<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2320" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/2320?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-23T06:19:43+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="2965">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/414776372d574123b3d2d6264962e2c9.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a1fccdb71df818ca9596ee6962b73c07</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="89853">
            <text>A Guy Named Suh&#13;
Remembering back to the first few weeks&#13;
of the semester, there seemed to be a&#13;
goodly number of aching, limping, black&#13;
and ulue bodies wandering around the&#13;
three campuses. No, there wasn't a dem-!&#13;
oostration or riot or rash of automobUe&#13;
accidents, just a simple, one credit course&#13;
titled "Judo - Self Defense." The instructor&#13;
is a pleasant, easy-going man&#13;
with a sixth degree red and while (black)&#13;
belt in Judo.&#13;
Byung Dae Suh (pronounced Sue) is&#13;
Parkside's resident Judo expert. His 24&#13;
years of experience dale back to his&#13;
Pollution Radio&#13;
Talks Announced&#13;
The existence, extent and grave hazards&#13;
of pollution are no longer subjects for&#13;
debate. PolIuUon is at last unanimously&#13;
recognized for the cuplrit that it is, one&#13;
of the most macabre crises threatening&#13;
the existence of nre on earth today.&#13;
Few die-hards remain who still proclaim&#13;
pollution to b~e a necessity w.hich&#13;
can co-exist with life. The current great&#13;
debate is no longer what and who pollution's&#13;
causes and offenders are, but&#13;
whether pottutlon can be overcome before&#13;
it snuffs out Ufe itself.&#13;
In an effort to examine the pollution&#13;
problem, WLIP president and general&#13;
manager WUliam E. Lipman has announced&#13;
a two-part series of panel dis ..&#13;
cuss ions on pollution, which will be heard&#13;
two consecutive Saturdays on UCollege&#13;
Talk-In."&#13;
Part one "Pcl lutton - Its Cause and&#13;
Effect on the Quality of Live," will be&#13;
heard Jan. 17. Part two. "Pollution _&#13;
Its Cure •.. the Role of Government,&#13;
Industry and the Individual," wui be heard&#13;
Jan. 24.&#13;
Moderator of the panels will be Dr.&#13;
Douglas LaF-ollette, assistant professor&#13;
of chemistry at Parkside. LaFollette is&#13;
president of the Root River restoration&#13;
council and a southeastern representative&#13;
of the Federation of American Scientists.&#13;
He frequently speaks on conservation and&#13;
pollution in this area. LaFollette received&#13;
his Ph.D. from Columbia University.&#13;
Students representing Parkside on the&#13;
panel wUl be Berry E. Jones, 5702 31st&#13;
avenue, and Alfred P. Krampert,· 7754&#13;
Seventh avenue, both of Kenosha.&#13;
Jones is a life science junior and&#13;
Krampert a special student in conservation&#13;
and ecology. Host of College Talk-In is&#13;
Jim Bradley, news director of WLIP.&#13;
Jansky to Exhibit&#13;
A show of polyester impregnated fiberglass&#13;
SCUlptures by Rollin Jansky of The&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parks ide art&#13;
faculty w1ll be on exhibit Jan. 5 through 23&#13;
at the Fox Valley Campus of The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Green Bay.&#13;
The show was on display during December&#13;
at the UWGBManitowoc Campus.&#13;
All of the cast fiberglass SCUlptures&#13;
are recent works and many of the pieces,&#13;
shown are part of a series based on&#13;
interconnections of three basic modules&#13;
Which take the shapes of circles and&#13;
ellipses.&#13;
Some of the sculptures are painted with&#13;
auto enamel spray paint While others&#13;
derive their color from pigmented resin.&#13;
Jansky Said the works range in size&#13;
from an IS-inch rounded cube toa massive&#13;
work about seven feet high to a long slender&#13;
form about seven feet long.&#13;
Faculty Artists Exhibit&#13;
Work by two University of Wisconsin&#13;
faculty members will be featured during&#13;
January at Wustum Museum of Fine Arts,&#13;
2519 Northwestern Ave., Racine, according&#13;
to Sylvester Jerry, Wustum director.&#13;
The artists are Robert Cadezofthe UWParks&#13;
ide art faculty and 'Robert Burkert&#13;
of the UW-MUwaukee faculty.&#13;
The show opened Sunday, Jan. 4, when&#13;
Burkert presented one in the museum's&#13;
series of afternoon art lectures at 3 p.m.&#13;
The exhibit wlll hang through Jan. 25.&#13;
• • •&#13;
middle school days. He began at the age&#13;
of 12, progressing through 3 years of&#13;
middle school, 3 years of high school,&#13;
and 4 years of college. He presently&#13;
holds a sixth, degree black belt and hopes&#13;
to advance his POsition in the future.&#13;
Born and raised In Korea, Mr. Suh has&#13;
traveled to many countries and has had&#13;
varied teaching experiences. He taught in&#13;
a Korean college and has visited South&#13;
Viet Nam with a jude demonstration team.&#13;
The Army has also benefited from his&#13;
talent as an instructor. As a resident&#13;
of the United States for approximately&#13;
2 and a half years, he has taught judo at&#13;
various recreational and educational centers&#13;
in Illinois. A few of these are New&#13;
Trier B.S., University of Chicago, Northbrook&#13;
YMCA, and Great Lakes Naval&#13;
Training Center. Now, Parks ide can boast&#13;
of having this talented man to instruct the&#13;
students in the art of self-defense.&#13;
According to Mr. Suh, judo is not only a&#13;
sport based on self-defense but also a&#13;
sport based on recreation and physical&#13;
education. It takes a lot of dexterity and&#13;
stamina to participate in this sport so the&#13;
participant must be in top physical condltfon,&#13;
~,&#13;
The. United States is progressing in its&#13;
Inter-est in Judo. More and more high&#13;
schools and colleges are offering uus&#13;
course to the students, Mr. Suh wouldltke&#13;
to see Parksdie get off the ground and&#13;
build up a JUdo club and eventually have&#13;
intercollegiate competition.&#13;
Parkstde-s athletic department has recruited&#13;
many excellent physical education&#13;
instructors In order to give the athletes&#13;
and interested students a chance to learn&#13;
~tlu~ 'best;--rnrsis agarn thecase in&#13;
Judo as in track and field, basketball,&#13;
fencing, and the other sports here at&#13;
Parkside. Mr. Suh, an interesting, cordial&#13;
and dynamic man, will add greatly to&#13;
Parkside's athletic program.&#13;
9 JANUARY 1970&#13;
Scholarships'&#13;
The Racine Branch of the American&#13;
Association of _University Women has&#13;
announced that appitcattons now are being&#13;
accepted for the $400 scholarship which&#13;
AAUW awards annually to a Racine County&#13;
girl.&#13;
The scholarship award, which is based&#13;
on academic achievement and financial&#13;
need, is awarded each year to a Racine&#13;
County girl beginning her junior year at&#13;
any accredited, degree-granting college&#13;
or university the fall after the grant is&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Deadline for filing applications is Aprll&#13;
1. The .scholar-ship will be awarded at&#13;
AAUW's annual banquet in May. .&#13;
Appl1catlon blanks may be obtained&#13;
from Mrs. Dorothy C. Melvtn, 2017 N.&#13;
Green Bay Road, Racine, Wis. 53405, the&#13;
scholarship committee chairman, or from&#13;
deans or student affairs directors at a&#13;
student's college or university.&#13;
Application blanks should be returned&#13;
to Mrs. Melvin along with a transcript of&#13;
'the student-s credits for her first three&#13;
semesters or four quarters of college&#13;
work.&#13;
Soviet Policy Article&#13;
Dr. Roger Hamburg, an assistant professor&#13;
01 political science at The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkslde, is the&#13;
author of an article, "Soviet Foreign&#13;
.Polfcy: The Church, The Christian Democrats&#13;
and Chile," which appears In the&#13;
current issue of the Journal of InterAmerican&#13;
Studies ,&#13;
Dr. Hamburg, a specialist in Inter-s&#13;
national relations and Soviet foreign&#13;
policy J received his bachelor's degree at&#13;
fhe University of Michigan, master's&#13;
degree at the University of Chicago, and&#13;
PhD. at UW-Madison. He-taught at Eastern&#13;
washington State College and Marquette&#13;
University before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Student Affairs Office Services&#13;
Many students are currently unaware of the various services offered by the Office&#13;
of Student AffaIrs. Listed below are some of the areas in which students may receive&#13;
service from the Student Affairs Staff. Student Affairs Offices are located on all three&#13;
campuses:&#13;
Tallent Hall - Room 203&#13;
Extension 225&#13;
Kenosha Campus.- Room 135&#13;
Extension .42, 43 or 44&#13;
Racine Campus - Main Hall 208&#13;
Extension R 24, 25, 26&#13;
Academic Planning, for inquiries such as:&#13;
Choice of courses, drop and add courses, withdrawal&#13;
Choice or change of major, referral for assignment to faculty adviser&#13;
Progress in major area&#13;
University aCfldemic requirements and regulations&#13;
Career Phmning, for inquiries such as:&#13;
Employability and/or occupational goals&#13;
Interest and ability relative to career choice&#13;
Source of occupatlonal-educatiQnal information&#13;
Planning for graduate school&#13;
Reading and Learning Skills, for concerns s~ch as:&#13;
• Improving reading and other educational skills&#13;
Difficulty In understanding textbooks, lectures, instructors&#13;
Improving ability to prepare for and take exams&#13;
Improving ability to concentrate on studies&#13;
Not enough time for study and/or recreation&#13;
Taking uninteresting courses&#13;
Improving organization of study, use of time&#13;
Personal Consultation, for concerns about:&#13;
Interpersonal relationships&#13;
Making friends, getting into actiVities&#13;
Differences between ideas and standards upheld at home and those expressed at&#13;
the University&#13;
Wanting to drop out of school, go home, or go somewhere else&#13;
Feelings of discouragement, unhappiness, nervousness or inadequacy&#13;
Sense of direction, planning personal life&#13;
Coping with problems of alcohol, drugs, etc.&#13;
StUdent Organization Consultation, for inquiries such as:&#13;
Planning, initiating and running a student organization&#13;
Regulations regarding student organizations&#13;
. Planning campus activities&#13;
Activity registration and space reservation&#13;
PubliciZing campus activities&#13;
Foreign StUdent Advising&#13;
Student Health Service&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Division&#13;
Meets&#13;
Areas coneerrung courses, Sum me r&#13;
school, and student enrollment were discussed&#13;
at the Humanities DiVision meeting&#13;
of November 10, held at Greenquist Hall. Mr" Gerald Musich, chairman of the&#13;
Humanities Curriculum Committee, inciVdtd&#13;
in his report that some leeway is&#13;
auowatae in offering courses beyond those&#13;
listed in the catalogue. Some probable.&#13;
addtttcns are:&#13;
Independent Study courses 499&#13;
Problems course in any discipline&#13;
Music course 490&#13;
Communications 210, American Rhetorical&#13;
Movements&#13;
Music 106, Symphony, 2 credits&#13;
French 318&#13;
Spanish 318&#13;
Of the present catalogue listings, 64%.&#13;
of the courses are now being taught or&#13;
offered; in some disciplines, 85%, and in&#13;
some a fewer percentage. Some discrepancies&#13;
must be straightened out in Education&#13;
certification. Errors in the Parkside&#13;
catalogue should be reported to Mr.&#13;
Musich.&#13;
