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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, Issue 11</text>
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            <text>The 27 Will Stay</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>0&#13;
g&#13;
C\&#13;
-~&#13;
0&#13;
~&#13;
l!&#13;
~&#13;
-1m c&#13;
:s&#13;
fI)&#13;
~~&#13;
~~&#13;
Editor's Note: The following news story&#13;
was written before the chancellor's&#13;
Monday morning announcement.&#13;
The purge has begun.&#13;
The "major surgery" Dean MacKinney&#13;
spoke of In October to remove those&#13;
faculty. who did not fit into Parkside's&#13;
plans has become a reality.&#13;
. Twenty-eight instructors have been&#13;
intorrned verbally tbat their contracts will&#13;
. not be renewed for the fall of 1971.Of these,&#13;
~enty-slx are second, third or fourth year&#13;
mstruclor~. Indications are that a similar&#13;
purge of first year faculty will take place&#13;
at the end of January. It is expected to take&#13;
a lesser number of instructors.&#13;
R.easons for the terminations have been&#13;
varied and vague. They include lack of&#13;
adequate publication, irrelevancy tu&#13;
Parkside'smission, better qualified people&#13;
can be hired, and lack of a Ph.D.&#13;
The administration claims some faculty&#13;
members promised to get Ph.D.'s when&#13;
hired, but haven't done so.&#13;
Some fac~lty members say in turn they&#13;
were promised more time to get Ph.D.'s&#13;
than given. They charge the administration&#13;
with bad faith.&#13;
The high number of terminations came&#13;
as a surprise to many faculty members.&#13;
Prof. James Shea, the president of the&#13;
University Committee, said, "The Vice&#13;
Chancellor and Dean MacKinney assured&#13;
me on Oct. 23 that there would be no more&#13;
than ten or 15 non-renewals of contracts. I&#13;
said to them, the information I had&#13;
suggested 20 to 30 faculty members would&#13;
have their contracts terminated. They said&#13;
absolutely not. It was nowhere near that."&#13;
Vice Chancellor Harris denied saying&#13;
this.&#13;
Among those who did - not ha ve their&#13;
contracts renewed at this time were John&#13;
Harbeson, who has long been involved in&#13;
the development of Parkside; Douglas&#13;
Laf'ollette, the defeated candidate for&#13;
Congress; Hal Stern; Carl Lindner, Robert&#13;
Schrader; Walter Graffin; and Gerald&#13;
Musich.&#13;
The 28 represent almost 20 per cent of&#13;
the full-time faculty, but more than 45 per&#13;
cent of the second. third and fourth year&#13;
instructors. In the Humanities Division.&#13;
roughly two-thirds have been terminated.&#13;
Looking at past terminations by the&#13;
school, no indication of this being expected&#13;
is seen. In 1967-68 there were four terminations;&#13;
in 1968-69 there were seven&#13;
terminations; and in 1969--70. there was&#13;
only one termination.&#13;
Faculty response was almost of&#13;
universal dismay at the number of terminations.&#13;
There is strong talk of&#13;
unionizing Parkside instructors, of seeking&#13;
punitive action from the American&#13;
Association of University Professors, and&#13;
to get the National Labor Relations Board&#13;
to hold a hearing about what has happened.&#13;
The ultimate decision to retain or not to&#13;
retain a faculty member was made by the&#13;
Dean and the Vice Chancellor. They&#13;
received recommendations from the&#13;
executive committees of each division.&#13;
The Executive Committees are made up of&#13;
the tenured people of the division.&#13;
But even before the Executive Committees&#13;
began their evaluations, the administration&#13;
had a list of potential terminees.&#13;
James Shea said, "The administration&#13;
carried out its own independent evaluation&#13;
of faculty. In fact, the divisional chairmen&#13;
were given a list of prospective terminees.&#13;
Agreement was sought from the chairmen&#13;
on this point.&#13;
':=;;:;;;:::--;;;;::=-::;;;::;:;;:;;:;;:;;=:;;===============___ • before the deliberations of the executive - "This happened," he continued, "even Lecture&#13;
committees had started."&#13;
In cases where the Dean had questions&#13;
about the recommendations. he referred&#13;
them to a special Ad Hoc committee he&#13;
appointed made up of six tenured faculty&#13;
members. They then made recommendations&#13;
to the Dean. The ultimate&#13;
decision, though, was still in the hands of&#13;
the administration.&#13;
The final number of terminations by the&#13;
administration exceeded the recommendations&#13;
for terminations by the&#13;
Divisions. In fact, the Social Science&#13;
division recommended that no terminations&#13;
be made. So far nine terminations&#13;
have been made in that division.&#13;
A few weeks ago the Division passed by&#13;
acclamation a condemnation of the administration.&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Harris said of this, "If&#13;
you give a body the power to evaluate&#13;
something, and they don't do it, then it's&#13;
obviously the responsibility of those in the&#13;
administration to do it."&#13;
VfETNAM WAR DEAD&#13;
COUNT RISES&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) Total&#13;
American deaths from the Indochinese&#13;
Waf have climbed to 52,757, according to&#13;
the most recent death count from the .S.&#13;
Department· of Defense. This figure iny&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie announced early&#13;
Monday that 17of the TI faculty memben&#13;
who had been informed verbally thetr&#13;
contracts were terminated will be re-hired&#13;
(or the 1971-197'2academic year.&#13;
The remaining len instructors will be&#13;
given until September 01 1971to complete&#13;
their doctor of philosophy degrees.&#13;
The reinstatements has been eUected,&#13;
Wyllie said, because when 22of these were&#13;
hired by former Dean Stephen Mitchell it&#13;
was not made clear in their contracts how&#13;
long their appointments were to be.&#13;
~e normal appointment period for an&#13;
assistant professor is three years.&#13;
While legally, Wyllie said, he felt the&#13;
university was within its rights to terminate&#13;
the contracts at one or two years,&#13;
txJt to render justice he said he felt the&#13;
professors should be retained for the third&#13;
year.&#13;
The chancellor said of these n teachers&#13;
who were not to be retained, eight were&#13;
recommended for non-retention by their&#13;
own divisional executive committees. 13&#13;
by the ad hoc advisory committee appointed&#13;
by Dean McKinney to give the&#13;
dean and vice-chancellor further&#13;
recommendation, and six by the personal&#13;
decision of the dean and vice-chancellor.&#13;
Of the eight faculty members recommended&#13;
for non-retention by their&#13;
divisional executive committee. five were&#13;
assistant professors and three were instructors&#13;
working on their Ph.D. degrees.&#13;
He said the executive committee informed&#13;
him they would see no reason to&#13;
change their initial recommendation on&#13;
the eight in the future.&#13;
Wyllie said, too, "our first and foremost&#13;
obligation is on teachi;g."&#13;
Wednesday-&#13;
,. Automobile Emissions: Environmental&#13;
Benefit vs. Technological&#13;
Costs" win be the topic of a public lecture&#13;
by Prof. Phillip S. Myers at 4:30 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday. Dec. 9, in Greenquisl Hall&#13;
Room 101 at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The lecture is sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
SCience Division.&#13;
Prof. Myers is a member of the&#13;
mechanical engineering Iaculty, at UWMadison&#13;
and is immediate past president&#13;
of the Society of Automotive Engineers&#13;
(SAEL Among his long-time research&#13;
interests are the vagaries of engines and&#13;
combustion.&#13;
His work has resulted in more than 40&#13;
technical publications and a number of&#13;
awards including the Benjamin Smith&#13;
Reynolds Teaching Award and the Horning&#13;
Memorial Award and Arch T. Colwell&#13;
Award 01 the SAE.&#13;
Prof. Myers received his undergraduate&#13;
degree from Kansas State University and&#13;
his MS and Ph.D. degrees from UWMadison.&#13;
eludes 43,959 deaths, "resultmg trom&#13;
action from hostile forces," and 8,798from&#13;
"other causes," which include aircraft&#13;
accidents and "incidents."&#13;
Weaver: University For' Purposes Of Students By MARGIE NOER entire answer lollows: strength of that thesis persons are being the Board his feelings about the policies of&#13;
"In fact, nobody has been dismissed. invited in for conversations with the Dean the institution that are in his judgment,&#13;
What has been occurring this week is the and lhe Vice-Chancellor about the based on his work with faculty and other&#13;
Dean (MacKinney) and the Vice- situation and during those conversations administrative officers, correct. The new&#13;
Chancellor have been talking to individual they are being afforded every opportunity UW president sees the Board 01 Regents&#13;
faculty members but no notices have been to, as 1understand it and I'm not in on this, and the president in a relationship&#13;
served on any faculty members. You see to speak their case and their situation, So representing an arena of discussion of the&#13;
you are stating as fact things that are not it's conceivable based on those con- university's problems and judgments&#13;
facts. The review process starts at the versations with the Dean and the Vice- made by the laymen who are represendivisional&#13;
level with the faculty who serve Chancellor that some of these things could tatives of the public.&#13;
on the divisional executive committees be turned around so that the notices would Weaver went on to say that "I feel very&#13;
making the initial judgments and offering not be sent, you see, and we are in a strongly in this particular moment and&#13;
advice on the renewal of these ap- situation in which student reaction is a time that even our students are demanding&#13;
pointments to the Dean. So that's one level. gun-jumping reaction based on claims that more of an opportunity to be heard in the&#13;
And in fact, a significant number of people are not stated by the people who are governance of the university. So also is the&#13;
were recommended for non-renewal by the responsible for the review." public." He stressed that the public is&#13;
divisional executive committees. Then the At that point the questions were getting "mighty insistent" about their&#13;
'next level of review is the Dean's level. redirected to president Weaver. In the feelings of need of greater accountability&#13;
And again, to build in protection for the short time. that remained, Weaver was on the part of the university to the public&#13;
faculty, the Dean created a special ad hoc asked if he felt the UW president should be that supports it. Although he has syrnadvisory&#13;
committee of faculty to help him submissive to some of the orders and pathies for the students' wish for parwith&#13;
the review process at this level. And requests made by the Board of Regents or ticipation in university governing and&#13;
that faculty group also recommended should the present university make an hopes they may be accomodated in the&#13;
people for non-renewal. There is an im- attempt to stand up to the Regents? councils of the university in the future,&#13;
portant distinction here between dismissal Weaver answered that the president Weaver also feels the public should be&#13;
for cause ana non-renewal. And then on the should use his judgment in representing to heard and represented in the same way.&#13;
"I am delighted to find that there are&#13;
some woodland and ecologic areas with&#13;
real merit that I hope this campus is going&#13;
to be able to preserve in the years ahead."&#13;
Such was UW president-elect John C.&#13;
Weaver's initial reaction to Parkside when&#13;
he visited our campus last Thursday.&#13;
In a press conference, followiDg his tourof&#13;
the campus, Weaver said that when he is&#13;
officially in office he hopes to find informal&#13;
ways of visiting with the students, "The&#13;
university is here for the purposes of&#13;
education and that means for the pur}X&gt;ses&#13;
of the students .. , With the Chancellors'&#13;
help I'll find ways to be able to visit with&#13;
the student, you can be sure of that."&#13;
Having arrived during the height of the&#13;
student rally, Weaver was asked several&#13;
questions about the faculty dismissals.&#13;
Since he had been in the state only 24&#13;
hours, Weaver said he couldn't effectively&#13;
answer due to lack of information on the&#13;
SUbject. At that point, the question was&#13;
directed to Chancellor Wyllie and his&#13;
I&#13;
r&#13;
•&#13;
The 27 Will Sta y&#13;
Editor:s Note: The following news story&#13;
was written before the chancellor's&#13;
Monday morning announcement.&#13;
The purge has begun.&#13;
The "major surgery" Dean MacKinney&#13;
spoke of in October to remove those&#13;
faculty who did not fit into Parkside's&#13;
plans has become a reality.&#13;
. Twenty-eight instructors have been&#13;
informed verbally that their contracts will . not be re~ewed for the fall of 1971. Of these,&#13;
~enty-s1x are s_eco~d, third or fourth year&#13;
instructors. Indications are that a similar&#13;
purge of first year faculty will take place&#13;
at the end of January. It is expected to take a lesser number of instructors.&#13;
Reasons for the terminations have been&#13;
varied and vague. They include lack of&#13;
adeq~at~ . p~bl_ication, irrelevancy to&#13;
Parkside s m1ss1on, better qualified people&#13;
can be hired, and lack of a Ph.D.&#13;
The administration claims some faculty&#13;
members promised to get Ph.D. 's when&#13;
hired, but haven't done so.&#13;
Some faculty members say in turn they&#13;
were promised more time to get Ph.D.'s&#13;
than given. They charge the administration&#13;
with bad faith.&#13;
The high number of terminations came&#13;
as a surprise to many faculty members.&#13;
Prof. James Shea, the president of the&#13;
University Committee, said, "The Vice&#13;
Chancellor and Dean MacKinney assured&#13;
me on Oct. 23 that there would be no more&#13;
than ten or 15 non-renewals of contracts. I&#13;
said to them, the information I had&#13;
suggested 20 to 30 faculty members would&#13;
have their contracts terminated. They said&#13;
absolutely not. It was nowhere near that."&#13;
Vice Chancellor Harris denied saying&#13;
this.&#13;
Among those who did not have their&#13;
contracts renewed at this time were John&#13;
Harbeson, who has long been involved in&#13;
the development of Parkside; Douglas&#13;
LaFollette, the defeated candidate for&#13;
Congress; Hal Stern; Carl Lindner, Robert&#13;
Schrader; Walter Graffin ; and Gerald&#13;
Musich.&#13;
The 28 represent almost 20 per cent of&#13;
the full-time faculty, but more than 45 per&#13;
cent of the second, third and fourth year&#13;
instructors. In the Humanities Division,&#13;
roughly two-thirds have been terminated.&#13;
Looking at past terminations by the&#13;
school, no indication of this being expected&#13;
is seen. In 1967~ there were four terminations:&#13;
in 1968-69 there were seven&#13;
terminations; and in 1969-70, there was&#13;
only one termination.&#13;
Faculty response was almost of&#13;
universal dismay at the number of terminations.&#13;
There is strong talk of&#13;
unionizing Parkside instructors. of seeking&#13;
punitive action from the American&#13;
Association of University Professors, and&#13;
to get the National Labor Relations Board&#13;
to hold a hearing about what has happened.&#13;
&#13;
The ultimate decision to retain or not to&#13;
retain a faculty member was made by the&#13;
Dean and the Vice Chancellor. They&#13;
received recommendations from the&#13;
executive committees of each division.&#13;
The Executive Committees are made up of&#13;
the tenured people of the division.&#13;
But even before the Executive Committees&#13;
began their evaluations, the administration&#13;
had a list of potential terminees.&#13;
&#13;
James Shea said, "The administration&#13;
carried out its own independent evaluation&#13;
of faculty. In fact, the divisional chairmen&#13;
were given a list of prospective terminees.&#13;
Agreement was sought from the chairmen&#13;
on this point.&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie announced early&#13;
tonday that 17 of the 27 faculty member~&#13;
who had been informed verbally their&#13;
contracts were terminated will be re-hired&#13;
for the 1971-1972 academic year.&#13;
The remaining ten instructors will be&#13;
given until September of 1971 to complete&#13;
their doctor of philosophy degree .&#13;
The reinstatements has been effected&#13;
Wyllie said, because when 22 of th ewer~&#13;
hired by former Dean Stephen Mitchell it&#13;
was not made clear in their contracts how&#13;
long their appointments were to be.&#13;
The normal appointment period for an assistant professor is three year .&#13;
While legally, Wyllie said, he felt the&#13;
university was within its rights to terminate&#13;
the contracts at one or two year ,&#13;
but to render justice he said he felt the&#13;
professors should be retained for the third&#13;
year.&#13;
The chancellor said of the e 27 teacher&#13;
who were not to be retained, eight were&#13;
recommended for non-retention by their&#13;
own divisional executive committees, 13&#13;
by_ the ad hoc advisory committee appointed&#13;
by Dean kKinney to give the&#13;
dean and vice;chancellor further&#13;
recommendation, and six by the personal&#13;
decision of the dean and vice-chancellor.&#13;
Of the eight faculty member recommended&#13;
for non-retention by their&#13;
divisional executive committee. five were&#13;
assistant professors and three were instructors&#13;
working on their Ph.D. degrees.&#13;
He said the executive committee informed&#13;
him they would ee no reason to&#13;
change their initial recommendation on the eight in the future.&#13;
Wyllie said, too, "our first and foremo t&#13;
obligation is on teaching."&#13;
"This happened, " he continued, "even&#13;
before the deliberations of the executive - Lecture w ednesday -- committees had started."&#13;
In cases where the Dean had questions "Automobile Em1ss1ons: Enabout&#13;
the recommendations, he referred vironmental Benefit vs. Technological&#13;
them to a special Ad Hoc committee he Costs" will be the topic of a public lecture&#13;
appointed made up of six tenured faculty by Prof. Phillip S. tyers at 4:30 p.m. on&#13;
members. They then made recom- \\'ednesday, Dec. 9, in Greenquist Hall&#13;
mendations to the Dean. The ultimate Room 101 at the Univer ity of Wi consmdecision,&#13;
though, was still in the hands of Parkside Wood Road Campu . the administration. The lecture is spon ored by the Park 1de&#13;
The final number of terminations bv the Science Divi ion .&#13;
administration exceeded the recom- Prof. :\tyer · is a member of th&#13;
mendations for terminations bv the mechanical engineering facult_· at WDivisions.&#13;
In fact, the Social Science • tadt on and I immediate pa t pr('l;id nt&#13;
division recommended that no ter- of the ociety of Automotive Engineer&#13;
minations be made. So far nine ter- &lt;SAE&gt; Among his long-time re £&gt;arch&#13;
minations have been made in that division. interest are the vagarie of engin s and&#13;
A few weeks ago the Division passed by com_bu lion. .&#13;
acclamation a condemnation of the ad- His work ha r ulted in more than 40&#13;
ministration. technical publication and a number of&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Harris said of this " If awards including the Benjamin m1th&#13;
you give a body the power to eval~ate Reynolds Teaching Award and the Horsomething,&#13;
and they don't do it, then it's rung Memorial Award and Arch T. Colwell&#13;
obviously the responsibility of those in the Award of the AE&#13;
administration to do it." Prof. · iyers received h1 undergraduate&#13;
VIETNAM WAR DEAD&#13;
COUNT RISE&#13;
degree from Kansas State University and&#13;
his MS and Ph.D degrees from UW·&#13;
fad1son&#13;
WASHINGTON ICP I Total&#13;
American deaths from the Indochine e clud 43 ,959 death . "r ulting trom&#13;
War have climbed to 52,757, according to action from ho tile fore , " and 8,798 from&#13;
the most recent death count from the t; "other cause ," which includ aircraft&#13;
Department -of Defense. Thi figure in- accidents and "inciden . "&#13;
Weaver: University For, Purposes Of Students&#13;
By MARGIE NOER entire answer follows: strength of that thesis persons are being the Board his feeling about the polici of&#13;
"I am delighted to find that there are&#13;
some woodland and ecologic areas with&#13;
real merit that I hope this campus is going&#13;
to be able to preserve in the years ahead.''&#13;
Such was UW president-elect John C.&#13;
Weaver's initial reaction to Parkside when&#13;
he visited our campus last Thursday.&#13;
In a press conference, following his tour~&#13;
of the campus, Weaver said that when he is&#13;
officially in office he hopes to find informal&#13;
ways of visiting with the students. "The&#13;
university is here for the purposes of&#13;
education and that means for the purposes&#13;
of the students ... With the Chancellors'&#13;
help I'll find ways to be able to visit with&#13;
the student, you can be sure of that."&#13;
Having arrived during the height of the&#13;
student rally, Weaver was asked several&#13;
questions about the faculty dismissals.&#13;
Since he had been in the state only 24&#13;
hours, Weaver said he couldn't effectively&#13;
answer due to lack of information on the&#13;
subject. At that point, the question was&#13;
directed to Chancellor Wylhe and his&#13;
"In fact, nobody has been dismissed. invited in for conversations with the Dean the institution that are in his judgment,&#13;
What has been occurring this week is the and the Vice-Chancellor about the based on his work with faculty and other&#13;
Dean (MacKinney) and the Vice- situation and during those conversations administrative officers, correct. The new&#13;
Chancellor have been talking to individual they are being afforded every opportunity UW president sees the Board of Regents&#13;
faculty members but no notices have been to, as I understand it and I'm not in on this, and the president in a relationship&#13;
served on any faculty members. You see to speak their case and their situation. So representing an arena of discussion of the&#13;
you are stating as fact things that are not it's conceivable based on those con- university's problems and judgments&#13;
facts. The review process starts at the versations with the Dean and the Vice- made by the laymen who are represendivisional&#13;
level with the faculty who serve Chancellor that some of these things could tativ~ of the public.&#13;
on the divisional executive committees be turned around so that the notices would Weaver went on to say that "I feel very&#13;
making the initial judgments and offering not be sent, you see, and we are in a ,trongly in this particular moment and&#13;
advice on the renewal of these ap- situation in which student reaction is a time that even our students are demanding&#13;
pointments to the Dean. So that's one level. gun-jumping reaction based on claims that more of an opportunity to be heard in the&#13;
And in fact, a significant number of people are not stated by the people who are governance of the university. So also is the&#13;
were recommended for non-renewal by the responsible for the review." public." He stressed that the public is&#13;
divisional executive committees. Then the At that point the questions were getting "mighty insistent" about their&#13;
next level of review is the Dean's level. redirected to president Weaver. In the feelings of need of greater accountability&#13;
And again, to build in protettion for the short time. that remained, Weaver was on the part of the university to the public&#13;
faculty, the Dean created a special ad hoc asked if he felt the UW president should be that supports il Although he has symadvisory&#13;
committee of faculty to help him submissive to some of the orders and pathies for the students' wish for parwith&#13;
the review process at this level. And requests made by the Board of Regents or ticipation in university governing and&#13;
that faculty group also recommended should the present university make an hopes they may be accomodated in the&#13;
people for non-renewal. There is an im- attempt to stand up to the Regents? councils of the university in the future,&#13;
portant distinction here between dismissal Weaver ;inswered that the president Weaver also feels the public should be&#13;
for cau:;e ana non-renewal. And then on the should use his Judgment in representing to heard and represented in the same way. &#13;
When "The Brids, The Bees and the&#13;
italians" lirsl played in U.S. theatres, the&#13;
ads for these engagements carried the&#13;
copy line: "A new triumph Ircm the&#13;
director of 'Divorce Italian Style' ...&#13;
Another PIetro Germi triumph ISprecisely&#13;
what it proved 10 be&#13;
The filrn IS suffused, start to finish, ..s-ith&#13;
the unique ense of delicious social satire&#13;
that I Germi's own mark on the screen&#13;
You laugh delightedly at hIS people, so&#13;
a urd in their pcsturmg and hypocrisy,&#13;
yet you do not despi them, for the rolhes&#13;
of Germi's human being are the uruversa!&#13;
tcrbt 01 manklOd&#13;
r n stars Virna List. never more&#13;
Italian Film Here Friday&#13;
beautiful and sexy. and masterly&#13;
comedian Gastone Moschin portray&#13;
b1isslul, unhappy lovers. The plot, set in a&#13;
town in northern Italy.&#13;
Critics have acclaimed "The Birds, The&#13;
Bees and The Italians" as: "An extremely&#13;
Iunny comedy .. . hilarious, orlglOal,&#13;
outrageously convincing - imm~r~l ..&#13;
an Italian Peyton Place ... Titlllatt~&#13;
... and lull 01sharp, satiric bile." It will&#13;
be shown at Parkside this Friday night. at&#13;
8:00 p.m. in the Parkside achVlhes&#13;
building. Admission is 75 cents and&#13;
Parkside \.0. It is one 01 the series 01 t9&#13;
feature films booked and sponsored&#13;
through the office of student activities.&#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
To the Eouors&#13;
Th'r I a. trange and deadly disease&#13;
pi' 'adlOK aero the I;WP campuses.&#13;
Ther appc r-. 10 he no remedy lor thIS&#13;
t ·knt, . wtu h rhre len to d tro)' the&#13;
lotal stru .ture of thiS unl\ rsuy&#13;
Appart'ntly U'N'earner I somew here 10&#13;
T II 'nl lIall, bUI efforL, 10 pmpornt and&#13;
ceerm ~ It... dl eased h ve been thus far&#13;
un-u rut&#13;
II ppc r that those most vulnerable to&#13;
Ult'" kllh:r are faculty m mbers, parncularty&#13;
lh lack,n~ tenure Ph 0 's, and&#13;
,-,he) ha .. • pru\' n lhem~ch:es din·&#13;
~tru -tors of high qualll)' and promise&#13;
Thl dl"ca . call d "Faculty purgus" or&#13;
tht.' p18~ue. has reached epidemic&#13;
pruporhMs By la I \\oeek It had claimed 1:4&#13;
"Il·hm~. and IlK' toU mal go as high 8S 60&#13;
"In the meanllme," s~Hd one social&#13;
clfmc.:~ In 'ructor a. he \loas clearing out&#13;
hi nUu.:. "311 \\e can do I make&#13;
arran r rn('nL"ioto h~'a\'ecampus and seek&#13;
('mpt()~ m 'ot (.'1 .. (·"" tw.·re The bug could hit&#13;
.In) of lL'"..&#13;
Symplom. of the bug IOciude a bleak&#13;
pallor on facull) member.&gt;' faces. huddled&#13;
t(roup:-;.of dllJ(,(:tl'CI ·Iookmg Il\~tructors. and&#13;
,I gl'm-ritl lilp~e of all IOteresl In In1l'lh,'c:tual&#13;
pur~ulb. of the classroom as&#13;
f ..lcully und studl'nls alike wait for the next&#13;
\ Ictlm&#13;
H('p()rt~ OIr('that Go\'ernor·elect Lucey&#13;
IIl,I dl'C.:lan' a state of emergenc)' at the&#13;
l\\ c. mvu~ and ..lsk for federal troops&#13;
Jeff Parry&#13;
Tn lh(" editor&#13;
Th(' Amencan Institute of&#13;
Family HclatlOns&#13;
;,2R7 Sunset Boulevard.&#13;
l..cko. Angeles. California 9OOZ1&#13;
HE M ... tal lIeallh 01 College tudeols.&#13;
One of th serlOUSproblems 10 college&#13;
tmd UOl\'cr -(1)' hfe today is the lack of&#13;
aU nllon to the persona lily needs of the&#13;
.ludents UI'Ide IS the second most&#13;
l'Ommon cause of death on the camups.&#13;
topped onl)' b)' automobile accidents; but&#13;
th "ho ha\'e studIed lhe subjecl believe&#13;
lhat half of the latter are "concealed&#13;
SUICideS",thus SUICideactually leads the&#13;
11,1 I)r Ho"ard A Rusk or the New York&#13;
Unl' ('rsit) McdlC:al Center collected&#13;
l':)lImatc. that 90.000 students each year&#13;
\\llIlhr alen SUICide,one In ten will make&#13;
Ihc "Hempt, and lhal lhere ",11 be 1.000&#13;
t!c.'tual death.-.;r~ulttng Beyond this. he&#13;
"'olleulat . that amongslx mllhon students,&#13;
. )mc 6110,000 han' emotional problems&#13;
for "htch they need profeSSional&#13;
~ I lanl'c" Thl" ~altonal Institute of&#13;
:\lrntal H,,'alth find:s that "the factor of&#13;
human I.solatlonand \\ithdrawal" appears&#13;
10 lx- cnhc31 and the colleges recognize&#13;
IhI.' rlOlJ.'oiproblem created by these&#13;
"lnnl'rs" and arr tr)'lOg to pro\'ide help but&#13;
admit t 10 hundreds or lellers to lb from&#13;
&lt;iI'Dns1 that the)' do not have adequate&#13;
~olutJons&#13;
This \\01 ·te of some of the nallon's finest&#13;
youn~ people is Intolerable. 10ee for&#13;
l'\l"r} 3('(031 death, nearly a hundred have&#13;
f('lt so drspcrate a~ to threaten it. much&#13;
h~hl could be lhrown on lhe subject by&#13;
learmng whal ractor-Iiie-nabled the ror·&#13;
tul1att OI\('Sto ",ork out of the-ir diHiculties&#13;
and kct"p ~oing.&#13;
With the help of a friend who is vitally&#13;
IOtcrested in thiS subject. the American&#13;
Institute ~fFamily RelaliorJs is carrying&#13;
oul a nattonwl?e study of what is being&#13;
done and what could and should be done.&#13;
We need to hear from as many students&#13;
and Tor mer sludenlS as possible who have&#13;
faced such a crisis What pulled them out&#13;
01il? Was it aid furnished by lhe college or&#13;
university? or other community&#13;
organization~ or by a friend~ or religion?&#13;
or reading? Just how did they save&#13;
themselves?&#13;
We will not publish the names of any&#13;
individuals or schools; the information&#13;
WIll be handled slalistically and&#13;
anonymously. If you can call the attention&#13;
or your readers to this study and ask for&#13;
volunteers who will ~ rite their experiences&#13;
to me ("personal") at the above&#13;
address. it may contribute toward saving&#13;
valuable lives&#13;
We shall certainly be most grateful for&#13;
any help you can give.&#13;
Cordially yours,&#13;
Paul Popenoe, Sc.D.&#13;
President&#13;
Dear Sirs:&#13;
As Central Administrative Nomenclator&#13;
It IS my function to firm up and finalize the&#13;
academic lilies to be used at Parkside. In&#13;
the lOtereslS of brevity and efficiency I&#13;
suggest that appropriate acronyms be&#13;
d!\·ised wherever possible. Since there is&#13;
lillie time, we at Central Administration&#13;
have~igned the following code names to&#13;
faculty groups regarding who~&#13;
"t;~'cope has expressed concern. To&#13;
begm with there are those tenured faculty&#13;
who are not meeting the standards set by&#13;
Centeral Administration. These&#13;
profCSS(lrs, Identifiable by the Increased&#13;
l.oad 1--e\'Y with which we have laxed&#13;
them, are regarded by us as ILL. Next are&#13;
the 5econd·year Academic Doctorated, all&#13;
of whom. as you know. can be summarily&#13;
terminated by December 15. When&#13;
discussing thiS group's chances of&#13;
retention please refer to them as SAD.&#13;
Finally, there are the new teachers who&#13;
have come to U6 without the doctorate,&#13;
those first year probationary instructors&#13;
who have been Detained Earning&#13;
Academic Doctorates; these persons are·&#13;
DEAD.&#13;
Thank you for helping us facilitate&#13;
~atters - it is. after all, a ftulclioning&#13;
mput40utput model.&#13;
Yours obediently,&#13;
Central Administrative Nomenclator&#13;
Concerning EducatorRetentions&#13;
Please refer. inquires to CANCER at&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
SYMPOSIUM&#13;
The largest annual symposium ever&#13;
sponsored by the Wisconsin Student&#13;
Association, to include more than 30 in·&#13;
ternationally·known speakers over a 10-&#13;
day period in March, is planned by UW·&#13;
Madison students with the help of com·&#13;
mumty leaders,&#13;
"We want to demonstrate that the&#13;
Univer ity of Wisconsin still stands for&#13;
rati~naJ dial~ue," said WSA Symposium&#13;
chairman, Victor Rodwin.&#13;
"We believe it is important that America&#13;
be exposed to ideas that will stimulate&#13;
constructive action instead of useless&#13;
deslru~l.ion..The University is a strategic&#13;
place In whIch to breed these ideas and&#13;
present ~~ to thp A.merican public."&#13;
In the past, the Symposium has brought&#13;
such speakers to the UWcampus as Henry&#13;
Kissinger. Jesse Jackson, James Reston,&#13;
George Wallace, Eugene McCarthy and&#13;
B,shop James Pike.&#13;
RodwlO announced the theme for the&#13;
1971 Symposiwn will be "Alternative&#13;
Futures for America."&#13;
So far ~ financial support for the Sym4&#13;
POSlum mcludes a $5,000 appropriation&#13;
from the WSA budgel, and a $5.900granl&#13;
from the Board or Regents.&#13;
Violence lollowed the 1969 Symposium&#13;
o~ B!ack America and after a speech by&#13;
Ylppte leader Jerry Rubin during last&#13;
year's program. Douhts had arisen among&#13;
some UW administrative leaders as to&#13;
whether the traditional symposium should&#13;
be continued.&#13;
"To cancel major University programs&#13;
in the name of fear would contradict one&#13;
major goal of the University - the pursuit&#13;
of truth ... Rodwin explained.&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI , MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 11&#13;
December 1. 1970&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon .'&#13;
Bill Jacohy, John Potente&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
PhotographerS&#13;
Published weekly by the students 01 the U~iversity 01 WiSCOO8inParkside&#13;
Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Mathng address ISParkside's Newseope.&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha, Business and editoriallelephone number isIJII.&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
It was bound to come up , .. The&#13;
subject is: Beards.&#13;
"Now that you're going to college, I&#13;
suppose you'll be raising a beard. or&#13;
mustache" said a bald and over·wetght&#13;
Iriend. A~d when itold him that I had the&#13;
idea under consideration he gave me a&#13;
hopeless shrug, opened another can of beer&#13;
and turned on his TV. More calories to&#13;
him!&#13;
