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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, Issue 12</text>
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            <text>Intramurals Started on Both Campuses</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>i&#13;
THE&#13;
r BEAR&#13;
Volume 2 — Number 12&#13;
December 14, 1970 FACTS&#13;
Intramurals Started&#13;
On Both Campuses&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
By MARC HAARBAUER&#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 Alfredson and Phil Limbach&#13;
remained in first place with a 23-5 record.&#13;
In second place, 4% game off the pace, is&#13;
the team of Marc Haarbauer, Dave&#13;
Semrad and Gregg Hansen, with an 18V2-&#13;
914 record. Both teams had bad nights, but&#13;
managed to still win two games and series&#13;
from t heir 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;
TABLE TENNIS&#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;
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, Roorn 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;
Spotlight&#13;
On&#13;
Judy&#13;
Zimmerman&#13;
Eli Slaughter, left, and Stan White, right, are two of Parkside's leading scorers.&#13;
Stan was the leading scorer (28 points) in the Michigan game.&#13;
Competition Tougher&#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;
die first half and spurted to a 45-39 lead at&#13;
intermission. The winners came out of the&#13;
dressing rooms red hot and quickly&#13;
jnounted an 18 point bulge, 75-57, m idway&#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;
Rangers whittled the lead down to 10, 01-&#13;
81, with three minutes to play, but it was&#13;
too late.&#13;
White, continuing his fine play, led both&#13;
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;
19 points and pulled in 11 rebounds.&#13;
Northern handcuffed normally highscoring&#13;
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;
basket, hitting just 3 of 16 shots.&#13;
The L egs of a 5' 4" Blue-Eyed Blonde&#13;
Athletes portray many different images,&#13;
wit very few are the image of a lovely, 5'4"&#13;
Mue eyed blond.&#13;
Judy Zimmerman, an 18 year old freshman&#13;
from West Allis Hale, does much to&#13;
s atter 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;
1 com petition 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;
bhe admits to being a half-miler and&#13;
ter running 1.5 miles and 2 miles all fall&#13;
ne should feel like sprinting the half mile&#13;
urmg the winter and spring track&#13;
seasons.&#13;
®ef?&#13;
re coming to Parkside, Judy had&#13;
ann »u ed quite a reputation for herself&#13;
&lt;mu the Milwaukee Track Club. She has&#13;
a Wisconsin state champion in the 440&#13;
880 as well as capturing the state XC&#13;
utle this past fal^&#13;
L Edition to her state honors she has&#13;
active on the national level. In 1969&#13;
placed third in the 440 at the Junior&#13;
ympic championships in San Diego. Just&#13;
Past summer, Judy placed third in the&#13;
the Junior Nationals in "Bowling&#13;
had t&#13;
n&#13;
'&#13;
Kentuc&#13;
ty- Earlier in the spring she&#13;
Mid tile runner&#13;
"&#13;
uP spot in the Golden&#13;
est championships in Chicago.&#13;
Mn« ° K**™ ago her relay team from the&#13;
Zwaukee Track Club won the spring&#13;
ey relay at the world famous Drake&#13;
wa* ai' Par&#13;
^&#13;
s&#13;
^&#13;
e teammate, Mary Libal,&#13;
Perh 3 member °T t hat team,&#13;
beine S her greatest honor was in&#13;
StatE ^ccted to represent the United&#13;
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;
Lee Palmer, high-leaping 6'4 forward,&#13;
led Northern with 20 points and a gamehigh&#13;
15 rebounds., as the winners&#13;
dominated the boards 61-46.&#13;
