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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Funds Approved for Newscope</text>
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              <text>Funds Approved f or Newscope&#13;
by Larry Jones&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
In a last ditch effort to prevent Newscope from&#13;
dying a sudden death, Parkside's Student&#13;
Government Association (SGA) Wednesday approved&#13;
a measure to give the paper $2,000.&#13;
The measure was approved unanimously by&#13;
SGA in response to a plea from newly elected&#13;
Editor John Koloen. In a letter to each senator,&#13;
Koloen said: "We are currently rising out of an&#13;
economic slump which has resulted in a debt of&#13;
almost $5,000, with assets of nearly $4,000. This&#13;
last figure, however, is misleading in that it&#13;
represents accounts receivable, many of which&#13;
cannot be collected because the advertiser has&#13;
gone bankrupt. We have been running in the red&#13;
for over a year, but have managed to trim the total&#13;
debt from a high of $8,000 last September to its&#13;
present level. Unfortunately, our printer, and&#13;
principal creditor, has informed us that unless a&#13;
very substantial portion of the debt is paid by the&#13;
end of January, he will not print the paper."&#13;
According to Koloen, $4,000 of the debt was&#13;
inherited from the old Collegian and the previous&#13;
operators of Newscope. As the surviving Parkside&#13;
student paper, the current editors were still&#13;
responsible for paying the money back.&#13;
The $2,000 granted by SGA will be immediately&#13;
applied to the debt and put the paper&#13;
back on its feet, Koloen said.&#13;
The money itself will come from SGA's&#13;
Student Group Support Funds, which stood at&#13;
$4,104.09 as of the Wednesday, January 19,&#13;
meeting.&#13;
According to Koloen, Newscope is going to&#13;
lease its own computerized composing machine at&#13;
a cost of approximately $150 p er month, which is&#13;
substantially less than is now paid for the same&#13;
service from the printer. Leasing of the machine&#13;
will not only save money, but will also improve the&#13;
quality of the paper by allowing for more comprehensive&#13;
copy and proof-reading, will speed the&#13;
entire make-up process by allowing stories to be&#13;
justified and pasted into proofs as they come in —&#13;
rather than everything being done in one day at&#13;
the printer, will give the editors more time and&#13;
flexibility, and will also give Newscope an opportunity&#13;
to raise further revenue by obtaining&#13;
contracts to do composing work for others in the&#13;
area, Koloen said.&#13;
Newscope is planning to present a request for&#13;
additional funds to several foundations in the near&#13;
future, in an effort to insure stability and selfsufficiency&#13;
for the paper in the coming years,&#13;
Koloen said.&#13;
CCC Discover Flaws in Rules, SGA&#13;
Gains P artial Control O ver Money&#13;
by Marc Eisen of the Newscope staff&#13;
Student Government has gained a measure of c ontrol over the&#13;
portion of t he segregated fees intended for Student Support Groups&#13;
— b ut not without first going thru what has to be considered the&#13;
most bizarre and contradictory series of events of the school year.&#13;
The funds represent an estimated $4,104. SGA will be able to&#13;
divide the money up among student groups with the concurrence of&#13;
the Campus Concerns Committee (CCC), and the approval of&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen Dearborn.&#13;
Dearborn indicated in a meeting with SGA leaders that if the&#13;
Student Senate approved an appropriation and the CCC concurred&#13;
with it, he would go along with the decision.&#13;
But before this method of dispersing the funds was agreed&#13;
upon, SGA leaders and members of the Administration were locked&#13;
into a bitter argument that saw SGA accuse Dearborn and the&#13;
Director of the Business Office, Erwin Zuehlke, of lying to them&#13;
and deceiving them of how the funds could be obtained.&#13;
Zuehlke, in turn, accused the President of SGA, Dean Loumos,&#13;
and Treasurer Danny Trotter of lying to the CCC and&#13;
misrepresenting to them what he had told SGA about their proposal&#13;
to disperse the funds.&#13;
The CCC, a joint faculty-student committee that deals with&#13;
student life and interests on campus, met last Monday night for the&#13;
first time of the academic year. It is composed of seven faculty&#13;
members, five students, and the Dean of Students, or his&#13;
representative.&#13;
It was prevented from meeting first semester because the SGA&#13;
had not presented the Chancellor a list of students from which to&#13;
make the student selections.&#13;
After the Committee had chosen Marion Mochon, anthropology,&#13;
as its chairwoman, Loumos, a member of the committee,&#13;
asked that the first item on the agenda be that the CCC give&#13;
its power to make a budget for student organizations to Student&#13;
Government.&#13;
Loumos told the committee that Erwin Zuehlke, the director of&#13;
the Business Office, had told him soon after his election to the SGA&#13;
presidency, that as of July 1 there was an estimated $6,400&#13;
available for student support groups (This is determined by a&#13;
formula that allocated $.93 from each full time student's tuition for&#13;
the first semester, and $1.00 for the second semester. A different&#13;
formula is used for part time students.).&#13;
Loumos said that Zuehlke had told him that while the moneywas&#13;
there, there were no procedures to disperse it to student&#13;
groups, and that it was unclear how the money would be dealt out.&#13;
He said then SGA began to formulate procedures to handle&#13;
budget requests. A copy of them was passed out to Committee&#13;
members.&#13;
Noting in his speech that last year's CCC had voted to dissolve&#13;
itself because they felt many duties of the Committee could be&#13;
handled by Student Government, he asked that the authority to&#13;
make a budget be given to SGA.&#13;
Members of the committee had discovered prior to this that the&#13;
committee was set up so that the faculty was always in the&#13;
majority — if m ore students than faculty showed up for a meeting,&#13;
the number exceeding the faculty couldn't vote.&#13;
Marion Mochon, herself a member of the codification committee&#13;
of the Faculty Senate that structured all student-faculty&#13;
committees, described the CCC as being "poorly codified"&#13;
Loumos said further SGA had spoken with the University&#13;
lawyer in Madison to have him check out their budget request form&#13;
for any possible loopholes. He suggested they add a clause in which&#13;
(Continued on Pagetf)&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
WARNING!&#13;
Parkside's police will now be ticketing everyone they catch&#13;
driving faster than 15 MPH anywhere on campus and anyone not&#13;
coming to a complete stop at any one of the posted stop signs. The&#13;
citations are the same as those issued by State police and the same&#13;
penalties apply.&#13;
Be forewarned! You could conceivably lose your license doing&#13;
45 MPH in the parking lot.&#13;
Volume 6 Number 3 January 24, 1972&#13;
The Psychic Circus&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of th e Newscope staff&#13;
ESP is slowly wending its&#13;
mysterious way into the thick&#13;
entangled maze of psychology&#13;
as a valid phenomenon of the&#13;
human brain, scientistphilosophers&#13;
as diverse as&#13;
Aldous Huxley and Timothy&#13;
Leary have been 2ply intrigued&#13;
by it and other&#13;
parapsychological phenomena.&#13;
Newscope got into the act about&#13;
a year ago, when it presented a&#13;
two part series concerning&#13;
Kenosha's self-proclaimed&#13;
psychic-in-residence, Normal&#13;
Slater ESP.&#13;
The timid looking psychic&#13;
with weird peepers, seemed to&#13;
have demonstrated his faculty&#13;
for Extra Sensory Perception to&#13;
various Newscope staffers, and&#13;
the impression many of them&#13;
came away with was one of&#13;
bewildered awe. Since that&#13;
time, many people have consulted&#13;
Slater on the psychic&#13;
world, and many of them have&#13;
since related incidents to me in&#13;
which Slater revealed things&#13;
that no one but themselves&#13;
could have possibly known.&#13;
Others have indicated him as a&#13;
fraud at worst, and a lousy&#13;
psychic at best. Personally, I&#13;
don't care either way, so with&#13;
this in mind I took the assignment&#13;
to report on Norm Slater's&#13;
ESP lecture held at the Vogue&#13;
Theater Sunday night, January&#13;
16. I'd predicted that few people&#13;
would pay the $1.50 admission&#13;
charge. As it turned out I was&#13;
wrong, either that or a lot of&#13;
people snuck in.&#13;
The large crowd was composed&#13;
of the weirdest collection&#13;
of freaks I've ever encountered&#13;
at one time, under one roof.&#13;
Beside the usual motley crew of&#13;
hippie gigglers, there were&#13;
silent and intense longhair&#13;
believers, with the remainder of&#13;
the seriously interested&#13;
audience made up of coiffeured&#13;
middle aged housewives and&#13;
psychic dilletantes, elderly&#13;
rotund matrons, truckdriver&#13;
types, young straights dressed&#13;
in their going out duds, with&#13;
their snazzed up young ladies in&#13;
tow, and of course Norm&#13;
himself. It was really quite a&#13;
collection to behold.&#13;
When word got out that I was&#13;
a reporter. Norm's two&#13;
managers accosted me, and&#13;
demanded to know what I was&#13;
going to write. Rather than&#13;
explain that I didn't know yet, I&#13;
decided to take the more impressive&#13;
freedom of press route.&#13;
I invoked the prior censorship&#13;
case of the U.S. v. New York&#13;
Times, et. al. The very paranoid&#13;
and excited managers of the&#13;
psychic went away for a consultation&#13;
with Norm, neither of&#13;
them understanding what the&#13;
New York Times had to do with&#13;
it. Finally the psychic himself&#13;
granted me an audience. Accoutered&#13;
in a purple panoply,&#13;
Norm told me that he was&#13;
simply afraid I'd put ESP down.&#13;
I explained that I didn't care&#13;
either way, thinking that if he's&#13;
a psychic he ought to know what&#13;
I'm going to write anyway, and&#13;
that maybe I should ask him.&#13;
But maybe he already read that&#13;
question in my mind, so I&#13;
decided mum's da woid. I asked&#13;
him what he'd been doing with&#13;
himself lately. He told me about&#13;
the classes in "development of&#13;
conscious awareness" he'd&#13;
been teaching at KTI and RTI.&#13;
He also invited me to come&#13;
along on a research expedition&#13;
to the Bermuda Triangle this&#13;
summer. I politely said I'd think&#13;
about it. After shaking hands&#13;
with me seven separate times, I&#13;
thanked him for his indulgence,&#13;
and wormed my way through a&#13;
small hallway lined with young&#13;
devotees, waiting to see the&#13;
master. Out in the audience, I&#13;
scribbled impressions while&#13;
waiting for Norm's entre.&#13;
The program was divided into&#13;
two parts: The first half consisted&#13;
of a brief biographical&#13;
sketch of the psychic followed&#13;
by a panel "discussion", and a&#13;
demonstration of ESP. The&#13;
(Continued on Page 8) &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE January 24, 1972&#13;
EDITORIAL - Friends or Enemies I + HPf&#13;
It's strange what the sight of a tape recorder will do to a&#13;
Parkside administrator. There's a great gnashing of teeth, a&#13;
bubbling of anger, finally an eruption of indignation — My God,&#13;
tape record the conference? Never! They rise in mass — We'll walk&#13;
out if you tape record this! they threaten. Wow, you say to yourself.&#13;
You remember the time the poet — black nationalist Leroi&#13;
Jones spoke at Carthage — You'll capture my spirit if you record&#13;
this, he had warned solemnly as he forbid any taping.&#13;
Yes, that must be the key, the point of speculation. The administrators&#13;
must be incarnates of the devil! You don't see them in&#13;
mirrors, you can't record their voices. More than one paranoid's&#13;
suspicions would be confirmed . . .&#13;
You ask — Why can't it be recorded?&#13;
The assistant Chancellor answers: We're here to discuss the&#13;
problems of Student Government. We don't know what other&#13;
questions you would ask.&#13;
Tony Totero answers: I have allowed Newscope to record interviews&#13;
with me in the past, and things haven't come out as they&#13;
were intended.&#13;
— When did this happen? you ask Tony&#13;
— This is not the place to go into it, he replies. Alright, you&#13;
think, maybe this deserves a story in the future: Tony Totero Tells&#13;
How Newscope Has Wronged Him.&#13;
The Director of the Business Office, Erwin Zuehlke, scores it&#13;
finally — We know why you want it recorded. You don't trust us.&#13;
Ah, yes, you nod in agreement, the answer at last — You don t&#13;
trust us. He's summed it all up — You don't trust us. Yup, you're&#13;
right, you think. We don't trust you.&#13;
Now the climoA: Dearborn says — I'll tell you this, if the&#13;
discussions we have at this meeting are printed in Newscope, it will&#13;
be the last time we have this type c' meeting.&#13;
Kapowie. It's crystal clear now.&#13;
Why record it?&#13;
Example 1: Approximately two months ago, Dean Loumos&#13;
says that Zuehlke told him money was available for student&#13;
organizations — except it was unclear who would deal it out, and&#13;
what procedures would be used to do it. Loumos says that Zuehlke&#13;
suggested SGA draw up the guidelines for the utilization of the&#13;
money.&#13;
Two months later, Zuehlke denies saying this, and lo and&#13;
behold, he reveals procedures had existed all along for the&#13;
utilization of the money. About $2,000 of the supposedly untouchable&#13;
money is discovered spent.&#13;
Some probable solutions of the conundrum are:&#13;
(1) Zuehlke lied to SGA at the first meeting,&#13;
(2) SGA lied about what Zuehlke told them at the first meeting,&#13;
(3) SGA misunderstood what Zuehlke told them,&#13;
(4) Zuehlke mistakenly gave SGA the wrong information.&#13;
What is the truth? What actually occurred? It's unknown,&#13;
almost undiscoverable at this point. How could this have been&#13;
avoided? The meeting could have been recorded, and the confusion&#13;
would have been avoided.&#13;
Example 2: A Newscope reporter is working on an investigative&#13;
story on a Parkside administrater. He interviews&#13;
another administrater, who refuses to allow the discussion to be&#13;
taped. Some damaging information is revealed in the interview.&#13;
A few weeks later the reporter checks back with the adQ)&#13;
&#13;
U&#13;
O&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
I •&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
9a.m.—4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
a bottle or&#13;
a glass&#13;
and&#13;
a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
a b eefburger&#13;
and&#13;
trench fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
u&#13;
Z)&#13;
O&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brut is where its at'&#13;
N O R T H W E S T C O R N E R O F HIGH W A Y S 1-94 AND&#13;
open 9 a.m.—12 p.m.&#13;
Ava ilab le for f r a t&#13;
e&#13;
'&#13;
n ' t y or sorority p arties&#13;
50&#13;
ministrater to reverify the information. The ad,mmistra ter deny&#13;
ever having said it. The reporter is incredulous He checks his&#13;
notes; the revelation is written down there, hie has it down as^&#13;
direct quote. He asks the administrater again |n the end,&#13;
administrater denies emphatically ever having said .&#13;
the reporter doesn't use the quote - it's too questionable.&#13;
But how to explain what happened?&#13;
(1) The administrater actually did say it, but lied in enying&#13;
(2) The reporter lied in claiming he had said&#13;
(3) The reporter misunderstood what he had saidI the tr •&#13;
(4) The administrater gave the wrong information th&#13;
but denied later having said it. Mnw&#13;
Where lies the truth? At this point it's ,nd,st&#13;
'"9&#13;
u,sh«&#13;
bl®; .&#13;
could this have been avoided? The interview could have been tape&#13;
recorded. . ... . + ,t&#13;
If the absolute truth itself is beyond recovery at this point,, at&#13;
least it is possible to consider who would profit the most by the tru&#13;
being obscured — the administration or the students.&#13;
First, it has to be recognized that the students may ave&#13;
misunderstood what was told to them. The fact that they have less&#13;
of a knowledge of the workings of the University than the administraters&#13;
gives them an incomplete perspective from which to&#13;
comprehend things. A misunderstanding is possible.&#13;
But the students didn't profit from the misunderstandings, the&#13;
administraters did. In the first case, SGA lost total control of&#13;
money for student clubs, while a third of the money had already&#13;
been spent on peripheral items. In the second case, damaging&#13;
evidence against an administrater was denied legitimacy.&#13;
Furthermore, it was the administraters who prevented an&#13;
objective record from being made, not the students. A determination&#13;
of who is lying is impossible to make.&#13;
Then there is Dearborn's intimidation of Newscope — you prinf&#13;
anything said in this meeting and this will be the last meeting. The&#13;
implication seems clear — it's better to keep the student body&#13;
ignorant of a meeting that greatly affects them than to have them&#13;
informed of it.&#13;
Newscope, of course, rejects this. Our aim is not to insure&#13;
ignorance on key issues among students, but rather to inform them&#13;