Further concerns of the Curz'Iculum&#13;
Committee were:&#13;
1. .62 per cent of students enrolled are&#13;
freshmen. Only one/eighth of the total are&#13;
'junior-s and seniors. Two problems concerning&#13;
this are: a. the retention of upperctassmsa,&#13;
and (b) a possible loss of upper&#13;
claasmen when the present freshmen and&#13;
sophomores enter the junior year.&#13;
2. They are also studying compatible&#13;
courses and anticipate similar problems&#13;
for present undergraduates, who may need&#13;
seminars for interesting appeal and needed&#13;
credits.&#13;
3. The division will decide what is&#13;
offered in summer school.&#13;
A motion was passed to form a summer-s&#13;
school-offerings committee, whose mem-·&#13;
bers will be appointed by Dr. Gray,&#13;
chairman of the Humanities Division.&#13;
It was moved, amended, and carried&#13;
that the stucent Government be requested&#13;
to select three students In the Humanities&#13;
Division, to serve with the seven faculty&#13;
members on the Curriculum Committee,&#13;
and that the Student Government officers&#13;
be asked to appoint members with any·&#13;
qualifications they regard as germane.&#13;
StUdents so appointed must establish office&#13;
hours and consult w1th students, seeking&#13;
out student opinion.&#13;
Non-voting Visitors are welcome ~&#13;
atoond the _meetings.&#13;
Juniors Must&#13;
Declare Maiors&#13;
Declaration of M a j 0 r forms have&#13;
recently been mailed to students who will&#13;
have accumulated approximately 60 or&#13;
more credits by the end of the current&#13;
semester. The purpose of declaring a&#13;
major is to initiate the students formal&#13;
referral by the various Division Offices&#13;
to a faculty adviser in the student's&#13;
major field.&#13;
StUdents who w1l1 have accumulated&#13;
approximately 60 or more credits by the&#13;
end of the current semester and did not&#13;
file the Declaration of Major forms at a&#13;
Student Affairs Office by the December&#13;
19th deadline should do so as soon as&#13;
possible.&#13;
General Degree Requirement Worksheets&#13;
and addltiona11nformatlon regarding&#13;
Elementary and Secondary Education&#13;
are available at Student Affairs Omceson&#13;
each campus. Also, education stUdents&#13;
hoping to graduate by August, 1970. should&#13;
'have contacted Mr. Elmore, Director of&#13;
Admissions in Tallent Hall, for information&#13;
on Student Teaching and Certification.&#13;
As My Guitar Gently Weeps ...&#13;
ED BORCHARDT Among the leaves and trees of Parkstdtl&#13;
By this is an obvious truth for among&#13;
This article is the result at a few days that lovely herbage are 3,000 vegetabl::&#13;
of deep depression and maudlin fantasy NLxongave us the term !18llent Majority':&#13;
brought about by the demise of the 60's. and few of us realized he 'was fight&#13;
While the ideas put forward here can be most of the nation is one immense t I&#13;
dismissed as warped, dueto the condiUons farm. ruck&#13;
surroundlrc their birth, I submit that that Wrapping things up in a nutshell Wbi&#13;
is all the more reason they be accepted. Is the fashion today as it avoids ~1l thCb&#13;
Robbed of all optimism they reflect realIty messy thinking one might say' "Tat&#13;
sans rose-colored distortions. Early in more things ch~ngeJ the more th~ sthe&#13;
Dostoevskl's career, he was interested in the same." y ay&#13;
saving the Russian Empire through reform.&#13;
After a long period of imprisonment&#13;
and punishment he believed the&#13;
peasant's belief inChrist, the Czar, and the&#13;
Eastern Church would save Russia. Fortunately,&#13;
Dostoevski died long before the&#13;
Revolution.&#13;
It has occurred to me that neither Nixon,&#13;
Agnew, Mitchell, Laird, nor Podgorny,&#13;
Breznev, Castro, or Mao are acting out&#13;
o.f a perverse sense of evn, They are doing&#13;
what they believe to be right. Beliefs are&#13;
tricky things, the more you try to force&#13;
a person to change his beliefs the more&#13;
set they become. This is one- reason for&#13;
the present world situation. Nixon and&#13;
his group are determined to save America&#13;
thefr . OWN way, even if they have to&#13;
release Agnew on the world.&#13;
This brings up another point. Mosteonfiiets&#13;
people get emotional about are unimportant.&#13;
Only three issues before us&#13;
now will still matter in twenty years;&#13;
Pollution, Population, and the Arms Race,&#13;
In the next hundred years everY other&#13;
issue being debated today will have been&#13;
forgotten long ago. By 2070 Abbe Hoffman&#13;
wUl be somebcdy-s great-grandfather,&#13;
Janis Joplln wm. replace Jenny Lind, the&#13;
ABM will be a museum piece, and human&#13;
suUerlng wID still continue.&#13;
For those of you myopic Jndividuals who&#13;
believe that this generation is destined&#13;
to rind the Holy Grall and reach the&#13;
Impossible Dream my second argument&#13;
becomes a metaphysical pin to prick your&#13;
dormant intellectUal capacities. Just as&#13;
the vast majorIty 'of issues are unimportant,&#13;
the vast majority of individuals are&#13;
un\mportant. Nobody is anybody, society&#13;
is a collection of mass ...produced elements.&#13;
Bus Shelter Scheduled&#13;
the bus schedule. At 7:30 a.m. one bus&#13;
at both Racine and Kenosha leave direct ..&#13;
ly for the other campus (they do not stop&#13;
at Tallent HaU). After that, every time&#13;
on the hour a bus wUlleave Kenosha and&#13;
Racine tor Tallent. They both leave Tallent&#13;
on the halt hoe r. There are also runs&#13;
between Tallent and Greenqutst when the&#13;
busses arrive at Tallent. At 5:00 p.m.&#13;
a third bus begtns shuttle service tJ:etween&#13;
Tallent and Gr_lst only. Finally al&#13;
10:00 p.m, the buses leave xenosna and&#13;
Racine for Talient. At Tallent they go&#13;
to Greenqutst and back to Talfent again.&#13;
Then they head back to Kenosha or ~c1ne&#13;
to be ready for another day. Now that&#13;
wasn't confus1Dg, or was .it? '&#13;
By LARRY M.A TTooN&#13;
A bus shelter "til be huUt so that some&#13;
deerH' at comfort wUl be attained when&#13;
standinl at the bus stop at Tallent Hall on&#13;
windy, cold or rainy days. The administration&#13;
rHl1zes that It is not conducive&#13;
to the health or Parkside students. Only&#13;
Tallent Han will receive a bus shelter&#13;
Ilnee the other campus buUdlncs are&#13;
near enough to the bus stops to walt inaide.&#13;
At Greenqulst the bus stop will&#13;
H cna,.ed SO that the students on the&#13;
upper and lower D revel will be abJe to&#13;
reach lbe bus easily. This is so that&#13;
another bus shelter need oot be ecut,&#13;
Anotber probJem is that or where is&#13;
Uw bul? Here In summary is ~1ca11~&#13;
Time bIs Ie.... Location&#13;
1:30 •• m, One bus at each campus (J&lt;:enosha and Racine) leaves&#13;
at 1:30 • .m. and roes directly to the other campus.&#13;
It does not slop at Tallent.&#13;
Kenosha or Racine (When bus arrives at Tallent it&#13;
makes a run to Greenquist and then back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One bus goes toKenosba,theotherto Racine.)&#13;
Raclne or Kenosha (When bus arrives at Tallent it&#13;
makes a run to Greenqulst and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One bus to Kenosha, the other to Racine.)&#13;
Racine or Kenosha (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greeoquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One bus goes to Kenosha, the other to Ractne.)&#13;
Kenosha or Racine (When bus arrives at Tallent it&#13;
makes a run to Greeoquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One bus to Kenosha, the other to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha or Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Creenqulst and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One bus to Kenosha. the other .to Raefnes)&#13;
Kenosha or Racine (Bus'alTives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenqulst and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Talfent (One bJs to Kenosha, the other to Racine.)&#13;
K8Ilosha or Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
TaJlent (One bus to Kenosha, and one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha and Racine (Bus arrives atTallentandmakes&#13;
run to Greenquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha and one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha/Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenqutst and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha, the other to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha/Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
NOTE: StarUng at 5:00 p.m. there is one bus for&#13;
shuttle service between Tallent and Greenqulst.&#13;
this bus ONLY makes runs between the tw~&#13;
bUildings.&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha, one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha and Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenqulst and back.) ~&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha and one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha/Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenqulst and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha and one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha/Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha and Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha and one to Racine.)&#13;
KenOSha/Racine (l3us arrives at Tallent makes rWl to&#13;
Greenquist and back to Tallent and then goes to&#13;
Kenosha or Racine.)&#13;
':00 a.m.&#13;
1:30 a.m,&#13;
8:00 a.m.&#13;
g:30 a.m.&#13;
10:00a.m.&#13;
10:'0 a.m.&#13;
11:00 a.m.&#13;
11:301.m.&#13;
12:00 p.m.&#13;
12:30 e.m.&#13;
1:00 p.m,&#13;
1:30 p.m.&#13;
2:00 p.m.&#13;
2:30 p.m.&#13;
3:00 p.m.&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
4:00 p.m.&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
5:00 p.m.&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
6:00 p.m.&#13;
.:30 p.m.&#13;
7:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
8:30 p.m.&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
9:30 p.m.&#13;
10:00 p.m. Last Run&#13;
A DulJ 130 Minutes'&#13;
Katherine HePburn is an estabUshed&#13;
slar of unprecedented magnitude .. What ..&#13;
e.er forced her Into this arrant movie&#13;
mut have been six rfcured and green.&#13;
Any personage to have made this movie&#13;
would need to be CObStlpated and over&#13;
eichty to dell\oer tbe retarded lines.&#13;
U any play need be written for the&#13;
screen, Edward Anhalt shOUld be the last&#13;
to do so. His script la so slow in capturing&#13;
the aUdience, that it takes two hours&#13;
and ten minutes to do $0 (playing Ume Of&#13;
the movie is about two hours and rtfteen&#13;
minutes) even thOUChthe last tive minutes&#13;
of the movie show slens ot IUe.&#13;
Somet.lme In the dull t,..o hours and ten&#13;
minut.. the audience must wonder just&#13;
who bas been mad. Is itKatherine Hep,urn&#13;
who pia,. the Madwoman or Chalilol or&#13;
is U •• the audience who P&amp;1dmoney' for&#13;
tbla IDept rarbq:e ot a clamorous Holly- w_?&#13;
WhU. KatberlDe Hepburn and the east&#13;
romp thrOUCb the streets of Parts we&#13;
reaD, wODder U we are supposed to&#13;
aec ... tbe tantuy of such a movie Could&#13;
Jou ICcept DamJ Kaye plcklnc carbage orr&#13;
'be alrftta or Paris? COuld JOU like In&#13;
Donald Pleasence's performance of a&#13;
toUet worshipper, or Yul Brynner's performance&#13;
of a bald-headed millionaire?&#13;
Such is the quality of this star-studded&#13;
piece of garbage picked out of a mUlton&#13;
dollar toilet.&#13;
The original play by Jean Glraudoux&#13;
did have pOssibility for a movie. Just&#13;
