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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 1, issue 3</text>
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            <text>How many $ needed to run Parkside</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>The. University of \\'iscol'61n.&#13;
Parkslde Activities Board has&#13;
annou~ed the appearance of the&#13;
St. Louis Jazz Quartet in concert&#13;
at 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 14,10 the&#13;
Bradford High chool&#13;
auditorium.&#13;
The Quartet has been billed a&#13;
one of the most exciting contemp?rary&#13;
jazz. groups In&#13;
America Their program runs the&#13;
gamut from jazz to blues to&#13;
ballads A review of their perfo.rmance&#13;
at the Missi ippt&#13;
RIVer Festival in the t. LotH&#13;
Post-Dispatch read, 'The&#13;
Quartet thrilled the audience&#13;
with their fine program rang10g&#13;
from gospel soul music to fun .&#13;
jazz. Their singing was versatile,&#13;
controlled, and emotionall)&#13;
sincere. They brought dov. n the&#13;
house with their hand-elapp1Og,&#13;
foot-stomping spiritual. Let It Be&#13;
Their show is fresh. exciting, and&#13;
clearly imaginallve.··&#13;
The group has extended an&#13;
invitation to an)' intere ted&#13;
member of the audience to la\&#13;
and talk after the concert. The\&#13;
will be glad to answer an;·&#13;
questions you might have.&#13;
Tickets may be purchased at&#13;
the UW-Parkside Information&#13;
Office. Room 201 Tallent Hall&#13;
Reserved seat tickets are $2.50.&#13;
students and staff with Parksrde&#13;
ill are $l.5O.&#13;
St. Lo ui&#13;
Jazz Q&#13;
here Satur&#13;
For Once In. I til&#13;
FlOe and t eUo,,"&#13;
On Green DOllllln Street&#13;
methm mpl&#13;
Free-Again&#13;
I'nul us Ttme&#13;
Somebody'. Knockong&#13;
Walk HIm l:p&#13;
TheParkside--------&#13;
GE do da&#13;
a&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
lob r 11 1 72&#13;
How many $ needed to run Parkside&#13;
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown 1972-73&#13;
Union Reserve. . . '38.50&#13;
Lecture &amp; Fine Arts .. 2.00&#13;
Student Health . .. 2.00&#13;
Transpcrtation &amp; Parking ..............•..... 18.00&#13;
Athletics... . ... . ..... . . .9.00&#13;
Ill~aln"rals. ....•..... . 8.00&#13;
Student Activities 8.50&#13;
Student Group Support.. . 2.00&#13;
$88.00&#13;
Summer Sesston (Union Reserve) .. "$22.00&#13;
Apathy will help Nixon:&#13;
McGovern aide&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
. 'Skip" Roberts, Deputy&#13;
DIrector of Congressional Liaison&#13;
~orthe McGovern campaign, was&#13;
In Wisconsin last week addressing&#13;
various groups for the&#13;
Senator.&#13;
Roberts. former Director of the&#13;
Viet Nam Veterans Against the&#13;
War. and now on leave as&#13;
Director of the Labor-University&#13;
Alliance. addressed groups at&#13;
~O~i~ican College and the&#13;
l ",lanan Universalist Church in&#13;
HaCine, as well as a press conference&#13;
at the Racine McGovern&#13;
office. (A meeting was scheduled&#13;
at Parkside, but never&#13;
materialized due to the apathy of&#13;
the So-called "organizers" a&#13;
Spokesman for the R~cine&#13;
MCGovern office said.)&#13;
R Referring to this apathy,&#13;
oberts attacked the general&#13;
apathy of the tB-24-year-old&#13;
vot ers, long considered a&#13;
stronghold of the McGovern&#13;
camp.&#13;
. ')'10st 18'24~year-old \ oters are&#13;
~e~thetic." said Roberts.&#13;
{'Y"'E' '0 longer {'C'ncerced&#13;
about the war, and the economic,S&#13;
of the country usually doesn. t&#13;
affect them. They are once again&#13;
becoming the isolationist 10-&#13;
telligentia clique that th_ey&#13;
seemed to be in the early 19;,05&#13;
and 60s."&#13;
Roberts cited a recent New&#13;
York Times poll which showed&#13;
that 55 percent of those 10-&#13;
terviewed had not decided t~at&#13;
they would actually vote: despite&#13;
their preference In the&#13;
Presidential race. .&#13;
·'It is this apathy which ma~&#13;
d f at George 1\lcGovern ..&#13;
R~beerts said, "and it .is thiS&#13;
apathy that Richard Nixon IS&#13;
counting on."&#13;
Open House&#13;
Th University of Wisconsi~-&#13;
e ht"twIIi Parkside announced t a I Oct&#13;
hold an open house Sunday. . .&#13;
15 from noon till 5 p.m. ViSItors&#13;
. t 'ty to tour ··n have an oppor unt&#13;
\\I . II s well as the&#13;
GreenqUist Ha . a . g Center&#13;
L·b y_Learmn new I rar . 1 Education&#13;
and the new Physlca&#13;
-uidmg.&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
How much does it cost to run 8&#13;
university? This IS a question&#13;
many of you have probably asked&#13;
yourselves but never bothered to&#13;
find out In order to answer thiS&#13;
question. RA:XGER interviewed&#13;
Erwin F Zuehlke. DIrector 01 the&#13;
Business Office&#13;
The thmg \\,hich concerns mo (&#13;
students on a day-to-dey ba IS I&#13;
the transportation and parking&#13;
This segment of finance takes up&#13;
a good part of the egregated ree&#13;
It was Originally anticipated that&#13;
Parks Ide " ould have sn-lOO rrom&#13;
student receipts and facult)&#13;
permits and an ackhtlonal $13.&#13;
subsid) through tate funds lor a&#13;
total T&amp;P budget or over .000&#13;
Park ide IS not geumg S77,000&#13;
from tudent and raC'ult~&#13;
receipts. the real figure IS closer&#13;
to $10.000, And the university I&#13;
paying out more than the crigmal&#13;
$70.000 \\ hrch "a allocated for&#13;
buses, This cuts IOta the&#13;
Intended to be set aside for nev.&#13;
parking Iactliue .&#13;
Of the $70.000 oflglnall~ IO~&#13;
tended for buSing. 543.600 \I, as for&#13;
the two huttles. $18.600 for the&#13;
Kenosha mterclty bu and $7.800&#13;
for the summer se 1011, ..\ddluoo&#13;
of the additional shuttle IS costing&#13;
us another $9.000. Coupled ",th&#13;
the $7.000 loss m re\'enue. It&#13;
means the parking reserve I cut&#13;
to $1.000.&#13;
There is a question on ho\\, to&#13;
gain rC\'enue, perhaps "e lA'ould&#13;
have to charge additional&#13;
parking fees. Instead or the&#13;
present $90.000 a year. we could&#13;
use 5120,000 a year in order to&#13;
maintain the reserve and bwld&#13;
new lots.&#13;
Even then Parks ide "ou!d have&#13;
no facilities to mamtam them&#13;
There would even be a problem&#13;
with &gt;corage ~ilIl~'I'.·'lf )'&#13;
need three :;:huM~l\m ~nt&#13;
()"T ~ 2 1972 voJ -&#13;
ERWI ZUEHl E&#13;
Dunn th r gular chool&#13;
. Ion bu t amOUR to&#13;
a " The. hull I run on&#13;
I.,bror boo"" and the Ph) 'cal&#13;
Educo;,on Bwld,ng must k p&#13;
th "e sa me boo lor the purpo&#13;
0/ ""Pong addlllonal e,,,,"&#13;
do"n&#13;
Because 0/ the lac of rund&gt; It&#13;
d&lt;Je,. nOlloo Iokel) that Ice to&#13;
Racn~ \I, III rei tated In (act&#13;
\\ l~ln Coach Litle rna)tv n&#13;
curtail !'Orne QlWr8uon If Lh )'&#13;
don"t get more """In On the&#13;
other hand. e mIght be abl lo&#13;
extend en Ice to Kenosha&#13;
Zuehlke ,,"ould like to see more&#13;
~tuden rei) on car is and&#13;
lnterclt,,· buses to allevlale the&#13;
parklllg Ituatloo&#13;
Par Side need additional&#13;
capital to bu) our own buses.&#13;
bu " and '''0 for candb) AI a&#13;
cost or $25. for a Twin Coach&#13;
L P gas model ",th capacIty of&#13;
31 and 3.000 for some OJ·&#13;
pa sen~er model&gt; the oroglOal&#13;
• L&#13;
J zz&#13;
h&#13;
The Parkside,--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
How many$ needed tor __ __&#13;
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown 1972-73&#13;
l 'nion Reserve .... . .. . ..... . . . .. .. .. .. . ..... $38.50&#13;
I .ecture &amp; Fine Arts ... . . . . .. .......... . ....... 2.00&#13;
Student Health .. ... ... .. .. ..... .. . .......... .. 2.00&#13;
Transportation &amp; Parking . . . .. . . ..... . ....... 18.00&#13;
\thletics ................ ... . . .. . ............ . . 9.00&#13;
Intra murals . ........ ... .. .. ............. .. ... 8.00&#13;
Stud!'nt Activities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 8.50&#13;
~tudrnt Group Support .. . . .... . ..... . ........ 2.00&#13;
$88.00&#13;
Sumnwr Spssion (Union Reserve) . ... .. ...... $22.00&#13;
Apathy will help Nixon:&#13;
McGovern aide&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
Skip" Roberts, Deputy&#13;
Director of Congressional Liaison&#13;
for the McGovern campaign, was&#13;
in Wisconsin last week adc)re&#13;
ing various groups for the&#13;
enator.&#13;
Hoberts. former Director of the&#13;
Viet Nam Veterans Against the&#13;
War. and now on leave as&#13;
Director of the Labor-University&#13;
Alhance, addressed groups at&#13;
Dominican College and the&#13;
l rutarian Universalist Church in&#13;
Hacme , as well as a press conference&#13;
at the Racine McGovern&#13;
office IA meeting was scheduled&#13;
at Parkside, but never&#13;
materialized due to the apathy of the so-called "organizers," a&#13;
· Pokes man for the Racine&#13;
!\JcGovern office said.)&#13;
Referring to this apathy ,&#13;
Roberts attacked the general&#13;
apathy of the 18-24-year-old \Ol ers, long considered a ·tr&#13;
· onghold of the McGovern t'amp&#13;
. ':\lost 18-24-year-otd , oters are&#13;
~~? thetic ," aid Ro be r s&#13;
" 'r p .,o lor.ger re- cen-Ec!&#13;
about the war. and the economics&#13;
of the country usually doesn't&#13;
affect them. They are one~ ag~m&#13;
becoming the isolat1on1 t 111 -&#13;
te II igen ti a clique that th_ey&#13;
seemed to be in the early 19;,0&#13;
and 60s." • ·ew Roberts cited a recent&#13;
York Times poll which hO\\ed&#13;
that 55 percent of those interviewed&#13;
had not decided that&#13;
they would actually vote, de p1te&#13;
their preference in the&#13;
Presidential race. . . "It is this apathy which ma~.&#13;
defeat George l\IcGo~e rn ._&#13;
Roberts said . "and it I th1&#13;
apathy that Richard 'ixon I&#13;
counting on ."&#13;
Open House&#13;
Th University of Wisc_ons1~- e ed that 1t will Parkside announc . Oct&#13;
hold an open house Sunday_. . .&#13;
15 from noon till 5 P·1!1· V1s1tors&#13;
will have an opportunit)l.l to t~~~ . t Hall as we a Greenqu1s · . g Center L' brary-Learnm new 1 . 1 Education and the new Phys1ca&#13;
1(1 Illa"&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
0 972&#13;
n&#13;
•&#13;
ar &#13;
1 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed .• Oct. 11. 1971&#13;
ED TORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
new attitude&#13;
A new attlluOe seems to preval among many students&#13;
10 Ih e~lenl that they are willingtoparlicipate.&#13;
en Ihls paper first came out. it was weak. Now it&#13;
h S il larg staff of people with many interests. Some&#13;
c m 10 write, some are photographers. some wanted to&#13;
slid nd ome came down and just said they wanted&#13;
to h Ip&#13;
Th e people are forming something new and good. A&#13;
rvice 10 school and peers. the paper was created by&#13;
Ih m.&#13;
ow thai we are a going concern. we welcome all to&#13;
come 10 the ollice and loin us. There is greater strength&#13;
In grea ter numbers.&#13;
Id s 'or stor ies are always appreciated. The Ranger&#13;
will Iways seek to service this campus to the fullest of&#13;
Its journallsllc capabllllles.&#13;
It can be done....&#13;
The question of whether it would be possible to move&#13;
large amounts of people from the Phisical Education&#13;
Building has been answered. II can be done.&#13;
The Norman Mailer lecture was the test case. Appro~imalely&#13;
BOO people atfended. Seven buses were used&#13;
to bring people to the Athlelic Building from the parking&#13;
lot and a caravan of fourleen buses were stationed to&#13;
bring them back.&#13;
The reasoning behind the fourteen buses on the return&#13;
trip Is that at the end of a presentation. it is expected&#13;
Ihat everyone will run for a bus at the same lime. The&#13;
Mailer presentation was an exception with many of the&#13;
people filing out before Mailer was finished.&#13;
Even though people did not stream out of the building.&#13;
IIwas apparent that this method of transportation would&#13;
be adequate.&#13;
Access to Ihe parking lot was found to be the real&#13;
problem. Perhaps, in the future. more security ollicers&#13;
iII be provided so that some may assist in traffic&#13;
direcllon.&#13;
But ...&#13;
It must be realized that expanded use of the Physical&#13;
Educallon Building and the usage of the theatre portion&#13;
of the new Communication Arts Building in the spring&#13;
wi II require a new parking system.&#13;
The administration has recognized the parking&#13;
problem and has demonostrated its concern by asking&#13;
for a study to recommend placement of a new parking&#13;
facility. But fhls study will be considering the overall&#13;
parking problem and will not deal specifically with the&#13;
problems which will develop in the event of massive&#13;
crowds&#13;
On st.rn te shows the cost of moving 3.000 people to&#13;
nd trom the PhYSical Education Building would be&#13;