of the issues. An open marketplace of information is the best environment&#13;
for important decisions to be made within. If people are&#13;
offended by this, we can only reply they don't realize what&#13;
newspapers are for.&#13;
We point out in conclusion; it has been certain administraters&#13;
that have prevented an objective record of key meetings with&#13;
students from being made; it has been these administraters that&#13;
have benefitted from the subsequent obfuscation of what was said&#13;
in these meetings.&#13;
We believe it has been these administraters, and not the&#13;
students, that have changed their stories from one meeting to&#13;
another. Whether they lied maliciously, or made honest mistakes is&#13;
known only by them. The fact is that we believe their stories have&#13;
changed.&#13;
So, ultimately, Zuehlke was right — we don't trust the administraters.&#13;
They burned us once, they burned us twice, if the&#13;
burn us for a third time, we're fools. We, as students, can&#13;
realistically only conclude that these people can not only be our&#13;
friends, they can also be our enemies.&#13;
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Letter&#13;
To The&#13;
Editor&#13;
3309 Washington Ave.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
To the Editor;&#13;
Strange. Very strange. That's&#13;
what any student with normal&#13;
intelligence would have to say&#13;
concerning the situation they&#13;
face when dealing with the&#13;
Parkside Bookstore. Strange,&#13;
that there are 27 booklists for&#13;
approximately 3,700 students,&#13;
25 of those booklists were&#13;
printed up by student gov't,&#13;
(with the cooperation of a few&#13;
secretaries and the Duplicating&#13;
and Processing Dept.).&#13;
About four weeks ago PSGA&#13;
decided to attempt to set up a&#13;
book exchange in the Student&#13;
Act. Bldg. To get such an exchange&#13;
off a booklist was a&#13;
necessity. Further research&#13;
uncovered legal problems with&#13;
the university in running such&#13;
an exchange. Apparently it&#13;
would be in violation of a contract&#13;
between the university&#13;
and the bookstore. So the&#13;
booklists went from faculty to&#13;
administration to the bookstore.&#13;
It was "private property" and&#13;
was denied to student government.&#13;
&#13;
Constant pressure by PSGA&#13;
resulted in an agreement from&#13;
Ass. Chancellor Dearborn,&#13;
Jewel Echalbarger, and Anthony&#13;
Totero promising that a&#13;
complete booklist would be&#13;
available to students 3 days&#13;
prior to registration. But&#13;
everyone knows promises are&#13;
made to be broken; or to keep&#13;
disenchanted students quiet.&#13;
Nobody ever explained why the&#13;
list wasn't printed, but most of&#13;
us can guess. So on Monday and&#13;
Tuesday (10th and 11th of&#13;
January) the PSGA with the&#13;
help of the secretaries printed&#13;
25 booklists and made them&#13;
available around the campus.&#13;
Without a booklist the&#13;
students are forced to buy their&#13;
books at a bookstore which has&#13;
lost $20,000 in their past&#13;
operations. That means you and&#13;
I are paying higher prices to&#13;
make up for their losses. I hope&#13;
that all students will react to&#13;
this injustice by taking the time&#13;
to write a letter to Ass. Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn, Rm. 284,&#13;
Tallent Hall, telling him just&#13;
how you feel.&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
Vice-President, PSGA&#13;
For The Record&#13;
idi&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
I II I I I \ i k ' 1 1 I N v • £ IN &gt;&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
1 1 ' &#13;
Muskie Scene&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Burton Scott, Kenosha's District&#13;
Attorney, stood at the entrance of the&#13;
United Auto Workers all purpose hall&#13;
the night of January 18th. He was&#13;
greeting strangers, well wishers and&#13;
acquaintances in his capacity as a&#13;
"Muskie for President" organizer.&#13;
Twitches of uneasiness seemed to&#13;
infect the D.A. between handshakes&#13;
and casual greetings. The minutes were&#13;
piling up on the wrong side of seven&#13;
o'clock. After cancelling one Kenosha&#13;
appearance weeks before, Senator&#13;
Edmund Muskie was almost a half an&#13;
hour late.&#13;
Many of the individuals in the large&#13;
room were unconcerned and unaware&#13;
of the elapsing time. An older rotund,&#13;
cigar smoking gentleman was leaning&#13;
against a table talking to a friend he&#13;
obviously had not seen in some time.&#13;
Every so often he would turn and shout&#13;
hello to someone just coming in, and&#13;
they would see his pin. Attached to his&#13;
green shortsleeve shirt was a political&#13;
button featuring a donkey producing a&#13;
cloud if ill smelling gas. Within the&#13;
cloud, on the very large pin were the&#13;
words, "Nixon gone with the wind in&#13;
'72"&#13;
On the other side of the room, a girl&#13;
was beginning to drink her third free&#13;
beer, a feature of the Muskie rally. She&#13;
turned to her companion and asked if a&#13;
"Muskie" was a fish. The companion, a&#13;
college aged male, just laughed and&#13;
asked the girl when the rally was to&#13;
start. She thought seven, but as long as&#13;
the free beer held out, she said she&#13;
didn't mind if the candidate was late.&#13;
Clusters of. individuals sat, stood,&#13;
miled about, and talked. Burton Scott&#13;
began to appear restless as he continued&#13;
shaking hands, though&#13;
periodically glancing over the heads&#13;
out the glass entrance doors into the&#13;
darkness.&#13;
Two young Muskie workers, finished&#13;
with last minute details, had taken up a&#13;
vigin in the crisp January air, standing&#13;
at the building's main entrance staring&#13;
blankly at Washington Road. They&#13;
were hoping to spot a line of official&#13;
looking cars — one of them carrying&#13;
their candidate.&#13;
A boy dressed in a blazer, wearing&#13;
freshly pressed pants, with his hair&#13;
very neatly parted, played "Roll Out&#13;
the Barrel" on an organ supplied for&#13;
the evening by the Hammond Organ&#13;
Studios. He didn't look to be much older&#13;
than Little League age. The boy&#13;
alternated furnishing music with an&#13;
adult that could have been his father.&#13;
The two kept a steady flow of polkas&#13;
and old favorites coming out of the&#13;
organ, making the delay seem short.&#13;
A teenage girl wearing a simple pink&#13;
dress strolled about the gymnasium&#13;
sized room carrying a stack of&#13;
reproduced charcoal drawings and a&#13;
money box. With an appealing smile,&#13;
she approached most everyone, asking&#13;
if they would like to buy a sketch of Ed&#13;
Muskie done by Kenosha artist George&#13;
Pollard. The drawings were fifty cents,&#13;
ideal for framing.&#13;
Meanwhile, at the entrance, the&#13;
shortsleeved Muskie volunteers talked&#13;
to each other, neither appearing to be&#13;
listening to the other. Burton Scott was&#13;
still shaking hands with those who were&#13;
arriving about half past seven.&#13;
A partition, which had closed off&#13;
about a quarter of the hall, had to be&#13;
opened, as rows of people three and&#13;
four deep began forming behind the few&#13;
hundred chairs that were occupied. A&#13;
cheer went up from the crowd as the&#13;
partition slid open.&#13;
The two young Muskie workers still&#13;
waiting, registered looks of shock when&#13;
they heard the cheering. They must&#13;
have thought the candidate had&#13;
somehow gotten past their blank stares.&#13;
They were relieved to know that only a&#13;
new portion of the room had made an&#13;
appearance.&#13;
At twenty-nine minutes past seven,&#13;
four American Motors products slowly&#13;
made the way up a small hill from the&#13;
west on Washington Road. The cars&#13;
swung into the driveway of the union&#13;
building, slowly heading for a back&#13;
entrance.&#13;
Senator Edmund Muskie had arrived.&#13;
Smiles hit the Muskie workers, their&#13;
flesh a ruddy color having been exposed&#13;
to the cold. They loudly announced the&#13;
candidate had arrived. A grin streamed&#13;
across Burton Scott's face, as he shook&#13;
the last few hands with a confident&#13;
vigor which had been slowly draining&#13;
from him in the last half hour.&#13;
The rally was to begin.&#13;
Detectives from the Kenosha Police&#13;
Department kept photographers and&#13;
other assorted bodies away from the&#13;
entrance Muskie was approaching. The&#13;
door opened, in came members of the&#13;
senator's staff, Muskie himself sandwiched&#13;
between the front and back&#13;
ranks.&#13;
Muskie wore a broad politicians'&#13;
smile as he was greeted by the twenty&#13;
or so people in the side hall with random&#13;
cheers, popping flashbulbs,&#13;
assorted clapping, and a few handshakes&#13;
by those who had weaseled past&#13;
the detectives.&#13;
He wore a perfect fitting dark blue&#13;
suit, traditional black shoes, a white&#13;
shirt and silk blue tie, tied in an almost&#13;
perfect Winsor knot. His face had deep&#13;
lines cutting into it. A tired glaze dulled&#13;
the color of his eyes, and there were&#13;
noticable bags under each one. The&#13;
wind had arranged his hair in an inJ&#13;
a unary 24, 1972&#13;
teresting disarray, but he quickly used&#13;
a free hand to push it back into shape, a&#13;
part forming like magic.&#13;
Burton Scott whisked the Senator into&#13;
a room at the right of the door he had&#13;
just entered. The room was marked&#13;
"Board Room". Muskie was to meet&#13;
the Executive Board of the United Auto&#13;
Workers, Local 72, headed by Ralph&#13;
Daum. The board had endorsed the&#13;
Presidential hopeful earlier in the&#13;
month.&#13;
Word reached the main hall that the&#13;
Senator had arrived. There was a&#13;
bustle of movment as some people went&#13;
to locate signs to wave when Muskie&#13;
came in; "Kenosha for Muskie",&#13;
"UAW for Ed", "ESM in '72".&#13;
The candidate came out of the conference&#13;
room smiling. He shook hands&#13;
in the hall, upon entering the large&#13;
room full of cheering people, and on his&#13;
way to his seat near the podium. As&#13;
soon as he was seated, the artist about&#13;
fifteen feet to his right began sketching&#13;
the Senator. The screams, shouts,&#13;
applause, yelps and bobbing signs&#13;
made those in the Muskie organization&#13;
smile, from the football player sized&#13;
bodyguard types standing near him to&#13;
Mr. Scott, the Kenosha based&#13;
organizer.&#13;
The Mayor of Kenosha presented the&#13;
Senator from Maine with a pin replica&#13;
of Wisconsin. Local dignitaries were&#13;
introduced, Ralph Daum spoke, wife of&#13;
the slain civil rights leader Medger&#13;
Evers spoke, and finally, almost an&#13;
hour off schedule, Senator Edmund&#13;
Muskie began to tell the crowd why&#13;
they were right in supporting him, and&#13;
why he wanted more support, enough to&#13;
win the primary in April.&#13;
The speech, comprised of human&#13;
interest stories, a joke, and promises&#13;
was not interrupted often by audience&#13;
response. The only rousing cheers&#13;
came after Muskie pointed out Nixon&#13;
failures in economics, foreign relations&#13;
and the war. He called for an all out&#13;
effort by all Democrats to unite to rid&#13;
the populus of Nixon leadership. The&#13;
predominently blue collar audience&#13;
came to life with solid response.&#13;
Hubert Humphrey's 1968 running&#13;
mate did not answer or ask for&#13;
questions from the audience. He spoke&#13;
to the crowd without the benefit of notes&#13;
NKWSCOl'K 1'anc 8&#13;
or a prepared speech. The content of&#13;
the speech was accepted with mixed&#13;
emotion, but when it was over, there&#13;
was no question Mr. Muskie was&#13;
through speaking.&#13;
The conclusion of the speech sent&#13;
some individuals to the exits, but there&#13;
were those who had bought the original,&#13;
reproduced charcoal sketches that they&#13;
were determined to get autographed.&#13;
Others simply wanted to slap the man&#13;
from Maine on the back, wish him luck,&#13;
and shake his hand. A student reporter&#13;
was determined to get an interview,&#13;
and the Muskie staff was equally&#13;
determined to get their man to an exit&#13;
through a path previously cleared&#13;
through a sea of empty, non-folding&#13;
chairs. A mass of humanity had grown&#13;
fifteen deep around the Presidential&#13;
candidate immediately after his final&#13;
- words of the speech.&#13;
Muskie staffers waved frantically at&#13;
^ the tall, stocky Senator, but to no avail.&#13;
° The path that had been cleared for his&#13;
m exit was to remain clear and void of&#13;
z everything, as the Senator headed for&#13;
m the wrong exit through the middle of the&#13;
z few hundred chairs, autographing, and&#13;
handshaking his way into disaster.&#13;
A woman who looked about fifty who&#13;
was to later admit she had waited six&#13;
months to shake Muskie's hand, leaped&#13;
for the Senator, catching the lapel of his&#13;
dark blue suit. A man, back-peddling a&#13;
few steps ahead of the human beehive,&#13;
stumbled, fell, and was buried by&#13;
chairs, causing the small army to head&#13;
a few degrees further off course into&#13;
still more chairs.&#13;
The young reporter, determined to&#13;
get exclusive statements from the man&#13;
running for President, almost hit his&#13;
subject in the mouth with his&#13;
microphone, as the pushing and&#13;
shoving was beginning to alarm the few&#13;
detectives and aides trying to protect&#13;
the candidate.&#13;
Muskie, realising he was heading into&#13;
impending doom, used the advantage of&#13;
his height to seek out a new route, while&#13;
shaking hands and signing autographs.&#13;
The members of his staff who had&#13;
engineered an almost flawless entrance,&#13;
were frantically trying to clear&#13;
a way, but carefully enough so as not to&#13;
injure any potential Muskie votes.&#13;
Amazingly, Muskie was making&#13;
headway toward an exit. As he did,&#13;
those wanting signatures or handshakes&#13;
became more desperate. The&#13;
young reporter, being carried like a&#13;
rusty tin can over a large wave, no&#13;
longer cared about an interview. He&#13;
was apparently more interested in the&#13;
safety of his recording equipment, and&#13;
himself. Muskie finally approached the&#13;
narrow doorway, after Burton Scott&#13;
and others had cast chairs in all&#13;
directions making a path. The doorway&#13;
trimmed away layers of human beings&#13;
that the Senator had been carrying&#13;
from the podium. He turned left in the&#13;
hallway, then right, and was relatively&#13;
free of his followers. The cars were&#13;
quickly filled with the Muskie party,&#13;
and they were off to an airport.&#13;
The man who was wearing the large&#13;
donkey button was gone, as was the girl&#13;
selling pictures. The organ was silent,&#13;
and Burton Scott was standing in the&#13;
doorway to the hall shaking hands, of&#13;
those who were leaving.&#13;
There were beads of sweat on his&#13;
forehead, and a faint smile on his face.&#13;
It just didn't seem that the coming&#13;
election could be as hard on him as&#13;
clearing a path for Muskie through that&#13;
sea of chairs.&#13;
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Page 4 NEWSCOPE January 24,1972&#13;
by Michael Stevesand&#13;
If you have wondered, as I have in the past&#13;
twelve months, where is rock going?, or more&#13;
pragmatically where is rock?, why has it limped off&#13;
and how can I find it?, there's good news from the&#13;
East.&#13;
Eyeing the cowboys and the Englishboys if at&#13;
all with a certain ironic amusement, are several&#13;
sinister bands with outlooks not so predictable, and&#13;
laughter cheerfully blacker, each on its own axis,&#13;
but all more or less dedicated to preserving rock at&#13;
the gut level of awareness that created the original&#13;
vacuum of power and identity which made rock&#13;
necessary. Or to put it another way, despite all the&#13;
amputaions you can still dance to the rock &amp; roll&#13;
stations.&#13;
Dancing is important. Maintaining in the city&#13;
requires setting up countervibrations or a force&#13;
field temporarily against the civic madness and it's&#13;
no coincidence that these killer bands thrive in the&#13;
population centers. The Velvet Underground from&#13;
New York. The J. Geils Band from Boston. And god&#13;
Bless Detroit for Alice Cooper and Mitch Ryder.&#13;
Detroit may know more about rock &amp; roll and&#13;
the natural facts in general than any other City in&#13;
the world. Consider the cultural indignities of&#13;
spending days and years in the shadow of Motor&#13;
City. Consider the potential energy taut and ready&#13;
to be released behind bands that know how to be a&#13;
fuse. And imagine the shock wave exploding from&#13;
your speakers and nailing you to the wall.&#13;
"Long Neck Goose" comes on like the Detroit&#13;
Wheels of old — Mitch still sounds hoarse and even&#13;
the name is a throwback. Allow yourself a fleeting&#13;
sense of deja vu and then fasten into a bass line or&#13;
Johnny Bee's diesel drums and realize the support&#13;
they're shoveling under Mitch would have split&#13;
1965's radios. It just drives and drives. And without&#13;
a blink they're into "Is It You or Is It Me?" a&#13;
bouncing bop doo wah that you might like to do the&#13;
funky chicken to. "It Ain't Easy" marches along on&#13;
acoustic guitar and harp until a monster riff rears&#13;
back and shows what Mountain could have been if&#13;
they weren't half English which probably figures&#13;
because Leslie West used to be lead guitar for none&#13;
other than the Detroit Wheels. In any case the punch&#13;
is there and if momentum has any meeting left it&#13;
slams right into:&#13;
