the exit guard cannot do other
kinds of productive work.
At the beginning of the year, we
closed the lower level door
completely. This, it soon became
evident, was inconvenient. Then
we recalculated, found that the
busy hours were nine to four; and
so we compromised on these.
That the lower doors should be
shut at all is undesirable. But
we'd rather put exit guard money
into cataloging staff, so we can
get the books on the shelves
quickly; into reference staff, so
we can have professional help
available as much as possible for
the confused patron; and into
ti rj l instructional staff, so we can give By Gary Huck classes in library use.
Economics is the allocation of.
scarce resources. You can never
do everything. We thought thisallocation
of funds made sense.
Philip M. Burnett
Director of Libraries
To Parkside Student Body:
I want to thank you for communicating
your concern about
the situation at Wounded Knee
and about Indian affairs.
You may be sure that your
views are appreciated and have
been carefully noted.
I am enclosing a statement by
Secretary of the Interior Rogers
C B. Morton which I am sure you
will find of interest.
Marvin Franklin
Asst. to the Secretary
For Indian Affairs
Editor's Note: PSGA President
Tom Haack sent a message
expressing concern about the
treatment of Indians and the
situation at Wounded Knee. The
statement by Secretary oft the
Interior referred to in the above
letter is on file in the Student
Government office and is
available for scrutiny.
To the Editor:
I was sitting down at the
student government office
reading a book and a student
came in with an unusual request.
He wanted to know if we could put
the Parkside flag at half mast. I
asked him why and he told me a
girl in one of h is classes had died
of cancer. He further told me that
he went to see Asst. Chancellor
Dearborn about the flag.
The student only knew her
name and that she died. But
because he cared he wanted to do
more to show his concern than
just a thought. So when you see
the flag at half-mast stop and
think about caring. The Student
Government and the students ol
Parkside offer our deepest
sympathy to the family of Mary
T. Jenn, a freshman from
Racine.
Patrick McDevitl
Senator, PSGA
4 THE PARKSI DE RANGER Wed./ Ap r i l A , 1 9 7 3
The Raven
By Gary Jensen
New dorm-living concept conceived
COSMIC WHEELS
Donavan
Epic (KE 32156)
curreTmus^Thpln^ defin*ely established within the realm of
an esoteric^nahiTp hnf nf mUS1C bandS 3nd their Products are still of
demand Pink Sn i AT are*l&\8 indicating a growing consumer
^JfPinJ F1fyd and Amon Duul maintain a steady appeal while
S"!: :8 NGW f°rCeS SUCh as ui-cnestra are emerging within this scene. Mahavishnu
he reason that this phenomena exists is quite interesting Once
upon a time there was a bunch of kids who grew up reading Captain
in thdrifte^dollarneand °f fiCti°n COmiC b°°ks- Then'
f ? . Ce'they turned onto Timothy Leary's philosophy
furtheSitr tab'e quantities 01 **D. Now these minds seek
fnrlu f in a more natural (?) form. Hence, the blame
for all of us crazies rests in the hands of the creators of Spider Man.
^beii°talamaSS °ff?ese mind-expanders are in sharp contrast to the
Svp ft audience of toe strictly metal music makers. The star seekers
rtaltt frt teamt ?°nSC!SuS and unconscious. but they still confront
reality from time to time. The only reality for a downer freak is death
Aicordmg to Greg Shaw of PRM (Phonograph Record Magazine)
space music breaks down into two categories-space rock and cosmic
music Space rock is music left in its original pattern with a new
element added. This element is usually a synthesiser or a weird
sounding organ. Against this is cosmic music which is derived from
various sources. Hawkwind is an example of space rock while Pink
t>^ u Mahavishnu Orchestra are representative of cosmic music.
I d have to go along with this breakdown but not with Shaw's appraisal
of each. He claims space rock is better because it is more
commercial More commercial it may be but space rock, in his
definition (which he received from Ohr music), is not superior to
cosmic music. Cross-breeding always creates healthier offspring I
ma!"tai" that "sPace Odyssey" by the Byrds is a fantastic composition
for the very same reasons Shaw says it fails. Hawkwind as of
yet maintains the power to create imaginative effects and liberate
minds. This is accomplished by repetitive, simple guitar, bass and
drum playing that develop into climaxes, all the while submerged in a
sea of synthesiser effects. Hawkwind is sensational now and I cherish
their present products. But, in time, if they are held rigidly within
these limits, they will become boring, suffocating from lack of fresh
air.
Donavan should offer additional proof of the superiority of cosmic
music. He got everyone smoking banana peels a few years back and
following this he turned many onto meditation. Since everything
changed, today nothing is as unhip as that passive flower child. He was
left to thrill the hearts of 14-year-old girls.
When I first encountered COSMIC WHEELS, I had in mind a strict
folk singer type. But, being enticed by its cosmic cover and thinking of
"Hurdy Gurdy Man" at the time, my curiosity got the best of me.
The package material is black and white but somehow evokes color
The inside of the open-up jacket contains a sketch of some fantasyland
with the invitation to get out your crayons and color it.
The music is ecletic and produces a most unique form of cosmic
vibrations. "Cosmic Wheels" has Donavan strumming an acoustic
guitar while singing with a mysterious and appealing voice. This is set
to a good beat, with a violin added. High-pitched choir voices are like
ghosts approaching from the background. The total effect is teasingly
scary.
"Earth Sign Man" is a blues done in an outer space fashion. It has a
break with a lead guitar and a sax, that depicts movement in the Milky
Way. The sax is played by Bobby Keyes.
Donavan introduces "Sleep" with a high-reaching voice that settles
into his usual one. Bobby Keyes is in here again, along with some
metal guitar chords. Donavan trails off a couple lines with his
quivering voice style that sends chills up your spine.
The only sore spot on side one is "Maria Magenta," with its accordian
that makes it sound like the Lawrence Welk rock show.
Perhaps the most sensational cut is "Wild Witch Lady." Built upon a
simple go-go guitar riff, it also features more soprano-apparition
voices. Donavan sing-screams the chorus lines as if he was an affected
teenage Lucifer. There also is his quivering vocals that follow the end
of some lines. "...Lady" would be the best bet for a single release from
the album.
"The Music Makers" is a rocker that has funky-soul roots. A guitar
reminiscent of the early Kinks is also a part of it. It develops into a
rock chant at the end.
The sensational substance gives way at this point. "The Intergalactic
Laxative" is a Scottish folk song about the problems of
human waste in outer space. Humor is the only adhering quality.
"I Like You" is Donavan as his most sentimental, love-singing
person. It is either very touching or very irritating, depending on your
mood.
The remainder is reserved for "Only the Blues" and "Appearances."
"Only the Blues" is a country-type number and "Appearances"
is another super-tender piece.
COSMIC WHEELS IS Donavan's attempt to get back into the pop
scene by entering the space race. While a little more than half of the
material would probably be favored by the general pop audience, this
larger portion contains some of the most outstanding space music.
What is needed is a little publicity and the release of a single from this
disc. When this happens Donavan may again become a guru of modern
youth.
(Record courtesy of J&J Tapes and Records)
MADISON - A new concept in
dormitory living at UW-Madison
may go a long way toward
alleviating study problems as
well as closing the gap between
social and academic aspects of
student life.
Beginning next August, Gilman
House, an 80-student unit of
Kronshage Halls, located on the
shore of Lake Mendota, will be
reserved exclusively for
engineering and nursing
students.
"It is unusual in present dor-
Republican results
mitory practice to have students
with a common academic interest
together," says College of
Engineering Associate Dean
Fred 0. Leidel.
The Gilman House situation, he
explains, will encourage a concentration
of nursing and
engineering students (particularly
now, since men are now
entering the nursing field and
women are going into
engineering). These students, in
other housing, have had little
opportunity for contact with
those in their own fields.
With the new concentration,
Leidel says, "it will be convenient
for faculty members and
student groups to make themselves
available for advising and
information, and for providing
tutoring services and guest
speakers."
Gilman House, which is being
co-sponsored by the College of
Engineering and the UW Division
of Residence Halls, with the
cooperation of the School of
Nursing, joins a variety of other
coeducational dormitories which
already exist on the Madison
campus.
Convention starts process
by Marilyn Schubert
For the average voter, political
activity probably begins and ends
with the election. For those active
in party politics, however,
this could not be further from the
truth. The election is the climax
of months of campaign activities,
primaries, fund-raising events,
and especially at this time of
year, party conventions.
Parkside is represented at the
state conventions of two
Republican groups this month,
the Wisconsin College
Republicans and the Wisconsin
Federation of Young
R e p u b l i c a n s . C o l l e g e
Republicans consists of a number
of c olleges who broke away from
Young Republicans several years
ago. Their convention took place
March 16-18 in Wausau. Young
Republicans consists of people
from the ages 14-35, including
some colleges who chose not to
leave the federation. This convention
was held last weekend in
Brookfield with the theme
"MiGovern Down and Lucey to
Go."
A typical convention includes
district caucuses, meetings of
committees such as resolutions,
constitution, rules and credentials,
election of officers, awards
banquets and, of course, parties!
The caucuses and most of the
committee reports deal with
internal workings of the
organization. The resolutions,
however, may be of more
widespread interest. Young
Republican resolutions were not
available at the time of this
printing. College Republicans
considered over 50 resolutions,
the more notable among them
involved the following:
Reinstitution of the death
penalty as outlined by President
Nixon - Pass
Opposition to the Equal Rights
Amendment - Pass
Legalization of marijuana -
Defeat
Recommend immediate
prosecution of lawbreakers occupying
Wounded Knee, South
Dakota, and condemnation of
Attorney General Kliendienst for
his poor handling of the situation -
Pass
No unconditional amnesty -
Pass
Opposition to abortion except in
cases of harm to mother - Pass
Open contraceptive policy -
Pass
Commendation of President
Nixon and Henry Kissinger on
their handling of the war in
Vietnam - Pass
Retention of tenure system -
Defeat
Among those elected to College
Republican offices were
sophomores Ross Workman and
Caesar Geiger as Southeastern
Area Coordinator and Deputy
Coordinator, respectively. Kathj
Stokley Matz of UW-Superior was
elected Chairman.
Parkside delegates to the
Young Republican convention
included seniors Ken Axelson and
Alan Bryner. Official election
results were not available
However, Muriel Coleman ol
Madison was running unopposed
for Chairman as was freshman
Marilyn Schubert foi
Southeastern Area College
Coordinator.
Parkside Activities Board presents
QMiat'. 2
cA/ew
Qussycat ?
Wednesday, April 9
Gr. 103 - 2:00 & 8:00 p.m.
50 cents admission
2nd National (formerly Shakey's) Cocktail Bar and Restaurant
6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485
UVE BiTEBTMIK? I BANOING
River City
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'LUNCH ZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-Ji
11:30-1:30
lon.-Fri. Sat. & Si
*159 $189
PIZZA
20 KINDS SERVED ALL THE TIME
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'FISH FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S
Wed.&Fri. j«gg
from 5 p.m. I
CHICKEN
W MO-JO'S SERVED ALL THE TIME
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers
Wed. , Apri l 4, 1973 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER S
Film Society presents
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENNING 'Woman in the Dunes
Approximately 200 nomination
papers have been turned in for
Parkside's outstanding teacher
awards. The awards committee
urges all students who think they
have an outstanding teacher to
write a nomination paper and file
it with that committee. •
"How Body Language Talks"
will be offered by the UWExtension
on the Wood Road
campus Wednesday, May 2 and 9
from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Gestures, postures, facial
expressions and other forms of
nonverbal communicationusually
unconscious--can
enhance or change the meaning
of what you are saying. This is
known as body language. The
course will help you to become
aware of body language as you
and others use it to express attitudes
and emotions.
The instructor will be Scott
Baudhuin, assistant professor of
communication.
Fees for the course are $4.50, $7
for a married couple.
Registration deadline is April 25.
For further information phone
553-2312. •
The Parkside Vets Club will
sponsor a dance Thursday, April
19 from 9 p.m. to l a.m in the
Student Activities Building. The
band will be Blood Money and
admission will be $i 50
Wisconsin and Parkside I D's
required.
Applications for the $200
Scholarship offered by the
Business and Professional
Women's Club of Kenosha are
available in the Kenosha Campus
Student Services Office (Room
135). To be considered, applicants
must be single female
residents of Kenosha County who
are in their sophomore or junior
year of college and plan to continue
their studies. Students from
any major field of study are
eligible to apply. Deadline for
returning applications is Friday,
April 13.
The Parkside Vets Club will
meet Sunday, April 8 at 7 p.m. in
the Student Activities Building.
There will be a nomination of
officers and Bill Kemp, Outreach
counselor for the Vets Administration
Regional Office, will
speak.
Beta Lambda chapter of Alpha
Kappa Lambda fraternity here at
Parkside is proud to announce
the acceptance of three new
members. They are: Jim Filipek,
Mark Holler and Chuck Stephen.
A second pledge class this
semester will begin this week. If
interested, contact George Kis
(632-4742) or Jim Gaastra (634-
6461) or any member at large.
Extension offers course
on Latin America
A look at the complex and
fascinating continent of Latin
America will be taken in a class
offered by the University of
Wisconsin-Extension.
Prof. Jose Ortega, instructor
for the class, calls Latin America
an almost unknown continent,
where everything is immense.
Prof. Ortega has traveled, lectured
and published materials on
Latin American countries, and is
a Parkside faculty member. He
will cover the land and the
people, the economy; institutions:
church, army,
oligarchy; the culture;
revolutions, coups and
guerrillas; and Latin America's
relationship to the world.
The class will meet on the
Kenosha Campus, 3700
Washington Road, on five
Wednesdays beginning April 4, at
7:30 p.m. Registrations are being
taken by University Extension at
553-2312.
Telephone 652-8662
3315-52nd St.
Kenosha, Wis.
meos
PIZZA HITCH BN
Chicken & It alian Sa usage Bombers
Free Delivery t o P arkside V illage
SOU SOth Anna* Phone 6S7-S191
Friday
Safety and Security will again
offer a state certified defensive
driving course Saturday, April 7
from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. in
Greenquist Room 101. To register
call Safety and Security at Ext
2455.
How to get to Europe, how to
get around when there, and what
and how to see it will be discussed
in a University Extension class
entitled "Prelude to European
Travel."
Dennis Dean, an instructor
from the Parkside faculty, has
spent some time on the continent
and is an experienced traveler.
His emphasis will be thoroughly
practical, balancing comfort and
convenience on one hand against
expense on the other. Class
participants will learn how to get
the most for their money and how
to get the most out of every day.
The class will meet for six
Tuesdays beginning April 3, at
7:30 p.m. on the Wood Road
Campus. For registration information
contact University
Extension, 553-2312.
What's New Pussycat? will be
shown by the Activities Board on
Monday, April 9, at 2 p.m. and 8
p.m. in Greenquist 103. The film
stars Peter Sellers, Woody Allen
and Ursula Andress. Studentfaculty-
staff admission is 50
cents.
Woman in the Dunes, a 1964
Japanese film about a man and
woman trapped at the bottom of a
sand dune, will be shown Friday
April 6 at 7:30 by the Parkside
Film Society, in Greenquist 103
New York Times film critic
Bosley Crowther describes it as a
"strangely poetic drama" which
encompasses "a disturbing
allegory of the fate of man in the
world-a strong expression of the
enslavement of the spirit by all
the demands of environment."
Named Best Japanese Film of
1964, it is also a Cannes Film
r estival award winner, New
York Film Festival sellout, and
Montreal Film Festival award
winner.
The short, Gerald McBoing
Boing, a 1950 Academy Award
winner narrated in rhyme, will
also be shown. Admission is 60
cents.
Forum benifit planned
A "Two-Bit Poetry Forum"
will be staged as a benefit for the
Harlow B. Mills Scholarship
Fund from noon to 1:30 p.m. on
Thursday in the Whiteskellar by
the Parkside Poetry Forum.
Minimum donation is two bits
(what else?).
Faculty members participating
in the forum will include
Stella Gray and Richard
Carrington presenting an Emily
Dickinson dialog, John Van
Willigen reading Tagore, Susan
Craig reading e.e. cummings,
Norbert Isenberg reading
Schiller and Whitman, Carole
Vopat reading several modern
woman poets, and Andrew
McLean reading John Donne and
Giuseppe Ungaretti.
J & J
Tape & Record Cen ter
Super Low Prices
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine
518-56th St., Kenosha
AUTO &
TRUCK
PARTS GORDON AUTO PARTS, INC.
Compl e t e Machine Shop Service
Pain t & B ody Shop Suppl i e s
High Performance Work .
1400 Milwaukee Ave.
Racine, Wis.
Mon Fri . 7.30 9.00
Saturday 7 30 5:30
Sunday 9 00 1 00
Discount to Parks ide Student s
% K^epk
4437 - 2-2 nd Av enue Kenosha,
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774
I
I
I
Alfredo's Restaurant
2827 63rd St., Kenosha
V0"\ITAL'AN FOOD A SPECIALTY
^SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA
IEWIRES-BF DRINKS AVAILABLE FROM THE BAR
Ap r i1 U3 50' OFF ANY
- 5 Q <
The Mills Scholarship Fund
was established in memory of the
late UW-P professor of life
science, poet and humanist, who
was the first acting chairman of
the College of Science and
Society.
I
I
I
I
I
CHECKING is
AT FIRST NATIONAL
OF RACINE
• No minimum
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• No limit to the
number of checks
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CHECKING
IS
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CHECKING
IS
AT FIRST NATIONAL
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Open your free checking
account soon at
First National Bank
and Trust Company of Racine
Member ot Federal Fteserve System
Member Federal Deposit insurance Corp
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine
6 T H E P a r k s ,DE RANGER Wed., Ap r i l 4, 1 9 7 3
Correspondent Childs
to speak at Madison
in May
MADISON - Marquis W.
Childs, Washington correspondent
for the St. Louis Post-
Dispatch, will be the headline
speaker when the UW-Madison
School of Journalism and Mass
Communication dedicates its
JT_of Vilas Communication
Hall May 11.
An all-day program will pay
tribute to the school's former
directors, Willard G. Bleyer,
Grant M. Hyde, and Ralph o!
Nafziger; offer seminars on
Government and the Press" and
"Advertising and Consumerism";
include dedication
of a journalism court honoring A.
Matt Werner, Sheboygan, former
UW regent; feature presentation
of special awards to
distinguished alumni and tours of
the new facility.
Friends and alumni of the
school are invited to attend.
The array of participants will
include:
Madison campus Chancellor
Edwin Young; Don Davies,
Madison, president of the
school's alumni association; Don
Anderson, former publisher of
the Wisconsin State Journal,
Madison; Prof. Harold L. Nelson,
director of the school; Carl
Steiger, Oshkosh, former UW
regent; Helen Matheson Rupp of
the Wisconsin State Journal;
Courtland R. Conlee, retired vicepresident
of the Milwaukee
Journal; and Robert Wright,
Montello, vice-president of the
Wisconsin Press Association.
A mosaic, "Freedom of
Communication," by Prof.
James S. Watrous of the campus
art history department, will be
unveiled, and the University
Singers will present a concert.
Two years in the building, Vilas
Communication Hall was opened
last fall for use by the school,
communication arts department,
WHA and WHA-TV, the Compass
Theatre, and the Daily Cardinal.
Other dedication programs are
being planned by these groups.
The $10.7 million six-story
structure, located in the heart of
the campus, contains
classrooms, research facilities,
theaters, laboratories, studios,
seminar rooms, rehearsal areas,
production units, and maintenance,
repair and storage
areas.
The school is the oldest continuing
journalism education
program at an American
university. It was founded in 1905.
An authority on
mathematics curriculum
development, Prof. Wade
Ellis, visited UW-Parkside
Thursday and Friday as a
part of the Mathematics
Association of America
V i s i t i n g L e c t u r e r s
Program. His schedule
included a lecture for area
secondary and college
level math teachers as
well as talks in UW-P
classes . Shown at the
lecture, above, are left to
right: Denise Kolmos, a
senior at St. Joseph's High
School, Kenosha; Donald
Piele of the Parkside math
faculty; Dr. Wade; Sister
C e c e l i a H u d e c , math
teacher at St. Joseph's;
and Esther Klemp, math
teacher at Washington
Junior High School,
Racine. Dr. Wade is dean
of t he graduate school at
the University of
Michigan. He has conducted
seminars for math
teachers throughout the
U.S. an d in India, France
and Peru.
Conflict Center sees work ahead
MADISON — T he Center for
Conflict Resolution at Madison
believes peace is a way of living,
not just the absence of war.
"Although war in Vietnam is
over, we still have to study ways
of living so other wars don't
break out," explains Robert
Mishacoff, a conscientious objector
doing alternative military
service at the Center.
The Center conducts
workshops for church and civic
groups attempting to resolve
conflicts ranging from interpersonal
to international. It
also operates a research
program providing background
in the art of conflict resolutionteaching
people not to be afraid of
conflict.
Founded in 1970 as "a peace
education project," the Center
now has 14 active workers.
"We haven't been particularly
active in the role of mediator.
Our role is mostly educational so
people can more successfully
resolve their own problems,"
Mishacoff says.
A chance for real conflict
resolution came recently when
three Center members were sent
by the National Council of
Churches to be non-violent observers
at the confrofitation at
Wounded Knee, South Dakota.
A unique opportunity to spend
four weeks in New York City
studying the United Nations
through regular UWM credit
courses, attendance at U.N.
sessions and meetings with
delegation and secretariat
personnel, is being offered to
undergraduates of eleven participating
universities of The
University of Wisconsin system,
as part of a six weeks, 6-credit
course. The first two weeks of the
course will be held on the UWM
Mishacoff notes the Dayton,
Ohio police force now has officers
trained in non-violent conflict
resolution. The Center is working
on making inroads in this area in
Madison.
The Center is funded through
private sources, grants from
companies and private
U. N.
campus in preparatory study.
Each student will enroll in two
3-credit courses focusing upon
the U.N. and international
organization. While in New York
City, the participants will live in
dormitories of the New York
University Medical Center,
within walking distance of the
U.N. Expenses are based upon
regular UWM summer tuition
and dormitory costs. Admission
is open to legal residents of
Wisconsin who will be
.sophomores, juniors or seniors by
donations, with the University
providing only office space.
Both the Center and the
University agree the University
shouldn't provide financial
support.
"Although our funding is very
inadequate...several people work
here full time and we are unable
study
the summer of 1973 at one of the
participating institutions.
Candidates should have a substantial
number of college credits
in history and social studies, a
basic course in political science
(preferably international
relations), and a grade point
average of 2.50 or above (between
B and C).
Descriptive booklets and application
blanks are available
from the Office of the Dean,
College of Science and Society^
Greenouist 345.
to pay them very much...I don't
think we would look for
University funding. We wouldn't
want to be tied down," Mishacoff
contends.
Madison Chancellor Edwin
Young agrees:
"The Center for Conflict
Resolution is better as an
alternative institution. One of the
Center's values is that it is not
associated with the University. It
has greater credibility because of
it."
The Center would like to work
with the University, however, in
creating an academic program in
conflict or "peace" studies. One
course—Conflict in American
Society-exists, taught voluntarily
by sociology Prof. Joseph
W. Elder. A Center founder,
James M. Struve, is the volunteer
teaching assistant.
Elder is hopeful a major can be
created in conflict resolution.
"We see beginnings of careers
in conflict resolution. Marriage
counselors are just one example
of this."
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Parkside Activities Board
presents
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An Illustrated Lecture
/heft*1
4'-""'STANTON I.
FRIEDMAN Tues. - April 17
8:00 p.m.
Phy. Ed. Bldg.
Adm: $1.00
Tickets Available: Info Center
EWv9v\U
Credit offered for
Wed., April 4, 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7
"Do we really need all that power? y y
Continued from page 1
Safety Record
MacKenzie explained that
while the safety record of the 30
currently operating plants
sounds good, it really isn't. The
power companies claim no accidents
in about 150 years of
reactor experience. This sounds
nice, but as MacKenzie explained
it, the meaning changed.
One year of reactor experience
is defined as having one reactor
in operation for one year. Having
one reactor in operation for two
years yields two years of reactor
experience, but so does having
two reactors in operation for one
year. With our present number of
reactors, some of which have
been operating for several years,
we have about 150 years of experience
according to this
definition.
If t he AEC has its way and the
United States has 60 percent of i ts
energy supplied by nuclear
reactors, we will have to have at
least 1,000 reactors by the year
2000. That means one accident
per year.
Safety System Testing
It seems that all this wouldn't
be so bad if the AEC was trying to
test and improve the safety
systems in our present and future
reactors. But MacKenzie pointed
out that very few tests have
actually been done. There was a
series of tests using computers
and theoretical stiuations. When
Viet Vet
conference
slated
MADISON -- A statewide
conference for Vietnam-era
vetera s is slated Thursday on the
UW-Madison campus.
Sponsored by the Madison
campus Vets for Vets group, the
all-day conference is titled
"Where to Now?" Focus will be
on the lack of use of the G.I. Bill
in Wisconsin, veterans' employment
problems, and
psychological disorders of
veterans, according to coordinator
Steve Harrison,
discharged from the U.S.
Marines this January.
Harrison emphasized that
anyone interested in the
problems of veterans is welcome
to attend.
Speakers include UW system
Executive Vice-President Donald
E. Percy and Wayne D. Horner,
active in Vets for Vets. Sessions
are scheduled for the Wisconsin
Union beginning at 8 a.m.
Vets for Vets was founded on
this campus last fall to aid
returning Vietnam-era veterans.
the hypothetical LOAC were run
through the computer, the ECCS
all functioned. However, in one
test the only one of its kind, a
real LOAC was created in a
model reactor, the core of which
was heated by electricity. When
the primary cooling system
failed, the ECCS began to work,
but the extreme temperature in
the core caused the water to turn
to steam and immediately force
its way out. The result was a
failure of the ECCS.
Test Failures
These test failures led to AEC
hearings on whether ECCS
design criteria are adequate.
Although the hearings will not be
completed until sometime this
year, the AEC has continued to
license nuclear plants to operate
with the old ECCS design, and to
issue construction pursuits for
new ones.
The next speaker, Dr. John W.
Gofman, who has a Ph. D. in
Nuclear Physical Chemistry and
is the former AEC scientist,
discussed the physiological
impact of nuclear accidents.
Gofman also, discussed the fact
that the nation is being presented
with an even greater danger with
the development erf the Breeder
reactor. This reactor actually
creates more fuel in its reaction.
This fuel is Plutonium 239, an
extremely toxic substance. To
give an idea of how toxic this
element is, Gofman quoted some
statistics on its ability to cause
lung cancer. Gofman stated that
one pound of Pu-239 could cause
nine billion cases of lung cancer.
The AEC proposes to ship this
material in trucks on the nation's
highways
hi addition to the shipping of
radioactive materials, there is
also the problem of storing the
nuclear waste created by the
plants.
Current storage is not perfect,
as the radioactive waste is placed
in stainless steel containers
which must be replaced
periodically because they leak.
Moratorium
Gofman's answer to all this
was to stop. He asked why the
U.S. should continue to endanger
the environment and build cancer
into the lives of future
generations. Gofman strongly
believes that there should be an
indefinite moratorium on nuclear
reactors. There are other
possible sources for power, such
as the unlimited supply of solar
Artist Concert Series
to conclude Sunday
Pianist Marylene Dosse will
present the final program in the
University Artists Concert Series
at Parkside at 3 p.m. on Sunday,
April 8, in Greenquist Hall.
Ms. Dosse will play an all-
Saint-Saens program. In April,
she will begin recording the
complete works of Saint-Saens
for Vox records in New York.
Her Saint-Saens program at
Parkside will consist of Suite, Op.
90; Souvenir d'ltalie, Op. 80;
Minuet and Valse, Op. 56; Three
Etudes, Op. Ill, No. 2, 1, 6; Six
Bagatelles, Op. 3; Two Valses,
Op. 104 and 110; and Theme
Varie, Op. 97.
Ms. Dosse has in the past few
years been artist-in-residence for
UW-Whitewater and the UW
Center System.
French-born, she graduated
from the Paris Conservatory with
highest awards both in piano and
chamber music. She won first
place in the Salzburg, Austria,
piano contest in 1962 and the
French Ministry of Culture
granted her a special scholarship
to continue her Salzburg studies
for the following year.
Participating in the masters
class of Alfred Brendel, Joerg
Demus and Paul Badura-Skoda,
she was unanimously awarded
their scholarship and subsequently
engaged to perform at
the renowned Salzburg Festival.
She was a winner in the Casella
International Piano Competition
of 1965 in Naples and in the 1968
Vilas Competition in Madison.
She has performed throughout
Europe, North Africa and South
America and was selected to give
four concert tours in her
homeland for the Jeunesses
Musicales de France.
Tickets for her concert will be
available at the door. General
admission is $2; admission for
Parkside students, staff and
immediate families is $1;
children 12 and under are admitted
free.
A concert by the Milwaukee
Symphony at Parkside,
originally planned for May 10,
has been rescheduled for Sept. 11.
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power. Even though such a powei
source couldn't be utilized immediately,
Gofman stated that is
only dueto the fact that so much
talent, money and time has been
spent on nuclear power. Switch
all of that talent and money to
researching the other possible
power sources, he said, and
something could be developed.
Fuel Comsumption
Finally, Cole has presented
some statistics on the fact that
the AEC is misleading people
about the percentage of power
which will be supplied by nuclear
reactors and fossil fuel by burning
plants.
According to the AEC, the total
energy consumption of the U.S.
will double by the year 2000. The
comsumption of electricity will
go up five times. So even if
atomic power supplies 60 percent
of the electric power, 40 percent
will still be generated by means
of fossil fuels. According to Cole,
this will be more than is currently
being generated by fossil fuel.
Obviously, with supplies of
fossil fuels running low, other
sources of energy must be found.
Cole thinks people must also
begin asking questions. The
burden of proof rests with the
AEC as to whether or not nuclear
power is worth the risks. If it
isn't, then the effort would have
to be made to find new sources of
• power.
What To Do
Also present in the questions
are being and will be asked, is
that of "Do we really need all that
power?" Must the consumption
of fuel and electricity be so
phenomenal, Cole asked. If the
citizens of this country want to do
something about this problem, a
start could be to reduce our
demands of electricity, Cole said,
lights burning all day in empty
rooms and doing small tasks by
hand instead of using the myriad
of e lectric gadgets found in most
homes.
Next week - The Federal Water
Pollution Control Act of 1972.
rassyium
Sales & Service At
KEN SCHIHTZ 6UICK-0PEI
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha
654-5514
*2,373°°
1973 OREL
1900
GO FAR ON A
LITTLE MONEY
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
Essay Qn "Mother Russia"
Education regimented in Russia
Editor's note: Parkside history student Arthur
uhl was in Russia recently and has submitted this
report of his impressions concerning education
there.
By Arthur M. Gruhl
Several have asked me, "What did you learn
about education in Russia?" I'll tell you. But I
haven't time to be less than candid. So here goes
Like everything else in Russia, education is
regimented and run by the state. Not counting preschool
age kids, one-third of the population of
Russia, 247 million people, is in school one wav or
another. 3
The "universities" are for science. The "institutes"
are the trade and technical schools. When
you graduate you get a "certificate." A certificate
trom an institute has the same face value as one
from a university.
There are no degrees like B.A. or M.A. There are
doctoral degrees but they are for M.D.'s, some
scientists and the super-smart. Incidentally we
were told that 60 percent of all of the doctors of
medicine in the world are Russians and 80 percent
of them are women.
Education is free in Russia, all along the line.
College level students are given "stipends" according
to grades. A student with five A's gets 40
rubles a month. One with four A's and one B will get
36. A ruble is worth $1.20. Thre rubles a month goes
for room and board in a dorm. The rest is for routine
needs. The lower the grades, the lower the stipend,
so slow learners have tough going.
Students needn't concern themselves about
placement when they graduate. The jobs are all
categorized and everyone writes a competitive
exam for the jobs to be filled. Competition to get
ahead is brutal. A slightly higher grade might mean
sharing a bathroom in one's apartment with fewer
people. They will be told where they are to work.
There is no unemployment in Russia.
Society is very stratified in the U.S.S.R. One's
measure of success is determined by his value to the
state. Parents are held strictly responsible for their
children's behavior until they are 18 and-or still in
school. Goof off and parents and child will all be on
the carpet before a jury of their peers. For a student
to try to tell the school administrators how to run
things is unheard of. And the campus paper is a big
bulletin board for faculty use.
If a student does poorly on a final exam, he is
offered the chance to take the last semester all over
again, and his stipend will be greatly reduced. Then
he is given one more chance to take the exam and if
he flunks a second time he is moved down...and
down...until he reaches an area which is compatible
with his zeal and intelligence. And that will be his
niche until he works himself out of it-up or down.
But he will never be unemployed.
The Moscow University
I stood one morning on the wide plaza approach to
Moscow University in Lenin Hills. What a layout!
32,000 s tudents...14 faculties...and the top of their
main building was obscured by clouds the day I was
there.
The men going in and out of the building looked
like young business and professional men. You
could easily tell the men from the women. The
women wore skirts, were well-groomed and looked
sharp. There was no mingling of men and women.
Evidently there is no time for socializing on campus,
and the women are tough competitors here.
Students Are
Their Own Custodians
We walked inside. There was a lot of traffic,
several lounges, and not an empty can or paper cup
was to be seen. Tanya, our tour guide (a graduate of
a language institute), told us that the students were
responsible for the care and condition of "their"
building. There are no custodians going around
picking up after them. Anyone seen littering would
be pointed out on the spot and wind up policing the
campus for a week.
"Heroes" are recognized on campus and offnationwide,
in fact. Who are their heroes? They are
the students with superior grades, workers who
exceed high goals, scientists and artists. The
"Order of Lenin" is their highest accolade.
Wouldn't Want To
Live By Their Rules
I sure wouldn't wlike to live by some of their
ground rules but Russia is their country" and they
think that the world is their oyster. They (the dozen
or so students I met who could speak some English)
assume without argument that eventually
everything will be done their way. That is their idea
of peaceful coexistence. In the meantime anything
not being done according to their rules is up for
grabs.
They are striving for their goals very openly and
are using all of the sophisticated tools of our free
enterprise system to make their system of
socialism work. The draft of warm air you feel
behind your ears is probably caused by Tanya and
Boris breathing down your neck. While smiling at
you they will try to knock your block off
academically if given half a chance. They covet
much of what we take for granted. They are out to
produce what they expect will eventually be the best
educated society in the world-all dedicated to the
proposition that their country comes before self. To
them, no sacrifice is too great to gain that goal.
Upturn seen
in journalism
vocations
MADISON - Job-seeking UWMadison
journalism graduates
this spring are finding prospects
considerably brighter than did
last year's class.
Notices of job openings are up
10 percent over last year at the
School of Journalism and Mass
Communication's placement
office.
Radio-TV news, public
relations and newspapers offer
the most openings, according to
Prof. Lester L. Hawkes, the
school's assistant director. And
although newspaper hiring isn't
up as much as hiring in other
fields of communication, Hawkes
expects an upturn in the
availability of newspaper jobs in
the next six months.
During periods of recession,
Hawkes noted, "Newspapers
delay filling vacant positions.
Attrition and retirement take a
number of individuals during this
period, and the time is coming
when people will be needed to fill
the vacancies."
Fears of scarcity in the job
market may be driving more
journalism students into
graduate school, Hawkes said.
"People with master's degrees,
of course, are in much more
demand."
Thirty of the 31 students to
receive a masters degree last
year from the UW-Madison
moved directly into jobs in
communication with no
problems, Hawkes pointed out.
Corporate internal publications
are the largest recruiters at the
present time. State and federal
information positions are also
attracting a lot of our
graduates," Hawkes added.
I UJA.riV "?oo "Vo Go "to .. . .
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The Ranger asks-—
What is your opinion of Women's Liberation'
Wed . , April 4, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9
Frank Locante, Senior, Kenosha
"If they want women's lib let
them have it. I don't think
everybody wants it; I think it's a
selected few. I don't know why
they want it. It's only a selected
few that want women's lib. Let
them be liberated if t hey want to
be."
S"? ,Lora» Freshman' Kenosha
"I'm for it to a certain extent,
and I think that I don't want to
become an equal to man. But
women should have equal rights
as the men, but I don't want
them. Like I don't want to get
drafted."
Rick Barnhart, Junior, Waterford
"I'm for it to a certain extent,
like equal pay and equal rights.
But I'm against strong women's
lib like, say you open a door for a
girl and she slams the door back
in your face or something, I'm
against that."
Kathy Cooper, Staff, Computer
Center "It's OK; just don't go to
far with it that's all. We need it
but we still need the men's ability
for morale boost, I guess."
College Educations Start at
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Phone 658-2 573 58th St . a t 6th Ave.
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COU RT MILWAUKEE
P. A.B.
p r e s entSs PRING FOLK
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Dave Castaneda, Freshman,
acine
"I have no opinion on women's
lib, if they feel they're not
liberated that's their problem. I
don't know; just leave them
alone."
<S Lindgren
Mi ke Gregor y
Tom Rosplock
Bob Rohan
Dave Duffeck
Mone y Price
SUN.
APRIL 8
[m 2-7 p.m.
Free
Admi s si on
"St d . Ac t . Bldg.
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your $1
per d ay lodging includes
• coffee, donuts
• shower
THE
KENTUCKY DERBY
SPECIAL
MAY 4-6
$5.00 for Derby Ticket
$2.50 pre-Derby Concert
advance sale ticket
($4.00 at the door)
Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant
Dean of S tudents
"My opinion is that it has some
value on campus, but that it has
to be treated justly so that the
women get fair treatment as well
as the men."
bring own sleeping bag
MUST SUPPLY OWN TRANSPORTATION - TRAVEL
INFORMATION AND SIGN-UP AT STU. ACT. OFFICE -
LLC-D-197.
Candy Bieneman, Freshman,
Racine
"I really agree with the idea,
but I don't agree with a lot of t he
way they go about doing it. Like I
don't think they should push it on
people and I think they're kind of
going to the other extreme.
They're trying to push it on
people, and a lot needs to be
changed. You're going to have to
change the way people think,
you're going to have to change
society and that's going to take a
long time. I think it should have
happened a long time ago."
Jim Simmons, Junior, Kenosha
"I really can't say. I like what
they're doing though."
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10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed . , April 4, 1973
The Parkside
RANGER Baseball opens today
' Sports
Rangers strong in Track
by Helmut Kali
Parkside has had "a very good
year so far in track," according
to head coach Bob Lawson. The
quality of our trackmen is high,
but Lawson would like to see
more students out for track
ents out for track. '
Most meets have been
multiple-team meets (eight to
twenty teams) with the Rangers
placing in the top 25 percent.
Lucien Rosa and Dennis Biel
started out theyear as All-
America and have kept a good
record. Another outstanding
performer was Keith Merritt,
who has been setting records in
the pole vault and triple jump.
Merritt "should soon be ready
for national competition in the
triple jump and the decathlon,"
says Lawson. The decathlon
consists of ten events; the 100
meter, long jump, high jump,
shot put, 400 meter, lio meter
hurdle, discus, pole vault
javelin, and 1,500 meter.
Chuck Dettman has had a good
year running the half mile.
"Two freshmen with a good
future at Parkside are Herb
DeGroot annd Cornelius Gordon,
both of Racine, and both 440 men.
Also having good potential is
Mike Kopczynski, a long jump
sprinter.
The next meet for the Ranger
trackmen will be the United
States Track and Field
Federation (USTFF) State Indoor
Championships April7 at
Madison. On the same day,
Merritt and Dom Cooper will be
competing in the decathlon and
Whitewater.
Bob Lawson
A Parkside decathlon, and
wMh ™S open events
will be held May 7 and 8. The first
ou^oorjneet on the new track
will be held to deticate the track
•April 19 and 20.
Lawson's main goal right now
is to get Rosa ready to defend his
national marathon record at the
JS^URelays' which are the
USTFF National Championships
held at Drake University in Des
Moines, Iowa. John Ammerman
«s also training to run at Drake
Rosa took top honors in the Drake
marathon last year, and Gary
Lance, a former ParksiriW
student took tenth. de
The Parkside Rangers baseball
club opens up its season, today,
with a single game against the
College of Racine. Game time is 1
p.m. at the UW-P baseball field.
College of Racine, something of
a fledging in baseball in recent
years, has yet to beat the
Rangers since Ken (Red)
Oberbruner has coached and
squad.
"We haven't lost to them yet,
and I don't plan on starting this
year," Oberbruner said.
C of R (Dominican) lost four
games to Parkside iast year with
only one game being decided by
one run. C of R is led by second
baseman Ed Granitz, last year's
most valuable player, and third
baseman Larry Haskins.
The Rangers are coming off a
6-4 record. They had 14 games
washed out a year ago. This
year's team will attempt to play
17 games if the weather will
oblige. Wisconsin - Madison tried
to get a early start this year but
was rained out last Saturday.
Oberbruner indicated his
pitching is below last year's with
only two returning lettermen in
sophomores Dale Phillips and
lefty Bob Kosters. Phillips will be
tried more at first base this year.
He has hopes that several
promising newcomers, Kim
Singleton, Jeff Sexton and Nick
Ziomek, will be able to help carry
the pitching load. The Rangers
will play eight doubleheaders this
year and good pitching is a must
for success.
Oberbruner said that this
year's team has better over-all
balance than a year ago, which
should help any shortcomings the
pitching may have.
His infield is set with lettermen
Tom Gedemer at third (he hit .275
a year ago), Ron Schmidt at
second (.300), and either Phillips
(.255) o r Jim Mohrbacher (.225)
at first. Oberbruner noted the
team has two good prospects in
An important announcement to every
student in the health professions:
NEW SCHOLARSHIPS
ARE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.
THEY COVER TUITION AND
RELATED COSTS AND PROVIDE AN
ANNUAL INCOME OF $5,300 AS WELL.
If a,, steady salary of $400 a
month and paid-up tuition
will help you continue your
professional training, the
scholarships just made poss
i b l e by t h e U n i fo r m e d
Services Health Professions
Revitalization Act of 1972
deserve your close attention.
Because if you are now in a
medical, osteopathic, dental,
veterinary, podiatry, or optometry
school, or are working
toward a PhD in Clinical
Psychology, you may qualify.
We make it eakjj tor you to
complete your xtudie.k. You're
commissioned as an officer as
soon as you enter the program,
but remain in student
status until graduation. And,
during each year you will be
on active duty (with extra
pay) for 45 days. Naturally,
if your academic schedule
requires that you remain on
campus, you stay on campus
-and still receive your active
duty pay.
Active duty requirements
are fair. Basically, you serve
one year as a commissioned
officer for each year you've
participated in the program,
with a two year minimum.
You may apply for a scholarship
with either the Army,
Navy or Air Force, and know
that upon entering active
d u t y y o u ' l l h a v e r a n k a n d
duties in keeping with your
professional training.
The life's work you've chosen
for yourself requires long,
hard, expensive training.
Now we are in a position to
give you some help. Mail in
the coupon at your earliest
convenience for more detailed
information.
< Scholarship:
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J'niv'vrsal City. Texas 7H14S
I desire information for
C-CN-43
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Army n Navy J~| Air K.irce
MdliralyOstonpathic H Dental
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Other ( I'lease specify )
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i please print 1
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file
T.. itia.h.ate
ISi-hoiill
' Month 1 ( Year) (DeimO
1 Month 1 (Day) (Year)
* y n,it a v uilahlt' in Ail- K.ircc I'l-onrcm.
BASEBALL SCHEDULE
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Spring 1973
April 4, Wed. - Dominican - Away (2) l';00
April 11, Wed. - D ominican - Home (2) 1:00
April 14, Sat. • UW-Whitewater - H ome (2) 1$:00
April 16, Mon. - S t. Norbert - Home (2) 12:00
April 19, Thurs. • Northland - Home (2) 1:00
April 30, Mon. - UW-Madison (JV's) - Away (2) 1:00
May 4, Fri. - Waukesha Tech - Away (2) 1:00
May 6, Sun. - UW-Madison (JV's) - Home (2) 12:00
May 8, Tues. - Milw. Tech (MATIC) -Away (2) 1:00
May 10, Thurs. - Milw. Tech (MATC) - Home (2) 1:00
All home games will be played at UW-P baseball field located on campus.
freshmen Dave Marino and Pete
Putra for the open shortstop
position.
In the outfield, where no one
has hit consistently this spring,
the battle ranges between lettermen
Scott Nelson (.260), Jeff
Koleske (.290) and freshmen Jeff
Hamon, Bill Blaha, Mike Cook
and several other players.
Oberbruner indicated, "The
name of t he game in college ball
is hitting and whoever hits will
play."
Oberbruner said his strongest
position, at this moment, would
have to be at catcher, where Tim
Elston and freshman Andy Vacca
are battling for the starting nod.
Oberbruner explained that he
felt the last three weeks have
been the best weather he has had
for practices since he became the
coach. He said the club has a
good chance to win a "goodly
number of games" with the
team's better over-all depth.
The schedule is in the Rangers'
favor with the first seven games
to be played here and only six
games to be played on the road
all season.
Oberbruner feels the stiffest
opposition this year, will come
from Whitewater in a
doubleheader Saturday, April 14
and then from St. Norbert the
following Monday plus the pair of
doubleheaders against the UWMadison-
JV's.
Ruggers win 1st
game of the season
On April l the Parkside ruggers
traveled to Purdue - North
Central in Indiana and there
picked up their first victory of the
young season by the score of 20-8.
Scoring honors go to Keith
Bosman who scored twice including
picking up a misplayed
Purdue ball and racing 80 yards
for the second of his scores. Other
tries for Parkside came on runs
by John Ble§hka and John van
Vleet. Two of the scores were
converted, one by Keith Bosman
and the other by Eric Olson. Two
tries were scored for Purdue. The
next game will be played April 7
at Northwestern.
IVEEAT
I N T HE C OMFORT
OF Y OUR C AR
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• PAPA B URGER . MAMA B URGER
• TEEN B URGER . BABY B URGER
CARRY-OUTS
CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL BE READY
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FREE GALLON OF ROOT BEER WITH $5.00 ORDER
Vi MILE NORTH OF
MIDCITY THEATER
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Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North
Kenosha
Tennis faces tough schedule
by B.D. RASMUSSEN
RECREATION A L HOURS
Pool
Monday 8. Wednesday
Tuesday & Thursday
Friday
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
Thursday
Saturday
Sunday.. All extra-curricular play will
be restricted to times that the
varsity tennis and gym classes
will not be using the courts.
The rules governing play are:
two, three, or four players must
occupy the courts: courts may be
reserved two days in advance;
and the reservation must include
the first and last names of the
participants. Reservations for
courts one and six may be made
in person or by phone, but
reservations for other courts
must be made in person, and
players may reserve the courts
for only one time per day. A ten
minute "grace period" will apply
to each court. Any court not
reserved is open for free play and
during "prime time" doubles
players will receive priority.
Players are not permitted to
wear street shoes on the court.
Reservations are to be made at
the issue desk in the PE Building.
Gym
Monday thru Friday
30 (2 courts open)
: 00 (1 court open)
(restricted play)
Handball Courts
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m.-10:00
from 10:30-12:00for cle
except Tuesday & Thursday closed
Saturday
Sunday..
SPORTS SHORTS
INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL
PLAY-OFFS
Starting Sunday, Spril 8
6:30 p.m. Olympians vs. Mercury
Comets
Herblius Superblius vs. Rebels
7:30 p.m. Flash vs. Deke's Boys
Sheeters vs. Bold Ones
8:30 p.m. Semi-Finals
Dick Frecka
With spring sports beginning to
occupy more of the students time,
a reservation system has been
started for the courts just east of
the PE Building, according to
tennis coach Dick Frecka. fillip Finals and Consolation Finals
will be played Wednesday, April
11. Times will be announced
later. The
Mat Maids^ present
CL Dance
The Starboys
SATURDAY APRIL 17
. 9p.m. -1 a.m.
$D° ^
Physical Education Building
April l
North Court - volleyball
reserved Alpha Kappa Lambda
2:00-4:30. Rest of building open.
April 8
CYO Swim Meet 1:00-4:30. Pool
closed until 5:00; rest of building
open.
Joe Biebel and John Tank
traveled to the Martini-Rossi
world invitational fencing meet
in New York City the weekend of
March 24, and when they came
back, a few more people knew
where Parkside was.
Tank made his way to the
second round before being
defeated, but it was Biebel that
caught the most attention as he
battled his way to the semi-finals
before submitting defeat. One of
Biebel's victims along the way
was Dr. Jeno Kamuti, of
Hungary, who was the silver
medal winner in the Olympics at
Munich last year.
Wauwatosa, Wis. where they both
studied under the same coach
and many times battled each
April 14
Don Jacoby concert at 8:00
building closes at 5:00.
3l^^^(Parksideand Wis. I.D.'srequired)
•w Student Activities Building ^ April 15
Band concert - UWP concert
band at 8:00; building closes at
6:00.
April 17 CLASSIFIED
Friedman at 8:00; building closes
at 5:30.
Tj—'/ Good for 2 Free Dry Cycles (-
with any wash load
T^^aaand an Extra Free Punch On Your Dividend Cardffi
Sx>w/y with an 8-pound Load of Dry Cleaning \2E5>{
jfflqffi~NORGE VILLAGE 7513 - 45th Ave., Kenosha^®"^
9/A®?i$-tWi ESTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 Ohio St., Racine j
*4mRAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 R apids Dr., Racind
One Coupon Per Week Per Customer \
Expires Sept. 5,1973
FOR RENT: One bedroom furnished
apartment near Parkside. Utilities and heat
included, S130. 654-7341
1972 Kustom 500 Amp. Excellent condition.
List $1700. $950 or best offer. Call 633-6191
after 5.
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421
1969 Camaro economical, 3-speed, Orange,
black vinyl top. $1295.00, 694-6277. Special
Monday thru
Thursday 11-8
For Sale: 1970 Camaro Rally Sport, 21,000
miles, snow tires included. Call Parkside
extension 2360.
NAME 8. ADDRESS
Termpapers Typed
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches 0150 after 5 p.m.
Foosball 2 Pool Tables
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine
Cold Six Packs To Go
contact Kris Wright 632
MONDAY NITE
IS ALWAYS
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-
CLASSIFIED AD VERTISING O RDER FORM
Classified Advertising Rate
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.
Payable in advance by check or cash to:
The Parkside Ranger
Business Office
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside
Kenosha, Wis. 53140
CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $
DATES(S) TO RUN
To find your cost, multiply the
number pf words times 5
cents. Multiply that total by
the number of issues you want
NAME it to run. A PITCHER
OF
LIGHT BEER
ONLY
ADDRESS
PHONE NO .
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing
— IN RACINE
LATHROP AND 21st ( ALMOST)
Ads must be submitted one week before publication,
P.E. Bldg. Schedule ^ *1,73 ™E PARKS'DE RANGER"
12 ™E PARKS,DE "ANGER Wed., Apri! 4, ,973
/
V *
<$v
ABC . Atlantic • MGM . Nonesuch . Cadet . Blue Note . Pacific
Jan . Reprise . Warner Brothers . Elektra . Columbia . Immediate
• Angel • Turnabout • Vanguard • Sta* • Atco • Gordy • Mace •
DISTRIBUTORS OVERSTOCK SALE!
HUNDREDS O F L ABELS & ARTISTS INCLUDING
Everest . Blue Note . Music Guild . Westminster . Command .
RCA . Chess . Verve . World Pacific . Ounhill . Westminster Gold .
Impulse • and many others.
Thelonius Monk . Cream . B. J. Thomas . Mamas & Papas . John
Mayall . Laurindo Almeida . Sabicas . Eric Clapton . Joan Baei .
Aretha Franklin . Odetto . John Coltrane . Louis Armstrong . Fifth
Dimension • Bee Gees • Pittsburgh Symphony • Dionne Warwick •
Ramsey Lewis • London Symphony • Julian Bream • Wes Montgomery
• New York Pro Musica . Tim Buckley . William Steinberg . Josef
Krips • Eddie Harris . Tom Paxton • and many others.
It NOW O NLY I.9o Schwann
Cat. List
4.98 to 6.98
J4ZZ
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED! NO DEALERS PLEASE!
SCORE AGAIN!! CLASSICAL BOX SET VALUES
WHILE THEY LAST! HURRY IN TODAY FOR BEST SELECTION
»VSTRAVINSKY
HIS FINEST MUSIC
4 Record Set f
Value to $24.00 Q
$
mn i \u>t n\n
f t
BRUCKNER —
SYMPHONY NO. 7
2 Record Set m ••
Value to SI 0.00 / '
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR
5 Record Set
Value to S25.00 L *f8
TCHAIKOVSKY
HIS FINEST MUSIC
3 Record Set only • ol
Value to SI 8.00 5
JULIAN BREAM
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR
3 Record Set
Value to $15.00 4 TB
* vS»-X\&.
< Xv» xv.-X -y
; VXv\vV>'oo^ >-X- : y,
: :Uo> »x«w
VX4 X.-X
< .\c<vv.
*mv%
AN ANTHOLOGY
FOLK MUSIC
5 Record Set
Value to $25.00
OF
AaAnthaiotcyttiYt&t Music
SALE STARTS WED., T ODAY AND ENDS APRIL 18
BEETHOVEN SYMPHONI
8 Record Set only _ ,
Value to $44.50 9
THE BEST OF THE BLUES
3 Record Sat
Value to $18.00 £ .f 8
JOHANN STRAUSS
3 Record Set only _
Value to $18.00 4
HW1
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 24, April 4, 1973
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1973-04-04
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
biology
jane schliesman
kathryn wellner
ken konkol
kentucky derby
lake michigan alert conference
parkside activities board (PAB)
the new age foundation
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/92a52cf19e9fd1e30824bdb1f4e74011.pdf
7a3caa6fc7764c0d1a0091a73fc65fcf
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 1, issue 9
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Advisory Board formed, seeks editor
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
A
d
v
i
s
o
r
y
B
o
a
r
d
f
o
r
m
e
d
,
s
e
e
k
s
e
d
i
t
o
r
C
la
y
a
s
a
c
r
e
a
ti
v
e
m
e
d
iu
m
Cl
ay
pr
ov
id
es
th
e
cr
ea
ti
v
e
m
ed
iu
m
for
an
in
fo
rm
al
cl
as
s
in
ce
ra
m
ic
s
be
in
g
ta
ug
ht
a
t
R
ac
in
e'
s
P
ro
je
ct
B
re
ak
th
ru
Ce
nt
er
by
Jo
hn
M
ur
ph
y,
a
m
em
be
r
of
th
e
a
rt
fa
cu
lty
a
t
th
e
Un
iv
er
sit
y
of
Wi
sco
nsi
n-
P
ar
ks
id
e.
A
p
ar
t
of
t
he
a
rt
an
d
cr
af
t
a
ct
iv
it
ie
s
a
t
th
e
C
en
te
r,
th
e
c
la
ss
,
co
nd
uc
ted
on
Tu
es
da
y
ni
gh
ts,
a
tt
ra
c
ts
bot
h
ch
ild
re
n
an
d
ad
ul
ts
.
Abo
ve,
le
ft
to
r
ig
ht
,
a
re
To
m
Wh
ite
,
H
ele
n
B
ea
ve
rs
,
M
ur
ph
y,
T
he
re
sa
Th
om
as
(p
ar
tl
y
hi
dd
en
),
he
r
m
ot
he
r
B
et
ty
T
ho
m
as
,
B
ea
tr
ic
e
G
re
en
an
d
M
ar
y
M
cD
on
ald
,
a
m
em
be
r
of
th
e
p
ro
je
ct
s
ta
ff
.
Th
e
Ad
vis
ory
Bo
ard
to
th
e
P
ar
ks
id
e
R
an
ge
r
is
ac
ce
pt
in
g
ap
pl
ic
at
io
ns
fr
om
an
y
st
ud
en
t
ca
rr
yi
ng
ei
gh
t
or
m
or
e
cr
ed
its
for
th
e
pos
itio
n
of
Ed
ito
r-i
n-
Chi
ef.
An
app
lic
at
io
n
f
or
m
an
d
w
rit
te
n
st
at
em
en
t
of
pu
rp
os
e,
to
be
tu
rn
ed
in
no
la
te
r
th
an
4:30
p.
m
.
Mo
nda
y,
De
c.
4,
will
be
re
qu
ire
d
of
al
l
ap
pl
ca
nt
s.
Se
e
Don
Ko
pr
iva
,
ad
vi
so
r
to
St
ud
en
t
Pu
bl
ic
i
tio
ns
,
in
D-194
L
LC,
fo
r
de
ta
il
s
an
d
fo
rm
s.
An
Ad
vis
ory
Bo
ard
fo
r
th
e
Pa
rk
si
de
R
an
ge
r
h
as
be
en
fo
r
m
ed
.
Th
ei
r
c
hie
f
ta
sk
a
t
th
is
ti
m
e
is
to
ch
oo
se
an
ed
ito
r-i
n-
ch
ief
,
who
w
ill
a
ss
um
e
d
ut
ie
s
beg
inn
ing
wit
h
th
e
se
co
nd
se
m
es
te
r.
Ap
pl
ica
tio
ns
for
th
is
pos
itio
n
a
re
bei
ng
ac
ce
pt
ed
by
Don
Ko
pr
iv
a,
sta
ff
ad
vi
so
r
to
R
an
ge
r,
in
LLC
D-194.
In
ad
di
tio
n
to
K
op
riv
a,
bo
ard
m
em
be
rs
ar
e
Wa
lt
S
hi
re
r,
di
re
ct
or
of
pu
bli
c
inf
o;
P
e
te
r
M
ar
tin
,
a
ss
t.
pr
of
.
E
ng
lis
h;
And
y
Mc
Le
an,
as
st
.
pr
of
.
E
ng
lis
h;
Dew
ey
Ne
ue
nd
orf
,
ac
co
un
tin
g;
Sh
el
do
n
H
a
rs
e
l,
in
s
t.
co
m
m
un
ic
at
io
ns
;
J
a
n
e
Sc
hl
ie
sm
an
,
R
ac
in
e
so
p
h
.;
Ke
n
K
on
ko
l,
R
ac
in
e
s
e
n
.;
Je
ff
B
la
e
si
n
g
,
Ra
cin
e
fr
e
sh
.;
Ka
th
y
W
ell
ne
r,
R
ac
in
e
f
r
e
s
h
.;
Il
e
n
e
L
e
v
in
,
Ra
cin
e
fr
es
h
.;
an
d
Je
an
ni
ne
Si
ps
m
a,
Ra
ci
ne
fr
es
h.
'N
ow
h
o
w
d
o
w
e
fi
n
d
th
e
LL
C?
'
Ph
ot
o
by
C
ra
ig
Ro
be
rts
At
t
h
e
W
h
it
e
s
k
e
ll
a
r
By
Rudy
L
ienau
Ac
tiv
iti
es
Off
ice
re
ce
nt
ly
sp
on
so
re
d
th
e
pe
rf
or
m
an
ce
of
th
e
loc
al
gr
ou
p
T
on
y,
J
um
bo
an
d
G
ar
ry
at
th
e
c
on
ve
nti
on
of
th
e
N
a
tu
ra
l
E
nt
er
ta
in
m
en
t
Co
nf
ere
nc
e
an
d
th
e
As
soc
iat
ion
of
Co
lleg
e
Un
ion
s-
In
te
rn
at
io
na
l.
Th
e
gr
ou
p
p
er
fo
rm
ed
a
s
ho
rt
se
t
of
nu
m
be
rs
fo
r
t
he
ex
pl
ic
it
pu
rp
os
e
of
g
et
tin
g
ex
po
su
re
by
peo
ple
re
sp
on
sib
le
for
hi
rin
g
e
n
te
rt
ai
nm
en
t
a
t
sch
oo
ls
ou
tsi
de
th
is
ar
ea
an
d
ge
tti
ng
en
ga
ge
m
en
ts
.
Au
die
nce
re
sp
on
se
w
as
ve
ry
en
th
us
ia
st
ic
.
Th
e
pol
ish
an
d
pr
of
es
sio
na
lis
m
of
th
e
gr
ou
p
wa
s
ap
pa
re
nt
an
d
co
m
m
en
te
d
upo
n
by
ma
ny
m
em
be
rs
of
th
e
au
di
en
ce
.
"W
e
wo
ul
dn
't
d
o
w
ith
ou
t
e
ac
h
o
th
er
,"
sa
id
G
ar
ry
Wolk
.
He
we
nt
on
to
ex
pl
ain
th
at
Ch
ris
(J
um
bo
)
In
lo
es
is
the
voi
ce,
he
fi
gu
re
s
ou
t
th
e
ha
rm
on
y
;
To
ny
B
re
se
tt
e
i
s
the
a
rr
a
n
g
e
r.
C
hr
is
sa
id
G
ar
ry
is
th
e
be
st
ov
er
al
l
m
us
ic
ia
n.
Se
ve
n
y
ea
rs
ag
o
a
ll
th
re
e
w
er
e
d
ev
ote
d
to
a
di
ff
er
en
t
kin
d
of
m
us
ic
,
pe
rf
or
m
in
g
in
roc
k
gr
ou
ps
.
Th
ey
'v
e
m
ad
e
s
om
ew
ha
t
a
na
tu
ra
l
t
ra
ns
iti
on
to
th
ei
r
pr
es
en
t
ac
t
of
ac
ou
sti
c
gu
ita
rs
,
so
ft
el
ec
tr
ic
ba
ss
an
d
pia
no
.
To
ny
,
J
um
bo
an
d
G
ar
ry
a
re
ap
pe
ar
in
g
in
th
e
W
hi
tes
ke
lla
r
be
tw
ee
n
12:30
an
d
3
p.
m
.
Ad
mi
ssi
on
is
fr
ee
.
J
u
m
b
o
,
T
o
n
y
a
n
d
G
ar
ry
P
h
o
to
g
r
a
p
h
e
r
s
w
a
n
te
d
Th
e
P
ar
k
si
de
R
an
ge
r
is
l
ook
ing
for
a
ha
nd
fu
l
of
re
lia
bl
e
pho
to
me
n
t
o
w
ork
on
th
e
sta
ff
.
Th
e
o
nly
thi
ng
we
as
k
is
th
at
you
ha
ve
ac
ce
ss
to,
or
own
you
r
own
eq
ui
pm
en
t
be
ca
us
e
we
ca
nn
ot
su
pp
ly
it
for
you
a
t
th
is
ti
m
e.
D
ar
k
roo
m
ex
pe
rie
nc
e
is
he
lp
fu
l,
but
not
ne
ce
ss
ar
y!
Also
we
as
k
th
at
yo
ur
ca
m
er
a
be
in
th
e
li
ne
of
a
35m
m
or
a
2V
4X
2V
4.
Sti
ll
in
te
re
st
ed
?
Th
en
why
not
co
m
e
dow
n
an
d
se
e
us
in
th
e
R
an
ge
r
off
ice
a
t
Roo
m
D-194
in
th
e
LLC
.
2
T
H
E
PA
RK
SID
E
RA
NG
ER
W
ed
.
Nov.
22,
1972
C
ha
ng
e
of
o
p
in
io
n
A
m
a
r
s
h
i
s
..
.
Th
e
reb
utt
al
t
o
ou
r
pre
vio
us
ed
itori
al c
onc
erni
ng
th
e
m
ar
sh
,
whi
ch
ap
pe
ar
s
on
thi
s
pa
ge
,
ha
s
suftici
ently
enl
igh
ten
ed
th
e
Ra
ng
er
sta
ft
so
a
s
to
m
ak
e
us
re
ev
al
ua
te
o
ur
origi
nal
position.
We
feel
pre
sen
t
ev
ide
nce
in
fav
or
of
th
e
m
ar
sh
fa
r
out
we
igh
s
its
alle
ged
bad
point
s.
We
a
re
conv
inced
th
at
th
e
m
ar
sh
will
be
a
val
uab
le,
in
tere
stin
g
an
d
h
an
ds
om
e
ca
m
pu
s
a
re
a.
In
fu
tu
re
issu
es,
th
e
R
an
ge
r
will
a
tt
em
pt
to
giv
e
in-
dep
th
co
ve
ra
ge
of
al
l
phys
ical
as
pe
ct
s
of
ou
r
c
am
pu
s.
We
h
ope
ou
r
re
pre
sen
tat
ion
of
th
e
c
am
pu
s
p
lan
will
b
e
ac
cu
ra
te
,
but
w
e
still
en
co
ur
ag
e
the
kind
of
const
ruc
tive
cri
tic
ism
or
sug
ges
tion
s
exem
plif
ied
by
tod
ay
's
reb
utt
al.
Th
e
R
an
ge
r
still
feels
a
n
ice
sk
ati
ng
rin
k
wo
uld
be
a
gr
ea
t
delig
ht
for
m
an
y
Pa
rk
sid
er
s.
We
m
ay
a
s
well
use
ou
r
n
atu
ral
as
se
ts
to
th
eir
fu
llest
.
We
've go
t
th
e
w
at
er
,
let
's
us
e
it.
Th
is
w
ee
k'
s
cut-of
f
line
is
sa
id
with
sin
cer
ity
:
ou
r
m
ar
sh
ca
n
an
d
will
be
a
good
m
ar
sh
.
P
o
in
t
o
f
Vie
w
F
o
r
t
h
e
m
a
r
s
h
By
Sus
an
Bo
rg
er
"
N
O
M
A
R
S
H
IS
A
G
O
O
D
M
A
R
S
H
"
"
T
h
e
o
nly
goo
d
In
di
an
is
a
de
ad
In
d
ia
n
"
-
an
d
other
wit
tici
sms
Th
e
ed
ito
rs
of
this
new
spa
per
ha
ve
ex
pre
sse
d
the
ir
con
cer
n
with
th
e
m
ar
sh
,
fea
rin
g
it
will
bec
om
e
an
eye
sor
e,
a
nui
san
ce,
an
d
an
ar
ea
with
a
"lo
w
level
of
usef
ulne
ss
or
b
ea
ut
y.
"
Adm
itte
dly,
th
es
e
ind
ividua
ls
do
not
ha
ve
all
th
e
info
rma
tion
.
Th
e
fa
ct
s
a
r
e
th
at
th
e
m
ar
sh
is
act
ual
ly
savi
ng
th
e
univ
ersit
y
mo
ney
,
th
at
it
is
ecolog
ically
an
d
g
eog
rap
hic
ally
co
rre
ct
in
it
s
location
,
th
at
it
wi
ll
b
e
an
a
est
he
tic
add
ition
to
ou
r
c
am
pu
s,
a
nd
th
at
it
will
pr
ovi
de
Pa
rk
sid
e
th
e
m
an
y
ad
va
nt
ag
es
th
at
co
m
e
w
ith
a
m
ar
sh
.
How
is
th
e
ma
rs
h
s
avi
ng
t
he
univ
ersit
y
m
on
ey
?
T
ak
e
a
look
a
t
th
es
e
f
igu
res
fro
m
Plan
ning
&
C
onstr
uction
.
$4
2,5
00
-
Site
gr
ad
ing
(incl
udes
all
ath
let
ic
fields
,
gro
un
ds
surr
oun
din
g
Ath
letic
Building,
and
ar
ea
ea
st
of
Gre
enq
uis
t)
$22
,263
-
Si
dew
alks
$4,
815
-
Additions
to
sto
rm
se
we
rs
$30
0
-
Bike
Rac
k
for
Athl
etic
Building
$4,
98
0
-
Se
edin
g
e
xpo
sed
soil
f
or
e
rosio
n
prev
entio
n
$2,
700
-
Duck
Walk
an
d
gr
av
el
pa
th
It
ta
ke
s
bu
t
a
quic
k
gl
an
ce
to
se
e
th
e
m
ar
sh
is
a
rela
tive
ly
i
nex
pen
siv
e
comp
one
nt
of
t
he
total
con
tra
ct,
$77
,55
8.
If
,
howe
ver
,
th
e
univ
ersi
ty
had
dec
ided
to
fil
l
in
th
e
lowl
and
ar
ea
,
it
would
ha
ve
cos
t
an
addi
tion
al
$50
,00
0.
(Inf
orm
atio
n
suppl
ied
b
y
M
r.
J
a
m
e
s
Ga
lbr
aith
Dire
ctor
of
Plan
ning
&
Co
nstr
ucti
on).
Seco
ndly
,
th
e
m
ar
sh
belo
ngs
th
er
e.
It
is
a
ve
ry
pra
cti
cal
sc
jtion
to
th
e
wa
te
r
dr
ai
na
ge
prob
lem
on
ca
m
pu
s,
n
am
ely
t
he
nu
me
ro
us
spri
ng
s
south
of
Lib
rar
y
Lea
rnin
g
Ce
nte
r.
This
wat
er
o
rigin
ally
flowed
out
of
th
e
woo
ds
in
a
n
ort
he
ast
erl
y
direct
ion
,
eve
ntu
ally
em
pty
ing
into
th
e
Pik
e
Riv
er.
Th
e
lan
d
ov
er
whic
h
this
wa
te
r
flowed
w
as
gen
era
lly
mu
dd
y
an
d
m
ar
sh
y,
an
d
th
us
uns
uita
ble
fo
r
de
ve
lop
me
nt.
Unf
ortu
nate
ly,
th
e
c
ost
of
dra
ini
ng
th
e
land
with
field
tiles
an
d
sub
seq
uen
t
con
nection
to
sto
rm
se
we
rs
w
as
prohi
bitive
.
So,
ins
tead
of
dispo
sing
of
th
e
unw
ant
ed
wa
te
r,
the
unive
rsity
h
as
use
d
it
to
its
o
wn
ad
va
nt
ag
e.
Actu
ally,
th
e
m
ar
sh
will
be
ver
y
beautifu
l
wh
en
th
e
na
tu
ral
vege
tatio
n
be
co
me
s
e
sta
bli
she
d.
"W
et-
foo
ted
"
pla
nts
su
ch
a
s
willows
an
d
se
dg
es
will
sur
rou
nd
an
d
sc
re
en
t
he
w
at
er
from
view
whi
le
cat
tai
ls
an
d
wild
ric
e
will
gr
ow
in
the
wat
er
.
Th
e
w
at
er
level
will
be
controlled
in
tw
o
wa
ys
:
1)
an
over
flow
se
we
r,
an
d
2)
a
sup
ple
me
nta
l
wa
te
r
sup
ply
fro
m
th
e
ma
in
sto
rm
se
we
r.
Th
us,
th
e
m
ar
sh
will
soon
be
a
va
ry
sta
bi
e
an
d
pro
duc
tive
co
mm
un
ity
.
But
wh
at a
dv
an
ta
ge
s
ca
n
Pa
rks
ide
s
tud
en
ts
ge
t
fro
m
th
e
m
ar
sh
?
Spr
ing
an
d
su
m
m
er
flow
ers
will
flourish
th
er
e;
hu
nd
red
s
of
kin
ds
of
an
im
al
s
m
ay
visit
or
live
th
er
e
-
cer
tai
nly
ev
er
yo
ne
ca
n
ap
pr
ec
ia
te
thi
s
bea
uty
an
d
ex
cit
em
en
t,
Also,
th
e
m
ar
sh
will
con
trib
ute
to
a
hea
lth
y
he
tero
gen
iety
of
th
e
la
nds
cap
e.
Th
e
m
ar
sh
will
be
a
"d
ra
w
in
g
c
a
rd
"
for
stu
de
nts
an
d
distin
guish
ed
facu
lty
in
th
e
fu
tu
re
a
s
both
an
ae
sth
eti
c
an
d
edu
cati
ona
l
ex
pe
rie
nc
e.
But,
mo
st
imp
ort
ant
ly
thi
s
m
ar
sh
will
p
rov
ide
e
ve
ry
on
e
h
er
e
on
ca
m
pu
s
a
uniqu
e
opp
ort
uni
ty
to
work
an
d
live
in
a
m
or
e
nat
ura
l
en
vir
on
me
nt
-
in
h
ar
m
on
y
with
na
tu
re
,
not
in
sp
ite
of
it.
ED
IT
OR
IA
LS
/O
PI
N
IO
N
S
I
n
d
iv
id
u
a
l
r
ig
h
t
s
v
s
.
s
o
c
ie
t
a
l
c
e
n
s
u
r
e
By
Ja
ne
Sc
hl
ie
sm
an
Th
e
"s
im
pl
e
use
an
d
possession
of
m
ar
ij
ua
na
"
would
be
legalized
an
d
"c
ri
m
es
a
ga
in
st
se
xua
l
mo
ra
lit
y"
would
be
abolis
hed
if
r
eco
mm
end
ati
on
s
of
th
e
Citizens
Study
Co
mm
itte
e
on
Judi
cial
Organ
izatio
n
a
re
followed.
