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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 11</text>
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            <text>Photographs by Jack Kazarian</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>U11i1ersil) of Wisconsin -Parkside&#13;
IJJ!WIJCOPll&#13;
Volumes Xumbfr ll ;,.01·ember 1~. 1971&#13;
,. ;&#13;
I&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
II&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
N&#13;
(&#13;
:,:&#13;
:,:&#13;
u&#13;
(&#13;
-, &#13;
NEWSCOPE K'ovember li. 1111&#13;
C IRUNA Concerned with U.S. Imports For The Record&#13;
1 11&#13;
~~ I I I , I I.: I II I , ~ · S I, 'I I !I, I 1·&#13;
D&lt;JU·ntou•n K~osha ____ ,.&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
'Come visit our pizza&#13;
itchens or have&#13;
ome deliver:td'.&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5-12&#13;
except sunday&#13;
4615-7th avenue&#13;
10 kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
(New York) - The Southern Africa :rask&#13;
Fe&gt;rce Committee or the Council on Jntemation•J&#13;
Relations and United Nations Affairs ¼CIRUNA)&#13;
is deeply conctrned. over the Senate ameodme:tt ':&lt;&gt;&#13;
the Military Procurement Bill wl:tich would per~•t&#13;
importation of chrom~ from R,hodesia (Zun•&#13;
babwe&gt;. For 8 number of reasons. the S~tbern&#13;
Africa Ta.sit FOTce Committee opposes the unport&#13;
ffhodesia. and against the UN sancti a vote to acknowledge and stre u..'""'""'1411,&#13;
racist regime of Ian Smith. The b:':cks ~9Slhe "'d&#13;
of the people of Rhodesia) are controlled byl&gt;Of o,~&#13;
per ~ent whit, minority. an~,&#13;
Lastly, there ex.ism no chrome&#13;
of chrome from Rhodesia. . Imports from Rhodesia would be in direct&#13;
violation of the mandatory sanctioos voted b'y the&#13;
UN Security CounciJ with the support and assent of&#13;
the UnitedStolles. If the Military Procore~en~ Bill&#13;
is enacted, the U.S. will join South Africa. and&#13;
Portugal as the only countrieS publicly comm1Ued&#13;
to breaking the embargo. This bill would go&#13;
against the Obllgalivns of the U.S. unde• the _UN&#13;
Charter (article 41J and under the U.S. Umted&#13;
Nation.,; Participation Act (which was passc.-d by&#13;
bOth Houses or Congress). The cbiel lobbyilll: and&#13;
pressure groups for the import of chrome from&#13;
Rhodesia are Union Carbide and Foote Mlooral.&#13;
who own the chrome mines.&#13;
prompt such drastic and uncalled, ro ICa!'&lt;"il)t :.&#13;
strategic stockpile pn,sently amoun~ ~&lt;ttoo 'I\,&#13;
tons, of which 2,225,000 tons are 1 ° $,lk.111)&#13;
foreseeable need$. In addition. authoo, tx:ceq &lt;i&#13;
been requested of Cong.-- to S&lt;!l1 1 '""ltoo ti.,&#13;
Only about ten per cent of the 900 ooo~,- C..,.&#13;
grade chrome used annually in u\e u ;i- 01 Ing), defense purpooos. · · g.., fer&#13;
Again, the Southern Africa Task&#13;
Committee of CffiUNA "'Pl&gt;&lt;&gt;ies the . Per,.&#13;
chrome from Rhodesia. We ugt you !:Pon Cl&#13;
~me. ~~&#13;
A vote ror the imp0rt or chrome lrom&#13;
. (The Council on International Rei.r&#13;
Urut~ ~ations ~fairs is a national tOllS. aad&#13;
organization. our interest lies i.n five . ~ all dealing with foreign policy r:1;~&#13;
Africa Task Force Committee is one Cl the :i.,,,&#13;
topical committees ol CIRUNA.) .,..,&#13;
Voters' Conference Called&#13;
Over 100 student body&#13;
presidents from colleges and&#13;
universities across America&#13;
joined with Che Association of&#13;
Student Governments·"this w«k&#13;
in calling for an Emergency&#13;
Conference for New Vote.rs to&#13;
organize students as votlng&#13;
delegates to lhe national party&#13;
nominating conventions ln 1972.&#13;
The Emergency_ Conference is&#13;
slated !or Dec. 3, 4 and S at&#13;
l..Dyola Unive-rsity in Ch1cago.&#13;
''The events or the past month&#13;
cJearly indicate that neither of&#13;
the two major political parties&#13;
welcome the yowig, left-leaning&#13;
voters as fully-enfranchised&#13;
participants in the parties,"&#13;
said Duane Drape,, President&#13;
of the ASG aod Chairman of the&#13;
steering committee for the&#13;
Emergency Conterence,&#13;
''These events create a crisis&#13;
situation for the millions of&#13;
)")Wig people who wish to ellect&#13;
constructive change through&#13;
existing institutions. Unless we&#13;
begin the task immediately ol&#13;
organizing students within the&#13;
party proceSS&lt;lS, we will find&#13;
ourselves totally excluded from&#13;
the delegate selections and the&#13;
Presidential · nominating&#13;
procedures, thus effectively&#13;
disenfr81lchised despite the 26th&#13;
amendment.''&#13;
The eyents Draper referred to&#13;
were the Democratic O,mmlttee's&#13;
M!lection of Patricia&#13;
Harris as temporary chairman&#13;
of the credentials committee&#13;
over liberal Senator Harold&#13;
Hughes(D-lowa), who had been&#13;
viewed by many as the key to&#13;
enforcement of the McGovern&#13;
Commission reforms at the&#13;
Democratic convention in&#13;
Miami.&#13;
On ttle Republican side,&#13;
pressure from higher echelon&#13;
Republican officials to thwart&#13;
congressman Pat McCloskey"s&#13;
(R·CBl.1 challnge to President&#13;
Nixon in the primaries has&#13;
caused serious £inancial&#13;
problems for McCloskey's&#13;
campaign, and could essentially&#13;
e.Jiminate him as an alternative&#13;
Rcpubllcan candldate. ''lt is impcctative that the 25&#13;
million 18--24 year olds in this&#13;
country are aware of tit&#13;
mockery tliat both n._..,tic&#13;
and Repu~lican party off'ICu&#13;
are making or the rtlon,&#13;
movements in lhe parties&#13;
continued Draper. ·&#13;
'"Young people m1Et...,. Ult&#13;
urgency ol this meeting 01 U.&#13;
student communit)' and the&#13;
absolute necessity ol mollllllllll&#13;
very quickly to combat u.&#13;
forces who woukl seek to1solate&#13;
us from the recular· part,&#13;
procedures. We mist&#13;
remember that Ihm are llttll&#13;
m.nbcr or people fn both pe.ro,,&#13;
who would prefer IO wmd ~&#13;
their conventions with S,OOJ&#13;
stllde.nts outside chantiJ'I IDstead&#13;
ol 300 studaito .- voting. We do not intend lol,lft&#13;
them that sali&amp;lactioo," be&#13;
concluded. The Emergency Con!"'""&#13;
for New Voters is tbe last&#13;
national galhering ol swdtn1&gt;&#13;
befure the del,cate ,elect,.,&#13;
process b&lt;gins, whieb in """&#13;
stales ls as •arly as FebnlarJ&#13;
The conference at Loyoll •ill&#13;
include a number or wortr,bopl.&#13;
se,nlnars and panels to disc,..&#13;
voter reglstr.tion and pciih&lt;II&#13;
organization. A series of&#13;
national speakers, to bt a&amp;&#13;
nounced at a latu dal&lt;. w1II&#13;
addr,!ss the studeol$ 11 lh!&#13;
Oih.:~go conference «-0el'flilll&#13;
the issues confronUl'II them 111&#13;
this election year.&#13;
Cappa Cappa Gusto&#13;
that great beer drinking fraternity w,tA flus&#13;
f/011.JE;R Coupon &#13;
l,\ission: K.T. Inc. truck, piled high with&#13;
•d-shaped wooden boxes and other assorted&#13;
.,.,en route to the flaming steel wigwam. Even&#13;
lilt IS mph limit is obeyed, the load might&#13;
-.bit lo the ground when children are present.&#13;
photographs by jack kazarian&#13;
Oes1ination: Industrial Keoosha·s solution to disposal.&#13;
Towering above old, run-down trucks that b&lt;-ing tis food&#13;
from American .V.Otors, the glutton seems to have an&#13;
unsatisfiable hunger as It Is constantly eating.&#13;
,, Delivery: A K.G. Inc. truck bringing in a load to ~ " d1sposed&#13;
~ An ecologist should stop and ask K.T. Inc., and possibly him~i':•&#13;
~oes one get away with this. Has the word "recycle" los s&#13;
ll'lean,ng?&#13;
The perfed end for all&#13;
Success: ts- a raging fire- and&#13;
burna_ble ob1e~ time when one cannot&#13;
pollutl;"'• In h in the backyard barrel,&#13;
burn his trasli ashcan continues to&#13;
this symbo c&#13;
glow(er). &#13;
Spring Trip to Mexico Planned&#13;
u,p to Mexico next&#13;
,.,:Y be otfered by the&#13;
,ii,"'"· of Wisconsln- ~,tfr eOOO,h people are :::;".s. ,t was announced&#13;
,,;,! MtJ&lt;ieo Living, the _trip&#13;
)il&lt;d unieersity credit '"&#13;
,tll"rr'i _ One cre&lt;lil would&#13;
~ bY those par• ,.,, oolY in the trip; three&#13;
~Id be given for those&#13;
,-0 t.oi• th&lt; entire second&#13;
:,.,.,cours• and als-0 go oo&#13;
, °' tnll cl approximately&#13;
Ill ill • .,ould be taken&#13;
- ~ recess at UW•P, ,_,.,. rrom Mar. SJ-April&#13;
_. da)'S would be spent in&#13;
flt City visiting the&#13;
-. , Museum and the&#13;
::. ft History ,nd Art, as .•&#13;
., • unp«lant landmarks.&#13;
1111 .,.,Id be made to the&#13;
,.,...,.,,1 1 sites or&#13;
i,,1.(JD, Tula. Sanla&#13;
_, iJIJlpan, Cuicuilco and&#13;
)dlll. .as ,.·ell as an overnight ,,_ Puebla, a Spanish&#13;
_, olY and capitol of the&#13;
• DI Puebla Departure for&#13;
tlllldSIJltes would be from&#13;
-:::.ll'S and guides for the&#13;
w1llid be Marion Mochon&#13;
byCUrlSabaklen&#13;
hrtskltActlvitles Hoard&#13;
-...., music is hard to find. --•in Uihlein Hall&#13;
It !',r!orm,ng Arts Center&#13;
lhluee. It was for a&#13;
,.am. put on by area&#13;
-• called Intake, a ..,_ peace concer~&#13;
t-. Ille dir•dion of Ken-&#13;
• Schermerhorn, the .,.,1,, Symphony Or-&#13;
- Clllnlcted me on a&#13;
llltal Journey Ken was&#13;
._rd Bernstein's un• .._, at Tanglewood and&#13;
-led many orchestras ....... lb,.,..,r1d. He is very&#13;
lllole4&amp;eable about con•&#13;
~Y composers. His&#13;
-IWIJCt 14·as what you&#13;
• tlp,ed from someone of&#13;
locqroond - fantastic.&#13;
""""'ce ol hearing the -....,. Symphony per·&#13;
tac tontemporary work&#13;
"1WJ1ns111g.&#13;
~ lfn,baU light show&#13;
'llir Pletures on the screen&#13;
._ tll. orch,.ira plaved a&#13;
"1tt,i, by one of the&#13;
and John Van Willigen of the&#13;
UW•P anthropology faculty.&#13;
Cost of the trip is estimated at&#13;
between$250and$30(), including&#13;
round trip fljght from Chicago&#13;