With his outburst, white has passed&#13;
Slaughter and is second to Hogan in the&#13;
Ranger scoring derby. 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 26 ( 7), Mike Jackson 17&#13;
(4), 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 St. Joseph&#13;
High School (8 p.m.). The Phoenix of UWGB&#13;
are one of the strongest teams in the&#13;
state and feature Ray Willis, an all-NAIA&#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 St. 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-Parkside (85)&#13;
fg ft pf&#13;
Hogan 5 3 1&#13;
Perrine 10 0&#13;
Rick 260&#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;
Northern Michigan (101)&#13;
fg ft pf&#13;
Conklin 2 0 0&#13;
Friday 8 3 1&#13;
Griffin 9 0 3&#13;
Duehning 4 0 4&#13;
Vaneklasen 5 0 3&#13;
Barber 604&#13;
Inkola 4 2 4&#13;
Palmer 8 4 2&#13;
Totals 46 9 21&#13;
Fencers Defeat&#13;
Two Big 10'ers&#13;
Coach Loren Hein was more than satisfied&#13;
with the results of the Fencing competition&#13;
during Sportsfest weekend.&#13;
Beating the University of Wisconsin 17-3&#13;
and the University of M innesota 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;
Cohen was leading 4-0 be fore Tank began&#13;
his magnificent comeback to win the bout&#13;
5-4.&#13;
Kim Nelson, another promising freshman,&#13;
had a 4-1 r ecord 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;
will have a&#13;
he Christmas&#13;
Parkside besketbailer&#13;
heavy schedule during&#13;
holidays&#13;
They will begin the period with a eight&#13;
team tournament at QuanUco, Virginia.&#13;
They will be in action next at home when&#13;
thes take on the Cougars of Southern&#13;
Illinois at Edwardsvilie&#13;
After a short break for Christmas, the&#13;
Hangers will head west where they will&#13;
play in the Corn Palace tournament in&#13;
Mitchell, South Dakota.&#13;
December 17 th e Ranger* will ooen the&#13;
&lt;*ianl&#13;
j* all&#13;
The «&#13;
wtraic&#13;
Maru&#13;
York&#13;
® tour&#13;
New Y&#13;
will ope&#13;
&gt;ent by squaring off&#13;
ork State of Old Westbury&#13;
of that game will meet the&#13;
he North Carolina AlrT vs.&#13;
ege of Poughkeepsie. New&#13;
Other teams in the tournament are&#13;
Alderson-Boarddus College o FfojW.&#13;
West Virginia. Groves City Coege.&#13;
Pennsylvania. Findlay CoUege of Ohio ana&#13;
^^W^rSurnament is a four&#13;
teamaffanr hosted by Dakota Wesleyan, a&#13;
TaTfcidTldll open on Januar&gt; ^ ^&#13;
Wisconsin State UnivertitrLaCr^ss&#13;
while the host Tigers will be meeting&#13;
Northwestern College of Orange City,&#13;
l0Tbe finals mil be P&#13;
u&#13;
^™ N&#13;
^J&#13;
e&#13;
?£i&#13;
Eve. The Rangers will begin the 1971&#13;
season by hosting Milton (January' 6&gt;&#13;
Lake he ad University of Ontario on the 9th&#13;
and Northeastern Illinois on the 12th.&#13;
Cross Country MVP, Coach, Team&#13;
s- ' '&#13;
WHITEWATER — Four freshmen and a&#13;
junior waged a close race for the MVP of&#13;
the 1170 cross country District 14 balloting&#13;
by the District coaches Jim Drews, the&#13;
Handout from LaCrosse. was the clear&#13;
MVP choice but the other four were very&#13;
cloae, Rick Lund of Parkside finished&#13;
fourth in the balloting&#13;
The same was true for the Coach of the&#13;
Year honor, as five coaches were all in the&#13;
running with Bob Ftskum of Whitewater&#13;
the winner Only three votes separated the&#13;
I&#13;
w p&#13;
IS the top team&#13;
rtween Carthage&#13;
icr-up honors as&#13;
edge Parkside&#13;
rornpetition this&#13;
sec&#13;
mei&#13;
the&#13;
rec&lt;&#13;
McGhe&#13;
i shed m&#13;
i 25 30 clocking for this&#13;
ormance and was the&#13;
in his first season at&#13;
&gt;, a freshman at Car&#13;
:ond to Drews as he&#13;
ing over five miles and&#13;