"Rock and Roll" by N.Y.'s angelic rocker Lou&#13;
Reed is possibly the best song ever written about it:&#13;
Ginny said when she was just five years old&#13;
there was nothin happenin at all&#13;
Every time she listened to the radio there was&#13;
nothin goin down at all&#13;
But one day she heard a Detroit station, she&#13;
couldn't believe what she heard at all&#13;
She started dancin to that fine fine music&#13;
Her life was saved by rock &amp; roll,&#13;
charging behind the Decatur Gator's blown Injected&#13;
guitar and if you can sit still after ten seconds you&#13;
better check the batteries in your pacemaker. This&#13;
song has been known to cause structural damage to&#13;
the cortex and sprained ankles. Forewarned ,s&#13;
forearmed. . ,, .&#13;
(Pant pant) between sides pause to reflect on&#13;
the spare quality of the music. For a band of seven&#13;
including a full time conga and tambourine player&#13;
these boys stick close to the skeleton of a song so the&#13;
sound is anything but crowded and in fact although&#13;
the piano-organ and double guitars leave the impression&#13;
of brass there is no brass. Which is not to&#13;
say that it's not conducive because these songs are&#13;
wired in series and a current runs from beginning to&#13;
end Washed out Mitch stands knee deep in flowing&#13;
quitar-organ harmonies in the soulful weeper&#13;
"Drinking" a paen to the bleary-eyed staggers.&#13;
Even the guitar sounds tipsy in a sinuous sort of&#13;
way "Box of Old Roses" is just a total gas and one.&#13;
of the few current nostalgoid 1961 period pieces that&#13;
could actually have been a hit in 1961. Check the&#13;
organ comping for all he's worth the stride piano&#13;
and bassman W. R. Cooke's convincing ducktail&#13;
vocal. Cooke is rumored to believe himself the&#13;
reincarnation of Bobby Rydell. Quick cut to Wilson&#13;
Pickett by way of the Electric Flag and "I Found a&#13;
Love". The Nashville lessons have been learned&#13;
well and Mitch may well have screamed himself&#13;
into a different time factor during the recording of&#13;
this. We won't know till the next one.&#13;
By the time the next one comes around Mitch&#13;
Ryder and Detroit may have evolved into a force too&#13;
devastating to be contained in a stereo system.&#13;
When that happens the components must all&#13;
vaporize leaving black smoking residue. But the&#13;
music will keep on playing.&#13;
'Bread', the&#13;
rated by Billboa&#13;
artists for 1971,&#13;
Phys-Ed Center&#13;
appearance is b&lt;&#13;
Board.&#13;
Tickets for I&#13;
thage's Student&#13;
Chiappetta's (do&#13;
Racine, tickets £&#13;
Electronics in E&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Nowscopo staff&#13;
Last night, "On tha Nod" decided to&#13;
become a kid again, and Imbibe&#13;
Wednesday night bickers of brew at a&#13;
teeny bar, a place where under 21's&#13;
gain their alcoholic baptism, and&#13;
receive communion in the shape of a&#13;
bratwurst. I ' put drinking in a&#13;
theological framework because alcohol&#13;
has a lot to do with my metaphysic.&#13;
This was old memories night; many&#13;
were the times that my teeny contemporaries&#13;
and I split pitchers of beer,&#13;
while discussing Existentialism and&#13;
Marxism, screaming at the war,&#13;
wondering about the possible harmful&#13;
effects of devil weed, afraid of acid&#13;
because you didn't wanna end up&#13;
jumpin' outa no window. I remember&#13;
also that the Bratstop was the first bar&#13;
to kick me out, and for, of all reasons,&#13;
growing hair.&#13;
My how the times have changed. The&#13;
Bratstop is just a different place these&#13;
days; boys get to grow their hair long&#13;
now, and there's four bars scattered&#13;
through the building including a&#13;
downstairs room with pool tables,&#13;
strobe lights that make you sick, bands,&#13;
and pinball machines. Wowwee! It&#13;
seems that the only things that haven't&#13;
changed are the TV, the quarter admission&#13;
charge, and the war.&#13;
Willie Sorensen, Newscope's ace&#13;
media-excommunicator and part-time&#13;
bartender, accompanied me on this&#13;
foray into teeny nightlife scenes. We&#13;
breezed past the ID checkers booth, and&#13;
huffed and puffed at the outrageous&#13;
$1.50 cover charge. There was a noisy&#13;
adolescent band called Freefall, that&#13;
attempted to knock people down with&#13;
overamplifications, covering the trails&#13;
left by bad riffs with noise. After&#13;
touring the place, checking things out,&#13;
Bill and I settled in a corner of the bar&#13;
nearest the Teevee and discussed&#13;
Miller, Millett, Kubrick, Soch and Clint&#13;
Eastwood before going on the nod. I .&#13;
wanted to get as far away as possible&#13;
from the band, and a strobe light whose&#13;
only value seemed to be its ability to&#13;
make everybody an existentialist, it&#13;
produced a lot of nausea. A bar just&#13;
ain't a place for strobes, noway. We&#13;
pooled our resources and ordered&#13;
bottles of Bud priced at 60 cents a bottle&#13;
if you buy just one, or $1.00 for two.&#13;
It was about 7:30 when we arrived,&#13;
and the bar was already crowded.&#13;
Willie told me the big nights are&#13;
Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. This&#13;
place has something for everyone so&#13;
you can take your mind off the fact that&#13;
the Brat isn't a real bar. It's a teen bar&#13;
and you never forget it. Patrons all had&#13;
young unformed faces, laughing it up,&#13;
drinking beer until they ran out of&#13;
money, and to get the parents car&#13;
home, or threw up because they weren't&#13;
experienced enough to know when to&#13;
stop. Keeps em off the streets.&#13;
The beer selection is surprisingly&#13;
impressive, the Brat has Hamms and&#13;
Falstaff on tap, and bottled beer with&#13;
labels like Bud, Pabst, Michelob, etc.,&#13;
they even have a stock of what I consider&#13;
to be the Edsel of alcohol, Right&#13;
Time. Willie said the food was good,&#13;
"priced at about what you'd expect. . .&#13;
probably the best brat I ever had,&#13;
definitely worth the money (60 cents)."&#13;
Waiting for my next Bud, I surveyed&#13;
the .area around our niche; the same&#13;
synthetic woocf panelling that lines the&#13;
walls of all other newly built or&#13;
remodeled taverns, formica bars,&#13;
comfortable barstools. Actually I'm not&#13;
quite sure if the barstools were comfortable&#13;
or not — let's just say I was&#13;
feelin' no pain.&#13;
shattered the atmosphere; your car is&#13;
blocking the drive, your car has its&#13;
lights on, your mother is at the door,&#13;
etc. A bar with a public address system,&#13;
far out. I was approaching a critical&#13;
phase that would lead either to on the&#13;
nod or disaster, liftoff was beautiful and&#13;
all systems were go, through the&#13;
stratosphere, ionosphere, through the&#13;
Van Allen belt, every sip preceded by a&#13;
carefully considered choice, nearing&#13;
the point of no return, breaking through&#13;
the ozone. I escaped on Brat's orbit, I&#13;
was On the Nod.&#13;
I noticed the phenomenal number of&#13;
chicks, thousands of nubile females, it&#13;
was too much, better than the dance in&#13;
the gym, and they was gettin' drunk.&#13;
Ouwee as Bobby D says. Ouwee indeed.&#13;
I looked over at Bill, he was jumping&#13;
around on the floor, brandishing a&#13;
broom screaming I'm a liberal, I'm a&#13;
liberal. He then performed his famous&#13;
Karateballet, trying to chop up frying&#13;
pans and whacking away at the bar. It's&#13;
good to know that even a karateguy&#13;
can't break a bar in half, it's sort of&#13;
reassuring, invincibility.&#13;
Pitchers were priced at a somewhat&#13;
dubious $1.70, cheaper than a lime&#13;
amount of bottled suds, but we&#13;
qualitiopted for a more reliable 12 oz.&#13;
Bud instead. In between Millet and&#13;
Socha, a disembodied voice suddenly&#13;
The service was quite good, friendly&#13;
bartenders were overworked but still&#13;
managed to converse with patrons, in&#13;
fact it was just about as good as when&#13;
Basil, an old friend of mine, worked the&#13;
bar when we were teenies and deluged •&#13;
me with free pitchers. The prices, I&#13;
suppose are about what you'd expect&#13;
from a teen bar. If you worked it right&#13;
'THE EXECUTIONER'S FACE IS ALWAYS WELL HIDDEN"&#13;
Title: The Vantage Point&#13;
Author: Lyndon Baines Johnson&#13;
Publisher: Holt, Rinehart and Winston ($15.00) «9&#13;
Former President Lyndon B. Johnson is taking the skeleton&#13;
out of the closet for public scrutiny. Unfortunately, it's not quite&#13;
the skeleton we always knew was there, it's been touched up in&#13;
places, especially where the hip bone is connected to the DMZ.&#13;
Demonstrating that LBJ is not a man of few words, though I&#13;
strongly doubt that most of the words in this&#13;
politicautobiography were written solely by him, the former&#13;
Commander-in-Chief presents his "Perspectives of the&#13;
Presidency 1963-1969" in a bulky 569 pages (not including appendices).&#13;
&#13;
The Vantage Point, of course, was wherever LBJ happened&#13;
to be during his more than five years in office, but wherever it&#13;
was, it had the Presidential Seal embossed on it somewhere. It's&#13;
with mixed emotions that I review (and read) this book, because&#13;
LBJ is no longer the powerogre he once was, he can no longer&#13;
tell me to go to war, he can no longer force me to kill for peace.&#13;
LBJ is now a certified refiree, a grandfather resting after a&#13;
lifetime of service to country, on his ranch by the Perdanales&#13;
Riyer. And who likes to kick grandfathers?&#13;
But the truth must out, as the Pentagon Papers reveal. In&#13;
judging this book one also judges LBJ, to believe everything that&#13;
is said in it, one must forget about credibility gaps. I am survivor&#13;
of the '60s, when turbulence, crisis and war were willing&#13;
bedfellows, when idealists were imprisoned for believing in&#13;
their country's dreams, when lies were confused with truth, and&#13;
truth with lies.&#13;
The Vantage Point reveals that LBJ was incapable of&#13;
comprehending the basic fallacy that kept us in Viet Nam; that&#13;
we belonged there. To the end, LBJ refuses to deny this; we&#13;
belonged there because the commies were taking over; we&#13;
belonged there so we could lead the people to democracy; we&#13;
belonged there because the South Vietnamese wanted us to&#13;
protect them from the evil Ho Chi Minh (years earlier, of&#13;
course, we refused to aid him in instituting a democratic&#13;
government); that we belonged there because dominoes fell&#13;
down. We were fhere because the American people believed the&#13;
lies their government told them.&#13;
1963-1969 encompases the era of the secret document;&#13;
nobody outside the higher echelons of government knew what&#13;
was going on. Yet Johnson condemned the rising numbers of&#13;
dissenters because, he says, each time they protested the war,&#13;
they strengthened the enemy's psychological front, while&#13;
American boys (as well as Vietnamese women, children) were&#13;
dying yet winning on the military front. He says that he sympathized&#13;
with the war protesters, but blames them because they&#13;
didn t know enough about what was going on, didn't know he&#13;
was, he says, seeking peace "through every available channel".&#13;
If he was seeking peace, why didn't he let the American people&#13;
know? Because it was a secret. Catch-22.&#13;
The Vantage Point presents us with many views of the&#13;
President, most of them flattering, a precious few of them&#13;
revealing. For example, he tells us that a few minufes after&#13;
giving the go ahead for the renewed bombing of Hanoi, he was in&#13;
a church kneeling, praying to the God (of Peace). At other times&#13;
we see him on the hot line, asking Kosygin to intervene with the&#13;
. . in stopping the Six Day War, or addressing the huge crowds&#13;
that came out to show their support in the 1964 elections.&#13;
But the war was only one aspect of what I call LBJ's&#13;
schizopolitick. While pursuing a hideous war in Nam, LBJ&#13;
por rays himself as the relentless peaceseeker in other parts of&#13;
e globe. Continually, he says, he plugged away for disarmament,&#13;
for se1&#13;
setting up foreic&#13;
nations emerge. I&#13;
more internatior&#13;
ward nations: Ui&#13;
daddy. He told th&#13;
that developing i&#13;
their destiny tog&#13;
direct. Yeah, su&#13;
But no matte&#13;
really can't ig'&#13;
President before&#13;
reaching social I'&#13;
There were two&#13;
hey, LBJ- how&#13;
Johnson the n&#13;
l&#13;
amazing to read&#13;
over due civil '&#13;
etc., legislation&#13;
1&#13;
knight of justice&#13;
He describe&#13;
lifted the heavy1&#13;
senators and c&#13;
meaningful soci&#13;
many-ofVanta&#13;
fellow feeling *&#13;
wants rememb&#13;
motivation, by&#13;
It's an indicato&#13;
pulling themse&#13;
r i.A +hP dl &#13;
January 24, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
le hottest musical quartet on the scene today and&#13;
oard Magazine as No. 15 out of the top 100 single&#13;
1, will appear in concert at the Carthage College&#13;
ir Jan. 30 ( Sunday), at 8 p.m. The 'Bread' group's&#13;
being sponsored by the Carthage Student Activities&#13;
* the J an. 30 performance are now on sale at Carit&#13;
Activities Office, Bidinger's Music House and&#13;
Jowntown and Pershing Plaza stores) in Kenosha. In&#13;
; are availabel at Cook-Gere Music Store, and Team&#13;
Elmwood Plaza.&#13;
bottled beer was 50 cents. The tap was&#13;
30 cents, about a dime more than a real&#13;
bar, in fact everything was a dime&#13;
more than a real bar. The juke", Wil lie&#13;
informed me, was "Top 10 and not&#13;
much else."&#13;
Perhaps what impressed me most&#13;
about the Bratstop was its hugeness.&#13;
This ain't a bar, it's a ballroom lined&#13;
with bars, hundreds of people walking&#13;
around, watching the band destroy&#13;
their hearing, sitting in booths, and at&#13;
the bar. Conversation was carried on&#13;
mouth to ear, the cacaphony created by&#13;
a hundred mouths proved to be quite an&#13;
obstacle to our reasonable discourse.&#13;
Ah ha, another reason for going On the&#13;
Nod.&#13;
The Brat must have a high turnover&#13;
of customers each year, but there's&#13;
always a wave of new faces eager to&#13;
enter the door after the old ones have&#13;
bid their fond adieu ready to search for&#13;
a real bar. Alot of graduates from teen&#13;
bars never return for post grad&#13;
drinking. I think that means something.&#13;
The Bratstop is a place where you can&#13;
lose yourself in t he crowd, where teens&#13;
can be just like everybody else and not&#13;
be noticed, where it's easy to talk to&#13;
strangers because they'll always&#13;
remain anonymous. The big thing is not&#13;
to confuse teen bars with the real item,&#13;
cause there's a hell of a lot of difference.&#13;
But if you're under 21, you&#13;
really ain't got much of a choice.&#13;
GOLDSTEIN&#13;
Directed by Philip Kaufman and Benjamin Monaster&#13;
Altura Films&#13;
Wednesday night, .Goldstein and The Grateful&#13;
Dead, only 50 cents to see films that are seldom&#13;
available . . . not bad. A student can enjoy hesitant&#13;
laughter and intellectual company right here on&#13;
campus, courtesy of The Parkside Film Society. A&#13;
nice liberal way to spend an evening off.&#13;
After viewing Goldstein I app roached Hal Stern,&#13;
French professor and world traveler, to ask his&#13;
opinion, telling him that I thought the film entertaining,&#13;
he replied that "it was a little obscure",&#13;
and looked at me in a way that ushered me to a place&#13;
short of the third level of consciousness (a look t hat I&#13;
have grown accustomed to since my first attempt at&#13;
reviewing films).&#13;
The film, a 1965 release, grinds the then contemporary&#13;
life style of Chicago into sausage, as is the&#13;
fate of a n ogre cop who is pushed into one of those&#13;
machines by an ambiguous sculptor (Thomas&#13;
Erhart) who has taken it upon himself to find the&#13;
newly arisen Elijah, a soggy old man who walks up&#13;
and out of Lake Michigan to make metaphysical fun&#13;
of Daley's deluge.&#13;
Lou Gilbert, the old man, is the drone around&#13;
which the film manifests the bureaucratic idiocy of&#13;
police, public puritanism and aborted babies. Other&#13;
tickles are plentiful w.th existential baseball anecdotes,&#13;
yes men and a comic bear played by Benito&#13;
Carruthers who serves as Abbott and Costello.&#13;
Hal was probably right though, as the film wired&#13;
along with many jokes and few revelations, the old&#13;
man finally dancing off into Lake Michigan without&#13;
changing much of what was so funny in the first&#13;
place. I ha ven't seen Hallelujah the Hills yet, but I&#13;
would like to, seeing that Goldstein tried to do for&#13;
Chicago what that film did for Vermont (according to&#13;
Eugene Archer, another reviewer).&#13;
Along with this presentation came The Grateful&#13;
Dead, a sound and sight syncopation of one of the&#13;
very first Acid Rock bands. It reminded me of Ken&#13;
Kesey and his Pranksters, who made a film that&#13;
probably bore some similarity to this egocentric&#13;
picture of the Dead.&#13;
Their music serves as a kind of trip tripping&#13;
background for stop action, reversal, overexposure&#13;
and trip clicking of film. An instant insight into the&#13;
group and putting us into what would seem to be a&#13;
rehearsal with short acid burned moments in the&#13;
sunlight, retinas flinching in Lysergic confusion,&#13;
is early Dead, without stovepipe hats, still the burnt&#13;
out beachboy look, but heavy.&#13;
The film society let me in for next to nothing and&#13;
I'd like to thank them for that and ask you Newscope&#13;
