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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 7</text>
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            <text>F. Lee Bailey to speak here Friday</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>/&#13;
,",.: ..- ,,' ':': ..", ',"" ','" ',' ::"' "&#13;
'...... ," ..', ',' " , .. , '.\ , .. ,, .. ,\ .- '.-'.. '.&#13;
"\ '.'. '.' \ ,\ ,\ ,, .&#13;
------- ""'" ,,'"&#13;
F. Lee Bailey to spe~k&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
"The Defense Never Rests" is&#13;
the title of a book by one of the&#13;
ounlry'S most famous trial&#13;
~awyers, F. Lee Baile~.&#13;
Bailey will be at Parkside on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 10, at 8 p:m. His will&#13;
be the first lecture this semester&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Anthony Totero, coordinator of&#13;
student programming, explains&#13;
that the Board decided on F. Lee&#13;
Bailey partly because it wanted&#13;
to get off on the right foot by&#13;
choosing a speaker of some&#13;
stature.&#13;
Bailey's reputation as a rebel&#13;
has evolved because of the nature&#13;
ofthe defense attorney's job -- to&#13;
fight the Establishment. This he&#13;
does admirably well, which is&#13;
why he was Capt. Ernest&#13;
Medina'schoice as the lawyer to&#13;
defend him against the My Lai&#13;
massacre charges.&#13;
His stop here at Parkside will&#13;
be the first on his current lecture&#13;
tour, but he has already&#13;
established himself as an in·&#13;
teresting, controlled speaker. His&#13;
appearances usually find him&#13;
speaking for 45 minutes followed&#13;
by half an hour for questions.&#13;
" .&#13;
here Friday&#13;
Topics to be covered include his&#13;
ex~riences in some of his cases&#13;
(which include the Boston&#13;
Strangler, the Great Plymouth&#13;
Mall Robbery and the retrial of&#13;
Dr, Sam Sheppard). penal&#13;
reform and the plight of the&#13;
defendant, who is stigmatized&#13;
whether guilty or innocent as&#13;
soon as he is arrested. He will&#13;
also comment on the role of the&#13;
defense attorney.&#13;
In connection with this last&#13;
topic, a sec lion in his book attempts&#13;
to answer a question&#13;
frequently put to him by laymen'&#13;
"How can you defend a man y~&#13;
know is guilty?"&#13;
Replies Bailey. "Guilt, like&#13;
most things, is scarcely ever&#13;
black or white," He says the&#13;
questioner is rarely satisfied v.ILh&#13;
lus answer though&#13;
"He sees no fusunceuce for&#13;
defending someone who reall)&#13;
drd It. He can afford to play the&#13;
moralist, it' not his neck on the&#13;
gUIllotine. If lawyers were to&#13;
hun every case In which they&#13;
knew the defendant was guilty,&#13;
there woeld be no courts, Every&#13;
person v. ho was arre ted and&#13;
indicted would go right to jail&#13;
unless hIS defense counsel Judged&#13;
tum mnocent."&#13;
Baile)' IS e pecially worried&#13;
about what happens to someone&#13;
when the) are arrested ev n&#13;
though they may subsequently be&#13;
acquitted&#13;
"The pre umptien of innocence&#13;
ha.s never existed In the public&#13;
mind:' he explams Even worse,&#13;
Juries often ConVict Innocent&#13;
people.&#13;
, "The system's o\-erridmg fault&#13;
lS., ..the fact thal as the wheels of&#13;
justice grind on, Innocence&#13;
becomes progressively less&#13;
relevant_"&#13;
He feels thai if polygraphs llie&#13;
delector tests) were to gain&#13;
general acceptance they would&#13;
preclude many trials and prevent&#13;
many innocent people from ever&#13;
even having to come to court.&#13;
edne day RANGER Vol. I, No.7&#13;
TheParkside---- _&#13;
Barney Stanitis does his thing&#13;
Barney Stanitis has done his&#13;
thing again.&#13;
Barney is a job superintendent&#13;
for Camosy Construction Co. of&#13;
Kenosha, and his thing is getting&#13;
buildings up fast. His skill at&#13;
doing that has made him&#13;
something of a legend at UWParkside.&#13;
His latest coup occurred this&#13;
week when the $4,1 million&#13;
classroom building being constructed&#13;
at UW-P by Camosy was&#13;
"topped out" two months early.&#13;
That moved the building's&#13;
completion schedule from Aug. 20&#13;
to May 4,&#13;
Topping out, with the placing of&#13;
the traditional tree atop the&#13;
bUilding, signifies that all the&#13;
major concrete pouring has been&#13;
completed and the frame of the&#13;
bUilding is done.&#13;
With Stanitis on the job, the&#13;
early topping out surprised no&#13;
One. He had earned his UW-P&#13;
reputation as a fast man with a&#13;
bUilding some three years ago&#13;
When, under his supervision,&#13;
Greenquist Hall, the school's first&#13;
la?oratory classroom building,&#13;
miraculously opened in time for&#13;
the 1969 fall semester.&#13;
To accomplish that feat the&#13;
S!anitis-led Camosy crew w~rked&#13;
nme hours a day and Saturdays to&#13;
make up time lost to a concrete&#13;
stirke. From ground level construction&#13;
to topping out was&#13;
accomplished in 15 months,&#13;
compared to a national average&#13;
of three years for such a building.&#13;
d Barn~y, n~w 57, recalls those&#13;
ayS WIth mixed emotions&#13;
"If I had to go through that&#13;
agaIn, I'd resign" he said. "But w ' •&#13;
e Just had to get it done&#13;
'.'1 remember 1 asked the&#13;
~?IVersity people if they had&#13;
Ired professors to start teaching&#13;
in it in September. When they&#13;
said they had I told them, 'then&#13;
we'll get you a building&#13;
somehow'."&#13;
Stanitis, a Racine resident who&#13;
has worn a Camosy hard hat for&#13;
eight years after Z7 years with&#13;
Johnson-Henricksen Construction&#13;
of Racine, also gUided&#13;
the other of UW-P's first two&#13;
buildings, Tallent Hall. to an&#13;
onschedule opening that fall ..&#13;
More recently. he led the&#13;
Camosy team on the physical&#13;
education building which opened&#13;
comfortably within schedule this&#13;
fall after running several weeks&#13;
ahead most of the way.&#13;
Barney probably kIlO" as&#13;
much practical p ychology as the&#13;
psychology professors who teach&#13;
in his buildings. And this is one of&#13;
the secrets of his success.&#13;
"The big thing is gelling people&#13;
to work," he said. "To do that you&#13;
have to be able to judge them.&#13;
Some need a pat on the back,&#13;
others need you to climb on their&#13;
back. And sometimes you ha\'e to&#13;
get on your knees, The trick is to&#13;
choose the right method for each&#13;
man&#13;
His other secret IS a computer·&#13;
like capacity to antiCipate&#13;
theproper scheduling of men and&#13;
materials for future work&#13;
BARNEY'S BUILDING - Barney Stanitis lright), job superind&#13;
f C mosy Construction Co. the generaJ contractor on the&#13;
ten ent or a ' . h' UW-Parkside classroom building, talks o~er the projeCt w Ich&#13;
newb&#13;
t ped out with the traditional tree WIth Gerry Knop &lt;lem,&#13;
has een op ,.' nd Job C I , 'd t of Camosy Wlsconsm operabons, a n or ey, Vice presl en&#13;
Camosy project manager.&#13;
nus would save the la.pa) er&#13;
money and ease th burd non th&#13;
courts, a " II a IvaKlng th&#13;
. uspect reputatIon&#13;
Regardm the prISon I' lem&#13;
BaIley' book tat ,&#13;
"In 'ifoct "hal th la" l'&#13;
lhal "c'r gomg to put ttlt felon&#13;
mto a place h:f lht'n" .n:&#13;
plenty of othen Ju I 10k him 10&#13;
timulat hlS crlmm.lIt • and&#13;
others "ho aren't qUit 11k him&#13;
and can teach him cnmInal acts&#13;
he h ~n't )et cone hed \\&#13;
th"'" murd or . ptm , dOfl&lt;'&#13;
pu, hen. and bank rob, all&#13;
lOf!e.her 10 cro" &lt;1&lt;'&lt;1 cell block !IO&#13;
they can eombme their re peelive.&#13;
pecialu In"hat amount to&#13;
coli g of cnm And" put&#13;
innocent men In among lh m ..&#13;
He lh n OUtJlO hi ug,g lJon&#13;
for a . yst ern of •• arned&#13;
freedom," "herein the C'OfWlct&#13;
has the opportufUty for ~or·&#13;
th"lule employment. TItI gl"&#13;
the person a chance to be&lt;:om a&#13;
productIVe CIUzen and" as h&#13;
demon trated hiS Improv ment..&#13;
he .. ould be able to .arn Iu way&#13;
mto partial confinement and then&#13;
IOlo freedom."&#13;
Bailey's lecture hould prov&#13;
IOteresting nOl onJ)' for those&#13;
making law their career, but for&#13;
anyone concerned about )U tJc&#13;
10 America&#13;
ov mb r 8, 1972&#13;
•••••••••• **********************&#13;
R GER&#13;
STRAW POLL&#13;
RETUR S&#13;
P'R!SID!:Ir'!'1AL !U:C'!'1011'&#13;
(Xl"'" 10.... rucrlO&#13;
ItII'lJm,I CAl 130 lit DIS'MtlCT CO&#13;
RICUJID M. IUOI ltIilOO U&#13;
SPIPIO 'f. AGRW&#13;
260 IlDClCIW' 334 JlU&#13;
us ASPIJI&#13;
GIlOIlCE HCGOV!llI&#13;
R. SiJIID'I' SClDUVIft&#13;
IlZI'IIBLI CAJ 48&#13;
AllI:lUCAJ MEIll\ILL I. STAl.IAl.OIJOIlI&#13;
SClO&lt;tn&#13;
ftIC1L\S J, AJlDD901 NQ:IUCAI 3&#13;
0&#13;
ClWlLlI:S J, roR'l'QIl--&#13;
SOCIALIST I.UlII&#13;
LDfIS "CHat&#13;
GDJ:Y'IBn ClUmIJt901 S!'Aft stun&#13;
2 22M Dumucr&#13;
COO&lt;lJIIST USA&#13;
GUS IW.L Dl&gt;tOCIV.T 275 JARVIS 1'IDR&#13;
DOUC .... lAPOLUlTn--&#13;
SOCULIsr .........&#13;
RI:PUBLI CAlI 77&#13;
EVlLn RDD&#13;
CLIrrol DE8ER.Jtt GIORGI v. AllDDl&#13;
PEOPLZS 7&#13;
7&#13;
AKElUCAI&#13;
BElIJ AMI. J. S'POCK CIIES!'Dl 1lEJISLE't JULIus W. HOBSOI&#13;
******************************&#13;
\ ' ,·&#13;
\' \'''.' . \.\&#13;
F. Lee Bailey to speak here Friday&#13;
BY Jane Schliesman&#13;
"The Defense Never Rests" is&#13;
e title of a book by one of ~he th try's most famous trial coun B -1 rs F Lee a1 ey. lawye , · k ·ct Bailey . wi ·11 be at Par s1 e on . .&#13;
Fri 'd y ov 10 at 8 p.m. His will a , · ' . be the first lecture this semester&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. . Anthony Totero, c_oordmator_ of&#13;
t dent programming, explains&#13;
~ u t the Board decided on F. Lee&#13;
B \ey partly because it wanted&#13;
ttget off on the right foot by&#13;
ch()()l,ing a speaker of some&#13;
stature.&#13;
Bailey's reputation as a rebel&#13;
has evolved because of the nature&#13;
of the defense attorney's job -- to&#13;
fight the Establishment. T?is ~e&#13;
does admirably well, which 1s&#13;
why he was Capt. Ernest&#13;
Medina's choice as the lawyer to&#13;
defend him against the My Lai&#13;
massacre charges.&#13;
His stop here at Parkside will&#13;
be the first on his current lecture&#13;
tour but he has already&#13;
established himself as an interesting,&#13;
controlled speaker. His&#13;
appearances usually find him&#13;
speaking for 45 minutes f~llowed&#13;
by half an hour for questions.&#13;
Topics to be covered include his&#13;
experiences in some of his cases&#13;
(which include the Boston&#13;
Strangler, the Great Plymouth&#13;
Mail Robbery and the retrial of&#13;
Dr. Sam Sheppard), penal&#13;
reform and the plight of the&#13;
defendant, who is stigmatized&#13;
whether guilty or innocent as&#13;
soon as he is arrested. He will&#13;
also comment on the role of the&#13;
defense attorn y.&#13;
In connection with tht la t&#13;
topic, a section in hi boo attempts&#13;
to answer a que lion&#13;
frequently put to him by laymen:&#13;
"How can you defend a man ·ou&#13;
know is guilty?"&#13;
Replies Bailey, "Guilt, Ii e&#13;
most things, i scarce!} ever&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Barney Stanitis does his thing&#13;
Barney Slanitis has done his&#13;
thing again.&#13;
Barney is a job superintendent&#13;
for Camosy Construction Co. of&#13;
Kenosha, and his thing is getting&#13;
buildings up fast. His skill at&#13;
doing that has made him&#13;
something of a legend at UWParkside.&#13;
&#13;
His latest coup occurred this&#13;
week when the $4 .1 million&#13;
classroom building being constructed&#13;
at UW-P by Camosy was&#13;
"topped out" two months early.&#13;
That moved the building's&#13;
completion schedule from Aug. 20&#13;
to May 4.&#13;
Topping out, with the placing of&#13;
the traditional tree atop the&#13;
building, signifies that all the&#13;
major concrete pouring has been&#13;
completed and the frame of the&#13;
building is done.&#13;
With Slanitis on the job, the&#13;
early topping out surprised no&#13;
one. He had earned his UW-P&#13;
reputation as a fast man with a&#13;
building some three years ago&#13;
when, under his supervision,&#13;
Greenquist Hall, the school's first&#13;
laboratory classroom building,&#13;
miraculously opened in time for&#13;
the 1969 fall semester.&#13;
To accomplish that feat, the&#13;
tanitis-led Camosy crew worked&#13;
nine hours a day and Saturdays to&#13;
make up time lost to a concrete stirke. From ground level construction&#13;
to topping out was&#13;
accomplished in 15 months,&#13;
compared to a national average&#13;
or three years for such a building.&#13;
Barney, now 57, recalls those&#13;
day with mixed emotions.&#13;
" If I had to go through that&#13;
again, I'd resign," he said. "But&#13;
We just had to get it done.&#13;
" I remember I asked the&#13;
~iversity people if they had&#13;
hired professors to start teaching&#13;
in it in September. When they&#13;
said they had I told them, 'then&#13;
we'll get you a building&#13;
somehow'."&#13;
Stanitis, a Racine resident who&#13;
bas worn a Camosy hard hat for&#13;
eight years after 'l:l years with&#13;
Johnson-Henricksen Construction&#13;
of Racine, also guided&#13;
the other of UW-P's first two&#13;
buildings, Tallent Hall, to an&#13;
onschedule opening that fall..&#13;
More recently, he led the&#13;
Camosy team on the physical&#13;
education building which opened&#13;
comfortably within schedule this&#13;
fall after running several week&#13;
ahead most of the way.&#13;
, Barney taruti (rightl, job uperin- BARNEY'S B ILDI Gtr - t' n Co the general conlractor on the C sy Cons uc JO ., tendent for amo • h"ch b ·irung talk O\'er the project w 1&#13;
new UW-Parkside cla~r~t t u~tion~ tree with Gerry Knop (left),&#13;
bas been topped out with ~ ::onsin operations. and John Corle;. vice president of Camosy Camosy project manager.&#13;
dn a&#13;
R&#13;
TR&#13;
ol . I,&#13;
m&#13;
. 1&#13;
RET R&#13;
130&#13;
260&#13;
0&#13;
2 22D4&#13;
GUS BALL T&#13;
JARVIS 'l'fDI\&#13;
DOOC&#13;
SOCIALIST&#13;
RIPU'BLIC&#13;
rn:tn RUD&#13;
curro IDQRt&#13;
PEOPLES 7&#13;
AKI J. SPOCl(&#13;
JULIUS • HOBSO&#13;
r 2&#13;
• *&#13;
3&#13;
275&#13;
LA10&#13;
77&#13;
7&#13;
lZf&#13;
********************************&#13;
)&#13;
-&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER V:::l .• Nov. 8. 1972&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
Photo by Cra4 Roberts THORN&#13;
Many people have voiced their displeasure with the&#13;
possibility of a mars" In our front yard. This editorial is&#13;
an attempt to sympathize with those who do not want the&#13;
marsh.&#13;
A pond. perhaps, or even a lake would be readily&#13;
accepted - but a marsh. with a very low level of&#13;
usefulness or beauty, seems rather dreary.&#13;
To use the pond as an ice rink in winter sounds excillng&#13;
That will be looked into by this editor. At the&#13;
same time Ranger will look, in depth, at what the marsh&#13;
wi 1l'&lt;l'lIlsn, how It witl look and how changes can be made&#13;
if they are desirable.&#13;
We hope someone can prove that a marsh would really&#13;
be virtuous. If that were to happen, another editorial&#13;