ppro Imil el 5500 Assuming ten buses were used. it IS&#13;
C cv ted ha the last audience member would leave&#13;
build ng pproxlma ely two and one na If hours afteconclus&#13;
on a the event&#13;
I h es lma s Me correct. and no one has thus far&#13;
prov n a her lse, he Ranger strongly urges that any&#13;
tu ure par ong area to be placed to facilitate the ex&#13;
pand d use of the PhYSical Education Bu'lding and the&#13;
v lual u of lhe new theatre.&#13;
The Ranger also recognizes that any future parking or&#13;
Ir nsportation must be funded by means other than&#13;
those presently available. We suggest that funds be&#13;
cotlected by some Iype of user fee which will be fair and&#13;
equitable to the total campus community: students.&#13;
'acuity and sfaff alike.&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
It seems we paid Norman Mailer $3175 for his appearance&#13;
here. That is a hell of a lot of money to&#13;
spend to hear him read his book. ItfIgures he should&#13;
have paid us to let him promote It Instead. ~or ~at&#13;
amount we could have bought 400 COpies of It. Eight&#13;
hundred people attended the lecture and 5900 was&#13;
collected at the door. It wasn't worth $2200 to have&#13;
lum autograph those library books. While th.e&#13;
following discussions were interestmg, they weren t&#13;
that interesting&#13;
Last Thursday and Friday someone dragged t~ee&#13;
sets of those steel filing shelves out int~ the re3:1nat&#13;
the library loading dock. After an overnight so~ourn&#13;
they were nice and rusty. Even af.ter higher&#13;
authority was consulted, they remained there&#13;
another four bours. Seems whoever orders the&#13;
furnishings has money to throwaway.&#13;
Two years ago one of the under-directors in the&#13;
finanCe office promised to install pencil sharpeners&#13;
In Greenquist Hall. Student Government finally had&#13;
to install a couple on its own. We could use some&#13;
more - and in the library. How about the clock for&#13;
Greenquist concourse - and another for Main&#13;
Place')&#13;
Certain campus police have been making rounds&#13;
through. the buildings during prime class ti:nes in&#13;
full uniforms with their guns hanging out. This does&#13;
tend to antagonize certain types of people, but it is&#13;
onJy temporary until the new blazers arrive. It&#13;
seems the old ones "wore ouL"&#13;
A lot. of students are still waiting on their grants&#13;
from the state. For those who needed the money&#13;
more than for just tuition, for which payment has&#13;
been delayed; until the money arrives they can&#13;
always go on welfare and blame the governor who is&#13;
trying to save the state money. Il's ridiculous when&#13;
you realize that these are just loans and the money&#13;
will be paid back.&#13;
You should be happy to learn that they are finally&#13;
putting labels on the lavatory doors. It is frustrating&#13;
to not know which is which, and trial and error could&#13;
be embarrassing. The writing on the walls at the&#13;
entrances to the locker rooms is so large that many&#13;
people don't notice it. A few have had interesting&#13;
experiences on entering the wrong one.&#13;
Student Government elections are in just three&#13;
weeks. They can't afford to pay the cost of handbill&#13;
printing for candidates. But anyone interested can&#13;
get their own for a cost of $1.35 for the first 50 and&#13;
$.35 for each additional 50 at Printing and&#13;
Duplicating in the Modulux Building.&#13;
Speaking of elections, it doesn't look like many will&#13;
run for the Student Union Committee. There isn't&#13;
much point in trying to get this area under student&#13;
advisement until the Parkside Activities Board is&#13;
abolished.&#13;
We get&#13;
letters ...&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
\\ e demand to be heard' sex&#13;
discrrrmnauon has gone far&#13;
enough at good ole Parkside ' We&#13;
are making reference to a&#13;
definite ne-cessity in the men s&#13;
locker room. \\ e realize that as a&#13;
rule. women do have more hair&#13;
however. some of us hav~&#13;
progressed from the Age of&#13;
Cre\l,cut to the Age at Aquaflus&#13;
and ~es. after many years, we.&#13;
too. have split ends. Halr does not&#13;
·eem to dryas quickly as It did 10&#13;
the Age of Crewcut. The point is&#13;
that women have hair dryers in&#13;
their locker room and as the&#13;
temperature drops and wet hair&#13;
freezes. and we would pretty&#13;
please like a hair dryer or two.&#13;
Two Wet Heads&#13;
A few of the present Student Senate have made&#13;
some remarks on the supposed mishandling of the&#13;
monetary Teacher of the Year awards. Seems that&#13;
even though there are an equal number of students&#13;
on the committee, these are hand picked and have&#13;
nothing to say about the method used In selection.&#13;
Just looking at the poor turnout last year shows thrs&#13;
has to change.&#13;
$10 a month is an awful lot of money to pay for a&#13;
telephone on campus.&#13;
Be careful if you answer that ad for research&#13;
materials. If you're caught submitting a paper not&#13;
your own, it could mean expulsion. A few people&#13;
here have already learned the hard way that&#13;
plagiarism doesn't pay. Use this service only for&#13;
research!&#13;
If you have a file cabinet in your office, there are&#13;
probably a lot of people with a key to it S-IOOseems&#13;
to be a prevalent lock on these.&#13;
A couple of staff members are considering an article&#13;
in the Nov, 1 issue on the national political&#13;
candidates. If you have anything you'd like to&#13;
mention -- pro or con .. drops us a line by OCt.21.&#13;
That library of ours is not only big, it's impressive.&#13;
In talking to Ken Herrick, Ilearned that the library&#13;
has 180,000 volumes including bound periodicals.&#13;
There are half a million cards in the card catalog,&#13;
and it is staffed by 90 people, including GO part-lime&#13;
students, and 30 Civil Service and academic personnel&#13;
including 13 professional librarians.&#13;
If you're waiting for the Student-Staff directory to&#13;
come out, you'll have to wait a little longer - till the&#13;
beginning of November.&#13;
The Archives is looking for copies from the back&#13;
issues of the previous student newspapers, The old&#13;
copy files from COLLEGIAN and NEWSCOPE&#13;
were deleted to nothing. If you have some eariy&#13;
issues that you forgot to throw out, take them to the&#13;
Archives or bring them to the newspaper office,&#13;
Touring below floors in the library can be an ex·&#13;
perience. There are a couple of rooms down there&#13;
which are nearly empty and together are about as&#13;
big as the Tallent Hall parking lot.&#13;
If you have something bothering you or a newsitem&#13;
too small to stretch into a full story, write and iet us&#13;
know about them. A black border around an article&#13;
sure attracts readers.&#13;
If you find yourself short of money, a good wayto&#13;
get hold of some is to solicit ads for the RANGER.&#13;
We pay 10 percent commission and a telephone can&#13;
do most of your work for you. Stop on by D-I94and&#13;
find out about it.&#13;
If you're one of those glory hounds who might like&#13;
the idea of seeing your name in print, why not let us&#13;
know about it. The pay isn't too great, but you getto&#13;
meet a lot of interesting people.&#13;
!"Jf:.The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parks ide Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Kenosha. Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located at 0-194 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessarily the officiai view of the University 0'&#13;
W,sconsin- Perkside.&#13;
EDITORS '-\:&gt;:0 WRITERS, Rudv Lienau Geoff Blaesmg. Kns Ko('h.&#13;
~Iath~ \\'ellner, Ken Konkol. Jea~nine Sip'sma Shawn Clements. Dalr&#13;
1\ artm T p ,&#13;
, om etersen, Marilyn Schubert. Dave Reyher&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pe;tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
-"~·---:.R-E-PR-E-S-EN":"TE-D"':"fO-R-N-A-T-'O-N-AL-A-O-V-ER-T-1-SI-N-G-.-Y---1 T National Educational Advertising Services,lnc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y, 10017 -&#13;
'2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
But ...&#13;
R LS/ OPI&#13;
itu&#13;
t ing ne and good. A&#13;
as crea ed by&#13;
done ....&#13;
parking lo as found to be the real&#13;
ps, In the future, more security officers&#13;
d so ha some may assist in traffic&#13;
I mu b r allzed that expanded use of the Physical&#13;
on Building and the usage of the theatre portion&#13;
Communic tlon Ar s Building in the spring&#13;
uir n par Ing system.&#13;
dmini r on has recognized the parking&#13;
nd d monostrated its concern by asking&#13;
commend placement of a ne parking&#13;
udy Ill be considering he overall&#13;
nd ill no deal specifically with the&#13;
1ll d v lop in e e en of massive&#13;
IO s&#13;
THORN&#13;
Sy Konkol&#13;
Tu o , ars ago one of the under-directors m the&#13;
finance offic promi ed to in tall pencil harpeners&#13;
in G nqw t Hall tudent Go ernment finally had&#13;
to in tall a couple on it own. \! e could use some&#13;
more - and in the librarv. How about the clock for&#13;
G qw t concourse :.. and another for Main&#13;
Place"&#13;
ertam camp police ha e been making rounds&#13;
through the building during prime class times in&#13;
full uniform "'1th their gun hanging out. This does&#13;
tend to antagoruze certain types of people, but it is&#13;
only temporary until the new blazers arrive. It&#13;
eems the old ones "wore out •·&#13;
lot of tud nt are till waiting on their grants&#13;
from the tale. For th e who needed the money&#13;
more than for just tuition, for which payment has&#13;
been d layed: until the money arrives they can&#13;
alway go on welfare and blame the governor who is&#13;
trying to save the tale money. It's ridiculous when&#13;
you realize that these are ju t loan and the money&#13;
will be paid back.&#13;
You hould be happy to learn that they are finally&#13;
putting labels on the lavator doors. It is frustrating&#13;
to not know"' h1ch is which, and trial and error could&#13;
be embarra ing. The writing on the walls at the&#13;
entrances to the locker rooms is so large that many&#13;
people don't notice it. A few have had interesting&#13;
experiences on entering the wrong one.&#13;
udent Government elections are in just three&#13;
. They can't afford to pay the cost of handbill&#13;
pnnting for candidates. But anyone interested can&#13;
et their own for a cost of $1.35 for the first 50 and&#13;
. 35 for each additional 50 at Printing and&#13;
Duplicating in the :l.odulux Building.&#13;
peaking of elections, it doesn't look like many will&#13;
run for the tudent nion Committee. There isn't&#13;
much point m trying to get this area under student&#13;
advisement until the Parkside Activities Board is&#13;
aboh hed.&#13;
A re ..... of the present Student enate have made&#13;
·ome remarks on the supposed m1shandlmg of lhe&#13;
monetary Teacher of the Year awards. eems that&#13;
even though there are an equal number of Ludent.,&#13;
on the committee. these are hand picked and hav&#13;
nothing to say about the method used m select10&#13;
Just looking at the poor turnout la t year how lh1.&#13;
has to change.&#13;
10 a month is an awful lot of money to pay for&#13;
telephone on campus.&#13;
Be careful if you answer that ad for re earch&#13;
materials. If you're caught submitting a pap r not&#13;
your own, it could mean expulsion. A few people&#13;
here have already learned the hard way that&#13;
plagiarism doesn't pay . Use this service only for&#13;
research!&#13;
If you have a file cabinet in your office, there are&#13;
probably a lot of people with a key to it. S-100 eem&#13;
to be a prevalent lock on these.&#13;
A couple of staff members are considering an article&#13;
in the Nov. 1 issue on the national political&#13;
candidates. If you have anything you'd like Lo&#13;
mention -- pro or con -- drops us a line by Oct. 21.&#13;
That library of ours is not only big, it's impressive.&#13;
In talking to Ken Herrick, I learned that the library&#13;
has 180,000 volumes including bound periodicals&#13;
There are half a million cards in the card catalog,&#13;
and it is staffed by 90 people, including 60 part-time&#13;
students, and 30 Civil Service and academic personnel&#13;
including 13 professional librarians.&#13;
If you're waiting for the Student-Staff directory to&#13;
come out, you'll have to wait a little longer -- till the&#13;
beginning of November.&#13;
The Archives is looking for copies from the back&#13;
issues of the previous student newspapers. The old&#13;
copy files from COLLEGIAN and NEWSCOPE&#13;
were deleted to nothing. If you have some early&#13;
issues that you forgot to throw out, take them to the&#13;