Actually, I sort 01 like a well·trimmed&#13;
beard or mustache. I was browsing&#13;
through a book the other day. It had in it&#13;
the portraits of our thirty-five Presidents&#13;
and about half of them had a beard or&#13;
mustache. Of course, most of the wearers&#13;
were prior to the time of Messrs. Gillette&#13;
and Schick. Nevertheless they were a&#13;
distinguished group and Isaluted each one&#13;
of them as I turned the pages.&#13;
Ithink that each man has his own face to&#13;
take care of and each has the privilege of&#13;
doing with it as he pleases. It's his private&#13;
property. If he wants to scare people away&#13;
with it, that's his business, too.&#13;
As far as I'm concerned, if a fellow&#13;
wants to raise dandelions on his face, it's&#13;
OK with me. But he had better not let the.&#13;
blossoms turn into seeds and show up in&#13;
our neighborhood. because then he would&#13;
really be in trouble. Mrs. Gruhl doesn't&#13;
like to see dandelion seeds floating around&#13;
our back yard,&#13;
Confidentially, the chances of my&#13;
growing a beard are very slim. Ibroached&#13;
the subject to Mrs. Gruhl. She said, for&#13;
instance, "Now if you could figure out a&#13;
way to make the hair come out on the top&#13;
of your head, Icould see some sense in it."&#13;
And the crack that really sent my idea&#13;
down the drain was, "You're-going to sleep&#13;
alone if you dare to even try to grow a&#13;
beard!"&#13;
Sleeping alone is about the last thing I&#13;
would want to do. My bride and I have&#13;
been sharing the same bunk for 46 years&#13;
3:nd I've sort of gotten used to it. And for&#13;
Dear Sir: .&#13;
I.remo~ed my name from the petition to&#13;
which this letter is attached. I did so&#13;
because I wish to remain an individual&#13;
and because I recognize that perhaps ther~&#13;
may have been good reason for removing&#13;
so~~ of the instructors from their teaching&#13;
po.sltion. I do feel, however, that a gross&#13;
mls~ke has been made in removing Mr.&#13;
Mus.l~h (English) and Mr. Simpson&#13;
(polItical science).&#13;
There are two attitudes an instructor&#13;
may have toward his job.&#13;
1: ~e may consider doing research and&#13;
writing books for recognition ad-&#13;
~ancement. and more pay as being most&#13;
tmpo~tan~. Thus, his attitude tow~rd&#13;
teac~mg ISthat it is something he must put&#13;
up With.&#13;
2. He may leel thai if he is a teacher&#13;
that IS the lob he is being paid to do. H~&#13;
may al.so feel that if a student pays for an&#13;
education, as a teacher h h obrg r • e as an&#13;
I a Ion to. give him one. This attitude&#13;
may t~?d to mterfere with doing research&#13;
or wnting books.&#13;
S.As a student under Mr. Musich and Mr&#13;
!mpson, I feel they have the second at~&#13;
lItude toward their job and for thi they f ' s reason&#13;
try were Ired. I do not mean they will not&#13;
., to ~dvan e thems_elves; but I do mean&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
\lle past fifteen years I've also had.1II&#13;
~ed to having our cat "Sbadow",laW&#13;
WIth us. I would conSIder it a greatllllll&#13;
victory if I could get "Shadow" III ..&#13;
derstand that she is not to sleeP..........&#13;
on my side 01 the bed.&#13;
But I've been workiog on si.....&#13;
I've been letting them slide down••&#13;
teenth of an inch at a lime. And 1'".&#13;
trying to let my hair grow a tilDe&#13;
can see some practical advantages&#13;
hair. If you let it grow long ......&#13;
don't have to wash your neck.so&#13;
you can wear a dirty shirt collar&#13;
being noticed. So there are&#13;
economic advantages to this 1011&#13;
business.&#13;
There is also in our house an eIe*Ir&#13;
clipper which I bought lor myseliwilli&#13;
barbers raised the' price of a hairall&#13;
two-lilty. With considerable proddillC_&#13;
a little practice, Mrs. Grohl has -&#13;
my personal barber. Nowshe is verr'"&#13;
at it. But a peculiar thing seems00 .....&#13;
to my coiffure when my dear wifegnea&#13;
haircut. When she says, "That'sil811&#13;
it," I uncross my fingers, open my.,.&#13;
and 10 and behold, my carefully.......&#13;
sideburns have been moved a half II.&#13;
north and my hair is up around lIIe,,"&#13;
my ears wh~re it was six months •&#13;
Parkside has some very well~&#13;
men on the campus. Some of 0Ir ..&#13;
faculty members are reaDy sharp. •&#13;
torically speaking, some 01 them :;&#13;
near make be turn green with ell\'}'.&#13;
..You can't have everything!&#13;
that they respect the righl of a s~&#13;
receive the education he has ~&#13;
Because they are such goodi ""&#13;
I am at a loss to undersmnd whylIIeJ&#13;
removed Irom the teaching stalli.lellt&#13;
I cannot help bul leellbat a m~ed'"&#13;
been made. These men have w ....&#13;
hard 10 do their jobs, aod in ~ltlJl1I....&#13;
received nothing, I respecU YlltIt..,&#13;
that their cases be re~lewedand «I It&#13;
be reinstated as lI1struetors&#13;
Parkside staff. Si~&#13;
Jo/1IIr~&#13;
f)&#13;
~:~~&#13;
'3322SHERIDAHROAD&#13;
HORTHCITYLIIlITS&#13;
Italian Film Here Friday&#13;
beautiful and sexy, and masterly&#13;
comedian Gastone • toschin portray&#13;
bli ful. unhappy lovers. The plot, set in a&#13;
town in northern Italy.&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
To th editor&#13;
Lilul of&#13;
Critic have acclaimed "The Birds, The&#13;
Bees and The Italians'' as: "An extr_e1!1elY&#13;
funny comedy . . . hilarious, ongmal,&#13;
outrageously convincing - immor~l ... -&#13;
an Italian Peyton Place ... Titillah~&#13;
... and full of sharp, satiric bite." It will&#13;
be shov,:n al Parkside this Friday night at&#13;
8:00 pm. in the Parkside activities&#13;
building. Admission is 75 ce~ts and&#13;
Parksid I.D. It i one of the series of 19&#13;
feature film booked and sponsored&#13;
through the o(fice of student activities.&#13;
to the editors&#13;
indl\ idual · or chool : the information&#13;
will be handled tatistically and&#13;
n,·mou h . If ,-ou can call the attention&#13;
of )O°w- r ad r to this tudy and a k for&#13;
volunl rs who will write their exritnc&#13;
to me ("personal''&gt; at the above&#13;
ddr , it may contribute toward saving&#13;
,. luable lh .&#13;
W .. hall c rtainly be mo ·t grateful for&#13;
any h p you can i\'e.&#13;
Cordially yours,&#13;
Paul Popenoe, Sc.D.&#13;
President&#13;
Dear '1r :&#13;
ntral dmim trative. 'omenclator&#13;
ii I my function to firm up and finalize the&#13;
demi t1U to be u eel at Parkside. In&#13;
th int r ts of brevity and efficiency I&#13;
, , t that appropriate acronyms be&#13;
di,·1. ed wh ren~r po ible ince there is&#13;
. littl tame, we at Central Administration&#13;
hl ,. igned t following code names to&#13;
facultv roup regarding whom&#13;
,,~" t:ol)(' ha. expr ·ed concern. To&#13;
in , ith there are tho e tenured faculty&#13;
ar not me tin the tandards set by&#13;
C nteral dm ini tration. These&#13;
prof r , iden ifiable by the Increased&#13;
Load Le\'y with which we have taxed&#13;
lh m, are re •arded bv u: a ILL., ·ext are&#13;
the. cond-year Academic Doctorated. all&#13;
of whom, a. you know, can be summarily&#13;
terminated by December 15. When&#13;
dLcu .. ing thi group's chances of&#13;
retention plea.-e refer to them as AD.&#13;
Finally, there are the new teachers who&#13;
have come to us without the doctorate,&#13;
those fir t year probationary instructors&#13;
who have been Detained Earning&#13;
,\cad mic Doctorates: the e persons are·&#13;
DE,\D.&#13;
Thank you for helping us facilitate&#13;
!Tlatters - it i . after all, a fllllctioning&#13;
input-output model.&#13;
Yours obediently,&#13;
entral Administrative Nomenclator&#13;
Concerning EducatorRetentions&#13;
Please refer. inquires to CA:--.CER at&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
SYMPOSIUM&#13;
The largest annual symposium ever&#13;
pon ored by the Wisconsin Student&#13;
ociation, to include more than 30 internationally-known&#13;
speakers over a 10-&#13;
day period in . larch, is planned by UW-&#13;
. lad1 n tudents with the help of com- munity lead rs.&#13;
"We want to demonstrate that the&#13;
niver ity of Wi consm still stands for&#13;
rational dialogue," said WSA Symposium&#13;
chairman, \'ictor Rodwm.&#13;
"We believe it i important that America&#13;
exposed to ideas that will stimulate&#13;
con tructtve action instead of useless&#13;
de ·tru~tion. The University is a strategic&#13;
place in which to breed these ideas and&#13;
pre. ent ~ei:n to thP .\merican public."&#13;
In the past, the Symposium has brought&#13;
~h ·peakers to the l:W campus as Henry&#13;
K1_ ·mger, J~e Jackson, James Reston&#13;
Geor e Wallace, Eugene McCarthy and&#13;
Bi hop James Pike.&#13;
Rod n announced the theme for the&#13;
1971 ymposium will be "Alternative&#13;
Futures for America."&#13;
So far, financial support for the Sympo&#13;
1um includes a 5,000 appropriation&#13;
from the W A budget. and a $5,900 grant&#13;
from the Board of Regents.&#13;
Violence followed the 1969 Symposium&#13;
o~ B!ack America and after a speech by&#13;
\ 1pp1e leader Jerry Rubin during last&#13;
year's program. Doubts had arisen among&#13;
some UW administrative leaders as to&#13;
whether the traditional symposium should&#13;
be continued.&#13;
"To cancel major University programs&#13;
in the name of fear would contradict one&#13;
major goal of the University - the pursuit&#13;
of truth," Rodwin explained.&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 11&#13;
December 7, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI , MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
SvenTaffs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon _&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Adyertising Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity of Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 5314~. Ma1lmg a~dr~ss 1s Parkside's Newscope,&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 658-&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
It was bound to come up The&#13;
subject is: Beards.&#13;
"Now that you're going to college, I&#13;
suppose you'll be raising a beard or&#13;
mustache," said a bald and over-weight&#13;
friend. And when I told him that I had the&#13;
idea under consideration he gave me a&#13;
hopeless shrug, opened another can of beer&#13;
and turned on his TV. More calories to&#13;
him!&#13;
Actually, I sort of like a well-trimmed&#13;
beard or mustache. I was browsing&#13;
through a book the other day. It had in it&#13;
the portraits of our thirty-five Presidents&#13;
and about half of them had a beard or&#13;
mustache. Of course, most of the wearers&#13;
were prior to the time of Messrs. Gillette&#13;
and Schick. Nevertheless they were a&#13;
distinguished group and I saluted each one&#13;
of them as I turned the pages.&#13;
I think that each man has his own face to&#13;
take care of and each has the privilege of&#13;
doing with it as he pleases. It's his private&#13;
property. If he wants to scare people away&#13;
with it, that's his business, too.&#13;
As far as I'm concerned, if a fellow&#13;
wants to raise dandelions on his face, it's&#13;
OK with me. But he had better not let the&#13;
blossoms turn into seeds and show up in&#13;
our neighborhood because then he would&#13;
really be in trouble. Mrs. Gruhl doesn't&#13;
like to see dandelion seeds floating around&#13;
our back yard.&#13;
Confidentially, the chances of my&#13;
growing a beard are very slim. I broached&#13;
the subject to Mrs. Gruhl. She said for&#13;
instance, "Now if you could figure ~ut a&#13;
way to make the hair come out on the top&#13;
of your head, I could see some sense in it."&#13;
And the crack that really sent my idea&#13;
down the drain was, "You're-going to sleep&#13;
alone if you dare to even try to grow a beard!"&#13;
Sleeping alone is about the last thing I&#13;
would want to do. My bride and I have&#13;
been sharing the same bunk for 46 years&#13;
~nd I've sort of gotten used to it. And for&#13;
Dear Sir:&#13;
I_remo~ed my name from the petition to&#13;
which this letter is attached. I did so&#13;
because I wish to remain an individual&#13;
and because l recognize that perhaps ther~&#13;
may have been good reason for removing&#13;
so~~ of the instructors from their teaching&#13;
po_s1lton. I do feel, however, that a gross&#13;
mis~ke has been made in removing Mr.&#13;
Mus_a~h &lt;English) and Mr. Simpson&#13;
(pohhcal science).&#13;
There are two attitudes an instructor&#13;
may have toward his job.&#13;
1: :tte may consider doing research and&#13;
wntang books for recognition advancement,&#13;
and more pay as being most&#13;
impo~tant. Thus, his attitude toward&#13;
teach_mg is that it is something he must put&#13;
Up With.&#13;
2· ~e ma~ feel that if he is a teacher,&#13;
that is the Job he is being paid to do. He&#13;
may al_so feel that if a student pays for an&#13;
ed~cat~on, as a teacher, he has an&#13;
obligation to give him one. This attitude&#13;
may t~~d to interfere with doing research or wntmg books.&#13;
s· As a student under Mr. Musich and Mr&#13;
_1mpson, I feel they have the second at~&#13;
~tude towa_rd their job, and for this reason&#13;
~~ were fired. I do not mean they will not&#13;
. o advance thems_elves; but I do mean&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
the past fifteen years I've also had lo get&#13;
~ed to having our c?t "Shadow". in bed&#13;
with us. I would consider it a great mCll)&#13;
victory if I could get "Shadow" to 11&gt;-&#13;
derstand that she is not to sleep er~ on my side of the bed.&#13;
But I've been working on side-hlrns.&#13;
I've been letting them slide down a&#13;
teenth of an inch at a time. And I've bes&#13;
trying to let my hair grow a little loll'I' I&#13;
can see some practical advantages lolaiis&#13;
hair. If you let it grow long enough,.&#13;
don't have to wash your neck so oftenlld&#13;
you can wear a dirty shirt collar withom&#13;
being noticed. So there are certail&#13;
economic advantages to this lo~ lu&#13;
business.&#13;
There is also in our house an electnc&#13;
clipper which I bought for myself when dlt&#13;
barbers raised the price of a haircut to&#13;
two-fifty. With considerable prodding all! a little practice, Mrs. Gruhl has becomt&#13;
my personal barber. Now she is very goad&#13;
at it. But a peculiar thing seems to hap&#13;
to my coiffure when my dear wife gives me&#13;
a haircut. When she says, "That's il Bal&#13;
it," I uncross my fingers, open my eyes&#13;
and lo and behold, my carefully-nurtured&#13;
sideburns have been moved a half an ird&#13;
north and my hair is up around the ""af&#13;
my ears wh~re it was six montffi ago.&#13;
Parkside has some very well-groooied&#13;
men on the campus. Some of our malr&#13;
faculty members are really sharp. Sar&#13;
toric-ally speaking, some of them ~ near make be turn green with envy. \\&#13;
, You can't have everything!&#13;
th.at they respect the right of a s_tudelll - receive the education he has P31~&#13;
Because they are such good ins&#13;
I am at a loss to understand why !hey&#13;
removed from the teaching st~\.ate&#13;
I cannot help but feel that a nusked&#13;
been made. These men have wor&#13;
hard to do their jobs, and in return&#13;
received nothing. I respectfull)~t&#13;
that their cases be re~1ewed aact &lt;Xl&#13;
be reinstated as instructors&#13;
Parkside staff.&#13;
{f) ~:~~&#13;
·3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS &#13;
New President Visits Campus&#13;
Honors Concert Thursday Night&#13;
Music students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will present an honors&#13;
coocert at 8 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 10, in&#13;
the Fine Arts Room at Parkside's Kenosha&#13;
Campus. The program, which is free and&#13;
open to the public, will include both vocal&#13;
and instrumental music. .&#13;
Vocal soloists will be Kathleen McCombs&#13;
of Racine, a soprano, singing&#13;
Pergolesi's HSe tu m'aml": Dan zarletti of&#13;
Kenosha, bass, Stradella's "Pieta&#13;
Signore";" Douglas Anderson of South&#13;
Holland, Ill., haritone, Handel's aria&#13;
"Honor and Arms" from Samson; and&#13;
James Johnson of Kenosha, tenor, Handel's&#13;
recitative "Oh, Loss of Sight" and&#13;
aria "Total Eclipse! No Sun, No Moon"&#13;
from Samson.&#13;
Instrumental soloists will he Fred&#13;
Piano Recital Sunday&#13;
Parkside affiliate artist in music Annie&#13;
Petit will playa piano recital as part of the&#13;
University Artists Concert Series at 4 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Dec. 13, in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
Her program will include the Bach- Liszt&#13;
Fantasy and Fugue in G minor,&#13;
Shumann's Carnaval Op. 9, three selections&#13;
from Debussy's First Book of&#13;
Preludes and Prokofiev's Sonata No.7, Op.&#13;
83.&#13;
Tickets are available at the door&#13;
(general admission $1, students 50 cents,&#13;
children 12 and under free).&#13;
Miss Petit will return to her native&#13;
France in January for a concert tour&#13;
.which will include a performance of a&#13;
Bartok concerto with the radio orchestra&#13;
of Lille.&#13;
Sell it&#13;
with&#13;
a classified&#13;
Hermes of Racine, Basoon, Mozart's&#13;
Concerto in B-flat Major; Adrienne Gerth&#13;
of Kenosha, viola, Telemann's Concerto in&#13;
AMajor for Viola; and Diane Chambers of&#13;
Kenosha, French horn, Jacob's Concerto&#13;
for Horn.&#13;
A flute trio comprised of Sharron Lee&#13;
Johnson", Kenosha, Lenee Karow,&#13;
Burlington, and Judith Brewer, Racine,&#13;
will play the Beethoven-Andraud Trio, Op,&#13;
87, and a saxaphone quartet includirig&#13;
Sheri Lueck, Kenosha, Joyce Andacht,&#13;
Franklin, Tina Thomas, Racine, and Miss&#13;
McCombs will play Singelee's Allegro de&#13;
Concert.&#13;
Accompanists will be Kathleen Devine,&#13;
Union Grove, Susan Hay, Oak Creek,&#13;
Joyce Richards, Racine, and Letha Wood,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The Parkside Student Chapter of the&#13;
Music Educators National Conference will&#13;
bost a reception after the program.&#13;
3 . 4 YEAR OLDS&#13;
$11.00 PER MONTH&#13;
STATE LICENSED&#13;
Applications are now being taken&#13;
for the United Presbyterian Cooperative&#13;
Nursery Center&#13;
Tues., Wed. &amp; Thurs. Morning&#13;
Parent Pcrticipution&#13;
Call Mr. P. LaMacchia 654-7468&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French Fries or Onion Rings&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
ond&#13;
Schooner or Bottle or Glass of a"er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20~&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,,~~BRAT -STOP&#13;
Northwest Carner 1-94 and Highwoy 50&#13;
New President Visits Campus&#13;
Honors Concert Thursday Night&#13;
Music students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will present an honors&#13;
concert at 8 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 10, in&#13;
the Fine Arts Room at Parkside's Kenosha&#13;
Campus. The program, which is free and&#13;
open to the public, will include both vocal&#13;
and instrumental music. Vocal soloists will be Kathleen Mc~ Combs of Racine, a soprano, singing&#13;
Pergolesi's "Se tu m'ami" ; Dan Zarletti of&#13;
Kenosha, bass, Stradella's "Pieta&#13;
Signore"; Douglas_ Anderson of Sou~&#13;
Holland, Ill., baritone, Handel's aria&#13;
"Honor and Arms" from Samson; and&#13;
James Johnson of Kenosha, tenor, Handel's&#13;
recitative "Oh, Loss of Sight" and&#13;
aria "Total Eclipse! No Sun, No Moon"&#13;
from Samson.&#13;
Instrumental soloists will be Fred&#13;
Piano Recital Sunday&#13;
Parkside affiliate artist in music Annie&#13;
Petit will play a piano recital as part of the&#13;
University Artists Concert Series at 4 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Dec. 13, in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse. Her program will include the Bach-Liszt&#13;
Fantasy and Fugue in G minor,&#13;
Shumann's Carnaval Op. 9, three selections&#13;
from Debussy's First Book of&#13;
Preludes and Prokofiev's Sonata No. 7, Op. 83.&#13;
Tickets are available at the door&#13;
(general admission $1 , students 50 cents,&#13;
children 12 and under free).&#13;
Miss Petit will return to her native&#13;
France in January for a concert tour&#13;
:which will include a performance of a&#13;
Bartok concerto with the radio orchestra&#13;
or Lille.&#13;
Sell it&#13;
with&#13;
a classified&#13;
Hermes of Racine, Basoon, Mozart's&#13;
Concerto in B-flat Major; Adrienne Gerth&#13;
of Kenosha, viola, Telemann's Concerto in&#13;
A Major for Viola; and Diane Chambers of&#13;
Kenosha, French horn, Jacob's Concerto&#13;
for Horn. A flute trio comprised of Sharron Lee&#13;
Johnson~ Kenosha , Lenee Karow,&#13;
Burlington, and Judith Brewer, Racine, will play the Beethoven-Andraud Trio, Op.&#13;
87, and a saxaphone quartet including&#13;
Sheri Lueck, Kenosha, Joyce Andacht, Franklin, Tina Thomas, Racine, and Miss&#13;
Mccombs will play Singelee's Allegro de&#13;
Concert.&#13;
Accompanists will be Kathleen Devine,&#13;
Union Grove, Susan Hay, Oak Creek, Joyce Richards, Racine, and Letha Wood,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The Parkside Student Chapter of the&#13;
Music Educators National Conference will&#13;
host a reception after the program.&#13;
3 - 4 YEAR OLDS&#13;
$11.00 PER MONTH&#13;
STATE LICENSED&#13;
Applications are now being taken&#13;
for the United Presbyterian Cooperative&#13;
Nursery Center&#13;
Tues., Wed. &amp; Thurs. Morning&#13;
Parent Participation&#13;
Call Mr. P. LaMacchia 654-7 468&#13;
The "BRAT",~&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French F rie s or Onion Rings&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or Bottle or Gloss of Bter&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Ava ilable For Parties&#13;
Includ ing Fratern ity and Sorority Part ies·&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50 &#13;
Campus&#13;
Events&#13;
Tuesday, Dec 8· Basketball; Rangers v.&#13;
Northern MichJgan University at 8 p.rn&#13;
There.&#13;
Thursday. Dec 10 . Concert. UWP&#13;
mUSIC tudents will present an Honors&#13;
Concert at 7·30 P m In the Kenosha&#13;
Campu Fine Arts Room&#13;
FIlm The Spanish facult} "III sponsor&#13;
. howmg or a film, -Los Tnrnntos," at 8&#13;
pm to Room Ul.1.Greenquist Hall&#13;
Froday, Dec II· Pia} The Parkside&#13;
Players '*111 present "Come 810y. Your&#13;
Horn" at " pm In the nacme Campu&#13;
l\;ldg -r Itoom Also Dec 12 Adrn chg&#13;
Film Stud -n1 Acuviues Ollice will&#13;
ponscr . hov.lnl( or tht· £11m"The Birds,&#13;
Ih,.1\4,'\"Sand the Italians" at Rp rn. In the&#13;
\:'h\ ItI~ BUlldlnK dm 75 cents&#13;
'. turda) Dec; 12 rm\'l"r~lly League:&#13;
Thl' annu..'! tnt\ 'f. ny L ague Christmas&#13;
dmn -r daOCl"ror all Unl\"er-olly faculty and&#13;
taU \AlII be hl'ld b(~lnnmg a16:30 p m at&#13;
HW.ICll nab ('uuntr) Club. H) SO.&#13;
K,'o. ha Tu:kl'tsar '8vallableat the maIO&#13;
l'~nlpU'" frum Jan FIlippone at Ext 291 or&#13;
(rom I.lnda ( ·k(&gt;r at 6:\.1.1(iR:J&#13;
B.....k"lh.11I Han~('r cager' v W ..&#13;
Grt~'n n,.) ~ pm. St Jt»eph's HIgh&#13;
SChnol. Kt'ntl~ha&#13;
F"'I'K'm~ liWP h.'n&lt;:cr WIll participate&#13;
In tht' lIhnOl~ Cnlll'jitiatc Open at Cham·&#13;
pal~n&#13;
Wn'!'lthnll. HanKcr matmen Will meet&#13;
W(~lt.'rn Ml('htgan Umv~rsity There&#13;
Sunday, Dt.-c 13· Film Intercollegiate&#13;
Film Council "'III sponsor shoy,mg of "Red&#13;
Ilt",,'rt" at 7 p 01 at the Gold n Rondelle&#13;
Thealer, Racme. Tickets are available on&#13;
l:ampu from Mar)· GeraelS (632·20&amp;1) or&#13;
J 'rr} Horton' 6.13-4769).&#13;
Artists Series Concert: Annie Petit.&#13;
UWP arr.hate arhsl. will play a piano&#13;
rt'Cltal In the University Artists Concert&#13;
Sc,:rtCSat 4 pm, m Hoom 103. Greenquist&#13;
lIall TlC,:kets available at the door: Gen.&#13;
&lt;.Idm $1, students 50 cent. children 12 and&#13;
under frl"C&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Ellllwood&#13;
Students lel fed c.arpet sel ....ice&#13;
(SO does e ....eryone ehe')&#13;
--&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
eR~&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62HI; ST.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Hockey; UWP Hockey Club will meet&#13;
the Johnson's Wax company team at 10&#13;
a.m. at Wilson Park Recreation Center&#13;
rink, Milwaukee.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 15 - Poetry Forum: Bruce&#13;
Stichm of the UWP Spanish faculty will&#13;
read from his poetry in Spanish and&#13;
English at 7 p.rn. in Greenquist Han Room&#13;
127.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. t6 . Faculty Senate;&#13;
The UWP Faculty Senate will meet at3;3O&#13;
pm. In Room 101. Greenquisl Hall.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 17 . Wrestling; Ranger&#13;
-gr applers will meet UW·Milwaukee.&#13;
There.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 18 - Film; Student AcIrvities&#13;
Office will sponsor showing of the&#13;
film "You're a Big Boy Now" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Activities Building. Adm, 75 cents.&#13;
Regents Meeting: Regents of the&#13;
Umverstty or Wisconsin will meet in&#13;
Milwaukee .&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 23 . Basketball;&#13;
Ranger cagers v Southern Illinois&#13;
UnI\,ersity.Edwardsville. 8 p.rn., St.&#13;
Joseph's high school, Kenosha.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 29 . Wrestling; Ranger&#13;
matmen will participate in the Midlands&#13;
Tournament in Evanston, HI. Also Dec. 30.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 30 - Basketball;&#13;
Ranger cagers will participate in the Corn&#13;
Palace Invitational Tournament at&#13;
MItchell, S. Oak. Participating teams are&#13;
UWP, WSU·LaCrosse, South Dakota&#13;
Wesleyan and Northwestern (Iowa)&#13;
College.&#13;
Monday. Jan 4 - Classes Resume.&#13;
News from&#13;
Other Campuses&#13;
College Park, Md. - ,I.P.l - The&#13;
University or Maryland's Board of&#13;
Regents recently announced the appointment&#13;
of a special commission&#13;
composed of prominent journalists and&#13;
educators to study metllods of separating&#13;
student publications from the University.&#13;
The creation of a commission was&#13;
recommended by a special committee of&#13;
the Board appointed to study all aspects of&#13;
lhe student activities fees. On the&#13;
recommendation of the committee, the&#13;
Regent acted to separate fee-supported&#13;
student publications from the University&#13;
and to have the proposed commission&#13;
advise them no later than February 1'-&#13;
1971, on the procedures to be followed to do&#13;
this.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Carbondale, fit - (l,P'&gt; - A major&#13;
restructuring of Southern Illinois&#13;
University with emphasis on educational&#13;
independence for its two campuses has&#13;
been recommended by a professional&#13;
management firm.&#13;
The report by Cresap, McCormick and&#13;
Paget. Inc., calls for decentralization of&#13;
the SIU President's office and&#13;
redistribution of administrative functions&#13;
under a strong four·man structure.&#13;
Under the plan the board of trustees&#13;
would assume clearcut responsibilities for&#13;
governance and polic;ymaking, with administration&#13;
just as clearly marked as the&#13;
system president's and. chancellors' roles.&#13;
Two advisory councils and a&#13;
professional staff woula reinforce the'&#13;
trustees in the far· reaching&#13;
"organizational changes" recommended&#13;
by the firm.&#13;
Councils. of students and faculty&#13;
members With equal representation from&#13;
each :ampus would sit with the trustees at&#13;
meeltngs. They would have open advisory&#13;
channels to the board and agenda time on&#13;
request. but no formal voting status. The&#13;
effect woold be a "two-way street" be.&#13;
tween the board, students and faculty.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Palo Alto, Calif. - ILP.) - Creation of a&#13;
comml~Jon to make .. a fair and comprehensive&#13;
examination of all major&#13;
lSSueS related to campus protest" has been&#13;
recommended at Stanford University.&#13;
The recommendation is contained in a&#13;
report prepared by the Ombudsman's&#13;
Intenm Study Group. Some of the broad&#13;
goals and problems facing the proposed&#13;
commiSSion were described in these ds&#13;
by the lSG; wor&#13;
"~he commission should examine acts&#13;
of VIolence on the Stanford campus but·t&#13;
sh.o~d also examine the charge or co~.&#13;
phclty on the part of the University in acts&#13;
of vloleoce pe~traled upon minority&#13;
gr?UPS elsewhere In this country, and by&#13;
thIS country elsewhere in the world&#13;
."It should look into all matters thai have&#13;
direct relevance to the sources and eff ts&#13;
ot. protest in the life of the univers~&#13;
Wlthoot, however, straying so far afield a~&#13;
to concern itself with problems whose&#13;
What a. stunning way to staft the HOlidS season! you'll&#13;
hypnotize everyone with this exciting hand screened&#13;
plint top by Jane Colby, Designed in 100% Dacron,. it&#13;
has long sleeves and a neat shirt collar. The StyliSh&#13;
fJgure flattering flared pants are pull-on, and are madeof&#13;
100% tiyl0n..1n .coordinating solid colors,&#13;
Top in Sizes S-M-L .&#13;
Pant in Sizes s-is&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
FREE CHRISTMAS BOXES -"-- -&#13;
resolution falls entirely outside of the&#13;
frame of University administration and&#13;
community.&#13;
EVERYBODY'S DOIN' IT!&#13;
CHICAGO (CPS) - Several years ago&#13;
people 'were surprised that underground&#13;
papers and student movements were&#13;
beginning to appear in high schools, Then&#13;
the movement reached some junior highs'&#13;
and administrators really began to worry.&#13;
Now there is an underground paper put&#13;
out by elementary school students. .&#13;
The paper named "The Eye", IS&#13;
published by ; group of students at Philip&#13;
Rogers school on Chicago'S far north Side.&#13;
u currently has a circulation of 500, sold.at&#13;
a dime aach. The eight-page paper 10-&#13;
eludes anti·war poetry, comics, and a&#13;
story criticiz.ing the school for putting in a&#13;
new intercom system when there was&#13;
already "a good system for gelling&#13;
messages around". There also are articles&#13;
about restrictions on the use of restrooms&#13;
and stairways.&#13;
Of course, underground papers aren't&#13;
any more popular in the elementary&#13;
schools than they are in the high schools,&#13;
and school officials have already "spoken&#13;
to" some of the students responsible for&#13;
the paper. However, the students are not&#13;
going to be intimidated, and are now&#13;
planning future issues of "The Eye".&#13;
New Exhibit&#13;
If to live in the tWentieth century is&#13;
really to come to grips with insantity, at&#13;
least reducing things to tpeir proper abo&#13;
surdity helps ease the pain. The New&#13;
Gallery One (formerly La Porte), located&#13;
at 503 Main Street, Racine is presenting an&#13;
exhibition of graphics and drawings by&#13;
Warrington Colescott. Warringt~n&#13;
Colescoll is the head of the print depart·&#13;
ment at the University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
and is Wisconsin's most noted&#13;
international artist. On the playing fields&#13;
of stinging and--or niggling satire, he runs&#13;
riot. The exhibition opened Sunday,&#13;
INSTANT FASHION&#13;
FOR&#13;
GIFTING&#13;
or&#13;
GETT!NG&#13;
TOP&#13;
$15.00&#13;
•&#13;
.,lanE&#13;
~OLPY&#13;
November 29. The show will run '&#13;
19th of December; some pieces hunlillbe&#13;
been on display at the New Gall ave....&#13;
5036 Sixth Avenue Kenosh ery ~&#13;
November 30. a "U1ee&#13;
Anchorln&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADU L TS SUD&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER IU $1.11&#13;
.CHILDREN UNDER 5 FRII&#13;
Prices include fillt&#13;
dinner beverace,&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
a....t Chl.ken wltll&#13;
BI•• ult. and gra vy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sal. 5 p.m. - 11 Po"&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.RI,&#13;
$un. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd_ Phone 694-1731&#13;
PANTS&#13;
$13.00&#13;
Campus&#13;
E ents&#13;
rt· 'WP&#13;
n Honors&#13;
Keno~h&#13;
B nkof&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2104 lolh,op •-~ lo&lt;i"•• Wi,coi,11n&#13;
Students aet red carpet seiv1ce&#13;
(So do s everyone el~e!)&#13;
·-&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
ef.~&#13;
--·&#13;
KE OSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62i1:.; ST.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
Hockey: U\ P Hockey Club will meet&#13;
the Johnson's Wax company team at 10&#13;
a.m. at Wilson Park Recreation Center&#13;
rink .• mwaukee.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec.15 - Poetry Forum: Bruce&#13;
Stiehm of the UWP Spanish faculty will&#13;
read from his poetry in Spanish and&#13;
English at 7 pm. in Greenquist Hall Room&#13;
127.&#13;
Wedn sday, Dec. 16 - Faculty Senate:&#13;
The 'WP Faculty Senate will meet at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in Room 101, Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 17 - Wrestling: Ranger&#13;
•grappler will meet UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
There.&#13;
Friday, D c. 18 - Film· Student Acti\'ilie&#13;
· Office will ponsor showing of the&#13;
film " You're a Big Boy ·ow" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
th Cll\'1t1es Bwlding. Adm. 75 cents.&#13;
R~g nt . le ting: Regents of the&#13;
niver ity of Wi~con in will meet in&#13;
Malwauk . .&#13;
\ ' dn day, Dec 23 Basketball :&#13;
Han r ca er. v outhern Illinois&#13;
n1ver 1ty-Edwards\ill 8 p.m .. St.&#13;
J eph' hi •h chool, Keno ha.&#13;
Tu d :, , D c. 29 • Wre::;tling : Ranger&#13;
maim n "ill participate m the '.\tidlands&#13;
Tourn m nt in Evan ton, Ill. Al o Dec. 30.&#13;
Wedn . day, Dec. 30 - Basketball :&#13;
Rang r cager. will participate in the Corn&#13;
Palace ln\·itational Tournament at&#13;
11tchcll, . Oak . Participating teams are&#13;
WP , W '-LaCro e. outh Dakota&#13;
W I yan and , 'orthwestern &lt;Iowa)&#13;
II g .&#13;
londa} , Jan 4 • Cla . e Resume.&#13;
News from&#13;
Other Campuses&#13;
ollege Park, • td. - &lt;I.P.&gt; - The&#13;
niver. 1tv of larvland's Board of&#13;
R ents ~ecently aru1ounced the appomtmenl&#13;
of a pecial commission&#13;
compo:; d of prominent journalists and&#13;
educators to tudy methods of separating&#13;
Ludent publications from the University.&#13;
The creation of a commission was&#13;
recommended by a special committee of&#13;
the Board appointed to study all aspects of&#13;
the student activities fees. On the&#13;
recommendation of the committee, the&#13;