readers to take in a few of their films. For the money&#13;
yer gettin' a good deal. Stop in and tell em Bill se nt&#13;
ya.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
settling the Middle East crisis diplomatically,&#13;
'ign aid programs designed to help emerging&#13;
. He initiated a foreign policy that would demand&#13;
anal participation in the development of backUncle&#13;
Sam was tired of being the world's sugar&#13;
fhe world that wherever U.S. aid went, he wanted&#13;
I nation to form a regional alliance to work out&#13;
&gt;gether. U nca Sam would help, but he wouldn't&#13;
ure.&#13;
ter what you may think of his foreign policy, you&#13;
jnore his (Jekvll) domestic side. No other&#13;
"e LBJ instituted as much progressive and far&#13;
legislation in the history of our beloved republic.&#13;
1 LBJ's, on e we shouted at from the streets, hey,&#13;
many boys did you kill today; the other was&#13;
lumanitarian, the civil rights advocate. It's&#13;
f about his progress in initiating a plenum of long&#13;
rights, conservation, education, labor, health,&#13;
: That the black knight of war was also the white&#13;
J Was the paradox of this President.&#13;
es bow he cajoled, persuaded, and sometimes&#13;
gauntlet of the Presidency to convince reluctant&#13;
congressmen of the need for immediate and&#13;
ial legisla tion. It's those sections, and there are&#13;
go that leave the reader with a quiet respect and&#13;
or the President, those are the chapters LBJ&#13;
&gt;ered. We are touched by his own personal&#13;
is own e xperiences with racism and poverty,&#13;
of his complexity; he didn't believe in the poor&#13;
ves UP by their bootstraps bUllshit, and yet he&#13;
omino theory.&#13;
lead the struggle to end racism, poverty,&#13;
er&#13;
' i°b'essness, and it was the historic mandate&#13;
" ed bim with the leverage to institute such laws&#13;
as: Medicare, Aid to Higher Education, Model Cities, Clean&#13;
Rivers, Urban Mass Transit, Indian Bill of Rights, Fair&#13;
Housing, Guaranteed Student Loans, Gun Controls, AntiPoverty&#13;
Program, Clean Air, and scores of o thers. If hi story's&#13;
memory suffers amnesia about the war, LBJ has a sizeable&#13;
niche next to the good guys.&#13;
But this reviewer doesn't forget. The cloud of the war looms&#13;
large over LBJ's head, as well it should. Under him our involvement&#13;
increased from 69,000 troops to 525,000, and the&#13;
maimed and broken survivors multiply ten-fold the more than&#13;
44,000 dead. That's not even to mention the billions of dollars&#13;
diverted from urgently needed-domestic programs.&#13;
In places the writing is touching, speckled with drawlsy&#13;
anecdotes, interesting and sometimes exciting. In other places,&#13;
much longer and more of them, it's dry, humorless and boring.&#13;
It's a long book and LBJ was obviously selective about what&#13;
went in; his Presidential years are painted as years of great&#13;
social upheaval and advancement, which they were, and years&#13;
of questing for peace, which they really weren't. If I seem&#13;
biased against LBJ's vantage point, it's because I too shouted&#13;
peace now, and was never answered.&#13;
Some of the especially boring sections of Vantage Point&#13;
occur when LBJ describes various Cabinet meetings during&#13;
sundry crises. He did what his advisors and he thought best,&#13;
based on the information they had. He won't admit mistakes.&#13;
Late in the book he describes how peace negotiations were&#13;
finally agreed upon, and that Saigon was the side that dragged&#13;
its feet. He even indicated that Nixon men had counseled Thieu&#13;
and Ky into believing they would have a mote acceptable ally,&#13;
once Nixon took office. Saigon sat out the Peace Talks for a&#13;
while, and LBJ thinks that this delay won Nixon the-election. He&#13;
was never to quite forgive the Saigon regieme for this delay, and&#13;
we may never be able to quite forgive LBJ for his.&#13;
(Courtesy of the Book Mart, 622-59th S treet, Kenosha.)&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
Ladies:&#13;
The beer's on&#13;
Frenchie&#13;
That's rightfree&#13;
beer&#13;
for you girls, if ^&#13;
you're over 21 of course,&#13;
anytime after 8 pm on&#13;
Tuesdays.&#13;
The&#13;
food's great, the beer's&#13;
cold, and if you don t&#13;
like our music-&#13;
:• bring your&#13;
own.&#13;
3050 Douglas*open till 12 &#13;
1'agHi MiVVSCOFK January 21, 1972&#13;
VCome visit our pizza&#13;
j kitchens or have&#13;
\ some delivered'&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5—12&#13;
except S unday&#13;
4615—7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
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DAUNTLESS DEFENDER OF QDAUTY&#13;
DAUNTJMP&#13;
noMB&#13;
trt&#13;
BAUNTIESS DEFENDER OF UlAlffl&#13;
SGA into&#13;
Biz arre Situation&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
the organization would pledge&#13;
to use the money for the purposes&#13;
they requested it for. SGA&#13;
added it.&#13;
Ricardo Quintana ,&#13;
mathematics, asked if the CCC&#13;
would have any veto power over&#13;
any appropriations made.&#13;
Loumos replied no.&#13;
After further discussion the&#13;
CCC voted unanimously to allow&#13;
SGA to make the appropriations.&#13;
&#13;
So jubilation reigned supreme&#13;
for Student Government — th ey&#13;
had $6,400, and the authority to&#13;
allocate it to student&#13;
organizations. So they thought.&#13;
Tuesday afternoon, Loumos&#13;
met with Zuehlke to arrange the&#13;
transfer of funds to Student&#13;
Government's account — rather&#13;
he though he would. Zuehlke&#13;
told him, he told Newscope,&#13;
procedures to utilize the funds&#13;
already existed, and, alas, only&#13;
$2,400 was left — the money had&#13;
been used for office supplies&#13;
and equipment, telephones and&#13;
carpeting, among other things.&#13;
Loumos walked out.&#13;
W e dne sda y m o rni ng&#13;
Loumos, Trotter and myself,&#13;
representing SGA, met with&#13;
Dearborn, Zuehlke, Tony&#13;
Totero and Jewel Echelbarger&#13;
of Student Affairs, and Duane&#13;
Nuendorf of the Business office.&#13;
Stu d e nt G o v e r n m e nt&#13;
desired to tape record the&#13;
conference — the misunderstandings&#13;
that have arisen&#13;
out of past meetings was their&#13;
justification. The administrators&#13;
refused. At one&#13;
point, believing the meeting&#13;
was being recorded, they got up&#13;
as if to walk out.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn threatened, "I'll tell&#13;
you this, if the discussions we&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
'/2 Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line S°ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
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Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
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All It ems Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
have at this meeting are printed&#13;
in Newscope, it will be the last&#13;
time we have this type of&#13;
meeting."&#13;
The meeting was not&#13;
recorded.&#13;
Zuehlke began by saying he&#13;
had given SGA the wrong&#13;
figures the day before. An&#13;
estimated $4,104 remained of&#13;
the funds, not $2,400. He&#13;
provided a breakdown of how&#13;
the money had been spent.&#13;
Significant expenditures included:&#13;
$585 for office equipment&#13;
and furnishings; $609 for&#13;
telephone rental and tolls; $209&#13;
for student salaries; $155 for&#13;
supplies.&#13;
Zuehlke accused Loumos and&#13;
Trotter of lying to the CCC in&#13;
saying he had approved the&#13;
SGA budget request forms.&#13;
Loumos denied this.&#13;
He charged, in turn, Zuehlke&#13;
had lied to them two months&#13;
earlier in saying no procedures&#13;
existed for utilizing the funds,&#13;
and that SGA could draw up&#13;
such forms. Why, he asked, did&#13;
Zuehlke say no procedures&#13;
existed and the money could not&#13;
be reached because of this,&#13;
when, in fact, such procedures&#13;
did exist, and the money was&#13;
being used?&#13;
Zuehlke denied, in turn, ever&#13;
saying this.&#13;
At this point, I said a recording&#13;
of the meeting would have&#13;
obviously shown who was lying.&#13;
There was no reply.&#13;
Dearborn maintained that, in&#13;
the first place, the CCC had no&#13;
authority to relinquish its&#13;
budget making authority; just&#13;
as the CCC last year had no&#13;
authority to abolish itself.&#13;
The SGA leaders accepted&#13;
this, and gradually a compromise&#13;
was worked out: any&#13;
allocation of funds would have&#13;
to be approved by SGA, and the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
Dearborn would then concur if&#13;
the two bodies first okayed it.&#13;
So student organizations will&#13;
be in line to receive an&#13;
estimated $4,104, and SGA will&#13;
have a say in how it's allocated.&#13;
After it was all over, Loumos&#13;
commented wearily, "At least&#13;
everything is straightened out&#13;
now."&#13;
&lt;"3 171 "&#13;
/ /&#13;
I I v"&#13;
cv:&#13;
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PIPES&#13;
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OPENMON.-FRI.&#13;
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Crazy Horse&#13;
"LOOSE" — $3.85&#13;
Yes&#13;
"FRAGILE" — $3.95&#13;
Rolling Stones&#13;
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NEW BREAD ALBUM — $3.85&#13;
Osibisa Wcyay&#13;
"OSIBISA WCYAY" — $3.85&#13;
NEW KING CRIMSON — $3.85&#13;
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Phone: 654-5032&#13;
George Harrison and friends&#13;
"CONCERT FOR BANGLA DESH"&#13;
Emerson, Lake and Palmer&#13;
"LIVE "PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION " — $3.85&#13;
WANT TO SEE THE&#13;
CLASSIC FILMS?&#13;
During the next six months,&#13;
there will be a number of&#13;
exciting movie offerings in&#13;
the Parkside area. Check&#13;
the bulletin board in the&#13;
Tallent Hall Library for&#13;
the week's current films —&#13;
and reviews. &#13;
^ * i 7&#13;
POETRY&#13;
* FO RU M&#13;
c&lt; f-jpwage t o&#13;
ralolo Nerudft&#13;
WOO f.n\, We^lhei^ay&#13;
it January 26- i&#13;
Whifertelfcir CoTfi^hwe&#13;
/ Qreeh^is't&#13;
January 24,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
fi Parkside Activities Board fimenk&#13;
ACADEMY AWARD —&#13;
WINNER&#13;
THEY SHOOT&#13;
HORSES,&#13;
DON'T THEY?&#13;
GIG YOUNG BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR&#13;
JANE FO NDA BEST ACTRESS OF THE YEAR&#13;
New Yolk Film Critics&#13;
BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR&#13;
National Board of Revlow&#13;
Fri. Jan . 28 8 =00 P .M&#13;
Student Ac t. Bl dg. Ad m. 75 '&#13;
Parkside 8. W ise. ID R equired&#13;
CAP CMP CAP CAP c&gt;PSo E)&#13;
9Gutwfo.&#13;
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In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"-&#13;
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• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
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MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
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For complete information and&#13;
more details contact the&#13;
Student Activities Office,&#13;
Tallent nail&#13;
cX=&gt; cifC&gt;o&#13;
tifu W.P. Student Activitie s&#13;
presents ... in concert&#13;
POPULAR RECORDING ARTISTS &amp;&#13;
WOODSTOCK ATTRACTION&#13;
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"Rock fn Roll is Here to Stay"&#13;
Sun. Feb. 6 8=00 P.M.&#13;
RESERVED SEAT TICKETS S3.5U&#13;
(Limit 2 per fee card)&#13;
Available at the Student Activities Office &#13;
PageS NEWSCOPE January 24, 1972&#13;
The Psychic Circus&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
I T 'S S C R U M P T I O U S&#13;
80c&#13;
V~v ^ HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
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A big sundae loaded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
N O R T H 3311 SH E RID AN R O AD S O U T H 7 500 S HE R I D AN R O AD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
ALL textbooks tor A LL courses I&#13;
now sold at Main Book Store&#13;
on Wood Rd.&#13;
2nd W E E K O F C L A S S E S , JAN. 2*4 -28 , 1972&#13;
M A IN B O O K S T O R E:&#13;
Mon .-Th urs . - 8 : 00 A.M. - * 4 : 3 0 P .M.&#13;
6:3 0 P.M. - 8:0 0 P.M.&#13;
F r i d ay - 8:0 0 A.M. - * 4 : 3 0 P .M.&#13;
K E N O S H A A N D R A C I NE S T O R E S:&#13;
M o n.- Fri day - 8:0 0 A.M. - 1:30 P.M.&#13;
No Books Will Be Sold At&#13;
Kenosha &amp; Rac&#13;
i&#13;
ne Stores&#13;
I&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
Round Trip Jet&#13;
Ground Transferi&#13;
Eight Nights&#13;
Lodging —&#13;
Sightseeing&#13;
Optional Sidetrips&#13;
Shopping&#13;
Sign Up Early,&#13;
Space Limitedl&#13;
For Additional Information&#13;
plaata oontact:&#13;
William Ncebuhr. Coordinator&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
University ol Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin S3140&#13;
Phono, (414) 553-2226&#13;
University of Wisconsin, Parkside&#13;
Overnight flight from Chicago to ROME, ITALY, via Alitalia Airlines,&#13;
DC-8 Jet. Your overseas flights will include complimentary meals and&#13;
/ beverages.&#13;
Transportation from and to airport and hotel, via deluxe buses.&#13;
In ROME. ITALY, the most vibrant of European capitols where the past&#13;
lives with the present. There's much to see and savor; the Sistine Chapel,&#13;
Art Treasures of the Vatican, the Roman Forum, legendary squares and&#13;
'fountains. "Roma Di None" with the monuments and fountains beaulfully&#13;
illuminated, dinner at a family-style "Trattoria" or a more formal&#13;
"Ristorante" (perhaps one overlooking the city). Nite Spots .... plenty!&#13;
At one you can dance amidst the ancient ruins and of course there's always&#13;
time for "people-watching" on the Via Veneto and an "expresso" at&#13;
a sidewalk cafe where you can enjoy ROME with the lively and charming&#13;
Romans.&#13;
The Spanish Steps, the Catacombs and The Appian Way!&#13;
Good category hotels.&#13;
Tour includes a full days sightseeing tour of the VATICAN, COLOSSEUM,&#13;
ROMAN FORUM. CATACOMBS and the SPANISH STEPS.&#13;
Via Aurelia, Trevi Fountain and St. Peter's Square!&#13;
One day optional side trips will be offered to FLORENCE,.famed city of&#13;
Renaissance art, and to POMPEII-NAPLES-SORRENTO.&#13;
.What to buy in ITALY? Everything! .... Craftsmanship is excellent ....&#13;
Don't miss s look at the leathergoods of all kinds, art books and prints,&#13;
fabrics and beautifully wrought silver and gold. Question is "What not to&#13;
buy?"&#13;
9 Days Only $276&#13;
Plus $20.00 Tax &amp; Service&#13;
Depart: Chicago, March 30&#13;
Return: Chicago, April 8&#13;
$50.00 Deposit Balance due 30 (thirty) days prior to departure.&#13;
LSD music and a hard rock light&#13;
show. Gawd! I stepped out for a&#13;
moment and reentered&#13;
refreshed.&#13;
Norm walked out to the&#13;
audience for the second half of&#13;
the program, with mike in hand,&#13;
this time to explain that ESP is&#13;
"God Given" and asking for&#13;
questions, taking time out to&#13;
forecase a few predictions, and&#13;
informing the audience that his:&#13;
managers were trying to get&#13;
him on the Carson show. Here is&#13;
where the circus began. The&#13;
ESP lecture had turned into a&#13;
route, it was the Ask Norman&#13;
show, Stump the Psychic, and&#13;
finally a revival meeting.&#13;
People seriously asked him if&#13;
they should take a trip to&#13;
another city, they asked him&#13;
what they should do about&#13;
certain problems, etc. Norm&#13;
answered some and told others&#13;
that a psychic couldn't simply&#13;
turn his powers on and answer&#13;
questions, just like that. Some&#13;
people heckled him, and here I&#13;
must give Norm credit. He&#13;
handled hecklers well by not&#13;
answering them, instead he&#13;
went into a rap that centered&#13;
around various historical&#13;
figures who had to suffer persecutions&#13;
and ridicule for what&#13;
they believed. Exit hecklers. At&#13;
other times Norm used his&#13;
psychic powers to answer&#13;
unasked questions that he'd&#13;
"received" from members of&#13;
the audience; he told people&#13;
about their pasts, their health,&#13;
that sort of thing. Nobody told&#13;
him if he was right, if they did I&#13;
couldn't hear them. One&#13;
longhair walked out haflway&#13;
through the show, casually&#13;
saying "I stumped him."&#13;
During this time, Norm was&#13;
speaking in his incredible speed&#13;
'o light monotone and people&#13;
were raising their hands to be&#13;
called on, while others yelled&#13;
out questions. Slater would&#13;
answer a question and then&#13;
move directly into an unfortunately&#13;
stagnant rap on&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
panel didn't discuss anything,&#13;
rather they asked trick&#13;
questions like what's ESP, and&#13;
what's the Bermuda Triangle.&#13;
Norm helpfully answered the&#13;
obviously spontaneous&#13;
questions. The answers may&#13;
have been interesting, I don't&#13;
quite know because Norm&#13;
doesn't speak in a way that's&#13;
conducive to communication.&#13;
He has a tendency to fracture&#13;
the English language, and&#13;
speaks in an incredible&#13;
monotone, accenting nothing,&#13;
punctuating nothing, simply&#13;
spieling out words that pile atop&#13;
each- other until he runs out of&#13;
breath. I heard some of it, but&#13;
I'd have liked to hear more.&#13;
After the panel "discussion"&#13;
was completed, Norm left the&#13;
stage and took the floor, mike in&#13;
hand. He was going to&#13;
demonstrate ESP, using the&#13;
audience. Ten objects were&#13;
placed on a table, while two&#13;
volunteers were dubiously&#13;
isolated in the back of the&#13;
theater. Amplifying his words&#13;