would be written syaing how wrong we were. We don't&#13;
believe this will be the case.&#13;
A campus of beautiful grass and the trees which were&#13;
so carefully worked around will be a drawing card for&#13;
students in the future and something for everyone at&#13;
Parkside and outlying communities to be proud of.&#13;
t.ets use our natura I lowland practically - as a pond&#13;
or small take. but not a marsh.&#13;
Now that this position has been stated, everyone has&#13;
his equal chance to defend or attack it. Tell everyone&#13;
what you think with a leiter to the editor.&#13;
Remember. no marsh is a good marsh.&#13;
_ IU The PartWde&#13;
~rr..RANGER&#13;
Tht Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
he a_ademic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisco'1sln.Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located at 0·194 Library·Learning Center.&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
1he Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
O!:&gt;tnlonsexpressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin.Parkslde.&#13;
OITOR D WRITERS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing. Kris Koch,&#13;
Kilhy Wellner, Ken Konltol. JealUline Sipsma, Shawn Clemer&gt;Is, Dale&#13;
Mlrun. Tom Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Dave Reyher.&#13;
PltOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
au INEIlS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERnlllNG MANAGER: Fred Lawrel&gt;Ce&#13;
ADVI90R: 0.0 Kopriva&#13;
,&#13;
.....-..aIHTID flCW. NATlONAl ADVonSJNG IY&#13;
NaDoaal EdlKltioaal Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
J'O Losi_ A... N ... yon, N. Y. 10011&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
We have it from a reliable source that the makeup&#13;
of the Lecture and Fine Arts Committ~ is being reevaluated.&#13;
It is about time. This commIttee spend~&#13;
more money (rom the - segregated fee than. a&#13;
tudent organizations combined, yet this commIttee&#13;
has only four students on it.&#13;
I; the four students on the committee vote i~ ~Iock,&#13;
they can still be overruled by a simple majority of&#13;
the eight appointed faculty.&#13;
tudents should control student money: It is abo~~&#13;
time students were consulted when It. co~es&#13;
allocating the segregated fee. Too much IS gomg for&#13;
"0 little.&#13;
The Bureau of Facilities Management In Madison is&#13;
responsible for the Inept landscaping program on&#13;
campus. if you think there may be a mmdless&#13;
beaurocral in charge of some of the developments,&#13;
remember they may not be as incompetent as they&#13;
seem Then again they could very well be.&#13;
We are paying F. Lee Bailey $2,000 for his appearance&#13;
here However. this is $500 less than his&#13;
normal asking fee. thanks to the efforts of someone&#13;
on campus who knows his agent, a former Kenosha&#13;
man.&#13;
Some of those plants which we paid so much money&#13;
for across from the bookstore are dying.&#13;
The basement of Greenquist is empty. It could be&#13;
lined with student lockers.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
The following members were&#13;
present: Tom Haack, President;&#13;
Joe Harris. Vice-President ;&#13;
James Rea, Treasurer Terri&#13;
Appleget, Corresponding&#13;
ecretary; Jim Bielefeldt,&#13;
Recording Secretary; and Peggy&#13;
Hansen, Mark Harris, Tom&#13;
Jennett. Rich Kienitz, Ken&#13;
Konkol. Neil Lawton. Ernest&#13;
Llanas. Eric Moore, Jan Petzke,&#13;
Rick Ponzio. Thomas Weiss,&#13;
Michael Wickware and Gerard&#13;
Wielgat. Senators.&#13;
The following members were&#13;
absent: Rosanne Darrey (excused).&#13;
Debra Roberts, Jeannine&#13;
ipsma. Laurie Thompsen&#13;
(excused I. Motion: It is proposed&#13;
that Student Government co-&#13;
"1 ......&#13;
If a TV lounge was installed in D-I73, we could keep&#13;
the card players out of the food service area during&#13;
the lunch hour, and most of the rest of the time,~.&#13;
People have been industriously laying sod the past&#13;
couple of weeks, at one hell.of an expense. It may be&#13;
too late in the seaso": for t~s to take hold. Last time&#13;
sod was laid so late It all died. Grass seed is much&#13;
cheaper.&#13;
Why can't a path of grav~l be laid across that&#13;
muddy patch of ground leading to Greenquistl Th.&#13;
money saved on cleaning up the mud alone would be&#13;
worth it.&#13;
You all remember the great McGovern. Nixon&#13;
cutdown scheduled for last issue? It didn't haPPen&#13;
Not one single s?litary stu~ent. Democrat ~&#13;
Republican, submitted anythmg for pubhcation&#13;
Even after being reminded to do so in three COn~&#13;
secutive issues of this paper.&#13;
That Kenneth R. Konkvol who was listed On thl'&#13;
front page of the last Issue as receiving the 100 I&#13;
votes in the Senate election is realty this very sam"&#13;
writer. No, Idid not use an assumed name this s&#13;
merely a typographical error.&#13;
Quite a lot of typographical errors have been cc&#13;
curring in recent issues due to the fact that we&#13;
not have sufficient people on the staff to lhoroughh'&#13;
proofread all articles before our prmting deadhn~&#13;
We could use your help&#13;
The staff gets together every Monday night In ill.&#13;
office to layout the paper. If you are interested In&#13;
helping, stop on by.&#13;
We also need ad solicitors. Stop in and see how It I&#13;
done. Remember, only three pages of ads and we go&#13;
to twelve pages.&#13;
Minutes of&#13;
Novem ber 1, 1972&#13;
sponsor the Alcoholism and Drug&#13;
Abuse Council at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Vote: Unanimous.&#13;
The following students were&#13;
appointed chairmen of committees:&#13;
Mark Harris, Constitution&#13;
Amendment Committee;&#13;
Tom Weiss, Student&#13;
Union Committee; Eric Cushman&#13;
Moore, Interview Committee;&#13;
Tom Jennett, Grievances and&#13;
Clearing House; and Ken Konkol,&#13;
Academic Policies Committee.&#13;
These appointments were&#13;
unanimously approved by the&#13;
Senate.&#13;
The following student was&#13;
appointed Acting Chairman:&#13;
Tom Weiss, Student Court&#13;
Committee. Approved&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
We get letters •.•&#13;
Letters to the Editors are encouraged. We ask that&#13;
tney be confined to 250 words or less and that they be.&#13;
typed and double-spaced. All must be signed and include&#13;
address and phone number and student status (senior,&#13;
[uruor, sophomore, treshrna»: or faculty rank. Names&#13;
~ill be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the&#13;
right to refuse to ori'lt any letters.&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In your column THORN of Oct.&#13;
25, Ken Konkol calls allention to&#13;
the static electricity in the&#13;
Library carpeting. The LLC&#13;
building is a complicated&#13;
m~h.anis~. Like other large&#13;
bUIldIngs, It will require several&#13;
mont~s for shakedown, and&#13;
continued watchfulness&#13;
thereafter. With the coming of&#13;
cold weather and extra heat in&#13;
the system, humidity controls are&#13;
now being put into winter&#13;
'operation for the first time. When&#13;
these are adjusted, the static&#13;
electricity should be much&#13;
dim_inished.&#13;
I~ the problem continues.&#13;
serIOus. we may be able to reduce&#13;
it ~Y periodic spraying. NonstatIc&#13;
carpeting is more expensive;&#13;
and in the LLC budget&#13;
we were lucky in the end to get&#13;
carpeting at all. Although nonstatic&#13;
carpeting is sometimes&#13;
alm~st essential (for example, in&#13;
hospital operating rooms and&#13;
~ome computer and industrial&#13;
Ins~allations), it may well be&#13;
omitted where the snapping is no&#13;
more than a mild nuisance. Until&#13;
Ihe humidity reduces the&#13;
problem to the non-nuisance&#13;
level, Library users may wish to&#13;
a~proach the metal book shelving&#13;
.With caution - sleeve first.&#13;
Philip M. Burnett·&#13;
Library&#13;
A Student Government Rap&#13;
Sheet was discussed. Further&#13;
action is responsibility of Public&#13;
Information Committee.&#13;
Treasurer-s Heport&#13;
Student Govt. Acct $18-1&#13;
Fund 128 Temp. Allow. 31586&#13;
Total Funds A vail. 1300.•&#13;
Motion: It was moved that&#13;
Student Government attempt 10&#13;
reclaim control of budgeting fer&#13;
Fund 128. Vote: In Favor· II&#13;
Opposed - I. Abstained - 2.&#13;
The resignation of Sue Murph~&#13;
from the Student union COO'·&#13;
mittee was accepted by&#13;
Senate. Meeting adjourned&#13;
To the Editor.&#13;
Saturday night, Oct. 28, pro\~&#13;
to be either the best or sece&#13;
best dance of the year. I wasat&#13;
the first dance of the year. a~&#13;
"Black Society" was fantastIC&#13;
"White Cross" played Saturda~&#13;
night and though their style rJ&#13;
music was different to that&#13;
Black Society. I thoughl iJl'l&#13;
were equally as well&#13;
One thing I have noticed&#13;
clubs put on dances to ~ak~~ap&#13;
of money. and in turn hlr~e tht"!f&#13;
or just o.k. bands to rnak ~&#13;
profits rise. Not so oct: 28.IY&#13;
club that put on the Th,n~~,dt&lt;l&#13;
Dance went all out and p -de: I&#13;
a great service to Parksl&#13;
bOlJl&#13;
saw signs all over the place atJ'I3l&#13;
a band coming from I:;, '(b.&#13;
was supposedly very gd ill' I·&#13;
signs were correct an nrtJ1&#13;
ten dance that night wasthuBI~&#13;
The place was paCked&#13;
C&#13;
"~hageytl&#13;
Sweat and Tears at ar ·ouS sur&#13;
n ob\'1 The dance was a ha\~ng I&#13;
cess with everyone ...&#13;
fantastic time., writing tbP&#13;
The reason I m h pe otb"&#13;
letter is because I dances C .&#13;
clubs that sponsor I: stud&lt;"&#13;
produce a servlC~ ing grt,l&#13;
weekends by brinJ notal"!&#13;
bands to Parkside an ney_JJlskl&#13;
thinking of the rno&#13;
part. TornJ""&#13;
. . ,. . . ... . . 2 THE PARKSIDE RA GE R V.'::j., ov. 8, 1972&#13;
DITOR ALS/OPI&#13;
Photo by Cra Rob rt.s&#13;
Par de R nger is published weekly throughout&#13;
m c year by the students of The University of&#13;
n-Par s de, enosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
c s r located at 0.19, Library-Learning Center,&#13;
phone (, c) 553 2295.&#13;
Par side Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opin oos expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
n c rlly the official view of the University of&#13;
1 consin-Parkside.&#13;
\\ RI : Rudy Llenau, Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch,&#13;
Ko ol, JeaMme Jpsma, hawn Clemer,ts, Dale&#13;
arilyn Schubert, Dave Reyher.&#13;
: Pat owak, Craig Roberts&#13;
AGER: Ken P Uta&#13;
n I G A GER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
R: Ooo Kopriva&#13;
,Uft. POI. NATIONAL ADVEaTISJNG BY -~&#13;
auoa.al Eduatioaal Advertising Services, Inc. Q&#13;
1'° Lui A" .. Ncw Yon. N. Y. 10017&#13;
'I I ".&#13;
IONS&#13;
THORN If a TV lounge was installed in D-173, we could k&#13;
the card players out of the food service area duri~&#13;
the lunch hour, and most of the rest of the time, loo.&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
We ha,·e it from a reliable source tt_iat ~e m~keu!&#13;
or the Lecture and Fine Art Committ~ is being r&#13;
evaluated. It i about time This committee spend~&#13;
more monev from the segregated fee than_ a&#13;
tudent or a·nizations combined, yet this committee&#13;
ha only four tudents on it.&#13;
People have been industriously laying sod the pa l&#13;
couple of weeks, at one hell _of an expense. lt may be&#13;
too late in ~he season_ for thi:s to take hold. Last time&#13;
sod was laid so late 1t all died. Grass seed is much&#13;
cheaper.&#13;
Why can't a path of gravel be laid acros that&#13;
muddy patch of ground leading to Greenqu1 t? Th&#13;
money saved on cleaning up the mud alone would&#13;
worth it.&#13;
tr the four tudents on the committee vote i~ ~Jockf&#13;
th , can till be overruled b a imple ma1onty 0 You all remember the great McGovern . , ixon&#13;
cutdown scheduled for last issue? It didn't hat&gt;Pt th 1ght appointed faculty.&#13;
nt ·hould c ntrol tudent money. It is about&#13;
. ire tud nts were consulted when it_ co~es to&#13;
11 atin the· gregated fee. Too much 1s going for&#13;
ot one single s?litary stu?ent, Democrat ;&#13;
Republican, submitted anything for pubhcat,on&#13;
Even after being re'!1inded to do so in thr COIi·&#13;
secutive issues of this paper.&#13;
htU • That Kenneth R. Konkvol who wa · It ted on th&#13;
front page of the last issue as rec 1vmg the in&#13;
votes m the enate election is really thi \ •r&#13;
writer. o, I did not use an assumed name thr&#13;
merely a typographical error.&#13;
Quite a lot of typographical error have h n&#13;
curring in recent is ues due to th tact that w&#13;
not have sufficient people on the staff to th rou ,&#13;
proofread all articles before our printing d d&#13;
We could use your help&#13;
some o th plant which we paid o much money&#13;
fo acr · from th bookstore are d ing&#13;
The staff gets together every Monday night in&#13;
office to Jay out the paper. If you are int re t Ill&#13;
helping, stop on by.&#13;
The b m n of Greenqui t is empty. It could be&#13;
lined with tudent lockers.&#13;
We also need ad solicitors. Stop m and e hO\\ rt&#13;
done . Remember, only three pages of ad and we&#13;
to twelve pages.&#13;
PSGA Minutes of&#13;
November 1, 1972&#13;
The follo,~ing members were&#13;
pre nt: Tom Haack, President;&#13;
Jo Harri • \'ice-Pre ident;&#13;
Jam · Rea. Trea urer Terri&#13;
\ pl et, Corre ponding&#13;
ecretary. Jim Bielefeldt,&#13;
R orciing cretar ; and Peggy&#13;
Han en • Yark Harri·. Tom&#13;
Jennett. Rich Kienitz, Ken&#13;
Konkol. . ·en Lawton, Ernest&#13;
Liana. , Eric loore, Jan Petzke,&#13;
Hick Ponzio, Thoma Weis ,&#13;
lichael \ 1ck\\ar and Gerard&#13;
Wielgat. nat r.&#13;
Th follov. in member were&#13;
ab nt: Rosanne Darre · t excu&#13;
ed), Debra Roberts. Jeannine&#13;
. 1p ma, Laurie Thompsen&#13;
&lt;e. cu edl. ~loLJon : It is proposed&#13;
that tudent Government coponsor&#13;
the Alcoholism and Drug&#13;
Abuse Council at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Vote: nanimous.&#13;
The following students were&#13;
appointed chairmen of committees:&#13;
Mark Harris, Conti&#13;
tu ti on Amendment Committee;&#13;
Tom Weiss, Student&#13;
nion Committee; Eric Cushman&#13;
Moore, Interview Committee;&#13;
Tom Jennett, Grievances and&#13;
Clearing House ; and Ken Konkol,&#13;
Academic Policies Committee.&#13;
The e appointments were&#13;
unanimously approved by the&#13;
nate&#13;
The following student was&#13;
appointed Acting Chairman:&#13;
Tom Weiss. Student Court&#13;
Committee . Approved&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
We get letters ...&#13;
Letters to the Editors are encouraged. We ask that&#13;
tney be confined to 250 words or less and that they be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. All must be signed and include&#13;
~dd_ress and phone number and student status (senior,&#13;
1u_n,or, so_phomore, freshma,,) or faculty rank. Names&#13;
"".ill be withheld upon r£:quest. The editors reserve the&#13;
right to refuse to pri11t any letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