or Milwaukee to Mexico bus&#13;
lransportation in Mexic~ all&#13;
botel accommodations, and the&#13;
6 Faculty with&#13;
tuition ror one credit&#13;
1r·Thooe inte..,.1«1 ill !hes study 1&#13;
P are requested to COnta&lt;t the-&#13;
\JW.p Student Alfa,rs an~&#13;
~-2294&gt; so lhat officials can . term1ne ir there 1S sulfitH~•Dl&#13;
interest to ~ ... w·u, .,_ • .-•-~ I ,..._n. rung.&#13;
lnternationa I Qualifications&#13;
Six faculty members or the University or w·&#13;
have been chosen lor inclusion in the third editi ~:m·Parb,de&#13;
"Faculty Wilh International Qualifications" i~~ 0 bl~IJ'EClor)•. UW Office of International Studies and 0...:.... pu by~&#13;
Cr. •·rt • , ..,, ams . he a . for selection are the amount and type 01 oveneu&#13;
ex()P..!'IPntt, mterwt in over,eu work and applicab.m o( ,&#13;
specialty to foreign assistance projects especl u Y • 8)-.n nations. a Y m emerganc&#13;
The six Parkside representatives and their overseas intere:t-t&#13;
areas are:&#13;
.Philllp 1:lurnett, professor of history and director ol hbrarit:s&#13;
Lattn America and W~tern Europe; ·&#13;
John Harbeson, assistant prolessor. political science Africa&#13;
Heroort Kubly, professor, English, Eu~. Middle East '&#13;
Thom~s R:osandleh1 assistant professor, physical educabon&#13;
and athletic direct.or. Southeast Asia, Afrida ; , Harold Stern, instructor, French, Eu.rope:&#13;
And, _Hel&gt;,Hslaog Yuan, instructor, English, Northeast Asia . South Asta, Western Europe.&#13;
The direetory lists faculty memb(n from the uw Center&#13;
System, University Extensioo and the Madison ?tWwaukee Green&#13;
Bay and Parkside campuses. ' '&#13;
members of the light show,&#13;
Sigmund Snop&lt;!k Ill. This ex- perience wa~ givPn ~ standing&#13;
ovation by an audience which&#13;
was made up or people&#13;
representing every corner of&#13;
our society. And the ending was&#13;
fantastic l How else would you&#13;
end a musicaJ trip but with a&#13;
musical orgasm, Straus·s&#13;
complete symphonic tone poem. Tnctodf'd \l'U Sprac:h&#13;
Zarathustra together ••th&#13;
readings from Neilche's wo~k of&#13;
the same n•me. It was very impres.sivt.&#13;
promising to be even better next&#13;
ye.at .&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT ' S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
cream, 70c&#13;
7Sc&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHl!RIDAN ROAD $0U1'H 7500 SHERI DAN ROAO&#13;
THE RANCH---'&#13;
Admiral&#13;
R.C. Service&#13;
s299oo&#13;
S ter eo&#13;
c ons ole&#13;
also included:&#13;
Portable TV&#13;
or&#13;
8 Track Stereo&#13;
Tape Player&#13;
s1000&#13;
wilh above purchase&#13;
2129 BIRCH RO. KENOSHA 654-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE BAR, DINING 11001111&#13;
' lr&#13;
P\t()EE;s&#13;
1)1'\WE IY\ R£S\tl\)Rll,fTT"&#13;
1 l'\!&gt;Tlcl\D oF €1\'Tlnl• W"~~O oiti;:_&#13;
1'111,0&lt;&gt;1\la foc&gt;C&gt;, ~ (£ P, f" #E "''"lltl::&#13;
~•&lt;&gt;E To A Uv:e.:S ~r,o f;"r\:IC 'f&#13;
$,) ..... -, ".,,_.,,.1:)£ f'~O CHE:RPI&#13;
0 OAO&#13;
~g~o&#13;
FREEi&#13;
w 1th purcllase ol any&#13;
stereo syslem&#13;
Three volu e story&#13;
ol ChllSL-:ias and a&#13;
cn11stmas record albu&#13;
admiral 1&amp;1d1l1r C•llPIIUI s,,, .. ,,&#13;
aln nailable startlac as 1,w as&#13;
$69.95&#13;
11111-chncu&#13;
$39-95&#13;
Ron Casperson-owner&#13;
1240 N·. Main Street&#13;
Racine Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
/t,u" · t •&#13;
rmg Admiral Mastercare Warran 'Y&#13;
•Ad•lfll .,asteccare warru1t1: Tllil 5 wuu111y eovtrs u,e entife&#13;
product. NO cbat1• .. 111 bl III IClt foe pa,u Of l abor Oft UP l•ctmenl&#13;
of detective c,•ru . w•u•At,- rood- at Ad • h•I deuen&#13;
throu1nout tile U-S · &#13;
fAnile&#13;
JEANS&#13;
'n'&#13;
JEANS!&#13;
VERY DEFINITEl Y&#13;
GEAR eox•&#13;
1 hree great looks,-.. den•&#13;
,m-from light weight to&#13;
bull Funky pockets.front&#13;
and back. Some scooped.&#13;
some patched. Lets of&#13;
legs. too. Some flare.&#13;
some regular Slip ,nto&#13;
someth111g great today.&#13;
5 5 and 5 7&#13;
Richman&#13;
BROTl"IERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
Guest Editorial ____ ~ ---------------- caucus of our own - the :outh Caucus·- to 7""'-&#13;
RE: Emergency Conference for New Voters, that one or both of the national parties non,· 014ir1&#13;
December 3, 4 and 5, Loyola University. Chicago. candidate acceptable to the young and the ~n~t~ a&#13;
As college students, we are almost all 18·&#13;
24 years country. r •nthI1&#13;
old, which means that the twenty-sixth amendment to Those of us who worked for Eugene Meta&#13;
the Constitution entitles us to do somethlnd11.;~ haf~~ and Robert Kennedy In 1968 learned that the str r1tiy&#13;
never done before - vote for a can I a e . of the old politics buckles under hard pr ucti,,,&#13;
Pres;dent of the United States. We are eleven mil hon correctly applied. The power elite did not denyes&amp;ure.&#13;
in number and we possess a political potential greater Presidency in 1968; an assassin did, and wh•r"he&#13;
than almost any other single group In the country. tragedy of Robert Kennedy's death Is ,;&#13;
1&#13;
: Ille&#13;
Organized, we could have a remarkable impact on comprehensible. It does not convince us that 1~&#13;
politics next November, but the opportunity Is about political system can repel all efforts to change It the&#13;
to quietly slip away. OnlybyaconcertedeffortlnChicagocan...:,._ __&#13;
The situation in the two major political parties to rival the power and organization of the ;;i11&#13;
•~&#13;
indicates that neither party is particularly anxious to machines which run our political parties. •·~ 1&#13;
CII&#13;
welcome the young, newly enfranchised voters as _full b I S I ""'the&#13;
partitipants in the politics of 1972. It is quite possible process muSt eg n now. er ous reform In the 111,._&#13;
that both the Democrat• and the Republicans will Is dependent upon the mass numbers Which "'Ir&#13;
simply fill their "youth slots" on their national young epople can bring to bear and In niany stalls&#13;
convention delegations with young party hacks - delegate selection will be effectively finished by the&#13;
1 bl' t· 'thout end of February. If you care about using !he 1 thereby fulfilling their numerlca o iga ,ons, w 1 . elections as an effective mechanism for ch• -"!.&#13;
changing the philosophical base of the parties • . ,.. ., whatsoever. We cannot allow that to happen. America, we Invite you to join us In the work al Hit&#13;
The Emergency Conference wil l mark an end and Emergency Conference for New Voters, Decembert&#13;
a beginning In the politics of 19n. 11 will see the en- 4 and 5, at Loyola University in Chicago. Come 11&#13;
ding of the bi-partisan voter registration efforts of the Chicago and cooperate In the planning and org1111z1111 past six months and the beginning of the struggle for which alone will give us real power inside !he con.&#13;
delegate power in the nominating conventions of the vention halls in 1972.&#13;
Democratic and Republican parties. It is in Chicago - Doane Draper, Chairman&#13;
that we must set the national strategy by which young of the steering committee for the Emergency Con.&#13;
people, in cooperation w ith the already •formed ference, and President of the National Association of&#13;
minority and women's caucuses, can formulate a Student Governments in Washi ngton, D.C.&#13;
&amp;.itofflA&#13;
On November 11. 18, and 19 elections for student&#13;
representath'es will be held . Ballots can be cast in the&#13;
Greenquist Concourse and at the Racine and Kenosl1a&#13;
campuses during the regular school hours.&#13;
Now. when the University of Wisconsin-Parkside is still&#13;
it its infancy is no time for student disorganization and&#13;
a1,athy. We, the students who are present at the Unh1&#13;
ersity&#13;
during this crucial growing period ha,·e a grave resp.on~&#13;
sibility not only to ou.1·selves, but also to all those students&#13;
who wilt follow us. Whether those students look back on&#13;
these early days of the University and condemn us as&#13;
1(-m,urn~ or the ·so•s or see u:ii as a ~olid block in the r,mndation&#13;
of a meaningful Unh•ersity depends largely on how&#13;
we shoulder the responsibilily of elecling our 1·epresenl8tives.&#13;
·&#13;
Student elections. or any elections for that matter.&#13;
aren't popularity contests. It is our obligation as mambers&#13;
of the University to choose representatives who are going to&#13;
work consistenlly in the best interests of the students and&#13;
the University. Students now have the right and the&#13;
responsibility t, vote in national, state and local elections.&#13;
and to shape the future that we will have to llve with . If we&#13;
can't meet dutieti we face in these student elections, th11n wP&#13;
don't deserve tht national \1&#13;
0te. then we are the most&#13;
outrageous hypocrites. •~ students at the University are&#13;
content t.o be breast-fed by the Administration, if we are&#13;
willing to relinquish our voice in the democ.ratic system, to&#13;
wallow in a void or non-think. then we don't have the right to&#13;
tall ourselves tollege students.&#13;
No mauer what your political inclination.s, no matter&#13;
what your philosophic.al ouUook, no matt.er what your&#13;
aspirations for the future.. vote on election days to get those&#13;
ideas out or your head and into the system.&#13;
Rebuttal&#13;
To: Newscope&#13;
The article about cheerleaders was partly !rot&#13;
Lance has a great squad. "What makes a cheerleader&#13;
lick" qualities weren't so true. Pep, determination&#13;
personal satisfaction, a loud mouth and pride In her&#13;
school are the qualities of a cheerleader. Gymnastla&#13;
are not.&#13;
If you want to see "back flips, splits and hand&#13;
springs, al l executed with perfect accuracy", ame&#13;
see our girls gymnastic team. They're greet I Sols our&#13;