through the sound system, he&#13;
picked out one object for each&#13;
half of the audience to concentrate&#13;
on. The volunteers&#13;
were brought back in and instructed&#13;
to pass a hand over the&#13;
objects, and pick up the one&#13;
which radiated the most&#13;
psychic heat. The first volunteer&#13;
failed. The second simply&#13;
gave up after Norm asked the&#13;
hapless hipster if he was "on a&#13;
trip."&#13;
With that failure behind him,&#13;
Norm picked out another&#13;
volunteer from the audience.&#13;
This time Norm himself was&#13;
going to transmit the image of&#13;
the object. With the volunteer&#13;
facing the lighted screen in the&#13;
back of the stage, Norm showed&#13;
everyone in the audience what&#13;
he was going to concentrate on.&#13;
I'm not sure if the volunteer&#13;
didn't see it either. It seems that&#13;
the object's dark outline was&#13;
projected onto the top of the&#13;
screen, which the volunteer was&#13;
facing. He many have seen it,&#13;
and then again he may not have.&#13;
Anyway, the volunteer picked&#13;
the correct object, and scattered&#13;
applause ensued. At&#13;
which time Norman beat a&#13;
hasty exit, and promised&#13;
predictions to come.&#13;
Two electric guitarists by&#13;
name of Corrigan &amp; Liepke took&#13;
over the amps while the&#13;
Psychedelic Scientist volunteered&#13;
his sighshow. I could&#13;
just imagine what the older folk&#13;
in the audience were thinking;&#13;
YOU CAN E AT!&#13;
only $1.39&#13;
Serving from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.&#13;
pizza, chicken,&#13;
'mo-jo' potatoes,&#13;
and tossed salad&#13;
SHEETS&#13;
BUM-LUNGE'&#13;
Highway 31 at&#13;
60th Street&#13;
Phone 654-0485&#13;
Lathrop^ Ave. Racine 633-6307&#13;
********#************************&lt;£&#13;
Christ, the Word and God&#13;
evangelical style, evangelical&#13;
at its worst.&#13;
Slater was also predicting&#13;
things, as he promised earlier,&#13;
and making a few hilarious&#13;
mistakes along the way. For&#13;
example, he predicted that in&#13;
1978 a 17 year old would take the&#13;
place of "James Hendrickson"&#13;
(Jimi Hendrix), that Lindsay&#13;
would be President in 1974 (an&#13;
off year), and that the U.S.&#13;
would be (surprise) completely&#13;
different in 2000 from what it is&#13;
today. However, beside a few&#13;
absurd "predictions" the&#13;
psychic also forecast that a&#13;
"pyramid on he t moon would be&#13;
found in 1973", the war wouldn't&#13;
end for years, that in 1980 the&#13;
U.S. would be in a war with&#13;
South Africa, that draft&#13;
resistors would not be allowed&#13;
to repatriate, that great earth&#13;
tremors would shake the&#13;
Midwest in 1974, that Atlantis&#13;
will rise again, and the Statue of&#13;
Liberty would be blown up in&#13;
1973. He also predicted that an&#13;
assassination attempt will be&#13;
made on Nixon while he visits&#13;
China.&#13;
ESP may well be an emerging&#13;
science, evidence seems to&#13;
indicate its validity, but Sunday&#13;
night's program didn't do much&#13;
in proving its case. The last half&#13;
of the program was pure&#13;
theater, it was absurd comedy,&#13;
a melange of fast talking car&#13;
salesmen, Monte Hall, Ann&#13;
Landers and What's My Line. I&#13;
could only laugh. I&#13;
congratulated Eric Prentnieks&#13;
for his stroke of genius in introducing&#13;
live theater to the&#13;
Vogue (he'd told me earlier that&#13;
it's "one of a continuing series&#13;
of lectures"), and I for one hope&#13;
it continues.&#13;
If Norman Slater is to be a&#13;
crusader for ESP, he's going to&#13;
have to learn how to present a&#13;
serious program that doesn't&#13;
sink (ascend?) to theater. As it&#13;
turned out, the biggest block to&#13;
accepting ESP was the&#13;
evangelist-psychic himself.&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
O N S O U T H S H E R I D A N RO A D IN KE N O S H A 6 5 4 - 0 4 1 1 </text>
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              <text>Fire in Com-Arts Building Under Investigation</text>
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              <text>The University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
JUVICOVI&#13;
Volume 5 Number 15 December 13,1971 'Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold&#13;
If you'd have written a&#13;
story, it would have been&#13;
here.&#13;
Join the Newscope staff.&#13;
Fire In&#13;
Com-Arts&#13;
Building&#13;
Under&#13;
Investigation o&#13;
ir&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
CD&#13;
Christmas party for&#13;
underprivilged needs spirit&#13;
Santa Claus (Jim Greco) is comin' to town! Actually,&#13;
he's coming to Parkside on Saturday, December 18. That's&#13;
when he'll be bringing Christmas cheer to underprivileged&#13;
children from the surrounding communities. There are going&#13;
to be games, cartoons, prizes, soda, food and presents. The&#13;
party is being held in the Student Activities Building from&#13;
1:30 to 4:30. Cooperating on this activity will be Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises, the Parkside Activities Board, and the Student&#13;
Union Committee. Interested students and organizations are&#13;
invited to help and their assistance would be deeply appreciated.&#13;
Contact either the Student Activities Office or the&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
the special magic of&#13;
CHRISTMAS!&#13;
by Larry Jones, Campus Editor&#13;
A fire did minor damage to the new communication-arts&#13;
building last Wednesday night.&#13;
As of Thursday afternoon, the Somers Fire&#13;
Department had not yet completed its investigation&#13;
of the blaze, and so would not release&#13;
any information about it. Nowever, Newscope was&#13;
able to obtain the following information in a short&#13;
interview with UWP chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie:&#13;
The fire was "in a very limited basement&#13;
section of the new communication-arts building,&#13;
close to where the connector will be between the&#13;
library-learning center and the corn-arts building.&#13;
The fire occurred in an area where evidently the&#13;
construction people were carrying on some&#13;
warming activity — they were evidently warming&#13;
wooden forms in which concrete was going to be&#13;
poured Thursday. I heard they had some electric&#13;
lights going down there . . . whether they could&#13;
generate enough heat to warm these forms I &lt;don't&#13;
know. The specific cause of the blaze is still being&#13;
looked into.&#13;
"Evidently it did burn quite fiercely in this&#13;
limited area; maybe as much as an hour, and did&#13;
burn some of the wooden forms and did heat up&#13;
some of the steel reinforcing rods in the area to the&#13;
extent that they bent and will have to be replaced.&#13;
There was no major damage to the structure, and&#13;
it is not the University's responsibility; that is, it is&#13;
still the contractor's building and his responsibility&#13;
to take care of it."&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie also stated that no dollar&#13;
estimate of damage had yet been made, and that,&#13;
to his knowledge, there was no suspicion of arson.&#13;
Deputies reported that the Sommers Fire&#13;
Department responded to the call at about 11:30&#13;
p.m., but had trouble getting to the fire site&#13;
because of ankle deep mud. The fire was first&#13;
noticed by a student or faculty member who was in&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the time.&#13;
The building is under construction by the&#13;
Korndoerfer Construction Company of Racine and&#13;
is due for completion next year. It is believed,&#13;
according to Wyllie, that construction of the&#13;
building will not be hampered very much by the&#13;
fire, which is under investigation by an insurance&#13;
firm, university officials and the Sheriff's&#13;
.Department.&#13;
The D eath Of A University-another volley&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
The University of Wisconsin,&#13;
as we knew it, is dead. It died&#13;
the day Governor Patrick&#13;
Lucey signed into law the&#13;
merger which combined the two&#13;
university systems into one.&#13;
The old way is gone and we now&#13;
• have a giant conglomerate&#13;
University of Wisconsin consisting&#13;
of 13 campuses spread&#13;
over the state from Superior to&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Each of these 13 campuses&#13;
bears the name University of&#13;
Wisconsin, but while they may&#13;
be united in name they have a&#13;
long way to go to be united in&#13;
spirit. This separation is due to&#13;
the uniqueness of the situation.&#13;
The schools from each of the old&#13;
systems were run differently&#13;
and there will be difficulties&#13;
involved in getting things to run&#13;
smoothly.&#13;
The final form of the new&#13;
University of Wisconsin is not&#13;
decided, nor will it be, at least&#13;
until January, 1973. That is how&#13;
long the Merger Implementation&#13;
Committee plans&#13;
to be working on the problem.&#13;
This committee, which consists&#13;
of 17 members including the&#13;
chairmen of the Joint Finance&#13;
Committee and the chairmen of&#13;
the Joint Education Committee,&#13;
has a big job ahead of them.&#13;
They are the ones who must find&#13;
the best way of facilitating the&#13;
merger and may decide&#13;
anything from leaving the&#13;
merger as a merger in name&#13;
only or to go all the way and&#13;
have every campus treated the&#13;
same, or anything in between.&#13;
According to George&#13;
Molinaro, Chairman of the&#13;
Assembly Finance Committee,&#13;
the only really big thing the&#13;
Merger Implementation&#13;
Committee has done is to&#13;
eliminate the Coordinating&#13;
Council on Higher Education,&#13;
which was found to be unnecessary&#13;
due to the new&#13;
combined central administration.&#13;
&#13;
As far as Parkside is concerned,&#13;
Molinaro thinks we did&#13;
fairly weH. We got more than&#13;
others did. Whether we would&#13;
have gotten still more under the&#13;
old system is another question.&#13;
Where we really did well was&#13;
in our building program — not a&#13;
thing has been cut. How much&#13;
did we get? Originally it was&#13;
requested that Parkside receive&#13;
an additional $3,066,000 over the&#13;
1969-71 biennium for the 1971-73&#13;
biennium. This addition was cut&#13;
to $1,300,000 or less than half.&#13;
Because of the shortfall in&#13;
expected enrollment, Parkside&#13;
lost an additional $288,000 and&#13;
the forced savings because of&#13;
the budget delay and the Nixon&#13;
economic freeze cost an additional&#13;
$180,000. The budget&#13;
delay wriught havoc with more&#13;
than University funds. All state&#13;
employees who would have&#13;
received pay increases after&#13;
July 1, were denied those increases&#13;
till the budget was&#13;
passed. That would have been&#13;
fine —- everyone would have&#13;
gotten those raises retroactively&#13;
as soon as the budget was&#13;
passed. But along came the&#13;
price freeze and no one could&#13;
get a raise and the budget&#13;
passed without any of those&#13;
included. So nobody got&#13;
anything in back pay and no&#13;
increases were granted until&#13;
after the freeze expired.&#13;
Parkside will lose additional&#13;
funds due to the change in the&#13;
level of funding. It used to be&#13;
that Parkside was funded on&#13;
level one, freshman and&#13;
sophomore, and level two,&#13;
junior and serior per credit hour&#13;
regardless of the curriculum.&#13;
Now we are funded still on&#13;
levels one and two but these are&#13;
further broken down into four&#13;
major disciplinary fields.&#13;
Which means we now get less&#13;
for each literature major than&#13;
we do for each physics major —&#13;
watchifor increased accent on&#13;
the sciences witl all those&#13;
specialized facility&#13;
There was a bright side to the&#13;
personnel problem, as none of&#13;
the mentioned layoffs came&#13;
about, and Parkside will be able&#13;
to recruit additional instructional&#13;
personnel for next&#13;
fall. The personnel office is&#13;
already hiring additional&#13;
clerical help.&#13;
The big bite came in those&#13;
decision items which were not&#13;
restored. These included the&#13;
fundting of two new majors and&#13;
others which were enumerated&#13;
in the March 15 issue. However,&#13;
there will be an expansion in the&#13;
administrative and institutional&#13;
computing facilities. The near&#13;
future should see almost every&#13;
department on campus making&#13;
use of the machine.&#13;
Breakdown of Parkside&#13;
budget:&#13;
60 per cent, Institutional costs&#13;
10 per cent, Physical Plant&#13;
10 per cent, Library&#13;
7 per cent, general services&#13;
3 per cent, miscellaneous &#13;
Page 2 XEWSCOPE December 13, 1971&#13;
An All N ew Concept&#13;
In Self Service Shoe Stores&#13;
The Shoe S top A nnex&#13;
three doors down from&#13;
The Shoe Stop (400 main st.)&#13;
racine&#13;
Grand Opening&#13;
Thurs. Dec. 16th&#13;
Famous Brand Shoes,&#13;
Values To $25.00&#13;
Reduced To $l4.90-$11.90-$9.90.&#13;
Also Reduced , Famous&#13;
Children's Jumping Jack's Shoes.&#13;
The Shoe S top A nnex&#13;
three doors down from&#13;
The Shoe Stop (400 main st.)&#13;
racine&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
I T 'S S C R U M P T I O U S&#13;
80c&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
BIG TOP Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream and&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
cream, nuts and cherry 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
— THE RANCH&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
My story can be called an&#13;
Exercise in Futility or Whoever&#13;
Reads the Legal Notices?&#13;
On September 29, October 6&#13;
and October 13 of 1960 the Legal&#13;
Notice of the Kenosha News told&#13;
of a petition to rezone an area ot&#13;
Kenosha county from&#13;
residential to industrial. The&#13;
public hearing was held October&#13;
14, 1960. Somers township approved&#13;
the petition of a certain&#13;
Mr. Infusino to use 12.7 acres of&#13;
land on 30 Ave. just south of&#13;
Lichter Rd. to build an incinerator&#13;
for the burning of&#13;
salvage. None of the neighbors&#13;
were there to object. Thus, very&#13;
quickly and easily, Mr Infusino's&#13;
parcel of land was&#13;
rezoned.&#13;
It was not until the neighbors&#13;
saw what was being built that&#13;
they complained. The complicated&#13;
legal terminology in&#13;
the Legal Notices had not&#13;
conveyed to them that their&#13;
neighborhood was in for a&#13;
drastic change. And now it&#13;
seemed too late.&#13;
Complaints directed to&#13;
Kenosha's city hall were turned&#13;
away. K. T. Incinerator is not in&#13;
the city, they were told. Somers&#13;
tells the poor neighbors to be&#13;
patient; it all takes time.&#13;
A complaint that the teepee&#13;
(as the ugly structure was&#13;
nicknamed) was too high for&#13;
current regulations led to an&#13;
amendment of that regulation.&#13;
Meanwhile, the neighbors&#13;
have to contend with an ugly&#13;
and dangerous eyesore. Trucks&#13;
haul garbage from American&#13;
Motors. The garbage is piled&#13;
high. What if a strong wind&#13;
.?&#13;
Th§ screening at the top of the&#13;
teepee is broken down; large&#13;
chunks of half-burned paper&#13;
and wood have been found in the&#13;
neighbors' yards. Patc&#13;
£*°&#13;
burned ground were pointed out&#13;
to me. When, they asked, would&#13;
such a spark land on a roof or&#13;
agrove of trees and catch on&#13;
fire?&#13;
The garbage that decorates&#13;
Infusion's property f&#13;
ttracts&#13;
rats There is the smell, smoke&#13;
and soot that plagues them&#13;
night and day.&#13;
The people want help, but no&#13;
one wants to help. They have&#13;
been fighting the incinerator&#13;
since it was built. They are still&#13;
fighting. Their shouts have&#13;
easily been drowned out,&#13;
quieted and ignored, but still&#13;
they shout. What they lack are&#13;
the numbers. They need more&#13;
people to shout with them.&#13;
Aren't you getting a little sick of&#13;
seeing and smelling that mess&#13;
on your way to Greenquist?&#13;
Only until Mr. Infusino takes&#13;
his teepee and goes home&#13;
will those neighbors be able to&#13;
rest easy.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Diane Haney&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Finally, there may be some&#13;
coherence to the bulletin boards&#13;
around Parkside. The Student&#13;
Activities Office has completed&#13;
a study of the boards and has&#13;
come up with a solution. The&#13;
boards will be labeled as to the&#13;
size and type of what will be&#13;
allowed to be posted.&#13;
These regulations will affect&#13;
all boards except those&#13;
specifically reserved for&#13;
University departments.&#13;
The signs divide the boards&#13;
into three categories. First will&#13;
be the Campus Events Bulletin&#13;
Boards, for announcement of&#13;
approved campus activities and&#13;
events. Size of posters on this&#13;
board will be limited to 14 x 22&#13;
inches.&#13;
The next group will be the&#13;
Student Bulletin Boards. These&#13;
are to be used for personal&#13;
motes, for sale items, or student&#13;
notes of interest. Size of items&#13;
on this board will be limited to 3&#13;
x 5 inch announcements.&#13;
The final group will be boards&#13;
saying Rides And Riders&#13;
Wanted. These will be used for&#13;
the one specific purpose, announcements&#13;
again limited to 3&#13;
x 5 inches.&#13;
The Activities Office hopes&#13;
that this will end some of the&#13;
confustion over the present&#13;
bulletin boards at Parkside.&#13;
People using the boards are&#13;
asked to keep them as neat as&#13;
possible.&#13;
The Student Activities Office&#13;
will implement this process on&#13;