was third In the CCTW meet Schnepf of&#13;
Whitewater was third as he had a 26:33&#13;
mark for his best time as he won eight&#13;
meets Russell of Plattevilk rounded out&#13;
the top five as he won seven meets and had&#13;
a third place finish with his best time at&#13;
r iskum wj given the nod as Coach of&#13;
the Year for his guidance of a young team&#13;
that climbed from fifth to second in the&#13;
WSUC meet and posted a much improvea&#13;
9-3-1 record after falling to 4-10-1 just a&#13;
year ago.&#13;
Tom Vail, the Platteville coach, was&#13;
rnd. while Jon Swift, the Carthage&#13;
tor was third. Warren Kinzel of River&#13;
Falls was fourth while Vic Godfrey of UWParkside&#13;
was fifth. Only three votes&#13;
separated Vail. Swift and Kinzel&#13;
Platteville was a solid pick as Team of&#13;
Year as the Pioneers posted a 12-1&#13;
rd for the season, won the WSUC&#13;
t. was second in the Whitewater Invitational&#13;
meet, third in the Pioneer Invitational,&#13;
and finished in the top 15 teams&#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 CCTW. finished&#13;
sixth in the Platteville Invitational, and&#13;
second 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 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 fourth in a large 12-&#13;
team meet during the season.&#13;
Spotlight on Doug&#13;
the&#13;
; , ' , , r h n c k n e t t m a n , P a r k s i d e ' s t w o r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s o n&#13;
NAIA leading the pack against&#13;
WHITEWATER - Two repeat performers&#13;
and an outstanding poup of&#13;
freshmen runners paeed the NAIA District&#13;
14 All-Star squad for the 1970 season. Th&#13;
team, consisting of 10 runner^ was&#13;
selected by the vote of the District&#13;
C°RidTLund and Chuck Dettman, two&#13;
Parkside freshmen from Marinette, were&#13;
the District 14&#13;
named to the top 10 for their outs&#13;
yearling record.&#13;
A1 Russell, a junior from Plattev&#13;
the top runner for the Pioneers this seasr&#13;
was selected for the second straight veT&#13;
along with Mark Delaney, a junior'&#13;
Whitewater and the Warhawks&#13;
two runner this season.&#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.&#13;
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;
Seven freshmen, the largest group ev&#13;
selected to an NAIA District 14 team, wer»&#13;
voted as top performers, along viith&#13;
sophomore. Heading the freshman grout)&#13;
was Jim Drews, the LaCrosse top ru nner&#13;
who had eight wins and a fourth place&#13;
finish in nine meets.&#13;
Carthage, always a dominate force in&#13;
cross country, paced two first year men or,&#13;
the squad — Mark Reisweber and Jo?&#13;
McGhee. McGhee finished third in the&#13;
CCTW meet after winning three dual&#13;
meets, getting three second place finishes&#13;
also for the unbeated Redmen. Reisweber&#13;
was fifth in the CCTW meet as he won four&#13;
dual 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 the&#13;
Pioneers' second man; Chuck Dettman. a&#13;
freshman from UW-Parkside who had four&#13;
wins and a third place in five meets; R ick&#13;
Lund, another freshman from UWParkside&#13;
who had three wins and a pair 0!&#13;
second place finishes; and sophomore Pa:&#13;
Stemper of Platteville, with a second an d&#13;
five thirds for the Pioneers.&#13;
There were seven runners on the&#13;
Honorable Mention list. They were: Can&#13;
Sumner, a freshman from River Falls;&#13;
John Stodola, a sophomore from Superior;&#13;
Doug Brefezynski, a freshman from&#13;
Oshkosh; Harry Pennington, a sophomore&#13;
from Carthage; John Carlson, a freshmaa&#13;
from LaCrosse; John Wilke, a sophomore&#13;
from Lakeland; and Bill Fojtik, a fre shman&#13;
from Eau Claire.&#13;