ln your column THOR of Oct.&#13;
25, Ken Konkol call attention to&#13;
the tatic electricity in the&#13;
Library carpeting. The LLC&#13;
building i a complicated&#13;
m~h_ani ~- ~ike other large&#13;
building , 1t will require several&#13;
month for shakedown and&#13;
continued watchfulness&#13;
thereafter. With the coming of&#13;
cold weather and extra heat in&#13;
the Y tern, humidity controls are&#13;
now being put into winter&#13;
operation for the first time. When&#13;
these are adjusted, the static&#13;
electricity hould be much&#13;
diminished.&#13;
I{ the problem continue&amp;&#13;
eriou . we may be able to reduce&#13;
it ~y periodic spraying. Nonstatic&#13;
carpeting is more expensive;&#13;
and in the LLC budget&#13;
we were lucky in the end to get&#13;
carpeting at all. Although nonstatic&#13;
carpeting is sometimes&#13;
alm~st essential &lt;for example, in&#13;
hospital operating rooms and&#13;
~ome computer and industrial&#13;
ms~allationsl, it may well be&#13;
omitted where the snapping is no&#13;
more than a mild nuisance. Until&#13;
the humidity reduces t he&#13;
problem to the non-nuisance&#13;
level, Library users may wish to&#13;
a~proach the metal book shelving&#13;
. with caution - sleeve first.&#13;
Philip M. Burnett·&#13;
Libr ary&#13;
A Student Government R&#13;
Sheet was discussed. Furth&#13;
action is responsibility of Pub!&#13;
Information Committee.&#13;
Treasurt&gt;r's Rt&gt;port&#13;
Student Govt. Acct $184 8.1&#13;
Fund 128 Temp. AIIO\\ 315&#13;
Total Funds Avail. S~ .&#13;
MoJ.ion: It wa moved t al&#13;
Student Government attempt&#13;
reclaim control of budgetin f&#13;
Fund 128. Vote · In Favor · 11&#13;
Opposed . 1. Ab tain '2.&#13;
The resignation of ue Mu&#13;
from the Student L mon&#13;
mittee was accepted by&#13;
Senate. Meeting ad1ourned&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Saturday night, Oct 28, proi&#13;
to be either the best or ·&#13;
best dance of the year I wa 1&#13;
the first dance of the year. a&#13;
" Black Society" was fantill it&#13;
"White Cross" played · tu&#13;
night and th~ugh therr ti' ~ music was different to lha&#13;
Black Society , I thought&#13;
were equally as well . One thing I have noticed&#13;
clubs put on dances to make a lot&#13;
of money, and in turn hrre r&#13;
or just o.k . bands to mak; 'fbt&#13;
profits rise. ot so Oct&#13;
club that put on the Thrnk • d&#13;
Dance went all out and pro~, 1 a great service to Parks•&#13;
saw signs all over the pla~ ·'&#13;
a band coming from 1:;&#13;
was supposedly very gd th at&#13;
signs were correct an&#13;
tendance that nrght 1&#13;
~~,t:~I&#13;
The place was packed thJ~ 1&#13;
Sweat and Tears at Car . · b\10\l· The dance was an o ha11n ' cess with everyone&#13;
fantastic time. ·ung&#13;
The reason I'm wrr ·&#13;
letter is because I ho:es c&#13;
clubs that sponsor da t··1 · to II''&#13;
produce a service ing gr'&#13;
weekends by bring not al&#13;
bands to Parkside andnefl11·&#13;
thinking of the mo&#13;
part. &#13;
The Raven&#13;
Around 1967 a fad was introduced for rock music Thi f&#13;
' "St ' d . IS ad Was psychedelic mUSIC. range, ~elr ,experimental and creative"&#13;
the comments generally made In reference to these ne dl . we~e&#13;
w tmensions In&#13;
sounds.&#13;
The fads for rock in 1971 were in themselves quits Il'm'ted a&#13;
lk . . I . De was tobe a solo fa singer. accompanymg one's self on an ac ti ,&#13;
t I ic Jncl di ous ICguitar- The other was me a mUSIC me u mg one electric g itar-i ' , d d . 1lI arrst one&#13;
bassist one rummer, an one vocalist. The first af :&#13;
, h I li ht ib orementioned&#13;
style thought t ~t on y Ig II VIh~S}.ad asthetic qualities, The latter&#13;
assumedeveryt mg w~s ~l -r~ t ~hIt ~e~e hard and loud. Certainly&#13;
both types are 3&#13;
l&#13;
Ppr&#13;
d&#13;
ecla e, th~ e limits these styles impose on&#13;
themselves may ea one to mk that as for experimenting' k&#13;
this is The End! In roc&#13;
Ofcourse no,t. Some bands still experiment. At this time I will brio&#13;
to your attention a few lesser known records. g&#13;
The "elecftric&#13;
t&#13;
Lidght arches dirt"''' b]Ythe same name has a Beatleish&#13;
sound. The Irs Sl e 1S a. goo . rrp, eavmg you with a sense of 16th or&#13;
17th century tmaTdnhetss'dhke w&#13;
t&#13;
ItCh],-bhurning or something, The second&#13;
side bums ou. a SI e IS 00 ig t, too consistent, and contains no&#13;
vocals.&#13;
"In Se~rch ~f S~ace" by ~awkwind deserves a blue ribbon. Traces&#13;
of Satanic Majesties, N~torIOus Byrds, and many other albums from&#13;
that era can be felt. ThIS band makes splendid use of electronics in&#13;
their synthesiser. In sho.rt, "In Search of Space" is a must for space&#13;
children or anyone who likes to move his mind with music.&#13;
Bo.th sides are really far out and .side two comes ahead creatively,&#13;
and IS,~ore perfectly balance~. SIde two starts out with a moving&#13;
theme Iam the center of the universe, and everything moves relative&#13;
to.me." The beginning of "Adjust Me" builds up to a spine tingling&#13;
climax.&#13;
Jefferson Airplane is back with what is probably their best product&#13;
to date. J.A. took ideas from their previous LP's such as Baxters&#13;
Volunteers, and Bark. T~e end re.sult however is something entirely&#13;
new. Indeed Jefferson AIrplane still possesses the kind of magic that&#13;
makes me grow fonder of them upon repeated listening.&#13;
The song writing on "Long John Silver" is magnificent. Vocal&#13;
harmonies and exchanges are included frequently, And I'd surely put&#13;
Jorma up against the most competitive of axe-men.&#13;
J.A. may be perfect in the musical sense, but you can't always take&#13;
their lyrics too seriously. If you do you should be put "up against the&#13;
wall yourself mother ---." "Eat Starch Mom" demonstrates absurd&#13;
lyrics plainly. The Plane must have received a payoff from a&#13;
processed convenience food company.&#13;
Title song "Long John Silver" takes swift and drives hard. &lt;lAirie"&#13;
is prett) "Twilight Double Leader" has shades of Pooniel in the&#13;
middle. The beginning of .•Alexandra" may strike one as being corny,&#13;
but It developes into dynamite with a guitar solo that feels like water.&#13;
The ending leaves you absolutely breathless with Grace's wailings.&#13;
"Eat Starch Mom" is'a bouncy hard rocker.&#13;
The previously discussed discs should provide other wings for your&#13;
mind to fly by&#13;
Free music program&#13;
tonight at Kenosha&#13;
Kenosha; and Susan Lasco,&#13;
saxophone, Salem.&#13;
Ensemble numbers will include&#13;
a flute trio by Miss Truax, Lenee&#13;
Stevens, Elkhorn, and Paula&#13;
Novack, Kenosha; a guitar trio&#13;
by Kurt Harfr, Kenosha, Floyd&#13;
Hanson, Kenosha, and Gary&#13;
Walk, Racine; and a percussion&#13;
ensemble including Robert&#13;
Hansen, Kenosha, David Walley,&#13;
Racine, Brian Ford, Kenosha,&#13;
and Curtis Petri, Kenosha.&#13;
Accompanists will include&#13;
Kathy Devine, Union Grove,&#13;
Susan Kloet, Kenosha, Sluart&#13;
Melius, Racine, Jean Tashoff,&#13;
Racine, and Fred Wenger,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Vocal and instrumental music&#13;
students at The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will present&#13;
a free public program at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Wednesday, Nov. 8, in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room.&#13;
Vocal soloists will be Karla&#13;
Bielewicz, mezzo-soprano,&#13;
Kenosha; David Johnston, tenor,&#13;
Kenosha; Lynn Cross, contralto,&#13;
Kenosha; and Judith Lanning,&#13;
Soprano, Racine.&#13;
Instrumental soloists will be&#13;
Jill Reich piano Racine'&#13;
Deborah 'Perron~, piano:&#13;
Kenosha; Phillip Ince, violoncello.&#13;
Racine; Linda Truax, flute,&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
(appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
CONTINUOUSENTERTAINMENT&#13;
7P.M. TIL?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
lake Ave., Racine 637-8467 Dancers vYanted&#13;
Wed.• Nov. 8. 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
.. , '"&#13;
'The Case of the Disappearing Plants'&#13;
This week Ranger brings its&#13;
readers a real bcnest-to-goodness&#13;
whod~nit to solve - "The Case of&#13;
the DIsappearing Plants." Here&#13;
are the facts for you Sherlock&#13;
Holmes types:&#13;
E.ugene Gasiorkiewicl.&#13;
chaIrman of the Science Division.&#13;
Robert Esser. associate&#13;
professor of life science, and two&#13;
students spent hours pnor to&#13;
C?pen House arranging the horticultural&#13;
display along the&#13;
library's glass west wall. Some of&#13;
Esser's blood was shed in this&#13;
endeavor, as he cut himself on a&#13;
cactus.&#13;
The planter contains more than&#13;
fifty kinds of plants, some of&#13;
them donated by students and&#13;
faculty members. It IS designed&#13;
to serve an educational as well as&#13;
an aesthetic Function. The plants&#13;
range from desert natives on the&#13;
north end (where the light mtensity&#13;
is greatest) to specimens&#13;
from the northern temperate&#13;
zone to tropical ram forest plants&#13;
on the south end, Tbev will&#13;
eventually all be labeled f~r easy&#13;
identification. .&#13;
Sometime between 7 a.m and&#13;
midnight (this time span was&#13;
deduced by Secunty and can be&#13;
regarded as accurate) on a day in&#13;
mid-October, a number of these&#13;
plants disappeared. Among the&#13;
missing specimens is a valuable&#13;
cactus. 38 years of age. donated&#13;
to the University by Esser. It wa&#13;
the only cactus flowering there at&#13;
the lime. which is 10 Itself a&#13;
unique characteristic of the&#13;
missing plant. It was also one of&#13;
the oldest plants 10 the di play,&#13;
The girl in the picture I Terry&#13;
Richards of Kenosha 1 holding&#13;
the missing cactus. This photo&#13;
was taken before the plants&#13;
disappeared. and .\Is. Richards I&#13;
beyond suspicion. The picture is&#13;
provided only to aid you In&#13;
identifying the cactus.&#13;
Your mission. then, should you&#13;
decide to accept it. is to find the&#13;
missing plants. They are believed&#13;
stolen. but the perpetrators of&#13;
uus evil deed will not be&#13;
prosecuted In fact. should this&#13;
fall into their hands. Ranger has&#13;
a message for them - If your&#13;
thumbs aren't as green a you&#13;
though! and vou'd like to unload&#13;
the 'tun bn'ug It to the Rang er&#13;
office LLC 0-19-1) and 1t will get&#13;
(0 Gasrorjoewrca .'0 questions&#13;
a ked&#13;
As a result of this dISaPpearance&#13;
and the loss of other&#13;
\"3nou and undry th1l1gs from&#13;
LLC's stock of rurmshlngs.&#13;
Security has deCided to have a&#13;
man palrolling the halls at all&#13;
tImes 11l1s eem a. ad state of&#13;
affaIrs. but apparently a&#13;
necessary tep to help clear up&#13;
thl. roysters&#13;
LPt u~ not berome too paranoid&#13;
at lhe Il'tht of man In umform,&#13;
unlE'SS we really havp ~methmg&#13;
to feel l(Ullty about&#13;
ONE SWEET DREAM&#13;
5010 7JAVE.&#13;
KE OSHA&#13;
U FIRST NATIOIIAL&#13;
Of RACIIIE&#13;
.110 mini •••&#13;
balance reqlired&#13;
• 110 limit to the&#13;
nu.ber of checks&#13;
yOl write&#13;
AT FIRST IIATlOIIAL&#13;
OF RACIIIE&#13;
AT fiRST NAT101lAl&#13;
Of RACIIIE&#13;
Open ym free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
-.--._- -_._-&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine&#13;
The Raven&#13;
Around 1967 a fad was introduced for rock music Th. f · "St · d · is ad was psychedelic music. !!ranged, ~eir r' experimental and creative" were&#13;
the comments genera Y ma em re erence to these new ct· . . 1mens1onsm sounds.&#13;
The fads for rock in 1971 were in themselves quite lim·ted Jk · · 1 0 · ne was to be a solo fo smgetr '1 acco1!1p~nylmdg. one's self on an acoustic guitar&#13;
The other was me a music me u mg one electric g ·t . t · dr d . u1 ans ' one bassist, one ummer, ~n o~e vocahst. The first aforementioned&#13;
style thought ththat only hghllt ~1bhets.fh_ad asthetic qualities. The latter&#13;
assumed e\ery mg was a -ng I it were hard and loud C ta·n1&#13;
both types are appreciable, but the limits these styles ·. er&#13;
1 Y&#13;
I d th. impose on themselves may e~ one to mk that as for experimenting in rock&#13;
this is --- The End.&#13;
Of course no.t. Some bands still experiment. At this time I will brin&#13;
to your attent10n a few lesser known records. g&#13;
The "electric Light Orchestra" by the same name has a Be ti · h&#13;
f&#13;
. t . d . d t . l . a e1s sound. The Jrs s1 e 1s a. goo . rip, ea~mg you with a sense of lGth or&#13;
17th century madness. hk~ w1tc~-burmng or something. The second&#13;
side bums out. That side 1s too hght, too consistent, and contains no&#13;
vocals.&#13;
"In Search ~f S~ace" by ~awkwind deserves a blue ribbon. Traces&#13;
of Satanic MaJesties, N~tonous Byrds, and many other albums from&#13;
that era can be felt. This band makes splendid use of electronics in&#13;
their synthesiser. In sho.rt, "In Search of Space" is a must for space&#13;
children or anyone who likes to move his mind with music.&#13;
Both sides are really far out and side two comes ahead creatively&#13;
and is .~ore perfectly balance~. Side two starts out with a moving&#13;
theme I am the center of the um verse, and everything moves relative&#13;
to me." The beginning of "Adjust Me" builds up to a spine tingling&#13;
climax.&#13;
Jefferson Airplane is back with what is probably their best product&#13;
to date. J.A. took ideas from their previous LP's such as Baxters&#13;
Volunteers, and Bark. The end result however is something entirely&#13;
new. Indeed Jefferson Airplane still possesses the kind of magic that&#13;
makes me grow fonder of them upon repeated listening.&#13;
The song writing on "Long John Silver" is magnificent. Vocal&#13;
harmonies and exchanges are included frequently. And I'd surely put&#13;
Jorma up against the most competitive of axe-men.&#13;
J.A. may be perfect in the musical sense, but you can't always take&#13;
their lyncs too seriously. If you do you should be put "up against the&#13;
wall yourself mother----." "Eat Starch Mom" demonstrates absurd&#13;
lyrics plainly. The Plane must have received a payoff from a&#13;
processed convenience food company.&#13;
Title song "Long John Silver" takes swift and drives hard. "Airie"&#13;
is prett) .. Twilight Double Leader" has shades of Pooniel in the&#13;
middle. The beginning of ·'Alexandra'' may strike one as being corny,&#13;
but 1t developes into dynamite with a guitar solo that feels like water.&#13;
The endmg leaves you absolutely breathless with Grace's wailings.&#13;
"Eat Starch Mom" is a bouncy hard rocker.&#13;
The previously discussed discs should provide other wings for your&#13;
mind to fl:&gt; b)&#13;
Free music program&#13;
tonight at Kenosha , Kenosha; and Susan Lasco, \local and instrume~tal ~usic saxophone, Salem.&#13;
, t~dents at The Umvers1ty of Ensemble numbers will include&#13;
W1sconsin-~arkside will present a flute trio by Miss Truax, Lenee&#13;
a free pubhc program at ~ p.m. Stevens, Elkhorn, and Paula&#13;