Archives or bring them to the newspaper office.&#13;
Touring below floors in the library can be an experience.&#13;
There are a couple of rooms down there&#13;
which are nearly empty and together are about as&#13;
big as the Tallent Hall parking lot.&#13;
If you have something bothering you or a news item&#13;
too small to stretch into a full story, write and !el us&#13;
know about them. A black border around an article&#13;
sure attracts readers .&#13;
If you find yourself short of money, a good way to&#13;
get hold of some is to solicit ads for the RANGER .&#13;
We pay 10 percent commission and a telephone can&#13;
do most of your work for you. Stop on by D-194 and&#13;
find out about it.&#13;
If you're one of those glory hounds who might like&#13;
the idea of seeing your name in print, why not let us&#13;
know about it. The pay isn't too great, but you get Lo&#13;
meet a lot of interesting people.&#13;
We get&#13;
letters ...&#13;
\,fr.. The ParkskJe -&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin .&#13;
Offices are located at D-194 Libr ary-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553_2295_&#13;
~he Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are no&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University or&#13;
W sco'1sin- Parkside&#13;
f.:DITORS \ D \\HITERS: Hudv L1enau Geoff Blaesmg Km Koch&#13;
Kath \\ 11 • , · · • I&gt; le ·. c mr Ken Konkol, Jeannme Sip ·ma Shawn Clement:,. a '.\lartm To p · · · m etersen. Marilyn Schubert Dave Reyhe1&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pe;tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: F red Lawrence ADVISOR : Don Kopriva&#13;
w· ,llEPR.ESENTED FOR. NATIONAL ADVER.TISING BY I National Educational Advertising Services, Inc,&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 &#13;
Wed .• Oct. 11, 1972 THE PARKS IDE RANGER 3&#13;
poet James Liddy&#13;
return's to Parkside&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy has returned to Th&#13;
University of "':isconsin-Parkside campus for the&#13;
1972-73 academic year as a visiting professor ef&#13;
EnglIs'h .&#13;
0&#13;
Liddy, who has held facu~ty posts at San Francisco&#13;
State College, St~te Umversity of New York at&#13;
Bingham~on, l!mverslty C?llege DUblin, Lewis and&#13;
Clark University and Denison University, spent a&#13;
week as a guest lecturer at Parkside in March 1971&#13;
Liddy is the author of five books of poetry. Hi~&#13;
poems have appeared in "The Dolmen Review of&#13;
Irish Writing," The New York Times' "Today"&#13;
"The Kil~enn.y Magazine," The Irish Press a~d&#13;
other publications, and have been reprinted in "The&#13;
Penguin Book of Irish Verse," "New Poets of&#13;
Ireland" and "Drumbook."&#13;
He has presented poetry readings at The San&#13;
Francisco ~oetry Corner, t~e International Poetry&#13;
Forum of Pittsburgh, The Irish Embassy in London&#13;
and at a number of colleges and universities in&#13;
Ireland and the U.S.&#13;
Liddy received his bachelor's and master's&#13;
degrees at University College Dublin and barrister&#13;
at law at Kings Inns Dublin.&#13;
BLUE HOUSE&#13;
PREFERABLY CHINESE&#13;
Wearing the masks of dead poets&#13;
They crave the butterfly immortality of circulation:&#13;
The dinginess of their methods hurts me.&#13;
I would not like to waste my tiny legacy of energy&#13;
Seeing the letters of my name headlined&#13;
And my nervous photograph printed&#13;
(I have not the temperament for politics&gt;.&#13;
It fatigues me a lot to contemplate the industry&#13;
Of those who do not hear life's message&#13;
Of eternal unimportance.&#13;
The poet should be a gentleman&#13;
Preferably Chinese:&#13;
I would prefer to retire to riverbanks and walks&#13;
Asking with a prayer through the senses&#13;
To be released from Effort&#13;
Finding gay and courageous friends&#13;
And being generous with time which we call love.&#13;
- James Liddy&#13;
•••••••••••&#13;
By Tom Petersen&#13;
Not knowing exactly what tYJ&gt;E:of artic,le I was&#13;
going to do, I set out in pursuit of mformah?n about&#13;
our poet in residence, James Liddy, My fIrst stop&#13;
was Stella Grey's office, and she suggested that I&#13;
speak to Dr. Liddy himself. Next Iwas at the LLC&#13;
where his office is located and, fmdmg myself on ~e&#13;
second floor, realized 1 had forg~tten his off~ce&#13;
number Back to the main desk. WhIle I was askmg&#13;
for the I~ation of his office, the librarian informed&#13;
me that Dr, Liddy was standing beside me: What&#13;
follows is sort of an impromptu interview, WIth Dr.&#13;
Liddy and me making up the questions as we went&#13;
.. l' t" I wasn't sure along. Being a "rookIe Journa IS , , w he&#13;
where to begin, so I started off by asking ho&#13;
came to Parkside. . .&#13;
LIDDY: I always go to a good school that inVites&#13;
me to be their poet in residence. . e&#13;
RANGER: What do you think of Parkslde. th&#13;
school and the students'? . 'te&#13;
LIDDY: As to the buildings, the LLC. IS ~~re&#13;
beautiful enough space to dream or, If Y&#13;
• . A to the students, recreational to speculate m. s b t th y&#13;
American kids are the nicest in the world, U he&#13;
f t· of the teac er, aren't always awake. The unc Ion k&#13;
specifically of the writer, is to keep them a;a .~&#13;
The life at Parkside seems to start slowly bu WI d&#13;
winter coming it will probably become :ar~al~n a&#13;
lively, I notice about the students that t ~y from&#13;
lot which is probably explained by commg&#13;
, . . Wch Norman such a nice place as Wlsconsm, Wit&#13;
"the p easan Mailer referred to last Sunday as&#13;
country north of Chicago." lawyer'&#13;
RANGER: You said you were once a ,&#13;
were you also writing then'? . ba k with my&#13;
LIDDY' Yes and now lookmg c, " . t the expense awful Irish guilt, perhaps sometImes a&#13;
of my clients. h did you&#13;
RANGER: From lawyer to teacher -- w y&#13;
make lhe change? " d own in a&#13;
LIDDY: Well, one morning In wig ~n ,g the' high&#13;
Probate molion before Justice Dawltt 10 ore than&#13;
court, I thought: I ar:n io:portant, I.h~~ek~ut, I will&#13;
the people in this affidaVIt. If I don.t the Dublin&#13;
be only a lawyer. Then I looked ou; ;Omight.l The&#13;
sky. II won't say I heard VOIces, bu d So I&#13;
d&#13;
k the real wor s. message was, go away an see told to get at&#13;
was chosen, and by that I mean I w~s, adequate&#13;
the hard work necessary for wTltmg&#13;
Poet Janes Liddy (left) ond Parkside's Herb ubly.&#13;
poems in book sequence. I behev the boo IS th&#13;
basisofpoelr)·. not the mdivtdual poem SolO earn a&#13;
living, while mvolved In the truggle (or boo ,I&#13;
turned to teaching.&#13;
RA."GER· Asa poet. h"" do)ou r IIOU benetlt&#13;
(rom your teaching'!&#13;
LIDDY' There is a contro\"eTS) a 10 ""bether&#13;
poets benefit from teaching Jolin Berryman IQ h&#13;
Paris Re-\ iew interview said thai poets get noth~&#13;
from creative wrtung I don't necessarily agree&#13;
with this. One doesn't ....mte poems JUSt (or oneself&#13;
one \\ rites for the commwlIc} of dead poets and&#13;
those to come, I notice In my wnung cia thai&#13;
there are alway one or two poets I can reall) help.&#13;
the others get caught up ",th the excitement. and&#13;
their writing gets better. tn my v.TlU~ da I&#13;
usually end up forgetling ml II&#13;
RANGER· I noticed tha, lOU have a COPI 0( th&#13;
Playboy interview ..nth Bernadette Devlin What&#13;
are yoer feeling or the Iwauon LO'reland"&#13;
LIDDY, Ac'uall)' I'm ha\"lng a groop In my cia&#13;
study this interview They haven't reponed ~et.but&#13;
my vie .....is clear, Bernadette 15 a herome-. a Joan of&#13;
Arc for the mrocntv In •·orth~ Ireland I upport&#13;
the official I RA more than the PI'O\' lonall R 1\ •&#13;
but I go along Withmost O("hat both "In do The&#13;
cause is for the unity of ireland, the- sameAbraham&#13;
Lincoln's cause In the O\·iJ war here&#13;
Americans seem to forget thai they ov.e- their&#13;
country to fighting KIng George In In6 I also&#13;
believe in the SOClaJ In.tggle (or a beuer e. i.tenee&#13;
in all Ireland&#13;
RANGER· Have you e'er had an)&#13;
periences "Ith the \'1olence that has&#13;
Ireland?&#13;
LIDDY' . 'one dIr"'~1 There ISn·' much actl\ .t)&#13;
where I live. I do bu) the matenal lht I R A&#13;
distributes, and I otherv.'ise contnbule But II' an&#13;
emotIOnal thing basically: )ou·d be surpnsed h""&#13;
many people in Ireland don't e\'en M\'e that&#13;
RANGER, Gelling back 1O lour wnling. do)ou&#13;
ever do work for magaun .,&#13;
LIDDY Yes.laJ"a) ha"e had the urge 1Oedit I&#13;
did \re-na 10 Ireland and 1"10\11 I ha\f" • n&#13;
magazme there. The Plei d ,&#13;
RA. ·GER Ho" do IOU f",,1 about lour poetr).&#13;
what are you tr)'lng toexpre In .)our TltJ"8"&#13;
LIDDY IbelI",e ml poelT)'I "hal poetr)&#13;
00- a relIgiOUSart , ot lhal poets are qwt pn&#13;
but the\ are sen'an Thf!" UN\ 1 Cull of&#13;
messages The poet' bu. In I. to walt fer them&#13;
and decode them Tlu. is ne, r fully Ie. "&#13;
do not qulLekno" "hal IShappenln In m) poelT) I&#13;
locate places and ex nen "'Nch contain t&#13;
inviSible- re\'elatIOfb. but hk am nina n Job In a&#13;
\Ioarehouse.1 am not urewhere t\er)thl or&#13;
even came (rom Ido nO\lo m~ poem art' not JU t&#13;
m~ busm nor the audience'.&#13;
rsonal e&#13;
ep throo&#13;
BENEFIT ROCK CONCERT ................. FOR .&#13;
GEORGE McGOVERN .......................&#13;
October 13, 1972&#13;
Racine Labor Center 7 P.M,&#13;
2300 Layard Ave. 'til Midnight&#13;
5 solid hours of&#13;
Country Jf.. Old Rock .. Now Rock&#13;
Donation: sl at door&#13;
J 08 OPPORTU ITY&#13;
String r needed for&#13;
W ZN- Z8 to r port&#13;
by 6 a.m. Mon.-Sat.&#13;
on enesha poll ee , Iir&#13;
&amp;. sheri ff. Poy on hourly&#13;
bosis. Must be rellabl&#13;
Call Fronk Falduta at&#13;
658-2055 before II a.m.&#13;
CHECKIM;&#13;
IS&#13;
AT fllST ullom&#13;
Of IACIIE&#13;
• II .ili.l.&#13;
~ilmerI~llrd&#13;
• Mo Ii.it 10 th&#13;
1I.~tr.f eheks&#13;
'01 writl&#13;
AT FIIST Ullom&#13;
OF UCIME&#13;
AT FIIST UTIOUL&#13;
OF UCIME&#13;
Opu ,au free checkilr&#13;
iCCOIAt SOOI it&#13;
First ational Bank&#13;
a.nd. Trust Company of Racl.n&#13;
---- -'- --&#13;
500WISCOISil hi. belli&#13;
ed., Oct. I , 72 TH PARK ID RA G&#13;
Poet James Liddy&#13;
return·s to Parkside&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy has ret&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside urned to The&#13;
1972-73 academic year as a visit' campus for the&#13;
English. mg professor of&#13;
Liddy, who has held faculty st&#13;
cisco State College, State Univer~t st~ San FranBinghamton,&#13;
University College Dy ir ew Y?rk at&#13;
Clark University and Denison Uru_u 10., Lewis and vers1ty sp t week as a guest lecturer at Parksid . M ' en a Liddy is the author of five boo/ 10f arch, 1971.&#13;
poems have appeared in "The D ~ o poetrt His&#13;
Irish Writing," The New York ~-men, ~.ev1ew of&#13;
"The Kilkenny Magazine " The ;n_ies Today,"&#13;
other publications, and ha~e been r ns~ Press and . eprmted in "Th&#13;
Pengum Book of Irish Verse" "N e Ireland" and "Drum book." ' ew Poets of&#13;
He has presented poetry readi&#13;
Francisco Poetry Corner the lnte ngs/t The San&#13;
Forum of Pittsburgh, Th~ Irish E;~:s~on_al Poetry&#13;
and at a number of colleges and .YID ~nd~n&#13;
Ireland and the U.S. uruvers1bes ID&#13;
Liddy received his bachelor's d&#13;
degrees at University College Dublina;nd ;:ias~er's at law at Kings Inns Dublin. arnster&#13;
BLUE HOUSE&#13;
PREFERABL y CHINESE&#13;
Wearing the masks of dead poets&#13;
They ~ra~e the butterfly immortality of circulation.&#13;
The d1Dg1Dess of their methods hurts ·&#13;
I w~uld not like to waste my tiny Jega;e~f ener Seemg the letters of my name headlined gy&#13;
And my nervous photograph printed&#13;
(I ha_ve not the temperament for politics).&#13;
It fatigues me a lot to contemplate the industry&#13;
Of those who do not hear life's message&#13;
Of eternal unimportance.&#13;
The poet should be a gentleman&#13;
Preferably Chinese:&#13;
I wo_uld pr:efer to retire to riverbanks and walks&#13;
Askmg with a prayer through the senses&#13;
To be released from Effort&#13;
Finding gay and courageous friends&#13;
And being generous with time which we call love.&#13;
-- James Liddy&#13;
•••••••••••&#13;
By Tom Petersen&#13;
ot knowing exactly what type of article I was&#13;
going to do, I set out in pursuit of information about&#13;
our poet in residence, James Liddy. My first stop&#13;
was Stella Grey's office, and she suggested that I&#13;
speak to Dr. Liddy himself. Next I was at the LLC&#13;
where his office is located and, finding myself on the&#13;
second floor, realized I had forgotten his office&#13;
number. Back to the main desk. While I was asking&#13;
for the location of his office, the librarian informed&#13;
me that Dr. Liddy was standing beside me. What&#13;