In all, there were 26 r unners from t he&#13;
District teams nominated for the AlhSttf&#13;
team. Drews was the only runner p:cW&#13;
on every ballot as the number one runner&#13;
Coaches did not vote for their own r unners&#13;
in the balloting.&#13;
Word Is Out! Here It Is!&#13;
Doug Anderson: Co-Captain&#13;
5' 10" — ISO lbs., Frosh&#13;
Doug comes to Parkside from&#13;
nation's hotbed of high school gymnastics&#13;
- Illinois. His home is in South Holland,&#13;
Illinois, 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;
SKnng.&#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 1971 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;
1969 tournament, a revamped USA&#13;
National team swept to victory, and&#13;
qualified for the 1972 Olympic Games. At&#13;
the present time, this augmented National&#13;
team actually an Olympic training squad,&#13;
is in the midst of a backbreaking 51-game&#13;
training schedule prior to the Group A ice&#13;
hockey championships in Switzerland.&#13;
f wor&#13;
Jd wrestling championships at&#13;
Ectaonton, 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;
gold medalist in the 163-pound&#13;
Our other three medal wj&#13;
nn&#13;
R&#13;
Olympic veteran Larry Kristo ,&#13;
medal, 220 pounds; 1968 Olympi c&#13;
Bobby Douglas, bronze, 149.5 poun&#13;
Mike Young, bronze, 136.5 poun d&#13;
Team Sports&#13;
In the team sports of soccer, ft ^&#13;
and volleyball (men's and women . y&#13;
f u t u r e o f t h e U S A c o u l d pre tt* *&#13;
determined by the Pan-Amen ^ (&#13;
So far as soccer is concerned ^&#13;
the "Olympic" team invol ^&#13;
preliminary qualifying g a)s0 if&#13;
Olympic competition in 197 , ,R 0*&#13;
same team will represem. ^ a&#13;
Pan-American Games. It h ,n e;:i&#13;
time since the USA has don&#13;
competition. _ in&#13;
Much depends on suce* -* ,mei''-&#13;
American Games for the 5 v&#13;
° tic***&#13;
(men's and women's) an ^ at C*J&#13;
team. It is mandatory toat ty of c&lt;&#13;
if they expect to play at Mun ]d n-,entile&#13;
volleyball teams won bom ^&#13;
at Winnipeg in 1967 an&#13;
„ jg f0r thebr&#13;
'&#13;
team edged out host Can won b&gt;&#13;
medal - the first medal * ^&#13;
USA in international "&#13;
e&#13;
petition. &#13;
Spotlight on Big "E ff&#13;
One of the most exciting basketball&#13;
players in Wisconsin collegiate circles is a&#13;
6'3" senior from M arshall High School in&#13;
Chicago.&#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 fortune s go.&#13;
' After a so-so career at Marshall, Eli&#13;
me a sudden star at Wright J.C. He&#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 27 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, fadeaway&#13;
jumper that usually hits the target if&#13;
he is in the 10-20 foot range.&#13;
Rangers P ost First Victory&#13;
star T scu&#13;
^&#13;
e resulting in the loss of a&#13;
North r " and 3 *&#13;
ate raUy Purdue&#13;
Park • ,&#13;
tral wer&#13;
e overcome by UWvjp.J&#13;
® in Posting their first season&#13;
W'ory 74-68 Friday, Dec. 4.&#13;
runni!,&#13;
r op enin§ the game with a flurry and&#13;
cold TP&#13;
?&#13;
strong ha&#13;
lt-time lead of 43-29,&#13;
mt0 f)iQ half pumping almost turned&#13;
iwo as ^ardue closed the gap to&#13;
remaSg ^ leSS than a minute&#13;
deijT ,,&#13;
minut&#13;
es gone, a "misunS!aUit&#13;
»&#13;
ng&#13;
' between Parkside's Eli&#13;
r and 7"toot Craig Salik of Purdue&#13;
^st of Year&#13;
°1 its b ^t&#13;
S X°lleybaH ^l&#13;
ub Played some&#13;
i0sing in snH^&#13;
e^&#13;
baH °t the year before&#13;
IJle Volievh n ^ th to place second in&#13;
,/&#13;
ournament won by UWThe&#13;
Rana during the Sportsfest.&#13;
^anient h opene&lt;&#13;
l the four-team&#13;
16-i4. K io&#13;
SCraP&#13;
ing P&#13;
ast UW-Green&#13;
f ^ ^d' rounH 30(1 then b&#13;