what could be lovelier than to tell a tale&#13;
about a madworpan who lives in the past&#13;
Naturally some "rich bad men" find&#13;
all uDdemeath the city of PariS and want&#13;
to excavate it. Seeirc the cruelty of the&#13;
world in these "evU men" the madwoman&#13;
Saves all of Paris. Thvrnovie version&#13;
updates, pads, and expands untU--tllere is&#13;
sometb1rc about the f4estabUshment" also&#13;
mixed In.&#13;
MOViegoers will find the mOVie Quite&#13;
complete. For those Who think- WoOd .&#13;
WUsoo's League of Nations idea Was row&#13;
lhey will have Edith Evans While gthoOOd,&#13;
who p-r • . se&#13;
..... er religious aspects will .}&#13;
John Gavin. Also for the French ove&#13;
there la Charles Boyer I the Elffel ~ded,&#13;
;;:, left over lets from "My Fair L~~:~:&#13;
but an~:::b~everything going for it,&#13;
SCHObARSHIP,S"&#13;
GRANTS&#13;
LOANS&#13;
1970-71&#13;
J'~M~&#13;
~~Ut;&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 213&#13;
Final Deadline&#13;
March 1, 1970&#13;
'JJirtnncinlll.ids 'lJuUelin&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
Open Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
,&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
I&#13;
~928Sixtieth Street&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
YOurComplete "On Campus" Book and Supply Centel&#13;
UNI~~RS!!: ,..!.?2~STORES&#13;
'P pricepaid for used texts which wil' b .J '.&#13;
I e useu next term&#13;
Book. Jor EJlERYONE· he • W S m, ~m~&#13;
e peciel-Order ANY B k I •&#13;
00 n PrInt&#13;
l&#13;
Campus Editors Now Say What They Think&#13;
at private colleges except for small,&#13;
church-run schools, have long been able&#13;
• to print four-letter words with little outcry.&#13;
At the private schools, the controversy&#13;
has been chieny political. Believing that&#13;
the student papers did not give proper&#13;
voice to administration vtews and announcements,&#13;
several schools - Including&#13;
Boston University, Cornell and Harvard&#13;
-have founded official weekly newspapers.&#13;
Columbia, Yale, Stanford and SOuthern&#13;
California are also said to be considering&#13;
such publications.&#13;
At Harvard, a discussion-oriented student-run&#13;
paper, The Harvardlndependent,&#13;
has also risen as competition for The&#13;
Harvard Crimson, which some faculty and&#13;
students have charged with being biased&#13;
in favor of radical students.&#13;
Newspapers in conservative areas seem&#13;
to have encountered particular trouble.&#13;
The Colorado Daily, at the University of&#13;
Colorado in Boulder, 1s possibly the most&#13;
radical campus paper in the country.&#13;
Seven members of its business staff&#13;
attempted recently to moderate its tone,&#13;
but their leader was dismissed by the&#13;
editors. The daily has also incurred the&#13;
wrath of Colorado's new president, Frederick&#13;
Thieme, and now faces some competition&#13;
from a (lmoderate" semiweekly,&#13;
T he Colorado Student News. which has been&#13;
raiding its advertisers. But no formal&#13;
action has been taken against The Daily.&#13;
Nearby at the Colorado School of Mines&#13;
in Golden, the Oredigger, traditionally&#13;
among the most conservative campus&#13;
newspapers, is now edited by Jack Yeneh,&#13;
a senior from the Philippines, who has&#13;
given it a decidedlyliberaloutlookstressIng&#13;
controversy.&#13;
Mr. Yench was warned that he would&#13;
lose his post, or even be expelled from the&#13;
school, by the president, Orlo E. Childs,&#13;
after the paper repo rted the use of fourletter&#13;
words .by the school's cheerleaders.&#13;
The student-faculty Board of Publications&#13;
found nothing 'leven close to obscenity"&#13;
by Supreme Court guidelines.&#13;
1'J: suspect the r~al issue is that the&#13;
-------------&#13;
Tallent Hall Is Boarded Up&#13;
c 1969 by The New York Tfmes Co ,&#13;
Reprinted with permission In an interview. the president, Dr.&#13;
Frederick Meier, said he had acted because&#13;
the Log had failed to submit "questionable"&#13;
material to the publications&#13;
board, as specified in its policy statement.&#13;
The Cleaver article, he argued, was of&#13;
Salem, Masa.; Dec. 2-In an atmos- doubtful suitability because the college&#13;
phere of crisis, the student editors of the has a grammar school for teacher traincampus&#13;
newspapers at six of Massa- ing purposes and the article might be&#13;
chusetts" state colleges gathered here seen by the children. In addition, he said,&#13;
recently in the small cluttered office ot he belfeved it Violated state obscenity&#13;
the Salem State College Log. statutes. The police found no basis "for&#13;
They had come to organize support for action. however.&#13;
the Cycle at Fitchburg State College. The "I know nothing about the press," he&#13;
school's president had canceled an issue said, obviously weary at the controversy.&#13;
of the paper alter the printer informed him "I'm a chemist by trade."&#13;
that the issue was. to contain an article The editors believe that Dr. Meier's&#13;
by Eldridge Cleaver. the Black Panther actions are really based on fear of the&#13;
leader. The text was considered obscene state legislature, which holds the purse&#13;
by the printer and the pres ldent. strings.&#13;
The Massachusetts situation paralleled "The idea that you have to censor ever-yothers&#13;
throughout the country as college thing because some legislator may t&gt;e&#13;
newspapers seek to assert' their editorial upset is absurd " said HelenAuchterlonie&#13;
independence and venture boldly into areas' the sandY-halr~d 21-year-old editor ofth~&#13;
of social and political opinion they have Log. 'lJt's also absurd that we have to&#13;
long avoided. reduce the paper to the level of sixth&#13;
Interviews with administrations, faculty graders.&#13;
and students at more than 30 colleges "This paper is distributed for adults.&#13;
around the nation show that officially He's forgetting who this college is for _&#13;
sanctioned college papers are provoking it's not 'rcr his Iegtslators or for the&#13;
wide unhappiness among college admtn- grammar school children."&#13;
istrators and conservative students and, Last February, the Log, which receives&#13;
to a lesser extent, radical students. $11,000 a year from student fees, accused&#13;
In many cases, the papers have assumed Dr. Meier of creating an atmosphere of&#13;
activist roles, crusading against the war ; "intimidation" and "repression" and sugthe&#13;
government, social conditions, and gested he resign.&#13;
campus officials. In the process, some of While an agreement was finaIlyreached&#13;
their editors have risked jail, fines, loss to restore the Log's funds, Miss Auchterof&#13;
funds and advertising and expulsion lonie is not optimistic. "It's not going to&#13;
from their positions. get better _ the campus is ready to blow&#13;
In Hartford today. three University of up."&#13;
Hartford students went on trial on charges Meanwhile, the editor at Fitchburg, John&#13;
of criminal libel against President Nixon. Antonelli has filed suit against the colThe&#13;
charges stem from a cartoon printed lege's presfdent, James J. Hammond,&#13;
last year in the college newspaper. The charging violation of First and 14th&#13;
students face up to a year in prison if Amendment rights.&#13;
convicted on the charge, a misdemeanor. The obscenity issue appears mostprevThe&#13;
trial is expected to continue tomcr- alent~ at state-supported schools, perhaps&#13;
row in the 14th Circuit Court before Judge because they are dependent on legislatures&#13;
William S. Ewing, Jr. for their funds. Ge rre r a Hy papers&#13;
The campus "disputes vary widely, but&#13;
they usually center on the use of obscene&#13;
words and pictures or charges of undue&#13;
emphasis on the reporting of activities of&#13;
radicals.&#13;
In the Fitchburg State College case, the&#13;
article in question was an excerpt from&#13;
"Black Moochie," a novella by Mr.Cleaver.&#13;
At the meeting at Salem State the six Tallant Hall vias boarded up December&#13;
edttors all agreed to print 'the article-in"'""'"2, !969. :At least it,looks that way W&#13;
their own papers as a gesture or'defiance average passer-by who doesn't bother to&#13;
at what they felt was highhanded press look in the windows.&#13;
censorship at Fitchburg. The day betore December 1, 1969, at&#13;
There' followed six weeks of turmoil on 11:20 p.m., a Parkside physical plan"&#13;
the campuses, marked by threats of law- .man ~rashed into. the Tallant Hall doors.&#13;
sutts, countersuits, a str-tn here at Salem The rfgnt large window was also damaged.&#13;
and the closing down of three of the No injury to the driver was reported.&#13;
papers at Salem Fitchburg and Wor- The truck was reported to have a brake'&#13;
cester:' line severed and right front head light&#13;
For some time. across - the nation, broken and slight damage to the front&#13;
underground newspapers run by radical bumper. , ,&#13;
students unhappy with the viewpoint pre- Mr. Hunt, assistant DIrector of Parksented&#13;
by the official organs have been side's. Physical. Plant, said that the rear&#13;
flourishing on college campuses. door that was supposed to have been use~&#13;
Now, however, a growing number of did not always open. As a result the front&#13;
the sanctioned papers are falling into the door was utilized to bring in the supplies.&#13;
hands of activist editors and reporters. As the truck was driven toward the door~&#13;
Many of them are challenging the appro- it was found that the brakes would not&#13;
prfateness of journalistic objectivity' on operate. The truck rammed into the front&#13;
campus and they often embrace the concept doors as a result. The truck was not&#13;
of Hadvocacy journalism." .g.o.1D.g fast. but because of the weight&#13;
"Activist newspapers are catching factor a lot of damage was caused.&#13;
fire" says Nelly Jo Lee of the United The wooden structure, now bunt in Hen&#13;
Stat~s Student Press Association in Wash- of doors" has a rather permanent look.&#13;
ington. 'l"fhey are saying that there is no Mr. Hunt reassured me that it would be&#13;
such thing as objectivity and that any replaced as soon as the style of door&#13;
story is going to be somewhat subjective. Parkside uses can ~e procured. No estiThe&#13;
college press is trying to give a side mate was ava.liable, at the time as to the&#13;
that frequently isn't given in the profes- total cost of the aCCIdent.&#13;
sional press." Accidents just seem to be happening&#13;
The lines are seldom as clearly drawn in abundance. By the time you read thisas&#13;
they are here at Salem. Learning of thE!'bus wUl undoubte~IY be repaired. But&#13;
the intention to use the Cleaver article, just_in case yon didn t know. one of our&#13;
the college's 58-year-old president "di- bus engines blew up.&#13;
rected the printer not to publish the issue When one of the bus drivers was quesand&#13;
froze the Log's funds. tioned, he simply said that the age of the&#13;
Incensed, the students took a collec- bus and the general condition caused the&#13;
tion, 'found another printer and displayed blow up. As a result Parks ide students&#13;
the article proni.inently on page one. Soon now have a fifty-fifty chance of riding in&#13;
afterward the college'S publications a classy and even a comfortable bus. The&#13;
board a ~anel 0112" faculty and admin- bus is rather large and of the Grey Hound&#13;
istratlon members and eight students, type style, and is equipped with an essenunanimously&#13;
Censured the president for tional item of the road, a radio. The&#13;