on Wednesday, Nov. 8, m the Novack Kenosha· a guitar trio&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts by Kurt Harff, Kenosha , Floyd&#13;
Room. . . Hanson, Kenosha, and Gary _Yocal . soloists will be Karla Wolk, Racine; and a percussion&#13;
B1elew1cz, mezzo-soprano, ensemble including Robert&#13;
Kenosha; David Johnston, tenor, Hansen, Kenosha , David Walle ,&#13;
Kenosha; Lynn Cross, contralto, Racine Brian Ford, Kenosha,&#13;
Kenosha; and Judith Lanning, and c~tis Petri, Kenosha .&#13;
soprano, Racine. . . Accompanists will include .Instrumental soloists will be Kathy Devine, Union Grove, Jill Reich, piano, Racine ; Susan Kloet, Kenosha, Stuart&#13;
Deborah Perrone, piano, Melius Racine, Jean Tashoff, Kenosha; Phillip Ince, violon- Racin~ and Fred Wenger,&#13;
cello, Racine; Linda Truax, flute, Kenosh~.&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
(appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
7P.M. TIL?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Ni2ht&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Lake Ave., Racine 637-8467 Dancers YVanted&#13;
'The Case of th&#13;
KE&#13;
Wed. , Nov. 8, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Di app • ar1n I t&#13;
• min, 1&#13;
•&#13;
ala ce req1ir d&#13;
rite&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
ee&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
AT FIRST NATIO AL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open yo r free checki g&#13;
account soo at &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Noy. 8, 1972&#13;
Community the lab in new class&#13;
The community is the&#13;
laboratory for students in a new&#13;
class called "The City" being&#13;
offered for the [irst time this&#13;
semester at The University of&#13;
W rsccnstn-Perkstoe.&#13;
The course is interdisciplinary&#13;
.. students may enroll for credit&#13;
In either English or political&#13;
science .. and claims as its&#13;
subject matter the whole range of&#13;
urban experience, from the&#13;
.•ghts and sounds 01 the city to its&#13;
delivery system for social serVICes&#13;
Classroom work is combined&#13;
"Ilh individual and group student&#13;
research projects in community&#13;
"laboratories" which range Crom&#13;
inner city streets to hospital&#13;
room to police squad cars.&#13;
Laboratory equipment includes&#13;
camera and tape recorders, but&#13;
most importantly, lhe students'&#13;
eyes and ears.&#13;
The Idea for the course&#13;
or igmated with the two&#13;
professors who are teaching it&#13;
JOJnUy: art Lindner of the&#13;
Englt h faculty and Wiltiam&#13;
Murin of the political science&#13;
laculty. Both are big city&#13;
products. Lindner has lived most&#13;
01 hiS liIe In New York City and&#13;
Murin also is from the east.&#13;
They have designed lhe course&#13;
to Interpret. through their own&#13;
academic tlelds , Parkside's&#13;
special educational mission of&#13;
relating to the urban industrial&#13;
society which it serves in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. The&#13;
course is one of nine which focus&#13;
on urba n problems this semester&#13;
10 w-P's liberal arts-oriented&#13;
hool of cience and Society.&#13;
"Most of OUf students come&#13;
from urban backgrounds"&#13;
Lindner said. "But they may n'ot&#13;
have really become aware or the&#13;
~Ity ar&lt;4irlP them; 01 "'filit&#13;
happens outside their own neighborhoods.&#13;
The interdisciplinary&#13;
nature 01 lhe class helps point out&#13;
urban lnter-relat icnshtps. Bill&#13;
(Mur-in) and I are learning, too.&#13;
He's becoming more of a&#13;
humanist and I'm becoming&#13;
more of a soclologlst."&#13;
The classroom portion of the&#13;
course employs a variety of&#13;
readings Irom urban poetry to&#13;
sociological studies, fiJms and&#13;
te tapes to explore such&#13;
topics as the city as a sense of&#13;
place. growing up in the city,&#13;
people in the city, art and envtronment.&#13;
life in the streets, and&#13;
urban cri es and problems.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
MocIefn w .. lnul baby (rIb oIndmol"r.",.&#13;
II'. e..lIllJ-ll.d ..ys. 4341215 .~.nings.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
To dD odd tobs ,"vol~ing minor&#13;
l'MI4IHhokl ,.,.lr-s ~, two·'oImily 1I00t.&#13;
e.1I »l-11. dolYS. 634-4115 n.nlngs.&#13;
TO IGHT!&#13;
Wed., ov.8&#13;
Screen Classics&#13;
leaturi"'O&#13;
incent Price&#13;
Peter Lorre&#13;
Boris Karloff&#13;
Adm. 50'&#13;
1:30 Cr. II. room 103 dm.&#13;
Students have chosen an&#13;
equally broad range 01 subjects&#13;
for their individual and group&#13;
projects.&#13;
A sampling 01 group projects&#13;
includes a study of Racine's new&#13;
alternative high school which&#13;
aims at turning on students&#13;
turned off by traditional studies;&#13;
analysis of effectiveness of&#13;
street-level community action&#13;
groups in Racine and Kenosha;&#13;
exploration of the effects of urbanization&#13;
on organized religion;&#13;
and a survey of several specific&#13;
kinds of crime including child&#13;
abuse in Kenosha.&#13;
Individual projects include a&#13;
study of juvenile delinquency in&#13;
Racine; collages meant to express&#13;
how various persons view&#13;
urban life; a slide series shot on&#13;
Racine streets to illustrate urban&#13;
poetry; a study 01 the decline 01&#13;
downtown areas and related&#13;
attempts to preserve urban&#13;
landmarks; analysis of the effect&#13;
01 drugs in a black neighborhood&#13;
in Milwaukee; studies of mental&#13;
health facilities in Kenosha and&#13;
of the history of the Racine Police&#13;
Department's Community&#13;
Relations unit; a photo essay set&#13;
in Kenosha on signs and their&#13;
functions in urban life; and a&#13;
slide series of Chicago cityscapes&#13;
sel to original musical interpretations.&#13;
The city also is the subject of&#13;
three sections of the American&#13;
Language course which Parkside&#13;
offers in place of the traditional&#13;
Freshman English. One section is&#13;
also titled "The City" and two&#13;
others are on "Language and the&#13;
Industrial Society." Related&#13;
sections of the course deal with&#13;
"Past and Future Shock,"&#13;
"Environmental Pollution,"&#13;
"Women's Liberation and&#13;
Literature" and "Poetry, F'iction,&#13;
Drama: Antidote to the&#13;
Boredom of an Industrial&#13;
Society."&#13;
The innovative language&#13;
program has been a part of&#13;
Parks ide's curriculum since the&#13;
new university opened in 1969 and&#13;
is designed to teach written and&#13;
spoken communications skills in&#13;
the framework of contemporary&#13;
issues. Students can choose this&#13;
semester from 15 different topics.&#13;
Urban-related courses being&#13;
offered this semester in other&#13;
disciplines in the College 01&#13;
Science and Society include a&#13;
history course, "Emergence of&#13;
Metropolitan America," and a&#13;
sociology course, "Urbanism and&#13;
Urbanization."&#13;
Romerez, Chapson explore&#13;
life in poetry&#13;
The Poetry Forum last&#13;
Thursday presented two poets,&#13;
Daniel Romerez and James&#13;
Chapson, and their readings.&#13;
Romerez recited his poetry&#13;
with deep emotional conviction.&#13;
His heavy voice created romantic&#13;
illusion but was not overly sentimental.;&#13;
Time elapsed between&#13;
lines ana each idea was contemplated.&#13;
Romerez's bilingual&#13;
attempts 01 Spanish and English&#13;
proved that his "transcendental&#13;
barrier of language through&#13;
sound" succeeded.&#13;
By contrasting nature and&#13;
human life, he writes to have&#13;
questions raised as to his ideas.&#13;
Romerez's subject matter&#13;
consisted of love, war, spiritual&#13;
and physical imprisonment.&#13;
There was an excess of concrete&#13;
objects overloaded and ran his&#13;
sentences rampant with intense&#13;
thought.&#13;
Chapson's poetry consisted of&#13;
the void, insensitive man,&#13;
walking streets and exploring the&#13;
life of emptiness. His poetry,&#13;
stories of the vain and the selfish,&#13;
living in the existence of&#13;
monotony and depression.&#13;
Chapson's sinewy voice echoing&#13;
the rage and irony of modern&#13;
man and life's absurdity.&#13;
Chapson's verbal expressions&#13;
are callous and unsympathetic&#13;
toward the man who dreams of&#13;
the unreal. He reflects little on a&#13;
phrase or word, to emphasize the&#13;
neglect of man's being. Chapson&#13;
scolds and scoffs at those who are&#13;
vulnerable to lower nature. His&#13;
hard and indifferent tone cornmunicates&#13;
the voice of man in his&#13;
lame and distraught state, which&#13;
brought verbal reality and life&#13;
into his words.&#13;
CHAMPION TERMPAPERS&#13;
636 Beacon St. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston, Mass. 02215&#13;
6t1-536-91oo&#13;
Research material for 'rermoecere.&#13;
Reports, Theses, etc. LOWEST PR ICES.&#13;
QUICK SERVICE. For information,&#13;
please write or call.&#13;
The poster&#13;
Tnthe last few weeks, there has&#13;
been a crisis, as far as poste~s&#13;
and the posting of these posters IS&#13;
concerned. Posters have not been&#13;
posted in their designated areas,&#13;
but have been posted on bricks&#13;
and cement walls, doors and&#13;
windows. The correct placement&#13;
of posters is on bulletin boards&#13;
only.&#13;
Many of the students at&#13;
Parks ide do not know the rules&#13;
pertaining to bulletin boards. The&#13;
following rules, as outlined and&#13;
enforced by Student Activities,&#13;
should be observed:&#13;
1) Only bulletin boards marked&#13;
"Campus Events." "For Sale"&#13;
and "Rides and Riders Wanted"&#13;
may be used by student&#13;
organizations, faculty, staff,&#13;
students and other University&#13;
personnel.&#13;
2) Divisional bulletin boards&#13;
are controlled by the divisions&#13;
and are solely for their use.&#13;
3) Divisions may not use&#13;
"Campus Events" bulletin&#13;
boards for divisional purposes.&#13;
4) Bulletin boards marked&#13;
"For Sale" or &lt;IRides or Riders&#13;
Wanted" are for use by&#13;
University personnel. These&#13;
bulletin boards are the only ones&#13;
that can be used for this purpose.&#13;
Notes must be approximately&#13;
3x5.&#13;
5) Posters advertising nonUniversity&#13;
sponsored events&#13;
must receive approval from the&#13;
Office of Student Activities&#13;
before being posled.&#13;
, " ..&#13;
... ,,,&#13;
• •&#13;
CrISIS&#13;
6) Posters on the "Campus&#13;
Events" bulletin boards must be&#13;
no longer than 14x22. Exceptions&#13;
are made for pre-printed posters.&#13;
7) Posters must indicate&#13;
organizational sponsorship or&#13;
author.&#13;
8) The following rules must be&#13;
observed when posting On&#13;
bulletin boards:&#13;
a) Posters may only be attached&#13;
by lacks or pins.&#13;
bl A group may only post One&#13;
poster concerning one topic On&#13;
anyone bulletin board.&#13;
c~ Removal?f obsc~rity of any&#13;
active poster IS prohibited.&#13;
d) Posters must be remoVed&#13;
from the bulletin boards one day&#13;
after the event takes place.&#13;
e) Posting is restricted only to&#13;
designated bulletin boards.&#13;
Il Posters may nol be altached&#13;
to windows, doors, walls, trees Or&#13;
any other part of the UniverSity&#13;
grounds without prior approval of&#13;
the Office of Student Activities&#13;
9) Direct questions concerni.,g&#13;
bulletin boards to the Student&#13;
Activities Office.&#13;
In addition to the rules listed&#13;
above, special permission to use&#13;
banner posters for advertising&#13;
school functions can be obtained&#13;
at the Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 in the Library&#13;
Learning Center. The bulletin&#13;
boards are made to keep our&#13;
campus clean, and for students to&#13;
communicate in a more orderly&#13;
fashion.&#13;
Plus $20 Tax &amp; Service&#13;
Price Includes:&#13;
Round Trip Jet Fare to Honolulu&#13;
Luxury Hotel on Waikiki Beach&#13;
All ground transfers&#13;
Traditional flower lei greeting&#13;
Tour Host services&#13;
The&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
#RWRII-RN HEJbI&amp;RY&#13;
9 Fun-Filled, Sun-Filled Days&#13;
January 5-14&#13;
$274&#13;
HURRY!&#13;
Over 2/3 Filled&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
Campus Travel Center - Student Activities&#13;
Office&#13;
Library Learning Center 0-197&#13;
Phone: 553·2219&#13;
r111H11I1I1I1I1I1I1II1I "1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111&#13;
i LIVE ENTE~TAINMENT I&#13;
~l 5 Nights a Week i&#13;
~ ~'il~,i~~~\ DANCE • DANCE • DANCE I&#13;
i .ere IIIe alJlilJniI' I&#13;
! I&#13;
i ~~ Mille, 99~P::~S,~~, G;ChlilZ'1" I&#13;
I MIN:E •"~I•• jl;IIII IREMEMBER MIJNDAY I, TUESDAY!!&#13;
~ 1tI",,,,, HI ringl IJIf irinla tiff IJnly lSI I ~&#13;
;;&#13;
;;&#13;
I&#13;
l..HllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnHBnlllnlllllnllnml1llmnmllmlllllllll~::mlllnll P&#13;
00 I Tab Ie s &amp; Dart Game5&#13;
18111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111110110111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111&#13;
The Train Station ~&#13;
WE CATER TO FRATERNITY PARTIES&#13;
2703 63 St.&#13;
. ' . .&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. 8, 1972&#13;
• •&#13;
Community the lab in new class The poster cr1s1s&#13;
11 w•l11u1 .,.by crob and m1ttrHs,&#13;
US C• Ul·lllO d•ys, 634.41U even,ngs.&#13;
HELPW 'TED&#13;
To do odd 1obs tnvolv1ng minor -•-•d r .,..,, for two-f•m,ly flat.&#13;
Ctll SSl 11IO d•y•, 634-41U evfl&gt;ongs.&#13;
n Cla ic&#13;
,~aruru,9&#13;
'in nt Pri&#13;
Pet r Lorre&#13;
B ri Karloff&#13;
tudent have chosen an&#13;
equally broad range of ubjects&#13;
for their individual and group&#13;
projec . sampling of group projects&#13;
includ a tudy of Racine' ne&#13;
alternative high chool which&#13;
aim at turning on students&#13;
turn doff by traditional tudies;&#13;
analy I of effectivene s of&#13;
treet-level communit action&#13;
group in Racine and Keno ha;&#13;
e. ·ploration or the effects of urbanization&#13;
on organized religion;&#13;
and a urvey of e era! specific&#13;
kin or crime including child&#13;
abu in Kenosha.&#13;
Indi\idual projects include a&#13;
tudy of juvenile delinquen y in&#13;
R cin : collages meant to expr&#13;
how ,ariou person iew&#13;
urban life, a lide erie hot on&#13;
Ra in treet to illu trate urban&#13;
po try: a tudy of the decline of&#13;
downtown area and related&#13;
attempt to pre erve urban&#13;
landmark ; anal} i of the effect&#13;
or dru in a black neighborhood&#13;
in tilwaukee; tudies of mental&#13;
h alth facilities in Kenosha and&#13;
of the hi tory of the Racine Police&#13;
partment' Community&#13;
Relation unit; a photo essay set&#13;
in Keno ha on igns and their&#13;
funchon in urban life; and a&#13;
lide series of Chicago cityscapes&#13;
et to original musical interpretations.&#13;
The city al o is the subject of&#13;
three ections of the American&#13;
Language course which Parkside&#13;
offer in place of the traditional&#13;
Freshman English. One section is&#13;
also titled "The City" and two&#13;
others are on "Language and the&#13;
Industrial Society." Related&#13;
ection of the course deal with&#13;
"Past and Future hock ,"&#13;
"En iron mental Pollution,"&#13;
"Women's Liberation and&#13;
Literature" and "Poetry, Fiction,&#13;