guys team.&#13;
The cheerleaders are working under a co.iple of&#13;
handiC&amp;p$: no gym to practice in and time schedules&#13;
Practices are scheduled between class and working&#13;
schedules. Junior and high school studenls have men&#13;
free time after school. Even with our handicaps'"'&#13;
have seven cheerleaders who are willing to support&#13;
our teams. After all, how many people would sit&#13;
through a soccer game when It's cold enough to snow?&#13;
If you're not staisfied with our cheerleading squad.&#13;
come out and cheer OUR team on toa victory.&#13;
Be glas Parkside has cheerileaders. That makes•&#13;
few people in th&lt;1 st.inds when no one else shoWS up.&#13;
However, we would like to thank the faithful few who&#13;
do come.&#13;
The Cheerleaders: Pam Engdahl, Julie While&#13;
Debbie Wade, Pam Kngrovillt&#13;
Joni K.-ebs, Anita FuhrrnlM&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADYERTIS(~&#13;
are you offended ••••••••&#13;
by nudity?&#13;
d.,. ·•nnn't h@Ueve everything you rea . ,., "&#13;
Editorial Staff Madin, P.-t Ntl-'•&#13;
Editor-In-Chief Warren Nedry WIide&#13;
Managing Editor John Koloen&#13;
Qtmpus Editor lclrry Jones&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Fine Ar-ts Editor 8111 Sorensen It not, stop In.&#13;
The Adult Bookstore&#13;
406 Main Street Downtown Racine&#13;
15% OFF all purchases SPECIAL with any student 1.0 .&#13;
Complete selection of contemporary adult merchandise&#13;
Sports Editor Jame, casper&#13;
Photo Editor Ride Pa:zera&#13;
Circulatioo ~'. Fred Noor, Jr.&#13;
Business ManAger John Beck&#13;
Pl,Otogrl!l~Y Staff ll&lt;O' J1"&#13;
Jack Kazarian, 8'1111&#13;
Scoville&#13;
Busineu Staff tc.rJVf- Pl'&#13;
John G.-ey, [)a... IJl"""I&#13;
McDermld, T. D. 1/V.&#13;
Writing SfAtf&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Marc Elsen, P!lonH: IP"°&#13;
Kelly lnfuslno, Kim King, Jim Editorial SS,.~&#13;
Koloen, Ken Konkol, Dale Business ~'&#13;
Newseope Is an 1ndepende.\t student ~per aimP""',:.,, ~ the Univer-slty Of Wl$COOSln•Parksl&lt;:W p\Jbli5hed wNtlf1f .,,. -"",.&#13;
vacation periods. Student obtained actv~ising fundS ~ ar• r,,lflf' ., revMue for the opeiration of Newsa,pe. 6,000 coptel 11,.,. _..."'&#13;
distributed throu,ghou1 the KenoSha and Ra:IM a,n1n1unl ft#&#13;
Unlversi1y. Fret coptes ere available upcl't request. il ;;JO p.fl'I w&#13;
o,..cHtne for all tnanuscrlpts s 1.1bmitt«&gt;d to H~.citd, ~~ Thurkt,6yprior toput&gt;ucatlon andmuttbetypeddDUt&gt;le•s~ JMdtftlll""':',,&#13;
Photographs is the Saturday prior to publl:.atk&gt;n, Un~~ 1t1• ;,!If" ,,.&#13;
an_d PhOtooral)hs may be reclaimed within 3C daVS •, ,.~~ •&#13;
m1u1on, after \Wlic:n they w ill bt&gt;alme the prop«"fY O tion• ou1--&#13;
Newscope offlc:e Is located in tt.e StudlW'!t o,van,P&#13;
fetMctlon ot Hlgl'lway A and Wood Road. &#13;
&lt;Oph J)OSlle the Editonal Pa•, w 1ch ·. ~&#13;
Sa1· b is, directly under&#13;
tS Ur}· s su - received the Pthu1on&#13;
Cl 0v.....,.. Pr ... ub Award !or lh• besl I&#13;
news coverage. oreun&#13;
.. ~a:i~ury·s books mclu:le . = Days· The Siege of&#13;
~B mgrad", "Orbit or Cluna· .. ehmtt tN!I L1nc21 • Hanoi-•&#13;
MoScow Jouma .. "K"··· .. "Am · - · • -..-ia , encan in Russia' ··r&#13;
M~w and Beyond" ., ~ x ~ Russia". and his m~t ~~ published last March •·~&#13;
Many Americas Shall Be Ont'&#13;
lie al-.o wrote a novel •·nw&#13;
Northern Palmyra A/lair and&#13;
edited and wrotf' the· introduction&#13;
and commf'nran· to ' 'Marshan Zhukov's Gre8tl'St&#13;
Battles".&#13;
, SaHsbury first went to R1AUa&#13;
'" 1944 to head the Urtited Prf:,,5&#13;
bureau ln Moscov., then&#13;
returned to the t.: S. as l,,., foreign news edilor. also&#13;
covering the birth of t~ t· ru.led&#13;
Nations.&#13;
In 19-19 Salisbury J(llned Tho&#13;
New York Times and rtturred&#13;
to Russia as us correspondtnt&#13;
!or five years.&#13;
Tim es Editor t o Give&#13;
Free Lectu r e&#13;
Upon his return to the Us. i.o&#13;
1954 he dtd a series of art1clesoo&#13;
Russia U'hith ~ulled 1n a&#13;
Russian ban on his relurn to&#13;
that country. The ban wa, lilled&#13;
temporarily In 19$9 when&#13;
Salisbury was permitll'&lt;I to&#13;
return with ther,.\'ice Pre-1c;kr.t&#13;
Nixon on his \tlSil to Russia&#13;
C., A Cquomred Offer&#13;
FREE LU BE&#13;
••011 &amp; · Filter Chance&#13;
,,~KSIDESHELL&#13;
'"" l~CTON "OAO&#13;
&amp; l0TH AVE&#13;
61•-9968&#13;
North Vietnam with lhe approval&#13;
of the U.S. Department&#13;
or St.ate and in the same year&#13;
v:sited Laos, Burma , the&#13;
Himalayan Indian border,&#13;
Mongolia and Siberia.&#13;
He has assessed the tensions&#13;
between Russia and China&#13;
along their frontier and in&#13;
listening posts in Tokyo. Hong&#13;
Kong, Seoul, Moscow, Londan&#13;
and Paris.&#13;
His travels, study and investigations&#13;
have resulted in a&#13;
continuous series or front•page&#13;
headlines and bylines over the&#13;
year!S, numerous awards. and&#13;
many books.&#13;
In addition to receiving the&#13;
Pulitzer PrizQ for lntornational&#13;
Correspondence in 1955, he has&#13;
received the George Polk&#13;
Memorial Award for Foreign&#13;
Reporting (l!IS7) and the Sigma&#13;
Delta Chi Award Foreign&#13;
Correspondence (1958). Last&#13;
March the New York 'ri.mes&#13;
innovative "Op. Ed. Page"&#13;
For a period 1n tl'K- m1d-hfbes&#13;
he covered k,cal ~ev.: Ybrk&#13;
news for The Times and h~&#13;
sotires on Juvenile dehnqu~&#13;
resulted in a book called '1'11&lt;'&#13;
Shocik-Up Generallon •· SaJisbur)" was bom in Min· neapolis in um and attf'J'lded&#13;
the Univenily of Minnesota Ht&gt;&#13;
began his career in )ournaJ15m&#13;
on the coUegc newspaper and at&#13;
the same lime v.orked for the&#13;
St. Paul Bureau ol United&#13;
Pr~ss. UPon graduallon. he&#13;
moved to the Ctucago Bureau of&#13;
UP and among other nev.-"S&#13;
sotires CO\'ert.-d part of the&#13;
Prohibition gang wars and the&#13;
tt'ia 1 o( Al Capone In 19-IO hr&#13;
transferred: to UP'Fo«ign Oe,.K.&#13;
in WaY\ington, and in l!Ml&#13;
became the l,..ondon 8u~u·s&#13;
managing d.rector during&#13;
co,·crage or the war _ in E~pe&#13;
before being a~1gned to thl'-&#13;
;\IOS(-Ov.:· Bureau the rou~mg&#13;
year.&#13;
VAyo'S C ~ ~&#13;
~IZZAf)'&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
fRll DlLIVIRl'&#13;
AL.S:)OIIO&lt;CN DINNERS 4:IO p.llL-12:IO l .M.&#13;
.'NO ITAUAl'I SAUSAGE s:;M3ERS&#13;
5021-:11111 Avtflllt K-slla '5l-Q91&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 pm .• closed i;,:,,wJars&#13;
Intermezzo&#13;
- -,-,.=vEaWARi7&#13;
W•ll- . L•"'&#13;
..........&#13;
·-&amp;.-......&#13;
, .. , ...&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISIRS&#13;
a ce,.&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
l\.lo nda,, Tucsdav .ind 'l'hur,Ja,&#13;
I · 9;1.m . ...:..l p.m. •&#13;
a schooner ,,,.&#13;
Q) a bottle ,,,. u&#13;
·- a glass •&#13;
_g and&#13;
u a steak sandwich&#13;
~ a bratwurst or 6 a beefburger&#13;
&gt;- and&#13;
french fries or&#13;
po tato salad&#13;
$1.15&#13;
or&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
The Brat is uhtrt its at'&#13;
,oRTH•Es- co•~E- O F HIGH•AVS ,_,. AN D 50&#13;
open 9 a.m.- 12 p.m. ... ¥1! bl• fol F'UltUlty 01 s o co , 11 , p, 11t, .. i &#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
Candida.le rorSGA Prei ldent&#13;
Student Go\'ernment on most campuses&#13;
doesn't do much more than ours cbd last&#13;
year. They are usu,,lly frustrated by&#13;
misled vottrs, administration coercion.&#13;
and unenlightened Jeide.-ship. All or these&#13;
and more tend to rob Student Govern• ments of the character and identity it&#13;
would have The Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition has been atlempling to instill and&#13;
promote ll community among Parkside&#13;
students. We do not reel that there should be a Student Activities aQninistration &amp;t all. Jt&#13;
ls not the administrailion's job to build us a&#13;
building to have fun in. ll 1.s not the ad•&#13;
ministration's job to ~an entertainment&#13;
and activities for us. It is the ad•&#13;
ministration's job to see that we receive an&#13;
Oennis tashlon •&#13;
Candidate forSGA Pre-sidtnt&#13;
It is obvious to all of us that the past&#13;
year's student government was grossly&#13;
inactive and ina~q·1ate. Some claim this&#13;
was due to administrative harrassment~ others say it was dJe to student apathy;&#13;
and stm others maintain that lack or&#13;
student know-how was the prime reason&#13;
(or inaction. Regardless or the n~asor\s, Ule issues&#13;
remain the same : £inancia1 automony&#13;
from the universily, co-op bookstores,&#13;
student involvement on all on-campus&#13;
organi1ations and total Parkside com•&#13;
mtlment to the Racine-Kenosha area.&#13;
These problems are not without answers. But. they caiMol be dealt with in a student&#13;
go.,·ernment wrapped up ln ideological&#13;
bickering and rhetoric coupled with a lack&#13;
or facts, articuJated by those who are the&#13;
first to quit when the going gets rought.&#13;
We must reaUze that the UnivcrsHy is a&#13;
political and economic Institution. A.enouncement or political interest and&#13;
activity breeds apathy. Failure to&#13;
recognize its economic importance leads&#13;
students astray when they w•nt 10 apply&#13;
pressure to gain their ends. Many university and college student&#13;
governments have come from under the&#13;
restramLS of financial ac:countabiJity to the&#13;
univer$ity admmistretion b)' incorporating.&#13;
This is a long and tedious&#13;
process. It takes th? cooperation of all the&#13;
students - full and part-time alike.&#13;
Through in.corporation, student owned and&#13;
operated c»ol)S can be started. without the&#13;
use or state runds, which is the only way it&#13;
t'An h,. Ac.'COmplished&#13;
With the passage or the 26th amendment,&#13;
18-20 year olds ca."l now vote. With this&#13;
potential power, $ludents in the RacineKenosha&#13;