all the campuses. However, to&#13;
make this procedure work, it&#13;
will require the people using the&#13;
board to cooperate with the&#13;
standards set. If anyone has any&#13;
questions or would like further&#13;
information regarding bulletin&#13;
board policies, they are asked to&#13;
contact the Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is just to inform you that&#13;
the sketch purported to be that&#13;
of "James Koloen", as&#13;
published in last week's issue's&#13;
bar review, (which, by the way,&#13;
I thought was mighty boss and&#13;
right on) is indeed the face of an&#13;
imposter. Upon closer&#13;
examination of the picture,&#13;
anyone who is reasonably well&#13;
acquainted with the ace&#13;
reviewer, will discover that it is&#13;
in fact the portrait of the&#13;
scurrilous, archcartoonloony,&#13;
Jerry "the ageless wonder"&#13;
Socha, as drawn by the ace&#13;
cartoon reviewer "James&#13;
Koloen".&#13;
Don't believe everything you&#13;
see, huh Warren?&#13;
Keep on bulkin'&#13;
Jim Sucha&#13;
Why in the hell can't you illiterates learn even how to spell?&#13;
Disgusted&#13;
Picky, Picky, Ed.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Racine&#13;
3309 Washington Avo.&#13;
633-3595&#13;
Mcmi|&#13;
Ctotnuu&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phono 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Campus Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Fine Arts Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Circulation Manager&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
Warren Nedry&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Larry Jones&#13;
Paul Lomartire&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
James Casper&#13;
Rick Pazera.&#13;
Fred Noer,Jr.&#13;
John Beck&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
.. Newscope is an independent student newspaper composed by students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside published weekly except during&#13;
vacation periods. Student obtained advertising funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the&#13;
University. Free copies are available upon request.&#13;
Th, ,&#13;
e&#13;
.&#13;
ne ,or 3,1 manuscripts submitted to Newscope is 4:30 p.m. the&#13;
nursday prior to publication and must be typed double-spaced. Deadline for&#13;
^&#13;
ra&#13;
.&#13;
PhS iS the SaturdaV Prior to publication. Unsolicited manuscripts&#13;
d photographs may be reclaimed within 30 days after the date of subn^c&#13;
0&#13;
"' .&#13;
r Which they wi&#13;
" bec&#13;
°me the property of Newscope Ltd. The&#13;
»Prn..&#13;
0Pe °. A" ,S ,oca,ed the Student Organizations building, Intersection&#13;
Of Highway A and Wood Road. &#13;
December i:t. 1971 NKWSCOPK Page :i&#13;
Myra Sadker, an assistant professor of education at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and author of a forthcoming book&#13;
on discrimination against women in U.S. schools, displays pages&#13;
from a book which, she says, illustrates her contention that girls&#13;
are subtly forced into stereotyped career choices in the education&#13;
process. Captions on the illustrations in the book read "Boys are&#13;
doctors." and "Girls are nurses."&#13;
Myra Sadker&#13;
r Sex ism In The School'&#13;
Liberating little girls from&#13;
"sexist" school curriculums is&#13;
the goal of a forthcoming book&#13;
by Myra Sadker, an assistant&#13;
professor of education at the&#13;
University of WiscgnsinParkside&#13;
and mother of a yearand-a-half-old&#13;
daughter.&#13;
The book, tentatively titled&#13;
"Sexism in the Schools: The&#13;
Hidden Curriculum", is to be&#13;
issued for the fall market by&#13;
Harper and Row Publishers,&#13;
Inc., of New York.&#13;
In it, Mrs. Sadker traces&#13;
discrimination against women&#13;
in education from kindergarten&#13;
through college and beyond and&#13;
makes a strong plea for change.&#13;
"We can no longer afford to&#13;
waste the talents of over half of&#13;
our population," says Mrs.&#13;
Sadker, who received her&#13;
doctoral degree in education&#13;
from the Universpty of&#13;
Massachusetts.&#13;
"Discriminatory practices in&#13;
schools are creating built-in&#13;
economic discrimination&#13;
reflected in eventual career&#13;
limitation and salary differentials&#13;
for women."&#13;
Mrs. Sadker opens her indictment&#13;
with basic readers&#13;
used in the early elementary&#13;
grades. They "subtly&#13;
discriminate" in providing role&#13;
models for children, she says.&#13;
"These books use two to four&#13;
times as many stories about&#13;
boys as about girls; there are&#13;
more pictures of boys; and girls&#13;
are relegated to passive, observer&#13;
roles in the stories,"&#13;
Mrs. Sadker says. One particularly&#13;
flagrant example of&#13;
such books cited by Mrs.&#13;
Sadker, "I'm Glad I'm a Boy —&#13;
I'm Glad I'm a Girl" by&#13;
Whitney Darrow (Simon and&#13;
Schuster, 1970), consists of&#13;
facing pages picturing boys and&#13;
girls with such captions as&#13;
"Boys are policemen. Girls are&#13;
metermaids." "Boys are pilots.&#13;
Girls are stewardesses". "Boys&#13;
are presidents. Girls are first&#13;
ladies". "Boys invent things.&#13;
Girls use what boys invent",&#13;
and "Boys fix things. Girls need&#13;
things fixed".&#13;
All this can be unfair to boys&#13;
as well as girls, Mrs. Sadker&#13;
concedes. "The aggressive girl&#13;
is labeled a 'tomboy' while the&#13;
sensitive boy is labeled a 'sissy'&#13;
— both suffer as a result of&#13;
artificial role limitation."&#13;
Reading tests are not the orily&#13;
offenders, however. Women&#13;
come off even worse in most&#13;
history books, Mrs. Sadker&#13;
says. They are virtually&#13;
ignored.&#13;
"A survey of 12 o f the most&#13;
commonly used high school&#13;
history texts show definite bias&#13;
against women. One text&#13;
devotes only two lines to the&#13;
women's sufferage movement.&#13;
Another devotes a paragraph to&#13;
it," she points out. "Students&#13;
frequently do not realize that&#13;
there is a selection process&#13;
involved in the material&#13;
presented. Girls simply find no&#13;
role models in our history&#13;
books."&#13;
By the time girls are in junior&#13;
high school or high school, the&#13;
"subtle" discrimination of text&#13;
books is augmented by more&#13;
overt forms of sex bias.&#13;
"Counselors sometimes do&#13;
not encourage capable girls to&#13;
be doctors or lawyers." she&#13;
asserts. "They encourage girls&#13;
to be nurses and clerical&#13;
workers — traditional roles&#13;
where they may be undertrained&#13;
and under-paid for the&#13;
level of their ability."&#13;
To this is added social and&#13;
peer group pressures for girls to&#13;
"play dumb", Mrs. Sadker&#13;
says.&#13;
"Studies show that patterns of&#13;
underachievement for boys who&#13;
do not reach their full potential&#13;
in school began in the&#13;
elementary grades. These&#13;
patterns frequently begin for&#13;
girls in junior high school as&#13;
they 'learn their place' and&#13;
come to accept female role&#13;
limitations. Other studies show&#13;
that girls' IQ scorew decline&#13;
during adolesence, probably&#13;
because of a lack of motivation.&#13;
Girls are not rewarded for&#13;
academic achievement."&#13;
Mrs. Sadker makes clear she&#13;
is not "knocking" careers&#13;
which are traditionally&#13;
regarded as women's, so olng as&#13;
women choose them freely&#13;
rather than accept them as&#13;
"second choices'Mn an attempt&#13;
to conform with social&#13;
stereotypes.&#13;
Mrs. Sadker also cites two&#13;
common forms of "economic"&#13;
discrimination against girls in&#13;
secondary education.&#13;
Frequently boys take&#13;
mechanical or "shop" courses&#13;
where they develop potentially&#13;
marketable skills, while girls&#13;
take home economics courses&#13;
unlikely to bring them any&#13;
future economic return, she&#13;
says.&#13;
Another form of economic&#13;
discrimination comes in terms&#13;
of facilities and staffing,&#13;
especially in such areas as&#13;
school athletics, she says.&#13;
At the college and university&#13;
level bias against women also&#13;
exists, Mrs. Sadker says, in the&#13;
areas of admissions ("studies&#13;
indicate that if a school must&#13;
choose between a man and a&#13;
woman of equal ability, they&#13;
will amost invariably choose&#13;
the man") and career choices&#13;
("many professional and&#13;
graduate schools still have&#13;
'quota' systems for admitting&#13;
women").&#13;
And the woman who does get&#13;
a college degree will find that it&#13;
a sort of "discount diploma",&#13;
Mrs. Sadker points out. "A&#13;
woman with a B.A. degree can&#13;
expect to earn the same salary&#13;
as a man with a sixth grade&#13;
education. Fewer than one per&#13;
cent of working women earn&#13;
more than $10,000 a yaar while&#13;
the figure for the male&#13;
population is 20 t imes higher."&#13;
"The goal of education is to&#13;
allow each individual to develop&#13;
that person's greatest potential,&#13;
but education is actually&#13;
limiting women in the&#13;
development of their potential,"&#13;
Mrs. Sadker emphasizes.&#13;
How to change all that?&#13;
Mrs. Sadker hopes her book&#13;
will help by making parents,&#13;
teachers, school administrators&#13;
and publishers aware of sexism&#13;
in the schools. By getting the&#13;
"hidden curriculum" out in the&#13;
open, she hopes to have a part in&#13;
getting rid of it.&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
Holm - Accutron&#13;
Ultrachren - Longine&#13;
Bui ova - Movado&#13;
Caravelle - Timax&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
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REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
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Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
(U f **"&#13;
A v&#13;
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It does make » difference where you shop!&#13;
10% Discount to students and Faculty with i'.q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Read 4 Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
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Tiffon - Orrefora&#13;
Seneca - Lalique&#13;
Royal Worceater&#13;
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Custom made for you&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 p m—12;00 a m.&#13;
5021-30 tti Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
Ken Dauby Sf/ksarecns Xcir (ia/lcry One&#13;
'Hod Main St/-act&#13;
Hacinc. Wis&#13;
0)&#13;
u&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
9a.m.—4p.m.&#13;
a schooner or&#13;
a bottle or&#13;
a glass&#13;
_c and&#13;
O a steak sandwich or&#13;
a bratwurst or&#13;
q a beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
potato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
'The Brat is where its at'&#13;
NORTHWEST CORNE R OF HIGHWAYS 1-9 4 AND 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
Availab le f or fraternity or s oro rity part ies &#13;
Page 4 NEYVSCOPE December 13,1971 CAMPUS&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
"Whenever I get to feel this way .&#13;
hard to find new words to say.&#13;
I think about the bad old days,&#13;
we used to know —&#13;
Nights of winter turn me cold&#13;
fear of dieing, getting old.&#13;
We ran the race,&#13;
the race was won:&#13;
by running slowly."&#13;
Ian Anderson&#13;
Two college-aged girls were looking at&#13;
greeting cards in a downtown gift-card store. As&#13;
one girl would pluck a card from the rack, glance&#13;
at the cover and read the verse within, the other&#13;
girl would hand her friend another card adding,&#13;
"This one is really beautiful," or "This one's&#13;
cute."&#13;
and every available space which greets the eye is&#13;
painted. There is a spontanious festival of color&#13;
within this place. The walls feature: an egg&#13;
hanging over a beer, an open refrigerator, a&#13;
clown, a cop, a cat on a bookcase, wild animals&#13;
resting, a seashore, W. C. Fields playing cards,&#13;
and a country road leading into the pay telephone.&#13;
I sat on a stool under the watchful eye of W. C.&#13;
Fields, who has been studying the same hand of&#13;
cards since he was immortalized in poster form&#13;
some years back. Since he had obviously been on&#13;
the wall longer than I had been sitting in the&#13;
restaurant, I figured he wguld be a good one to ask&#13;
what to order.&#13;
The man with the bulb nose suggested a&#13;
cheeseburger and coffee, through magic found&#13;
only at Bob's Keno Kofeee Pot. I began to feel my&#13;
bad mood dissolve as I talked with the waitress.&#13;
CM®&#13;
UJ&#13;
The girls had looked over a display of&#13;
Christmas cards when they found themselves in a&#13;
section of cards that narked no holiday or event.&#13;
Beautiful flaming sunsets, mellow yellow&#13;
sunrises, violets, roses, daisies, lines by Keats,&#13;
Shakespeare, couples walking along beaches, in&#13;
forests, in the rain, and in fields of clover. For fifty&#13;
or seventy-five cents, either girl could lose herself&#13;
in any one of the photographs on the cards. The&#13;
beautiful scenes on the seventy-five cent ones&#13;
were covered with heavy plastic, in case someone&#13;
wanted to get lost in the scene often enough to risk&#13;
getting fingerprints or smudges on the picture.&#13;
The girl with a white knitted hat picked up a&#13;
card featuring a scene that could have been&#13;
Simmons Island. "The sea has its treasure of&#13;
p e a r l s , t h e s h o r e i t s c r y s t a l s a n d s , a n d I ... I&#13;
have you." She read it and appeared to gaze&#13;
across the store in a romantic fantasy.&#13;
Not being in a receptive mood to this form of&#13;
"honesty", I left the card shop. I walked north&#13;
from the downtown area, in a very depressed&#13;
mood.&#13;
I seem to experience times when the sad lyrics&#13;
from every song created to make you feel lonely,&#13;
come to mind. It is at this time that I realize the&#13;
race I am in does involve rats. I usually suspend&#13;
whatever I am doing, buy the morning paper, and&#13;
take a long walk.&#13;
On this specific morning, I walked with the&#13;
Sun-Times under my arm, until I found myself one&#13;
block beyond Harbor West, in front of a curious&#13;
restaurant called Bob's Keno Kgffee Pot.&#13;
The interior of this place is unique. Each wall&#13;
Her name was Mickey. She had gone to school&#13;
in Madison, gotten married, dropped out, and was&#13;
thinking about going to Parksije. I had a second&#13;
semester timetable of scheduled classes with me.&#13;
She glanced through it and talked with me. Her&#13;
face reflected a type of honesty that could never be&#13;
found in a card shop for seventy-five cents a&#13;
throw. T .. , ..&#13;
When I tasted the cheeseburger, I realized it&#13;
was very good (it cost 45 cents). I highly recommend&#13;
it, as it was the best cheeseburger I had&#13;
eaten in some time. The coffee was also very good,&#13;
not old, too weak or too strong.&#13;
The food was so good on this visit that I&#13;
returned two other times in the next few days. I&#13;
ate breakfast (French toast, 60 cents) and dinner&#13;
(roast beef, applesauce, a vegetable, bread and&#13;
butter and soup, a dollar fifty). The cycle of meals&#13;
convinced me Bob's Keno Koffee Pot is a reliable&#13;
place to get good food. For a restaurant of this&#13;
type, there aren't many in the area that are better.&#13;
After the last bite of cheeseburger was long&#13;
gone, my coffee cup refilled and emptied, I&#13;
decided to be on my way. W. C. Fields had still not&#13;
played a card, while Mickey talked to another&#13;
waitress on duty as a mid-afternoon lull hit the&#13;
restaurant.&#13;
As I walked across the bridge to Simmons&#13;
Island, I watched the seagulls float and swoop,&#13;
remembering the same scene had been on one of&#13;
those cards. I thought of Mickey the waitress, and&#13;
hoped I would never see her face on a card with&#13;
lines by Keats across her forehead, covered with&#13;
plastic for seventy-five cents.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 14&#13;
Meeting: Student Senate, 4&#13;
p.m., Greenquist Hall, Room&#13;
101.&#13;
Poetry Reading: Sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Poetry Forum.&#13;
7:30 tp 8:30. Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Room D-101.&#13;
Meeting: Students International&#13;
Meditation Society.&#13;
Racine Campus, Room 105, 7 to&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
M e e t i n g : Music Educators&#13;
N a t i o n a l C o n f e r e n c e ,&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room D-131,&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 15&#13;
Film: Intercollegiate Film&#13;
Council will sponsor showing of&#13;
Kurasawa's "Rashomon" at 7&#13;
pm at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theatre. Free tickets available&#13;
at the Tallent Hall Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
Last day of Classes: Final&#13;
exams Dec. 16-23.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 17&#13;
Hockey: Rangers vs. Chicago&#13;
State College at Wilson Park&#13;
Recreation Center, Milwaukee,&#13;
9 p.m. Tickets available at the&#13;
Athletic Office.&#13;
Gymnastics: Rangers vs. UWEau&#13;
Claire at Eau Claire.&#13;
Regents: Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
will meet at Van Hise Hall, UWMadison.&#13;
&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 18&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs.&#13;
Northern Michigan at Memorial&#13;
HallK Racine, 8 p.m.&#13;
Gymnastics: Rangers vs. UWStout&#13;
and UW-Eau Claire at&#13;
Menomonee.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 21&#13;
Basketball: Rangers vs.&#13;