Regent acted to separate fee-supported&#13;
tudent publications from the University&#13;
and to have the proposed commission&#13;
advise them no later than February 1,·&#13;
1971, on the procedures to be followed to do&#13;
this.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Carbondale, Ill. - (I.P.) - A major&#13;
restructuring of Southern Illinois&#13;
University with emphasis on educational&#13;
independence for its two campuses has&#13;
been recommended by a professional&#13;
management firm.&#13;
The report by Cresap, McCormick and&#13;
Paget. Inc., calls for decentralization of&#13;
the SIU President's office and&#13;
redistribution of administrative functions&#13;
under a strong four-man structure.&#13;
nder the plan the board of trustees&#13;
would as ume clearcut responsibilities for&#13;
go_v~rnan~ ~nd policymaking, with adm1mstrallon&#13;
Just as clearly marked as the&#13;
ystem president's and chancellors' roles.&#13;
Two advisory councils and a&#13;
professional staff would reinforce the ·&#13;
lru ·tees in the far-reaching&#13;
··organizational changes" recommended&#13;
by the firm .&#13;
Councils . of students and faculty&#13;
members with equal representation from&#13;
each ~ampus would sit with the trustees at&#13;
meetings. They would have open advisory&#13;
channels to the board and agenda time on&#13;
request, but no formal voting status. The&#13;
effect would be a "two-way street" between&#13;
the board, students and faculty.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Palo_ Al_to. Calif. - (LP.)_ Creation of a&#13;
comm1~1on to make "a fair and comprehensive&#13;
examination of all major&#13;
issues related to campus protest" has been&#13;
recommended at Stanford University.&#13;
The recommendation is contained in a&#13;
repo~t prepared by the Ombudsman's&#13;
Interim Study Group. Some of the broad&#13;
goals ~n? problems facing the proposed&#13;
comm1ss1on were described in these wo d&#13;
by the ISG: r s&#13;
"'!'he commission should examine acts&#13;
of violence on the Stanford campus but ·t&#13;
should also examine the charge 0'r 1&#13;
1 ·ty th comp&#13;
ic1 . on e part of the University in acts&#13;
of vaolence perpetrated upon minority&#13;
gr~ups elsewhere in this country, and by&#13;
this country elsewhere in the world&#13;
. "It should look into all matters that have&#13;
direct relevance to the sources and err ts&#13;
of_ protest in the life of the Univers~&#13;
without, however, straying so far afield i'&#13;
to concern itself with problems whos!&#13;
resolution falls entirely outside of the&#13;
frame of University administration and&#13;
community.&#13;
EVERYBODY'S DOIN' IT!&#13;
CHICAGO (CPS) - Several years ago&#13;
people were surprised that underground ·&#13;
papers and student movements were&#13;
beginning to appear in high SC?°';lls. 1:hen&#13;
the movement reached some Jumor highs ·&#13;
and administrators really began to worry.&#13;
Now there is an underground paper put&#13;
out by elementary school students.&#13;
The paper named "The Eye", is&#13;
published by ; group of students at P~lip&#13;
Rogers school on Chicago's far north side.&#13;
It currently has a circulation of 500, sold_at&#13;
a dime each. The eight-page paper mcludes&#13;
anti-war poetry, comics, and a&#13;
story criticizing the school for putting in a&#13;
new intercom system when there was&#13;
already "a good system for getting&#13;
messages around". There also are articles&#13;
about restrictions on the use of restrooms&#13;
and stairways.&#13;
Of course, underground papers aren't&#13;
any more popular in the elementary&#13;
schools than they are in the high schools,&#13;
and school officials have already "spoken&#13;
to" some of the students responsible for&#13;
the paper. However, the students are not&#13;
going to be intimidated, and are now&#13;
planning future issues of "The Eye".&#13;
New Exhibit&#13;
If to live in the twentieth century is&#13;
really to come to grips with insantity, at&#13;
least reducing things to their proper absurdity&#13;
helps ease the pain. The New&#13;
Gallery One (formerly La Porte), located&#13;
at 503 Main Street, Racine is presenting an&#13;
exhibition of graphics and drawings by&#13;
Warrington Colescott. Warringt~n&#13;
Colescott is the head of the print department&#13;
at the University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
and is Wisconsin's most noted&#13;
international artist. On the playing fields&#13;
of stinging and-or niggling satire, he runs&#13;
riot. The exhibition opened Sunday,&#13;
INSTANT FASHION&#13;
FOR&#13;
GIFTING&#13;
or&#13;
GETT!NG&#13;
TOP&#13;
$15.00&#13;
•&#13;
November 29. The show will run . 19th of December; some pieces h llntil !ht&#13;
been on display at the New Gall ave also&#13;
5036 S_ixth Avenue Kenosh ery ~. Novel!lber 30. a since&#13;
_Anchor In&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADULTS $2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 SI.SI&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 5 FRU&#13;
Prices include first&#13;
dinner beverage.&#13;
SUNDAY SPF.cJAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and gravy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. - 11 p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
~un. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
9006 Sheridan ~d. Phone 694-1733&#13;
J_.ane&#13;
~OLPY PANTS&#13;
$13.00&#13;
What a_ stunning way to start the Holiday season! You'll&#13;
hypnotize everyone with this exciting hand screened&#13;
print top by Jane Colby. Designed in 100% Dacron,. it&#13;
h_as long sleeves and a neat shirt collar. The stylish&#13;
fJgu;e flatter_ing flar~d p~nts are pull-on, and are made of&#13;
IPO ~ ~yJon_ in .coordinating solid colors.&#13;
Top in Sizes S-M-L ·&#13;
Pant in Sizes s-is&#13;
BA.RDEN'S&#13;
FREE CHRISTMAS BOXES &#13;
Athletic Director Thomas P: Rosandich&#13;
left yesterday for the Far East with his&#13;
pimeobjectives being the Philippines and&#13;
1baiIand.&#13;
Presidnet Marcos.of the Philippines has&#13;
iDvited Rosandich to be his guest at the&#13;
Asian Games being held in Bangkok.&#13;
Besides viewing the spectacular games,&#13;
Rosandich will review the Parkside&#13;
Coaches team currently working in the&#13;
Pbilippines and present a seminar to the&#13;
Asian Coaches Association, of which he&#13;
ns thefounder at the 1962 Asian Games in&#13;
Djakarta, Indonesia.&#13;
Reprinted here is an article written by&#13;
Ernie T. BUong of the Philippine News&#13;
Service which fully explains Rosandich's&#13;
mission. /&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Manila - Thomas P. Rosandich,&#13;
Atbletic Director of the University of&#13;
W"lICODSin-Parkside,was named recently&#13;
by the Philippine President Ferdinand E.&#13;
Marcos as the island Republic's adviser on&#13;
1pOrts.&#13;
Az, adviser to the Presidential Committee&#13;
on Sports, Rosandich will be in-&#13;
"crating the sports program of the&#13;
Department of Education, the Department&#13;
r,( National Defense (armed forces), the&#13;
Philippine Amateur Athletic Federation,&#13;
and the Office of the Philippine President.&#13;
One of America's outstandin coaches&#13;
Ranger Bear&#13;
To Accompany&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Athletic Teams&#13;
Cong ratulation s&#13;
Kathy Doherty&#13;
UW-P's First&#13;
uMiss Parkside"&#13;
Parkside crowned its first Sportsfest&#13;
Queen last Friday. The corcnauon activities&#13;
included the introduction or aU&#13;
queen candidates escorted by the captain&#13;
of the sport that nominated her. After&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey introduced the can.&#13;
didates, Athletic Director Tom Rosandich&#13;
crowned Miss Kathy Doberty. Captain Bill&#13;
Benkstein escorted the Queen. who was the&#13;
wrestling team's candidate.&#13;
Kathy is a freshman at Parkside.&#13;
majoring in elementary education. She is a&#13;
member of the newly formed Mat Maids,&#13;
who assist at all wrestling meets.&#13;
Kathy likes dogs, spaghetti, boys.&#13;
swimming. waterskiing and little kids.&#13;
Being a Queen is nothing new. Last year&#13;
she was Kenosha Bradford's homecoming&#13;
Queen. She also was president of the HiStyle&#13;
Club. This year she was a Miss&#13;
IUDlted Fund, representing tbe commercial&#13;
and prctesslceal area.&#13;
About Parl&lt;Jilde. Kathy said. "I ilke th&#13;
people. you kn"", [ ilke to talk [thulk It&#13;
,,;11 be beller "~n we're all on one&#13;
campus,"&#13;
The otnee candidates and t~" escort&gt;&#13;
were Diane Thomas. escorted by gymnastics&#13;
co-captain Warren . tcCllhvar)' •&#13;
Basketball Queen Sue ,Iagee and her&#13;
escort. Ken Rick. Tennis and Golr Quem&#13;
Diane Lakatos and Captain Steve mlLh I&#13;
Fencing Queen Diane Lawler and Keith&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier Cross-Country and&#13;
Track Queen andy Houston and capta m&#13;
Skip Jones; Hockey Queen, 'ancy Helfnch&#13;
and Tom Krummel. ki Queen ~anC)'&#13;
tichels and JIm DeB..-ge, Dran Krann'll&#13;
and soccer captain. hke Jenrette. and the&#13;
•Volleyball Queen Jan Hermes. escorted by&#13;
Pete Habetler&#13;
Rosandich To Be Guest&#13;
Of Philippines' President&#13;
and sports organizers, Rosandich brings to&#13;
this position considerable expertise and a&#13;
~ wealth of experience, having spent close to&#13;
two decades in Asia as coach of national&#13;
teams in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore,&#13;
Thailand, Laos, Borneo and Okinawa.&#13;
Mfectionately known in Asia as "Mr.&#13;
Tom" Rosandich came to the attention or&#13;
Philippine sports authorities some eight&#13;
years ago for his spendid work as chief&#13;
adviser or the Sports Ministry of Indonesia&#13;
and enabling Indonesia to vault from&#13;
obscurity to second place in the Fourth&#13;
Asian Games and world class in sports. In&#13;
Indonesia with a population of some 120&#13;
million, 'he established a National&#13;
Academy of Coaches and instituted a&#13;
National Physical Fitness program that&#13;
has become a model for developing&#13;
countries .&#13;
. Rosandich, who is Uncle sam~s unofficial&#13;
sports envoy in the Orient, is ~lso&#13;
remembered for organizing the first&#13;
national sports championships meet in the&#13;
kingdom of Laos and developing a Borneo&#13;
headhunter named Gabuh into a world&#13;
class triple jumper. .&#13;
An internationally known athletics&#13;
coach and writer, Rosandich has the&#13;
distinction of having prepared learns for&#13;
every major sports competitio~ in the&#13;
world, including three Olympiads ". He&#13;
carne to Manila with another American&#13;
sports mentor, Bob Lawson, h~d tra.ck&#13;
coach of the University of Wlsc_o~.m.&#13;
Parkside to train and develop F'ilipino&#13;
athletes for the Sixth Asian Games next&#13;
December in Bangkok. .&#13;
The Philippine Presl~ent. t~anked&#13;
Rosandich for his efforts m pruning the&#13;
national team to the next Asiad as he&#13;
'named the Wisconsin sports leader to ~e&#13;
position of adviser. In that. ca~cIty,&#13;
Rosandich will map out a .physlcal fitness&#13;
program for some nine million Philippme&#13;
school children on the elementary and&#13;
secondary levels.&#13;
The national sports program, to be&#13;
implemented by Rosandich through a&#13;
s of foreign and local CoachIng&#13;
corp'alists will also aim to discover aod speCI, . I d'n&#13;
develop athletes ~~rnationa an I·&#13;
ternational competihoos. . . ed&#13;
Rosandich has also been comm1SSl~&#13;
. the curriculum of the National&#13;
to reVise . Education so that it&#13;
College of PhYSICal&#13;
th&#13;
is1and Republic'.&#13;
will serve as e&#13;
academy for coaches.&#13;
Thomas Rosandich IS pictured above wuh Carlos RomuJo. first pn Idt-nt of the&#13;
United Nations and Monsarrat. head of the Plulipp me Olympic omrmuee&#13;
Atbletic Director Thomas Rosandicb is shown watching Parkside track coach Bob&#13;
Lawson work with some sprinters at one of the training centers in tbe Philippines. Coach&#13;
Lawson will return to Parkside after Christmas.&#13;
Athletic Director Thomas P: Rosandich&#13;
left yesterday for the Far East with his&#13;
IJ'lllle objectives being the Philippines and&#13;
Thailand.&#13;
Presidnet Marcos of the Philippines has&#13;
invited Rosandich to be his guest at the&#13;
Asian Games being held in Bangkok.&#13;
Besides viewing the spectacular games,&#13;
Rosandich will review the Parkside&#13;
Coaches team currently working · in the&#13;
Philippines and present a seminar to the&#13;
Asian Coaches Association, of which he&#13;
was the founder at the 1962 Asian Games in&#13;
Djakarta, Indonesia.&#13;
Reprinted here is an article written by&#13;
Ernie T. Bitong of the Philippine News&#13;
Service which fully explains Rosandich's&#13;
mission.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Manila - Thomas P. Rosandich,&#13;
Athletic Director of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, was named recently&#13;
by the Philippine President Ferdinand E.&#13;
Marcos as the island Republic's adviser on ports.&#13;
As adviser to the Presidential Committee&#13;
on Sports, Rosandich will be integrating&#13;
the sports program of the&#13;
Department of Education, the Department&#13;
of National Defense (armed forces), the&#13;
Philippine Amateur Athletic Federation,&#13;
and the Office of the Philippine President.&#13;
One of America's outstandin coaches·&#13;
Ranger Bear&#13;
lo Accompany&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Athletic Teams&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
Kathy Doherty&#13;
''Miss Parkside''&#13;
Parkside crowned its fir t rtsfe t&#13;
Queen last Friday. The coronation a&#13;
tivities included the introduction or all&#13;
queen candidates escorted by the captain&#13;
of the sport that nominated her. Afl r&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey introduced the can- didates, Athletic Director Tom R ndich&#13;
cro'-ol.11ed Miss Kathy Doherty. Captain Bill&#13;
Benkstein escorted the Queen, ·ho"a the&#13;
wrestling team's candidate.&#13;
Kathy is a freshman al Par 1de. ll!ajoring in elementary educati •1 e i a&#13;
member of the newly formed fat M~ids, who a~ist at all wrestling meet ,&#13;
Kathy likes dogs, paghetti, boy ,&#13;
swimming, waterskiing and litUe kids.&#13;
Being a Queen is nothing new. La t year&#13;
~he was Kenosha Bradford's homecoming&#13;
Queen. She also was president of the HiStyle&#13;
Club. This year she was a . Ii&#13;
comRosandich&#13;
To Be Guest&#13;
Of Philippines' President&#13;
and sports organizers, Rosandich brings to&#13;
this position considerable expertise and a&#13;
wealth of experience, having spent close to&#13;
two decades in Asia as coach of national&#13;
teams in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore,&#13;
Thailand, Laos, Borneo and Okinawa.&#13;
Affectionately known in Asia as "Mr.&#13;
Tom", Rosandich came to the attention of&#13;
Philippine sports authorities some eight&#13;
years ago for his spendid work as chief&#13;
adviser of the Sports Ministry of Indonesia&#13;
and enabling Indonesia to vault from&#13;
obscurity to second place in the Fourth&#13;
Asian Games and world class in sports. In&#13;
Indonesia with a population of some 120&#13;
million, 1&#13;
he established a National&#13;
Academy of Coaches and instituted a&#13;
National Physical Fitness program that&#13;
has become a model for developing&#13;
countries.&#13;
Rosandich, who is Uncle &amp;rm'.s unofficial&#13;
sports envoy in the Orient, is also&#13;
remembered for organizing the first&#13;
national sports championships meet in the&#13;
kingdom of Laos and developing a Borneo&#13;
headhunter named Gabuh into a world&#13;
class triple jumper. . An internationally known athletics&#13;
coach and writer, Rosandich has the&#13;
distinction of having prepared teams for&#13;
every major sports competitio~ in the&#13;
world including three Olympiads. He&#13;
&lt;;ame ' to Manila with another American&#13;
sports mentor, Bob Lawson, h~d tra_ck&#13;
coach of the University of W1sc_o!15_mParkside,&#13;
to train and develop Fil1pmo&#13;
athletes for the Sixth Asian Games next&#13;
December in Bangkok. The Philippine Presi?ent . t~anked&#13;
Rosandich for his efforts m pr_1mmg the&#13;
national team to the next As1ad as he&#13;
named the Wisconsin sports leader to _the&#13;
position of adviser. In that. capaetty •&#13;
Rosandich will map out a physical_ f_1tn~&#13;
program for some nine million Philippine&#13;
school children on the elementary and&#13;
secondary levels.&#13;
The national sports program, to be&#13;
implemented by Rosandich through_ a cor s of foreign and local coaching&#13;
spe~ialists, will also aim t? discover a~&#13;
develop athletes !~r national and international&#13;
competitions. . . Rosandich has also been comm1ss1~ned . the curriculum of the National to reVIse . hat ·t College of Physical Education so t . ,1&#13;
will serve as the island Repubhc s&#13;
academy for coaches.&#13;
Athletic Director Thomas Rosandich is sho\1.11 \l.atching Parkside track coach Bo&#13;
Lawson work \l.ith some sprinters at one of the training centers in the Philippines. Coach&#13;
Lawson will return to Parkside after Christmas. &#13;
u.s. Gymnastics&#13;
Federation&#13;
Appoints Ballester&#13;
Coach BI1IBallester has added another&#13;
star to his already impressive list of&#13;
credentials He Just received notice of his&#13;
appomtment to the governing body of the&#13;
Untied rates Gymnastlcs Federatioo.&#13;
TIllS Federation is the sole representative&#13;
to the Federation of International&#13;
Gymnasucs which is the world body of&#13;
gymnastics.&#13;
The United States Gymnastics&#13;
Federation has the responsibility of&#13;
leading the U.S to a higher ranking in the&#13;
world of gymnastics.&#13;
Besides Ballester, olhers serving on this.&#13;
goverrung board are the athletic director&#13;
of Penn Stale, the chairman for lIYmflashes&#13;
In the Junior Colleges of America,&#13;
the YMCA chairman and the Women's&#13;
chairmen The executive secretary of the&#13;
uscr IS Frank Bare of Tucson. Ariz.&#13;
Spotlight On Warren&#13;
his bes~ eve~t. on the campus for only a&#13;
Despite being n has proven to be a very&#13;
few weeks~warreWith his outgoing perpopul.ar&#13;
flg:eh&#13;
.&#13;
S&#13;
habit of introducing&#13;
sonality an I he doesn't know:&#13;
himself to almost a~yone I is to qualify&#13;
Warren's immediate go~, f Inr&#13;
the National AssoclatIO? o.&#13;
~~rcollegiate Athletics champlOnS~Pg at&#13;
Louisiana early next spn,n "&#13;
Northea~tran e plans include majormg in&#13;
Longeh&#13;
angdcoaching gymnastics once&#13;
geograp Y .&#13;
he has finished compettng- . d ba&#13;
Warren's main hobbles inclu e sc~&#13;
diving, which he can do here, and surfing,&#13;
which he cannot.&#13;
Warren McGilli\'ary, 1970-71 Ranger&#13;
gymnast, comes to Wisconsin fro.m Los&#13;
Angeles. Calif. Prior to enrolhng at&#13;
Parkside, this personable young man&#13;
attended Pierce Junior College for two&#13;
years . .,&#13;
Warren is no stranger ~o Wlsc~nsm ~&#13;
type of climate since he I~ a native 0&#13;
Toronto, Canada \\'hile at Pierce, W~rren&#13;
compiled an impressive list of credits.&#13;
He was captain of his gymnastic. team&#13;
both years he attended that institution. In&#13;
addition to this he was named *:hen:~st&#13;
valuable gymnast as a result of his abl1,lty&#13;
to perform all SIX Olympic events on a high&#13;
level. He has been the winner of several&#13;
tournaments. He considers the vault to be&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Awards&#13;
Given&#13;
Parkside's soccer team finished .its&#13;
season with a 4-6-1 record. lncludll:g&#13;
scrimmages its record was 6-6-~. Their&#13;
leading goal scorers were Dale Nickel, 11&#13;
goals and Wolff Keelfer, eight goals.&#13;
Joseph Orr was elected most. valuable&#13;
player. Joseph also was captain, along&#13;
WIth Michael Jennette.&#13;
Other letter winners from the team&#13;
mclude: Tom Thomsen, Tom Jaehne, Kurt&#13;
Wassauer, Tony Kriedl, Do.uglas&#13;
Beveridge, Edward St. Peter, ChrIS Andachl,&#13;
Charles Lees, Karl Liekoski,. Tim&#13;
Martinson, Stan Markovic, Dale NIckel,&#13;
Mike Jennette and Joseph Orr.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Dec. 8 - Parkside vs. Northern Michigan&#13;
University at Marquette, Mich.&#13;
6:00 p.m., Equestrian Club at&#13;
Greenquist, Room 127.&#13;
9:00 p.m., Kenosha bowling at the&#13;
Sheridan Lanes.&#13;
Dec. 9 - Parkside volleyball team. Racine&#13;
City League at Memorial Hall, 6:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
4 p.m., Racine Bowling at J &amp; W Lanes.&#13;
Dec. to - 8:00 a.m., Karate Club at&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
7:30 p.m., Judo Club 'at Kenosha.&#13;
Dec. t2 - 8:00 p.m., Basketball, OWParks&#13;
ide versus UW·Green Bay at 81.&#13;
Joseph's H.S. in Kenosha.&#13;
BROOMBALL&#13;
Outdoor sports should get their brooms&#13;
ready. As soon as the water freezes on the&#13;
rink, broomball play will begin. Managers·&#13;
or players, get rour teams ready!&#13;
Ranger Basketball&#13;
Missed First Shot&#13;
CHICAGO "The whole lown's talking&#13;
about the Jones Boy" went the Ames&#13;
Brother .." hit record in the mid-1950's.&#13;
ParkSid basketball coach Sle"e Stephens&#13;
us('d to hum It while a schoolboy ace at&#13;
Plattenlle high school U's no longer 10 his&#13;
repertol reo&#13;
The Jones boy, called Skeel, nearly&#13;
slngle·handedly spoiled Parkside's&#13;
baskelball debut here lasl nighl through&#13;
great leaps and bounds around the basket.&#13;
The result of Jones' 42 points and 28&#13;
rebounds was a 111-97 victory for Xavier&#13;
College, a school which has used&#13;
scholarships to round up an Impressive&#13;
array or Ch.cagoland prep league talent in&#13;
preparation for its first season of varsity&#13;
basketball and so far has a 3-0 record to&#13;
show for it.&#13;
The 6-6 Jones, a Marshall product, is the&#13;
most notable acquisition. He was released&#13;
early from the Army to attend Xavier, a&#13;
Pentagon concession Stephens may never&#13;
(orgive. .,.&#13;
Parkside's SCOring twlOS, Jim Hogan&#13;
and Eli Slaughter, did their best to counter&#13;
Jo .... with 33 and 'Z7point productions to&#13;
take up where they left orr last year, but&#13;
the atory of the game is simply told 10 the&#13;
total domination of Xavier's quick, agile&#13;
one! leaping front line.&#13;
The few times Jones touched the floor,&#13;
teammales Bob Lanning, &amp;-7, and Mike&#13;
McGrath. 6-5. were in the air. Xavier&#13;
seldom went outside for a shot, but when&#13;
they did a miss remained so only for the&#13;
split second it took Jones and friends to&#13;
become airborne. They had 82 rebounds to&#13;
Parkside's 52, including as many off the&#13;
offensive boards as UWP had in lotal.&#13;
Slaughler, Chicago's gift to Parkside&#13;
who played with Jones at Marshall, stayed&#13;
with his former Ipammate for the first&#13;
half, scoring 23 to Jones' 25. 1&lt;'orthat&#13;
reason, UWP trailed by only two, 53·51, at&#13;
intermission.&#13;
But Eli got only four points the final 20&#13;
minutes compared to Jones' 17, and even a&#13;
19 poinl splurge by Hogan couldn't keep&#13;
Xavier from blitzing a _ lead to a 90-70&#13;
bulge during a decisive six·minute spurt.&#13;
Stan White added t7 points to the&#13;
Parkside effort and teamed with Slaughter&#13;
to proVide UWI' with its only rebounding.&#13;
strength. Both had 1I3. Bradford frosh&#13;
Mike Jackson gol to second half points.&#13;
Parkside compounded its troubles with&#13;
cold second half shooting to finish at 39 per&#13;
cent to Xavier's 47.&#13;
The Rangers will host· Purdue-North&#13;
Central, which Xavier beat by t4 despite a&#13;
seven foot center, Friday nigbt at St.&#13;
Jospeh's and the Swedish National team&#13;
saturday night at Racine Case high school.&#13;
UWP Women&#13;
On The Go&#13;
Parkside's Women's cross c~untry team&#13;
participated in its first nahon~ cross&#13;
country championship at St. Louis, Mo."&#13;
during the Thanksgiving ~reak: ,&#13;
Although the Parkside girls didn t pla~e&#13;
in the top 30 individuals, they all had their&#13;
best performances of the 1: careers.&#13;
Parkside's team of Judy Zlmmerma~,&#13;
sandy Houston, Mary Libal and. Bonnie&#13;
Eppers have had very little experIenc~ m&#13;
cross country and they were competing&#13;
against the best in the country, if not in the&#13;
world. . te f&#13;
Judy Zimmerman broke 12 mmu s or&#13;
the first time over a two mile course.&#13;
sandy Houston improved b~ more than 80&#13;
seconds with a 12:40 clocking. .&#13;
The winner of the race was Doris Brown&#13;
of Seattle, Wash. Brown, who IS the&#13;
defending international champion, .won the&#13;
race with a fine 10:39 for the hilly two&#13;
miles. .&#13;
The winning team was the Wolvenne&#13;
Parkettes a team that ran at Parkside&#13;
earlier in 'Ule year and won the Parkside&#13;
AAU Cross Country Championships.&#13;
Workouts will begin soon for the- 1971&#13;
Women's Track team. Interested girls&#13;
sbould contact coach Godfrey at the Office&#13;
of Athletics immediately.&#13;
Ski Rangers&#13;
In 2nd Year&#13;
Parkside will field its second ski team&#13;
this winter. Men and women are both&#13;
eligible for the team, which will compete&#13;
in both divisions.&#13;
Last year's initial team finished the&#13;
season. ranking' sixth in the Wisconsin&#13;
Intercollegiate Ski Association. With the&#13;
addition of ski coaches Andrei Glasberg&#13;
and Kari Liekoski, plus' new skiers on&#13;
campus, it is hoped that the Rangers will&#13;
be able to move up in the standings.&#13;
The 1971 ski schedule is as follows:&#13;
Jan. 9-19- Mt. Frontenac,.Red Wing, Minn.&#13;
Jan. 17 - Little Switzerland, Slinger, Wis.&#13;
Jan. 30-31 - Mt. LaCrosse, LaCrosse, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 7 - Wilmot, Wilmot, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 13·14 - Rib Mountain, Wausau, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 21 - Houghton, Mich.&#13;
Feb. 'Z7-28- Indlanhead Mountain, Mich.,&#13;
Tri-State Championships.&#13;
Marquette Fo.iled&#13;
Members of Ute Parkside Foils&#13;
team fenced and defeated Foil team&#13;
members at the Marquette Club.&#13;
./ohn Tank and Kim Nelson won all&#13;
three of their matches while Larry&#13;
Foreman was winning one and&#13;
losing two. The other member of the&#13;
team, Jim Cummings, was one and&#13;
one.&#13;
The Ranger Volleyball Club, playing in&#13;
th~ Racine National League, shut out the&#13;
WIgs and Ellies last Wednesday 15-6, 15-4&#13;
and 15-12.&#13;
Equestrians Meet&#13;
A meeting is scheduled for Tuesday,&#13;
December 8, at Greenquist at 7:00&#13;
p.m. Posters are posted announcing&#13;
the room nwnber.&#13;
Intramurals To&#13;
Start Soon&#13;
Intramural basketball teams are beIttI&#13;
formed in two leagues. Coach II&#13;
Ballester is director of the RacineLeIpI&#13;
and Coach Jim Koch the KenoshaLelIa&#13;
Men interested in playing or who In&#13;
managing teams should contact one 1Jl1lle&#13;
two coaches.&#13;
The Racine league will play its gaDllIli&#13;
Memorial Hall on Mondays, wedJleldlJl&#13;
and Fridays during the noon hour.&#13;
Kenosha players will be playing iI•&#13;
variety of junior high school ~&#13;
Thursday nights. The complete&#13;
will be posted in the next edition.&#13;
'Coach Koch is organizing a table.-&#13;
tournament for Kenosha entbuBiuta.&#13;
Everyone is encouraged to join inthe pIIt.&#13;
whether they think they are tournan::&#13;
players or not. The tOlD'Dament.&#13;
probably be a ladder tournamen~ wI1ido&#13;
leaves a space for everybody.&#13;
Many Ranger&#13;
Fencers Will&#13;
Make Debut&#13;
ti g con.... Collegiate fencers represen ~ to S4JllII&#13;
from Colorado to Ohio, WisconSin paifl.&#13;
Carolina will congregate al Ch"j'"Illin'"&#13;
nl., this Saturday for the annua&#13;
Collegiate Fencing Tournarn~·iPS"""1&#13;
Although no team c~ampl~ W·sconsilt'&#13;
stake, the UniverSIty 0 fO~ t.pia&#13;
Parkside will be there 10 full they tJI&#13;
whatever individual ~o~O:~eir b~&#13;
garner. Fencers who Will fromJl1iDOiI:&#13;
obstacles to these honors areh&#13;
· Stale""&#13;
the Air Force Academy, 0 10&#13;
Wayne State of Detroit. debut rar dII&#13;
This will be the season AI ~&#13;
following Ranger fencer~. NeJsol1,,JoIlI&#13;
Keith Herbrechlsmeier, KI~westbY,Jdi'&#13;
Tanke, Bruce Bosman, Bo Rick liofltlL&#13;
zanotti, Peter Shemanske, mrniDS".&#13;
John Hanzalik and JIm eu&#13;
Racine Bowle~ L&#13;
21 U&#13;
15 II "&#13;
I' II.&#13;
11 •&#13;
10 •til&#13;
ToddPet ..&#13;
ToddP~ ...&#13;
ToddPet.. -&#13;
Rattle Rousers&#13;
N.T.L.F.S.&#13;
Senior Citizens&#13;
Banana Splits&#13;
Untouchables&#13;
The Machine&#13;
High Game&#13;
High Series&#13;
High Average&#13;
Spotlight On Warren&#13;
his best eve~t. the campus for only a&#13;
U.S. Gymnastics&#13;
Federation&#13;
Appoints Ballester&#13;
Warren . tcGillivary. 1970-il Ranger&#13;
gvmna t, comes to Wiscon m fro_m Los&#13;
"ngel ' Calif. Prior to enrolling at&#13;
Park id • thi per onable young man&#13;
att nded Pierce Junior College for two&#13;
years. .. . . Warren I no stranger to W1sc~nsm s&#13;
type of climate ince he is a natl\'e of&#13;
Toronto, Canada. While at Pierce, W~rren&#13;
compiled an impre sl\:e list of credits. H wa captain of h1 gymna_sttc_ team&#13;
both ~ear. he attended that in tttullon. In&#13;
dd1tion to thi he was named f:he ~~st&#13;
\ luable gymna t a a r~ult of his ab1l_1ty&#13;
to perform all ix Olympic event . on a high&#13;
1 ,·el. He ha been the ,·inner of several&#13;
tournament . He considers the vault to be&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Awards&#13;
Given&#13;
Park ide'. occer team finished . its&#13;
ea on with a 4-6-1 record. lncludmg&#13;
crimmage its record was 6-6-1 Their&#13;
1 ading goal corer. were Dale ' ickel. 11&#13;
goal . and Wolff Keeffer. eight goals.&#13;
Jo eph Orr wa elected most . valuable&#13;
player. Joseph also was captain, along&#13;
with 'lichael Jennette. Other letter winners from the team&#13;
include: Tom Thomsen, Tom Jaehne, Kurt&#13;
Wa sauer. Tony Kriedl, D~uglas&#13;
Beveridge, Edward St. Peter, Chr_1s ~-&#13;
dacht, Charles Lees, Ka~i Liekoski,_ Tim&#13;
1artinson, Stan farkov1c, Dale Nickel,&#13;
1ike Jennette and Joseph Orr.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Dec. s - Parkside vs. Northern Michigan&#13;
University at Marquette, Mich.&#13;
6:00 p.m., Equestrian Club at&#13;
Greenquist, Room 1Z7.&#13;
9 00 p.m., Kenosha bowling at the&#13;
Sheridan Lanes.&#13;
Dec. 9 - Parkside volleyball team. Racine&#13;
City League at Memorial Hall, 6:30&#13;
p.m. 4 p.m., Racine Bowling at J &amp; W Lanes.&#13;
Dec. 10 - 8:00 a.m., Karate Club at&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
7:30 p.m, Judo Club ·at Kenosha.&#13;
Dec. 12 - 8 :00 p.m., Basketball, UWParkside&#13;
versus UW-Green Bay at St.&#13;
Joseph's HS. in Kenosha.&#13;
BROO 18 LL&#13;
Outdoor sports should get their brooms&#13;
ready. As soon as the water freezes on the&#13;
rink, broomball play will begin. Managers&#13;
or players, get rour teams ready!&#13;
Ranger Basketball&#13;
Missed First Shot&#13;
r rto1r&#13;
Th Jon boy, c !led keet. nearly&#13;
m I -hand dly poiled Park ide's&#13;
ba ketball debut here la~t night through&#13;
gre I leap and bounds around the ba ket.&#13;
The r ult of Jones' 42 points and 28&#13;
r bound was a 111-97 victory for Xavier&#13;
ollege, a chool which ha ~ed&#13;
cholar hips to round up an 1mpress1~e&#13;
array of Chic goland prep league talent_ m&#13;
pr paration for it first s on of varsity&#13;
ba ketball and o far ha a 3--0 record to&#13;
hov. for it.&#13;
The 6~ Jones, a Marshall product, is the&#13;
most notable acquisition. He was released&#13;
early from the Army to attend Xavier, a&#13;
p ntagon concession Stephens may never&#13;
forgive. . . Park ide's scoring twms, Jim Hogan&#13;
and Eli Slaughter, did their best to counter&#13;
Jone· with 33 and Z1 point productions.to&#13;
take up where they left off last year, but&#13;
th ·tory of the game is simply told in the&#13;
total domination of Xavier's quick, agile&#13;
and leaping front line.&#13;
Th few times Jones touched the floor,&#13;
teammates Bob Lanning, 6-7, and Mike&#13;
l\lcGrath. 6-5. were in the air. Xavier&#13;
eldom went outside for a shot, but when&#13;
they did a miss remained so only for the&#13;
plit second it took Jones and friends to&#13;
become airborne. They had 82 rebounds to&#13;
Parkside's 52, including as many off the&#13;
offensive boards as lJ'.VP had in total.&#13;
laughter. Chicago's gift to Parkside&#13;
who played with Jones at Marshall, stayed&#13;
with his former tP.ammate for the first&#13;
half, scoring 23 to Jones' 25. 1' or that&#13;
reason, UWP trailed by only two, 53-51, at&#13;
intermission.&#13;
But Eli got only four points the final 20&#13;
minutes compared to Jones' 17, and even a&#13;
19 point splurge by Hogan couldn't keep&#13;
Xavier from blitzing a 56-64 lead to a 90-70&#13;
bulge during a decisive six-minute spurt.&#13;
Stan White added 17 points to the&#13;
Parkside effort and teamed with Slaughter&#13;
to provide t]WJ:&gt; with its only rebounding.&#13;
strength. Both had 113. Bradford frosh&#13;
Mike Jackson got 10 second half points.&#13;
Parkside compounded its troubles with&#13;
cold second half shooting to finish at 39 per&#13;
cent to Xavier's 47.&#13;
The Rangers will host · Purdue-North&#13;
Central, which Xavier beat by 14 despite a&#13;
seven foot center, Friday night at St.&#13;
Jospeh's and the Swedish National team&#13;
Saturday night at Racine Case high school.&#13;
Despite bemg on y W n has proven to be a ver few weeks: arre ith his outgoing perpopul_ar&#13;
f1gf\-: habit of introducing&#13;
sonallty an I h doesn't know.&#13;
himself to almost a~yone el is to qualify&#13;
Warren's immediate go~ . of Inhe&#13;
National Assoc1at10n .&#13;
!~~co~legiate Athletics champions~pg at&#13;
Louisiana early next spn_n . .&#13;
N~eage~\ange plans include maj?nng m h. g gymnastics once geography and coac m.&#13;
he has finished compet!ng. . d scuba&#13;
Warren's main hobbies mclu e . . . h' h he can do here and surfing, divmg, w 1c '&#13;
which he cannot.&#13;
UWP Women&#13;
On The Go&#13;
Parkside's Women's cross c~untry team&#13;
participated in its first nattona_l cross&#13;
country championship at St. Lows, Mo.,.&#13;
during the Thanksgiving ~reak: '&#13;
Although the Parkside girls didn t pla~e&#13;
in the top 30 individuals, they ~II had their&#13;
best performances of their careers.&#13;
Parkside's team of Judy Zimmerma~,&#13;
Sandy Houston, Mary Libal and. Bonn~e&#13;