area are eligi~le to run for&#13;
elet,ted ollice Should this happen, there is&#13;
no reason why political pressure could not&#13;
Cl&#13;
• %&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
•&#13;
...&#13;
,.&#13;
.,,&#13;
..&#13;
X&#13;
0&#13;
..,&#13;
0&#13;
" " ~&#13;
" n&#13;
,&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
N&#13;
..&#13;
»&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Bruce Volplntesta&#13;
C.ndida&amp;e fo.r SGA \'ioe Prdidenl&#13;
exce11ent education without having to be&#13;
hassled by pelly bureaucratic problems.&#13;
NS far as entertainment and activities are&#13;
concerned - we can plan our own. and the&#13;
administration should help us solely as an&#13;
inform&amp;tional deseminaling network for&#13;
student use. Given ihe budget c.risis (chat University&#13;
offlcials would have us believe we are&#13;
experiencing) we feel that .at least half of&#13;
the salaried administrators in Tallent Hall&#13;
could b&lt;? replaced with students given&#13;
academic credit~ instead &lt;1f drawing on&#13;
tax.payers, who not only pay forimost or&#13;
the educational process, but are forced to&#13;
pay the salaries of people whose function&#13;
often has nothing to do with what goes on in&#13;
the classroom.&#13;
be brought upon Parkside to aid in the&#13;
achie"cment or student eods. There has already bee11 too much talk&#13;
and griping about the problems and not&#13;
enough energy spent to corr~t them . Here&#13;
is an opportunity ; but it will take all of us&#13;
lo do i t. ll c.an be done .&#13;
Frank Chiapeua&#13;
Candidate £or SGA Vice Pre,jident&#13;
The University of Wi&amp;eonsin-Parkside is&#13;
in a slate of physical growth and turmoil.&#13;
lts student body is growing at a faster rate&#13;
than ~ny other state campus. And its&#13;
poten_t1al ror being a great center of&#13;
learning and activities is far above that of&#13;
any other state university.&#13;
The reasons for lnis are obvious&#13;
Parkside is located betwoon two great&#13;
megalopol1.s centers and will, widoubledly,&#13;
attract people, benefits and activities from&#13;
surrounding cities.&#13;
. But until Parkside reaches its potential&#13;
it, nee~ s~ud~l leadership to influence th~&#13;
direeLion 1t will follow in fulfilling students*&#13;
needs. l'ark.si~e is here to serve the&#13;
students; so it is up to us to influence how&#13;
our needs are to be met.&#13;
The most effective way to express&#13;
Slu~nt needs to the administration is&#13;
througl_l an erreclive Student Government.&#13;
Up until now our Studemt Government has&#13;
been less than effective&#13;
1n scc~ing th~ vice iesidency, I make&#13;
no ~romi~. 1t 1s not my desire to impose&#13;
my •d~as if elected, but rather to see that&#13;
the wishes of the enlire student bodv&#13;
~C'Ome a re.aUty. ~&#13;
It is up to you, the students, lo give the&#13;
St1:1dent Government the leaders it needs. It ,s, then, the responsit:.tity of the leaders&#13;
to follow through and light lor the needs of&#13;
the students. The first ~ction is yours the&#13;
second would be mine '. .&#13;
Danny Trotter&#13;
c,n~idate tor SGA Treasurer&#13;
The CSC has b&lt;?en asslstbg Student&#13;
groups helping to get their projects&#13;
organized. However, we feel that this is the&#13;
maJn function of a Student Government&#13;
We also reel that to take over what should&#13;
be done by our Student Government will&#13;
only further weaken, instead of bolster the&#13;
official voice o( the students. For this&#13;
reason the CSC has decided to run some&#13;
members (or positions i:t Student&#13;
Government. we hope in this campaign&#13;
that we will be able to raise enough islues&#13;
and point out enough proble.ms to create an&#13;
involvement among many more students&#13;
to help us solve some of the silly haS$les or&#13;
our school, and to help us bulld a Parkside&#13;
which is creative, new. stimulating, and&#13;
not Just a place to go to get a degree.&#13;
Norntan Pietras&#13;
Candidate for Studenl Senate&#13;
l believe that I can get the studel'lt&#13;
government and the adtninistrati_on&#13;
together to iron out some or the difflcult1es&#13;
in communication that they've been&#13;
having. I think that I can logically think&#13;
out both sides of the situation, and come up&#13;
with some answers. J want to see a m~&#13;
effective student government then we ,,-e&#13;
been having the last couple of years. ll i•&#13;
entirely up to you, the student bOdY, io&#13;
elect a group of people as )~ur&#13;
representatives lhat will do just· that.&#13;
REPRESENT YOU. In my estimatio'."&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE bas a gre;,t !ulureand1t S&#13;
up to you to make sure it doe&gt;. Elect me.as&#13;
your senator and I will do the Job. ,.&#13;
Jeanette Dremel&#13;
Cendldate £or SGA Sf:Crelar)'&#13;
Qualiflcattons: Can u,ke shorlhand.:,,::;:&#13;
type welJ. Junior standlll: - E,,..&#13;
major, Communications minor. . tesof&#13;
Pledge: To record and report ,ninll """''&#13;
the meetinllS so that studeolS and st&#13;
government can stay informed tor ia&#13;
Background: PresenUY a Sen8 alt&#13;
Student Government (attended&#13;
meetings this semester l. ieoJ1JIC&#13;
Chairman of the Gricwance and C&#13;
House Committee. tpb Accomplishments: Arrar,ged for ~ Hanson, Head of Security, to C()!11;UI lb&lt;&#13;
Madison to tell him how wt fell • aU&lt;IDC&#13;
campus police wearing gurs and w&#13;
around the corridors of the sch001· t,eel'&#13;
Notified administration •~d ha~~-..e:&#13;
promtsed a clock iu orcenqwst. c~--&#13;
pencil sharpeners at Greenqu,st. ested ID&#13;
Along with Ken Konkol. prol ,r b)'&#13;
Professor Kubly about tt.e m•"" ,,,_. which the Excellent Teacher awardl&#13;
decided last semester. .-- Offered the Idea of a child care &#13;
Tom Taskonls&#13;
Candidate for Studenl~nate&#13;
People in the know around here find&#13;
certain lhings jusl a little hard lo swallow&#13;
- usually administration policy.&#13;
The first thing to hit us this semester was&#13;
the chanceUor's "welcoming" message in&#13;
the Registration Ts.sue of Newseope (Aug.&#13;
23). Nai 1;e to most; ludicrous to those&#13;
remunely aware of administration policy.&#13;
I haven't heard such a schmaltzy, "all's•&#13;
nght-with·the-world" message since&#13;
befon: the Viet Nttm WM ( ,vhich h.o::s :sil\ce&#13;
spread lo all of Indochina).&#13;
The chancellor talks of "grappling" with&#13;
a ~crete problem - well grapple with&#13;
this one. There are three buildings on this&#13;
cam~ and two on two other campuses,&#13;
all crammed up the hump with rip,oll&#13;
1-..ding machines that survive by eating&#13;
our pockets. During last sprlng's campaicn&#13;
I suggested lunch counters at all&#13;
three campuses. to be open as long as the&#13;
buiJdings were open, Lunch counters with&#13;
decent rood - not the Sllme garbage that&#13;
crawls into those machines and dies there&#13;
-lhen we get to buy it for 4-0 cents only if&#13;
tht machine works on the first 40 cents.&#13;
.Sow get this quote £rom the chancellor:&#13;
"'Jhe right •action' is the constructive&#13;
dttd that improves the unii.•ersily or&#13;
improves society."&#13;
Now I ask you. what would improve this&#13;
•ar-torn area more, wholesome food for&#13;
bungry people or perpetuation of the "blue&#13;
bandits".&#13;
He also suggests that we students may&#13;
110t c~r-o to think obout bow we're OJ&gt;-&#13;
preued. Again his naivete shows through.&#13;
Any concerned, aware individual realJzes&#13;
it's an oppres~i\'e system all around If he&#13;
doesn•~ it's only bc&lt;:auS&lt;? he's constantly&#13;
led whitewashed rocts by people like the&#13;
chancellor who make a profession of brainwaslung.&#13;
&#13;
He l~n basically implies that there is no&#13;
place m HlS university for anyone who&#13;
&lt;\sagrtes with HIM. Here, his "Mayor&#13;
Daley-Russian Tsar" attitude shows itself.&#13;
The,, he says that student. that appeal to&#13;
oUter StuelenLS on the basis of "negative"&#13;
ideas and values get a "5mall and short"&#13;
!olloWing. That's guts! Even at HIS&#13;
ParQide over 1,000 st.udEnl$ saw Jerry&#13;
Rub.n ~nd other good people speak at the&#13;
&lt;letivlt1es Building last siring. A "small&#13;
and short following" stood in front of&#13;
~Uent HaU last ran with picket signs and&#13;
H.idtcameras present. This gave "Wyllie's&#13;
away" a bad image and soon aJlerw-ard&#13;
the contracts of Zi' teachers were&#13;
JlU~td away from the fire. But then last&#13;
SPfma. as MOn as a ''small nnd short&#13;
::chowi11g" left for Washington, five more . ers gol "Wyllie'$ Political Axe".&#13;
,. FinaUy, the man qootes Jefferson:&#13;
Malice wiU always find bad motives for&#13;
COOd act.ions.••&#13;
,, 1 Wish to remind the students that: ._?ect 1&#13;
. it always rinds good motives for bad&#13;
- ions."&#13;
1 also 6nd it imperative (since student&#13;
:v•rnment is a myth, particularly in this&#13;
ace) that student government Conn a ;"':!, relationship with the Concerned u ts CoaliUoo in ot'der to mo.ximh.@&#13;
SChoo!-co~unity relations and, also in&#13;
:-,;un•Uon with the Black Student Union,&#13;
d Y to get more aid for the less finan- ..:Y fortunate black brothers and sisters&#13;
lo go lo school.&#13;
James Twist&#13;
A Ca ndidate for Studeal Sena It&#13;
to Vast &amp;mount of opportunities ,ire open&#13;
~I 5t':klent government on a new and&#13;
op111g campus. Along with these&#13;
t-!tb.tniliee are certain obligations that&#13;
A govtrning body has to its students.&#13;
lta •tudent government in the forming&#13;
ltS bu the advantage cf building from&#13;
,. , ::-:==-~'~°'!;f19lwr£!!!~:.Jtl!S.,J.!lt7!!!.l _____ ~,:!•·~-~h(~•!?_!!-!:._" ____ _!~l!..!~- i..ie ground Roor 1b ..,.... ~ ••• 1• t . • v.id - vices and events 't t array or 5tl"&#13;
by the lack or ini~i~~~ on:" is only hmitt-ct&#13;