Purdue-North Central at&#13;
Westville, Ind., 8 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 24&#13;
Winter Recess: Holiday&#13;
through Jan. 8.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 30&#13;
Basketball: Rangers at UWGreen&#13;
Bay Classic, Green Bay.&#13;
Wrestling: Rangers at&#13;
M i d l a n d s T o u r n a m e n t,&#13;
LaGrange, 111.&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS&#13;
January 4-14&#13;
Ski the Alps: (late sign-up&#13;
accepted this week) 10 days for&#13;
$264 plus tax. Includes air and&#13;
ground transportation, lodging&#13;
and overnight stops in Geneva&#13;
and Paris. Open to University of&#13;
Wisconsin students and personnel&#13;
only. For details contact&#13;
Bill Neibuhr, Student Activities&#13;
Office, Room 213, Tallent Hall.&#13;
MO&#13;
Impulses, without the sweat&#13;
dripping from a forehead,&#13;
glistening in biological&#13;
anguisheets that ripple and&#13;
splash to a strained neck, then&#13;
rivers of the stuff down and&#13;
around the pectorals still&#13;
glistening onto the heaving&#13;
diaphram. The hands are gone&#13;
too, their search for string or&#13;
valve hampered by the same&#13;
poistness of pungent salt that&#13;
ages wood and darkens metal.&#13;
Music has always been&#13;
unquestionably made of souls&#13;
and love and sadness and pain&#13;
and . . .&#13;
The Moog came to Parkside,&#13;
operated by Chris Swanson,&#13;
whose genius is without saying&#13;
and whose machine is nearly&#13;
without playing. He constructed&#13;
nearly every aspect of the&#13;
music and the Moog and&#13;
elect ronic ally simulated&#13;
familiars like The Blood, Sweat&#13;
and Tears' "Spinning Wheel"&#13;
and Beatles' "Hey Jude".&#13;
Bach's Aria D buzzed perfectly&#13;
only to be surpassed by Mr.&#13;
Swanson's original works,&#13;
"Snow", which spooned us a&#13;
modern jazz work showing a&#13;
many leveled understanding of&#13;
the mechanism and its&#13;
possibilities and "Here Comes&#13;
Monday", which integrated 17&#13;
Title: CRUISING SPEED&#13;
Author: Willpam F. Buckley, Jr.&#13;
Publisher: G. P. Putnam's Sons&#13;
($6.95)&#13;
It has taken me three dyas to write&#13;
this first sentence. After staring at the&#13;
typewriter for four hours Wednesday&#13;
night, I decided, quite without a&#13;
palpable reason, to quit smoking and&#13;
begin the review with cleaner lungs on&#13;
the next day. When I woke up Thursday,&#13;
I'd yet to take another toke off a&#13;
tobacco cigarette, of which I was proud.&#13;
But, as the day wore on, I discovered to&#13;
my dismay that I'd contracted a vicious&#13;
cold over the night. I finished off&#13;
Thursday by staring at my typewriter,&#13;
not smoking, and wiping my runny&#13;
nose. Today I began the review without&#13;
mentioning the title of the book in the&#13;
first paragraph, my original stumbling&#13;
block of the past two days; it has&#13;
something to do with style.&#13;
Cruising Speed is a 250 page&#13;
"documentary" concerning one week&#13;
in the life of the~ e ditor of "National&#13;
Review", moderator of "Firing Line",&#13;
and much in demand conservative&#13;
speaker, William F. Buckley, Jr. A&#13;
typical week includes work on his&#13;
magazine, taping a "Firing Line"&#13;
show, making a few speeches, accepting&#13;
and rejecting offers for future&#13;
*&#13;
oratory, eating, and drinking. His one&#13;
week "documentary", in truth, covers&#13;
much more than a week in the life of&#13;
America's foremost conservative. In&#13;
the typical Buckley manner, the author&#13;
indulges in countless asides, remembering&#13;
and analysing past debates,&#13;
looking at his own student years,&#13;
remembering advice he'd gotten from&#13;
people he's respected, talking about his&#13;
dogs and the many people who write to&#13;
him, revealing anecdotes and just plain&#13;
getting off the subject at hand.&#13;
One discovers many hitherto&#13;
unknown facets and foibles of the&#13;
seemingly unflappable conservative.&#13;
One has to respect the dedication he&#13;
exhibits in providing a forum for&#13;
responsible conservative opinion, by&#13;
publishing the "National Review",&#13;
which, moneywise, one discovers is a&#13;
l o s i ng p r o p o si t i o n. B u c k ley 7 c h a r g es fat&#13;
fees for speeches because the $12.00&#13;
subscription fee to the Mag is $8.00&#13;
short of its publication costs. One has to&#13;
admir e tha t k i nd o f d e d i c a t i o n , eve n i f ,&#13;
or perhaps especially because, it is&#13;
directed toward a Quixotic myopic&#13;
vision of how the world should be. The&#13;
conservative never expects to win.&#13;
There is a fatalism in his views that&#13;
anticipates failure but it is a fatalism&#13;
that asks the question, so, what?&#13;
As one reads Cruising Speed, one&#13;
retains respect for the author's wit, and&#13;
also for his straightforward honesty; he&#13;
ain't puttin' nobody on. For instance, he&#13;
almost crassly admits to a laziness in&#13;
relation to his speeches, by revealing&#13;
that for every speech he has made, he&#13;
has relied on one of three prepared&#13;
texts that were written years ago. We&#13;
learn why he is always seen carrying a&#13;
pen and pad of paper while appeal ing&#13;
on "Firing Line". It's because he had&#13;
f a l l en into the pat ter n w h i c h wont&#13;
allow him to think clearly without the&#13;
two items in his grasp. We also learn&#13;
some of Mr. Buckley's medical&#13;
problems; for instance, he is&#13;
prescribed to retalins (a type of speed)&#13;
to compensate for a low blood pressure.&#13;
One pecadillo I respect is his healthy&#13;
attitude toward booze; it's getting so&#13;
half the books I read are tributes to&#13;
alcohol.&#13;
Though most of this "documentary&#13;
is devoted to aspects of his workweek,&#13;
B u c k ley doe s p r e s e n t the rea der w i th a&#13;
lengthy formal argument concerning&#13;
the left vs. the conservative; comparing&#13;
the two points of view in sucn&#13;
areas as repression, the possible loss o&#13;
public sanction in the political arena,&#13;
the absolute vs. relative stances toward&#13;
the interpretation of the Constitution,&#13;
and more. ,&#13;
Bucklev's stvle of writing often leads &#13;
December 13, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page",&#13;
&gt;OG&#13;
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5,&#13;
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a&#13;
a&#13;
of j §&#13;
ts •&#13;
es?-&#13;
:&#13;
.&#13;
17&#13;
taped tracks. Swanson played&#13;
much of the melody on an&#13;
electronic organ with 12 tones to&#13;
the octave and a "ribbon controller"&#13;
that varied pitch in line&#13;
with the Moog's wavering pitch&#13;
changes.&#13;
In brief explanatory pauses&#13;
he told of how the Moog composition&#13;
is like oil painting in&#13;
that color is equal to sound, the&#13;
composer choosing the color&#13;
key rather than audio musical&#13;
keys.&#13;
Interest generated by the&#13;
Moog was impressive with&#13;
about 700 switched on people&#13;
showing up, standing room&#13;
only.&#13;
The effect of all those modern&#13;
Americans in that cyclopean&#13;
Greenquist towering into the&#13;
night, a musterious music&#13;
emitting from one man and his&#13;
machine was a little strange.&#13;
Listening to the composer's&#13;
""Time Remembering", a mysto&#13;
jazz-rock piece, I looked out into&#13;
the night with all of those&#13;
futuristic looking floodlights&#13;
beaming the way to streamlined&#13;
Tallent Hall half expecting . . .&#13;
half expecting . . . half expect&#13;
. . . half expec . . . f expect&#13;
. . . zzzz.&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
to the reader's confustion, he begins&#13;
what turns out to be a paragraph-size&#13;
sentence, with one specific subject,&#13;
suddenly jumps to something entirely&#13;
different, maybe makes another jump,&#13;
and then ends the sentence. At first I&#13;
thought (perish the thought) that it was&#13;
some incapacity on my part which&#13;
provided a block to understanding what&#13;
Buckley was saying, But, I reasoned,&#13;
even though I may be stupid some of the&#13;
time, I ain't that stupid most of the&#13;
time, and the confustion was apparent&#13;
most of the time. This confustion in&#13;
following Buckley's reasoning and&#13;
prose is, 1 think, caused by time jumpes&#13;
in a given sentence; Buckley tends&#13;
toward tangential reminiscences which&#13;
are catalyzed by the subject of a given&#13;
sentence; often he leaves the original&#13;
subject and never comes back to it,&#13;
leaving the reader up in the air.&#13;
All in all, Willy ain't such a bad guy&#13;
after all, and I think quite a few of the&#13;
more openminded leftists who read&#13;
(ruising Speed will discover this, just&#13;
as I did.&#13;
What else can I say about a book that&#13;
caused me to quit smoking and catCh a&#13;
cold before I could review it? Or was&#13;
that the typewriter?&#13;
Courtesy of the Book Mart, 622 - 59th&#13;
Street, Kenosha.&#13;
The Parkside activities board&#13;
will sponsor three dances over&#13;
the holidays:&#13;
Dec. 23 — Th ursday from 9-1&#13;
a.m. (the last day of finals)&#13;
Jan. 5 — We dnesday from 9-1&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Jan. 13 — Thursday from 9-1&#13;
a.m. (the last day of&#13;
registration).&#13;
iFor the man...&#13;
-Brute&#13;
-Wind Drift&#13;
English&#13;
Leather&#13;
-Jade East&#13;
-Pub&#13;
-Bravura&#13;
-British&#13;
Sterling&#13;
-Grand&#13;
Marque&#13;
-Old Spice&#13;
-Canoe&#13;
-Trouble&#13;
-Nine Flags&#13;
For the&#13;
woman...&#13;
-My Sin&#13;
-Intimate&#13;
-Tigress&#13;
-Arpege&#13;
-Tabu&#13;
-Ambush&#13;
-Chantilly&#13;
-Lemon Mist&#13;
-Desert&#13;
Flower&#13;
Pregnant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
We will help any woman regardless&#13;
ol race, religion, age or linancial&#13;
status. We do not moralize, but&#13;
merely help women obtain qualified&#13;
Doctors for abortions, if this is&#13;
what they desire. Please do not&#13;
delay, an early abortion is more&#13;
simple and less costly, and can be&#13;
performed on an out patient basis.&#13;
r 312 922-0777&#13;
Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Aisistance of Chicago&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Coke. Trade-mark &lt;r)&#13;
-Men's and&#13;
women's&#13;
Timex&#13;
watches&#13;
-Wallets&#13;
-Candles&#13;
-Cards&#13;
Park Drags&#13;
3809-22 a venue&#13;
Just north of&#13;
Washington Rd.&#13;
kenosha&#13;
Phone 654-6443&#13;
Hours&#13;
9:00a.m.-9:30p.m.&#13;
Sunday&#13;
8:30a.m.-2:00p.m.&#13;
Christmas Day&#13;
9:00a.m.-1:00p.m.&#13;
For all yo ur&#13;
Christmsa needs&#13;
8 AM-10 PM—7 DAYS&#13;
A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION&#13;
Get Ac qu ai nt ed Offer&#13;
FREE LUBE&#13;
With Oil 8i F ilter C hange&#13;
PARKSIDE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROAD&#13;
&amp; 30TH AVE.&#13;
654-9968&#13;
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IBID "VogtiB ^-J liputer&#13;
1820-52ND STREET KENOSHA&#13;
50&lt;r OFF&#13;
LARGE PIZZA&#13;
(with coupon)&#13;
10 oz. BEER 15 ft&#13;
PITCHER 75C&#13;
3&#13;
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on wood road just south of parkside&#13;
When Old Mother Hubbard found a&#13;
bare cupboard, _&#13;
She said to herdog,"Theres no bone.&#13;
But you needn't worry, I'll go in a hurry&#13;
And get us a Personal Loan? We'll provide money for&#13;
any worthwhile purpose—&#13;
at low rates, so that you can&#13;
keep within your budget.&#13;
And we'll expedite your loan,&#13;
because we know that when&#13;
you need money, you usually&#13;
need it fast. So come in today,&#13;
discuss your problem with our&#13;
Personal Loan Officer.&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF&#13;
0* S/&#13;
Service Center&#13;
245 T allent Hall&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Doris Lantz,&#13;
Representative&#13;
CREDIT UNION&#13;
Home Office&#13;
25A A. W. Peterson Bldg.&#13;
750 U niversity Ave.&#13;
Madison Wis. 53706 &#13;
Page« NEWSt'OPE December 13, 1971&#13;
Se/utitUf the fyinedt&#13;
Piffl* &amp; Station, tf-oodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 653-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR. DINING ROOM&#13;
SIOGtmh Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Vt Block South of Kanosha-Racino County Una&#13;
SPump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE I&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash A Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W • 20W - SOW&#13;
10W - 20 W -SOW&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c par quart&#13;
34c par quart&#13;
SI.39 par gallon&#13;
47c par can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prlcason Oil Filtars,&#13;
Air Filtars, Tuna Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Itemj Subject to 4 Par Cant Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
Swimming Pools For Parkside?&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Those of you who attend&#13;
classes at Greenquist Hall&#13;
probably have noticed those two&#13;
holes in the ground, one behind&#13;
the Library Learning Center&#13;
and one on the north side of&#13;
Greenquist at the end of the old&#13;
access road. Those two mudsided&#13;
swimming pools are to&#13;
become the Communication&#13;
Arts Building and Classroom&#13;
Buildin.g&#13;
The Communications Arts&#13;
Building, which is under construction&#13;
behind the Library&#13;
Learning Center, will bring&#13;
University fine arts under one&#13;
roof. Classified as an instructional&#13;
laboratory and&#13;
classroom building, the facility&#13;
will consist of multidisciplinary&#13;
classrooms and&#13;
l e c t u r e r o o m .s&#13;
More than just classrooms,&#13;
the building will have&#13;
specialsed spaces for music,&#13;
art, speech and foreign&#13;
language labs. Also included&#13;
will be a special laboratory for&#13;
audio visual work and an institutional&#13;
data processing&#13;
facility.&#13;
The main feature of the CornArts&#13;
building is a 750 seat&#13;
capacity theater which will&#13;
have at its focal point a stage&#13;
fronted by a portion that can be&#13;
raised and lowered to serve a&#13;
variety of functions. The&#13;
theater itself can be divided into&#13;
three areas, two 125 seat&#13;
balcony sections can be closed&#13;
off to serve as lexture rooms.&#13;
The main theater which contains&#13;
projection facilities, seats&#13;
500.&#13;
The building, started last&#13;
month, will be completed in&#13;
January of 1973 with the&#13;
possibility of having the&#13;
classroom portion done in time&#13;
for the fall semester next year.&#13;
It will be the smallest&#13;
educational facility in campus&#13;
at 104,500 square feet.&#13;
The cost for Coin-Arts is&#13;
$4,220,000, broken down as&#13;
follows: General Contractor&#13;
$2,277,500, Plumbing $130,702,&#13;
Heating and Ventilation&#13;
$564,741, electric $584,868,&#13;
Elevator $22,954, Stage Lift&#13;
$30,951, Testing and Balances&#13;
$11,474, total $3,628,763, plus site&#13;
development, fees, contingency,&#13;
$4,220,000 total.&#13;
The facility that now exists&#13;
only as an H-shaped hole in the&#13;
ground north of Greenquist Hall&#13;
will become the Classroom&#13;
Building. Construction has been&#13;
held up because of problems in&#13;
clearing the paperwork.&#13;
The building, scheduled for&#13;
completion in the summer of&#13;
1973, will, besides classroom&#13;
space, contain laboratories for&#13;
c o m m e r c e, g e o g r a p h y,&#13;
Table Tennis&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Sponsored&#13;
Of special interest to the table tennis players on campus,&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board will sponsor a men's and&#13;
women's singles table tennis tournament to be held January&#13;
19 through February 2.&#13;
The tournament, held in conjunction with the Association&#13;
of College Unions-International, will determine Parkside's&#13;
representatives to the regional playoffs in Oshkosh on&#13;
February 17, 18 and 19. The two singles campus winners, in&#13;
both the men's and women's divisions, will participate in the&#13;
regionals as doubles teams.&#13;
Trophies will be awarded to local winners and the&#13;
tournament is open to all Parkside students. Registration&#13;
blanks and further information are available in the Student&#13;
Activities Office, Room 217, Tallent Hall. The forms, along&#13;
with a $1.00 entry fee, must be returned to the Student Activities&#13;
Office by December 15.&#13;
meteorology, psychology and&#13;
anthropology. Also included will&#13;
be lab rooms containing terminals&#13;
to the Institutional Data&#13;
Processing Center in the CornArts&#13;
Building.&#13;
The Classroom Building will&#13;
have an area of 126,000 square&#13;
feet and will be completed at a&#13;
cost of $4,093,420, broken down&#13;
as follows: General Contractor&#13;
$2,364,700, Plumbing $130,702,&#13;
Heating and Ventilation&#13;
$542,550, electric $281,413,&#13;
TElevator $29,626, Testing and&#13;
Balancing $4,480, total&#13;
$3,352,734, plus site development,&#13;
fees, contingency,&#13;
$4,093,420 tota.&#13;
The sites for the Corn-Arts&#13;
and Classroom buildings are&#13;
already being developed;&#13;
h o w e v e r, c o n s t r u c tio n&#13;
programs for the 1971-73&#13;
biennium include the Student&#13;
Union and Physical Plant.&#13;
The Union will have 90,000&#13;
square feet of floor space and&#13;
cost three and a half million&#13;
dollars. Due to the lack of&#13;
forward planning money,&#13;
nothing has yet been done on it.&#13;
Next month will see the&#13;
beginning work on design,&#13;
which will take about a year&#13;
until approved. Construction&#13;
should begin in January, 1973,&#13;