Drama: Antidote to the&#13;
Boredom of an Industrial&#13;
ciety."&#13;
The innovative language&#13;
program has been a part of&#13;
Park ide' curriculum since the&#13;
new university opened in 1969 and&#13;
i designed to teach written and&#13;
poken communications skills in&#13;
the framework of contemporary&#13;
i ues. tudents can choose this&#13;
em ester from 15 different topics.&#13;
rban-related courses being&#13;
offered this emester in other&#13;
di ciplines in the College of&#13;
ience and Society include a&#13;
history course, "Emergence of&#13;
Ietropolitan America," and a&#13;
ociology course, "Urbanism and&#13;
rbanization."&#13;
Romerez, Chapson explore&#13;
life in poetry&#13;
The Poetry Forum last&#13;
Thursday presented two poets,&#13;
Daniel Romerez and James&#13;
hap on, and their readings.&#13;
Romerez recited his poetry&#13;
with deep emotional conviction.&#13;
His heavy voice created romantic&#13;
illusion but wa not overly sentimentaL&#13;
Time elapsed between&#13;
lines ana each idea was contemplated.&#13;
Romerez's bilingual&#13;
attempts of Spanish and English&#13;
proved that his "transcendental&#13;
barrier of language through&#13;
sound" succeeded.&#13;
By contrasting nature and&#13;
human life, he writes to have&#13;
questions raised as to his ideas.&#13;
Romerez's subject matter&#13;
con i ted of love, war, spiritual&#13;
and phy ical imprisonment.&#13;
There wa an excess of concrete&#13;
objects overloaded and ran his&#13;
sentences rampant with intense&#13;
thought.&#13;
hap on' poetry consisted of&#13;
the void, insensitive man .&#13;
walking streets and exploring the&#13;
life of emptiness. His poetry,&#13;
stories of the vain and the selfish,&#13;
living in the existence of&#13;
monotony and depression.&#13;
Chapson's sinewy voice echoing&#13;
the rage and irony of modern&#13;
man and life's absurdity.&#13;
Chapson's verbal expressions&#13;
are callous and unsympathetic&#13;
toward the man who dreams of&#13;
the unreal. He reflects little on a&#13;
phrase or word, to emphasize the&#13;
neglect of man's being. Chapson&#13;
scolds and scoffs at those who are&#13;
vulnerable to lower nature. His&#13;
hard and indifferent tone communicates&#13;
the voice of man in his&#13;
lame and distraught state, which&#13;
brought verbal reality and life&#13;
into his words.&#13;
CHAMPION TERMPAPERS&#13;
636 Beacon St. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston, Mass. 02215&#13;
617-536-9700 Research material for Termpapers,&#13;
Reports, Theses, etc. LOWEST PRICES.&#13;
QUICK SERVICE. For information,&#13;
please write or call.&#13;
In the last few weeks, there has&#13;
been a crisis, as far as posters&#13;
and the posting of these posters is&#13;
concerned. Posters have not been&#13;
posted in their designated areas,&#13;
but have been posted on bricks&#13;
and cement walls, doors and&#13;
windows. The correct placement&#13;
of posters is on bulletin boards&#13;
only.&#13;
fany of the students at&#13;
Parkside do not know the rules&#13;
pertaining to bulletin boards. The&#13;
following rules, as outlined and&#13;
enforced by Student Activities,&#13;
should be observed: 1) Only bulletin boards marked&#13;
"Campus Events." "For Sale"&#13;
and "Rides and Riders Wanted"&#13;
may be used by student&#13;
organizations, faculty, staff,&#13;
students and other University&#13;
personnel.&#13;
2) Divisional bulletin boards&#13;
are controlled by the divisions&#13;
and are solely for their use.&#13;
3) Divisions may not use&#13;
"Campus Events" bulletin&#13;
boards for divisional purposes.&#13;
4) Bulletin boards marked&#13;
"For Sale" or "Rides or Riders&#13;
Wanted" are for use by&#13;
University personnel. These&#13;
bulletin boards are the only ones&#13;
that can be used for this purpose.&#13;
otes must be approximately&#13;
3x5.&#13;
5) Posters advertising nonUniversity&#13;
sponsored events&#13;
must receive approval from the&#13;
Office of Student Activities&#13;
before being posted.&#13;
6) Posters on the "Campus&#13;
Events" bulletin boards must be&#13;
no longer than 14x22. Exceptions&#13;
are made for pre-printed posters.&#13;
7) Posters must indicate&#13;
organizational sponsorship or&#13;
author.&#13;
8) The following rules must be&#13;
observed when posting on&#13;
bulletin boards:&#13;
al Posters may only be attached&#13;
by tacks or pins.&#13;
b &gt; A group may only post one&#13;
poster concerning one topic on&#13;
any one bulletin board.&#13;
c) Removal or obscurity of any&#13;
active poster is prohibited.&#13;
dl Posters must be removed&#13;
from the bulletin boards one day&#13;
after the event takes place.&#13;
e) Posting is restricted only to&#13;
designated bulletin boards.&#13;
f) Posters may not be attached&#13;
to windows, doors, walls, trees or&#13;
any other part of the University&#13;
grounds without prior approval of&#13;
the Office of Student Activities.&#13;
9) Direct questions concerning&#13;
bulletin boards to the Student&#13;
Activities Office.&#13;
In addition to the rules listed&#13;
above, special permission to u&#13;
banner posters for advertising&#13;
school functions can be obtained&#13;
at the Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 in the Library&#13;
Learning Center. The bulletin&#13;
boards are made to keep our&#13;
campus clean, and for students to&#13;
communicate in a more orderly&#13;
fashion.&#13;
9 Fun-Filled, Sun-Filled Days&#13;
January 5-14&#13;
$274&#13;
Plus $20 Tax &amp; Service&#13;
Price Includes:&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Fare to Honolulu&#13;
• Luxury Hotel on Waikiki Beach&#13;
• All ground transfers&#13;
Traditional flower lei greeting&#13;
Tour Host services&#13;
.. -Aa;-&#13;
lll 11111 IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllll 1111 11111 I 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 -&#13;
MONDAY &amp; TflR • LIVE ENTERTAINMENT I&#13;
BEER --college Nfth,\ 1tlat i,•\!!~t we: .N:Sc; ~;;NCE I&#13;
Lorge Glass 1 sc Large Pit=~H~~:ll!lll: 1tbere t/,e action ;,• ~ I&#13;
==~~-&#13;
REMEMBER MONDAr, TIIE$DAr II&#13;
,tl,n II,, W ring, 1,,, drinlt, ,,, only 1$1&#13;
~~~&#13;
6 Packs To Go&#13;
Miller 99c Bud $1 30 Schlitz $1 30&#13;
::&#13;
!&#13;
i&#13;
The Train Sfafio11 i&#13;
WE CATER TO FRATERNITY PARTIES&#13;
2703 63 St.&#13;
Pool Tables &amp; Dart Games &#13;
" '-&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
•&#13;
Wed.. Nov. 8, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
•&#13;
What's Happening" will&#13;
·,It'S&#13;
regular feature of The&#13;
be a 'de Ranger. All clubs and&#13;
Parksl. ations are urge to d&#13;
organtZ mit notices about mee tlmgs,&#13;
sub I' etC. in person at the&#13;
ral1es, ff' D&#13;
k&#13;
'de Ranger 0 Ice, -194 Par SI •&#13;
1£ We ask that these be 10 our&#13;
L Ii . one week before the issue of Ice&#13;
(wednesday for the next. Wedd&#13;
y's issue). None will be&#13;
nes a&#13;
accepted over the phone.&#13;
•&#13;
beAnyone interested in dogs 'II&#13;
able to . k WI th . PIC up pointers on&#13;
of el~l?roper. care in a University&#13;
be . I~consm-Extension coo&#13;
gmmng Nov. 8. rse&#13;
Selecting the dog f&#13;
needs housi . or your&#13;
he lth ousm~, maintaining dog&#13;
a ,groommg, nutrition and&#13;
r~sponsibilities of dog owoersnl&#13;
Will be Covered in the class p&#13;
A veterinarian a spec'lal: t . feeds .' IS m&#13;
, a tral,ner, a dog judge and&#13;
a small. ammal specialist from&#13;
the .UOlv~rsity of Wisconsin.&#13;
Madison Will be instructors of th&#13;
class. e&#13;
Meetings will be held . W on SIX&#13;
ednesdays at 7:30 p.m. at uw.&#13;
Parkside Kenosha campus A&#13;
Special reduced rate for fa~ilY&#13;
m.embers and for students of S5&#13;
WIll apply.&#13;
Regis~ation information may&#13;
be obtained from Diversity&#13;
Extension, 553-2312.&#13;
Sparush ",amst Carmen Vd.,&#13;
presently In her fIfth sea..... a&#13;
art! t-m-re rdence at W.&#13;
Park ide. will pre. ent a&#13;
Crn\"ersuy Ar1J ts Concert n&#13;
~gram at 3 pm on unday,&#13;
xov 12. In Room 103. Creenqu,. t&#13;
HaU&#13;
General adm 'on, $2. d&#13;
rni ton for Par Ide tud&#13;
and taU and their Imme(ha1&#13;
families I $1&#13;
An internationally nov. n&#13;
concert am t. ., Vila hi&#13;
appeared In con rts and recitals&#13;
throughout Europe and South&#13;
Amenca and, In late 1970. v.a&#13;
featured in the Jeune e&#13;
~Iuslcal lnteenaucoal Ani&#13;
roes at Camegl HaU rn a&#13;
recital v.hJch "on pra (rom th&#13;
:-;"" York Ttm&#13;
~11 \"da .....111also appear In&#13;
the 110031 concert In the current&#13;
Umversu y Arti t erie as&#13;
sololSl \I,-jlh the •tll\ll aukee&#13;
ymphony on • la 10 Tbe final.&#13;
concert IS lenLaU_ely scheduled&#13;
"or the Communication ArLs&#13;
Bulld'ng Theater&#13;
Looking for someth'&#13;
Sun.d~y afternoon? T~~g to do. on&#13;
ActivIties Board' ParksIde&#13;
"Outer L' it IS sponsoring the&#13;
1 inn s I" r d&#13;
Sunday afternoo oaN&#13;
rallye this&#13;
. n, ov. 12. It's&#13;
Just the thing to get&#13;
house or away from ~~~ ~ut of the&#13;
an afternoon f ooks for&#13;
challenge R .0 fun and&#13;
begi t' eglstration will&#13;
n a noon on the Tall&#13;
parking lot, the f tent Hall&#13;
leaving at '1 p m Ir~h car will be&#13;
fee is $5 '. e entrance&#13;
per car, allowing two&#13;
persons per car. Trophies will be&#13;
awarded to the top three places&#13;
and a party will be held af:&#13;
terwards where you can recount&#13;
to your friends the thrills and&#13;
hazards encountered during the&#13;
Course of the rallye over hot do s&#13;
and beer, g&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are&#13;
sponsoring a "Ski Show" Sunday,&#13;
Nov.12, at 7:30 p.m. Admission is&#13;
75 cents. There will be ski&#13;
movies, a fashion show, cross&#13;
country skis display, plus the&#13;
latest designs. Door prize: 2 sets&#13;
of fiberglass skis. (Student Activities&#13;
Building).&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
4 named as Danforth nominees&#13;
•&#13;
Parkside has named four&#13;
students as its first Danforth&#13;
Fellowship Nominees. Parkside&#13;
became eligible to nominate&#13;
Dan,forth canQ.idates upon&#13;
achieving independent accredalion&#13;
from the North Central&#13;
Association of Colleges and&#13;
Secondary Schools this year,&#13;
The nominees are Jay W.&#13;
Ruud, 1651Chatham St., Racine,&#13;
a May, 1972, Parkside graduate&#13;
in English; Alan Joseph Ramias,&#13;
4410 19th Ave., Kenosha, who will&#13;
graduate in January in&#13;
philosophy and English; Susan&#13;
Jayne Olson, 31410th St., Racine,&#13;
who will graduate next May in&#13;
English; and Stanley R. Craig,&#13;
1715 19th Ave., Kenosh'l., wh.Q,will&#13;
graduate next May in chemistry&#13;
and management science.&#13;
The fellowships, offered annually&#13;
since 1952 by the Danforth&#13;
Foundation of St. Louis, Mo., are&#13;
open to men and women who are&#13;
seniors or recent graduates of&#13;
accredited colleges in the United&#13;
States, who have serious interest&#13;
in college teaching as a career,&#13;
and who plan to study for a Ph. D.&#13;
degree in a field of study common&#13;
t? the American undergraduate&#13;
lIberal arts curriculum. Can-&#13;
~id.ates must be nominated by the&#13;
lIaison officer of their undergraduate&#13;
institution. The&#13;
number of nominees per institution&#13;
is based on enrollment.&#13;
Approximately 100 fellowships&#13;
will be awarded in March, 1973.&#13;
Danforth Fellows are eligible for&#13;
four years of financial&#13;
assistance, with a maximum&#13;
annual stipend of $2,700 for single&#13;
fellows and $2,950 for married&#13;
fellows plus tuition and fees.&#13;
Financial need is not a condition&#13;
for consideration.&#13;
In selecting Danforth Fellows,&#13;
special attention is given to&#13;
evidence of intellectual ability&#13;
which is felxible and of wide&#13;
range, academic achievement&#13;
which is a thorough foundation&#13;
for graduate study, evidence of&#13;
personal characteristics which&#13;
are likely to contribute to effective&#13;
teaching and to constructive&#13;
relationships with&#13;
students, and evidence of a&#13;
concern for the relation of ethical&#13;
or religious values to academic&#13;
disciplines, the educational&#13;
process and to academic and&#13;
social responsibility.&#13;
Parkside's nominees were&#13;
selected on recommendation of&#13;
the faculty to the W·P Danforth&#13;
liaison officer, Virginia Scherr.&#13;
who is special assistant to Vice&#13;
Chancellor Otto Bauer and a&#13;
member of the chemistry faculty&#13;
An tntemallonal fol dance&#13;
group bas been fanned ,n Racme.&#13;
All Interested tudents, faculty&#13;
and staff are encouraged to come&#13;
to learn dane from Greece,&#13;
Israel. Bulgana. Yu 0 laYla and&#13;
other countrl ThIS group&#13;
sponsored bl the RaCIne Par&#13;
and Recreauon Department and&#13;
meel at tbe Lak'" ''''' CommUOIt)·&#13;
Center. 201 Gould. e\er)'&#13;
Friday e\erung from 1 to 10 p m&#13;
Beginning dane are Laught&#13;
from 7 lD 8 pm&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Beloit poet&#13;
will read here&#13;
Beloit College poet'In'&#13;
residence Bink '011 will gh'e an&#13;
afternoon reading and conduct an&#13;
evening workshop at VW·&#13;
Parkside under the sponsorshJp&#13;
of the Poetry Forum on •'0\' 13&#13;
Noll, who was named "Teacher&#13;
of the Year" at Bel0l1 in 1965. aLa&#13;
has been a faculty member at&#13;
Dartmouth College and JuDiaLa&#13;
College and spent a year a gue t&#13;
lecturer on American literature&#13;
in Zaragonza. pain. Wlder a&#13;
Fulbright grant. DUring 196Hll,&#13;
he was resident fello,," In creatl\ e&#13;
writing at Princeton&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College tudents&#13;
392 60th t, Phon 65 25 2&#13;
o c&#13;
r-"t,:B·O"RT·ioNS····~&#13;
~ FREEReferral 10 N.Y, Clinic. ~&#13;
· 12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
$150&#13;
CALL&#13;
· CONTROLLED&#13;
~PARENTHOODj&#13;
WHITESKELLAR&#13;
~\ (north lounge&#13;
,~ \ Greenquist Halll&#13;
~VE&#13;
ENT~ITA'''1Nr&#13;
12:30p.ffi.&#13;
Wed., Nov.8&#13;
Major employers throughout the&#13;
U.S. (private &amp; government) are&#13;
seeking '1ualified coU~e. men ~d&#13;
women or career paubons WIth&#13;
top pay and out8tan~.ng bt:r;tefi~.&#13;
Excellent opporturubt8 eX18t In&#13;
many areas. For F~EE infor·&#13;
mation on student a!l818tance and&#13;
placement program send self.&#13;
addressed STAMPED envelope to&#13;
National Placement Reglstry.&#13;
Data-Tech Services. 1001 Eallt&#13;
Idaho St .. K']i,pe11, MT 59901.&#13;
\Ionda) nil:ht i&#13;
"Ye Id, uds, ippingit "&#13;
at hak y' In Ra in&#13;
SI a pi tcher for Pobst&#13;
(a Don_profit organiatiOQ) or Schlitz light.&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
DA JD STOTT BLDG.&#13;
· (313) 964-0530 e••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
2hI ( Im"'ll&#13;
,\( !&gt;340&#13;
633 307&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Va~ity Club&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE ACTMTIES BOARD&#13;
pr nts&#13;
• merica' 10 t Famou&#13;
• Best· elling Author&#13;
tD443~ - 22~d Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