"b " d Hth bus drivers seemed quite prOUd of it&#13;
an ar itrary action that Viol~,te e a nd were willing to show a student the&#13;
r~hts of the college community. general high po~ts of.1t, such as the&#13;
By ROBERT REINHOLD&#13;
Special to The New York Times&#13;
By DALE MARTIN&#13;
• QUALITY&#13;
• SATISFACTION&#13;
• SAVINGS&#13;
ALWAYS&#13;
For You and Your Car&#13;
BILL'S DEEP ROCK SERVICE STATION&#13;
2305 Racine 634-9328&#13;
plush seats and large engine compartment.&#13;
Unfortunately by the time you read this&#13;
the old 'bus will probably be repaired.&#13;
Actually, though, it Would be mote eco ...&#13;
nornical for Parkside to run the more&#13;
plush bus. The old bus ran on around 45&#13;
gallons a day, whereas the new one takes&#13;
only about 30 gallons 3: day to operate.&#13;
The average day run excluding night is&#13;
around 170 miles. Perhaps the plush bus&#13;
is the answer on how to get more students&#13;
to ride the bus. who knows?&#13;
trustees don't Uke what we are saying&#13;
about them and the scbcot.o" says Mr.&#13;
Yench.&#13;
At - the y'niverstty of Wyoming, the&#13;
Branding Iron stood out as a strongly&#13;
liberal. anliwar, pro-black on a highly&#13;
conservative campus - at least until its&#13;
editor, Phil White, resigned the other&#13;
day under fire.&#13;
In quilting, he complained billefly that&#13;
most Wyoming students were apparently&#13;
not interested in racism, t}1eVietnam war,&#13;
urban problema, drugs or prison abuses.&#13;
"There are no problems In Laramie _&#13;
everything here is perfect," he said&#13;
sarcastically. He had been accused of&#13;
mixing tact with opinion in the news columns.&#13;
On many a liberal campus, the news ..&#13;
papers reflect the prevailing student mood.&#13;
But increasingly they are encountering&#13;
competition from conservatives. At the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, one of the more&#13;
radical campuses in the Midwest, The&#13;
Daily Cardinal has some new competition,&#13;
the weekly Badger Herald. The'weekly&#13;
Is run by Pat Korten, chairman at the&#13;
conservative Young Americans for Freedom&#13;
chapter.&#13;
"This campus needed a paper that will&#13;
print unbiased news and not just radical&#13;
Views," Mr. Korten said. The Cardinal,&#13;
meanwhfje, has run afoul of the regents&#13;
over obscenities and has been forced to&#13;
pay a $6,000 rental fee for campus office&#13;
space.&#13;
A similar situation pertains at Vanderbilt&#13;
University in Nashville, where the&#13;
liberal 81-year-old Hustler is beingchalIenged&#13;
by Versus, a conservative organ&#13;
that disputes the Hustler's right to a&#13;
$14,000 college subsidy.&#13;
Some papers find themselves in the&#13;
middle of campus crossfire. At the mammoth&#13;
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor,&#13;
The Michigan Daily is under attack from&#13;
lett, right and the Women's Liberation&#13;
Movement. Radical groups believe it has&#13;
"copped out" since it was edited in 1961&#13;
by Tom Hayden, a founder at the Students&#13;
for a Democratic Society.&#13;
"fabrics for&#13;
II&#13;
." a occasions&#13;
VOGUE&#13;
FABRICS&#13;
709 58th Str_&#13;
65... 612&#13;
EARN WHILE&#13;
YOU LEARN&#13;
Of }0Urilt1 "Ju &amp;/kfialt'.&#13;
adufJlti.4i.luj 4f.4JI. 114 a &amp;/kfiAA&#13;
If.t(J~e foa'l16epaiJ&#13;
a (,Q~ft. qoa ~&#13;
1uJ~ fIfJId foa'i I.i.Iu fJJ 1ItIJ1r.t.&#13;
Stop&#13;
'Rut. 109&#13;
7.S. We'll fJtaiA foa.&#13;
EDITORIALS&#13;
A Fairy Ta'e&#13;
Once upon a time, as all fairy tales begin, there ~da\~n&#13;
livi .' a large forcst oUtSI e e&#13;
industrious wood carve I' f ~lOg f~~IOWwood carvers wanted to&#13;
big city. He and some 0 us . so they carved&#13;
contribute to thc enjoyment of their fello~~~e~nl been making&#13;
wooden figurines. Up untJ! that time they y 1 These&#13;
small ones at a high cost in man hours to t:I~~"~~~~~refore&#13;
figureS were very costly to the general pu th whole&#13;
not many were sold. Something had to be done or. e&#13;
purpose of the- figures would be lost amid the rrsmg cost of&#13;
livin~\fter many hard days of toil and blisters the wood carver&#13;
decided to visit the city to see if he could secure help from the&#13;
founding fathers. He had heard that the founding fathers were&#13;
kindly gentlemen willing to help anyone who came to them.&#13;
Armed only with thi knowledge and a strong spirit, the wood&#13;
carver went to them to ask for a small work space neare~ the&#13;
city and an allowance to alleviate some ofthe cost of the ca~vll1gs.&#13;
The- founding fathers checked their bank account and declde.d to&#13;
allow the wood carver and his friends the money they reqUIredl&#13;
to set up a business. They also checked their available space&#13;
and came up with a temporary shed near the outskirts of town in&#13;
a suburb. I&#13;
The wood carver was overjoyed with the founding fathers and&#13;
their decision. lie promiscd to make his carvings the pride of&#13;
the- city and that made the fathers very glad. Left alone, the&#13;
wood carvers did produce very good carvings and they were&#13;
gl·tting better all the time, but one day whe.n the quote for that&#13;
week came out there was a noticeahle change in the quality of the&#13;
carvings. They were considerably poorer in quality and style than&#13;
the- previous quota.&#13;
incc the founding fathers had some money in the venture&#13;
they decided to investigate. They discovered the wood carver,&#13;
much older looking and overworked, sitting at his carving bench&#13;
bemoaning his situation. When asked to elaborate, the wood&#13;
carver related this: He and his friends were so happy about&#13;
being in the city that they worked very hard at first to make all&#13;
the people proud of their carvings,allbearingthe city'S inscription.&#13;
As time wore on tempers wore out. The space allotted the&#13;
carve rs was just too small. Some of them felt they were better&#13;
off in the forest again. The wood carver knew that the space&#13;
give-n them was only temporary and he had tried to keep his little&#13;
group togvtlu-r , but now he had his own doubts about the founding •.&#13;
fathers. TIll')' were all very wise men but also a little slow in&#13;
making decisions. Unfortunatcly this was something that required&#13;
quick thinking since all those involved had a lot invested in the&#13;
venture. \\l'11. 10 make a long story short, the founding fathers&#13;
took too much Iime in making their decision and the wood carver&#13;
and his friends were forced to go back to the forest and give up&#13;
thei I' venture in town. The towns people were angry with the&#13;
fathers, and everyone was sad thatthings turned out the way they&#13;
did - that is. all except ... (but that's another story).&#13;
Form C'ub at UWP&#13;
The largest single club on campus is' forming. beginning&#13;
second semester of this school year. So far only 12 UWP&#13;
students have refused to join the Apathy Club.&#13;
When the club was first thought of, one of the founders&#13;
sIX-culated that there was the possibility of total student body&#13;
membership in the organization. If this becomes a reality this&#13;
speculator surmises the possibility exists that by fall semester&#13;
of 1970 the club will include the entire faculty.&#13;
In its investigation of the club, the COLLEGIAN noticed a&#13;
h·t'nd in the- students refusing to join the club. Of the 12 nonmembers&#13;
two arc seniors, one a junior, three sophomores and&#13;
five freshmen. This shows that students become progressively&#13;
more apathetic the longer they are in school.&#13;
Three of the students arc concerned about the war in Vietnam&#13;
and one is concerned about the war in relation to brotherhood.&#13;
Other concerns range from Agnew, although the studJj\nt is 't&#13;
'ure if he is meaningful, to the death of Paul MCCartny. Ma:k&#13;
Dodd, a freshman, IS concerned about art and tlie morbid&#13;
enVIronment such a campus created for the producti f&#13;
~ueh thi.ng while freshman Randy Reeves is also c~~c~r~:~&#13;
about thiS campus, the acbon it lacks. One student is conce d&#13;
about Chancellor Wyllie's head, another gyroscopes and :~ll&#13;
3.l1?ther,. people. One student submitted a scrap of pa rstatin&#13;
he d wl'lte his name down and non-join except he didn!";t g&#13;
gl'l Involved. want to&#13;
QUl'stions have arisen as to when the club will hold't f'&#13;
unorgal1lzed meeting. Since no member .' s .Irst&#13;
enough to non-organize One no date ha' b has been 1l1spll'ed&#13;
p . .. U J ~ een set.&#13;
re\lousl} one show-of-interest" meeti· h&#13;
." r. it didn't get an over\"hel . ng was eld. How-&#13;
, lUillg response N . .&#13;
ex-officio membe 1', Ste"e Soldber . on-p.reslding,&#13;
meeting. Only two members of ~~ c~~ucted the fIrst nOnafter&#13;
a fe-\\'mInutes C\'er"one lost. t c u attended. However,&#13;
The students . reed a . ill e:est and left.&#13;
that the} hould nO~be concte~hisd'~l~eting that.the greatest issue&#13;
Also at tlus meeting se";;al a out was CIVil rights.&#13;
zatlon vere made ,\ fe f th non-rules for the nOn-organi-&#13;
. . w 0 ese are: Members cannot particiPARKSIDE&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
Volume I - No 5&#13;
9 January 1969&#13;
..••••••••••••. Jim Runge&#13;
Editor-in Chief. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . Perry Michal&#13;
Ed·t • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • os Associate 1 or . . . • . . • • • . • . .. ••••.••••••..•.• Marc Colby&#13;
Business Manager. • • • • • •. ••••• . Greg E&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • . • • mery&#13;
News Edit.or •.••••••••••••• : : : : • • • • • • • • . •• Helen S~humacher&#13;
Sports Editor. • . . . . • • • . . • . . • Ed Borchardt&#13;
Feature Editor •.•.....••.•••••• : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : • Nell Haglov&#13;
Chief Photographer .•.••.....•.. _. Margie Noer &amp; Connie Ryterske&#13;
Production Managers . . . . . . • . . • . . . . • Jim C !&#13;
• . • • . • . . . . . . . . . • rox ord&#13;
Accountant •..•... , .••....• ' . • . •• -.•• Mr. John Pest&#13;
Advisor . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . • . • . • . . • . . • • • a&#13;
published every two weeks by the students of the University of Wisconsin·&#13;
P rkstde: Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Opinions expressed 111 editorials,&#13;
c:rtoons; and articies are not necessarily those of THE COLLEGIAN staff,&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, its faculty,administrators,or students,&#13;
LETTERS to the editor&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
What is going on with student government?&#13;
1 was a student here last year and&#13;
remember that student government at&#13;
least met then! 1 know from talking withsome&#13;
of the student senators last yea~.&#13;
that an Interim Student Government was&#13;
established last year to meet during the&#13;
summer and to organize elections for&#13;
this year. In September, I heard through&#13;
the school grape vine that PSGA President&#13;
Jim Midura disbanded Summer Interim.&#13;
I Iater "learned that Jim resigned on&#13;
doctor's orders and did not disband student&#13;
government. The PSGA president&#13;
doesn't have the power to disband student&#13;
government. It seems to me that the only&#13;
way student government could be disbanded&#13;
at all would be by student vote or&#13;
university action. I don't think that it&#13;
could even be done In these two ways.&#13;
Despite the resignation of the PSGA&#13;
president, the Vice-President, Carol Ley,&#13;
and the summer interim committee should&#13;