Eppers have had very little expenenc~ m&#13;
cross country and they were . com~etmg&#13;
against the best in the country, tf not m the&#13;
world. . t f&#13;
Judy Zimmerman broke 12 mmu es or&#13;
the first time over a two mile course.&#13;
Sandy Houston improved hr more than 80&#13;
seconds with a 12:40 clock.mg.&#13;
The winner of the race was Doris Brown&#13;
of Seattle, Wash. Brown, who is the&#13;
defending international champion, _won the&#13;
race with a fine 10:39 for the hilly two&#13;
miles. . The winning team was the Wolverine&#13;
Parkettes a team that ran at Parkside&#13;
earlier in 'the year and won the Parkside&#13;
AAU Cross Country Championships.&#13;
Workouts will begin soon for the 1971&#13;
Women's Track team. Interested girls&#13;
should contact Coach Godfrey at the Office&#13;
of Athletics immediately.&#13;
Ski Rangers&#13;
In 2nd Year&#13;
Parkside will field its second ski team&#13;
this winter. Men and women are both ·&#13;
eligible for the team, which will compete&#13;
in both divisions.&#13;
Last year's i~itial team finished the season ranking sixth in the Wisconsin&#13;
Intercollegiate Ski Association. With the&#13;
addition of ski coaches Andrei Glasberg&#13;
and Kari Liekoski, plus· new skiers on&#13;
campus, it is hoped that the Rangers will&#13;
be able to move up in the standings.&#13;
The 1971 ski schedule is as follows:&#13;
Jan. 9-19- Mt. Frontenac,,Red Wing, Minn.&#13;
Jan. 17 - Little Switzerland, Slinger, Wis.&#13;
Jan. 30-31 - Mt. Lacrosse, Lacrosse, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 7 - Wilmot, Wilmot, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 13-14 - Rib Mountain, Wausau, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 21 - Houghton, Mich.&#13;
Feb. Z7-28 - Indianhead Mountain, Mich.,&#13;
Tri-State Championships.&#13;
Marquette Fo.iled&#13;
Members of the Parkside Foils&#13;
team fenced and defeated Foil team&#13;
members at the Marquette Club.&#13;
,John Tank and Kim Nelson won all&#13;
three of their matches while Larry&#13;
Foreman was winning one and&#13;
losing two. The other member of the&#13;
team, Jim Cwnmings, was one and one.&#13;
The Ranger Volleyball Club, playing in&#13;
th~ Racine National League, shut out the&#13;
Wigs and Ellies last Wednesday 15-6, 15-4&#13;
and 15-12.&#13;
Equestrians Meet&#13;
A meeting is scheduled for Tuesday,&#13;
December 8, at Greenquist at 7:00&#13;
p.m. Posters are posted announcing the room nwnber.&#13;
lntramurals lo&#13;
Start Soon&#13;
Intramural basketball teams are beq&#13;
formed in two leagues. Coach Bill&#13;
Ballester is director of the Racine League&#13;
and Coach Jim Koch the Kenosha League.&#13;
Men interested in playing or who are&#13;
managing teams should contact one of the&#13;
two coaches.&#13;
The Racine league will play its games at&#13;
Memorial Hall on Mondays, Wednesdays&#13;
and Fridays during the noon ho~ ..&#13;
Kenosha players will be playmg m •&#13;
variety of junior high school gyms oo&#13;
Thursday nights. The complete schedaie&#13;
will be posted in the next edition. .&#13;
·coach Koch is organizing a table ~IIIIIS&#13;
tournament for Kenosha enthusia51S.&#13;
Everyone is encouraged to join in the play,&#13;
whether they think they are tournam~&#13;
players or not. The tournament .&#13;
probably be a ladder tournament, which&#13;
leaves a space for everybody.&#13;
Many Ranger&#13;
Fencers Will&#13;
Make Debut&#13;
ti g colleges Collegiate fencers represen ~ south&#13;
from Colorado to Ohio, Wiscon~:;paign&#13;
Carolina will congregate at I lllin&#13;
Ill this Saturday for the annua&#13;
c~ilegiate Fencing Tourna~en~.i 5 aJ'(' a'&#13;
Although no te~m c~amP1f 05wi~cons10· stake the University O e to ~aio&#13;
Parkside w!ll ~ -there in ful~t~ey can&#13;
whatever md1v1dual ~onoe their bigg&#13;
garner. Fencers who will b from ruino!S,&#13;
obstacles to these honors are . state ~&#13;
the Air Force Academy, Ohio&#13;
Wayne State of Detroit. d but ror tbt&#13;
This will be the season. ~l LJ&gt;CBnl&#13;
following Ranger fencer~. Nelson, J&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier, Ki: westbY, J~&#13;
Tanke, Bruce Bosman, Bo Rick Moffel~&#13;
Zanotti, Peter Shem~nske, mming.s· John Hanzalik and Jim CU&#13;
Racine Bowle~s L&#13;
JI&#13;
15 Rattle Rousers&#13;
N.T.L.F.S.&#13;
Senior Citizens&#13;
Banana Splits&#13;
Untouchables&#13;
The Machine&#13;
High Game&#13;
High Series&#13;
High Average&#13;
29&#13;
25&#13;
2()&#13;
19 JI&#13;
17 SS ,0&#13;
10 24'&#13;
Todd petersetl 6d&#13;
Todd petersetl 184&#13;
Todd petersetl &#13;
Spotlight On Kari&#13;
xc Awards&#13;
... DeWitt junior from Kenosha&#13;
n..,er was elected captain of the 1970&#13;
;"..,.. country team and Rick&#13;
:."a lreshman from Marinette, -was&#13;
1II1II the most valuable runner ..&#13;
DeWitt won his third letter 10 cross&#13;
..., Ibis rall and bas been a leader by&#13;
.... ror!be harriers, Rick Lund came&#13;
.1IrGIII to rank as the Rangers' number&#13;
.1\1lIIOI',&#13;
IAIId boIds the school record in the four&#13;
ole, aJong with teammate Chuch Detl-&#13;
_ at 3:1:29, as well as the five and six&#13;
.. XC record.&#13;
Fite other Ranger runners were&#13;
mrded their varsity letters. These&#13;
raers are all freshmen and include&#13;
OW: Dettman, M.rinette; Jim McFadden,&#13;
W.terford; Tim McGilsky,&#13;
...... St. Catherine's; Gary Lance of&#13;
Ialorford aod John Wagner of Elmhurst,&#13;
I.&#13;
1lIe lop live ranked runners were Lund,&#13;
Dettman, McFadden, McGilsky and&#13;
I8e.&#13;
One. of the new faces around the&#13;
Parkslde campus is a member of th&#13;
United States biathlon team. TwentY-fou~&#13;
year ?ld Karl Liekowki has Come to&#13;
Parksld~ to study ecnomics after three&#13;
years WIth the U.S. Army.&#13;
Liekoski came to the United. States when&#13;
h~ was 17 from Helsinki, Finland, his&#13;
birthplace. He and his family settled in&#13;
New Yor~, where he finished high school.&#13;
Immediately after high school he briefly&#13;
attende? Orange County Community&#13;
College In New York and Arizona State&#13;
where he played soccer. •&#13;
This fall he was a standout on the&#13;
Ranger SOccerteam. This winter he will be&#13;
vying for a berth on the U.S. national team&#13;
in the biathlon as well as working with the&#13;
Ranger Alpine skiing team and playing for&#13;
the hockey team.&#13;
In his spare time he is teaching assistant&#13;
for the ski courses besides participating in&#13;
other sports such as table tennis and&#13;
volleyball,&#13;
While in tbe Army, Kari traveled&#13;
through much of the United States and&#13;
Europe, mostly competing in cross&#13;
country skiing and The biathlon.&#13;
Last winter .he competed in the world&#13;
biathlon championships in Sweden as well&#13;
as other competitions in the Scandinavian&#13;
countries.&#13;
After the world championships the&#13;
United States team traveled to Austria for&#13;
the World Military Championships (CISM)&#13;
in both cross country and downhill skiing.&#13;
Kari also found time to win a marathon&#13;
in Alaska and make the All-Alaska soccer&#13;
team .&#13;
Last September, 'Kari was married to a&#13;
girl from New York. Teresa shares bis&#13;
interest in skiing and sports. She IS a&#13;
competent skier and instructor.&#13;
Congrats&#13;
To The Bear&#13;
'.&#13;
Spotlight On Keith&#13;
k 'th ~ Herbrecbtsmeier, MASTER&#13;
.. R. That's quite. tille for a young&#13;
.. tohold.Especially when you consider&#13;
.... OtlIyahalf dozenor so men in tbe mldllIIeeanholclthat&#13;
tille and only one is •&#13;
~ a Master Fencer means that one&#13;
lila a aass A r.ting. To illustrate wh.t&#13;
.......1Deans one can point out th.t a former&#13;
lidI 01 the United States fencing team&#13;
..... "'- P.n American team member&#13;
~ to Milwaukee holds a Class B.&#13;
~bIY the most shocking f.ct about&#13;
•. 110 that he is a rookie as rar as fencers&#13;
"-'. baa only been competing for two&#13;
~,,-, elt won the '--- K'h Wlsconsm .'&#13;
lid rAte01 the American Fencing League&#13;
ed _d in the midwest. The&#13;
Olympic team is picked on the basis of&#13;
points compiled prior to the games: SoJ':::.&#13;
Keith bas picked up II~1Ots. put~k..th&#13;
in contension for a posslble Olymp&#13;
which is his goal. sch I .t Kenosha&#13;
While 10 high 00 . .&#13;
K ith was captain of his temus&#13;
Tremper, ~ b Coach Schmale. He.lso&#13;
::.m~ ';:~ber%flbe student council .nd&#13;
the senior advisory boa~haS gained most&#13;
Athletics is where KCI . as&#13;
of his f.me but he is equallY ouu:r::::. of&#13;
• student. In 1!MjlHj9, ':'w:~ for the out·&#13;
the Roger SUPfWete at parkside. He&#13;
.tanding studen -. . ." of the Bernard&#13;
also bas been a recIpIent&#13;
T.llent scholarship. 400 student .nd&#13;
Besides bemg a near. so served&#13;
outstanding fencer, KeIth has aI&#13;
as president of the VarsIty club.&#13;
Spotlight&#13;
On Hogan&#13;
Jim Hogan, P.rks,de's standout guard.&#13;
may not be very "high" m beighl but he',&#13;
the high scorer a good deal ollbe ume.&#13;
During the 1969-70 season. JIm led all&#13;
Rangers with a 23.9 a\'erage as well as&#13;
rankIng second in District 14 rree--Lh~&#13;
sbooting with a .895 percentage&#13;
In the day or the big man. irs refreshll'8&#13;
to see a 5'10" basketball player star hke&#13;
Hogan does. Being a standout is a babit,&#13;
While at Byron high school in IIhno; . he&#13;
was All-Conference. During tu.s senior&#13;
year he scored as high as 56 points in a&#13;
single game.&#13;
After high school, JIm attended Rock&#13;
Valley Junior College in Rockford. Ill,&#13;
where he was a leammate of fellow&#13;
Ranger, Stan White. While U1ereJun was&#13;
selected 10 U1ethird All·American Jumor&#13;
College learn.&#13;
Jim is a senior at Parkside and has&#13;
already started orr U1eseason WItha bang&#13;
by scoring 33 points ag.UlSt Xavier,&#13;
This young man is married tUnda Iaed&#13;
majoring in business management with a&#13;
minor in "point production"&#13;
Lose to Xavier&#13;
By JIM CASPER&#13;
Word got around that Keet Jones of&#13;
Chicago Xavier could touch the top of the&#13;
backboard and now Parkside players&#13;
probably figure that to be a conservative&#13;
estimate of his jumping ability. All Jones&#13;
did against Parkside last Tuesday was&#13;
score 42 points and grab 28 rebounds,&#13;
sending the Rangers down to an opening&#13;
111-97 loss to Chicago.&#13;
The game was close, with Parkside on&#13;
the short end of a 53-51 count at U1ebalf.&#13;
Mter Parkside narrowed the margin to 6S--&#13;
64 Jones took control and Xavier steadily&#13;
put the game out of reach.&#13;
The big problem for the Rangers was a&#13;
lack of rebounding, especially defensive&#13;
rebounding. Parkside had four players in&#13;
double figures, paced by Jim Hogan's 33&#13;
points. Eli Slaughter and Stan While, two&#13;
players who rebound Well, contributed n&#13;
and 17 points respectively. Mike Jackson&#13;
was the only other Ranger 10 score COl1-&#13;
sistantly, adding ten points. While Jones&#13;
innicted lhe most damage. three other&#13;
Xavier cagers also hit in double figures.&#13;
Parkside will get another shot at Xavier&#13;
on February 16 and that will be a home&#13;
game.&#13;
Basketball: Ranger cagers .. ,II par&#13;
ticlpate 10 the Qo8l~ a"'!" Holiday&#13;
InVItational Tournament through 0t'C It&#13;
Eight teams will take part Wllh Parb,de&#13;
opening .galO,t Y State at Old II' t·&#13;
bury followed by e1U1er 'orth Carolina AIt&#13;
Tor MarlSl College of Pough\&lt; oe 101Y&#13;
Soys and Girls In Varsity Sports&#13;
member of hlS tenru..s team&#13;
"The other pia) .... looked upon her a&#13;
CellO,.·pla)e.r and a ClJrlygood one at that&#13;
She dod all the runrung. dnll and&#13;
calesthenucs the others lhd Out 0( ..,&#13;
players. she probably ranked number&#13;
four Four other gIrl Ined out for th t am&#13;
but couldn't make It ,one \110&amp; tpven&#13;
peelal lre.lment "&#13;
An oJlPO!'ongcoachsaId of. golf conI&#13;
"One gIrl beat ml tlurdplace&#13;
both mal&lt;h.nd \rake play Tb&#13;
pl.)' .... ludded hun some bul th WI&#13;
derstood thaI !hel could ba, n '" th&#13;
same POSItion t. fifth-pI C'C man t&#13;
anolher &amp;lrl so!her". no probl&#13;
AnothPr op!&gt;O'&gt;,ngcoach saId he ,.&#13;
ag.,nst pial'" &amp;lr1 .1 the ou , ' but th&#13;
number one pial er 10 oor I gu I t lear&#13;
\110 as a girl made mt h ~rong I&#13;
~as.··&#13;
A boy .. bo fa'ored compellng a al&#13;
&amp;lrI saId "lIagu) gelS beat .. ,.hat" If&#13;
the guy doesn't like 10 admll a gIrl&#13;
beller, he has a .. now. problem ..&#13;
EIghI)'·fl\e per cenl of the girls lelt&#13;
accepted by boys as leam mem rs.' me&#13;
out of ten said their partJetpahon In varslt)t&#13;
sports drew more tnlerest. attention,&#13;
respect and fnendhnes5 from then&#13;
teachers, fell... students and communIty&#13;
School work lhd 001 suffer, and soc.. 1&#13;
ac:t;yities or home hfe were not affected&#13;
Only rove per cent of the &amp;Iris felt practice&#13;
sessioos were too strenuous&#13;
Main parental concerns were "noIlosll1l&#13;
idenllly as a lIU'L" While the ma)Ortly&#13;
favored the righl of • girl 10 compete on a&#13;
bo)'S' team, 39 per cenl said they preferred&#13;
that their ... '11 daughlers be memben of an&#13;
all-girls team .&#13;
"1 was pre:5eIlt at. number of cc:mtests,"&#13;
said one approving parenl, "and there was&#13;
oot even any of the hllle joItes and comments&#13;
Iexpected there would be. They JUSt&#13;
shook hands and wenl at 0110 see who could&#13;
a feminine win over the other. tl&#13;
By ArthUl'J. Snider&#13;
Daily News Science Editor&#13;
The tall, blond boy lunged to",.rd the&#13;
fading ball and desperately swung hIS&#13;
racquet - but too late. The pomt went to&#13;
his opponent and with it, the game, set.nd&#13;
m.tch. th&#13;
There was nothing unusual a.bout . e&#13;
tennis contest between the t\l.Ofl\'aj high&#13;
school varsity teams, except that the&#13;
decisive victory was won by a girl&#13;
After congratulating his pretty foe. the&#13;
losing youth said "ltned my besl. bul she&#13;
was too good. l'io, Idon't resent losmg to a&#13;
girl. Sbe deserved It." ,&#13;
The unusual scene was duplicated in 1&#13;
New York high schools thiS year as girls&#13;
competed on varsity team 10 10 noncontact&#13;
sports - tennis, golf, gymnastics.&#13;
cross-country. SWlmmin.g.track, fencmg,&#13;
riflery, skiing and bowhng&#13;
"Results of thiS expenment have led us&#13;
to conclude that girls should be permItted&#13;
to participate in boys' mterschool.,athletlc&#13;
teams in non-contact sports: Prof.&#13;
George H. Grover of the New York State&#13;
Department of Educati~n. told an&#13;
American Medical Associahon symposium&#13;
in Boston.&#13;
The experiment was undertaken. 1D&#13;
Marcb, 1969, afler the parents of a high.&#13;
school senior girl challenged the&#13;
regul.tions thaI .prevented girls from&#13;
competing in varsIty sports.&#13;
"We found we bad htlle oroo~mg to&#13;
support OUl' Iraditional position, S81d&#13;
Grover. ., til tal The experiment is cmtinll1Dll 1m , e&#13;
authorities can rule &lt;Xl the rec«nendation,&#13;
but an evaIuatim of the firsl16&#13;
:::mths showed 84 per cenl of U1eboys;99&#13;
r cent of U1e girls, 93 per cent of the&#13;
::rents 86 per cent of the coaches and 74&#13;
per ceni or the opposirc coaches f.vored&#13;
mixed athletic learns.&#13;
One coach commented m&#13;
Spotlight On Kari&#13;
L---------:::~::----·---1&#13;
One. of the new faces around the&#13;
XC Awards&#13;
)lik DeWitt junior from Kenosha&#13;
~ was eiected captain of the 1970&#13;
fTe!ll 'cross country team and Rick er . tt Ll:ll1, a freshman from Marme e, was&#13;
the most valuable runner ..&#13;
DeWitt won his third letter m cross&#13;
trY this fall and has been a leader by&#13;
OJl!l~e for the harriers. Rick Lund came&#13;
1roog to rank as the Rangers' number&#13;
runner.&#13;
Lund holds the school record in the four&#13;
along with teammate· Chuch Dett-&#13;
, at 20:29, as well as the five and six&#13;
·le XC record.&#13;
five other Ranger runners were&#13;
arded their varsity letters. These&#13;
IIJll)etS are all freshmen and include&#13;
k Dettman, Marinette; Jim Mcadden,&#13;
Waterford; Tim McGilsky,&#13;
Racme St. Catherine's; Gary Lance of&#13;
aterford and John Wagner of Elmhurst,&#13;
1be top five ranked runners were Lund,&#13;
Dtttman, McFadden, McGilsky and&#13;
wre.&#13;
Pa~ks1de campus is a member of the&#13;
Uruted States ~iatl_llon team. Twenty-four&#13;
year ?ld Kari L1ekowki has come to&#13;
Parks1d~ to study ecnomics after three&#13;
yea~s w1tl_l the U.S. Army.&#13;
L1ekosk1 came to the United States when&#13;
h~ was 17 from Helsinki, Finland, his&#13;
birthplace. He and his family settled in&#13;
New Yor~, where he finished high school.&#13;
Immediately after high school he briefly&#13;
attende? Orange County Community&#13;
College m New York and Arizona State&#13;
where he played soccer. ·&#13;
This fall he was a standout on the&#13;
Ranger soccer team. This winter he will be&#13;
vying for a berth on the U.S. national team&#13;
in the biathlon as well as working with the&#13;
Ranger Alpine skiing team and playing for&#13;
the hockey team.&#13;
In his spare time he is teaching assistant&#13;
for the ski courses besides participating in&#13;
other sports such as table tennis and&#13;
volleyball.&#13;
While in the Army, Kari traveled&#13;
through m11Ch of the United States and&#13;
Europe, mostly competing in cross country skiing and 'the biathlon.&#13;
Last winter he competed in the world&#13;
biathlon championships in Sweden as well&#13;
as other competitions in the Scandinavian&#13;
countries.&#13;
After the world championships the&#13;
United States team traveled to Austria for&#13;
the World Military Championships ( CISM)&#13;
in both cross country and downhill skiing.&#13;
Kari also found time to win a marathon&#13;
in Alaska and make the All-Alaska soccer&#13;
team.&#13;
Last September, ·Kari was married to a&#13;
girl from New York. Teresa shares his&#13;
interest in skiing and sports. She is a&#13;
competent skier and instructor.&#13;
Congrais&#13;
To The Bear&#13;
Spotlight On Keith&#13;
K~lt~ Herbrechtsmeier, MASTER&#13;
CER. That's quite a title for a young&#13;
lobold. Especially when you consider&#13;
only a half dozen or so men in the mid-&#13;
!iold that title and only one is a n.&#13;
~ a Master Fencer means that one&#13;
a Class A rating. To illustrate what&#13;
ans one can point out that a former&#13;
~ of the United States fencing team&#13;
0~er Pan American team member&#13;
In Milwaukee holds a Class B. ra&#13;
Probably the most shocking fact about&#13;
ll la that he is a rookie as far as fencers&#13;
has only been competing for two&#13;
~ Year, Keith won the Wisconsin&#13;
Placof the American Fencing League&#13;
ed 1&gt;econd in the midwest. The&#13;
01 m ic team is picked on the basis of&#13;
polnt!compiled prior to tJ:ie games_. Soh~:&#13;
Keith has picked up 11 ~mts, putlfckth&#13;
in contension for a possible Olymp&#13;
which is ~s g°'.'31. sch 1 at Kenosha While m high oo . . Keith was captain of his tenms&#13;
Trem~~ched by Coach Schmale. H~ also&#13;
team, mber of the student council and was a me . d&#13;
the seni?r ~dvisory ~ has gained most&#13;
Athletics is wh~e ei tstanding as&#13;
of bis fame but he lS 1:ae~ou the winner of&#13;
a student. In I961Hi9, award for the out-&#13;
~e Roger Sup~ete at Parkside. He&#13;
standing beestudena ~~ipient of the Bernard also has n .&#13;
Tallent schol~rship. 4 oo student and&#13;
Besides being a "if ~th has also served&#13;
outstanding fencer, ei . cl b&#13;
as president of the Varsity u .&#13;
Spotlight&#13;
On Hogan&#13;
Lose to Xavier&#13;
B, JI:\1 C.\, PFR&#13;
Word got around tha• Keet J • of&#13;
Chicago Xavier could touch t top th&#13;
backboard and no\\ Par ide players&#13;
probably figure that to be a conservative&#13;
estimate of his jumping ability. All Jon&#13;
did against Park ide la t Tuesday a score 42 points and grab 28 rebounds,&#13;
sending the Rangers down to an openi&#13;
111-97 loss to Chicago.&#13;
The game was close, with Parkside on&#13;
the short end of a 53-51 count at the half.&#13;
After Parkside narrowed the margin to 6!&gt;-&#13;
64 Jones took control and Xa,ier teadily&#13;
put the game out of reach.&#13;
The big problem for the Rangers was&#13;
lack of rebounding, especially defensive&#13;
rebounding. Parkside had four players m&#13;
double figures, paced by Jim Hogan's 33&#13;
points. Eli Slaughter and Stan White, two&#13;
players who rebound well, contributed Tl&#13;
and 17 points respectively. like Jackson&#13;
;as the only other Ranger to score consis&#13;
ta ntly, adding ten points. While Jones&#13;
inflicted the most damage, three other&#13;
Xavier cagers also hit in double figur~&#13;
Parkside will get another shot at Xavier&#13;
on February 16 and that will be a home&#13;
game. &#13;
Mr. Wrestling&#13;
Bill Benkstein ..&#13;
Bill Benkstein is in a unique but enviable 18 ~&#13;
position for an athlete in any sport - he IS ,&#13;
beginning his third season as a team lIlIIt&#13;
captain. The captainCY is usually a r&#13;
position reserved for a senior. However,·&#13;
Bill has asserted himself the past three&#13;
seasons and emerged as the team leader.&#13;
Bill is more than just the leader, he is the&#13;
number one point getter on the team. He.&#13;
was a regular from day one at Parkside,&#13;
and holds virtually every wrestling record&#13;
at the school The business major is a former Salem&#13;
Central graduate and hopes some day to&#13;
possibly be a coach. In Bill's junior year he&#13;
posted a !f-2 record, which included a State&#13;
AAU runner-up at 160 pounds. Coach Koch&#13;
leels that this should he Bill's year to win&#13;
national recognition and possibly a&#13;
championship. Koch has nothing but'&#13;
ursise for Benkstein, "Bill commands&#13;
respect from his teammates in such a&#13;
manner that he is more like a playing&#13;
coach. He has the tenacity and the desire&#13;
to make himself a national champion."&#13;
It could be a long and dreary season for&#13;
the Parkside opponents at Bill's 167 pound&#13;
Spotlight On A Coach&#13;
Dielt Wilson has just returned from a&#13;
lour of the Philippines where he worked&#13;
with their archery program as a member&#13;
~ the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
coaching team. Wilson was highly commended&#13;
lor the program he laid out lor&#13;
that country. When he left, 16 master&#13;
coaches and 200 instructors had been&#13;
cerhfied 10carry on the archery program.&#13;
DIck Wilson allended Hillsdale College,&#13;
HIllsdale, MICh., and began his archery&#13;
career as a field tesl staf! member lor a&#13;
large archery tackle manufacturer, which&#13;
firm he later jomed, first as an exhibition&#13;
starr archer. then as advertising eonsullant.&#13;
As a toumament archer he was&#13;
MIchIgan tate fIeld Archery ChampIon&#13;
and won over 50 archery tournament&#13;
prne He later ran his own archery&#13;
eqwpmenl shop, the JOined Shakespeare&#13;
Company as Archery DIVision Manager&#13;
Wtlson serves as chairman of the&#13;
Educalion Committees 01 both the&#13;
Prol ional Archery Association and the&#13;
American Archery Council He serves on&#13;
the board 01 directors of lhe Archery&#13;
Manufacturers OrgaOlzatlon He also is&#13;
dlreclor of the ProlesslOnal Archery&#13;
Assoclahon's BuslOess and Instructors&#13;
hoOIs and lS a member 01 the Archery&#13;
Committee 01 the Outdoor Education&#13;
Project. He has served as President 01the&#13;
American Archery Council smce 1967. Mr&#13;
Wilson ISa member of the Outdoor Writers&#13;
Assoclallon. He received the Junior&#13;
Chamber of Commerce OSA award in 1954&#13;
for organizing a selr4supporting summer&#13;
recreation program He also is a charter&#13;
member of the American Camping&#13;
AssocIation, a member ollhe FIshing Hall&#13;
of fame, and ortglnator 01 the PAA. In&#13;
September. he was the principal&#13;
"ceIebrlly" 01 another American Sportsman&#13;
!ilm&#13;
Dlclc. has served as master instructor in&#13;
more than 20 Outdoor Education Project&#13;
Archery Workshops and as a Master instructor&#13;
in Lifetime Sports Master&#13;
Oinlciao Workshops. He is the author 01&#13;
several archery mstructor manuals and ot&#13;
magazme and book articles on archery&#13;
and howhunting. He has appeared in eight&#13;
television and distribution films on archery&#13;
HIS most recent archery nJms,&#13;
"Bowhuntini lor Exotic Deer" and&#13;
"Hunting and Fishing in South America"&#13;
have been seen by millions of television&#13;
VIC"'crS.&#13;
An accomplished bowhunter. Dick&#13;
Wilson has successfully hunted bear, axis&#13;
deer, white4tail and mule deer elk moose&#13;
wild boar and other game' in' severai&#13;
states.. I&#13;
Dick, tus Wile, Ellen, and their lour&#13;
daughters live on Crooked Lake near&#13;
Kalamazoo. Mich.&#13;
~e follow,ingis an article written by Mr.&#13;
Wtlson on hiS faVOrite subject.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Archery means many things to many&#13;
people, but to the citizens 01 the PtulipPIOesArchery&#13;
will become a sport of great&#13;
national pride In lhe very near future.&#13;
Archery wHl be a Gold Medal Sport in&#13;
the 1972OlympICS to be held al MWlich&#13;
Germany This alone should aWake~&#13;
people that the shooting 01 a how and&#13;
arrow is not just for savages and children.&#13;
This IS a game 01 greal skill and the top&#13;
archers 10 the world can shoot six arrows&#13;
In a 14 lOch circle at 90 meters! There has&#13;
been very lilUe archery in the Philippines&#13;
10 lhe past, but a long range program&#13;
develop~d by the National Archery&#13;
Association 01 the Philippines (NAAPl&#13;
WIder the dedicated and able guidance 01&#13;
Mr Ramon Lim, President 01 NAAP, and&#13;
Mr Bernabe G. Martinez, Vice President&#13;
and Executive Secretary 01 NAAP will&#13;
change this sorry fact. '&#13;
Up until .this year, the Philippines has&#13;
lagged behind all other coWltries in this&#13;
greal sport. Bul the pasl two years 01 ellort&#13;
by Mr. Lim and Mr. Martinez has&#13;
blossomed inlo a program thai has Iwo&#13;
primary iloals: first, 10 develop a&#13;
program WIthin the public school system&#13;
thai WIll allow the Philippine children 10&#13;
enJOYa physical activily that is healthful&#13;
as well as enjoyable and a challenge.&#13;
Second, to develop from this grass rools&#13;
base a team of top archers who will go to&#13;
MWlich and bring home the glory of a&#13;
Gold, Silver or Bronze medal to the&#13;
Phllippines.&#13;
To set goals is an easy task, bul implementing&#13;
the necessary lunctions of&#13;
oraalllzatlon to achieve the goals is&#13;
_her matter. The organization set up by&#13;
the NAAP lS that thru the public school&#13;
aystem archery will become a primary&#13;
:tiVily in P.E. classes. From these&#13;
.... will develop archery clubs in the&#13;
barrio schools, as well as the cily schools.&#13;
The archery in these clubs will gain&#13;
competition experience by having tournaments&#13;
(meets) with other schools in&#13;
preparation lor the Interscholastic Meets&#13;
and the National Championships. from&#13;
the winners of these major events, and&#13;
Irom other clubs, an Olympic try-oulevent&#13;
will be held 10 determine lhe teams that&#13;
will represent the Philippines.&#13;
Obviously, a program of such a&#13;
tremendous scale must have (1)&#13;
knowledgeable instructors and (2}&#13;
"'!uipment. In order to satisfy these needs,&#13;
the NAAP has developed a clinic&#13;
(workshop) program that is very intense&#13;
in subject matter. In a period of five days,&#13;
the delegates to one of the NAAP&#13;
workshops learn archery instruction, how&#13;
to make bows and arrows from local&#13;
materials and how to set up clubs and run&#13;
successlul meets. In order to develop the&#13;
broad hase of shooters and 10 help the&#13;
economy of the country, much emphasis is&#13;
given to the making of equipment with&#13;
materials that are readily available&#13;
anywhere in the Philippines instead 01&#13;
importing all 01the equipment. This e!fort&#13;
will help stabilize the economy 01 the&#13;
country yet allow studenls the satislaction&#13;
of creating a how and then using their&#13;
creations successfully. Imported equipment&#13;
will only be necessary lor the very&#13;
advanced archers.&#13;
In addition, the NAAP and the PAAF&#13;
have had the loresighlto engage archery&#13;
experts from America to enrich their&#13;
•knowledge of teaching methods and&#13;
construction of equipment. Workshops will&#13;
he held in the four major areas 01 the&#13;
Philippines and as of this writing&#13;
workshops have already been held at&#13;
Davao City (Mindanao Area) and Cebu&#13;
City (Visayan Area). Other workshops are&#13;
planned lor Quezon City (Luzon Area) in&#13;
the next few weeks. Follow up workshops&#13;
are planned for the next yet4r to assist&#13;
coaches in advanced techniques and to&#13;
assist the delegates who allend lhese&#13;
current clinics in establishing local&#13;
programs.&#13;
Archery is a motor skill activity and&#13;
sport and ~he stature, size or strength of&#13;
the archer IS not a criteria as it is in other&#13;
sports such as baskelball. The smallest&#13;
woman can beat the biggest man in an&#13;
archer~ co~test as it is a game of skill and&#13;
deter~lnalion, not si~e or strength. Many&#13;
prom.ment people enJoy the satisfaction of&#13;
shooting the how and arrow. Most 01 you&#13;
are familiar with Mr. O. D. Corpuz&#13;
Secretary of Education and Directo;&#13;
Gemma Cruz Araneta, lormer Miss international.&#13;
Both are Archery enthusiasts&#13;
and both believe that tpe Philippines c~&#13;
beco.me the international leader in Archery&#13;
In the near future.&#13;
. At the ~~es~nt time, organized archery&#13;
In ~e PhilIppmes consists of a very few&#13;
dedicated people, bul they are people who&#13;
are. working together for a common&#13;
nati~nal cause. With this cooperative&#13;
leeling and the dedication of lbe educators&#13;
who have been, and will be al the&#13;
workshops, Archery will become the Sport&#13;
01 the People.&#13;
Kenosha Bow lers&#13;
ThIs year the Kenosha Intramural&#13;
Bowling League was lormed under the&#13;
direction of Coach Jim Koch.&#13;
.The league howls regularly on Tuesda&#13;
mghts at 9:00 at Sheridan Lanes i~&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The intramural league consists of ei ht&#13;
teams of three persons. The league g&#13;
SlStsof mainly boys, but there is one&#13;
=&#13;
Mark Tullewski&#13;
·Tom Krummel&#13;
George Georgacopolos&#13;
Rich Rosko&#13;
weight class, and with a litlle luck and lot&#13;
of :-"ork, Bill could be Parkside', :in1&#13;
national champion.&#13;
Rangers Lose&#13;
To Loyola 7-4&#13;
The Parkside Ranger Hockey team&#13;
kicked orr the Sportsfesl weekend Thurs-'&#13;
day, December 3, at Wilson Park hosting&#13;
the Loyola Ramblers, losing 7-4.&#13;
Loyola, as they did in the lirst meeting,&#13;
jumped to an early lead with three goals in&#13;
the first period to Parkside's nothing.&#13;
Parkside's net minding was not at its best&#13;
as Loyola got several cheap goals coming&#13;
from long shots just inside the blue line.&#13;
Parkside, sparked by Rich Rosko,&#13;
George Georgacopolos and Kari Liekoski,&#13;
came back with three goals to put the"&#13;
Rangers back in the game after the second&#13;
period, 6-3.&#13;
The third period opened with two players&#13;
in the penalty box, Tom Krumme,&#13;
Parkside's verastile center, and Paul&#13;
Pateras, Loyola defenseman, both&#13;
drawing five-minute majors for fighting at&#13;
18:02 of the second period.&#13;
The game calmed down a bit in the third&#13;
period with Parkside and Loyola each&#13;
add.ing ~ne more goal. Parkside's goal&#13;
came WIth 5:45 remaining when Tom&#13;
Krummel fed winger Mark Lutlewski with&#13;
a perfect pass, and Lullewski banged her&#13;
home to end Parkside's scoring.&#13;
Dale Swenson, Parkside defenseman ,&#13;
Western Michigan&#13;
Wrestling Tournament&#13;
After ?pening the season with home&#13;
duals WIth Michigan Tech and WSU-&#13;
.Ste:rens PolOt, the wrestling team will find&#13;
therr next action in a five team tournamen-t&#13;
at Kalamazoo, Mich. lm;luded in the&#13;
to~rnan:ent with Parkside Will be the host&#13;
UnIVerSItyof W~tern Michigan, Hillsdale&#13;
College: AdrIan College, and the&#13;
Uruverslty of Western Ontario.&#13;
Western Michigan, a member of the&#13;
powerful Mid~American Conference is&#13;
expec~ed to be th~class of the tournam'ent.&#13;
Parksl~e, who will be using primarily the&#13;
sa~e line-up as they did in their opener&#13;
c~ll ~ be a contender. Parkside's line-up&#13;
WI Hugh Gately at 118, Steve Lamont&#13;
at 126, Ken M~rtin at 134, Gary Vincent at&#13;
142, Jeff Jenkins all50, Gene Fox al 158&#13;
Bill Benkstein at 167, Tom Beyer at 177'&#13;
be&#13;
Pau1Pancka at 190,and Mark Barnhill ai&#13;
avy weIght.&#13;
Use the Classifieds&#13;
of girls.&#13;
wiAsth°hiIDhecemberI, three hoys were tied&#13;
g average 190 G Phil Limhach a d' Ti' regg Hansen,&#13;
interesting po' tn. m Alfredson. The&#13;
In In the ra f h' average is that H c~ or 19b&#13;
lied in total' ansen and Limbach are&#13;
one total Pi~,~~,583d ,with Alfredson just&#13;
So In .&#13;
me 01 tbe individual h' hs follows: 19 are as&#13;
690~~h~r~ame series: Tim Alfredson,&#13;
636. bach, 563; Gregg Hansen,&#13;
High single game: Tim Alfredson .&#13;
Gregg Hansen 255' Ph'l Li b ' 258, .' ' I mach, 237.&#13;
played his best game 01 the season ...&#13;
cording to player-coach Bill Weslerlund.&#13;
Westerlund commented alter the game,&#13;
"I've never seen Dale play so aggressively&#13;
and heads-up as he did tonight."&#13;
Parkside's next home game will be willi&#13;
Johnson Wax Sunday, December t3 It&#13;
Wilson Park arena. '&#13;
Scoring&#13;
G A&#13;
1 1&#13;
o I&#13;
1 •&#13;
1 1&#13;
Kari Liekowki I I&#13;
The viedo tape of the game will be sboIi&#13;
at the Student Union Tuesday, Decemblr&#13;
8, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
In Italy,&#13;
everybody&#13;
else's grass&#13;
looks greener. ..&#13;
Th~i(ds, Th$OOSaod&#13;
. Th3talians&#13;
rRI., ut:~_ IIIH 1:1:00p ,M.&#13;
Activities Building&#13;
Porkside &amp; Wisconsin ID.&#13;
-.1\oolQo.og1"""t.Pl£TllOGV\Ilrs-TIlE'-'OS'THElHl .... nt:1\I;.IOII' ~~=lrdu~~~=~=.:::'-&#13;
s&#13;
Save a little bread each week·&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIAtiON&#13;
Down~own Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN /IVENU£&#13;
West Side Office NUE&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
Spotlight On A Coach Mr. Wrestli~g Bill Benkstein,=' ........ ..._. ...&#13;
rch ry m n.s many thing to many&#13;