Th
e
tas
k
for
ce
w
as
appo
inted
by
Gov
erno
r
Lucey
to
prob
e
cou
rt
ref
or
m,
judicial
sa
lar
ie
s
an
d
elec
tions
.
How
ard
Pa
ck
ar
d
of
Rac
ine,
vice-
pres
iden
t
of
S.C.
John
son
an
d
Son
Inc.
an
d
a
m
em
be
r
of
th
e
co
m
m
it
te
e,
op
po
se
d
th
e
tw
o
re
co
m
m
en
d
at
io
n
s,
sa
y
in
g
,
"
I
t
'
s
a
n
ou
tra
ge
to
co
me
he
re
an
d
dis
cus
s
ref
orm
s
rela
ting
to
ou
r
st
at
e
cou
rt
sys
tem
and
then
to
go
ah
ea
d
an
d
le
galize
ad
ul
te
ry
."
But
Joh
n
Geilfuss,
Mil
wau
kee
ba
nk
er
an
d
ch
ai
rm
an
of
th
e
ta
sk
forc
e,
sa
id
Lucey
ha
dn
't
rest
rict
ed
the
m
fro
m
consi
derin
g
crimi
nal
la
w,
a
s
it
aff
ect
s
the
cou
rts
an
d
thei
r
cas
elo
ads
.
About
24
million
Ame
ric
an
s
h
av
e
tri
ed
ma
rij
ua
na
,
an
d
while
th
e
s
ub
co
mm
itt
ee
did
not
con
don
e
its
use
,
it
d
id
ur
ge
th
e
st
at
e
to
ma
int
ain
control
of
its
sa
le
by
estab
lishi
ng
a
reg
ula
tor
y
body
.
While
thi
s
wr
ite
r
dou
bts
th
at
th
e
W
isc
on
sin
le
g
is
la
tu
re
is
pr
o
g
re
ss
iv
e
enou
gh
to
follow
the
se
rec
om
me
nd
ati
on
s
(th
e
incid
ence
s
of
tas
k
for
ce
rep
ort
e
n
a
c
tm
e
n
t
is
r
a
r
e
a
n
y
w
a
y
),
o
ur
legi
slat
ure
d
oe
s
se
em
clos
er
tha
n
m
an
y
oth
ers
to
legalizing
m
ar
iju
an
a.
Al
l
th
e
ar
gu
m
en
ts
for
or
aga
in
st
thi
s
need
not
b
e
pointed
out
he
re,
bu
t
suffic
e
it
to
sa
y
t
ha
t
its
legality
pr
oba
bly
w
ould
n't
h
av
e
m
uc
h
effe
ct
on
th
e
incid
ence
of
its
use.
Tho
se
who
sm
ok
e
it
now
would
cont
inue
to
do
so,
thos
e
who
don't
wou
ldn't
.
In
fut
ure
y
ea
rs
it
m
ay
be
co
me
a
sub
sti
tut
e
fo
r
to
bacco
,
sin
ce
it
ap
pe
ar
s
to
be
bet
ter
for
on
e's
heal
th,
b
ut
a
s
with
ci
ga
re
tte
s
no
w,
the
re
a
re
m
an
y
peopl
e
w
ho
wo
n't
sm
ok
e.
Th
e
m
aj
or
effe
ct
of
l
egalizati
on
would
ap
pe
ar
to
b
e
on
the
pri
ce.
T
od
ay'
s
nickel
bag
could
go
for
a
lot
less
on
an
open
m
ar
ke
t.
But
th
er
e
will
alw
ay
s
be
en
terp
risi
ng
bus
ine
ssm
en
to
sur
rou
nd
the
pro
duc
t
with
f
an
cy
pac
kag
ing
an
d
sp
end
a
for
tun
e
on
adv
ert
isin
g
an
d
gim
mi
cks
(1
01
mil
lim
ete
r
joints?)
t
o
u
p
the
cos
t.
It
m
ay
be
to
da
y'
s
tobac
co
com
pa
nie
s
which
inhe
rit
wh
at
would
undo
ubted
ly
be
a
luc
rati
ve
pro
duc
t.
Th
e
cr
im
es
ag
ai
ns
t
sex
ual
mor
ality
which
th
e
tas
k
fo
rce
as
ke
d
b
e
elimin
ated
inclu
de
pri
va
te
offe
nses
of
fornicati
on
betw
een
cons
enti
ng
ad
ult
s,
adu
lter
y,
sex
ual
p
erve
rsio
n
and
co
habi
tatio
n
under
cir
cu
ms
tan
ce
s
impl
ying
inte
rco
urse
.
Fo
r
so
m
e
r
eas
on
th
e
c
ha
nc
es
of
t
hese
ac
ts
being
within
the
law
ar
e
less
than
the
odd
s
for
legalizat
ion
of
m
ar
iju
an
a.
But
this
shoul
d
not
be
so
.
Certa
inly
the
ess
enc
e
of
th
e
fre
ed
om
thi
s
cou
ntry
cla
im
s
to
che
ris
h
abov
e
all
el
se
m
us
t
be
a
tol
era
nce
for
ea
ch
in
dividu
al
to
live
his
or
he
r
perbonal
an
d
pri
va
te
life
howe
ver
th
ey
c
h
'o
s
e
.
T
h
e
p
h
r
a
s
e
"
b
e
tw
e
e
n
cons
entin
g
ad
ul
ts
"
shou
ld
ta
^e
ca
re
of
an
y
infr
ing
eme
nt
on
t
he
rig
hts
of
oth
ers.
Th
e
stat
e
ha
s
no
righ
t
to
cla
im
a
per
son
's
sex
ual
ha
bit
s
illegal
if
th
e
a
ct
s
a
r
e
don
e
in
pri
vac
y
an
d
by
peop
le
wh
o
ha
ve
full
know
ledg
e
an
d
c
ons
ent
to
w
ha
t
th
ey
a
re
doing
.
Th
e
leg
isla
tur
e
should
con
side
r
the
se
rec
om
me
nd
ati
on
s
ve
ry
car
efu
lly,
sinc
e
the
y
involv
e
individ
ual
rig
hts
ver
sus
soc
iet
y's
ce
ns
ur
e.
If
the
y
de
cid
e
to
acce
pt
th
em
,
it
will
be
a
la
rg
e
st
ep
fo
rw
ar
d
in
th
e
int
ere
sts
of
pers
ona
l
f
re
ed
om
.
M
E
M
O
:
Tom
Je
nn
et
t
an
d
Ji
m
Re
a
of
St
ud
en
t
G
ri
ev
an
ce
s
Co
m
m
itt
ee
re
ce
nt
ly
m
et
wit
h
M
r.
Ro
na
ld
B
rin
km
an
,
di
re
ct
or
of
se
cu
ri
ty
,
to
d
is
c
u
ss
th
e
p
ro
b
le
m
s
of
s
tu
d
e
n
ts
to
w
ar
d
th
e
c
a
m
p
u
s
pol
ice
.
Th
e
m
ee
tin
g
w
as
su
c
ce
ss
fu
l
in
th
at
it
so
lve
d
va
rio
us
pr
ob
le
m
s
an
d
he
lpe
d
to
ope
n
th
e
cl
os
ed
c
o
m
m
u
n
ic
a
ti
o
n
li
n
e
be
tw
ee
n
th
e
s
tu
d
e
n
ts
an
d
se
cu
ri
ty
.
M
r.
Br
in
km
an
w
as
ap
pr
ec
ia
tiv
e
of
th
e
co
m
m
it
te
e'
s
ef
fo
rt
to
co
m
m
un
ic
at
e
wi
th
him
an
d
co
n
ve
ye
d
th
is
in
hi
s
de
cis
ion
s.
One
of
th
e
pr
ob
le
m
s
di
sc
us
se
d
wa
s
th
e
tic
ke
tin
g
of
ca
rs
wi
tho
ut
P
a
rk
s
id
e
p
e
rm
it
s
on
th
e
m
.
Va
rio
us
st
ud
en
ts
an
d
fa
cu
lty
ha
ve
r
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17
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
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The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 9, November 22, 1972
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1972-11-22
Subject
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College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
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Newspaper
Language
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English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
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Text
Publisher
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University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
activities office
advisory board
jane schliesman
john murphy
ken konkol
peter martin
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/3fac2296a9dc2fe39369b680ae61665e.pdf
fe0e302b8679d5d73d541126bf4bfd09
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 1, issue 5
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
HHH Campaigns for McGovern
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
These three University of Wisconsin-Parkside students are now in
Europe on student teaching assignments: left to right, Kathy
Williamson of Kenosha; Bill Zapencki, Kenosha; and Jacquie Braun
of Racine. Seniors in Parkside's Division of Education, they are the
first UW-P students to participate in the overseas teacher training
program.
The Parkside
Parking Committee dissolves;
Racine buses run til Friday
By Rudy Lienau
Las week's meeting of the
Parking and Transportation
Committee revealed that
Wisconsin Coach service from
Racine will continue until next
Friday and that the committee's
lack of power has resulted in its
move to dissolve.
Jewel Echelbarger,
Assistant Dean of Students said,
"In a meeting with Wisconsin
Coach on October 10, they said
they had looked at their books
and wanted to discontinue service
because they were showing a
loss. At that time they said they'd
continue service until Oct. 20; in
subsequent talks they indicated
they would extend service to Oct.
27."
Immediately after the Oct. 10
meeting, talks began between the
Business Department and
several transportation concerns.
Among them were the Kenosha
Transit Authority, Flash of
Racine and the Gateway
Technical Institute bus service.
The progress of these talks
were not fully discussed but there
were indications that each
concern would have some
problem providing the service at
this time.
Subsidy of Wisconsin Coach by
the university was discussed but
Erwin Zuelke, Director of
Business Affacs said there is no
legal way Parkside can subsidize
Wisconsin Coach. He said
however, student support funds,
such as Student Government
money alloted by the Campus
Concerns Committee, could be
used if the student organization
did it of their own volition.
When the committee exhausted
the Racine busing issue,
Professor Leon Applebaum,
economics, made a motion to
dissolve the committee and
suggested that the Campus
Planning committee be allowed
to assume activities thereof. The
motion was seconded by
Assistant Chancellor Brockman
and was passed unanimously.
Committee Chairman,
Professor Harry Lantz, music,
said, "We've been whipping boy
for many problems."
Members were concerned that
they met to discuss problems but
were pwoerless to affect change.
It was suggested that Campus
Planning will have a greater
chance at action.
VOTE!
Wednesday, October 25, 1972
| RANGER Straw Poll
| Nov. 2-3
illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIH
HHH campaigns for McGovern
By Ken Konkol
Originally Sen. Hubert H.
Humphrey (D Minn.) had been
scheduled to land at the airport at
7:30 p.m. but was delayed in take
off from his fourth meeting of the
day. Hence he didn't land at Gate
7 of Mitchell field till 8:07.
Some of the comments before
the press conference were better
than the conference itself. Joe
Spehart, driver of the McGovern
campaign bus (which had
previously been the Humphrey
campaign bus) mentioned the
research done by a 1948
California Congressional candidate.
"This man spent 24 years in
researching the speeches of
Richard Nixon and determined a
foolproof method to tell when
Nixon was lying.
"If he pulls his ear, he's telling
the truth. If h e straightens his tie,
he's telling the truth. If he rubs
his hands, he's telling the truth.
But watch out. If he opens his
mouth and starts talking ~ that's
a lie."
The senator entered the press
conference and was told he would
have to hurry to get to the union
rally at the Red Carpet Expo
Center at 8:30 p.m. But the
senator said he "would eat first."
He hadn't eaten since 7 a.m.
The press conference got under
way with Humphrey fielding a
question in regard to the
Democrats for Nixon ad on TV
which refers to his criticizing
George McGovern's defense
program. He explained that the
things said in the Democrats for
Nixon ads were no longer true,
that positions had changed on
these issues and that McGovern
had changed his stand.
In referring to President
Nixon, Humphrey referred to his
(Nixon's) recent veto of a natural
resources act, his stand against
education bills, against veterans'
bills, public service money, his
cutback in programs for the poor,
and the fact that Nixon was
against the labor movement.
In closing he said, "This
country can't take four more
years of Richard Nixon, a Nixon
who has wage controls on
workers and no salary controls on
corporate executives."
Humphrey then mentioned the
present electoral system in which
a win in twelve key statesqould
win the election. He seemed
confident that McGovern would
win California, Nixon's home
state.
When questioned by this
reporter about the Democrats for
Nixon Committee, the Senator
said that he wasn't in favor of
them, that he didn't think it would
help to drum Connally out of the
Democratic Party and that he
had received no specific information
as to Republican
campaign contributions paying
for the Democrats for Nixon
commercials. He concluded that
Nixon would not be president now
if some good Democrats had used
their heads in voting in 1968.
Upon completion of the press
conference, Humphrey adjourned
to room 411 in the Red
Carpet Inn where he had dinner.
Here, or at the airport, security
arrangements were not
especially evident. In fact, the
only security officer seen all
night was the officer posted inside
the bathroom in the Expo
Center.
While waiting for the senator to
arrive at the Expo Center, those
in attendance were treated to
such rousing songs as the
McGovern Labor Rally Song,
Solidarity Forever and You Are
My Sunshine.
One of the main speakers was
union leader Emil Mazey, who
mentioned that Nixon had
created a bigger deficit in the
budget than had been created by
presidents in the previous 18
years.
He added, "Nixon is the best
president money can buy ... This
is not 1952 where Nixon has an
$18,000 slush fund given him by
California big business... but 1972
where he now has a twenty
million dollar slush fund donated
to his campaign by large corporations."
Mazey then lauded Humphrey
as a friend of the working man,,
referring to his 1948 election to
senate and his work for the repeal
of the Taft-Hartley Act.
The big moment of the night
arrived as Humphrey entered the
hall. It took five minutes to get
the paraders to finally sit down.
This reporter observed the
senator's speech from a distance
of about nine feet in the press
box.
After the crowd quieted
Humphrey remarked on the
introduction: "That was an introduction
my father would have
liked and which my mother
wouldn't believe."
He remarked about the trouble
the chief executive has to go
through: "If McGovern wins he'll
have ty trouble, but if N ixon wins
you'll have the trouble - and
don't you forget it!"
In speaking on the economic
situation -- "If you expect to work
for the money you have to live on,
you can't afford Richard Nixon."
He then made remarks about
the Nixon-Congress battle on who
was going to control the purse
strings of the country, the
President or the elected
representatives of the people. He
remarked about the things Nixon
was taking credit for which were
being done by Congress.
"Five-and-one-half billion has
been taken out of d efense to help
old folks and kids. Congress
approved a 20 percent increase in
social security. Nixon wanted
five percent. But he took credit
for it. Then he blames Congress
for inflation -- this fellow's hard
to hit."
"Nixon says the economy is
improving. When my wife says
prices are going up I ask her who
am I to believe, you or the
president? I've spent 36 years
with Muriel and loved it, but four
years of Nixon is too much for
me. If you don't like my man
McGovern, vote for him, just to
get even with Nixon."
Humphrey then pointed to
Nixon's record-setting pace:
"Let's just look at Nixon's
record. We have the highest
unemployment in ten years. The
highest inflation in two decades.
The highest budget deficit in
eight decades and the highest
intejst rates in 100 years ... If we
had pulled ourselves together
four years ago he wouldn't be in
the White House.
The senatorhen remarked on
his association with George
McGovern, stating that it was he
who persuaded him to run for
Senate.
"When George McGovern
came to Washington, I helped
him find his house. We lived right
next eoor to each other, just
acorss the district line."
"When the McGovern family
entertained they used to borrow
our dishes. I want him to get
elected president so I can get my
dishes back."
"When our children outgrew
their bunk beds, we gave them to
the McGoverns. We also let them
have our old dining room set and
gave our old nickelodeon to the
McGovern kids. When he gets
elected I'm sure I'll get the thing
back."
In conclusion Humphrey said,
"Richard Nixon says you've
never had it so good. Remember
that when you get your tax bill.
Remember that when you have to
eat beans and franks instead of
steak. Remember that when you
find the dollar is worth 20 cents
less than it was four years ago.
Remember when wages are
frozen while profits increase,
you've never had it so good."
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 25, 1972
Crossings hazardous
As Parkside has grown, and as it will continue to
grow, the advent of added roads and thicker vehicular
traffic has complicated the always present problem of
campus safety. Although the major responsibility
inherently lies with the pedestrians and vehicle
operators themselves, there are some feasible safety
measures which deserve checking into.
A sore traffic area on the north side of the campus is
the intersection of Hwy. A and Wood Road. Eastbound
traffic on A is poorly visible to northbound traffic on
Wood Road. The speed limit of 65 on Hwy. A could be
reduced to 45 and a four-way stop instituted at the intersection
to provide a far safer area.
An area where traffic is a hazard to pedestrian travel
is the crossing of Wood Road. Although it is a posted
school crossing zone and caution lights are continually
flashing, much traffic is still speeding through the area
as if on the way to a fire. Perhaps "rumble strips"
(ridges in the road as those on highway 50 as you approach
1-94) may be a helpful suggestion.
As was stated above, primary responsibility for safety
lies with the pedestrian himself. Care in crossing any
road goes without saying; but too many people have
little reaard for the fact that fast-moving traffic very
often is not paying attention as it should be.
The Tallent and Greenquist bus stops also present
problems. Passengers should proceed to cross streets
from the rear of the bus. It is much easier to watch for
traffic and much safer. Let's all work together to
provide for a safer campus. A death or serious injury is
a poor price to pay for correctable mistakes.
Each vote counts
By Rudy Lienau
In approximately two weeks millions of
Americans will go to the polls and vote for a
President, many other officers and some
referendums. This column is dedicated to those who
may not.
"To vote or not to vote" is not a question ; it is a
cop-out. Now that eighteen-year-olds have the vote,
most all people on campus have the right. An
estimated 25 million became eligible with the new
law and considering elections of the past couple of
decades, it^jvould take only a fraction of the new
voters to swing an election.
In 1968, Humphrey lost by approximately 150,000
votes. Kennedy won by much less than that.
The point is that each individual vote counts for
something, now more than ever.
Should it be said, "The kids were given the vote to
keep them quiet"? I think not.
The youth vote in America had a lot to say about
the present candidates for President. Youth effort
in campaigning had, and has now, more than ever,
made presence and usefulness obvious.
The next several weeks and, eventually, Nov. 7
will reveal whether active, politicking youth has
followed through on its new opportunity.
EDITORIALS/OPINION S
¥ The ParksideThe
Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout
the academic year by the students of The University of
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Offices are located at D-194 Library-Learning Center,
Telephone (414) 553-2295.
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not
necessarily the official view of the University of
Wisconsin-Parkside.
EDITORS AND WRITERS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch,
Kathy Wellner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma, Shawn Clements, Dale
Martin, Tom Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Dave Reyher.
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva
By Konkol
By this time or shortly in the future, the doors to the
lower level of the library are open. In a letter
received from Philip Burnett, Library Director, it
was explained that the inconvenience of having only
one door affects everyone, including Library staff.
The lower door will now be open from about 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. on a trial basis.
If the door stays open, it s i up to those who make use
of it. If traffic does not warrant it, it will close. If
people try to bring food in from the nearby food
service area, it will be closed. To facilitate use, the
reserve book section will be moved to the circulation
desk.
The front page story last week about the governor's
visit had the Chancellor explain that students
decided to have Mailer come here. The Lecture and
Fine Arts Committee was responsible for Mailer's
visit. This committee is made up of eight faculty
chosen by the Assistant Chancellor and only four(!)
students.
If the Chancellor can say that one-tenth of 1 percent
of the students were responsible for wasting $2,200
of student money, I wonder what bit of misinformation
is coming out next.
For those of you who have friends who can't read,
please mention it to them that those signs posted
around the food service area mean that no one is to
be occupying space in that area from 11 to 1 unless
they are eating!
For those of you who attend class in Kenosha, notice
those cars parked on the left side of the drive facing
the school. This practice is illegal, stupid and
dangerous as evidenced by the head-on I nearly had
with one of these clowns pulling in across my front
bumper as I was leaving the lot last week. How
about it, security? Bust these fools and cease this
practice.
Canteen has a man on full time filling its machines
on campus. He has to hustle to keep the machines
full. This is where a good part of the excess profit
Canteen makes goes. Is there a cheaper way?
For people who must spend any time at all in the
Library, the static electricity phenomena is a real
problem. It is disconcerting to be electrified every
time you touch something. Who is the person
responsible for not correcting this before it became
a difficulty? Also, non-static carpeting should have
been installed in the first place.
THORN
I've been wondering what that third flagpole is for -
any ideas?
Anyone who desires to assist in distinguished
teacher award procedures, please contact me. If we
can get enough people together, maybe we can get it
done right this year.
What happened to all those politically minded
students who are continually holding those rallies
on campus? For two weeks now I have been mentioning
our big political issue coming out Nov. l and
not a single person has brought anything to this
office. If anybody supports any candidate or is
against any candidate and thinks his opinion is
worth as much as mine, get your copy to us by Oct
26 (t hat's Thursday, gang).
I suggest the university investigate the trimester
program, in which the summer session will be
lengthened to four months and in which the spring
semester will end in April. By looking at a calendar
you can see it can be done with no rout ble at al.
Bus petitions are circulating fast and furious. What
good are they if there is no money to enact them?
Last day to drop a class is this Friday!
Why can't offices on campus stay open during the
noon hour? People staffing these could eat
separately and thus promote efficiency, and it
would be a convenience to students who are only
free at that time.
Who was the person who scheduled the pool to be
closed from 1:30 to 5:30 every day? This is the
prime time when it should be open, when people are
finished with their morning classes and would like
something to refresh them after a hard day. Any
activities scheduled during this time could easily
have been re-scheduled.
Some people have taken us up on the 10 percent
commission for selling ads, as evidenced by the
increased amount in this issue. We could use a lot
more. If we can get three pages every week, we can
go to twelve pages. It isn't that hard, but we need
the bodies.
?
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc.
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 ?
To Chancellor Wyllie:
During enrollment time the
school advertised that there
would be bus service from Racine
to Greenquist and back.
Believing this, like others, I
enrolled, paid my tuition, bought
books, attended classes and
studied, fully thinking I would be
able to complete the semester.
Now the school, under your administration,
has stated that this
bus service may be discontinued
at any time.
You encouraged people to
enroll believing that this bus
service would be provided; now
you feel you can walk out on this
promise and leave people
stranded. This kind of deception
indicates irresponsibility, at the
least, and possibly fraud.
Furthermore, your administration
recently stated that
theUW system had liberalized its
admission policy which would
allow minority people to enroll.
However, if you allow the bus
service to be discontinued, you
have, in effect, prevented many
of the minority people from
enrolling because they won't
have any way of getting to school
since they cannot afford to buy a
car. Thus, while the university
opens one door, it closes another.
From an economic standpoint,
you will be penalizing the people
who can afford it least. Many
students who were taking the bus
back at the end of the day were on
their way to work and without
this service they will be forced to
give up their jobs because they
can't get to work on time without
a decent bus service.
We get letters...
for
enI
believe, as many others do,
that you should be held responsible
for the situation you have
created. When this school was in
the planning stage, surely it must
have occurred to you that some
type of transportation would be
needed because of its location. It
is unreasonable to expect every
student to own a car
economic, as well as
vironmental, reasons.
As I understand it, the position
of the school is that (l) the
University cannot afford to
provide this service and (2) it is
prohibited from providing it since
all transportation is supposed to
be financed without UW money.
However, the University could
afford expensive lounges and
aesthetic considerations.
Granted, these are very nice and
desirable, but surely the ability to
get to school must be just as
important. Now as far as the UW
refusal to subsidize bus service I
believe, because of the unusual
location and the fact that you
encouraged people to enroll
depending on this service, the
ruling can be brought to court if
necessary and reversed because
of the unusual circumstances.
If you cannot correct this
problem, I think you'd better be
prepared to face a civil suit.
Kathy Schulz
Racine junior
To the Editor:
On Friday, Oct. 13, I lost the
little respect I had for the
security guards here on the
Parkside campus. About noon, I
noticed a security guard parked
in a car by the new flag poles on
campus. I know he was parked
there for over an hour. I believe
that this is a big waste if we are
going to pay a person to sit there
and watch people walking for no
real reason.
Later in the day, I tried to get
into the Library-Learning
Center. I came from the Physical
Education building about 5:25
only to find that the building was
locked. In it was a security guard
looking at me shaking his head. I
motioned that I wanted to get in,
but he held up five fingers and
shook his head again.
I know the building is supposed
to be open to 6 p .m. on Friday.
The buses run to 6:15 only
because the buildings are open to
6 p.m.
I know that Friday was the first
day a security guard was
stationed in the building but
that's no excuse for locking
people out an hour early.
I think this shows some
ignorance on the part of these so
called "security guards."
David Zuehlke
Racine Sophomore
Wed., Oct. 25/ 197 2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3
Vets irate over lack of benefits 658 HELP
Switchboard
"We're getting screwed!"
That was the opening
statement when RANGER asked
Chuck St. Pierre, leader of the
Parkside Vets' Club, why their
group existed.
The "screw" St. Pierre
referred to is the lack of
veteran's benefits. "We now get
$175 per month. At the end of
World War two vets got free
tuition and books and $170 per
month. And that's a difference of
almost 30 years," St. Pierre said.
His comments were heartily
approved by the 20 or so members
in attendance at the
meeting. There were no war
stories told RANGER during or
after the meeting. There was
plenty of discussion about
veteran's benefits, however.
To the Editors:
It has recently come to my
attention that it is not possible for
students or faculty members to
cash a check on this campus. This
is a ridiculous and very inconvenient
policy that I feel
should be amended.
Most colleges and universities
have check cashing privileges for
students and faculty during
regular business hours. By
presenting a current ID card and
the check (generally for under
$25), a student can cash his
check. Since many students are
now attending Parkside whose
homes are not in Racine and
Kenosha, I feel that someplace at
the University should cash our
checks. This is not a terribly
time-consuming practice. Actually,
I see no reason why the
Bursar's office could not handle
this without much difficulty.
Even at other campuses on our
own system such services are
available. At UW-Madison,
checks can be cashed at the
Bursar's office and at the student
union. At UW-Milwaukee, this
service is available for faculty
members at the Bursar's office
and for students at the bookstore
and student union. Many of the
other campuses on our system
offer the same service, but the
examples are too numerous to
repeat here. Perhaps students
who need check cashing
privileges should make their
need known to administration
representatives and something
can be done to change the state of
things!
Eric Cushman Moore
There was also discussion
about the Day Care center, which
the Vets' Club is helping out by
building shelves. POW bracelets
were discussed, and the general
membership was in favor of
ordering a supply, to be sold at
cost around the campus.
The veterans are planning a
trip to Madison, coordinated with
other veterans groups, to demand
that Gov. Lucey take a firm stand
on benefits. What type of
demonstration or confrontation
this will be is still up in the air;
according to one member.
"Our biggest problem," St.
Pierre said, "is getting members.
At least a guy could show up
for a few free beers. Then maybe
he'd get the idea that we are
worth joining."
To the Editor:
On Sunday, Oct. 15, was our
open house. Hundreds of people
came - many looking resplendent
in their white shirts, ties,
jewelry and elegant knit suits.
Shiny shoes scuffled across
spotless floors. They admired our
growth, stood awestruck at the
huge factory-like buildings, and
they just adored the plush furniture
and all the modern, expensive
conveniences and
sophisticated equipment which
make an office run.
Clean and spotless shuttle
buses guided the tourists to a
fantasy world of bright, affluent
men's dreams. And yet to come is
the big water fountain to be in
front of Tallent Hall to add a
touch of Disneyland. But why
should wealthy white socialites,
parents of students and townspeople
be the only ones to visit
us and our image?
I feel that a great treat for so
many poor inner city children
and youths would be a guided
tour of the campus. We could
drive buses into Racine's and
Kenosha's ghettos and pick up
the folks for a look at the liberal
intellectual community. Our
Chancellor would be proud to tell
the starving welfare recipients
and black brothers and sisters
that this truly is a great country
with abundant opportunities for
all. And won't they be impressed?
We really are involved
in the community and the betterment
of society.
Chancellor Wyllie - a man
among men and champion of
decency and the American Way.
He's also a champion at keeping
The next meeting is set for Oct.
29, at 7 p.m., in the Student Activities
Building. A gathering at 1
p.m. in the S.A.b. is also planned,
to get ready for a touch football
game the club is planning on
Sunday.
"The main thing we need
emphasized," a member said, "is
that we aren't a bunch of jocks
sitting around swapping war
stories and getting drunk. We're
together because we're concerned
about the raw deal that
vets are getting, especially in
Wisconsin. We're concerned that
Gov. Lucey has yet to take a firm,
public stand on the issue of
veterans' benefits. And we're
concerned because most of us are
older than the average student,
are paying taxes and have
families to support as well as
school to attned."
the black student population
down and, from what I heard,
limiting funds for them, too. But
why now? Now that the buildings,
all that's in them, and water
fountain with paved and repaved
roads are paid for, or will be, we
just don't have money for
frivolous use, do we?
David Myer
sophomore
P.S. Hey, Champ, how about
being sure that all female employees
here get the same pay as
males doing the same work?
To the Editors:
Your editorial concerning
health care is well advised. Ms.
Isenberg does an excellent job
and is to be commended for
same. However, as you point out,
"She is not a doctor." It seems
that some arrangement might be
made for a free clinic for
students. I heartily endorse such
an idea and recommend we make
it more than just an idea soon.
Mrs. Reuben Gorsky
Racine
RESEARCH MATERIALS
All Topics
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,
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519 6LENR0CK AVE., SUITE 203
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024
(213)477-8474 • 477-5493
"We need a local salesman"
on
By Jeannine Sipsma
The RANGER went to Switchboard,
Kenosha's call-in
service, and talked to two
operators who were working that
night.
On entering, there is a flight of
stairs. At the top is a sign that
says, "People helping people - a
life-time opportunity."
Switchboard has several different
rooms. There's one for
personal counseling. Another
room has a parachute fastened to
the ceiling, a TV for when things
get slow, and writings on the wall
like "Who do Switchboard people
call?" and "If they've got the
dime, we've got the time." This is
also where the three telephone
lines are located.
Switchboard has been in
existence since 1970 and handles
any type of problem calls. There
are 16 people who work there.
There are at least two people
working each night from 6 p.m. to
midnight on weekdays, and 6
p.m. to 3 a.m. on weekends.
It is supported mainly by
Kenosha Drug Abuse. There have
also been fund-raising campaigns
such as a basketball game with
Playboy Bunnies and Hares as
cheerleaders which was held on
Oct. 17.
Switchboard also performs
other services besides counseling
on the phone. A person can call
and make an appointment to
come down and get professional
counseling. There are booklets
near the counseling room which
contain information on drugs,
birth control, alcoholism apd VD.
If there is a caller whom ISwitchboard
cannot help, they have a
file of other agencies to which
they can refer him. There are
duty
also speakers who will go out and
talk with groups.
The people who work on the
lines have to go through a
training program. This is taught
mostly by old members of
Switchboard. The program lasts
for two weeks with meetings
twice a week.
S w itc h b o a rd r e c e i v es
anywhere from 200 to 600 calls a
month. Some things people call
about are answers to math
problems, how to tell your
boyfriend he has bad breath, how
many squares there are on a
checker board, and what time
Creature Features is on.
"There are times when you
wonder how serious some of the
callers are," one of the operators
said, "when you hear people
laughing in the background."
There are also a number of very
serious calls. One time someone
called who was going to commit
suicide and the operator talked to
the person for six hours.
One operator said that they are
"sort of a last resort for people
who can't talk to their friends
about their problems." Switchboard
does what it can. If
Switchboard gets something they
don't know about, they admit it
and refer the caller to someone
else. They try to get the person to
think logically and then give
them alternatives, instead of
advice.
Switchboard would like to have
a regular drop-in center and a
foster home where run-aways
can temporarily be housed. Right
now its policy restricts people
from coming to their office except
by appointment. If a runaway,
comes in,, they don't have
anywhere for him to stay.
If you need someone to talk to,
call 658-HELP.
giefert/Assembly
One of the most qualified young
men running for office anywhere
DEMOCRAT-63rd
PAID ADVERTISEMENT: A utk. Pi. f*r ky CitiiMS Ur Scfwt CMimittM. R. WitSami"
3943 Ro4n«y Liin, R«<int, Ttmi.
Carthage C ollege Activities B eard Presents
In Concert
Saturday
October 2 8
8:00 P.M.
Carthage
Fieldhouse
Q gjW| |jWij| p Also Don C ooper
SWEAT-.
Tickets s5 & $4 TEARS
ON SALE Carthage C ollege C enter O ffice
Bidingers M usic (Downtown K enosha) C ook-Gene (Racine)
Free beer controversy
Bartenders claim "meddling V
Bartenders in the Student
Activities Building complained
last week that they are victims of
"unfair beaurocratic meddling,"
as at least two of them were
threatened with firing.
The changes were made by two
bartenders (who asked that they
not be identified) in a chance
meeting with this reporter.
The bartenders alledged that
they were being "spied upon" by
the administration, who accused
them of giving away free beer to
friends. They also charged that
William R. Niebuhr, coordinator
of Student life, refused to talk to
them as a group, is never in the
S.A.B., and refused to disclose his
sources of information. They also
stated that faculty and staff
receive more free beer than
anyone.
Niebuhr confirmed that two of
the men had been spoken to
regarding the dispersal of free
beer. He also admitted that some
faculty members were asked to
"keep on eye on the bar" during a
recent event.
He denied, however, that
faculty and staff received more
free beer than anyone.
"This was the practice before
this school year, but since then
we've decided that no one, not
even the Chancellor, gets free
beer," Niebuhr said.
Niebuhr also said that "the
attitude of the bartenders is also
a consideration."
Talks with students in the
S.A.B. revealed that friends of
the bartenders do get free beer.
However, it seems' that some
staff members are also sipping
free suds.
In a related incident, several of
the bartenders complained about
the pizza being offered. (The
supplier was changed this year).
In commenting on this,
Niebuhr said that the first consideration
had to be expense. He
said, any complaints about the
pizza can be handled through use
of the suggestion box.
"DeRango's will make that pizza
to our specifications. They'll
change it anyway we want it
changed. If people have complaints,
let them suggest the
changes needed."
Niebuhr added that the
decision as to where the pizza will
be purchased is a business one,
not one "about which the bartenders
should be concerned."
• •• and more letters
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., O ct. 25, 1 9 72
Greenquist
Open House
HOFFMAN'S
RECORDS
TAPES
Discount P rices!
5707 - Sixth Axe.
Kenosha
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE
219 TALLENT HALL
553-2150
"WI f t ashington Square
5200 Washington Avenue
Radge
PHONE: 634-6661
FREE DELIVERY
Member Parkside 200
National Varsity Club
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774
Photo by Craig Roberts
Young Republicans active
Two previously unheard of
groups have been formed on the
Parkside campus, namely the
Parkside Young Republicans and
Young Voters for the President.
Joint meetings have been held,
but each group is a separete
entity with separate goals.
Young Voters for the
President, as a nation-wide
organization, is nonpartisan and
includes Democrats and Independents
as well as
Republicans. According to Ross
Workman, who organized the
Parkside chapter, the main goal
of Yo ung Voters is the re-election
of President Nixon and therefore,
it does not become involved in
any other races.
Here at Parkside, as at other
campuses across the nation, a
major emphasis has been to
dispel the notion that college
students overwhelmingly support
Sen. George McGovern. Some of
the activities sponsored by this
Information
available
on fellowship
Each year the National
Research Council advises the
National Science Foundation in
the selection of candidates for the
Foundation's program of
Graduate Fellowships. Panels of
prominent scientists are appointed
by the National Research
Council to recommend candidates
to the Foundation after a
careful review of each applicant's
qualifications. In 1972,
of.a total of 5,647 a pplicants to the
program, 998 candidates were
selected for awards.
Applicants to the NSF
Graduate Fellowship Program
must be beginning graduate
students by the Fall of 1973, or
must have completed not more
than one calendar year of fulltime
or part-time graduate study
by the Fall of 1973. Subject to the
availability of funds, new
fellowships awarded in the
Spring of 1973 will be for periods
of three years, the second and
third years contingent on certification
to the Foundation by
the fellowship institution of the
sstudent's satisfactory progress
toward an advanced degree in the
sciences.
Further information and
preliminary application forms
may be secured from the College
Office, Greenquist 345.
College Men
PART TIME
WORK
Call 5 52-8355
• PAPA B URGER • MAMA BU RGER
• TEEN B URGER . BABY BU RGER
CARRY-OUTS
CALL AHEAD YOUR OR DER W ill BE RE ADY
Tubs of Chicken • Fish
jnd Shrimp
fREt GALLON OE ROO T BEE R WITH SS 00 ORDER
MILE NORTH Of
MIDCITY THEAT ER
ON SHERI DAN ROAD
552-8404
A & W ROOT B EER D RIVE-IN
Shcndjn Rd Hy 11 North
Ken osha
HOURS DAILY H AM TO II TM
SUMMER MONTHS
II A M TO MIDNIGHT
•AA A A *
group have been a bumpershekermg
drive in both Racine
and Kenosha, attendance at a
Young Voter rock concert in
Milwaukee and a survey of
Parkside students, which is
currently being undertaken.
Activity is expected to increase
dramatically as the election
approaches, and several
speakers will be brought in
Young Republicans also
supports the president but, in
addition, is actively involved in
the congressional, state and local
races. Each member is encouraged
to work with one or
more candidates they are
especially interested in. In this
way the activities of the YRs
have been many and varied.
Some members have worked
for Tom Mortenson in Racine,
others working with the Kenosha
Young Republicans have worked
on the Robert Baker and Arnold
Esser campaigns. A major upcoming
activity for this group is
the "Meet the Candidates"
dessert, in which they will be able
to meet the congressional, state
and local Republican candidates
as well as officers of the
Wisconsin Federation of Young
Republicans.
In the near future, they will be
boarding the WFYR campaign
bus to stump for their candidates.
The regular meeting time for
both clubs is on Fridays from
11:30a.m. until 1 p.m. in Room D174
L LC.
Career Counseling Center
The Career Counseling and
Information Center is a place
where students can drop in and
browse through materials on
careers or talk to Barb Larson
career counselor.
The center contains material
on career trends, what different
jobs you can get into with a
certain major, many job titles
and definitions, and different
degrees you can get in your
major at certain colleges. According
to Mrs. Larson, if there is
information you would like that
the center doesn't have, they will
try to find it for you.
She went on to say that tests
are available to help focus on a
person's particular interests. The
test helps the student to learn
more about himself and isolate
his interests, in order to concentrate
on going into a certain
line of work. This will aid him in
choosing his classes.
Mrs. Larson also remarked
that picking a career is not a onetime
process, but continues on
through your entire life.
The Career Counseling and
Information Center is located in
Tallent Hall, Room 284. If you
wish to make an appointment,
call Barb Larson, 553-2122.
UW P Winter Break
rams
Jan 5-14
1497
ttP TODAY OVERHAlf FILLED!
Sielert/Assembly
He realizes Vietname era
veterans need State educational aids.
DEMOCRAT-63rd
PAID A DVERTISEMENT: Auth. a nd Pd. for by Citiz ens for Siofer t Committee R Willoms,
3043 Rodney L ena, Rocine , Trees.
Wed./ Oct. 25/ 197 2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5
! llll'jlllllllllllllllllllllltlttmilHHIIMMIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMtlltMIIMIIIIIIMIIIIinillllllllimillin^
~ s
1 Walking down the steps
swirling curving and winding down
My mind is wandering all around.
It grows dizzy from massive shapes
I am gazing at the soul of amerikan education
Those massive shapes stab
the hearts of artists bleed
jagged points blind me
My fate; to drown in this sureal sea
The glass shows the real art
rocks and trees
Man's mind is marred he looks for freedom
he looks out onto charred stumps
I know it will not be found this way
this wild child will never be free
look at its poverty what is it really worth?
E
E
i =
E
1 3 =
power prestige
education please
3llllHHIIIllHIIHHIIHHIHHHmiHlllllHHIIIHII|||Hlllimillllllllllllllllllnilllllllliiiiiiiiiiimiii
THE PARK SIDE
RANGER will no w accept
classifi ed adve rtising.
Cost per insertion for each
ad of 20 words or less is 50
cents, payable at the time
you turn in your ad copy at
the RANGER office, D-194
Library-Learning Center.
Deadline for all such ads is
THURSDAY NOON before
the followingwednesday
publication. No ads can be
accept ed pay this time.
The adver tising manage r
reserves the right to refuse
any ad which may be
libelous or is in violation of
any and all civil rights
acts.
UW Parkside
Winter Break
Travel Program
to
Non Skiers:
nd
Motor option
For Information Contact
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER
LLC-D-197
lit
SHAKE y S PA?*A»
Monday night is
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"
at Shakey'sin Racine.
$1 a pit cher for Pabst
or Schlitz light.
Lath rop & 21st (almost)
Racine, Wise. 5 3 4 0 6
Pho ne: 633-63 07
^IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||l|||||||||mm|||||,||||,||||||,|||||||m||||||||||||m||mii|m|||m|||||m|||m|||||m|||||m|||||||||||||||||||||||||
MONDAY "College Night"
BEER — BEER
Large Glass 15c Large Pitcher 99c
TUESDAY thru THURSDAY
Com Charge ( NOT one dollar)
Only $0*
I REMEMBER!!
| When the bell rings bar drinks are only 35*
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
6 N ights a Week
1Where Hie action is"
6 Packs To Go
Miller 99c Bud $1
30 Schlitz $1
30
nS
1
Station
WE CATER TO YOU
2707 63 St. |
1 P°0
' Tables & Dart Games I
rtY&£\ i i i ti i^> ui rr« i?|B
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimmmmiiiiimiiiiiiiiii miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiimmimil
6 THE PARKSI DE RANGER W e d., Oct. 25, 1 9 7 2
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING
A class to help writers polish
their professionalism and
heighten their insights into new
article ideas, more vivid writing
and ever-changing markets is
offered by University Extension
beginning Oct. 25.
Both practicing writers and
beginners will find help in the
class, "Got Writer's Cramp?"
The experienced writer who has
hit a snag will gain inspiration;
neophytes can quickly pick up
important basics by association
with more advanced writers.
The instructor will be Bill
Nelson, newspaperman,
magazine freelancer and writing
instructor.
The class will meet on 8
Wednesdays, at 7:30 p.m., at
Starbuck Jr. High School,
Racine. Contact University
Extension at UW-Parkside for
registration information, phone
553-2312.
The Hawaii Trip is over half
filled, according to William R.
Niebuhr, coordinator of Student
Life. The nine-day trip will be
from Jan. 5-14 and costs $274 plus
$20 tax and service. Interested
travelers are advised to register
in the Student Activities Office,
LLC Rm. D-197, as soon as
possible.
John Mack, consultant to
higher education of the Wisconsin
Education Association, will
speak to James E. McKeouwn's
classes in urbanism and urbanization
Nov. 8, 6-7:15 p.m., in
Room D-lll, Gr.
There will be a draft seminar
on Wednesday, Oct. 25, at 2:30 in
Greenquist Hall, Room 231.
According to Steve Bangert,
counselor, this will be an informal
question-and-answer
session. Some of the topics
covered will be basic laws on the
draft, how the lottery works,
what deferments still stand,
medical standards, legal
statements of a conscientious
objector, and the different
branches of the service.
If you want help on an individual
basis, contact Steve
Bangert at the Kenosha campus,
Room 135, e xt. 42.
Harry Lantz, associate
professor of music at The
University of WiscorisinParkside,
has been invited to
serve as clinician and conductor
of the Ohio Regional All-State
Orchestra Oct. 28 and 29 in
Cincinnati. Lantz will conduct the
orchestra, sponsored by the Ohio
Music Education Association in
concert before the state music
group, at its annual meeting.
RAG TIME RANGERS announce
their second official club
meeting. It will be held in the
S.A.B. Oct. 29 (Sun.), promptly at
1 p.m. Fashion show, bike hike,
ski trips to Whitecap and Aspen,
Colo., will be discussed and
planned. Bring your friends.
Interested students are urged to
come and find out what we have
to offer. See you there!
mm
PIZZA KITCHEN
Chicken ft Italian Sausage B ombers
Fru Delivery it Parkslde Vi llage
5021 30th Annua Phone 6 57-5191
Cham-Tap-Bar
2511 Dur and
^ Racine, Wis.
(Shampagne on Tap
Ham Sandwiches G
and Pizza C© O
SSefert/ Assembly
We need a student
in the State Legislature
DEMOCRAT-63rd
PAID ADVERTISEMENT: A uth. end Pd. ler by Citizens far Siafart Cemmitlaa. R. WiL
fiems* 3043 Rednay lint, Racine, Treat.
The Parkside swim club is in
need of members. Members have
the opportunity of participating
in competitive swimming in a
club atmosphere. No experience
is necessary. Training will be
provided if desired. Applications
are taken at the pool daily, from
3:30 to 5:30.
Mohamed S. El-Hennawi, 31,
has been appointed an assistant
professor of management science
in the School of Modern Industry
at The University of WisconsinParkside
effective in January.
His fields of specialization include
corporation finance, money
and banking and monetary
theory and policy.
El-Hennawi presently is on the
faculty of the University of
Illinois where he is completing
work for his Ph.D. degree. He
previously has taught at
Alexandria University in his
native Egypt and at Washington
University in St. Louis and at St.
Louis University. El-Hennawi
also has experience with private
business both in Egypt and the
U.S.
Attention: Christian Scientists,
or student and faculty members
interested in studying Christian
Science.
Special organizational
meeting. Please contact Rich
Myers at 634-1202.
We are looking for a facultystaff
member interested in
Christian Science to act as advisor.
Phone 634-1202.
The Parkside Activities Board
will present Big Jake on Nov. 3,
as part of their continuing feature
film series.
The movie stars John Wayne
and Richard Boone. John Wayne
portrays Big Jake McCaudels
who has his grandson kidnapped
by outlaws led by Richard Boone.
Hearing of it, Big Jake sets out to
find his grandson, and in the
process there is some pretty
typical John Wayne action.
The movie will be shown at the
activities building at 8 p.m., and
the admission price is 75 cents.
Your Wisconsin and Parkside IDs
are required.
The Whiteskellar will present
Grant Anderson and John
Graham Thursday at 1 p.m. Both
are guitarists and folk singers,
with Graham playing a twelvestring
guitar.
A print titled "A Gothic Tale
(Death in Milano)" by Moishe
Smith, visiting professor of art at
The University of WisconsinParkside,
has been purchased by
the United States Information
Agency and is currently being
exhibited with a group of
American prints in various
Australian museums.
The print also is included in a
traveling show at various U.S.
museums sponsored by the
American Federation of Arts.
Smith, a Chicago native,
worked in Rapallo, Italy, immediately
before coming to
Parkside this fall. He previously
taught at several Midwestern
universities including UWMadison.
His work has been
featured in one-man shows in
Europe and the U.S. and is in a
number of permanent collections.
The RAG TIME RANGERS
present the second annual
THINK SNOW dance this
Saturday evening, Oct. 28. It will
be held in the Student Activities
Building from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
The performing band comes to
us direct from Iowa. Their name
is White Cross and they're one of
Iowa's top dance bands. The band
consists of seven excellent
musicians who play rhythm,
blues, rock 'n' roll and jazz.
Admission is $1.50, club
members 75 cents. Parkside and
Wisconsin IDs are required.
:
Parkside Educators
for
McGovern
The coming election offers a crucial decision. The next President must shape policy which will take
us through some of the critical years of this half of th e twentieth century. Because we are convinced
that he can best provide the leadership and policies so deeply needed, we endorse Senator George
McGovern as our choice for President.
David R. Beach Myra Sadker
Frederick A. Becker Ann E. Harbeson Michael T. Marron Marilyn Scamman
Emmett Bedford John Harbeson Andrew M. McLean Frank G. Schliesmann
i
Gabriella S. Bonn Teresa Harris M. Brian McMahon Robert W. Schrader
John D. Buenker John R. Henderson James S. Mehoke James Shea
Nicholas Burckel Kenneth Herrick Marion J. Mochon Alan R. Shucard
Philip M. Burnett Harold W. Heser Robert J. Moore Aaron Snyder
John Campbell Peter S. Hoff Robert w. Moore Harold Stern
Robert A. Canary Michael Holmes Frank Mueller Bruce Stiehm
Henry S. Cole Kenneth Holsten Thomas E. Mueller Carla J. Stoffle
James Dean Rollin Jansky William J. Murin Richard Stoffle 3
Frank N. Egerton Mary Helgren Johnson Morton Nachlas David Streeter
John Elmore Thomas D. Knight Michael O'Rourke Richard Teschner
Walter W. Feldt Charles Kugel Virginia Parsons Douglas Thompson
3
Eric Forrest David Kuhn Don T. Piele John Van Willigen
Shirley Fraser Donald D. Kummings Michael D. Reid Carole Gottlieb Vopat %
4
Ronald W. Gatterdam Douglas LaFollette Don Rintz Alan Wallace
Ronald Gottesman James Liddy Richard Rosenberg Robert D. Wrinkle
Ben Greenebaum Carl Lindner David Sadker Heh-Hsiang Yuan
ll=*=
• " ' - - - •
This list of names represents the results of a rather informal poll. The absence of a name does not
necessarily imply either lack of support for McGovern or enthusiasm for the opposing ticket.
(Authorized and paid for by Parkside Educators for McGovern: H. Cole, F. Egerton, W. Johnson, and A. Snyder, Coordinators.)
UW-PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD
presents
Friday, Nov. 10-8:00 p.m. - Phy. Ed. Bldg.
• America's Most Famous Defense Attorney
• Best-Selling Author • Lecturer
speaking on "The Defense Never Rests"
F. LEE BAILEY
General Admission - *1.50
Parkside Students & Staff - *1.00
Tickets Available: UW-P Information Office - Room 201 - Talent Hal
Wed., Oct. 25, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7
Gymnasts' goal is participation USTFF cross country
By Kathryn Wellner
Parkside's got a gymnastics
team! A good one, too.
Last year Parkside's women's
gymnastics team, in its first year
of competition, won every dual
meet, and all six girls qualified
for state. This year the team is
bigger with members of last
year's team plus a number of
experienced gymnasts and
beginners.
At the beginner level are
Debbie Lienau, Cindy Squire,
Sharon Lindstrom, Toni Marini,
and Bonnie Sparks. The intermediate
girls are July
Weidner, Debbie Roseth, Liz
Stellberg, Paris Wohlust, and
Karen Sivley. Jacki Levonian,
Kim Simonsen and team captain
Kathy Kramer compete at the
advanced level. All members of
the team compete in all around,
which consists of floor exercise,
balance beam, uneven bars, and
vaulting.
The team is improving on all
levels according to Coach Geza
Martiny, who started Women's
gymnastics at Parkside when he
arrived last fall.
Two of the girls, Jacki
Levonian, and Kim Simonsen,
are working on the national level
for the United States Gymnastics
Federation.
If one speaks to the members of
a gymnastics team, it soon
becomes apparent that it is very
much an individual sport. There
is rarely unilateral agreement on
anything, be it the advantages of
long legs or which event is most
difficult. One of the few things
which was generally agreed upon
was that gymnastics can be
frustrating at times, especially
when a judge seems to be against
one. Most of the girls felt that the
absolute power of the judges
wasn't quite fair, because different
judges have different
preferences in style. If one's style
doesn't suit the judge, too bad.
Also agreed on was that work for
self improvement results in team
improvement.
Butterflies and shakes are only
a couple of the many individual
reactions to meets. One girl felt
that the worst possible feeling is
the one she gets as she stands
waiting for the judge's nod to
A«
g,n
' The §
reatest feeling?
Afterward, in the shower when
it's all over, and one feels one has
done their best.
A firm belief in her ability to fly
is one girl's formula for success
in vaulting.
"You've got to have the right
mental attitude. Think that
you're weightless. I think to
myself just before I start that I'm
gonna fly," she said.
kor a while there was a great
debate on the advantages of size
It seemed that the taller girls
viewed being short as an advantage,
and the short girls
considered long legs to be the
most valuable asset. Finally, one
of them decided that what one
does with one's size is most
important. Good carriage and
grace come across well no matter
what a person's size. The
women's gymnastics season runs
from September to the first week
of December, and is followed
immediately by the men's season
which runs until April.
This is the first year that
Parkside has had a full men's
gymnastics team. The members
of the team and their events are
as follows: Steve Sladky, Brian
Petschow, Tim Petro, Mike
Miller, Brad Grunewald, and Jim
Magruder, competing in all
around. The rest of the team
•consists of Kevin O'Neil; rings,
parallel bars, side horse, and
high bar, Jerry Konecny; side
horse, rings, and high bar, Greg
Dewitz; vaulting and floor
exercise, Jesus Torres; high bar,
and Mark Jossart; floor exercise.
According to Martiny, the
philosophy of gymnastics at an
educational institution is to teach
students to achieve a goal
through participation. The goal of
the Parkside gymnastics team is
participation. Whether or not
they win is not as important as
whether or not they work hard
and do their best.
Grunewald says tnat he gets
nervous the night before a meet,
but not when he is out doing his
routine.
The men agreed that gymnastics
is one of the hardest
sports. Some of their comments
on the nature of g ymnastics were
interesting, if not amusing.
"You have to approach it with
reckless abandon."
"It's really a mind over matter
sports."
"You've got to feel self concious."
"Workouts go in cycles. You
start out looking forward to it,
after a while you can't stand it,
and then it gets better again.
The team is looking forward to
the big meets when it gets to
travel and maybe pick up a few
trophies.
One hazard of gymnastics, like
all sports, is injuries. There have
been several of these because of
to the lack of spotting equipment.
Hopefully this situation will not
continue.
The whole team thinks it's
great when people come to watch
the meets, especially girls.
Powder Puffs
still undefeated
Parkside's Powder Puff
Football Team remained undefeated
with a resounding 19-0
Columbus Day victory over GTI.
This was the second victory of the
season for the girls. Parkside had
a very balanced attack with four
girls getting into the scoring
column. The first score came
when Nancy Thomson connected
on a 38-yard bomb pass to Barb
Piasecki. In the second half the
girls kept the pressure on GTI as
Dita Hunter intercepted a GIT
pass and pranced 65 yards for the
score. The final score of the game
came as Paula Vanchem
returned to punt for 40 yards and
a touchdown.
The next game of the season
has the girls matched up with
Dominican College Oct. 29.
Harriers dump Marquette
Jim McKadden
The Ranger Cross country
team had its best team meet
against Marquette Oct. 17 winning
17-44. Coach Vic Godfrey
said that "if the fourth to seventh
place runners keep running the
way they are we should be in the
top three in the NAIA District 14
and have a chance for the
Nationals." The District 14 meet
is at Eau Claire on Nov. 11 and
the nationals are Nov. 18 at
Kansas City. Mo.
Lucian Rosa finished in the top
spot again for the Rangers with a
time of 2 6:25. He was followed by
Dennis Biel in 26:38 and Jim
McFadden in 26:50. The course
record in the five mile race is
25:30 by Garry Bentley of South
Dakota State. Keith Merritt
finished sixth, Ned Kessenich
seventh. Sid Hyde eighth, Everett
Hyde ninth, and John Ammeran
fourteenth.
Parkside's dual record is now
3-1.
WHITESKEUAR
(north lounge
**. Greenquist H all)
v»Vf.
THURS., OCT. 26
NOTICE
Major employers throughout the
U.S. (private & government) are
seeking qualified college men and
women for career positions with
top pay and outstanding benefits.
Excellent opportunities exist in
many areas. For FREE information
on student assistance and
placement program send selfaddressed
STAMPED envelope to
National Placement Registry,
Data-Tech Services, 1001 East
Idaho St., Kalispell, MT 59901.
ihi^im i Qfru
v
THE ESTABLISHMENT
SHOW LOUNGE
25 Gorgeous D ancing Girls
(appearing o n our s tage w eekly)
Continuous Entertainment
7 P.M. til?
Closed Sundays
424 Lake A ve.
Racine
637-8467
Amateur Contest
Every Thursday
Night Dancers W anted
This season the Ranger cross
country team will be hosting the
United States Track and Field
F e d e r a t i on Mk- Am e r i c a
Championship. The meet will be
held on Oct. 28 beginning at 10
a.m. The Western Championships
were held last Saturday
at Fresno State University. The
Eastern Championships are also
going to be held Oct. 28 at Pennsylvania
State University. The
National Championships are to
be held at Northern Texas State,
Nov. 22.
The favorites are University of
Chicago Track Club, Northwestern
University, and the
Western Michigan team. There
will also be a competition for
veterans, runners over 30, and
masters, for runners over 40. The
course for the veterans and
masters will be three miles, while
the course for the college teams
will be five miles.
The Women's USTFF MidAmerican
C h ampionsh ips are
also to be held Oct. 28 here at
Parkside. The competition begins
at 10 a.m. The men will follow as
soon as the women are finished.
The favorite for the women is the
Ozark Track Club. They will race
on a two-mile course. The open
competition will be run on a
10,000 meter course
Booters lose 3-1
The UW-P booters lost 3-1 to
Marquette in a sloppy quagmire
nere last Saturday, dropping
their record to 2-6-1.
The first half went well with
Parkside leading 1-0, but the
second half turned into a different
ball game when Marquette
scored three goals.
According to Coach Hal
Henderson, Marquette's second
goal was literally given to them
due to a mistake by Parkside.
During the last few minutes
Women
gymnasts
sweep
The women's gymnastics team
did well in its second meet of the
year, beating Carroll College of
Waukesha Saturday afternoon in
all three classes. The scoring
went as follows:
Beginner Parkside - 41.00
Carroll-27.55
Intermediate Parkside-47.10
Carroll-00.00
Advan ced Parkside-54.10
Carroll-00.00
The next meet for the gymnasts
will be Oct. 28 at Whitewater.
Marquette made its third and
final goal on a penalty kick.
"The game was very disappointing,
as I believe we were the
better team," Hendersen said.
"On paper the shots and goal
saves were even, but after that
second goal, we just died," he
added.
The Rangers will have this
weekend off before traveling to
Charleston, 111., n ext Wednesday
for a contest against rugged
Eastern Illinois. Parkside will
close regular season play the
following Saturday when it meets
UW-Green Bay here.
Swimming meet here
The Parkside swim team is
having its first home meet this
coming Tuesday, Oct. 31 at 6 p.m.
CHAMPION TERMPAPERS
636 Beacon St. (No. 605)
Boston, Mass. 02215
617-536-9700
Research material for Termpapers,
Reports, Theses, etc. LOWEST PRICES.
QUICK SERVICE. For information,
please write or call.
HALE HITCH So says V ie VA ~ * Honk Kifdiaa
DID VOL KNOW ^1
YOU CAN ATTEND A FOREIGN
UNIVERSITY UNDER THE G.L BILL?"
For information, contact the Veterans Administration
y
m
Q
0
to
IR
• BEER • SODA
• LIQUORS • WINES
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE
CONVENI ENT PARKING
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.
CALL
632-1565
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC.
OKNiir
jfraim
ROOKS
W
If yo u
prefer
use our
Rear
Entrance
STARTS FRIDAY
On Our Screen
"Vice-Hustlers"
plus
"Sweet Lips"
New Selections of Adult Books Arriving
Daily! Theatre Open Noon 'til
Midnite. Book Storo Open 11 a.m.
'til Midnite.
18 Years and Over Only!
OPEN TODAY
6:00 - 12:00 Mid.
410 MAIN STREET • DOWNTOWN
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 25, 1972
Club sports HOW in action Womens tennis squad wins again
SWIMMING
Swim coach Barb Morris has
just released the 1972-73 Ranger
swim schedule for both the men
and women. The women open up
Oct. 31 at 6 p.m. with UWOshkosh.
This will be the first
swim meet in the new Physical
Education building.
Five days later, on Nov. 4, the
women will be hosting an invitational
in the home pool. The
men open their season at the
Ripon Relays on Dec. 2 to be
followed by meets on Dec. 9 with
Carroll College and Dec. 15 with
UW-Whitewater. Both meet? are
at home.
The men will start the new
semester by journeying to
Chicago to meet Loyola on Jan.
13. Both teams will be meeting
Lake Forest in the local pool on
Jan. 20 before going to Chicago
State on Jan. 29. The final home
meet for the men will feature the
University of Chicago on Feb. 7.
The women will bow out, Feb.
10 at DeKalb, 111., w ith Northern
Illinois and the men will finish up
Feb. 21 at Carroll College.
JUDOCLUB
The Parkside Judo Club
practices every Tuesday and
Thursday evenings at 9 p.m. with
3rd degree Black Belt Ron
Hansen. The club has already
participated in two tournaments
with club president Helmut Kah
bringing home the first place
trophy in the White-Brown Belt
light weight class in Chicago
recently.
SKIING
The R Time Rangers under
president Bill Jaecks have been
very busy preparing for the
coming Ski season. The club is
sponsoring a dance Oct. 28 to
follow a Road Rally they recently
sponsored.
Several members of the racing
team are planning on attending a
pre-season racing camp to be
held in early December at Mt.
Telemark. A plane load of the
club is planning on visiting
Colorado over the semester
break for a ski trip sponsored by
the Midwest Collegiate Ski
Association.
TABLE TENNIS
Dr. Omar Amin is looking for
table tennis enthusiasts who
I ABORTIONS
: FREE Referral to N .Y.Clin
i 12 weeks o r le ss
: Total c ost
i $ 150
CALL
i CONTROLLED
: PARENTHOO
J (a non-profit organization
SUITE 1006
I DAVID STOTT BLDG.
j (313) 9 64-0530
would like to practice as a team
on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons
at the Physical
Education building. The club
would like to play other colleges
on a dual meet basis.
HOCKEY
Parkside's very successful
hockey club will be in action
early this fall. The Rangers have
been invited by the Milwaukee
Admirals to play a exhibition
game with the Marquette
Warrors on Nov. 7 at the
Milwaukee Arena at 6:45 p.m.
prior to the Admirals-Green Bay
Bobcats game. Tickets are $1.50.
More information will appear
later.
RUGBY
The Ranger Ruggers recently
dropped a 30-12 match to the
University of Wisconsin Rugby
Club. The Rangers have made
constant progress this season and
are finally shaping up as a team
to reckon with.
The last home match of the
season will be held Sunday, Nov.
5 at Lakefront Stadium in
Kenosha. The game is being
sponsored by the Kenosha Lions.
Tickets will be on sale shortly.
The Lions are making this an all
out push to fill the stadium and
make this an annual event. The
Rangers' opponents will be the
Warriors of Marquette.
The women's tennis team
played at Oshkosh Oct. 19,
winning the meet 3-2, conference
scoring.
The number one player, Pat
Kekic, took first in singles with a
pro set score of 8-3. Pat and Sue
Graf took first in doubles with an
8-2, while Kay Becker and Eileen
Reilly took second with 8-6.
Normally a set is six games,
but one may play a pro set with
eight, ten or twelve games. The
first player to reach eight games
in an eight game pro set wins
provided they have a margin to
two games.
Coming up this weekend is the
W.W.I.A.C. State meet at
Oshkosh. The meet will begin at
5:30 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m.
Saturday. Schools participating
in the meet are Carthage,
Whitewater, La Crosse, Stevens
Point, Oshkosh and Parkside.
Representing Parkside in
doubles will be Pat Kekic and Sue
Graf; number one position, and
Kay Becker and Nicolet De Rose;
number two Doubles will be
played Friday evening.
IM Football
In the IM Touch Football
League, the cream is rising to the
top as last year's University
Champions, the Schooners, have
sole possession of first place with
a perfect 4-0 record.
STANDINGS
Schooners 4-0
Pink Fascists 4-1
Trout 2-3
Football Team 1-4
BOSS 14
SCHEDULED
Soccer
?|
ov
-
1 Eastern Illinois at Charleston
ov
-
4 UW-Green Bay at Parkside
Cross Country
28 USTFF Mid-American Championship at Parkside
Nov
-
3 Loras at Parkside
Women's Cross Country
0ct
-
28 USTFF National Women's Championships at Parkside
Women's Swimming
Nov
-
4 Parkside Invitational at Parkside
Women's Gymnastics
0ct
-
28 Whitewater Invitational at Whitewater
Women's Tennis
Nov
-
10-11 State Meet at Oshkosh
NOTICE
Jobs Are Available. . . !
For FREE information
on student assistance and
placement program send
self-addressed STAMPED
envelope to the National
Placement Registry, 1001
East Idaho St., Kalispell,
MT 59901
- NO GIMMICKS -
The dearest choice for a generation
A/T„n ». , r, So McGovern can't win, eh?
Where have you heard that before?
In the primaries last Spring,
that's where.
But you fooled the political
experts and rewrote the history
books. You provided the manpower
and womanpower for the largest,
smoothest, toughest vote-canvassing
operation this country had
ever seen.
Now it's time to do it again.
And the job this Fall is even more
important. For the choice between
Nixon and McGovern is the clearest
choice voters have had for a
generation.
McGovern has opposed the
bombing of Indochina, while
Nixon has been inflicting the explosive
equivalent of 7 Hiroshima
atom bombs a month on that already
devastated area.
Nixon believes in putting people
out of work in order to hold
down prices. His policies have put
2 million more people out of work.
McGovern believes that there
should be a job for everyone who
wants to work, with the U.S. Government
itself as the employer of
last resort.
Nixon started his campaign
with $10 million in secret money.
McGovern's campaign is financed
almost entirely by contributions
of $5 to $25 from the people.
Nixon has nominated conservatives
and mediocrities to the
United States Supreme Court.
One or two more Nixon appointments
if he is re-elected, and you'll
live with a heavy-handed Nixon
court for the rest of your life.
McGovern has pledged to appoint
a woman and members of racial
and ethnic minorities, and will appoint
highly qualified liberals.
Ralph Nader says the Nixon
Administration is "the most corrupt
in our history." The late
Robert Kennedy called George
McGovern "the most decent man
in the Senate."
McGovern wants the millionaires
and the large corporations to
start paying their fair share of
taxes. Nixon wants to maintain
the status quo.
Get an absentee ballot if you
need one. Get some money together
to help us make get-outthe-vote
phone calls. And get together
with your local McGovern
Committee to find out how you
can help.
You started this campaign. It's
up to you to finish it.
r
Send money while there's still time!
Help us buy get-out-the-vote phone calls.
Age of McGovern Box 100, A-M, Washington, D.C. 20005
contribution™"' '° he
'
P 8et
°
Ut the VOte f
°
r Gwrge McG°wrn. Enclosed is my
• $5 to pay for 50 phone calls to voters • $25 to pay for 250 phone calls to voters
• $10 to pay for 100 phone calls to voters • (whatever you can give)
The Age of McGovern
Dedicated to raising $1 million
for a nationwide get-out-the-vote drive
Name.
Address..
City_ —State. -Zip_
thtfnew fxtfitica"c^nthbubons'a'cC f
°"
OWing informati
°" is *'*> "«ded for rec ord purp oses only un der
Occupation Name of Company City & Still
Authorized and paid f or by Age of M cGovern Campaign Committee • 201 East 42nd Street
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
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The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 5, October 25, 1972
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1972-10-25
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
associate dean jewel echelbarger
george mcgovern
harry lantz
ken konkol
richard nixon
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/7321e50dd9119962d773242ce147d364.pdf
02ed962d835780c94a5c1b054d16c60c
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 1, issue 4
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Who's he? It's the gov!
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
The Parkside _
RANGE dn day,O lob r 18, 1972
Gov. Patrick Lucey
Bus service from- Racine
may end Friday
By Shawn Clements
As or Oct. 20, there may be no
more bus service between Racine
and the Parkside campus. This
will leave some 100 students
without transportation and
conceivably add to the already
overcrowded parking lots.
According to Stan Altenbern,
president of Wisconsin Coach
L.ines, the service is being
discontinued because of lack of
Use. Altenbern said that a
minimum of 180 one-way trips
must be made per day for the
companyto break even, and 230
to 250 for the line to make a
decent profit.
The announcement came
following a Public Service
C~mmission hearing on Oct. 10.
Wisconsin Coach had originally
requested a permanent permit to
operate the line, though this was
changed to a temporary permit
request (which was approved)
after the company discovered the
loss of revenue. A schedule
change, which went into effect on
Oct. 9, has had little effect as yet,
according to Altenbern, on
revenues,
d Jewel Echelbarger, assistant
ean for student affairs said that
"f '
eelers" have gone out to Flash
of R ' FI acme and Kenosha Transit.
d' ash,. however, is already
f ISCUssmg discontinuing service
t~r Racine. A public hearing on
1, at request has been set for NoV,
d
' Ms, Echelbarger also said that
ISC ' G USSlons are underway with
trateway Tech" which already
t
ansports students from Racine
o Ke h ' and nos a, to possibly expand
transport Parkside students
as well,
"The main thing we need is
more interest in using the buses,"
Ms. Echelbarger commented.
"Without increased revenue, who
can blame Wisconsin Coach for
wanting to discontinue. Where
are all the students concerned
with ecology?"
A caB to Racine Mayor Kenneth
Huck's office produced a
"no comment" and a "The
Mayor is busy and cannot speak
with you."
Car pool, anyone?
Who's he?
BY SHAWN CLEMENTS
"Who's that guy? wbere's he
from?" Th .- ose were typical
questions asked by Parkside
students last Tuesday as
Governor Patrick Lucey loured
the campus with Doug
LaFo~ette, assistant professor of
chemistry and Democratic
candidate for the State Senate
from Kenosha
Lucey arrived on the Keoosha
Campus at 2 p.m. and was
greeted by LaFollette and Henry
Cole, professor of science, After a
few brief formalities, they were
off to see what the city of
Kenosha is doing 'With its sewage
these days,
LaFollette, a well-known
ecologist, led the governor on a
tour of two "holding ponds"
where the sewage is dwnped. The
unfortunate part of dumping the
sewage in this manner is that the
holding ponds lie in a flood plain -
when the rains come, the raw,
untreated sewage goes
everywhere. Lucey promised to
look into the matter.
The entourage (the governor
and LaFollette in the governor's
limousine, with two carloads of
news paople Iollowingj arrived at
Tallent Hall at 2:45 p.m., only to
find that parking was nonexistent.
It's somewhat strange
to see the governor's chauffeur
looking in vain for a parking spot
Parking was finally located,
though, and the group boarded a
shuttle bus (which almost lett
without the governor) (or
Greenquist Hall. The governor
said that he was pleased with the
idea of a shuttle bus, but also
agreed with LaFollette that $1 for
a round·trip from Racine was
entirely too steep, and indeed
contributed to the OVeI"CON"'SlDg
of the existing lots - not 10
mention the added pollution.
Lucey and Doug LaFollette
were met by Bruce Schroeder.
who was recently appointed
District Attorney for Kenosha by
It's the gov!
lAIcey and "ho IS roll/llog for
elec-tion In rovember A lMrt':
to meet Luc~' "as O1&rl Huck.
Democratic cendrdare for the
late mbly
As the governor entered
Greenqcasr. sUlTOUnded by nov.
people, the reacuon w.