follows is sort of an impromptu interview, with Dr.&#13;
Liddy and me making up the questions as we went&#13;
along. Being a "rookie journalist," I wasn't sure&#13;
where to begin, so I started off by asking how he&#13;
came to Parkside. LIDDY: I always go to a good school that invites&#13;
me to be their poet in residence. RANGER: What do you think of Parkside, the&#13;
school and the students?&#13;
LIDDY: As to the buildings, the LLC is quite&#13;
beautiful, enough space to dream or, if you're&#13;
recreational, to speculate in. As to the students,&#13;
American kids are the nicest in the world, but they&#13;
aren't always awake. The function of the teacher,&#13;
specifically of the writer, is to keep them awake.&#13;
The life at Parkside seems to start slowly but with&#13;
winter coming it will probably become warm and&#13;
lively. I notice about the students that they talk a&#13;
lot, which is probably explained by coming from&#13;
such a nice place as Wisconsin, which orman Mailer referred to last Sunday as "the pleasant&#13;
country north of Chicago."&#13;
RANGER: You said you were once a lawyer:&#13;
were you also writing then?&#13;
LIDDY : Yes, and now looking back, with my&#13;
awful Irish guilt, perhaps sometimes at the expen e&#13;
of my clients. RANGER: From lawyer to teacher -- why did you&#13;
make the change? . LIDDY: Well, one morning in wig and gown, 1~ a&#13;
Probate motion before Justice Dawitt in the high&#13;
court, I thought: I am important, I have more th~n&#13;
the people in this affidavit. If I don'.t look out. I will&#13;
be only a lawyer. Then I looked out to 1!1e Dublin&#13;
sky. (l won't say I heard voices, but I m1ghU The&#13;
message was, go away and seek the real words. So I&#13;
was chosen, and by that I mean I was told to get at&#13;
the hard work necessary for writing adequate&#13;
Poet JCJTies Liddy (left) and Par&#13;
BENEFIT ROCK CONCERT ...................... FOR • •&#13;
GEORGE McGOVERN .................&#13;
October 13, 1972&#13;
Racine Labor Center 7 P.&#13;
2300 Layard Ave. til idnight&#13;
5 solid hours of&#13;
Country ~ Old Rock • o&#13;
Donation: s1 at door&#13;
Au P&lt;I !or&#13;
Rock&#13;
AL&#13;
•&#13;
1rd&#13;
• I II tt t t I&#13;
• er 1f c tc s&#13;
J I rift&#13;
CHECKI G&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST TIO AL&#13;
OF ACI E&#13;
0 e yo r free c ec i&#13;
acco t so at &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
New buildings on display at Open House&#13;
The new buildings on The&#13;
Umv nit)" of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
campu will be on public display&#13;
for tbe lirst lime durmg a public&#13;
Open House unday. Oct IS,&#13;
from noon to 5 p m&#13;
Thou nd of vi uors are expected&#13;
to tour the 700·acre&#13;
mpu. with major attention&#13;
tocu mg on the three new&#13;
hulldll'lt. the rna rve LibraryLe&#13;
mlng enter. with Its muchd1SCU..&#13;
d lain Place. the&#13;
Ph)' ical Education Buildmg.&#13;
nd the H bng hilhng Plant,&#13;
lh eentr tiled campu utilities&#13;
lit triblltion center&#13;
Other campus bUlldongs also&#13;
will b open. including&#13;
r nqUl t and Tall nt Halls,&#13;
which opened on fall of 1969, and&#13;
the envmes BUlldmR which 1&#13;
the 1 mporary campus union .&#13;
Th hrst Wop pen Hou e, on&#13;
. prtn of 1970 horUy arter the&#13;
new mpus opened. attracted&#13;
ohout 5. persons d pue an allday&#13;
ra rn Another 2.500 a tte~ed&#13;
th econd the follow lng pnng&#13;
I pla)' and exhrbiuons will be&#13;
f.. tured In all bUlldlOgs, meluding&#13;
computer demontrau&#13;
,lab lit pia" and art&#13;
exhibIts In reenqui tHall,&#13;
p erat mtm-tour s. demonlraUon&#13;
of the latest m learnong&#13;
m tenal and equIpment. and&#13;
_ lit pia 10 the Library'&#13;
Learning Center. and demon·&#13;
tratlons of various sports,&#13;
recreational activities, special&#13;
equipment and even a Pep Band&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
BulldlOg&#13;
In addition. the Parkside&#13;
Baroque Players will present&#13;
concerts at 1'30 p.m and 3 p.m.&#13;
in Greenquist Hall auditorium&#13;
103&#13;
A special service for parents&#13;
will be a "Kiddie Korral" child&#13;
care center in Tallent Hall for&#13;
live year olds and up, featuring&#13;
cartoon rtIms and ref"'5hments&#13;
to entertain the children who do&#13;
not care to accompany their&#13;
parents through the huildings.&#13;
Vi itors also will be able to see&#13;
two other major buildings well&#13;
along in construction: the&#13;
Communication Arts Building,&#13;
!cheduled for occupancy In early&#13;
pring 1973~ and a Classroom&#13;
Building, scheduled for completion&#13;
next September.&#13;
If-guiding tour Oyers wtll&#13;
uggest routes and activities and&#13;
provide special information on&#13;
the campus and its facilities.&#13;
They will be available at the&#13;
starting POints in the parking lots&#13;
and at information stops.&#13;
Parking will be in TaUent&#13;
Hall'. two parking lots. with&#13;
continuou shuttle bus service&#13;
from there around the loop road&#13;
~ hich encircles the central&#13;
academic rea ufficient buses&#13;
w,lI be on dul)' SO that one wtll&#13;
always be In sight and waits&#13;
should not exceed two or three&#13;
minutes Walking distances from&#13;
the lots to the main building area&#13;
range from one-third of a mile to&#13;
a mile. Mulllple buses will begin&#13;
nmnllll at 11'45 a m&#13;
S. says th VA...&#13;
'SHC)R£. Not ...:7rIFY n-( VA&#13;
OF "'ClAE E'N ADORESS&#13;
WIo\&amp;J "lO' LANOS.-:;"'&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
I I/JrI'_to&#13;
,&#13;
,.----. .. _"'A .....&#13;
,-IJDI "-_-,._"'-~ /'I'll -.__,._1; ...&#13;
Building projects and site&#13;
developrnent work totaling&#13;
nearly $30 million has been&#13;
completed or is nearing cornplelion&#13;
on the W·P campus&#13;
mce It opened to its first&#13;
students in eptember 1969. An&#13;
additional $6 million In projects,&#13;
IOcluding a permanent Campus&#13;
Umon and a Ph) ical Plant&#13;
facility, have been funded and&#13;
are in design and planning&#13;
tages. The UW ystem Board of&#13;
Regents recently recommended&#13;
a $3.1 million School of Modem&#13;
Industry Building for Parks ide&#13;
during the 1973-75 biennium.&#13;
Uw-Parkside is located in&#13;
northern Keno ha County adjacent&#13;
to Petrifying Springs Park&#13;
between Kenosha and Racme.&#13;
bordered on the west by Hwy. 31.&#13;
on the north and south by county&#13;
roads A and E and On the east by&#13;
Wood Rd. (30th Ave.). County E&#13;
exits from Interstate 94. TaUent&#13;
Hall parking lots are entered&#13;
(rom Wood Rd. and County A.&#13;
Workshop&#13;
planned&#13;
A study skills workshop will be&#13;
conducted (or students at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Oct. 16, 18,23.25 and Nov. 1 by the&#13;
tudent Counseling Services&#13;
staff. Workshop sessions will be&#13;
In Room D-I89 of the LibraryLearning&#13;
Center.&#13;
The sessions open to all&#13;
Parkside students. will cover&#13;
topics including note-taking.&#13;
preparation of themes and&#13;
research papers, reading and&#13;
taking exammations.&#13;
The workshop sessions are&#13;
patterned after a successful&#13;
study skills "pilot" program held&#13;
last summer&#13;
CIa)' Barnard of the Student&#13;
Counseling staff sa ',~ October&#13;
was chosen for tiie ~'5ions&#13;
because most students wiH have&#13;
completed six-week&#13;
examinations and wiH be able to&#13;
determine whether they need.&#13;
help with study sl&lt;iJls.&#13;
Marines interview here&#13;
MILWA KEE- The Mari~e&#13;
Corps Officer sel~tion T~am ~i1l&#13;
visit The University of wlscons~nParkside&#13;
Oct. 11 and 12 to l~-&#13;
terview students interested m&#13;
becoming commissioned officer.s.&#13;
The Officer Selection Team WIll&#13;
be located m the Student Activities&#13;
Building to provide .information&#13;
pertaining to ~ar1ne&#13;
Officer Programs, according to&#13;
Capt. D. M. BU~koveetz, the&#13;
Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Officer.&#13;
The Marine Corps offers&#13;
programs leading to. a commission&#13;
as a 2nd Lieutenant.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
: Parkside :&#13;
: Activities Board :&#13;
: sponsors :&#13;
: a bus trip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • VS. •&#13;
•&#13;
: OHIO STATE :&#13;
•&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME :&#13;
• Saturday, October 28 •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• $10 (Includes Bus. •&#13;
• Continental Breakfast, •&#13;
: $6 Game Ticket) :&#13;
• •&#13;
••&#13;
TICKETS IYAILABlE&#13;
••&#13;
: INFORMATION OffiCE :&#13;
• '202 TALLENT HALL • ••••••••••••••••&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
These programs are open to&#13;
undergraduates as well as&#13;
graduating seniors. To be&#13;
eligible, students must have a&#13;
"C" or better average. pass a&#13;
written examination, be&#13;
physically qualified and have the&#13;
leadership potential required of a&#13;
Marine Officer.&#13;
Aviation Officer Programs are&#13;
open to highly qualified students,&#13;
Woman Officer Programs are&#13;
available to junior and senior&#13;
women.&#13;
Regents&#13;
accept grant&#13;
MADISON .. Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system&#13;
Friday accepted a federal grant&#13;
of $5,493 in support of the Law&#13;
Enforcement EducatIon&#13;
Program (LEEP) at UW·&#13;
Parkside. The funds are part of&#13;
the $7,800 approved by the U.S&#13;
Department of Justice for the&#13;
first semester LEEP program at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
LEEP grants pay tuition for&#13;
local law enforcement officers&#13;
who wish to further their&#13;
education in job-related courses&#13;
while pursuing their careers.&#13;
VISIT&#13;
THE DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
CAMPUS CLOTHES.••... .FOR MEN&#13;
Try Us..•..••••..••• .You'lI Like Us!!!&#13;
STUDENT 10% DISCOUNT&#13;
This special discount is offered to Park-side students on all Bell's, regular&#13;
priced merchandise. Coupon must be presented al time of sale with I.D&#13;
BELL'S DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
offer expires Nov. 3D, 1972&#13;
~&#13;
come in and browse ...&#13;
CLOTHING BELL HOUSE&#13;
Downtown I Kenosha&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET !'If:. The P"'k&amp;ide_~ __&#13;
RANGER&#13;
" t pSS ...&#13;
hey kid! I&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
I hear it most reliably from a pal, Waldo Winchester, who is a scrite lor a local d~j~1&#13;
sheet. Well, Waldo says there are yards of opportunities for guys and dolls on~agcllance&#13;
over tile country. He says tllere is a real hot future In the newspaper racket a Id&#13;
to make some decent scratch, wllile maybe puttmg Ihe arm on some of the Ills of 0 k a\\'&#13;
terra tirma. With a high-class monicker like Waldo you can not help but have tile real n&#13;
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one·&#13;
hundred percent a sucker' Check it out."&#13;
T~@obo.'e R'H'lvone"" 100.. ly ".",I",od, mean,&#13;
'he "me ~a, no.e, he." he"o, '~an now '0 get&#13;
,"to an .. «ling c.,ce, H'llou,nol"m&#13;
Fo, I, •• ",Io,ma"on abou, lou,nal"n' &lt;a,.e,', 3n&lt;l&#13;
",hola,'h,p" w", •• o T~e New,c.po, F,,,,&lt;l. P 0&#13;
Bo. 300, Pnnce,on. New Je, .. y 08540 Also&#13;
Contac, yom locol new,pop." and yo", ,ehool&#13;
new,pope, odVl'•• ,&#13;
the swift Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to t"&#13;
or the battle always to the strong _ but it's a good way to be .&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
ew buildings on display at Open House&#13;
Marines interview here&#13;
Regents&#13;
accept grant&#13;
MADISON -- Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system&#13;
Friday accepted a federal grant&#13;
of $5,493 in support of the Law&#13;
Enforcement Education&#13;
Program (LEEP &gt; at WParkside.&#13;
The funds are part of&#13;
the $7,800 approved by the U.&#13;
Department of Justice for the&#13;
first semester LEEP program at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
ork hop&#13;
planned&#13;
A ·tudy kills wor k hop will be&#13;
conducted for tudents at The&#13;
niver ity of Wi consin-Parkside&#13;
t 16. 18, 23. 25 and ov. 1 by the&#13;
tudent Coun ehng ervices&#13;
tare Workshop es ions will be&#13;
in Room D-189 of the LibraryLearning&#13;
Cen er.&#13;
The e io open to all&#13;
Park ide tudents. will cover&#13;
topic includ ing note-taking,&#13;
prepara tion of theme and&#13;
r earch papers, reading and&#13;
taking examination&#13;
Th workshop se ion are&#13;
patte rned a fter a uccessful&#13;
tud) kill • pilot" program held&#13;
I t 1mm r&#13;
ay Barnard of the tudent&#13;
oun ling taff · ctober&#13;
\ a cho en for ,.. ior&#13;
because most tudents ha\'e&#13;
co mpleted ix eek&#13;
examina tion and will be able to&#13;