~ Wlsconslll Phone 654-0774 cl nse tt rn&#13;
• Lecturer&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
RACINO: 553-2150&#13;
r,cACHE:R&#13;
8 P. . Fri. 0 10 Phy. Ed. BId&#13;
F. LEE BAILEY&#13;
"Washington quare S "&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Racil1e&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
peaking on "The Deft/lse I er:erRests"&#13;
General Admission - '1.50&#13;
Parks ide rudents taff - s1.00&#13;
Tickets Available: U\ -P Information Office - Room 201 - Talent Hall&#13;
t I • r ' 1 •&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
What's Happening" will&#13;
"lt'S regular feature of The&#13;
be a 'de Ranger. All clubs and&#13;
parks• d . ations are urge to rgan1z . 0 ·t notices about meetmgs, subntl . . etc m person at the&#13;
ralbeS, · ff' D&#13;
k 'de Ranger o ice, -194&#13;
par s1 . C We ask that these be m our LL· f th' ff. one week be ore e issue 0 ice&#13;
(Wednesday for the next. Wedd&#13;
Y's issue). None will be 0es a&#13;
Pted over the phone. acce&#13;
•&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are&#13;
sponsoring a "Ski Show" Sunday,&#13;
ov.12, at 7:30 p.m. Admission is&#13;
75 cents. There will be ski&#13;
movies, a fashion show, cross&#13;
country skis display, plus the&#13;
latest designs. Door prize: 2 sets&#13;
of fiberglass skis. (Student Activities&#13;
Building).&#13;
•&#13;
Looking for someth.&#13;
Sun.day afternoon? T mg to do.on&#13;
Activities Board . he Parkside&#13;
"Outer Limits /s s~nsoring the&#13;
Sunday afternoo:oaN rallye this ·. , ov. 12. It's&#13;
Just the thing to get&#13;
house or away from~~~ ~ut of the&#13;
an afternoon f ooks for&#13;
challenge R .&#13;
0 f~n and&#13;
begin at . eg1stration will noon on the Tall t&#13;
parking lot· the f t en Hall&#13;
leaving at '&#13;
1 irs car will be&#13;
fee is $5 p.m. The entrance&#13;
per car, allowing two&#13;
persons per car. Trophies will be&#13;
awarded to the top three places&#13;
and a party will be held af~&#13;
terwards where you can recount&#13;
to your friends the thrills and&#13;
hazards encountered during the&#13;
course of the rallye over hot do&#13;
and beer. gs&#13;
•&#13;
beAnyone interested in do ·u&#13;
able to pick up . \\ • the· pointers on of ·~~roper. care in a 'ni,·e it, . t~consin-Extension cou . beginning ov. 8.&#13;
Selecting the dog f . needs h . or }our health ousing,. maintainin d&#13;
' .grooming, nutrition and&#13;
responsibilities of d own ·hi&#13;
will be covered in the cla p&#13;
A veterinarian a peciar· t . feeds a t . · 1 m , rainer. a d Jud and&#13;
fh small. anin:ial peciali t from e n1ver 1t of \\'i co . Mad· · · n tn · ison will be instructo f th&#13;
clas . 0&#13;
1eeting will be held on Wed da 1. n~s Y at 7:30 p.m. at&#13;
Park ide Kenosha carnpu&#13;
special reduced rate for fa~il ,&#13;
m.embers and for tud n of . will apply.&#13;
Registration information ma&#13;
be obtained from niver it.&#13;
Exten ion, 553.2312. •&#13;
4 nanted as Dan£ orth • noin1nees&#13;
Parkside has named four&#13;
students as its first Danforth&#13;
Fellowship Nominees. Parkside&#13;
became eligible to nominate&#13;
Danforth candidates upon&#13;
achieving independent accredation&#13;
from the North Central&#13;
Association of Colleges and&#13;
Secondary Schools this year.&#13;
The nominees are Jay W.&#13;
Ruud, 1651 Chatham St., Racine,&#13;
a May, 1972, Parkside graduate&#13;
in English; Alan Joseph Ramias,&#13;
441019th Ave., Kenosha , who will&#13;
graduate in January in&#13;
philosophy and English; Susan&#13;
Jayne Olson, 314 10th St. , Racine,&#13;
who will graduate next May in&#13;
Eng1ish; and Stanley R. Craig,&#13;
171519th Ave. , Kenoshc}. who will&#13;
graduate next May in chemistry&#13;
and management science.&#13;
The fellowships, offered annually&#13;
since 1952 by the Danforth&#13;
Foundation of St. Louis, Mo., are&#13;
open to men and women who are&#13;
eniors or recent graduates of&#13;
accredited colleges in the United&#13;
tates, who have serious interest&#13;
in college teaching as a career,&#13;
and who plan to study for a Ph. D.&#13;
degree in a field of study common&#13;
:WHITES KELLAR&#13;
t? the American undergraduate&#13;
hberal arts curriculum. Can-&#13;
~id_a tes must be nominated by the&#13;
ha1son officer of their undergraduate&#13;
institution. The&#13;
number of nominees per institution&#13;
is based on enrollment.&#13;
Approximately 100 fellowships&#13;
will be awarded in March, 1973.&#13;
Danforth Fellows are eligible for&#13;
four years of financial&#13;
assistance, with a maximum&#13;
annual stipend of $2,700 for single&#13;
fellows and $2,950 for married&#13;
fellows plus tuition and fees.&#13;
Financial need is not a condition&#13;
for consideration.&#13;
In selecting Danforth Fellows,&#13;
special attention is given to&#13;
evidence of intellectual ability&#13;
which is felxible and of wide&#13;
range, academic achievement&#13;
which is a thorough foundation&#13;
for graduate study, evidence of&#13;
personal characteristics which&#13;
are likely to contribute to effective&#13;
teaching and to constructive&#13;
relationships with&#13;
students, and evidence of a&#13;
concern for the relation of ethical&#13;
or religious values to academic&#13;
disciplines, the educational&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
\\ (north lounge&#13;
,~ \ Greenquist Hall)&#13;
~VE&#13;
ENJ-tAl"1,,r.&#13;
12:30p.m.&#13;
Major employers throughout the&#13;
U.S. (private &amp; government) are seeking qualified college men and women for career poeitionll with&#13;
top pay and outstan~_ng bc~efi~.&#13;
Excellent opporturubes ex1St m many areas. For FREE information&#13;
on student assistance and&#13;
placement program send acJf.&#13;
addressed ST AMPED envelope to&#13;
National Placement Registry,&#13;
Data-Tech Services, 1001 East&#13;
Wed., Nov. 8 Idaho St., Kalispell, MT 59901.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
• 4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha&#13;
' W1scons1n Phone 654-0774&#13;
~"°"'· ~~~~~~&#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;
proces and to academic and&#13;
ocial respon ibihh .&#13;
Parkside' nominee ere&#13;
elected on recommendat.Jon of&#13;
~~ faculty to the W-P Danforth&#13;
hat on officer, \'1rgioia ch rr&#13;
who is pecial i tant to \'ic '&#13;
Chancellor Otto Bauer and&#13;
member or the ch mi t~ facult_ .&#13;
Beloit poet&#13;
will read her&#13;
r··A· s·o·RT 'j ON s ... ·.&#13;
: FREE Referral to . Y. Cli ic. :&#13;
12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
$150&#13;
CALL&#13;
. CONTROLLED&#13;
~ PARENTHOOD~ . . (a non- profit&#13;
SUIT 6&#13;
OA\10 STOTT BLDG.&#13;
. (313) 964-0530 · ............................. .&#13;
Ticke&#13;
Wed ., Nov. 8, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGERS&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
American&#13;
for&#13;
h h n&#13;
DIC&#13;
OW-PARKSIDE ACTIVITIE&#13;
•&#13;
n&#13;
P. fl. . 1 h .&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
F. LEE BAILEY&#13;
D&#13;
11 &#13;
,'THE PARKSIDE'RANGE'R Wed., NOlI, 8,1972&#13;
Exploring transcendental meditation Meet the'&#13;
which relieves the deep anxieties&#13;
which accumulate in all human&#13;
beings due to the stresses of&#13;
living.&#13;
Physiologists . currently&#13;
recognize three major states ~f&#13;
consciousness and . t~elr&#13;
corresponding phYSlOlog~cal&#13;
slates. They are waking,&#13;
dreaming and deep sleep. The&#13;
fourth proposed state is that of&#13;
transcendental consciousness.&#13;
This IS a state of restful alertness&#13;
during which the mind is very&#13;
alert, and the body is in an e,:en&#13;
deeper state of rest than during&#13;
deep sleep. .&#13;
The most important part IS that&#13;
meditators don't meditate for&#13;
meditation's sake, but for the&#13;
cummulative results.&#13;
Short term studies have shown&#13;
that in addition to a multitude of&#13;
physical benefits, lhe,re are ma~y&#13;
mental and sociologICal benefits&#13;
experienced by meditators.&#13;
These benefits are discussed m&#13;
more detail in a bulletin&#13;
published by W. H. Free~an ~~d&#13;
Company, entitled SCientifIc&#13;
American Offprints: The&#13;
Physiology of Meditation.&#13;
For further information on how&#13;
TM can benefit you, you can&#13;
attend the introductory lecture&#13;
Tuesday, Nov, 14, at 7 p.m. in&#13;
LLC D-189_.&#13;
There are basically two stages&#13;
to TM. During the first there is a&#13;
refinement of the thinking&#13;
process. as one experiences&#13;
progressively Iiner levels of the&#13;
thinking process. This is accompanied&#13;
by an expansion of&#13;
awareness at the same time that&#13;
the mind settles down to its&#13;
essential nature.&#13;
The second stage is reached&#13;
when the finest level of the&#13;
thinking process is transcended&#13;
and the mind experiences pure&#13;
consciousness. At this point, the&#13;
mind is not fogged or cramped by&#13;
disorganized, random thoughts.&#13;
. '0 concentration. contemplation,&#13;
hypnosis or&#13;
suggestion is necessary. TM is a&#13;
simple. natural method which is&#13;
based on the ract that the&#13;
thmking process is natural and&#13;
effortless, and has intelligence&#13;
and attention. This attention is&#13;
turned inward rather than outward&#13;
and made to follow the most&#13;
pleasing and satisfying direction&#13;
possible. This tendency to follow&#13;
the most charming thought&#13;
causes the mind to experience the&#13;
finer levels necessary to reach&#13;
pure consciousness.&#13;
The best part of TM is that it&#13;
results not only in extremely&#13;
refined mental perception, but&#13;
that there is a corresponding&#13;
physiological state of deep' rest&#13;
(}) You must attend an introductory&#13;
lecture which explains&#13;
the benefits of TM. (2)&#13;
Attend a preparatory lecture&#13;
which discusse the actual&#13;
mechanic of TM (3) A personal&#13;
Interview with the teacher so that&#13;
he rna} get to know the&#13;
pr-ospective student. (4) There is&#13;
a day of personal instruction for&#13;
1\'0 hours at the student's convemence&#13;
to learn the techruque.&#13;
teps 5. 6 and 7 are three days of&#13;
verineauon of experience during&#13;
'0\ hich students meet in a&#13;
ria. room nuauon to check the&#13;
tuoeru' progre. in acqumng&#13;
the technique.&#13;
Th second requirement asks&#13;
that )'ou abstain from the use of&#13;
drug- uch as marijuana. LSD&#13;
and other hallucinogens, amphetamines&#13;
and barbi tuat es.&#13;
There i no moral reason for this.&#13;
It IS merely a ph~ iclogrcal one.&#13;
Thirdly. th re 15 a fee for the&#13;
course. This fee IS charged by&#13;
tudents International&#13;
\te&lt;htallon oclety merely to&#13;
keep the organizauon running on&#13;
local. national and international&#13;
levels. as it IS a non-profit&#13;
educatIonal organization.&#13;
Married couples are asked for a&#13;
pa)'ment of $125: adult m·&#13;
dmduals. $75: college students.&#13;
Sol5: and high school students,&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner Music Dept.&#13;
Hav vou ever wondered just&#13;
"hat belOit transcended is during&#13;
tra~fndt-ntal meditation"&#13;
ccordln~ to And) Goodman. a&#13;
tuderu t Par ide and a teacher&#13;
or Tran. cendental Meditation,&#13;
ITM). one experiences&#13;
prcgre .1\ f'1) finer level of&#13;
thmklnR until th finest level I&#13;
r aeheo and thtn transcended as&#13;
on re..icn pur consclousn&#13;
What do. all thIS mean. )'ou&#13;
k QUIte Imp), it means that&#13;
eee meditates. ere' mmd&#13;
10110" It m t ple In and&#13;
tur I !rom or thought The&#13;
r uu I • Cf) tal darlt) or&#13;
con (;10U nesa, and 3&#13;
.orre ndlng ph) I al tate of&#13;
-p r t "00 Ir nqwhl)&#13;
Surpr, m~l) nough, th ..&#13;
Id)1I1 I. I i. errortle ly&#13;
chI \ 01 10110'" rs of TM For&#13;
I bru~fpt'nod of 1~20 minutes per&#13;
da)'. mornln~ and evenIng,&#13;
meditator uUhled thl Simple.&#13;
Ifortl . mtntal t hmqll&lt;!as it&#13;
I tau~ht b) the laharishl&#13;
\Iah h "Ol!' and the leachers&#13;
hom hl' h., cprt",ed to lea h 11&#13;
lI)OU h.,\p 10 do to become a&#13;
meditator I meet three . Imple&#13;
noqwr men~ Th first 01 tbese&#13;
reqUJr m nt. I. one or time, and&#13;
th r ute' tV n steps Involved&#13;
By Tom Peterson&#13;
The music department here at&#13;
Parkside is one of the least.&#13;
known segments of the schooL&#13;
The department offers a full&#13;
degree in music which students&#13;
can certify for teaching. There&#13;
are presently some 90 students&#13;
committed to a major, being&#13;
taught by eight full-time and six&#13;
part-time faculty members. The&#13;
department now holds classes on&#13;
both the Kenosha and WoodRoad&#13;
campuses, but will be housed in&#13;
the new Communication Arts&#13;
Building upon its completion&#13;
Facilities will be greatly ex.&#13;
panded with Ihe new building&#13;
which win include music studios&#13;
a large rehearsal room for band'&#13;
orchestra and chorus, plus in:&#13;
dividual and ensemble practice&#13;
rooms.&#13;
The bands and choirs un.&#13;
derstandably make up a large&#13;
part of the department. There are&#13;
three chorale groups which arc&#13;
not related to one another at a,1.&#13;
The Chorus does a certain Iypeof&#13;
music for general appeal; it is not&#13;
selective and is open to anyone.&#13;
The Chrale is a group of aboutJO&#13;
persons that performs more&#13;
challenging music. For example,&#13;
it wiJI do a program of Italian&#13;
music from the 17th and tSU!&#13;
century. The Chorale is open to&#13;
anyone with an audition,&#13;
Probably one of the more&#13;
familiar musical groups is the&#13;
Baroque Players, which is a&#13;
faculty ensemble that does get&#13;
around for numerous performances.&#13;
REVIEW: 'Where Does It Hurt?'&#13;
8y 8i II 8rohough&#13;
r . II "" I ea 01)' oneol the&#13;
mo t \'pr atlle comedian of&#13;
rteent lim He I able to pia)&#13;
"lth "'lual d ftness a master&#13;
thl f ITh fo,), a bumbhng&#13;
pollee detecti,·e Onspecter&#13;
nUl, and a variety of&#13;
Insane penoonages in one film&#13;
Dr trangelo\'e), uddenl)·. ",e&#13;
find him In th center of a private&#13;
ho ptt I pgr mg a 1ecl1erOUs,&#13;
ronnannJl hObPlla)admirustrator,&#13;
a chant ·ter that 15 as sly and&#13;
('tJrulln~ a: he IS improbable.&#13;
. lie,.. " \Ibert Horrnagle. a&#13;
man that makes love with nurses&#13;
In the linen closet, allows&#13;
~fatl()n to be performed in&#13;
change for green stamps, qas a&#13;
ceret entrance to his office&#13;
through the Pepsi machine, and&#13;
general I)' 'tu,,05 every patient&#13;
for p, ry mclde that BIll&lt;!Cross&#13;
'"ill cough up&#13;
eller is surrounded by&#13;
character equally as improbably-an&#13;
incompetent doctor,&#13;
a Japanese lab technician that&#13;
does Groucho Marx impressions,&#13;
an o\'ersexed nurse that&#13;
renade tiers through the&#13;
soda machine. And into this falls&#13;
an uny,aT)' "'orker that ends up&#13;
g Ihng hIS appenchx (healthy)&#13;
removed when all he wanted was&#13;
a ch . t X-ra)'&#13;
held hiS own, adding his own&#13;
depth to Hoffnagle.&#13;
Whel'e Does It Hurt? It hurts&#13;
basically because the movie was&#13;