C1mos,ty, mostly. and. glimmer
here and there 0( recogruhon -
mostly recogruhon 0( LaFoll tt ,
oot Lucey,
Locey greeted the luden
warmly, and the reaclJon of me t
was plea arable, If a bit nervous
ophomore teve Brinkman
summed up much 0( the tudents'
sentiment "hen he commented,
"1I's good that he came here to
meet the luden , instead of
haVl~ the tudents ha'1ng to go
to him"
Chanc<!lIor \ly'lhe greeted th
governor and LaFolieUe ID
Greenqwsl The two Lalked hk
old fnends for • fev. moments,
and \lyllte pomted out the construction
under "ay .nd offered
several comments regard,~ It
The governor '8 qwle tnteeested
m the type 0( bu,ld,og
bere, especially ".th the emphasis
on "hvrng bulldlog:'
rather lhan tradtucaal, tod
architecture Ever-ywher the
governor ....enl here, he saw
evidence 01 this concept. a
studen louoged on n-. .nd
the "hot do "e-eryv.here
A tour 0( lhe hbr.ry prov.ded •
chance for the gov morlO the
"krofiche readers Ttl book
provided for lhe demonstr.uon
....as a volume by Robert 1
"Ftghung Bob" La Folielle, Iale
governor of Wi con In Phil
Burnell, dlrector 0( lhe hbrary,
po,nted out to budget-mInded
lAIcey that the hooI obta.tned
20, volum ,n the 'licrofl e
collection for S20, The sam
collechon 10 th orlllnll,
assummg lhe boo .. rf' 'en
available .....ould run len to fift
umes \hal pnce, and tak 1
um
p
Th 8O\emor
01 11I'O" th pi
th
m
Austerity slows building program here
By Ken Konkol
Things have been happening
around campus in the ~on·
strucHon department. Besides
the major projects of Communication
Arts and Classr
.
oom
buildings various other projects
are being' undertaken in the area
of sight development. Among
these are bus shelters and
sidewalks,
The shelters. which will .have
the appearance of interlmk~
hexagons roughly 13 x 30 feet, Will
have seating capacities for about
30 persons. Unfortunately: only
'II be constructed In the
one WI h f r
, diate future -- at tea
1mme d also unk'ng
lot an par I ,; will be unheated,
fortunately, I b ' g laid
The walks presently em ba k
between the segments 0,£ t!t.e
c
the responslblhty of
lot are . the planning
someone 10
department in, Mad,son The
long-range plan I to have sealing
areas and landscapmg In the
areas around the parking lolS to
improve the aesthetic situation
A decorative circular .....alk 15
being constructed In front of
Tallent Hall The center of the
entry circle is an area which may
some day contain a fountam. but
no money exists for such a
project at this time. The
decorative brick walkway Will
match the brick pavers to be used
elsewhere on campus
Upon completion of the
Communication Arts, _and
Classroom building . additional
walks and terraced areas will be
provided south and west of the
Library, west of the Classroom
building and south of lhe CommArts
building, ,
In talking to James GalbraIth,
head of Planning and Con·
s!ruction, RA 'GER learned thaI
of the two major bUilding
pro ts req led for th 197HS
bteMlum, only th ... " bulldl
for the h lof 100 rn In tr)'
hod appro,ed by th Board
0( Regt'll The addluon to th
Ph) Ed bulld,ng " drIlled ",'en
thou$ the pr t faclhty f.1
short 0( Rt'I(enl gwdchn
Becau'e of the go\'ern r'
aust nty pr<JiRram. only ual
buIldIng' ",II be appro,ed for
con troctlon In lh n 'lCt bien·
mum It I hoped thaI th • \I
buildIng "II' be one of thoI.e
con~ld",ed nual
In nf'\\ lng th present tate or
the campu', GalbraIth I proud
and pleased ".th the results of
Lhe ....ock but '" Ishe' th faeihtl
could be compleled sooner
The CommuOicallon Art
bulldmg" a or.g",ally' scheduled
for compleUon m January, 1973,
but ra",s have detayed the early
constnJcllon Korndorfer eonstruchon
is trying hard to have at
least the cia room portion of the GOVT. rJ ~s.
OCT 1 1972
UW-Parksida LlbralJ
The Parkside
-----------
RANGER
"' ..
ii
0
z
.;
"-
,.
D
Gov. Patrick Lucey
Bus service from-Racine
may end Friday
By Shawn Clements
As of Oct. 20, there may be no
more bus service between Racine
and the Parkside campus. This
will leave some 100 students
without transportation and
conceivably add to the already
overcrowded parking lots.
"The main thing we need is
more interest in using the buses,"
Ms. Echelbarger commented.
"Without increased revenue, who
can blame Wisconsin Coach for
wanting to discontinue. Where
are all the students concerned
with ecology?"
A call to Racine Mayor Kenneth
Huck's office produced a
"no comment" and a "The
Mayor is busy and cannot speak
with you."
Car pool, anyone?
Who's he?
According to Stan Altenbern,
president of Wisconsin Coach
Unes, the service is being
discontinued because of lack of
u e. Altenbern said that a
minimum of 180 one-way trips
must be made per day for the
company to break even and 230
lo 250 for the line to 'make a decent profit. Austerity slows buildin
The announcement came
following a Public Service
C~mmission hearing on Oct. 10.
Wisconsin Coach had originally
requested a permanent permit to
Operate the line, though this was
changed to a temporary permit
request (which was approved)
after the company discovered the
loss of revenue. A schedule
change, which went into effect on
Oct. 9, has had little effect as yet,
according to Altenbern, on
revenues.
Jewel Echelbarger assistant
~?n for student affair's, said that
eelers" have gone out to Flash
of Ra · Fl cme and Kenosha Transit.
dash ,. however, is already
f
I cussing discontinuing service
t~r Racine. A public hearing on
l. at request has been set for Nov.
d
. Ms. Echelbarger also said that I CU . G ss1ons are underway with
1
/leway Tech., which already
1 ansports students from Racine
a~lenosha, to possibly expand
a transport Parkside students
S We]].
By Ken Konkol
Things have been happening improv
around campus in the ~onstruction
department. Besides
the major projects of Communication
Arts and Clas r_oom
buildings various other proJects
are being' undertaken in the area
of sight development. Among
these are bus shelters and
sidewalks. . . , The shelters, which will _ha~e
the appearance of interlink~
hexagons roughly 13 x 30 feet, wll
have seating capacities for about
30 persons. Unfortunately_, only
one will be constructed m re
immediate future -- at the ar
k. g lot and also unpar
m . . b heated
fortunately , it will e un_ I ·ci
The walks presently bemg a1k
th egments of the bac
between es "bTty of
lot are the respons1 I I .
in the planning someone
d11
It' th
h r
0
2THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972EDITORIALS/OPINIONS
We need those buses
Wisconsin Coach is considering discontinuing bus
service from Racine to our campus. This must not
happen.
Many of our students from Racine rely on this service
and would be greatly inconvenienced.
p rt of the problem lies In the amount of students who
use the service. Wisconsin Coach feels if cannot operate
profitably with the present passenger usage. This
editorial makes an appeal to students, faculty, and staff
from R cin who could lust as soon use the service as
not. Ev n though it is the view of this paper that the cost
of the service is too high, at this point it is better than no
rvlce lit all.
re Important, we are making an appeal to
Wisconsin Coach to continue service in the hope fhat
mar stud nts, faculty, and staff will begin to use Coach
buses regularly. We feel this service will be mutually
profit ble for both Wisconsin Coach and passengers.
Editorial research
We re Iit is our responsibility fo alert our audience to
th possible trouble which may arise from the use of the
product of one of our advertisers, Research Unlimited.
The company sells research papers by mail order
:i:at logue.
First, plagiarism is illegal. Second, the state's attorney
has been clamping down on suspected users of
the service.
If it Is found that the paper was indeed used as
background material, no adion can be taken. If there is
a case of plagiarism, the student user will very likely
find himself expelled from school.
The function of Research Unlimited is very legal, but
the service's misuse can be Illegal.
Chess, anyone?
By Jane Schliesman
1 ~ poant In Parkside's
hislory II IS necessary to a one
v I)' Importanl qu bon - shall
th l.LC food Ice rea at·
tempt to chi Its OIiglOaI goal
_ to a· a cafetena for
tu n • fa ulty, and taU - or
11\' In lO one (W' another of the
CUrT'tflt trends wtuch ppear 10
rapIdly be monopollZlng II~
1/ .• opl 10 keep II a cereteete.
th all d us who wander around
I nc.~ tray m one hand and
boob or attache case in lhe other
ould uddenly flOd thai there is
Ind a place to II. You may
ha. 10 ~ rrang someone else's
rb<o& ,but tI a I you ' .. got a
I How ·er, ther<! a~ other
llern8It'· to eabng lunch. and
to lin Ith lis polley of ",porting
II .d . RAl'iGER wishes to
make you aware or these
l\>lhlt
flt"t. th rea could be con·
, rted to a ludy hall In the
Ir d.lton I n thiS o\lld
reqwre pla.,n aU the tables end
to end to row • With chain only
alo~ one Id to pre.enl \10'
n f) con\'ersation. But
lnno'" tlHO Park ide students
, decIded that ludYI~ is
much mQre eUeclively done
m. I loud no and confUSIon.
Theref_ the fUl'1\llure could
rema.n .t IS, and perhaps a
rock band could be hired to play
In 'alO Place to provide ad·
ebltonal "OUnd bmulllS.
nd allemalt,.., IS to make
It InlO • C 100 ard sharks
bound- 'n lhe lacsurule red
I alh r . eals. They could
probably conVInce the ludenl
b .. b 0I1t to layout money
for red , Iv I openes from
lin 10floor 10 enclose the a rea
m k .t mor .nbmate hag
lin ould be mce, too,
Itho h not necessary nghl
"Y .a r and other k.nds of
"ould hso c:ontrl1l11le to
the atmosphere. The food service
counter could be converted to a
bar. and the pictures in the
veeding machines changed from
soda cans to apples, oranges and
lemons. Jackpot! You could play
pok.er fo.- "as" with your profs,
roU dice lor pass or fail, and spin
the roulette wheel 01 term paper
topics. You might even win the
compleled paper.
A tbird major trend in
utilization of this area is as a
game room, specifically for
chess. One can visualize it now:
Daleline - Kenosha - World
Cbess Cbampion Bobby Fischer
am.ed today al the campus of
UW·Parkside for his match with
challe~er Queenie Bishop. Is.
Bishop. a Parkside student, had
requested thai the match be held
in the university's Chess Place
because d the proximity of soda
mactunes and rest rooms.
"I drink a lot when I'm Ilnder
pre 1lCO." Ms. Bishop is quoled
as saying. H()\\'ever. Mr. Fischer,
upon his am.a!, glanced al the
buildl~ ,,;th scorn and ",fused
to play until a cafeteria was
constructed ",;thin easy walking
distance.
So there you have it, Parkside.
The l.LC Cafeteria stands jt the
er roads. Which direcbon il
wtll take depends on You. U you
~ishto gh'e in to your stomachs,
please have a little consideration
for the other stomachs on
campus, too. Between the hours
0111 and 2 you a", mosl likely 10
see hunger-crazed students
desperately seeking a place 10
rest thew lra)'S During this lime
try ludying lO the Iibr&!)' (we
realize It'S quiet, but one has to
adapt locertaln inconveniences).
There are also lounge areas
throughoul the building for
lud)'ing. or playing chess, poker,
old maid. or whatever. Let's give
the original plan for a cafelena a
(alf trial.
THORN
By Konkol
Pencil sharpeners mentioned last week have
arrived. ow all we need is someone to install them.
I hope they'll lind the time.
Tentative schedules have been made out for classes
next semester. U the division heads would release
these to the students. they could receive immed~ate
leedhack on how to resol ve any coollicts that might
have occurred in having required courses occurrl~
stmultanecusly: something which has happened m
the past
We could sure use some enclosed and heated bus
shelters before the snow flies. The way things stand
oow, we're not going to get them.
With the money squeeze on, it's interesting to note
that we do have funds to install that unnecessary
piece of walk in front of Tallent H 11.Also, laying
those walks to lear up that beautiful piece of lawn in
the center of the back parking lot is stupid. People
gomg to and from the buses are going to travel in a
straight line across the grass.
It is amazing to me that certain students at this
university have not progressed beyond the maturity
oC the average kindergarten student. Irefer to those
morons who carved their initials in the concrete in
front of Tallent Hall. This is pure vandalism and I
hope those responsible are caught and expelled.
There are still not enough buses in service to handle
the crowds during the morning rush periods.
Drivers are taking on passengers at the near lot
before going to the far lot with the result that the
buses are Cull before they reach there. This practice
should cease.
I'm reasonably certain that if enough people
requested it, the lower level entrance to the Library
could be opened. There is t?O mU~h time wasted in
getting to the one entrance 10 service at the present
time.
I think it is about time that the Distinguished
Teacher Award nominations be put back into th
hands of the only people qualified to jUdg:
distingUIshed teaching - the students themselves
The method us~~ the past tw~ years does not work:
There is InSUffiCient student input for results to be
analyzed.
Last time the .4,~+ students at this school submitted
some~llng lIke ~O?recoI?mendations. Hence
this method Judges writing ability of students, not
quality of instruction. The Student Senate Teacher
Evaluation Forms could easily be made mandatory
in all divisions and used in such an evaluation.
Time is running out for those of you who would like
to get in on the great Nixon-McGovern cutdown in
the Nov. 1 issue. Anything you would like to see
mentioned for or against either side should be in OUr
office by Oct, 21. I shall be taking the anti-Nixon
point of view; another staff member is pro-Nixon
We need some anti and prO-McGovern input t~
round out the discussion.
How about setting the clocks on campus to
correspond to time in the rest of the world? Seems
things around here happen three minutes later than
other places.
1 wasn't kidding when I mentioned before that we
need people to solicit ads for the paper. The more
we get, the better we can run in not having the
financial burden hanging over.
There is going to be a staff meeting this Thursday at
8 p.m. in the office, D·194 LLC. Monday nights we
have a newspaper layout session. Everyone is invited
to attend,
We get letfers.i,
To the Editors:
I would like to summarize the
status of the parking petition
which I circulated, and to
respond to Phil Burnett's letter.
Phil sent me the original copy of
the letter and I, in turn, submitted
it to the University
Committee when I appeared.
before them. The petition which
you published was a part of a
letter which presented an
argument which did not appear in
the Ranger.
My argument was that poor bus
service caused faculty and slalf
to spend between 6 and 8 bours
per week riding the bus, thus
reducing the work output of many
persons. I suggested that a
remedy Jay in a temporary andor
'permanent starr·faculty
parking lot on the west side of
Wood Road. Ialso suggested that
the shuttle service needed some
attention. I think mosl of us
would agree that the bus service
has improved substantially.
Many comments and
suggestions were returned with
the parking petition. I sum·
marized these for the members of
the University Committee
suggesled thai they be gi.. ~
further sludy by the appropriate
committee, and requested that
the committee take a position
sUP.p?rting the sense of the
pe,tition. The University Comffi1lt.E:e
took such a position
unarumously; they forwarded the
matter. to the Campus Planning
Com~llltu:e. I believe that the
park10g Situation is under review
at this time.
Personally, I am all for non.
segregaled parking lots as long
as lhey fllOCt.on efficiently I
ho~. we're on the road tow~rd
erCIClency.
Marion Mochon
Anthropology
esteem. Which garbage can was
all that work thrown into?
Hats off to Jewel Echelbarger.
She agreed that the busing
situation wasn't right, yet she
signed the letter which told
students that school would now
cost them 18 dollars a month
more just to get there (daily ride
to and from campus). She has
now placed her name on an ad
which says "service will be
discontinued" if more riders
don;t ride the daily robber. To
Jewel I say, may you ride a
bicycle to campus in the middle
of January. Some of us will have
to.
To the Editors:
In its first issue in its short
existence, the Parkside Ranger
editorialized on the busing
situation for students commuting
from Racine to Campus. Three
weeks later the situation has
changed. It's GOTTEN WORSE!
Now for ithe same ridiculously
high fee there are considerably
less trips per day. And to top thai,
there is a threa t of discontinued
service.
I would like 10 thank the administration
at Parkside and the
Wisconsin Coach Lines for taking
such a dramatic action. It's good
to know that student surveys and
editorials are held in such high ~If:.The Parksidlee------
RANGER
Tom Ford
-
The Parkside Ranger is publ ished weekly throughout
the academ ic year by the students of The University of
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Oftices are located at D-194 Library.Learning Center,
Telephone (414) 553-2295.
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are nof
nwecessarily the official view of the University of
Isconsin· Parkside.
EDITORS AND WRIT . Koch, Kathy W II ERS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing, Kns ~
Martin; ner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma, Shawn Clements, Da
, am Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Dave R~yher,
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken P";tka
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva
,
N ,J..EP1lESENTED ~J.. NATIONAL ADVER.TISIN~ BY
49
anonal EducatIOnal Advertising ServIces, InC. i
360 Lexington Ave.• New York. N, Y. 10017 ~
'THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972 EDITORIALS/ 0 PINION s
n.
need those buses
considering discontinuing bus
o our campus. This must not
ny of ours uden s from Racine rely on this service
ould greatly inconvenienced.
problem lies · n the amount of students who
le . i consln Coach feels it cannot operate
t h present passenger usage. This
n ppe I o students, faculty, and staff
ho could f ust as soon use he service as
h It I l of this paper that the cost
too high, t this point It ls better than no
Import nt, e re ma ng an appeal to
o Co ch to continue service In the hope that
n , f culty, nd staff ill begin to use Coach
ul rly. feet this service ill be mutually
or both n Coach and passengers.
earch
pons bllity to alert our audience to
roubl hlch may arise from the use of the
our d rt1sers, Research Unlimited.
II rch papers by mail order
Is llleg I. Second, the state's atdo
n on suspected users of
'
anyone?
By Jane Schliesman
THORN I'm reasonably certain that if enough people
requested it, the lower level entrance to the Library
could be opened. There is t?O mu~h time wasted in
getting to the one entrance m service at the present
time.
By Konkol
p ncil harpeners mentioned last week have
rrived .• ow all we need is omeone to install them.
I think it is about time that the Distinguished
Teacher Award nominations be put back into the
hands of the onl! people qualified to judge
distinguished teaching - the students themselves
Toe method used the past two years does not work·
There is insufficient student input for results to ~
analyzed.
I hope th y'II find the time.
Tentative chedule have been made out for classes
ne. t eme ter. If the division heads would rel~se
th · to th tud nts, they could receive immed!ate
r dback on how tor olve any conflicts that might
have occurred in ha,ing required courses occurri~g
imultan ·ly; something which has happened m
Last time the 4,000+ students at this school submitted
some~ing like ~o? recoi:n_mendations. Hence
this method Judges wntmg ab1hty of students not
quality of instruction. The Student Senate Tea~her
Evalu~ti~~ Forms coul~ easily be made mandatory
in all div1s1ons and used m such an evaluation.
th pa ·t.
\ e could ur u e ome enclosed and heated bus
.-hell befor th now flies. The way things stand
no\\. w re not going to get them. Time is running out for those of you who would like
to get in on the great Nixon-McGovern cutdown in
the Nov. 1 issue. Anything you would like to see
mentioned for or against either side should be in our
office by Oct. 21. I shall be taking the anti- ixon
point of view; another staff member is pro-Nixon
We need some anti and pro-McGovern input to
round out the discussion.
With th mone. squ eze on, it's interesting to note
that w do hav funds to in tall that unnecessary
piec o( \ alk in front of Tallent H ll. Also, laying
t \\alk to tear up that beautiful piece of lawn m
th c nt r or the back parking lot i stupid. People
oing to and from the buse are going to travel in a
trai ht line acr the gra .
It i amazing to me that certain students at this
umv ·1ty hav not progre ed beyond the maturity
o th a,·erage kindergarten student. I refer to those
moron, \hO carved their initials in the concrete in
front of Tallent Hall. Thi i pure vandalism and I
hope tho e r pon ible are caught and expelled.
How about setting the clocks on campus to
correspond to time in the rest of the world? Seem
things around here happen three minutes later than
other places.
I wasn't kidding when I mentioned before that we
need people to solicit ads for the paper. The more
we get, the better we can run in not having the
financial burden hanging over. There are till not enough buses in service to handle
the crowds during the morning rush periods.
Drl\'ers are taking on pas engers at the near lot
before going to the far lot with the result that the
bu ·es are full before they reach there. This practice
There is going to be a staff meeting this Thursday al
8 p.m. in the office, D-194 LLC. Monday nights we
have a newspape.- layout session. Everyone is invited
to attend. hould cea e.
We get lefters~.-~·-··--"
To the Editors:
I would like to summarize the
tatus of the parking petition
which I circulated, and to
respond to Phil Burnett's letter.
Phil ent me the original copy of
the letter and I, in turn, submitted
it to the University
C-Ommittee when I appeared
before them. The petition which
you published was a part of a letter which presented an
argument which did not appear in
the Ranger.
• 1 · argument was that poor bus
sen;ce caused faculty and staff
to pend between 6 and 8 hours
per week riding the bus, thus
reducing the work output of many
persons. I suggested that a
remed lay in a temporary andor
_Permanent staff-faculty
parking lot on the west side of
Wood Road. I also suggested that
the shuttle ervice needed some
attention. I think most of us
would agree that the bus service
ha improved substantially.
• lany comments and
suggestions were returned with
the parking petition. I summarized
these for the members of
the ni versity Committee
uggested that they be give~
further study by the appropriate
committee, and requested that
the committee take a position
up_P?rting the sense of the
pe_tition. The University Comm1tt.E:e
took such a position
unarumously; they forwarded the
matte~ to the Campus Planning
Com~mt~. I_ believe that the
parkmg situation is under review
at this time.
Personally, I am all for nonegregated
pa~king lots as long
as they• function efficiently. I
hoi_ie_ we re on the road toward
efficiency.
Marion Mochon
Anthropology
To the Editors:
In its first issue in its short
existence, the Parkside Ranger
editorialized on the busing
situation for students commuting
from Racine to Campus. Three
weeks later the situation has
changed. It's GOTIEN WORSE!
Now for ·the same ridiculously
high fee there are considerably
less trips per day. And to top that,
there is a threat of discontinued
service.
I would like to thank the administration
at Parkside and the
Wisconsin Coach Lines for taking
such a dramatic action. It's good
to know that student surveys and
editorials are held in such high
esteem. Which garbage can wa
all that work thrown into?
Hats off to Jewel Echelbarger.
She agreed that the busing
situation wasn't right, yet she
signed the letter which told
students that school would now
cost them 18 dollars a month
more just to get there (daily ride
to and from campus). She has
now placed her name on an ad
which says "service will be
discontinued" if more riders
don't ride the daily robber. To
Jewel I say, may you ride a
bicycle to campus in the middle
of January. Some of us will have
to.
Tom Ford
~Jr.. The PmkskJe -
RANGER
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout
the academic year by the students of The University of
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Offices are located ~t D-1 94 Library-Learning Center,
Telephone (414) 553.2295.
~h~ Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not
ne_cessa~ily the official view of the University of
Wisconsin-Parkside.
EDITORS AND WRITE · Kach, Kathy Well RS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing, Kns ale
M t· T ner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma Shawn Clements, D
ar m, om Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, D~ve Reyher.
=~OTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts . SI NESS MANAGER· Ken Pe~tka
ADVERTISING MANAGER: i-'red Lawrence
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva
7;--:------------___-.:
• . N ,llEPRESENTED FOil NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY t T ational Educational Advertising Services, Inc. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 ___....,
Officer Candidates
ld promise you the world,
I cau
ee
eleeted give you nothing
andon n The reason for such a
in retur. . due to the
ment IS
stateurance of the. attitudes and
un~:s of the elected senators;
bell president of the student
for a~ent I am responsible to
govet
te and call meetings of the
IIlStl ttl The voting which will
sena eiace on specific issues is
~~d~ by all senators and not hy
the president alone. .
If any candidate for the office
f resident IS making such
o Pises he cannot be conpr:~eddompetent
for the ollice
~:ause of his lack of knowledge
of the. student government
proceedings.
Your next President,
Thomas E. Haack
Shawn Clements
for Vice-President
The reasons I am seeking officership
as vice-president of
student government are as
follows:
1. Student government should
represent student ideals and
wishes. This has not been so in
the past.
2. Students have no voice in the
administration of policies at
Parkside. This should be changed
now.
3. The so-called student union,
lhougha temporary one, should
be made more realistic now.
4. Asa senior at this institution,
Ihave seen student governments
corne and go, and I think it is
about time the student government
did something to earn the
respect of the students and administration
as welL
The most important task to be
endeavored by student government
is to establish a "student
voice" in the function of
Parkside. We tried advocation in
the past, let's give application a
chance. Let's take a look at some
stUdent government action. It's
about time Parkside matured.
JOE HARRIS
Candidate for Vice-President
Student Government
u.T III THf {OHfORT Of YOUI CAR
• >
:1 (~>:1',\, f\ ~RltrJ THE
~ • ~ BURliER
'11.\'\-''-' IAHIL'
~->-'
• PiPA BUR6ER • HAMA BURGER
• TUM BUlin • BABY BURiER
CARR'( -OUTS
tA" 'Hloo 'OUO 000[0 """ .. "00'
T"h' 01 Cb,<~••• rllh
,.dSb" .. " .'
"11 G'lLOH 0' OOOT 1110"'ITH ,~(J.Q 000'0
.. "'"' _OOIH 0'
""OC'" THUlil
0_ IH'O'Do_ OOAO
552-8404
A & W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN
She,,~.n Rd H, 12 No''"
Keno,ho
HOCOI D'"'''''''' TO"'" 'U""," "O",'HI
" ." '0 ""O""GH'
The reasons I am r .
again for a position in ps~nmg
as follows: are
1. I believe there is a need
student counselling servt for a f rvrca made
up 0 stUdents who are willin to
help counsel stUdents above ~nd
beyon~ academIC counselling
Parks.Ide. is a growing and
changmg mstitution.
2. Last semester PSGA p t
. togeth~r a student-teach~r
.evaluation, I would like to see this
be ~evised to a more permanent
project, The basic form and ideas
are ther~, but with a little more
work . ~IS form could be very
benef~clal in student program
planmng. It might also have
son:: influence on faculty
posittons.
3. eee is one of the most imp~rtant
and influential committees
on campus. I believe the
~tudents can benefit much more
If the eee were more active in
the campus concern situation.
4. Revision of the PSGA constitution.
I know there is need for
revision of the constitution. Bylaws
are needed. The constitution
is too generaL
Parkside needs student in·
volvement. As Parkside gets
larger, the students should have a
larger coice in University
governance. We have a good start
- let's keep going. If you can't
run for election in the g\lvern·
ment, please vote in the PSGA
elections.
Thank you,
Bruce Volpintesta
Acting President
PLATFORM
1. Assure student government
to be a viable and powerful force
to guarantee students "that what
they see is what they get."
2. fnstitute a sense of loyalty
among the Administration,
faculty, and student body.
3. Stamp out apathy of students
towards their government.
4. Promote the general welfare
of all students regardless of race,
color, creed, national origin, or
social status.
5. Reassert belief in a supreme
being and the dignity of all
peoples under one God.
6. Pledge to support the student
body and uphold the rights of all
students in all matters under the
law. d '11
7 Condemn drug abuse an WI
vig~rously oppose the ille~al
distribution and use of narcotics
and dangerous drugs on the
campus. .
8. Deplore the pollutIOn of our
environment and oppose any
attempt to install any system thaI
will add to our present air, water,
or other pollution on the campus.
Frederick Lawrence
Candidate for Vice--Pres.
..~**~*****
TOM WEISS
What is Parks ide Student
Government missing?
The students oE Parkside need
a viable government structure
which has the power to affect
change and create full implementation
of student ideas and
resources.
Advocation and applicatioo are
two different things. What
students say tbey wanl and need
is one lbing, being able 10 bring
~ese wants and needs to reality
IS another.
In order to have needed
changes at Parkside, we must
initiate vehicles which can bring
such change about. These
vehicles must be created in the
form of:
1. A student court and jury.
Here students and faculty work
together to decide; for example,
the validity of tickets received by
students, the validity of
disciplinary action initiated by
the University against a student~
the validity of all types oE fines
levied upon students, and the
resolution of other student -
University conflicts.
2. More powerful student
committees and boards. Here .....e
make decisions needed in the
proper operation of the Union and
related student activities
3. The creation or proper lines
of communication bet~een the
student government and the
university. Here wvre "'ill enable
the realization of equitable
decisions and solutions to all
student related problems as
OPIX>sedto decisions favoring the
interests of the administration
and of the parties sympathetic 10
the University power structure
-Bruce Volpmtesta, Joe ltams,
and 1 will make such vehicles a
Pa rkside reality.
CHAMPIOS TER\tPAPERS
636 ~acon t. C'o. 505)
Boston. Mas. 0'2'215
61 j .536-9700
Research m..'tt"ll. teor T~
R~rs. The'Soft.~lC l.owEST PRICES
QUICK SERViCE For "'~'-'
pl~ll~ wt,t~ or cell.
Wed .• Oct. 18. 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3
Senate ..*......*****
Let me disclose to you a very large
piece of buzz,
Ta e a tiP from Hot Horse Herbie "do no on
hundred percent a sucker' Ch ,lout ..
Ken Konkol
Student Go~ermnenl ha !>em
havmgalotoftroUbieth t twe
years at Par Ide "Mus
pnmanJy been due to th quahty
of person that has been elected 10
ofIice. Then bas been a great
deal or problem in e-en reach!
a quorum m order 10 hold a
meeting.
Student Gccernment cannot
begin to operate efle<:tJ,e1y unul
the present con utuucn IS
replaced by a oriulble one. Abo
\"Oters must carefully consider
the type of persoe they \'01 for.
In the po I, bl of peopl ha'e
been ~oled In that caMOt "orIt
ellect"..,lj· ,,·,th others
I "00'1 go uuc greal deta.,1 00
my quahficallons for office •I
people "bo 1m me at all kn...
how Ithmk I ha' e been "" the
udent Senate lnee Ib for·
mal100 and ha~e 'lA.T1Uenfor the
campus new paper for the pasl
three ·... rs \\'h<n sam thmg
bothers me. 1 lend 10exp mj
oplt'Uon on It, "'hether ~t lO •
campus. adrmnL ..trator. • I I
leglalor or th go-ernor
As a TIler for the paper. I I
mlo a lot of Lhn~5 1 know .. hat
makes thIS campus Uelt, and I
shall keep I<)"ng to bnn th
sludenl 1010his nglllful pia 00
campus. not let h,m be shO\'ed
Ide and ne ected.
Weare hound 10lose sam good
quahlY people 10th nale.n th
presidential race lnc~ only on
pe.-, can be elected to th
olh"" _lore can be accomplished
'IA.,l.hm the Senate than Without It
ThaI I "h} 1 run for the pool 01
senator HO'IA.ever. anyone that
feels the urg rna) ....Tlle me In for
president
Oct. 23-25
*****************
,..Student Governm nt ,..
~Elections
,.. ~
~GET OUT & VOTE ~ I 7rJii~.
~***** ..*...***..***~Li::
ERIC CUSHMAN MOORE
" t pSS ...
hey kid!
..
..._---- -- --_.....-
_1.-__ -- _ .....,- --- -_......._._ ..
...-..._-- -
Damon Runyon once wrote. "The race
-------- -- IS not alway. 10 the SWltt
Of the banle 411w,ysto the it,.on&- but It'S' &ood way to be ..
JOURNAUSM IS A GOOD WAYTO BET
%ANGER
Officer Candidates ed ., Oct. 11, 972 TH PARKSIO RA G R
1 could promise _you the wo~ld, .... ******** Senate
d once elected give you nothmg
an turn The reason for such a ·n re · 1 tement is due to the
st~ssurance of the. attitudes and
unrefs of the elected senators;
ror I as president Of the S~Udent
vernrnent I am responsible to
~o titute and call meetings of the
insnate. The voting which will
:ke place on specific issues is
decided by all senators and not by
the president alone.
If any candi~ate for ~he office
of president 1s makmg such
mises, he cannot be con-
~ered competent for the office
t,ecause of his lack of knowledge
of the student government
proceedings. Your next President,
Thomas E. Haack
Shawn Clements
for Vice-President
The reasons I am seeking officership
as vice-president of
student government are as
follows:
1. Student government should
represent student ideals and
wishes. This has not been so in
the past.
2. Students have no voice in the
administration of policies at
Parkside. This should be changed
now.
3. The so-called student union
though a temporary one, should
be made more realistic now.
4. As a senior at this institution
I have seen student governmen~
come and go, and I think it is
about time the student government
did something to earn the
respect of the students and administration
as well.
The most important task to be
endea~ored by student government
1s to establish a "student
voice" in the function of
Parkside. We tried advocation in
the past, let's give application a
chance. Let's take a look at some
student government action. It's
about time Parkside matured.
JOE HARRIS
Candidate for Vice-President
Student Government
• lll ll IHI COMFORT Of YOUI CAR
i
: (1: ~\\ ~vfi"
' /,. ~ BURGER
~ -- FAMILY
• PAPA BURGER • MAMA BURGER
• TUN 8UR61R • BUY IUR6lR
CARRY-OUTS CALL AHU D 'l'OUfl ~I.OU Will I( l(AD,
-'"d Shr,mp •·
HJt CALLON Of 1.00l 1((1 WITH 5,- 00 01.0U
: .._,u NOUH or MIOCITY TH(Al(I
ON \HUIOA N flOAO
[ 552-8404 j
A &. W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN Sh..,,d~" ltd Hv ]2 Norrh
Kenosha HOll\ 0.\tll II .\ ._. TO 11 r r.1
\IJ.., ... U. "40HTH\
I I A Y TO MIOMIGHT
The reasons I · am r · agam for a position . unnmg
as follows: m PSGA are
1. I believe there is a
student counsellin n_eed for a
up of students wh! !~rv1~e ~ade
help counsel students e :lbng to
beyond academi a ve and
TOM WEISS Ken Konkol ERIC CUSH N MOOR
Parkside is c co~nselling. h . . a growmg a d
c angmg mstituti n 2 La on. · st semest . together a st e~ PSGA put
evaluation. I woul~li:;t-teach~r
be revised to to see this
project The b a ~ore permanent . as1c form and idea
:-o:t:~· bfut with a little mor! . . is orm could be ve
benef1c1al in student ry
planning. It might 1Program . a so have
son:i~ mfluence on facult
positions. Y
3. CCC is one of the most imp~rtant
and influential committees
on campus. I believe the
students can benefit much
·r th more I e CCC were more active in
the campus concern situation
4. Revision of the PSGA · ftu. cons
J . t~on. I know there is need for
rev1s1on of the constitution. By-
!aws are needed. The constitution
1s too general.
Parkside needs student involvement.
As Parkside gets
larger, the students should have a
larger coice in University
governance. We have a good start
-- let's keep going. If you can't
run for election in the g.:ivernment,
please vote in the PSGA
elections.
Thank you,
Bruce Volpintesta
Acting President
PLATFORM
1. Assure student government
to be a viable and powerful force
to guarantee students "that what
they see is what they get."
2. Institute a sense of loyalty
among the Administration,
faculty, and student body.
3. Stamp out apathy of students
towards their government.
4. Promote the general welfare
of all students regardless of race,
color, creed, national origin, or
social status. 5. Reassert belief in a supreme
being and the dignity of all
peoples under one God. 6. Pledge to support the student
body and uphold the rights of all
students in all matters under the
law.
7. Condemn drug abuse and will
vigorously oppose the iIJe~al
distribution and use of narcotics
and dangerous drugs on the
campus.
8. Deplore the pollution of our
environment and oppose any
attempt to install any system that
will add to our present air, water.
or other pollution on the campu Frederick Lawren e
Candidate for ice-Pre .
Sun., Oct. 22
7:30 p.m.
Student Activities Bldg.
Admission 75c
Parkside and Wis. 1.0. req1ired
tud nt
1de need
tructure
to affect
Let me disclo e to you
piece of buzz.
Da
Of"
•••
kid!
if TO BET
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972
Parkside Potpourri
A
The Hawaiian trip is over half-filled. Interested
students are urged to act now and reserve a spot on this
great tour.
B
Nancy Michals. Oktoberfest Queen
c
Phy Ed meets modern design
D
Chancellor Wyllie in his "Penthouse"
E
Gov. Patrick Lucey and candidate Doug La Follette tour
campus.
B
Photos by Pat owak & Craig Roberts
D
E
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972
Parkside Potpourri
The Hawaiian trip is over half-filled. Interested
students are urged to act now and reserve a spot on this
great tour.
B
N ncy Michals, Oktoberfest Queen
Phy Ed meets modern design
Chancellor Wyllie in his "Penthouse"
Gov. P trick Lucey and candidate Doug La Follette tour
c mpus.
B
Ph to by Pat owak & Craig Robert
C
E
D
VIEWPOINT
;,..;---
By Shawn Clements
,,L Wed., Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5
et me finish my beer"
. Professor Douglas La Follette led Gov Pat
smce id lTd .
roundParksl east ues ay, and since he's
LuceYl~professor I've heard of running for office
th~onear (excepting Dr. McGovern), I decided to
thl~~nto what make~ a political campaign.
100 Follette is runnmg for the State Senate from
La ha His Republican opponent is George W
~~~:so~.In the interest of fairness, I attempted t~
tact Anderson so I could get a look at his camCO"gnoperation.
This attempt was met by a brick
~;Ilof silence and "Don't call us, we'll call you's."
SO this is, admittedly, somewhat one-sided.
La Follette is assistant professor of chemistry at
Parkside. He's better known, though, as an
ecologist.
When one first. meet:' . La Follette, it can be
d"concerting. while waiting for the governor, we I:ot to La Follette's office at Kenosha. One
Weporterasked if he could turn on a light. "Do you
~ave something you want to read?" La Follette
asked. "If so, go ahead. If not, it's a waste of
etectricity. The sunlight's adequate." A quick check
revealed that La Follette has always done this __
reserving artificial lighting for times when it's
necessary.
La Follette's "campaign headquarters" are in his
home.One of the first things that struck me was the
business-like atmosphere of the place. Everywhere
it's an office ·th·
literature piled :~ thies, press statements and
though. u . All very neat and orderly.
"I believe in the 'Poi t ' . .
explains. "Every thin n~, pnnclple~" La Follette
to Point A, where it1:lon~~ ~one being used goes
The La Follette cam: .
examples of this d . patgn IS replete with
terized b th or. erliness. I heard it characscientificYc~mpaerig~ltll,clans
as "one of the rna t
J asked ve ever seen."
. La Follette what the main pomt 01 hi
campaign was. "I'm fed . - - .
elitist politics" he repl"ed AsuPWith politicians. and
. ' . an example of thi he
~mt.ed to a "free beer" event held last Tuesday
dvem~g, whe~e people were asked to chip in a $1
onation. ~unous, I attended the get-together
Affter dutIfully paying my one doUar. and geul~
~y ;ee beer, I talked to the people there. One girl
ad~ t any money. Her donation of 16 cents was
~onsl?ered good enough, however. (Can )'( J
,mag me that happening ata thousand-<lollar-a-plate
dinner? )
~fter the gathering got underv.'ay, the political
speeches started. Surprisingly, they did not drag on
and on. Gov. Lucey said a few won:ls, as did La
Follette -- and then it was back to the beer drinking.
tan~ union pt'<JpI " ~ In IU(!ndal'k't At thf'
~Uwnn • ,.hlch II lIy ga\ m _ to
about oom,tlung I'd In ""pi 01.- I
an ad dire tl'd 10 pl~ of m n n I
attacklllll La Foll \I
IlA. GEIl "II hal lour ",,"uon 01 tad'"
l \II .1 m r: "11' typoc I RepubllClln m r
tacuc ••
R..\. 'Gl-:R .. ml't ~ou both
Follelt '. tl'd. '00'111 lour JOb
!'hut dO\' n \menc n toto ....
l II ., mber •. '0 H "auIdn't do lhal nd
he' lor th "orI<t'J' That hy I'm An
derson' nO! 110' lor th corporatJ n.• nd h •
b 109 lhe ,",ark rs"
RA.· ER "An) ""'or camm
l."AII '.""ber'··Y.ah Let m
Good poinl. I thou I I
dnn Ing. and my lOur
OnOthlng. that La Folleti. Oln lorh,m .. h
corps 0( \lIork .,,, n man mort:' h
though "That's the pn I pul t poilU
Th La Follette c.mpalgn.' I th c
man)' thJ.s:) r. II unde.r·n n
agam "Ilhmanyolh campal .It' lh A.
the VOIWlleOf W,thout th."", th lutW'O
nalOr from Kcnooh. "auld ,n IOn')'
,ndeed
MediaFair slated
OSHKOSH -- Radio-TV-film
students at the University of
Wisconsin-Oshkosh are bringing
several outstanding radio, TV
and movie personalities to the
campus for their first "Media
Fair 72" Nov. 13 to 17.
Among those scheduled to give
talks are Paul Duke of the NBC
News Washington bureau, CBS
sportscaster Haywood Hale
Broun and "Oscar" winning
screenplay writer Dalton
Trumbo.
Programs will be held during
the day and evening on each of
the five days for the Media Fair
which is being funded by the
Oshkosh Student Association
Speakers Series and coordinated
by the radio-TV-film section of
the speech department, Alpha
Epsilon Rho chapter at the
university and the Reeve Union
fine arts committee.
All sessions will be open to the
public without charge.
Paul Duke will speak on the
1972 Presidential campaign.
Dalton Trumbo will have an
opendiscussion on the Hollywood
scene and writing for the movies
on Tuesday evening, Nov. 14.
Trumbo won the 1971 Cannes
International Film Festival
Award for "Johnny Got His
r..AB·O·RT·ioNS····
~FREERelerral to N.Y. Clinic.
12 weeks or less
Total cost
$150
CALL
CONTROLLED
:PARENTHOOD
(a non. profit organiL.ation)
SUITE 1006
DAVID STOTT BLDG.
. (313) 964-0530 .............................
Jobs Are Available ... !
For FREE information
on stUdent assistance and
placem~n t program send
self-addressed STAMPED
envelope to the National
Placement Registry, 100 I
~TstIdaho St., Kalispell.
"1 59901
- NO GIMMICKS _
Gun," of which he was the writer,
director and producer. He also
received an "Oscar" for one of
his movie screenplays.
"Communications by Lasers,"
subject of a talk and threedimensional
photography
demonstration, will show how
laser beams can be used to
transmit telephone conversations,
TV programs and
communications data.
Cable television, the effects of
cable television on today's
commercial broadcasting and
regulation of cable television will
be discussed.
International television is the
subject of the talk to be given by
Colin Campbell, vice president of
ABC Films and director for its
international sales. There will
also be a 12-hour "Film Grab
Bag," consisting of a mixtur~ of
silent films, early sound mOVies,
comedies, dramas and European
movies.
t II La
.... h,·11
lJ""
Illu h my
umed my
Lady, are you terrorized?
Does a woman have to go
through life terrorized and
befuddled by a machine - namel)'
her own car? The Parkside
Women's caucus doesn'ttlunk so
and is taking steps to reverse this
cultural stereotype. Parkside
Women's Caucus is offering a Car
Clinic for all Parkside ~omen
students, faculty and staff who
would like to be able to tell a Ian
belt from a fuel pump.
The Car Clinic will be held
Sunday. Oct. 22. al 1 p.m. on the
north Side of the bus shelter III th
far east parking lot of the main
(Wood Road) campus (Bad
weather date will be announced
by posted nyers.)
Women are encouraged to
come dressed in grubbies and
should be prepared to "ark either
on their own car or on someone
else's. Procedures such as
VAlEO'S
PIZZA tnCHEN
Chiclced & ltaliln Sluug. Bolllhers
free Deliveryto Perksl., Villi"
,,,,,,, 6S1-S''''
checking oil and changmg a tire
"III be demonstratl'd
Regular Parkslde Women's
.... h d on
.t 7':10 p m
Ca ...
II l'd
lOLL
m
y ,
0·174
n
run
HITESKELLAR
\. (north lounle
\'\ Greenquist Halll
\.;V~TA'''' E"'~ '1M'
1 '.11. Thrsday. Oct. 19
1 mberrOI
i it Our
IER BR
at
135022nd A enue
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141
H
FIRST
National Bank
of Kenosha
.." " " ". " " ",
Cham- Tap-Bar
25' r Durand
Racine. Wls,
edh~gne on Tap
Ham Sandwiches 0
............................. and Pizza ,.".,, cXJ, 0:.
J!JEWPOINT
~
'' L Wed., Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKSID
et Ille finish my be
R G RS
By Shawn Clements r' . e professor Douglas La Follette led Gov Pat
sine ·d l t T · around Parks1 e as uesday, and since he's
Lucey I' h d f · Jy professor ve ear o runnmg for office
thf/;ear (excepting Dr. M:<?overn), I decided to
~k into what make~ a political campaign.
La Follette is runm~g for the State Senate from
OSha. His Republican opponent is George w
!{en · t t ff · · Anderson. In them eres o a1rness, I attempted to
contact Ande.rson s~ I could get a look at his cam-
·gn operation. This attempt was met by a brick ~;ll of silence and "Don't call us, we'll call you's.,,
So this is, adi:iiitte~ly, somewhat one-sided.
La Follette 1s assistant professor of chemistry at
Parkside. He's better known, though, as an
ecologist.
When one first. mee~ . La Follette, it can be
disconcerting. While wa1tmg for the governor we
went to La Follette's office at Kenosha. 'one
reporter asked if he could turn on a light. "Do you
have something you want to read?" La Follette
asked. "If so, go ahead. If not, it's a waste of
electricity. The sunlight's adequate." A quick check
revealed that La Follette has always done this __
reserving artificial lighting for times when it's
necessary.
La Follette's "campaign headquarters" are in his
home. One of the first things that struck me was the
business-like atmosphere of the place. Everywhere
Media Fair slated •
OSHKOSH -- Radio-TV-film
students at the University of
Wisconsin-Oshkosh are bringing
several outstanding radio, TV
and movie personalities to the
campus for their first "Media
Fair 72" Nov. 13 to 17.
Gun," of which he was the writer,
director and producer. He also
received an "Oscar" for one of
his movie screenplays.
Lady, are you terrori ?
•
Among those scheduled to give
talks are Paul Duke of the NBC
News Washington bureau, CBS
sportscaster Haywood Hale
Broun and "Oscar" winning
screenplay writer Dalton
Trumbo.
Programs will be held during
the day and evening on each of
the five days for the Media Fair
which is being funded by the
Oshkosh Student Association
Speakers Series and coordinated
by the radio-TV-film section of
the speech department, Alpha
Epsilon Rho chapter at the
university and the Reeve Union
fine arts committee.
All sessions will be open to the
public without charge.
Paul Duke will speak on the
1972 Presidential campaign.
Dalton Trumbo will have an
open discussion on the Hollywood
scene and writing for the movies
on Tuesday evening, Nov. 14.
Trumbo won the 1971 Cannes
International Film Festival
Award for "Johnny Got His
:··· .......................... . l ABORTIONS
l FREE Referral to N.Y. Clinic.
1 12 weeks or less
Total cost
$150
CALL
CONTROLLED
PARENTHOOD
(a non.profit organilation)
SUITE 1006
DAVID STOTT BLDG.
. (313) 964-0530 :
·····························•
Jobs Are Available ... !
For FREE information
on student assistance and
placeJ:Trent program send
self-addressed ST AMPED
envelope to the National
Placement Registry, 1001
~ st Idaho St., Kalispell, " 1T 59901
- NO GIMMICKS -
" Communications by Lasers,"
subject of a talk and threedi
men siona l photogra phy
demonstration, will show how
laser beams can be used to
transmit telephone conversations,
TV programs and
communications data.
Cable television, the effects of
cable television on today's
commercial broadcasting and
regula tion of cable television will
be discussed.
International television is the
subject of the talk to be given by
Colin Campbell, vice president of
ABC Films and director for its
international sales. There will
also be a 12-hour "Film Grab
Bag," consisting of a mixtur~ of
silent films, early sound movies,
comedies, dramas and European
movies.
Does a woman ha\·e to o
through life terrorized and
befuddled by a machine - name \
her own car" The Par · 1d°
Women' Caucus doesn' thin· o
and is taking tep- tor \er th
cultural tereotype. Par td
\\.'omen· Caucu i offenn a r
Clinic for all Par ide ,omen
student . faculty and taff ho
would like to be able to tell a fan
belt from a fuel pump
The Car Clinic "111 be h ld
unday. Oct. 22. at 1 pm on th
north 1de of the b h r far ea t parkin lot of the m m
(\\'ood Road) campu B d
weather date will be nnoun
by po ted Oyer.,.)
Women are encour
come dr ed m grubb1
hould be prepared to
on their O\\ n car or on
el e' Procedure
VALEO'$
PIZZA KffCHEN
Chicken & Italian Sausage Bo111lters
Free Del~ery to Parksi•• Yill•t•
1011 JOI/, At1n•1 ,,,., 6l1-lf'1
NOTICE
1
hon
F T
a ional Bank
of eno h
......................................................... -..... . . ~-- . Cham-Tap-Bar
2511 Durand
Racine, Wis. .
. .
.
.
ap
Ham Sandw ·ches 0
and Pizza O . ................................................................
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING
~ K nosba School 808M! is
I 109for ..·olunteen to work in
!he 'allOnal Rlght to Read
Program Th1S would entail
work,ng w,lh lourth and liIlh
grade el mentary tudents appro
trn lely two hours per week.
For more ,nformation contact
Dr Vlrglnla HawkUlS, reading
con ul tant , Keno ha Public
hool •01653- 2371. extension 61,
01' Education OWl Ion Gree:nquist
318. $53-2lt10
•
Pltk ,d Iud nt Actlvitie
Board 10,11 P nt "B,g Jake"
3 part 01 Its conlInulng
I ture Iilm ser,
1'hf; rnO"1 lars John Wayne
nd R.chard Boon In lh Iilm
J hn wayne play·· BIg Jake
" andel. who ha h.. grandson
ludn pped by a band 01 outlaw
I by R. hard B ne Haring 01 '1. 8. Jak ts cut to lind hi
ran n nd ,n the p there
pretty Iypocal John
\'")"n cllon
Th mo" ,,111 be hewn at 8
pm nd the adml ·.00 pnce IS 7S
c nt YOUf WI conSln and
P rk ,de lOS are required
•
I) rk.ldt tudents (or
I ,o,·em and lhe ne,,·ly lormed
r"Jark. Ide Educators for
"teO I.ern are sponsonng a
Te h·lnlorMcCovemlobeheld
ot the Library-Learning Center
from 11'30 a m to 1'30 p.m.
wednesday, OCt 2S During lhis
two-hour period various memrs
of lhe laculty and starr. as
" II as m mbers 01 lhe tudent
body, ".11 peak on behalf of lhe
\1 ~f'rn~ nver ticKet.
Present plans also call lor the
appearance of a Democrat of
!'.Om national stature.
•
,x instrumental music
tudents at The University 01
WI5COI"lIn-Parkside will pl'esent
a lree pubhc concert atS p.m. on
Thursday lOcI. 19) in the
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts
Room
A Parkside poetry Forum will
be held on OCI. 30 in the Ubrary'
Learning Center at 8 p.m.
Featured will be James Chapsom,
who has written with
Parkside resident poet James
Uddy. Also leatured will be a
student who writes in English as
well as in Spanish, Daniel
Ramerez.
The readings will take place in
the second Ooor lounge, which is
located behind the rare book
room.
•
The Whiteskellar Colfee House
will present live on stage local
talent, Dave Rogers. Rogers will
appear Thursday. OCt. 19, at I
p.m. He is a Parkside student and
his act will cover a variety of
music ranging from blues to folk
rock Wluteskellar is open (rom 1
1I1I 3 pm
•
Parkside Young Republicans
.and Young Voters for the
President will be holding a joint
meeting Friday, Oct. 20, from
l1:30a.m. to 1 p.m. in room 0~174
LLC. ew campaign strategy
will be discussed.
The Hawaii Trip is over hall
•
lilled. according 10Bill iebohr,
coordinator of Student Life.
The nine-day trip will last from
Jan 5 to 14and costs $Z74 plus $20
lax and service.
Interested travelers are ad·
vised to register in the Student
Activities Ollice. LLC Hm. 0-197,
as soon as possible.
The University of Wisconsin
•
Vilas Master String Quartet will
open the 1972-73 University Artists
Concert series at UWParkside
with a program at 3
p.m. on Sunday, OCt. 22, in Room
103Greenquist Hall.
Tiekets will be available at lhe
door. General admission is $2;
admission for Parkside students
and staff and lheir immediate
lamilies is $1 (children 12 and
under are admitted Cree).
President John C. Weaver has
scheduled business trips to all 13
Wliversities in the University of
Wisconsin system before the end
of the year.
He will be accompanied by a
lew members 01bis stafl on each
tri
~'eaver and his staff will visit
the Parkside campus on Monday,
Nov. 20.
Students for McGovern
•
will
hold a meeting in LLC 0-174 on
Thursday, Oct. 19, Irom 2 to 4
p.m. All students and faculty are
invited. This will be an important
strategy meeting, as well as a
coordinating effort with other
area McGovern offices.
"Recipe for Making
•
a Moon"
will be the topic of a free public
lecture by Dr. Larry A. Haskin,
professor of chemistry at !he
University of Wisconsin·Madlson
and 1970 ASA award winner for
his work with lunar rock samples,
at a: 15 p.rn. on Friday (OCI.
20) in Tallent Hall at The
University of WisconsinParkside.
The Philanthropist Club, a
•
social organization that has been
operating lor the last three
semesters, will hold a Casino
Night this saturday. It will be
held in the Student Activities
Building Irom 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
"The Existential World of
•
Norman Mailer" is a course
being offered by the university
extension. The class will run for
five consecutive Tuesdays
beginning Oct. 17. Taught by
Walter Graffin. asst. professor 01
English, the class will be concerned
with the concepts that
unite Mailer's writings and his
life which emphasize his feelings
on action, power and sex. The
cost will be $11 or $16 for a
married couple, and registration
forms are available in Room 206
Talent Hall, the UW-P extension
office. Registration must be
completed before Oct. 10. For
further information, call 553-2312.
Poetry Corner
SPIRIT
Espirit de Corp .,. Soul ... Heart ... Ad Infinitum
Who cares Nation ... Church ... Society ... Ad Absurdum
Why Give .. ' a .'. damn .,. Ad Nauseatum
._ Barry E. Jones
War and Peace
'Great White
Hope' here
"CASINO NICHT"
ORIIIIUlIO
OAMIUIIO
BAR MAIDS
ROULmES
DiCE OAMES
CIIUCK-A-LUO
POKER TABLES
Good .. , bad ... infinite; indifferent
SO
ugly ... beautiful ... WHICH
WAR is Peace?
The Parkside Activities Board
presents the movie, "The Great
White Hope," in the Student
Activities Building on Friday,
Oct. 20, and on Sunday, oct. 23.
The movie is based on the true
story of Jack Johnson, the first
black heavy·weight boxing
champ in the United States, and
his struggle to keep his crown.
The story stars James Earl
Johnson and Jane Alexander. For
her performance in the movie
Miss Alexander received the
academy award nomination.
As the long running hit on the
New York stage, the play
received the pulitzer Prize, the
New York Critics Award, and the
Tony Award.
Showings wilL_be at. S p.m.
Friday - and 7~30 ·p.m.' Sunday.
Admission is 75 cents on both
nights and Parkside and state
IDs are required.
F. Lee Bailey
to lecture
at UW-p
The Student Activities office
has announced that the famous
criminal lawyer, F. Lee Bailey,
will lecture here Nov. 10 at 8 p.m.
in the Physical Education
building.
Mr. Tony Totero, coordinator
of Student Services, said, "He
rose to fame with the Sam
Shephard murder trial. ... He
defended the Boston Strangler,
William Calley and is presently
representing former Governorof
Illinois and Judge Otto Kerner.
Tickets will go on sale on OCt
23 at the information office,Rm
201 Tallent Hall, and al
Bidingers, Kook-Geer Records
and J.J Records and Tapel off
campus.
Admission prices are $1 for
students, faculty and staff, and
$1.50 for general admission.
BUCK JACK
CRAP TABLES
FORTUNE WHEEl
GAMES
lET'S MAKE A DEAL
TO TELL THE TRUTH
P-RIZES & SURPRISES
THE ESTABLISHMENT
SHOW LOUNGE
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls
{appearing on our stage weekly)
Continuous Entertainment
7 P.M. til?
Closed Sundays
424 Lake Ave.
Racine
631-8461
Amateur Contest
Every Thursday
Night
itA BIG AUCTION IN THE END"
SATURD ~, OCTOBER 21 9 P.M. 1 AaM.
All inion ~1ts (illcl.des ~SOQDO Oalllhiint Money)
StN«"e AdUidie. 'C,.tUtC9 p~ & 1Q~, 1.7:>, ~e4
Dancers Wanted
U lJJ[ijJ CDCiJ CiJ(g ill
PSGAPresident
§CDCiJ(l!JGJ (B[bl3 OOC3GJU0
Vice President
iJiJ (jJGJ GJlLrn[3§U UC(Bm13Vfr
Au. & Pd. for by Haack & Clements Comm., J. petwe ChrJP'
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972
T
•
•
HATS HAPPE ING
•
•
Hawa11 Trip i over half
filled, rdm to Bill , 'iebuhr,
rdmator of tudent Llfe. Th nine-<la) trip will la t from
Jan 5 to 14 and cost $Z14 plu $20
ta and rvic .
lnt •r ted travelers are ad-
,i. d to regi ter in the tudent
ct1v ill ffice, LLC Rm. D-197,
a . oon a possible.
The niversity • or Wisconsin
Vilas faster String Quartet will
open the 1972-73 niversity Arti
Concert eries at UWPark
1de with a program at 3
p.m. on unday, Oct. 22 , in Room
103 Greenqui t Hall.
Ticket Y.ill be available at the
door. General admission is $2 ;
admi ion for Parkside students
and taff and their immediate
rt famili i $1 (children 12 and
\D'lder are admitted Cree).
President John C. Weaver has
eduled bu ine trips to all 13
wuversities in the niversit of
Wisconsin } tern before the end
of the ·ear. He will be accompanied by a
f , members or his staff on each
tri ~;eaver and his tarr will visit
th Parkside campu on Monday,
'o • 20.
•
.. R ipe for faking a foon "
will be the topic of a free public
I tur by Dr. Larry A. Haskin,
prof · r of chemistry at The
'niv ity of Wi consin-Madison
and 1970 ASA award winner for
hi work with lunar rock sampl
, at 8: 15 p.m. on Friday (Oct.
20) in Tallent Hall at The
niver it of WisconsinPark
ide.
The Philanthropist • Club, a
ocial organization that has been
operating for the last three
emesters, will hold a Casino
ight this Saturday. It will be
held in the Student Activities
Building from 9 p.m. to 1 a .m.
" The Existential • World of
orman Mailer" is a course
being offered by the university
extension. The class will run for
five consecutive Tuesdays
beginning Oct. 17. Taught by
Walter Graffin, asst. professor of
English, the class will be concerned
with the concepts that
unite Mailer's writings and his
life which emphasize his feelings
on action, power and sex. The
cost will be $11 or $16 for a
married couple, and registration
forms are available in Room 206
Talent Hall, the UW-P extension
office. Registration must be
completed before Oct. 10. For
further information, call 553-2312.
"CASINO NIGHT''
DRI KINI
A IUNO
BAR AIDS
ROUlfflES
DICE IA ES
BLACK JACK
CRAP TABLES
FORTUNE WHEEL
GAMES
C CK-A-LUO
LET'S MAKE A DEAL
TO TELL THE TRUTH
POKER TABLES PRIZES & SURPRISES
11A BIC AUCTION IN THE END"
ATURD i, OCTOBER 21 9 P.M. 1 A.M.
Poetry Corner
__ Barry E. Jones
SPIRIT
Espirit de Corp ... Soul ... Heart ... Ad Infinitum
Who cares d
ation ... Church ... Society ... Ad Absur um
Why
Give ... a ... damn ... Ad Nauseatum
War and Peace
Good ... bad ... infinite; indifferent
0
ugly ... beautiful ... WHICH
WAR is Peace?
'Great White
Hope' here
The Parkside Activities Board
presents the movie, "The Great
White Hope," in the Student
Activities Building on Friday,
Oct. 20, and on Sunday, Oct. 23.
The movie is based on the true
story of Jack Johnson, the first
black heavy-weight boxing
champ in the United States, and
his struggle to keep his crown.
The story stars James Earl
Johnson and Jane Alexander. For
her performance in the movie
Miss Alexander received the
academy award nomination.
As the long running hit on the
New York stage, the play
received the Pulitzer Prize, the
New York Critics Award, and the
Tony Award. Showings will be at 8 p.m.
Friday and 7:30 p.m. Sunday.
Admission is 75 cents on both
nights and Parkside and state
IDs are required.
F. Lee Bailey
to lecture
at UW-P
The Student Activities office
has announced that the famou
criminal lawyer, F. Lee Bail y,
will lecture here Nov. JO at 8 p.m
in the Physical Education
building.
Mr. Tony Totero, coordinator
of Student Services, said, "H
rose to fame with the m
Shephard murder trial. .. H
defended the Boston Strangler,
William Calley and is presenUy
representing former Governor or
Illinois and Judge Otto Kerner
Tickets will go on sale on Oct
23 at the information office, Rm
201 Tallent Hall, and at
Bidingers, Kook-Geer Records
and J-J Records and Tape& cif
campus.
Admission prices are $1 for
students, faculty and staff, and
$1.50 for general admission.
THE ESTABLISHMENT
SHOW LOUNGE
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls
(appearing on our stage weekly)
424 Lake Ave.
Racine
637-8467
Amateur Contest
Every Thursday
Night
U IJJ 00 [IJ(D (D(B (]
PSGA President
§aJaJWGJ CBCb~OOll'D'Ue
Vice President
/HJ GJru mCILr~§U uuCBm£3'i1cc
Au. & Pd, for by Haack & Clements Comm,, J. Petzke ChrJll•
ON THE WEEKEND
Penalty kick
The 17th Annual Notre Dame
Cross Country Invitational saw
t~o new records set Friday. The
first came Irom Mike Slack 01
North Dakota State who won the
l~dlvldual title in 23:44.2 over the
fIve mile course, besting Olympic
gold medalist Dave Wottle's old
':l~rk. Parkside's Lucian Rosa
fImshed 15th in 24:16 for a
Parkside record and beat Dave
Antagnoli 01 Edinboro State, the
defending NAJA champ, in the
process.
Bowling Green won the team
title with 81 points in the ~leam
field followed in the lop five by
Eastern Michigan, Ball Slate.
Southern Illinois and Michigan.
The Rangers grabbed 24th.
Dennis Biel was Parkside's
second man at 59th while 'ed
Kessenich linished in t7Oth,Keith
Merritt in 183rd and Sid Hyde in
217lh.
Coach Vic Godfrey called it the
Rangers' toughest meet of the
year.
Next home meet for Parkside is
. at noon, Oct. 28, when the
Rangers host tbe Third Annual
USTFF Mid American Championships.
The Rangers did well in their
last goll match 01 the season
placing filth 01 IS. The lirst place
team, UW-Madison. won with a
score of 320, followed by Northern
Illinois University learn one at
323, Northern illinois University
team two at 324, Uw-Le Crosse at
326, Parkside at 328, UW·
Whitewater and University of
Missouri-St. Louis at 329.
Medalists in the match Chuck
Voy, UW·Oshkosh, at 76. Pete
Nevins, UW-Parkside and Marl)'
Joyce, orthern Illinois tied fOl'
second with 77; Mike Soli Northern
Illinois, had a 78. Nevins
lost the second place trophy in a
. play off against ~\artyJoyce.
The Parkside team scores were
as follows; Pete Nevins, 77~ Tom
Bothe, 83; Dave Fox and Jim
Vakos 840 Rick Willemas, 89.
The 'next time the golfers will
see action is in the spring. 1
Carthage College Activities Board Presents
In Concert
: .
• Parkside :
• A • CI' " rvitres B d • oar .•
•
• Sponsors •
•
: a bus Irip to :
: UW-MADISON :
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
: VS, : Tickets s5 & S4
: OHIO STATE : College Center Office
: FOOTBALL GAME : ON SALE Carthage K noshal Cook-Gene (Racine)
: Saturday. October 28 .1~B~id:in:ge:r~s~M~US~iC~(D:o:w:nt~ow~n~e... ... ....•.....••••. ~
Carthage
Fieldhouse B L0 0 D Also Don Cooper
sWEATAND
TEARS
J
Before a recent meet, Coach Godfrey gives some
advice to his harriers. In the Notre Dame Invitational
this weekend, the harriers placed ..
14th. Lucian Rosa finished in 15th place. The
harriers next meet at home for the USTFF MidAmerica
Championship on the 28th.
Photo by Pat Nowak
I
At a recent match an
unidentified Ranger
boots the ball. Last
weekend they booted
the ball enough for a
2-1 win in overtime
OVer LW-Platteville.
Saturday
October 28
8:00 P.M.
,
j
!
BUSING PROBLEMS?
Riders needed to Racine
or service will be disconti
nued , Tell your
fri ends to ri de the bus.
Schedules ovai loble at
UW-p Information Office
or call Jewel Echelborger
ot 553-2342.
Wed" Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7
•
unn for boot r
.1Ike ,'edel OVIC put In both 01
Parkside's goals ler the soec ... ,
teams second '41n of the ear.
beallng -Plauevill t-I The
wmmng goal ler tbe Rang
came on a penalty kick earl In
the first overtime penod
The Rangers <Iommated lb
first half but JUSt couldn't find th
SCHEDULED
Soccer
October 2\
ovember 1
tarqu
IU. Il
at P'anL"""
Ea rl lAln, 1\1
Cross Country
October 17
October:!ll
I.rqu
mpoo
at P
'p, Pol
Women's Cross Country
October:!ll lSTn· .aue Illomen' C1uImpoo Ip,P.
Women~5 Gymnastics
October :!ll t Whit .t....
Women's Tennis
October 18 t Par de
:'olonday night is
"Ye Old uds ipping : II ..
at hakey' In R in,
sr a pi tcher for Pobst
or Schlitz light.
l th,op 21>t I Imo,tl
R "'" W. 5 40
Phone 633 307
-'1-<1'-'" __01 ·· _ ...
..,..- -_.
OC . 18-24, 1972
Adulta-$l.50
_RICH LITTLE-HERB VOLAND
Rd,
Wed ., Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKS ID
Q,N THE WEEKE D
Penalty ki
The 17th Annual 'otre Dame
Cross Country Invitational w
t~o new records set Frida v Th
first came from like la or
~o~~ Dakota State who ·on th
1~d1v1dual title in 23: 44 _2 ov r th
five mile course, besting lympic
gold medalist Dave Wottte· old
~~k. Parkside's Lucian Rosa
finished 15th in 24:16 for a
Parkside record and beat Dave
Antagnoli of Edinboro ate the
defending NAIA champ m' th
process.
Bowling Green won the team
title with 81 points in the 30-team
field followed in the top five b_·
Eastern iichigan, Ball ate,
Southern Illinois and . lichi an.
The Ranger grabbed 24th .
Dennis Biel was Par ide".
second man at 5 th ·hile . 'ed
Kessenich finished in liOth. Keith
Merritt in 183rd and id Hvde n 217th. .
Coach Vic Godfrev called it the
Rangers' toughest· meet o the
year.
ext home meet for Par· id i
· at noon, Oct. 28. when the
Rangers host the Third Annual
USTFF 1id American Championships.
Before a recent meet, Coach Godfrey gives some
advice to his harriers. In the Notre Dame Invitational
this weekend, the harriers placed ..
24th. Lucian Rosa finished in 15th place . The
harriers next meet at home for the USTFF MidAmerica
Championship on the 28th.
The Rangers did Y.ell m their
last golf match of the sea on
placing fifth of 15. Th fi t pl e
team, UW- tadison, Y.OO 1th a
score of 320, follow d b. , 'orthern
Illinois University team one a·
323, 'orthern Illinoi 'mv 1·:
team two at 324. \'-LaCro. _
326. Parkside at 328
Whitewater and Univers1t_
At a recent match an
unidentified Ranger
boots the bal 1. Last
Weekend they booted
the ball enough for a
2-1 win in overt ime
over LW-Platteville.
Photo by Pat Nowak
!
Photo by Pat Nowak
1issouri t. LoUJ at 329.
1edalists in the match Ch
Voy, ~-Oshkosh. at i6 P te
evins, ,\\'-Par ide and . art)
Joyce, 'orthern Illino1 lied f
second -....;th n: . like Ii , 'orthern
Illinois, had a 78 ·e,ins
lost the second place troph) m a
play off qgain t • larty Jo)
The Parkside team score re
as follow : Pete. 'evms ;-;· Tom
Bothe, 83: Dave Fo. and Jim
Vakos, 840 Rick Will ma ,
The next time the olf 111
see action i in the pr1 .
BUSING PROBLEMS?
Riders needed to Racine
or service will be discontinued.
Tel I your
friends to ride the bus.
Schedules avai I able at
LJW-P Information Of -
ice or call Je el Echelberger
at 553-2342.
Carthage College Activities Board Presents
Saturday
October 28
8:00 P.M.
Carthage
Fieldhouse
In Concert
BLOOD Also Don Cooper
SWEATAND
Tickets $5 & $4 TEARS
arthage College Center Office . ON SALE C K nosha) cook-Gene (Racine) Bidingers Music (Downtown e
• fi r 0
C ED
Cross Country
Women's Cross Country
Women's Gymnastics
Women's Tennis
I
RANG R 7
r
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., oct. 18.1972
SwIm Club.
coach Barb
Third Row:
front rOW (1 to r): Barb Kupper. Torn Bergo. Nancy Michals,
MorrIs. Second Row: Richard Harnrn.John Heigl, Rich Glover.
Dale MartIn, Pat HIll, Torn Hughes, Shirley Moore.
wim Club
According to club president Tom
Berge, the difficulty 01 a workout
can easily be told (rom the
redness of the swimmers' eyes.
"The main thing now is for
individuaJs to work on their
strokes and cut down their
times," said Coach Barbra Jo
Morris.
HWe need specialists, divers,
and just people who are willing to
compete. Even if they've never
competed before, they shouldn't
be discouraged Irom coming
because they're inexperienced.
There are quite a few members of
the club who never competed
before," she added.
Even though the workouts get
toegh, there is still that club
atmosphere. It isn't quite like
being on a varsity team where
one must show up for practice
every day. This way even the
people who don't have a lot 01
time to practice can still participate.
The club is currently in the oneyear
probation period required of
all sports before they become
varsity. For both the men and the
women, going varsity next year
is primarily a matter of money,
Photo by Craig Roberts
Working on strokes
Photo by Pat Nowak
Curses! Foiled by an axle
An oversize tricycle
"built for eight" was
the entry by the ad
hoc Red Baron relay
team for the fourth
annua I I IT "Spr Ing
Thing~' The team finished
on the bottom
due to a broken axle.
pictured are Dave Reyher
and Marty Gregory.
RESEARCH MATERIALS
All Topics
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,
12S-page, mail order catalog of 2,300
Quality research papers. Enclose
$1.00 to cover postage and handling.
RESEARCH UNLIMITED
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 80024
(213)477·8474 • 477-5493
"We need a local salesman"
YOUNG DRIVERS WEl(OMf
INSURANCE FOR
AUTOS· CYCLES - SCOOTERS
All forms Of Insurance
Professional Ser¥ice
With The Better Co's
Fire - Life - Hospital - Bolt~
Package Policies
DIAL %
~-36Ofl ,.,/ .". ~ ~/·"""·{I.J"'.! ..-..(;:j .....
J. R. MULICH
CARL H. JEHSEI'l
By Kathryn Wellner
.. troke it!" 0, thi i not an
obscene proposition, but it could
well be the motto 01 the Parks ide
wrm Club.
On paper the club numbers 45,
but due to class schedule and
work conflicts. not everyone
shows up for practice at the same
time. I lucked out. The day I
chose for my interview turned out
to be the lowest turnout yet.
Practice is held every day lrom
3,30 to 5,30 p.m. during which
time the swimmers indulge in the
numerous delights of learning
nip turns, practicing flip turns.
and teaching other people flip
turns. Arter watching an hour's
worth 01 flip turns Irom the
relative salety of a starting
block, I am now able to
di tinguish a good Ilip turn Irom
• had flip turn. This is not
because I know what a good or a
had flip turn looks like, but
because I soon distovered that I
didn't get splashed if the turn was
properly executed.
In addition to nip turns, they
have been known to do a little
swimming, something on the
order 01 two to three miles a day.
College Men
PART nME
WORK
Call 552-8355
according to Coach Morris.
There are advantages to being
a club rather than a varsity sport,
one of them being that there is a
wider range of appeal in a club
than in going out for a team.
Even if swimming becomes
varsity next year, Coach Morris
expressed her hope of there being
a Swim for Fun Club. This would
provide a place for those people
who aren't necessarily interested
in going out for the team.
The men's season doesn't
actually start until November,
and it runs until March. During
that time they will have swim
meets against Whitewater,
Carroll, Ripon and many nonconference
schools from the
Chicago area. The women's
season should be over by
Thanksgiving, but will be extended
into March so that the
girls can swim against Illinois
schools.
Pat Hill, the club's best hack
stroker, took 2nd in the W-yd.
back stroke in a recent meet,
while Julie Surendonk took znd in
the l00--yd. breast stroke. Their
next meet win be this Saturday at
Oshkosh.
5520 6th AVE.
••••••••••••••••••••••
Parkside
\
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT
STARTS OCT. 23
,
-,
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC. sponsored by Parkside ActivitiesBoard
/'..----...-~-,----....-..... .........•............
We ~oareiDoii~huilg~1
• BEER. SODA
• LIQUORS. WINES
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES- GLASSWARE
CONVENIENT PARKING
()PEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.
CALL ---'----
632-1565
10% commission
Registration
Now thru Oct. 20
-> OJ " )
Entry Fee 50~
Appl y now - Student ActivitiesOffice
Room D-197 LLC
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?
STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFIC[_)
0-194 LLC or telephone 553-229~
.--......--.....--.....--....-..-..-..-.- - - .. - "...--..
~ ~ ----- -...._--~~
8 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972
Swim Club,
Coach 8 rb
Third Row:
front row (l tor): Barb Kupper, Tom Bergo, Nancy Michals,
Morris. Second Row: Richard HalTITl, John Heigl, Rich Glover·
Dale Martin, Pat Hill, Tom Hughes, Shirley Moore.
Pt,oto by Cra ig Roberts
lub
Working on strokes
it!'' 'o, thi.- i · not an
vu.::, .. .,.,._ pro 1tion, but it could
the m lto of th Park id
tub.
r th club numbers 45,
but du to cla: chedule and
work conflict . not everyone ·how · up for practice at the same
tim . I lucked out. The day I
h for my intervie'ilo' turned out
to th low t turnout yet.
Pr ctic i h Id every day from
3: lo 5:30 p.m. during which
tim th ·imm indulge in the
num ro a d lights of learning
nip turn . practicing flip turns, nd leaching other people flip
turns. Aft r watching an hour's
""orth or mp turns from the r I tive safety of a tarting
lock, 1 am now able to
· t1nguish a good flip turn from
bad flip turn. This is not a I know what a good or a
d flip turn looks like, but
ause I n distovered that I
didn'tg t pl hediftheturnwas
properly e uted. In ddition to flip turns, they
have been known to do a little
wimming, mething on the
ord r ol two to three miles a day.
Coll191 Men
PART TIME
WORK
Call 552-8355
Accordin to club president Torn
Bergo, th difficulty of a workout
can ily be told from the
redne of the wimrners' eyes.
"Th main thing now is for
individual to work on their
troke and cut down their
times," said Coach Barbra Jo
lorris. "We need specialists, divers,
and ju t people who are willing to
compete. Even if they've never
competed before, they shouldn't
be discouraged from coming
because they're inexperienced. There are quite a few members of
the club who never competed
before, ' he added. Even though the workouts get
tough, there is still that club
atmosphere. It isn't quite like
being on a varsity team where
one must show up for practice
every day. This way even the
people who don't have a lot of
time to practice can still participate.
The club is currently in the oneyear
probation period required of
all sports before they become
varsity. For both the men and the
women, going varsity next year
is primarily a matter of money,
according to Coach Jorris. There are advantages to being a club rather than a varsity sport,
one of them being that there is a
wider range of appeal in a club
than in going out for a team.
Even if swimming becomes
varsity next year, Coach Morris
expressed her hope of there being
a Swim for Fun Club. This would
provide a place for those people
who aren't necessarily interested
in going out for the team. The men's season doesn't
actually start until November,
and it runs until March. During
that time they will have swim
meets against Whitewater,
Carroll, Ripon and many nonconference
schools from the
Chicago area . The women's
season should be over by
Thanksgiving, but will be extended
into March so that the
girls can swim against Illinois
schools.
Pat Hill, the club's best back
stroker, took 2nd in the 50-yd.
back stroke in a recent meet,
while Julie Surendonk took 2nd in
the 100-yd. breast stroke. Their
next meet will be this Saturday at
Oshkosh.
•BEER• SODA
L
I
Q
u
0
R
• LIQUORS • WINES
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE
CONVENIENT PARKING
~PE N DAILY 9A. M. - 9 P. M.
SUN DAY TIL 8 P.M.
CALL --------,
632-1565
Photo by Pat Nowak
Curses! Foiled by an axle
An ove rs ize tricycle 11built for ei ght " was
the entry by the ad
hoc Red Baron relay
t eam for the fourth
annua 1 I IT 11S pr i ng
Thing!' The team finished
on the bottom
due t o a broken axle .
Pictured are Dave Reyhe
r and Marty Gregory.
RESEARCH MATERIALS
All Topics
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date, 128-page, mail orde r catalog of 2,300
quality research papers. Enclose
$1.00 to cover postage and handling.
RESEARCH UNLIMITED
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203
LOS ANBELES, CALIF. 90024
(213) 477-8474 • 477-5493
"We need a local salesman"
YOUNG DRIVERS WELCOMf
INSUR ANCE FOR
AUTOS - CYCLES - SCOOTERS
All Forms Of Insurance
Professional Service
With The Better Co's
Fire - Life - Hospital - Boats
Package Policies
~DIAL ~
052-3600] =:/;)E: J. R. MULICH
CARL H. JENSEN
••••••••••••••••••••• Parkside
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT
STARTS OCT. 23
' ' \
\
·,
Registration
Now thru Oct. 20
/ -Q;,
/ ./
·Entry Fee 50'
Apply now - Student Activities Office
Room D-197 LLC
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC. sponsored by Parkside Acti vities Board
I ••••••••••••••••••••••
We need people whoare'mmiij=buiigry!~1
) ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?
10 % commission STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFICE_
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 4, October 18, 1972
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1972-10-18
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
associate dean jewel echelbarger
doug lafollette
f. lee bailey
ken konkol
patrick lucey
racine bus service
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/fa5c19336c3af92188c13b6928a1d8ab.pdf
715dfacfca8eeea2fbed120d7f62fdf1
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 1, issue 3
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
How many $ needed to run Parkside
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
The. University of \\'iscol'61n.
Parkslde Activities Board has
annou~ed the appearance of the
St. Louis Jazz Quartet in concert
at 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 14,10 the
Bradford High chool
auditorium.
The Quartet has been billed a
one of the most exciting contemp?rary
jazz. groups In
America Their program runs the
gamut from jazz to blues to
ballads A review of their perfo.rmance
at the Missi ippt
RIVer Festival in the t. LotH
Post-Dispatch read, 'The
Quartet thrilled the audience
with their fine program rang10g
from gospel soul music to fun .
jazz. Their singing was versatile,
controlled, and emotionall)
sincere. They brought dov. n the
house with their hand-elapp1Og,
foot-stomping spiritual. Let It Be
Their show is fresh. exciting, and
clearly imaginallve.··
The group has extended an
invitation to an)' intere ted
member of the audience to la\
and talk after the concert. The\
will be glad to answer an;·
questions you might have.
Tickets may be purchased at
the UW-Parkside Information
Office. Room 201 Tallent Hall
Reserved seat tickets are $2.50.
students and staff with Parksrde
ill are $l.5O.
St. Lo ui
Jazz Q
here Satur
For Once In. I til
FlOe and t eUo,,"
On Green DOllllln Street
methm mpl
Free-Again
I'nul us Ttme
Somebody'. Knockong
Walk HIm l:p
TheParkside--------
GE do da
a
J
J
J
lob r 11 1 72
How many $ needed to run Parkside
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown 1972-73
Union Reserve. . . '38.50
Lecture & Fine Arts .. 2.00
Student Health . .. 2.00
Transpcrtation & Parking ..............•..... 18.00
Athletics... . ... . ..... . . .9.00
Ill~aln"rals. ....•..... . 8.00
Student Activities 8.50
Student Group Support.. . 2.00
$88.00
Summer Sesston (Union Reserve) .. "$22.00
Apathy will help Nixon:
McGovern aide
By Shawn R. Clements
. 'Skip" Roberts, Deputy
DIrector of Congressional Liaison
~orthe McGovern campaign, was
In Wisconsin last week addressing
various groups for the
Senator.
Roberts. former Director of the
Viet Nam Veterans Against the
War. and now on leave as
Director of the Labor-University
Alliance. addressed groups at
~O~i~ican College and the
l ",lanan Universalist Church in
HaCine, as well as a press conference
at the Racine McGovern
office. (A meeting was scheduled
at Parkside, but never
materialized due to the apathy of
the So-called "organizers" a
Spokesman for the R~cine
MCGovern office said.)
R Referring to this apathy,
oberts attacked the general
apathy of the tB-24-year-old
vot ers, long considered a
stronghold of the McGovern
camp.
. ')'10st 18'24~year-old \ oters are
~e~thetic." said Roberts.
{'Y"'E' '0 longer {'C'ncerced
about the war, and the economic,S
of the country usually doesn. t
affect them. They are once again
becoming the isolationist 10-
telligentia clique that th_ey
seemed to be in the early 19;,05
and 60s."
Roberts cited a recent New
York Times poll which showed
that 55 percent of those 10-
terviewed had not decided t~at
they would actually vote: despite
their preference In the
Presidential race. .
·'It is this apathy which ma~
d f at George 1\lcGovern ..
R~beerts said, "and it .is thiS
apathy that Richard Nixon IS
counting on."
Open House
Th University of Wisconsi~-
e ht"twIIi Parkside announced t a I Oct
hold an open house Sunday. . .
15 from noon till 5 p.m. ViSItors
. t 'ty to tour ··n have an oppor unt
\\I . II s well as the
GreenqUist Ha . a . g Center
L·b y_Learmn new I rar . 1 Education
and the new Physlca
-uidmg.
By Ken Konkol
How much does it cost to run 8
university? This IS a question
many of you have probably asked
yourselves but never bothered to
find out In order to answer thiS
question. RA:XGER interviewed
Erwin F Zuehlke. DIrector 01 the
Business Office
The thmg \\,hich concerns mo (
students on a day-to-dey ba IS I
the transportation and parking
This segment of finance takes up
a good part of the egregated ree
It was Originally anticipated that
Parks Ide " ould have sn-lOO rrom
student receipts and facult)
permits and an ackhtlonal $13.
subsid) through tate funds lor a
total T&P budget or over .000
Park ide IS not geumg S77,000
from tudent and raC'ult~
receipts. the real figure IS closer
to $10.000, And the university I
paying out more than the crigmal
$70.000 \\ hrch "a allocated for
buses, This cuts IOta the
Intended to be set aside for nev.
parking Iactliue .
Of the $70.000 oflglnall~ IO~
tended for buSing. 543.600 \I, as for
the two huttles. $18.600 for the
Kenosha mterclty bu and $7.800
for the summer se 1011, ..\ddluoo
of the additional shuttle IS costing
us another $9.000. Coupled ",th
the $7.000 loss m re\'enue. It
means the parking reserve I cut
to $1.000.
There is a question on ho\\, to
gain rC\'enue, perhaps "e lA'ould
have to charge additional
parking fees. Instead or the
present $90.000 a year. we could
use 5120,000 a year in order to
maintain the reserve and bwld
new lots.
Even then Parks ide "ou!d have
no facilities to mamtam them
There would even be a problem
with >corage ~ilIl~'I'.·'lf )'
need three :;:huM~l\m ~nt
()"T ~ 2 1972 voJ -
ERWI ZUEHl E
Dunn th r gular chool
. Ion bu t amOUR to
a " The. hull I run on
I.,bror boo"" and the Ph) 'cal
Educo;,on Bwld,ng must k p
th "e sa me boo lor the purpo
0/ ""Pong addlllonal e,,,,"
do"n
Because 0/ the lac of rund> It
d<Je,. nOlloo Iokel) that Ice to
Racn~ \I, III rei tated In (act
\\ l~ln Coach Litle rna)tv n
curtail !'Orne QlWr8uon If Lh )'
don"t get more """In On the
other hand. e mIght be abl lo
extend en Ice to Kenosha
Zuehlke ,,"ould like to see more
~tuden rei) on car is and
lnterclt,,· buses to allevlale the
parklllg Ituatloo
Par Side need additional
capital to bu) our own buses.
bu " and '''0 for candb) AI a
cost or $25. for a Twin Coach
L P gas model ",th capacIty of
31 and 3.000 for some OJ·
pa sen~er model> the oroglOal
• L
J zz
h
The Parkside,--------
RANGER
How many$ needed tor __ __
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown 1972-73
l 'nion Reserve .... . .. . ..... . . . .. .. .. .. . ..... $38.50
I .ecture & Fine Arts ... . . . . .. .......... . ....... 2.00
Student Health .. ... ... .. .. ..... .. . .......... .. 2.00
Transportation & Parking . . . .. . . ..... . ....... 18.00
\thletics ................ ... . . .. . ............ . . 9.00
Intra murals . ........ ... .. .. ............. .. ... 8.00
Stud!'nt Activities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 8.50
~tudrnt Group Support .. . . .... . ..... . ........ 2.00
$88.00
Sumnwr Spssion (Union Reserve) . ... .. ...... $22.00
Apathy will help Nixon:
McGovern aide
By Shawn R. Clements
Skip" Roberts, Deputy
Director of Congressional Liaison
for the McGovern campaign, was
in Wisconsin last week adc)re
ing various groups for the
enator.
Hoberts. former Director of the
Viet Nam Veterans Against the
War. and now on leave as
Director of the Labor-University
Alhance, addressed groups at
Dominican College and the
l rutarian Universalist Church in
Hacme , as well as a press conference
at the Racine McGovern
office IA meeting was scheduled
at Parkside, but never
materialized due to the apathy of the so-called "organizers," a
· Pokes man for the Racine
!\JcGovern office said.)
Referring to this apathy ,
Roberts attacked the general
apathy of the 18-24-year-old \Ol ers, long considered a ·tr
· onghold of the McGovern t'amp
. ':\lost 18-24-year-otd , oters are
~~? thetic ," aid Ro be r s
" 'r p .,o lor.ger re- cen-Ec!
about the war. and the economics
of the country usually doesn't
affect them. They are one~ ag~m
becoming the isolat1on1 t 111 -
te II igen ti a clique that th_ey
seemed to be in the early 19;,0
and 60s." • ·ew Roberts cited a recent
York Times poll which hO\\ed
that 55 percent of those interviewed
had not decided that
they would actually vote, de p1te
their preference in the
Presidential race. . . "It is this apathy which ma~.
defeat George l\IcGo~e rn ._
Roberts said . "and it I th1
apathy that Richard 'ixon I
counting on ."
Open House
Th University of Wisc_ons1~- e ed that 1t will Parkside announc . Oct
hold an open house Sunday_. . .
15 from noon till 5 P·1!1· V1s1tors
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
1(1 Illa"
By Ken Konkol
0 972
n
•
ar
1 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed .• Oct. 11. 1971
ED TORIALS/OPINIONS
new attitude
A new attlluOe seems to preval among many students
10 Ih e~lenl that they are willingtoparlicipate.
en Ihls paper first came out. it was weak. Now it
h S il larg staff of people with many interests. Some
c m 10 write, some are photographers. some wanted to
slid nd ome came down and just said they wanted
to h Ip
Th e people are forming something new and good. A
rvice 10 school and peers. the paper was created by
Ih m.
ow thai we are a going concern. we welcome all to
come 10 the ollice and loin us. There is greater strength
In grea ter numbers.
Id s 'or stor ies are always appreciated. The Ranger
will Iways seek to service this campus to the fullest of
Its journallsllc capabllllles.
It can be done....
The question of whether it would be possible to move
large amounts of people from the Phisical Education
Building has been answered. II can be done.
The Norman Mailer lecture was the test case. Appro~imalely
BOO people atfended. Seven buses were used
to bring people to the Athlelic Building from the parking
lot and a caravan of fourleen buses were stationed to
bring them back.
The reasoning behind the fourteen buses on the return
trip Is that at the end of a presentation. it is expected
Ihat everyone will run for a bus at the same lime. The
Mailer presentation was an exception with many of the
people filing out before Mailer was finished.
Even though people did not stream out of the building.
IIwas apparent that this method of transportation would
be adequate.
Access to Ihe parking lot was found to be the real
problem. Perhaps, in the future. more security ollicers
iII be provided so that some may assist in traffic
direcllon.
But ...
It must be realized that expanded use of the Physical
Educallon Building and the usage of the theatre portion
of the new Communication Arts Building in the spring
wi II require a new parking system.
The administration has recognized the parking
problem and has demonostrated its concern by asking
for a study to recommend placement of a new parking
facility. But fhls study will be considering the overall
parking problem and will not deal specifically with the
problems which will develop in the event of massive
crowds
On st.rn te shows the cost of moving 3.000 people to
nd trom the PhYSical Education Building would be
ppro Imil el 5500 Assuming ten buses were used. it IS
C cv ted ha the last audience member would leave
build ng pproxlma ely two and one na If hours afteconclus
on a the event
I h es lma s Me correct. and no one has thus far
prov n a her lse, he Ranger strongly urges that any
tu ure par ong area to be placed to facilitate the ex
pand d use of the PhYSical Education Bu'lding and the
v lual u of lhe new theatre.
The Ranger also recognizes that any future parking or
Ir nsportation must be funded by means other than
those presently available. We suggest that funds be
cotlected by some Iype of user fee which will be fair and
equitable to the total campus community: students.
'acuity and sfaff alike.
THORN
By Konkol
It seems we paid Norman Mailer $3175 for his appearance
here. That is a hell of a lot of money to
spend to hear him read his book. ItfIgures he should
have paid us to let him promote It Instead. ~or ~at
amount we could have bought 400 COpies of It. Eight
hundred people attended the lecture and 5900 was
collected at the door. It wasn't worth $2200 to have
lum autograph those library books. While th.e
following discussions were interestmg, they weren t
that interesting
Last Thursday and Friday someone dragged t~ee
sets of those steel filing shelves out int~ the re3:1nat
the library loading dock. After an overnight so~ourn
they were nice and rusty. Even af.ter higher
authority was consulted, they remained there
another four bours. Seems whoever orders the
furnishings has money to throwaway.
Two years ago one of the under-directors in the
finanCe office promised to install pencil sharpeners
In Greenquist Hall. Student Government finally had
to install a couple on its own. We could use some
more - and in the library. How about the clock for
Greenquist concourse - and another for Main
Place')
Certain campus police have been making rounds
through. the buildings during prime class ti:nes in
full uniforms with their guns hanging out. This does
tend to antagonize certain types of people, but it is
onJy temporary until the new blazers arrive. It
seems the old ones "wore ouL"
A lot. of students are still waiting on their grants
from the state. For those who needed the money
more than for just tuition, for which payment has
been delayed; until the money arrives they can
always go on welfare and blame the governor who is
trying to save the state money. Il's ridiculous when
you realize that these are just loans and the money
will be paid back.
You should be happy to learn that they are finally
putting labels on the lavatory doors. It is frustrating
to not know which is which, and trial and error could
be embarrassing. The writing on the walls at the
entrances to the locker rooms is so large that many
people don't notice it. A few have had interesting
experiences on entering the wrong one.
Student Government elections are in just three
weeks. They can't afford to pay the cost of handbill
printing for candidates. But anyone interested can
get their own for a cost of $1.35 for the first 50 and
$.35 for each additional 50 at Printing and
Duplicating in the Modulux Building.
Speaking of elections, it doesn't look like many will
run for the Student Union Committee. There isn't
much point in trying to get this area under student
advisement until the Parkside Activities Board is
abolished.
We get
letters ...
Dear Editor,
\\ e demand to be heard' sex
discrrrmnauon has gone far
enough at good ole Parkside ' We
are making reference to a
definite ne-cessity in the men s
locker room. \\ e realize that as a
rule. women do have more hair
however. some of us hav~
progressed from the Age of
Cre\l,cut to the Age at Aquaflus
and ~es. after many years, we.
too. have split ends. Halr does not
·eem to dryas quickly as It did 10
the Age of Crewcut. The point is
that women have hair dryers in
their locker room and as the
temperature drops and wet hair
freezes. and we would pretty
please like a hair dryer or two.
Two Wet Heads
A few of the present Student Senate have made
some remarks on the supposed mishandling of the
monetary Teacher of the Year awards. Seems that
even though there are an equal number of students
on the committee, these are hand picked and have
nothing to say about the method used In selection.
Just looking at the poor turnout last year shows thrs
has to change.
$10 a month is an awful lot of money to pay for a
telephone on campus.
Be careful if you answer that ad for research
materials. If you're caught submitting a paper not
your own, it could mean expulsion. A few people
here have already learned the hard way that
plagiarism doesn't pay. Use this service only for
research!
If you have a file cabinet in your office, there are
probably a lot of people with a key to it S-IOOseems
to be a prevalent lock on these.
A couple of staff members are considering an article
in the Nov, 1 issue on the national political
candidates. If you have anything you'd like to
mention -- pro or con .. drops us a line by OCt.21.
That library of ours is not only big, it's impressive.
In talking to Ken Herrick, Ilearned that the library
has 180,000 volumes including bound periodicals.
There are half a million cards in the card catalog,
and it is staffed by 90 people, including GO part-lime
students, and 30 Civil Service and academic personnel
including 13 professional librarians.
If you're waiting for the Student-Staff directory to
come out, you'll have to wait a little longer - till the
beginning of November.
The Archives is looking for copies from the back
issues of the previous student newspapers, The old
copy files from COLLEGIAN and NEWSCOPE
were deleted to nothing. If you have some eariy
issues that you forgot to throw out, take them to the
Archives or bring them to the newspaper office,
Touring below floors in the library can be an ex·
perience. There are a couple of rooms down there
which are nearly empty and together are about as
big as the Tallent Hall parking lot.
If you have something bothering you or a newsitem
too small to stretch into a full story, write and iet us
know about them. A black border around an article
sure attracts readers.
If you find yourself short of money, a good wayto
get hold of some is to solicit ads for the RANGER.
We pay 10 percent commission and a telephone can
do most of your work for you. Stop on by D-I94and
find out about it.
If you're one of those glory hounds who might like
the idea of seeing your name in print, why not let us
know about it. The pay isn't too great, but you getto
meet a lot of interesting people.
!"Jf:.The Parkside
RANGER
The Parks ide Ranger is published weekly throughout
the academic year by the students of The University of
Wisconsin-Parkside. Kenosha. Wisconsin.
Offices are located at 0-194 Library-Learning Center,
Telephone (414) 553-2295.
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not
necessarily the officiai view of the University 0'
W,sconsin- Perkside.
EDITORS '-\:>:0 WRITERS, Rudv Lienau Geoff Blaesmg. Kns Ko('h.
~Iath~ \\'ellner, Ken Konkol. Jea~nine Sip'sma Shawn Clements. Dalr
1\ artm T p ,
, om etersen, Marilyn Schubert. Dave Reyher
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pe;tka
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva
-"~·---:.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.
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y, 10017 -
'2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972
But ...
R LS/ OPI
itu
t ing ne and good. A
as crea ed by
done ....
parking lo as found to be the real
ps, In the future, more security officers
d so ha some may assist in traffic
I mu b r allzed that expanded use of the Physical
on Building and the usage of the theatre portion
Communic tlon Ar s Building in the spring
uir n par Ing system.
dmini r on has recognized the parking
nd d monostrated its concern by asking
commend placement of a ne parking
udy Ill be considering he overall
nd ill no deal specifically with the
1ll d v lop in e e en of massive
IO s
THORN
Sy Konkol
Tu o , ars ago one of the under-directors m the
finance offic promi ed to in tall pencil harpeners
in G nqw t Hall tudent Go ernment finally had
to in tall a couple on it own. \! e could use some
more - and in the librarv. How about the clock for
G qw t concourse :.. and another for Main
Place"
ertam camp police ha e been making rounds
through the building during prime class times in
full uniform "'1th their gun hanging out. This does
tend to antagoruze certain types of people, but it is
only temporary until the new blazers arrive. It
eems the old ones "wore out •·
lot of tud nt are till waiting on their grants
from the tale. For th e who needed the money
more than for just tuition, for which payment has
been d layed: until the money arrives they can
alway go on welfare and blame the governor who is
trying to save the tale money. It's ridiculous when
you realize that these are ju t loan and the money
will be paid back.
You hould be happy to learn that they are finally
putting labels on the lavator doors. It is frustrating
to not know"' h1ch is which, and trial and error could
be embarra ing. The writing on the walls at the
entrances to the locker rooms is so large that many
people don't notice it. A few have had interesting
experiences on entering the wrong one.
udent Government elections are in just three
. They can't afford to pay the cost of handbill
pnnting for candidates. But anyone interested can
et their own for a cost of $1.35 for the first 50 and
. 35 for each additional 50 at Printing and
Duplicating in the :l.odulux Building.
peaking of elections, it doesn't look like many will
run for the tudent nion Committee. There isn't
much point m trying to get this area under student
advisement until the Parkside Activities Board is
aboh hed.
A re ..... of the present Student enate have made
·ome remarks on the supposed m1shandlmg of lhe
monetary Teacher of the Year awards. eems that
even though there are an equal number of Ludent.,
on the committee. these are hand picked and hav
nothing to say about the method used m select10
Just looking at the poor turnout la t year how lh1.
has to change.
10 a month is an awful lot of money to pay for
telephone on campus.
Be careful if you answer that ad for re earch
materials. If you're caught submitting a pap r not
your own, it could mean expulsion. A few people
here have already learned the hard way that
plagiarism doesn't pay . Use this service only for
research!
If you have a file cabinet in your office, there are
probably a lot of people with a key to it. S-100 eem
to be a prevalent lock on these.
A couple of staff members are considering an article
in the Nov. 1 issue on the national political
candidates. If you have anything you'd like Lo
mention -- pro or con -- drops us a line by Oct. 21.
That library of ours is not only big, it's impressive.
In talking to Ken Herrick, I learned that the library
has 180,000 volumes including bound periodicals
There are half a million cards in the card catalog,
and it is staffed by 90 people, including 60 part-time
students, and 30 Civil Service and academic personnel
including 13 professional librarians.
If you're waiting for the Student-Staff directory to
come out, you'll have to wait a little longer -- till the
beginning of November.
The Archives is looking for copies from the back
issues of the previous student newspapers. The old
copy files from COLLEGIAN and NEWSCOPE
were deleted to nothing. If you have some early
issues that you forgot to throw out, take them to the
Archives or bring them to the newspaper office.
Touring below floors in the library can be an experience.
There are a couple of rooms down there
which are nearly empty and together are about as
big as the Tallent Hall parking lot.
If you have something bothering you or a news item
too small to stretch into a full story, write and !el us
know about them. A black border around an article
sure attracts readers .
If you find yourself short of money, a good way to
get hold of some is to solicit ads for the RANGER .
We pay 10 percent commission and a telephone can
do most of your work for you. Stop on by D-194 and
find out about it.
If you're one of those glory hounds who might like
the idea of seeing your name in print, why not let us
know about it. The pay isn't too great, but you get Lo
meet a lot of interesting people.
We get
letters ...
\,fr.. The ParkskJe -
RANGER
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout
the academic year by the students of The University of
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin .
Offices are located at D-194 Libr ary-Learning Center,
Telephone (414) 553_2295_
~he Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are no
necessarily the official view of the University or
W sco'1sin- Parkside
f.:DITORS \ D \\HITERS: Hudv L1enau Geoff Blaesmg Km Koch
Kath \\ 11 • , · · • I> le ·. c mr Ken Konkol, Jeannme Sip ·ma Shawn Clement:,. a '.\lartm To p · · · m etersen. Marilyn Schubert Dave Reyhe1
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pe;tka
ADVERTISING MANAGER: F red Lawrence ADVISOR : Don Kopriva
w· ,llEPR.ESENTED FOR. NATIONAL ADVER.TISING BY I National Educational Advertising Services, Inc,
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017
Wed .• Oct. 11, 1972 THE PARKS IDE RANGER 3
poet James Liddy
return's to Parkside
Irish poet James Liddy has returned to Th
University of "':isconsin-Parkside campus for the
1972-73 academic year as a visiting professor ef
EnglIs'h .
0
Liddy, who has held facu~ty posts at San Francisco
State College, St~te Umversity of New York at
Bingham~on, l!mverslty C?llege DUblin, Lewis and
Clark University and Denison University, spent a
week as a guest lecturer at Parkside in March 1971
Liddy is the author of five books of poetry. Hi~
poems have appeared in "The Dolmen Review of
Irish Writing," The New York Times' "Today"
"The Kil~enn.y Magazine," The Irish Press a~d
other publications, and have been reprinted in "The
Penguin Book of Irish Verse," "New Poets of
Ireland" and "Drumbook."
He has presented poetry readings at The San
Francisco ~oetry Corner, t~e International Poetry
Forum of Pittsburgh, The Irish Embassy in London
and at a number of colleges and universities in
Ireland and the U.S.
Liddy received his bachelor's and master's
degrees at University College Dublin and barrister
at law at Kings Inns Dublin.
BLUE HOUSE
PREFERABLY CHINESE
Wearing the masks of dead poets
They crave the butterfly immortality of circulation:
The dinginess of their methods hurts me.
I would not like to waste my tiny legacy of energy
Seeing the letters of my name headlined
And my nervous photograph printed
(I have not the temperament for politics>.
It fatigues me a lot to contemplate the industry
Of those who do not hear life's message
Of eternal unimportance.
The poet should be a gentleman
Preferably Chinese:
I would prefer to retire to riverbanks and walks
Asking with a prayer through the senses
To be released from Effort
Finding gay and courageous friends
And being generous with time which we call love.
- James Liddy
•••••••••••
By Tom Petersen
Not knowing exactly what tYJ>E:of artic,le I was
going to do, I set out in pursuit of mformah?n about
our poet in residence, James Liddy, My fIrst stop
was Stella Grey's office, and she suggested that I
speak to Dr. Liddy himself. Next Iwas at the LLC
where his office is located and, fmdmg myself on ~e
second floor, realized 1 had forg~tten his off~ce
number Back to the main desk. WhIle I was askmg
for the I~ation of his office, the librarian informed
me that Dr, Liddy was standing beside me: What
follows is sort of an impromptu interview, WIth Dr.
Liddy and me making up the questions as we went
.. l' t" I wasn't sure along. Being a "rookIe Journa IS , , w he
where to begin, so I started off by asking ho
came to Parkside. . .
LIDDY: I always go to a good school that inVites
me to be their poet in residence. . e
RANGER: What do you think of Parkslde. th
school and the students'? . 'te
LIDDY: As to the buildings, the LLC. IS ~~re
beautiful enough space to dream or, If Y
• . A to the students, recreational to speculate m. s b t th y
American kids are the nicest in the world, U he
f t· of the teac er, aren't always awake. The unc Ion k
specifically of the writer, is to keep them a;a .~
The life at Parkside seems to start slowly bu WI d
winter coming it will probably become :ar~al~n a
lively, I notice about the students that t ~y from
lot which is probably explained by commg
, . . Wch Norman such a nice place as Wlsconsm, Wit
"the p easan Mailer referred to last Sunday as
country north of Chicago." lawyer'
RANGER: You said you were once a ,
were you also writing then'? . ba k with my
LIDDY' Yes and now lookmg c, " . t the expense awful Irish guilt, perhaps sometImes a
of my clients. h did you
RANGER: From lawyer to teacher -- w y
make lhe change? " d own in a
LIDDY: Well, one morning In wig ~n ,g the' high
Probate molion before Justice Dawltt 10 ore than
court, I thought: I ar:n io:portant, I.h~~ek~ut, I will
the people in this affidaVIt. If I don.t the Dublin
be only a lawyer. Then I looked ou; ;Omight.l The
sky. II won't say I heard VOIces, bu d So I
d
k the real wor s. message was, go away an see told to get at
was chosen, and by that I mean I w~s, adequate
the hard work necessary for wTltmg
Poet Janes Liddy (left) ond Parkside's Herb ubly.
poems in book sequence. I behev the boo IS th
basisofpoelr)·. not the mdivtdual poem SolO earn a
living, while mvolved In the truggle (or boo ,I
turned to teaching.
RA."GER· Asa poet. h"" do)ou r IIOU benetlt
(rom your teaching'!
LIDDY' There is a contro\"eTS) a 10 ""bether
poets benefit from teaching Jolin Berryman IQ h
Paris Re-\ iew interview said thai poets get noth~
from creative wrtung I don't necessarily agree
with this. One doesn't ....mte poems JUSt (or oneself
one \\ rites for the commwlIc} of dead poets and
those to come, I notice In my wnung cia thai
there are alway one or two poets I can reall) help.
the others get caught up ",th the excitement. and
their writing gets better. tn my v.TlU~ da I
usually end up forgetling ml II
RANGER· I noticed tha, lOU have a COPI 0( th
Playboy interview ..nth Bernadette Devlin What
are yoer feeling or the Iwauon LO'reland"
LIDDY, Ac'uall)' I'm ha\"lng a groop In my cia
study this interview They haven't reponed ~et.but
my vie .....is clear, Bernadette 15 a herome-. a Joan of
Arc for the mrocntv In •·orth~ Ireland I upport
the official I RA more than the PI'O\' lonall R 1\ •
but I go along Withmost O("hat both "In do The
cause is for the unity of ireland, the- sameAbraham
Lincoln's cause In the O\·iJ war here
Americans seem to forget thai they ov.e- their
country to fighting KIng George In In6 I also
believe in the SOClaJ In.tggle (or a beuer e. i.tenee
in all Ireland
RANGER· Have you e'er had an)
periences "Ith the \'1olence that has
Ireland?
LIDDY' . 'one dIr"'~1 There ISn·' much actl\ .t)
where I live. I do bu) the matenal lht I R A
distributes, and I otherv.'ise contnbule But II' an
emotIOnal thing basically: )ou·d be surpnsed h""
many people in Ireland don't e\'en M\'e that
RANGER, Gelling back 1O lour wnling. do)ou
ever do work for magaun .,
LIDDY Yes.laJ"a) ha"e had the urge 1Oedit I
did \re-na 10 Ireland and 1"10\11 I ha\f" • n
magazme there. The Plei d ,
RA. ·GER Ho" do IOU f",,1 about lour poetr).
what are you tr)'lng toexpre In .)our TltJ"8"
LIDDY IbelI",e ml poelT)'I "hal poetr)
00- a relIgiOUSart , ot lhal poets are qwt pn
but the\ are sen'an Thf!" UN\ 1 Cull of
messages The poet' bu. In I. to walt fer them
and decode them Tlu. is ne, r fully Ie. "
do not qulLekno" "hal IShappenln In m) poelT) I
locate places and ex nen "'Nch contain t
inviSible- re\'elatIOfb. but hk am nina n Job In a
\Ioarehouse.1 am not urewhere t\er)thl or
even came (rom Ido nO\lo m~ poem art' not JU t
m~ busm nor the audience'.
rsonal e
ep throo
BENEFIT ROCK CONCERT ................. FOR .
GEORGE McGOVERN .......................
October 13, 1972
Racine Labor Center 7 P.M,
2300 Layard Ave. 'til Midnight
5 solid hours of
Country Jf.. Old Rock .. Now Rock
Donation: sl at door
J 08 OPPORTU ITY
String r needed for
W ZN- Z8 to r port
by 6 a.m. Mon.-Sat.
on enesha poll ee , Iir
&. sheri ff. Poy on hourly
bosis. Must be rellabl
Call Fronk Falduta at
658-2055 before II a.m.
CHECKIM;
IS
AT fllST ullom
Of IACIIE
• II .ili.l.
~ilmerI~llrd
• Mo Ii.it 10 th
1I.~tr.f eheks
'01 writl
AT FIIST Ullom
OF UCIME
AT FIIST UTIOUL
OF UCIME
Opu ,au free checkilr
iCCOIAt SOOI it
First ational Bank
a.nd. Trust Company of Racl.n
---- -'- --
500WISCOISil hi. belli
ed., Oct. I , 72 TH PARK ID RA G
Poet James Liddy
return·s to Parkside
Irish poet James Liddy has ret
University of Wisconsin-Parkside urned to The
1972-73 academic year as a visit' campus for the
English. mg professor of
Liddy, who has held faculty st
cisco State College, State Univer~t st~ San FranBinghamton,
University College Dy ir ew Y?rk at
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.
poems have appeared in "The D ~ o poetrt His
Irish Writing," The New York ~-men, ~.ev1ew of
"The Kilkenny Magazine " The ;n_ies Today,"
other publications, and ha~e been r ns~ Press and . eprmted in "Th
Pengum Book of Irish Verse" "N e Ireland" and "Drum book." ' ew Poets of
He has presented poetry readi
Francisco Poetry Corner the lnte ngs/t The San
Forum of Pittsburgh, Th~ Irish E;~:s~on_al Poetry
and at a number of colleges and .YID ~nd~n
Ireland and the U.S. uruvers1bes ID
Liddy received his bachelor's d
degrees at University College Dublina;nd ;:ias~er's at law at Kings Inns Dublin. arnster
BLUE HOUSE
PREFERABL y CHINESE
Wearing the masks of dead poets
They ~ra~e the butterfly immortality of circulation.
The d1Dg1Dess of their methods hurts ·
I w~uld not like to waste my tiny Jega;e~f ener Seemg the letters of my name headlined gy
And my nervous photograph printed
(I ha_ve not the temperament for politics).
It fatigues me a lot to contemplate the industry
Of those who do not hear life's message
Of eternal unimportance.
The poet should be a gentleman
Preferably Chinese:
I wo_uld pr:efer to retire to riverbanks and walks
Askmg with a prayer through the senses
To be released from Effort
Finding gay and courageous friends
And being generous with time which we call love.
-- James Liddy
•••••••••••
By Tom Petersen
ot knowing exactly what type of article I was
going to do, I set out in pursuit of information about
our poet in residence, James Liddy. My first stop
was Stella Grey's office, and she suggested that I
speak to Dr. Liddy himself. Next I was at the LLC
where his office is located and, finding myself on the
second floor, realized I had forgotten his office
number. Back to the main desk. While I was asking
for the location of his office, the librarian informed
me that Dr. Liddy was standing beside me. What
follows is sort of an impromptu interview, with Dr.
Liddy and me making up the questions as we went
along. Being a "rookie journalist," I wasn't sure
where to begin, so I started off by asking how he
came to Parkside. LIDDY: I always go to a good school that invites
me to be their poet in residence. RANGER: What do you think of Parkside, the
school and the students?
LIDDY: As to the buildings, the LLC is quite
beautiful, enough space to dream or, if you're
recreational, to speculate in. As to the students,
American kids are the nicest in the world, but they
aren't always awake. The function of the teacher,
specifically of the writer, is to keep them awake.
The life at Parkside seems to start slowly but with
winter coming it will probably become warm and
lively. I notice about the students that they talk a
lot, which is probably explained by coming from
such a nice place as Wisconsin, which orman Mailer referred to last Sunday as "the pleasant
country north of Chicago."
RANGER: You said you were once a lawyer:
were you also writing then?
LIDDY : Yes, and now looking back, with my
awful Irish guilt, perhaps sometimes at the expen e
of my clients. RANGER: From lawyer to teacher -- why did you
make the change? . LIDDY: Well, one morning in wig and gown, 1~ a
Probate motion before Justice Dawitt in the high
court, I thought: I am important, I have more th~n
the people in this affidavit. If I don'.t look out. I will
be only a lawyer. Then I looked out to 1!1e Dublin
sky. (l won't say I heard voices, but I m1ghU The
message was, go away and seek the real words. So I
was chosen, and by that I mean I was told to get at
the hard work necessary for writing adequate
Poet JCJTies Liddy (left) and Par
BENEFIT ROCK CONCERT ...................... FOR • •
GEORGE McGOVERN .................
October 13, 1972
Racine Labor Center 7 P.
2300 Layard Ave. til idnight
5 solid hours of
Country ~ Old Rock • o
Donation: s1 at door
Au P<I !or
Rock
AL
•
1rd
• I II tt t t I
• er 1f c tc s
J I rift
CHECKI G
IS
AT FIRST TIO AL
OF ACI E
0 e yo r free c ec i
acco t so at
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972
New buildings on display at Open House
The new buildings on The
Umv nit)" of Wisconsin-Parkside
campu will be on public display
for tbe lirst lime durmg a public
Open House unday. Oct IS,
from noon to 5 p m
Thou nd of vi uors are expected
to tour the 700·acre
mpu. with major attention
tocu mg on the three new
hulldll'lt. the rna rve LibraryLe
mlng enter. with Its muchd1SCU..
d lain Place. the
Ph)' ical Education Buildmg.
nd the H bng hilhng Plant,
lh eentr tiled campu utilities
lit triblltion center
Other campus bUlldongs also
will b open. including
r nqUl t and Tall nt Halls,
which opened on fall of 1969, and
the envmes BUlldmR which 1
the 1 mporary campus union .
Th hrst Wop pen Hou e, on
. prtn of 1970 horUy arter the
new mpus opened. attracted
ohout 5. persons d pue an allday
ra rn Another 2.500 a tte~ed
th econd the follow lng pnng
I pla)' and exhrbiuons will be
f.. tured In all bUlldlOgs, meluding
computer demontrau
,lab lit pia" and art
exhibIts In reenqui tHall,
p erat mtm-tour s. demonlraUon
of the latest m learnong
m tenal and equIpment. and
_ lit pia 10 the Library'
Learning Center. and demon·
tratlons of various sports,
recreational activities, special
equipment and even a Pep Band
in the Physical Education
BulldlOg
In addition. the Parkside
Baroque Players will present
concerts at 1'30 p.m and 3 p.m.
in Greenquist Hall auditorium
103
A special service for parents
will be a "Kiddie Korral" child
care center in Tallent Hall for
live year olds and up, featuring
cartoon rtIms and ref"'5hments
to entertain the children who do
not care to accompany their
parents through the huildings.
Vi itors also will be able to see
two other major buildings well
along in construction: the
Communication Arts Building,
!cheduled for occupancy In early
pring 1973~ and a Classroom
Building, scheduled for completion
next September.
If-guiding tour Oyers wtll
uggest routes and activities and
provide special information on
the campus and its facilities.
They will be available at the
starting POints in the parking lots
and at information stops.
Parking will be in TaUent
Hall'. two parking lots. with
continuou shuttle bus service
from there around the loop road
~ hich encircles the central
academic rea ufficient buses
w,lI be on dul)' SO that one wtll
always be In sight and waits
should not exceed two or three
minutes Walking distances from
the lots to the main building area
range from one-third of a mile to
a mile. Mulllple buses will begin
nmnllll at 11'45 a m
S. says th VA...
'SHC)R£. Not ...:7rIFY n-( VA
OF "'ClAE E'N ADORESS
WIo\&J "lO' LANOS.-:;"'
I
I
,
I I/JrI'_to
,
,.----. .. _"'A .....
,-IJDI "-_-,._"'-~ /'I'll -.__,._1; ...
Building projects and site
developrnent work totaling
nearly $30 million has been
completed or is nearing cornplelion
on the W·P campus
mce It opened to its first
students in eptember 1969. An
additional $6 million In projects,
IOcluding a permanent Campus
Umon and a Ph) ical Plant
facility, have been funded and
are in design and planning
tages. The UW ystem Board of
Regents recently recommended
a $3.1 million School of Modem
Industry Building for Parks ide
during the 1973-75 biennium.
Uw-Parkside is located in
northern Keno ha County adjacent
to Petrifying Springs Park
between Kenosha and Racme.
bordered on the west by Hwy. 31.
on the north and south by county
roads A and E and On the east by
Wood Rd. (30th Ave.). County E
exits from Interstate 94. TaUent
Hall parking lots are entered
(rom Wood Rd. and County A.
Workshop
planned
A study skills workshop will be
conducted (or students at The
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Oct. 16, 18,23.25 and Nov. 1 by the
tudent Counseling Services
staff. Workshop sessions will be
In Room D-I89 of the LibraryLearning
Center.
The sessions open to all
Parkside students. will cover
topics including note-taking.
preparation of themes and
research papers, reading and
taking exammations.
The workshop sessions are
patterned after a successful
study skills "pilot" program held
last summer
CIa)' Barnard of the Student
Counseling staff sa ',~ October
was chosen for tiie ~'5ions
because most students wiH have
completed six-week
examinations and wiH be able to
determine whether they need.
help with study sl<iJls.
Marines interview here
MILWA KEE- The Mari~e
Corps Officer sel~tion T~am ~i1l
visit The University of wlscons~nParkside
Oct. 11 and 12 to l~-
terview students interested m
becoming commissioned officer.s.
The Officer Selection Team WIll
be located m the Student Activities
Building to provide .information
pertaining to ~ar1ne
Officer Programs, according to
Capt. D. M. BU~koveetz, the
Marine Corps Officer Selection
Officer.
The Marine Corps offers
programs leading to. a commission
as a 2nd Lieutenant.
••••••••••••••••
: Parkside :
: Activities Board :
: sponsors :
: a bus trip to :
: UW-MADISON :
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
• •
• • • VS. •
•
: OHIO STATE :
•
: FOOTBALL GAME :
• Saturday, October 28 •
• •
• •
• $10 (Includes Bus. •
• Continental Breakfast, •
: $6 Game Ticket) :
• •
••
TICKETS IYAILABlE
••
: INFORMATION OffiCE :
• '202 TALLENT HALL • ••••••••••••••••
Visit Our
SOMERS BRANCH
at
1350 22nd Avenue
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141
FIRST
National Bank
of Kenosha
Member F.D.I.C.
These programs are open to
undergraduates as well as
graduating seniors. To be
eligible, students must have a
"C" or better average. pass a
written examination, be
physically qualified and have the
leadership potential required of a
Marine Officer.
Aviation Officer Programs are
open to highly qualified students,
Woman Officer Programs are
available to junior and senior
women.
Regents
accept grant
MADISON .. Regents of the
University of Wisconsin system
Friday accepted a federal grant
of $5,493 in support of the Law
Enforcement EducatIon
Program (LEEP) at UW·
Parkside. The funds are part of
the $7,800 approved by the U.S
Department of Justice for the
first semester LEEP program at
UW-P.
LEEP grants pay tuition for
local law enforcement officers
who wish to further their
education in job-related courses
while pursuing their careers.
VISIT
THE DOWNUNDER SHOP
CAMPUS CLOTHES.••... .FOR MEN
Try Us..•..••••..••• .You'lI Like Us!!!
STUDENT 10% DISCOUNT
This special discount is offered to Park-side students on all Bell's, regular
priced merchandise. Coupon must be presented al time of sale with I.D
BELL'S DOWNUNDER SHOP
offer expires Nov. 3D, 1972
~
come in and browse ...
CLOTHING BELL HOUSE
Downtown I Kenosha
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET !'If:. The P"'k&ide_~ __
RANGER
" t pSS ...
hey kid! I
Let me disclose to you a very large
piece of buzz.
I hear it most reliably from a pal, Waldo Winchester, who is a scrite lor a local d~j~1
sheet. Well, Waldo says there are yards of opportunities for guys and dolls on~agcllance
over tile country. He says tllere is a real hot future In the newspaper racket a Id
to make some decent scratch, wllile maybe puttmg Ihe arm on some of the Ills of 0 k a\\'
terra tirma. With a high-class monicker like Waldo you can not help but have tile real n
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one·
hundred percent a sucker' Check it out."
T~@obo.'e R'H'lvone"" 100.. ly ".",I",od, mean,
'he "me ~a, no.e, he." he"o, '~an now '0 get
,"to an .. «ling c.,ce, H'llou,nol"m
Fo, I, •• ",Io,ma"on abou, lou,nal"n' <a,.e,', 3n<l
",hola,'h,p" w", •• o T~e New,c.po, F,,,,<l. P 0
Bo. 300, Pnnce,on. New Je, .. y 08540 Also
Contac, yom locol new,pop." and yo", ,ehool
new,pope, odVl'•• ,
the swift Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to t"
or the battle always to the strong _ but it's a good way to be .
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972
ew buildings on display at Open House
Marines interview here
Regents
accept grant
MADISON -- Regents of the
University of Wisconsin system
Friday accepted a federal grant
of $5,493 in support of the Law
Enforcement Education
Program (LEEP > at WParkside.
The funds are part of
the $7,800 approved by the U.
Department of Justice for the
first semester LEEP program at
UW-P.
ork hop
planned
A ·tudy kills wor k hop will be
conducted for tudents at The
niver ity of Wi consin-Parkside
t 16. 18, 23. 25 and ov. 1 by the
tudent Coun ehng ervices
tare Workshop es ions will be
in Room D-189 of the LibraryLearning
Cen er.
The e io open to all
Park ide tudents. will cover
topic includ ing note-taking,
prepara tion of theme and
r earch papers, reading and
taking examination
Th workshop se ion are
patte rned a fter a uccessful
tud) kill • pilot" program held
I t 1mm r
ay Barnard of the tudent
oun ling taff · ctober
\ a cho en for ,.. ior
because most tudents ha\'e
co mpleted ix eek
examina tion and will be able to
determine whether they need
help with tud) kills
11 w \ 'KEE- The 'Iarine
Corp fficer Selection T~am v.:m
vi it The ·niver ity of Wt cons~nPark
ide Oct. 11 and 12 to L~-
ter\'iey, tudent intere led ID
becoming commis ioned officer_s
The Officer Selection Team will
be located ID the Student Activities
Building to provide _informa
tion pertaining to Manne
Officer Programs, according to
Capt. D. i. Buckoveetz, ~ e
1arine Corps Officer election
om er.
The Marine Corps offers
program leading to . a commi
ion as a 2nd Lieutenant.
••••••••••••••••
: Parkside :
: Activities Board :
: sponsors :
: a bus trip to :
: UW-MADISON :
• • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • vs. • •
• •
: OHIO STATE :
: FOOTBALL GAME :
• Saturday, October 28 •
• • • • • $10 (Includes Bus •
• Continental Breakfast, •
: $6 Game Ticket) :
• • •
e TICKETS AVAILABLE •
e
: INFOR ATION OFFICE :
e 202 TALLENT HALL e
••••••••••••••••
Visit Our
SOMERS BRANCH
at
1350 22nd Avenue
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141
FIRST
National Bank
of Kenosha
:\Iember F.D.I.C.
These programs are open to
undergraduates as well as
graduating seniors. To be
eligible, students must have a
"C" or better average, pass a
written examination, be
physically qualifi~d and ~ave the
leadership potential reqwred of a
Marine Officer.
Aviation Officer Programs are
open to highly qualified students.
Woman Officer Programs are
available to junior and senior
women.
LEEP grants pay tuition for
local Jaw enforcement officer
who wish to further their
education in job-related courses
while pursuing their careers
v~~l DOWNUNDER SHOP
CAMPUS CLOTHES ....... FOR MEN
Try Us ............... You'll Like Us!!!
STUDENT 10 % DISCOUNT This spec ia l d iscount i s offered to Par kside students on all Bell 's, regular
priced merchandise. Coupon must be presented at lime of sa le w ith 1. 0
BELL 'S DOWNUNDER SHOP
offer expires Nov. 30, 1972
come in and browse ...
CLOTHING BELL HOUSE
Downtown / Kenosha
'' pss t ...
hey kid!
Let me disclose to you a very large
piece of buzz.
I hear it most reliably from a pal, Waldo Winchester, who is a scribe for a loc al dail~I
sheet. Well, Waldo says there are yards of opportunities for guys and dol ls on rags a ce
over the country. He says there is a real hot future in the newspaper racket - a th~~
to make some decent scratch, while maybe putting the arm on some of the ills of : kn•~
terra firma. With a high-class monicker like Waldo you can not help but have th e rea
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one·
hundred percent a sucker! Check it out."
The above Runyonese, loo sely transla ted . means
the t,me has never been betlet than n ow to get
mto an exc,1In9 career in Iournal1sm
For free m1 o rmat,on about J0urnahsm ca, eers and
scholarships, write to The Newspaper Fund. P 0
Bo1t 300, Princeton. New Jersey 08540 Also
contact your local newspaper and your school
newspaper advise,
the swift Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to t ,,
or the battle always to the strong- but it's a good way to be ·
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET
t~Ak,..,N __ G_ E_ R_
. '. ,
, ,
North -South Exchange I
panned
BYJeannjne Sip sma
J Croxford is a student from
pa;;side who participated in the
North.South Exchange Program.
This program ~llow~d him to
tt nd a prirnari ly black
a u~hern University, North
~~rolina Central University, for
the second semester of the 1968·69
school year.
As to how he felt on the first
day, he said it was kind of strange
and that the ten students from
Wisconsin sort of stuck together.
"To begin with, there is a
definite color distinction and you
reel kind of lost and out of place,
but once you get to know people,
youfeel more at home," Croxford
said
He said some people are very
friendly, others don't care if
vou're there or not and the black
militants usually just left him
alone
Most of his friends were not
other exchange students; he said
he hardly saw them at all. He had
met a lot of his friends in a play
he was in.
"It was a good experience. You
learn what life is like in a
minority. Most white people don't
get the chance. You run into
situations you read about blacks
getting into."
Part of the purpose of this
program is to experience difrerent
cultural and social
situations. Croxford said that
there were differences in the
kinds of music, ways of dancing,
verbal expressions, and some of
the foods in the cafeteria; there
were also a lot of courses in black
culture
"1 noticed that the people
seemed to be better dressed."
Croxford said. "It wax not uncommon
to see a guy Tn" a sports
jacket
He said he'd go back if given
the chance, but the program only
allows one to go down for a
semester without paying Qut-ofstate
tuition.
"You have to go there with an
open mind, knowing it isn't going
to be all good or all bad. It's the
same as anywhere else; you meet
some people you don't get along
with and some who have the
same interests," Croscord said.
"~fter Iwas there for a while, I
didn't think of people as being
?lack or white anymore; they're
Just your friends and there's no
color distinction."
College Men
PART TIME
WORK
Call 552-8355
The academic year 1972-73 i
the erghth year of the U. . s
f W
· mversIty
o ISconsin's one-semester
student exchange program with a
black university Thi
offers th '. IS program
. . e Umversity of
WIsconSin students
t
. an oppor
unity to grow in th .
d
err unerstanding
of Amerl'ca .
tit ti n inS
I U IOns and society b
tici . Y par- icipating for a semester in a
totally different ac aderm
cultural and social life style th
lC
,
that of their own experience a~~
background The
. program
stresses the differences which the
exchange student WI' II .Incur
becau~e we live in a complex and
changing society in which differences
among people -- racial
geographic, religious and
economic -- are real and
unavoidable. By realizing this
through experience, the student
can become more aware of the
why as well as what the problems
and is.sues are in America today.
Sprmg semester, Wisconsin
students will attend North
Carolina Central University It is
located in the circle of ac~demic
institutions which include Duke
University in Durham and the
University of North Carolina in
neighboring Chapel Hill. Textiles
and tobacco industries are also
predominant in the Durham
area, and the weather is mild.
The population of Durham was
95,438 in the 1970 census
Exchange students follow a
course program similar to one
they would follow at the
University of WisconsinParkside.
Tl1j.s does not e.xclude
taking courses for which there
are no direct equivalents at
Wisconsin, but which would be of
special value to take at the exchange
school. It is the student's
responsibility to consult the
Office of Admissions on the
transferability of any courses
they may take. They should also
consult academic advisors in
their college or major. To date
there has bee
ficult n no major die-
. Y regardlOg transfer of
credits. StUdents .'11 w recewe
~ansfer credits for work taken at
e exchange University. not
grades. Participation In the
program will be noted 00 the
student's uw transcript.
Applicants who will be fresh.
m:~ during participation are not
elIgible. Students who will be
Jumo.rs during participation Will
tM: given priority. tuoents ho
w~ll.be seniors are oot normauv
ehglble. In order to a ist \!lith
program activities participanls
should be at Wi eonsin for at
l~a.st a year follo""ing par
t1clpation in the program
Moreover. the Uni\'er It)· of
Wisconsin requires that a tude:nt
must earn his la l 30 crechts jn
residence to receive a Wisconsin
degree. An applicant shoold ha\'e
a cumulative CPA of 2.5 through
last semester. Progress in tho
semester's classes will also be
evaluated. There are some ex·
ceptions.
There is a n agreement by
North Carolina Central and
University of Wisconsin Sj tern
campuses (except Madison~ that
exchange students are permitted
to pay Wisconsin tuition on thesr
Wisconsin campus before the\
leave for "CCl: Thu tbey \\ould
avoid paymg Xorth Carolina outof·state
tuition at ,'CCC
Students will pay room and
board and other expenses at
NCCU. The offiCial room and
board costs per semesler are
s-I2Q
AccordlOg to 150m Fern, 10
terested students must pick up an
application at his office and ha\'e
it and related form turned 10 b\
Nov. 3. They ",Ill then be uiterviewed
between ,,·o\: 6 and
10V. 10 and nolificatlon of
selection will be made by ..'0\ 20
There will be an orientalJOO held
in Madison 10 early December
and the students wiU leave for
North Carolina Central
University around Jan. 5. 1973
: .
Cham- Tap-Bar
Wed., Oct. 11, 1971 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S
Sorry. hoa
"Leave your empty
cigarette pack
By Shawn R. Clements
A large. orange. IIll lh bUcIt
lenermg Implores toom and
facult) to "le3\ yoor em"t
Cleareue paclt " rn ord .... thai •
"httle rI" In a • hi .. au f;
ho pitaI" m.y ha\ free
hour m an Iron lu
In tront 0( the gn 011. table
are some •. empt) pIIc of
crgareue. ~ haun o( lIt lor.
chtld"
rT) 0
Tbe si n In the caJ"etrna on
the K ha campllS Jud I
lrom the .... mb<r 0( ern ) pa
0/ are Ie th m
riTectl\ nfortunatlth t I
a cruel ,thou ~po no
tenuonalh so hoa
Achee' '" Ith Lh mat.n ofh at
Kenosha ~ .. Ied no OM
knev. the anglO 0( the I nit"""
been compl"'necI about I.....
•~eone.·· a td
lIer efforts to lind the niaker 01
th ., n prG\ed frultl Th
reporter' ellorb did .....
Call to t,I""au ·.r~a
ho--pltal prG\'ed Jll.! a lut I
There.po ra edlrom "\Ie
ha\ e no one ~ an an Iron lu
to'"Tha' the old .1., j e.n
the .. arid ••
"
10 % commission
BUSI G PROBLEMS?
Rider. n eded to Rocin
or service ",ill be discontinued.
T II your
fri end. to ride the bu.,
Schedule. ovo; loble 01
lJW -p InfonTlol ion Office
or coli JeNel Ech 1-
borger ot 553-2342.
Special
Sx7 COLOR E LAR E.IE. iT
OC70BER I ' 0 'OVE. IBER I I
~~~~------------
Pukside AcliYities Board prm Is
P to and t\f'\
Elm\\ood PtW
381 Durand PI .....
SsHSII
•
D
G offr
fUllfil! lbe
on r Band
Fri., Oct. 13 9:00 p.m,
Student Activities Bldg,
dm. P
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?
STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFICE
0-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295
251 I Durand
Racine, Wis.
d"gne onTap
Ham Sandwiches 0
:
. and Pizza :J:)0.
/~.-..~.-.. ---------~-_.;"
) § We need people who are money-hungry!
)
)
' (
ed., Oct. 11, 972 THE PARKSIDE RA G R
North-South Exchange Panned 1
BY Jeannine Sipsma
J Croxford is a student from
Pa~:side who participated in the
North-South Exchange Program.
Th's program allowed him to
tiend a primarily black
\uthern Univers~ty, . North
Carolina Central Uruvers1ty, for
the second semester of the 1968-69
chool year. A to how he fel~ on the first
day, he said it was kind of strange
and that the ten students from
Wisconsin sort of stuck together.
·'To begin with, there is a
definite color distinction and you
reel kind of lost and out of place,
but once you get to know people,
vou feel more at home," Croxford
said
He said some people are very
friendl), others don't care if
l'ou're there or not and the black
militants usually just left him
alone
Most of his friends were not
other exchange students; he said
he hardly saw them at all. He had
met a lot of his friends in a play
he was in.
"It was a good experience. You
learn what life is like in a
minority. Most white people don't
get the chance. You run into
ituations you read about blacks
getting mto."
Th~ academic yelir 1972-73 . the eighth year of th U . . is
f . e mvers1ty 0 Wisconsin's one-semester
student e~change program with a
black umversity Th'
offers th . . is program . . e Umversity of
W1sconsm students
portunity to grow in tha~ op- d . e1r un- :;s:_andmg of American inst·
I. u i~ns and society by par1c1patmg
for a semest . er m a totally different academ.
cultural and social life style th;~
that of their own experience and
background The p · rogram
stresses the differences which the
exchange student w1·11 mcur .
becau~e we live in a complex and
changmg society in which differences
among people -- racial
geographic, religious and
economic -- are real and
unavoidable. By realizing this
through experience, the student
can become more aware of the
why as well as what the problem
and is_sues are in America today em ter·
evaluated
ceptions
There 1
rr •
'Lea ur
• Cl ar
Part of the purpose of this
program is to experience different
cultural and social
1tuations. Croxford said that
there were differences in the
kinds of music, ways of dancing,
verbal expressions, and some of
the foods in the cafeteria; there
were also a lot of courses in black
culture
Spring semester, Wiscon m
students will attend :-.orth
Carolina Central Universitv It i
located in the circle ot ac~dem1c
institutions which include Duke
University in Durham and the
University of North Carolina in
neighboring Chapel Hill Textile
and tobacco industries are also
predominant in the Durham
area, and the weather i mild
The population of Durham wa
95,438 in the 1970 census
Exchange students follow a
course program similar to one
they would follow at the
University of Wi con inParkside.
This does not e: elude
taking courses for which there
are no direct equivalent at
Wisconsin, but which would be of
special value to take at the exchange
school. It is the tudent
responsibility to con ult the
Office of Admi ions on the
transferability of any course
they may take. They hould al o
consult academic advi or in
their college or major To date
Specia
'·I noticed that the people
seemed to be better dressed "
Croxford aid "It wax not uncommon
to see a guy in a sports
jacke
He said he'd go back if given
the chance, but the program only
allows one to go down for a
emester without paying out-oftate
tuition.
"You have to go there with an
open mind, knowing it isn't going
to be all good or all bad. It's the
same as anywhere else; you meet
ome people you don't get along
with and some who have the
·ame interests," Croscord said.
"After I was there for a while, I
didn't think of people as being
black or white anymore; they're
JU t your friends and there's no
color distinction ."
College Men
PART TIME
WORK
Call 552-8355
:······························································
.
Cham-Tap-Bar =
2511 Durand
Racine, Wis.
:
Ham Sandwiches O
. and Pizza O ; : •.•.••••••••...••••••.••.•.•.•....................•...........•
Our
Fri. Oct. 13
Studen
I~.,.-....,..-...~~,,,,,,--..._,...-.... ,,..-......,_,,...---....
) ll We need people who are money-hungry!
)
) RE 0 ER 0
'
7
•
10 % commission STOP BY THE PAR SIDE RANGE OFFICE
D-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING P.E. Bldg. underused Mother Nature's organ
gardening food supply _ Will~
foods -- will. be discussed and
collected during a University of
Wisconsin-Extension COUfS
"Edible Wild Plants," e,
Three lectures will be held 0
Thursdays, beginning Oct. 1;
7:30 p.m., on the UW-Parksid~
Wood Road Campus; and thre
field trips on Saturdays, 8 a.rn te
noon. . 0
Eugene Gasiorkiewi
professor of life science at ~~.
~ark~idfe, will
t
,instruct the class'
or
t
l~ 0lrma IOn on field trip
rna er-ta 5 and registrar
ta t Universit IOn can c mv~rsl y Extension 553:
2312. There IS a special reduced
student fee of $5.00.
An organizational meeting for
all students and faculty interested
in studying Christian
Science is being planned. The
group is looking for a faculty or
staff member as an advisor to the
group. For more information,
contact Rich Meyers at 634-1202.
"It's Wbat's Happening" will
be a regular feature or The
Parkside Ranger. All clubs and
organizations are urged to
submit notices about meetings.
rallies. etc. in person at the
Parkside Ranger office, D-IM
LLC. We ask that these be in our
oUice one week before the issue
(Wednesday for the next Wednesday's
issue). None will be
accepted over the phone.
Parkside Student Government
•
will be holding elections from
Oct. 23-25. The deadline lor the
completion of petitions is 10 a.m.
Oct. 16. The deadline for platforms
is Oct. 11 and otficer
candidates are asked to appear
for pictures on Oct. 10 from 10 -12
noon at l..LC0-194. Petitions may
be picked up at the PSGA office
LLC 0.193, the main desk in the
library, the information desk in
the LLC, or at the student services
office on the Kenosha
campus, K-l35. Volunteers are
needed to work at the polls. You
can sign up at the SG office, LLC
D-193.
By Shawn R_ Clements
II' a beauhlul, n,'" Olympic size pool Adjoining the pool are very
Ole . modem. male and female locker rooms. At one end of the
T) tal-clear pool are diving hoards of obvious quality. Idyllic, isn't it?
The onl) probl m With the scene i a lack of the most important
commodlt) - people Aecordmg to sst. to the Athletic Director Loren
lIem "The enure buildmg. e pecially the pool. is gro Iy uoderused."
Th r "' lor thl. underuse are quite unclear. Lack of knowledge?
If lOU re readmg thl ,that no longer applies. (Fees and schedules at
end 01 rncle r
Th lO'mn tum 1 adding two electrically operated curtains which.
htn 10" red ~ III divide the gym mto three sections, thus making
m re roodm for el a well as general u e. The sauna, too, will soon
r ,
Th ee I me m ntion about the lact that the Physical Education
b'Jlldlng "III have to be elf ustaming in the near future. Hein's
r pun to qu . hon about tin was that lillie, if anything, is known
bout that Idea Thu ,any peculation about the possible eflect of
uch • mev on fe IS pure conjecture.
IIIth II the laClhtl available in this million-dollar building. nonus
b) tUdent, faculty and staff IS incomprehensible, especially
conSldermR th t I for equivalent facilities would run $150 on the
PJ he morkl't "Eve-f)'one kept crying for a swimming pool .. Hein
ld "No\lt It's here U Il!" '
f e. h dul Includes
$1.50 mo. U Shirt, shorts, towel, swimsuit, aU laundering
The WhiteskeJlar Coffee House
•
will be holding auditions on
Wednesday, Oct. 18, for upcoming
acts this fall. They will
begin at 1 p.m. and continue until
they are all heard, Some twenty
acts are expected to audition.
•
•
A Republican "Meet the
Candidates" Dessert will be held
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct, 12, at
the Kenosha VFW. GOP candidates
for state and local offices,
as well as tst District
Congressional candidate Merrill
Stalbaurn, will be present at the
affair, spmsored by the Kenosha
County Young Republicans, with
which the Parkside Young
Republicans are affiliated. For
more information, phone Marilyn
Schubert at 658-8954.
Audit.ions for the 1972
production of cardiac capers has
been .set for Oct. 10 in the 51.
Mary s Hospital cafeteria at 7:30
p.m.
. The show is open to anyone
IOterested and includes a varlet
f
.. da Y o SlOglOg, ncing, and some
drama. Anyone who auditions'
~heshow is used in some aspect ~~
It.
($2 01 thl Lock, locker, towel
I. r fundabl
The Parkside Film Society will
•
present the feature film,
"Loneliness of the Long Distance
Runner," and a short, "The
Wall," at 7:30 p.m. today (Oct.
11) in Greenquist Hall. Donation
is 60 cents .
Towel
wimsUit. per usage
Paddle ball or handball (player keeps ball)
FREE DELIVER Y
liED LE
The Parkside Women's Caucus
•
will meet today at 7:30 p.m. in D174LLC
to discuss the remainder
of ~e Gloria Steinem tape and
attitudes and opinions about it.
Member Parkside 200
Pool National Varsity Club
Mon - Fn, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m
Mon - Thurs, 5:30 p.m. to to p.m.
Sal., 10 a m to 5 p.m.
Sun, 1-30 p.m. to 10 p.m.
•
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha ,
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774
• BEER. SODA
• LIQUORS. WINES
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE
CONVENIENT PARKING
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P M
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M. • •
CALL
632-1565
.". s.M.i.
UVE·OM
Cymna lum
Mon • Thurs, 7,45 a m.
to to p m.
f'rl .. 7:45 am to 6 p.m.
t , 9 am (0 5 p.m.
Sun, 1,30 pm. to 10 p.m.
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE
219 TALLENT HALL
RACINE 553·2150
rEACH~R
"Washington Square"
5200 Washington Avenue
Raciqe
PHONE: 634-6661
~
The House of
fIne Diamond.s 2909 DURAND AVE_ RACINE, wise.
1----------------------- I -------1
!GINO'S TAILORS!
I I
I I
I Clothes for the Young Man I
I Large Selection of Doubleknit Slacks and Sportcoats :
I Alterations and Styling I
I 10 pet. off with Parkside I.D. I
! 2212 60th Street 654-0774 I
,_____________ I __________ 1
ramou Brand Watches
Ring - Jewelry- GUts
Repairs THE
EST ABLISHMENT
SHOW LOUNGE
Racine's Newest Nightery
Proudly Presents
An All Girl All Star
Go-Go-A-Rama
Continuous Entertainment
7 P.M. til?
UT (Itfttl • ,. w:
. ,"!.-a . N.I4A. ..,.
_ ,UIt-.a
CAIRY-OU1S
....-_...~.......
,.... a....- ,... _ .._--,.." ...- -'_ .. ...... _.ra
,....-
... ... I'" -'-
...l'O_
424 Lake Ave.
Racine
637-8467
RESEARCH MATlRIALS
All Topics
SInd IOf y r dtsctiphve, UIl-to-dale
121pIIp, lUll Oldertltliol of 2 300
QUlllty ft3urch papers helln
$1 oaI. co'" ,utal. 1M ~H1101.
RESEARCH UNLlMIT£D
519 Gl£HROCK m., SUIT£ 203
lOS AHGEUS, CALIF. !10024
(213) 411-S414 • m·S4!l3
''We Mid • loul salesmln"
A mateur Contest
Every Thursday
Night Jim FlIlpK. 116-.4152, Racine
1S..c
...... Steve Httgeno .............d $1.. KlMOSha W', 531 w. 654-7297, KenoSha
• I. «I, 654.5139
6 THE PARKSIDE RANG ER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972
P. ld . underused IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING
•
By Shawn R. Clements
"It' \ llal' Happening" will
~ a re ular feature of The
P rk ide Ranger. II club and
rganization are urged to
ubmit notic about meeting ,
rallie , etc . in pe on at the
the pool are ve~
Park id Ranger orri e, D-l!M
LL . We a k that the e be in our
ffi e one week b fore the i ue
!\\edn day for the ne t Wed·
n da) • i u ) .• 'one will be
ace pt d ov r the phone.
Par ide tudent • Government
ill be holding elections from
Oct. 23-25. The deadline for the
completion of petition i 10 a.m.
r, to
t. 16. The deadline for plat·
form i Oct. 11 and officer
candidat are a ked to appear
for pictures on Oct. 10 from 10 -12
noon at LLC D-194. Petitions may
be picked up at the PSGA office
LLC D-193, the main desk in the
library. the information desk in
the LLC, or at the tudent ser-
\ic office on the Kenosha
campu , K-135. Volunteers are
needed to work at the polls. You
can ign up at the SG office, LLC
D-193.
•
T The Parkside Film Society will
\\ 1m u,t. per e
present the feature film ,
"Loneliness or the Long Distance
Runner, ' and a short, "The
Wall," at 7:30 p.m. today (Oct.
11) in Greenquist Hall. Donation
is 60 cents .
11 or h nd I < play r keeps ball)
· Ht.I Lf.
m. to 1: p.m
• S: p.m. to 10 p.m.
m to s p.m.
pm. to 10 p.m.
, 7: 5 .m.
f 'ne Diamonds
m BrandW tch
in - J 'Atll') -GU
R lr -
-z.s.....
IIE-11
L
The Parkside W• omen's Caucus
will meet today at 7: 30 p.m. in D·
174 LLC to discuss the remainder
or the Gloria Steinem tape and
attitudes and opinions about it.
•BEER• SODA
• LIQUORS • WINES
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE
I CONVENIENT PARKING
Q OPE N DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.
u
I
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.
0
CALL
I 632-1565 R
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC.
------------------------------
GINO'S TAILORS
Clothes for the Young Man
Large Selection of Doubleknit Slacks and Sportcoats
Alterations and Styl ing
10 pct. off with Parkside I.D.
2212 60th Street 654-0774
' I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I ______________________________ !
RESEARCH MAffRIALS
All Topics
... .
NML
lit( OISIC'\iS
IOR "01VIOU4l ~
• 116 '152. Rac,ne
2S1.5 6Jr Steve Hagenow 654 d St., Kenosha, Wis. 531<10, 654-5739 ' -7297, Kenosha
An organizational meeting for
all students and faculty interested
in studying Christian
Science is being planned. The
group is looking for a faculty or
taff member as an advisor to the
group. For more information,
contact Rich Meyers at 634-1202.
The Whiteskellar • Coffee House
will be holding auditions on
Wednesday, Oct. 18, for upcoming
acts this fall. They will
begin at l p.m. and continue until
they are all heard. Some twenty
acts are expected to audition.
•
A Republican "Meet the
Candidates" Dessert will be held
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 12, at
the Kenosha VFW. GOP candidates
for state and local offices,
as well as 1st District
Congressional candidate Merrill
Stalbaurn, will be present at the
affair, sponsored by the Kenosha
County Young Republicans, with
which the Parkside Young
Republicans are affiliated. For
more information, phone Marilyn
Schubert at 658-8954.