and be completed in late fall of&#13;
1974.&#13;
Lanny Davis to&#13;
speak&#13;
The National Youth Coordinator&#13;
of the Muskie Campaign,&#13;
Lanny Davis, will speak&#13;
here Wednesday, Dec. 15.&#13;
A one-time "McCarthyite",&#13;
the Yale law graduate is&#13;
massing youth support behind&#13;
Muskie. Davis has supported&#13;
many so-called "peace candidates"&#13;
in the past and is&#13;
willing to explain why he now&#13;
supports Senator Muskie.&#13;
The Davis lecture, sponsored&#13;
by the UW-P Young Democrats,&#13;
is scheduled from 11:30 a.m. to&#13;
12:30 p.m. in room 108 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Davis will answer any opposing&#13;
questions.&#13;
JP1&#13;
*0* * "&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
9" - 12" - 14" - 16" (&#13;
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In Four Sites&#13;
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CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
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&lt;$&gt; Q&lt;^&#13;
vv*&#13;
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e &#13;
Johnson on comm.&#13;
chairman of a committee to provide research and&#13;
background information on faculty government aspects of&#13;
the recent merger of UW and State University systemV&#13;
The committee chaired by Johnson is one of 16 covering&#13;
various aspects of the merger which will report to the faculty&#13;
representative on the Merger Implementation Study Committee&#13;
appointed last month by Gov. Patrick Lucey The 16&#13;
committees were set up by the University Faculty Council of&#13;
the former UW units.&#13;
Timetables available&#13;
Timetables listing both daytime and evening classes for&#13;
second semester at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
now are available at the Wood Road, Racine and Kenosha&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Because of implementation of a new calendar for the&#13;
academic year, second semester registration will start&#13;
earlier this year — on Jan. 11 in Greenquist Hall — immediately&#13;
after the winter recess. Second semester instruction&#13;
begins Jan. 17 and ends with completion of final&#13;
exams on May 20.&#13;
The timetable lists 355 separate courses in 29 different&#13;
academic fields and includes complete registration information.&#13;
&#13;
In addition to the timetable, the newly published 1971-73&#13;
Parkside catalogue also is now available. Both may be&#13;
obtained at the library and information center in Tallent&#13;
Hall on the Wood Road campus and in the main offices at&#13;
the Kenosha and Racine campuses.&#13;
SGA ag enda&#13;
DECEMBER 14 —Room 101—4:00P.M.&#13;
1. Additional SGA responsibilities&#13;
2. Establish committee chairmen.&#13;
3. Introduction of special projects number one and two.&#13;
4. Discussion of instructor evaluation. (COP report)&#13;
5. Discussion of SGA credit.&#13;
6. Discussion of CCC.&#13;
December 13.1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
/X f o r&#13;
/THE BEST&#13;
1 Ui \ J ) D o u t le Chees &lt; s u r q e r . ' 1 ^&#13;
; * J+ H 5 * S i f K v t&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Newscope Classifieds are free to the&#13;
students, staff and faculty of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Deadline for classifieds is Thursday&#13;
prior to the week of publication and&#13;
will be run three weeks consecutively&#13;
or until cancelled by the&#13;
advertiser.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
COUNTER GIRL — Must be able to&#13;
work Friday noon hours and nights&#13;
and weekends — apply in person&#13;
Monday or Tuesday after 4, Sandy's&#13;
Drive-In.&#13;
WAN TED : P iano teacher in Union&#13;
Grove area to take 7 students. Call&#13;
554-8269.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WAN TED : One girl to share 2&#13;
bedroom apartment with 2 other&#13;
girls. Centrally located. $13.50 per&#13;
week per person including utilities.&#13;
Call 654-2741 a ny weeknight after 5&#13;
and ask for Rose or Peggy.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Mosrite Acco.ustic-electrical guitar,&#13;
with plush case. Originally $500&#13;
value, like new, will sacrifice. Call&#13;
694-6168.&#13;
FOR S A L E : 2 Remington&#13;
Typewriters. 1 Mark II manual&#13;
portable. Excellent condition. $7 5. 1&#13;
Model 700 electric portable, $90. Call&#13;
633-4442.&#13;
WATER BED S - All sizes. Five&#13;
year guarantee. $25.00. Call Mike at&#13;
654-5402.&#13;
W A S H E R - D R Y E R : Frigidaire&#13;
Skinny-Minny one piece com&#13;
bination. Never used — couldn't get&#13;
220 w t line. Paid $469. Will sell for&#13;
$400 or best offer. Call 654-5777.&#13;
HEY KIDS! Need your term papers&#13;
typed? Call Dee Rafferty, 654-3094.&#13;
SUMM ER IN EUR OPE : Chicago&#13;
London-Chicago. June 7 to Aug. 23,&#13;
$239. Other flights leave weekly&#13;
from New York and Chicago. International&#13;
Student ID Cards issued.&#13;
Also IntraEuropean Flights. Flight&#13;
Center, Box 70, UW Union South, 227&#13;
N. Randall Ave., Madison, Wl 53715.&#13;
Telephone (608) 263-3131.&#13;
FOR SALE — Pentron reel typ?tape&#13;
recorder, 1200 ft. capacity, portable&#13;
with tapes, empty reels and accessories.&#13;
$20. Call 654-4982.&#13;
F R EE — GI V E AWAY —Kittens 3&#13;
mixed black and white, 2 all black.&#13;
Please call 633-3260 a fter 5:30.&#13;
FOR S A L E : Water Ski Sloum&#13;
Thompson Tunnel Concave, like&#13;
new, $45. Call Bob, 658-4048 a fter 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
IF YOU LOVE ANIMALS DON'T&#13;
EAT THEM. For free information or&#13;
for ways you can help, write&#13;
American Vegetarians, Box 5424,&#13;
Akron, Ohio 44313. (Our group has no&#13;
paid employees.)&#13;
Have your baby when you want to.&#13;
Visit our Planned Parenthood Clinic,&#13;
Planned Parenthood of Kenosha,&#13;
Inc., Kenosha Memorial Hospital,&#13;
Outpatient Entrance, Thursdays, 7&#13;
p.m. No one turned away for lack of&#13;
money. For appointment call 657-&#13;
6211.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1976 Ambassador, 4 door, 232 engine,&#13;
automatic — good condition. $795,&#13;
call 551-9556 after 5 p.m., 1814 18th&#13;
Ave.&#13;
1963 Rambler 4 dr. Good engine,&#13;
good paing, $165 o r offer. Call 632-&#13;
5779 or 553 2423.&#13;
1963 Rambler American Station&#13;
Wagon. Runs good, but needs&#13;
muffler. $35.00. Call 654 8 998. As k for&#13;
Maggie or leave message.&#13;
1968 Mustang Cobra, Green, 428&#13;
automatic. Must sell. $1,250 or best&#13;
offer. Call 654-8574 a fter 6 p.m.&#13;
1966 Volskwagen, excellent con&#13;
dition, new brakes, new muffler and&#13;
exhaust system, white with red&#13;
interior. Letting it go for a good&#13;
price. Call 654-3028.&#13;
1963 Mercury Meteor. 4 dr, 260&#13;
engine, automatic. Runs good, body&#13;
good. $200or best offer. 761-1653 (oak&#13;
Creek), Larry, or Newscope office.&#13;
Fan "56" Chevy. Green. 6 cyl., Auto.&#13;
$60. Call Dave, 633-6740.&#13;
Fan "61" Corvair. Green in color.&#13;
Engine has 44,000. Body bad. $30.&#13;
Call Bruce, 633-6740.&#13;
FOR SALE: 1063 Chevy Impala 2 dr&#13;
Hardtop Black, 327 hp Automatic.&#13;
Runs good. Body in perfect shape.&#13;
$450. Aks Bill 632-4686.&#13;
1946 VW. Bright yellow. Excellent&#13;
condition. Must sell. 633 4442. Best&#13;
offer. &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE December 13,1971&#13;
Icemen Shoot For F ifth Win&#13;
UW-Parkside's hockey club will shoot for its fifth straight win&#13;
Saturday night at Green Bay's Brown County Arena against St.&#13;
Norbert College. Game time is 10:30 p.m.&#13;
The Rangers beat Illinois State 5-3 and Triton College 4-3 in&#13;
action last weekend in Milwaukee. Goalie Rich Orchevsky, helped&#13;
by good defensive work by Terry P'latly, Ron Eiffler and brothers&#13;
Rich and Joe Rosko, is currently sporting a 1.29 goals against&#13;
average.&#13;
"Defense has been the key to our winning streak," club&#13;
president Tom Krimmel said. "In the last game, Triton had only 11&#13;
shots on goal to our 37."&#13;
Mike Broderick leads the team in scoring with 13 points on nine&#13;
goals and four assists while Krimmel is second with four goals and&#13;
lour assists for eight points.&#13;
Next home game for the Ranger is Friday, Dec. 17, at 9 p.m. in&#13;
Milwaukee agapnst Chicago State.&#13;
Wrestlers In Dual Meet Saturday&#13;
AlVarez Named&#13;
All-American&#13;
by Jim Casper, Sports Editor&#13;
Rudy Alvarez, the former Racine Horlick prep star, won AllAmerican&#13;
honors in cross country this season. He also set a school&#13;
record in the North Central Marathon run at Naperville, Illinois.&#13;
This is Alvarez's first attempt at that race and his coach, Bob&#13;
Lawson, termed it, "A good first effort."&#13;
Alvarez's run broke the record set by Mike DeWitt of 2.56:6 in&#13;
the 1970 Boston Marathon.&#13;
UW-Parkside's wrestling&#13;
team will close out its preChristmas&#13;
action Saturday at&#13;
Bullen Junior High in Kenosha&#13;
as it hosts Northern Michigan&#13;
and Marquette in a double dual&#13;
meet.&#13;
The Rangers will meet&#13;
Northern at 1 p.m. and the&#13;
Warriors ar 4 p.m. with a&#13;
Marquette-NMU contest slated&#13;
for 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Parkside Coach will probably&#13;
go with the same lineup he has&#13;
used through the Rangers' first&#13;
three meets, with Ken Martin, a&#13;
16-4 winner in the Rangers' 30-15&#13;
dual loss at Oshkosh, heading&#13;
the liast at 134 pounds.&#13;
Frank Velasquez at 118, Jeff&#13;
Jenkins at 150 and Mark Barnhill&#13;
at 190, Parkside's other&#13;
winners at Oshkosh, will be&#13;
counted on heavily Saturday as&#13;
the Rangers look for their first&#13;
dual win of the year.&#13;
Dave Langeland, who drew at&#13;
Oshkosh, will go again at&#13;
heavyweight, while Rick&#13;
Mauldin at 126 and Tom Beyer&#13;
at 167, both of whom failed to&#13;
make weight and forfeited at&#13;
UW-O, are looking to get back&#13;
on the winning track.&#13;
Rick Shoeffler, the 177-&#13;
pounder who's been a strong&#13;
point for Parkside, lost at&#13;
Oshkosh when forced to stop&#13;
because of injury but should be&#13;
ready for Saturday's matches.&#13;
Also entered for the Rangers&#13;
are Kyle Barnes at 142 and Ron&#13;
Atiams at 158.&#13;
The Rangers' next competition&#13;
will come Dec. 29-30 in&#13;
the prestigious Midlands&#13;
Tournament at LaGrange, 111.,&#13;
which annually attracts the top&#13;
collegiate wrestlers from&#13;
throughout the nation.&#13;
Ranger Grapplers&#13;
Lose To Oshkosh&#13;
UW-Oshkosh scored a 30-15 victory over the Ranger grapplers&#13;
in a match at Oshkosh.&#13;
Two Rangers failed to make weight and another defaulted due&#13;
to an injury, helping contribute to the Oshkosh victory.&#13;
Ranger winners were Frank Valesquez, 118, Ken Martin 134,&#13;
Jeff Jenkins 150, and Mark Barnhill-130, all by decision.&#13;
Dave Langeland wrestled to a draw in the heavyweight class.&#13;
Ranger Wrestlers Score First Win&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
After suffering a 68-45 setback&#13;
at Western Michigan and an 82-&#13;
60 defeat at home against&#13;
Wayne State, the Rangers came&#13;
home to Memorial Hall to cope&#13;
their initial win of the young&#13;
Hockey C lub Gets 3 rd, 4th Victories&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside hockey club&#13;
notched its fourth victory in a&#13;
row, defeating Triton College 4-&#13;
3. On the previous night the&#13;
Rangers had defeated Illinois&#13;
State University by a 5-3 score.&#13;
In the victory Friday night&#13;
the Rangers had to make a&#13;
comeback after ISU opened the&#13;
scoring. Mike Broderick of the&#13;
Rangers evened the score with&#13;
a goal. He was assisted by Marc&#13;
Tutlewski. Bill Westerlund then&#13;
put the Rangers in the lead by&#13;
ripping home a beautiful pass&#13;
from Terry Flatley.&#13;
Tom Krimmel closed out the&#13;
first period scoring. In the&#13;
second period the teams traded&#13;
toals. Gordie Bradshaw of the&#13;
Rangers came up with his&#13;
team's fourth goal. Passes from&#13;
Bill Westerlund and Dave&#13;
Bradshaw helped him get his&#13;
goal.&#13;
Mike Broderick then scored&#13;
his second goal of the night.&#13;
Broderick was assisted by&#13;
Tom Krimmel. In the third&#13;
period defense played the&#13;
primary role as the teams&#13;
played a scoreless period.&#13;
In the 4-3 victory over Triton&#13;
College, Krimmel opened the&#13;
scoring at 4:04 of the first&#13;
period, the only assist going to&#13;
Mike Broderick. Triton then&#13;
scored the next three goals to&#13;
build up a substantial 3-1 advantage.&#13;
&#13;
The Rangers started their&#13;
comeback in the second period&#13;
with Tom Krimmel's second&#13;
goal of the game. He was&#13;
assisted by Rich Rosko and&#13;
Terry Flatley.&#13;
A wild, free-swinging fistfight&#13;
between Gordie Bradshaw of&#13;
the Tangers and Ed Provanzano&#13;
of Triton marred the second&#13;
period. Referee Bob Berry&#13;
banished both players with&#13;
game misconducts.&#13;
Broderick tied the game with&#13;
an unassisted goal at 1:57 of the&#13;
third period. Dave Tilley picked&#13;
a timely moment for his first&#13;
goal of the season as he fired the&#13;
winning score at 10:18 of the&#13;
final stanza. Dave Bradshaw&#13;
and Bill Westerlund collected&#13;
the assists.&#13;
It appears to be a year of&#13;
operation turnabout for the&#13;
hockey squad which is only in&#13;
its second season.&#13;
campaign by routing Lake&#13;
Forest College 93-63.&#13;
Parkside was very convincing&#13;
in this first home contest as they&#13;
rolled to an early 23-11 lwad,&#13;
stretching it to 44-26 at the half.&#13;
By that time it was quite&#13;
apparent that the visitors would&#13;
not have the ability to make a&#13;
strong comeback.&#13;
Ted Rogers, a freshman, was&#13;
especially impressive in the&#13;
first half as he totaled 11 points.&#13;
He ended up with 18 for the&#13;
game.&#13;
Another freshman, Tom&#13;
Heller, led the Ranger offensive&#13;
production for the night with 20&#13;
points. He had been the high&#13;
scorer coming into this game&#13;
and of course continued in that&#13;
position.&#13;
Freshman Chuck Chambliss,&#13;
a former star at Racine Park,&#13;
scored 15 points along with&#13;
giving a fine overall floor&#13;
Otto Bauer, UW-Parkside Vice Chancellor, meets&#13;
Parkside's Ranger Bear, who may be seen wandering around&#13;
GRIN AND BEAR IT campus these weeks stirring up enthusiasm for Parkside's&#13;
athletic teams. Looking on is Cheerleader Pam Engdahl.&#13;
performance.&#13;
Parkside Coach Steve Setphens&#13;
was pleased with the win&#13;
and the score. "The kids gained&#13;
confidence that they needed,"&#13;
he said. "The first win is an&#13;
important one."&#13;
Although Stephens was&#13;
clearly satisfied with the victory,&#13;
he sounded some words of&#13;
caution: "We did not do&#13;
everything well. Our defense&#13;
was fair, but not real good."&#13;
Chambliss, a key factor in the&#13;
win, echoed words similar to&#13;
what Stephens said.&#13;
"I think it was great to win a&#13;
game, but we should commit&#13;
ourselves more in practice and&#13;
we could bring out more of our&#13;
ability," said Chambliss.&#13;
"This is a young club with a&#13;
lot of potential," he added, "but&#13;
it has to develop yet."&#13;
After suffering two defeats by&#13;
rather one sided margins how&#13;
could the Rangers post a 30&#13;
point triumph?&#13;
Chambliss commented on&#13;
this. This does not mean that the&#13;
team has improved that much&#13;
in the last few days, he implied.&#13;
"The other games were against&#13;
major college schools — this&#13;
one was against lesser competition,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
"Later in the season we would&#13;
. play better against Wayne State&#13;
and Western Michigan. We are&#13;
a team on the come," concluded&#13;
Chambliss.&#13;
Parkside scored on 38 of 61&#13;
shots for a lofty 62 per cent&#13;
shooting average, while Lake&#13;
Forest hit 23 of 57 for 43 per&#13;
cent. The Rangers also&#13;
outrebounded the undermanned&#13;
Foresters by a wide margin as&#13;
Heller led the Ranters with ten&#13;
boards, while Ed VanTine&#13;
cleared nine.&#13;
With an entirely different&#13;
starting lineup from last year's&#13;
edition, the Ranger squad will&#13;
lose quite a few games, but they&#13;
should show marked improvement&#13;
throughout the&#13;
season.&#13;
Hopefully, a number of victories&#13;
will come during this&#13;
improvevent stage.&#13;
Pl e a se H e l p Gi v e&#13;
A C h r i s t m a s P a r t y&#13;
F o r U n d e r p ri v i l a g ed C h i I d r e n&#13;
O r g a niz ati o n s a n d ind ivi dua ls are&#13;
inv ite d to si g n up a t the S t u d e n t&#13;
A c tiv iti es B l dg. or Office .&#13;
P a rty will be h e ld D e c. 18 1:30-4:30&#13;
Please Help&#13;
T rop hie s!&#13;
B i lli ard s &amp; T a b l e T e n n i s&#13;
Parkside Activitie s Board&#13;
TOU RNA MEN TS Pr esents&#13;
Entry f e e s : Holiday Activity&#13;
B i lli a r ds $ 1 . 5 0&#13;
T a b le T e n n i s $ 1 . 0 0 Schedule&#13;
Sign up d e a d l i ne&#13;
j a n u a ry 1 7&#13;
T h u r s. D e c. 2 3 9 - 1 a . m.&#13;
Wed. J a n . 5 9 - 1 a .m.&#13;
R e gis tra tio n b l a n ks a v a i l&#13;
T h u r s. J a n . 1 3 9 - 1 a.m.&#13;
a b le a t S t. Act . Bld g. or Stu d e nt Acti vity B ui Iding Admiss ion C h a r g e&#13;
Rm. 2 17 T a l l e n t. R e tur n P a r k s i de a n d Wi sco nsi n'l .D. req uir ed&#13;
to Rm. 217. </text>
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
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            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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