pl • but to ~ citizen of the Philipp&#13;
n rch ry w11l come a port of great&#13;
national prid in the very near future.&#13;
Arch ry v. 111 a Gold '.\tedal port in&#13;
th 1972 Ol)mpi to be held at tunich&#13;
rm ny. Thi · alone hould awake~&#13;
opl th t th hooting of a bow and&#13;
not ju t for \·ages and children.&#13;
m of great kill and the top rch m the world can shoot ix arrows&#13;
m 14 Inch circle at meter ! There has&#13;
n ry litU arch ry in the Philippines&#13;
m th I , but long range program&#13;
d v l?P. d by the . 'ational Archery&#13;
oc1atton of the Philippines (NAAP)&#13;
under the dedicated and able guidance of&#13;
tr. Ramon Lim, Pre ident of NAAP, and&#13;
tr. Bernabe G. 1artinez, Vice President&#13;
nd Exl'Cutive ecretary of NAAP will change thi orry fact. '&#13;
P until _thi year, the Philippines has&#13;
la ed hind all other countries in this&#13;
great port. But the pa t two years of effort&#13;
by Mr. Llm and Mr. Martinez has&#13;
blo omed into a program that has two&#13;
primary goal : First, to develop a&#13;
progra_m within the public school system&#13;
th~t will allow the Philippine children to&#13;
en.)Oy a phy ical activity that is healthful&#13;
as wen as enjoyable and a challenge.&#13;
Second, to develop from this grass roots&#13;
base a team of top archers who wilJ go to&#13;
Munich and bring home the glory of a&#13;
Gold, Silver or Bronze medal to the&#13;
Philippines.&#13;
To set goals is an easy task, but im- plementing the necessary functions of&#13;
organization to achieve the goals is&#13;
another ma!ter. The organization set up by&#13;
the NAAP ts that thru the public school&#13;
ystem archery will become a primary&#13;
:ivity i_n P.E. classes. From these&#13;
w,11 develop archery clubs in the&#13;
Bill Benkstein is in a unique but enviab~e&#13;
position for an athlete in any sport - he 1s&#13;
beginning his third season as a team&#13;
captain. The captaincy ~s usually a _&#13;
position reserved for a semor. However,&#13;
Bill has asserted himself the past three&#13;
seasons and emerged as the team leader.&#13;
Bill is more than just the leader, he is the&#13;
number one point getter on the team. He&#13;
was a regular from day one at Parkside,&#13;
and holds virtually every wrestling record&#13;
at the school&#13;
The business major is a former Salem&#13;
Central graduate and hopes some day to&#13;
possibly be a coach. In Bill's junior year he&#13;
posted a 9-2 record, which included a State&#13;
AAU runner-up at 160 pounds. Coach Koch&#13;
feels that this should be Bill's year to win&#13;
national recognition and possibly a&#13;
championship. Koch has nothing but'&#13;
praise for Benkstein, "Bill commands&#13;
respect from his tea'.mmates in such a&#13;
manner that he is more like a playing&#13;
coach. He has the tenacity and the desire&#13;
to make himself a national champion."&#13;
It could be a long and dreary season for&#13;
the Parkside opponents at Bill's 167 pound&#13;
weight class_, and with a little luck and a lot&#13;
of work, Bill could be Parkside's f&#13;
national champion. 11'51&#13;
barrio schools, as well as the city schools.&#13;
The archery in these clubs will gain&#13;
competition experience by having tournam&#13;
nts (meets) with other schools in&#13;
preparation for the Interscholastic Meets&#13;
and the 'ational Championships. From&#13;
the winners of these major events, and&#13;
from other clubs, an Olympic try-out event&#13;
will be held to determine the teams that&#13;
v.ill repre en! the Philippines.&#13;
Obviou ly, a program of such a&#13;
tremendous scale must have C 1)&#13;
knowledgeable instr11ctors and ( 2l&#13;
equipment. In order to satisfy these needs&#13;
the 'AAP ha developed a clini~&#13;
(work hop) program that is very intense&#13;
in ubJect matter. In a period of five days,&#13;
the delegates to one of the NAAP&#13;
workshops learn archery instruction, how&#13;
to make bows and arrows from local&#13;
materials and how to set up clubs and run&#13;
Rangers Lose&#13;
To Loyola 7-4&#13;
uccessful meets. In order to develop the&#13;
broad ba e of shooters and to help the&#13;
economy of the country, much emphasis is&#13;
given to the making of equipment with&#13;
materials that are readily available&#13;
anywhere in the Philippines instead of&#13;
importing all of the equipment. This effort&#13;
will help stabilize the economy of the&#13;
country yet allow students the satisfaction&#13;
of creating a bow and then using their&#13;
creations successfully. Imported equipment&#13;
will only be necessary for the very&#13;
advanced archers.&#13;
In addition, the NAAP and the PAAF&#13;
have had the foresight to engage archery&#13;
experts from America to enrich their&#13;
_knowledge of teaching methods and&#13;
construction of equipment. Worksho~ will&#13;
be held in the four major areas of the&#13;
Philippines and as of this writing&#13;
worksho~ have already been held at&#13;
Davao City (Mindanao Area) and Cebu&#13;
City C Visayan Areal. Other workshops are&#13;
planned for Quezon City (Luzon Area) in&#13;
the next few weeks. Follow up workshops&#13;
are planned for the next yea,r to assist&#13;
coaches in advanced techniques and to&#13;
assist the delegates who attend these&#13;
current clinics in establishing local&#13;
programs.&#13;
Archery is a motor skill activity and&#13;
sport and ~he stature, size or strength or&#13;
the archer ts not a criteria as it is in other&#13;
sports such as basketball. The smallest&#13;
woman can beat the biggest man in an&#13;
archery co~test as it is a game of skill and&#13;
deter~ntnalton, not size or strength. Many&#13;
prom_ment people enjoy the satisfaction of&#13;
shooting the bow and arrow. Most of you&#13;
are familiar with Mr. o. D. Corpuz&#13;
Secretary of Education and Directo;&#13;
Gem~a Cruz Araneta, former Miss International.&#13;
Both are Archery enthusiasts&#13;
and both believe that the Philippines c~&#13;
bec~me the international leader in Arch- ery m the near future.&#13;
. At the ~~es~nt time, organized archery&#13;
m t~e Phihppmes consists or a very few&#13;
dedicated people, but they are people who&#13;
are. working together for a common&#13;
nati~nal cause. With this cooperative&#13;
feelmg and the dedication of the educators&#13;
who have been, and will be at th&#13;
workshops, Archery will become the Spor~&#13;
of the People.&#13;
K~nosha Bowlers&#13;
Th~s year the Kenosha Intramural&#13;
~wh~ League was formed under the&#13;
direction of Coach Jim Koch&#13;
. The league bowls regularly. on Tuesda&#13;
rughts at 9:00 at Sheridan Lanes i~&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The intramural league consists of eight&#13;
~ms of three persons. The league con&#13;
StSts of mainly boys, but there is one tea~&#13;
The Parkside Ranger Hockey team&#13;
kicked off the Sportsfest weekend Thurs-·&#13;
day, December 3, at Wilson Park hosting&#13;
the Loyola Ramblers, losing 7-4.&#13;
Loyola, as they did in the first meeting,&#13;
jumped to an early lead with three goals in&#13;
the first period to Parkside's nothing.&#13;
Parkside's net minding was not at its best&#13;
as Loyola got several cheap goals coming&#13;
from long shots just inside the blue line.&#13;
Parkside, sparked by Rich Rosko,&#13;
George Georgacopolos and Kari Llekoski,&#13;
came back with three goals to put the'&#13;
Rangers back in the game after the second&#13;
period, 6-3.&#13;
The third period opened with two players&#13;
in the penalty box, Tom Krumme,&#13;
Park.side's verastile center, and Paul&#13;
Pateras, Loyola defenseman, both&#13;
drawing five-minute majors for fighting at&#13;
18: 02 of the second period.&#13;
The game calmed down a bit in the third&#13;
peri_od with Parkside and Loyola each&#13;
addmg ~ne more goal. Parkside's goal&#13;
came with 5:45 remaining when Tom&#13;
Krummel fed winger Mark Lutlewski with&#13;
a perfect pass, and Lutlewski banged her&#13;
home to end Parkside's scoring.&#13;
Dale Swenson, Parkside defenseman&#13;
Western Michigan&#13;
Wrestling Tournament&#13;
.&#13;
After ?pening the season wfrh home&#13;
duals Wt~ Michigan Tech and WSU-&#13;
_Steyens Pom~, the wrestling team will find&#13;
their next action in a five team tournamen·t&#13;
at Kalamaz&lt;&gt;?, Mich. In9luded in the&#13;
to~rna1'.1ent with Parkside will be the host&#13;
umvers1ty of Western Michigan Hillsdale&#13;
Co!lege_. Adrian College, 'and the&#13;
Uruvers1ty of Western Ontario.&#13;
Western Michigan, a member of the&#13;
powerful Mid-American Conference is&#13;
expec~ed to be th~ class of the tournam'ent.&#13;
Parkst~e, who will be using primarily the&#13;
same !me-up as they did in their opener&#13;
could be a contender Parks'd , 1. '&#13;
ill be · 1 es me-up w Hugh Gately at 118 Steve Lamont&#13;
at 126, Ken M~rtin at 134, Gary Vincent at&#13;
1~, Jeff Jen_kins at 150, Gene Fox at 158&#13;
Bill Ben~tem at 167, Tom Beyer at 177'&#13;
h&#13;
Paul Par1~ka at 190, and Mark Barnhill at&#13;
eavy weight.&#13;
Use the Classifieds&#13;
of girls.&#13;
wi Asth °.:, Dhecember 1, three boys were tied&#13;
mg average 190 G&#13;
Phil L. ba ' • regg Hansen&#13;
im ch and Ti Al , interesting point . ; fredson. The&#13;
average is that H m e race for high&#13;
tied in total pins 4a~n ~nd Limbach are&#13;
one total pin behu'.id. ' with Alfredson just&#13;
Some of the individual h. hs&#13;
follows: ig are as&#13;
H'gh 1 three-game series· Tim Alf eds&#13;
690; Phil Limbach 563. · G r on,&#13;
636. ' , regg Hansen,&#13;
High single game: Tim Alfreds&#13;
Gregg Hansen 255· Phil Ll on, 256;&#13;
.' • mbach, 237.&#13;
play~ his best game of the season accordmg&#13;
to player-coach Bill Westerlund,&#13;
~~terlund commented after the gamt,&#13;
I ve never seen Dale play so aggressively&#13;
and heads-up as he did tonight."&#13;
Parkside's next home game will be ~ith&#13;
Johnson Wax Sunday, December 13, at&#13;
Wilson Park arena.&#13;
Scoring&#13;
G A&#13;
Mark Tutlewski&#13;
·Tom Krummel&#13;
George Georgacopolos&#13;
Rich Rosko&#13;
1 I&#13;
0 2&#13;
1 0&#13;
1 I&#13;
Kari Liekowki 1 J&#13;
The viedo tape of the game will be shown&#13;
at the Student Union Tuesday, December&#13;
8, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
In Italy, everybody else's grass looks greener. ..&#13;
TuIBi(ds, Tu!Beesand&#13;
· Tu3talians r'RI., Ut:C. 11 IH ij:00 P.M.&#13;
Activities Building&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wisconsin JD. ~KloclmDIQS#IISPIETIIOGlRMrS"Tlf:BRJS,M9WfJIJ1&gt;f&#13;
~~~ ..!-:!! ::. ~= ::.::::::.::'--&#13;
Save a little bread each week·&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
Downtown Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN /J, VENUE&#13;
West Side Office NUE&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
-&#13;
Blow&#13;
Your Horn'&#13;
The Parkside Players will present the&#13;
Neil Simon comedy "Come Blow Your&#13;
Horn" at 8:15 p.m. on Friday and Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 11 and 12, in the Racine Campus&#13;
Badger Room.&#13;
General admission tickets are $1.50 and&#13;
student tickets are $1. Tickets are&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Members of the cast are Michael Kragh,&#13;
Racine, Mitch Herbert, Kenosha, Katie&#13;
Hinke, Racine, Jon Christiansen, Racine,&#13;
,Jan Hall, Salem, Marsha Radewan,&#13;
Racine, and Terry Kollman, Kenosha.&#13;
Richard H. Carrington, assistant&#13;
professor, communication, will direct the&#13;
pray.&#13;
"Come Blow Your Horn" opened in New&#13;
York on Feb. 22, 1961, with Hal March&#13;
playing the lead.&#13;
SOUL DANCE&#13;
The Black Student Union is sponsoring a&#13;
dance on Saturday, December 12, at the&#13;
Student Activities building. Tbe dance will&#13;
be from 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. and will&#13;
feature the "Marvelous Mints". This&#13;
group consists of ten members who play&#13;
the latest hits of popular soul performers .&#13;
Admission will be $1.50 and is open to all&#13;
Parkside students. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin J.D. required.&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Band In Concert&#13;
The Parbide C&lt;lncert Band and Sym.&#13;
phony Orchestra will Ift48It a jotnt&#13;
"""""rt at 4 p.m. on SUnday, Dec. 13, in&#13;
Raeme's Horlick high sdlool audilArium.&#13;
The band is undo.- lbe baton of Ge&lt;qe&#13;
Reynolds, associate professor of music&#13;
and the or&lt;:bestra will be cmducted by&#13;
Harry Lantz, also an associate professor of&#13;
musIC.&#13;
The Concert Band will play Fervent Is&#13;
My Longing. Chorale Fugue in G minor by&#13;
J. S. Bach, a Jubilant Overture by Alfnd&#13;
Reed, Solo de Concoun by Henri Rabaud&#13;
with Philip Smith as clarinet soIo.. t, The&#13;
WhitePeacodt by Charles Grilfes, Festive&#13;
Overture Op. 1I6 by Sh05takovich and The&#13;
Southerner March by RusseI1 Aiexandet'.&#13;
saturday, Dec 19 • Hohda y: am lInaa&#13;
recess begins&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
L... " ........&#13;
~i:#..~&#13;
626 nth 51. K.".....&#13;
Consider The&#13;
North-South Program&#13;
Are yOUinterested in attending an all- . .&#13;
black University? . The University of this app~eciation of differences to other&#13;
w~ Parkslde IS one of tbe Northern groups, t.e. the older generation&#13;
Univ.... ities which participate in the Parkside students parlicipa&amp;g in lbe&#13;
NortII-8OUthStudent Exchange Program. program will be attending North Car li&#13;
'[1Ie program is designed on both an In- Central University (NCCU) in ~ na&#13;
leIT.cial and intercultural experience North Carol.ina during the seco~d&#13;
inteaded to expand student personal semester.oflhis academic year. NCCU is.&#13;
bOri%OOS, sli'."ulate intellectural growth small hberal arts college with a&#13;
and afford mdiv.dual students an op- predominately residential student&#13;
rWnityto contribute in a personal· way jlOpuiation. The UWP students will be&#13;
~ the solution of major contemporary living in the resIdence units with tbe NCCU&#13;
blems. students. UW Parkside Exchange students&#13;
p1luw students have beeu participating in WIll regtster and pay tuition at Parkside,&#13;
the North-South Exchange Program since thus saving student out-of-state tuition&#13;
11166.Comments made by Wisconsin payments..&#13;
studentsabout the program are as follows: . Students mterested in the Nortb-South&#13;
For me, the most valuable aspect of the Exchange Program should contact Isom&#13;
p1lgram was that Ilearned a litlle of what Fearn or Jewel Echelbarger through the&#13;
it is to be Black and live in a White world. 'Office of Student Affairs before Friday,&#13;
I made many new friends who helped me December. 11. Parkside students paropen&#13;
my eyes to racial problems. The fact ticipants will be selected before Christmas&#13;
that I was brought out of·a situation of vacation.&#13;
hear·sayinto a situation of reality was the ' Com e&#13;
most valuahle ' aspect (to me) of the&#13;
....,gram ... f tried to be myself'-1 tried&#13;
to helppeople understand that one must he&#13;
judged and judge others on an individual&#13;
basis not on racial, regional,&#13;
denominational or any other basis. U I&#13;
succeededin this course, then this was my&#13;
most valuable contribution.&#13;
The most valuable part of the program&#13;
was that I developmed an emotional and&#13;
personal understanding of black America&#13;
which I previously understood only in&#13;
theorY.&#13;
... the oportunity for a person to grow&#13;
inthe understanding of himself. It opened&#13;
me and helped me realize my capabilities&#13;
and draw-backs within my personality -&#13;
!rombere Ican learn to grow. . . . This to&#13;
me, was the most valuable aspect of the&#13;
p'0gram - because of its challenge ...&#13;
the greatest contribution any exchange&#13;
student can give is feedback - spread the&#13;
word. Communicate your experience to as&#13;
manypeople as can be turned on by a fivebour&#13;
non-stop dissertation - I've tried&#13;
doing this and bope I've contributed&#13;
lOIIlethingby working on our own exhange&#13;
JlrOtlram.&#13;
rve nearly finished my college career.&#13;
Evaluating these last years has made me&#13;
..... tlon the extent of value much of my&#13;
course work and school activities. This&#13;
_ter I spent on the exchange is one&#13;
II1IDg Iknow to be invaluable, allowing me&#13;
III mature in some areas that may have&#13;
olIIerwiae required years, giving me rich&#13;
friendships that crossed some cultural (if&#13;
lOIIlewhatimaginary) lines, and making&#13;
me more sensitive to continue growing and&#13;
Ieoming. Ufe is also more painful,&#13;
clemanding and hard to face at times&#13;
beca\lle of some ways my eyes were&#13;
opened. This program allows individual&#13;
interaction and natural "4give and take" is&#13;
• bope for closer brotherhood - let's&#13;
challenge more students with its&#13;
possibilities.&#13;
I realized that differences between&#13;
groups of people are beautiful and funcu.al.&#13;
Certain behaviors and attitudes are&#13;
more adaptive to certain styles of living&#13;
than are others, i.e. white middle-class&#13;
values are not the best for everyone ... I&#13;
learned to appreciate the differences in&#13;
people ratber than to judge them by my&#13;
person values. I've since learned to extenn&#13;
THE ROCKER!&#13;
- - -&#13;
100-FM!&#13;
Radne Kenosha Radio!&#13;
- - -&#13;
24 HOURS!&#13;
RIGHT ON!&#13;
Consider The&#13;
North-South Program&#13;
Are you interested in attending an all- . .&#13;
black Universi~y? . The University of this app~eciation of &lt;Iµferences to other&#13;
WjsCOllSin Parks1~e 1s one _o~ the N~rthern groups, _1.e. the older generation.&#13;
universities which part1C1pate m the Parkside_ students participating in the&#13;
North-South Student Exchange Program. program will be attending North Car lina&#13;
nie program is designed on both an in- Central University (NCCU) in Dur~m&#13;
terracial and intercultural experience North Caro~ina during the second&#13;
intended to expand student personal semester_ of this academic year. NCCU is 8&#13;
tiorizons, stimulate intellectural growth small ~1beral arts college with a&#13;
and afford individual students an op- predo~mately residential student&#13;
rtunity to contribute ~n a personal way ~pul~tion. Th~ uwP students will be&#13;
fa the solution of maJor contemporary livmg m the residence units with the NCCU&#13;
blems. s~den~. UW Parkside Exchange students&#13;
proUW students have been participating in will regis_ter and pay tuition at Parkside,&#13;
the North-South Exchange Program since thus saving student out-of-state tuition&#13;
l966, Comments made by Wisconsin payments. .&#13;
students about the program are as follows: students mterested in the North-South&#13;
For me, the most valuable aspect of the Exchange Program should contact Isom&#13;
program was that I learned a little of what Fearn or Jewel Echelbarger through the&#13;
it is to be Black and live in a white world. ·Office of Student Affairs before Friday&#13;
I made many new friends who helped me J?e_cember. 11. Parkside students par:&#13;
open my eyes to racial problems. The fact ticipa~ts will be selected before Christmas&#13;
that I was brought out of a situation of vacation.&#13;
hear-say into a situation of reality was the 'CO me BI O W&#13;
most valuable · aspect (to me) of the&#13;
program . . . I tried to be myself - I tried&#13;
to help people understand that one must be&#13;
judged and judge others ?n an indi~idual&#13;
basis not on racial, regional,&#13;
denominational or any other basis. If I&#13;
succeeded in this course, then this was my&#13;
most valuable contribution.&#13;
The most valuable part of the program&#13;
was that I developmed an emotional and&#13;
personal understanding of black America&#13;
which I previously understood only in&#13;
theory.&#13;
... the oportunity for a person to grow&#13;
in the understanding of himself. It opened&#13;
me and helped me realize my capabilities&#13;
and draw-backs within my personality -&#13;
from here I can learn to grow . . . . This to&#13;
me, was the most valuable aspect of the&#13;
program - because of its challenge . . .&#13;
the greatest contribution any exchange&#13;
student can give is feedback - spread the&#13;
word. Communicate your experience to as&#13;
many people as can be turned on by a fivehour&#13;
non-stop dissertation - I've tried&#13;
doing this and hope I've contributed&#13;
something by working on our own exhange&#13;
irogram. .&#13;
I've nearly finished my college career.&#13;
Evaluating these last years has made me&#13;
~tion the extent of value much of my&#13;
course work and school activities. This&#13;
aernester I spent on the exchange is one&#13;
~ I know to be invaluable, allowing me&#13;
to mature in some areas that may have&#13;
otherwise required years, giving me rich&#13;
friendships that crossed some cultural (if&#13;
somewhat imaginary) lines, and making&#13;
me more sensitive to continue growing and&#13;
learning. Life is also more painful,&#13;
demanding and hard to face at times&#13;
because of some ways my eyes were&#13;
opened. This program allows individual&#13;
interaction and natural ~give and take" is&#13;
a hope for closer brotherhood - let's&#13;
challenge more students with its&#13;
possibilities.&#13;
I realized that differences between&#13;
groups of people are beautiful and functional.&#13;
Certain behaviors and attitudes are&#13;
more adaptive to certain styles of living&#13;
than are others, i.e. white middle-class&#13;
values are not the best for everyone . . . I&#13;
learned to appreciate the differences in&#13;
people rather than to judge them by my&#13;
person values. I've since learned to extenn&#13;
Your Horn'&#13;
The Parkside Players will present the&#13;
Neil Simon comedy "Come Blow Your&#13;
Horn" at 8:15 p.m. on Friday and Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 11 and 12, in the Racine Campus&#13;
Badger Room.&#13;
General admission tickets are $1.50 and&#13;
student tickets are $1. Tickets are avAilable at the door.&#13;
M~mber~ of the cast are Michael Kragh,&#13;
Racme, Mitch Herbert, Kenosha, Katie&#13;
Hinke, Racine, Jon Christiansen, Racine,&#13;
_Jan Hall, Salem, Marsha Radewan,&#13;
Racine, and Terry Kollman, Kenosha.&#13;
Richard H. Carrington, assistant&#13;
professor, communication, will direct the&#13;
play.&#13;
"Come Blow Your Horn" opened in New&#13;
York on Feb. 22, 1961, with Hal March&#13;
playing the lead.&#13;
SOUL DANCE&#13;
The Black Student Union is sponsoring a&#13;
dance on Saturday, December 12, at the&#13;
Student Activities building. The dance will&#13;
be from 9:00 p.m. to 1 :00 a.m. and will&#13;
feature the "Marvelous Mints". This&#13;
group consists of ten members who play&#13;
the latest hits of popular soul performers.&#13;
Admission will be $1.50 and is open to all&#13;
Parkside students. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D. reQuired.&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Drinks 25c For Th• Ladies&#13;
(Excl•di1tg Top Sftolf}&#13;
LIVE MUSIC&#13;
Now Appearing&#13;
IEYtrv Mon. and Tues. lowlint NIM DRINKS v, PRICE TO ALL&#13;
UNIFORMED BOWLERS&#13;
Zodiak&#13;
Band In Concert&#13;
The Parkside Concert Band and Symphony&#13;
Orchestra will present a joint&#13;
concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 13, in&#13;
Racine's Horli high school uditorium.&#13;
The band is under the baton ol George&#13;
Reynolds, associate prof r ol m ic&#13;
and the orchestra \I.ill be cooducted b)&#13;
~ Lantz, also an associate professor of&#13;
music.&#13;
Pl t Tt IIJ&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
The Concert Band will pla) Fen·erit I&#13;
My Longing· Clorale Fugue in G minor b&#13;
J. S Bach, a Jubilant Overture b) Alfred&#13;
Reed, Solo de Concours b) Henri Rabaud&#13;
with Philip Smith as clarinet soloi t, The&#13;
White Peacock by Charles Griff , Festive&#13;
Overture Op. by Shostako, 'ch and The&#13;
Southerner arch by Russell Alexander.&#13;
Larpst Seltctt ..&#13;
6?6 S6th St. ktftOS a&#13;
THE ROCKER!&#13;
- - -&#13;
100-FM!&#13;
Racine Kenosha Radio! - -&#13;
24 HOURS!&#13;
RIGHT ON! &#13;
Criteria For Personnel Reviews \ I&#13;
therrnore 'it is probably unfair to the&#13;
man in hi's professional development to&#13;
continue him at an institution whose&#13;
program and resources caMot support&#13;
his special interests. .&#13;
8. Age and career-change factors: while&#13;
no importance attaches to age as such,&#13;
an individual's age in ~lati.on to&#13;
productivity and-or re-directIon of&#13;
career are of consequence. We f!lust&#13;
estimate the chances of any. given&#13;
person attaining distinction In hIS&#13;
special field. If the individual has spent&#13;
20 years as a ranch hand befo~e&#13;
becoming a zen accelerator,. hIS&#13;
prospects of achieving distinction in the&#13;
latter occupation are greatly reduced.&#13;
9. Time in graduate study: as a special&#13;
instance of NO.8 above, and. a~.an excellent&#13;
predictor of future productivity.&#13;
consider how much time elapsed&#13;
between the B.A. and the Ph.D. If over ,r~-----------=&#13;
five years, the evidence strongly&#13;
suggests that the chances for&#13;
distinction are reduced.&#13;
10. Prognosis: the fundamental point is the&#13;
prognosis for future performance. What&#13;
we must judge is the prohability that the&#13;
individual will bring distinction to&#13;
himself and to Parkside. If the.&#13;
assessment based on Ute above factors&#13;
is negative, then separation is indicated.&#13;
At this time and at this stage of&#13;
institutional _development we cannot&#13;
avoid making rigorous judgements of&#13;
"staff suitability arid quality.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
should be cOunted, but it cannot substitute&#13;
lor teaching effectiveness and&#13;
scholarly productivity. Furthermore,&#13;
the quality of the person's institutional&#13;
service must be demonstrated. Membership&#13;
on committees is not of i~ ~&#13;
proof 01 contribution. The question is,&#13;
what measurable constructive contribution&#13;
did the individual make?&#13;
September 30, 1970&#13;
TO- Division Chairmen.&#13;
Division Executive Committees&#13;
FROM: Jobn S. Harris,&#13;
Vice CbanceUor for&#13;
Academic Alfairs&#13;
RE: CRITERIA FOR&#13;
PERSONNEL REVIEWS&#13;
/&#13;
\&#13;
4. Community service: this can be considered&#13;
if it is germane to the faculty&#13;
member's field of specialization.&#13;
General community activities such as&#13;
church. service club, or other such&#13;
involvments do nol count in professional&#13;
evaluations.&#13;
In carrying out annual performanc ..&#13;
reviews 01probationary laculty members,&#13;
consIderation should he gIven to the&#13;
followi,. lactors: There is no importance&#13;
attached to the order)&#13;
Teaching: unless there i evidence to --&#13;
the contrary, we will assume at least&#13;
minimal adequac)' in teaching performance&#13;
OccasIonally, there will be&#13;
trong direct evidence of 10 lructional&#13;
up rlodt)' or Inadequacy. Such&#13;
viden hould be taken mto accounL&#13;
We -':11110 time come to an improved&#13;
procedur for evaluating teaching&#13;
pertormance. but for new 10 the absence&#13;
of strong direct evidence we will&#13;
8. urn mtnimal adequacy and nol&#13;
a.. ign thiS factor undue wight,&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY • PIPES&#13;
• PAPERS&#13;
.·eELLS&#13;
• IN~ENS~&#13;
• CANDLES&#13;
5. Market factors: it is our obligation to&#13;
assemble the best qualified faculty that&#13;
our budget can afford. What money can&#13;
buy varies from time to time. Today's&#13;
market is a buyer'S market in most&#13;
fields. We must therefore assess some&#13;
of our present probationary staff in light&#13;
of the possibility 01 finding hetterqualified&#13;
replacements. This is&#13;
necessary from an institutional quality&#13;
and Institutional responsibility standpoint,&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
S2nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
.'&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24e&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
SSe&#13;
2 R arch and Publication: the degree&#13;
and kInd of holarl)· production to he&#13;
expected. depends on the discipline.&#13;
Faculty at UW campuses are expected&#13;
to producuve chola rs In evaluating&#13;
scholarly ment, quality should count&#13;
mere h avol)' than quantity. but both&#13;
factors should be taken into account. In&#13;
a essmg quality direct appraisal 01 the&#13;
published Item by UW-Parkslde staff is&#13;
e ential Indirect appraisal (peer&#13;
group review or articles submitted for&#13;
journal publication, (or example) can&#13;
be given considerable weight Attention&#13;
should be paid to the closeness and&#13;
rigorousness of peer group review;&#13;
articles published in journals are more&#13;
rigorously appraised and edited than&#13;
papers presented at meetings or&#13;
published in proceedings, and therefore&#13;
are enhtled to greater proportional&#13;
weight. The standIng 01 the journal in its&#13;
academic field. or the scholarly&#13;
reputalion of 8 press, in the case of a&#13;
book, can also be taken into account in&#13;
indirectly assessing the quality of a&#13;
published item.&#13;
6. Program coverage factors: if the individual's&#13;
area of specialization is&#13;
already adequately covered by another&#13;
memher of the faculty (perhaps a&#13;
tenured person of higher qualification),&#13;
then separation may be indicated. Wise&#13;
allocation of limited resources demands&#13;
that these resources he spent optimally&#13;
for the most needed and appropriate&#13;
personnel.&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
In addition, consider especially the&#13;
matter of completion of the Ph.D'- All&#13;
faculty are hired in the expectation that&#13;
the degree will he completed if indeed it&#13;
is not already in hand. Hence, if the&#13;
person has not yet completed the&#13;
degree. even if he is yet in his first year&#13;
of appointment, a searching look should&#13;
be taken and separation may very well&#13;
he indicated.&#13;
NORTH &amp; SpuTH SHERIDAN ROilD&#13;
-KENOSH-A -&#13;
FAMQUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROIlED&#13;
1 STEAKS&#13;
7. Relation to the Parkside special&#13;
mission: review should consider the&#13;
degree to which the individual's&#13;
specialized competence rela tes to the&#13;
mission of the campus. II the specialty&#13;
is remote froin the mission, the institutional-&#13;
interest suffers. Fur3&#13;
Insutunceal service: contribution to the&#13;
Institution in terms of committe- work&#13;
J &amp; J TAPE CENTER T&#13;
H&#13;
E Good Lookin' Pants Co.&#13;
329 MAIN STREET&#13;
LPS - 8 TRACK, CASSETTE &amp;&#13;
REEL TO REEL TAPES;&#13;
POSTERS, CAR PLAYERS, STEREOS&#13;
JEANS AND PANTS&#13;
ARE WHAT WE SELL&#13;
We have the largest selection of&#13;
tapes in the Racine-Kenosha area. We&#13;
have all the new records and tapes&#13;
before anyone.&#13;
"We also handle Slack Lights and Fixtures"&#13;
2056 Taylor Avenue&#13;
Racirie&#13;
~LY ONE wan BUCK PER PURCHASE&#13;
OPENING SOON&#13;
IN DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Criteria For Personnel Reviews I&#13;
pt rnber 30, 1970&#13;
2&#13;
should be counted, but it cannot substitute&#13;
for teaching effectiveness and&#13;
scholar!} productivity. Furthermore,&#13;
the quality or the person's institutional&#13;
sen.ice must be demonstrated. Membership&#13;
on committees is not of itself a&#13;
proof of. cootribution. The question is,&#13;
what measurable constructive contribution&#13;
did the individual make?&#13;
4. Community service: this can be conidered&#13;
if it is germane to the faculty&#13;
member's field of specialization. General community activities such as&#13;
church, service club, or other such&#13;
involvments do not count in professional&#13;
evaluatioru..&#13;
s. 1arket factors: it is our obligation to a· emble the best qualified faculty that&#13;
our budget can afford. What money can&#13;
bu) vari · from time to time. Today's&#13;
market i a buyer's market in most&#13;
Cields. We must therefore assess some&#13;
of our pr . nt probationary staff in light&#13;
of the po ~ibility of finding better- qualifi ed replacements. This is n ry Crom an institutional quality&#13;
and in. litutional respon ibility standpoml&#13;
&#13;
6. Program coverage factors: if the indiv&#13;
dual' area of pecialization is&#13;
already adequately covered by another&#13;
member of the faculty (perhaps a&#13;
tenured person of higher qualification),&#13;
then paration may be indicated. Wise&#13;
allocation of limited resources demands&#13;
that the. e resources be spent optimally&#13;
for the most needed and appropriate&#13;
persoMel.&#13;
In addition, consider especially · the&#13;
matter of completion of the Ph.D: All&#13;
faculty are hired in the expectation that&#13;
the degree will be completed if indeed it&#13;
is not already in hand. Hence, if the&#13;
person has not yet completed the&#13;
degree, even if he is yet in his first year&#13;
of appointment, a searching look should •&#13;
be taken and separation may very well&#13;
be indicated.&#13;
3. Institutional rvice: contribution to the&#13;
institution in term of committeo work&#13;
7. Rel a lion to the Parkside special&#13;
mission: review should consider the&#13;
degree to which the individual's&#13;
specialized competence relates to the&#13;
mission of. the campus. If the specialty&#13;
is remote froin the mission, the ins&#13;
ti tu tion&lt;! 1 · interest suffers. FurJ&#13;
&amp; J TAPE CENTER&#13;
LPS - 8 TRACK, CASSETTE &amp;&#13;
REEL TO REEL TAPES;&#13;
POSTERS, CAR PLAYERS, STEREOS&#13;
We have the largest selection of&#13;
tapes in the Racine-Kenosha area. We&#13;
have all the new records and tapes&#13;
before anyone.&#13;
"We also handle Black Lights and Fixtures"&#13;
2056 Taylor Avenue&#13;
Racirie&#13;
thermore ' it is probably unfair to the&#13;
man in hi~ professional d~vel_opment to&#13;
continue him at an institution whose&#13;
program and resources cannot support&#13;
his special interests.&#13;
8. Age and career-change factors: while&#13;
no importance attaches to age a~ such,&#13;
an individual's age in ~elati_on to&#13;
productivity and-or re-direction of&#13;
career are of consequence. We ~ust&#13;
estimate the chances of any. giv~n&#13;
person attaining distinction m his&#13;
special field. If the individual has spent&#13;
20 years as a ranch hand befo~e&#13;
becoming a zen accelerator, his&#13;
prospects of achieving distin~tion in the&#13;
latter occupation are greatly reduced.&#13;