not all that it could have been.&#13;
Good laugh lines were sparce. It&#13;
seemed that a movie with Peter&#13;
Sellers could have been much&#13;
more. I'll admit, it was entertaining,&#13;
but unfortunately, it&#13;
was also a bit of a disappointment.&#13;
\\ her~ Do~ It Hurt? is a Not to say that the movie isn't&#13;
farce--almost. It is the un- funny. It is. But it is populated&#13;
fortunate mating of two genres, mosUy with a humor you might&#13;
satire and farce. a mating that expect to hear on the streets, not&#13;
doesn't qUite make it. The film IS on the screen, It is certainly&#13;
"dedicated" to the diligent. humor that would offend your&#13;
public minded MO's dedicated to parents. but that our generation.&#13;
upholding the Hyppocratic Oath, more liberal and vulgar. would&#13;
Those three doctors are then enjoy.&#13;
asked to stand up. Thus we are Structurally, the film is&#13;
prepar~(or=:satire. basically continuous. but sudThe&#13;
story of ahospital that is denly falls apart at the very end.&#13;
more commercial than it is Alot of loose ends are not tied up,&#13;
altruistic would seem to be and we leave in a bit of a fog,&#13;
satire, but with (arcical saying to ourselves, "Whatever&#13;
characters and a farcical plot, happened to .....&#13;
the movie is transxormed into a Character portrayals by the&#13;
muddle. The two genres don't actors and actresses are good,&#13;
mesh-they collide. One one hand but they were written poorly in&#13;
you have sharp social comment, the first place. I cannot lavish&#13;
on the other you have an idiocy praise on Sellers, but I can't say&#13;
that. destroys any relation with anything derogatory, either. He&#13;
reahty. ............................................................... . .&#13;
: .&#13;
1 Cham- Tap-Bar 1&#13;
··&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
..............................&#13;
Parkside ActiVities Board presents&#13;
~&#13;
\\". Road Rallye /~~.&#13;
Sun. , Noy. 12, 1912&#13;
Registration 12:00&#13;
Tallent Hall lot entrance&#13;
Fee 15&#13;
The Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Team from Milwaukee will visit The&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parks ide on Nov.&#13;
9 to intorm interested students of&#13;
programs leading to a commission as a&#13;
Marine Officer. The minimum starting&#13;
salary for a Marine Officer is S9,000 per&#13;
year, increasing to sn,ooo within 2 years.&#13;
All training is done in the summer and&#13;
there are no on·campus commitments.&#13;
Those students who apply and are accepted&#13;
as undergraduates accrue&#13;
longevity While in the program. resulting&#13;
in a freshman, for example. starting at&#13;
SlO.5oo after he graduates and accepts a&#13;
commission. There is no obligation to&#13;
accept a commission or go on active duty.&#13;
If a young man accepts a commission&#13;
following graduation. he must serve at&#13;
least 2', years on active duty. Financial&#13;
assistance of 5100 per school month is&#13;
available in addition to aviation options&#13;
leading to designation as a Marine Pilot or&#13;
Marine Flight Officer.&#13;
Captain Dennis M. BUCKOVETZ heads&#13;
the Officer Selection efforts in Wisconsin&#13;
and Upper Michigan and will be available&#13;
in the Greenquist Hall Concourse to fur·&#13;
ther explain the Marine Corps com·&#13;
missioning programs and how to apply.&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
'A) Racine, Wis.&#13;
eS dhMfiPagne on Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches&#13;
L. ._{l:.ndPizza cD 01 . ~~ .- .&#13;
RESEARCH MAnRIALS o&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send 10t'Jour desCriptive. up-to-date.&#13;
121 PI .... ,1"'der tal'loe 01 2,300&#13;
qUII ty luurch papelS. EltilSt&#13;
$1.00 '1tint ,nutl 1M undlilll.&#13;
RmARCH UNlIMIT£O&#13;
519 GUNROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
OS ANGElES, CALtf. 90024&#13;
213)471-1474 • 477-5493&#13;
r'fe MeG I local salesman"&#13;
Parkside Activitie5 Board Presents&#13;
(]Q~(D0~Q0 [DI]UU(5£££&#13;
~~[;J(D[Brn~ ~[;J(D1111 00 lD13[;J13 VII! 0'l!(DClff&#13;
aJ lIJeDGJ(B(3&#13;
featuring mfil&#13;
UUlL:.JL:i&#13;
(Rock-n.Roll Revival)&#13;
[,?[;JOG(iJ~ v lDl.Dl:D ill.D Eism IJ.[.&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
PIZZA KnCHEN liege Men (immediately following F. Lee Bailey Lecture)&#13;
Admissions 11'0 Student Activities Building&#13;
ART TIME Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers 75' for Greaser get-ups&#13;
ORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
F,.. O.lh.ry to Pa,ksld. Villag.&#13;
5Dn 10M At'lI" ''',"' 651-51"&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. a, 1972&#13;
E loring transcendental ineditation Meet the·&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
tc&gt;-dale , ol 2,300&#13;
£11elese&#13;
11&#13;
11191 Men&#13;
all 552-8355&#13;
Th r are ba icallv two tag&#13;
to T. t. During the first there i a&#13;
r frnement of the thinking&#13;
pure consciou n . The be t part of T 1 1 that it&#13;
re ults not onlv in extremely&#13;
refined mental • perception, but&#13;
that there i a corre ponding&#13;
phy iological tate of d ep· rest&#13;
which relieves the deep anxieties&#13;
which accumulate in all human&#13;
bein due to the stres es of&#13;
living. Phv iologists currently&#13;
recognize three major state ?f&#13;
con ciousness and their&#13;
corre ponding physiological&#13;
tale . They are waking,&#13;
dreaming and deep sleep. The&#13;
fourth proposed state is that of&#13;
transcendental con ciousnes&#13;
Thi 1. a . late ol restful alertne s&#13;
during which the mind is very&#13;
alert. and the body 1s in an even&#13;
deeper tale of rest than during&#13;
deep sl ep. . The most important part 1s that&#13;
meditators don't meditate for&#13;
meditation's sake, but for the&#13;
cummulative r ults. horl term studies have shown&#13;
that in addition to a multitude of&#13;
physical benefits, the_re are ma~y&#13;
mental and ociolog1cal benefits&#13;
experienced by ~editator~.&#13;
Th e benefits are d1scu sed m&#13;
more detail in a bulletin&#13;
publi hed by W. H. Freen:1an ~~d&#13;
ompany, entitled Sc1entJfic&#13;
American Offprints: The&#13;
Physiology of Meditation.&#13;
For further information on how&#13;
T 1 can benefit you, you can&#13;
attend the introductory lecture&#13;
Tuesday, ov. 14, at 7 p.m. in&#13;
LLC D-189 ..&#13;
Music Dept.&#13;
By Tom Peterson&#13;
The music department her at&#13;
Parkside is one of th lea. lknown&#13;
segments of the chool&#13;
The departm nl offer. a full&#13;
degree in music which luden&#13;
can certify for teaching. Th r&#13;
are presently som 90 tuden&#13;
committed to a major, being&#13;
taught by eight full-time and ix&#13;
part-time faculty member . The&#13;
department now holds cla e on&#13;
both the Kenosha and Wood Ro d&#13;
campuses, but will be hou d in&#13;
the new Communication Ar&#13;
Building upon its completion&#13;
Facilities will be greatly xpanded&#13;
with the new buildin&#13;
which will include music tudi0s&#13;
a large rehearsal room for band&#13;
orchestra and chorus, plu in&#13;
dividual and ensemble prachc&#13;
rooms.&#13;
'Where Does It Hurt?'&#13;
The bands and choir un- derstandably make up a larg&#13;
part of the department. Ther ar&#13;
three chorale groups which ar&#13;
not related to one another at a,l&#13;
The Chorus does a certain type o(&#13;
music for general app al ; it i. not&#13;
selective and is open to anyon&#13;
The Chrale is a group of about 30&#13;
persons that performs more&#13;
challenging music. For exampl&#13;
it will do a program of ltaha~&#13;
music from the 17th and 18th&#13;
century. The Chorale is open to&#13;
anyone with an audition. .'.'\ot to av that the movie isn't&#13;
funny. It i ·. But it is populated&#13;
mostly with a humor you might&#13;
expect to hear on the streets, not&#13;
on the creen. It is certainly&#13;
humor that would offend your&#13;
parents. but that our generation.&#13;
more liberal and \'ulgar, would&#13;
enJoy.&#13;
Structurally, the film is&#13;
basically continuous, but suddenly&#13;
falls apart at the very end.&#13;
A lot of loose ends are not tied up,&#13;
and we leave m a bit of a fog,&#13;
saying to ourselves, "Whatever&#13;
happened to ... "&#13;
Character portrayals by the&#13;
actors and actresses are good,&#13;
but they were written poorly in&#13;
the first place. I cannot lavish&#13;
praise on Sellers, but I can't say&#13;
anything derogatory, either. He&#13;
Cham-Tap-Bar =&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
0&#13;
L.. ..... __ g_n:d Pizza cO 0 . ··········----~,--~.-.. ..............•&#13;
Ham Sandwiches&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers&#13;
Free Delkery to Puksi•• Village&#13;
SOl11M At1••1 Pl,on, 6S1-St9t&#13;
held ht own. adding his own&#13;
depth to Hoffnagle.&#13;
\\'here Does It Hurt? It hurts&#13;
ha ically because the movie was&#13;
not all that it could have been.&#13;
Good laugh lines were sparce . It&#13;
. eemed that a movie with Peter&#13;
Seller could have been much&#13;
more. I'll admit, it was entertaining,&#13;
but unfortunately, it&#13;
was also a bit of a disappointment.&#13;
&#13;
The Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Team from Milwaukee will visit The&#13;
University of Wisconsin . Parkside on Nov.&#13;
9 to inform interested students of&#13;
programs leading to a commission as a&#13;
Marine Officer . The minimum starting&#13;
salary for a Marine Officer is $9,000 per&#13;
year, increasing to $11,000 within 2 years.&#13;
All training is done in the summer and&#13;
there are no on -campus commitments.&#13;
Those students who apply and are ac -&#13;
cepted as undergraduates accrue&#13;
longevity while in the program, resulting&#13;
in a freshman, for example, starting at&#13;
S10,500 after he graduates and accepts a&#13;
commission. There is no obligation to&#13;
accept a commission or go on active duty.&#13;
If a young man accepts a commission&#13;
following graduation, he must ser ve at&#13;
least 21 2 years on active duty. Financial&#13;
assistance of S100 per school mont h is&#13;
available in addition to aviation options&#13;
leading to designation as a Marine Pilot or&#13;
Marine Flight Officer.&#13;
Captain Dennis M . BUCKOVETZ heads&#13;
the Offi cer Selection efforts in Wisconsin&#13;
and Upper Michigan and wi ll be available&#13;
in the Greenquist Hall Concourse to further&#13;
explain the Marine Corps commissioning&#13;
programs and how to apply.&#13;
Probably one of the mor •&#13;
familiar musical groups is th&#13;
Baroque Player , which i a&#13;
faculty ensemble that doe g t&#13;
around for numerou p rformances&#13;
.&#13;
............................. Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
~&#13;
--~~: Road Ral lye /~:&#13;
Sun. , Nov. 12, 1972&#13;
Registration 12:00&#13;
Tallent Hall lot entmce&#13;
Fee $5&#13;
TROPHIES&#13;
WILL BE AWARDED!&#13;
~ PARTY AFTERWARD! . . : ........................ ······&#13;
(Bl]~(D§~I]§ l!JGJUV~~~~&#13;
'-'illl:Dl1l1 C§ (](31](3 Ul!l §'(r(D(H&#13;
(D (D(D(Dl]~&#13;
featuring m~ uru L.:,)&#13;
(Rock-n-Roll Revival)&#13;
llffiOCDGJ~ v l]f:!:(D tJ(D £ s~l!: Lr~lL.&#13;
(i m mediatel y follow ing F. Lee Bailey Lecture)&#13;
Admissions $l5° Student Activities Building&#13;
75c for Greaser get-ups&#13;
IJffiCfsl3§&#13;
\.W,\\\\t&#13;
DANCE CONTEST &#13;
....., .... ,-.&#13;
, .... ~.. ' .&#13;
'Weaklings, here's your chance&#13;
Kathryn Wellner BY&#13;
a 90-pound weakling?&#13;
AreYOUrybodYpick on you?&#13;
DoeS eve. t th ab your gi, run over 0 e&#13;
Well,gdr&#13;
dojo and learn the&#13;
ParksJe " '&#13;
"gentleway, , ' h if you don t weig 90 Even I&#13;
d judocan be fun as well as&#13;
pount'During the Tukogawa era&#13;
usefu 1'876)the only weapons of (1576-, ,&#13;
d I&#13;
Japanese warriors were&#13;
feu a "'tslk'e ' hands (JlUJU U, mv s, theIr Th&#13;
d&#13;
clubs and spears. e&#13;
swor s, . d ' th&#13;
t day sport of JU 0 IS e&#13;
Presen. .. . d dant of JIUJutsu, an was descen .&#13;
1 ped bv .jigoro Kano. deve 0 • .&#13;
Professor Kana estabhsh~d the&#13;
Kodokan(a school of studying the&#13;
waY)In Tokyo III.June of 1882.&#13;
TheParkside Judo Club mee~s&#13;
rv Tuesday and Thursday 10&#13;
eve r ti the dojo (place of prac Ice -&#13;
actually the large green gymnastIcsmat&#13;
in the gym) The club&#13;
advisor and sensei Ron H ' hi , ansen&#13;
IS a t ird degree black belt&#13;
(Sandan). Helmut K h&#13;
presIdent, is a third degree bro~~&#13;
belt ISankyuj • Bonnie E&#13;
seer t· ppers,&#13;
e ary, IS also a Sankyu and&#13;
treasurer Mike Wood' Was&#13;
recently awarded his Yonk&#13;
Igreen belt J. yu&#13;
Other members of the club are&#13;
Rudy Alvarez, Gokyu 16th degree&#13;
student); Deana Bigley, Rokkyu&#13;
15th degree student); Jim Gallo,&#13;
Rokkyu; Micah Grasser&#13;
Sankyn John Jones Gokyu:'&#13;
Mike Kocol, Rokky~; Jerry&#13;
Konecy, Sankyu ; Bill Matelski.&#13;
Gokyu; Hayes Norman, YonkyuMark&#13;
Olson, Gokyu; Kerris&#13;
Palmer, Rokkyu ; Tom Parnella,&#13;
Rokkyu. John Petersen GokyuMike&#13;
Popinski, ROkky~; Kathy&#13;
Wellner, Gokyu; and Darrell&#13;
Wright, Rokkyu.&#13;
"Judo IS an outlet for the&#13;
release of hostilities built up&#13;
Women defend honor&#13;
By Pat Nowak&#13;
It was a cold, cloudy afternoon&#13;
butsomehowtypical of what one&#13;
'wouldexpect for a football game.&#13;
But-wasit just a football game?&#13;
Toa passerby maybe, but to the&#13;
players it was a ti~e of co~-&#13;
frontationand defendmg of one s&#13;
honor. Sound a little heavy for&#13;
you' Well, maybe so, but that's&#13;
;'hat happened last Sunday afternoon.&#13;
The vets vs. the women's&#13;
caucus in what was to be the&#13;
game of the season took place,&#13;
and it proved to be quite interesting.&#13;
In the pre-game&#13;
preparations the women were&#13;
found to be outnumbered so a&#13;
quickdraft was formed and a few&#13;
of the vets found themselves&#13;
playing for the caucus.&#13;
The game, thought by few to be&#13;
an easy victory for the vets, soon&#13;
proved otherwise. A stiff&#13;
defensive battle soon became&#13;
apparent as the women refused to&#13;
give ground to the vets. It was&#13;
late in the second quarter when&#13;
the first score came for the&#13;
womenon an intercepted pass by&#13;
Jeff Vandernanen who returned&#13;
il 60 yeards for the score.&#13;
The game again ground down&#13;
to a standstill with neither the&#13;
womennor the vets able to mount&#13;
a Substantial drive. The women's&#13;
hopes for victory were smashed&#13;
In the final seconds of play when&#13;
TERMPAPERS&#13;
Resnrthed and professionally typed.&#13;
All Writers have a minimum BS, BA&#13;
Degree.&#13;
CALL COLLECT: 202.333.0201&#13;
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lOVER 3,000 ON FILE)&#13;
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51 to tover postage and handling tor your&#13;
tiiltiillog.&#13;
TERMPAPER LIBRARY, INC.&#13;
3160"0" Street, N.W.&#13;
Wnhington, D.C. 20007&#13;
r"~:B'O'RT'ioNS"'1&#13;
~FREERelerralto N,Y, Clinic, l&#13;
~ 12 weeks or less&#13;
~ Total cost&#13;
~ $150&#13;
(not including&#13;