represent you. l\e O those: decled to&#13;
Parks.ide's student&#13;
CO ligation to invest. go\'ernmax has an&#13;
plaints that have •sate lh• many ....,,. months. It also h!'""• aired m lhepa&gt;t r ... , Parkside studen•·s the opportun,1y to orrt:r&#13;
l .., such servt«s&#13;
reg $lration an(I ecotogy jec as votPr&#13;
also become involl·ed in~ ts II mijjl,1&#13;
pletr_1entation lo insure that~ m~er im- a fair shake. ar-1de gtu&#13;
a.'f"e 6PPOrtunities are •ndl ... _ SGA .Ji:~!~ :;a~= '1.:1~ to ~'Ork.&#13;
~p :J:~~ '!SI ~ear spults for ::i~-:1:..:; SlnCtte, dedicated and 1n,.&#13;
volved set or candidates •rill be elected to&#13;
::~\:; aa:d ;!=hon that will ha\'"&#13;
Student govemmeni should ..,... hub or orga ud . ·e a.~ • Parkside I~ student aeti\,ty at&#13;
d . . must Cune:tton as a eannghouse for student CGmplamL II&#13;
must attempt to deal w,lh lht Special&#13;
p-oblems of students at a commuter&#13;
cam~us. Jt must also 5er\'e the M..tdents m&#13;
a variety or ways other than social events&#13;
Only. when SGA begins '° olrer&#13;
something to lh• students a1 uw.p .,,u "&#13;
establish i~lf as a meaninaful and&#13;
valuable organization.&#13;
Micbiel Lorton&#13;
Candidate for SLudmt Sena tr&#13;
My platform consists of certaK'I general&#13;
alms and goals whaeh anclude&#13;
clarification or and-or 1n11ueneean exutang&#13;
admimstrali\'t policie,; as the:;.e rdate to&#13;
ll.Ude.nts:&#13;
Establishing a basis or studient&#13;
,oodarity. lhereb:; aiding 111 the ronn.a~on&#13;
or a positive student ident.t1y·&#13;
HeJpmg student govcnunent at Parkside&#13;
to continue Crom its early ra11enn&amp; at&#13;
tempts to a more adv&amp;l'K.'t'd form of&#13;
representation which may ln lhe future&#13;
lake its place with the admma!lnll«I and&#13;
faculty as a detennining racl.lr m the&#13;
future of this school:&#13;
By student go\·emment _ acum. to M&#13;
pre~ents or student paruc1pab00 rn I.he&#13;
functions of lhlS school&#13;
Somewhat more speofic as.sues are&#13;
-&lt;:0nferring on use-control of them~&#13;
that is, bulletin boards, Juke boxes. 1 .. r.&#13;
nets Ne\\scope, mailings and otbtr. -~ainta1ning active student,facully&#13;
and student govern.men.I committeu. - impr6ved student•Caculty&#13;
administration cammumcatioo; - increasing recruitment_ of mu10nbet,&#13;
~tabhshing accoun1.1~ty u, dollars&#13;
and cents at all tevets Wlthtn Parksack' • -creating 5-0me form of fecult)'&#13;
evaluation;&#13;
-reviewing and amending rules on&#13;
student actwities end orgamz.abons&#13;
n,e Student &lt;;overnmenl should not be&#13;
only a smaU group oC people. ,, mU$1 also&#13;
be a pipehne of 1nrormalion for tht student&#13;
t,ody. It can take on 31 v1tality-1r and ~-ben&#13;
_ it actually assumes the voice or the&#13;
collective student body. Park:Stde needs a student government to bn.Dg bal~ and&#13;
dlr«tion to it . . now&#13;
Tony Korobol&#13;
Candi.date for S1udNal Setaat.t&#13;
A$ your Student Apathy Party I SAP&gt;&#13;
candidate. 1 resoJ\.·e, if elected. to makt no&#13;
campaign promises. to hedge al iSRS. and&#13;
generally not give a damn. My fOJth is "'&#13;
all the apalh•tic students of Parksule, v.-ho&#13;
1 t,ope will neglect to vole ,n the up-coming&#13;
election. ay my plutorm I .in coun~&#13;
every vote not ca.st a conficler(:f! vott m&#13;
For thoSe wbO ar• trapped u,to ,-..ung :eUlose who eccl it i• their duty to \'Olt but&#13;
don't care anyway, just put )&lt;lllr X down&#13;
by my nan&gt;•-&#13;
f:la1,w, :\I Btrcb&#13;
(aM ...... .f'fOl'"~l......,_W'&#13;
[: - - o{ Ibo ~-"' tlM, Studml Go&gt; fflllDftll bas beffl u.at 111.,-&#13;
ha\ e DOl bll!ftl able 10 rudl a quanun Al a&#13;
,.,..., .,._,.,. .. --m,) -Uon al Pa~ 4..-m, Ibo_,,,., oad laU oC&#13;
"72 and - 7&gt;, I• t,c, --for CJ•&#13;
Smale l,leetlr.t&gt; Lot• Ccl Tocdhtt'&#13;
'!be ..,., prot,lem - lo Ir - of&#13;
C()!,Oft,ICATIO, Tb&lt;N .,.. 1n1tta1&#13;
- aJld actiYlua ..- tho 1• - 17 of&#13;
IOnrunC - - Ld • Gd "'-tOMr lo.-n-hfre 11wllaw Wbat \1,,.,.,, and \Ila o{- a&lt;IMII&lt;&gt; llttflU to b,-&#13;
IIUSSllC p.,t,opo a -• m&lt;amce!~&#13;
R.fgialn~tlon - op&lt;1I - IOnle C1111DIDUll.iit.aUan ~ A.bo Ct'&#13;
elecled l&gt;fflalon - Ill, -le MN'llllp&#13;
- bo .._. r,ad:!y a•ailabl~ IO oil&#13;
SI-Ii a a - o1 &lt;Om1111allcali&lt;a&#13;
Lot •• C.t nie,,tbfr'&#13;
Part1&lt;1 a,... '"91. bul lo b&lt;Uu r&lt;l"ftftll&#13;
the si~ b.Jd;y I am nmt11J11 u •n e,&#13;
df-pet 1 J nndide•~ I •m • mt"mbrr el&#13;
tlle Col~a Pftl !-1-1 Coah1- W hll••&#13;
- ~ the tho Day ~ Cmltt&#13;
Commilltt&#13;
I am• con1inul:1!11tud&lt;t-.! .. -..:iobul ... • .,.,. tllo lwl1 , ou'n pvt,abl) -.!&#13;
- of my "1iloooplly In Socio1oQ aod&#13;
£4Ja- &lt;Jasin. ii not U-..T:i Gt'T&#13;
TI&gt;CE'IHER&#13;
811hr •-ay R¢mu )-wr bitdl h&#13;
llittb.&#13;
Jerry \lorpll) (at1111da1.-,_,,..._, -sc-oaw In.,.._ 1w ~tlldt-nl Smato I ltd tllal&#13;
I am 11•1D11 1M students at Parbldo a&#13;
m&lt;dian all.,,..tlw .. IO • b&gt;.-b t.ind GI&#13;
'""'"""'Ul'- they -.anl 9-tinl acCUN,mna&#13;
..- btinl ..,_.Jllf- ....._. dM mat&#13;
lddo&lt;D aceomplis!Md a")1hlnl V.°MI -&#13;
nted b a "orlling ~ludml -I&lt;&#13;
I l&lt;fl thal the rrwn eb)t«ln ol 1h,&#13;
Seoale ohc,uld be to ro(dct lludPIII o..da&#13;
and deslns. '!be linl ma)., COQC, m b&#13;
Iba• of a,cadml,c: al!ain Examples ol llll&gt;&#13;
.,.,..Id be a •-• 1n raao11y ..-a1ua~&#13;
adda\iOII of. COW'l8 Of" 11vlJII cn'd,I for&#13;
extraa,,n,,ular wwti Midi as p.11y1,&#13;
.a'thleuc&#13;
Mitfll The&#13;
teems&#13;
other&#13;
or&#13;
ma.,.-&#13;
f'\tlll 1-l~&#13;
C'ltln(T'rn ~&#13;
b lbt&#13;
oooal actMo .. in ..-hkh ltudcnts par&#13;
uc,p,1r ~ «11Kcru. fvnd ~"-.&#13;
clt-&amp;n-UP and Giber m-campa or O&lt;igl&gt;&#13;
bonqicommumty a&lt;tint•" att unpcrtanl&#13;
to tilt lltl.denl Th, s.,,a,. lhould be Ille&#13;
deanng-houoe for up,_nc studont&#13;
opan:om in these rna1ten&#13;
A $ll"Olt&amp; Student Smalt JS uftil Hf) GO&#13;
• """ na campuo suc:h u """ On• - lS lbal • • mU&gt;I build up th•&#13;
reputation of Parks&gt;d• a. bellll a ld""'1&#13;
"Ahett lhe itudenlA ha\.'e a SA) m lh,sr&#13;
educ-ahon Another ,.._ d 1M n...:I fo,r&#13;
~ting the rights oC the students 1n all&#13;
matlfn A lltOnl Salatt can aa,ompbsb&#13;
lh,. &#13;
Pages&#13;
b) Jim Koloen&#13;
TITLE: Tm; OTIIER&#13;
\l'TIIOH: Thomas Tr)·o•&#13;
l'l'BtlSIIER: Alfrtd ,\, Knupf&#13;
CSG.fl.ll&#13;
Tom 'l'ryon factor lW'ned wnttr&gt; is&#13;
lryin' very hnrd and Th.- 0Lhr ls a 280&#13;
page novel about a de.id 11,1,-m brother.&#13;
and lhe 11, c one becomin4 lhc other&#13;
brother, t1nd another other, gf&gt;l that1&#13;
The setting for th1-. Ameru~trin golhic&#13;
11Q\·l'l 1s Pt.-quot L.lndmg. a small, rural&#13;
New England tov.·11 , Lhe time 193.'l. the&#13;
po111l of ,·1ew s&lt;&gt;ems to be fin;t person&#13;
,wrrattoo The narralor is unidentified&#13;
Wlhl the fmal f 1ve page-;, 8!-. it turn~ out&#13;
the narrator 1!&gt; tht- prot.igomst 25 or !-,0&#13;
)·ear~ ulder than hr was wht"fl lhc action&#13;
took place The point of "·1cw is &lt;."Onlosrng&#13;
thou~. bt:caWl.c 1t ~•ms HI l,c&#13;
omn1sc-wnt, &gt;·el lhe narrator couldn'l&#13;
po:,s1bly know C-\&lt;er} llung he's telhng&#13;
Ui Trvon blends th&lt;: ommsclent&#13;
n,1rr~11c)n w1lh first pt•r~n. 1t'-; &lt;.-un·&#13;
tu-.,ng and yet effective&#13;
\\ 1th thl• exn•µt,oo of lhl' 1&gt;rotagom:,t&#13;
So\'embtr IS, 1911&#13;
Nile Perry and possibly Aunt Ada. the&#13;
secondary characters are stock ~ypes,&#13;
there's a town gossip, a stlrf se,cton, 3&#13;
handyman prone to fits of alcoholism,&#13;
elc. The protagonist 1s a 13 years old&#13;
boy, Niles PerTy, sensitive, intelligent.&#13;
occult, who is burdened by 8 dysfunc·&#13;
honally advanced imaginahon His&#13;
Aunt Ada ha!! helped Niles develop his&#13;
1mnginat1on b)' teaching him ''the&#13;
game"&#13;
"The game,•· consists or the person&#13;
concentratin@ on an object, describing&#13;
it until he discovers its .. essence", it&#13;
t-omb111cs astrol projection and rnind&#13;
rcacbng, veri occult and very in·&#13;
tr1gwng. After Holland's dealh Niles&#13;
be&lt;:omes a victim of "the game'\ he&#13;
creates an image or his dead brother,&#13;
he emulates him until he becOmes&#13;
Holland It seems that Holland was&#13;
sadistic ·cthe opposite of Niles), prone. to&#13;
kiUing smaU animals. Niles goes htm&#13;
Lwo £urther by murdering a c,usin &amp;nd&#13;
a&#13;
an old neighbor lady and finaUy a onemon1h-old&#13;
baby boy. It seerns that&#13;
llollandhadhad murdered his old man.&#13;
Niles bc,comes Holland and murdtts&#13;
everybody else. ('..ties ls the \'it:lim of a.n&#13;
occult schizophrenia and the result 1s&#13;
horror. The style of writing is heavily&#13;
descriplivc with an occasional&#13;
~ragraph of forced pretty prose.&#13;
Tryon tends 10 get carried a&#13;
images and bleak words gh•:z Dart&#13;
a •yrup ol foreboding, or in, •&lt;n-~&#13;
tragedy; !he bleak words reint ""1~&#13;
reflect the theme. I ha\•c to (f &lt;&gt;rte~&#13;
credit for his handling o( t11e'"' T110,&#13;
element in the fir-st two s.t'C::t.:J&gt;ielist&#13;
third and final section is bas: Tht&#13;
anticHmatic~ it ties up an th 1&#13;
-ca.11)&#13;
ends. answers all the ~ti ' loost&#13;
clarifies the contustion. oiu; 1~&#13;
'l'he Other is good escapsim tam$ all the elements or a -cla,s..~c rt c011&#13;
novel; set on a rundov.1'1 farm_ • ID'Jiw.&#13;
England. with an emphasis on ~JD N!:'1i•&#13;
the recalling o! Ada's early y •1Nt1t&#13;
Russia and her belier in lH~ t'.tfl 11&#13;
~uperstitio~s, the presence of r---~&#13;
in u,e lamily, occultism and ~ murders all combine for an ah:$.o ....... tale. Read it as escapism and yc:x,j r-..,&#13;
be disappointed. · WOn&#13;
If you•re looking for a good&#13;
novel. The Other is as g()()(I as escapbt&#13;
The Other cou.rtesy ot lb, Bto11; ~ 622 59th S1... Keno,ha. I\&#13;
Pre9nant?&#13;
Need Help?&#13;
Sell your stuff with&#13;
Newscope clawfiuls&#13;