FREE DELIVERY
Member Parkside 200
National Varsity Club
Mother Nature's organi
gardening food supply _ wil~
foods - will_ be discussed and
co~ected_ durmg a University of
W1sconsm-Extension course "Edible Wild Plants." '
Three lectures will be held 0
Thursdays, beginning Oct. 1:
7:30 p.m., on the UW-Parksid '
Wood Road Campus; and thr
field trips on Saturdays, s a.m. t
noon. 0
Eugene Gasiorkiewi
professor of life science at c;,
Parkside, will instruct the cl ·
For information on field ~ -
materials and registrat· lp ta tu . . ion con c mv~rs1ty Extension 553:
2312. There 1s a special reduced
student fee of $5.00.
•
Audit_ions for the 1972
production of cardiac capers ha
been ,set for_ Oct. 10 in the l.
Mary s Hospital cafeteria at 7:30
p.m.
The show is open to anyon
interested and includes a varlet
f . . d y o smgmg, ancing, and some
drama. Anyone who auditions . th h . ed' lO . e s ow 1s us m some aspect of
It.
•
443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha ,
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE
219 TALLENT HALL
553-2150
"Washington Square"
5200 Washington Avenue
Raciqe
PHONE: 634-6661
THE
ESTABLISHMENT
SHOW LOUNGE
Racine's Newest Nightery
Proudly Presents
An All Girl All Star
Go-Go-A-Rama
Continuous Entertainment
7 P.M. til?
424 Lake Ave.
Racine
637-8467
Amateur C1Jntest
Every Thursday
Night
-
0",
"
Membersof the UW-Parkside women's tennis team t k
e
for a photo. with Coach Dick Frecka Pictur da(le)a mement from practice to
pos • e -r are Sue ./II de' Squire, Kay Becker, Sue Gra f and Frecka. Pat K k' h anggaar, ind
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<t be
f
st Tennis Tournament, IS not pictured. 0 re
, Photo by Crarg Robert
"Yon ve got to he optimistic"
I'I;EI:: L.\:\CE WRlTI:"G
SERVtCES Report writing,
speech writing, commercial
cOPY-editing. editing and ~rlOg done in my home.
ease call 639-7378
eVenings.
WithOll,t hurting your feelings,"
she said.
Pat enjoys playing on the team,
and says she loves competition.
She doesn't mind strange courts
and likes to play away from home
because "we have a lot of fun on
the trips."
Sue Wanggard doesn't dislike
playing away meets because the
courts are strange, but because
the people are strange, so she
likes to play at home better.
"It really helps to have
somebody there to watch you,"
she said.
Sue enjoys playing on hot,
sunny days, but her favorite
conditions are cloudy and cool.
"With the sun coming out when
it's to my advantage," she added.
Sue says the wind doesn't
bother her, but after a couple of
wild shots cries 01 "BI"" , Wind "
echoed arouod the courts
Practice is held every weekdav
from about 3 to 5 p.m. and ~
Fridays it can last all afternoon
Along with practice
developing a good attitude IS oi
great imporlance
"Yoo've got to be opium tic,
concentrate and try to do "hat
the coach tells yeo." said ue
Wanggard.
During a practice doubles
match, Frecka continuously
encouraged and cnucued hJ
players.
At one point, when there
seemed to be more critieism
flying around than tennis balls,
he turned and said \l, ith a mile,
"I can't let these girls thi
they're too good, because then
they can beat anybody:"
Soccer
oct. 14.
Oct. 21 ..
Cross
Oct. 13
Oct. t7 .
Country
. Notre Dame Invitational at Bend, Inc
Ma rquene at Parts'de
Golf
Oct. 14 .
Women's Swimming
Oct. 14
Women's Tennis
Oct. 18
UW-Plalle..,Ue at Pari< Id
Marquette at Parks,de
U\\'-Mad,son at ~Iadlson
Oshkosh tnvltational at Oshkosh
W-oshkosh at Par ,de
Monday night is
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"
at Shakey's in Racine,
$1 a pitcher for Pab
or Schlitz light.
American State Bankt
Free Checking Accounts
for College Students
Phone 658-2582
3928 60th St.
Wed" OCt. 11, 1972 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 7
ByKathrynWellner
Good exercise and fun aren't
the only things Pat Keltic, Sue
Wanggardand Sue Graf get out of
tennis.
The girls, respectively the top
three members of the women's
tennisteam, each have their own
unique reasons for playing.
After being injured as a
gymnast, Sue Wannggard took up
playing tennis and running cross
«entry. She says she does it
mostly for her own personal
enjoyment.
"Il changed my personality,
100. I keep more to myself now; I
don't let my emotions show as
much anymore," said Sue. "One
thinga sport like this teaches you
is patience," she added.
Sue Graf, a senior, gets a
feeling of accomplishment,
especially when she wins.
"When -I win-E really-feel-Iike-c--v-.
work
I've done something, like all the
and practice have paid off,"
SCHEDULED
she said. "But when Ilose I feel
very upset with myself, and
depressed. "
Sueseemed very positive about
the effect tennis has had on her
personality.
"Oh, yes!" she exclaimed,
"especially the ups and downs."
Nobodylikes to lose. Pat Kekic
describes the way she feels
before a match as "the worst
possiblebutterflies" and she says
that she doesn't settle down until
aller she starts playing.
"Coach (Dick) Frecka always
makes us relax with his snide
httle jokes," she said, smiling.
Winning, on the other hand, is
always exciting, • 'especially
when your coach is there or if it's
the match you need to win the
meet."
According to Pat, playing
lenms taught her to be both a
g~ Winner and a good loser. She
beheves that it's good for people
to learn good sportsmanship and
courtesy.
"It has helped me to learn how
to get along with people" she
~aid. '
Pat has had the advantage of
living across the street from
some tennis courts and she
slarted playing when she was
thirteen.
"The best time for kids to start
Isv,;hen they're nine or len," said
Pat.
She never had lessons until she
played for the team. so all of
oach Frecka's advi<.:e has been
e1tome.
·Ht·s good at giving criticism
MemMr" F' 0 I C
Harrier' b
La t TIl sda)" the Ranger
hamers .. ent (0 t ..hi a
and came bo "'10 qwte
ha~ Coach \',c GodIf'O) ,d
"n. IS the that.. ha.
be.,on them 10 the lour }..
thal e ',"eo been • am them
n,., top five .",..,.,... ran a
team for th rlrst ume th ) r
If this eeps '" d a
coote~ lor the . AlA DlSlnct
O1amplOnSh,p .,
TIC
l;
Rm
DE IS 81El
t
•
In t
\aUa e
Information It
I, TaUonl Hall
,
M mbers o f the UW-Parkside women's tennis team tak • •
e . h C h D· k F e a memen ro practice o for a photo. wit oac 1c recka. Pictured (I-) S
pose S r are ue anggaard Cind S U·,re Kay Becke r, ue Graf and Frecka Pat Kek· th 1 '
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
p • • as ee s to r- fe st Tennis Tournament, 1s not pictured. Pho
O
b\ Cr
1
R
"You've got to he optimi~tic
BY Kathryn Wellner
Good exercise and fun. aren't
the only things Pat Kekic, Sue
wanggard and Sue Graf get out of
tennis. . The girls, respectively the top
three members of the women's
tennis team, each have their own
unique reasons for playing.
After being injured as a
gymnast, Sue Wannggar? took up
playing tennis and runnmg cross
country. She says she does it
mostly for her own personal
enjoyment.
"It changed my personality,
too. I keep more to myself now; I
don't let my emotions show as
much anymore," said Sue. "One
thing a sport like this teaches you
i patience," she added.
Sue Graf, a senior, gets a
feeling of accomplishment,
especially when she wins.
"When I win I really reel Hke
I've done something, like all the
work and practice have paid off,"
he said. "But when I lose I feel
very upset with myself, and
depressed."
Sue seemed very positive about
the effect tennis has had on her
personality.
"Oh, yes!" she exclaimed,
"especially the ups and downs."
obody likes to lose. Pat Kekic
describes the way she feels
before a match as "the worst
po ible butterflies" and she says
that she doesn't settle down until
after she starts playing.
"Coach (Dick) Frecka always
makes us relax with his snide
little jokes, " she said, smiling.
Winning, on the other hand, is
always exciting, "especially
when your coach is there or if it's
the match you need to win the
meet."
According to Pat, playing
tenni taught her to be both a
00d winner and a good loser. She
believes that it's good for people
lo learn good sportsmanship and courte y.
"It ha helped me to learn how
to ,:et along with people," she
Pat has had the advantage of
hvmg across the street from
ome tennis courts and she
tarted planng when she was th1rte •n. ·
"Th' best tune for kids to start
'p h n the, 're nine or ten, .. said
at
1 h n '\ r had lesson· until he
P ed for the team. so all of
th fr• ka ad, ice ha. be
lcom •
H
• Hl:i-; L \, (T WRITl'.I.G
•~H\'t( Es Report writing.
Jleech \\Tiling. commercial
copy-edtt1ng. editmg and
~Ping done in my home .
lea e call 639-7378 evening
without hurting your feelings,"
she said.
Pat enjoys playing on the team,
and says she loves competition.
She doesn't mind strange courts
and likes to play away from home
because "we have a lot of fun on the trips."
Sue Wanggard doesn't dislike
playing away meets because the
courts are strange, but because
the people are strange, so she
likes to play at home better.
"It really helps to have
somebody there to watch you,"
she said.
Sue enjoys playing on hot,
sunny days, but her favorite
conditions are cloudy and cool.
"With the sun coming out when
it's to my advantage," she added.
Sue says the wind doesn't
bother her, but after a couple of
SCHEDULED
Soccer
oct. 14 . ... ... ........................ .
Oct. 21 ..... . ......... . ....... .
Cross Country
Oct. 13 ......... ... ...... .
Oct. 17 ................... .
Golf
Oct. 14 ...... ......... ..
Women's Swimming
Oct. 14 ......... ·
Women's Tennis
Oct. 18 .. . .... · · · · ·
Monday night i
"Ye Old ud ipping , 'ite"
at Shakey's in Racine.
$I a pitcher for Pab
or Schlitz light
American
Free Checking Ac o its
for College tud nts
Phone 65 --5
3928 60th St. D C
., Oct. 11, 1 72 TH PA ID G 7
OE IS l
Harr· r I
• Tl
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed .• Oct. 11,1972
Intramural
Th I 1 Touch Football season
I. und r ....8) with three undeleat
d learns teadmg the way.
La l year's university chamPiOns.the
hoon rs, got off 10 a
good tart WIIb a 21-t~ vic tory
over B A new learn is out in
ront In the wm column, however,
lhe Trout porI a 2-1)record.
er e led 1»' their flashy
runner Dean MatlOson. The other
undefeated team is the Pink
FascI Is They combined the pinpolOlpasslOg
or Jack Swaru with
the hawk·l1ke delense 01 Fred
Z1 vers ror a 1!HlVlCtory over the
FOOIballTeam
andlng
Trout
hnon rs
Pink F ,IS
FOOIballTeam
BO
TwO Park Ide I Bowling
Leagues are forming that
tudent can Ign up for now.
Th Itrat league i being held at
endan Lan 10 Kenosha It
will be held every Monday at 9: 15
pm The OIld league WIll be
beld at uri Lanes, also in
Kenosha It "ill be held every
f'nday at 4 30 p.m.
Anyone Interested in joimng
elth r 01 th. leagues should
'Ill' up,.," at the P E Buildlng.
crt am lose
The Park Idt soccer team
wed liS rourlh game 01 the
son la I .....ednesday !Ught to
th !uka. or C'lucago Circle
Coli e,:l-2 It as a game 01
rgument and controversial
all • "hlch showed in the
lahst!c Par Ide commiUed 30
louis 10 Ollcago Circle's 37.
NOTICE
Jobs re Available ... !
For FREE inIonnation
on ludenc istance and
pia _nt program send
If-addressed STAMPED
envelope 10 the ational
Placemen I Regi Iry. 1001
I ldal10 St.. Kalispell.
MT S9901
o ,1\1\11
Porkside soccer coach Hal Henderson gives his team
some advice before recent game. The Porkside booters, fresh from
their first win of the season against UW-Milwaukee, "ill face UWPlatteville
here Saturday afternoon
o THE WEEKE D
Rooters win lst game
2·0
I ·0
1-0
0·2
0-2
The Uw-Parkslde soccer team
got its first win saturday in the
consolation game of the
Oktoberfest Soccer Tournament
as lhe Rangers dumped UW1i1waukee
&2.
Parkside had losl Friday to
otre Dame, 3-1,but the Rangers
rallied saturday and posted their
highest goal total of the year.
Rick Lechusz, Mike Jenrette,
Mike Nedeljkovic and Wayne
Shisler each scored one goal for
Parkside while Ray Phanturat
had two. Parkside held a 2-1)
halftime lead and a 4-2 lead with
13minutes to go, but the Rangers
exploded lor two goals in the final
13minutes to go, but the Rangers
exploded lor two goals in tbe final
13 minutes to put the game on ice.
Parkside is now 1·5--1on the
sea on and will face UWPlatteville
here Saturday aftemoon.
•
The Parkside cross country
team came up with one of its
better performances here
Saturday as it claimed a strong
third In the first annual
Oktoberfest Invitational.
Lucian Rosam, the sophomore
from Ceylon. tasted defeat lor the
first time this year but the loss
came against South Dakota
tate's Garry Bentley. a
delending NCAACoilege Division
1500-meter champ.
Bentley clocked 25:30 for the
rugged five mile route while Rosa
"as close behind al 25:37. Dan
Sols\ig or leam champ SDSU
grabbed third while all·American
Jim Drews of LaCrosse was
PIZZA KnCHEN
fourth and Parkstde s Dennis
Biel a strong fifth.
Other Ranger placers included
junior Jim McFadden in tenth,
freshman Sid Hyde in 24th. and
junior Keith Merritt in 25th.
Parkside will travel to the
otre Dame Invitational at South
Bend Friday. The meet attracts
most Midwestern teams and
should be a good test lor the
young Ranger team.
•
First place honors in the
Second Annual Oktoberlesl Gall
Tournament Saturday went to
orthern Illinois while UW·
Madison grabbed second and
Parkside was a strong third in the
is-note tourney at Petrifying
Springs.
Medalist honors went to Rick
Willems, of Parkside; Rick
Garcia of Northern Illinois
placed second; Steve Larsen,
also Irom Northern, placed third;
Phil Lohr from UW-Madison
finished fourth and Tom Bothe of
Parkside copped fifth.
Parkside's women's tennis
•
team placed first in the
Oktoberfest Tournament here
last Wednesday. The Rangers
had a score of 12. Whitewater
placed second with 10, Carthage
was third with 8 and Lawrence
finished last with no points.
Rangers Pat Kekic, Sue
Wanggard and Nicolet DeRose
all won their matches.
VAlEO'S
Chicken & Italian Sausage Bombers
Free Delifery to Parkside Village
son ItH11.... , ''',n, 6S1-S'"
Photo by Pal Nowak
---------- Jonathan Livingston
Seagull
Last Whole Earth Catalog
Politics of Heroin in S.E, Asia
The Prophet
Woodstock Craftsman's
Manual
Massage Book
The Rolling Stones
Having trouble locating these books? Well, search no
further than Martha Merrill's Bookstore. See us for
what's new in books - bestsellers, art, chess, novels,
reference works, crafts specialties, ad infinitum.
Look over our large selection of hard covers and
paperbacks - and take advantage of our fast special
order service.
M~N\~~ rs~t(Yta.J
~.Jw. f{(lJ;iA'& •
GI4-59t.hsr. 312-(;"""'$'1',.
6S8-3bf;?- 632-5195' ••
---_---•.
-------
...
--
••••••••••••••••••••••
Parkside
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT
STARTS OCT 16
Registration
Now thru Oct. 13
//-01
'Entry Fee 501
Apply now - Student Activities Office
Room D-197 LLC
,
..
sponsored by Parkside Activities Board
••••••••••••••••••••
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972
ntramural
NOTICE
2-0
1 • O
1 -0
O·
0-2
Parkside soccer coach Hal Henderson gives his team
some advice before recent gane. The Parkside booters, fresh from
their first win of the season against UW-Milwaukee, will face UWPlatteville
here Saturday afternoon Photo by Pat Nowak
D
Booter win lst game
Th \\'-Par 1de socc r team
first wm turdav in the
on olation game or the
to rfest Soccer Tournament
the Rangers dumped UWt1lwaukee
6-2.
Park ide had lo.st Friday to
, ·otr Dame, 3·1. but the Rangers
rall1t-d . turday and posted their
highest oal total of the ) ear.
Rick Lechusz, fike Jenrette,
hke . 'edeljkovic and Wayne
i ler each cored one goal for
Park 1de while Ray Phanturat
had two. Park ide held a 2--0
lftime lead and a 4-2 lead with
13 minutes to go, but the Rangers
ploded for two goals in the final
13 minutes to go, but the Rangers
ploded for two goal in the final
13 minutes to put the game on ice.
P rk ide i now 1·5-1 on the
on and will face \ ·
11 t ev11le here Saturday af-
• country
fourth and Parkside s Dennis
Biel a trong fifth.
Other Ranger placers included
Junior Jim tcFadden in tenth,
freshman Sid Hyde in 24th, and
junior Keith Merritt in 25th.
Parkside will travel to the
. ·otre Dame Invitational at South
Bend Friday. The meet attracts
mo.st fidwestern teams and
should be a good test for the
oung Ranger team.
•
First place honors in the
Second Annual Oktoberfest Golf
Tournament Saturday went to
, orthern Illinois while UWIadison
grabbed second and
Parkside was a trong third in the
HI-hole tourney at Petrifying
prings.
tedalist honors went to Rick
Willems, of Parkside; Rick
Garcia of Northern Illinois
placed second; Steve Larsen,
also from Northern, placed third;
Phil Lohr from UW-Madison
finished fourth and Tom Bothe of
Parkside copped fifth.
• Parkside's women's tennis
team placed first in the
Oktoberfest Tournament here
last Wednesday. The Rangers
had a score of 12. Whitewater
placed second with 10, Carthage
was third with 8 and Lawrence
finished last with no points.
Rangers Pat Kekic, Sue
Wanggard and Nicolet DeRose
all won their matches.
VALEO'$
PIZZA KffCHEN
Clllebn & Italian Sausage Bomhers
Frtt Delivery to Parkside Village
son 1°" ., •• , ,,,,n, 6S1-St9t
----------
Jonathan Livingston
Seagull
Last Whole Earth Catalog
Politics of Heroin in S.E. Asia
The Prophet
Woodstock Cr aftsm an 's
Manual
Massage Book
The Rolling Stones
Having trouble locating these books? Well, search no
further than Martha Merrill's Bookstore. See us for
what's new in books - bestsellers, art, chess, novels,
reference works, crafts specialties, ad infinitum.
Look over our large selection of hard covers and
paperbacks - and take advantage of our fast special
order service.
G14-59~St;
658-3b !;"2-
f{_ru;U'ZIJ., •
312.- 6-¼ 5-t, -
632-5195' -·
---
-------~-- -----·
••••••••••••••••••••• Parkside
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT
STARTS OCT 16
\
\
Registration
Now thru Oct. 13 / / -o, ·t ·ntry Fee so~
Appl Y no w - Student Ac tivities Office
Room D-197 LLC
sponsored by Parkside Activities Board
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 3, October 11, 1972
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1972-10-11
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
erwin zuehlke
george mcgovern
ken konkol
parkside activities board (PAB)
richard nixon
segregated fees
st louis jazz quartet
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/45b9138269c9baf657df3092c5c86e79.pdf
c55fd833b85231ea09e68f4f80dd33c7
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 6, issue 16
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Graffin recieves Kiekhofer Award
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
Graff in receives
Kiekhofer award
Walter R. Graffin, 35, an
assistant professor of English at
the University of Wisconsin-
Parkside, is among young
faculty members chosen from
throughout the UW System to
receive the 1972 Kiekhofer
awards of $1,000 each for
superior classroom performance.
Graffin received the award
Friday evening at a dinner
attended by members of the
Parkside humanities division,
which recommended Graffin
for the honor, the campus
teaching award committee,
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie and
other colleagues. Final selection
of recipients is made by an
all-UW System committee.
Graffin is the second
Parkside faculty members to
receive one of the outstanding
young teacher awards since the
program, which began at the
Madison campus in 1953, was
extended in 1970 to all campuses
of the university. Morris W.
(Continued on Page 6)
University of Wisconsin - Parkside free
Volume 6 Number 16 May 1, 1972
last sga meeting of semester
Loumos steps down from Meeting
by Ken Konkol
of the Newscope staff
The April 25th meeting of the
Parkside Student Senate saw a
diversity of items on the
agenda.
Motions made by Nancy
Robinson, corresponding
secretary, after a presentation
by Jim Twist on the WPS
Medical Insurance which would
be made available to students
during the next academic year.
Though this insurance, at a cost
of $87 per 12 month year, is
more than previously paid for
medical insurance, the increased
benefits far outweigh
the cost.
Included in the health
package are surgical,
diagnostic, and maternity
benefits. The policy is available
to students with carrying six
credits or more.
The motion: "That the
Parkside Student Government
Association participate in the
Wisconsin Physicians Service
student health insurance
program sponsored by the
United Council of University of
Wisconsin Student Governments."
passed unanimously
when quorum was established.
A second motion, "That a
coordinator be elected to
represent the Parkside Student
Government Association in all
matters regarding the student
health insurance problem,",
also passed unanimously and
Jim Twist was elected to fill the
post.
A final motion: "That a
representative(s) be elected to
officially represent the
Parkside Student Government
Association at the United
Council Winter and Spring
General assemblies at Stout
State University in Menominee
on May 5, 6, and 7.
1). That these representatives
be given full authority in terms
of voting powers to represent
the Student Government
Association on any matters that
call for a decision at the general
assemblies.
2). That travel, lodging, and
meals be paid for by the
Parkside Student Government
Association by means that are
availablel"
The motion passed 13-0-1 and
Jim Twist and Elaine Birch
were voted to attend the conference.
In commenting on the PSGA
sponsored Symposium, Dean
Loumos expressed his disappointment
in the way the
Campus Concerns Committee
was handling approval of funds,
and objected to the president
referring the matter to committee.
President Loumos further
expressed his feeling on the
matter when he turned the
meeting over to Jim Twist
saying he had had it. He also
stated that Bruce Volpintesta,
who was not present, had also
"had it." Danny Trotter,
treasurer, who ran for office on
the same ticket as Loumos and
Volpintesta, must also have had
it since he also was not present.
Upon taking over the
meeting, Jim Twist, with
Elaine Birch, clarified the
symposium plans. It was
generally agreed that the
Symposium committee try to
save as much of the planned
program as pos sible instead of
forgetting the whole thing which
had been suggested by
President Loumos.
The preceeding action took
place without a quorum,
quorum being established at
5:15 with the arrival of Mike
Lofton who had not been informed
of the meeting until
called when it was evident a
quorum was not present.
Upon establishing a quorum,
(Continued on Page 6)
•»..
PARKSIDE CHILD CARE CENTER
The Parkside Child Care Center will offer a special summer
session to begin June 19th. Registration will be held at the center
ST n,a n?: T }.P\m each day the week of May 8th through the
12th and will be limited to children up to age 5. The Center will be
open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., during the summer
session. For further information you may call Kenosha 658-3888 or
Racine 633-2931.
CAMPUS UNION BUILDING
f Thf £fmpus Union Building Committee has recently been
formed. The following members of the faculty, staff, and student
body form the committee: Student representatives include James
Lroxtord, John J. Grimes, and Patrick Moran; Staff, William
, ?r'AEJWin ?UeWke' and Philip Burnett! Faculty members
include Andrew McLean, John Murphy, and Barbara Jo Morris.
}he Co"1"1I"ee members welcome all suggestions by students,
taculty, and staff members in the planning of this vital building on
campus. &
THIRTEEN DOLLARS A COUPLE
The annual Varsity Club Awards Banquet and Dinner-Dance
will be held Saturday, May 6, at the Kenosha Holiday Inn. All
students, faculty and staff are invited.
Cost for the complete program, which includes a social hour,
dinner and dance, is six-fifty per person or thirteen dollars a
couple.
Tickets may be purchased at the athletics office on Wood Road.
Call 553-2246 for information.
CAREER INTEREST GROUPS
Beginning the week of May 1 a group will be started for
students who would like to learn more about their career related
interests. If you would like to join such a group, please call 553-2121,
extension K42, as soon as possible . Tell the secretary your name,
phone number and what hours would be most convenient for you to
meet. If you have any questions, please cal lus at the same number.
CHICAGO BORN ITALIAN RESIDENT TO TEACH
A painter and printmaker of international stature, Moishe
Smith, has been named a visiting associate professor of art- at
Parkside effective next September. Chicago-born Smith presently
lives in Rapallo, Italy.
He previously taught at Southern Illinois University and Stout
State University (presently UW-Stout) and has been a visiting
faculty member at UW-Madison, Ohio State University, Utah State
University and the University of Iowa.
A PLANNED WEEK
This week will be Academic Planning Week at Parkside.
The program, organized by the Parkside student counseling
staff and faculty, is designed to assist students in p lanning summer
and fall academic schedules, selecting majors and determining
career choices.
Group academic advising sessions a re scheduled in various
academic fields throughout the week for students who have not yet
selected a major. Students who already have selected a major are
being encouraged to confer with the academic adviser assigned to
them during the week.
LITERATURE AND FILM
Literature and Film: "Narration, Montage and You" is the
topic for the next Parkside Humanities Seminar. Dr. Robert Self of
Northern Illinois University will lecture and show several short
films in Greenquist room 101, Friday, May 5th, at two-thirty.
Mr. Self has been teaching film for years and has been
especially interested in the possibilities for teaching in a comparative
approach to literature and film.
His presentation will vocus on the narrative and verbal aspects
of literature, the visual demands and implications of
cinematography, and the socio-cultural significance of the two
media. There is no charge; all students are welcome.
itt subsidiary opposed Strike becomes a Boycott of Canteen
Discussion takes plac e at
Monday s t r i k e meeting .
by Jim Kq lo^n, editor
What began as an attempt to
initiate a student strike,
developed into a free lunch
program in the Activities
Building. Originally, the
Concerned Students Coalition
had planned to strike in protest
of the War. However, as it
turned out, their efforts were
channeled into a protest of the
Canteen Company which
provides food services to the
Activities Building.
During a Monday morning
Strike meeting in the Activities
Building, the plan for a free
lunch table was crystallized. It
was pointed out that the Canteen
Co. is owned by ITT, and as
such is implicated in the war
effort. Dean Loumos, SGA
President, said, "It's not
whether you boycott the
machine, it's that you know
they are owned by ITT."
The Monday morning planning
session was attended by
twenty students who agreed
with Loumos that "a true act of
anti-war sentiment would be to
boycott Canteen." Loumos
explained the boycott of Canteen
would represent a "constructive
action" as opposed to
a more dramatic strike.
Donations were gathered from
those attending the planning
session and by 12:15 a table had
been set up offering assorted
sandwiches and fruit.
Continuing through Wednesday,
the lunch table attracted
few faculty or students,
and though a few boycott
supporters stood up on tables to
explain the purpose of the free,
alternative lunch, few people
looked up.
Danny Trotter, an SGA officer
participating in the
boycott, said "though the
boycott may seem futile, it's a
start. You have to take some
kind of action, you just can't sit
around doing nothing." Few
people heeded his plea.
The al t e r n a t i ve lunch prograi
protestin g Canteen a nd |TT
May l, 1972 NEWS COPE Pag* 2
EpjtoRIAL
ran 'L'V revaa,ln9' and monotonously predictable conclusions
can be drawn from the first full week of Symposium activities
&J^aCt'^,eS r" t0 dr3W Very sP®c!alizeTaudiences;
the people interested in Wednesday's Women's Caucus programs
nterested in Thursday's VICC VCISD. Radical Politics Seminar, and
intpr^ln"mb€a^0: ^ pe0p,e (faculty' staff' students) are
interested in anything. The average attendance figure for each
event presented during the week approached ten. Though some
succassfu,,y Presented than others, quality had
materialize' quanitltV of attendance. The audience just didn't
notth^n^Tw"6.!1?01 ubiquitous 9ray daV apathy; maybe it's
thl h °nuf kn0W where they're at' more "ke it's simply
factor'" att«ndan^?ere *" 9°' ^ •
The Campus Concerns Committee recently rejected SGA's
proposal that the Revolutionary Youth Movement, and the
Wisconsin Alliance people who participated in the Radical Politics
Seminar, be paid a small gratuity for their efforts
The reason given: RYM and the Alliance represent "political"
groups and therefore cannot be paid for speaking on campus.
wh« lm 1 nter*sf 1 n9» and not entirely irrelevant, that Julian Bond,
nn m Q^f a-ne Student Union's Symposium program
n 5uW eCelve$2'000forhiseffortsfrom Lecture and Fine
^,'i ®°ndh.f'°f cou"e' a 9reater nationwide fame based on his
sn!!thf>rn i u3 e 68 D®mocratic Convention, and in
southern politics. He is a public political figure; possibly the fact
«iomathiaP^eaHanCf*!S funded throu9h Lecture and Fine Arts has
something to do with this seeming incongruity.
Perhaps the rub is not just the word "politics" or "political"
bu the word "radical". Perhaps the difference befween radical
asfrfh,3 ,C°nVen,l0nal P°",iCS is ,he ,ac,or dictating the
distribution of money. Of course, there's nothing new here.
frl£0'S
Letters to the Editor Jff
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Cash and Carry Prlctson Oil Filters,
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All Items Subject to 4 Par Ont Sales Tax
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE
Turk stops flood
April 25,1972
To th e Editor:
When Robert Flood, in his
missive to the Voice, showed us
that he had missed the message
in the movie, "The Godfather,"
I was sorry. But when your
reviewer seemed to have
missed it also, I felt obligated to
clear it up.
If you are going to discuss a
movie with any degree of intelligence,
it is suggested that
you see all of it first. The
message was in the very
beginning, with the little old
man who had determined to live
by the rules, by law and order,
and to stay clear of the dirty
hands of the Mafia. But the poor
fellow learned that justice does
not always prevail, and to right
a grievous wrong had been
forced to get help from the
Godfather.
The message is just as
relevant today — i.e . McCarthy
who couldn't get a peace
platform in '68, or his followers
who could not even speak
because their microphones
were turned off. We have all
learned that, though violence
isn't much of an answer,
seeking justice through
peaceful means doesn't do
much either.
And so we have the usual
problems that stay usual every
year . , . an administration
overstocked with expensive
administrators who run the
university for themselves and
not the students or faculty... a
school that will not support a
newspaper unless it is a rubber
stamp for their propaganda,
and on and on.
Sex was such a minor part of
the movie that I am a bit
amazed at # Mr. Flood's
anguished cries ... I don't
think he's ready for anything as
dull as "Love Story" either.
He'd better just stay home and
lock the doors. But I'm indebted
to Mr. Flood. "Sex is a sacred
act," he said. Surely does
relieve my mind, so that's what
those bells are that I keep
hearing!
I would suggest that perhaps
the "Godfather" . is popular
because the distraught citizens
who attempted to gain peace
through the regular channels
are at the movie looking for
other answers. We've tried to
get out of Vietnam and dispose
of local dictators with every
method short of that.
I realize that you are short of
copy, but do we have to put up
with such long letters, such as
last week's offering from some
fellow who never has had
anything to say, but keeps on
saying it. We'd all be ahead if
you would just leave the space
blank.
Mrs. Genevieve Turk
senator
answers
gruhl
Dear Editor:
Last week saw another of
those infrequent and unmissed
missives by Art Gruhl generally
condemning our hard working
student senate as a bunch of
bureaucratic misfits.
I have a few things to say to
Mr. Gruel regarding , his instance
that the student senate is
unrepresentative since it was
elected by only 17 per cent of the
student body.
I say this to Mr. Gruhl: Your
Student Senate is the duly
elected body of the students of
the University of Wisconsin-
Parkside and the fact that only
17 per cent of those students
voted only means that 83 per
cent of the students aren't worth
shit when it comes to expressing
a political preference. Did YOU
vote, Mr. Gruhn?
As to his comments about
paying taxes, that can only be
taken as a bunch of crud since
just about everyone does the
same be they hard working
businessmen like Mr. Gruhl or
outspoken short-haired radicals
like myself who are trying their
best to get an education.
I, unlike Mr. Gruhl, do not pay
my 'own' tuition. For this I
depend strictly upon scholarships
and $175 a month from a
grateful government paid me
through the Veteran's Administration.
I did have a job
once, but it interfered with my
academic planning. My only
'job' now is with the Naval
Reserve.
As to the entertainment Mr.
Gruhl derides so nicely:
Someone should inform Mr.
Gruhl that the money for such
entertainment is budgeted
through the State of Wisconsin
and given to the Activities
Board which must use it all up
or give it back.
The Activities Board is
strictly controlled by the Administration
of this University
even to the extent of having its
members appointed and then
denied even a vote on the
committee.
It's too bad Mr. Gruhl that
you are denied the opportunity
to express yourself to the PAB,
which should have been
disbanded long ago in favor of
the more representative and
duly elected Student Union
Committee of the Parkside
Student Senate. Your Student
Senate, Mr. Gruhl. If you have
any complaints on the way the
show is run bring them yourself
to the off office of YOUR Senate
and we will try to help you with
them.
Instead of crying to his
friendly recognised student
newspaper which is subsidized
by his friendly Student
Government Association of
which he is a member, Mr.
Gruhl could be useful to us on
some Student Senate committee
or other, thus putting that
vehemence of his into a constructive
channel.
So, Mr. Gruhl, come on down
and have a tale with your
representatives. Instead of
rapping Dean and the rest of t he
Senate in the paper, rap with
them in person. Though if you
want to dh so with me you will
have to do so before I depart on
the little journey I have coming
up on the orders of the U.S.
Navy. (Even student radicals
can have that little regarded
emotion of patriotism.)
Yours,
Kenneth R. Konkol, Senator
Parkside Student Government
Association
senior reflects
on uwp
To the Students,
I have been a student at
Parkside for four years now and
graduate next month and I feel
at least a little qualified to state
some experiences during my
time here and some opinions on
them I have been fortunate, or
equally unfortunate, to watch
Parkside grow in some areas
and conversely die in others, as
u has gone from a University
Extension to a University of
Wisconsin. Aside from just
being "around here" for four
years 1 have been on a number
of student committees, a
member of the Athletic Board
oMwo P?SitW°years' President
of two clubs, and have worked
AAtthhlewti c ^Dlethp armtmemebnetr. s of the
I have: gotten chased by two
Parkside cops all the way to
Racine because a friend and I
took a wrong road on campus
during a blizzard (even though
they tried to run us off the road
they failed to get us) . . . sden
three different sets of roads on
this campus and their accompanying
sets of pot holes
. . . Been thrown out of a dance
by Tony T. for still unknown
reasons . . . easily come to the
conclusion that Arthur M. Gruhl
is full of sh-t . . . seen Wyllie
spend $5,000 on sod around
Tallent and Greenquist Halls
only to have it torn up less than
a year later (he refused to have
it used for a soccer field which
was needed at the time) .
seen some blonde woman
walking around the Student
Union for 3 years and never do a
goddamn thing except make
money off the students ....
been with a friend as the
Parkside cops towed away his
car during class because it
stalled on the side of the "road"
and then wanted him to pay
$41.00 to get it back . . . never
found Donald Gunderson in his
office (try the Library
newsstand) . . . had the "files"
pulled out on me and consequently
2 days later had a
parking ticket appeal, which I
submitted over four months
earlier, denieii . . . and the
terrible misfortune of having to
take a class with Harry Copipock
. . . wondered why the building
where the administration has
its offices is called Tallent when
they show so much lack of it
. . . and finally, I have been
falsely accused of fighting and
brawling in the Student Union
by some of the Administration.
I could go on but I think you
get the point I am trying to
make. That is, as a student at
Parkside you are going to be
faced with all kinds of shit from
the administration, faculty, and
cops. Don't get me wrong, I'm
not tearing down the school.
Parkside has great potential
and I want to see it developed,
but it's the things and the people
I mentioned and experienced
that are choking Parkside to
death. I have had good times at
Parkside, too, especially with
the Athletic Department and
S.G.A. and it is through these
and similar organizations I
suggest you work in to better,
Parkside. It's your school, not
the faculty's or the, administration's,
so make it the
way you want it to be. And then
in the future it will be a school
where you, as well as myself,
will be more proud to have
graduated from.
Peter J. Habetler, Jr.
"Don't believe everything you read."
Jim Koloen, "Red" Widely, Paul
Lomartire, Brian Ross, Cleta
Skovronski, Bob Mainland, Mike
Kite, Gary Jensen, Wolfgang
Salewski, Mike Stevesand, Andrew
Schmelling, Ken Konkol, Kathy
Rasch, Tom Paradise
PHONES:
Editorial
Business
553-2496
553-2498
Newscope is an independent
student newspaper composed by
student* of thte University of
Wisconsm-Parkside published
weekly except during vacation
periods. Student obtained advertising
funds are the sole source of
revenue for the operation of
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed
and distributed throughout Ihe
Kenosha and Racine communities
as well as the University. Free
copies are available upon request.
Deadline for all manuscripts and
photographs submitted to Newscope
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to
publication. Manuscripts must be
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited
manuscripts and
photographs may be reclaimed
within 30 days after the date of
submissio, after which they become
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The
Newscope office is located In the
Student Organizations building,
intersection of Highway A and Wood
Road.
I*-***4*.***MUttVlMPMW******** "*»«r**•««*•*' AT A .*<.*•»-» * * *
OUTER LIMITS
Parkside Activities Board
Presents a REAL Road Rallye
"Head Your Car to the "
May 7
Registration at Noon — 1st Car Out l :00 PM
$5.00 Registration Fee — includes Driver and Navigator
Tallent Hall Parking Lot
After the competition and Dust Subsides
Relax at our party — Beer & Food
Parkside and Wisconsin ID required
Page 3 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972
Radical Political Organizing
SGA Meeting by Jim Koioen, Editor
Thursday night's segment of
the Parkside Student Government
Symposium, "Radical
Political Organizing" began
late, and was attended by few.
Paul Soglin, the Madison City
Councilman, did not speak. His
absence was explained by
PSGA President Dean Loumos
as due to a searies of events in
Madison that demanded his
presence.
Members of the Wisconsin
Alliance, a political party from
Madison, and representatives of
the Revolutionary Youth
Movement from Racine
outlined their philosophies and
programs.
Spokesmen for Wisconsin
Alliance explained their activities
in organizing workers
and farmers in the Madison
area. Representing various
committees in the Alliance, the
four Madisonites explained the
goals of the Alliance as a
"working people's party" which
assists in organizing people
from the "bottom up". One
speaker pointed out that the
union leadership "can be as
bureaucratic as management",
and thus not represent the true
feelings of the rank and file.
After briefly outlining the
history of the Alliance, which
was formed in 1968, two spokesnen
from RYM presented an
PENAL
Kicking off Symposium 1972,
the Cellblock Circus Players
performed a series of short skits
which one of the players
characterized as "examples of
the kind of humor that goes
over really well in the institutions."
The troupe performed
before an audience
whose size was to be seen as
characteristic of the week-long
Symposium activities; small
and specialized.
The four women and one man
who make up the Cellblock
Players presented six skits,
including "Pedro", a "pet
rock," with which the player
quickly knocked herself out;
"Hopscotch", about a cop who
attempts to bust some kids for
holding an illegal assembly on
the sidewalk; "Hey, Bill,"
about a man who discovers his
girl isn't "safe"; and "Factory
Song" sung to the tune of "I've
Urban League and SSSSSSSS
Project Acceptance
Women's
Day of Symposium
poetry and play readings
by Gary Jensen
of the Newscope staff
Three people dedicated to
helping the needy in Racine met
Tuesday, April 25, at the
Whiteskellar. They presented
the facts of their presently
existing programs to an
audience of six or seven.
Ray Matthews, Associate
Director of the Racine Urban
League, was the first to speak..
He informed the meager
audience that the Racine Urban
League was part of a national
urban league. There are 106
local affiliates of their league in
46 cities. It is presently funded
by private citizens and the
Department of Labor. One of his
hopes, he said, is to get minority
groups into jobs as skilled
apprentices.
The Southside Revitalization
Organization was represented
by Terry Ludimon. The S.R.O.
recently began being funded by
the federal government. They
are presently occupied with the
rebuilding of Racine's south
side. Ludiomon also said they
hope to buy small industries for
the south side community. This
would provide jobs for the
people.
Jean Manley from Urban
Concern told about her experiences
working with ACenter,
the detention home, and
the city jail. This is all part of
"Project Acceptance," which
was formed to help prisoners fit
back into society. Urban
Concern is funded solely by
private donations and churches.
During his presentation,
Ludimon suggested that
students become directly involved;
paint a poor person's
house; clean a blind person's
house, he suggested.
Matthews said the Racine
Urban League can always use
new people since it is a membership
organization, supported
only by volunteers. Jean
mentioned that Father Williams
needs students in the research
area.
At the end there was a
question-answer period in
which students asked the group
various questions about the
progress of the aforementioned
organizations.
The poetry reading, held in
the Whiteshellar at 7:30 was
presented by Carol Vopat, an
English instructor. Included in
her selections were poems from
Sandra Hoffman, Denise
Levertov, Nikki Johavic, Ann
Sexton and Sylvia Plath.
Ms. Vopat provided a good
interpretation of the "Women's
poems," whose themse included
abortion, seduction, menstruaticn,
childbirth. The
general ambiance of the poems
was either celebration or
poignant sadness, a dejection
culminating in Plath's poetry of
tragedy and venom.
The audience at the poetry
reading outnumbered the
participant ten to one,
representing a 66 per cent
upswing in attendance over the
play readings.
analysis of the "system" in
historical terms. The RYM
member posited as an apriori
premise the statement that.
"America is the most racist
country in the history of the
world." He concluded that the
failure tp deal with racism has
historically prevented
meaningful change in the U.S.
Speaking briefly on what
radical politics means, the
RYM representative equated it
with change. The RYM speaker
later outlined the various
programs his organization has
initiated in Racine. Concentrating
on the Near North
Side, he explained, "We have
put together survival programs
for the oppressed and poor
people living in this area."
"Only by getting the community
together," he continued,
"can we survive."
The meeting ended with a
question and answer period.
INSTITUTIONS
been working on the Railroad"
with lyrics like "some one in the
factory is dying, hoping a fresh
wind blows."
The Cellblock Circus Players
has performed at the
Manhattan House of Detention
for Men, disaffectionately
nicknamed the "Tombs" by its
inmates, and at many state
penal institutions including
Green Bay, Waupun and the
Milwaukee House of Correction.
Following the presentation of
the skits, a discussion ensued
which included short presentations
by Jack Jude, a
representative of Project Acceptance,
and Jerry Gonzales, a
former convict and addict.
Jude explained the function of
Project Acceptance, characterizing
it as a vehicle for
community involvement with a
philosophy similar to the Big
Brother and Sister
organizations. The attitude of
the group, Jude said, leads to
the belief that "jail as a form of
rehabilitation is defunct,"
adding that the "institution
squelches the individual."
Gonzales drew the analogy of
prison as "a bug which goes in
one ear and eats his way
through to the other ear. On the
way it lays millions of eggs all
over the brain."
He told the audience that
when a person is released from
prison, he needs "a place to stay
for at least two months, clothes
and a minimum of $30 a week"
in order to readjust himself to
the world and find employment.
Currently, he explained, a
released prisoner is left
basically to his own resources,
and without the necessities as
he outlined, he is easily forced
back into crime.
As part of the "Women's
Day" activities of the SYMPOSIUM,
the Parkside
Women's Caucus produced both
a play reading and a poetry
reading. The play readings,
held in the Whiteskellar at 3:30,
featured Claire Booth Luce's
"Doll's House 1970" and Sylvia
Plath's "Three Women".
Ms. Luce's play, which unfortunately
is yawningly
didactic and evidences little
dramatic merit, was capably
read by Pam Nekich and'Ted
Paone. The tract involves a
dialogue between a couple
married for ten years, and
analyzes the reason behind the
wife deserting her husband in
order to become a human being.
Tough both participants
presented a good reading, little
could be done to compensate for
the play's lack of merit; the
dialogue, as written, has little
relationship to the way people
really speak: Propagandizing is
not necessarily an art form.
The final reading was from
Sylvia Plath's "Three Women,"
a poem for three voices. The
three women were presented by
Debby Friedell, Becky Ecklund
and Rebecca Cook, One voice
represented a mother about to
give a natural childbirth;
another echoed a woman about
to have a miscarriage following
a series of miscarraiges; and
the third voice was that of a
college girl about to have a child
which she plans to put up for
adoption.
Sylvia Plath, a poet who
committed suicide at the age of
30, afforded the readers with
decidedly poetic material, as
opposed to the staid didacticism
of the tractition Luce. The three
readers presented a good interpretation
of the material;
Rebecca Cooks' rendering
especially good.
The audience tied the participants
with six members
each.
May l, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 4
SGA meeting
(Continued from Page 1)
Ken Konkol made a motion that
the roll be taken for the purpose
of having it as part of the
minutes, something which had
not been previously made. The
motion passed.
Members present: Dean
Loumos, President, Becky
Ecklund, Recording Secretary,
Nancy Robinson, Corresponding
Secretary, Senators
Michael Baxter, Jerry Murphy,
Mike R. Harris, Elaine M.
Birch, Kenneth R. Konkol, Mike
Lofton, Mark Barnhill, Ken
Martin, James Twist, Dale
Martin, Jim Bielefeldt, and
Tom Taskonis, another late
arrival.
A motion on a request by
Z.P.G. for $100 for establishing
an information center on birth
control methods and contraceptive
devices with a future
outlook toward a V.D. clinic
passed 12-2.
A motion to reimburse
Carmen Nute of the Latino
Student Coalition for expenses
of $36.20 incurred while attending
two Latino oriented
conferences passed 10-3.
A motion to provide $200 for
fencing for the Day Care Center
passed by 9-4-2.
At this time a question arose
as to whether the Student
Organizations Account, which
had had $1,700 in it before the
Symposium planning which
would cost an estimated $1,200,
and other disbursements had
been made, now had any money
left in it at all. Since the
treasurer was unavailable, the
question remained unresolved.
Mike Lofton, Chairman of the
Academic Policies Committee,
spoke on the standardized
TEACHER EVALUATION
FORM prepared by that
committee consinsting of Lofton
and Senators Birch, Bielefeldt
and Konkol.
Though the meeting started
breaking up for 6:00 classes, the
committee got the go ahead to
disburse the form to faculty
members for consideration at
the May 2 Faculty Senate
meeting.
Graffin receives award
(Continued from Page 1
Firebaugh, an associate
professor of physics at UW-P,
received one of the first four allcampus
awards in 1970.
The awards are named for
William Kiekhofer, late UW
professor of economics, and are
funded from a grant established
to perpetuate his teaching
ideals, candidates must be
under 36.
Graffin was graduated from
Milwaukee North Division High
School, received his B.S. and
M.A. degrees at UW-Madison,
did additional graduate work at
Indiana University and was
awarded his Ph.D. degree at
Madison.
Before joining the Parkside
faculty in 1968, he taught for
three years at Northwestern
University.
His current teaching includes
a section devoted to
contemporary problems in
P a r k s i d e ' s i n n o v a t i v e
American language program,
an English course in contemporary
literature and a
humanities course titled
"Background of the Arts: 20th
Century," which he developed
with Peter Martin of the
English faculty.
Graffin also is chairman of
the American language
program committee and is
active as a lecturer for PREP
(Parkside Resource Enrichment
Professors), a project in
which faculty members act as
visiting lecturers in area high
schools.
He was among lecturers for
the recent Capsule College for
Women at UW-P and has spoken
on a variety of literary topics
before community groups.
He is co-editor of a volume of
contemporary readings for
college level English classes,
"Perspectives for the 70's,"
publiched by Dodd, Mead in
1971.
He was elected to Phi Beta
Kappa as an undergraduate and
is a member of the Modern
Language Association.
Last spring he was among
four UW-P professors cited for
honorable mention as
distinguished teachers at
Parkside.
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— HERBERT KUBLY
"WONDERFUL FOOD"
~ SENATOR PROXM|R£_
18 hour film
marathon at
vogue
On Saturday and Sunday,
May 6th and 7th, SGA will
present the penultimate activity
of Symposium 1972. An 18 hour
long film festival is planned to
begin at 6 PM Saturday at the
grave site of the Vogue Theater,
1820 - 52nd Street, Kenosha.
Admission is $1.00 and inexpensive
food and refreshments
will be served. Many surprises
are currently being planned to
keep people awake and alert as
the marathon film session runs
its 18 hour cinematic gamut of
underground, foreign, and old
classic flicks.
Included in the list of films to
be shown are such old standbys
as "Horse Feathers" starring
the inimitable Marx Brothers;
the Great Nose's "Hurry!
Hurry!" and "The Great
Chase"; Laurel and Hardy's
"Perfect Day", as well as
Chaplin's "Essanay" films. For
swashbuckling fans, Errol
Flynn's "Captain Blood" will be
shown.
Other, more contemporary
fare includes such peppery
classics as "Salt of the Earth";
the controversial "Pledge of
Allegiance"; "Brand X"
starring Taylor Mead, Ultra
Violet and Abbie Hoffman; and
"Right On".
Rounding out the list will be a
3-D flick entitled "Eyes of Hell'
the proletarian "Day of the
Painter", the revealing "Apple
Thieves", "Parque-Year of the
Tanks", the prosaic "La Vita -
Life in a Tin Can", "Spider
Elephant", "1001 Arabian
Nights" and "Dead of the
Night".
The film festival is open to the
public.
SYMPOSIUM 1972
A BON VOYAGE TO RACINE CAMPUS
On Friday, May 5, beginning about 5 PM, a "Going Away",
party will be held for and at the Racine campus. Featured at this
event will be three rock bands; "Canyon", "Speedy Cookin' " and
"Blood Money".
Weather permitting, the party planners hope to hold the party
outside, on the Racine Campus' patio, overlooking Lake Michigan.
Next year, the campus will become part of the Racine Technical
Institute.
THEATRE X
An • Exc iting theatrical revue of satire, improvisation and
experiment will be featured when UWP presents Milwaukee's
Theatre X. The ensemble company will present X Communication.
Curtain time is 8 PMat the Activities building on Tuesday, May 2.
Admission is free.
A collective touring ensemble, which has recently performed
before Kenosha audiences at Carthage College and the Vogue
Theater, Theatre X has won both popular and critical acclaim for
more than 175 performances in 60 locations since its founding two
years ago.
X COMMUNICATION is a collage of changing and growing,
short original pieces created by the Theatre X company members.
The program runs the theatrical gamut of co ntent and style, and
features spontaneous company improvisations utilizing situations
drawn from audience suggestions.
There will be only one performance.
Pre-Law Club: Sex Panel
As part of the Symposium
activities, the UWP Pre-Law
Club will sponsor a panel
discussion Wednesday, May 3,
at Greenquist 103. The topic will.
be "Should Private Sex Between
Concenting Adults be
Legalized?"
The discussion panel includes
Waukesha County District
Attorney Richard McConnell;
Racine Attorney Jay Schwartz;
Kenosha State
Assemblyman Eugene Dorff;
and the Rev. Gergory Spitz, a
Kenosha St. Joseph high school
teacher. Also sitting on the
panel will be a prostitute and a
homosexual.
District Attorney McConnell
recently gained notoriety for his
opposition to the controversial
sex education program sponsored
by the Unitarian Church.
Jay Schwartz is a well-known
Racine attorney who ran for
state attorney general a few
years ago.
The panel discussion in
Greenquist 103\vill begin at 7:30
PM. After the discussion an
informal social gathering
replete with refreshments will
be held in the Whiteskellar. All
UWP faculty, staff and students
are invited to attend and continue
discussion with panel
members on a one to one basis.
CLARIFICATION:
Last week's NEWSCOPE
included a story on the new bar
in the Activities Building. It was
mistakenly reported that two
upright coolers cost $2,900 each.
This should be amended to
approximately $2,200 for
everything, not as stated in
NEWSCOPE. Don't believe
everything you read.
. ^OMEGRAD SCHOOLS
ARE MORE CHALLENGING
THAN OTHERS. It's graduation day and
there you stand... diploma
in hand and future in doubt.
You could go on to graduate
school.Or you could look for
a job in today's ever-tightening
job market. Or,you could
put your education to work
immediately by applying for
the Air Force's OfficerTraining
School program.
Upon qualification,
you'll find yourself beginning
12 weeks of specialized
study designed to prepare
you for the challenge and
responsibilities of an officer's
commission. And, give you
the chance to go on to flight
school to earn those famous
silver wings as an Air Force
pilot or navigator.
OTS is your chance to
break away from the crowd
and be recognized. For all the
facts, mail in the coupon. Or,
call 800-631-1972 toll free:
Remember,with an Air
rorce future, the sky's no
imit. * In New Jersey call 800-962-2803.
TDfRHIAmRATEcR^?»U1TINGSERV1CE «•«!
Please send me more information on Air Force OTS. I
i Name.
. Address
j Date of Birth. I City
| State
-Sex.
-County.
| Date of Graduation —School.
j I understand there is no obligation. |
ij^dyo^jf in theAirFbrce.j
Awards To VanWilliganfO'Rourke Page 5 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972
An anthropologist and an
engineer are the 1972 winners of
outstanding teaching awards of
$500 each at the University of
Wisconsin-Parkside. The
awards are'funded by a grant'
from the Standard Oil (Ind.)
Foundation and will be formally
presented at commencement
exercises on May 28.
The winners are John Van
Willigen, assistant professor of
anthropology, and Michael J.
O'Rourke, engineering science
instructor. Cited for honorable
mention as distinguished
teachers were LeRoy Cougle,
assistant professor of business
management, and Chong-maw
Chen, assistant professor of lif e
science.
They were selected by the
c ampu s f a c u l t y - s t u d e n t
teaching awards committee
chaired by Prof. Herbert Kubly
on the basis of nominations
submitted by students.
Van Willigen, 33, joined the
Parkside faculty in September,
1970, after teaching at the
University of Arizona, where he
also completed work for his
Ph.D.
John Van Willigen
As an anthropologist and as a
teacher, Van Willigen has interested
himself in the impact
of industrialization on the
problems of urban industrial
society, the area of stu dy which
constitutes Parkside's special
educational mission.
He presently is teaching two
courses in introductory anthropology
and a course in
culture and technological
change. He also was one of tw o
UW-P anthropologists who led a
study-field trip to Mexico
during the spring semester
break to study Mexican culture
News Briefs
DRUG TESTS AT CENTRAL STATE U.
(CPS) —Ohio's Central State University has begun mandatory
urinalysis with registration to weed out hard drug users, after two
drug-related shootings shook the campus several weeks ago.
Students at the predominantly black school requested the tests
and the regents approved, "to change CSU's reputation as a drug
haven in Ohio."
READER-OWNED PAPER IN IDAHO?
(CPS) — The Intermountain Observer in Boise, Idaho, is
selling shares to its readers in that state to raise $30,000 by th e end
of April.
The paper, written and printed on the University of Idaho
campus, hopes to buy its way out of a local broadcasting firm and
become a self-supporting journal of a dvocacy by 1973. It would be
the first totally reader-owned paper in the country.
MITCHELL SPEAKS OUT
(CPS) — "My dear, don't you realize that you can take a real
trip in marijuana. . . These stupid jerks who smoke the stuff don't
realize what they're getting themselves into. Now that we've
stopped the flow of the milder stuff in the United States, they're
going outside the country, and now the pushers are importing the
cannabis plant from other countries. The same kind of stuff the
opium smokers use. It's hashish, and you can really become addicted
to it." — for mer Attorney General John Mitchell to Kandy
Stroud, a reporter for Women's Wear Daily, at a cocktail party.
EAGLE FOUND SHOT
(CPS) — A mature golden eagle has been found shot to death in
Wyoming with a note tied to its legs with barbed wire. The note
read: "To the continued safety of the flocks of Wyoming, for he died
that the lambs may grow."
and history.
He has just been elected a
fellow of the American Anthropological
Association and is
also a member of Sigma Xi, the
Tibet Society and the
Association for Asian studies.
O'Rourke, 25, also came to
Parkside in fall, 1970, and
presently is teaching a course in
electromechanics, mechanical
vibrations and introducting to
computing mechanics in the
School of Modern Industry,
which implements Parkside's
industrial society mission.
O'Rourke also has been
selected as a participant in a
National Science Foundation
Summer Institute, on structural
design, an interaction program
between educators and practitioners,
to be held July 10
through August 4 at Illinois
Institute of Technology.
He received his M.S.C.E. and
Ph.D. degrees at Northwestern
University and brings to the
classroom experience from
both industrial and academic
posts.
He is a member of T au Beta
Phi, Chi Epsilon and the
Michael O'Rourke
American Society of Civil
Engineers.
Cougle teaches courses in
emp l o y e e e v a l u a t i o n ,
behavioral science and decision
making in the management
science division of th e School fo
Modern Industry, and is a
Loyola University Ph.D.
Chen, who is teaching
bioscience and plant
physiology, received his Ph.D.
at Kansas University and did
postdoctoral work at the
National Cancer Institute of
Canada and the Roche Institute
af M olecular Biology.
the tyinedt
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FOR SALE —1948 Ford, 6cyl. 2 door
in good cond. Call after 6 at 654-6485.
for this S450 value.
FOR SALE — '62 Comet, 6 cyl. $125.
Call 652-5904 or 654-3429.
FOR SALE —Guitar MARTIN D-18,
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FOR SALE: White panne velvet
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FOR SALE — '68 VW, sunroof, good
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P E Turntable. SHURE high track
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1970 Nova, 350 V-8, two barrel,
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contact Jim at 553-2496 or at the
Newscope office.
PERSONALS
WANTED - Writers, iournalists,
production staff and ad men to take
over a college newspaper. Must be
housebroken, learn while you earn
when you can. Ph. 553-2496 or 553-
2498. Ask for anybody or come in
person to the Newscope office,
corner of Wood Rd. and Hwy. A.
Gay Youth Coalition: Anyone interested,
or having any questions or
problems they would like to discuss,
please call 634-4470.
HOUSEWORK HELPER — early
June for about a week, pay open. Ph.
554-8517.
WANTED — a student volunteer to
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JUST IN TIME FOR MOTHER'S
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looks like Sylvester the Cat; 1 Gray
Tiger Stripe Male - big eyes and a
loud pur; 1 Brown Tiger Stripe Male
• the friendliest kitten. All come with
white boots, stomachs and faces.
Cost: only a little love. Call 633-8162
any time, but hurry.
Go Go Girls wanted', top wages.
Pussy Cat Lounge, 633-3805, Racine.
Babysitter and light house work,
afternoons and evenings, full or part
time. Please call 632-3785.
WANT TO TRADE Men's 21"
bicycle frame - Reynolds 531. With to
trade for larger, comparable frame -
would consider selling. Ph. 657-3046.
TYPING done. Experienced. Ph.
552 877.
ROMEMATE WANTED — Girl to
share apt. in June, a mile from the
Kenosha campus. 3 rooms. Ph. 652-
1486, between 12 - 2, 652-5904.
May l, 1972 NEWSCOPE Paget
by Paul Lomartire
HOLIDAY IN N AND
RUBY II
It took me a day and a half to
find Eating Out, and when I did,
I found him on some kinda' trip.
It seems that the dentist he
hadn't seen in six months told
him his teeth were fine, but he
was too fat.
Eating Out was depreseed, it
took a real sales pitch to get him
out to review double the normal
amount of restaurants. "C'mon,
man, we've got three places to
do before NEWSCOPE is a
thing of the past." '
Maggie was gathered up, and
the three of us slid into
Kenosha's melting pot of
prepared food.
The first stop on a Thursday
night, a little after nine, was the
local Holiday Inn. I had to
convince Eating Out that this
coast to coast, global Chain
didn't contribute directly to
"the Big Viet Squirmish", the
"Commie Caper". I told him it
didn't to my limited knowledge,
just don't drink a Coke.
The only reason I took the
entourage there was because a
former Parkside student and
Kenosha track superstar, Tom
Young, worked there.
The ex-student mans the night
kitchens, preparing items like
hamburger delights, Reuben
sandwiches, Norsman halibut
steak, T-Bones, Kansas City
Sirloins, lobster, frog legs . . .
and so on.
Word had gotten to the food
desk to the effect that ole Tom
was whippin' up some fine food.
So, by a three to nothing vote, it
was off to the Southport Room.
Eating Out and I each had a
steak sandwich (2.65) while
Maggie was drawn to a Rueben
sandwich (1.95) by the well
worded menu. The real test was
on the shoulders of the former
fleetfoot. As Eating Out put it,
"Can one successfully make the
transition from cinder to tile?"
He did, at least last Thursday
night. The steak sandwich
wasn't the usual scrawny,
grizzly, stringy piece of poorly
cooked meat. We each ate big,
juicy, cooked to perfection
steaks, plump, placed atop a
throne of toast.
Maggie decided the Rueben
was good enough to serve Al
Kooper, Norman Mailer,
Barbara Striesand, el Rico
Dorfman, Sandy Koufax, Bob
Dylan, Sammy Davis, or even
good enough to bury with Lenny
Bruce. A Rueben can't be given
a higher recommendation to my
way of thinking-writing.
PAB Presents
PARAMOUNT P ICTURES PRESENTS
Ali MacGraw-Ryan O'Neal
A HOWARD G.MINSKY- ARTHUR HILLER Production
John Marley & Ray Milland ERO SEGAL ARTHUR HILLER
fcoduefetd bby* {f iflecruultivn#t PPrrrovd4u,c.re«ri MUu.s.i.c. Scored bk.*
HOWARD G.MINSKY D AVID GOLDEN FRANCIS LAI A PARAMOUNT M
I SOUNO TRACK At BUM AVAILABLE ON PARAMOUNT RECOUPS I [PPl
May 5, 8 PM 100 min.
Student Activities Building
Parkside 8. Wisconsin ID required
While eating and talking to
Tom, I found out Josie worked
there, one of the waitresses on
the Eating Out All Star Team,
and in the Eating Out Hall of
Fame. Josie Speed Queen, one
of the friendliest workers in the
frenzied, freaked-out food
world.
Tom Young and the other
night shift workers had won our
stomachs at the Holiday Inn,
and the three of us recommend
the food prepared by Tom, and I
suggest stopping by in the
morning to see Josie.
That was' it, we couldn't
return for a second visit to
really give the Inn a twice-over,
no time. With a staff of two
writers covering all the beats,
regular columns, and all else, I
had to hustle my associates
home for rest so we could take
on another deserving eatery.
On to Ruby II, at the site of
the defunct George Webb
franchise. The Ruby Brothers
have expanded to the west, they
run the all-night restaurant
painted purple on Roosevelt
Road. Kenosha night life never
had it so interesting.
Along with a sharp waitress
named Marie, we enjoyed
cheeseburgers, Damon Runyon
characters, and the jukebox.
The Ruby Boys, along with
their army of workers-nonworkers,
are always ready to
listen to any ideas concerning
the betterment of their
restaurants. They are unique
this way. Besides talking about
food. Jack Ruby will offer his
basketball analysis to anyone,
and I have not found him to be
wrong recently. He'll tell you
how. the Knicks will upset the
Lakers, just ask him.
They could serve dog food at
Ruby 11 and still rake it in when
the bars close. Those individuals
dining-out after
drinking-out will consume
anything under the guise of
food, ask Jim Koloen.
Ruby II is better than that. It
is an interesting place,
frequented by everything from
intellectuals to nomads to
moms and dads to detectives
(and they wouldn't put just
anything in their stomachs).
There is one thing the
management at Ruby II did that
deserves mention. They
removed the sign above the
door that read "Minimum to
Minors", which spelled out a
minimum time the second class
citizens could sit. The sign is
gone and minors are more than
welcomed. That's progress in
the restaurant business.
There was a creamer soured
on our table, and there may be
other odds and ends one could
fault, but the place is new, and it
is like a factory, three shifts,
busy usually, and just getting
routines set.
As Ken Kesey and the Merry
Pranksters would say, "flow
with it, just flow with it" and I
agree.
Next Week: The Last Supper
Southeastern Wisconsin's Newest Rock Bar
now open
the Establish
424 Lake Avenue, Racine
(formerly Counselor's II)
Live Entertainment Five Nights a Week
now featuring
Second Coming
formerly
Buddy and the Citations
by Bob Sieger
ONE YEAR:
COLIN BLUNSTONE
During the middle 60's, The
Zombies was one of many
groups to share the crowded
spotlight of rock stardom. They
were good, putting out such
early hits as "She's Not There"
and "Tell Ner No." They were a
strong group, both musically
and vocally and they really
knew how to rock. Shortly after
their last hit, "Time Of The
Season," the Zombies broke up.
Out of this breakup came
ARGENT, a new group led by
Rod Argent, a former Zombie.
Now, Colin Blunstone, a singer
for the Zombies, has decided to
re-enter the music business.
With the musical backing of
ARGENT, Blunstone has just
released his first solo album.
But something is missing.
Although he has his roots in
rock, Blunstone does nothing on
this album that comes close.
There is none of the power, none
of the drive that was inherent in
the Zombies. Instead what
Blunstone offers is ten love
songs, four of which he wrote.
Songs of love lost, love gained,
love far away.
- -^nse o>
a un,fy of ba
monotony, 7^ r
^ts. are also
chelated and
arranged.
B'unstone's Vo
rename
h abl sound!
t\eJchln .iqhuaeb,i t wa struci
<*rtain song,
beneficial. Howe-
9asps way
s,*» of the albu
suffer from too
^king them dry
0,1 the first cut or
only cut pn the
l
from the music desk
Buddy Rich is the Grand
Canyon among the
topographical features of the
drumming fraternity. Or he
could be Steve Canyon; larger
than life in spite of .weighing in
at 115 on a heavy day. The plain
fact is that he was born with
wings while the rest of us need
sticks to walk with.
Buddy Rich doesn't need
sticks to drum with. He can play
cleaner licks with his fingers
than most drummers can
manage with any number of
sticks, as he demonstrated
Saturday, April 22, at Bradford
Auditorium. His return
engagement drew probably all
the local hardcore swing fans, a
number of masochist fellow
drummers come for the sheer
sweet frustration of it, and,
befitting the glittering UWPARKSIDE
floating above the
stage, even a few students who
didn't belong to either category.
Noticing the I.F.O., Buddy
quipped, "That's a funny way to
spell 'Rich'."
Several such remarks plus
bored-casual attitude toward
the funny Wisconsin towns he
and his band were hitting led to
the conclusion that Buddy Rich
thinks highly of himself. The
buzz from the business bears
WO$HA this out, as Buddy has collected
a reputation as one of the Bad
Boys, hell to work with, hell to
Interview. Rumor has Frank
Sinatra throwing a full pjtChe,
of water at him for disrupt^
love songs with rimshots durinq
their mutual stint with Tommy
Dorsey. But the stature of the
man and his prodigous musical
genius make all other considerations
irrelevant, at least
to the audience.
Buddy fronts a streamlined
band these days, himself and a
bassist the sum total of the
rhythm section, the sole support
for four trumpets, three
trombines and four saxes. It
could easily get top heavy but
Buddy Rich is Buddy Rich and
the bassist, who looks like a
lizard with a ponytale and plays
with spider fingers, is his
match, eyes glued to Buddy's
ride cymbal, staying neck and
neck. The rest of the side men
are all first rate, many doubled
on several instruments, and two
of the sax men are genuinely
exciting in solo spots.
This really isn't a big band,
though. The arrangements,
while workmanlike and spiffy,
are rather elementary in terms
of tone color and shading,
tending toward flashy accents
and lots of fills, playing off the
«* • .
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"Red" Widely of the
Newscope Sports staff
Yes, sports fans, finally
NEWSCOPE's ace in the hole,
par free, bar none, sportswriter
gets a chance to pitch the ole
ball. Yessir, this On the Nod
fella's average has been falling
lately, vat-aging he can't go the
distance anymore. After each
contest he's had to wrap his
head in ice packs; he's even
been whirl-pooling his tongue.
But the quarts are inevitably
creeping up on him.
Nothin' worked, so coach
benched him and gave me,
NEWSCOPE's first round draft
choice, a chance to bat and
pitch the ole ball.
Yessiree, I'm pitchin' the old
ball npw, yesirqe.
Dick's Olympic Super Bar (on
the corner of 24th Ave. and 52nd
St.) was my first batter of this
early season and, well, looks
like I gotta do some more warm
ups. Got a tripple off me on the
first pitch. Yessiree, I peppered
it in there and zowie, I was
knocked off the mound. But
coach says I deserve another
chance, so I'll probably be
starting when we play the
Activities Building next week.
Dick Stankus presents an
ever-smiling, chunky figure,
and manages a fine team with
such All-star material as ten
ounce tap Bud, Pabst, Hamm's
and Old Style for 15c; basic
mixed drinks for 35c; schooners
for 30c and Harvey Wallbangers
for a shockingly low 75c. I didn't
stay in the game long enough to
face a Wall banger, but Jack
Daniels and Gin Tonic did
plenty of damage; I was beaned
twice in a row. A NEWSCOPE
record.
The tavern features a formica
topped bar which is at least 50
feet long (you can't hit one out
ef the bar), tables and padded
chairs, a piano, and a small pool
table. Bob Stankus, who will
become manager of the bar in
May, took over for his father at
9 PM, and with him, the older
fans in the stands started filing
out, figgering the game was
already decided.
With mostly longhair types
sparsely occupying the box
seats at the bar, Bob piped- in
music from a stereo, featuring
albums by the Doors, Dylan and
Eric Burdon to name a few.
Fumblefingers Socha was
catching, and trying to call the
pitchers. Unfortunately/ he
wasn't speaking loudly enough,
which left the ordering of drinks
on my shoulders.
The softly lit/ "ewly
remodelled bar featured a
Martini and Manhattan mixing
device which resempled a four
^ cuts he is ac- drums and bass) Blunstone
igjy by Violins and comes close to a rock style. Yet
arranging of the he catches himself before he
st identical on all has a chance to
0 gives the returns to his
Page 7
sing out and
This '"c reiurna 10 nis nnoorrmmaall,, ' ssaaffee
> of unity' but it is style. His vocal ethic seems to 1
' bKa^ddiylv arrantg ed bt e: ,D on't take chances and try
„ remaining four to please everyone.
Ho heavily or- —
ld equally overvocals
ar e high,
mediocre. He has
inding br eathy. If
was a refined
-uctured to fit a
It would be
lWever, Blunstone
jy through both
jbum. His vocals
oo much control,
dry and ordinary
With
groups
worse yet, going crazy on the
bar circuit, why does Colin
so many deserving
going unheard of or.
Blunstone rate an album? But
I'm letting my ideals show. I'm
forgetting that the music industry,
with all its politics and
petty bureauracracy, is a
business first and an artistic
medium second.
ONE YEAR: COLIN
BLUNSTONE is just a lot of
wasted acetate. It has no beat,
,t on side two (the the lyrics are trite, and the
the album with vocals ordinary. I give it a 25.
NEWSCOPE May 1,1972
fA
big brass sound like a drum
corps scaled for the stage.
Which figures because it is
Buddy's show.
But in context it's a great
show. Buddy pulls sounds from
his drums that qualify them as a
melodic instrument, filling the
holes with the perfect riffs,
nudging the beat in all the right
places. Every now and then an
arm will shoot out of the tangle
to flick a cymbal, always catching
the accents, and all
without benefit of a score.
Buddy shouts the numbers of
the songs like some cocky
quarterback setting off a flurry
of pages, but he doesn't have a
music stand.
And, of course. There were
only two extended drum solos
but Buddy did them right, arms
crossing, sticks blurred to a
solid sheet, rattling off the most
amazingly complex combinations
of obscure rudiments.
The finale had him moving from
the fastest cleanest most
purring single stroke roll in the
world on the rim of his snare to
several arm, shoulder and head
riffs.
It may be grandstanding, but
the man is a natural wonder
and should be seen at least once
in a l ifetime. r
^% pronged candelabra: Lot of
drinking geniuses running
around inventing all kinds of
labor saving machines for the
contemporary bartender.