°wing 7-15.&#13;
;&#13;
rnished tb?o °PPonent, Milwaukee,&#13;
their tlr&#13;
an&#13;
.f&#13;
ers ^ opportunity to&#13;
,"e 15-u B,ucu 10 capture the third&#13;
cm,&#13;
?&#13;
siti&#13;
°n, losino&#13;
e?Be furnished little opM&#13;
?&#13;
e Parksirim ' 154 and 15&#13;
-8- At this S Waukee w?s&#13;
Sn,&#13;
reCOrd was 7&#13;
"&#13;
2&#13;
' and&#13;
fr.team wiiS ymg Green BayIf&#13;
&#13;
w,&#13;
ks&#13;
'de woul.&#13;
d Win two games, then&#13;
&gt;'t the cae tbe winner, but this&#13;
sw? parties &lt;1 3S Mi&#13;
lwaukee won all&#13;
^ death. 108 the tournament into&#13;
one gam"1® factor&gt; the play-off&#13;
C,?*- coidp&#13;
nStead 0f best two out&#13;
Mii^s was th! k gers Sot a 2-1 lead&#13;
they could do and&#13;
rofnped to a 15-8 win.&#13;
resulted in Slaughter's ejection 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 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 jumper to make it&#13;
69-63. P urdue 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 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;
Parkside — 74&#13;
White 7 ld44 4&#13;
Slaughter J 2&#13;
Jackson !!"? =&#13;
Madsen 3 0-&#13;
Hogan I 2-5 3 Perrme 3 2*&#13;
Rick 2 4&#13;
"&#13;
7 2&#13;
Purdue NC — 68&#13;
ssu ; s »&#13;
r 3&#13;
Swanson o 2 3 4&#13;
Haynes 2 Xl 4&#13;
Salik 2 ^ ;&#13;
Janzaruk 2 __&#13;
Parkside 43 2&#13;
q&#13;
Purdue NC 29 39 - 68&#13;
Ski R angers: Plans Include&#13;
Winter Carnival E vents&#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 Mexico with a&#13;
friend and went to Yucatan. She also is the&#13;
advisor to Parkside's Pom-Pom 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 is Doreen.&#13;
Editor's Note: Due to the background of&#13;
some of our coaching staff, I was asked to&#13;
say that "North Dakota is the second best&#13;
state in the country, next to South&#13;
Dakota'..&#13;
game, and the crowning of a Snow Queen.&#13;
This type of event will take much&#13;
planning and the cooperation of students&#13;
and faculty alike. Especially important&#13;
will be the participation of all clubs on&#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 the quality of its distance&#13;
runners.&#13;
This Friday, Godfrey will be speaking in&#13;
Toledo, Ohio, at the banquet honoring the&#13;
Ohio State 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;
be coming of age. Jeff had an unimpressive&#13;
4-4 r ecord last year, but he did&#13;
win a match at the NAIA National Tournament.&#13;
&#13;
Koch is quick to point out that this is a&#13;
new season and Jeff Jenkins has assertedhimself&#13;
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 butter on a hot knife."&#13;
In Jeff's first two matches, he lived up to&#13;
his coach's kind remarks by decisioning&#13;
his opponents 21-11 and 14-6. During the&#13;
remainder of the season, the 150-pounder's&#13;
courage will be put to the test many times.&#13;
At this weight class, the opponents usually&#13;
seem to have about their best wrestler&#13;
also.&#13;
Ranger Wrestlers to Meet U W-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&#13;
L&#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&#13;
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 wrestling boosters, the Rangers may&#13;
well feel that they are wrestling in front of&#13;
a home crowd anyway.&#13;
The line-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, 177 Tom*&#13;
Beyer, 190 Paul Paricka, and heavyweight&#13;
Mark Barnhill.&#13;
Parkside has never defeated Milwaukee&#13;
in wrestling. &#13;
A Wrestling Spectacular&#13;
Parkside wrestling fans were treated to&#13;
a full afternoon of wrestling during the&#13;
second annual Sportsfest.&#13;
Excitement was not lacking as the&#13;