we .,.1 "'•'II 11\f •om1n •e11••~'••• ol ,,ce. ,.i.,1ot1. ••·• or 1,11.,.c ,fl •••1..,, w• clo no, ,.o,.i.,, ~~!&#13;
,..,,.1w 11,111 •e"""' o•t••" c~•l•••o Ooc!(H• lo• , e o,1lon1. II ,~,, II&#13;
...... , 111., cllt,re ,. ... ,e cl• ~01&#13;
delay '" e.,:, abo,ho .. ls lftCfl&#13;
l ·•l!'jttl lfld IHI Clllly, -~• Cl'&gt; b l 11••10, ... ,d on • ., o.,, p 151r,1 '.Ul•I&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
Call:&#13;
8 AM-10 PM-7 DAYS ., ,,,.n,,. . 11 . nFIT n • r.&amp;N,1£-10111&#13;
i!, ti ~ 1 I •~f- ccc:,p Cl)&#13;
c:,CCI) -&#13;
1 I ,c,zc,&#13;
I ::z::c:,l:C&#13;
..... c,c,c,&#13;
w&#13;
&gt; 0:&#13;
u. 0&#13;
&gt;- g ...&#13;
0: :(]&#13;
tr&#13;
'Jhe 1lew "Vogue 'Jheuler&#13;
j&#13;
' ...&#13;
1820-52ND STREET KENOS-IA&#13;
"\n,· l,aJ/f.r,· Otk'&#13;
."io:1 .\/&lt;tltJ :-.·, n ,,v&#13;
lltWUN'. hf,,&#13;
by Jim Ko,loen. Bar,·cviewer&#13;
ZIMMfo:R:\'lAN'S (ZIMMIE'S) TAVERN&#13;
Zimmie's is a Kenosha tavern located on the&#13;
corner of 50th streel af\d 11th Avenue. whose&#13;
chentele is composed or working dass heroes.&#13;
senior citizens. and a few althernatcs of tt.e&#13;
alternative culture. On this for.1y I enlisted. the aid&#13;
uf my scotch and soda specialist. Brian P. Kipp,&#13;
M.A. cmaster of alcohol), who took his M.A. al&#13;
lhtnhna,l's while lending bur there. Incidentall)',&#13;
it has come to my aUentic,o that some people here&#13;
gained the mistaken impression U1at Hardman's is&#13;
closed, from last wee.k's stellar review. Let me mp&#13;
1his evil rumor in the bud, so to speak. Hardman'$&#13;
is nol closed.&#13;
Back ~o Z1mmies. On review night George and&#13;
Honky were Lreading tJ\c long formic.a-topped bar.&#13;
F'or 01)Cf\CJ'S Bria:a and I ordered a hamburger and&#13;
n Bud~ for the p:ice an unbeatable combination .&#13;
The lap beer is 20 cents for at least !O 0W1ces and&#13;
the 50 cent l\amburge.r is of a type that the chain&#13;
hambw-jter stands can on1y advert11.e about.&#13;
Repast completed, 1 survl.!)'od the bar; six taps,&#13;
Bud, Schlitz. Old Style. Lowenbrau, Pabst and I&#13;
lhink Schliti Matt Liquor. The stock and selection&#13;
or hard spirits Is more than ample.&#13;
It was aner six and the night crowd wat&gt;&#13;
trickling in when we decided 10 put Honky to t:'lC&#13;
letit. The big, gruff talkiog, Italia n looking bartender&#13;
proceeded to sen-e up a t,COtch and sell.zi?r&#13;
1 make sure you ask for seltzer or you could end up&#13;
wilh 7-Up&gt;. utilizing the Lops.heir H &amp; H scotch .&#13;
Brian said i1 ~s "nice and light and high in&#13;
drinkability, like your everyday run of the gin mi11&#13;
!Kolch, better for drinkin~ Ulan reviewing.'' lli~&#13;
~ 1.0~~ how clean&#13;
final comment on the sc~tch and seltzer was, ''ict&#13;
cubes and gJass, as (unctional as any." I'd~&#13;
a gin and tonic {Mr. BQISton Gill), it \litat d°'u&#13;
smooth and did Uie trick, [uned my vision and&#13;
loosened me up.&#13;
The general attitude of the c1ientele ts IM: and&#13;
lel li\'e, no hassles, the bartender, are frielXll&gt;&#13;
it's a place to drink with your friends eilher al tilt&#13;
bar or around the square woodc,, tables. ma&gt;t&gt;t:&#13;
,;;-vPn play a game of pool. One can spend hmm&#13;
sipping on a drink and staring at the most im&#13;
pressive picture of a nude chick that l\'e nu lald&#13;
my eyes on.&#13;
Defore dismounling our barstools to contmw our lir~less quest for congenial wtenng ~ICft.&#13;
Brian suggested yel another l&lt;ot £or the bor&#13;
lender. He ordered a Black Ru..o;sian, unfommateh&#13;
George was unable to comply with the r,que,t ai&#13;
lhe bar didn't have any Kohlua (coffee liqUft'I Ht&#13;
was not lo be daunted, hQY.'C\'er, as a vodka and&#13;
creme de cacao soon reflected his admiring v!Sllf&#13;
before him. His commen1 wa.~, .. It C1.1drl't qwte&#13;
make 1t." H~ recommended imbibing fi\t Bla&lt;i&#13;
Russians in a row, but creme de cacao "don't eo&#13;
d()wn as fine as posoevsky."&#13;
Zlmmie.'s is a bar that serves long hair$ a.11 ,.di as middle aged workers alld the affable 0,'ld..,.&#13;
[lappable Honky enjoys talking with •~•&#13;
customers. Zimmie's is highly recommeodei Tht&#13;
only real weakness is the juke. it is O\'e~tulftd&#13;
with Jc.rry Vale and easy listening muzak. bJt 1&#13;
supp0se one has to expect that in a bar hke_Zlmm.ie's.&#13;
As the world turns, the undaunted driobr&#13;
spins.&#13;
I lhoueht&#13;
J&amp;V&#13;
oncy "ii: :1::·;::&#13;
' ~,; got my&#13;
and sold&#13;
stereos?&#13;
bJOU$P!&#13;
6 t 8-S5th street&#13;
In Kt•osha&#13;
phone 654-3559 &#13;
p,-t Lontarlire. ,. ... eature Editor&#13;
Sill '&amp;ue-n is a familiar (igure on daytime ,,... Ile has kept himself in_ the public eye&#13;
If'!" ·be years by l)ercommg associated with quiz.. ~ · hoY--S like "The Price Is Righi''. Those&#13;
~I v.ho don't watch morning television&#13;
t,ate inStead b«ome acquainted with his&#13;
""' a daily, syndicated radio show.&#13;
Wbilt: drMng lo the Wood Road Campus the&#13;
,c,rdaY I turned on the radio, catching his five&#13;
tt ~ on one ol the Chicago stations. He&#13;
lfll""'tly launches into interesting and thought&#13;
,iw,g wbjeets. On this sp,cific show, Bill&#13;
~ t,,egandtSCUssing a topic lhat means instant ,.,_,.., .. to many poople, including myself.&#13;
:.,j &lt;li&gt;J•&lt;l is travel. The sound of the word sets&#13;
-, mtO visions or boarding jets and lounging on&#13;
ldtbtS lD far away places.&#13;
s,3 Cullen was explaining the development of&#13;
a 5trtt ba1tle among Uie major commercial in1m,1c1onal&#13;
airlines for the public's dollar. Th.is&#13;
..,...,uon had produced all-time lows in ticket&#13;
,,.. Lo !)!rope.&#13;
F,r some unknown reason, I was aboard Air&#13;
blia before Bill Cullen's five minute show was&#13;
1u- Instead of waiting for tile light to change&#13;
• ~ mtersection or Thirtieth Avenue and&#13;
Ja,11,igtoo Road, I was waving to friends through&#13;
1 p&lt;rtbole window from the jel, in a daydream&#13;
JIOITol by the thought of travel.&#13;
.liter I almost ran over a fat Jady in front o(&#13;
m.mydaydream made an unsdleduled landing. 11,.,..; to the rest of Bill Cullen's show without IN!! 1.slong thP ~t.,.wnr(l,:,,s wbal Umt we would&#13;
lllld111Rome.&#13;
l forgot this bit of escapisr.1 unti1 evening.&#13;
111!1 I wished I could happen upon a good&#13;
imtn.nttoeatanddaydream in, l explained my&#13;
- Rome trip to Maggie 8nd asked her if she&#13;
,.tlHke lo ,at at a plaee I was told had good&#13;
food.&#13;
There was once a bar at the intersection or&#13;
lllrUi 22nd Avenue and Birch Road in Kenosha&#13;
lllollnas"Tl~Center of the World". Today, at Lhe&#13;
amt location is a combined Jiquor store· """"••t. Casa Capri.&#13;
c._ C-apri ad\'eruses an ··old world" at•&#13;
~~~ -c&#13;
rnosphere. I was at&#13;
restaurant environme tractec:t lo th.is son OI&#13;
.. live" my daydn•am"' ~fan e(fort lo remot('h&#13;
ltalianf&lt;&gt;ocl. socasaCa , aggie w.u hunlP') ro·r&#13;
our dinner i.hat eveni~n was 8 logical chcrn:e for&#13;
The Old World J had&#13;
through Na.lion.al Geo &amp;~own lo kllO'.\ so \\·elJ&#13;
reasonablyreprOducJ;~~~c over the )tan y,a~ upon a casual look around sa C.pr1, So I thought&#13;
When I sat down I reahz,d magazines and Lhe • Casa lhe Old World ,n&#13;
were in dirl'Ct eontrasl A Capn represtn!ahon listing of the I t e,·et")· table v,a, a&#13;
com ng SChedule ol "Lwg .. Al . do&#13;
and the_ res1 of lhe Milwaukee Bucks 1Th can r&#13;
so~ething un-Old World about this ';t "'a~&#13;
enhgluenment. 1 was visabJy crushed of&#13;
side '!;;~t:any,_a.~emd e!\t bor asts "the finest pizza thi~ · · u gmg rom my e,cposure lo other&#13;
pizza ads, they Share the title \li'.ith a fev. :lozcn&#13;
other places in ~e area, not to mention a few•·&#13;
thousand this side of Little llaly m :,.;.,. Yori.&#13;
alone. Not wanting to involve m,..self .... th l L t di . ,/ "I an '9t• .~mp O sered.it their claim, I ordered lhr&#13;
llouse Spectal, Casa Ste.ak Au Jus'• rea11.11ng&#13;
salad. onion rings, ranch style pot.at~ ior ~uX'&#13;
order of Spaghetti) and coffee. All for two d:lllar..&#13;
and sevent)' cents&#13;
Mag~, filled her desire for llalian tood ~ 1th&#13;
spaghetti and meat balls. A lull dinnor would ha,•&#13;
cos~ two dollars and twenty•five cenb. but W&#13;
decided on a half order costing a dollar tv.entv fa, t&#13;
cents.&#13;
In orde.nng, we both passed up$UCh dtnnttS a!-.&#13;
Baked Lasagna t2.25), ~•ul(ed R,galom 12961,&#13;
Cli!ckcn 12.25), Ravoli (2 6S, half order I 251,&#13;
Clucken and Spaghell1 (2.551 and Perch I t.251&#13;
. Round.ir.,g out the menu, piua is reasonabl)&#13;
pnced, and an excephonal bargam 1f it is the besl&#13;
this side o! ltaly. Drinks were se.J'\·ed m a&#13;
moderate price range (martini 70 cents). Both of&#13;
us were impressed with Casa capri pnces..&#13;
Alter eating the "House Special". I fclt&#13;
satisfied, but not stuffed. I asked !or the steak&#13;
medium rare, and got it that way. Ranc.h St)lt"&#13;
potatoes are like giant French fries mm\6 an&#13;
excess of grease. A minor c:bsappointment I ex· perienced wilh the meal was the l'A'O orUon "Lr\g.S&#13;
Maggie pointed out that the spaghetti \l.l$ not&#13;
in Lhe least biL 5t,1;u-•chy1 a pitfall of ltali;.u-.; oa both&#13;
sides of lhc Atlantic. 1 tasted her food and had to&#13;
agree that il was very good. Taking mlo aocou.nt&#13;
the good fo«I and exeellent serv,ee .,.. rtffi,td&#13;
Maggie and I decided to return at a future dale to&#13;
see if it wasn't all a Duke. Only coN1.$lanC)· "' u in&#13;
question, as H Is ln any resturan t upon JU.'l Oil('&#13;
visit.&#13;
The pleasant reality or Casa C'.apn Jre,er.ed&#13;
me from re-entering another daydream dur111 I-! the&#13;
meal. On my way to the ear Lough, I c•Uiht&#13;
myself mentally sending B,11 Cullen a thank you&#13;
post card for sparking the da)dr""m that ltd&#13;
Maggie and me to a fim: meal&#13;