have had enough sense to go through&#13;
the proper channels to keep student interim&#13;
active long enough to arrange elections&#13;
for this year.&#13;
It is now well into January; this&#13;
semester ~i1l be over In a.couple of weeks&#13;
and stUl no move has been made to hold&#13;
elections for a new student government.&#13;
The elections were to have taken place&#13;
in mid-october. Do you realize What&#13;
that means? The University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside has been operating for almost&#13;
a full semester without the proper student&#13;
representation that all students are&#13;
entttled to. Student government - is the&#13;
s tudents ' link with the faculty and administration&#13;
in this institution and the regents&#13;
of the entire University of Wisconsin&#13;
system. No student voice in the form of&#13;
a student senate has been avatlable this&#13;
semester. The people suffering most&#13;
because of this situation are the stUdents.&#13;
I have heard rumors lately tha~someMobile&#13;
Desk&#13;
By AL KARLS&#13;
On Monday, December 8, the Racine&#13;
Campus was visited by a small truck&#13;
with the words uRacine Mobile City Desk"&#13;
and cJThe Racine Journal-Times" written&#13;
on the side. The people who came&#13;
inside of it were George Hansen, managing&#13;
Editor; Chuck D'Acquisto, a noted&#13;
photographer; Mrs. Sophie Clay rePorter.&#13;
and Chris Boultinghouse, a re~rter and;.&#13;
former stUdent at the Racine Campus. They&#13;
came to interview stUdents and got cons&#13;
iderable results.&#13;
The MobUe City Desk had its start about&#13;
four months ago. It is, as its name indicates,&#13;
a mobile desk or office that brings&#13;
the RaCine newspaper to the scene of an&#13;
event, or to a place of interest. Initially&#13;
it was started to get the paper to th~&#13;
people and also to be a shelter for people&#13;
being interViewed. Since that time it has&#13;
helped the Journal-Times show an htterest ;~l people and people's problems. It also&#13;
ows its readers to learn What other&#13;
people think.&#13;
The purpose in coming to the Racine&#13;
Campus was to find the students' OPinions&#13;
~boUt Racine's intent to sell the campus&#13;
T~UdingS to Racine Technical Institute&#13;
ey were also interested in how SUCh;&#13;
move would. affect the Parkside stUdent&#13;
one, - I think it is one of last year's&#13;
senators, is trying to get last year's&#13;
student government senators reorganized&#13;
again 10 order to plan and hold electlcq&#13;
for a student government for next semes.&#13;
ter and to offer some representation loUIe&#13;
students for the rest of this semester.&#13;
At best this student government wlll offer&#13;
only partial representationsinceanumber&#13;
of last year's senators have transferred&#13;
to other schools, but at least itis an e&amp;rt&#13;
to give the students a part of the rep""&#13;
sentation they are entitled to.&#13;
As a student at Parkside, I feel thai&#13;
the student body should support this effort&#13;
to re-establish student government on til&#13;
Parkside campuses as anoperationvehie1e&#13;
for representation of student voice w~&#13;
after all, is something that every sbIdeut&#13;
Is entitled to.&#13;
The elections for student senate sbouM&#13;
be an important and number one priorItJ&#13;
concern of every student on campus. Iam&#13;
quite sure that Miss Jewel Eehelbarger,&#13;
PSGA advisor from last year, would be&#13;
glad to hear from anyone who is at all&#13;
interested in the re-establishment of stu·&#13;
dent government here at Parkslde. SUrel,&#13;
she will be more than willing to llstl!ll&#13;
to any suggestions and ideas from the&#13;
etuoenls here at Parkside. After all, M1si&#13;
Echelbarger should be interested in tile&#13;
reorganization of the student senate stDct&#13;
she was the advisor of last year's student&#13;
senate and the summer interim.&#13;
I don't know who should get the blame&#13;
for what happened to student governmef&#13;
the student senators, the advisor, tli&#13;
administration, or the students. Each of&#13;
these could have at least TRIED to ~&#13;
something to get the Parks Ide Studert&#13;
Government Association back into operation.&#13;
What is really a shame is thai&#13;
it took this long for even a rumor J hop!&#13;
it Is more than thatc), to get.around tb8I&#13;
PSGA is being reorganized.&#13;
_Fred x. Zenowitl&#13;
from Racine. Students were almost unani·&#13;
mously against the sale and they indicated&#13;
·such a move Would hurt bQ!h Parksidea!lll&#13;
its stUdents.&#13;
It was an enjoyable experience for&#13;
everyone. The Racine paper was pleased&#13;
with the considerable student turnout, and&#13;
students were happy to be able to express&#13;
their views. But by far the happiest JDSIl&#13;
around was Chuck D'Acquisto. He was&#13;
having a field day posing and photographW&#13;
the many co-eds that turned out. Bouncl!li&#13;
around joyously and showing his best&#13;
smile to the girls, he was evidentlyhavlIt&#13;
a ball.&#13;
Dinosaur Article&#13;
An assistant professo; of English at&#13;
The University of Wisconsln-Parkside&#13;
Who has combined interests in literature&#13;
and geology throughout his academic&#13;
career is the author of an article titled&#13;
'tHitchcock's Dinosaur Tracks" in thE&#13;
current issue of AmericanQuarterly.&#13;
T~e article, by Dennis Dean, deals wltb&#13;
the mfluence of Dr. Edward Hitchcock, tbe&#13;
central figure in a 19th centurypalentologo&#13;
ical controversy, on the works of such&#13;
authors as Longfellow Melv1lle James&#13;
Russell Lowell, Olive; Wendell' HolmeS&#13;
and Thoreau. .&#13;
pate or care; no member c th'nk .-&#13;
the future because they d 'tan I ; members cannot plan for&#13;
be no regnlar meetings ~:c care and can't think; and there will&#13;
Dr. John Jenks Mas Cause m~mb.ers won't attend anyway·&#13;
if he would non-ad~ise t~e ~%mUmcaho.ns chairman. was asked&#13;
confronted with the same 'ob b. ~e S.aId he didn't care. WheP&#13;
his sail!e non-poSition. J agaIn this year. Jenks reiterated&#13;
Libraries Offer Volumes&#13;
For Those Term Papers&#13;
Are you doing research for a term&#13;
paper?&#13;
You will find sources and bibliograph_&#13;
ical aids at the Parks ide LIbrary located'&#13;
on the first ncor of Tallent Hall that you&#13;
will not find at either Kenosha or Racine&#13;
campus libraries. The libraries at the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine campuses have holdings&#13;
of about 13,000 titles each. The&#13;
main Parkslde Library has about 80,000&#13;
titles. In searching for material you will&#13;
find more aids at the Main Parkslde&#13;
Library. such as the complete NEW YORK'&#13;
TIMES INDEX, EDUCATION INDEX,&#13;
,sOCIAL SCIENCES AND HUMANITIES&#13;
INDEX, etc. Some books recommended&#13;
by faculty are avaUable only at the main&#13;
Parkside Library. -&#13;
New subscriptions now arriving at the&#13;
Parks Ide Library include - American&#13;
west c.Bulrettn of Atomic ScIentists, Antioch&#13;
Review, Cha-nging Times, Films in&#13;
Review, Arizona Highways, Commentary,&#13;
Four Quarters, Atlantic, Commonweal,&#13;
History of Political Economy, Consumer&#13;
BUlletin, Hobbies, Huntington Library&#13;
Quarterly, Jet, Wanderer, World Tennis,&#13;
Nation, Wisconsin Architect.&#13;
The Library has an informal Lost and&#13;
Found department behind the front counter.&#13;
Quite a number of gloves, purses,&#13;
car keys, books, umbrellas and other&#13;
articles have been turned in; and some&#13;
of these have not been claimed. Please&#13;
inquire if you think you have lost something.&#13;
The Library is now posting notices of&#13;
art eXhibitions, museum shows, and so&#13;
forth, on the window oppOsite the circulation&#13;
desk. Some of these items are&#13;
really significant. Take a look at them&#13;
as you come into the Library.&#13;
Users of periodicals should be sure to&#13;
ask about the microfilm cabinets. Some&#13;
periodical holdings are in microfilm form&#13;
and may be easily read on the readers&#13;
in the back room. Ask at the desk.&#13;
LIBRARY HOURS&#13;
Jan. 13 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 14 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight,allcampuses&#13;
Jan. 15 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight, aU campuses&#13;
Jan. 16 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 16 - 7:15 - 5:00 - all campuses&#13;
Jan. IB - 2:30 - 10:30 (Parks Ide)&#13;
Closed all day Sunday en and K)&#13;
Jan. 19 - 7:15 - 12 Midnlght,allcampuse.s&#13;
Jan. 20 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 21 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 22 - 7:15 .. 12 Midnlght,allcampuses&#13;
Jan. 23 .. 7:15 - 12 Midnight, all campuses&#13;
Jan 24 - 7:15 - 5:00, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 25 - Closed, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 26 - 8:00 - 4:30, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 27 - 8:00 - 4':30, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 28 - 8:00 - 4:30, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 29 - 8:00 - 4:30, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 30 - 8:00 - 4:30, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 31 - Closed, aU campuses&#13;
Feb. 1 - Closed, all campuses&#13;
Feb. 2 - Regular hours. resume.&#13;
No Style to Speak of .&#13;
By RICH KIENNITZ and&#13;
BOB BORCHARDT&#13;
Like all new groups, "Grand Funk&#13;
Railroad" has received a SUbstantial&#13;
amount of record company propaganda,&#13;
acclaiming them as 'one of the Best New&#13;
Groups of the Year.'. However, it might&#13;
be appropriate to point out that railroads&#13;
are going out of business and hopefully&#13;
the "Grand Funk" wui go down with&#13;
them. The title of this mistake is HOn&#13;
Time", but it is the opinion of these&#13;
writers that it should be changed to&#13;
"Doing Time", owing to the fact that.&#13;
the members of the group should 'get ten&#13;
years apiece .for prcst ltlon of the arts.&#13;
The album begins fhnccently enough,&#13;
with the needle circling the edge of the&#13;
d Isc, However, when it reluctantly arrives&#13;
at the first chord, it begins a seemingly&#13;
endless succession of songs that do nothing&#13;
and goonowhere.&#13;
Individually, it should be noted that&#13;
the lead singer has talent. However, the&#13;
• •&#13;
rest of the band does an excellent job&#13;
of hiding the fact. As long as he is with&#13;
this group it w1l1be hard for him to rise&#13;
above their mediocrity.&#13;
The bass player seems to have a few&#13;
ideas, but we feel that we Would be doing&#13;
him a great favor by introducinl him to&#13;
such seemingly foreign elements as F&#13;
sharp and A flat, and by enlightening&#13;
him to the fact that his instrument has&#13;
three other strings.&#13;
The lead guitarist seems to fall into&#13;
the unfortunate category of a number of&#13;
other new musicians Who sacrifice creativity&#13;
and style for speed and technique.&#13;
While speed and technique can be achieved&#13;
by' almost anyone, creativity is the true&#13;
measure of the value of an artist.&#13;
For example, a musician of the caliber&#13;
of B. B. King can do more with three well&#13;
placed notes than this guitarist does with&#13;
a thousand of his pointless flashy runs.&#13;
About all that can be said about the&#13;
drummer is that a robot could do his job&#13;
as well or better. His endless drum 5010&#13;
goes on for bars without one single new&#13;
idea or the slightest hint of an original&#13;
innovation.&#13;