determine whether they need&#13;
help with tud) kills&#13;
11 w \ 'KEE- The 'Iarine&#13;
Corp fficer Selection T~am v.:m&#13;
vi it The ·niver ity of Wt cons~nPark&#13;
ide Oct. 11 and 12 to L~-&#13;
ter\'iey, tudent intere led ID&#13;
becoming commis ioned officer_s&#13;
The Officer Selection Team will&#13;
be located ID the Student Activities&#13;
Building to provide _informa&#13;
tion pertaining to Manne&#13;
Officer Programs, according to&#13;
Capt. D. i. Buckoveetz, ~ e&#13;
1arine Corps Officer election&#13;
om er.&#13;
The Marine Corps offers&#13;
program leading to . a commi&#13;
ion as a 2nd Lieutenant.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
: Parkside :&#13;
: Activities Board :&#13;
: sponsors :&#13;
: a bus trip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• • • •&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • vs. • •&#13;
• •&#13;
: OHIO STATE :&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME :&#13;
• Saturday, October 28 •&#13;
• • • • • $10 (Includes Bus •&#13;
• Continental Breakfast, •&#13;
: $6 Game Ticket) :&#13;
• • •&#13;
e TICKETS AVAILABLE •&#13;
e&#13;
: INFOR ATION OFFICE :&#13;
e 202 TALLENT HALL e&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
:\Iember F.D.I.C.&#13;
These programs are open to&#13;
undergraduates as well as&#13;
graduating seniors. To be&#13;
eligible, students must have a&#13;
"C" or better average, pass a&#13;
written examination, be&#13;
physically qualifi~d and ~ave the&#13;
leadership potential reqwred of a&#13;
Marine Officer.&#13;
Aviation Officer Programs are&#13;
open to highly qualified students.&#13;
Woman Officer Programs are&#13;
available to junior and senior&#13;
women.&#13;
LEEP grants pay tuition for&#13;
local Jaw enforcement officer&#13;
who wish to further their&#13;
education in job-related courses&#13;
while pursuing their careers&#13;
v~~l DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
CAMPUS CLOTHES ....... FOR MEN&#13;
Try Us ............... You'll Like Us!!!&#13;
STUDENT 10 % DISCOUNT This spec ia l d iscount i s offered to Par kside students on all Bell 's, regular&#13;
priced merchandise. Coupon must be presented at lime of sa le w ith 1. 0&#13;
BELL 'S DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
offer expires Nov. 30, 1972&#13;
come in and browse ...&#13;
CLOTHING BELL HOUSE&#13;
Downtown / Kenosha&#13;
'' pss t ...&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
I hear it most reliably from a pal, Waldo Winchester, who is a scribe for a loc al dail~I&#13;
sheet. Well, Waldo says there are yards of opportunities for guys and dol ls on rags a ce&#13;
over the country. He says there is a real hot future in the newspaper racket - a th~~&#13;
to make some decent scratch, while maybe putting the arm on some of the ills of : kn•~&#13;
terra firma. With a high-class monicker like Waldo you can not help but have th e rea&#13;
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one·&#13;
hundred percent a sucker! Check it out."&#13;
The above Runyonese, loo sely transla ted . means&#13;
the t,me has never been betlet than n ow to get&#13;
mto an exc,1In9 career in Iournal1sm&#13;
For free m1 o rmat,on about J0urnahsm ca, eers and&#13;
scholarships, write to The Newspaper Fund. P 0&#13;
Bo1t 300, Princeton. New Jersey 08540 Also&#13;
contact your local newspaper and your school&#13;
newspaper advise,&#13;
the swift Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to t ,,&#13;
or the battle always to the strong- but it's a good way to be ·&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET&#13;
t~Ak,..,N __ G_ E_ R_ &#13;
. '. ,&#13;
, ,&#13;
North -South Exchange I&#13;
panned&#13;
BYJeannjne Sip sma&#13;
J Croxford is a student from&#13;
pa;;side who participated in the&#13;
North.South Exchange Program.&#13;
This program ~llow~d him to&#13;
tt nd a prirnari ly black&#13;
a u~hern University, North&#13;
~~rolina Central University, for&#13;
the second semester of the 1968·69&#13;
school year.&#13;
As to how he felt on the first&#13;
day, he said it was kind of strange&#13;
and that the ten students from&#13;
Wisconsin sort of stuck together.&#13;
"To begin with, there is a&#13;
definite color distinction and you&#13;
reel kind of lost and out of place,&#13;
but once you get to know people,&#13;
youfeel more at home," Croxford&#13;
said&#13;
He said some people are very&#13;
friendly, others don't care if&#13;
vou're there or not and the black&#13;
militants usually just left him&#13;
alone&#13;
Most of his friends were not&#13;
other exchange students; he said&#13;
he hardly saw them at all. He had&#13;
met a lot of his friends in a play&#13;
he was in.&#13;
"It was a good experience. You&#13;
learn what life is like in a&#13;
minority. Most white people don't&#13;
get the chance. You run into&#13;
situations you read about blacks&#13;
getting into."&#13;
Part of the purpose of this&#13;
program is to experience difrerent&#13;
cultural and social&#13;
situations. Croxford said that&#13;
there were differences in the&#13;
kinds of music, ways of dancing,&#13;
verbal expressions, and some of&#13;
the foods in the cafeteria; there&#13;
were also a lot of courses in black&#13;
culture&#13;
"1 noticed that the people&#13;
seemed to be better dressed."&#13;
Croxford said. "It wax not uncommon&#13;
to see a guy Tn" a sports&#13;
jacket&#13;
He said he'd go back if given&#13;
the chance, but the program only&#13;
allows one to go down for a&#13;
semester without paying Qut-ofstate&#13;
tuition.&#13;
"You have to go there with an&#13;
open mind, knowing it isn't going&#13;
to be all good or all bad. It's the&#13;
same as anywhere else; you meet&#13;
some people you don't get along&#13;
with and some who have the&#13;
same interests," Croscord said.&#13;
"~fter Iwas there for a while, I&#13;
didn't think of people as being&#13;
?lack or white anymore; they're&#13;
Just your friends and there's no&#13;
color distinction."&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
The academic year 1972-73 i&#13;
the erghth year of the U. . s&#13;
f W&#13;
· mversIty&#13;
o ISconsin's one-semester&#13;
student exchange program with a&#13;
black university Thi&#13;
offers th '. IS program&#13;
. . e Umversity of&#13;
WIsconSin students&#13;
t&#13;
. an oppor&#13;
unity to grow in th .&#13;
d&#13;
err unerstanding&#13;
of Amerl'ca .&#13;
tit ti n inS&#13;
I U IOns and society b&#13;
tici . Y par- icipating for a semester in a&#13;
totally different ac aderm&#13;
cultural and social life style th&#13;
lC&#13;
,&#13;
that of their own experience a~~&#13;
background The&#13;
. program&#13;
stresses the differences which the&#13;
exchange student WI' II .Incur&#13;
becau~e we live in a complex and&#13;
changing society in which differences&#13;
among people -- racial&#13;
geographic, religious and&#13;
economic -- are real and&#13;
unavoidable. By realizing this&#13;
through experience, the student&#13;
can become more aware of the&#13;
why as well as what the problems&#13;
and is.sues are in America today.&#13;
Sprmg semester, Wisconsin&#13;
students will attend North&#13;
Carolina Central University It is&#13;
located in the circle of ac~demic&#13;
institutions which include Duke&#13;
University in Durham and the&#13;
University of North Carolina in&#13;
neighboring Chapel Hill. Textiles&#13;
and tobacco industries are also&#13;
predominant in the Durham&#13;
area, and the weather is mild.&#13;
The population of Durham was&#13;
95,438 in the 1970 census&#13;
Exchange students follow a&#13;
course program similar to one&#13;
they would follow at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Tl1j.s does not e.xclude&#13;
taking courses for which there&#13;
are no direct equivalents at&#13;
Wisconsin, but which would be of&#13;
special value to take at the exchange&#13;
school. It is the student's&#13;
responsibility to consult the&#13;
Office of Admissions on the&#13;
transferability of any courses&#13;
they may take. They should also&#13;
consult academic advisors in&#13;
their college or major. To date&#13;
there has bee&#13;
ficult n no major die-&#13;
. Y regardlOg transfer of&#13;
credits. StUdents .'11 w recewe&#13;
~ansfer credits for work taken at&#13;
e exchange University. not&#13;
grades. Participation In the&#13;
program will be noted 00 the&#13;
student's uw transcript.&#13;
Applicants who will be fresh.&#13;
m:~ during participation are not&#13;
elIgible. Students who will be&#13;
Jumo.rs during participation Will&#13;
tM: given priority. tuoents ho&#13;
w~ll.be seniors are oot normauv&#13;
ehglble. In order to a ist \!lith&#13;
program activities participanls&#13;
should be at Wi eonsin for at&#13;
l~a.st a year follo""ing par&#13;
t1clpation in the program&#13;
Moreover. the Uni\'er It)· of&#13;
Wisconsin requires that a tude:nt&#13;
must earn his la l 30 crechts jn&#13;
residence to receive a Wisconsin&#13;
degree. An applicant shoold ha\'e&#13;
a cumulative CPA of 2.5 through&#13;
last semester. Progress in tho&#13;
semester's classes will also be&#13;
evaluated. There are some ex·&#13;
ceptions.&#13;
There is a n agreement by&#13;
North Carolina Central and&#13;
University of Wisconsin Sj tern&#13;
campuses (except Madison~ that&#13;
exchange students are permitted&#13;
to pay Wisconsin tuition on thesr&#13;
Wisconsin campus before the\&#13;
leave for "CCl: Thu tbey \\ould&#13;
avoid paymg Xorth Carolina outof·state&#13;
tuition at ,'CCC&#13;
Students will pay room and&#13;
board and other expenses at&#13;
NCCU. The offiCial room and&#13;
board costs per semesler are&#13;
s-I2Q&#13;
AccordlOg to 150m Fern, 10&#13;
terested students must pick up an&#13;
application at his office and ha\'e&#13;
it and related form turned 10 b\&#13;
Nov. 3. They ",Ill then be uiterviewed&#13;
between ,,·o\: 6 and&#13;
10V. 10 and nolificatlon of&#13;
selection will be made by ..'0\ 20&#13;
There will be an orientalJOO held&#13;
in Madison 10 early December&#13;
and the students wiU leave for&#13;
North Carolina Central&#13;
University around Jan. 5. 1973&#13;
: .&#13;
Cham- Tap-Bar&#13;
Wed., Oct. 11, 1971 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
Sorry. hoa&#13;
"Leave your empty&#13;
cigarette pack&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
A large. orange. IIll lh bUcIt&#13;
lenermg Implores toom and&#13;
facult) to "le3\ yoor em"t&#13;
Cleareue paclt " rn ord .... thai •&#13;
"httle rI" In a • hi .. au f;&#13;
ho pitaI" m.y ha\ free&#13;
hour m an Iron lu&#13;
In tront 0( the gn 011. table&#13;
are some •. empt) pIIc of&#13;
crgareue. ~ haun o( lIt lor.&#13;
chtld"&#13;
rT) 0&#13;
Tbe si n In the caJ"etrna on&#13;
the K ha campllS Jud I&#13;
lrom the .... mb&lt;r 0( ern ) pa&#13;
0/ are Ie th m&#13;
riTectl\ nfortunatlth t I&#13;
a cruel ,thou ~po no&#13;
tenuonalh so hoa&#13;
Achee' '" Ith Lh mat.n ofh at&#13;
Kenosha ~ .. Ied no OM&#13;
knev. the anglO 0( the I nit"""&#13;
been compl"'necI about I.....&#13;
•~eone.·· a td&#13;
lIer efforts to lind the niaker 01&#13;
th ., n prG\ed frultl Th&#13;
reporter' ellorb did .....&#13;
Call to t,I""au ·.r~a&#13;
ho--pltal prG\'ed Jll.! a lut I&#13;
There.po ra edlrom "\Ie&#13;
ha\ e no one ~ an an Iron lu&#13;
to'"Tha' the old .1., j e.n&#13;
the .. arid ••&#13;
"&#13;
10 % commission&#13;
BUSI G PROBLEMS?&#13;
Rider. n eded to Rocin&#13;
or service ",ill be discontinued.&#13;
T II your&#13;
fri end. to ride the bu.,&#13;
Schedule. ovo; loble 01&#13;
lJW -p InfonTlol ion Office&#13;
or coli JeNel Ech 1-&#13;
borger ot 553-2342.&#13;
Special&#13;
Sx7 COLOR E LAR E.IE. iT&#13;
OC70BER I ' 0 'OVE. IBER I I&#13;
~~~~------------&#13;
Pukside AcliYities Board prm Is&#13;
P to and t\f'\&#13;
Elm\\ood PtW&#13;
381 Durand PI .....&#13;
SsHSII&#13;
•&#13;
D&#13;
G offr&#13;
fUllfil! lbe&#13;
on r Band&#13;
Fri., Oct. 13 9:00 p.m,&#13;
Student Activities Bldg,&#13;
dm. P&#13;
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?&#13;
STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFICE&#13;
0-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295&#13;
251 I Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
d"gne onTap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches 0&#13;
:&#13;
. and Pizza :J:)0.&#13;
/~.-..~.-.. ---------~-_.;"&#13;
) § We need people who are money-hungry!&#13;
)&#13;
)&#13;
' (&#13;
ed., Oct. 11, 972 THE PARKSIDE RA G R&#13;
North-South Exchange Panned 1&#13;
BY Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
J Croxford is a student from&#13;
Pa~:side who participated in the&#13;
North-South Exchange Program.&#13;
Th's program allowed him to&#13;
tiend a primarily black&#13;
\uthern Univers~ty, . North&#13;
Carolina Central Uruvers1ty, for&#13;
the second semester of the 1968-69&#13;
chool year. A to how he fel~ on the first&#13;
day, he said it was kind of strange&#13;