,·~ - ... ...:!,:,.&#13;
i Iha Wine•&#13;
,11king F&#13;
,Season ii&#13;
VOTE NOV. 17-19&#13;
lis ~ere .. J&#13;
1 ... "'" ir. \ '-Yl'l11 hr !&#13;
( -" Ir 11,1rt1 1&#13;
• 11 IIClll PIICES. f ,. 1:~,&#13;
I :~&#13;
r~!• ~t l f&#13;
! I&#13;
I Y111r ffl, ~ tose tao •ake wines like ;;:j&#13;
I ~ Ille )Ill&gt; buy at a fraclion i!I&#13;
ll's 1 ~I Ille yea, a1oood. ~•1&#13;
1 · s"e· fun and fascin· i;J!i • ,, C:1&#13;
~o, f,RE~ i llu!- !i, , 'l !qu t o winernak- l;:j 'll&lt;tlenl and supplies. ,,,&#13;
~&#13;
I 'Jh:)USQ&#13;
, ~-~~, ~1111"" •1 37&amp; 1mi rd.I&#13;
. l"IE ~HCON!IIN Sl-102&#13;
F11 1-! ll'f tokO.ys. ·: 111 ·'dJ11 12 \ Su n;J-,1 ),,&#13;
Ral:ine T heatre Guild&#13;
presents OPENS&#13;
NOV. 19&#13;
601 High St.&#13;
6334218&#13;
hi son to •'be a man' '. does heWh&#13;
ell meani= rather tells s&#13;
en aw * •-e h n's'&gt;&#13;
mean 111S kind of man, (It t e So •&#13;
Performance Oates: 28 Dec 3 4 5&#13;
Nov. J9, 20, 2l. 26,27•1)«. 4 '&#13;
5.'1:i &amp; 9:00 pm TWO Performances • ·&#13;
Curtain: S 7•-&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sal. 8:15; un. ·-&#13;
Seal;;,,io swdenl$ SI 25 Fri, • s1111.&#13;
•&#13;
n&#13;
" • &gt;&#13;
~&#13;
..&#13;
~&#13;
&gt;&#13;
ht.••&#13;
Parting Shot(s) Ill __ _&#13;
.&#13;
JltG,...,11 .. ., WOi,N ~• Wt,coMHI fl?IJ'iilP'-•-&#13;
&amp; $ave&#13;
SERVE YOUA:SELF WITH THE FINEST G,UOl.lHC&#13;
AND SAVEi&#13;
ROYAL TRITOH&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCONO&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cuh&amp;C.rry&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12oz HEAVY OUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
soc..., ........&#13;
C&amp;li\ end C.ny Pr1c• on OU Fut..,,&#13;
Jtur filttn, Tunt U1&gt; )(lt1. ~rk Pti,g,-&#13;
AJI 1,_,.., Sub1.c:1to 4 ~ Ctnt S.IH Tu&#13;
SAV E - SAVE - SAVE &#13;
1•a&amp;it18&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Ful\lre&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
,.._. 65&amp;-2573&#13;
Sith St. at 6th Avt.&#13;
MAIN OfflC(&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MllWAUKH&#13;
lolffOVJ lor&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I• Few, S....,, t "' 12· • 14 , 16"&#13;
AUO&#13;
• • •H • l'AC.Nt"l,tl • (Nl((tN&#13;
CiNO((NI • IAYIOI.I • lA SAC.NA&#13;
• ''"" tOO. • l••O• ICMU&#13;
c.-1,r-ou11 0t:LIV1lT&#13;
rOc.1 •1HG w, u ,-.~-·&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1161 PONTIAC OTO - J o,. _,w&#13;
~&#13;
ffl•l••o•- IOhd dWII bh.oe w•t, tinted&#13;
, .... spo-.,. ........ 1 *""&#13;
"'-V rim, w"' ,..,a N'IWl'TI. .., • ..,.«&#13;
d&lt;1rll. rAM11de ¥1-l'INI CO\ltr. 10.000&#13;
"""' ""', .... ,, /Yry , •• !iOft .. t p,tl&lt;.•&#13;
,l(("f"Qtf,Cf M,x.t ... ,.-s, 90t"9 -.&#13;
C4n.ada c..u eJ• 1)16. ,nll b- Allan&#13;
u .. CM.VY If - #fl90'\, ''llf'ldard.&#13;
,4.,goor1 concM1on.USOlftCll.ld n9&#13;
trio•"'"" 011 SU t9S6 evw+lnos or&#13;
-·-&#13;
.-o,,n,•c. ~1•••••0 ,.., - L•"• ,....,,.,._., ~ mtf\g,,..,l"'twi,a1ftt,&#13;
'"'IIQi ...,.,.t ... , 194 .• · 5&#13;
1f'48£\.AI. CHIVY-'Wl'ule4clt' ,&#13;
IUIJ.lfteoollllcCW"IG ttOn SS..Jltf.•U2&#13;
•~•er .. , Ori'V•&#13;
H6J F,11 OLO~Oell.l - VI&#13;
il"'O•P-llff"N 4dr~,'&lt;llfrY&#13;
VOOdc.on&lt;J N&gt;tull 0nl"OwnH . S4.000&#13;
,,. ..,,. o,...-. voo c.tl '"' )tl1&#13;
".'O\t• ber IS. lt71&#13;
Oal~ Martin&#13;
Candidate for Student Sena le&#13;
Parbidr need. somfrOne who cares and&#13;
kn~ what as h11pperu-111 TI,e Senal~ man&#13;
has to comprthcnd probltm.s as they&#13;
h.appen. know v.hat causes them and what&#13;
can bt dme ,buut 1l. 1bt mGlli unporumt&#13;
thing 11 that thr Semite man carts enough&#13;
to co to IJ'le mHt.ings&#13;
The -l• man nHdl the ba&lt;:kmC ol all&#13;
Wtludent1 So you who read this, do ~·hat&#13;
h'ff )OU can l4 show w )'OUT ~upporl Last&#13;
tttm \\t did DOC have )Wt bac:k.ir,g and •e wrre hurting. 1 M mNtlngs ,tuted to tall&#13;
apart thf' second •e- had ~ You. the&#13;
a1""6e-nt.e. bleoa. It 'lc,,t did nol sho'II an&#13;
O\·erwhelmmg lnttrcst 1n the electaon As a&#13;
r-11 a buncll o/ block h,_d« were elected&#13;
who did not care enoug/1 to atl&lt;nd&#13;
meL-t1ngs Olttk the bJltol again this )'ear&#13;
and notu.:f ... nat • &lt;mall aelection you have&#13;
to ct,..., Crom You can t,,ke U from there&#13;
how{ar ..,c·re going togo this year without&#13;
Y'4.&gt;t.r blnsed "iUpport&#13;
Moot of you hllto to be preoch&lt;d •• and I&#13;
Mn"t preach \·ery good, "° l auess th1.s is&#13;
lht last time I'll preacb It YoU Pc,son11ly,&#13;
I Im go.ng lo be loo b.a) tr) 1ng to g,c ...- 00 called mudrnll gu&gt;ernmonl off It'•&#13;
li1Uo p1nlues and on 10111 big fal feel'&#13;
•'e"' siuderll.3 reaJ..u .. tiat a sludml&#13;
governmtnt can do r@r lhem How could&#13;
)OU havi.ng nf'\tr had one that (W1Cli&lt;med&#13;
bclnre"' l can tNI )"09 one thing - there&#13;
w,11 be n big change once \\·e get your&#13;
upport So m•k• your!ldr felt and get it&#13;
LutJelher Vou 11:now that v.:e don't live&#13;
fore,,·er and we dofl'I go to Park.aide&#13;
Candidates (con't.)&#13;
fon,·er _ or "°"""" I'm not spoalotli lor&#13;
evtt')oae Fre~tn and Sophomores, get 11110&#13;
Part.id,. You h•d )'OW- shar• of doing&#13;
nothing b111 going to cla.ses wtiere you&#13;
punch an and punch out. Do what you can&#13;
... )'OU will not ..... left high sd,ool There&#13;
I go, pre•clling al )'&lt;)U again. I !"'P' ~ Jet&#13;
tht me.ss&amp;1e. Work, people: I m gomg lo.&#13;
t.o mort preacllh1g; thank you all&#13;
Ken Konkol&#13;
Candldalt' tor Suidtnt Stn1te&#13;
So lar the Student Senate hasn"t ac•&#13;
ccmpliihed much foe this school, This has&#13;
been due mainly to those penons \lo-ho&#13;
made,. game or the Spring £I e&lt;&gt;lioos and&#13;
wtte dCC1.cl as • lark. I aam speaking&#13;
primarily ot those peop1, -,.;ho ran 1ndcr&#13;
the so-called Halloween Party ond thooe&#13;
olhtn who deliberately do not attond&#13;
meet-.soltheSenate,yet do not ha..e the&#13;
~ncy to resign ao at least n qmrum&#13;
could be formed .. ilhoul lhcm, This type or&#13;
pen,on isn't worth shlt end should ro&lt; be&#13;
running ror office. Unfortunately, we do&#13;
have :,ame of lhb type runnil1' Oj/aln.&#13;
The-re are committee cba1nnen v.: bo&#13;
have not colled a meeting of their commitlHS&#13;
sanc-e last semfft.er This type of&#13;
penon we aon•t ~ The J&gt;W'POM ot lM&#13;
commiltecb is to provide an access far I.he&#13;
students or the university to mo.ke their&#13;
feelings known to unh·er1tty ad·&#13;
ministration. When no committee&#13;
mttt.ngs are held, it doN become difficult&#13;
for ~wdent1 to hove such organized acct'liS&#13;
to hi,t;her echelons or university auttiorlty.&#13;
I myself have been a member of the&#13;
fliihly inlluontial Gnevance and Cleanng&#13;
House Com.mittc.&gt;t which is influenllul&#13;
l&gt;N,at..se ol ready acceu to Unh'erslty&#13;
off1r-'-'ll"- "ho can tzet thlllgs done. This&#13;
committee, chaired by Jeanette D,cmcl,&#13;
has tone to lmglhs to improve the student&#13;
relat1onsh1p on campus We have StCUred&#13;
proir.ises ot the ndrninlstralion to inst.nll&#13;
pencil sbarpenen m C""'l'ljuist Hall. and&#13;
to put a clock in the concourse. These are on order. Also we have been negotiating&#13;
for a 1oot-11ded bulletin board fir the&#13;
conc»urse and dnnting fountains in the&#13;
student louoge at OreenqulsL 0.&#13;
concrete side of Jung, ,.., 11&gt;, loo,&#13;
.. -ortmg oo suet, U11ogs •• st,"""- .._ student power on C'ampus but h~&#13;
NSults because of lhe unbtl1&#13;
.,.:.-; ~ apolhy. "lld!ii&#13;
Additionul lhi~ I have beer,&#13;
!or bll\"• bttn •boul-.nent al ~&#13;
Acliviues&#13;
takes powor&#13;
Board&#13;
away&#13;
""""&#13;
from lhe&#13;
this&#13;
mo, ::&#13;
nl&#13;
~ ""i&#13;
oritnted Student Union Co•,...__&#13;
releasing overytlung cl...irie,t •'"':i.t&#13;
information for l)llblicau.., OJ.ua .. l&gt;lbi,,&#13;
,m,reallthestudo0Lmon,y ~ students lh_h.,. dee:~ ,.::-1o&#13;
searegaled fee mooey goa, 11a,,, '-&#13;
aid In maldng up t'-clato ~..,_&#13;
than have them len up to the l'llor&#13;
of ln•truclors and the dot..,:. ........ SUXk.nl, &amp;ud [1.0A1l1 Cu haYt ~ f( h&#13;
mot! of Ille say in the racwty .,_ pro&lt;:css aa lar II lirlng1 lOII ~ rent'Wals are oollt'emed ·-•,..&#13;
As a member d the ~,.sr.,.&#13;
have interviewed nearly ., ..,,. ,n,:_: public official in the aroo .;....,.&#13;
Governor, and have made the Plillll III It&#13;
Parkside stude-nt known to tht:m '-&#13;
I •ill oontinu• lo -i,; lor ,._ pr-ovemenl of this Univ..-.ity, i.. , .. ";;&#13;
better able to do •o as a member ol l!lrt&#13;
S&gt;udcnt Senale, n.. bod) •"-I ,._ non-apathetic st1.ldent body and •&#13;
members that "'II strive to &amp;fl ~ done, can accomplish 111uch e,, lit&#13;
Umversuy.&#13;
Know who you are votina ror Plnd.-r&#13;
candidates for ol'ke an, .--c to•• "-&#13;
ptOmlst: to attend Senatt- m~i.ap.&#13;
I would like to '4,c lhe ""'°"" SIWll,a&#13;
ConslllUIIOO cltaq;ed. lolm"'C&#13;
U1ose amendm,nts propoo.J":''!&#13;
aborted Coostiluhooal Rd,..,.._ 1&#13;
hehen the amerdmmt "'°""' - i.&#13;
mor(! r&lt;!presentatlve If handlld U.rv,p&#13;
the atudenl body ,ather th.In the Scult u&#13;
anyone else feels the coMlltuooe "• • the primary faults m the lll&lt;'k of a 11:r&lt;wf&#13;
Student Govemrrentaod "C1Wdlib1el"'1&#13;
ronn a committee £or the P,.rpcllt' c( a--&#13;
proving i~ I would hke help Even !h"'lh I&#13;
lryk I can't do a demandtn, JOblillo llla1'9'&#13;
myself.&#13;
Chess Club Meeting Alpha Omega Attention chess playen and peoplt 'Abo are lntero.ted in tMrning&#13;
lh&lt;' game The Park:!td&lt;' Che!li5 Club wJJJ hold it.A second meetinw&#13;
Thursday ,ov 18. frorn ~ to 6:4S pm in room 201 on the Racille&#13;
C-,mpus If thi~ ume if mconvenient. plea.st contact eithc-r Sharon&#13;
Schwandt, 634-4623, Ti'!\ Vaccaro, 657-7'..:11l, or Ken Vlach. 835-2.'!93. You&#13;
can also lea\·e yuur rume and trlt:phone number in the Studenl Ae,.&#13;