It's pointless to review the songs individually&#13;
due to the fact that the difference&#13;
between them is even less than between&#13;
"Cold SweaP', and ''I've Got the Feelin' ".&#13;
As for the musical value of the lyrlcswell,&#13;
we'll let you judge for yourself by&#13;
this typical example.&#13;
"Heartbreaker,&#13;
"Can't take her ..&#13;
"Heartbreaker,&#13;
"Bringing me down".&#13;
The above is the total lyrical content&#13;
of a six minute and thirty second song.&#13;
Such concise, pOwer-packed poetry has&#13;
not seen its like since&#13;
'&lt;Roses are red,&#13;
'~iolets are blue~_&#13;
"We hate 'Grand Funk'&#13;
"and so will you."&#13;
(We just made that up-honest!)&#13;
As far as style is concerned the Grand&#13;
Funk has none to speak of. They seem io&#13;
rely on the past efforts of the Vanilla&#13;
Fudge and the Chicago blues groups,&#13;
never reaching the quality of either.&#13;
In closing, we feel that '.'The Grand&#13;
Funk Railroad" is a very appropriate&#13;
name for this group, although we feel&#13;
that there has been a slight spelling&#13;
error.&#13;
P.S. If any of you readers are unfortunate&#13;
enough to receive this album as a&#13;
Christmas present, it has one use that&#13;
we have fonnd. It. you heat the edges&#13;
and bend them up, it makes an attractive&#13;
ash tray.&#13;
Ute&#13;
LEADER&#13;
dow&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/IACINE&#13;
Moratorium&#13;
Committee&#13;
Organized&#13;
The Vietnam War Moratorium&#13;
•&#13;
Commit ..&#13;
tee of Parks ide called on all interested&#13;
students to attend an informational meet ..&#13;
ing recently. When the meeting started,&#13;
four interested people were present and&#13;
four others came in late. The person in&#13;
charge apologized for not knowing much,&#13;
and the meeting began.&#13;
The group is an independent organization&#13;
of Parkside students; It has no&#13;
national affiliation, but has co-operative&#13;
agreements with the Racine, Dominican,&#13;
Carthage and Kenosha groups. The chairman&#13;
is Mike Lofton and the faculty advisor&#13;
is Henry S. Cole.&#13;
The Parkside Vietnam War Moratorium&#13;
Committee is formed to develop participation&#13;
in a series of monthly peace actfvtties.&#13;
The committee proposes a peaceful&#13;
and legal program Which could Include&#13;
distribution of literature, setting up seminars,&#13;
raising funds, organizing marches&#13;
and petitioning. These activities will be&#13;
directed toward the ending of U.S. military&#13;
involvement in Vietnam.&#13;
The committee will encourage actfvtttes&#13;
in line with this statement of purpose but&#13;
will respect the will and conscience of&#13;
Indtvtduaj members.&#13;
The Moratorium Committee asks for&#13;
popular- support for an immediate end&#13;
to the war. Their main concern is for&#13;
school and student involvement.~not city&#13;
action. The group believes the use of the&#13;
Moratorium is the main tool toward&#13;
gaining their end .&#13;
In the plans for the future is a plan&#13;
for a Panel Discussion about the war.&#13;
The plans are tentative, but hopefully&#13;
it will occur soon. The discussion will&#13;
have both pro-and-con opinion toward the&#13;
war, and will have a question and answer&#13;
period at the end.&#13;
The membership is open to every Park ..&#13;
side student. To gain full membership and&#13;
voting privileges, a- membership fee of&#13;
50~ is charged. Membership is now estimated&#13;
at up to 30, of which 12 are very&#13;
active. Some .Parkside Committee members&#13;
are also members of one of the&#13;
other four Moratorium Committees in&#13;
the area.&#13;
The Parkside Moratortum Committee&#13;
is hoping to gain student support , It Is a&#13;
young organization and has a problem in&#13;
that not many students know about it.&#13;
Prospective members are encouraged to&#13;
come to meetings that are held on the&#13;
second and fourth Tuesday of every month&#13;
at J2:30 in the Tallent Hall Lounge. You&#13;
don't have to be a member to attend&#13;
meetings, and the Parkside Moratorium&#13;
Committee encourages new ideas and&#13;
new people.&#13;
Datta Co-authors&#13;
Cancer Article&#13;
Dr. S. P. Datta, assistant professor of&#13;
lite science at The University of Wiseonsin-Parkside,&#13;
is one of four authors of a&#13;
paper titled "Effect of Phytohaemagglutin_&#13;
in on Ehrlich Ascites Carcinoma" which&#13;
appears in the current issue of the "British&#13;
Journal of Cancer"&#13;
The Ehrlich ascites carcinoma is a&#13;
tumor which grows in the abdominal cavity&#13;
of mice"'. Phytohaemagglutinin is a plant&#13;
deriviUve whose properties include inducement&#13;
of cell diVision and clumping&#13;
of red blood cells. In this project an&#13;
extract prepared from kidney beans was&#13;
used by the group to determine its possible&#13;
role in retarding or enhancing tumor&#13;
growth. The project is related to Prof.&#13;
·Datta's current research at Parkside,&#13;
which is aimed at determining the effect&#13;
.of enVironmental stress during pregnancy'&#13;
on the development of defense mechanisms&#13;
in the offs~g. Phytohaemagglutinin is&#13;
known to enhance growth of cells involVed&#13;
in defense mechanisms. Mice are being&#13;
used in his current work as they were in&#13;
the other project.&#13;
Co-authors of the article appearing In&#13;
the British journal are Mrs. Mildred&#13;
Cerini, T. G. Ghose and J. C. Cer1ni, aU&#13;
presently at the Dalhousie University&#13;
Medical School, Halifax J Nova ScotJa,&#13;
Canada. The article reports research&#13;
conducted by the group in 1966-67 at&#13;
Monash University Medical SChOOl,Prah ..&#13;
-ran, Victoria, Australia, Where Dr. Datta&#13;
was a lecturer In 1m.munologyandgeneUcs,&#13;
Mrs. Cer1ni was a graduate student working&#13;
with Gbase, and her husband a graduate&#13;
atudent workiac with Datta.&#13;
WE PAY&#13;
CASH FOR&#13;
USED&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
BRASS&#13;
CANNON&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
BOOK&#13;
MART&#13;
581'.6th Ave. Kenosha&#13;
Experienced&#13;
Key Punch Operators&#13;
Part time for students&#13;
Salary $2.00 per hour and up&#13;
Students Discuss&#13;
Right to Beer&#13;
If a young man is consfde red mature&#13;
enough to handle a gun and fight for&#13;
IIis country, should he also be considered&#13;
not only mature enough tu vote, but also&#13;
mature enough to handle e mug of beer?&#13;
That question has practically become an&#13;
Arue rfcan cliche.&#13;
Although his right to drink beer may&#13;
not be as vital an issue to today-s college&#13;
student 35 his right to vote, it is, nevertheless,&#13;
an issue Which affects him personally&#13;
and Which he feels entttled to&#13;
decide for himself.&#13;
When, where, and Whether students&#13;
should be allowed access to beer - these&#13;
are the questions facing not only college&#13;
students and administrators, but also law&#13;
enforcement officers and the communtty;&#13;
at-large. Thus, "Uniform Beer Age _&#13;
Teen Beer Bars - and Beer on Campus"&#13;
will be the over-all subject considered by&#13;
"College Talk-In" panelists Saturday&#13;
(Jan. 10) at 10:35 a.m. on WLIP (95.1 fill).&#13;
Moderator of the panel w1ll be Daniel&#13;
Jurkovic, Carthage College assistant professor&#13;
of political sc lence who received&#13;
his A.M. degree from the University of&#13;
Minnesota. Student panelists representing&#13;
Carthage will be Kenoshans Frank Maxwell&#13;
(5216 - 35th Ave.), junior in speech&#13;
and theater arts; and Jim Drago (7935 _&#13;
39th Ave.), recent Carthage graduate in&#13;
POlitical science and history.&#13;
Kenosha student panelists representing&#13;
The University of Wiscollsin-Parkside&#13;
will be Richard A. Langer (G8l8 _ 31st&#13;
Ave.), senior ill geography and former&#13;
acting president of Parkside's Circle K&#13;
Chrbj and Andrew B. SchmeUing (42~ _ 43rd&#13;
St.), junior in sociology.&#13;
WLIP's News Director, Jim Bradley,&#13;
serves as IICollege Talk-In" host.&#13;
Contact:&#13;
Dr. Leon Applebau m&#13;
319 Greenquist Hall Ext. 316&#13;
GIVE 'EM HELEN&#13;
d II oment or even 0&#13;
The old cliche "There's never a u&#13;
ne&#13;
";,ven newspapers and&#13;
r st for th wicked" applies to evtZ~e ~oticed, this paper has&#13;
r porters. As you may or r:;a~~obecause of various reasons;&#13;
been delayed In being PU~ eChristmas vacation and other&#13;
re-organJ~atlon of the stan, ese roblems stop the&#13;
ml cellaneous excuses. AlthO.ug~e: ressPonward. This poses&#13;
pr ssea, time and athletic acu1~ h Psit I am the only sports&#13;
a special problem for me. As a~. ~ direy and his "Coach'S&#13;
r porter on this paper. Wedohav~ ICso~e reporting, plus the&#13;
Corner" and other coaches ~olng t 0 I am very grateful&#13;
D1r ctor of ews ervices dOingsome, 0e time out from their&#13;
and Ind bted to these ge~erous ~e~ ~hOs: paper. This is a fine&#13;
cuvtue in order towrlteanartic e or t1 "cricket" WhatI'm&#13;
g ture on their part but it isn't exac ~ rts enth'usiasts who&#13;
tt mptlng to say is HEr! iz: s~ewrfte a small article on&#13;
wouldbe willing to atten ao . r Journalism major,&#13;
them. 11 doesn't have t~ be ':ti~~:: s~nse of school spirit.&#13;
Ju t omcon with a lItt e am I . fits are fantastic.) If&#13;
(Th hour arc great and the frlnghtehbe;t e of the "Collegian"&#13;
you chip m ,contact me throug eo c&#13;
- room 109 or Ext. ~4 In Kenosha. This is your paper. team is&#13;
To t back to the ubject at hand- basketball. Our&#13;
moving now. .\l1lt took was a little time. It could be compared to&#13;
c ron 11 wint r morning - slow to start but once.It gets go~~&#13;
it r il" g s \\ e've got our regular heroes like JIm Hogan .&#13;
, • . hi ·th theIr Ell I hter who seem to keep the basket SWlS ng Wl&#13;
r pc tl\ 4.9 and 26 point averages. Thenwehave our centers&#13;
ho rab r hound and dunk shots like MIke ~a~sen, third&#13;
hi b t corer, and Ed VanTine whoscored the WI~ng b.asket&#13;
In Ib me alnst Ripon.The rest ofthe team is dOlOgtheIr Job&#13;
but th y could use ome more spark. The thing I can't ~et over&#13;
i th r t number of turnovers in each game. It reml~ds me&#13;
of th num r of interceptions in the Penn State-MISSOUrigame&#13;
I I w k. I believe It was a total of !&#13;
I hate 10 r -open an old woundbut let's discuss the Sports.-&#13;
f t spectacle. It was better than last season's attendance but It&#13;
could still be Improved. I've asked some of the people involved&#13;
with 'portsfest what they thoughtofthe crowd. Most of them were&#13;
sali fled considering the all-important football game played that&#13;
afternoon. I felt that there could have'been a much larger crowd&#13;
o I wouldgrade It C, but since most of the athletes were satlsfled,&#13;
l'U rate ItB-.lt's not badbut it could be improved. See what&#13;
you can do ahout It.&#13;
I received a response on last issue's column asking for&#13;
uggested topics. The sport asked ahout was jogging so I got a&#13;
weat swt for Christmas (fromSantaClaus, ofcourse) and began&#13;
a program of Jogging. I'll let you know more on the sport and&#13;
on howI'm doing in the next issue - if I'm still alive!&#13;
~~e--&#13;
Rangers Favored&#13;
O,er Milton Five&#13;
ParkakSe wUl be faVOred to exteod its&#13;
wlnnIrw streak to nv. saturday nJiht wben&#13;
lb. ~nc.ra boet YUtOft Col1@Ce at Racine&#13;
Cu lleldbaua. (8 p.m.).&#13;
Milton, ortetnally picked as a contender&#13;
IJI tbe Gat .... , Coo.terence, ls 5.bou1der~&#13;
• Ilv. lime 101'" streal and ls 1-7 tor the&#13;
N'UOft. Parulde's 4-3 mark ls DOt the&#13;
ollly baala lor I.. be.... lavored. The&#13;