and that the ten students from&#13;
Wisconsin sort of stuck together.&#13;
·'To begin with, there is a&#13;
definite color distinction and you&#13;
reel kind of lost and out of place,&#13;
but once you get to know people,&#13;
vou feel more at home," Croxford&#13;
said&#13;
He said some people are very&#13;
friendl), others don't care if&#13;
l'ou're there or not and the black&#13;
militants usually just left him&#13;
alone&#13;
Most of his friends were not&#13;
other exchange students; he said&#13;
he hardly saw them at all. He had&#13;
met a lot of his friends in a play&#13;
he was in.&#13;
"It was a good experience. You&#13;
learn what life is like in a&#13;
minority. Most white people don't&#13;
get the chance. You run into&#13;
ituations you read about blacks&#13;
getting mto."&#13;
Th~ academic yelir 1972-73 . the eighth year of th U . . is&#13;
f . e mvers1ty 0 Wisconsin's one-semester&#13;
student e~change program with a&#13;
black umversity Th'&#13;
offers th . . is program . . e Umversity of&#13;
W1sconsm students&#13;
portunity to grow in tha~ op- d . e1r un- :;s:_andmg of American inst·&#13;
I. u i~ns and society by par1c1patmg&#13;
for a semest . er m a totally different academ.&#13;
cultural and social life style th;~&#13;
that of their own experience and&#13;
background The p · rogram&#13;
stresses the differences which the&#13;
exchange student w1·11 mcur .&#13;
becau~e we live in a complex and&#13;
changmg society in which differences&#13;
among people -- racial&#13;
geographic, religious and&#13;
economic -- are real and&#13;
unavoidable. By realizing this&#13;
through experience, the student&#13;
can become more aware of the&#13;
why as well as what the problem&#13;
and is_sues are in America today em ter·&#13;
evaluated&#13;
ceptions&#13;
There 1&#13;
rr •&#13;
'Lea ur&#13;
• Cl ar&#13;
Part of the purpose of this&#13;
program is to experience different&#13;
cultural and social&#13;
1tuations. Croxford said that&#13;
there were differences in the&#13;
kinds of music, ways of dancing,&#13;
verbal expressions, and some of&#13;
the foods in the cafeteria; there&#13;
were also a lot of courses in black&#13;
culture&#13;
Spring semester, Wiscon m&#13;
students will attend :-.orth&#13;
Carolina Central Universitv It i&#13;
located in the circle ot ac~dem1c&#13;
institutions which include Duke&#13;
University in Durham and the&#13;
University of North Carolina in&#13;
neighboring Chapel Hill Textile&#13;
and tobacco industries are also&#13;
predominant in the Durham&#13;
area, and the weather i mild&#13;
The population of Durham wa&#13;
95,438 in the 1970 census&#13;
Exchange students follow a&#13;
course program similar to one&#13;
they would follow at the&#13;
University of Wi con inParkside.&#13;
This does not e: elude&#13;
taking courses for which there&#13;
are no direct equivalent at&#13;
Wisconsin, but which would be of&#13;
special value to take at the exchange&#13;
school. It is the tudent&#13;
responsibility to con ult the&#13;
Office of Admi ions on the&#13;
transferability of any course&#13;
they may take. They hould al o&#13;
consult academic advi or in&#13;
their college or major To date&#13;
Specia&#13;
'·I noticed that the people&#13;
seemed to be better dressed "&#13;
Croxford aid "It wax not uncommon&#13;
to see a guy in a sports&#13;
jacke&#13;
He said he'd go back if given&#13;
the chance, but the program only&#13;
allows one to go down for a&#13;
emester without paying out-oftate&#13;
tuition.&#13;
"You have to go there with an&#13;
open mind, knowing it isn't going&#13;
to be all good or all bad. It's the&#13;
same as anywhere else; you meet&#13;
ome people you don't get along&#13;
with and some who have the&#13;
·ame interests," Croscord said.&#13;
"After I was there for a while, I&#13;
didn't think of people as being&#13;
black or white anymore; they're&#13;
JU t your friends and there's no&#13;
color distinction ."&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
:······························································&#13;
.&#13;
Cham-Tap-Bar =&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
:&#13;
Ham Sandwiches O&#13;
. and Pizza O ; : •.•.••••••••...••••••.••.•.•.•....................•...........•&#13;
Our&#13;
Fri. Oct. 13&#13;
Studen&#13;
I~.,.-....,..-...~~,,,,,,--..._,...-.... ,,..-......,_,,...---....&#13;
) ll We need people who are money-hungry!&#13;
)&#13;
) RE 0 ER 0&#13;
'&#13;
7&#13;
•&#13;
10 % commission STOP BY THE PAR SIDE RANGE OFFICE&#13;
D-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING P.E. Bldg. underused Mother Nature's organ&#13;
gardening food supply _ Will~&#13;
foods -- will. be discussed and&#13;
collected during a University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Extension COUfS&#13;
"Edible Wild Plants," e,&#13;
Three lectures will be held 0&#13;
Thursdays, beginning Oct. 1;&#13;
7:30 p.m., on the UW-Parksid~&#13;
Wood Road Campus; and thre&#13;
field trips on Saturdays, 8 a.rn te&#13;
noon. . 0&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewi&#13;
professor of life science at ~~.&#13;
~ark~idfe, will&#13;
t&#13;
,instruct the class'&#13;
or&#13;
t&#13;
l~ 0lrma IOn on field trip&#13;
rna er-ta 5 and registrar&#13;
ta t Universit IOn can c mv~rsl y Extension 553:&#13;
2312. There IS a special reduced&#13;
student fee of $5.00.&#13;
An organizational meeting for&#13;
all students and faculty interested&#13;
in studying Christian&#13;
Science is being planned. The&#13;
group is looking for a faculty or&#13;
staff member as an advisor to the&#13;
group. For more information,&#13;
contact Rich Meyers at 634-1202.&#13;
"It's Wbat's Happening" will&#13;
be a regular feature or The&#13;
Parkside Ranger. All clubs and&#13;
organizations are urged to&#13;
submit notices about meetings.&#13;
rallies. etc. in person at the&#13;
Parkside Ranger office, D-IM&#13;
LLC. We ask that these be in our&#13;
oUice one week before the issue&#13;
(Wednesday for the next Wednesday's&#13;
issue). None will be&#13;
accepted over the phone.&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
•&#13;
will be holding elections from&#13;
Oct. 23-25. The deadline lor the&#13;
completion of petitions is 10 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 16. The deadline for platforms&#13;
is Oct. 11 and otficer&#13;
candidates are asked to appear&#13;
for pictures on Oct. 10 from 10 -12&#13;
noon at l..LC0-194. Petitions may&#13;
be picked up at the PSGA office&#13;
LLC 0.193, the main desk in the&#13;
library, the information desk in&#13;
the LLC, or at the student services&#13;
office on the Kenosha&#13;
campus, K-l35. Volunteers are&#13;
needed to work at the polls. You&#13;
can sign up at the SG office, LLC&#13;
D-193.&#13;
By Shawn R_ Clements&#13;
II' a beauhlul, n,'" Olympic size pool Adjoining the pool are very&#13;
Ole . modem. male and female locker rooms. At one end of the&#13;
T) tal-clear pool are diving hoards of obvious quality. Idyllic, isn't it?&#13;
The onl) probl m With the scene i a lack of the most important&#13;
commodlt) - people Aecordmg to sst. to the Athletic Director Loren&#13;
lIem "The enure buildmg. e pecially the pool. is gro Iy uoderused."&#13;
Th r "' lor thl. underuse are quite unclear. Lack of knowledge?&#13;
If lOU re readmg thl ,that no longer applies. (Fees and schedules at&#13;
end 01 rncle r&#13;
Th lO'mn tum 1 adding two electrically operated curtains which.&#13;
htn 10" red ~ III divide the gym mto three sections, thus making&#13;
m re roodm for el a well as general u e. The sauna, too, will soon&#13;
r ,&#13;
Th ee I me m ntion about the lact that the Physical Education&#13;
b'Jlldlng "III have to be elf ustaming in the near future. Hein's&#13;
r pun to qu . hon about tin was that lillie, if anything, is known&#13;
bout that Idea Thu ,any peculation about the possible eflect of&#13;
uch • mev on fe IS pure conjecture.&#13;
IIIth II the laClhtl available in this million-dollar building. nonus&#13;
b) tUdent, faculty and staff IS incomprehensible, especially&#13;
conSldermR th t I for equivalent facilities would run $150 on the&#13;
PJ he morkl't "Eve-f)'one kept crying for a swimming pool .. Hein&#13;
ld "No\lt It's here U Il!" '&#13;
f e. h dul Includes&#13;
$1.50 mo. U Shirt, shorts, towel, swimsuit, aU laundering&#13;
The WhiteskeJlar Coffee House&#13;
•&#13;
will be holding auditions on&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 18, for upcoming&#13;
acts this fall. They will&#13;
begin at 1 p.m. and continue until&#13;
they are all heard, Some twenty&#13;
acts are expected to audition.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
A Republican "Meet the&#13;
Candidates" Dessert will be held&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct, 12, at&#13;
the Kenosha VFW. GOP candidates&#13;
for state and local offices,&#13;
as well as tst District&#13;
Congressional candidate Merrill&#13;
Stalbaurn, will be present at the&#13;
affair, spmsored by the Kenosha&#13;
County Young Republicans, with&#13;
which the Parkside Young&#13;
Republicans are affiliated. For&#13;
more information, phone Marilyn&#13;
Schubert at 658-8954.&#13;
Audit.ions for the 1972&#13;
production of cardiac capers has&#13;
been .set for Oct. 10 in the 51.&#13;
Mary s Hospital cafeteria at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
. The show is open to anyone&#13;
IOterested and includes a varlet&#13;
f&#13;
.. da Y o SlOglOg, ncing, and some&#13;
drama. Anyone who auditions'&#13;
~heshow is used in some aspect ~~&#13;
It.&#13;
($2 01 thl Lock, locker, towel&#13;
I. r fundabl&#13;
The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
•&#13;
present the feature film,&#13;
"Loneliness of the Long Distance&#13;
Runner," and a short, "The&#13;
Wall," at 7:30 p.m. today (Oct.&#13;
11) in Greenquist Hall. Donation&#13;
is 60 cents .&#13;
Towel&#13;
wimsUit. per usage&#13;
Paddle ball or handball (player keeps ball)&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
liED LE&#13;
The Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
•&#13;
will meet today at 7:30 p.m. in D174LLC&#13;
to discuss the remainder&#13;
of ~e Gloria Steinem tape and&#13;
attitudes and opinions about it.&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Pool National Varsity Club&#13;
Mon - Fn, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m&#13;
Mon - Thurs, 5:30 p.m. to to p.m.&#13;
Sal., 10 a m to 5 p.m.&#13;
Sun, 1-30 p.m. to 10 p.m.&#13;
•&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha ,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
• BEER. SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS. WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P M&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M. • •&#13;
CALL&#13;
632-1565&#13;
.". s.M.i.&#13;
UVE·OM&#13;
Cymna lum&#13;
Mon • Thurs, 7,45 a m.&#13;
to to p m.&#13;
f'rl .. 7:45 am to 6 p.m.&#13;
t , 9 am (0 5 p.m.&#13;
Sun, 1,30 pm. to 10 p.m.&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
RACINE 553·2150&#13;
rEACH~R&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
~&#13;
The House of&#13;
fIne Diamond.s 2909 DURAND AVE_ RACINE, wise.&#13;
1----------------------- I -------1&#13;
!GINO'S TAILORS!&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I Clothes for the Young Man I&#13;
I Large Selection of Doubleknit Slacks and Sportcoats :&#13;
I Alterations and Styling I&#13;
I 10 pet. off with Parkside I.D. I&#13;
! 2212 60th Street 654-0774 I&#13;
,_____________ I __________ 1&#13;
ramou Brand Watches&#13;
Ring - Jewelry- GUts&#13;
Repairs THE&#13;
EST ABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
UT (Itfttl • ,. w:&#13;
. ,"!.-a . N.I4A. ..,.&#13;
_ ,UIt-.a&#13;
CAIRY-OU1S&#13;
....-_...~.......&#13;
,.... a....- ,... _ .._--,.." ...- -'_ .. ...... _.ra&#13;
,....-&#13;
... ... I'" -'-&#13;
...l'O_&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
RESEARCH MATlRIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
SInd IOf y r dtsctiphve, UIl-to-dale&#13;
121pIIp, lUll Oldertltliol of 2 300&#13;
QUlllty ft3urch papers helln&#13;
$1 oaI. co'" ,utal. 1M ~H1101.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLlMIT£D&#13;
519 Gl£HROCK m., SUIT£ 203&#13;
lOS AHGEUS, CALIF. !10024&#13;
(213) 411-S414 • m·S4!l3&#13;
''We Mid • loul salesmln"&#13;
A mateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night Jim FlIlpK. 116-.4152, Racine&#13;
1S..c&#13;
...... Steve Httgeno .............d $1.. KlMOSha W', 531 w. 654-7297, KenoSha&#13;
• I. «I, 654.5139&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANG ER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
P. ld . underused IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
•&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
"It' \ llal' Happening" will&#13;
~ a re ular feature of The&#13;
P rk ide Ranger. II club and&#13;