ll\'the5 Office and ,.,"ii ~ gotten m touch \\1th. 'The C~ Oub &amp;a&#13;
planning tournaments ond olhcr event&amp;, plus they wlll be endinG a&#13;
'rJim to the ~1atitn of C'-Ol~ge Unions lntematio.W competition&#13;
1700 $heridcn lcf.&#13;
KfNOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Omcgo, the J)l.&gt;(J!)le'• mililanl&#13;
=o!uUonary socialist party,&#13;
plans to shut down O C. uni~&#13;
lhe,,e nor&gt;ncgohable demands&#13;
of thtir organization ore met&#13;
We dem&gt;nd;&#13;
t. Freeing ol all political&#13;
l)nionera;&#13;
2. Res,anataon or Nixon,&#13;
Agnew, Eaker, Daley, Hoover,&#13;
Halas, and Wyllle;&#13;
3. The rcplocing of the&#13;
Washingt01 Monument with u&#13;
Warren Ntdry Ml'fllOrial t a 200&#13;
loot grunlle syringe&gt;;&#13;
4 A Parktlde Ph)•.sical&#13;
Ea.lcation cour-se in guerilla&#13;
tnctics~&#13;
S A ne., pin ball machine&#13;
""•TY "'"' in lbe Student&#13;
Union'&#13;
6 Guflrantce evtrJ&#13;
American a -t klOIHral&#13;
7 The Ytolenl OTttttnw ~&#13;
Auxiliary Enlerprl1t1.&#13;
culmunbne tn a 11CU!k ~ Ir&#13;
bookSlJJr&lt;',&#13;
8. Replacing Vrrn t.lllltJIS&#13;
wllb a nk:kle pn bill - 9. Tbe channellrc of al It&#13;
funds from the sp.ict pr;crm&#13;
to lhe ddense fund f• llMlif&#13;
Manson.&#13;
10, A r&lt;turn en~Ollltd ilJ&#13;
the ",oice ol thP ~&#13;
John Denver,&#13;
If )OU have I landlori&#13;
shopo-»ner or mothtl"· • bt&#13;
who's been hasslinayou-ffl';&#13;
us and we·u pul our llr'!l"JI&#13;
tt-am m it. Povotr ·.,,tm' ~&#13;
PATRONIZE NEWSCOPE ADVERTISfti&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
lOtl• Toronedl&gt;, pwt . bl'lktl, pwr&#13;
""' I\CI, OM". MIIS f,K"tlry el(&#13;
11.(11)11 OI best .. ,.- 1~..:,,,i•t•&#13;
eond1t1on. C111 Jim 6$t-O.Ul&#13;
•t,o Triumpn GT6 lrlt1th Rac1no&#13;
or.., A.-1 CIQndlHon. 1,800 ml1fl, 1WO&#13;
..,...., rN•el hr.s 8tSI our ov•&#13;
11,400.0I,. '""" ... _,, ,,., "'•ks.ff&#13;
VUla,oe, 81,Hldln!J one&#13;
••• Opeil -• 1y, new w d• o••l'I.&#13;
AN FM. ll.009 m1lt1 c:•11 6J:l.«Mll&#13;
ll'OR SALe - , ... Fo(o M•tiO'l&#13;
•IIOOn '"' envww. ..,.,..,..., a,n,o&#13;
trW\sm,ss,°" (tuto,r•t•d In 9000 COf'IO•lion \JO. 171 11?2.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
I or 1 f*""•'• roo"'"•'" to .,..,. .-,,ne,f d...,.,no ~ ,.,,_e,stw&#13;
Cl!I '3'2 , •• , oe1WH"I I ano S p.m&#13;
Asit t« c,~c.t1en&#13;
Ride w11n1eo "to Chlceoo env&#13;
WM&gt;ktnd C611 7l+Jt.M.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOLK GVIT AR$ We,~,-rn oun ...&#13;
w!,h Rostwooc bOCfV, 12,, Folk&#13;
9'- t• $1' C.11.$51 2tl'l aft., 4 p.,n&#13;
FOLD GUITAR - With caae Sl$1&#13;
CIOffiptete S4t chlldr9"'$ Go,ldt,\ Boo"&#13;
Etlc-,&lt;.fOIMC;t H ., Ptrfttt COnelihon :,°.,.ce11 sn 240:lt&gt;Moresp,m, week.&#13;
Oirla:lmH9lft$ for thc, tntlre ftimltv&#13;
trom AYOn Somefhlng for • VWYOn•.&#13;
Wr9Pped for Olristm•s FREe.&#13;
Phone 45,,t !237. No Obllt;:t•llon.&#13;
Wl!:LCOMt COME BRO·NSE -&#13;
•'h,no in 11e«1·• O•ft Np, $11 1, . Mreei R•dne. Ol)ln 12 to $ p,m.&#13;
Tu~ays l'lru sunoevs f=ridavs tll&#13;
9 00 P m INllfift.,I h..W,m_,. fl_,.t&#13;
aold cre,o·lve wor ll. •so •••corn"&#13;
.V.01rit• It• &lt;;ult.,-. Double pick.&#13;
I.ID, hOllolt,tx,ay "'-•fh PhnlH n • cl "·l'"d Sh~I CHe. Good conclllkln. WH&#13;
kSO new, win MIi tor 1100. Contact'&#13;
LMrv, P.,ksid,e Vlll~•- Alp. lot, s.u 1J,1, or 1ea1te met.sage a,&#13;
N• Moop~ otti~o.&#13;
FOR SALii - 0Qo • WirM•lrt&lt;I fox&#13;
1err1~ ,AICC '~--. WkS otd. Call SS3 2l1t, Of 6D.J.S6S,&#13;
~-, lktd, size 10 lkl boo 15, Sl.00.&#13;
INFORNIATION tt"11,.a - fOr&#13;
tirowsino •• ;:, t11t,1e 1r1 tl'le 1n&#13;
forma11011 Cmt•r, T•11on1 Hall, "'°"' 101&#13;
PR.el KITTEN'S - Sl"'f t::&#13;
from tt\e g.S Cflll'l'IDII'.&#13;
CDIOrwd Gell 111 11'1&#13;
PERSONALS _ &#13;
Soccer Team Defeats Platteville&#13;
1'nND~ u. lffl Papll&#13;
;oe's soecer team&#13;
I" ~ay-off victory and ;.4 • ". s,asoo record to&#13;
,,_.i ''! overtime victory ~· ... ' ,;I P1allev1lle. ... (11'· ' Ill play-off bal~e&#13;
IV~• was loaded with&#13;
.-FIJI ms 1,atUed to a ,,.. .. 111:~ner regul~llon&#13;
~ two five m1(!ute&#13;
;,, .w&lt;tbe score remained I•&#13;
~ . .,.. a play-off&#13;
"""' '&#13;
1&#13;
had lo be 1": ~ :'r7team had five&#13;
.,i,d st,olS. with Platteville :::.C oo• 10 Parkside's&#13;
... ~ were made from 11&#13;
11' "'' and Rang..- goalie ""'n,on,,on made • strong&#13;
,. e!forl ' stopping two&#13;
-: anticipoUng correctly _, . tinS quickly.&#13;
-:.,,:.,., UW-Green Bay&#13;
1ollle ror Playoff B,rth&#13;
., the week UW-Green&#13;
..'::OiPJatteville 3·1 so now&#13;
1 t,,t-.-etn Parkside and&#13;
Cross&#13;
Country&#13;
,.,,ooa1 and ~gional cross&#13;
9f1'1 championships were&#13;
iGi111 11 Parkside in a U.S.&#13;
bl and Field Federation&#13;
~meet.&#13;
rmag the men•s national&#13;
-·• UUe was John Kot· wofMilwaukee, while Amy&#13;
lllnan. also of Milwaukee,&#13;
lltdll nabonal women's tiUe.&#13;
Jilm Lath of the Chicago&#13;
hlQllb,.,asanother winner.&#13;
- dlt ten team open meet&#13;
Pllliid, placed fourlll, with&#13;
Illy Alvarez emergi...i as the&#13;
'""111'1' r,msher, capturing&#13;
"'place.&#13;
Qiu Ottlman finished 12th,&#13;
"'1 Lance 17th, Bill Carlson&#13;
Ill. Ind Keith Merritt +1th.&#13;
'lie Ringers would have&#13;
.. • belier showing had&#13;
- Rosa and Jim Mc• hldni hem able to run. Illness&#13;
•~)lrieskepl them oul of the&#13;
111&lt;t °"'"1s Biel was unable lo&#13;
....&#13;
"It •·ere considerably&#13;
~,.ed" said Assist.ant&#13;
~ \~ic Godfrey. "We we&#13;
llllcl bl,·e run the way we&#13;
::, run we would have&#13;
second." ~ ~olvenuy of Chicago&#13;
Club look first In lhe&#13;
""lolob This club is com-&#13;
~ ol tJ&lt;-wllegians, most of&#13;
-i:1 '-'trt stars on colJege&#13;
~•nd lwo were national&#13;
~. ''There is no way&#13;
" ~ bavt beaten them " ~ added. •&#13;
Green Bay for the Play-off spot.&#13;
(n an earliar meellng the h\•o&#13;
learns balUed lo a tie al Green&#13;
Bay.&#13;
Coach Beza Martiny com,&#13;
menled on how the learn has&#13;
progressed. "The team has&#13;
suffered a large number oi&#13;
Injuries which have had a&#13;
negative effect. As a unil lhe&#13;
leam Is doing ••ell nonethe1-&#13;
wl!h Rick Lednn,. a lreshma11.t&#13;
being the top sccrtr so var- "&#13;
Martiny continued. ..Al&#13;
pre.1ent the team is wortUl&amp; on&#13;
drills lo improve both thf&#13;
defense and offense»&#13;
"Our hardest ,natch v.ill be&#13;
the upcoming came against&#13;
UW-Gr..,.. Bay," be added.&#13;
Women Gymnasts Win Two Meets&#13;
Parkside women gymnasts be.at UW·Whlt.ewattr at the 1n&#13;
termediate optional level, ~231,, Wednesday, Nov. 11, at Park Htgh&#13;
School. Parkside winners were Kathy Kramer, Mary Jo G1anot11 and&#13;
Karen Sivley in valuting and floor exercise evenL'i- Gianotti 'and&#13;
Kramer took second and third m the uneven parallel bars. All~a.round&#13;
•.vinners were Kramer, Sivley and Undy R&lt;id. Al the beg1mer ievd&#13;
Liz Slellberg took third in vaulU.,g and all-around competition.&#13;
In earlier competition Parhide beal UW.Stevens Point 65.."' to&#13;
26'10. Slellberg won aJl·around competition al the beginner l"'el In&#13;
mtermediate optional contests Kramer won noor exertise, ~t!ni,&#13;
and all-around~ Gianotti won vaulting and Si\•ley was second on the&#13;
balance beam .&#13;
The gymnasls traveled to Oskhold Moodo.y, Nov 15. and met&#13;
Oshkosh and Stevens Point. Saturday, November 20, is the reg10ral&#13;
meet at Whitewater at 11 a,m, LaCrosse hosts the s~le meet&#13;
~mber4.&#13;
'71-'72 UW-P&#13;
Basketball Schedule&#13;
Coach Steve Stephus-Asst. Ken Oberbru~r&#13;
Dec. 1-Western Michigan Kalamazoo, Mich.&#13;
Dec. 4-Wayne St.ate Parkside (Case HS.&gt;&#13;
Dec. a-Lake Forest Parkside (Racine Memonal&#13;
Hall)&#13;
Doc. 11 - uw-oreenBay Parkside(CascHS,&#13;
Dec. 18-Northern Michigan Park&amp;de &lt; Memonal&#13;
Hall&gt; . Doc. 21 - Purdue-Nonb Central w .. 1v1lle, fod.&#13;
Dec 29-:IO-Green 8'1yClassic Green Bay, \I as.&#13;
Jan: ii-UW•Milwaukee Parkside ( Memorial&#13;
Hall) W t-• V. Jan 5- carroll College au =••· 15&#13;
Jan: 8- UW-Plattevitte Parkside&lt; Mem~1al Hall I&#13;
Jan. 11 - Xavier Coll&lt;11e &lt;Chicago• Chicago, rn&#13;
Jan. 15-Missouri-St.l.ouis Parkslde(Memonal&#13;
Hall)&#13;
Jan. 17-Southern Dlinoi., . rdsville, lJl&#13;
Edwardsville _ Ed\\a&#13;
Jan. 18-lndlana Sta~Evansv1lle E\'ansville,&#13;
Ind. Milton, Wis t!~: ;5-~~1&#13;
;:.~:e . Grand Rapi~:~~:. Feb. 5-Xavier College ( Chicago&gt;&#13;
( Memoria l H•ll &gt; .... . k Milwaukee. nlS Feb. 8-UW-Mllwau ee C B Was •=· Green Bay reen •&gt;· Feb. 17- v ,.. Sheboygan WIS&#13;
Feb.19-LakelandC&lt;&gt;llege n-one Wis&#13;
0 · · can College ~ ' Feb. 21- om1ru W I CA Pla•offs&#13;
Feb. 29 . Mar. 4 - · · : · ,..,;.r&#13;
M~r. 1:3.18-M A.l.A.NataonaJ Ka~City, Mo&#13;
namenl C s=;n 11-P M All UW-Parkttide Home ames ... &amp;-&#13;
Central Standard Time&#13;
!I&#13;
It's the. realth1ng.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
wednesday&#13;
10 oz. BEER 15¢&#13;
PITCHER 75¢&#13;
PIZZA HUT&#13;
on uood road JUSI south of parltiid~&#13;
The lacc,c )C) le,&#13;
and accc~\Oric,&#13;
including After&#13;
Six are ac&#13;
:,&#13;
-·&#13;
-&#13;
CD&#13;
GINO&#13;
SPORT~WEAR&#13;
2212-60 ,tn:ec&#13;
in kenosha</text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 5, issue 11, November 15, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Date</name>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63530">
              <text>1971-11-15</text>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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        <element elementId="44">
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              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
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          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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