One especially impressive
aspect of the Super Bar is its
orderliness; nothing was out of
place; the good stock of hard
spirits was lined up in single
file, chest out and bottletop
fight. On review night, the bar
was quiet, restful, almost
tranquil, though the seasonal
attendance figures are probably
quite high since Dick's , is
located near AMC. It's a shot
and a beer bar during the afternoon
when some elderly
sportsmen sit around the tables
playing cards, or while the
American Motors workers lift a
few during recess, hoping to
Place the boredom of fhe
Assembly line in the proper
amber perspective.
Prices are very reasonable,
indeed I wonder how they got
Harvey Walbanger and Gin
Tonic to play for only 75c and
40c respectively: The strike had
no effect on them. On
weeknights, Dick's provides the
patron with a quiet atmosphere,
color TV and albums to listen to.
Even the umpires are nice guys,
which just goes to show why
drinking is America's number
one a ll-season indoor sport.
By Andy Schmelling
of the Newscope staff
After making a few last
minute arrangements Friday
afternoon, like calling for
tickets, picking up my young
lady, replenishing my stash,
buying a bottle, grabbing a bite
and filling my beast with petrol,
it was off into the sunset, 1-94
non-stop to Madison.
We reached our destination,
the Madison field house, about 8
p.m. or one hour after the start
of the show. Inside there were
gathered a sizeable number of
people but not the crowd scene
one might have expected at the
first major festival of the year.
As i t was, it was ideal. Anyone
who wanted to could work
himself to the front of the stage
without much difficulty, or if he
preferred there was ample
room in the bleachers to stretch
out and take a nap or just observe
the show from a reclining
position, which many people did
as the clock moved on past two.
Looking to the stage we saw
what appeared to be about a 40
year old, long haired man in an
orange jumpsuit telling dirty
jokes. As it turned out, it was
just Uncle Dirty, the M.C.,
doing his thing. He wasn't
having much success in the
audience reaction department,
and it soon became apparent
that the crowd had come for
music and would settle for
nothing less.
Then the spotlight swung to a
large bearded man with a
guitar whom Uncle Dirty introduced
as Dave Von Ronk.
Dave has been around for quite
a while but his talents have for
the most part been overlooked
except for people who have been
into folk. After a rolicking
rendition of "Candy Man", the
frustrated dopers lament, he
broke into a laugh and exclaimed
"Kenosha Blues". He
moved through the slow rhythmic
"Who Do I Love" and
blasted out another called "If
You Want to be A Hero Follow
Me". I remembered what Dylan
once said of him. "I'd always
known Risin' Sun but never
really knew it until I heard
Dave sing it." Called back after
"One Meatball" he delighted
the crowd with "Would You
Like to Swing on A Star".
Next up was McKendree
Spring, a relatively new group
whom I'd never had the
pleasure of hearing before.
They began with Neil Young's
"Down By The River". Their
three guitars and violin
produced such a full sound that
it was hard to believe they
didn't have a drummer. They
had a real ear-pleasing sound. A
violin solo of "God Bless
America" reminded me of
THE END
MAY 20,21
Hendrix's "National Anthem"
with fantastic feedback work
producing everything from the
sounds of a string quartet to
that of a diving jet bomber full
with blazing machine gun. I
hope to hear some more good
things from this group.
McKendree was as-hard as the
rock got Friday night with the
appearance of Ramblin' Jack
Elliot the sounds returned to the
acoustic traditional vein which
dominated the weekend.
Opening with "San Francisco
Bay Blues" he quickly moved
into a string of fine Dylan tunes
including "I Threw It All
Away", "Lay Lady Lay", and
"God On Our Side". He looks
remarkably like Dylan and
hearing him sing his songs was
almost disconcerting. He more
lhan did them justice though.
After Jack was the world
famous Earl Scruggs Review
show, in the spirit of the thing,
opened up with Dylan's "You
Ain't Going No Where". Their
reception was fantastic,
especially when they started
getting it on with some down
home square dance, the whole
place was jumping. At one
o'clock in the morning they
were just What the crowd
needed for a second wind.
Hearing Earl play "Orange
Blossom Special" on the banjo
was a real treat.
The first night was climaxed
with the fabulous Richie
Havens. Watching his play
guitar just blows my mind. His
hand just moved in a blur
across the front of his box.
Every song he sang brought on
an ovation. "Handsome
Johnny", "Freedom", "Here
Comes the Sun", and a couple
new songs I'd never heard
before. It was a fine end to a
great night. When the lights
came on it was alter 2:30 a.m.
and looking at Diane I knew it
was time to head for home. It
seemed like we'd been there a
week.
We missed Sorry Mutha's and
just caught the last part of
David Mississippi Queen Rea's
act. I decided to move up to the
stage and try to get a couple of
shots. My luck was with me,
just as I reached the stage
Beautiful Day came on, just as
they came on I came on, and the
next hour was almost to much
for me to believe. Anyone who
has ever seen them could understand
why. They sang a
couple of cuts off their first
album like "Hot Summer Day",
and "White Bird". I could have
sat and listened to them until
the cows came home. As far as I
was concerned they were the
high point of the weekend.
Country Joe followed
Beautiful Day with a sing-aiong
version of "We'll All Be Free
Some Day". If you know
anything about Country Joe,
and you know anything about
Madison, you can imagine what
his performance was like. It
was something like a family
reunion, brothers and sisters
together again for a while. He
told a story about his being
harrassed in Boston over the
"Fish Cheer" and then led the
crowd in a chorus of it that
shook the walls. "Give me an f .
. . Give me a U ... He played
four or five songs and ended up
with the house singing "Fixin to
Die Rag". No one wanted to let
him leave the stage.
Linda Ronstadt was up next.
She's one of the best looking
female performers I've ever
seen (The lady in Beautiful Day
was right up there too!) besides
being a fine singer and violin
player. She started out with "A
Whole Lot More of Jesus and a
Whole Less Rock and Roll" then
(I think I'm Going to Love You
For) "A Long Long Time" I'd
say her group's music was
country based although it had a
wide variety. Her lead player
who said he was from "Suthurn
Texus" picked and his way
through "a littl' song ah rote"
called "Mail Order Dog", and
then they jammed on some
country for a while.
By the time Kris Kristofferson
got on the stage we were
having trouble seeing it. Just
the same our audios were in fine
shape. He sang his current
release "Josie" and then made
a big hit with "Okie from
Muskogee". Then he asked
Linda Ronstadt to come up and
sing "Help Me Make It Through
The Night" with him. They
really sounded good together.
Muffy, a friend of mine from
Racine, agreed when I said they
sounded good and added, "And I
don't even like that song." After
that they brought Ramblin Jack
Elliot up and they all sang a
song of Jack's called "The
Tramp on the Street". For the
final number of the weekend
they called Leslie on stage and
the whole group sang "Me and
Bobby McGee". Ramblin Jack
had a yodel that would put the
Swiss to shame. It was really a
happy scene, everyone was
singing and laughing and just
carrying on. When the lights
finally came on it was apparent
that our friend with the sports
coat had done a miserable job. I
saw him as we left, sitting on a
bleacher with his head in his
hand.
Walking out into the warm
night air I had the feeling of
having taken part in something
beautiful, something to
remember for a long time to
come.
For The Record
T II I: l: I N l: K T II I N v*. S IN Ml'f IC
Downtown Kenosha -
LIVE
ENTERTAIN
MENT
Two Shows
featuring
Tom Rosplack
and the duo of
Terry Elliot
Don Mohr
May 3 + 4
Noon to 3 PM
The news
is Stretch!
VERY DEFINITELY
GEAR BOX®
Newest fashion on the
scene — Stretch Woven
Slacks! Great new fabric
look with a great, built-in
comfort factor. Stay-neat,
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flannels, twills and neat
geometries. Pick your favorite
color: grey, green,
navy. It. blue, tan, black.
Sizes 28-38.
Richman BROTHERS
Elmwood Plaza
May 1, i?72 NEWSCOPE Page 8
Iil'lil'l'l'l'lil'l'lililililililililililililil.lililil.
Parkside Student Activities Board
Last Dance of the Year
(until the End)
9 PM — 1 AM
SURPRISE BAND!
$1.00 for students $1.25 for guests
Parkside and Wisconsin ID required
I'I'I'I'IiI'IiIiIiIiIiTiT iTiTiTiTiTiTiTiT iTiTiT iTiTiTiTi
| Golfers vs. Roosevelt I
The UW-Parkside golf squad
went into action against
Roosevelt University Friday
with a 9-5 mark and Coach Steve
Stephens hopes that's a good
sign for the future.
And the future, in this case,
means Thursday through
Saturday because the Rangers
will be vying in the NAIA
District 14 tournament at Green
Lake, hoping to improve on
their ninth place finish of 1971.
Parkside dumped Carthage,
Loyola and Whitewater last
Tuesday to run their mark to 9-5
as freshmen Dave Fox and Pete
Nevins led the way over the par
Trackmen
E>q&s' Ko r r s e To Compete
^ 5r P®T"
The UW-Parkside trackmen
will compete Saturday at the
Northern Illinois Relays in
DeKalb.
The meet is becoming one of
the Midwest's toughest relay
battles as evidenced by the
entry of Drake University,
perennial Missouri Valley
Conference champion.
The Rangers will enter a full
squad in the meet and also in
next Tuesday's dual encounter
with UW-Whitewater on the
Warhawks' track.
Lucian Rosa and Gary Lance
competed in the marathon in
last weekend's Drake Relays at
Des Moines. For Rosa, the
Ceylonese Olympian, it was his
first big test over the 26 mile
route.
The Rangers also entered a
four mile relay team of Rosa,
sophomore Jim McFadden and
freshmen Dennis Biel and Rudy
Alvarez. That quartet, which
ran in the big race with all the
major colleges, schools, should
have ben pulled to a fast time,
hopefully under 17 minutes.
// yon arc unable to a/tend summer school, yon are invited to participate in . . .
A T E L E V I S E D C R E D I T S E M I N A R
The College ot Continuing Education, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh
PSYCHOLOGY OF DRUG USE...AND ABUSE
a six week course - Summer, 1972
presented on the following stations:
WLUK-TV (ch 11) Green Bay, Wis. WREX-TV
WXOW-TV (ch 19) La Crosse, Wis. KDUB-TV
WKOW-TV (ch 27) Madison, Wis. WDSE-TV
WMVS-TV (ch 10) Milwaukee, Wis. KTCA-TV
WAOW-TV (ch 9) Wausau, Wis. WNMR-TV
(ch 13) Rockford, III.
(ch 40) Dubuque, Iowa
(ch 8) Duluth, Minn,
(ch 2) Minneapolis, Minn.
Northern Michigan Univ.
TOPICS WILL INCLUDE: Is th e \1is( hiet in Drills or in People . . . Hist ory ol Drug Abuse . . . Drugs Commonly
Abused . Inerts ot Drug Abuse loneliness lose llum.in Development and Growth . . . Psycho-
Sor i.il ( onsider.itions . the Allein.itive So< jety Drugs. Religion, and Mysticism . . . Crime Drugs.
\outh and law leathers, kids and Drugs ( ommunily Role in Drug Abuse . . . New Directions
YOU CAN ENROLL AS:
a "Special" undergraduate student
a "Special" graduate student
an undergraduate auditor
Earn i graduate or undergraduate credits
for a course outline, enrollment information, and viewing schedule, dip and mail
All c ourse
requirements
can be
completed
at home
without
campus
attendance
host professor
Robert lane, Ph.D.
N.ime- Te
Address.
City-
State. -Zip.
Televised Instruction
College of Continuing Education
Return to: University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh
Oshkosh, Wisconsin 54901
71 course at Pets as with a 77
and 79 repsectively.
Mark Hjortness added a 79
and Tom Bothe an 80 while Jim
Vakos and Tom Feiner came up
with an 80 and 85 respectively to
round out the Parkside scoring.
The Rangers totaled 480 for
six men while Carthage had 487.
Whitewater 487 and Loyola of
Chicago 509. Medalist was Ed
Habacker of Loyola with a par
71.
Parkside will meet Lake
Forest and Dominican — teams
which it's already defeated —
and UW-Green Bay at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at Pets.
Road Rallye Results
On Sunday, April 23, Steve
Swan and his navigator Tom
Werbie won the second annual
Jimmy Clarke Road Railey.
Runner up trophy was given to
Kevin McKay and Jerry Socha.
John Zaring and Ron Gatterdam
received the Most
Distinguished Faculty Award.
Forty-six cars turned out for
thS event on a partly Sunny
afternoon, and it was a great
success for the Ragtime
Rangers.
The actual course, 67 miles
long, was created by Mary
Fettas and Chris Heckel, and
was basically designed for
Racine and Kenosha counties;
but a few people included side
tours to as far south as Antioch,
Illinois, as far west as
Burlington, and as far north as
the Seven Mile Fair. Many
people were thankful for Lake
Michigan's constant presence to
the east!
After the Rallye, a crowd of
more than ninety people enjoyed
food and beer at the
Brat's basement.
Netmen vie for volley
Interested in (check one) Graduate Credit- Undergraduate Credit- -. Undergraduate Audit-
The Ranger tennis squad will
face UW-Milwaukee Friday at
the Pershing Courts in Racine
in a rematch of one the
Parkside men dropped earlier
and Saturday the Rangers will
meet UW-Green Bay up north.
The Rangers, improving
weekly, notched their second
victory last week against an
experienced Milton unit in what
Parkside Coach Dick Frecka
called "our best meet of the
year."
Mike Safago, playing at No. 1
singles for the Rangers, beat
Brian Gibson of Milton 6-3, 6-2
while No. 2 man Dan Mieczkowski
won over Brad Barry 6-
3, 6-2.
Skip Jones, No. 3 man, won 6-
4, 4-6, 6-0 over Bruce Lindsley
while Dennis Halverson fought
an uphill battle at No. 4 against
Kurt Aufterhaar but won 1-6, 8-
6, 6-4.
Dave Herchen won over Sam
Skaggas at No. 5 by 6-1, 6-3
whild John Kangas topped
Corey Shea at No. 6 6-1, 6-3.
In doubles action, Safago and
Jones beat Gibson and Aufterhaar
6-2, 6-2 while Mieczkowski
and Halverson won 6-0,
6-0 over Barry and Lindsey.
Herchen teamed with Todd
Nelson at No. 3 doubles to win 6-
1, 6-2 over Skaggs and Shea.
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uvuT-n.nrLqft.-inf»i^i^^^^^, . . , nnritijuJ
ASNDH0UGH S0ME0NE FROM PARKSIDE WILL ATFrom
May 5th through June 11th, the Milwai.kpo R
Theater Company will present forty-four performanrP^T^P
Journey of the Fifth Horse", Ronald Ribman's thrfn !
compassionate portrait of human lonliness and unrrJ,?- "Ifi
The rhapsodical play MRT's final .ubscription^„72 oft'
season, will open Friday, May 5th, at eight p m in the T«HH ur u
Theater at the Performing Arts Center.
EROTIC FL ICS
The prize winning works of the recent New York Fvnt;,. R-.
Festival, an exhibition designed to encourage more creaUvP T
in sex cinema, will be presented at UWM's Bolton Hall l in
The films, part of a new UWM Union sponsored filmT •
be shown Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 4th 5th and 6th
Showtimes Thursday are at seven and nine-thirty p m and FHH*
and Saturday at seven, nine-thirty and eleven thirty o m
Admission for the public is two bucks, persons uder 18 can't get
in, and identification is required, so know who you are.
WHOSE GOVERNMENT IS THIS 9
Students on a number of US campuses have began a campaign
to turn the Nixon Administration around on its refusal to hold
public hearings on the issue of environmental impact of the
proposed trans-Alaska pipeline.
Working with the Alaska Action Committee, an organization of
econservatiomsts living in the vicinity of Washington D C these
students are distributing a pamphlet entitled "The Alaska PinelTne
Reading Lesson." The pamphlet deals with unanswereS quSns
and inconsistencies found in the government's pipeline imnacl
statements. r r
In spite of the imposing concern on the part of conservationists
ecologists, Congress members and students, the Nixon Ad'
ministration appears determined to bow to oil industry demands to
issue the pipeline permit (a permit for construction as early as Mav
4th for construction of the 789 mile, hot-oil pipeline)
Copies of "The Alaska Pipeline Reading Lesson" can be obtained
m quantity from the Alaska Action Committee 729 - lith
Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005. '
Page 9 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972
OA/ +ht LAKE
•sPorts bar
: HWY 32.
/ > / / \ Y pool ' FOO s BA L L.
^ BAR- SAA/D UL/CRBS .jP,
" package c,oot>s .
(we l come A/ E w AbULTSJ)
\ . . s A / s t > s 3 A A / t > S — 3 * A / t > S .
It's the
Creoakl eth. ing.
FLO'S
Home Cooking
HWY 31&County Trunk E
L_
6AM-6PM Specials Daily
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
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
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 .
Quiet City,
USA
(CPS) — If the city of Des
Plaines, Illinois, has its way,
that town will probably be the
quietest town in the country.
They've just passed an ordinance
that bans the following:
m "... crying, calling or
• o shouting, using a whistle, rattle,
* bell, gong, clapper, hammer,
ro drum, horn, hand organ,
jjj mechanically operated piano,
or other musical instrument,
wind instrument, mechanical
device, radio, phonograph,
sound amplifier or other similar
electronic devices so as to
destroy the peace of the neighborhood."
The nine page document,
passed unanimously by the
Council, also requires motors on
vehicles, except for buses, to be
shut off while idle.
The ordinance carries lines of
$15 - 300 for a first offense and a
jail term of up to six months for
additional offenses.
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
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
P a b s t t a p.
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
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
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 .
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Phone - 657-3911
Kenosha, Wisconsin
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May 1,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 10
Page 11 NEWSCOPE May 1,1*72
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Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 16, May 1, 1972
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1972-05-01
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
chancellor irvin g. wyllie
ken konkol
parkside student government association (PSGA)
women's day
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/4648d4492949d221c4ff4c203b4c7bff.pdf
4338e53d44f04bdf39c8981180203220
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 5, issue 15
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Fire in Com-Arts Building Under Investigation
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
The University of Wisconsin - Parkside
JUVICOVI
Volume 5 Number 15 December 13,1971 'Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold
If you'd have written a
story, it would have been
here.
Join the Newscope staff.
Fire In
Com-Arts
Building
Under
Investigation o
ir
z
<
CD
Christmas party for
underprivilged needs spirit
Santa Claus (Jim Greco) is comin' to town! Actually,
he's coming to Parkside on Saturday, December 18. That's
when he'll be bringing Christmas cheer to underprivileged
children from the surrounding communities. There are going
to be games, cartoons, prizes, soda, food and presents. The
party is being held in the Student Activities Building from
1:30 to 4:30. Cooperating on this activity will be Auxiliary
Enterprises, the Parkside Activities Board, and the Student
Union Committee. Interested students and organizations are
invited to help and their assistance would be deeply appreciated.
Contact either the Student Activities Office or the
Student Activities Building.
the special magic of
CHRISTMAS!
by Larry Jones, Campus Editor
A fire did minor damage to the new communication-arts
building last Wednesday night.
As of Thursday afternoon, the Somers Fire
Department had not yet completed its investigation
of the blaze, and so would not release
any information about it. Nowever, Newscope was
able to obtain the following information in a short
interview with UWP chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie:
The fire was "in a very limited basement
section of the new communication-arts building,
close to where the connector will be between the
library-learning center and the corn-arts building.
The fire occurred in an area where evidently the
construction people were carrying on some
warming activity — they were evidently warming
wooden forms in which concrete was going to be
poured Thursday. I heard they had some electric
lights going down there . . . whether they could
generate enough heat to warm these forms I <don't
know. The specific cause of the blaze is still being
looked into.
"Evidently it did burn quite fiercely in this
limited area; maybe as much as an hour, and did
burn some of the wooden forms and did heat up
some of the steel reinforcing rods in the area to the
extent that they bent and will have to be replaced.
There was no major damage to the structure, and
it is not the University's responsibility; that is, it is
still the contractor's building and his responsibility
to take care of it."
Chancellor Wyllie also stated that no dollar
estimate of damage had yet been made, and that,
to his knowledge, there was no suspicion of arson.
Deputies reported that the Sommers Fire
Department responded to the call at about 11:30
p.m., but had trouble getting to the fire site
because of ankle deep mud. The fire was first
noticed by a student or faculty member who was in
Greenquist Hall at the time.
The building is under construction by the
Korndoerfer Construction Company of Racine and
is due for completion next year. It is believed,
according to Wyllie, that construction of the
building will not be hampered very much by the
fire, which is under investigation by an insurance
firm, university officials and the Sheriff's
.Department.
The D eath Of A University-another volley
by Ken Konkol
of the Newscope Staff
The University of Wisconsin,
as we knew it, is dead. It died
the day Governor Patrick
Lucey signed into law the
merger which combined the two
university systems into one.
The old way is gone and we now
• have a giant conglomerate
University of Wisconsin consisting
of 13 campuses spread
over the state from Superior to
Kenosha.
Each of these 13 campuses
bears the name University of
Wisconsin, but while they may
be united in name they have a
long way to go to be united in
spirit. This separation is due to
the uniqueness of the situation.
The schools from each of the old
systems were run differently
and there will be difficulties
involved in getting things to run
smoothly.
The final form of the new
University of Wisconsin is not
decided, nor will it be, at least
until January, 1973. That is how
long the Merger Implementation
Committee plans
to be working on the problem.
This committee, which consists
of 17 members including the
chairmen of the Joint Finance
Committee and the chairmen of
the Joint Education Committee,
has a big job ahead of them.
They are the ones who must find
the best way of facilitating the
merger and may decide
anything from leaving the
merger as a merger in name
only or to go all the way and
have every campus treated the
same, or anything in between.
According to George
Molinaro, Chairman of the
Assembly Finance Committee,
the only really big thing the
Merger Implementation
Committee has done is to
eliminate the Coordinating
Council on Higher Education,
which was found to be unnecessary
due to the new
combined central administration.
As far as Parkside is concerned,
Molinaro thinks we did
fairly weH. We got more than
others did. Whether we would
have gotten still more under the
old system is another question.
Where we really did well was
in our building program — not a
thing has been cut. How much
did we get? Originally it was
requested that Parkside receive
an additional $3,066,000 over the
1969-71 biennium for the 1971-73
biennium. This addition was cut
to $1,300,000 or less than half.
Because of the shortfall in
expected enrollment, Parkside
lost an additional $288,000 and
the forced savings because of
the budget delay and the Nixon
economic freeze cost an additional
$180,000. The budget
delay wriught havoc with more
than University funds. All state
employees who would have
received pay increases after
July 1, were denied those increases
till the budget was
passed. That would have been
fine —- everyone would have
gotten those raises retroactively
as soon as the budget was
passed. But along came the
price freeze and no one could
get a raise and the budget
passed without any of those
included. So nobody got
anything in back pay and no
increases were granted until
after the freeze expired.
Parkside will lose additional
funds due to the change in the
level of funding. It used to be
that Parkside was funded on
level one, freshman and
sophomore, and level two,
junior and serior per credit hour
regardless of the curriculum.
Now we are funded still on
levels one and two but these are
further broken down into four
major disciplinary fields.
Which means we now get less
for each literature major than
we do for each physics major —
watchifor increased accent on
the sciences witl all those
specialized facility
There was a bright side to the
personnel problem, as none of
the mentioned layoffs came
about, and Parkside will be able
to recruit additional instructional
personnel for next
fall. The personnel office is
already hiring additional
clerical help.
The big bite came in those
decision items which were not
restored. These included the
fundting of two new majors and
others which were enumerated
in the March 15 issue. However,
there will be an expansion in the
administrative and institutional
computing facilities. The near
future should see almost every
department on campus making
use of the machine.
Breakdown of Parkside
budget:
60 per cent, Institutional costs
10 per cent, Physical Plant
10 per cent, Library
7 per cent, general services
3 per cent, miscellaneous
Page 2 XEWSCOPE December 13, 1971
An All N ew Concept
In Self Service Shoe Stores
The Shoe S top A nnex
three doors down from
The Shoe Stop (400 main st.)
racine
Grand Opening
Thurs. Dec. 16th
Famous Brand Shoes,
Values To $25.00
Reduced To $l4.90-$11.90-$9.90.
Also Reduced , Famous
Children's Jumping Jack's Shoes.
The Shoe S top A nnex
three doors down from
The Shoe Stop (400 main st.)
racine
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
To the Editor:
My story can be called an
Exercise in Futility or Whoever
Reads the Legal Notices?
On September 29, October 6
and October 13 of 1960 the Legal
Notice of the Kenosha News told
of a petition to rezone an area ot
Kenosha county from
residential to industrial. The
public hearing was held October
14, 1960. Somers township approved
the petition of a certain
Mr. Infusino to use 12.7 acres of
land on 30 Ave. just south of
Lichter Rd. to build an incinerator
for the burning of
salvage. None of the neighbors
were there to object. Thus, very
quickly and easily, Mr Infusino's
parcel of land was
rezoned.
It was not until the neighbors
saw what was being built that
they complained. The complicated
legal terminology in
the Legal Notices had not
conveyed to them that their
neighborhood was in for a
drastic change. And now it
seemed too late.
Complaints directed to
Kenosha's city hall were turned
away. K. T. Incinerator is not in
the city, they were told. Somers
tells the poor neighbors to be
patient; it all takes time.
A complaint that the teepee
(as the ugly structure was
nicknamed) was too high for
current regulations led to an
amendment of that regulation.
Meanwhile, the neighbors
have to contend with an ugly
and dangerous eyesore. Trucks
haul garbage from American
Motors. The garbage is piled
high. What if a strong wind
.?
Th§ screening at the top of the
teepee is broken down; large
chunks of half-burned paper
and wood have been found in the
neighbors' yards. Patc
£*°
burned ground were pointed out
to me. When, they asked, would
such a spark land on a roof or
agrove of trees and catch on
fire?
The garbage that decorates
Infusion's property f
ttracts
rats There is the smell, smoke
and soot that plagues them
night and day.
The people want help, but no
one wants to help. They have
been fighting the incinerator
since it was built. They are still
fighting. Their shouts have
easily been drowned out,
quieted and ignored, but still
they shout. What they lack are
the numbers. They need more
people to shout with them.
Aren't you getting a little sick of
seeing and smelling that mess
on your way to Greenquist?
Only until Mr. Infusino takes
his teepee and goes home
will those neighbors be able to
rest easy.
Sincerely,
Diane Haney
To the Editor:
Finally, there may be some
coherence to the bulletin boards
around Parkside. The Student
Activities Office has completed
a study of the boards and has
come up with a solution. The
boards will be labeled as to the
size and type of what will be
allowed to be posted.
These regulations will affect
all boards except those
specifically reserved for
University departments.
The signs divide the boards
into three categories. First will
be the Campus Events Bulletin
Boards, for announcement of
approved campus activities and
events. Size of posters on this
board will be limited to 14 x 22
inches.
The next group will be the
Student Bulletin Boards. These
are to be used for personal
motes, for sale items, or student
notes of interest. Size of items
on this board will be limited to 3
x 5 inch announcements.
The final group will be boards
saying Rides And Riders
Wanted. These will be used for
the one specific purpose, announcements
again limited to 3
x 5 inches.
The Activities Office hopes
that this will end some of the
confustion over the present
bulletin boards at Parkside.
People using the boards are
asked to keep them as neat as
possible.
The Student Activities Office
will implement this process on
all the campuses. However, to
make this procedure work, it
will require the people using the
board to cooperate with the
standards set. If anyone has any
questions or would like further
information regarding bulletin
board policies, they are asked to
contact the Student Activities
Office.
Student Activities Office
To the Editor:
This is just to inform you that
the sketch purported to be that
of "James Koloen", as
published in last week's issue's
bar review, (which, by the way,
I thought was mighty boss and
right on) is indeed the face of an
imposter. Upon closer
examination of the picture,
anyone who is reasonably well
acquainted with the ace
reviewer, will discover that it is
in fact the portrait of the
scurrilous, archcartoonloony,
Jerry "the ageless wonder"
Socha, as drawn by the ace
cartoon reviewer "James
Koloen".
Don't believe everything you
see, huh Warren?
Keep on bulkin'
Jim Sucha
Why in the hell can't you illiterates learn even how to spell?
Disgusted
Picky, Picky, Ed.
ALADDIN
FLOWER SHOP
in west
Racine
3309 Washington Avo.
633-3595
Mcmi|
Ctotnuu
"Don't believe everything you read."
Save
for
the
Future
WEST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
Phono 658-2573
58th St. at 6th Ave.
MAIN OFFICE:
CAPITOL COURT,
MILWAUKEE
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief
Managing Editor
Campus Editor
Feature Editor
Fine Arts Editor
Sports Editor
Photo Editor
Circulation Manager
Business Manager
PHONES:
Editorial
Business
Warren Nedry
John Koloen
Larry Jones
Paul Lomartire
Bill Sorensen
James Casper
Rick Pazera.
Fred Noer,Jr.
John Beck
553-2496
553-2498
.. Newscope is an independent student newspaper composed by students of
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside published weekly except during
vacation periods. Student obtained advertising funds are the sole source of
revenue for the operation of Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed and
distributed throughout the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the
University. Free copies are available upon request.
Th, ,
e
.
ne ,or 3,1 manuscripts submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. the
nursday prior to publication and must be typed double-spaced. Deadline for
^
ra
.
PhS iS the SaturdaV Prior to publication. Unsolicited manuscripts
d photographs may be reclaimed within 30 days after the date of subn^c
0
"' .
r Which they wi
" bec
°me the property of Newscope Ltd. The
»Prn..
0Pe °. A" ,S ,oca,ed the Student Organizations building, Intersection
Of Highway A and Wood Road.
December i:t. 1971 NKWSCOPK Page :i
Myra Sadker, an assistant professor of education at the
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and author of a forthcoming book
on discrimination against women in U.S. schools, displays pages
from a book which, she says, illustrates her contention that girls
are subtly forced into stereotyped career choices in the education
process. Captions on the illustrations in the book read "Boys are
doctors." and "Girls are nurses."
Myra Sadker
r Sex ism In The School'
Liberating little girls from
"sexist" school curriculums is
the goal of a forthcoming book
by Myra Sadker, an assistant
professor of education at the
University of WiscgnsinParkside
and mother of a yearand-a-half-old
daughter.
The book, tentatively titled
"Sexism in the Schools: The
Hidden Curriculum", is to be
issued for the fall market by
Harper and Row Publishers,
Inc., of New York.
In it, Mrs. Sadker traces
discrimination against women
in education from kindergarten
through college and beyond and
makes a strong plea for change.
"We can no longer afford to
waste the talents of over half of
our population," says Mrs.
Sadker, who received her
doctoral degree in education
from the Universpty of
Massachusetts.
"Discriminatory practices in
schools are creating built-in
economic discrimination
reflected in eventual career
limitation and salary differentials
for women."
Mrs. Sadker opens her indictment
with basic readers
used in the early elementary
grades. They "subtly
discriminate" in providing role
models for children, she says.
"These books use two to four
times as many stories about
boys as about girls; there are
more pictures of boys; and girls
are relegated to passive, observer
roles in the stories,"
Mrs. Sadker says. One particularly
flagrant example of
such books cited by Mrs.
Sadker, "I'm Glad I'm a Boy —
I'm Glad I'm a Girl" by
Whitney Darrow (Simon and
Schuster, 1970), consists of
facing pages picturing boys and
girls with such captions as
"Boys are policemen. Girls are
metermaids." "Boys are pilots.
Girls are stewardesses". "Boys
are presidents. Girls are first
ladies". "Boys invent things.
Girls use what boys invent",
and "Boys fix things. Girls need
things fixed".
All this can be unfair to boys
as well as girls, Mrs. Sadker
concedes. "The aggressive girl
is labeled a 'tomboy' while the
sensitive boy is labeled a 'sissy'
— both suffer as a result of
artificial role limitation."
Reading tests are not the orily
offenders, however. Women
come off even worse in most
history books, Mrs. Sadker
says. They are virtually
ignored.
"A survey of 12 o f the most
commonly used high school
history texts show definite bias
against women. One text
devotes only two lines to the
women's sufferage movement.
Another devotes a paragraph to
it," she points out. "Students
frequently do not realize that
there is a selection process
involved in the material
presented. Girls simply find no
role models in our history
books."
By the time girls are in junior
high school or high school, the
"subtle" discrimination of text
books is augmented by more
overt forms of sex bias.
"Counselors sometimes do
not encourage capable girls to
be doctors or lawyers." she
asserts. "They encourage girls
to be nurses and clerical
workers — traditional roles
where they may be undertrained
and under-paid for the
level of their ability."
To this is added social and
peer group pressures for girls to
"play dumb", Mrs. Sadker
says.
"Studies show that patterns of
underachievement for boys who
do not reach their full potential
in school began in the
elementary grades. These
patterns frequently begin for
girls in junior high school as
they 'learn their place' and
come to accept female role
limitations. Other studies show
that girls' IQ scorew decline
during adolesence, probably
because of a lack of motivation.
Girls are not rewarded for
academic achievement."
Mrs. Sadker makes clear she
is not "knocking" careers
which are traditionally
regarded as women's, so olng as
women choose them freely
rather than accept them as
"second choices'Mn an attempt
to conform with social
stereotypes.
Mrs. Sadker also cites two
common forms of "economic"
discrimination against girls in
secondary education.
Frequently boys take
mechanical or "shop" courses
where they develop potentially
marketable skills, while girls
take home economics courses
unlikely to bring them any
future economic return, she
says.
Another form of economic
discrimination comes in terms
of facilities and staffing,
especially in such areas as
school athletics, she says.
At the college and university
level bias against women also
exists, Mrs. Sadker says, in the
areas of admissions ("studies
indicate that if a school must
choose between a man and a
woman of equal ability, they
will amost invariably choose
the man") and career choices
("many professional and
graduate schools still have
'quota' systems for admitting
women").
And the woman who does get
a college degree will find that it
a sort of "discount diploma",
Mrs. Sadker points out. "A
woman with a B.A. degree can
expect to earn the same salary
as a man with a sixth grade
education. Fewer than one per
cent of working women earn
more than $10,000 a yaar while
the figure for the male
population is 20 t imes higher."
"The goal of education is to
allow each individual to develop
that person's greatest potential,
but education is actually
limiting women in the
development of their potential,"
Mrs. Sadker emphasizes.
How to change all that?
Mrs. Sadker hopes her book
will help by making parents,
teachers, school administrators
and publishers aware of sexism
in the schools. By getting the
"hidden curriculum" out in the
open, she hopes to have a part in
getting rid of it.
WATCHES
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10% Discount to students and Faculty with i'.q
SILVERWARE
Wallace - Lunt
Read 4 Barton
Sheffield - etc.
BRIDAL
REGISTRY
CRYSTAL
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Intermezzo
PIZZA I
Custom made for you
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS
FREE DELIVERY
4:00 p m—12;00 a m.
5021-30 tti Avenue Kenosha 657-5191
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays
Ken Dauby Sf/ksarecns Xcir (ia/lcry One
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Hacinc. Wis
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SPECIAL
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday
9a.m.—4p.m.
a schooner or
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_c and
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and
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The Brat Stop
'The Brat is where its at'
NORTHWEST CORNE R OF HIGHWAYS 1-9 4 AND 50
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.
Availab le f or fraternity or s oro rity part ies
Page 4 NEYVSCOPE December 13,1971 CAMPUS
by Paul Lomartire
"Whenever I get to feel this way .
hard to find new words to say.
I think about the bad old days,
we used to know —
Nights of winter turn me cold
fear of dieing, getting old.
We ran the race,
the race was won:
by running slowly."
Ian Anderson
Two college-aged girls were looking at
greeting cards in a downtown gift-card store. As
one girl would pluck a card from the rack, glance
at the cover and read the verse within, the other
girl would hand her friend another card adding,
"This one is really beautiful," or "This one's
cute."
and every available space which greets the eye is
painted. There is a spontanious festival of color
within this place. The walls feature: an egg
hanging over a beer, an open refrigerator, a
clown, a cop, a cat on a bookcase, wild animals
resting, a seashore, W. C. Fields playing cards,
and a country road leading into the pay telephone.
I sat on a stool under the watchful eye of W. C.
Fields, who has been studying the same hand of
cards since he was immortalized in poster form
some years back. Since he had obviously been on
the wall longer than I had been sitting in the
restaurant, I figured he wguld be a good one to ask
what to order.
The man with the bulb nose suggested a
cheeseburger and coffee, through magic found
only at Bob's Keno Kofeee Pot. I began to feel my
bad mood dissolve as I talked with the waitress.
CM®
UJ
The girls had looked over a display of
Christmas cards when they found themselves in a
section of cards that narked no holiday or event.
Beautiful flaming sunsets, mellow yellow
sunrises, violets, roses, daisies, lines by Keats,
Shakespeare, couples walking along beaches, in
forests, in the rain, and in fields of clover. For fifty
or seventy-five cents, either girl could lose herself
in any one of the photographs on the cards. The
beautiful scenes on the seventy-five cent ones
were covered with heavy plastic, in case someone
wanted to get lost in the scene often enough to risk
getting fingerprints or smudges on the picture.
The girl with a white knitted hat picked up a
card featuring a scene that could have been
Simmons Island. "The sea has its treasure of
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
have you." She read it and appeared to gaze
across the store in a romantic fantasy.
Not being in a receptive mood to this form of
"honesty", I left the card shop. I walked north
from the downtown area, in a very depressed
mood.
I seem to experience times when the sad lyrics
from every song created to make you feel lonely,
come to mind. It is at this time that I realize the
race I am in does involve rats. I usually suspend
whatever I am doing, buy the morning paper, and
take a long walk.
On this specific morning, I walked with the
Sun-Times under my arm, until I found myself one
block beyond Harbor West, in front of a curious
restaurant called Bob's Keno Kgffee Pot.
The interior of this place is unique. Each wall
Her name was Mickey. She had gone to school
in Madison, gotten married, dropped out, and was
thinking about going to Parksije. I had a second
semester timetable of scheduled classes with me.
She glanced through it and talked with me. Her
face reflected a type of honesty that could never be
found in a card shop for seventy-five cents a
throw. T .. , ..
When I tasted the cheeseburger, I realized it
was very good (it cost 45 cents). I highly recommend
it, as it was the best cheeseburger I had
eaten in some time. The coffee was also very good,
not old, too weak or too strong.
The food was so good on this visit that I
returned two other times in the next few days. I
ate breakfast (French toast, 60 cents) and dinner
(roast beef, applesauce, a vegetable, bread and
butter and soup, a dollar fifty). The cycle of meals
convinced me Bob's Keno Koffee Pot is a reliable
place to get good food. For a restaurant of this
type, there aren't many in the area that are better.
After the last bite of cheeseburger was long
gone, my coffee cup refilled and emptied, I
decided to be on my way. W. C. Fields had still not
played a card, while Mickey talked to another
waitress on duty as a mid-afternoon lull hit the
restaurant.
As I walked across the bridge to Simmons
Island, I watched the seagulls float and swoop,
remembering the same scene had been on one of
those cards. I thought of Mickey the waitress, and
hoped I would never see her face on a card with
lines by Keats across her forehead, covered with
plastic for seventy-five cents.
Tuesday, Dec. 14
Meeting: Student Senate, 4
p.m., Greenquist Hall, Room
101.
Poetry Reading: Sponsored by
the Parkside Poetry Forum.
7:30 tp 8:30. Greenquist Hall,
Room D-101.
Meeting: Students International
Meditation Society.
Racine Campus, Room 105, 7 to
10 p.m.
M e e t i n g : Music Educators
N a t i o n a l C o n f e r e n c e ,
Greenquist Hall, Room D-131,
4:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 15
Film: Intercollegiate Film
Council will sponsor showing of
Kurasawa's "Rashomon" at 7
pm at the Golden Rondelle
Theatre. Free tickets available
at the Tallent Hall Information
Center.
Last day of Classes: Final
exams Dec. 16-23.
Friday, Dec. 17
Hockey: Rangers vs. Chicago
State College at Wilson Park
Recreation Center, Milwaukee,
9 p.m. Tickets available at the
Athletic Office.
Gymnastics: Rangers vs. UWEau
Claire at Eau Claire.
Regents: Regents of the
University of Wisconsin System
will meet at Van Hise Hall, UWMadison.
Saturday, Dec. 18
Basketball: Rangers vs.
Northern Michigan at Memorial
HallK Racine, 8 p.m.
Gymnastics: Rangers vs. UWStout
and UW-Eau Claire at
Menomonee.
Tuesday, Dec. 21
Basketball: Rangers vs.
Purdue-North Central at
Westville, Ind., 8 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 24
Winter Recess: Holiday
through Jan. 8.
Thursday, Dec. 30
Basketball: Rangers at UWGreen
Bay Classic, Green Bay.
Wrestling: Rangers at
M i d l a n d s T o u r n a m e n t,
LaGrange, 111.
SPECIAL EVENTS
January 4-14
Ski the Alps: (late sign-up
accepted this week) 10 days for
$264 plus tax. Includes air and
ground transportation, lodging
and overnight stops in Geneva
and Paris. Open to University of
Wisconsin students and personnel
only. For details contact
Bill Neibuhr, Student Activities
Office, Room 213, Tallent Hall.
MO
Impulses, without the sweat
dripping from a forehead,
glistening in biological
anguisheets that ripple and
splash to a strained neck, then
rivers of the stuff down and
around the pectorals still
glistening onto the heaving
diaphram. The hands are gone
too, their search for string or
valve hampered by the same
poistness of pungent salt that
ages wood and darkens metal.
Music has always been
unquestionably made of souls
and love and sadness and pain
and . . .
The Moog came to Parkside,
operated by Chris Swanson,
whose genius is without saying
and whose machine is nearly
without playing. He constructed
nearly every aspect of the
music and the Moog and
elect ronic ally simulated
familiars like The Blood, Sweat
and Tears' "Spinning Wheel"
and Beatles' "Hey Jude".
Bach's Aria D buzzed perfectly
only to be surpassed by Mr.
Swanson's original works,
"Snow", which spooned us a
modern jazz work showing a
many leveled understanding of
the mechanism and its
possibilities and "Here Comes
Monday", which integrated 17
Title: CRUISING SPEED
Author: Willpam F. Buckley, Jr.
Publisher: G. P. Putnam's Sons
($6.95)
It has taken me three dyas to write
this first sentence. After staring at the
typewriter for four hours Wednesday
night, I decided, quite without a
palpable reason, to quit smoking and
begin the review with cleaner lungs on
the next day. When I woke up Thursday,
I'd yet to take another toke off a
tobacco cigarette, of which I was proud.
But, as the day wore on, I discovered to
my dismay that I'd contracted a vicious
cold over the night. I finished off
Thursday by staring at my typewriter,
not smoking, and wiping my runny
nose. Today I began the review without
mentioning the title of the book in the
first paragraph, my original stumbling
block of the past two days; it has
something to do with style.
Cruising Speed is a 250 page
"documentary" concerning one week
in the life of the~ e ditor of "National
Review", moderator of "Firing Line",
and much in demand conservative
speaker, William F. Buckley, Jr. A
typical week includes work on his
magazine, taping a "Firing Line"
show, making a few speeches, accepting
and rejecting offers for future
*
oratory, eating, and drinking. His one
week "documentary", in truth, covers
much more than a week in the life of
America's foremost conservative. In
the typical Buckley manner, the author
indulges in countless asides, remembering
and analysing past debates,
looking at his own student years,
remembering advice he'd gotten from
people he's respected, talking about his
dogs and the many people who write to
him, revealing anecdotes and just plain
getting off the subject at hand.
One discovers many hitherto
unknown facets and foibles of the
seemingly unflappable conservative.
One has to respect the dedication he
exhibits in providing a forum for
responsible conservative opinion, by
publishing the "National Review",
which, moneywise, one discovers is a
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
fees for speeches because the $12.00
subscription fee to the Mag is $8.00
short of its publication costs. One has to
admir e tha t k i nd o f d e d i c a t i o n , eve n i f ,
or perhaps especially because, it is
directed toward a Quixotic myopic
vision of how the world should be. The
conservative never expects to win.
There is a fatalism in his views that
anticipates failure but it is a fatalism
that asks the question, so, what?
As one reads Cruising Speed, one
retains respect for the author's wit, and
also for his straightforward honesty; he
ain't puttin' nobody on. For instance, he
almost crassly admits to a laziness in
relation to his speeches, by revealing
that for every speech he has made, he
has relied on one of three prepared
texts that were written years ago. We
learn why he is always seen carrying a
pen and pad of paper while appeal ing
on "Firing Line". It's because he had
f a l l en into the pat ter n w h i c h wont
allow him to think clearly without the
two items in his grasp. We also learn
some of Mr. Buckley's medical
problems; for instance, he is
prescribed to retalins (a type of speed)
to compensate for a low blood pressure.
One pecadillo I respect is his healthy
attitude toward booze; it's getting so
half the books I read are tributes to
alcohol.
Though most of this "documentary
is devoted to aspects of his workweek,
B u c k ley doe s p r e s e n t the rea der w i th a
lengthy formal argument concerning
the left vs. the conservative; comparing
the two points of view in sucn
areas as repression, the possible loss o
public sanction in the political arena,
the absolute vs. relative stances toward
the interpretation of the Constitution,
and more. ,
Bucklev's stvle of writing often leads
December 13, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page",
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17
taped tracks. Swanson played
much of the melody on an
electronic organ with 12 tones to
the octave and a "ribbon controller"
that varied pitch in line
with the Moog's wavering pitch
changes.
In brief explanatory pauses
he told of how the Moog composition
is like oil painting in
that color is equal to sound, the
composer choosing the color
key rather than audio musical
keys.
Interest generated by the
Moog was impressive with
about 700 switched on people
showing up, standing room
only.
The effect of all those modern
Americans in that cyclopean
Greenquist towering into the
night, a musterious music
emitting from one man and his
machine was a little strange.
Listening to the composer's
""Time Remembering", a mysto
jazz-rock piece, I looked out into
the night with all of those
futuristic looking floodlights
beaming the way to streamlined
Tallent Hall half expecting . . .
half expecting . . . half expect
. . . half expec . . . f expect
. . . zzzz.
Bill Sorensen
to the reader's confustion, he begins
what turns out to be a paragraph-size
sentence, with one specific subject,
suddenly jumps to something entirely
different, maybe makes another jump,
and then ends the sentence. At first I
thought (perish the thought) that it was
some incapacity on my part which
provided a block to understanding what
Buckley was saying, But, I reasoned,
even though I may be stupid some of the
time, I ain't that stupid most of the
time, and the confustion was apparent
most of the time. This confustion in
following Buckley's reasoning and
prose is, 1 think, caused by time jumpes
in a given sentence; Buckley tends
toward tangential reminiscences which
are catalyzed by the subject of a given
sentence; often he leaves the original
subject and never comes back to it,
leaving the reader up in the air.
All in all, Willy ain't such a bad guy
after all, and I think quite a few of the
more openminded leftists who read
(ruising Speed will discover this, just
as I did.
What else can I say about a book that
caused me to quit smoking and catCh a
cold before I could review it? Or was
that the typewriter?
Courtesy of the Book Mart, 622 - 59th
Street, Kenosha.
The Parkside activities board
will sponsor three dances over
the holidays:
Dec. 23 — Th ursday from 9-1
a.m. (the last day of finals)
Jan. 5 — We dnesday from 9-1
a.m.
Jan. 13 — Thursday from 9-1
a.m. (the last day of
registration).
iFor the man...
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English
Leather
-Jade East
-Pub
-Bravura
-British
Sterling
-Grand
Marque
-Old Spice
-Canoe
-Trouble
-Nine Flags
For the
woman...
-My Sin
-Intimate
-Tigress
-Arpege
-Tabu
-Ambush
-Chantilly
-Lemon Mist
-Desert
Flower
Pregnant?
Need Help?
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merely help women obtain qualified
Doctors for abortions, if this is
what they desire. Please do not
delay, an early abortion is more
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r 312 922-0777
Problem Pregnancy
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women's
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watches
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Park Drags
3809-22 a venue
Just north of
Washington Rd.
kenosha
Phone 654-6443
Hours
9:00a.m.-9:30p.m.
Sunday
8:30a.m.-2:00p.m.
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For all yo ur
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8 AM-10 PM—7 DAYS
A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION
Get Ac qu ai nt ed Offer
FREE LUBE
With Oil 8i F ilter C hange
PARKSIDE SHELL
WASHINGTON ROAD
& 30TH AVE.
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50<r OFF
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(with coupon)
10 oz. BEER 15 ft
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on wood road just south of parkside
When Old Mother Hubbard found a
bare cupboard, _
She said to herdog,"Theres no bone.
But you needn't worry, I'll go in a hurry
And get us a Personal Loan? We'll provide money for
any worthwhile purpose—
at low rates, so that you can
keep within your budget.
And we'll expedite your loan,
because we know that when
you need money, you usually
need it fast. So come in today,
discuss your problem with our
Personal Loan Officer.
UNIVERSITY
OF
0* S/
Service Center
245 T allent Hall
UW-Parkside
Doris Lantz,
Representative
CREDIT UNION
Home Office
25A A. W. Peterson Bldg.
750 U niversity Ave.
Madison Wis. 53706
Page« NEWSt'OPE December 13, 1971
Se/utitUf the fyinedt
Piffl* & Station, tf-oodl
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 653-3131
LIQUOR STORE, BAR. DINING ROOM
SIOGtmh Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin
Vt Block South of Kanosha-Racino County Una
SPump
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AND SAVE I
DISCOUNT SPECIALS
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10W - 20 W -SOW
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120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID
50c par quart
34c par quart
SI.39 par gallon
47c par can
Cash and Carry Prlcason Oil Filtars,
Air Filtars, Tuna Up Kits, Spark Plugs
All Itemj Subject to 4 Par Cant Sales Tax
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE
Swimming Pools For Parkside?
by Ken Konkol
of the Newscope staff
Those of you who attend
classes at Greenquist Hall
probably have noticed those two
holes in the ground, one behind
the Library Learning Center
and one on the north side of
Greenquist at the end of the old
access road. Those two mudsided
swimming pools are to
become the Communication
Arts Building and Classroom
Buildin.g
The Communications Arts
Building, which is under construction
behind the Library
Learning Center, will bring
University fine arts under one
roof. Classified as an instructional
laboratory and
classroom building, the facility
will consist of multidisciplinary
classrooms and
l e c t u r e r o o m .s
More than just classrooms,
the building will have
specialsed spaces for music,
art, speech and foreign
language labs. Also included
will be a special laboratory for
audio visual work and an institutional
data processing
facility.
The main feature of the CornArts
building is a 750 seat
capacity theater which will
have at its focal point a stage
fronted by a portion that can be
raised and lowered to serve a
variety of functions. The
theater itself can be divided into
three areas, two 125 seat
balcony sections can be closed
off to serve as lexture rooms.
The main theater which contains
projection facilities, seats
500.
The building, started last
month, will be completed in
January of 1973 with the
possibility of having the
classroom portion done in time
for the fall semester next year.
It will be the smallest
educational facility in campus
at 104,500 square feet.
The cost for Coin-Arts is
$4,220,000, broken down as
follows: General Contractor
$2,277,500, Plumbing $130,702,
Heating and Ventilation
$564,741, electric $584,868,
Elevator $22,954, Stage Lift
$30,951, Testing and Balances
$11,474, total $3,628,763, plus site
development, fees, contingency,
$4,220,000 total.
The facility that now exists
only as an H-shaped hole in the
ground north of Greenquist Hall
will become the Classroom
Building. Construction has been
held up because of problems in
clearing the paperwork.
The building, scheduled for
completion in the summer of
1973, will, besides classroom
space, contain laboratories for
c o m m e r c e, g e o g r a p h y,
Table Tennis
Tournament
Sponsored
Of special interest to the table tennis players on campus,
the Parkside Activities Board will sponsor a men's and
women's singles table tennis tournament to be held January
19 through February 2.
The tournament, held in conjunction with the Association
of College Unions-International, will determine Parkside's
representatives to the regional playoffs in Oshkosh on
February 17, 18 and 19. The two singles campus winners, in
both the men's and women's divisions, will participate in the
regionals as doubles teams.
Trophies will be awarded to local winners and the
tournament is open to all Parkside students. Registration
blanks and further information are available in the Student
Activities Office, Room 217, Tallent Hall. The forms, along
with a $1.00 entry fee, must be returned to the Student Activities
Office by December 15.
meteorology, psychology and
anthropology. Also included will
be lab rooms containing terminals
to the Institutional Data
Processing Center in the CornArts
Building.
The Classroom Building will
have an area of 126,000 square
feet and will be completed at a
cost of $4,093,420, broken down
as follows: General Contractor
$2,364,700, Plumbing $130,702,
Heating and Ventilation
$542,550, electric $281,413,
TElevator $29,626, Testing and
Balancing $4,480, total
$3,352,734, plus site development,
fees, contingency,
$4,093,420 tota.
The sites for the Corn-Arts
and Classroom buildings are
already being developed;
h o w e v e r, c o n s t r u c tio n
programs for the 1971-73
biennium include the Student
Union and Physical Plant.
The Union will have 90,000
square feet of floor space and
cost three and a half million
dollars. Due to the lack of
forward planning money,
nothing has yet been done on it.
Next month will see the
beginning work on design,
which will take about a year
until approved. Construction
should begin in January, 1973,
and be completed in late fall of
1974.
Lanny Davis to
speak
The National Youth Coordinator
of the Muskie Campaign,
Lanny Davis, will speak
here Wednesday, Dec. 15.
A one-time "McCarthyite",
the Yale law graduate is
massing youth support behind
Muskie. Davis has supported
many so-called "peace candidates"
in the past and is
willing to explain why he now
supports Senator Muskie.
The Davis lecture, sponsored
by the UW-P Young Democrats,
is scheduled from 11:30 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. in room 108 at
Greenquist Hall.
Davis will answer any opposing
questions.
JP1
*0* * "
famous for
CARL'S PIZZA
9" - 12" - 14" - 16" (
ALSO &
In Four Sites
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKIN
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA
• SI A FOOD • SANDWICHES
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY
"YOU KING Wf BRING657-9843
or
658-4922
DL VJLj Supper CU
1700 Sheridan RdKENOSHA,
WISCONSIN
5^
SV
,j£> <j^. o&s 1# '.<£•
V°xe>V /V'W ^
<$> Q<^
vv*
AV O&
c5*
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e
Johnson on comm.
chairman of a committee to provide research and
background information on faculty government aspects of
the recent merger of UW and State University systemV
The committee chaired by Johnson is one of 16 covering
various aspects of the merger which will report to the faculty
representative on the Merger Implementation Study Committee
appointed last month by Gov. Patrick Lucey The 16
committees were set up by the University Faculty Council of
the former UW units.
Timetables available
Timetables listing both daytime and evening classes for
second semester at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside
now are available at the Wood Road, Racine and Kenosha
campuses.
Because of implementation of a new calendar for the
academic year, second semester registration will start
earlier this year — on Jan. 11 in Greenquist Hall — immediately
after the winter recess. Second semester instruction
begins Jan. 17 and ends with completion of final
exams on May 20.
The timetable lists 355 separate courses in 29 different
academic fields and includes complete registration information.
In addition to the timetable, the newly published 1971-73
Parkside catalogue also is now available. Both may be
obtained at the library and information center in Tallent
Hall on the Wood Road campus and in the main offices at
the Kenosha and Racine campuses.
SGA ag enda
DECEMBER 14 —Room 101—4:00P.M.
1. Additional SGA responsibilities
2. Establish committee chairmen.
3. Introduction of special projects number one and two.
4. Discussion of instructor evaluation. (COP report)
5. Discussion of SGA credit.
6. Discussion of CCC.
December 13.1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7
/X f o r
/THE BEST
1 Ui \ J ) D o u t le Chees < s u r q e r . ' 1 ^
; * J+ H 5 * S i f K v t
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS
Newscope Classifieds are free to the
students, staff and faculty of the
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.
Deadline for classifieds is Thursday
prior to the week of publication and
will be run three weeks consecutively
or until cancelled by the
advertiser.
HELP WANTED
COUNTER GIRL — Must be able to
work Friday noon hours and nights
and weekends — apply in person
Monday or Tuesday after 4, Sandy's
Drive-In.
WAN TED : P iano teacher in Union
Grove area to take 7 students. Call
554-8269.
WANTED
WAN TED : One girl to share 2
bedroom apartment with 2 other
girls. Centrally located. $13.50 per
week per person including utilities.
Call 654-2741 a ny weeknight after 5
and ask for Rose or Peggy.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
Mosrite Acco.ustic-electrical guitar,
with plush case. Originally $500
value, like new, will sacrifice. Call
694-6168.
FOR S A L E : 2 Remington
Typewriters. 1 Mark II manual
portable. Excellent condition. $7 5. 1
Model 700 electric portable, $90. Call
633-4442.
WATER BED S - All sizes. Five
year guarantee. $25.00. Call Mike at
654-5402.
W A S H E R - D R Y E R : Frigidaire
Skinny-Minny one piece com
bination. Never used — couldn't get
220 w t line. Paid $469. Will sell for
$400 or best offer. Call 654-5777.
HEY KIDS! Need your term papers
typed? Call Dee Rafferty, 654-3094.
SUMM ER IN EUR OPE : Chicago
London-Chicago. June 7 to Aug. 23,
$239. Other flights leave weekly
from New York and Chicago. International
Student ID Cards issued.
Also IntraEuropean Flights. Flight
Center, Box 70, UW Union South, 227
N. Randall Ave., Madison, Wl 53715.
Telephone (608) 263-3131.
FOR SALE — Pentron reel typ?tape
recorder, 1200 ft. capacity, portable
with tapes, empty reels and accessories.
$20. Call 654-4982.
F R EE — GI V E AWAY —Kittens 3
mixed black and white, 2 all black.
Please call 633-3260 a fter 5:30.
FOR S A L E : Water Ski Sloum
Thompson Tunnel Concave, like
new, $45. Call Bob, 658-4048 a fter 5
p.m.
IF YOU LOVE ANIMALS DON'T
EAT THEM. For free information or
for ways you can help, write
American Vegetarians, Box 5424,
Akron, Ohio 44313. (Our group has no
paid employees.)
Have your baby when you want to.
Visit our Planned Parenthood Clinic,
Planned Parenthood of Kenosha,
Inc., Kenosha Memorial Hospital,
Outpatient Entrance, Thursdays, 7
p.m. No one turned away for lack of
money. For appointment call 657-
6211.
WHEELS
1976 Ambassador, 4 door, 232 engine,
automatic — good condition. $795,
call 551-9556 after 5 p.m., 1814 18th
Ave.
1963 Rambler 4 dr. Good engine,
good paing, $165 o r offer. Call 632-
5779 or 553 2423.
1963 Rambler American Station
Wagon. Runs good, but needs
muffler. $35.00. Call 654 8 998. As k for
Maggie or leave message.
1968 Mustang Cobra, Green, 428
automatic. Must sell. $1,250 or best
offer. Call 654-8574 a fter 6 p.m.
1966 Volskwagen, excellent con
dition, new brakes, new muffler and
exhaust system, white with red
interior. Letting it go for a good
price. Call 654-3028.
1963 Mercury Meteor. 4 dr, 260
engine, automatic. Runs good, body
good. $200or best offer. 761-1653 (oak
Creek), Larry, or Newscope office.
Fan "56" Chevy. Green. 6 cyl., Auto.
$60. Call Dave, 633-6740.
Fan "61" Corvair. Green in color.
Engine has 44,000. Body bad. $30.
Call Bruce, 633-6740.
FOR SALE: 1063 Chevy Impala 2 dr
Hardtop Black, 327 hp Automatic.
Runs good. Body in perfect shape.
$450. Aks Bill 632-4686.
1946 VW. Bright yellow. Excellent
condition. Must sell. 633 4442. Best
offer.
Page 8 NEWSCOPE December 13,1971
Icemen Shoot For F ifth Win
UW-Parkside's hockey club will shoot for its fifth straight win
Saturday night at Green Bay's Brown County Arena against St.
Norbert College. Game time is 10:30 p.m.
The Rangers beat Illinois State 5-3 and Triton College 4-3 in
action last weekend in Milwaukee. Goalie Rich Orchevsky, helped
by good defensive work by Terry P'latly, Ron Eiffler and brothers
Rich and Joe Rosko, is currently sporting a 1.29 goals against
average.
"Defense has been the key to our winning streak," club
president Tom Krimmel said. "In the last game, Triton had only 11
shots on goal to our 37."
Mike Broderick leads the team in scoring with 13 points on nine
goals and four assists while Krimmel is second with four goals and
lour assists for eight points.
Next home game for the Ranger is Friday, Dec. 17, at 9 p.m. in
Milwaukee agapnst Chicago State.
Wrestlers In Dual Meet Saturday
AlVarez Named
All-American
by Jim Casper, Sports Editor
Rudy Alvarez, the former Racine Horlick prep star, won AllAmerican
honors in cross country this season. He also set a school
record in the North Central Marathon run at Naperville, Illinois.
This is Alvarez's first attempt at that race and his coach, Bob
Lawson, termed it, "A good first effort."
Alvarez's run broke the record set by Mike DeWitt of 2.56:6 in
the 1970 Boston Marathon.
UW-Parkside's wrestling
team will close out its preChristmas
action Saturday at
Bullen Junior High in Kenosha
as it hosts Northern Michigan
and Marquette in a double dual
meet.
The Rangers will meet
Northern at 1 p.m. and the
Warriors ar 4 p.m. with a
Marquette-NMU contest slated
for 2:30 p.m.
Parkside Coach will probably
go with the same lineup he has
used through the Rangers' first
three meets, with Ken Martin, a
16-4 winner in the Rangers' 30-15
dual loss at Oshkosh, heading
the liast at 134 pounds.
Frank Velasquez at 118, Jeff
Jenkins at 150 and Mark Barnhill
at 190, Parkside's other
winners at Oshkosh, will be
counted on heavily Saturday as
the Rangers look for their first
dual win of the year.
Dave Langeland, who drew at
Oshkosh, will go again at
heavyweight, while Rick
Mauldin at 126 and Tom Beyer
at 167, both of whom failed to
make weight and forfeited at
UW-O, are looking to get back
on the winning track.
Rick Shoeffler, the 177-
pounder who's been a strong
point for Parkside, lost at
Oshkosh when forced to stop
because of injury but should be
ready for Saturday's matches.
Also entered for the Rangers
are Kyle Barnes at 142 and Ron
Atiams at 158.
The Rangers' next competition
will come Dec. 29-30 in
the prestigious Midlands
Tournament at LaGrange, 111.,
which annually attracts the top
collegiate wrestlers from
throughout the nation.
Ranger Grapplers
Lose To Oshkosh
UW-Oshkosh scored a 30-15 victory over the Ranger grapplers
in a match at Oshkosh.
Two Rangers failed to make weight and another defaulted due
to an injury, helping contribute to the Oshkosh victory.
Ranger winners were Frank Valesquez, 118, Ken Martin 134,
Jeff Jenkins 150, and Mark Barnhill-130, all by decision.
Dave Langeland wrestled to a draw in the heavyweight class.
Ranger Wrestlers Score First Win
by Jim Casper
Sports Editor
After suffering a 68-45 setback
at Western Michigan and an 82-
60 defeat at home against
Wayne State, the Rangers came
home to Memorial Hall to cope
their initial win of the young
Hockey C lub Gets 3 rd, 4th Victories
by Jim Casper
Sports Editor
The Parkside hockey club
notched its fourth victory in a
row, defeating Triton College 4-
3. On the previous night the
Rangers had defeated Illinois
State University by a 5-3 score.
In the victory Friday night
the Rangers had to make a
comeback after ISU opened the
scoring. Mike Broderick of the
Rangers evened the score with
a goal. He was assisted by Marc
Tutlewski. Bill Westerlund then
put the Rangers in the lead by
ripping home a beautiful pass
from Terry Flatley.
Tom Krimmel closed out the
first period scoring. In the
second period the teams traded
toals. Gordie Bradshaw of the
Rangers came up with his
team's fourth goal. Passes from
Bill Westerlund and Dave
Bradshaw helped him get his
goal.
Mike Broderick then scored
his second goal of the night.
Broderick was assisted by
Tom Krimmel. In the third
period defense played the
primary role as the teams
played a scoreless period.
In the 4-3 victory over Triton
College, Krimmel opened the
scoring at 4:04 of the first
period, the only assist going to
Mike Broderick. Triton then
scored the next three goals to
build up a substantial 3-1 advantage.
The Rangers started their
comeback in the second period
with Tom Krimmel's second
goal of the game. He was
assisted by Rich Rosko and
Terry Flatley.
A wild, free-swinging fistfight
between Gordie Bradshaw of
the Tangers and Ed Provanzano
of Triton marred the second
period. Referee Bob Berry
banished both players with
game misconducts.
Broderick tied the game with
an unassisted goal at 1:57 of the
third period. Dave Tilley picked
a timely moment for his first
goal of the season as he fired the
winning score at 10:18 of the
final stanza. Dave Bradshaw
and Bill Westerlund collected
the assists.
It appears to be a year of
operation turnabout for the
hockey squad which is only in
its second season.
campaign by routing Lake
Forest College 93-63.
Parkside was very convincing
in this first home contest as they
rolled to an early 23-11 lwad,
stretching it to 44-26 at the half.
By that time it was quite
apparent that the visitors would
not have the ability to make a
strong comeback.
Ted Rogers, a freshman, was
especially impressive in the
first half as he totaled 11 points.
He ended up with 18 for the
game.
Another freshman, Tom
Heller, led the Ranger offensive
production for the night with 20
points. He had been the high
scorer coming into this game
and of course continued in that
position.
Freshman Chuck Chambliss,
a former star at Racine Park,
scored 15 points along with
giving a fine overall floor
Otto Bauer, UW-Parkside Vice Chancellor, meets
Parkside's Ranger Bear, who may be seen wandering around
GRIN AND BEAR IT campus these weeks stirring up enthusiasm for Parkside's
athletic teams. Looking on is Cheerleader Pam Engdahl.
performance.
Parkside Coach Steve Setphens
was pleased with the win
and the score. "The kids gained
confidence that they needed,"
he said. "The first win is an
important one."
Although Stephens was
clearly satisfied with the victory,
he sounded some words of
caution: "We did not do
everything well. Our defense
was fair, but not real good."
Chambliss, a key factor in the
win, echoed words similar to
what Stephens said.
"I think it was great to win a
game, but we should commit
ourselves more in practice and
we could bring out more of our
ability," said Chambliss.
"This is a young club with a
lot of potential," he added, "but
it has to develop yet."
After suffering two defeats by
rather one sided margins how
could the Rangers post a 30
point triumph?
Chambliss commented on
this. This does not mean that the
team has improved that much
in the last few days, he implied.
"The other games were against
major college schools — this
one was against lesser competition,"
he said.
"Later in the season we would
. play better against Wayne State
and Western Michigan. We are
a team on the come," concluded
Chambliss.
Parkside scored on 38 of 61
shots for a lofty 62 per cent
shooting average, while Lake
Forest hit 23 of 57 for 43 per
cent. The Rangers also
outrebounded the undermanned
Foresters by a wide margin as
Heller led the Ranters with ten
boards, while Ed VanTine
cleared nine.
With an entirely different
starting lineup from last year's
edition, the Ranger squad will
lose quite a few games, but they
should show marked improvement
throughout the
season.
Hopefully, a number of victories
will come during this
improvevent stage.
Pl e a se H e l p Gi v e
A C h r i s t m a s P a r t y
F o r U n d e r p ri v i l a g ed C h i I d r e n
O r g a niz ati o n s a n d ind ivi dua ls are
inv ite d to si g n up a t the S t u d e n t
A c tiv iti es B l dg. or Office .
P a rty will be h e ld D e c. 18 1:30-4:30
Please Help
T rop hie s!
B i lli ard s & T a b l e T e n n i s
Parkside Activitie s Board
TOU RNA MEN TS Pr esents
Entry f e e s : Holiday Activity
B i lli a r ds $ 1 . 5 0
T a b le T e n n i s $ 1 . 0 0 Schedule
Sign up d e a d l i ne
j a n u a ry 1 7
T h u r s. D e c. 2 3 9 - 1 a . m.
Wed. J a n . 5 9 - 1 a .m.
R e gis tra tio n b l a n ks a v a i l
T h u r s. J a n . 1 3 9 - 1 a.m.
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
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
to Rm. 217.
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 15, December 13, 1971
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1971-12-13
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
george molinaro
ken konkol
larry jones
merger
university of wisconsin
wyllie
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/988b4aac0f63dedf2f0b125aa093c7c6.pdf
f1f83214f1a039af292e9688221edaf6
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 5, issue 13
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Loumos Wins SGA Presidency
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
"Journalism it Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold U"»*rsity of WisCOmi* • Parkside
VXWfCOVS
Volume 5 Number 13 November 29,1971
Loumos Wins SGA Presidency ir*
by Ken Konkol of the Newscope staff
In an election that saw only 17 per cent of the
student body casting votes the Concerned Students
Coalition scored a solid victory by capturing three of
the top offices from more moderate candidates. Amid
rumors of alleged ballot box stuffing (see guest
editorial), Dean Loumos won the presidency over
Dennis Cashion by 29 v otes while his running mate,
Bruce Volpintesta, easily defeated his nearest
challenger, Frank Chiapetta. Rounding out the CSC
victory, Canny Trotter pulled 458 votes in winning the
treasurer's office.
Jeanette Dremel ran uncontested for recording
secretary and received 498 votes, tops for any of the
candidates. Don Kosher ran away with the
corresponding secretary's contest, but received a
total of only 129 votes.
In the race for President Warren McGillvrey
received 122 votes as a write-in candidate and may
have played a significant role in Cashion's defeat.
McGillvrey, a conservative, took votes that most
likely would have gone to Cashion as a moderate.
For the Student Union Committee, Bob Wingate
received 381 votes, far above second place Pat Waite
who received 31. Rounding out the committee are
Jerry Ruffalo, 24; Mike Pobar, 15; and Kurt
Sahakian, 8.
The 14 people who were on the ballot for the office
of Senator came in the top 14 positions for the office.
In addition, successful write-in campaigns were
waged by Jim DeBerge, Ken Martin and Mark
Barnhill who edged out John Hanzlik by one vote for
the 17th position.
Election results:
President, Dean Loumos 273, Dennis Cashion 244,
Warren McGillvrey 122, Tony Kombol 59.
Vice President, Bruce Volpintesta 263, Frank
Chiapetta 202, C. S. O'Brian 95, Ed Vantine 88.
Treasurer, Danny Trotter 458.
Recording Secretary, Jeanette Dremel 498.
Corresponding Secretary, Don Koser 128, Dave
Walden 15.
Senators, Elaine Birch 289, Dale Martin 243,
Carol Kubinski 233, Ken Konkol 226, Mike Lofton 224,
Jerry Murphy 221, Tom Taskonis 207, Mike Baxter
195, James Twist 190, Dave Kerner 155, Norman
Pietras 142, John Grimes 127, Dan Voisin 111, James
Bielefeldt 97, Jim DeBarge 70, Ken Martin 47, Mark
Barnhill 44.
Student Union Committee, Bob Wingate 381, Pat
Waite 31, Jerry Ruffalo 24, Mike Pobar 15, Kurt
Sahakian 8.
First
Student
Government
Meeting
THURSDAY AT 3:30 IN EI THER
101 OR 103 GREENQUIST HALL
AGENDA:
A. "STATE OF THE SCHOOL ADDRESS
1. RESPONSIBILITY OF STUDENT
GOVERNMENT OFFICIERS
2. BUDGET OUTLINE
3. EXPLANATION OF STANDING
COMMITTEES
4. INTRODUCTION OF PROJECTS
5. OUTLINE OF COMMITTEES
6. STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Page 2 NEWSCOPE November 27,1971
Letter To T he E ditor
During the recent student government elections it
seemed that the classical Parkside student apathy
was replaced as a chief source of concern for conscientious
students by Student Affairs' mishandling of
the election. Since the current student constitution
contains no definitive or explanatory election laws,
local regulations were supposedly in force (i.e.
Wisconsin State Statutes). However, I observed
violations as well as unethical practices which I feel
are worth considering.
First, the displaying on the balloting tables in
Kenosha and Greenquist of the list of organized
government write-in candidates was a violation of
election ethics. Even though the Athletic Department
prodded, candidates entered the race on the first day
of voting, this affords them no excuse to receive
preferred treatment. Similarly then, all candidates
should have had their campaign literature on the
balloting tables too; but they didn't, so the organized
student government candidates shouldn't have had
theirs. Interestingly, this was in direct violation of a
typewritten law taped on all balloting tables which
stated there should be no soliciting (powters, campaign
literature, etc.) within 50 yards of the polling
place. A rule that was obviously not enforced.