Ran fa t Dominlean, a learn which&#13;
&lt;_rtel )lUloo, by 18 pOln .. and display&#13;
COMldtorablymo~ aplomb In loalng&#13;
by a total of 119. pOln .. to three teams&#13;
.. bleb tUU, outttlatanced WUtoo_ Carth-&#13;
, 1A.Uland aDd UW-Cnl!n Bay.&#13;
senior I~t rman Ron Grovesleen, a&#13;
8-0 IUUd averqlrc 18.5 POlnts, and Skip&#13;
o rbruner, Goo" tOf"1l'a.rdwith a 13.3&#13;
.1' rae., a r. the WUdcata' greatest&#13;
thrata. Croy tMa is tH thlnt leading&#13;
aeonr ID MUtea blator7, whUe Ober ..&#13;
b r. _ of coach K... (Red) Ober.&#13;
b " IMdI: the WUrlcata lD rebounc1l.Qc&#13;
•• Ila .. me.&#13;
Otber pf'Obabl MUton .tarters are&#13;
It_ DIck Holm aDd lre8Iunan Bred&#13;
Peck, _ 8-4. up troat and Juolor rual'd&#13;
Do..u Goecke, 8-1.&#13;
Pa ....... COUll 8t.. , Stephens is eaPHtild&#13;
10 coaater with his usual ttye ot '-J 1:11Sla&lt;&gt;cbter aDd 6-I BIll Kolar at&#13;
to...... , .... II1IIa IIad.MD at c-.rter and&#13;
"11 hITIa aDd 5-10 Jim HOC~ at -,... ..- will be !be lint lor Parulde&#13;
... IlK. 10. _ tile Ilallc abaded&#13;
......n_17.". KU.CIIl _&#13;
Hollda7 tcuraamet at Carroll a-a.&#13;
.... ulde W..... up lor loat time&#13;
, Jlartac floe _ In DIn. do,. befo ..&#13;
J&#13;
IM..,... fbi' ...... r exams. The&#13;
W .... t La"1aad To.ada, IIiCbt&#13;
at Case betore embarklng -on a northern&#13;
swing againstSt.Jolm's UnIversity, Northland.&#13;
College and Lakehead University at&#13;
Port Arthur, OntarIo, Jan. 9, 10 and 12,&#13;
Slaughter and Hogan, Parkslde's scoring&#13;
twins, are averaging 26 and 24.9 through&#13;
the tirst seven games. Slaughter has hit an&#13;
amazing 81 ot 135 field goal attempts for&#13;
an even 60 percent, whUe Hogan 15exactly&#13;
50 percent on 59 of 118. Hogan has made&#13;
2'7 straight free throws and has a 56 ot 62&#13;
tor the season.&#13;
As a leam, the Rangers are shooting a&#13;
scorching 52 percent whUe averaging 92&#13;
points per game. They have given up 85 a&#13;
contest.&#13;
Parkside scorlng:&#13;
fg It pls. Slaughter 81 20 182 Hocan&#13;
Madsen 59 56 174&#13;
KoJar 32 14 78&#13;
18 19 55 Perrine 17 6 40 Rick&#13;
VanTine 14 7 35&#13;
13 4 30 Hacenow&#13;
While 13 I 27&#13;
5 2 12 Bredeck&#13;
Harris 2 2 6&#13;
I 0 2 Johnson 1 0 2 Totals 256 131 643 0pp. Totals 242 112 596&#13;
FIFTH LOSS&#13;
Somehow the w th&#13;
tbe basketball t ea er seemed to affect&#13;
ttfth loss at the:m as It acquired Its&#13;
"Moose" Walt ,season by boWing to&#13;
the Racine C zen s Muskles 106-86 at&#13;
day, Jim Hoc:e&#13;
FieldhOUse last Tues ..&#13;
seven field Coal:U COOl,Shooting only&#13;
Ell SlaUChter manag&#13;
a&#13;
: 3&#13;
tw2&#13;
0tree-throws.&#13;
pOints but had&#13;
Corner&#13;
Vic Godfrey&#13;
Have an Ear for News?&#13;
We Can Use You!&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
Room 109', Ext. 24&#13;
r&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Coach's&#13;
thingS in this world I&#13;
There are many of those thIngs&#13;
can't underst3..?d laegn~I~~~reapproPriat1ng&#13;
Is the Wlsconsm h larshlps&#13;
all ot the 280 athletic tuition sc 0&#13;
to ;:d~~nknow athletics at the Mad~~~&#13;
, eds help but there'S no nee&#13;
cam&#13;
p&#13;
u:1l n~hat water into a rusty bucket.&#13;
po~~say that the whole situation is unf~~&#13;
is being a little redundant but why sho t&#13;
one school be tavored this way. Wha&#13;
makes them more deserving than- Parkside&#13;
Milwaukee or Green Bay?&#13;
It:s not that we wanted all 280 SChola~~&#13;
hi to ourselves. We certainly wou&#13;
:aJ: been satisfied with the 40 that were&#13;
originally allocated for ParksIde.ActuaUy&#13;
we would be happy with any number&#13;
because that would be more than we have&#13;
nO;~rsonallY I feel that we would get mo~e.&#13;
mileage and do a better job with the aid&#13;
that Madison has. At least we might get&#13;
some' of the Wisconsin athletes that find&#13;
greener areas elsewhere.&#13;
SKIING&#13;
In the last issue some space was devoted&#13;
to the Wisconsin Inter-collegiate SkIing&#13;
Association More Information has come&#13;
in. The W.I.S.A. racing schedule tor 1970&#13;
is as tollows: Jan. 17 - Wilmot Bowl Cup&#13;
at Wilmot; Feb. 1 - WlntergreenCupRace&#13;
at Spring Green, Wisconsin; Feb. 8 - Little&#13;
Switzerland, Slinger; Feb. 14-15 - Wausau&#13;
Mt. Wausau; and Feb. 28-Mar. 1 -Indianhead&#13;
at Bessemer, Michigan. The last&#13;
race Is the W.I.S.A. championships.&#13;
There are several race requirements:&#13;
A- A team must race in at least three&#13;
m'eets in order to qualify for a statewide&#13;
standing. B:· The best three scores out&#13;
of the five meets wIll count towards the&#13;
final scoring. You are therefore allowed&#13;
two complete throwouts (the scores at two&#13;
meets; not individual scores) or you may&#13;
select not to attend two meets (your&#13;
choice). C: It is mandatory that your team&#13;
race at Indlanhead. This meet cannot&#13;
count as a throwout. The meet is the TriState&#13;
Championship, and also determines&#13;
the Wisconsin Collegiate ChampionshIp.&#13;
0: Each team consIsts of five racers&#13;
maximum. The highest three scores per&#13;
racer will count towards the team score.&#13;
Therefore, two thtx&gt;wouts are permitted,&#13;
or a school may select to race only three&#13;
'racers. E: All racers have to register at&#13;
the registration desk as W.I.S.A. racers&#13;
and show proof of Club affiliation, and&#13;
must meet the requirements of the WISAI&#13;
USSA race regulations.&#13;
It there are people on this campus&#13;
Interested In competitive skiing this oftice&#13;
would like to know about them. We would&#13;
like to form a competitive ski club.&#13;
As was mentioned before WISA Is also&#13;
interested in recreational skUng. Wedon't&#13;
seem to have, on campus, any club promoting&#13;
sid trips, but Holger Peterson of the&#13;
club at Marquette has invited us to join&#13;
them. They do ask that the varIous clubs&#13;
take turns hosting a ski weekend but&#13;
maybe we can be waived until we have an&#13;
active club.&#13;
An example of a ski trip planned was&#13;
the trip planned over Christmas vacation&#13;
to Thunder Bay in Canada. The bus left&#13;
trorn MUwaukee on December 26 and returned&#13;
on the 31st. The cost was $49 and&#13;
that inclUded lift tiCkets, translX&gt;rtation&#13;
and lodging.&#13;
a little trouble holdIng on to the ball.&#13;
The whole game was one of "catCh_&#13;
up" baIl. Lakeland grabbed a 15 point&#13;
lead In the first ten minutes of play&#13;
and kept .the lead all the way. It wasn't&#13;
really a tight game.&#13;
Steve Hagenow had a gOOdnight, though.&#13;
He grabbed 20 rebounds and made 15&#13;
POints. He shows sIgns ot promIse.&#13;
The game should have been a revenge&#13;
game tor liS. Parkside's first defeat ot&#13;
the season was at the hands ot Lakeland&#13;
in a two point loss, 83-85. It sounded as&#13;
though ~akeland wanted revenge on ParksIde&#13;
the way the notse went. The spIrit&#13;
ot cheering doesn't seem to have reached&#13;
the Ranger fansj there was more en":&#13;
thuslasm comIng trom the Muskle bench&#13;
than trom the tans Who came to see the&#13;
home team.&#13;
(Continued on,fOllowIng page)&#13;
....&#13;
BUTTONS&#13;
The sale of the buttons will continue to&#13;
the Dominican Game which wnt be PlaYed&#13;
at Salem Central. The Salem Central&#13;
Lettermen's club under the direction at&#13;
Dorm Grams is sellIng the buttons to&#13;
help support athletics at Parkside. A&#13;
decal is also being sold for $10. This&#13;
decal comes with a season pass. This&#13;
decal wnt look good on someone's car&#13;
wtndow or store window. This is the&#13;
beggar'S way of raising money torathletlcs&#13;
but when the state legislature Won't&#13;
help????????&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION CLASSES&#13;
There will be some new phYsical ed:uca..&#13;
lion classes added next semester One of&#13;
these wIll be a badminton class which Wlli&#13;
be scheduled at 'r'remper in the evening.&#13;
Byung Dae Suh will be joInlng the staff&#13;
full time so the judo, karate, and self&#13;
defense offerblgs will be expanded. Mr.&#13;
Suh will also work in gymnastfcs ,&#13;
A hunter safety certificate/Shooting&#13;
Sports class wIll be conducted. This Will&#13;
be i first in the state. Other Classes&#13;
include: Fencing I Low OrganIzed Games,&#13;
'aquatics, Weight TraIning., BowUng/Colf,&#13;
gymnastics, Wrestling/Track and FIeld,&#13;
Volleyball/Soccer, Fencing/Softball, SkiIng,&#13;
First Aid, and Modern Dance.&#13;
XC SKIING&#13;
There is another phase of skiing that&#13;
too few people know about. We've been&#13;
talking about Alpine skiing. This is the&#13;
glamour side of the sport. Cross country&#13;
skiing Is Nordic. It is a sport that takes&#13;
a high level of physical conditionIng-or, to&#13;
put It another way, it 1s a way to condition&#13;
oneself and to maintain that condition.&#13;
The Office of Athletics Is inthe process&#13;
of developing XC trails. around the campus&#13;
(with the cooperation. of the Phys1cal&#13;
Plant) and skis have been ordered. All&#13;
students and staff are invited to find out&#13;
what U Is all about.&#13;
SPORTS FEST&#13;
The all-sports day was an enjoyable&#13;
occasIon. At least it was enjoyed by most&#13;
although the day could have been brighter&#13;
with a win 1n basketball. The Rangers are&#13;
an exciting team to watch and show plenty&#13;
.of promise. Coach Stephens and the team&#13;
can probably put up wIth a narrow 108s&#13;
once or twice, but three times in a row?&#13;
·It's just too hard on the ulcer, or at least&#13;
on the ulcer that Is developing, Besidesf&#13;
how long can one go Without sleep?&#13;
The wrestlers showed some talant. The&#13;
four pins in successIon were exciting.&#13;
W~ tInally got our 118 pounder in the&#13;
form of Larry Griffin. Now we need a 126&#13;
and 191 pounder. It's stUI not too late.&#13;
The fencers domInated "their part.of the&#13;
show wIth goad wins over the U.ofChicago&#13;
and Milwaukee Tech. That is one team we&#13;
don't have to worry about too mUCh.&#13;
In volleyball, both the faculty and club&#13;
teams showed promise in winning one&#13;
game apiece from the faculty team of&#13;
UWM. UWM has already extended an&#13;
inVitation for sometime after the New&#13;
Year for a rematch.&#13;
Compliments should also be extended&#13;
to the Porn Porn girls tor their part in the&#13;
show and to the Judo people. The Office&#13;
of StUdent Affairs more than dicltheirpart&#13;
in adding to the weekend activities. They&#13;
have some very capable people and are&#13;
working hard to provide activities for the&#13;
students of Parks ide.&#13;
Af~fe'IN~&#13;
YOUNG MEN - BOYS&#13;
207 Sixth St.&#13;
Racine, Wi., 53403&#13;
Phone&#13;
633-4266&#13;
'Sterile Cuckoo'&#13;
Liza MirmelU wm emerge this season as&#13;
the AU Macgraw of last season. Miss&#13;
Mlrtnelll's new and first movie of renown&#13;
is "The Sterile Cuckoov, It is one ot those&#13;
cheap budget sudden ending movies with&#13;
something to say, or at least I think it has&#13;
something to say.&#13;
Some audiences will 'think Lfza-s performance&#13;
a run through of a Carol Burnette&#13;
caricature. Others wtll find a warm funny&#13;
character who wanted to be loved. Nevertheless&#13;
hew you take Ltza Minelli's performance&#13;
wUl determine your feeling&#13;
for "The Sterile Cuckoo."&#13;
The screenplay by AlvlnSargentdoesnJt&#13;
seem very lnt~st1ng without Liza&#13;
MinnelU. It teUs of a couple who meet,&#13;
fall in love, fall in bed, and then fall out.&#13;
Most of the action is set on a New England&#13;
College Campus where Pookie and Jerry&#13;
attend as freshmen.&#13;