· use Classifieds&#13;
I&#13;
• CANDLES&#13;
9. Time in graduate study: as a special&#13;
instance of No. 8 above, and_ as_ an excellent&#13;
predictor of future productivity,&#13;
consider how much time elapsed&#13;
between the B.A. and the Ph.D. If over , ,------------&#13;
five years, the evidence strongly&#13;
suggests that the chances for&#13;
distinction are reduced.&#13;
10. Prognosis: the fundamental pointis the&#13;
prognosis for future performance. What&#13;
we must judge is the probability that the&#13;
individual will bring distinction to&#13;
himself and to Parkside. If the&#13;
assessment based on the above factors ·&#13;
is negative, then separation is indicated.&#13;
At this time and at this stage of&#13;
institutional . development we cannot&#13;
avoid making rigorous judgements of&#13;
·staff suitability artd quality.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp; S.PUTH SHERIDAN RO!,D&#13;
-KENOSH-AFAMQUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN, THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A,M, TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI, I SAT •. TILL 2 A,M,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker}&#13;
CHARCOA~ BROILEDi 55( _ ST_EAKS . - -======~*=~-~~~-~&#13;
T&#13;
H&#13;
E Good Lookin' Pants Co.&#13;
329 MAIN STREET&#13;
JEANS AND PANTS&#13;
ARE WHAT WE SELL&#13;
OPENING SOON&#13;
IN DOWNTOWN KENOSHA &#13;
In an interview necessitated by the&#13;
t dismissals of certain Parksids&#13;
~ty members, Chancellor Wyllie told&#13;
raUl Rolbiecki and Marc Eisen of the&#13;
B WSCOPE tbat wbat has to be con-&#13;
~red is "the professional man and his&#13;
51 ressional effectiveness in his&#13;
professional role. What he thinks about&#13;
JI'O matters can not t:nter in~o this kind&#13;
otherd&#13;
termination and still do him (faculty&#13;
rJ.e lustice." member) JUs ceo&#13;
Asked if certain instructors were being&#13;
dismissed because they were outspoken&#13;
d rhaps opposed to administration&#13;
anlie pe Wyllie' assured the interviewers&#13;
~t ~'that kind of consi~rat~on does not&#13;
enter into the deliberations, lOT contract&#13;
renewal or non-renewal.&#13;
Pursuing the point tbat the faculty may&#13;
organize, the Chancellor was asked what&#13;
his reaction would be If the fa~ulty&#13;
lDlionized. And WyllIe all!;wered, The&#13;
faculty here could not uni?nize ,:"itJ:lout&#13;
total university system b~mg W1l00lzed&#13;
and tbere is a great hazard mvolved tbat 1&#13;
think faculty are well aware of: or should&#13;
be in unionization. The mmute you&#13;
1D1ionizethen the relationship between the&#13;
institution and the faculty member&#13;
changes. It becomes strictly an employeremployee&#13;
relationship In a busmess ~r&#13;
cooperative ~en~e ~n~ the ~mploye.e5&#13;
participation In mstitution policy-makmg&#13;
is wiped out. In other words, he the~ has&#13;
ooly those rights tbat are spelled out 10 the&#13;
labor contract. 1 think most faculty,&#13;
looking at this rationally, are of the OpInIOn&#13;
that whatever might be gained in terms ?f&#13;
dollars in the paycheck by thIS&#13;
l81ionization process would be more than&#13;
lost in the offset in what 1 call the faculty&#13;
participatory rights."&#13;
In regard to Parkside's special mission&#13;
of contributing to an industrial society, the&#13;
OIancellor indicated that those members&#13;
rJ.the faculty whose interests are far-field&#13;
from the mission (for example, a certam&#13;
instructor may be interested in some&#13;
lDldeveloped part of the world), and if&#13;
the university bas .an opportumty to&#13;
replace those members with faculty who&#13;
are more useful in terms -of UWP's&#13;
mission, then Parkside has the right to&#13;
make alterations in its faculty. "You've&#13;
lOt to put your resources, your program,&#13;
and your staff where your mission is."&#13;
The Chancellor was then asked how, for&#13;
example, an English, Spanish, or Art instructor&#13;
could correlate his field with the&#13;
mission. Not directly answering the&#13;
question, Wyllie commented tbat an artist&#13;
who painted urban scenes or people m&#13;
wort situations could fit well with the&#13;
""ted mission. Wyllie went on to say, "I do&#13;
not conceive the point that focus on the&#13;
mission produces narrowness of the&#13;
program."&#13;
EnSUing questions suggested that&#13;
pernapa the Parkside mission had not been&#13;
elaborated to such a degree that the&#13;
raculty member could tell on his own&#13;
wbether or not he fits the mission. And the&#13;
Chancellor answered tbat the meaning of&#13;
the mission should be perfectly understandable:&#13;
"It should be no mystery to&#13;
anybody that this mission is present and&#13;
that we have from the very beginning had&#13;
a responsibility' to pursue it and a&#13;
... ponsibiiity to offer program and staff&#13;
that's related to it." Also, the question of&#13;
mission fulfillment is only one of the&#13;
considerations involved in the review&#13;
Irocess.&#13;
Where does the student stand on the&#13;
question of the adequacy of his in8tructors~&#13;
According to Wyllie "it places&#13;
Wyllie Responds To Student Questions By MARGIE NOER th enable lhose haVing act,v~ prof IOnal&#13;
e students Where the student has long exactly that or 2) what he meant by projeCts 10 carry U.. m out&#13;
been. That is, with every Opportunity to saying thal On the ~hon of r,ft n houri he"'C&#13;
make representations about what he Wyllie flatly denied that he ever told assigned to some of Ule faculty and&#13;
regards to be good teaching." Students certain junior faculty members that If they whether or flO( th...., IS the opbon to turn&#13;
bavetbe Opportunity every day to go to the badn't fmished their Ph.D.'s they were to do"." such a load. Wyll,~ .... d. "The potnt&#13;
diVlslo.nal chairmen, to the executive spend more time on rmishing thesis than is that you can't ha"e ,I both " .• y So 10&#13;
commIttees about who tbey believe are teaching. "U any junior faculty member 0Iher "'ords, the lacully ... n nol come and&#13;
strong or weak instructors. says that I advised him to neglect his say we "ant load reducuon and nol ha e&#13;
Question: why did Vice-Chancellol teaching in fa.or ol fmislung his thesIS, he certalO load mcru" The f,ft n hour&#13;
Harris' criteria say that teaching shall be is not telling the truth. That is a thoughl load asslgnmenl can he turned do"n and&#13;
assumed adequate? It doesn't seem to give that would not occur to me because we do sucb an asslgnmenl I not ml~ndod I.&#13;
much room for student reaction upon the employ in the first instance to do a pumsh or "gel nd of' tenured faculty&#13;
teaching of the faculty member. Answer teaching job and a good teaching job" a.ancellor Wyllie fell facully morale&#13;
from Wyllie: 1 can't speak to that point; OIancellor Wyllie POinted out that the bad been very good to Uu cl10te Ho.. ee,&#13;
because I don't know 1) whether he said reason for six-bour loads for faculty was to "faculty morale is undoubl~y dasturb«l&#13;
at lIus moment but I d al say that, lnI4!&#13;
i.n any Iluatlon at any lime, that ~&#13;
are faced "'th the problem of uncertainty&#13;
aboul lhe,r future Th~ mere rael thaI&#13;
at a given urne there are morale problfm&#13;
doesn't prove thaI rn UtUhonal InJOsUe&#13;
are being done"&#13;
The Cbancellor "ent on to explain thaI&#13;
each year each facully member fills out a&#13;
record 10 whJch he describes hi te.chIOC.&#13;
wbal he teaches. any other prof lonal&#13;
3ClJvity, the institutions he attended. hllo&#13;
degrees, and anylhing else that facully&#13;
members Wishes lo volunteer about&#13;
himself&#13;
FACULTY EVALUATION CATEGORlES&#13;
lea tegory 1: Serious deficiency on several criteria;&#13;
1971-72indicated. termination for&#13;
BASIC, BLUESY, BALLSY&#13;
4437. 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654~774&#13;
Category 2: Serious deficiency on at least one crucial criterion; future&#13;
termination likely.&#13;
Category 3: Deficiencies in several criteria which&#13;
remediable; appropriate action to be determined.&#13;
Category 4: Lecturer status: renewal of appointment not assured; will&#13;
depend upon developing an institutional policy regarding appointment&#13;
of laboratory lecturers.&#13;
may&#13;
Category 5: The desirability of granting tenure is in question; furthe&#13;
detailed evaluation necessary.&#13;
Category 6: All other probationary faculty.&#13;
•&#13;
that's what a concerti workshop js&#13;
featuring&#13;
PARAMOUNT RECORDING ARTIST&#13;
CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE&#13;
AND HIS CHICAGO BLUES BAND&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11th&#13;
WORKSHOP 3:~ CONCERT 4:30&#13;
FREEADMISSION&#13;
be&#13;
Thrifty Thrtads&#13;
For Your Back...&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Ftet!&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
ooor,nOWN KENOSHA&#13;
UI\I\Y side 10risl&#13;
rl!enhouses --"..---&#13;
3021· ,,'W .,.&#13;
tARGURmE'S&#13;
ROBES-Regulo' SIS 00.&#13;
5oec;01. S10OO.&#13;
E!"10y theu· cool&#13;
evenmgs In COty&#13;
comfort'&#13;
Short quilted, vel"et&#13;
toned rI bon down.&#13;
the front, I,ned w IIh&#13;
sohest nylon&#13;
peocl, Of&#13;
lavendor&#13;
Smoll.&#13;
~orguerU et SIS open&#13;
9 unIt! 9 Mondays cnd&#13;
fndoys. other weelcdoy_,&#13;
9 ',01 530, Sundoys&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
S p.m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd A •• nua&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 531'0&#13;
Pho... , 652·2681'&#13;
Wyllie Responds To Student Questions&#13;
By MARGIE NOER th tud h \ n&#13;
e s ents wher~ the student has long h t he m n b) 1T) t m&#13;
an interview necessitated by the&#13;
In t dismissals of certain Parkside&#13;
rec~rty members, Chancellor_ Wyllie told&#13;
fa~ Rolbiecki and Marc Eisen of the&#13;
B WSCOPE that what has to be conNEd&#13;
ed is "the professional man and his ~ er t· . h" r ssional effec 1veness m 1s&#13;
pror!sional role. _What he thinks about&#13;
~ matters can not enter into this kind 0 dertermination and still do him (faculty ote .ti .. member) JUS ce. Asked if certain instructors were being&#13;
di issed because they were outspoken&#13;
s;i perhaps opposed to administration&#13;
anJ'cy Wyllie assured the interviewers&#13;
:a&#13;
1&#13;
t :'that kind of consi~rat~on does not&#13;
enter into the deliberations -1or contract&#13;
enewal or non-renewal. r Pursuing the point that the faculty may&#13;
ganize the Chancellor was asked what&#13;
: rea~tion would be if the faculty&#13;
~onized. And Wyllie a~w~red, . "The&#13;
faculty here could not uru?ruze ~1tI:1out&#13;
total university system b~ing W11omzed&#13;
and there is a great hazard involved that I&#13;
think faculty are well aware of! or should&#13;
be in unionization. The minute you&#13;
unionize then the relationship between the&#13;
·nstitution and the faculty member&#13;
~anges. It becomes strictly an eI?ployeremployee&#13;
relationship in a business ~r&#13;
cooperative ~en~e ~n~ the ~mploye_e s participation m mstitubon pohcy-making&#13;
is wiped out. In other words, he the~ has&#13;
only those rights that are spelled out m the&#13;
labor contract. I think most fac_u~ty,&#13;
looking at this rationally, are of the opm1on&#13;
that whatever might be gained in terms ?f&#13;
dollars in the paycheck by this&#13;
1mionization process would be more than&#13;
lost in the offset in what I call the faculty&#13;
participatory rights.'.' . . . In regard to Parks1de's special m1ss10n&#13;
of contributing to an industrial society, the&#13;
Chancellor indicated that those mem~ers&#13;
of the faculty whose interests are far-f1e~d&#13;
from the mission (for example, a certam&#13;
instructor may be interested in some&#13;
undeveloped part of the world), ~d if&#13;
the university has an opporturuty to&#13;
replace those members with faculty who&#13;
are more useful in terms of UWP's&#13;
mission, then Parkside has the right to&#13;
make alterations in its faculty. "You've&#13;
got to put your resources, yo~r pro~~~·&#13;
and your staff where your m1ss10n 1s.&#13;
The Chancellor was then asked how, for&#13;
example, an English, Spanish, or ~rt instructor&#13;
could correlate his field With the&#13;
mission. Not directly answering t~e&#13;
question, Wyllie commented that an arh~t&#13;
who painted urban scenes or t&gt;e?Ple m work situations could fit well With the&#13;
stated mission. Wyllie went on to say, "I do&#13;
not conceive the point that focus on the&#13;
mission produces narrowness of the&#13;
program."&#13;
Ensuing questions suggested that&#13;
perhaps the Parkside mission had not been&#13;
elaborated to such a degree that the&#13;
faculty member could tell on his own&#13;
whether or not he fits the mission. And the&#13;
Chancellor answered that the meaning of&#13;
the mission should be perfectly under&#13;
landable: "It should be no mystery to&#13;
anybody that this mission is present and&#13;
that we have from the very beginning had&#13;
a responsibility to pursue it and a&#13;
r ponsibility to offer program and staff&#13;
that's related to it." Also, the question of&#13;
mission fulfillment is only one of _the&#13;
considerations involved in the review&#13;
process.&#13;
Where does the student stand on the&#13;
question of the adequacy of his intructors?&#13;
According to Wyllie "it places&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
been. That is, with every opportWlity to tr of ,r&#13;
make representations about what he of&#13;
regards to be good teaching." Students u."h1&gt;th,1'1" th&#13;
~".e_the opportunity every day to go to the n a d ·lh&#13;
diviSio_nal chairmen, to the executive that }OU can't l&#13;
committees about who they believe are oth • r cut&#13;
strong or weak instructors. d n,u1u1.:•1u&#13;
Question: why did Vice-Chancellor&#13;
Harris' criteria say that teaching shall be&#13;
assumed adequate? It doesn't seem to give&#13;
much room for student reaction upon the&#13;
teaching of the faculty member. Answer&#13;
from Wyllie: I can't speak to that point,&#13;
because I don't know 1) whether he said&#13;
FACULTYEVALUATIO CATEGORIE&#13;
ategory 1: Serious deficiency on several criteria: termination for&#13;
1971-72 indicated.&#13;
Category 2: Serious deficiency on at least one crucial criterion; future&#13;
termination likely.&#13;
Category 3: Deficiencies in several criteria which&#13;
remediable; appropriate action to be determined. may be&#13;
Category 4: Lecturer status: renewal of appointment not assured; will&#13;
depend upon developing an institutional policy regarding appointment&#13;
of laboratory lecturers.&#13;
Category 5: The desirability of granting tenure is in question ; further&#13;
detailed evaluation necessary.&#13;
Category 6: All other probationary faculty.&#13;
BASIC, BLUESY, BALLSY&#13;
•&#13;
that's what a concert/ workshop is&#13;
featuring&#13;
PARAMOUNT RECORDING ARTIST&#13;
CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE&#13;
AND HIS CHICAGO BLUES BAND&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11th&#13;
WORKSHOP 3:3() CONCERT 4:30&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
Thnfty Thread&#13;
For Your Ba 'it. ..&#13;
Far Out Fitting&#13;
For our et.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
ENOSHA&#13;
unny. id lo ri l&#13;
I R&#13;
enhou e&#13;
14 0&#13;
RITT •&#13;
!'IOY&#13;
n,ng&#13;
c:o fo I&#13;
c:ool&#13;
in c:o:ty&#13;
day_&#13;
Sundays&#13;
from JO a .m. un 11&#13;
5 p .m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenua&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 531-40&#13;
Phon : 652-2681 · &#13;
Chancellor Letter&#13;
Professor Leon Applebaum, Chairman&#13;
Social SCience Division&#13;
Dear Lee:&#13;
This will acknowledge receipt of the&#13;
resolution that the Social Science Division&#13;
adopted "by acctamauon" on October 30&#13;
That means, according 10 my dictionary.&#13;
that the resolution was adopted "by&#13;
cheers, shouts. or applause rather than by&#13;
ballot" That no doubt reflects intensny 01&#13;
I hng. but It docs not reflect credit on the&#13;
def iber ative processes of the Social&#13;
tenet DI\"tS1OO&#13;
The fact that the resoluuon was&#13;
dch\'ered to tudents for publication in&#13;
'F.\\. OPE In advance at being delivered&#13;
to my oIh« al 0 )'S somethmg about&#13;
Iaculty r. poru.,blhty and proless,onat&#13;
Nhl ~ In your drvrsice Usmg students In&#13;
that "'8) tak('s something away from the'&#13;
resotuuen's Identification of Its authors as&#13;
"honorable people In an honorable endNWor&#13;
..&#13;
Y . terda)' during your visit to m} office&#13;
'IOU nnd Prof£' sO( Ii rbeson tesuned at&#13;
i·nglh about the good ",iii and ccrstrucuve&#13;
pcrpce, or Ih(' faculty I can appreciate&#13;
\our ('hagran, ther (ore. at having to&#13;
(t'por1 \l.llhlO mtnut of that visit that&#13;
(lnu.-ol'M,~In }UUr dl\ ISIGnhad dell\'ercd the&#13;
n~olUhon to ...tudents an ad\'ance of its&#13;
bt.'lng tro"",lmlted to me. The tactic of&#13;
If)"lng to rally student to support fa cult)"&#13;
"Cij~s" I!) not new on this or on other&#13;
c mpuses But It IS transparent. and It IS&#13;
counterprOOuctI "c.&#13;
The resolution ItsCIr IS too vague and&#13;
mdt'flmte to m\"lte or permit a reasoned.&#13;
~JX'Clr.C response propaganda It IS&#13;
uperb. but as an accout of administrative&#13;
poIlC). procedure. and purpose It is sheer&#13;
fantasy All the familiar rallymg Cries are&#13;
therr - "publish or perish:' "democracy&#13;
IS dead." "low faculty morale:' and so on.&#13;
But the broad·brush claims of the&#13;
resolution are susLamed not by evidence&#13;
hut by "perception" that are demonstrably&#13;
Inaccurate,&#13;
The claim that "the faculty is not&#13;
respected and IS demed its tradJtional role&#13;
In setttn~ policy or esLablishing long-range&#13;
~oals of the university" is patently false.&#13;
Th(' . tructurC of government at UWParksldt-~&#13;
'Aa.. dt&gt;\Ised by the faculty, and&#13;
through that government and through an&#13;
elaborate committee system proposed by&#13;
the faculty t we have more than 50 committees'l&#13;
the faculty has been directly and&#13;
stradlly Involved in shaPing policy and&#13;
proposln~ institutional goals. The key to&#13;
much of the dlffaculfy IS to be found in the&#13;
language of the resolul1on which talks&#13;
about the faculty "settmg" po!icy and&#13;
"establishing" goals. as though that were&#13;
an exc1usl\'e faculty right. In a public&#13;
uOIverslt)· legislators, Regents. Coor·&#13;
dlnatlng Councils, administrators. and&#13;
others are also Involved in setting policy&#13;
and establishing goals. Unfortunately,&#13;
\l.hen olher parties exercise their partiCipatory&#13;
nghts. or take irutiatives that&#13;
are necessa.r)" In terms of their respon·&#13;
Iblltty, their actions. however proper, are&#13;
routme)y condemned as violations of&#13;
lacully nghlS.&#13;
Facull)' reacllon to Dean t\lacKinney's&#13;
"Inslant greatness' re"mark certainly&#13;
ral es the Question of responsibility for&#13;
the alleged "hostile and hateful climate at&#13;
Parkside" As an act of (rlendliness&#13;
lov.ard the faculty Dean l\tacKinney&#13;
\'olunteered to share With them this fall&#13;
snmethlng of his educational philosophy.&#13;
somettung o( his perception of the nature&#13;
of the academic enterpri e. based on his&#13;
expenence al Iowa tate before joining&#13;
our staff; hIS speech was intended as a&#13;
tartlng POint for discussion. not as an&#13;
announcement of policy or an evaluation of&#13;
Parkside personnel. goals. or announcement&#13;
of policy or an evaluation of&#13;
Parkside personnel. goals, or programs.&#13;
And he made that quite clear. His purpose&#13;
was to be positive and encouraging, to&#13;
sllmulate thelacully to think well of itsell&#13;
and of Its prospects, and to enlist faculty&#13;
support In the work of institutional improvement&#13;
His "instant greatness"&#13;
remark was Intended to build morale. to&#13;
encourage the faculty to understand that&#13;
substantial gains could be made this year.&#13;
His purpose was quite like that of a new&#13;
coach exhorting his team to strive for a&#13;
winning season this )'ear. The hostility and&#13;
ridicule that greeted his remark, and the&#13;
calculated distortions and misrepresentations&#13;
01 it. had the unlortunate ellect of&#13;
shulttng off discussion of practical steps&#13;
and measures, and of putting the whole&#13;
question into the realm of propaganda.&#13;
The aSSE'rlion that Dean MacKinney's&#13;
remark '"'ranslates inta an immediate&#13;
purge of junior faculty and punishment of&#13;
senior faculty" is blatant propaganda.&#13;
Annual reviews of staff qualifications,&#13;
workload, and performance are standard&#13;
in every university, and go forward under&#13;
well-established policies and prodecures.&#13;
Such reviews are under way now, with&#13;
faculty involvement. Dean MacKinney&#13;
and Vice Chancellor Harris tell me that to&#13;
assure objectivity and fairness judgments&#13;
will be made on the basis of demonstrable&#13;
facts, and showings on the record, r.af!1er&#13;
than on the basis or casual oprruon,&#13;
memorials, resolutions, petitions, and the&#13;
like.&#13;
UW-Parkside does not and will not have,&#13;
SO long as I am Chancellor, "a severe&#13;
-pobhsh or Perish' altitude which t~anslates&#13;
into a near complete deemphasls of&#13;
teaching." Good teaching is our fi~st&#13;
responsibility. It has been 10·&#13;
sutuuonalized. recognized, and rewarded&#13;
here, and will continue to have first&#13;
prionty in our campus rewards syste~.&#13;
That does not mean, however, that instructional&#13;
service is the only service that&#13;
we expect of faculty; that undocumented&#13;
claim of teaching merit overbalance&#13;
other demonstrable deficiencies of&#13;
professional Qualification or perforr:'ance;&#13;
or that Parkside is obliged to retain nontenured&#13;
faculty who do not fit the campus&#13;
mission or instructional program.&#13;
mce we have an approved academic&#13;
program to implement and a specific&#13;
mdustrial society mission to fulfill we have&#13;
a responsibility to .invest institutional&#13;
resources m faculty who are best Qualified&#13;
twhlch means specifically, direcUy, and&#13;
measurably qualified) to teach the&#13;
program and implement the mission. You&#13;
understand this, I'm sure, since you&#13;
participated in the recent mission&#13;
discussions with CCHE sLafL Because of&#13;
limitations of staff resources and other&#13;
kinds of resources new campuses&#13;
everywhere are much more mission-oriented&#13;
than older. more lully·develope&lt;!&#13;
campuses. The mission provides a focus (a&#13;
program focus and a staffing focus) for the&#13;
general as well as the specialized undergraduate&#13;
offerings" Mission-oriented&#13;
faculties and programs are not narrow, or&#13;
hostile to the goals of liberal education.&#13;
They are capable. in fact, of producing&#13;
better educational results by encouraging&#13;
students to integrate what they learn&#13;
around the central concerns of the institutional&#13;
mission. We need more mission&#13;
focus in our staffing, and need to understand&#13;
that more is required to identify&#13;
a man as mission-suitable than a general&#13;
interest in undergraduate education or the&#13;
ability to teach certain courses listed in the&#13;
catalogue.&#13;
Weare pleased. as the laculty should be,&#13;
that students in increasing numbers are&#13;
enrolling at UW·Parkside and taking their&#13;
degrees here. That renects favorably on&#13;
our faculty and on our program.&#13;
Enrollment growth underwrites all the&#13;
things that strong faculties value - new&#13;
opportunities for service, new courses and&#13;
programs, new faculty colleagues, expanded&#13;
library collections, a total increase&#13;
in the inteUectual resources of the&#13;
university. Developing institutions need&#13;
faculties that welcome growth and the&#13;
service opportunities that growth brings.&#13;
They do not need faculties that see in&#13;
growth npthing but "the use of students as&#13;
objects in an elaborate public relations&#13;
and 'numbers game'."&#13;
Your division's final set of assertions&#13;
represents that "democracy is dead at&#13;
Parkside," that committies are powerless&#13;
"fronts." and that "communication and&#13;
power at Parks ide run in only one direction&#13;
- from top to bottom." Such&#13;
assessments are grossly unfair to faculty&#13;
colleagues who, through committee service&#13;
and participation in faculty government,&#13;
have greatly strengthened this&#13;
institution and contributed to almost every&#13;
aspect of its development. The point about&#13;
one-way communication reflects total lack&#13;
of awareness of the strong way in which&#13;
the University Committee and the&#13;
divisional chairmen have represented the&#13;
faculty and its interests to the campus&#13;
administration, as well as lack of&#13;
awareness, of the administrative&#13;
response. Reaching understandings and&#13;
having one's own way are two very dif·&#13;
ferent things. Those who do not succeed in&#13;
having their way feel aggrieved in all&#13;
human institutions.&#13;
Feel Iree to share this response with&#13;
your colleagues. I hope you will also share&#13;
with them my judgment, based on direct&#13;
knowledge of many universities, that&#13;
faculty power is a function of professional&#13;
achievement, and of satisfaction in&#13;
professional achievement, and not of&#13;
anything else.&#13;
Blues Concert Friday&#13;
'This Friday afternoon, Dec. n'h:t n~&#13;
I amming will be broug 0&#13;
~pek~i:'::':.'mpus by the Office 01 Student&#13;
ar . . Th ragram will be a blues&#13;
ActiVIties. e p d'll leature the&#13;
concert workshop an WI I hit&#13;
nationally popular Charlie Musse w e&#13;
Blues Band. It will be Iree and Willbe h~ld&#13;
in tbe activities building Irom 3:3\l to 5.30&#13;
with a workshop-question and answer&#13;
session during the first hour and a concert&#13;
during the second. Students are encouraged&#13;
to have question~ ~eadY C?~-&#13;
eeming blues music, what It IS, 11.Ow It s&#13;
played, etc., as Charlie Musselwhite and&#13;
memberS 01 his five piece group have&#13;
consented to talk to Parkside students&#13;
concerning this unique and purely&#13;
Americana form of musical expressIOn.&#13;
'-WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 D,m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phane 657"-9747&#13;
For those not familiar with CharI'&#13;
Musselwhite and his group. he. along Wi~&#13;
Paul Butterfield, is at the top 01the whit&#13;
blues harp players-singers in the busm":&#13;
today. This is displayed in more than 15&#13;
albums be has cut o~ labels like RCA&#13;
Victor, Capttol , EpIC, Buddah and&#13;
Paramount. You get to be good, or Bad a.&#13;
be puts It, not by listening to and imitating&#13;
other people's records. But by living the&#13;
life, creating the folklore, playing aOll&#13;
playing those legendary dues to and forthe&#13;
black audiences that respect the blues aOll&#13;
the men who can lay them down.&#13;
Nickie"s&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 • 56th Street&#13;
Kenasha, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Reg. $45.00&#13;
Haw $27.50&#13;
Pric.esto&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
LA TEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINHERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
FREE OELIVERY 4,00 P.M. TO 12,00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657·5191&#13;
ATTENTION S.ENIORS&#13;
HA VE YOU FILED&#13;
FOR A SENIOR SUMMARY?&#13;
AVAILABLE AT STUDENT RECORDS OFFICI&#13;
NECESSARY FOR GRADUATI.ON&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Tremendous values on all types of books&#13;
• Stop in at all three stores •&#13;
- Different books at each store.&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE '--------------------::&#13;
=&#13;
=~'@!£::JI~. . WATCHES _~ .J&#13;
....... Acc_- w.~.!.-~&#13;
Ultr..... n ....... 1_ ~~ __&#13;
::::.; ~ ... 0;::.,..&#13;
1,.eC .... 1-&#13;
.1:"'*""1 .~~ ..:.:;:..;.r&#13;
10% ..... :.-I1:::.nCourtesy&#13;
Oiscount sHA&#13;
t S· DOWNTOWN.KENO o tudents and ~&#13;
Facuit y . . eerti/iod0;.'-&#13;
(Must Show I.D.);;·I.~~:;t. ",.~J&#13;
Fa irtrade Y.f!l1iliJJli;r, 11eJlTI':;&#13;
~OHD C&lt;mSULTANTS excepted ,It ~.. s mole. diHefe"'O...... .,..&#13;
_.-&#13;
CHINA ]&#13;
Chancellor letter .enior faculty" is blatant propaganda.&#13;
Annual re\'iews of taff qualifications,&#13;
·or ·load, and performance are standard&#13;
in every uni,ersity, and go forward under&#13;
well-established policies and prodecur~.&#13;
Blues Concert Friday&#13;
For those not familiar with Charli&#13;
Musselwhite and his group, he, along wi;&#13;
Paul Butterfield, is ~t the l?P of the White&#13;
blues harp players-smgers m the busines&#13;
today. This is displayed in more than 1~&#13;
albums he h~s cut o~ labels like RCA&#13;
Victor, Capitol, Epic, Buddah and&#13;
Param~unt. You ~et to_ be good, or Bad as&#13;
he puts 1t, not by hstenmg to and imitating&#13;
other peop~e's records. But by living the&#13;
life, creating the folklore, playing and&#13;
playing those legendary dues to and for the&#13;
black audiences that respect the blues and&#13;
the men who can lay them down.&#13;
uch re\'iews are under way now, with&#13;
r ·ulty involvement. Dean . tacKinney&#13;
and \'ice Chancellor Harris tell me that to&#13;
a ·ure objectivity and fairness judgments&#13;
will be made on the basi of demonstrable&#13;
facts, and howings on the record, r~l?er&#13;
than on the ba is of casual opm1on,&#13;
memorial , ·re~oJutions, petitions, and the&#13;
This Friday aftern~n, Dec. 1\:ton~:&#13;
type of programming will be ~roug d t&#13;
Parkside campus by the Of~;~\~f !t~l~~&#13;
Activities The program w1 the · ksh and will feature&#13;
concert wor op Ch r Musselwhite&#13;
nationally popular ar ie . h id&#13;
Blues Band. It will be free and will be ~ . the activities building from 3:30 to 5.30&#13;
:ith a workshop-question and answer&#13;
session during the first hour and a concert&#13;
during the second. Students are encouraged&#13;
to have question~ ~eady c?~-&#13;
cerning blues music, what it is, h_ow it s&#13;
like.&#13;
W-Park ide d not and will not have,&#13;
o long as I am Chancellor, "a severe&#13;
' publi h or Peri. h' attitude which t~anlal&#13;
· into a near complete deemphasis of&#13;
t ching." Good teaching is our fi~st&#13;
r pon ibilily. It has been mltluhonalized,&#13;
recognized, and rewarded&#13;
here, and will continue to have first&#13;
priority in our campus rewards syste~.&#13;
That does not mean, however, that mtrucllooal&#13;
ervic i the only service that&#13;
w e peel or faculty: that undocumented&#13;
claim. of teaching merit overbalance&#13;
other demon trable deficiencies of&#13;
of iooal qualification or performance;&#13;
r that Park id i. obliged to retain nont&#13;
nured facult,· who do not fit the campus&#13;
mi ion or m 0&#13;
lru tional program.&#13;
mce w have an approved academic&#13;
pro •ram to implement and a specific&#13;
indu ·trial ocietv mi ion to fulfill we have r ~pon ibiht~· to _invest institutional&#13;
~ourcc. m faculty who are best qualified&#13;
(which m ans pecifically, directly, and&#13;
mea. urably qualified&gt; to teach the&#13;
program and implement the mi ion. You&#13;
und rstand thi , I'm ure, ince you&#13;
participated in the recent mission&#13;
di cussions with CCHE taff. Because of&#13;
limitation of taff re ources and other&#13;
kind· of re ·ources new campuses&#13;
everywhere are much more mission-oriented&#13;
than old r. more fully-developed&#13;
campu . The m1 10n provides a focus &lt;a&#13;
program focu and a staffing focus) for the&#13;
general as well as the specialized und&#13;
rgraduate offerings. • fission-oriented&#13;
faculties and programs are not narrow. or&#13;
ho tile to the goal or liberal education.&#13;
They are capable. in fact, of producing&#13;
helter educational results by encouraging&#13;
·tud nt to integrate what they learn&#13;
around the central concerns of the inlltuhonal&#13;
mi sion. We need more mission&#13;
focus m our staffing, and need to und&#13;
rstand that more is required to identify&#13;
a man as mission- uitable than a general&#13;
interest in undergraduate education or the&#13;
ability to teach certain courses listed in the&#13;
catalogue. We are pleased, a the faculty should be,&#13;
that tudents in increasing numbers are&#13;
enrolling at '\\'-Parkside and taking their&#13;
d grees here. That reflects favorably on&#13;
our faculty and on our program.&#13;
Enrollment growth underwrites all the&#13;
things that strong faculties value - new opportunities for ervice, new courses and&#13;
programs, new faculty colleagues, expanded&#13;
library collections, a total increase&#13;
in the intellectual resources of the&#13;
uni\'ersity Developing institutions need&#13;
faculties that welcome growth and the&#13;
erv1ce opportunities that growth brings.&#13;
They do not need faculties that see in&#13;
growth nplhing but "the use of students as&#13;
objects in an elaborate public relations&#13;
and 'numbers game'."&#13;
Your division's final set of assertions&#13;
represents that "democracy is dead at&#13;
Parkside." that commit ties are powerless&#13;
"fronts." and that "communication and&#13;
power al Parkside run in only one direction&#13;
- from top to bottom." Such&#13;
as essments are grossly unfair lo faculty&#13;
colleagues who, through committee service&#13;
and participation in faculty government,&#13;
have greatly strengthened this&#13;
institution and contributed to almost every&#13;
aspect of its development. The point about&#13;
one-way communication reflects total lack&#13;
of awareness of the strong way in which&#13;
the University Committee and the&#13;
divisional chairmen have represented the&#13;
faculty and its interests to the campus&#13;
administration, as well as lack of&#13;
awareness, of the administrative&#13;
response. Reaching understandings and&#13;
having one's own way are two very different&#13;
things. Those who do not succeed in&#13;
having their way feel aggrieved in all&#13;
human institutions.&#13;
Feel free to share this response with&#13;
your colleagues. I hope you will also share&#13;
with them my judgment, based on direct&#13;
knowledge of many universities, that&#13;
faculty power is a function of professional&#13;
achievement, and of satisfaction in&#13;
professional achievement, and not of&#13;
anything else.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
layed, etc., as Charlie Musselwhite and&#13;