Another violation was in campaign literature
found at all three campuses which violates Chapter
12, Section 16 of the Wisconsin State Statutes. This law
prohibits the issuing or circulating of campaign
literature, that fails to provide the name of the author
and the candidate in whose behalf this literature was
published and circulated. The literature in question
carried the title "Vote for Violence?!!" and was a
general rip off of the C.S.C. candidates, especially
Dean Loumos. Even though I didn't vote for him and
other C.S.C. candidates, I raise the issue. Why? For
the reason of one anonymous charge deserves
another and another and another, etc. until charges,
denials, propaganda and B.S. are hurled about
irresponsibly causing the meaningless campaign and
more important confused and apathetic voters.
These flyers should have been picked up immediately
by the Student Affairs. However, they were
not. Interestingly enough, posters were taken down
earlier in the semester because they violated the
University of Wisconsin Code Book size for posters;
yet campaign literature issued during the election, in
violation of the Wisconsin State Statutes, was left
untouched.
Concerning the polling station attendents, while
they did not violate any laws to my knowledge, there
is considerable room for improvement. Since they
were getting paid by the hour for doing a job, I feel the
job didn't include talking to girlfriends or doing
homework while curiously passing and glancing
students walked by. I would suggest the job they
should get paid for is attending the polling station and
attracting passing students to vote, and if not,
reminding them that they should vote.
For the above reasons among others, it appears
that Student Affairs did a poor job in handling and
assuring the fairness of the campaign.
I am not out to indict anyone, but help Parkside
be the great university it deserves to be. This can only
come about by a vigorous and effective student
government, which is the result of a well managed
and fair election.
Timothy W. Prostko,
President, Pre-Law Club
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
To the Editor:
November 15 was one day in
the life of a generally reserved
Parkside student. This student
was relatively depressed on this
particular day. He decided to
have a few beers. Well, one led
to another and he became intoxicated.
While under this
intoxication, he said words that
he had not offended any individuals.
The powef of alcohol
can be somewhat, controlled.
The student was entirely nonviolent.
He was asked to leave
by a few fellow students, he
refused. "I haven't done
anything wrong."
This young man was left alone
for a while, then a security
officer was summoned to the
scene of this senseless interaction
of students in the
Activity Building. The officer
was asking questions and informed
the student that a
complaint was reported. The
officer was asked what the
150 Protest
Draft Clause
Madison, Wis. (CPS) — Three
persons were arrested Thursday
as more than 150
demonstrators surrounded the
bus which was to take 20 men to
Milwaukee for draft physicals
or induction.
The demonstration, organized
by the Madison Area Draft
Reistances, was to protest
against what the group considered
to be illegal induction
orders. Citing a November 10
decision by a California federal
court which issued a restraining
order prohibiting induction of a
man against his will within 90
days of the signing of the draft
law. The 90 d ays will be up on
December 28.
Federal Judge Robert J.
Kelleher said last week that the
argument of 23-year-old Karl S.
Bohn of Santa Barbara "seems
to present a case of national
importance."
Bohn's case is based on a
draft law section that reads:
"No person shall be inducted or
ordered into active service
without his consent under this
title within 90 days after the
date of its enactment."
The clause was part of the
1948 revival of the World War II
draft law, and the 90 day
moratorium apparently was
intended to give the Selective
Service time to set up its
operation again.
The 60 days injunction only
affects Bohn, however,
although other cases presenting
the same point as Bohn's have
been filed in California.
U.S. Attorney Alan Peryam,
representing the government,
told the judge the case would
affect 10,000 men facing induction
in the next two months.
nature of the complaint was. I
don't know I'm just following
orders." I asked the officer his
name, he gave it to me and
made a phone call. I then made
a phone call to Mr. Martinez to
find out the nature of the
complaint. While I was on the
phone a well-dressed security
officer came in and then there
was two. They took the student
into the utility room and locked
the door. After 15 minutes of
interogation, the student would
confess nothing and was let go.
The well dressed security officer
was asked his name and
replied, "I don't have to give
you my name." Then Mr. Noname
left and Gary had another
beer.
MORAL: If you get intoxicated
in the Act. Bldg., don't
open your mouth, you might get
locked up .... in the utility
room.
Bruce Volpintesta
Conference to Organize
New Voters
(CPS) — Over one hundred
student body presidents from
colleges and universities across
America joined with the
Association of Student
Governments this week in
calling for an Emergency
Conference for New Voters to
organize students as voting
delegates to the nationwide
party nominating conventions
in 1972.
The Emergency Conference
is slated for December 3,4 and 5
at Loyola University in
Chicago.
"The events of the past month
clearly indicate that neither of
the two major political parties
welcome the young, leaning
voters as fully-enfranchised
participants in the parties,"
said Duane Drapter, President
of ASG and Chairman of the
steering committee for the
Emergency Conference.
"These events create a crisis
situation for the millions of
young people who wish to effect
constructive change through
existing institutions. Unless we
begin the task immediately of
organizing students within the
party processes, we will find
ourselves totally excluded from
the delegate selections and the
Presidential nominating
procedures, thus effectively
disenfranchised despite the 26th
amendment. The events
Drapter referred to were the
Democratic Committee's
selection of Patricia Harris as
temporary chairman of the
credentials committee over
liberal Senator Harold Hughes
Iowa), who had been viewed by
many as the key to enforcement
of the McGovern Commission
reforms at the Democratic
convention in Miami.
On the Republican side,
pressure from high echelon
Republican officials to thwart
Congressman Pat McCloskey's
(R-Cal) challenge to President
Nixon in the primaries has
caused serious financial
problems for McCloskey's
campaign, and could essentially
eliminate him as an alternate
candidate.
"It is imperative that the
twenty-five million 18-24 year
olds in the country are aware of
the mockery that both
Democratic and Republican
party officials are making of the
reform movements in the
parties," continued Draper.
The Emergency Conference
for New Voters is the last
national gathering of students
before the delegate selection
process begins, which in some
states is as early as February.
The conference at Loyola will
include a number of workshops,
seminars, and panels to discuss
voter registration and political
organization.
50* OFF
LARGE PIZZA
(with coupon)
10 oz. BEER 15 *
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"Don't believe everything you read."
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry
Managing Editor John Koloen
Campus Editor Larry Jones
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen
Sports Editor James Casper
Photo Editor Rick Pazera
Circulation Manager Fred Noer,Jr.
Business Manager John Beck
PHONES:
Editorial 553-2496
Business 553-2498
Newscope is an independent student newspaper composed by students of
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside published weekly except during
vacation periods. Student obtained advertising funds are the sole source of
revenue for the operation of Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed and
distributed throughout the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the
University. Free copies are available upon request.
Deadline for all manuscripts submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. the
Thursday prior to publication and must be typed double-spaced. Deadline for
photographs is the Saturday prior to publication. Unsolicited manuscripts
and photographs may be reclaimed within 30 days after the date of submission,
after which they will become the property of Newscope Ltd. The
Newscope office is located in the Student Organizations building, Intersection
of Highway A and Wood Road.
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS
PIZZA HUT
on wood road just south of parkside
November 21), 1971 NEWSC'OPE Page:)
PART II
TERROR IN THE PARK
by Alexous Doo Dah
This, which you are about to read, is
the continuing story of Crobait
Cavanaugh vs. the world. A story about
the man who shot from behind, at the
behind, and which is so elegantly
covered by a crack ace Newscope
crimestopper team. As you recall, last
week the Police Chief revealed the
hidden identity of the mad sniper who
had been terrorizing K-town. He is none
other than Crowbait! The feared, the
dreaded, the drunken dope crazed halfbreed.
And now let us return to that
fateful interview with the Chief.
Newscope: Bit the big toe off his
gramma and spit it out in the street did
he? Must have tasted awful. I can't
think of any other reason to spit
something like that out.
Chief: That's neither here nor their Doo
vh hand of the man must be felt again.
It's almost noon and the topless oottomless
joints will be opening. I hear
there's a new dancer on 52nd and I think
I'll go "investigate" her lewd and
liscentious dancing.
Newscope: If it offends you, why do ya
done?
Me: He's Crobait Cavanaugh, a
drunken dope crazed half breed who
escaped from Waupun two weeks ago.
He used to live in K-town but got sent up
for biting his gramma. Since he
escaped, he's already shot four old
ladies in the ass with a B.B. gun. The
police say he has this thing about 'em.
Editor: I'm aghast. Play me the tape.
The tape was played ... bit her bit toe
off and spit it put huh. Must have tasted
awful.
Me: That's neither here nor there
White.
Editor: Shuttup Doo Dah and keep a
proper perspective. What I'd like you to
do now is take the mobil
Newscopemobil for a few days. Keep
the police radio tuned in at ALL times
and next time this Crowbait character
causes a ruckus, I want you to be there.
Take Vincent Makroleah, the ace
camera whizz with you, and don't fuck
it up! Got it?
As Vince and I drove into the sunset
looking for criminals, we heard Perry
turn up his radio, "There's a hole in my
bucket, Dear Lisa, dear Lisa . . ."
"You know Vince," I said, "That song
Vince, by this time, looked yellow in
the face and his cheeks were puffed out,
like he had a mouthful of liquid. When I
tol
hime the good news he started flopping
around on the floor going "uggghhaaa,
uuggghhhaaa . . ." to voice his approval,
I presume. He seemed to have a
lot of internal pressure.
P-Springs, when we arrived, looked
like another Democratic Convention.
There were cops everywhere. Every
parking lot was full of squads, the roads
were lined with the boys in blue, and the
sky was filled with copters chopping
around. They were even scooting
around on the golf course mounted on
Honda 50's and tricycles. One particularly
burly looking cop jumped off
his trike as we passed and maced a
squirrel. He claimed he was ". . . just
getting warmed up."
We finally found the center of activity
over by a bridge. There was a banner
stretched between two squads which
read "Hdqtrs. — Police Chief," and
beneath that banner he sat. Surrounded
by parolee's waving ostrich feather
fans, he was sitting at his portable
throne screaming obscenities into a
He steered (he squad right toward the
Chief's portable throne sending us and
the fan bearer's currying for cover. He
ran over the bush Vincent was so
diligently relieving himself on narrowly
missing Vincent's privates and
smacked square into the bridge. The
squad was sunk up to the whidshield
with bridge but before anyone could
move, Crowbait crawled from the now
burning wreck and did a one and a half
gainer into the murkee depths of PSprings,
off the roof of the car.
There was a stunned silence and then,
one by one the cops began taking their
helmets off and putting their hands
over their hearts.
Newscope: Catch 'em Chief! He's
swimming away. And whats this with
the helmets. You gonna play the
national anthem?
Chief: God have mercy on him son. He
won't live two seconds in that polluted
spring. What a way to go, even for a guy
like that. I doubt if we'll ever even find
his body.
Vince and I walked slowly back to the
van. A proper ending. Once again
proving crime doesn't pay. But we had
a story.
The Reign Of Crowbait Cavanaugh
gotta go Chief?
Chief: For the sake of public decency
and all that is good and pure, besides, I
wanna see it. But that's off the record,
Doo Dah. Whew, just the thought of that
juicy little ...
Newscope: Excuse me. Thank you
chief and you can count on my
discretion of course. Good luck with
your lewd, liscentious, and immoral
investigations, but most of all I hope
you get that little fart Cavanaugh.
99 parking tickets later at the
Newscope office . . .
Me: Well Perry, I got the interview. All
on this. I patted my taperecorder.
Editor: Great Ceasers Ghost, Alexous!
Don't call me Perry. Mr. White to you.
Me: Sho'nuff boss. Ah, boss, do you
think that if a reporter while out on
assignment ... I mean if he got 99
parking tickets while on the job, would
the paper — ah — help him out? A little?
Editor: Hell NO! We're one of the most
underpaid, underrated orgainizations
in the entire world. No! No! No! and NO
again. We can't and won't afford it. The
facts Alexous. Who is this mad sniper?
Where'd he come from and what's he
Perry's playing is a little symbolic."
But Vince was so wrapped up in
flashing flashbulbs in his face that he
didn't answer. For two days, and I
mean two days, 48 h ours at least, we
drove and drove and drove, just waiting
for that elusive clue into the
whereabouts of the devil, C.
Cavanaugh. Vince and I by this time
were eating uppers like M & M's and
the tension was mounting. He kept
saying "Alexous, for Peter's sake, you
have to stop driving just for a minute.
Please? Please! I have to go to the john.
It's been two days now."
"Vince," I'd say, "Hold it just a little
bit longer. This is for God and country
and we ain't getting paid to piss on
some poor bushes." He'd just burst into
tears and start popping flashbulbs in
his face. But I had to hand it to him. He
held it like a man.
On the third morning the report we'd
been waiting for came over the police
radio. "Squads 1 thru 2,460 report to PSprings.
We've got a 10,478 out there.
Approach with caution." 10,478 in police
code means 'armed lunatic sniper'.
Crowbait Cavanaugh at last! We'd
found him!
walky talky. We pulled the van up
nearby and Vince went crawling full
speed ahead into the nearest bushes.
The sound of rushing water, not unlike
Niagara falls, was neard.
Newscope: Howdy Chief. Remember
me? Looks like you got him huh.
Chief: Whattsa matter with your
buddy? Can't he walk?
Newscope: He had to go bad. Sir.
Chief: Oh. Wanna see me scare this
cold blooded bastard half to death? We
got him trapped on that hill over there.
He raised his megaphone, "alio, alio,
alio, gyou are wanted for shooting ole
ladies in the ass and cuttin off peeples
heds and also for braking some windows
in the state penitentary. Giv up
Cavanaugh. You haven't got a prayer."
Cavanaugh: (from the top of the hill
"False accustaion's you Motha's. I
didn't break nobody's window's up and
I didn't cut nobody's head off either."
With that a police siren started at the
top of the hill and squad 99 came
crashing down thru the underbrush
with Cavanaugh at the wheel. The siren
was still going but an ancient Souix war
cry could be heard over it.
"WaHOOOOOOOOO."
As we drove away, Vince saw a
hitchhiker up the rode a ways. He said,
"Lets pick the poor guy up." We had an
arguement over company policy
concerning riders but I let Vince win.
He'd had a rough last few days with his
bladder. We pulled over and the
stranger stepped into the van.
Newscope: Whew. Man we could smell
your body a mile away!
Hiker: A mile away?
Newscope: A mile away.
Hiker: Well, it's not my fault. That park
oughta be named Pee-Atrofied Springs.
Don't ever try swimming in that creek.
Newscope: Yep — We're famous
newsmen out gatherin news about a
condemned dope crazed criminal indian.
God arrest his soul.
Hiker: (click) I am he brotha, and this
here armament that I just cocked is my
pistol. Drive on my friend and we'll
keep it peaceful. Crowbail Cavanaugh
at your service.
Newscope: Shriek, SCREEEECH . . .
YAAAAAAHHHHH . . . Hail Mary full
of . . .
What will happen to Vincent and
Alexous? There's only one way to find
out. Stay tuned next week for Part III.
Terror in a Van.
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Page 4 NEWSCOPE November 29,1971
NEWS BRIEFS
COURT UPHOLDS SEX EQUALITY IN JOBS
Washington, D.C. (CPS) — The Supreme Court has let stand two
major rulings by lower courts involving charges of job discrimination
because of sex. In one case, domestic airlines were told they must give
men, as well as women, the opportunity to work as flight attendants.
In the other, a woman was upheld in her contention that she was
denied her equal rights by being forced to retire from her brewery job
at age 62 when men at the same plant were allowed to work until they
were 65.
AFL-CIO OPPOSES REHNQUIST
Washington, D.C. (CPS) — AFL-CIO Legislative Director Andrew
.J. Biemillio branded Supreme Court nominee William H. Rehnquist a
"right-wing zealot" before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week.
He has advocated "unbridled executive power," Biemillio said,
and defended unregulated wiretapping. The labor organization joined
civil rights and civil liberties groups in opposing the Assistant Attorney
General's confirmation.
PENTAGON SUPPRESSES RAND CORP STUDY
(CPS) — The Pentagon is suppressing a Rand Corp. study on the
indoctrination and tactics of the National Liberation Front, the West
German news magazine Der Spiegel said. The 281-page study, based
on interviews with NLF deserters, concluded that battlefield successes
of the movement resulted from high ediological motivation and
implied that the policy of "Vietnamizing" the war was futile.
The U.S. government's doctrine is that terror tactics are
responsible for enemy battlefield success, Der Speigel said.
the 1971-73 edition of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Catalogue is now available. Students may pick up copies at the
Information Center and the Library in Tallent Hall on the main
campus and at the main offices of the Kenosha and Racine campuses.
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISERS
Hear a Moog Synthesizer Dec. 7
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THE RANCH
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
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
N|K Round Trip Jot.. .
NjR Ground T rmrtari .
Sewn Nights
Overnight thght from your city via d regularly scheduled Air France flight to
PARIS with dn immediate connecting Might to GENEVA. SWITZERLAND. Your
overseas High! will include complimentsy meals and beverages
Transportation IrOin and to GENEVA via deluxe bust's.
The tifst through the seventh day in COURCHEVEL. FRANCE, the most m odern
and extensively developed s ki atea m EUROPE situated at 6. I0f» feet in theuentei
ol a vast d omain ol snowtields Abundant s now, temaikable sunshine record. runs
from beginner's to e*pert's with intermediate runs from lop to bottom COURCHEVEL
was developed by Fmile Allais. French Olympic champion 2 big cabin
cableways. 6 gondolas, 36 ski and clvau lilts. 30,000 ascents pei hour. I ski lump,
35 marked runs including EUROPE'S lasiest Olympic run. ski school. 200 inslruc
to»s. a 50 man maintenance and ies«:ue team. 2 skating nnks. and 1t> discotheques
Lessons-$13 00 lor 12 2 Ihhh lessons, rental-skis and poles $2 00 per day
(appro*)
Lodging Your lodging in the ski area will be in modern new apartments and chalets all with
bath, kitchenette, balcony and individual beds
jjfl Reee end Party On the seventh day there will be a giant slalom race lot yotu group with an awards
party in Hie evening complete with wine, pii/es and trophies
3Iff. Eighth Night In GENEVA with thine great options Tor that day
z-tn Con tinue skiing in COURCHEVEL and that alter noon depart lor your over
^ night in GENEVA
®Ski m a different area suc h as LA PLAGNE and then go to GENEVA lor the
night
Depart in the morning lor GENEVA where you will have the day lor shopping
^ and sightseeing Overnight in GENEVA in a good category hotel
jfC Ninth Ni*it . . . , In PARIS. In the morning you will depart lor PARIS where you will have time 10
shop and spend the evening on the town. Overnight in a good calegoiy hotel Tlie
next morning you will catch your Air France Might home
jflfk Guides Multilingual guides will meet you' group upon your arrival HI EUROPE and will l>e
available to assist you at all times until departure
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:
Mr. William Niabuhr. Coordinator
Student Actrvitiat
University of Wisconsin - Parksida
Kenosh. Wisconsin 53140
Phone: (414) 55*2726
lODays
Only $264.
Plus $20.00 Tax and S*v»ct
Dqvm C1ue<Kia January 4
Return Che ,iim January 14
The electronic music of the
Moog Synthesizer will be
featured in a free public concert
by Chris Swansen, a young
performer-composer, at 8 p.m.
on Tuesday, Dec. 7, at the
University of WisconsinParkside
Wood Road campus in
the Greenquist Hall concourse.
The program is sponsored by
the Parkside Lecture and Fine
Arts Committee.
Swansen's program will include
a short introduction to the
synthesizer followed by a varied
selection of works by J. S. Bach,
Paul McCartney, Simon and
Garfunkle and Blood, Sweat and
Tears. The final portion of the
program will include a group of
compositions by Swansen, who
was named a composer in
residence and director of the
experimental music studio of R.
A. Moog, Inc., manufacturers of
the synthesizer, in 1968.
"All the pieces are presented
as a solo synthesizer performance
on top of prepared
tape which holds the additional
ten to 25 sy nthesized lines, the
total of which form the finished
composition," Swansen points
out. He will explain various
works in the program during
the performance.
Swansen, 32, received his
music degree from Dartmouth
College and played piano,
trombone, trumpet and a
number of other instruments
before turning to electronic
music. He studied composition
and orchestration with Herb
Pomeroy, Gunther Schuller,
Aaron Copland and Yannis
X e n a k i s; p e r f o r m ed
professionally with Phil Woods,
Gary Burton, Steve Marcus,
Stan Kenton and Maynard
Ferguson; and fulfilled commissions
for Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation,
Westdeutsch Rundfunk, the
N a tio nal E d uca tio nal
Television Network, Stan Getz,
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Burton and Marcus.
A graduate of Shorewood
High School, Milwaukee,
Swansen is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. T. L. Swansen of Rt. 2,
East Troy. Mrs. Swansen is a
cellist with the Kenosha
Symphony Orchestra.
Says young Swansen: "My
music derives from as many
sources as I can find and use
electronically. The music is not
limited by the instrument as
almost any conceivable sound
or tone color is possible on the
synthesizer. Almost every style
of composition and orchestration
is used at one time
or another, with an overall
freedom given to rhymic and
harmonic structures of the total
structure. Jazz, rock, folk
music of many parts of the
world, Indian scales and intervals,
classical and romantic
western forms and harmonies,
serial techniques, and Grecian,
Arabic and Chinese intervalic
systems, as well as pure
electronically derived forms
and patterns all enter into my
compositions."
Art Exhibition and Sale
The art discipline at the
University of WisconsinParkside
will sponsor an
exhibition and sale of original
graphic art by contemporary
and old master artists arranged
by the Ferdinand Roten
Galleries of Baltimore on
Friday, Dec. 3, from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. in the Greenquist Hall
Concourse on the Wood Road
campus.
Included in the exhibition will
be over 1,000 o riginal etchings,
lithographs, and woodcuts by
artists such as Picasso,
Chagall, Miro, Dali, Goya,
Renoir, Kollwitz, and many
others including contemporary
American, European and
Japanese printmakers. Prices
start at $5.00 with the majority
priced under $100.
A representative of the Roten
Galleries will be present at the
exhibition to answer any
questions regarding graphic art
and printmaking.
Established in 1932, Roten
Galleries has one of the largest
collections of graphic art in the
country and specializes in
arranging exhibition sales of
original graphic art at colleges,
museums, and art centers
throughout the country.
Through its one day
exhibition and sale program,
the Gallery serves ad an extension
to art education
programs by providing students
and other interested groups
with an opportunity to view a
variety of fine graphics. Last
year, Roten representatives
visited more than 1,000 sch ools
and organizations holding
events. In addition, the Gallery
sent more than 400 special
exhibitions to art centers,
museums and universities all
over the country.
Vila
To Perform
Spanish pianist Carmen Vila,
artist-in-residence at the
University of WisconqinParkside,
will present a
University Artist Series Concert
at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 5, in
Greenquist Hall at Parkside's
Wood Road Campus.
Miss Vila, presently in her
fourth year as resident artist at
Parkside, is an internationallyknown
concert pianist and has
appeared with major orchestras
and in recital
throughout Europe, the Middle
East and South America. She
also made a Carnegie Hall
appearance last winter in the
Juenesses Musicales Internationale
Artists Series.
Her performance Sunday will
precede a series of continental
concert dates during the holiday
break at the end of the current
semester.
Among them: A TV
production in Madrid, t\fco
concerts with the Valencia
(Spain) Philharmonic Orchestra,
a radio production in
Switzerland, two concerts with
the Barcelona (spain) Orchestra,
a recording session in
Madrid and recitals in Vienna,
Innsbruck and Wells, Austria.
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10-5 Saturdays, 12-5 Sundays
November 29,1971 NEWSCOPE Page5
The camera jerks back and forth with the
sound of intermittent footsteps and heavy
machinery mixed, blaspheming the sound of wind.
It is cold and the camera stops for a moment and
turns slowly from the concrete grays and browns
of loo ming Greenquist, its surrounding bare trees
made small by its size. A dirty sky blue bus
rumbles by ... a serious longhaired driver and
serious passengers seriously intent upon their
destinations are interrupted briefly by this slight
and look up to see the camera watch.
The walk continues along the asphalt trail,
over the boardwalk lifting the lens to the frigid
glass doors of the box ahead; they open and the
lens begins to fog. The obscure photographer
cleans it as if his own eye.
Flat angular-sharp the restless knife edges of
pragmatic, static architecture greet the ground
eye of the camera ... it walks on to look at faces.
Sitting on one of the burnt orange couches is a
girl. She is reading something and does not notice
the intruder. Her eyes dart from the book, blue
and lean they tell her story with a frown. A
seeming friend approaches and a smile parts her
lips. The change of expression is quick and
machined. They begin to talk with furtive gestures
for punctuation. The camera moves on.
Standing, looking through a window twice his
size is another. A green canvas knapsack law near
the feet dusty and bulging. Blue wash denimus
bleached by the sun clothe a rested frame with
dark hair tangled, the other turns, a face calm and
unaffected by falseness looks into the lens. A time
passes before interpretable expression lights the
geography of the other's face. A smile shows . . .
amusement and recognition. The camera has
found a friend.
Midnight: While I write this to you WRKR —
the voice of the people, is really talking to me like
few radio stations ever have. A cold cup of coffee
nearby. Debby asleep in our bed lonesome warm. I
should be lying beside her, but as usual there is
work to be done.
It isn't really the kind of wo rk that is assigned
to me or provoked from me, but instead a kind that
evolves from the quiet anguish of questioning;
penance for feigning an image to or at someone. I
could be confessing my dying ego to all who find
this column a little cryptic or overly critical, but
truer, I am probably only feeding the damn thing
again with self-serving scraps of romantic
bullshit. All I know is that others sing, some talk,
and I write this column for me and you.
Bill Sorensen
Orson Wells
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1820-52ND STREET KENOSHA
Hurdy Gurdy Donovan Mellow
by Dale Martin
of th e Newscope staff
We sat down at 7:14 p.m. after
a long hectic journey to McCormick
Place, through bottleneck
traffic that went on for
five miles. At 7:15 p.m., before
we even had our coats off,
Donovan walked on the stage.
He wore white loose fitting
bells, his curly hair longish but
not really long compared to
today's standards. A smile upon
his face and a guitar in his hand.
The stage contained a small
square platform. On it, three
mikes. One for Donovan's
vocals, one for his guitar and
one for the flute player who was
to come on later.
Without uttering a word
Donovan sat cross-legged,
Indian style, very relaxed. He
sang "Jenifer Juniper" and
sang it as one being only,
Donovan. The guitar became a
part of him as he strummed the
cords that have made him a
legend at 25. He then sang "I
May as Well Try to Catch the
Wind".
The drows had already
become enchanted and dazed.
The audience well behaved,
very little pot is going around,
you can smell it for a short time
at the beginning of the concert.
The party next to me had a
bottle of wine. They laughed
and talked through much of the
show, because they were
bombed out of their heads. I did
not even notice them for I had
tuned Donovan in and them out.
"So hello, how are you. This
was a couple of old sorta songs,
a few years old. This is a new
one and it's called "A Shape in
the Sky", says Donovan in his
Scottish accent. He starts to
play and decides his guitar is
out of tune and wordlessly takes
a few seconds out to tune it.
"There's a shape in the sky
and it's beckoning me." The
song turns out to be a fast
moving song, sung in a very gay
fashion. The song although sung
fast and gay was packed with a
lot of deep down philosophy.
One must listen closely or he
will be traicked by the song's
gayety. Without pause Donovan
goes into "Twas then when the
Hurdy Gurdy man comes
singing songs of love." Donovan
needs no reverb to make his
voice echo. "Hurdy Gurdy,
Hurdy Gurdy, Hurdy Gurdy is
sad." The growd goes wild.
"Down through all eternity the
crying of humanity".
"The next song," explains
Donovan, "is another new one
and it's called the orginary
family. The family which we all
belong to."
"My father cut his toe off in
rotary lawnmower . . . We're
just an ordinary family with the
ordinary calamities." The song
is easy and relaxing and is
about a family that has more
than its share of calamities.
Paul Horn was introduced
and came on stage wearing
white Nehru type clothing. Horn
plays the flue and the sax. He
has recorded 15 albums, the last
called Concert Ensemble in
which he mixes rock, classical
tracks and jazz.
Horn assisted Donovan for
most of the remaining numbers.
In the second set violinist Peter
Mark joined Horn and Donovan.
On the slower numbers Mark's
viola and Donovan's voice often
vibrated on the same note. The
effect is very pleasing.
Donovan took a ten minute
break for a cup of tea. He told us
the second set would be longer.
In all, Donovan played for two
full hours. He had another
concert to perform at 10:00 to
complete Thanksgiving eve.
The audience did not get into
it the way Donovan is accustomed.
We did actually, but
were too subdued to show it at
first. Donovan blamed it on
himself and said he wished he
had seen the stage set up ahead
of time. He said that he would
have had them build a platform
out into the audience. He said he
felt as if he were up on the stage
and that he was singing in a
room by himself. Donovan said
with a smile that he would try
not to let it get him down.
Many of the tongs towards the
end of the concert strived to get
the audience involved. Donovan
tried to get the audience into the
music with a song called
"Happiness Runs". The
number has a part for the men,
a part for the women and a part
for himself. We all broke down
and became totally apart of
hime with "Mellow Yellow".
Donovan wants to be close to
the audience and they can feel
it. "We surely have come a long
way, haven't we( We get near to
one another. People put what
they call popstars — they put
them in another place. Or
perhaps we feel in another
place, but I feel it getting nearer
and nearer. A record is very
nice to hear . . . but it's better
to feel the music going out and
going in around all of us, all us
feeling together."
ALADDIN
FLOWER SHOP
"n we st
Rac ine
3309 Washington Ave.
633-3595
%e VJley Supper CLl
1700 Sheridan Rd.
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN
Racine Theatre Guild
presents
OPENS
NOV. 19
601 High St.
SUMMERTREE 6334218
k fta rnlWCWBl
When a well-meaning father tells his son to "be a man", does he
mean HIS kind of man, or the son's?
Performance Dates:
Nov. 19,20, 21,26,27, 28, Dec. 3,4, 5
Two Performances Dec. 4, 5:15 & 9:00 p.m.
Curtain:
Fri. & Sat. 8:15; Sun. 7:30
Seats:
$2.50 Students $1.25 Fri. & Su n.
Ken Dan by Si/kscreens .\ew GalJory One
503Main Street
Racine, Wis
Page 6 NKWSCOPE November 29,1971
Sports test
m i k e
d a v is
spe ed
c i t y
A o9X o°* '<*\
-x*- d Fjf
o
N \>° ^e. >csN A' <,* xr
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Students at the University of
Wisconsin-Parkside are raising
money for a scholarship fund
and electing a queen for UW-P's
"Sportsfest" at the same time.
Nine coeds, sponsored by
athletic groups at UW-P, are in
the running for queen of
Sportsfest to be held Dec. 1-4,
with the winner being determined
by how much money
their sponsors raise for the
Harlow B. Mills Scholarship
Fund.
The late Professor Mills, an
internationally-known entomologist
who died last April,
was a full professor at UW-P
and acting dean of the College of
Science and Society during late
1969 and early 1970. Through
individual contributions and
bene fit stu den t-f acu lty
basketball games, nearly $1,000
has been raised for the
scholarship fund established in
his name shortly after his
death.
Students are taking their
campaigns into the cities of
Kenosha and Racine as well as
on campus this week and will
Pregnant?
Need Help?
We will h elp any w o m a n reg ard les s
ol rac e, religion, a g e or linan cial
sta tus . W e do n o t mora lize, but
mer ely h e lp w o m e n o bta in qualifi ed
D o cto rs for abo rtio ns, if this is
w h at they des ire . P l eas e do not
dela y, an earl y abor tion is m o re
sim ple a n d les s c o stly, a n d c a n b e
per for med on an o u t pati ent bas is.
r 312 922-0777
Problem Pregnancy
Assistance of Chicago 1
8 AM-10 P M—7 DAYS
A NON -PRO FIT ORGA NIZA TION
Pop art
By Joseph Schlitz
Candidates for queen of UW-Parkside's Sportsfest, which
ushers in the winter sports season Dec. 1-4 are (back row, from
left) Debbie LaJeunesse, 2308 - 25th Ave., Kenosha, sophomore,
sponsored by the ski club; Cathy Momper, 11198 G reen Bay Rd.,
Kenosha, sophomore, equestrian club; and Carol Busch, 7903
Pershing Blvd., Kenosha, freshman, fencers; (front row, from left)
Debbie Goudreau, 3529 V ictory Lane, Racine, freshman, hockey
club; Robin Strangberg, 6406 - 29th- Ave., Kenosha, junior,
basketball; Mary Fonk, 6511 - 42nd Ave., Kenosha, junior,
wrestlers; Liz Stellberg, 3055 Ruby Ave., Racine, freshman, tennis;
and Bonnie Eppers, Rt. 1, Kansasville, senior, judo club. Not
pictured is Barbara Lundskow, 7929 - 15th Ave., Kenosha,
sophomore, cross country and track.
For Mills S cholarship Fund
set up polling, or contribution,
places at the main UW-P
campus and the urban campuses
in Kenosha and Racine
next week.
The candidate who raises the
most money will be crowned
queen just before the wrestling
match between UW-P and
Northwestern University which
will kick off Sportsfest Dec. 1.
The meet will begin at 8 p.m. in
Kenosha Trempere high school
with the corwning and
presentation of court at 7:45.
Other athletic events over
which the queen and her court
will reign are a fenching match
between UW-P, UW-Madison
and the University of Chicago
Friday, Dec. 3, at 6 p.m. at
Racine Case high school
fieldhouse; a judo match between
UW-P and Marquette
University Saturday afternoon,
Dec. 4, at 1:30 at Racine Park
high school fieldhouse; a
gymnastics meet between UWP
and Northern Illinois
University Saturday at 4 p.m. at
Park; and the home opener
basketball game Saturday night
between UW-P and Wayne State
University at 8 p.m. at Case
fieldhouse. Sportsfest annually
opens the winter sports season
at Parkside.
PEPSI-COLA
P/4RIS SPECIM
University of Wisconsin-
'Parkside
Air F,ance «<> paris. YOUr
overseas flight will include complimentary meals and beverages.
Transportation from and to your hotel via deluxe buses.
The Eiffel Tower. Champs Elysees. the Flea Market'
'by TwitETfh mm8n
|L" '
h
!,
W0,ld
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5 mOS
' beau,i,ul ci,V. To be enjoyed
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philosophy, literature and fashion. Rich or poor, young or old you'll
become a lover of PARIS Right Bank to Left Bank, the city of dreams come
;Twin-bedded rooms with bath in good class hotels in central PARIS.
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The Louvre. Montparnasse. Sidewalk Cafesl
CHA^TREs'and^l^LO^RE'W^LLEY* TOUNTAINBLEAU,
•Multilingual guides will meet your group upon arrival i
be available to assist you at all times until departure.
I E UROPE and will
For additional Information
•a contact:
Mr. MWiam ffiaboh,
«~dant Act.mar Coordinator
Unkrarsitv of Witconain - Parftiida
Kanosfta. Wirooniin 63140
Fhona 14141 5632225
-MOTORING OPTION, for information please see reverse side.
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Depart: Chicago, December 27
neturn: Chicago, January 4
JM.OC or DOW Balance due by 30 dan prior to departo,.
For spoliation Mt r evtric ixk.
by Jim Casper
Sports Editor
College basketball fans in this area
should have a satisfying winter following
the progress of the Marquette Warriors,
who last year ranked number two in the
nation, running a 26-0 regular season
record only to be upset by Ohio Stafe 60-59
in the NCAA Tournament.
Adding a local angle again this year to
the Marquette team will be center Jim
Chones from Racine. Chones, a strong,
agile performer, is rated as an AilAmerican
this year by knowledgeable
basketball sources.
One of the most highly sought after
players while in high school, Chones
proved that the scouts were right by
having an excellent sophomore season. He
should be even better this year.
Newscope talked to Jim about prospects
for the new season.
Maruqette last year finished with a 28-1
record including tournament play. With
the loss of two regulars, Gary Brell and
All-American Dean Meminger, it clearly
leaves gaps on the team.
Newscope asked Chones whether or not
these openings can be filled, and how this
year's' team will compare with the
previous one.
Chones: "We have a lot more ability than
we have ever had."
Newscope: Even more than last year?
Chones: "Very easily. It's hard for people
who don't know basketball to imagine that
we have more ability, but Bob Lackey is a
better ballplayer than he showed last year,
and I am a better ballplayer than what I
showed, but when you have a Dean
Meminger you sort of take a back seat
while everybody is watching Dean. This
year we won't have the great ball handler
so that means everybody else will have to
do a little bit more, and as a result I think
you will see more individual talent. Instead
of going to Dean for the pressure
basket, I'll be getting the ball or Bob will
be getting it."
Newscope: Among the new players who
really impresses you?
Chones: "We've got a great sophomore in
Larry McNeil who I think is probably the
greatest forward in college right now. He
is a lot like Ken Durrett, wiry and strong.
We call him Connie Hawkins."
Newscope: You say there is more overall
talent this year, but how do you think the
team will react in tight games without the
leadership of Dean Meminger?
Chones: "I think we'll survive. We'll have
to become more of a team. We can't just
rely on one person, we'll have to rely on
each other, and this in itself will bring us
togehter. People said the same thing when
Marquette lost George Thompson.
"You have to remember that Marquette
doesn't have just good ballpalerys, they
have ballplayers that would be stars if they
went to other schools.
'We just don't have adequate ballplayers
November 29,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7
s Jim Chones
Foresees Good Year
anymore, like a Gary Brell who was just
supposed to play defense and get the
scraps. Now we have players like McNeil
who can get the scraps, rebound, shoot,
dribble and handle all other phases of the
game. This is the kind of players
Marquette is recruiting. This is a new kind
of ball team."
Newscope: What about UCLA?
Chones: "They had a good freshman team
but they played an easy schedule. I don't
know. I've heard a lot about (Bill) Walton,
I hear he is a pretty good rebounder. I
don't like to comment on individual
players, as far as teams go, I don't really
know. Mr. Wooden is a great coach, and
somehow they will come through with a
decent record."
"If I were a sportswriter I think I would
rate them number one just on prestige
alone. They should be number one until
somebody knocks them off."
Newscope: What about the Big 10 this
year?
Chones: "I think Michigan is going to take
it. I don't think Ohio State can beat
Michigan this year. I heard that (Ken)
Brady, their 6-9 center, got hurt and if they
lose him they can almost forget it."
"Ohio State has a good coach and good
ballplayers so they could win again."
Newscope: Would you like to get another
crack at Ohio State?
Jim Chones
Chones: "I don't know. I don't believe they
will go that far this year. Witte played with
us this summer in the Pan-American
Games and he didn't get in that much
because he is not that mobile of a center,
but he does what he is supposed to do for
their type of game. But I can't see them
going any father because they lost a great
player in (Jim) Cleamons, and there will
be some adjustments made, but these are
great players, not just adequate ones, and
I think they will have another good team
and I hope they will go as far as they can so
we can get another chance at them."
Newscope: How about your own style of
play? Will it be changing this year? Will
they be relying more on you?
Chones: "I don't know, like I've changed
my whole game. If you haven't seen me
play yet this year then you will see that my
whole game has changed. In the past I
never had a game, I just played, never
having something that was steady all the
time."
"People sometimes say, 'he is not
playing his game,' but you couldn't say
that last year about me because I didn't
have a game. Now I have developed a
game by hard work and playing a lot this
summer."
"I just want people to see us play
because they will see an altogether different
team. Many are skeptical because
we depended so much on Dean, but I think
that we will have a better team. I really
believe this, and the practices have proven
it. Coach is letting us out early because
he's been thinking we are peaking too soon.
We have been really looking good, really
great."
Newscope: Who will fill the position that
Meminger vacated?
Chones: "It would have been George
Frazier but he is hur.t right now. but he
should be back by December 1st. I don't
know if he will be starting by then. Marcus
Washington and Randy Wade have been
looking very good and are battling for the
job right now."
Newscope: The schedule this year looks
much tougher with Jacksonville, South
Carolina, and Michigan among the tougher
opponents on it. What do you think about
it?
Chones: "Well, I think it has to be tougher
for the type of ballplayers we have. If
anything hurt us last year I think it might
have been those last seven games because
they weren't that hard and we found it
difficult to get up for them, and therefore
weren't prepared to go into tournament
play."
"This year, with the tougher schedule,
we will be better prepared for the strong
teams."
Newscope: Does the high national ranking
make opponents tougher than they normally
would be9
Chones: "When you are rated number one
or two. everybody is out to get you. Every
game will be tough It's been said so many
times that people don't really believe it. If
a Loyola or a South Carolina can beat a
Marquette, that makes their whole
seasons. With coach's (A1 McGuire)
arrogance it makes other teams want to
beat us all the more so that just adds to it."
Newscope: What about games against
highly rated teams? Will they be great
obstacles?
Chones: "You seem to be underestimating
us. We have a good team and I'm not
worried about anybody. I feel that if we go
out and play hard against anybody we will
beat them. You can't judge these teams by
the way they performed in the past. Some
of them aren't as good as last year. I don't
think that Notre Dame and Jacksonville
are as good as they were last year."
* "But they are still good enough, and it
will make their seasons just to beat
Marquette. We won't play their game, we
will just play the way we are accustomed
to, and if we play our best I think we'll do
all right."
Newscope: What teams will be toughest
overall?
Chones: "Memphis State I know will be
tought because they are rated well in the
Missouri Valley Conference. Minnesota
will be very good. South Carolina will be
very tough at Stouh Carolina. Jacksonville
will be tough, and New Mexico State will
be difficult on the road."
Newscope: Does the long winning streak at
the Milwaukee Arena add any pressure?
(more than 50 consecutive home victories)
Chones: "I've never thought about the
victories. I just play. I've heard people
talking about this streak, but I never think
about it while playing. That's no added
pressure to me."
Newscope: Who do you think will end up as
NCAA champions?
Chones: "You can't say. The season hasn't
even started yet. You can get a better idea
when you see the teams play. You can see
how Marquette is doing, how UCLA is
doing, and go by scores and judge from
there. That is a very hard thing to predict'
+ + +
One thing that can be predicted is that
Marquette will be fighting for the top spot.
It seems clear that this team will be among
the best, and possibly the best in the
country.
As far as Jim Chones is concerned, he
proved last year that he can withstand
pressure. He feels that he has improved
much over last season and that is
frightening news for Marquette opponents.
With his confidence, determination and
great knowledge about the game, it is
more than likely that the 6-11 center from
Racine will live up to his All-American
ratings.
Get Acquainted Offer
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Three v olume story
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HELP WANTED
WANTED
COUNTER GIRL — Must be able to
work Friday noon hours and nights
and weekends — apply in person
Monday or Tuesday after 4, Sandy's
Drive-In.
1 or 2 female roommates to share
apartment during 2nd semester.
Call 632-1691 b etween 1 and 5 p.m.
Ask Tbr Gretchen.
RIDE from 65th street & Sheridan
road to Parkside 5 days per week at
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with Rosewood body, $28, Folk
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complete set children's Golden Book
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Gals: Dress up for the Holidays in a
1933 brown crepe; long bloused
velvet sleeves; separate sleeveless
jacket. Worn 3 times. Call 657-7223.
1 pair of men's ski boots (laced), size
10 for $8. Call Info. Cn»r., ext. 2345.
Cold Heart Warmer - size 14,
muskrat fur jacket $50. Call 652-6754.
Typewriter - Remington portable,
with case. $35. Call 654-0272 from 9-5,
or 652-2788 after 5.
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Center, Tallent Hall,
room 201.
HEY KIDS! Need your term papers
typed? Call Tee Rafferty, 654-3094.
FOR SALE — Pentron reel type tape
recorder, 1200 ft. capacity, portable
with tapes, empty reels and accessories.
$20. Call 654-4982.
HOUSE - re nt free for neat mature
female. Call 552-8835 a fter 4 p.m.,
Kris.
WHEELS
1968 PONTIAC GTO — 2 dr, low
mileage, solid dark blue with tinted
windows, five-spoke wheels with
mag rims with red inserts, interior
dark, rawhide wheel cover, 10,000
rpm sun tach. Any reasonable price
accepted. Must sell fast, going to
Canada. Call 634-2316, ask for Allan.
1966 CHEVY II — Wagon, standard,
radio, good condition, $650 including
snow tires. Call 552-8956 evenings or
weekends.
PONTIAC FIREBIRD 1967 — Like
new condition, 326 engine, new paint,
mag wheels. 694-2075.
1976 Ambassador, 4-door, 232 engine,
automatic — good condition. $795,
call 551-9556 after 5 p.m., 1814 - 18 th
Ave.
1963 Rambler 4 dr. Good engine,
good paing, $165 o r offer. Call 632-
5779 or 553-2423.
1064 BE LAIR CHEV^f — White 4 dr.,
$150, in good condition. 554-7719, 4532
Ridge Crest Drive.
1965 F-85 OLDSMOBILE — V8,
auto., pwr steering, 4 dr sedan, very
good cond. no ru$t. One owner, 54,000
mi. NF green - $700. Call 654-3937.
FOR SALE - 1964 Chrysler Newport,
dependable. Call 639-0379.
FOR SALE 1966 Triumph 650 T.T.
Runs great, but needs little work.
$500 or best offer. Call 552-8987.
1967 Cougar, 3 speed on floor, 289
eng. Clean interior, 4 new tires, 2
owner. Call 654-0272 from 9-5, or 652-
2788 a fter 5.
JUGUAR - 1966 XKE coupe. Very
good mechanically & structurally,
best offer over $1950. Contact Prof.
Beyer evenings at ext. 53 on Racine
Campus.
FOR SALE - '65 Plymouth 426
automatic, 2 dr. hardtop, bucket
seats, mags. Must sell. $800. Call 654-
7346 after 4:30.
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 13, November 29, 1971
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1971-11-29
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
dean loumos
ken konkol
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/a240690ee6e7d1062be06aac621a0326.pdf
bc2a2d73b6e76872019b07844df426f4
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 5, issue 3
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
To or To Not a Student Government
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
ByKen Konkol of the Newscope slall eel'
1bursday, the 16th of September, at 7:30 p.m, m AIDg·
. \lOOm101 Greenquist, Parkside witnessed the report from the Student Union Commi -.te ba recb>ed Ita m_benbIp from 21 to 15.
;::"tmeeting of the Student Senate in four months. -;'85 mos~~ a bitch about enlon:ed subservi ttee bullhooe mteon are pulllnll .... a vahanl ltnIIIIe
Problems were encountered with notification e admlDlSlration, relegating it to useI= to give students a voice at Parblde
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 ,<IIeral udenl
o ot a StUdent Government
to be mailed the week before, did not reach
senators till the day of the meeting.
By some marvelous coincidence a quorum
was established at 7:51 and the meeting came to
disorder. . . .
The first official order of business was the
resibnation, in writing, of Walter Ulbrights who
stated the convention was illegal according to the
senate constitution which called for meeting
during the summer.
It was decided more or less by assent among
the rest of the senators, no vote taken, to suspend
the constitution retroactively since the last
Along.about the time the election committee
reported It was discovered that the senate had
resigned itself out of a quorum aod the eetin
broke up. m g
So, after only five months of operation the
power for control of Student Affairs, a rip-off o[ the
University in general, proposals [or the expansioo
of the mdependent studies program to civic alfairs
;and the estabtishment of a proposed day care
,center. In conclusion he gave his oral resignation
'to the remainder of the senate which was accepted.
attendance.
The Gnevance and C1eammg Ho... Com
mittee will list<ll to and d1scusa ludMI eemplaints
and problmu with th ~ o[ unn
results. The committee will meet on Thuraday,
September 23. al 4: pm ID .-n 103,
Greenquisl. n.e enure st.udtnt body and anyone
else is invited to euend,
The senate will hold a general m IDll on
Monday, 8epI. 27, at.: pm ID Gr=lqulSl 10\
Once again, the)'d like to pac thp lecture hall
Prove Parkside IS nol apathetic to I o""n c r
- come!
FREE "Journalismis Literature in a Hurry" -Matthew Arnold University of W isamsin • Parkside
•••••••
volume 5 ,Number 3 September 20, 1971
(Pioneer' Conditions Braved by Parks ide Villagers
Norwood Interested it) Results
By Warren Nedry. Editor-in-Chief
Although Parkside Village is nearing
CGIIIpletion,the present living conditions
vary (rom near complete to primitive. Units
slated to house (rom two to four students are
JftSeIItly the home for up to ten.
Adding to the "pioneer" atmosphere at
Parkside Village is the lack of running
waler, electricity and telephones. Part of
IIIiI primitive atmosphere has been normalized
during the past week, but there
NIIlSinunits without what most of us term
"Iecessities". All endure the noise and the
~us journeys through the 7 - 4:30
_!ruction world.
These conditions were brought about by
lIbat Mr. Emil Avendroth, President of
Global Construction Company, general
~ctor for Parks ide Village, termed "the
liIlJt labor market in the Kenosha-Racine area': and "the inability of suppliers to meet
JI'OlDised deadlines". Adding to the delay
... a Week-long, njid·summer. labor strike.
Asked if it was true that some tenants
IIIdtouse the bathtub as their .only source of
IUIIning water - for washing dishes,
~~, brushing teeth, etc. - Avendroth
:; 'This is true if they use the facilities in
IIlen apar~ent, but there are other apartIs,
bousmg by the same sex, within the
complex that have facilities and
IlTangements could be made to use them if
~ desired to. It's an inconvenience, but at
~me time we're not charging for that
vemence. We will not make it in-
-enient for any student. He can have
by lIlarc Elsen.
Sa althe Newscope stan
YIDg.that he had no
~'Ved notions of how
!lIg..:,de should develop,
IIIthe Norwood,the new Dean
~ College o[ Scien~e and
IInieW' slaled m a brIef in·
lIilb fa that he would first meet
1IIIkin cully members hefore
"y g POlicydecisions OU .
loot;" I can't really work eflllII'
? unless you have met
IlIeir SCuItyand have learned
'OOd
="
and plans," Norb\I
.
liked~ntly,. the Dean has
10leI u DlV1s~onalChairman
1II1bu.,P a serIes of meetings
"I [acuity.
liat.n ~~d come to these to
!lis' o<woodsaid
4iffer~~ents were markedly
....'_ n from the initial -neDts of hi • ~ M . S pred~cessor ..
-, 'Nh acKlOney. MacKin-
...;. owns appointed to the
~ PDoltIonlast year at this
~r"responsible for the
lostant Greatness"
what he wants and we will pay for it on this
temporary basis."
.Tenants have the choice of living at a
motel or at the Parkside Village site. If they
choose a motel they are required to pay rent
on their uncompleted apartment to help
defer the added cost of the motel. At
Parkside Village they are required to pay for
the space used unless they are in groups of
eight or more.
Although all tenants were told Sept. 1
was the completion date, Avendroth said it
would be difficult for a tenant to break his
lease. The lease requires Global to
demonstrate a best effort to complete on
schedule.
Commenting on the possibility of fire or
health code violations, Avendroth said there
were no code violations as far as the living
conditions were concerned and stressed the
temporary nature of the conditiDns. Present
conditions require living in and around
construction life: noisy machines, miles of
cords lumber piles, refuse piles and open
fires. 'In some of the complexes fire extinguishers
are not evident. No telephones
are available as of yet.
"We will have sulficient aparbnents for
all students who bave registered with us,"
Avendroth said. "They will all be with their
permanent group, perbaps not in their
leased apartment, by the end of next week
(Sept. 25)." At this time apprOJomate1y.60
people have leased apartments at Parks.de
t continued on Page 8)
that led to the attempted
purging of 27 faculty members.
When popular resistance. to
the purge made it imposs.ble
for it to be· carried out,
MacKinney, along with. Vice
Chancellor Harris, resIgned.
Norwood as Dean of the
College of Science and SocIety
will have the Chairmen of the
Science, Social Scien~e,
Humanities and EducatIon
divisions report to him.
He will be the eollege's
principal educational and administrative
officer, and will be
responsible for staff and
program development,
program review, and budget.
Because of responsibilities. at
UW-M where he was the acting
Dean ~f tbe Graduate School,
Norwood will only be at
Parkside part time till October
15. He will he spending three
days a week at Parkside and
two at UW-M lill tben.
Norwood said he had no
priority poticies he would like to
see instituted. "It'd be mappropriate
to commenL It would
appear I had come With
preconceived ideas. I'd rather
talk to tbe faculty and students
firsl .
"One thing 1 have learned IS
that each instilution is different/'
he said la~1 ".an~ if
anyone comes into an mstitutioo
with preconceived notions of
what to do Wlthout first
checking with the laculty and
students, he's going to find
himself in difficulhes.
"One uses tbese sour<:e'l...of
ideas Of he said. "One's job then
is to' sort out those ideas ~l
can be instituted, and to expand
.",.-
.---
JERRY SOCHA
Next Week
an Interview with
Muddy Waters
Iruclur "Good ,d a nOI
unplemented are 1
expiaIDed
"Th place hi to dev op'
own mold," be e.mph'~lted
Ialer "II's unique. II can't flI
already eXlSUn&molds."
"We're nol 01Dg to sel nul
With the preconceved nollon of
being the Harvard of the Pike
iIlver," he added dryly
Norwood said be favored a
strong undergraduate program
He observed Uus IS a University
of WisconsIn institutional goal,
noling President Weaver's
recenl rea£fll'll\ation of this
before the JOlnl Finance
Committee.
The failure of the stale
legislature 10 pas$ a budgel has
hurt the University, par·
ticularly in recruiting, he said
Critical teachi~ positions will
be fll1ed fI1'SL
What are some of pen.onal
values? "I have the ,dea people
come before programs. I'm
suspicious of rhetoric - I'm
more interested in results."
.J IE: fl "'v sOC:".
DEAN £:U(O.£NE NORWOOD
those policies that have ""orIted
in the past.
'''Ibis does nol mean 1will nol
he making judgments," he
noled.
He sees part of his job as
making more effective the
Colle e administrative
By Ken Konkol of the Newscope staff
'lbursday, the 16th of September, at 7:30 p.m.
. RoOm 101 Greenquist, Parkside witnessed the
first meeting of the Student Senate in four months.
Problems were encountered with notification
of members because cards, which were supposed
meeting.
was A report f~m the Student Union Committee
the =~~ a bit~ about enforced subservience to
G uustr~tion, relegating it to uselessness
th ary Davis spoke eloquently for 45 minutes ~ e plans of Academic Policies to get a hold on ·hich .
ToorToNot s a tudant Govarnm
to be mailed the week before, did not reach
senators till the day of the meeting.
By some marvelous coincidence a quorum
was established at 7:51 and the meeting came to
disorder.
'lbe first official order of business was the
resibnation, in writing, of Walter Ulbrights who
stated the convention was illegal according to the
senate constitution which called for meeting
during the summer.
It was decided more or less by assent among
the rest of the senators, no vote taken, to suspend
the constitution retroactively since the last
Along_ about the time the election committee
re~rted _it was discovered that the senate had
resigned itself out of a quorum and the tin
broke up. mee g
So, after only five months of operation the
po~er f~r c?ntrol of Student Affairs, 8 rip-off of the
Uruv~s1ty m general, proposals for the expansion
of the mdependent studies program to civic affairs
. and the establish~ent of a proposed day care
center. In conclusion he gave his oral res1gnation
to the remainder of the senate which "a ac- cepted.
"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" - Matthew Arnold University o j W isrons in - Parkside
••••••• VqJume 5 _Number 3 September 20, 1971
nt
FREE
'Pioneer' Conditions Braved by Parksid Villag r
By Warren Nedry, Editor-in-Chief
Although Parkside Village is nearing
completion, the present living conditions
,-ary from near complete to primitive. Units
slated to house from two to four students are
presently the home for up to ten.
Adding to the "pioneer" atmosphere at
Parkside Village is th~ lack of running
waler, electricity and telephones. Part of
this primitive atmosphere has been normalized
during the past week, but there
remain units without what most of us term
'necessities". All endure the noise and the
d.ingerous journeys through the 7 - 4:30
COIL5truction world.
These conditions were brought about by
what Mr. Emil Avendroth, President of
Global Construction Company, general
contractor for Parkside Village, termed "the
tight labor market in the Kenosha-Racine
area•: and "the inability of suppliers to meet
pronused deadlines". Adding to the delay
1-a a week-long, mid-summer. labor strike.
Asked if it was true that some tenants
bad l? use the bathtub as their .only source of
runn~ng water - for washing dishes,
Shaving, brushing teeth, etc. - Avendroth
Iii~, "This is true if they use the facilities in
their aparbnent, but there are other apartlllents,
housing by the same sex, within the
complex that have facilities and
~nge~ents could be made to use them if
~Y desir~ to. It's an inconvenience, but at
lnco sam~ time we're not charging for that
nvenience. We will not make it inconvenient
for any student. He can have
what he wants and we will pay for it on this
temporary basis."
Tenants have the choice of living at a
motel or at the Parkside Village site. U they
choose a motel they are required to pay rent
on their uncompleted apartment to help
defer the added cost of the motel. At
Parkside Village they are required to pay for
the space used unless they are in groups of
eight or more.
Although all tenants were told Sept. 1
was the completion date, Avendroth said it
would be difficult for a tenant to break h.
lease. The lease requires Global to
demonstrate a best effort to complete on
schedule.
Commenting on the possibility of fire or
health code violations, Avendroth said there
were no code violations as far as the living
conditions were concerned and stre sed the
temporary nature of the conditions. Present
conditions require living in and around
construction life: noisy machines, miles of
cords lumber piles, refuse piles and open
fires. ' In some of the complexes fire extinguishers
are not evident. No telephones
are available as of yet.
"We will have sufficient apartments for
all students who have registered w_ith us,."
Avendroth said. "They will all be \\-~th the~r
permanent group, perhaps not m their
leased apartment, by the end of _next week
(Sept. 25)." At this time approximately_ 60
people have leased apartments at Parkside
(COntmued on Page 8)
J Y OCHA
ext We
an Interview wit
Muddy Waters
by Marc Eisen
Sa "! the Newscope staff
Ytng that he had no
~_ceived notions of how
Eug side should develop
Ii lhene Norwood, the new Dea~
Soci e College of Science and
~~ty, stated in a brief inlnthlew
that he would first meet
lllak~acu}~ members before
Norwood Interested in Results
"Y ~ policy decisions.
!etti I can't really work efYvur
v; Y Unless you have met
their acuity and have learned
'°OCd :t and plans," Nor- Su . ~uen_tl~,. the Dean has
to set u e Divis~onal Chairman
lrith u/ r a senes of meetings ,.1 acuity
len~~d co~e to these to
His 0rwood said
d1rrer::~ents were markedly
Ila tern from the initial
~re~ of ~s predecessor' . lley, Wh acKmney. MacKinlline
O .~as appointed to the
IIine, J>Ositton last year at this
Policy :;s,{esponsible for the
nstant Greatness"
that led to the attempted
purging of '%7 faculty members.
When popular resistance_ to
the purge made it impossible
for it to be carri_ed o~t,
MacKinney, along with. Vice
Chancellor Harris, resigned.
Norwood as Dean of . the
College of Science and SOCiety
will have the Chairmen _of the
Science, Social Scien~e,
Humanities and Education
divisions report to him.
He will be the College's
principal educati_onal and: administrative
officer, and will~
responsible for staff an program development,
program review, and budget.
Because of responsibilities_ at
UW-M where he was the acting
Dean ~f the Graduate School,
Norwood will only be at
Parkside part time till October
15 He will be spending three
&ys a week at Parkside and
two at UW-M till then.
Norwood said he had no
priority policies he would ~e to see instituted. "It'd be mappropriate
to commenl It w°':11d
appear I had come with
preconceived ideas. I'd rather
talk to the faculty and students
first . ··One thing I have learned IS
that each institution is different,"
he said. la~, "_an~ if
anyone comes into an mstitution
with preconceived notions_ of
what to do without first
checking with the faculty and
students, he's go!ng to find
himself in difficulties.
"One uses these ~..of
ideas " he said. "One's job then
is to 'sort out those ideas ~t
can be insti~ted, and to expand
J£1'RY SOC'H4
CEA £UG£ £ ORWOOO
those policies that ha,· " ed
in the past.
"This does not mean I 11 not
be malting judgments," he
noted.
He sees part of his job a
making more effective the
Colle e administrative
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Pa,e2
To the Editor:
Certain members of the so
called left wing 01 the Student
Government are apparently
trying to sell out the student
body 01 Parkside to the Administration
They have
decided that alter rambling
around on extraneous issues
and causing the student
government to accomplish
little. that they must exemplily
their ideal, the administration
even further They hav~
deerded to resign m protest
because they cannot dissolve
the student government.
They are Irustrated by the
fact that no one wilt bow down to
them, since they are the only
true god in the university.
They are attempting to turn
the students' means of making a
mark in the uruversity into a
lal .club of im potence and
al 0 provide the administration
WIthan excuse lor not giving the
students thear due TIghts and
prmleges
Gary Adelsen,
tudent Senate Member
september %ti. Itt! .
Ed. Note: This letter was senl
to NEWSCOPE last week
shortly after the situation at
Parkside Village came to our
attention. It proved to be interesting
reading material.l
It has been brought to my
attention that there is a feeling
among certain students that
Parkside is not interested in
protecting the needs and interests
of those students who
are housed 0(( campus. In these
days when anti-establishmenl
attitudes run so rampant
throughout society, it is easy lor
those who wish to capitalize on
any situation to feed the flames
by making accusations against
those who are responsible for
administering programs.
In the August 16, 1971,issue 01
EWSCOPE there was a
lengthy article on the ellorts
made by the campus to secure
student housing. Since that time
Parkside Village has begun to
house a number of students who
have had to live under rather
trying conditions due to the lack
KENOSHA-RACINE
Complete
Poster
Gallery
also 'Love' and 'Soft Touch' greeting cards
PARK DRUGS
Just north of washIngton ROodon .,-... A . h ~~.... venue In K enos a
10% OCsco...t-lT Wln-l PARKSICE CAR'Tl-lAGE: OR . KTI 1.0.
01 completed lacilities. We have
always made it clear that the
relationship 01 the student
tenant and the private landlord
is a contractual relationship in
which the University is not a
party. We are, however, concerned
when students are living
under difficult circumstances
and therefore in cooperation
with the management 01
Parkside Village have begun
steps to mutually investigate
the problems that exist. Miss
Jewel Echelbarger 01 this office
along with the Student
Government President, the
editor 01 the NEWSCQPE and
Mr. Agendroth 01 ParksidSe
Village were able to discuss this
matter on Thursday, September
t6, t97t, and it is anticipated .
that out 01 this meeting
progress was made both in
execution and understanding.
Furthermore, Miss
Echelbarger has attempted to
contact as many 01 the student
residents as possible and it is
her feeling that although the
conditions may be somewhat
dillicult, those directly involved
are bearing up quite well and
displaying a relreshing sense 01
humor and a ce~tain esprit de
corps.
Iassure you that we are going
to maintain contact with this
specific situation as with any
others that may arise. Personally,
I feel that the construction
of student housing
must be considered as an asset
to the campus. It is my hoep
that you will join with us in'
encouraging lurther growth 01
this nature and the attraction of
more students to our campus. If
any student would like to
discusS this matter lurther with
the parties concerned, Isuggest
that the Ollice 01 Student
Services be contacted at the
earliest moment.
Allen B. Dearborn
Ass't Chancellor for
Student Services
To the Editor:
The Ford Foundation is
pleased to announce the continuation
of the following
programs for the 1972-1973
year:
Doctoral Fell
American Indian ~"'Sbi", for
Doctoral Fell tude.iI
Black StUdents o"'sbi", for
Doctoral Fell
M
. o....hi eXlcan America Ips br
Rican Students n alll\ Pu,,\
These .Iell~shi
are lor stUdents w~~
undertaken any ba....
prolessional stu:aduatt" Wish to pursue the Pt, iIId '10
enter careers .. D·IId"
ed ti In hi.- uca ion. Each .....
support lull-lime .~
five years conlin 1~lh
Fellow's SatiSlac~: IIJIOn '"
toward the Pb.D. IIvtIlI
InstrUCtions and
lorms may be ob",a~
The Ford Foundati IIIed rr..
43rd Street, N.... ~ 311 "-
York 10017.AppIicati0It. ""
three program. ....rur
complete. by Jan muat It
We will be h uary 10, l1li.
additional inl:~:a~ ~
request. IOn "Plo
Patricia A.Baduna"
DoctoralF~
SPECIAL EVENlll
SATURDAY.OCT,Z
Concert - John Den
p.m. KenoshaTrem: .-
School Auditorium. ~
mISSIOn 83.5(). TtcQq
available at tbe Studoa
Activities Office R.a ..
Tallent Hall. '
FRIDAY,OCT.'
SATURDAY,OCT.'
Octoberle.t - Weel:ead ~
atWelic and soclaI .-
CompetitioninClOII01oaItJ
Soccer, Golf, T ..
and Sailing. Alao, ..
brats at soccer .
Saturday alterDOOl ...
dances at !be SludIIII ,.
tivilies Building FridIJ ..
Saturday nigbts.
CAMPUS EVENTS
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21
Cross Country - UW-P vs.
WSU-Whitewater at
Whitewater.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22
Recital - Harpsichord and
cello recital by Frances
Bedford and Harry Lantz,
UW-P music laculty, in 103
Greenquist, 8 p.m. Free.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 2.
Film Feature film
:'Rosemary's Baby" at S p.m.
10 the Activities Building.
Adm. 75c.
SATURDAY, SEPT. 25
Dance Sponsored by
NEWSCOPE. Activities
Building. 9-1 a.m. Adm.
charg~ __._
Get Acquointed Offer
FREE LUBE
With Oil & Filter Change.
PARKSIDE SH ELL
WASHINGTON ROAO
& 30TH AVe.
654-9968
Save
for
the
Future
at
WEST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
Phone 658.2573
58th St. at 6th Ave.
MAIN OFFICE,
CAPITOl COURT,
MILWAUKEE
~
Editorial Stall
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry
Managing Editor John Koloen
Feature Editor Paul Lomarlire
Fine Arts Editor Bill Sorensen
Copy Editor Larry Jones
Photo Editor Jerry Socha
Business Manager John Beck
VALEO'S· .~
IZ
AND ITAU AN SAUSAGE: El::Ivf3ER5' -'
5lI2l-lltlt Ay... e Kenoslll &&J-III
Open 6 days 0 week from 4 p.m., closeel ~
Cross Country - UW-P vs.
North Central- at UW-P .. 11
a.m.
Soccer - UW-P vs. Wisconsin
Junior All-Stars at UW-P.
SUNDAY, SEPT. 26
Concert- Milwaukee Fine Arts
Quartet sponsored by the
University Artists Concert
Series. 4 p.m., 103Greenquisl.
Adm. $1.00, students $.50,
children 12 and under free.
Film- "The Shop on Main
Street" sponsored by In·
tercollegiate Film Council. 7
p.m. Golden Ronde11e
Theatre, 16th & Howe
Racine. Limited number of
tickets available at the Information
Center, second
floor. Tallent Hall.
Writing Staff
.Bob Borchardt, James
Ca~per, Marc EiseQ, Kelly
Infusino, Jim Koloen Ken
Konkol '
Contributing Staff
Mike Stevesand, Mike Starr
Photography
Darrell Borger, Ricky Pazera
Production staff
Becky Ecklund Denise
Anastasia, Roberta' Williams
Business Staff
Connie Kinsella,Dave'"
Barb Scott
Phones
Editorial ..
Business ..
Newscope is an ~
student newspaper .......
by students 01theUai~
Wisconsin-Parksido
weekly except duriIC~
periods. Student oIliafIlI'.
vertising Ioods .... till til
source 01 revenue ltr :-
ope~ation 01 N~~ ..
copIes are P'~ II
distributed tbro..--"
Kenosha and Badat
mwlities 'as weD • ~::
sitv. F..... capiea are
upon request.
Page2 ''EWSCOPE, eptember2011971'
LETT-ERS TO THE EDITOR
G ry del 0 n,
tu nt nate ~tember
Ed. Note: This letter was sent
to 'EWSCOPE last week
shortly after the situation at
Parkside Village came to our
attention. It proved to be interesting
reading material.)
It has been brought to my
attention that there is a feeling
among certain students that
Park. ide is not interested in
protecting the needs and interests
of those students who
are hou ed off campus. In these
day when anti-establishment
attitudes run so rampant
throughout society, it is easy for
those who wish to capitalize on
any situation to feed the names
by making accusations against
tho::;e who are responsible for
administering programs.
In the August 16, 1971, issue of
'EWSCOPE there was a
lengthy article on the efforts
made by the campus to secure
tudent housing Since that time
Park ide Village has begun to
house a number of students who
have had to live under rather
trying conditions due to the lack
Complete
Poster
Gallery
al o 'Love' and 'Soft Touch' greeting cards
PARK DRUGS
Just n<>fth of woshington Rood 00 """'..l A . ,/.f.'"" venue in K enosho
1'"- DISCXl.NTWITH P~ICE CAc-n_, ' rs I nAGE OR KTI 1.0 .
of completed facilities. We have
always made it clear that the
relationship of the student
tenant and the private landlord
is a contractual relationship in
which the University is not a
party. We are, however, concerned
when students are living
under difficult circumstances
and therefore in cooperation
with the management of
Parkside Village have begun
steps to mutually investigate
the problems that exist. Miss
Jewel Echelbarger of this office
along with the Student
Government President, the
editor of the NEWSCOPE and
Mr. Agendroth of Parksid8e
Village were able to discuss this
matter on Thursday, September
16, 1971, and it is anticipated .
that out of this meeting
progress was made both in
execution and understanding.
Furthermore, Miss
Echelbarger has attempted to
contact as many of the student
residents as possible and it is
her feeling that although the
conditions may be somewhat
difficult, those directly involved
are bearing up quite well and
displaying a refreshing sense of
humor and a ce~tain esprit de
corps. I assure you that we are going
to maintain contact with this
specific situation as with any
others that may arise. Personally,
I feel that the construction
of student housing
must be considered as an asset
to the campus. It is my hoep
that you will join with us in
encouraging further growth of
this nature and the attraction of
more students to our campus. If
any student would like to
discuss this matter further with
the parties concerned, I suggest
that the Office of Student
Services be contacted at the
earliest moment.
Allen B. Dearborn
Ass' t Chancellor for
Student Services
To the Editor:
The Ford Foundation is
pleased to announce the continuation
of the following
programs for the 1972-1973
year:
Doctoral Fell
American Indian ;7ships r
Doctoral Fel Udents
Black Students lowship f
Doctoral Fell
Mexican Ameri owship
Rican Students can anr1
These . fello~shi
are for students ~ pr
undertaken any w O have
p~ofessional studf aduate
wish to pursue the Ph and
enter careers .. D. an! lei
education. Each in h
s.upport full-time si~~&rarn
five years contingeni fct le
Fellow's satisfacto UP0n
toward the Ph.D.ry
Instructions and
forms may be obta~PPli
The Ford Foundar mec1 ~ 43rd Street N 10n, 320
York 10017 'Apel~ York,
th · P 1cations r ree programs or
complete.by Janu rnu t
We will be ha ary 10, I
additional infof PY to Pro.
request. rnation
Patricia A. Bac!unar.:
Doctoral Feu011
_CAMPUS EVENTS
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21
Cross Country - UW-P vs.
WSU-Whitewater at
Whitewater.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22
Recital - Harpsichord and
cello recital by Frances
Bedford and Harry Lantz,
UW-P music faculty, in 103
Greenquist, 8 p.m. Free.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 25
Film Feature film
'.'Rosemary's Baby" at 8 p.m.
m the Activities Building.
Adm. 75c.
SATURDAY, SEPT. 25
Dance Sponsored by
NEWSCOPE. Activities
Building. 9-1 a.m. Adm.
charg~ ---
Get Acquainted Offer
FREE LUBE
With Oil & Filter Change,
PARKSIDE SH ELL
WASHINGTON ROAD
& 30TH Ave..
654-9968
Save
for
the
Future
at
WEST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
Phone 658-2573
5~th St. a_t. 6th Ave.
MAIN OFFICE:
CAPITOL COURT
MILWAUKEE ,
Cross Country - UW-P vs.
North Central at UW-P. 11
a.m.
Soccer - UW-P vs. Wisconsin
Junior All-Stars at UW-P.
SUNDAY, SEPT. 26
Concert- Milwaukee Fine Arts
Quartet sponsored by the
University Artists Concert
Series. 4 p.m., 103 Greenquist.
Adm. $1.00, students $.50,
children 12 and under free.