rganization are urged to&#13;
ubmit notic about meeting ,&#13;
rallie , etc . in pe on at the&#13;
the pool are ve~&#13;
Park id Ranger orri e, D-l!M&#13;
LL . We a k that the e be in our&#13;
ffi e one week b fore the i ue&#13;
!\\edn day for the ne t Wed·&#13;
n da) • i u ) .• 'one will be&#13;
ace pt d ov r the phone.&#13;
Par ide tudent • Government&#13;
ill be holding elections from&#13;
Oct. 23-25. The deadline for the&#13;
completion of petition i 10 a.m.&#13;
r, to&#13;
t. 16. The deadline for plat·&#13;
form i Oct. 11 and officer&#13;
candidat are a ked to appear&#13;
for pictures on Oct. 10 from 10 -12&#13;
noon at LLC D-194. Petitions may&#13;
be picked up at the PSGA office&#13;
LLC D-193, the main desk in the&#13;
library. the information desk in&#13;
the LLC, or at the tudent ser-&#13;
\ic office on the Kenosha&#13;
campu , K-135. Volunteers are&#13;
needed to work at the polls. You&#13;
can ign up at the SG office, LLC&#13;
D-193.&#13;
•&#13;
T The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
\\ 1m u,t. per e&#13;
present the feature film ,&#13;
"Loneliness or the Long Distance&#13;
Runner, ' and a short, "The&#13;
Wall," at 7:30 p.m. today (Oct.&#13;
11) in Greenquist Hall. Donation&#13;
is 60 cents .&#13;
11 or h nd I &lt; play r keeps ball)&#13;
· Ht.I Lf.&#13;
m. to 1: p.m&#13;
• S: p.m. to 10 p.m.&#13;
m to s p.m.&#13;
pm. to 10 p.m.&#13;
, 7: 5 .m.&#13;
f 'ne Diamonds&#13;
m BrandW tch&#13;
in - J 'Atll') -GU&#13;
R lr -&#13;
-z.s.....&#13;
IIE-11&#13;
L&#13;
The Parkside W• omen's Caucus&#13;
will meet today at 7: 30 p.m. in D·&#13;
174 LLC to discuss the remainder&#13;
or the Gloria Steinem tape and&#13;
attitudes and opinions about it.&#13;
•BEER• SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
I CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
Q OPE N DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
u&#13;
I&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.&#13;
0&#13;
CALL&#13;
I 632-1565 R&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC.&#13;
------------------------------&#13;
GINO'S TAILORS&#13;
Clothes for the Young Man&#13;
Large Selection of Doubleknit Slacks and Sportcoats&#13;
Alterations and Styl ing&#13;
10 pct. off with Parkside I.D.&#13;
2212 60th Street 654-0774&#13;
' I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I ______________________________ !&#13;
RESEARCH MAffRIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
... .&#13;
NML&#13;
lit( OISIC'\iS&#13;
IOR "01VIOU4l ~&#13;
• 116 '152. Rac,ne&#13;
2S1.5 6Jr Steve Hagenow 654 d St., Kenosha, Wis. 531&lt;10, 654-5739 ' -7297, Kenosha&#13;
An organizational meeting for&#13;
all students and faculty interested&#13;
in studying Christian&#13;
Science is being planned. The&#13;
group is looking for a faculty or&#13;
taff member as an advisor to the&#13;
group. For more information,&#13;
contact Rich Meyers at 634-1202.&#13;
The Whiteskellar • Coffee House&#13;
will be holding auditions on&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 18, for upcoming&#13;
acts this fall. They will&#13;
begin at l p.m. and continue until&#13;
they are all heard. Some twenty&#13;
acts are expected to audition.&#13;
•&#13;
A Republican "Meet the&#13;
Candidates" Dessert will be held&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 12, at&#13;
the Kenosha VFW. GOP candidates&#13;
for state and local offices,&#13;
as well as 1st District&#13;
Congressional candidate Merrill&#13;
Stalbaurn, will be present at the&#13;
affair, sponsored by the Kenosha&#13;
County Young Republicans, with&#13;
which the Parkside Young&#13;
Republicans are affiliated. For&#13;
more information, phone Marilyn&#13;
Schubert at 658-8954.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mother Nature's organi&#13;
gardening food supply _ wil~&#13;
foods - will_ be discussed and&#13;
co~ected_ durmg a University of&#13;
W1sconsm-Extension course "Edible Wild Plants." '&#13;
Three lectures will be held 0&#13;
Thursdays, beginning Oct. 1:&#13;
7:30 p.m., on the UW-Parksid '&#13;
Wood Road Campus; and thr&#13;
field trips on Saturdays, s a.m. t&#13;
noon. 0&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewi&#13;
professor of life science at c;,&#13;
Parkside, will instruct the cl ·&#13;
For information on field ~ -&#13;
materials and registrat· lp ta tu . . ion con c mv~rs1ty Extension 553:&#13;
2312. There 1s a special reduced&#13;
student fee of $5.00.&#13;
•&#13;
Audit_ions for the 1972&#13;
production of cardiac capers ha&#13;
been ,set for_ Oct. 10 in the l.&#13;
Mary s Hospital cafeteria at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The show is open to anyon&#13;
interested and includes a varlet&#13;
f . . d y o smgmg, ancing, and some&#13;
drama. Anyone who auditions . th h . ed' lO . e s ow 1s us m some aspect of&#13;
It.&#13;
•&#13;
443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha ,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
THE&#13;
ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur C1Jntest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night &#13;
-&#13;
0",&#13;
"&#13;
Membersof the UW-Parkside women's tennis team t k&#13;
e&#13;
for a photo. with Coach Dick Frecka Pictur da(le)a mement from practice to&#13;
pos • e -r are Sue ./II de' Squire, Kay Becker, Sue Gra f and Frecka. Pat K k' h anggaar, ind&#13;
I h R e rc , t e squad's N I layer .vho ed t e anger women to a first place f' , h' I o . P , InIS rn ast .veek's O&lt;t be&#13;
f&#13;
st Tennis Tournament, IS not pictured. 0 re&#13;
, Photo by Crarg Robert&#13;
"Yon ve got to he optimistic"&#13;
I'I;EI:: L.\:\CE WRlTI:"G&#13;
SERVtCES Report writing,&#13;
speech writing, commercial&#13;
cOPY-editing. editing and ~rlOg done in my home.&#13;
ease call 639-7378&#13;
eVenings.&#13;
WithOll,t hurting your feelings,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Pat enjoys playing on the team,&#13;
and says she loves competition.&#13;
She doesn't mind strange courts&#13;
and likes to play away from home&#13;
because "we have a lot of fun on&#13;
the trips."&#13;
Sue Wanggard doesn't dislike&#13;
playing away meets because the&#13;
courts are strange, but because&#13;
the people are strange, so she&#13;
likes to play at home better.&#13;
"It really helps to have&#13;
somebody there to watch you,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Sue enjoys playing on hot,&#13;
sunny days, but her favorite&#13;
conditions are cloudy and cool.&#13;
"With the sun coming out when&#13;
it's to my advantage," she added.&#13;
Sue says the wind doesn't&#13;
bother her, but after a couple of&#13;
wild shots cries 01 "BI"" , Wind "&#13;
echoed arouod the courts&#13;
Practice is held every weekdav&#13;
from about 3 to 5 p.m. and ~&#13;
Fridays it can last all afternoon&#13;
Along with practice&#13;
developing a good attitude IS oi&#13;
great imporlance&#13;
"Yoo've got to be opium tic,&#13;
concentrate and try to do "hat&#13;
the coach tells yeo." said ue&#13;
Wanggard.&#13;
During a practice doubles&#13;
match, Frecka continuously&#13;
encouraged and cnucued hJ&#13;
players.&#13;
At one point, when there&#13;
seemed to be more critieism&#13;
flying around than tennis balls,&#13;
he turned and said \l, ith a mile,&#13;
"I can't let these girls thi&#13;
they're too good, because then&#13;
they can beat anybody:"&#13;
Soccer&#13;
oct. 14.&#13;
Oct. 21 ..&#13;
Cross&#13;
Oct. 13&#13;
Oct. t7 .&#13;
Country&#13;
. Notre Dame Invitational at Bend, Inc&#13;
Ma rquene at Parts'de&#13;
Golf&#13;
Oct. 14 .&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
Oct. 14&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Oct. 18&#13;
UW-Plalle..,Ue at Pari&lt; Id&#13;
Marquette at Parks,de&#13;
U\\'-Mad,son at ~Iadlson&#13;
Oshkosh tnvltational at Oshkosh&#13;
W-oshkosh at Par ,de&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine,&#13;
$1 a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
American State Bankt&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
Phone 658-2582&#13;
3928 60th St.&#13;
Wed" OCt. 11, 1972 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 7&#13;
ByKathrynWellner&#13;
Good exercise and fun aren't&#13;
the only things Pat Keltic, Sue&#13;
Wanggardand Sue Graf get out of&#13;
tennis.&#13;
The girls, respectively the top&#13;
three members of the women's&#13;
tennisteam, each have their own&#13;
unique reasons for playing.&#13;
After being injured as a&#13;
gymnast, Sue Wannggard took up&#13;
playing tennis and running cross&#13;
«entry. She says she does it&#13;
mostly for her own personal&#13;
enjoyment.&#13;
"Il changed my personality,&#13;
100. I keep more to myself now; I&#13;
don't let my emotions show as&#13;
much anymore," said Sue. "One&#13;
thinga sport like this teaches you&#13;
is patience," she added.&#13;
Sue Graf, a senior, gets a&#13;
feeling of accomplishment,&#13;
especially when she wins.&#13;
"When -I win-E really-feel-Iike-c--v-.&#13;
work&#13;
I've done something, like all the&#13;
and practice have paid off,"&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
she said. "But when Ilose I feel&#13;
very upset with myself, and&#13;
depressed. "&#13;
Sueseemed very positive about&#13;
the effect tennis has had on her&#13;
personality.&#13;
"Oh, yes!" she exclaimed,&#13;
"especially the ups and downs."&#13;
Nobodylikes to lose. Pat Kekic&#13;
describes the way she feels&#13;
before a match as "the worst&#13;
possiblebutterflies" and she says&#13;
that she doesn't settle down until&#13;
aller she starts playing.&#13;
"Coach (Dick) Frecka always&#13;
makes us relax with his snide&#13;
httle jokes," she said, smiling.&#13;
Winning, on the other hand, is&#13;
always exciting, • 'especially&#13;
when your coach is there or if it's&#13;
the match you need to win the&#13;
meet."&#13;
According to Pat, playing&#13;
lenms taught her to be both a&#13;
g~ Winner and a good loser. She&#13;
beheves that it's good for people&#13;
to learn good sportsmanship and&#13;
courtesy.&#13;
"It has helped me to learn how&#13;
to get along with people" she&#13;
~aid. '&#13;
Pat has had the advantage of&#13;
living across the street from&#13;
some tennis courts and she&#13;
slarted playing when she was&#13;
thirteen.&#13;
"The best time for kids to start&#13;
Isv,;hen they're nine or len," said&#13;
Pat.&#13;
She never had lessons until she&#13;
played for the team. so all of&#13;
oach Frecka's advi&lt;.:e has been&#13;
e1tome.&#13;
·Ht·s good at giving criticism&#13;
MemMr" F' 0 I C&#13;
Harrier' b&#13;
La t TIl sda)" the Ranger&#13;
hamers .. ent (0 t ..hi a&#13;
and came bo "'10 qwte&#13;
ha~ Coach \',c GodIf'O) ,d&#13;
"n. IS the that.. ha.&#13;
be.,on them 10 the lour }..&#13;
thal e ',"eo been • am them&#13;
n,., top five .",..,.,... ran a&#13;
team for th rlrst ume th ) r&#13;
If this eeps '" d a&#13;
coote~ lor the . AlA DlSlnct&#13;
O1amplOnSh,p .,&#13;
TIC&#13;
l;&#13;
Rm&#13;
DE IS 81El&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
In t&#13;
\aUa e&#13;
Information It&#13;
I, TaUonl Hall&#13;
,&#13;
M mbers o f the UW-Parkside women's tennis team tak • •&#13;
e . h C h D· k F e a memen ro practice o for a photo. wit oac 1c recka. Pictured (I-) S&#13;
pose S r are ue anggaard Cind S U·,re Kay Becke r, ue Graf and Frecka Pat Kek· th 1 '&#13;
q ' • 1 c, e squad s O I layer who led the Ranger women to a first place finish in I t k' Ok. be&#13;
p • • as ee s to r- fe st Tennis Tournament, 1s not pictured. Pho&#13;
O&#13;
b\ Cr&#13;
1&#13;
R&#13;
"You've got to he optimi~tic&#13;
BY Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Good exercise and fun. aren't&#13;
the only things Pat Kekic, Sue&#13;
wanggard and Sue Graf get out of&#13;
tennis. . The girls, respectively the top&#13;
three members of the women's&#13;
tennis team, each have their own&#13;
unique reasons for playing.&#13;
After being injured as a&#13;
gymnast, Sue Wannggar? took up&#13;
playing tennis and runnmg cross&#13;
country. She says she does it&#13;
mostly for her own personal&#13;
enjoyment.&#13;
"It changed my personality,&#13;
too. I keep more to myself now; I&#13;
don't let my emotions show as&#13;
much anymore," said Sue. "One&#13;
thing a sport like this teaches you&#13;
i patience," she added.&#13;
Sue Graf, a senior, gets a&#13;
feeling of accomplishment,&#13;
especially when she wins.&#13;
"When I win I really reel Hke&#13;
I've done something, like all the&#13;
work and practice have paid off,"&#13;
he said. "But when I lose I feel&#13;
very upset with myself, and&#13;
depressed."&#13;
Sue seemed very positive about&#13;
the effect tennis has had on her&#13;
personality.&#13;
"Oh, yes!" she exclaimed,&#13;
"especially the ups and downs."&#13;
obody likes to lose. Pat Kekic&#13;
describes the way she feels&#13;
before a match as "the worst&#13;
po ible butterflies" and she says&#13;