~embers of his five piece group have&#13;
nsented to talk to Parkside students&#13;
~ncerning this unique and pur_ely&#13;
Americana form of musical expression.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 ~:m· 1 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 651'-97 47&#13;
VAi.ED'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Nickie-'s&#13;
SportsW.ear&#13;
1202 · 56th Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
LA TEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Reg. $45.00&#13;
Now $27.50&#13;
Pric,es to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
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THE&#13;
V.....el-N_ ... u&#13;
neeemller It, 1"1 FACTS&#13;
Intramurals Started&#13;
On Both Campuses&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
ByMARCHAARBAUER&#13;
The Parkside intramural league standings&#13;
remained about the same after the&#13;
night of December 8. The team of Tom&#13;
Bsin, Tim Alfredson and Phil Limbach&#13;
remained in fll'St place with a 23-5 record.&#13;
In second place, tl'.! game off the pace, is&#13;
the team of Marc Hasrbauer, Dave&#13;
Semrad and Gregg Hansen, with an 181'.!·&#13;
91'.!record. Both teams had bad nights, but&#13;
managed to still win two games and series&#13;
!rom their opponents.&#13;
The hottest team of the night was the&#13;
team of Tom Gascoigne, Gene Schnuckel&#13;
and Ed St. Peter. The team had high game&#13;
(634) and high series (1768). (These&#13;
figures include handicap.)&#13;
The best male bowler of the night was&#13;
Tim Alfredson, who had a 583 series with a&#13;
high game of 232. Alfredson also has high&#13;
average in the league - a 191 average.&#13;
• The best female bowler Tuesday night&#13;
was Sandy Schmauss. She had a 348 series&#13;
with a 148 high game. Sandy also has the&#13;
girls high average - a 110 average.&#13;
•&#13;
TABLE TENNIS&#13;
Sixteen students signed up to play in the&#13;
Parkside intramural table tennis tour.&#13;
nament. 'Ibis is a rather unique tour.&#13;
nament where an individual sigllS up to&#13;
play in the tournament and then the 1M&#13;
Director pairs the contestants off.&#13;
The contestants then can make&#13;
arrangements to play their opponent when&#13;
they have some free time. The winner will&#13;
eventually advance to the championship.&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Intramural Basketball is in full swing at&#13;
the Kenosha Campus. Eight teams&#13;
comprise the league, which plays one night&#13;
a week at one of the local junior high&#13;
schools. Games are at 8:00 and at 9:00.&#13;
Teams still interested in joining the&#13;
league may be able to enter, depending on&#13;
the number of late entries. Contact Coach&#13;
Jim Koch, Room. 144. The evenings to be&#13;
used for 1M Basketball are as follows:&#13;
1st week . Monday, Dec. 7: Lance&#13;
2nd week· Wednesday, Dec. 16: Lance&#13;
3rd week· Tuesday, Jan. 5: Bullen&#13;
4th week . Tuesday, Jan. 12: Washington&#13;
5th week - Wednesday, Feb. 10: Lance&#13;
6th week • Monday, Feb. 15: Lance&#13;
7th week - Monday, Feb. 22: Lincoln&#13;
8th week - Monday, Mar. 1: Lance&#13;
9th week - Monday, Mar. 8: Lance&#13;
10th week - Monday, Mar. 15: Lance&#13;
11th week· Monday, Mar. 22: Lance&#13;
12th week - Monday, Mar. 29: Lance&#13;
Spot'ig f&#13;
On.&#13;
Judy&#13;
Zimmerman&#13;
Eli Slaughter, left, and Stan White, righi, are two of Parbide's leading scorers.&#13;
Stan was the leading scorer (28 points) in the Michigan game.&#13;
Competition Tougher&#13;
ByWALTSIIIRER&#13;
MARQUETTE, MICH - Parkside&#13;
stepped up. notch in competition but gsve&#13;
a good account of itself before bowing to&#13;
powerful Northern Michigan 101-85&#13;
Tuesdsy night.&#13;
A cold spell to start the second half was&#13;
more than Parkside could afford against&#13;
the team wbose only loss in four starts has&#13;
been to Tennessee and whose schedule&#13;
includes such major university powers as&#13;
Utah and Illinois.&#13;
Northern broke a 39-39deadlock late in&#13;
the first half and spurted to a 45-39lead at&#13;
intermission. The winners came out of the&#13;
dressing rooms red bot and quickly&#13;
l"ounted an 18 point bulge, 75-57,midway&#13;
through the final stanza while UWP was&#13;
having trouble fmding the range. Northern's&#13;
bot streak resulted in a sizzling 51&#13;
per cent shooting mark for the game, while&#13;
the Rangers' frigid spell left them at 40 per&#13;
cent.&#13;
Parkside didn't fold, however, and led&#13;
by Stan White and Mike Madsen, the&#13;
Rang ...s whittled the lead down to 10, 21-&#13;
81, with three minutes to play, but it was&#13;
too late.&#13;
White, continuing Ilia fme play, led both&#13;
teams with 28 points, including 18 in the&#13;
second half, and had 10rebounds. Madsen,&#13;
enjoying his finest night by far, gsrnered&#13;
19 points and pulled in 11 rebounds.&#13;
Northern handcuffed normally high·&#13;
scoring Jim Hogan and Eli Slaughter.&#13;
They got only four between them the&#13;
second half.and finished the night with 13&#13;
and 8, respectively. Eli couldn't buy a&#13;
baaket, hitting just 3 of tS ahots.&#13;
The Legs of a 5' 4" Blue-Eyed Blonde&#13;
BEAR&#13;
Athletes portray many different images,&#13;
oot very few are the image of a lovely, 5'4"&#13;
blue eyed blond.&#13;
JUdy Zimmerman, an 18 year old freshman&#13;
from West Allis Hale, does much to&#13;
shatter one's image of an athlete. But an&#13;
athlete ahe is, and a good one.&#13;
Judy has just finished her first year of&#13;
full COmpetition in cross country in admirable&#13;
fashion. She has defeated all&#13;
comers in the area and has done very well&#13;
against national competition.&#13;
She admits to being a half-rniler and&#13;
after running 1.5 miles and 2 miles all fall&#13;
abe should feel like sprinting the half mile&#13;
during the winter and spring track&#13;
seasons.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside, Judy had&#13;
eslabliahed quite a reputation for herself&#13;
and the Milwaukee Track Club. She has&#13;
been a Wisconsin state champion in the 4&lt;10&#13;
and 880 as well as capturing the state XC&#13;
tiUe this past fal1..&#13;
In addition to her state honors abe has&#13;
been active on the national level. In 1969&#13;
abe placed third in the 4&lt;10 at the Junior&#13;
Olrmpic championshiP. in San Diego. Just&#13;
this past summer, Judy placed third in the&#13;
880 at the Junior Nationals in "Bowling&#13;
Green, Kentucky. Earlier in the spring she&#13;
had taken the runner-up spot in the Golden&#13;
Midwest championships in Chicago.&#13;
Two years ago her relay team from the&#13;
Milwaukee Track Club won the spring&#13;
medley relay at the world famOWlDrake&#13;
Relays. Parkside·tearnmaIe,Mary Libal,&#13;
.... aIao a member of that team.&#13;
Perhaps her greatest honor was ir)&#13;
beiDll selected to' represent .the United&#13;
States at tlle Cultural Olympics beld ill&#13;
conjunction with the 1968 Olympics in&#13;
Mexico City.&#13;
It was here that abe received her biggest&#13;
thrill in athletics. This came when she&#13;
viewed the opening ceremonies and was&#13;
thrilled to watch the United States&#13;
Olympic team parade into the Olympic&#13;
Stadium.&#13;
Perhaps her highest aim for the immediate&#13;
future came from watching the&#13;
magnificent spectacle of the Games; that&#13;
of being an Olympian herself.&#13;
other ambitions include being a coach&#13;
and teacher of cross country and track.&#13;
'Ibroullb this vocation she would like the&#13;
opportuntiy to work with inner-core&#13;
youngsters.&#13;
IT abe could imitate anyone ahe would&#13;
like to approach the examples that her&#13;
gymnastics coach, Jim Farbs, has taUKht&#13;
her. Mr. Farkas is .the coach of the&#13;
Milwaukee TUrners.&#13;
Besides her track hack-ground, Judy&#13;
was captain of her high school gymnastics&#13;
team as well as being a member of the&#13;
varsity cheerleading aquad.&#13;
On top of all this, somehow, someplace,&#13;
abe found time to compile a 3.8 academic&#13;
grade. It just seems that some people have&#13;
it!&#13;
Lee Palmer, high-leaping S'4 forward,&#13;
led Northern with 20 points and a gam ..&#13;
high 15 rebounds., as the winners&#13;
dominated the boards 6H6.&#13;
With his outburst, white has passed&#13;
Slaughter and is second to Hogan in the&#13;
Ranger liCoring derb.)'. After four games,&#13;
Hogan has·96 points (a 24 average!., White&#13;
81 (20), Slaughter 69 (17), Madsen 37 (9),&#13;
captain Ken Rick 211 (7), Mike Jackson 17&#13;
W, and Nick Perrine 15 (4). White is the&#13;
leading rebounder, followed by Madsen&#13;
Parkside will host undefeated UW-Green&#13;
Bay Saturday night at Kenosha SI. Joseph&#13;
High School (8 p.m.), The Phoenix of UW·&#13;
GB are one of the strongest teams in the&#13;
state and Ieature Ray Willis, an all·NAJA&#13;
District 14 first team choice last season&#13;
and better than ever this campaign. The&#13;
6'5 Willis is averaging close to 30 points a&#13;
game, and hit 30 in Green Bay's latest&#13;
triumph, a convincing 94·77 rout of always&#13;
formidable SI. Norbert's.&#13;
Green Bay defeated its arch rival,&#13;
Parkside, twice last season, but only by&#13;
one point here, so an upset Saturday is a&#13;
possibility.&#13;
UW-Pamlde (lIS)&#13;
fg ft pf&#13;
Hogan 5 3 1&#13;
Perrine 1 0 0&#13;
Rick 2 6 0&#13;
Slaughter 3 2 2&#13;
White 11 6 4&#13;
Madsen 7 5 4&#13;
Jackson 2 1 2&#13;
Totals 31 23 13&#13;
Nortbe", Michigan (Ie.)&#13;
fg It pf&#13;
Conklin 2 0 0&#13;
Friday 8 3 1&#13;
Griffm 9 0 3&#13;
Duehning 4 0 4&#13;
Vaneklasen 5 0 3&#13;
Barber 6 0 4&#13;
Inkola 4 2 4&#13;
Palmer 8 4 2&#13;
Totals t6 9 21&#13;
Fencers Defeat&#13;
Tw 0 Big 10'ers&#13;
Coach Loren Hein was more than satisfied&#13;
with the results of the Fencing competition&#13;
during Sportsfest weekend.&#13;
Besling the University of WiscolISin 17·3&#13;
and the University of Minnesola 24-3is an&#13;
accompliahment in itself, but to add icing&#13;
to the cake, Freshmen had a big hand in&#13;
the victory.&#13;
For example, in epee against Madison&#13;
frosh Bob Westby in his collegiste debut:&#13;
had a 3-0 record. Veterans John Hanzalik&#13;
and Broce Bosman came through with two&#13;
and one records.&#13;
Another frosh, John Tank, gave one of&#13;
the fmest exhibitions in the foil class to&#13;
defeat Big 10 champion Neal Cohen.&#13;
Cohen was leading 4-0 before Tank began&#13;
Ilia magnilicent comeback to win the bout&#13;
5-4.&#13;
Kim Nelson, another promising freshman,&#13;
had a 4-1 record for the day and a&#13;
perfect record against Minnesota. Another&#13;
yearling, Rich Moffett, fmished with a 3&#13;
and 3 record.&#13;
For the veterans, Keith Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
was 5-1 in foil, Pete&#13;
Scbemanake 5-1, and John zanotti 4-2 in&#13;
sabre.&#13;
Bob Westby and Captain Bruce Bosman&#13;
were 3-0 in epee.&#13;
THE&#13;
BEAR&#13;
Volame z - Namber lZ&#13;
December 14, 1171&#13;
lntramurals Started&#13;
FACTS&#13;
On Both Campuses&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
By MARC HAARBAUER&#13;
TABLE TENNIS&#13;
The Parkside intramural league standings&#13;
remained about the same after the&#13;
night of December 8. The team of Tom&#13;
Bain, Tim Alfre~n and Phil Limbach&#13;
remained in first place with a 23-5 record.&#13;
In second place, 4½ game off the pace, is&#13;
the team of Marc Haarbauer, Dave&#13;
Semrad and Gregg Hansen, with an 18½-&#13;
9½ record. Both teams had bad nights, but&#13;
managed to still win two games and series&#13;
from their opponents.&#13;
Sixteen students signed up to play in the&#13;
Parkside intramural table tennis tournament.&#13;
This is a rather unique tournament&#13;
where an individual signs up to&#13;
play in the tournament and then the IM&#13;
Director pairs the contestants off.&#13;
Eli Slaughter, left, and Stan White, right, are two of Parkside's leading scorers.&#13;
The hottest team of the night was the&#13;
team of Tom Gascoigne, Gene Schnuckel&#13;
and Ed St. Peter. The team had high game&#13;
(634) and high series (1768). (These&#13;
figures include handicap.)&#13;
The best male bowler of the night was&#13;
Tim Alfredson, who had a 583 series with a&#13;
high game of 232. Alfredson also has high&#13;
average in the league - a 191 average.&#13;
The best female bowler Tuesday night&#13;
was Sandy Schmauss. She had a 348 series&#13;
with a 148 high game. Sandy also has the&#13;
girls high average - a 110 average.&#13;
Stan was the leading scorer (28 points) in the Michigan game.&#13;
The contestants then can make&#13;
arrangements to play their opponent when&#13;
they have some free time. The winner will&#13;
eventually advance to the championship.&#13;
Competition Tougher&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Intramural Basketball is in full swing at&#13;
the Kenosha Campus. Eight teams&#13;
comprise the league, which plays one night&#13;
a week at one of the local junior high&#13;
schools. Games are at 8:00 and at 9:00.&#13;
Teams still interested in joining the&#13;
league may be able to enter, depending on&#13;
the number of late entries. Contact Coach&#13;
Jim Koch, Room. 144. The evenings to be&#13;
used for IM Basketball are as follows:&#13;
1st week - Monday, Dec. 7: Lance&#13;
2nd week - Wednesday, Dec. 16: Lance&#13;
3rd week - Tuesday, Jan. 5: Bullen&#13;
4th week - Tuesday, Jan. 12: Washington&#13;
5th week - Wednesday, Feb. 10: Lance&#13;
6th week - Monday, Feb. 15: Lance&#13;
7th week - Monday, Feb. 22: Lincoln&#13;
8th week - Monday, Mar. 1: Lance&#13;
9th week - Monday, Mar. 8: Lance&#13;
10th week - Monday, Mar. 15: Lance&#13;
11th week - Monday, Mar. 22: Lance&#13;
12th week - Monday, Mar. 29: Lance&#13;
By WALT SHIRER&#13;
MARQUETTE, MICH - Parkside&#13;
stepped up a notch in competition but gave&#13;
a good account of itself before bowing to&#13;
powerful Northern Michigan 101-85&#13;
Tuesday night.&#13;
A cold spell to start the second half was&#13;
more than Parkside could afford against&#13;
the team whose only loss in four starts has&#13;
been to Tennessee and whose schedule&#13;
includes such major university powers as&#13;
Utah and Illinois.&#13;
Northern broke a 39-39 deadlock late in&#13;
the first half and spurted to a 45-39 lead at&#13;
intermission. The wiMers came out of the&#13;
dressing rooms red hot and quickly&#13;
Jllounted an 18 point bulge, 75-57, midway&#13;
through the final stanza while UWP was&#13;
having trouble finding the range. Northern's&#13;
hot streak resulted in a sizzling 51&#13;
per cent shooting mark for the game, while&#13;
the Rangers' frigid spell left them at 40 per&#13;
cent.&#13;
Parkside didn't fold, however, and led&#13;
by Stan White and Mike Madsen, the&#13;
S I i:---~-- .,. er · ·tt; t. ead down to 10, !.'1&#13;
PO f ign f 81, with three minutes to play, but it was too late.&#13;
White, continuing his fine play, led both 0 n teams with 28 points, including 18 in the&#13;
• second half, and had 10 rebounds. Madsen,&#13;
enjoying his finest night by far, garnered&#13;
d 19 points and pulled in 11 rebounds. JU y Northern handcuffed normally highscoring&#13;
Jim Hogan and Eli Slaughter.&#13;
They got only four between them the Zimmerman second half_and finished the night with 13&#13;
and 8, respectively. Eli couldn't buy a&#13;
basket, hitting just 3 of 16 shots.&#13;
Lee Palmer, high-leaping 6'4 forward,&#13;
led Northern with 20 points and a gnm&#13;
high 15 rebounds. , as the winner&#13;
dominated the boards 61-46.&#13;
With his outburst, white ha pa ed&#13;
Slaughter and is second to Hogan in the&#13;
Ranger $Coring derby. After four games,&#13;
Hogan has·96 points ca 24 averagel, White&#13;
81 (20), Slaughter 69 (17), Madsen ~ (9),&#13;
captain Ken Rick 26 (7), Mike Jackson 17&#13;
m, and Nick Perrine 15 (4). White i the&#13;
leading rebounder. followed by Mad en. Parkside will host undefeated UW-Green&#13;
Bay Saturday night at Kenosha St. Joseph&#13;
High School (8 p.m.&gt;. The Phoenix of UW- GB are one of the strongest teams in the&#13;
state and feature Ray Willis, an all-NAIA&#13;
District 14 first team choice last eason&#13;
and better than ever this campaign. The&#13;
6'5 Willis is averaging close to 30 poin a&#13;
game, and hit 30 in Green Bay's late t&#13;
triumph, a convincing 94-n rout of alway&#13;
formidable St. Norbert's.&#13;
Green Bay defeated its arch rival,&#13;
Parkside, twice ast season, but only by&#13;
one point here so an upset turday is B&#13;
possibility.&#13;
UW-Parkslde (85)&#13;
Hogan&#13;
Perrine&#13;
Rick&#13;
Slaughte,·&#13;
White&#13;
Madsen&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Totals&#13;
Northern&#13;
fg&#13;
5&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
11&#13;
7&#13;
2&#13;
31&#13;
11chlgan &lt;IOI)&#13;
Ct pf&#13;
3 1&#13;
0 0&#13;
6 0&#13;
2 2&#13;
6 4&#13;
5 4&#13;
l 2&#13;
23 13&#13;
ft pf&#13;
0 0&#13;
The Legs of a 5' 4" Blue-Eyed Blonde&#13;
Conklin&#13;
Friday&#13;
Griffin&#13;
Duehning&#13;
Vaneklasen&#13;
Barber&#13;
lnkola&#13;
Palmer&#13;
fg&#13;
2&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
4&#13;
8&#13;
3 1&#13;
0 3&#13;
0 4&#13;
Athletes portray many different images,&#13;
but very few are the image of a lovely, 5'4"&#13;
blue eyed blond.&#13;
Judy Zimmerman, an 18 year old freshman&#13;
from West Allis Hale, does much to&#13;
shatter one's image of an athlete. But an&#13;
athlete she is, and a good one.&#13;
Judy has just finished her first year of&#13;
full competition in cross country in admirable&#13;
fashion. She has defeated all&#13;
comers in the area and has done very well&#13;
against national competition.&#13;
She admits to being a half-miler and&#13;
after running 1.5 miles and 2 miles all fall&#13;
she should feel like sprinting the half mile&#13;
during the winter and spring track seasons.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside, Judy had&#13;
established quite a reputation for herself&#13;
and the Milwaukee Track Club. She has&#13;
been a Wisconsin state champion in the 440&#13;
and 880 as well as capturing the state XC&#13;
title this past fall....&#13;
In addition to her state honors she has&#13;
been active on the national level. In 1969&#13;
she placed third in the 440 at the Junior&#13;
Olympic championships in San Diego. Just&#13;
this past summer, Judy placed third in the&#13;
880 at the Junior Nationals in ·Bowling&#13;
Green, Kentucky. Earlier in the spring she&#13;
~d taken the runner-up spot in the Golden&#13;
Midwest championships in Chicago.&#13;
Two years ago her relay team from the&#13;
Milwaukee Track Club won the spring&#13;
medley relay at the world famous Drake&#13;
Relays. Parkside·teammate, Mary Liblll,&#13;
was also a member of that team.&#13;
Perhaps her greatest honor was in&#13;
being selected to represent · the United&#13;
States at the Cultural Olympics held in&#13;
conjunction with the 1968 Olympics in&#13;
Mexico City.&#13;
It was here that she received her biggest&#13;
thrill in athletics. This came when she&#13;
viewed the opening ceremonies and was&#13;
thrilled to watch the United States&#13;
Olympic team parade into the Olympic&#13;
Stadium.&#13;
Perhaps her highest aim for the immediate&#13;
future came from watching the&#13;
magnificent spectacle of the Games; that&#13;
of being an Olympian herself.&#13;
Other ambitions include being a coach&#13;
and teacher of cross country and track.&#13;
Through this vocation she would like the&#13;
opportuntiy to work with inner-core&#13;
youngsters.&#13;
If she could imitate anyone she would&#13;
like to approach the examples that her&#13;
gymnastics coach, Jim Farkas, has taught&#13;
her. Mr. Farkas is · the coach of the&#13;
Milwaukee Turners.&#13;
Besides her track back-ground, Judy&#13;
was captain of her high school gymnastics&#13;
team as well as being a member of the&#13;
varsity cheerleading squad.&#13;
On top of all this, somehow, someplace,&#13;
she found time to compile a 3.8 academic&#13;
grade. It just seems that some people have&#13;
it!&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
Totals 46 9&#13;
Fencers Defeat&#13;
Two Big lO'ers&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
2&#13;
21&#13;
Coach Loren Hein was more than satisfied&#13;
with the results of the Fencing comp tition&#13;
during Sportsfest weekend.&#13;
Beating the University of Wi consin 17·3&#13;
and the University of Minnesota 24·3 is an&#13;
accomplishment in itself, but to add icing&#13;
to the cake, Freshmen had a big hand in&#13;
the victory.&#13;
For example, in epee against Madison,&#13;
frosh Bob Westby in his collegiate debut,&#13;
had a 3-0 record. Veterans John Hanzalik&#13;
and Bruce Bosman came through with two&#13;
and one records.&#13;
Another frosh, John Tank, gave one of&#13;
the finest exhibitions in the foil class to&#13;
defeat Big 10 champion Neal Cohen.&#13;
~hen w~s. leading 4-0 before Tank began&#13;
his magnificent comeback to win the bout&#13;
5-4.&#13;
Kim Nelson, another promising freshman,&#13;
had a 4-1 record for the day and a&#13;
perfect record against Minnesota. Another&#13;
yearling, Rich Moffett, finished with a 3&#13;
and 3 record.&#13;
For the veterans, Keith Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
was 5-1 in foil, Pete&#13;
Schemanske 5-1, and John Zanotti 4-2 in&#13;
sabre.&#13;
Bob Westby and Captain Bruce Bosman&#13;
were 3-0 in epee. &#13;
Ranger Basketballers Have&#13;
Rough Schedule Ahead&#13;
Parbide basltetballers will have a&#13;
heavy Idledule durin&amp; Ibe Christmas&#13;
holidays.&#13;
They will begin lhe period wilb a eight&#13;
team tournament at Quantico, Virginia.&#13;
They will be in action next at home when&#13;
Ibey take on Ibe Cougan 01 Soulbern&#13;
minois at Edwardsville.&#13;
Alter a short breslt for Christmas, Ibe&#13;
Rangers will head west where they will&#13;
play in the Com Palace tournament in&#13;
Mitchell, South Dakota.&#13;
December 17 the Rangers will open the&#13;
Quantico tournamenl by oquaring oIf&#13;
againsl ew York State 01 Old Westbury.&#13;
The wln_ of lhal game will meet the&#13;
WInner of the North Caroliua AiT vs.&#13;
Marl I CoIlOCe of PoueJlkeepsle, New&#13;
York&#13;
----&#13;
Other teams in Ibe tournamenl are&#13;
A1dersoo-Boarddus College 01 Phillippi.&#13;
West Virginia, Groves City College,&#13;
Pennsylvania, Findlay College of Obio aod&#13;
the Quantico Marines.&#13;
'!be Com Palace loUI'Dllmenl is a four&#13;
team affair hosled by Dakota Wesleyan, a&#13;
regional power. .&#13;
Parkside will open on January 30 WlIb&#13;
Wisconsin State University-LaCrosse&#13;
while the hosl Tigers will be meeting&#13;
Northweslern College of Orange City,&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
The fmals will be played on New Year's&#13;
Eve. The Rangers will begin the 1971&#13;
season by hosting Millon (January 6),&#13;
Lakehead Universily of Onlarlo on the 9th&#13;
and Northeastern D1inois on Ibe 12th.&#13;
Cross Country MVP, Coach, Team&#13;
WHITEW ATER - Four freshmen and a&#13;
lWllor waged a close race for Ibe MVP of&#13;
lhe uno Croll country District 14 balloting&#13;
by the Dlslnct coaches Jim Drews, Ibe&#13;
tandout from LaCroue, was the clear&#13;
MVP choice bul Ibe other four were very&#13;
clOle. Rick Lund 01 Parks.de fllushed&#13;
fourth an the ballollng&#13;
The same was true for the Coach ollbe&#13;
Year honor. as five coaches were aU in the&#13;
runnm&amp; with Bob Fiskum o( Whitewater&#13;
the WIMer Only Ibree votes separated Ibe&#13;
next three coaches&#13;
Plauevolle was voted as Ibe top team&#13;
""ib almost I dead heat between Carthage&#13;
Ind UW·Plrkside ror runner· up honors IS&#13;
Carlbage hid a slight edge. Parkside&#13;
defeated bolb lelms in competition this&#13;
son&#13;
Drews. who won eight individual races&#13;
thIS season. posted a 25:30 clock,ng for this&#13;
best (i'ie mile performance and was the&#13;
'It' UC chamption in his first season at&#13;
LaCrosse. McGhee, a freshman 01 Car·&#13;
thage. fimshed second to Drews as he&#13;
posted a 26:05 clocking over rive miles and&#13;
",as third in the CCTW meet. Schnepf of&#13;
WhIle",ater was third as he had a 26:33&#13;
mark (or his best time as he won eight&#13;
meel Russell of Pia Ueville rounded out&#13;
the top five as he won sevtf'l meets and had&#13;
a lhlrd place finish with his best time at&#13;
25:57&#13;
Flskum was given the nod as Coach of&#13;
the Year (or his guidance of a young team&#13;
that climbed from fifth to second in Ibe&#13;
WSUC meet and posted a much improved&#13;
9-3-1 record after falling 10 4-111-1just a&#13;
year ago.&#13;
Tom Vail, Ibe Platteville coach, was&#13;
second while Jon Swift, the Carthage&#13;
menl":, was third, Warren Kinzel of River&#13;
Falls was fourlb while Vic Godfrey of UWParkside&#13;
was fiflb. Only three voles&#13;
separaled Vail, Swifl and Kinzel.&#13;
Plalteville was a solid pick as Team of&#13;
the Year as the Pioneers posted a 12-1&#13;
record (or the season, won the WSUC&#13;
meet, was second in the Whitewatef invitational&#13;
meet, third in the Pioneer Invitational,&#13;
and finished in the lop 15 leams&#13;
in the NAIA finals.&#13;
Carthage, with a dual meet record of 28&#13;
straight wins, was second with a 7-0 dual&#13;
meet, was second in the ccrw, finished&#13;
sixth in the Platteville Invitational, and&#13;
second in the District Invitational meet&#13;
and also was in the top 15 of lhe NAIA&#13;
finals.&#13;
Parkside was 4-1 in dual meets, finished&#13;
third in the Whitewater Invitational, and&#13;
won the District Invitational meet.&#13;
Whitewater fmished fourth in the team&#13;
balloting with a 9-3-1 record while&#13;
LaCrosse finished a close fifth with a 7-3&#13;
dual meet record and third in the WSUC&#13;
meet while getting fourlb in a large 12-&#13;
team meet during the season.&#13;
Spotlight on Doug&#13;
Doug Anderson: Co-Captain&#13;
5' 10" -ISO lbs.•Frosh&#13;
Doug comes to Parkside from the&#13;
nation's hotbed of high school gymnastics&#13;
- Illinois. His home is in South Holland,&#13;
minois, a southern suburb of Chicago,&#13;
where he was graduated from Tbornridge&#13;
High School.&#13;
Doug was captain of his high school&#13;
team and won many individual honors. An&#13;
all-around man, Doug works side horse,&#13;
free exercise, high bar, rings, parallel&#13;
bars, and vaulting. His strongesl event is&#13;
high bar, where he must be considered for&#13;
national honors. Doug's goal in gymnastics&#13;
is to represenlthe United States in&#13;
inlemational competition.&#13;
Doug's major fields are Biological&#13;
Science and Music. His music background&#13;
is equally as impressive as his gym·&#13;
nastics, having been awarded All-Siate&#13;
honors as a baritone vocalist. His other&#13;
areas of interest afe sailing and snow&#13;
skiing.&#13;
Rick Lund and Chuck Dettman. Parkside's t~o representatives OIl the&#13;
NAJA All-Siar team, are sbown leading the pack against WSU-PlatteVllle.&#13;
WHITEWATER _ Two repeal per- named 10 the top 10 for their&#13;
d&#13;
tstanding -up of yearling record.&#13;
formers an an ou ... - Al R 11 . . f PIa&#13;
freshmen runners paced lhe NAJA District usse ,af1unthlOrprom&#13;
14 All-Star squad for the 1970 season. The Ibe top runner or e lOnoors lbIa&#13;
. I' f 10 runners was was selected for the second str8l&amp;li&#13;
team, consis mg 0 , al'lb M k D I j.......&#13;
sel ted b th ote 01 the District ong wt ar e aney, a -&#13;
':~ y e v Whilewater and lhe WarhawU'&#13;
coecnes thi Rick 'Lund and Chuck Dettman, two two runner IS season.&#13;
P&#13;
kside f hm fro Marinelte were seven freshmen, the largest&#13;
ar 51 fes en m , selected to an NAIA District 14&#13;
voted as top performers, along&#13;
sophomore. Heading the freshmu&#13;
was Jim Drews, the LaCrosse tap&#13;
who had eight wins and a fourth&#13;
finish in nine meets.&#13;
Carthage, always a dominate I&#13;
cross country, paced two first year&#13;
the squad - Mark Reisweber&#13;
McGhee. McGhee finished Ihird III&#13;
CCTW meet after winning three&#13;
meets, getting three second place&#13;
also for the unbeated Redmen.&#13;
was fifth in the CCTW meet as he .....&#13;
dual meets and was second in two&#13;
Rounding out the team were&#13;
Schnepf, a freshman from Whi&#13;
Ibe Hawks' lop runner; Gary Y&#13;
freshman from Platteville&#13;
Pioneers' second man; Chuck' ~.~.-&#13;
freshman from UW-Parkside who&#13;
wins and a third place in five meets;&#13;
Lund, another freshman from&#13;
Parkside who liad Ibree wins and I&#13;
second. place finishes; and sophomllIe&#13;
Stemper of Plalteville, with a seooad&#13;
five thirds for the Pioneers.&#13;
There were seven rtmners ..&#13;
Honorable Mention list. They wert:&#13;
Sumner, a freslunan from River&#13;
John Sindola, a sophomore from&#13;
Doug I}refezynski, a freshmaD&#13;
Oshkosh; Harry PeMinglon, a&#13;
from Carthage; John' Carlson, a&#13;
from LaCrosse; Joho Wilke, a&#13;
from Lakeland; and Bill Fojtik. s&#13;
man from Eau Claire.&#13;
In all, there were 26 runners frail&#13;
District teams nominated for the&#13;
team. Drews was the only runner&#13;
on every ballot as the nwnber one&#13;
Coaches did not vote for their own&#13;
in the balloting.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Dec. 17-19: Rangers al Quantico,&#13;
Virginia, for Quantico Tournament.&#13;
Dec. 23: Southern IllinoisEdwardsville,&#13;
8:00, St. Joseph's,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Dec. 30-31: Corn Palace Tournamenl,&#13;
Mitchell, Soulb Dakota,&#13;
. WSU-LaCrosse, Dakota Wesleyan,&#13;
Northwestern College.&#13;
Jan. 6: Millon College (Home) 8:00,&#13;
Union Grove High School.&#13;
Jan. 9: Lakehead University&#13;
(Ontario), Home, 8:00, Case Higli&#13;
School.&#13;
Jan. 12: Northeastern Illinois&#13;
(Home), 8:00, St. Joseph's.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Jan. 8: University of Missouri,&#13;
Kansas Cily, Milwaukee Tech.&#13;
(Home), John Bullen Junior Higli.&#13;
Jan. 16: Air Force Academy" UWMadison&#13;
and Oliio Stale at&#13;
Madison.&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
Dec. 17: UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Dec. 29-30: Midlands Tournament&#13;
at LaGrange, Illinois.&#13;
Jan. 9: Beloit College (Home), John&#13;
Bullen Junior Higli.&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
Jan. 9: Wisconsin State U-Stevens&#13;
Point, 3:00&#13;
TRACK&#13;
Jan. 2: Indiana State&#13;
Haute.&#13;
at Terre&#13;
al&#13;
Word Is Out! Here It Is!&#13;
By C. ROBERT PAUL. JR.&#13;
Director of Public Information&#13;
The Sports Year 1970 was NOT a vintage&#13;
year for the United States in amateur&#13;
sports in the Olympic Garnes, internationally&#13;
speaking.&#13;
Two developments worth mentioning&#13;
are: The success of the young basketball&#13;
team which won 10 out of 13 as the U.S.&#13;
Olympic Training Squad toured eastern&#13;
Europe afler three weeks of practice in&#13;
Colorado. Tom McMillen, currenlly a&#13;
freshman at the University of Maryland.&#13;
showed that he may be a strong candidate&#13;
for both the 1971 USA Pan-American Team&#13;
and tbe 1972 Olympic Tearn.&#13;
The comeback of the USA in ice hockey.&#13;
ReIegaled to Group B after a disastrous&#13;
1969 lournament, a revamped USA&#13;
Natl?~al learn swept to victory, and&#13;
qualified for Ihe 1972 Olympic Games. At&#13;
the presenl time, this augmented Natiol)lll&#13;
team, actu~y an Olympic training squad,&#13;
IS '? tbe mIdst of a backbreaking 51-game&#13;
trammg schedule prior to tbe Group A ice&#13;
hockey cbampionships in Switzerland.&#13;
In Ibe world wrestling cbampionships al&#13;
Edmonlon, Alberta, the USA continued 10&#13;
bold ils own in world wreslling by placing&#13;
second to Ibe Soviet Union in the free-style&#13;
competition as Wayne Wells became a&#13;
gold medalist in Ibe 163'pound&#13;
OUr other three medal wtnners&#13;
Olympic veteran Larry KriStl!1I,&#13;
medal, 220 pounds; 1968 OlymptC&#13;
Bobby Douglas, bronze, 149~:f::"&#13;
Mike Young, bronze, 136.5 jJUYU--&#13;
Team Sports e1d&#13;
In the tearn sports of soccer, ft ",'II&#13;
and volleyball (men's and "'om ....&#13;
future of the USA could prelty&#13;
determined by tbe pan-Amenca.:.&#13;
So far as soccer is con&lt;:ern~ ell&#13;
the "Olympic" team invOv III&#13;
preliminary q~~fying ~ eIII&#13;
Olympic competillon 1I11971, USA.&#13;
same teajD will represent \he ..... s&#13;
Pan-AiDerican Games. II hasweU ill&#13;
time since the USA has done&#13;
competition. e:ese ill IbI&#13;
Much depends on sOC ~&#13;
American Games for the VOlle&#13;
iJeld (men's and women's) and the _&#13;
team. Itis mandatory thai ~J~&#13;
if they expect to play at M~ gold&#13;
the volleyball. teamS won \he iieId&#13;
at Winnipeg 1I11967 and de forlbl&#13;
team edged oul hosl e.::::t evet ..... If&#13;
medal - the fU'St m bOd'1&#13;
USA in international field&#13;
petition.&#13;
Ranger Basketballers Have&#13;
Rough Schedule Ahead&#13;
Other teams in the tournament are&#13;
Aldersoo-Boarddus College of Phillippi,&#13;
West Virginia, Groves City Co!lege,&#13;
PeMSylvania, Findlay College of Ohio and&#13;
the Quantico 1arines.&#13;
The Corn Palace tournament is a four&#13;
team affair hosted by Dakota Wesleyan, a&#13;
regional power. . Parkside will open on January 30 with&#13;
Wi consin State University·LaCrosse&#13;
while the host Tigers will be meeting&#13;
, ·or th western College of Orange City,&#13;
Iowa. , The finals v.ill be played on New Years&#13;
Eve. The Rangers will begin the 1971&#13;
season by hosting 1ilton (January 6),&#13;
Lakehead University of Ontario on the 9th&#13;
·ev. and , 'orthea tern Illinois on the 12th.&#13;
Cross Country MVP, Coach, Team&#13;
the Year for his guidance of a yoWlg team&#13;
that climbed from fifth to second in the&#13;
w C meet and po ted a much improved&#13;
9-3·1 record after falling to 4-10-1 just a&#13;
year ago. Tom Vail, the Platteville coach, was&#13;
second while Jon Swift, the Carthage&#13;
ment~. wa third, Warren Kinzel of River&#13;
Fall was fourth while Vic Godfrey of UWPark&#13;
ide was fifth Only three votes&#13;
eparated Vail, Swift and Kinzel.&#13;
Platteville was a solid pick as Team of&#13;
the Year a the Pioneers posted a 12-1&#13;
record for the season, won the WSUC&#13;
mee , was econd in the Whitewater Invitational&#13;
meet. third in the Pioneer In-&#13;
,itational, and fini hed in the top 15 teams&#13;
m the · AIA final . Carthage, with a dual meet record of 28&#13;
traight wins, was second with a 7--0 dual&#13;
meet, was second in the ccrw. finished&#13;
i th in the Platte,ille Invitational, and&#13;
. econd in the District Invitational meet&#13;
and also was in the top 15 of the NAIA&#13;
finals.&#13;
Parkside was 4-1 in dual meets, finished&#13;
third in the Whitewater Invitational, and&#13;
won the District Invitational meet.&#13;