Rangers handled Michigan Tech with east&#13;
and went down to the last match before&#13;
bowing to the Pointers from WSU-Stevens&#13;
Point.&#13;
Parkside gave up 10 points to each team&#13;
before the match was hardly under way.&#13;
First of a ll they lost 126 pounder, Steve&#13;
Lamont, when the junior transfer from&#13;
Richland Center couldn't make the weight&#13;
limit. To further dim Ranger chances,&#13;
sophomore rookie Gene Fix dislocated his&#13;
elbow in the early seconds of his first&#13;
match.&#13;
Michigan Tech only managed 13 points&#13;
against 29 for the Rangers so the 10 point&#13;
handicap didn't affect the outcome, but the&#13;
Stevens Point match was a different story.&#13;
Parkside lost a 23-17 decision when&#13;
Parkside's lightweight heavyweight Mark&#13;
Barnhill lost in a valiant effort to overtake&#13;
the Pointers in the finale. A Parkside win&#13;
would have given the Rangers both victories.&#13;
&#13;
At one time the Rangers were leading&#13;
the Point 17-3 before the forfeits came into&#13;
view.&#13;
Freshman Ken Martin (134) from&#13;
Colman, Wisconsin, led all Rangers in&#13;
scoring with two pins. He pinned Tech&#13;
captain Greg Hauser with only 45 seconds&#13;
remaining and Martin behind. His second&#13;
victim was Point's Dale Hedkiewicz.&#13;
Another frosh, Hugh Gately of Kenosha&#13;
Tremper, made his collegiate debut a&#13;
successful one with a pin over Frank&#13;
Oliver of Tech and a 8-2 decision over&#13;
Kevin Campbell in the 118 pound class.&#13;
Jeff Jenkins, a 150 pound soph from&#13;
Bradford, ran up large scores in winning&#13;
his two matches. Jenkins racked up 21&#13;
points to John Lindsay's (Tech) 11 and&#13;
then in one of the final matches he&#13;
decisioned Eric Opperman 14-6.&#13;
After Gene Fox was injured in his bout,&#13;
142 pounder Bill Tabbert subbed for Fox in&#13;
the 158 pound class but the weight differential&#13;
was too great and he succumbed&#13;
with 1:30 gone in the match.&#13;
After handing Stevens Point's Russ&#13;
Bentley 12-2,167 pounder and captain Bill&#13;
Benkstein pinned a tough Mitch Vogeli in&#13;
7:35. Benkstein was the Rangers' leading&#13;
wrestler last year.&#13;
Another freshman, Tom Beyer of&#13;
Dodgeville, Wisconsin, showed the mat&#13;
fans some exciting wrestling by outpointing&#13;
Jim Wittig (SP) 15-12 and then&#13;
coming back with a spectacular pan t hat&#13;
was the result of a hip toss. A surprised&#13;
Tom Hanstreet was shown a new move&#13;
when he took mat burns on his back with&#13;
4:30 gone in the match.&#13;
Ex-heavyweight Paul Paricka split for&#13;
the afternoon by winning a hard fought 4-2&#13;
decision over Loren Williams of Tech and&#13;
losing by a pin to Point's Jim Notstad in&#13;
6:40.&#13;
A little and inexperienced Mark Barnhill&#13;
made his debut as a heavyweight an exciting&#13;
if not winning one. Barnhill at 190&#13;
gave up 95 pounds to David Tarbell of Tech&#13;
and went down to a 6-2 defeat. Dave&#13;
Garber, a good heavyweight from Point,&#13;
put Barnhill down for the count in 4:10.&#13;
+ -f + T&#13;
Michigan Tech, a wrestling team that&#13;
Parkside defeated during Sportsfest, went&#13;
over to Carthage the next day and won the&#13;
Carthage Quadrangle.&#13;
Michigan Tech scored 90 points to 70 for&#13;
Carthage. North Park was third with 42,&#13;
and Aurora last with 31.&#13;
Sophomore Jeff Jenkins is shown rolling into a predicament on&#13;
the Pointers. Jenkins decisioned Opperman 14-6. Eric Oppemani&#13;
Freshman Ken Martin is shown pinning the Michigan Tech captain, Greg Hauser.&#13;
This was one of two pins Martin pulled off during the afternoon.&#13;
Freshman Tom Beyer has a pinning combination on Jim Witlig of WSU-Stevens&#13;
Point. Beyer missed the pin, but went on to a wild 15-12 decision.&#13;