Together they make. an ideal combination.&#13;
He likes bJtterfiles~d she hates&#13;
weirdos. (A weirdo to Pookle is anyone who blends into the crowd.) When the&#13;
lights turn out, together they find as much&#13;
in common as ''he'' rabbits and "she"&#13;
rabbits.&#13;
After passing Easter vacation In his&#13;
dorm, Pookie the "tomato" an'C.1Jerry the&#13;
/Wlbookworm" break up their understand-&#13;
·ing. Of course she rides off in her&#13;
:seventy-five dollar Volkswagen'into the&#13;
sunset. But this is not the end, the script&#13;
calls for a deep meaning abrupt ending&#13;
which will leave the audience totally&#13;
frustrated, and the sixty year old housewife&#13;
looking for her shoes.&#13;
Liza Minnelli and Wendel Burton give&#13;
excellent performances as the couple who&#13;
sin on Sunday. Even 11 the context of '-The&#13;
Sterile Cuckoo" is second rate, Liza.&#13;
MiDnelli wl1l be assured of an Oscar&#13;
nomtnatton, but "The sterile Cuckoo" as&#13;
fUm will rot in its tin can.&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Continued&#13;
One not of humor in the dreary night&#13;
was a bad calIon the part of the ref.&#13;
Near the end of the game, a call went&#13;
out over the speaker to the owner of&#13;
a car with the license number C40-l32&#13;
to please move his car. Who should get&#13;
a surprised look on his face but the&#13;
referee. Technical anyone?&#13;
This week-end, the Rangers go on&#13;
tour to Minnesota, NortherD: Wisconsin&#13;
and Canada. They miss' out on a_..1ew&#13;
days rof school but they 'can atone for&#13;
it with a victory or two or- three. It's&#13;
cold up north OOt maybe the team wlll&#13;
warm up and show its real power.&#13;
PARKSlDE (86)&#13;
Kolar&#13;
Slaughter&#13;
Madsen&#13;
Hogan&#13;
Perrine&#13;
Rick&#13;
Hagenow&#13;
White&#13;
Tolals&#13;
Ig fI pi&#13;
2 3 1&#13;
15 2 2&#13;
1 0 2&#13;
7 2 5&#13;
3 1 3&#13;
3 1 3&#13;
6 3 2&#13;
001&#13;
37 12 16&#13;
LAKELAND (106)&#13;
Ig II pi&#13;
Imme 4 0 1&#13;
HI1l 10 1 3&#13;
Hotz 9 1 1&#13;
Heck 7 1 3&#13;
Meyer 9 11 3&#13;
Diener 5 0 2&#13;
Auslln 2 0 0&#13;
Totals 46 14 13&#13;
Halfllrne: Lakeland 55, Parkslde 36&#13;
FTM: Lakeland 8, Parkside 8&#13;
JVs: Lakeland 103, Parkslde 94&#13;
international printing week&#13;
-,&#13;
~&#13;
%-~-rz:&#13;
HAVE A HAPPY EXAM TIME!&#13;
A Collegian Public Service Message.&#13;
5 led U.iversity Population Symposium Featu'res&#13;
Advisory Group Experts on Problems, Trends&#13;
A representative of the Ford pnunda- Health and Human Development, Washing- Detection and Community Outre h&#13;
t ton, a Green Bay pltyslclan. two protes- ton, D.C., and Dr. E. H. Storey, dean of PaneHsts, in addition to the spea~: ",&#13;
sors and two students of The University the College of creauve Communication, will be Dr. Green. Dr. Harlley Mrs,&#13;
of Wisconsin-Green Bay have been added UWGB. _ Estel, and Mr-Lang hltn, Dr. Kaufm'an W~I~&#13;
to the roster of speakers and paneltsts Daytime sessions on Jan. 9, which begin serve as chairman of the Saturday&#13;
who wlJl participate In a symposium on at 9:30 a.m., wlJl present an analysiso! sion and moderator of the pan~l sea,&#13;
population problems to be presented Jan. the present population crisis and Its Saturday session will meet at the I~cThe&#13;
9-10 by the UWGB College of Human manUestatlons In contemporary iir e. hall of the Environmental Sciences b I~re&#13;
Biology. speakers and their topics Include Dr. Ing on the Main Campus. U d.&#13;
According to an announcement by Dr. 'paeuber , "population Outlook in Asia"; Registration Infortnatton and pr&#13;
John R. Beaton, dean of the 'college, Dr. Gyorgy, "Malnutrltlou Is a Problem brochures are avalldble from the o;f~nl&#13;
Robert T. McLaughlin of the Ford Faun- of Ecology"j Dr. Storey. "The Leisure of the College of Human Biology at UWGCI?&#13;
dation has been named as principal speak- Explosion"; and Dr. Abrahamson, "EfJ&#13;
A nominal one-day registration fee hB.&#13;
e r for the dinner meeting Jan. 9 at the tects of pollution on population Growth". been arranged for the Saturday session as&#13;
Beaumont Motor Inn. He wUl address the After the formal presentations, the day's&#13;
symposium on the tcctc, "FertUHy Re- speakers will serve as the nucleus for a&#13;
ducUOn: Can Voluntary Approaches see- d tscussion panel that will also include&#13;
ceed?" McLaughlin is program officer Greenwood and be moderated by Dr.&#13;
for the international diviSion of the Pcun- Alex Doberenz, assistant dean of the&#13;
dation's omee of Population in Washing- College of Human Biology and a member&#13;
ton, D.C. and a former staff member of' of 'the conference planning committee.&#13;
the Agency for International oevelopment Friday sessions, all scheduled at the&#13;
in Bogota, Colombia. Beaumont Motor Inn, will conclude with&#13;
Dr. Jeremy GreenoftheWebsterCl1nlc, the dinner meeting at 7 p.m,&#13;
Dr. Ruth Hartley and Or. William Kaut- Participants on Jan, 10 will present&#13;
man of the UWGBfaculty and two sopho- some alternatives to meeting the populamore&#13;
students, Sharon Estel and David lion crisis. The Saturday session opens&#13;
Greenwood, will join adlstinguishedgrouP. at 8:30 a.m, and adjournS at 12:30 p.m~&#13;
of scientists and social scientists from Speakers will be Dr. Combs, HThe Role&#13;
outside the state as panelists during the of the Federal Government in population&#13;
Friday and Saturday sessions. Dr, Hartley ;~e=s~e~a~rc~h~'~' ,~a~n~d~D~r~.~p~i~o~n:.., ~'~'p::re~g~n~a~n~c2:Y_================:&#13;
is chairman of the concentration ingrowth&#13;
and development and Dr. Kaufman is a&#13;
professor of biology in the College of&#13;
Human Biology.&#13;
"Population Growth: Crisis and Challenge"&#13;
is the theme of the conference&#13;
for which reglstralion is open to th~&#13;
general public. Other speakers at the&#13;
meeting will include Dr. Paul Gyergy,&#13;
of the University of PennsylvanIa reputed&#13;
to be the '&lt;father of nutrition" inAmerica&#13;
on the basis of his research on vitamins'&#13;
Dr. Irene B. Taeuber, visiting profes~&#13;
sor of international economics at Johns&#13;
Hopkins University and senior research&#13;
demographer in the Office of Population&#13;
Studies at Princeton University; two medical&#13;
doctors, Dr. Dean E. Abrahamson of&#13;
the faculty of the School of MedIcine&#13;
tjntversity ot J\.1innesota, and Dr. Ronald&#13;
Pion, director otllie DepartmentofFamUy&#13;
Planning and Sex Education, University O:f&#13;
Washington School of Medicine' Dr J W&#13;
Combs, Jr" of the Center for 'poP~la'tlo~&#13;
Research. National Institute of Child&#13;
The faculty has elected three repreSft\(ative.s&#13;
from Social Science, two from&#13;
Science aM one trom Kuma0..L5ticStudies&#13;
as members at the flrst elected Parkslde&#13;
University Committee.&#13;
This committee, perhaps me of lhe most&#13;
lnOuentlal on camp,ls,hu a wide varletyof&#13;
tunctlOlUl ranc1nl: from advising the Chancellor&#13;
on polley matters at ececem to the&#13;
faculty to sett1nc agendaB for faculty&#13;
Senate meetlncs.&#13;
It also acts as faculty rrievance committee&#13;
and can investlCate anythlJC at&#13;
ParUlde related educaUon.lts cha1rman&#13;
18 • member ot the nine-man, all-VolversUy&#13;
at Wisconsin Faculty Council and .&#13;
the UniveraUy Faculty Assembly which&#13;
baa approximately seventy members. includlnC&#13;
Fred Harrinrton, President of the&#13;
UniversUyot Wlaconstn.&#13;
Elected for three-year terms were&#13;
Norbert lsenberc (professor. chemistry)&#13;
and James Shea (Associate Protessor&#13;
earth SCience); for two-year terms Leo~&#13;
Applebaum CAssoclate Professor: economlca)&#13;
and Richard Carrington (Assistant&#13;
Professor, economics) and John&#13;
Harbeson (,\sslstant Professor, political&#13;
science); for one-year terms,OUverHayward&#13;
&lt;Asslal&amp;nt Protessor, history) and&#13;
Richard Carrlncton (Assistant professor,&#13;
communications). At the first meeting of&#13;
the CommIttee. Or. Shea was reelected&#13;
C~lrman; Or. Carrington was elected&#13;
a!ternate delecate to the Faculty CouncU'&#13;
and Or. Harbeson was elected Secretary:&#13;
From the Right&#13;
OUR GOALS FOR THE 70's&#13;
By JEFF PARRY&#13;
~n this new decade, most of us UWP&#13;
students will be graduat.tne. marrying,&#13;
and c:hoosirc our 11ttle cubby-hole In&#13;
society Where we wUl remain untO we die&#13;
The f ct that tbis picture is so abhor:&#13;
rent to many of us says something about&#13;
modern socIety. The truth Is that It is&#13;
hard to (E't enthusied about laking one's&#13;
place In t eo American Culture.&#13;
The winds of chance have elevated us to&#13;
new heights unmatched in the history of&#13;
man, yet war, hunger, pestilence and&#13;
pollution all 11e unsol\led at our feet.&#13;
Th1S is the supreme Irony. Standing on&#13;
the planets, we gaze back on the earth&#13;
and faU to solve the problems that consume&#13;
our socIety.&#13;
Why? Young people have the answer&#13;
We have turned from the true values of&#13;
IUe to artUlciaJ gods. Democracy, communlsmJ&#13;
money have replaced man's origInal&#13;
goals: peace, harmony and happiness.&#13;
Instead of loving our brother, we kill him&#13;
because he disagrees with us.&#13;
As the peace symbol comeS of age&#13;
let we yourc people take it up as 00;&#13;
banneri as we resign ourselves to taking&#13;
our place In society, let us make that&#13;
society, let us make that society a better'&#13;
the best, place on -earth. '&#13;
The torch of leadership is passl~ Into&#13;
our hands. If we remember to love f1rst&#13;
not to doubt; U we live In peace becaus~&#13;
we disavow war. then when this decade&#13;
closes our dread and dismay will have&#13;
turned to years of triumph.&#13;
fI;&#13;
"......."-&#13;
I SURANCE&#13;
FIRE&#13;
AUTO&#13;
UFE&#13;
lIABIUTY&#13;
THen&#13;
BONDS&#13;
BUSINESS&#13;
ACCIDENT&#13;
'iOSPITAlIZATION&#13;
MARINE&#13;
HOUSEHOLD&#13;
LOftS Haul Cayerages&#13;
em' a I AIL&#13;
UAIIU1'Y_.&#13;
--&#13;
-&#13;
m'en COIIP .......&#13;
~&#13;
DON SPARKS&#13;
INSURANCE AGINCY I 657·5156 I&#13;
........ AYI.&#13;
HERBERT'S&#13;
Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Jewelry StOf'e&#13;
It', Brandt's for the Fine,t in Sound Equipment&#13;
Solly. PalI__ lc .nc1 G.E.&#13;
Record Players•. Radios.&#13;
Tape Recorders and TV&#13;
All Record, and Tapes at Racine's Lowe,t Prices Alway,&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS ~ 511 lIAI,' STRElT&#13;
I I, , " , til' n! ;.1r.llI.lIlC'll )1\\1.11 f&#13;
freedom now now now&#13;
colorS and h&#13;
, opes 10 Zip Ihe&#13;
disapprOving&#13;
eye&#13;
.he&#13;
"Jl under cI&#13;
/I.. groun&#13;
;!~~&#13;
it3~iJ': Itf tit&#13;
__r ...... __...:~J ~"" - --&#13;
..&#13;
The Chiapp tt . e a Underground&#13;
a&#13;
'·"olut' '&#13;
fO".'Y&#13;
dig it l live&#13;
the underground is the fulure you you you&#13;
bring bread</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="59616">
              <text>Parkside Collegian, Volume 1, issue 5, January 9, 1970</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="59617">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="59618">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="59619">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="59620">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="59621">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="59622">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="59623">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="59624">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="59625">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