Whitewater finished fourth in the team&#13;
balloting ...,;th a 9-3-1 record while&#13;
LaCrosse finished a close fifth with a 7-3&#13;
dual meet record and third in the WSUC&#13;
meet while getting fourth in a large 12-&#13;
team meet during the season.&#13;
Spotlight on Doug&#13;
Doug Anderson: Co-Captain&#13;
s· 10" -150 lbs., Frosh&#13;
Doug comes to Parkside from the&#13;
nation's hotbed of high school gymnastics&#13;
- Illinois. His home is in South Holland,&#13;
lliinois, a southern suburb of Chicago,&#13;
where he was graduated from Thornridge&#13;
High School.&#13;
Doug was captain of his high school&#13;
team and won many individual honors. An&#13;
all-around man, Doug works side horse,&#13;
free exercise, high bar, rings, parallel&#13;
bars, and vaulting. His strongest event is&#13;
high bar, where he must be considered for&#13;
national honors. Doug's goal in gymnastics&#13;
is to represent the United States in&#13;
international competition.&#13;
Doug's major fields are Biological&#13;
Science and Music. His music background&#13;
is equally as impressive as his gymnastics,&#13;
having been awarded All-State&#13;
honors as a baritone vocalist. His other&#13;
areas of interest are sailing and snow&#13;
skiing.&#13;
Rick Ltmd and Ch~ck Dettman, Parkside' s t~o representative~ on the District 14&#13;
NAIA All-Star team, are shown leading the pack agamst WSU-Plattevdle.&#13;
Tw peat per- named to the top 10 for their ou~&#13;
WHITEWATER - 0 . re ou of yearling record.&#13;
formers and an outedstatnhedinNgAIAgrnf trict AI Russell, a junior from Platteville _. freshmen runners pac th t f th p· hi - d f the 1970 Season The e op runner or e 10neers t s -- 14 All-Star squa or · l ted f th d · -- . · f 10 tmners was was se ec or e secon str8Jgbt ~&#13;
team, consb 1st~ 0 te fr the District along with Mark Delaney, a j1D1ior ~ selected Y e vo O Whitewater and the Warhawks' lllllllbw&#13;
coaches th' · d Ch ck D ttman two two runner 1s season. Rick Lund an u e. ' Seven freshmen, the largest group&#13;
Parkside freshmen from Marmette, were selected to an NAIA District 14 team evw&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Dec. 17-19: Rangers at Quantico,&#13;
Virginia, for Quantico Tournament.&#13;
&#13;
Dec. 23: Southern IllinoisEdwardsville,&#13;
8:00, St. Joseph's,&#13;
Kenosha. Dec. 30-31: Corn Palace Tournament,&#13;
Mitchell, South Dakota,&#13;
. WSU-LaCrosse, Dakota Wesleyan,&#13;
Northwestern College.&#13;
Jan. 6: Milton College (Home) 8:00,&#13;
Union Grove High School.&#13;
Jan. 9: Lakehead University&#13;
(Ontario), Home, 8:00, Case High&#13;
School.&#13;
Jan. 12 : Northeastern Illinois&#13;
(Home), 8:00, St. Joseph's.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Jan. 8: University of Missouri,&#13;
Kansas City, Milwaukee Tech.&#13;
(Home), John Bullen Junior High.&#13;
Jan. 16: Air Force Academy., UWMadison&#13;
and Ohio State at&#13;
Madison.&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
Dec. 17: UW-Milwaukee at&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Dec. 29-30: Midlands Tournament&#13;
at LaGrange, Illinois.&#13;
Jan. 9: Beloit College (Home), John&#13;
Bullen Junior High.&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
Jan. 9: Wisconsin State U-Stevens&#13;
Point, 3:00&#13;
TRACK&#13;
Jan. 2: Indiana State at Terre&#13;
Haute.&#13;
..... voted as top performers, along with 1&#13;
sophomore. Heading the freshman il'lllt was Jim Drews, the LaCrosse top l'lllllllr&#13;
who had eight wins and a fourth place&#13;
finish in nine meets.&#13;
Carthage, always a dominate force ii&#13;
cross country, paced two first year men•&#13;
the squad - Mark Reisweber and Joe&#13;
McGhee. McGhee finished third in the&#13;
CCTW meet after winning three dlll!&#13;
meets, getting three second place finishfs&#13;
also for the unheated Redmen. Reisweber was fifth in the CCTW meet as he woo fcudual&#13;
meets and was second in two others.&#13;
Rounding out the team were: Joe&#13;
Schnepf, a freshman from Whitewater and&#13;
the Hawks' top runner; Gary Yanke, a&#13;
freshman from Platteville and Ille&#13;
Pioneers' second man; Chuck Dettman, 1&#13;
freshman from UW-Parkside who had four&#13;
wins and a third place in five meets; Rkt&#13;
Lund, another freshman from UW·&#13;
Parkside who had three wins and a pair al&#13;
second place finishes; and sophomore Pal&#13;
Stemper of Platteville, with a second and&#13;
five thirds for the Pioneers.&#13;
There were seven runners on Ille&#13;
Honorable Mention list. They were: Gar,&#13;
Sumner a freshman from River Falla,&#13;
John St~ola, a sophomore from Superkr.&#13;
Doug :Qrefezynski, a freshman fl"CIII&#13;
Oshkosh; Harry Pennington, a sophomort&#13;
from Carthage; John Carlson, a freshmll&#13;
from Lacrosse; John Wilke, a sophomore&#13;
from Lakeland; and Bill Fojtik, a (relllman&#13;
from Eau Claire.&#13;
In all there were 26 runners from lilt&#13;
District' teams nominated for the All.:&#13;
team. Drews was the only runner P1&#13;
on every ballot as the nwnber one !11111«&#13;
Coaches did not vote for their own !'lllner1&#13;
in the balloting.&#13;
Word Is Out! Here It Is!&#13;
By C. ROBERT PAUL, JR.&#13;
Director of Public Information&#13;
The Sports Year 1970 was NOT a vintage&#13;
year for the United States in amateur&#13;
sports in the Olympic Games, internationally&#13;
speaking.&#13;
Two developments worth mentioning&#13;
are: The success of the young basketball&#13;
team which won 10 out of 13 as the U.S.&#13;
Olympic Training Squad toured eastern&#13;
Europe after three weeks of practice in&#13;
Colorado. Tom McMillen, currently a&#13;
freshman at the University of Maryland,&#13;
showed that he may be a strong candidate&#13;
for both the urn USA Pan-American Team&#13;
and the 1972 Olympic Team.&#13;
The comeback of the USA in ice hockey.&#13;
Relegated to Group B after a disastrous&#13;
196~ tournament, a revamped USA&#13;
Nati?~al team swept to victory, and&#13;
quahf1ed for the 1972 Olympic Games. At&#13;
the present time, this augmented Natiotial&#13;
~m, actu~ly an Olympic training squad,&#13;
lS 1~ !he midst of a backbreaking 51-game&#13;
tra1mng schedule prior to the Group A ice&#13;
hockey championships in Switzerland.&#13;
In the world wrestling championships at&#13;
Edmonton, Alberta, the USA continued to&#13;
hold its own in world wrestling by placing&#13;
second to the Soviet Union in the free-style&#13;
competition as Wayne Wells became a&#13;
. visil,Ggold&#13;
medalist in the 163-po~nd di we!'&#13;
Our other three medal wmners .:i.« . toff :,u•- Oly.mpic veteran Larry Kris . • ~&#13;
medal, 220 pounds; 1968 Olympic ca. and&#13;
Bobby Douglas, bronze, 149-5 ~·&#13;
Mike Young, bronze, 136.5 poWl ·&#13;
Team Sports id be)Ck~&#13;
In the team sports of soccer, fie ,51 lbe&#13;
and volleyball (men's and wom~udl i,r&#13;
future of the USA could pre~ty GaJlll!'-&#13;
deterinined by the Pan-Amencanot orJY ii&#13;
So far as soccer is conc~e&lt;\~ed ,nt&#13;
the "Olympic" team invo in tJlf&#13;
preliminary qua~ifyi!1g gam;t 8150 tilt&#13;
Olympic competition m lg,l, USA ID 11'&#13;
same teBJll will represent the l)eell • tcllC&#13;
Pan-Ainerican Games. It has ll in eitbl&#13;
time since the USA has done we&#13;
competition. in the Pf'&#13;
Much depends on succ~ yt&gt;all u,Jllf&#13;
American Games for the v~ efteld h~&#13;
(men's and women's) and e will at c)i&#13;
team. It is mandatory that tr J Of~&#13;
if they expect to play at M:th gold~~&#13;
the volleyball teams won the field IW-"~.&#13;
at Winnipeg in 1967 and da for the~&#13;
team edged ou~ host &lt;;;1J ever won bY~&#13;
medal - the first m f' Id boekeY&#13;
USA in international ie&#13;
petition. &#13;
potlight on 8ig&#13;
One of the most exciting hasketball&#13;
yers in Wisconsin collegiate circles is a&#13;
3" senior from Marshall High School in&#13;
·cago.&#13;
Eli Slaughter, or the "E" as Ranger fans&#13;
him, has been a big gun since his&#13;
etball dehut at Parkside.&#13;
Slaughter is one of the junior college&#13;
ansfers that has made Parkside&#13;
etball fortunes go.&#13;
After a so-so career at Marshall, Eli&#13;
e a sudden star at Wright J.C. He&#13;
An earlJl scuffle resulting in the loss of a&#13;
player and a late rally by Purdue&#13;
Ortb Central were overcome by UWrkside&#13;
in posting their first season&#13;
*tory 7~ Friday, Dec. 4.&#13;
After opening the game with a flurry and&#13;
ing up a strong half-time lead of 43-29,&#13;
second half pumping almost turned&#13;
disaster as Purdue closed the gap to&#13;
o points with less than a .minute&#13;
ining.&#13;
With five minutes gone, a "misunderstanding"&#13;
between Parkside's Eli&#13;
ugIIter and Hoot Craig Salik of Purdue&#13;
Best of Year&#13;
Parkside's Volleyball Club played some&#13;
o! its best volley hall of the year hefore&#13;
Ioeing in sudden death to place second in&#13;
the Volleyball Tournament won hy UWMilwaukee&#13;
held during the Sportsfest.&#13;
The Rangers opened the four-team&#13;
lAlurnament by scraping past UW-Green&#13;
Bay 16-14; 15-12; and 1hen bowing 7-15.&#13;
Second round opponent, Milwaukee,&#13;
furnished the Rangers an opportunity to&#13;
play their best volleyball of the tourney.&#13;
Parkside edged the Congars 15-13 in the&#13;
final game helore faltering in the second&#13;
14-16.Parkside rallied to capture the third&#13;
game 15-11.&#13;
Millon College furnished little opJIOOition,losing&#13;
15-2, 15-1and 15-6. At this&#13;
stage Parkside's record was 7-2, and&#13;
Milwaukee was playing Green Bay. If&#13;
.. ther learn would win two games, then&#13;
Parkside would he the winner, hut this&#13;
-asn't the case as Milwaukee won all&#13;
Ihree games, forCing the tournament into&#13;
Sudden death.&#13;
Because of a lime factor, the play-off&#13;
Was set at one game instead of best two out&#13;
of Ihree. The cold Rangers got a 2-1 lead&#13;
but thia was the best they could do and&#13;
MiJ-waukeeromped to a 15-6 win.&#13;
became the team's leading scorer both&#13;
years and was named to the second team&#13;
J.C. All-American cage squad.&#13;
Slaughter took right off last year with a&#13;
24 point average. In the squad's first three&#13;
games this year he has had 32 and TI points&#13;
plus a two pointer when he was ejected&#13;
from a game in its early stages for&#13;
fighting.&#13;
Eli is a great scorer with a soft, fade.&#13;
away jumper that usually hits the target if&#13;
he is in the 111-20foot range.&#13;
Whlte&#13;
Slaughter&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Madsen&#13;
Hogan&#13;
Perrine&#13;
Rick&#13;
Mann&#13;
Gonsorek&#13;
Hart&#13;
Pizarek&#13;
Swanson&#13;
Haynes&#13;
salik&#13;
Janzaruk&#13;
Parkside&#13;
PurdueNC&#13;
1IH4&#13;
0-0&#13;
0-0&#13;
IH&#13;
8-9&#13;
2-5&#13;
4-7&#13;
3-5 5&#13;
6-9 3&#13;
1-3 4&#13;
0-1 1&#13;
3-3 3&#13;
2-3 4&#13;
3-3 4&#13;
0-1 2&#13;
31 - 74&#13;
39-68&#13;
Ski Rangers: Plans Include&#13;
Winter Carnival Events&#13;
The Ski Rangers are in the preliminary&#13;
stages of planning a "Winter Carnival"&#13;
series of events. The events are scheduled&#13;
tentatively from February 17-20.&#13;
Planning committees are working on a&#13;
theme, name and schedule of events.&#13;
According to Ski Ranger President Jim&#13;
DeBerge, events that are being discussed&#13;
are: Ice Carving, Ski Racing, Cross&#13;
Country Skiing, Sled Racing, Broomball&#13;
Tournaments for men and women, Saow&#13;
Shoe Races, Hockey and a drop by sky&#13;
divers.&#13;
Held in conjunction with this snow spree&#13;
would he a breakfast, dances, basketball&#13;
New Advisor&#13;
For Girls&#13;
HI was born and raised in North Dakota,&#13;
and I'm proud of it!" she says with a&#13;
smile. Doreen Kristjanson is the new,&#13;
advisor for Parkside's Cheerleaders and&#13;
Rangeretles. She is a 1969graduate of the&#13;
University of North Dakota and is in her&#13;
second year of teaching home economics&#13;
at Racine Park High School.&#13;
Doreen was a cheerleader aU four years&#13;
at Grand Forks Central High School in&#13;
Grand Forks, North Dakota. At the&#13;
University of North Dakota she was a&#13;
member of Phi Upsilon Omicron, an&#13;
honorary home economics fraternity. Last&#13;
August she traveled to Mexico with a&#13;
friend and went to Yucatan. She also is the&#13;
advisor to Parkside's Porn-Porn girls.&#13;
Though one can easily see she has little&#13;
spare time, she usually spends it sewing,&#13;
swimming crocheting or bowling. She&#13;
says her f~vorites are men and parties.&#13;
Her first impression of Parkside was&#13;
that she was disappointed to see that it was&#13;
so hard to get kids involved here&#13;
At the next balf lime of a hasketball&#13;
game, Jook for the record player. The&#13;
young lady standing there with the long,&#13;
light brown hair and blue eyes is Doreen.&#13;
Editor's Note: Due to the background of&#13;
some of our coaching staff, I was asked to&#13;
'lay that "North Dakota is the second best&#13;
state in the country, next to South&#13;
Dakota' ..&#13;
game, and the crowning of • Snow Queen.&#13;
This type of event will take much&#13;
planning and the cooperation of studen18&#13;
and faculty alike. Espec:ially important&#13;
will be the participatioo of all clubs 00&#13;
campus.&#13;
Each event will have a chairman and&#13;
committee that is responsible for the&#13;
promotion of the event.&#13;
More will be published in the next issue&#13;
of Newscope.&#13;
Miss Kristjanson&#13;
Godrey Speaks&#13;
Cross Country Coach Vic Godfrey spoke&#13;
at Proviso West's cross country banquet&#13;
last Friday night. Proviso West IS located&#13;
in Hillside, Illinois, and has long been&#13;
famous for tile quality of Its distance&#13;
nmners.&#13;
This Friday, Godfrey will he speaking In&#13;
Toledo, Ohio, at the banquet honoring the&#13;
Ohio Stale Cross Country Champions,&#13;
DeVilbiss High School of Toledo.&#13;
Spotlight on Jeff Jenkins&#13;
Jeff Jenkins has Coach Koch smiling&#13;
when he goes out to meet his opponents in a&#13;
wrestling match,&#13;
Jeff is a sophomore from Bradford HIgh&#13;
School who, according to Koch, may just&#13;
he coming of age. Jeff had an unimpressive&#13;
4-4 record last year, but he did&#13;
win a match at the NAJA National Tournament.&#13;
Koch is quick to point out that this is a&#13;
new season and Jeff Jenkins has asserted&#13;
himself as a mainstay on the team. "Jeff is&#13;
probably the most exciting wrestler to&#13;
watch on the team due to his unorthodox&#13;
style and his variety of moves. He moves&#13;
like butler on a hot knife."&#13;
In Jeffs first two matches, he lived up to&#13;
his coach's kind remarks by decisioning&#13;
his opponents 21·11 and IH. During the&#13;
remainder of the season, the 150-poWlder's&#13;
courage will he put to the test many limes.&#13;
At this weight class, the opponents usually&#13;
seem to have ahout their best wrestler&#13;
also.&#13;
o&#13;
4 Ranger Wrestlers to Meet UW-M&#13;
2&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
In what could prove to be a very interesting&#13;
afternoon of wrestling, the&#13;
Parkside wrestlers meet the uwMilwaukee&#13;
wrestling team on Thursday,&#13;
December 17, at 1:30. The match, which&#13;
was originally scheduled for Parkside,&#13;
Rangers Post first Victory&#13;
resulted in Slaughter's ejection with only&#13;
two points scored hy the Ranger ace.&#13;
Stan White took over the rebounding&#13;
reins for Parkside, leading both teams&#13;
with 12 pick offs. It was White, in the&#13;
second half, who battled Purdue back from&#13;
a rush that brought the score to 56-52.&#13;
Hitting on jumpers and drives and&#13;
counting a few chairty tosses, White hit&#13;
seven straight to give the Rangers some&#13;
breathing room. .&#13;
Purdue, not giving in easily, drilled on&#13;
and with 2 :45 remaining, trailed only 67-63.&#13;
White again clicked a jwnper to make it&#13;
69-63. Purdue out-gunned the Rangers 5-1&#13;
to tighten the score with forty seconds&#13;
remaining at 70-68.&#13;
A missed bonus situation by Purdue cost&#13;
them a chance at a tie and with only 30&#13;
seconds remaining a similar opportunity&#13;
was missed by Parkside's Ken Rick.&#13;
Another bonus play was converted with&#13;
just a few seconds remaining by Rick to&#13;
put the game away.&#13;
Parkside hit 43 per cent for the evening&#13;
after a hot SO per cent first half. Purdue&#13;
shot a respectahle48 per cent for the night.&#13;
Jim Hogan topped all scorers for Parkside&#13;
with 26 points, followed by White with 24.&#13;
Parkalde-74&#13;
7&#13;
1&#13;
o&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
Purdue NC-68&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
5&#13;
1&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
43&#13;
29&#13;
JOGGING&#13;
Faculty or Staff members and&#13;
their spouses who are interested in a&#13;
morning jobbing program should&#13;
contact Vic Godfrey at the Office of L Athletics, Ext. 245, this week.&#13;
was rescheduled for Milwaukee to coincide&#13;
with their winter homecoming activities.&#13;
Between the Mat Maids and the newly&#13;
organized Mat Rats, which is a male group&#13;
of wresUing boosters, the Rangers may&#13;
well feel that they are wresUing in front of&#13;
a home crowd anyway.&#13;
The line-up for the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
match should he as follows: 188 Hugh&#13;
Gately, t26 Steve Lamont, 134 Ken Marlin,&#13;
142 Gary Vincent, ISO Jeff Jenkins, 158&#13;
Tony Kolnik, 167 Bill Benkstein, 177Tom'&#13;
Beyer, 190Paul Paricka, and heavyweight&#13;
Mark Barnhill.&#13;
Parkside has never defeated Milwaukee&#13;
in wrestling.&#13;
Spotlight on Big&#13;
One of the most exciting basketball&#13;
players in Wisconsin collegiate circles is a&#13;
6'3" senior from Marshall High School in&#13;
Oticago.&#13;
Eli Slaughter, or the "E" as Ranger fans&#13;
call him, has been a big gun since his&#13;
basketball debut at Parkside.&#13;
Slaughter is one of the junior college&#13;
transfers that has made Parkside&#13;
basketball fortunes go.&#13;
After a so-so career at Marshall, Eli&#13;
became a sudden star at Wright J.C. He&#13;
"E"&#13;
became the team's leading scorer both&#13;
years and was named to the second team&#13;
J.C. All-American cage squad.&#13;
Slaughter took right off last year with a&#13;
24 point average. In the squad's first three&#13;
games this year he has had 32 and '1:1 points&#13;
plus a two pointer when he was ejected&#13;
from a game in its early stages for&#13;
fighting.&#13;
Eli is a great scorer with a soft, fad~&#13;
away jumper that usually hits the target if&#13;
he is in the 10-20 foot range.&#13;
Rangers Post First Victory&#13;
An earl.)r scuffle resulting in the loss of a&#13;
star player and a late rally by Purdue&#13;
North Central were overcome by UWParkside&#13;
in posting their first season&#13;
Victory 74-68 Friday, Dec. 4.&#13;
After opening the game with a flurry and&#13;
running up a strong half-time lead of 43-29,&#13;
cold second half pumping almost turned&#13;
into disaster as Purdue closed the gap to&#13;
two points with less than a · minute&#13;
remaining.&#13;
With five minutes gone, a "misunderstanding"&#13;
between Parkside's Eli&#13;
Slaughter and 7-foot Craig Salik of Purdue&#13;
Best of Year&#13;
Parkside's Volleyball Club played some&#13;
of its best volleyball of the year before&#13;
losing in sudden death to place second in&#13;
the Volleyball Tournament won by UW·&#13;
Milwaukee held during the Sportsfest.&#13;
The Rangers opened the four-team&#13;
lournament by scraping past UW-Green&#13;
Bay 16-14; 15-12; and then bowing 7-15.&#13;
Second round opponent, Milwaukee,&#13;
furnished the Rangers an opportunity to&#13;
play their best volleyball of the tourney.&#13;
Parkside edged the Cougars 15-13 in the&#13;
final game before faltering in the second&#13;
14-16. Parkside rallied to capture the third&#13;
game 15-11.&#13;
Milton College furnished little opllOSition,&#13;
losing 15-2, 15-1 and 15-8. At this&#13;
stage Parkside's record was 7-2, and&#13;
~Waukee was playing Green Bay. If&#13;
either team would win two games, then&#13;
Parkside would be the winner, but this&#13;
wasn't the case as Milwaukee won all&#13;
three games, forcing the tournament into&#13;
Sudden death.&#13;
Because of a time factor, the play-off was set at one game instead of best two out&#13;
of three. The cold Rangers got a 2-1 lead&#13;
~t this was the best they could do and&#13;
Milwaukee romped to a 15-8 win.&#13;
resulted in Slaughter's eiection with only&#13;
two points scored by the Ranger ace.&#13;
Stan White took over the rebounding&#13;
reins for Parkside, leading both teams&#13;
with 12 pick offs. It was White, in the&#13;
second half, who battled Purdue back from&#13;
a rush that brought the score to 56-52.&#13;
Hitting on jumpers and driv~ an~&#13;
counting a few chaii;ty tosses, White hit&#13;
seven straight to give the Rangers some&#13;
breathing room. · Purdue, not giving in easily, drilled on&#13;
and with 2: 45 remaining, trailed only 67~.&#13;
White again clicked a jumper to make it&#13;
6~. Purdue out-gunned the Rangers 5-1&#13;
to tighten the score with forty seconds&#13;
remaining at 70-68.&#13;
A missed bonus situation by Purdue cost&#13;
them a chance at a tie and with only 30&#13;
seconds remaining a similar opportunity&#13;
was missed by Parkside's Ken Rick.&#13;
Another bonus play was converted with&#13;
just a few seconds remaining by Rick to&#13;
put the game away. . Parkside hit 43 per cent for the evening&#13;
after a hot 50 per cent first half. Purdue&#13;
shot a respectable 48 per cent for the night.&#13;
Jim Hogan topped all scorers for Parkside&#13;
with 26 points, followed by White with 24.&#13;
White&#13;
Slaughter&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Madsen&#13;
Hogan&#13;
Perrine&#13;
Rick&#13;
Mann&#13;
Gonsorek&#13;
Hart&#13;
Pizarek&#13;
Swanson&#13;
Haynes&#13;
Salik&#13;
Janzaruk&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Purdue NC&#13;
Parkside - 74&#13;
7&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
Purdue NC-68&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
5&#13;
1&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
43&#13;
29&#13;
10-14&#13;
0-0&#13;
0-0&#13;
0-1&#13;
8-9&#13;
2-5&#13;
4-7&#13;
4&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3-5 5&#13;
6-9 3&#13;
1-3 4&#13;
0-1 1&#13;
3-3 3&#13;
2-3 4&#13;
3-3 4&#13;
0-1 2&#13;
31 - 74&#13;
39 - 68&#13;
Ski Rangers: Plans Include&#13;
Winter Carnival Events&#13;
The Ski Rangers are in the preliminary&#13;
stages of planning a "Winter Carnival"&#13;
series of events. The events are scheduled&#13;
tentatively from February 17-20.&#13;
Planning committees are working on a&#13;
theme, name and schedule of events.&#13;
According to Ski Ranger President Jim&#13;
DeBerge, events that are being discussed&#13;
are: Ice Carving, Ski Racing, Cross&#13;
Country Skiing, Sled Racing, Broomball&#13;
Tournaments for men and women, Snow&#13;
Shoe Races, Hockey and a drop by sky&#13;
divers.&#13;
Held in conjunction with this snow spree&#13;
would be a breakfast, dances, basketball&#13;
New Advisor&#13;
For Girls&#13;
"I was born and raised in North Dakota,&#13;
and I'm proud of it!" she says with a&#13;
smile. Doreen Kristjanson is the new.&#13;
advisor for Parkside's Cheerleaders and&#13;
Rangerettes. She is a 1969 graduate of the&#13;
University of North Dakota and is in her&#13;
second year of teaching home economics&#13;
at Racine Park High School.&#13;
Doreen was a cheerleader all four years&#13;
at Grand Forks Central High School in&#13;
Grand Forks, North Dakota. At the&#13;
University of North Dakota she was a&#13;
member of Phi Upsilon Omicron, an&#13;
honorary home economics fraternity. Last&#13;
August she traveled to texico with a&#13;
friend and went to Yucatan. She also is the&#13;
advisor to Parkside's Porn-Porn girls.&#13;
Though one can easily see she has little&#13;
spare time, she usually spends it sewing.&#13;
swimming, crocheting or bowling. She&#13;
says her favorites are men and parties.&#13;
Her first impression of Parkside was&#13;
that she was disappointed to see that it was&#13;
so hard to get kids involved here&#13;
At the next half time of a basketball&#13;
game, look for the record player. The&#13;
young lady standing there with_ the long,&#13;
light brown hair and blue eyes Doreen.&#13;
Editor's Note: Due to the background of&#13;
some of our coaching staff, I was asked to&#13;
c;;ay that "North Dakota is the second best&#13;
state in the country. next to South&#13;
Dakota' ..&#13;
game, and the crowning of a Sno" Qu&#13;
This type of ev nt will take much&#13;
planning and the cooperation of tuden&#13;
and faculty alike. Especially important&#13;
v.;n be the participation of all clubs on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Each event will have a chairman and&#13;
committee that i respon ible for the&#13;
promotion of the event.&#13;
More will be published in the next i ue&#13;
of Newscope.&#13;
Miss Kristianson&#13;
Godrey Speaks&#13;
Cros Country Coach ic Godfr y pok&#13;
at Proviso West's er country bang t&#13;
last Friday night. Pro,;so W t I located&#13;
in Hillside, Illinoi , and ha Ion been&#13;
famou for the ;iality of 1ts di tancc runner .&#13;
Thi Friday, Godfrey \\111 be _pc kin in&#13;
Toledo, Ohio, at the banquet honorin the&#13;
Ohio State Cr Country Ch mpion .&#13;
DeVilbi High ch I of Toledo.&#13;
Spotlight on Jeff Jenkins&#13;
Jeff Jenkin ha Coach Koch _ miling&#13;
\\'hen he g out tom hi oppon 11t in&#13;
\\TesUing match.&#13;
Jeff i a ophomore from Bradford High&#13;
School who, according to Koch, may ju t&#13;
be coming of age. J ff h d n unimpre&#13;
iv -4 record la t y r, but h did&#13;
win a match at th 'AIA • · Uonal Tour·&#13;
seem&#13;
also.&#13;
Ranger Wrestlers to Meet UW- M&#13;
In what could prove to be a very interesting&#13;
afternoon of wrestling, the&#13;
Parkside wrestlers meet the UWMilwaukee&#13;
wrestling team on Thursday,&#13;
December 17, at 1:30. The match, which&#13;
was originally scheduled for Parkside,&#13;
JOGGING . Faculty or Staff members and&#13;
their spouses who are interested in a&#13;
morning jobbing program should&#13;
contact Vic Godfrey at the Office of L Athletics, Ext. 245, this week.&#13;
was rescheduled for Milwaukee to coincide&#13;
with their winter homecoming activities.&#13;
Between the 1at Maids and the newly&#13;
organized Mat Rats, which is a male group&#13;
of v.Testling boosters, the Rangers may&#13;
well feel that they are wrestling in front of&#13;
a home crowd anyway.&#13;
The lin~up for the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
match should be as follows: 188 Hugh&#13;
Gately, 126 Steve Lamont, 134 Ken Martin,&#13;
142 Gary Vincent, 150 Jeff Jenkins, 158&#13;
Tony Kolnik, 167 Bill Benkstein, rn Tom•&#13;
Beyer, 190 Paul Paricka, and heavyweight&#13;
Mark Barnhill.&#13;
Parkside has never defeated .1ilwaukee&#13;
in \\-Testling. &#13;
A Wrestling Spectacular&#13;
biI two ma"'" Jet\DI ,.ad .. 11&#13;
paiIIb • .kIIID ,.. (1'8dll 11 ....&#13;
... ill _ '" fIM1 DI.' t • •&#13;
I" ' ErIc 0 • I+&amp;:&#13;
AItI6 G.- FlIll ;'1DjInd ill.. baIIl.&#13;
1a; B1DT8IlIMd ~ "::t~&#13;
.... dI 1lIIl&#13;
.... --&#13;
.. 2"' __ .,at-· ....&#13;
_1: '" _edL AItI6 a.a&#13;
...., IS-I, 117 palIIIdIr aDd C8fAID BIll&#13;
P' ' 1II2dI vCJIIII '"&#13;
7:.P , ,._ r·--&#13;
Wi I- IIIIt ,....&#13;
AMI r-==bman• Tom Be1er of&#13;
D WIll&gt; • ---'!be mat&#13;
I.- _ ad2lIII ". .21!tW bJ aut·&#13;
polDtitII JItD Wll2II I51') ~IJ aDd ...&#13;
CIlIIII2Dll beck witII ..... 2 :d.r pID !ba2&#13;
_ ....-It '"•bIp -. A -jdM!d 'l'Gm~-""""._- ."., be&#13;
""*&#13;
ma2 _ ... bllI bIIcl&lt; with&#13;
.:• .- In!bematdl.&#13;
Ex...... ) wellbt Paul Parlc:U sp112for&#13;
!be ."....... II)wiDDIDI. bard foullht 4-2&#13;
dac:IIIiaa _ LareIl WiDlaDla '" Tecb ....&#13;
...... bJ • pID • PaID!'. Jim Notslad in&#13;
.:•.&#13;
A little .... lDupeI'IeDeed Mart Bambill&#13;
made bllI debu2 85 • bea¥)'WeIgb? an excitinllf&#13;
not winDItC aoe. BambiIl at 190&#13;
p.eupll6pounda to Da¥id Tarbell of Tech&#13;
and went down to a 6-2 defeat, Dave&#13;
Garber. a ll00d beavyweigbt from Point,&#13;
put Bambill down for the co... t in .: 10.&#13;
+ + + ,&#13;
MlchIpn Tecb. a wresUIDll leam that&#13;
ParUide defeated durinI Sportafest, went&#13;
OYffCto Cartballe !benext day and woo the&#13;
Carthalle Quadrangle.&#13;
Michigan Tech scored 90 points to 70 for&#13;
Carthalle, North Park was third with 42,&#13;
and AUJ'(lI'alast with 31,&#13;
Publde w, '''*'8 lana wen ~ted to&#13;
a IlaII sr..._ 01 wreat1InI cIuriJlI ....&#13;
.....-I ~ SportaIeoP,&#13;
E." d _ 1102 ....&#13;
R .,. baIdod W t I Tecb wttIt _&#13;
.... _ III8ldl baIon&#13;
............ P' 2nrr-WSVsae._&#13;
Poid.&#13;
PubIda ....... II poIII?a .. eadl_&#13;
.........-*II -1lu'lIJ '"'7.&#13;
P'Inl 01 all lost dI ....&#13;
1. 2 ,.... rrP'&#13;
t,.. c....,... ....&#13;
IItDIL To ..... dim P8lIIIor +. ",&#13;
It T" *"'*Is G.a "" .... ..., Ida&#13;
..... ill ....-'1 01 biI lin?&#13;
mMdl. T_ ..., m IJ poIII?a&#13;
___ R • • II paIiI?&#13;
ben , ., dad : .1lIIl !be&#13;
Poid 1II8ldl- adIIIoo_..,·&#13;
PubIda lost a Dol7 I " ....&#13;
PubIda·. t .... ) .1'.2 Ibtll&#13;
PanIIIID _In a .aIIaDl.ort ..... tlk.&#13;
the P k iII lIDaIe, A Pa' 11 will&#13;
..., ba Ra,..n Ilolh ric-&#13;
....&#13;
At _ l2DM .... Ba ,Ir .......&#13;
the Poid 17-3 baIon ~ Ido&#13;
Frallmaa Kea .... rtla (34) from&#13;
CaImaa • ...-m, led III ..... In&#13;
~ with two piDI. Ha pIDDed Teet cap?8ID GftI Ha__ oa\y 46 -..ado&#13;
nmaiDIaI .... MartID bobIIId. HIs ascoad&#13;
vk:1Im _ PalDt'. Dele Ha*\ewlC1&#13;
AilCI2IIltr Iroo\l, IluIb Gataly of K.-bI&#13;
1ftmpIr. made bllI coIIeIIate deIU • ...-lui _ with • pID over FTaak&#13;
(11_ 01 T_ and a &amp;-2 declaloa OYffC&#13;
Kevin Campbell ill!be 111 pouad daa.&#13;
Jeff JeakinI. a 150 pouad IOJIb from&#13;
Pradt • d, ran up \arII ocona in winDItC&#13;
. Fresluna~ Tom Berer has a pinning combination on Jim Wit1lll Of&#13;
Porn!. Beyer missed the pm, but went on to a wild 15-12 decision.&#13;
Rangers Come Back&#13;
To Win Over Swedes&#13;
By JOHN ANDERSON&#13;
Journ.I·Tlmes Stiff&#13;
A ~rrage of late baskets provided UW·&#13;
Parks"le. WIth a Ihrilling come-from·&#13;
hem.nd VlCtory over. the touring Swedish&#13;
Nahonal team 85-80 in the Case HIgh&#13;
Saturday n!llh!. gym&#13;
The taller Swedes spotted the Ran ers&#13;
the lead for the ftrst 13 mintues and ~en&#13;
took over on torrid shooting by6'S Jorgen&#13;
~n to lead by S at half time, Parkslde&#13;
eg~ed the lead with five minules&#13;
remammgand held on to gain the win&#13;
The t-.ams. played WIder Internatio~1&#13;
rules wh.ch differ from those used 'by U.S.&#13;
::::::' t: free throws are shot on fouls&#13;
shoo . person fouled Is in the act of&#13;
In ting. ,then two shots are awarded. .&#13;
the fmal three minutes of the g&#13;
all fouls give th te . arne.&#13;
either shootmg'~ am fouled the option of&#13;
hoWlds ,"'.0 or 1a1&lt;lng the ball inlea&#13;
. Th~ dl!Clslonmust come from the&#13;
m captain and not the bench&#13;
Another intere . .&#13;
Ifter each sting variation results&#13;
handle th ~aske!. The officials do not&#13;
not toUChethe and the scorinll team may&#13;
called If th hall, Technical fouls are&#13;
ciden!. ey touch the ball even by ac·&#13;
Substitutes enter th buzzer, but notify thee game only on a&#13;
makla a' scorer's Iable by&#13;
then ing&#13;
th rolling ~otlon with their handa,&#13;
rul ey 110. W.th all the chan ..es' th&#13;
es, some thirty f - m e&#13;
controlled the g 0 t,hem. the officials&#13;
argument from ~e~chth a minimum of&#13;
The SWed dI es,&#13;
sound in fWl':am spl.yed a brand of ball&#13;
differed in the enlals and their shooting&#13;
Seldom do the ~t touch they display,&#13;
usinll a hi&amp;h';' ~ve the ball at the basket,&#13;
re than most American&#13;
.. wIa~i pm lleDkItein rldinll Russ Bentley of WSU-Steveas Point. Benkstein went on&#13;
Heavyweipt Mark Barnhill Is Ihown tryinll to tear If I I&#13;
Tarbell, the Michigan Tech heavyweight. T.rbell weighed? the bead of one David&#13;
Tarbell emer&amp;ed the winnffC6-2. m at 285 to Barnhi1l's 190.&#13;
Capt BW Benbtein ~ Rua Bentley of WSU-Stevens Poinl Benkstein went on&#13;
lo 1J,&#13;
I I&#13;
Heavyweight Mark Barnhill la shown trying to tear off the bead of one DaVid&#13;
Tarbell, the Michigan Tech heavywejpt. Tarbell Wei8hed in at 285 to BarnhilJ•s 190&#13;
Tarbell emerged the winner 6-2. ·&#13;
Freshman Tom Beyer has a pinning c~mbination ~n. Jim Willig al&#13;
Point. Beyer missed the pin, but went on to a wlld 15-12 dec1s1on.&#13;
Rangers Come Back&#13;
To Win Over Swedes&#13;
By JOHN ANDERSON&#13;
Journal-Times Staff&#13;
A barrage of late baskets provided UWParkside&#13;
with a thrilling come-frombehind&#13;
Victory over. the touring Swedish ,'iational team 85-80 in the Case High gym&#13;
Saturday night.&#13;
The taller Swedes spotted the Rangers&#13;
the lead for the fll'St 13 mintues and then&#13;
took over on torrid shooting by 6'8 Jorgen&#13;
Hansson to lead by 8 at half time. Parkside&#13;
regained the lead with five minutes&#13;
remaining and held on to gain the. win.&#13;
The teams played under International&#13;
rules which differ from those used by U.S. teams. No free throws are shot on fouls&#13;
unless the person fouled is in the act of&#13;
shooting, then two shots are awarded.&#13;
In the f?3al three minutes of the game,&#13;
all fouls give the team fouled the option of&#13;
either shooting two or taking the ball inbounds.&#13;
The decision must come from the&#13;
team captain and not the bench.&#13;
Another interesting variation results&#13;
after each basket. The officials do not&#13;
handle the ball and the scoring team may&#13;
not touch the ball. Technical fouls are&#13;
~lied if they touch the ball even by accident.&#13;
&#13;
Substitutes enter the game only on a&#13;
buzzer, but notify the scorer's table by&#13;
m~g a rolling motion with their hands,&#13;
then ID they go. With all the changes in the&#13;
rules: some thirty of them, the officials&#13;
controlled the aame with a minimum of&#13;
argument from the benches.&#13;
The _Swedes displayed a brand of ball&#13;
8?'1Dd ID f undamenta1s and their shooting&#13;
differed 10 the Soft touch they display.&#13;
=~m d~ they drive the ball at the basket,&#13;
g a higher arc than most American </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 11, December 3, 1970</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>1970-12-03</text>
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          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="61675">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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