Rangers C ome Back&#13;
To W in Over Swedes&#13;
Capt. Bill Benkstein riding Russ Bentley of WSU-Stevens Point. Benkstein went on&#13;
to win 12-2.&#13;
Heavyweight Mark Barnhill is shown trying to tear nff tho j&#13;
Tarbell, the Michigan Tech heavyweight. Tarbell weighed in at 2fts •« r °U® David&#13;
Tarbell emerged the winner 6-2. ^ ,n at 285 to Chill's 190.&#13;
By JOHN ANDERSON&#13;
Journal-Times Staff&#13;
A barrage of late baskets provided UWParkside&#13;
with a thrilling come-frombehmd&#13;
victory over , the touring Swedish&#13;
National team 85-80 in the Case High gym&#13;
Saturday night.&#13;
The taller Swedes spotted the Rangers&#13;
the lead for the first 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.&#13;
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 final three minutes of the game,&#13;
all fouls give the team fouled the option of&#13;
hlnnL -^'T ?&#13;
W° °&#13;
r taki&#13;
"8 ba&#13;
" i&gt;&gt;-&#13;
bounds. The decision must come from the&#13;
team captain and not the bench.&#13;
Another interesting variation results&#13;
^ 6?u basket 1116 officials do not&#13;
handle the ball and the scoring team may&#13;
no touch the ba ll. Te chnical fo ulsare&#13;
cajted a they touch the ball even by ac-&#13;
^ Substitutes e&#13;
"'er the game only on a&#13;
buzzer, but notify the scorer's table by&#13;
making a rolling motion with their hands&#13;
then in they go. With all the changes in the&#13;
rules, some thirty of them, the officials&#13;
controlled the game with a minimum of&#13;
argument from the benches.&#13;
The Swedes displayed a brand of ball&#13;
sound in fundamentals and their shooting&#13;
*2E"l.&#13;
ln&#13;
J&#13;
he M touch they display&#13;
S nH' hirt* driVG ^ baU at the basket&#13;
' using a higher arc than most American&#13;
teams. Only under the boards do they give&#13;
ground. As their coach Arne Jansson&#13;
explained, In Europe any body contact is&#13;
rewarded with a foul call, forcing th eir&#13;
teams to give ground inside, especially on&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
Parkside opened the game with a flu^&#13;
and quickly ran up a 12-6 lead, Stan White&#13;
and Eli Slaughter providing the pwc •&#13;
Jorgen Hansson and Anders Grenl1&#13;
!?&#13;
provided the early scoring efforts for&#13;
Swedes&#13;
Opening the final half the Swedes gaineji&#13;
a 10 point lead on a jumper by H J° •&#13;
Parkside started cutting into the&#13;
scoring two to each shot by the Nationals,&#13;
and narrowed the gap to 54-58 w&#13;
minutes left. Slaughter and Jim ** B&#13;
combined from the lane to narrow tn B&#13;
to 64-63. Hansson and Bo Liindrn&#13;
returned the fire to gain the edge ot&#13;
Slaughter scored on a steal by &amp; 'e&#13;
who was all over the floor badger11ob&#13;
taller Swedes, and the score rea&#13;
With 5:30 remaining Slaughter hit fr&#13;
line to make it 73-73 Pa rkside. but&#13;
Per-Olof Levert nailed a tip-_ t&#13;
Parkside regained the lead on a jw&#13;
by Hogan. White and Slaughter eac one&#13;
a 79-74 Parkside lead. Rannelid par* 6&#13;
for the Swedes to cut the lead by&#13;
White and Slaughter sandwiched a ^&#13;
Rannelid to maintain a five point g&#13;
78. Hjort scored on a pair of charity&#13;
for the Swedes to make it 83-80. on&#13;
The Rangers then had several opu ^&#13;
fouls and took the ball out of bou n ^&#13;
time until the final five seconds&#13;
Rick chose to shoot the foul sh®f' re.&#13;
both of them for the final 85-80 </text>
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              <text>The Bear Facts, Volume 2, Issue 12, December 14, 1970</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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