that she doesn't settle down until&#13;
after she starts playing.&#13;
"Coach (Dick) Frecka always&#13;
makes us relax with his snide&#13;
little jokes, " she said, smiling.&#13;
Winning, on the other hand, is&#13;
always exciting, "especially&#13;
when your coach is there or if it's&#13;
the match you need to win the&#13;
meet."&#13;
According to Pat, playing&#13;
tenni taught her to be both a&#13;
00d winner and a good loser. She&#13;
believes that it's good for people&#13;
lo learn good sportsmanship and courte y.&#13;
"It ha helped me to learn how&#13;
to ,:et along with people," she&#13;
Pat has had the advantage of&#13;
hvmg across the street from&#13;
ome tennis courts and she&#13;
tarted planng when she was th1rte •n. ·&#13;
"Th' best tune for kids to start&#13;
'p h n the, 're nine or ten, .. said&#13;
at&#13;
1 h n '\ r had lesson· until he&#13;
P ed for the team. so all of&#13;
th fr• ka ad, ice ha. be&#13;
lcom •&#13;
H&#13;
• Hl:i-; L \, (T WRITl'.I.G&#13;
•~H\'t( Es Report writing.&#13;
Jleech \\Tiling. commercial&#13;
copy-edtt1ng. editmg and&#13;
~Ping done in my home .&#13;
lea e call 639-7378 evening&#13;
without hurting your feelings,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Pat enjoys playing on the team,&#13;
and says she loves competition.&#13;
She doesn't mind strange courts&#13;
and likes to play away from home&#13;
because "we have a lot of fun on the trips."&#13;
Sue Wanggard doesn't dislike&#13;
playing away meets because the&#13;
courts are strange, but because&#13;
the people are strange, so she&#13;
likes to play at home better.&#13;
"It really helps to have&#13;
somebody there to watch you,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Sue enjoys playing on hot,&#13;
sunny days, but her favorite&#13;
conditions are cloudy and cool.&#13;
"With the sun coming out when&#13;
it's to my advantage," she added.&#13;
Sue says the wind doesn't&#13;
bother her, but after a couple of&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
oct. 14 . ... ... ........................ .&#13;
Oct. 21 ..... . ......... . ....... .&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Oct. 13 ......... ... ...... .&#13;
Oct. 17 ................... .&#13;
Golf&#13;
Oct. 14 ...... ......... ..&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
Oct. 14 ......... ·&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Oct. 18 .. . .... · · · · ·&#13;
Monday night i&#13;
"Ye Old ud ipping , 'ite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$I a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light&#13;
American&#13;
Free Checking Ac o its&#13;
for College tud nts&#13;
Phone 65 --5&#13;
3928 60th St. D C&#13;
., Oct. 11, 1 72 TH PA ID G 7&#13;
OE IS l&#13;
Harr· r I&#13;
• Tl &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed .• Oct. 11,1972&#13;
Intramural&#13;
Th I 1 Touch Football season&#13;
I. und r ....8) with three undeleat&#13;
d learns teadmg the way.&#13;
La l year's university chamPiOns.the&#13;
hoon rs, got off 10 a&#13;
good tart WIIb a 21-t~ vic tory&#13;
over B A new learn is out in&#13;
ront In the wm column, however,&#13;
lhe Trout porI a 2-1)record.&#13;
er e led 1»' their flashy&#13;
runner Dean MatlOson. The other&#13;
undefeated team is the Pink&#13;
FascI Is They combined the pinpolOlpasslOg&#13;
or Jack Swaru with&#13;
the hawk·l1ke delense 01 Fred&#13;
Z1 vers ror a 1!HlVlCtory over the&#13;
FOOIballTeam&#13;
andlng&#13;
Trout&#13;
hnon rs&#13;
Pink F ,IS&#13;
FOOIballTeam&#13;
BO&#13;
TwO Park Ide I Bowling&#13;
Leagues are forming that&#13;
tudent can Ign up for now.&#13;
Th Itrat league i being held at&#13;
endan Lan 10 Kenosha It&#13;
will be held every Monday at 9: 15&#13;
pm The OIld league WIll be&#13;
beld at uri Lanes, also in&#13;
Kenosha It "ill be held every&#13;
f'nday at 4 30 p.m.&#13;
Anyone Interested in joimng&#13;
elth r 01 th. leagues should&#13;
'Ill' up,.," at the P E Buildlng.&#13;
crt am lose&#13;
The Park Idt soccer team&#13;
wed liS rourlh game 01 the&#13;
son la I .....ednesday !Ught to&#13;
th !uka. or C'lucago Circle&#13;
Coli e,:l-2 It as a game 01&#13;
rgument and controversial&#13;
all • "hlch showed in the&#13;
lahst!c Par Ide commiUed 30&#13;
louis 10 Ollcago Circle's 37.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Jobs re Available ... !&#13;
For FREE inIonnation&#13;
on ludenc istance and&#13;
pia _nt program send&#13;
If-addressed STAMPED&#13;
envelope 10 the ational&#13;
Placemen I Regi Iry. 1001&#13;
I ldal10 St.. Kalispell.&#13;
MT S9901&#13;
o ,1\1\11&#13;
Porkside soccer coach Hal Henderson gives his team&#13;
some advice before recent game. The Porkside booters, fresh from&#13;
their first win of the season against UW-Milwaukee, "ill face UWPlatteville&#13;
here Saturday afternoon&#13;
o THE WEEKE D&#13;
Rooters win lst game&#13;
2·0&#13;
I ·0&#13;
1-0&#13;
0·2&#13;
0-2&#13;
The Uw-Parkslde soccer team&#13;
got its first win saturday in the&#13;
consolation game of the&#13;
Oktoberfest Soccer Tournament&#13;
as lhe Rangers dumped UW1i1waukee&#13;
&amp;2.&#13;
Parkside had losl Friday to&#13;
otre Dame, 3-1,but the Rangers&#13;
rallied saturday and posted their&#13;
highest goal total of the year.&#13;
Rick Lechusz, Mike Jenrette,&#13;
Mike Nedeljkovic and Wayne&#13;
Shisler each scored one goal for&#13;
Parkside while Ray Phanturat&#13;
had two. Parkside held a 2-1)&#13;
halftime lead and a 4-2 lead with&#13;
13minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
exploded lor two goals in the final&#13;
13minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
exploded lor two goals in tbe final&#13;
13 minutes to put the game on ice.&#13;
Parkside is now 1·5--1on the&#13;
sea on and will face UWPlatteville&#13;
here Saturday aftemoon.&#13;
•&#13;
The Parkside cross country&#13;
team came up with one of its&#13;
better performances here&#13;
Saturday as it claimed a strong&#13;
third In the first annual&#13;
Oktoberfest Invitational.&#13;
Lucian Rosam, the sophomore&#13;
from Ceylon. tasted defeat lor the&#13;
first time this year but the loss&#13;
came against South Dakota&#13;
tate's Garry Bentley. a&#13;
delending NCAACoilege Division&#13;
1500-meter champ.&#13;
Bentley clocked 25:30 for the&#13;
rugged five mile route while Rosa&#13;
"as close behind al 25:37. Dan&#13;
Sols\ig or leam champ SDSU&#13;
grabbed third while all·American&#13;
Jim Drews of LaCrosse was&#13;
PIZZA KnCHEN&#13;
fourth and Parkstde s Dennis&#13;
Biel a strong fifth.&#13;
Other Ranger placers included&#13;
junior Jim McFadden in tenth,&#13;
freshman Sid Hyde in 24th. and&#13;
junior Keith Merritt in 25th.&#13;
Parkside will travel to the&#13;
otre Dame Invitational at South&#13;
Bend Friday. The meet attracts&#13;
most Midwestern teams and&#13;
should be a good test lor the&#13;
young Ranger team.&#13;
•&#13;
First place honors in the&#13;
Second Annual Oktoberlesl Gall&#13;
Tournament Saturday went to&#13;
orthern Illinois while UW·&#13;
Madison grabbed second and&#13;
Parkside was a strong third in the&#13;
is-note tourney at Petrifying&#13;
Springs.&#13;
Medalist honors went to Rick&#13;
Willems, of Parkside; Rick&#13;
Garcia of Northern Illinois&#13;
placed second; Steve Larsen,&#13;
also Irom Northern, placed third;&#13;
Phil Lohr from UW-Madison&#13;
finished fourth and Tom Bothe of&#13;
Parkside copped fifth.&#13;
Parkside's women's tennis&#13;
•&#13;
team placed first in the&#13;
Oktoberfest Tournament here&#13;
last Wednesday. The Rangers&#13;
had a score of 12. Whitewater&#13;
placed second with 10, Carthage&#13;
was third with 8 and Lawrence&#13;
finished last with no points.&#13;
Rangers Pat Kekic, Sue&#13;
Wanggard and Nicolet DeRose&#13;
all won their matches.&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bombers&#13;
Free Delifery to Parkside Village&#13;
son ItH11.... , ''',n, 6S1-S'"&#13;
Photo by Pal Nowak&#13;
---------- Jonathan Livingston&#13;
Seagull&#13;
Last Whole Earth Catalog&#13;
Politics of Heroin in S.E, Asia&#13;
The Prophet&#13;
Woodstock Craftsman's&#13;
Manual&#13;
Massage Book&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
Having trouble locating these books? Well, search no&#13;
further than Martha Merrill's Bookstore. See us for&#13;
what's new in books - bestsellers, art, chess, novels,&#13;
reference works, crafts specialties, ad infinitum.&#13;
Look over our large selection of hard covers and&#13;
paperbacks - and take advantage of our fast special&#13;
order service.&#13;
M~N\~~ rs~t(Yta.J&#13;
~.Jw. f{(lJ;iA'&amp; •&#13;
GI4-59t.hsr. 312-(;"""'$'1',.&#13;
6S8-3bf;?- 632-5195' ••&#13;
---_---•.&#13;
-------&#13;
...&#13;
--&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Parkside&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT 16&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 13&#13;
//-01&#13;
'Entry Fee 501&#13;
Apply now - Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Activities Board&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
ntramural&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
2-0&#13;
1 • O&#13;
1 -0&#13;
O·&#13;
0-2&#13;
Parkside soccer coach Hal Henderson gives his team&#13;
some advice before recent gane. The Parkside booters, fresh from&#13;
their first win of the season against UW-Milwaukee, will face UWPlatteville&#13;
here Saturday afternoon Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
D&#13;
Booter win lst game&#13;
Th \\'-Par 1de socc r team&#13;
first wm turdav in the&#13;
on olation game or the&#13;
to rfest Soccer Tournament&#13;
the Rangers dumped UWt1lwaukee&#13;
6-2.&#13;
Park ide had lo.st Friday to&#13;
, ·otr Dame, 3·1. but the Rangers&#13;
rall1t-d . turday and posted their&#13;
highest oal total of the ) ear.&#13;
Rick Lechusz, fike Jenrette,&#13;
hke . 'edeljkovic and Wayne&#13;
i ler each cored one goal for&#13;
Park 1de while Ray Phanturat&#13;
had two. Park ide held a 2--0&#13;
lftime lead and a 4-2 lead with&#13;
13 minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
ploded for two goals in the final&#13;
13 minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
ploded for two goal in the final&#13;
13 minutes to put the game on ice.&#13;
P rk ide i now 1·5-1 on the&#13;
on and will face \ ·&#13;
11 t ev11le here Saturday af-&#13;
• country&#13;
fourth and Parkside s Dennis&#13;
Biel a trong fifth.&#13;
Other Ranger placers included&#13;
Junior Jim tcFadden in tenth,&#13;
freshman Sid Hyde in 24th, and&#13;
junior Keith Merritt in 25th.&#13;
Parkside will travel to the&#13;
. ·otre Dame Invitational at South&#13;
Bend Friday. The meet attracts&#13;
mo.st fidwestern teams and&#13;
should be a good test for the&#13;
oung Ranger team.&#13;
•&#13;
First place honors in the&#13;
Second Annual Oktoberfest Golf&#13;
Tournament Saturday went to&#13;
, orthern Illinois while UWIadison&#13;
grabbed second and&#13;
Parkside was a trong third in the&#13;
HI-hole tourney at Petrifying&#13;
prings.&#13;
tedalist honors went to Rick&#13;
Willems, of Parkside; Rick&#13;
Garcia of Northern Illinois&#13;
placed second; Steve Larsen,&#13;
also from Northern, placed third;&#13;
Phil Lohr from UW-Madison&#13;
finished fourth and Tom Bothe of&#13;
Parkside copped fifth.&#13;
• Parkside's women's tennis&#13;
team placed first in the&#13;
Oktoberfest Tournament here&#13;
last Wednesday. The Rangers&#13;
had a score of 12. Whitewater&#13;
placed second with 10, Carthage&#13;
was third with 8 and Lawrence&#13;
finished last with no points.&#13;
Rangers Pat Kekic, Sue&#13;
Wanggard and Nicolet DeRose&#13;
all won their matches.&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Clllebn &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers&#13;
Frtt Delivery to Parkside Village&#13;
son 1°" ., •• , ,,,,n, 6S1-St9t&#13;
----------&#13;
Jonathan Livingston&#13;
Seagull&#13;
Last Whole Earth Catalog&#13;
Politics of Heroin in S.E. Asia&#13;
The Prophet&#13;
Woodstock Cr aftsm an 's&#13;
Manual&#13;
Massage Book&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
Having trouble locating these books? Well, search no&#13;
further than Martha Merrill's Bookstore. See us for&#13;
what's new in books - bestsellers, art, chess, novels,&#13;
reference works, crafts specialties, ad infinitum.&#13;
Look over our large selection of hard covers and&#13;
paperbacks - and take advantage of our fast special&#13;
order service.&#13;
G14-59~St;&#13;
658-3b !;"2-&#13;
f{_ru;U'ZIJ., •&#13;
312.- 6-¼ 5-t, -&#13;
632-5195' -·&#13;
---&#13;
-------~-- -----·&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••• Parkside&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT 16&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 13 / / -o, ·t ·ntry Fee so~&#13;
Appl Y no w - Student Ac tivities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Activities Board&#13;
</text>
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