transportation to N.Y.)&#13;
an interference call gave the vets&#13;
the ball on the one-yard line, On&#13;
the following play Chet Andersen&#13;
made a diving reception for the&#13;
score.&#13;
The clock ran out and overtime&#13;
was declared. Neither side&#13;
scored and the game ended in&#13;
almost total darkness. Coach&#13;
Wendy Musich described the&#13;
caucus' play with, "Brilliant&#13;
defensive work and team play&#13;
came through for us. We came&#13;
through as I expected."&#13;
The game is now only sJXlrts&#13;
history and there are only&#13;
memories of the sore muscles&#13;
and cold hands,&#13;
There are rumors that a new&#13;
challenge may arise on the&#13;
volleyball court for a rematch&#13;
against the vets.&#13;
UW-p hosts&#13;
gym meet&#13;
Parkside will host the Women's&#13;
Region B Gymnastics Championships&#13;
Saturday at Bullen&#13;
Junior H. S. in Kenosha.&#13;
thrOUghstudying," Grasser said&#13;
'..It teaches you gent1enes.,;&#13;
said Kah as several other&#13;
members snickered.&#13;
In spite of the fact that judo&#13;
provides a person with lots of&#13;
strenuous exercise, and a few&#13;
occasional bruises, it can't be too&#13;
bad, since the club has been in&#13;
existence at Parkside since&#13;
September, 1969, The club&#13;
sponsored the rirst Annual&#13;
Wisconsin Collegiate Judo&#13;
Tournament last April.&#13;
The next tournament will be a&#13;
Parks ide intramural held or;&#13;
Thursday. Nov. 9. Registration&#13;
fee is 81 and entry forms are&#13;
available from Vic Godfrey or&#13;
members of the Judo Club. Tbere&#13;
will be three divisions: Men's&#13;
brown belt, open; men's while&#13;
belt, lightweight and&#13;
heavyweight: and women's white&#13;
belt. open. If you don't plan on&#13;
competing. there's no cha~e:or&#13;
watching&#13;
Harriers end&#13;
in a tie&#13;
Parkside's harflers firushed&#13;
out their regular season with a 28·&#13;
28 tie with Loras Friday. Lucian&#13;
Rosa finished first again with a&#13;
time of 25:32.3. only two second&#13;
off the course record. followed by&#13;
Dennis Biel. 26:01 Jim ~1cFadden&#13;
finished fifth. ~ed&#13;
Kessenich ninth and Everett&#13;
Hyde eleventh. Loras' highest&#13;
placer was Ed Wagner. who&#13;
finished third in 26:03&#13;
The Rangers wilJ be at Eau&#13;
Claire Saturday in the :\AIA&#13;
District 14meet where Coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey figures the harriers will&#13;
havea good chance to place in the&#13;
top three and earn a trip to lhe&#13;
nationals&#13;
Rooters close&#13;
with 3-0 los:;&#13;
The l'W-Parkside soccer team&#13;
closed its season Saturday \I,Ilh a&#13;
;H) loss at the hands of t-II ·Gr",n&#13;
Bay The Rangers ended \\ lth a '2-&#13;
1\-1record&#13;
Wed., Nov, 8, 1972 THE PARKSIDE ~ANGER 7&#13;
P.E. Bldg. schedule&#13;
POOL&#13;
Saturday _&#13;
Sunday&#13;
Monday. Wednesday ..••&#13;
Tuesday. Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
101 m IOSp.m&#13;
1"0 to 10p.m&#13;
1l·30-t'30.S·30-10p m&#13;
..•...•• 1l:30-S·30.S30-IOp m&#13;
11'301 m 1O'30p.m&#13;
GVlIU M&#13;
Monday through Friday&#13;
turday&#13;
day&#13;
.. 10 1010pm&#13;
~ Frida d Itspm&#13;
91 m IOSp.m&#13;
l'30loI0p.m&#13;
Al:&#13;
Same as Pool Houn&#13;
H DB.\LL R&#13;
Same IS GymnASIum&#13;
'ovember 10 F L IlIlle)&#13;
'o"ember II Wresthn Olnlc - G}mnl urn a&#13;
Enllre BuJldUlg Closed&#13;
ours are ubject to chan e b«'JUIM" of peclaJ «!\ ent&#13;
SCHED LED&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
• 0\ 11&#13;
CRO&#13;
• 'o\"&#13;
· '0\&#13;
COL:-.TRV&#13;
11&#13;
18&#13;
• AlA 0 InellO PI&#13;
110\IE'" Gnl, n&#13;
• 'o\" II RegIon B O\'lmplonshl&#13;
11'0\1E'" TE"" I&#13;
:\ov 1().1l ~,l It&#13;
410 MAIN&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY&#13;
On Our Screen&#13;
, 'Vi(e-Hustlers"&#13;
plus&#13;
"Sweet lips"&#13;
N.w S.lections of Aduh 800 • lu·&#13;
nVlng Dollyl Th aile OfMn Noon ',.1&#13;
Mldnl' •• look Store O~n '1 0 m.&#13;
III Mldnil •.&#13;
8 Yea" ond Over Only&#13;
OPEN TODAY&#13;
6:DD • 12:00 Mid.&#13;
STREET • DOWNTOWN&#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;
'1eMC ~'.&#13;
SAVE·ON&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
Q&#13;
U&#13;
o&#13;
R&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE, RACINE. WiSe,&#13;
PIUS '10 Ta.. .aNI ~,("t'&#13;
COl"i',Kl&#13;
Camp.l'S Tr .... ei Ce&lt;"leI"&#13;
SluderV",(1,,,,1" Oft,ce&#13;
L,tJ(arv L~" ng Ceoro'lt'!'"0 tl'&#13;
PI'\l:IM W n~&#13;
Hy_&#13;
~f.,&#13;
... WI ~,&#13;
too,&#13;
It\,rolW.&#13;
T1W DUll NOME COOK/Nt;!&#13;
n. But 1_ I~. C u'"&#13;
"COUNTRY&#13;
KffCHEN"&#13;
Dn Mile North&#13;
01 Cal PiS 01 Hwy. 31&#13;
Dpe. 1 Days a Week 8 u. to 8 p.m.&#13;
SUNDAY'S SPECIAL: Roast Bttf &amp; T rkay&#13;
Hwy. 31 - 1/. Mile North of Petrifying Spnn,s&#13;
... ·, ·, ... ·. .. . . .. .. .. •. ~ .... ~&#13;
Weaklings, here's your chance&#13;
BY Kathryn Wellner&#13;
u a 90-pound weakling'? Are yo . k ? everybody pie on you .&#13;
o~s rab your gi, run over to the&#13;
well, ~de dojo, and learn the parks ,,&#13;
··gentle way. ' . h l&#13;
·r you don t we1g 90 E~O 11&#13;
pounds, judo can be fukn as we as&#13;
f 1 During the Tu ogawa era u e 6&#13;
u 1&#13;
'&#13;
876) the only weapons of&#13;
(157 - ' • d I Japanese warriors were feu a .. · ts ) knives their hands (JIUJU u ' Th '&#13;
swords, clubs and fs~rs: the&#13;
present-day sp~_rt. ot JU o dis e&#13;
d endant of JIUJU su, an was eK J' K d loped by 1goro ano.&#13;
/v~essor Kano established the&#13;
K:iokan ( a school of studying the&#13;
. ,., 10 Tokyo m June of 1882 wa, · - The Parkside Judo Club meets&#13;
every Tuesday and Thurs~ay in&#13;
the dojo (place of practice -&#13;
actuall)- the large green gymn~stic&#13;
mat in the gym) The club&#13;
advisor and sensei Ron H · . , ansen is a third degree black belt&#13;
&lt;Sa~danl. Helmut Kah&#13;
president, is a third degree brow~&#13;
belt ( Sankyu l . Bonnie E . ta . ' ppers secre ry, is also a Sankyu and&#13;
treasurer Mike Wood 'was&#13;
recently awarded his Yonk&#13;
( green belt) . yu&#13;
Other members of the club are&#13;
Rudy Alvarez, Gokyu (6th degree&#13;
student); Deana Bigley, Rokkyu&#13;
(5th degree student); Jim Gallo&#13;
Rokkyu; Micah Grasser'&#13;
Sa_nkyu; John Jones, Gokyu! .&#13;
M 1ke Kocol, Rokkyu: Jerry&#13;
Konecy' Sankyu; Bill Matelski&#13;
Gokyu; Hayes Norman, Yonkyu:&#13;
Mark Olson, Gokyu; Kerns&#13;
Palmer, Rokkyu; Tom Pamelia.&#13;
R~kkyu; John Petersen. Gokvu&#13;
Mike Popinski, Rokkyu; Kath;.&#13;
Wellner, Gokyu; and Darreit&#13;
Wnght, Rokkyu.&#13;
"Judo 1s an outlet for the&#13;
release of hostilities built up&#13;
through tudying," Grasser said&#13;
'_'It teaches you gentlen ..•&#13;
said Kah a several other&#13;
member nickered.&#13;
In . pite of the fact that judo&#13;
provides a person with lots of&#13;
strenuou exercise, and a re&#13;
occa ional bruises, it can't be too&#13;
bad. since the club ha been in&#13;
existence at Parkside ince&#13;
eptember. 1969 The club&#13;
spon ored the fir t Annual&#13;
\\'i con 10 Collegiate Judo&#13;
Tournament la t April.&#13;
The next tournament will a&#13;
Park ide intramural ~Id or.&#13;
Thur da), 'o\'. 9. Regi tration&#13;
fee is I and entry form are&#13;
available from Vic Godfre, or&#13;
member of the Judo Club. T .&#13;
will be three dhi io : I n·&#13;
brown belt. open, men' hite&#13;
belt. lightweight and&#13;
heavyweight: and worn n' \\hite&#13;
belt, open. If )OU d n't plan o&#13;
compe mg, her ·&#13;
,,atchmg&#13;
Women defend honor Harrier&#13;
in a tie&#13;
nd&#13;
By Pat Nowak&#13;
It was a cold, cloudy afternoon&#13;
but somehow typical of what one&#13;
would expect for a football game.&#13;
But was it just a football game'?&#13;
To a passerby maybe, but to the&#13;
players it was a time of confrontation&#13;
and defending of one's&#13;
honor. Sound a little heavy for&#13;
vou? Well, maybe so, but that's&#13;
~hat happened last Sunday afternoon.&#13;
&#13;
The vets vs. the women's&#13;
caucus in what was to be the&#13;
game of the season took place,&#13;
and it proved to be quite interesting.&#13;
In the pre-game&#13;
preparations the women were&#13;
found to be outnumbered so a&#13;
quick draft was formed and a few&#13;
of the vets found themselves&#13;
playing for the caucus.&#13;
The game, thought by few to be&#13;
an easy victory for the vets, soon&#13;
proved otherwise. A stiff&#13;
defensive battle soon became&#13;
apparent as the women refused to&#13;
give ground to the vets. It was&#13;
late in the second quarter when&#13;
the first score came for the&#13;
women on an intercepted pass by&#13;
,Jeff Vandernanen who returned&#13;
tt 60 yeards for the score.&#13;
The game again ground down&#13;
to a standstill with neither the&#13;
women nor the vets able to mount&#13;
a ubstantial drive. The women's&#13;
hope for victory were smashed&#13;
10 the final seconds of play when&#13;
TERMPAPERS&#13;
Researched and professionally typed.&#13;
All writers have a minimum BS, BA Degree.&#13;
CALL COLLECT: 202-333-0201&#13;
ALSO AVAILABLE&#13;
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(OVER 3,000ON FILE)&#13;
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SI lo cover postage and handling for your cot•log.&#13;
TERMPAPER LIBRARY, INC.&#13;
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f .. A. s·o·R f. i o N s ... -~&#13;
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·······················&#13;
an interference call gave the vets&#13;
the ball on the one-yard line. On&#13;
the following play Chet Andersen&#13;
made a diving reception for the&#13;
score.&#13;
The clock ran out and overtime&#13;
was declared. Neither side&#13;
scored and the game ended in&#13;
almost total darkness. Coach&#13;
Wendy Musich described the&#13;
caucus' play with, "Brilliant&#13;
defensive work and team play&#13;
came through for us. We came&#13;
through as I expected."&#13;
The game is now only sports&#13;
history and there are only&#13;
memories of the sore muscles&#13;
and cold hands.&#13;
There are rumors that a new&#13;
challenge may arise on the&#13;
volleyball court for a rematch&#13;
against the vets.&#13;
UW-P hosts&#13;
gym meet&#13;
Parkside will host the Women's&#13;
Region B Gymnastics Championships&#13;
Saturday at Bullen&#13;
Junior H. S. in Kenosha .&#13;
Park 1de' harrier fm1 hed&#13;
out their regular ea on v1th a -&#13;
28 tie with Lora Frida · .uc,an&#13;
Rosa fim hed fi t a a·m , h a&#13;
time of 25·32.3. onl) t&gt;Ao econd&#13;
off the course record. folio ed b&#13;
Dennis Biel. 26:01 Jim . leFadden&#13;
fini hed t1fth, ' ed&#13;
Kessenich ninth and E\'er t&#13;
Hyde eleventh. Lora ' h1e:he ,&#13;
placer wa Ed Wagner. ho&#13;
finished third m 26:03.&#13;
The Rangers 111 be at Eau&#13;
Claire ' aturda) in the · I&#13;
District 1-t meet \\here Coach \'i&#13;
Godfrey f1gur he ham II&#13;
have a good chance to pla m th&#13;
top three and earn a tnp to th&#13;
national.&#13;
Booter lo e&#13;
with 3-0 lo -&#13;
• BEER• SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WI ES&#13;
ICE _ BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8_P......:..._M_. __ __,&#13;
CALL&#13;
632-1565&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE.&#13;
. . et tare to switterlaind * ..._ Round trip I . tail breakfast&#13;
Lodging and cont,nen&#13;
Jt 9th night in Copenhagen&#13;
Jt Motor option avai1laible * Multi-lingual guides&#13;
ONL y THREE WEEK&#13;
LEFT TO SIG p&#13;
RACINE, WISC.&#13;
Wed., Nov. 8, 1972 THE PARKSfDE RANGER 7&#13;
P.E. Bldg. hedul&#13;
\\&#13;
rs"&#13;
On&#13;
410 Al ST EET TO&#13;
TFW OUR HO :E COOK/NCI&#13;
T lttC ff&#13;
"COUNTRY&#13;
KffCHEN"&#13;
SU DA&#13;
0 e ile orl&#13;
f Ca p s o&#13;
Ope 7 Days a ee&#13;
SPEC • R st &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. S, 1912&#13;
a r r adying&#13;
. tl practicing for its season&#13;
Parkside's baske~ball team ISC~I~~r:nh~re. Exceptional fr~shmen&#13;
opener Dec. 1 against Luther g omises a bright season for&#13;
talent coupled with returning :ei~;:;sS~;phens and Assistant Rudy&#13;
the Rangers and Head Coac [or op ner Collum.&#13;
Women third&#13;
in swim meet&#13;
Parkside's women Swimmers&#13;
look third in their first home&#13;
meet last Tuesday. Oshkosh lOOk&#13;
first with 91 points, Whitewater&#13;
was second with 69 and Parkside&#13;
had 33.&#13;
Individually, Pal Hill look n"t&#13;
place in the 50-yard and tOO-yard&#13;
backstroke. Julie Surendonk&#13;
placed second in the 100 In&#13;
dividual medley, and in the 50&#13;
breast stroke; she also took third&#13;
In the butterfly.&#13;
Also competing for Parkside at&#13;
the meet were Charlene 'tarl1n&#13;
Amy werve. Nancy Michal&#13;
Ba rb Kupper and Shirley 'MOOrt"&#13;
R u~~ers lose&#13;
to Marquette&#13;
The Ruggers of ParkSld.&#13;
battled with lhe MarqUfU&#13;
Warriors Sunday in the First&#13;
Annual Rugby Foolball gam.&#13;
sponsored by lhe Lions Club&#13;
After a disappointing first half&#13;
during which Marquette scorEd&#13;
14 points, Parkside had yet to&#13;
score. But the game was rarrrona&#13;
over as the second hall proved&#13;
Coming from behind, Parks,dt&#13;
made two tries and two COO.&#13;
versions to leave the score •&#13;
respectable 14-12.&#13;
/'111 H,,/ing ftJ M, ',ng",!f!ItJHfJn&#13;
ftJ e" M' Lalell in 'lIP!!'&#13;
P"bil, T-Shim&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
Libra" Learning Center&#13;
ov . •• 1972&#13;
for n r&#13;
ti acticing for its season&#13;
Parkside's baske!ball tea; i~ cl~;~:n h!r~.r Exceptional fr~shmen&#13;
opener Dec. 1 against Lu_t er o romises a bright season for&#13;
alent coupled with returning hve;;ran\fephens and Assistant Rudy&#13;
the Rangers and Head Coac eve&#13;
Collum.&#13;
Women third&#13;
in swim meet&#13;
Hugger lo e&#13;
to Marquett&#13;
The Ruggers of Park id&#13;
battled with the l\tarquett&#13;
Warriors unclay in the f&#13;
Annual Rugby F'ootball&#13;
sponsored by the Lion lub&#13;
After a disappointing fir:;t h If&#13;
during which Marqu tte&#13;
14 points, Parkside had yet lo&#13;
score. But the game was far frOl?I&#13;
over as the second half Pl"O\ ed&#13;
Coming from behind, Parkside&#13;
made two tries and two ~ - versions to leave the sc~ 1&#13;
respectable 14-12.&#13;
/'Ill H11ding lo 1/,1 R1ng11 .. ~ftllion&#13;
lo IJel 1/,1 lale1I in ;f;Jlff!feii,-&#13;
11bil1 T-S/,il'II&#13;
a. ; net&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 7, November 8, 1972</text>
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        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
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              <text>1972-11-08</text>
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        <element elementId="49">
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            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="63918">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="63919">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>English</text>
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        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63922">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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