Film- "The Shop on Main
Street" sponsored by Intercollegiate
Film Council. 7
p.m. Golden Rondelle
Theatre, 16th & Howe,
Racine. Limited number of
tickets available at · the Information
Center second
floor. T~llent Hall. '
Editorial Staff
Editor-in-Chief Warren Nedry
Managing Editor John Koloen
F~ature Editor Paul Lomartire
Fme Arts Editor Bill Sorensen
. Copy Editor Larry Jones
Pho~o Editor Jerry Socha
Business Manager John Beck
Writing Staff
. Bob Borchardt, James
Ca~per, Marc Eisen, Kelly
Infusino, Jim Koloen Ken
Konkol '
Contributing Staff
Mike Stevesand, Mike Starr
Photography
Darrell Borger, Ricky Pazera
Production Staff
Becky Ecklund Denise
Anastasia, Roberta' Williams
SPECIAL EVE~TS
SA TURD A y, OCT. z
Concert - John De nver g
p.m. Kenosha Tremper' JU
S~ho?l Auditorium. A
m1s~1on $3.50. Tic
avB:il~?le at the Stud
Activities Office, Room
Tallent Hall.
FRIDAY,OCT.8
SATURDAY, OCT. 9
Octobe~fest _ Weekend rJ
. athletic and social e~
Competition in Cross Coun
Soccer, Golf, Tennis, R
and Sailing. Also, beer
brats at soccer game
Saturday afternoon 1
dances at the Student At,
tivities Building Friday
Saturday nights.
Business Staff
Connie Kinsella, Da\'e ·
Barb Scott
Phones
Editorial
Business
Newscope is an ind
student newspaper co
by students of the Uni1t
Wisconsin-Parkside
weekly except during
periods. Student obl!med
vertising funds are !ht
source of revenue for
operation of Newscope '
copies are printed
distributed throughovl
Kenosha and Racine
munities as well as the t
sitv. Frer copies art 1
upon request.
VALEO'S . ~ {;
O<EN 01NNERS·-""'"·" ...... ioo p.m.-tz:•
AND ITA\ . .JAN SAUSA.GE EDv13ERS,.
5021- IJth AVellle K•sba &51-61,91
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mo¢<rf5
•
In Being, Busted
,.lbe Newscopestall
BYgen Konkol
ent complaint of past
•
A freq1l has been the abun-
"",est"fparking tickets given
doJlC" 0 our efficient Campus
.. I bYty Patrol. .
socun may feel that the force
Some I' a little over-zea o~s In
~ II' g violations, but the ~ In . . b . ,,- I is only doing Its JO In
J'~ding additional .revenue
~ theuw-system.
The person who gets busted
Ita violationha~ only himself
_ blame since It IS patently
rtS'J to avoid the fine.
IDthe past there was the
... eIy excuse of a lack of
~ space but since the
"",truetionof'the east parking
Illt thiS excused~sn' t carry as
""b weightas It used to.
SoParking areas are clearly ..;ned though, according to
!gt D. W.Krogh of the security
ItCf there has been troubie
lIith~me students ripping off
IIItsigns.But the lack of one of
tbo6e signs is no excuse. If you
park where you shouldn't, you'll
get.3 ticket, SIgns or no signs.
TIckets vary in cost
proportionally to the
seriousness of the offense. The
least you can get hit for is three
bucks for parking without a
perm~t or with an improper
permit.
Overtime parking, parking on
law?s. or "improper parking in
designated areas" will also get
you three. Stiffer fines include
five dollars for parking in a No
Parking area and ten dollars for
being on a sidewalk.
If you commit a violation that
is not covered above there is
also a blank space on the ticket
that can De filled in to cover any
contingency.
If you ignore a ticket it won't
go away. After five days the fine
doubles, after forty days you get
a warning letter, and at the end
of sixty days you get hauled to
the D.A. and he doesn't see
anyone for less than twenty
doliars.
A first offense could set you
hack forty dollar-s if not paid
promptly and a second will cost
you anywhere from fifty to onehundred
dollars!
If .you wish to appeal a
parking ticket you can do so
However, this must be do~
within five days by completing
a f~rm available at the Bursar's
o~ftce. There is no appeal after
flv~ days, From past exper~ence,
appeals are usually
demed.
During the first two weeks of
c~asses warning tickets were
given out. 4C9were distributed
as of the 16th. Starting this week
things will begin in earnest
Don't risk a ticket on the offchance
you may get away with
it. The Security Patrol has three
shifts that work around the
clock: They don't enjoy giving
out tickets but it makes them
mad when you break the law.
Students are not the only people
?eing socked, either. Sgt. Krogh
intends to see all violators -
faculty, construction workers
and visitors - busted alike.
Baroque Players Debut this Week
TheBaroque Players of the
l:Diversity of WisconsinParkside
will present a series of
tbree programs in the RacineKenosha
area beginning Sunday.
'M1e newly-formed group was
II'ganized by cellist" Harry
lAot, and harpsichordist
Frances Bedford, both members
01 the music faculty at
PlrUide.They plan to invite
tIriIIIs guestartists to perform
..Ill them from time to time,
Guestartist for the initial
_rts will be flutist Frank
!lIIlho1z.
'\'be group played Sunday at
IIIe DominicanCollege Theater
lIaldayat tbe Carthage Colleg~
.... Room and wili Play
Wedoesday, Sept. 22, at
Parkside in Room 103
GreenquistHall to the Wond
Road Campus. Ali perbmances
are at 8 p.m. and are
free and open to the public.
Suetbol"the guest artist, is
• matnnnental music teacher
~~ Racine Unified' School
..... m and has Iaught at
~western University. He
*'ied nute in New York with
8Im~ Ba:ron and is currently
~g WithIsrael Borouchoff
UW-MIIwaukee.He is a ;ember of the Racine and
lukeSha Symphony Or- :::a' and has appeared with
Lan...... ha Symphony.
at tz,. as associate professor
DlU;SIC at UW-P, is an in-
::::'OOSIlY.known cellist and
...... tor. A Widely-acclaimed
Ippea oand adjudicator, heh~s
Witb red ~sa performing artist
IiIooiesma]OrAmerican sym8lIdl
under the batons of
renOWnedconductors as
...
Leopoid Stokowski, Bruno
Walter, Dimitri Mitropolus, Sir
Thomas Beecham and Leonard
Bernstein. He founded the
Houston All-City Orchestra
which he conducted on a tour of
Europe in 1965 and of Mexico in
1967. He previously taught at
the University of Houston.
Mrs. Bedford taught harpsichord
and piano at Southern
Illinois University before
coming to Parkside where she is
an assistant professor of music.
She has studied with harpsichordists
Wesley K. Morgan
and Robert Conant and has
given a number of lecturerecitals.
She is soloist for the
harpsichord selections on two
recordings of Renaissance
music recorded as part of the
Historical Anthology of Music
published by Ihe Harvard
University Press. She will
perform on a two-manual
Flemish instrument copied
after a 1643 Ruckers harpsichord.
The program for the concerts
will include two trios, Bach's
Sonata for Flute and Continuo
and Handel's Sonata Vll for
Flute and Figured bass. Mrs.
Bedford and Suetholz will
perform Bach's Sonata Il for
CIavier and Flute and she and
Lantz will play Bach's Sonata I
for Clavier and Viola da gamba.
Mrs. Bedford will play two
harpsichord solos, The WellTempered
Clavier by Bach and
Le Tic-Tac-Choc au les
Maillotins by Couperin.
Sickle Cell Clinic Held
Sopt.m ..... zt • .,,, PE
Patronize Our Advertisers
GIVE US YOUR GRIPESI
Ifsthe
realthing.
Coke.
.~
PaltJ
The first mass testing in Kenosha for Sickle Cell Anemia traits
was held Sunday, Sept. 19, at the Second Baptist Church, 3925- 32nd
Ave., from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. .
The tesing program, involving the taking of blood samples, IS
being sponsored by the Kenosha bra~ch of NAACP, With the
cooperation of the University of Wlsconsm-Parkslde and Sl.
Catherine's hospital. .
Samples were taken by lab tectmicians from the ~OSpl.lal.Dr. S. P
Datta, a geneticist who is an associate professor of hfe scl.ence at w-
, Parkside will perform the analysis at the UW-P laboratones.
The Parkside professor and his assistants have ~form~ so~e
400 such analyses during the past summer while wor.kmg _Ill
cooperation with tbe Racine NAACP branch and the Racme City
Health Department. .
Under the analysis used at UW-P, traits of other types of blood cell
disorders in addition to Sickle Cell can be detected.
.u.: 01 ni«:
AWRAL COSMETICS
NAWRAL GRAlNS&CEREALS
UNSULPHURATED FRUIT.
HEALTH FOOD
6221· 22"'0 AV£t\tu£ KENOSHA PHON 52·41ti'
Grievance and
Clearing House
Committee
lIleetsthis thursday
Sept.25 at 4p.m. in room 103 Greenquist.
.111students Me invited to participate.
"Here's To Your Good Health"
SPECIAL
Monday, Tue da and Thur da
I
9a.m.-4p.m.
a schooner or
~ a bottle or
.0 a glass
....c: and
U a steak sandwich or
a bratwurst or
a beefburger
and
french fries or
potato salad
..
$1.15
The Brat Stop
'The Brat is where its at'
NORTHWEST CORNER Of HIGHWAYS 1-94 AND so
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.
Available 'or ftlt.lnlty Of SOloClly partles
Student Senate
will meet monday
Sept. 27 at 4p. m. in Greenquist 101.
AU studmts are requestuJ to attnld .
Interested O1IkJolters welcome.
In Being Busted
By Ken Konkol
ol the Newscope staff
uent complaint of past
A fr~ has been the abun-
¢1\est I parking tickets given
ceb O our efficient Campus t y ~-,rity Patrol. ;:c•- may feel that the force
rne 1 . a little ov~r-zea ous m
ttin& violations,_ bu_t t~e
Po I is only doing its Job m
patrJdin& additional revenue
P'° the uw-system.
fi:tTbe person who gets ?usted
violation has only himself
fclb&Jame since it is patently to f. r to avoid the me. ~ the past there was the
rtadv excuse of a lac_k of
partlng space, but since the
coostruction of the east parking
Joi this excuse doesn't carry as uch weight as it used to.
·o Parking areas are clearly
~ked though, according . to
D. W. Krogh of the security
llrte, there has been trouble
th ome students ripping off
igns. But the lack of one of
signs is no excuse. H you
park w~ere yo':1 shouldn't, you'll
get _a ticket, signs or no signs.
T1cke!s vary in cost
pr~portionally to the
seriousness of the offense. The
least you can get hit for is three
bucks for parking without a
perm~t or with an improper
permit.
Overtime parking, parking on
law~s, or "improper parking in
designated areas" will also get
you three. Stiffer fines include
five dollars for parking in a No
Parking area and ten dollars for
being on a sidewalk.
H you commit a violation that
is not covered above there is
also a blank space on the ticket
that canoe filled in to cover any
contingency.
If you ignore a ticket it won't
go away. After five days the fine
doubles, after forty days you get
a warning letter, and at the end
of sixty days you get hauled to
the D.A. and he doesn't see
anyone for less than twenty
dollars.
A first off(lnse could set you
back forty dollars if not paid
promptly and a second will co.st
you anywhere from fifty to one- hundred dollars!
If . you wish to appeal a
parking ticket you can do so
H?w~ver, this must be do~
w1thm five days by completing
a f~rm available at the Bursar'
o~f1ce. There is no appeal after
f1v: days. From past e -
per~ence, appeals are u ually
derued.
During the first two we s of
c~asses warning tickets were
given out. 409 were distributed
as_ of the 16th. Starting this week
thmgs will begin in earnest.
Don't risk a ticket on the off-
~ance you may get away with
it. The Security Patrol has three
shifts that work around the
clock: They don't enjoy giving
out tickets but it makes them
mad when you break the law.
Sh:1dents are not the only people
~mg socked, either. Sgt Krogh
mtends to see all violators -
faculty, construction workers
and visitors - busted alike.
Baroque Players Debut this Week
The Baroque Players of the
~mversity of WisconsinPark
ide will present a series of
ee programs in the RacineKenosha
area beginning Suny.
The newly-formed group was
organized by cellist' Harry
Lantz and harpsichordist
Frances Bedford, both m'emof
the music faculty at
Parkside. They plan to invite
YVIOUS guest artists to perform
th them from time to time.
Guest artist for the initial
Clllleerts will be flutist Frank
~lz.
The group played Sunday at
lbe Dominican College Theater,
ooday at the Carthage College
e Room and will Play
Wednesday, Sept. 22, at
Park ide in Room 103
Greenquist Hall tn the Wood
Road Campus. All performances
are at 8 p.m. and are
free and open to the public.
etholz, the guest artist, is
• lllStnunental music teacher
the Racine Unified· School
m and has taught at
Ncirthwestern University. He
lllldied flute in New York with
u~I Barron and is currently
ltludy1ng with Israel Borouchoff
UW-Milwaukee. He is a ;""her of the Racine and
allkesha Symphony Orlbe
lras and has appeared with
La Kenosha Symphony.
GI ntz, as associate professor
m~ic at UW-P, is an in-
~tionally-known cellist and
=:tor. A widely-acclaimed
lppea n and adjudicator, he has
th red ~s a performing artist
~ · lllaJor American symh
ies under the batons of
renowned conductors as
Leopold Stokowski, Bruno
Walter, Dimitri Mitropolus, Sir
Thomas Beecham and Leonard
Bernstein. He founded the
Houston All-City Orchestra
which he conducted on a tour of
Europe in 1965 and of Mexico in
1967. He previously taught at
the University of Houston.
Mrs. Bedford taught harpsichord
and piano at Southern
Illinois University before
coming to Parkside where she is
an assistant professor of music.
She has studied with harpsichordists
Wesley K. Morgan
and Robert Conant and has
given a nwnber of lecturerecitals.
She is soloist for the
harpsichord selections on two
recordings of Renaissance
music recorded as part of the
Historical l\nthology of . lusic
published by the Harvard
University Pres . She will
perform on a two-manual
Flemish instrument copied
after a 1643 Ruckers harpsichord.
The program for the concert
will include two trios, Bach·
Sonata for Flute and Continuo
and Handel's Sonata VII for
Flute and Figured bass. . lrs.
Bedford and Suetholz will
perform Bach's Sonata II for
Clavier and Flute and he and
Lantz will play Bach's Sonata I
for Clavier and Viola da gamba .
Mrs. Bedford ·will play two
harpsichord solos, The WellTempered
Clavier by Bach and
Le Tic-Tac-Choe ou le
Maillotins by Couperin.
Sickle Cell Clinic Held
The first mass testing in Kenosha for Sickle Cell Anemia trai
was held Sunday, Sept. 19, at the Second Baptist Church, ;:-5 - 32nd
Ave., from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
The tesing program, involving the taking of blood amp! , i
being sponsored by the Kenosha bra~ch o_f AAC_P, \\1th th
cooperation of the University of W1sconsm-Park:1d and
Catherine's hospital. . Samples were taken by lab technicians from the ~o:;p1.tal. Dr. . P.
Datta, a geneticist who is an associate professor of hfe sc1_ence at
• Parkside, will perform the analysis at th~ UW-P laboratories.
The Parkside professor and his assistants have ~form~ o~
400 such analyses during the past summer while wor 1 . m
cooperation with the Racine NAACP branch and the Racme Cit)
Health Department. . . Under the analysis used at UW-P, traits of other type of blood cell
disorders in addition to Sickle Cell can be detected.
Patronize Our Advertisers
Grievance and
Clearing House
Committee
tneets this thursday
Sept. 25 at 4p.m. in room 103 Greenquist.
'1// student · · __ J • • -s are tnvtttJU to parltctpate.
GIVE US YOUR GRIPfil!
Ifs the
real thing. Coke.
,,_
!I
A
ATURAL GRA
'S LPH RAT. ·D FR
HEALTH OD
622 • 22._D A E J E O HA
Q)
u
·-
0
-C
"Here's To Your Good H I h"
.m.
a sch ner or
a ttle or
a glass
nd
u a steak sand h or
a brat ur t or
a beefburger
nd
trench rie r
p tato sal d
$1.1
The Brat So
'Th Brat i uh it t'
ORTH EST CO ER 0 IC A ,_ 4 A
open 9 .m.-12 p.m.
A 1llable 101 fr• I I or sororlt p rt
.. , ,
D 0
Student Senate
will m et m nda
Sept. 27 at 4p. m. in Greenqui t 101.
ALL students art requested to attend.
Interesud onloolters welcome.
Page. NEWSCOPE Septe .. ber N. Ifll •
Recycle this Newspaper
HIGH
RIBBING
THE RIBBED KNIT SHIRT.
Zipped high. Ribbed thick
and thin. A great casual
look that's very Fall'71-
very definitely Gear Box".
Brown or navy 100%
polyester knit. S·M·L.
$9
Richman BROTHERS
Elmwood Plaza
FRIDAY SEPT 24 e:o.oPM
ACTIVITIES e-UILDING
ADMISSION $.75
'lIwp'ond Wisconsin I.D ..
pollution
is also a
statB 01
mind.
We hear a lot about
pollution of air and water.
But what about mental
pollution? Could it affect
the environment we
live in?
Perhaps the answer to
dirty rivers and smoggy
air is purer thinking ...
more spiritual thinking
that eliminates the greed
and self-will that cloud
our thoughts.
To learn more about
fighting mental pollution,
come hear a talk by
Grace Bemis Curtis, a
teacher and practitioner
of Christian Science,
called "Let's Choose
Heaven Here."
CIlistian SOO1ce lecture
sp.rn. Monday sept. 27th'
The First Church of Christ, Scientist
9th and college g aclne ;
free par1l.ing and child care provided
~vldence by tne stale, The young man
toe crime read the book in question sho~ a(
he was to have committed the act. TheY beIort
blamed for psychologically inflaming ::.
action. Through the long overdramalizatiaa 10
simple counter and attack that plague the a(
scenes we can see that the boy is innocent OMIt
already know that he is impotent and thai .. "
. his college friends did it. DIll! a(
The court scenes are tiring and
overplaying simple feats of logic, but~
that set off the courtroom action are evfll ......
Superficiality dominates as we see .....
Corvettes and .'out of sight' clothing loaded~
the screen as If for advertising purposes ..
. The sensuality as art vs. pomogr~
pornography issue is insulted consistenUyby:
very methods used in the film. Quick, cbeop .....
ups of over·mammaried, highly cosmet'
were shown every two minutes or so asin;'~
to show hos "liberal" society had become.~
impression that one received is slighUydUf.:'
The treatment appeared much like a IIkio,
Spill~ne dream world with women subjegalod.
plastic clothes awaiting the time whenthey 'OIIlIId
.be allowed to be undressed and taken.
In the end the book is saved and P"'IMIIs1llr
the accused boy is good. Yvonne DeCarloillolIlII
to be the real author of the book and J. J. Jldwar
merely a pen name. Everyone lives happier etII
after.
Seldom is it that I do not enjoy re~ I
film. While many of the pictures I have _ caaId
have been improved in ways that are as obYiaaItI
many other viewers; but there is alW8)'l ~
enough to sit and watch until the filmwas flDiIIlel
This film is an example of hypocritical..
sorship of pornography for political eodI.
WDliams.-
PROBLEMS OF A PERFECT WORLD
THE SEVEN MINUTES Mike Barrett Wayne Maunder
Maggie Marianne McAndrew
Elmo Duncan Philip Carey
Luther Yerkes Jay C. Fhppen
Faye Osborn Edy WIlhams
Produced and Directed by Russ Meyer
with Yvonne DeCarlo as Constance cu~berl~nd
Russ Meyer takes the E out of Eros III a .fIlm
that attempts to render hypocritical censorship of
pornography for political ends. It is the first time
that Meyer has worked with a recogmzed hterary.
work. Previously he has turned out $100,000and
under sexploitive films that would have to be.
considered better fare than this current flick.
Recently the American dream film, Beyond the
Valley of the Dolls, was also layed waste by this
director's hand.
Irving Wallace, the author who wrote The
Seven Minutes has had two other films adapted for
the screen, The Chapman Report and The Prize.
He is also a former resident of Kenosha ... where
it seems he wrote for the Bradford High
newspaper and doubled as quite a tennis freak. He
eventually left for Madison to attend the
University of Wisconsin, where, if this film is any
example of his authorship, he could have experienced
more and imagined less. Albeit, the
rook has appeared on the best seller lists since its
release in September of 1969. All words spelled
correctly and the proper writing techniques applied.The
story ... An ideal New York publisher
contacts an ideal young lawyer so that he may
defend a novel called The Seven Minutes by the
fictional J. J. Jadway. A small bookstore and its
owner have been summoned for its sape and our
hero comes to the rescue.
An incidental rape is applied to the case as
Wed. Sept. ~2
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH
•
CD
It
Magus Productions presents
BLUES NIGHT
MUDDY WATERS at
also Case High School Fiel<JbollS'
JOHNNY YOUNG BLUES BAND Racine
Tickets available at:
E h 8:00-12:
30
art Works -Racine
The Daisy -Kenosha-Racine
Bidingers-Kenosh~-W aukee8an
J&J'sT ape Center -Kenosha-Racine-Bulington
featuring
Pagt NEWSCOPE
Recycle th is
VERY DEFI NITELY
GEAR BOX
THE RIBBED KNIT SHIRT.
Zipped high. Ribbed thick
and thin. A great ca sual
look that's very Fall '71 -
very definitely Gear Box•.
Brown or navy 100 %
polyester kni t. S-M-l.
$9
Richman
BROTHERS
Elmwood Plaza
eptember ZO, 1971 •
ewspaper
JohnCassavetes
FRI DA Y SEPT 24 8 : 00P M
ACTI V I T I ES e ·u1LDING
A DM I SS I ON$ 75
uwp·and Wisconsin t .D.
pollution
is also a
state of
mind.
We hear a lot about
pollution of air and water.
But what about mental
pollution? Could it affect
the environment we
live in?
Perhaps the answer to
dirty rivers and smoggy
air is purer thinking ...
more spiritual thinking
that eliminates the greed
and self-will that cloud
our thoughts.
To learn more about
fighting mental pollution,
come hear a talk by
Grace Bemis Curtis, a
teacher and practitioner
of Christian Science,
called " Let's Choose
Heaven Here."
Christian Science lecture
SP,m. MOnday 5_ept. 27th·
The First Church of Christ, Scientist
9th and college Racine -
Free parking and child care provided
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH
•
•
PROBLEMS uF A PERFECT WORLD
TIIE SEVEN MINUTES
Mike Barrett Wayne Maunder
Maggie Marianne McAndrew
Elmo Duncan Philip Carey
Y k Jay C. Flippen
Luther er es d w·Ir
Faye Osborn E y l iams
Produced and Directed by Russ Meyer
with Yvonne DeCarlo as Constance Cu~berl~d
Russ Meyer takes the E out of Eros m a _film
that attempts to render hypocritical cens?rship of
pornography for political ends. It is t.J:ie fir~t time _
that Meyer has worked with a recognized literary,
work. Previously he has turned out $100,000 and
W1der sexploitive films that would have to _ be.
considered better fare than this current fbck.
Recently the American dream film, Beyond the
Valley of the Dolls, was also layed waste by this
director's hand. Irving Wallace, the author who wrote The
Seven Minutes has had two other films adapted for
the screen, The Chapman Report and The Prize.
He is also a former resident of Kenosha . . . where
it seems he wrote for the Bradford High
newspaper and doubled as quite a tennis freak. He
eventually left for Madison to attend the
University of Wisconsin, where, if this film is any
example of his authorship, he could have ex·
perienced more and imagined less. Albeit, the
book has appeared on the best seller lists since its
release in September of 1969. All words spelled
correctly and the proper writing techniques applied.
The story . . . An ideal New York publisher
contacts an ideal yoW1g lawyer so that he may
defend a novel called The Seven Minutes by the
fictional J. J. Jadway. A small bookstore and its
owner have been summoned for its sape and our
hero comes to the rescue.
An incidental rape is applied to the case as
t!Vidence by tne state. The young man
the crime read the book in question sho a~CUst!d ~ he was to have committed the act. T~e Y ~fore
blamed for psychologically inflaming ;.
0rk IS
action. Through the long overdramaliza un
simple counter and attack that plague th ti~ ~ scenes we can see that_th~ boy is innocent~ co
already know that he 1s impotent and th t · . his college friends did it. a 011e ~
The court scenes are tiring and un .
overplaying simple feats of logic, but th:eah
that set off the courtroom action are even ~ Superficiality dominates as we see worse
Corvettes and _'out of sight' clothing load~OO\'t)
the screen as 1£ for advertising purposes <XI
The sens~ality. a~ art vs. pornogr~IXl
pornography issue 1s insulted consistently b ~ 11
very methods used in t~e film. Quick, cheap t,
ups of over-mammaned, highly cosmetic
were shown every two minutes or so as in atte
!o show. hos "liberal" s~ciety had become ?
1mpress1on that one received is slightly differ
Th~ treatment appeare_d much like a Mi
Sp1ll~ne dream wo~l_d with women subjegated
plastic clothes awaiting the time when thev wow · be allowed to be undressed and taken. ·
In the end the book is saved and prognosi for
the accused boy is good. Yvonne Decarlo is ro
to be the real author of the book and J. J. Jadlla
merely a pen name. Everyone lives happier e •
after.
Seldom is it that I do not enjoy re\ie\1'"1 a
film. While many of the pictures I have seen could
have been improved in ways that are as obvio115
many other viewers; but there is always reasoo
enough to sit and watch until the film was finished.
This film is an example of hypocritical censorship
of pornography for political ends.
William So!'e115e1
~ Jf· The University of Wisconsin-Parkside
~
PRESEHTS .. . . IN CONCERT
JOHN DENVER
'TAKE ME HOME COUNTRY ROADS'
SAT. OCT. 2 . 8:00 p.m.
KENOSHA TREMPER AUD.
RES. SEAT TICKETS $3-50
AVAILABLE:
Student Activities Office
Magus Productions presents
BLUES NIGHT
featuring Wed. Sept. 22
MUDDY WATERS at
also Case High School FieidhoU
JOHNNY YOUNG BLUES BAND Racine
Tickets available at_:
E h 8:00-12:30
art Works -Racine
The Daisy -Kenosha-Racine
Bidingers-Kenosh~-W aukee$an
]& J'sT ape Center -Kenosha-Racine-Bulington
By Jim Koloen
If OIYs with the Enemy
,...: . lIichlrd oudman
ttP'6. . Liverighl ($5.95).
~r. ith the Enemy IS one of
• p.y' w I occasionally pick out
".. bOQI<sboOk- i'd ordered hadn't
•..,1> Ule :I • •
~a-:ved eenie, meeme, ml~~, a
ttl am . h moment's [ndeciston.
""r of tc:ntributing, if not the
"olher f tor was the length of 40
~ ac 181 pages which proved to
s a mere
pay,. k reading.
qUJ~ urnalism, old journalism as
,0\11 JO to the new, where words have
~ definitions, nuance and
,ho ..ary buried deep beneath the
""boIl~ the facts, stright dope: no
fo<Il..g
concrete writing. And JourlIIIs!U\s
what 40 Days is all about.
~.n is writing an extended Tartickle
~behind the scenes look at riC Y
~senemy, be tells a 40 day story of
.. ever lovin A:latIcS, them
olutionists what the l\;10ngols,
rtf French, and Americans so
:C:'left unbeaten. Can't impede
........ noway. '~d Dudman is the Washington
... uchief of the St. Louis Dispatch,
lIlI! two other "internatIOnal Jour-
~"Hblundered into no man's land
_ if tb8t term can be borrowed from
te(jd conventional wars, where battle
..... were weB-defined, combatants
_ wore uniforms, and where most
,..... couldagree on who were friends
lI!.bo were enemies." The date of the
tree joUrnalists' capture was May 7,
IfIl six days after Nixon's an-
_menl of the Cambodian inBy
BobBorchardt
of the Newscope staff
t1lAH HEEP - "LOOK AT
YOIJRSELF"
IItmIry SRM 1 614
IIIl Hensley - Organ, Piano,
Gtitar, Accoustical Guitar
IIId Vocals
M Box - Lead Guitar, AcI'QIlical
Guitar
~ Byron - Lead Vocal
PIlI Newson - Bass
IIiIClerk - Druns
lodIering through John
Donor'. album last .week wa~
• aperience somewhat akin
-cursion.
At first suspected of being CIA
ag~nts, the three reporters feared for
their h~es as they were led blindfolded
deeper mto the Cambodian junble, after
40 days tbey were cleared as journalists
.and sent back to their friends. Between
day number one and day number forty
they were given the opportunity to
Observ~ the "enemy" first hand, liVing
Sop/ ........ zt. Ii'll PaIrS
strategy was to bomb the hell out d the
countrySide. Hai, the North Vietnamese
revolutionary who was delegated the
responsibilily for the safety olthe three
suspected CIA agents, said that the
Americans go where they want, "We
just stay out of their way_" They drop
many bombs and hit oothing, "hen the)'
do hit something, they are of ....
peasant houses.
with tbem, ealing with them, telling
each other about their pasts and finally
coming to laugh together.
And so while we students closed the
campuses down and Kent State.became
a symbol of our national confusion
Dudman and two younger journalis~
were captives of the "enemy", liVing
off the land, and keeping their sarongs
over their heads so as not to aroUse the
wrath of peasants whose families had
been torn apart by Nixon's B52's and
helicopter gunsbips.
And what was the inside view of the
Cambodian incursion? It basically
consists of fleeing the B52s, the gunships,
watcbing the flares reflecting off
rice paddies at night, listening for reCOD
planes, and passing many boring hours
by exercising, playing chess with a
hand made set and answering interrogators'
questionsj what are you
doing here, who are you. The American
album, that's exactly what tbey
do.
Heep's sound is built basically
. around the simultaneous guitar
work of Mick Box and !Cen
Hensely, wbo if they badn't
before, have proven their worth
on both electric and sensitive
accoustic guitar. They combine
to lay a concrete background,
perfectly setting up anything
that leaves the melody for a ride
of its own, while whoever it is or
the moog takes some very interesting
~rips. He seems to be
able to use it as an instrument
The point is made that Nixon's claim
that Lon 'ol's government \loa
popularly supported is a lie. Who fed
the guerillas, the people: who sheltered
them, the people; "ho paId for the food,
the guerillas. Dodman makes one thing
perfectly clear; the guerillas are the
people's chosen aIl,es, and that unltke
the ARVN the guerillas are careful oot
to alienate the pesants.
Another ioteresting poinlbroughl out
in the book is the Viet Gong aod ,-orth
Vietnamese personal opinion that the
Cambodian Liberation Front could 001
have put up any kind of battle agalDSl
the Americans and the AR\'N with thelr
help. Hai sllys thai the Cambodians
have not been lighting for 25 years, they
have much to learn. One of the lIungs
they must learn, according to Hal,
the fact that there are good and bad
Americans, and lbat the American
government is not the same as the
Amenan people On the finl day of
thetr aptiVlly the JOumali to' apton
had to sa" e lbtm from purnw
'meBed to death by a!Cry cambodian
peasants who sur,,,ed the B52 r cis
Dudman "as trnpr ed by
guerilla d ree of cernmnm
their respect for their aU.
pelbants II" l!leir country
ere flghling for lhe AR •
ran ack d Cambod an boo
guerillas paId for the r pli
respeered the pma yof lhelf h
The lory of th r captor captl, tty
and e\ ent ua I me r <Is much Ii
Iicuoo. thll~S "or out rl U)- and
the human capaCl'y for com on.
understanding and Crlendsl'llp "'. sho,.,. to be shanod t'qually among
aptor and apt"e alike E ry1lod)
a good guy It' th od5Ollltday ""'III
meet again under dlff~n1 ha pler'
Clf'OJms~nces roulln
.... Da) 'MIlch lh~ f:nem) ..an In-
...... ting bit of)OUnUl m, II by no
meam. preotenIJow. 10 • nor ~t
c:realJve Dudm-an is no .1 tl or
Wolfe he IS 52 un old, I ear
JOUrnall l "ho f"lally got the P h
was wa11Jng for Th \-an n
di\"lduals In\'oh:ed are ad qUill I)
rsonahzed I h l!lelr .dI •".
eraci . the "plot' c 01> nawrally
and aU 10 all ould mak good m t for
a no,e1 Perhapo "'hat mll5t d P'
pomtmgabout I boc*: or rather ~ at
Iea,e. one unaffected, I> lhe f
that thl> .xaclly h t '" e
Keep the ",on! enemy In qu
au:rLt-)' r lhto 8 ,. rl. f.:! ..
tree{. I\.env ha.
Discount Prices on
Records and Tapes
Hoffman's
DOWN"f.QWN KENOSHA
KOSCOT
Get Together
Save4~
on Kosmetics
Exciting and
Glamorus
516 \lollulllt'llt quar
RACINE
Poor Boy BOOTS
5i••• 711-12
Poloton and Mushroom
Bulled Suck, olural
Crepe oUI-sol.
Career opportunity
Unlimited earning
potential
Flexible working
schedule
MEETING
thursday sept 23
room 110 gre.nquilt
lo_am-tPm
contact Mr. Teub.rt It
stud.nt emplOyment
KOSCOT
Interplanetary
Inc.
'Kosmetics for.
communities
of the future'
Musie Committee presents
CHARLIE MU.§§ELWHITE
BLUES BAND
also appearing Spri1rgbackJames
SEPTEMBER 22 1:30 PM
WM UNICN BALLROOM
Tickenlillie SfUdent Alhirs oftu:e, plln Hall
- daoo1ng a quart of maple and not a novelty. David Byron
~. Since modern medicine on vocals is stylistically
'" to devise the mental predictabie, adopting a choppy
~rt of the stomach Bee Gee's vibrato, but that can
~Ille is left to his own be overlooked for its overall
;;;;;:" to alleviate the at- effect. He's in tune, in time, and
'II . Fortunately the cure adequately covers the spect:~m
-....,hund in a double-shot of from all out hollers to sensitive
iii;""'bylabeled Mercury SRM ballads. Newton (bass) and
.... the makers of Uriah Clark (drums) do nothing to
.... gUarant,.d to remedy the stand out, but quite a few people
~ and physical distress will argue that it's preCIsely thiS
Sebb ,ton by too much Denver characteristic that marks a
Ieid ~nl or Teresa Brewer: good rhythm section. .
I,"lthout prescription. Dissecting the album song by
'- IS &ratified in more ways song wouldn't serve much
'Uor~e to ,hear, Heep's latest purpose, since they're all good
~. Whlie It might be and all basically the same;, But
IIbo IZing to say that one the high point has to be One
~ro~es a trend, it July Morning", the one tun~
DlO<!Jess '"stills bope in tbe the group' seems to really credit
~ ate future of rock on the liner notes. If they woul?
lbono,; g. In a time of sac- bave shaved a bit off the end It
~phOnIes, the record is would have been improved, but
"" h bul prelentious. In it still is a credit to the gro.up
lilt. thonest Simplicity they botb as writers and lOW
bow • Complicated problem strumentalists. . I
lIod to write and perform All in all, Uriah Heep ;.'I
s
'iIh ~USIC. Utilizing charts remind you happily of the Y
~I,~he notes of tbe "in- hefore the onslought of the ham
It Put glro,ups,they are free groups a time when four or hve
~. . Wlce as much 'at the very least, ~"'neted men, ld t IIid lor I energy behind it adequately amplified, cOO ge
he entire stretch of the u on sta e and raise helL 1
Two Bands F~r The Price Of One(plus a ~) Sept. 25th
52S
(eDaeap)
By Jim Koloen
40 Days with the Enemy
~ : . Richard Dudman
of . Liveright ($5.95).
,-bJlSher, 'th the Enemy 1s one of
It oays w\ occasionally pick out
t,o0kS bo<>'·~ i'd ordered hadn't ,.,p the "" . . """.ved eenie, meeru~, m1~~' a t arri , h moment's mdec1s1on .
r of t :ntributing, if not the
A other r~ctor was the length of 40
181 pages which proved to
a mere
Y • k reading.
q111: urnalism, old journalism as
AA JO to the new, where words have
,ed definitions, nuance and uon_a ry buried deep beneath the
~ 1
: the facts, stright dope! no
, -~ concrete writing. And Jour-
'. what 4o Days is all about. · IS ed til . 5 writing an extend ar c e
~ ~nd the scenes look at Tricky
, enemy, he tells a ~o ~ay story of
ever lovin A~iatlcs, them
olutionists what the ~ongols,
If' ese French, and Americans so
i'3-\1y 'left unbeaten. Can't impede
55 no way.
Ri(hard Dudman is the Washington
u chief of the St. Loui~ Disp~tch,
and two other "international Jour-
" "blundered into no man's land
_ that term can be borrowed from
old conventional wars, where battle
were well-defined, combatants
'v wore uniforms, and where most
· could agree on who were friends
ho were enemies." The date of the
JOurnalists' capture was May 7,
ix days after Nixon's anment
of the Cambodian in-
-cursion.
At first suspected of being CIA
ag~n~, the three reporters feared for
their h~es as they were led blindfolded
deeper into the Cambodian junble after
40 days they were cleared as jour~alists
.and sent back to their friends. Between
day number one and day number forty
they were given the opportunity to
observe the "enemy" first hand, living
with them, eating with them, telling
each other about their pasts and finally
coming to laugh together .
And so while we students closed the
campuses down and Kent State.became
a symbol of our national confusion
Dudman and two younger journalis~
were captives of the "enemy", living
off the land, and keeping their sarongs
over their heads so as not to arouse the
wrath of peasants whose families had
been torn apart by Nixon's B52's and
helicopter gunships.
And what was the inside view of the
Cambodian incursion? It basically
consists of fleeing the B52s, the gunships,
watching the flares reflecting off
rice paddies at night, listening for recon
planes, and passing many boring hours
by exercising, playing chess with a
hand made set and answering interrogators'
questions; what are you
doing here, who are you. The American
By Bob Borchardt
of the Newscope staff
album, that's exactly what they
do.
Heep's sound is built basically l 1\11 HEEP - "LOOK AT
Yorn ELF"
ury SRM 1 614
Hensley - Organ, Piano,
G tar, Accoustical Guitar
and Vocals
. around the simultaneous guitar
work of Mick Box and l:{en
Hensely, who if they hadn_' t
before, have proven their worth
on both electric and sensitive
accoustic guitar. They combine
to lay a concrete background,
perfectly setting up anything
that leaves the melody for a ride
of its own, while whoever it is or
the moog takes some very interesting
trips. He seems to be
able to use it as an instrument
Discount Prices on
Records and Tapes
Box - Lead Guitar, Actical
Guitar
vid Byron - Lead Vocal
Pl Newson - Bass
Clark - Druns
ering through John
~ r's albwn last week was
experience some:.Vhat aki~
'- downing a quart of maple
· Since modern medicine
Yet to devise the mental
lerpart of the stomach , one is left to his own
ces to alleviate the af.
te. Fortunately the cure
found in a double-shot of
1 e labeled Mercury SRM
4 by the makers of Uriah
' guarant:!ed to remedy the
lal and physical distress
ti I on by too much Denver,
v.·an. or Teresa Brewer. 1thoul prescription.
gratified in rnore ways
for~e lo _hear Heep's latest
~-~hile it might be
tung to say that one
Ill Proves a trend it
llledeless instills hope~ the
~ate future of rock
· g. In a time of sac-
. phonies, the record is
~ but ~retentious. In e lh onest simplicity they
e complicated problem lo w ·t . n e and perform rnus1c ut·1· . hau ' l 1z1ng charts
lual}he notes of the "inPut
gr~ps, they are free
tr- twice as much ~ ror '~led energy behind it
he entire stretch of the
and not a novelty. David Byron
on vocals is stylistically
predictable, adopting a choppy
Bee Gee's vibrato, but that can
be overlooked for its overall
effect. He's in tune, in time, and
adequately covers the spec~~m
from all out hollers to sensitive
ballads. Newton (bass) and
Clark ( drums) do nothing to
stand out, but quite a fe_w peop~e
will argue that it's precisely this
characteristic that marks a
good rhythm section. .
Dissecting the album song by
song wouldn't serve much
purpose, since they're all good
and all basically the same;, But
the high point has to be One
July Morning" ' the one tune
the group· seems to really credit
on the liner notes. If they wot-~
have shaved a bit off the en I
would have been improved, but
it still is a credit to the gr~up
both as writers and instrumentalists.
ill
All in all, Uriah Heep w s
remind you happily of the day
before the onslaught of the h~m
groups a time when four or five , at the very least,
:a~~ately amplified, could get
u on sta e and raise hell.
Hoffman's
D Ol'iNT-OWN KENOSHA
KOSCOT
Get Together
Save 4<1'/o
on Kosmetics
Exciting and
G/amoros
Career opportunity
Un/imitrd eanzing
potential
Flexible working
schedule
MEETING
thursday sept 23
room 110 greenquist
1 o-am-apm
contact M'· Teubert at
student employment
KOSCOT
Interplanetary
Inc.
'Kosmetics for .
communities
of the future'
Poor oy
SitH 1 •l2 Polo an and
Bu f d Bue
Crep ou -,o
Music Committee pr
CHARLI
LUE
(c
A
al o appearing 1Jringba
SEPTEMBER 22 7:3
WM UNION ALL
Of
Jam
A rs Ofti ce rail ent H I
Two Bands For The Price Of One(plus a ¼) Sept. 25th
Pale& NEWSCOPE Seplember 20,1971
I I
All John Denver Albums
list price SS.98
our price S4.97
Available at
UNIVERSITY
BOOK STORE
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE
ADVERTISERS
the
roommate
that turns
you on.
Simulated TV Picture
Slim-aod-trim Portable TV-model 5003. Photosharp
9" diagonal measure pictures. Great extra-value
leatures. Like up-front secondary controls, pre-set VH F
fine tUning. jack for optional earphone. Even a removable
sun shield lorglare-Iree viewing in brightly lighted
or sun-filled rooms. Telescoping antenna and carrying
handle give true portability. It's just one 01 many in the
Magnavox line of value-packed roommates-for home
or away. Component systems and S89
accessories.radios. tape recorder~ / 95
players. portable TV and stereo.
lWIagnav"o~
Joerndt & Ventura Inc.
Downtown 'Kenosha 654·3559
thus far.
"He gives us maturity and I
Lawson said. "It's more leadership ~ ..
now but later on he'll be more vOC8\ ,
"The guys on the team respect hbn
for what he's done but also for the lJ"rsoa'*- 00Ij
What he's done is nothing short of . be il
His best for 5,000 meters is 14:10.2, "'IUal~\lreooiv,
mile in the mid 13:30~and on a par With • u...
notch collegIans. His 29:55.6 for 10000IIlost ~
came in the Asian Games and ranks hun ~
NAIA's best at that distance. And aU tha'Oilblllo
while running barefoot. t be did
But the marathon is to he his
although he's never run the 26 D1ileev:- IIId
grind, Rosa is confident. I ~
. "I'm here to prepare for the 01 '"
said. "1 think Coach Lawson can help~ _
for the marathon. I'm just trying todom.~
him." ,-.,
Rosa Paces Harriers
----....., Soccer Team Inexperienc
The Ranger's soccer game
scheduled for last Saturday was
cancelled, but Coach Geza
Martiny was not too disappointed
because four of his
players were injured.
The first game now wili be
Saturday at home against the
Wisconsin Junior All Stars, a
team which should prove quite
(ormidable.
I\l~wscope talked to Martiny
at a practice session and asked
him how practices have been so
far: "They have been good
except that there have been so
many injuries," he said.
Martiny also expressed the
Special buttons ad~ilting persons to the Oct. 6-9 ~
celebration at Parkside· are now on sale for $.50at the O8IlIaa AtWetics and through the sponsoring German ~~uba~ VlIIIIl7 •
The bultons, which are similar to the smile ~
sweeping the nation, wili admit the bearers (or wear::1iII.
toberfest activities, which include a German style wiD .. 1t
rugby match, soccer games and other events. The buttllDS ....
good for $.50 off the $1.50admission to the Saturday mght.....
Student Activities Building.
, .d oss country prospects
IfWisconsin-parksl. e cr what one runner has
are charted on the baSIS 0 oin to be big winners
done, then tbe Rangers adreg m ~ili start to unfold
and the j-aallzation of a rea
for Lucian Ro~a. h been the number one
Ceylon native Rosa as k Is thus far and
gh all UW-P wor ou . k man throu 'letting up on the qurc
shows no sign that hh~11 ::e team leader in his first
pacethathasmade irn
season. di . utive distance phenom, a
And for the mm. d with competition -
dream that he hO':at~ ~~ the marathon at the
and posSibly a m t year might just be
Munich OlympICS nex
beginning'
thl uc director Tom Rosandich and
But a e I h Bob Lawson knew
track and crOSScountry ~oac t December when
all these things were possible las . . lng Rosaexpressed interest in parksld~ :;;e~::r~ Asian Games titles at 5,000 and 1 , ch bout ibe
"We talked with him and his C08k
'
d
a Lawson
. ilit f coming to Par SI e, possibi 1 Y 0 d th gh on it when we got
recalled. "Tom followe r~~
back and nOWRosa's here. . Rosa
The Ceylonese were anxious to have. f
attend school in the United States to tram. 0:
Munich, but Rosa, a b.usiness ~~n:~e:oe~~ ~~~Ot~
is here for the educatIOn as we a .
return to business in Ceylon when his college days
are done. hi nd what
But the big thing going for im, a
. ts trai Ing and both brought him to Parkside, IS rami, .,
Rosa and the University seem to be benefIttmg
famous
CARL'S PIZZA
In Four Sizes 9" - ,12" - 14" - 16"
ALSO
_ RIBS _ SPAGHOTI - CHICKEN
GNOCCHI _ RAViOLI - LA SAGNA
_SEA FOOD - SANDWICHES
CARlY -OUTS - DELIVERY
"YOU IUHG ... WE BRING"
657·9843 or
658-4922
And his best may be good enough10...
anything he runs in, Lawson said, allhoup..
cedin,g that hili running may causesome~
for Rosa. --
"He's never run cross country before
never run on hills," Lawson pointed 0Il~-
small (5-6, 101 lbs.) and needs a lot .............
strength." •
One thing he doesn't need work 00 ia '"-
ship .. He's found plenty of that, esJM!CiaIIJ"-
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Joanis of Kl!IIOIba,
. have taken him into their home for his time:
by Jim Casper
of the Newscope staff
need for conditioolng1DlI1II
practices so far havesened
help in this vital area.
In previeWing the IIpIlllIIioa
season Martiny predieta •
miracles. "This is II ..
perienced team IryiDg to .-
experience," he said.
Martiny termed the ....
very tough Withauch .
UW-Green Bay, OhIo ...
Notre Dame and Quiaq II II
faced. On October I VI
Madison will be played ...
In looking at the IIdIIdaII
appears that much 01tile •
perienee that thele8mIO"'"
needs will be gaIneII _
defeats.
SPORT SHORTS
Recycle this Paper
-
are you offended by nudltr'
if not, stop in.
Complete selection
dise of con~emporary adult mercbafl
SPEf'AL
The Adult. Bookstore jne
406 Main Street Downtown Rae ~
15% OFF all purchases
with any student I.D._
r ge ~E\\' OPE eptember .o. 1971
I I
All John Denver Albums
list price ss. 98
our price s4_ 97
Available at
UNIVERSITY
BOOK STORE
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE
ADVERTISERS
the
roommate
that turns
you on.
S,mulared TV P,crure
Slim-and-trim Portable TV-model 5003. Photoharp
9• diagonal measure pictures. Great extra-value
f atures. Li e up-front secondary controls, pre-set VHF
fine tuning, jack for optional earphone. Even a removable
sun shield for glare-free viewing in brightly lighted
or sun-filled rooms. Telescoping antenna and carrying
handle give true portability. It's just one of many in the
Magnavox hne of value-packed roommates-for home
or away. Component systems and S8995
accessories. radios, tape recorders/
players, portable TV and stereo.
M e1gnc:l'-'c»~
Joerndt & Ventura Inc.
Downtown ·Kenosha 654-3559
Rosa Paces Harriers . d s country prospects lfWisconsin-Parksi_ ecr:hat one runner has
are charted on the basis o oin to be big winners
done, then t~ ~ngerfs a~\~m !m start to unfold
and the reahzation o a r
for Lucian Ro~a. h been the number one Ceylon native Rosap as kouts thus far and
man through all ~- w;:tting up on the quick
shows no sign that hh~ 11 ~~ team leader in his first
'pace that has made im
season. th di ·nutive distance phenom, a And for e mi . end with competition -
dream th:3t he ho~alwill in the marathon at the
and possibly a ~ t year might just be
Munich Olympics nex
beginning.th} tic director Tom Rosandich and
But a e coach Bob Lawson knew
track and ~ross country sible last December when
all these thmgs ~ere P~. Parkside after winning
Rosa expressed mteres m O 000 meters
Asian Games titles at 5,000 an? 1 ' h about the
"We talked with him and his coac . p ksi·de Lawson ·bTt of commg to ar '
poss11led1 ir'Tom followed through on it when we got reca . ,, back and now Rosa's here. R
The Ceylonese were anxious to have. fa
attend school in the United States to tram . or
Munich but Rosa, a business mana~em~~ f:~of~
is here for the education as well an_ wo i
return to business in Ceylon when his college days
are done. h. d what But the big thing going for . ~m, an
brought him to Parkside, is trammg, and. 1>?th
Rosa and the University seem to be beneflttmg
thus far .
"He gives us maturity and 1
Lawson said. "It's more leadership ~del'Ship ~
now but later on he'll be more vocal exa.n: '
"The guys on the team respect hi
for what he's done but also for the pe~ not )
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
notch collegians. His 29:55.6 for 10 000 m~t ltf. came in the Asian Games and ranks hi I;!
NAIA's best at that distance. And all : With
while running barefoot. . at he
But the marathon is to be his eve
although he's never run the 26 mile ::· grind, Rosa is confident. ' )
"I'm here to prepare for the Olym .
said. "I think Coach Lawsoa can help m~lC&,"
for the marathon. I'm just trying to do my~
hi m. " -
And his best may be good enough to ,
anything he runs in, Lawson said alth~
ceding that hill running may cause ~ome obi
for Rosa. pr
"He's never run cross country before nd
never run on hills," Lawson pointed oo.ta ..
small (5-6, 101 lbs.) and needs a lot of ~onllt
strength."
One thing he doesn't need work on is In
ship. He's found plenty of that, especially
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Joanis of Kenosha,
have taken him into their home for his time
~~~tQl<f·Soccer Team Inexperience~
famous for
CARL'S P_IZZA
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"
ALSO
• RIBS • SPAGHO,TI • CHICKEN
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES
CARILY-OUTS - DELIVERY "YOU RING ... WE BRING"
657-9843 or
658-4922
by Jim Casper
of the Newscope staff
The Ranger's soccer game
scheduled for last Saturday was
cancelled, but Coach Geza
Martiny was not too disappointed
because four of his
players were injured.
The first game now will be
Saturday at home against the
Wisconsin Junior All Stars, a
team which should prove quite
formidable.
J'\jewscope talked to Martiny
at a practice session and asked
him how practices have been so
far: "They have been good
except that there have been so
many injuries," he said.
Martiny also expressed the
need for conditioning and
practices so far have sened
help in this vital area
In previewing the u
season Martiny predicts
miracles. "This is an
perienced team trying to
experience," he said.
Martiny termed the sch
very tough with such scoools
UW-Green Bay, Ohio la
Notre Dame and Quincy to
faced. On October 2 I:
Madison will be played also
In looking at the schedule
appears that much of the ei
perience that the teamso\t
needs will be gained
defeats.
SPORT SHORTS
Special buttons ad~itting persons to the Oct. 8-9 October! i
celebration at Parkside-are now on sale for $.50 at the Offi
_Athletics and through the sponsoring German ~!ub _a~~ Varstt)
The buttons, which are similar to the smile butt~
sweeping the nation, will admit the bearers (or wearers) to
toberfest activities which include a German style cele~
rugby match socce~ games and other events. The buttons \I a
good for $.50 ~ff the $1.50 admission to the Saturday night danceai
Student Activities Building.
Recycle this Paper
are you offended by nudity'I
ii not, stop in.
di Complete selection of con~emporary adult merchan
SPECIAL 15% OFF all purchases
with any student I.D.
The Adult Bookstore . Racu1e 406 Main Street Downtown
-
r
Hockey Club
Meets
Parkside's Hockey Club
begins practice at 10: 15 p
~esday at Wilson park-%
MIlwaukee. All students
invited to attend practice
contact !om Krimmel at 552.
=~
8634 or VIC Godfrey at 553-2310 if
mter~ted in joining.
ThIrty-five students have
alre~dy joined the club and are
lookmg forward to the first
game N.ov. 6 against Harper
College In Joliet, Ill. The first
home game is slated for Sunday,
Nov. 14, against
Marquette.
All home games are played at
WIlson Park, 4001 S. 20th St
Milwaukee.'
Ocloberfest Golf Tourna ment Pia nned
I....and golf, normally _I 01 as sports for the
. e have found their
~p~kside in this fall's
~"I activities.
!IJl1I3!1lentswill be held
..., u"se days in each sport
II' ~CIIlty,staff and students,
.. men and women.
A studenttennis tournam~nt
be held at the Pershing
rwt courts in Racine Friday,
Iktllrom 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
II'ltUdents.
I faculty·sUlff tournament
foUowduring the same time
I""'! Saturday. Only singles
IIpannedbut doubles will be
)llyol d time permits. Contact
b£i Freeka in Racme or VIC
Godfreyat the Office of.
lIIIotics, phone 553-2310, for
--lr>lflooroament will be held
ana that week. Eighteen
.... are to be played at the
Pllrilying Springs Course
IIIInon Friday, Oct. 1, and
rnday, Oct. 8. Scores must be
.m to by a partner and
InId 10 by 4 p.m. Friday.
Golfers must sign up for
flights before playing. The
flights are "A", for male
students under 99; "B", for
male students over 90; "C", for
female students; "D", for
faculty-staff men under 90;
"E", for faculty-staff men over
90; "F", for faculty-staff
women. Contact Vic Godfrey or
Steve Stephens at Athletics for
details.
Other intramural activities
include archery competition on
Friday and a sailing regatta
Saturday.
The Parkside Rugby Club will
play Lincoln Park at 2 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 26. Lincoln Park
started rugby in 1969 as a
member of the Mid-American
Rugby Football Union.
All those interested in joining
the Parkside club contact Vic
Godfrey at 553-2310 or assembie
at the athletics fleld at 4:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Wednesday or
Thursday or 2 p.m. Sunday. The
team will play the Milwaukee
Rugby Club at 1 p.m. Saturday,
Oct. 9.
------ schedule _•••• -
ldabafest golf tournament
F.. men and women
hculty, staff, students
\I holes to be played at
Petn!ymgSpringsfrom Friday,
I. through Friday, Oct. 8.
IlIdine£orreporting scores is
Fnday, Oct. 8, at 4 p.m. Scores
:- be attested to by a part-
~ Sign'up in advance in-
~ night. Call Vic Godfrey
at 553-2310 for more information.
Flights:
A - male students under 90
B - male students over 90
C - female students
D _ faculty-staff men under
90
E _ faculty-staff men over 90
F - faculty-staff women
Turn scorecards in by 4 p.m.
frid.ay! ! ! !
.",pl
Remember
Octoberfest
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658·3131
LIQUOR' STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM
Hill Kruel1er's
Jlowers
3113 WASHINGTON AVENUE:
R....CINE. WISCONSIN 5'.05
...-1 NEED HELPIII
ENVELOPE STUFFERS---PART TillE
525 GUIUI.d Itl ... ry 100 .... 1.'"
y.. stl«
All ,"taC' 'I.,a,~
S"~sIam,d, SlIf_"~lessd IInl.,.
pllS 51 f.1 IIclstnllll ud ba ~-
linc I.
AllEN KING CORPORATIO
P.O, BOX &525
PITTSBURG, PENN 15212
~e\\O
w~would lik. 1o
invit you to see ~TH:~~~1
1 Pants I
I P I
I anly I
I H I
lose I
IR'fSI99 I
I o· I' I
1.llocool
I I I s .tI ...
I oil t •• 0 .p ,
IL liP ...... '
IE' 9-16 - I I
-------
Heads & Threads
.I") ...,.••
w....
Opt ""''''' ... f ••
, n 1 .. -Ml ...
(
[IJS COPE prHuts
TWO BANDS
I
-r----
5,,-+.. ,. J,""l'
5 <f +C ~ b.r 2.5~
8f..!:o-1~
...+ 6'+~~.""J /'IJ,-
P- r;d '" W:S,J:·D.'f I"e~.
l'OGrMnBoyRoo4,K ., KO 'Pu'm--'--"
{6; $ave
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE
AND SAVEl
DISCOUNT SPECIALS
~sh&~rry
ROYAL TRITO
QUAKER STATE
PENNZOIL
AFSCON.O.
10 20'11)4'11
10W-20W·)4W 34c ptr q rl
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE
120Z HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID
. Cas/lon4 Corry fltlctson on Flit.,..,
Air Fllltrs. Tun. Up Is, $pork Plugs
All 11tm~ Sublecl 10' Per <:en Sol.. Tax
SAVE - SAVE - S.AVE
Ii"
ijctoberfest Golf Tournament Pia nned
. and golf, normally
t of as sports for the
e have found their
at p~kside in this fall's
est activities.
tllfllaments will be held
tl~se days in each sport
tr farulty, staff and students,
men and women.
udenl tennis tournament
be held at the Pershing
coorts in Racine Friday,
a,from9a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
ents.
faculty-staff tournament
Uow during the same time
Saturday. Only singles
panned but doubles will be
if time permits. Contact
· Frecka in Racine or Vic
rey at the Office of .
, phone 553-2310, for
If tournament will be held
that week. Eighteen
are to be played at the
1f)'lng Springs Course
n Friday, Oct. 1, and
y, Oct. 8. Scores must be
ed to by a partner and
m by 4 p.m. Friday.
Golfers must sign up for
flights before playing. The
flights are "A", for male
students under 99; "B", for
male students over 90; "C", for
female students; "D", for
faculty-staff men under 90;
"E", for faculty-staff men over
90; "F", for faculty-staff
women. Contact Vic Godfrey or
Steve Stephens at Athletics for
details.
Other intramural activities
include archery competition on
Friday and a sailing regatta
Saturday.
The Parkside Rugby Club will
play Lincoln Park at 2 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 26. Lincoln Park
started rugby in 1969 as a
member of the Mid-American
Rugby Football Union.
All those interested in joining
the Parkside club contact Vic
Godfrey at 553-2310 or assemble
at the athletics field at 4: 30 p.m.
Tuesday, Wednesday or
Thursday or 2 p.m. Sunday. The
team will play the Milwaukee
Rugby Club at 1 p.m. Saturday,
Oct. 9.
•••••• schedule -····
est golf tournament
men and women
It,. staff, students
hole· to be played at
U)mgSprings from Friday,
1, through Friday, Oct. s. ne for reporting scores is
'1, Oct. 8, at 4 p.m. Scores
be attested to by a part-
\ ·ign up in advance inflight.
Call Vic Godfrey
at 553-2310 for more information.
Flights:
A - male students under 90
B - male students over 90
C - female students
D - faculty-staff men under
90
E - faculty-staff men over 90
F - faculty-staff women
Turn scorecards in by 4 p.m.
Frid_ay! ! ! !
r
1 CW SC OPE rre~._11ts
TWO BANDS
I
'(---
Hockey Club
Meets
P~rkside's Hockey Club
begins practice at 10: 15 p.m.
~~day at Wilson Park in
. I _waukee. All students are
invited to attend practice and
contact !om Krimmel at 552.
~ 4 or Vic ~odfrey at 553-2310 if
inter~ted in joining.
Thirty-five students ha
alre~dy joined the club and a~
looking forward to the fir
game N_ov. 6 against Harper
College m Joliet, Ill. Tbe firs
home game is lated for unday,
Nov. 14, again t
Marquette.
All home games are plaved at
Wilson Park 4001 s 20th 1
Milwaukee. ' '
, I 11
Remember
October e
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658·3131
LIQUOR° STORE, SAR, DI I G OOM
Rill Krueger's
1/owcrs
3113 WASHINGTON AVE VE
RACINE. WISCONSIN !1340
PHON~· 637-94591
s "'"'t,.. ,,. Jo. 1,
S<f+i:f"Y\hU 25-
B~ -1M<
"'+ 0t~~ -~ct- tlJ,-
p_ riJ ~ W:s,J: D's r"tj•
.---1
SERVE YOU
ROYAL RI 0
QUA ER S A E
PE ZOil
AFSCO .0.
ED
Fl
LS
Q . ,0 . JO I
PER A E T TYPE A fl.FREEZE S1
12oz. HEAVY DUTY BRA E FLUID
d carry Prices on
Air FIi rs, T e I ,,
A 11 J Sub K 0~ Ce
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE
1
....e. sr."'" 21. 1171
RANCH'S IANANA SPLIT
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS
80c ~r.., HOT FUDGE BANANA
~ BIG TOP Creamy hat fudge ave<
A big sundae loaded with ice cream ond
fresh strawberries. whipped bananas
cream, nuts and cherry
75c
70c
SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD'
~ORTH 331' SHERIDAN ROAD
THE RANCH
The Dime Beerl
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
\
A II 10 oz muas of beer
a pence an ounce
LUNCHEON SPECIAL \
Mon_Frl
A II vou e en e at
$ 99
Flut 1001.. beer
$.01 per oz.
PIZZA HUT
NORTH ON 30TH AVENUE IN' KENOSHA
WHEELS
For '-.e - '63 v.«. $275.00. 350f
w .... 1ngton Ro.s. Kenolha.
,.., 0....,. (01\'.. wry good ",echo
__...... cyl .•• uto. pwr ..... Ing
SUD·ull "'-JAl2.
1Mt HilIftCII; 17SCe SCtambl.... Ex.
c:on4. SGS. Includn 2 helmets. CAli Ed. 639""".
1M2 Wc": 2 dr h.,.dtop, 1250. call
~ or 6J3..2791.
lflI RIlmb. American. ~.b1.-
rustle. anel cheep.~. J209 -lIrTh St.
196G Ramb. Amerle-n. Dependebte.
170. 1209 . 21th SI.• KenoMl.
\970 Pontiac Tempest, 2 dr .. H.a·
toP. V -I, Automatic. power stHt"lng.
.,.......
Patronize Our
Advertizers
Quality sportswear
for women
SLACKS
SK IRTS
VESTS
TUNIC TOPS
tfUNDREDS OF BLOUSES
ANN'S Stt1ARTWEAR
3120 WASHINGTON AVE
RACINE
V illage Pioneers
(Continued from Page 1)
V"illage.
"We're trying to make a complex here
that's going to be oriented for students .. he
continued. '
"We are looking forward to putting a h'
lake on this property. We will also ha~
swimming pools and tennis courts. We're 0 t
here to build just one complex. we're here ~
build 1,000 units.
"We're trying to bring the student into
an area where he .can get. acquainted and
have the type of living that ID our estimation
wiU create men and women of good caliber ..
Is Parkside Village creating men ~
women of good caliber? You'd have to ask
the Parkside Vil1age Pioneers.
ALADDIN
FLOWER SHOP
in west
Raci['le ,/
1C:;' . . .
.3309 Washington Ave.
633·35~
THOUSANDS
OF FLARES
" ~- 213 SixTH STREET RACINE
....,
Hustl •• brut. this season ... heavy. handsome
IKKIhurly-burly on • sensational wood-y heel.
Pure big-heert8d fun i. O.rk Brown antiqued
.. ether uppen. and Peanut Brown smooth, $iB
Boughf and sold
(we buy and $ell)
A little out of "WIy,
but ..... .,
MCFarland, AIt, aiiii
7904 WASHINOTO;-
AVENUE RACial
BY TH E UNDU'AII
Open Daily 9:30 a.m.·5:30 p.m.
Monday & Friday 'til 9 p.m.
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5
days a week. 7: 45-4:30. Call 5£)-2415.
connie·
1963 Buick For SIlIe - .. barrel 4A2'
11"IO. In GOOd cond. Autom. on the
floOr. 8odYJDgoocI condo For sale A.t
WO. ALSO
"bWreI QI.... cwb Md bottom piece
tor only 13Q.OOt.ke It. Call 633-07U 7
10 p.m. Redne.
----
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc
Ntotorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special
gearing. Phon.e 654·8710 - or
Newscopeoffice. Leave messagefor
Rick Pazera..
PERSONAL
- PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy
consultation service. Free local
counseling piUSthe right. Phone 1-
. 352·4050_
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS
1967 Austln·Healey 3CIOO, Aft .. sp.m
539-2«)7 (Burlington).
..... Ford Torino 3U1·VB. LOw mil.
Automatic. power steering. Radio,
Heater, 652-n.-s, see at 5234 - ~
Ave. 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.
650 Triumph T_T. rebuilt enqlne,
lace paint on frame and talk, 2
hefmets. S8OO.00orbest offer. See at
5723 - 40th Ave.
Honda "150" 80 per cent restored.
Needs some clutch 'NOrk, $250.00.
MA·Dlf71.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
3suitcases, very good condo$25.Call
654-27Q.t.
For II Good night's sleep -
Wa;ftrbeds. 3701. 60th street. Cail
654-940_
Hand Painted milk cans. Make us ar
offer. call 654-462.
Otlcago - casette tape fo trade for
'NOrklng tape Doors, Byrds, etc.
Newscope office.
Homegrown tomatoes. Cali 633-3836.
PubliC Wholesale Cleaners, 3602
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Check
ours first high quality - 1 day
service.
SUde Rule $10.00. Cail 553-2345.
Skis Mens. including poles and
boots. 553-22A5.
~;~.$5.ao,Steam Iron $5.00. Cail
Golf Clubs Full set irons and WOOds
1346 new will sell for $2"5. '
Legalize Marlj uana Bumper
Stickers. SOc. donation. Be at Student
Activities BUilding Wed. .
Stereo CompOnentSystem 60 watt
amPlifier, t ....nta~le. 2 ~PNkerS
Nevlng, must seU.$50. Ph. 6S2-OO79~
BROWSE - Breadloaf Book 9'l
261 Broad Street, Lake Geneva. ";I~:
- =-
Concord grapes for eating and
winemaklng. Home grown tomatoes
and can.etope and plums. 6328
Washington Ave. 633-3836
WANTED
Earn Extra Money - Bartend & Go
Go Dance. 632·3785 or 633-3805.
WANTED - Rambler American or
VOlkswagen - Good conaltlon and
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.
Apt. wanted, male junior will share
expenses. call Kurt, 551.9429.
LU
Septem~r Z , 1911
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT
IT ' S SCR U MPTIOUS
80c
HOT FUDGE BANANA
er om, 70c
75c
911 SHE IOA ROAD SOUTH 7500 SH E RI DA ROAD
THE RANCH
SPECIAL
Mon-Fri
11 ou can at
S ·99
t 10oz. b
s .Ol pe r oz.
WEDNE SDAY NIGHT
I
A ll 10 oz mu es of beer
a pence an ounce
PIZZA HUT
O N 30 TH A V ENUE IN' KENOSHA
Patronize Our
Advertizers
ouality sportswear
for women
SLACKS
SKIRTS
VESTS
TUNIC TOPS
HUNDREDS Of BLOUSES
ANN'S SMARTWEAR
3120 WASHINGTON AVE
RACINE
Village Pioneers
(Continued from Page 1)
Village. "We're trying to make a complex here
that's going to be oriented for students " he
continued. '
"We are looking forward to putting ab.
lake o~ this property. ~e will also ha~!
swimmmg pools and tenms courts. We're n t
here to build j~t one complex, we're here~
build 1,000 umts.
"We're trying to bring the student into
an area where h_e _can get_ acquainted and
have the type of hvmg that m our estimation
will create men and women of good caliber ,,
Is Parkside Village creating men a~d
women of good caliber? You'd have to ask
the Parkside Village Pioneers.
sought and sold
(We buy and sell)
·A little out of 1ht ... but wott1i '
7904 WASHING;;
AVENUE RAC~ E
BY THE UNDERPASS
Open Daily 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Monday & Friday 'til 9 p.m.
Hustle a brute this season ... heavy, handsome
and hurly-burly on a sensational wood-y heel.
Pure big-hearted fun in Dark Brown antiqued
leather uppers, and Peanut Brown smooth, $18
conn1e· DOWNTOWN
WHEELS
For Salt - '6.l v.w. $275.00. 3509
W-.n ngton Ro.i. Kenosh•.
1961 Cht'{, cori.O .. very good mech . "1•pe. 6 cyl., •uto. pwr st..,.lng
S150 • U II 159 2'12.
lttt Hl:lnct. 175cc Scr•mbltf". Ex
cond , IQS, k\cludn 2 helm.ts. c.11
Ed , 639 .'9«),
1"1 841 ck 2 dr h•rdtop, $250. C.11
6l4'4C5 or 6.33 2791,
R mb Amer I~. Depen°dabl• .
r Ile. 1na cl\tlC). w:.. J209 • am St.
196.l Buick For Sale - 4 barrel .u2
.,g. In oood cond. Autom. on the
floor . Body Jn gooc1 cond. For Sale At
$250. ALSO
4 barrel Chev. cwb 11nd bottom piece
tor only $30.00 t•tw It. ca11 633-0784 1
10 p.m. Racine.
FOR SALE - 1967 NORTON 750 cc Motorcycle. Engine rebuilt, special
gearing . Phone 654-8770 . or
Newscope office. Leave message tor
Rick Pazera.
PERSONAL
. PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Clergy
consultation service. Free local
counseling plus the right. Phone 1-
. 352-4050.
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS
1967 Austin-Healey 3000, After !Ii p.m
539-2407 (&wllngton).
1968 Ford Torino JU2-V8. Low mll.
Automatic, power sreerlng, RadiO, Heater-, 652-n45, see at 5234 . "4th
Ave. 6;00 . 7:30 p.m.
1967 Impala Super- Sport 327, After
-4 :30 p.m., 3022 . 23rd Ave.
Y• maha 350 RS, 1971, Exe. C.Ond. 6S4-572-4, Eve.
6M Triumph T.T. rebuilt eoqine,
lace paint on frame and tank, 2
helmets, S800.00 or best offer. See at
5723 . -40th Ave.
Honda " 150" 80 per cent restored.
eeds some clutch W'Ork, $250.00. 63-4-087 1.
MISCELLANEOUS
FORSALE
3 suitcases, very good cond. $25. Call
65,4. 270-4.
For II Good night's sleep - Water beds. 3701 • 60th street. Call
654-94'7.
Hand Painted mil k cans. Make us er off er. Call 654-4862.
Ollcago - casette tape to trade tor
working tape Doors, Byrds, etc. Newscope office.
Homegrown tomatoes. Cell 633-3836.
Public Wholesale Cleaners, 3602
Roosevelt Rd. Low Prices. Oleck
ours first high quality - 1 day
service.
Sllde Rule Sl0.00. Call 553-2345.
Skis - Mens, incluellng poles and
boots. 553-2245.
Toaster '5.00, Steam Iron $5 oo Call
553-2345. ' '
Golt Clubs Full set irons and woods
S346 new will sell for S2-45. '
Legalize MarlJ uana Bumper
Stickers. 50c donation . Be at Student
Activities Building Wed. ·
Stereo Component System. 60 watt
ll(llPllfier, turntable, 2 speakers
Moving, must sell. SSO. Ph . 6S2-0079:
BROWSE - Breaclloat Book Sh
~1 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, ,,:i~'.
2 Snow Tires, 7.75. 14 Rim, Rear end
Shocks for '67-'69 Chevy, Bumber
Hitch, 8 Log FM Ant. 654-7312.
Wet Suit $5, Show tire & rim S1, File
boxes Sl & S1.50, call 634-3757.
C.Olt, part Arab, 3 mo. old. Good
Disp. Call 5J1-7161 aft. -4 p,m.
2 Bedroom House, Parks,oe area,
Liv . R., Dining Room· .comb.,
Fftplace,' over one acre land, 552- 901-2. ·
Concord grapes for eating and_
winemaking. Home grown tomatoes
and cantelope and plums. 6328
Washington Ave. 633-3836
WANTED
Earn Extra Money - Bartend & Go
Go Dance. 632-378S or 633-3805.
WANTED - Rambler American or
Volkswagen - Good conaltion and
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.
Apt. wanted, male junior will share
expenses, call Kurt, 551-9429.
Car Pool or rider from West Allis 5
days a week, 7:45-4:30. Call _553-241S.
HELP WANTE0-2Sp9\
pl ayers work in PIZZI 1M
551-8906 or stop In and••
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 3, September 20, 1971
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1971-09-20
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
dean eugene norwood
ken konkol
parkside village
student government